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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 1 April 1896</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="doi">17790</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18960401</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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          <mods:subject authority="lcsh">
            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
          <mods:subject authority="fast">
            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 1 April 1896</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:contributor></dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>18960401</dc:date>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
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          <dc:identifier>17790</dc:identifier>
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                <p>
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all <lb />
of this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
and <lb />
STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
i of Stationery. <lb />
HOW THIEVES ARE <lb />
la to Bee Bad Steak <lb />
Gang. <lb />
An interesting account of the way <lb />
in which young children are <lb />
ed to enter the is given by <lb />
Dr. de a <lb />
who has been studying the <lb />
its of criminals. The at <lb />
Naples, like the Mafia in Sicily, is <lb />
an organization of criminals and as- <lb />
of criminals that is <lb />
old. The begins its <lb />
work with the infants who are <lb />
abandoned by their parents, or who <lb />
are lent out to the impostors who <lb />
beg in the streets of Naples. These <lb />
children, for the most part those of <lb />
persons in prison, are taught to beg <lb />
for the end of a cigar or a and <lb />
the In winter they <lb />
in holes and stables, in sum- <lb />
mer on the church stops, under arch- <lb />
ways or on the benches in the public <lb />
gardens. <lb />
When they are or years old <lb />
they are instructed in bogging and <lb />
thieving by older children. At <lb />
years of age the little <lb />
or little thief, becomes a <lb />
Ho must know how to <lb />
song to the girls and <lb />
reply with an extemporaneous verse <lb />
to the verse of a companion or of an <lb />
antagonist. In Naples there are <lb />
two armies of belong- <lb />
to the streets in the older part <lb />
of the city and one to those of the <lb />
west end. They constitute the <lb />
of the and compete <lb />
in passing their examinations <lb />
night in the streets. They choose <lb />
for the subject of their chants any- <lb />
thing that takes place in the city, <lb />
and very often the object of derisive <lb />
songs is an old man or a poor idiot. <lb />
The better class hear these scoffs, <lb />
but do not interfere and often laugh <lb />
at the wit which is scarcely ever <lb />
missing. The two bands are <lb />
great rivals, and once a year <lb />
at least they defy each other to a <lb />
series of battles in which stones arc <lb />
the weapons, and at the close of the <lb />
fray knives too often into play <lb />
practice of battles with stones <lb />
among the boys can traced back <lb />
as far as for at that period the <lb />
Duke of Alva caused <lb />
to arrested in Naples. <lb />
which is <lb />
not certain. After the conies <lb />
the challenge in of a verse, <lb />
to which the enemy responds like- <lb />
wise. <lb />
Then the young boys commence <lb />
the attack. The passersby flee, but <lb />
at no great distance stand old <lb />
young men, who incite the rival <lb />
bands and if necessary rescue one <lb />
the other of them from an arrest by <lb />
the police. Two years ago there <lb />
was a famous battle of kind in <lb />
Piazza which ended in a <lb />
fight between the police and the <lb />
stone throwers, during which <lb />
trams were stopped for time. <lb />
This duel ceases at first drawing <lb />
of blood. A slight scratch received <lb />
by one of the members of tho two <lb />
parties puts an end to tho battle. <lb />
wounded boy is surrounded by <lb />
, his friends and taken to his mother, <lb />
real or adopted, to be bound up and <lb />
nursed. The songs sung by the boys <lb />
have always a chorus, and generally <lb />
there are two soloists, who sing a <lb />
verse in turn, which is ended by a <lb />
refrain sung by tho chorus, a <lb />
oh Ah, In poetical <lb />
form these youths express the <lb />
knowledge they have of the worst <lb />
evils and vices of human life, but <lb />
the verses are realistic and without <lb />
tho least gleam of <lb />
don News. <lb />
A The of the boys is <lb />
the derivation of v <lb />
Store Brodie's Ideals. <lb />
Answering a question asked by a <lb />
Chicago paper, Steve <lb />
I had the first <lb />
thing I would do would to build <lb />
a home for the newsboys in <lb />
large city in the United States; also <lb />
a home for working girls, a Keeley <lb />
for drunkards, a workingman's <lb />
i library in every city; have the Chi- <lb />
river water washed; have the <lb />
end of South Clark fenced in, <lb />
so they all be by <lb />
pay some of your Chicago aldermen <lb />
money enough to retire, so that they <lb />
never be candidates again; <lb />
give what money is lacking to keep <lb />
the streets clean; pay an honest <lb />
man to see that the appropriations <lb />
are put where they belong, and <lb />
last, but not least, buy the street I <lb />
so dearly love, for my own use, the <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL i, 1896 <lb />
NO. <lb />
IF WE HAD THE <lb />
The Country <lb />
If I had the time to a place <lb />
Ami .-it mi- down lull face to face <lb />
With better half that cannot <lb />
show <lb />
In my daily life that rushes so; <lb />
It be then I would see my soul <lb />
still toward Inning <lb />
goal, <lb />
aright he nerved by the <lb />
sublime <lb />
It I hail the time. <lb />
It I had the time to kt my heart <lb />
Speak out and take in my lite a pan, <lb />
To look about and stretch a band <lb />
To a quartered in no luck <lb />
land ; <lb />
Ah. God if I ought but just sit still <lb />
And note of the whippoorwill <lb />
think that my wish with God's <lb />
would rime <lb />
If I had tin- lime. <lb />
K I had the time to learn from you <lb />
How much for comfort my word would <lb />
And I then of my <lb />
will <lb />
To kiss your feet when J did you ill <lb />
If the tears of the coldness <lb />
feigned <lb />
Could and the wrong be quite ex- <lb />
plained <lb />
Brothers, the souls of us would <lb />
II we had the time. <lb />
Richard Burton. <lb />
will operate with greater <lb />
force in some instances than rigor. <lb />
It is, therefore, my great wish to <lb />
have my whole conduct distinguish- <lb />
ed by <lb />
A lawyer tells the following story <lb />
in The Green time ago <lb />
he bad under cross examination a <lb />
youth from the country who <lb />
name of and whoso <lb />
replies were provocative of much <lb />
laughter in the court. so, <lb />
questioned the barrister, wish <lb />
the court to believe that you are a <lb />
peaceably disposed and <lb />
kind of that <lb />
yon have no desire to follow in <lb />
stops of your illustrious namesake <lb />
and smite <lb />
I've answered the witness. <lb />
if I had the desire I ain't got <lb />
the power at yon, <lb />
you would be unable to cope <lb />
successfully with a thousand <lb />
mies and utterly rout them with the <lb />
jawbone of an answer- <lb />
ed the ruffled Samson, might have <lb />
a try when yon done with the <lb />
About the Eye. <lb />
The upturned eye is typical of <lb />
devotion. <lb />
Wide open are indicative <lb />
f rashness. <lb />
The eye is really a <lb />
table telescope. <lb />
Side glancing eyes are always <lb />
be distrusted. <lb />
eye.- should not be used it <lb />
weakness or sickness. <lb />
Bi eyes are said by <lb />
to be the strongest. <lb />
Small e cs are commonly sup- <lb />
posed to <lb />
people almost <lb />
ways have prominent eyes. <lb />
The proper distance between <lb />
the eyes is tho width of one eye <lb />
There are from four to sis <lb />
of aqueous in <lb />
aye. <lb />
The downcast eye Las all <lb />
ages been modesty. <lb />
Many eyes supposed to b- <lb />
are only a deep <lb />
brown. <lb />
Eyes rapid and constant <lb />
betoken anxiety, fear or <lb />
care. <lb />
People of melancholic temper- <lb />
rarely have eyes. <lb />
The eyes of fish and are <lb />
round, with no angles at the <lb />
is almost <lb />
reptile provided with an <lb />
deal really weeps, its <lb />
provided with lachrymal <lb />
glands. <lb />
Whenever blue occurs in the <lb />
it is generally <lb />
color- <lb />
Eyes v. it h long, sharp corners, <lb />
indicate great discernment and <lb />
penetration. <lb />
Homer attributed a protruding <lb />
eye to Juno lie called her the <lb />
Juno. <lb />
all nocturnal animals the <lb />
eyes are placed to look forward, <lb />
as in the case of man. <lb />
The eye of the octopus is said <lb />
to be black, large and as vicious <lb />
as that of a snake. <lb />
The white of the eye showing <lb />
beneath the iris is indicative of <lb />
nobility of character. <lb />
The eye of the seems <lb />
to have expression of intense <lb />
hatred <lb />
A bit of gold leaf part <lb />
of an inch square can be <lb />
by the naked eye. <lb />
Two Papers for <lb />
We have made <lb />
to furnish <lb />
the Reflector and <lb />
Worth Carolinian for the <lb />
above amount. This <lb />
campaign you <lb />
should take the two <lb />
leading papers. <lb />
THE CHILDREN. <lb />
The country editor is a com- <lb />
of the entire staff of .-. <lb />
newspaper sphere of <lb />
is quite as s <lb />
that of the great <lb />
His weekly i- <lb />
miniature the f per <lb />
week of His <lb />
constituency is most <lb />
moral and high minded If 0- <lb />
found in the cf history. <lb />
He reaches the homes of <lb />
and that to the col- <lb />
and cities the great, well- <lb />
balanced in on of the age. He <lb />
may not uproot expos, <lb />
corruption, tear down religious <lb />
and political create em <lb />
pins or crush dynasties, but he <lb />
reaches and influences the ma- <lb />
of army of boys <lb />
in after yea., fight the great bat <lb />
ties of life tho pulpit, at the <lb />
bar, in the hospital, and be <lb />
come his must co <lb />
workers j <lb />
The country editor take <lb />
wood and potatoes fur his sub- <lb />
price, but he u lies <lb />
about his circulation Ho may <lb />
mention detail the i of <lb />
construction of barns and j <lb />
the if j <lb />
but he makes do attempt. <lb />
to build bis tunes <lb />
homes, twaddle, and <lb />
undue prying into private <lb />
Lie may write wretched <lb />
and deplorable grammar, but he <lb />
talks <lb />
and f-j <lb />
fort. He publish three pages ; <lb />
of patent to one <lb />
-natter, but he never steals the <lb />
brains of others because <lb />
a geographical difference cf time <lb />
favors his location- He may set <lb />
bis own type turn the crank <lb />
of his press, but he never <lb />
scales down the --vases of em- <lb />
nor treats printers like <lb />
cattle nor pays starvation wages <lb />
to reporters, lie may deplore <lb />
local usages want of <lb />
appreciation of his columns by <lb />
business men, but he never <lb />
Only to heap them so, <lb />
Harm, young ; <lb />
The wee, feeble fingers. <lb />
The babbling tongue. <lb />
lean that we kiss away, <lb />
Smiles that we win ; <lb />
Careless of knowledge, <lb />
As guiltless .- <lb />
Only to keep so, <lb />
Frank, true and pure, <lb />
full wisdom <lb />
So lovingly sure. <lb />
Our frown all they shrink from, <lb />
Our tint their law ; <lb />
Our More, whence all gladness <lb />
They fearlessly draw. <lb />
Only to keep them so, <lb />
Sweet hands that cling, <lb />
Sweet lips that laugh for us. <lb />
Sweet tones that ring ; <lb />
Curls that we train to wave, <lb />
Feet that we guide. <lb />
fresh step a wonder, <lb />
new word a pride. <lb />
Only to keep them so <lb />
Women and men <lb />
Are the ties Circled us <lb />
Lovingly then. <lb />
Gentle and to us. <lb />
Patient and strong. <lb />
Guarding our weakness, <lb />
Hearing us along. <lb />
mocking us. <lb />
Old thoughts and ways, <lb />
That keep measure <lb />
With rapid days. <lb />
f to <lb />
Our sunset shows fair <lb />
Hut, only to have them so, <lb />
as they were <lb />
OBSERVATIONS. <lb />
Alway due as you wished <lb />
be dunned by. <lb />
to <lb />
Loafing is not resting, nor is <lb />
sues people who have no means <lb />
for reply with vindictive hate, with <lb />
vile cartoons -ltd outrageous per- <lb />
to the He is m-t There is line that every <lb />
a life wrecker, nor a family wreck- delights to <lb />
or, not a monger, nor a <lb />
petty political poltroon, nor a <lb />
bribe nor a washer of dirty Heaven is this side of the grave <lb />
lib us well j s the other, if we so <lb />
ludicrous exhibitions at it. <lb />
times, the country editor is <lb />
honest, painstaking one We may never love a he, c <lb />
of the most potent factors the flower, but we worship the <lb />
higher civilization of the age.- heavy dower. <lb />
New York Dispatch- Nobody looks for a mail <lb />
. . . lime this its <lb />
f male <lb />
How truly grand the honest <lb />
of those who practice <lb />
what they are <lb />
The girls at Vassar are so thin <lb />
this year that the came is about <lb />
to be changed to <lb />
Frozen kisses the latest <lb />
They tire good raw at a church <lb />
fair or warmed the parlor <lb />
tire. <lb />
the <lb />
of Corsets. <lb />
most pitiful sight tie <lb />
human category is the woman who <lb />
will not submit, gracefully to her <lb />
years- <lb />
Pockets, the duplicate of those <lb />
in the masculine trousers, are seen <lb />
the new tailor made skirts. <lb />
Tea cloths of <lb />
colored centers, <lb />
special in art em- <lb />
Don't with your <lb />
A Dead Kan Drove The Team. <lb />
A big beer wagon rumbled down <lb />
West Side avenue, Jersey City, <lb />
drawn a heavy team at a smart <lb />
The who the <lb />
teat had set that pace at the be- <lb />
of The <lb />
homes were kept it <lb />
up <lb />
He on the high seat, looking <lb />
neither to the right nor to the <lb />
I-ft. His head was bowed. He <lb />
might have sleeping, or <lb />
ply staring before him a brown <lb />
study. <lb />
Other drivers cursed him as they <lb />
turned out only time to avert <lb />
collision, lie did not curse back, <lb />
and each had who passed him <lb />
wondered about that as he drove <lb />
through the storm. <lb />
The snow whitened his <lb />
beard his eyebrows, swept <lb />
his eves and Ids coat <lb />
collar- He seemed to feel it. <lb />
He just drove scattering <lb />
hides, f right pedestrians. <lb />
heed to the rules of the <lb />
road- acting, in short, like a man <lb />
who could of some <lb />
which had whelmed him <lb />
and was his work rue- <lb />
A policeman saw the big horses <lb />
the other <lb />
Vets sweating, watching the <lb />
beer <lb />
driver wax drunk, <lb />
The policeman into the <lb />
street shouted. The team did <lb />
not stop. The driver did sot <lb />
heed. <lb />
The policemen seized the bridles <lb />
brought the up sharp- <lb />
y. The swayed his <lb />
Seat. <lb />
you the policeman <lb />
said angrily. do you <lb />
mean <lb />
The driver any- <lb />
thing- He was dead- <lb />
His heart stopped as he <lb />
drove for many blocks there- <lb />
after his dead bands held the <lb />
reins New York Herald, <lb />
AN INDIAN POMPEII. <lb />
Highest of in Leavening U. S. Govt Report <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
the or India, bat Now a <lb />
sadder or more beautiful <lb />
exists in India thin tho deserted <lb />
city of There it <lb />
stands, some miles from Agra, <lb />
much as it stood years ago when <lb />
Akbar decreed the stately pleasure <lb />
house. It was built to <lb />
rate blessing of tho holy Salim <lb />
tho hermit, who dwelt <lb />
among tho wild boasts in his cave THE LITTLE PAPER. <lb />
at and who had foretold that <lb />
son, born on that spot, j It's not the paper <lb />
should live to succeed him on tho i i . ., <lb />
,,.,., . . . . hat pounce upon Hie first; <lb />
splendid throne. The saint did v ., , , <lb />
foresee that the infant would grow <lb />
up into that unmitigated lo the wont, <lb />
whose orgies amazed the little country paper <lb />
Thomas Roe, and whose potent From the place I to live, <lb />
liquor caused that virtuous j is most <lb />
to sneeze incontinently, to the ; -i , <lb />
.,,., . Sal a fellow can <lb />
of the whole court. But <lb />
heroic toper did not his fa- . You read the locals over <lb />
palace city, which must hove j an eagerness zest <lb />
been deserted soon after its found- ,,, ,;., , , , , <lb />
. . .,.,,. . , it s like shaking hands wit neon la <lb />
s death, for when William Finch; . <lb />
visited in be it I <lb />
lying like a waste district very though there's little in them <lb />
dangerous to pass through St night i Still name is like a face. <lb />
it has remained ever sines, And the past beams down upon roil <lb />
and abandoned. No <lb />
white with Solid <lb />
among the <lb />
Orange has a charity bawl <lb />
band on tbs street. The Bight. <lb />
enjoys tho fan, but it doesn't; me <lb />
its estimation one <lb />
raise yon <lb />
bit. <lb />
i something to <lb />
A western doctor has succeeded <lb />
All balls in England teaching several mute women <lb />
popular- The women present . to talk. Their husbands <lb />
pear varying shades of a single him a quack, <lb />
tint that has been chosen by <lb />
hostess. are that God <lb />
Engagement gilts are now quite puts record in our favor, while <lb />
as as wedding, Christ- <lb />
mas, birthday of Easter offer- <lb />
Large French veils of wash nets <lb />
are used for smart babies place <lb />
of the worsted conceits of former <lb />
years. <lb />
The summer girl is already <lb />
planning Puffed <lb />
sleeves will not be of its beau- <lb />
ties, as formerly. <lb />
A modern young woman won- <lb />
why the Clerks <lb />
when she inquired if the green <lb />
candles gave a green light. <lb />
The Who Build. <lb />
Some years ago a comic opera <lb />
was produced in York city <lb />
which required that two cf the <lb />
male members of the com pan v <lb />
should impersonate women. The <lb />
day before the opening night <lb />
there was a dress rehearsal, at <lb />
which they appeared in their <lb />
feminine attire, and, for the first <lb />
time in their live, wearing <lb />
sets, which, costumer declared <lb />
were laced no tighter than the <lb />
woman would wear them. <lb />
One of the singers found it <lb />
possible to make himself heard <lb />
beyond the front rows. The <lb />
a muscular baritone, quietly <lb />
fainted away, and only recovered <lb />
consciousness when released from <lb />
unaccustomed restraint- <lb />
If there is anything the face <lb />
of the earth that makes us long <lb />
for eternal rest and deep, damp <lb />
solitude, it is a man who comes <lb />
to a town or county, builds up a <lb />
big paying business, grows rich, <lb />
and then squats down on his gold <lb />
a hen on a door knob, and is <lb />
too to let the gravel <lb />
grind in his own gizzard. <lb />
A real, genuine, 18-karat, <lb />
selfish man cannot be honest, <lb />
and if he ever sets to heaven and <lb />
has wings, he will them up <lb />
and walk for fear that he might <lb />
ruffle a plume or lose a tail feather. <lb />
The kind of men who <lb />
a town or a county, and enjoy life <lb />
and make beat citizens are <lb />
energetic, enterprising and liberal <lb />
men; who believe in living and <lb />
letting live, and who, when <lb />
they get a dollar, don't squeeze <lb />
it until the goddess of liberty feels <lb />
as though she had on a corset. <lb />
Such squeezing is what causes <lb />
the hard and stops the cir <lb />
of the American eagle. <lb />
If it were not for the broad- <lb />
ganged, enterprising men, it would <lb />
be impossible to build up a pros <lb />
city. Life would be one <lb />
big game of grab, and the devil <lb />
take the hindmost would be <lb />
the words go by unnoticed. <lb />
Sin cannot defined <lb />
An act that would be justifiable <lb />
or even commendable one <lb />
sou would be absolutely sinful <lb />
another. <lb />
True religion has nothing of <lb />
intolerance in it, nor will it ever <lb />
seek to interfere with man's <lb />
right to rind a religion or <lb />
a form and expression thereof to <lb />
suit himself. <lb />
The best time for a young man <lb />
to take his girl sleighing is curing <lb />
a Then <lb />
he can both his arms to hold <lb />
her in the sleigh and let the snow <lb />
do the <lb />
In the beginning it took but one <lb />
rib to make a woman. these <lb />
progressive days it takes all the <lb />
contents of several millinery- <lb />
stores to make the average fem- <lb />
beauty, not counting the <lb />
false teeth, paint, wrinkles and <lb />
Va-I Observer. <lb />
you have been having a <lb />
pretty dry time oat in Kansas <lb />
Well, rather. Why, th <lb />
air was so dry cut there that the <lb />
moon used to fairly raise a dust <lb />
as it went through the sky, and <lb />
the moisture was all evaporated <lb />
out of the Milky Way, until it <lb />
looked like a long trail of <lb />
did you get water for <lb />
yourselves and <lb />
was a hard matter. <lb />
We used to have to the well <lb />
through clothes wringer every <lb />
morning to get water for cooking, <lb />
and we would go and throw a lot <lb />
of little pebbles on the barn to <lb />
make the horses think it was rain <lb />
falling on the roof, and that <lb />
order of the them from getting dis- <lb />
Told of Children. <lb />
Jack explained a <lb />
the other by saying ; mis <lb />
Little Helen discovered her <lb />
pulse while she was ill with a <lb />
fever, cried O I've <lb />
the my <lb />
Baby had bumped his head. <lb />
-Does it feel asked <lb />
said baby, <lb />
some but an tho <lb />
better <lb />
you lose my thimble for <lb />
slowly shook her head <lb />
I've lost it from <lb />
With a sorry face she said. <lb />
A little girl who had <lb />
learned, a of abbreviations in <lb />
common use, was asks I lo spell <lb />
tho name of one of our best <lb />
know rivers. Thy answer came <lb />
r-s-i p in <lb />
Little went to <lb />
when her pastor next day, <lb />
ruler of India has over dared to <lb />
Akbar's Versailles, just as no <lb />
of India has over climbed to the <lb />
heights of Akbar's genius. In the <lb />
empty palaces, wonderful <lb />
mosque, sacred tomb, baths, <lb />
the every turn we recognize <lb />
some memory of tho greatest of In- <lb />
emperors. may even en- <lb />
tor his or <lb />
of see tho very <lb />
screens of beautiful tracery, <lb />
tho very Persian con plots, tho <lb />
decoration in gold and ultra- <lb />
marine upon which Akbar feasted <lb />
his eyes during the long sultry aft- <lb />
cf tho Indian plains. We <lb />
may walk into tho houses of <lb />
and tho laureate and the <lb />
premier of his empire, who sang his <lb />
glory and chronicled his reign. We <lb />
may see that building, tho <lb />
with central pillar <lb />
odd galleries, which some <lb />
have sought to identify with the <lb />
famous hall metaphysical de- <lb />
took place every Friday night <lb />
under the emperor's personal <lb />
and philosopher and <lb />
orthodox and <lb />
battle for their creeds or doubts <lb />
till they ended, long the <lb />
by bandying and <lb />
to the disgust of an <lb />
willing austere Ba- <lb />
The associations of <lb />
of not its only <lb />
claims to interest and respect <lb />
Its beauty in desolation excited the <lb />
Imagination of and <lb />
stirred the critical enthusiasm <lb />
who says of the <lb />
sultan's which still over- <lb />
looks the court where <lb />
bar is fabled to played his <lb />
games of living chess, that it is <lb />
possible to conceive anything so <lb />
in or any building <lb />
so richly and wonderfully carved <lb />
without least exaggeration or <lb />
bad taste Equally exquisite is the <lb />
celebrated St. Salim <lb />
ti, built in with its pure white <lb />
wishing to be social, she said to j cenotaph, its red sandstone <lb />
heard speak your dome and its veranda by <lb />
piece you V he, delicately pierced screens of fair <lb />
d. j mM fine lace sot in <lb />
did you like it was the And for grandeur what can compare <lb />
honest but reply, to tho stately <lb />
of tho which <lb />
I crowns rocky plateau, and which <lb />
the historian of architecture cites as <lb />
beyond portal in India, <lb />
perhaps in the <lb />
James u <lb />
made me <lb />
Youth's <lb />
A Woman's Devotion. <lb />
A man named <lb />
somewhere, undertook to a <lb />
little difference with his by <lb />
shooting her three times. He was <lb />
arrested, but the obstinate woman <lb />
persisted in living, and much to <lb />
the surprise of the doctors got <lb />
well, then as much to the <lb />
prise of of tho law <lb />
she not only refused to testify <lb />
against her would be slayer, but <lb />
testified in his behalf to get him <lb />
out of jail. <lb />
Mr. Lincoln was once asked as <lb />
to the proper length of a man's <lb />
legs, and after some ion of <lb />
concluded by saying <lb />
should always be long <lb />
enough to reach from his body to <lb />
the <lb />
For all practical purposes chat <lb />
strikes us as being about the <lb />
proper length, certainly tho <lb />
settles a very <lb />
question. <lb />
A Pennsylvania man recently <lb />
presented his wife with a piano <lb />
lamp which she said she would <lb />
call after him. asking <lb />
she dear, <lb />
it has a good deal of about <lb />
it, it is handsome looK at, it is <lb />
not remarkably brilliant, requires <lb />
a good deal of attention, is liable <lb />
to flares up occasionally, <lb />
is always out at bedtime and is <lb />
to <lb />
The Democratic party was <lb />
founded by Jefferson in <lb />
1796. and it will celebrate its <lb />
this fall by sweeping the <lb />
country wiping out mug <lb />
as well as Republicans. <lb />
Raleigh Press <lb />
Editor Sweat, of says <lb />
never a man by his outside <lb />
A shabby may <lb />
a newspaper publisher, <lb />
while a wearing a <lb />
plug hat and sporting a gold cane <lb />
Com. <lb />
thins Will occasionally <lb />
happen on railroads. Not long ago <lb />
a Fort freight conductor, on <lb />
looking over oars of his train, <lb />
was surprised to seven cars tho <lb />
numbers of which were in <lb />
rotation. Ho <lb />
that through chance such a <lb />
thing happen, but there were <lb />
the cars, with tho first next to <lb />
the engine numbered and <lb />
others back to a seventh with <lb />
numbers in the ascending order <lb />
in correct position. In their wan- <lb />
about from place to place the <lb />
cars got shuffled by <lb />
numbers were as <lb />
described above. According to the <lb />
laws that govern tho operations of <lb />
chance such a thing is not <lb />
occur again in years. <lb />
A Fearful Situation. <lb />
said <lb />
shall again make fun of <lb />
between <lb />
duty sometimes happen in <lb />
weal life. You know how the girl <lb />
Grants to a young man who <lb />
with bet father on <lb />
tics and goes to war on the <lb />
knows <lb />
make sport of <lb />
Suppose this <lb />
try were to have. a. war Eng- <lb />
land, Which would I do, wave the <lb />
flag and whistle <lb />
or up my pantaloons <lb />
Star. <lb />
was to die any man- <lb />
of death. sermons <lb />
toll how starved on tho cross <lb />
for the redemption of <lb />
As the lines you trace. <lb />
see the childhood, <lb />
the little country store, <lb />
And the face of your old s <lb />
In vine embowered <lb />
And the old school and your piny, <lb />
mates <lb />
with the local read. <lb />
Notwithstanding some are married, <lb />
Notwithstanding are <lb />
I here s the forest long departed, <lb />
And little swimming hole. <lb />
And the past crowds in upon you. <lb />
rilling mind eyes and <lb />
And the little country paper <lb />
From the crude and distant press, <lb />
With freight of homely items. <lb />
like a caress. <lb />
C. L. in Ark. Star. <lb />
DIXIE IN THE <lb />
The blizzard blows on Dixie ; <lb />
Hooray <lb />
Git away <lb />
Hut folks can't freeze in Dixie land <lb />
With big trees on every hand <lb />
Hooray <lb />
Git away <lb />
While the blizzard blows on Dixie <lb />
The blizzard blows on Dixie <lb />
Blows high, <lb />
Oh, my <lb />
I'll pond is frozen all in spots. <lb />
Hut we've got a load el knots, <lb />
Hooray <lb />
away <lb />
While the blows on Dixie <lb />
Oil, I wish hot in Dixie, <lb />
Hooray <lb />
Git away <lb />
I wish hot as a summer's sen, <lb />
a dollar hall a <lb />
Hooray <lb />
away <lb />
While the blizzard blows <lb />
Atlanta <lb />
ON THE WING. <lb />
A Word to The Scornful. <lb />
not, O proud of earth, the lowly <lb />
born, <lb />
Because thy lot h cast among the <lb />
great. <lb />
If God should exercise that selfsame <lb />
scorn, <lb />
What think thou indeed would be <lb />
thy <lb />
coins, many of which <lb />
tho <lb />
in large Mi London and <lb />
tho <lb />
ml S A <lb />
A in the Rhone. <lb />
Below the Rhone breaks out <lb />
from its upper valley into its <lb />
broader lower valley through the de- <lb />
file of Here the foot hills of <lb />
the Alps the foot hills of the <lb />
come together, and behind this <lb />
dam there must have been ancient- <lb />
a great Hum which extended to the <lb />
northward of where now is Valence. <lb />
The is a veritable canyon that <lb />
would be quite in place in Sierra <lb />
On each side of the sharply narrow- <lb />
river the walls of rock rise to a sheer <lb />
height of feet. The rush of the <lb />
water is In midstream, <lb />
surrounded by eddies whirling <lb />
waves, is the <lb />
against which the boat of a luckless <lb />
party of travelers struck and was shat- <lb />
a hundred years ago. Indeed, so <lb />
dangerous was this passage held to be <lb />
old, when faith was stronger and <lb />
boats were weaker than in our day of <lb />
skepticism and compound engines, <lb />
that it was to tie the <lb />
head of I he defile for grace to <lb />
come through it safely; but nowadays <lb />
the same practical they <lb />
put extra men at the tiller and clap on <lb />
more in <lb />
tin- First Star, <lb />
now then on anecdote <lb />
to. the front showing that our <lb />
first president liked the theater as well <lb />
tis do his followers of to-day. Tho point <lb />
is mentioned in one of the the- <lb />
stories narrated In that new- <lb />
Heroines on the <lb />
Says the author of the <lb />
Philadelphia Portia of this same <lb />
season of 1703 1704 a <lb />
noted family, being none other than <lb />
Mrs. the sinter of Mrs. <lb />
and of the In Eng- <lb />
land, at the age of she had made her <lb />
London debut as the heroine of <lb />
OB February 17-3. and, though <lb />
somewhat masculine in face and <lb />
yet displayed so animated <lb />
and so graceful a a to win a <lb />
moderate of favor. A few years <lb />
coming to this land she enjoyed <lb />
the distinction of playing the first <lb />
engagement on the American <lb />
engaged for a benefit to <lb />
play at theater in October. <lb />
There she repeated her Portia, <lb />
contending with the f <lb />
Mrs. Powell's a <lb />
season. had the honor of <lb />
playing, before. Washington In <lb />
News. <lb />
The late bishop of Winchester is <lb />
to have possessed among his m M other <lb />
qualities that of A good story <lb />
is told of n, made to the late Lord <lb />
who. his way <lb />
back to his room to take on Ida robes <lb />
after rending prayer In the house of <lb />
lords, apologized for having loon <lb />
sent from the ceremony. kneel <lb />
down it gives me palpitation of the <lb />
said Lord it <lb />
would not respectful for me to <lb />
stand while your lordship was pray- <lb />
Bishop perhaps know- <lb />
almost as much about the old bar- <lb />
sanctity did lord him- <lb />
self, answered measured <lb />
do not mention it. Lord <lb />
I am sure your lordship can be <lb />
equally devout you <lb />
kneeling, or <lb />
ploy old judge after- <lb />
inquired who hart read prayers <lb />
that afternoon, and, on being told re- <lb />
marked, with S sparkle In his I <lb />
Ya. <lb />
Km nut one who <lb />
is interested in the prosperity of your <lb />
spirited, enterprising town and county, <lb />
it is indeed pleasing to note the <lb />
and pluck that has been displayed <lb />
since the recent tire. It <lb />
doc s,.,., from the is <lb />
being manifested by your people, and <lb />
especially those who were sufferers <lb />
largely, that your town really has been <lb />
blessed and it will demonstrated in <lb />
a very few months, that for tho town <lb />
in general great good has been done. <lb />
Doubtless your town to be a <lb />
would have slept in the <lb />
of the past, no <lb />
would have been taken for a sufficient <lb />
water supply to guarantee the security <lb />
of so prosperous and progressive a <lb />
town, as yours most surety is. It was <lb />
suggested and even predicted that fail- <lb />
would follow the tire, but instead, <lb />
there is demonstrated u <lb />
and pluck that shows to the com- <lb />
world that you have a tine <lb />
country to back up a good town, and <lb />
your people are becoming aware it. <lb />
I was specially impressed with tho en- <lb />
of new men, who had just <lb />
began business, Messrs. Baker Hart, <lb />
and Messrs. <lb />
these the support, gen. <lb />
and strong of the community, <lb />
should be given . With a first-class <lb />
wafer System, and electric lights in ft <lb />
town with such a tobacco market and a <lb />
country supplied, and will con-. <lb />
thine to supply, a first-class market <lb />
ail the staple productions so plentifully <lb />
grown in Pitt county, the future of <lb />
town is hard lo estimate. It <lb />
must indeed be a rapid growth for the <lb />
next few years. It is most delightful <lb />
to hear traveling men, <lb />
Sealers, and all those who of the <lb />
the State as applied <lb />
to what a few. weeks ago scented <lb />
most broken up. The good that year <lb />
water works and electric lights will add <lb />
to i he general prosperity Bin only <lb />
by the lapse time, and a short <lb />
time too. The tobacco columns of <lb />
paper are worth ten limes the <lb />
price. The keen intelligence, the <lb />
energy, your tobacco editor, Mr. Joy- <lb />
is bringing the attraction of the <lb />
growing sections to the <lb />
markets, is attractive and stimulating, <lb />
and should bring union to the prosper, <lb />
and of the town and <lb />
specialty to that particular feature of <lb />
business. Only a short while and you <lb />
will see manufacturing enterprises <lb />
start. They are the natural sequence, <lb />
of pluck and when backed by <lb />
solid material cannot fail to follow. <lb />
I hope to see many improvements on <lb />
my next trip in large howl <lb />
one <lb />
IN CAROLINA. <lb />
Of Interest Over the State, <lb />
The latest addition to Wilkes <lb />
freaks is a 12-year-old mother. <lb />
Andre r Carnegie, <lb />
steel magnate, is Asheville, with a <lb />
large of friends. <lb />
The Baptist churches of Wilmington <lb />
will invite the Southern Baptist <lb />
to meet in that city next year. <lb />
Capt, R. A. sect with <lb />
quite a accident Friday morn- <lb />
While walking on <lb />
front the A. C. L. depot he sapped <lb />
on the and fell, dislocating his<lb />
a fallow I braised about <lb />
Words. I the body.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017790_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
C I Editor <lb />
Entered at <lb />
K. C, as second-class <lb />
TOBACCO JOTTINGS. <lb />
by o. l. <lb />
April 1896. <lb />
We notice that the Charlotte <lb />
Tr, the leader In the <lb />
single standard agitation -this State, <lb />
to considerable <lb />
reprinting anything from a paper with <lb />
a silver leaning say that <lb />
its individual opinion will be held in <lb />
abeyance to the Democratic National <lb />
Convention, and whoever that <lb />
nominates for President- will re- <lb />
its support. Wen, that, is good <lb />
Democratic doctrine, and if any Demo- <lb />
paper in the State has said that <lb />
if the National Convention should <lb />
a man not exactly in accord with <lb />
its way of thinking on the money <lb />
it was going to bolt and not sup- <lb />
port nominee, we have failed to see <lb />
such declaration. However, the Re- <lb />
would like to ask the <lb />
a Suppose, contrary <lb />
the Observer's belief, land a <lb />
thing is the Democratic Na- <lb />
Convention at Chicago should <lb />
nominate for President a man commit- <lb />
to the free coinage of silver, will the <lb />
Observer give such nominee its <lb />
If such should be the result of the con- <lb />
the Observer is paving the way <lb />
either a or to the kitchen where <lb />
the crow-eating goes on. But we would <lb />
like to read its own answer to the <lb />
A COMMON VIOLATION. <lb />
In making his charge to the grand <lb />
on Judge E. T. <lb />
spoke at some length upon the <lb />
of the oath the jurors had just <lb />
taken, and instructed them that before <lb />
entering upon their duties he desired <lb />
them to get a copy of the Code, read <lb />
the oath over and make a study <lb />
f it for themselves. Then into <lb />
a brief analysis of certain crimes to <lb />
which he wished to direct their <lb />
the first he mentioned was per- <lb />
jury. <lb />
Judge said that this was be- <lb />
coming one of the most common crimes <lb />
in North Carolina, and it is almost <lb />
appalling to note the frequency with <lb />
which perjury is committed. He said <lb />
there is not a Court in the State, and <lb />
scarcely a day in any Court, in which <lb />
some witness does not violate the oath <lb />
taken when going upon the stand. He <lb />
said that even spectators in court can <lb />
sec, from the fact that two witnesses <lb />
will give entirely different testimony <lb />
about the same thing, that one or the <lb />
other of them has sworn falsely. It <lb />
has become so common, he said, as to <lb />
endanger justice, really there- can be <lb />
no justice without truth. <lb />
It is to be regretted that such a state <lb />
of affairs exist, and that many men <lb />
have so slight regard for truth, but the <lb />
facts as stated by Judge are <lb />
undeniable. It is no hard matter for a <lb />
spectator to tell Alien wit- <lb />
. making contradictory state- <lb />
both of which cannot be true, <lb />
or to tell in many instances when they <lb />
are violating the oath taken. Men are <lb />
sometimes guilty of this who would <lb />
scorn, and become indignant at, the <lb />
the accusation of having sworn <lb />
Note the nature of the oath a witness <lb />
it is to truth, the <lb />
whole truth, and nothing but the <lb />
To violate this oath it is not <lb />
necessary that a falsehood shall <lb />
be told, but it can be done by <lb />
or keeping back part of what should be <lb />
told. When a witness does not want <lb />
lo testify to a certain thing he will by <lb />
every possible evasive answer keep <lb />
back the truth. Especially is this true <lb />
under cross examination. <lb />
And the is frank to ex- <lb />
press its belief that in some instances <lb />
the lawyers themselves are responsible <lb />
for the violation of the oath on the <lb />
part of witnesses. While we are <lb />
initiated in the method of conducting <lb />
trial, it is reasonable to infer that if a <lb />
case is of much importance the lawyers <lb />
are acquainted in advance with what <lb />
the witnesses on their side know about <lb />
it, and they drill their witnesses as to <lb />
what shall be told and what be <lb />
kept back. <lb />
This violation of oaths, all of which <lb />
is perjury in a greater or less degree, is <lb />
an evil that should be corrected. We <lb />
believe the Judge himself could <lb />
vent it in some measure it whenever <lb />
he saw a witness by evasive answers <lb />
was trying to withhold the truth, would <lb />
immediately take such witness in hand <lb />
and compel him to give direct answers <lb />
in accordance with his knowledge of <lb />
the facts, and in strict adherence to the <lb />
SOfa has taken. <lb />
There are men, a few and very few <lb />
of them in Greenville to-day, that are <lb />
still mouthing and quarreling mostly <lb />
with themselves because there is a to- <lb />
market here and our farmers <lb />
have seen proper to cut loose from the <lb />
infernal mortgage system and assert <lb />
their independence. There is a mer- <lb />
chant in this, town, one who has seen <lb />
the time when he carried the <lb />
per cent of the farmers of this county <lb />
on a mortgage in his overcoat pocket, <lb />
but has lost his grip and the time <lb />
has gone now who has been heard <lb />
to say within the last few days that he <lb />
wished that there was not an acre of <lb />
tobacco planted in the county and that <lb />
the merchants of Greenville had never <lb />
been benefit one cent from the to- <lb />
market, that there was as <lb />
much money made to-day by the <lb />
of the county and that the mer- <lb />
chants of Greenville did not sell as <lb />
many goods to-day as they did ten of <lb />
twelve years ago when there was no <lb />
tobacco planted in Pitt county, and <lb />
closed by saying that the farmers told <lb />
him that the tobacco men were the <lb />
toughest men to of <lb />
in the country and that if his <lb />
way about it he would not plant a <lb />
stalk this year. Well Well Well <lb />
the Greenville tobacco market will <lb />
certainly have to close if this man <lb />
fails to plant tobacco. <lb />
sold his Greenville and if he fails <lb />
to plant this year we be ruined, of <lb />
course. <lb />
Through the kindness of Messrs. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co., the writer was <lb />
furnished a comparative estimate of the <lb />
number of bales of cotton that W <lb />
grown in Pitt county since 1880, <lb />
from that statement we believe <lb />
that this firm have as accurate an <lb />
mate as can be found in the <lb />
take the greatest number of bales of <lb />
cotton grown in any one year <lb />
place the price of the cotton at ten <lb />
cents a pound and the to- <lb />
market paid out last year a <lb />
much money for tobacco as was <lb />
for cotton when the greatest <lb />
of bales were produced in one <lb />
year at the largest average price that <lb />
cotton has sold tor in fifteen years. This <lb />
statement is not produced here for any <lb />
other purpose than to give the <lb />
facts to those who may not know them. <lb />
As the merchants have <lb />
increased their sales they will decide, <lb />
but it is so plain that there were nearly <lb />
twin as many goods sold in <lb />
ville in as was sold ten <lb />
years ago that a way-faring man though <lb />
a fool might see it. It is not doubted <lb />
at all that there may be some men <lb />
town who arc not selling as many <lb />
goods as they formerly did, but this is <lb />
because an era of comparative prosper- <lb />
has loomed upon the farmers and <lb />
they are allowed to trade where they <lb />
please, and the day also has passed <lb />
when one. two or three men constituted <lb />
Greenville, and the man who made <lb />
this remark, whoever he <lb />
sooner or later realize that the <lb />
business of Greenville is not by <lb />
means vested in one man. It is <lb />
that he is very behind the <lb />
times as yet or he would not have <lb />
made the and if such is the <lb />
case then it is only natural for him to <lb />
think that Greenville is not selling as <lb />
many goods as formerly because he is <lb />
not. <lb />
That the tobacco market has done a <lb />
great deal toward developing Green- <lb />
ville no intelligent man will dispute, <lb />
and that some of this man's property <lb />
who made this remark has been in- <lb />
creased in value in some cases as much <lb />
as per cent no man that knows <lb />
dispute. In conclusion want to <lb />
say that ordinarily these things would <lb />
not have been noticed, but recently <lb />
this thing has become not only odious <lb />
but is calculated to do harm and it is <lb />
only injustice to those engaged in the <lb />
tobacco business that any attention <lb />
is paid it. <lb />
I have seen quite a number of plant <lb />
beds during the last few days and they <lb />
show up very in the <lb />
absence of plants, though it is to be <lb />
hoped that a few warm days will bring <lb />
them up. <lb />
Farmers v. ho expect to plant to- <lb />
could do nothing more beneficial <lb />
to the than to thoroughly prepare <lb />
the land before the tobacco is trans, <lb />
planted. Land that is thoroughly <lb />
will make a much better yield <lb />
and it is not half the trouble to <lb />
There is no class of men that re <lb />
mere benefit from <lb />
of various kinds than farmers, and yet, <lb />
as a general they take but little <lb />
interest in improvements of this kind <lb />
because they feel no direct interest in <lb />
them, when if they will reflect for a <lb />
moment they are probably <lb />
more than other class of men. The <lb />
following clipping from the n <lb />
Star is timely and contains facts that <lb />
are worth considering. Every farm- <lb />
should feel deeply interested in the <lb />
establishment of and <lb />
they have as much right and should <lb />
show an interest in such things as much <lb />
so as men of other professions. It is <lb />
on account of this neglect of such <lb />
things that has dragged down <lb />
the agricultural profession and causes <lb />
everyone that can get anything else to <lb />
do to it, when in point of fact it <lb />
should be the most desirable and one <lb />
the most lucrative professions. <lb />
a general thing farmers take bat <lb />
interest in the establishment of <lb />
and yet there h no class <lb />
of people who derive more benefit from <lb />
than the farmers. If the <lb />
be numerous enough to <lb />
give employment to a large number of <lb />
people the farmers in the vicinity are <lb />
more by them than are the <lb />
people to whom the give <lb />
employment or the who <lb />
draw annual or semi-annual <lb />
This may seem to some thought- <lb />
less or extravagant assertion, but it can <lb />
be easily shown and is being practically <lb />
shown wherever in any <lb />
considerable number exist. <lb />
increase population f <lb />
consumers of what is produced upon <lb />
the farm. The greater the number of <lb />
the greater the increase <lb />
of population, wherever <lb />
center there cities spring up and <lb />
grow. Why is it that farming lands <lb />
near a city are worth so much more <lb />
than hinds at a greater distance In <lb />
point of fertility and capacity to pro. <lb />
duce a variety of crops there may be no <lb />
difference between them, but the land <lb />
within a mile or two of the city may <lb />
command a hundred dollars an acre or <lb />
more while the same character of land <lb />
twenty miles distant, unless on a rail- <lb />
road line, might not bring ten dollars an <lb />
acre. The reason is of course apparent <lb />
to every one. The farmer near the <lb />
a market at his door which he <lb />
can roach in an hour or so, and every <lb />
day find sale for something, for <lb />
thing that is worth cultivating or <lb />
There are gardeners within a few <lb />
of New York city who on few <lb />
acres of land make from eight o ten <lb />
dollars a year. And there <lb />
are others near other large cities who <lb />
do as well. <lb />
course depends on the in- <lb />
methods, industry and <lb />
of the man, for some men wouldn't <lb />
make money if they had charge of a <lb />
mint, bat the majority of the gardeners <lb />
or farmers near cities do. If they be <lb />
and slipshod in their manage- <lb />
and foil to make money by <lb />
or gardening they make it on the <lb />
enhanced value of their property. <lb />
the city is to the <lb />
country in the way of affording a con- <lb />
and constant market for a <lb />
of products the is <lb />
in u less extensive way, every one added <lb />
to the number increasing the number <lb />
of consumers, the capacity to consume <lb />
and the for what the farm pro. <lb />
If these work <lb />
the raw materials that are produced <lb />
upon the farms as staple crops, such as <lb />
cotton, wool, hemp, tobacco, then <lb />
the always has a home market <lb />
for them where he is sure of getting <lb />
the highest market price and where ho <lb />
can deliver with the least loss of time <lb />
and the least expense. <lb />
an illustration of this we know <lb />
of lands near tobacco manufacturing <lb />
towns in this State which ten MM <lb />
have been bought for an acre <lb />
which couldn't be bought for an <lb />
acre now, because now the tobacco crop <lb />
can be marketed to advantage and with <lb />
profit when it could not be then, and <lb />
the owners can find profitable sale for <lb />
many things now that then they couldn't <lb />
find sale tor at all. There are <lb />
of places where something <lb />
this might be said as the result of the <lb />
establishment of some kind or kinds of <lb />
manufacturing <lb />
WASHINGTON <lb />
Washington, D. C. March <lb />
From our Regular Correspondence. <lb />
Gen. Thomas Lincoln Casey. S. <lb />
A., retired, who has been in charge of <lb />
the construction of the Congressional <lb />
building since it was died <lb />
very suddenly Wednesday afternoon. <lb />
Gen. Casey was the engineer in charge <lb />
of the erection of the State, War and <lb />
Department Building, and of the <lb />
Washington Monument. <lb />
It looks like the Cuban business was <lb />
ended so far as Congress is concerned. <lb />
Bot to many who did not catch the <lb />
drift when the Senate sent l lie Cuban <lb />
resolutions back to things <lb />
did not look promising. But soon <lb />
saw that the conference had only to <lb />
agree to the original Senate resolutions <lb />
and the House to do likewise to end the <lb />
affair. <lb />
The equestrian statue of Gen. W S. <lb />
Hancock, which is to be erected in <lb />
Washington, has arrived and will be in <lb />
position inside of two or three weeks. <lb />
The unveiling of the statue is to be <lb />
made the occasion of a big public <lb />
military and civic, under pa- <lb />
auspices. Art critics; say <lb />
statue will be the best of its kind at <lb />
the National Capital. The date for <lb />
the formal unveiling has not been <lb />
definitely set, but it will be on or about <lb />
May Gen. Hancock had many <lb />
admirers and they will <lb />
all be glad of an opportunity to honor <lb />
his memory. <lb />
BEAST TO REPORT. <lb />
And the Matter How Bests With <lb />
Town Council. <lb />
The water works committee <lb />
had a meeting Thursday night to hear <lb />
the statement of Engineer J. L. <lb />
low, who had taken a preliminary view <lb />
of the town, relative to the cost of a <lb />
system of water works. <lb />
Mr. Ludlow stated that the location <lb />
of the town is good for the establish- <lb />
of the system and it can be put in <lb />
at moderate exceeding <lb />
for a system abundant <lb />
water for fire protection and for do- <lb />
use. He said that any- <lb />
where on the river front would be a <lb />
site for the stand-pipe and that <lb />
about three-and-a-half miles of piping <lb />
would be sufficient to cover the town. <lb />
When questioned as to what he <lb />
thought of Tar water for do- <lb />
use, he said that by means of a <lb />
filterer it would be made as excellent <lb />
water for nay purpose as any town in <lb />
the State could show, none better could <lb />
be wished for. <lb />
After discussing the matter fully the <lb />
committee decided unanimously to <lb />
mend to tin-Town Council the immediate <lb />
of a complete system of <lb />
water works, both for lire and domestic <lb />
accordance with the suggestion of <lb />
Mr. Ludlow. <lb />
The will make its report <lb />
and to the Council at <lb />
the meeting of that body Wednesday <lb />
night, April 1st, and it is expected that <lb />
the Council will take immediate action <lb />
on the matter. <lb />
At the joint meeting of the citizen <lb />
and Board of held in the <lb />
Court House on the night of March <lb />
3rd, Mayor Forbes stated that the <lb />
Council was ready and would take <lb />
just such steps to secure water works <lb />
as the citizens of the town desired. <lb />
A committee of our best business men <lb />
was selected to represent the citizens <lb />
of the town, and it was unanimously <lb />
agreed that the decision and <lb />
of the com should be <lb />
therefore the Reflector feels satisfied <lb />
that Greenville will at an early day <lb />
have a complete system of water works <lb />
as recommended by the committee. <lb />
The committee has perform- <lb />
ed its work well, and we believe every <lb />
citizen of the town will heartily approve <lb />
the decision reached. <lb />
Now, Messrs. Councilmen, let the <lb />
water works be forthcoming. <lb />
BOARD FOB <lb />
VILLE. <lb />
The Salisbury Herald takes up about <lb />
one-and-a-half columns of space to give <lb />
a different enterprises <lb />
that exist that town. We are in- <lb />
to believe that the Herald was <lb />
through its or that the <lb />
editor had got off his bearings and <lb />
imagined that he was writing about <lb />
Chicago, New York or London. We <lb />
do not feel at all envious of that town <lb />
because a railroad shop has <lb />
been thrust in its lap, but that Salisbury <lb />
has even the half of the enterprises <lb />
claimed by the Herald we do not be <lb />
Hem. There is a very true saying that <lb />
town is judged by its newspapers, <lb />
the papers of Salisbury fail to verify <lb />
any such claim as tin Herald makes. <lb />
The Reflector exchanges with two <lb />
daily papers from that town, and we <lb />
read them every day, the <lb />
showing of both papers indicate that <lb />
Salisbury two shoe stores, <lb />
store, about three dry goods <lb />
stores, three drug stores, a lawyer, a <lb />
doctor, two real estate agents, two <lb />
a barber, a stenographer and a <lb />
few other odds and ends. An outsider <lb />
would think by at the <lb />
columns of the Herald and World <lb />
that those papers were wasting their <lb />
energies in across roads <lb />
The Reed and <lb />
cans are now at daggers points, so to <lb />
speak, and they are growing more bit- <lb />
towards each other every day. <lb />
side is charging the other with <lb />
being guilty of all sorts of disgraceful <lb />
tactics. The men are <lb />
charged with frying the fat out of <lb />
manufacturers in order to buy <lb />
gates, and the Reed men are charged <lb />
with species of duplicity m con- <lb />
wit the favorite son scheme, <lb />
the latest being that originated <lb />
the story of a combine to <lb />
Harrison so as to prevent the Indiana <lb />
delegates committing themselves to <lb />
The average democrat re- <lb />
it merely as of <lb />
pot calling the kettle and feels <lb />
like shouting it it <lb />
Tom and enjoying the fight all the <lb />
way through without caring a <lb />
how it ends. <lb />
Editor Reflector a few <lb />
days ago the writer heard a discussion <lb />
concerning the town of Greenville. A <lb />
very intelligent man remarked that <lb />
while the people of Greenville were <lb />
plucky and energetic and the town <lb />
generally was famous, it was a wonder <lb />
and an astonishment to the business <lb />
world that with the means and men <lb />
young, active, hard working, pushing <lb />
was not a first class Board <lb />
of Trade in the town. A medium <lb />
through which the business world could <lb />
make any inquiry concerning the <lb />
vocations or business, and in fact <lb />
everything that a should want to <lb />
inquire about a town and community. <lb />
There are active, energetic, intelligent <lb />
young business men in Greenville who <lb />
would take pleasure in looking after <lb />
and letting the world know what re- <lb />
sources, advantages and inducements <lb />
Greenville and vicinity offer to bring <lb />
capital and brains to invest here. This <lb />
gentleman remarked, it Was the only <lb />
town in the State of advantages <lb />
that did not have a Board of Trade. <lb />
Will not the business men take <lb />
mediate steps to organize a Board of <lb />
Trade, that we may get the great <lb />
fits to be derived therefrom Doubt- <lb />
less many do not know what it means <lb />
but they would soon familiarize them- <lb />
selves and feel the great good that will <lb />
accrue. Now is the time to start. <lb />
Will you not have some one cal a <lb />
meeting and make the <lb />
This is just along the line upon <lb />
which the Reflector has been arT <lb />
tor sometime, and the wonder <lb />
is, that after so suggestions have <lb />
been made the town is still without a <lb />
Board Trade. The Reflector <lb />
be glad to publish an announce, <lb />
inept for a meeting to be held to effect <lb />
such an <lb />
THE CHANGE A BAD ONE. <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA, <lb />
tatters Of Interest Over the State. <lb />
Mr. Robert Emmet Carr, brother of <lb />
Col. Julian S. Carr and Dr. A. G. <lb />
Carr, died in Durham i lay night. <lb />
According to the Elkin Times, a <lb />
young man came all the way from II. <lb />
Chester, Maryland, to Wilkes county re- <lb />
to marry a young lady with <lb />
whom he had been corresponding but <lb />
when he arrived the girl had married <lb />
another man the day before. The <lb />
poor fellow returned home the next <lb />
day with a sad and heavy heart. <lb />
An old vault set in the walls of the <lb />
State Treasurer's -e at Raleigh, was <lb />
opened Thursday, and two interesting <lb />
finds were made. One the last <lb />
warrant drawn by B. Vance <lb />
as war Governor, on the State a <lb />
It was for for the last <lb />
quarter of his salary its Governor, and <lb />
was dated April 1805. The <lb />
find was of old funding bonds. <lb />
denominations of and <lb />
They are worth in new bonds <lb />
and it held by private parties <lb />
the State could be compelled to re- <lb />
deem them for that amount. <lb />
T. WHITE <lb />
C. A. Whites old <lb />
-------DEALER IN------- <lb />
Oakley, N. C. Mar. 30th, 1890. <lb />
Editor wish to <lb />
say a word through your columns in <lb />
regard to the voting precinct of this, <lb />
township, and of moving the <lb />
polling place to Turner School- <lb />
house. A more unfit place could not <lb />
have been found in the township for <lb />
these There is only a small. <lb />
ant not another within a mile <lb />
that could be used for the <lb />
of the election. Suppose a school <lb />
is going on, as is usually the case, will <lb />
it stop for the election to be held And <lb />
again, suppose committee says you <lb />
cannot bold the election in this house, <lb />
what then P Again, suppose it is rainy <lb />
on that day I ask in common sense <lb />
what the people do Stokes is <lb />
two miles southeast and Oakley is one <lb />
mile north of said schoolhouse. Both <lb />
of these places are on the and <lb />
the people could have been provided <lb />
for at either place with shelter in case <lb />
of rain. We have seen people from all <lb />
parts of the township and they all with <lb />
one accord condemn the action of Mr. <lb />
I venture the assertion that <lb />
there is not a man in Carolina town- <lb />
ship, b Democrat or Re- <lb />
publican, the re- <lb />
of advising the removal of <lb />
the polling place to Turner <lb />
schoolhouse. H. <lb />
The apt description <lb />
of a mortgage is taken from <lb />
It A mortgage <lb />
makes a rustle, and it keeps <lb />
him poor. It is a strong <lb />
to action and a wholesale <lb />
reminder of the fleeting months <lb />
and years. It is fully as <lb />
in its meaning as the hour- <lb />
glass and scythe that mean death. <lb />
A. mortgage represents industry, <lb />
it is never idle, night or It <lb />
is like a bosom friend, because <lb />
the greater the adversity the <lb />
it sticks to a fellow. It is <lb />
like a brave soldier, for it never <lb />
hesitates at charges, fears to <lb />
close in on the enemy. It is like <lb />
a sand bag of in <lb />
application, but deadly in effect. <lb />
It is like the band of Providence <lb />
it spreads all over creation, and <lb />
its influence is everywhere visible <lb />
It is like grasp of devil <lb />
longer it holds the <lb />
greater its strength. It will ex- <lb />
feeble energies, and lend <lb />
actively to a sluggish brain ; but <lb />
no matter how work, <lb />
mortgage works harder still. <lb />
A mortgage is a good thing to <lb />
have in a <lb />
ways, it is somebody else's <lb />
Cotton and Peanut. <lb />
Below are Norfolk prices of cotton <lb />
and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished <lb />
by Bros- Commission Mer- <lb />
chants of <lb />
Tinware, Crockery and Hardware, Heavy Groceries, all <lb />
T. of Shovel warranted <lb />
Axes, Plows, etc., a specialty. Call to see ran and get my prices be- <lb />
fore purchasing. Car load Flour, Hay, Lime, Seed Irish Potatoes <lb />
received- I also handle all brands of <lb />
Fertilizers for Cotton and Tobacco. <lb />
OUT AT <lb />
ENTIRE STOCK <lb />
MERCHANDISE <lb />
Good Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low <lb />
Good v <lb />
11-16 <lb />
5-1 <lb />
Prime <lb />
Spanish <lb />
Greenville Market, <lb />
Corrected by S. M. <lb />
at cost without reserve. There <lb />
will be e in our business next year and <lb />
these goods must go. Remember everything <lb />
goes at New York cost. Parties owing us must <lb />
make immediate payment so we can settle up <lb />
the business, <lb />
J. O. Proctor Bro., <lb />
GRIMESLAND, N. G <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE. <lb />
--------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE<lb />
TEARS EXPERIENCE taught me that the best is the Cheap <lb />
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general house a- well a <lb />
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing for Clark's N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous and clerks. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb />
Life,. Fire and Accident <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
OFFICE AT K COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All Risks placed in strictly <lb />
ASS COMPANIES <lb />
At rates <lb />
AGENT mE <lb />
LOOK FIRES. <lb />
Editor Reflector there <lb />
is much being said about the <lb />
of the water supply of the town, <lb />
and all eyes and tongues are eagerly at <lb />
work looking and talking for water <lb />
works, there a very great work being <lb />
left undone which and be <lb />
attended to by the authorities of <lb />
town, and one that will cost so little <lb />
that it is not to be counted. It is <lb />
ply outrageous to see the condition of <lb />
many of the back lots in town, <lb />
back of the stores on main street. <lb />
All the old trash, paper, rotten wood, <lb />
boxes, and in fact everything that goes <lb />
to the start a great <lb />
can be in many places, <lb />
where the police have fa look <lb />
after and where they should go every <lb />
day. The lot between the post-office <lb />
and Proctor's bar is a most inviting <lb />
place tor starting a big <lb />
back of the stores on main street, back <lb />
the racket store many other <lb />
places, where the simple dropping the <lb />
stump of a lighted cigar or cigarette, <lb />
a spark falling would quickly set <lb />
the town ablaze. Persons owning <lb />
these sites should be required to have <lb />
them cleaned and keep them so. This <lb />
is in the strict province of the town <lb />
authorities and to then the people of <lb />
the town look, and have a right to <lb />
look to enforce this great and <lb />
work, The weather is dry and die <lb />
winds high, ad great care cannot <lb />
be taken in this matte. Besides the <lb />
health of the town requires it as <lb />
sanitary measure. It should not be <lb />
allowed to go another day A few <lb />
days work may save the of <lb />
the town and also save the health of <lb />
the people. There is no excuse for <lb />
further delay and bat little expense at- <lb />
ached. <lb />
Thousands have tested the great <lb />
of Hood's <lb />
and have fount renewed strength, <lb />
vigor and vitality in its use. <lb />
The judicial appropriation bill, which <lb />
passed the Senate provides that the <lb />
salary of the United Status marshal <lb />
and district attorney in the Eastern <lb />
district of North Carolina shall be <lb />
and in the Western district <lb />
PAPERS FOR <lb />
This Chance Does Hot Come Every <lb />
Day. <lb />
The Reflector has just made <lb />
with the North Carolinian, <lb />
Raleigh, whereby can furnish <lb />
both weekly, a whole year for <lb />
Our readers are well acquainted with <lb />
both these papers. No paper ever <lb />
published in Pitt county contained as <lb />
much news as is now found every <lb />
week in Tug Eastern Reflector, <lb />
while the ranks as <lb />
the best weekly paper the State. <lb />
If you want the home, State and <lb />
general news these two papers will fur- <lb />
it to you. Remember this is cam- <lb />
year and you could not subscribe <lb />
at a better time. <lb />
Rocky Mount, N. C. <lb />
January <lb />
F. S. Royster. <lb />
Dear enter my <lb />
order for tons of your <lb />
Tobacco Guano, <lb />
think I will need tons for <lb />
my own use. I have used <lb />
Orinoco for two seasons past <lb />
and I like it. It's a splendid <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
It. H- RICKS. <lb />
Mr Ricks has made a large <lb />
fortune raising fine tobacco. <lb />
Hi commendations of a <lb />
is worth something, as <lb />
he knows what he Is talking <lb />
about. <lb />
For sale by O. M. Tucker, <lb />
Greenville, N, C <lb />
CO, <lb />
per lb <lb />
Western Sides <lb />
Sugar <lb />
Corn <lb />
Corn Meal <lb />
Floor, Family <lb />
Lard <lb />
Oats <lb />
Coffee <lb />
Salt Ml Sack <lb />
Eggs per <lb />
Beeswax, per <lb />
to SO <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
4.25 to 6.00 <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
it to a <lb />
it o n <lb />
I'D to <lb />
C. C. Cobb. Pitt Co. N. C. <lb />
T. Co., V <lb />
EXPECTANT <lb />
MOTHERS, <lb />
We Offer You <lb />
Which <lb />
INSURES <lb />
of Life to Mother <lb />
and Child. <lb />
Robs Confinement of Pain, Horror and Risk. <lb />
My wife used be- <lb />
fore of she <lb />
Softer from <lb />
at the critical hour but <lb />
had do afterward and her <lb />
recovery was rapid. . . <lb />
E. E. Johnston. Ala. <lb />
Sent by Mall or Express, on receipt of <lb />
price, per bottle. Book Moth- <lb />
mailed Tree. <lb />
CO., Atlanta, S <lb />
OLD BY ALL S <lb />
New <lb />
Arriving <lb />
Daily. <lb />
I am n New Goods every <lb />
day- My stock will be com- <lb />
in every line. <lb />
Stoves, mil Pip, <lb />
Nails, Axes, Doors, Sash, Paints <lb />
and Oils, Rope, Belting and Pack <lb />
Poultry Netting and Fence <lb />
Wire and <lb />
of every <lb />
description. You will find me a <lb />
Five Points where I am selling <lb />
low for the cash. I buy <lb />
for and Boll for cash- <lb />
to see <lb />
Truly <lb />
D. D. HASKETT <lb />
N. <lb />
COBB BROS CO. <lb />
Vet. <lb />
COTTON AND <lb />
AND <lb />
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers. <lb />
and Progress Building, Water <lb />
Bagging, Ties Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices. <lb />
and Consignments Solicited. <lb />
Code, used in Telegraphing. <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
Flues. <lb />
Ready For <lb />
Lite In- <lb />
Having secured a shop Policy in that <lb />
old and reliable com- <lb />
the <lb />
on Dickerson Avenue <lb />
near R. L. <lb />
J am prepared to fill <lb />
your orders for <lb />
STEEL FLUES <lb />
at same price as com- <lb />
iron. Have put <lb />
in new machinery and <lb />
guarantee first class <lb />
work. Look to <lb />
interest and give me <lb />
your orders. <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON, <lb />
A gent tor Wall Paper. <lb />
UNION <lb />
CENTRAL. <lb />
Remember we also have <lb />
also added to our list of <lb />
Fire Companies the <lb />
GEORGIA <lb />
HOME, <lb />
of Columbus, Ga., as- <lb />
sets over <lb />
WHITE <lb />
Office in building.<lb />
STOLEN. <lb />
On Thursday, March a <lb />
dirk bay mare, with white star In her <lb />
forehead, about hired <lb />
by a white man, giving his name a <lb />
George Williams, from my stables. In <lb />
Greenville. was a medium <lb />
steed man, clean with red face, <lb />
had on white hat and blue suit of <lb />
clothes. I will pay a reward of f r <lb />
information loading lo the recovery <lb />
said mare. <lb />
KING, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
County having Issued Letters of Ad- <lb />
ministration tome, the undersigned, on <lb />
the 24th day of February, on <lb />
estate of deceased, no <lb />
tie is hereby given to all persons In- <lb />
to the Estate to make Immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned, and to ill <lb />
of said Estate to present their <lb />
properly to the <lb />
within twelve months <lb />
after the date of this Notice, or this No- <lb />
will be plead in bar their re- <lb />
Jay of March 1806. <lb />
on the Estate of Belcher.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017790_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
New <lb />
Spring <lb />
Styles <lb />
A Mrs- Hopkins Boy. <lb />
HIGH <lb />
yon a <lb />
nor complete stock the <lb />
Everything needed <lb />
high dross prices <lb />
that are surprising. They <lb />
ASK WITH THE BEST <lb />
that the country affords. <lb />
For durability and near <lb />
I defy competition. I <lb />
have just from <lb />
tie northern markets <lb />
stock of SPRING <lb />
CLOTHING which for <lb />
style and fit <lb />
cannot be equaled in a <lb />
first class store <lb />
A SUIT IN STOCK <lb />
that is out of style. I <lb />
sold very close last sea <lb />
son and have no shelf <lb />
worn offer you. <lb />
Everything date. I <lb />
i can suit you <lb />
I have a number of years <lb />
experience in the <lb />
business and under <lb />
stand the taste wants <lb />
of you all. Give mo a call <lb />
HEN IN <lb />
an <lb />
NEED OF <lb />
in <lb />
FURNISHINGS look <lb />
over my stock and you <lb />
will buy The line is <lb />
complete and <lb />
N THE GOODS LINE <lb />
I am up to-date have <lb />
the late t PRINTS to select <lb />
from. I was careful in my <lb />
selections and can show you <lb />
some beautiful effects My <lb />
LINE OF HATS ARE <lb />
surpassed. I have a Hat <lb />
for every man and boy in <lb />
Pitt county. Every <lb />
and shade imaginable <lb />
have a hat chart of styles. <lb />
HOES. YOU CAN BE <lb />
suited in any make, <lb />
or quality. I make a spec <lb />
of tine Shoes for both <lb />
Ladies Gentlemen <lb />
will make close figures. <lb />
ONLY THE LATEST IN <lb />
NOT are kept in <lb />
stock they are of tho <lb />
highest A will <lb />
THE <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Court is in session. <lb />
One more day in March. <lb />
This is the last week of Lent. <lb />
In a part of Cleveland county eggs <lb />
are selling at C cents a dozen. <lb />
Charleston Rice cents a pound at <lb />
J. S. <lb />
XV THE <lb />
People See Their Faces and Straight- <lb />
way Forget What Manner of <lb />
Ken They Are. <lb />
Sparing Club and Golden Seal <lb />
Cigars, at J. S. <lb />
and herring have become <lb />
somewhat more plentiful, but are still <lb />
high in price. <lb />
The acknowledges re- <lb />
of the report of the State Auditor <lb />
for the past year. <lb />
It is much easier to waste <lb />
space by using to little than by <lb />
too Ink. <lb />
At S. M. Schultz, Link Sausage <lb />
Butter. <lb />
N. L. of Warren ton <lb />
Business is moving very nip Sunday and here. <lb />
idly in Court, as the long list of cases <lb />
Master Pearce is quite sick. <lb />
J. M. has been sick <lb />
days. <lb />
Edward Greene returned to Norfolk <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Capt. Swift Galloway, of Snow Hill, <lb />
is here at court. <lb />
Mayor Ola Forbes returned Friday <lb />
evening from Richmond. <lb />
T. R. Moore has moved into his new <lb />
house in <lb />
R. E. returned from <lb />
more Thursday evening. <lb />
Adrian Savage returned from Rich- <lb />
Thursday evening. <lb />
T. F. Haskett. of Scotland Neck, is <lb />
visiting in town. <lb />
J. II. Blount returned Wednesday <lb />
from court. <lb />
Nice Barber Shop. <lb />
Herb-rt has moved into <lb />
his new barber shop, between <lb />
store and the Reflector office, near <lb />
Five Points. He has put in entire <lb />
new furniture and has the handsomest <lb />
shop ever opened in <lb />
Died. <lb />
The infant child of Mr. and Mrs. E. <lb />
M. Cheek, whose illness was mentioned <lb />
in Tuesday's Reflector, died Tues- <lb />
day evening about o'clock. The <lb />
remains were taken to Raleigh this <lb />
morning for burial. The family have <lb />
the sympathy of our people. <lb />
Mending the Fences. <lb />
E. A. Holton, chairman of the <lb />
State Republican Executive Committee <lb />
spent Sunday afternoon and night here <lb />
giving pointers to of the under- <lb />
lings. He had a caucus with Claude <lb />
Forbes and Tom both colored, <lb />
at the depot Monday before taking <lb />
his departure. <lb />
the most <lb />
cal of this fact. Remember <lb />
OW IS THE TIME TO <lb />
have a Suit to <lb />
My samples are all <lb />
in and are beauties Fit <lb />
given in every case <lb />
tried one day will snow. <lb />
Herbert invites to visit <lb />
Ids new barber shop, near Five Points. <lb />
Nicest place in town a shave <lb />
It is not believed that the prospect <lb />
of a good fruit crop in this section has <lb />
been injured any cold weather. <lb />
It Greenville had a canning factory <lb />
it make fruit vegetable grow- <lb />
in much more profitable. <lb />
Choice prunes, cleaned Currants and <lb />
Corn Starch at S. <lb />
Cod Fish. Irish Potatoes, Prepared <lb />
Buckwheat, Oat Flakes, Cheese, Mac- <lb />
P. R. Molasses, at S. M. <lb />
Schultz. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. must get in <lb />
a ear load of chairs a week, from <lb />
the number we see unloading around <lb />
their place. <lb />
No town in the State its size can <lb />
show a batter health record than <lb />
Greenville. There is lit- <lb />
sickness here. <lb />
I am off after more homes. Wait <lb />
return if you want a good animal. <lb />
My customers are always satisfied.<lb />
Something New and Sweet, Peanut <lb />
1-lakes at S. M. Schultz. <lb />
Mrs. King says there are more <lb />
now than she has ever <lb />
known at this time of year. Her house <lb />
has been full every day of late. <lb />
It is reported that the widow of one <lb />
ct the who was killed at the <lb />
lumber mill at Parmele, some months <lb />
ago, ha sued the company for <lb />
Brick and plaster from the burned <lb />
buildings has been placed on main <lb />
greet down Five Points the work <lb />
is being carried on out Dickinson ave- <lb />
It i hut little over a month now to <lb />
the next town election. A progressive <lb />
Board of should be elected <lb />
and it is time t be looking around tor <lb />
the right men. <lb />
An esteemed heads an <lb />
editorial, -Let the <lb />
Most men are willing to obey that in- <lb />
junction, but the trouble is the d <lb />
won't let them alone. <lb />
Mayor Forces says that wherever <lb />
he went on his recent trip he. found <lb />
people talking about Greenville. All <lb />
were eager to know about the enter- <lb />
prises going on down this way, <lb />
Brick Co., has put in a <lb />
large machine for making pressed brick <lb />
and has begun work- hose wishing <lb />
to buy good brick will do well to place <lb />
orders at once with A. Q. Cox <lb />
general manager, N. C. <lb />
The boys had a good one on the Re- <lb />
old man this morning. He <lb />
went in his garden to plant corn, dug <lb />
the holes and brought the shelled corn <lb />
dawn town in his pocket. <lb />
Mr. Godwin will place the old <lb />
parsonage building, which he is <lb />
having moved, on Dickinson avenue <lb />
near Presbyterian church, instead <lb />
of on Pitt street. He will make two <lb />
houses out of the old one. <lb />
We hear that a party of prospecting <lb />
a visit to Green- <lb />
ville within the next few days. Our <lb />
business men should take them in <lb />
hand and otter aver inducement to <lb />
get them to locate here. <lb />
The Old Dominion Steamship Co., <lb />
will give excursion rates on Steamer <lb />
Tar River to the races in Greenville, <lb />
April and The Steamer <lb />
will be held at Greenville on the <lb />
until after the races. <lb />
Mr. W. J. has taken the con <lb />
tract to build brick store for <lb />
Mrs. M. A. Jarvis on the site where <lb />
her other stores were burned. He tells <lb />
us that the new stores will he much <lb />
better buildings than the old ones. <lb />
One day last week a young man <lb />
his name as George Williams, hired <lb />
a horse at J. F. King's livery s to <lb />
go in the country. Neither Williams <lb />
nor the horse have been heard from <lb />
since. King offers a reward for <lb />
of tire <lb />
Mrs. John S. Congleton returned <lb />
home from Haleigh Thursday evening. <lb />
A. S. a tobacconist of Dan- <lb />
ville, arrived Monday evening. <lb />
Ex Senator T. J. Jarvis <lb />
returned from Raleigh Wednesday <lb />
evening. <lb />
C. S. Hamilton, of Me., is <lb />
here on a visit to his brother, S. C. <lb />
Hamilton. <lb />
Dr. R. L. Carr, of Snow Hill, re- <lb />
returned from Baltimore, spent <lb />
Sunday here. <lb />
J. B. Cherry returned Friday even- <lb />
the north where he had been <lb />
purchasing new goods. <lb />
W. T. Lipscomb returned Friday <lb />
evening from a trip to several of the <lb />
Virginia tobacco markets. <lb />
W. II. of this county, who <lb />
has attending Richmond Medical <lb />
College, in home last week for <lb />
the summer. <lb />
We regret learn that T. Erwin, <lb />
who is alien bug <lb />
at Nashville. Tenn., is quite sick. His <lb />
father has written tor him to come <lb />
home. <lb />
II. B. returned <lb />
evening from the north where he hail <lb />
been to purchase goods. Mrs. Clark, <lb />
who was visiting in Scotland <lb />
also returned home. <lb />
-A Mrs. Hopkins <lb />
The <lb />
Clothier, <lb />
Hookerton Items. <lb />
N. C, March <lb />
Tax Collector was in town today. <lb />
The League is progress- <lb />
fine now. Will elect a pres- <lb />
Friday night. <lb />
Messrs. F. A. Mosley, Paul Koonce, <lb />
Wiley Miss Mattie Ed- <lb />
wards, J. H. Dixon and wife, made a <lb />
visit to the Institute Sunday. <lb />
W. M. Edwards Prof. Stanford <lb />
are contemplating building a brick <lb />
house. They were over Sunday exam- <lb />
and counting brick in a certain <lb />
brick dwelling near Edwards Bridge. <lb />
We are sorry to loose our townsman <lb />
Prof. Junes Stanford. He leaves to- <lb />
day to conduct a lumber <lb />
yard. Hope him success. <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
The April term of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court convened promptly at o'clock <lb />
Monday morning, his honor, Judge <lb />
E. T. Boykin, presiding. <lb />
In selecting the grand jury of <lb />
those drawn were excused from serving <lb />
two tor being members of the State <lb />
Guard, two for having suits <lb />
and two because of sickness in their <lb />
families. The jury is composed of the <lb />
D. D. Haskett, Foreman, <lb />
Robert Staten, Lafayette Cox, <lb />
do Brown, G. B. Spencer <lb />
Harriss, L. B. E. P. <lb />
Joshua John J. Mason, M. <lb />
Z. M ore, Joseph Pittman, J. C. <lb />
id, Jas. K. James <lb />
W. J. Kilpatrick, Jerry Mi- <lb />
A. A. Joyner. <lb />
The charge of the Judge, which was <lb />
an excellent one, occupied most of the <lb />
of the morning. We were <lb />
particularly impressed with his remarks <lb />
in to perjury, and propose <lb />
have something to say on that subject, <lb />
later. <lb />
The regular jury tor this week <lb />
is composed of T. R. Moore, J. J. <lb />
Evans, W. J. Jackson, J. W. Higgs, <lb />
D. J. Holland, Henry Williamson. A. <lb />
Cooper, Caleb Cannon, Win, <lb />
J. A. Thigpen, Asa Bullock, <lb />
Tyson. <lb />
The following cases on the <lb />
. . i . . . <lb />
locket disposed up to. noon <lb />
D. C. Stokes, pleads guilty, <lb />
judgment suspended upon payment <lb />
costs. <lb />
Alfred Milliard at id Stan ton, <lb />
F. and A- plead guilty, Milliard sen- <lb />
months in jail, Stanton fined <lb />
and costs. <lb />
Cory and Richard Vines, <lb />
fray, plead guilty, judgment suspended <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
R. L. Joyner, J. P. failure to re- <lb />
port, pleads guilty, judgment suspended <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
David injury w personal <lb />
properly, guilty, judgment <lb />
pended upon payment of costs. <lb />
Thomas Hudson, carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, submits, lined and costs. <lb />
William Gardner, failing to list poll, <lb />
pleads guilty, judgment suspended upon <lb />
payments of costs. <lb />
Henry T. King, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, pleads guilty. <lb />
larceny, pleads <lb />
sentenced one year in penitentiary. <lb />
D. S. affray, <lb />
suspended upon payment of costs. <lb />
Richard Wingate, carrying con- <lb />
weapon, not guilty. <lb />
Bagley and Will Pippin, affray, <lb />
plead guilty. <lb />
Teel and William Whichard, <lb />
affray, Teel pleads guilty. <lb />
Alex Bailey, affray, guilty, sentenced <lb />
five months in jail with leave to Com- <lb />
missioners to hire out. <lb />
George <lb />
guilty, judgment suspended <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
Edward Moore and Albert Freeman, <lb />
affray, not guilty. <lb />
Haywood Smith, assault with deadly <lb />
guilty. <lb />
Haywood carrying concealed <lb />
weapon, and <lb />
Excursion Sates to the Races. <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Line has made <lb />
excursion rates over its roads lo the <lb />
s of the Greenville Driving <lb />
April and Kith. The <lb />
rates will be one first-class fare for the <lb />
round trip from any point and ticket <lb />
will be good through the entire wee <lb />
in which the races occur. I <lb />
Soon Be Beady. <lb />
Mr. S. C. Hamilton informs us that <lb />
work has commenced on the building <lb />
tor the electric light plant. The <lb />
rival of the machinery for the plant is <lb />
expected daily and we may now expect <lb />
for all to be in readiness for turning en <lb />
the lights within a few weeks. This <lb />
will be a substantial improvement for <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Street Talk. <lb />
There is talk of opening Fifth street <lb />
to the branch east of town and ex- <lb />
tending the roadway in a straight <lb />
course on through Mr. W. II. <lb />
property. If the plan is <lb />
carried out it will ii number of <lb />
splendid building lots on Mr. <lb />
ton's place. There is no better prop- <lb />
anywhere convenient to the town. <lb />
Seven Last Week. <lb />
of Deeds King issued nun <lb />
licenses to seven couples last week, <lb />
two for white and five for colored BOO. <lb />
WHITE. <lb />
F. O. Cox Maggie Cox. <lb />
H. C. and Franklin <lb />
COLORED. <lb />
Julius Redmond and <lb />
man. <lb />
Win. Pippin and Mary Smith. <lb />
Atkinson and <lb />
Moore. <lb />
Peter Boyd and Laura Nobles. <lb />
John Chapman and Lang- <lb />
Soldier's Picnic. <lb />
The Confederate soldiers of Pitt <lb />
county have a picnic and fish fry <lb />
at Bluff on April -24th All <lb />
are very earnestly requested to carry a <lb />
basket and plenty bread. Every old <lb />
soldier is expected to get word to all <lb />
other comrades so that all may be <lb />
advised in time. The table will be <lb />
under the supervision of that true and <lb />
tried old veteran, Willoughby, <lb />
who will be by W. II. <lb />
son, A. D. Hill, Elder Samuel Moore, <lb />
Albert Jones. C. D. Rountree, Elihu <lb />
Briley, Ferd Ward, L. W. Lawrence, <lb />
Paul Harrington, T. A. Nichols and J. <lb />
A. Bullock. Let the old veterans come <lb />
out and make this a pleasant day. <lb />
Wednesday afternoon at the home <lb />
of Mr. William in Edge- <lb />
county, Mr. Zeno Moore, of <lb />
and Miss Eloise <lb />
of Edgecombe were united in marriage <lb />
by Rev. M. T. <lb />
The were John Hearne <lb />
with Miss Blanche Lyman <lb />
with Miss Lucy Dunn, Dr. <lb />
Frank Whitehead with Miss Ch <lb />
L. D. with Miss <lb />
Lena Taylor, P. Rasberry <lb />
Miss Annie Bass, John <lb />
with Miss Fannie <lb />
The bridal party reached Greenville <lb />
on the evening train and a <lb />
was held at night at the home of the <lb />
groom on Dickinson avenue. <lb />
Among presents, which were <lb />
beautiful and handsome, were the fol- <lb />
lowing <lb />
Mr. and U. M. silver <lb />
berry stand. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. A. Forbes set knives <lb />
forks. <lb />
J. rug. <lb />
Paul holder. <lb />
J. S. Higgs, picture. <lb />
J. A. Ricks, pa. lamp. <lb />
Rev. M. T. vase. <lb />
I. D. silver butter knife. <lb />
G. C. Moore, silver cake stand. <lb />
Lyman rug. <lb />
J. L. Starkey, chair. <lb />
Chas. Forbes and J. E. Starkey. <lb />
handsome clock. <lb />
J. R. J. G. J. A. An- <lb />
and J. L. Little, very handsome <lb />
Turkish rug. <lb />
Master Fred Forbes, silver sugar <lb />
spoon. <lb />
Clans and Hearne, silver nap- <lb />
kin ring. <lb />
soap stand and <lb />
pickle dish. <lb />
Lee Stewart, pair towels. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Dunn, Scotland <lb />
of orange spoons. <lb />
John and Hearne. large rock- <lb />
chair. <lb />
Gloom <lb />
Of ill health, despondency and despair, <lb />
gives way to the sunshine hope, <lb />
happiness and health, taking <lb />
Hood's Sarsaparilla, because it gives <lb />
renewed life and vitality to the blood, <lb />
and through that imparts <lb />
M vigor <lb />
and energy MK to the whole <lb />
body. this<lb />
helped me wonderfully, <lb />
changed sickness to health, gloom to sun- <lb />
shine. Mo pen can describe what I <lb />
I was deathly sick, had sick head- <lb />
aches every few days and those terrible <lb />
tired, despondent feelings, with heart <lb />
troubles so I could not go up and <lb />
Sunshine <lb />
down stairs without clasping my hand <lb />
over my heart and resting. In fact, it <lb />
would almost take my breath away. I <lb />
so I did not care to live, yet I had <lb />
much to live for. There is no pleasure in <lb />
life if deprived of health, for life becomes <lb />
a harden. Hood's Sarsaparilla does far <lb />
more than advertised. After taking one <lb />
bottle, it is sufficient to recommend <lb />
J. E. Smith, Beloit, Iowa. <lb />
Hoods <lb />
Sarsaparilla <lb />
Is the One True Blond Purifier. All druggists, f I. <lb />
Prepared only C. I. Hood Co., w. d I. Mass. <lb />
. cure all liver ills, <lb />
S headache, <lb />
Dr. C. picture. <lb />
Arch Braswell, Sr,. pair blank- <lb />
Miss Hortense Forbes, chair. <lb />
Miss Ida Moore, silver napkin ring. <lb />
Misses Helen and Glenn Forbes, <lb />
butter knife. <lb />
Miss Novella Higgs and sister, card <lb />
receiver. <lb />
Mrs. D. M. Dunn, Scotland Neck, <lb />
set of desert knives. <lb />
Miss Lena Taylor, Whitakers. break- <lb />
fast caster and sugar moon. <lb />
M Margaret handwork <lb />
and silver butter knife. <lb />
Miss Sadie Short, mat. <lb />
Miss Lena Harris, set fruit knives. <lb />
Miss Hackney, Wilson, <lb />
spoon. <lb />
Miss Fannie sugar spoon <lb />
and berry spoon. <lb />
Miss Annie Bass, silver napkin ring. <lb />
Miss Ellen Moore, set silver tea- <lb />
spoons. <lb />
Miss Lizzie <lb />
set. <lb />
The joins host of <lb />
friends in extending best wishes in <lb />
welcoming the bride to Greenville. <lb />
Goes to Asheville. <lb />
The Executive of the <lb />
Teacher's have that <lb />
the next session will be-held in Ashe- <lb />
ville. The meetings have been held <lb />
for the last nine years at <lb />
We are inclined to believe that the <lb />
crowd at the Assembly would be larger <lb />
this year if it had been held at <lb />
again. Our people will <lb />
lie sorry to know that it has gone so <lb />
far. Greenville has tarnishing a <lb />
large at each session the <lb />
body for several However, it <lb />
will be a nice, cheap trip to <lb />
rifle. The hotels have put their <lb />
rates at one dollar per day. <lb />
TEN <lb />
Moore, handsome glass <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
X. C. March -24th, 1890. <lb />
The telephone line from Conetoe <lb />
here, was completed last night, and <lb />
we communicated with Conetoe <lb />
Tarboro. We learn the line will be com <lb />
to Parmele in a days. <lb />
Bethel is to have a new railroad de- <lb />
pot, something that US long been <lb />
needed. <lb />
John Brown, col., was committed lo <lb />
jail today, upon a charge of In <lb />
default bond by W. J. Teel, J. <lb />
P. <lb />
Me. G. Bullock wen; to Greenville <lb />
this evening. <lb />
A part of my stock was Damaged by the <lb />
fire and I am determined to dispose of them at <lb />
Greatly Reduced <lb />
Prices. <lb />
In fact no reasonable price refused. <lb />
NEXT TO TYSON BANK. <lb />
FOR <lb />
Our tools were de- <lb />
fire but we <lb />
have ordered more and <lb />
will be ready to furnish <lb />
all the Tobacco Flues <lb />
you want. They will <lb />
be made of Steel and <lb />
you may depend on it <lb />
our flues will be made <lb />
right as heretofore. For <lb />
the present you will <lb />
And us near our old <lb />
the warehouse <lb />
formerly used by J. C. <lb />
Cobb Son, first floor. <lb />
S. E. FENDER CO. <lb />
Mar. 1st, 1896. <lb />
John Wilson, assault <lb />
battery, <lb />
Training Stables. <lb />
Mr. J, II, Sunnier, <lb />
P-a., arrived in Greenville Friday night. <lb />
Mr. Sunnier is a member of a firm of <lb />
horse trainers and was looking for a <lb />
place in a good climate where there is <lb />
a good track, to locate his training <lb />
Only a short while here was <lb />
necessary to convince him that <lb />
is the place he was looking for, <lb />
and he has arranged with the Green- <lb />
ville Driving Association for the use <lb />
their track tor twelve months, <lb />
tells that he <lb />
in his charge seventeen young <lb />
horses belonging to rich northerners <lb />
and he has already ordered these r- <lb />
shipped lo Greenville. lie will <lb />
build stables for them out at the track <lb />
and will put the track in thorough con- <lb />
for these horses. <lb />
DRESS <lb />
To buy a Dress is <lb />
To I tn a stylish and s aide <lb />
Dress is another thing. <lb />
Two Splendid Sermons. <lb />
Those at the <lb />
church Sunday certainly hard <lb />
two elegant sermons. The subject of <lb />
he morning discourse was <lb />
It was thought- <lb />
tender, pleasing and instructive <lb />
sermon. At night the theme <lb />
at the Gate of <lb />
These conditions as they exist at pres- <lb />
in our strongly <lb />
Tho evils which are <lb />
ard which will continue to result from <lb />
these extremes were shown in a man- <lb />
which carried conviction to every <lb />
bearer. Lastly were <lb />
with force and <lb />
We don't know when we have <lb />
a more timely than this <lb />
Rev. Wells is growing upon <lb />
hi., people, aid his congregation is <lb />
more than delimited, with him as their <lb />
, ill I <lb />
Just new supply of Job <lb />
material. Some beautiful linen letter <lb />
heads. Come, let us put you up a <lb />
thousand c- two. <lb />
LANG'S DRESS GOODS <lb />
Are always <lb />
stylish and <lb />
No store <lb />
U such <lb />
a variety of <lb />
To <lb />
We invite <lb />
you to <lb />
-We ave been selecting Dress Goods for the. past <lb />
Our experience is at your <lb />
LANG <lb />
SELLS <lb />
CHEAP. <lb />
Mrs. corner <lb />
But we have come again. <lb />
Tho late fire just as we were business in Green- <lb />
ville, out we have built a to the Reflector <lb />
office, below ft and are now ready to <lb />
serve the <lb />
IS OUR<lb />
SPECIALTY <lb />
HARDWARE <lb />
But we carry a complete line of <lb />
Farming Implements <lb />
W-e buy CASH and soil consequently defy <lb />
competition all goods in our line- Come to see us- <lb />
BAKER HART <lb />
FIVE POINTS. <lb />
FALL WINTER <lb />
BUSINESS <lb />
and cordially invite you to inspect the largest <lb />
and neatest assortment of <lb />
ever brought to Greenville. Our stock con- <lb />
all the newest and <lb />
DRESS GOODS, <lb />
Furnishings <lb />
Boots- <lb />
Slices, Domestics, <lb />
ed Sheeting and Shirt- <lb />
Fancy <lb />
Cotton Dress Goods <lb />
everything you will <lb />
want or need in that <lb />
line. Hardware for far <lb />
and mechanics <lb />
use, Hollow- <lb />
ware, Wood and <lb />
Whips, Buggy Robes, Collars. Rope, <lb />
wine, Heavy Groceries always on hand, <lb />
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Sat and Molasses. <lb />
The best and largest assortment of Crock- <lb />
Lamp Chimneys and <lb />
Shades, Fancy Glassware, to be found <lb />
in the county. And our stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
Carpets. Rugs and is by far <lb />
the and cheapest ever offered to tho people <lb />
of this section. Come 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. 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 <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 />
GREENVILLE, N. C , Feb. <lb />
J. Agent Victor Safe Co-, <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Dear am pleased to say the Vic <lb />
tor Safe you sold me some five e six years ago <lb />
preserved in tact all its contents in the late fire <lb />
in Greenville on the The safe stood <lb />
at a point in office in the Opera <lb />
block have been cue of the hottest <lb />
parts in tho great conflagration. It contained <lb />
many papers and other things of When <lb />
it was out of the ruins and opened, son <lb />
twelve hours after the Are, every thing in it was <lb />
found to be preserved and in good con- <lb />
I cheerfully make this of <lb />
facts in recognition of the valuable service <lb />
me by this and you are at liberty to <lb />
make such use of it a yon may Mt <lb />
J. JARVIS. <lb />
The Victor Safe is made in Jail sizes, <lb />
for home, farm, office or general business <lb />
use. Every Safe sold with a guarantee to be Are <lb />
proof. Prices range from up. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, Agent, <lb />
N; C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017790_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
their interest to get our price before <lb />
chasing else where. <lb />
n all Its brandies. I <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
always t Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ens <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A core <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always and prices <lb />
the t Our goods bought and <lb />
fold for having no risk <lb />
o run. we sell at a dose margin. <lb />
S. M. N C <lb />
F. <lb />
Celebrated Russian Gal <lb />
Violin Strings <lb />
he Fines in the World. <lb />
Every Suing <lb />
for fill. E. 8th St.<lb />
MING K. h. <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
FLORENCE RAIL <lb />
Mar. <lb />
M. M <lb />
Leave <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar.<lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar <lb />
Mar. <lb />
a.<lb />
Ar U <lb />
.- <lb />
. i<lb />
Ar l<lb />
. v. <lb />
m. p. up.<lb />
Ar Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Train on Scotland Meek Branch <lb />
eaves 8.55 p. in., Halifax 4.1 <lb />
arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p <lb />
m., Greenville 6.47 p, m., Kinston 7.45 <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. in. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m., 11.20 am <lb />
except <lb />
Branch leave <lb />
Washington 8.00 a. and 3.00 p . m. <lb />
arrives Pamela 8.50 a. and 4.40 p <lb />
m., Tarboro 9.46 a. in., <lb />
Tarboro 3.30 p. in., Parmele 10.20 a. m. <lb />
and p. m arrives Washington <lb />
11.50 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. Daily ex- <lb />
Sunday. Connects with trains on <lb />
Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves S C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. except Sun. <lb />
day, at p. m., Sunday. P. M; <lb />
arrive Plymouth P. M., 5.25 p. m. <lb />
returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
y, 6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.25 and <lb />
Train on Midland N. C. branch leaves <lb />
daily, except Sunday, 6.05 a <lb />
m. arriving 7-30 a. m. Re- <lb />
turning leaves Smith Held 8.00 a. la , <lb />
rives at 9.30 a. m. <lb />
Trains in Nashville branch leave <lb />
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. m,. arrives <lb />
Nashville 5.05 p. m., Spring Hope 6.80 <lb />
p. in. Returning leave Spring Hope <lb />
m., Nashville a in, at <lb />
Rocky Mount 9.06 a m, daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta brunch, Florence It <lb />
leave Latta 6.40 p m, Dunbar <lb />
7.50 p m, Clio 8.05 p m. Returning <lb />
leave a m. Dunbar 6.30 a m <lb />
arm c Latta 7.50 a m, except Sun- <lb />
day. <lb />
Train Branch leaves War- <lb />
law for Clinton except <lb />
11.10 a. m. and 8.50 p, m- Returning <lb />
leaves Clinton at 7.00 a. m. p m. <lb />
Train Sol S make dose connection <lb />
at points dally, all rail via <lb />
at Bo. Mount with <lb />
Norfolk and it for <lb />
all points North via Norfolk. <lb />
JOHN P. <lb />
bur. <lb />
MAN'S WILL <lb />
Managed as m Each Ob <lb />
B Basils. <lb />
Judge Carpenter was spend- <lb />
a vacation in the country, he <lb />
bad occasion to look at some records, <lb />
and bis attention was directed to a <lb />
whimsical He arranged for a <lb />
copy of it as a literary <lb />
the satisfaction with <lb />
-which Mr. Darling proceeded to <lb />
all his relatives and insert a <lb />
ting into each bequest, well know- <lb />
that before their anger began to <lb />
rise he would be where even a ca- <lb />
in a suit for damages could <lb />
never commented the <lb />
judge, as he gave it to a reporter to <lb />
The testamentary clauses of <lb />
the documents are as <lb />
William Darling, in <lb />
in the township of , county and <lb />
district of------, western Canada, es- <lb />
quire, being in sound health of body, <lb />
and my mind Just as usual, which <lb />
friends who flatter me say is no <lb />
treat shakes at the best of times, do <lb />
make this my last will. and <lb />
as follows, revoking, of course, <lb />
all former <lb />
leave the property of Grant- <lb />
pees, and all other landed property <lb />
I may die possessed of, to my sisters <lb />
Ellen------and Betsey Darling, the <lb />
former because she is married to a <lb />
minister whom help she <lb />
the latter because she is <lb />
married to nobody, nor is she likely <lb />
to be, for she is an old maid and not <lb />
market ripe. And also I leave to <lb />
thorn and their heirs my share of <lb />
the stock and implements on the <lb />
farm, provided that the <lb />
round my brother's grave be re- <lb />
served. And if either should die <lb />
without issue then the other shall <lb />
inherit the whole. <lb />
leave my brother Andrew my <lb />
big silver son of old James, as the <lb />
representative of the family. I <lb />
would have left it to old James, <lb />
himself, but he would molt it down <lb />
to make temperance medals, and <lb />
that would a sacrilege. However, <lb />
I leave him my big horn snuffbox. <lb />
He can only make temperance horn <lb />
spoons of that. <lb />
leave my sister Jessie my Bible, <lb />
and when she knows as of the <lb />
of it as she does of the letter, <lb />
she will be another guise Christian <lb />
than she is. <lb />
leave my late brother's watch <lb />
to my brother Jerry, exhorting him <lb />
t the same time to give up <lb />
radicalism and all other sing <lb />
that do most easily beset him. <lb />
leave my brother Andrew my <lb />
big silver snuffbox, as I am informed <lb />
he is rather a decent Christian, with <lb />
jolly face. <lb />
leave Parson------the snuffbox <lb />
I got from the militia, as a small <lb />
token of my gratitude for the <lb />
ices he has done the family in <lb />
a sister that no man of taste <lb />
would taken. <lb />
leave John Carson a silver tea- <lb />
pot, to end that he may drink <lb />
tea therefrom to comfort him under <lb />
the affliction of a wife. <lb />
give my silver cup, with a <lb />
in it, to my sister Jane, be- <lb />
she is an old maid and pious j <lb />
also my snuffbox, as it <lb />
looks decent to an old woman <lb />
taking Press. <lb />
the Cs of <lb />
Every one knows the anecdote in <lb />
which the thought <lb />
was something inside of a pig, mean- <lb />
probably tho part that furnishes <lb />
lard, is known in some rural <lb />
as flair, in as flick <lb />
the latter word is well known in <lb />
But this story is <lb />
passed in simplicity by the follow- <lb />
A woman in a village in Kent <lb />
lost three children by <lb />
and when the clergyman's wife went <lb />
to condole with she railed <lb />
against the and said she <lb />
couldn't think how they could go to <lb />
and say that prayer, and <lb />
then go and practice on the people <lb />
as they did. In answer to the <lb />
what prayer she meant, she <lb />
aid, pray to he <lb />
from false doctoring, heresy <lb />
and schism, and they go about <lb />
and do false doctoring and kill tho <lb />
and Queries. <lb />
Why the Boiler Maker Called. <lb />
you said Mr. Grate- <lb />
bar, for a long I couldn't <lb />
imagine what brought our neighbor, <lb />
Mr. Anthony in to see <lb />
so often. Mr. was a <lb />
retired boiler maker. He had been <lb />
a journeyman boiler maker and then <lb />
a boss, and having made a modest <lb />
fortune he had retired to enjoy it <lb />
He lived only two or three doors <lb />
from us, and he used to come in of- <lb />
ten evenings. He seemed <lb />
to like to hear the children <lb />
play on the piano, and if didn't <lb />
play be would always ask to have <lb />
them. I used to wonder at this, be. <lb />
cause I never had any idea that Mr. <lb />
was especially fond <lb />
and one day I asked him <lb />
about it <lb />
you said Mr. Ham- <lb />
suppose that every man <lb />
has a feeling of affection for the <lb />
trade or profession that he was <lb />
brought up in. I know that I have <lb />
that feeling for my own, and when <lb />
I hear your children play duets on <lb />
the piano with the hard pedal on all <lb />
the time, it makes me think of the <lb />
ear old boiler <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
In the of Alabama <lb />
there are employed hands, <lb />
who turn out annually <lb />
worth of product <lb />
Noah Webster, from first to last, <lb />
pent years on his of <lb />
the English <lb />
A RUNAWAY TRAIN. <lb />
out PLANTS BY i straight and sooner, <lb />
may begin earlier and <lb />
the cultivator run closer to <lb />
The Fuller ft Johnson Trans-1 plant. The machine Hie <lb />
of Its Work, j m the row felting, the <lb />
i weeds are killed, this equal <lb />
to cultivating. The cut <lb />
worms are in some degree <lb />
The tobacco grower pro-j off immediate <lb />
W Southern <lb />
It Bad a Clear Track a Goal <lb />
Headed <lb />
A railroad official, speaking of I <lb />
some of his experiences, <lb />
lived many years ago in a small <lb />
Massachusetts city and managed j <lb />
road where every employee, from i <lb />
Bill up, was personally to be enamored of The glower is <lb />
known to me, and railroading was I tedious, pendent of labor escapes a <lb />
more of a pleasure than it is here, I of setting out plants by hand lain back. Asa it docs <lb />
where the roads are so vast and long whose veracity is work better than when done <lb />
that one hardly knows the members above This part of tho <lb />
work of tobacco culture, <lb />
by hand; it its owe seasons; <lb />
it insures tobacco more <lb />
of his own office staff. My office <lb />
windows, I remember, looked out <lb />
directly the principal business ,, <lb />
street of the place and the entrance to trembling far the cheapest in every way. <lb />
,. , a i for it approaches, i The farmer who gets the <lb />
arduous labor, which <lb />
the old method of transplanting is of ill the work cultivating and <lb />
adhered to, always j of harvesting is less, mid it is by <lb />
to the Union depot the street cross- <lb />
the tracks at right angles not <lb />
feet from the great station <lb />
entrance. Every hour or two New <lb />
York and Boston express trains ware <lb />
arriving and departing, and it was <lb />
always an interesting sight the day <lb />
before Thanksgiving, when every <lb />
train was running in two or three <lb />
actions, and each one drawn by two <lb />
locomotives, loaded down with pas- <lb />
anxious to get to tho old <lb />
farm in time for the Thanksgiving <lb />
dinner. <lb />
One snowy, blustering day I sat <lb />
waiting to see the train pull <lb />
In from Boston, for somehow I <lb />
kind of danger, as a railroad <lb />
man often does. I knew the train <lb />
was a heavy one, the rails slippery <lb />
and that before it the cross- <lb />
To the arduous labor, winch <lb />
with groans and <lb />
lamentations there is the <lb />
of a season when plants <lb />
are ready, and altogether it is a <lb />
worrisome business, <lb />
is offered up <lb />
it is over done with. <lb />
Blessed is the man who invent- <lb />
ed the transplanter The <lb />
of the machine is not yet fully <lb />
appreciated, but it is beginning <lb />
to be so. More and more of them <lb />
are coming into use every day, <lb />
and the day is not far distant <lb />
when great labor saving de- <lb />
vice will be looked upon as of no <lb />
less importance to the tobacco <lb />
raiser than bis curing barn- In <lb />
some sections it is already so re <lb />
and it is pushing its way <lb />
it came down a heavy grade four popular favor in the South- <lb />
miles long. Out at the other end of <lb />
the depot was a great long bridge <lb />
carrying the train off to the west <lb />
and also the tracks south <lb />
to New York. On both these tracks <lb />
stood huge locomotives blowing off <lb />
steam and seemingly in baste to <lb />
couple on to the coming train, <lb />
was destined for both the south and <lb />
west, and hurry it off to its <lb />
Well, to make a long story <lb />
short, that train got the best of the <lb />
that day, owing to some <lb />
defect in the and there <lb />
was of the most hair raising <lb />
train runaways I guess I will ever <lb />
witness. A mile the grade <lb />
heard old Seth the engineer, <lb />
making old No. whistle for <lb />
brakes in a way that made me turn <lb />
cold. Almost at the same time the <lb />
train came tearing down over the <lb />
street crossing and into the depot <lb />
going miles an hour, and I re- <lb />
member to this day and always will <lb />
how cool looked as ho dash- <lb />
ed by, blowing his whistle for dear <lb />
life as a warning to give him a <lb />
they would even get those <lb />
engines at the other end of the <lb />
out of the way I thought was <lb />
There <lb />
were cool men about that place that <lb />
day, and No. great Crawford <lb />
whistle had given the warning. The <lb />
witches were hastily set straight <lb />
on to the bridge, and away dashed <lb />
the waiting engine in a race to get <lb />
out of the way of the runaway train. <lb />
It was a close shave, and it <lb />
ed me for a week, but luck saved <lb />
the day. <lb />
runaway ran four miles be- <lb />
fore it and tho engineer <lb />
with the light engine tearing along <lb />
ahead of it was beginning to wonder <lb />
If the tracks were dear way out to <lb />
Buffalo, when the brakes worked <lb />
and the runaway was brought to a <lb />
stop. For years I boon wonder- <lb />
how that train ever dashed down <lb />
that grade and through the <lb />
depot, following the switches in and <lb />
out, without a most frightful smash <lb />
up. <lb />
Seth when he step <lb />
down from the cab after back- <lb />
back, regarded it as a huge joke, <lb />
but it soared everybody else within <lb />
a mile of the station out of a week's <lb />
Sometimes it is the wise words of <lb />
an infant that impress us more than <lb />
those carefully thought out by the <lb />
age. Therefore we quote the words <lb />
of the most innocent of mothers who <lb />
has in charge a beautiful <lb />
will not interfere with mar- <lb />
though I do not exactly <lb />
prove of the man she has <lb />
All have to abide by the fate <lb />
they make for themselves. I would <lb />
have preferred some one else, but <lb />
her heart has for her, and <lb />
Cupid, after all, is the best <lb />
Mothers, sisters, friends, take this <lb />
lesson to heart. You will never be <lb />
thanked if you interfere, and no <lb />
matter whether a marriage turns <lb />
out well or ill the adviser, the third <lb />
party, is seldom considered. <lb />
in business may love it does <lb />
not count Remember this and save <lb />
yourself time and annoyance by <lb />
keeping to yourself any wise re- <lb />
marks that you think the occasion <lb />
requires or your own conscience <lb />
Bands. o. <lb />
The advantage of using the <lb />
famous Fuller Johnson <lb />
Transplanter, which we illustrate <lb />
on page, are manifold, and <lb />
will be readily seen when the <lb />
work it does is understood- The <lb />
is drawn by a pair of <lb />
horses, and requires to <lb />
it besides the driver, two boys <lb />
great- <lb />
est returns from his crops is he <lb />
who is progressive, and adopts <lb />
agricultural machinery that have <lb />
proved successful lime, and <lb />
money save. H in an <lb />
is I he Tr.-u s- <lb />
planter manufactured by the <lb />
A- Johnson <lb />
Company, of Wis. The <lb />
Journal abundant reasons for <lb />
that it is nil ill it is <lb />
claimed for it, and we fully re- <lb />
commend it to our growers. In <lb />
to use in setting out to <lb />
it will also transplant to <lb />
cabbage, etc The price <lb />
of the machine is reasonable and <lb />
it is strongly constructed. With <lb />
proper care it will last a lifetime. <lb />
It will pay for itself in a year, <lb />
often several times in year. <lb />
We append a few testimonials of <lb />
Southern farmers who have used <lb />
the Transplanter; <lb />
The Bern is Tobacco Transplanter <lb />
is a perfect success. It sets out <lb />
the plants more regularly, leaves <lb />
the ground in better condition to <lb />
cultivate, the plants grow more <lb />
uniformly can be set at any- <lb />
time where the land been pro. <lb />
Bilious and Intermittent Fevers <lb />
which prevail in dis- <lb />
are invariably <lb />
by derangements of the <lb />
Stomach Liver and Bowels. <lb />
The Secret of Health. <lb />
The liver is the great driving <lb />
in the mechanism of <lb />
man, and when it is out of order, <lb />
the whole system becomes de- <lb />
ranged and disease is the result. <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
Cure all Liver Troubles. <lb />
SMITH EDWARDS, Props. <lb />
the <lb />
late <lb />
Com t mi-i . <lb />
store near <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Manufacturers and dealers in all <lb />
kinds of <lb />
CW, m <lb />
FINE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY <lb />
All kinds of repairing done <lb />
We use skilled labor and good <lb />
material and are prepared to give <lb />
yon satisfactory work. <lb />
E. Moors. Ia. L <lb />
Greenville <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,<lb />
miller Opera House. Third S <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Pia tees in all the Courts. <lb />
a specialty <lb />
w. <lb />
II, LONG, <lb />
Greenville. N. G. <lb />
GROVES <lb />
CHILL <lb />
FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE <lb />
Ii ls. Not. <lb />
Paris <lb />
mild last of <lb />
CHILI, TONIC <lb />
your. In nil <lb />
II In tho <lb />
never an universal <lb />
as truly. <lb />
guaranteed J. <lb />
CO. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N C <lb />
--------DB IN------- <lb />
MARBLE <lb />
and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. First-class work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
II. <lb />
President, <lb />
Sec. t <lb />
Practices in all the <lb />
of Ohio, City of <lb />
Lucas County j <lb />
Frank J. makes oath ilia <lb />
he ii the senior partner of the firm of K. <lb />
J. Co., doing business In <lb />
the City of Toledo, State <lb />
and that said firm will pay <lb />
the sum of ONE HUNDRED <lb />
LARS for each every case of Ca- <lb />
that cannot be cured by the use <lb />
Of <lb />
Sworn to before me and subscribed in <lb />
my presence, this 6th day of December <lb />
A, D. 1686. <lb />
OLE A SO <lb />
Notary Public. <lb />
Of what consequence is it that <lb />
anything should be from <lb />
man Nothing is hidden from God; <lb />
he is present in our minds and <lb />
into the midst of our thoughts. <lb />
Comes, do I say As if he were ever <lb />
to drop the plants. It plants one <lb />
row a time, and can set from <lb />
throe to six acres a day. A the <lb />
plants are set they are watered; <lb />
that is, the machine makes a <lb />
small furrow in which water in <lb />
exactly the right is pour- <lb />
ed automatically, the plan's <lb />
are set in water so that the roots <lb />
are thoroughly The fur- <lb />
row is then closed and the earth <lb />
packed nicely around plants <lb />
by the packing plates, the rows <lb />
thus left in a The <lb />
packing of the earth is regulated, <lb />
may be done hard or as <lb />
desired- The machine adapts it- <lb />
self to the of the <lb />
face of the land, enabling the <lb />
operator, just as he pleases, to <lb />
set the plants deep or shadow. <lb />
The plants may be set ready, <lb />
no matter how dry the ground <lb />
may The fertilizer attach <lb />
which is peculiar to the <lb />
Fuller v Johnson Trans- <lb />
planter and not to be had else- <lb />
where, distributes the fertilizer <lb />
in the row and puts in just as <lb />
much or as little as may be want- <lb />
ed. <lb />
By the use of this transplanter <lb />
these results are obtained super- <lb />
to that follow hand sett- <lb />
The roots are doubled <lb />
up, the plants start better <lb />
and grow and mature more evenly <lb />
and quicker. A crust is not form- <lb />
ed on ml the roots, as is often <lb />
the case by the old process where <lb />
the ground is wet and water is <lb />
applied. The plants being set <lb />
prepared, the last being <lb />
decided advantage as every to- <lb />
grower <lb />
L- F. Evans, Greenville, N. C- <lb />
Yours at noted. I <lb />
have been setting my tobacco <lb />
plants with a machine for two <lb />
years, at the same time have <lb />
been experimenting with hand- <lb />
plants. I greatly prefer to <lb />
have my crop set by machinery <lb />
under any circumstances A part <lb />
from the better work <lb />
can be than it is possible to <lb />
do with the hand- find that the <lb />
plant thrives better, it grows off <lb />
quicker, evenly, and more <lb />
uniform v. Of the ma- <lb />
chines you have sold in this sec <lb />
this season, I hear but one <lb />
a perfect <lb />
success. <lb />
F. M. Roof-rs, <lb />
Florence, S. C <lb />
I consider the Tobacco <lb />
Transplanter a great success, and <lb />
am satisfied had I used it to set <lb />
my crop of acres last season it <lb />
would save more than tho cost of <lb />
the <lb />
per cent of plants set with it will <lb />
live grow off so quickly that <lb />
it will be ready for cutting from <lb />
six to tan days sooner that <lb />
set by hand. <lb />
H. D. Lucas. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
The Transplanter is sold <lb />
in Pitt County by Spain, <lb />
at the Eastern Warehouse. <lb />
Swift Galloway, B. K. Tyson, <lb />
Snow Hill, N- V. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
GALLOWAY TYSON, <lb />
AT N K Y-AT-1 W, <lb />
Greenville, X. C. <lb />
Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
H. W- <lb />
ft <lb />
O Successors lo Latham Skimmer, <lb />
N- O- <lb />
John E. Woodard, K. v. <lb />
Wilson, X. C. Greenville, M. I <lb />
HARDING, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Special attention given to <lb />
settlement of <lb />
GOOD FOR STOCK AND POULTRY <lb />
TOP- <lb />
lie Upturned From <lb />
The man, who <lb />
also walked into <lb />
tho organ was forth <lb />
a long, low melody that scorned to <lb />
In the of heaven. And as he <lb />
listened to it his air grow more <lb />
a light not of earth came <lb />
Into his all the better <lb />
I of bis nature were moved <lb />
I have used all of medicine, but, the melodious strains,<lb />
pared especially for stock, as well <lb />
man, and for that purpose sold in tin <lb />
cans, holding one-half pound of I <lb />
cine for cents. <lb />
Lambert. Franklin Co., Tenn., I <lb />
March <lb />
I would not give one package of black- <lb />
for all the others I ever saw. <lb />
It is the bast thing for horses or cattle <lb />
the spring of the year, and will cure <lb />
chicken cholera every time. <lb />
R. Boylan <lb />
Yard was once any rod or <lb />
pole. The expression is still used <lb />
with this meaning when applied to <lb />
various parts of a ship's equipment, <lb />
as and the <lb />
Tommy Suggests a Remedy. <lb />
can say of neighbor, Hark- <lb />
observed Mr. <lb />
he gives away a great deal in char- <lb />
and that bis left hand never <lb />
knows what his right hand is do- <lb />
doesn't be take boxing lee- <lb />
asked <lb />
A tired to very much like a <lb />
sprained ankle. If you from any <lb />
of the symptoms of your <lb />
Is tired. It needs a crutch. We <lb />
must relieve of all work for a time, <lb />
or until it restored to Its natural <lb />
strength. To do this we <lb />
must use a food which is already digest- <lb />
ed outside of the body, and which will <lb />
aid the digestion of other foods that <lb />
may be taken with It. Such a product <lb />
the Shaker Digestive Cordial. <lb />
The Shakers have the <lb />
principles present in plants for the <lb />
manufacture of this article, and its <lb />
success has been truly phenomenal <lb />
You can try it for the nominal sum of <lb />
cents, as sample bottles are sold by <lb />
at this price. <lb />
Ball's Catarrh Care Is taken Intern- <lb />
directly on the blood <lb />
surfaces of the system. Send <lb />
for free, U the medicine lit c <lb />
F. J. CHEN BY A Co,, Toledo, Doctors it in p. <lb />
. rOB. <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 />
J. L STARKEY, <lb />
-AGENT <lb />
CITY ELECTRIC <lb />
WILMINGTON. N. G. <lb />
This Laundry does the work In <lb />
r. Month, and are low. We <lb />
make every Tuesday. Bring <lb />
work to our store on Monday and <lb />
-t will be forwarded promptly. <lb />
furnished application. <lb />
and for that moment he was not of <lb />
earth. <lb />
Then walked into his pew and <lb />
started to take off his overcoat. Sc <lb />
was he that he did not <lb />
realize be was pulling off bis other <lb />
until he stood there in bis shirt <lb />
sleeves in full view of the worldly <lb />
tittered so it <lb />
could be beard. <lb />
Then the man who bad been in <lb />
heaven a moment before came sud- <lb />
and his feelings were <lb />
like unto those of the suffering souls <lb />
in Post. <lb />
Content. <lb />
The fountain of must <lb />
spring up in the mind, and he who <lb />
has so little knowledge of human <lb />
nature to seek happiness by <lb />
anything but his own <lb />
position will bis life In fruit- <lb />
less efforts and multiply the griefs <lb />
which he purposes to remove. <lb />
Tl. <lb />
American Book. <lb />
The was <lb />
published at Cambridge, Mass., in <lb />
1640, was for many years supposed <lb />
to be the very first book printed on <lb />
the continent. Of late it <lb />
has been discovered persons who <lb />
ought to have been acquainted with <lb />
the facts from the beginning of the <lb />
that books were print- <lb />
ed in Mexico a long century before <lb />
the ever saw a of <lb />
fie Fernandez's <lb />
published <lb />
t Toledo, Spain, in 1611, plainly <lb />
States that first book published <lb />
in America was a of Antonio <lb />
In the of Mexico in the year <lb />
Louis <lb />
D. L. <lb />
DENTIST <lb />
DR. <lb />
II. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST.<lb />
LUMBER CO. <lb />
Always in tho market <lb />
for and pay <lb />
Cash at market prices <lb />
Can also fill orders <lb />
for Bough Dressed <lb />
L n in lie r promptly. <lb />
Give us your orders. <lb />
C HAMILTON. Manage. <lb />
Cotton. <lb />
With careful rotation of <lb />
crops and liberal fertilizations, <lb />
cotton lands will improve. The <lb />
application of a proper <lb />
containing sufficient Pot- <lb />
ash often makes the difference <lb />
between a profitable crop and <lb />
failure. Use fertilizers contain- <lb />
not less than to <lb />
Actual Potash. <lb />
is a complete specific <lb />
against <lb />
Our pamphlet fire circular <lb />
special t.-i t bin contain- <lb />
the result a f in line, <lb />
cotton farmer should have a copy. They are <lb />
tent free for the asking. <lb />
GERMAN RAM WORKS. <lb />
Nassau St., New York. <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
By virtue of the power contained la <lb />
court <lb />
Pitt in IS entitled. W. <lb />
II. fell, and trading <lb />
Hie of A Co., in <lb />
own behalf and In the behalf of all other <lb />
creditors Moore. <lb />
who Will join and hear the <lb />
Plaintiff, D. <lb />
Executor is Moore, <lb />
l. Individually and as <lb />
guardian of W. w Moon- and <lb />
Bruce M. Murphy, wife of said <lb />
said w w. Mo re and Brim <lb />
M W. iii wife, <lb />
Helen Perkins as <lb />
of ids said wife, John N. Vaughan <lb />
and I. Barnes, trading as <lb />
Vaughan Barnes, Sarah Moore and <lb />
Oliver Moore, as defendants, will sell <lb />
before the Court House Door in the <lb />
town of Greenville, N. C, on Mon- <lb />
day, the sixth day of April, <lb />
the following real <lb />
entire undivided half Interest <lb />
a t of land lying and being In <lb />
fort township, <lb />
adjoining the lauds of David Smith, <lb />
James Henry <lb />
an others, situated Creep- <lb />
nineteen <lb />
acres more or less and known <lb />
as tin a or <lb />
Is of land. is <lb />
to the Will if I K . record- <lb />
ed in the book of wills of Beaufort <lb />
county at pares and and a deed <lb />
v. II. and wife to Mar- <lb />
Ins Moore and I on Which <lb />
deed Is n c In tin- Register a <lb />
c Book at <lb />
page <lb />
so one other tract or parcel of land <lb />
situated in the of Halifax, ad- <lb />
joining the of John . <lb />
Henry Baker, Pope and others <lb />
and Known as tin- or <lb />
land, containing tour hundred <lb />
acres more or leas and being the <lb />
same land Dawson, <lb />
Sheriff, to Moore on third <lb />
day of February, and In <lb />
the Register of Office of Halifax <lb />
in Book at pages and <lb />
Terms of sale cash, <lb />
Mai 1-9. <lb />
II. <lb />
Commissioner.<lb />
so much more <lb />
r you <lb />
f fatal diseases result from <lb />
-f trifling ailments neglected, i <lb />
f Don't play with Nature's <lb />
f greatest <lb />
.-. <lb />
O. <lb />
Office, up stairs overS. E, Ponder Co <lb />
Hardware tore. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
Male Academy. <lb />
The next session of this will <lb />
begin <lb />
SEPT. <lb />
and continue for ten months. <lb />
The course embraces all the branches <lb />
usually in an Academy. <lb />
Terms, both for tuition and boa id <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
Boys well and equipped for <lb />
business, taking the <lb />
course alone. Where they wish V <lb />
pursue a higher course, this school <lb />
guarantees thorough preparation to <lb />
enter, with credit, any College in North <lb />
the State University. <lb />
refers who have recently <lb />
Us wall the truthfulness of Saw <lb />
statement. <lb />
Any young man with character ant <lb />
moderate ability taking a course <lb />
us will aided In arrange- <lb />
to continue in the higher school-. <lb />
The discipline will be It- <lb />
present standard. <lb />
Neither time nor attention <lb />
work will be spared to make this <lb />
I that p could wish. <lb />
For fin particulars see or ad <lb />
dress <lb />
W. H. <lb />
July 80,1890- <lb />
j Brown's <lb />
Iron <lb />
; Bitters <lb />
If you <lb />
re <lb />
out of sons, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at <lb />
the most J <lb />
Me <lb />
Iron Bit- <lb />
A few hot- <lb />
ties cure-benefit <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
won't your <lb />
and <lb />
pleasant to take. , <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
r, only the his crossed red <lb />
Haas on the wrapper. All other, <lb />
On receipt of two we <lb />
will send set of Ten <lb />
Fair Views end <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO. <lb />
OLD DOMINION <lb />
THE MORNING STAR <lb />
The Oldest <lb />
Daily Newspaper in <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
The Only Six-Dollar Daily <lb />
its Glass in the State. <lb />
Favors Limited Free <lb />
of American Silver and <lb />
of the Ten Per Out. Tax on <lb />
State Daily <lb />
per month; Weekly per <lb />
year. Wm. H. BERNARD, <lb />
Ed. NO <lb />
TAR SERVICE <lb />
Steamers Washington for <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land <lb />
on Tar River Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. X. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
A. M. same days. <lb />
These departures are subject to <lb />
of water on Tar <lb />
at with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Bo-ton. <lb />
Shippers should their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion fr m <lb />
Hew York. from <lb />
Norfolk A <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
N C <lb />
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and aD <lb />
Ova o. . <lb />
and w patent law time <lb />
remote from <lb />
Send model, drawing or <lb />
If or not, free of <lb />
Oar fee not till Is secured. <lb />
How to Obtain <lb />
com of S <lb />
rat free. <lb />
ft <lb />
AND ITS <lb />
To the Editor have an absolute <lb />
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use <lb />
thousands of hopeless have been already <lb />
permanently cured. So proof-positive am I <lb />
of its power that I consider it my duty to <lb />
two free to of your readers <lb />
who have Bronchial or <lb />
Lung Trouble, if they will write me <lb />
express and address. Sincerely, <lb />
T. A. M. C, Pearl St., Sew York. <lb />
Tho Editorial and Management of <lb />
this <lb />
v . I . IS <lb />
WINE OF<lb />
back, <lb />
for <lb />
I hex p <lb />
Mil- <lb />
r ii- <lb />
ti u <lb />
Ml<lb />
pi <lb />
u , <lb />
hips, <lb />
in in the de- <lb />
. r of <lb />
-lion and <lb />
In <lb />
. ii <lb />
MAN'S <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
lit Mil <lb />
MARK <lb />
,; Of <lb />
This been In use for <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady It has been en <lb />
the leading physician all over <lb />
country, and effected <lb />
all other with the <lb />
most who <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment Is Of <lb />
long Standing and the high <lb />
it has obtained is owing <lb />
a own but <lb />
ever been made to bring It before th <lb />
nubile. One bottle of this <lb />
be sent to any address <lb />
Dollar. All Cash Older promptly <lb />
tended to. Address all order to <lb />
T, N. <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
Carolina <lb />
FORK OS SP A <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
and fearless ; r an <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will be a <lb />
Invaluable visitor to the home, t h <lb />
the club or the work room, <lb />
mi DAILY <lb />
All of the news of the world. Com <lb />
reports from the <lb />
and National Capitols. a -ear <lb />
OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect AH the <lb />
new of the week. The <lb />
news ; <lb />
from the Legislature a <lb />
the Weakly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY DOLLAR A <lb />
for sample copies. Address <lb />
THE <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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