<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00018889_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
LEADING PAPER <lb/>
I THE <lb/>
nit mm. <lb/>
lONE YEAR SIX MONTHS <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
gas <lb/>
THE REST PAPER <lb/>
LARGEST <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Proprietor. <lb/>
IN TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL VII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY JUNE 1888 <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor <lb/>
Published Every Wednesday <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
Subscription Trice. MM per <lb/>
i ii but <lb/>
will to <lb/>
ii. that arc not consistent <lb/>
with principles of the part. <lb/>
If you want a a <lb/>
of -he State send for the <lb/>
SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb/>
Democratic Nominees. <lb/>
you <lb/>
GROVER CLEVELAND, <lb/>
Of New York. <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Governor Scales, of Guilford <lb/>
M. <lb/>
man. of H mover. <lb/>
Secretary of I. Satin- <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
W. of Wake. <lb/>
P. Roberts, of Gates. <lb/>
lent of Public Instruction <lb/>
Sidney M. Finger of <lb/>
Attorney F. <lb/>
on, of Buncombe. <lb/>
SUPREME COURT. <lb/>
Chief N. H. Smith, of <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Associate S. A she, of <lb/>
Anson ; Augustus S. of Wake. <lb/>
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
First E. Shepherd, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second Philips, of <lb/>
Third Connor, of <lb/>
son. <lb/>
Clark, of <lb/>
Fifth A. Gilmer, of <lb/>
ford <lb/>
Sixth T. of <lb/>
Sampson. <lb/>
Seventh C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth J. Montgomery, of <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Yadkin. <lb/>
Tenth C. Avery, of <lb/>
Eleventh M. Shipp, of <lb/>
Mecklenburg. <lb/>
Twelfth H. Merrimon, <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
Representatives in <lb/>
B. Vance, of <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of <lb/>
House of District <lb/>
Louis C Latham, of Pitt <lb/>
Second M. Simmons, of <lb/>
Craven. <lb/>
Third W. of <lb/>
Unite <lb/>
Fourth Nichols, of <lb/>
Wake <lb/>
Fifth W. Reid, of Rock- <lb/>
Sixth T. Bennett, of <lb/>
Anson. <lb/>
S. Henderson, <lb/>
of Rowan. <lb/>
Eighth H. n. <lb/>
I Wilkes. <lb/>
Ninth D. Johnston, <lb/>
Buncombe <lb/>
COUNTY GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Superior Court A. <lb/>
Sheriff William M. King. <lb/>
Register of II. Wilson. <lb/>
B. Cherry. <lb/>
S. Congleton. <lb/>
P. Redding. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb/>
man, Guilford Mooring, J. A. K. Tucker, <lb/>
W. A. James, Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb/>
Public School <lb/>
Latham. <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
TOWN. <lb/>
M. Moore. <lb/>
C. Forbes. <lb/>
J. Perkins. <lb/>
B. Cherry H. C. <lb/>
Ward. T. A. <lb/>
and J. P. 2nd Ward. O. Hook- <lb/>
and R. Williams Jr.; 3rd Ward, J. J. <lb/>
Perkins and A. F. <lb/>
m vice-president <lb/>
ALLEN G. THURMAN, <lb/>
Of Ohio. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
DANIEL G. FOWLE, <lb/>
Of Wake County. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
THOMAS M. HOLT, <lb/>
Of Alamance County. <lb/>
FOR OF <lb/>
WILLIAM L SAUNDERS, <lb/>
Of New Hanover County. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
DONALD W. <lb/>
Of Wake County. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
GEORGE W. SANDERLIN, <lb/>
Wayne County. <lb/>
FOR PUBLIC IN- <lb/>
SIDNEY M. FINGER, <lb/>
Of County. <lb/>
ATTORNEY GENERAL <lb/>
THEODORE F. DAVIDSON, <lb/>
Of Buncombe County. <lb/>
Fix th <lb/>
MOBBING <lb/>
SOMEWHERE. <lb/>
BY II. <lb/>
Though we may be in <lb/>
of <lb/>
the gloom <lb/>
Tortured by doubt and fear. <lb/>
Somewhere in the world the morning is <lb/>
bright. <lb/>
Another's sad heart to cheer. <lb/>
We may kneel the form that we love <lb/>
best. <lb/>
When death's dark night has come, <lb/>
When the very eyelids are closed in <lb/>
death. <lb/>
And dear lips are dumb. <lb/>
With wildest despair we gaze on that <lb/>
brow. <lb/>
And folded hands so white, <lb/>
And we cry aloud, in the wide world <lb/>
how <lb/>
Is there aught else but night t <lb/>
How is there aught else but night, do <lb/>
we ask I <lb/>
Aught else but death and gloom V <lb/>
To learn life's lesson is such a hard task <lb/>
There's morn beyond the tomb. <lb/>
Mary Jane's Letter. <lb/>
Washington, May <lb/>
are yon going, my pretty maid <lb/>
said Dickey tome this morning, as <lb/>
I began putting on my bonnet and <lb/>
other apparel. <lb/>
am going to the said <lb/>
I politely. you go along <lb/>
said she ; not <lb/>
on the mash to <lb/>
do you mean <lb/>
rising indignation. <lb/>
just what I say, you innocent <lb/>
old said she, with the most <lb/>
provoking manner. you <lb/>
good, plain English, with J <lb/>
a touch of the picturesque <lb/>
in his chair. <lb/>
To one of the congressional mys- <lb/>
is how a man can make a <lb/>
speech and maintain his own inter- <lb/>
est in it, when he knows nobody is <lb/>
listening to bin. The day of the <lb/>
skinning match ill <lb/>
the senate, I into the <lb/>
house about half-past o'clock, and <lb/>
there were only twenty odd <lb/>
on the floor, with nobody in <lb/>
the galleries, not even in the press <lb/>
gallery, and there I <lb/>
charging up and down the aisle, <lb/>
shaking his long hair and <lb/>
Letter. <lb/>
Special to <lb/>
Washington, D. C, June 4th 1888. <lb/>
Greater enthusiasm has never <lb/>
been shown than was displayed <lb/>
the democrats in Congress at the <lb/>
suggestion that ex Senator Allen <lb/>
The State Over, From Our <lb/>
Many Exchange. <lb/>
Thoughts for Reflection. <lb/>
Good temper like a sunny day, <lb/>
sheds a brightness over everything. <lb/>
It is the sweetener of toil the <lb/>
soother of disquietude. <lb/>
God helps that help themselves. <lb/>
should nominated Event. Concerning tat <lb/>
North Oar People <lb/>
Are Doing and Saying. <lb/>
for Vice-President on the ticket <lb/>
with Cleveland. The sentiment is <lb/>
absolutely favor of the i <lb/>
greatest of all of Ohio's Murfreesboro A narrow <lb/>
Nothing but the consent of death by lightning was <lb/>
forth his oratorical bursts as if would be necessary to so- experienced by II. O. Hill, of Ply- <lb/>
he loosen the very found-1 cure his nomination by acclamation. mouth, N. C, on Monday. A bolt <lb/>
of the republic. It was j With the ticket Cleveland and lightning split the handle an <lb/>
I words I to at- the echoes in <lb/>
your <lb/>
I don't understand the really appalling. <lb/>
if yon said she, <lb/>
A morning brighter than any on earth, <lb/>
A mom of joy and light, <lb/>
Into which some soul each moment has <lb/>
birth, <lb/>
While to us all is night. <lb/>
Somewhere in the world always <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
If we can't see the light. <lb/>
Somewhere the Heavenly day is dawn- <lb/>
Somewhere ever bright. <lb/>
HOPE, A BLESSED BALM-<lb/>
FOR SUPREME COURT <lb/>
JOSEPH J. DAVIS, <lb/>
Franklin. <lb/>
JAMES E. SHEPHERD, <lb/>
Of Beaufort. <lb/>
A. O. AVERY, <lb/>
Of Burke. <lb/>
FOR ELECTORS AT LARGE <lb/>
ALFRED If. WADDELL, <lb/>
Of New Hanover. <lb/>
FREDRICK N. STRUDWICK. <lb/>
Of Orange. <lb/>
There is a word I can't explain ; <lb/>
It thrills me o'er, <lb/>
And were it not for its effect <lb/>
My bliss would be no more. <lb/>
Its inspiration, I long have felt ; <lb/>
Of it I've often <lb/>
Its prospects I have oft divulged. <lb/>
And this sweet word is <lb/>
Its very sound seems impart <lb/>
Its how great <lb/>
Yet to explain would useless be <lb/>
Could we not of it partake. <lb/>
How dull would be this life of ours <lb/>
When adverse clouds do come <lb/>
To know that they would last always <lb/>
No sunshine ever dawn <lb/>
How sore when tossed on life's rough <lb/>
sea <lb/>
By billows, fierce and wild, <lb/>
To have no hone for a better time, <lb/>
A season, calm and mild <lb/>
How hard when weary hearts and hands <lb/>
Toil with a task undone. <lb/>
To know always one harder far <lb/>
Awaits to be begun. <lb/>
But how sweet to feel, we almost <lb/>
faint; <lb/>
And the way seems dark and long, <lb/>
That by and by well reach the end <lb/>
And join in the gladsome <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
First and Third <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. X. C. <lb/>
Hughes. D. D., Rector. <lb/>
Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Prayer Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
every Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
LODGES. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A A. <lb/>
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb/>
day night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
Masonic Lodge. M. King, W. M. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb/>
very 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb/>
sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, n. P. <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb/>
meets every Tuesday night. D. L. <lb/>
James, N. G. <lb/>
Insurance Lodge, No. K. of II. <lb/>
meets every first and third Friday night. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. <lb/>
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of H., meets <lb/>
very Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb/>
Temperance Reform Club meets In their <lb/>
room every Monday night, at <lb/>
o'clock. Mass meeting in the Court <lb/>
fourth Sunday of each month, at o'clock <lb/>
, F. M. E. C. Glenn, <lb/>
Woman's Christian Temperance Union <lb/>
meet In the Reform Club Room Friday <lb/>
of each week. Mrs. V. H. Which- <lb/>
ard, <lb/>
Band of Hope meets in Reform Club <lb/>
Boom every Friday night. Miss Eva <lb/>
POST OFFICE. <lb/>
Office boors a. m. to p. u. <lb/>
Order boors a, M. to p. M. No or- <lb/>
will be issued from to p. if. and <lb/>
from to p. X. <lb/>
Bethel mail arrives daily Sun- <lb/>
at A. U., and departs at S. p it. <lb/>
TarbOro mall arrive daily Sun- <lb/>
at M. departs at p. x. <lb/>
Washington mail arrives dally <lb/>
at x. and departs at P. x. <lb/>
Mail leaves for Ridge Spring and inter- <lb/>
mediate offices, Mondays, Wednesdays <lb/>
and Fridays at A. X. Returns at p. if. <lb/>
mail arrives Fridays at <lb/>
Departs Saturdays at a. x. <lb/>
H. A. M. <lb/>
Drink Water. <lb/>
There are very few people that <lb/>
appreciate the importance of <lb/>
drinking water. Many persons <lb/>
merely drink water to satisfy thirst; <lb/>
they think that is all that is <lb/>
and as there are a large <lb/>
of people who care very little <lb/>
for water they fail to make water- <lb/>
a habit. One great <lb/>
trouble is people don't drink water <lb/>
enough to properly thin the blood <lb/>
secretions and that <lb/>
the system can be cleaned of its <lb/>
worn out matter speedily. I had a <lb/>
friend whose health failed ; she con <lb/>
a physician ; she began tell- <lb/>
her feel- <lb/>
about the head, palpitation of <lb/>
the heart, numbness of the limbs <lb/>
many other distressing <lb/>
when the doctor stopped her and <lb/>
much water do you <lb/>
drink during the She re- <lb/>
plied that she seldom ever cared for <lb/>
water; sometimes she drank a glass <lb/>
at her dinner but not often. His <lb/>
prescription was to drink at least a <lb/>
half gallon of water during the day, <lb/>
she found the action of the <lb/>
heart better, and her other symptoms <lb/>
relieved, then she could decrease the <lb/>
quantity. But he said every one <lb/>
should drink over a quart of water <lb/>
daily, at different times. Another <lb/>
celebrated physician, when asked as <lb/>
to bis opinion of the efficacy of some <lb/>
noted springs, said the only good <lb/>
derived from them, was the <lb/>
of water people felt called on to <lb/>
drink when they went to such places. <lb/>
If they drank just as much at home <lb/>
they would never need go to springs <lb/>
for health. The human body needs <lb/>
washing out; as a health journal <lb/>
expresses long-continued <lb/>
retention secretions that to <lb/>
be thrown off, is the cause such <lb/>
diseases as rheumatism, catarrh, <lb/>
etc. They affect the heart by thick- is small of dyspepsia <lb/>
the blood, making it harder and kindred ills. <lb/>
The brightest story and <lb/>
To hope is natural to human kind ; <lb/>
It begins in childhood years. <lb/>
And lead,, us towards some goal <lb/>
Through mirth and gloom and tears. <lb/>
It sweet and blessed balm <lb/>
That makes life's burdens light. <lb/>
And sheds about our faltering steps <lb/>
Rays that the night. <lb/>
But best of all, is the Christian's hope, <lb/>
For its ashamed <lb/>
Crosses are easy for His sake. <lb/>
That a crown in Heaven be gained. <lb/>
It gives a trusting peace <lb/>
Which understanding; <lb/>
Bids tears to dry, sad hearts look up <lb/>
Our lips, our all, commanding, <lb/>
When fade this world's delusive hones, <lb/>
And fallen lie earth's castles down, <lb/>
Bethlehem's Star grows brighter still. <lb/>
And points us to the waiting crown. <lb/>
Oft do I lie near to despair <lb/>
As I think of <lb/>
And to persist in such, it seems, <lb/>
Would wear my life away. <lb/>
But ever as these adverse clouds <lb/>
Around me gather dark. <lb/>
There comes from this of <lb/>
. A shining, cheering spark. <lb/>
It lifts me from the sinking sand <lb/>
On the of plants, <lb/>
Where waves may baffle and storms <lb/>
descend. <lb/>
Yet onward I will advance. <lb/>
And twill be blessed thought <lb/>
Till time is with me no more. <lb/>
Then light my path across death's stream <lb/>
To a blissful <lb/>
nope ah Hope to thee I cling. <lb/>
Let thy Star be dim or bright; <lb/>
If built on Faith, ever last <lb/>
Ami lead Home to Light. <lb/>
Sunny South. <lb/>
A Pleasant Hoar. <lb/>
When pleasant chat savors a meal. <lb/>
work for the heart to do Its work- <lb/>
Again, the of water, in. its full <lb/>
normal quantity, washes oat the <lb/>
canal; keeps the stomach <lb/>
and bowels sweet and clean, and <lb/>
jest should be saved up to relate at <lb/>
the family table. <lb/>
Add to tins a courtesy, and <lb/>
that family need never fear the ad <lb/>
has the effect of an inside j vent of strangers as requiring com- <lb/>
we see this habit of drinking water manners. <lb/>
is a very good one that we <lb/>
should cultivate, attach much <lb/>
more importance to than we do. <lb/>
A Puzzled Hen. <lb/>
Probably the worst muddled hen <lb/>
in the State of North is <lb/>
one owned by Atkinson. Jr. <lb/>
Her trouble dates to the publics. <lb/>
The constant encouragement of <lb/>
social graces in the household will <lb/>
do much to prevent the awkwardness <lb/>
of children, <lb/>
We often see households where the <lb/>
children are promptly hustled eat of <lb/>
the way guests arrive, and <lb/>
they naturally become bashful, and <lb/>
doubtful of their manners when in <lb/>
the presence of <lb/>
We do not believe in the forcing <lb/>
of the process, which makes children eon <lb/>
and she has apparently vainly <lb/>
struggling to solve it practically. <lb/>
Her first attempt took the shape of <lb/>
an egg and a half, the half egg be- <lb/>
connected with the whole. A <lb/>
Tew days later she laid an egg twice <lb/>
the usual size much deformed- <lb/>
Yesterday she made a third attempt, <lb/>
producing this time three eggs, one <lb/>
about the ordinary one the size <lb/>
of a pa t ridge egg and one sue <lb/>
of a small bird egg. is await- <lb/>
the next laying with much inter- <lb/>
est. He fears, however, that the <lb/>
hen will lay herself oat unless she <lb/>
atone worrying over that problem. <lb/>
If net <lb/>
and over-bold, bat if they are <lb/>
so trained that they have no com- <lb/>
manners, they may be modest <lb/>
in the presence of strangers, bat <lb/>
ever unbecomingly or awkwardly <lb/>
bashful. <lb/>
The social hoar at home is the <lb/>
best school for the training of good <lb/>
manners, good manners will be <lb/>
a powerful element in life. <lb/>
Good manners on A foundation of <lb/>
good morals, will always secure <lb/>
friends. <lb/>
As the old proverb says, <lb/>
make the <lb/>
Subscribe to the <lb/>
me give yon a You are <lb/>
going to the Capitol, and of coarse <lb/>
in Washington that means that you <lb/>
are going to occupy a seat in <lb/>
the senate or house gallery. Am <lb/>
I correct <lb/>
I nodded In affirmation. <lb/>
well; you won't be there <lb/>
five she continued, <lb/>
senator or some member will <lb/>
have spotted yon, and will be gazing <lb/>
upward at yon, something after the <lb/>
fashion of Dives and Lazarus as <lb/>
rated in the New Testament, with <lb/>
the exception that you will hand <lb/>
down something refreshing In <lb/>
the shape of a smile, and the next <lb/>
thing you know he will be up along- <lb/>
side of you talking more than he <lb/>
ever did on the floor of the <lb/>
what of that said I, with <lb/>
a conscious smile and a tell tale <lb/>
blush. gentlemen of my ac- <lb/>
want to talk to me, and <lb/>
I want them to, is there harm <lb/>
no, of coarse said she, <lb/>
I am not finding fault; <lb/>
I said before, I am not the mash <lb/>
today. That is to say, I feel <lb/>
in the humor to talk to or to be <lb/>
talked to by any rising or risen <lb/>
st ate <lb/>
With that she relapsed once more <lb/>
into her reading, and I went to the <lb/>
Capitol alone, and a portion of her <lb/>
prediction came to pass. <lb/>
Nor is it unusual for ladies to go <lb/>
to the Capitol. On the contrary, it is <lb/>
quite the thing, and one can often <lb/>
spend a very pleasant afternoon <lb/>
there, especially on the house side, <lb/>
where men are plenty and many of <lb/>
them are young, gay gallant, for <lb/>
age have a very serious <lb/>
on a unless it has <lb/>
been running a long time; and <lb/>
charming little parties of ladies go <lb/>
to the Capitol, and meeting their <lb/>
statesmen friends there, indulge <lb/>
delightful lunches in the house res- <lb/>
or charming a in <lb/>
the gallery. wives <lb/>
daughters go there, too, and on <lb/>
special occasions, when speeches <lb/>
are to be made, they are always in <lb/>
advantageous positions, where they <lb/>
may see hear, it is a pleas <lb/>
to see the quick passages of re- <lb/>
cognition between the floor and <lb/>
the gallery; the look of the anxious <lb/>
man below and the encouraging <lb/>
glance smile of the loved ones <lb/>
above who center all their hopes and <lb/>
ambitions on the speaker, and to <lb/>
them the national legislature is <lb/>
important only because <lb/>
he is there. <lb/>
Yet the galleries are abused and <lb/>
many women are admitted who <lb/>
should be under the ban of <lb/>
and almost disgraceful <lb/>
flirtations are sometimes carried <lb/>
but this does not often occur, and <lb/>
the women occupy the public <lb/>
of the gallery, though I have <lb/>
heard of congressmen who have <lb/>
en their of admission to the <lb/>
gallery to they <lb/>
would not dare to recognize in pub- <lb/>
It would seem that every man <lb/>
who had risen to the dignity of a <lb/>
national representative had also <lb/>
to the dignity or decency of a <lb/>
gentleman, but I am grieved to <lb/>
that this is not true. <lb/>
Some right funny things occur <lb/>
sometimes in the gallery, when <lb/>
stranger seeking information is <lb/>
baud. Not very long ago a couple <lb/>
of outsiders sat behind several ladies, <lb/>
and they were descanting upon the <lb/>
characteristics of the members, <lb/>
One of them knew a number of the <lb/>
statesmen by sight and he was <lb/>
pointing out their noticeable points. <lb/>
much as a dime museum lecturer <lb/>
shows off his freaks. The ladies <lb/>
were enjoying it immensely, too, in <lb/>
a quiet way. Finally one said <lb/>
do you want to see the <lb/>
homeliest man in the house <lb/>
Of coarse, I want to see it <lb/>
was the response. is he <lb/>
him over on the <lb/>
can side, Lyman, of Iowa; see him <lb/>
over there eating an apple <lb/>
was the other's <lb/>
only comment, when he bad located <lb/>
him, and the ladies immediately <lb/>
looked nervous, for Mrs. Lyman was <lb/>
one of them, bat she only smiled, <lb/>
for it was not her husband's beauty <lb/>
that had won her. <lb/>
Then the stranger went on. <lb/>
that chap speaking <lb/>
asked one. <lb/>
if I know who he <lb/>
be ain't much, I guess, for <lb/>
nobody is paying any attention to <lb/>
but I'll ask and he went for- <lb/>
ward and inquired of a young lady <lb/>
in the group if she knew the speak- <lb/>
She turned to the questioner with <lb/>
sweetest smile. <lb/>
she said, do not know <lb/>
who he <lb/>
But she did, for be was her own <lb/>
father. She told me about it her- <lb/>
self. <lb/>
He is, by the way, one of lead- <lb/>
western Republicans, and <lb/>
ways makes a with one foot <lb/>
Two or three days ago I saw an- <lb/>
other case. A young man, quite a <lb/>
swell too, by the way, and a bad in <lb/>
Washington society, was making <lb/>
his maiden effort. It was on the <lb/>
tariff, and he spoke in one of those <lb/>
still small voices such as an over <lb/>
married uses when he asks for <lb/>
second piece of pie, and he was <lb/>
without auditors save an intimate <lb/>
and three other members who <lb/>
had formed a hollow square around <lb/>
he finished, I didn't <lb/>
see a stop his writing, I didn't <lb/>
see a ripple of consciousness any- <lb/>
where on the bosom of the <lb/>
except among his four friends, who <lb/>
clapped their hands and moved up <lb/>
in a body to congratulate him. <lb/>
This was the only oasis in that <lb/>
whole desert of indifference and it <lb/>
was a dozen times more lively than <lb/>
the desert itself. <lb/>
It may be true that any sort of a <lb/>
man may be a congressman, but it <lb/>
requires a man among men to a <lb/>
congressman who force <lb/>
from his colleagues. <lb/>
Of the members probably <lb/>
Thurman, Ohio could be added to <lb/>
the democratic column this year, <lb/>
said an Ohio democrat to your <lb/>
respondent to-day. Mr. Cleveland <lb/>
is said to be the who first <lb/>
Hill hail his and <lb/>
knocked him senseless but he <lb/>
A more glorious victory cannot be <lb/>
gained over another man than this, <lb/>
that when the injury begins on hie <lb/>
part the kindness should begin on <lb/>
god sets some souls in shade, alone <lb/>
They have no daylight of their own ; <lb/>
Only in lives of happier <lb/>
They see the shins of distant suns. <lb/>
A. I. T. <lb/>
Wouldst thou taste to the full the <lb/>
sweetness of life T Then keep thy- <lb/>
self low at humility's feet. The <lb/>
Shelby The prospects <lb/>
. . , a good crop in our are, <lb/>
the nomination of Judge The sweetest or the cane is part that <lb/>
Thurman and the spread like may M nearest <lb/>
a prairie Are among democrats here,; than an in i <lb/>
for the noblest of them alL can be <lb/>
as the to affectionately called world <lb/>
is personally very eel by the made <lb/>
from the Judge's recent remark s of <lb/>
If the people believe me to be an ; Hot years in such a general state of <lb/>
honest man they will let me alone, g C rapidly perfection, <lb/>
there is no doubt left of his Fayetteville There <lb/>
retirement from politics. j seems to be a great demand <lb/>
It having decided by a bay, etc., this market. Wei <lb/>
ens of republican Senators that the i always regret to see wagons i <lb/>
Fisheries treaty must be discussed I carts going out of town loaded with <lb/>
open sessions of the Senate, those forage. HOW our people pros <lb/>
Who had constantly voted against per when they are compelled to buy , contagious as exam- <lb/>
open executive any the they need for their stock v,, was there any consider- <lb/>
purpose, such men as Senators j alliance, see to it, that yon -g that not <lb/>
and Sherman, for instance, i don't have to buy your hay another <lb/>
not hesitate a moment to <lb/>
tired. <lb/>
As travelers long, when we n and <lb/>
Their home to <lb/>
wandering far and wide. <lb/>
Hiding Its goal, is satisfied <lb/>
To rest thee. <lb/>
Sarah<lb/>
completely and reverse their <lb/>
previous records <lb/>
There was one days open discus- <lb/>
of the treaty this week, after <lb/>
which it was postponed until June <lb/>
The ration has <lb/>
nothing to lose by having the sub- <lb/>
can do this, and not j publicly discussed, <lb/>
even that many if the matter he de- Seeing the utter hopelessness of <lb/>
sires to be recognized is not of I any republican being elected <lb/>
importance. And what dent, Mr. has <lb/>
cipher, some of the noble j letter, stating in positive terms <lb/>
are Some have so as that he will not under any <lb/>
said during all their stances accept the republican <lb/>
experience, others are not even <lb/>
known by name to the newspaper <lb/>
men, whose business it is to know <lb/>
everything, and who have sat in <lb/>
the press gallery day alter day and <lb/>
watched the proceedings of the <lb/>
house ever since these mute <lb/>
He knows what it is to be <lb/>
run over by the Cleveland train, <lb/>
and one experience of the is us <lb/>
much he wants. <lb/>
Sheridan has this week been <lb/>
about as near death's door as it was <lb/>
possible to go, and still live; his <lb/>
patriots answered to the first j family and physicians at one time <lb/>
roll call. Yet they are not useless gave up all hope. But suddenly. <lb/>
Winston One of the <lb/>
oldest couples in Wilkes county is <lb/>
Mr. Samuel Welch wile of Lewis <lb/>
Fork Town-hip. They lived to <lb/>
get her as man and wife -or many <lb/>
years and in death were not divided <lb/>
Mrs. Welch died at A. It on the <lb/>
18th and Mr. Welch o P. M, on the <lb/>
same date, and were Uttered <lb/>
et on the same day. <lb/>
produce its like. We imitate good <lb/>
actions through emulation, and bad <lb/>
ones through a malignity in our <lb/>
which shame conceals and ex. <lb/>
ample sets at liberty. <lb/>
not a place in earth or heaven. <lb/>
There s not a task to mankind given. <lb/>
There <lb/>
members; they work hard for their, there was change for the <lb/>
which continued for three derail <lb/>
he had another relapse. There <lb/>
little hope of his ultimate <lb/>
A committee of citizens <lb/>
are in this city, for the purpose <lb/>
districts they render valuable <lb/>
but they are not of the ma- <lb/>
from which garments of <lb/>
greatness are cut, that is all. <lb/>
might say a great deal more <lb/>
about congressmen, but won't; I'll <lb/>
open a chestnut burr and quit. <lb/>
Everybody the United States <lb/>
has heard the story that Congress <lb/>
man Martin, of Texas, blew out the <lb/>
of inviting Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland <lb/>
to attend the opening of the <lb/>
exposition in that city. <lb/>
Commissioner has <lb/>
gas at his hotel the first night of his recommended that suits be brought <lb/>
stay in Washington. Well, on that; against the Southern Pacific Bail- <lb/>
eventful night there was a con <lb/>
his way to the national <lb/>
capital from the of Ken- <lb/>
and when he got into <lb/>
he heard the story of Martin and <lb/>
the gas, and ho also read a column <lb/>
or more about it in the papers, and <lb/>
jet somehow the inspiring humor <lb/>
of it didn't strike him. He stood <lb/>
it till evening, and then he called <lb/>
in a fellow Kentuckian for counsel <lb/>
comfort. <lb/>
he said, <lb/>
about the story on Martin <lb/>
tho best joke I over heard <lb/>
said Caruth, who lives Louis- <lb/>
ville. <lb/>
what they all seem to <lb/>
think, but dog my cats if I seem to <lb/>
absorb <lb/>
he blew out the ex- <lb/>
plained Caruth. <lb/>
course ho did, but they don't <lb/>
expect a man when he first comes <lb/>
to Washington co sleep in a room <lb/>
light as day, do they <lb/>
Then Caruth collapsed, and to <lb/>
this day lie won't tell what that <lb/>
name is. <lb/>
Jane. <lb/>
The Origin of a Common Say- <lb/>
Buffalo Courier. <lb/>
divinity student's broke out <lb/>
said young man that <lb/>
boards on South Division street. <lb/>
were sitting at dinner to day <lb/>
Miss she up and says <lb/>
of her pupils will set the <lb/>
river on fire. The divinity student <lb/>
looked up said, see that yon, <lb/>
like other good people, are in error <lb/>
What do you <lb/>
said Miss getting red in <lb/>
the face, the divinity <lb/>
student yon talk t <lb/>
setting the river fire <lb/>
an old saying that's got off the track. <lb/>
It to be never set <lb/>
Thames and people when <lb/>
they say it had in mind the river <lb/>
Thames; on the contrary it means a <lb/>
miller's sieve, called a which <lb/>
was used in the old wind and water <lb/>
mill days. This had a wood- <lb/>
en rim which slid back and forth in <lb/>
a wooden frame. If the that <lb/>
worked it was energetic his work <lb/>
he sometimes set on fire <lb/>
from friction. Hence it was said of <lb/>
a dull, Blow person he <lb/>
never set on fire, and the <lb/>
saying baa been corrupted to its <lb/>
present <lb/>
com <lb/>
To ran Inform <lb/>
readers that I have a. positive remedy <lb/>
the above named disease. By its timely <lb/>
use thousands bf hopeless cases have been <lb/>
permanently I shall be glad to <lb/>
send two bottles of my remedy to <lb/>
any of readers who have <lb/>
If they send me their express <lb/>
and post <lb/>
T. A. M, C. Pearl st. N. Y. <lb/>
against <lb/>
road Co., to vacate for about <lb/>
acres of laud Southern <lb/>
California. <lb/>
The House committee on public <lb/>
lauds has adopted the substitute <lb/>
offered by Mr. of Indiana, <lb/>
the general land forfeiture <lb/>
bill, which recently passed the <lb/>
ate. The Senate bill permits the <lb/>
roads to hold all the lauds along the <lb/>
line as far as the roads have been <lb/>
completed, regardless of the time <lb/>
limit provided in the original grants. <lb/>
Mr. substitute holds <lb/>
railroads to a stricter accountability, <lb/>
and forfeits all lands not earned <lb/>
strictly according to tho terms of the <lb/>
original grant. <lb/>
The first session of the Fiftieth <lb/>
bids fair to break the re <lb/>
cord as to the length of the <lb/>
No one dares to name a time for <lb/>
adjournment. If they are not still <lb/>
here it will be because <lb/>
the heat will drive them away. <lb/>
us glance at the regular <lb/>
that has to be finished up be- <lb/>
fore they can adjourn. Of the four <lb/>
teen regular appropriation bills, only <lb/>
Military Academy and <lb/>
Pension passed both <lb/>
half from Falling Creek, last <lb/>
Friday, Laura Miller, a or <lb/>
year old colored girl, was kindling <lb/>
a fire by pouring kerosene on it from <lb/>
a Tho exploded, the oil <lb/>
flew all over her and her <lb/>
clothes and skin. At last accounts <lb/>
she was suffering terrible agonies, <lb/>
and no hope is felt that she will re- <lb/>
cover.<lb/>
Governor Scales yesterday issued <lb/>
the death warrant of W. A. Potts, <lb/>
who murdered Paul in Beau- <lb/>
fort county last November, but whose <lb/>
death was appealed to the <lb/>
Supreme Court and the decision I <lb/>
tamed on Friday, May The j ,, <lb/>
has July as the day <lb/>
for execution. The same day <lb/>
was also fixed for the execution of <lb/>
James Byers, of Wilkes, who was <lb/>
convicted of mi <lb/>
Supreme Court <lb/>
affirmed. <lb/>
. i- n , I'm- <lb/>
Wilkes, who was ,,.<lb/>
t and judgment was g <lb/>
The Mad Stone Cures a Snake <lb/>
Bite. <lb/>
Charlotte Chronicle. <lb/>
was yesterday <lb/>
around the back lots when <lb/>
a young snake at- <lb/>
his attention. Ho <lb/>
to catch the and put it <lb/>
a bottle; and the result w is that the <lb/>
snake caught him. He was bitten <lb/>
on bis left baud and within a few j <lb/>
his hand arm, up to <lb/>
tho elbow were swollen to twice <lb/>
their usual size. swallowed a <lb/>
quantity of whiskey, under protest, <lb/>
was then hurried to John T <lb/>
jewelry store to try the <lb/>
He was really suffering <lb/>
great, pain and his hand was swollen <lb/>
out of nil shape at the time the mad <lb/>
stone was applied to the wound. <lb/>
Tho stone adhered nearly half an <lb/>
hour, when it dropped off. It was <lb/>
cleansed by being boiled, was <lb/>
again applied, when it adhered as <lb/>
before. The swelling began to de- <lb/>
. -U <lb/>
V G. JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in nil courts. Collections <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
Houses. Five of the others crease, and at the end two hours, <lb/>
it had all disappeared and the snake <lb/>
bite was cured. This case proves <lb/>
beyond a doubt that there is virtue <lb/>
in Battlers <lb/>
passed the House, and one is now <lb/>
pending before that body. Six of <lb/>
them have not yet been reported <lb/>
from the committees- The first <lb/>
of the Forty-ninth Congress <lb/>
was called very slow, but at a ears <lb/>
responding date two years ago it <lb/>
was more than one third ahead of <lb/>
the present Congress- <lb/>
The Mills tariff bill, when it comes <lb/>
before the House will have <lb/>
a number of amendments ad- <lb/>
But none will be accepted or <lb/>
voted for by democrats, except those <lb/>
which have been accepted by the <lb/>
democratic caucus, a resolution to <lb/>
that effect having been unanimously <lb/>
passed by the caucus Wednesday <lb/>
night. amendments which <lb/>
have been accepted by the caucus, <lb/>
are rather numerous, but do not <lb/>
affect the bill to any great extent. <lb/>
It is estimated that all told they <lb/>
will not make more than <lb/>
a year difference. <lb/>
WEAKEST PART. <lb/>
is a general principle that local dis- <lb/>
ease attacks weakest part of the <lb/>
fortunate victim at the time he may be <lb/>
exposed to the attack. This may be more <lb/>
satisfactory to the theorist than to the <lb/>
sufferer. The latter has often asked, <lb/>
But why should that part be weaker <lb/>
than any That is a wise remedy <lb/>
that tends to strengthen all the weaker <lb/>
parts, but guard them from the encroach- <lb/>
of other diseases. <lb/>
For this purpose the Compound <lb/>
gen has no equal. If yon wish to know <lb/>
more of this Treatment, you can easily <lb/>
be gratified by addressing Starkey <lb/>
It is a fact about that ballot <lb/>
Northern Methodist <lb/>
Conference. There wen; votes <lb/>
cast an election for a Bishop, <lb/>
where there were but 42.5 delegates. <lb/>
How it that for high t We get the <lb/>
information from a religious ex- <lb/>
change. The Northern Methodists <lb/>
the war wrapped tho com- <lb/>
table in a C. s. flag, and <lb/>
made loyalty to the flag a test of <lb/>
loyalty to Christ. the <lb/>
stuffing. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
A citizen of an adjoining county <lb/>
was talking to a friend in our pres- <lb/>
a few days ago, when he was <lb/>
asked bow the people were getting <lb/>
along in his section. <lb/>
said he, with a sorrowful look <lb/>
on his countenance, dirt is so <lb/>
poor down there we have to <lb/>
guano with it to make <lb/>
Gold <lb/>
Wart <lb/>
W. II. merchant, Lake <lb/>
City, Fla., was taken with a severe cold <lb/>
attended with a distressing and <lb/>
running Into consumption Its first stage <lb/>
lie tried many so-called cough <lb/>
remedies and steadily grew worse. Was <lb/>
reduced in flesh, had In breath- <lb/>
and was unable to Finally <lb/>
tried Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- <lb/>
and found Immediate relief, <lb/>
1529 Arch street, Philadelphia, after rising about a dozen bottles <lb/>
Pa., for Brochure, an <lb/>
book of pages, and It will sent to <lb/>
free. <lb/>
The now <lb/>
January 1st, 1889, <lb/>
until <lb/>
found himself well and ha had no return <lb/>
of the No he remedy can <lb/>
show so grand a record of cures, ax Dr. <lb/>
King's New Discovery Consumption <lb/>
to do just what Is claimed for It. <lb/>
Trial bottle free at Drug <lb/>
Store, <lb/>
I,. JAMES, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
Greenville, N <lb/>
TAMES M. <lb/>
Y-AT-L A W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
A LEX <lb/>
KY-AT-L AW, <lb/>
G V C. <lb/>
AUG. M MOORE, CM. <lb/>
BERNARD, <lb/>
W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
Practice in the State and Federal Court <lb/>
J. M. TUCKER. J MURPHY <lb/>
MOORE, TUCKER A MURPHY, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
SKINNER <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
LATHAM. <lb/>
T A <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
V. <lb/>
Attorney and at <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
Law <lb/>
Alt <lb/>
JOYNER. <lb/>
and at Law <lb/>
GREENVILLE N. U <lb/>
Win practice In the Courts Pitt, <lb/>
Greene, Edgecombe and <lb/>
ties, and the Supreme Court. <lb/>
Faithful attention given to all <lb/>
to him. <lb/>
DR. H. SNELL <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
Surgeon Dentist. <lb/>
Tenders his professional services t <lb/>
public. <lb/>
Teeth extracted without pain by <lb/>
Oxide Gas.<lb/>
Without a woman in <lb/>
Learn to wait. The trial of pa <lb/>
is itself r. blessing. To <lb/>
Kinston On Mr. Q. I promptitude appears to be essential <lb/>
place about one and a to satisfaction, but we know nothing <lb/>
of the true meaning of tho word <lb/>
promptitude; we measure at ion <lb/>
by our own standards of time, not <lb/>
by the solemnity and compass of <lb/>
eternity <lb/>
He useful where thou that they <lb/>
may <lb/>
Both want and wish thy pleasing pres- <lb/>
still. <lb/>
Kindness, good parts, great places are <lb/>
the way <lb/>
To compass this. Find out <lb/>
wants will, <lb/>
And meet them there. All worldly joys <lb/>
go less <lb/>
So the one joy of doing kindness. <lb/>
Herbert. <lb/>
One act may more sinful than <lb/>
one sin cannot be <lb/>
in Other sin, because, <lb/>
since sin is sin, there can be nothing <lb/>
right it. You may cross the <lb/>
line that divides right from wrong <lb/>
one course of action; <lb/>
g line has neither <lb/>
and every <lb/>
time you step over the line you are <lb/>
no longer on the other side of it <lb/>
David Swinger.<lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A Y-A W, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018889_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Published Every Wednesday <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IX THE <lb/>
DISTRICT. <lb/>
Subscription Price. . pet year. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC. BUT <lb/>
will not hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men and measures that are not consistent <lb/>
with true principles of the party. <lb/>
If you want a a wide-a-wake <lb/>
o the for the <lb/>
SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb/>
WEDNESDAY JUNE IS <lb/>
Entered at the Post at <lb/>
G., as Second-Class <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
Bandannas are carrying the <lb/>
now and will he all the rage. <lb/>
Get one and he patriotic. <lb/>
for Cleveland and Thur- <lb/>
d an <lb/>
The first Tuesday in <lb/>
be a Fowle day for <lb/>
Dockery. When the returns are <lb/>
in son Oliver will wish he <lb/>
had never been born before a <lb/>
nominating convention. <lb/>
Last week the grand jury of <lb/>
county Superior Court <lb/>
found a true bill against forty- <lb/>
two citizens of Winston for <lb/>
They were tiled before <lb/>
Judge and a line of <lb/>
and costs placed upon each of <lb/>
them. <lb/>
through that <lb/>
excellent medium the Statesville <lb/>
Landmark, pays our townsman, <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner, a handsome <lb/>
compliment in the following <lb/>
terms Harry Skinner of <lb/>
Pitt, is an orator who charms <lb/>
away one's senses. He has a <lb/>
rare strain of eloquence. Yet <lb/>
his eloquence is incidental. He <lb/>
has a directness and a force to <lb/>
which his other <lb/>
as a speaker are subordinate. <lb/>
There is not a man in the State <lb/>
who has greater felicity of ex- <lb/>
The Reflector for <lb/>
Col. Skinner and Pitt county <lb/>
appreciates this, coming as it <lb/>
does from a distant portion of the <lb/>
State. The East appreciates his <lb/>
powers as a speaker. He is the <lb/>
orator par excellent of the First <lb/>
District, and this is wonderfully <lb/>
strange to those who come in <lb/>
daily contact with him, his <lb/>
immense business interest and <lb/>
large practice seems to engross <lb/>
bis entire time and he appears <lb/>
to give speaking no thought or <lb/>
care. Now that he has by his <lb/>
wisdom, judgment and energy <lb/>
made a snug little fortune, if he <lb/>
will only cultivate that talent of <lb/>
speaking with which he is gifted <lb/>
by Heaven, in a few years he <lb/>
could command any position to <lb/>
which he might aspire. <lb/>
At the Commencement last <lb/>
week the State University con- <lb/>
the degree of LL. on <lb/>
i B. the <lb/>
editor of the Wilmington <lb/>
Star. Such u honor could not <lb/>
have been more worthily bestow- <lb/>
ed, as the State possesses no <lb/>
man whose attainments make <lb/>
him more deserving. <lb/>
Judge A. C. Avery, of <lb/>
whom the people of the <lb/>
East esteem and honor, is <lb/>
siding at this term of Pitt <lb/>
Court. His many friends <lb/>
here congratulate him upon <lb/>
having received the nomination <lb/>
for a position upon the Supreme <lb/>
Court bench. Pitt county will <lb/>
stand by him and give him a <lb/>
large majority. <lb/>
The ticket brought out by the <lb/>
late Democratic State <lb/>
is being generally <lb/>
From all over the State <lb/>
are coming testimonials from <lb/>
the people and press that the <lb/>
Convention made wise selections. <lb/>
Now let the utmost harmony <lb/>
prevail, with a solid front <lb/>
brought up against the enemy, <lb/>
and a great victory awaits the <lb/>
Democracy next November. <lb/>
The Wilmington Star settles <lb/>
the question as to the birth place <lb/>
of Allen G. Thurman, the <lb/>
date for by say- <lb/>
was born at Lynchburg, <lb/>
Va., November 13th He <lb/>
is half North Carolinian by de- <lb/>
Because some had seen <lb/>
it mentioned in print that he <lb/>
was of North Carolina stock, <lb/>
they argued that he was born <lb/>
within the borders of this State. <lb/>
our financial affairs, resulting from <lb/>
the <lb/>
of our currency and a public <lb/>
debt it has, by the <lb/>
adoption of and conservative <lb/>
course, not only avoided disaster, <lb/>
but greatly promoted the prosperity <lb/>
of the people. <lb/>
It reversed the improvident <lb/>
unwise policy of the <lb/>
party touching the public domain, <lb/>
and has claimed from corporations <lb/>
and syndicates, alien and domestic, <lb/>
and restored to the people, nearly <lb/>
one hundred million acres of land, <lb/>
to held as homesteads <lb/>
for our citizens. <lb/>
While carefully guarding interest <lb/>
to principles of justice and equity, <lb/>
it has paid out more for pensions <lb/>
and bounties to soldiers and <lb/>
sailors of the Republic was <lb/>
paid before during an equal <lb/>
It has adopted and consistently <lb/>
pursued a firm and prudent foreign <lb/>
preserving peace with all <lb/>
nations, while scrupulously main- <lb/>
all rights interests of <lb/>
our own government and people at <lb/>
home and abroad. <lb/>
The exclusion from our shores of <lb/>
Chinese laborers has been effectual- <lb/>
secured under the provisions of a <lb/>
treaty, the operation for which has <lb/>
been postponed by the action of <lb/>
the Republican majority in the <lb/>
Senate. <lb/>
reform in civil service has <lb/>
been inaugurated and maintained <lb/>
by President Cleveland, and ho has <lb/>
brought the public service to the <lb/>
highest standard of efficiency, not <lb/>
only by rule and precept, but by the <lb/>
example of his own and <lb/>
selfish administration of public <lb/>
affairs. <lb/>
The National Convention of j <lb/>
Greenville Institute. <lb/>
Third Annual Commencement <lb/>
The third session of Greenville <lb/>
Institute has closed, and the com-. <lb/>
passed off very <lb/>
pleasantly. <lb/>
On Thursday a debate was <lb/>
had at the College chapel. A large <lb/>
crowd was present to hear the <lb/>
speeches all seemed to enjoy <lb/>
them. It was not our pleasure to <lb/>
be detained by bus- <lb/>
we hear that the speak- <lb/>
acquitted themselves <lb/>
especially Mr. F. C. Harding, whose <lb/>
speech was pronounced exceptional- <lb/>
fine. After the close of the de- <lb/>
bate Maj. Henry Harding entertain- <lb/>
ed the audience in a splendid ad- <lb/>
dress. <lb/>
ADDRESS. <lb/>
Friday afternoon at three o'clock <lb/>
a large audience assembled the <lb/>
Opera House to hear the literary <lb/>
address by Rev. S. M. Smith, of <lb/>
Washington. The exercises were <lb/>
opened with a song by a class of <lb/>
little girls- Prayer was then offer- <lb/>
ed by Rev. R. B. John, pastor of <lb/>
the M. E. Church. The orator was <lb/>
introduced by Mr. J. H. Tucker in <lb/>
a very and appropriate speech. <lb/>
Mr. Smith spoke for nearly an hour, <lb/>
but said it was an error about his <lb/>
going to make a literary address, as <lb/>
he was only going to make a plain, <lb/>
practical talk. His subject <lb/>
In every branch department <lb/>
of the Government under Democrat- . . , , . , . <lb/>
to control the and welfare of ct Le not , <lb/>
, , j all people have been guarded and; upon the s side. <lb/>
the Democratic party, which was I every public interest has as some supposed when his subject <lb/>
was announced. His speech was <lb/>
Stomach <lb/>
and Liver <lb/>
and all of tho Kidneys. <lb/>
WEAK NERVES <lb/>
which never Containing Mid <lb/>
wonderful it <lb/>
speedily cures all disorder. <lb/>
RHEUMATISM <lb/>
Um <lb/>
blood. It oat lactic Mid. which <lb/>
to a healthy It la <lb/>
the remedy fee <lb/>
KIDNEY COMPLAINTS <lb/>
quickly <lb/>
the and to perfect health. <lb/>
power, combined with la nerve <lb/>
tonic, makes it the beat remedy for all <lb/>
kidney complaints. <lb/>
DYSPEPSIA <lb/>
the <lb/>
and the of the die <lb/>
tire la why It cu <lb/>
CONSTIPATION <lb/>
la not a <lb/>
Me. <lb/>
action to the fol- <lb/>
by prof national and <lb/>
men. Send for book. <lb/>
Price Sold by <lb/>
WELLS, <lb/>
VT. <lb/>
HARRY SKINNER <lb/>
L C. LATHAM <lb/>
R. GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb/>
held last week at St. Louis, was been protected, and the equality of <lb/>
the largest, most I all our citizens before the law, with <lb/>
and most <lb/>
,, . . -out regard to race or color has been <lb/>
enthusiastic that is, <lb/>
known in the history of our A a-j Upon its record; thus exhibited, <lb/>
and upon a pledge of continuance <lb/>
met that was marked by such <lb/>
harmony and unanimity. popular trusts by the election <lb/>
a bod- of its size should meet, a Chief Magistrate who has been <lb/>
nominate for both able and prudent; and in. <lb/>
,, ., . addition to that trust, <lb/>
-President by <lb/>
upon many things that a woman bad <lb/>
the right to expect and demand in <lb/>
matrimonial, social and business cir- <lb/>
Never has a Convention land upon a of continuance His points were well taken, and <lb/>
his speech throughout a fine <lb/>
fort, the audience showing their <lb/>
in frequent applause. A <lb/>
full synopsis would interesting <lb/>
but space forbids. <lb/>
BOLL OF <lb/>
At the close of the address Prof. <lb/>
Duckett read the of pupils <lb/>
who were upon the roll of for <lb/>
the last quarter, viz number <lb/>
indicates highest <lb/>
T. K. J. <lb/>
Teel, F. U Harding, Job. <lb/>
An error crept into our last <lb/>
rather, an omission it <lb/>
escaped notice until <lb/>
our attention was directed to it <lb/>
by the writer of the article. It <lb/>
was the piece from <lb/>
concerning the time of holding <lb/>
the Normal Schools. Some <lb/>
questions were asked and the <lb/>
answers given which we made to <lb/>
read I wish to ask, <lb/>
what are the Normals And <lb/>
of course the answer will be for <lb/>
the benefit of the poor children <lb/>
of the State, who have not the <lb/>
means to educate <lb/>
This was a mixture of two <lb/>
and answers and should <lb/>
have I wish to ask <lb/>
what are the Normals for i They <lb/>
are for the instruction of teach- <lb/>
to better prepare them for <lb/>
charge of the public schools. <lb/>
And what are the public schools <lb/>
for Of course the answer will <lb/>
be for the benefit of the poor <lb/>
children of the State, who have <lb/>
not the means to educate them- <lb/>
The purport of the <lb/>
article was very much changed <lb/>
by getting that portion wrong, <lb/>
hence this explanation. We <lb/>
will add, that the position taken <lb/>
by was a one, <lb/>
and be brought to the <lb/>
attention of those having <lb/>
in such matters. The <lb/>
time most benefit <lb/>
could by the poor <lb/>
children who could not attend <lb/>
school in any other months <lb/>
should not consumed, by the <lb/>
Normals. <lb/>
and ice <lb/>
acclamation, and adopt a plat- <lb/>
form without a dissenting voice <lb/>
is without precedent. Still such <lb/>
was done at St. Louis. Grover <lb/>
Cleveland was nominated for re- <lb/>
election as President by <lb/>
The mention of his name <lb/>
before the Convention brought <lb/>
forth the greatest ovation ever <lb/>
received by one man. A grand <lb/>
shout of applause from thou- <lb/>
sands of enthusiastic Democrats <lb/>
rent the air and continued with- <lb/>
out cessation for twenty-four <lb/>
minutes. A splendid endorse <lb/>
indeed of the <lb/>
of President Cleveland. <lb/>
Allen G. Thurman, of Ohio, <lb/>
noble old was <lb/>
for the second place on the <lb/>
ticket. His name was received <lb/>
amid great cheering and the <lb/>
waving of innumerable <lb/>
These nomination in every- <lb/>
way meet the approbation of <lb/>
people and the prevailing <lb/>
expression is that the <lb/>
performed its work well. <lb/>
The ticket is an admirable one, <lb/>
and one be beaten. <lb/>
The people approve of the wise <lb/>
and patriotic administration of <lb/>
President Cleveland, and feel <lb/>
that the security and welfare of <lb/>
the government depend upon <lb/>
Democratic rule. For that <lb/>
son there will be a grand rally <lb/>
to our leaders, and when <lb/>
day comes there will be an <lb/>
and overwhelming <lb/>
majority for Cleveland and Thur- <lb/>
man and honest government. <lb/>
The publish in an- <lb/>
other column. Comment upon it <lb/>
is unnecessary. It is clear, con- <lb/>
wisely planned, meets the <lb/>
requirements of the party and <lb/>
will be endorsed by all Demo- <lb/>
of <lb/>
to that <lb/>
a transfer also to Democracy <lb/>
the entire legislative power. <lb/>
The Republican party, controlling <lb/>
the Senate, resisting in both <lb/>
houses of Congress a reformation of <lb/>
the unjust unequal tax laws <lb/>
which have outlasted the <lb/>
ties of war, and are now <lb/>
the abundance of a long peace, <lb/>
deny to the people equality before <lb/>
WE are now fitted up order and are prepared to man- <lb/>
upon short notice any kind or style of <lb/>
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb/>
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING. <lb/>
We also keep a nice line of<lb/>
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed. <lb/>
THE MAN IN THE MOON <lb/>
BE SEEN EVERY DAY, but the mail who keeps a fresh supply of <lb/>
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars, <lb/>
TOBACCO, CANNED GOODS, <lb/>
Can be found whenever wanted. You only have to look for <lb/>
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb/>
And all your wants the above goods can be supplied. <lb/>
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS TUT UP TO ORDER. <lb/>
FINE -A. SPECIALTY. <lb/>
tho law, the fairness and justice Robert Wingate, W. O. Little, W. <lb/>
The Platform. <lb/>
The Democratic party of the <lb/>
United States in National <lb/>
assembled renews the pledge of <lb/>
fidelity to Democratic faith, and re- <lb/>
affirms the platform adopted by its <lb/>
representatives in the Convention of <lb/>
1844, and endorses the views ex- <lb/>
pressed by President Cleveland in <lb/>
his last earnest message to Con- <lb/>
as the correct Interpretation <lb/>
of that platform upon the question <lb/>
of tariff reduction; and also endorses <lb/>
the efforts of our Democratic <lb/>
in Congress to secure a <lb/>
reduction of executive taxation. <lb/>
Among its principles of party- <lb/>
faith are the maintenance of in- <lb/>
of free <lb/>
States, now about to enter <lb/>
upon its second century of <lb/>
progress and renown ; devotion <lb/>
to a plan of by <lb/>
a written constitution strictly <lb/>
every granted power, and ex <lb/>
reserving to the States or <lb/>
people the ungrateful residue <lb/>
of power; the encouragement of <lb/>
jealous popular vigilance, directed <lb/>
to all who have been chosen for brief <lb/>
terms to enact and execute laws, <lb/>
and are charged with the duly of <lb/>
preserving peace, insuring equality <lb/>
and establishing justice. <lb/>
The Democratic party only- <lb/>
welcomes an exacting scrutiny of <lb/>
the administration of the executive <lb/>
power which four years ago was <lb/>
committed to its trust in the <lb/>
election of Grover Cleveland as <lb/>
President of the United States, bat <lb/>
it challenges the most searching in- <lb/>
concerning its fidelity and de- <lb/>
to the pledges which invited <lb/>
the suffrage of the people. <lb/>
the most critical period of <lb/>
which are their right. the <lb/>
cry of American labor for a better <lb/>
share the rewards of industries is <lb/>
stilled with enter <lb/>
prise is fettered bound down to <lb/>
home markets; is <lb/>
ed with doubt; and unequal <lb/>
just laws can neither be properly <lb/>
amended or repealed. <lb/>
The Democratic party will con- <lb/>
all the power confided to <lb/>
it to to reform these laws in <lb/>
accordance with the pledges of its <lb/>
last platform, at the ballot <lb/>
by the suffrages of the <lb/>
all industrious freemen of our land. <lb/>
The immense majority, including <lb/>
every tiller of the soil, gain no ad- <lb/>
vantage from executive tax laws, <lb/>
but the price of nearly everything <lb/>
they buy is increased by the <lb/>
ism of unequal system of tax leg- <lb/>
AU unnecessary taxation <lb/>
is unjust; it is repugnant to the <lb/>
creed of Democracy that by such <lb/>
taxation the cost of the necessaries <lb/>
of life should be unjustifiably in <lb/>
creased to all our people. <lb/>
Judged by Democratic principles <lb/>
tho interests of the people are be- <lb/>
when, by unnecessary tax- <lb/>
trusts and combinations are <lb/>
permitted to exist, which, while <lb/>
duly enriching the few that combine, <lb/>
rob our citizens by depriving them <lb/>
of the benefits of natural <lb/>
Every Democratic rule of govern- <lb/>
mental action is violated when, <lb/>
through unnecessary taxation, a <lb/>
vast sum of money, far beyond the <lb/>
needs of an economical <lb/>
is drawn from the people and <lb/>
the channels of trade, <lb/>
lated as a demoralizing surplus in <lb/>
the national treasury. The money <lb/>
now lying idle in the Federal <lb/>
treasury, resulting from super- <lb/>
taxation amounts to more <lb/>
than one hundred and twenty-five <lb/>
millions, and the surplus collected <lb/>
is reaching the sum of more than <lb/>
sixty millions annually. <lb/>
Debauched by this immense temp- <lb/>
the remedy of the republican <lb/>
party is to meet and by <lb/>
extravagant appropriations and ex <lb/>
whether constitutional or <lb/>
not, the accumulation of <lb/>
taxation. The Democratic <lb/>
policy is to enforce frugality the <lb/>
public expense and abolish <lb/>
taxation. <lb/>
Our established domestic <lb/>
tries and should not and <lb/>
need not be endangered by a <lb/>
and correction of the burdens <lb/>
of taxation. On the contrary, a <lb/>
fair and careful revision of our tax <lb/>
laws, with due allowance or differ- <lb/>
between wages of American <lb/>
and foreign labor, must promote <lb/>
and encourage every branch of such <lb/>
industries and enterprises, by giving <lb/>
them assurance of an extended mar- <lb/>
and steady and continuous op- <lb/>
in the interests of American <lb/>
labor, which should in no event be <lb/>
neglected. <lb/>
The revision of our tax laws con- <lb/>
by the Democratic party <lb/>
should promote the advantage of <lb/>
such labor, by cheapening the cost <lb/>
of the necessaries of life the home <lb/>
of every working man, and at the <lb/>
same time securing to him steady <lb/>
employment. <lb/>
Upon this question of tariff re <lb/>
form so closely concerning every <lb/>
phase of out life, and upon <lb/>
every question involved in the pro- <lb/>
duct of good government, the Dem- <lb/>
party submits its principles <lb/>
and professions the intelligent <lb/>
suffrages of the American people. <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
If from another poem should <lb/>
come, <lb/>
of Ids surplus lore. <lb/>
Please tell him to of Tom <lb/>
And let us have a little Moore. <lb/>
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN S. CO <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
THE LEADERS IN <lb/>
ILL KINDS OF STAPLE GOODS. <lb/>
A, B. J. T. Erwin, <lb/>
House, S. T. White, <lb/>
Ola Forbes, Louis H. <lb/>
Edwards. <lb/>
Cox, Annie <lb/>
Harding, Forbes, <lb/>
Foley, It. D. Erwin, Bessie Jarvis, <lb/>
Ada Leggett, Mary Cannon, Alice <lb/>
Moore, Bessie White, Estelle <lb/>
Anderson, Delia Mar- <lb/>
shall, Forking, Allie Tractor, <lb/>
Mary Terrell, Helen Kicks, <lb/>
Primary eta <lb/>
Mamie Duckett, Ii <lb/>
ma Maggie <lb/>
Rosalind It omit roe, Annie. <lb/>
Lina Sheppard, Myra Skinner, <lb/>
White. <lb/>
AWARD OF MEDALS. <lb/>
Several prizes had been offered <lb/>
at the beginning of the session, <lb/>
after the names of those by whom <lb/>
the medals had been won were read, <lb/>
they were requested to go upon the <lb/>
stage. The medals were presented <lb/>
by Mr. G. B. King in a beautiful <lb/>
speech of a few minutes. The <lb/>
awards were as <lb/>
Scholarship Nannie <lb/>
Cox. <lb/>
Mental Leta <lb/>
Improvement in <lb/>
Helen Kicks. <lb/>
N. C. T. <lb/>
Robert Peel. <lb/>
A prize was also awarded to <lb/>
lie Perkins in the Primary Depart- <lb/>
for writing, <lb/>
At o'clock the annual concert <lb/>
began. The Opera House was <lb/>
crowded almost to its utmost <lb/>
the audience being many <lb/>
people from a distance. The <lb/>
was the most orderly and best <lb/>
behaved that we ever saw here on a <lb/>
similar occasion. The following <lb/>
program was <lb/>
Piano o'er the Mead- <lb/>
Lillian Nobles Rosa <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
the Children. <lb/>
Piano Mazurka, Op. <lb/>
Miss Mary Cannon. <lb/>
Vocal Listen tie the Wood- <lb/>
bird's Misses N. Fleming and A. <lb/>
Harding. <lb/>
Piano Petite Polka De <lb/>
Misses and Rosa <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Vocal Sole Chant the Sum- <lb/>
mer Miss Lillian Nobles. <lb/>
Piano <lb/>
Piano and <lb/>
Hams. <lb/>
Piano <lb/>
Miss Hortense Forbes. <lb/>
Vocal Among the LU- <lb/>
Misses Cannon, Harding and <lb/>
Lizzie <lb/>
Vocal Moonlit <lb/>
Miss Nona Fleming. <lb/>
Piano On. Misses <lb/>
M. Cannon and II. Forbes. <lb/>
Vocal Heard a <lb/>
Misses Cannon and Jarvis. <lb/>
Accompanist Miss Mary Atwater. <lb/>
We will pot comment upon any <lb/>
part of the separately, but <lb/>
will only say that each performer <lb/>
executed her part well and skillful <lb/>
y, credit upon both <lb/>
and instructor. <lb/>
Just before the last a very <lb/>
handsome jewelry case was <lb/>
ON THIRD PAGE. <lb/>
THIS BEING ELECTION YEAR <lb/>
And LEAP YEAR has nothing to do with the price of <lb/>
GROCERIES. <lb/>
you desire to purchase a article in <lb/>
FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE. MEAT, <lb/>
Or anything in that lino, call on <lb/>
C. TYSON, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Provisions, Canned Goods, General Family Supplies, <lb/>
Tobacco, Always on Hand. <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 he enabled to sell as cheaply as any one South of <lb/>
Norfolk. We shall retain in our employ J. S Congleton as general <lb/>
superintendent, of the business, with his former partner Chan Skinner <lb/>
as assistant, who will always be glad to see and servo their old customers <lb/>
A special branch of business will be to furnish cash at <lb/>
rates to farmers to cultivate and harvest their crops, in sums of <lb/>
to with approved security <lb/>
J. SUGG, <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, FIRS <lb/>
ACCIDENT and STOCK INSURANCE. <lb/>
M Yon Are Ditty For <lb/>
Is Reliable Goods <lb/>
If such be your wants, we can supply them. <lb/>
We are receiving weekly <lb/>
NEW GOODS <lb/>
OF THE LATEST STYLES. <lb/>
US A GALL. <lb/>
LITTLE HOUSE, k BRO. <lb/>
E. C. GLENN.<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/>
W. L. BROWN <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT <lb/>
AND AGENT FOR THE OIL MILLS. <lb/>
Highest Cash price paid for Cotton Seed or <lb/>
given in exchange. Has for sale <lb/>
Acid Lime and Cotton Seed Meal <lb/>
Either for Cash or on Time. <lb/>
FARMER'S BONE FERTILIZER. <lb/>
SPECIALTY It is to be superior to any fertilizer the market. <lb/>
A SPEC <lb/>
Save Money Money. <lb/>
PUPS <lb/>
The Best In The World. <lb/>
HUME, <lb/>
Three Big Houses. <lb/>
RICHMOND, NORFOLK, AND <lb/>
A REVOLUTION IN PRICES. <lb/>
OLDEST LATEST HOUSES. BEST <lb/>
LOWEST ICIEST TERMS. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb/>
D. Williamson, <lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN AX AC. AX. <lb/>
WILL THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, consequently <lb/>
but first-class work. keep up with the times and the latest <lb/>
Best material used in all work, All styles of Springs are used, you ca . select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm. Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full line of made <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
the year round, which sell as low As lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
JOHN SIMMS <lb/>
Merchant Tailor, <lb/>
CO., IV. C, <lb/>
I never put out or an- <lb/>
to the public of great sales and <lb/>
job lots. I never pretend to oiler 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 Best and <lb/>
the Cheapest in the State. Again, and yet again <lb/>
do I challenge any merchant tailor to compete <lb/>
f W, Quality, <lb/>
j. c. chestnut, ice ice <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
on hand a well assorted stock of <lb/>
Light Groceries, Canned <lb/>
Confections, Tobacco, <lb/>
Cigars, <lb/>
will be sold at very cash <lb/>
Mm a at <lb/>
tinder the <lb/>
THE NEW MILLINERY STORE OF <lb/>
. I, T. <lb/>
Has lately been repaired and fitted up. <lb/>
pd she has received display <lb/>
New Millinery <lb/>
SPRING AND SUMMER; <lb/>
Besides her usual line trimmed and <lb/>
Hats, Ornaments and general <lb/>
goods, she has prettiest <lb/>
stock Silks, shaded Rib- <lb/>
etc lb the Give <lb/>
tr a at the Old Stand.<lb/>
SEVEN SPRINGS HOTEL. <lb/>
now open for <lb/>
guests and visitor to the SPRINGS. <lb/>
The properties the waters are well <lb/>
known Kidney and Bladder <lb/>
Indigestion, Debility and <lb/>
General Prostration. The house has <lb/>
been thoroughly renovated. <lb/>
nun am. mm <lb/>
can be bad to the Spring <lb/>
from Mt. Olive, or <lb/>
LaGrange. The proprietors return many <lb/>
thanks for past favors and respectfully <lb/>
solicit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
Respectfully <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Proprietors. <lb/>
T HAVE LOCATED MY BOX AT <lb/>
the store of Messrs. Harry Co., <lb/>
where ICE can be had at all limes of <lb/>
tho day quantities to suit at <lb/>
Ice delivered in all parts of the town <lb/>
cry morning without extra charge. <lb/>
orders attended to and <lb/>
fill I v packed for out of town <lb/>
Thanking the public for their past lib- <lb/>
patronage, solicit a continuance of <lb/>
the same. Respectfully, <lb/>
E. B. MOORE, <lb/>
May <lb/>
Horses <lb/>
Mules, <lb/>
A oar load inst arrived and now for <lb/>
,; <lb/>
at Keel King's old stand. Will sell them <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
or at reasonable terms on time. I bought <lb/>
my stock for Cash and afford to sell <lb/>
as cheap as anyone. Give me a call. <lb/>
nave procured <lb/>
passengers ton <lb/>
point at reasonable rates, <lb/>
Sail, M and<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018889_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
THIS PAPER <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
AT <lb/>
Al- <lb/>
b suable for it <lb/>
Local <lb/>
The best Butter kept <lb/>
constantly on ice at <lb/>
Harry Skinner Co's. <lb/>
Gentlemen and ladies are invited <lb/>
to visit Ryan Bedding's refresh <lb/>
parlor when they want ice <lb/>
cream of other refreshments. <lb/>
Mr. Alex. is on a two <lb/>
week's visit to his former home, Tar <lb/>
Mrs. L. E. Cleve. of Vanceboro, is <lb/>
visiting her mother Mrs. P. E. <lb/>
Dancy. <lb/>
Mrs. F. J. Martin <lb/>
is visiting her daughter, Mrs. W. A. <lb/>
Fleming. <lb/>
Dr. of the Washington <lb/>
Progress, came op to the commence- <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
Let Us Celebrate <lb/>
Greenville is preparing a grand <lb/>
celebration for the of July, some- <lb/>
thing that will surpass <lb/>
ever known in the history of the <lb/>
town. Send the good news <lb/>
we are to have a big time and <lb/>
want everybody to know it so they <lb/>
can come and help us enjoy the day. <lb/>
Ola Coin <lb/>
Mr. Job Moore, or Swift Creek <lb/>
township, sent up a very old coin <lb/>
the other day for us to look at. It <lb/>
was a little larger than a silver j <lb/>
Mrs. E. G. Leggett left Monday j in size but not quite so thick, <lb/>
for to visit her j The lettering on one side was very <lb/>
As mentioned last issue, a <lb/>
Men's Christian Association <lb/>
was organized on Tuesday night. <lb/>
Up to and including the meeting <lb/>
held at that time thirty-five <lb/>
were enrolled. The following <lb/>
were elected <lb/>
A. <lb/>
1st Vice J. <lb/>
2nd Vice Brown. <lb/>
E. Harris. <lb/>
Harding. <lb/>
The first regular meeting of the <lb/>
held at <lb/>
Go list your taxes <lb/>
We will pay the Cash <lb/>
pounds of Beeswax, <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
for <lb/>
at the Old <lb/>
The river is falling again. <lb/>
A chased band finger ring has <lb/>
been found and left at the Km <lb/>
toe office. Owner can get it by <lb/>
property and paying for I <lb/>
this notice. <lb/>
Mrs. Proctor, who is sick. <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Higgs has been Scot- <lb/>
laud the past week, sickness <lb/>
of his mother calling there. <lb/>
-Miss Jennie Gray Hodges, of <lb/>
Washington, has been visiting Miss <lb/>
, Hortense Forbes Friday. <lb/>
Mrs. A. M. Moore and Misses <lb/>
Emily and Green, who were <lb/>
visiting her, have gone to Edenton. <lb/>
Misses Cora Henry and Blanche <lb/>
of Virginia, were visiting <lb/>
Mrs. C. M. Bernard part of last week <lb/>
Miss Annie Brown, who been <lb/>
plain but was all abbreviations. It <lb/>
bore the date of 1765. We think <lb/>
the coin belonged to Austria. <lb/>
Much rain <lb/>
There has been more high water <lb/>
in the river during the last eight <lb/>
mouths than we have ever known <lb/>
o'clock to-morrow night at which <lb/>
time all the members and all others <lb/>
interested in the organization are <lb/>
requested to be present. <lb/>
He Went From Pitt <lb/>
Mr. J. E. Tucker, of Willow Green, <lb/>
Greene county, accepts the position <lb/>
of clerical assistant in the <lb/>
j Experiment Station and will <lb/>
in any year since our recollection., rive y. duties. <lb/>
Sunday was a warm day. <lb/>
Point Lace Flour has been <lb/>
attending school at <lb/>
J male College, returned home last <lb/>
tried I Thursday. <lb/>
the <lb/>
and is the best cheapest at <lb/>
Old Brick Store. <lb/>
for the 4th of July. <lb/>
suffer with beat during the <lb/>
warm weather. Go to ft Bed-1 Mr. Thomas Small and Miss Mag- <lb/>
and keep cool. Harvey, of Washington, <lb/>
a few days the past week with Mr. <lb/>
and Mrs. O. <lb/>
peaches have appeared. <lb/>
The sale of the Boss Famous <lb/>
Lunch Milk Biscuit during ex <lb/>
ceded sales of the former year <lb/>
by 380.701 pounds. Try them, at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Nones -Colored School Commit- <lb/>
tees are hereby instructed not to <lb/>
employ Fred Cannon to teach in <lb/>
their schools, as <lb/>
order. <lb/>
I will not at Beaufort. <lb/>
J. Latham, <lb/>
Base ball continues to warm up. <lb/>
Lemonade, milk shakes, soda <lb/>
water, ice cream can always be <lb/>
found at Ryan ft Bedding's. <lb/>
That horrid fly. <lb/>
will leave next <lb/>
Monday for Raleigh to <lb/>
attend the K. C Dental Association. <lb/>
office will be closed about ten <lb/>
days- D. L. James, D. D. S. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C, June 1888. <lb/>
If you owe for the pay <lb/>
up. <lb/>
Buy Fruit Jars at the <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
And we believe the. same can be <lb/>
said by persons much older. We <lb/>
don't believe a month has passed in <lb/>
the last eight but what there was a <lb/>
freshet. <lb/>
Bead Twice <lb/>
When money is scarcest the <lb/>
chaser is most anxious to find bar- <lb/>
gains and he looks over his home <lb/>
paper to ascertain where they can <lb/>
be obtained- Do the business <lb/>
consider this fact when they are <lb/>
thinking of discontinuing their ad- <lb/>
until the summer has <lb/>
passed It never saves money to <lb/>
j stop advertising. <lb/>
No Better- <lb/>
There is no printing and binding; <lb/>
in the State, and we <lb/>
i say in the work can <lb/>
, surpass that of Edwards j <lb/>
ton, or We have just had <lb/>
i them to bind another volume of the <lb/>
Mrs. J. S and Miss Ad Reflector and it is a fine specimen <lb/>
of work. Every of the pa- <lb/>
per is now bound and <lb/>
they make useful books. <lb/>
Mr. C. M. Bernard, of this town, <lb/>
goes to represent the First District <lb/>
in the Republican <lb/>
at Chicago. <lb/>
We regret that the excellent wife <lb/>
of our good neighbor, Mr. E. C. <lb/>
Glenn, has been numbered with the <lb/>
sick during the past week. <lb/>
die Randolph have spending <lb/>
some visiting Rev. F. A. Blab- <lb/>
They returned on <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
Dr. D. L. James is the <lb/>
Go Ahead <lb/>
Now the men arc taking <lb/>
meeting of the State Denial la step in the right, <lb/>
n Raleigh. He will visit Blob-1 up on a 4th of July celebration <lb/>
Philadelphia before re- Let such a spirit prevail Let all <lb/>
turning home. i throw their shoulders together with <lb/>
i a determination to push Greenville <lb/>
Messrs. Gilliam and Martin, of and attract the attention <lb/>
of V r outside work to One <lb/>
Mr. Tucker was for three years a <lb/>
student at Wake Forest College, but <lb/>
was compelled to return borne in <lb/>
March last on account of illness of <lb/>
bis father. He comes, we under- <lb/>
stand, with the highest <lb/>
from members of the Wake <lb/>
Forest Faculty from others for <lb/>
studiousness, and gen- <lb/>
attention to <lb/>
News and Observer. <lb/>
The above is correct <lb/>
ting Mr. Tucker down f <lb/>
county. He is a Pitt county boy. <lb/>
Barbers. <lb/>
Perhaps no town in the State has <lb/>
such musical barbers as does <lb/>
There are five of <lb/>
the razor here and every <lb/>
one of them is a good musician. <lb/>
I We passed by Edmund's <lb/>
shop, a few evenings since, where <lb/>
the quintet had come together for <lb/>
practice and their music was excel- <lb/>
lent. John Lewis performed upon <lb/>
the lead violin, Robert Hodges the <lb/>
i second, Herbert the violin <lb/>
cello, Alfred the guitar <lb/>
I Smith the flute. Each could <lb/>
play bis part well, but the best per- <lb/>
formers were Lewis and <lb/>
i The former plays a lead violin that <lb/>
is hard to beat, the latter on <lb/>
either the bass or second is almost <lb/>
a prodigy. <lb/>
THIS WEEK <lb/>
A big rush at Higgs <lb/>
this <lb/>
week everybody is <lb/>
alter those <lb/>
WHY BECAUSE THEY ABE 331-3 <lb/>
CENT CHEAPER THAN ANYWHERE <lb/>
ELSE. <lb/>
HIGGS <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
M. R. Lang. <lb/>
.; <lb/>
LEI SO GALLAGHER <lb/>
Also let every man, woman and child go to our <lb/>
store this week and look at fie <lb/>
awaiting them. We have set this week as <lb/>
BARGAIN WEEK. <lb/>
Rodman, of Washington, and step leads to <lb/>
Be. up and doing, business men, <lb/>
bring Greenville to the front. <lb/>
Bishop Watson preaches at Beth- <lb/>
el to-day. <lb/>
The Racket Store has just <lb/>
chased the entire stock of shoes, <lb/>
dry goods, laces, <lb/>
fee, 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/>
Ryan Redding. <lb/>
Only civil cases are <lb/>
this Court, <lb/>
being heard <lb/>
here this week. <lb/>
That splendid man <lb/>
Allen Warren, was sick part of last <lb/>
week. His daughter, Miss <lb/>
has also been sick. We are glad to <lb/>
that both are regaining health. <lb/>
Thanks <lb/>
To the Riverside Nursery <lb/>
is under many obligations <lb/>
for a peck of peaches which <lb/>
Died <lb/>
The wife of Mr. W. H. <lb/>
ton, residing about four miles from <lb/>
Greenville, died on Wednesday of <lb/>
last week. The family have our <lb/>
sympathy. <lb/>
Mrs, Lizzie Bynum, wife of Mr. <lb/>
IR- A. Bynum, near whose <lb/>
Mr. II- A. Sutton has con-1 <lb/>
Warren brought us Monday morn- j e <lb/>
The fruit was fine and of e evening at <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/>
The most stylish Cloths and cuts at Popular prices. <lb/>
SHOES and SLIPPERS, <lb/>
AGRICULTURAL LIME We state to show a finer line of <lb/>
I fill . , a. I m a . A-11.- <lb/>
km mm <lb/>
FOR SALE B HARRY SKINNER <lb/>
Low Quarters and Slippers than we have. <lb/>
Tarboro, X. C. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
The boarding pupils were <lb/>
music pupils Latin pupils <lb/>
He spoke of the excellent work each <lb/>
teacher had done in their respective <lb/>
places, and expressed some regrets <lb/>
that all who had labored with him <lb/>
during the past session could not re-1 AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb/>
main. Prof. assistant J. log their year's supplies will it <lb/>
principal, was going to the <lb/>
ville Normal Institute for <lb/>
.,,.,., <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD STORE. <lb/>
fined at home with rheumatic flavor. Mr. warren is one <lb/>
week past. His beam., mi <lb/>
Miss has also been sick a <lb/>
few days. It is a pleasure to know <lb/>
both are improving. <lb/>
Mr. Alex. S. Sheppard, of Pitt <lb/>
county, who for the last few years <lb/>
has <lb/>
is spending a few days with relatives <lb/>
friends here. We were de- <lb/>
lighted to see him. <lb/>
There will be a total eclipse of <lb/>
the moon the night of the 22nd <lb/>
inst-. which promises to be more j <lb/>
than the one in January. <lb/>
Mr. J. B. brought us the <lb/>
nicest peach on Saturday that we <lb/>
had seen this season up to that <lb/>
Some larger have in market j <lb/>
since. <lb/>
men who make friends everywhere. <lb/>
May he the Riverside Nursery <lb/>
flourish for many years to come <lb/>
for both are to the <lb/>
The List Taker requests re- <lb/>
mind the public that only a few <lb/>
days are left in which taxes can be <lb/>
given in. Better to it at <lb/>
once. <lb/>
we feel like blowing just as much <lb/>
for Greenville as ever. This ain't <lb/>
no dead town. <lb/>
The Wilmington Star, <lb/>
ton Messenger and Raleigh <lb/>
Observer have had here this <lb/>
The Walter A. Wood Mowing <lb/>
Machine and Horse Rakes, the best <lb/>
in the world, for sale by S. <lb/>
Tarboro, N- C. Send for <lb/>
and prices. <lb/>
all the children <lb/>
are happy. <lb/>
Let us all prepare to <lb/>
the 4th of July. <lb/>
Tax listing was brisk at the Court <lb/>
House Saturday. <lb/>
Lovely weather for the commence- <lb/>
last week. <lb/>
The high water last week injured <lb/>
low crops. <lb/>
The farmers have had a few more <lb/>
good days for work. <lb/>
The Teacher's Assembly train <lb/>
goes down to Morehead to-day. <lb/>
The North Carolina Tress <lb/>
meets at Morehead July 18th. <lb/>
j A free use of lime about <lb/>
premises will help to drive away <lb/>
disease. <lb/>
Unripe fruit and early vegetables <lb/>
have caused some sickness in the <lb/>
community. <lb/>
Corn and silks can be seen <lb/>
in some of the gardens around <lb/>
town. <lb/>
Mr. F. Fleming shipped forty bar- <lb/>
of Irish potatoes by steamer My <lb/>
yesterday. <lb/>
Bear in the meeting of the <lb/>
Young Men's Christian Association <lb/>
I to-morrow night. <lb/>
The hens must have all gone a <lb/>
strike, judging from the scarcity of <lb/>
eggs in market last week. <lb/>
The colored people of the <lb/>
of the Good Samaritans will <lb/>
have a celebration Friday. <lb/>
A Methodist Sunday School was <lb/>
organized at Tripp's Chapel, five <lb/>
miles South of Greenville, last Sun- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
New Moon Saturday. If the <lb/>
keeps fan now we will <lb/>
pave some glorious moonlight <lb/>
The feather renovators have re- <lb/>
moved their plant from this place to <lb/>
Farmville. They did a good <lb/>
here. <lb/>
If much talking foretells good <lb/>
i playing Greenville will have some <lb/>
champions with the ball and bat at <lb/>
an early day. <lb/>
Crop prospects are very poor for <lb/>
the time of year, the farmers tell us. <lb/>
We hope some good weather will <lb/>
bring them out. <lb/>
The essay recently read before <lb/>
pear next week, <lb/>
A hard wind followed by some <lb/>
rain passed here about noon Mon- <lb/>
. day. It almost a tornado <lb/>
for a few minutes. <lb/>
This is a joyous season of the year <lb/>
with pupil and teacher. Routine of <lb/>
school- room is laid aside <lb/>
in out Us devoted to recreation. <lb/>
An exchange says if a delinquent <lb/>
and a half should come up and pay <lb/>
a dollar and a half in a year and a <lb/>
half, an editor and a half <lb/>
stand chance of getting a meal <lb/>
and a hag occasionally. <lb/>
Masonic. <lb/>
At the communication of Green- <lb/>
ville Lodge, No. A. F. A. M., <lb/>
held the 8th inst, the following <lb/>
officers were <lb/>
W. M. King, W. M. <lb/>
Dr. F. W. Brown, S. W. <lb/>
B. C Pearce, J W. <lb/>
L. G. Treas. <lb/>
G. L. Secy. <lb/>
The is contemplating a <lb/>
o'clock. remains were brought <lb/>
to Greenville Saturday morning and <lb/>
interred at o'clock in the family <lb/>
burial ground the services being <lb/>
conducted by Rev. R. B. John. <lb/>
Mrs. Bynum was about years old <lb/>
was one of the best and most <lb/>
estimable women of our county. <lb/>
Her home was in Greenville before <lb/>
marriage and her friends here-were <lb/>
a t <lb/>
year's course, and Miss teach- <lb/>
of the primary department would <lb/>
go to fill another <lb/>
However their places for the next <lb/>
session would be Oiled by the best <lb/>
talent that could be procured, Mr. <lb/>
a graduate of the University, <lb/>
will fill the place of prim <lb/>
Miss Meta Chestnut who has <lb/>
just graduated at Nashville is <lb/>
well known here, will charge <lb/>
of the primary department; Miss <lb/>
many, all of whom regret her death. Harri, a late Peace In- <lb/>
With the husband and bereaved <lb/>
relatives we sympathize. <lb/>
Storms <lb/>
Two storms visited this section on <lb/>
Monday, one about one o'clock and <lb/>
the other-about sunset. From the <lb/>
first there was no hail in town, but <lb/>
public installation of officers I considerable wind some rain for <lb/>
minutes. However, there was <lb/>
some hail just north of us, news <lb/>
25th, the exercises to take place at <lb/>
the Opera House. We will give <lb/>
more definite notice of this next <lb/>
week. <lb/>
will teach art, and <lb/>
such other branches as it may be- <lb/>
come necessary to assign her; Miss <lb/>
Cannon will remain in charge of. <lb/>
the music. He closed by returning <lb/>
thanks for the liberal patronage <lb/>
that had been upon the <lb/>
Institute, and hoped that it would <lb/>
even larger at the next session. <lb/>
The Reflector is proud that <lb/>
to <lb/>
their interest to get price. before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere, is <lb/>
in all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
SPICES, TEAS, Ac. <lb/>
always at Lowest Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our arc bought <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to run, we sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully,<lb/>
Greenville. N. V- <lb/>
S. P ELLIOTT. JOHN <lb/>
HATS, <lb/>
Both Felt and Straw, of all the Stylish <lb/>
and Colors. <lb/>
Id conclusion, make H business to visit <lb/>
us this week, and we will send j on away <lb/>
rejoicing in the possession of so man <lb/>
M. R. LANG. <lb/>
Without Parallel <lb/>
The trade issue of the <lb/>
ton Messenger which came out last <lb/>
week is the grandest journalistic <lb/>
True, we are right in the midst of effort appeared in the <lb/>
the dullest season of the year, but I State. <lb/>
It was a mammoth sheet of <lb/>
pages, in a handsome <lb/>
cover, containing splendid Limbs were torn from the <lb/>
illustrations and descriptions of shade trees, windows were broken, <lb/>
coining in that great damage had <lb/>
been the plantation or Mr. this has such an excellent <lb/>
Whitehead. The wind <lb/>
blew down several out houses and . <lb/>
played havoc with bis orchard. The hi the hands of <lb/>
storm about sunset seemed to be <lb/>
more severe here in town than any- <lb/>
where else, so far as we have heard, i <lb/>
There were much wind, hail <lb/>
rain, the storm lasting several mm <lb/>
COTTON f <lb/>
Wilmington and her industries. <lb/>
No paper ever published the <lb/>
South can surpass that issue of the <lb/>
i Messenger in the point of newspaper <lb/>
vim as brother <lb/>
week. Bat it is a dull Court for the I enterprise. We more men in <lb/>
newspaperman. such <lb/>
Those who were so fortunate as to <lb/>
get out to the picnic under the <lb/>
of the Institute pupils, last <lb/>
Saturday, report if a successful one <lb/>
in respect, <lb/>
The June number of Wide <lb/>
and some fences were leveled. Two <lb/>
chimneys were blown down at the <lb/>
Institute. made some inquiry <lb/>
but hear no further damage of con- <lb/>
sequence reported from the country. <lb/>
Ease Ball. <lb/>
The match of base ball last I <lb/>
Friday proved to be interesting <lb/>
one. Instead of being a game be <lb/>
two clubs of the <lb/>
by b. Company, Boston, is the organization received a <lb/>
not behind any former issue. It is; an outside made <lb/>
a fine magazine and contains composed club <lb/>
selections and contributions, challenge was ac- <lb/>
i and the game played, Mr. K. <lb/>
Our town needs factories and C. acting as umpire. <lb/>
shops and enterprises that give em- <lb/>
to the laboring classes. <lb/>
A combination of public spirit and <lb/>
unity of capital can give us these. <lb/>
have one of the best printed <lb/>
weekly papers I know Such <lb/>
were the appreciated words uttered <lb/>
by J. W. as he be- <lb/>
held our power at work a few <lb/>
days since. <lb/>
A Court for civil cases <lb/>
when it falls at such a busy <lb/>
time with the not at- <lb/>
tract as many people as an average <lb/>
criminal Court, the <lb/>
dance this week, is not large. <lb/>
that surpasses the hen <lb/>
and a half right along. It <lb/>
is simple enough and every one who <lb/>
; solves it is sure to get a correct so- <lb/>
The problem <lb/>
down in figures the year in which <lb/>
were born; to this add then <lb/>
add your age at last birthday, pro- <lb/>
it comes before January <lb/>
Rev. J. W. I otherwise your at last birthday; <lb/>
three in Baptist Church I multiply result by from this <lb/>
on Wednesday night of last week, deduct substitute for <lb/>
On Sunday afternoon he corresponding letters of the <lb/>
Johnson's Mill Items. <lb/>
Miss Jennie Kilpatrick will leave <lb/>
next week for where she <lb/>
will take special lessons in music <lb/>
under Meares. <lb/>
The crops are doing very well <lb/>
since the heavy May rains. This <lb/>
part of the county will maintain its <lb/>
former reputation for the <lb/>
most productive of the county. <lb/>
Our friend M. Smith is the <lb/>
field for office of Register of Deeds <lb/>
and proposes to stay. We see the <lb/>
present incumbent is around looking <lb/>
i his <lb/>
that Mrs. W. S. Blount <lb/>
j is quite a critical condition. A <lb/>
j large was removed from her <lb/>
Try This i breast three weeks ago. <lb/>
Another egg problem is going the The Stockholders of Centerville <lb/>
game was played briskly through- <lb/>
out, the victory being won by the <lb/>
Association boys, the score standing <lb/>
to in their favor, <lb/>
that two other games are to <lb/>
played before the contest ends, <lb/>
Male Female Academy met <lb/>
last Saturday, and re-elected the <lb/>
old Board of Trustees, except W. C- <lb/>
Butler, who is succeeded by Calvin <lb/>
Stokes, The Trustees elected Kev, <lb/>
j. t. Winfield, principal for <lb/>
year. The <lb/>
management and our people <lb/>
are beginning to realize the <lb/>
is to the community. Though <lb/>
established but three years, it is <lb/>
ready exerting a wide influence. <lb/>
Give it the patronage it deserves, <lb/>
as we have said before, Green- <lb/>
ville will have an institution of <lb/>
learning second to no town <lb/>
North Carolina. We bespeak for it <lb/>
a larger enrollment than ever <lb/>
at the fall session. <lb/>
FOR SALE. <lb/>
One Tanner Haw Mill. Husk <lb/>
and Carriage, Saws odd feet long. <lb/>
Cost Used six months, <lb/>
Cash. <lb/>
One Double Cylinder Engine, <lb/>
with Boiler. Cost <lb/>
Used months, <lb/>
Two Marino Boilers to run horse en- <lb/>
would do for land service, or for <lb/>
steam boats with repairs. Cost <lb/>
each, will take each. <lb/>
Ono Marine Boiler to run horse en- <lb/>
will take <lb/>
One Single Block Shingle Ma- <lb/>
chine. Cost Price <lb/>
One Old Steamboat Engine <lb/>
some slight repairs necessary. <lb/>
Price <lb/>
Above articles sold we have <lb/>
absolutely no for them. Address <lb/>
JOHNSON SON. <lb/>
Norfolk, Va. <lb/>
seven others at Pollard's Mill, three <lb/>
miles above town. <lb/>
The yard around the Masonic <lb/>
Lodge recently much in. <lb/>
and beautified. New fences <lb/>
barbed wire placed on the composed about <lb/>
as A for B for C for <lb/>
for etc. The result will give <lb/>
the name by which you are <lb/>
Kin Moore's School <lb/>
The closing exercises of this <lb/>
outer fence to prevent trespassing, <lb/>
and the flower plots all neatly <lb/>
ranged. There is attraction <lb/>
about a well kept yard. <lb/>
We the assertion <lb/>
that <lb/>
has <lb/>
been talked more In Greenville than <lb/>
any other one subject, not even <lb/>
such subjects as com- <lb/>
with its large attendance <lb/>
of pretty girls and admiring boys <lb/>
was likely to produce. <lb/>
The Seven, Springs Hotel, <lb/>
of which be found in <lb/>
this paper, is now open for ac- <lb/>
of guests. <lb/>
from these Springs is highly <lb/>
thirty bright little boys and <lb/>
took place in the House <lb/>
Monday night. A good audience <lb/>
and the little folks <lb/>
them with a very pleasing <lb/>
program. The entertainment has <lb/>
pronounced among the best of <lb/>
the yet given here, and when <lb/>
the of the participants is <lb/>
too much praise cannot be <lb/>
en them. There were several tiny <lb/>
little boys and more <lb/>
titan of <lb/>
none of them were more than twelve <lb/>
or all went through <lb/>
their parts with great accuracy and <lb/>
precision. Some of the <lb/>
were very amusing. The exercises <lb/>
certainly reflected much credit upon, <lb/>
recommended for its medicinal <lb/>
Many persons in this section I Miss Moore, showing o <lb/>
have been greatly in be tub best control and that <lb/>
health by visiting the training not be surpass <lb/>
ed. is a thorough teacher. <lb/>
showed that last session was <lb/>
the most prosperous ever <lb/>
Tue fall session begins September <lb/>
24th. <lb/>
Miss Annie Brooks and Mr. L. <lb/>
Is Court, <lb/>
Pitt County. j <lb/>
Ordered by the Commissioners of Pitt <lb/>
report I county, and notice is hereby given that no<lb/>
BALTIMORE <lb/>
NORFOLK <lb/>
Established in Baltimore in 1870. <lb/>
Will open a House <lb/>
w. <lb/>
in September. for handling and <lb/>
sale of cotton, thus giving our customers <lb/>
their choice two markets. <lb/>
BLIZZARD <lb/>
Tie Tar <lb/>
Forbes, President <lb/>
B. Cherry. <lb/>
J. S. Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, <lb/>
It. F. Jones, Washington, Gen <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on Tar <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer 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 OFFICERS <lb/>
A Sit-class Table with the <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the 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 G o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Freights received daily through <lb/>
Bills Lading given to nil points. <lb/>
J. J. agent <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
IS PAST <lb/>
But not so the LOW PRICES at the <lb/>
Once More She is Chock Block With <lb/>
order will be issued after this date on the <lb/>
Treasurer of Pitt county the payment <lb/>
of money to any pauper outside the t <lb/>
Poor House except hi of Insane <lb/>
Paupers. <lb/>
Ordered, further, that this notice be pub- <lb/>
May 7th, 1888. Lewis H. Wilson, <lb/>
Corns, Co, <lb/>
attended Kinston College <lb/>
Commencement <lb/>
. A i u I By order of the Board. Given under <lb/>
has a new physician, my at in Greenville, N. c. <lb/>
Dr. <lb/>
Several of our people left <lb/>
this morning for Greenville to at <lb/>
tend the closing exercises of the In-<lb/>
presented to Cannon by Mr. <lb/>
J. Murphy in behalf of her <lb/>
Mr. Murphy's speech <lb/>
passed all bis former efforts and <lb/>
brought considerable applause from <lb/>
the audience. <lb/>
Alter the completion, of pro- <lb/>
gram, Miss by special re <lb/>
quest, sang a solo, winch delighted <lb/>
her hearers. <lb/>
THE INSTITUTE. <lb/>
Prof. then stepped for <lb/>
NORTH Superior Court. <lb/>
Pitt County. j <lb/>
Martha E. Cobb vs. Warren Cobb. <lb/>
The defendant above named will take <lb/>
notice entitled as above, <lb/>
has been commenced by the plaintiff in <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county to ob- <lb/>
a divorce from <lb/>
j the said Cobb, husband; and <lb/>
I the said 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/>
COURT, <lb/>
Pitt County, i March Term, <lb/>
B. H, Martha J. the first In March 1888. at the <lb/>
Allen Warren, Trustee of F. L. Thigpen. <lb/>
Notice is hereby given to such creditors <lb/>
F. I- as desire to contest the <lb/>
plaintiff's right in the above entitled ac- <lb/>
to appear at the next term of <lb/>
Superior Court, to be held at <lb/>
on 2nd Monday June, and they <lb/>
shall be heard, A- C. A very, <lb/>
Judge Presiding. <lb/>
E, A. Move, Clerk Superior Court, <lb/>
House of said county in Greenville, <lb/>
N. C, and answer the complaint in said <lb/>
action, or the will apply to the <lb/>
Court for the relief demanded in her com- <lb/>
plaint. i. the 8th day of May 1888. <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
s, <lb/>
Dress Goods <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/>
Do Not Forget The Fact <lb/>
That we still have a quantity of CLOTHING that <lb/>
was purchased at cents in the dollar, thug <lb/>
enabling us to sell at far below <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 of <lb/>
Estate of Thomas Hid, deceased, no- <lb/>
I given to all persons indebted <lb/>
to estate to immediate payment <lb/>
ward Md n statement to the undersigned, and to all creditors of <lb/>
workings of the inn the <lb/>
Session closed, which its <lb/>
third and most The to- <lb/>
enrollment reached a <lb/>
largo increase over the former <lb/>
t said estate to present their claims prop- <lb/>
authenticated, to the undersigned <lb/>
on before the Aid day of April, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. This nth day of May, 1888. <lb/>
j. o, mix, <lb/>
Thomas Hill. <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 <lb/>
ALL SINS. OF <lb/>
A News has been added to my <lb/>
where the and <lb/>
can be <lb/>
MOSES <lb/>
STRAW HATS <lb/>
At warm weather prices, cents up. <lb/>
RYAN REDDING. <lb/>
.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018889_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
MRS. E. A. SHEPPARD <lb/>
HAS JUST ADDED TO STOCK <lb/>
Millinery Goods, and has secured <lb/>
the services o assistant. <lb/>
All orders can now be tilled on the short- <lb/>
est notice. Dry Wet Stamping <lb/>
I ill executed <lb/>
While in the Northern markets she <lb/>
careful to select only the best <lb/>
latest goods in the Millinery line, ant <lb/>
Is prepared to purchasers special in <lb/>
The his Shop <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS STYLE, <lb/>
and any person desiring a <lb/>
CLEA A PLEASANT SHAVE <lb/>
SHAMPOO, <lb/>
or anything in the <lb/>
Is invited to give me a trial. <lb/>
guaranteed or no charge made. <lb/>
CULLY <lb/>
i mistake. <lb/>
A Sick Man's Wife Disregards the Druggist's <lb/>
Advice and So Saves the Life <lb/>
Her Husband. <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Hair. <lb/>
STOP <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT, <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
have recently located, and where have <lb/>
my <lb/>
NEW, AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBER SHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; new <lb/>
and comfortable chairs. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb/>
work outside of my shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
HERBERT EDMONDS. <lb/>
STEAM ENGINES <lb/>
and all repaired at short <lb/>
at shop. Iron and <lb/>
Brass Turning done in the best manner. <lb/>
Cylinders bored. Models made to order. <lb/>
Locks repaired, or fitted. <lb/>
cut and threaded. Gins repaired in best <lb/>
manner. Bring on your work. General <lb/>
Jobbing done by O. P. Ill <lb/>
May Greenville K. C. <lb/>
A R. R. <lb/>
and nodule. <lb/>
TWAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No So <lb/>
Dated daily Fast-Mail, daily <lb/>
dally ex Sun. <lb/>
Weldon pa. pan <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount <lb/>
am <lb/>
I pin <lb/>
pm am<lb/>
S am<lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar Fayetteville <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
GOING NORTH <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Ar Goldsboro S I<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson pm pm <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount IS <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. pm <lb/>
Train en Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax for Scotland Neck at 3.00 <lb/>
P. M. Returning, leaves Scotland Neck <lb/>
A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N V, via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
flay, P M. Sunday P M. <lb/>
N C. S T M, P M. <lb/>
Returning leave- N C, dally <lb/>
Sunday. A K, Sunday A <lb/>
If, arrive Tarboro, N C, AM, <lb/>
AM. <lb/>
Train on Midland N Branch leaves <lb/>
Goldsboro except M, <lb/>
arrive Smith field. N C, A M. Re- <lb/>
turning leaves K C A M. <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. 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/>
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
M daily, except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch loaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at G <lb/>
V M. Returning leave Clinton at A <lb/>
M, connecting at Warsaw with Nos. <lb/>
and <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson <lb/>
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. All <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/>
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. Transportation <lb/>
T. M. EMERSON, Passenger <lb/>
I am a wood carver by trade and it is <lb/>
out of ray line to write letters; but my <lb/>
wife thought it was no more than right <lb/>
that I should let you know what your <lb/>
remedy has done for me, and I think <lb/>
so too. <lb/>
Hive in East 157th street, west <lb/>
Third avenue, and have, lived therefor <lb/>
about twenty-three years, whore I own <lb/>
real estate. Up t the I am about <lb/>
to mention hail been a well <lb/>
man. There wan always more or less <lb/>
malaria in Use u i but I had <lb/>
not ml. ll <lb/>
in 1880 hail my attack. It came <lb/>
on as men attacks do. with <lb/>
headaches. of and <lb/>
chilly fever <lb/>
afterwards, a tin yawn and <lb/>
stretch, and an I was <lb/>
at that time at Brothers, <lb/>
furniture in West <lb/>
street. would wear <lb/>
off. but as it didn't I I well- <lb/>
known and <lb/>
who gave me j in a- and told me <lb/>
what to I can the Brat four <lb/>
and a half or H v. years of my <lb/>
in words. I <lb/>
laid up for a day or I no, but on <lb/>
the whole. I stuck to my work. kept <lb/>
taking quinine, in large doses from <lb/>
year to year, and kept on <lb/>
and worse, slowly bill <lb/>
time. My trouble now well de <lb/>
fined and its symptoms were steady and <lb/>
regular. I had dumb ague in its worst <lb/>
form, and it was grinding down in <lb/>
spite of all that I could do or the <lb/>
tors could do. It held me in a <lb/>
fire in a The poison <lb/>
had gone all through and over me and <lb/>
nothing was able to touch it, J was <lb/>
fast losing flesh strength, and <lb/>
March. knock d off work entire- <lb/>
and wont home to ho down h-k, and <lb/>
to die for all could loll, I ran down SO <lb/>
rapidly that I soon unable to <lb/>
walk distance. Liter I went from <lb/>
room to room in my u house only by <lb/>
friends holding me up by em-harm. The <lb/>
doses of err bit i until J <lb/>
often took thirty .- The <lb/>
effect, stimulation <lb/>
was to make near. It broke <lb/>
my sloop all lip. and I often walked the <lb/>
floor, or staggered night <lb/>
long, to boar <lb/>
or even My <lb/>
was A- o food, <lb/>
one of my would cat <lb/>
more in a than I timid In day, <lb/>
I would older food and then turn from <lb/>
i in disgust. I lived on quinine and <lb/>
stimulants and on If, like a <lb/>
bear winter. The sot my <lb/>
head in n whirl, and the liquor-given <lb/>
as a s so <lb/>
sick I it. <lb/>
From pounds proper <lb/>
I ran to weight <lb/>
of a was scarcely better <lb/>
than a skeleton. <lb/>
anybody ha taken a and <lb/>
A mi and killed me I should <lb/>
hart Hi r <lb/>
the r part of this period, <lb/>
in 1886. my physician <lb/>
Miller, there's no in my taking <lb/>
any more money of yon. do you <lb/>
any I might pour pounds of <lb/>
down throat and it wouldn't <lb/>
help <lb/>
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/>
my <lb/>
Three weeks the <lb/>
last of my wife saw an advertise- <lb/>
of in a Now York paper. <lb/>
She me of it. I <lb/>
it can't do me any <lb/>
But she wont to a druggist's, <lb/>
less, to get it. The druggist advised <lb/>
her against he said It was <lb/>
but she ought not <lb/>
to throw her on it. <lb/>
He said he didn't keep it. but could get <lb/>
it If she insisted on having it. Turn- <lb/>
away in disgust my wife spoke to <lb/>
our Sir. A. G. <lb/>
who got her a bottle at a drug store in <lb/>
Sixth avenue. <lb/>
Almost against my will, and without <lb/>
the faith, I began taking it. In <lb/>
one week I m I began to <lb/>
sleep. I slopped seeing I <lb/>
began to have an appetite and to gain <lb/>
strength. This was now the first of <lb/>
June. and by the end of that <lb/>
month was bark at my bench at C. P. <lb/>
Smith's scroll sawing factory in 116th <lb/>
street, whore I work now. <lb/>
Since then I have never lost a day <lb/>
from sickness. only, <lb/>
about fort in four closes <lb/>
a day. . to gain. The ma- <lb/>
appeared in killed in my sys- <lb/>
and mm I've got back my old <lb/>
and old <lb/>
C. B. EDWARDS <lb/>
N. B. <lb/>
Edwards N, <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
o- <lb/>
We have 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 <lb/>
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb/>
FOB PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders.<lb/>
BINDERS, <lb/>
RALEIGH. N. C. <lb/>
HOTEL <lb/>
SPENCER <lb/>
THE HOME <lb/>
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE. <lb/>
Polite Good means. Best <lb/>
the market affords. When in the city <lb/>
atop at the <lb/>
Hotel, <lb/>
strength to <lb/>
to <lb/>
if did <lb/>
what did. Th <lb/>
could do <lb/>
to life. <lb/>
K- . <lb/>
P. S. For l <lb/>
above statement I <lb/>
gentlemen. ho<lb/>
I am an <lb/>
to friends, and <lb/>
do I know <lb/>
greater it <lb/>
. man <lb/>
BK-a A <lb/>
; . <lb/>
i of the <lb/>
per ac- <lb/>
Mr Alex- <lb/>
Weir. St.; Mr. George <lb/>
Seaman. <lb/>
Mr. A. 154th street <lb/>
and Mr. P. F. <lb/>
-street and <lb/>
Hr. John East <lb/>
Mr. John <lb/>
street, and others. I will <lb/>
also to letters of <lb/>
We submit the above astonish- <lb/>
vouched for it is by <lb/>
table men. is deserving of a <lb/>
candid by thinking <lb/>
people. And we furl her submit that <lb/>
when druggists turn away customers <lb/>
by falsifying he character of a remedy <lb/>
because they do not happen to have it <lb/>
on baud, they do a great wrong. If <lb/>
this afflicted man had not disregarded <lb/>
the advice and sent else- <lb/>
where for I he reined v ho without <lb/>
doubt have been in grave. <lb/>
Other of a similar character <lb/>
from prominent individuals, which <lb/>
stamp as a remedy of <lb/>
doubted merit, will lie sent on <lb/>
or C <lb/>
GREENVILLE. C. <lb/>
A WITH AN <lb/>
Journalism as a Profession. <lb/>
Give me with an aim. <lb/>
Whatever aim may be, <lb/>
W it's wealth or whether it's fame, <lb/>
It matters not to me. <lb/>
Let him walk in the path of right, <lb/>
And keep his aim in sight; <lb/>
And work and pray with faith alway. <lb/>
With his eye on the glittering height. <lb/>
Give me a man who says <lb/>
will do something well. <lb/>
And make the fleeting days <lb/>
A story of labor <lb/>
Though the aim he be small, <lb/>
It is better than none at all <lb/>
With something to do the whole year <lb/>
through, <lb/>
lie will not tumble or fall. <lb/>
But Satan weaves a snare <lb/>
For the feet of those who stray, <lb/>
With never a thought or <lb/>
Where the path may lead away <lb/>
The man who hath no aim, <lb/>
Not only leaves no name <lb/>
When this life's done, but ten to one <lb/>
He leave; a record of shame. <lb/>
Give me a man whose heart <lb/>
Is tilled with ambition's Are, <lb/>
Who sets his mark in the start, <lb/>
moves it higher and higher, <lb/>
Better to die m u in,, <lb/>
The hands with labor tire. <lb/>
Than to glide with the stream in <lb/>
dream, <lb/>
And live a purposeless life. <lb/>
idle <lb/>
A SISTER <lb/>
ROBERT J. <lb/>
He lifted his head in the starlight dim. <lb/>
And all that he saw was a round, dull <lb/>
and the that twinkled, looked to <lb/>
him <lb/>
Like the phosphor gleams of the fire fly <lb/>
The new moon hung in <lb/>
shape <lb/>
And was crooked and bent like the horn <lb/>
of a ram ; <lb/>
The sombre maples seemed hung with <lb/>
crape <lb/>
And the garden gate banged to with a <lb/>
slam. <lb/>
The. brook oozed over the slimy stones <lb/>
From stagnant in the meadow <lb/>
Or It crooned along with plaintive moans. <lb/>
And the song of the whip-poor-will <lb/>
was harsh. <lb/>
He jabbed his ribs on the clumsy style. <lb/>
For dark pitch was the dusty lane ; <lb/>
his thin in a bitter smile <lb/>
As he smote, the weeds with a spiteful <lb/>
cane. <lb/>
Rough and ugly and long was the way. <lb/>
The skies were dull and earth was <lb/>
cold; <lb/>
He hated the night and he dreaded the <lb/>
day. <lb/>
And his heart seemed a hundred <lb/>
old. <lb/>
With the dirge of his sighs he timed his <lb/>
tread <lb/>
As one who bitter things <lb/>
But he only whispered, with drooping <lb/>
head. <lb/>
And a heart that <lb/>
York Life. <lb/>
Curious Wants at <lb/>
Counters. <lb/>
The National Druggist gives the <lb/>
following amusing specimens as fair <lb/>
samples of everyday experience <lb/>
me some of your essence to <lb/>
put people to sleep with when they <lb/>
cut their fingers off. want some- <lb/>
thing to take tobacco out of my <lb/>
mouth. Send me a baby's top to a <lb/>
nursing bottle. Something for a <lb/>
sore baby's eye. ipecac to <lb/>
throw up a girl four years old. <lb/>
Enough anise seed to take the <lb/>
twist out of a dose of senna. Some <lb/>
thing for a woman with a bad cough <lb/>
and cannot cough. Something, <lb/>
forget the name, but it is for a cure <lb/>
for a swelled woman's foot. For a <lb/>
whose appetite is loose on <lb/>
Social Equality. <lb/>
Salve. <lb/>
The best Salve in the world for Cuts. <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe- <lb/>
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, <lb/>
cures Piles, or no re- <lb/>
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price, <lb/>
per box. For sale Ernul, <lb/>
on Main St. <lb/>
Washington. N. C. <lb/>
Onward Is The Word. <lb/>
The enters its <lb/>
third at the following <lb/>
subscriber, <lb/>
subscribers, year. 6.00 <lb/>
subscribers, year. 10.00 <lb/>
One copy, year free to the one send- <lb/>
a club ten. <lb/>
Eight pages. columns, weekly. Send <lb/>
cash to <lb/>
L. L. POLK. Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES <lb/>
GREENVILLE, K. C. <lb/>
Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions, <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. They need only to be tried to <lb/>
give satisfaction <lb/>
I can now offer to the Jobbing Trade <lb/>
superior advantages in Geo. A. Clark <lb/>
Bros spool cotton which I will sell it <lb/>
cents per doz., per cent. off. <lb/>
I keep on hand a large supply of <lb/>
ford's Bread <lb/>
sell at wholesale prices <lb/>
The patronage of the public is very res-<lb/>
Farm Paragraphs. <lb/>
Cattle, should be fed partly in the <lb/>
barn throughout the season and not <lb/>
be forced to depend upon pasture <lb/>
age. <lb/>
They don't tax oleomargarine <lb/>
butter England, but when a deal- <lb/>
is found selling it for butter he <lb/>
goes to prison with neatness and <lb/>
dispatch. <lb/>
A great farmers say that it <lb/>
does not pay to raise oats. The <lb/>
trouble is that they figure by the <lb/>
market value instead of feeding val- <lb/>
A moth is on its eastward <lb/>
from Kansas, the of which <lb/>
will eat nothing bat the leaves of <lb/>
that terrible weed of our gardens, <lb/>
The wild West is waking up to <lb/>
the injury inflicted by the English <lb/>
sparrow. In Oregon and Kansas <lb/>
the dirty little pests are driving out <lb/>
the native birds and destroying <lb/>
grain. <lb/>
The cultivation of the potato crop <lb/>
cannot begin too early or be too <lb/>
thorough. The period of growth is <lb/>
short, and we ought to give them <lb/>
every possible chance while grow- <lb/>
Mask melons, which arc hardier <lb/>
and more easily raised than water <lb/>
melons and have a richer flavor, <lb/>
should be specially planted at conn- <lb/>
try homes in the off years of orchard <lb/>
fruits. <lb/>
Like most garments, everything <lb/>
in life has a right and a wrong <lb/>
side. You can take any joy, and by <lb/>
tinning it around, find troubles on <lb/>
the other side; or, yon take the <lb/>
greatest trouble, and by turning it <lb/>
find joys on the other side. <lb/>
The gloomiest mountain never casts <lb/>
a shadow on both sides at once. <lb/>
Bar <lb/>
Mrs. Phoebe Peterson, Clay <lb/>
Co., Iowa, tells the following remarkable <lb/>
story, the truth of which is vouched for <lb/>
by the residents of am <lb/>
years old, have been troubled with kid- <lb/>
complaint and lameness for many <lb/>
years ; not dress myself without <lb/>
help. Now I am free from all pain and <lb/>
soreness, and am able to do all my own <lb/>
housework. I owe my thanks to Electric <lb/>
Bitters for having renewed my and <lb/>
removed completely all disease and pain. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
Mr. James not only one <lb/>
of most distinguished American <lb/>
journalists, he is one of the most <lb/>
American authors. He is <lb/>
well qualified to give an opinion as <lb/>
to journalism as a profession for <lb/>
young men. In a conversation not <lb/>
long since we said that if we had a <lb/>
dozen sons and all were gifted <lb/>
educated, not one of <lb/>
them should become a journalist <lb/>
with consent. We mean in all <lb/>
seriousness just what we said. A <lb/>
few editors have wielded great <lb/>
in the <lb/>
Horace J. Watson Webb, <lb/>
George D. Prentice, John Forsyth, <lb/>
Thomas Samuel and <lb/>
perhaps others. But who to-day is <lb/>
specially as a great and in- <lb/>
journalist <lb/>
Some few ape well known like <lb/>
Charles Dana, Henry <lb/>
and Halstead, but their utter- <lb/>
not regarded as oracular <lb/>
or final in any sense, or as <lb/>
important. <lb/>
But our objection chiefly lies in <lb/>
direction. It offers a poor <lb/>
field for a living in <lb/>
fact. It is a profession that creates <lb/>
other men, but does not particularly <lb/>
help the creator. The editorial room <lb/>
is not a good stepping stone to high- <lb/>
position. That is our observation <lb/>
through forty years. You will be <lb/>
called upon constantly to aid other <lb/>
men in obtaining office, who per- <lb/>
unfit for the preferment and <lb/>
are immeasurably below self <lb/>
all that constitutes an enlightened, <lb/>
qualified, well furnished We <lb/>
have never been acquainted with an <lb/>
editor of superior qualities who was <lb/>
not poor. He is forced through life <lb/>
to work like a pack-horse or like the <lb/>
galley-slave, and then drop into the <lb/>
grave unappreciated, uncared for, <lb/>
and <lb/>
If you should aspire to some <lb/>
place according to the <lb/>
of the world you arc regarded <lb/>
with suspicion an interloper. <lb/>
Gov. II i l n was a man of great in- <lb/>
in North Carolina up to the <lb/>
time he began to think of the Gov- <lb/>
opposed Ellis. What <lb/>
editor North Carolina is <lb/>
generally thought of for any place <lb/>
They are one and all expected to <lb/>
blow the trumpet for office seekers, <lb/>
but they must not have a crumb of <lb/>
the good things- Electors at large, <lb/>
delegates to the National <lb/>
nominees for Congress or on the <lb/>
State many of the <lb/>
Fourth Estate will be honored or <lb/>
thought of i This writer can say <lb/>
this as lie has no itching for office <lb/>
himself and would not have one if <lb/>
laid at his feet, He has no bee in <lb/>
bis bonnet and he never had one. <lb/>
The field is very limited. If you <lb/>
should be a man of admirable parts, <lb/>
with rare style and fine culture you <lb/>
will be foolish to in the tread <lb/>
mill when yon can write books and <lb/>
make a name in literature per- <lb/>
haps put money in pocket for a <lb/>
If you or- <lb/>
mortal with but few gifts <lb/>
and less cultivation, you will do <lb/>
in the profession and perhaps <lb/>
Calf starve. <lb/>
Then there are other- <lb/>
wise. Journalism is not a good school <lb/>
for the cultivation of a high morale, <lb/>
for a <lb/>
You see so much insincerity <lb/>
for effect in the newspapers that <lb/>
you are either driven into a huge <lb/>
distrust or you become demoralized <lb/>
and learn to lie easily in turn. The <lb/>
conscientious man who write <lb/>
a line he does not in his heart believe <lb/>
to be true is a jewel of the first <lb/>
and should be by all <lb/>
honest, virtuous, God-fearing men. <lb/>
to be Nothing can I <lb/>
need a lie. The fault that needs it <lb/>
mosts grows two <lb/>
But our purpose was not to write <lb/>
a dozen lines when we took up our <lb/>
pencil, but to copy what Mr. <lb/>
said. He answerers the question, <lb/>
I consider journalism a <lb/>
profession for young men to <lb/>
with a very emphatic, a <lb/>
He says <lb/>
hangs over me, <lb/>
impulse is still to cry to <lb/>
young men <lb/>
it is true as Holy <lb/>
thing, I fear, must always <lb/>
place journalism at a disadvantage, <lb/>
compared with other professions, <lb/>
such as law, art, medicine, teaching <lb/>
engineering. By the very <lb/>
i arc cl case the writers for the <lb/>
daily press can have but little <lb/>
pendent action. Speaking roughly, <lb/>
of the press as we find <lb/>
it now New York, the other <lb/>
large cities of the United States, <lb/>
everything; the writer <lb/>
is nothing. The most gifted and the <lb/>
most enlightened journalist must of <lb/>
necessity write to order, and in very <lb/>
many instances the man who gives <lb/>
the order is person whom an en- <lb/>
lightened and patriotic spirit would <lb/>
least willingly obey. This appears <lb/>
to be <lb/>
If we could retrace our life for <lb/>
thirty years and more we would not <lb/>
enter a newspaper office for any con- <lb/>
short of saving life. We <lb/>
feel some like we had almost <lb/>
rather a dog and bay the <lb/>
In the South gentlemen will not write <lb/>
but they are nevertheless <lb/>
severely handicapped and restrained <lb/>
Yon must not advocate a measure in <lb/>
opposition to the known policy of <lb/>
the paper you are connected with. <lb/>
This of course necessitates the avoid- <lb/>
of and cuts off <lb/>
Mr. <lb/>
is the age of business; the <lb/>
business man is king, over no <lb/>
kind of industry does he exercise a <lb/>
sway so absolute as over <lb/>
try of the mind. Nor can this ma- <lb/>
change until education con- <lb/>
itself most with those faculties <lb/>
and powers which fit men lead- <lb/>
the educated Man of <lb/>
controls the <lb/>
There is one view that is more <lb/>
hopeful. Dickens, Theirs <lb/>
and lesser lights in the of <lb/>
letters once earned their bread in <lb/>
the newspaper office. of course <lb/>
no office could confine men of <lb/>
such genius and They got <lb/>
oat into free air and open sky <lb/>
and made themselves immortal and <lb/>
the world glad. <lb/>
Rocket. <lb/>
to come nearer home. In <lb/>
Wadesboro we find children <lb/>
white children attending <lb/>
same Sunday school, in the same <lb/>
church, at same hour, all bear- <lb/>
floral offerings, and all <lb/>
and coming at the same door. <lb/>
This is not only a step, it is a very <lb/>
decided leap, the highway to <lb/>
social equality. If the most <lb/>
the most exclusive, body of <lb/>
Christian believers in the South <lb/>
says, will hold our church, con <lb/>
together, forgetful of race <lb/>
distinction, we will lot our <lb/>
white and colored, meet to <lb/>
it common religious <lb/>
equality once a who is it <lb/>
that rise and say the Southern <lb/>
people are. not drifting, with torrent <lb/>
sweep, maelstrom of social <lb/>
equality- -miscegenation <lb/>
I This is the size of it. Who <lb/>
will assert that picture is over- <lb/>
Intelligencer. <lb/>
The above is an extract from an <lb/>
editorial in the last issue of the In- <lb/>
the Episcopal Con- <lb/>
recently in session at <lb/>
bury, X. C. We were greatly <lb/>
prised to learn that equality, <lb/>
even to the extent mentioned, had <lb/>
found abiding place in Wades- <lb/>
and we should have hesitated <lb/>
to give credence to the statement <lb/>
had we seen it in almost any other <lb/>
paper. As it is we must believe <lb/>
but our of the denomination <lb/>
which encourages it has suffered a <lb/>
back-set. <lb/>
We believe it to be the Christian <lb/>
duty of ecclesiastical <lb/>
nation and of every individual to <lb/>
aid in the educational elevation of <lb/>
Negro race. As an order of beings <lb/>
in every way their superiors, it is <lb/>
the duty of the white people to <lb/>
guide and direct them, to lead <lb/>
them to a higher plane of existence. <lb/>
How far and what this <lb/>
high aid should extended is a question <lb/>
rd upon which is much diversity <lb/>
of opinion; but no one but a fanatic <lb/>
will for a moment entertain the pro- <lb/>
position that the standard of the <lb/>
Anglo Saxon race must be lowered <lb/>
order to equalize the two races <lb/>
intellectually and otherwise and to <lb/>
put upon the same plane <lb/>
ally and morally. And that is the <lb/>
only way by which the two races <lb/>
can be equalized. God Almighty <lb/>
created the Negro with a black <lb/>
skin and with an intellect inferior <lb/>
to that of the white race, it is <lb/>
our honest, firmly rooted opinion <lb/>
that it was His intention that the <lb/>
two races should remain separate <lb/>
Mid distinct and that the superior <lb/>
race should govern and guide in all <lb/>
things. <lb/>
II this be so, the denomination <lb/>
which receives Negroes into its <lb/>
-schools and church <lb/>
on an equal footing with the <lb/>
whites is treading on dangerous <lb/>
It is a short step from <lb/>
the church to the hearthstone; from <lb/>
the Sunday school chapel to <lb/>
week-day school room. Youthful <lb/>
hearts are tender and susceptible to <lb/>
affections which age would <lb/>
spurn, and attachments formed <lb/>
the Sunday-school, <lb/>
of fanatical parents, will event- <lb/>
lead to social relations, and <lb/>
The deterioration of the <lb/>
white race and a corresponding <lb/>
of the colored God forbid <lb/>
that such a curse should come upon <lb/>
the South Relegate to the realms <lb/>
of obscurity religious who <lb/>
would blight manhood of our <lb/>
brave chivalrous boys; who <lb/>
would tinge the blood of fair and <lb/>
virtuous and lovely girls, and who <lb/>
would jeopardize our cherished in- <lb/>
and scatter broad <lb/>
cases over the land. <lb/>
Hut how far and in what way are <lb/>
we to aid the Negro helps <lb/>
those who help Must <lb/>
man go a step further than that and <lb/>
help those who manifest no <lb/>
to help themselves J Surely <lb/>
one will say so. Wt can aid them <lb/>
by building school houses and <lb/>
churches for them, and by giving <lb/>
them all the advantages necessary <lb/>
for their advancement. But let <lb/>
be maintained separate and <lb/>
apart for those of the whites. The <lb/>
have the mental capacity to <lb/>
vastly improve their intellectual and <lb/>
moral condition, as they improve <lb/>
they will establish among themselves <lb/>
a condition of society which will <lb/>
give to those who deserve them all <lb/>
the blessings and pleasures of <lb/>
and civilization that are <lb/>
vouchsafed to the white people. <lb/>
Can they, or any of the white fools <lb/>
who are so clamorous for the <lb/>
of the Negro, ask for more f <lb/>
are educated and <lb/>
to the extent of their <lb/>
they must still be greatly below <lb/>
the white race in intelligence and <lb/>
wisdom, and is no way to help <lb/>
it except by amalgamation, the <lb/>
gradual absorption of the black by <lb/>
the white race; and the very, men- <lb/>
of a proposition is <lb/>
mount to rank heresy before high <lb/>
heaven. <lb/>
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb/>
Corrected weekly by <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Grocers. <lb/>
Mess Pork- <lb/>
Bulk Sides <lb/>
Bulk Shoulders <lb/>
Bacon Sides <lb/>
Bacon Shoulders <lb/>
Pitt County <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 <lb/>
G. A. Salt <lb/>
Liverpool Salt <lb/>
Hides <lb/>
Rags <lb/>
Bread <lb/>
Star Lye <lb/>
Kerosene Oil <lb/>
15.00<lb/>
to <lb/>
is <lb/>
to 5.60 <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
II to <lb/>
to <lb/>
1.60 <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
2.25 <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
6.25 <lb/>
3.40 <lb/>
to <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
CASH <lb/>
We have recently purchased the <lb/>
of Hardware belonging to M. A. Jarvis, <lb/>
and will replenish the same with all the <lb/>
leading goods in the <lb/>
HARDWARE LINE. <lb/>
Farm Implements, Tools, Ta- <lb/>
and Pocket Cutlery, Plow Bolls <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/>
Will Color One to Four Pounds <lb/>
Of Dress Goods, <lb/>
Garments, V I <lb/>
Yarns, Rags, etc. J <lb/>
A Child can use them I <lb/>
STRONGEST and FASTEST <lb/>
of M Warranted Dye the most W <lb/>
give the bet colon. for <lb/>
bona, and all Fancy Dyeing. leading colors. <lb/>
They also make the and Cheapest <lb/>
WRITING INK I ONE QUART <lb/>
laundry blue f IO Cents. <lb/>
Direction for Coloring Photograph and a colon <lb/>
Cabinet as sample, for cents. <lb/>
Ask for Book and Sample Card, or writ <lb/>
WELLS, RICHARDSON CO., Burlington, <lb/>
For Gilding or Bromine Fancy <lb/>
DIAMOND PAINTS. <lb/>
Gold. Silver, Copper Only IO Cents. <lb/>
O. <lb/>
D. J. Editor <lb/>
US<lb/>
Harrows and Cultivators, Gins, Grist <lb/>
Mills, Cider and Fan Mills, Saw <lb/>
Glimmers, Cooking Stoves. <lb/>
In fact all kept In a <lb/>
mm store. <lb/>
thank the public for the liberal pat- <lb/>
they 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/>
HaSKETT CO. <lb/>
ENLARGED TO <lb/>
file Remains <lb/>
Per Year, <lb/>
IN ADVANCE <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all business in th <lb/>
U. S. Patent or in the Court <lb/>
to for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We are opposite U. S. Patent <lb/>
Office engaged in Patents <lb/>
and can obtain patents it- <lb/>
less time those more remote <lb/>
from Washington. <lb/>
When model or drawing is sen <lb/>
advise as to <lb/>
of charge, and make no charge <lb/>
unless we obtain Patents. <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Post Mas- <lb/>
the of the Money <lb/>
Div., and to officials of the U. S <lb/>
Patent Office. For circular, <lb/>
terms and reference to actual <lb/>
m own State, or county <lb/>
address, C. A. <lb/>
Washington, D. G <lb/>
UNDERTAKING.<lb/>
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/>
Nothing is wholly bad. Even <lb/>
dark lantern has its bright side. <lb/>
The modes of death's approach are <lb/>
various, and statistics 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 numbers 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 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/>
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 yon <lb/>
must act with promptness; Allowing a <lb/>
cold to go without is dangerous <lb/>
and may lose you your As soon as <lb/>
you feel that is wrong with <lb/>
your Throat, Lungs or Nostrils, obtain a <lb/>
bottle of German Syrup. It <lb/>
will give you immediate relict. <lb/>
There is something in the <lb/>
of the positive man that deserves <lb/>
universal admiration. There is <lb/>
never doubt as to the position <lb/>
be occupies on any subject or issue. <lb/>
He may often be hasty in his action, <lb/>
but he never toadies to the wants <lb/>
or demands of any particular clique. <lb/>
Into whatever work he enters he <lb/>
throws his whole energies, and <lb/>
sues his chosen regardless of <lb/>
the opinion of others. men <lb/>
are always the leaders in society, <lb/>
and the hesitating and fearful look <lb/>
to them for and pro <lb/>
Times <lb/>
keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
stock of Banal Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything 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/>
BUY <lb/>
EXCELSIOR <lb/>
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS <lb/>
PURCHASERS CAM BE SUITED <lb/>
BY <lb/>
Isaac A. Sheppard Co., Mi <lb/>
mm SALE U V <lb/>
L. C. TERRELL, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR IS THE <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Newspaper ever published, in <lb/>
Greenville. It furnishes the <lb/>
LATEST NEWS <lb/>
and gives More Reading for <lb/>
the money than any other paper <lb/>
published in North Carolina. <lb/>
The 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 an I get a <lb/>
FREE SAMPLE COPY. <lb/>
is called to the as its <lb/>
large and growing circulation <lb/>
makes it an excellent medium <lb/>
through which to reach the people <lb/>
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb/>
DO YOU WANT TO SAVE MONEY <lb/>
If so buy <lb/>
Combined Harrow S. Cultivator. <lb/>
It is worth as much In the field <lb/>
as a good hand. For sale by <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
LITTLE, HOUSE Br Agent, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
N S. FULFORD, Agent. Wash- <lb/>
N. C, <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
W. A. Fields, and other Creditors <lb/>
v. <lb/>
B. H. of <lb/>
Notice Is hereby given to all the <lb/>
tors of the estate of <lb/>
to file the evidences of their claims In my <lb/>
office or before the 9th day of July <lb/>
1888. E. A. MO YE, <lb/>
May Superior Court. <lb/>
FILLED. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
CULLEY'S for baldness, <lb/>
falling out of hair, and eradication of <lb/>
dandruff is before the public. <lb/>
Among the many who it with <lb/>
wonderful success, I refer vow to the fol- <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of my assertion <lb/>
Kid. Latham, Greenville. <lb/>
Mb. O. <lb/>
Greene, Sr., <lb/>
Any one wishing to give it a trial for <lb/>
the above named complaint can procure <lb/>
it from me, at my place of business, for <lb/>
per bottle. Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb/>
Greenville, V. C, Maren 1887. <lb/>
DO YOU WANT A DOG <lb/>
Bond <lb/>
Id v I <lb/>
r w i I <lb/>
buy i -.- I <lb/>
Mailed I <lb/>
It K of <lb/>
f all <lb/>
, wind for <lb/>
THY BOOK Km. <lb/>
I of all of <lb/>
I of t <lb/>
I plans for poultry <lb/>
v lo buy<lb/>
I to buy <lb/>
I Kern from <lb/>
I per for <lb/>
KEEP GAGE-BIRDS <lb/>
If you the HOOK OF <lb/>
m, plate. <lb/>
bird, for <lb/>
lira. How t build I <lb/>
All about Farrow. I <lb/>
U kinds bird. etc. Mailed tat I <lb/>
Cent. Book. u. I <lb/>
ASSOCIATED FANCIERS. <lb/>
South Philadelphia, Pa. I <lb/>
paper la kept on at the <lb/>
GENTS <lb/>
i building <lb/>
CO I I Co ; t Lowest Rat. <lb/>
SON'S <lb/>
FITS <lb/>
When I I do not man merely to <lb/>
Stop tor a time, and then have them re- <lb/>
turn twain. I A RADICAL CURB. <lb/>
I made the disease <lb/>
FITS, <lb/>
FALLING SICKNESS, <lb/>
I my remedy to <lb/>
the worst cases. Because others hT <lb/>
failed is no reason now receiving a cure. <lb/>
Send at once tor a and a <lb/>
my Give Express <lb/>
and Post Office. R costs you nothing a <lb/>
trial, and It will cure you. Address <lb/>
H. C. ROOT. M. C, Pun St., Hr-Y <lb/>
of <lb/>
ban <lb/>
i Mi <lb/>
Thousand application for <lb/>
Cm and <lb/>
of <lb/>
American to act <lb/>
for patents, copy <lb/>
etc. for tho United States, and <lb/>
to in land. <lb/>
ll other countries. <lb/>
and their are <lb/>
pared. <lb/>
and pacifications prepared and filed <lb/>
In Patent Office on short notice. Terms Terr <lb/>
reasonable No for nation of mod ell <lb/>
Or drawing Advice by mail <lb/>
Patents obtained Mum <lb/>
baa <lb/>
largest and is moat influential <lb/>
of its kind published in world. <lb/>
of a notice <lb/>
Thia large splendidly <lb/>
WEEKLY it f 3.00 a year, and <lb/>
admitted to be best paper devoted to <lb/>
mechanics, invention-, engineering works, and <lb/>
other departments of industrial progress, pub- <lb/>
in any country. It contains names Off <lb/>
all and title of every patented <lb/>
each week. Try it four for <lb/>
Bold by all newsdealer. <lb/>
If yon an invention to patent M <lb/>
Munn A Co., of Scientific <lb/>
Kl Broadway. New York. <lb/>
Handbook about mailed <lb/>
ONE OF THE <lb/>
GREAT WESTERN <lb/>
is now in Greenville and being <lb/>
operated y A. O. A Bro. These <lb/>
gentlemen came from Washington, N. C, <lb/>
highly recommended the citizens and <lb/>
having machinery of the latest patent are <lb/>
prepared to Renovate Old and New. <lb/>
Feathers to or no pay <lb/>
asked. <lb/>
Below are some names of citizens In <lb/>
Washington and vicinity given by per- <lb/>
mission J M Gallagher, M Rev Nat <lb/>
Harding, D T J Bryan Grimes, <lb/>
Hymen Proctor, R F Jones, N <lb/>
James Galloway, Bishop J A W <lb/>
R Bright and others. <lb/>
IR BALSAM <lb/>
. and the <lb/>
r falls to <lb/>
Hair to It <lb/>
J PARKER <lb/>
,. . <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>