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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>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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mi <lb/>
SIX MONTHS <lb/>
The <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
THE PAPER <lb/>
EVER PUBLISHED IN <lb/>
LARGEST CIRCULATION. <lb/>
EXCELLENT <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL VII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY FEBRUARY <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
TWO SIZES TO A <lb/>
MARGARET ANDREWS OLDHAM. <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
are two side to n so <lb/>
my mother paid to me. <lb/>
When in frolics I would fuss <lb/>
And to her would go for comfort, with a <lb/>
weight upon my heart, <lb/>
I Thinking- without any <lb/>
would blindly take my part. <lb/>
in early years of childhood, while at <lb/>
yet in- little feet <lb/>
thing is that during this period, <lb/>
1880 to 1886, the actual cash <lb/>
by North Carolina far- <lb/>
mer tor these fertilizers has de- <lb/>
creased per cent, while the <lb/>
or grade has improved <lb/>
percent. Tine menus North <lb/>
Carolina farmer could get, in <lb/>
three million of dollars <lb/>
what they had to pay four millions <lb/>
for in and get an <lb/>
than the <lb/>
1880 article was. <lb/>
The station has endeavored to <lb/>
extend on all matters <lb/>
; Stood the magic fairy-land of <lb/>
. . by hood so sweet, <lb/>
Subscription Price. per year ,,.,, honest lesson, as my pertaining to scientific agriculture <lb/>
dear replied print lug <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC HUT ; sides to a question, let me <lb/>
hear the other side. <lb/>
will not hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men and measures that are not consistent <lb/>
now used, every <lb/>
pound which brought from <lb/>
Europe miles away. <lb/>
The officers of the Station <lb/>
have aided lamely in the displays <lb/>
of the resources of the State in <lb/>
Boston in 1883, at our own Expo- <lb/>
in 1884 in New Orleans in <lb/>
These exhibits have done <lb/>
incalculable good m advertising <lb/>
North Carolina and her material <lb/>
resources. <lb/>
The Station has always in <lb/>
the past is to-day cheerfully <lb/>
and promptly attending to every <lb/>
Digestion experiments with <lb/>
stock to ascertain practically the <lb/>
value of certain our food stuffs. <lb/>
A study of the temperature <lb/>
of the soil, to ascertain how far it <lb/>
affects the of the crop. <lb/>
Investigation of the chem- <lb/>
constituents of the Standard <lb/>
crops in the various stages of their <lb/>
growth ; and the growth of the <lb/>
State Guard. <lb/>
Raleigh Chronicle. <lb/>
The law under which the State <lb/>
Guard is to he so thoroughly equip- <lb/>
went into force the 1st <lb/>
1887. Decisions made in De- <lb/>
by the Secretary of War <lb/>
were to the effect that its <lb/>
provisions Quartermaster's stores <lb/>
roots of these crop, as determined I as well as ordinance stores could <lb/>
by root-washing. be issued. This is a new depart- <lb/>
The list might he largely ore and a most important one ; <lb/>
increased is merely given to <lb/>
show in outline the work which is <lb/>
request by mail and otherwise, in I considered should he undertaken <lb/>
sixty separate reports, <lb/>
formulas for composts,<lb/>
with the true principles of the party. I of and be- ions have <lb/>
If yon want a a the swallows go i been distributed broadcast <lb/>
section of the State send for the High I prize the useful lesson, in the , and ill ad- <lb/>
in of trouble, such <lb/>
come to all who grow rt,. . ,. . . <lb/>
Of their mother's and be- n <lb/>
tor. Or SAMPLE <lb/>
true and tried. <lb/>
That has silenced my opinion till I heard <lb/>
the side. <lb/>
For the darkest cloud, they tell us, has a <lb/>
lining silver bright; <lb/>
have their hours of perfect light ; <lb/>
Ami this life so strange and <lb/>
where no joy can long abide. <lb/>
Has a look in Heaven, where <lb/>
we see the side. <lb/>
A. Y. Universal <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
at. Scales, of <lb/>
M. <lb/>
man. of New Hanover. <lb/>
Secretary of <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
W. Rain, of Wake. <lb/>
P. Roberts, of Gates. I <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction N. <lb/>
M. Finger of . . r <lb/>
Attorney F. David- <lb/>
son, of <lb/>
,.,., the it <lb/>
X. H. of, . ., . ,. .,.,. <lb/>
to future <lb/>
Associate S. Ashe. of <lb/>
Augustus Merrimon. of Wake. The h Carolina Agricultural <lb/>
JUDGES SUPERIOR <lb/>
monthly Bulletin has <lb/>
hugely increased this circulation. <lb/>
The effect of these publications <lb/>
has of the service to <lb/>
For our days so with shadow, the people of the State, <lb/>
First E. Shepherd, of, , , ., . a . . <lb/>
ed an Act o <lb/>
Second Philips, of in 1877. just ten years ago, which <lb/>
Edgecombe. Act the same time established a <lb/>
Connor, of j , and of <lb/>
re-nth Clark, of and Statistics <lb/>
The object.- for which <lb/>
ally and collectively. <lb/>
By the urgent ad <lb/>
vice, thousands home-made <lb/>
composts have been made by <lb/>
in every of the State, <lb/>
and the have that <lb/>
every pound of compost put up <lb/>
means so much money in their <lb/>
pockets. To aid in the <lb/>
these compost have been, <lb/>
when requested, analyzed by the <lb/>
Sta ton. Over hundred <lb/>
these and other home materials. <lb/>
Experiment Station was establish- from waste products been <lb/>
as to the proper <lb/>
for certain soils, in giving <lb/>
a variety of formulas for composts <lb/>
suitable for each individual soil, <lb/>
and in fact in among <lb/>
questions relating to <lb/>
scientific agriculture. <lb/>
The officers of the Station <lb/>
have attended many Farmers In-j <lb/>
made addresses <lb/>
to topics of importance to the i <lb/>
farmers. <lb/>
The money value of this work <lb/>
cannot he estimated. As far as <lb/>
the fertilizers alone are concerned <lb/>
the following will give an <lb/>
The results which been ac <lb/>
certainly for North Carolina, <lb/>
it permits the complete equipment, <lb/>
with of <lb/>
the State Guard. The law in- <lb/>
experiment the allowance annually to <lb/>
in the past, as well as Whet militia in the United States <lb/>
proposes for the is thus <lb/>
outlined. Can the people afford <lb/>
lo let this work droop in languish <lb/>
a work so fraught with good re-<lb/>
H. Director. <lb/>
A Printer's Dream. <lb/>
North <lb/>
Carolina's annual is <lb/>
Of this allowance, <lb/>
July, 86.000 is to the State's credit <lb/>
now, and more becomes <lb/>
available July 1st next. Out of <lb/>
this overcoats will be <lb/>
drawn for twelve hundred men. <lb/>
Four companies are to he <lb/>
supplied with uniforms, <lb/>
and the issue of the latter will in <lb/>
cases he based upon the report of <lb/>
charges for such work <lb/>
for each analysis, which <lb/>
would make for the <lb/>
work on fertilizers alone every <lb/>
year. Besides the fertilizers there <lb/>
are analyzed several hundred <lb/>
samples each year, embracing <lb/>
examined their value to the <lb/>
shown. <lb/>
The phosphate beds of the <lb/>
Slate have been explored and <lb/>
j mapped. These beds though no. <lb/>
j now on account of the ex- <lb/>
of the Experiment Sta South Carolina rock, <lb/>
Sixth T. of j were desired two-fold grade will undoubtedly <lb/>
Sampson. <lb/>
Seventh C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth J. <lb/>
Cabarrus. <lb/>
Ninth F Graves, of <lb/>
Yadkin. <lb/>
Tenth Avery, of <lb/>
of <lb/>
IN <lb/>
Sena B. Vance, of <lb/>
To protect the farmers of <lb/>
the Mate the fraudulent <lb/>
fertilizers then flooding the mar <lb/>
to exercise a <lb/>
of the by a system <lb/>
all legally on sale in <lb/>
and by a chemical anal- <lb/>
of these samples to ascertain <lb/>
valuable in the future and <lb/>
thus tie very profitable to the <lb/>
State. <lb/>
The marls of the State have <lb/>
been examined and no less than <lb/>
three hundred beds analyzed. A <lb/>
has been given to use <lb/>
them, which will prove of <lb/>
M. Shipp, of<lb/>
guaranteed standard. <lb/>
2nd. To on experiments <lb/>
Meek- , , e the <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- , , . A ., . i <lb/>
the nutrition and <lb/>
of District growth of plants with a view to <lb/>
Louis C. Latham, of Pitt. <lb/>
Second M. Simmons, of <lb/>
Craven. <lb/>
Third W. of <lb/>
Fender <lb/>
Fourth Nichols, of <lb/>
Wake <lb/>
Fifth W. Reid, of Rock- <lb/>
Sixth T. Bennett, of <lb/>
S S. Henderson, <lb/>
Rowan. <lb/>
Eighth II. IT. Cowles, <lb/>
Wilkes. <lb/>
Ninth D. Johnston, <lb/>
Buncombe. <lb/>
i ascertain what are best <lb/>
sett-ad to the various crops of this <lb/>
State, and whether other crops <lb/>
may not be advantageously grown <lb/>
on its soil. <lb/>
proving the soil. <lb/>
On account of tho proper con- <lb/>
and regulation of Bale of <lb/>
fertilizers, the in cotton <lb/>
been largely increased the <lb/>
western limit of the cotton belt <lb/>
is now fifty miles farther west- <lb/>
than f Tobacco has <lb/>
like-wise increased in acreage. <lb/>
Now where sods are worth for to <lb/>
As to whether the Station has growing an acre the. <lb/>
fulfilled the respect worth less than <lb/>
to the first, in the proper control I Frauds in the adulteration <lb/>
of the fertilizer trade, the follow-i fertilize have been discovered <lb/>
GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Sept.-i-v Court A. <lb/>
M. King. <lb/>
Register of n. Wilson. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Abram S. Congleton. <lb/>
P. Redding. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb/>
man, J. A. K. Tucker. <lb/>
W. A. James. Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb/>
Public School Superintendent <lb/>
Latham. <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
TOWN. <lb/>
J. Perkins. <lb/>
C. Forbes. <lb/>
Tyson. <lb/>
B. Alex. <lb/>
1st Ward. T. A. <lb/>
and J. P. 2nd Ward. Ty- <lb/>
son and J. S. Smith; 3rd Ward, A. M. <lb/>
Moore and J. J. Cherry. <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
First and Third <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. <lb/>
Hughes. D. D., Factor. <lb/>
Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
every Sunday, morn- <lb/>
night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
LODGES. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A. <lb/>
M. meet every 1st Thursday and <lb/>
night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
Masonic Lodge. . M. King. W. M. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb/>
every 2nd and 4th nights at Ma- <lb/>
sonic Hall. F. W. P. <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb/>
meets Tuesday night. D. L. <lb/>
James, N. G. <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of H., <lb/>
meets every first and third Friday night. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. <lb/>
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of H. meets <lb/>
every Thursday night. C. A. White. C. <lb/>
Temperance Reform Club meets in their <lb/>
club room every Monday night, at <lb/>
o'clock. Mass meeting in the Court House <lb/>
fourth Sunday of each month, at o'clock <lb/>
p. X. E. C. Glenn, <lb/>
Woman's Christian Temperance Union <lb/>
meet in the Reform Friday <lb/>
statement will show. <lb/>
Prior to 1877 no less than <lb/>
brands of wee sold in <lb/>
the State, and of Mich a <lb/>
that confidence could be placed <lb/>
in them or their qualities. A <lb/>
good producing excel- <lb/>
lent the year <lb/>
prove worthless the next. The <lb/>
bad absolutely no <lb/>
I On every hand fraudulent <lb/>
were sold and no <lb/>
by any way tell <lb/>
whether or nine <lb/>
tenths Wat- sand. The people had <lb/>
lost all confidence in their sale <lb/>
and at the time the establish <lb/>
of the Experiment Station <lb/>
scarcely tons were sold an- <lb/>
not the fact that all <lb/>
were made at home <lb/>
l hat could be but <lb/>
wing the entire loss of <lb/>
bad in the trade. <lb/>
What were the people to <lb/>
use of fertilizers tor plant food on <lb/>
most our lands is as necessary <lb/>
to the growth of the crop as food <lb/>
is to a baby. <lb/>
They must used, is no <lb/>
help for it, and yet the farmers of <lb/>
the year 1877 and were <lb/>
millions of dollars annually <lb/>
for sand to haul on the soil, in <lb/>
many instances already too sandy. <lb/>
In fact a certain manufacturer <lb/>
Sold many tons of a stuff contain- <lb/>
common sand, which he claim- <lb/>
ed was as good as ammonia, and the <lb/>
farmers paid hi in per <lb/>
pound for ii, because had no <lb/>
means for proving that it was val <lb/>
and snipped. In 1381 adulterated <lb/>
nitrate soda containing per <lb/>
cent, common salt was <lb/>
In 1882 hair leather, and horn <lb/>
were found mixed with ammonia <lb/>
fertilizers. In <lb/>
and Peruvian guano <lb/>
were exposed. In these and other <lb/>
were the farmers pro- <lb/>
from various frauds and <lb/>
swindles. <lb/>
At a further check upon the <lb/>
rude and in oiler to educate our <lb/>
farmers on the <lb/>
Mat ion makes analyses of <lb/>
samples of chemicals, <lb/>
for actual North Car- <lb/>
Farmers, free of charge, pro <lb/>
the samples are taken and <lb/>
forwarded according to our <lb/>
lions. <lb/>
The Station has stimulated <lb/>
home growth of industries in such <lb/>
a way that while in 1878 there <lb/>
was only one fertilizer factory in <lb/>
the State, now there are ten. Cot <lb/>
ton Seed Oil Mills have increased <lb/>
in number from none in 1878 to <lb/>
at present. Many waste products <lb/>
have been utilized in the <lb/>
of waste products for making <lb/>
standard example, <lb/>
tobacco stems, seed meal, <lb/>
from fish fact <lb/>
When the coal exploration <lb/>
was made by the Depart of <lb/>
Agriculture in Deep River and <lb/>
Dan River Sections the Station <lb/>
analyzed for this survey all the <lb/>
samples of coal obtained, and so, <lb/>
largely aided in work. <lb/>
Hundreds of mineral waters <lb/>
been examined, and large <lb/>
After the law went into force ii umbers of ores identified and as- <lb/>
out of these fertilizers <lb/>
driven from the State, and Seeds have been <lb/>
remainder were greatly improved to their purity and germinating <lb/>
in quality and ha continued to qualities, and several adulterations <lb/>
improve ever since. The follow- <lb/>
extract from the Station's Re- <lb/>
port, tor 1885, will give to our far- <lb/>
some idea of the improve- <lb/>
. c , <lb/>
of each week. Mrs. V. H. Which- sold <lb/>
ard, <lb/>
Band <lb/>
Room e <lb/>
be <lb/>
I of Hope meets in Reform i i ,, ,, i <lb/>
every Friday night. Miss Eva <lb/>
r, from ill <lb/>
The percent of portion of St ate <lb/>
id has increased <lb/>
1880 to in <lb/>
detected. <lb/>
have been <lb/>
made in the growth of the sugar <lb/>
beet and hundreds of analyses <lb/>
made from samples sent from <lb/>
EXPERIMENTAL WORK. <lb/>
And now as to the other duty <lb/>
of the Experiment Station to as- <lb/>
certain by experimental work in <lb/>
the field, the value fertilizers <lb/>
on various crops, and other <lb/>
to aid directly the far- <lb/>
mer in his labors. <lb/>
Not till the spring of 1886 did <lb/>
the Board of Agriculture see fit <lb/>
to establish a farm in conjunction <lb/>
with the work of the station and <lb/>
to carry out the provisions of the <lb/>
second part of the Act. True ex- <lb/>
work should <lb/>
mainly in actual field trials to be <lb/>
supplemented by the results oh <lb/>
tamed in the One is <lb/>
necessary to other us a man's <lb/>
right to his left. <lb/>
mental wink in the field should be <lb/>
combined with experimental work <lb/>
in laboratory United they prove <lb/>
of the greatest benefit m <lb/>
the general cause for which j with red-hot wire ; and <lb/>
they should he undertaken ; sir, you should see them squirm, <lb/>
they are of many of the while I turn them over and cook to <lb/>
advantages that would inevitably a <lb/>
follow their union. With these lust words the <lb/>
The work at the farm since awoke, and thought it all a <lb/>
Old Exchange. <lb/>
A printer hi chair,. <lb/>
. Ins hoots were patched and his coat General that <lb/>
average fertilizers threadbare, and bis face looked re them- Th <lb/>
are analyzed every year. A j stores are ail the property f the <lb/>
I While sadly thinking of business States The law is entire- <lb/>
i debts, old Morpheus slowly around i In the <lb/>
him and before be knew the of the <lb/>
ho suddenly slept; and while practically gives each <lb/>
I Sleeping, he dreamed that he was expense, so <lb/>
dead. from trouble and toil and camp <lb/>
spirit and Bed, and that not even I equipage re concerned, an army <lb/>
among others, marls, soils, waters,,, its own, ready for service <lb/>
ores, seed prod-j rest f- sole As he at u notice, at the <lb/>
composts and agricultural Wandered among the shades, that <lb/>
products. j smoke and scorch in lower hades he <lb/>
shortly observed an iron door, that <lb/>
swung on hinges ajar, <lb/>
but the entrance was closed with <lb/>
a red-hot Oar, and Satan himself <lb/>
stood peeping out, and watching <lb/>
for travelers thereabout, and thus <lb/>
to the passing printer spoke <lb/>
in, my dear, it shall cost <lb/>
you nothing, and never tear, this <lb/>
is the place where I cook the ones <lb/>
who never pay their <lb/>
sums, for though in life they may <lb/>
escape, they will find when dead, <lb/>
it is too late ; I will show you <lb/>
place where I melt them thin, with <lb/>
red-hot chains and scraps of tin, <lb/>
and also where I comb their heads <lb/>
with broken melted lead <lb/>
and it of they only <lb/>
J-u will <lb/>
to drink; there's the red-hot grind- testimony to <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
The State Over, From Our <lb/>
Many Exchanges. <lb/>
Happenings in and Events Concerning the <lb/>
North <lb/>
Are Doing and Saying. <lb/>
A stock company has <lb/>
been organized in Oxford for the <lb/>
purpose of building a and <lb/>
ti hotel. <lb/>
Greensboro is now one of the <lb/>
best towns in the State, <lb/>
having electric lights. gas <lb/>
lamps and kerosene lamps. <lb/>
Four hundred and forty prison- <lb/>
lets in one county jail in one year <lb/>
do not look much like a <lb/>
of crime. This is what Forsyth <lb/>
county jail contained m 1887. <lb/>
Scales has been authorized <lb/>
I to furnish overcoats for each and <lb/>
every member of the State guard <lb/>
Be a Man. <lb/>
Wilson Advertiser. <lb/>
The highest attainment for a <lb/>
young man is to be a mar. This <lb/>
world is full of counterfeits. But <lb/>
it is thing to stand upright <lb/>
troth and principle. <lb/>
When persecution comes, some <lb/>
hide their faces until tho storm <lb/>
passes by ; others can be bought <lb/>
for a mete of pottage. From such <lb/>
a one torn away. But stand by a <lb/>
friend ; be a man , do not run <lb/>
away when danger to <lb/>
overwhelm him or yourself. <lb/>
Think for yourself; read good <lb/>
books and read men's faces. The <lb/>
eye is the window to the soul ; use <lb/>
your eyes and hold your tongue. <lb/>
u opposition come meet it man- <lb/>
fully. If success crowns your <lb/>
forts, bear it quietly. Do your <lb/>
own and keep your own <lb/>
secrets ; worship no man for his <lb/>
lineage or his wealth. Fine <lb/>
feathers don't always cover fine <lb/>
birds. Be sober, be honest, be <lb/>
just in all your dealings with the <lb/>
who proposes to go into annual en- j world ; be They will sell <lb/>
j this year. <lb/>
you for money <lb/>
popularity ; <lb/>
call Governor or of the Pres- <lb/>
of the United States, through <lb/>
the Governor. The State Guard <lb/>
thus becomes as near regular <lb/>
army as The law the <lb/>
State fixes the number of <lb/>
at The same act gives <lb/>
each company annually. The <lb/>
minimum strength of a company <lb/>
must not fall below and each <lb/>
organization must be at a point <lb/>
having railway or steamboat com- <lb/>
and with telegraphic <lb/>
facilities. <lb/>
The Number Seven in the Bible. <lb/>
Philadelphia News. <lb/>
Among the Hebrews the word <lb/>
for solemn swearing <lb/>
or protest by seven. Abraham. <lb/>
One them. Wear but one <lb/>
I chant in this county had about j let <lb/>
i forty-five lien bonds and <lb/>
I mortgage registered Monday. SMELL <lb/>
I What are coining to i . ,, , , ,. <lb/>
n What smells in a drug store Your <lb/>
Greensboro At Win- have a cold, noting. <lb/>
day before yesterday Judge <lb/>
sentenced a white man and I Mullein. <lb/>
j a to days imprisonment <lb/>
appearing before the grand the outgrowths of the <lb/>
j in an intoxicated condition. principles co-operation taught <lb/>
n t. n . . . in the Grange has been the <lb/>
R. II Battle, chairman of the and successful <lb/>
Democratic State Executive Com , of banks by farmers. no- <lb/>
, has published a call for table a core-pond <lb/>
meeting on the of the Farmer's Friend, the <lb/>
Feb nary tor the fixing j Bank of California, <lb/>
the time and place for holding the started more than ten years ago, <lb/>
with its million dollars capital, and <lb/>
State convention. <lb/>
Free Kinston <lb/>
and lead the State in <lb/>
which in a single season, has loan- <lb/>
ed over three million of dollars <lb/>
educational advantages. Each of upon the receipts of <lb/>
these towns have three or four wheat stored in a Grange elevator <lb/>
good In fact Lenoir or Kansas has a <lb/>
a we have frequently said before, i in a prosperous <lb/>
I the banner county of the State in <lb/>
schooling advantages. <lb/>
New There the <lb/>
been less Northern cabbage in our u n <lb/>
this winter than for many I <lb/>
i wealth produce by not giving <lb/>
condition. Pennsylvania has <lb/>
all in a prosperous condition, <lb/>
stone to grind down their toes, <lb/>
and if they mention they don't <lb/>
fire I'll sew up their mouths <lb/>
The Station has made <lb/>
ding to law all analyses for the <lb/>
POST OFFICE. <lb/>
the <lb/>
. will be issued front to P. M. and <lb/>
Bethel mall arrives daily Sun- <lb/>
I at A. M., and departs at p M. <lb/>
mail arrives <lb/>
at ii . and depart p. m. <lb/>
nail arrives daily <lb/>
at l J K. departs at p. at. <lb/>
tor Ridge and inter- <lb/>
ate Mondays, Wednesdays<lb/>
mail arrives Fridays at J p. <lb/>
ate a. ax. <lb/>
H, A. P. aV <lb/>
1886 ; average per cent of pot- Board of Health, each anal- <lb/>
ash has increased iron, in <lb/>
per cent, of ammonia remains re <lb/>
near ore figure for all <lb/>
the years except 1883, when am <lb/>
were unusually <lb/>
Thus the valuation the average <lb/>
the prices of <lb/>
for ail analyses alike, ha, with a <lb/>
few duet nations, steadily climbed <lb/>
p from per ton in 1880 to <lb/>
The man <lb/>
embracing many hundreds of <lb/>
portable articles of <lb/>
supposed to be adulterated and <lb/>
similar other articles. <lb/>
The Station has made an <lb/>
exploration of the deposits, <lb/>
investigated every bed of <lb/>
and samples of <lb/>
each. These deposits will at <lb/>
future time be fr the man. <lb/>
of <lb/>
m 1884., and in the of avid <lb/>
establishment has been to a <lb/>
extent preparatory in its nature. <lb/>
A commencement has been made <lb/>
however, and with the proper fa- <lb/>
the work can be made of <lb/>
the greatest benefit to our <lb/>
In its workings they should take <lb/>
tho liveliest interest, because for <lb/>
them it was established, and for <lb/>
their benefit the work is carried <lb/>
on. <lb/>
The Experimental work that it <lb/>
would be best to undertake should <lb/>
it be considered entirely practical <lb/>
in character, and such as would <lb/>
give the moat immediate and <lb/>
and practical for the <lb/>
of our farmers, it should in- <lb/>
among others <lb/>
The effect of fertilizers on <lb/>
various soils and crops, carried on <lb/>
in, conjunction with the <lb/>
Station by individual far- <lb/>
throughout the State. With <lb/>
such a diversity of soil and <lb/>
mate as we have, is a <lb/>
to obtain results of value. <lb/>
A study of the cultivation <lb/>
of our staple crops, looking to the <lb/>
improvement in the present sys- <lb/>
The best treatment of worn <lb/>
out lands to render them <lb/>
The best system for the <lb/>
of crops, and the effect of <lb/>
time for the planting of each. <lb/>
Experiments relative to the <lb/>
feeding value the various for- <lb/>
age crops, and of the grasses, now <lb/>
grown the State, or can be <lb/>
grown, and to instruct farmers <lb/>
in the value of the standard hays <lb/>
grasses, of the nutritive value <lb/>
of ; and to determine from <lb/>
the analysis of the plants grown <lb/>
the proper ration tor stock. <lb/>
Investigation as to the <lb/>
growth of other crops than those <lb/>
now planted, to ascertain if more <lb/>
valuable crops could be substituted <lb/>
in part or in whole, for those we <lb/>
now have investigation, <lb/>
might include among others, the. , <lb/>
practical joke, but still at tunes, so <lb/>
real did it seem, that he cannot <lb/>
believe it area a dream, and often <lb/>
he thinks a chuckle am grin, <lb/>
of the fate of those who save their <lb/>
tin and never pay the printer. <lb/>
Sound Logic and Sound Sense. <lb/>
the covenant with <lb/>
The Creator rested from His work <lb/>
on the seventh day, and this day <lb/>
was called Sabbath or seventh. A <lb/>
leprous person bathe <lb/>
seven time- or be sprinkled seven <lb/>
times with the blood of a sparrow. <lb/>
Seven years was the period for <lb/>
repentance. Every seven years <lb/>
the Hebrew servant demanded <lb/>
liberty for himself. And the <lb/>
prophet praised God seven times <lb/>
day. Cain, we are told, to he <lb/>
revenged sevenfold. <lb/>
The gifts of the Holy Ghost <lb/>
said to be seven in number, and in <lb/>
. the presence of the Almighty en <lb/>
angels we are told, in To- <lb/>
bias. Seven lamps burn before <lb/>
God, and throughout the-whole <lb/>
book of Revelation the number i.- <lb/>
constantly used. Jacob served <lb/>
en years for Leah, and seven more <lb/>
for Rachel. Then there are the <lb/>
seven ears of corn and the seven <lb/>
kine. It was seven people that <lb/>
possessed the land of Promise in <lb/>
Deuteronomy, and the story of <lb/>
Samson tells how he kept ins <lb/>
and then was <lb/>
bound with seven green withes <lb/>
years. truckers have learned <lb/>
to make a supply fall cabbage <lb/>
and they have been able to supply <lb/>
the They are better than <lb/>
imported. <lb/>
Wilson We notice <lb/>
ca <lb/>
tern meat is being <lb/>
to the per of profit <lb/>
too frequently demanded. The <lb/>
success of the bank above refer- <lb/>
red to is on I, one of the many in- <lb/>
stances of the fact that well <lb/>
intelligent co-operation <lb/>
load after cart load of among will <lb/>
tern meat is being out of I Times. <lb/>
town by the people who should be <lb/>
i selling instead of buying. There i IN <lb/>
be but lit I lo permanent pros- <lb/>
with any people who do not i A Black. Jr., writes from Andalusia, <lb/>
raise what they eat. Alabama, that he was taken with <lb/>
j tery of type. were <lb/>
Scot land Neck While j called in to no effect. A <lb/>
standing on the the <lb/>
to Its use he owes Ins life. <lb/>
Do Not Fret. <lb/>
The best policy we for a <lb/>
political party to follow is to <lb/>
the man it can most easily <lb/>
elect. The renomination of Mr. <lb/>
Cleveland, then, will not only de- <lb/>
that the true Demo <lb/>
era's desire his re-election, but <lb/>
i hat such a result is considered <lb/>
good policy. Republicans do <lb/>
not believe that they can elect seven days, <lb/>
Blame, so they deem it bad <lb/>
policy to nominate him. See <lb/>
New York Star. <lb/>
This is very practical and <lb/>
and as a rule it would be safe <lb/>
enough to follow in a political con- <lb/>
State and <lb/>
pal. As such we commend it to <lb/>
the Democratic party m North <lb/>
Carolina. We have no doubt that <lb/>
when the National Convention is <lb/>
held there will be a spontaneous <lb/>
recognition of Mr. Cleveland's <lb/>
ability. As a consequence we <lb/>
have no doubt that he will be <lb/>
nominated on the first ballot. <lb/>
So, we think, the people in <lb/>
their candidate for Gov- <lb/>
on tho Democratic ticket <lb/>
should not forget the wisdom of <lb/>
this principle as so clearly stated <lb/>
by the New York Star. We are <lb/>
convinced that the campaign this <lb/>
year will be conducted with vigor <lb/>
and ability by the Republicans <lb/>
who are more united now than <lb/>
they have been for several years <lb/>
past. We are assured that we <lb/>
must needs he united and <lb/>
in order to insure a Demo <lb/>
victory. Consequently, the <lb/>
best thing to be done is to <lb/>
the man whom we en most <lb/>
A LEX I. BLOW, <lb/>
ware-house recently, we counted <lb/>
fourteen mule carts, two single ox <lb/>
carts, two double ox carts, <lb/>
horse two-mule wagons, <lb/>
lull on the yard at once, and all <lb/>
having brought of <lb/>
I which came from the farm of Mr. <lb/>
William I lodgers. <lb/>
Goldsboro There is a <lb/>
peach tree in this city, near the <lb/>
graded school, in full bloom. It <lb/>
looked lonesome <lb/>
its midwinter <lb/>
and not another peach tree in <lb/>
sight. And, by the way, is it not <lb/>
about lime to hear from the usual <lb/>
report of tho effect of the <lb/>
upon the peach crop <lb/>
Here are the tuxes collected <lb/>
ring 1887, in North <lb/>
Tax on licensed retail liquor deal- <lb/>
Carte <lb/>
IAMBS M. <lb/>
Y-AT-L A W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
ought to he, as <lb/>
study of he will ,, the choice of all the <lb/>
root growth of plants I people, and he will be elected. <lb/>
yielding a study of the Wilmington Messenger. <lb/>
our grasses of value, to ascertain <lb/>
ho far the new crops could super- <lb/>
the planting of cotton and <lb/>
other crops, now so <lb/>
to the soil. <lb/>
The ruction of the to <lb/>
and the preservation of green for- <lb/>
yon have twins at <lb/>
house a neighbor to Tom- <lb/>
my T two of <lb/>
What ere yon going to cell them <lb/>
and <lb/>
hat strange names to cell <lb/>
age and that what pa <lb/>
vain e he beard<lb/>
Any one who expects to got <lb/>
through life without a certain <lb/>
share of is under a <lb/>
very serious mistake. It is in the <lb/>
nature of human affairs for petty <lb/>
vexations to can hardly <lb/>
tell how or wherefore ; and he is <lb/>
a wise man who being aware of <lb/>
this fact, docs not allow himself to <lb/>
fret or fume over annoyance that <lb/>
everybody has to encounter, and <lb/>
which cannot he helped. <lb/>
Fretting does not pay. To the <lb/>
contrary, it is always practiced <lb/>
a loss of time, strength and <lb/>
per, ending in n great loss of hap <lb/>
are much more <lb/>
apt to indulge in their silly habit <lb/>
of pessimism concerning small <lb/>
matters than greater ones, and <lb/>
troubles are quite at like- <lb/>
to be the subject of their dis- <lb/>
quietude as real ones. And, if <lb/>
they have nothing real worry <lb/>
over, they will conjure up some <lb/>
thing with which to make them- <lb/>
selves miserable. <lb/>
Nothing is to be gained by fret- <lb/>
ting. Yon simply make yourself <lb/>
miserable by So doing, more over, <lb/>
you are almost certain to make <lb/>
your family and friends <lb/>
table. <lb/>
Remember this, ye and <lb/>
fret no more. <lb/>
C M <lb/>
BERNARD, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
IT. C. <lb/>
Practice in the State Federal <lb/>
J. E. MOORE <lb/>
J. H. TUCKER <lb/>
J D <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
N. <lb/>
The beat in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
. Bruin. Salt Rheum, <lb/>
Sore, Hands, <lb/>
Coma, and all akin Erupt one <lb/>
and passively cures Piles, or pay re- <lb/>
quired guaranteed <lb/>
tax white <lb/>
; tax on colored polls, <lb/>
; on real and <lb/>
property at cents on the <lb/>
valuation, Total school <lb/>
taxes, ; total taxes for all I <lb/>
purposes, <lb/>
Kinston Free Press.- From pres- j <lb/>
indications but few <lb/>
fertilizers will be sold in this; V. <lb/>
section this year. Home of our bus- and at Law <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
W. IS. A. O. <lb/>
HUGO JAMES, <lb/>
successors to A <lb/>
N. U <lb/>
them have bought none this seas- <lb/>
on those who are still hand- <lb/>
ling them are buying in not near <lb/>
so large quantities. This is a <lb/>
good sign. If our farmers would <lb/>
less commercial fertilizers and <lb/>
utilize the they have on <lb/>
their farms they would be much <lb/>
better oft ; and we believe they <lb/>
are beginning to do so. <lb/>
Jew Mr. <lb/>
the green grocer on <lb/>
Middle street, captured a raccoon <lb/>
in store yesterday evening. <lb/>
For sometime he had been annoy- <lb/>
ed by. what he thought, rats <lb/>
between the ceiling and upper <lb/>
floor. Yesterday he went up <lb/>
stairs, took up u plunk of the floor <lb/>
and set a steel trap. In less than <lb/>
half an hour afterwards he hoard <lb/>
the trap fall when he went to <lb/>
examine it found a nice, fat <lb/>
coon about grown, fast <lb/>
by one fore foot. Where he cam <lb/>
from and how he got is <lb/>
somewhat a mystery but he <lb/>
t just the same. <lb/>
Baleen be o the Re <lb/>
Collections a Specialty. <lb/>
Practice in the Superior, Federal and <lb/>
Supreme<lb/>
Attorney and at Lair <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N, C. <lb/>
Will practice in the Courts of Pitt, <lb/>
Greene, and Beaufort <lb/>
ties, and the Supreme Court. <lb/>
Faithful attention given to all <lb/>
entrusted to him. <lb/>
DR. H. SNELL, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
Surgeon Dentist. <lb/>
Tenders hie professional the <lb/>
public. <lb/>
Teeth without the sea <lb/>
of Oxide Gas. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Wt <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018873_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C.<lb/>
Every Wednesday <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER<lb/>
TO <lb/>
Subscription Price, per year <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC, BUT <lb/>
have read <lb/>
Cleveland's message.- Thia doc- <lb/>
is so astonishing, and its <lb/>
effect in Europe so ordinary, <lb/>
that it forces me to break the <lb/>
which I expected to main- <lb/>
during my stay <lb/>
Richmond Pearson in Asheville Ad <lb/>
Wonderful tidings these from <lb/>
a wonderfully remarkable his <lb/>
own man The sound- <lb/>
of that great big Mr. <lb/>
Pearson at the top of the <lb/>
cal ladder. All other aspirants <lb/>
for office must remain silent and <lb/>
inactive until this mighty, self <lb/>
constituted leader decides what <lb/>
he wants in this respect. From <lb/>
the tone of his marvelous epistle <lb/>
from across the sea, one is led <lb/>
to infer that he imagines the <lb/>
time has about come when he is <lb/>
to step into Mr. Cleveland's <lb/>
shoes and be the boss of the <lb/>
The Slaughters nation, on <lb/>
the U. <lb/>
Very Sick Poor to i I Richmond Pearson, <lb/>
Help Kurt of Buncombe county, the big- <lb/>
man that the has ever <lb/>
seen, or that the State of North <lb/>
Carolina has ever produced, <lb/>
have read the President's mes- <lb/>
What a grand <lb/>
to mankind is this But <lb/>
listen, as he goes on. <lb/>
document is so astounding, and <lb/>
so extraordinary in its <lb/>
trill not hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men and measures that arc not consistent <lb/>
with the true principles of the party. <lb/>
If yon want a a <lb/>
section of the State send for the <lb/>
-SAMPLE FREE <lb/>
Entered at the office at <lb/>
C, <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
Procure a <lb/>
Seen or It'll Die. <lb/>
A subscription list ought to be <lb/>
carried through the different <lb/>
sections of the State, and <lb/>
ally in radical counties, to see if <lb/>
enough or could be raised to <lb/>
help J. C. L. Harris, of the <lb/>
Raleigh Signal, to secure <lb/>
for his paper. It is sadly, Yes, yes. No doubt it teas <lb/>
in need at present both of an to his puny intellect <lb/>
editor, and correspondents. so astounding indeed that it <lb/>
does the best he can, it may i couldn't comprehend it. Poor <lb/>
be, but if so it's a mighty bad; little ignoramus He is <lb/>
best. His recent exhibit of the of pity who desires to learn, <lb/>
finances of the State under Rad- and can't. But the effect ought <lb/>
not to have been <lb/>
to cause him to get mad at <lb/>
the President about it. He was <lb/>
not responsible for Mr. P's <lb/>
But we are sorry for <lb/>
Mr P. all the same, for he didn't <lb/>
know any better. This message <lb/>
President me <lb/>
to break the silence How <lb/>
sad for him to have been thus <lb/>
and Democratic rule was a <lb/>
lovely thing. Loge <lb/>
somehow forgot that the Stale <lb/>
Chronicle flourished in Raleigh, <lb/>
or he wouldn't have made the <lb/>
fool of himself that he did. The <lb/>
Chronicle went fat him with <lb/>
gloves off. and such a <lb/>
J. C. L. got, oh my The <lb/>
young, but brainy editor of the <lb/>
Chronicle, placed Harris and his the midst of quietude <lb/>
in a bad light, rest If Mr. P. had notified <lb/>
made the laughingstock he President that he intended <lb/>
all sensible people Maybe taking a trip abroad, it may be he <lb/>
try to come a little near- would have deferred giving his <lb/>
the truth next time. He ought message to the public until after <lb/>
to subside a little after the gentleman's return. It has <lb/>
Chronicle's withering rebuke. been charged against Pres. <lb/>
But J. C. L. may be like the that he loves these lit- <lb/>
character Solomon speaks of in j tie hungry mugwumps too well <lb/>
Prow Chapter Verse If to give them any if he <lb/>
he don't keep quiet after this, we i can avoid it, and if this be true <lb/>
shall always think so. Take a Pearson ought to have made <lb/>
backseat. Mr. Hams, and let known to him just how he stood <lb/>
the next biggest rad fool what he way <lb/>
in for his share of the drubbing j of a message, and of course the <lb/>
which the Chronicle, is ever ready would have shaped it <lb/>
with pleasure to administer. <lb/>
to suit Mr. P's views. But the <lb/>
And then the has one die has been cast, and now it de- <lb/>
correspondent who considers upon the President to <lb/>
himself bright particular star make some satisfaction to Mr. <lb/>
in the political horizon. for breaking his rest <lb/>
he is a blossom. What a power-, while abroad, and also to offer <lb/>
imagination he possesses . some kind of apology to him for <lb/>
What grandeur of thought writing such an outlandish doc- <lb/>
What lofty conception of men without even asking Mr. <lb/>
and consent, or else the wand of <lb/>
inventing lies for instance. his political power has been for- <lb/>
this writer goes on from time to ever Cleveland <lb/>
time to tell the leaders of the J must make a defense, or <lb/>
Signal how anxious the people determined to keep <lb/>
are to find out his him from being president <lb/>
where he hails from, j Mr. P. has gone into <lb/>
We will say for His enlighten- the radical wigwam at last and <lb/>
that these inquiries are not j we devoutly trust he will stay <lb/>
made because they see anything j there. If he wants anything at <lb/>
smart in his letters, but because j the hands of the Democratic par <lb/>
they didn't know that such he'll never get it. He is too <lb/>
was to be found in j small a fry for that, even if he <lb/>
the State. Then he tells us read the Presidents message. <lb/>
what a mighty sensation they <lb/>
create wherever they are read. <lb/>
We are not surprised at this. <lb/>
We suppose the correspondent is <lb/>
a at least it <lb/>
The Elizabeth City Economist <lb/>
I and Edenton Enquirer are claim- <lb/>
the next District <lb/>
for their re- <lb/>
and i and the <lb/>
it don't take much to produce a issue suggests that <lb/>
. , , , , j these differences be settled <lb/>
sensation of kind and de- , .,. . <lb/>
,, the Convention in <lb/>
among the average class , <lb/>
ft ow we cannot <lb/>
He may be the agree with <lb/>
do for ought Hertford is not <lb/>
know. he calls himself accessible and has neither haD <lb/>
Will take that back Suppose <lb/>
fear of insulting the Rev. Jas. suggest a solution of the mat- <lb/>
per, if he be alive. He is -factory to the <lb/>
not of that respectable more the interest of <lb/>
class to which <lb/>
Rev. Jasper Stowe belongs, nor and <lb/>
is he equal to him in natural en-i as as Reflector. Let <lb/>
and gifts. Verily the candidate from <lb/>
takes the cake for Hertford and leave the selection <lb/>
ranee and exaggeration of the to the committee <lb/>
between j w <lb/>
the , We <lb/>
invariably come out second best an he <lb/>
that is unless n gets brainier and <lb/>
men than it now has at its helm. with the wrongful appropriation <lb/>
Loge and his puny little Jasper of Pacific <lb/>
cant even so as keep the heM in b and <lb/>
flies off of Daniels. Truly the<lb/>
Mr. Editor day bra <lb/>
week while I was out <lb/>
fellow-cam long de road <lb/>
far Pate Carter. I <lb/>
I de man he give me <lb/>
letter he you axed him <lb/>
deliver. De letter was writ- <lb/>
ten in de folio <lb/>
Wilson, the In- <lb/>
dependent Register of Deeds, wishes me <lb/>
to Inform v on that he went up to the mas- <lb/>
Ball Wednesday night to see <lb/>
a dance but before he left the thing had <lb/>
developed into a hug. D. J. W. <lb/>
Er long time ergo was <lb/>
art painted picture a <lb/>
woman when be got <lb/>
pain de picture be sorter <lb/>
tired so he paint very much <lb/>
clot he.-n it. He hung <lb/>
op in art gallery one day <lb/>
at hit, when lady <lb/>
cum up axed him he <lb/>
think picture vulgar. He <lb/>
-no madam, de ain't <lb/>
vulgar at all but your remark <lb/>
and may be de way de <lb/>
Register Deeds on <lb/>
Dar may not be <lb/>
bout but may be sum <lb/>
very wrong his thoughts <lb/>
on de subject Dar goes an old <lb/>
the pure all things are <lb/>
I moat <lb/>
be changed so as read to the <lb/>
impure all things are impure with- <lb/>
out damage to its truthful- <lb/>
whatever. I would <lb/>
write whole letter <lb/>
but I got in <lb/>
y her ball in Green <lb/>
ville I'm sorter of <lb/>
things, sec Hard <lb/>
Side preacher, he <lb/>
over got on a <lb/>
tended ball <lb/>
had the de big <lb/>
locked up in de guard house <lb/>
all day when he cum <lb/>
home he tole me his ad <lb/>
I writ em up fur de <lb/>
Well rite smart <lb/>
niggers dis <lb/>
The its <lb/>
at the following <lb/>
subscriber,<lb/>
subscribers, year. 10.90 <lb/>
One copy, year nuns to the one end- <lb/>
a club of ten. <lb/>
Bight pages, weekly. Send <lb/>
cash to <lb/>
L. L. Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
MONEY TO LOAN. <lb/>
now prepared to effect Loans at <lb/>
per cent, interest on good farm property <lb/>
as security. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
AW. <lb/>
Feb. 1888 Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
Important Land Sale <lb/>
By virtue of an execution In my hands <lb/>
for collection against B. F. Sugg and <lb/>
issued from the Superior Court of <lb/>
Wayne county, I will sell at the Court <lb/>
House door In Greenville on Monday, the <lb/>
5th day of March, 1888, the Interest of the <lb/>
said B. F. Sugg In a tract or parcel of <lb/>
land in the town of Greenville, contain- <lb/>
more or less on which the <lb/>
Machine Shops and Foundry are situated <lb/>
and also all the interest of the said B. F. <lb/>
Sugg In the Machinery in said shops, the <lb/>
interest of said B. F. being a lease <lb/>
of said Real to satisfy said Ex- <lb/>
Terms of Sale Cash. <lb/>
W. M. KING, <lb/>
Feb. 9th Sheriff of Pitt county. <lb/>
Executor's Notice. <lb/>
Having qualified as Executor of the <lb/>
last Will and Testament of Barnes. Bl <lb/>
deceased, on the day of January <lb/>
before E. . Move, Clerk of the Superior <lb/>
Court Pitt county, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons indebted to said estate to <lb/>
make immediate payment to the <lb/>
signed, and all persons holding claims <lb/>
against said estate are hereby notified to <lb/>
them to the undersigned be- <lb/>
ore the 18th day of January 1889 or this <lb/>
notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
Tills the 18th day of January 1888. <lb/>
ALEX L BLOW. <lb/>
Executor of <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
Whereas, Lizzie and <lb/>
C minor children of B. C. <lb/>
Highsmith, deceased, by their attorney J. <lb/>
H. Johnston, have petitioned to the <lb/>
Justice of the Peace for Pitt <lb/>
county to have a homestead exemption <lb/>
laid and set apart in the lands of said <lb/>
B. C. Highsmith, situated in Pitt comity <lb/>
on the North side of Creek ad- <lb/>
joining the lands of R. B. Highsmith, the <lb/>
all v takes de REFLECTOR Nobles land and others, being the land <lb/>
when de letter <lb/>
cum out old man seed <lb/>
did he would be <lb/>
ruined, so he took de bull by de <lb/>
called church meet <lb/>
me up fur dances. <lb/>
He read letter showed <lb/>
my name hit made <lb/>
jest convinced <lb/>
hit me of him <lb/>
went ball cum <lb/>
nigh me out de <lb/>
church on ob hit, my <lb/>
old woman, she's bitterly <lb/>
couldn't get her <lb/>
I go <lb/>
mutters Mr. Andrew <lb/>
cum out Hog <lb/>
day and Sally she axed him he <lb/>
whether I not. <lb/>
He yes he saw me <lb/>
up jig on <lb/>
bench at mid <lb/>
not much ennui in my household <lb/>
fur de next few days an <lb/>
I wished fur my <lb/>
wife was turned <lb/>
suit Lot's wife den I <lb/>
devised to B. C. Highsmith by Godfrey <lb/>
All the creditors of said B. C. <lb/>
Highsmith are hereby notified that said <lb/>
petition be heard before meat Beth- <lb/>
el Pitt county on the 4th day of August <lb/>
1888, at which time and place they are <lb/>
notified to appear and show cause if any <lb/>
they can, why the prayer in the petition <lb/>
shall not be granted. This 2nd day of <lb/>
February 1888. M. G. BRYAN, J. P. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
To All Whom It May Concern <lb/>
At the last meeting of Board of <lb/>
Commissioners of Pitt county a motion <lb/>
was lodged to rehear the matter of a Free <lb/>
Ferry at Yankee nail, and the motion <lb/>
was continued to the March session of <lb/>
said Board, and notice is hereby given <lb/>
that the matter will be heard, when all <lb/>
interested will have a fair hearing and <lb/>
action taken in the premises, Done by <lb/>
order of Board Commissioners for Pitt <lb/>
county, this February 7th 1888. <lb/>
LEWIS H, WILSON, <lb/>
Clerk of Board Commissioners. <lb/>
OF WILSON <lb/>
Mutual Benefit and Belief Association <lb/>
Wilson of 8th. <lb/>
We have been, from the beginning of <lb/>
the operations of the Mutual Benefit <lb/>
would have put her out an i Relief Association, a strong advocate for <lb/>
t I it. n XI <lb/>
let hit rained on her while but <lb/>
I reckon I better not go <lb/>
too much in line fur my <lb/>
hood is in state peace jest at <lb/>
present I find state <lb/>
a flairs suitable <lb/>
your friend <lb/>
Carter, P. K. <lb/>
Hog N. C. Feb. 14th <lb/>
Items. <lb/>
N. C. Feb. 1888. <lb/>
Editor Eastern <lb/>
Sickness prevented my getting <lb/>
u letter to the Ki last <lb/>
week. <lb/>
How do you e to keep the <lb/>
weather signals right during such <lb/>
weather u we have been having <lb/>
lately We have a little warm, <lb/>
some very cold, some cloudy, some <lb/>
and some sleety weather, <lb/>
and I think it must be hard to <lb/>
Keep up with it. <lb/>
ail this, the farmers are <lb/>
right ahead hauling dirt and <lb/>
up their ground. <lb/>
Miss Purvis, from Hamil- <lb/>
ton, is visiting relatives near this <lb/>
place. <lb/>
The people, generally, were very <lb/>
busy last Tuesday, It the <lb/>
14th, preparing their gardens and <lb/>
seed. We are of the <lb/>
ion that the seed would have been <lb/>
better since then, <lb/>
it, believing Its plans were wise. Its terms <lb/>
moderate, its officers honest, prudent, <lb/>
painstaking men. It is the pride of the <lb/>
people of who are exciting them- <lb/>
selves to push it on and upward ; for in It <lb/>
protection for the widow and or- <lb/>
and the old policy holder, when <lb/>
too poor and infirm to meet the assess- <lb/>
They see in it the accumulation <lb/>
of a reserve fund, which grows with each <lb/>
assessment and which must be invested, <lb/>
relief for those needing money, while at <lb/>
the same time insurance is furnished at <lb/>
lowest possible cost, and now the degree <lb/>
of prosperity to which it attained <lb/>
the announcement that <lb/>
will be in full after the fifteenth of <lb/>
March next. The <lb/>
great agents have bad in <lb/>
obtaining patrons was that they were <lb/>
able to promise to pay death claims in full. <lb/>
This promise is guaranteed now by the <lb/>
pledges of the officers who re assured of <lb/>
fulfillment by the prosperous condition <lb/>
and increasing membership of the <lb/>
and it is now confidently <lb/>
mended to all those who need insurance <lb/>
to apply at once tor a policy, and this h <lb/>
particularly urged upon all in Wilson <lb/>
county; not only on the ground that it <lb/>
will afford the relief desired but because <lb/>
it is a home company and needs the co- <lb/>
operation and cordial support of all of <lb/>
our own people. It is needless for us to <lb/>
say one word in favor of insurance in <lb/>
general, that has now become a necessity <lb/>
to i In- poor man and such as this affords <lb/>
the best and cheapest form. The pay- <lb/>
come in small amounts and it <lb/>
serves the purpose of saving banks with <lb/>
the strongest assurance that the family <lb/>
will get the benefit of the savings. The <lb/>
old line insurance companies may twit <lb/>
us as much as they please; call us ropes <lb/>
of sand, monkey bridges and all manner <lb/>
of hard names, but the security of the in- <lb/>
sured in ours Is as stable as that in the old <lb/>
line companies. While we have no big <lb/>
investments held by wealthy corpora- <lb/>
while ours are dependent on<lb/>
For The NERVOUS <lb/>
The DEBILITATED <lb/>
The AGED. <lb/>
m tome, <lb/>
the be mi m <lb/>
It , <lb/>
the <lb/>
tho blood purifying sod enriching it, <lb/>
and overcoming those <lb/>
revolting from impure or <lb/>
blood. <lb/>
A LAXATIVE. <lb/>
Acting sorely on <lb/>
and <lb/>
a stomach, and aids <lb/>
A DIURETIC. <lb/>
In Its best and inert <lb/>
other <lb/>
for of tho <lb/>
It can be railed on to give <lb/>
relief and cure, <lb/>
. Hand bare <lb/>
who<lb/>
fall <lb/>
b, <lb/>
WELLS, RICHARDSON CO <lb/>
THE MAN MOON <lb/>
BE SEEK EVERY DAY, but the man who keeps a fresh supply of <lb/>
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars, <lb/>
TOBACCO, CANNED GOODS, <lb/>
Can be found whenever wanted. You only have to look tor <lb/>
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb/>
And all your wants in above goods can be supplied. <lb/>
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS PUT UP TO <lb/>
FINE A. SPECIALTY. <lb/>
THIS BEING ELECTION YEAR <lb/>
And YEAR has nothing to do with the price of <lb/>
GROCERIES. <lb/>
I you desire to purchase a first-class article in <lb/>
FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE, MEAT, <lb/>
Or anything in that line, call on <lb/>
C. TYSON, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Provisions, Canned Goods, General Family Supplies, <lb/>
Tobacco, Always on Hand. <lb/>
THIS MONTH <lb/>
soil <lb/>
Dress Goods, <lb/>
GINGHAMS, <lb/>
BOOTS SHOES, <lb/>
For Value. <lb/>
O O O O O O O O O O O Q Q U Q O O O O O O O o o o <lb/>
Don't go further <lb/>
you have <lb/>
ed our elegant line of <lb/>
Samples, just in, for <lb/>
Dress Goods wort h for<lb/>
Ginghams <lb/>
Dress for<lb/>
Ginghams <lb/>
THIS IS NO CATCH <lb/>
We MEAN IT <lb/>
The Champion and the Turning <lb/>
Plows always on hand. <lb/>
LITTLE, HOUSE k BRO. <lb/>
E. C. GLENN. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT. <lb/>
STANDARD GUANO. ACID PHOSPHATE, <lb/>
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb/>
SHELL LIME, PURE DISSOLVED BONE. <lb/>
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb/>
Tennessee Wagons, for sale, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, Mar. 1887. <lb/>
way of the transgressor in the <lb/>
neighborhood of the Chronicle. <lb/>
office, <lb/>
that the case is one that demands <lb/>
attention from the Grand Jury. <lb/>
code of New York <lb/>
an offense as grand <lb/>
The Blair bill seems to have; The <lb/>
gone through the Senate after a j prescribed is fifteen years <lb/>
fashion. It passed last Wed j imprisonment and fine not ex- <lb/>
by a vote of to the value of the proper <lb/>
There is said to a shadow j misappropriated or stole <lb/>
of it in the House, j with inter- st on the amount <lb/>
it die right U is. j <lb/>
they been bunging In- the tire. <lb/>
W niter and Eddie small assessments of individual, <lb/>
. . i r , members, we feel we can say ours is just <lb/>
Mr. Vi. K. Whichard of <lb/>
township, have been setting steel- <lb/>
go <lb/>
traps for rabbits where <lb/>
through the fence into the gar- <lb/>
den. They have caught three <lb/>
one have <lb/>
failed to get any rabbits. It is <lb/>
mime, hut they gnaw their feet <lb/>
and make their escape. <lb/>
Now feel inclined to correct <lb/>
an impression which my last letter <lb/>
made in regard to the drowning <lb/>
of Win. J. Langley. The last re <lb/>
ports that he was indicted at <lb/>
last, conn for stealing, and that <lb/>
the plan was agreed by bun <lb/>
and his father and mother that he <lb/>
pa to the creek and act <lb/>
such a way as the <lb/>
that he was drowned <lb/>
then go to his brother in Pam <lb/>
county and after next <lb/>
court, thinking that the ease <lb/>
would be thrown out then. It is <lb/>
reported that he has been seen in <lb/>
the neighborhood dressed in <lb/>
en's clot bee he disappeared but <lb/>
that ha is now in county. <lb/>
No one believes now that he it <lb/>
drowned. <lb/>
Hon. <lb/>
the and moat brilliant <lb/>
men of oar State, died in Brook <lb/>
N. Y., on the in, He <lb/>
as depend upon honesty <lb/>
prompt dealing the companies. <lb/>
The payment of the required <lb/>
is the condition of membership In <lb/>
ours, tailing in that the member forfeits <lb/>
his policy. Will be do It when the <lb/>
amount is so small and he knows he is <lb/>
only paying what the other members <lb/>
would pay in case his death The <lb/>
mutuality of ours is the strong bond <lb/>
that assures success. The officers are the <lb/>
agents to keep the accounts mail direct <lb/>
the management Its affairs. <lb/>
The growth of the Mutual Benefit <lb/>
Relief Association with all the odds <lb/>
against it, in the way of well paid agents <lb/>
bloated corporations, mis- <lb/>
representing ours and the plans under <lb/>
which we work, our inability, as a mat- <lb/>
of course, to pay a policy in full at <lb/>
first, our growth we cay under all these <lb/>
draw has been phenomenal, now <lb/>
tint all these have been over come and <lb/>
policies can be paid in fall, oar agents are <lb/>
having a fair field and our borders are <lb/>
being enlarged day by day. The few <lb/>
families have been and <lb/>
in their afflictions rise op a ad call <lb/>
us blessed. The amounts paid them <lb/>
teem to the big corporations, small and <lb/>
Insignificant, but they were larger in <lb/>
proportion to amount paid by <lb/>
than it they bad fall mount <lb/>
policy and paid the rates of the old line <lb/>
companies. The one of our company <lb/>
who died was a charter member had <lb/>
paid one not exceeding <lb/>
and lea of is, his family re <lb/>
The paid two <lb/>
at a <lb/>
save the aura from <lb/>
the the h <lb/>
tared In all net <lb/>
dean. The a email an <lb/>
tea tar <lb/>
R. GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb/>
WE are now fitted in first-class and are prepared to man- <lb/>
upon short notice any kind or style of <lb/>
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb/>
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING. <lb/>
We keep a nice line of <lb/>
READY M-rt-DE HARNESS. <lb/>
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed. <lb/>
W. L. BROWN <lb/>
MERCHANT <lb/>
AND AGENT FOR THE TARBORO OIL MILLS. <lb/>
Highest Cash price paid for Cotton Seed or <lb/>
Meal given in exchange. Has for sale <lb/>
Acid Lime and Cotton Seed Meal <lb/>
Either for Cash or on Time. <lb/>
FARMER'S BONE FERTILIZER <lb/>
A SPECIALTY It is to be superior to any on the market. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By of a decree Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt dated February 1st <lb/>
1885 and made in a certain Special Pro- <lb/>
entitled Robert Executor <lb/>
of J. S. Olson against E. S. et <lb/>
and numbered upon Special Pro- <lb/>
of said Court, I will on <lb/>
Saturday the 10th of March. 1888, on the <lb/>
premises Black Church In CM- <lb/>
cod township, at public sale to the <lb/>
bidder a certain lot or parcel <lb/>
land la township, Pitt county, de- <lb/>
as follows, Beginning at <lb/>
a state on the Greenville Mew <lb/>
road from the fork he road <lb/>
leading Block Jack Church to <lb/>
Ferry, Unmet N. XV. H pole to a stake, <lb/>
stake, thence <lb/>
or Saw <lb/>
the Court, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
E. Nelson and J <lb/>
son, by their <lb/>
F. E. N .-1-on. <lb/>
Pursuant to an order of the Superior <lb/>
Court In the above entitled special pro- <lb/>
the undersigned Special Coastal, <lb/>
sell at the door, <lb/>
In Greenville for cash to the highest bid- <lb/>
on Monday the day of 1888 <lb/>
the described <lb/>
on the East tide the road and <lb/>
about two acre on the North of the <lb/>
road leading from Black to <lb/>
Ferry In Pitt county, adjoining the lands <lb/>
of Henry Samuel X O. <lb/>
Proctor a Bro,, about <lb/>
acres more or leas. About ten <lb/>
of land F. E.<lb/>
lace orders with us and guarantee <lb/>
to give you a Suit that is a PERFECT FIT and <lb/>
SATISFACTORY IN EVERY PARTICULAR. <lb/>
H. MORRIS BROS <lb/>
VILLE, N. C. Feb. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
L C. LATHAM <lb/>
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN S, CO <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
THE LEADERS IN <lb/>
ILL KINDS OF STAPLE GOODS. <lb/>
Our Fall and Winter stock of Dry Goods, <lb/>
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, etc., have arrived, and all <lb/>
friends and customers are invited to call and ex- <lb/>
goods and prices. <lb/>
Having the entire mercantile business of John S. <lb/>
Co, including mites, book accounts and all evidences of debt <lb/>
and merchandise, we solicit their former and increased patronage. <lb/>
Being aide to make all purchases for cash, getting advantage <lb/>
discounts, we will he enabled to sell as cheaply as any one of <lb/>
Norfolk. retain in our employ J. H as general <lb/>
superintendent of the business, with his former partner Chas Skinner <lb/>
as who will always be glad to see mid serve their customers <lb/>
A special branch of our business will be to furnish cash at <lb/>
rates to farmers to cultivate and harvest their crops, in sums <lb/>
to with approved security <lb/>
J. <lb/>
INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
SKINNER BUILDING OPPOSITE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates Give us a call when in need of LIFE, <lb/>
ACCIDENT and LIVE STOCK INSURANCE. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
THE FRONT <lb/>
D. Williamson, <lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO <lb/>
KB TUB OF <lb/>
CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the Wet Mechanic. put up nothing <lb/>
but work. keep up with the time the latest improved <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of Spring are used, you can select from I <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full line of ready made <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
year round, which we will sell as as lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding favors, we hope <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
TAILORING <lb/>
Recent improvement which we have made ii <lb/>
Custom Clothing, enables us to place <lb/>
within the reach of all, and which arc superior <lb/>
to those generally at higher <lb/>
elsewhere. Every garment made on the <lb/>
JOHN SIMMS, <lb/>
LaG range, N. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
. <lb/>
AGRICULTURAL <lb/>
SALE BY HARRY SKINNER CO,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018873_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR,<lb/>
THIS PAPER<lb/>
I AT . <lb/>
Ad- him <lb/>
may be foe It In I <lb/>
Local Spar <lb/>
A big lot of Sample Shoos to fit <lb/>
every body AT COST at k <lb/>
ford's. <lb/>
Moonlight. <lb/>
Seed Oats for sale <lb/>
by E. C Glenn. <lb/>
The shad are here now. <lb/>
A few more Game <lb/>
for sale by J. J. Cherry. <lb/>
Elm trees are budding. <lb/>
We have still a few desirable <lb/>
goods on hand that must be closed <lb/>
out soon, regardless of cost. A <lb/>
splendid chance tor cash purchases <lb/>
to secure bargains. <lb/>
T. R. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Oh these streets just about <lb/>
now. <lb/>
D. If. Ferry Co's. <lb/>
Seed at the Brick Store. <lb/>
Yesterday was an out-and-out <lb/>
rainy day. <lb/>
will soon close his Gal- <lb/>
in Greenville. <lb/>
We had a thunder rain <lb/>
storm evening. <lb/>
barrels seed Potatoes, cheap <lb/>
Mrs. M. T. sick. <lb/>
Or J. G. James and wife are <lb/>
quite nick. <lb/>
Mr S. M. Schultz spending a <lb/>
few days in Rocky <lb/>
Miss Ada of Greene <lb/>
is visiting Miss Jennie <lb/>
Savage. <lb/>
Miss Purvis, of Hamil- <lb/>
ton, visiting her sister, Mrs. V. <lb/>
L. Stephens. <lb/>
Mr. J. W of the firm of <lb/>
Higgs left Monday <lb/>
for the Northern markets. <lb/>
Miss Leta Lawrence, of <lb/>
who had been visiting Mrs. <lb/>
Glenn, returned home last <lb/>
Mr. Abe of <lb/>
has been visiting his uncle, Mr. <lb/>
M. II. Lang, during the past week. <lb/>
Miss Matilda left <lb/>
Monday to visit the family of Mr. <lb/>
W. R. Whichard, in <lb/>
township. <lb/>
Miss May of Norfolk, <lb/>
Miss Ricks of this county, and Mr. <lb/>
A. T. Griffin Martin Co, enter- <lb/>
ed the Institute on Monday. <lb/>
Rev. S. If. Smith of Washington <lb/>
N. C. will deliver the Commence- <lb/>
address Greenville <lb/>
Jane 8th. <lb/>
Mrs. J. W. Goodwin and little <lb/>
Jack, who been visiting Mrs. <lb/>
yesterday for their <lb/>
home in Philadelphia. <lb/>
Mr. B. F. agent <lb/>
of the Mutual Benefit and Relief <lb/>
Association, of Wilson, Messrs <lb/>
Warren and Deans, agents, <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
A few days of pretty weather in town several days, <lb/>
the past week. Miss Mollie Moore was very <lb/>
A complete line of Sample No- <lb/>
to be closed out at cost at <lb/>
More people than usual in town <lb/>
last Saturday <lb/>
Point Lace Flour has been tried <lb/>
and is the best and cheapest at the <lb/>
Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The odor of the fertilizer <lb/>
m the land. <lb/>
Forty Bushels Spanish Peanuts <lb/>
for sale by J. L. Ballard. <lb/>
We had a mild blast of March <lb/>
winds on <lb/>
bushels early Spring Oats, <lb/>
cheap, at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
burned, a few days <lb/>
since, while replenishing the fire <lb/>
in schoolroom, by the hot <lb/>
stove door in contact with <lb/>
her arm. <lb/>
We regret very much to learn <lb/>
that the wife of our <lb/>
Mr. J. swift Creek <lb/>
township, died last Saturday week <lb/>
of pneumonia. A husband and <lb/>
nine children mourn her death. <lb/>
Mr. J. B. Tripp, a young man of <lb/>
this county, left Friday for Jack- <lb/>
Fla., having been appoint- <lb/>
ed mail weigher upon the route <lb/>
that city and <lb/>
ton, N. C. <lb/>
Mr. N. If. Lawrence, of <lb/>
far, during the winter <lb/>
escaped the <lb/>
fiend lose from that <lb/>
source been sustained. In or- <lb/>
that the remainder of the sea- <lb/>
son may be passed in safety we <lb/>
advise our to look well to <lb/>
the condition pf their chimneys <lb/>
and stove before the <lb/>
of March winds. <lb/>
New Organ. <lb/>
Our Baptist friends have this <lb/>
week received a handsome new <lb/>
organ for their Church. The <lb/>
necessary for the purchase of <lb/>
the instrument was raised by the <lb/>
ladies and much credit is due <lb/>
them. We have not seen the or- <lb/>
or heard its tone at this writ- <lb/>
therefore cannot speak much <lb/>
as yet. <lb/>
Prise. <lb/>
Some days ago Prof <lb/>
teacher of Grammar at the <lb/>
Institute, offered a present to the <lb/>
first who would correctly <lb/>
the following <lb/>
God hath joined together <lb/>
let no man put Miss <lb/>
Mary Cannon the first to hand <lb/>
in a correct diagram, and was <lb/>
awarded a silver cup. <lb/>
More Corn <lb/>
Corn is in considerable demand <lb/>
and readily brings cents per <lb/>
bushel in this market. The price <lb/>
promises to be higher. <lb/>
Those pf our farmers who made a <lb/>
plenty of com last season now see <lb/>
the advantage-of not turning his <lb/>
entire attention to cotton. A <lb/>
good price can be obtained for all <lb/>
the corn they will have <lb/>
this summer. <lb/>
of the <lb/>
wilt be found in <lb/>
of <lb/>
deceased, has a no- <lb/>
to creditors of the estate in <lb/>
this paper. <lb/>
T. Keel announces that he <lb/>
will not be responsible for debts <lb/>
that may in be contracted <lb/>
in the name of Keel King. See <lb/>
notice. <lb/>
M. R. Lang has something <lb/>
important to say in our <lb/>
columns. His first shipment <lb/>
of spring goods are now arriving <lb/>
and his selections cannot be <lb/>
passed . <lb/>
Don't fail to read H. Morrie k <lb/>
Bros, advertisement if you want a <lb/>
suit of clothes. Spring samples <lb/>
have just been received and they <lb/>
are prepared to give you <lb/>
in every particular. <lb/>
The Mutual Benefit and <lb/>
Association, of Wilson, is <lb/>
in this paper. It is a good <lb/>
and sate Company, is <lb/>
mended to those wanting <lb/>
upon their lives. <lb/>
Be sure to read the advertise- <lb/>
of Greenville Carriage <lb/>
Works and gave them a call. <lb/>
They are prepared to serve in <lb/>
a workmanlike manner and <lb/>
satisfaction. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
The of Keel A King having been <lb/>
dissolved the 17th of February, <lb/>
1888, the undersigned hereby gives notice <lb/>
that he will not be responsible tor any <lb/>
furore debts contracted In tho of <lb/>
the Ann. T. K. KEEL. <lb/>
Feb. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified upon the <lb/>
day of January, 1888, as Executor of <lb/>
the estate Harriett <lb/>
ed, notice is hereby given to all person <lb/>
indebted to the estate to make <lb/>
ate payment to the undersigned, and to <lb/>
all creditors of said estate to present their <lb/>
claims, properly authenticated to the <lb/>
on or before the 20th of <lb/>
1889, or notice will be plead In <lb/>
bar of their recovery. This 20th day of <lb/>
February, R. <lb/>
Executor of Harriett <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
In of a decree of the <lb/>
Court of Pitt county made in a <lb/>
Special Proceedings case, entitled <lb/>
Nancy E. Turnage and husband,. <lb/>
T. Turnage and Phillips, <lb/>
by their guardian. J. G. Pi Ice, <lb/>
the undersigned Commissioner will sell <lb/>
at the Court House door in Greenville, on <lb/>
March 19th, 1888, to the highest <lb/>
bidder for cash, a certain tract or piece <lb/>
of land lying in township, <lb/>
Pitt county, adjoining the lands of A. <lb/>
J. F. Crawford and others, con- <lb/>
about thirty-three acres. <lb/>
Said land was conveyed to Use above <lb/>
named parties by a Deed of Gift from <lb/>
Moses This sale is made for <lb/>
partition. G. B. KING Commissioner. <lb/>
Feb. 20th. 1688. <lb/>
Out <lb/>
For <lb/>
The <lb/>
RAILROAD <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
M. Rent <lb/>
N. <lb/>
But before that comes we want to tell you of <lb/>
the bargains we are offering on <lb/>
Error. <lb/>
Through the fault of the printer <lb/>
two. names were omitted from the <lb/>
report of the German, in last issue, <lb/>
and one couple was stated wrong. <lb/>
It was written on copy W. <lb/>
B. Greene and <lb/>
Ola Forbes and Miss Belle <lb/>
and should have appeared in the <lb/>
paper that way but the printer <lb/>
put it different as our readers will <lb/>
remember. <lb/>
The public school opened in the efficient General Manager <lb/>
Academy Monday <lb/>
Received this week another large <lb/>
lot of good paper curds, etc , for <lb/>
job work, at the Reflector office. <lb/>
Give us an order for letter heads <lb/>
and see if we don't give you i. <lb/>
first-class job. <lb/>
Spring will soon be here, to the <lb/>
delight of every one. <lb/>
E. C. Glenn has a tons of <lb/>
Boykin Chemicals for <lb/>
Home Fertilizers, at per ton <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
We have heard of several cases <lb/>
of pneumonia in the county <lb/>
The sale of the Boss Famous <lb/>
Lunch Milk Biscuit during 1887 <lb/>
exceeded the sales of the former <lb/>
year by founds. Try <lb/>
them, at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Riches are of but little value to a <lb/>
man unless used to a good purpose, j <lb/>
Capt A. F. Davis, of Carteret <lb/>
county, will arrive at Greenville <lb/>
early next week with a cargo of <lb/>
Fish Scrap Fertilizer. <lb/>
Don't mortgage The practice <lb/>
will ruin any who follows it. <lb/>
We that King Bros., of <lb/>
Falkland, have made an assign- <lb/>
It pays to advertise in dull seas- <lb/>
ons. men should <lb/>
this. <lb/>
The town authorities had some <lb/>
trees on Evans street <lb/>
cut on Monday. <lb/>
We read 1,234 times <lb/>
more or less, last week. Every <lb/>
paper in the land had it. <lb/>
To-day is commemorative of the <lb/>
birth the greatest man this <lb/>
country has ever known. <lb/>
It is in order to day to retell <lb/>
the story of the cherry tree aid <lb/>
the hatchet for the <lb/>
time. <lb/>
Robins have made their appear- <lb/>
and the sportsmen are after <lb/>
them. A robin pie is not a bad <lb/>
dish. <lb/>
There is now and then a slight <lb/>
moving of the political waters, <lb/>
speaking. Ere long <lb/>
the storm will arise. <lb/>
Sunday was almost as lovely a <lb/>
day a-; could be asked for. <lb/>
were held in all our churches, <lb/>
each having a large congregation. <lb/>
The good weather does not hold <lb/>
long at the time. Clouds got the <lb/>
better of the situation and Mon- <lb/>
day and yesterday were <lb/>
The program to be rendered at <lb/>
the temperance mass meeting next <lb/>
Sunday afternoon is of such a char- <lb/>
as to amply repay all who <lb/>
The rush of new advertisements <lb/>
this week has prevented us from <lb/>
giving our usual attention to local <lb/>
items. The advertisements are all <lb/>
good reading. <lb/>
The last issue of the Wilson <lb/>
Mirror speaks of enjoying the <lb/>
of a visitor. Did <lb/>
he come at you with his foot, <lb/>
brother <lb/>
The children of the Methodist <lb/>
Sunday School had a <lb/>
last Sunday afternoon at three <lb/>
o'clock. The barrels in which the <lb/>
of the various class- <lb/>
es had been made during the last <lb/>
three months were opened and the <lb/>
moon's made known. The <lb/>
for the school was some- <lb/>
thing over <lb/>
of the Tar River Transportation <lb/>
Company, called in to see us <lb/>
Thursday. He left us a pleasant <lb/>
reminder of his courtesy. <lb/>
Miss May Griffin, of Norfolk, a <lb/>
niece of our townsman. Mr. A. J. <lb/>
Griffin, has made Greenville her <lb/>
home for the present. She is as- <lb/>
r. Griffin in her <lb/>
establishment. <lb/>
We are pained to learn of the <lb/>
death of the wife of Dr. J. N. <lb/>
near Farmville, which <lb/>
occurred on Sunday afternoon; <lb/>
Mist. She was a most excellent <lb/>
woman and had hosts of warm <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
Rev. R. R. of Peters- <lb/>
burg, arrived to assist <lb/>
in the meeting now going on in <lb/>
the Baptist Church. Rev. J. A. <lb/>
Leslie, of Tarboro, also arrived <lb/>
yesterday and will be in our midst <lb/>
a few days. <lb/>
Senator W. R. Williams <lb/>
Falkland, was in to see us Monday, <lb/>
and among other things said <lb/>
the Reform Club had <lb/>
almost ionized Falkland and <lb/>
that it had worked incalculable <lb/>
good. Let all the brethren take <lb/>
courage from this. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I wish to say to the people of <lb/>
Greenville and vicinity that there <lb/>
will be Protracted Services in the <lb/>
Baptist Church, daily, during the <lb/>
present week and perhaps longer <lb/>
at p. m. and p. m. <lb/>
by Rev. R. R. of Peters- <lb/>
burg, Va. I beg that God's <lb/>
of all denominations will come <lb/>
and help us in the services. Bring <lb/>
Gospel Hymns if yon have the <lb/>
book and sing. Try to be present <lb/>
promptly by Bring your <lb/>
friends with you. <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
Kind. <lb/>
In endorsing what the Smith- <lb/>
field Herald says about the Re- <lb/>
the Henderson Gold Leaf <lb/>
says it is of our valued <lb/>
exchanges, whose editor is one <lb/>
the most indefatigable journalistic <lb/>
workers in the Thanks. <lb/>
Triad. <lb/>
The Greenville Reflector has <lb/>
entered upon a new volume. This <lb/>
is a paper we always like to read. <lb/>
It has a freshness about it that <lb/>
captivates us. and <lb/>
ability. Bro. Whichard be- <lb/>
longs to the band of progressive <lb/>
young editors of North Carolina of <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
On this page will be found a <lb/>
space reserved for Higgs <lb/>
ford. One of the firm is now vis <lb/>
ting Baltimore, Philadelphia and <lb/>
New York, for the purpose of <lb/>
chasing new goods for the spring <lb/>
and summer. He has gone <lb/>
pared to pay cash for his goods <lb/>
which insures the very lowest <lb/>
on them, and patrons of their <lb/>
store will be given the advantage <lb/>
of these bargains. They are run- <lb/>
off their at a <lb/>
sacrifice in order to make room for <lb/>
the large stock of new goods now <lb/>
being purchased. <lb/>
Mr. Theo. Ross, of Carolina <lb/>
township, while hunting <lb/>
day, fell in a fainting fit and died <lb/>
instantly. He leaves a family. <lb/>
Commissioners Proceedings. <lb/>
February 6th, 1888. <lb/>
The Board Commissioners <lb/>
for Pitt county met this day, at <lb/>
a. m., the following members <lb/>
being Council <lb/>
Chairman, G. M. Mooring, J. A. <lb/>
K. Tucker, T. E. Keel and W. A. <lb/>
James, Jr. <lb/>
last meeting read and <lb/>
approved. <lb/>
The following pauper orders <lb/>
were drawn. <lb/>
Look well to the establishment <lb/>
of small and the larger <lb/>
ones will come along in due time. <lb/>
Agitate and keep the town <lb/>
moving. <lb/>
Much our space outside <lb/>
pages of this issue is given to re- <lb/>
ports from the State Agricultural <lb/>
Experiment Station. The farm- <lb/>
will find it interesting read- <lb/>
For sometime we have said <lb/>
nothing to the delinquent <lb/>
the Reflector. We have <lb/>
not them, however, and <lb/>
request all owing us to come tor- <lb/>
ward and settle an honest debt. <lb/>
Just give Greenville a railroad <lb/>
now and we will show yon what <lb/>
the town can do. Such a boom as <lb/>
the town would get on has not <lb/>
been known in these parts. Let <lb/>
the road be secured. <lb/>
Twenty-four members of the <lb/>
Guard were oat at the drill last <lb/>
Friday. After the drill the meas- <lb/>
each one was taken for <lb/>
overcoats that are to be furnish- <lb/>
ed by the State. <lb/>
The is a paper lately <lb/>
started in Concord by Messrs An- <lb/>
Cross. We are highly <lb/>
pleased with the copy before us <lb/>
and gladly place it upon our ex- <lb/>
change list It shows a good <lb/>
paper. <lb/>
The children of the Bee <lb/>
gave a festival Friday <lb/>
night the proceeds of which will <lb/>
apply to the purchase of a memo- <lb/>
rial for the Baptist <lb/>
Church. The net proceeds <lb/>
mounting to about <lb/>
The increase in circulation of <lb/>
the Reflector has been more sat- <lb/>
January and <lb/>
February, than at any former time <lb/>
in its history. Keep the boom <lb/>
going, friends, and we will he en <lb/>
to make the paper still bet- <lb/>
Harried. <lb/>
On Tuesday last, February 7th, <lb/>
at the residence of the bride's <lb/>
mother, in Carolina township, Mr. <lb/>
W. W. Thomas, Bethel town- <lb/>
ship, was married to Miss Bug <lb/>
W. U. Williams Esq., <lb/>
The following couples <lb/>
attended them Mr. Willie <lb/>
an Miss James, Mr. <lb/>
C. L. Whichard Miss Carrie <lb/>
James, Mr. W. B. Roebuck and <lb/>
Miss Maggie Mooring, Mr. <lb/>
I lane II and Miss Maggie <lb/>
ton, Mr. Geo. Blount and Miss <lb/>
Pattie James, Mr. G. Williams <lb/>
and Miss Fannie Barnhill. After <lb/>
the ceremony the happy couple <lb/>
with their attendants <lb/>
friends went to the home of <lb/>
the groom where a host of friends <lb/>
had gathered to welcome their <lb/>
return. Soon after their arrival <lb/>
at home all were invited into the <lb/>
dining room where one of the <lb/>
awaited us that it was <lb/>
ever our fortune to partake of, and <lb/>
which was greatly enjoyed by all. <lb/>
After supper the resorted <lb/>
to different amusements, tho <lb/>
greater part joining in the merry <lb/>
dance, while those like the writer <lb/>
built that found other <lb/>
amusements which wore enjoyed <lb/>
equally as well. The presents <lb/>
were too numerous to mention. <lb/>
They were useful and beautiful <lb/>
and many of them very costly. If <lb/>
kind wishes of friends could <lb/>
their lite would be one <lb/>
broken chain of happiness. W. <lb/>
The above was intended for <lb/>
last issue, but the person Dy whom <lb/>
it was sent did not hand it m <lb/>
Thursday <lb/>
Joshua L. Tucker, mortgagee, <lb/>
advertises land for sale. <lb/>
Sheriff King advertises land for <lb/>
sale to satisfy executions in bis <lb/>
hands. <lb/>
Joe Richmond offers pine wood <lb/>
at per cord. advertise- <lb/>
See advertisement of laud sale <lb/>
by G. B. King Commissioner, in <lb/>
another column. <lb/>
Mosley Haddock Ferry Haddock <lb/>
Susan Turner Nancy Moore U <lb/>
Nancy John Stocks <lb/>
Alice Gorham Dinah Carney <lb/>
Robert Moore Mayo <lb/>
Taylor <lb/>
Darling Williams Hopkins SO <lb/>
Henry Smith SO Mahala Braxton <lb/>
Cherry Terry <lb/>
Clarissa Nelson Cannon <lb/>
L. A. Green <lb/>
Lewis Gray Polly <lb/>
J. D. Cobb <lb/>
Rhoda May Pliancy Tucker <lb/>
Susan Briley Shade <lb/>
Elks Edwards <lb/>
Margaret Bryan James Masters <lb/>
Amos Parker <lb/>
W. T. Ross Elijah Ange <lb/>
Richard Warren John Baker <lb/>
W. B. Harris <lb/>
County orders were issued fol- <lb/>
lows. <lb/>
J. J. <lb/>
II. E. Ellis <lb/>
Henry Brown <lb/>
B. R. Manning <lb/>
L. H. Wilson <lb/>
J H Cherry <lb/>
J J <lb/>
G B Ellis <lb/>
Howell Cobb <lb/>
Shade Cox <lb/>
Sam <lb/>
H R Hearne <lb/>
Ed Bland <lb/>
W. B. <lb/>
T. R. Moore <lb/>
Harris <lb/>
D. Wilson <lb/>
Alfred <lb/>
Council Chapman <lb/>
HE Ellis <lb/>
B White <lb/>
Oliver Smith <lb/>
Rachael Dixon <lb/>
J B Price <lb/>
W F <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of a power contained in a <lb/>
certain mortgage deed executed by W. I. <lb/>
Smith and wife Patience, to Joshua. L, <lb/>
Tucker on the 16th day of November, <lb/>
1880, which mortgage deed is recorded in <lb/>
the Register's office of Pitt county in <lb/>
Book P. pages Ml the under- <lb/>
signed Mortgagee sell on the <lb/>
on Saturday, February, 25th 1888, at <lb/>
o'clock. M. the following described <lb/>
tract of land situated in Swift Creek town- <lb/>
ship, Pitt county, and bounded as follows <lb/>
viz Beginning at a stake on the side of <lb/>
the road, thence N. W. <lb/>
on the side of said road, thence S. W. <lb/>
to a small black gum in <lb/>
line, then S. E. to a stake. <lb/>
then N. E. to a stake cornered <lb/>
two large pines, then to the beginning <lb/>
containing fifty-two acres more or less, <lb/>
being the lands conveyed by Jacob Mo, <lb/>
Cotter to John smith. This January <lb/>
1888. Terms of Sale Cash. <lb/>
JOSHUA <lb/>
Tucker Murphy Ally's. Mortgagee. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
On Wednesday the 21st of March <lb/>
A D. will sell at the Court House <lb/>
door In the town of Greenville to the <lb/>
highest bidder for Cash two tracts of land <lb/>
in Pitt County containing about one <lb/>
and forty acres and bounded as fol- <lb/>
lows One tract on the East side John- <lb/>
son's Mill Swamp adjoining the lands of <lb/>
the late B W Brown's heirs and others <lb/>
containing by estimates forty two acres <lb/>
more or less, one tract bounded on <lb/>
the east by the Homestead of S M John- <lb/>
son on the North by the Tarboro road on <lb/>
the west by the lands of win. <lb/>
on the South Tar River containing <lb/>
by estimation about one hundred <lb/>
more or less both tracts belief the excess <lb/>
of S M Johnson's Homestead, to satisfy <lb/>
executions in my hands for col- <lb/>
against S M Johnson and which <lb/>
has been levied on said land as the prop- <lb/>
of sold Johnson. <lb/>
W. M. KING, <lb/>
Feb. 20th Sheriff. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
On Wednesday the 21st day of March <lb/>
A. D. 1888, will sell at the Court House <lb/>
door in Greenville to the highest bidder <lb/>
for cash one tract of land in Pitt county <lb/>
containing about thirteen acres and <lb/>
as follows As a part of the tract of <lb/>
land known as the Geo W Andrews land <lb/>
in Bethel township Pitt county and <lb/>
known as lot No in the partition of said <lb/>
land and bounded as follows beginning <lb/>
at the corner of lot No on the road and <lb/>
runs North poles to a stake thence <lb/>
South east poles to the back line <lb/>
thence South to the comer of lot No <lb/>
thence with Second line of lot No to <lb/>
the beginning containing acres and as- <lb/>
signed to Warren Andrews in the <lb/>
to satisfy a ex in my hands for <lb/>
collection against said lot No <lb/>
which has been levied on said land. <lb/>
KING, <lb/>
20th 1888. Sheriff. <lb/>
and all other goods in our line Our Mr. HIGGS <lb/>
is now visiting Baltimore, New York and <lb/>
to purchase a large stock of Spring and <lb/>
Summer goods and our present stock <lb/>
MUST BE DISPOSED OF <lb/>
in order to make room for new goods. <lb/>
purchases will be made the <lb/>
GASH which will enable us to give all patrons <lb/>
benefit of the very lowest prices. We are <lb/>
ways glad to serve you. <lb/>
HIGGS <lb/>
a of A. A. BATTLE'S <lb/>
Calf Shoe. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD MICK <lb/>
AND MERCHANTS <lb/>
their year's supplies will Had <lb/>
their Interest to get our prices before M <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. <lb/>
in all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb/>
SPICES, TEAS, <lb/>
Market <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb/>
buy direct from Manufacturers, end <lb/>
buy at one profit. A cc <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on band and sold at prices to <lb/>
the times. Our goods are all bought <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no <lb/>
to run. we sell n close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
W. V. <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
The Racket Store. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING. <lb/>
B. S. <lb/>
in the Undertaking we <lb/>
with me <lb/>
are ready <lb/>
to <lb/>
Frank Williams Rosette Thomas <lb/>
Dennis Blount Isaac Joyner <lb/>
C M A Dawson Henry Burton S <lb/>
Fred Harding Washington Wilson <lb/>
James Wilson E Whittle Id <lb/>
F M SO L H Wilson SO <lb/>
J E May <lb/>
Samuel <lb/>
Richard Warren and W B <lb/>
were deemed worthy objects <lb/>
for county aid and allowed per <lb/>
month each from date. <lb/>
License to retail liquor was <lb/>
granted to W O John- <lb/>
sun, Co., and Bullock <lb/>
Petition of W C Joyner for ex- <lb/>
valuation was not allowed. <lb/>
John King was appointed to <lb/>
have repaired bridge across Ward's <lb/>
Run. <lb/>
Asa Langley and Cicero <lb/>
were exempted from poll tax for <lb/>
the year 1887. <lb/>
W P Buck was elected <lb/>
of township and ten- <lb/>
his official bond with James <lb/>
Galloway and J D Buck as sure- <lb/>
ties, which bond was accepted and <lb/>
recorded. <lb/>
The Grand jury reports concern <lb/>
the Poor House and Jail were <lb/>
read ordered spread the min- <lb/>
The reports were published <lb/>
a former issue of the <lb/>
Proceedings of the second day <lb/>
will be published next week <lb/>
serve the people in that <lb/>
capacity. All notes and accounts <lb/>
me for past services have been placed In <lb/>
the hands of Mr. for collection. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
stock of Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb/>
from the Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Pine Coffin. are fitted <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can render <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who patronize <lb/>
us ft <lb/>
Feb. 1888. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
Having disposed of my interest in the <lb/>
Drug business. I will in future devote my <lb/>
entire attention to the practice of <lb/>
cine Office at residence in <lb/>
J T. SLEDGE, M. D. <lb/>
Step by step tho RACKET moves on, and step by step its law of low <lb/>
value demonstrates tho principles of in business. Solve <lb/>
the problem of success you will, surround it with all the mystery- <lb/>
possible, put in it all the due spun theories you can invent and boil <lb/>
them down into a nut-shell, then put them into practice and you will <lb/>
find that you have no better one than the law of tho RACKET. Mus- <lb/>
your business when you buy, keep the mastery when you sell. Nev- <lb/>
mark item cents when you can afford to take seven. <lb/>
purchased largely from several merchants retiring from business <lb/>
at cents in the dollar and sonic goods for loss. propose giving <lb/>
our customers tho benefit of the bargains. The law of small profits <lb/>
and quick sales is the only legitimate road to successful career in <lb/>
To do this it takes when you no man's <lb/>
credit is equal to dollars, dollars when you sell, for no man can sell you <lb/>
goods as cheap on time as for cash. And if anyone avers to you that <lb/>
your credit is as good us your money, look out, for tho business man <lb/>
who does it, knows full well the power of ready cash, or has not learn- <lb/>
ed enough the principles business to rank him with a twelve <lb/>
years old school boy. Men sell goods on time ; of course they do, and <lb/>
thoroughly dulled merchants in that line do it, but they make you <lb/>
pay for it. If they did not they would fail. And a groat many do <lb/>
tail, for the reason that the law of it is the higher prices, the more <lb/>
certain defeat. Big profits kill, small profits master the mercantile i <lb/>
business. The credit system is a failure, it encumbers the producer, <lb/>
the farmers with debts that he may never expect to pay. Ho gives n <lb/>
mortgage on his horse and cow and everything save his wife <lb/>
and when he bus done this, he is no longer a tree man. He <lb/>
agrees to pay just what the merchant charges, and this is compelled to <lb/>
lie an to make up for those who never pay. At the <lb/>
end of the if he has been very fortunate he pays up. if not ho <lb/>
goes on the same basis for another year, and thus it la year after year <lb/>
Below we quote of oar leading bargains. We can save you <lb/>
money on anything you may want in our line. <lb/>
C. S. Parson's Brogan Shoes at astonishing low figures <lb/>
Calicoes cents Paper Pins cents <lb/>
Sharp's Needles cents Spools of Cotton for cents <lb/>
Cakes of Toilet cents oz Bottle Machine Oil cents <lb/>
Hemstitched Ladies Handkerchief cents <lb/>
All Silk Ribbon cents per yard <lb/>
Men's Shirts Linen Bosoms cents <lb/>
Balls Sewing Cotton cents Towels from cents up <lb/>
Ladies Breakfast Shawls for lo cents <lb/>
Men's Suspenders at and cents <lb/>
Table Clothes at low figures <lb/>
Ladies Hose and cents better quality <lb/>
Men's Pants from tip Note cents a quire <lb/>
Good Envelops cents a pack Buttons cents a dozen and up <lb/>
Handkerchiefs for cents better quality for cents <lb/>
Bustles cents usual price <lb/>
Pocket Books cents Hair Brush cents <lb/>
Combs and razors most any price cents <lb/>
Good Hammers cents Corsets for cents and up <lb/>
Good Rubber Elastic cents better quality brocaded cents <lb/>
Chemise well made cents <lb/>
Lead Pencils for cents <lb/>
Tin and Glassware at prices that will astonish you <lb/>
Tie Tar River Transportation Company.- <lb/>
Greenville, Preside <lb/>
J. B. h <lb/>
S. e <lb/>
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Capt. U. F. Washington, den <lb/>
The People's Line for on Tar <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer i <lb/>
and quickest on the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, n <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for comfort, <lb/>
convenience of Ladies <lb/>
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table with the i <lb/>
best, the Barbel <lb/>
A on Steamer <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Wednesday j <lb/>
Friday at o'clock, <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursdays i <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb/>
Freights received and through, <lb/>
Bills Lading given to points. J <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
COTTON FACTORS <lb/>
BALTIMORE I i <lb/>
NORFOLK. <lb/>
Established in Baltimore in 1870. <lb/>
Will open House In <lb/>
n September, for die handling and <lb/>
sale of cotton, thus giving our customers <lb/>
their choice of two markets. <lb/>
J. c. chestnut; <lb/>
Has on hand a well assorted stock, <lb/>
Light Groceries, Canned Goods, i <lb/>
Confections, Tobacco, <lb/>
Cigars. Ac, <lb/>
which will lie sold <lb/>
PRICES. Give him a call, tho <lb/>
under Opera House, <lb/>
Give us a call and be convinced that a dime <lb/>
saved is a dime made. Come one and all, little <lb/>
and big, we will send you home rejoicing. <lb/>
Very respectfully yours <lb/>
RYAN REDDING <lb/>
NEW <lb/>
JEWELRY STORE. <lb/>
I have lost Opened a Jewelry Store at <lb/>
the stand of L. will <lb/>
keep on sale a nice line of <lb/>
WATCHES, CLOCKS, <lb/>
and Jewelry. <lb/>
Am also prepared to do ail kinds of re- <lb/>
pairing on rash articles in a <lb/>
and satisfactory manner. <lb/>
MOSES <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES <lb/>
X. <lb/>
Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing <lb/>
Hats, Boots, Shoes. Hardware, <lb/>
and Groceries. Lime kept constant. <lb/>
hand. <lb/>
I have Just received a large lot of I <lb/>
Braces for boys, girls, ladles and <lb/>
gentlemen. need only to be tried to <lb/>
give satisfaction <lb/>
I can offer to Jobbing <lb/>
superior advantages in a. <lb/>
spool which I will sell at I <lb/>
cents per doe., per cent. off. <lb/>
I keep on hand a largo supply of <lb/>
ford's Bread Preparation, I j <lb/>
frill sell at wholesale prices to J <lb/>
The patronage of die public is very I <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
The Wilson Advertiser is the <lb/>
latest venture in this <lb/>
State, Mr. J. Gold, editor and <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Stone, business manager. <lb/>
It made its appearance last <lb/>
Wednesday and will be <lb/>
semi monthly. It is bright <lb/>
and -era it <lb/>
J. B. is prepared to <lb/>
ct loans at per cent, interest. <lb/>
See advertisement. <lb/>
k Sheppard advertise <lb/>
their Undertaking in this <lb/>
are prepared to serve the <lb/>
public. <lb/>
I deliver Ht any where <lb/>
In town at 11.73 per cord <lb/>
RICHMOND. <lb/>
Feb. 21st 1888. . . <lb/>
IMPORTANT. <lb/>
ALL PERSONS <lb/>
A or <lb/>
TO TUB <lb/>
T. R. Cherry Co., <lb/>
are hereby notified to come forward st <lb/>
once and nettle their accounts. This hi <lb/>
t tbs <lb/>
mm mt he mm emporium. <lb/>
Come and be convinced that our selections cannot be surpassed. Watch our column and <lb/>
will keep you posted as to the arrival of New Goods in all departments.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018873_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
MRS. E, A. SHEPPARD <lb/>
JUST TO HER STOCK <lb/>
of floods, <lb/>
the . f an exp. <lb/>
All no be the <lb/>
eat mid Wet Stamping <lb/>
paint and embroidery executed <lb/>
the Northern markets she <lb/>
careful to select only the best an <lb/>
latest style goods In the Millinery line, ant <lb/>
to prepared to offer purchasers special in <lb/>
FREE DELIVERY IS TOWN <lb/>
or <lb/>
KEROSENE OIL. <lb/>
By JAMES A. SMITH <lb/>
VinE DELIVER, DAILY, <lb/>
to parties desiring Kerosene Oil, as <lb/>
as any in market and at lb <lb/>
now paid at the stores. <lb/>
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED <lb/>
Save time, money and trouble by per- <lb/>
us to till your orders at your <lb/>
and places of business. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
GREENVILLE, <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb/>
S TOP <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT, <lb/>
Under the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
I have recently Waled, and where I hare <lb/>
everything ray line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; new <lb/>
and comfortable chairs. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb/>
for work outside of my shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
HERBERT EDMONDS. <lb/>
AT THE STOCK OF NEW <lb/>
MILLINERY GOODS <lb/>
arriving at <lb/>
MRS. <lb/>
will convince you that they are without a <lb/>
parallel in this market, both as to quality <lb/>
and price. A new lot of the latest style <lb/>
nods received every few days. <lb/>
Will Color One to Four <lb/>
Of Dress Goods, <lb/>
Garments, <lb/>
. Yarns, Rags, etc. j cents. <lb/>
A Child can use them <lb/>
The PUREST, STRONGEST FASTEST <lb/>
of all Dyes. Warranted lo Dye the <lb/>
ire the best colors. for <lb/>
and ill fancy Dyeing. leading color. <lb/>
They also make the Beat and <lb/>
WRITING INK ONE QUART <lb/>
LAUNDRY BLUE f IO Cents. <lb/>
Direction for Coloring and colon <lb/>
Cabinet as sample, sent for <lb/>
Ask druggist for Book and Sample or <lb/>
WELLS, RICHARDSOn t CO. Burlington, ft. <lb/>
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles. <lb/>
DIAMOND PAINTS. <lb/>
Gold. Silver. Only IO Cent. <lb/>
MACON <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT <lb/>
CONVENIENTLY LOCATED. <lb/>
LARGE SAMPLE ROOMS. <lb/>
TABLE WITH BEST OF <lb/>
Tilt MAI <lb/>
Good rooms and attentive servants. <lb/>
Feed Stables <lb/>
S- Proprietor. <lb/>
HOTEL <lb/>
SPENCER BROS., <lb/>
THE ROME <lb/>
BAWLS <lb/>
Polite waiters. Good rooms. Beat <lb/>
the Market affords. When in the city <lb/>
stop the <lb/>
Hotel, <lb/>
THE <lb/>
To pay or not to pay. that Is the question <lb/>
Whether for me to refuse <lb/>
To take a local paper and deprive <lb/>
My family rending all the news, <lb/>
Or pay up promptly what the printers <lb/>
And, by such payment, cheer him No <lb/>
pay, no paper- <lb/>
Then no more shall I be posted on the <lb/>
news <lb/>
And local haps throughout the town. <lb/>
And divers a consummation <lb/>
I i hat I have long feared. To pay, or stop <lb/>
To stop to lose <lb/>
the rub; <lb/>
For in that step no rest I take <lb/>
of a flairs that move the town. <lb/>
And such a shuffling off of all that's good <lb/>
Must make me pause. There's the re- <lb/>
Which every editor maintains for those <lb/>
ho come with I he cash and ne'er <lb/>
delay <lb/>
To settle up little For who <lb/>
would bear <lb/>
The pointed squibs and pungent para- <lb/>
graph <lb/>
Which far too oft reflect upon the man <lb/>
fails to settle his subscription bill <lb/>
I'll me now unto the editor. <lb/>
And. with my purse In my hand. <lb/>
Will settle up in full, one year date. <lb/>
By paying t him from my reedy cash <lb/>
The sum which is his due. <lb/>
Hampshire Co. Journal. <lb/>
on Main St. <lb/>
Washington. N. C. <lb/>
and all other machines repaired at short <lb/>
notice, at home or at shop. Iron and <lb/>
Brass Turning done in the best manner. <lb/>
Cylinders Models made to order. <lb/>
Locks repaired. Keys made or fitted, <lb/>
and threaded. repaired in best <lb/>
manner. Bring on work. General <lb/>
Jobbing done by O. P. <lb/>
Greenville N. C. <lb/>
S am <lb/>
R. R. <lb/>
and Schedule. <lb/>
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb/>
No No <lb/>
daily Fa Mail, daily <lb/>
daily ex Sun. <lb/>
Weldon pin pm C <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount<lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Wilson I pm pm am <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Magnolia C <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
Wilmington am <lb/>
Magnolia am <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Ar Goldsboro<lb/>
Ar Selma <lb/>
At Wilson <lb/>
Wilson am pm pm <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount <lb/>
Ar Tarboro N <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. pm <lb/>
Train en Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax for Scotland Neck at <lb/>
P. M. Returning, leaves Scotland Neck <lb/>
A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train N C, via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day, P M. Sunday P M, <lb/>
Williamston, N C. P M. P M. <lb/>
Returning leaves Williamston, X C, daily <lb/>
except Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb/>
M, arrive Tarboro, N C, A M, <lb/>
AM. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. A M, <lb/>
arrive X C, A M. Re- <lb/>
turning leaves X C A M, <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. X C, P M. <lb/>
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb/>
Mount at P M, arrives Nashville <lb/>
V M, Spring Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M. Nashville <lb/>
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
M, daily, except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at <lb/>
P M. Returning leave Clinton at A <lb/>
M, connecting at Warsaw with Nob. <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson Fayette- <lb/>
Branch is No. Northbound Is <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. South will stop only at <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points dally. All <lb/>
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb/>
day via Bay <lb/>
Trains make close connection for all <lb/>
points North via Richmond and Wash- <lb/>
AH trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb/>
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb/>
F. DIVINE. <lb/>
General <lb/>
B. KENLY. Transportation <lb/>
T. M. EMERSON. Passenger <lb/>
C. B. N. B. <lb/>
Edwards , <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
N. O- <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
of the kind to be found in <lb/>
lb Stale, solicit orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STATIONERY READY <lb/>
PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
FOR MAGISTRATES <lb/>
, in f oar <lb/>
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY <lb/>
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS <lb/>
ILL PURCHASERS CAN BE SUITED <lb/>
BY <lb/>
Isaac <lb/>
.-ALL <lb/>
L. C. TERRELL, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. K- C. <lb/>
Should be a I I confinement. <lb/>
for tool <lb/>
.- to. Atlanta, Ga, <lb/>
it spoon <lb/>
iii<lb/>
pug <lb/>
pug <lb/>
mm<lb/>
-g <lb/>
Font <lb/>
id <lb/>
of <lb/>
i On <lb/>
ion. M <lb/>
th ind <lb/>
of the <lb/>
continue to act u <lb/>
, paw it. copy- <lb/>
I . for th and <lb/>
to pan-in. Canada. En I and. Franc. <lb/>
and all <lb/>
is and <lb/>
MM <lb/>
and and <lb/>
lb on abort <lb/>
No for of modal <lb/>
bf -Mil <lb/>
a lb moot <lb/>
of it kind la th <lb/>
To ad a a a <lb/>
tare and <lb/>
W a ard <lb/>
U. lb to <lb/>
invention. ac <lb/>
f pram, <lb/>
m ant it aw <lb/>
all of <lb/>
Mb It far on <lb/>
aM k all <lb/>
If an In m <lb/>
iii <lb/>
Fertilizer Analyses at the Ex- <lb/>
Station. <lb/>
N. C. Felt. 18th, 1888. <lb/>
The relative in I <lb/>
of the fertilizing have <lb/>
reduced us follows Avail- <lb/>
Acid <lb/>
cents per pound of to <lb/>
cents tor the <lb/>
is reduced cents to <lb/>
cents, at <lb/>
cents per pound. In consequence <lb/>
of tins an <lb/>
fertilizer valued at last Bea- <lb/>
son. will lie valued at this <lb/>
These values are n the <lb/>
cash retail puce of lb ingredients <lb/>
at the us Norfolk, <lb/>
etc For interior points <lb/>
in North Carolina, the freight from <lb/>
the to these points <lb/>
he added. For Haleigh the aver- <lb/>
per ton is add- <lb/>
ed to an estimate of the val- <lb/>
n ii this point. <lb/>
The following <lb/>
These brands <lb/>
hr during the season <lb/>
Other will short- <lb/>
No. Co., High <lb/>
Am hate, <lb/>
lured era, Wilmington, <lb/>
N. sampled <lb/>
acid, claimed to <lb/>
cent <lb/>
. found <lb/>
cent ; potash, to <lb/>
per cent. <lb/>
value at <lb/>
No. <lb/>
no, <lb/>
Charleston, S. C, <lb/>
at Fair <lb/>
acid, found per <lb/>
cent.; ammonia, claimed found <lb/>
2.38 per cent.; claimed I, <lb/>
found Relative value sen- <lb/>
hoard, per pound. <lb/>
relative value at <lb/>
No. Acid <lb/>
Co., S. C . <lb/>
sample Fair <lb/>
acid, claimed 12.25 <lb/>
per cent. Relative value sea <lb/>
pounds, <lb/>
relative value at Raleigh, <lb/>
No. Acme Fertilizer, <lb/>
Acme Mtg Co., <lb/>
N. C sampled at <lb/>
Fair Bluff. Avail, acid, <lb/>
claimed found 8.68 per cent ; <lb/>
ammonia, claimed found <lb/>
per cent.; potash claimed <lb/>
found 2.89 t. Relative val- <lb/>
at seaboard, per pounds. <lb/>
relative value at Raleigh, <lb/>
No National Fertilizer, <lb/>
manufactured by S. W. k <lb/>
C., Richmond, stamped at <lb/>
Wadesboro. Available <lb/>
to found <lb/>
cent.; ammonia, claimed to <lb/>
found per cent.; potash claim- <lb/>
ed to found 2.02 per cent <lb/>
Relative at seaboard, per <lb/>
2.000 pounds, relative val- <lb/>
at <lb/>
No. Special Cotton Com- <lb/>
pound, manufactured by Q. <lb/>
Co., Baltimore, Md , sum <lb/>
at Avail, <lb/>
claimed to found 9.13 <lb/>
per cent.; an to <lb/>
2.36 percent ; <lb/>
ed to found 2- per cent <lb/>
Relative value at per 2.- <lb/>
pounds. relative value <lb/>
at Raleigh, <lb/>
No Island <lb/>
manufactured <lb/>
i t ., New London, <lb/>
Ct., sampled at Wilmington, N. C. <lb/>
Avail, claimed found <lb/>
10.43 per cent ; ammonia, claimed <lb/>
found per cent. Relative <lb/>
at per pounds. <lb/>
; value at Raleigh. <lb/>
Manipulated Guano to., Charles- <lb/>
ton, C at Fayetteville, <lb/>
N. C. Avail acid claimed <lb/>
d per cent.; ammonia, <lb/>
claimed 2.40. found 2.31 per cent.; <lb/>
potash, claimed found 2.88 <lb/>
cent. Relative value at Raleigh, <lb/>
No. Basin's Acid <lb/>
manufactured by <lb/>
Fertilizer Co, Baltimore, Md., <lb/>
sampled at Greenville. Avail, <lb/>
acid, canned t found <lb/>
pet cent.; ammonia, claimed <lb/>
to 8-30. found Oil per cent <lb/>
Relative value at Raleigh, <lb/>
No. Rot war's High <lb/>
Grade Phosphate, <lb/>
by <lb/>
Norfolk, Va., at <lb/>
value t <lb/>
at <lb/>
No. Owl Brand <lb/>
by Davie Whittle. <lb/>
at <lb/>
Mount Avail, acid, claim <lb/>
ed found per cent.; potash, <lb/>
claimed found 1.72 cent. <lb/>
Relative value at per <lb/>
pounds, relative val- <lb/>
at Raleigh, <lb/>
No. Meadow's Special <lb/>
Guanos for all Crops, <lb/>
ed E. II. k J A. Meadows, <lb/>
New N. C. Avail, <lb/>
mid, claimed to fun id <lb/>
per cent; potash, claimed H to <lb/>
found per cent.; potash, <lb/>
t per <lb/>
cent. Relative value at seaboard <lb/>
pound. relative <lb/>
value at <lb/>
i. Battle Director. <lb/>
lea Me. <lb/>
If we know all of approach <lb/>
adopted by an enemy we are en- <lb/>
tn ward off the danger and post- <lb/>
pone the when surrender becomes <lb/>
inevitable. In many instances the in- <lb/>
strength the body suffices to en- <lb/>
able It to oppose the tendency toward <lb/>
death. Many however have lost these for- <lb/>
to such an extent that there Is little <lb/>
or no help. In other cases a little aid to <lb/>
the weakened Lungs will make all <lb/>
difference between sudden death <lb/>
many years of useful life. Upon the first <lb/>
symptoms of a Cough, Cold or any <lb/>
of the Throat or Lungs, give that old <lb/>
and well known Ger- <lb/>
man Syrup, h careful trial. It will prove <lb/>
what thousands say of It to be, the <lb/>
of any <lb/>
A bushel of distilled will <lb/>
make four gallons off whiskey. <lb/>
The government tax on <lb/>
off whiskey is The <lb/>
whiskey made ripe the Jay Eye <lb/>
rapid process sells quickly for <lb/>
per making for the <lb/>
four gallons. this. the far- <lb/>
mer gets cents with which to <lb/>
pay the expenses of raising the <lb/>
corn and supporting his family ; <lb/>
the help <lb/>
the already Treas- <lb/>
on ; the railroads get ; the <lb/>
manufacturer, ; the vendor, <lb/>
; and the user gets the <lb/>
while the tax payer foots the <lb/>
hill. this bushel of corn <lb/>
made into bread; now make a cal- <lb/>
see what the result <lb/>
will City News. <lb/>
k Senna Legal Opinion. <lb/>
E. Esq., County <lb/>
Atty., Clay Co., Tex., used <lb/>
Electric Bitters with most happy results <lb/>
My was low with Mala- <lb/>
rial Fever and Jaundice, but was cured <lb/>
timely use of this medicine. Am sat- <lb/>
Electric Bitters saved his life. <lb/>
Mr. D. I. of Horse Cave Ky. <lb/>
adds a like testimony. He <lb/>
believes he have died, had <lb/>
it not been for Electric s. <lb/>
This great remedy will ward off. as <lb/>
well as cure all Malarial Diseases, and <lb/>
for all Kidney, Liver and Stomach <lb/>
stands Price and SI <lb/>
at Drug store. <lb/>
Corn. <lb/>
W Mirror. <lb/>
The Wadesboro Intelligencer <lb/>
says that the farmers of <lb/>
county last year hit the nail on <lb/>
I he head when they planted large <lb/>
areas corn. As a consequence <lb/>
hey are to-day in a better cm <lb/>
with u plenty of bread, than <lb/>
Ht time during past ten <lb/>
years. A plenty of bread what <lb/>
a comfortable reflection And <lb/>
when it is remembered that, ac- <lb/>
cording to statistics Wash <lb/>
the corn crop of the <lb/>
try is bushels short of <lb/>
the yield of and the shortest <lb/>
of any yield in seven years, it is a <lb/>
refreshing thought We urge <lb/>
one, who cultivates one inch <lb/>
of soil, to pay particular attention <lb/>
to com, which should be the first <lb/>
consideration every day <lb/>
dinnertime. Were we a farmer <lb/>
we would as soon think having <lb/>
no bread on our as no com <lb/>
growing our fields. <lb/>
For skin diseases, liver complaint, etc., <lb/>
use this wonderful remedy <lb/>
cleanses and purities the blood and there- <lb/>
by remove such disorders. <lb/>
The time for the elixirs, and cordials, <lb/>
for the baby has passed, and Dr. Bull's <lb/>
Baby Syrup Is now the reliable <lb/>
remedy. Price<lb/>
The Chattanooga Tradesman <lb/>
has this to say about suckers A <lb/>
man who lives in a ton for no <lb/>
other purpose than to suck from <lb/>
that town his wealth his fat- <lb/>
and all his goes to <lb/>
other and perhaps <lb/>
rival worse than a traitor <lb/>
lie is a vampire, which, while <lb/>
sucking the blood of its victim, <lb/>
soothes hi-, wound. lie covers up <lb/>
Ins act words of <lb/>
while in his heart he is working <lb/>
some other cry and will <lb/>
the one to the other and the <lb/>
business men of lie one to the <lb/>
benefit of the other. <lb/>
To the inform your <lb/>
readers that have a positive remedy for <lb/>
the above mimed disease. By Its timely <lb/>
use thousands of hopeless cases have been <lb/>
permanently cured. I snail be glad to <lb/>
send two bottles of my remedy to <lb/>
any of readers who have <lb/>
If they will me their express <lb/>
and pOst office address. Respectfully, <lb/>
T. A. Slocum, M. C, st., N Y <lb/>
glad to see you back, old <lb/>
man said a local merchant to a <lb/>
returned citizen. glad to be <lb/>
the <lb/>
have you over to <lb/>
Boomtown there <lb/>
anything <lb/>
made an <lb/>
eat <lb/>
Ton cannot afford to waste time In e <lb/>
when your lungs are In <lb/>
Consumption always seems at <lb/>
only a cold. Do not permit any deal- <lb/>
to Impose open yon with some cheap <lb/>
Or. King's New Discovery <lb/>
tor Consumption, Coughs and Colds, but <lb/>
be tore yon get genuine. to <lb/>
m ma he are to saw to <lb/>
has or the <lb/>
Don't be deceived, <lb/>
Lang <lb/>
trial <lb/>
Elisabeth City News. <lb/>
We hoped that with tin <lb/>
turning over of new leaves and <lb/>
milking of new resolutions on the <lb/>
first of the year, the mortgage <lb/>
plan, so indulged in by our <lb/>
people, would receive the <lb/>
the habit deserves,, and that <lb/>
this year, at least, might pass <lb/>
without a renewal of the <lb/>
held by a few upon the <lb/>
homes of many of people. But <lb/>
an examination of the the <lb/>
Register of this county will show <lb/>
that though u was raised <lb/>
last year, but few mortgages were <lb/>
more new ones <lb/>
were given than old ones paid. It <lb/>
is a state of a flairs for <lb/>
a people to be shingled with <lb/>
gages the <lb/>
of the section and paralyzes <lb/>
energy of the community. A <lb/>
mortgage once given is hard to <lb/>
get rid of. It means all the profit <lb/>
n n one horse crop to pay interest, <lb/>
and often a Bale at Die court house <lb/>
door at last. A man who gives a <lb/>
mortgage is simply working for <lb/>
his creditor. He gives up at last <lb/>
and his home is advertised for <lb/>
sale. Iii proof of this, look at the <lb/>
newspapers all over the country <lb/>
and see how homes are thus <lb/>
advertised. It dangerous to <lb/>
mortgage. If a crisis in <lb/>
matters eh mid nearly <lb/>
every farm m county <lb/>
and many of the homes in Eliza- <lb/>
City would he sold. Just <lb/>
think of it ; your families will he <lb/>
and homeless. If you <lb/>
are debt you had better sell a <lb/>
part of your land than encumber <lb/>
it all. make a mortgage if <lb/>
it is possible to avoid it. Let it <lb/>
be the last resort to save honor <lb/>
and integrity. It you make it, it <lb/>
will cost you many a <lb/>
night, fay your debts by all <lb/>
means after yon have made them, <lb/>
but, deny yourself sell something, <lb/>
part of the land if need be. Make <lb/>
a mortgage of your home only <lb/>
from sheer necessity. <lb/>
A Lady's Perfect Companies. <lb/>
Painless Childbirth, n new hook by <lb/>
Dr. John H. Dye, one of Xe w <lb/>
skillful physicians, shows that pain is not <lb/>
in.- lit Childbirth, but results from <lb/>
causes easily understood and overcome <lb/>
It proves flint any woman may be- <lb/>
come a mother without suffering any <lb/>
whatever. It also tells how to overcome <lb/>
and prevent morning sickness, swelled <lb/>
limbs, and all other evils attending <lb/>
It is i and highly endorsed <lb/>
by physicians everywhere as the wife's <lb/>
true private companion. Cut this out ; <lb/>
It will save and possibly your <lb/>
life. Send two-cent stamp for descriptive <lb/>
circulars, testimonials, <lb/>
letter sent In sealed envelope. Address <lb/>
Frank Thomas Co , <lb/>
Mil. <lb/>
The printing office at <lb/>
Washington is in the largest print- <lb/>
house the world, and em- <lb/>
ploys more -people in getting <lb/>
through with its work than any <lb/>
other half-dozen similar places <lb/>
A great deal of matter is allowed <lb/>
to go into print in the United <lb/>
States that never would see <lb/>
light anywhere Vis- <lb/>
THE WEALTH OF A HOME. <lb/>
Is dependent upon the happiness there- <lb/>
in. If sickness is there, what a shadow <lb/>
falls. Parents, you should never neglect <lb/>
a slight cough or cold, but give time <lb/>
Taylor's Cherokee Remedy of Sweet Gum <lb/>
Mullein. <lb/>
The of Cuban us county <lb/>
pay about into the school <lb/>
fund and receive back about <lb/>
Such a system is unfair and <lb/>
unjust to the whites The white <lb/>
man is simply educating the <lb/>
all Concord <lb/>
Times <lb/>
It It <lb/>
like a it f at night it <lb/>
in upon us <lb/>
have pains <lb/>
chest and and <lb/>
in the hack. They real <lb/>
and sleepy; the month has. <lb/>
bad taste, especially in the <lb/>
morning. A sort of sticky slime <lb/>
collects about the teeth. The <lb/>
appetite is poor. There is a <lb/>
feeling like a heavy <lb/>
Stomach; a faint, <lb/>
gone sen- i lite <lb/>
stomach fowl does n <lb/>
satisfy. The eyes an <lb/>
the hands and feet I <lb/>
and After a <lb/>
cough sets in, bu <lb/>
after a few months it is attend <lb/>
ed with a greenish-c ex <lb/>
The patient feel <lb/>
tired fill the and <lb/>
does not seem to afford an <lb/>
rest. After a time he <lb/>
nervous, irritable and gloom <lb/>
a giddiness, a sort of whir <lb/>
in the bead <lb/>
ii j -suddenly. <lb/>
Is become costive; the skin i <lb/>
and times; the <lb/>
thick <lb/>
he white- of the eyes <lb/>
with the <lb/>
s high colored, de <lb/>
a after stand <lb/>
There is frequently <lb/>
He led the German and dress <lb/>
was the admiration of the assembled fair. <lb/>
bu. his -torn partner slipped on his f i <lb/>
corn. Sensation Salvation Oil to <lb/>
the rescue. Happiness again <lb/>
Nothing is more provoking than a <lb/>
Cm re it with Or. Bull's <lb/>
Cough Syrup. <lb/>
Some people have a had habit <lb/>
of hen about the doors of <lb/>
churches just before the hour of <lb/>
spitting all over the <lb/>
pavement. The is <lb/>
that ladies have to wade <lb/>
this mess of spittle to into the <lb/>
home of God. How anyone who <lb/>
calls himself a gentlemen can per- <lb/>
is such a thing, is <lb/>
beyond oar to comprehend. <lb/>
n the name common decency, <lb/>
we enter our protest against it. <lb/>
Elizabeth News. <lb/>
TURNING DAY. <lb/>
Why is the like people of fashion <lb/>
It turns night into time people <lb/>
catch cold, which, if not attended to In <lb/>
time, will induce consumption. Take <lb/>
time Taylor's Cherokee of <lb/>
Your local paper does more than <lb/>
anything else to give your <lb/>
character abroad. If you would <lb/>
come to our table and pick up a <lb/>
small, poorly supported paper, <lb/>
without liberal advertising pat- <lb/>
you would decide at once <lb/>
that it was from some small <lb/>
or life town If you pick- <lb/>
ed up a paper full of live local <lb/>
you would say <lb/>
that the business men were full <lb/>
of snap and enterprise, and that <lb/>
it was a lively town. Moreover, <lb/>
m a good paper will <lb/>
draw i to a that would <lb/>
otherwise be attracted elsewhere. <lb/>
Your local newspaper has there <lb/>
fore, an influence in giving <lb/>
town character, and in drawing <lb/>
trade to it, that should hot be <lb/>
overlooked, and the business men <lb/>
of the town owe it a liberal sup- <lb/>
port, and they are In <lb/>
their own light when they try to <lb/>
see how In tie they can <lb/>
use in it. The poorly <lb/>
gives th town away. <lb/>
Enquirer. <lb/>
were three hundred and <lb/>
twenty-two visitors to the State <lb/>
Museum during the month of <lb/>
States <lb/>
g till <lb/>
with a <lb/>
f the food, some <lb/>
hair Balsam <lb/>
the hair, <lb/>
Fail to <lb/>
Hair to its Youthful Color. <lb/>
it f<lb/>
f PARKER <lb/>
Pains, <lb/>
STEEL <lb/>
max in <lb/>
not by will <lb/>
in u h c-cS at <lb/>
pens. do, <lb/>
J a <lb/>
u Stubs, each, <lb/>
TEE CO. Cm <lb/>
la on the . <lb/>
GENTS <lb/>
TIMES BUILDING <lb/>
ESTIMATES FREE <lb/>
with a <lb/>
this is at <lb/>
ended of th <lb/>
hi I <lb/>
aired, th <lb/>
yes; of <lb/>
. Al <lb/>
f thee, .-ire in turn <lb/>
present. It I bought that <lb/>
nearly of our <lb/>
this in some <lb/>
if its varied forms. <lb/>
It ha found that <lb/>
, the cause <lb/>
f . Some <lb/>
i .;. a <lb/>
hers f.-- disease, etc. <lb/>
c, bid none these kinds <lb/>
have been <lb/>
for it is <lb/>
i and It <lb/>
a also fount that Shaker Ex- <lb/>
rack of or <lb/>
Syrup, whet <lb/>
will <lb/>
his disease in all its stages. <lb/>
are must lie taken, however, <lb/>
o secure genuine article. <lb/>
IT WILL THAN <lb/>
Mr. John <lb/>
of Co., <lb/>
wife has <lb/>
lean so much benefited by <lb/>
Shaker Extract of Roots or <lb/>
Syrup that she says <lb/>
would rather be without <lb/>
part of food than without <lb/>
he medicine. It has done <lb/>
good than the doctors and <lb/>
ill other medicines put together. <lb/>
would ride twenty miles to <lb/>
it into the hands of any <lb/>
if he can get it in no <lb/>
I believe it will soon sell in <lb/>
this State better than <lb/>
TESTIMONY FROM <lb/>
Mrs. Barton, of Varner, <lb/>
Co., Mo., writes that <lb/>
he had long afflicted with <lb/>
and disease of the <lb/>
urinary organs was cured <lb/>
by Shaker Extract of Roots. <lb/>
Rev. J. J. merchant, <lb/>
of the place, who sold <lb/>
Mrs. Barton medicine, says <lb/>
he has sold it for four years <lb/>
and never knew it to fail. <lb/>
WAS ALMOST <lb/>
I was so low with <lb/>
that there was not a <lb/>
to be found who could <lb/>
lo anything me. had <lb/>
of the heart and <lb/>
of the head. One <lb/>
lay I read y our pamphlet called <lb/>
the Shaken <lb/>
my <lb/>
than I could myself. <lb/>
the Shaker Extract <lb/>
loots and kept on with it tint, <lb/>
I rejoice in good health <lb/>
ft. <lb/>
Co., Ky. <lb/>
For sale by all Druggists, <lb/>
address the proprietor, A. J. <lb/>
White, Limited, <lb/>
St., New Yin.<lb/>
D. J.<lb/>
----H---- <lb/>
Remain; <lb/>
Per Year, <lb/>
PAN Sn <lb/>
Ill i r<lb/>
I CURE <lb/>
FITS <lb/>
I say I do not mean to <lb/>
Mop them a time, and then re- <lb/>
turn I mi-an A RADICAL <lb/>
i have made the disease <lb/>
FITS, <lb/>
FALLING SICKNESS, <lb/>
T to <lb/>
worn caw-. <lb/>
failed Is no reason <lb/>
at <lb/>
of my Give <lb/>
and It cost you for a <lb/>
trial. It will you. <lb/>
ROOT. <lb/>
Pills <lb/>
FOR TORPID LIVER. <lb/>
A torpid liver derange the <lb/>
l Lin. and cs <lb/>
Sick Headache, <lb/>
A V A A . Dyspepsia, Costiveness, <lb/>
Sallow Skin and Piles.<lb/>
Is THE <lb/>
Newspaper ever published in <lb/>
Greenville. It the <lb/>
LATEST NEWS <lb/>
mill give Muir for <lb/>
the money than any other <lb/>
in Forth Carolina. <lb/>
The iii a <lb/>
of news. NATIONAL, STATE <lb/>
and LOCAL, devote it- <lb/>
to the material advancement <lb/>
the section in which it <lb/>
Send and get a <lb/>
SAMPLE <lb/>
it <lb/>
is called to tho as its <lb/>
large and circulation <lb/>
it an excellent medium <lb/>
through which to reach the people <lb/>
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb/>
weekly by A <lb/>
and <lb/>
Mess <lb/>
Bulk <lb/>
Bulk <lb/>
Bacon <lb/>
Bacon to <lb/>
Pitt County <lb/>
Sugar Cured <lb/>
to 6.50 <lb/>
Brown <lb/>
Granulated v to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
tot <lb/>
to <lb/>
Irish <lb/>
O. A. <lb/>
ton <lb/>
Rags <lb/>
Bread<lb/>
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb/>
t no remedy <lb/>
hi a trial <lb/>
Sold Everywhere. <lb/>
GIVEN AWAY <lb/>
S PIECES FREE <lb/>
. <lb/>
t- to can i <lb/>
tr . will on lo fr <lb/>
Ive <lb/>
and lull <lb/>
x . <lb/>
name a- <lb/>
at to fill If v <lb/>
or and and r <lb/>
real i in <lb/>
Lat to will job. <lb/>
wed our of <lb/>
it haven't <lb/>
All tin-. Sold at <lb/>
In I. S. to <lb/>
BATES Southern Music <lb/>
SAVANNAH, <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all in tho <lb/>
U. Patent Office or in the Court <lb/>
to for Moderate <lb/>
We are opposite the I <lb/>
Office engaged in Patent <lb/>
and patents ii. <lb/>
less time than those more remote <lb/>
from Washington. <lb/>
When model or drawing sen <lb/>
we advise as to <lb/>
of charge, and we make no <lb/>
unless we obtain <lb/>
refer, here, to Post Mas- <lb/>
tar, the of the Money <lb/>
Div., and to officials of the V. <lb/>
Patent Office. For circular, ail vice <lb/>
terms and reference to actual <lb/>
cuts m own Slate, or county <lb/>
address, A. Snow <lb/>
Washington, l C <lb/>
PROMPTLY FILLED. <lb/>
and I <lb/>
W HEAD <lb/>
CATARRH <lb/>
i i <lb/>
Fen i <lb/>
mid of-1 <lb/>
of Is <lb/>
i is i r <lb/>
of tho from <lb/>
ill On sore, and <lb/>
of <lb/>
by a as, <lb/>
at h <lb/>
Co i. free. <lb/>
N. V. <lb/>
. rs- <lb/>
I Not a <lb/>
N parts II may finally c <lb/>
Ir Hie <lb/>
I'm ;. ; <lb/>
I Iii a in-., i I <lb/>
One of Is lo I <lb/>
. of <lb/>
Cream <lb/>
Ike bet v <lb/>
SHOP. <lb/>
The has fitted up his la <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS STYLE, <lb/>
and any person a tiring <lb/>
CLEAN a PLEASANT <lb/>
OUT, SHAMPOO, <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
for balds. <lb/>
out hair, and of <lb/>
l the <lb/>
the many have It with <lb/>
I refer yon lo fol- <lb/>
lowing who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of my i <lb/>
Latham,<lb/>
Boat fa., <lb/>
Any one to ft a tho <lb/>
. . , <lb/>
a mo, st my o ART <lb/>
is Invited to me <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018873_0005" n="5"/>
<p>
vs- <lb/>
El XV <lb/>
State <lb/>
STATE <lb/>
Extravagance Contrasted <lb/>
With Democratic Economy. <lb/>
much does it is inquiry <lb/>
Bade whenever any plan or <lb/>
is discussed. This question in North <lb/>
Carolina is both proper and necessary be- <lb/>
cause the people have little or no surplus <lb/>
money, and they are compelled to carefully <lb/>
count the costs before ordering new <lb/>
or enlarging pr. sent expenses. And <lb/>
if the financial condition of the people did <lb/>
not compel to investigate closely. <lb/>
and spend money economically, the <lb/>
of common sense and prudence would <lb/>
that care be exercised in all ex- <lb/>
This is not only true of <lb/>
bought by individuals. It applies <lb/>
to the expenses of government as well. <lb/>
Taxation is always a burden, even under <lb/>
most favorable conditions. Men submit <lb/>
to the taking of a part of their earnings <lb/>
the State only because of the <lb/>
and protection to lite, liberty and <lb/>
property thereby secured. No taxation is <lb/>
just except what is required for the <lb/>
administration of all branches of <lb/>
the government. Every dollar collected <lb/>
by taxation, above what is absolutely re <lb/>
Sired, is under form of law. <lb/>
is is sound political economy. This is <lb/>
Democratic principle and Democratic <lb/>
In North Carolina, as a careful study <lb/>
of the financial operations of the State. <lb/>
under Democratic rule, will show. <lb/>
In November 1888 there is to be an <lb/>
in North Carolina to determine <lb/>
whether the Democratic party shall retain <lb/>
control of the executive and legislative <lb/>
departments of whether the <lb/>
Republican party shall be given this high <lb/>
trust. In that election every man, white <lb/>
and colored, who has children, or pays <lb/>
poll or property taxes, works on the raid, <lb/>
or derives any benefit from, or pays any <lb/>
burden to, government, is deeply interest- <lb/>
ed. For 1888 it is the question of <lb/>
Beside it all others sink into com- <lb/>
insignificance. <lb/>
What to influence voters in cast- <lb/>
their bailout <lb/>
The issue has been tendered by the Re- <lb/>
publicans. They charge the Democratic <lb/>
party in North Carolina with extravagance <lb/>
in the financial management of the State. <lb/>
The Democratic party accepts the issue, <lb/>
and is willing to stand or fall upon it <lb/>
financial record indeed, the Democratic <lb/>
party would be willing, although there are <lb/>
other strong reasons why it should be con- <lb/>
tinned In power, to waive all other issues, <lb/>
and go before the people, and let de- <lb/>
by contrasting Republican <lb/>
with Democratic expenditures, <lb/>
which party shall govern North Carolina. <lb/>
We are willing say to every <lb/>
the inquiry, much docs it <lb/>
and vote for the party that gives you <lb/>
the best government for the least <lb/>
Confident that it has given the people the <lb/>
lowest taxation, during the years of <lb/>
its full control in North Carolina, consist- <lb/>
With the BERT ADMINISTRATION Of rill- <lb/>
Lie the Democratic party chiefly <lb/>
rests its hope of continued success upon <lb/>
its wise economical financial record. <lb/>
In 1876 the profligacy, and <lb/>
of the Republican party buried it <lb/>
In although it has made at- <lb/>
tempt to again secure the control of the <lb/>
State, it has until now, had the <lb/>
effrontery to charge the Dem- <lb/>
party with extravagance. They <lb/>
sought to evade this question of <lb/>
questions by wholesale flinging of mud <lb/>
and detraction of gentlemen. <lb/>
Now they think that the people have <lb/>
forgotten their thieving, and they offer <lb/>
to take charge of the finances of the <lb/>
State to the people of heavy- <lb/>
taxation and stop extravagant <lb/>
We tell them That the <lb/>
have not forgotten the corrupt days of <lb/>
Radical rule in North Carolina, nor will <lb/>
they forget them, as long as the same men, <lb/>
who were conspicuous in Radical circles <lb/>
then, are the real leaders of the Radical <lb/>
party now. <lb/>
We repeat, the issue has been tendered. <lb/>
A Republican leader has a long <lb/>
article in which he the <lb/>
Democratic party has increased the ex- <lb/>
of the State government; <lb/>
it keeps a large surplus in the State Treas- <lb/>
its represents; ions of de- <lb/>
creasing taxation are false. <lb/>
These are the charges made, and upon <lb/>
them, for his party, he puts the Demo- <lb/>
party upon trial. We accept the is- <lb/>
see tendered and <lb/>
Allegation is not true. <lb/>
Allegation is not true. <lb/>
Allegation is not true. <lb/>
In the first place the entire article of <lb/>
Radical Reformer is based upon a false <lb/>
foundation. It Is intended to deceive. It is <lb/>
a showing and conveys a false <lb/>
His statement the <lb/>
expenditures under Got. Scales are <lb/>
were, Gov. <lb/>
den only Now the <lb/>
truth is that the Governor of a State has <lb/>
no control of the expenditures of the State. <lb/>
Brogden Lad nothing more to do with the <lb/>
expended in 1876 than the King <lb/>
ml the North Pole, if that undiscovered <lb/>
country has a King. When Mr. Brogden <lb/>
Governor of North Carolina the Demo- <lb/>
had full control of the Legislature, <lb/>
and bad been controlling it since 1870. <lb/>
The Democrats are to be credited with <lb/>
whatever of economy prevailed in 1876, <lb/>
and It is false to claim that the <lb/>
cans had anything whatever to do with it. <lb/>
word of praise of the economy in <lb/>
1876 is praise of the Democratic <lb/>
To contrast the Scales <lb/>
with the Democratic <lb/>
in 1876, when Brogden hap- <lb/>
to be Governor, is to contrast De- <lb/>
with Democracy. If in 1876 the <lb/>
expenses of the State government were <lb/>
less than in 1886, there is reason for <lb/>
this reason is clear to an unprejudiced mind. <lb/>
Further on, in this article, we will show it. <lb/>
Now the only honest way to contrast <lb/>
the financial record of the Democratic <lb/>
with that of the Republican party, <lb/>
to contrast the expenditure.- of the years <lb/>
when the Republicans controlled the Leg- <lb/>
with the years when the Demo- <lb/>
controlled the Legislature. No power <lb/>
can appropriate the State's funds or levy <lb/>
taxation, except the Legislature. <lb/>
The expenditures of 1869 and 1870 were <lb/>
directed by the Republican Legislature. <lb/>
If ever there was a time in the history of <lb/>
tile State when the tax-payers had a right <lb/>
to demand the most rigid economy it was <lb/>
then. And yet it is known of all men <lb/>
how the Radical legislators squandered <lb/>
the State's money and increased the State <lb/>
debt, and neither provided any schools for <lb/>
the children nor one k u another <lb/>
m the way of erecting public buildings. <lb/>
In contracting the administration of the <lb/>
finances, consideration Is to be had <lb/>
the purposes which the money was <lb/>
and the condition of people <lb/>
i the taxes were levied. When the <lb/>
arc moderately prosperous it Is not only <lb/>
but absolutely b ruling upon <lb/>
representatives to set foot those <lb/>
that will educate, elevate and up- <lb/>
lift people. When the people have Just <lb/>
a war. It is Imperative upon <lb/>
that the burdens of taxation be <lb/>
I light as possible to administer the <lb/>
attain of government. It is not a question <lb/>
so much of how much was expended, as for <lb/>
the money was expended. It <lb/>
is as to charge the Democratic party <lb/>
extravagance to-day because the <lb/>
are In of <lb/>
TO cause or increase, as it <lb/>
be to censure a mac for spending <lb/>
Stole money when he a large family <lb/>
flu he was a single man. W hat Is <lb/>
depends upon <lb/>
men will not forget this <lb/>
the expenses of 1876 with <lb/>
the party has no concealments <lb/>
it the closest scrutiny and <lb/>
into its financial <lb/>
, and expenditures of the <lb/>
following table gives the <lb/>
what <lb/>
for two of<lb/>
Adjutant Department -.-. t <lb/>
.<lb/>
disabled <lb/>
Auditor's <lb/>
Hoard of Internal <lb/>
square and public <lb/>
Convention. SB <lb/>
Contingencies.-------. <lb/>
Conveying convicts to Penitentiary-. <lb/>
Public Instruction. <lb/>
Drummer's license t refunded. <lb/>
fund. 64.70 <lb/>
Executive Department. <lb/>
Executive -.-. <lb/>
fugitives . <lb/>
Assembly. <lb/>
Caldwell's funeral. <lb/>
Geological survey. <lb/>
Insane Raleigh. II <lb/>
Insane Asylum, Morganton, A Support <lb/>
Asylum, <lb/>
Institution D. and It. Repairs A <lb/>
Indigent pupils at Deaf. Dumb and mind. <lb/>
on i per cent, state debt. . <lb/>
Interest on percent, state debt. <lb/>
Interest on W. N. C. K. B. bonds. <lb/>
merest on special Tax<lb/>
Keeper <lb/>
Lunatics supported by Co's. not in asylums. <lb/>
Marlon and lie <lb/>
or State <lb/>
Normal <lb/>
Orphan Asylum. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Sunday school. <lb/>
Public printing. i n <lb/>
Public tax <lb/>
Pensions to Con. soldiers and widows. <lb/>
Pay of Code Commissioners. i <lb/>
regulations. <lb/>
taxes.-.- <lb/>
State Hoard Health. <lb/>
Slate <lb/>
Library. <lb/>
state Boundary. <lb/>
Slate Canvassing Board. <lb/>
Stationery, amount refunded.-. <lb/>
Salaries of state officers and employees. <lb/>
state Loans paid. <lb/>
Depart men t. <lb/>
Tax Commission . <lb/>
University of North Carolina. <lb/>
Weights and measures. <lb/>
other general expenses not slated above. <lb/>
Investment In I per cent. Bonds.-.- <lb/>
6.230 <lb/>
7.500 <lb/>
If. to the above we add, what Is legitimate <lb/>
lo conic under these v amounts, <lb/>
the statement of the cost of Republican rule <lb/>
In Carolina Is arrived at The <lb/>
party is responsible as much for what It <lb/>
as for what It spent, they are <lb/>
thus legitimately to be charged with these <lb/>
by Democratic manage. <lb/>
the people were saved from paying <lb/>
them. These Items <lb/>
SB, School Fund squandered. I <lb/>
to. Stale Increased. In Oct., Treasurer <lb/>
reported In Nov., <lb/>
Treasurer Jenkins reported It to be <lb/>
In three years the Increase was <lb/>
Grand <lb/>
Dan. <lb/>
4.440 on <lb/>
MS <lb/>
10.411 <lb/>
last is<lb/>
5.100 <lb/>
as <lb/>
3.700 <lb/>
On <lb/>
1.-274 m <lb/>
at <lb/>
1,700 <lb/>
a, <lb/>
mm <lb/>
St <lb/>
30.828 <lb/>
IS <lb/>
CM US. <lb/>
7.800 on <lb/>
oust <lb/>
261.013 SO <lb/>
11,117.10 <lb/>
17.848,801 <lb/>
The in 1886 are subject to deduction of <lb/>
special Hems, as <lb/>
Agricultural tax on 41,000.00 <lb/>
Interest on new six per cent. Slate bonds. 801,193.00 <lb/>
Executive Mansion provided for from sales of State in the of <lb/>
Raleigh. 2,088.86 <lb/>
Investment in four per cent. State bonds. 947,815.08 <lb/>
492,070.34 <lb/>
Deducting the above amount, the legitimate disbursements payable oat <lb/>
of the ordinary revenues are, including the interest on tie four per <lb/>
cent. State 680,572.97 <lb/>
following remarks and explanations of the fore- <lb/>
table ought to be read carefully and digested by <lb/>
every voter in North Carolina. They are somewhat long, <lb/>
but they are explicit and they are accurate. <lb/>
GENERAL'S DEPART- <lb/>
increase is due to the fact <lb/>
that the salary of the Adjutant General <lb/>
was raised to MM. This is exactly half <lb/>
of the pay of this officer in 1869, and it <lb/>
is now about the smallest salary paid to <lb/>
this officer in any State in the Union. <lb/>
2-THE AGRICULTURAL DEPART- <lb/>
is a new expense, but the <lb/>
expense is entirely met by new receipts. <lb/>
Every by the Agricultural <lb/>
Department, the Bureau, the pub- <lb/>
of the Geological Reports, the <lb/>
Experiment Station and Farm, and <lb/>
migration Bureau, and some to fairs, is <lb/>
raised by a MM tax levied upon each <lb/>
brand of fertilizer sold in the State. This <lb/>
amount was never collected by <lb/>
cans. Democrats collected it, and they <lb/>
expend it, in the main, wisely. The <lb/>
of Chronicle upon the <lb/>
of the Department <lb/>
is well known. Two years ago we pub- <lb/>
a full statement of the affairs of <lb/>
that Department, showing that there had <lb/>
been some extravagance. What was the <lb/>
result Democrats corrected their own <lb/>
extravagance. At the last session of the <lb/>
Legislature, the expenses of the <lb/>
Department were reduced by <lb/>
sum of twenty thousand dollars. That <lb/>
Department now is run on and <lb/>
economy prevails in every branch. The <lb/>
Chronicle docs not hesitate to call ex- <lb/>
by its right name, even when <lb/>
tie Democratic party is responsible for <lb/>
it. But the difference between the Dem- <lb/>
and Republican parties is <lb/>
Democrats retrench their <lb/>
Republicans never retrench. <lb/>
This is a marked and striking difference <lb/>
between the parties. The of <lb/>
money that remains in the Treasury from <lb/>
this Fertilizer Tax Fund will go towards <lb/>
the erection of an Agricultural and Me- <lb/>
College, which is demanded by <lb/>
the farmers and mechanics throughout <lb/>
the State. For the protection of farmers <lb/>
there must be an inspection of <lb/>
and it is but just that the makers <lb/>
of fertilizers should pay this expense. <lb/>
money is given to encourage <lb/>
Fairs, and to thus improve our <lb/>
of fanning. amount is not large <lb/>
and we have never heard complaint <lb/>
made of thus expenditure to encourage <lb/>
a generous rivalry among our farmers. <lb/>
FOR DISABLED <lb/>
is a wise provision. <lb/>
It is a specific appropriation for soldiers <lb/>
who have lost both arms, or legs, <lb/>
or both eyes. partisan who would <lb/>
refuse this pittance to brave soldiers, <lb/>
while every Yankee soldier is drawing a <lb/>
large pension, is undeserving the respect <lb/>
good citizens. It is expenses for the <lb/>
unfortunates of the State that increases <lb/>
the total expenditures. Who will say <lb/>
that these are not proper <lb/>
will advocate stopping The <lb/>
Chronicle knows that no good n <lb/>
will lose confidence in the Democratic <lb/>
party because of expenditures. <lb/>
TOR'S DEPARTMENT-The in- <lb/>
crease in this department is occasioned <lb/>
by extra clerical force required on <lb/>
account of the recent pension law. <lb/>
OF INTERNAL IMPROVE- <lb/>
is a very small amount <lb/>
and is expended under the direction of <lb/>
the Governor. <lb/>
is very <lb/>
moderate. <lb/>
only occurs <lb/>
when a Convention is called. In this <lb/>
Convention, which was worth much to <lb/>
Male, the Republicans tried to ad- <lb/>
without doing anything. The <lb/>
Democrats succeeded in making it of <lb/>
great value to tax-payers by repealing <lb/>
Yankee system under which we <lb/>
were living. <lb/>
call special <lb/>
attention to the account for <lb/>
Under Democratic rule in 1876 the <lb/>
amount was In 1886, <lb/>
Democratic it was <lb/>
This makes a total for two years of <lb/>
466.01. Now the In two years <lb/>
for Contingencies the Republicans spent <lb/>
In the two the Re- <lb/>
publicans spent four times as <lb/>
money a the Democrats. In other words <lb/>
the saving by the Democrats in two <lb/>
years in Contingencies is <lb/>
TO <lb/>
Republican par- <lb/>
begun the Penitentiary while in pow- <lb/>
The Democrats filled it Be- <lb/>
who after the tax-payer <lb/>
the <lb/>
Treasury, continued their depredations <lb/>
barns, hen-roosts, Ac. Of course <lb/>
it costs money to transport them. <lb/>
LAWS-Small and <lb/>
necessary. <lb/>
OF PUBLIC IN- <lb/>
spent money <lb/>
for this purpose, but included it <lb/>
of State Officers and Em- <lb/>
They spent money for <lb/>
the Department; they gave the people <lb/>
no schools. increase in this expense <lb/>
in 1886 over 1876 is to the fact that <lb/>
allowed <lb/>
dent a clerk, and paid his traveling ex- <lb/>
to enable him to perform the <lb/>
duties of bis office more efficiently. <lb/>
13-DRUMMER LICENSE TAX RE- <lb/>
is not an expense at all, <lb/>
but merely returning a receipt. <lb/>
spent nothing, so record <lb/>
shows, in these two years. They <lb/>
a permanent school fund of <lb/>
The decrease is owing to the tact <lb/>
that the taxes for school purposes are <lb/>
now paid direct to counties, instead <lb/>
of into the State Treasury. The total <lb/>
for 1887, paid to the counties, amount- <lb/>
to as against <lb/>
paid to the State in 1876. The revenues <lb/>
to school fund paid now into the <lb/>
State Treasury are derived from entries <lb/>
of vacant lands, and the interest paid <lb/>
on a permanent fund of <lb/>
ed to the school by the wisdom of <lb/>
a Democratic administration. The School <lb/>
Board is developing public lands belong- <lb/>
to State; Republicans did not <lb/>
try to make this land available for school <lb/>
purposes. The amount expended for <lb/>
schools, under Democratic and <lb/>
can rule, is contrasted in another col- <lb/>
To a careful perusal of that con- <lb/>
we invite every reader of the <lb/>
Chronicle, especially those who depend <lb/>
upon the public schools for the <lb/>
of their children. <lb/>
EXECUTIVE DEPARTMENT The <lb/>
item this head in is in- <lb/>
under Salaries of State Officers <lb/>
and There is no increase <lb/>
in 1886 over 1876, but a of <lb/>
This table shows an apparent <lb/>
increase. The apparent increase is due <lb/>
to this cause Got. Brogden did not <lb/>
collect his salary in 1876. bat held his <lb/>
warrants for until his term ex- <lb/>
He also drew last <lb/>
quarter's salary, in Got. Vance's first <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Re- <lb/>
publican rule the Governor did not live <lb/>
in the Manson. Got. Holden preferred <lb/>
to reside in his own house. Of course, <lb/>
there was no expense. Now we are <lb/>
building a Governor's House. <lb/>
FUGITIVES FROM JUSTICE <lb/>
Republican in 1869 this item was <lb/>
In 1870 it was <lb/>
This is over six times as much as under <lb/>
Democratic rule. <lb/>
ASSEMBLY We hare <lb/>
chosen two years Democratic <lb/>
when there was no General Assembly <lb/>
because Radical Reformer, to whose <lb/>
article we have referred, took these two <lb/>
years to contrast Democratic with Re- <lb/>
publican Bat on cost of the <lb/>
General Assembly we are glad to show <lb/>
a comparison. In there were <lb/>
three sessions of the General Assembly. <lb/>
It was In session days, and seven <lb/>
dollars per day and cents mileage was <lb/>
the pay of representatives. The total <lb/>
cost of that Legislature was <lb/>
This was an average pay of about <lb/>
for each member. Let us make the eon- <lb/>
In the Legislature was in <lb/>
session days. The members received <lb/>
per day and ten cents mileage. <lb/>
The total cost was an aver- <lb/>
age of per member. In the one <lb/>
item of cost of the General Assembly, <lb/>
one session, Democrats saved to the <lb/>
small voucher. <lb/>
SURVEY-Until Prof. <lb/>
Kerr's survey there was no accurate map <lb/>
of North Carolina <lb/>
21-INSANE ASYLUM AT RALEIGH- <lb/>
More money was of course expended for <lb/>
this institution before the completion of <lb/>
Western Asylum at and <lb/>
the Colored Insane Asylum at <lb/>
Both of these were built by <lb/>
Under rate the whites and <lb/>
ware in tbs <lb/>
or In other words, the white<lb/>
ant at tbs <lb/>
be was to share a <lb/>
Tbs pro- <lb/>
for both of this <lb/>
class population, but provided <lb/>
separate buildings, as was proper. <lb/>
22-INSANE ASYLUM AT MORGAN- <lb/>
course this is a new expense <lb/>
Democratic rule. Radicalism did <lb/>
not place one brick another in <lb/>
North Carolina. Democrats built <lb/>
Morganton Insane Asylum, and it stands <lb/>
as a monument to the devotion of the <lb/>
Democratic party to duty of <lb/>
orating condition of unfortunate <lb/>
insane. We rejoice that this is a <lb/>
and an increased expense. The people <lb/>
never object to expenditures of <lb/>
public money, demagogues to con- <lb/>
notwithstanding. left <lb/>
the- insane to die in poor houses and <lb/>
county jails while it squandered the <lb/>
money; Democracy expends the <lb/>
money raised by taxation for better- <lb/>
and help of all the people, <lb/>
unfortunate. <lb/>
INSANE <lb/>
is a new expense. The Radical party <lb/>
got the vote. It gave <lb/>
nothing, and promised him everything. <lb/>
It allowed the insane of the race to die <lb/>
in jails and poor-houses, because it <lb/>
couldn't pay its legislators a year, <lb/>
and take care of the insane, too. It <lb/>
chose to pay legislators big money, <lb/>
and let insane continue to suffer. <lb/>
The Democratic party has made the <lb/>
few promises, bat it has given <lb/>
him an insane asylum, a deaf, dumb <lb/>
and blind institute, a normal college, <lb/>
normal schools, and thousands of public <lb/>
schools. And now Radicalism, with its <lb/>
load promises to the <lb/>
charges the Democratic party with ex <lb/>
because it takes care of the <lb/>
insane in State. Well, the <lb/>
Democratic party can stand charges <lb/>
as long as it is doing its to the u n for- <lb/>
of the State, and it will be upheld <lb/>
by the honest tax-payers. <lb/>
mat continue to be hewers of wood and <lb/>
drawers of water for the Republican <lb/>
party, in spite of the fact that the Dem- <lb/>
have done so much for their race. <lb/>
They may continue to thus make fools <lb/>
of themselves, bat the Democrats will <lb/>
continue their appropriations to educate <lb/>
and help the poor and unfortunate of <lb/>
their race, and it will do it at the risk of <lb/>
being charged with extravagance by <lb/>
Radicals. One of these days <lb/>
will begin to think <lb/>
INSTITUTION FOR DEAF, DUMB <lb/>
AND amount is larger <lb/>
than under Republican because <lb/>
there is a larger attendance, and because <lb/>
the Democratic of 1872 or <lb/>
erection of a building for <lb/>
colored deaf, dumb, and blind. <lb/>
was expended by Democrats to build it. <lb/>
This was for alone, and yet <lb/>
Radicals hare the cheek to abuse <lb/>
Democrats for <lb/>
85-INDIGENT PUPILS D., AND <lb/>
B. amount was <lb/>
repaid to the Treasurer by the counties. <lb/>
ON PER CENT DEBT <lb/>
The money to pay this was derived from <lb/>
a tax on drummers, all but of <lb/>
which came from non-residents, and <lb/>
from certain specific taxes, and not from <lb/>
tax on property. At one time there was <lb/>
a surplus from this particular fund <lb/>
which law said should be applied to <lb/>
the interest on the four per cent. debt. <lb/>
This surplus was wisely invested by the <lb/>
State Treasurer, under the direction of <lb/>
the General Assembly, because, under a <lb/>
constitutional provision, it could not be <lb/>
applied to any other purpose than <lb/>
interest on this debt. saving to the <lb/>
State up to this time, on this investment, <lb/>
is over <lb/>
ON PER CENT. DEBT <lb/>
The State owns stock in the <lb/>
N. C. R. R., the dividends on which <lb/>
amount to per year. Under <lb/>
the suit, known as the suit, de- <lb/>
in 1874 by the Court, <lb/>
a Receiver was appointed in behalf of <lb/>
the bond-holders. The Receiver received <lb/>
these dividends and disbursed the same <lb/>
in the payment of the interest on the old <lb/>
bonds. The bonds having been redeemed <lb/>
under act of 1879, these dividends, <lb/>
an amended decree of the court in <lb/>
1888, are now payable to the State <lb/>
Treasurer, and by him disbursed to the <lb/>
extent of the old bonds taken and <lb/>
new ones issued to the holders of the <lb/>
new bonds. This is not to be <lb/>
a part of regular revenue of the <lb/>
State. The Receivership still existing, <lb/>
he receives a part and the State Treas- <lb/>
a part. The Treasurer only pays <lb/>
out what he receives from the railroad <lb/>
company. The Receiver pays interest <lb/>
on such old bonds as are still <lb/>
and unchanged. <lb/>
ON W. N. R <lb/>
interest was paid by the Democrats <lb/>
they sold the road. The sale of <lb/>
road relieved the State of a heavy yearly <lb/>
expense, and insured the completion of <lb/>
the road. <lb/>
INTEREST ON SPECIAL TAX <lb/>
expense no longer exists. <lb/>
These Special Tax Bonds, offspring <lb/>
of the Republicans, were conceived <lb/>
in sin, born in iniquity, reared upon <lb/>
and strangled to death <lb/>
by the hand of the honest Demo- <lb/>
party. If the Republican party <lb/>
had continued in power, this expense <lb/>
have continued throughout all the <lb/>
years from 1870 to 1887, and been a <lb/>
never-ending burden on tax-payers. The <lb/>
Republicans Issued the bonds. They <lb/>
were children of and <lb/>
the father could not the child. <lb/>
The Democrats repudiated whole <lb/>
issue of these Special Tax Bonds, and <lb/>
thus relieved the people. There is now <lb/>
litigation pending to compel the pay- <lb/>
of these fraudulent bonds. If the <lb/>
Radical party should be restored to <lb/>
power, there is no assurance that they <lb/>
not pay these bonds. The Dem- <lb/>
will ever refuse to pay these <lb/>
iniquitous and unjust claims. By re- <lb/>
fusing to recognize these bonds as bind- <lb/>
the Democrats saved the State <lb/>
a year, it being interest <lb/>
alone on the face value of the issue of <lb/>
special tax bonds, not including <lb/>
lated interest for nearly M years. For <lb/>
the seventeen in interest alone, <lb/>
this saving is Every voter <lb/>
ought to stick a pin here I <lb/>
Democrats have <lb/>
decreased the expenses, and they have <lb/>
increased efficiency of the bench. <lb/>
All judges are now men of high <lb/>
character and integrity. We have no <lb/>
ignoramuses, such as toe Radicals gave <lb/>
us, nor any men who sell Justice, as in <lb/>
the days of Radical role. Oar Democratic <lb/>
solicitors prosecute faithfully, and in <lb/>
conformity with their oaths. None of <lb/>
them have to resign to escape impeach- <lb/>
as was ease in Radical <lb/>
There is no brighter page in history <lb/>
of to-day than purity of the bench <lb/>
in North Carolina. It is the crowning <lb/>
glory of Democratic <lb/>
party is entitled to all the credit. It is <lb/>
not expensive. Perhaps we do not pay <lb/>
officers enough. Bat <lb/>
justice, so called, was dear at any <lb/>
price. Under Democratic rule It is never <lb/>
said Judiciary is <lb/>
OF <lb/>
embraced this expense an- <lb/>
other head. <lb/>
inks car of the <lb/>
insane, and expense <lb/>
is not now because other <lb/>
party said this <lb/>
It ha ever been liberal to <lb/>
the West, and West has been true <lb/>
to the will continue to be. <lb/>
STATE new ex- <lb/>
was by the vote of both <lb/>
parties in the and is <lb/>
proved by all who know need of <lb/>
armed men in the ease of riot. Yon <lb/>
don't need an armed force often, but, <lb/>
like man out West, in regard to a <lb/>
you do need it, you need <lb/>
t d They have rendered <lb/>
good service mote than once. The <lb/>
is about the smallest of any <lb/>
State in the Union, South <lb/>
spending twice as ranch. The little <lb/>
Republican State of New Hampshire <lb/>
spends yearly Re- <lb/>
State of Pennsylvania spends <lb/>
a year for this purpose. In <lb/>
North Carolina, when the Radicals <lb/>
ed, the organized militia cost the State <lb/>
in one year. If this is <lb/>
ed, we refer to the official report of <lb/>
the carpet lug A. W. Fish <lb/>
dated Jan. 1871. This is a <lb/>
Democratic saving to the tax payers in <lb/>
one year of 7.74, as in North Car <lb/>
we now spend but Not <lb/>
only so; but through the gross neglect <lb/>
and inefficiency of the Radical Adjutant <lb/>
Generals and Governors, a fund amount- <lb/>
to was lost to the State <lb/>
in the War Department. This fund was <lb/>
recovered after years of effort by <lb/>
wisdom and endeavors of our Democrat- <lb/>
Adjutant General. And worse than <lb/>
that and more When the <lb/>
General took charge <lb/>
in 1877 there were more militia <lb/>
than whites in this State Now there <lb/>
are white es and colored <lb/>
companies. The Radical militia was <lb/>
worse than worthless to the State while <lb/>
the Democratic State Guard is an or- <lb/>
that any State might be proud <lb/>
of, and has a reputation our <lb/>
borders. <lb/>
and more terrible Under <lb/>
Radical rule the first Adjutant General <lb/>
was an imported carpet-bagger who knew <lb/>
nothing of our people cared less, <lb/>
while under Democratic rule this officer <lb/>
is a native North Carolinian who knows <lb/>
and loves the State. Once When <lb/>
the Radical militia employed to <lb/>
suppress an insurrection, a cut-throat <lb/>
from Tennessee had to be imported to <lb/>
command North Carolinians, while <lb/>
Democratic government, whenever <lb/>
the State Guard has been called out, It <lb/>
is commanded by of North Car- <lb/>
89-NORMAL SCHOOLS-This I a new <lb/>
expense, ordered by The <lb/>
Democratic party believe in <lb/>
schools. There can be no efficient pub- <lb/>
schools without good teachers. Part <lb/>
of this money goes to the whites and part <lb/>
to the and yet Radical cheek <lb/>
puts this down an <lb/>
36-ORPHAN is a new <lb/>
expense, ordered by Democrats. <lb/>
says it is <lb/>
So be it. The Democratic party <lb/>
will continue this appropriation, and <lb/>
prefers to die aiding the orphans than <lb/>
to lire repudiating their just claims on <lb/>
the State. To be sure Radicalism did <lb/>
nothing for the orphans. It was not in <lb/>
their peculiar line. Orphans are neither <lb/>
carpet-baggers, nor members of the <lb/>
nor politicians, nor are <lb/>
they interested in special-tax bonds <lb/>
ago the <lb/>
Chronicle said that it did not intend to <lb/>
keep silent until the penitentiary was <lb/>
made self-supporting. Nor do we; and <lb/>
yet we believe In looking at things a <lb/>
they are, rather than as we would have <lb/>
them. Until we had a Republican party <lb/>
in North Carolina we neither had nor <lb/>
needed a penitentiary. They started it. <lb/>
and started it on a big scale. <lb/>
was reduced at the last session <lb/>
of the General Assembly from <lb/>
year to but no further re- <lb/>
actions were made. Lead by Dr. <lb/>
York, the Republicans almost to a man, <lb/>
advocated convict <lb/>
then big appropriations to the <lb/>
This was not a question, <lb/>
and we do not desire to it one, but <lb/>
for a Republican to the Demo- <lb/>
party with extravagance when His <lb/>
PARTY LARGELY RESPONSIBLE IT, IS <lb/>
cheek that only a Radical could show. <lb/>
The Chronicle bas no disposition to <lb/>
criticize the members for their votes. <lb/>
The of convicts on Internal Improve- <lb/>
may be wise. We are not now <lb/>
discussing that question. We only seek <lb/>
to show that it doesn't come with <lb/>
good grace for a Radical to talk of <lb/>
extravagance in management of <lb/>
the penitentiary We say The <lb/>
penitentiary must be made <lb/>
but we that Di- <lb/>
rectors cannot make it self-support log <lb/>
as long as the Legislature it to <lb/>
do work for it gets no pay. Give <lb/>
the penitentiary a chance with con- <lb/>
and it will pay money every year <lb/>
into the Treasury. <lb/>
have no right to complain. They <lb/>
founded the penitentiary. They have <lb/>
always voted for convicts to roads and <lb/>
ditches and swamps, and they furnish <lb/>
nine-tenths of inmates. Democratic <lb/>
tax-payers may complain and seek to <lb/>
secure a reduction of expenses of <lb/>
the chronicle <lb/>
will help no tax-payer, who <lb/>
is not an idiot, will for a moment dream <lb/>
that help lies in the direction of <lb/>
cal success. <lb/>
-PENITENTIARY SUNDAY SCHOOL <lb/>
This is small item and we suppose no <lb/>
man will raise objections to it. The <lb/>
are trying to Radical <lb/>
inmates the command not <lb/>
If the leaders of the party con Id <lb/>
be taught shalt not a largo <lb/>
voluntary subscription could easily <lb/>
raised. <lb/>
the fact that the State publishes <lb/>
larger Supreme Court Reports, and is <lb/>
doing other work not required in 1869 <lb/>
and 1870, the cost for the State printing <lb/>
is not half what it was under Radical <lb/>
Pot that down. <lb/>
TAX is <lb/>
not an expense. <lb/>
TO CON FEDERATE SOL <lb/>
AND Demo- <lb/>
party increases the expenses to <lb/>
give aid to these deserving disabled sol- <lb/>
and their widows. We can't give <lb/>
as much as recipients <lb/>
need and ought to have, but we give <lb/>
something. When we think of the <lb/>
great sums that are yearly <lb/>
to the Yankee soldiers, and com- <lb/>
pare It to the pittance own brave <lb/>
men and their widows receive, we find <lb/>
it hard to have any respect for South- <lb/>
men who oppose small <lb/>
This Is one of the causes <lb/>
en for The <lb/>
Chronicle Let us keep up such ex- <lb/>
as long as is necessary to <lb/>
keep want from the door of our pen- <lb/>
Off CODE COMMISSIONERS <lb/>
Necessary expenses. Not permanent. <lb/>
48-QUARANTINE REGULATIONS. <lb/>
We suppose no one. except an ignorant <lb/>
Radical call this <lb/>
It keeps disease from <lb/>
our doors. <lb/>
44-SETTLING formerly <lb/>
came to Raleigh to settle their tax. <lb/>
they deposit In a <lb/>
bank and expenses of a trip to <lb/>
is saved. <lb/>
BOARD OF HEALTH-The <lb/>
party has a just regard for <lb/>
the people of <lb/>
ex <lb/>
M-STATS Dam- <lb/>
Stain gets <lb/>
no fees as formerly. Tbs business of <lb/>
office bas increased. <lb/>
I a very <lb/>
small an appropriation for <lb/>
library. <lb/>
ATE BOUNDARY- Necessary. Not <lb/>
permanent. <lb/>
CANVASSING BOARD- <lb/>
Necessary. <lb/>
50-STATIONERY- Necessary. <lb/>
OF STATE OFFICES, Ac. <lb/>
Under the Republican rule all are put <lb/>
under one bead. The Democrats give <lb/>
the expense in each Department in a <lb/>
separate place, showing a decrease. sT <lb/>
LOANS PAID-This was in <lb/>
Radical days. Now we have no such <lb/>
entry in our Treasury books. <lb/>
1879 <lb/>
the Democratic Legislature the <lb/>
State Treasurer, Treasurer of <lb/>
all penal and charitable inst <lb/>
of State, thereby saving salaries to <lb/>
separate treasurers of these Institutions, <lb/>
and a saving to State of over a <lb/>
the way of appropriations to these <lb/>
After doing this, the Leg- <lb/>
allowed the State Treasurer a <lb/>
clerk at This makes difference <lb/>
between and 1888. <lb/>
was the <lb/>
expense of the Tax Commission author- <lb/>
by the Legislature. Not permanent. <lb/>
OF NORTH CARO- <lb/>
LINA Carrying out the requirements <lb/>
of Constitution, Democrats have <lb/>
appropriated a sufficient amount to en- <lb/>
able the University to do good work. <lb/>
Under Radicalism the doors of the <lb/>
were closed. They neither <lb/>
public schools, nor the University. <lb/>
The Democrats foster both. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
expense fluctuates, owing to needs <lb/>
of the counties. <lb/>
87-OTHER GENERAL EXPENSES.-We <lb/>
call especial attention to this <lb/>
general What <lb/>
may not be included in that term I How <lb/>
many white Democrats were arrested <lb/>
under general How <lb/>
much money was stolen under that am- <lb/>
In two years <lb/>
were spent for general <lb/>
What a happy way to keep ex- <lb/>
Senses Under Democratic rule not a <lb/>
has been expended under such a <lb/>
It Is suspicious to say the least <lb/>
of it, to spend in two years for <lb/>
general expenses after spending <lb/>
for <lb/>
So much on Hue of expenditures. <lb/>
Now let consider. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
TUB RECEIPTS AND THE SI II- <lb/>
It is charged that the receipts for the <lb/>
year 1878. under were <lb/>
017.68. and in 1887 under Scales <lb/>
68.62. and that the increase in 1887 was <lb/>
that <lb/>
hard times, the Democrats keep a surplus <lb/>
in the Treasury. The sly tried <lb/>
to be left, by using the expression <lb/>
and is that in <lb/>
1876 the Republicans controlled <lb/>
and in 1887 the Democrats. <lb/>
While was a Republican, yet <lb/>
he had no connection whatever with <lb/>
state's finances. All matters concerning <lb/>
the levying and collection of taxes were in <lb/>
the bands of a Democratic legislature and <lb/>
had been since 1870. The proper <lb/>
would have been to compare with year <lb/>
1869 the last of Republican misrule. The <lb/>
printed which the person re- <lb/>
to took his figures, do not show <lb/>
receipts to be what ho slates them. He <lb/>
seeks to the public by a false <lb/>
of figures. He makes the <lb/>
of the educational public funds, <lb/>
to seemingly appear as a part of re- <lb/>
for the year 1876, and so on <lb/>
through the ten years which make his <lb/>
table of comparison, bringing forward <lb/>
each year's balances and adding them <lb/>
again to the subsequent years incomes, <lb/>
thus practicing a deception for the <lb/>
pose of endeavoring to show an <lb/>
increase of receipts under Democrat- <lb/>
rule for each year. We will show the <lb/>
falsity of the figures as must clearly <lb/>
pear even to the author of the reckless <lb/>
charges of Democratic extravagance, if <lb/>
he will read figures more carefully <lb/>
than he did the from <lb/>
which he alleges to have obtained his in- <lb/>
formation. <lb/>
As years 1876 <lb/>
and 1887 are used as <lb/>
comparisons, let us look at figures in <lb/>
regard to <lb/>
Assessed <lb/>
of <lb/>
ill for <lb/>
X Assessed valuation <lb/>
of <lb/>
Receipts and Educational Fund for <lb/>
year is <lb/>
From this amount must be <lb/>
deducted, as they formed <lb/>
no pan of the receipts of <lb/>
Depart <lb/>
sale or Licenses. I <lb/>
Amount refunded In <lb/>
on account of <lb/>
In-t. D., <lb/>
N. a it. dividends to pay <lb/>
Interest on <lb/>
bonds Issued on <lb/>
of N. It. It. paid to <lb/>
by the Lessees of <lb/>
said road. CO <lb/>
contributed by Gov- <lb/>
. <lb/>
14.787 <lb/>
Legitimate of end <lb/>
Funds for <lb/>
It will be seen that the increase in eleven <lb/>
years is only The tax rate <lb/>
has further been reduced to cents. <lb/>
The talk about large amounts lying in <lb/>
the Treasury a a is not the truth. <lb/>
There has never been a large surplus in the <lb/>
Treasury, but there has usually been about <lb/>
This was applied to buy log State <lb/>
bonds, and State Treasurer, by <lb/>
expended in 1886 for <lb/>
per cent, bonds, as we <lb/>
ave stated elsewhere. <lb/>
The appropriations have necessarily In- <lb/>
creased. The per cent, debt ha been <lb/>
satisfactorily adjusted and interest prompt- <lb/>
met. Asylums have been built and <lb/>
maintained. The wounded Confederate <lb/>
soldier and the widows of soldiers have <lb/>
been given something. The Orphan <lb/>
put upon a sound basis; taxes re- <lb/>
cents on the valuation of <lb/>
property; railroads have been built; val- <lb/>
of property increased <lb/>
and all accomplished since the State was <lb/>
III. <lb/>
THE RATE OF TAXATION. <lb/>
The third allegation made the <lb/>
The representations the <lb/>
Democrats that they have decreased <lb/>
is false. Let see about it. <lb/>
beet and fairest way to the <lb/>
Republican and Democratic <lb/>
of the State's finances is to give the <lb/>
rate of taxation for years under <lb/>
of the two parties. The Republican, <lb/>
who falsely charges the Democratic <lb/>
party has not reduced taxation, is invited <lb/>
to read following tables. They tell <lb/>
the truth because they are from the record. <lb/>
Under Basel <lb/>
la 1848, for 1869, the Republican levied <lb/>
a tax of on worth of property. <lb/>
Under the levy of 1869 Republicans <lb/>
collected over one million dollar on <lb/>
and although more than half <lb/>
of it was designed to pay Interest on <lb/>
tax bonds, the applied lee than one-half <lb/>
amount collected to that <lb/>
The Democrats bad control of the <lb/>
in 1870 and <lb/>
the <lb/>
made arc as follows, and are on every <lb/>
worth of <lb/>
of tax<lb/>
meet a deficiency of the <lb/>
Session of 1871, same Legislature, <lb/>
collectible In <lb/>
Legislature of 1872, collectible <lb/>
in 1878, cents of which were to meet <lb/>
the deficiencies of Republicans, from <lb/>
which State had not recovered. <lb/>
Same Legislature, session of 1878, <lb/>
cents, collectible in 1874. <lb/>
Legislature of cents, col <lb/>
In 1875 and 1876. <lb/>
Legislature of cents col <lb/>
in 1877 and 1878. <lb/>
Legislature of 1879 met in <lb/>
instead of November as former- <lb/>
collectible in 1879 and 1880 <lb/>
Legislature of 1881, cents, collect <lb/>
in 1882, cents of which <lb/>
were to pay interest on the new four per <lb/>
cent, adjusted bonds. <lb/>
Legislature of 1883, 2.1 cents for all <lb/>
purposes, collectible in 1883, suspended <lb/>
in 1884 and not collected. legislature of <lb/>
1885, in 1885 and 1886. <lb/>
legislature of 1887, cents collectible <lb/>
in 1887 and 1888. <lb/>
In the first few years of Democratic <lb/>
the rate was higher than it now is, <lb/>
and the reason is that when the Democrats <lb/>
came into power they were compelled to <lb/>
pay amounts for which the Republicans <lb/>
had contracted. Let us see how this <lb/>
Take the 1871, the rate cents <lb/>
on every hundred dollars worth of proper- <lb/>
In this were Included eight cents for the <lb/>
asylums, ton cents to meet in <lb/>
Treasury on contracts mads by <lb/>
In 1869, and twelve cents for the <lb/>
incomplete penitentiary <lb/>
IV. <lb/>
TUB RECORD EDUCATION. <lb/>
Republican impudence stops when H <lb/>
comes to a comparison of the Educational <lb/>
records of the two do not <lb/>
propose to allow any dodging. The fol- <lb/>
lowing is the <lb/>
Tho Republicans into full <lb/>
of all departments of the government July <lb/>
1868 and continued to exercise this control <lb/>
until the meeting of the first Democratic <lb/>
General Assembly of period <lb/>
of about two and one-half years. Al- <lb/>
though their General <lb/>
was in session for a large portion of <lb/>
this period, the only funds that into <lb/>
the Treasury for school purposes were one <lb/>
hundred thousand dollars especially <lb/>
by act of 1370 and those that <lb/>
the Constitution set apart, mainly poll tax. <lb/>
Indeed much of the poll tax collected in <lb/>
the counties never found its way into the <lb/>
school fund as is evidenced by the follow- <lb/>
statement made by Supt. Ashley in <lb/>
bis report Nov. 1st, county <lb/>
capitation tax is to be collected and paid <lb/>
in by the same persons who collect the <lb/>
State capitation tax. Tho law has not <lb/>
been observed. In most of tho counties <lb/>
seventy-five per cent of their county <lb/>
tax has been The stat- <lb/>
at time required seventy-five per <lb/>
cent of county capitation tax to lie paid <lb/>
into the State Treasury. All school funds <lb/>
at that time were required to paid to <lb/>
tho State Treasurer, and to be Apportioned <lb/>
to the by tho State Hoard of <lb/>
cation. <lb/>
In Nov made <lb/>
of but up to Oct. 1st 1870 <lb/>
there had been paid of this to tho counties <lb/>
only leaving still them <lb/>
almost a year had elapsed <lb/>
In Nov. 1870 March 1871 together <lb/>
there was again apportioned to the <lb/>
ties the same amount which <lb/>
together with the balance or <lb/>
still due was paid in 1871 and 1872. In <lb/>
the Legislature <lb/>
levied a tax of cents on of proper <lb/>
and cents on polls for schools. This <lb/>
they collected applied together with <lb/>
tho capitation tax and other taxes, to dis- <lb/>
charging tho two apportionments that <lb/>
had been made In 1869 1870. <lb/>
So the Republicans while in power <lb/>
made, during the first two years, two <lb/>
amounting in the aggregate <lb/>
part of which <lb/>
In 1871 and 1873 out of funds raised by <lb/>
the Democratic Legislature of 1870-71. <lb/>
Very little of tho funds sot by the <lb/>
Constitution during the two years of Re- <lb/>
publican rule found its way to the <lb/>
of tho children. <lb/>
There remained of <lb/>
school fund accumulated before the <lb/>
war stocks that were <lb/>
shares in the Wilmington Weldon R. R , <lb/>
shares in the Wilmington At Man- <lb/>
chester R. R , and shares in the Cape <lb/>
Fear Navigation Company. All these <lb/>
stocks the Republicans sold for the sum <lb/>
of their value <lb/>
Of the they Invested <lb/>
in special tax bonds which are worthless. <lb/>
What the Republicans did for schools <lb/>
while they were in full control may be <lb/>
summed up in this They <lb/>
the permanent school fund that re <lb/>
after the war, and collected but <lb/>
little for school purposes except what the <lb/>
Constitution required and a large part <lb/>
even of they applied to some other <lb/>
purpose. <lb/>
The Democrats In 1872 increased the <lb/>
on property and on the poll <lb/>
by them in to cents on proper- <lb/>
and cents on polls, and in 1881 they <lb/>
increased the levy to cents on proper- <lb/>
and cent on poll. From <lb/>
these taxes and from flues, forfeitures and <lb/>
penalties, liquor licenses and other sources, <lb/>
they have collected and spent the follow- <lb/>
sums for public <lb/>
In 1871, disbursed for schools, <lb/>
in 173,275.98 <lb/>
In 1878, 191,675.07 <lb/>
In 1874, . 997,1594.85 <lb/>
In 1875. No report. <lb/>
In 1876, 834,168.14 <lb/>
In 1877, <lb/>
In 1878, . 824.287.10 <lb/>
In 1879, 826,040.80 <lb/>
In 1880, 852,882.85 <lb/>
In 1881, 409,858.88 <lb/>
In 1889, 509,786.02 <lb/>
In 1888, 628,430.98 <lb/>
In 1884, 640,245.20 <lb/>
In 1886, 680,552.82 <lb/>
In 1886, 671,115.65 <lb/>
In 1887, 658,087.88 <lb/>
These figures, if not exact, are a very <lb/>
near approximation, some counties not <lb/>
reporting. <lb/>
The Assembly of 1881 directed that the <lb/>
funds had been accumulating in <lb/>
State Treasury from fines, forfeitures and <lb/>
penalties should be distributed to <lb/>
counties, this legislation being authorized <lb/>
by the amended Constitution. Two dis- <lb/>
were made from this fund one <lb/>
In 1841 amounting to applied in <lb/>
1889 and 1888, and the other In 1888 <lb/>
amounting to applied In 1888 and <lb/>
1884. Except as modified by these <lb/>
which increased the available fund <lb/>
for 1889, 1888 and 1884, these figure. <lb/>
show a gradual and yearly Increase of <lb/>
money disbursed for schools. In 1887, <lb/>
however, there Is a slight falling off from <lb/>
1886 which is accounted for by hard <lb/>
times through which we passed which <lb/>
rendered more people to pay their <lb/>
taxes, and by the decision of Supreme <lb/>
Court In case vs. <lb/>
of Sampson county limiting <lb/>
to for all purposes of a gen- <lb/>
nature including schools. <lb/>
The Chronicle commends this thought <lb/>
to tbs careful consideration of every <lb/>
Democrat have steadily in- <lb/>
creased school fund, and every year <lb/>
the school have been better. What bas <lb/>
of what win <lb/>
if Democratic party is given <lb/>
of power. Nothing ought to hare <lb/>
more influence with voters, who have <lb/>
to than <lb/>
at a natty. We urge to re- <lb/>
party; <lb/>
tho Democratic <lb/>
the school year. <lb/>
V. <lb/>
TO SUM IT ALL TIP. <lb/>
Hear the a hole <lb/>
Under rule in No <lb/>
there were <lb/>
fund of <lb/>
i hoes, nil dollars, was squandered <lb/>
W . <lb/>
Treasurer Jenkins, eighteen <lb/>
dollars; war <lb/>
Bach rm their i <lb/>
rate of taxation mm. <lb/>
on the one hundred worth of <lb/>
property, although the Constitution pro j <lb/>
that tin State and county <lb/>
not exceed sixty Bis two . ts. <lb/>
hundred dollars; the lax <lb/>
were issued and over two hundred <lb/>
eight thousand dollars raised in n <lb/>
year from an impoverished people to <lb/>
interest on <lb/>
of the Slate was, in s pan. <lb/>
ant, . <lb/>
charitable Institutions i noted; no proves- <lb/>
ion Was made to aid the disabled <lb/>
veteran or his widow; native North I <lb/>
were from official <lb/>
Vice, and carpetbaggers ignorant <lb/>
elevated ti j. n of trust <lb/>
and tin- <lb/>
bankrupted; in j <lb/>
a worse <lb/>
and upon the than <lb/>
devastations of no progressive of <lb/>
rehabilitating measures were cost tie need <lb/>
encouraged by them. <lb/>
Let us turn to a brighter <lb/>
draw the <lb/>
Under Democratic rule there are <lb/>
schools In every district in the Mate, for <lb/>
White and colored children; the m hoof <lb/>
fund has grown steadily until now tip. <lb/>
wards of six hundred thousand <lb/>
fear are expended for public inn <lb/>
legislature of 1879 passed an act am <lb/>
a settlement of the State debt, and <lb/>
this act the State reduced, by mu- <lb/>
agreement with Hie Hate and <lb/>
bond holders-the debt to <lb/>
bearing four per cent <lb/>
in thirty years; <lb/>
IN sessions A NO <lb/>
THE or EACH lull IS NOT <lb/>
volt THE SESSION; the of taxation <lb/>
for Stale purposes has steadily decreased <lb/>
from eighty cents on the one hundred dot- j <lb/>
worth of property until it is now on. j <lb/>
cents, one-fourth the <lb/>
Republican rule; two <lb/>
one for the whites and one <lb/>
one institution for the deal <lb/>
dumb and blind for the have <lb/>
has Urn built <lb/>
and supported, and the labor of con- <lb/>
has been used to build railroads and <lb/>
other works of internal improvement <lb/>
a small pension has been given lone <lb/>
soldiers and their <lb/>
the orphan asylum has been <lb/>
en appropriation sufficient for all its <lb/>
needs; tho has been strength- <lb/>
the University has been <lb/>
the Department has <lb/>
a good work <lb/>
a largo building for its uses; the <lb/>
of Labor Statistics has la-en <lb/>
the Agricultural Me. <lb/>
provided for; the j <lb/>
and Supreme Court of the Slab <lb/>
administered even and exact to <lb/>
all, no breath of i u ban <lb/>
In to any judge; <lb/>
new Supreme Court Library budding j <lb/>
has been erected, and a home It <lb/>
Is nearly completed; j <lb/>
finances have been, in the main, wist v arid I <lb/>
economically native am <lb/>
loving North Carolinians have ail <lb/>
tared the government affairs, s I no <lb/>
state in the Union hits had r <lb/>
government; -in a word the mo <lb/>
have given low taxes, g <lb/>
and originated, and earned ii o <lb/>
feet, measures for the betterment . f the <lb/>
people. It has made some i. but <lb/>
it rectifies them. It is in North <lb/>
the only party of Honesty, and<lb/>
I From the State <lb/>
A v <lb/>
The was the first paper in <lb/>
Carolina advocate tho j <lb/>
of a of . We <lb/>
hailed tho action of tho Legislature in i <lb/>
making an appropriation for this needed <lb/>
work with joy, and we watch, d the i <lb/>
progress of the work with ion and <lb/>
satisfaction. The department started with- <lb/>
out the endorsement of tho whole people, <lb/>
and without co It had <lb/>
no enthusiastic backing. It had no army <lb/>
of correspondents or helpers. It was a <lb/>
pioneer in a new country. It had to cut <lb/>
down the forests, tho roads, and <lb/>
erect the first habitations. What to do to <lb/>
make the department of value to the <lb/>
was tho question that confronted the <lb/>
Commissioner. Ho into the office <lb/>
with no enthusiastic applause. He heard <lb/>
only muttering of discontent and <lb/>
of failure. Such was the beginning <lb/>
of tho work one short year ago. <lb/>
Commissioner W. N. Jones has won the <lb/>
confidence of tho people, shown bis <lb/>
department is valuable and necessary, <lb/>
Is entitled to that praise duo to an honest, <lb/>
industrious, and efficient man for faith- <lb/>
fully performing difficult, untried and <lb/>
delicate duties, lie has beef aided by his <lb/>
efficient Secretary, Mr. J. M. Broughton. <lb/>
We have on the Chronicle table a copy of <lb/>
the First Annual Report of Bureau of <lb/>
Labor Statistics of the State of North <lb/>
Carolina. It is a valuable publication and <lb/>
teaches valuable lessons, and is a credit tn <lb/>
North Carolina. Speculation, supposed <lb/>
conditions, and generalities mislead. There <lb/>
was some wisdom in the of Thomas <lb/>
in Hard Times, when be <lb/>
what I want is, Facts. <lb/>
these boys and gills nothing hut Facts. <lb/>
Facts alone wanted in life. <lb/>
nothing else, and root out everything else. <lb/>
You can only form the minds of reasoning <lb/>
animals upon nothing else mil ever <lb/>
be of any service to them. This is the <lb/>
principle on which I bring up my own <lb/>
children, and It Is tho principle on which <lb/>
I shall bring up these children. Stick to j <lb/>
Facts, <lb/>
Francis A. Walker spoke still mom j <lb/>
wisely when he declared that it is only by <lb/>
statistics results of a wide and <lb/>
varied experience in any department <lb/>
can be collected, classified, and <lb/>
led. said this <lb/>
statistician, hungry for <lb/>
everything of a statistical appearance <lb/>
taken up with an eagerness that Is <lb/>
This Ant report fairly bristles with fa <lb/>
stoat the condition of the <lb/>
and of the State. The fa <lb/>
need to be studied, and <lb/>
employers will do well to give their t <lb/>
nights to a careful examination <lb/>
facts elicited and If the <lb/>
has rendered no other service, the pat <lb/>
cation of this book its <lb/>
and continuance. We <lb/>
the Commissioner the fullness I <lb/>
of Information Rep. <lb/>
contains. It establishes t basis of knot, <lb/>
which calculation <lb/>
Heretofore we have known nothing of t <lb/>
wages, numbers of hours, and soon <lb/>
and all theories have been based upon <lb/>
condition. Now have <lb/>
for The <lb/>
cu expects to <lb/>
to shortly<lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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