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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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.-c. <lb/>
Jr <lb/>
JOB PRINTING <lb/>
The Reflector is <lb/>
pared to do all wort <lb/>
of this line <lb/>
NEATLY, <lb/>
and <lb/>
IN BEST STYLE. <lb/>
Plenty of new mate- <lb/>
rial and the best <lb/>
of Stationery. <lb/>
THE WHY OF IT. <lb/>
The<lb/>
. , <lb/>
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
VOL. XIV. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. Q., WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1895. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
editorial hut relates <lb/>
the Nobody . <lb/>
can a oration <lb/>
ts this tits beau- set just <lb/>
where i. f. oft has <lb/>
improved upon August's <lb/>
A Public Enemy. <lb/>
Marion Butler, in his speech <lb/>
laws of God are inexorable ; Friday night, <lb/>
For the physical world, as for telling the people of oppress <lb/>
lie established Certain j ions to they are subjected, <lb/>
principles which are to that it would not do <lb/>
When man violates to ballets for <lb/>
. , i. , the of then grievances, <lb/>
tn he invariably pays pen- <lb/>
because their oppressors nave <lb/>
reaping what he has government would be <lb/>
Nature's processes are sometimes j enabled to coerce and crush them. <lb/>
slow ultimate result is i The logical inference is that the <lb/>
inevitably wrought out. This, people ought, by right, to rise up <lb/>
however, is a in aims against the government <lb/>
that they have justification for so <lb/>
doing and that th only <lb/>
which restrain <lb/>
them relates to the <lb/>
cf revolution. This <lb/>
government is one of people <lb/>
and this suggestion of rebellion <lb/>
against it is a clear denial of the <lb/>
of majority rule. The ma <lb/>
of the people elect the men <lb/>
who make and those who execute <lb/>
the laws, and yet here is a fellow <lb/>
who will soon take the oath as a <lb/>
United States Senator to support <lb/>
constitution and the lairs, go- <lb/>
around against re- <lb/>
the ground only <lb/>
that it is not practicable. A <lb/>
sou who indulges such talk is <lb/>
only unworthy the blessings <lb/>
of free government himself out is <lb/>
a public enemy. None Out a bad <lb/>
man would do it. He who talks <lb/>
thus should be regarded as a <lb/>
element society and <lb/>
should be shunned as one shuns <lb/>
a poisonous <lb/>
Landmark. <lb/>
lick. Coming to look back, the <lb/>
ht-at of the through extra- <lb/>
should not be surprising, <lb/>
Because the country his <lb/>
been behind on heat. Some <lb/>
weeks ago the Weather Bureau <lb/>
gave out that there was a de- <lb/>
heat up to that date of <lb/>
a great This de- <lb/>
hail to be made up <lb/>
the year. If summer did <lb/>
even ii up fall meat. And <lb/>
ibis i- the explanation of a <lb/>
hot September- It is <lb/>
with the heat as with the rain <lb/>
We are so much each <lb/>
year and if it not come at <lb/>
time it must at another. <lb/>
who have been <lb/>
sweltering daring September <lb/>
u I. it for which nor August <lb/>
gave equal, can comfort them <lb/>
selves with the reflection that <lb/>
they have <lb/>
what belonged to them. Stan-s <lb/>
in New York. <lb/>
The upon that are BOO <lb/>
cases of leprosy in city of <lb/>
is a matter calculated to <lb/>
cause no little alarm among the <lb/>
citizens of the metropolis, and it <lb/>
is but natural the health <lb/>
should be piled with in- <lb/>
quires persons. Up <lb/>
to this time the belief has ob- <lb/>
that it was an easy matter <lb/>
to spread the dreaded disease, <lb/>
but the secretary of the New York <lb/>
Health says not- This <lb/>
official makes the statement that <lb/>
in our there is no real <lb/>
necessity for the <lb/>
even the most case of <lb/>
leprosy, of course, if this be <lb/>
so the danger of the disease <lb/>
spreading in York need <lb/>
no alarm. There is, bow- <lb/>
he Bag of it All. <lb/>
The Baltimore Sun, in referring <lb/>
the of cotton at this time, <lb/>
takes occasion to say that aft r <lb/>
all there can be no real, <lb/>
prosperity unless the <lb/>
is getting pries; fr <lb/>
what he has to sell, for the farmer <lb/>
is the upon which all the <lb/>
whole fabric of our national pros- <lb/>
a d happiness rests. This <lb/>
is very ti in-. If the is <lb/>
and crop good the <lb/>
c is very likely to be pros- <lb/>
Speaking of planting, <lb/>
our contemporary says that the <lb/>
planters of the South are <lb/>
this year receiving about cents <lb/>
a pound more for their cotton <lb/>
than they got last year. This is <lb/>
of about per bale. <lb/>
Estimating the crop this year at <lb/>
bales which is <lb/>
some of the estimates, the <lb/>
a pound will bring <lb/>
more into the cotton States <lb/>
than last year. The and <lb/>
the wheat growers and those de- <lb/>
Eleven Year,. Ago. <lb/>
This fall is very much like the <lb/>
one eleven years ago. <lb/>
one will remember that when <lb/>
the State Exposition opened <lb/>
the first of <lb/>
the weather was very as it <lb/>
has been the week. The boys of <lb/>
the old Greenville Guard will Lot <lb/>
forget the hot march they <lb/>
The occasion is well <lb/>
were a private in the <lb/>
Guard and with them <lb/>
and the other members of <lb/>
State Guard, some or <lb/>
in number, stood the broiling <lb/>
sue for fully two hours the rear <lb/>
of the capital while the big officers <lb/>
dignitaries wore getting <lb/>
their carriages and on hors- <lb/>
es- After this long wait came a <lb/>
terrible tramp of two miles <lb/>
through dust and heat to ex- <lb/>
position grounds. Every <lb/>
line had men who fell by <lb/>
the wayside, overcome by beat, <lb/>
some were seriously sick- <lb/>
One poor fellow, we believe, died <lb/>
from the fleets of his exertion. <lb/>
We remember, that effort <lb/>
was made to have the boys <lb/>
pear on dress parade after all <lb/>
and what a how of <lb/>
protest went up from the officers <lb/>
who knew of their suffering- <lb/>
Gotten, of the Regiment, <lb/>
now Brigadier threaten- <lb/>
ed to resign his and <lb/>
disband his before sub <lb/>
milting to such inhuman treat- <lb/>
and other equally rs strong <lb/>
protests were made. One captain <lb/>
remarked that the <lb/>
es the boxes of his men would <lb/>
be exhausted before they went <lb/>
It was exceedingly hot and <lb/>
trying on the boys and the <lb/>
i ii almost cured us of <lb/>
Herald- <lb/>
e difference of opinion <lb/>
on the question, and it is for that <lb/>
reason that the people of New <lb/>
York do not feel so long <lb/>
as the disease has a in <lb/>
their Virginian- <lb/>
earners of the manufactured pro- <lb/>
duct, and the vast sum of money <lb/>
mentioned will all be spent in <lb/>
buying the products of labor. <lb/>
As it is with these products of <lb/>
cotton and wheat so it is with <lb/>
everything grown by the farmer <lb/>
I Success to him benefits <lb/>
folk Virginian. <lb/>
la Peril. <lb/>
The Standard The <lb/>
position of the Chinese Govern <lb/>
meat is perilous. It <lb/>
has enough on its without <lb/>
a quarrel with England. It is too <lb/>
soon to say that the fall of the <lb/>
dynasty is imminent, but <lb/>
the news of spread of the Ma <lb/>
insurrection is alarm- <lb/>
The demands must j j, force and <lb/>
be supported by the presence of the of man. <lb/>
our fleet in the Yang . ., ,. ,, . , <lb/>
., . ,., . . It disease to the third <lb/>
if not by the occupation of fourth by <lb/>
doubt if the <lb/>
could survive such a I, the mental and <lb/>
shock. If the cf Cal faculties, wrecks the <lb/>
the West a leader, and if, at powers as well. <lb/>
What Whiskey <lb/>
It befuddles the brain <lb/>
overworks the heart. <lb/>
It arrests digestion and causes <lb/>
fatty degeneration of the kidneys. <lb/>
It creates an appetite which is <lb/>
only increased by being gratified. <lb/>
A Kiss. <lb/>
One of taken <lb/>
a shy at kissing. It says that <lb/>
betrayed the Savior with a <lb/>
kiss, from that hour to the <lb/>
present day the world been <lb/>
betrayed by a kiss. There is, by <lb/>
way, a good deal more this <lb/>
unique than would <lb/>
appear the surface. A young <lb/>
man, example, kisses a maiden <lb/>
I makes her bis wife, and the <lb/>
we know spark <lb/>
ling wine bas lured him away <lb/>
from her side. He tells her a lie <lb/>
seals it with a kiss, and the <lb/>
young wife believes every word <lb/>
of it- The son has a kiss for his <lb/>
mother while she toils with the <lb/>
needle for him, and a year or <lb/>
two the gambling den has more <lb/>
of his love than the woman who <lb/>
bore him. The daughter has a <lb/>
kiss as she wishes mother had <lb/>
not so much to do, while she lolls <lb/>
on the for hours and <lb/>
reads trashy novels of the Trilby <lb/>
type. <lb/>
While the specimens <lb/>
are, of exceptions to the <lb/>
general rule, their <lb/>
are to found every <lb/>
that without the aid of <lb/>
a magnifying glass. A kiss <lb/>
a smile have been of <lb/>
thousands, while the other <lb/>
hand, often men have been made <lb/>
heroes by a kick and a cuff. Ger- <lb/>
Independent. <lb/>
WEATHER CROP <lb/>
The reports of of <lb/>
Weather Crop <lb/>
tin, issued by the N Carolina <lb/>
State Weather Service, tor <lb/>
week ending Saturday, September <lb/>
continue to be <lb/>
able. The extreme heat and dry- <lb/>
cooler <lb/>
set in o. Friday and Saturday. <lb/>
mean temperature for the <lb/>
first five days averaged degrees <lb/>
per day above the normal. <lb/>
Drought continues unbroken and <lb/>
is greatly damaging all fall crops- <lb/>
Streams and wells are very low. <lb/>
Peanut-digging bas commenced <lb/>
is being gathered <lb/>
Very and large crops of <lb/>
bay have been saved. <lb/>
Fall plowing still it a standstill <lb/>
for lack of rain- <lb/>
Extremely hot, dry weather <lb/>
until very end of <lb/>
the week, when cooler weather <lb/>
set The drought is unbroken, <lb/>
no rain having fallen anywhere <lb/>
except near the extreme eastern <lb/>
coast. All late crops are suffering <lb/>
from drought, especially peas, <lb/>
potatoes, and young lice. <lb/>
ripened prematurely and <lb/>
many leaves young fell <lb/>
off. Cotton is being rapidly pick- <lb/>
ed out now. is dry enough <lb/>
to gather and is housed. <lb/>
More fodder and bay have <lb/>
saved than for years. No fall <lb/>
plowing done. <lb/>
Two Kansas Beverages. <lb/>
If paper correctly <lb/>
reports the testimony given last <lb/>
week a whiskey trial before <lb/>
District Judge Humphrey a new <lb/>
drink has been born in Kansas. <lb/>
A witness upon the Stand gave <lb/>
y as contained the <lb/>
following cross examination <lb/>
did you was <lb/>
asked. <lb/>
was it like <lb/>
you ever beer <lb/>
know what it is <lb/>
you drank anything <lb/>
resembles hop tea <lb/>
fas <lb/>
went on the at- <lb/>
is like <lb/>
is like bop was the <lb/>
And all the attorney could fur- <lb/>
get out of that was <lb/>
the statement that <lb/>
ed like hop tea end hop tea tasted <lb/>
like City <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
You <lb/>
; . . <lb/>
T T I <lb/>
. -.-- . -to J <lb/>
The Reflector tins <lb/>
. i <lb/>
will give the -H <lb/>
every week for <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
WOMAN. <lb/>
What They Have Done the State <lb/>
. -at the Exposition. <lb/>
eight to <lb/>
represent North t i at At- <lb/>
were not dismayed <lb/>
Legislature said money, <lb/>
help, no They said <lb/>
we will be represented in that <lb/>
Woman's Building, so one of the <lb/>
number met the Building Com- <lb/>
Atlanta and after dis- <lb/>
it was decided to ask <lb/>
North Carolina to contribute the <lb/>
wood work of the Assembly room, <lb/>
as a perpetual advertisement of <lb/>
the wonderful woods that make <lb/>
wonder of the world. <lb/>
This mantel pt-ice was <lb/>
by Miss Norma It is <lb/>
of oak and blistered It is <lb/>
classic design, with ionic col <lb/>
The pediments are twists <lb/>
of tobacco with outspread leaves. <lb/>
The are carved in relief <lb/>
with the products of the State, <lb/>
grapes panels, <lb/>
cotton and bolls, Dine <lb/>
branches cones, tobacco <lb/>
conventional and the <lb/>
blistered maple in bold relief is <lb/>
carved the shield of the State <lb/>
mounted by raised letters, <lb/>
Carolina to These lady <lb/>
managers have made the <lb/>
themselves to pay for this <lb/>
work of art. reasonable fair minded <lb/>
Ager the ought to see that so much <lb/>
decided could sh w a ., , ,. , <lb/>
greater variety of woods by fur-i men for <lb/>
the doors this their <lb/>
So order was mads disturbs their sows <lb/>
I coking <lb/>
this is an <lb/>
in politics, North <lb/>
keeps her record for political <lb/>
agitation. Some who are cal- <lb/>
tor a from the <lb/>
political fountain of reward for <lb/>
labor, are out their j <lb/>
for the interest of the dear <lb/>
people, giving them instructions <lb/>
which will lead them to fair <lb/>
fields of plenty where they may <lb/>
bask the sunshine of prosper <lb/>
Those who are most active <lb/>
in the people agitated <lb/>
and in poisoning their minds with <lb/>
bitter discontent, are the very <lb/>
who will be foremost <lb/>
ranks of candidates tor public of <lb/>
next year. <lb/>
We do not see of I <lb/>
patriotism of it. He is <lb/>
the truest patriot who does his <lb/>
people the service ; <lb/>
best service man, Populist, <lb/>
Demo Republican or what <lb/>
not, can render the people of this <lb/>
is to let them <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Govt Report <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb/>
for the two one double <lb/>
doors. A special design, con- <lb/>
of a large number of pan- <lb/>
cord amongst all classes so <lb/>
the of the entire <lb/>
each panel made of a <lb/>
wood, will make them It would restful if the place- <lb/>
I unusually handsome. This is all hangers and seekers would <lb/>
to go in the Woman's Building, ,, th lo <lb/>
is the work of the ., , , <lb/>
women this to attend to <lb/>
Herald- i their <lb/>
I land Democrat. <lb/>
Bl Corp D sign- <lb/>
ed to Tell When Lire Is Extinct <lb/>
One of the so called <lb/>
tests of which has ; <lb/>
introduced France, Germany <lb/>
Twelve els Twins. <lb/>
the same time, the Imperial Gov- <lb/>
is rash enough to defy <lb/>
the Western Powers, a revolution <lb/>
is <lb/>
It demoralizes business, politics <lb/>
society- <lb/>
It degrades father son, and <lb/>
blights the love of wife and moth- <lb/>
and chains womanhood in a <lb/>
bell of chastity. <lb/>
a Ii blocks the wheels of <lb/>
of tho New South Wales Par- j try, closes mines and mills, <lb/>
colleague me ; cripples the markets, <lb/>
with a for fame- J strikes fills jails and <lb/>
the imputation, . sir. <lb/>
What is fame It is a shaved pig <lb/>
a greased tail, which I honest legislation <lb/>
i i ii land creates laws which are a <lb/>
through the hand.-, of . u <lb/>
, ., , the nostrils of every <lb/>
and then is caught by ; patriot, <lb/>
some lucky fellow who happens to above M j men <lb/>
piles cost on state and <lb/>
nation. <lb/>
hold on to it. I let the greasy <lb/>
tailed go by me with- <lb/>
out an effort to clutch it, <lb/>
eternally and leaves them with- <lb/>
out hope in life or death. <lb/>
A LESSON IN ECONOMY. <lb/>
A professor believes <lb/>
tobacco smoking as a protection <lb/>
against and other , The lot these great creations take <lb/>
throat diseases. Smokers, he says, u one believe- <lb/>
are less affected by these diseases I And when the was hall worn out <lb/>
This of dainty taste, <lb/>
To soon reduced the sleeves <lb/>
and away the waist. <lb/>
non-smokers, in the <lb/>
of to heard a <lb/>
diphtheria treater of considerable . , <lb/>
K i And now along the ocean sands <lb/>
experience say that he never knew She trips, fetching cute, <lb/>
a tobacco chewer to tilt For she's cut her bloomers <lb/>
Star. And made a gait. <lb/>
New York Journal. <lb/>
A of at Atlanta <lb/>
visitors from North Car- <lb/>
make a note of the differ- <lb/>
in time they are apt to be <lb/>
put to many little annoyances. If <lb/>
those who go from this section <lb/>
will Ht their watches one hour <lb/>
fast, on reaching they <lb/>
will have trouble on the score <lb/>
of the correct time, for <lb/>
time is just one hour <lb/>
slower than North Carolina time. <lb/>
When it is o'clock noon here, <lb/>
it is U Atlanta. It is easily <lb/>
seen how this hour's difference in <lb/>
time may work trouble for those <lb/>
careless about such matters, es- <lb/>
when they want to be <lb/>
prompt at dinner, at the <lb/>
or more particularly when they <lb/>
want to catch a train for home <lb/>
North Carolina people <lb/>
forget that when it is o'clock <lb/>
in Atlanta it is o'clock in North <lb/>
Carolina and fix their watches so <lb/>
that they will not get muddled <lb/>
Raleigh Press Visitor. <lb/>
men who dip in <lb/>
ink have latterly had <lb/>
much to say of the greatly <lb/>
proved outlook and it is doubt <lb/>
true that there has some <lb/>
reaction that is favorable since <lb/>
very low plane of 1894, when <lb/>
the bottom had drop- <lb/>
out. But somehow the tramp <lb/>
business flourishes- According <lb/>
to a Northern in <lb/>
1892, the number of tramps was <lb/>
costing annually <lb/>
for their support. He says that <lb/>
this army has so in <lb/>
creased that in 1895. it really <lb/>
numbers costing the <lb/>
to f -ed them. The <lb/>
army of tramps is being recruited <lb/>
enlarged all the time- Why <lb/>
Where is tho cure f Wilmington <lb/>
Messenger. <lb/>
Some years ago a storekeeper <lb/>
and Holland tho past in N. Y., was <lb/>
years, is known among tho on- at a moat singular sight <lb/>
as blistering A <lb/>
i, , . . <lb/>
a blister on the feet by a horse <lb/>
some other exposed an had halted there, aim <lb/>
of the of the supposed corpse about the vehicle were <lb/>
The test to be infallible all boys. the <lb/>
for this If the blister pro , ., <lb/>
, , , . ,. ,. K, wagon was mother, by the <lb/>
by application of a J <lb/>
j lighted can or red-hot iron, or stood the father, who ex- <lb/>
tire in form, is shown to coo- plaited to store <lb/>
fluid upon being keeper that they were their <lb/>
opened, there is still life in the way to Indiana, <lb/>
body, a burial the cir- ; , . <lb/>
would not be II <lb/>
aide. the other baud should <lb/>
blister be empty, or this family asked <lb/>
steam only, the sorrowing friends <lb/>
may rest assured that the vital y . <lb/>
spark has flown, and that there is , , , <lb/>
danger that the corpse is be- twenty four boys, twelve sets of <lb/>
twins, and we have children <lb/>
dead. At night what get <lb/>
The Queen Of All. into the wagon, under it <lb/>
the ground IVe all bore, <lb/>
the dear old mother <lb/>
j Time has scattered the snowy The was so pleased <lb/>
flakes her brow, plowed deep at the sight that formed the <lb/>
furrows on her cheeks, but is she boys line and each <lb/>
not sweet beautiful a straw <lb/>
Tho lips shrunken, but <lb/>
I those are tho lips which have <lb/>
i kissed many a hot tear from the Talk of <lb/>
childish and they are the masters Civil Service. <lb/>
lips all the world.; <lb/>
The eve is dim, yet it glows with j President Cleveland has in con- <lb/>
the soft radiance of holy love an order placing all I <lb/>
which can fade. Ah, yes. j the fourth-class post offices under <lb/>
She is dear old mother. The the protection of the civil service i <lb/>
sands life are nearly run out, jaw. There were July of j <lb/>
feeble as is, she will go I tie year <lb/>
further and reach down lower for I in the United States, of j <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875- <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
PORK <lb/>
l their supplies will <lb/>
their interest CO get our prices before <lb/>
la complete <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
FLOOR, SUGAR <lb/>
RICK, <lb/>
i-v M <lb/>
., CIGARS <lb/>
re direct from pus <lb/>
tiling you to buy at la A <lb/>
of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
always prices <lb/>
I lines. bought and <lb/>
gold for therefore, having no risk <lb/>
t i sell at a close <lb/>
-4. M. N C <lb/>
Greenville Collegiate <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
j N. C s. P. <lb/>
VI A. M. With full corps of <lb/>
Next session ill begin <lb/>
All <lb/>
the s, Ancient and <lb/>
Modern Music will on <lb/>
taught on Hie conservatory plan, <lb/>
by a graduate In <lb/>
but kind. <lb/>
Terms Art and Elocution <lb/>
will be if desired, Calisthenics <lb/>
free. particulars address I lie <lb/>
Villa N. U. <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Academy. <lb/>
I lie session of this School will <lb/>
on <lb/>
SEPT. I <lb/>
Yesterday Adjutant <lb/>
Cameron issued a for <lb/>
revolvers for officers <lb/>
of the guard. The in- <lb/>
Colts revolvers, cal <lb/>
cartridge belts, pis <lb/>
holsters revolver ball <lb/>
cartridges- Maj. Hayes remarked <lb/>
yesterday that he considered the <lb/>
militia now to be in better <lb/>
than it ever had been, as far <lb/>
as his observation went. <lb/>
men are provided for <lb/>
com in every way, <lb/>
both in clothing, camp-outfit <lb/>
military supplies, all which is <lb/>
largely due to the unceasing in- <lb/>
and vigilance and good <lb/>
management General Cameron. <lb/>
Raleigh and Observer <lb/>
yon than other upon earth. <lb/>
You walk into a mid- <lb/>
night where she cannot see you ; <lb/>
you enter a prison whose <lb/>
bars will keep her out; you can <lb/>
never mount a scaffold too high <lb/>
for her to reach, that she may <lb/>
kiss and bless evidence of <lb/>
her deathless love. When the <lb/>
shall and <lb/>
you, when it leaves you by the <lb/>
wayside to die unnoticed, the <lb/>
dear old mother will gather you <lb/>
in her arms and carry you <lb/>
j home and tell you of all your <lb/>
until you almost forget that <lb/>
your soul is disfigured by <lb/>
Love her tenderly and cheer her <lb/>
declining years with holy <lb/>
A Chicago journal <lb/>
advocates a head tax of on <lb/>
every American going to Europe <lb/>
to spend precious American gold. <lb/>
If that is such a terrible thing <lb/>
for the country, how about these <lb/>
marriages of heiresses to <lb/>
titles, which take away in hulk in <lb/>
tome cases as much as or- <lb/>
travelers spend in the <lb/>
of a season <lb/>
There was a time when business <lb/>
men could do without advertising, <lb/>
but it gone to return no more <lb/>
Those were the days of stage <lb/>
and tallow <lb/>
is done in a <lb/>
man who does not move a <lb/>
hurry gets left. This is a reading <lb/>
ago. People expect the <lb/>
per to keep them informed upon <lb/>
everything. They want <lb/>
homes before they <lb/>
buy. Hence the superiority of <lb/>
newspaper advertising <lb/>
other forms. Put this in your pipe <lb/>
and smoke it. most successful <lb/>
merchants are the most persist- <lb/>
advertisers. <lb/>
A Suggestion ts to Turnips. <lb/>
This dry. hot-weather is expect- <lb/>
ed to adversely affect the turnip <lb/>
crop now growing. is too late <lb/>
to anything with rutabagas- <lb/>
they of sow <lb/>
the with those grow <lb/>
but informs us that <lb/>
white turnips will still come and <lb/>
do well if planted. <lb/>
It might well for former <lb/>
friends to try another sowing. If <lb/>
first sown ones should <lb/>
out poorly there might be good <lb/>
in the sowing <lb/>
What a Trio <lb/>
had South Caro- <lb/>
has her forth <lb/>
i has her Mary Ann <lb/>
Terms <lb/>
which number were the <lb/>
fourth class list, will be <lb/>
by tho proposed <lb/>
of the civil service rules. The <lb/>
peculiar actor of the service <lb/>
will make it necessary to devise <lb/>
special rules for <lb/>
of these postmasters, the <lb/>
the officials of the <lb/>
Department the <lb/>
Civil Service Commissioners have <lb/>
had the matter under <lb/>
for some time. <lb/>
on Top. <lb/>
Through recent and <lb/>
events the South has entered <lb/>
upon period of its most <lb/>
and substantial development <lb/>
Detroit Free s. <lb/>
The South, i now only in the <lb/>
beginning of its progress. It is <lb/>
taking the first steps merely in a <lb/>
forward march which in years <lb/>
to will have carried it so <lb/>
far beyond where it now is that <lb/>
its. advancement will <lb/>
seem slight <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
and continue ten mouths. <lb/>
Th course embraces branches <lb/>
usually in an Academy. <lb/>
Terms, both for and board <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
Boys wed lined and equipped for <lb/>
taking the mad <lb/>
course alone. Where they wish to <lb/>
a higher course, this school <lb/>
guarantees thorough preparation to <lb/>
enter, with credit, any College in North <lb/>
Carolina, or the State University. It <lb/>
refers to tho-e who have left <lb/>
its walls for the truthfulness of <lb/>
statement. <lb/>
Any young man with character and <lb/>
moderate ability taking a course with <lb/>
us will in arrange- <lb/>
to continue the higher <lb/>
The discipline will be kept at its <lb/>
standard. <lb/>
Neither time nor attention nor <lb/>
work will he pared to make this school <lb/>
parents could <lb/>
For fun her ace or ad- <lb/>
II. <lb/>
July Principal. <lb/>
The Charlotte <lb/>
OBSERVER, <lb/>
North Carolina's <lb/>
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER <lb/>
DAILY <lb/>
College Hotel <lb/>
Convenient to depot to the to- <lb/>
inc. o warehouses. <lb/>
and highest location around <lb/>
I mineral water. <lb/>
Rooms large and comfortable, Table <lb/>
supplied with the b the market at <lb/>
AND <lb/>
A New York magistrate had de- <lb/>
that it is legal to sell soda <lb/>
water on Sunday, but no chew- <lb/>
gum. The basis of his <lb/>
on is that the former has an es- <lb/>
respectability, but tho <lb/>
has not- <lb/>
LOCAL DIRECTORY. <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
Superior Con-it Clerk, E. A. <lb/>
Sheriff, R. W. King. <lb/>
Register of Deeds, W. M. King. <lb/>
Treasurer, J. J. Little. <lb/>
Coroner, Dr. C. Laughing- <lb/>
Dawson, <lb/>
T. E. L. <lb/>
Smith and S. M. Jones. <lb/>
Health, Dr. W. H. <lb/>
Home, J. W. Smith. <lb/>
County Examiner of <lb/>
W. II. <lb/>
TOWN OFFICE US. <lb/>
Mayor, Ola Forbes. <lb/>
Clerk, C. Forbes. <lb/>
Treasure, T. Godwin. <lb/>
W. chief, Fred. <lb/>
Cox, asst; J. W. Murphy, night. <lb/>
II. Smith, W. L. <lb/>
W. T. Godwin. T. A. <lb/>
Julius Jenkins. <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
Baptist. Services every Sunday <lb/>
second morning and night. Prayer <lb/>
night. Rev. c M. <lb/>
pastor. Sunday School <lb/>
A. M. C. <lb/>
Catholic. No regular services. <lb/>
Episcopal. Services every fourth Sun- <lb/>
day morning and night. Rev. A, <lb/>
Rector. Sunday School at <lb/>
A. W. B. Brown, <lb/>
Methodist. Services every Sunday <lb/>
morning light. Prayer meeting <lb/>
night. Rev. F. Smith, <lb/>
Mater. Sunday at A. M. A. <lb/>
B. Sept. <lb/>
Presbyterian. 1st <lb/>
3rd Sunday morning and Prayer <lb/>
meeting Tuesday night Rev. Archie <lb/>
pastor. Sunday School at <lb/>
A. D. Evans, <lb/>
Covenant. Lodge No. I. O. O. F., <lb/>
meets every Tuesday night. <lb/>
et, <lb/>
No. A. F. A A. <lb/>
M. meets and third Monday nights <lb/>
Zeno Moore. W. M <lb/>
R. D. T,. JAMES. <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
OR. B. A. JOYNER <lb/>
DENTIST. <lb/>
O. <lb/>
up stairs over S. K, Penile i Cos, <lb/>
Hardware store. <lb/>
J. E. V. <lb/>
Williamston. <lb/>
A MOORE,<lb/>
tinier Opera House. <lb/>
n G. <lb/>
G R E I. N V I L L E, i; <lb/>
nil Col <lb/>
specialty. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
reasonable. <lb/>
WEEKLY. <lb/>
Independent and fearless ; bigger and <lb/>
more attractive than ever, it will he an <lb/>
Invaluable visitor to home, the <lb/>
the club or tho work room. <lb/>
TUB DAILY OBSERVER. <lb/>
All of the news of the world. Com- <lb/>
Daily reports from the State <lb/>
and National Capitols. tS a year. <lb/>
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb/>
A-perfect family journal. All the <lb/>
news the week. The reports <lb/>
from the Legislature a special. <lb/>
Remember the Weekly Ob- <lb/>
server. <lb/>
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A <lb/>
Send for sample copies. <lb/>
TUT. OBSERVER, <lb/>
Charlotte, W. C. <lb/>
Attorney and Counselor at-Law <lb/>
Greenville, County, <lb/>
Practices in all the Courts. <lb/>
Civil and Criminal Business Solicited. <lb/>
Makes a special of fraud <lb/>
ages, actions to recover land, and col- <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention given <lb/>
all business. <lb/>
Money to loan on approved security. <lb/>
ms easy. <lb/>
J. H. VI . J. I,. <lb/>
BLOUNT FLEMING<lb/>
Practice in all the Courts. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY <lb/>
I a <lb/>
N. C. , .<lb/>
John E. F. C. Harding, <lb/>
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. <lb/>
A HARDING, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
Special attention given to <lb/>
and settlement of claims,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017766_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Tobacco Department. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
I. I Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb/>
Entered at the t. Greenville <lb/>
X. C, as matter. <lb/>
OCT. 1685. <lb/>
The crisp weather of past <lb/>
few has caused breaks to be <lb/>
lighter. <lb/>
The Texas Legislature just <lb/>
four hours to settle the <lb/>
. --1 ion of prize lighting in that breaks yesterday. <lb/>
So Co., will <lb/>
have to try their skill else- <lb/>
where. The fight will now come <lb/>
off in Mexico, several cities are <lb/>
already bidding for it and the <lb/>
authorities assure them that <lb/>
there will be no interference. <lb/>
company <lb/>
decided in Raleigh Wednesday <lb/>
night that they would have <lb/>
again all the way down beginning <lb/>
with Presidential elector. They <lb/>
will have pledged to vote <lb/>
or no mail who is not in favor <lb/>
the free coinage of silver. In <lb/>
the <lb/>
need not on North <lb/>
Carolina. This to tin <lb/>
National Republican Committee, <lb/>
we will North Car- <lb/>
Quite s delegation of <lb/>
Wilson were on the <lb/>
all sail <lb/>
tobacco was high down he.-e. <lb/>
We never saw prices better at <lb/>
The question of the <lb/>
of the Atlanta Exposition on <lb/>
Sunday was settled at a meet- <lb/>
of the directors on Monday <lb/>
evening. The vote was over- <lb/>
against having <lb/>
the gates on Sunday. <lb/>
This is all right, <lb/>
our Southern capital city pro <lb/>
poses to the Lord's day. <lb/>
Whosoever the <lb/>
Lord, him will the Lord <lb/>
and we it will be <lb/>
with this Exposition. <lb/>
shows a marked difference be <lb/>
tween Chicago and Atlanta an <lb/>
between the north-west and th <lb/>
South as regards the Sabbath. <lb/>
TOM Watson is again defeat- <lb/>
ed in the tenth Congressional <lb/>
district in Georgia. Last <lb/>
when Mr. Black was <lb/>
Tom cried fraud fraud So <lb/>
Mr. Black resigned and pro- <lb/>
posed lo Tom that they <lb/>
try it over again. The election <lb/>
Wednesday the <lb/>
ever known in this district <lb/>
Mr. Watson was beaten by i <lb/>
majority of Watson <lb/>
votes this time in nearly <lb/>
county in the district and es- <lb/>
in his own county. <lb/>
Wonder what his cry will be <lb/>
next <lb/>
A mammoth meeting has beet <lb/>
held, in Chicago expressing <lb/>
sympathy for the Cubans. Res <lb/>
were passed asking the <lb/>
United States to recognize at <lb/>
belligerents the men who are <lb/>
lighting for their freedom. A <lb/>
large number of organization- <lb/>
were represented, and many <lb/>
telegrams and letters of <lb/>
val of the meeting were read <lb/>
from prominent men Every <lb/>
available foot of space in the <lb/>
hall was filled, and every sen <lb/>
of sympathy for the Cu- <lb/>
bans was cheered to the echo <lb/>
It is not believed, however, that <lb/>
the States interfere <lb/>
with the insurrection. <lb/>
it is said, is ruling <lb/>
with a high hand in South Car <lb/>
lie proposes that the <lb/>
Convention which now in <lb/>
session shall change the law s <lb/>
that he and his party may be <lb/>
able to disfranchise any man <lb/>
who does not wish to vote <lb/>
for them. It is proposed to <lb/>
make both an educational <lb/>
property qualification <lb/>
to the right of but be- <lb/>
this it is proposed to go <lb/>
and give the registrar the right <lb/>
to say whether a man is <lb/>
This will be reform <lb/>
with a The law is <lb/>
aimed at the but if <lb/>
the clause giving absolute pow- <lb/>
to the registrars should be <lb/>
come a law it can be used just <lb/>
as well to disfranchise the <lb/>
whites. <lb/>
this season of ah <lb/>
tobaccos, except wrappers. <lb/>
They will no w in demand. <lb/>
During tho mouth of <lb/>
the Greenville tobacco market <lb/>
sold ore million ail ninety sis <lb/>
thousand pounds. These figures <lb/>
be sworn to by the <lb/>
Wonder how mush MOM of the <lb/>
other eastern will report. <lb/>
Greenville now has the best <lb/>
opportunity it has ever had to <lb/>
push its claims and show its ad- <lb/>
vantages to the world- Let <lb/>
me put his shoulder lo the heel <lb/>
and push with might wail, <lb/>
for the Queen of the New <lb/>
We were asked by a <lb/>
yesterday why it was that the re- <lb/>
ports gave Wilson and Book <lb/>
Mount the credit for selling <lb/>
much tobacco ODd <lb/>
only about three-fourths of what <lb/>
these markets are selling, when <lb/>
n truth upon every visit he <lb/>
he eastern markets be <lb/>
Greenville selling more tobacco <lb/>
either of the <lb/>
Judge of the Unite <lb/>
District Court has decided <lb/>
suit of the American <lb/>
Jo., the <lb/>
Co., W. F- Smith ft Sons, <lb/>
others the Ame <lb/>
Tobacco Co. the <lb/>
Machine Co., says a W dis- <lb/>
latch to the Raleigh Aw <lb/>
Observer. the decision tiled <lb/>
dismissed <lb/>
attached the cost <lb/>
f the suit the <lb/>
can Tobacco Co. the <lb/>
sack Machine Co. <lb/>
Mr. J. Bryan Grimes, of <lb/>
came up Friday <lb/>
about three thousand pounds <lb/>
f at E <lb/>
says this was his first <lb/>
visit to the Greenville tobacco <lb/>
market season and his first <lb/>
to us when he drove up <lb/>
were you seem to have <lb/>
quite a little city up Mr. <lb/>
has frequently before <lb/>
told tobacco on the Greenville <lb/>
market, but he like numbers of <lb/>
others that have not been <lb/>
the tobacco warehouses lately <lb/>
was at lie <lb/>
progress this part of town <lb/>
has made the last four years- <lb/>
T- J. Gentry, who returned <lb/>
Wednesday from Roxboro on a <lb/>
visit to his parents and---------, <lb/>
the frost there has <lb/>
damaged a good many farm <lb/>
He says about one-fourth <lb/>
if the tobacco crop is still on be <lb/>
nil and a great many farmers <lb/>
lave not cut over half, while on <lb/>
he whole about three fourths of <lb/>
he crop has been saved. In Wes <lb/>
em North Carolina and Virginia <lb/>
he damage done tobacco crops is <lb/>
heavy, while in <lb/>
lessee and in Kentucky the <lb/>
standing crop is ruined. In Penn- <lb/>
and the other tobacco <lb/>
States of the north <lb/>
On a good season now farmers <lb/>
can begin stripping out their to <lb/>
Tobacco is selling as well as we <lb/>
saw it at this season of the <lb/>
year. Good cutters, smokers and <lb/>
strips are remarkably <lb/>
wrappers, well, we had any <lb/>
yet don't know how they <lb/>
would sell. <lb/>
During nest eight weeks <lb/>
the columns of the Tobacco De <lb/>
will be open for the <lb/>
discussion of any matter pertain- <lb/>
to tho tobacco interests of <lb/>
Greenville and surrounding <lb/>
try. <lb/>
especially invite the ware- <lb/>
housemen of Greenville to lend <lb/>
us a helping hand getting up <lb/>
news that will be of inter <lb/>
to the tobacco reading <lb/>
Let us all get together and see if <lb/>
we can't make the tobacco <lb/>
attractive, and <lb/>
The Board of Trade <lb/>
and tho got to <lb/>
the other evening and <lb/>
raised half the amount required <lb/>
to advertise and illustrate tho to <lb/>
market. As yet we have <lb/>
only a few merchants to <lb/>
contribute without a single <lb/>
exception everyone has promised <lb/>
to aid us. Those that have not <lb/>
been called upon yet need not <lb/>
get uneasy, shall see them all <lb/>
by and by. <lb/>
During the last four years, in <lb/>
other words ever since Greenville <lb/>
his had a tobacco warehouse, <lb/>
there have been enemies of the <lb/>
market at work doing everything <lb/>
they could to undermine and <lb/>
break down the tobacco interests <lb/>
here- Every conceivable <lb/>
has been to induce <lb/>
people to carry their tobacco to <lb/>
either Wilson or Rocky Mount. <lb/>
Farmers have been told that the <lb/>
here were buying <lb/>
tobacco and shipping it to those <lb/>
markets and making money on <lb/>
it and other kinds of equally fool <lb/>
and false methods have been <lb/>
rt a ployed to lure away <lb/>
Greenville. To all of these <lb/>
Wilson tobacconists say that <lb/>
nearly halt of the crop <lb/>
has been that section <lb/>
If that is the case then Green- <lb/>
ville will lead Wilson this year <lb/>
by a good majority. <lb/>
We were mistaken in our state- <lb/>
Friday that no warehouse- <lb/>
man here had shipped tobacco to <lb/>
Wilson. We asked one member <lb/>
of each house not king it <lb/>
necessary to see them ail. <lb/>
Saturday one of the warehouse- <lb/>
men said to that he wanted <lb/>
to say that after trying all the <lb/>
markets to see how they were, <lb/>
so much of the high <lb/>
prices of Wilson he shipped three <lb/>
packages there just to see hew it <lb/>
sold, on the three packages <lb/>
he lost just even ninety <lb/>
dollars- This evidence is rec- <lb/>
if wants mote <lb/>
on the subject if he will up <lb/>
ply to as we will him to th <lb/>
parties who did the shipping and <lb/>
selling. <lb/>
If the business men of Green- <lb/>
will now go to work and take ad <lb/>
vantage of the opportunities in <lb/>
sight to make Greenville a <lb/>
town it will not be the <lb/>
close of before we will have i. <lb/>
a city of more than five thousand <lb/>
people. Manufacturing <lb/>
of various kinds could <lb/>
good business management be <lb/>
carried most successfully <lb/>
A canning factory to work up the <lb/>
fruits and vegetables <lb/>
are here in abundance <lb/>
could be made to pay <lb/>
dividends. Our cotton interest <lb/>
would justify a cotton factory. <lb/>
Our tobacco interest would win <lb/>
rant the successful operation <lb/>
tobacco factories and raw mate, i <lb/>
of various kinds is here ii <lb/>
abundance and only needs <lb/>
touch of business men to tun. <lb/>
them into staple products. <lb/>
The people of Pitt county <lb/>
surrounding counties have <lb/>
that no class of agriculturist <lb/>
in the great state of North Caro- <lb/>
possess. We laMb <lb/>
adapted to tho the growth of col- <lb/>
has just reached us that demands <lb/>
an explanation and a <lb/>
tho writer as he is the <lb/>
one this time implicated. We were <lb/>
told by a farmer Thursday that he <lb/>
had been told while in Wilson <lb/>
a few days ago that that O. L- <lb/>
Joyner was shipping tobacco <lb/>
from this point to Wilson and <lb/>
money on it. This was <lb/>
used as an argument to the far- <lb/>
mer to show to him that it was <lb/>
best to carry his tobacco direct to <lb/>
Wilson rather than sell in Green <lb/>
where it would be bought <lb/>
And eventually shipped to <lb/>
sod sold at a profit. To this <lb/>
we only have to say that we have <lb/>
asked every here <lb/>
if he ever shipped tobacco to <lb/>
son to be sold they all say <lb/>
positively they never did. So far <lb/>
as we are concerned in this mat <lb/>
we that the <lb/>
argument was used as a false de <lb/>
scheme to get tobacco to <lb/>
Wilson and tho who started <lb/>
,,, . on the report is an <lb/>
hill it is ruined. The extent We have never <lb/>
A the damage cannot be learned, j of tobacco <lb/>
everywhere it is reported we ; <lb/>
heavy. <lb/>
ton, corn, peanuts, potatoes, <lb/>
the the Greenville to- products are <lb/>
men is to treat such things to perfection. There are <lb/>
with silent contempt knowing full of a in Pitt <lb/>
well that they would soon rebound man <lb/>
against the author, but a report I be converted int. <lb/>
i us credit <lb/>
sense- <lb/>
for having so little <lb/>
into blooming orchards <lb/>
would turn out in- <lb/>
comes to the owners in a few <lb/>
years. We have almost as fine <lb/>
grain pasture lands as the <lb/>
far famed bluegrass region of <lb/>
Kentucky, and last, but by no <lb/>
means, least lands grow and <lb/>
mature the finest bright tobacco <lb/>
grown in the world. Hence we <lb/>
repeat that with these advantages <lb/>
our people are blessed indeed <lb/>
while some of of us may think <lb/>
ours a hard lot, if we only think <lb/>
of the many blessings that we <lb/>
have over others our <lb/>
will be more general. <lb/>
IS THE <lb/>
Buy the Genuine <lb/>
JAMES GRAPES, <lb/>
From A Son. who <lb/>
make a of the e <lb/>
Vines for market. Send for Cat- <lb/>
of Grape Vines, Fruit and <lb/>
Trees Greenhouse Plants. Also <lb/>
Tulip, Narcissus, Lily and <lb/>
other <lb/>
ALLEN WARREN <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Some months ago the <lb/>
Dispatch <lb/>
some of the acts of Mayor Fish- <lb/>
of that city, whereupon <lb/>
the Mayor had the editors of <lb/>
that paper indicted for <lb/>
libel. When the case was <lb/>
brought up before New Han- <lb/>
over court on Monday, the <lb/>
Mayor had presented an <lb/>
davit asking for a removal of <lb/>
the case to another county on <lb/>
the ground that he did not be- <lb/>
he could get a fair trail <lb/>
in his own city and county. <lb/>
This seems rather for <lb/>
the in a case to be <lb/>
making such an affidavit, and <lb/>
looks on the surface that he i s <lb/>
afraid to face what might be <lb/>
brought Against his record, <lb/>
judge Green, who was <lb/>
denied the motion to <lb/>
move the case. <lb/>
TO THE TOBACCO FARMERS <lb/>
Just stop, think, consider where you can <lb/>
best protect your interest in <lb/>
of your Tobacco crop. <lb/>
For four year we have worked hard and spent our money in building <lb/>
and placing the Greenville Tobacco Market in the front rank of the <lb/>
Markets of the world. Since Greenville first had a To- <lb/>
Warehouse we have been on the grounds working day and night <lb/>
to acquire the best possible knowledge of how to sell the farmers <lb/>
co to the best advantage and now after four years of difficult toil we <lb/>
want to say to all who have tobacco to sell that we believe we are in a <lb/>
better position than any Warehouse firm in Eastern North Carolina to <lb/>
get the highest market price for your product. So with this we make <lb/>
our politest bow asking for a continuance and an increase of your pat- <lb/>
only upon the strictest business merit. We have no special pets <lb/>
to whom fancy prices are given at the expense of less favored ones but <lb/>
our undivided personal attention is given to every pile of your Tobacco <lb/>
and if your interest should at any time be neglected our attention only <lb/>
needs to be called to it and cheerfully and willingly all wrongs will be <lb/>
righted. Our opinion is that Tobacco is selling very well for the <lb/>
offered and from now on we expects lively market. So when you <lb/>
get ready to sell just hook up and drive straight to the old reliable <lb/>
headquarters for high prices, good averages and all <lb/>
round courteous treatment. <lb/>
Your friends, <lb/>
JOYNER CO., <lb/>
Owners and Proprietors Eastern Warehouse. <lb/>
HUSBAND <lb/>
His last Suit of Clothes Most <lb/>
ladies do buy their husband's <lb/>
Clothes. Its right that they <lb/>
should. A man don't know <lb/>
what looks well on him and be- <lb/>
sides he don't know a good <lb/>
piece of good from a common <lb/>
piece- His wife does and its <lb/>
to his interest to let her buy <lb/>
his Clothes. He saves money <lb/>
by it and is more becomingly <lb/>
dressed. Speaking of Clothes <lb/>
I have a very nice line for <lb/>
Men I bought at a bankrupt <lb/>
sale which I will sell at a very <lb/>
low one-half its <lb/>
real value- I have Suits from <lb/>
up. Don't fail to sec me <lb/>
before buying. I have also <lb/>
a nice line of Dress Goods <lb/>
and Notions that I am selling <lb/>
cheaper than any man in town <lb/>
When in need of SHOES re- <lb/>
member my stock is complete <lb/>
and will sell them cheap. <lb/>
H. B. CLARK. <lb/>
Middle store in Opera House <lb/>
run <lb/>
BIG VALUES DRAW <lb/>
Low Prices the People. <lb/>
Drop in to scenic, to swap thoughts and ideas. <lb/>
I have a complete line of <lb/>
Fall <lb/>
in all shapes and makes. Styles superb, fit <lb/>
faultless, prices popular. <lb/>
For All <lb/>
J FEET. <lb/>
Standard makes by celebrated shoe artists. <lb/>
flats, Ac- low down. Come and see <lb/>
me <lb/>
Keep Your <lb/>
Eyes on <lb/>
this Space. <lb/>
Will Open <lb/>
Them Next <lb/>
Week. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
WANTS f <lb/>
1500.000 Pounds <lb/>
Stoves. Stoves. <lb/>
We are laying in a full line <lb/>
Iron Heating <lb/>
Stoves. Best quality, low prices. Call and <lb/>
celebrated <lb/>
and Columbia <lb/>
and have on hand second-hand <lb/>
for sale very cheap. You may need a MI owing- <lb/>
Machine, we have in stock. <lb/>
S. EL CO <lb/>
Drugstore. <lb/>
STOVES STOVES <lb/>
I am now <lb/>
my Fall Stock <lb/>
and Heating Stoves. <lb/>
receiving <lb/>
of <lb/>
Cooking <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
, . . if or. respect. The New Dixie, Comfort, Iron King, <lb/>
satisfactory prices will get it. for Cash a for Cash T <lb/>
My Cook Stoves are made by the Richmond <lb/>
Stove Co., and are as widely known as any E t <lb/>
made. I have been handling them more than <lb/>
years, and find that they are the Stove for the <lb/>
Plow Boy, Now <lb/>
Patron and New Lee. Price from and up. <lb/>
I have the best Stove ever sold <lb/>
on this market. With each Stove give pipe and <lb/>
the fixtures to do the cooking for any family. I <lb/>
keep constantly on hand castings for the Stoves <lb/>
I sell. My Stove Pipe is made the best Eastern <lb/>
Iron. My are first class i n every <lb/>
Give us a trial and be convinced that <lb/>
FORBES MOVE <lb/>
can and will give satisfaction in every respect. <lb/>
The High Prices we are getting every day for <lb/>
the farmers who sell with us will convince you <lb/>
that we are yours for highest averages, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
y jot a sen l get <lb/>
off all the discounts possible and I give my <lb/>
it in low prices, <lb/>
in stock, Doors, Sash, Glass, Putty, Oil, Lead, <lb/>
Axes, Mails, Belting, Rope, Saws, Tools, Iron <lb/>
Drive Pumps and Pipes and everything kept in <lb/>
a first class Hardware Store. I sell the <lb/>
heaviest Pump made. All <lb/>
ed to look at my stock. <lb/>
sell for <lb/>
D. D. HASKETT, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017766_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
Cotton 8.40. <lb/>
Down with the dust. <lb/>
At la.-t it ha rained- <lb/>
is coming. <lb/>
Now you en rule your <lb/>
cut your chimney at one. <lb/>
Dust Proof Goods at s. <lb/>
It la e to straw hat. <lb/>
general putting up of stoves- <lb/>
darted their <lb/>
ball <lb/>
Just as well lay in your sup- <lb/>
ply cf cool and wood. <lb/>
The crowd here has gone bat the <lb/>
is still <lb/>
are scarce in Market and <lb/>
good pi ice-. <lb/>
Everybody was sec <lb/>
Monday night. <lb/>
The rain came in time to help <lb/>
the fall turnip crop. <lb/>
Large shipments of grapes <lb/>
being made from here every <lb/>
I lawyers were grant- <lb/>
ed licenses by the Supreme Court <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
When did yon notice the <lb/>
September passed without <lb/>
equinoctial storm <lb/>
Ormand is also lulling in <lb/>
stock of in the hi tiding near th <lb/>
an house. <lb/>
The well up in tobacco town <lb/>
is going right down the earth. The <lb/>
Machine work finely. <lb/>
i not seen Hi out on <lb/>
drill in <lb/>
hoy-, and come out. <lb/>
Some people at Tarboro say they <lb/>
fell a earthquake shock <lb/>
II sun day morning. <lb/>
Go. Carr's tine fresh <lb/>
Batter today. B. M. <lb/>
C lieu Warren tells baa <lb/>
shipped of <lb/>
Grapes orders arc still ahead. <lb/>
lbs. Evans is baring a dwelling <lb/>
built in just south <lb/>
Of Mr. A. new residence. <lb/>
The young people had a in <lb/>
hall Thursday An <lb/>
Italian band was here lo mi <lb/>
been appointed <lb/>
executive committeeman, North <lb/>
Carolina, the National Silver League <lb/>
The tobacco warehouses arc now <lb/>
Working under the new schedule of <lb/>
rates as made by the last Legislature. <lb/>
Mote than Smiths from <lb/>
alone fought in the onion <lb/>
mies. John was in tie crowd <lb/>
times <lb/>
I The Greenville Lumber Co. are put- <lb/>
ting up bill the post- <lb/>
the town will regaled <lb/>
with <lb/>
Dining the month of September <lb/>
Deed-issued sixteen marriage <lb/>
live for white and eleven for <lb/>
, Colored couples. <lb/>
Those who went here A.-- <lb/>
near Scotland returned <lb/>
Monday evening. They report a large <lb/>
crowd in attendance. <lb/>
i it ever occur to you that you can <lb/>
price of a newspaper <lb/>
tines year by carefully read-<lb/>
Oil Cloths in ail s <lb/>
r.-. Lang's- <lb/>
The ii <lb/>
ling e do not recall <lb/>
any people on th; streets in <lb/>
same fix. but some got so earlier in tin <lb/>
week. <lb/>
our printers warning to go <lb/>
to the races we do <lb/>
hold space open to give an account <lb/>
ill ibis i-Mi, ht defer It out <lb/>
row. <lb/>
This is season year for fur <lb/>
fires, and ill coon and <lb/>
. how they urn <lb/>
their torches at night. <lb/>
Talking through the nose or <lb/>
mil e a base drum had <lb/>
been swallowed is lie- fad now, <lb/>
the weather causes people t lake to <lb/>
Hi. St. Louis, has <lb/>
nil tins weather He <lb/>
a regular storm <lb/>
Del o the center and <lb/>
both missing. <lb/>
i- a rumor that there be I <lb/>
W. W. V. in t; before <lb/>
we. k-. don't ask these <lb/>
Utters menu, as re cannot give <lb/>
. i. i do your own guess- <lb/>
He around the train <lb/>
raise a racket drumming for <lb/>
S. Some tIn <lb/>
used by tin w hi advancing <lb/>
home they r present are <lb/>
r s <lb/>
night the mil <lb/>
i miles from town, a white <lb/>
mi colored man a difficulty. <lb/>
Th color, was <lb/>
owled, and it hi th hi <lb/>
wound- will prove fatal <lb/>
II. Long tells us he baa taken on <lb/>
use f M the House and expects <lb/>
i,. be able to have some goo i plays <lb/>
The re- <lb/>
opening of the Opera Hone will be a <lb/>
pleasure of oar people. <lb/>
We been shown th the <lb/>
Forbes Move prize noose jun com- <lb/>
It is one of the best equipped <lb/>
and most on lit houses Oil <lb/>
market, a l force of h in Is arc <lb/>
work all time <lb/>
Mr. T. l Car nine a white <lb/>
ab ii. his nets at mouth of <lb/>
river Monday. This was the <lb/>
In on waters lust <lb/>
; in i <lb/>
unusually <lb/>
join <lb/>
The well is sunk <lb/>
i., i i la- readied a depth of <lb/>
street and slid going down- Some <lb/>
veil peculiar nave been brought <lb/>
h the and Pal <lb/>
are going to Ike gold U there <lb/>
We lino boggles on hand <lb/>
work so <lb/>
rapidly that all l <lb/>
promptly- <lb/>
IN Co <lb/>
ONE AT A <lb/>
The Months Pass, But People in <lb/>
Numbers. <lb/>
B. E. returned Monday even- <lb/>
Dr. T. L. Carr, of Snow Hill, is in <lb/>
town. <lb/>
I. II. is attend court at <lb/>
deacon. <lb/>
W. J. returned home <lb/>
day evening. <lb/>
Mayor D- C. Moore, of Bethel, spent <lb/>
Monday here. <lb/>
J. S. Smith returned from Seven <lb/>
Springs Friday. <lb/>
Prof. C. II. James, of was <lb/>
in Monday. <lb/>
Misses Fannie and Blow have <lb/>
-one to Littleton. <lb/>
M. arrived from Weldon <lb/>
Monday evening. <lb/>
J. D. Swindell, of is in town. <lb/>
once lived here <lb/>
Mrs E. Powell is visiting <lb/>
D. <lb/>
B. C. returned Thursday eve- <lb/>
from Baltimore. <lb/>
Mrs. J. S. Jenkins and children lave <lb/>
I home Virginia. <lb/>
Mis Newell, of county, <lb/>
i- W. White. <lb/>
Solicitor C. M. returned <lb/>
M evening. <lb/>
T. J. returned <lb/>
evening from visit to <lb/>
of here <lb/>
visiting his brother, Maj. Latham. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry returned from a business- <lb/>
trip to Thursday evening. <lb/>
W. Bernard came up from <lb/>
Friday to spend a day or two at <lb/>
Mrs. E. T. Stewart, of Washington, <lb/>
has been a few dais Mis. <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
of lit, Olive, who <lb/>
been visiting Mrs- B. V. <lb/>
I home <lb/>
came over from <lb/>
Holiday to take a position with the John <lb/>
Buggy co. <lb/>
We learn that A. F. a <lb/>
former citizen of this low u and a son <lb/>
Of Cornelius died at <lb/>
den Wednesday evening. <lb/>
W. who in <lb/>
the Presbyterian church. Sunday, re- <lb/>
to Monday. <lb/>
Mayor Sol Cohen and M. II. <lb/>
of Newborn, who were to the <lb/>
races, left for home Friday evening. <lb/>
J. S. C. Benjamin, of <lb/>
-right here and <lb/>
His many friends were glad to <lb/>
see him. <lb/>
K. L. Smith, w. ii. Harrington and <lb/>
wife. Ml n T. Ii. Cherry and K. II. <lb/>
Home and Dannie King and <lb/>
Smith have gone to the <lb/>
fair. <lb/>
Misses Blow, Bessie Harding. <lb/>
Johnston, Ada Tyson. Mary <lb/>
Smith, Tripp and a Miss Cox <lb/>
left last week for the I. College at <lb/>
Dim. D. T. of Washington, <lb/>
and Charles Dully, Newborn, <lb/>
here Saturday with <lb/>
upon the <lb/>
condition of Maj. L. C. Latham. <lb/>
Col. Tom Washington one of the <lb/>
proprietors of the Brick Warehouse, at <lb/>
Wilson, and James K. Woodard, were <lb/>
here Friday to attend the sales and the <lb/>
race Mr. Washington was never in <lb/>
before, but the visit con- <lb/>
him that we have a town and a <lb/>
tobacco market here that will do to talk <lb/>
about. <lb/>
Mr. II. B. Clark who was so long the <lb/>
popular salesman with Mr. W. t. Jones <lb/>
this city, has opened a store in Green- <lb/>
wile. We wish friend Henry <lb/>
predict a blight future for him. II <lb/>
i learned his lesson well from his <lb/>
i employer he will make things hustle <lb/>
his store will lie crowded <lb/>
t Messenger. <lb/>
To A U Market. <lb/>
This week the Tobacco Hoard <lb/>
if Trade begins sending out <lb/>
extra copies, weekly, of THE <lb/>
Reflector for t He <lb/>
of advertising the <lb/>
and showing to <lb/>
the outside world the advantages <lb/>
town has to offer as a place <lb/>
tor making good investments. <lb/>
should a note <lb/>
of fact that this will give them <lb/>
a splendid opportunity of reach- <lb/>
tho of Pitt and <lb/>
counties. No business <lb/>
should this chance. <lb/>
A Good Man Dead. <lb/>
We regret bear of the death <lb/>
of Mr. M. C. S. Cherry, which <lb/>
occurred at his home Bethel <lb/>
on the 2nd inst- Mr. Cherry was <lb/>
one of the most prominent <lb/>
in the county, a staunch Demo- <lb/>
and represented Pitt several <lb/>
times in the Legislature. He <lb/>
was also for years a member of <lb/>
the Board of County <lb/>
and was on the Board <lb/>
that took charge of the county <lb/>
affairs when they had been wreck- <lb/>
ed under lie publican misrule, <lb/>
worked the county of debt <lb/>
and made Pitt the peer <lb/>
of any county in the State- <lb/>
He leaves a large family. <lb/>
An Old Company. <lb/>
The has received a <lb/>
very handsome souvenir <lb/>
giving a brief and concise <lb/>
of the Second Company <lb/>
of New <lb/>
Company was <lb/>
organized by Benedict Arnold in <lb/>
1775, and while not the oldest mil- <lb/>
in, the <lb/>
states it is the having <lb/>
a continuous record, holding <lb/>
meetings and electing its officers <lb/>
for The Com- <lb/>
will leave New Haven on <lb/>
October 19th for Atlanta, to act as <lb/>
guard and escort for Governor <lb/>
of that State. <lb/>
An Unjust Law. <lb/>
The State Treasurer has sent <lb/>
out notices to the Sheriff of each <lb/>
county relative to the section of <lb/>
o act that places a tax <lb/>
on dealers in pianos and <lb/>
organs, and directs the sheriff to <lb/>
proceed as the law directs against <lb/>
parties engaged in selling pianos <lb/>
oz organs in the county. The <lb/>
not apply to agents who <lb/>
take orders for instruments for <lb/>
factories or dealers outside the <lb/>
it is a j unjust law that <lb/>
a citizen of the State <lb/>
lot doing business and at the <lb/>
same time those doing same <lb/>
outside the State can <lb/>
send in all the agents they please <lb/>
and pay no tax. But the <lb/>
made the law, and as the <lb/>
State Treasurer intimates, even if <lb/>
it it does appear burdensome that <lb/>
does not excuse the Sheriff from <lb/>
executing it. But there is no one <lb/>
county liable to this law <lb/>
The County to Have a Vault- <lb/>
Mr. B. P. Smith, of Richmond, <lb/>
was here today and submitted to <lb/>
the Board of County <lb/>
plans and specifications <lb/>
a tire proof vault the <lb/>
House. After considering care- <lb/>
fully the plans submitted by Mr. <lb/>
Smith hearing his <lb/>
as to terms for the vault <lb/>
the Board by unanimous vote <lb/>
taking <lb/>
this step the Commissioners <lb/>
receive the hearty <lb/>
of the people of the <lb/>
generally. It no argument <lb/>
to show the need of a place for the <lb/>
safe keeping of the records <lb/>
other papers in the <lb/>
Clerk's Register of <lb/>
offices. vault to be put by <lb/>
Mr. will be a double one. <lb/>
entrances from both offices, <lb/>
it will be in the <lb/>
jest and most substantial man <lb/>
will be fitted with metal <lb/>
The work will com <lb/>
at once. The vault will <lb/>
cost to be paid for in four <lb/>
yearly payments of <lb/>
sack. Pitt thus takes an- <lb/>
other big step forward. <lb/>
New Advertisement. <lb/>
You will find tho following new <lb/>
advertisements in the <lb/>
to-day <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
Millinery at lowest prices. <lb/>
Allen Warren <lb/>
grapes, vines, fruit <lb/>
tn es. <lb/>
Frank and <lb/>
Shoes. <lb/>
reserved <lb/>
to tel of his stock. <lb/>
Evans, Joy nor Ea-- <lb/>
A- L sale. <lb/>
Only a Bale. <lb/>
,.,,.,,. of the O. p. <lb/>
seam.-.,. Company, m-.-iv. d In- <lb/>
make a still further re- <lb/>
in Ma <lb/>
.,, the now only a <lb/>
bite Greenville <lb/>
rate heretofore baa been ween <lb/>
the two our people can <lb/>
halt what they <lb/>
This is good news <lb/>
for the and they av. <lb/>
them wives of the Old <lb/>
Hue is them. <lb/>
OAKLEY ITEMS. <lb/>
N. Oct. 1805. <lb/>
Charlie Peal, editor of Farmer <lb/>
and Trucker, of Berkley, Va., was <lb/>
visiting relatives last week- <lb/>
Mr, J. A <lb/>
nod H. Williams went to Ku <lb/>
Association Sunday- <lb/>
W. Belcher arrived home <lb/>
Friday from Farm near <lb/>
for a <lb/>
S. H- Taylor and S went to <lb/>
Thursday to pay the <lb/>
tobacco tax. Our <lb/>
me wall in re <lb/>
to said <lb/>
that he going to <lb/>
take a patent cu plowing so <lb/>
that one should every other <lb/>
row but should plow Bush or not <lb/>
at all- <lb/>
Strict Car d. <lb/>
Monday application <lb/>
made to Ho Town Council for the <lb/>
f e. v for I hilt rears for a <lb/>
street car line to operated be- <lb/>
tween the wharf and the depot, to <lb/>
pass along Evans street. <lb/>
Council deferred notion on <lb/>
application until the next regular <lb/>
meeting the <lb/>
of citizen-. the town j <lb/>
may be obtained in tho matter <lb/>
Now let the citizens take <lb/>
it fully, that <lb/>
the Councilman may be <lb/>
to act in accordance with the <lb/>
wishes of the The Re- <lb/>
columns are open to any <lb/>
one wishing to express his <lb/>
ion print. For our part, we <lb/>
believe a street car would be both <lb/>
advantageous to j <lb/>
the people of town. <lb/>
Bethel items. <lb/>
Bethel, N. C, Oct. 7th, 1805. <lb/>
R- A. Peal, of Oakley, spent <lb/>
Sunday in town. <lb/>
James Cherry to Rich- <lb/>
Rev. W. A Forbes preached at <lb/>
Pinnacle Sunday evening. <lb/>
Samuel John-ten and wife and <lb/>
several others from <lb/>
spent Sunday in <lb/>
Rev. E. J- Edwards filled his <lb/>
regular monthly appointment in <lb/>
the church Sunday. <lb/>
A. will <lb/>
a protracted <lb/>
Methodist church this week. <lb/>
On Thursday evening Oct. 3rd, <lb/>
at r of War <lb/>
Andrews, bride's father, <lb/>
in John O- of <lb/>
township, was married <lb/>
to Miss Allie Andrews, Elder <lb/>
Samuel Moore officiating. <lb/>
the residence of <lb/>
James A- Mayo, in Bethel, the <lb/>
brides father, Wednesday Oct. <lb/>
o'clock P. M-, <lb/>
Jones, of was mar- <lb/>
to Miss Mayo, D. C- <lb/>
Moore, officiating- A re- <lb/>
was held after the mar <lb/>
THE ESSENCE OF PUERILITY, <lb/>
Early last week following <lb/>
appeared in personal column <lb/>
of the <lb/>
C. A. Carter, a tobacco buyer, left for <lb/>
Kinston Monday evening. The boys <lb/>
say he found this market too high for <lb/>
him. <lb/>
The Kinston Free construes <lb/>
this item to be upon the <lb/>
Kinston tobacco market and takes <lb/>
to throw off a lot of <lb/>
bile that seems to have lain <lb/>
on its liver. After raving a <lb/>
bit about Greenville <lb/>
and sharks cheating the far- <lb/>
and how much <lb/>
detrimental to the Green- <lb/>
ville market it has suppressed the <lb/>
Free Press closes <lb/>
We have acted courteously towards <lb/>
other markets and we are disposed to <lb/>
continue doing so, but if other markets <lb/>
want a fight they have only to attack <lb/>
the Kinston market. The first stone was <lb/>
thrown by <lb/>
It was a display of more <lb/>
than we thought the free <lb/>
Press could be guilty of- <lb/>
your soul, in printing that item, <lb/>
which was purely a personal note <lb/>
in the personal column of <lb/>
Reflector, the idea never once <lb/>
occurred to us that even <lb/>
had a tobacco market. We <lb/>
at the train bunting for personal <lb/>
items, as is our daily custom, saw <lb/>
Mr Carter leaving and upon <lb/>
where he was going were <lb/>
Kinston, and noticing some of the <lb/>
tobacco boys around the depot <lb/>
having a bit of Inn and chiding <lb/>
him because, as they had put it, <lb/>
tobacco was too high for <lb/>
here, carrying out their spirit of <lb/>
merriment the item was printed <lb/>
accordingly, without <lb/>
caring what the party was <lb/>
to Kinston for, or whether he had <lb/>
ever been th before. <lb/>
However, this ebullition tin <lb/>
part of the <lb/>
show that as has tin <lb/>
best tobacco market in Eastern <lb/>
Carolina it is envied by the small <lb/>
and they seem to de- <lb/>
light in an opportunity to show <lb/>
their spleen- But Greenville has <lb/>
built up its business strictly on <lb/>
merit and without <lb/>
at other markets and will <lb/>
continue to pursue the tenor <lb/>
of v. Four good ware- <lb/>
houses, high prices, of <lb/>
money and reliable business men <lb/>
are our drawing Cards. <lb/>
s Races. <lb/>
There were about a thousand <lb/>
people out at the track to witness <lb/>
he races on Thursday, and they <lb/>
the trials of speed as <lb/>
good as they ever saw. The dust <lb/>
was fearful at times almost <lb/>
the horses <lb/>
The first race was the minute <lb/>
the horses coming <lb/>
jut as 1st <lb/>
by G. J- Wash- <lb/>
by Ed- <lb/>
wards Bros, Snow Hill; 3rd, <lb/>
New <lb/>
born. <lb/>
The winners in the second race <lb/>
class were 1st, by <lb/>
Edwards Snow Hill; 2nd <lb/>
-Old by Dr. Warren, <lb/>
Greenville; 3rd by<lb/>
The winners in the third race- <lb/>
class, were 1st, <lb/>
by <lb/>
Mayor <lb/>
Ellis, 3rd, Rush Miller <lb/>
by G- J- Washington <lb/>
The winners in running <lb/>
race were 1st, by J. G. <lb/>
Washington; 2nd <lb/>
by Leon Williams Tarboro. <lb/>
Small Crowd for First Monday. <lb/>
W e heard Chairman <lb/>
of the of <lb/>
say Monday that there <lb/>
was the smallest crowd here he <lb/>
ever saw on a first Monday in <lb/>
October. There were very few <lb/>
people that had business before <lb/>
the Commissioners and not many <lb/>
were hero.<lb/>
We bad a call Thurs- <lb/>
day from E <lb/>
contracting f Sells Bros, <lb/>
Circus. d very <lb/>
and he s . I.- will be <lb/>
here on November lot. Sells <lb/>
Bros circus is largest show <lb/>
on the road, it takes cars to <lb/>
transport it. Watch the <lb/>
and it will tell yon all about <lb/>
it <lb/>
Off on a Hunt. <lb/>
There was a jolly crowd that <lb/>
went down to den, Friday <lb/>
to engage a big hunt, <lb/>
consisted of G. P- Flawing, <lb/>
Ola Forbes. R. Earnest <lb/>
Forbes, Alf Forbes, R. W <lb/>
shaw, R- M. Lit Mad- <lb/>
it night wort <lb/>
opportune to catch the j <lb/>
and the they brought <lb/>
back with tin-in one and <lb/>
six coons. The boys say they never <lb/>
bad a bigger time. best <lb/>
of the trip was had at the expense <lb/>
of He was strutting <lb/>
along pretty lively in advance of <lb/>
the crowd when he suddenly <lb/>
out of sight and raised a <lb/>
cry f-r help down <lb/>
Tho boy gathered around <lb/>
ind him about <lb/>
u f feet hole. <lb/>
warn of and <lb/>
they could locate him <lb/>
by the light of his cigar <lb/>
which he never lost the fail, <lb/>
fished out and though <lb/>
pretty hunt- <lb/>
DANGER AHEAD. <lb/>
of One Crop Id-. <lb/>
While rejoices <lb/>
the price of cotton has advanced <lb/>
so rapidly, there may after all be <lb/>
some danger about it. It may <lb/>
turn of th far heads <lb/>
and them to rush <lb/>
into planting a largely <lb/>
increased acreage next year. <lb/>
have already heard one large <lb/>
farmer reported as saying if <lb/>
cotton goes to cents this sea- <lb/>
son lie not plant a stalk of <lb/>
tobacco next year, but would go <lb/>
for cotton on a large scale- <lb/>
hint; would more suicidal <lb/>
to the farmers than for a general <lb/>
idea of this kind to prevail among <lb/>
In opinion of the Re- <lb/>
it a tremendous crop of; <lb/>
cotton should be raised year <lb/>
you would see price <lb/>
right back to where it was la.-. <lb/>
season. The farmers should be <lb/>
to desire to pass <lb/>
through the bitter experiences of <lb/>
the h st few years, and would <lb/>
be the outcome of back <lb/>
into the crop idea. only <lb/>
way a high price fur cotton <lb/>
be is to keep the sup- <lb/>
ply below the first <lb/>
idea of the farmer should be to <lb/>
raise his home supplies, and <lb/>
diversify his remaining acres <lb/>
among the crops, not put- <lb/>
ting his entire upon <lb/>
cotton, tobacco or any ether one <lb/>
crop.<lb/>
FALL OPENING. <lb/>
To fit everybody, little feet and <lb/>
Dig feet feet and black feet <lb/>
o you want a Dress <lb/>
suitable Trim- <lb/>
We have latest and newest styles <lb/>
n Tl want a Suit of Clothes <lb/>
Ours are the newest designs <lb/>
and will fit. <lb/>
latest make. <lb/>
designs are beautiful. <lb/>
Hats and Caps.<lb/>
SLASHED. <lb/>
We intend to make our new stock of <lb/>
Dry Goods Shoes. <lb/>
rapidly if low prices will do it. <lb/>
Everything the very a poor article in <lb/>
lie store. Right up in quality. Right up in <lb/>
Right up in assortment. Just what <lb/>
will please you. trouble to show goods. <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
------FOR THE- <lb/>
FALL AND WINTER <lb/>
and cordially invite you to inspect the largest <lb/>
and neatest assortment of <lb/>
you want <lb/>
L I bargains in everything then <lb/>
come to us. <lb/>
BROS <lb/>
Opposite J- A Son. Leader of Low <lb/>
TO THE TOP <lb/>
Below are Norfolk prices of cm ton <lb/>
and peanuts tor yesterday, .-is furnished <lb/>
by Bros- Her- <lb/>
of <lb/>
COTTON. <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Middling s <lb/>
Low Middling s 3-Hi <lb/>
Good Ordinary V <lb/>
steady. <lb/>
Extra <lb/>
lone <lb/>
Twenty Years Proof. <lb/>
Liver Pills keep the bow- <lb/>
els in natural motion and cleanse <lb/>
the system of all impurities An <lb/>
absolute cure for sick headache, <lb/>
dyspepsia, sour stomach, con- <lb/>
and kindred diseases. <lb/>
do without <lb/>
R. P. Smith, Va. <lb/>
writes I don't know how I could <lb/>
do without them. I have had <lb/>
Liver disease for over twenty <lb/>
years. Am now entirely cured. <lb/>
Liver Pills <lb/>
Nearly every visitor here his <lb/>
tiling good to say about Greenville. We <lb/>
have Mien a town here th it they <lb/>
can't help talking about it <lb/>
Nervous Prostration <lb/>
Could Not Had No <lb/>
Appetite <lb/>
Cured In Body and Mind by Hood's <lb/>
Sarsaparilla <lb/>
suffered very much tor a long time <lb/>
with prostration. I had about <lb/>
given up all hopes <lb/>
of let- <lb/>
when <lb/>
ilia v. n <lb/>
recommended t <lb/>
me and I believe it <lb/>
my to lei <lb/>
other duff <lb/>
know the benefit I <lb/>
derived from It. <lb/>
Could Not Steep <lb/>
at r. <lb/>
and <lb/>
did <lb/>
cat I was unable to <lb/>
After taking the <lb/>
T f Dress Goods and Trimmings in <lb/>
the latest novelties. <lb/>
Clothing <lb/>
of the highest art to fit and suit you. <lb/>
SHOES and BOOTS to fit your feet and <lb/>
pocketbook. <lb/>
Hats and Caps in the latest styles. Cloaks- <lb/>
the handsomest line ever brought to this city. <lb/>
Call on us and we will show better than <lb/>
we can tell you. <lb/>
RICKS, TAFT CO. <lb/>
Next door Rawls the Jeweler. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
-.-jute I <lb/>
Mr. J. <lb/>
Pa. <lb/>
on my stomach <lb/>
first of which <lb/>
seemed to do mo good, I tried a <lb/>
second and continued to feel better. <lb/>
got up feeling <lb/>
Bright and Refreshed <lb/>
In the morning. I the <lb/>
am cured, and mind, <lb/>
can deep and feel better in ovary <lb/>
way. I gladly recommend <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Madison Ave., Va. <lb/>
Be Sure <lb/>
to Get Hood's <lb/>
Cures <lb/>
Hood's Pills <lb/>
headache. <lb/>
Ladies, Misses and <lb/>
Wraps. <lb/>
to fit suit<lb/>
HATS AN <lb/>
NOTIONS, TRUNKS, <lb/>
The best and <lb/>
of this season- <lb/>
ever to Greenville. Our stock eon- <lb/>
all the newest and most <lb/>
DRESS GOODS, <lb/>
Trimmings, Notions, Furnish- <lb/>
Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots and Shoes, <lb/>
Domestics, Bleached and Unbleached <lb/>
Sheeting and Shirting, Calicoes, Fancy <lb/>
t ton Dress Goods, and every thing you <lb/>
will want or need in that line. Hardware <lb/>
for farmers and mechanics use, Tinware, <lb/>
Hollowware, Wood and <lb/>
Whips, Buggy Robes, Collars, Rope, <lb/>
Twine, Heavy Groceries always on <lb/>
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Salt and Molasses. <lb/>
The best and largest assortment of Crock- <lb/>
Lamps, Lanterns, Lamp Chimneys and <lb/>
Shades, Fancy Glassware, to be found <lb/>
in the county. And our stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
Matting Rugs and Foot Mats is by far <lb/>
the best and cheapest ever ottered to the people <lb/>
of this section. look and see and buy. <lb/>
Sole agents of Coats Spool Cotton for this town <lb/>
for wholesale and retail trade. Reynold's Shoes <lb/>
for Men and Boys. Bros. Shoes <lb/>
for Ladies and children. We buy Cotton and <lb/>
Peanuts and pay the highest market price for <lb/>
them. Your experience teaches you all to buy <lb/>
and deal with men who will treat you fair and <lb/>
do the square thing by you. Come and see us <lb/>
and be convinced that what we claim is true. <lb/>
Yours for business square dealings, <lb/>
Cheap And Good Goods <lb/>
Differ in their tastes. The foremost <lb/>
thought the men just row is <lb/>
tobacco and high prices, while <lb/>
are thinking the <lb/>
at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
If they will call at the store of <lb/>
I, <lb/>
MRS. GEORGIA PEARCE. <lb/>
will a f ill line of <lb/>
El- <lb/>
Fancy Hair <lb/>
Pin-. Bill and all <lb/>
latest style <lb/>
Agent for <lb/>
J. r. <lb/>
Novelties at very low <lb/>
prices at <lb/>
LANG'S. <lb/>
STABLES. <lb/>
On Fifth Street near Five <lb/>
Points. <lb/>
Passengers carried to any <lb/>
point at reasonable Good <lb/>
Horses. Comfortable Vehicles. <lb/>
I attended sales in New York and Baltimore in July <lb/>
jobbers were purchasing to sell to the southern <lb/>
and I am now prepared to many inducements j <lb/>
my customers and the trade generally. I also <lb/>
bought a big lot of good and reliable BOOTS <lb/>
and SHOES on June 1st before the <lb/>
price. Also a big line of Ladies <lb/>
Dress Goods, Dry Goods and Notions, Crockery, <lb/>
Hardware, Tinware. Wood and <lb/>
and Furniture, which will sell cheap. In <lb/>
proof of what I say will quote you prices of a few <lb/>
liens and Boys Cashmere Pants Men and Boys Cashmere <lb/>
Suits Boys Vest , Mens Vest Boys Coats <lb/>
Mens Coats Mens Suits made of <lb/>
Coats Mens Clay Worsted, Diagonal and Cork- <lb/>
screw Suits to Mens Coats, same material, Boys <lb/>
Suits, size to at Mens Overcoats to <lb/>
Boys Shirts Mens Shins, Mens and Boys <lb/>
Caps to Men and Boys Cotton, Wool and Fur Hats <lb/>
to pair of Skin Shoes, Congress and <lb/>
Lace, worth will sell for Ladies Misses good <lb/>
Shoes to Ladies and Misses old stock, to <lb/>
Children Shoes, old stock, to Nice Rice Good <lb/>
Rica Molasses , Good West India Molasses All <lb/>
kinds of Farmers taken in exchange for goods. High- <lb/>
est cash prices paid for Cotton in Seed or Lint. <lb/>
F. H.<lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017766_0004" n="4"/>
<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 you money. Address, <lb/>
GERMAN KALI WORKS, Nassau Street, New York. <lb/>
R. J. Cobb, <lb/>
Pitt Co., N. C. <lb/>
C. C. Cobb. <lb/>
fie, N. C. <lb/>
Joshua Skinner, <lb/>
to., NO <lb/>
COBB BROS. CO. <lb/>
and rooms near N. A C. R. <lb/>
COTTON AND PEANUT <lb/>
Ties Peanut Sacks Furnished at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
Code, edition 1818, used in Telegraphing. <lb/>
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb/>
T. A- <lb/>
Established <lb/>
P. H- SAVAGE. <lb/>
SAVAGE. SON CO, <lb/>
Cotton Factoid and Commission Merchants <lb/>
TUNIS WHARF, <lb/>
NORFOLK, YA. <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Bagging. Ties. Peanut Bigs, to- S, <lb/>
Attention given to Sales of Cotton, Grain, Peanuts and Pea. <lb/>
Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. Prompt and <lb/>
Market Guaranteed. <lb/>
Norfolk National Bank, n any Reliable House in tin <lb/>
City. <lb/>
n consequence of the removal of the Military from Fay <lb/>
to the name of this i institution of learning will here <lb/>
after be known as Wilson Military Academy. The TERM BEGIN- <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER A let. With greater better <lb/>
equipments, and. if possible, brighter prospects, tin- school enter <lb/>
upon its third year with every cation a much larger patronage and mm- <lb/>
usefulness. The most thorough is given in literary and com <lb/>
branches; moral culture and training r. due attention <lb/>
The Third Annual Announcement, full will be mailed to <lb/>
application. <lb/>
Maj. J. W. Supt., <lb/>
Wilson, N. C. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
fining before the <lb/>
Court Clerk of Pitt county as <lb/>
Administrator of the estate of George <lb/>
Move, deceased, notice Is hereby given <lb/>
to nil persons indebted to the estate to <lb/>
make immediate payment to the under- <lb/>
signed, and having claims <lb/>
against the must present the <lb/>
same for payment on or before the 30th <lb/>
day of September, IS or this notice <lb/>
will he plead in bar of recovery. <lb/>
day or <lb/>
B. E. MOVE. <lb/>
George Move. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors- <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the Sn- <lb/>
pt Court Clark of Pitt county as <lb/>
to the Lost Will an <lb/>
of dames Wall, deceased, notice <lb/>
is hereby given to persons indebted <lb/>
to the estate to make immediate pay- <lb/>
to the undersigned, and all per- <lb/>
sons having claims against said estate <lb/>
must present the same for payment on <lb/>
or before the 17th day of September, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar <lb/>
of recovery. <lb/>
This 17th day of ember <lb/>
H. D. WALL. <lb/>
N. James Wall. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors- <lb/>
Clerk of the Superior Court of <lb/>
Pitt County having Issued to the under- <lb/>
signed on this letters of <lb/>
upon the estate of James <lb/>
way deceased. Notice is hereby given <lb/>
to the creditors of said Jam I Galloway <lb/>
to their claims to the undersign- <lb/>
ed on or before September <lb/>
properly authenticated, or this notice <lb/>
will he plead In bar their recovery. <lb/>
All p Indebted to said estate are <lb/>
r quested to make e payment <lb/>
and thus save costs and expense. <lb/>
his the 13th day September <lb/>
B. W. TUCKER. <lb/>
of James Galloway. <lb/>
Ship produce to <lb/>
J C. Meekins, Jr., <lb/>
Factors <lb/>
Commission <lb/>
NORFOLK VA. <lb/>
j;. <lb/>
Personal Attention given to <lb/>
Weights and <lb/>
ft R <lb/>
AND BRANCHES. <lb/>
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb/>
Condensed <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
Mt <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Selma <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
2-<lb/>
; i; if <lb/>
1-2 u <lb/>
z-. <lb/>
. It. <lb/>
L- i V <lb/>
v i <lb/>
Magnolia IS <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
RIP-A-N-S <lb/>
The modern stand- <lb/>
ard Family <lb/>
cine Cures the <lb/>
common every-day <lb/>
ills of humanity. <lb/>
PORTER'S <lb/>
ANTISEPTIC HEALING OIL <lb/>
Dated July Mb <lb/>
Florence Selma Ar el <lb/>
j A. M. <lb/>
Wilmington Magnolia Goldsboro H <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mt <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
M t <lb/>
Ar Weldon<lb/>
For Barb Wire Cuts, Scratches, <lb/>
Saddle and Collar Galls, Cracked <lb/>
Burns, Old Sores, Cuts, Boils, Bruises. <lb/>
Piles and all kinds of inflammation <lb/>
man or beast. Cures Itch and <lb/>
Cat or Ban Till Batter after the e <lb/>
In <lb/>
lie prepared accidents by keeping it in <lb/>
house or stable. All tell <lb/>
Cure, No Pay. Price and If you. <lb/>
Druggist does not keep Bend us in pas <lb/>
stamps and we will send it to you by mail, <lb/>
h. <lb/>
has Cr <lb/>
Saddle Bars Wire <lb/>
perfect and heartily recommend u <lb/>
ill and <lb/>
C. B. and Feed <lb/>
BABY BU <lb/>
Gentlemen am to a <lb/>
My a h-w <lb/>
. after ti vine all . applied your <lb/>
are and In a day- <lb/>
well. I the nil on my and fin,, lb. <lb/>
beat remedy for purpose that I MM <lb/>
C. T. LEWIS. <lb/>
Pane. January . <lb/>
PARIS MEDICINE CO., <lb/>
ST. BK <lb/>
a J. <lb/>
druggist. <lb/>
Train on Week Branch Hoar <lb/>
Weldon 3.40 p. m., Halifax 4.00 <lb/>
p. m., arrives Scot laud Neck at 4.55 p <lb/>
Greenville 6.37 p. 7.6 <lb/>
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20, <lb/>
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb/>
Halifax at a. m Weldon 11.20 am <lb/>
except <lb/>
Trains on V Brant-h leave <lb/>
Washington a, arrives <lb/>
8.40 p. in. Tarboro 0.50; returning <lb/>
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m , <lb/>
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb/>
except Sunday. Connects with <lb/>
on Scot In Neck Branch. <lb/>
Tram leaves if C, via <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day, at S p. m. Sunday P. <lb/>
Plymouth 9.20 P. M-, 8.20 p. m. <lb/>
He i ii i n ii i g leaves Plymouth daily <lb/>
6.30 a. m., Sunday 0.30 a m. <lb/>
10.5 and II. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C s <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except 6.50 <lb/>
m. arriving a. R. <lb/>
leaves a. m. <lb/>
Goldsboro. <lb/>
Trains on leaves <lb/>
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. arrive <lb/>
ft p. m-, Hope 5.30. <lb/>
p. m. Returning leaves Spring <lb/>
H a. m. 8.35 a. in., <lb/>
-t Rocky Mount a. in., <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Trains on Latta Branch, ii. <lb/>
R. 0.50 p. m., arrive <lb/>
Oar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave <lb/>
bar a-m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. in. <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- <lb/>
for Clinton dally, except Sunday <lb/>
at in. leave Clinton <lb/>
m. at Warsaw with <lb/>
main line <lb/>
F. DIVINE, <lb/>
General Supt. <lb/>
T. M. EMERSON. Traffic Manage-. <lb/>
J. R. KENLY, Manager, <lb/>
This <lb/>
You every <lb/>
in the month <lb/>
September that it <lb/>
you have <lb/>
your done <lb/>
at the <lb/>
JOB OFFICE. <lb/>
It will be done right, <lb/>
It will be done in style <lb/>
and it suits. <lb/>
These points are <lb/>
well worth weighing <lb/>
in any sort <lb/>
of work, but <lb/>
all things in <lb/>
Land. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the Sup <lb/>
Court of Pitt county made at April <lb/>
in a case therein ponding entitle I <lb/>
J. A. of R. A. <lb/>
versus It. B. et a I will on <lb/>
Monday, November 4th. , before <lb/>
the Court House door in Greenville, <lb/>
sell at public Sile to bi r <lb/>
the following pieces or or land <lb/>
lying and in <lb/>
county to wit <lb/>
One tract on the north side Black <lb/>
Swamp known as the <lb/>
adjoining the land of S. N. Bynum, it. <lb/>
acres more or less, <lb/>
One tract known as <lb/>
th- laud- of It. I-. <lb/>
Bynum, others, con- <lb/>
res more or less. <lb/>
One tract known as the Moore <lb/>
adjoining the Lands R, <lb/>
Bynum, J, . in and cm- <lb/>
sores more or less. <lb/>
And one other piece in Falkland <lb/>
township known as the <lb/>
property containing two acres <lb/>
and upon which is situated a store and <lb/>
warehouse. <lb/>
of ale WOO third cash, one <lb/>
I bird In six months and the balance in <lb/>
twelve from day of sale, with <lb/>
interest on the d payments and <lb/>
secured by notes of the purchases. <lb/>
retained until the whole of the <lb/>
money is paid. <lb/>
the fay of October 1.-95. <lb/>
L. BLOW. <lb/>
ARTICLE OF AGREEMENT. <lb/>
For the of the <lb/>
North State Lumber Co. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
Regular <lb/>
Washington, D. C, Sept. 27th. <lb/>
Secretary very naturally de- <lb/>
to discuss the possibilities of an <lb/>
early charge in the attitude of this <lb/>
government towards Hie Cuban <lb/>
but happenings have <lb/>
made it a subject of discussion among <lb/>
those who may <lb/>
opinion without a breach of i <lb/>
etiquette or of diplomatic <lb/>
and they are doing it. Ami the <lb/>
things indicate lbs drift <lb/>
sentiment outside of Washing- <lb/>
ton is the frequency with which Demo- <lb/>
assemblages have of lat been <lb/>
adopting resolutions in favor of free <lb/>
Cuba, the latest and most <lb/>
instance being the New York State <lb/>
Democratic convention. It was noted <lb/>
also with pleasure that Senator Gray, <lb/>
of Delaware, was Instrumental, as their <lb/>
chief counsel, in getting the Co re- <lb/>
arrested near . Dela- <lb/>
ware, O course <lb/>
it was in his capacity as a r, and <lb/>
not as chairman of the commit- <lb/>
tee on Foreign that Senator <lb/>
Gray befriended those Cubans, tut all <lb/>
the same it has taken as a straw in- <lb/>
much. It is argued that Sen- <lb/>
Gray would not have become the <lb/>
counsel tho c Cubans if lie had not <lb/>
with thorn, mid <lb/>
Id- relations with President d <lb/>
arc snob that he would hardly have <lb/>
in the case, though per- <lb/>
had been with the ac- <lb/>
men and the cause they <lb/>
if he hail not known the <lb/>
nations of the t urn to lean the <lb/>
same way. A meeting in favor <lb/>
of f Cuba is g talked up in Wash- <lb/>
and will probably shortly be held. <lb/>
Many Democrats to see the ad- <lb/>
ministration act before- tin matter comes <lb/>
up in Congress, as it is certain to do <lb/>
very early in the session. <lb/>
If proof were needed that the Han <lb/>
is dead it is f by the <lb/>
with which Republican's of prom- <lb/>
who come to Washington give it <lb/>
a kick. Its latest kicking was <lb/>
by Ex-Senator Sabin, of Minn., <lb/>
who was once chairman of the Rep <lb/>
National committee. Mr. Sabin <lb/>
sys he thinks Harrison ceased to be a <lb/>
Presidential possibility the moment it <lb/>
was certain that and would <lb/>
ion the P- an I New <lb/>
to the Na- <lb/>
convent on. lie also think- mat <lb/>
Reed Is to have a walk-fiver for <lb/>
the nomination, or says he does. <lb/>
A. cording those who are <lb/>
posted on inside republican <lb/>
Mr. of Ohio, has <lb/>
Gov, consent made a direct <lb/>
bid to win Boss Plait over to the s p- <lb/>
of Presidential <lb/>
It is well known that was <lb/>
in promised on behalf of Mr. <lb/>
that he should be Secretary of the <lb/>
Treasury, a place that has been <lb/>
hankering after for mar y years, if he <lb/>
would Harrison, and lie was <lb/>
elected. Mr. repudiated that <lb/>
claiming that it was made <lb/>
without his knowledge or consent, and <lb/>
j thereby made a lit- lime enemy of <lb/>
I Mr. has how made the same <lb/>
; promise for Got, and ha- <lb/>
it-id Mr. that <lb/>
it in person if Mr. would <lb/>
agree to swing the New York delegation <lb/>
to alter a complimentary vote <lb/>
is cast for Gov. who is <lb/>
ally regarded as merely a brevet eat. i- <lb/>
the nomination, will <lb/>
also before he returns to Ohio endeavor <lb/>
to make a deal when he can <lb/>
the sup, on of Boss Quay for <lb/>
Heed h is been supposed to have a <lb/>
gage upon both Plait and Quay, but <lb/>
they are very and <lb/>
will both be found on the of the <lb/>
w ho offer.- them the most. <lb/>
Great <lb/>
Rev. R. Hicks, the celebrated storm <lb/>
prophet, of St, is now a house- <lb/>
hold name In every home In <lb/>
America. His wonderful Almanac <lb/>
the weather for a year ahead more <lb/>
correctly stud accurately then any other <lb/>
publication or a y other system. The <lb/>
testimony a large number of c ireful <lb/>
observers i that of <lb/>
predictions are fill to the letter. <lb/>
of annual Aim-macs now <lb/>
well and favorably known in all parts <lb/>
of this in foreign lands. <lb/>
new Almanac for is the most <lb/>
practical and as well as the <lb/>
prettiest of this I series. It con- <lb/>
pages, printed on tine book pa- <lb/>
per, with elegantly printed in <lb/>
colors. The Batter, although scientific, <lb/>
is written in popular style, there being <lb/>
nothing difficult to <lb/>
It is also finely Don't con- <lb/>
found this with some patent medicine <lb/>
It is nothing o. the kind, <lb/>
but is a fine book, which sells at all the <lb/>
news stands for . floe <lb/>
is given as a premium to every yearly <lb/>
to the Rev, well- <lb/>
known and deservedly popular paper, <lb/>
Word Works. <lb/>
is a peerless e the masses, <lb/>
and is fast becoming a household <lb/>
and necessity in the home of <lb/>
America, Those who want to keep up <lb/>
with the advanced thought of the age in <lb/>
science, and social, <lb/>
Intellectual and <lb/>
should subscribe for Word and <lb/>
only a year. The <lb/>
Weekly and W and <lb/>
Works will be sent a year for <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C- <lb/>
---------DEALER IN-------- <lb/>
MARBLE. <lb/>
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb/>
sold. First-class work <lb/>
and prices reasonable. <lb/>
Your Job Printing. <lb/>
The undesigned, J. Cherry, <lb/>
a reel tent of the State of North Caro- <lb/>
and County of Martin, Oscar S. <lb/>
Flash, of City, County and State of <lb/>
New York, and Frederick U. Samuels, <lb/>
a resident of said State of North Caro- <lb/>
and County of Martin, being <lb/>
of a corporation r <lb/>
by virtue of chapter of the Code <lb/>
of North Carolina, and the acts of The <lb/>
General Assembly thereof, <lb/>
for the purposes express- <lb/>
ed, do he make sign and <lb/>
edge the following Articles of agreement <lb/>
and associate upon <lb/>
terms and for the purposes following to <lb/>
wit. <lb/>
The name of said <lb/>
lie and is -The North Stale <lb/>
The objects will, h the said <lb/>
company is formed are to own and <lb/>
deal in timber and logs and options <lb/>
timber. To purchase, own <lb/>
lumber of all kinds To <lb/>
and deal in lumber of all kinds. To <lb/>
deal in lumber on commission . to <lb/>
purchase, improve, own and convey <lb/>
lands requisite to it-1 business, and to <lb/>
erect maintain buildings thereon. <lb/>
To own and operate machinery for the <lb/>
purpose of the and sale of <lb/>
lumber- To charter, own and operate <lb/>
vessels, heats, oars, and rail- <lb/>
roads tor tramp of logs. <lb/>
lumber and snob other materials <lb/>
and of <lb/>
he Company eh lo own <lb/>
and operate c in con- <lb/>
with lie business of sail Cm <lb/>
To borrow money upon <lb/>
credit and notes from time t time a <lb/>
its interests shall require <lb/>
To issue a bond o bends secured by a <lb/>
mortgage or mortgages upon the prop- <lb/>
and of .-aid Company, <lb/>
and to sell the same for the purpose- <lb/>
raising money for purposes <lb/>
of said Company A, d generally, to <lb/>
do all acts and to perform ail operations <lb/>
that may be deem, d <lb/>
expedient in with the <lb/>
of mi <lb/>
The principal place of business of <lb/>
sad Company snail at Mar <lb/>
tin county. Stale of Ninth Carolina. <lb/>
The ion shall exist for <lb/>
term of thirty years from Hie date of <lb/>
art of incorporation. <lb/>
The following have sub- <lb/>
scribed to the stock of said corporation <lb/>
CO wit <lb/>
J. Cherry. Oscar S- <lb/>
and Fredrick U. Samuels. <lb/>
The present capital stock of said <lb/>
corporation shall be twenty rive th ms- <lb/>
and dollars, to he divided into <lb/>
two hundred <lb/>
value of one hundred each <lb/>
of which forty have been <lb/>
subscribed, by the following parties, to <lb/>
wit J. Cherry thirty <lb/>
shares, S. Plash one <lb/>
share and Frederick Samuels e <lb/>
I share, the said co shall <lb/>
the privilege of increasing its <lb/>
stock to any amount not g <lb/>
seventy live thousand dollars in <lb/>
shams of one hundred 8.00 collars each. <lb/>
The said capital stock or any par <lb/>
th may be issued for or <lb/>
actually received by or for <lb/>
labor or services rendered to said <lb/>
and when so pail for and <lb/>
i-sued. said stock shall he deemed an- <lb/>
taken as <lb/>
of said company, and there shall b no <lb/>
personal liability for <lb/>
and stock holders of Slid be- <lb/>
the amount <lb/>
the held by them. <lb/>
The meeting of this Company <lb/>
a i -s iii connection with Its <lb/>
organization and business as provided <lb/>
in Charter shall lie held on Friday. <lb/>
September 1895 at Mar- <lb/>
tin county. North Carolina. <lb/>
witness the Corpora- <lb/>
I for the purposes <lb/>
aforesaid, have set our <lb/>
seals, this the eighteenth day <lb/>
1895. <lb/>
CHERRY, Seal. <lb/>
CAB FLASH, St <lb/>
By J. CHERRY. <lb/>
U. <lb/>
Signed and delivered in the presence <lb/>
of Donnell Gill lam. subscribing witness. <lb/>
A which had <lb/>
saved the of several <lb/>
at various times, was recent- <lb/>
over killed. The <lb/>
then for his <lb/>
by burying <lb/>
oak about of them at- <lb/>
tending the <lb/>
Like Magic. <lb/>
If you have Catarrh. or <lb/>
any oilier Gloria Oil. which you can <lb/>
get at Dr. Wooten's will cure you. <lb/>
We Keep That Kind. <lb/>
The reader of paper will he pleas <lb/>
ed to learn that there Is at least one <lb/>
dreaded that has been <lb/>
ante lo cure in all its stages, and that is <lb/>
Catarrh, Cure is the <lb/>
only positive core known to the <lb/>
Catarrh being a <lb/>
disease, requires a constitutional <lb/>
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is <lb/>
taken intern illy, acting directly on the <lb/>
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb/>
thereby destroying tie foundation <lb/>
of the and giving tie <lb/>
strength by building up the <lb/>
lion and assisting nature in doing its <lb/>
work. The proprietors have so much <lb/>
faith in its curative powers, that they <lb/>
offer One Hundred Dollars a ease <lb/>
that it falls to Send fir list of <lb/>
testimonials. <lb/>
F. J. CO., <lb/>
Toledo, O. <lb/>
Sold by <lb/>
Nelson who has <lb/>
been a on pilot Tar river for a <lb/>
number years, in fact tho oldest, <lb/>
died in our city He <lb/>
ran a flat before ever a steam- <lb/>
boat was on Tar river. <lb/>
Washing to <lb/>
Bear this fact in mind when start <lb/>
out for <lb/>
FULL AND GOODS. <lb/>
season is complete in <lb/>
every and we ran supply ail <lb/>
your wants in<lb/>
You hi to come us for any- <lb/>
thing wanted. goods and prices <lb/>
will please you. <lb/>
Ill addition to selling the best goo Is at <lb/>
lowest prices, we p iv top of the <lb/>
market all country pro- <lb/>
Thanking you far a liberal patronage <lb/>
in th p st. we hope to have many calls <lb/>
from you this season. <lb/>
J. O. BRO. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
ill <lb/>
CO. OF PHILADELPHIA, <lb/>
ORGANIZED <lb/>
Surplus over <lb/>
R. B. Rainey, State <lb/>
C. <lb/>
The Old Penn Mutual is the best <lb/>
managed Life in <lb/>
America. It furnishes all kinds of pol- <lb/>
at lowest possible rates <lb/>
with absolute security. It may not pay <lb/>
as large commissions to agents as some <lb/>
other companies, but its low rate of ex- <lb/>
low death rate, immense <lb/>
plus safely and profitably arrested, <lb/>
large dividends and indulgence to its <lb/>
policy-holders, render it the Company <lb/>
in which to insure. Its policies are ab- <lb/>
incontestable, after three <lb/>
years c be forfeited. Money loan- <lb/>
ed on policies, paid lip granted <lb/>
or policies carried by the <lb/>
a number of years. <lb/>
J. L. Din. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
EXPECTANT <lb/>
MOTHERS, <lb/>
We Offer You <lb/>
REMEDY Which <lb/>
INSURES Safety <lb/>
f Life to Mother I <lb/>
and Child. <lb/>
FRIEND <lb/>
j Robs of its Pain, Horror and Risk., <lb/>
My wile used be- <lb/>
fore birth she did not <lb/>
suffer from CUB or quickly <lb/>
I relieved at the critical hour hut . <lb/>
, had no pains afterward and her <lb/>
recovery was rapid. <lb/>
E. E. Johnston. Ala. <lb/>
Sent ivy Mail or Express, on receipt of<lb/>
, mailed Free. <lb/>
price, Moth- <lb/>
Mot <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
SOLD ALL <lb/>
LAND SALE. <lb/>
of the power in me vested <lb/>
a by a decree in the ease <lb/>
of Susan and Win. L. Elliott, <lb/>
P Nicholson trading <lb/>
as Elliott against Jesse P. <lb/>
Brown and wife Laura Brown, and T. <lb/>
V. Trust e. which decree was <lb/>
made Honor Albert L. e. <lb/>
Judge, at the Term o of Pitt <lb/>
Superior Court and duly docketed in <lb/>
Docket No. page in <lb/>
Court I will sell at public sale to <lb/>
the highest bidder at the Court House <lb/>
door in Greenville, N. C, on Monday <lb/>
th- day of November two <lb/>
tracts of land In <lb/>
Pitt County and as <lb/>
folio, tow it; One tract as the <lb/>
Ida adjoining the lauds of <lb/>
Betsy Philips, Cobb. John A. <lb/>
old O B. rs, con. <lb/>
One Bundled and thirty <lb/>
acres. <lb/>
ore other tract laud a <lb/>
the said Warren tract, O. B. <lb/>
as the Brown land containing two <lb/>
hundred a ires more or lea. <lb/>
Terms of one-third cash, balance <lb/>
in two Installments due and pay- <lb/>
able one and two yearn respectively, <lb/>
secured by notes of the r with <lb/>
interest at t per cent on said notes from <lb/>
day of sale, purchaser to have privilege <lb/>
said noes any time <lb/>
due if he wishes, or cash at time of <lb/>
sale as he may prefer, to be retain- <lb/>
ed until all of money is paid. <lb/>
WM. II. LONG, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. h, 1805. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
Caveats, and obtained and all Pat- <lb/>
business conducted for Fees. <lb/>
u. s. <lb/>
and we can secure patent in less <lb/>
remote from Washington. <lb/>
Send modeL, drawing or photo., with <lb/>
We advise, if or not, free of <lb/>
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. <lb/>
a pamphlet, O; with <lb/>
cost of same in the U. S. and foreign countries <lb/>
sent ires. Address, <lb/>
OFf. Washington. D. C. <lb/>
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb/>
-O----- <lb/>
We will fill them QUICK <lb/>
We will fill then. CHEAP <lb/>
We will fill them WELL <lb/>
Ron. h Heart Framing, <lb/>
sap <lb/>
sap Hi.- <lb/>
Bough Sap Boards, Inches. <lb/>
Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb/>
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber <lb/>
as <lb/>
Wood delivered to your door for <lb/>
cents a load. <lb/>
Terms cash. <lb/>
Thanking you for past patronage. <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. <lb/>
w ft e re S <lb/>
In <lb/>
Poor <lb/>
Health <lb/>
means so much more than <lb/>
you and <lb/>
fatal diseases result from <lb/>
trilling ailments neglected. <lb/>
Don't play with Nature's <lb/>
greatest <lb/>
; Brown's <lb/>
Iron <lb/>
Bitters <lb/>
If <lb/>
out sorts, weak <lb/>
and generally ex- <lb/>
nervous, <lb/>
have no appetite <lb/>
and can't work, <lb/>
been at <lb/>
the most <lb/>
strengthening <lb/>
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb/>
A few hot- <lb/>
from the <lb/>
very first <lb/>
-n slain your <lb/>
teeth, and it's <lb/>
pleasant to take. <lb/>
It Cures <lb/>
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb/>
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb/>
t Constipation, Bad Blood <lb/>
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb/>
Women's complaints. <lb/>
Get only the has crossed red <lb/>
lines on the wrapper. All others arc sub- <lb/>
On receipt of two ac. stamps we <lb/>
will send set Tan Beautiful <lb/>
Fair Views and <lb/>
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO. <lb/>
DO YOU RIDE A VICTOR <lb/>
made <lb/>
tic <lb/>
. <lb/>
. i; u Victor, <lb/>
BOSTON. <lb/>
CHICAGO.<lb/>
PORTLAND. <lb/>
-IS STILL AT THE I WITH A LINE. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
TRADE <lb/>
MARK <lb/>
tie Sure c all Skin Bums <lb/>
This has been In use over <lb/>
years, and know <lb/>
in steady demand. It has been on <lb/>
by tin lending physicians all over <lb/>
where <lb/>
all other With the attention of <lb/>
the physicians, have <lb/>
for years failed. Tins is of <lb/>
long standing and the high reputation <lb/>
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb/>
its own as but little hat <lb/>
ever been made to bring II the <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb/>
Dollar. All Cash Outers promptly at- <lb/>
tended lo. Address all orders and <lb/>
to <lb/>
T. V. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
YEARS EXPERIENCE has me the best is cheap-st <lb/>
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and <lb/>
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and purposes, a- well at <lb/>
Clothing, Hats, Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have hand. Am head <lb/>
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's O. T. <lb/>
Cotton, keep courteous and attentive clerk. <lb/>
AltERED FORBES, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
ii fit <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
AT COURT <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At current rates. <lb/>
W FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
The cultural and Mechanical the <lb/>
Colored Race, at Greensboro, N. O. <lb/>
The Kali Term will begin Wednesday, 1895. <lb/>
mission will he made and <lb/>
nation county students will be <lb/>
the Saturday in September next. <lb/>
Instruction in Horticulture, Dairy the Me- <lb/>
Arts, the English and various branches of Mathematical, <lb/>
Physical. Economic with special reference to their <lb/>
in the Industries of life- <lb/>
A ilia number girls will b. admitted for m, in addition to regular <lb/>
course of Blurry, instruction will be n In Music, Sewing, Cooking and <lb/>
dry work. <lb/>
This School is by States, and of Carolina <lb/>
It is sectarian, and is not controlled or influenced by any particular <lb/>
TERMS. <lb/>
County Students. <lb/>
Tuition, Free Tuition, per -es-ion <lb/>
BOB ALL <lb/>
Board, per week . 1.23 <lb/>
room, etc. s-i <lb/>
Instruction ti a m nth 2.00 <lb/>
u-.- piano per -c--ion <lb/>
additional terms see whit h can be h id by Tile <lb/>
President of The Agricultural and tor Col Race <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
NORTH CAROLIN <lb/>
K. K. TIME TABLE. <lb/>
In Effect <lb/>
EAST. <lb/>
GOING V <lb/>
, y <lb/>
Ex Sun. <lb/>
STATIONS <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
Pas.-. Daily <lb/>
Ex Sun. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
P. M <lb/>
-.-S <lb/>
P II. P. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
II <lb/>
M. <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
Train connects v ti Wilmington aft <lb/>
Weldon train bound North, leaving <lb/>
Goldsboro a. and with <lb/>
train West, n m <lb/>
HERBERT <lb/>
Under Opera House, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Call In when you good work <lb/>
Examination for ad <lb/>
October 2nd <lb/>
in county county examiner on <lb/>
REDUCED RATES <lb/>
EM <lb/>
ATLANTA, GA. <lb/>
September 31st, 1885. <lb/>
the above the Southern Railway Co, will sell round <lb/>
trip tickets to Atlanta, On., return on the following <lb/>
FROM <lb/>
D i E <lb/>
,. IT <lb/>
TO <lb/>
lb <lb/>
to <lb/>
25-17 <lb/>
IS <lb/>
So lo <lb/>
In <lb/>
. <lb/>
I. <lb/>
1-i <lb/>
TAR SERVICE <lb/>
ville and Tarboro touching at all land <lb/>
lugs on Tar River Wednesday <lb/>
and Pi tit A. H. <lb/>
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
These departures lo stage <lb/>
of Hater on Tar River <lb/>
with steam- <lb/>
em of The k, Wash- <lb/>
.- for Norfolk. <lb/>
. York and <lb/>
Shippers goods <lb/>
marked via Dominion fr <lb/>
New York. de m <lb/>
Norfolk Halt i <lb/>
more Inn Haiti <lb/>
more. Miners I <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
J. A-rent. <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Burlington, IN. C. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Culpepper. Va. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
Va-. <lb/>
Hill. N. <lb/>
Concord, C. <lb/>
Charlotte, N- C. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Durham, N. C. <lb/>
Front Royal. Va. <lb/>
Greensboro. N. <lb/>
Goldsboro, N- G. <lb/>
Henderson ville, N. C. <lb/>
Hickory. N- <lb/>
Point, N. <lb/>
Hot Springs, N. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Lexington, N- <lb/>
N, <lb/>
Marion, N- <lb/>
N. W <lb/>
Orange, <lb/>
Oxford. N. C.-20 <lb/>
Richmond, <lb/>
N. . <lb/>
N, . <lb/>
South Boston. . <lb/>
Salisbury, N. <lb/>
Statesville, N. . H <lb/>
N. . <lb/>
N. <lb/>
Washington, <lb/>
West Point, or. . <lb/>
. <lb/>
Wilkesboro, V.-32 . <lb/>
N. <lb/>
-Ill<lb/>
.-.-. <lb/>
ii <lb/>
DO <lb/>
. <lb/>
.; <lb/>
. HI <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. j<lb/>
To <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
,. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. i <lb/>
I.-. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. <lb/>
. . . . <lb/>
Lumber Wanted <lb/>
Cut Rap-1 <lb/>
Idly <lb/>
FARQUHAR <lb/>
Variable Friction <lb/>
Food Saw Mill <lb/>
III. Quick II-hi <lb/>
5.00111- <lb/>
null . <lb/>
mill to <lb/>
Power. <lb/>
For foil Catalans <lb/>
A. B. FARQUHAR CO., Ltd., <lb/>
YORK, PA. <lb/>
If <lb/>
Ml. <lb/>
Rate-, from joints I <lb/>
be fold on o Ii. and daily from s p- <lb/>
1816, inclusive, with final limb January Col- <lb/>
Estate <lb/>
and <lb/>
Rental <lb/>
Agent. <lb/>
end lots for Rent or sale <lb/>
I terms easy. Rents, Insurance <lb/>
and open accounts and any other <lb/>
I of debt placed in my hands <lb/>
I have prompt attention. <lb/>
guaranteed. I solicit your <lb/>
patronage, I <lb/>
Column A . ts will In <lb/>
ember to if <lb/>
Tickets will sold daily from September HI to r <lb/>
with limit twenty days tram date of sale. Column Tickets will be <lb/>
sold daily from September to 1883, with limit <lb/>
then days from date of sale. No to bear limit than January <lb/>
Column Tickets will be sold on Tuesdays and Thursdays of seek <lb/>
reek from until 1896, with tin limb ten <lb/>
days from date of Column Tickets will be sold dally from <lb/>
lo to inclusive, with final limit seven days from <lb/>
date of sale. <lb/>
SOUTHERN RAILWAY Is only line entering the Exposition <lb/>
having a double-track, standard railway from the c the <lb/>
city of Atlanta to Exposition Grounds. <lb/>
For tickets and Information apply to your agent, <lb/>
J. M. GULP, W. A. TURK, G. P. A. <lb/>
1300 Ave., Washington, D. C, <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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