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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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<p>
V ; t <lb/>
JOB PRINTING. <lb/>
hi P. is p e <lb/>
pared to do all wort <lb/>
of this<lb/>
f L E. <lb/>
Plenty of new <lb/>
rial and the best VOL, XV. <lb/>
of Stationery. <lb/>
J. Editor and Owner IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER n, <lb/>
for <lb/>
We <lb/>
fa nm ., <lb/>
the Reflector and <lb/>
above amount, is <lb/>
I campaign year and you <lb/>
I should take the two <lb/>
NO leading papers. <lb/>
Gen- Evans Grave of Crisp. <lb/>
A man c die if e <lb/>
Knew a friend, who <lb/>
hi-, virtues a d ins <lb/>
n bis funeral <lb/>
. i in i h n v and hOD <lb/>
on i hi. It <lb/>
a s; Ii . when <lb/>
Mark Anti ti p.-.-.- the funeral <lb/>
of his ii d, -i it. B <lb/>
id in used his <lb/>
to-ti. b of the <lb/>
lace. It is it far r sight <lb/>
one who lived in an era <lb/>
of light the noble <lb/>
i of the old mi days <lb/>
his clasped the <lb/>
. ire Ch leaches <lb/>
I ii . <lb/>
A. I taught<lb/>
Friend, the <lb/>
ii I <lb/>
in e i <lb/>
. l <lb/>
, . supreme and <lb/>
boor a m i life <lb/>
r k o b <lb/>
a by ii- Me; <lb/>
. i II It <lb/>
LIGHT PARLIAMENT. <lb/>
Collecting <lb/>
Bow <lb/>
the Common and Lords Are Var- <lb/>
With <lb/>
candles and oil<lb/>
Although <lb/>
lamps an- need to light the <lb/>
buildings, says <lb/>
lamps <lb/>
in most general use. The of <lb/>
electric lighting from <lb/>
the basement, and throughout the <lb/>
building the lamps themselves are <lb/>
very where arranged with great <lb/>
and In dining -v <lb/>
looms, for instance, lire placed voting <lb/>
very high up, so lei the sap- <lb/>
ply of is ample there is no <lb/>
glare over the tables. In the tea- <lb/>
Booms, In -ides the lights from the <lb/>
there are wall <lb/>
the tables and oven movable table <lb/>
lamps those who to use. <lb/>
them. And the and the <lb/>
. room adjoining com <lb/>
mons dining room nil the fittings <lb/>
are made . iron, than -i <lb/>
brass, so i In y may as <lb/>
as I from am. <lb/>
With as. , of it i.- men . <lb/>
superintendent i all <lb/>
Boris of ingenious and pretty <lb/>
tings. And, as r .-; t <lb/>
the which is everywhere <lb/>
A in way of bad <lb/>
is from Paris. A <lb/>
bus gone into here <lb/>
who will collect c-<lb/>
The most wonderful city within <lb/>
limits of United States, and j <lb/>
which no existence whatever j <lb/>
daring summer months, is Fish f fT <lb/>
How lonely it must tor the <lb/>
LAUNCHING A VESSEL. <lb/>
City, This municipal oddity <lb/>
is built on the toe of bay <lb/>
regularly every winter and <lb/>
co a which ordinary col lei tors by men and their families who <lb/>
are engaged in catching, cleaning <lb/>
and packing lake trout and white- <lb/>
fish for the market. Fish City is <lb/>
situated in tho same nearly <lb/>
winter and Is built of rough <lb/>
pine boards. In tho winter of 1693-4 <lb/>
it had a population of nearly <lb/>
visible, ii may be mentioned that h calmly awaiting <lb/>
have been able The <lb/>
employs to <lb/>
sue particularly <lb/>
from whom he <lb/>
has in collect. One of <lb/>
for instance, ii- to stop <lb/>
at a debtor's with his wagon <lb/>
top i f which he dis- <lb/>
plays signs which am n <lb/>
very hind colors bug- <lb/>
only slops in front of <lb/>
of people who will no <lb/>
. their and <lb/>
this so <lb/>
I ha pit f-r to the full <lb/>
amount of claim tn 1- <lb/>
t n Army of Start the Ship the<lb/>
All the been taken <lb/>
down except n tow that reach <lb/>
operators in these little way station , little way up the aides. A platform <lb/>
telegraph offices at a news. I with n railing, on tho <lb/>
paper man remarked the other wart workmen may rest the stout <lb/>
in the smoking room of tho <lb/>
Southwestern limited as the train <lb/>
Hashed past the switch, semaphore <lb/>
and office lights of one of tho tiny <lb/>
stations. <lb/>
lonely, remarked the <lb/>
pieces of timber they vise as batter- <lb/>
rams when they are driving <lb/>
homo wedges, bus been erected <lb/>
along the sides of ship There <lb/>
nearly workmen distributed <lb/>
along the sides in gangs of <lb/>
each. Each gang has five wedges to <lb/>
of all in Leavening U. S. Govt Report <lb/>
Baking <lb/>
Powder <lb/>
PURE <lb/>
and in 1894-6 almost twice that i W after. The time sot for <lb/>
who is seated<lb/>
it <lb/>
iii i ; me <lb/>
ii . ii ed to be <lb/>
priest the black <lb/>
b ; b I lie <lb/>
gown sent to <lb/>
Prince of Eternal. <lb/>
object <lb/>
holds on earth i <lb/>
its tot <lb/>
i-i the <lb/>
the <lb/>
an i th t i <lb/>
ii s. and friends in <lb/>
. i tin- las being rue <lb/>
man on ii is <lb/>
Li-id. In the article alter <lb/>
i mortal i l w -j <lb/>
. the eves of <lb/>
torn i ii <lb/>
T see as we <lb/>
i. i <lb/>
n h <lb/>
. el <lb/>
lb i . u <lb/>
. t<lb/>
e a the fa <lb/>
Go <lb/>
s u a to I <lb/>
e r. tho <lb/>
i . f <lb/>
. is <lb/>
i i <lb/>
the pure in I <lb/>
. lie c <lb/>
, . ,. ,., .,. . ; <lb/>
I- I <lb/>
cold, <lb/>
I d and ii <lb/>
, I i-i<lb/>
i. <lb/>
i I r <lb/>
the deli <lb/>
a- f ; i l lie <lb/>
H d <lb/>
;. <lb/>
in making many <lb/>
of the old lit <lb/>
tings. The i <lb/>
that in central ball, <lb/>
weighs and bears <lb/>
tho smaller ones in <lb/>
the I it <lb/>
hall and i i re i re to he <lb/>
and . ; for <lb/>
cleaning or placing broken <lb/>
lamps. has, high <lb/>
up in one, a crane, which <lb/>
B r on tram by <lb/>
d, <lb/>
tho el are carefully <lb/>
aside on another tramway <lb/>
that they may not i in <lb/>
lie ii <lb/>
being lowered. And in roof above <lb/>
the of lords there i similar <lb/>
arrangements, but with simply a <lb/>
weight am a couple of earthenware <lb/>
pulleys in place of crane. <lb/>
chamber is <lb/>
lighted entirely by electricity. <lb/>
Bound the arched doorway <lb/>
incandescent lamps, which are <lb/>
required in show the <lb/>
carving and clock lace, and tin- <lb/>
order <lb/>
front<lb/>
The <lb/>
one win i <lb/>
buggy tin <lb/>
it in <lb/>
tho -ll-; y <lb/>
in <lb/>
get <lb/>
allow a mob collect iii <lb/>
the place in <lb/>
the if <lb/>
buggy. <lb/>
d has u- <lb/>
pi <lb/>
man sit in <lb/>
move on. <lb/>
; s i j f ii i. ct i u <lb/>
in front it st-re a f-v. <lb/>
minutes, a-hen somebody rushes <lb/>
the <lb/>
so. which <lb/>
Iv brought man's <lb/>
d if it- very nominal for <lb/>
ii to appear a second time to <lb/>
r mind i is debtors of pron <lb/>
to pay <lb/>
A DESPERADO'S NERVE. <lb/>
this time not taken any part in <lb/>
I the conversation, they have <lb/>
I fun than you'd think. I used <lb/>
to one of thorn myself back ii <lb/>
the eighties. I was at a little <lb/>
try station where about my <lb/>
business night long was report- <lb/>
to tho dispatcher tho time of <lb/>
as they passed, with occasion- <lb/>
ally a train order switched in. <lb/>
in awhile would have a <lb/>
i message to send on <lb/>
. wire, and the rest of time hung <lb/>
According to j heavy on our hands, <lb/>
tho Old Testament contains ill fated Dennie Murphy, <lb/>
distinct words, not counting proper was killed in Hastings <lb/>
names and obsolete roots. A few, was a student in the office <lb/>
comparisons with above ma ho wonderfully <lb/>
not prove uninteresting. The fertile to make time <lb/>
and through the crowd, you <lb/>
Louis <lb/>
Gentleman these <lb/>
safety matches Why, they won't <lb/>
light at all. <lb/>
wot could you <lb/>
Fun. <lb/>
In <lb/>
The total number of distinct <lb/>
words in Mew Testament, ex- <lb/>
rinding proper names and their de- <lb/>
is The vocabulary <lb/>
of the Old Testament is much larger. <lb/>
is usually just before high <lb/>
where stream has a tide, j <lb/>
A dredge has been used directly <lb/>
in the path the vessel will take when <lb/>
makes her plunge, so that she <lb/>
may no obstructions. i <lb/>
part of the ways has been inspected j <lb/>
If file weather is cold, lard oil <lb/>
been mingled with the tallow ti. <lb/>
I make it soft, and if tho weather <lb/>
warm has been mixed with I <lb/>
it to it hard. <lb/>
It is about an hour before the <lb/>
for tho ship to move. Tho <lb/>
workmen are summoned, and tho <lb/>
signal is given for the first j <lb/>
All at once a great din arises. It U <lb/>
if an army of street were i <lb/>
at work beneath the ship. If you <lb/>
Weal it If Hail. <lb/>
Here is a story about that <lb/>
. late Lord <lb/>
bury. It has I ho merit of being true. <lb/>
Lord was standing bare- <lb/>
headed in a well known <lb/>
shop in Piccadilly while his bat was <lb/>
being ironed A being <lb/>
till alive, not yet reached bis <lb/>
turn fur posthumous anecdotes and <lb/>
must consequently nameless <lb/>
entered the shop in full attire, and <lb/>
seeing Lord bareheaded <lb/>
mistook fur a Taking <lb/>
off his own head covering, tho bishop <lb/>
said, want to know if you have n <lb/>
bat like Lord <lb/>
the bat and its owner <lb/>
turned on bis heel with curt 10- <lb/>
mark, I haven't, and if I bad <lb/>
I'm d------d if I'd <lb/>
Realm. <lb/>
Affability BUM Who <lb/>
to <lb/>
J. K. Chambers, Union depot tick- <lb/>
et agent, when in a reminiscent <lb/>
mood, can tell many interesting <lb/>
the side galleries there is a lamp stories of tho west in early days. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
. <lb/>
.- an I <lb/>
ti i <lb/>
ii <lb/>
. i-v- <lb/>
the <lb/>
ho- <lb/>
red f <lb/>
ft I <lb/>
it <lb/>
u ell. to in -i <lb/>
most <lb/>
;. here is <lb/>
hi i i <lb/>
b. . <lb/>
t I <lb/>
pi for <lb/>
. eh <lb/>
Catarrh Cannot -red <lb/>
i IX L AI I I<lb/>
I Ii IS <lb/>
as <lb/>
the the is- <lb/>
m i-ore it<lb/>
email n <lb/>
i II i r. i , <lb/>
q ck . I- <lb/>
v on III <lb/>
1.1 <lb/>
I ill <lb/>
i I n <lb/>
an-. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
J lull i <lb/>
ii ill I <lb/>
m tin- i. <lb/>
;. <lb/>
n a i i lb <lb/>
I -I I ii. II <lb/>
j in d a reg <lb/>
i- in -f <lb/>
i it ill. be i <lb/>
j tin . y on the <lb/>
III <lb/>
I to i mill us -pi-Ii hod <lb/>
res Its in Bend <lb/>
f r n <lb/>
A-CO Toledo. <lb/>
b. <lb/>
placed behind each pillar, so that <lb/>
while it cannot Itself be .-.-mi, ii <lb/>
vents may be <lb/>
therefrom being in deep shade <lb/>
and so invisible to speaker. <lb/>
principal lighting however, <lb/>
cornea through the painted glass <lb/>
roof, behind c powerful gas <lb/>
lamps i. gas being preferred <lb/>
to electricity hero both on account <lb/>
of its ling powers and <lb/>
because tho heal i a draft, <lb/>
and so assists ventilation. <lb/>
the glass is n very wire net- <lb/>
work, so were a breakage to <lb/>
cur there be no danger of a <lb/>
cabinet minister being decapitated <lb/>
In the lobbies and tho libraries i <lb/>
electric lighting is used, however <lb/>
In the libraries and reading room- <lb/>
It is placed lower than in most parts <lb/>
of the for obvious reasons. <lb/>
And in all larger i <lb/>
lamps are divided into three groups, <lb/>
which independently of one <lb/>
another. Tims, on a dull day one set <lb/>
of lamps would be in use; ii it were <lb/>
foggy, there might be two sets, and <lb/>
at night all throe are employed. <lb/>
and Si-I-n.-p. <lb/>
One of the worst en of sci- <lb/>
published his on Fish- <lb/>
which was of such <lb/>
in determining the n <lb/>
ages of tho strata in they <lb/>
were found that the United Stales <lb/>
government contributed to <lb/>
of publication, Mr. Buskin, <lb/>
in volume page <lb/>
says, a mere <lb/>
to paid for all that end draw- <lb/>
of the nasty, ugly things, and <lb/>
it didn't matter n stale herring <lb/>
whether had any names <lb/>
a piece of criticism written I <lb/>
with the pen of ignorance. Rut <lb/>
what shall we say when we see <lb/>
same writer of <lb/>
i oil <lb/>
in heaven n a <lb/>
quote fr. e i v Sorely, if <lb/>
a man was grant both as a man <lb/>
and an of nature's <lb/>
it was son who <lb/>
made hi.-1 y from the pi of a <lb/>
Hi. new to t hat i i the neat <lb/>
est . that over lived <lb/>
and Queries. <lb/>
contain distinct words. Milton <lb/>
used different words and forms <lb/>
of expression in bis entire works, <lb/>
Shakespeare, the peer of all <lb/>
twisters, d over or <lb/>
one-third more -a used by all <lb/>
the writers of both Old and New <lb/>
Louis Republic. <lb/>
Safe. <lb/>
little Bink.-, <lb/>
egged on by bis wife, who insisted <lb/>
that there was a burglar in <lb/>
room. <lb/>
returned the burglar. <lb/>
my snapped Links, <lb/>
exactly what I told you. <lb/>
Nobody's there, so do go to sleep <lb/>
One of interesting of <lb/>
newspapers i l the Now Zealand To <lb/>
or or Seven <lb/>
Slurs. It enjoys distinction of <lb/>
having a king for an editor. His <lb/>
royal highness is not, it <lb/>
is true, on independent sovereign <lb/>
He was in tho service of tho gov- like Emperor William, but when i <lb/>
eminent at Sydney when that town <lb/>
was tho toughest place in Nebraska, <lb/>
if not in the west, and whence per. <lb/>
sons bound for tho Black Hills <lb/>
started <lb/>
A few days ago Mr. Chambers was <lb/>
Bitting in the Milwaukee city office, <lb/>
and the turned to early <lb/>
days in the country <lb/>
and bra very. <lb/>
Mrs, V. aid, in the course <lb/>
of a recent address on the subject of <lb/>
book- and their uses, reminded her <lb/>
bean rs f I prediction of Dr. <lb/>
descends from royal throne to <lb/>
editor's then, in- <lb/>
deed, is he monarch of all <lb/>
even of that wise bade <lb/>
pendent personage, the <lb/>
a small eight page <lb/>
paper, three columns on a page. It <lb/>
is printed in tho English and native <lb/>
tongue.-. Sometimes translation <lb/>
is in center column, sometimes <lb/>
in one of outside columns. <lb/>
Maori language is a <lb/>
dialect. It closely approaches <lb/>
that of the Islands, of tho <lb/>
played night on a <lb/>
young operator up tho lino that <lb/>
never think of without a smile <lb/>
was Dannie's idea, and it worked <lb/>
like a charm. <lb/>
see, operator in question <lb/>
was of tho sort of young <lb/>
fellows who fancy that an operator <lb/>
who works of the country <lb/>
offices must of necessity a <lb/>
as used to call a poor operator <lb/>
in those days, and that it is at all <lb/>
times advisable to sit down upon <lb/>
in every way possible when <lb/>
there is tho slightest excuse for it <lb/>
and frequently when there isn't. <lb/>
This particular operator was cordial <lb/>
detested all along tho line. <lb/>
Dennie and I fixed <lb/>
fake message to send <lb/>
Hie way, it might well to men <lb/>
that tho brass pounder in <lb/>
lion was not half so good an opt <lb/>
or as he fancied a;. <lb/>
bad tho message prepared <lb/>
sprung it on when business v i <lb/>
over. <lb/>
message purported to come <lb/>
from Milwaukee, and we <lb/>
signed of repeating office <lb/>
at western end of the circuit, <lb/>
first thoughtfully th <lb/>
wire west to avoid detection. <lb/>
those days Dennie was a <lb/>
remarkably good and <lb/>
way ho pushed that message into <lb/>
man <lb/>
have kept the latter busy indeed <lb/>
Apple <lb/>
It is said that an apple aster will <lb/>
never be dyspeptic or given to <lb/>
see the men drawing back the bat <lb/>
taring rams and then projecting <lb/>
them sharply against wed go after The lovers this fruit say <lb/>
wedge This work continues for that one must always eat it raw, <lb/>
four or five minutes, and then an others consider it only edible <lb/>
is made. It is necessary When cooked. This latter is wrong, <lb/>
that wedges be driven uniform- however, as a ripe apple well <lb/>
Tho effect of this rally seems is a healthy food. Among <lb/>
imperceptible. It has resulted, excellent ways of cooKing apples are <lb/>
however, in driving the apple apple <lb/>
lose up against sides of the j staffed, fried, preserved, jellied and <lb/>
ship, and when that was baked. <lb/>
has driven the sliding <lb/>
down hard upon burgeon once described Noah as <lb/>
ways, , out the tallow outside ark at twilight <lb/>
and there. But the ship still rests This reminds <lb/>
upon keel blocks one by a <lb/>
After arcs of or minutes ding his own <lb/>
second rally comes. In go the m with a pair <lb/>
wedges, and great hull seems to <lb/>
tremble just the least bit. She is <lb/>
beginning to rest on launching <lb/>
Ways, At last is raised <lb/>
small bI of an inch above <lb/>
the blocks. Now comes the <lb/>
for quick work. Hove is where <lb/>
the begin to swing their <lb/>
s. <lb/>
of born framed spectacles. <lb/>
of Spectacle. <lb/>
Spectacles, to enable the user <lb/>
see objects near at hand or at a dis <lb/>
made in a variety <lb/>
forms. In a common form the glass- <lb/>
es in two parts, joined at the <lb/>
center, tho upper halves being of a <lb/>
One gang of men rushes to and tin <lb/>
pr e chat are still rest <lb/>
against the sides the hull. <lb/>
lower halves to reading. Sometimes <lb/>
a piece is cut out of tho glass and n <lb/>
Quick Wows are given; timbers and piece of a different power is put in <lb/>
begin to fly, and prop after its place. Sometimes tho variation <lb/>
prop fails to the ground. Another <lb/>
gang of men is rushing after the <lb/>
pioneers. the painters, <lb/>
and with long brushes on tho ends <lb/>
of polos they daub over tho places <lb/>
where props rested, which could <lb/>
i place <lb/>
is by contenting a wafer <lb/>
glass over a part of tho spectacle <lb/>
glasses, and sometimes by grinding <lb/>
away a part of the claim <lb/>
There made also spectacles with <lb/>
crescent shaped glasses, tho <lb/>
HER WEDDING INVITATION. <lb/>
It today, and I must <lb/>
It brought a emotion <lb/>
At I of tin. time when happiness <lb/>
Wan by fed devotion. <lb/>
I of a pore, boy. <lb/>
With plans fur our future union. <lb/>
And the life, with their base alloy, <lb/>
entered our communion. <lb/>
But the tide my life om <lb/>
In a full and <lb/>
And I the lore had <lb/>
With many a worthy pleasure. <lb/>
Many years have pasted that lot <lb/>
In my frank, impulsive fashion. <lb/>
And my mind has to a plane above <lb/>
My most ardent dream or passion. <lb/>
I think of those dear old <lb/>
When my heart w.-is and tender. <lb/>
And that little with her dainty ways. <lb/>
Was the shrine of my surrender. <lb/>
Edmond in Detroit Free <lb/>
GETTING READY FOR A LAUNCH. <lb/>
Ho broke a good many not be painted until props wore tho glass being cut out on- <lb/>
finally had it ell. Hero is a copy , taken away. I <lb/>
Why Maker <lb/>
J i ii ii i; taster of who Navigator's group and of <lb/>
shall come in the future Natives of these mutually under. <lb/>
to teach entirely by tend one another.- <lb/>
Wei all begin with life which <lb/>
is most familiar to life <lb/>
of shall and <lb/>
more put before our children tho <lb/>
great examples of <lb/>
they shall have from begin- <lb/>
heroes and friends in <lb/>
of the message as near as I tan re Underneath tho ship another gang <lb/>
member <lb/>
Paid ; t Bate. <lb/>
Wis., 8th. <lb/>
John Join, <lb/>
Our are too Mew. If any more <lb/>
onions, options r delivery. <lb/>
Farm <lb/>
of men is making havoc with tho <lb/>
keel blocks. Sharp s <lb/>
inserted on tho sides of <lb/>
blocks, and sledges are used as I <lb/>
workmen come from tho river <lb/>
, .,.,,. , , . toward the bow, knocking this way <lb/>
you said Mr. Grate mads , that <lb/>
bar, for a long time I couldn't words, while the body , <lb/>
what brought our neighbor, of the message counted and back <lb/>
the wearer reads through tho <lb/>
glasses and looks over them to see <lb/>
at a distance. There <lb/>
called clerical glasses, that like <lb/>
glasses with tho upper halves cut <lb/>
off; tho looks down through <lb/>
tho glasses to road, and can see <lb/>
over them without effort when ho <lb/>
looks it <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
Metaphor. <lb/>
You can no more escape the an- <lb/>
of your misdeeds than a <lb/>
boiled climb a telegraph <lb/>
c Herald. <lb/>
More Thai, <lb/>
club. Did bear what ho said <lb/>
about<lb/>
said that they were tho first <lb/>
duplicate presents that <lb/>
Mrs. he had received <lb/>
Brook i Ufa <lb/>
ii <lb/>
s it <lb/>
I a i <lb/>
that <lb/>
The <lb/>
spec d <lb/>
he <lb/>
Tommy Sun.-- a <lb/>
I f neighbor, Hark- <lb/>
Mr. Tucker, <lb/>
jives at v n deal in <lb/>
and i ii left never <lb/>
. r I -s right hand is do- <lb/>
e i e take boxing lea- <lb/>
i . i ii Tucker. <lb/>
. Expo <lb/>
will N May <lb/>
i. i a <lb/>
its <lb/>
he Union- The is to <lb/>
cost all <lb/>
has be n sub- <lb/>
scribed. Work <lb/>
i a pose i f tho <lb/>
the <lb/>
his been <lb/>
buildings are beau <lb/>
of an i <lb/>
aVe spacious picturesque <lb/>
every adapted for Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
pose intended- exposition In with a decree made at <lb/>
sis The 1890 of Pitt Superior <lb/>
will continue six , <lb/>
in J, N. r. <lb/>
are ., en- <lb/>
Mr-J. t R. A. <lb/>
railroad being <lb/>
president. Misted Mr , l day u; <lb/>
A- ft- Wills an I, my to <lb/>
. u Inc. <lb/>
prominent en of Nash- pro . n each debt in <lb/>
Louis -d creditor desiring <lb/>
i u- la assets their <lb/>
the past t n days within ah time <lb/>
steps to full K. A. <lb/>
, I products I and rick of the Court. <lb/>
C, 1338. <lb/>
Mr. Anthony in to see the <lb/>
us so often. Mr. was a should be <lb/>
retired boiler maker. He bad been Dennie; <lb/>
a journeyman boiler maker and then under tho it <lb/>
a boss, and having made a modest customary for the receiving <lb/>
fortune bad retired to enjoy it. to tho body of tho <lb/>
He lived only two or back to the sending <lb/>
from and used to come in of that is, repeat tho first letter of each <lb/>
ten evenings. Ho seemed word to verify tho check, <lb/>
to like to bear children the error can be quickly detect <lb/>
play on tho piano, and if they didn't So Dennie <lb/>
play ho would always ask to have <lb/>
them. I used to wonder at this, be- came loiters with a <lb/>
I I never bad any idea that Mr. spiteful <lb/>
Yes, I heard it at the especially fond <lb/>
music, and day I asked and over again <lb/>
about it. him repent this frank admission <lb/>
you Mr. Ham- operator on tho line was <lb/>
that every man enjoying it. Ho finally tumbled and <lb/>
has a feeling of affection for the would not respond to our demands <lb/>
or profession that be was to letter it just more, but it <lb/>
brought up in. I know that I have was a long time ho heard the <lb/>
that for my own, and when of our connection with <lb/>
I bear your children play duets leaked <lb/>
tho piano with tho bard pedal on all York Press, <lb/>
time, it makes mo think of the <lb/>
old boiler <lb/>
York Sun. <lb/>
Advice. <lb/>
One day a rich but ill <lb/>
who sad havoc of tho French <lb/>
apparently lifter much confusion, Breach of Discipline. <lb/>
but really in accordance with a care-1 In February, 1718, Lord Robert <lb/>
system, all tho blocks are, third son of first <lb/>
knocked away, and the of Lancaster, afterward <lb/>
moment has arrived. All the wedges in tho army and colonel of the <lb/>
been driven borne, and their regiment of foot guards, <lb/>
edges are in a lino as straight a reprimand, such reprimand <lb/>
as a file of on dress parade. I convoyed to him by Duke <lb/>
Tho ship rests on an entirely now of Cumberland's aid-do-camp. His <lb/>
foundation and a very treacherous I military offense was that had <lb/>
one. There are no side supports to blown his ho relieved guard, <lb/>
keep her from toppling over. The I beneath bis grace's window in St. <lb/>
l-Kit-; Shirts. <lb/>
Genuine cashmere shawls are so <lb/>
that one measuring three or <lb/>
square yards could <lb/>
within shell of a small walnut. <lb/>
But an even delicate fabric is <lb/>
manufactured on tho Philippine is- <lb/>
lands from the fibers of pineapple <lb/>
leaves. To properly <lb/>
fibers for Weaving involves much to i language called upon Jules <lb/>
work. For instance, the tiny tho French critic, and began <lb/>
fibers are tied together by band to <lb/>
suitable lengths. Tho weaving of a <lb/>
quantity sufficient for shirt is <lb/>
the work of several years, and so it <lb/>
is no wonder that such a shirt costs <lb/>
about but rich planter <lb/>
of and <lb/>
afford to indulge <lb/>
extravagances. <lb/>
THE DISCOVER Y SAVED his LIFE <lb/>
Mr. c. Druggist, Beaver <lb/>
vibe. in-, King's New <lb/>
Discovery I ewe my taken <lb/>
a tirade upon trivial matter in <lb/>
execrable French. listening <lb/>
politely for some time at last <lb/>
replied to his visitor in Latin. <lb/>
do you mean, If. <lb/>
demanded tho man angrily. <lb/>
don't understand you. I can't speak <lb/>
sir; cried the great <lb/>
critic. could not speak it <lb/>
worse than you do <lb/>
The o. <lb/>
Piano does it happen <lb/>
that in this pedal is bro- <lb/>
with I tried the ken every week <lb/>
w is <lb/>
. Having Dr King's New <lb/>
in my I tent for a e and <lb/>
began r use and from the first dost- <lb/>
Ki gut better, and three <lb/>
b was up an i about again It is <lb/>
its In gold we won't <lb/>
keep or without, Get a <lb/>
free trial at L. Drug <lb/>
Store <lb/>
rill <lb/>
Bring your Poultry and to <lb/>
for the highest market pikes <lb/>
Buy and ship in large and <lb/>
m to p you as much any <lb/>
J B. TRIPP <lb/>
Most of bookkeepers and cash- <lb/>
employed in business <lb/>
bosses Chinamen, who are <lb/>
en preference for such positions <lb/>
because of honesty, <lb/>
I dislike an eye that twinkles like <lb/>
a star. Those only beautiful <lb/>
which, like have a lam- <lb/>
bent light, are luminous, not <lb/>
I. of l n--. <lb/>
Tho chief thing about tho great <lb/>
is, after all, that it is very <lb/>
big, but intaglio, found at <lb/>
Delphi or Olympia, is of more inter- <lb/>
est, in way, and infinitely more <lb/>
fascinating. The opprobrium of <lb/>
newness lies upon the Amer- <lb/>
and there <lb/>
of Americans who would ex. <lb/>
change all Now York, and Chicago <lb/>
into tho for ancient <lb/>
monastery or for- <lb/>
tress of tho past. Our transatlantic <lb/>
a wonderful and delight- <lb/>
but cannot show a <lb/>
unless have <lb/>
ported it from tho old world. It is <lb/>
not surprising, then, that as soon as <lb/>
they have their or are <lb/>
on the way to making it, the first <lb/>
thing Americans think of is a visit <lb/>
to Europe, and, most of all, to tho <lb/>
old land. It has boon said that <lb/>
strongest wish of every American is <lb/>
to an Englishman. But, if t bey <lb/>
only knew it, they Englishmen <lb/>
London Standard. <lb/>
Dr. G, <lb/>
says. Dr. New <lb/>
Discovery my life. I was taken <lb/>
With La Grippe and <lb/>
fur miles bill avail <lb/>
was sad told i no <lb/>
live. Having Dr. King's New <lb/>
in my store I Rent for a bottle <lb/>
began its use and from dote <lb/>
began better, and after using <lb/>
and a bunt <lb/>
Deceit is the false road to three bottle was up and about again. <lb/>
i i. is worth its In <lb/>
and all the joys we travel keep or u. <lb/>
through to vice, fairy banquets, a at John L <lb/>
when we touch them. Dreg Store. <lb/>
toboggan slides are ready for work, <lb/>
and they must in their in- <lb/>
in their horizontal <lb/>
or the ship will wrecked <lb/>
as goes sliding down toward the <lb/>
water. is held entirely by <lb/>
stout piece of timber that clamps the <lb/>
James palace; this, and this only <lb/>
was all ho bad <lb/>
Beacon Hill's Glory Departed. <lb/>
Who among tho prophets could <lb/>
foretold years ago that real <lb/>
estate on far famed Beacon bill <lb/>
stationary and sliding together depreciated in value <lb/>
section of <lb/>
a Great by is fat; <lb/>
in St Nicholas. <lb/>
Island, although the least <lb/>
of the states, is strong in <lb/>
employing hands and <lb/>
producing worth of <lb/>
lines of goods. <lb/>
manuscripts of fifth and <lb/>
twelfth centuries were written with <lb/>
very good black ink which has not <lb/>
shown least signs of fading <lb/>
obliteration. <lb/>
All that is good in art is ex- <lb/>
of one soul talking to an- <lb/>
other, Is precious according to <lb/>
tho greatness of tho soul that utters <lb/>
Gallon was originally a pitcher e <lb/>
jar, no matter of what size. <lb/>
Here is a diamond, here a of <lb/>
Both carbon . yet between, <lb/>
them of magicians <lb/>
food on your <lb/>
own bod; ; the same, <lb/>
vet between two the <lb/>
lion, the arbiter el growth or decline, <lb/>
or death. <lb/>
We cannot make a diamond, we can- <lb/>
not make blood and bone. No. <lb/>
But by means of the Shaker Digestive <lb/>
Cordial we can enable the <lb/>
food which would otherwise <lb/>
poison the a <lb/>
forms of con- <lb/>
weakness, loss of flesh, <lb/>
thin m the <lb/>
dial is remedy. Taken <lb/>
with fool it relieves at one It <lb/>
and assists nature to nourish <lb/>
trial to show its merit <lb/>
cents <lb/>
is t e be-t medicine for <lb/>
en it hi place- <lb/>
Ca-tor <lb/>
Th Pint Preparations Are Mad <lb/>
the Are Laid. <lb/>
It has often said that man <lb/>
begins to die the moment that he <lb/>
begins to live. It might also be said <lb/>
that a ship begins to be launched <lb/>
the moment she begins to built. <lb/>
Tho first thing in actual con- <lb/>
is to arrange tho keel <lb/>
blocks on which ship is to rest <lb/>
while is building. must be <lb/>
placed at distances apart, <lb/>
and each must a little <lb/>
than its neighbor nearer the water. <lb/>
These blocks are usually of the <lb/>
Stoutest oak and are placed from <lb/>
two to feet apart. They must <lb/>
a regular inclination, or <lb/>
Ship cannot be launched. In <lb/>
like St. Louis the incline is <lb/>
about half an inch in height to <lb/>
a foot in length. In smaller <lb/>
It is often more than one inch to <lb/>
foot. Larger vessels so much <lb/>
weight that a sharp incline is not <lb/>
as necessary as with smaller ones. <lb/>
Tho keel of ship is laid o <lb/>
blocks, and as fast as tho sides of <lb/>
the vessel are up great props <lb/>
against them to make <lb/>
sure that by no will <lb/>
topple over. <lb/>
At length bull of ship is <lb/>
completed. it is that <lb/>
launching apparatus is prepared. <lb/>
This consists of two parts, one that <lb/>
remains fixed on the ground and <lb/>
one that glides into tho water with <lb/>
the ship. The part that goes into <lb/>
the is cradle. It is that <lb/>
part in which tho hull of the vessel <lb/>
rests snugly, and probably that is <lb/>
why it is called a cradle. When the <lb/>
time comes for the launch, a long <lb/>
row of blocks is built under each <lb/>
side of tho ship at an distance <lb/>
from keel blocks and of the <lb/>
same inclination. On those <lb/>
first the stationary <lb/>
These consist of broad planks of <lb/>
oak from to feet wide, capable <lb/>
of sustaining a weight of from to <lb/>
tons to square foot On top <lb/>
of ways the <lb/>
of nearly tho breadth, <lb/>
and between the two the tallow is <lb/>
A narrow cleat runs along the <lb/>
edge of the stationary ways so that <lb/>
sliding ways shall not slip off as <lb/>
carry tho ship along. Above <lb/>
tho sliding ways is what is called <lb/>
the This consists Of <lb/>
pieces of timber packed <lb/>
curving of vessel to <lb/>
hold it firm to tho sliding ways be- <lb/>
neath. Tho in the hull vary <lb/>
much that it would be impossible <lb/>
to lit sliding ways to them, and <lb/>
so, by moans of packing, ship is <lb/>
fitted to the ways instead. The pack- <lb/>
and the sliding ways constitute <lb/>
the cradle, and it is fastened to the <lb/>
ship by stout Along its length, <lb/>
at intervals of about are <lb/>
big Wedges, the points of are <lb/>
Inserted between the sliding ways <lb/>
and packing. A rope about the <lb/>
thickness of a clothesline runs from <lb/>
wedge to so that none may <lb/>
be lost when they float into the <lb/>
are now ready for the <lb/>
Tallow to thickness of about an <lb/>
Inch has been spread between the <lb/>
ways as were put in position, <lb/>
nearly barrels being necessary <lb/>
for a ship like the St. Louis. The <lb/>
sots snugly against the ship's <lb/>
bottom. Tho vessel, however, is still <lb/>
resting on the blocks. The task <lb/>
now is to transfer the ship from <lb/>
those blocks to the launching <lb/>
supports and to take away keel <lb/>
blocks. Then, when the weight of <lb/>
the ship rests on tho launching ways <lb/>
alone, all that is necessary is to saw <lb/>
away the at the bow, <lb/>
where the stationary and sliding <lb/>
ways are fastened and the <lb/>
ship by her own weight will <lb/>
into the If she needs <lb/>
a start, several using <lb/>
power are ready beneath the <lb/>
keel to lift her a trifle and give her <lb/>
i Great <lb/>
Franklin <lb/>
CURE FOR <lb/>
Asa remedy for all forms of U <lb/>
Bitters has proved to be <lb/>
best. It effects a permanent cute <lb/>
most dreaded <lb/>
headaches yield to Its Influence We <lb/>
and it illustrates how tho whims of <lb/>
fashion dominate all things <lb/>
I told you of the Spaniard <lb/>
who always put on bis <lb/>
about to cat cherries, that <lb/>
might look bigger and tempt, <lb/>
In manner I make tho most <lb/>
of my enjoyments, and though I do <lb/>
not my cares away, I pack them <lb/>
in as compass as can, and <lb/>
carry them as conveniently as I can <lb/>
for myself, and let them an- <lb/>
Pores of Habit. <lb/>
A story is told of an old <lb/>
miser, who, at the point of <lb/>
death, resolved to all his <lb/>
to a nephew at whose bands <lb/>
had experienced some kind- <lb/>
said ho, for that was <lb/>
bis nephew's I am <lb/>
about to world, and to <lb/>
leave you all my You will <lb/>
then have Only think Yes, <lb/>
I feel weaker and weaker. I think I <lb/>
shall in two hours. Ob, yes, <lb/>
I'm going Give me per cent, <lb/>
you may the money now <lb/>
the <lb/>
Running tho gantlet as a military <lb/>
punishment was, it is said, <lb/>
ed by to punish <lb/>
thieves in bis army. It was <lb/>
towed by the English from Gar- <lb/>
mans, who copied it from Gustavus, <lb/>
and om ployed in British urge all who are afflicted to procure a <lb/>
regiments in America was readily bottle, and give this remedy a <lb/>
taker, up by the Indians of this of constipation <lb/>
Bitters cures by giving needed tone <lb/>
to, the and few cases long <lb/>
the use medicine. Try it i r -e. <lb/>
cents and 61.00 at Joan L. <lb/>
Drug<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017821_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Entered at the pot at <lb/>
Me, N. C. as second o ass mail matte <lb/>
WASHINGTON <lb/>
in Our Correspondent <lb/>
Wednesday, November 1890. <lb/>
A CARD HO EX-SEN <lb/>
JAB VIS- <lb/>
Greenville, N. MM. <lb/>
To Tue Public in <lb/>
King's Weekly, a paper <lb/>
published at this place, contained <lb/>
attack on Mr. Skinner in which <lb/>
my name was and offensively <lb/>
used as a witness against him. It was <lb/>
not the first time my t had been <lb/>
used in that paper in a manner offensive <lb/>
to me, I tut paid no attention to it and <lb/>
would not now if the matter involved <lb/>
myself alone. The statement In the <lb/>
paper, as I remember it, is <lb/>
certain <lb/>
Jarvis is now in the western part the <lb/>
Slate and says these things are true and <lb/>
the hall has not been If it was <lb/>
meant to charge that had discussed <lb/>
these things in public the charge is <lb/>
true. it is meant to say that I bad <lb/>
discussed them in private, if true, it was <lb/>
gross of confidence to give H <lb/>
out publication, but as a matter cf <lb/>
fact, it is not true that have used the <lb/>
language attributed to me in <lb/>
to Mr. It is well known <lb/>
I have assisted in the adjustment o <lb/>
some of bis financial mutters and it may <lb/>
be that in talking about his <lb/>
to some individual creditor I may <lb/>
have said that is not hall of his <lb/>
; but I emphatically deny that I <lb/>
have ever discussed Mr. Skinner's <lb/>
fairs in the manner or in the spirit <lb/>
in said <lb/>
SKINNER AT <lb/>
When I was engaged in my canvass <lb/>
in the western part of the Stale I read <lb/>
a telegram Greenville published <lb/>
in the daily papers purporting to give <lb/>
t of an incident Mr. <lb/>
Lucas and Mr. Skinner in their <lb/>
discussion at Greenville. The telegram <lb/>
made Mr. Lucas say, have been told <lb/>
h today that Gov. said he <lb/>
heard Skinner lobbying in Washington <lb/>
in favor a bill to pay clerks a salary <lb/>
a the year through ; and <lb/>
minutes later went on the floor Con <lb/>
-ind made a speech against and <lb/>
voted against the I <lb/>
from the and I say I have <lb/>
never made a statement to any <lb/>
one. I never heard Mr. Skinner lobby <lb/>
for such a bill. I never heard him re- <lb/>
any one to vote it w any- <lb/>
way, or indirectly, in any man- <lb/>
try to influence them <lb/>
do so; and I have never suited to any <lb/>
one that he did. The facts about what <lb/>
I saw and heard Washington and <lb/>
what I have suited in private <lb/>
m Greenville are I hap. <lb/>
to be in the lobby of the <lb/>
Representatives last spring when the <lb/>
bill referred to was under consideration. <lb/>
I was in conversation with Skinner <lb/>
and two or three other members of <lb/>
House when something was said <lb/>
the matter under discussion. Mr. Skin- <lb/>
remarked that he wanted to see the <lb/>
bill puss but that he could not vote for <lb/>
it; and some of the other gentlemen <lb/>
aid the same thing. In a short time <lb/>
thereafter I was sitting with my back <lb/>
towards the seats discussing <lb/>
with from the West th; <lb/>
probable outcome of the Chicago Con- <lb/>
when beard a familiar voice <lb/>
on the floor speaking, and raising up <lb/>
and looking in the direction of the voice <lb/>
I saw Mr. Skinner on the floor making <lb/>
a speech against the bill. have joked <lb/>
Mr. Skinner about speaking <lb/>
against a bill which he wished to see <lb/>
I have also stated these <lb/>
facts to and laughed about them with <lb/>
those with whom I am in the habit of <lb/>
associating in Greenville, but it never <lb/>
occurred to me that one use, <lb/>
them in a political discussion. Nor <lb/>
could have imagined that <lb/>
man who aspired to a seat in Congress <lb/>
could so far forget the common pro- <lb/>
of life as to make use on the <lb/>
stump a private conversation as <lb/>
coming from me without first <lb/>
f-om me the facts and my permission <lb/>
to my name in connection there- <lb/>
with. When I read the t of the <lb/>
discussion I fell indignant at Mr. <lb/>
conduct and I so wrote I trust <lb/>
he may be able to say it was thought- <lb/>
and not deliberately done. I <lb/>
make these statements facts because <lb/>
feel that those who desire to know <lb/>
the truth of the matter may do so; and <lb/>
because will not allow the coarse and <lb/>
brutal language to have been <lb/>
Used by Mr. Skinner on the occasion <lb/>
referred to prevent me from doing <lb/>
in the matter. <lb/>
Titos- J. <lb/>
I Peel Sarah Bright <lb/>
Alex Venters SO, <lb/>
SO Elisabeth I Amanda <lb/>
Dunn .-0 Alex Harris U <lb/>
The following orders tor general <lb/>
purposes were issued <lb/>
i Henry the, defeat <lb/>
J W Smith J B Little <lb/>
Henry Lewis J L <lb/>
J Brooks James Barrett <lb/>
Ed Page E A <lb/>
It M Starker Luke <lb/>
It W Kin- B W King better than the Republicans did <lb/>
j parts might find that it would <lb/>
advantageous to after its <lb/>
j Had the Democratic <lb/>
, i party teen organized as it should <lb/>
Washington, Nov. Gib 1896 been Senators Jon, and <lb/>
Democrats are would have bad more <lb/>
had wall of defeat again. <lb/>
MEETING. <lb/>
Greenville, Nov. 1895. <lb/>
The Board of Commissioners for <lb/>
county met this date, present C. <lb/>
son, chairman. Leonidas Fleming, S. <lb/>
M. Jones, T. E. Keel and Jesse L. <lb/>
Smith. <lb/>
The following orders for <lb/>
issued <lb/>
Martha Nelson II D Smith <lb/>
Nancy Moore Susan Briley <lb/>
Henry Harris Kenneth <lb/>
Henderson Eliza Edwards <lb/>
J H Henry Ann <lb/>
Cherry i Fannie Tucker Alice <lb/>
Corbett Winifred Taylor <lb/>
Polly Adams Mrs. J W Crisp <lb/>
Long Edwin Had- <lb/>
dock Matilda Thomas Mrs. I <lb/>
Joyner Hannah <lb/>
t as or <lb/>
whelming as the <lb/>
tried to make the country believe <lb/>
it was. but still it is defeat. Dem- <lb/>
do not like defeat any bet- <lb/>
now than the past any <lb/>
It W King W H J <lb/>
L W T Godwin <lb/>
Alonzo Jones S T Carson <lb/>
A A Joyner J M <lb/>
Morris Meyer Woody Mo-aw- <lb/>
horn W It Whichard Henry <lb/>
CHas Council W <lb/>
B Wilson S E Ponder F <lb/>
W Brown F W on, <lb/>
M B Go, D J Whichard <lb/>
It W King E A <lb/>
W B Moore K F Williams <lb/>
Wiley Pierce S V <lb/>
four years but there are <lb/>
numerous reasons which serve to <lb/>
make the defeat of <lb/>
aggravating, not the least <lb/>
of which is the knowledge <lb/>
his el action would have ho <lb/>
easy had the gold Democrats <lb/>
en him as loyal support as the <lb/>
silver Democrats gave to Cleve- <lb/>
land in his campaigns. Still <lb/>
there is very little bitterness ex- <lb/>
pressed by Democrat. They <lb/>
made their against the <lb/>
I Barton Woody Me- great eat odds any party <lb/>
W L House So, N L <lb/>
Gray iv II Williams J It <lb/>
Congleton J J Perkins J W <lb/>
Murphy E G Cox E B <lb/>
C M Bernard N <lb/>
K Cory James Cox D C <lb/>
Moore J II M t <lb/>
Bullock It I. Davis W C <lb/>
Askew J A bang W <lb/>
Whichard See, T II W <lb/>
H Boss, II T King J O I <lb/>
J L Smith , S M Jones <lb/>
L Fleming C <lb/>
T E Keel W M King C <lb/>
Laughinghouse -o. <lb/>
A petition from T. F. and <lb/>
others asking for a new road across the <lb/>
lands of F M Smith. J W Allen and <lb/>
others was lead. <lb/>
that the lands of Miss F M <lb/>
Hill, in township, be in <lb/>
valuation from <lb/>
W W Gardner, <lb/>
S F Hardy and Edward Stocks were <lb/>
released from poll tax 1890. <lb/>
The persons were allowed <lb/>
to list <lb/>
Little, J W Wig- <lb/>
gins, S II Abbott, C -de, It M <lb/>
Kennedy, Henrietta Dixon, John Little <lb/>
James J C Foy, W A Forbes, <lb/>
J Teel, W W Al- <lb/>
A Mills, James <lb/>
Hardy, Mills, Mary V Evans. <lb/>
B B <lb/>
Canady Evans, Augustus Evans, <lb/>
May, A Boyd. <lb/>
Swift E May. <lb/>
.-lardy, Noah Hardy, Hardy, <lb/>
C Harris, <lb/>
A Gardner, James II <lb/>
Coward, Groan <lb/>
William Jones, II II Hardy, S <lb/>
L Graft, I. C <lb/>
Barrett. <lb/>
Cooper, Limn. <lb/>
t warren. <lb/>
M King settled tor hire Henry <lb/>
Bennett and was released Iron same. <lb/>
trustworthy information from I <lb/>
oral States than they far- <lb/>
with, and had the ; <lb/>
that were lost they might have <lb/>
taken steps that would have <lb/>
saved them and possibly have <lb/>
changed the result of the <lb/>
It is the custom to <lb/>
at party machines some <lb/>
but for all that they are <lb/>
adjuncts of most <lb/>
PITT'S VOTE. <lb/>
Below we give the total to iv <lb/>
ed by different in t is county <lb/>
the on th.; right indicating ma <lb/>
INTERESTING HISTORY. <lb/>
Snowed Here Years <lb/>
In conversation with Governor Jar- <lb/>
vis Monday he mentioned that he was <lb/>
for the time in Greenville years <lb/>
ago that day and in he remembers <lb/>
it then it was a a place. <lb/>
He told us the circumstances of his <lb/>
visit. He Raid his 8th, <lb/>
in which he was a company commando <lb/>
was in camp at A courier <lb/>
brought the news there that the Fed- <lb/>
troops had at <lb/>
and were burning and destroying every- <lb/>
thing before them. Col. Shaw with his <lb/>
regiment, the 8th, a battery of <lb/>
and some other troops made a rapid <lb/>
march over to to the <lb/>
Yanks and to protect the people. <lb/>
The report turned out to be <lb/>
and the troops all returned the next <lb/>
day. The Governor tells us that his <lb/>
regiment camped that <lb/>
of November, the woods on <lb/>
the old plank road about miles <lb/>
Greenville near Mr. Stanley <lb/>
Smith's, that he went to with <lb/>
some pine straw and the earth for his <lb/>
bed and a blanket and the sky for his <lb/>
covering, and that he woke up next <lb/>
morning covered up about two inches in <lb/>
snow. <lb/>
He also tells us that he came into town <lb/>
early that morning, the 9th Nov. <lb/>
and that it was snowing, that about <lb/>
ten o'clock he received orders to act as <lb/>
Baser of the Rear Guard on a <lb/>
eh back to and that he <lb/>
Greenville eleven o clonk, and <lb/>
that they were compelled to go by the <lb/>
way of Hookerton to cross the Content. <lb/>
and that he went into camp at <lb/>
dark. He also says <lb/>
that the snow melted during the <lb/>
and that it made the roads very sloppy <lb/>
and disagreeable. The reason of the <lb/>
forced mar h back to Kin sum was that <lb/>
a dispatch was received that <lb/>
by Col. Shaw to hurry hi ck to <lb/>
Kinston, collect all his available <lb/>
force and proceed with all possible <lb/>
speed to threaten New which <lb/>
was done. <lb/>
It must be some thirty or more <lb/>
from Greenville to Kinston by way of <lb/>
Hookerton. To sleep on the ground <lb/>
snow and then mike that march <lb/>
on from eleven o'clock to dark in <lb/>
the slush and mud. reads like of <lb/>
Stonewall Jackson's marches or pipes <lb/>
romance ; but such was the soldier's <lb/>
fought against and no near <lb/>
winning that they frightened some <lb/>
of tho other follow almost to <lb/>
death, being <lb/>
and thorough believers in Hie rule <lb/>
of the majority, they are general- <lb/>
disposed to accept the result <lb/>
philosophically and to wait for <lb/>
time to even up things, as it gen- <lb/>
end does, in politics in <lb/>
everything else. <lb/>
Although it is too early, owing <lb/>
to the absence if full <lb/>
tic returns, o pass full judgment <lb/>
on the extent of defeat, is <lb/>
known that a majority of <lb/>
electors have been elected and <lb/>
probable that a majority of the <lb/>
popular baa registered <lb/>
against the free cf silver; <lb/>
it is that a of the <lb/>
next House will be <lb/>
Republicans, feared that <lb/>
enough legislatures have gone <lb/>
Republican to elect enough Sen- <lb/>
to wipe out the silver <lb/>
in the Senate give that <lb/>
body over to the control of the <lb/>
anti-silver Grant- <lb/>
that these probabilities will <lb/>
all turn out to be they are <lb/>
not so terrible, a Democratic <lb/>
print of view, as they at first <lb/>
glance appear to be. In fact, if <lb/>
the Democrats rot have <lb/>
the Presidency and both branches <lb/>
of it is much for <lb/>
the future of tho let it <lb/>
be forgotten that the <lb/>
party is tho one deathless <lb/>
cal that this has <lb/>
that the Republicans <lb/>
have them all. With the <lb/>
legislative <lb/>
of the government in their hands <lb/>
can be no shirking of re- <lb/>
on the part of the <lb/>
Republicans. They have <lb/>
the country a renewal of <lb/>
prosperity, if they were <lb/>
to power. Now that is exactly <lb/>
what the country stands most in <lb/>
what the <lb/>
hoped to accomplish A <lb/>
majority of the voters of the <lb/>
country have decided that the <lb/>
Republicans should have <lb/>
trial. All right, let thorn go <lb/>
ahead and give us prosperity as <lb/>
soon as possible. If they it, <lb/>
the voters will be sure to give <lb/>
fall credit for it, and they <lb/>
may be sure that the Democrats <lb/>
will be too anxious after their <lb/>
long period of under <lb/>
previous republican legislation <lb/>
and policy to get a of that <lb/>
prosperity for themselves to raise <lb/>
obstacles to prevent its com <lb/>
or drive it away after it <lb/>
rives. If they fail, as they have <lb/>
done before, the voters will see <lb/>
their mistake and will give the <lb/>
Democratic party a to tee <lb/>
what it can do towards making <lb/>
the country permanently prosper- <lb/>
instead of spasmodically <lb/>
prosperous with long intervals of <lb/>
Many things might be <lb/>
the methods pursued to <lb/>
cure election, but as <lb/>
the case is analogous to that of <lb/>
some of our unscrupulous rich <lb/>
men who have no hesitation about <lb/>
violating moral to get <lb/>
but are almighty careful nut <lb/>
to violate the criminal laws, it is <lb/>
probably best to let them go with <lb/>
out comment. <lb/>
Since election there has <lb/>
been considerable talk about a <lb/>
reorganization of the democratic <lb/>
party upon some basis which <lb/>
bring together in one <lb/>
all those who believe the <lb/>
fundamental principles of the <lb/>
party. Such a movement proper- <lb/>
conducted is worthy of all <lb/>
commendation, but if it is intend- <lb/>
ed merely as a means of restoring <lb/>
to leadership the men who failed <lb/>
the party its hour of need it <lb/>
will be certain to receive the con- <lb/>
it deserves, from the <lb/>
rank and file of the <lb/>
men who bore brunt of th- <lb/>
battle just lost. There may b <lb/>
two as to the need of a <lb/>
reorganization of the Democratic <lb/>
party, but it is certain, to <lb/>
mind, and I mink to that of the <lb/>
most of those who are fa mi I i <lb/>
with the working cf the campaign <lb/>
Gut<lb/>
Little <lb/>
Barrett <lb/>
Chapman <lb/>
Cox <lb/>
Tucker <lb/>
Harrington <lb/>
Little<lb/>
Perkins <lb/>
Laughinghouse <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
0-12 <lb/>
Jenkins <lb/>
Tucker <lb/>
Cannon <lb/>
King <lb/>
Manning <lb/>
Thompson <lb/>
just ended, that the <lb/>
party needs organ very <lb/>
badly in some states- That i <lb/>
one of the few things that th <lb/>
COMMISSION <lb/>
The above shows that th fusion can- <lb/>
received ave-age <lb/>
ties years ago. The vote <lb/>
Bryan aid indicates bow <lb/>
county would stand if the white <lb/>
people voted t. <lb/>
In there was a <lb/>
lie between two of the <lb/>
for magistrate. Under the election law <lb/>
this will necessitate another election in <lb/>
that township to fill the the <lb/>
to be called by the Superior Court <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
BRYAN MAKES A STATEMENT <lb/>
Lincoln Nab., Nov <lb/>
an today gives out the following state- <lb/>
to the <lb/>
cause ever had supporters more <lb/>
brave, and devoted than those <lb/>
who have the cause of <lb/>
They have <lb/>
and have fought with all the <lb/>
zeal which conviction inspires. <lb/>
will prove whether they O, <lb/>
wrong. Having their duly as they <lb/>
saw it, they have to regret. <lb/>
The Republican candidate has been <lb/>
raided as the advance of s- <lb/>
It the policy brings re. pros- <lb/>
to the America-, people, those <lb/>
who Opposed will share ill <lb/>
prosperity. If, on the other hand, his <lb/>
policies prove an injury to die people <lb/>
th. of his supporters who <lb/>
do not b. long to the <lb/>
class, or to tho privileged owes, will <lb/>
sailer in common with those who op- <lb/>
posed him. The friends of <lb/>
have not been vanquished ; they have <lb/>
simply been overcome. They believe <lb/>
that the gold standard is a conspiracy <lb/>
the money-changers against the <lb/>
welfare cf the human race, and until <lb/>
convinced of their error, they will con- <lb/>
the against it. <lb/>
-The contest has been waged this <lb/>
embarrassments and <lb/>
against great odds. The money <lb/>
has been the paramount issue. The <lb/>
held out the de- <lb/>
hope of international bi-met- <lb/>
while the loaders <lb/>
labored secretly for sold <lb/>
Gold standard Democrats have <lb/>
the election the <lb/>
Indianapolis ticket, while they labored <lb/>
secretly the of he <lb/>
ticket. The trusts and corpora- <lb/>
have tried to excite a fear of law- <lb/>
while they themselves have <lb/>
been defying the law, and American <lb/>
financiers have boasted that they were <lb/>
custodians national honor, while <lb/>
they were secretly bartering away the <lb/>
nation's financial independence. But in <lb/>
spite of the efforts of the <lb/>
and its in spite of the <lb/>
threats of the money-loaners at home <lb/>
and abroad, in spite of the coercions <lb/>
practiced by corporations, and spite <lb/>
of the a hostile daily press, <lb/>
has almost triumphed in <lb/>
its first great right- The loss of a few <lb/>
Suites, and that, too, by a very small <lb/>
plurality has defeated <lb/>
present, but bimetallism emerges <lb/>
from the contest it was <lb/>
tour months ago. <lb/>
desire to commend the work of the <lb/>
three which have <lb/>
joined in the management this cam- <lb/>
Co operation between the <lb/>
hers of distinct political <lb/>
is always difficult, but it Las been less <lb/>
so this year than usual, Interest a <lb/>
common cause of great importance has <lb/>
reduced friction to a minimum. I here <lb/>
by express my personal to <lb/>
individual members, as well as the <lb/>
officers of the national com- <lb/>
cf the Democratic, Populist and <lb/>
parties for their efficient, <lb/>
aid tabors. They hive <lb/>
lain the foundation <lb/>
and will be remembered as <lb/>
when victory is at <lb/>
o.- politic need <lb/>
grieve became of my defeat. My am- <lb/>
has been to secure immediate <lb/>
legislation rather than to the <lb/>
honors of office, and, therefore, defeat <lb/>
brings me no feeling of personal loss. <lb/>
Speaking for the wife who has Shared <lb/>
my labors, as well as myself, I de- <lb/>
sire to say we have been amply re- <lb/>
paid for all that we have done. In the <lb/>
love of millions of our fellow-citizens, <lb/>
so kindly expressed, we find full com- <lb/>
for w we have <lb/>
pat forth. Our hearts have been touch- <lb/>
ed by the devotion friends, and our <lb/>
lives shall prove our appreciation of the <lb/>
of the plain people, an <lb/>
We prize us the host re- <lb/>
ward which this campaign bes brought. <lb/>
the lace of an enemy rejoicing <lb/>
in its victory Lt the roll be e died to.- <lb/>
the next engagement and urge all <lb/>
friends of bimetallism to renew their <lb/>
allegiance to tin; cause. II We are <lb/>
right, and I believe we are, we shall yet <lb/>
triumph. Until convinced of their <lb/>
let all advocates of bimetallism <lb/>
continue the work. Let all silver clubs <lb/>
retain their hold regular <lb/>
meetings and circulate literature. Our <lb/>
opponents have succeeded in this <lb/>
and must now put their theories <lb/>
test. Instead talking mys- <lb/>
about and an <lb/>
they must now advocate <lb/>
and defend a financial system. Every <lb/>
slip by Hit m be publicly <lb/>
considered by silver clubs. <lb/>
cans has prospered most where <lb/>
the money question has longest <lb/>
among the people. During <lb/>
the next lour years it will be Studied all <lb/>
over this nation even more than it has <lb/>
been studied in the past. <lb/>
year is net far away. Be- <lb/>
fore that year arrives international bi- <lb/>
will cease to deceive ; before <lb/>
that year arrives those who have called <lb/>
themselves gold standard Democrats <lb/>
will become be with us <lb/>
or they will become It-public ins and <lb/>
be open emirs ; before that year <lb/>
rives trusts will have convinced <lb/>
mere people that the trust is a menace <lb/>
to private and public safety ; <lb/>
before that year arrives the evil effects <lb/>
of a gold standard will b; even more <lb/>
evident than are now and the <lb/>
people then ready t Hid an Am <lb/>
financial policy for the America <lb/>
people will join with us in <lb/>
ate restoration of the five and <lb/>
coinage of gold and diver t the <lb/>
present legal ratio of to without <lb/>
waiting for the aid or consent of any <lb/>
other nation. <lb/>
signed <lb/>
FOB, <lb/>
confess to oar <lb/>
today. Hope is <lb/>
in sorrow. Exultation <lb/>
piece to despair. Tue down trod <lb/>
den are lower than over <lb/>
before in m history. But for <lb/>
faith an Providence <lb/>
we would despair of our country <lb/>
its institution-. <lb/>
in our history we <lb/>
have a somewhat <lb/>
condition. before, in 1844, <lb/>
Henry Clay mot defeat as <lb/>
as did . on <lb/>
Tuesday. your Hi tits and <lb/>
try said lie. God rules <lb/>
in all things how sub- <lb/>
to Hie will and <lb/>
chastisement on my as a <lb/>
blessing in disguise. Ho may <lb/>
out to us the fail <lb/>
of ids wrath, and <lb/>
a butter <lb/>
to us as a nation, than <lb/>
the party. bow <lb/>
in humble submission to bis <lb/>
wrathful and we in- <lb/>
bis mercy while pours <lb/>
out the vials of his displeasure <lb/>
from cup of Republicanism <lb/>
which holds Ins <lb/>
But after all, tho nice is <lb/>
ways to swift nor tho battle <lb/>
to strong. Victory is <lb/>
the or speedy <lb/>
defeat. As sure as God rules. <lb/>
Democracy has been a chosen <lb/>
vessel the history of this <lb/>
try. has been instrument <lb/>
of its progress and It <lb/>
has bad severe but <lb/>
it has always come out of them <lb/>
purer, burnished, <lb/>
brighter, more stalwart de- <lb/>
Lot us not loose faith <lb/>
in its loyalty, heroism, its <lb/>
steadfastness and its patriotism <lb/>
Let us not cease to venerate the <lb/>
memory of the illustrious Demo <lb/>
every period of our his- <lb/>
that have given to our <lb/>
i Venerable men Patriots <lb/>
all They speak to us from their <lb/>
graves admonish us to <lb/>
City Economist- <lb/>
No comment on tho def of <lb/>
Democracy that we have lead so <lb/>
impressed us as above from <lb/>
the pen of Col. B. the <lb/>
venerable editor the Economist <lb/>
Having already passed his four <lb/>
score years and being familiar <lb/>
with the history of our gov- <lb/>
through a large putt of <lb/>
its existence, no is so well <lb/>
prepared as he to picture <lb/>
ilia rule of the party <lb/>
means. What lie says reminds us <lb/>
of a conversation the <lb/>
had a few Saturdays prior to the <lb/>
election with a prominent minis- <lb/>
of Primitive Baptist church. <lb/>
Al his <lb/>
of Mr. and ins desire to <lb/>
see him he <lb/>
I feel hope that he will be <lb/>
elected this When asked <lb/>
for his reason for he <lb/>
remember the <lb/>
history of the of <lb/>
how because of <lb/>
wickedness and rebellious <lb/>
He permitted bad men to <lb/>
rule over them, and often sub- <lb/>
them to overthrows and <lb/>
even to captivity. feel that way <lb/>
now- There is such great wick- <lb/>
in this nation, the people <lb/>
are so possessed with a stunt of <lb/>
rebellion, there is so much envy, <lb/>
strife, bitterness and do- <lb/>
that I fear God will permit <lb/>
us to meet defeat and suffer fur <lb/>
punishment lie de- <lb/>
livers us from our <lb/>
I., News m -an <lb/>
but It cent per line <lb/>
will he for obituary notices of <lb/>
all business men who do not a he Use <lb/>
while Delinquent <lb/>
ill lie la cents par line tor <lb/>
obi notices. Advertisers and cash <lb/>
v. I r is <lb/>
off w a I'll- I V t . <lb/>
. v m <lb/>
men in <lb/>
will gladly pay their <lb/>
Cotton <lb/>
Below are Norfolk prices r. <lb/>
and for <lb/>
by Cobb on Mer- <lb/>
chants of <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
J. B <lb/>
J G- <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Middling <lb/>
Low Middling <lb/>
Good Ordinary <lb/>
Tone <lb/>
P KAN <lb/>
Pi <lb/>
Spanish <lb/>
13-10 <lb/>
CO t <lb/>
We You n <lb/>
REMEDY Which <lb/>
Safely <lb/>
Life tn Mother <lb/>
Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk., <lb/>
My wife used N- <lb/>
fore birth tier chi d, did not <lb/>
suffer from or quickly <lb/>
I relieved at the critical hour but, <lb/>
no afterward her <lb/>
was rapid. <lb/>
E, K. Johnston. Ala. <lb/>
Sent Mail or on receipt of j <lb/>
Mr bottle. Moth- <lb/>
matted Free. <lb/>
., <lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
Is lowest price any to you Are the best y <lb/>
I If come in and see our stock <lb/>
which we have just received. Oar store is <lb/>
full of New hi d prices <lb/>
were never lower. <lb/>
To the <lb/>
lad e we extend cordial to examine our stock of <lb/>
Dress Goods <lb/>
Trimmings <lb/>
We Lave a beautiful up-to-date You will Bod the <lb/>
we know we can please you. O lovely, how <lb/>
beautiful, the prettiest line I have ever is what lady friend <lb/>
say have B hue and blacks and <lb/>
cm please you. <lb/>
in Ladies and Gent <lb/>
GOODS have a <lb/>
splendid line. <lb/>
In DIES LO for Wraps <lb/>
jaw what want. <lb/>
North Carolina, I <lb/>
County. tn the Court <lb/>
Lassiter, <lb/>
vs. <lb/>
Sarah J <lb/>
The defendant above named take <lb/>
that an action as above <lb/>
has eon commenced in t <lb/>
of for a divorce and <lb/>
the will take <lb/>
notice tint she Is to appear at <lb/>
the term of <lb/>
to lip held at the <lb/>
House In Greenville on the 18th Mon, <lb/>
lay after 1st in <lb/>
1806. answer or demur to the com- <lb/>
plant of the plaintiff, or the relief de- <lb/>
will granted. <lb/>
This f October. 1886. <lb/>
K A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior <lb/>
F. Attorney. <lb/>
Sale of Valuable Land. <lb/>
By of the i vested In me by <lb/>
a decree of of Pitt <lb/>
comity made at September term ism in <lb/>
In which Brown, <lb/>
K. Everett Is <lb/>
an I Skinner are <lb/>
I will offer for sale at the Court <lb/>
door in 7th <lb/>
day of December to the highest <lb/>
bidder the follow Ins described tails of <lb/>
land situated the county of <lb/>
One tract in on erst <lb/>
aide of creek adjoining the lands <lb/>
Louis Galloway, James R. <lb/>
T. Wilson an nth rs live <lb/>
hundred a res nu-re or less and <lb/>
as the Smith <lb/>
One trait in Township north <lb/>
Bide of Tar River the land of <lb/>
Moses Teel Rives <lb/>
laud Others, and known as the <lb/>
land. <lb/>
The terms are one third balance <lb/>
one two years, interest from day of <lb/>
sale, title r tabled all the purchase <lb/>
money Is pal I with the privilege to the <lb/>
purchaser to pay the whole take his <lb/>
title J. JAR VIS. <lb/>
C. October 7th, 1898. <lb/>
A. Notice I <lb/>
Having this day qualified before K. <lb/>
A. Clerk of Superior Court <lb/>
t county, as administrator of the <lb/>
state <lb/>
notice is hereby to the creditors <lb/>
of estate to present their claims <lb/>
duly x ed, to me for payment <lb/>
on or before the -nth of September, <lb/>
1801, or s notice will be plead la bar <lb/>
of their All i- r-o is Indebted <lb/>
lid es at are to make <lb/>
mediate payment thus save cost and <lb/>
expenses. <lb/>
Tins day of <lb/>
JOHN MANNING, <lb/>
w. <lb/>
Blow. Attorney. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors <lb/>
The undersigned duly <lb/>
before the superior Court of <lb/>
county Executor of the Last <lb/>
and Testament of <lb/>
ard, notice is hereby given to <lb/>
all persons indebted to to <lb/>
make Immediate payment to the under- <lb/>
signed, and all persons having claims <lb/>
said estate mast present the <lb/>
same for payment on or before <lb/>
day of October, 1897. or this notice wilt <lb/>
tie plead In bar of <lb/>
This 24th day of <lb/>
WHICHARD. <lb/>
of Jam s shard <lb/>
Men and PANTS <lb/>
GOODS we have just best <lb/>
to in- found and prices were <lb/>
lower. <lb/>
SHOES. shoes we <lb/>
or to buy Mich as will please <lb/>
wearer, the prices on Shoes are <lb/>
much lower than <lb/>
us h trial when you Deed Shoes <lb/>
or any member of <lb/>
your family. We can fit the small- <lb/>
est or largest foot in the <lb/>
L. Reynold Ac Shoes <lb/>
for Men and warranted <lb/>
good service- We have <lb/>
ix years experience with <lb/>
line and know them to lit all <lb/>
claim them.<lb/>
LOADED SHELLS, K- <lb/>
HALL <lb/>
LAMPS. LIBRARY LAMPS, <lb/>
PARLOR LAMPS, LAMP <lb/>
U R ES, T L N W A RE, <lb/>
WOOD WILLOW WAKE <lb/>
COLLARS, <lb/>
TRUNKS, <lb/>
CHILDREN'S <lb/>
PAPER, <lb/>
RUGS, LACK CURTAINS. <lb/>
POLES, <lb/>
and any goods you need for <lb/>
family come to see u-. <lb/>
Our object is to sell lion <lb/>
eat goods at the lowest prices. <lb/>
have a huge line of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
and can give anything <lb/>
may need at the lowest prices <lb/>
ever heard of. Come and see our <lb/>
112.60 Solid Bedroom Suits. <lb/>
To pass by would be <lb/>
injustice to your <lb/>
book. This is not ;, w- <lb/>
say so. but because gooK <lb/>
and prices make it so Her is ii <lb/>
fair if deserve <lb/>
nothing, u nothing, but if <lb/>
yon rind our goods and prices <lb/>
it with <lb/>
Hoping; to see <lb/>
you soon and oar beef <lb/>
efforts make your <lb/>
profitable, we are <lb/>
Your friends. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY <lb/>
q j<lb/>
ll <lb/>
re<lb/>
fit's <lb/>
t- <lb/>
. C , <lb/>
ha ,<lb/>
ts <lb/>
To the Sports. <lb/>
are now headquarters for all kinds of <lb/>
Have opened up a new <lb/>
ad large stock <lb/>
STOVES, TINWARE <lb/>
BICYCLES, in <lb/>
new store next <lb/>
door to j. c. and <lb/>
Son <lb/>
call onus everybody <lb/>
arc selling goods <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
Biliousness <lb/>
Is ml by MM liver, prevents <lb/>
and to ferment and In <lb/>
Then <lb/>
If not relieve. <lb/>
or I S <lb/>
Pills stimulate tho <lb/>
the liver, cure eon- <lb/>
and defy all competitors as to price <lb/>
and high gr goods, -ac <lb/>
cents per box.-T <lb/>
HARDWARE, <lb/>
in abundance and low in price. Don't forget the <lb/>
-I <lb/>
Wilson Heater, <lb/>
The Great Fuel Saver. <lb/>
prices <lb/>
Down. <lb/>
C We line of <lb/>
U Trimmings <lb/>
a I AN Our h the u l the <lb/>
I I IN are exceedingly low <lb/>
rs Oil K at very <lb/>
And a complete line Ladies Underwear, both <lb/>
woolen and cotton. A full line of Gents Fur- <lb/>
Goods. Come and examine our prices <lb/>
and they will please you. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
At Bros, old stand. <lb/>
Style<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017821_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Frank <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Local Refections. <lb/>
ii in <lb/>
am .-t loans.<lb/>
mu at <lb/>
. <lb/>
flutter at S. M <lb/>
Apple <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
m got ready win- <lb/>
Youth and Boys <lb/>
MIL WINTER <lb/>
CLOTHING. <lb/>
in to It to i <lb/>
eking day, <lb/>
tile be l <lb/>
suite re now. <lb/>
AND CAPES. <lb/>
People K Them as They <lb/>
Around Vow. <lb/>
K. Ins returned fro n <lb/>
ante. <lb/>
J. of I. <lb/>
in Monday <lb/>
I ; . of Hi in <lb/>
. italic fa r it to snow. <lb/>
Miss of Snow Hill, <lb/>
is visiting the Misses Wilson. <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
Hove, infant son of Mr. <lb/>
Without Water. <lb/>
The fir.- been <lb/>
Mr. . X. Hart, iv eight ,, there have boon two or I <lb/>
Fall Winter. 1896 <lb/>
he the not <lb/>
p Maori lie III looker now. <lb/>
The Baptist State ml <lb/>
be held Ibis week. <lb/>
tour all <lb/>
Jail at <lb/>
W. William is elected <lb/>
i but in- in. U ilium are masted. <lb/>
The . utility will go <lb/>
on iii-t in <lb/>
Miss Fleming, k <lb/>
visiting Miss Sophia <lb/>
Mis. E. Barrett, of Wilson, is <lb/>
visaing Mrs. A. H. <lb/>
F. Friday morning on a <lb/>
i rip to West Virginia stock it ark <lb/>
Miss s <lb/>
a visit col weeks <lb/>
J. arrived <lb/>
open jewelry <lb/>
and store <lb/>
I. C Flanagan, <lb/>
weeks <lb/>
I lO t.-day. <lb/>
En. Left For <lb/>
Mi. i tin- are <lb/>
but two little fellows above say they <lb/>
are going to over the fact that in <lb/>
three townships in Pitt <lb/>
and <lb/>
Democrats elected their candidates for <lb/>
Constables and Magistrates. <lb/>
also honored itself in <lb/>
Majority r that peerless man, <lb/>
Bryan, the man whom we <lb/>
as -v II in as a crown o <lb/>
o'clock. The I had <lb/>
j about two months, and during <lb/>
a part of I s it -red in- <lb/>
tensely. is a sad bereavement to the <lb/>
parents, their only being taken, <lb/>
and our people sympathize <lb/>
. with it. tie- sorrow that <lb/>
he s, ices were <lb/>
I m .-. . I m <lb/>
. n <lb/>
the work was <lb/>
roe <lb/>
done, ii. <lb/>
been with iii- in. <lb/>
i-iii <lb/>
;. in many; <lb/>
ii la a it bud <lb/>
the I <lb/>
work is net done <lb/>
and <lb/>
On Thursday a colored man giving <lb/>
bis name as Cobb was offering <lb/>
several pistols for sale in Bethel. <lb/>
over there had read in <lb/>
Tun about some one breaking into the <lb/>
store of L. Starkey Bros here and <lb/>
stealing a lot of pistols, and <lb/>
Fa t. <lb/>
to d <lb/>
you to e m M a <lb/>
mm i .-cl <lb/>
me and I will tell you how it can be <lb/>
done. 12th, 13th and <lb/>
I shall be at the King House, Green- <lb/>
ville, X. C. G. W. <lb/>
Agent Imp. Pub. Co <lb/>
FORD'S <lb/>
Bullock took a man in custody, be <lb/>
victory nested upon his brow, and in I confessed that be in the <lb/>
giving majority, even was store. He was brought to Greenville <lb/>
Watson. <lb/>
d i;. <lb/>
It i now iii to t ; <lb/>
bets.<lb/>
III a large lid <lb/>
ii. calls to bi r <lb/>
.- hi- stun <lb/>
an <lb/>
and and <lb/>
n carries. <lb/>
All in and the <lb/>
is than <lb/>
ever. The price <lb/>
has been greatly <lb/>
reduced and <lb/>
the <lb/>
is just <lb/>
the <lb/>
All colors, cuts <lb/>
makes to select <lb/>
Give me a trial, <lb/>
same <lb/>
and <lb/>
from <lb/>
will be satisfied <lb/>
Mrs. Hopkins Boy, <lb/>
Dry Goods, <lb/>
NOTIONS, <lb/>
GENTS FURNISHINGS <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, <lb/>
Xe is prayer of n <lb/>
pure blood, i- <lb/>
U. e and <lb/>
Sines run bus <lb/>
en much cater is more sea- <lb/>
seaside. <lb/>
bis moved from <lb/>
here to to a school i <lb/>
the place. <lb/>
i In- predicted good lanes <lb/>
should i; <lb/>
Herbert has <lb/>
barber to the corner in the <lb/>
for will set in <lb/>
early. are <lb/>
to to pie <lb/>
a ball cent <lb/>
does <lb/>
got better <lb/>
-i- people will now <lb/>
lie agitation the <lb/>
men should get in their ad- <lb/>
licks. <lb/>
Ia lb. <lb/>
Nuts, <lb/>
Evaporated and Peaches, at <lb/>
S. M. Sell <lb/>
The Italian band made more delight- <lb/>
Monday The <lb/>
g- n ; engaged then for the Ger- <lb/>
man on the 18th. <lb/>
is not are <lb/>
hoped, we are glad el- e is over. <lb/>
can now go to work and get <lb/>
Now For <lb/>
U inter Early <lb/>
id.<lb/>
I; mi <lb/>
tree.<lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
is not. dead. <lb/>
It can ha defeated, but the party and its <lb/>
die. <lb/>
placed in jail Several keys were <lb/>
found in bis posses-ion that be- <lb/>
to have been taken from D. D. <lb/>
store night it was <lb/>
and the man has that be bad <lb/>
Town Council affairs a hand in also. He raid <lb/>
At meeting of the lard be came Greene <lb/>
Town night <lb/>
trade that had be. n in existence as to <lb/>
v -d night <lb/>
Snooting at Washington, <lb/>
learns In <lb/>
in the Court House. <lb/>
Monday morning a colored couple got <lb/>
in the Reg <lb/>
They went in bagel <lb/>
and were married at once. The licenses <lb/>
was issued and the marriage witness- <lb/>
ed by Resistor of Deeds, and <lb/>
Ceremony was performed by the Regis- <lb/>
Deeds elect. <lb/>
the lead and the price is no <lb/>
Come and see me. <lb/>
are out of sight in style and color and <lb/>
par in price <lb/>
Every thing cheap. <lb/>
Taken tor Trial. <lb/>
A. II. Mash <lb/>
came lo <lb/>
fa I evening and left next morning taking <lb/>
One colored h I bill. John who has been <lb/>
ed the salary of night policeman R <lb/>
went in the telegraph <lb/>
an began fag. Jordan killed It man named Cat <lb/>
, pursing tic- ma. K. J. ; b It in Meant M Sept. <lb/>
Tin- i-i was ordered out office, land because of threats to lynch bin be <lb/>
when h-J become more was r- moved to Wilson jail and at- <lb/>
the most oaths, and to <lb/>
Bethel Items <lb/>
X. C. fib, a color, d Man was serving will, Man <lb/>
. ,, . to <lb/>
Kate Dean spent and <lb/>
i-, is, ., , , .- service. ins let the <lb/>
in town. She r <lb/>
i., i . ;. i out of the bag, the o in- <lb/>
home an Henderson this <lb/>
crease the salary evidently being with <lb/>
Miss Cornelia of j at dividing ii between <lb/>
bas token a a I <lb/>
in W. I pal it was <lb/>
lien. II. of Greenville, tendered bis <lb/>
passed through here Ibis evening. The Board then elected <lb/>
J. L. Daniel to till the place. <lb/>
Another matter discussed by the <lb/>
such errors <lb/>
Murphy be from per <lb/>
month to fin, During tin <lb/>
that follow d this motion a colored <lb/>
member made remark to <lb/>
that latter bad out been <lb/>
the month or s. with Henry j a <lb/>
Both, a colored who bad bean <lb/>
j , <lb/>
replied M not l <lb/>
the men the town that <lb/>
Can't Understand the Clocks. <lb/>
I'll- Reflector office has got some <lb/>
comical clocks. One in tin- printing <lb/>
Copped work at minutes to <lb/>
a dangerous day. U Thai <lb/>
bound over to bis dock ., .,., o ,, <lb/>
bail hi planed S <lb/>
ens <lb/>
doctors not <lb/>
by. <lb/>
People <lb/>
their minds on <lb/>
Several earn rs who <lb/>
been work and Barnes on <lb/>
L. I. Moore, Greenville, spent <lb/>
Thursday here on legal business. <lb/>
; Hoard t e <lb/>
. Morton, in <lb/>
pent last here on legal bus.- by Johnson, and <lb/>
tor which be already been paid, as <lb/>
Ex. of .-pent to a revision the ii-t. <lb/>
i W. f. was chosen to do the <lb/>
John went to work revision. <lb/>
Saturday night and returned Sundae i .,,,, . <lb/>
The a <lb/>
morning. , ,. <lb/>
It is said the expense day. <lb/>
Rev. Mr. Ricard, the near pastor of jibe Art Calendar <lb/>
preached Friday w it ;., <lb/>
in the usual quantity it could <lb/>
Daring the of October twenty <lb/>
tour marriage licenses were issued <lb/>
Pitt county. <lb/>
WHITE. <lb/>
William Barren and I. Spain. <lb/>
C. I. and K. <lb/>
R. Mills and <lb/>
J. J. Parker and Martha A <lb/>
s. and Dixon. <lb/>
Dunn and Caroline <lb/>
V, r Long v and Ailee u. <lb/>
Foley and bile. <lb/>
John I. Warren and Lidia Tucker. <lb/>
J. Ii. and S. J. Stocks. <lb/>
J. II. Manning aid Bundy. <lb/>
J. A. Andrews and K Moore <lb/>
J. T. and Jennie W. II <lb/>
night and Sunday. <lb/>
col. <lb/>
I not be sold tor less than one <lb/>
j Four are <lb/>
Built j <lb/>
ii ibis morning <lb/>
in abundance and they <lb/>
will suit you in price. <lb/>
Don't forget me <lb/>
when want goods <lb/>
rank <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
homes in Suffolk, having com- <lb/>
their here. <lb/>
fall races at the Greenville <lb/>
Dining Association will begin next <lb/>
Wednesday, 18th. Some the finest <lb/>
race; seen here may be expected. <lb/>
I p to this time there are entries. <lb/>
J. F King is oft in West Virginia <lb/>
baying none and mules for this mar- <lb/>
He says tell the people to wait <lb/>
until be gets back and be will be able <lb/>
to sell them good at their own <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Lang looks quite at home in his new <lb/>
store. Being the same location be <lb/>
so long a time previous to the <lb/>
lire makes look natural to see him <lb/>
back store is being made a <lb/>
place beauty. <lb/>
colored people had on a <lb/>
spirit night. They held a <lb/>
or two and the band on. <lb/>
Well, it is their victory anyway, and <lb/>
they have a right to orderly if <lb/>
they wish to. <lb/>
The election is over now and the <lb/>
country can settle down to business. <lb/>
Let all bitterness that may have en <lb/>
political differences be put aside <lb/>
and everybody work together for <lb/>
best interest their <lb/>
An Italian band came in on Friday <lb/>
evening's train and stopped at King <lb/>
House. Alter supper they made some <lb/>
charming in the hotel <lb/>
was enjoyed not only by those <lb/>
present but by several who had their <lb/>
es connected. <lb/>
Mrs. Warren Breaks an Arm. <lb/>
Mrs. Allen Warren met a very <lb/>
Monday evening. Early <lb/>
after supper she started to go from her <lb/>
sitting room into the ball, she stumbling <lb/>
the rockers of u chair and fell to <lb/>
the floor. In trying to catch in <lb/>
the fall her right arm broken near <lb/>
the wrist. Fortunately her son, Dr. <lb/>
W. E. Warren, was home at the time <lb/>
and be phoned at once for Dr. Charles <lb/>
to and they <lb/>
broken limb without delay. <lb/>
While Mrs. Warren is suffering con- <lb/>
her injury is <lb/>
along as could be expected. <lb/>
Her host friends wish her a <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
Greenville Market. <lb/>
Corrected by M. <lb/>
Batter, per <lb/>
Western Sides <lb/>
Sugar cured Hams <lb/>
Corn <lb/>
Corn Meal <lb/>
Flour, <lb/>
Laid <lb/>
Oats <lb/>
Sugar <lb/>
Salt pet Sack <lb/>
Chickens <lb/>
Egg a per <lb/>
I Beeswax, per <lb/>
to M <lb/>
too <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
o W <lb/>
Lie. to <lb/>
to it <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to I co- <lb/>
to H <lb/>
C, Nov. 1896. on folding pages. Bach <lb/>
Reflector-I desire the w in twelve colors, be- <lb/>
u-e your to make a brief I a true reproduction of the original <lb/>
and simple statement concerning the j water-color painting, was <lb/>
mention the name of i ed because its excellence of design <lb/>
Jams in the joint discussion at of color and tone. i. <lb/>
Oct. 14th, <lb/>
Boa. W. Lucas myself. <lb/>
The rule if debate upon be- <lb/>
tween Mr. Lucas and <lb/>
our joint was that party <lb/>
closing in his reply should <lb/>
no new matter, and should <lb/>
his remarks strictly in reply. <lb/>
This day Mr Lucas closed the de- <lb/>
bat-;. In his last fifteen re- <lb/>
he violated the rule of debate <lb/>
by introducing the subject <lb/>
and said on the subject as I <lb/>
now recall Skinner, as I have <lb/>
been informed the <lb/>
heard Gov. say that he saw <lb/>
and beard Skinner lobbying for the bill <lb/>
giving vacation clerks salary and in <lb/>
minutes afterwards be was <lb/>
the floor making a speech against the <lb/>
It Mr. bad have introduced <lb/>
this matter his hour to me, he <lb/>
would have afforded me an opportunity <lb/>
in my rejoinder to have met this false <lb/>
charge in a deliberate, orderly and con- <lb/>
manner, satisfactory to all and <lb/>
offensive to none. <lb/>
But coming as it did surprisingly, in <lb/>
violation of the rules of debate, array- <lb/>
the influential evidence of Gov Jar- <lb/>
an acknowledged personal <lb/>
against me in absence, an in- <lb/>
tense partisan excitement and pressure, <lb/>
a when f had no opportunity <lb/>
of reply, could not have been ex- <lb/>
to have controlled my thoughts <lb/>
or expressed them in measured terms. <lb/>
I simply lost my usual temper and em- <lb/>
ployed in connection <lb/>
With the name my personal <lb/>
friend, Gov. Jarvis, which I have <lb/>
been and am contritely sorry and take <lb/>
this method of g to for <lb/>
the personal affront and to the public <lb/>
tor using such language. With this <lb/>
statement I now deny having <lb/>
ed vis as a damnable in <lb/>
the sense as was wired over the Slate <lb/>
and published in press to my injury. <lb/>
I simply said the irritation and <lb/>
provocation surrounding that he <lb/>
or any one else that made the statement <lb/>
as used by Lucas a damnable <lb/>
aid not, I could not believe <lb/>
that Gov. Jarvis had made such a state- <lb/>
and his recent statement <lb/>
in Nov. col firms <lb/>
my belief and satisfies me that he, to- <lb/>
with myself, has been wronged, <lb/>
and that he never made such a charge <lb/>
against me. <lb/>
Under any circumstances I should <lb/>
not have used such <lb/>
concerning or in connection with <lb/>
such honorable and faithful public <lb/>
servant and excellent Christian gentle- <lb/>
man as all know and acknowledge Gov. <lb/>
to be. <lb/>
II <lb/>
i- is <lb/>
of each the four folding pa <lb/>
by inches, <lb/>
it is by far the best of <lb/>
work the Companion has ever offered <lb/>
Both as a calendar and at a gem the <lb/>
it is so attractive that <lb/>
t becomes a addition to the <lb/>
mantel or center-table of any <lb/>
It is given free to all new subscribers <lb/>
sending to the <lb/>
ion year who receive also <lb/>
paper free from time the <lb/>
lion is received till January <lb/>
For free illustrated Prospectus ad- <lb/>
The <lb/>
W. and Mary Elks, <lb/>
ban Smith and Jane II. Moore. <lb/>
J. L. Hobgood and Rosa M.-Law- <lb/>
T. Goodrich and Move. <lb/>
R. Davenport and <lb/>
De-mis and Hannah A us in. <lb/>
Cur and Mary William-. <lb/>
Mac Alice W s <lb/>
Albert Can- B Kittrell. <lb/>
Gen Crawford and Ward. <lb/>
Ma ,. Little W. <lb/>
be mi <lb/>
election and is ticking along <lb/>
all right, but the one in the telegraph <lb/>
room slopped right still minutes <lb/>
after the final BOWS came Friday m on <lb/>
am Russell's election, <lb/>
and sen i since lo get it lo <lb/>
work have proven fruitless. We are <lb/>
send that dock to <lb/>
That <lb/>
Tired Feeling <lb/>
Makes you seen with- <lb/>
out life, ambition, energy or appetite. <lb/>
I It is often the of serious ill- <lb/>
or the accompaniment of nervous <lb/>
troubles. It is a positive proof of thin, <lb/>
weak, Impure blood; for, if I he blood Is <lb/>
rich, red, vitalized and vigorous, It <lb/>
parts life and energy to every nerve, <lb/>
organ and tissue of the body. The <lb/>
necessity of taking Hood's <lb/>
tor that tired feeling Is therefore apparent <lb/>
to every one, and the good It will do you <lb/>
is equally beyond question. Remember <lb/>
Hood's <lb/>
Sarsaparilla <lb/>
lathe fact the On- True Purifier. <lb/>
Removal Notice. <lb/>
e have moved into our large two story <lb/>
completed, in the new brick block, at about <lb/>
same place we were located before <lb/>
fire, and with a complete new <lb/>
-----stock of----- <lb/>
AND CONFECTIONS. <lb/>
We now better ever to do business. <lb/>
W a stock in all its branches we are <lb/>
for business. the public for very liberal <lb/>
they have favored with in the past and if <lb/>
is wort, anything, we know we <lb/>
will have a continuance of your Come and see <lb/>
us in our new store and we will treat you right- <lb/>
Ed. H. Co.,<lb/>
FIVE <lb/>
P K <lb/>
Mi a <lb/>
e o C<lb/>
Hood's Pills <lb/>
easy to operate. <lb/>
t-end the News. <lb/>
Now that campaign is over and <lb/>
so much time is not given to political <lb/>
discussion, the hope., to <lb/>
hear from its correspondents <lb/>
We would b- <lb/>
glad to have a good correspondent at <lb/>
ever in the county, one who <lb/>
will send us the news items dice a <lb/>
week. <lb/>
REPORT. <lb/>
CY O. L. <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
LANG <lb/>
CHEAP <lb/>
Funeral Directors. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb/>
Have just received an <lb/>
of i In- latest style and are ready to v <lb/>
the wants of the trade at Prices Lowe <lb/>
than ever offered re. Small <lb/>
and sales Is our motto. Our <lb/>
goods are new and cheap to meet the <lb/>
wants of the masses. We are <lb/>
goods at a price far below the <lb/>
price. <lb/>
casket we sell for <lb/>
TO <lb/>
SO <lb/>
45.50 <lb/>
All we ask Is a and will give en- <lb/>
tire satisfaction. <lb/>
G. A. CO. <lb/>
Op; o Post Office. <lb/>
. F. SUGG. Manager. <lb/>
OUT OF THE OLD <lb/>
Into the New <lb/>
Store we have <lb/>
Will be pleased to serve one and all. <lb/>
LANG<lb/>
SELL <lb/>
CHEAP <lb/>
Prices Be ow <lb/>
Mens Split Boots, C to <lb/>
Men j Good Boots, G lo <lb/>
Boys Roots, lo <lb/>
Mens Shoes, <lb/>
Mens <lb/>
Womens Good Shoes, <lb/>
One-half Wool Dress Goods, <lb/>
1-25 Big line of Serges, <lb/>
1.10 meres and Flannels all <lb/>
wool, double <lb/>
1-00 pounds wood <lb/>
Whole Grain Rice <lb/>
Chi Shoes, to English Island Molasses <lb/>
Ladies to 1.00 Sack Salt, pounds, <lb/>
Ladies Goat Button, to 1.50 Good Buggy Harness, <lb/>
Children Boys Hats to 1.00 Furniture in <lb/>
Mens an i Boys Hats to 3.00 Good Patent Flour, <lb/>
all wool Suits Clothes Old stock Men and <lb/>
Mens all-wool Suits Shoes, <lb/>
Clothes 2.50 to 18.00 Large stock Lard. Pork and <lb/>
Mens to 12-50 Sides always on hand, <lb/>
Highest cash prices paid <lb/>
yd <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
5.00 <lb/>
3.75 <lb/>
J. R DAVENPORT <lb/>
N. C, September 22nd, 1896.<lb/>
R g <lb/>
CO <lb/>
. S <lb/>
CO <lb/>
i e <lb/>
. o- <lb/>
CO<lb/>
ii <lb/>
CS. <lb/>
-a <lb/>
CO <lb/>
CD <lb/>
j- <lb/>
f AFT. <lb/>
A BARGAIN FESTIVAL. <lb/>
All-wool Dress Goods. <lb/>
Cheviot Melanges, <lb/>
Scotch Homespuns <lb/>
Novelties <lb/>
French <lb/>
Suiting <lb/>
Basket-weave Cheviot <lb/>
Fancy Coverts <lb/>
Imported Persians <lb/>
French Broadcloth <lb/>
Tufted Granites <lb/>
Effects <lb/>
Curl <lb/>
The new blues, reds, greens Two <lb/>
and three colors and tones <lb/>
Never before were <lb/>
condition so favorable <lb/>
for making your Win- <lb/>
Clothing purchase. <lb/>
Our stock is brimful of <lb/>
newness in all depart- <lb/>
Not a clothing <lb/>
want has been over- <lb/>
looked. Best goods, <lb/>
best workmanship. <lb/>
RICKS TAFT.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017821_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
PROCLAMATION. <lb/>
Mr. Cleveland Day foil <lb/>
the to Gather Together <lb/>
Offer and Thanks <lb/>
Washington, Nov. the Pres- <lb/>
of Suits. <lb/>
The people of the United States <lb/>
never lie the <lb/>
they the God of for <lb/>
His which hits shielded <lb/>
then., and point d <lb/>
out to the way peace and <lb/>
Kt should they t vi-r refuse <lb/>
to contrite hearts, <lb/>
their to turn from <lb/>
God's leaching, and to follow with sin- <lb/>
pride after their own devices. <lb/>
To the end that thoughts may <lb/>
be quickened, it is titling that on a day <lb/>
especially appoint, d, we should join to <lb/>
in the Throne <lb/>
with praise and supplication. <lb/>
There ore, I. Grover , <lb/>
President of the United State-, do <lb/>
hereby and set apart Thurs- <lb/>
day, the twenty -sixth day i f the pres- <lb/>
mouth of November, to be kept <lb/>
observed as a day o and <lb/>
prayer throughout our land. <lb/>
that din let all our people <lb/>
v and occupation, and <lb/>
their places of <lb/>
we ship; let with one accord <lb/>
thanks to the Killer of the Universe <lb/>
for our preservation as a nation and <lb/>
our from every threatened <lb/>
danger; for the peace that has dwelt <lb/>
within- our for <lb/>
and pestilence during <lb/>
the year that has for <lb/>
rewards that followed the <lb/>
tabor our husbandmen, and for all <lb/>
ill other that have been <lb/>
vouchsafed to u. <lb/>
An let us. through the mi <lb/>
has taught us how to pray. <lb/>
implore the forgiveness sins and <lb/>
continuation our Heavenly <lb/>
Let us not on <lb/>
this day the poor <lb/>
needy; and by deeds of <lb/>
let our praise be made <lb/>
mi iv in light of the <lb/>
Lord. <lb/>
Witness my baud and tee seal of the <lb/>
United States which I have caused to <lb/>
be hereto affixed. Done at <lb/>
Washington, D. C, this day of <lb/>
November, In the year of our Lord one <lb/>
thousand eight hundred and ninety-six. <lb/>
and tin- independence of the United <lb/>
of America the one hundred and <lb/>
Seal. <lb/>
Secretary State. <lb/>
HARPOONING A WHALE. <lb/>
cLues . <lb/>
The of the election u now no <lb/>
longer in doubt. The fight was a hard <lb/>
one, contest close, but as the <lb/>
of battle chats away it is that <lb/>
ha- a of the <lb/>
college and Russell Ins carried North <lb/>
by y. <lb/>
At o'clock the <lb/>
the following <lb/>
inn <lb/>
telegraphs last night the fol- <lb/>
lowing to <lb/>
-Senator Jones has informed <lb/>
me that returns indicate your . <lb/>
ha-ten to extend ray <lb/>
We submitted the issues to the <lb/>
people and will is law. <lb/>
Russell's in the State i- <lb/>
THE GREAT METROPOLIS. <lb/>
City a. th Part of the <lb/>
emu Continent. <lb/>
After taking into full account the <lb/>
claims of the sensitive city of Chi- <lb/>
it be truthfully stated <lb/>
flint city if Now York is I <lb/>
of America. There arc other <lb/>
municipalities which doing their ; <lb/>
best in their several ways to <lb/>
her, but it is toward New York that <lb/>
oil the eyed in the country ate turn- <lb/>
ed, and from which take <lb/>
as a cat laps milk. The real <lb/>
of us are in a measure provincial. <lb/>
Many of us profess not to approve <lb/>
of New York; but, though we cross <lb/>
ourselves piously, take or read a <lb/>
New York daily paper. Now York <lb/>
gives the cue alike In tho secretary <lb/>
of the treasury and way of Lon- <lb/>
to the social swell. Tho ablest <lb/>
men in the country seek New York i <lb/>
as a market for their brains, and <lb/>
the wealthiest tho country <lb/>
move to New York to spend th <lb/>
patrimony which their rail splitting <lb/>
fathers or grandfathers <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Therefore it is perfectly just <lb/>
refer to tho social life of Now York <lb/>
as representative of that element of <lb/>
the American people which has been <lb/>
most blessed with brains or fortune, <lb/>
and as representative of our most <lb/>
highly evolved civilization. It ought <lb/>
to be our best. The men and <lb/>
who contribute to its movement and <lb/>
influence ought to be tho pick of the <lb/>
country. <lb/>
But what do we find find as <lb/>
the ostensible leaders of New York I <lb/>
society a set of shallow <lb/>
whoso existence is given up <lb/>
to emulating another in <lb/>
rate and social <lb/>
; They dine and wine and <lb/>
dance and entertain from January <lb/>
to December. Their houses, <lb/>
in town or at the fashionable <lb/>
places to which they move in <lb/>
summer, are as sumptuous, if not <lb/>
more so, than those of the French <lb/>
nobility in its palmiest days, and <lb/>
their energies are devoted to the <lb/>
discovery of new expensive luxuries <lb/>
and fresh titillating creature com- <lb/>
Conduct of by <lb/>
Robert Grant, in <lb/>
tart Work. <lb/>
Mrs. surprised that <lb/>
husband earns so little if he works <lb/>
as hard as you say. What does be <lb/>
do <lb/>
Mrs. B The last thing be did <lb/>
was to calculate how many times a <lb/>
clock ticked in the course of <lb/>
Tit-Bits. <lb/>
Captor of Ono <lb/>
Cold Blooded Murder. <lb/>
As we came abreast of a tiny cove <lb/>
or cleft in the <lb/>
suddenly stiffened with excitement, <lb/>
and he muttered in <lb/>
an undertone. There in that little <lb/>
cleft lay a monster just <lb/>
awash, a tiny spiral of vapor at <lb/>
showing to be accompanied <lb/>
by a calf. Down the mast and <lb/>
sails as if by and in loss than <lb/>
one minute, we wore paddling <lb/>
straight in for the cove. Tho water <lb/>
was as smooth as a mirror, and the <lb/>
silence profound. A very few strokes <lb/>
and tho order was whispered, <lb/>
to the Louis rose, <lb/>
poising bis iron, and almost <lb/>
darted. Tho weapon <lb/>
was buried to the socket the <lb/>
broad, glistening side. <lb/>
was shouted, and backward we <lb/>
glided, but there was no <lb/>
need for retreat. Never n move did <lb/>
she make, convulsively to <lb/>
clutch tho calf to her side with one <lb/>
of her great winglike flippers. <lb/>
carefully approached again, <lb/>
tho and officer having <lb/>
changed places, and, incredible as it <lb/>
may seem, almost wedged tho boat <lb/>
In between the and the rocks. <lb/>
No sheep could more quietly <lb/>
submitted to slaughter than did this <lb/>
mighty monster, whose roll to one <lb/>
side would have crushed our boat to <lb/>
and whose straggle, <lb/>
bad it taken place as usual, must, <lb/>
in so confined a corner, drown <lb/>
ed us nil. Evidently fearful of in- <lb/>
her calf, she quietly died and <lb/>
gave no sign. Case hardened old <lb/>
blubber hunters we were, felt <lb/>
deeply ashamed, our deed looked so <lb/>
like a cold blooded murder. Ono <lb/>
merciful thrust of a lance the <lb/>
misery, and, rapidly cutting <lb/>
a hole through the two lips out <lb/>
prize, buckled to oar. heavy task <lb/>
of towing it to tho ship. <lb/>
soon joined by tho other boats, but <lb/>
all combined made no groat <lb/>
and had seven hours of <lb/>
heavy labor before we got the car- <lb/>
home. Securing it alongside, <lb/>
went to a hard and well earned <lb/>
meal and u good night's <lb/>
Words. <lb/>
Milk. <lb/>
among the manifold con- <lb/>
to tho commissariat of <lb/>
London that of milk asserts itself <lb/>
most loudly. there is the <lb/>
rumbling transfer at railway <lb/>
of those truncated tin cones <lb/>
containing it which have arrived by- <lb/>
night trains from the country into <lb/>
carts, whoso jangling <lb/>
cans add to tho rattle they make as <lb/>
drive furiously to tho various <lb/>
where it is distributed by <lb/>
thick soled, white aproned women, <lb/>
who, in filling the household jug, <lb/>
also leave a of it on the door- <lb/>
libation resented by tidy <lb/>
mistresses. Tho noise of its arrival <lb/>
before tho London milkmaid fills <lb/>
pail might lead one to wish that <lb/>
its transporting carts fitted <lb/>
with tires. No other <lb/>
makes such a seemingly need <lb/>
loss row in going about its business. <lb/>
But every Londoner must have his <lb/>
apply of milk betimes, mid in this <lb/>
respect the poor townsman is better <lb/>
off than his mate in the country. <lb/>
a p daily working in <lb/>
tho midst cow pastured fields, is <lb/>
often unable to get n jug of it <lb/>
family. It is sent away to the city, <lb/>
in whoso meanest streets the house- <lb/>
wife can always buy a <lb/>
There is no real elevation of mind <lb/>
in a contempt of little things. It is, <lb/>
on tho contrary, from the narrow <lb/>
views that consider those things <lb/>
little importance which in <lb/>
fact, such extensive consequences. <lb/>
A tobacconist named Farr had the <lb/>
following painted above his door, <lb/>
best tobacco by A rival <lb/>
tobacconist, at the other end of the <lb/>
street, painted better to- <lb/>
than the test tobacco by<lb/>
A Bird etching Insect. <lb/>
In this country talk of <lb/>
or insect eating birds, and <lb/>
few of us ever beard or read of <lb/>
a country where tho tables are turn- <lb/>
ed to such a degree that they speak <lb/>
of a bird eating insect, but is <lb/>
the exact condition of affairs in <lb/>
southern Brazil and In <lb/>
those countries they have an <lb/>
called great mantis, which is <lb/>
four or inches in length, <lb/>
not including his strong jaws and <lb/>
immense fore legs. <lb/>
This pair of enormous <lb/>
equal in strength to those of a <lb/>
or a crab and used by <lb/>
tho giant mantis in capturing <lb/>
prey. The food of this <lb/>
insect consists of spiders, <lb/>
small snakes and lizards, and, <lb/>
according to tho most <lb/>
robust specimens of tho will <lb/>
not stand aside with an empty <lb/>
if he can to get his nip. <lb/>
on a bird of the size of a canary, <lb/>
warbler or chickadee. Tho groat <lb/>
mantis resembles a combined loaf <lb/>
and twig both in color and shape, <lb/>
and being aided by <lb/>
is able to stealthily approach its <lb/>
prey. Whether it insect <lb/>
or bird, and seize the unsuspecting <lb/>
with its claws. <lb/>
St. Louis Republic. <lb/>
Broke Che Hank at One may. <lb/>
A local sport named <lb/>
ed into tho gambling rooms of the <lb/>
at the commence- <lb/>
of play the other afternoon. <lb/>
The first hand at was being <lb/>
dealt. Laying down what <lb/>
to a bill with in silver on <lb/>
the top of it on the do bas- <lb/>
he awaited the result <lb/>
of tho draw. Tho card won, on <lb/>
the proceeding to open tho <lb/>
bill he was surprised to find <lb/>
neatly folded inside two bills. <lb/>
The sport bad won which <lb/>
was promptly paid, although it took <lb/>
the bank and more to do <lb/>
it. The lucky rolled a <lb/>
in the customary Mexican non- <lb/>
manner, and, bowing polite- <lb/>
to the croupiers, left the room, <lb/>
leaving those gentry staring vacant- <lb/>
at the waste of green cloth in <lb/>
front of and wondering what <lb/>
the beat thine to do.<lb/>
MATTER OF FACT <lb/>
la Business With <lb/>
Display <lb/>
T. T. of this city, who <lb/>
recently returned from <lb/>
railway survey through <lb/>
Central and South America, says one <lb/>
of the most interesting things to be <lb/>
seen in the tropics is loaf carry- <lb/>
ant <lb/>
loaf carrying ant is peculiar <lb/>
tropical America. The two species <lb/>
occupy different nests. They are <lb/>
never soon in tho same roadways, <lb/>
and they always enter different <lb/>
holes, but those ants such groat <lb/>
burrowers could not say <lb/>
positively that tho do <lb/>
not communicate with each other <lb/>
under ground. Their boles do not <lb/>
cross, and there is no communication <lb/>
between the holes ground. As <lb/>
an experiment, members of one col- <lb/>
were transferred by hand to the <lb/>
path of another. There was no con- <lb/>
The strangers made <lb/>
haste to get away. <lb/>
continued Mr. <lb/>
Lovelace, tho same habits, <lb/>
save that tho red fellows the <lb/>
most industrious. Tho black <lb/>
ways work in tho beat <lb/>
of tho afternoon, the red ones <lb/>
struggled along all day, although <lb/>
there wire fewer workers to seen <lb/>
in the paths and <lb/>
o'clock. There being no trees on <lb/>
Moro island to supply leaves for the <lb/>
ants, they gathered hay instead. A <lb/>
grass that grow to tho earth <lb/>
and produced short seed stalks was <lb/>
just coming in tassel. The seed heads <lb/>
just peeping out from their in- <lb/>
folding leaves when I was there, <lb/>
heads of seed were tho favor- <lb/>
harvest. <lb/>
saw half inch ants carrying <lb/>
stalks an inch long and of twice <lb/>
tho weight of tho carrier. They <lb/>
cutoff the grass leaves earned <lb/>
them in, moist crumbs <lb/>
bread and vegetables cut up <lb/>
and carried also. Very dry <lb/>
wore ignored. I did not Bee them <lb/>
carry meat of any kind, and when I <lb/>
put a piece of freshly killed grass- <lb/>
hopper in their path they refused to <lb/>
notice it. But certain bits of damp, <lb/>
rotten wood carried into the <lb/>
nests as quickly as soft bread. <lb/>
peon who came to see what <lb/>
found of interest in tho little work- <lb/>
dropped a flaming wax match <lb/>
among them. did not <lb/>
it, for rushed into the flame <lb/>
as would have crossed a bit <lb/>
paper. A number were burned to <lb/>
death, while many of them were <lb/>
crippled tho flame was <lb/>
The dead and the crippled <lb/>
remained in tho path perhaps two <lb/>
minutes at a spot five foot from the <lb/>
nest entrance. Then came a gang <lb/>
workers from tho nest, who picked <lb/>
up tho dead and tho crippled and <lb/>
carried them several inches away in- <lb/>
to the grass at right angles to the <lb/>
path. Tho wounded left <lb/>
tended, as ere the dead. Tho work- <lb/>
then attacked the extinguished <lb/>
match taper. It was nearly an inch <lb/>
long, and a dozen took <lb/>
hold of it, pulled it in all directions <lb/>
at once, rolled it another <lb/>
over, stood on their heads and crawl- <lb/>
ed under it, tho leaf carriers <lb/>
streamed by and over them, <lb/>
bee of their presence. <lb/>
It was a case of wholly undirected <lb/>
labor, for any two, possibly any one, <lb/>
could dragged it from tho path, <lb/>
hut it took tho dozen minutes <lb/>
tumble it across two inches of th <lb/>
path. <lb/>
in Honduras an American <lb/>
told mo that the leaf cutting But was <lb/>
to blame for much of tho laziness of <lb/>
tho natives, who do not try to make <lb/>
gardens or cultivate fruit <lb/>
cause tho ants destroy everything <lb/>
that kind. However, tho American <lb/>
solved tin.- of keeping those <lb/>
ants away from his garden by dig- <lb/>
a ditch around it and <lb/>
water running through it, an <lb/>
City Star. <lb/>
Tho egg of tho ant is uniform, <lb/>
smooth, tight bright, without <lb/>
any division. When t ho larva has <lb/>
come from it, only a thin <lb/>
membrane is loft, which rolls up <lb/>
and is reduced to an imperceptible <lb/>
point, and even if the egg does not <lb/>
hatch it is still so small as to escape <lb/>
the This is why these eggs <lb/>
so little known, for what is com- <lb/>
Improperly called the <lb/>
egg is really tho larva and is endow- <lb/>
ed with life and motion. Those eggs, <lb/>
or rather larva, of ants are <lb/>
much sought after by barnyard <lb/>
Science Monthly. <lb/>
A shoemaker was fitting a <lb/>
with a pair of boots when the <lb/>
buyer observed that ho had but one <lb/>
objection to them, which was that <lb/>
the solos wore too thick. that <lb/>
is replied on the <lb/>
boots, and tho objection will grad- <lb/>
wear <lb/>
A Practical <lb/>
doctor, how is it with <lb/>
my husband <lb/>
to middling, so to <lb/>
peak. Ho wants all <lb/>
things. I written out a <lb/>
for an opiate. <lb/>
when must I give him <lb/>
the <lb/>
Tho opiate is for <lb/>
you, madam. <lb/>
Of what consequence is it that <lb/>
anything should be concealed from <lb/>
man Nothing is hidden from God; <lb/>
ho is in our minds and comes <lb/>
into tho midst of our thoughts. <lb/>
Comes, do I say As if he were ever <lb/>
Yard was once any stick, rod <lb/>
pole. The expression is still used <lb/>
with this meaning when applied to <lb/>
various parts of a ship's equipment, <lb/>
as yardarm. and the like. <lb/>
Alan, Poor mo tor man. <lb/>
A life is not a happy <lb/>
one. While the self satisfied con <lb/>
is the coin in his <lb/>
jangling the register, <lb/>
the boll cord or blithely <lb/>
street names, the motor- <lb/>
man is silently grinding out his life <lb/>
at the his mind strung to its <lb/>
utmost tension, and his hands and <lb/>
arms never for a moment Idle. Yet <lb/>
he's the one to be blamed whenever <lb/>
an accident happens, without a <lb/>
thought being given to the many <lb/>
calamities have been avoided <lb/>
his alertness and <lb/>
Boston <lb/>
Before parting Napoleon spent a <lb/>
few moments at her side, and at the <lb/>
end, turning, pulled from a a <lb/>
beautiful rose, which he offered <lb/>
with gestures of gallantry and <lb/>
age. moment tho queen <lb/>
at last put out her band and said as <lb/>
she accepted it, least with <lb/>
the frigid reply, <lb/>
is mine to give and yours to ac- <lb/>
But he gave his arm to con- <lb/>
duct her the carriage, and as <lb/>
descended tho stair together tho dis- <lb/>
appointed guest said in a <lb/>
emotional voice, it <lb/>
that, hag Lad happiness <lb/>
to see so near tho man of the <lb/>
and of all history, ho will not <lb/>
afford me possibility and the <lb/>
satisfaction of being able to assure <lb/>
him that ho has put under <lb/>
rations for <lb/>
With solemn tones Napoleon re- <lb/>
I am to pitied <lb/>
It is a fault of my unlucky <lb/>
Queen Louisa's own lady in wait- <lb/>
related that her sovereign's bit- <lb/>
overcame at the <lb/>
as she stepped into tho carriage <lb/>
She said, you cruelly de- <lb/>
Sloane in <lb/>
Century, <lb/>
What It Coat <lb/>
Mrs. We have <lb/>
cleared off the last of that church <lb/>
debt, and it never cost you men a <lb/>
pent. See what women can do. <lb/>
Mr. don't know about <lb/>
the other fellows, I know you <lb/>
made me spend more than <lb/>
for extra meals down town while <lb/>
you out monkeying around. <lb/>
Indianapolis Journal. <lb/>
Fiat hunter hates <lb/>
you allow tenants to keep dogs <lb/>
Landlord tho wrong <lb/>
Well, ye-, sometimes. <lb/>
settles it. <lb/>
won't tho York <lb/>
Tribune <lb/>
Heave. <lb/>
Tho ab-i-t man, who it <lb/>
also religions, walked into church <lb/>
while the t was breathing forth <lb/>
a long, low melody that seemed to <lb/>
tho of heaven. And as ho <lb/>
listened to ii his air grew <lb/>
occupied, a light not of earth came <lb/>
his suffused eyes, all better <lb/>
his nature were moved <lb/>
in accord With tho melodious strains, <lb/>
and fur that moment ho was not <lb/>
earth. <lb/>
Then he walked into his pow and <lb/>
started to lake off his overcoat. So <lb/>
preoccupied was ho that ho did not <lb/>
realize he was palling off his <lb/>
coat until he stood there in his shirt <lb/>
full view of the worldly <lb/>
congregation, which tittered so it <lb/>
could ho beard. <lb/>
Then the man who had been in <lb/>
heaven a moment before sud- <lb/>
back, and his fee-lings <lb/>
like unto those of tho suffering souls <lb/>
Post. <lb/>
v it. i<lb/>
-i <lb/>
In Ufa i <lb/>
M. l<lb/>
Ml . no J <lb/>
i- <lb/>
AND ITS <lb/>
To the Editor have an absolute <lb/>
remedy for Consumption. By its timely use <lb/>
thousands of hopeless cases have been already <lb/>
permanently cured So proof-positive am I <lb/>
of its power that consider it my duty to <lb/>
send two bottles free to those of your readers <lb/>
who have Bronchial or <lb/>
Lung Trouble, if they will writs me their <lb/>
express and address. Sincerely, <lb/>
T. A. M. C, Pearl St., Hew York. <lb/>
Tim and<lb/>
f. I <lb/>
j l,<lb/>
v Wilson <lb/>
v Col <lb/>
Vi Wilmington <lb/>
P. v,. <lb/>
Us <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
i a I the j ion <lb/>
i y <lb/>
V. II j v <lb/>
I U <lb/>
V ,. at ham r <lb/>
.- <lb/>
s Pills <lb/>
All <lb/>
Liver Ills. <lb/>
ARE YOU <lb/>
health, <lb/>
constitution undermined by ex- <lb/>
in eating, by <lb/>
the laws of nature, or <lb/>
physical capital all gone, if so, <lb/>
NEVER DESPAIR <lb/>
Liver Pills will cure you. <lb/>
For sick headache, dyspepsia, <lb/>
sour stomach, malaria, torpid <lb/>
liver, constipation, biliousness <lb/>
and all kindred diseases. <lb/>
Liver Pills <lb/>
an absolute cure. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
T ii d V <lb/>
I -ll. I I I <lb/>
; j m r. t r <lb/>
ca- <lb/>
u . 1.1 Ice in . <lb/>
.<lb/>
hated <lb/>
1806. <lb/>
Selma. <lb/>
v Wilson <lb/>
Kooky Ml <lb/>
la . <lb/>
M. <lb/>
-I <lb/>
A.<lb/>
us <lb/>
P. Ai <lb/>
en <lb/>
it <lb/>
M P. M. <lb/>
ill <lb/>
II II <lb/>
V B. . y on, <lb/>
Know Hill, N. V. -v X. C. <lb/>
G ALLOW TYSON, <lb/>
Greenville, X. C <lb/>
Practice in all fowl, <lb/>
m H- <lb/>
R. I. I,. <lb/>
H. O.<lb/>
Rocky <lb/>
GOOD STOCK A . Pf <lb/>
TOO. <lb/>
is <lb/>
pared especially for stick, u well M j <lb/>
man, for purpose i- d in tin <lb/>
holding one-bin of <lb/>
cine <lb/>
Franklin Co., <lb/>
March <lb/>
I have all kinds of m i <lb/>
I would not Rive om i of ii b k <lb/>
1-. n v for the ever aw <lb/>
It is the tiling f r n or cattle In <lb/>
be of year, an I will cure <lb/>
sicken ch time. <lb/>
i. Ian. <lb/>
; I <lb/>
TASTELESS <lb/>
B M . <lb/>
Content. <lb/>
of content must <lb/>
Spring up in mind, and who <lb/>
has so little of <lb/>
as to seek happiness by <lb/>
changing anything but his own dis- <lb/>
position will bis in fruit- <lb/>
loss and multiply tho griefs <lb/>
which he to <lb/>
Potash <lb/>
is a necessary and important <lb/>
ingredient of complete fer- <lb/>
Crops of all kinds <lb/>
require a properly balanced <lb/>
manure. The best <lb/>
Fertilizers <lb/>
contain a high percentage <lb/>
of Potash. <lb/>
All results of Its by e. <lb/>
on the best farms in the United <lb/>
told in a little book which we publish and will gladly <lb/>
mail free to any farmer in America who will write for it. <lb/>
GERMAN KALI WORKS. <lb/>
Nassau St., New York. <lb/>
Train on ; <lb/>
Weldon p. in., Halifax 4.10 <lb/>
i. m., arrives Scotland at i sq p <lb/>
6.47 p, m., Kinston 7.46 <lb/>
. in. Returning, 7.2 <lb/>
a in., Greenville a. in. <lb/>
I at a. m., n <lb/>
except <lb/>
1.11 w Branch leave <lb/>
Washington 8.00 a, m., 8.00 p . m, <lb/>
Parmele a. m and 4.40 p, <lb/>
-n., Tarboro a. in., <lb/>
in., a. in. <lb/>
6.20 p. in,, arrives Washington <lb/>
a. 7.10 p, m, ex- <lb/>
Sunday. trains on <lb/>
Scot In Neck Branch. <lb/>
Tram leaves r C, via <lb/>
it. H. <lb/>
. at p. at., P. M ; <lb/>
Plymouth 9.00 P. M., p. m. <lb/>
pt <lb/>
0.00 a. u;., 8.80 a -n., <lb/>
10.2 am and <lb/>
Train on Midland N. C. branch leaves <lb/>
except Sunday, a <lb/>
arriving m. Be- <lb/>
turning leaves 8.00 a. m., <lb/>
rives at a. <lb/>
Trains in N h <lb/>
Mount a p. in., arrive <lb/>
Nashville 5.09 p. , Spring Hope <lb/>
p Hi-Hi in ave Spring Hope <lb/>
m., N a at <lb/>
Mount 9.0 in. dally <lb/>
Trains on Latta branch, Florence R <lb/>
leave Latin to <lb/>
Clio i n. Returning <lb/>
leave a 6.80 a in, <lb/>
Latta 7.80 a m. daily except <lb/>
Train Branch leaves War- <lb/>
i for <lb/>
a. in. p. in- <lb/>
rave-1 lilt a in. ill. <lb/>
a. makes clone connection <lb/>
it Weldon all points daily, ail rail via <lb/>
me. else K Mount <lb/>
Norfolk and H for <lb/>
lie all points North via Norfolk. <lb/>
JOHN K. DIVINE,<lb/>
r. M. K <lb/>
I. H. KS Y. -r. <lb/>
druggists. <lb/>
dizziness. <lb/>
Ripens ass <lb/>
curb <lb/>
dyspepsia. <lb/>
-----A line <lb/>
Family <lb/>
A . <lb/>
Flour, Lard, <lb/>
Moat, Coffee <lb/>
Meal, Sugar<lb/>
I tun <lb/>
selling low <lb/>
bat it <lb/>
surprise. <lb/>
me <lb/>
and will <lb/>
tr at fair <lb/>
and sonar a. <lb/>
ft K <lb/>
HOM K C <lb/>
Will open <lb/>
Oct. a Home School s <lb/>
tr. years of age. 1- <lb/>
limited to <lb/>
Mrs. AL <lb/>
Norwood O Nelson C <lb/>
i-i-i-. i 1.1 estate to make <lb/>
In <lb/>
and I i having claims against <lb/>
the 11-1 ; i-i tame <lb/>
within ton <lb/>
p or -i Ice III b plead <lb/>
r f <lb/>
T i- October. If B. <lb/>
D. . POUT. <lb/>
V Davenport. <lb/>
s Notice. <lb/>
ac i , .,, <lb/>
of Jesse Brown <lb/>
County Stale .,; North <lb/>
I ii- claims <lb/>
Id-1 e are hi r by -milled <lb/>
in me for t i inn <lb/>
i- e in m ill- Iron tin- no. <lb/>
II v. . . i.- . n ,,. <lb/>
And all ; . <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
d ate are -ii. u in <lb/>
at me <lb/>
Li- i. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Land Bale. <lb/>
By of tin <lb/>
Ii in the -I. M <lb/>
and tin h- i . f I;. <lb/>
Li I . . . . l. I. <lb/>
. I. I, the ill d <lb/>
-i n w in -e i for <lb/>
the door In <lb/>
Monday, the day m Nov. B. the <lb/>
I in-- ma ii t I <lb/>
I. Th it pan No. the <lb/>
town . i tin upon i- <lb/>
occupied Mi K. U. <lb/>
now by M. g <lb/>
no an th <lb/>
Iii p e <lb/>
m hull Id lot. <lb/>
I art of lot No I- in he <lb/>
low i -1-.--11 b v. ii In- <lb/>
, . . pied by -i . <lb/>
II in- or <lb/>
an -in b I <lb/>
t II i lot, <lb/>
. in n <lb/>
in I in- . ling Mi <lb/>
of in-. V ,. <lb/>
and w a i. <lb/>
i. I i-i a <lb/>
e or .---. <lb/>
i j.- hi for<lb/>
I.<lb/>
.; <lb/>
WARRANTED. <lb/>
-I <lb/>
. . i . <lb/>
fl bill ., <lb/>
Gild and K <lb/>
i- . . r. inn m . <lb/>
r . . In <lb/>
b u . n .-. <lb/>
Ml . <lb/>
. wen ace <lb/>
Sold . <lb/>
st.<lb/>
Pro pi. <lb/>
A n n a <lb/>
Court <lb/>
. N C <lb/>
M and dealers in nil <lb/>
i-i <lb/>
PINE <lb/>
All if done <lb/>
We H-.- ski lie I d good <lb/>
material prepared to <lb/>
on i ;. <lb/>
CO. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
IN------- <lb/>
His Worst Enemy by <lb/>
P. P. p., <lb/>
Remedy. <lb/>
Hit. <lb/>
I. Id<lb/>
FE OLD Bl <lb/>
--------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A I <lb/>
YEARS has taught aw that the best Is tie cheap <lb/>
Hope, Building Farming Implements, and every <lb/>
ring necessary for Millers, Mechanic and general limn- purposes, well a <lb/>
Bats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head <lb/>
for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spun <lb/>
keep attentive <lb/>
N . <lb/>
;. PUt Co. n c. <lb/>
T. J. up <lb/>
COBB BROS CO.<lb/>
their year's will <lb/>
prices be U re <lb/>
all Its<lb/>
a. way 1.1 at<lb/>
we buy from <lb/>
at one an <lb/>
of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
always i-nil prices i-i <lb/>
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old mi -i- <lb/>
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V. N <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers. <lb/>
Offices and Progress Building, Water Street. <lb/>
Bagging, Ties Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
and Consign merits Solicit <lb/>
All editions Codes used <lb/>
SUGG. <lb/>
I iii, Fire and Aden. Insurance. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
W AT <lb/>
All Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
ASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At current rates. <lb/>
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its Class in the State. <lb/>
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of Silver and Repeal <lb/>
of the Ten Per Tax on <lb/>
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per month. per <lb/>
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torpid <lb/>
cure Indigestion. <lb/>
for sour stomach. <lb/>
cure Cad breath. <lb/>
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Norfolk, Baltimore. <lb/>
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August 4th. I <lb/>
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Cured by P. P. P. <lb/>
Ores where nil other <lb/>
remedies foiled. <lb/>
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hands and feet. agonies Intense, <lb/>
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Is the of P, p. <lb/>
Woman's weakness, whether nervous or <lb/>
otherwise, ran be eared <lb/>
bunt an b P. P. r. A healthy woman b <lb/>
woman. <lb/>
Pimples, blotches, and nil d's- <lb/>
of the skin removed <lb/>
cured by P. P. P. <lb/>
P. P. P. will restore your <lb/>
your system and regulate you In <lb/>
P. P P. removes that down. <lb/>
feeling <lb/>
For and Pimples on <lb/>
lake P. P P. <lb/>
for and thorough <lb/>
take P. P. p. <lb/>
Remedy, and get welt at once. <lb/>
SOLD BY ALL <lb/>
BROTHERS, APOTHECARIES, <lb/>
SOLE PROPRIETORS <lb/>
Block, J <lb/>
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