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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
i i <lb/>
JOB <lb/>
The Reflector is <lb/>
pared to do all worK <lb/>
in this line <lb/>
NEATLY, <lb/>
QUICKLY, and <lb/>
IN BEST STYLE. <lb/>
Plenty of new mate- <lb/>
rial and the best <lb/>
of Stationery. <lb/>
 NEWS. <lb/>
A flood almost wrecked lite <lb/>
town of Silver City Now M s- <lb/>
Throe wore instantly killed <lb/>
by a premature dynamite <lb/>
in Illinois <lb/>
A tornado struck a camp meet- <lb/>
near and <lb/>
killed two people. <lb/>
A plant to cm horse meat for <lb/>
foreign consumption ha <lb/>
started at Ore. <lb/>
The of Medical <lb/>
Examiners will hold an extra <lb/>
at <lb/>
A five story link and <lb/>
pounds was de- <lb/>
by tire at Winston Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
The Massey-Pilot libel suit at <lb/>
Norfolk is Hearing its end after <lb/>
occupying the court for several <lb/>
Yellow fever ii a <lb/>
an alarming rate in Havana, and <lb/>
cholera is at <lb/>
Salisbury will have a double <lb/>
to-morrow, two no <lb/>
pro murderers wall pay tho pen- <lb/>
of their <lb/>
Dolph Edwards and Sam liar <lb/>
had a light at Ala-, <lb/>
over a debt of Edwards <lb/>
was stabbed death- <lb/>
Southern California's orange <lb/>
this season has brought to <lb/>
the grower about <lb/>
B pears are selling at a <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
You Need <lb/>
D. J. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. XIV. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1895. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Weather Crop Bulletin. <lb/>
An Ear Full of Files. <lb/>
The reports of A correspondent of the Char- <lb/>
of the Weather Observer, Man- <lb/>
issued by the North N. t <lb/>
State Weather Service, for tho <lb/>
week Saturday, July To people not familiar with tho <lb/>
Odd <lb/>
Idaho is building a Home. <lb/>
Oreg has a Homo started ; <lb/>
of property, <lb/>
has Incorporated a <lb/>
The Reflector this year <lb/>
It will give the news <lb/>
every week tor <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
How <lb/>
A WHITE <lb/>
the <lb/>
Unison In North Carolina. <lb/>
Mr. A, L. Jones, of Hamilton, <lb/>
i N. Y-, experienced hop grow <lb/>
visited the Department of Ag <lb/>
i yesterday. He inform- <lb/>
ed department that he had street to the South ferry station at <lb/>
. La. <lb/>
Midnight <lb/>
Found a. Mascot. <lb/>
The midnight trail <lb/>
on Third avenue elevated road, <lb/>
while whirling down <lb/>
1893, indicate, . the whole, o phenomena j Home fur North Carolina, near fr-fifteen o'clock one <lb/>
favorable week, though more ills to which the <lb/>
it. <lb/>
He comes for tho <lb/>
; to a sudden stop at Thirty-eighth <lb/>
street. <lb/>
usual reports are received of dam-1 body is subjected, there is in I Kansas has a prop-, purpose of hops The butchers, green grocers and <lb/>
age by and local <lb/>
temperature above nor- <lb/>
with abundant A <lb/>
been large of bad <lb/>
showers. <lb/>
drought is beginning to prevail, <lb/>
though no great damage is re- <lb/>
ported as yet. Violent hail <lb/>
and wind storms occurred on Fri- <lb/>
day several counties the <lb/>
Central and Districts- <lb/>
Caring tobacco progressing with <lb/>
good results- Fall Irish potatoes <lb/>
planted- Melons coming <lb/>
in slowly, to be late and <lb/>
poor. <lb/>
EAST <lb/>
Tho past week was warm with <lb/>
plenty of sunshine, on the <lb/>
whole favorable for crops, though <lb/>
as is usual at this season the rain <lb/>
fall was unevenly distributed. At <lb/>
places it is dry, <lb/>
no real damage results as yet. <lb/>
Heavy wind storms Fri- <lb/>
day injured especially to- <lb/>
at Pitt, county, <lb/>
and Nashville, Nash county. Cot- <lb/>
getting plenty of weed ; in <lb/>
fact, reported as too fast <lb/>
in the south but and <lb/>
squares short ; lice seem to be <lb/>
disappearing in many sections. <lb/>
Tobacco fine; cutting and curing <lb/>
going with excellent results <lb/>
Fall crop of Irish potatoes <lb/>
planted. coming in, and <lb/>
shipments begun- River rice <lb/>
fields well worked and rice prom- <lb/>
Much of <lb/>
era among the <lb/>
neighborhood a most won jerry given to it by He has two five j other early birds who sleep on the <lb/>
of ear trouble. Liv-J worth now growing in hops near train most of the way from Harlem <lb/>
the river plantation of Col. j v. where he went markets, woke up with a <lb/>
Jersey e crop prom- <lb/>
to be unusually large and ex- <lb/>
this year, the <lb/>
of the largest <lb/>
ever known <lb/>
Another fool, Patrick <lb/>
has jumped the Brooklyn <lb/>
He was picked up <lb/>
but hurt- He made the <lb/>
jump for <lb/>
Sunday night two <lb/>
steamers collided at the entrance <lb/>
of the Gulf of Genoa. One of the <lb/>
sank and passengers <lb/>
won drowned. <lb/>
Col, G- O- Luke, formerly of <lb/>
Elizabeth City, died Berkly. <lb/>
Va. on Sunday. He was well <lb/>
known in this district as an ac- <lb/>
Democrat, <lb/>
A motion to prevent its school <lb/>
teachers wearing bloomers was <lb/>
voted by Toronto <lb/>
School and the women are <lb/>
happy over tho <lb/>
Four acres of the Mississippi <lb/>
River's banks, just below New <lb/>
have caved and <lb/>
a number of houses into the <lb/>
river. Other are feared- <lb/>
Mr- George of Beau <lb/>
fort took his wife and <lb/>
tithing, one of the <lb/>
fell and, <lb/>
jumped to the rescue and <lb/>
they were drowned. The last time <lb/>
he came up tho child was his <lb/>
j brains. It is alleged that on <lb/>
President Cleveland or some Spruill attempted a <lb/>
of his family, possibly j on a respectable roar <lb/>
Baby Marion, will start the ma lady the <lb/>
at the Cotton Spates Is- yesterday papers for his <lb/>
position. directors rest were placed in the hands of <lb/>
Mr. Geo Henderson, Las a <lb/>
veritable curiosity an extra- <lb/>
ordinarily marked common gar- <lb/>
spider- back of the <lb/>
hinder half of the spider <lb/>
large lo or oval are <lb/>
markings which distinctly <lb/>
a human face, eyes, nose and <lb/>
month; even to little <lb/>
at the pi places to <lb/>
nostrils. Each feature is in reg- <lb/>
natural position. To <lb/>
got the best view of the face the <lb/>
spider must be looked at with <lb/>
his head toward the spectator, as <lb/>
the month is about tho middle of <lb/>
his back and the eyes the <lb/>
upper part of the face <lb/>
towards tho rear. The shape of <lb/>
the body is not a human <lb/>
head, and in color it is a dull <lb/>
white and thus makes the re- <lb/>
semblance still more striking. <lb/>
Is keeping his <lb/>
pet a little box supplying <lb/>
him with insects and leaves to <lb/>
keep him alive as long as possible <lb/>
He takes pleasure in showing him <lb/>
to visitors- Newborn Journal. <lb/>
O. H. Dockery is a little <lb/>
girl, years For about a <lb/>
week she had been complaining <lb/>
of in of ears. <lb/>
tie was paid to it by her <lb/>
until the child came to <lb/>
mother holding a common <lb/>
house fly in her hand and telling <lb/>
that it had flown from her <lb/>
Upon looking into the left ear <lb/>
her mother was horrified to <lb/>
tho in a perfect work, <lb/>
swarming with flies. A doctor <lb/>
was neut for, and for three o. <lb/>
four days they have been taking <lb/>
flies out of the ear, and up ton few <lb/>
hours ago, tho h id reach- <lb/>
ed 160- Some out alive, <lb/>
others ones <lb/>
all fully developed <lb/>
house flies. For a day the child <lb/>
has been spasms, her <lb/>
Sufferings seems to be <lb/>
She will be carried to Dr. <lb/>
Graham, Charlotte to-morrow <lb/>
Tho case has baffled the skill of <lb/>
our best local physicians. <lb/>
The mystery is How did so <lb/>
many flies get into the ear, <lb/>
is cavity enough outside of <lb/>
the drum of to hold <lb/>
I-, it possible for them to remain <lb/>
there deposited <lb/>
And why, after f days of <lb/>
applications of medicine do <lb/>
they continue come out alive t <lb/>
If the reader of a similar <lb/>
case we would like to know it, <lb/>
Lear this <lb/>
New Hampshire has a Home <lb/>
built years ago; it <lb/>
is located at Concord ; value of <lb/>
property <lb/>
Now Jersey's <lb/>
Home is at Trenton ; been in op- <lb/>
ten years; property worth <lb/>
cost per <lb/>
Weekly. <lb/>
the to look his <lb/>
Mr. Jones is of the <lb/>
and craned their necks <lb/>
I anxiously from the car windows to <lb/>
i see what the trouble was. <lb/>
that there are sections Ahead a gasoline torch bobbed up <lb/>
this State as well adapted to the and down in the darkness like a <lb/>
hop industry as any part of on track. The <lb/>
, ti -i locomotives breathed and chafed <lb/>
ow State, tie says u the , ,, ,, ., . <lb/>
. J , , patiently, awaiting the return of <lb/>
hop ripens here in August <lb/>
they that an acre here is <lb/>
Tho Missouri Odd State- So if the hop is profitable <lb/>
Home will be dedicate May, it in Now York, it should <lb/>
connection with the of be more so <lb/>
the fireman. <lb/>
A little way further he was seen <lb/>
worth three or more his native hi the light of his torch to bend over <lb/>
and take a bundle of something <lb/>
white up in his arms. He turned and <lb/>
Wrinkles. <lb/>
Dr. T- a prominent <lb/>
practicing physician <lb/>
of in Nash <lb/>
committed suicide Wednesday at <lb/>
i his home with a pistol shot in the <lb/>
Worry and the grave <lb/>
Set well <lb/>
When go out to meet <lb/>
we never have a long walk. <lb/>
the can't get be <lb/>
hind the preacher in other <lb/>
way he sometimes joins the choir- <lb/>
Anyone can be to <lb/>
people, but it takes <lb/>
grace to be pleasant to <lb/>
ant people. <lb/>
If you want to a crooked <lb/>
path, just follow tho direction of <lb/>
a corkscrew. <lb/>
There are people who hate a <lb/>
thief, who borrow books <lb/>
return them. <lb/>
Ho who is hunting for a wife <lb/>
without a fault should <lb/>
that the spouse he is seeking may <lb/>
be searching for a husband of tho <lb/>
same sort. <lb/>
The man that is <lb/>
to speak the exact truth is not <lb/>
apt to be garrulous. <lb/>
It is us to, take <lb/>
from tho silly as counsel from the <lb/>
Horn. <lb/>
ranged for a wire into the grounds <lb/>
and another Gray Gables on <lb/>
opening day, September <lb/>
From present a <lb/>
co warehouse for is an <lb/>
fact. The amount <lb/>
to build has already been <lb/>
raised and the committee have <lb/>
now the selection of a suitable <lb/>
site under <lb/>
An exchange says ; The quick <lb/>
est way to dig your financial <lb/>
grave is to let up on advertising- <lb/>
It. will dig itself <lb/>
ply sink out of sight of every- <lb/>
body but your creditors and a i <lb/>
the county sheriff for service. <lb/>
The State printers in publish- <lb/>
tho lists of magistrates <lb/>
changed names in cases <lb/>
and added names not shown <lb/>
on the certified list- The terms <lb/>
of magistrates been <lb/>
changed in cases. names <lb/>
on tho list have been <lb/>
dropped by the State printers. <lb/>
If all these changes were -1 <lb/>
the printers are <lb/>
incompetent , ii the wore <lb/>
the State printers <lb/>
acted unlawfully- How is it <lb/>
A novel prize has been offered <lb/>
by the Great Northern Steamship <lb/>
whoso gigantic vessels <lb/>
ply on the Great Lakes. The of <lb/>
announcement been <lb/>
made that the company will give <lb/>
a of in gold to every <lb/>
baby born this season aboard of <lb/>
either of its two palatial steamers <lb/>
Northland Northwest- Five <lb/>
hundred dollars is the prize for <lb/>
twins, and for triplets. The <lb/>
condition that the officers <lb/>
of the company shall name the <lb/>
babies. <lb/>
the Grand Lodge. <lb/>
California has purchased a <lb/>
magnificent site the <lb/>
Lodge by legislation pro- <lb/>
for its permanence <lb/>
has a and Or. <lb/>
Home at ; prop <lb/>
valued at <lb/>
mates are ; average <lb/>
monthly of it is <lb/>
maintained the Lodge <lb/>
Connecticut has a Homo at <lb/>
worth acquired <lb/>
since July a per capital <lb/>
tux of per member is levied <lb/>
fir maintenance and to create a <lb/>
permanent fund. <lb/>
The German Odd Fellows of <lb/>
New York have a Home for <lb/>
aged brethren, at <lb/>
also Orphanage; very tine <lb/>
buildings- There is Odd <lb/>
Home at L I-, with <lb/>
seven inmates. <lb/>
in 1301, has property <lb/>
worth <lb/>
Do Not Judge by Clothing. <lb/>
Boys do not Judge a man by <lb/>
his clothing. A little <lb/>
curred one of street cars a <lb/>
few days since winch is worthy of <lb/>
A poorly woman en- <lb/>
the car carrying an infant <lb/>
in her arms. As she I <lb/>
observed she seemed trouble <lb/>
about something. When the <lb/>
passed through the car for <lb/>
the fares she said in a very . low <lb/>
money. <lb/>
let mo ride this time and some <lb/>
other time I will pay <lb/>
can hear that story every <lb/>
said the conductor, in a loud, <lb/>
rough voice- can pay or <lb/>
get fares, <lb/>
said a pleasant voice, as a toil- <lb/>
worn sunburned baud passed <lb/>
ho conductor ten. cents. <lb/>
you said the <lb/>
man, ard loner she <lb/>
wept; the language of the heart <lb/>
so to express our <lb/>
thoughts This man in worn and <lb/>
soiled garments was one of God's <lb/>
noblemen. He possessed a heart <lb/>
to for the woes of <lb/>
although the act was but a trifle, <lb/>
it proves that we with <lb/>
safety, judge a man by his <lb/>
a true heart <lb/>
boats beneath a ragged <lb/>
Our Dumb Animals. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Bill Advice. <lb/>
Bill his advice to a <lb/>
young lady, it is quite pro- <lb/>
per to tale a young man's arm <lb/>
after dark, bat you should return <lb/>
it to him afterwards- Never let a <lb/>
young man take your arm how- <lb/>
ever. Ho <lb/>
muscles afterward, it is <lb/>
way to live Should he attempt <lb/>
it. do not brain him the spot, <lb/>
for the odor of gas <lb/>
be disagreeable, but tell <lb/>
him to try and <lb/>
rather than to lean the <lb/>
of a timid girl- Should ho be <lb/>
afraid of the dark, and again <lb/>
clutch at your arm, call a <lb/>
and seed him home The cost <lb/>
will be slight, and you will never <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb/>
Absolutely pure <lb/>
LEAVING OUT WASHING. <lb/>
What May When There <lb/>
on a Blow in tho Night. <lb/>
That At t, . II, r In <lb/>
City Rally Morning Call <lb/>
to Shorten Sail on the <lb/>
Line. <lb/>
Some months like poaches <lb/>
cream and some like a hole <lb/>
a brick wall lo ad- <lb/>
a door or window. Tho <lb/>
mouth is a hotbed of toothaches, <lb/>
the of oratory and a <lb/>
baby's crowning glory. It is the <lb/>
patriotism's fountain head the <lb/>
tool chest for pie. Without it the <lb/>
would be a <lb/>
the face of tho the <lb/>
go down to tin- <lb/>
honored grave. It is the grocer's <lb/>
friend, the orator's pride, and the <lb/>
dentist's hope- <lb/>
A man living near the Johnston <lb/>
and Wilson in Wilson <lb/>
made his oat fourteen <lb/>
biscuits at cue sitting <lb/>
she had burned them cooking. <lb/>
He made her do this by threats. <lb/>
The next a mob went to his <lb/>
house, tho man began to cry <lb/>
out for his friends. He was told <lb/>
that all the neighborhood was <lb/>
there. He was whipped the <lb/>
left him. <lb/>
Wednesday as <lb/>
a sister of Mrs was en- <lb/>
the main -rate at from six thous <lb/>
school, a boy approached I sand per mile <lb/>
About twenty-four million, five <lb/>
hundred <lb/>
total valuation, of railroad prop- <lb/>
given by tho Railway <lb/>
mission for the year 189-i; in- <lb/>
crease of nearly five hundred <lb/>
thousand dollars. The Seaboard <lb/>
property increased being <lb/>
nine thou <lb/>
The assessment <lb/>
body a hand of steamboat lines is two <lb/>
old fossils who love the dead j. L <lb/>
smell o be pa . was chased some distance by d <lb/>
bugs have done great a man from that neigh I forty <lb/>
damage to crops in stuck, <lb/>
a. dean in m k .- <lb/>
mi <lb/>
Men who are all the time try- <lb/>
to get out of or out <lb/>
of town will never build up <lb/>
of the two things must <lb/>
be done run the town for for all <lb/>
it is gee up and <lb/>
it up, or unit the whole <lb/>
slide and lot <lb/>
take its course. Do you want <lb/>
trade I Bid for it. Do you want <lb/>
business to come to your town <lb/>
Encourage those who do come. <lb/>
Do you want a <lb/>
where people corns who are <lb/>
disposed to make I <lb/>
Mr. George F. <lb/>
new ground, corn, acres of <lb/>
which are cultivated, the remain- <lb/>
acres being sowed. The two <lb/>
acres cultivated are in the richest <lb/>
part of the field, while the other <lb/>
is in the poorest, yet tho sow- <lb/>
ed corn is much the best, being a <lb/>
great deal Why is this T <lb/>
Can tome explain <lb/>
Topic. <lb/>
The National Harness <lb/>
declares wide-awake <lb/>
timers don't know anything <lb/>
dull Bradstreet's says that <lb/>
nearly per cent, of the con- <lb/>
that failed were <lb/>
those advertise May <lb/>
be there isn't a moral in <lb/>
that statement. <lb/>
University <lb/>
The University for <lb/>
1804 shows as <lb/>
in <lb/>
the law school, the medical <lb/>
school in tie summer<lb/>
homes I Then school for <lb/>
from sight, <lb/>
k no more o- Mr. <lb/>
came back with it. <lb/>
A hundred heads protruding from <lb/>
windows watched him come. <lb/>
is a burst from them <lb/>
hi one breath, and the entire lot <lb/>
scrambled for the engine, on the <lb/>
track and through the train. <lb/>
Fireman Buck met them with his <lb/>
white bundle hugged close. They <lb/>
fell upon him, a perfect mob, <lb/>
Chirp The little darling, <lb/>
did the poor <lb/>
said the dear thing, and <lb/>
snapped at the nose poked nearest. <lb/>
It was not a baby, but a puppy, a <lb/>
white poodle dog trotting all <lb/>
alone down the elevated track from <lb/>
heaven knows where, in the small <lb/>
hours of the morning, when the en- <lb/>
saw him and stopped the <lb/>
train just in time. <lb/>
They took him into the rah, while <lb/>
I lie excited passengers went back to <lb/>
sleep, feeling that they had been <lb/>
posed upon. Fireman Buck and the <lb/>
engineer didn't feel that way. They <lb/>
got the pup some milk down at <lb/>
South ferry and took him back with <lb/>
them on the home run. <lb/>
The midnight has a <lb/>
mascot now, the only elevated dog <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
But how he get on the track where <lb/>
he was, where he was going at <lb/>
that hour are mysteries that may <lb/>
never b Y. Sun. <lb/>
AT THE BATTLE OF <lb/>
Sensations of One on Ship During <lb/>
an Awful of Death. <lb/>
Toward the close of the action, I <lb/>
Col. Hutchinson reported to me that j <lb/>
the guns wanted quill or tin tubes <lb/>
are used as more safe and <lb/>
expeditious than loose and <lb/>
wanted me to send some one, I <lb/>
own men were too ignorant of <lb/>
the ship, or he would have sent one <lb/>
before my says a writer in <lb/>
Macmillan's magazine. I told <lb/>
knew no one who could so well <lb/>
spared as He, however, <lb/>
objected to my going, and as I was <lb/>
aware of tho dreadful slaughter <lb/>
which had taken place in the center <lb/>
of the ship I was not very fond of <lb/>
the jaunt, but my conscience would <lb/>
not let me send another on an errand <lb/>
I was afraid to undertake myself, <lb/>
and away I posted toward the fore <lb/>
When I arrived on the main deck, <lb/>
along which I had to pass, there was <lb/>
not a single man standing tho whole <lb/>
way from the mainmast forward, a <lb/>
distance containing eight guns on a <lb/>
side, some of which were run out <lb/>
ready for firing; others lay dis- <lb/>
mounted, and others remained as <lb/>
were after recoiling. In this <lb/>
I be excused for <lb/>
shuddering as walked across the <lb/>
body of a dead soldier. I hastened <lb/>
down the fore ladder to the lower <lb/>
deck and felt really relieved to find <lb/>
somebody alive; <lb/>
reached the fore cockpit, where I was <lb/>
obliged to watt a few minutes for <lb/>
my cargo, and after this pause I <lb/>
felt something like regret, if not <lb/>
fear, as remounted the ladder on <lb/>
my return. This, however, entirely <lb/>
subsided when I the sun shilling <lb/>
and the old blue ensign flying as <lb/>
lofty as ever, <lb/>
I never felt the genuine sense of <lb/>
glory so completely as at that mo- <lb/>
and If I had seen anyone <lb/>
attempt to haul that ensign down <lb/>
could have run aft and shot O.-ad <lb/>
in as determined, a. manner the <lb/>
Jones. I took off <lb/>
my hat by an involuntary motion <lb/>
gave three cheers as I <lb/>
on to the quarterdeck. <lb/>
Whenever you see good roads <lb/>
in a county you can rest <lb/>
that county is a prosperous one- <lb/>
Good roads are index to tho <lb/>
prosperity of <lb/>
Topic. <lb/>
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb/>
county <lb/>
superior Clerk, K. A. <lb/>
Sheriff, It. King. <lb/>
Register of Deeds, w. If. King. <lb/>
Treasurer, 1.1. <lb/>
Dr. C. <lb/>
Surveyor, <lb/>
T. K. I. <lb/>
Smith and S. M. loins. <lb/>
Health. Dr. W. II. Bagwell. <lb/>
County Home. W. Smith. <lb/>
County Examiner of Teacher-. Prof. <lb/>
W. ii. <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
Mayor, Ola <lb/>
Clerk, C. <lb/>
w. v. Godwin. <lb/>
w. Perkins, chief, <lb/>
Cox, i- i W. Murphy, night. <lb/>
II. Smith, w. I. <lb/>
Brown, W. V. Godwin. T. A. which, <lb/>
Baptist. Service every Sunday <lb/>
morning night. Prayer <lb/>
night. C. M. <lb/>
Sunday at ; <lb/>
M. V. <lb/>
I Catholic. No regular <lb/>
Episcopal. Services every fourth <lb/>
morning Key. A. <lb/>
Hector. Sunday School <lb/>
Methodist. every <lb/>
morning and light. Prayer meeting <lb/>
night. Key. U. F. Smite, <lb/>
Mater. Sunday at A. M. A. <lb/>
it. Supt. <lb/>
Service let and <lb/>
I Sunday morning and night. <lb/>
meeting night Rev. Archie <lb/>
pastor. Sunday School at <lb/>
do away with, bur <lb/>
work; <lb/>
a Jew aft <lb/>
pages, is carefully in- <lb/>
gives full information <lb/>
about the University- Write for <lb/>
the Commissioner o <lb/>
decided that the <lb/>
only remedy is to infect them <lb/>
with some deadly disease. In- <lb/>
bugs are to be brought <lb/>
from other States and distributed <lb/>
There is a place <lb/>
in Washington. All that is re- <lb/>
quired of the applicant is that he <lb/>
understands chemistry, <lb/>
bacteriology, histological <lb/>
anatomy, and be able to tell what <lb/>
he knows about these and other <lb/>
things in English, French and <lb/>
German, and remarkable to say <lb/>
there isn't a jam of applicants <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
mat the <lb/>
News <lb/>
and Observer. <lb/>
One dollars in gold <lb/>
was offered in Charlotte last week <lb/>
to any colored base ball club in <lb/>
the State which would beat, the <lb/>
Cannot be Cartel. <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/>
and that is by constitutional remedies. <lb/>
Deafness Is caused by an con- <lb/>
of the mucous lining the <lb/>
When this tube <lb/>
in limned you have a rumbling or <lb/>
imperfect hearing, and when it is en- <lb/>
closed Deafness the result. <lb/>
best two out of three games, the inflammation can be <lb/>
taken out and this tube restored to its <lb/>
of that city. The <lb/>
of Greensboro ac- <lb/>
the challenge and <lb/>
games were played Thursday and <lb/>
Friday. The stays <lb/>
normal condition, hearing will be de- <lb/>
forever ; nine out of ten <lb/>
are caused by catarrh, is <lb/>
but an ed condition of the <lb/>
raucous surfaces. <lb/>
We will give Hundred Dollars <lb/>
any case of by <lb/>
in Charlotte by a score of a to S j that cannot be cured Hail's <lb/>
the first game and to in the <lb/>
second. <lb/>
together sew <lb/>
j prosper- <lb/>
. mutual benefit. Wake <lb/>
up, rub eyes, roll up your <lb/>
sleeves and so to work. Don't <lb/>
work with fear and trembling, but <lb/>
take it for granted that blood <lb/>
will tell. result with <lb/>
themselves; borrow no trouble, <lb/>
but all unite to make it the big- <lb/>
kind of a city. <lb/>
It is Mr. Gladstone's latest <lb/>
the older a man in <lb/>
good health becomes the greater <lb/>
his mental activity ought to be. <lb/>
He declares that the mind grows <lb/>
clearer as the body s <lb/>
vitality dwindles, and he docs <lb/>
see Low anything except disease <lb/>
of the latter can prevent <lb/>
progress from continuing <lb/>
copy to President <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
The man who is afraid to <lb/>
bis in any enterprise and <lb/>
still expects it to increase ought <lb/>
to be yoked to fellow who ex- <lb/>
to raise a crop of com with <lb/>
out putting his seed corn in the <lb/>
Money like grows <lb/>
by and not by lying still. <lb/>
to the end of a man's life <lb/>
We notice that in <lb/>
the State are taking steps to es- <lb/>
new cotton factories. Why <lb/>
not do something <lb/>
along this line <lb/>
on a hazardous <lb/>
and had returned in <lb/>
Mr. also expressed <lb/>
great satisfaction at seeing mo in <lb/>
such Ugh spirits and so active <lb/>
Disguise <lb/>
am endeavoring to become <lb/>
quite writes a Boston <lb/>
man in London, it will <lb/>
save me from tho tips of the first <lb/>
magnitude which servants expect <lb/>
from Americans. I have mounted a <lb/>
perfectly hideous Derby. I carry <lb/>
my right glove in my left gloved <lb/>
hand and swing a stick in <lb/>
my right. I wear an English collar, <lb/>
and an English scarf with an Eng- <lb/>
pin in it; my English cuffs <lb/>
spacious. I am having more clothes <lb/>
made at the Prince of <lb/>
tailor's. And when I go outside the <lb/>
is directly opposite the <lb/>
first up <lb/>
many American gentlemen, <lb/>
sir, know where they want to go, <lb/>
Such is the vanity of <lb/>
Transcript. <lb/>
to leave the <lb/>
doors or said Mr. <lb/>
to the New York Sun man, <lb/>
easily be a question of importance. <lb/>
Why It Is thought of leaving it out <lb/>
Is simple enough; It may have been <lb/>
a damp or drizzly day and the clothes <lb/>
may not be dry when night comes; <lb/>
they arc to be left out to blow dry <lb/>
In the night. The question in the <lb/>
suburbs or In the where <lb/>
would left on <lb/>
stretched between posts set the <lb/>
ground, is mostly of safety, for <lb/>
there they must be left where they <lb/>
could easily stolen by anybody <lb/>
that might take a fancy to them. <lb/>
In the city if you live in a flat the <lb/>
principal question Will it be too <lb/>
windy For if it is the clothespins, <lb/>
when they work off the line, don't <lb/>
fall upon the grass but into tho <lb/>
fathomless abyss of the rear area, <lb/>
and if washing drops from tho <lb/>
line it goes there, too, or off over <lb/>
some neighboring roof, or it whip <lb/>
or <lb/>
or the fire escape, or it winds <lb/>
itself around the pulley line so that <lb/>
the line won't budge either way, and <lb/>
there the washing is out in the air <lb/>
and you wonder how you arc going <lb/>
to get It. So that- it may easily be <lb/>
seen that in a flat it is really a <lb/>
question of some importance whether <lb/>
the washing shall be left out or not, <lb/>
and if the wind rises it is of still <lb/>
more Importance to get it In. <lb/>
do says Mrs. <lb/>
think it is <lb/>
going to blow any harder than it <lb/>
does <lb/>
you look out at the cold IA W Brows, Bop t. <lb/>
stars and glance around generally, <lb/>
and then you say no, you don't think <lb/>
it is, and after a little further <lb/>
deliberation Mrs. de- <lb/>
to leave out. It's pretty <lb/>
breezy and you can hoar now <lb/>
and then snapping in the wind, but <lb/>
if it doesn't blow up any more <lb/>
they're all right. So you <lb/>
out and go to lied. <lb/>
four o'clock you begin <lb/>
to dream of the sea story you had <lb/>
read the night before. Off Cape <lb/>
Horn is a howling gale in <lb/>
cold and snow and ice; rolling seas <lb/>
and tempest and danger everywhere; <lb/>
it's your suddenly you <lb/>
hear somebody pounding on the <lb/>
companion slide with a handspike, <lb/>
find a moment later you bear a voice <lb/>
shouting down the <lb/>
means you- it's all hands <lb/>
to shorten sail. As yon jump from <lb/>
your bunk you feel somebody pushing <lb/>
on your shoulder and yon hear Mrs. <lb/>
I guess you'll ha-e to <lb/>
take in the <lb/>
ling <lb/>
Into your boots and garments, not <lb/>
your tarpaulin and your <lb/>
sou'wester, and a minute r you're <lb/>
on the escape, with Mrs. Flat- <lb/>
dweller standing inside to lake tho <lb/>
things as you hand them in. <lb/>
O-howling, sheets a -flap- <lb/>
ping, shirts snapping, pillow cases <lb/>
everything cast loose and <lb/>
whipping Itself or <lb/>
ready to. In torrents <lb/>
and general uproar everywhere. <lb/>
comes a shoot across your <lb/>
face and away goes your sou'wester, <lb/>
but you grab the sheet and it as <lb/>
you would a sail until you come to <lb/>
line; you grab off the clothespins <lb/>
and the sheet and hand it in to <lb/>
No hero, <lb/>
so you must tiling the sail to you; <lb/>
yum the pulley line, blocks <lb/>
under the strain <lb/>
lidding to the <lb/>
sail you get in ye it all, <lb/>
and acting, B, . <lb/>
garnets and stuff <lb/>
Topping lifts and bowlines In those <lb/>
degenerate days of teakettles instead <lb/>
of clipper ships, if a man really <lb/>
wants a sniff of salty ocean let <lb/>
him ship in a <lb/>
An unmistakable <lb/>
Covenant Lodge So. I. o. K., <lb/>
meets every Tuesday night. Dr. W. II. <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Lodge A. K. ft A. <lb/>
M. e and third Monday <lb/>
W. M. King, W. M <lb/>
DB. D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
DR. U. A. JOYNER <lb/>
DENTIST.<lb/>
Ones B, Fender <lb/>
Hardware store. <lb/>
K. Boon.<lb/>
. under Opera House, Third St <lb/>
V . JAMES, <lb/>
t- <lb/>
ill <lb/>
up.- <lb/>
B. <lb/>
and Counselor at La w <lb/>
Greenville, County, <lb/>
Practices the Courts. <lb/>
Civil and Criminal Ito-in.--- it. <lb/>
Makes u special of fraud <lb/>
lo laud, and col- <lb/>
Prompt and careful Attention given <lb/>
SI <lb/>
Mont-y to loan on approved security. <lb/>
Perms easy. <lb/>
my said the <lb/>
prudent father, <lb/>
doesn't cost <lb/>
was the reply, hoard <lb/>
don't doubt it, do <lb/>
it certainly costs me about <lb/>
even dollars a week to get any <lb/>
out of the waiters at our <lb/>
hotel Star <lb/>
Belated. <lb/>
1.1. <lb/>
FLEMING <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
I HAM <lb/>
s.<lb/>
The traveler shaded his eyes with <lb/>
his hand looked anxiously stoat <lb/>
there a man In the village, <lb/>
he asked, a <lb/>
said a boy in the crowd, <lb/>
he's busy a horseless <lb/>
carriage, and there's six broken <lb/>
ahead you, besides. You'd <lb/>
N c. <lb/>
J. I. <lb/>
KY 8-AT-1. AW, <lb/>
ii. nil the<lb/>
John E. Woodard. F. Harding. <lb/>
N. C. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
A HARDING, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Special attention given to <lb/>
better go to the next town, and settlement of claims.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017756_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
JOB <lb/>
The Reflector is <lb/>
pared to do all <lb/>
in this line <lb/>
NEATLY, <lb/>
QUICKLY, and <lb/>
IN BEST STYLE. <lb/>
Plenty of new mate- <lb/>
rial and the best <lb/>
of Stationery. <lb/>
NEWS. <lb/>
A flood almost wrecked <lb/>
town of Silver City Mex- <lb/>
were instantly killed <lb/>
by a premature dynamite <lb/>
Illinois <lb/>
A tornado struck a camp meet- <lb/>
Ohio, <lb/>
killed two people. <lb/>
A plant to mm horse meat for <lb/>
foreign consumption La been <lb/>
started at Ore. <lb/>
Tb-j of Medical <lb/>
will hold extra <lb/>
at villa, 20th- <lb/>
A five and <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
You Need <lb/>
D. J. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. XIV. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1895. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Weather Crop Bulletin. <lb/>
An Ear Full of Files. <lb/>
Odd <lb/>
The reports of A correspondent of <lb/>
of Weekly j kite Observer, Man- <lb/>
issued by county, N. <lb/>
State Service, for i <lb/>
week eliding Saturday, To people not familiar <lb/>
indicate, on whole, u many f phenomena and <lb/>
favorable week, though more than j ilia to <lb/>
usual reports are received of dam-1 body is subjected, there is <lb/>
age by local toil neighborhood a most <lb/>
The temperature above not case of ear trouble. Liv <lb/>
A j river plantation of Col. <lb/>
The Reflector this year <lb/>
It will give the news <lb/>
every week for <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
Culture In North Carolina. <lb/>
Idaho is building a Home. Mr. A, L. Jones, of Hamilton, <lb/>
a Home started Y experienced hop grow <lb/>
value of property, I Department of Ag <lb/>
A WHITE POODLE. <lb/>
How the Midnight <lb/>
Found a Mascot. <lb/>
The midnight trail <lb/>
on the Third avenue elevated road, <lb/>
while whirling down Forty-Second <lb/>
I yesterday. He <lb/>
has incorporated a department that he had I street to the South ferry station at <lb/>
Home and raised for North o'clock one morning came <lb/>
it. I w ,. . . ; to a sudden stop at Thirty-eighth <lb/>
He comes for r <lb/>
Kansas has a prop-, purpose of growing hops The butchers, green grocers and <lb/>
3.5.000 pounds <lb/>
de- <lb/>
Winston Sun- <lb/>
by tire at <lb/>
day. <lb/>
libel suit at <lb/>
Norfolk is its end after <lb/>
occupying the court for several <lb/>
Weeks. <lb/>
Fellow fever increasing a <lb/>
alarming rate in Havana, <lb/>
cholera is epidemic at <lb/>
Japan. <lb/>
Salisbury will have a double <lb/>
hanging to-morrow, when two no- <lb/>
pro will pay pen- <lb/>
of their crime. <lb/>
Edwards and Sam liar <lb/>
Lad a light at Ala., <lb/>
over a debt of cents. Edwards <lb/>
wee stubbed death. <lb/>
Southern California's orange <lb/>
this season had brought to <lb/>
growers about <lb/>
B pears are at a <lb/>
Jersey's crop prom- <lb/>
to be unusually large ex- <lb/>
this year, the <lb/>
crop of 1803, largest <lb/>
ever known- <lb/>
Another tool, Patrick <lb/>
has jumped off the Brooklyn <lb/>
Bridge, He was picked up alive <lb/>
but badly hurt. He made the <lb/>
jump for <lb/>
Sunday two Italian <lb/>
steamers collided at the <lb/>
of the Gulf of Genoa One of the <lb/>
steamers sank US passengers <lb/>
drowned. <lb/>
Col, G- Luke, formerly of <lb/>
Elizabeth City, died <lb/>
Va. on Sunday, lie was well <lb/>
known in this district us an ac <lb/>
A motion to prevent its school <lb/>
teachers wearing bloomers was <lb/>
voted by Toronto <lb/>
School Boat d, the women are <lb/>
happy over result. <lb/>
four acres of the Mississippi <lb/>
River's banks, just below New <lb/>
have caved in, and <lb/>
a number of into the <lb/>
river. Other loses are feared- <lb/>
Mr. George of Beau <lb/>
fort county, took bis wife <lb/>
one of the <lb/>
fell overboard, ant the fa- <lb/>
jumped to tho rescue <lb/>
they were drowned. The last time <lb/>
he came up the child was bis <lb/>
arms- <lb/>
President Cleveland or some <lb/>
member of his family, possibly <lb/>
Baby Marion, will start the ma <lb/>
at the Cotton plates Ex- <lb/>
position- The directors <lb/>
ranged for a wire into the grounds <lb/>
and another into Gray Gables on <lb/>
opening day. September 18th- <lb/>
From present a <lb/>
co warehouse for Goldsboro is an <lb/>
fact- The amount <lb/>
to build has already been <lb/>
raised and the committee have <lb/>
largo number of counties had <lb/>
good showers. some places <lb/>
drought is beginning to prevail, <lb/>
though no great damage is re- <lb/>
ported as yet- Violent hail <lb/>
and wind storms occurred on Fri- <lb/>
day several counties the <lb/>
Central and Districts- <lb/>
tobacco progressing with <lb/>
good results- Fall Irish potatoes <lb/>
boa g planted- Melons coining <lb/>
in slowly, seem to be late and <lb/>
poor. <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
past week was warm with <lb/>
O. H- is a little <lb/>
girl, years For about a <lb/>
week she bad been complaining <lb/>
of in of her ears- <lb/>
tie attention was paid to it by her <lb/>
parer-ts, until the child came to <lb/>
mother holding a common <lb/>
fly in her baud and telling <lb/>
that it bad flown from her ear- <lb/>
Upon looking into left ear <lb/>
her mother was horrified to Bud <lb/>
the cavity in a perfect work, and <lb/>
swarming with flies. A doctor <lb/>
was Rent for, for three <lb/>
four days they been taking <lb/>
mi j given to it by State. He has two five acre J other early birds who sleep on the <lb/>
worth now growing in bops near j train most of the way from Harlem <lb/>
New Hampshire has a Home where he went on the markets, woke up with a <lb/>
years ago; it H n. <lb/>
is located at Concord; <lb/>
property <lb/>
Now Jersey's <lb/>
Home is at Trenton ; been in op- <lb/>
years; property worth <lb/>
cost per in ma to <lb/>
weekly. <lb/>
Mr. Jones is of the <lb/>
opinion that there are sections <lb/>
this State ad well adapted to the <lb/>
hop as any part o <lb/>
Now York State. He says if the <lb/>
hop ripens here in August <lb/>
they that an acre here is <lb/>
start and craned their necks <lb/>
anxiously from the car windows to <lb/>
sec what the trouble was. <lb/>
Ahead a gasoline torch bobbed up <lb/>
and down in the darkness like a <lb/>
f on the track. The <lb/>
locomotives breathed and chafed <lb/>
patiently, awaiting the return of <lb/>
the fireman. <lb/>
A little way further he was seen <lb/>
plenty of and on the I dies out of ear, up few <lb/>
whole favorable for crops, though ago, the bid reach- <lb/>
as is usual at this season the rain 169- Some out alive, <lb/>
fall was unevenly distributed. At <lb/>
many places it is dry, though <lb/>
no real damage results as yet. <lb/>
Heavy and wind storms Fri- <lb/>
day injured crops, especially to- <lb/>
at Farmville, Pitt <lb/>
and Nashville, Nash Cot- <lb/>
ton getting plenty of weed ; in <lb/>
fact, reported as too fast <lb/>
in south but- and <lb/>
squares short ; lice seem to be <lb/>
disappearing in many sections. <lb/>
Tobacco fine; cutting and curing <lb/>
going on with excellent results <lb/>
Fall crop of Irish potatoes <lb/>
Unions coming in, and <lb/>
shipments begun. rice <lb/>
fields well worked and rice prom- <lb/>
Much of <lb/>
era among the hogs. <lb/>
A Spider Mark-d with a Human <lb/>
Mr- Geo. Henderson, las a <lb/>
veritable curiosity an extra- <lb/>
ordinarily marked common gar- <lb/>
spider- back of the <lb/>
binder half of the spider <lb/>
large rounded or oval are <lb/>
which distinctly <lb/>
a human face, eyes, nose and <lb/>
mouth; even to little indentures <lb/>
at places to <lb/>
nostrils. Each feature is in reg- <lb/>
natural position. To <lb/>
got the best view of the face the <lb/>
spider must be looked at with <lb/>
his head toward tat spectator, as <lb/>
mouth is about the middle of <lb/>
his back and the eyes the <lb/>
upper part of the face farther <lb/>
towards the rear. shape of <lb/>
the body is not unlike a <lb/>
head, color it is a dull <lb/>
white and thus makes the re- <lb/>
still more striking. <lb/>
Hr. Henderson is keeping his <lb/>
pet a little and supplying <lb/>
him with insects and leaves to <lb/>
keep him alive as long as possible <lb/>
He takes pleasure in showing him <lb/>
to visitors.- Newborn Journal. <lb/>
others ones <lb/>
all fully developed <lb/>
flies. a day the child <lb/>
has beer, spasms, her <lb/>
sufferings seems to be <lb/>
She will be carried to Dr. <lb/>
Graham, Charlotte to-morrow <lb/>
case has baffled the skill of <lb/>
our best local physicians. <lb/>
The mystery is How did so <lb/>
many get into the ear. and <lb/>
is there cavity enough outside of <lb/>
the drum of to bold them <lb/>
I- it possible for them to remain <lb/>
there trow eggs deposited <lb/>
And why, after fear days of <lb/>
applications of medicine do <lb/>
they continue to come out alive <lb/>
If reader of a similar <lb/>
case we would like know it, <lb/>
Lear this explained. <lb/>
Wrinkles. <lb/>
Dr. W. T a prominent <lb/>
and practicing physician <lb/>
of in Nash <lb/>
committed suicide Wednesday at <lb/>
his home with a pistol shot in <lb/>
brains. It is alleged that on <lb/>
Sunday, Spruill attempted a <lb/>
assault on a respectable mar <lb/>
lady in the neighborhood, <lb/>
and papers for his <lb/>
rest were placed in the hands of <lb/>
the county sheriff for service. <lb/>
Worry and the grave <lb/>
Set well <lb/>
When we go out to meet <lb/>
we Lever have a long walk. <lb/>
the devil can't get be <lb/>
hind the preacher in any other <lb/>
way he sometimes joins the choir. <lb/>
Anyone can be to <lb/>
pleasant people, but it takes <lb/>
grace to be pleasant to <lb/>
ant people. <lb/>
If you want to a crooked <lb/>
path, just follow the direction of <lb/>
a corkscrew. <lb/>
There are people who hate a <lb/>
thief, who borrow books <lb/>
return them. <lb/>
He who is for a wife <lb/>
without a fault should <lb/>
that the spouse he is may <lb/>
be searching for a husband of the <lb/>
Same sort. <lb/>
The is only <lb/>
to speak the exact truth is not <lb/>
apt to be garrulous. <lb/>
It is as well to, take warning <lb/>
from as counsel from the <lb/>
Horn. <lb/>
A novel prize has been offered <lb/>
by Great Northern Steamship <lb/>
Company, whose gigantic vessels <lb/>
ply on Great Lakes. The of <lb/>
announcement has been <lb/>
made that will give <lb/>
a of gold to every <lb/>
baby born this season aboard of <lb/>
either of its two palatial steamers <lb/>
Northland and Northwest- Five <lb/>
hundred dollars is the prize for <lb/>
of magistrates have been <lb/>
changed in cases. names <lb/>
the certified list have been <lb/>
by the State printers. <lb/>
now selection of a suitable n all changes were <lb/>
site under consideration-Golds- i the printers are <lb/>
j incompetent , if the changes were <lb/>
. , I intentional the State printers <lb/>
An says the quick unlawfully- is it <lb/>
to dig your financial <lb/>
The State printers in publish- <lb/>
the lists of magistrates <lb/>
changed f he names cases twins, and for triplets. The <lb/>
and added names not shown only is that the officers <lb/>
the certified The terms o name the <lb/>
Wednesday as <lb/>
name <lb/>
, I babies. <lb/>
About twenty-four million, five <lb/>
hundred dollars is the <lb/>
. I total valuation of railroad prop- <lb/>
given by tho Railway Com <lb/>
mission for the year in- <lb/>
crease of nearly five hundred <lb/>
thousand dollars. The Seaboard <lb/>
Tho Missouri Odd State. So if the hop is profitable <lb/>
Home will be dedicate May, in it New York, it should <lb/>
connection with tho of be more so here- Raleigh <lb/>
the Grand Lodge- j and <lb/>
California has purchased <lb/>
a . i ll Bill Nye's Advice. <lb/>
site and <lb/>
Lodge by legislation pro-1 Bill bis advice to a <lb/>
for its future it is quite pro- <lb/>
I per to tale a young man's arm <lb/>
I after dark, bat you should return <lb/>
it to him Never let a <lb/>
worth three or more his native In the light of his torch to bend over <lb/>
and take a bundle of something <lb/>
white up in his arms. He turned and <lb/>
Texas has a Or. <lb/>
Home at ; prop <lb/>
valued at <lb/>
mates are ; average <lb/>
monthly of it is <lb/>
maintained by- the Lodge <lb/>
Connecticut has a Home at <lb/>
worth acquired <lb/>
since July 1802 ; a per capital <lb/>
tux of per member is levied <lb/>
far maintenance and to create a <lb/>
permanent fund. <lb/>
The German Odd Fellows of <lb/>
New York have a Home for <lb/>
aged brethren, at <lb/>
also Orphanage; very fine <lb/>
buddings. There is Odd <lb/>
Home at L I-, with <lb/>
seven inmates. Is <lb/>
in 1391, has property <lb/>
worth <lb/>
Do Not Judge by Clothing. <lb/>
Boys do not Judge a man by <lb/>
his clothing. A little incident <lb/>
curred one Hue of street cars a <lb/>
few days sines winch is worthy of <lb/>
notice. A poorly el id woman en- <lb/>
the car carrying an infant <lb/>
in her arms- As she I <lb/>
observed she seemed trouble <lb/>
about When the con- <lb/>
passed through the car for <lb/>
she said in a very . low <lb/>
money, <lb/>
let me ride this time and some <lb/>
other time I will pay <lb/>
hear that story every <lb/>
said conductor, in a loud, <lb/>
rough voice. can pay or <lb/>
get fares, <lb/>
said a pleasant voice, as a toil- <lb/>
worn and sunburned hand passed <lb/>
he conductor ten cents- <lb/>
bless you said the <lb/>
man, and and silently <lb/>
wept; the language of the heart <lb/>
so to express <lb/>
thoughts This man in worn and <lb/>
soiled garments was one of God's <lb/>
noblemen- He possessed a heart <lb/>
to feel for the woes of <lb/>
although the act was but a trifle, <lb/>
it proveR that we with <lb/>
safety, judge a man by his <lb/>
a true heart <lb/>
boats beneath a ragged <lb/>
Our Dumb Animals- <lb/>
young man take your arm how- j <lb/>
ever. Ho might j <lb/>
muscles afterward, it is one <lb/>
way to live Should he attempt <lb/>
it. do not In am him the spot, <lb/>
for the odor of gas <lb/>
would be disagreeable, but tell <lb/>
him to try and b self-supporting, <lb/>
rather than to lean the arm <lb/>
of a timid girl- Should he be <lb/>
afraid of the dark, and again <lb/>
clutch wildly at your arm, call a <lb/>
cab and send him home The cost <lb/>
will be slight, and you will never <lb/>
Some mouths lo k like peaches <lb/>
cream and some like a hole <lb/>
chopped into a brick wall to ad- <lb/>
a door or window. The <lb/>
mouth is a hotbed of toothaches, <lb/>
the bunghole of oratory a <lb/>
baby's glory. It is <lb/>
patriotism's fountain bead <lb/>
tool chest for pie. Without it the <lb/>
would be a wanderer <lb/>
the face of tho- the <lb/>
go down to an <lb/>
honored grave. It is the grocer's <lb/>
friend, the orator's pride, and the <lb/>
dentist's hope. <lb/>
came back with it. <lb/>
A hundred heads protruding from <lb/>
windows watched him come. <lb/>
is a burst from them <lb/>
In one breath, and the entire lot <lb/>
scrambled for the engine, on the <lb/>
track and through the train. <lb/>
Fireman Buck met them with his <lb/>
white bundle hugged close. They <lb/>
fell upon him, a perfect mob, <lb/>
Chirp The little darling, <lb/>
bow did the poor <lb/>
said the dear thing, and <lb/>
snapped at the nose poked nearest. <lb/>
It was not a baby, but a puppy, a <lb/>
white poodle dog trotting all <lb/>
alone down the elevated track from <lb/>
heaven knows where, in the small <lb/>
hours of the morning, when the en- <lb/>
saw him and stopped the <lb/>
I rain just in <lb/>
They took him into the cab, while <lb/>
I lie excited passengers went back to <lb/>
sleep, feeling that they had been <lb/>
posed upon. Fireman Buck and the <lb/>
engineer didn't feel that way. They <lb/>
trot the pup some milk down at <lb/>
South ferry and took him back with <lb/>
on the home run. <lb/>
The midnight a <lb/>
mascot now, the only elevated dog <lb/>
in town. <lb/>
But how he get on the track where <lb/>
lie was, and where he was going at <lb/>
that hour are mysteries that may <lb/>
never b Y. Sun. <lb/>
AT THE BATTLE OF COPENHAGEN <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Govt Report <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
PURE <lb/>
LEAVING OUT WASHING. <lb/>
What May Happen When There <lb/>
Come on a Blow In tho Night. <lb/>
Scenes That Are to la <lb/>
City Morning Call <lb/>
to Shorten Sail on the <lb/>
to leave the <lb/>
doors or said Mr. <lb/>
to the New York Sun <lb/>
easily be a question of importance. <lb/>
Why It is thought of leaving It out <lb/>
Is simple enough; It may have been <lb/>
a damp or drizzly day and clot lies <lb/>
may not be dry when night comes; <lb/>
they are to be left out to blow dry <lb/>
in the night. The question in the <lb/>
suburbs or In the country, where <lb/>
would be loft on lines <lb/>
stretched between posts in the <lb/>
ground, is mostly of safety, for <lb/>
there they must be left where they <lb/>
could easily be stolen by anybody <lb/>
that might take a fancy to them. <lb/>
in the city if you live in a flat the <lb/>
principal question Will it be too <lb/>
windy For if it is the clothespins, <lb/>
when they work off the line, don't <lb/>
fall upon the grass but into the <lb/>
fathomless abyss of the rear area, <lb/>
and if the washing drops from tho <lb/>
line it goes there, or off over <lb/>
some neighboring roof, or it <lb/>
poles or <lb/>
or the fire escape, or it winds <lb/>
itself around the pulley lino so that <lb/>
line won't budge either way, and <lb/>
there the washing is out In the air <lb/>
and you wonder how you are going <lb/>
to get It. So that, it may easily be <lb/>
seen that in a flat it is a <lb/>
question of some importance whether <lb/>
Whenever you see good roads <lb/>
a county you can rest assured <lb/>
that county is a prosperous one- <lb/>
Good roads are an index to tho <lb/>
prosperity of any <lb/>
Topic. <lb/>
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
Superior Clerk, E. A. Move. <lb/>
Sheriff, It. W. King. <lb/>
of Deeds, If. M. King. <lb/>
Treasurer, -i. Mule. <lb/>
Coroner, Dr. <lb/>
C. Laughing. <lb/>
Surveyor, <lb/>
Dawson, <lb/>
T. K. Kr.-l --.- L. <lb/>
Smith and S. U. <lb/>
Sup-t. Health. Dr. W. II. Bagwell. <lb/>
Home. W. Smith. <lb/>
County Examiner of Teacher-. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
Mayor, Ola <lb/>
Clerk, C. C. Forbes. <lb/>
Treasurer, T. Godwin. <lb/>
W. Perkins, chief, Fred. <lb/>
; W. Mm <lb/>
II. Smith, W. I,. <lb/>
Brown, t. Godwin. T. a. <lb/>
Julius Jenkins. <lb/>
A man living the Johnston <lb/>
and Wilson line, in Wilson <lb/>
made his cat fourteen <lb/>
biscuits at cue sitting because <lb/>
she had burned them cooking. <lb/>
He made her do this by threats. <lb/>
The next night a mob to his <lb/>
house, the began to cry <lb/>
out for his friends. He was told <lb/>
that all the neighborhood was <lb/>
there- He was whipped <lb/>
left him. <lb/>
est way <lb/>
rave is to let up on advertising. <lb/>
t la sister of Mrs was en- property increase <lb/>
will ,. . , <lb/>
, the to thou <lb/>
d v sink out of sight of every- , j -i <lb/>
. . . a boy approached sand per mile. <lb/>
body but your and .-,.,.,.,, ,,,, I , i k. <lb/>
her and snatched from her hand , of steamboat lines <lb/>
,,, , . j. j ; w nun <lb/>
few old who love the dead . ., <lb/>
of the <lb/>
flinch bigs have done great <lb/>
damage to crops in <lb/>
making a clean in <lb/>
the o <lb/>
that the <lb/>
Only remedy is to infect them <lb/>
with some deadly disease. In- <lb/>
bugs are to be <lb/>
from other States and distributed <lb/>
There is a place <lb/>
is re- <lb/>
quired of the is <lb/>
I a purse containing The boy j died and, ninety-three thou <lb/>
was chased tor some distance by dollars, against, <lb/>
forty dollar. <lb/>
a young man from that neigh- <lb/>
stuck. the <lb/>
thus <lb/>
the <lb/>
News <lb/>
and <lb/>
yd. <lb/>
Men who are all the time try- <lb/>
to get out of or <lb/>
o will never build up <lb/>
of the two things must <lb/>
be done run the town for for all <lb/>
it is up steam <lb/>
keep it up, or the <lb/>
let <lb/>
take its Do you want <lb/>
trade I Bid for it. Do you want <lb/>
business to come to your town I <lb/>
those who do come- <lb/>
Do you want a n <lb/>
people can who are <lb/>
disposed to make homes t Then <lb/>
Mr. George Thomason <lb/>
new ground, coin, acres of <lb/>
which are the remain. <lb/>
acres being sowed. The two <lb/>
acres cultivated are the richest <lb/>
part of the field, while the other <lb/>
ts in poorest, yet the sow- <lb/>
ed corn is much the best, being a <lb/>
great deal larger. Why is this <lb/>
Can tome explain Lenoir <lb/>
Topic. <lb/>
The National Harness Review <lb/>
declares wide-awake <lb/>
don't know anything <lb/>
dull times. Bradstreet's says that <lb/>
nearly per cent, of the con- <lb/>
that failed were <lb/>
those that advertise May <lb/>
be there isn't a big moral in <lb/>
that authoritative statement. <lb/>
University <lb/>
The University for <lb/>
1894 shows as <lb/>
college, in <lb/>
the law the medical <lb/>
school in tie summer <lb/>
Sensations of One on Ship During stars and glance around generally, <lb/>
an Awful Scene of Death. j and then you say no, you don't think <lb/>
Toward the close of the action, it is, and after a little further <lb/>
Col. Hutchinson reported to me that I deliberation Mrs. <lb/>
the guns wanted quill or tin tubes j to out. It's pretty <lb/>
are used as more safe and breezy and you can hear now <lb/>
expeditious than loose and <lb/>
wanted me to send some one, <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
Baptist. Services every Sunday <lb/>
morning night. <lb/>
the washing shall be loft out or not, night. Rev. C. M. <lb/>
and if the wind rises it is of still Billings, pastor. Sunday School at <lb/>
more importance to get it in. <lb/>
do you says Mrs. , Catholic. No regular services. <lb/>
you think it is Episcopal. Services every fourth <lb/>
going to blow harder than it morning Rev. A. <lb/>
does Rector. Sunday School at MO <lb/>
you look out at the cold A-M-w- <lb/>
, Methodist. Services every Sunday <lb/>
morning light. meeting <lb/>
night. Rev. U. F. Smith, <lb/>
Sunday at A. M. A. <lb/>
Supt. <lb/>
1st and <lb/>
school for teacher- To <lb/>
do away with, bury from sight, embraces <lb/>
all work; work, no more-for <lb/>
a few <lb/>
One dollars in gold <lb/>
was offered in week <lb/>
to any colored base ball club in <lb/>
State which would beat, the <lb/>
best two out of three games, the <lb/>
in Washington. All that is re- of that city. The <lb/>
that be ,,, .,,. ,, , <lb/>
bacteriology, the challenge and She <lb/>
anatomy, and be able to tell what games were played Thursday and <lb/>
he knows about these and other i The stays <lb/>
things English, French B <lb/>
or in the first game and to in the <lb/>
Wilmington Star. by <lb/>
Cannot be <lb/>
By local as they cannot <lb/>
reach the diseased portion of the ear. <lb/>
I There is only one way to care Deafness, <lb/>
and that is by constitutional remedies. <lb/>
Deafness Is caused by an con- <lb/>
of the mucous lining the <lb/>
Eustachian Tube. When this tube gets <lb/>
inflamed you have a rumbling or <lb/>
imperfect hearing, and when it is u- <lb/>
closed Deafness is the result, <lb/>
and unless the inflammation can be <lb/>
taken out and this tube restored to its <lb/>
normal condition, hearing will be de- <lb/>
forever ; nine out of ten <lb/>
are caused by catarrh, is <lb/>
but an ed condition of the <lb/>
mucous surfaces. <lb/>
We will give One Hundred Dollars <lb/>
any case of Deafness by <lb/>
be cured all V <lb/>
work <lb/>
-j prosper- <lb/>
mutual benefit. Wake <lb/>
up, rub eyes, roll up your <lb/>
sleeves and go to work. Don't <lb/>
work with fear and trembling, but <lb/>
take it for granted that blood <lb/>
will tell. result with <lb/>
themselves; borrow no trouble, <lb/>
but all unite to make it the big- <lb/>
kind of a city. <lb/>
It is Mr Gladstone's latest <lb/>
the older a man <lb/>
good health becomes greater <lb/>
his mental activity ought to be. <lb/>
lie declares that the grows <lb/>
and clearer as the body's <lb/>
vitality dwindles, and he dues not <lb/>
see Low anything except disease <lb/>
of the bitter can prevent <lb/>
progress from continuing <lb/>
most to the end of a man's life- <lb/>
n- <lb/>
con- <lb/>
Tr- <lb/>
eat a log <lb/>
pages, is carefully in- <lb/>
gives full information <lb/>
about the University. Write for <lb/>
to President <lb/>
Hill, N. C <lb/>
The man who is afraid to put <lb/>
his money in any enterprise and <lb/>
still expects it to increase ought <lb/>
to be yoked to fellow who ex- <lb/>
to raise a crop of with <lb/>
putting bis seed corn in the <lb/>
like grows <lb/>
by use and not by lying still. <lb/>
We notice that in <lb/>
the State are taking steps to es- <lb/>
new cotton factories. Why. <lb/>
not do something <lb/>
own men were too ignorant of <lb/>
the ship, or he would have sent one <lb/>
before my says a writer in <lb/>
magazine. I told <lb/>
knew no one who could so well <lb/>
be spared as He, however, <lb/>
Objected to my going, and as I was <lb/>
aware of the dreadful slaughter <lb/>
which had taken place in the center <lb/>
of the ship I was not very fond of <lb/>
the jaunt, but my conscience would <lb/>
not let me send another on an errand <lb/>
I was afraid to undertake myself, <lb/>
and away I posted toward the fore <lb/>
magazine. <lb/>
When I arrived on the main deck, <lb/>
along which I had to pass, there was <lb/>
not a single man standing the whole <lb/>
way from the mainmast forward, a <lb/>
distance containing eight guns on a <lb/>
side, some of which were run out <lb/>
ready for firing; others lay dis- <lb/>
mounted, and others remained as <lb/>
were after recoiling. In this <lb/>
dreary scene. I be excused for <lb/>
shuddering as walked across the <lb/>
body of a dead soldier. I hastened <lb/>
down the fore ladder to the lower <lb/>
deck and felt really relieved to find <lb/>
somebody alive; from I <lb/>
reached the fore cockpit, where I was <lb/>
obliged to wait a few minutes for <lb/>
my cargo, and after this pause I <lb/>
felt something like regret, if not <lb/>
fear, as remounted the ladder on <lb/>
my return. This, however, entirely <lb/>
subsided when I Saw the sun shining <lb/>
and the old blue ensign flying as <lb/>
lofty as ever, <lb/>
t never felt the genuine sense of <lb/>
glory so completely as at that mo- <lb/>
and if I had seen anyone <lb/>
attempt to haul that ensign down <lb/>
could have run aft and shot <lb/>
in as determined, a, manner as the <lb/>
Jones. I took off <lb/>
my hat by an involuntary motion <lb/>
gave three cheers as I <lb/>
on to the quarterdeck. <lb/>
as j quarters <lb/>
--a on a hazardous <lb/>
. and had returned In <lb/>
Mr. also expressed <lb/>
great satisfaction at seeing mo in <lb/>
such high spirits and so active. <lb/>
. rd Paver <lb/>
and then snapping in the wind, but ; meeting night <lb/>
if it doesn't blow up any more j paster. Sunday School at <lb/>
Covenant Lodge I. o. P., <lb/>
wets every Tuesday night. Dr. W. H. <lb/>
Bagwell. <lb/>
Lodge A. K. A. <lb/>
M. and third Monday night <lb/>
W. M. King, W. M <lb/>
DR. D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
n- c. <lb/>
DR. A. JOYNER <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
they're all right. So you leave D. Evans, <lb/>
out and go to bed. <lb/>
about four o'clock you begin <lb/>
to dream of the sea story you had <lb/>
read the night before. Off Cape <lb/>
is a howling gale in <lb/>
cold and snow and ice; rolling seas <lb/>
and tempest and danger everywhere; <lb/>
it's your watch below; suddenly you <lb/>
hear somebody pounding on the <lb/>
companion slide with a handspike, <lb/>
and a later you hear a voice <lb/>
shouting down the <lb/>
means it's all hands <lb/>
to shorten sail. As you jump from <lb/>
your bank you feel somebody pushing <lb/>
en your shoulder and you bear <lb/>
I guess you'll he.-o to <lb/>
take in the <lb/>
a wake no wand are go I <lb/>
Into your boots and garments, not <lb/>
forgetting your tarpaulin and your <lb/>
sou'wester, and a minute later you're <lb/>
on the lire escape, with Mrs. Flat- <lb/>
dweller standing inside to take <lb/>
things as you hand them in. <lb/>
it-howling, sheets <lb/>
shirts snapping, pillow eases <lb/>
tracking, everything cast loose and <lb/>
whipping itself into ribbons, or <lb/>
getting ready to. Rain torrents <lb/>
and uproar everywhere. <lb/>
comes a sheet across your <lb/>
face and away goes your sou'wester, <lb/>
but you grab tho sheet and list it as <lb/>
you would a sail until you come to <lb/>
the line; you grab off the clothespins <lb/>
and the sheet and hand it in to <lb/>
No ropes hero, <lb/>
so you bring the sail to you; <lb/>
the pulley line, blocks <lb/>
under the strain <lb/>
Office up stairs overs. Co's <lb/>
Hardware store. <lb/>
-Us. K. Moms. i.<lb/>
MOORE. <lb/>
House. Third Si <lb/>
ti. JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW <lb/>
B. <lb/>
P. TYSON, <lb/>
quite <lb/>
along this line <lb/>
Disguise Himself. <lb/>
am endeavoring to become <lb/>
writes a Boston <lb/>
man in London, it will <lb/>
save me from tho tips of the first <lb/>
magnitude which servants expect <lb/>
from Americans. I have mounted a <lb/>
perfectly hideous Derby. I carry <lb/>
my right glove in my left gloved <lb/>
hand and swing a walking stick in <lb/>
my right. I wear an English collar, <lb/>
and an English scarf with an Eng- <lb/>
pin la it; my English cuffs are <lb/>
spacious. I am having more clothes <lb/>
made at the Prince of <lb/>
tailor's. And when I go outside the <lb/>
is directly opposite the <lb/>
first up <lb/>
many American gentlemen, <lb/>
sir, know where they want to go, <lb/>
Such is the vanity of <lb/>
garnets and stuff <lb/>
Topping lifts and bowlines Tn these <lb/>
degenerate days of teakettles instead <lb/>
of clipper ships, if a man really <lb/>
wants a sniff of the salty ocean let <lb/>
him ship in a flat <lb/>
An Unmistakable <lb/>
my said the <lb/>
prudent father, <lb/>
cost <lb/>
was the reply, heard <lb/>
don't doubt It, do <lb/>
it certainly costs me about <lb/>
mob dollars a week lo get any <lb/>
out of the waiters at our <lb/>
hotel Washington Star <lb/>
Belated. <lb/>
At and Counselor at-Law <lb/>
Greenville, County, <lb/>
Practices the Courts. <lb/>
Civil and Criminal Business Solicited. <lb/>
a special of fraud <lb/>
lo land, and col- <lb/>
mid careful attention given <lb/>
business. <lb/>
to loan on approved security. <lb/>
ms easy. <lb/>
II. BLOUNT. J. 1.- <lb/>
BLOUNT FLEMING <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the Courts. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
I A I HAM<lb/>
Dost on Transcript. <lb/>
The traveler shaded his eyes with <lb/>
his hand and looked anxiously about <lb/>
him. <lb/>
there a man In the <lb/>
he asked, can a <lb/>
in <lb/>
he's busy a horseless <lb/>
carriage, and there's six broken <lb/>
ahead you, besides. <lb/>
better go to the next town, <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
J. h. BLOW<lb/>
N. t . <lb/>
ii. the<lb/>
MM E. Woodard, K. C. Harding. <lb/>
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. V. <lb/>
Greenville, X. <lb/>
Special attention given to collections <lb/>
and settlement of claims.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017756_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
I J <lb/>
Entered at the Greenville <lb/>
V. C, second-class m I matter. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. JULY 1803. <lb/>
The fourteen counties <lb/>
in North Carolina are given in <lb/>
the following, according to prop- <lb/>
the largest counties are <lb/>
named Wake, ten millions <lb/>
Buncombe, ten millions; <lb/>
burg, nearly ten ; New <lb/>
eight and three-fourths ; <lb/>
eight; Durham and Guilford <lb/>
nearly five each ; Wayne and Row- <lb/>
an, each seven; <lb/>
Granville, Iredell and <lb/>
Johnston each have a little over <lb/>
millions. <lb/>
would have done credit to a city <lb/>
that contains many times more <lb/>
than Greensboro's <lb/>
There was nothing in <lb/>
the line of china, and house <lb/>
furnishing goods generally that <lb/>
they did not have. They are ex <lb/>
tensive importers of the very <lb/>
finest wares. This firm enjoys <lb/>
a trade that reaches almost over <lb/>
the entire State and extends to <lb/>
neighboring States and as far <lb/>
away as Alabama. <lb/>
Secretary of State, Coke, hits <lb/>
the correspondent in the Pro- <lb/>
Farmer a hard lick <lb/>
about his certificate to the copy <lb/>
of the laws as furnished <lb/>
Bros., Public Printers- He says <lb/>
he only certified to the copies as <lb/>
he gave them to these gentlemen <lb/>
and not to the after they <lb/>
had been changed by the Public <lb/>
Printers. Mr. Coke intimated <lb/>
very strongly that this <lb/>
shows that he hasn't <lb/>
sense enough to know what a <lb/>
ratifying clause at the end of <lb/>
each Act means. <lb/>
The efforts of the New Orleans <lb/>
and other Cotton Exchanges in <lb/>
the direction of securing better <lb/>
bagging and bailing for cotton <lb/>
for shipment have already it is <lb/>
said, been productive of good re <lb/>
suits. It is reported that the com- <lb/>
crop, will be put in better bag- <lb/>
than heretofore, and at- <lb/>
tempts will also be made toward <lb/>
greater uniformity in baling- <lb/>
has been much complaint <lb/>
especially from Liverpool, of poor <lb/>
bagging and baling of American <lb/>
cotton, and the change for the <lb/>
bettor that is now being made <lb/>
will advantageous in <lb/>
quarters- <lb/>
The North Carolina Press As- <lb/>
discussed two very <lb/>
questions pertaining to <lb/>
the present laws in our State- <lb/>
One was a reform in tho present <lb/>
jury system relative to criminal <lb/>
cases. A resolution was adopted <lb/>
with this end in view- The idea <lb/>
is to give the State an equal <lb/>
chance in a murder case with the <lb/>
like the <lb/>
same number of challenges in the <lb/>
selection of a juryman as is now <lb/>
given the defendant. This will <lb/>
open up an interesting and <lb/>
upon the jury <lb/>
system and no doubt bring about <lb/>
some improvements along this <lb/>
lino. The other question Mi <lb/>
upon our present libel law, which <lb/>
is a sweeping measure, and needs <lb/>
so that justice may <lb/>
be given both shies. These <lb/>
very important questions, <lb/>
concern the whole <lb/>
ham Sun. <lb/>
The jury in the case of E- <lb/>
Massey, State Superintendent of <lb/>
Public Instruction against the <lb/>
Norfolk Pilot and others, <lb/>
for libel, Saturday afternoon <lb/>
a verdict giving Mr. Mas <lb/>
damages against the <lb/>
Pilot Publishing Co., Sam W. <lb/>
Small and R- E The jury <lb/>
before leaving their room, took a <lb/>
pledge not to divulge the <lb/>
standing, consequently <lb/>
is known as how they stood <lb/>
except that of the members <lb/>
were for heavy damages, <lb/>
as high as One was for <lb/>
Massey cent, and <lb/>
was in favor of the de <lb/>
fence. Judge Heath, of counsel <lb/>
for the moved to set <lb/>
aside the verdict which was re- <lb/>
fused by Judge It is said <lb/>
that will not take an <lb/>
appeal. Mr- attorneys <lb/>
appear to be satisfied. One of <lb/>
them said that so as the mat- <lb/>
of money was concerned that <lb/>
was as good as as <lb/>
nothing could be made out of the <lb/>
Pilot Co., Small or Byrd, and that <lb/>
all Mr. Massey desired was <lb/>
before the country. <lb/>
Items. <lb/>
N. C, July 20th. <lb/>
There are from one to four <lb/>
sick in every family <lb/>
in <lb/>
Mrs. S- E. Sutton returned <lb/>
Lome last week after spending <lb/>
some time in Lenoir county. <lb/>
Some very fine tobacco cures <lb/>
were made here last week. <lb/>
an illness of five days <lb/>
Miss died yesterday <lb/>
of hemorrhagic fever. She <lb/>
leaves a mother and several <lb/>
brothers and sisters to mourn <lb/>
loss. <lb/>
The Tobacco department. <lb/>
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Warehouse. <lb/>
The directors of the Thomas- <lb/>
ville elected Rev. J. <lb/>
B. Boon Superintendent of that <lb/>
Institution at their annual meet- <lb/>
this week. We don't know <lb/>
what causes led to his election <lb/>
instead of J. H. Mills who is the <lb/>
founder of the Institution and <lb/>
who has been tho Superintendent <lb/>
since its organization, and until <lb/>
we will not criticize the <lb/>
action of the directors- We know <lb/>
this, that Mr. Mills has to all <lb/>
appearances been the right man <lb/>
the right place, that no man in <lb/>
the State has done what ho has <lb/>
for the orphans its borders, <lb/>
that the history of all the orphan <lb/>
institutions in the Slate rests upon <lb/>
the unselfish work oft <lb/>
ed Christian man, that the State <lb/>
owes him a debt of gratitude it <lb/>
can never repay, and that the <lb/>
pie of North Carolina so feel to- <lb/>
wards him- These things <lb/>
true we can say that the causes <lb/>
which led to his removal ought to <lb/>
all sufficient, and unless they <lb/>
are the friends of Thomas ville Or- <lb/>
will not be slow to open- <lb/>
disapprove the action of tho <lb/>
Board in displacing Mr. Mills <lb/>
from the place which he seems to <lb/>
have filled so admirably from the <lb/>
beginning of the Institution. <lb/>
Upon our recent visit to <lb/>
Greensboro to attend the Press <lb/>
convention held there, we could <lb/>
but look with admiration upon <lb/>
the enterprises of that city, her <lb/>
various factories, banks, <lb/>
educational institutions, mag- <lb/>
hotels, numerous in- <lb/>
and splendid <lb/>
tile establishments. But there <lb/>
was nothing in the way of a re <lb/>
tail store that more impressed us <lb/>
than the large head- <lb/>
quarters of E. M. k <lb/>
Bro. We had of <lb/>
being shown through their <lb/>
establishment by one of <lb/>
The splendid quality of extra <lb/>
dry or some other equally fruit- <lb/>
producer of high hopes and <lb/>
glowing prospects, forming part <lb/>
of the menu at the Press ban- <lb/>
at Greensboro last week, <lb/>
got in happy effects upon <lb/>
tor Marshall In his remarks, <lb/>
Mr. Marshall predicted that <lb/>
sometime in the future we <lb/>
pie in North would <lb/>
see windmills all over the State <lb/>
generating electricity for farm- <lb/>
operations and that all <lb/>
night electric plows would turn <lb/>
furrows under the glare <lb/>
lights Clinton Democrat. <lb/>
If our good brother of the <lb/>
Democrat, had been present at <lb/>
he Press Convention he would <lb/>
not have been stumbling into <lb/>
such a blunder as the above <lb/>
contains. He would <lb/>
have known that, much to the <lb/>
f ratification of a large majority <lb/>
of the the ban- <lb/>
was strictly a water <lb/>
one, form of <lb/>
and other of high <lb/>
being entirely absent <lb/>
Mr- Marshall none of <lb/>
these to help him look <lb/>
prophetic eye into the future <lb/>
and point out some of tun <lb/>
of so great a State as <lb/>
North Carolina. If editor Be- <lb/>
lives a years he <lb/>
will see more startling <lb/>
than plows running at night by <lb/>
electricity. <lb/>
Dictionary or Discontent <lb/>
Science, Dear Lady Hetty, has <lb/>
hope, knowledge de <lb/>
our <lb/>
has deprived us <lb/>
Here, then, is the authorized <lb/>
of discontent. <lb/>
What is creation A failure- <lb/>
What is life A bore <lb/>
What is man A fraud. <lb/>
What is woman Both a and <lb/>
and a bore. <lb/>
What is beauty A deception- <lb/>
What is love A disease. <lb/>
What is marriage A mistake. <lb/>
What is a wife A trial. <lb/>
What is a child A <lb/>
What is the devil A fable. <lb/>
What is good Hypocrisy. <lb/>
What is evil Detection. <lb/>
What is wisdom Selfishness <lb/>
What is happiness A <lb/>
What is friendship Humbug. <lb/>
What is generosity <lb/>
What is money Everything. <lb/>
What is everything <lb/>
Were we, perhaps, not happier <lb/>
when wore monkeys <lb/>
Oakley Items. <lb/>
N- C, July 29th. 1895- <lb/>
Mr. B. F- Gainer returned <lb/>
home Saturday. <lb/>
Mrs. Bettie Keel, of <lb/>
ville, spent the day here Friday. <lb/>
Rev. J. L. Winfield filled his <lb/>
regular appointment at Oak <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Mrs. J- H- made a <lb/>
business trip to Parmele <lb/>
day- <lb/>
Tobacco is the order of <lb/>
the day in this section. <lb/>
Misses Lilian Nobles and Hat- <lb/>
tie Fleming returned home Sun- <lb/>
day accompanied by their little <lb/>
brothers. <lb/>
Many of tho railroad men are <lb/>
glad to know that Mr- W. W. <lb/>
Freeman, who was three years <lb/>
past section master at <lb/>
was appointed last week road <lb/>
master on the M- A- railroad <lb/>
in South Carolina. <lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
Sheriff R. W. King was in town <lb/>
to-day. <lb/>
Mr. F. C- Harding was here to- <lb/>
day on legal business- <lb/>
Rev. W- A- Forbes went to <lb/>
lace Monday to perform two roar <lb/>
ceremonies in that section- <lb/>
Mr. Underwood, of Rocky <lb/>
Mount, spent Tuesday night in <lb/>
Tho Colored Missionary <lb/>
a church here- <lb/>
We hope they may soon complete <lb/>
it. <lb/>
The following returned from <lb/>
Ocracoke on this morning's <lb/>
Lula Peal, Lena Jenkins. <lb/>
Effie Mattie Grimes, A. <lb/>
B. Cherry, Mrs. Julius <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. M. O. Blount <lb/>
Mr. Mis, Albert Ward. <lb/>
Bethel, N- C, July <lb/>
Mr- Claude Keith, of <lb/>
w Jo-day on business. <lb/>
Mr. F- S. Gardner has moved <lb/>
into the Gray Carson house on <lb/>
street- <lb/>
Mr- G- Bullock rented <lb/>
the Hotel and his <lb/>
family in it. <lb/>
-Miss Cornelia -Manning return- <lb/>
ed Hamilton this morning <lb/>
where she had visiting rel- <lb/>
Mrs. Maggie Floyd, of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, is visiting Fan- <lb/>
this week- <lb/>
A- will hold <lb/>
quarterly meeting in the <lb/>
church here <lb/>
evening. <lb/>
Rev- Mr- Cotton, of <lb/>
will preach the Methodist <lb/>
church here next Sunday night- <lb/>
Hill <lb/>
get- <lb/>
Short Sermons. <lb/>
It hurts the corns on the feet <lb/>
cf some people much more to go <lb/>
to church than to market. <lb/>
People with are careful <lb/>
to those without <lb/>
sometimes educate the feet. <lb/>
Many people use an oath to <lb/>
try and cover up a lie. <lb/>
The collection plats is one of <lb/>
the best tests of a man's <lb/>
Sorrow is but tho blackboard <lb/>
upon which God writes his most <lb/>
precious promises. <lb/>
Every temptation should re- <lb/>
mind you that the devil is your <lb/>
enemy, God is your friend. <lb/>
The ear chat is always open to <lb/>
hear slander becomes a common <lb/>
pool for the neighborhood. <lb/>
A. Very <lb/>
Deputy Sheriff George <lb/>
Teer, who lives on Chapel <lb/>
street, has a gander that is <lb/>
ting along up in years- Mr. Teer <lb/>
who was married years ago, <lb/>
says that the gander was owned <lb/>
by his wife when they were mar- <lb/>
and was then years old, <lb/>
which would make it years old <lb/>
now. He was hatched in 1863 <lb/>
and has boon owned by Mrs. <lb/>
Teer all his life. Mr. Teer says, <lb/>
that, notwithstanding his he <lb/>
is a good fighter yet and often <lb/>
whips out geese, chickens and <lb/>
sometimes children when they <lb/>
get too him- Score this one <lb/>
for Sun. <lb/>
TOBACCO UNION. <lb/>
Spoken by little six Frank <lb/>
Harris at Hurdle Mills school house, <lb/>
January 12th. 1885 <lb/>
Come old and young and hear tell <lb/>
How Mm; smokers smell, <lb/>
Who love to smoke their pipes so well. <lb/>
That for tobacco they would sell <lb/>
Their right to Social Union- <lb/>
A Briggs Bet ready led to an decline in <lb/>
The highest price per pound in <lb/>
Now York that decade was <lb/>
cents, in 1850, tho lowest, <lb/>
cents, 1842 and 1844. Shep- <lb/>
Were Obliged to person quoted middling in that <lb/>
year as low as cents. <lb/>
for action, and is to be operated <lb/>
during the hearing. <lb/>
A decision is i. looked for this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
In a of the Proceedings <lb/>
and Debates in the House of <lb/>
Commons in 1621, while James <lb/>
They always scat the atmosphere. <lb/>
And yon may know when they are near, I <lb/>
not a word from them yo hear. <lb/>
Their breath grows stronger year, j was still on tho British throne, we <lb/>
told that Sir William <lb/>
moved that be banished <lb/>
Oft the fumes and smoke will . <lb/>
Like morning mist toward the skies, <lb/>
And woe to them who have weak eyes. <lb/>
Unless they take their leave and fly <lb/>
from a Tobacco Union. <lb/>
Often within the church you View <lb/>
Some there who sit and chew. <lb/>
And spit on carpet, floor <lb/>
Until it spreads a foot or two, <lb/>
And sing of Heavenly Union. <lb/>
Sometimes the quid is large <lb/>
The juice runs out and stains their chin, <lb/>
And then I always have to grin, <lb/>
And think there is no little sin. <lb/>
In Union. <lb/>
The ladies, are sweet, tine, <lb/>
But have learned to use it too. <lb/>
It would almost make a monkey laugh <lb/>
To see them spit upon the <lb/>
And talk of Marriage Union. <lb/>
Sometimes you'll see five or six <lb/>
Out in the sticks. <lb/>
The are cut, the swabs are made, <lb/>
And III a group they now parade. <lb/>
And now for Slobbering Union. <lb/>
now the snuffbox is pulled out, <lb/>
And with their they it out. <lb/>
And rub their teeth inside and out, <lb/>
And smear their faces all about, <lb/>
And talk of Snuff Communion. <lb/>
From Person County, C, Courier. <lb/>
The Warehouse Business not a Paying <lb/>
One. <lb/>
The Danville Tobacco Journal <lb/>
of tho 20th inst. The three <lb/>
warehouses, Ex- <lb/>
change and Star, are tor rent <lb/>
October 1st The remain- <lb/>
eight warehouse firms came <lb/>
to an agreement among them- <lb/>
selves to rent the three above <lb/>
houses, use ho forces in <lb/>
their employ in conducting them <lb/>
and sustaining the losses, if any, <lb/>
or dividing the profits, if any, <lb/>
equally among the eight ware- <lb/>
house The property has <lb/>
been leased and will be run ac- <lb/>
cording to <lb/>
above after October 1st, when tho <lb/>
leases of the present occupants <lb/>
empire. This move is just what it <lb/>
purports to nothing more <lb/>
than an effort to curtail warehouse <lb/>
expenses to a degree at least that <lb/>
will interested to <lb/>
derive a profit SUP <lb/>
port their families. <lb/>
It is no secret that competition <lb/>
for trade the warehouse- <lb/>
men, pot of is so <lb/>
strong the warehouse <lb/>
has become a, losing <lb/>
to most of those engaged <lb/>
it, and if some steps are not <lb/>
very to break up the out <lb/>
competition,, this <lb/>
business should <lb/>
prove a will have <lb/>
to be relegated to irresponsible <lb/>
and adventurous persons, for no <lb/>
men of as the business is <lb/>
now being can to <lb/>
embark in it. <lb/>
leading warehouses <lb/>
down because there was not <lb/>
money the business to <lb/>
make sustaining, <lb/>
on the largest tobacco market in <lb/>
the the same tobacco mar- <lb/>
that taken pa a <lb/>
by whose rate v. <lb/>
North Carolina legislature it, <lb/>
the warehouse charges <lb/>
all the tobacco warehouses <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
wholly out the kingdom and that <lb/>
it may not be brought from <lb/>
any port, nor used among <lb/>
While Sir Guy Palmer argued <lb/>
that tobacco be not banished <lb/>
it will overthrow one hundred <lb/>
thousand men in England, for <lb/>
now it is so that he hath <lb/>
seen it at they <lb/>
are at the <lb/>
One authority says that <lb/>
the last Great Plague in London <lb/>
none that kept Tobacconist shops <lb/>
had the Plague. It is that <lb/>
smoking it was looked upon as a <lb/>
most excellent preservative, in so <lb/>
much that children were obliged <lb/>
to smoke. And I remember that <lb/>
I heard Tom Rogers, who was <lb/>
yeoman-beadle, say that where he <lb/>
was year when the Plague <lb/>
aged a school boy at Eaton, all <lb/>
the boys at that <lb/>
obliged to smoke in the school, <lb/>
and that he was never whipped <lb/>
so much in his life as he was one <lb/>
morning for not This <lb/>
of course, was before the <lb/>
of the cigarette, which 1- <lb/>
boys is and <lb/>
head masters in our days do not <lb/>
order as a preventive of <lb/>
plagues of any <lb/>
Hutton in Weekly- <lb/>
Connecticut Tobacco Crop Damaged <lb/>
By Hail. <lb/>
Latest accounts of the damage <lb/>
to tobacco in Connecticut by hail <lb/>
stones Saturday state in <lb/>
alone of to- <lb/>
was ruined. The greatest <lb/>
damage was done in that <lb/>
ft was calculated that the <lb/>
weight of t hail stones on a four <lb/>
acre tract was sixty four tons. <lb/>
The hail was gathered from a sec- <lb/>
by feet weighed, <lb/>
and found that the fall was <lb/>
pounds to the square rod, u, <lb/>
pounds to the acre. <lb/>
east side of the river <lb/>
the tobacco from of <lb/>
east Windsor Hill to <lb/>
is ruined, except a few acres of <lb/>
small plants recently set out. <lb/>
TOg A <lb/>
Prices and Fluctuations. <lb/>
The Company's Suit <lb/>
Winston Cigarette Manufacturers. <lb/>
Greenville Market. <lb/>
Corrected by S. <lb/>
Butter, per lb <lb/>
u Sides <lb/>
Safer cured Hams <lb/>
Corn Meal <lb/>
Floor, Family <lb/>
Oats <lb/>
Sugar <lb/>
Coffee <lb/>
Salt per Sack <lb/>
Thickens <lb/>
Eggs <lb/>
per lb <lb/>
Kerosene, <lb/>
bu <lb/>
Hulls, per ton <lb/>
Seed <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to SO <lb/>
5.25 <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to Son <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
Cotton and <lb/>
are Norfolk prices of cotton <lb/>
and yesterday, as <lb/>
by Cobb Bros. Co., Com Her <lb/>
chants of Norfolk <lb/>
Good Middling <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Low <lb/>
Go d Ordinary <lb/>
man a. <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
Extra Prime <lb/>
Fancy <lb/>
steady. <lb/>
-10 <lb/>
5-16 <lb/>
bu. <lb/>
Hare yon an advertisement in <lb/>
your local paper ad- <lb/>
will help you to hold, <lb/>
your present trade and gain new . <lb/>
the proprietors and found the i trade. Why do those who . beat, w tn , b,. <lb/>
Stock simply marvelous. Use most keep at it the longest m appears m a bound <lb/>
Clay, W to 1.00 per bushel i . . . j . , <lb/>
Volume on the attorney s desks- dating the next five years, which <lb/>
The suits of the B <lb/>
Machine Company and the <lb/>
American Tobacco Company <lb/>
against five manufacturing firms <lb/>
of Winston, and one of Thomas- <lb/>
ville, N. C., was opened before <lb/>
Judge Simonton, at Asheville, N <lb/>
C last Tuesday, with the <lb/>
that the result in one case <lb/>
shall govern all. <lb/>
The plaintiffs allege that the <lb/>
Briggs cigarette machine is an <lb/>
infringement of the pat- <lb/>
and in this suit they seek to <lb/>
have it declared an infringement <lb/>
to have a perpetual <lb/>
issued- The main claim of <lb/>
infringement is upon the endless <lb/>
belt used in the formation of <lb/>
upon which device the <lb/>
plaintiffs claim a patent. <lb/>
The defendants claim that the <lb/>
Briggs machine is constructed on <lb/>
an entirely different principle <lb/>
from the and the patents <lb/>
it controls, there has not <lb/>
been anything on the market like <lb/>
it- The Briggs machine makes <lb/>
a minute. <lb/>
The parties to the Defense are <lb/>
W. S. Smith Son, the Brown <lb/>
Bros. Company, the Winston <lb/>
Machine Company, the <lb/>
Liberty Company Works <lb/>
J. A- Vance, all of Winston, <lb/>
J. A- Leach Co., of Thomasville <lb/>
NO- <lb/>
Ail the testimony been <lb/>
The on prices of <lb/>
cotton for the <lb/>
Department Agriculture has <lb/>
had in course of preparation for <lb/>
some weeks, has issued. <lb/>
The period considered begins and <lb/>
of the most <lb/>
events the history <lb/>
the introduction <lb/>
of saw gin and <lb/>
the production of the largest <lb/>
crop the world has <lb/>
highest lowest average <lb/>
of file props pf <lb/>
to foreign <lb/>
-4 <lb/>
countries, the supply u. <lb/>
tho United States, <lb/>
Great and continental <lb/>
are given for each year, <lb/>
as well as the chief causes that <lb/>
have led to the rise and fall in <lb/>
prices from year to year. <lb/>
addition to a series of <lb/>
in which these facts and fig- <lb/>
are presented the bulletin <lb/>
contains numerous data relating <lb/>
to the progress made from time <lb/>
to time in the production and <lb/>
consumption of cotton in this <lb/>
and foreign countries. These <lb/>
are so arranged as to present a <lb/>
brief historical of cotton- <lb/>
production and consumption in <lb/>
the United States during the past <lb/>
century- The tables show that <lb/>
prices of cotton have not been so <lb/>
low during the past season as <lb/>
they were the decade <lb/>
from 1840 to 1850- <lb/>
The object of the Department <lb/>
has been to make this bulletin a <lb/>
valuable work of reference as to <lb/>
the production, consumption and <lb/>
prices of cotton and other nu- <lb/>
facts relating to cotton, <lb/>
for all who are interested either <lb/>
in cotton planting or in the cot- <lb/>
ton trade- <lb/>
Referring to the conditions of <lb/>
the market and prices in tho de <lb/>
from 1840 to 1850, the <lb/>
let in says i <lb/>
1840, the largest crop over <lb/>
made up to that time, and <lb/>
largest accumulation of stock <lb/>
ever witnessed in Liverpool, <lb/>
caused a decline to the lowest <lb/>
average for ten years. This was <lb/>
the beginning of the heavy ac- <lb/>
cumulation of stocks in <lb/>
continues the <lb/>
tin, to fair cotton <lb/>
reached as low as cents in <lb/>
New there is on tile <lb/>
in the Department of Agriculture <lb/>
a letter showing that a <lb/>
county. Alabama, planter sold <lb/>
this year bales of cotton in <lb/>
Mobile at cents- The price <lb/>
currents cf the day quote mid <lb/>
to fair in New Or <lb/>
in is as low us cents, <lb/>
and in Mobile the same year, <lb/>
cents per <lb/>
With respect to the <lb/>
ended with H is shown that <lb/>
the highest price per pound in <lb/>
New York was cents mi 1891. <lb/>
and tho lowest id cents, the <lb/>
present <lb/>
A table of the fluctuation in <lb/>
prices shows that in 1825 it <lb/>
amounted to per <lb/>
in 1837 to in to <lb/>
1-21; in to and in 1880 <lb/>
to only -SO of a the smaller <lb/>
on record <lb/>
Everlastingly At It <lb/>
Genius is only power <lb/>
of making continuous efforts. The <lb/>
line between failure and success <lb/>
is so tine that we scarcely know <lb/>
it when we pass fine that <lb/>
are often en the lino don't <lb/>
know it. many a has <lb/>
thrown up his at a time <lb/>
a little more effort, a little <lb/>
more patience, would have <lb/>
ed success. <lb/>
As the tide out, so it <lb/>
comes clear in. In some- <lb/>
times, prospects seem darkest <lb/>
when really they are on the turn. <lb/>
A little persistence, a little <lb/>
more effort, and what <lb/>
may to <lb/>
success. is fail- <lb/>
except no trying. <lb/>
is defeat except from <lb/>
no really insurmountable <lb/>
barrier save our inherent <lb/>
weakness of i; <lb/>
-AW- <lb/>
Meeting of Physicians. <lb/>
will meeting of the <lb/>
Pitt at <lb/>
In Greenville on the Brat Monday In <lb/>
at o'clock P. M. for the <lb/>
pose of electing a Superintendent of <lb/>
Health, and other <lb/>
A Strong <lb/>
Fortify the body against disease <lb/>
by pills, an <lb/>
lute cure for sick headache, <lb/>
sour stomach, malaria, <lb/>
constipation, jaundice, bilious- <lb/>
and all kindred troubles. <lb/>
The of Life <lb/>
Dr. Your Liver Pills are <lb/>
the fly-wheel of life. I shall ever <lb/>
be grateful for the accident that <lb/>
brought them to my notice. I feel <lb/>
as if I had a new lease of <lb/>
j. Fairleigh, Platte Cannon, <lb/>
Liver Pills <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Male Academy. <lb/>
he next of this School will <lb/>
twain on <lb/>
tun mouths, <lb/>
am. v. <lb/>
The coarse . <lb/>
usually taught in an Academy. <lb/>
Terms, both tuition and hoard <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
Boys fitted and equipped <lb/>
by taking the academic <lb/>
course alone. Where wish to <lb/>
pursue a higher course, this school <lb/>
guarantees thorough preparation to <lb/>
outer, with credit, any College in North <lb/>
Carolina, the State University. It <lb/>
refers to those who have recently left <lb/>
Its walls for the truthfulness of this <lb/>
statement. <lb/>
Any with character and <lb/>
moderate ability taking a course with <lb/>
us will be aided In milking arrange- <lb/>
to continue in the higher <lb/>
The discipline will be kept at Its <lb/>
present standard. <lb/>
Neither time nor attention nor <lb/>
work will be spared to make this <lb/>
ail tint could wish. <lb/>
Send your boys on the day. <lb/>
For further see or ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
W. II. <lb/>
July -to, 1806, Principal. <lb/>
Enterprise-Integrity. <lb/>
every movement, every <lb/>
J idea, every transaction at <lb/>
King 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 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. stock of Fine <lb/>
must be cut down as I intend to have a beau- <lb/>
line this fall and do not want to carry a <lb/>
suit over. In <lb/>
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb/>
have knocked the bottom clean out and will <lb/>
sell you if you will come and look. <lb/>
FRANK WILSON, <lb/>
KING CLOTHIER <lb/>
To<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., fee in warehouse business the com- <lb/>
season. We earnestly <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 for your tobacco as any house at <lb/>
market in the GiVe us a trial and we J <lb/>
try to please you. Respectfully, <lb/>
L. F. EVANS, C. <lb/>
are Now Ready for Delivery <lb/>
BY <lb/>
S, K Pender Co,<lb/>
Prices greatly reduced. Same juice to Jill <lb/>
Terms Cash. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb/>
Truck Barrels, Pumps <lb/>
All Kinds of <lb/>
. . <lb/>
We have opened at <lb/>
the old <lb/>
Moore store and are <lb/>
prepared to furnish <lb/>
want. <lb/>
Special attention given <lb/>
to putting down <lb/>
and repairing <lb/>
PUMPS. <lb/>
All of Pipe <lb/>
work and sat- <lb/>
guaranteed. <lb/>
your order <lb/>
Fines with <lb/>
ESTABLISHED. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb/>
KEGS S TEEL NAILS, ALL SIZES. <lb/>
Cases Sardines, <lb/>
n Bread Preparation, i <lb/>
Soap. <lb/>
Slur Lye. <lb/>
Boxes Cakes and <lb/>
Stick Candy, <lb/>
Cases Matches, <lb/>
Gold Dust, <lb/>
ion Good Luck linking Powder. <lb/>
Sacks Coffee. <lb/>
Molasses, <lb/>
Tons Shot, <lb/>
Kegs Powder. <lb/>
Hay, <lb/>
BO Tobi Lard, <lb/>
I'M Granulated Sugar, <lb/>
P. <lb/>
Gall Ax Snuff, <lb/>
R. B. Mills Snug.<lb/>
Boxes <lb/>
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes. <lb/>
Old Va. <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Fire got <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb/>
All kinda Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At rates. <lb/>
I GENT FOR FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb/>
no<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017756_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
H. C. HOOKER. <lb/>
BRUNSWICK STEW. <lb/>
JULY FLIES. <lb/>
What It Takes to Make Up a The Reflector Too, and <lb/>
Without Sauce. m . <lb/>
Caught Up With These People. <lb/>
Mrs. W. II. Rags-dale is sick. <lb/>
Dr. X went to <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
From five to ten loads of <lb/>
co Lave coining in daily <lb/>
past week. <lb/>
See notice of meeting of <lb/>
of county to be be <lb/>
first Monday in September- <lb/>
Mr. W. P. Hall left Wednesday for <lb/>
of county to be held <lb/>
Go to <lb/>
Talking about puzzles, a man <lb/>
tolls us that another man told him <lb/>
that he saw a new method of <lb/>
operation on a farm. <lb/>
The cultivation was done by <lb/>
moans of a plow that <lb/>
the services of neither man nor <lb/>
horse its management. Now <lb/>
JUMPED OFF THE TRAIN. <lb/>
And the Newsboy Him <lb/>
Off. <lb/>
People who have occasion to be <lb/>
about the depot at train time have <lb/>
noticed the annoyance caused by <lb/>
boys, most of them colored, jump- <lb/>
how was it No inS on and off <lb/>
Dr. H. L. Carr, of Hill spent <lb/>
All four of the tobacco ware-1 Sunday here, <lb/>
houses are placed in <lb/>
for the opening of the sea- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
The mud hole in front of the <lb/>
foundry on Dickerson avenue <lb/>
has enlarged until it takes the <lb/>
sidewalk as well as the street. <lb/>
Good loads and factories are <lb/>
commanding much attention <lb/>
throughout the State. Greenville <lb/>
should feel interested both- <lb/>
Lumber is being hauled <lb/>
to building a large prize <lb/>
house for Forbes ad <lb/>
joining the Planters Warehouse <lb/>
It is easy enough to and <lb/>
, find fault with what somebody <lb/>
else does, and at the same time <lb/>
make excuse for what is done by <lb/>
self. y <lb/>
editor <lb/>
is <lb/>
obligations to Mr. W. G. Lamb <lb/>
for a very handsome tie from his <lb/>
samples. Be carries a beautiful <lb/>
Odors at night in some <lb/>
of the town are so offensive <lb/>
as to be almost nauseating. Such <lb/>
dangers to health should be look- <lb/>
i ed after. <lb/>
j The fall session of <lb/>
i Male Academy, W. H- <lb/>
Principal, Monday, <lb/>
2nd. Announcement appears in <lb/>
another column. <lb/>
One No. Mill, complete <lb/>
f u sale cheap. D. Haskett. <lb/>
Every time a business man <lb/>
talks hard times he loses a trade <lb/>
by frightening some people that <lb/>
they will hide their ready money <lb/>
instead of spending it. <lb/>
We hoar that i severe storm <lb/>
passed the Latham X Roads sec- <lb/>
between Wash <lb/>
Tuesday afternoon, and <lb/>
did damage to crops. <lb/>
Carolina Christian College <lb/>
opens Sept L T. <lb/>
Ayden, N- C- <lb/>
Mr. 8- of Green- <lb/>
ville, lectured in p liters church <lb/>
We have beard tie <lb/>
lecture complimented very highly <lb/>
this morning. Washington Mar <lb/>
Mr. George Yon tie ford, a ten- <lb/>
ant on Sheriff 13- <lb/>
place near Ballard's X <lb/>
lost a tobacco barn by fire on <lb/>
Saturday. barn was <lb/>
tobacco.<lb/>
Mr. T. L. Turnage, of spent <lb/>
Friday in town. <lb/>
Mr W. returned to-day from <lb/>
Scotland Neck. <lb/>
Mrs. T. is visiting rel- <lb/>
a in Wilson. <lb/>
Mi.-s Lucy Cox baa gone to Wilton <lb/>
and Morehead City. <lb/>
W. is on a visit to <lb/>
his t at Hertford. <lb/>
Mr. Peter Smith, of Scotland Neck, <lb/>
Win in Monday evening. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. D. M. Edwards left <lb/>
Wednesday for Tarboro. <lb/>
Rev. A. left Wednesday <lb/>
to return to the Seminary. <lb/>
Mr. D. S. Smith returned Friday from <lb/>
his visit to Greene county. <lb/>
Mr. W. stem, n prominent leaf deal <lb/>
of Oxford, has located herb. <lb/>
Mr S. Littleton, is visiting <lb/>
his sister, Mrs. B. Latham. <lb/>
Ids many friends were glad to sec <lb/>
Mr. J. E. Starkey out Sunday. <lb/>
Mr. H. W. Ward, Deputy Register of <lb/>
Deeds, went Ocracoke Saturday. <lb/>
Rev. J. M. of Ayden, editor <lb/>
of the Free Will was here Friday. <lb/>
Mr. W. J. B. Blow, has i on a <lb/>
visit ed Thurs- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mr. If. E. COX, who has been on a <lb/>
visit home, returned to New York M in- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Mrs. P. C. and <lb/>
Miss for Chapel <lb/>
Hill, <lb/>
Miss Annie returned Sat- <lb/>
evening from a hilt to <lb/>
Hill. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs, J. have <lb/>
to to make that city their <lb/>
Hume. <lb/>
Mis. C. W. and children, of <lb/>
Baltimore, are Mrs. F. Q. <lb/>
James. <lb/>
Mr. J. B. Latham moved into Mr. <lb/>
II. C. Edwards new house in Forbes- <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Mrs. W. C. and Miss Allie <lb/>
Proctor have to Sampson county <lb/>
for a visit. <lb/>
Mrs. William of Falkland, <lb/>
took the train Monday morning for <lb/>
Littleton, <lb/>
Mr. Murphy, former postal e on <lb/>
the Washington spent <lb/>
night here. <lb/>
Mr. W. Ii. of came <lb/>
evening a nil went down to <lb/>
Mr. W- It. Smith has regained tab <lb/>
of I and returned to his position in <lb/>
Oxford yesterday <lb/>
for correct answers. <lb/>
Club Rats Withdrawn <lb/>
Our offer of The Eastern Re- <lb/>
and Atlanta Constitution <lb/>
both a year for is now with- <lb/>
drawn. After working up a good <lb/>
list for it, the Constitution bus <lb/>
advanced the rate at which that <lb/>
paper was furnished us. <lb/>
the price of the re- <lb/>
mains the a <lb/>
you can get the news for that <lb/>
amount- <lb/>
Married. <lb/>
Married at residence of the <lb/>
bride's father, Mr. Turner <lb/>
son, by the Rev. R. W. Hines, on <lb/>
July 1893, Nathaniel War- <lb/>
re u Miss Viola both <lb/>
of N. C. <lb/>
Near Scotland Neck, on July <lb/>
10th, 1895, at the residence of the <lb/>
bride's mother, Mrs. Martha <lb/>
by the Rev. R. W. Hines, <lb/>
John Hale and Miss Lucy Harris, <lb/>
both of Halifax county, N. C- <lb/>
Capt. J. T. Smith tells us the <lb/>
Pitt Rifles the <lb/>
HE at Ocracoke next <lb/>
month. The tobacco <lb/>
keeping of boys so <lb/>
Reflections, w-y get <lb/>
ml . , , . A who had not been <lb/>
There were several loads of to-1 to in two years slip- <lb/>
the train, Monday even <lb/>
and was heard to express <lb/>
at seeing so <lb/>
new <lb/>
lime. <lb/>
in market to-day- <lb/>
Watermelons getting more <lb/>
plentiful, but the price is still way <lb/>
up. <lb/>
I hi <lb/>
between the, small boy and <lb/>
the June bug. <lb/>
The farmers are so busy curing <lb/>
tobacco that very few of are I clean and free t <lb/>
f in tow; <lb/>
Air- Charles is a <lb/>
-tore depot on the in e <lb/>
of Tenth street. <lb/>
Agent J. R. has just had <lb/>
his residence near the depot <lb/>
handsomely repainted <lb/>
marriage licenses <lb/>
have been issued in this <lb/>
in the last two <lb/>
Au evening paper called the <lb/>
New has been started at Bath, <lb/>
M- F. Haskett is editor. <lb/>
The tobacco Hue manufacturers, <lb/>
having to work until late at <lb/>
night to up with orders- <lb/>
will be in at the <lb/>
Ring House Thursday, August <lb/>
1st, for purpose of treating <lb/>
Y and diseases the eye. <lb/>
H. 0- Hyatt. <lb/>
Saturday evening such a large <lb/>
lot of furniture left J. B. Cherry <lb/>
Cos store that it looked like <lb/>
somebody was moving. <lb/>
Work is now progress <lb/>
seven buildings in the <lb/>
tobacco quarter, and two other <lb/>
Have completed. <lb/>
your cotton seed to <lb/>
Sheppard, and buy your <lb/>
Meal and Hulls. Car load of each <lb/>
just arrived sale cheap. <lb/>
Several companies of the first <lb/>
regiment of the Guard are <lb/>
for an at <lb/>
early in August. <lb/>
We are now the midst of <lb/>
and according to the <lb/>
best authorities we do too <lb/>
toward keeping our <lb/>
i. <lb/>
of kin <lb/>
r . u <lb/>
Yesterday Dr. If. Brown- <lb/>
is attending a sick child of <lb/>
Mr. D S- on Pitt street, pro <lb/>
it a case of scarlet fever. <lb/>
It was reported to tie <lb/>
to <lb/>
the disease <lb/>
. that people <lb/>
I nave to close their doors at night <lb/>
to keep out offensive odors, as <lb/>
some people say they had <lb/>
night, it looks like the <lb/>
time had come to have the town, <lb/>
cleaned up. <lb/>
There's only one right way to <lb/>
advertise, and that is to hammer <lb/>
your name, your location and <lb/>
your business so constantly, so <lb/>
insistently and so thoroughly in- <lb/>
to the people's heads that if <lb/>
their sleep will in- <lb/>
turn their steps toward <lb/>
your <lb/>
We have received a neat little <lb/>
entitled you Read <lb/>
the Bible a Five Minute Talk <lb/>
to Church Members by a Lay- <lb/>
Its author <lb/>
Miss Dunn, of Scotland Neck, <lb/>
who was visiting Mrs. K. B. re- <lb/>
turned Thursday. <lb/>
mm who Wm vis- <lb/>
Mrs. returned <lb/>
to her Home in Saratoga. <lb/>
Mr. V. T. Carr, of Willow Greene, <lb/>
and H. K. Cotten, of <lb/>
wait- our streets Friday. <lb/>
Mr. XV. C. Billings, of <lb/>
arrived to <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Mi-so- Lona <lb/>
N an- Port left <lb/>
for a visit to Mount <lb/>
Mrs. Vines fame in from Lit- <lb/>
ton on Friday and left <lb/>
at once for her in <lb/>
, . i . T lit. <lb/>
f- L- and <lb/>
home Saturday <lb/>
later, Mi <lb/>
y f rum a <lb/>
visit of several weeks to Beaufort. <lb/>
Mr- Alex who was an en <lb/>
of the Ci, has re-, <lb/>
turned to his home at <lb/>
who has been visit. <lb/>
B. left for <lb/>
in Scotland morning. <lb/>
Ml. W. of was <lb/>
In town Friday. He over on a new <lb/>
Victor bicycle that is a beauty. <lb/>
Messrs. K. E. Gordon B. F. <lb/>
two county plant-, <lb/>
had a load of new on <lb/>
Friday. <lb/>
Mr. S. J. chM of of <lb/>
Newport Sews, Va,. bore <lb/>
a party who <lb/>
s wanted In <lb/>
Ex. Gov. Jarvis made a brief <lb/>
home from Morehead. arriving Friday <lb/>
evening. He returned there Saturday <lb/>
afternoon and he and Mrs. Jarvis will <lb/>
go to Connelly this week. <lb/>
Miss Raleigh, who, <lb/>
has visiting the family of <lb/>
Monday Mia <lb/>
her home <lb/>
will time in <lb/>
Mr. H. Smith, of the Beaufort <lb/>
Lumber Co., spent Thursday <lb/>
here and returned to Ayden on the <lb/>
evening train We hope soon to see <lb/>
him numbered among Greenville's cit- <lb/>
W Has. H. <lb/>
assistant in the <lb/>
Hilliard of who went home <lb/>
and pl to Ma bed and there <lb/>
sent to any one for a cent that be may have con- <lb/>
New Houses. <lb/>
i; s on fast in <lb/>
Greenville I hit new houses as- <lb/>
almost before <lb/>
of it. we <lb/>
noticed the frame of a building <lb/>
near the <lb/>
Warehouse, when we did not re- <lb/>
member seeing even a piece of <lb/>
lumber there when passing the <lb/>
same way during the morning. <lb/>
about it disclosed the <lb/>
fact that this building is to be <lb/>
for a <lb/>
Who That Melon <lb/>
Mr. R. M. Starkey has a nice <lb/>
melon patch in his front <lb/>
Friday morning he went out <lb/>
pulled two Hue melons, placed <lb/>
them the front porch and took <lb/>
a town. Upon his re- <lb/>
turn the melons had dis- <lb/>
appeared. H thinks cause <lb/>
of this lay , <lb/>
four, but which of the four is the <lb/>
At rate be is mi- <lb/>
a melon, he would <lb/>
be triad if whoever has it would <lb/>
return it, as his better half will <lb/>
be home Saturday and he wants <lb/>
a for her. <lb/>
them had a habit of up to <lb/>
water tank near the river and <lb/>
getting off there. Wednesday <lb/>
morning the newsboy on the <lb/>
Mr. L. R. Carter, in a spirit of fun <lb/>
hold of a colored boy <lb/>
named Andrew who was <lb/>
stealing a ride, prevented him <lb/>
getting off tho train at <lb/>
The train passed on across the <lb/>
river and when out <lb/>
beyond the embankment the boy <lb/>
jumped off. The boy was shock- <lb/>
ed in the fall and one side of his <lb/>
face badly hurt. He came back <lb/>
into and reported that the <lb/>
newsboy held him on the train <lb/>
until it was running at a high <lb/>
speed then him off. <lb/>
Upon application to Esquire B. <lb/>
S. Sheppard a warrant <lb/>
assault was issued against Carter <lb/>
and when the train came Wed <lb/>
evening an officer arrested <lb/>
him. The case has been set for a I <lb/>
hearing Saturday morning. We j <lb/>
that persons seeing the <lb/>
say Carter did not push ; <lb/>
the boy the but the boy <lb/>
jumped off of Ins own <lb/>
when the was <lb/>
eight hour, after being <lb/>
stay the train <lb/>
House station was reached. In <lb/>
tho place, the boy had no <lb/>
business on the <lb/>
, Gave Leg Bail. <lb/>
The trial of M. L. Carter, the <lb/>
newsboy, which was set for this <lb/>
did not take place, Car- <lb/>
being conspicuous by his ab- <lb/>
He went up to the depot <lb/>
Thursday presumably to arrange <lb/>
his bond and has not been seen <lb/>
here since It is supposed that he <lb/>
was so badly frightened over be <lb/>
arrested that he left foot <lb/>
at first From what <lb/>
can be gathered there was not <lb/>
much a case him <lb/>
no need of his being afraid to <lb/>
trial. <lb/>
Scanning our State exchanges <lb/>
for last week and noting their ac- <lb/>
counts of the late Press Con <lb/>
and trip to Morehead has <lb/>
afforded a deal cf interesting <lb/>
reading- <lb/>
PLAIN FACTS. <lb/>
DRY GOODS. Shirt Waists. <lb/>
Our 35-cent Shirt Waist,, <lb/>
Our 60-cent Shirt <lb/>
Shirt Waist. now <lb/>
Shirt <lb/>
Monday Mr. Joe <lb/>
Grifton, brought two <lb/>
to and turned <lb/>
them over to the Sheriff for safe <lb/>
keeping. They stole a horse <lb/>
Saturday night from Mr. George <lb/>
Gardner. <lb/>
The Only <lb/>
Great and thoroughly re- <lb/>
liable building-up medicine, <lb/>
nerve tonic, and <lb/>
Blood <lb/>
Purifier r <lb/>
Before the people today, and <lb/>
which stands preeminently <lb/>
above all other medicines, is <lb/>
HOOD'S <lb/>
Sarsaparilla <lb/>
It has won its hold upon the <lb/>
hearts of the people by its <lb/>
own absolute intrinsic merit. <lb/>
It is not what we say, but <lb/>
what Hood's Sarsaparilla <lb/>
does that tells the <lb/>
Hood's Cures <lb/>
Even when all other <lb/>
and prescriptions fail. <lb/>
a blood purifier we cannot find <lb/>
the equal of Hood's <lb/>
When any of our family complain of <lb/>
headache or tired feeling we get <lb/>
Howl's Sarsaparilla, and in a short <lb/>
time we are in good <lb/>
B. Mather, Short St., Aurora, <lb/>
Illinois. <lb/>
Get HOOD'S <lb/>
id's Pills <lb/>
All druggists. <lb/>
His Arm Amputated, <lb/>
On lay. Mr. Nelson <lb/>
Warren, a young man of <lb/>
township, got his baud badly <lb/>
cut by an edging saw Wool-. <lb/>
mill- The. cut so bad <lb/>
that mortification <lb/>
Thursday <lb/>
Drown amputated his a. m below <lb/>
the elbow- Last summer both pa <lb/>
rents of young died, <lb/>
several small be <lb/>
for him, and it was <lb/>
trying to make a support <lb/>
for that he met with the ac- <lb/>
that cost him his mm- i <lb/>
a sad case- <lb/>
Mouses Br ken <lb/>
Thursday into <lb/>
Joe by break- <lb/>
a glass from a window <lb/>
removing a bolt, and then tried <lb/>
break through door <lb/>
leading to. Mr t. Hooker's <lb/>
room- Failing to in v of <lb/>
fort was made t back door of <lb/>
the. bar room which was cut <lb/>
but without an entrance <lb/>
being effected. The thief then <lb/>
went to Steve <lb/>
near by and, through a <lb/>
door. was <lb/>
missed from hut some <lb/>
cakes, the places he was <lb/>
trying to. in, we judge the <lb/>
thief was both dry and <lb/>
and wanted to feast at the expense <lb/>
of others. <lb/>
stamp to pay postage. <lb/>
Time for Action. <lb/>
What is the reason Greenville <lb/>
cannot have a Board of Trade t <lb/>
A little organization <lb/>
A men a proper <lb/>
t the Brick fort iD that direction might <lb/>
The Tobacco Journal or more of the factories that <lb/>
will issue a woman's edition next <lb/>
Mrs. Cotten, of this <lb/>
if. <lb/>
Fob bushels <lb/>
known Peas, by J. L Starkey <lb/>
fife <lb/>
We are indebted to rs W. R. <lb/>
for a basket of deli- <lb/>
peaches, <lb/>
and a turnip measuring <lb/>
inches in circumference, which <lb/>
she sent us this morning. <lb/>
Tobacco Growers Attention. <lb/>
We have just received a large <lb/>
quantity of tobacco flue iron o- <lb/>
are seeking desirable locations in <lb/>
this State if people <lb/>
to sit still in the face of <lb/>
of <lb/>
may expect other towns to bear <lb/>
off tho prizes. <lb/>
Colored Boy Drowned. <lb/>
Between and o'clock this <lb/>
some email <lb/>
were playing about the wharf <lb/>
when one of them named Jim <lb/>
Johnson, about years old, fell <lb/>
over into the river and was drown- <lb/>
ed. The other boys were so fright <lb/>
that they did not render<lb/>
good quality and clean, any assistance. Agent J. J. <lb/>
Cherry, who was in his <lb/>
saw the boy struggling in the <lb/>
and ran down to try to save <lb/>
him, but just as be got on the <lb/>
boy sank. Parties are <lb/>
dragging for tho body the <lb/>
who have ordered flues from n <lb/>
can get them now at any time <lb/>
S. E- Co- <lb/>
O. L- <lb/>
Hooker. <lb/>
that their sales of <lb/>
.------- . .-- <lb/>
those of that re- <lb/>
other. There U no substitute for Hoods. jg doubtful. <lb/>
tinned fever. <lb/>
Miss Bettie came in on the <lb/>
train. Thursday evening, from a visit <lb/>
to Hobgood and after a s; <lb/>
Mat on to Snow <lb/>
Hill. There are several here who are <lb/>
sorry site not remain longer in <lb/>
DOUBLE HANGING. <lb/>
Anderson Brown Whit <lb/>
Pay the Penalty of Their Crimes <lb/>
in of <lb/>
to <lb/>
N- C, July <lb/>
Notwithstanding the heavy rains <lb/>
last night and this morning there <lb/>
were about five thousand people <lb/>
here to witness the execution of <lb/>
Anderson Brown and Fer- <lb/>
rand, were last <lb/>
May to be hanged to-day for <lb/>
murder. <lb/>
The drop fell at and both <lb/>
were dead in fifteen minutes- <lb/>
Brown both confess <lb/>
their crimes previous to <lb/>
crime was killing <lb/>
pi his and <lb/>
an officer who h <lb/>
gone out to arrest <lb/>
The Sunday School c. <lb/>
What a delightful time was <lb/>
the exclamation of every as <lb/>
the R. L. Myers steamed slowly <lb/>
up to her wharf, at Friday <lb/>
afternoon, laden with the hap- <lb/>
merriest party of pleasure <lb/>
seekers ever gathered her <lb/>
much decks. It was <lb/>
the occasion of the sum- <lb/>
mer of the Sunday <lb/>
school. But through <lb/>
of teachers and <lb/>
the did <lb/>
not compose tho <lb/>
of the party visitor,, whom <lb/>
your reporter was have <lb/>
many thanks to return for a most <lb/>
enjoyable The boat <lb/>
left ch wharf leaking her <lb/>
way the management of <lb/>
the to Yankee <lb/>
Hall, while children grown <lb/>
folks themselves to <lb/>
Strained and all <lb/>
that youth know <lb/>
so, well how to on such <lb/>
Refreshments the <lb/>
effluent of <lb/>
aid were by fair j <lb/>
the form of refresHing saucers <lb/>
piled ice cream. <lb/>
was its merit as this <lb/>
fact goes to prove. <lb/>
were, <lb/>
o the <lb/>
M to <lb/>
him as stiff as the <lb/>
. . t i The next session of college will <lb/>
. Let your reporter <lb/>
explain ho-heard his own county seats Saturday in <lb/>
ft is in the tires and rims that Rambler <lb/>
excellence in most apparent. They are less <lb/>
likely to or break than any others, and <lb/>
All <lb/>
better <lb/>
at any tor the same or <lb/>
less. Catalog free <lb/>
JEFFERY MFG. CO., <lb/>
WASHINGTON, D. C. <lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
m mum mi <lb/>
Young men desiring a <lb/>
at an illy low cost will <lb/>
well to apply for a to <lb/>
A. Q. <lb/>
N. C- <lb/>
om in n, <lb/>
A who does not <lb/>
out the country often tells the <lb/>
that the other day he <lb/>
took a trip cut the Beaver Dam <lb/>
The splendid growing <lb/>
crops were a revelation, him. <lb/>
A great <lb/>
new barns wore noticed going up <lb/>
and old ones being repaired. Ho <lb/>
stopped at Mr. William <lb/>
and went over farm. <lb/>
is a model young far, <lb/>
mer and has his place fully up to <lb/>
date. He also visited Mr. T. A. <lb/>
Nichols and was very much <lb/>
pressed with the crop of <lb/>
young ladies be found gathered <lb/>
there, and <lb/>
being represented. It <lb/>
looked like a opportunity <lb/>
for the young men reap <lb/>
The <lb/>
in was very much <lb/>
with trip <lb/>
be is going again- <lb/>
E B. has <lb/>
ham his home for some time left <lb/>
today for N- C-; where <lb/>
up will the He <lb/>
goes there to engage in the to <lb/>
business. His family will <lb/>
used many <lb/>
freezers <lb/>
for a he <lb/>
never <lb/>
The editor, as ho us our <lb/>
ticket, stipulated for jokes, I <lb/>
so with in hand we made <lb/>
the earnestly requesting <lb/>
jokes, but The. nearest <lb/>
we came to tho <lb/>
to look at lawyer Flem- <lb/>
Well, we saw many more <lb/>
such, but submit we were not <lb/>
to do them justice. <lb/>
The party just front of the pi- j <lb/>
lot house, it is true, seemed l <lb/>
gaged it some <lb/>
but there was an absence <lb/>
billings to add <lb/>
W. F- Harding who <lb/>
mp of the bu- <lb/>
will supply others <lb/>
cation. <lb/>
yells <lb/>
and cheers of we don't just <lb/>
what, from the the <lb/>
I with i <lb/>
Wt her much too early <lb/>
by agreement. We <lb/>
would fain have seen more of <lb/>
moon ad more of each <lb/>
its sympathetic rays. <lb/>
For Barb Wire Cuts, ., <lb/>
Saddle and Collar Galls, Cracked Heel <lb/>
Burns, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruis. I. <lb/>
and all kinds of inflammation <lb/>
man or beast. Cures Itch and . <lb/>
B, Cat or via c. <lb/>
hit <lb/>
He prepared tor accident H In<lb/>
No Cure, Ma Nb ct, <lb/>
nut keep it send In pot- <lb/>
and will send It to you by mail, <lb/>
. .<lb/>
Saddle Wire <lb/>
with perfect and I It I <lb/>
Board has been per <lb/>
day at the Atlantic Hotel, More <lb/>
head, for the remainder of the <lb/>
season. <lb/>
BABY <lb/>
m a word <lb/>
Oil l. ab; M burned a <lb/>
. r. i.-. .- <lb/>
gave relief, and in a tow day. IV <lb/>
. w.-l Die on and <lb/>
II I. the boat remedy for that have ever <lb/>
a T. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
PARIS MEDICINE CO- <lb/>
ST. LOCI. MO <lb/>
Sold guaranteed by J. <lb/>
druggist.<lb/>
Scotch Lawns <lb/>
Satin Lace Stripped Mitts <lb/>
Silk and Wool <lb/>
Colored Dotted Swiss <lb/>
Colored <lb/>
Cloths <lb/>
French Sateens <lb/>
Dotted Swiss <lb/>
STRAW HATS. <lb/>
Our Dollar Or, <lb/>
Our <lb/>
Our <lb/>
Our <lb/>
styles to select from. <lb/>
Crinkled Cloths an Cuffs- Game <lb/>
While Goods cents up. <lb/>
La Vest Scents, former price. <lb/>
See La <lb/>
HAMBURGS.<lb/>
8-amt cents. <lb/>
. cents. <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
Underwear. and Suspenders <lb/>
at panic prices. <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
Men, Youth and Boys mum <lb/>
go to make room for fall stock. <lb/>
PANTS GOODS. <lb/>
Our <lb/>
Our 49-cent <lb/>
Our <lb/>
Our 24-cent <lb/>
Remember to set these pi ices it takes the <lb/>
Hard down and don't yon forget it. <lb/>
Yours for business, <lb/>
C. T.<lb/>
WE <lb/>
ARE THE PEOPLE <lb/>
-Who want your trade on- <lb/>
JARS, <lb/>
Jelly <lb/>
Tobacco Knives. <lb/>
DRY GOODS, <lb/>
Shoes, Groceries <lb/>
FURNITURE. <lb/>
We can very cheap. <lb/>
Call on us for lowest prices on all goods. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Male School. <lb/>
I lie only School in Carolina tor <lb/>
and Men. <lb/>
literary Societies- Course. <lb/>
Good barracks, location, of Instruction Only the <lb/>
better of begins ST t <lb/>
will show what means for a boy here, for one.<lb/>
Scotland Neck, N. C. <lb/>
the Saturday In <lb/>
Instruction h Dairy <lb/>
and Of Mat he <lb/>
I and Science, to their i <lb/>
Lira week Durham <lb/>
He will auctioneer <lb/>
Star <lb/>
The Agricultural and College for the <lb/>
Colored Race, at N. C. <lb/>
fee will begin Wednesday, 2nd. ad- <lb/>
minion will lie made and October Silt <lb/>
students will be made county on <lb/>
.-- it III-, In . <lb/>
the Me <lb/>
in industries of life. <lb/>
admitted for In addition to the regular <lb/>
will be given in Cooking and <lb/>
work, <lb/>
Till School Is endowed by the Jotted Stales, and fie of Carol <lb/>
U not controlled or by any in <lb/>
County <lb/>
. . Tuition, 810.00 <lb/>
Board, per week t 1.85 <lb/>
use of room, bedding, per it , <lb/>
Instruction <lb/>
tor use of piano per <lb/>
additional terms see which can by <lb/>
of The Agricultural an I Mechanical -College <lb/>
K. C. <lb/>
It i not sec <lb/>
nation. <lb/>
January <lb/>
In of the removal of the Military Academy from Fay <lb/>
to Wilson the name of this institution of learning will here, <lb/>
after be know,, Military Academy. The <lb/>
With greater facilities, bettor <lb/>
and and. if possible, brighter the school enter <lb/>
upon it third year with every ind cation or a much larger patronage and more <lb/>
usefulness The most thorough instruction is given in literary and <lb/>
branches; and moral culture and physical training receive doe attention. <lb/>
The Third Annual Announcement, full will be mailed to <lb/>
any address upon application. Address <lb/>
Maj. J. W. Supt., <lb/>
Wilson, N. C <lb/>
University of N. C, <lb/>
a the University, Col- <lb/>
the Law and Medical Schools, and <lb/>
the Summer School for Teachers, <lb/>
Teachers, <lb/>
President Winston Chapel <lb/>
X. C, for and <lb/>
book on <lb/>
WALL PAPER <lb/>
have removed my Wall Paper to <lb/>
to the Marcel Ins Moore store and <lb/>
have added a lot of new samples. <lb/>
Come before the prettiest are <lb/>
selected. yon <lb/>
had to beauty your house at <lb/>
a small coat. Prices a low a <lb/>
three cents a roll of <lb/>
B. ELLINGTON.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017756_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
Exhausted Soils <lb/>
are made to produce larger and better crops by the <lb/>
use of Fertilizers rich in Potash. <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 KALI WORKS, Nassau Street, New York. <lb/>
Established <lb/>
PORK S <lb/>
their year's supplies will <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. is complete <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
Hi t <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF A. CIGARS <lb/>
we Dy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
Heir Apparent <lb/>
Care a <lb/>
th. ism. <lb/>
Albert Edward, prince of Wales, <lb/>
is perhaps the most popular man in <lb/>
England. This popularity is due to <lb/>
bis love of sports and all manly <lb/>
which are particularly com- <lb/>
in the eyes of the <lb/>
Britisher. As a his <lb/>
and appreciation of it <lb/>
a or victim, <lb/>
known. <lb/>
One Of his early escapades <lb/>
in her majesty, the queen, footing a <lb/>
bill for broken crockery and wrecked <lb/>
furniture which the young prince <lb/>
caused in the house of one of the <lb/>
lesser members of the nobility. A <lb/>
rather elderly countess, whose <lb/>
quick temper and sharp tongue <lb/>
drove even her servants from <lb/>
her, advertised for a footman. The <lb/>
prince, to whose cars tales of the <lb/>
of the old lady had come, <lb/>
resolved to teach her a lesson. <lb/>
times. Our goods bought and I therefore presented himself in dis- <lb/>
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk at her lad house and <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
s. <lb/>
LANIER CO. <lb/>
DEALER IX <lb/>
MARBLE. <lb/>
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb/>
sold. First-class work <lb/>
and prices reasonable. <lb/>
WILMINGTON ELI ON ft. H <lb/>
AND BRANCHES. <lb/>
AND FLORENCE BAIL RoAD. <lb/>
Schedule, <lb/>
i, <lb/>
Leave Weldon <lb/>
Ar. Mt <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Rocky Mt <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar. Florence <lb/>
y, z <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
plied for the position of footman. <lb/>
The countess had just finished her <lb/>
N. C breakfast, and, pushing her chair <lb/>
back from the table, instructed <lb/>
servant to bring before her the <lb/>
The prince was therefore <lb/>
ushered into the room. The countess <lb/>
looked him over from his feet up. <lb/>
Apparently pleased with the an- <lb/>
of the prince, she <lb/>
Let me see you <lb/>
Albert Edward did as commanded <lb/>
walked backward and forward <lb/>
nUll several times across the floor from <lb/>
I II end of the room to the other, now <lb/>
briskly at the request of the <lb/>
j lady and then pacing slowly, as <lb/>
wished to obtain points on this <lb/>
This performance over, the <lb/>
r-unless ordered him to trot. The <lb/>
dining room still the theater of <lb/>
action, the prince trotted around <lb/>
several tines. When this exercise <lb/>
was completed he again came to a <lb/>
standstill near the head of taM table, <lb/>
the countess was seated. <lb/>
ladyship seemed pleased, at. was <lb/>
just on the point of asking the <lb/>
man some questions about himself <lb/>
when he <lb/>
see me <lb/>
a corner of the <lb/>
cloth firmly in one hand, the <lb/>
rushed around the room, pulling <lb/>
crockery off on the floor in a heap, <lb/>
knocking over the furniture and <lb/>
finally winding her ladyship up in <lb/>
the folds of the cloth. He then <lb/>
bolted for the door, leaving the <lb/>
A. II<lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Lt <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington<lb/>
lo <lb/>
P. <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
I on <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
I countess sputtering and shouting <lb/>
and the servants running about in i <lb/>
distracted way to liberate their mis <lb/>
tress and quiet her rage. <lb/>
In the hubbub and confusion the <lb/>
prince escaped. The next day a <lb/>
check from the keeper of the privy <lb/>
purse settled the amount of the <lb/>
damages, and likewise established <lb/>
the identity the mischief maker. <lb/>
wen <lb/>
proposed to las <lb/>
do <lb/>
I J. <lb/>
The a w<lb/>
July <lb/>
1ST. <lb/>
c a <lb/>
A. <lb/>
M.<lb/>
Fayetteville <lb/>
Selma <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
t Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mt <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Rocky Mt <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
y z <lb/>
.,.;, <lb/>
P. H.<lb/>
O K <lb/>
y, <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
-so; <lb/>
3-1 I <lb/>
P. M P.<lb/>
4- <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch <lb/>
3.40 p. m., Halifax 4.06 <lb/>
arrives Scotland Neck at <lb/>
Greenville 6.87 p. m Kinston 7.35 <lb/>
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston <lb/>
a. in., Greenville 8.22 a. m. <lb/>
Halifax t 11.00 a. m am <lb/>
except <lb/>
leave <lb/>
7.00 a, n,., arrives <lb/>
8.40 p. m. Tarboro returning <lb/>
Tarboro 4.50 p. m., 6.10 <lb/>
p. arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb/>
except Sunday. Connects with <lb/>
trains on Branch. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Aloe- <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun <lb/>
day, at o p. m., Sunday p m <lb/>
arrive Plymouth 3.20 P. M., 5.20 p. m. <lb/>
leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
a. m., Sunday it m. <lb/>
arrive 10.25 and <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
N lea <lb/>
daily except Sun day, U <lb/>
m. riving a m. Ba <lb/>
a. <lb/>
arrive a- a. m. <lb/>
Trains on Nashville leave <lb/>
Mount at 4.30 p. <lb/>
J On p. m. Spring Hope 5.30. <lb/>
p. m. leaves Hone <lb/>
n. <lb/>
Rocky Mount m., <lb/>
Trains Florence R. <lb/>
K. p. i., arrive <lb/>
bar 8.00 put. <lb/>
Latta <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
Train on Branch leaves War- <lb/>
M daily, except Sunday <lb/>
at <lb/>
line trains. <lb/>
j; i, <lb/>
T. <lb/>
a. m. <lb/>
This <lb/>
You ever day <lb/>
in the month of <lb/>
July that 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 always suits. <lb/>
These points are <lb/>
well worth weighing <lb/>
in any sort <lb/>
of work, but <lb/>
above all things hi <lb/>
Your job Printing. <lb/>
THE NEW CANAL. <lb/>
It Compares Favorably with the. Amer- <lb/>
Sault Route. <lb/>
The almost utter silence and total <lb/>
lack of ceremony with which the <lb/>
Canadian parliament has treated the <lb/>
completion of new canal is <lb/>
in striking contrast with the value <lb/>
of the threat engineering work in its <lb/>
relation to the dominion's vast chain <lb/>
of artificial waterways. The rapid- <lb/>
with which the enterprise has <lb/>
been accomplished has been notable. <lb/>
Canada did not seriously conceive <lb/>
the idea of this canal around the falls <lb/>
of St. Mary's river on her own side <lb/>
until seven years ago, and on <lb/>
last the water was admit- <lb/>
to the lock for the first time. <lb/>
The size of the new may <lb/>
best be appreciated by comparison of <lb/>
this lock with the latest lock of the <lb/>
American route. The Can- <lb/>
chamber nine hundred feet <lb/>
sixty foot is deep <lb/>
tit <lb/>
eight <lb/>
Mi e- fee <lb/>
wide and twenty-one feet deep. <lb/>
The exact value of this new Can- <lb/>
depends upon its relation <lb/>
to the chain of Canadian canals from <lb/>
Lake Superior to the St. Lawrence. <lb/>
The extent of rivalry between the <lb/>
United States and the dominion for <lb/>
the immense traffic of the great <lb/>
of all the seaport <lb/>
tonnage of the United <lb/>
be determined by the average depth <lb/>
of continuous ship channel. <lb/>
By the engineering improvement <lb/>
of St. Clair Flats and the Lime Kilns, <lb/>
near Detroit, the American lake <lb/>
route will soon have a through <lb/>
depth of feet, will be <lb/>
a long time before the Canadian sys- <lb/>
shall possess throughout <lb/>
for vessels of twenty-five <lb/>
hundred tons burden. Nevertheless, <lb/>
the day is not far distant when Can- <lb/>
will make a desperate struggle <lb/>
for the carriage of the commerce of <lb/>
the groat <lb/>
AT SEA. <lb/>
Tests Prove That the White Light Is <lb/>
the Most Easily Seen. <lb/>
Some Interesting <lb/>
have been made on the visibility of <lb/>
the electric light at sea by the gov <lb/>
of the United States, Ger- <lb/>
many the Netherlands. The <lb/>
word tho report on the <lb/>
means visible on a dark night <lb/>
with a clear atmosphere. The re- <lb/>
of tho experience of the German <lb/>
committee was that a white light of <lb/>
candle power was visible 1.4 <lb/>
mires on a night, and <lb/>
mile on a rainy night. The <lb/>
can tests resulted as In very <lb/>
clear weather a light of candle <lb/>
power was plainly visible at <lb/>
nautical mile; om of candle <lb/>
power at miles, one of lo <lb/>
power was seen by the aid of a <lb/>
binocular at miles; one candle <lb/>
power faintly at miles, and one of <lb/>
candle power plainly at miles. <lb/>
On an exceptionally night a <lb/>
white light of 8.2 power <lb/>
readily distinguished at miles; one <lb/>
of candle power at miles and <lb/>
of 17.2 power at miles. In <lb/>
the Dutch experiments the results <lb/>
were almost similar, but a <lb/>
power light was plainly visible at <lb/>
miles. For a green light the power <lb/>
required was for mile, for <lb/>
miles, for miles and for <lb/>
miles. The results of tests with a <lb/>
red light wire almost identical with <lb/>
those with green, it was coo- <lb/>
proved that k white <lb/>
--is am <lb/>
with <lb/>
of the in their delight <lb/>
that a lady worth forty million <lb/>
a year will shortly visit New <lb/>
York. She may, naturally, while <lb/>
steamers are temptingly running <lb/>
America and England in six <lb/>
days, find it seductive to take a look <lb/>
at London, where she would indeed <lb/>
be a somebody and find all the shops <lb/>
open day and night on purpose <lb/>
to oblige her. The lady in question <lb/>
is a of the name of <lb/>
She is fortunately a <lb/>
woman of mature chances <lb/>
of her eloping are, therefore, less- <lb/>
while the chances of the old <lb/>
boys arc increased. She ranks as <lb/>
the richest woman In the world, and <lb/>
who is her male equal She Is a <lb/>
woman of excellent culture and <lb/>
business diminish <lb/>
the chances of the fortune hunters; <lb/>
the must won for his worth. The <lb/>
tastes are simple, but <lb/>
accurate. She Is great on the sub- <lb/>
of mines and ranches, and does <lb/>
not delight in grand dinners. This <lb/>
is. all that is known as yet of the <lb/>
manifold millionaire, and, naturally, <lb/>
as such, most pf women. <lb/>
London Court Journal. <lb/>
A MUSICAL PRODIGY. <lb/>
He Secured a Liberal Musical <lb/>
Education. <lb/>
Eight years New York city <lb/>
Girt wild over little He <lb/>
created an excitement tho like <lb/>
which We did not See <lb/>
appeared hero in 1892. He was such <lb/>
a little fellow that it looked <lb/>
though he could be carried away in <lb/>
the pocket of a greatcoat. He was <lb/>
only ten years of age, but he played <lb/>
the piano marvelously. Gerry tried <lb/>
to stop his playing tho public, <lb/>
claiming it was injuring the <lb/>
health. The father what <lb/>
am I to do I am poor and I am <lb/>
earning this money to complete <lb/>
little Josef's <lb/>
Commodore Gerry then <lb/>
you take him oil the stage tot <lb/>
years If you receive money <lb/>
enough to support yourself, his <lb/>
mother and him, and to give him the <lb/>
best instruction for that length of <lb/>
The father replied that he would <lb/>
gladly do so, and Commodore Gerry <lb/>
within a week raised a sum of money <lb/>
sufficient to yield income of <lb/>
five thousand dollars. This he <lb/>
in the hands of trustees, who we're <lb/>
to remit to Mr. in <lb/>
for, six years. The <lb/>
by his playing the highest promise <lb/>
of boyhood <lb/>
NEW SECRET ORDER. <lb/>
Oklahoma Commercial Men Organize <lb/>
for Mutual Protection. <lb/>
The traveling men who journey <lb/>
through Oklahoma and Indian <lb/>
selling goods and making <lb/>
friends for their employer have a <lb/>
hard enough time without any ex- <lb/>
says the Kansas v Star. <lb/>
Trips oft the line to small interior <lb/>
towns, living on the lean of the land <lb/>
in a country where there arc few <lb/>
hotels and no baths, is not any fun <lb/>
to speak of. But when straggling <lb/>
members of the Cook and Dalton <lb/>
gangs and all sorts of Dick <lb/>
got into the habit of stopping them <lb/>
the road at the point cf their <lb/>
pistols, and drinking up their <lb/>
samples and dividing their <lb/>
money, they thought It to do <lb/>
something or other. So they formed <lb/>
n society called the Oklahoma Com- <lb/>
Men's Mutual Anti-Robber- <lb/>
Drink All the Samples-Ourselves <lb/>
association, with a secret ritual and <lb/>
and passwords. <lb/>
No one outside the organization <lb/>
the ritual or the passwords, <lb/>
but the signs are frequently seen by <lb/>
persons who are closely observant. <lb/>
The hailing sign is given whenever <lb/>
a traveling roan a customer. <lb/>
It is given by raising the hands op- <lb/>
the shoulders and extending <lb/>
tho hands in a horizontal position; <lb/>
the hands are then waved back and <lb/>
forth. The signal of distress i also <lb/>
known and frequently seen on the <lb/>
road in that country. It is very <lb/>
simple. The arms are suddenly <lb/>
raised at full length above the head <lb/>
with palms empty and to the front. <lb/>
The ritual not being known, it would <lb/>
be difficult to say in what manner <lb/>
they propose to stop the division of <lb/>
the samples. <lb/>
A RADICAL CHANGE. <lb/>
IT IS A DISEASE. <lb/>
Doc- <lb/>
Chapel Swaps Episcopal <lb/>
for Unitarianism. <lb/>
As long as the British occupied <lb/>
Boston, King's chapel was the ruling <lb/>
power in religious circles. The <lb/>
British who bad boon <lb/>
members of the riding school <lb/>
in the Old South church during the <lb/>
week, would throng to the King's <lb/>
chapel on Sunday for reverent <lb/>
Put this very sacrilege to th- <lb/>
puritanical Old South tie <lb/>
ruin of the aristocratic worship <lb/>
King's chapel. It was brought about <lb/>
in this The members of King's <lb/>
chapel courteously invited the <lb/>
tiers o Old South church to <lb/>
worship with them while the damage <lb/>
caused by the riding school w; being <lb/>
repaired. This Invitation was <lb/>
grudgingly accepted. But <lb/>
mated union brought about a start- <lb/>
change In the belief of the King's <lb/>
became dissatisfied <lb/>
with Episcopal doctrines, yet con- <lb/>
to favor Episcopal forms. <lb/>
The result was, the adaptation of the <lb/>
Church pf service to <lb/>
doctrines, the first <lb/>
Episcopal church became the First <lb/>
Unitarian church of Boston. So the <lb/>
Puritans squared their accounts <lb/>
last with the haughty old governor, <lb/>
who have squirmed uneasily in <lb/>
his tomb at tho hybrid <lb/>
his pet church had under- <lb/>
gone. <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
of tho Nail <lb/>
Habit <lb/>
The Famous Frenchman Rays It Cannot <lb/>
Be Cured Any <lb/>
More Than Can Croup <lb/>
or <lb/>
BATHS WANTED <lb/>
Will <lb/>
fortune the Man Who <lb/>
Invent a Portable Bath Tub. <lb/>
The excursions of the bicyclist <lb/>
into every civilized corner of the <lb/>
brought out for tho first <lb/>
time a very important industrial <lb/>
fact, namely, that a tori is await- <lb/>
the inventor who can put upon <lb/>
market a cheap, compact bath, <lb/>
preferably of tin, just large enough <lb/>
to sufficient water for a <lb/>
but of convenient shape <lb/>
for handling and stowing away. To <lb/>
the there Is no greater <lb/>
luxury than a bath at tho end of his <lb/>
long spin, and he is comparatively <lb/>
seldom able to get one. Although <lb/>
our American cities are, on the av- <lb/>
far ahead of European cities <lb/>
in provisions for promoting hygienic <lb/>
conditions, and the personal <lb/>
of their inhabitants, our rural <lb/>
districts are far behind. many <lb/>
villages there Is not a single bath to <lb/>
be found, and many of the inhabit <lb/>
ants are not even as conscientious <lb/>
in the matter of ablutions as the <lb/>
lager who maintained that took <lb/>
a bath once year, whether he <lb/>
needed it or With the spread <lb/>
of athletic sports the practice of <lb/>
is growing in this <lb/>
try. It would a boon that most <lb/>
would ready to show <lb/>
their appreciation of to able to <lb/>
rely on the use of the bath tub in the <lb/>
farmhouse to which their wander- <lb/>
might lead them. Such a tub <lb/>
as that which could hold, <lb/>
say, a couple of palls of water, would <lb/>
cause the minimum amount of <lb/>
trouble. It would entail but slight <lb/>
expense, and no great stretch of <lb/>
mechanical to run pipes <lb/>
from the well to the bathroom and <lb/>
to make arrangements whereby the <lb/>
bicyclist hitch on his wheel <lb/>
and with a few turns pump the <lb/>
water for himself direct to the bath. <lb/>
St. Louis Globe-Democrat. <lb/>
That the habit of nail biting is a <lb/>
disease among children, and not <lb/>
merely a naughty trick, to be cured <lb/>
by punishment, is the scientific <lb/>
opinion of the famous Frenchman, <lb/>
Dr. Edgar who was at one <lb/>
time associated with and is <lb/>
present secretary of the French <lb/>
Society of and Inspector <lb/>
of state lunatic asylums. <lb/>
names this so-called dis- <lb/>
ease which at once <lb/>
gives an air of importance to <lb/>
and he states as the results <lb/>
of nine study and experiment- <lb/>
that it Is an sign of In- <lb/>
degeneration of tho nervous <lb/>
system. He holds that a child dis- <lb/>
playing any tendency <lb/>
biting should at once be put Under a <lb/>
physician's care, instead of being <lb/>
teased and punished. <lb/>
The s more prevalent among <lb/>
girls than boys, and is probably due <lb/>
to the factual tho ugh this is not <lb/>
brought out In recent pa- <lb/>
boys are permitted to <lb/>
live healthier lives, with more <lb/>
and out-of-door sports, in the <lb/>
report, made from an examination <lb/>
of one of the average mixed schools <lb/>
of Paris, the percentage or nail <lb/>
biters the girls was found to <lb/>
be fifty, while among the boys it was <lb/>
only twenty. This habit was usual- <lb/>
observed among tho poorer <lb/>
dents. Several Instructors In tho <lb/>
Paris fop manual training <lb/>
have the habitual nail <lb/>
biters hardest to teach, and often <lb/>
totally unfit for technical education. <lb/>
On rare occasions nail-biting <lb/>
were found to be <lb/>
but with a superficial <lb/>
cleverness, invariably outgrown. <lb/>
Although the disease Is frequently <lb/>
Inherited, Is often the result <lb/>
of imitation, which practically <lb/>
it contagious. In English <lb/>
schools the habit is considered so <lb/>
harmful and so easily contracted <lb/>
that the nail-biting children are <lb/>
lated and taught in separate classes, <lb/>
besides being subjected to severe <lb/>
and public reprimands. The idea of <lb/>
punishing a nail biter re- <lb/>
as showing about as much <lb/>
judgment as would be manifested In <lb/>
whipping a child for <lb/>
croup or measles, but that the <lb/>
. ; habit demands careful and intelligent, <lb/>
treatment cannot be doubted, for not <lb/>
only is it on the Increase, but in <lb/>
many cases it is accompanied in the <lb/>
second and third generations by <lb/>
marked signs Rt physical <lb/>
The extent to which it prevails in <lb/>
England can be estimated from the <lb/>
fact In school of thirty <lb/>
whose parents were of tho mid- <lb/>
class, at least fifty per cent, were <lb/>
nail biters. America the disease <lb/>
is prevalent to a marked degree. It <lb/>
may be noticed at every turn on the <lb/>
streets, in tho schools and on the <lb/>
cars, Wherever there Is a <lb/>
group of school children of any size, <lb/>
some of tho boys and girls will be <lb/>
found devouring their nails, and <lb/>
sometimes fingers <lb/>
The fact that after a time the habit <lb/>
becomes automatic makes the <lb/>
of it a difficult undertaking; but <lb/>
believes that it can be done, <lb/>
a id the grouping of these <lb/>
Children into classes, where they may <lb/>
subjected to special discipline and <lb/>
treatment. As, however, <lb/>
habit is the result of nervous de- <lb/>
generation, as easily treated <lb/>
at home. A nerve tonic, good food <lb/>
and plenty of exercise, are all the <lb/>
physical treatment necessary. For <lb/>
curing the <lb/>
which may linger after the <lb/>
cause is removed, suggests <lb/>
that the child s resolution should <lb/>
appealed to, and. that he be <lb/>
to regard the habit as unworthy. <lb/>
N. Y. Recorder. <lb/>
PATH'S <lb/>
A Thirsty <lb/>
PRIVATIONS. <lb/>
Before tho<lb/>
Concert. <lb/>
Pity the privations of the <lb/>
Hope is a story of Mme. <lb/>
which may be appropriately <lb/>
enough recalled. Once, when she <lb/>
returned from her dally drive, she <lb/>
was exceedingly thirsty, and asked <lb/>
M. to have procured for her <lb/>
a glass of water. was <lb/>
he shrieked. <lb/>
you know that you are <lb/>
going to to-morrow night, and <lb/>
the water your blood. Oh, <lb/>
no I forbid rive <lb/>
me a of pleaded the <lb/>
thirsty reared <lb/>
yon <lb/>
going to ting to-morrow night, and <lb/>
you know that wine will heat your <lb/>
blood. No, I cannot, permit <lb/>
cannot I have something <lb/>
pleaded Suit, with parched <lb/>
lips. long <lb/>
deeply, and at length with his own <lb/>
hands carefully prepared for the, <lb/>
great singer o <lb/>
AN PENSIONER. <lb/>
Old in Kentucky That Is We <lb/>
Cared For. <lb/>
There is a horse in this city re- <lb/>
to thirty-seven years old, <lb/>
which is still fat, and skittish, <lb/>
but through the provisions of a will <lb/>
made by-its former owner it is not <lb/>
allowed any work. Gil- <lb/>
is the name of the animal, and <lb/>
it is now In the possession of Mrs. <lb/>
who resides on Pearl street. <lb/>
When Mrs. Fannie Sharp died, about <lb/>
six years ago, she left five hundred <lb/>
dollars for tho purpose of keeping <lb/>
in ease and comfort <lb/>
the remainder of his days. ex- <lb/>
stipulated that the horse <lb/>
should required to do any <lb/>
work, and should be well fed ant <lb/>
cared for. These ts have <lb/>
been carried out, and <lb/>
the life of a retired capitalist <lb/>
or pensioner. He appears to be <lb/>
good for several years yet, and. <lb/>
allowed would probably put many <lb/>
an honest day's Gil- <lb/>
is a bay gelding, about fifteen <lb/>
hands high, and well proportioned. <lb/>
He must have been rather frisky In <lb/>
his youth, for fully twenty years <lb/>
ago he ran away with Councilman <lb/>
Julia and his sweetheart, <lb/>
paw Mrs. smashed the bug- <lb/>
in fright- <lb/>
the opt of the <lb/>
He was well up borne years then. <lb/>
Ho served during <lb/>
war and out with a scratch, <lb/>
Just which bide he was on is not <lb/>
remembered, and It Is barely <lb/>
that at one time or another he <lb/>
followed both the federal and con- <lb/>
federate flags. <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
Archdeacon recent- <lb/>
England at the ago of <lb/>
m, <lb/>
of tho Margaret club, <lb/>
the first boat club In Cambridge to <lb/>
row an tout. pulled <lb/>
bow. and was the last survivor of a <lb/>
which rowed Bishop <lb/>
ho of <lb/>
the <lb/>
MIRACULOUS ESCAPE <lb/>
Tie Great Log Struck a Rock and <lb/>
, Bounded Over Head. <lb/>
were rolling logs down a <lb/>
Into the St. John river, below Grand <lb/>
said a. lumberman. <lb/>
bluff was about forty rods up from <lb/>
the river, steep and worn pretty <lb/>
smooth by the log rolling. A log <lb/>
started over the brink would roll <lb/>
with a tremendous velocity down <lb/>
that sharp descent. Towards the <lb/>
foot of the hill there was a slight <lb/>
and now and then a log would <lb/>
strike it and go bounding into the <lb/>
air and land well out into the river. <lb/>
was a dry time that May and <lb/>
the rolling logs made dusty work. <lb/>
The dust was so thick sometimes <lb/>
that we almost lost sight of the logs <lb/>
before they reached the bottom. If <lb/>
a log was started right, it generally <lb/>
followed a pretty straight course <lb/>
down the bluff, but once in awhile a <lb/>
crashed on, went slewing, or Der <lb/>
get the a <lb/>
d. <lb/>
roll W mid u <lb/>
Tim Field would then have to go <lb/>
down and dislodge it. <lb/>
One day a crooked lo slewed and <lb/>
lodged. Tim Field went down to <lb/>
straighten it and send it on its <lb/>
course. While he was engaged thus <lb/>
two men came along with a log. <lb/>
They stopped on the brink and <lb/>
waited for Tim to get of their way, <lb/>
balancing their log with their <lb/>
Oh, Look <lb/>
was no time for the poor <lb/>
fellow to jump aside, and no human <lb/>
power could save him from being <lb/>
crushed by that huge descending log. <lb/>
We stood, horror-stricken, peering <lb/>
tho edge of the bluff. <lb/>
rolled the log. a cloud <lb/>
of dust rising in its wake. For a <lb/>
dozen rods it rolled, gaining velocity <lb/>
as it descended, and then it suddenly <lb/>
struck a rock or some obstruction, <lb/>
and gave a loud bound high over <lb/>
Tim's head, and ruck to the ground <lb/>
below, whence it rolled and tumbled <lb/>
to the foot. <lb/>
was untouched. <lb/>
we rolled thousands of <lb/>
logs down tho same bluff, never <lb/>
saw a second one bound into the air <lb/>
like that one. seemed to that <lb/>
the hand of Providence had inter- <lb/>
Standard. <lb/>
I Q J arc Che product of skilled <lb/>
workmen, and rank<lb/>
make tho best base <lb/>
balls, baseball bats, base- <lb/>
ball gloves and mitts, tennis <lb/>
rackets, tennis balls, tennis <lb/>
nets, racket presses, racket cases, boxing gloves, footballs, <lb/>
football suits, football and gymnasium shoes, gymnasium <lb/>
supplies, sweaters, etc. We guarantee better goods for <lb/>
money than asked by other manufacturers. If your local <lb/>
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write for our <lb/>
illustrated <lb/>
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb/>
Makers of Victor Bicycles and Athletic Goods. <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb/>
CHICAGO. <lb/>
PACIFIC COAST. <lb/>
LOS <lb/>
PORTLAND <lb/>
R. J. <lb/>
;. x. c. <lb/>
C C. <lb/>
Mm Co. X. C. <lb/>
I'm., NU.<lb/>
Poor <lb/>
Health <lb/>
means so much more than <lb/>
diseases result <lb/>
ailments neglected <lb/>
Don't play with Nature's <lb/>
greatest <lb/>
If <lb/>
out weak j <lb/>
and ex- <lb/>
nervous, J <lb/>
have no appetite <lb/>
and can't work, <lb/>
begin at <lb/>
the most <lb/>
strengthen ins; <lb/>
is <lb/>
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb/>
A few bot-<lb/>
comes from the <lb/>
Tery<lb/>
and its <lb/>
pleasant i <lb/>
It Cures <lb/>
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb/>
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb/>
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb/>
p Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb/>
Women's complaints. <lb/>
only the has crossed red <lb/>
on the wrapper. AH others arc <lb/>
On receipt of two stamps we , <lb/>
will send sol of Ten Beautiful World's <lb/>
i Views and <lb/>
BROWN CO. BALTIMORE, <lb/>
a k H y W <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
duly before the <lb/>
Conn of Pitt county n ex- <lb/>
of die Will <lb/>
of Warren Tucker, deceased, notice i <lb/>
hereby given to all Indebted lo <lb/>
the to make Immediate payment <lb/>
to the and all persons <lb/>
having claim- against mid estate must <lb/>
present same for payment on or before <lb/>
the day of June, or this no- <lb/>
will he plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
This of June, <lb/>
SUSAN K. <lb/>
Warren Tucker. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
the of all Skis fas <lb/>
This Preparation has been In use <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb/>
been in It has been en- <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
rind where <lb/>
all other i With the of <lb/>
the most experienced physicians, have <lb/>
for failed. This Ointment is <lb/>
the high reputation <lb/>
which it has h owing entirely <lb/>
its own as but little <lb/>
ever been made to bring it before the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any address op receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. AH promptly at <lb/>
tended to. Address ail orders and <lb/>
communications to <lb/>
T. F. <lb/>
N. U <lb/>
COBB BROS CO, <lb/>
AND <lb/>
u------- <lb/>
Commission Merchants <lb/>
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb/>
Solicited. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb/>
-------is STILL AT THE WITH A <lb/>
YEARS has taught me that the best is the cheapest <lb/>
Hemp Rope, Building Farming Implements and ever <lb/>
for and general house wall . <lb/>
Bat. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have on hand. Am head <lb/>
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for o N T . <lb/>
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive <lb/>
FORBES, <lb/>
N. c. <lb/>
OLD LINK. KiM <lb/>
TAR SERVICE <lb/>
lea ye Washington <lb/>
villa and Tarboro touching at all Ian I <lb/>
on Tar Rivet Wednesday <lb/>
and Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Returning leave Tarboro at A. XI. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
a. If. mum <lb/>
These departures are to <lb/>
of water on Tar River. <lb/>
HI , <lb/>
Real <lb/>
Estate <lb/>
and <lb/>
Rental <lb/>
Agent. <lb/>
Houses and lots tor Kent or for sale <lb/>
easy. Bents, Taxes, Insurance <lb/>
and open accounts and any other <lb/>
of debt placed in my fur <lb/>
have prompt attention, <lb/>
Sal i-faction guaranteed. I solicit <lb/>
patronage. <lb/>
with steam- <lb/>
em of The Ni and Wash- <lb/>
direct line for Norfolk. <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Bo-ton. <lb/>
Shippers goods <lb/>
marked via Dominion I fr in; <lb/>
New York. <lb/>
Norfolk Bait i. <lb/>
more St earn boat i <lb/>
more. Miners <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
Agent, <lb/>
Washington N. <lb/>
i. Agent, <lb/>
N r<lb/>
Under Opera <lb/>
GREENVILLE. NO. <lb/>
Call In when you want work <lb/>
A NORTH <lb/>
R. R. I ME <lb/>
Ill December MM<lb/>
Pas. <lb/>
Pas . <lb/>
GREEN <lb/>
MALE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
The next Session of this School will <lb/>
begin on Tuesday the 4th day of <lb/>
and <lb/>
Primary English <lb/>
English <lb/>
Higher English <lb/>
Languages j <lb/>
The instruction will continue through. <lb/>
Discipline mild nut firm. If necessary <lb/>
an additional teacher will be employed. <lb/>
Satisfaction when pupils <lb/>
liter early and attend regularly. <lb/>
informal ion apply to <lb/>
XV. II. <lb/>
Aug. I. <lb/>
P. <lb/>
A- XI.<lb/>
A. <lb/>
Ship year to <lb/>
J. C. Jr., Co- <lb/>
Cotton Factors <lb/>
NORFOLK VA. <lb/>
Train I connects v II h Wilmington <lb/>
train bound North, <lb/>
Goldsboro a. in., and with R <lb/>
leaving Goldsboro <lb/>
WE YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb/>
-v---. <lb/>
We will them QUICK <lb/>
will them CHEAP I <lb/>
We will them WELL <lb/>
Rough Heart Framing, <lb/>
Bough Sap Framing, <lb/>
7.0 <lb/>
Pu- <lb/>
Ft. <lb/>
I U, a. <lb/>
and we in less <lb/>
Send model, drawing or with <lb/>
advise, if or not, free of <lb/>
Var not due till Is see tired, <lb/>
f to Obtain<lb/>
Personal Attention given to <lb/>
Weights and Counts. <lb/>
BUILDUP HOME <lb/>
patronizing Home <lb/>
Malloy Go. <lb/>
of N. C, <lb/>
manufacturing fine Che- <lb/>
roots and a can found on <lb/>
the market. Their Lading brands arc <lb/>
OF DURHAM. <lb/>
a dime cigar for a Nickel, band made. <lb/>
Havana <lb/>
a Una Cigar, <lb/>
Wrapper, Havana hand mad <lb/>
Named in honor of Col. Buck <lb/>
well. <lb/>
a lino Sumatra <lb/>
mane, a sure win- <lb/>
Named honor of Col. J, s. <lb/>
of Black well <lb/>
Ten cents, <lb/>
CHUNK <lb/>
Five for cents. Tho line; t smoke for <lb/>
the money. <lb/>
NORTH STATE <lb/>
Three for cents, a hummer that <lb/>
ways pleases. <lb/>
Stick to home and semi us or <lb/>
Special brands put up Alien de- <lb/>
sired. <lb/>
MALLORY DURHAM Co. <lb/>
N. u <lb/>
Rough Sap Hi Inches <lb/>
Wait M days for our Planing Mill and <lb/>
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber <lb/>
as <lb/>
delivered to your door for <lb/>
cents a load. <lb/>
Terms cash. <lb/>
Thanking you for past patronage. <lb/>
cm,, <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb/>
The Charlotte <lb/>
North Carolina's <lb/>
FOREMOST <lb/>
Independent and ; <lb/>
more attractive than ever, it will <lb/>
visitor to the home, <lb/>
the club or <lb/>
OBSERVER, <lb/>
AH of the news of the world, <lb/>
Dally from the Sat <lb/>
and National Capitols. a <lb/>
THE WEEKLY <lb/>
A perfect family Journal. All <lb/>
news of the week. The reports <lb/>
from the Legislature a special. <lb/>
Remember Weekly Ob- <lb/>
server. <lb/>
DOLLAR A <lb/>
Send for copies. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Charlotte, n <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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