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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
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t i <lb/>
CT <lb/>
v.-v <lb/>
H III I <lb/>
JOB <lb/>
The Reflector is <lb/>
pared to do all worn <lb/>
of this line <lb/>
NEATLY,<lb/>
IN BEST STYLE. <lb/>
Plenty of Dew mate- <lb/>
rial and the best <lb/>
a v. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
per Year, in Advance.<lb/>
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER <lb/>
NO <lb/>
for <lb/>
We have made <lb/>
to <lb/>
the Reflector and <lb/>
North the <lb/>
above amount. Is <lb/>
campaign year and you <lb/>
should take the two <lb/>
leading papers.<lb/>
. s<lb/>
H -j <lb/>
t I .- B y hi <lb/>
LL bought direct from the makers in quantities and <lb/>
sold at only one small more. The Famishing <lb/>
and Equipment of New Houses a Specialty. Small orders receive the <lb/>
same careful and prompt as ones. Special lots of <lb/>
Furniture bought from Bankrupt Manufacturers being offered at <lb/>
I less than their value time. <lb/>
n- <lb/>
f It <lb/>
ABOUT PIANOS AND ORGANS,, <lb/>
to Make Home Attractive <lb/>
Has been the of mankind since the trouble ill <lb/>
ii Adam's household, and it is now universally conceded <lb/>
that Music is the most potent factor in the accomplish- <lb/>
of this result. Now a Piano or an Organ is a necessity <lb/>
if you want a Musical Home, and I have been studying <lb/>
and working for years to get myself into a position to <lb/>
supply the homes of North and South Carolina with the <lb/>
ABOUT FURNITURE. <lb/>
Best Possible Instruments, <lb/>
Lowest Possible Prices, <lb/>
Easiest Possible Terms. <lb/>
on <lb/>
My success is beyond my hopes, and I am now prepared <lb/>
to give my patrons the benefit. Such a line as lean <lb/>
offer has never been controlled by one dealer. <lb/>
UPRIGHT PIANOS, TO <lb/>
ORGANS, TO <lb/>
And I've got The Leader in <lb/>
Of course my low prices and easy terms are going to <lb/>
stir up the small dealers, and when yon hear <lb/>
about Andrews, just remember what Sam says <lb/>
about the one that has certainly been hit. Yon <lb/>
will probably buy but one or Organ in a lifetime, <lb/>
you want get the right one. Let me, or one of my <lb/>
salesmen, help yon make your selection. <lb/>
Fine Furniture <lb/>
Makes Fine Homes. <lb/>
The Most Expensive Furniture Not Always the It bum la <lb/>
mm<lb/>
Well Designed. <lb/>
Well Made. <lb/>
Well Finished. <lb/>
I can furnish you with till of these, at less money than <lb/>
other dealers will offer them. A great variety to select from W <lb/>
Bedroom Suits in Oak at I <lb/>
Curly Birch, Mahogany, Maple and Walnut . <lb/>
Suits at all prices. u <lb/>
or Suits in Great Variety. Mr <lb/>
Room Furniture, <lb/>
Suits, to the Queen's Taste. <lb/>
Pictures and Easels in abundance. Everything in m n <lb/>
Furniture to make home comfortable. E s <lb/>
MANTELS AND TILES FOR NEW HOUSES <lb/>
ALL GRADES AND PRICES. <lb/>
No on can us. e <lb/>
At Bottom fa <lb/>
We will Save yon Money on them. <lb/>
WHITE ENAMEL IRON REDS H <lb/>
AT A BARGAIN,<lb/>
Hundreds and Thousands of Homes in the two will testify to goods and low prices. Our business methods are fair and liberal. <lb/>
We want do business with you. Makes no difference how small orders are. will get the lowest prices. My traveling salesmen will <lb/>
call to see you if you wish Write for and <lb/>
prices. One postal card may save you many dollars. <lb/>
II. ANDREWS, <lb/>
V Manager Music Department. <lb/>
a m e <lb/>
E. ANDREW, <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Furniture, Pianos and Organs, j, <lb/>
West Trade Street. CHARLOTTE, N. C. <lb/>
e r; r- -a--stew it f <lb/>
a r -2 ii <lb/>
w a a s e <lb/>
Ai to Arthur I. <lb/>
Mr L. Smith, president <lb/>
of the Bryan Silver Club, at <lb/>
Hi tel <lb/>
A of Can who <lb/>
Tex-, writes to The j <lb/>
a to ask if Hon. Arthur <lb/>
the democratic nominee <lb/>
for vice president, is president of <lb/>
h national bank, president of the <lb/>
has lately returned <lb/>
the<lb/>
on the Bright Side. <lb/>
The I opes for bet- <lb/>
It abiding <lb/>
in the people tiny are <lb/>
necessity of <lb/>
or m-w <lb/>
moves. is a <lb/>
u the tendency of the times, a <lb/>
of improve baa shot <lb/>
the sky. R <lb/>
is coming <lb/>
t . sudden burst into pros- <lb/>
ii will greatly re- <lb/>
l be n u we <lb/>
i i I n p <lb/>
I lings very ii <lb/>
pie quit looking -v <lb/>
h on the dark and <lb/>
and predicting s <lb/>
i may never come. People <lb/>
and<lb/>
u to have no spark of <lb/>
that it is well with <lb/>
ti ah it is. They have looked <lb/>
u the dark so <lb/>
i y black to them- <lb/>
L ti f have depended <lb/>
a and busted too much <lb/>
gold and f trust- <lb/>
in Cod for guidance. <lb/>
your hope and talk <lb/>
increase your faith <lb/>
inn look for the bright in <lb/>
picture, this world <lb/>
generally what they ate con- <lb/>
out for. make <lb/>
up your mind for some- <lb/>
encouraging. Don't <lb/>
in dumps- sours human <lb/>
nature. If you cannot rind a <lb/>
bright spot, make <lb/>
circle will <lb/>
like these that some a <lb/>
thrown in the will <lb/>
take others. <lb/>
of good cheer. It your <lb/>
lot is a hard one, lake hem I <lb/>
hope and strive for bolter things. <lb/>
Look around and bee bow <lb/>
are not as well off as you are. <lb/>
will create and a desire <lb/>
to ameliorate their condition, <lb/>
thus you beget a bond of <lb/>
thy which gives <lb/>
Prosperity is largely determined <lb/>
by human effort faith Cod. <lb/>
Durham <lb/>
brought with him a copy <lb/>
some of he found posted <lb/>
a hotel dining room. <lb/>
tone it <lb/>
The betel was the <lb/>
window with such that <lb/>
i look out of the <lb/>
l-ii I Sew <lb/>
l professes <lb/>
He <lb/>
and, addition lo drawing <lb/>
business<lb/>
gen is with shooting <lb/>
i t i i Ian. i-ii Democratic party New <lb/>
but she laid him low with a fence , . . J . <lb/>
Creek, Co. J- f-J-f to him <lb/>
Marine o, j . for came out to grapple with her,. l <lb/>
h any with a rail- <lb/>
r Mr Smith <lb/>
in bi letter that <lb/>
o and populists have <lb/>
and integrity <lb/>
of The Constitution, and for this <lb/>
he asks for information in <lb/>
rail, and then went to the house; <lb/>
and threw all his bottles of <lb/>
or other weapons must . <lb/>
, , the gutter, breaking <lb/>
them before entering the ,, . . , , . <lb/>
. ., , I The couple ha I a <lb/>
Waiters too scarce to, <lb/>
be killed. <lb/>
are requested not to at- <lb/>
of any nature that attention by <lb/>
the business at n o This is no <lb/>
Mr. Bewail- deaf mate asylum. <lb/>
The know. kinds pie given <lb/>
Bewail, of Maine, as a pr with <lb/>
a are changed every <lb/>
national bank. As to <lb/>
be is a member of a Ma-j food an of best <lb/>
Protective Association, we do I is pure, eggs <lb/>
not know, a butter speaks for <lb/>
however, it is probable he <lb/>
may a mom per a marine <lb/>
in- court the next day now <lb/>
live happily together with a per- <lb/>
understanding of each other's <lb/>
humors. <lb/>
Everything for <lb/>
The Press Bureau at the Na- <lb/>
Democratic headquarters <lb/>
has issued the following state- <lb/>
York for years in one good office <lb/>
after another. But he never <lb/>
forgiven the for Ii <lb/>
shot one of his legs off never <lb/>
fails to avail himself of an <lb/>
to talk about the war and <lb/>
to traduce the South. He hates <lb/>
because has <lb/>
always kindly toward <lb/>
and bag ii more than <lb/>
its share i f the public patronage, <lb/>
his being <lb/>
many soldiers. <lb/>
and ho is equally vicious toward <lb/>
Bryan on account of bis <lb/>
toward this section. Ho has <lb/>
Based upon the present out-. <lb/>
. . ., f . just cent out a letter to army <lb/>
took the following estimate of , , .- , . , <lb/>
association, just as it is pro a <lb/>
that a prominent farmer may be a <lb/>
member of the grange, or the <lb/>
or some association look <lb/>
to the mutual benefit of <lb/>
cur a. We do not know whether <lb/>
Mr. Bewail baa any <lb/>
a railroad , but for tho sate <lb/>
of argument, that he has- <lb/>
The main thing that re know <lb/>
of Arthur is that for <lb/>
m i i years ho has been in favor <lb/>
tipping waiters must <lb/>
pay funeral in case one <lb/>
should die from heart disease. <lb/>
more than six eggs will be <lb/>
give each at a sitting. Any guest <lb/>
found work off shells on <lb/>
Bryan's majorities is <lb/>
A boon, Arkansas, <lb/>
California, <lb/>
Delaware, Florida, <lb/>
Georgia, Idaho, <lb/>
Illinois, <lb/>
all in which <lb/>
he Bays, among other things, <lb/>
Bryan and many o bis supporters <lb/>
combine tho South <lb/>
are trying to <lb/>
and West against North <lb/>
East. This is sectionalism, of <lb/>
which the rebellion was the off- <lb/>
Arguing against free <lb/>
a neighbor will be fired from Iowa, Kan n , ,,., . .-The a <lb/>
table <lb/>
-Biscuits found I <lb/>
be opened with a e <lb/>
supplied by a waiter- he use <lb/>
of dynamite strictly forbid- <lb/>
den. <lb/>
he <lb/>
Kentucky Louts. , ; ., the of lie would be <lb/>
Maryland, Michigan. wilt, tie of <lb/>
and pen <lb/>
Montana, . J . Ty ., , <lb/>
Nebraska, <lb/>
North Ohio, <lb/>
Car- <lb/>
fact that he i a capitalist and <lb/>
president of a national bank, and <lb/>
in the face the fact that the <lb/>
public sentiment around him has <lb/>
. I the free and unlimited coin age articles of food. j, <lb/>
of silver. He has held this must be settled outside. Texas, j , <lb/>
it in the face of the lasso the Matters, be- Utah, Virginia, <lb/>
nearly <lb/>
; the <lb/>
; they must not be <lb/>
the guest who can't throw Washington, West again, of the de- <lb/>
the rope will be n a Wisconsin, the authority of the <lb/>
tag-. i Wyoming, <lb/>
can take off their <lb/>
Wyoming, <lb/>
These estimates <lb/>
if they want to, but must <lb/>
been is violently in , <lb/>
on their <lb/>
Bryan <lb/>
twenty-six out of forty -five <lb/>
electoral <lb/>
the gold standard. The <lb/>
to Mr. Sewn is based on <lb/>
his bank connection is both blind <lb/>
and ignorant. Constitution <lb/>
is of the opinion that Mr. <lb/>
position in favor of free <lb/>
at a time when ho had <lb/>
to gain by it but a good <lb/>
deal lo is as high a tribute <lb/>
as not Id be paid to the people's <lb/>
cause. More than that, it is a <lb/>
tribute to bis own earnestness <lb/>
aDd patriotism, and to Ins <lb/>
strength of <lb/>
The Salve to the Cuts <lb/>
Sore. Salt Fe <lb/>
v.-i- Chapped Hands <lb/>
and -Skill <lb/>
and positively r on <lb/>
pay to give <lb/>
perfect satisfaction or <lb/>
per For sale by <lb/>
L. Hooter. <lb/>
The burn lbs hurter is I on the <lb/>
hill. <lb/>
The mist i he moonshine is over the <lb/>
September<lb/>
In Georgia. <lb/>
The voice of the candidate's heard on <lb/>
the stump ; <lb/>
The rabbits an scared, and they give <lb/>
the jump; <lb/>
September<lb/>
In <lb/>
The is loud at the <lb/>
door, <lb/>
strikes me I've gazed on that state- <lb/>
before <lb/>
September <lb/>
Georgia. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
o Hail for the <lb/>
A lanterned-jawed young man <lb/>
called at The <lb/>
and <lb/>
fer the <lb/>
replied tho mas <lb/>
fer Jane <lb/>
Anything fer Ace <lb/>
for Bill <lb/>
fer Tom <lb/>
tell you, <lb/>
tool Joe <lb/>
nor Jim Watts, nor any <lb/>
other Watts, dead or living, <lb/>
born, native or foreign, civilized <lb/>
or uncivilized, savage or <lb/>
male or female, white or <lb/>
black, franchised or <lb/>
ed, naturalized or otherwise. No <lb/>
there is positively <lb/>
any of the Watt's, either <lb/>
severally, jointly, now <lb/>
forever, one and inseparable. <lb/>
and the courts U interfere <lb/>
mobs; new doctrine <lb/>
is worse the old secession <lb/>
heresy you put down with your <lb/>
W silence tho new <lb/>
heresy by out Wire <lb/>
ill-tempered warrior <lb/>
urges the Grand Army of the Be- <lb/>
including the noble <lb/>
of to vote for <lb/>
who manifested <lb/>
his love for his country by <lb/>
his musket serving for <lb/>
two years as a private sol- <lb/>
In the face of such <lb/>
as this, tho Observer appeals <lb/>
with confidence to its readers to <lb/>
lay aside whatever of <lb/>
opinion there may exist between <lb/>
the Democratic candidate and <lb/>
them as to the financial question <lb/>
and up for <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
Bring your Poultry and to Win- <lb/>
The <lb/>
That was so good t. up I mil <lb/>
Mi Bryan gate Mr, <lb/>
last Monday, his record, that <lb/>
like keeping before our <lb/>
readers. It is especially good as <lb/>
being answer by <lb/>
to all the of <lb/>
about prosperity their <lb/>
policy has given the farmers of <lb/>
the laud. air. <lb/>
was sallied lo it by the following, <lb/>
which Air. said one <lb/>
of like that on <lb/>
at week <lb/>
the <lb/>
for more <lb/>
than thirty years the most mar- <lb/>
prosperity that has ever <lb/>
been given to nation of the <lb/>
world. We net only had <lb/>
prosperity, but we <lb/>
Mr. Bryan his speech called <lb/>
attention to the fact, and read the <lb/>
following, which wrote <lb/>
hied with the bill <lb/>
1800. <lb/>
there is widespread de- <lb/>
in this industry <lb/>
I today cannot be doubled. <lb/>
One of now <lb/>
prevalent among our farmers is <lb/>
that they get no for <lb/>
their crops U <lb/>
with the labor and capital invest- <lb/>
ed in their production. W . have <lb/>
not believed that our <lb/>
already suffering from low puces <lb/>
or will be satisfied with <lb/>
which will result u lower <lb/>
prise lap country ever <lb/>
pi ices were fairly <lb/>
AN RHYME <lb/>
The autumn winds they sweep <lb/>
i stars are <lb/>
A id sing a sung <lb/>
please, in <lb/>
The lie-ills Will <lb/>
Around die board we'll lee. . <lb/>
Sate sheltered from item. <lb/>
sharp an <lb/>
hat care we the p or, <lb/>
It scarcely a glance <lb/>
Behold e <lb/>
Sally, will you dance <lb/>
Highest of all in Leavening S. Report <lb/>
rid.<lb/>
The Next President. <lb/>
Tl <lb/>
for Scandal. <lb/>
Here is a cure for a terrible <lb/>
of the mouth <lb/>
called t f c d <lb/>
one oases; of a <lb/>
d by the Indians y- <lb/>
one mix <lb/>
with I-. little for <lb/>
two or three sprigs i f <lb/>
between yon tee <lb/>
Tue symptoms <lb/>
i violent itching of tin <lb/>
and of the mouth, which <lb/>
takes place when you are in <lb/>
com pan v of a species animals <lb/>
called gossips; you feel a <lb/>
tit of it coming on take a spoon <lb/>
of the mixture, hold it <lb/>
mouth, which you will keep close <lb/>
shut till yon get home, and you <lb/>
will find a complete cure- Should <lb/>
you a relapse, keep a <lb/>
small about you, on <lb/>
the repeat the <lb/>
Never. <lb/>
Never be <lb/>
you have to turn a grindstone. <lb/>
a lot l cranks in this world to be <lb/>
tinned. <lb/>
Never allow to get the <lb/>
will cost you more tor a hat. <lb/>
Never turn a new you <lb/>
have something sensible to write on the <lb/>
page. <lb/>
Never bang your head, even if you <lb/>
are will attend the <lb/>
hanging, <lb/>
O n . <lb/>
cease to advertise your <lb/>
it you have anything worth selling <lb/>
mg, or want attention. <lb/>
People are and have to be <lb/>
by reminded of things, even in <lb/>
the tile households <lb/>
ii. . <lb/>
ON A BRASS <lb/>
Ton have th- <lb/>
Upward of <lb/>
But there is ;. in a trace <lb/>
Of all tan and known, <lb/>
ft In -our <lb/>
Of the gladness, joy and tho <lb/>
That have past in hundred <lb/>
only .- m tho boars, <lb/>
the sorrows w of men, <lb/>
ho Hint w ti. and <lb/>
The deeds that in story, <lb/>
Tho lives that w re love united, <lb/>
now as <lb/>
Is the mightiest men. <lb/>
Tim, which destroys so much, <lb/>
Whoso servant and are, <lb/>
Who holds world In his amp <lb/>
who all men at last <lb/>
none may hi-i <lb/>
On leaves never a <lb/>
Ho is powerless to hurt and mar. <lb/>
For time is of this only. <lb/>
And. ho doth all things slay, <lb/>
f et for us a distant shore. <lb/>
When- he shall he powerless to harm us, <lb/>
love is triumphant <lb/>
And and distrust are passed away. <lb/>
And that was faithful ever stay. <lb/>
--Academy. <lb/>
Yankee Sleds Beat Swiss Coasters. <lb/>
The original has for <lb/>
long remained sufficient for <lb/>
probably because <lb/>
the pastime with thorn, is hardly <lb/>
morn than the original means of lo- <lb/>
it provided for tho Indians, <lb/>
and in speed was never <lb/>
a possibility. Tho <lb/>
Swiss was destined to a <lb/>
far shorter supremacy when put to <lb/>
the keen tests of the racing that de- <lb/>
it. Men soon all that <lb/>
was in the way speed out <lb/>
of Sifting on a wooden framework <lb/>
balanced upon flat iron bars. And <lb/>
Mr. L. P. Child of Nor sup- <lb/>
The boy looked up at the highest market prices. <lb/>
in astonishment and said and and <lb/>
look if there is much as any <lb/>
thing fer John Thomas <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
i plied want by producing J the <lb/>
great industry fore-, winter of ,,., <lb/>
most n beat every rider in <lb/>
out of native <lb/>
of The <lb/>
r, with i v. i <lb/>
i-. every rural editor la pi <lb/>
on the <lb/>
i , <lb/>
c an .- <lb/>
. when <lb/>
parsed bis <lb/>
. . . toward <lb/>
ti i <lb/>
i., .- in-.- <lb/>
lake tin <lb/>
. . the <lb/>
course It will be a picture <lb/>
if man you want <lb/>
the editor, who was opposed <lb/>
politically to the <lb/>
sir, it will be a picture of <lb/>
the next <lb/>
The was getting rather <lb/>
wrought up. <lb/>
you he <lb/>
put up my check for <lb/>
it will be the correct <lb/>
responded the <lb/>
The editor scratched his dome <lb/>
of <lb/>
not very he said, <lb/>
give you that <lb/>
tee for a cut of the picture to <lb/>
in my <lb/>
It locked like a cinch for the <lb/>
editor, and seven told the <lb/>
he was a plum <lb/>
but he drew up a contract <lb/>
tor the editor to sign binding him <lb/>
to pay for the <lb/>
guaranteeing it to be <lb/>
stalled on <lb/>
train. <lb/>
that cut buck here time <lb/>
tor called <lb/>
editor. <lb/>
the <lb/>
nothing <lb/>
in this contract about when I am <lb/>
to take tho picture. cant take <lb/>
It after election, of course, <lb/>
under my guarantee, and you <lb/>
ought to know <lb/>
Then tho scrap, began, and at <lb/>
last all of that end of <lb/>
New Jersey was taking sides. <lb/>
our Its success <lb/>
and prosperity to the <lb/>
nation. Bo is possible <lb/>
to other if agriculture <lb/>
languish. The depression in <lb/>
agriculture is cot to the <lb/>
United States- The reports of <lb/>
the Agricultural in- <lb/>
this distress in <lb/>
that Great France, and <lb/>
Germany are in a larger <lb/>
degree the farmers of the <lb/>
United <lb/>
Every man who has paid any <lb/>
lo what is on <lb/>
the agricultural districts knows <lb/>
that the farming interest is more <lb/>
depressed today than it was 1890, <lb/>
thus it is still going down- <lb/>
ward- But, notwithstanding this, <lb/>
the republican National <lb/>
resolved that things must <lb/>
stay as they are for tour years <lb/>
more, as far as they are concerned- <lb/>
Is it that on the <lb/>
farms they are Bryan <lb/>
as a deliverer Dis- <lb/>
patch- <lb/>
imported. Ho rode it lying head <lb/>
first on his side, steering with one <lb/>
foot swinging out be- <lb/>
hind, after the method familiar on <lb/>
the chutes of Montreal. <lb/>
Owing to local prejudice <lb/>
it, this bead first position had not <lb/>
penetrated to Switzerland till long <lb/>
after it had boon well known else- <lb/>
where. But oven the introduction of <lb/>
the new position was not so <lb/>
an advance as was tho long <lb/>
Meat for Japan's Navy. <lb/>
The Kansas City Star <lb/>
A month or six weeks <lb/>
ago the Armour Packing <lb/>
of Kansas City, began <lb/>
with the Japanese govern- <lb/>
The were car- <lb/>
by Japanese <lb/>
agents acting by direct govern- <lb/>
mental authority, and a few days <lb/>
ago the contract was awarded to <lb/>
Armour company, of this city. <lb/>
The specifications arrived lately <lb/>
by mail to avoid the great ex- <lb/>
incident to the transmission <lb/>
so much by cable. Ac- <lb/>
cording to the specifications, tn- <lb/>
Armour Company is to <lb/>
carloads of canned bet f <lb/>
to the the <lb/>
Eighteen 041-8 compose a <lb/>
train, and the <lb/>
considers the co. tract a vast <lb/>
one- it is intended to make the <lb/>
entire shipment within ten days <lb/>
already men women <lb/>
are now at work this contract <lb/>
alone. <lb/>
About two years ago, during <lb/>
the war with China, the company <lb/>
furnished meat to the Japanese <lb/>
soldiers and sailors, and it is sup <lb/>
posed that the appetite for the <lb/>
American product was <lb/>
at that time. The Armour <lb/>
MOW <lb/>
Babies In Maples Trash <lb/>
Or.,.,, i, . <lb/>
An interesting account of the w-y <lb/>
in young children are <lb/>
ed to the I given by <lb/>
Dr. de a Neapolitan <lb/>
who has boon studying <lb/>
Its of criminals. The at <lb/>
Naples, like the Mafia in Sicily, is <lb/>
an organization of criminals and as- <lb/>
of criminals that is <lb/>
old. The its <lb/>
work with the infants who are <lb/>
abandoned by their parents, or who <lb/>
re out to impostors <lb/>
beg in streets of Naples. Those <lb/>
for the most part those <lb/>
persons in prison, are taught to beg <lb/>
for tho end of a or a and <lb/>
infest the In winter they <lb/>
sleep in holes and stables. In sum <lb/>
mer on steps, under arch- <lb/>
ways or on the benches in the <lb/>
When they or years old <lb/>
they are instructed in bogging nod <lb/>
thieving by older children. At <lb/>
years of ago tho little <lb/>
or little thief, becomes a <lb/>
Ho must know how to <lb/>
improvise a song to the girls and <lb/>
an extemporaneous <lb/>
to tho verso of a companion or of <lb/>
antagonist. In Naples Micro are <lb/>
two armies of belong- <lb/>
to tho streets in the port <lb/>
of tho city and one to those of the <lb/>
west end. constitute tho <lb/>
of the and <lb/>
in public, passing their examinations <lb/>
by night the streets. They <lb/>
for tho of their chants any- <lb/>
thing that takes in the city, <lb/>
and very tho object of <lb/>
songs is an old man or a poor idiot. <lb/>
The hotter class hoar these <lb/>
but do not interfere and often laugh <lb/>
at the wit- which is scarcely over <lb/>
missing. Tho two <lb/>
great rivals, a year <lb/>
at hast they defy to a <lb/>
series of battles in stones are <lb/>
the weapons, and at close of <lb/>
fray knives too often come into play. <lb/>
This practice of battles with stones <lb/>
among tho boys can be traced back <lb/>
as far as 1625, for at that period the <lb/>
Duke of Alva caused <lb/>
to arrested in Naples. <lb/>
of the boys is <lb/>
the derivation of which is <lb/>
not certain. After the come <lb/>
the challenge in form of a verse, <lb/>
to which the enemy responds like- <lb/>
wise. <lb/>
Then the young boys commence <lb/>
tho attack. The flee, but <lb/>
t no great stand old and <lb/>
young men, who tho rival <lb/>
bands and if necessary or <lb/>
the other of them from an by <lb/>
the police. Two ago there <lb/>
was a famous of this kind in <lb/>
Piazza which ended in a <lb/>
fight between the police and the <lb/>
tone throwers, daring which the <lb/>
trams were stopped for some time. <lb/>
This at tho first drawing <lb/>
of blood. A slight scratch received <lb/>
by of tho members of the <lb/>
parties puts an end to the battle-. <lb/>
Tho wounded boy is surrounded by <lb/>
bis friends and taken to his mother, <lb/>
real or adopted, to hound and <lb/>
nursed. songs sung by the boys <lb/>
have always a and generally <lb/>
there two soloists, who sing a <lb/>
verse in turn, is ended by a <lb/>
refrain sung by the chorus, a mere <lb/>
oh I Ah, In <lb/>
form these youths express the <lb/>
knowledge have of the worst <lb/>
evils and of human <lb/>
are realistic and without <lb/>
least gleam of <lb/>
don News. <lb/>
spring runner of Mr. Child's ma- is intend. <lb/>
by moans of j , , . , , <lb/>
I ed for the Japanese navy- It has <lb/>
been stated in the press dis- <lb/>
patches more than once of late <lb/>
that Japan was contemplating <lb/>
the construction and equipment <lb/>
of the largest floating armament <lb/>
was far more accurate and <lb/>
than with the old flat <lb/>
Mr. E. Cohen, <lb/>
another American, by winning the <lb/>
best race at St. sitting on <lb/>
of the new clipper sleds, proved <lb/>
the merits of the right . <lb/>
machine, oven when it was ridden in the world, it is more than <lb/>
to the wrong way, and showed that <lb/>
on hard ice as well as on the snow <lb/>
of the the now machines <lb/>
fend methods were a great advance. <lb/>
Alabama's supply of red cedar is <lb/>
exhausted. This state was once the <lb/>
chief of supply of the United <lb/>
Mates. <lb/>
probable that the beef will be <lb/>
consumed by the Oriental sailors- <lb/>
It hardly be meant for the <lb/>
as they easy ac- <lb/>
to fresh meat practically all <lb/>
time- <lb/>
Five thousand cattle in all <lb/>
must be to flU the <lb/>
Steve <lb/>
Answering a question asked by a <lb/>
paper, <lb/>
I bad the first <lb/>
thing I would do would be to build <lb/>
a home for the in every <lb/>
largo in the United States; also <lb/>
a home for working girls, a Keeley <lb/>
cure for drunkards, a <lb/>
library in every hare the Chi- <lb/>
river water washed; have the <lb/>
end of South Clark street fences in, <lb/>
so they could all be by themselves <lb/>
pay some of your <lb/>
money enough to retire, that they <lb/>
could never be candidates again <lb/>
give what money is kicking to keep <lb/>
the streets clean; pay an honest <lb/>
man to see that the <lb/>
are put where they and <lb/>
last, out not least, buy the street t <lb/>
so love, for my use, the<lb/>
Proved <lb/>
The building blocks had been <lb/>
a dispute in the nursery. <lb/>
worth just as yon <lb/>
exclaimed the letter H. <lb/>
replied the let- <lb/>
G. you were worth anything <lb/>
at all, English would never drop <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
The <lb/>
only one thing the arm- <lb/>
less wonder can't do with bis <lb/>
aid <lb/>
said Jones. j <lb/>
on his gloves<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017815_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
at post office at Green <lb/>
as matte <lb/>
September <lb/>
LETTER <lb/>
From our Regular respondent. <lb/>
Washington, Sept <lb/>
The silver men have had plenty <lb/>
of encouraging news from other <lb/>
States to make up for <lb/>
stories from New York <lb/>
indicates the almost certain loss <lb/>
of that State. It is by <lb/>
that the fusion which <lb/>
has been completed in North <lb/>
Carolina between democrats and <lb/>
populists makes that State <lb/>
for In Kentucky the <lb/>
democrats and populists <lb/>
satisfactory fused, which places <lb/>
that State in the column. <lb/>
A letter received at silver head- <lb/>
quarters from D. W. Atkinson, <lb/>
president of Free Silver Club, <lb/>
of Sparta, Mich., is <lb/>
bound to win in Michigan, be- <lb/>
cause every party in the State <lb/>
has advocated free until <lb/>
the present campaign, and there <lb/>
are thousands of republicans and <lb/>
prohibitionists who can't and <lb/>
wont surrender the conviction of <lb/>
a life time at the command of a <lb/>
few politicians who change color <lb/>
in a single night. In any ordinary <lb/>
campaign the democrats and <lb/>
populists combined are a tight <lb/>
match for republicans, <lb/>
now when thousands of <lb/>
and hundreds of <lb/>
cans, are joining us there can be <lb/>
no of the <lb/>
John C Cannon, of Kansas, <lb/>
need have no fears about <lb/>
Kansas, as the leading <lb/>
cans themselves in private con- <lb/>
concede Kansas to <lb/>
an. I have a bet a leading <lb/>
republican that Bryan's majority <lb/>
will not be less and I <lb/>
offered to increase the bet and he <lb/>
declined. A republican poll of <lb/>
the State shows that Bryan will <lb/>
carry it by over Mr. J. <lb/>
W. Armstrong, of Richmond; Mo., <lb/>
says Bryan will carry that State <lb/>
by more majority, and <lb/>
there id equally encouraging <lb/>
from Indiana, Iowa and <lb/>
Illinois- <lb/>
capitalists have no <lb/>
votes, unless retain a <lb/>
in one of the <lb/>
States, as some of them do, but <lb/>
they are trying to control the <lb/>
votes all those who happen to <lb/>
be in their debt, as may be seen <lb/>
by tho following letter which was <lb/>
to a Virginia <lb/>
you aware, the of <lb/>
free silver gold respectively <lb/>
declare that if their candidates <lb/>
are elected the country cuter <lb/>
upon an era of prosperity- They <lb/>
respectively declare that if the <lb/>
other side is elected misery and <lb/>
trouble will be the result- As I <lb/>
favor I believe that <lb/>
within a few days after the <lb/>
of Bryan all gold the <lb/>
Treasury will be withdrawn, and <lb/>
there will be a terrible panic in <lb/>
money affairs, from which it will <lb/>
take the country many years to <lb/>
emerge. After Bryan's election <lb/>
one the first things done will <lb/>
be the calling in of all debts by <lb/>
because they do not <lb/>
wish to be paid cents for each <lb/>
dollar loaned. I hope you will <lb/>
not regard this letter as a threat <lb/>
or an intimation that you should <lb/>
vote than you <lb/>
believe to right. Our <lb/>
company will do after election <lb/>
just what you would do under <lb/>
the same circumstances- I hope <lb/>
you will be able to take up your <lb/>
note and collateral before <lb/>
This letter needs no com- <lb/>
it is a shame <lb/>
that there is co law to reach and <lb/>
properly punish the men who <lb/>
write such letters- <lb/>
THREE CORNERED. <lb/>
D lists and <lb/>
midnight on Monday at <lb/>
the State, committees Dem- <lb/>
and Populist fused on <lb/>
ticket. The Democrat <lb/>
appointed a conference committee com- <lb/>
posed of Manly, Simmons, <lb/>
Webster and Hale to meet <lb/>
list central committee, composed of <lb/>
Aye-, Cy Thompson, A S. Peace, <lb/>
Lloyd and Wilson, at Chairman <lb/>
rooms at Park Hotel. <lb/>
The committees after discussions <lb/>
ed on a f the electors as fol- <lb/>
lows At Urge, Locke Craig. Demo- <lb/>
; It B. Davis, Populist. By dis- <lb/>
First, White, Populist ; <lb/>
Second, II. F. Populist; <lb/>
Third, C. ft Thomas, Democrat <lb/>
Fourth, W. S. Bailey, ; Fifth, <lb/>
William Merritt. Sixth, B. <lb/>
F. Keith, Free Silvey Party ; Seventh, <lb/>
T. F. Klutz, Democrat; Eighth, <lb/>
York, Democrat ; Ninth, 1- B Gil- <lb/>
mer, Democrat. <lb/>
It will he sec that the electoral <lb/>
ticket will Le composed of five Demo- <lb/>
five Populists one <lb/>
Keith, Democrats <lb/>
will vote Bryan and the <lb/>
will voe for Bryan and Wat- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
The informed <lb/>
Democratic committee that it did net <lb/>
regard its contract with as <lb/>
to Congressmen as binding and that H <lb/>
was open to arrangements with the <lb/>
Democrats, it one could be made. It <lb/>
was stated that both committees had <lb/>
appointed to confer on <lb/>
this matter. <lb/>
A CHARMING TOWN. <lb/>
Here is a diamond, here a piece <lb/>
charcoal. Both carbon . between <lb/>
them stands mightiest of magicians <lb/>
Nature. The food on your table, and <lb/>
your own body ; the same, <lb/>
vet between the two stands the <lb/>
the arbiter of growth or decline, <lb/>
lite or death. <lb/>
We cannot make a diamond, we can- <lb/>
not make flesh, blood and bone. No. <lb/>
by means of the Shaker Digestive <lb/>
Cordial we can enable the stomach to <lb/>
digest food which would otherwise fer- <lb/>
and poison the system. In all <lb/>
forms of dyspepsia incipient con- <lb/>
with weakness, loss of flesh, <lb/>
thin blood, nervous prostration the <lb/>
dial is the successful remedy. Taken <lb/>
with food it relieves at once. It <lb/>
and assist nature to nourish <lb/>
trial to show its merit <lb/>
cents, <lb/>
is the best for <lb/>
Doctors recommend it in place <lb/>
of Castor Oil. <lb/>
Good Cotton ticking. <lb/>
Worth an 18-year old boy <lb/>
who lives in No. township, makes a <lb/>
splendid record in cotton <lb/>
For eighteen work days he has aver- <lb/>
aged pounds each day, and on <lb/>
Wednesday last the young fellow pull- <lb/>
ed out pounds. Mr. picked <lb/>
several hundred pounds more than <lb/>
three bales during the three weeks, <lb/>
The editor spent a very pleasant day <lb/>
Wednesday in the delightful town of <lb/>
Scotland For a town its sire <lb/>
we believe there is more culture, refine- <lb/>
and among people <lb/>
Scotland than any town in the <lb/>
State. <lb/>
Our business over there was <lb/>
at the office the Commonwealth, and <lb/>
while we Editor Milliard a very <lb/>
busy and hard-worked he took <lb/>
time to show us around point <lb/>
several the town's enterprises. There <lb/>
are lumber and milling plants, carriage <lb/>
factories, knitting u-ills, chewing gum <lb/>
factory and other industries that give <lb/>
employment to ninny hands and add <lb/>
much to the general prosperity of the <lb/>
community. <lb/>
Scotland has some splendid <lb/>
mercantile establishments also, and <lb/>
singling out one these to speak of no <lb/>
A visitor cannot be otherwise than <lb/>
with the of M Hoffman <lb/>
Bro. A quarter a century ago the <lb/>
head of this firm, Mr. M. Hoffman, <lb/>
went to town a poor man, and in <lb/>
these years he by indomitable en- <lb/>
amassed a fortune and built up an <lb/>
establishment would do credit to a <lb/>
city. The and others <lb/>
d an I <lb/>
Tin- never feels like <lb/>
passing but one criticism upon the bus- <lb/>
nun of Scotland if we may <lb/>
be pardoned for mentioning it. That <lb/>
is the apparent support they <lb/>
give their home paper as indicated by <lb/>
us advertising Tiny not <lb/>
seem to appreciate the treasure they <lb/>
have in Mr. Milliard and his paper. <lb/>
The excellent editorial work of the Com- <lb/>
faithfully presents the moral, <lb/>
social and intellectual advantages of the <lb/>
town, and its advertising columns ought <lb/>
to be able to show to the outside world <lb/>
the town's splendid b and <lb/>
trial features as veil. <lb/>
Hew to Kill Your <lb/>
Buy of peddlers as much and as of- <lb/>
ten as possible. <lb/>
Denounce your merchants because <lb/>
they make a profit on their goods. <lb/>
Make out your town a very bad place <lb/>
and state it every chance you get. <lb/>
Glory in the downfall a man who <lb/>
has done much to build up the town. <lb/>
Refuse to unite in any scheme for the <lb/>
betterment the material interests <lb/>
the people. <lb/>
If you are a merchant don't advertise <lb/>
in the home papers, buy a rubber stamp <lb/>
and use it. <lb/>
Patronize newspapers to the <lb/>
exclusion of your and denounce <lb/>
yours for not being as large and <lb/>
cheap as the big city papers. <lb/>
If you are a farmer curse the place <lb/>
where you trade as the meanest on <lb/>
Sin. <lb/>
Tell merchants you can buy <lb/>
goods a good dad cheaper in some <lb/>
town, and charge him with <lb/>
If a stranger comes to town, tell him <lb/>
is overdone mid predict a <lb/>
general crash in the town in the near <lb/>
future. <lb/>
Keep up a divided public sentiment <lb/>
and knife every man that disagrees with <lb/>
you on the best methods of <lb/>
business. <lb/>
A curious contract or bet was made <lb/>
last night at the Feast. A young <lb/>
lady said she would marry a <lb/>
young man it Bryan was elected. The <lb/>
young man in return said if <lb/>
was elected he would marry her. There <lb/>
is sure o be a wedding. <lb/>
Standing on the platform at the de- <lb/>
pot Thursday, two colored men stood <lb/>
talking in earnest conversation when <lb/>
the bearing Mr. Bryan and es- <lb/>
rolled in, and seeing the great <lb/>
mass of humanity making such a rush <lb/>
and huddling together, one said to <lb/>
the Lord, how <lb/>
dis Is all people vote <lb/>
for man He'll be right <lb/>
Standard. <lb/>
Last Tear and This <lb/>
A few days ago a practical farmer, <lb/>
and a good judge of was <lb/>
out at the Warehouses walking around <lb/>
looking at prices. The sales were <lb/>
over and he had examined several <lb/>
he walked into the office and said <lb/>
to one of the warehouseman, I <lb/>
have a good lot of all graded <lb/>
out which should like to sell, but <lb/>
really tobacco is so low that I hate to <lb/>
put mine on the now. <lb/>
The warehouseman to go <lb/>
with him back the and without <lb/>
looking at the price at which the <lb/>
co sold that day asked him to price it <lb/>
according to the way it sold last year. <lb/>
pile the farmer examined <lb/>
pretty closely and finally said, <lb/>
lust year that tobacco would have sold <lb/>
for lo The <lb/>
showed him the tag and it was marked <lb/>
said the farmer <lb/>
just picked out that pile because it sold <lb/>
said the tobacco <lb/>
man, will examine any pile on the <lb/>
in the presence of a number <lb/>
of farmers they went to several piles a-id <lb/>
there not a single pile that did not <lb/>
sell for more money that day than it <lb/>
priced by last years prices. <lb/>
The trouble year with tobacco <lb/>
this, it is by tar the most inferior crop <lb/>
that we have ever bad and farmers are <lb/>
not governed so much by the quality of <lb/>
the as they are by the p-ices <lb/>
they got last year for tobacco that was <lb/>
a least on an average per cent bet- <lb/>
than this crop, a great deal of <lb/>
the talk of low pries. <lb/>
PHYSICIAN'S BLACK LIST. <lb/>
Owing to bad collections for the past <lb/>
years to the <lb/>
medical bills by many of our patients, <lb/>
we the undersigned have each and every <lb/>
one pledged to abide by t he <lb/>
following <lb/>
1st. That all worthy poor who would <lb/>
if they could will receive careful, <lb/>
and cheerful attention at our <lb/>
id. That we no longer work for <lb/>
any person who can but will not pay <lb/>
their medical account, or will not nuke <lb/>
arrangements about settle- <lb/>
t saint-. <lb/>
That will put a Black <lb/>
ii; circulation among ourselves, upon <lb/>
which will be the names each <lb/>
and every who has made <lb/>
satisfactory arrangements as to the set- <lb/>
of his or her medical <lb/>
count. <lb/>
4th. That person MUM in <lb/>
this Black List cannot ob- <lb/>
from any of us, <lb/>
any except that <lb/>
they pay up the.- bills due each <lb/>
and everyone of the undersigned or <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
0th. That this Black List shall go <lb/>
into January 1st, 1897, beginning <lb/>
with those who have tailed to make <lb/>
satisfactory in regard to <lb/>
settlement of medical bills u; to <lb/>
date. <lb/>
That a copy these resolutions <lb/>
be lacked up in all portions of the <lb/>
and printed in the and <lb/>
Weekly, so as to give all men <lb/>
fair warning we will no longer <lb/>
work without pay. <lb/>
Dr. W. H. Bagwell, Greenville, M. O <lb/>
Dr. W. L. Best, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Bynum, Farmville, N. C. <lb/>
Dr. Frank W. Brown, Greenville, <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Dr. Jesse Brown, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. Brown, Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. B. X. C. <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox, N. C <lb/>
Dr. Joseph Dixon, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. It J. Grimes, Bethel, N. C, <lb/>
Dr. F. C. Jame-, Bethel, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. Johnson, <lb/>
X. c. <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. Morrill, Falkland, N. C. <lb/>
Dr. Sun Farmville, <lb/>
Dr. E. A. Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
Dr. C. J. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Dr. William E. Greenville, <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Dr. Wm. Cobb <lb/>
Superior Court <lb/>
The following cases on the criminal <lb/>
docket have been heard since our last <lb/>
R. T. Turnage, concealed <lb/>
weapons, not guilty. <lb/>
William larceny re- <lb/>
submits, sentenced one year in <lb/>
penitentiary. <lb/>
George murder, g in sec <lb/>
degree, sentenced y an in <lb/>
K v Edwards, assault n <lb/>
to commit rep, guilty. <lb/>
James Moore, <lb/>
and costs. <lb/>
Orange carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, judgment suspended <lb/>
on payment of costs. <lb/>
J. A Whichard, bastardy, guilty. <lb/>
J. J. Jones, retailing with mt license, <lb/>
guilty. <lb/>
Edward Langley and Warren, <lb/>
affray, submit, judgment suspended on <lb/>
payment of cost. <lb/>
Williams, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, judgment suspended. <lb/>
W. S. Briley, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, guilty, judgment suspended <lb/>
on payment of costs. <lb/>
Griffin, larceny, submits. <lb/>
Alfred Crandall and Kate Crandall. <lb/>
assault deadly weapon, guilty, <lb/>
suspends, <lb/>
Jesse Hill, and Louis Arnold, affray, <lb/>
guilty, each fined and costs. <lb/>
Louis Arnold, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapons, submits fined and costs. <lb/>
Orange Foreman alias Orange <lb/>
with deadly weapon, <lb/>
guilty, fined and costs. <lb/>
J. R. Smith, retailing without license <lb/>
submits, fined and costs, two <lb/>
cases- <lb/>
It. T. Turnage, with deadly- <lb/>
weapon, submits, fined and costs. <lb/>
Ira Porter, disturbing religious <lb/>
ship, submits, fined <lb/>
J, J. S. Fred <lb/>
and Peter lines, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon. J. S. not guilty, others <lb/>
guilty. J. J. fined Fred <lb/>
fined suspended on Peter <lb/>
James Brown and W. O. ill, <lb/>
affray, Brown Barnhill not <lb/>
guilty. <lb/>
Clark, carrying to COMB <lb/>
weapon, not guilty. <lb/>
Walter Grimes, assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, guilty, on <lb/>
payment costs. <lb/>
Spell assault with deadly <lb/>
fined costs. <lb/>
James Barker, carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, guilty. <lb/>
Henry K el, assault <lb/>
weapon, guilty, fined and costs. <lb/>
Willis larceny god receiving, <lb/>
guilty. Judgment suspended on payment <lb/>
of cost. <lb/>
Dixie and Alonzo Harris, <lb/>
fray, submit, each fined and <lb/>
W. C. assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, guilty, fined and costs. <lb/>
James Wilson, larceny, guilty, one <lb/>
year in <lb/>
Burton carrying concealed <lb/>
weapon, fined j and costs <lb/>
docket was taken up this <lb/>
morning and the business M b-1 rap- <lb/>
idly pus <lb/>
THE <lb/>
John R. Gentry Paces a Mile in Two <lb/>
Minutes and a Half Second. <lb/>
Portland, Me., September <lb/>
track today the world's <lb/>
was by John It. <lb/>
the horse pacing the fast- <lb/>
est mile ever trade in harness and <lb/>
placing the world's record at only a <lb/>
half second over two minutes, or <lb/>
Gentry was applauded when <lb/>
,. he appeared on the track for his great <lb/>
without . . ,,,.,. , <lb/>
trial speed, lie had out on the <lb/>
track several times before, and had <lb/>
been the of all eyes. <lb/>
When W. S. Andrews drove him on <lb/>
the track for the effort break his <lb/>
record, the air was chilly and a light <lb/>
breeze blew-up the home <lb/>
stretch. His record before starting was <lb/>
J, which he made September 8th, <lb/>
at Glen falls, X. Y., in the heat <lb/>
of a race with Star Pointer. Andrews <lb/>
had driven Gentry two up <lb/>
and it was nearly sunset when my, will no doubt call to <lb/>
ready to start tor the event <lb/>
mile <lb/>
he was <lb/>
mile. <lb/>
A runner appeared with Gentry to <lb/>
pace him. After scaring twice An- <lb/>
came down to the wire to pace <lb/>
the fastest mile ever accomplished by <lb/>
a horse in harness. The crowd cheer- <lb/>
ed as lie approached the starting point. <lb/>
shouted Culbertson <lb/>
watches caught the pacer <lb/>
at the The runner's horse <lb/>
within two feet Gentry's nose as they <lb/>
made the first turn. On the stretch <lb/>
Gentry was going gracefully and <lb/>
getting over the ground in shape, <lb/>
and the runner had to work to <lb/>
keep <lb/>
The first quarter was given by the <lb/>
judges as made in People began <lb/>
to Wonder when the half mile was tin- <lb/>
in j seconds and look tor a <lb/>
two minute pace. At this point the <lb/>
driver was using the whip <lb/>
and making a great effort, and <lb/>
in keeping at the wheel of <lb/>
The third quarter was reeled off in <lb/>
making the at three quarters <lb/>
post This was great going and <lb/>
now came the last and home <lb/>
stretch. <lb/>
As the horses tinned into tho home <lb/>
stretch they caught the wind their <lb/>
teeth. The crowd began to shout and <lb/>
and Andrews <lb/>
to his horse. The runner's <lb/>
driver urged his horse and used <lb/>
the whip sparingly. this nerved <lb/>
tin pacer to u supreme effort and it <lb/>
can be seen how noble an effort he <lb/>
mule, for with the wind his face he <lb/>
made the la-t quicker than the <lb/>
third quarter, doing it in and thus <lb/>
Covering his mile in two and <lb/>
own-hall second. This was a whole <lb/>
second less than his former record, <lb/>
had never been surpassed by <lb/>
any horse, and only equaled by Robert <lb/>
J. at <lb/>
Tommie lives <lb/>
below He i of <lb/>
beet citizens. Ho is <lb/>
a silver man as <lb/>
Brown and occasionally pro- <lb/>
pounds some knotty question for <lb/>
the fold standard people to an- <lb/>
Several days Tom- <lb/>
my came to town to get some <lb/>
medicine from his physician- His <lb/>
happens to a <lb/>
While tho case the <lb/>
doctor lecturing the old <lb/>
farmer about his views on <lb/>
Tommy was attentive to <lb/>
every; argument. At the <lb/>
the lecture, the farm tiller <lb/>
queried his physician and called <lb/>
tor He first asked the <lb/>
doctor if he did not remember his <lb/>
first visit to his house thirty- <lb/>
years ago. The doctor replied <lb/>
that he did. <lb/>
continued Tom- <lb/>
mind that you charged mo <lb/>
for the same price you <lb/>
charge The doctor re- <lb/>
said Uncle Tommy I <lb/>
want to tell you that it took <lb/>
two and one half bushels of my <lb/>
corn to pay you for your first vis- <lb/>
it, while now it takes over seven- <lb/>
Will you tall mo what's, the <lb/>
matter <lb/>
The doctor was too busy to <lb/>
the question <lb/>
Tommy went home telling <lb/>
his friends how ho hail <lb/>
one <lb/>
J B. <lb/>
J. R <lb/>
J G. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
Is tie lowest price any to root Are the best i <lb/>
inducements come and see new <lb/>
which received. Our store is <lb/>
full of New Goods prices <lb/>
lower. <lb/>
To the <lb/>
we extend a cordial invitation t examine our Mock <lb/>
Dress Goods <lb/>
Trimmings <lb/>
We A beautiful end -to-date Hi will i I he <lb/>
latest styles and we know please you. how lovely, how <lb/>
beautiful, tho prettiest Hue I have ever s. en. ii what our lad v friend <lb/>
say We have a large both in c and blacks <lb/>
please you. <lb/>
WOOD and WILLOW WARE <lb/>
HAli COLLARS. <lb/>
TRUNKS, GROCERIES, <lb/>
PROVISIONS. FURNITURE, <lb/>
CHILDREN CARRIAGES, <lb/>
CARPETS. CARPET PAPER, <lb/>
RUGS, LACK CURTAINS. <lb/>
CURTAIN POLES, <lb/>
and any goods you m id n <lb/>
self and family see us. <lb/>
Ladies Gluts FUR <lb/>
GOODS we a <lb/>
splendid line. <lb/>
In LADIES CLOTH for Wraps <lb/>
we have what you want. <lb/>
In and Boys PANTS <lb/>
GOODS we have just tho best <lb/>
stock to be found prices were, <lb/>
never lower. <lb/>
Some queer will i get into court, <lb/>
sometimes. these got into <lb/>
a San Francisco court SHOES. In shoes <lb/>
where a contest was made over a i or to such as will please the <lb/>
will that eras written on a shingle wearer, the prices on Shoes are <lb/>
an old <lb/>
Our object is to II good hon- <lb/>
est goods at lowest <lb/>
old miner who left ii big <lb/>
pile of to some one who <lb/>
had helped him in his day of <lb/>
need- A will on a looked <lb/>
somewhat odd, but tho court <lb/>
held that it was straight O <lb/>
Administrators Notice <lb/>
Having this day before K. <lb/>
A. Clerk of superior court, of <lb/>
county, as of I lie es- <lb/>
state Francis <lb/>
notice Is hereby to the creditors <lb/>
said estate to present their claims <lb/>
duly ed, to mo <lb/>
on or before the Nth cay September. <lb/>
or notice will be plead in bar <lb/>
their All indebted <lb/>
to Slid are requested to make <lb/>
mediate payment and thus save co.-t and <lb/>
expenses. <lb/>
This the day September <lb/>
JOHN II. MANNING. <lb/>
w. r. Man nine, <lb/>
Jarvis Blow, Attorneys. <lb/>
We a let so line of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
much lower hut season- <lb/>
us a trial when you need <lb/>
for yourself or any member of <lb/>
your family. fit the small <lb/>
est or foot in the county, give yon anything you <lb/>
Our L. Reynolds Shoes ,, lowest <lb/>
for are warranted heard <lb/>
to good service. We have 113.50 Solid Oak Bedroom Suits. <lb/>
had six years experience with To by would Rd <lb/>
this line and know them to be all injustice to p ck.-t <lb/>
We Offer Van a <lb/>
REMEDY Which <lb/>
Safety <lb/>
of Life to Mather <lb/>
and Child. <lb/>
Cooper's Tobacco <lb/>
We happened to pick up one of <lb/>
Coopers circulars and this is what he <lb/>
has to say to the farmers of and <lb/>
surrounding counties ; <lb/>
Market active this week and prices <lb/>
have advanced; all grade taken at full <lb/>
H or higher <lb/>
ban last season. Our Drier buyers <lb/>
and dealers are competing lively every <lb/>
day upon my floor, making prices <lb/>
factory to all patrons. Several new <lb/>
buyers have come on the market, we <lb/>
now have the strongest corps the <lb/>
State, while the neighboring markets <lb/>
are complaining heavily for want of <lb/>
money to conduct their business. Cash <lb/>
is plentiful with us, never in better <lb/>
w protect our patrons interest <lb/>
and sell their tobacco for the highest <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Remember that no market or <lb/>
shall sell your higher than I do. <lb/>
Send or ship me a lot promptly, it <lb/>
means a saving of money to you. Have <lb/>
sold big lots of bright primings this <lb/>
week at <lb/>
Every department my <lb/>
business is in better shape than ever be- <lb/>
fore. I will thank you to give me a <lb/>
trial <lb/>
Tobacco nicely graded. <lb/>
Yours very truly, <lb/>
D. Y. Prop. <lb/>
Taken in time Hood's <lb/>
prevents serious illness keeping <lb/>
blood pure and all the organs in a <lb/>
healthy <lb/>
Original Observations. <lb/>
benefits no one till <lb/>
Bad passion is a -1 red-hot, <lb/>
saddle. <lb/>
Soft soap will not the <lb/>
marks of scandal. <lb/>
It takes much loss to Mart a quarrel <lb/>
than t. stop one. <lb/>
The scissors that cut die thus <lb/>
life never dull. <lb/>
The devil is the overseer of the road <lb/>
he's a good one. <lb/>
is trying to run the campaign <lb/>
by the battery. <lb/>
Many a scoundrel takes and <lb/>
gives another scoundrel <lb/>
When a man climb higher <lb/>
than his ladder reaches, be falls. <lb/>
Every time a man does a t <lb/>
God cancels one of his bonds sin. <lb/>
Many people use religion as varnish <lb/>
with which to polish their character. <lb/>
man is fit to have power unless <lb/>
he it for the good <lb/>
all. <lb/>
Happiness comes more from help- <lb/>
others than from helping <lb/>
pa <lb/>
The a train of thought <lb/>
has to sidetrack for <lb/>
Conscience is the central station on <lb/>
the telephone line between the head and <lb/>
the heart. <lb/>
The friendship that does not prompt <lb/>
you to assist a friend is not worth la- <lb/>
as such. <lb/>
One good retained and nine <lb/>
bad ones discarded would make <lb/>
all us better off. <lb/>
Sugar coat a with money and <lb/>
the world will swallow him without <lb/>
asking a <lb/>
Your heart may be pi <lb/>
a thousand disappointments, there is <lb/>
room yet for leafy-boughed success <lb/>
to spring from and around every <lb/>
grave, making the future a <lb/>
of bowers, a garden of joy, a riv- <lb/>
of prosperity, a heaven of heartfelt <lb/>
bliss. <lb/>
on yourself more, and on his <lb/>
foolish talk and double dealing less, <lb/>
and you will not snore nearly as loud <lb/>
at night. When a man is good to him <lb/>
sell, he is one good friend to rely <lb/>
on, and one good friend can almost <lb/>
ways pull a man through so that his <lb/>
trousers come with <lb/>
Observer, <lb/>
A a ran tor all forms Headache <lb/>
I has proved to be the <lb/>
best. It a cine <lb/>
ml the in-st dreaded habitual sick <lb/>
headache yield to its Influence. We <lb/>
urn all who are afflicted to procure <lb/>
bottle, and give this remedy a <lb/>
In case of habitual constipation Electric <lb/>
hitters cures by giving the needed tone <lb/>
to the bowels, and few cases long resist <lb/>
the use f this Try if once, <lb/>
Fifty cents and at 1-. <lb/>
en's Store <lb/>
How to WorK. <lb/>
Tho advocates of the gold <lb/>
standard say that salaried <lb/>
and all others who do not pro- <lb/>
duce on the farms, can <lb/>
buy more for his money ever <lb/>
before. More of what. More of <lb/>
the necessities of such us <lb/>
bread and meat <lb/>
Who does he buy it from <lb/>
From the farmer, of course. <lb/>
Well, if buys it from tho far- <lb/>
mer, the farmer is making less <lb/>
his produce than eyer did be- <lb/>
fore. <lb/>
The farmers are not fools, <lb/>
when they see that are year <lb/>
Dy year getting less for their <lb/>
work the salaried are <lb/>
year year getting more for <lb/>
their work, by reason of the in- <lb/>
creased purchasing power of his <lb/>
will it not be natural for <lb/>
the on the to at <lb/>
go to the city and hunt <lb/>
some of those paying <lb/>
Is he not capable of performing <lb/>
the duties that are on <lb/>
the lower of <lb/>
from that point will he not rise to <lb/>
the capability for higher <lb/>
and will there no; be <lb/>
two, three and men hunting <lb/>
one position t Is it possible that <lb/>
employers will hold tho price <lb/>
of labor up when so many will- <lb/>
employees offer for <lb/>
less. How long will wages stand <lb/>
The progress of every <lb/>
strata of society is ultimately de- <lb/>
pendent upon the progress of the <lb/>
producers. Destroy tho <lb/>
that are from the <lb/>
of raw materials, you <lb/>
discourage and discredit the pro- <lb/>
of raw materials. <lb/>
age and discredit the production <lb/>
of raw materials and you destroy <lb/>
the foundation which the <lb/>
of genuine prosper- <lb/>
exist, and we have left <lb/>
uncertainty, stringency lack <lb/>
of confidence, which makes hard <lb/>
San. <lb/>
EXPECTANT <lb/>
MOTHERS, <lb/>
Robs Confinement of its Pain, Honor and Risk., <lb/>
we claim for them. <lb/>
In HARDWARE, <lb/>
GUN IMPLEMENTS, <lb/>
LOADED CROCK- <lb/>
HALL <lb/>
LAMPS, LIBRARY LAMPS, <lb/>
PARLOR LAMPS, LAMP <lb/>
FIXTURE-, TINWARE, <lb/>
book. Tins is not so bi cause <lb/>
so, bid our goods <lb/>
prices make it so Here is a <lb/>
fair If we <lb/>
give us nothing, <lb/>
you our goods mid prices , <lb/>
it with <lb/>
your patronage, Hoping to mo <lb/>
soon promising our i . st <lb/>
lo make your <lb/>
pleasant and are <lb/>
Your friend <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
My l <lb/>
tore of Ii r she did not <lb/>
suffer from quickly i <lb/>
relieved the critical hour <lb/>
no afterward and her <lb/>
recovery rapid. <lb/>
E. E. Ala. <lb/>
Sent Moil or <lb/>
1.00 bottle. Book Moth- <lb/>
mailed <lb/>
TO., Atlanta. <lb/>
BY <lb/>
GREEN N. C <lb/>
Han an <lb/>
f the latest st and arc ready to <lb/>
the wants of the trade t Prices <lb/>
than ever profits <lb/>
and sales is our motto. Oar <lb/>
goods re new and meet the <lb/>
of the we are <lb/>
goods at n price far below the <lb/>
price. <lb/>
sell for W<lb/>
3.-. <lb/>
IS <lb/>
ll <lb/>
SB <lb/>
IS <lb/>
12.50 <lb/>
ask is it trial and will give en- <lb/>
tire Mil. <lb/>
O- A. CO. <lb/>
Office. <lb/>
. Manager. <lb/>
Save opened up a now <lb/>
and large stock <lb/>
STOVES, <lb/>
BICYCLES, in <lb/>
tho new store next <lb/>
door to j. c. and <lb/>
Son <lb/>
on us everybody. <lb/>
we are selling goods <lb/>
very cheap <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
GOLD <lb/>
.-OR <lb/>
SILVER <lb/>
WE ARE CANDIDATES <lb/>
form is AT LOW sell from <lb/>
to per cent, lower than any other house in this lino find take <lb/>
payment in GOLD, SILVER or PAPER. to see us at <lb/>
Bros, old stand. stock embraces <lb/>
CLOTHING, j GLOVES, <lb/>
CAPES, j HOSIERY, <lb/>
DRESS GOODS, NOTIONS, <lb/>
UMBRELLAS, <lb/>
OVERALLS, <lb/>
j LACE GOODS, <lb/>
UNDERWEAR, <lb/>
SUSPENDERS, <lb/>
Caps Hats, JEWELRY, <lb/>
JUMPERS, SHOES. <lb/>
and a lot of to mention- <lb/>
to please. <lb/>
At <lb/>
L Styles.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017815_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Frank <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
ThE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
The oyster trade is opening up. <lb/>
is called the harvest moon. <lb/>
Always in <lb/>
Fresh Carr to-day, at S. M. <lb/>
Youth and Boys <lb/>
WINTER <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
Blend <lb/>
M. <lb/>
. S <lb/>
Fine just <lb/>
at J. S. <lb/>
There is a good bit, of travel up and <lb/>
down the road these days. <lb/>
BIG. <lb/>
Names of Beth Gel Into Pr at at the <lb/>
Ratio of to <lb/>
G. of is here. <lb/>
is in town. <lb/>
of Tarboro, is Pt- <lb/>
court. <lb/>
Hon. J. K. Moore, cf <lb/>
is court. <lb/>
Williamston <lb/>
Delicious <lb/>
Preserves at J. S. <lb/>
IV <lb/>
lira. Alfred Forbes had a inn <lb/>
room added to her school <lb/>
lo Cherry is <lb/>
now. <lb/>
his hair would <lb/>
All in and the Assort- <lb/>
is greater than <lb/>
ever. The price <lb/>
been greatly <lb/>
reduced and <lb/>
the <lb/>
is just <lb/>
the <lb/>
same All colors, cuts <lb/>
and makes select <lb/>
Pram Give me a trial, <lb/>
will be satisfied <lb/>
A Mrs. Hopkins <lb/>
Dry Goods, <lb/>
NOTIONS, <lb/>
GENTS <lb/>
HATS, <lb/>
The puts u flavor Ml <lb/>
i; just out <lb/>
should now be i d <lb/>
to chills every <lb/>
A lot el Cheese and <lb/>
Batter, on ice, at J. S. Tun- <lb/>
stall's. <lb/>
News has stopped <lb/>
Its evening edition bin <lb/>
weekly <lb/>
those delicious Preserves <lb/>
S. lie has them of Peach, <lb/>
l ear, Apricot Apple. <lb/>
We are of the opinion that Adam <lb/>
the first man. was not a butcher, <lb/>
though he did deal in spare ribs <lb/>
The- new hos for the <lb/>
e Las been received and tested, <lb/>
foreman F. tells us u <lb/>
works splendid. <lb/>
Mis. L. C. King i i Nor- <lb/>
folk Friday evening. <lb/>
K. II. Thursday <lb/>
Rocky Mount. <lb/>
B. C. Pearce came home Thursday <lb/>
evening from Baltimore. <lb/>
P. II. Gorman returned <lb/>
evening from Richmond. <lb/>
XIi.-a returned home <lb/>
evening from Hill. <lb/>
W. M. Lang, of is <lb/>
visiting friends and relatives here. <lb/>
Mrs. F. <lb/>
night from an extended to <lb/>
and the mountains of North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Walter and Ernest of <lb/>
visiting family of Mai.<lb/>
Oakley Heine. <lb/>
X. Sept. 1896. <lb/>
to Sat- <lb/>
to bear F. and reports <lb/>
be made a <lb/>
Tin- bulk i f the cotton is picked out <lb/>
in this section and will be considerably <lb/>
under an average cop. <lb/>
J. S Gray who several years <lb/>
b in lit in arrived Hi hi- <lb/>
MARKET <lb/>
O. L <lb/>
There been some improvement <lb/>
d iring the last days in all <lb/>
while the and <lb/>
Trades remain ed. There have <lb/>
been a few piles of wrappers sold <lb/>
on the recently and the prices <lb/>
at which they Sold reminded us of old <lb/>
times. The buyers good cutters <lb/>
have been much more active during the <lb/>
last days than before and there is u <lb/>
decided improvement in these grades. <lb/>
A days ago was on the <lb/>
and markets and per <lb/>
cert all the tobacco that came in <lb/>
from the adjacent country was it poor <lb/>
nondescript type and I was told that <lb/>
the Virginia Crop was the poorest that <lb/>
they had in years. It seems that <lb/>
the leaf dealers up there have been <lb/>
to the recent reports <lb/>
Eastern Carolina t- the <lb/>
feet tint the crop down here is a <lb/>
one have Seen <lb/>
of our the doubt has been <lb/>
r. moved. We have all doubt <lb/>
the p crop down here this year <lb/>
that ever grew out eastern soil, and <lb/>
when you lake consideration that <lb/>
the up c crop still poorer not <lb/>
enc is held out to far- <lb/>
to hold th sorry tobacco. <lb/>
QUOTATIONS. <lb/>
THe <lb/>
Today a n what is <lb/>
the difference between Sparks circus <lb/>
and When it was given <lb/>
up he announced that Sparks has a <lb/>
show in North while <lb/>
not. <lb/>
Somewhat <lb/>
The Monroe says a <lb/>
able thing happened during <lb/>
court. A man came lo town, went be- <lb/>
fore the grand jury, had <lb/>
and reported break- <lb/>
some law. The grand found a <lb/>
true bill, and he submitted and the <lb/>
costs. . V <lb/>
II can never be repealed I <lb/>
hen money is plenty, work seeks the j <lb/>
man; when money is scarce, the man, j. <lb/>
old <lb/>
I i.- <lb/>
lo <lb/>
lo a <lb/>
lo <lb/>
lo <lb/>
to la <lb/>
to <lb/>
lo <lb/>
to 2-3 <lb/>
lo in <lb/>
Tc Receive <lb/>
Some of the Populists are is <lb/>
saying that, special act the <lb/>
registrars are to get a day <lb/>
five days I hey work. Under the <lb/>
new election law they get cent for <lb/>
each name registered. There is <lb/>
a new registration almost all <lb/>
over the <lb/>
A Question of Dignity. <lb/>
Mr. Bryan hat gone among the <lb/>
and Mr. has not suffered in- <lb/>
dignity. His dignity, however, is not <lb/>
a Swallowtail at affair. It is the dig- <lb/>
of the honest, candid man who <lb/>
believes his cause, and is <lb/>
to mingle with his CO <lb/>
Mr. may refuse to go to the <lb/>
people now, but he Lead not be <lb/>
prised if the people should, on <lb/>
refuse to go to <lb/>
ha World-Herald <lb/>
Ali <lb/>
clever friend, Mr. J. S, Jenkins, <lb/>
is agent here the Riverside Cigar <lb/>
Co., Danville, of the <lb/>
cigar. He came in <lb/>
Tuesday night with a generous supply <lb/>
and put the the entire of- <lb/>
putting. is an excellent <lb/>
smoke can I at J. S. <lb/>
in vain seeks work. <lb/>
have moved my Dent. <lb/>
office over J. C. Cobb store. <lb/>
Dr. D. L. James. <lb/>
can number at <lb/>
-Mill, just miles town, at <lb/>
Gold Standard Pi S <lb/>
C. Manager. <lb/>
weather i; gelling <lb/>
tor fires people be careful that <lb/>
stove flues <lb/>
are in on. <lb/>
Since the cooler weather came price <lb/>
on have shown a good upward <lb/>
tendency. Several farmers on the sale <lb/>
Friday made averages from i<lb/>
The Miss <lb/>
Friday evening, was <lb/>
learned sorrow cf the most events of <lb/>
that the little daughter t f J. N i season The house was beautifully <lb/>
ma; here la-l night a d rated in hot house plan's and <lb/>
typhoid. We hostess attired in blue <lb/>
lo b sympathy. silk, and <lb/>
I diamond , the north parlor <lb/>
j Willi J. Corbett, while Jennie <lb/>
ll c of. in yellow silk, <lb/>
IN and diamonds, received th.- <lb/>
parlor with A. white. <lb/>
D. s n, Mr. Dancing and other were <lb/>
and Mrs. K ti. k,.,,, late ho r. when <lb/>
S. of N. r u <lb/>
u- r, n. <lb/>
ii.-in- his <lb/>
la <lb/>
Mrs. Ada G. <lb/>
S. t . <lb/>
Lanier, <lb/>
On 1st Greenville Lodge A. <lb/>
F. M. will a meeting ii <lb/>
proposition of Slumber sweetly <lb/>
place meeting to a hall down On lowly cu-b <lb/>
While we kn-el try to <lb/>
silk, <lb/>
in abundance and they <lb/>
will suit in price <lb/>
forget me <lb/>
when want goods <lb/>
small farm for sale, s; <lb/>
six mites from Greenville and one <lb/>
mile from Tar river, well adapted <lb/>
tobacco and a good stock range. <lb/>
J. C. <lb/>
The la-lies had a good evening with <lb/>
their Autumnal Gypsy Feast at Genoa- <lb/>
Hall Wednesday night. There was <lb/>
a good crowd present and about Sin <lb/>
in. <lb/>
The tax list for 1896 has been placed <lb/>
in the hands of the Sheriff tor <lb/>
Those interested, and every tax <lb/>
payer is, should Live matter prompt <lb/>
attention. <lb/>
he Home a live column <lb/>
weekly at by <lb/>
Ray M. Busier, has appear- <lb/>
It is neatly gotten up and do- <lb/>
serves success. <lb/>
At Wednesday we heard a <lb/>
say damage had been done <lb/>
the peanut crop his section by the <lb/>
rain the nuts lo sprout before <lb/>
they could hi dug. <lb/>
. The Male reached <lb/>
half of one today. Four <lb/>
new ones this morning makes the en- <lb/>
at the beginning this, the <lb/>
fourth week, nine. <lb/>
-For weeks I livid on Cold <lb/>
so to is the w a fellow <lb/>
started off a testimonial to patent <lb/>
medicine house. He must have been <lb/>
engaged in the newspaper business. <lb/>
A nice brick pavement is being laid <lb/>
in front ct the block on east <lb/>
side Main Street. It is a great <lb/>
over the wood pavement <lb/>
that cover the sidewalk in put sea <lb/>
We d man who in past years <lb/>
has not confined himself to <lb/>
pally lines in casting his vote, say that <lb/>
the Democrats county have <lb/>
tins year the best ticket <lb/>
all through of any year in his <lb/>
A certain man in Orange <lb/>
ii aver leaves the home his best girl <lb/>
on Sunday night until minutes to <lb/>
one. He says the young lady's father <lb/>
is such an ardent free man <lb/>
he can't kick and the mail de- <lb/>
that it is his to the <lb/>
that makes him stay so <lb/>
Orange Observer. <lb/>
Ii is a noticeable fact that th are <lb/>
no more liberal and generous hearted <lb/>
men in the community than those <lb/>
with our tobacco market. When- <lb/>
ever there is an entertainment for any <lb/>
church purpose, or an abject of <lb/>
itself, they are <lb/>
generous in their patronage and <lb/>
The ladies bear cheerful <lb/>
to this. <lb/>
Public Speaking. <lb/>
Hon. Cyrus B. Democratic <lb/>
candidate tor Governor, will speak at <lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 11- <lb/>
Snow Hill, Thursday, <lb/>
Greenville. Friday, O-t. <lb/>
Washington, Oct <lb/>
toil doe.- all thing.- for best. <lb/>
God in hi- loin has <lb/>
The i bis love bad given, <lb/>
And though thy body here, <lb/>
Th- soul is sale Heaven. <lb/>
Too- thy spirit -ii, <lb/>
Where some day we will meet. <lb/>
Thy menu we will love and cherish <lb/>
our hearts shall cease to beat. <lb/>
He leaves a father, mother, five <lb/>
brothers and sisters, and many <lb/>
friends lo mourn loss. <lb/>
Greenville Market. <lb/>
Corrected by S. M. <lb/>
Butter, per lb <lb/>
Western Sides <lb/>
Sags cured Hams <lb/>
Corn Meal <lb/>
Flour, Family <lb/>
Lard <lb/>
Oats <lb/>
Sugar <lb/>
Coffee <lb/>
Salt Sack <lb/>
Chickens <lb/>
Eggs per doz <lb/>
Beeswax, per <lb/>
to <lb/>
In <lb/>
to <lb/>
On <lb/>
3.7; to 4.25 <lb/>
to M <lb/>
to II <lb/>
toG <lb/>
to w <lb/>
So to T <lb/>
to i; <lb/>
in to <lb/>
Lola White, g. <lb/>
diamonds, with Phil. Crawford. <lb/>
Mix it Greene, while <lb/>
with V. <lb/>
Ada o.-i-ii, pink u <lb/>
. H <lb/>
Miss ii vi-, pink <lb/>
with W. U. Jam-s, <lb/>
Margaret Langley, white <lb/>
t J. E. Starker, <lb/>
Miss blue <lb/>
jewel trimming, with Dr K, A. <lb/>
Move, <lb/>
-Miss Bertie Tyson, egg blue <lb/>
I figured chiffon, <lb/>
with Woodward. <lb/>
Miss pink silk. <lb/>
. satin skirt, with Harry <lb/>
bee. <lb/>
Miss Annie blue satin, <lb/>
roses, pearls, with S. T. White. <lb/>
Miss Willis, of New <lb/>
yellow satin.; with <lb/>
Wiggins. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Jarvis Sugg, J. B. <lb/>
White and R. D. Bo Cherry. <lb/>
The guests all joined in saying they <lb/>
had spent no more charming evening. <lb/>
Loses an Arm <lb/>
Mr. Cornelius Barn hill, near Grin- <lb/>
don, met with a serious accident Wed- <lb/>
in which lie lost an arm. Mr. Barn <lb/>
was at work about his and got <lb/>
his in caught in the saws The limb <lb/>
was so badly and broken that <lb/>
amputation The op -r- <lb/>
was by F. U . <lb/>
and . <lb/>
Mr has much sympathy in his <lb/>
misfortune. <lb/>
Rate War at an Bad. <lb/>
X. C, September The <lb/>
of the commissions <lb/>
Georgia and South <lb/>
here to with the North <lb/>
Carolina commission regarding the set- <lb/>
by arbitration railway <lb/>
war bet the Southern and Sea- <lb/>
board Air Line. The commissioners <lb/>
Gets a Bad Fall. <lb/>
Agent J. Moore, of the Coast <lb/>
Line, met with an accident, Thursday <lb/>
came near proving <lb/>
He was mending lo loading <lb/>
some curs tobacco, alien the gang- <lb/>
way from the to the car. upon <lb/>
which he was standing at the time, <lb/>
and fell. Mr. Moore, was <lb/>
thrown four to ground, falling <lb/>
flat of his back. A man of his size get- <lb/>
ting such a fall, it is a he <lb/>
I not seriously injured. . s it was, he <lb/>
was mis d and shaken <lb/>
up. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses. <lb/>
For the last two weeks the Register <lb/>
Deeds issued licenses, <lb/>
one fur white and nine or <lb/>
s. <lb/>
WHITE <lb/>
William Smith and A la Boss. <lb/>
Silas Knight and Tucker, <lb/>
W. L. Cobb and Florence Little, <lb/>
John Little and Martha Spruill. <lb/>
Edwards and Laura Car <lb/>
man. <lb/>
Watson and Page. <lb/>
and Wilson.<lb/>
-in. <lb/>
Fields and Jeanette <lb/>
1896. Fall Winter. <lb/>
c. t. <lb/>
takes the lead and the price no o <lb/>
Come and see me. <lb/>
are out of sight in style and color and below <lb/>
par in price <lb/>
Every thing cheap. <lb/>
C. T. <lb/>
L. F. EVANS <lb/>
R S. EVANS. <lb/>
A. H. <lb/>
Tit <lb/>
EVANS Props. <lb/>
The old Greenville Warehouse is being en <lb/>
and more lights added which makes it <lb/>
the best lighted Warehouse in the State. With <lb/>
; money and no pets, fair dealings and <lb/>
hard work, we are going to sell as high <lb/>
as any one. Give us a trial and we will show <lb/>
you. Your friends, <lb/>
EVANS C Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
This is the complaint, <lb/>
thousands at this season. <lb/>
They hive no appetite; food <lb/>
does not relish. <lb/>
this afternoon received official notice I the stomach and digestive organs, which <lb/>
Willis Johnson and Mil Daniel. <lb/>
Can't <lb/>
Eat <lb/>
the ending of the i ail way war <lb/>
will I o <lb/>
th,., J a course Hood's Sarsaparilla will give <lb/>
them. It also purifies and enriches the <lb/>
blood, cures that distress after eating and <lb/>
Internal misery only a dyspeptic can <lb/>
know, creates an appetite, overcomes that <lb/>
tired feeling and builds up and sustains <lb/>
the whole physical system. It so prompt- <lb/>
Cotton and Peanut. <lb/>
are Norfolk prices of <lb/>
and peanuts for yesterday, as shed <lb/>
by Cobb Bros. Commission Mer- <lb/>
chant of <lb/>
COTTON. <lb/>
Good Middling <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Low <lb/>
Ordinary <lb/>
peanuts. <lb/>
Prime <lb/>
Extra <lb/>
Spanish <lb/>
W. HIGGS, Pres. i. S. HIGGS, Cashier <lb/>
Maj. HENRY HARDING Cashier.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Frank <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
the <lb/>
K. L. Smith will leave tomorrow <lb/>
the at Norfolk, <lb/>
and Raleigh. He will carry Lucy <lb/>
Ashby, L--e and Eloise. <lb/>
He as fine a entered <lb/>
a race and horse must fly <lb/>
IT win any the races <lb/>
Representing a Capital More Than a <lb/>
Million Dollars, <lb/>
Win. T. Dixon, President National <lb/>
Exchange Bank, Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
The Scotland Bank, Scotland <lb/>
Neck, N. C. <lb/>
Noah Biggs, Scotland Neck, N. C- <lb/>
R. R, Fleming, N, C. <lb/>
D, W. Higgs Bros., <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
A Lady Caught Them. <lb/>
Isn't it funny what methods people <lb/>
will sometimes resort lo in an to <lb/>
draw to j A lady <lb/>
living at learning that the <lb/>
man passed up the road <lb/>
Wednesday morning and would return <lb/>
that evening, walked down to the depot <lb/>
to ask him it he Greenville tobacco <lb/>
market bad been closed. Being assured <lb/>
that it had not, hut on the <lb/>
was selling an of nearly one <lb/>
hundred thousand pounds tobacco a <lb/>
day, she explained that she heard two <lb/>
drummers tor another market i <lb/>
that the Greenville warehouses had <lb/>
closed and all the tobacco business <lb/>
pended, but not believing any such re- <lb/>
port she determined to find out the <lb/>
facts in the case for self. Those <lb/>
drummers will have to hatch out a new <lb/>
falsehood, this one won't work. <lb/>
The is Bailed t <lb/>
chronicle u sad death occurred <lb/>
Sunday night, a little after <lb/>
Bliss Spain, the s c seems to have almost a magic <lb/>
S II. Spun, away <lb/>
womanhood. She <lb/>
wast ken on Saturday with a <lb/>
chill lived a short while. She <lb/>
was a devoted member the <lb/>
church and was buried Tuesday <lb/>
at Mount church, <lb/>
about tour from I <lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
Ct <lb/>
and efficiently relieves <lb/>
I toms and cures nervous headaches, that it <lb/>
seems to have almost a magic <lb/>
Hood's <lb/>
Sarsaparilla <lb/>
Is the fact the One True Blood Purifier. <lb/>
., are the best after-dinner <lb/>
HOOd S pills, aid digestion. <lb/>
Shopping Made Easy. <lb/>
is ft pleasure tor a lady rill <lb/>
o visit our store whom, <lb/>
under one roof she can . <lb/>
needed to <lb/>
complete <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. <lb/>
The latest and most stylish TRIMMINGS. <lb/>
The correct and most serviceable LININGS- <lb/>
The best and most honest makes in SHOES. <lb/>
The proper thing in GLOVES. <lb/>
The most comfortable and perfect Corsets. <lb/>
The best In <lb/>
the stylish <lb/>
and <lb/>
In fact everything that you will <lb/>
require when you start your <lb/>
shopping tour. at <lb/>
that will meet with p- <lb/>
Lang Sells Cheap. <lb/>
We solicit the <lb/>
of firms, individuals and the general <lb/>
Checks and Account furnish <lb/>
an application. <lb/>
than cost- Try a car f. o. b <lb/>
at Tillery, N. C- at per M- <lb/>
, Co I <lb/>
John M. Berry was <lb/>
this morning called upon to perform a <lb/>
service rather oat of ids <lb/>
a Hi subject was <lb/>
a water spaniel owned by Mr. <lb/>
Russell became ill a <lb/>
d s ago with pneumonia, and <lb/>
though his master employed the best <lb/>
veterinary services available, was. no <lb/>
good, and be died Mr <lb/>
-ii- turned the case <lb/>
or I lorry who purchased a satin lined <lb/>
casket for the body of the dog. <lb/>
The burial was Mr. <lb/>
Bush the <lb/>
News <lb/>
SAVED HIS <lb/>
Mr. O. <lb/>
ville. III., says. Dr. King's New <lb/>
Discovery I owe my taken <lb/>
with L and fled the <lb/>
for about, but of no avail <lb/>
and was given up arid told I could not <lb/>
live. Having Dr. King's <lb/>
in my store sent tor a bottle <lb/>
began its use and from the first dose <lb/>
began to get better, and after using <lb/>
three bottle was up and again. <lb/>
It is worth its weight In gold <lb/>
won't store or house without <lb/>
Get a free at John L. Wooten <lb/>
Drag <lb/>
Examine Prices Below <lb/>
Split Boots, G to <lb/>
Good Boots, to <lb/>
Boys lo <lb/>
Mens Plow <lb/>
liens Brogans, <lb/>
Womens Shoes, <lb/>
yd <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
5.00 <lb/>
Que half Wool Dress Goods, <lb/>
1.25 Big line of Serges, <lb/>
Flannels all <lb/>
wool, double <lb/>
pounds good <lb/>
Whole Grain Rice <lb/>
Children Shoes, to English Island Molasses <lb/>
Ladies to Sack Salt, pounds, <lb/>
Ladies Goat Button, to S, 1.50 Good <lb/>
Children Boys Hats to Furniture in <lb/>
Mens and Boys Hats to 8-00 Good Patent Flour, <lb/>
Boys Baits Clothes Old stock Men and Ladies <lb/>
all-wool Suits <lb/>
Clothes to 1800 hard, Pork and <lb/>
Mens Overcoats to Sides always on baud, <lb/>
highest prices paid <lb/>
ii or <lb/>
J. R DAVENPORT. <lb/>
US,. September 22nd, 1896. <lb/>
p J l-H <lb/>
o s j <lb/>
cc Cl ft V <lb/>
re pa o <lb/>
O I Ci g ii a p c re p. re m e re m p a a. s O <lb/>
TAFT, <lb/>
The Ladies Bazaar. <lb/>
Novelty Suits. , <lb/>
The is great and varied, our own ex- <lb/>
styles, and but one each. You are <lb/>
free to touch, handle, examine and <lb/>
them. Note particularly, we don't say <lb/>
That's another question, the goods are at your <lb/>
Our thought now is to interest you. <lb/>
Serges. <lb/>
Neat effects that assume but little and <lb/>
are brimful of honest wear and worth. <lb/>
and gravity about equally divide the dress <lb/>
goods taste. Hence Serges are prominent on <lb/>
the latter side. Our selections of qualities and <lb/>
colors aggregate far beyond any competition. <lb/>
Plaids. <lb/>
Plaids are powerful. We- their <lb/>
and provided They vary <lb/>
from the charming shepherd check to the bold <lb/>
criss-crossing. West of England as well as the <lb/>
Highlands are represented here. Come see us. <lb/>
RICKS f AFT. <lb/>
The Ladies Bazaar.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017815_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
WILEY BROWN. <lb/>
II. L. COWARD. <lb/>
T, E. <lb/>
Sole Owners and Proprietors of the <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES- <lb/>
National Ticket. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
WILLIAM J. BRYAN, <lb/>
of Nebraska. <lb/>
r. <lb/>
ARTHUR <lb/>
of Maine.<lb/>
W. H. LUCAS, <lb/>
of Hyde county.<lb/>
JOHN H. SMALL, <lb/>
county.<lb/>
AND <lb/>
AND FLORENCE ROAD <lb/>
. u<lb/>
Hated <lb/>
June <lb/>
v. . <lb/>
es <lb/>
Weldon <lb/>
Ar. Mt <lb/>
I. i I <lb/>
II<lb/>
State Ticket. <lb/>
CYRUS WATSON, <lb/>
of <lb/>
LIEUT. <lb/>
W. MASON, <lb/>
of <lb/>
CHAS. M. <lb/>
Franklin. <lb/>
FOR At <lb/>
M. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Rocky j no <lb/>
Wilson i <lb/>
Ar. Florence I iv <lb/>
I I <lb/>
C -i <lb/>
CATARRH. <lb/>
His Worst Enemy Defeated by <lb/>
P, P, P., <lb/>
Great Remedy. <lb/>
Catarrh Cannot be Cured <lb/>
will as <lb/>
the <lb/>
in a r . ; form of n street H <lb/>
and in .-ore it I His i . hollow, i late Pit n , <lb/>
you <lb/>
a i;.; o Administrators <lb/>
A ; Kim n he <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
of Brown . a-d, <lb/>
i N Hi<lb/>
hacking i escaped at ti<lb/>
P. VI <lb/>
; Wilson I t m<lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar o IV. <lb/>
r. y. <lb/>
TREASURER <lb/>
B. F. COCK, <lb/>
of Wayne, <lb/>
SUIT. PUBLIC <lb/>
J. C. SCARBOROUGH, <lb/>
of Johnston. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
F. <lb/>
Mecklenburg. <lb/>
FOR ASSOCIATE JUSTICES OF THE <lb/>
COURT <lb/>
A. C. AVERY, Burke, <lb/>
G. H. BROWN, of Beaufort. <lb/>
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET. <lb/>
FOR THE SENATE. <lb/>
J. J. LAUGHINGHOUSE. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
LITTLE, <lb/>
C L BARRETT, <lb/>
FOR COMMISSIONERS- <lb/>
A K TUCKER, <lb/>
JESSE CANNON, <lb/>
A B CONGLETON. <lb/>
A. M <lb/>
Vi <lb/>
a v<lb/>
Dated <lb/>
April <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
f. , <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
-i- <lb/>
A. M P. M<lb/>
I 80-11 , <lb/>
e a <lb/>
A. M<lb/>
i m <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Rocky lit <lb/>
P. u <lb/>
P. M P. M. <lb/>
Hit <lb/>
II <lb/>
Ar<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
FOR SHERIFF. <lb/>
M TUCKER. <lb/>
FOR REGISTER OF <lb/>
L B <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
J L LITTLE. <lb/>
C LAUGHINGHOUSE. <lb/>
J B <lb/>
Speaking. <lb/>
Hod. Cyrus B. Democratic <lb/>
candidate for will speak at <lb/>
Oct. <lb/>
Snow Hill, Of. <lb/>
Greenville. Friday, <lb/>
Washington. Saturday, Oct <lb/>
THE MORNING STAB <lb/>
The Oldest <lb/>
Daily Newspaper in <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
Train on Scotland Week Sea <lb/>
eaves Weldon 3.55 p. m., Halifax 4.10 <lb/>
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p <lb/>
m., Greenville 6.47 p. m., Kinston 7.45 <lb/>
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.2 <lb/>
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. <lb/>
Halifax at a. m., 11.20 am <lb/>
except <lb/>
Trains on Branch leave <lb/>
Washington 8.00 a. m. LOU p . <lb/>
arrives Parmele 8.50 a . in., and 4.40 <lb/>
m Tarboro 9.45 a. m., returning leaves <lb/>
Tarboro 3.30 p. in., Parmele 10.20 a. m <lb/>
and 6.20 p. m arrives Washington <lb/>
11.60 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. Daily ex- <lb/>
Sunday. Connect, with trains on <lb/>
Neck Branch. <lb/>
Train leaves C, via <lb/>
A Raleigh dally except mm <lb/>
day, at p. m., Sunday son p m- <lb/>
Plymouth 9.00 P. It., i. <lb/>
Plymouth daily <lb/>
6.00 a. m., Sunday a -a, <lb/>
10.25 and u <lb/>
N- C. branch leaves <lb/>
daily, except Sunday, a <lb/>
tn. arriving 7-30 a. in Re- <lb/>
turning leaves a. m , <lb/>
rives at a. m. <lb/>
Trains in Nashville blanch <lb/>
Rocky Mount at 4.80 p. m,. arrive <lb/>
Nashville 5.05 p. , <lb/>
p. in. leave Spring Hope <lb/>
8.00 a. m., e 8.3,, , at <lb/>
Mount 9.0 a in. except <lb/>
Trains on Latta branch, Florence R <lb/>
X, leave Latta p m, <lb/>
P P n. Returning <lb/>
a f <lb/>
Latta 7.50 a m, daily except <lb/>
Branch leaves War- <lb/>
W for Clinton except <lb/>
11.10 and 8.50 p, m- <lb/>
Clinton at 7.00 a. m. j. <lb/>
N connection <lb/>
it all point daily, all rail via <lb/>
Norfolk and Carolina R R for <lb/>
all points North via Norfolk. <lb/>
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb/>
T. KM Manage . <lb/>
I. B. <lb/>
FOR THREE <lb/>
HARDLY BREATH AT <lb/>
NOSTRIL CLOSED FOR YEARS. <lb/>
Mr. A. M. if <lb/>
a sufferer Catarrh in its <lb/>
Truly, his description of his <lb/>
seem short of marvelous. In <lb/>
of seeking his couch, glad for the <lb/>
he went to It with terror. <lb/>
another <lb/>
. j and a ii <lb/>
before him. He could not on <lb/>
Ca arm Is t k n i . ,. . I f <lb/>
. ,. ,. J, r <lb/>
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not q i low . Tie to t l <lb/>
i rs-.-iii. by on aggravate the th e. r It , . <lb/>
invalid and <lb/>
hi B-r, yon oughtn't to r <lb/>
c- ii the ii.-nus <lb/>
per co n Tho man miffed <lb/>
i . is what such .- Whoso business <lb/>
in g . mi . , <lb/>
forte i mi is c mine <lb/>
F A CO Props. j was no response, hut n <lb/>
-3 pi ice <lb/>
, it then tho <lb/>
smoker wheeled about. I beg <lb/>
surveyed for the <lb/>
first limo bis invalid fellow <lb/>
Bra. mes Mutual fire <lb/>
As of K. V. info tho<lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
to I be in of <lb/>
. i . .-. <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
Cure All <lb/>
Liver Ills. <lb/>
Doctors Say;<lb/>
m g f; <lb/>
I i <lb/>
U ii <lb/>
as <lb/>
Pi <lb/>
cut and a .-t In elm <lb/>
Y hat the I ff ft Intermittent Fevers <lb/>
niB above then whilom in <lb/>
or el., wilt b h- id smoker As be started I prevail in <lb/>
at cunt in on the curb invalid peered out and I are invariably <lb/>
V y October next M. ; in conciliatory <lb/>
to <lb/>
I night, was Stomach Liver and Bowels. <lb/>
Cheery response, and tho <lb/>
was lost in tho darkness. L <lb/>
York Mail and Express. I is the great driving , o., ; <lb/>
. m . ,. . la I r-T. AW i <lb/>
wheel in the I chili, <lb/>
pen. -i rears, In <lb/>
inch <lb/>
a roan <lb/>
p. p. has cured my of j hi-; her ex. i the can say the whole system becomes de- <lb/>
smothering palpitation of heart , V I into <lb/>
and baa relieved me of all pain. One nos . mil in -in . e i <lb/>
lath nay . f the I After bad tottered out of <lb/>
. . <lb/>
fill night and a struggle to breathe was j It. II. <lb/>
before him. He could not sleep on I I . I t K <lb/>
side for two years. P. P. P. ; <lb/>
Id quick time. i . <lb/>
DE i -T . . . . <lb/>
Savannah Ca. Sale. I <lb/>
I . . used nearly four ,, , . . . . . <lb/>
of P. P. P. I was from the v , I he the ill <lb/>
of my head to the soles of my Hie late Mrs. A. Clark, W H- <lb/>
The Secret of Health, price <lb/>
i . ii is., <lb/>
Why Editor Was I. . f <lb/>
. man, and when it is out of order, <lb/>
inquires tor <lb/>
me or ail pa <lb/>
was closed for years, but now <lb/>
ran breathe through It readily. <lb/>
I bar not slept on either <lb/>
rears; In fact, I to see night come <lb/>
Vow sleep soundly in any at <lb/>
night. <lb/>
I am years old, but expert <lb/>
able to take hold of the plow handles. <lb/>
that I was enough to get <lb/>
P. P. V- I recommend It <lb/>
friends <lb/>
respect folly. <lb/>
A. H. <lb/>
th. <lb/>
M. V P. <lb/>
County. Texas <lb/>
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P. <lb/>
i Great where all other <lb/>
remedies failed. <lb/>
Rheumatism twists and distorts your <lb/>
hands and feet. Its agonies are intense <lb/>
but speedy relief and a permanent <lb/>
Is gained by the use of P. p. P. <lb/>
Woman's weakness, whether nervous or <lb/>
otherwise, can be cured and the system <lb/>
built op by P. P. r. A healthy Is <lb/>
a beautiful woman. <lb/>
Pimples, eczema all ills <lb/>
P and <lb/>
P. P. P. restore build <lb/>
up system and regulate you In <lb/>
HE P- that <lb/>
feeling. <lb/>
For and Pimples on the face. <lb/>
Ladles, for natural and organic <lb/>
Great <lb/>
and get well at <lb/>
SOLD Br ALL <lb/>
BROTHERS, APOTHECARIES, <lb/>
PROPRIETORS <lb/>
Block. <lb/>
For sale by J. L. Woolen, Drug <lb/>
gist next deer to a- T- White- <lb/>
following real the house and office, looked on bis <lb/>
o, in K. C. that bad n letter <lb/>
by Mrs , ., . <lb/>
Clark. Also land containing <lb/>
within these <lb/>
partly of Green- is <lb/>
. or will be Fri- <lb/>
Neck pis-es. <lb/>
Will also sell on the same at the ; <lb/>
aforesaid of Mrs. the i hat were the causes that jet to <lb/>
following property; line war <lb/>
brief <lb/>
f gov- <lb/>
ire Weakly. <lb/>
I pt a I s cellars a <lb/>
spoons, one half I <lb/>
m property described in the The hard r-S Delia say <lb/>
tie <lb/>
in my r, or <lb/>
and except-the to <lb/>
stool, also all the furniture <lb/>
every kind in the bed I <lb/>
and cast iron yard the To which <lb/>
other I half bring <lb/>
of Mary Poole. <lb/>
Terms of sale, real bah . ; it <lb/>
I personalty, v <lb/>
for cash only. it. quill wore <lb/>
l HI <lb/>
which v ere sent to c i. n-i.-- <lb/>
ranged and disease is the result. <lb/>
Liver Pills <lb/>
Cure all Liver Troubles. <lb/>
Bi <lb/>
costs cotton planters more <lb/>
than five million dollars an- <lb/>
This is an enormous <lb/>
waste, and can be prevented. <lb/>
Practical experiments at Ala- <lb/>
Experiment Station show <lb/>
that the use of <lb/>
will prevent that dreaded plant <lb/>
disease. <lb/>
Our pamphlets <lb/>
but <lb/>
latest esp, in <lb/>
. ,.,. s copy. They <lb/>
fee <lb/>
GERMAN KALI Works. <lb/>
bl<lb/>
Sold.; J. <lb/>
at <lb/>
cure dizziness. <lb/>
digestion. <lb/>
Tabbies curb nausea. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
JAM <lb/>
Hill CB <lb/>
EDWARDS Pr . i.-. <lb/>
e W store near <lb/>
Court <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
WINE OF . <lb/>
MS <lb/>
r ; <lb/>
M in <lb/>
Kinds of <lb/>
W Oil's <lb/>
. . mil <lb/>
-a Mi. r. on<lb/>
n. ;. <lb/>
Practices In t.- Co r-. <lb/>
for <lb/>
neck, boulder, hi . <lb/>
t t. <lb/>
Womb, .- <lb/>
nun <lb/>
lib t .<lb/>
The Charlotta <lb/>
OBSERVE <lb/>
M. <lb/>
FOR . <lb/>
The Five-Dollar Daily of <lb/>
its Class in the State. <lb/>
Favors Free Coinage <lb/>
of A me i can Silver and Repeal <lb/>
of the Ten Per Cent. Tax on <lb/>
State Ranks. Daily cents <lb/>
per month. per <lb/>
year. <lb/>
N C <lb/>
Academy. <lb/>
Raleigh, C. <lb/>
No superior <lb/>
It ha the it <lb/>
has over had The offered B <lb/>
in Literature, Music and Art M, A.<lb/>
of . J <lb/>
THE <lb/>
-IS AT THE W A <lb/>
LI <lb/>
YEARS CE taught that the best is the <lb/>
Kemp Rope, Pumps, Fanning in, <lb/>
necessary tor Millers, Mechanic house purposes, as veil a <lb/>
Hats. Shoes. Lathes Dress I have on hand. Am head <lb/>
F. W- III <lb/>
for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for <lb/>
Cotton, and keep attentive <lb/>
O. N. T. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. <lb/>
C. C. Fill Co. N C. T. J. C .; n pt n t c. <lb/>
The next session of this school <lb/>
open on <lb/>
MONDAY SEPT. <lb/>
and for months. <lb/>
The terms are as follows. <lb/>
Primary Is per mo. <lb/>
. n,, <lb/>
. <lb/>
. i <lb/>
work and discipline of the school <lb/>
will be as heretofore. <lb/>
We ask a continuance of your past <lb/>
patronage. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
1875. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS<lb/>
their year's supplies will <lb/>
their interest our before <lb/>
is complete <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE. SUGAR <lb/>
RICE, TEA,<lb/>
k buy direct from Manufacturers u <lb/>
you to buy at. one profit. i <lb/>
Mote stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
prices <lb/>
the t Our goods bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
COBB CO. <lb/>
COTTON <lb/>
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers. <lb/>
and Water Street. <lb/>
Ties and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
Consignments Solicit <lb/>
Code. <lb/>
T-j <lb/>
v. <lb/>
to I <lb/>
-T- v <lb/>
. .-. N. c. <lb/>
B. V. on <lb/>
Snow N. V. Hit N. <lb/>
C A A TYSON,<lb/>
tire C <lb/>
Practice In all the <lb/>
DR. D. I. JAMES, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
N. o. <lb/>
GOOD FOB STOCK <lb/>
TOO. <lb/>
Is <lb/>
pared for well as <lb/>
for that purpose is sold in <lb/>
cans, pound of <lb/>
cine <lb/>
it. Franklin ., Ten , <lb/>
March l-i. <lb/>
I have us, medicine, but <lb/>
I would in i give one BlacK <lb/>
for all the others I saw- <lb/>
It is the f r horses or cattle in <lb/>
be spring of the year, and will <lb/>
sicken time. <lb/>
in <lb/>
All of done <lb/>
We nae labor good <lb/>
. .,, <lb/>
v. <lb/>
yon work. <lb/>
H ., i <lb/>
HE . <lb/>
A N r<lb/>
CO. <lb/>
nil <lb/>
f i ti ii Hid I. <lb/>
. than <lb/>
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the r f <lb/>
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All . ., ,. . <lb/>
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an i .<lb/>
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and Iron Fencing <lb/>
work <lb/>
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the v. Th ., ; <lb/>
i i the i . i . , v. <lb/>
server. <lb/>
DOLL, . <lb/>
Send Tor . i s <lb/>
i- <lb/>
B. v-v<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
on Tar a <lb/>
Fall Opens Sept. <lb/>
For Ac <lb/>
MRS, U. <lb/>
v. c <lb/>
-----A line of---- <lb/>
Friday at A. M. <lb/>
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb/>
Tuesdays, Thursdays and <lb/>
A. M. same days. <lb/>
These departures are jet t Io <lb/>
of water Tar River. <lb/>
at Washington With <lb/>
and and all Pat- <lb/>
Free. <lb/>
v.; . i <lb/>
Bead model, drawing or with <lb/>
advise, U n c, <lb/>
J Cur not due <lb/>
A M with <lb/>
f. j in the L . S. and foreign countries <lb/>
Patent Office. D. C. <lb/>
T O York. from <lb/>
Nor- <lb/>
I folk Baltimore Steamboat <lb/>
if------ <lb/>
ITS <lb/>
To the have an absolute <lb/>
remedy for Consumption. By its timely <lb/>
thousands of hopeless cases have already <lb/>
tor Norfolk, VESSEL I <lb/>
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. of It my duty to <lb/>
Shippers should their , of <lb/>
marked via Dominion fr -m Bronchial or <lb/>
York, from Lung if they will write me their <lb/>
express and address. Sincerely, <lb/>
Life, Fire ail accident <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb/>
All Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
ASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowed current <lb/>
AM AGENT FOB FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFES <lb/>
Flour, <lb/>
Meat, <lb/>
Meal, <lb/>
Lard, <lb/>
Coffee <lb/>
Sugar <lb/>
Ac, Ac, <lb/>
I an <lb/>
ow <lb/>
that It causes <lb/>
surprise. <lb/>
Come see me <lb/>
anti I will <lb/>
yon fair<lb/>
from Baltimore. Miners <lb/>
Boston. <lb/>
SON. Agent, <lb/>
, J C <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
f. <lb/>
Wanted-An Idea <lb/>
Protect Idea, <lb/>
and list of two hundred wanted. <lb/>
Who can think <lb/>
or simple <lb/>
to <lb/>
T. A. If. C Pearl St., Hew fork. <lb/>
Br Th <lb/>
this Jon, <lb/>
cure dyspepsia. <lb/>
one gives relief. <lb/>
cure biliousness. <lb/>
cure indigestion. <lb/>
cure bad breath. <lb/>
cure torpid liver. <lb/>
for sour stomach. <lb/>
Ripens laxative. <lb/>
The modern stand- <lb/>
ard Family <lb/>
cine Cures the <lb/>
common every-day <lb/>
ills of humanity.<lb/>
Tl <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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