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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 24 June 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">17802</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18960624</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <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, 24 June 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:date>18960624</dc:date>
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                <p>
JOB PRINTING. J <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all <lb />
of this line<lb />
and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
The <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL, XV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1896. <lb />
NO. <lb />
A LE FROM THE SEASHORE <lb />
I am waiting by the a. <lb />
Dill love, fin- thee ; <lb />
Wailing where billows roll <lb />
Hasten, km, across the <lb />
this pearly strand ; <lb />
Ha-c lo ocean's <lb />
bring your salary along <lb />
are dear, <lb />
When yon hare to lore them hew ; <lb />
Mine-, it you will only look. <lb />
Is home there, in nonfat <lb />
A on Trial for Forgery. <lb />
One H Henry Ward Beech m <lb />
on trial for forgery brother is <lb />
c mm for him. They do not look in <lb />
the least alike, nor either resemble <lb />
the distinguished father. <lb />
The ceding arc before Justice <lb />
Foreman, in branch of the <lb />
Supreme Court, and they are like a <lb />
trial in which there is a tan- <lb />
of wall street <lb />
Henry B. was the senior <lb />
partner Co. <lb />
It was brought out that <lb />
were the agents the <lb />
Ami rim Security and Casualty Com- <lb />
of which W. E. <lb />
lie the partners of <lb />
Co., was president. <lb />
B Co. were the gen- <lb />
the company and were to <lb />
per cent, of the premium. <lb />
act tor which II. <lb />
was indicted forging the <lb />
e. name of F. B. Bond, vice- <lb />
of the Chicago, Milwaukee, <lb />
and St. Paul railway. By means of <lb />
darks, bi and heads de- <lb />
it was shown that Mr Beech- <lb />
in 1893, had handed Manager <lb />
the I department two <lb />
applications policies purporting to, <lb />
signed by Bond. One policy was <lb />
tor the other for <lb />
the amount of commission due <lb />
Schenck Co. on than would have <lb />
This amount was through on <lb />
the book.-, and brought into the annual <lb />
report. Mr. Weeks said that the <lb />
Company declared a j per cent <lb />
dividend on the basis business, although <lb />
the polices had never been out. <lb />
Vice-president Bind was placed upon <lb />
he yesterday. He <lb />
had never Signed applications for <lb />
the policies. The signatures are <lb />
Bond, A. S. Mr Mond said <lb />
He knew no initial- <lb />
S. and he had never <lb />
ed the signing of applications. In <lb />
he had never heard of until <lb />
It was Mr. who brought <lb />
out that Mr. knew how Mr <lb />
signed his name and that the <lb />
nature showed no suggestion of an at- <lb />
tempt to imitate that of Mr. Bond <lb />
New York World. <lb />
TO EXCLUDE THE NEGRO <lb />
TEMPERANCE DEPARTMENT. <lb />
Northern Settlers in Mass Meeting at <lb />
Ga. Resolve to Drive j Mk. Em sIt you will <lb />
the Blacks From the Colony. j mo in your temperance <lb />
column, I would like to have something <lb />
A few ago the colonists of the <lb />
town in the Suite of <lb />
to say to the children on the subject of <lb />
temperance. would to show <lb />
Georgia, held a being j become Pro- <lb />
present. A resolution was named j help to make people <lb />
unanimously calling o- the entire j j.,,,,,. encouraging them to abstain <lb />
from strong <lb />
Uncle Ted is welcome to space in <lb />
the Temperance and m <lb />
hope the children will watch for his let- <lb />
and profit by what he tell them. <lb />
Ed. <lb />
to exclude from <lb />
In addition to , or rather as <lb />
a to it, notices were posted <lb />
in various places, adorned <lb />
with skulls and cross-bones to this <lb />
will be a meeting <lb />
the laboring and mechanics o <lb />
the city Fitzgerald to-night at <lb />
o'clock, in the Fitzgerald block, the <lb />
purpose excluding all colored labor <lb />
from If this he th- white <lb />
man's town let's have it if not <lb />
let the niggers have it. <lb />
order of the <lb />
Now. Fitzgerald is a Southern town. <lb />
It is in the heart a State. <lb />
What Fitzgerald says the South is sup- <lb />
posed to echo. And <lb />
that no need reply. Fitzgerald <lb />
is to be a while man's to-n. col <lb />
fed man and brother must move on. <lb />
How the Northern press will ring with <lb />
denunciation at this fresh exhibition <lb />
Southern hatred of the How <lb />
the sectional shriekers in this part of <lb />
the country will hold the bulldozer and <lb />
the old slave-owner up to public <lb />
because their prescriptive and <lb />
relentless of the black <lb />
man <lb />
And yet. is not a Southern <lb />
town. does not represent Southern <lb />
sentiment. It is not in tune with any <lb />
really Southern community, either in <lb />
or in the neighboring Slates. <lb />
The persons who constitute the <lb />
population Fitzgerald are. almost <lb />
without exception, Northern <lb />
birth and breading. The <lb />
ed quite recently from the North. <lb />
western States. Nearly hall of them <lb />
belong to the Grand Army of the Re- <lb />
public. They arc not Southerners, not <lb />
not form r slave owners or <lb />
the of slave-owners. They <lb />
are Northern men, former soldiers <lb />
the representative of the <lb />
the section from which they <lb />
came and so little in accord with the <lb />
people of Georgia among whom they <lb />
have settled that on the occasion <lb />
inciting above, referred p, <lb />
the speakers declared that <lb />
loved the better than <lb />
did the and <lb />
upon that hypothesis with great <lb />
We mention these, more or less <lb />
facts merely way of arrest- <lb />
the flow of comment <lb />
which would otherwise have emanated <lb />
from sectional newspapers of the North, <lb />
Washington <lb />
Prohibitionists. <lb />
not thou upon the wine when <lb />
it is red, it giveth his in <lb />
the cup, when it aright <lb />
Proverbs <lb />
arc wonder- <lb />
what that big word mean- A <lb />
Prohibitionist is one does not <lb />
drink wilt, or anything intoxicating <lb />
A Little Prohibitionist is a child who <lb />
will not touch cider, wine, or any Strong <lb />
drink. From now on I wish to show <lb />
you why little children ought to fa Lit- <lb />
Prohibitionists. <lb />
link boy who never learns so <lb />
taste liquor, to utter or pollute <lb />
his lips with H will make the be.-t <lb />
kind of a <lb />
alcohol may be found without change <lb />
or assimilation, and the brain bring the <lb />
very seat and of the nervous sys- <lb />
l in, this most delicate part our or- <lb />
is directly and immediately <lb />
by this most powerful and <lb />
stimulant, which always <lb />
when used in sufficient quantities. <lb />
Th; nerves are thus paralyzed, <lb />
hence brain, having medium <lb />
by which it thought and <lb />
emotion to the senses, becomes <lb />
in a state of intoxication. In <lb />
the repeated effects of upon the <lb />
nervous especially when <lb />
the brain to the senses ; and hence, at <lb />
intervals, the victim of habitual drink <lb />
its present the his vice <lb />
in all the horrid shapes by which the <lb />
confused brain play upon the nerves. <lb />
Fancy and imagination lakes the <lb />
of Sketches. <lb />
-Now therefore beware, thee, <lb />
and drink wine <lb />
I scad you 13- <lb />
day a p is u entitle Little <lb />
Let all in this <lb />
resolve, so we will all grow up to be <lb />
temperance men and women. <lb />
A Little Boy's Resolve. <lb />
I'll not, taste not, handle not. <lb />
Nor on it east my i yes, <lb />
For in the sparkling <lb />
A deadly serpent lies. <lb />
Cold water is the drink for me, <lb />
Cod's own gift, most kind. <lb />
No hidden power in it lies <lb />
To steal away my mind. <lb />
Two Papers for <lb />
We have made <lb />
an <lb />
he Reflector <lb />
North Carolinian for <lb />
above amount. This <lb />
campaign year and y <lb />
should take the <lb />
leading papers. <lb />
OPPORTUNITY. <lb />
n. <lb />
The reports correspondents of the <lb />
Weekly Crop Bulletin, by the <lb />
North Carolina Climate and Crop St i. <lb />
,, r ., . ,. . ; the to secure <lb />
vats, for the week ending j <lb />
13th, 1896, indicate A mow ., of population <lb />
The most before <lb />
is, bow to secure <lb />
a continued <lb />
favorable progress in growth of crops. <lb />
only really unfavorable reports <lb />
come from the north-east of the <lb />
State and a few localities in the central <lb />
portion, where there was too much <lb />
rain, and crops are very grassy. Th <lb />
temperature was nearly normal during I <lb />
the week, but the nights have been too I y property <lb />
COS for cotton. Sufficient ruin occur, I money <lb />
red where; the of sun- ties of every man, and in <lb />
from the North and and of the <lb />
better classes of German, Scandinavian <lb />
and British to the South would <lb />
la- incalculable value to this section. <lb />
It would the whole South, <lb />
wonderfully t the growth of <lb />
enhance the value of all <lb />
stripe was about fitly per cent. The <lb />
next week is likely to be dry and warm <lb />
DISTINCT. <lb />
The weather was generally <lb />
th South, bring about better education- <lb />
secure the construction of <lb />
better roads, forever Settle <lb />
nice questions, and give to this section <lb />
a prosperity as greater than that <lb />
this week, except that the nights I of the North and West as the mil lira I <lb />
A Scene. <lb />
Just at this the outer door <lb />
was open with a slow, hesitation <lb />
motion ; then u little pale face <lb />
in, and a pair of soft blue eyes wont <lb />
searching about the <lb />
was Instantly hushed, and every <lb />
face, excited with interest, <lb />
towards the child, who had now mapped <lb />
the door. She was not <lb />
ten years of age, but It moved the heart <lb />
to look upon the expression <lb />
of her young countenance, and the <lb />
forced bravery therein, that scarcely <lb />
overcame the native timidity so <lb />
visible, <lb />
I fare never heard <lb />
word spoken in a voice that sent such a <lb />
thrill along every nerve. It was full of <lb />
s love, full a tender concern <lb />
that its origin too deep for th; <lb />
heart a child. As she spoke, the lit. <lb />
tie one sprang across the room, and <lb />
laying her upon the of Joe <lb />
Morgan, lilting her eyes, that mm ready <lb />
to gush with tears. father <lb />
Won't you conic home I heat- that <lb />
low, pleading voice even now, and my <lb />
heart gives a quicker throb, poor child <lb />
Darkly shadowed was the sky that <lb />
bent gloomily and suffered the child to <lb />
lead from the room. He seemed <lb />
passive in her hands, I noticed that he <lb />
thrust his lingers nervously into his <lb />
pockets, and that a troubled look went <lb />
over his face as they were withdrawn. <lb />
His last sixpence was in, till <lb />
the drunkard and the nights in a bar- <lb />
shall come to <lb />
u.-ii i <lb />
were too cool for cotton, and in some <lb />
northern counties Gates, <lb />
advantages of the former exceed those <lb />
of the latter. It is the duty of every <lb />
have <lb />
a for you about Tim and Tot who <lb />
took, a rip around the world one day <lb />
What Ms of they found, to <lb />
all those countries on account of <lb />
MT HUSBAND. <lb />
There husbands who are pretty, <lb />
There are husbands who are witty, <lb />
; and how glad they must I There are husbands who in public <lb />
to Ride the Bike. <lb />
She had taken two lessons on the <lb />
wheel and Wanted to try it without an <lb />
instructor. So she rented a bicycle, <lb />
took it up on a back street of San Ba- <lb />
headed it down hill so she would <lb />
not have to work to hard and bad a <lb />
lady friend hold it until she got on. <lb />
She started a little but soon got. <lb />
the wheel going straight down the <lb />
at a three before site <lb />
realized that it was away with <lb />
lier- Just then a cow and a calf <lb />
up in street ahead, She <lb />
gave herself up for lost and screamed- <lb />
The cow thought it was a <lb />
new sort locomotive whistling and <lb />
got out of the road, while the calf stood <lb />
squarely in the middle of the street, <lb />
with its fore legs spread apart, its eats <lb />
sticking out like cabbage leaves its <lb />
eyes popping out its head in <lb />
astonishment. <lb />
The bicyclist creamed again, and <lb />
expected collide with the. <lb />
calf it whirled around and its fail <lb />
over its back went bawling the <lb />
hen the cow saw the queer <lb />
looking apparition in bloomers chasing <lb />
her calf, she started to the rescue;, <lb />
at the top of far -lungs. Halt a <lb />
neighborhood dogs heard the <lb />
racket went yelping after the cow. <lb />
went <lb />
the street, tips calf, bawling in <lb />
the lead, the a close second and <lb />
screaming, the cow along <lb />
behind the howling at her <lb />
heels. the lady struck a <lb />
lauded in the gutter with the wheel <lb />
on top of her, and there she lay till the <lb />
procession had <lb />
Post. <lb />
A NEW TOBACCO PEST. <lb />
A Warning to Tobacco <lb />
A has been <lb />
mining the leaves of growing <lb />
co. The caterpillar is about one-halt <lb />
inch long, greenish with a dark brown <lb />
head. It makes an irregular or blotch <lb />
mine by eating the green matter or par- <lb />
of the leaf, leaving the skins <lb />
intact and leaf transparent. The <lb />
caterpillar is extremely voracious and <lb />
as several usually mine one leaf the leaf, <lb />
is. soon worthless. The insect <lb />
belongs to the of <lb />
moths, whose best known <lb />
are the clothes and fur moth and <lb />
and the grain moth. This <lb />
particular species is yet <lb />
protected by the <lb />
skins of the leaf, no ordinary poison or <lb />
insecticide will destroy this pest, nor <lb />
can it be hand-picked without destroy- <lb />
the leaf. The only treatment is to <lb />
watch for leaves showing transparent <lb />
blotches and when found to remove and <lb />
burn them. So far this pest has been <lb />
reported only from one locality in North <lb />
Carolina, but it behooves tobacco grow <lb />
rs everywhere to look out for and <lb />
destroy i t as soon us it appears. If it <lb />
becomes common it will greatly harm <lb />
the industry of <lb />
K. <lb />
C. Experiment Station. <lb />
DID YOU EVER <lb />
Try Electric Bitters as a remedy <lb />
your troubles If not, get a bottle now <lb />
and get relief. This medicine has been <lb />
found to be adapted the re- <lb />
lief care of all Female Complaints, <lb />
a wonderful direct Influence <lb />
giving strength and to <lb />
organs. If you have of <lb />
or <lb />
or <lb />
troubled with Spoils, <lb />
Bitters is the medicine need. Health <lb />
and Strength by its use. <lb />
cents and at Jno. 4-. <lb />
Drag Store. <lb />
old Georgie heard his lather <lb />
and aunt talking about ft neighbor who <lb />
had beaten his wife while drunk. A <lb />
short time after he asked his aunt why <lb />
whiskey was called liquor. His aunt re- <lb />
plied she did not know. Georgie said, <lb />
think do. It is because men drink <lb />
it. and then go home and lick their <lb />
wives ; so it is called <lb />
have been to find themselves once more <lb />
to their temperance homes. <lb />
Uncle <lb />
A Trip Around the <lb />
Dear Tim and Tot, one summer day, <lb />
banner white <lb />
Said Tim, Let's take this temperance <lb />
Hag <lb />
A trip around Id. <lb />
So they played t the garden was <lb />
the world, and all the bushes we-e <lb />
countries. They found that in all <lb />
these countries strong drink was made, <lb />
and that it did much harm to the <lb />
In each country they waved their <lb />
flag, and bade people be sober. <lb />
They went to Great Britain, and, <lb />
found the folks making rye into <lb />
key. they France, <lb />
Raw their turning grapes into bran, <lb />
In Spain they n ed their grapes <lb />
for wine ; in I tally they made wine of <lb />
grapes; in Germany they made beer <lb />
of hops and barley ; in Russia they <lb />
made strong drink of rye and corn ; ill <lb />
India they were making whiskey of <lb />
palm juice and fruit; in China the rice <lb />
was turned, not into food, but into <lb />
strong drink. <lb />
They crossed to Alaska and found, <lb />
the poor people making rum of <lb />
In the United States the apples, <lb />
corn, rye and hops were turned, <lb />
strong drink. Mexico <lb />
the agave plant wits, made info a foul, <lb />
drink which made people drunk and. <lb />
In the West India <lb />
into Amer- <lb />
the used fruit, rice, sugar and <lb />
grain for drink. a crazy <lb />
place this world is Tim. <lb />
spoil good stuff to make bad I <lb />
think said Tot that it must make <lb />
sorry, and the angels cry, to see so <lb />
much trouble down in the world. <lb />
smiling as the morn ; <lb />
There are husbands who, are <lb />
are. husbands who arc wealthy <lb />
the real angelic <lb />
never yet been <lb />
Some for of are noted, <lb />
Who really so devoted <lb />
That their wives arc absent <lb />
they are lonesome and forlorn ; <lb />
And now and then you'll find one <lb />
Who's a fairly good and kind one. <lb />
Yet the real angelic he's <lb />
never yet been born. <lb />
So the woman who is mated <lb />
To a man who is rated <lb />
As should cherish him for- <lb />
ever and a day ; <lb />
For the real angelic creature- <lb />
He has. never been discovered, and he <lb />
he, so they say. <lb />
T. B. Aldrich, in the Forum. <lb />
Northampton, Hertford and man and woman interested in the <lb />
there was again too much rain; which to bend their best pi this great <lb />
prevented farm work and injured crops question. It the untiring <lb />
It is still dry over portions work, the most liberal financial aid and <lb />
of Craven county, but generally I the daily thought of everyone who de- <lb />
i. Cotton continues sires to see South enjoy the bless- <lb />
fine, though not growing as as would come a., ever- <lb />
would with warmer weather ; lice I increasing southward movement <lb />
reported. Corn crop especially fine ; population. The <lb />
nearly all corn hilled ; devoted to the industrial interests <lb />
in Tobacco doing well ; lay- of and reaching the <lb />
by and not of the North and West, and <lb />
so numerous. and i the magazine, pub- <lb />
housing still progress ; all sweet hi- by wholly lo its <lb />
ha e set; peas, and ea MU ; Migration and agricultural interests <lb />
doing well- aim apples of an aid thousands of prospective <lb />
inferior market Inn I buyers immigration <lb />
.,.,,., . . agents in the North and West, will <lb />
DISTRICT. . <lb />
prom industrial and immigration mat- <lb />
The week, though too cool ,, . attention in <lb />
cotton, was generally favorable, except , ml M , broader scale- <lb />
where too much rain fell, work , , , , <lb />
has boon interrupted so long that crops. ,,,,. <lb />
are gelling grassy tin l need work badly, , the <lb />
dam by a severe hall- ,.,,, ,, railroad nod <lb />
storm occurred in Johnston county on a j,,. <lb />
the 9th and heavy rains locally mother work <lb />
and It is reward that is possible, <lb />
C for cotton, and are damaging <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Govt Report <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY <lb />
an in rowel <lb />
it. Blooms have been seen in the <lb />
indicating unusually advanced <lb />
Stan Where and cultivated <lb />
ii is vigorous and healthy. Com <lb />
being laid by in good shape; some re- <lb />
ports of damage by bugs, in <lb />
general crop better than for <lb />
Tobacco well ; early-set bring <lb />
laid by. Wheat harvest about over <lb />
and much of if, baa been housed <lb />
thrashing just being <lb />
Many peas have been sown in <lb />
stub and up and growing nicely, <lb />
ripening,<lb />
Reports are nearly all favorable, from <lb />
this district, though the weather has <lb />
been a little cool in the. and north <lb />
portions. Fine rains every, <lb />
where nod nowhere In All <lb />
crops arc growing well. Gotten is <lb />
larger than usual at this season; first <lb />
up these <lb />
activity and enthusiasm t <lb />
with new <lb />
Among new tiled by <lb />
Congress, which has just a I. <lb />
an industrial commission of twelve <lb />
members, each of <lb />
labor, and <lb />
business, salary of these <lb />
to fa per annum, <lb />
and each group is to be provided with <lb />
a salary The <lb />
duties of the to <lb />
investigate fl their <lb />
and tn legislation <lb />
to There does not appear <lb />
any necessity for the appointment of <lb />
inch Commissioners, and the <lb />
is that the act is simply <lb />
a to provide comfortable <lb />
SMITHFIELD HANS. <lb />
How These Famous Virginia Hams <lb />
are Cured. <lb />
The following formula is <lb />
ably for hams which <lb />
have given the town of Smithfield, <lb />
an international and enviable <lb />
Experts, who have it carefully, <lb />
have declared that it is precisely as Mr. <lb />
Mr. K M, Todd, of Wight county, treats <lb />
his hams, that furl a ready market at <lb />
an advanced price. <lb />
The following is the receipt, which <lb />
must be closely followed to attain the <lb />
same result as Mr. Todd <lb />
The hams are placed in a large <lb />
tray fine Liverpool salt, and flesh <lb />
surface is sprinkled with finely ground <lb />
crude saltpeter until the hams are as <lb />
white as though covered with a moder- <lb />
ate use three or four pounds <lb />
of the powdered saltpeter to thous- <lb />
and pounds of green hams. <lb />
saltpeter <lb />
salt with the Liverpool line salt <lb />
well the entire surface. Now <lb />
hams in bulk, but not in <lb />
more than three feet high. In ordinary <lb />
the hams should remain thus <lb />
for three days. <lb />
Then break and re-salt with tine <lb />
salt. The hams thus salted should re- <lb />
main ill salt day for each pound each <lb />
ham weighs. <lb />
Next you wash with tepid water <lb />
until the hams are thoroughly cleaned, <lb />
and after partially drying rub the entire <lb />
surface with finely ground <lb />
Now the hams should be hung in <lb />
the smoke house, and this important <lb />
operation begun. The smoking should <lb />
be very gradually done, lasting thirty <lb />
to forty days. <lb />
After the hams are cured and smoked <lb />
they should be to guard <lb />
against vermin and then bagged. <lb />
These hams improve with <lb />
the Todd hums are in perfection when <lb />
a year old. <lb />
blooms on June 10th in Quo. f,. workers of <lb />
ton county very little trouble from <lb />
lice. is making good stalk. To- <lb />
is growing off finely. Farmers <lb />
about through cutting wheat in <lb />
extreme west and and are <lb />
to begin thrashing. Oat harvest on <lb />
hand ; spring oats improved. <lb />
bugs many farms have, gone <lb />
the wheat and Tire <lb />
damaging it. Many peas were sown <lb />
this week. Blackberries are ripening <lb />
and will be abundant; other fruit poor, <lb />
grapes, which are in good, <lb />
are grassy, hut the <lb />
majority in this district are clean and <lb />
well cultivated. <lb />
Congressmen. <lb />
If Congressmen had given more <lb />
time to legislation looking to the relief <lb />
of the country instead offices <lb />
of this kind the public might low <lb />
cause to now teems m be <lb />
the case. If the Congress <lb />
had remained in session much longer <lb />
its folly and extravagant would which he bowed there. The tempera, <lb />
exceeded by far Mr. oil- <lb />
Where it is Really Cold. <lb />
Cold is merely a relative term. The <lb />
resident of semi-tropical countries shiv- <lb />
when the thermometer falls to <lb />
degrees, while the Laplander Be- <lb />
think it is comfortable at zero. <lb />
For real cold and plenty of it, cue <lb />
must go to the Polar regions. Think <lb />
living where the mercury goes down <lb />
to degree in the house, <lb />
the stove. Of course, in <lb />
a case, fur garments tire piled on <lb />
until a man looks a great bundle of <lb />
Dr. Moss of the polar expedition <lb />
among other odd things tolls <lb />
of the effect of cold on a wan candle <lb />
Dave <lb />
For six or more a system <lb />
tic robbery of the mail- .- to and <lb />
from Black Durham Tobacco Co. <lb />
has been going on. The matter was <lb />
reported to the department <lb />
and detectives have been on the alert. <lb />
Thorough investigation will always <lb />
trace these thefts to the Durham <lb />
office, and on this account suspicion <lb />
rested upon the force in that office. <lb />
Finally, Gregory and <lb />
detectives, who had the matter in <lb />
charge, devised a scheme that caught <lb />
the rascal. A c hired man named <lb />
Dare Lane was employed the facto- <lb />
and it was duty to deliver mail <lb />
at the office and receive mail and take <lb />
it to the factory. He did not handle <lb />
all mail, but only that sent to and <lb />
from the coupon department. And <lb />
the robberies were confined lo malls <lb />
from this department. Some days ago <lb />
one of the detectives went to Green <lb />
and mailed o or package <lb />
to the coupon nit with money <lb />
enclosed. They were bills and marked. <lb />
He saw the packages put in the ouch <lb />
at followed the punch and <lb />
saw delivered to the mail <lb />
agent, went in the mail ear saw the <lb />
package unmolested put in the pouch <lb />
for delivery to the Durham office. <lb />
The man who carries the mail <lb />
the railroad station to the <lb />
was closely shadowed. When the <lb />
mail was taken lo the office one of <lb />
detectives kept watch at the front door, <lb />
the other at the rear Dave Lane <lb />
went in got the mail, there being <lb />
no one in the office at the time but <lb />
Mr. Jenkins, delivery clerk. When <lb />
Lane left the for the factory lie <lb />
was closely shadowed it was ob- <lb />
served that he could not have tampered <lb />
with the package on the way. When <lb />
the mail was handed in at the factory <lb />
office the letters had been broken and <lb />
the money gone. Lane was arrested <lb />
and the money found in his pockets. <lb />
When he got the morning mail there <lb />
was no one in the office but Mr. Jen <lb />
kins and it is the packages <lb />
were opened in the <lb />
ham to News<lb />
lion Congress, it is. not altogether <lb />
that such i not the <lb />
Virginian <lb />
The Big Mill Failure In Georgia. <lb />
Notes and Opinions. <lb />
Fashionable young ladies in Japan, <lb />
when they desire to look very <lb />
gild their lips. <lb />
The canker worms arc making sad <lb />
with the trees in some parts of <lb />
Western and Central Massachusetts. <lb />
Tennessee's of Labor <lb />
is voting to enforce the law. <lb />
against the employment of child labor <lb />
in factories. <lb />
Grant it is, said by those who <lb />
him invariably looks as if <lb />
he were from a seven <lb />
illness, <lb />
Westminster Hull has been closed to <lb />
the public except when <lb />
lance, since the dynamite explosions <lb />
eleven years ago. <lb />
At a temperance in <lb />
market, a little lad appeared in the pro- <lb />
cession bearing a which was <lb />
inscribed the following t right <lb />
when daddy's a sentence which <lb />
has been aptly described as volume <lb />
Delirium <lb />
The nature of is a <lb />
most interesting study, and the <lb />
of the subject t <lb />
be the means of deferring many a <lb />
man from strong drink. Alcohol has a <lb />
great affinity for the brain, and it plays <lb />
with harsh and dreadful note upon the <lb />
Steward cf Kent. <lb />
Here is a here a piece <lb />
charcoal. Both carbon yet between <lb />
them stands the mightiest of magicians <lb />
Nature. The food on your table, and <lb />
your own body ; the same, <lb />
between the two stands the <lb />
tin-arbiter of growth or decline, <lb />
life or <lb />
We cannot make a diamond, we can- <lb />
not make flesh, blood and bone. No. <lb />
But by means of the Shaker Digestive <lb />
Cordial we can enable to <lb />
digest food Which would otherwise fer- <lb />
poison the In all <lb />
el dyspepsia and incipient <lb />
with weakness, loss of <lb />
nervous prostration <lb />
dial is successful Taken <lb />
With it relieves at once. It <lb />
and assists nature to nourish d <lb />
trial to show Its merit <lb />
cents, <lb />
if best for <lb />
recommend it in place <lb />
of Castor Oil. <lb />
And how, James, was <lb />
made in former days <lb />
James Don't know. <lb />
Next<lb />
Teacher i Next <lb />
The Next t <lb />
Master do <lb />
Charles Jewett, arguing <lb />
for prohibition, once said not <lb />
pour the rum into the gutter It is <lb />
destined to the gutter at last ; why not <lb />
pour it there at once, and not wait to <lb />
strain it through a man and spoil the <lb />
strainer in the work <lb />
nervous system. yet people are I know <lb />
continually taking it to quiet their I Master Nit. sent to the <lb />
In the brain of the drunkard <lb />
is computed that the aggregate <lb />
wealth of eight millionaire brewers cf <lb />
New York city is The <lb />
money spent by workingmen to help <lb />
provide these eight men with palatial <lb />
residences would furnish of <lb />
i their families with pretty cot- <lb />
The Eagle mills, at Col <lb />
Ga., went into the hands <lb />
receivers last Saturday. Thu <lb />
at the mills Is It <lb />
is the largest manufacturing enterprise <lb />
in the South and its weekly pay roll to <lb />
hands is Sherman <lb />
passed Georgia on his march <lb />
to the sea he applied the torch to this <lb />
property and left it in ruins. When <lb />
the war closed the owners derided to re- <lb />
build, and instead of one mill they put <lb />
up two, and sin then property <lb />
has been known as the Eagle Flue- <lb />
nix mills. <lb />
The petition for the receivers re- <lb />
cites the fact that on Feb. the <lb />
Eagle Manufacturing Com- <lb />
was permission by the <lb />
to operate n savings bunk in <lb />
connection with their other business, <lb />
and began operating accordingly. More <lb />
than was deposited in this <lb />
department and among the <lb />
were the k alleged that, <lb />
of, this money was used for <lb />
purposes as is usual with, sayings <lb />
hanks, it all went to build ad- <lb />
mills and increase the facilities <lb />
of the Eagle company. On <lb />
1891, the savings bank de- <lb />
was abolished or discontinued. <lb />
At that time bonds were issue I to. pay <lb />
the depositors. wanted <lb />
the doctor must have been considerably <lb />
when, upon looking at his <lb />
candle, he discovered that the flame <lb />
had all it could do to keep warm. <lb />
It was so cold that the name could <lb />
not melt all the wax of the candle., but <lb />
was forced to cut way down, leaving <lb />
a sort of skeleton I ho candle stand- <lb />
There was heat enough, however, to <lb />
melt holes in thin <lb />
walls of wax and. tho result was a <lb />
like cylinder of white, <lb />
with a tongue of yellow flame burning <lb />
inside it, and sending out into the <lb />
streaks of <lb />
Science Now. <lb />
The County Paper. <lb />
Any man can take a newspaper. <lb />
Ft is the thing he can buy. <lb />
What good does it do you <lb />
It instructs you and your wife and <lb />
teaches your children ; it comes to you <lb />
every week rain or shine, calm or <lb />
storm, bringing you the best new of <lb />
neighborhood. No in liter what <lb />
happens, it your doors a welcome <lb />
latest, foil of sunshine, cheer and inter- <lb />
est. It shortens the summer days and <lb />
enlivens long winter evenings. It is <lb />
your adviser, your gossip and friend. <lb />
No man is jut to his wife and children <lb />
who does not give hem the home paper <lb />
to read. <lb />
Told of Daniel Webster. <lb />
It is never safe to say things to the <lb />
ragged, men one sees and <lb />
meets by some mud pond or <lb />
stream. This truth is illustrated by <lb />
the of Daniel Webster. <lb />
Webster was a fisherman and had <lb />
sloops and a smack which he used to <lb />
enjoy the pastime. He was not over- <lb />
fastidious in his fisherman's dress. If <lb />
he tore his clothes fa did not lane the <lb />
trouble to have the rent sewed up, and <lb />
enjoying his sport he was a <lb />
ably rough-looking according <lb />
ton reporter in. <lb />
Mrs. Dawes, a resident of <lb />
Webster's days. <lb />
Webster and Mrs. uncle <lb />
were ashing one day from the shore of <lb />
the fay, when a stylish young follow, n <lb />
visitor at tumbled head <lb />
over heels into the marsh. The tum- <lb />
yelled at Webster, asking how <lb />
much he'd charge to haul him out <lb />
carry him over the mud. <lb />
answered Webster, <lb />
and the deed was done. Whereupon <lb />
the was turned over and Web- <lb />
had start id when the mud- <lb />
stumbler asked <lb />
whom am I indebted f <lb />
Daniel <lb />
The man said afterward that he <lb />
apologized for his superciliousness, and <lb />
did not reckon other people no <lb />
ding to the number of tears and patches <lb />
mud on their clothes. New York <lb />
Sun. <lb />
The Banner. <lb />
We recently purchase I a <lb />
The doctor say that with careful <lb />
we will be out in six weeks. <lb />
We lo one leg in the war and the <lb />
other running for congress. We are <lb />
Still able, however, to play a full <lb />
hand. <lb />
There is only one in I till ville <lb />
now, and he's in a dime museum under <lb />
the direction of a silver manager. <lb />
There is no use to run for coroner in <lb />
The only time a drop <lb />
here is when some one goes <lb />
has a colored new woman on account, <lb />
who is a bricklayer and stone mason. <lb />
There is also a white woman in that <lb />
when it was due, and demanding I State although year old, <lb />
it, failed to get it- <lb />
far own sheep. <lb />
Mo <lb />
so scarce in that <lb />
we compelled to run for office on <lb />
the installment plan ; but it looks like <lb />
we'll never be fully installed. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017802_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
P. J. Editor i <lb />
at the post at <lb />
M mail matter. <lb />
June 24th. 1896. <lb />
IT <lb />
Just as Lad predicted <lb />
of Ohio, was nominated tor <lb />
President on first ballot by the <lb />
National Convention at St. Louis. <lb />
Hobart, of New Jersey-was <lb />
Vice-President. <lb />
The platform was a disappointment <lb />
to the silver forces and they bolted the <lb />
Convention. <lb />
eastern North Carolina crop this year <lb />
will be by far the poorest that we have <lb />
ever had. And about the acreage some <lb />
of our high flying will be <lb />
surprised some pf these days when they <lb />
realize that there was not as much to- <lb />
planted in eastern North <lb />
in as there was in <lb />
of the most destructive hail storms <lb />
passed through a section of country on <lb />
the north side of the river that we <lb />
have ever had. Mr. J. S. Smith tells <lb />
us that he had acres of tobacco and <lb />
that it is literally torn all to pieces. <lb />
He had already cured one barn of prim- <lb />
and would soon have been ready <lb />
to commence curing in full blast. The <lb />
storm passed through a section about <lb />
five miles in length doing great damage <lb />
to all the crops but Mr. Smith's and <lb />
Mr. Barn hill's were the worst damaged <lb />
of any that we have heard of, their's <lb />
entirely ruined. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
EUROPEAN LETTER. <lb />
TOBACCO AGAINST COTTON-f <lb />
THE TEACHERS ASSEMBLY. <lb />
A Brilliant Session in the Mountains <lb />
o. i- <lb />
We frequently hear say that <lb />
if should go down in price to <lb />
C or cents per pound they would be <lb />
forced to go back into the cultivation of <lb />
cotton or some other crop and leave oft <lb />
tobacco, entirely. Now while we are <lb />
not an advocate of large crops <lb />
of poor tobacco, but rather small <lb />
of superior quality, yet let's look at the <lb />
figures and make some comparisons be- <lb />
tween tobacco and at <lb />
cents and cotton at cents. <lb />
We have consulted a number of <lb />
farmers and they say they can <lb />
grow and house acre of tobacco for <lb />
from to Now on an <lb />
average say it costs an acre to <lb />
grow and save on this MR you <lb />
get from to say on <lb />
of only GOO pounds and it will <lb />
average that the county ever. You <lb />
sell this pounds of tobacco fit <lb />
a pound and realize for the acre- <lb />
Now as we have taken a minimum av- <lb />
on the acre of tobacco we will <lb />
ply the same rule to the acre of cotton. <lb />
We will assume that the cotton land of <lb />
Pitt county will average a half bale to <lb />
the acre or pound-, of cotton which <lb />
at a pound is So you <lb />
can plainly see that the profit on an <lb />
acre of tobacco above all actual expense <lb />
and cost is nearly equal to the entire <lb />
gross amount of an acre in cotton. <lb />
As to the cost of growing and saving <lb />
nil acre cotton we have not consider- <lb />
ed that at all. We shall leave th <lb />
reader to make his own calculation. <lb />
Every year since Greenville ban had <lb />
a market the entire sales <lb />
averaged, including scrap, over <lb />
cents a pound. Now when we con- <lb />
sider that the average cost of <lb />
an acre of tobacco is and that the <lb />
average weight is COO pounds and that <lb />
the average price hash-en say only <lb />
cents, you see that on an average <lb />
farmers of Pitt county have realized <lb />
net profit of at least for every <lb />
acre of tobacco grown in the <lb />
Of course every man that <lb />
has planted tobacco has not made <lb />
money out of it. Some have lost <lb />
heavily, but more have lost as they <lb />
would Lave done had the county been <lb />
upon a single cotton basis. There are <lb />
as a matter of course exceptions to <lb />
figures, for instance we know of <lb />
several farmers who say to grow <lb />
and handle an acre of tobacco cost <lb />
them every cent of There are <lb />
others who even say it costs more than <lb />
that figure. This course <lb />
the amount of fertilizer used and <lb />
usually it is the man who uses heavy <lb />
applications of manure that gets the <lb />
most money out of tobacco while we <lb />
believe that too much fertilizer is <lb />
used and as this item is one of <lb />
the chief sources expense it is one in <lb />
the use of which great care and <lb />
should be used in order to get the <lb />
most satisfactory results. <lb />
THE CROP CONDITION. <lb />
O. I. WIVES. <lb />
From U-e information that we have <lb />
gathered from the country in <lb />
there is no question of doubt <lb />
but that while the crop in some <lb />
sections is more forward than usual it <lb />
is still a very unsatisfactory one to the <lb />
It is more spotted than ever <lb />
before in the eastern counties, that is it <lb />
is irregular, a good plant and a poor <lb />
one, and barren spots so to speak all <lb />
over the field. There are a few far- <lb />
managed to get all their <lb />
crop set on a good season in April or <lb />
very early May who have good stands <lb />
with the exception of where the bud <lb />
worms cut it down during the cold <lb />
nights in May. Those crops are ad- <lb />
and in some cases are all topped <lb />
out and are looking very well indeed, <lb />
but the great body of the tobacco was <lb />
set from May 5th to 15th, and beyond <lb />
doubt this tobacco is more <lb />
to the farmers in many ways than <lb />
any crop we have ever grown. While <lb />
it may be reverse to the criticisms <lb />
made of the crop of eastern North Car- <lb />
by a good many other reporters <lb />
yet if we were called upon to give an <lb />
estimate of this crop in comparison <lb />
with the crop we i most <lb />
not place it over in condition, <lb />
and while we cannot tell what the <lb />
seasons will be or how the crop <lb />
Correspondence of Reflector. <lb />
N. C. June 17th. <lb />
On last evening at the North <lb />
Carolina Teachers Assembly convened <lb />
in its Session in the hall <lb />
of the Asheville Female College. <lb />
When President Joyner called the As- <lb />
to order, the beautiful hall was <lb />
filled to its utmost rapacity, the <lb />
audience being to find <lb />
standing room. This melting was only <lb />
an introductory skirmish preparatory to <lb />
the great battle of thought and action <lb />
on to-morrow. the rostrum, sat <lb />
the officers and speakers and a large <lb />
number of prominent educators. The <lb />
occasion was an auspicious and <lb />
one and pushing aside every sign of <lb />
fear and apprehension as to the success <lb />
of this session the whole assembly at <lb />
once aside stiff formalities and <lb />
leaped into the full fruition of Lope and <lb />
assurance. <lb />
At the proper time and in a few well <lb />
chosen remarks the president intro- <lb />
Hon. Was. M. the young, <lb />
tainted and eloquent Mayor of <lb />
ville. Mr. is a young man, just <lb />
passed his full of buoyancy, <lb />
hope and strength, a strong <lb />
intellectual face, with easy and grace- <lb />
manners, a deep resonant voice, and <lb />
a commanding appearance. As In- <lb />
stepped forward the audience greeted <lb />
him with generous applause and for <lb />
several minutes he repaid them with <lb />
words of an eloquent welcome, that <lb />
came forth the fluency and ease of <lb />
a flowing stream and captured the vast <lb />
audience. After he finished and the <lb />
applause Lad subsided President <lb />
said, have yet another treat in <lb />
store for us. In this city there is a <lb />
patriotic order railed the Junior Order <lb />
of American Mechanics. The <lb />
word Mechanic is a misnomer. <lb />
order is not a labor organization, nor <lb />
composed of artisans, but is purely pa- <lb />
in its design with a motto <lb />
and a creed, <lb />
migration and education of the <lb />
With a sympathy for our <lb />
work this order has craved the <lb />
of extending to of <lb />
Carolina a welcome to city <lb />
and selected as spokesman J. II <lb />
Tucker, Esq. of <lb />
Mr. Tucker, to all of your <lb />
readers, is universally acknowledged to <lb />
be one of the first, most progressing and <lb />
promising young lawyers of <lb />
Mountain City. order was <lb />
fortunate in selection of spokes- <lb />
man to extend welcome to the <lb />
Commanding in person, graceful in <lb />
manner, in expression, and fluent <lb />
in Mr. Tucker more than met <lb />
the expectation his of hosts of friends <lb />
here in the city and those pres- <lb />
from every portion of North <lb />
Carolina to whom he is so well and <lb />
favorably known in extending a truly <lb />
hearty welcome to the His <lb />
closing remarks, in which in the name <lb />
the honored dead statesman, <lb />
Vance, he welcomed us to this fair <lb />
land, captured the audience and he re- <lb />
the hearty applause of the even- <lb />
At conclusion of Tucker's <lb />
welcome president introduced J. B. <lb />
Professor of Latin in Wake <lb />
Forest College as the Demosthenes of <lb />
the North Carolina Teacher's <lb />
who respond to Asheville's <lb />
welcome in behalf of the Assembly. <lb />
Those who know Prof. Carlyle can bet- <lb />
appreciate the pith and oratory of <lb />
his response. Most happily he met <lb />
the requisites of the occasion. His <lb />
gifts, his culture, his classic <lb />
his grace and oratory all combined to <lb />
capture both the Assembly and Ashe- <lb />
ville when he stated triumphantly that <lb />
is the greatest and finest <lb />
city in North Carolina, and the Teach- <lb />
Assembly is the greatest and finest <lb />
body in North Carolina ; hence when <lb />
Asheville and the Assembly <lb />
meet the two greatest things North <lb />
Carolina have This was a hit <lb />
that took all by storm. His re- <lb />
closed an interesting and pleas- <lb />
ant beginning what <lb />
promises to be the best meeting ever <lb />
held by the North Carolina Teacher's <lb />
Assembly. <lb />
When we have been here longer <lb />
will write yon about Ashe- <lb />
ville though a drive through the city <lb />
from the Depot has impressed me that <lb />
From our Regular Correspondent. <lb />
Washington, D. C, June 19th, <lb />
President Cleveland's letter stating <lb />
that he, an unflinching Democrat <lb />
who has been honored by his party and <lb />
who desires hereafter no greater <lb />
cal privilege than to occupy the place <lb />
of private in is could not have <lb />
been surprising to readers of this <lb />
in which it was positively <lb />
stated, by authority, many months ago <lb />
that President Cleveland was not and <lb />
would not be a candidate before the <lb />
Chicago convention, and that he would <lb />
whenever he deemed such action <lb />
able write a letter to that effect. What <lb />
was stated has now come to pass. <lb />
That letter has been written. It was <lb />
not surprising, either, view of Mr. <lb />
Cleveland's consistent opposition to <lb />
he should have used that let- <lb />
to make a fresh attack upon the <lb />
free coinage of silver. There is a very <lb />
decided difference opinion among <lb />
Democrats to what, if any, effect the <lb />
President's letter will have upon the <lb />
Chicago convention, and only time will <lb />
tell which are right. Republicans say <lb />
they will use the letter as a campaign <lb />
document if the Chicago convention <lb />
a free silver platform. <lb />
Secretary Lament probably talks as <lb />
little to the public ear as any man in <lb />
public life, but he has a way of <lb />
what he starts out to do that <lb />
many more talkative men lack. When <lb />
Secretary Lamont wrote a letter <lb />
the bill to revive the grade of Lieu- <lb />
tenant General of the army in order <lb />
that Gen. Miles might be promoted <lb />
thereto, and giving the reasons for his <lb />
opposition, many supposed that Con- <lb />
anti-administration in both <lb />
branches would pass fa bill just be- <lb />
cause the administration didn't want it <lb />
passed, but your Uncle Daniel knew <lb />
better. If anybody will take the <lb />
to hunt it down that Miles will <lb />
be found in a committee-room pigeon- <lb />
hole, nicely covered with dust and cob- <lb />
webs, and there it will probably remain <lb />
You couldn't persuade Secretary La- <lb />
to say a word about it now. He <lb />
got what he wanted and <lb />
with him. <lb />
Representative Amos Cummings is <lb />
admittedly an authority on New York <lb />
polities. While in Washington <lb />
week he am sanguine that <lb />
New York will go Democratic this <lb />
year, it matters not what the Chicago <lb />
convention does on the financial <lb />
The people of New York state <lb />
are thoroughly disgusted with the re- <lb />
form administrations that have pro- <lb />
the bill and other <lb />
of legislation. They are mad <lb />
all the way through end per cent of <lb />
them are more interested in turning <lb />
down a party that encroaches on their <lb />
liberties and brings back an era of blue <lb />
law and puritanism than in the platform <lb />
a National Convention. <lb />
Mr. W. G. Conrad, a banker and <lb />
cattleman, of Montana, and a <lb />
Democrat, says the political <lb />
in that state Democrats <lb />
can carry the Suite for a silver <lb />
date for the Presidency, and if they <lb />
combine with the Populists, which they <lb />
probably will, they can elect the Gov- <lb />
easily. They might carry the <lb />
legislature, too, but would not be <lb />
of supreme importance seeing that no <lb />
United States Senator is to be chosen <lb />
by that body. Gov. seems to be <lb />
the favorite Presidential candidate out <lb />
our way ; at least we hear more about <lb />
him than of the rest. If he gets the <lb />
nomination there is no doubt of his <lb />
getting Montana's electoral <lb />
Never was the result a National <lb />
Convention received in Washington <lb />
with more apathy than that of the one <lb />
which has just been held at St. <lb />
Of course, when one stops to think, <lb />
that is not difficult to account tor. <lb />
People do not enthuse over the an- <lb />
of a cut and dried affair, <lb />
and the only thing that was ever for a <lb />
moment in doubt about <lb />
was would be the candidate <lb />
for Vice President. Czar Reed re <lb />
Washington to Lear the <lb />
news, and it he would only tell he <lb />
thinks about he won't. Demo- <lb />
do not regard the ticket <lb />
at St. Louis as a strong one. On <lb />
the contrary, they think it would have <lb />
been difficult for the convention to Lave <lb />
picked out one that would have been <lb />
weaker. Aside from the enmity of the <lb />
Republican leaders because of the <lb />
methods adopted by Mark Hanna, <lb />
will fail to get the votes of many <lb />
Republicans who regard him as a one- <lb />
man. The bolt of silver <lb />
cans because of the financial plank of <lb />
platform makes it doubtful <lb />
can carry a single western <lb />
slate. In short, it is the opinion <lb />
the best informed Democrats that if the <lb />
Democrats can't beat they <lb />
could not beat anybody, and that the <lb />
Republicans have added very largely to <lb />
will be looking in ten days, we do know . m my <lb />
that there is a decided change L W. H. R. <lb />
ice the better, and that soon, the <lb />
the chances for Democratic <lb />
Severe Hail. <lb />
We that a severe hail and wind <lb />
storm passed over the section between <lb />
Great Swamp and Grin die Creek on <lb />
Thursday evening. Many farms were <lb />
badly damaged. The worst sufferer <lb />
seems to be Mr. J. R. near <lb />
Berea church. His crops are almost <lb />
entirely ruined, the tobacco crop <lb />
He says he will have to cut it <lb />
all down and let suckers come on the <lb />
stalks. In many places cotton and corn <lb />
were broken off by the wind and fruit <lb />
trees are blown down. Mr. W. R. <lb />
Whichard, who rode through a part of <lb />
the damaged section, tells us It is almost <lb />
heart-sickening to look upon the ruined <lb />
crops that but a few days ago were so <lb />
beautiful and gave promise of a <lb />
I bountiful harvest. We sympathize j <lb />
with the sufferers. <lb />
our Special <lb />
Naples, Italy, June 3rd, 1896. <lb />
The Augean stables were doubtless <lb />
bad enough, but what would a nice <lb />
New England or a Dutch housekeeper <lb />
keeper say of Naples This city stands <lb />
in the and mi <lb />
manufacturing This <lb />
is not meant, to be to <lb />
Naples at all, for the interest of the <lb />
place is largely referable to the <lb />
dirt. Neapolitan face is <lb />
not characterized t, much by black <lb />
eyes and rosy lips as by one <lb />
ways thinks when looking at the <lb />
of Charles Lamb's re aunt, <lb />
dirt were trumps what hands hey would <lb />
In rainy streets <lb />
are covered with a thin black batter of <lb />
mud and the carefully dressed <lb />
can and the daily Englishman <lb />
find themselves after a few hour's sight <lb />
seeing reduced to the real Neapolitan <lb />
state. <lb />
The streets here are painfully narrow <lb />
in fact just enough to allow car- <lb />
to pass. On the numerous <lb />
days two long processions of carriages <lb />
block the business streets from end to <lb />
end, and the man who has not yet been <lb />
so influenced by the climate us not to <lb />
care whether he reaches the bank today <lb />
or next week, finds this slow moving <lb />
procession a sore trial to his patience. <lb />
The side walks are even worse. On the <lb />
principal shopping street they are about <lb />
two feet wide. At one point t his <lb />
street we saw a man the other day who <lb />
led a goat out of a gate <lb />
opening on pavement, and quietly <lb />
sat down to milk pedestrians <lb />
respected energy the entire mass <lb />
moved off the sidewalk so as not to dis- <lb />
him. The Italians are a good <lb />
nature-. people. <lb />
The beggars are innumerable. They <lb />
conduct business everywhere and there <lb />
seems to be between them and the gen- <lb />
who are almost as plentiful, a <lb />
kind of understanding that one will not <lb />
disturb the other. There is a <lb />
cent arcade in the city called the <lb />
Vittorio but the pleas- <lb />
of a walk through it is spoiled by <lb />
the little beggars who turn handsprings <lb />
and somersaults in fr of you through <lb />
the entire place in of a A <lb />
little girl a business of this kind <lb />
in the Galleria and reaps large rewards <lb />
a shop keeper told me, for doing it so <lb />
A man smoking is fol- <lb />
lowed distance until lie the <lb />
stump of his cigar, when a struggle for <lb />
its ensues. In the streets <lb />
that lead up to the hill the. poorer <lb />
classes reside and the rights these <lb />
streets afford are worth crossing the <lb />
ocean and all its attendant sea sickness <lb />
to see. of are only long <lb />
of stairs and are so steep <lb />
that land slides in the city are of com- <lb />
occurrence. Of course houses can- <lb />
not go these inclines so the whole <lb />
domestic economy of the families is ex- <lb />
in the street. They live almost <lb />
altogether out of doors and it is no <lb />
to see children <lb />
and dressed and oilier scenes <lb />
of a more or less delicate character en- <lb />
acted in air. But all of these <lb />
things do not interfere with the charm <lb />
of these picturesque, tortuous streets <lb />
and alleys. In fact they constitute its <lb />
charm and the scene that in America <lb />
would make you hasten for a policeman <lb />
forms here the subject of your snap <lb />
shot. It is something in the setting of <lb />
tall pink and yellow <lb />
Louses dirty windows and <lb />
broken walls, blue, blue sky over- <lb />
Lead, Le black streets below ; in the <lb />
distance across the brilliant bay <lb />
smoking daily <lb />
are cause and though you talk loud- <lb />
about the advantage American <lb />
thrift and progressiveness you long to <lb />
linger here where passive <lb />
is itself a <lb />
the school, so far as I can learn, <lb />
are very good. Attendance is com- <lb />
and the normal instruction for <lb />
teachers very careful. In all the <lb />
grades English, German and French <lb />
are taught. The fact that the people <lb />
have enjoyed freedom and good schools <lb />
for loss than one generation is apparent <lb />
in the superior intelligence of the <lb />
younger members of the households <lb />
The older persons speak a soft, ab- <lb />
Italian and one always thinks <lb />
of them as a people energy has <lb />
been expended for euphony ; but the <lb />
children show a quickness of perception <lb />
and an intelligence that is surprising. <lb />
Many the people ire complaining <lb />
that the public are undermining <lb />
not only parental but church authority, <lb />
which is probably quite true, and will <lb />
be the cause in a few generations of bet- <lb />
days for Italy. And speaking <lb />
the churches, I have seen nothing in <lb />
Italy that so well characterizes the <lb />
weakening of the ultramontane view as <lb />
a performance at a a few <lb />
nights since, a Franciscan monk <lb />
was caricatured in the drollest and <lb />
most rent manner, while the <lb />
applauded and encored again <lb />
and again. <lb />
AT THE STATE CAP IT <lb />
Things Transpiring in the cf <lb />
Age of <lb />
Educational Institutions and <lb />
A PITT <lb />
Correspondence to <lb />
N. C, June 22nd, 1896. <lb />
Editor may be <lb />
that of your readers would like to <lb />
know what is going here, and with <lb />
your permission we propose to jot down, <lb />
from time to time, such items as we <lb />
may think may be of interest to them, <lb />
the of the <lb />
Doubtless most of your readers have <lb />
sometime in their lives visited this city, <lb />
and familiar with its location, the <lb />
beauty and loveliness of the surround- <lb />
country, its charitable and penal <lb />
u l ions, its pure water and <lb />
and the generous hospitality <lb />
and good breeding of its citizens ; so <lb />
these we shall not speak for the pres- <lb />
but try to give yon such news as is <lb />
of daily <lb />
In this day of telephones and <lb />
graph a good many of the county <lb />
papers get the news before it can be <lb />
transmitted through the mails. Col. <lb />
Fred Olds, wide <lb />
dent and news gatherer, told me this <lb />
morning he furnished the MR to <lb />
about twenty different papers almost <lb />
entirely by wire. The cost of doing <lb />
this is very much less than we had <lb />
supposed. The Wilmington <lb />
Charlotte Observer and other <lb />
daily papers published <lb />
all the of interest <lb />
with the city papers. <lb />
About all the educational institutions <lb />
of Raleigh have held commence- <lb />
as closing exercises arc called, <lb />
and the students have gone to their <lb />
various homes to spend their summer <lb />
vacation. Each institution, of course, <lb />
claims a larger attendance and more <lb />
gratifying progress than in any former <lb />
year. We had the pleasure of attend- <lb />
the most of and were favor- <lb />
ably impressed and frank to express <lb />
our convictions that the schools here <lb />
are of high grade and most of the teach- <lb />
thoroughly competent, faithful and <lb />
zealous in the performance of <lb />
ties. The A. M. College established <lb />
here a few years ago for the especial <lb />
training of our boys agriculture and <lb />
the mechanic arts is on a large scale <lb />
and is now in good working order with <lb />
all necessary machinery, well stocked <lb />
with improved breed of cattle and hogs, <lb />
a model barn and <lb />
of the latest The sons of farm <lb />
are here taught how to make their <lb />
own living in some practical way, while <lb />
the developments of their minds and <lb />
muscles are not neglected. Most nil, <lb />
if every one, who have graduated <lb />
here is now occupying some responsible <lb />
position at good wages. Technical <lb />
training while tending to <lb />
trains the hand and <lb />
reconciles the practical with <lb />
It teaches our young men not to <lb />
be ashamed of honest labor and the <lb />
same time enables poor boys to earn <lb />
their own bread. The young man that <lb />
has learned to in a steam engine, <lb />
take of water works, electric <lb />
light plants, understand car sys- <lb />
or Low to manage a dairy farm <lb />
will be in demand in future. <lb />
We we are extending this latter <lb />
to too great a and must abruptly <lb />
close without saying anything about <lb />
politics or other things that might be <lb />
of interest to your readers. The State <lb />
Democratic Convention convenes here <lb />
this week and we hope to see the editor <lb />
and a number of Pitt county's citizens <lb />
present. The prospects of Democratic <lb />
success in the coming election grows <lb />
brighter every day. R. W. J. <lb />
Call <lb />
A Good Man With a Good Crop. <lb />
Everybody who knows Theophilus <lb />
Bland, Jr., can vouch for his good <lb />
character. It was a pleasure to hear <lb />
him say while in town to-day, Le <lb />
Las finest crops lie ever Lad in his <lb />
life. <lb />
lit has CO acres in cotton which he <lb />
says will average knee high, acres <lb />
in tobacco that will average waist high <lb />
and is already three-fourths topped, and <lb />
acres in corn which is the finest he <lb />
ever and will be through laying it <lb />
by next week. He also planted S acres <lb />
in and got from them bar- <lb />
per acre which been sold at <lb />
per barrel not. Mr. Bland says <lb />
he has never cultivated a crop so easily <lb />
and with as little expanse as this sea- <lb />
son. <lb />
When asked if he was a candidate <lb />
for County Commissioner he said <lb />
not be a candidate for <lb />
any office overseer of the <lb />
for cash. <lb />
Mr. Bland is a plain, practical man <lb />
of sterling lives well, works <lb />
his land and has one of tin; finest farms <lb />
in the county, chiefly made so by his <lb />
energy and good judgment. His home <lb />
and his family arc his chief pride. <lb />
ALIKE IN NAME. <lb />
For line of White <lb />
and Black Sailor Hats on the <lb />
market received weekly from <lb />
the northern cities. Also <lb />
Leghorn, White and Colored <lb />
Lace and Straw Shapes. <lb />
Flowers, Baby A <lb />
full lino of Trimmed Hals. <lb />
The entire will be <lb />
at per above cost fur <lb />
the next days. Call <lb />
satisfy yourself. <lb />
FLOORING <lb />
loss than cost. a car f. o. b. <lb />
a N. G at per M. <lb />
Carolina Lumber Co. <lb />
FLUES. <lb />
We. the undersigned, <lb />
purchased or used Tobacco Flues <lb />
Bade C- last <lb />
arid unhesitatingly gay they <lb />
are A both workmanship and <lb />
are easier put than <lb />
Flues usually mad. All <lb />
el. or hinged <lb />
J J. <lb />
S L Gins;. <lb />
. S- D. <lb />
We u order for <lb />
next and will <lb />
quality best and prices as low <lb />
M any. solicited <lb />
horror correct size of of barn <lb />
Makes CHILD-BIRTH Easy, and we will make flues you <lb />
and h- III lip in fifteen ill- <lb />
and who lined . <lb />
It. Beware of and imitations, <lb />
C. Son- <lb />
We Offer You a Remedy Which Insures <lb />
SAFETY to LIFE of Both <lb />
Mother and Child. <lb />
MOTHERS FRIEND <lb />
who <lb />
Sent by express or mull, on receipt of Price, <lb />
1.00 per <lb />
mailed free, containing voluntary testimonials. <lb />
tad. <lb />
Mrs. a Congleton, wife of Mr <lb />
Henry F. Congleton, of Carolina town- <lb />
ship, died at b o'clock Monday after- <lb />
noon of typhoid fever. She had been <lb />
nearly lour weeks. She leaves a <lb />
husband and a little girl months old <lb />
who have our heartfelt sympathy in <lb />
their bereavement. <lb />
J. J. Cherry and family, Mrs. <lb />
Pearce and little son Mount, B. C. <lb />
Pearce, J. G. Move and F. M. <lb />
left Saturday afternoon for Ocracoke. . showing. <lb />
Another Daily Reflector Published in <lb />
Ohio. <lb />
friend Alex of <lb />
New York, who is now on a trip <lb />
through the western states, sends us a <lb />
copy of a paper published at Norwalk, <lb />
Ohio, that made us feel at home <lb />
when we read the line. The <lb />
name of the paper Daily <lb />
and doubtless the similarity <lb />
of names led Alex to believe a copy <lb />
it would be to us. And so <lb />
proved. <lb />
While both papers have identically <lb />
the same name there are sonic points <lb />
between us. it <lb />
larger, being just the size of our week <lb />
edition ; then it is older, having at- <lb />
the pad age years ; and <lb />
it is thoroughly Republican in politics <lb />
All the same it is a bright paper <lb />
an excellent news service, and we hope <lb />
North Carolina name-sake may live <lb />
to become as large and as <lb />
never reach its political way think- <lb />
That Game Ball. <lb />
The Free Press in speak- <lb />
of the game of ball between Kin- <lb />
and Greenville says <lb />
Wednesday the ball <lb />
club went to Greenville and <lb />
but not very hard. The Green <lb />
ville were in and <lb />
weren't even a little bit. <lb />
all the Kinston boys played <lb />
good ball, but Frank Lewis on second, <lb />
Ben Stanly in the box, and Dunk <lb />
ton in the box the last two innings, <lb />
worthy of special praise. All know <lb />
that Stanly can play ball with <lb />
the best them. Greenville did not <lb />
score at all the two innings that <lb />
ton Frank Lewis covered <lb />
with glory on second, caught <lb />
everything that came in reach, and <lb />
won the hearts of the Greenville girls <lb />
Greenville people <lb />
were all nice and clever to our boys, <lb />
and Kinston hopes to have <lb />
soon of trying to make it <lb />
for them here. <lb />
Greenville Daily Reflector <lb />
had a nice account of the game before <lb />
the train Brother Whichard is a <lb />
good newspaper men and a <lb />
Our boys like him, is <lb />
The Reflector will add that it be- <lb />
the defeat the Greenville boy <lb />
met that day was a good thing for <lb />
them. It put the boys on metal, <lb />
and they have gone to practicing with <lb />
a determination of showing that they <lb />
can play ball. <lb />
Complimented. <lb />
Inspector Smith complimented the <lb />
Pitt County Rifles their efficiency <lb />
Monday evening. He said that it was <lb />
best he inspected, and <lb />
holding so faithfully after being <lb />
burned out was very praiseworthy. <lb />
There were men in line at the in- <lb />
and they made n creditable <lb />
Who is. <lb />
Hobart has been a <lb />
of the New Jersey legislature, <lb />
of the State Executive Committee <lb />
member of the National Committee, <lb />
and a party boss. He is a corpora- <lb />
lawyer, whose usefulness in get- <lb />
ting legislation has made him more <lb />
than a millionaire. lie is an aide and <lb />
trained corporation lawyer as is <lb />
by the fact he is one of the <lb />
at a salary, of <lb />
the National railroad pool, a law-defy- <lb />
combination. lie but one <lb />
in his of Mark Hanna. <lb />
The great Ohio boss is his ideal. This <lb />
tells the story of the <lb />
and Observer. <lb />
PERSONAL. <lb />
page medical reference <lb />
book to any person with any <lb />
special, chronic or delicate disease <lb />
liar to their sex. Address the leading <lb />
physicians and surgeons of t United <lb />
States, tit. Hathaway Co., South <lb />
Brod Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
One Hundred <lb />
Desirable lots <lb />
for sale. <lb />
from College <lb />
R. R. Depot. <lb />
Tobacco Town. <lb />
business <lb />
of Terms very reasonable. <lb />
Apply to BROS. <lb />
One Hundred <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
To the Tobacco Farm- <lb />
All grow in who pro- <lb />
pose to use the Improved Method of <lb />
Hanging or Looping Tobacco for curing <lb />
are notified that they must procure a <lb />
Farm Right before using same. <lb />
The same having been patented Oct. <lb />
by Pleasant B. Farmer, and by him <lb />
assumed to John R. Chancy. Farm <lb />
Rights can be procured by applying to <lb />
me. <lb />
ISAAC A. SUGG, Attorney. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, MM. <lb />
J. W. Pres. J. S. HIGGS, <lb />
Maj. Cashier. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Representing i Capital of Wore Than a Half <lb />
Million Dollars, <lb />
Wm. T. Dixon, President National <lb />
Exchange Bank, Baltimore, Md. <lb />
The Scotland Neck Bank, Scotland <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Noah Scotland Neck, N C. <lb />
R, B, Fleming, N. C. <lb />
D. W. Higgs Bros., <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
We respectfully solicit the accounts <lb />
of firms, individuals and the general <lb />
public. <lb />
Checks and Account Books furnish- <lb />
ed on application. <lb />
BEAD FIELD REGULATOR CO. Atlanta, <lb />
SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. <lb />
Reduced <lb />
YOU V <lb />
THAT YOU CAN BUY <lb />
STEEL <lb />
FLUES. <lb />
FOR LESS MONEY FROM <lb />
A. B <lb />
In about sixty days I will move <lb />
my stock of Hardware Stoves <lb />
to one the brick stores now Do- <lb />
in built. Until that time I will i <lb />
reduce the price my <lb />
per cent and on my Stoves <lb />
from <lb />
TO EACH <lb />
53.00 Stoves will be told yon can common iron <lb />
; My Stoves for from others. If you believe <lb />
and my New Lee for 18.00- et He will <lb />
Doors, Sash Nails, j not lie undersold. All work <lb />
specialties. Axes and as to material,<lb />
and Sewing Machines at cost. <lb />
I have received a lot of <lb />
barbed and fencing wire. <lb />
All my axes go tor <lb />
tor Delivery. <lb />
Prompt given to all or- <lb />
I am also agent for o <lb />
Try one of my axes, largest WALL <lb />
in America. <lb />
early and bring the <lb />
Five Points, N. C <lb />
A. R <lb />
Near Machine Shop <lb />
CHEAP SHOES <lb />
Have declined so this fall you can buy pretty <lb />
good Shoes for to as you used <lb />
to. I will beg-in now to sell them at the declined <lb />
prices which must prevail this fall. As I have <lb />
a large stock of those Shoes on hand, which will <lb />
begin to arrive in days. All goods as <lb />
and your money back always if you want <lb />
It. Give me a call at Higgs old stand. <lb />
------A large assortment of the celebrated------ <lb />
Eagle Brand of Fine Shoes <lb />
------just received. A complete stock of------ <lb />
General MERCHANDISE <lb />
on hand. <lb />
SAML T. WHITE. <lb />
C. A. Whites old <lb />
THE OLD <lb />
-------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE--------<lb />
YEARS EXPERIENCE taught me that the best U the <lb />
Hemp Rope, Pumps, Farming Implement, every <lb />
necessary for Millers, and general house purposes, us well a <lb />
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive <lb />
GREEN VILLE, if. <lb />
SUGG. <lb />
Life, Fire and Accident Insurance. <lb />
VILLA, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All placed in strictly <lb />
ASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates, <lb />
AGENT FOB FIRST-GLASS FIRE <lb />
C. Pitt Co. N. C. <lb />
T. J. POPE, Southampton <lb />
COBB BROS CO. <lb />
COTTON AND <lb />
AND <lb />
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers, <lb />
and Progress Building, Wafer Street, <lb />
Ties Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices. <lb />
and Consignments Solicited. <lb />
1878 Code, In Telegraphing.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017802_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
fl<lb />
id-Summer <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
ON THE EXCURSION. <lb />
land N <lb />
In cool-appearing and <lb />
comfort-giving <lb />
CL <lb />
we have been careful <lb />
not to omit a particle of <lb />
that distinctive style and <lb />
perfect lit which always <lb />
characterizes our <lb />
Clothing. Neither <lb />
have we for one moment <lb />
lost sight of the ever <lb />
important point of price <lb />
economy. Mid-Sum- <lb />
mer Clothing of equal <lb />
and style was <lb />
ever sold cheaper. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
You had better list your taxes <lb />
is shipping cantaloupes. <lb />
Cotton blooms are getting plentiful. <lb />
The small boy and the June bug will <lb />
soon be <lb />
We bear that there arc several cases <lb />
of fever in Carolina township. <lb />
In a or so now tobacco curing <lb />
will be in lull blast in this county. <lb />
The young people had a very enjoy- <lb />
able dance in Hall Friday <lb />
night. <lb />
barrels <lb />
of potatoes were shipped from Washing- <lb />
ton in one day. <lb />
What a pity B great many of I be <lb />
politicians the present day not <lb />
that much sense. <lb />
The Observer says in <lb />
that section numbers hog are drop- <lb />
ping dead from cholera. <lb />
Mayor Forbes had eight before <lb />
him Saturday and made a good <lb />
tor the to treasury. <lb />
The convention of <lb />
Greene endorse T. J. <lb />
The boys have their heads on <lb />
having telephones too. and are running <lb />
strings in places. <lb />
The Dispatch says Richmond has <lb />
made extensive preparation for the re- <lb />
union and is in readiness tor it. <lb />
The Demon convention <lb />
son county endorsed Col. J. IS. Chit <lb />
for Governor. That's II light. <lb />
A new paper called the Progress, <lb />
been started at in <lb />
county. It. M. Busier is editor. <lb />
There is considerable fun going <lb />
over the but they will come <lb />
down to business as soon as the novelty I bead. <lb />
wears oft. <lb />
John Duncan, Colored, of <lb />
township, hail a cotton June <lb />
17th It is the first of the season re- <lb />
ported here. <lb />
A Seattle woman asked to be com- <lb />
to the insane asylum, <lb />
get enough sense to know <lb />
that <lb />
One marriage was the sum <lb />
issued by Remoter of Deeds <lb />
King last week. That one was for <lb />
Joseph Johnson and G A. J <lb />
white. <lb />
Fresh Butter. N. Y. State and Can's <lb />
at S. <lb />
Seen Looking; Out the Window <lb />
Either Coming;. <lb />
Allied Forbes, Jr., is sick. <lb />
B. F. Sugg returned Friday <lb />
from Goldsboro. <lb />
One of the children of Col. I. A- <lb />
Sugg is quite sick. <lb />
J. T. Williams went to Kinston <lb />
Thursday evening. <lb />
W. C. Hester returned from Oxford <lb />
Thursday evening. <lb />
O. L. Joyner has gone to Seven <lb />
Springs for a week. <lb />
Miss May Harris, of Falkland, is vis- <lb />
Miss Bessie Jarvis. <lb />
New Patent. <lb />
Walter A. Burnett, of Kinston <lb />
passed through here Saturday and <lb />
I showed us models of a harness hook <lb />
and single tree upon which he <lb />
has just obtained patents. They are <lb />
good contrivances and we have no <lb />
doubt will prove very valuable. <lb />
Mrs. L. V. of Snow Hill, is <lb />
visiting her parents here. <lb />
New Census. <lb />
The Free Press says that a new <lb />
Kinston is to be taken at once by <lb />
direction the Town Commissioners. <lb />
The Reflector has tried to awaken <lb />
an interest here in having a new census <lb />
of Greenville taken, but no <lb />
steps have yet been taken. There <lb />
ought to be u new census of the town. <lb />
Valuable to Young Men. <lb />
Rev. E. delivered an ad-<lb />
Sunday night, his topic being <lb />
Hunter Fleming has to <lb />
to visit his father. j of excellent to tin <lb />
young, and every young especially <lb />
Miss Fannie Higgs has gone Scot- sermon ii <lb />
visit <lb />
A. M DEAD. <lb />
The old and the young alike have to <lb />
meet the reaper, Death, when the sum- <lb />
mons comes to them. At G o'clock <lb />
Wednesday evening, just as the bell <lb />
began tolling the hour for the burial of j third <lb />
little Gladys the spirit of j and Joe Jams made a run <lb />
Mrs. M. Clark took its flight home boys. <lb />
piled up runs on first inning, while <lb />
the home boys were shut out when <lb />
they went to the bat. Our boys <lb />
ed their work next time and let <lb />
the visitors make only run but got <lb />
nothing themselves in return. The <lb />
a cipher, <lb />
for the <lb />
Kinston made three on <lb />
fourth and Greenville came oft blank <lb />
again. The visitors took another egg <lb />
--b. <lb />
Our Special Effort <lb />
ON <lb />
from earth. <lb />
Mrs. Clark was in her 81st year, and <lb />
was the oldest lady in Greenville. She fifth inning and the home boys the <lb />
felt the approach of age, same <lb />
life's span could not be lengthened fa the sixth Kinston added four runs <lb />
many years at best, and was fully j Bob Move, George Woodward and <lb />
pared for the end whenever it should Gus Forbes Greenville three more <lb />
come. She was confined t. her bed j seventh Kinston pulled down <lb />
about two weeks prior to her death. j and Greenville came off with <lb />
Mrs. Clark was the widow of the nothing. The eighth gave t e visitors <lb />
Hon. S. Clark, who in days j another egg, and the home boys the <lb />
was a member of Congress from t is fa the ninth and last inning <lb />
He was also a lawyer wide j Kin-ton Wolfed Up another <lb />
prominence and is remembered by our and Greenville off likewise. <lb />
Mayor Wat. of re- <lb />
Friday evening. <lb />
Mis Sallie of Kin is <lb />
visiting Miss <lb />
Miss Katie is <lb />
visiting her uncle, D. <lb />
G. M. Tucker home <lb />
evening from a trip to Norfolk. <lb />
Miss Morrill went to Kin- <lb />
Monday evening to visit friends. <lb />
Charlie Shield, Scotland Neck, is <lb />
visiting his sister, Mrs. K B. <lb />
Patrick Henry Gorman left this morn <lb />
for Richmond to lake a weeks <lb />
rest. <lb />
G. P. Fleming and children <lb />
have to Durham to visit, her par- <lb />
Dr. D. L James returned Saturday <lb />
from the Dental convention at More- <lb />
Smith came Mon- <lb />
day evening to inspect the Pitt County <lb />
Rifles. <lb />
Mrs. S. C. Wells and daughter. Miss <lb />
Rosa, are visiting relatives at the King <lb />
House- <lb />
Allen Warren has gone to <lb />
county in the interest of Riverside <lb />
Nursery- <lb />
Mrs. G. F. Smith and little child, o <lb />
are visiting Mrs. R. <lb />
in the community ought to <lb />
it. <lb />
Don't All Speak at Once. <lb />
the bell to the new <lb />
rung Monday for the first time, <lb />
the housekeeper, the cook, the nurse, th <lb />
six children all gathered <lb />
around at once. To the man at <lb />
other end it sounded like a of <lb />
the confusion around the tower of Ba- <lb />
Finds <lb />
The workmen on the <lb />
Under the Bernard stores dog into more <lb />
graves Friday. One of-them had been <lb />
bricked up and i was found a small <lb />
At another place a large skull <lb />
was found to which the jaw bones were <lb />
attached. In lower jaw the of <lb />
teeth was complete and only a few were <lb />
missing from the Upper jaw. <lb />
Linen, Crash, Serge, <lb />
Flannel, Seersucker, Si- <lb />
ilk, Duck, <lb />
are in profusion and can <lb />
be bought cheap. <lb />
mediate buyers have <lb />
privilege of selection <lb />
from the finest, largest <lb />
and most complete as- <lb />
of <lb />
apparel ever display- <lb />
ed here. <lb />
I am showing a large <lb />
variety of the newest <lb />
and most fashionable <lb />
novelties in Straw and <lb />
including <lb />
the finest grades of both <lb />
English and American <lb />
manufacture. <lb />
Frank <lb />
Wilson <lb />
The King Clothier. <lb />
Hal Sugg tells us he has just sent oft <lb />
another order for the book entitled <lb />
a and the Fight for <lb />
It is a splendid work and should be <lb />
ken by i very body. <lb />
Our people become more and more <lb />
pleased with the arrangement by <lb />
mail gets here on the noon freight-train. <lb />
Getting mail six hours sooner is an ad- <lb />
vantage to many. <lb />
Can Tomatoes, Corn, Peaches, Cher <lb />
lies, Apricots, Pears and Pineapple. <lb />
S. <lb />
Some ladies were walking out to the <lb />
depot, Saturday evening, and one <lb />
them seeing the new stack over <lb />
at the mill wanted to know what kind <lb />
of steeple that was over there. <lb />
While the colored base ball club was <lb />
oat practicing, Friday afternoon, one of <lb />
the players at the bat caught the ball <lb />
flat on his mouth. The blow knocked <lb />
him dead for about ten minutes. <lb />
The best blend of Tea, <lb />
p. S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
Henry was tried <lb />
Justice J. A. Saturday for shoot- <lb />
a man named Harris through the <lb />
leg with a small rifle B week ago. <lb />
lord was hound over to court. <lb />
There was a rumor going around <lb />
this morning that the body of II. J. <lb />
Hoyle, who was drowned Feb. 11th, <lb />
had been found. No definite <lb />
Of be learned, so we suppose it <lb />
only a rumor. <lb />
The children in have <lb />
been having some amusement the last <lb />
few nights by parading with different <lb />
colored paper box lanterns. They had <lb />
lanterns in line, Friday night, and <lb />
made a nice show. <lb />
Is Peaches, <lb />
Raisins, Dittos and Apples, per <lb />
pound. S. M. <lb />
The Scotland Neck Democrat now <lb />
comes with changed to Com- <lb />
makes the <lb />
change because this latter name it is <lb />
the first under which the paper was <lb />
published. <lb />
On Sunday a corner stone was laid <lb />
to Sycamore Hill Baptist church, col- <lb />
which is undergoing repairs. An <lb />
excursion came up from Washington <lb />
and a Urge crowd witnessed the <lb />
Friday Mr. W. A. Pollard <lb />
wag driving through and <lb />
not taking his bearings his <lb />
buggy collided with one of the <lb />
phone poles. Breaking his harness <lb />
was about the only damage sustained. <lb />
Taken in time Hood's <lb />
prevents serious by keeping the <lb />
pure and all the organs in a <lb />
Some drummers who seemed to bare <lb />
more nickels than they know what to <lb />
do with, amused themselves Friday <lb />
evening while waiting for the train by <lb />
throwing them to a crowd of <lb />
beys around the an I seeing them <lb />
scramble tor the coins. <lb />
Mexico is running this country a <lb />
close race in several but ii <lb />
will take her some time to catch up in <lb />
the murder business. Over there they <lb />
kill only one person to every of <lb />
the population, while here we murder <lb />
one to every Star <lb />
Lee Rawls has gone to Chapel Hill <lb />
to join his lather who is spending some- <lb />
time there. <lb />
SHOOTING AT <lb />
to <lb />
t-1- Julie <lb />
lumber mill just here, two <lb />
got into a fuss this afternoon and <lb />
began shooting each other. One of <lb />
them, a flesh wound but was <lb />
not seriously hurt- <lb />
Maj. W. S. Bernard and Miss Mary <lb />
Bernard have gone to Chapel Hill for <lb />
a few weeks. <lb />
Mrs. M F. who was visit- <lb />
Mrs. R. L. Smith, today her <lb />
home in Wilson. <lb />
Mrs. C. T. and little C T. <lb />
arrived home Monday evening from a <lb />
visit to Wilson. <lb />
Mrs. B. A. Tuft and her son A. II. <lb />
Taft have gone to a Springs <lb />
for a few days. <lb />
Congressman Skinner and <lb />
wile came home Saturday evening from <lb />
Washington City. <lb />
Rev. J. W. yes <lb />
here and left this morning tor <lb />
his home at Littleton. <lb />
W. II. Allen, who has been visiting <lb />
relatives here, left this morning to re- <lb />
turn to Marion, S. <lb />
Misses Clara Bruce Forbes and <lb />
Worthington went to Kinston <lb />
Saturday to spend some days. <lb />
Mrs. who has been visit- <lb />
Mrs. W. II. Harrington, returned <lb />
to her home in Saturday. <lb />
J. D. Christian, of the <lb />
the cane Carver and popular <lb />
baking powder salesman, is in town. <lb />
Susie Shield, of Scotland Neck, <lb />
came down Monday evening to spend <lb />
a few days with her sister, Mrs. E. B. <lb />
Higgs. <lb />
Dr. Charles <lb />
and bride Miss Carrie came <lb />
home Friday evening from their bridal <lb />
tour. <lb />
Misses Bessie Gray, of Winston, <lb />
and Sallie Co. ten, of are <lb />
visiting Miss Myra. Skinner at Hotel <lb />
Macon, <lb />
Louis, Charlie and Monti j Latham <lb />
and Harry Skinner, Jr., returned Wed- <lb />
evening from school at Belmont, <lb />
in Gaston county. <lb />
Mrs. P. C. and Misses <lb />
Louise Latham, Winnie, Lottie mid <lb />
Nellie Skinner returned home Tuesday <lb />
evening from Washington City. <lb />
Miss Bettie Tyson returned home <lb />
Wednesday evening from Winston <lb />
where she has been visiting since the <lb />
lose of school at Miss Frances <lb />
Conrad, of Winston, accompanied her <lb />
home for a visit, <lb />
Items. <lb />
Oakley, N. C, June <lb />
The sudden drop in the potato mar- <lb />
causes our people to wear long <lb />
Miss Mary Highsmith and sister <lb />
left Saturday to visit relatives at <lb />
Scotland <lb />
Miss Mary Whitehurst and Al- <lb />
Ivey went Saturday <lb />
and returned Sunday, <lb />
Mrs. James left to <lb />
visit her Mrs. Mr. J. E. <lb />
at Rocky Mount. <lb />
Our old friend Joe W arrived <lb />
Saturday is visiting with his wife <lb />
the family of J. H. Whitehurst. <lb />
Crops of all kinds arc, looking well in <lb />
this section, especially tobacco. Our <lb />
people say they never saw the weed <lb />
look better at this season of f he year. <lb />
We hope they will continue so and that <lb />
they may get good prices for it to <lb />
for the loss in potatoes. <lb />
Free Information. <lb />
Messrs. C. A. Snow Co. of Wash- <lb />
ii C. lawyers end agents for <lb />
procuring patents, will send free to any <lb />
address pamphlets with information <lb />
about, home foreign patents, caveats, <lb />
copyrights, trademarks, infringement.-, <lb />
design patents, abstracts of decisions, <lb />
etc. as well as the cost of patents in the <lb />
red States and foreign countries. <lb />
older people as a man of great <lb />
and influence. <lb />
Mrs. Clark w as a woman rare <lb />
and refinement, her gentleness and <lb />
-FOB- <lb />
SPRING OF <lb />
Mods Suits r 5.00 <lb />
9.50 <lb />
10.60 <lb />
12.50 <lb />
6.00 <lb />
7.00 <lb />
8-00 <lb />
9.00 <lb />
i 0.50 8.00 5.75 <lb />
i i. <lb />
The result of was to <lb />
in favor of Kinston. <lb />
home boys played well consider- <lb />
that had had no practice d <lb />
kindliness winning to her the esteem would ll-t been beaten <lb />
Loafers. <lb />
Better for a grocer, dry goods dealer, <lb />
druggist, or any other bus- <lb />
man, to offend n whole coterie of <lb />
loungers than to spoil his trade by in- <lb />
persons who mean <lb />
No one likes to place small or- <lb />
when a lot of idle persons are <lb />
ready to make comment- on <lb />
them ind their purchases as soon as <lb />
their backs are Mer- <lb />
chant. <lb />
Died. <lb />
Little Gladys infant <lb />
of Mr. and Mrs. Ed. II. <lb />
died Tuesday evening of. last Week. <lb />
The burial will took place at Cherry <lb />
Hill cemetery Wednesday afternoon at G <lb />
o'clock. The bereaved parents have <lb />
the sympathy of the entire community <lb />
in the sorrow that has come into their <lb />
home. Gladys was month old and <lb />
had been sick only a few days. <lb />
It Wasn't Loaded <lb />
Near on Sunday two <lb />
a man and a woman, both <lb />
nearly grown, were amusing themselves <lb />
with a pistol. The weapon was one of <lb />
the usual kind, but sudden- <lb />
there was a report, a ball struck the <lb />
woman in the temple and she was killed <lb />
instantly. Her name was Nell Lang- <lb />
The man's name was John <lb />
Moore. Coroner went <lb />
to-day to look into the matter. <lb />
Cannery. <lb />
Last season Mr. J. J. Cory started a <lb />
small canning here, <lb />
berries being the principal article put <lb />
up by him. He has tested them <lb />
and finds that tiny have kept <lb />
excellent condition. Several our <lb />
people are using the berries put up by <lb />
Mr. Cory and all pronounce the <lb />
bes. He sent the some <lb />
to try, and are all right. We <lb />
hope he will his plant and do <lb />
a regular canning this reason. <lb />
every one. In her early years she was <lb />
converted and united with Baptist <lb />
church, her life always being that of an <lb />
earnest, devoted She was a <lb />
woman of means and gave to <lb />
many of charity and <lb />
though always in a way, <lb />
her being for sweet charity's sake <lb />
alone and not for the praise the <lb />
Id. <lb />
As a business woman we doubt it <lb />
Mrs. Clark had a superior. Through <lb />
the many years of her widowhood she <lb />
managed her own affairs and possessed <lb />
qualifications of mind and knowledge <lb />
of business matters acquired even by <lb />
few men. <lb />
Mrs. Clark leaves no children. In <lb />
Greenville she has two half-sisters and <lb />
one half brother now living. These <lb />
are Mrs. II. A. Sutton, Miss A. M. <lb />
Perkins and Mr. J. J. Perkins. Slit- <lb />
was also a of Miss <lb />
Pool, of <lb />
The of Mrs. Al. <lb />
Clark were interred in Cherry <lb />
Cemetery at o'clock Friday, funeral <lb />
badly <lb />
but for their fumbling in first inning. <lb />
Still they not a m itch tor <lb />
The Kinston club are exceedingly <lb />
clever boys we would be glad to <lb />
see them over again. <lb />
We have the in and Is ha e no <lb />
for the mo <lb />
We Lave a full line of <lb />
the latest design. We a full line of Bros. <lb />
Shoes, E. Rd Shoes, F. Reynold's Fine <lb />
We are- in n to you <lb />
to see us. K m <lb />
New <lb />
Saturday J. C. Smith and J. R. <lb />
Ross brought the a <lb />
bunch of new tobacco. It was <lb />
from a cure primings made this week. <lb />
The tobacco is nice shows <lb />
ti have been all right. It is the <lb />
cure we have heard reported this <lb />
sou. <lb />
We are sorry to know that <lb />
young men were by the hail <lb />
storm of Thursday evening. All of <lb />
their crop was ruined, except what <lb />
they had ill the barn Curing at the <lb />
time. <lb />
NEXT TO TYSON BANK. <lb />
Wells. The pall bearers were Messrs. <lb />
G. F. Evens, II. A. Sutton, E. A. <lb />
J. L. J. J. Cherry, C. <lb />
J. S. and D. J. <lb />
Whichard. A large number of friends <lb />
followed the remains to their last rest- <lb />
place. <lb />
vs. GREENVILLE. <lb />
Score to in Favor of K <lb />
The Kinston base ball club <lb />
over on the train Wednesday to a <lb />
game with Greenville club. Our <lb />
boys met them at the and enter- <lb />
the visitors at <lb />
The me was called at <lb />
with and II. C. Hooker um- <lb />
The of <lb />
clubs and their positions as follows <lb />
W. Cob man, <lb />
B. E. Stanley, <lb />
Jesse Herbert <lb />
Frank Lewis, <lb />
J. <lb />
C. <lb />
E. Wooten, <lb />
W. W. White. <lb />
EL D. Stanley, <lb />
c. <lb />
lb. <lb />
If. <lb />
Earnest .- <lb />
G. J. <lb />
Ola Forbes, <lb />
R. M. <lb />
John Stokes, <lb />
J. Jarvis, <lb />
I. Smith, <lb />
tins Forbes, <lb />
Moore, <lb />
Nervous <lb />
People find just the help they so much <lb />
need, in Hood's It fur- <lb />
the desired strength by <lb />
vitalizing and enriching the <lb />
blood, and thus builds up the nerve-, <lb />
tones the stomach and regulates the <lb />
whole system. Read <lb />
want to praise Hood's <lb />
My health run down, and I had the grip. <lb />
After that, my heart and nervous system <lb />
were badly affected, so that I could not do <lb />
my own work. Our physician gave me <lb />
some help, but did not cure. I decided <lb />
to try Hood's Soon I could <lb />
do all my own housework. I have taken <lb />
Cured <lb />
Hood's Pills with Hood's Sarsaparilla, <lb />
and they have done me much good. I <lb />
will not be without them. I have taken <lb />
bottles of Hood's through <lb />
the blessing of it has cured me. <lb />
I worked as hard in ever the past sum- <lb />
mer, and I am thankful to say I am <lb />
well. Hood's Pills when taken with <lb />
Hood's Sarsaparilla help very <lb />
Mas. M. M. Freehold, Penn. <lb />
This and many other cures prove that <lb />
Hoods <lb />
Sarsaparilla <lb />
Is the One True Blood Purifier. All f <lb />
only by C. I. Hood Co. Lowell. Mass. <lb />
Kinston gut the drop on things and <lb />
r-ll promptly and<lb />
With the Trip. <lb />
As John Ricks had his say in <lb />
day's about Seven <lb />
Higgs says he is entitled <lb />
a too. tells us they <lb />
were very much Improved by their <lb />
trip to these noted springs, and that <lb />
they found everything there very <lb />
pleasant indeed. In fact, with such a <lb />
proprietor as Mr. J. II. Fonville it <lb />
could not be otherwise. He says they <lb />
made some acquaintances among the <lb />
fair sex that John says would <lb />
not <lb />
to <lb />
Mrs. Jefferson and daughters <lb />
Will the meeting the <lb />
at this month. <lb />
A from that city dated the <lb />
8th At a meeting to-night of <lb />
the. committee having charge of the re- <lb />
to be tendered Jefferson <lb />
at the Davis Mansion, during <lb />
the Confederate reunion here, a letter <lb />
was read from Mrs. Davis, g that <lb />
sue gladly be present. <lb />
During the reception Mrs. Davis <lb />
will be seated upon a platform, between <lb />
two mid will not ex- <lb />
rise or shake hands with the <lb />
guests. <lb />
Miss Winnie Davis and Mrs. <lb />
. will at the foot of the platform. <lb />
We did not know that the ladies would take <lb />
so kindly to our selections in Laces and Em- <lb />
and were not prepared for the rush <lb />
which almost cleaned us out last week. We <lb />
are ready to-day, however, with another lot. <lb />
They are handsomer if possible than the first <lb />
ones and this lot includes all the novelties of <lb />
the season, notably among them Linen, Ecru <lb />
and Straw Colorings. All at prices that <lb />
allow them to remain long on our counters <lb />
Don't delay like you did or the loss will be yours. <lb />
Cheap. <lb />
Corner. <lb />
V Bargains jars the me purchasers dollars <lb />
ibis fact joined to the truthful assertions, the largest stock, moat <lb />
beautiful best values, make our store the most <lb />
satisfactory place for you to trade. Come take a look at <lb />
the many attractions which we offer you. They <lb />
cannot fail to elicit your admiration and make <lb />
you our patrons. A stock full of Bargains <lb />
day during each season, but <lb />
before any better, grander, more <lb />
beautiful or better selected <lb />
stock than this season. Our <lb />
bought for the <lb />
Cash, added to <lb />
the judgment <lb />
of years <lb />
experience, we offer a line of <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
that has sever been excelled or scarcely in this town or <lb />
county. Our store is the home of rare bargains, genuine <lb />
it, honest goods, square dealing, polite attention, <lb />
the place for you to We have <lb />
them here call upon every buyer <lb />
to examine Our store <lb />
is full to <lb />
of tie <lb />
following lines-- <lb />
Dry Goods, Ladies, Misses and Children Dress <lb />
Goods, Shirt Waist Silks, White Goods, <lb />
Dimities, ail wool <lb />
Black Dress Goods, Ripples, <lb />
Novelty Cotton Goods. <lb />
Linen Fabrics, <lb />
Ducks, <lb />
Piques, i Colored Lawns <lb />
Muslins, Ginghams, Calicoes and other <lb />
things too numerous to mention. Our Laces, Ribbons, Silks, <lb />
Braid, Buttons, Velvets and other Trimmings make the hearts of <lb />
the ladies glad to behold them- Kid Gloves, Hosiery, Side Combs, <lb />
and Hair are beauties. Our Shoe stock is immense for <lb />
Ladies, Misses and Children, Men and Boys. The most complete <lb />
and line of Ladies, Misses and Oxford Ties ever <lb />
offered here. <lb />
Furnishing Goods <lb />
embracing articles, such Collars, Cuffs, Ties, Bows <lb />
Suspender, Dress Sunday and <lb />
every day Undershirts and Toilet Articles- Fur, Wool and <lb />
Straw Hats for Men and Boys. C for men, Boys and children- <lb />
Plain, Pure, Heavy Groceries. <lb />
Flour, Meat, Lard, Molasses, Salt, Snuff and Tobacco. Hard <lb />
ware Farming Tools, lows and Casting, Tinware, Toilet Sets <lb />
ind many household articles that Hue- The Best line of <lb />
Crockery that we have ever had that is saying much. Our Tea <lb />
and Dinner Sets are beauties- Our Cups and Saucers, Dish- <lb />
es and Bowls are here quantities Vase and far <lb />
Lamps, plain and fancy patterns. Now a word about our <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
Store, more and grander than ever before. Oak <lb />
Suits, Parlor Suite, Couches. Lounges, Plush, Upholstered, Reed, <lb />
Willow, Oak Chairs, and Oak Dining Chairs. All th <lb />
culmination of the Art up to date. Separate pieces, <lb />
Bureaus, Bedsteads; and Dining Tables, Towel and Hat <lb />
facts, Tin Safes, Side Boards, Spring Mattresses, Cots, Wash <lb />
Shuck and straw Mattresses, Mattings, Rugs, <lb />
Poles, Lace Curtains, Window Shades and other house furnish <lb />
d gs. Harness, Trunks. and Hand Hags and Satchels. Woo <lb />
s Willow Ware- Buckets, Tubs. Market and Fancy Lunch Bask <lb />
n. And many other that need. Don't come to Green <lb />
and lea without weeing your friends, the Leaders and <lb />
I J. B, <lb />
A A A A A A A <lb />
BAKER AND HART, <lb />
v. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in <lb />
If not it will soon be <lb />
and you had better get <lb />
your Flues ready for <lb />
curing. We can sup- <lb />
ply you flow at any <lb />
time with the best <lb />
Flues. <lb />
Fender makes good <lb />
Flues. I <lb />
GENERAL HARDWARE <lb />
We have a few more left of those <lb />
Few <lb />
booms <lb />
at Cents a piece. <lb />
Ice Cream Freezers <lb />
which will be sold at cut prices.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017802_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
SIDES <lb />
ANTS BUT <lb />
their year supplies will <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
B all its branches. <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
H Throbs <lb />
we buy direct Manufacturers. en <lb />
tiling you to buy at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
and sold at prices <lb />
the t Out goods bought and <lb />
fold for CASH therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin <lb />
S. M. N C <lb />
cure liver trouble <lb />
cure nausea. <lb />
. k <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD, <lb />
TRAINS <lb />
June <lb />
I- <lb />
Weldon <lb />
Ar. Mt <lb />
Lt <lb />
Rocky Mt <lb />
Lt Wilson <lb />
Lt Selma <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar. Florence <lb />
A. M. <lb />
A. M<lb />
I .;<lb />
Lt Wilson <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
P. <lb />
P.<lb />
4- <lb />
GOING <lb />
Dated <lb />
April <lb />
Lt Florence <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt Selma <lb />
Ar <lb />
lA. M.<lb />
fit <lb />
Lt Wilmington <lb />
Lt Magnolia <lb />
Lt Goldsboro <lb />
tr Wilson <lb />
T Tarboro <lb />
A. M.<lb />
P. M.<lb />
Lt Wilson <lb />
Ar Rocky Mt <lb />
P. M P. M, <lb />
ill<lb />
Ar <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
. m. <lb />
Train on Scotland Keck Branch <lb />
Weldon 3.55 p. m., Halifax 4.1 <lb />
a. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 <lb />
. Greenville 6.47 p. m., Kinston 7.4 <lb />
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.3 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.20 am <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Branch leave <lb />
Washington 8.00 a, m., 3.00 p . <lb />
arrives Parmele 8.50 a. m., and 4.40 <lb />
m., Tarboro 9.45 a. m., <lb />
Tarboro 3.30 p. m., Parmele 10.20 a. m. <lb />
6.20 . m arrives <lb />
11.60 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. Daily ex- <lb />
Connects with trains on <lb />
Scot In Branch. <lb />
Train leaves A C, via <lb />
A Raleigh except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. m., Sunday. p. <lb />
arrive Plymouth 9.00 P. M-, 5.26 p. m. <lb />
leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
Sunday, 6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a m., <lb />
Tarboro 10.85 and <lb />
Train on Midland N. C. branch leaves <lb />
, daily, except Sunday, 6.0 a <lb />
n. 7-30 -a. m. Re- <lb />
loaves 8.00 a. in , <lb />
rives at Goldsboro 9.30 a. m. <lb />
branch leave <lb />
p. ,. arrive <lb />
6.06 p. m., Spring Hope 5.80 <lb />
leave Spring Hope <lb />
., 8.30 m, at <lb />
a m. daily except <lb />
Trains on Latta branch, Florence R <lb />
, L, 6.40 p m, Dun bar <lb />
p m, 8.06 p m. <lb />
leave am. 6.30 a m <lb />
7.50 a m. daily except Sun- <lb />
Branch leaves War- <lb />
Sunday, <lb />
p, <lb />
leaves on at 7.00 a. m. and 8.00 p m <lb />
. No- connection <lb />
at W daily, all via <lb />
. ale at Mount with <lb />
and Carolina R R for <lb />
all points North via Norfolk. <lb />
y- t f V F <lb />
General Supt. <lb />
Manager <lb />
Twinkling <lb />
wife <lb />
her temper Tery well <lb />
well <lb />
but I most of it i-. <lb />
The Nasty <lb />
ed the fair very, very <lb />
said the nasty <lb />
cynic, a truly <lb />
Judy. <lb />
allow me to hands <lb />
with yon, just by way of showing <lb />
that I know <lb />
pleasure, I am <lb />
in the Hume boat as <lb />
said the with <lb />
the X ray glance, as she looked <lb />
at her bashful lover, <lb />
come again tonight and not <lb />
brought bis backbone with <lb />
Gloomy Future for Lamb <lb />
Only think of is said that in <lb />
years the lion will be extinct <lb />
Then the poor probably <lb />
will have to lie down all by its <lb />
lonesome self, Isn't it awful lo <lb />
think Transcript- <lb />
A New orchestra of <lb />
teen pieces is going on a strike <lb />
thirteen is an unlucky <lb />
number. They want the <lb />
to hire a piccolo player to in- <lb />
crease the number ; he is think- <lb />
of discharging a meddlesome <lb />
bassoon player, to make the <lb />
lucky and less. <lb />
CURLING <lb />
At a Good Ba <lb />
Nobody Can Resist Them. <lb />
If wishes could only be answered <lb />
and a girl had but one, other things <lb />
being equal, I should advise her to <lb />
plead for long, <lb />
ones. There is nothing in <lb />
the world so serviceable as a pair of <lb />
effective eyelashes. They make any <lb />
kind of an eye pretty. If one's orbs <lb />
are not a pleasing color, nil one has <lb />
to do is to drop the curtains, look <lb />
down, not up; inward, not out Let <lb />
the eyelashes lie along the cheek, <lb />
and if they are the right kind one <lb />
looks charming. And tho lovely <lb />
part of it is, for those blessed, that <lb />
they cannot be counterfeited. They <lb />
are never false. If you were not <lb />
born with them, sighing for them is <lb />
of no use. Nor can art supply the <lb />
She hides bead In <lb />
at her utter lack of skill, for <lb />
they must can't <lb />
glue nor pin them on. <lb />
Every now and then some one <lb />
torts up with an idea about making <lb />
abort, thin eyelashes grow to be the <lb />
desired kind, and every new scheme <lb />
has its followers. But it is all hope- <lb />
futile. A girl course <lb />
be to help out short- <lb />
comings in her form. She may <lb />
row other people's hair, and she <lb />
may lay in a stock of complexion <lb />
that will last her a is, if <lb />
he should want to do such things, <lb />
but can't button or hook on that <lb />
desirable silky fringe to tho eye <lb />
which would enhance her charms <lb />
immeasurably. <lb />
The latest theory on this subject <lb />
launched is that if tho are <lb />
trimmed every two weeks for six <lb />
weeks tho result will be a very thick <lb />
growth. But it is a deep laid plot of <lb />
me fortunate one to deprive her <lb />
sisters of the little they have. One <lb />
girl I know tried it. took a very <lb />
harp pair of embroidery scissors <lb />
and neatly trimmed the of <lb />
left eye. Then examined her <lb />
work in tho mirror was very <lb />
much surprised at the result. The <lb />
left eye appeared much smaller than <lb />
the right and the row of little black <lb />
tubs felt very queer, to say nothing <lb />
of how they looked. And the com- <lb />
it excited and the questions <lb />
he had to answer As bad as when <lb />
a man gets his hair cut. <lb />
is tho matter with your <lb />
some one would ask. <lb />
as if you were going to have a <lb />
It took a long time before that eye <lb />
matched the other, and there was <lb />
not the slightest difference as re- <lb />
the growth after it did come <lb />
out. Clearly that I a scheme which <lb />
deserves to be exposed. <lb />
It is always the way. A girl who <lb />
baa everything has the eyelashes <lb />
thrown in, and age may wither her, <lb />
but they are Imperishable. A pretty <lb />
little woman, one who can give <lb />
beautifully, com- <lb />
plains that cannot wear a veil <lb />
with any comfort, because eye- <lb />
lashes get tangled in tho meshes <lb />
and annoy her Poor <lb />
thing I She has fold the story to <lb />
one knows, but none of the <lb />
girls sympathizes with her. Each one <lb />
tried to make own do the same <lb />
Times. <lb />
Th Ah Who Predicted. <lb />
An Ass who heard a observe <lb />
that tho Water in the Pond was get- <lb />
ting very Low, at once offered his <lb />
Services to Predict Rain. This <lb />
been Noised about, the Hens <lb />
asked for continued Dry Weather, <lb />
the Foxes demanded a snowstorm, <lb />
the Oxen wanted frosty mornings, <lb />
and the the Wolf, the Dog and <lb />
the Peacock each demanded that be <lb />
be Favored with Weather made to <lb />
order. As a result the Ass could <lb />
Please no one, and as his Failure <lb />
was charged to his Obstinacy, the <lb />
Whole Crowd fell upon hi in and <lb />
Wounded him almost to Death. He <lb />
was Complaining of this to the Peas- <lb />
ant When the latter He <lb />
who seeks to Please all will end in <lb />
Pleasing nobody at <lb />
Press. <lb />
Every superintendent of a nation- <lb />
cemetery must be an honorably <lb />
discharged, disabled soldier or <lb />
of the regular or volunteer army. <lb />
In 1880 the wages paid to <lb />
mill hands aggregated <lb />
Ten years later it had increased to<lb />
Consumption <lb />
Editor iI have an absolute <lb />
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use <lb />
thousands of hopeless cases have been already <lb />
permanently cured So am I <lb />
of its power that I consider it my duty to <lb />
two to those of your readers <lb />
who have Bronchial or <lb />
Lung Trouble, if they will write me their <lb />
express Address. Sincerely <lb />
T. A. B, c. M at, <lb />
The New Kan in <lb />
A singular story from <lb />
Baltimore showing progress <lb />
which the has made <lb />
in performing household duties. <lb />
The account is given in the fol- <lb />
lowing special to the Philadelphia <lb />
Annie Kuhn <lb />
the release of her <lb />
band from jail and put back <lb />
to work in her home as man of all <lb />
work and nurse to the children, <lb />
while she supports the large <lb />
working in a cigar factory. <lb />
With all the interesting- gossip <lb />
ah the Kuhn has <lb />
quietly <lb />
playing the part of a <lb />
He performed the household <lb />
ties with perfect satisfaction to <lb />
his wife, and always had meals <lb />
promptly ready when she return- <lb />
ed from the factory. He kept <lb />
the house clean and <lb />
a scrubbing brush with <lb />
In addition to these duties <lb />
he washed and dressed the <lb />
demanded a weekly <lb />
of as pin money in <lb />
to home support. <lb />
His wife agreed, but after paying <lb />
him for several weeks he <lb />
to spend it in neglect <lb />
his household duties and abuse <lb />
bis wife she had him <lb />
to jail and employed a lo <lb />
do the work. Yesterday she <lb />
plied to the court to release him, <lb />
declaring that she could not do <lb />
without his services. The woman <lb />
she employed had been taken <lb />
sick. She told the judge she <lb />
she could now her <lb />
husband again. Justice <lb />
today gave her the order for her <lb />
husband's release and it was <lb />
most peculiar case be had <lb />
ever had before <lb />
She Wanted Lightning to Strike <lb />
and It Complied <lb />
Quite a singular of a <lb />
wish occurred after- <lb />
noon near Md., on <lb />
regular steamer on the trip <lb />
the river during the <lb />
thunderstorm in Dorchester and <lb />
Talbot counties, but in a way not <lb />
in accordance with desire of <lb />
person who made the wish. <lb />
It was a who was watching <lb />
the play cf the fierce lightnings <lb />
and ether exciting <lb />
of storm, said she <lb />
like to see tho <lb />
strike meaning of <lb />
course that she wished to see the <lb />
effect of the display in some <lb />
harmless nay. lint she no sooner <lb />
uttered wish than the light- <lb />
did strike on Chancellor's <lb />
in Talbot county, as was <lb />
mentioned in the Sun's Cam- <lb />
this morning. Al- <lb />
most instantly the barn and <lb />
on the farm of Mrs. Lydia <lb />
on Point, <lb />
were in and a number of <lb />
horses and much <lb />
other stores were destroyed. The <lb />
spectacle was most but <lb />
the lady who made the to <lb />
see the lightning strike some- <lb />
where, was as soon as <lb />
the wish had gratified <lb />
loss of stock and produce fell on <lb />
tenant, and <lb />
the loss on the building is <lb />
by the owner. The lady <lb />
who made the wish says she will <lb />
never entertain such a <lb />
again, if she can help it. <lb />
CONDENSED TESTIMONY. <lb />
Chas. B. Hood, Broker and <lb />
Agent. Ohio, <lb />
that Dr. King's New <lb />
has do equal as a Cough remedy. J. D. <lb />
Brown, Prop. St. James Hotel, Ft. <lb />
Ind., that he was cured <lb />
of a Cough of two years <lb />
by La Grippe, by Dr. King's New Dis- <lb />
L. F. Merrill, <lb />
Mass. that he has used -ml rec- <lb />
it and knew it to fail <lb />
and would rather have it than any doc- <lb />
tor, because it always cures. Mis. <lb />
Hemming, E. 25th St. Chicago, <lb />
ways keeps it at hand and has no fear <lb />
of Croup, because it instantly relieves. <lb />
Free trial bottles at Jno. L. <lb />
As To The Eyesight. <lb />
Owing to the continual com- <lb />
plaint of the eyesight of many of <lb />
the pupils in the public schools <lb />
of the city of Baltimore, the <lb />
school authorities a short while <lb />
ago decided to employ a number <lb />
of oculists to examine into the <lb />
cause, and the result was that out <lb />
of a total of pupils it was <lb />
found that were troubled <lb />
with defective eyes, and ma <lb />
of those so troubled were <lb />
pupils in lower grades. <lb />
their report oculist that <lb />
the defective eyesight among the <lb />
pupils is the result i not placing <lb />
the maps and blackboards in <lb />
proper light for them and that <lb />
hereafter all pupils should be ex- <lb />
as to condition of <lb />
their eyes when -first enter <lb />
the schools, that their may <lb />
be properly adjusted. The exam, <lb />
is to be repeated every <lb />
year of all pupils. <lb />
matter of proper light in <lb />
our schools is which should <lb />
not be overlooked, as there is no <lb />
doubt that a failure in this regard <lb />
has a great deal to do with the <lb />
bad eyesight of many of the <lb />
school children who are now com- <lb />
to wear glasses. <lb />
Catarrh Cannot be Cured. <lb />
with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as <lb />
they cannot reach the seat of the dis- <lb />
ease. Catarrh is a blood or <lb />
disease, and in order to cure it <lb />
you must take internal remedies. Hall's <lb />
Is taken internally, and <lb />
acts directly on the blood and mucous <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not med- <lb />
It was prescribed by one of the <lb />
beet physicians in this country for <lb />
years, and is a regular prescription. It <lb />
is composed of the best known, <lb />
combined with the best blood purifiers, <lb />
acting directly on the mucous surfaces. <lb />
The perfect combination of the two <lb />
ingredients is what produces such won- <lb />
results In Catarrh. Send <lb />
for testimonials, free. <lb />
F. J. CO Props. Tole <lb />
Sold by druggists, price <lb />
digestion. <lb />
NICHOLSON, <lb />
J. A, Burgess, Mgr. <lb />
Washington, N. O. <lb />
This Hotel has thoroughly reno- <lb />
several new rooms added, <lb />
bells to every Attentive <lb />
Fish and Oysters served dally. <lb />
Patronage of traveling public <lb />
located. <lb />
CATARRH. <lb />
His Worst Enemy Defeated by <lb />
P. P. P., <lb />
Great Remedy. <lb />
FOR YEARS HE <lb />
HARDLY AT <lb />
HO IT RH. CLOSED FOR I YEARS. <lb />
Mr. A. M. f DeLeon. <lb />
hi i from Catarrh in Its wont <lb />
form. Truly, his description of his suffer <lb />
little short of marvelous. In- <lb />
stead of seeking his for the <lb />
coming, he went to with terror. <lb />
that another long, weary, wake- <lb />
and a struggle to breathe <lb />
before him. He could not sleep on either <lb />
side for two rears. P. P. P., <lb />
AM LOVE LETTER. <lb />
night. <lb />
I i <lb />
am SO years old, bot expect soon tn <lb />
he able to take hold of plow handle. <lb />
I feel glad that I was lucky enough to gel <lb />
P. P. P., and I heartily recommend It to <lb />
my friends the public generally. <lb />
respectfully, <lb />
A. M. RAMSEY. <lb />
OF of <lb />
undersigned <lb />
on this day, personally <lb />
A. M. Ramsey, who, after being <lb />
worn, says on oath that the foregoing <lb />
made by him relative to Hie <lb />
virtue of P. P. P. medicine Is true. <lb />
A. M. <lb />
Sworn to and subscribed before me this <lb />
August 4th, 1801. <lb />
J. M. N. T. <lb />
County. Texas <lb />
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P. <lb />
Great where all other <lb />
remedies failed. <lb />
Rheumatism twists distorts your <lb />
hands feet. Its agonies are Intense, <lb />
hut speedy relief and a permanent cure <lb />
Is gained by the of P. P. P. <lb />
woman's weakness, whether nervous or <lb />
otherwise, can be cured the <lb />
built up by P. P. p. A healthy woman Is <lb />
a beautiful woman. <lb />
Pimples, blotches, <lb />
of the skin are removed and <lb />
cured by P. P. P. <lb />
P. P. P. will restore your build <lb />
Williams Co the Widow <lb />
Parsons In the Year 1777. <lb />
The old parsonage in Par- <lb />
son Williams lived in East Hartford <lb />
for years is well known to Hart <lb />
ford people. This letter was writ <lb />
ten to widow who became <lb />
the old minister's wife. His <lb />
first was his tho <lb />
of Rector Williams, <lb />
dent of college The letter is <lb />
not as affectionate the old <lb />
Puritan letters of Join, Win- <lb />
but there are it delicacy and <lb />
about it and enough <lb />
love to make it <lb />
1777. <lb />
did oafs <lb />
with me; a Leaden sci to roll on <lb />
In every hour till tho when by <lb />
the Divine favor, obliging good- <lb />
I look to made happy as the prof on <lb />
state of things will I would <lb />
cheek and <lb />
considering tho uncertainty of <lb />
all a not knowing what i <lb />
day may bring forth; In this <lb />
of dark doubtful <lb />
tat yet with deference, may <lb />
I then hope the crow my withes, and com- <lb />
of my outward felicity. In being per <lb />
to call you mine, and becoming <lb />
Intimately ft inviolably yours; than <lb />
j have no greater ambition. I <lb />
evening returned from New Haven, <lb />
I with return of <lb />
late disorders owing to Riding hard and in <lb />
weather, to recruit. <lb />
happy for mo that yon went not re <lb />
by kind heaven, I to me t <lb />
my and I hope not unhappy for you <lb />
not to if all tho Little in my <lb />
can to your comfort and <lb />
Expect to go to New Haven again <lb />
t week in this month, to attend <lb />
meeting of corporation if and mean <lb />
While to lie employed In providing for tin <lb />
scholars In the neighboring Towns; <lb />
am like to very little to attend <lb />
own concerns at will a <lb />
Creator give yon health and every <lb />
whatever others tell a <lb />
being that, their hearts, I <lb />
Low I in s of Love; and to adopt the <lb />
of Andromache's Gallant, I not a though <lb />
that relates to you, which I CAnnot with conn <lb />
the seeing power to mi <lb />
In may perpetual <lb />
and director, and lead yon on in th <lb />
bright paths of Virtue peace. <lb />
this, is an uncommon way of talking t <lb />
Ladies; but you have a of Spirit, <lb />
which exalts you moved by <lb />
flatteries of tongues are <lb />
jugglers hands, their and <lb />
u fed to gain attention A admiration, <lb />
while they play upon the fair <lb />
my esteem is is rational, a <lb />
which will make my <lb />
constant endeavor, that the object thereof may <lb />
be as happy as <lb />
I wrote yon immediately after my <lb />
from yon, which I you have received <lb />
and add no further Now, tho I have a <lb />
things to say. U <lb />
due to good mother and <lb />
Brother, and charming Sifter, Mrs. <lb />
not of her worthy partner a family <lb />
and if yon would favor me with a Line, <lb />
acquainting me with of health, <lb />
It lay an additional obligation on him. <lb />
Great Remedy, cured him in quick time. <lb />
TIE TEXAS <lb />
Messrs. BROS., Savannah, Ga. .-. <lb />
I have used nearly bottles, acquaintance there a family O, ho <lb />
of P. P. P. I was afflicted from the crown <lb />
of my head to the soles of my feet. Your <lb />
P. P. P. has cured my difficulty of breath- <lb />
smothering, palpitation the heart. <lb />
and has relieved me all pain. One nos- <lb />
was closed for tea years, hot sow <lb />
hi breathe through It readily. <lb />
I have net slept on either side for two <lb />
years; hi fact, I dreaded to see night come. <lb />
I sleep soundly la any position <lb />
s Pills <lb />
Cure All <lb />
Liver Ills. <lb />
A Strong Fortification. <lb />
Fortify the body against disease <lb />
by Liver Pills, an <lb />
lute cure for sick headache, <lb />
sour stomach, malaria, <lb />
constipation, jaundice, bilious- <lb />
and all kindred troubles. <lb />
Fly-Wheel of <lb />
Dr. Your Liver Pills are <lb />
the fly-wheel of life. I shall ever <lb />
be grateful for the accident that <lb />
brought them to my notice. I feel <lb />
as if I had a new lease of life. <lb />
J. Fairleigh, Platte Cannon, Col. <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
at druggists. <lb />
FOR SALE <lb />
up system and regulate In every ; In all <lb />
way. P. P. P. removes that heavy, down- ardor of affection, ever <lb />
In-the-month feeling. <lb />
For Blotches and Pimples the face <lb />
take P. P. P. <lb />
Ladles, for and thorough <lb />
regulation, take P. P. P. Great <lb />
Remedy, and get well at <lb />
SOLD BY AU. <lb />
BROTHERS, APOTHECARIES, <lb />
SOLE PROPRIETORS. <lb />
Black. <lb />
For sale by J. L. Wooten, Drug- <lb />
gist next door to S. T. White. <lb />
To Mrs. Sarah <lb />
Hartford <lb />
SALVE. <lb />
The Beet Salve in the Cuts <lb />
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Fe- <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hand, <lb />
Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to <lb />
perfect satisfaction or money refunded. <lb />
Price cents per box. For sale <lb />
Jno. L. Wooten. <lb />
cure flatulence. <lb />
GIVES YOU <lb />
AFTERNOON <lb />
THE <lb />
INTERESTS OF, <lb />
GREENVILLE FIRST, SECOND <lb />
OUR POCKET BOOK THIRD. <lb />
SUBSCRIPTION Cents a MONTH <lb />
Tie Na Collection of <lb />
Washington, D. C. will dispose of the <lb />
following tits <lb />
Hill Aberdeen, w T <lb />
Irwin, Asheville, White Bros. <lb />
R B Bro, <lb />
Aulander, B F Mayo. Aurora, <lb />
R B Weston, Aurora, W, J <lb />
Smith, Bath. Jones k Hancock, <lb />
Beaufort, Mangum, Benson. <lb />
T G Carson, Bethel, E <lb />
Bunyan, Patterson <lb />
Brown, I Bl O A Raby. <lb />
Bryson J T Wright Bro <lb />
Candor, J W Markham, <lb />
W T Williamson, Clinton, <lb />
TE <lb />
SB Co train II D <lb />
Co. J A <lb />
I K Buckner Democrat I- <lb />
Lee SO, W A Slater <lb />
Patten Durham, <lb />
J E Cooper <lb />
Swain Elizabeth GO, J G Nor- <lb />
Park 1,443 M A <lb />
Fair J M Chadwick <lb />
J II Smith Falkland. <lb />
GO, Jones Fayetteville <lb />
J A Vann Franklinton <lb />
R T Clinton <lb />
Graham T <lb />
Sample S Brown <lb />
W R Jordan it Co <lb />
John B Hooker Ham <lb />
J c Co Hamilton <lb />
N Taylor, J W <lb />
B Co Haw River <lb />
Bros Henderson VI T <lb />
Henderson C D Inca <lb />
B P Jonathan Creek <lb />
J H Hales Co <lb />
Tarboro Lexington James <lb />
H Per- <lb />
Son <lb />
Isaac Williamston J A <lb />
R L Bennett <lb />
W J Bradshaw <lb />
cure John Bell <lb />
Riddle ft Johnson W <lb />
II Mason A Co Morehead City <lb />
R R Moore J V Mitchell <lb />
Son Mount J H Cohen <lb />
B J Smith A Co New- <lb />
S J Jan ell Oxford <lb />
R H Oxford S C <lb />
Wm B <lb />
Raleigh G Jenkins Raleigh <lb />
Bros <lb />
L Bennett F <lb />
A M Long Rooking- <lb />
ham N T Shore Salem H <lb />
P Co Seaboard C V <lb />
Co Seaboard Fuller Hyman <lb />
O M Statesville <lb />
K F Hanson <lb />
T Harris Jr L <lb />
Bro Tarboro CO, L <lb />
Bro Tarboro J J <lb />
Wilson Talbot Ducker ft <lb />
Tweed Wheeler Bros <lb />
Washington <lb />
Boston Shoe Store Weldon John <lb />
F Williamston W J <lb />
Harris Wilson W Corbett Wilson <lb />
Win Harris Wilson Hitch- <lb />
ill ft Askew Winston King Bros <lb />
Pure Food Cy Winston Anderson <lb />
ft Co <lb />
Send bids to the. <lb />
National <lb />
Washington C. <lb />
GROVE <lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
CHILL <lb />
JUST AS FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE <lb />
Not. <lb />
Paris Medici,. Co., St. Mo. <lb />
last year, pf <lb />
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL TOXIC hire <lb />
trough three already this In nil our ex- <lb />
of H In tho hue <lb />
faction Tonic. <lb />
CO <lb />
Sold ft guaranteed J. <lb />
No crop varies more in <lb />
according to grade of <lb />
used than tobacco. Pot- <lb />
ash is its most important re- <lb />
producing a large <lb />
yield of finest grade leaf. Use <lb />
only fertilizers containing at <lb />
least actual <lb />
Potash, <lb />
in form of sulphate. To in- <lb />
sure a clean burning leaf avoid <lb />
fertilizers containing chlorine. <lb />
pamphlet are not .-m- <lb />
b art practical <lb />
inn; on the t h <lb />
really helpful farmers They are sent far <lb />
Hie <lb />
GERMAN <lb />
II St., New ,. <lb />
Administrators Notice. <lb />
Baring Hi s qualified as <lb />
of deceased, <lb />
of the county Stale lb <lb />
Carolina, tilts W to all persons <lb />
having claims against the estate of <lb />
lo exhibit them to the under <lb />
or before the day of May <lb />
or this will be In liar <lb />
of their recovery. All hide <lb />
to said estate will please make <lb />
Th's day of <lb />
A. <lb />
Cox, Attorney. <lb />
WINE CF CM <lb />
SMITH EDWARD Props. <lb />
the late Williamston near <lb />
Court <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
all <lb />
and dealers in <lb />
kinds of <lb />
VOILES, <lb />
FINE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY <lb />
All kinds of repairing done <lb />
use skilled labor good <lb />
material and prepared to give <lb />
you satisfactory work. <lb />
for<lb />
. Ill <lb />
neck, <lb />
These p i.- <lb />
i ;.<lb />
t urea ii . <lb />
Womb, u f- -i, i i. <lb />
i i <lb />
m v i <lb />
i-iii ii. i<lb />
ii <lb />
;. <lb />
nil. . US, <lb />
CO. <lb />
N. C <lb />
IX------ <lb />
PUBLISHED WEDNESDAY AT <lb />
One Dollar Per Year. <lb />
This the People's Favorite <lb />
THE TOBACCO DEPARTMENT, WHICH <lb />
IS A REGULAR FEATURE OF THE PAPER, <lb />
IS ALONE WORTH MANY TIMES THE <lb />
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, <lb />
When you need <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
Don't forget <lb />
WE HAVE AMPLE FACILITIES <lb />
FOR THE WORK AND DO ALL <lb />
KINDS OF COMMERCIAL AND <lb />
TOBACCO WAREHOUSE WORK. <lb />
Our Work and Suit our Patrons <lb />
THE REFLECTOR BOOK STORE <lb />
IS THE CHEAPEST PLACE IN FOR- <lb />
BOOKS, STATIONERY HOTELS <lb />
A foil line Day Books. Memorandum and Time <lb />
Receipt, Draft and Note Legal Cap, Fools Cap <lb />
Bill Cap, Letter and Note Papers- Envelopes all sizes and styles, <lb />
Handsome Box JO cents and up. School Tab- <lb />
lets Slates, Lead and Pencils, Pens and Pen-Holders <lb />
Foil line Novels by best Celebrated <lb />
mood Inks, all colors, and Cream the beet made; constantly <lb />
on We are sole agent the Parker Pen. <lb />
equals it and every man have one, Erasers Sponge <lb />
Cup Pencil-Holders, Robber Beads, c forget when <lb />
want anything the line. <lb />
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. First-class work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
Dominion Line <lb />
OINTMENT<lb />
M A U K <lb />
cure dizziness. <lb />
O. <lb />
W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
in nil i- Courts. Collection <lb />
a specialty <lb />
LONG, <lb />
A y- A t Law. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
P in all Court. <lb />
Swift Galloway, B. F. Tyson, <lb />
Snow Hill, N. C. Greenville, N. C. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
N S LA IV, <lb />
Greenville. N. C <lb />
in all the <lb />
HARRY SKINNER H. W. <lb />
Successors to Latham <lb />
N. O. <lb />
John E. Woodard, O, Harding, <lb />
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. <lb />
WOODARD HARDING, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Special attention to collections <lb />
and settlement claims. <lb />
DR. H. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
TAR SERVICE <lb />
Steamers Washington for Green <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays Saturdays <lb />
Greenville tame days. <lb />
These departures are subject to <lb />
of water on Tar River <lb />
Connecting at with <lb />
steamers for Norfolk, Baltimore, <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Nor- <lb />
folk Baltimore Steamboat <lb />
flora Baltimore. Miners <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. MY SON. Agent, <lb />
n, <lb />
J. J, CHERRY, Agent, <lb />
C. <lb />
Wanted-An Idea <lb />
Who can think <lb />
of <lb />
bring <lb />
D. o., for KM offer <lb />
list of two honored wanted. <lb />
cure dyspepsia. <lb />
one gives relief. <lb />
biliousness. <lb />
cure indigestion. <lb />
cure bad breath. <lb />
cure torpid liver- <lb />
gentle cathartic. <lb />
cure constipation. <lb />
for sour stomach. <lb />
pleasant laxative. <lb />
IV. O. <lb />
Office over Old Brick Store front room <lb />
R. D. L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
VII N. C. <lb />
cure headache. <lb />
GOOD FOR STOCK AND POULTRY <lb />
TOO. <lb />
Is <lb />
especially for stock, its <lb />
man, and for that purpose Is sold m <lb />
cans, holding one-half pound of <lb />
cine for cents. <lb />
Lambert. Franklin Co., Tenn., <lb />
March <lb />
I have used all kinds f medicine, <lb />
I would not give one package of Black <lb />
for all the others I ever saw <lb />
It is best thing for horses or cattle in <lb />
the-pi of the rear, and will cure <lb />
chicken cholera every lime. <lb />
R. R. Boylan. <lb />
The modern stand- <lb />
ard Family <lb />
cine Cures the <lb />
common every-day <lb />
ills of humanity. <lb />
the morning; star. <lb />
The Oldest <lb />
Daily Newspaper in <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
The Only Six-Dollar Daily of <lb />
its Class in the <lb />
Favors Limited Free <lb />
of American Silver and Repeal <lb />
of Ten Per Cent. Tax on <lb />
State Banks Daily cents <lb />
per month. Weekly per <lb />
year. <lb />
Wilmington N G<lb />
For the Cure all Diseases. <lb />
This Preparation has been In for <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know tins <lb />
been in demand. It has b en <lb />
the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and has effected cure <lb />
all other remedies, with the <lb />
the most experienced physicians, who <lb />
for years failed. This of <lb />
long standing and <lb />
it has Obtained owing <lb />
its own little <lb />
ever been made to bring it <lb />
public of this <lb />
sent to any address on receipt One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash at <lb />
fended lo. Address all order to <lb />
f, V- X-C. <lb />
Caveat., and obtained all Pat- <lb />
and we can secure patent in its lime <lb />
remote Washington. <lb />
Send model, drawing or with <lb />
We advise, it or not, of <lb />
Our Ice not due till patent is secured. <lb />
How to Obtain with <lb />
cost same to. <lb />
sent tree. Address, <lb />
Opp. Washington, D. C. <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
North <lb />
DAILY <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and f an <lb />
more than ever, it will be a <lb />
invaluable visitor to the borne. <lb />
club Or the <lb />
THE DAILY <lb />
All of the news of the world. Com <lb />
Daily reports from the tat <lb />
and National Capitols. a <lb />
A perfect All <lb />
news of the The reports <lb />
from the Legislature <lb />
the Weekly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
Bend tor -ample copies. Address <lb />
THE <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
Male Academy. <lb />
. The course embraces all the branches <lb />
usually In an Academy. eM <lb />
Terms, both Tor tuition <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
Well fitted and <lb />
business, by taking the academic <lb />
course Where wish to <lb />
pursue a course, this school <lb />
thorough preparation to <lb />
enter, h credit, any College In North <lb />
Caroline the State University. It <lb />
refers . lose who have recently left <lb />
Its wall the truthfulness of this <lb />
statement. <lb />
Any young nun with and <lb />
taking with <lb />
will be In <lb />
to continue in the <lb />
The discipline be at its <lb />
present <lb />
Neither time nor nor <lb />
work will be spared to make this . <lb />
all that could wish. <lb />
For former see or <lb />
dress <lb />
W. B. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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