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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 30 May 1888</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 30 May 1888</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18880530</dc:date>
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                <p>
LEADING PAPER <lb />
m mm. <lb />
ONE YEAR SIX MONTHS Me. <lb />
-A-. <lb />
The <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
THE BEST PAPER <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
LARGEST CIRCULATION.<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, WEDNESDAY MAY 30.1888 <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Published Every Wednesday <lb />
THE LEADING PAPER <lb />
IN THE<lb />
i y misers M man I <lb />
Subscription year. <lb />
will not hesitate to Democratic <lb />
ten and measures that are not consistent <lb />
with the true principles of the party. <lb />
If yon want a a <lb />
Mm of the State send for the <lb />
T SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb />
STATE <lb />
sow things <lb />
things shall be forever ; <lb />
Matters may change. as must, <lb />
The mountains crumble into dust, <lb />
The tides forget their ebb and flow. <lb />
The earth no more its verdure know, <lb />
The moon light to darkness burn, <lb />
Stars fade away, suns cease to turn- <lb />
Some things shall be forever. <lb />
Some things shall perish never ; <lb />
wealth of gold, worth, <lb />
vanish with the miser earth, <lb />
Honor and glory shall be o'er <lb />
And fume e'en time lie more. <lb />
Kingdoms shall crumble, and the high. <lb />
ShaY ML awl Itself shall die- <lb />
Hut some tilings perish never. <lb />
Some things shall live forever ; <lb />
shall perish never more. <lb />
Memory keep her treasured store <lb />
And will Shall live, imperial will. <lb />
And love or hate, for good or ill. <lb />
This mystery of I. <lb />
This conscience, self, shall never die <lb />
Some things live forever. <lb />
Some things shall be ; <lb />
Truth shall tie changeless blessedness, <lb />
Justice abide righteousness. <lb />
And heaven be their abode, <lb />
God shall more God. <lb />
Shall sin with run parallel. <lb />
And hell eternally be hell t <lb />
things shall he forever. <lb />
a id <lb />
Scales, of <lb />
M. <lb />
of New Hanover. <lb />
of <lb />
of <lb />
W. Wane. <lb />
P. Roberts, of Gates. <lb />
of Public Instruction <lb />
M. Finger of <lb />
Attorney F- <lb />
an, <lb />
SUPREME <lb />
Chief N. H. Smith, of <lb />
Wake. <lb />
Associate S. of <lb />
Augustus S. Merrimon, of Wake. <lb />
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
E. Shepherd, of <lb />
Beaufort. <lb />
Second Philips, of <lb />
Third G. Connor, of <lb />
Clark, of <lb />
Filth A. Gilmer, of <lb />
all ford <lb />
Sixth T. of <lb />
Sampson. <lb />
Seventh C. of <lb />
Cumberland. <lb />
Eighth J. Montgomery, of <lb />
mis. <lb />
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb />
Tenth C. Avery, of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp, of <lb />
Mecklenburg. <lb />
Twelfth H- Merrimon, <lb />
at Buncombe. <lb />
in Congress. <lb />
B. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb />
House of District <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 />
T. Bennett, of f the times will not out place <lb />
with these <lb />
S. Henderson, j on tariff taxation. man of <lb />
Rowan. , a turn can witness the <lb />
daily course both <lb />
Ninth D. Johnston, i and Federal, without the re- <lb />
of these reflect ions, and<lb />
Her dimpled cheeks are pale <lb />
she's a Inly of the vale. <lb />
Not arose. <lb />
In a muslin or a lawn <lb />
She is than the dawn. <lb />
To her <lb />
Her boots are and neat. <lb />
She is about he feet. <lb />
It is said. <lb />
She amputates her r's. <lb />
But her eyes are like stars. <lb />
Overhead. <lb />
On a balcony at night. <lb />
With a cloud of white. <lb />
Round her <lb />
Her grace, ah. who could paint. <lb />
She would fascinate a saint, <lb />
I declare. <lb />
Tis a matter of regret. <lb />
She's a bit of a coquette, <lb />
Whom I sing <lb />
On her cruel path she goes. <lb />
With a dozen <lb />
On her string <lb />
But let that all pass by. <lb />
And her maiden moments fly. <lb />
Dew <lb />
When she marries, on my life. <lb />
She will make the dearest wife, <lb />
In the world. <lb />
Needs of the Nation. <lb />
The Creation of Monopolies a <lb />
Getting by Aid of the <lb />
Heeded. <lb />
Method of <lb />
try to sustain him in his rights as a <lb />
man and a citizen, ho is doomed. <lb />
Profiting by this pernicious exam- <lb />
the brood of vipers has multi- <lb />
plied and will multiply. The Cot- <lb />
Oil Trust is another in <lb />
Baltimore Sun <lb />
ARTICLE IX <lb />
A few reflections tendency <lb />
Buncombe <lb />
BOUNTY GOVERNMENT. <lb />
Superior Court A. <lb />
M. King. <lb />
Register of H. Wilson. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. Congleton. <lb />
P. Redding. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Dawson. <lb />
Mooring. J. A. K. Tucker. <lb />
W. A. James, Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb />
Public School <lb />
La the so. <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
TOWN. <lb />
J. Perkins. <lb />
C. Forbes. <lb />
Tyson. <lb />
B. Cherry A Alex. <lb />
Ward. T. A. <lb />
and J. P. 2nd Ward, Ty- <lb />
son and J. S. Smith ; 3rd Ward, A. X. <lb />
and J. J. <lb />
CHURCHES. <lb />
First and Third <lb />
morning and night. Rev. N. C. <lb />
D. Rector. <lb />
Sunday, mom- <lb />
r and night. Prayer Meeting every <lb />
night. Rev. B. B. John, <lb />
every Sunday, morn- <lb />
and night. Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. <lb />
Pastor- <lb />
LODGES. <lb />
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. ft A. <lb />
M. meets every 1st Thursday and <lb />
night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb />
W. M. King, W. M. <lb />
R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb />
vary 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb />
Hall, F. W.-Brown, H. P. <lb />
Covenant Lodge, No. L O. O. F. <lb />
every Tuesday night. D. L. <lb />
James, N. G. <lb />
Lodge, No. K. of II. <lb />
every first and third Friday night. <lb />
D. D. 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 />
tub room every Monday night, at <lb />
meeting in the Court House <lb />
Starts Sunday of each month, at o'clock <lb />
F. K. E. C. Glenn, <lb />
Woman's Christian Temperance Union <lb />
t la the Reform Club Room Friday <lb />
of each week. Mrs. V. H. Which- <lb />
ard, , . <lb />
Bond of Hope meets in Reform Club <lb />
Ream every Friday night. Mies Eva <lb />
amber, <lb />
POST OFFICE. <lb />
hours A. U. to r. M. Money <lb />
ear beers 10-i. M. to r. M. No or- <lb />
ha from to P. M. and <lb />
treat a to t r. n. <lb />
Bethel mail arrive daily Sun- <lb />
at a. at., departs at r m. <lb />
mail arrives dairy <lb />
and departs at <lb />
Washington mall arrives daily <lb />
at IS M. and at p. it. <lb />
they will be of a rather melancholy <lb />
nature if be sees things as they <lb />
pear to me. The baste to get rich <lb />
pervades every movement of <lb />
and in so far as this desire in- <lb />
a fair and square contest of <lb />
individual genius and energy it is <lb />
not only legitimate, but highly com- <lb />
Out such things grow <lb />
wealth and prosperity, and all of <lb />
which civilization is capable. <lb />
when these riches are sought to be <lb />
obtained by wresting the laws to <lb />
the service of one man or <lb />
of men, by means of which an- <lb />
other man or set of men is placed <lb />
in the power of the first, who <lb />
at pleasure, this same <lb />
laudable desire becomes, by- its <lb />
methods and results, a crime <lb />
against society. It deprives one <lb />
portion of the of the equal <lb />
protection of the laws; renders it less <lb />
possible for them to maintain the <lb />
straggle for their share of the pub- <lb />
prosperity, and converts a gov- <lb />
of freedom and equality <lb />
into a despicable tyranny. No man <lb />
can v that such an interference, <lb />
whereby law takes sides be- <lb />
tween citizens in what should <lb />
be an equal contort, is inevitably <lb />
followed by such resultS. <lb />
manufacturers of country <lb />
furnish an indisputable illustration <lb />
of this getting rich legislation. <lb />
I have already dwelt sufficiently on <lb />
the methods by which they have <lb />
heretofore under tariff <lb />
ties, with all of its inseparable evils <lb />
and injustice to others, and have <lb />
so endeavored to show how aboard <lb />
and sophistical were their <lb />
even when the pretext and <lb />
cover for these duties was revenue <lb />
for Flimsy and <lb />
unsubstantial as that veil was, it is <lb />
now gone. The revenue is now <lb />
many, many millions in excess of <lb />
expenditure. Every possible <lb />
expedient has been resorted to for <lb />
keeping that excess down; <lb />
appropriations, refunding of <lb />
direct taxes, pensions without limit <lb />
the payment of debt bear- <lb />
three per cent, interest, with <lb />
money which was worth six per <lb />
cent, to people from whom It <lb />
collected and even reaching <lb />
forward and paving the debt not <lb />
yet with a premium of per <lb />
cent, thereon, and still excess <lb />
over tho needs of the government is <lb />
gaining. Yet the manufacturers <lb />
and their advocates in Congress re- <lb />
fine to reduce tariff duties. Having <lb />
obtained an advantage over some <lb />
forty or fifty million of their <lb />
by pretext of public rev- <lb />
they propose to it <lb />
sits pretext has long since <lb />
off those foreign products which do <lb />
not compete with anything made by <lb />
us, remove direct taxes, do any- <lb />
thing rather take from this <lb />
advantage over fellow-citizens, <lb />
and compel to fight an equal <lb />
fight, and scratch as other people <lb />
What does a little too <lb />
much in the treasury matter T Our <lb />
revenue is not too large. We can <lb />
spend it all. If you reduce the <lb />
ties to only what government <lb />
needs what will become of us. who <lb />
a hundred years have been sop- <lb />
ported by taxation f <lb />
Another method of getting rich <lb />
by tho aid of law is the of <lb />
monopolies. Monopolies are <lb />
either by low or by combinations <lb />
which are made possible by the laws <lb />
They also exist sometimes by force <lb />
circumstances. These <lb />
; lies generally assume the shape of <lb />
corporations chartered by <lb />
State of Federal, it is true <lb />
that there is no set limit to these <lb />
charters. In theory, if one railroad <lb />
company is incorporated, another <lb />
may be between same points. <lb />
So of banks and all other business <lb />
associations. In good policy they <lb />
should always be multiplied, for <lb />
the greater the number the less the <lb />
v ; but in fact many corpora- <lb />
become sufficiently powerful <lb />
to prevent the establishment of <lb />
their rivals. Even where the Leg- <lb />
is true to its duty and char- <lb />
enough companies to give the <lb />
people the benefit of competition, <lb />
they combine among themselves <lb />
and become to all interests and <lb />
poses a monopoly. In this form <lb />
they are more dangerous than when <lb />
acting singly, for their power to in- <lb />
legislation is so much great- <lb />
Not only so, but being united <lb />
in interest and such simple <lb />
executive management, they can <lb />
easily destroy all competition by <lb />
the weight of their combined <lb />
alone, without regard to <lb />
AH they ask of law is to <lb />
be made a body politic, by which a <lb />
number of persons can act with the <lb />
efficiency and convenience of a sin- <lb />
and that law should <lb />
then stand off. The monopoly fol- <lb />
lows as a matter of course, and in <lb />
communities, States, and <lb />
entire regions of country are <lb />
with absolute impunity. In <lb />
this way most powerful and <lb />
agent of modern progress is <lb />
converted into an engine of <lb />
without conscience and with- <lb />
out responsibility. For it must be <lb />
admitted that no conception of mod- j the refined article, <lb />
times has done so much to pro- <lb />
mote human advancement in all <lb />
that pertains to the accumulation of <lb />
wealth as this association of <lb />
effort which charters of in- <lb />
corporation afford. Bat the greater <lb />
the benefits of the system, the great <lb />
the need to see that are rot <lb />
permitted to convert these benefits <lb />
into positive evils more urgent <lb />
duty of legislators to keep them <lb />
the servants, and not the masters, <lb />
of people. Among few and <lb />
highly intelligent, these <lb />
are easily affected, and this- is <lb />
seen daily. Not only do the <lb />
rations created for the same <lb />
pose conspire to influence <lb />
or to control trade in ab- <lb />
of legislation, but, as a gen <lb />
era rule, all other corporations <lb />
whatsoever do the same. The <lb />
banks, the railroads, steamship com- <lb />
the manufacturers and trust <lb />
companies all make common cause, <lb />
and that is to <lb />
and public policy in their inter- <lb />
est. This gives to their peculiar in- <lb />
such an approval of <lb />
public opinion that it is often <lb />
ken for public interest, and <lb />
tors seldom believe that fol <lb />
lowing their suggestions are <lb />
serving the public, when, in <lb />
they arc serving corporations. <lb />
Here is room for <lb />
as badly needed as tariff taxation. <lb />
The one is an outrage by <lb />
and the other by omission of <lb />
the law. one plunders by the <lb />
direct command of law; <lb />
plunders because the law does <lb />
not step in and forbid. Some idea <lb />
can be obtained of amount of <lb />
unjust taxation collected <lb />
people by protective tariffs, because <lb />
statistics pertaining to <lb />
part which goes into public <lb />
treasury as to form an <lb />
proximate estimate of vast re- <lb />
who can give a <lb />
estimate of <lb />
cause of <lb />
taxation levied upon the <lb />
American people and collected by <lb />
distress by the great <lb />
companies, rings and trusts of this <lb />
conn try T They keep no books <lb />
open to public, they furnish no <lb />
statistics, they are amenable to no <lb />
official visitation. Yet they collect <lb />
more taxes, and by methods more <lb />
and unjust, year by <lb />
year, is collected for all State <lb />
and Federal purposes in the United <lb />
States. To all complaints by the <lb />
public they reply by simply inviting <lb />
public to help itself. Things <lb />
are perpetrated daily which if done <lb />
by officials who were responsible in <lb />
any way to the people or dependent <lb />
on would burl the <lb />
tors from their places with a <lb />
which scarcely be expend- <lb />
ed until it reached a convenient <lb />
tree with outspreading branches. <lb />
The first great illustration -of a <lb />
monopoly which exists by the <lb />
of law to interfere, which <lb />
naturally suggests itself villainy <lb />
to forsake both father and moth- <lb />
family and friends, and for one <lb />
generation at least follow only the <lb />
record of its transactions, need hope <lb />
to see more the nebulous out- <lb />
lines of oppressions and <lb />
which the lays of a free civil- <lb />
republic permitted it to <lb />
commit untroubled. Their <lb />
of the oil trade over sixty mil- <lb />
lions people and four millions square <lb />
miles of territory is as complete as <lb />
could be made by the of an tariff bill will <lb />
autocratic czar. A man who at- <lb />
tempts to sell oil obtained through <lb />
any other source or at any <lb />
Washington Latter. <lb />
Circular Letter to County <lb />
Special to <lb />
Washington, D. C, May 18th 1888. of <lb />
Representative Mills expresses; of Instruction, <lb />
confidence in the final passage by Raleigh, <lb />
House of bis tariff bill without To <lb />
any amendments radical enough Red need railroad <lb />
change the bill material way. <lb />
Other members of the House arc not <lb />
so confident. believe that a <lb />
be passed by <lb />
House but that it will differ <lb />
ally from the original Mills bill. <lb />
The general debate on bill <lb />
price than the one fixed by them- to-morrow, but just what is <lb />
selves receives at once an then to lie done not yet been <lb />
rial visit from the Standard Two propositions are being <lb />
Company, whose notifies considered. One is to leave the tar <lb />
him to quit. If be be wise, he obeys I bill to go over until after the St. <lb />
lives; if he refuses to obey, Louis Convention, and get that Con <lb />
upon the laws of his to endorse it so strongly <lb />
The State Over, From Our <lb />
Many <lb />
Happenings in Events Concerning <lb />
Our People <lb />
Are Doing and Saying. <lb />
rates have been secured to Normals. <lb />
Those desiring to avail themselves <lb />
of the rates must hold a certificate <lb />
signed by a Superintendent <lb />
of Public Instruction. I send yon a j During Mr. two <lb />
bundle blank certificates, and ask in there <lb />
you to furnish them to any persons I conversions. <lb />
that no democratic member will dare <lb />
to vote against it. The other is to <lb />
cut off all amendments at the end of <lb />
the general debate and take a vote <lb />
on it at once. <lb />
The last idea is very inviting to <lb />
who may apply and be entitled to <lb />
them. The only persons who are <lb />
entitled to certificates, teachers, <lb />
those preparing to teach, and such <lb />
persons as go by invitation as in- <lb />
or lecturers. Please give <lb />
notice your county <lb />
and extend all <lb />
the convenient furnishing of these <lb />
certificates, and secure tho attend- <lb />
of your teachers on some Nor- <lb />
if possible. <lb />
The arrangement includes all the <lb />
The first Baptist Church of <lb />
has tendered a call to Dr. <lb />
W. II. Strickland, of Nashville, <lb />
Ten <lb />
Mt. Olive There was <lb />
r county papers ,,., ,;,, ,,,, m <lb />
hues you can for of Straw shipped Iron, Mt, <lb />
Dishing these <lb />
stance. When it was found that advocates in of in <lb />
this glorious Southern plant, which hut rather to the more con-1 ,, <lb />
not only clothed the greater part of i and timid members the; b The ,,,,. ,;,, <lb />
world, but furnished rich food It the were asked ,,, <lb />
for animals and fertilization for the to decide the matter he would ,, am ,,. fa <lb />
fields, contained also a rich and advise the latter course, be I . so <lb />
oil, mills for its extraction I cause every amendment accepted miles 94.80, .,, <lb />
established all over Sooth for the bill would weaken it a sq decreasing as the <lb />
at once. Then the trust was organ-; issue. j over t he game lint. <lb />
to monopolize the business. A The Senate committee on pin- Tickets ill lie on sale two or <lb />
large combination of capital and elections reported ,, before the opening and <lb />
bled it to buy all the mills that n of the legality , two m. three ,, .,,,,. <lb />
willingly offered for sale and to the election of Senator of the closing Normals according <lb />
force the sale of rest. A story Indiana, whose election was <lb />
is told of a mill owner in Alabama by certain republicans. ,,, <lb />
which is instructive. Secret sessions the Senate are. opens Jul y 30th, close An <lb />
sell. The warned not likely to be abolished for a long I Washington opens <lb />
him. He shipped ten thousand gal time to come. By more than a <lb />
from Mobile to Trieste; three-fourths majority Senate <lb />
the vessel which bore it touched at this week, against consul <lb />
New York for more cargo. treaty open sessions, <lb />
trust by same vessel Senator Vest's resolution <lb />
thousand gallons of oil to g tor a select committee to exam- <lb />
same place and the same consignees, questions touching meat and <lb />
with orders to sell below stub meat products of the United States, <lb />
born Alabamian's price so far as to together with transportation of July 27th <lb />
leave him no profit. A dead loss to, the same, has been adopted by the <lb />
him was the result; and be was no-, Senate. In his remarks on the sub- <lb />
that It should be same Mr. Vest quoted a table show- <lb />
thing every time. Not being able in the beef consumed <lb />
keep up the fight against so great per capita among the principal <lb />
be surrendered and sold of the world in 1884. The <lb />
it his mill. Can anything Stated heads the list with <lb />
outrageous be conceived short of pounds, per head, therefore he eon <lb />
highway robbery t tended that anything affecting meat <lb />
Then comes Sugar Trust, Production is of vital <lb />
Olive last Monday. <lb />
A new paper is soon to be started <lb />
at It will have the <lb />
name Whiskey or No <lb />
Whiskey. <lb />
Mr. <lb />
Smith died a days ago near <lb />
Mount Energy, county, <lb />
aged years. He, was active <lb />
within a few days of his. death. <lb />
Elisabeth City Prank <lb />
Duke and Mary both colored, <lb />
had a rate's court, <lb />
Wednesday, in which Mary was <lb />
slicing Dike for fifteen cents. Tho <lb />
cost in case amounted to 121.08 <lb />
which was paid between them and <lb />
the case settled. <lb />
Henderson It pays to <lb />
raise chickens. A friend of <lb />
has a hen from which he sold <lb />
worth of chickens since Christmas, <lb />
last week he took her off the <lb />
nest with a young brood of thirteen <lb />
more. He Still has several the <lb />
July 4th; first left. <lb />
Lexington Mr. <lb />
of Hill, has a sheep <lb />
which brought him six lambs in loss <lb />
than twelve the <lb />
time. A few more like that would <lb />
make sheep raising profitable even <lb />
in a country where the, dogs have <lb />
all the advantage. <lb />
Durham r <lb />
119th, closes August ; Winston <lb />
opens July 10th, closes August 18th; <lb />
I Newton opens July 5th, closes July <lb />
27th ; Elisabeth City opens July 0th, <lb />
j closes July 27th; Wilson opens July <lb />
4th, rinses July <lb />
S. M. <lb />
State Public Instruction. <lb />
Two Classes. <lb />
of <lb />
formed for depressing the price <lb />
raw sugar and increasing that of <lb />
Every refinery <lb />
to every single inhabitant of <lb />
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb />
A vulture around and around <lb />
but scarcely ever rises <lb />
On last Wed <lb />
W. Duke Sons of Dur-, <lb />
ham paid Messrs. J. A. Henderson <lb />
tree tops. Why it is a ;., r Danville Va., <lb />
scavenger. Its eyes are over down-1 for a shipment of bright cutlers. <lb />
r, . This is a large shipment considering <lb />
in the States but two, Board, Secretary Whitney has , The eagle plumes its wings cir- of tho times. This <lb />
newspapers tell us, has been sub-, fed Messrs Cramp A; Sons, the ever upward flight until it j ,., ,, in <lb />
in the same way and forced to an and lost to Warehouse over worth of <lb />
months time for . <lb />
join combination under penalty <lb />
bankruptcy and ruin <lb />
key Trust pursues much the same <lb />
policy. One by one these <lb />
ions, conspiracies <lb />
public welfare and the freedom of, Postponed tho consideration of <lb />
trade, are being formed in respect I nomination Jailer to be <lb />
to the production and sale of all the <lb />
leading necessaries of life. Stop by , u , H . <lb />
step the evil genius of monopoly L ire Fitch, of New <lb />
freedom of trade I c first, and so far he <lb />
which the v republican member of the <lb />
House who has announced <lb />
his intention of supporting Mills <lb />
tariff bill. He made a speech in <lb />
of new vessels Baltimore, <lb />
Yorktown and. Vesuvius. <lb />
republicans of the Senate <lb />
committee of the Judiciary have <lb />
the <lb />
until <lb />
nullifying that <lb />
our own people <lb />
policy of our fathers established <lb />
constitution, and which all men, <lb />
of whatever financial opinions, ad <lb />
he com-. sight. Why t its eyes are c <lb />
turned toward sun as the goal of; <lb />
its ambition. .- The colored <lb />
vulture and the eagle in these , population of this town are excited <lb />
movements fully illustrate over the alleged talking of S <lb />
people. these is always baby fifteen minutes alter it was <lb />
looking for and nosing about for; born, when three times in <lb />
slanderous actions, moral crooked-j it pronounced distinctly moth- <lb />
apparent errors, breaches The Chap- <lb />
the laws propriety, and what man's wile and three old women <lb />
is barely suspected of being firm the truth of this. then <lb />
wrongdoing in the conduct of others the child keeps up almost a cease <lb />
and feeding upon them and talking babbling in to talk. <lb />
about them as a delicious pabulum. <lb />
Thoughts for Reflection. <lb />
It is tho duty of everyone to mat <lb />
money enough to supply the <lb />
able wants or himself and of th <lb />
dependent on <lb />
The years <lb />
I in year Is Hie of the new ; <lb />
Filled with the wine of precious met <lb />
lies. <lb />
The golden van doth line the it. <lb />
C. F. Bat <lb />
A good deal what we are plea <lb />
to call goodness is only <lb />
a mo for -method of <lb />
that we have had drilled into us <lb />
they become <lb />
No serpent such fatal poll <lb />
on as that which drips from <lb />
tongues of the slanderer. <lb />
Ni mercies, each returning day, <lb />
Dover around m while we pray ; <lb />
Hew past, new sins forgiven. <lb />
Hew thought he <lb />
en. <lb />
True silence is the rest of tho mil <lb />
and is to the body <lb />
refreshment. It is a great virtue <lb />
it covers follies, keeps seer <lb />
avoids disputes, and prevents sin. <lb />
He who does a base thing in <lb />
for a I. burns the golden <lb />
that ties tin-it. hearts together. <lb />
Time past, how transient; <lb />
many how <lb />
Christianity means to tho <lb />
chant that he should be honest; <lb />
the judge it means that he <lb />
be just to the servant, that <lb />
faithful; to school <lb />
that he should be diligent; to <lb />
street -weeper f tic should <lb />
clean; to every worker, that <lb />
work be well <lb />
There is no death what so ff <lb />
transition <lb />
This life of mortal breath <lb />
N hid a of the life <lb />
u ho portal we call death. <lb />
W. <lb />
We do not believe there is an <lb />
force today to rival or <lb />
that beaut We <lb />
get In the ruins of the, <lb />
where once we had mead and i <lb />
and organs, nor that <lb />
spirit can feed, cover, and nerve <lb />
again. We again find an <lb />
SO dear, SO sweet, so graceful, <lb />
we sit and weep in vain. The <lb />
saith, and <lb />
ward for We <lb />
stay amid the W. <lb />
. I <lb />
Time present, how evanescent; <lb />
Time to come, with mat <lb />
A western base ball supply deal <lb />
tho usual array of bats <lb />
alls in his show window, <lb />
adds to them a large roll oft-. <lb />
piaster, n huge of <lb />
a pair crutches. <lb />
The from now nut <lb />
January 1st, <lb />
They are tho scavengers of society, <lb />
to be the chief source of reform on never breathe the purer air of <lb />
prosperity. Strange to say, whilst j higher strata in which Hie no <lb />
this part of capital Which party will control Sen and best find their highest joy <lb />
to create monopolies and suppress ate after the 4th, of next March moral appetites keeps their <lb />
competition by combination is on j a question often asked these days, eyes fixed downward where the <lb />
the increase, the tendency of On 3rd, of March terms of garbage is found in which they Bad <lb />
their chief delight. <lb />
Tie other class winch <lb />
not iniquity hut in the truth, <lb />
feeds upon the truth, and in life <lb />
seeks its very fountain as a goal. <lb />
It lifts its eyes in distaste and <lb />
Elizabeth City A color- <lb />
ed man of Island Dare <lb />
county, shipped nine hundred <lb />
during put season.------ <lb />
During to we <lb />
were reminded of the <lb />
hoy on the deck, <lb />
Eating peanuts the peek. <lb />
The boy must been from <lb />
Dan; county ; tho take the <lb />
cake as peanut eaters. The grand <lb />
jury was furnished with half <lb />
el at a time. <lb />
ii-.-t m <lb />
AN BLOOM, <lb />
earth, is the Standard Oil Company. <lb />
Its history is well known to pub- <lb />
though the quantity pro- <lb />
fond of iniquities, like the <lb />
versified of Talmud <lb />
legislation and administration of Senators will expire, this <lb />
the laws is to favor it. being equally divided between <lb />
in enactment and the parties. One of the republicans <lb />
execution of our laws seems of had a <lb />
Those who favor their en I democratic successor elected, and <lb />
are described as practical the rest arc pretty sure to be <lb />
statesmen, devoted to the business by republicans, with the from the slanderous gossip. Star It is announced <lb />
interests country, whilst those exception of Oregon. The bearer of vile talcs and Mr. Wake For- <lb />
who oppose schemes as democrats may secure a Senator ever is naught if not contaminating and Mr. Leslie, of I <lb />
called cranks and from that State, but it is doubtful. in society, and fixes them upon the j Tarboro, will fill Dr. <lb />
Among thirteen democratic Sen i things that are true, beautiful, and during his absence in Europe. <lb />
Surely this state of things, re-1 retiring, there is only who good. As the eagle soars above the Mr. will servo during the <lb />
quires correction. There is a con-1 is not certain of being succeeded by eyes fixed on month of June and Mr. Leslie in<lb />
ATTORNEY AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, If. C <lb />
Practice in nil tho court. <lb />
a Specialty. <lb />
I. I. <lb />
DENTIST, t <lb />
element in our business <lb />
society as in our political, and this <lb />
element should be invoked- There <lb />
are those who will give as well as <lb />
take, live and let lire ; looking <lb />
beyond the present things of selfish- <lb />
bare respect unto <lb />
of reward; wish to see <lb />
our country as free and its laws as <lb />
just in fact as are in theory. <lb />
There are citizens who desire to en- <lb />
courage to utmost all forms <lb />
and combinations of capital by which <lb />
its great and beneficent powers can <lb />
be made to serve our race, and who <lb />
yet believe it both wise patriotic <lb />
to restrain it from that extreme use <lb />
which crushes the weak, pleaders <lb />
the and nullifies law. <lb />
B.<lb />
The years that hare elapsed since <lb />
dose of the civil war bare <lb />
ed to obliterate all sectional feeling, <lb />
and a and prosperous nation <lb />
join in keeping green graves of <lb />
all its beloved dead. It is in this <lb />
spirit that the publisher of <lb />
York has bad <lb />
written a thrilling pathetic <lb />
peculiarly appropriate to <lb />
this national holiday, entitled <lb />
Leonore; or His Grave <lb />
Kept In the same paper <lb />
will also be found a weekly <lb />
the and Adventures <lb />
as a Showman of P. T. <lb />
written by himself, and <lb />
interesting to the young folks as <lb />
wall as heads of families. These are <lb />
a democrat. That is Mr. the sun, so the best of our species shipment of lumber from <lb />
son of New Jersey. Should the; ascend highest in the scale of purity this port to Maine is ho it, <lb />
democrats retain New Jersey and J and blessedness their eyes occurred to well <lb />
capture Oregon it would make the, arc fixed the Son of Man as worth noting. The schooner L. A. <lb />
Senate stand democrats re-1 exemplar and they aspire alter i cleared yesterday for <lb />
what it is I likeness to Him as the goal of their feet of pitch pine <lb />
now. But tho chances are that Ore-1 ambition. lumber, feet of cypress <lb />
will return a republican and, remember that when you and eighteen sticks of spar <lb />
New Jersey a democrat which will, arc in the company of a man or The shipment was made by <lb />
make the Senate a tie, giving the man who is taking delight in <lb />
through tho Vice you the garbage of neighbor <lb />
to whichever party carries res hood you arc in the presence of a <lb />
election. j whom you will do well to <lb />
Representative Chairman I <lb />
of the House committee on invalid . <lb />
Pensions and the democratic Cigarette smoking is very hurt <lb />
governor of Indiana, has It is killing hundreds of the <lb />
rare literary treats, sod these of our <lb />
of unrivaled proportions in all this readers who ate not already enjoy <lb />
will do well to obtain No. <lb />
York Family Story <lb />
of newsdealer send <lb />
direct t the <lb />
fat- <lb />
to all claimants filed their <lb />
claims after expiration of the <lb />
time limit, or may yet file claims be- <lb />
fore the passage of this bill. The <lb />
report accompanying bill states <lb />
that if passed it will cost the Gov- <lb />
probably sot more <lb />
and suggests to the <lb />
House that this is the best <lb />
means of distributing the surplus in <lb />
Parents who allow their commands <lb />
disobeyed without merited punish- <lb />
lose the respect of their <lb />
encourage disobedience and <lb />
make it Impossible to bring them <lb />
restraint. Reasonable re- <lb />
firmly enforced soon comes <lb />
to be looked upon with favor and <lb />
makes out of boys citizens re- <lb />
themselves and the which <lb />
govern society and State Let par- <lb />
try this. Let them begin by <lb />
keeping boys at home at night <lb />
with A rule <lb />
which is good for is good <lb />
far parents also- Don't try to make <lb />
yon assay st with<lb />
and all from <lb />
Joseph Davis, of Wayne county, <lb />
W. Va., has a daughter aged <lb />
years weighed pounds. <lb />
This is believed to be the largest <lb />
child of its age in <lb />
is also believed to be largest lie <lb />
in <lb />
The Fall Advance is <lb />
for assertion that mer- <lb />
chant who declines to advertise in <lb />
local papers but insists on <lb />
his business known by means of <lb />
shabby dodgers, is generally the <lb />
man who has to dodge his creditors <lb />
and the sheriff. <lb />
Messrs, S- W. H. Northrop. <lb />
What Wives are For. <lb />
Professional gamblers bare a <lb />
great many superstitions. One of <lb />
the most practical is, that if they <lb />
cards themselves <lb />
much better chance to win. <lb />
Old maids <lb />
spent life <lb />
It is not to sweep the house and <lb />
make the bods, darn tho socks, <lb />
and cook meat, chiefly that <lb />
man wants n wife. <lb />
If this Is ho wants, hired <lb />
can do that cheaper than a <lb />
wife. <lb />
If this is all, when a young man <lb />
calls to sec a young lady, send him <lb />
into pantry to taste tho bread <lb />
cakes that she has made, or <lb />
send him to see the needle-work <lb />
and bed-making, or put a broom in <lb />
her bands, and send him to witness <lb />
its use. <lb />
Such things arc important and <lb />
the wise young man will quietly <lb />
look after them. <lb />
But what the true man most <lb />
wants of a wife is <lb />
love. <lb />
The way of life has many dreary <lb />
places in it, and man needs a com- <lb />
with him. <lb />
A man is sometimes overtaken <lb />
with he meets a failure <lb />
and defeat, trials and temptations <lb />
beset Mm, and he needs one to stand <lb />
by and sympathize. He has some <lb />
stern battles to light with poverty, <lb />
KT, <lb />
O R E E VII. L E, N. <lb />
I. BLOW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
M MOORS. C M, <lb />
W GORE BERNARD, <lb />
A T-LA W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Practice hi State and Federal C <lb />
MOORE J. M. J MU <lb />
A T-LA W, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
l. <lb />
T A <lb />
n. c. <lb />
T V. <lb />
and at <lb />
N C. <lb />
A W <lb />
Attorney and st <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Will In the Courts o <lb />
Greene, mid Beaufort <lb />
and Supreme Court. <lb />
Faithful attention to <lb />
to him. <lb />
a. c. <lb />
Dentist. <lb />
Tender <lb />
. public, <lb />
h sin; be j Teeth without paw by l <lb />
Nitrous Oxide Gar. <lb />
Fl<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018887_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
Eastern Reflector, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb />
ant <lb />
Every <lb />
THE LEADING PAPER <lb />
IN THE<lb />
T U <lb />
Subscription Trice. per year. <lb />
BUT <lb />
hesitate to Democratic <lb />
mt arid measures that are not consistent <lb />
th principles of the party. <lb />
St want a from a wide-a-wake <lb />
n of th State send for the <lb />
W COPY FREE <lb />
MAY <lb />
AT POST OFFICE AT <lb />
C, as Second-Cabs <lb />
Hat, Matter. <lb />
The of the State <lb />
cultural Society shortly <lb />
be The regulations which <lb />
governed as to crops last <lb />
will govern this year The <lb />
premiums will be larger. <lb />
Dockery is a good man for <lb />
the Democrats to knock down <lb />
la the Gubernatorial contest. <lb />
Tho Democrats meet to-day for <lb />
the purpose of naming the man <lb />
who will do the work for him. <lb />
The recent converts from De- <lb />
fared poorly in the Re- <lb />
publican Slate Convention last <lb />
week, not one of these new men <lb />
given a place on the ticket <lb />
and all their suggestions being <lb />
disregarded. The nominees of <lb />
tho Convention are all straight- <lb />
mi, wool-dyed Radical, and <lb />
the fight this will be made <lb />
on strict party lines. We like <lb />
this, for in a straight fight the <lb />
Democrats of Carolina <lb />
always come victorious over <lb />
their Republican opponents. <lb />
There will be no side issues in <lb />
this campaign to draw off <lb />
warm Democrats and we look <lb />
for a large Democratic vote and <lb />
a sweeping majority in<lb />
The Republican Convention <lb />
of the Fourth Congressional Dis- <lb />
met in Raleigh last week <lb />
adjourned without making <lb />
any nomination. Of course they <lb />
will all support Congressman <lb />
John Nichols, who has <lb />
ed himself an Independent can- <lb />
for he is as good a Re- <lb />
publican the meanest of them <lb />
could wish to vote for. If <lb />
by the Democrats Mr. N. <lb />
B. Broughton will have no <lb />
in defeating Nichols despite <lb />
the nondescript character of the <lb />
platform upon which he is stand- <lb />
We doubt very much if <lb />
any other Democrat could be <lb />
nominated who would poll as <lb />
big a vote as Mr. Broughton, or <lb />
who would be so sure of election. <lb />
The river and harbor bill <lb />
been favorably reported to the <lb />
Senate. Senator Ransom has <lb />
had greatly increased . the <lb />
amounts allowed in the House <lb />
for North Carolina rivers and <lb />
harbors. The following are the <lb />
mounts given the various riv- <lb />
en and harbors in North <lb />
; Beaufort Harbor, ; <lb />
Beaufort and New River water- <lb />
way, ; Beaufort and New <lb />
waterway, Cape <lb />
Fear River above Wilmington, <lb />
; Cape Pear River below <lb />
Wilmington, ; Content- <lb />
Creek, Currituck <lb />
Sound, Neuse River <lb />
New ; <lb />
and Tar Rivers, ; Trent <lb />
Roanoke, River, <lb />
Waccamaw River, <lb />
Yadkin River, <lb />
The Republican State <lb />
which met in Raleigh last <lb />
week, lasted two days, and was <lb />
a stormy and turbulent gather- <lb />
J. E. Boyd, of Greensboro, <lb />
ins elected Chairman, and two <lb />
were made Secretaries, <lb />
following State ticket was <lb />
O. H. Dockery, <lb />
J. C. Lieu- <lb />
Geo. W. Stan- <lb />
Secretary of State; C. F. <lb />
ton. Auditor; G. A. Bing- <lb />
T. P. Devereux, <lb />
General; Jas. B. Ma- <lb />
Superintendent of Public <lb />
D. L. Russell, D. <lb />
Furches, R. P. Buxton for <lb />
Justices of the <lb />
f Court. J. E. Boyd and <lb />
. Moore were nominated for <lb />
Electors. The plan <lb />
was changed and <lb />
of State Exec- <lb />
was elected by <lb />
I Convention. J. B. Eaves, of <lb />
was elected. <lb />
of <lb />
t ion to the nomination of a fall <lb />
set of candidates for State <lb />
and Presidential Electors <lb />
for the State at Large, the Con- <lb />
will select delegates to <lb />
the National Democratic Con- <lb />
at St. Louis, and will <lb />
adopt a platform of principles. <lb />
The chief interest seems to be <lb />
over the nominee for Governor, <lb />
there being several names prom- <lb />
mentioned, it is <lb />
for us to predict who will <lb />
be the nominee. Of the three <lb />
most prominent candidates men- <lb />
Stedman and <lb />
seems to be <lb />
in the lead, but the other gen- <lb />
have considerable <lb />
strength and will have their <lb />
claims vigorously pushed. It is <lb />
possible that neither of these <lb />
can be nominated, <lb />
and that a will re- <lb />
the prize. In that event <lb />
we think the man <lb />
who will be selected. We <lb />
await the action of the <lb />
Convention. That the body will <lb />
be very deliberate in their work <lb />
and will select good and true <lb />
men for the nominees we have <lb />
no doubt. And we predict that <lb />
the people of the State will <lb />
prove of their course. The Re- <lb />
stands ready to endorse <lb />
the work of the Convention and <lb />
will cordially support the <lb />
The magistrates of the county <lb />
will meet here next Monday for <lb />
the purpose of electing a Board <lb />
of County Commissioners for <lb />
two years from the first of next <lb />
December, a County <lb />
dent of Public Instruction and <lb />
for the transaction of such other <lb />
business as may come before <lb />
We hope every mag- <lb />
the county will be <lb />
present, end that ail who come <lb />
will appreciate the importance <lb />
of the duties that will devolve <lb />
upon them. The office of Com- <lb />
missioner is one of the most <lb />
not the most <lb />
the county and great <lb />
care should be taken in the <lb />
of suitable men to fill <lb />
these positions. Messrs. <lb />
Dawson, G. M. Mooring, W. <lb />
A. James, Jr., J. A. K. Tucker <lb />
and T. E. Keel constitute the <lb />
present Board of Commissioners, <lb />
and that they have made excel- <lb />
lent officers no one will pretend <lb />
to deny. Inasmuch, therefore, <lb />
as these gentlemen; have made <lb />
good Commissioners and have <lb />
discharged the duties of the of- <lb />
creditably we see no reason <lb />
why they should not be elected <lb />
as their own successors. In fact, <lb />
their past services should be a <lb />
reason, and a strong one, for re- <lb />
them in office. All of <lb />
the members of the present <lb />
Board of Commissioners are <lb />
shrewd and safe business men, <lb />
are men of character and stand- <lb />
in their and <lb />
the county, and the financial <lb />
fairs of the county will be well <lb />
managed in their hands. The <lb />
Reflector suggests that they <lb />
be elected again, and would be <lb />
glad to see the magistrates ac- <lb />
its suggestion. <lb />
That Third party Movement. <lb />
Every reader of the <lb />
tor is acquainted with our views <lb />
on the temperance problem. <lb />
Every one cf them knows that <lb />
we have been all along an earn- <lb />
est advocate of temperance re- <lb />
form. There has never been any <lb />
worthy movement set on foot in <lb />
regard to the regulation of the <lb />
liquor traffic that we did not fa- <lb />
and encourage, both by <lb />
and example. We have <lb />
lived temperance, we have talk- <lb />
ed temperance, and we would <lb />
have voted temperance if the <lb />
opportunity had been given. <lb />
Believing, as we have believed, <lb />
and still believe, that liquor is <lb />
the curse of the world, we have <lb />
tried in every fair and laudable <lb />
way to discourage its use and to <lb />
suppress its sale. And we have <lb />
done this with good will for all <lb />
and malice towards none. The <lb />
business of a public journal is to <lb />
labor for the weal and prosper- <lb />
of mankind, we would <lb />
be false to our God, to our <lb />
low-man, to society, and to our- <lb />
were tHis not the case. <lb />
But while this is true, it is our <lb />
prerogative, yea our solemn <lb />
to any foolish and <lb />
misdirected effort which may <lb />
be put forth in behalf of the <lb />
temperance cause. Such an <lb />
effort is now being made in the <lb />
State, and we enter against it an <lb />
earnest protest. We see that <lb />
the blind <lb />
opposed to the tan . <lb />
taken. While we nothing. <lb />
to say against those who <lb />
been named as the standard <lb />
bearers of the prohibition party <lb />
in North they <lb />
are all good, honest, capable men, <lb />
yet we shall vote against them, <lb />
and call upon all friends of <lb />
Democracy to-pursue a like <lb />
course, for every vote you give <lb />
to them and the. party they rep- <lb />
resent, means a against <lb />
the Democratic party The Re- <lb />
publicans will not desert their <lb />
assured of that. No <lb />
Democrat can afford to throw <lb />
away his vote in the coming <lb />
and when you cast your <lb />
vote for this third party, you <lb />
not only waste your vote, but <lb />
give substantial aid to the Bad- <lb />
cause. You have seen what <lb />
Radical supremacy means in <lb />
your own town in recent days, <lb />
and can you bear even the <lb />
thought of a Radical triumph in <lb />
the State election If you can, <lb />
and if you want them to win, <lb />
way m rigid <lb />
as any I have <lb />
That Mr. J. D. should <lb />
wish the position I cannot believe, <lb />
and I can not think Hr. King would <lb />
aid in any scheme looking towards <lb />
the displacement of the present in <lb />
who was, I am told, <lb />
mental in making him a member of <lb />
the board of education. <lb />
Whether a man's wishing position <lb />
in order to support himself and <lb />
or not, it is <lb />
the usual incentive to effort in any <lb />
department of human a <lb />
laudable instinct, and one from <lb />
which not one of the aspirants is <lb />
free. Elect Mr. Latham <lb />
County Superintendent and will <lb />
be well. <lb />
A Teacher of Washington <lb />
School. <lb />
from Allen's <lb />
School House. <lb />
Editor <lb />
As yon invite communications <lb />
from different neighborhoods I; take <lb />
pleasure in saying a word in behalf <lb />
of that one in which the above <lb />
mentioned school is located. <lb />
Three years ago the lands lying be- <lb />
tween the river road and the old <lb />
plank road was almost a continuous <lb />
just rally around this third j wilderness with now and then a lit <lb />
and the Rads will laugh in their <lb />
sleeves at your stupidity, and <lb />
hare cause to rejoice over the <lb />
downfall of Democracy. The <lb />
Democratic party has made the <lb />
State rich and prosperous as she <lb />
is to day; and if you want her <lb />
name to be dishonored and her <lb />
credit to be discounted abroad,. <lb />
and make her a and a <lb />
among the sisterhood <lb />
of States, cast your vote against <lb />
the Democratic party and your <lb />
desire shall be satisfied ; but if <lb />
you want her to march onward <lb />
and upward in the scale of social, <lb />
financial and religious progress <lb />
and enjoyment, as she has been <lb />
doing for several years past, cast <lb />
your vote for the maintenance of <lb />
Democratic principles and for <lb />
the continuance of a sound and <lb />
patriotic Democratic government <lb />
Whatever else you may <lb />
of North Carolina <lb />
stand by the Democratic party. <lb />
It is the hope of the country, <lb />
and with its defeat vanishes the <lb />
present and future glory of the <lb />
grand Old North State. You <lb />
cannot afford to imperil this <lb />
commonwealth by enlisting <lb />
your energies and your suffrage <lb />
in behalf of a cause doomed to <lb />
disastrous defeat. There is not <lb />
the ghost of a chance for this <lb />
third party to succeed in the <lb />
election this fall. The real bat- <lb />
is between the Democratic <lb />
and Radical parties. The other <lb />
is only a sideshow ; and it bodes <lb />
no good to our cause. Be not <lb />
deceived in this matter. Vote <lb />
for the Democratic nominees to <lb />
a State and Nation- <lb />
and a great and overwhelming <lb />
victory will be ours. Stand by <lb />
your colors, Democrats. Let <lb />
your banner still float in triumph <lb />
from the spires of the State Cap- <lb />
Vote for your party. <lb />
County Superintendent of Pub- <lb />
Instruction. <lb />
A Lady Speaks Strongly for the Present <lb />
Incumbent. <lb />
Washington, C. May 21st, 1888. <lb />
Mr. woman, but not <lb />
a Belva Lock wood woman suffragist, <lb />
yet I do hesitate to speak in <lb />
defense of right and justice when <lb />
they are assailed. <lb />
To-day by merest accident, I read <lb />
in a Raleigh paper that latest <lb />
move on the political chess <lb />
Pitt county is the effort now being <lb />
made to decapitate Elder <lb />
Latham, the worthy and efficient <lb />
superintendent public schools, to <lb />
make room for one of rising at- <lb />
perhaps either Mr. J. D. <lb />
or Mr. Buck This <lb />
statement confirms the whisper of <lb />
Madam Rumor, and I pronounce the <lb />
whole proceeding a preposterous <lb />
outrage. Mr. Latham has <lb />
done practical teaching for twenty- <lb />
fire years; a man of pronounced <lb />
convictions, he has the moral <lb />
age to assert his opinions. No one <lb />
will dare defame him, <lb />
as have, to my knowledge, spent <lb />
their and money making <lb />
FALSE accusations against him, be- <lb />
cause he dared to do. right and <lb />
would not come to unjust demands <lb />
for their pockets sake in their patty <lb />
There is in troth not one <lb />
dark blot to discolor bis fair es- <lb />
He has served several terms as <lb />
Superintendent, and Major <lb />
Finger, the State Superintendent <lb />
has, to my knowledge, publicly pro- <lb />
him one of the most <lb />
efficient and successful <lb />
Superintendents in the State. Mr. <lb />
Latham has made the subject a <lb />
study, acquainting himself with all <lb />
school literature, in reach, and often <lb />
consulting with the beat educators <lb />
in and of the State, and with <lb />
many Superintendents; <lb />
notably, Rev. Nat Harding of Wash- <lb />
N. C. He has exchanged <lb />
examination papers with him, <lb />
always to elevate the nobility <lb />
of the profession. He has done <lb />
more for education in Pitt <lb />
than any other man, and is better fit- <lb />
for the position. The gentlemen <lb />
mentioned, though they are very <lb />
worthy gentlemen and so far as I <lb />
know, may he <lb />
do know, however that it takes ex- <lb />
any position <lb />
tie farm here and there. Messrs. J. <lb />
W. Allen, J. A. and other <lb />
public spirited men conceived the <lb />
idea of building a new road to pass <lb />
through this heretofore neglected <lb />
country and the completion thereof <lb />
marked a new era for our section. <lb />
spirit, push and enterprise <lb />
began to infuse itself among <lb />
people and the lands that were once <lb />
barren and worthless now <lb />
as the rose. New buildings <lb />
were soon erected. Fields began <lb />
to be enlarged, and to keep pace <lb />
with the moving progress of the <lb />
people it became necessary to have <lb />
a school, and that sturdy yeoman, <lb />
J. W. Allen, who is always <lb />
foremost in every good work, built <lb />
a school for the country, <lb />
since which time we have had good <lb />
schools. We knew great good <lb />
result who bad dreamed <lb />
of the wonderful mental and moral <lb />
improvement that has already been <lb />
achieved by the erection of that <lb />
school house in <lb />
It is a source of pride to <lb />
all our citizens and already a move- <lb />
is on foot to enlarge and <lb />
prove it. About a year and a half <lb />
J. H. Tucker, of Greenville, <lb />
organized a School here <lb />
and the two schools have done <lb />
to displace ignorance and turn on the <lb />
light From this little school house <lb />
Education has spread her golden-tint- <lb />
ed pinions and winged her blessed <lb />
flight into every household in the <lb />
community. Before <lb />
School was organized old men <lb />
crated the Sabbath by chasing foxes, <lb />
and young men's sport was <lb />
base ball. A decided healthy moral <lb />
sentiment now prevails and the old <lb />
fox chasers and young base ball play- <lb />
meet together with their children <lb />
and all sing praises to Most <lb />
High God. Our community owes <lb />
to Mr. Tucker. Be has <lb />
ed us faithfully as Superintendent <lb />
of School and stood by <lb />
us when the dark of <lb />
hung over our heads threat- <lb />
destruction, and now that the <lb />
sunlight is breaking over the hills <lb />
and lighting up the valleys they will <lb />
not forget him. <lb />
What a wonderful change his <lb />
work has wrought in midst A <lb />
change that even God is smiling <lb />
upon, for already the conversion of <lb />
many souls has marked the result. <lb />
A protracted meeting is <lb />
now being conducted by Revs. J. V. <lb />
of Greenville, and G. J. <lb />
of Hamilton. Many souls <lb />
have been converted and more than <lb />
fifty have stood for prayers on a sin- <lb />
night meeting. Surely God has <lb />
smiled upon us. <lb />
The above are not all the <lb />
in our midst. The Hon. <lb />
has organized <lb />
a Grange among us and all the <lb />
farmers fell into line save <lb />
latter <lb />
will probably alter a <lb />
while but will <lb />
to see the Salvation of the <lb />
Our farming advancements are <lb />
marvelous. The writer remembers <lb />
he is not an old yet, <lb />
but don't say he will not when <lb />
this whole section could harvest <lb />
scarcely ten bales of cotton. Last <lb />
year notwithstanding bad crops we <lb />
marketed over raised <lb />
plenty of other products for home <lb />
consumption. Very few of far <lb />
are tied with mortgages <lb />
and whole country is on the high <lb />
row to development and prosperity <lb />
and I predict that another decade <lb />
will find section the <lb />
of Pitt for farming. <lb />
Ont does not furnish a more <lb />
progressive and successful farmer <lb />
than J. W. Allen Esq. I <lb />
the same for J. A. Briley, J. T. Al- <lb />
Everett and others. <lb />
If people will continue <lb />
united and pull who can <lb />
predict the success we will yet <lb />
achieve. C. <lb />
The President and Mrs. Cleveland <lb />
went to Philadelphia on <lb />
day, to attend the 250th <lb />
of the Presbyterian church held <lb />
at Germantown. Mr. Cleveland re- <lb />
turned to Washington Thursday, <lb />
but Mrs. Cleveland will remain in <lb />
Philadelphia a few days. Next <lb />
Tuesday night Mr. Cleveland will <lb />
go to New York to take part in the <lb />
Memorial Day exercises in that city, <lb />
and on Wednesday. He <lb />
will review the New York parade <lb />
in the morning, and the one in <lb />
Brooklyn in the afternoon, return- <lb />
to this city at night. <lb />
The Senate has passed the House <lb />
to establish a Department of <lb />
Labor. There were several <lb />
amendments made which <lb />
will necessitate returning the bill to <lb />
the its <lb />
The Senate committee on <lb />
tare have mad a favorable report <lb />
en the House bill to enlarge the So- <lb />
ties of the of <lb />
and make it a executive de- <lb />
, m The trill, as it passed <lb />
RHEUMATISM <lb />
KIDNEY COMPLAINTS <lb />
DYSPEPSIA <lb />
CONSTIPATION <lb />
not t <lb />
all of th. WELLS,<lb />
Sold by <lb />
GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb />
WE are now fitted up 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 <lb />
We also keep a nice line of <lb />
READY <lb />
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed. <lb />
One A Delaney Saw Hill, Hurt <lb />
and Carriage, Saw feet long. <lb />
Co six month. <lb />
Cash. <lb />
One Double Cylinder Engine, <lb />
with Coat <lb />
Price <lb />
Two Marine Boilers to run horse en- <lb />
would do for land service, or for <lb />
steam boats with some repairs. Cost <lb />
will each. <lb />
One Marine Boiler to run home en- <lb />
will take <lb />
Ore Single Block shingle Ma- <lb />
chine. Cost Price <lb />
One Old Steamboat Engine <lb />
slight repairs <lb />
Price <lb />
Above articles sold because we have <lb />
absolutely no use for them. Address <lb />
JOHNSON SON. <lb />
Norfolk, Va. <lb />
THE NEW MILLINERY STORE OF <lb />
. M. T. <lb />
THE MAN <lb />
BE SEEN EVERY DAY, but the man who keeps a fresh of <lb />
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars, <lb />
TOBACCO, CANNED GOODS, <lb />
Can be found whenever wanted. Yon have to look for <lb />
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb />
And all your wants in above goods can be supplied. <lb />
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS PUT UP TO ORDER. <lb />
A. <lb />
THIS BEING ELECTION YEAR <lb />
And LEAP 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 />
H Are For <lb />
Is Reliable Goods At <lb />
Reasonable Prices. <lb />
If such be your wants, we can supply them. <lb />
We are receiving weekly <lb />
NEW GOODS <lb />
. OF THE LATEST STYLES. <lb />
A GALL. <lb />
LITTLE HOUSE, i BRO. <lb />
Has lately been repaired and fitted up <lb />
and she has . <lb />
of New Millinery for <lb />
SUMMER <lb />
Besides her usual lint <lb />
Hats, and general <lb />
millinery goods, she has the prettiest <lb />
stock Silks, shaded Rib- <lb />
Gauzes, etc., in the market. Give <lb />
her a call at the Old Stand. <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
I'm TONIC <lb />
a. Inward . bU for <lb />
-------am, and and <lb />
Mo. M <lb />
At be for Corn.,<lb />
IT. <lb />
NORTH Superior Cwt <lb />
Martin <lb />
w. t. Crawford, <lb />
Ruth Taylor Administratrix of Frank <lb />
Taylor. <lb />
J. J. Taylor, II. F. Taylor and I. <lb />
Taylor and A. II. Smith and H. W. <lb />
Stubbs, Commissioners. <lb />
H, F. Taylor, one the above named <lb />
defendants who a non of tale <lb />
State will take notice that Ruth Taylor, <lb />
Administratrix of Frank Taylor, has com- <lb />
a cause of action before the Clerk <lb />
of the Superior Court, of Martin <lb />
for the sale of certain lands, described In <lb />
the petition in this action belonging to <lb />
late Frank Taylor, also to have <lb />
monies In hands of the above <lb />
named declared to be <lb />
used for the payment the debt of <lb />
Frank Taylor, and that ha <lb />
appears and answers petition or de- <lb />
thereto on the 1st day of June <lb />
flied in the Clerk's the plaint <lb />
will the relief asked for la <lb />
said petition. Witness my band and seal <lb />
at my office in this the Hill <lb />
day of April 1888. <lb />
W. T. CRAWFORD. <lb />
Superior Court Clerk. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb />
M Executor of Silas Edwards before B. <lb />
A. Clerk Superior Court of PHI <lb />
county, on the 17th day of December, <lb />
1887. All persons having claims against <lb />
the raid estate will present them within <lb />
twelve months or this notice will be plead <lb />
in bar of their recovery, all persons ow- <lb />
said estate will make immediate pay- <lb />
to <lb />
B. GALLOWAY, <lb />
of Silas Edwards. <lb />
In of <lb />
fr I. <lb />
HARRY SKINNER <lb />
L. C LATHAM <lb />
E. C. GLENN. <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT. <lb />
STANDARD GUANO ACID PHOSPHATE, <lb />
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb />
SHELL LIME. DISSOLVED BONE, <lb />
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb />
Tennessee Wagons, for sale. <lb />
N. C, Mar. 1887. <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT <lb />
AND AGENT FOB THE OIL KILLS. <lb />
for Cotton Seed or <lb />
Has for sale <lb />
Highest Cash price paid <lb />
Heal given in exchange. <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 n the <lb />
market. <lb />
lave <lb />
Save Money <lb />
The Best In The World. <lb />
HUME, MINOR COMPANY. <lb />
Three Big Houses. <lb />
RICHMOND, NORFOLK, AND <lb />
k m MIC-, <lb />
HARRY SKINNER k CO, <lb />
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN S, CONGLETON CO <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
THE LEADERS IN <lb />
III 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 purchased the entire mercantile business of John S. Con <lb />
Co, including notes, book accounts and all evidences of debt <lb />
and merchandise, we solicit their former and increased patronage <lb />
Being able to make all purchases for cash, getting advantage of the <lb />
discounts, we will be enabled to sell as cheaply as any one of <lb />
Norfolk. We shall retain in our employ J. S. Congleton as general <lb />
superintendent of the business, with his former Chas Skinner <lb />
as assistant, who will always be glad to pee and serve their old customer <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 of f <lb />
to with approved security <lb />
J, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND. <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 />
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb />
J. D. Williamson, <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
WILL CONTINUE THE OF <lb />
PH BUGGIES, CARTS OR ATS. <lb />
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanic, consequently put up nothing <lb />
but We keep up with the times and the latest Improved styles. <lb />
Best material used In all work. All styles of Springs are used, you select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep on hand a full line of ready made <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the year round, which we will sell ab low as the lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hop <lb />
merit a continuance of the same. <lb />
SIMMS <lb />
Merchant Tailor, <lb />
W Q. <lb />
I never put out or an- <lb />
to the public of great sales and <lb />
job lots. I never pretend to offer such stock. <lb />
My rule of business is to buy and sell at the <lb />
Lowest Possible Cash Figures, and to deal only <lb />
in the <lb />
My stock is the Most Complete, the Beat and <lb />
the Cheapest in the State. Again, and yet again <lb />
do I challenge any merchant tailor to compete <lb />
t Style, <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018887_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
. <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb />
THIS PAPER <lb />
I MAT <lb />
at r.<lb />
may it in I <lb />
Don't the grass prow <lb />
The best Butter kept l Fayetteville last week. <lb />
Capt. J. K. of Washing- <lb />
ton, was in town last Friday on <lb />
business. <lb />
Her many will be pained <lb />
to learn that Mrs. John Flanagan is <lb />
very sick. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Higgs with her children <lb />
Las moved to the home of Mr. K. A. <lb />
near <lb />
Mrs. A. M. Moore and Miss Fannie <lb />
Green attended the Episcopal Conn- <lb />
constantly on ice at <lb />
Harry Skinner Co's. <lb />
To-morrow will be the last day of <lb />
May. <lb />
Just in Potatoes at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Commencements draw near at <lb />
hand. <lb />
Bushels of sale by E <lb />
Glenn. <lb />
It snowed at High Point, this <lb />
State, on the 20th. <lb />
We will pay the for <lb />
pounds of Beeswax, at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Sidewalks need repairing at <lb />
places in town. <lb />
Point Lace Flour has been tried <lb />
and is the best and cheapest ac the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
No mistake about May having <lb />
been a cool, wet month. <lb />
Mrs. M. T. bas a beautiful <lb />
line of She tells us her <lb />
sale have been very large in the <lb />
last few weeks. <lb />
Strawberries have played out but <lb />
will soon be along. <lb />
Herrings arrived <lb />
day at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
is the state of the <lb />
weather thus far week. <lb />
The sale of the Boss Famous <lb />
Laura Milk 1887 ex <lb />
red id the sales of the former year <lb />
by 380.701 Try <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The feather renovators are still <lb />
doing a thriving business <lb />
School Commit <lb />
tees are hereby instructed not to <lb />
employ Fred Cannon to teach in <lb />
their schools, as will not sign his <lb />
order. J. Latham, Supt. <lb />
Now as the weather is improving <lb />
let the cemeteries be beautified. <lb />
New lot of cabbages received <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
is money in advertising <lb />
even if the season is dull. Try it. <lb />
The Store has just <lb />
chased the entire stock of shoes, <lb />
dry goods, laces, <lb />
of Mrs. Horne at in the <lb />
dollar less than cost, and we pro- <lb />
pose giving our customers the <lb />
fit of this mammoth bargain. <lb />
Bedding. <lb />
Several towns in the State <lb />
have local option elections next Mon- <lb />
day- <lb />
Fresh selected Corned Beef just <lb />
in at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
. Elias Moore always laughs loudest <lb />
on the warmest days. into <lb />
that. <lb />
The looks for <lb />
bargains for its purchasers. Their <lb />
recent purchase Mrs. B. H. <lb />
Home's stock, which they are sell- <lb />
below cost, proves this. <lb />
Several our citizens are attend- <lb />
the State Convention in <lb />
Bead the advertisement of the <lb />
action before the Superior <lb />
Asa B. vs. Mary E. Garris, <lb />
of John B. Garris. <lb />
Magnolias are in bloom. A tree <lb />
in the yard of Mrs. V. H. Whichard <lb />
is lovely. <lb />
H. F- Keel keeps the best turn <lb />
of any liveryman in Greenville. <lb />
It is a pleasure to drive one of his <lb />
horses, for he never sends out a <lb />
tired, jaded animal, furnishes <lb />
good horses and comfortable <lb />
This town has long needed a <lb />
first, class livery and Mr. Keel is fill <lb />
that want. <lb />
How <lb />
strikingly this is illustrated with <lb />
now. <lb />
Their new advertisement came in <lb />
so late last week that we could make <lb />
no mention of Higgs <lb />
purchased another lot of sample <lb />
notions- Nevertheless they have <lb />
the goods and are giving them a <lb />
big boom. Go look at their goods. <lb />
The Bethel Herald has enlarged. <lb />
It is now a column sheet and <lb />
looks well. <lb />
Bead the notice to creditors, W. <lb />
A. Fields and others against B. H. <lb />
Hearne, administrator of Ivey Nor- <lb />
ville. <lb />
Greenville bad a large <lb />
at the M. E. Conference in <lb />
Washington. <lb />
The news from the convention to- <lb />
day will be given out as rapidly as <lb />
we receive it. <lb />
Now let the sanitary condition of <lb />
the town be looked alter. It re- <lb />
ally needed. <lb />
Services only in the Baptist Church <lb />
last Sunday the other churches be- <lb />
closed that day. <lb />
Last week all the towns were wet <lb />
very wet. Next many of <lb />
them desire to go dry. <lb />
There have been very few days <lb />
during this month but what we <lb />
have had some rain. <lb />
They generally call May the <lb />
I Out in that particular <lb />
it proved a big fraud this year. <lb />
The health of a community should <lb />
guarded. Citizens <lb />
should see that every precaution is <lb />
seed. <lb />
tide of travel has been <lb />
t for two weeks <lb />
taking many people to <lb />
city. <lb />
By and <lb />
industries and enterprises <lb />
Mrs. Dr. V. N. Seawell and child <lb />
of Sanford, are visiting Mrs. P. E. <lb />
Dancy, Mrs. mother., <lb />
Mr. W. O. Parker bas rented the <lb />
residence on Fourth Street, former- <lb />
occupied by the Misses Lawrence. <lb />
D, B. Clayton, <lb />
preached in the Court House here <lb />
Wednesday and Thursday nights of <lb />
last week. <lb />
We regret to learn that our young <lb />
friend Mr. J. G. has been in <lb />
bad health for several days. All <lb />
I his friends wish him speedy <lb />
Mr. Ada Cherry, of <lb />
whose voice bas no equal in culture j <lb />
and sweetness, aided the choir <lb />
the Methodist Church during Con- <lb />
Progress. <lb />
Mr. D. W. W instead, who for <lb />
years has been a member of a <lb />
hardware firm here, left Saturday <lb />
for Mississippi Or. the night be- <lb />
fore his departure a number of his <lb />
friends gave him a collation at By- <lb />
an Bedding's ice cream parlor. <lb />
The Convention at <lb />
last week selected Mr. A- <lb />
M. Moore, this town, as one of the <lb />
Presidential for the State <lb />
at large. Perhaps he is as good a <lb />
selection as they could have made, <lb />
but he will never to <lb />
vote for <lb />
our farmer friends will <lb />
The ran shad has been some- <lb />
thing remarkable this season. The <lb />
skimmers caught them in large <lb />
quanta ties last week and they are <lb />
very flue, in fact, as those <lb />
caught earlier in the season. <lb />
Important Say. <lb />
The Board of County <lb />
and the Magistrates will <lb />
hold a joint session next Monday. <lb />
They will elect a Board of <lb />
and a Superintendent of <lb />
Public Instruction and will levy the <lb />
taxes. <lb />
Many of <lb />
be town next Monday. <lb />
the Reflector office gives a <lb />
cordial welcome to all. <lb />
Greenville has organized a base <lb />
ball association. Whether it will <lb />
produce anybody that can play or <lb />
not remains to be seen. <lb />
We are requested to announce <lb />
that the ladies of the M. E. Church <lb />
will have a festival during the first <lb />
week of June Court. <lb />
The warm weather takes the <lb />
crowd to ft Bedding's. Milk <lb />
shakes, ice cream, soda <lb />
and all such, know. <lb />
Life always seems more worth <lb />
living on a beautiful day, but it re- <lb />
quires some cloudy days to make <lb />
appreciate the bright ones. <lb />
The heavy rains last week caused <lb />
a rapid rise in the river. The water <lb />
is quite high now does not cause <lb />
inconvenience in passing. <lb />
The Hotel at Wash- <lb />
kept by Spencer Bros., is a <lb />
popular house with the <lb />
men. All fare well who stop there. <lb />
Everybody now says, it <lb />
warm V Not long since the cry <lb />
was. it Who'd live in <lb />
a world that was always the same. <lb />
The Southern Guardsman has been <lb />
revived at Winston, with Will X. <lb />
Coley as publisher. It contains <lb />
matter of interest to the Guard of <lb />
the State. <lb />
The M. E. Conference closed <lb />
at Washington is said to have been <lb />
the largest attended and most in- <lb />
of any ever held in this <lb />
District. <lb />
Coma Cm. <lb />
Since so many of the Greenville <lb />
girls attended the Conference at <lb />
learn that some of <lb />
the boys of that town are anxious to <lb />
engage board by the week up <lb />
Tell them, brother Gazette, board is <lb />
cheap here. <lb />
Postponed. <lb />
Owing to the steamer <lb />
having been previously engaged for <lb />
the day, the Baptist Sunday School <lb />
cannot have their excursion picnic <lb />
to Yankee Hall to-morrow, as bad <lb />
been announced. The dale will be <lb />
made known in due time. <lb />
A very enjoyable prayer meeting <lb />
lasting from fifteen minutes to half- <lb />
hour is held every day in the Re- <lb />
form Boom. These are held <lb />
the business men and all would <lb />
derive spiritual pleasure and benefit <lb />
from attending. <lb />
Hail. <lb />
We learn that a heavy hail and <lb />
wind storm passed through the <lb />
Northern portion of the county on <lb />
last Friday. Considerable damage <lb />
is reported from the <lb />
neighborhood. It was the severest <lb />
hail storm they have had in several <lb />
years. <lb />
lull <lb />
Greenville bad another jail <lb />
Sunday morning, in broad day <lb />
time. The jailer went to the prison <lb />
in the morning and turned the in- <lb />
mates from their cells into <lb />
as usual. He then left and <lb />
upon returning about two hours <lb />
later with their rations found the <lb />
building empty. It was discovered <lb />
that the prisoners had out a hole <lb />
through the brick wall separating <lb />
the corridor from fuel room, <lb />
and passing through this the <lb />
the exit was almost without <lb />
obstruction. Near the hole was <lb />
found an a chair post and a <lb />
piece of plank that had been torn <lb />
from the floor. With these tools <lb />
they made quick work of it. How <lb />
they got is not known but <lb />
it is supposed one of prisoners <lb />
slipped it from the fuel room. The <lb />
jail had five occupants, four of whom <lb />
made their escape. The other was <lb />
a partially insane man who got out <lb />
and went to look for the Sheriff in- <lb />
stead of going off with the prisoners. <lb />
This makes the second time prison- <lb />
have escaped from the jail this <lb />
year. <lb />
Warning. <lb />
committee in charge of Ma- <lb />
sonic yard request to warn per- <lb />
sons against entering premises <lb />
and breaking the flowers. <lb />
yard bas been frequently trespassed <lb />
and if the offenders do <lb />
do not desist they may expect to be <lb />
prosecuted. <lb />
You're Behind. <lb />
Mr. J. M. Stewart, of Grove town <lb />
ship, this county, saw squares on his <lb />
cot ton as early as May 20th. Who <lb />
can beat this Signboard. <lb />
That's nothing We wore riding <lb />
through the country last Sunday <lb />
and saw two or three bolls of open <lb />
cotton in a field. <lb />
Judging from the quantity of <lb />
lumber being placed upon bridge <lb />
the repairs to that structure are to <lb />
be general. The work will not be- <lb />
gin before it is needed. <lb />
The has received <lb />
many compliments upon its neat <lb />
appearance since put- <lb />
ting on a new dress of type. We <lb />
are proud of print. <lb />
On the first Thursday in June <lb />
Greenville Lodge No A. P. <lb />
A. M. will bold a communication for <lb />
the annual election of officers. A <lb />
full attendance is requested. <lb />
Our people will soon be casting <lb />
about as to where they shall spend <lb />
the summer. Believe we will take <lb />
ours in Greenville, this year, unless <lb />
delinquent do better. <lb />
Saturday was more like a day <lb />
that belongs to this season of the <lb />
year. Clear, bright and wearing <lb />
quite a summer temperature. We <lb />
have had other days like it since. <lb />
Some friends of the <lb />
are snowing their appreciation by <lb />
helping us get new subscribers. <lb />
That is how all should do, take a <lb />
lively interest in your county paper. <lb />
We want every Democrat in the <lb />
county to have the at <lb />
least during campaign, and for <lb />
that reason have made price <lb />
only cents for the balance of this <lb />
year. <lb />
Attention Firemen. <lb />
The members of Bough Beady <lb />
Fire Company are requested to <lb />
meet promptly at the Mayor's office, <lb />
on Monday, the day June, at <lb />
o'clock, p. M., as business of <lb />
will be transacted. <lb />
G- Hodges, Captain. <lb />
Grand. <lb />
. The electric display arising from <lb />
the approaching clouds, early Fri- <lb />
day night, was a marvel of beauty <lb />
and caused many to gaze at it in <lb />
wonder. The heavens seemed one <lb />
continuous sphere of brilliancy, so <lb />
rapid did the vivid flashes follow <lb />
each other. About midnight <lb />
rain came down in torrents. <lb />
The meeting begun last week at <lb />
Allen's School House, a few miles <lb />
above town, is meeting with <lb />
success. Many conversions <lb />
are reported and a large number <lb />
are anxiously seeking the way of <lb />
salvation. The interest is very <lb />
great. Geo. J. <lb />
Hamilton is assisting Mr. <lb />
in conducting the <lb />
Invitations. <lb />
is indebted to <lb />
Cadets E. C. Yellowley and W. F. <lb />
Pittman for a pretty invitation to <lb />
the celebration of the Washington <lb />
and Jefferson Literary Societies of <lb />
Davis School, LaGrange, on Juno <lb />
Messrs. H. H. Wilson, J. L. Flem- <lb />
and W. J. Little also have our <lb />
thanks Tor an invitation to the ex- <lb />
by the class of of Wake <lb />
Forest College, June 13th and <lb />
14th. The Wake Forest invitation <lb />
is newest and handsomest we <lb />
have seen. <lb />
Thanks for an invitation to <lb />
commencement exercises of <lb />
son Female College June <lb />
We acknowledge receipt of an in- <lb />
to the commencement <lb />
of Wilson Collegiate Institute <lb />
for young ladies June <lb />
An invitation has also been <lb />
ed to the commencement of Aurora <lb />
Academy, June Mr. H. A. <lb />
Latham will deliver the annual ad- <lb />
dress. <lb />
All eyes turn toward to- <lb />
day and anxiously await the an <lb />
of the nominees of the <lb />
Democratic Convention. <lb />
We a very interesting let- <lb />
to-day from Allen's School <lb />
House. Such communications are <lb />
always enjoyed by the readers of a <lb />
newspaper and we like to <lb />
have more of them. Lot us have <lb />
them from every section of <lb />
county. <lb />
THIS WEEK <lb />
A big rush at Higgs <lb />
this <lb />
week everybody is <lb />
alter those <lb />
WHY BECAUSE THEY ARE 331-3 PER <lb />
CENT CHEAPER THAN ANYWHERE <lb />
ELSE. <lb />
HIGGS <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
M. R. Lang. <lb />
LET GALLAGHER <lb />
Also let every man, woman and child go to our <lb />
store this week and look at the <lb />
awaiting them. We have set this week as <lb />
BARGAIN WEEK. <lb />
Look at this array of Stylish <lb />
Dress Goods and Trimmings <lb />
That can surpass any line ever before shown in <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
Mill k The most stylish Cloths and cuts at Popular prices. <lb />
KAN IT, SHOES mid SLIPPERS, <lb />
AGRICULTURAL LIME We to show a finer line of <lb />
Low Quarters and Slippers than we have. <lb />
FOR SALE BY HARRY SKINNER <lb />
Horses <lb />
Mules. <lb />
D. <lb />
Tarboro, X. C. <lb />
M. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb />
HATS, <lb />
Both Felt and Straw, of all the Stylish Shapes <lb />
and Colors. <lb />
A car load just arrived and now for <lb />
sale by. <lb />
at King's old stand. Will sell them <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
or at reasonable terms on time. bought <lb />
my stock for Cash and can afford to sell <lb />
as cheap as anyone. Give me a call. <lb />
procured several first-class <lb />
Vehicles and will take passengers to any <lb />
point at reasonable <lb />
The recent bad weather retarded <lb />
the farmers in work. We <lb />
hope there was no damage done be- <lb />
this and that a few days of <lb />
good weather will set the crops <lb />
right. <lb />
A meeting will be held in Farm- <lb />
ville on the second Sunday in Jane, <lb />
so we are informed, for the <lb />
pose of re-organizing the Temper- <lb />
Club. Several speakers <lb />
will be present. <lb />
We want every reader in the <lb />
county to feel that he has an inter <lb />
est in Its <lb />
are open to all for a free discussion <lb />
of topics that will be interesting to <lb />
the general public. <lb />
Beginning with the first June, <lb />
it be a good idea all the <lb />
stores to close early and give the <lb />
clerks a rest. Most of oar dry <lb />
goods have already adopted <lb />
an early hour for closing. <lb />
Header, have you not made <lb />
promises concern the amount yon <lb />
of owe the that remain <lb />
town yon promote best in- unfulfilled T Hold a few moments <lb />
honest consultation with eon <lb />
We. say look oat for dear; science and see if yon are acting en <lb />
we hope it come <lb />
wet weather <lb />
upon the Those to <lb />
to wheat will a <lb />
It ohm- <lb />
Annoying <lb />
We do not like to complain of a <lb />
congregation holding religious <lb />
vices, but the manner in which some <lb />
of the colored churches in town con- <lb />
duct their meetings is most an- <lb />
to persons living adjacent <lb />
to them. They keep the meetings <lb />
up until a very late and unreason- <lb />
able hour, creating shunts and noises <lb />
that can be heard several squares <lb />
distant. <lb />
Public Debate. <lb />
The Society will have <lb />
a public debate at the Institute <lb />
Chapel, Thursday night, June 7th. <lb />
Intemperance <lb />
bas been a greater evil than War. <lb />
T. Griffin, W. A. <lb />
B. Hearne, Little. Negative <lb />
A. D. Johnston, O. L. <lb />
F. C. Harding. After the debate, <lb />
Maj. Henry Harding will make a <lb />
short talk on the advantages of <lb />
Debating Societies. All former <lb />
students of the Institute are request <lb />
ed to attend this debate, for <lb />
purpose of organizing a <lb />
Association of Greenville Institute. <lb />
Speaking will commence at o'clock <lb />
sharp. <lb />
How They So <lb />
the ruling power of the <lb />
town government might be classed <lb />
with the wise and pound <lb />
Among their acts <lb />
was to withdraw the payment of <lb />
per month from Mr. T. F. Christman, <lb />
the night watchman employed by <lb />
private citizens, for which paltry <lb />
sum be bad been serving as <lb />
night police in addition to his regular <lb />
duties. Still they can pay two <lb />
men per month each for doing <lb />
comparatively nothing in day <lb />
time. And it goes without saying, <lb />
as we have heard it numerously <lb />
repeated, that Christman as <lb />
night officer was worth both of <lb />
day <lb />
Excellent Minister. <lb />
One of the best <lb />
might say most edifying and in- <lb />
which it was ever our <lb />
pleasure.-to listen, was delivered by <lb />
J. W. in Baptist <lb />
Church on last Sunday morning, his <lb />
subject being Patience. Would that <lb />
every person in community <lb />
could have been present and beard <lb />
this able discourse. It was follow- <lb />
ed at night by another excellent <lb />
Charity. Within our re- <lb />
collection Greenville bas bad <lb />
more learned and powerful minister <lb />
than Mr. and be daily <lb />
grows more popular with our people. <lb />
Truly he is man of superior attain- <lb />
and will accomplish good <lb />
work for the Master wherever be <lb />
labors. May bis tat long be cast <lb />
For Superintend <lb />
Mb. Editor time for <lb />
ting a Superintendent of Public <lb />
Schools draws near and if yon will <lb />
allow space in your highly esteemed <lb />
paper, I will say a few words in be <lb />
half of our present, most worthy <lb />
I have heard it talk- <lb />
ed that he will be of <lb />
and for what Is it because <lb />
be bas so performed the <lb />
duties resting him while <lb />
the people in that office T or do <lb />
they think there can be a man <lb />
who will make a better Super- <lb />
one better qualified for <lb />
discharges of the duties of that <lb />
office I If so, they may stop. He <lb />
will not be found. W in his <lb />
letter two weeks ago claims that <lb />
at experienced teacher is <lb />
qualified to superintend, and train <lb />
teachers in the best methods of teach- <lb />
He is perfectly right, <lb />
where is a man more experienced, <lb />
or one who has been more success- <lb />
in teaching, or who keeps better <lb />
with the methods of teaching <lb />
than that most esteemed gentleman, <lb />
Josephus Latham. Let us <lb />
have him again by all means. <lb />
Beet. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
W. A. Fields, and other Creditors <lb />
B. H. Hearne of <lb />
Notice is hereby given to all the <lb />
tors of the estate of Ivey <lb />
to file the evidences of their claims in my <lb />
office on or before the 9th day of July <lb />
1888. E. A. <lb />
May Superior Court. <lb />
Sale, Feed and Livery Stables. <lb />
Ice Ice <lb />
AND BUT- <lb />
their year's s <lb />
chasing elsewhere, <lb />
in all its branches. <lb />
Our stock is complete <lb />
T HAVE LOCATED MY ICE BOX AT <lb />
the store of Messrs. Harry Skinner Co., <lb />
where ICE can be had at all limes of <lb />
the day in quantities to suit at <lb />
Ice delivered in all parts of the town <lb />
morning without extra charge. All <lb />
orders personally attended to and care-1 <lb />
fully packed for out of town customers. <lb />
Thanking the public for their past lib- <lb />
patronage, I solicit a continuance of <lb />
the same. Respectfully, <lb />
E. B. MOORE, <lb />
May <lb />
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
SPICES, TEAS, <lb />
always at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one A com- <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb />
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb />
gold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to run, sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
LICHTENSTEIN SCHULTZ. <lb />
Greenville, C <lb />
JOHN NICHOLS <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA, Superior Court. <lb />
Pitt County. j <lb />
Asa Garris in behalf of himself all <lb />
other Creditors. <lb />
vs <lb />
Mary E. Garris, of B. Gar- <lb />
deed. <lb />
This Is an action commenced in the <lb />
Superior Court of Pitt county by Asa <lb />
Garris behalf of himself and all other <lb />
Creditors of John B. Garris, against <lb />
Mary E. of said John B. <lb />
Gain-, under Section 1448 ct seq, of the <lb />
Code of North Carolina, All Creditors <lb />
holding claims against estate of John <lb />
B. Garris, are hereby notified to <lb />
file their evidence of debt properly <lb />
with me at my office or with <lb />
said Administratrix on or before the 5th <lb />
day of July 1888 and institute such far- <lb />
proceeding as the Creditors may de- <lb />
sire. E. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
Moore Tucker Murphy for <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA Superior Court, <lb />
County j Before the Clerk <lb />
Notice is hereby given of <lb />
of the Benevolent Religions Bury- <lb />
Society of Pitt county, that the names <lb />
of the arc Matthew Kittrell, <lb />
John ward, Henry Brown, Ran- <lb />
Benjamin Price, Turner <lb />
Randolph. Aaron Evans <lb />
Blount Stocks. Smith, Benjamin <lb />
Dancy, James Evans and Lucas <lb />
and such others as they <lb />
with them. That the place of business <lb />
shall be in Pitt county. North Carolina <lb />
and Its purpose and business is mutual <lb />
aid to its members, to aid the sick and <lb />
bury dead, that the duration of the <lb />
corporation shall be thirty years, that <lb />
there shall be no capital stock. <lb />
This May 18th 1888- A; MOTE, <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
SUPERIOR COURTS <lb />
County. March Term, 1888 <lb />
B. H. Hearne, Martha J. <lb />
Allen Warren, Trustee of F. L. <lb />
Notice is hereby given to such creditors <lb />
of F. L. as desire to contest the <lb />
plaintiff's right in the above entitled ac- <lb />
to appear at the next term of Pitt <lb />
Superior Court, to be held at Greenville <lb />
on the 2nd Monday in June, and they <lb />
shall be beard. A. C Avery, <lb />
Judge Presiding. <lb />
E, A. Move, Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on the <lb />
21st day of April, 1887, as Executor of <lb />
the Estate of Thomas Hill, deceased, no- <lb />
is hereby given to all persons indebted <lb />
to the estate to make immediate payment <lb />
to the undersigned, and to all creditors of <lb />
said to present their claims prop- <lb />
authenticated, to the undersigned <lb />
on or before the 22nd day of April, <lb />
Or this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. This 9th day of May, 1888. <lb />
J. B. HILL, <lb />
Thomas Hill. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county on the <lb />
5th day of April, 1888, as <lb />
of J. G. James, deceased, notice <lb />
is hereby given to all persons indebted to <lb />
the estate to make immediate payment to <lb />
the undersigned, and to all creditors of <lb />
said estate to present their claims, prop- <lb />
authenticated, to the undersigned <lb />
on or before the 5th day April, <lb />
or this notice will be plead in bar of <lb />
their recovery. This 5th day of April <lb />
1888. F. G. JAMES. <lb />
of J. G. James, <lb />
OF <lb />
Greenville Institute, <lb />
Literary Address by 8- M-SMITH, <lb />
of Washington, N. C, in Skinner's Opera <lb />
House, <lb />
M AT P J, <lb />
ANNUAL CONCERT, at p. M. in the <lb />
same hall. <lb />
The Public and especially and <lb />
Patrons of the School cordially invited to <lb />
attend both exercises;. <lb />
COTTON <lb />
AND <lb />
BALTIMORE <lb />
NORFOLK <lb />
Established in Baltimore in 1870. <lb />
Will open a House in <lb />
in September, 1887, for the handling and <lb />
sale cotton, thus giving our customers <lb />
their choice of the two markets. <lb />
In ion. make it your business to visit <lb />
on away <lb />
in tire possession of so <lb />
. i. us this week, and we will send <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
BLIZZARD <lb />
The Tar River Transportation Company, <lb />
Alfred Forbes, President <lb />
J. B. Cherry, <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
N. M. Lawrence, Gen Mani <lb />
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen <lb />
The People's Line for travel on Tar <lb />
River. <lb />
The Steamer Greenville is the finest <lb />
and quickest boat on the river. She has <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
POLITE ATTENTIVE <lb />
A first-class Table furnished with the <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Freights received daily and through <lb />
Bills Lading given to all <lb />
J. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
PAST <lb />
But not so the LOW PRICES at the <lb />
Once More She is Chock o Block With <lb />
Dress Goods <lb />
In the Court, <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Ordered by the Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
county, and notice Is hereby given that no <lb />
order will be Issued after this date on the <lb />
Treasurer of Pitt county lot the payment <lb />
of money to any pauper outside the <lb />
Poor House except In oases of Insane <lb />
Paupers. <lb />
Ordered, further, that this notice be pub- <lb />
for three weeks In Eastern <lb />
By order of the Board. Given under <lb />
hand at office id N. C.<lb />
. rm co. <lb />
J. C. CHESTNUT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
Has on hand a well assorted stock of <lb />
Light Canned Goods, Fruits, <lb />
Confections, Tobacco, <lb />
Cigars, <lb />
which will be sold very lowest cash <lb />
prices. Give him a call, at the <lb />
the Opera House. <lb />
NORTH CAROL IN Superior Court. <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Martha E. Cobb vs. Warren Cobb. <lb />
The defendant above named will take <lb />
notice that an action, entitled as above, <lb />
has been commenced by the plaintiff in <lb />
the Superior Court of Pitt county to ob- <lb />
a divorce a from <lb />
the said Warren Cobb, her husband; and <lb />
the said defendant will further take notice <lb />
that he Is required to appear at the next <lb />
term of the Superior Court of said county <lb />
to be held on the Monday <lb />
the first in March 1888, at the <lb />
Court House of said county in Greenville, <lb />
N. C., and answer the complaint in said <lb />
action, or the plaintiff will apply to the <lb />
Court for the relief demanded in her com- <lb />
plaint. the 8th day of May 1888. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
NEW <lb />
JEWELRY STORE. <lb />
I have Just received another lot of line <lb />
WATCHES, CLOCKS, <lb />
and Jewelry. <lb />
which are offered at low prices <lb />
ill Ml ST <lb />
Specialty. <lb />
Particular Attention has been paid the selection <lb />
WHITE GOODS <lb />
Of which we have quite a quantity. <lb />
all wool Dress Goods cents per yard. <lb />
Cashmeres cents. Veiling cents. <lb />
WE HAVE ALSO LOT OF <lb />
CLOTHING, <lb />
Latest Styles and Best Quality at prices far be- <lb />
low anything in town. <lb />
Not Forget The Fact <lb />
That we still have a quantity of that <lb />
was purchased at cents in the dollar, thus <lb />
enabling us to sell at far below<lb />
STRAW HATS <lb />
At warm weather prices, cents up. <lb />
Worn <lb />
RYAN REDDING.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018887_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
MRS. E. A. SHEPPARD <lb />
HAS JUST TO HER STOCK <lb />
of Millinery has secured <lb />
the service-of an expel assistant. <lb />
All orders can now ha filled on the short- <lb />
est notice. Dry and Wet Stamping for <lb />
minting and embroidery neatly executed <lb />
While in the Northern markets she <lb />
very careful to only the best ant <lb />
latest style goods in the Millinery line. <lb />
ts prepared to offer purchasers special in <lb />
TOWS <lb />
OF <lb />
KEROSENE OIL. <lb />
By JAMES A. SMITH <lb />
wilt, deliver, daily, <lb />
it <lb />
to parties desiring it. Kerosene Oil. as <lb />
rood as any in market at the <lb />
bat Price now paid at Mai stores. <lb />
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED <lb />
Save time, money and trouble by per- <lb />
us to fill your orders at your <lb />
and places of business. <lb />
EMPORIUM <lb />
for Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT, <lb />
the Opera House, at which place <lb />
I have recently and beam have <lb />
everything in <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
With all the new <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
at reasonable figure <lb />
for outside of n y <lb />
promptly executed. Very <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
STEAM ENGINES <lb />
and all other machine- repaired at short <lb />
at home or at shop. Iron and <lb />
Brass Turning done in the best manner. <lb />
Cylinders bated, Mod-Is made to order. <lb />
Locks repaired. or fitted. Pipe <lb />
and threaded. Gins repaired in best <lb />
manner. Bring on work. General <lb />
Jobbing done by O. NUMBER, <lb />
May Greenville X. C. <lb />
WILMINGTON B. B. <lb />
and Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb />
No K, No No <lb />
Dated H daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
Weldon o pm <lb />
Mount <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar am <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
Lt am <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Lt Wilmington <lb />
Lt Magnolia am <lb />
Lt Warsaw <lb />
pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Ar Goldsboro <lb />
Lt Fayetteville <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Wilson am pm <lb />
Ar Mount <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Lt Tarboro <lb />
Ar Weldon pm <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train en Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
Halifax for Scotland Neck at 3.00 <lb />
P. M. leaves Scotland Neck <lb />
A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
B. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M. Sunday P M, <lb />
i. N C. P M, P M. <lb />
Returning leaves Williamston, daily <lb />
Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb />
at, arrive Tarboro, N C. A M, <lb />
AM. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. M, <lb />
arrive Smithfield, N C. AM. Be- <lb />
turning leaves Smithfield. A M. <lb />
N C. A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rook v <lb />
Mount at P M. arrives Nashville <lb />
PM, Spring Hope PM. <lb />
tares Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
AM. arrives Rocky Mount II A <lb />
M daily, except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at GO <lb />
PM. Returning leave Clinton at <lb />
M, connecting at Warsaw with Nos. Jo V 154th -tn-.-t <lb />
and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A Fayette- <lb />
ville Branch is No. Northbound is <lb />
No. except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. South will stop only at <lb />
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. <lb />
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line. <lb />
Trains close connection for all <lb />
points North via Richmond and Wash- <lb />
All trains run solid between <lb />
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb />
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE. <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. KENLY, Transportation <lb />
T. M. EMERSON. Passenger <lb />
B. <lb />
M. B. <lb />
Edwards IN <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
We the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOB PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOB MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
AND BINDERS, <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
HOTEL <lb />
SPENCER BROS., <lb />
THE HOME <lb />
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE. <lb />
waiters. Good rooms. Best <lb />
Ma the market affords. When in <lb />
tor. at the <lb />
I Ann St., Washington. C. <lb />
i MISTAKE. <lb />
tick Wife fat <lb />
So Saves fl<lb />
I am a wood carver by trade and it is <lb />
out of my line to write I. but my <lb />
wife thought it was no than right <lb />
that should let yon know what <lb />
remedy has done for me, and I think <lb />
too. <lb />
I live in East 157th west of <lb />
Third avenue, have lived there for <lb />
about years, where I own <lb />
real estate. to the time I am about <lb />
to mention I had a strong, well <lb />
man. Tin iv was more or <lb />
malaria in law but I had <lb />
not It was <lb />
in 1880 first attack, came <lb />
on as such attacks do, with <lb />
headache. and <lb />
light fever <lb />
afterward-, a to yawn and <lb />
stretch, and m f i seas <lb />
at that time h Brothers, <lb />
furniture in West <lb />
street. h t-i.- attars would wear <lb />
off. but as it I i. tiled a well- <lb />
known and mama Morris- <lb />
who gave in me and told me <lb />
what to do. I can an las first four <lb />
and a half or five years of <lb />
j in few words. I <lb />
I laid up for day or two, hut on <lb />
i the whole to my work. kept <lb />
iv from <lb />
j year to year, i g-Ming <lb />
and worse. km sorely, all the <lb />
time. My was now well de- <lb />
fined its were steady and <lb />
I hail in its worst <lb />
form, and it was down in <lb />
of all that do or the doc- <lb />
toW Could do. held me in aria <lb />
fire in fl burning coal mine. The <lb />
and and over me and <lb />
nothing was to it. I <lb />
fast strength, and about <lb />
March. knocked off work entire- <lb />
and to In-down i-k, and <lb />
to die for all ML I down so <lb />
rapidly that soon unable to <lb />
walk any I weal from <lb />
room in h only by <lb />
friends holding nu- no The <lb />
doses of j. i until I <lb />
often took M. The <lb />
effects of stimulation <lb />
to i It broke <lb />
my all often walked the <lb />
or it. all night <lb />
long, to <lb />
or even temper <lb />
was extremely As to food, <lb />
one of my little hen would eat <lb />
more in a meal in a day. <lb />
would order food and turn from <lb />
it in disgust. I Bred and <lb />
other stimulants and .;, if, like a <lb />
bear in winter. The set my <lb />
head in a whirl, rind I lie <lb />
as a medicine male stomach so <lb />
Kick I could not tolerate it. <lb />
From pound- i <lb />
I ran down to the weight <lb />
of a light scarcely better <lb />
than a skeleton. <lb />
If had taken a hatchet and <lb />
knocked mM and killed I should <lb />
have . <lb />
During the latter part of this period, <lb />
early in my <lb />
Miller. no use in my taking <lb />
any money of yon. do <lb />
any good. might pour of <lb />
nine your and it wouldn't <lb />
help <lb />
On the strength of this I gave up the <lb />
Use of quinine altogether, and made up <lb />
my to do nothing more and take <lb />
chances. <lb />
Three weeks afterwards-about the <lb />
of am an advertise- <lb />
of ill a New York <lb />
She told me of it. Stuff and <lb />
nonsense it can't do me any <lb />
But she went to a <lb />
less, to get it. <lb />
her against In- said it was <lb />
nothing mi-a.- not <lb />
to throw M-r it. <lb />
He said he i. get <lb />
it if she in having it. Turn- <lb />
away in my wife to <lb />
our Mr. A. G. H <lb />
who got her a bottle at a drug store in <lb />
Sixth avenue. <lb />
Almost against my will, and without <lb />
the least bits, I organ taking It In <lb />
one week I k tier. I to <lb />
sleep. I stopped I <lb />
began to have all to gain <lb />
strength. Tin- mow the Bret of <lb />
June, and by end of that <lb />
month t back at my at C. <lb />
Smith's scroll factor in 116th <lb />
Street, where I now. <lb />
Since then I never lost a day <lb />
from Taking only, <lb />
about forty pellets in four . doses <lb />
a day, I to gain. The ma- <lb />
t-. in my <lb />
and I've got bark my old <lb />
my old <lb />
strength I am an <lb />
to my-elf and to my friends, and <lb />
if did not o this I -i know <lb />
what did. The only greater thing it <lb />
could do would hr to man <lb />
to life. A <lb />
I . X.-w York. <lb />
P. S. Fort he f the <lb />
-tat.-m. I <lb />
gentlemen, pr . ac- <lb />
Mr. Alex- <lb />
Weir. St.; Mr. George <lb />
Seaman. and <lb />
Mr. A. street <lb />
and Mr. P. F. <lb />
id <lb />
Mr. John East <lb />
Mr. John <lb />
125th street, and I <lb />
also reply to letter- of <lb />
We submit that e astonish- <lb />
cure. . . I- by <lb />
men. is .- <lb />
and candid thinking <lb />
And we that <lb />
when turn away customers <lb />
the a <lb />
they do not happen to have it <lb />
on hand, they do a great wrong. II <lb />
this afflicted man bad not disregarded <lb />
advice and sent else- <lb />
where for the remedy he would without <lb />
doubt have in-en in his <lb />
Other letters of a character <lb />
from prominent both which <lb />
stamp as a remedy of <lb />
doubted merit, will be sent on <lb />
e. 81.00, or bottle. 85.00. <lb />
GREENVILLE. M. C. <lb />
THE SHADOWS. <lb />
Clouds may float down on our <lb />
our meek flowers with <lb />
Life may grow darkened, though love <lb />
has thrown <lb />
The strength of its light it; <lb />
Till longer and deeper the shadows <lb />
grown. <lb />
Hide the halo of bliss that crowned <lb />
of <lb />
peace <lb />
And crush <lb />
scorning. <lb />
Yet never this song in our spirits shall <lb />
cease <lb />
After the shadows, the morning. <lb />
Never so closely does pain fold its wings <lb />
But the white of Sympathy's <lb />
near it; <lb />
And each tear that the dark of <lb />
Misery wings <lb />
Brings the touch of a blessing to <lb />
cheer <lb />
As fades the dim night at the coming <lb />
of day. <lb />
When it weaves its bright web of <lb />
adorning. <lb />
So grief from out life path <lb />
away. <lb />
Come, after our shadows, the morning <lb />
THE <lb />
JAMES <lb />
Love comes back to an empty heart, <lb />
Or a being clothed in love's sweet guise <lb />
Love bids sorrow and tears depart; <lb />
The dear old light in the tender eyes <lb />
Like a swift, bright sunbeam hastens <lb />
here <lb />
And warms the life that was cold and <lb />
drear. <lb />
The old. old love of the days of yore I <lb />
It is shame V Oh love, confess. <lb />
Is it not deeper than e'er before. <lb />
To cheer, to guide, and forever bless <lb />
Answer me. Love turn not away ; <lb />
Speak to m ; say you have come to <lb />
stay. <lb />
Who can be sure of Love's replies. <lb />
Hiding his myriad masks <lb />
Yet to my soul this dear disguise <lb />
Savors of Heaven ; all it asks. <lb />
Swift, sweet tears to the eyelids <lb />
Love comes lack to an empty heart. <lb />
Home Journal. <lb />
A Good Country for Poor Boys. <lb />
The United States is the best <lb />
country in the world for poor boys. <lb />
Young America always has a chance <lb />
to show what is in him. No boy id <lb />
the United States, however poor he <lb />
is, or however gloomy his prospects <lb />
may seem, need fear to strike cat <lb />
hopefully for himself. If he has <lb />
good health, determination and <lb />
the possibilities before him can <lb />
scarcely be limited. <lb />
About forty years ago a schooner <lb />
foundered Lake Erie, not far from <lb />
the Ohio shore. A few hours later <lb />
an infant boy, tied to a mattress <lb />
and supported by life-preservers, <lb />
was found by a farmer. The <lb />
history of the child could not be <lb />
learned, and the farmer adopted <lb />
him as his own. After eighteen <lb />
years on the scraps of <lb />
time having meanwhile been spent <lb />
in boy obtained the <lb />
of janitor in a school, and <lb />
struggled manfully to pay for his <lb />
tuition and get an education. In <lb />
spite of the interruptions to his stud- <lb />
be ranked with the brightest <lb />
boys, and was remarked for his fix- <lb />
of purpose. He went back <lb />
the farm, and after his day's work <lb />
was done, read law by light of <lb />
the kitchen fire. Subsequently he <lb />
was admitted to the bar, worked <lb />
hard, distinguished himself, and <lb />
was elected a judge. Some years <lb />
later he was sent to Congress, where <lb />
be is now known as Edward Lane. <lb />
the Representative from the seven- <lb />
congressional district of <lb />
This sketch from actual life shows <lb />
what golden opportunities lie within <lb />
the grasp of the poorest boys this <lb />
Republic, if they only do their best <lb />
in whatever circumstances Prov- <lb />
may place them. <lb />
Fan in the House, <lb />
The modes of death's approach are <lb />
various, and statistics show conclusively <lb />
that more persons die from diseases of the <lb />
Throat and Lungs than any other. It is <lb />
probable everyone, without <lb />
receives vast numbers of Tubercle <lb />
Germs into the the system and where <lb />
these germs fall upon suitable soil they <lb />
start into life and develop, at first slowly <lb />
and is shown by a slight tickling <lb />
in the throat and if allowed to con- <lb />
their ravages they extend to the <lb />
lung- producing Consumption and to the <lb />
head, causing Catarrh. Now all this is <lb />
dangerous and if allowed to proceed will <lb />
in time cause death. At the onset you <lb />
must act with promptness; Allowing a <lb />
cold to go without attention is dangerous <lb />
and may lose you your life. As soon as <lb />
you feel that something is wrong with <lb />
your Throat, Lungs or Nostrils, obtain a <lb />
bottle of German Syrup. It <lb />
will give you immediate relief. <lb />
Good and Bad News. <lb />
Democratic State Executive <lb />
Committee. <lb />
Raleigh, N. C, May 1888. <lb />
To the Delegates to the Democratic <lb />
Convention. <lb />
The railroad in the <lb />
State have generally agreed to hare <lb />
round trip tickets at excursion rates <lb />
on sale for delegates to the Demo <lb />
State Convention to be held <lb />
in this city on May 30th mat, to be <lb />
good from May 28th to 4th, <lb />
both inclusive. The delegates will <lb />
be careful to buy ticket to Raleigh <lb />
and return. R. H. <lb />
Chairman, <lb />
B. C- Secretary. <lb />
Bad news weakens the action of <lb />
the heart, oppresses the lungs, de- <lb />
the appetite, stops the <lb />
and partially suspends the <lb />
functions of the system. An <lb />
of flushes the face; fear <lb />
blanches, joy illuminates it, and an <lb />
instant thrill electrifies a million of <lb />
nerves. Surprise spurs the pulse <lb />
into a gallop. infuses <lb />
great energy. Volition commands, <lb />
and hundreds of muscles spring to <lb />
excite. Powerful e mo tons often <lb />
kill the body at a stroke. <lb />
and Sophocles died of joy <lb />
at the Grecian games. The news of <lb />
defeat killed Phillip Y. One of the <lb />
Popes died of an emotion of the <lb />
on seeing his pet monkey <lb />
rolled in pontificals, occupying the <lb />
chair of State. The Doorkeeper of <lb />
on expired on hearing of the <lb />
surrender of Corn Eminent <lb />
public speakers have often died in <lb />
the midst of an impassioned burst <lb />
of eloquence or when the deep <lb />
that produced it has subsided. <lb />
young Parisian, died <lb />
when be heard that the musical <lb />
prize for which he had competed <lb />
was adjudged to another <lb />
Onward Is The Word.<lb />
Th., ruin enters <lb />
at the following <lb />
subscribers, year. 6.00 <lb />
subscribers, year. 10.00 <lb />
One copy, I year ran to one send- <lb />
a club of ten. <lb />
GOOD ADVICE. <lb />
I used it In the spring of 1885 with ex- <lb />
results for bronchitis and catarrh, <lb />
And I have taken pleasure in <lb />
ding it to invalids. Several have sent for <lb />
it and it has worked well; I think it will <lb />
do good in So writes a clergyman <lb />
in Portland He., when writing Oct. <lb />
to to send him <lb />
another full Treatment of Compound Ox- <lb />
This Compound Oxygen has a history <lb />
wonderful its way, and worth reading <lb />
by whose life Is worth <lb />
serving. This history is embodied In a <lb />
very two hundred page <lb />
a sent free by mall on <lb />
Mr. Cox of New York said that <lb />
but for some personal allusions <lb />
which bad occurred during the de- <lb />
bate he would have kept silent. On <lb />
the first day of the session be <lb />
bad said that he believed the tariff <lb />
was a business question, and should <lb />
so be considered, aloof from parties, <lb />
away from personalities. Sum gen- <lb />
proposed that the surplus <lb />
should be spent Gov. Allen had <lb />
once said that a surplus was <lb />
worst thing a government could <lb />
have. It was as well to try to run a <lb />
powder mill in hell as an honest <lb />
government a treasury <lb />
Applause. In 1861 be gone to <lb />
the Custom Houses in Boston <lb />
New York and found the cost of <lb />
some articles imported there. Alter <lb />
making computations and allowing <lb />
for the premium on gold he had <lb />
found that in order to get <lb />
into the Treasury country <lb />
paid the enormous sum of <lb />
that never saw the treasury. <lb />
Deducting the GO per cent, for de- <lb />
paper money, it would be <lb />
found that in order to get <lb />
treasury the country <lb />
now paid at least <lb />
He did not want to quarrel with <lb />
gentlemen who had local interests <lb />
at stake. He would not quarrel <lb />
the gentleman from Michigan <lb />
because he wanted <lb />
lumber salt protected; nor with <lb />
the gentleman from Vermont, <lb />
who appealed for wool. <lb />
He would like them to commit what <lb />
said ought to have been <lb />
reciprocal brigand- <lb />
age. If Pennsylvania robbed too <lb />
from Massachusetts, let Mass- <lb />
rob something from Penn- <lb />
; let Connecticut, the land <lb />
of nutmegs and corsets, which re- <lb />
called tender memories to members <lb />
of Congress, laughter, make a raid <lb />
upon Tennessee and Carolina <lb />
and Virginia after peanuts. Laugh- <lb />
That was way to carry on <lb />
a tariff reciprocal The <lb />
J Devil, when he came to earth, was <lb />
greatly delighted in going around <lb />
and finding that the most select of <lb />
his instruments was a cunning old <lb />
cheated by statute ; but <lb />
then the Devil had never read the <lb />
tariff law, with its ad <lb />
specific duties. If he had be never <lb />
would have bought the beautiful <lb />
dress he wore, or be would have got <lb />
it through the Custom House with <lb />
out paying taxes. <lb />
how was the Devil dressed r <lb />
Oh. he was dressed in his Sunday lest. <lb />
With of scarlet coats of <lb />
blue; <lb />
there was a hole where the tail came <lb />
Laughter. <lb />
The tallow had cried <lb />
out the external competition <lb />
of sunlight. What cheap pauper <lb />
labor the sun was. Laughter. <lb />
Joshua most have been a protection <lb />
for be had made sun stand <lb />
still for a while. Under this policy <lb />
of free light What would become <lb />
the whaling industries of New Eng <lb />
laud Down sun; up with <lb />
chaos and old protection. Laugh <lb />
He bad made a calculation <lb />
about the infant industries of this <lb />
their power of suction <lb />
from the maternal government. He <lb />
could show that power of suction <lb />
of those industries amount to over <lb />
10,000.000 horse power. He could <lb />
tell the amount of milk sucked by <lb />
the copper of Michigan, the iron of <lb />
Pennsylvania, the salt of York, <lb />
the wool of Ohio, Of course <lb />
there was struggling as to which <lb />
infant have the right of way, <lb />
which should get the first pull at the <lb />
pap. It was said of Hercules that <lb />
he had pulled so hard that he <lb />
led the milk and made the <lb />
Way. Gentlemen on other side <lb />
said that the Mills bill was a radical <lb />
measure. He did not see that a re <lb />
of seven percent was much of <lb />
a free trade reduction. <lb />
ed that gentlemen other side <lb />
did follow the example of <lb />
tallow chandler of France, who <lb />
for the suppression of all <lb />
gas producing machines, and want- <lb />
ed all windows, curtains, openings, <lb />
chinks, and clefts closed, so that the <lb />
sun could not enter, so that the <lb />
chandler might have all the <lb />
which would follow the closing <lb />
out of sun. It was proposed to <lb />
shut out the sun as a foreign cheap <lb />
labor producer. Her- <lb />
that was <lb />
The <lb />
argued that the States <lb />
had protection and high wages, <lb />
therefore protection brought nigh <lb />
wages. Apply the <lb />
to England. England had <lb />
House of Lords and low wages; <lb />
therefore, House of Lords made <lb />
low wages. The United States bad <lb />
tramps and high wages; therefore <lb />
tramps made high wages. Ireland <lb />
had no snakes and no wages; there- <lb />
fore, snakes made high wages. <lb />
truth was that <lb />
wages were a matter utterly <lb />
to a discussion to tariff. <lb />
Mr. Cox next turned his attention <lb />
to Mr. Burrow's speech, and <lb />
ally that peroration, <lb />
where, like Silas he <lb />
into The gentleman, after, <lb />
in eloquent language, picturing the <lb />
advancement and progress of the <lb />
new Senate, had quoted its <lb />
coming tongue and quoting <lb />
Charles law rhyme for the <lb />
incoming of absolute free trade. <lb />
laughter and He <lb />
bad quoted verse at <lb />
Democratic caucus held at the time <lb />
of the deadlock, and be did not <lb />
know how the gentleman bad got <lb />
hold of it, unless it was that Mr. <lb />
Perkins, Kansas had mad- <lb />
wandered into the <lb />
had heard it and bad <lb />
given it to the gentleman. He <lb />
would like to have a toning fork <lb />
here, so that all might <lb />
its coming, tongue and pen ; <lb />
Aid it, hopes of honest men , <lb />
Aid it, paper ; aid it, type ; <lb />
Aid it for the hour is ripe. <lb />
And our earnest should not slacken into <lb />
play; <lb />
Men of thought and men of action, clear <lb />
the way <lb />
Bat be could not get a tuning <lb />
fork because tariff was too high. <lb />
Laughter. In conclusion Mr. Cox <lb />
said that the country had grown <lb />
from sea to sea and from golf to <lb />
lake, expanding its progress. Why <lb />
should we not expand oar liberty <lb />
also We bad liberty to sleep and <lb />
teach and worship according to <lb />
dictates or conscience. We had <lb />
Why not <lb />
liberty also Why not give men <lb />
right to the earnings of their <lb />
own labor t Why take from one <lb />
class to give to another t <lb />
make a slave of labor Why put <lb />
the shackles on any <lb />
not stand for freedom everywhere. <lb />
Let us, be said, be true to the <lb />
of our Constitution; true to <lb />
freedom, for avails the <lb />
plow or soil or land or life if freedom <lb />
fails Applause. <lb />
MARKET. <lb />
Corrected weekly by <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Grocers. <lb />
wonderful discovery <lb />
been made and that too by a lady in this <lb />
county. Disease fastened its clutches <lb />
upon her and for seven years she with- <lb />
stood its severest but her vital or- <lb />
were undermined and death seem- <lb />
ed imminent. For three months she <lb />
coughed incessantly could not sleep. <lb />
She bought of of Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery for Consumption and was <lb />
so much relieved on first dose that <lb />
she slept all and with one bottle <lb />
has been miraculously cured Her name <lb />
is Mrs- Luther Thus write W. C. <lb />
Co., of Shelby. N. a <lb />
free trial bottle at Drug <lb />
Store, <lb />
Seldom What They Seem. <lb />
One man is ordered to eat eggs <lb />
because they arc nutritious, and an <lb />
other is cautioned to leave <lb />
alone because they produce bile. <lb />
This is a sort turvy Id. <lb />
No seems to be satisfied. One <lb />
is struggling to get justice and <lb />
another is flying from it. <lb />
The prize fighter reforms and <lb />
conies a preacher, while <lb />
logical student leaves his <lb />
to become a professional baseball <lb />
pitcher. <lb />
One man keeps a pistol to protect <lb />
himself against burglars, while his <lb />
neighbor doesn't keep one for fear <lb />
of shoot some member of the <lb />
house by mistake. <lb />
The man who can make a <lb />
year as a general thing can't save a <lb />
cent, while man who is thrifty <lb />
and wise is seldom so gifted that he <lb />
can earn anything at all. <lb />
One rich man wears poor clothes <lb />
because he is rich can do <lb />
thing, while a poor man wears fine <lb />
clothes because he is poor, and <lb />
to create the impression that <lb />
he is not. <lb />
The laborer with ten children <lb />
keeps out of debt on a week, <lb />
while an unmarried bank of- <lb />
with a week can't get <lb />
along without helping to the <lb />
bank's funds. <lb />
man escapes all the diseases <lb />
that flesh is heir to and is killed on <lb />
the railroad another goes <lb />
through a half a dozen wars with- <lb />
a scratch, and then dies of <lb />
whooping cough. <lb />
Mess Pork- <lb />
Bulk Sides <lb />
Bulk Shoulders <lb />
Bacon Sides <lb />
Bacon Shoulders <lb />
Pitt County Hams <lb />
Sugar Cured Hams <lb />
Flour <lb />
Coffee <lb />
Brown Sugar <lb />
Granulated Sugar <lb />
Syrup <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
Snuff <lb />
Lard <lb />
Butter <lb />
Cheese <lb />
Eggs <lb />
Meal <lb />
Corn. <lb />
Irish Potatoes <lb />
O. A. Salt <lb />
Liverpool Salt <lb />
Hides <lb />
Rags <lb />
Beeswax <lb />
Bread <lb />
Star Lye <lb />
Kerosene Oil <lb />
15.00 <lb />
toO <lb />
1.25 to 5.50 <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
THE <lb />
Eastern Reflector, <lb />
CASH <lb />
The <lb />
W. D. Suit, Druggist, <lb />
can recommend Electric <lb />
Bitters as the very best remedy. Every <lb />
bottle sold has given immediate relief in <lb />
every case. One man took six bottles, <lb />
and was cured of Rheumatism of years <lb />
Hare, <lb />
ville, Ohio, affirms ; best selling <lb />
medicine I have ever handled in my <lb />
experience is Electric <lb />
Thousands of others have added <lb />
testimony, so that the is <lb />
that Electric Bitters do cure all dis- <lb />
eases of the Liver, Kidneys or blood. <lb />
Only a half dollar a bottle at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
We have recently purchased the stock <lb />
Hardware belonging to M. A. <lb />
and will replenish the same with all the <lb />
leading goods in the <lb />
HARDWARE LINE. <lb />
Implements Tools, Ta- <lb />
and Cutlery, Plow Bolts <lb />
and Castings. Cart Material, <lb />
Doors, Sash, Blinds, <lb />
Screws, Nails, <lb />
Glass, Putty, Lead, <lb />
Oil, and <lb />
Material <lb />
of description. <lb />
Harrows and Cultivators, Gins, Grist <lb />
Mills, Cider and Fan Mills, Saw <lb />
Ii. fact all goods kept in a <lb />
Our Summer Normals. <lb />
We give below a list of the officers <lb />
and teachers of the Normal schools <lb />
to be held in North Carolina this <lb />
C. D. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
W. A- <lb />
Blair. E. P. Moses M. <lb />
C. S. E. C. Branson. J. J. <lb />
Blair, Mrs. J. A. Begins <lb />
July <lb />
H E <lb />
Shepherd, B. E. <lb />
Atkins, P. P, Mrs- II. M. <lb />
Davidson, Miss Katie Millard. Be- <lb />
July <lb />
Alexander Graham. <lb />
Prof. Collier Cobb, J. C. <lb />
Meares, Miss Cook. July <lb />
L. <lb />
G. L. Wills, <lb />
W. J- Miss M. E. Goodloe, <lb />
Miss G- Sharp, Miss Osborne. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
Elizabeth <lb />
S. L. Sheep. S. <lb />
Noble, Prof. Houck. Mrs. . G. <lb />
Thompson. Begins July <lb />
S. E. <lb />
Warren. C. D. Principal. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
Greensboro <lb />
B. F. Blair. Begins July <lb />
We thank the public for the liberal pat- <lb />
that they have given while <lb />
managing the M. A. Jarvis hardware bus- <lb />
and ask that they continue the same <lb />
to us. Our motto will be <lb />
FOR <lb />
D CO. <lb />
ALFRED FORBES <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions. Clothing <lb />
Hats, Boots, Shoes. Hardware, Furniture <lb />
and Groceries. Rock Lime kept constant- <lb />
on hand. <lb />
I have just received a large lot of <lb />
Braces for boys, girls, ladies and <lb />
gentlemen. need only to be tried to <lb />
give <lb />
I can now offer to the Jobbing Trade <lb />
superior advantages in Geo. A. Clark <lb />
spool cotton which I will sell t <lb />
cents per doz., per cent. off. <lb />
I keep on hand a large supply of Hos- <lb />
ford's Bread Preparation, <lb />
sell at wholesale prices to merchants. <lb />
The patronage of the public is very res- <lb />
solicited. <lb />
UNDERTAKING. <lb />
KT. O. <lb />
D. J. Editor Proprietor. <lb />
to-. <lb />
price Hi <lb />
Per Year, <lb />
IN ADVANCE <lb />
THE <lb />
The best In the world Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe- <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Corns, all Skin Eruptions, <lb />
and cures Piles, or no pay re- <lb />
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price, <lb />
per box. For <lb />
Having associated B. S. Sheppard <lb />
with in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people in that <lb />
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb />
me for past services have been placed in <lb />
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
----M---- <lb />
REFLECTOR IS THE <lb />
gift I <lb />
Newspaper ever published in <lb />
Greenville. It the <lb />
LATEST NEWS <lb />
and gives More Reading Matter for <lb />
the money than other paper <lb />
published in North Carolina. <lb />
The Reflector gives a variety <lb />
of news, NATIONAL, STATE <lb />
and LOCAL, and will devote it- <lb />
self to the material advancement <lb />
of the section in which it <lb />
Send name get a <lb />
FREE SAMPLE <lb />
fie Unities if <lb />
is called to tho as its <lb />
large and growing circulation <lb />
makes it an excellent medium <lb />
through which to reach the people <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 finest Metal Case down to a <lb />
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We arc fitted <lb />
up with all conveniences and can render <lb />
satisfactory services to all who patronize <lb />
us FLANAGAN SHEPPARD. <lb />
Feb. 22nd. . <lb />
BUY <lb />
EXCELSIOR <lb />
ALWAYS SATISFACTORY <lb />
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS <lb />
ILL PURCHASERS CAN BE SUITES <lb />
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb />
it <lb />
Isaac L Step cart A Co,, Baltimore, II <lb />
FOB <lb />
L. C. TERRELL, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
DO T WANT TO SAVE MONET <lb />
If so buy <lb />
Combined Bum <lb />
It is worth as much in cotton Acid <lb />
as a good hand. For sale by <lb />
J. H. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. <lb />
Williamston, N C. <lb />
LITTLE, HOUSE Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
N S. Agent <lb />
N. C. <lb />
. . <lb />
Subscribe to the <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having administered <lb />
on the estate <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons <lb />
claims against said decedent to <lb />
sent the same to such administrator on <lb />
or before the 10th day of April 1889, or <lb />
this notice will be plead In bar of their <lb />
recovery. This 30th day of March 1888. <lb />
S. A. GAINER, <lb />
of Aaron Whitehurst <lb />
BARBER SHOP. <lb />
The undersigned has fitted up his Shop Ir <lb />
FIRST-CLASS STYLE, <lb />
and any person desiring a <lb />
CLEAN PLEASANT SHAVE <lb />
CUT, SHAMPOO, <lb />
or anything in the <lb />
TONSORIAL ART <lb />
Is Invited to me a trial. <lb />
guaranteed or no charge <lb />
CULLY <lb />
Will Color One to Four Pound <lb />
Of Dress Goods, <lb />
Garments, I <lb />
Yarns, Rags, etc. j <lb />
A Child can use them I <lb />
The PUREST, STRONGEST FASTEST <lb />
of all Ir. Warranted lo Dy <lb />
ire the ht colors. for <lb />
Don, and all Fancy leading <lb />
make the Best and <lb />
WAITING INK ONE QUART <lb />
LAUNDRY BLUE f IO Cents. <lb />
for and a <lb />
Cabinet Photo. for <lb />
fr hook an <lb />
ind <lb />
Card, or <lb />
CO. <lb />
For Gilding or Fancy <lb />
DIAMOND PAINTS. <lb />
Silver, BrooM, Only IO <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the <lb />
Potent Office or in the Court <lb />
to for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the U. S. Patent <lb />
engaged in Patents <lb />
and can obtain patents <lb />
less those more <lb />
from Washington. <lb />
When model or drawing is sea <lb />
we advise as to <lb />
of charge, and we make no charge <lb />
unless we obtain Patents. <lb />
We refer, bore, to the Poet Mat <lb />
the Supt. of the Money <lb />
Div., and to officials of tho U. <lb />
Patent Office. For circular, <lb />
terms and reference to actual ell <lb />
in own Slate, or county <lb />
address. C A. <lb />
Washington, U. C <lb />
; DO YOU A DOG <lb />
If wk mm f. <lb />
containing <lb />
, i i i i <lb />
tier r.- <lb />
fr of <lb />
I of ell<lb />
color, ti . <lb />
lot ail of fowl; <lb />
I bow in <lb />
I fin <lb />
I about end m f o J <lb />
from . t. m <lb />
oat for <lb />
KEEP GAGE <lb />
If en, HOOK OF I <lb />
Treatment of ell <lb />
birds, for <lb />
tun end I <lb />
an All at I <lb />
ell feel <lb />
Id <lb />
ASSOCIATED <lb />
Sooth Pi, <lb />
Ii kepi on at <lb />
GENTS <lb />
BUILDING <lb />
AYER SON'S<lb />
I CURE <lb />
FITS <lb />
I y emu I do not mean M <lb />
Stop them a then rs <lb />
turn I A CUBS. <lb />
X bars made <lb />
FITS, or <lb />
FALLING SICKNESS, <lb />
the others hat <lb />
a son <lb />
Send at once for a treat It and a Tin I <lb />
of ray Infallible <lb />
and post It costs you nothing for , <lb />
trial, It will you. Address <lb />
ROOT. <lb />
Aft-r Forty Mi <lb />
n Um <lb />
One <lb />
for it <lb />
end <lb />
tries, of <lb />
continue to act m <lb />
for <lb />
etc . for the United States, <lb />
o id <lb />
and all other <lb />
is and facilities are <lb />
, prepared and Meet <lb />
ID the Patent Office on abort notice. Terms ea <lb />
reasonable No for examination of <lb />
or drawings Ad by mail free. <lb />
Patent obtained i AC <lb />
S I Fit AMERICAN, baa <lb />
the and la th mo-t <lb />
of it kind in <lb />
he each a <lb />
This <lb />
I published a year. <lb />
admitted to he beat doted to <lb />
Inventions, works, <lb />
other departments of <lb />
m It s <lb />
all and title of every invention <lb />
Try four for one <lb />
Bold by all <lb />
If invention to <lb />
A of <lb />
HI New York. <lb />
about <lb />
ONE OF THE <lb />
GREAT WESTERN, <lb />
PROMPTLY FILLED. <lb />
Nat ice <lb />
out and of <lb />
dandruff is before the public. <lb />
Among the many win. have it with <lb />
wonderful I refer you to the fol- <lb />
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb />
to the truth of assertion <lb />
Latham. Greenville. <lb />
Mb. O.<lb />
Any one to give It a trial tor <lb />
above named complaints can procure <lb />
It from me, at my place of business, for<lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber, <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber. T <lb />
C, Mb flat <lb />
Is now located Greenville and <lb />
operated by A. Hoyt Bro. <lb />
gentlemen came from Washington, <lb />
highly recommended by the citizens . <lb />
having machinery of the latest <lb />
lo Renovate Old and <lb />
fathers to or <lb />
asked. <lb />
Below are some names of citizens <lb />
Washington and vicinity given by<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018887_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
MRS. E. A. SHEPPARD a<lb />
JUST ADDED TO HER STOCK <lb />
of Millinery Goods, bag secured <lb />
the services of an assistant. <lb />
All orders can now be tilled on the short- <lb />
est notice. Dry and Wet Stamping for <lb />
tainting and embroidery neatly executed <lb />
While in the Northern markets she wt <lb />
careful to select only the best ant <lb />
latest style goods in the Millinery line, <lb />
Is prepared to offer purchasers special in <lb />
FREE DELIVERY IX TOWN <lb />
OF <lb />
KEROSENE OIL <lb />
By JAMES A. SMITH <lb />
to <lb />
WILT. DELIVER, DAILY, <lb />
parties desiring Kerosene Oil, as <lb />
good as any in market and at Exactly <lb />
Isaac now paid at the stores. <lb />
SATISFACTION GUARANTEED <lb />
Save time, money and trouble by per- <lb />
us to your orders at your <lb />
and places of business. <lb />
A Sick Man's Wife Disregards the <lb />
and So Saves Lite s <lb />
Her Husband. <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
for Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT, <lb />
the Opera at which place <lb />
I have recently located, and where I have <lb />
everything in my line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO 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 />
EDMONDS. <lb />
STEAM ENGINES <lb />
all other machines repaired at short <lb />
at home or at shop. Iron and <lb />
Turning done mi best manner. <lb />
Cylinders bored. Models made to order. <lb />
Locks repaired. Keys made or fitted. Pipe <lb />
and threaded, Gins repaired in best <lb />
manner. Bring on work. General <lb />
Jobbing done by O. P. <lb />
May Greenville K. C. <lb />
WILMINGTON WELDON R. R. <lb />
and Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS GOING SOOTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
Dated daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
Lt Weldon OS pm pin G <lb />
Ar Rocky Mounts<lb />
am <lb />
Ar Wilson pm pm am <lb />
Lt Wilson <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Fayetteville <lb />
Lt Goldsboro am <lb />
Lt Warsaw <lb />
Lt Magnolia C <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
Noll, IT <lb />
daily daily <lb />
No CG, <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
am<lb />
pm <lb />
Lt Wilmington <lb />
Lt Magnolia <lb />
Lt Warsaw <lb />
Ar Goldsboro <lb />
Lt Fayetteville <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson am pm <lb />
Ar Rocky Mount <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Lt Tarboro am <lb />
Ar Weldon pm <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train en Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax for Scotland Neck at 8.00 <lb />
Returning, leaves Scotland Neck <lb />
A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M. Sunday P M, arrive <lb />
Williamston, N C. P M, P M. <lb />
Returning leaves Williamston, N C, daily <lb />
Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb />
If, arrive Tarboro, N C, A M, <lb />
A M. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M, <lb />
arrive Smithfield, N C, A M. Re- <lb />
turning leaves Smithfield, NO A M. <lb />
arrive N C, A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
Mount at P M, arrives Nashville <lb />
P M. Spring Hope P M. Returning <lb />
loaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
IS A SI, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
M daily, except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at <lb />
P M. Returning leave Clinton at <lb />
U, connecting at Warsaw with Nos. <lb />
and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A Fayette- <lb />
ville Branch Is No. Northbound is <lb />
No. except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. South will stop only at <lb />
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. <lb />
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line. <lb />
Trains make close connection for all <lb />
points North via Richmond and Wash- <lb />
trains solid between <lb />
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb />
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. Transportation <lb />
T. M. EMERSON, Passenger <lb />
I am a wood carver by trade and it is <lb />
of my line to write hut my <lb />
wife thought it was no more than right <lb />
that I should let you know what your <lb />
remedy has done for mo, and I think <lb />
so too. <lb />
I live in East 157th street, west of <lb />
Third avenue, and have lived there for <lb />
about twenty-three years, where I own <lb />
real estate. to the time I am about <lb />
to mention bad been a strong, well <lb />
man. There was always more or less <lb />
malaria in the hut I had <lb />
j not from it. It was <lb />
in 1880 I hail first attack. It came <lb />
on as such attacks do, with <lb />
headaches, loss of and <lb />
chilly v. slight fever <lb />
afterwards. ; to yawn and <lb />
Stretch, and s. f was employed <lb />
at that time at 1- Brothers, <lb />
furniture in West <lb />
street. I attack would wear <lb />
off, but as II consulted a well- <lb />
known and able Morris- <lb />
who me in and told me <lb />
what to do. I can sum up the four <lb />
and a half or five years of my <lb />
in few words. Occasionally I <lb />
was laid up for a day or two, but on <lb />
the whole I stink to work. kept <lb />
taking large. doses from <lb />
year to year, and kept getting weak- <lb />
and worse, slowly tint surely, all the <lb />
time. My was now well de- <lb />
fined and its were steady and <lb />
regular. I had dumb ague in its worst <lb />
form, and it was grinding no down in <lb />
spite of all that I could do or the doc- <lb />
tors could do. It in a grip like <lb />
fire in a burning mine. The poison <lb />
had gone nil through and over me and <lb />
nothing was able to touch it. I was <lb />
fast strength, and about <lb />
March. I knocked oil work entire- <lb />
and went home to sick, and <lb />
to die for all I could tell. ran down so <lb />
rapidly that I soon unable to <lb />
walk any distance. Liter I went from <lb />
room to room in my U only by <lb />
friends holding me no by arm. The <lb />
doses of -ed until I <lb />
often grain at h The <lb />
effects of this stimulation <lb />
was to make It broke <lb />
my sleep all up. and I walked the <lb />
HOOT, or about it. all night <lb />
long, scarcely aide to bear any noises <lb />
or even human speech. My temper <lb />
extremely Irritable. As to food, <lb />
of my little lien would eat <lb />
more in a than I could in a day. <lb />
I would order food and then turn from <lb />
it In I lived on quinine and <lb />
other stimulants and on like a <lb />
bear in winter. The quinine set my <lb />
head in a whirl, the <lb />
as a my stomach so <lb />
sick I not tolerate it <lb />
From ITS pound <lb />
Iran down to I lie weight <lb />
of a light was scarcely better <lb />
than a skeleton. <lb />
If had taken a hatchet and <lb />
knocked me down and killed me I should <lb />
have letter off. . <lb />
During the latter part of this period, <lb />
early in my <lb />
there's no use in my taking <lb />
any more money of yon. can't do you <lb />
any good. I might pour pounds of <lb />
nine down your throat and it wouldn't <lb />
help <lb />
On the strength of this I gave up the <lb />
use of quinine altogether, and made up <lb />
my mind to do nothing more and take <lb />
chances. <lb />
Three weeks afterwards -about the <lb />
of wife aw an advertise- <lb />
of in a New York paper. <lb />
She told me of it. I and <lb />
nonsense it can't do me any <lb />
But she went to a druggist's, <lb />
less, to get it. The advised <lb />
her against lie said it was <lb />
nothing hut ought not <lb />
to throw away her my on <lb />
He said he didn't keep i. could get <lb />
it if she on having it. Turn- <lb />
away in My wife spoke to <lb />
our neighbor. Mr. A. G. H <lb />
who got her a bottle at a drug store in <lb />
Sixth avenue. <lb />
Almost against my will, and without <lb />
the least faith, I taking it. In <lb />
one week I was heller. I began to <lb />
sleep. I stopped I <lb />
began to have an appetite and to gain <lb />
strength. This the first of <lb />
June, 1886, and by the end of that <lb />
month I was back at my bench at C. <lb />
Smith's scroll sawing factory in 116th <lb />
Street, where I work now. <lb />
Since then I have never lost a day <lb />
from sickness. Taking -kine only, <lb />
about forty pellets in four doses <lb />
a day, I continued to gain. The ma- <lb />
appeared to lie killed in my <lb />
and now I've got back my old <lb />
my old <lb />
strength to labor. I am an astonish- <lb />
to and to my and <lb />
if did not do this I m- know <lb />
what did. The only greater thing it <lb />
could do would he to bring a dead man <lb />
to life. A. Miller, <lb />
East Sir New York. <lb />
P- the of the <lb />
above statement I to the following <lb />
gentlemen, who are ac- <lb />
with the Mr. Alex- <lb />
GREENVILLE, M C. <lb />
THE SHADOWS. <lb />
Life may grow darkened, though love <lb />
has thrown <lb />
The strength of its light around it; <lb />
Till longer and deeper the shadows <lb />
grown. <lb />
Hide the of bliss that crowned it; <lb />
Clouds may float down on our of <lb />
peace <lb />
And crush our meek flowers with <lb />
scorning. <lb />
Yet never this song in our spirits shall <lb />
cease. <lb />
After the shadows, the morning. <lb />
Never so closely does pain fold its wings <lb />
But the white robe of Sympathy's <lb />
near it; <lb />
And each tear that the dark hand of <lb />
Misery wings <lb />
Brings the touch of a blessing to <lb />
cheer <lb />
As the dim night at the coming <lb />
of Gay, <lb />
When it weaves its bright web of <lb />
adorning. <lb />
So pale grief from life path <lb />
away, <lb />
Come, after our shadows, the morning <lb />
THE <lb />
JAMES <lb />
Love comes back to an empty heart, <lb />
Or a being clothed in love's sweet guise <lb />
Love bids sorrow and tears depart; <lb />
The dear old light in the tender eyes <lb />
Like a swift, bright sunbeam hastens <lb />
here <lb />
And warms the that was cold and <lb />
drear. <lb />
The old. old love of the days of yore <lb />
It is the shame Oh Love, confess. <lb />
Is it not deeper than e'er before, <lb />
To cheer, to and forever bless <lb />
Answer me, Love ; turn not away ; <lb />
Speak to me ; say you have come to <lb />
stay. <lb />
Who can be sure of Love's replies. <lb />
Hiding behind his myriad masks V <lb />
Yet to my soul this dear disguise <lb />
Savors of Heaven ; all it asks, <lb />
Swift, sweet tears to the eyelids start; <lb />
Love back loan empty heart. <lb />
Home Journal. <lb />
A Good Country for Poor <lb />
The United -States is the. best <lb />
country ill the world for poor boys. <lb />
Young America always a chance <lb />
to show what is him. No boy in <lb />
the United States, however poor he <lb />
is, or however gloomy his prospects <lb />
may seem, need fear to strike oat <lb />
hopefully for himself. If be has <lb />
good health, determination and <lb />
the possibilities before him can <lb />
scarcely be limited. <lb />
About forty years ago a schooner <lb />
foundered Lake Erie, not far from <lb />
the Ohio shore. A few hours later <lb />
an infant boy, tied to a mattress <lb />
and supported by life-preservers, <lb />
was found by a farmer. The <lb />
history of the child could not be <lb />
learned, and the farmer adopted <lb />
him as his own. Alter eighteen <lb />
years on the scraps of <lb />
time having been spent <lb />
in boy obtained the <lb />
of janitor in a school, and <lb />
struggled manfully to pay for his <lb />
tuition and get an education. In <lb />
spite of the interruptions to bis stud- <lb />
be ranked with the brightest <lb />
boys, and was remarked for his fix- <lb />
of purpose. went back <lb />
the farm, and after his day's work <lb />
was done, read law by the light of <lb />
the kitchen fire. Subsequently be <lb />
was admitted to the bar, worked <lb />
bard, distinguished himself, and <lb />
was elected a judge. Some years <lb />
later he was sent to Congress, where <lb />
he is now known as Edward Lane, <lb />
the Representative from the seven- <lb />
congressional district of <lb />
This sketch from actual life shows <lb />
what golden opportunities lie within <lb />
the grasp of the poorest boys in this <lb />
Republic, if they only do their best <lb />
in whatever circumstances Prov- <lb />
may place them. <lb />
Fun in the House, <lb />
C. B. EDWARDS <lb />
H. B. <lb />
Edwards a <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
RALEIGH, 1ST. C- <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
of the kind to be found in <lb />
and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOR INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us orders. <lb />
PRINTERS AND HINDERS, <lb />
RALEIGH. N. C. <lb />
St.; Mr. George <lb />
Seaman, 158th strict and <lb />
Mr. A. street <lb />
and avenue; Mr. P. F. <lb />
mid <lb />
avenue; Mr. John East <lb />
168th Mr. John <lb />
135th street, others. I will <lb />
also reply to letters <lb />
We submit that astonish- <lb />
m it i- by <lb />
men. is of a thorough <lb />
candid by thinking <lb />
people. And we further submit that <lb />
druggists away customers <lb />
falsifying the a remedy <lb />
because do to have it <lb />
on hand. do a great wrong. If <lb />
tins man had not disregarded <lb />
the druggist's advice sent else- <lb />
where for the remedy lie would without <lb />
doubt have been in his grave. <lb />
Other letters of a similar character <lb />
from individuals, which <lb />
stamp as a remedy of <lb />
doubted merit, will be sent on <lb />
e. 81.00, or C bottles. <lb />
The modes of death's approach are <lb />
various, and statistics show conclusively <lb />
that more persons die from diseases of the <lb />
Throat and Lungs than any other. It Is <lb />
probable that everyone, without <lb />
receives vast number.- of Tubercle <lb />
Germs into the the system and where <lb />
these fall upon suitable soil they <lb />
start into life and develop, at first <lb />
and is shown by a slight tickling <lb />
in the throat and if allowed to con- <lb />
their ravages they extend to the <lb />
lungs producing Consumption and to the <lb />
head, causing Catarrh. Now all this is <lb />
dangerous and if allowed to proceed will <lb />
in time cause death. At the onset you <lb />
must act with promptness; Allowing a <lb />
cold to go without attention is dangerous <lb />
and may lose you your life. As soon as <lb />
feel that something is wrong with <lb />
your Throat, Lungs or Nostrils, obtain a <lb />
bottle of German Syrup. It <lb />
will give you immediate relief. <lb />
HOTEL <lb />
BROS., <lb />
SI <lb />
Democratic State Executive <lb />
Committee. <lb />
N. C, May 8th, 1888. <lb />
To Hie Delegates to the Democratic <lb />
Convention. <lb />
The railroad in the <lb />
State have generally agreed to have <lb />
round trip tickets at rates <lb />
on sale for delegates to the Demo- <lb />
State Convention to be held <lb />
in this city on May 30th inst, to be <lb />
good from May 28th to Jane 4th, <lb />
both inclusive. The delegates will <lb />
be careful to buy tickets to <lb />
and return. It. H. Battle, <lb />
Chairman, <lb />
B. C. Secretary. <lb />
Good and Bad News. <lb />
Bad news weakens the action of <lb />
the heart, oppresses the longs, de- <lb />
tn o appetite, stops the <lb />
and partially suspends the <lb />
net ions of the system. An <lb />
of Hushes the face; fear <lb />
blanches, joy illuminates it, and an <lb />
instant thrill electrifies a million of <lb />
nerves. Surprise spurs the pulse <lb />
into a gallop. infuses <lb />
great energy. Volition commands, <lb />
and hundreds of muscles spring to <lb />
excite. Powerful often <lb />
kill the body at a stroke. <lb />
and Sophocles died of joy <lb />
at the Grecian games. The news of <lb />
defeat killed Phillip V. One of the <lb />
Popes died of an emotion of the <lb />
on seeing his pet monkey <lb />
rolled in pontificals, occupying the <lb />
chair of state. The Doorkeeper of <lb />
expired on bearing of the <lb />
surrender of Eminent <lb />
public speakers hare often died in <lb />
the midst of an impassioned <lb />
of eloquence or when the deep <lb />
that produced it has subsided. <lb />
the young Parisian, died <lb />
when be heard that the musical <lb />
prize for which he bad competed <lb />
was adjudged to another <lb />
THE HOME <lb />
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE. <lb />
Polite waiters. Good rooms. Best U- <lb />
M the market affords. When In <lb />
Hotel, <lb />
., <lb />
Onward Is The Word. <lb />
The FAME enters Its <lb />
third at the following <lb />
subscriber, I year. <lb />
S year. 5.00 <lb />
subscribers, year. <lb />
GOOD ADVICE. <lb />
I used it in the spring of 1885 with ex- <lb />
client results for and catarrh, <lb />
And I have taken pleasure in <lb />
ding it to invalids. Several have sent for <lb />
it and it has worked well; I think It will <lb />
do good in So write a clergyman <lb />
in Portland Me., when writing II, <lb />
1880, to to send him <lb />
another fall Treatment of Compound Ox- <lb />
Compound Oxygen has a history <lb />
wonderful way, and worth reading <lb />
by everybody life Is worth <lb />
This Is lit a <lb />
two hundred <lb />
mail -m <lb />
Mr. Cox of New York said that <lb />
but for some personal allusions <lb />
which bad occurred during the de- <lb />
bate he would have kept silent. On <lb />
the first day of the session be <lb />
had said that he believed the tariff <lb />
was a business question, and should <lb />
so be considered, aloof from parties, <lb />
away from personalities. Some gen- <lb />
proposed that the surplus <lb />
should be spent. Gov. Allen had <lb />
once said that a surplus was the <lb />
worst, thing a government could <lb />
have. It was as well to try to ran a <lb />
powder mill in hell as an honest <lb />
government with a treasury <lb />
Applause. 1861 he gone to <lb />
the Custom Houses Boston and <lb />
New York and found the cost of <lb />
some articles imported there. After <lb />
making computations and allowing <lb />
for the premium on gold he bad <lb />
found that in order to get <lb />
into the Treasury the country <lb />
paid the enormous sum of <lb />
that never saw the treasury. <lb />
Deducting the per cent, for de <lb />
predated paper money, it would be <lb />
found in order to get <lb />
into the treasury the country <lb />
now paid at least <lb />
He did not want to quarrel with <lb />
gentlemen who bad local interests <lb />
at stake. He would not quarrel <lb />
with the gentleman from Michigan <lb />
because he wanted <lb />
lumber and salt protected ; with <lb />
the gentleman from Vermont, <lb />
who appealed for wool. <lb />
He would like them to commit what <lb />
said ought to hare been <lb />
reciprocal brigand- <lb />
age. If Pennsylvania robbed too <lb />
much from Massachusetts, let Mass- <lb />
rob something from Penn- <lb />
; let Connecticut, the land <lb />
of and corsets, which re- <lb />
called tender memories to members <lb />
of Congress, laughter, make a raid <lb />
upon Tennessee and North Carolina <lb />
and Virginia after Laugh- <lb />
That was the way to carry on <lb />
a tariff reciprocal The <lb />
Devil, when came to earth, was <lb />
greatly delighted in going around <lb />
and finding that the most select of <lb />
his instruments was a cunning old <lb />
cheated by statute; but <lb />
then the Devil had never read the <lb />
tariff law, with its ad and <lb />
specific duties. If he bad he never <lb />
would have bought the beautiful <lb />
dress he wore, or he would have got <lb />
it through the Custom House with- <lb />
out paying taxes. <lb />
how was the Devil dressed i <lb />
Oh. he was dressed in his Sunday best, <lb />
With of scarlet ard coats of <lb />
blue; <lb />
there was a hole where the tail came <lb />
Laughter. <lb />
The tallow chandlers had cried <lb />
out against the external competition <lb />
of sunlight. What cheap pauper <lb />
labor the sun was. Laughter. <lb />
Joshua must have been a protection <lb />
for he bad made the sun stand <lb />
still for a while. Under this policy <lb />
of free light what would become <lb />
the whaling industries New Eng- <lb />
land Down ; up with <lb />
chaos and old protection. Laugh <lb />
He bad made a calculation <lb />
about the infant industries of this <lb />
country and their power of suction <lb />
from the maternal government. He <lb />
could show that the power of suction <lb />
of those industries amount to over <lb />
10,000.000 horse power. He could <lb />
tell the amount of milk sucked by <lb />
the copper of Michigan, the iron of <lb />
Pennsylvania, the salt of New York, <lb />
the wool of Ohio, Of course <lb />
there was struggling as to which <lb />
infant have the right of wag, <lb />
which should get the first pull at the <lb />
pap. It was said of Hercules that <lb />
lie had pulled so bard that be <lb />
led the milk and made the Milky- <lb />
Way, on the other side <lb />
said that the Mills bill was a radical <lb />
measure. He did not see that a re <lb />
net ion of seven per cent was much of <lb />
a free trade reduction. He wonder- <lb />
ed that gentlemen the other side <lb />
did not follow the example of the <lb />
tallow chandler of France, who <lb />
for tho suppression of all <lb />
gas producing machines, and want <lb />
ed all windows, openings, <lb />
chinks, and clefts closed, so the <lb />
sun could not enter, and so that the <lb />
chandler might have all the <lb />
which would follow the closing <lb />
out of the sun. It was proposed to <lb />
shut out the sun as a foreign cheap <lb />
labor producer. Her- <lb />
that was <lb />
The <lb />
argued that the States <lb />
had protection and high wages, <lb />
therefore protection brought nigh <lb />
wages. Apply the <lb />
f ion to England. England bad the <lb />
House of Lords and low wages; <lb />
therefore, the House of Lords made <lb />
low wages. The United States had <lb />
tramps and high wages; therefore <lb />
tramps made wages. Ireland <lb />
had no snakes and no wages; there- <lb />
fore, snakes made high wages. <lb />
The truth was <lb />
wages were a matter utterly <lb />
to a discussion to tariff. <lb />
Mr. Cox next turned his attention <lb />
to Mr. Burrow's speech, and <lb />
ally that gentleman's peroration, <lb />
where, like Silas he <lb />
into The gentleman, after, <lb />
in eloquent language, picturing the <lb />
advancement and progress of the <lb />
new Senate, had quoted its <lb />
coming and quoting <lb />
Charles law rhyme for the <lb />
incoming of absolute free trade. <lb />
laughter and He <lb />
bad quoted the verse at the <lb />
Democratic caucus held at the time <lb />
of the deadlock, and be did not <lb />
know how the gentleman had got <lb />
bold of it, unless it was that Mr. <lb />
Perkins, Kansas had <lb />
wandered into the <lb />
had beard it and bad <lb />
given it to the gentleman. He <lb />
like to have a fork <lb />
here, so that all might <lb />
its coming, tongue and pen ; <lb />
Aid it, hopes of honest men ; <lb />
Aid It, paper ; aid it, type ; <lb />
Aid It for the hour is <lb />
And our earnest should not slacken into <lb />
play; <lb />
Men of thought and men of action, clear <lb />
the <lb />
But be could not get a <lb />
fork because the tariff was too high. <lb />
Laughter. In conclusion Mr. Cox <lb />
said tho country bad grown <lb />
from sea to sea sod from golf to <lb />
lake, expanding its progress. Why <lb />
should we not expand oar liberty <lb />
also f We had liberty to sleep and <lb />
and according to the <lb />
We had <lb />
liberty also Why not give men <lb />
the right to the earnings of their <lb />
own Why take from one <lb />
class to give to another t Why <lb />
make a slave of labor Why put <lb />
the shackles on any man Why <lb />
not stand for freedom everywhere. <lb />
Let us, he said, be true to the <lb />
of our Constitution; true to <lb />
freedom, for avails the <lb />
plow or soil or land or life if freedom <lb />
Applause. <lb />
has <lb />
A U <lb />
wonderful discovery . <lb />
been made and that too by a lady in this <lb />
county. Disease fastened its clutches <lb />
upon her and for seven years she with- <lb />
stood its severest but her vital <lb />
wore undermined and death seem- <lb />
ed Imminent. For three months she <lb />
coughed incessantly and could not sleep. <lb />
She bought of us a bottle of Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery for Consumption and was <lb />
so much relieved on taking first dose that <lb />
she slept all and with bottle <lb />
has been miraculously cured Her name <lb />
Is Mrs. Luther Thus write W. C. <lb />
Hamrick Co., of Shelby. N. a <lb />
free trial bottle at Drug <lb />
Store, <lb />
Seldom WhaT They Seem. <lb />
One man is ordered to eat eggs <lb />
because they are nutritions, and an <lb />
other is cautioned to leave them <lb />
alone because they produce bile. <lb />
This is a sort tarry world. <lb />
No seems to be satisfied. One <lb />
is struggling to get justice and <lb />
another is flying from <lb />
The prize tighter and be- <lb />
comes a preacher, while the <lb />
logical student leaves his <lb />
to become a professional baseball <lb />
pitcher. <lb />
One man keeps a pistol to protect <lb />
himself against burglars, while his <lb />
neighbor doesn't keep one for fear <lb />
of shooting some member of the <lb />
house by mistake. <lb />
The man who can make a <lb />
year as a general thing can't save a <lb />
cent, while the man who is thrifty <lb />
and wise is seldom so gifted that he <lb />
can earn anything at all. <lb />
One rich man wears poor clothes <lb />
because he is rich can do any <lb />
while a poor man wears fine <lb />
clothes because he is poor, and <lb />
wants to create the impression that <lb />
he is not. <lb />
The laborer with ten children <lb />
keeps out of debt on a week, <lb />
while many an unmarried bank of- <lb />
with a week can't get <lb />
along without helping to the <lb />
bank's funds. <lb />
man escapes all the diseases <lb />
flesh is heir to and is killed on <lb />
the railroad another man goes <lb />
through a half a dozen wars with- <lb />
out a scratch, and then dies of <lb />
whooping cough. <lb />
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb />
The Verdict <lb />
W. D. Suit. Druggist, <lb />
test s can recommend Electric <lb />
Bitters as the very best remedy. Every <lb />
bottle sold has given immediate relief In <lb />
every case. One man took six bottles, <lb />
and was cured of Rheumatism of years <lb />
Hare, druggist, Bell- <lb />
Ohio, affirms; best selling <lb />
medicine I have ever handled in my <lb />
experience is Electric <lb />
Thousands of others have added <lb />
testimony, so that the is <lb />
mons that Electric Bitters do cure all dis- <lb />
eases of the Liver, Kidneys or blood. <lb />
Only a half dollar a bottle at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
Corrected weekly by <lb />
Schultz, Wholesale and Retail <lb />
Mess <lb />
Bulk toO <lb />
Bulk <lb />
Bacon <lb />
Bacon to <lb />
Pitt County <lb />
Sugar Cured <lb />
to 6.60 <lb />
to <lb />
Brown co to <lb />
Sugar <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
G. A. <lb />
Liverpool <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Bread <lb />
Star <lb />
Kerosene <lb />
THE <lb />
Eastern Reflector, <lb />
CASH <lb />
We have recently purchased the stock <lb />
of Hardware belonging to M. A. Jarvis, <lb />
and will replenish the same with all the <lb />
leading goods the <lb />
HARDWARE LINE. <lb />
Farm Implements, Tools, Ta- <lb />
and Pocket Cutlery, Plow Bolts <lb />
and Castings, Cart Material, <lb />
Doors, Sash, Blinds, Hinges, <lb />
Butts, Screws, Nails, <lb />
Glass, Putty, Lead, <lb />
Oil, Painters and <lb />
Material <lb />
of description. <lb />
narrows and Cultivators, Gins, Grist <lb />
Mills, Cider and Fan Mills, Saw <lb />
Glimmers, Self-feeding Cooking Stoves. <lb />
In fact all goods kept in a <lb />
We thank the public for the liberal pat- <lb />
that they have given us while <lb />
managing the M. A. Jarvis hardware bus- <lb />
and ask that they continue the same <lb />
to us. Our motto will be <lb />
FOR <lb />
D CO. <lb />
Our Summer Normals. <lb />
We give below a list of the officers <lb />
and teachers of the Normal schools <lb />
to be held in North Carolina this <lb />
C. D. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
W. A. <lb />
Blair. E. P. Moses M. <lb />
C. S. Noble, E. C. Branson, J. J. <lb />
Blair, Mrs. J. A. Begins <lb />
July <lb />
H E <lb />
Shepherd, B. E. <lb />
Atkins, P. P, Mrs. II. M. <lb />
Davidson, Miss Katie Millard. Be- <lb />
July <lb />
Alexander Graham. <lb />
Prof. Collier Cobb, J. C. <lb />
Meares, Miss Cook. Begins July <lb />
L. <lb />
G. L. Wills, <lb />
W. J. Miss M. K, Goodloe, <lb />
Miss G- Sharp, Miss II. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
Elizabeth <lb />
S. L. Sheep. S. <lb />
Noble, Prof. Mrs. G. <lb />
Thompson. Begins July <lb />
S. E. <lb />
Warren. C. D. Principal. <lb />
Begins July <lb />
Greensboro <lb />
B. F, Blair. Begins July <lb />
ALFRED FORBES <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions. Clothing <lb />
Hats, Boots, Shoes, Hardware, Furniture <lb />
and Groceries. Rock Lime kept constant- <lb />
on hand. <lb />
I have just received a large lot of <lb />
Braces for boys, girls, ladies and <lb />
gentlemen. need only to be tried to <lb />
give <lb />
I can now offer to the Jobbing Trade <lb />
superior Geo. A. Clark A <lb />
spool cotton which I will sell it <lb />
cents per doz., per cent. <lb />
I keep on hand a large supply of Hos- <lb />
ford's Bread Preparation, w I <lb />
sell at wholesale prices to merchants. <lb />
The patronage of the public is res- <lb />
solicited. <lb />
UNDERTAKING. <lb />
O. <lb />
D. J. Editor Proprietor. <lb />
ENLARGED TO <lb />
.,. <lb />
H fries <lb />
Per Year, <lb />
IN ADVANCE <lb />
Having associated B. S. Sheppard <lb />
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people in that <lb />
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb />
me for past services have been placed In <lb />
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb />
stock of Cases and Caskets of all <lb />
kinds and can furnish desired <lb />
from the finest Case down to a <lb />
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We are fitted <lb />
up with all conveniences and can render <lb />
satisfactory services to all who patronize <lb />
us FLANAGAN SHEPPARD. <lb />
Feb. 22nd. 1888. <lb />
The best in the world Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe- <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, <lb />
and cures Piles, or no pay re- <lb />
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price, <lb />
per box. For <lb />
See Here. <lb />
BUY <lb />
EXCELSIOR <lb />
HI SATISFACTORY <lb />
EIGHTEEN SIZES KINDS <lb />
ILL PURCHASERS CAB BE SUITES <lb />
ST <lb />
bate Co. <lb />
FOB BY <lb />
L. C. TERRELL, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR IS THE <lb />
Newspaper ever published in <lb />
Greenville. It furnishes the <lb />
LATEST NEWS <lb />
and gives More Beading Matter for <lb />
tho money than any other paper <lb />
published in North Carolina. <lb />
The Reflector gives a variety <lb />
of news, NATIONAL, STATE <lb />
and LOCAL, and will devote it- <lb />
self to the material advancement <lb />
of the section in which it <lb />
Send your name and get a <lb />
FREE SAMPLE COPY. <lb />
cl <lb />
is called to I ho Reflector, as its <lb />
largo growing circulation <lb />
makes it an excellent medium <lb />
through which to reach the people <lb />
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb />
DO Y WANT TO SAVE MONEY <lb />
If so buy <lb />
Combined Bunt <lb />
It is worth as much in the cotton <lb />
as a good band. For sale by <lb />
J. H. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. <lb />
Williamston, N C. <lb />
LITTLE, HOUSE A Br Agent, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
N S. Agent Wash- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
to the <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
undersigned having administered <lb />
on the estate of Aaron <lb />
notice Is hereby given to all persons hay- <lb />
claims against said decedent to <lb />
sent the same to such administrator on <lb />
or before the 10th day of April 1889, or <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. This day of March 1888. <lb />
S. A. GAINER, <lb />
of Aaron Whitehurst <lb />
BARBER SHOP. <lb />
The undersigned has fitted his <lb />
FIRST-CLASS STYLE, <lb />
and any person desiring a <lb />
CLEAN k SHAVE <lb />
HAIR CUT, SHAMPOO, <lb />
or anything in the <lb />
TONSORIAL. ART <lb />
Is invited to give me a trial. <lb />
guaranteed or no charge made. <lb />
ALFRED CULLY <lb />
Will Color One to Four Pound i <lb />
Of Dress Goods, for <lb />
Garments, I <lb />
Yarns, Rags, etc. J <lb />
A Child can. use them <lb />
The PUREST, STRONGEST and FAST <lb />
Tall <lb />
five the <lb />
Sons, and <lb />
Warranted to j <lb />
Feat he <lb />
of a <lb />
live beat colon. for Feather. <lb />
ill Fancy Dyeing. lending <lb />
They also make Best and Cheapest <lb />
WRITING INK ONE QUART <lb />
LAUNDRY BLUE IO Cents. <lb />
for Coloring Photographs and a <lb />
Cabinet as sample, sent for cents. <lb />
Ask for Boole and Sample Card, or <lb />
WELLS, RICHARDSON t CO. <lb />
For Gilding or Fancy Articles. <lb />
DIAMOND PAINTS. <lb />
Cold, Silver, Copper. Only IO <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all in the <lb />
Patent Office or in the Court <lb />
to for Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the U. S. <lb />
Office engaged in Patents <lb />
and can patents i <lb />
less time than more remote <lb />
from Washington. <lb />
When model or drawing is sea <lb />
we advise as <lb />
of charge, and we make no charge <lb />
unless obtain Patents. <lb />
to the Post <lb />
the Supt, of the Money <lb />
to officials the I ; <lb />
Patent Office. For circular, <lb />
terms and reference t. I <lb />
cuts in your own State, or county <lb />
address, C. A. Snow A Co., <lb />
Washington, D. C , <lb />
DO <lb />
If en, . Ill <lb />
n I. plat <lb />
I res<lb />
ft m r<lb />
for of l <lb />
of all <lb />
Then f. <lb />
BOOK. panes <lb />
I of all of <lb />
I of t <lb />
plans <lb />
I r. and M drift In <lb />
from be-M m . <lb />
I per bout r Cents <lb />
paper Is kept on file at the office <lb />
GENTS <lb />
fat Lowest Cash <lb />
LAYERS SON'S<lb />
FITS <lb />
When I HT Cube I do not mean <lb />
top tor at inn. and <lb />
turn I MEAN A RADICAL I <lb />
I days made the <lb />
FITS, EPILEPSY or <lb />
FALLING SICKNESS. <lb />
Cure the worst cue;. others <lb />
f ailed s l for not now a <lb />
Send at once for a treatise and a <lb />
of my Infallible <lb />
and Post Office. It costs you nothing NaT <lb />
trial, and you. Address <lb />
H. G. ROOT. M. C., <lb />
PROMPTLY FILLED. <lb />
Notice <lb />
for <lb />
falling out of eradication of <lb />
dandruff it before the public. <lb />
Among the who have It with <lb />
wonderful success, I refer you to the fol- <lb />
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb />
to the truth of assertion <lb />
Josephus Latham, Greenville. <lb />
Mb. O. <lb />
Greene, <lb />
Any one wishing to give it a trial for <lb />
Hie above name complaint can procure <lb />
it from me, at ivy place of business, for<lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, Barter <lb />
a, m <lb />
mom <lb />
One <lb />
application for <lb />
th United Slain <lb />
tries, the of <lb />
to act a <lb />
for m <lb />
ate., for the Sf <lb />
to obtain id Canada, England, <lb />
end all other <lb />
in and their <lb />
and prepared end <lb />
in Patent Office on <lb />
No charge for <lb />
Or by mail <lb />
lathe V which B <lb />
circulation and the n-o-t <lb />
of kind in the <lb />
a of each a nonce every pa team, <lb />
an d e re t a n<lb />
admitted to he bast paper devoted to <lb />
mechanic, inventions, engineering <lb />
of pate- <lb />
in any count it. It contains off <lb />
all tilts of ever; invention <lb />
Tr- It four months for <lb />
Do. d by a n i <lb />
If on have an invention lo patent far <lb />
patents Balled free <lb />
ONE OF THE <lb />
GREAT <lb />
II <lb />
is now looted In Greenville and <lb />
operated by A. . Hoyt. Bro. <lb />
gentlemen came from Washington, <lb />
highly recommended citizens L <lb />
having machinery of the latest patent <lb />
Prepared to Renovate Old and <lb />
to satisfaction or no <lb />
asked. <lb />
Below some names of citizens <lb />
Washington and vicinity given I <lb />
mission M Gallagher, M D, Her <lb />
Harding, b T Tayloe, <lb />
Hymen Proctor, B F Jones, N C T <lb />
James Galloway, Bishop J A <lb />
R Bright and others. <lb />
P CIR<lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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