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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 11 July 1888</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 11 July 1888</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18880711</dc:date>
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                <p>
LEADING PA i <lb />
ONE SIX MONTHS <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
THE RIM PAPER <lb />
IN <lb />
LARGEST l <lb />
excellent m i mum. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. VII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY JULY 1888 <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, <lb />
GREENVILLE, M. C <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor <lb />
THE LEADING PAPER <lb />
IN THE <lb />
FIRST <lb />
Price. per year. <lb />
-THOROUGHLY DEMOCRATIC, BIT <lb />
will not hesitate to <lb />
men Mum that are not consistent <lb />
with the into principles of the party. <lb />
If yea want a paper from a <lb />
section of the State send for the <lb />
tor. Or COPY FREE <lb />
Democratic Nominees. Politics in New York. <lb />
NATIONAL. <lb />
Kill <lb />
CLEVELAND, <lb />
Of New York. <lb />
ran <lb />
ALLEN . THURMAN. <lb />
Of Ohio. <lb />
STATE. <lb />
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb />
Bred L Scale, of <lb />
of New <lb />
Secretary of <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
W. of Wake. <lb />
Auditor William Roberts, of Gates. <lb />
of Public Instruction <lb />
M. Finger of <lb />
Attorney F David- <lb />
son, of <lb />
court. <lb />
ChM N. II . of <lb />
S. Ashe. of <lb />
Anson Augustus S. of Wake. <lb />
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
District James E. Shepherd, of <lb />
Beaufort. <lb />
Second Philips, of <lb />
Edgecombe. <lb />
Third O. <lb />
son. <lb />
Clark, of <lb />
Fifth I A. of <lb />
U mi for- <lb />
Sixth T. of <lb />
Sampson. <lb />
Seventh C. <lb />
Cumberland. <lb />
Eighth J. Montgomery, of <lb />
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb />
Yadkin. <lb />
Tenth C. of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp. of <lb />
Twelfth n <lb />
of <lb />
in Commas. <lb />
Sena B. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb />
House of District <lb />
C. of Pitt <lb />
Second M. Simmons, of <lb />
Craven. <lb />
Third W. of <lb />
Frailer <lb />
Fourth District Mm Nichols, of <lb />
Wake <lb />
Fifth W. Reid, of Rock- <lb />
Sixth T. Bennett, of <lb />
An <lb />
Se tenth S. Henderson, <lb />
of Rowan. <lb />
Eighth II. II. <lb />
of Wilkes. <lb />
Ninth D. Johnston, <lb />
Buncombe <lb />
COUNTY GOVERNMENT. <lb />
Safaris Court A. Move. <lb />
M. King. <lb />
Register of H. Wilson. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. Cough-ton. <lb />
P. Redding. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb />
man, Mooring. J. A. K. Tucker. <lb />
W. A. James, Jr. T. E. Keel. <lb />
Public <lb />
Latham. <lb />
of Health Dr. F. W. Brown. <lb />
M. <lb />
C. Forbes. <lb />
J. Perkins. <lb />
Ward. T. A. <lb />
and J. P. 2nd Ward, O. Hook- <lb />
and R. William Jr.; 3rd Ward, J. J. <lb />
Perkins and A. F. Kin--nil. <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. Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
Baptist- Services every Sunday, morn- <lb />
and night. Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
DANIEL G. FOWLS, <lb />
Of Wake County. <lb />
I t <lb />
THOMAS If. HOLT, <lb />
Of County. <lb />
ran of <lb />
M L. S A DER S, <lb />
Of New Hanover County. <lb />
DONALD W. <lb />
Of Make <lb />
GEORGE W. SANDERLIN, <lb />
Of Wayne County. <lb />
Ill IN- <lb />
SIDNEY M. FINGER, <lb />
OX County. <lb />
THEODORE P. DAVIDSON, <lb />
Of County. <lb />
m mom <lb />
JOSEPH J. DAVIS, <lb />
O Franklin. <lb />
JAMES E. SHEPHERD. <lb />
Of Beaufort. <lb />
A. A VERY, <lb />
Of Baste. <lb />
FOR BUM Tints AT <lb />
ALFRED M. <lb />
Of New Hanover. <lb />
FREDRICK N. <lb />
Of <lb />
For <lb />
AWAKEN <lb />
M. O. <lb />
is sings the <lb />
Life is earnest, life is strong, <lb />
the truth and learn tn know <lb />
Hold it as you march along. <lb />
Not in drifting, not in dreaming <lb />
To the good of life attained. <lb />
Not by shadows, not by seeming <lb />
To the of life maintained <lb />
from sighing. <lb />
Leave the amaranth and palm. <lb />
Lei not priceless moments Hying. <lb />
Find you mildewed thick with calm. <lb />
the note of high endeavor. <lb />
Sound it with exultant youth. <lb />
Make its chords to ring forever <lb />
Vibrant from the harp of Truth. <lb />
the <lb />
PSALM OF <lb />
The is my sole shepherd dear <lb />
I never shall fell want of diet <lb />
He makes me lie down without fear <lb />
In green. By waters <lb />
He ever <lb />
soul, again, he <lb />
In righteous paths he <lb />
for his own name's sake. <lb />
Republicans Bit-rusted with he work of <lb />
the Chicago Solid <lb />
for Wall Street <lb />
End of the <lb />
Ticket, with a <lb />
the <lb />
New York star Syndicate Letter to the <lb />
June <lb />
has will now. A few <lb />
flora ago it was raging at white heat. <lb />
You got of it in the wiles <lb />
hotel lobbies. It came to <lb />
in III gusts from the wide <lb />
open of Printing House <lb />
stuccoed the fronts of the great <lb />
newspaper offices with big lettered <lb />
legends of the extraordinary doings <lb />
at Every other man re <lb />
solved himself into an oracle or u <lb />
soothsayer and the talk was pretty <lb />
much all <lb />
Every one felt New York's <lb />
delegates with <lb />
at the head and Stove <lb />
Cossacks hovering <lb />
about the edges were sent to <lb />
go to do the bidding the <lb />
from Maine when the proper moment <lb />
should arrive. The trotting out of <lb />
as a stalking horse lo keep <lb />
the in line pending the grand <lb />
deceived no one. <lb />
And now the dismal failure of <lb />
the plot, and the unexpected <lb />
combination of other candidates <lb />
which headed off the <lb />
stampede to the crafty Florentine is <lb />
the absorbing topic. In <lb />
its discussion tho nominees them- <lb />
selves are almost lost sight of. en <lb />
who have hoary politics <lb />
cannot remember when the work of <lb />
; a national convention has been re- <lb />
with such conspicuous in <lb />
difference. Even those perfunctory <lb />
the <lb />
j nature, of things are supposed to as- <lb />
I themselves on such occasions <lb />
have here been almost totally lack <lb />
Your Gotham <lb />
there is of apt to be positive <lb />
aggressive. lie chooses his idol <lb />
from the circle of Stalwart ism. <lb />
and bestows his homage upon it <lb />
with a zeal in direct ratio to its <lb />
record of partisan achievement. No <lb />
amount of cheap ancestral gilding <lb />
will burnish up a little tin figure of <lb />
the Chicago convention tin into a <lb />
deity worthy to command <lb />
of the New York In <lb />
fact, he is usually the type that <lb />
has been graphically and rather <lb />
picturesquely described <lb />
or and he is naturally dis- <lb />
gusted that his party should have so <lb />
little to show for their season of an- <lb />
travail at Chicago. <lb />
The family history idea in politics <lb />
comes home to the New York lie- <lb />
publican I pain <lb />
only of the record and memory of <lb />
disaster, last fall that <lb />
the supposed prestige of pedigree <lb />
placed at the head of <lb />
Slate ticket the very <lb />
of bis Col. Fred Gnat. <lb />
he led the party to defeat <lb />
; conditions much more favorable <lb />
its success than they can be by <lb />
any reasonable this fall <lb />
has passed into history <lb />
is very likely to itself with <lb />
emphasis with respect to the <lb />
ticket. <lb />
As seen through the field glasses <lb />
the local leaders the bead of the <lb />
I ticket to be something more <lb />
a Mugwump and something <lb />
less a Republican. The <lb />
j straight-jacket of the In <lb />
THE dependent will not adapt itself to <lb />
his figure and the stalwart mantle <lb />
of the Magnetic man is many sizes <lb />
too large a of his girth. <lb />
The Independent vote that to <lb />
Cleveland in will stay with <lb />
him year. For a time this con- <lb />
seemed considerably befog- <lb />
as to which road it would take, <lb />
the Chicago dicker has cleared <lb />
all that up. George William Curtis <lb />
and Times, the head front <lb />
and month of the combination <lb />
pronounced for Cleveland and <lb />
God's goodness will forsake me <lb />
In his house I will live forever, <lb />
A life exempt from woes. <lb />
SEE FOE <lb />
LODGES. <lb />
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A A. <lb />
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb />
day night 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb />
Masonic Lodge. W M. King. W. M. <lb />
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meet <lb />
2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb />
sonic Hall, F. W. P. <lb />
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb />
meet every Tuesday night. D. L. thought. <lb />
James, oh w , <lb />
Insurance Lodge. No. h. of H., I <lb />
meet every and third Friday night. ow J J m mg <lb />
Through death's dark vale shall be. <lb />
No evil will I fear at <lb />
For thou with me at all times art <lb />
comfort thy staff and thy red. <lb />
A table is spread for me by God <lb />
In the face of my foes. <lb />
thou head with <lb />
My cup runs o'er, makes glad for Mayor <lb />
in the most unequivocal <lb />
, terms. <lb />
The vote of organized labor here i <lb />
will go the it is big <lb />
enough to be a mighty force in New <lb />
York politics. George who <lb />
as champion polled over <lb />
D. D. Haskett. D. <lb />
Pitt Council. No. A. L. of H. meets <lb />
Thursday night. C. A. White. C. <lb />
Temperance Reform Club meets ill their <lb />
room every Monday night, at <lb />
o'clock. Mass meeting in the House <lb />
fourth of each month, at o'clock <lb />
p. M. E. C. Glenn, <lb />
Christian Temperance Union <lb />
meet in the Reform Club Room Friday <lb />
of each week. Mrs. V. II. <lb />
ard, <lb />
Band of Hope meets in Reform Club <lb />
Room every Friday night. Miss I <lb />
live, prays for me. <lb />
When waves of darkness round me roll <lb />
ran and Democratic tickets in the <lb />
field, is an avowed advocate of <lb />
Cleveland's election. That very <lb />
considerable section of Irish Demo- <lb />
who were led astray by the <lb />
blarney of the Maine man four <lb />
years ago are also safely back with <lb />
in the Democratic fold. <lb />
The wires had hardly flashed the <lb />
news of Hanson's nomination when <lb />
were yelling with all the <lb />
force of their well trained lungs <lb />
newspaper catch lines on the <lb />
Hanker Morton is a multi-million. <lb />
He belongs to the ton of New <lb />
York society. He maintains a mag <lb />
home establishment here <lb />
and half a dozen others at various <lb />
I fashionable watering The <lb />
finest thoroughbreds are in his <lb />
Mm; his servants are all attired in <lb />
the most irreproachable liveries. <lb />
He entertains royally at home, and <lb />
is frequently the host of dazzling <lb />
receptions banquets at <lb />
have had occasion to see <lb />
him professionally more than once. <lb />
He has a good manner and tho lines <lb />
his face recall those of the late <lb />
ex governor Besides being <lb />
immensely rich man, Mr. Morton <lb />
i is known here for the <lb />
his <lb />
When ho entered <lb />
tics some twelve years ago, the <lb />
soon discovered a commend- <lb />
able readiness on his part to put the <lb />
big on tap. They have <lb />
been systematically bleeding him <lb />
ever since. He was once defeated <lb />
and once elected to Congress from <lb />
an up town-town dis- <lb />
The rolled out the <lb />
when that memorable wail <lb />
went up funds four years <lb />
put a Brother <lb />
Morten's ear about the venerable <lb />
seat the Senate. When <lb />
the vacancy occurred up went the <lb />
to Albany with <lb />
personally presiding at the bung <lb />
hole. however, drew the <lb />
prize. Nothing daunted, the same <lb />
old crowd were on hand at Albany <lb />
again last year when Warner Mil <lb />
lei's term as Senator expired. The <lb />
i Wall Street magnate as usual was <lb />
bled fearfully but somehow the Sen <lb />
ticket got fastened to His- <lb />
cock's coat. <lb />
This sort of thing began to a <lb />
trifle monotonous. There was <lb />
danger that Moneybags, <lb />
growing weary of indulging bis ex- <lb />
pensive folly, might get his grip on <lb />
I the faucet and turn off the golden <lb />
l stream. Then what would the <lb />
do for a living Politics is their <lb />
bread and meat and drink. It is as <lb />
much their trade as is <lb />
that of the village cobbler. That <lb />
is why Boss put the screws <lb />
down on his men at Chicago when <lb />
the conspiracy petered out <lb />
the ticket itself tells the <lb />
rest of the story. At least, this is <lb />
the generally accepted view here. <lb />
The outlook a nutshell is for a <lb />
larger majority for the <lb />
ticket than has been given since the <lb />
first rise of the Cleveland tidal <lb />
wave which engulfed the <lb />
party the over to-be remembered <lb />
i gubernatorial of <lb />
E. <lb />
on Thurman. <lb />
In Years n; <lb />
ex-Senator James G wrote <lb />
ex Senator Allen G as fol- <lb />
lows <lb />
His rank in the Semite was es <lb />
from the day he took <lb />
, his seat and was never lowered <lb />
during the period of his services. <lb />
He was admirably disciplined <lb />
i debater, was fair in his method of <lb />
logical in his argument, <lb />
honest his conclusions. Ho had <lb />
no trick in discussion, no catch <lb />
phrases to attention, but <lb />
was always direct manly. His <lb />
mind was not preoccupied and en- <lb />
grossed with political contests or <lb />
with affairs of state. He had <lb />
and cultivated tastes outside of <lb />
those fields. He was a <lb />
ting reader, and enjoyed not only <lb />
serious books, but inclined also to <lb />
the lighter indulgence of romance <lb />
and poetry. He was especially fond <lb />
of the best French writers. He <lb />
ed Moliere and and could <lb />
quote with rare enjoyment the <lb />
scenes depicted by Balzac. <lb />
He took pleasure the drama and <lb />
was devoted to music. In Washing- <lb />
ton he could usually be found in the <lb />
best seat of the a good <lb />
play was to be presented or an ope- <lb />
was to be given. These tastes <lb />
illustrate the genial side of bis <lb />
and were a fitting compliment <lb />
to the stronger and sterner <lb />
the man. His retirement <lb />
from the Senate was a serious loss <lb />
to his loss indeed, to the <lb />
He left behind him the re- <lb />
of all with whom he had been <lb />
associated during his twelve years <lb />
of honorable service. <lb />
Business Is Business. <lb />
And troubles press hard upon the soul record on <lb />
A comfort comes so rich free, .- <lb />
Because know prays for question. That record <lb />
instantly welded the labor <lb />
When in time of need solidly against the Chicago <lb />
m heart b ticket and as solidly in favor of the <lb />
Democratic standard-bearers- <lb />
After all there is considerable <lb />
i humor grotesque combination <lb />
and <lb />
most of it. <lb />
I for me. They say there was a very sugary <lb />
j odor in the great meeting ball when <lb />
i Boss Plat triumphantly rolled the <lb />
Tis turn in joy to thee <lb />
Because thou ever pray for me. <lb />
v, W hen disappointments weigh me down. I , i.-s <lb />
; Beneath its load, crushed by its frown., aDd <lb />
I forget it all to turn to thee. are the <lb />
POST OFFICE. <lb />
hours a. M. to p. M. Money And when the end of life shaft come, <lb />
a. M. to p. M. And my freed is home, ,, . . , , . <lb />
will be issued turn to p. m. have that sweet promise there Morton down the aisle. he <lb />
from to p. m. Which came in answer to your prayer, j brainiest of Republican <lb />
, , . . , . . ; who usually dips <lb />
at M. and depart s at p. U. The joy to me will be, <lb />
Washington mail arrives dally <lb />
from to a p. m. mm <lb />
Bethel arrives daily Sun-i . . <lb />
at JO A. M., and departs at p m. j <lb />
mail arrives daily Sun- j <lb />
The thought of those sweet prayers <lb />
for me. <lb />
at M. and departs at P. <lb />
for Spring and inter- <lb />
Mondays, Wednesdays A few can touch the string, <lb />
and Returns at m. i And noisy is proud to win <lb />
mail arrive Fridays at Alas for those never sing, <lb />
Saturday at C a. M. I die with all their music in them i <lb />
H. A. M. O. W. <lb />
pen in <lb />
smears it over with oil of polite sat- <lb />
ire, wrought better than be knew <lb />
perhaps, his recent advance <lb />
sketch of the Vice Presidential can- <lb />
At all events the picture, <lb />
of his drawing is a very accurate <lb />
presentment of Wall St. end of the j <lb />
ticket. <lb />
Au exchange alluding to the fact, <lb />
that people ask and expect so much <lb />
free service from newspaper <lb />
hers, when they would not think of <lb />
making such demands other <lb />
men, follows up our recent <lb />
com men t son the same subject this <lb />
manner. It line of <lb />
space a newspaper is worth money <lb />
when people beg for space they <lb />
beg for money. There are very <lb />
many people, <lb />
who don't understand this. When <lb />
they ask for the of an <lb />
or a paragraph which is not <lb />
interesting itself, bat intended to be <lb />
in the interest of some restitution <lb />
charitable or they often I <lb />
do so with an air of assurance that <lb />
indicates that, in their opinion, they <lb />
are conferring a favor rather than <lb />
asking one. If it were not for the <lb />
charges made for space in a news- <lb />
paper it could not exist and all ad- <lb />
should be charged for. <lb />
The Richmond and Danville Rail- <lb />
road company has invested <lb />
the purchase of deep water-fronts <lb />
at Norfolk, Vs., for international <lb />
facilities. railroad property in <lb />
is assessed for taxation at <lb />
Washington Letter. <lb />
Special to <lb />
1888. <lb />
the Republican mountain <lb />
hath brought forth a mouse. The <lb />
party which elected Lincoln, the <lb />
rail splitter, Grant, the tanner, and <lb />
the tow-path boy, and <lb />
which has so loudly claimed to lie <lb />
the party, the friend of the <lb />
etc, has taken a new de <lb />
part lire this lime, they have selected <lb />
a member of the blue-blooded silk <lb />
stocking aristocracy to head <lb />
ticket, only distinction is <lb />
that he is the grand-son of his <lb />
grand-father, and have hitched on <lb />
to the New York banker, whose <lb />
only distinction is the possession of <lb />
many barrels of ready cash which <lb />
he. is expected around <lb />
liberally during the campaign. <lb />
Harrison Morton is a queer <lb />
kind or a ticket to ask a working <lb />
man to vote for, but of course the <lb />
Republican managers except the <lb />
support of thousands of the wage <lb />
workers of the country. The <lb />
is will they get them Time <lb />
will tell. If the Chinese had votes <lb />
they would doubtless be solid for <lb />
Harrison. <lb />
The Democrats in Congress are <lb />
much pleased with the Republican <lb />
I ticket, as following opinions <lb />
; show Senator is <lb />
In very weak ticket. In the first <lb />
place Harrison has no element of <lb />
popularity in the country; second, <lb />
his Chinese record will lose the Pa- <lb />
slope, and do not see how he <lb />
can hope to carry any doubtful <lb />
j Senator <lb />
is the weakest the <lb />
cans could possibly have made. <lb />
Harrison possesses no personal pop- <lb />
and has no claims to states <lb />
I served with him for a <lb />
long period on the committee on <lb />
territories, know him well, and as <lb />
certain that no element <lb />
of Senator Harris <lb />
is as good a man as the <lb />
democrats could have desired. If <lb />
we cannot beat him, we cannot beat <lb />
Senator <lb />
is a weak man- I cannot <lb />
see how a man defeated three or <lb />
four times his own state can hope <lb />
I to Representative <lb />
will not stand a <lb />
ghost of a show. will go <lb />
Democratic, and Cleveland and <lb />
i Thurman will be <lb />
ticket <lb />
cannot carry New Jersey. Cleve- <lb />
land and are now certain <lb />
to be Representative <lb />
Burns-The republicans have <lb />
blundered. presume they don't <lb />
expect, seriously, to elect that tick- <lb />
Representative Frank <lb />
don't sec how any man <lb />
can vote that enough <lb />
of this. The above is sufficient and <lb />
is the general reflection of the <lb />
ion every Democrat in Congress. <lb />
The House has passed the public <lb />
lands bill, with an amendment re- <lb />
title in the to <lb />
i coal mines such coal deposits until <lb />
acts further in the mat <lb />
tor. <lb />
A new style of bandanna has <lb />
made its appearance among demo- <lb />
here. It has portraits of <lb />
Cleveland and Thurman in the <lb />
with an eagle and the <lb />
shield in each corner. <lb />
Mr. Cleveland was on Tuesday <lb />
officially notified of his nomination <lb />
by the Committee appointed by the <lb />
Chairman of St. <lb />
He responded a few well <lb />
timed remarks, and stated that he <lb />
would communicate further with the <lb />
party at large shortly by issuing <lb />
his letter of acceptance. The com- <lb />
went to Columbus <lb />
day evening, Mr. Thur- <lb />
man. <lb />
An amusing incident occurred at <lb />
the While House Tuesday. Mr. <lb />
Leroy Springs, a member of the no- <lb />
committee from South <lb />
Carolina, during a conversation with <lb />
Mrs. Cleveland, remarked that South <lb />
Carolina would give the President <lb />
majority, but that if tho <lb />
man suffrage people would <lb />
her, she would receive the <lb />
vote or the State. <lb />
said lb. Cleveland quickly and <lb />
laughingly, not that kind of a <lb />
The fight reform is <lb />
again raging in the House. There <lb />
will be no rest until a final vote is <lb />
taken Mills bill. When <lb />
that will be, is at extremely <lb />
don <lb />
General Sheridan has gone to his <lb />
summer cottage on the <lb />
setts coast. <lb />
Everything Adulterated.<lb />
A French paper contains the fol- <lb />
lowing Four flies wore in <lb />
quest of a breakfast. One some <lb />
jelly and regaled himself. The jelly <lb />
was not, and the fly turned <lb />
upon his back. second <lb />
the sad fate of bis <lb />
ed to eat plain bread. The alum in <lb />
the bread was too much and he <lb />
turned over and breathed bis last. <lb />
third fly attacked a glass of <lb />
beer, but the aloes laid him out cold. <lb />
fourth seeing that everything <lb />
was tampered with, resolved to <lb />
commit suicide, some <lb />
fly paper on which was inscribed <lb />
to He partook freely, <lb />
but the more he took the better he <lb />
felt. He stuck to the fly paper and <lb />
lived a good old age. <lb />
Two Conditions Contrasted. <lb />
Carolinian. <lb />
In the overcrowded marls of Ku- <lb />
rope human life is cheap. There <lb />
man is only a machine. As in the <lb />
old days lo the question, <lb />
was man the an- <lb />
is, the The caste <lb />
rules, t he masses are oppressed, t hey <lb />
i are to hope and only ask <lb />
to lit. <lb />
In our America the State was <lb />
for the man, and as a citizen <lb />
be is sovereign, and laws are crimes <lb />
if not made to help him on his <lb />
; Here the plow boy expects to live to <lb />
, own the farm, and the clerk means <lb />
j lo be the proprietor of the store. <lb />
There is no aristocracy brains. <lb />
i the poor man's capital is vigorous <lb />
manhood, and all he is a fair <lb />
; chance in the race of life. <lb />
How great the contrast between <lb />
i the two one a ilium- <lb />
civilization that has existed <lb />
i since caste ruled and labor meant <lb />
serfdom and ignorance, and the <lb />
era new instinct <lb />
of honest aspiration that asks to de- <lb />
; the resources and <lb />
make her self-sustaining; that says <lb />
; that the man who shall re- <lb />
fair wages, posses a <lb />
; table home, his children receive an <lb />
education, and his son by dint, of <lb />
tact and toil may fill the highest <lb />
; position in the land. <lb />
Clean Faces and Kissing. <lb />
Bab in New York Star. <lb />
A clean face may be vulgar, it <lb />
may be within tho reach of every <lb />
in the world; but <lb />
j less, the clean lace is to <lb />
What man would ever want <lb />
to kiss a made-up lady, and risk be- <lb />
by the cosmetics <lb />
use I <lb />
In the old days, when powder and <lb />
rouge were indispensable, a gallant <lb />
gentleman kissed the hand of his <lb />
j lair lady. And her hand was <lb />
that this kiss might mean <lb />
much to him. Nowadays men don't <lb />
down to kiss your hand, it <lb />
would get trousers out of shape. <lb />
So a clear face becomes a necessity <lb />
I to a woman who any liking for <lb />
that expression of affection which <lb />
is generally approved of and seldom <lb />
well done. <lb />
The only kiss worth having is that <lb />
I Of a nice baby, and if the baby does <lb />
not give it, it only submits to it, <lb />
and keeps dainty, <lb />
I my little mouth, shaped like o, <lb />
as it waits for you lo discover just <lb />
; how it is. kisses <lb />
are like Scotch <lb />
apt to be smoky. Children's kisses <lb />
inclined to cover one's entire <lb />
lace; but a baby simply exists and <lb />
; lets you take, a mouthful of the <lb />
breath of Araby. Men have <lb />
idea that their kisses are <lb />
are most immensely mis- <lb />
i taken. The average man gives a <lb />
kiss just as be throws a baseball <lb />
with too much force. It ought to <lb />
be as delicate Almost a <lb />
memory in a second. It need not <lb />
suggest a postage stamp, nor a <lb />
plaster. Dolly. I think I <lb />
write a book on but man- <lb />
kind is so determined that I don't <lb />
he'd take any advice the subject, <lb />
and yet, as it is the women who re- <lb />
the kisses, they certainly <lb />
ought to know more about them <lb />
than the great, big. stupid creatures <lb />
who give them. <lb />
SPATE NEWS. <lb />
A WEEK'S GLEANING <lb />
The State Over, From Our <lb />
Many Exchanges. <lb />
Happenings in and the <lb />
North Our People <lb />
Are Deter; and Saying. <lb />
Davidson conn <lb />
has a guinea hen ye us old <lb />
that has laid ergs, a total <lb />
of <lb />
Thoughts for Reflection. <lb />
The Greensboro Stale <lb />
j plains loudly that North Carolina <lb />
i was misrepresented at the <lb />
can National Convention. The fol- <lb />
lowing utterance is significant, as <lb />
showing the belief or the Slate <lb />
i that the delegates sold <lb />
The Southern delegation at <lb />
were much ridiculed by the <lb />
Northern papers and by the <lb />
When North Carolina <lb />
her vote to Alger. the galleries <lb />
out, The <lb />
machine of this State <lb />
j is not a representative or the voters <lb />
i in the party, and until the people <lb />
revolt fully against the manner in <lb />
which they are misrepresented, they <lb />
will have no fair standing in the <lb />
National party. <lb />
Harrison is unpopular at borne and <lb />
, disliked abroad, not supported by <lb />
any German newspaper or <lb />
by any German leader in the <lb />
United States ; not numbering <lb />
among his close friends man <lb />
I who ever served with him the <lb />
; Senate of the United States; hated <lb />
in California because he voted four- <lb />
teen times against the restriction of <lb />
i Chinese in his <lb />
; own State because he is cold and <lb />
distant in his manners and <lb />
with every public act that has <lb />
i been adopted which could wound <lb />
the sensibilities of voters not <lb />
i among bis own particular <lb />
in the party, <lb />
having a strong support among <lb />
little among the rank <lb />
file of the Mr, Harrison <lb />
has never been elected to any office <lb />
save that or reporter or the Supreme <lb />
Court by popular vote, and it is <lb />
not probable that he ever will be. <lb />
Chicago Tribune. <lb />
A friend wants to know what an <lb />
Independent is. He is a man who <lb />
loves office better be does <lb />
principle, and would sell his <lb />
if he bad any, for office. <lb />
Argus. <lb />
At Buncombe Superior <lb />
Messrs. Furman and Cameron, <lb />
tors of the Asheville Citizen were <lb />
guilty and fined for <lb />
publishing an advertisement of the i <lb />
Louisiana lottery. An appeal was <lb />
taken. <lb />
It is said the blackberry crop <lb />
t h county is worth as much as <lb />
the cotton crop of Edgecombe conn- <lb />
That sounds rather <lb />
but the of this berry <lb />
crop is very important. <lb />
The Cape Fear river has been <lb />
stocked with young; shad <lb />
I bit season by the I. S. Fish Com <lb />
Greensboro has organized one of <lb />
strongest Men's Demo- <lb />
Clubs in the State. It started <lb />
off with a membership of amid <lb />
much enthusiasm. <lb />
Headlight.- The <lb />
Bank recently established in <lb />
this city, has now depositors on <lb />
its books, who have the amount of <lb />
to that institution. , <lb />
This is a very good showing in these <lb />
dull summer months. <lb />
Mr. W. D. Cole, of <lb />
hanged himself last Friday. About <lb />
a year ago he was sent to the , <lb />
at Morganton, and was dis-1 <lb />
charged, mentally well, but l <lb />
weak. He was afflicted with <lb />
melancholy and in a moment <lb />
sanity hung himself. <lb />
Mr. Bob. G. Smith, of Charlotte, <lb />
a loud-mouthed Harrison <lb />
man by proposing to walk from <lb />
Charlotte to New York if Harrison <lb />
is the Harrison man agree- , <lb />
to walk from New to <lb />
Charlotte if Cleveland is elected. <lb />
There is walking ahead for that <lb />
Harrison man. <lb />
Durham It is <lb />
probable that the lour men <lb />
sentenced to be hanged, August <lb />
will be hung. Judge Mer- <lb />
by whom they were tried has <lb />
written to the Governor recommend <lb />
that the sentence commuted <lb />
to imprisonment for a term of years; <lb />
in the penitentiary. <lb />
Wilmington . Along <lb />
the line of the Carolina Beach rail <lb />
road, may be seen several huge one- <lb />
hundred pounds shot- mis-; <lb />
of war are the <lb />
attention paid to our coast by <lb />
Sam's navy the late <lb />
pleasantness. Quite a number of <lb />
these shot were unearthed dining i <lb />
the construction of the railroad. <lb />
A correspondent to the <lb />
says It is thought, <lb />
Dr. Keith who died in Coleraine <lb />
very suddenly not long since, was <lb />
foully dealt with, and we learn BUS- l <lb />
run so high, his remains were <lb />
for post exam <lb />
but. on opening the coffin, <lb />
it was found to be empty. He had <lb />
arisen his grave, but by what <lb />
power, it is not known. <lb />
While Mr. <lb />
work train was standing <lb />
upon the side track at Osgood yes-, <lb />
one of the colored hands, <lb />
crawled under a car and went to I <lb />
sleep. This unfortunate has <lb />
severely paid the penalty for Ins <lb />
prudence Mr. the <lb />
unconscious of his hazardous <lb />
sit ion, moved off train and <lb />
his were cut off above the; <lb />
knees. It is doubtful whether bis <lb />
life can be saved this warm <lb />
Wilmington Mr. John <lb />
R Watson showed us at the Hutu- i <lb />
mocks on Tuesday what is <lb />
bouts called a but i <lb />
which is in reality the octopus, or as I <lb />
some call it, the devil-fish. <lb />
was a small one and had been found <lb />
by a boy a conch. It is truly a <lb />
hideous-looking object yet its; con-1 <lb />
are laughable and well <lb />
earn for it the title of monkey-fish., <lb />
They grow to a large site, large <lb />
enough, it is said , to entangle and <lb />
devour men and animals. <lb />
Kinston Free Sunday <lb />
night a horse and buggy and about <lb />
money were stolen from Mr. <lb />
A. Stokes, at Garden's X Bonds, j <lb />
Pitt county, by white boy years <lb />
old, who had been working with Mr. <lb />
Stokes. Look out for the young thief, j <lb />
------Two boys, and years j <lb />
of age, whose names we were m <lb />
able to learn, living on Mr John <lb />
plantation, in Greene <lb />
county, got into a quarrel last Sun- <lb />
day over a chew of tobacco. The <lb />
older boy got a shot gun and shot <lb />
the younger boy in the head killing I <lb />
him instantly. The murderer made <lb />
his escape <lb />
Monroe Enquirer Express Prof. <lb />
R. R. Hunter reports a <lb />
phenomenon which he witnessed at <lb />
the residence of W. X. Alexander, I <lb />
Esq., near church, <lb />
burg county, last Sunday. Mr. Al-1 <lb />
called Hunter's <lb />
to an oak tree standing <lb />
yard which seemed to be literally I <lb />
covered with honey bees. A closer <lb />
inspection revealed the secret of at- <lb />
traction. All the leaves green ; <lb />
dry, together with the j <lb />
in a circle having a <lb />
of about forty feet, were almost <lb />
with which-had fallen in <lb />
large drops, resembling large drops <lb />
of rain. What caused the <lb />
and where it came from, are <lb />
not be easily . <lb />
Tho money spent for drinks in an <lb />
American city of inhabitants <lb />
is put down at per week <lb />
year round. That is <lb />
thrown away and worse, and seven- <lb />
tenths it comes from day labor- <lb />
The only reward of virtue, is <lb />
; the way to have a friend is to <lb />
be one. The essence of friendship <lb />
is a total, magnanimity <lb />
trust. <lb />
It's coming on the steeps of time. <lb />
Ami world Is growing <lb />
We may not see its dawn sublime. <lb />
But high hopes make the heart throb <lb />
lighter. <lb />
Flowers will bloom over again in <lb />
poems as the summer fields, to <lb />
the end of the time, always old and <lb />
always new. Why should be <lb />
more shy of repeating ourselves <lb />
than the spring be tired of blossoms <lb />
or the night of stars <lb />
There is a tide in the affairs or men <lb />
Which, taken at the Hood leads to for- <lb />
tune <lb />
Omitted, all the voyage of their life <lb />
Is hound shallows and in miseries. <lb />
W. <lb />
Compliments of congratulation <lb />
are always kindly taken and cost <lb />
one nothing but pen, ink and patter. <lb />
I consider them as <lb />
good breeding, where the exchange <lb />
is always greatly favor or the <lb />
Chesterfield. <lb />
is sincere hut he who <lb />
The wise man <lb />
tries <lb />
To be sincere haphazard is not wise. <lb />
Knowledge is gold to him who can dis- <lb />
That he who loves to know must love to <lb />
learn. <lb />
II. <lb />
A man of integrity will never <lb />
ten to any reasons against <lb />
A young man must stick himself <lb />
to business with the glue of <lb />
try. <lb />
We rise by the things that <lb />
By what we have mastered of good <lb />
and gain ; <lb />
By the pride deposed and the <lb />
slain. <lb />
And the vanquished ills that we <lb />
meet. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
Whatever strengthens our local <lb />
attachments is favorable both to in- <lb />
and national character. <lb />
Our home, our birth place, <lb />
for awhile what <lb />
the virtues are which arise of the <lb />
feelings connected with these words, <lb />
and if you have any intellectual eyes <lb />
you will then perceive the <lb />
between topography and <lb />
Show me a man who cares <lb />
no more for one place than another, <lb />
and I will show yon that same <lb />
person one who loves nothing <lb />
himself. Robert <lb />
If the world's a vale of tears. <lb />
Smile I ill rainbows span it. <lb />
Breathe the love that life endears. <lb />
Clear of to fan it <lb />
Of your gladness lend a gleam <lb />
Unto souls that shiver. <lb />
Show them how dark Sorrow's stream <lb />
Blends with Hope's bright river. <lb />
It is the poorest way to get up in <lb />
the world to be continually down in <lb />
the month. <lb />
Y B. JAMES, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice In nil the courts. Collection <lb />
a Specialty. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
Greenville, N <lb />
TAKES M. <lb />
Y-AT-L A W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
LEX L. BLOW, <lb />
E Y-AT-L AW, <lb />
G C <lb />
AUG. M MOORE. <lb />
BERNARD, <lb />
A Tl W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Practice the State and Federal <lb />
J E MOORE. <lb />
J. M. TUCKER <lb />
J. D. MURPHY <lb />
TICKER A MURPHY, <lb />
A W, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY SKINNER <lb />
T SKINNER, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
T V. <lb />
Attorney and at Law <lb />
V C. <lb />
R. H. SNELL, <lb />
WASHINGTON, N. O. <lb />
Surgeon Dentist. <lb />
Tenders his professional services to <lb />
public.,,, ., , <lb />
Teeth extracted without pain by tho SM <lb />
of Nitrous Oxide Gas.<lb />
W- JOYNER, <lb />
Attorney and at Law <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
Will In the o Pitt,. , <lb />
Greene, Edgecombe and Beaufort <lb />
ties, and the Supreme Court, <lb />
Faithful attention given to all . <lb />
entrusted to him. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
A Y-A W, <lb />
Greenville, N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018893_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
The Reflector, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
Editor and <lb />
Published Every <lb />
THE LEADING PAPER <lb />
IN THE<lb />
Subscription Price. per year. <lb />
BIT <lb />
will hesitate to Democratic <lb />
men measures that are not consistent <lb />
with the true principles of the party. <lb />
II yon want a a <lb />
o the State send <lb />
tor. T SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb />
WEDNESDAY <lb />
AT THE OFFICE AT <lb />
C. as Second-Class <lb />
Mail <lb />
THE FOURTH. <lb />
A Grand Day for Greenville. <lb />
Town People <lb />
Celebration a Success. <lb />
Court of thee. <lb />
Sweet land of <lb />
Of thee I'll sing <lb />
Land wk n my fathers died. <lb />
Laud of the pride. <lb />
From even- mountain side <lb />
Let Freedom <lb />
The ringing of bells boom- <lb />
of cannon between the hours <lb />
of day break and sunrise on the <lb />
morning of the 4th inst. warned <lb />
the sleepers of usually quiet <lb />
that the anniversary <lb />
of American Independence was <lb />
at hand. For many clays prep- <lb />
had been going on among <lb />
our people for a proper <lb />
of the occasion, and now <lb />
that the day had arrived every <lb />
heart hoped to realize its fullest <lb />
anticipations. All preparations <lb />
had been completed and nothing <lb />
was exacted to interfere with <lb />
the carrying out of the program, <lb />
unless, perhaps, it might be the <lb />
weather, but as the golden orb <lb />
of day aroused from his slumber <lb />
and peered the eastern <lb />
upon us, his smiles of <lb />
came down upon the day's <lb />
u in brightest <lb />
giving ever indication of <lb />
auspicious weather, inspiring <lb />
every heart with greater zeal <lb />
and enthusiasm, and <lb />
seemed emblazoned everywhere. <lb />
And thus begun the day. <lb />
Almost with the of the <lb />
sun people began to pour into <lb />
town from every direction, and <lb />
by o'clock it was evident that <lb />
the spirit of patriotism was wide <lb />
spread, and that the largest <lb />
crowd would be present to join <lb />
in the celebration of this glorious <lb />
day of independence that Green- <lb />
ville had contained in years. <lb />
Every heart was joyous, and <lb />
every countenance bore marks <lb />
of pride for our native land. <lb />
the hope within us springing. <lb />
Herald of to-morrow's strife <lb />
By that sun. whose light is bringing <lb />
Chains or freedom, death or life. <lb />
Oh can <lb />
No charm for him who lives not <lb />
People continued to come <lb />
Pitt, Edgecombe, Martin. Beau- <lb />
fort, Greene, Craven and Lenoir <lb />
counties all had <lb />
and the crowd increased until <lb />
the town contained more than <lb />
visitors. <lb />
TOE <lb />
At o'clock the ringing of <lb />
the Court House bell called the <lb />
vast concourse of to the <lb />
front of this temple of justice, <lb />
from which point the procession <lb />
was to start. <lb />
the chief marshal, mounted <lb />
a pure white <lb />
promptly on hand with a com- <lb />
of courteous and handsome <lb />
assistants. The assistants were <lb />
Col. I. A. Sugg, Messrs. E. A. <lb />
J. W. Perkins, B. F. <lb />
Patrick, S. Fleming. S. A. <lb />
Gainer. Lang, Cobb, <lb />
Charlie G. M. <lb />
Mooring, and Dr. W. H. Bag- <lb />
well. <lb />
At o'clock the procession <lb />
moved off headed by the Green- <lb />
ville Cornet Band, Prof. A. A. <lb />
Forbes and Mr. S. T. Hooker as <lb />
came the Green- <lb />
ville Guard in command of Capt. <lb />
R. Williams Jr. Following the <lb />
company was the antique char- <lb />
riot, gorgeously decorated, and <lb />
containing thirteen beautiful <lb />
young ladies who represented <lb />
the thirteen original States <lb />
These North Carolina, <lb />
Miss Estelle Williams; South <lb />
Carolina, Miss Hortense Forbes ; <lb />
Georgia, Miss Delia Marshal; <lb />
Virginia, Miss Lizzie Peebles; <lb />
Maryland, Miss Bessie Jarvis; <lb />
Miss Laura <lb />
Pennsylvania, Miss <lb />
; New York, Miss <lb />
Jersey, Miss <lb />
Annie Brown ; New Hampshire <lb />
Miss Belle ; <lb />
setts, Miss Lillie Cherry ; <lb />
Island, Miss Lizzie Foley; Con- <lb />
Miss Carrie Cobb. <lb />
Next to the chariot came car- <lb />
with the speakers of the <lb />
day, the citizens forming behind <lb />
them. The procession passed <lb />
through some of the principal <lb />
streets then to the <lb />
my grove where preparations had <lb />
been made to hold the exercises. <lb />
EXERCISES AT ACADEMY <lb />
The order of exercises here was <lb />
announced by Col. f. A. Sugg, <lb />
and after some excellent music <lb />
by the band prayer was offered <lb />
by Rev. Mr. of the <lb />
Baptist Church. The band then <lb />
played My God to <lb />
Following this the Dec- <lb />
of Independence was <lb />
read by Mr. C. U- Hill, of Wash- <lb />
He prefixed the reading <lb />
appropriate upon <lb />
the Declaration. <lb />
was beautifully rendered by the <lb />
band, the music ending amid <lb />
The Mecklenburg Dec- <lb />
was read by Mr- B. F. <lb />
Tyson, of Greenville. Before <lb />
the reading he paid a tribute to <lb />
the noble little band of North <lb />
Carolinians who were the first to <lb />
declare their independence and <lb />
assert their rights as free men. <lb />
The band repeated <lb />
and when the chorus was reach- <lb />
ed a number of ladies joined in <lb />
pinging it through. Mr. G. B. <lb />
King stepped forward to intro- <lb />
duce the orator of the day, Don- <lb />
Gilliam, Esq., of Tarboro. <lb />
The introductory speech was a <lb />
masterly effort, delivered in Mr. <lb />
King's usually pleasing manner, <lb />
and he was frequently interrupt <lb />
by applause from the <lb />
Mr. Gilliam spoke nearly <lb />
three-quarters of an hour. His <lb />
address was appropriate and ex- <lb />
delighting to all. The <lb />
speech will be published in next <lb />
issue of the Reflector, there- <lb />
fore no comment is made here <lb />
except that it was complimented <lb />
by all who heard it. At the <lb />
close of the address the band <lb />
played and Col. Harry <lb />
Skinner, in behalf of the ladies, <lb />
and in the eloquent manner for <lb />
which he is noted, presented Mr. <lb />
Gilliam with a handsome <lb />
There were calls for Dr. <lb />
from the audience but <lb />
the doctor declined to make a <lb />
speech, saying that the audience <lb />
had been held long, <lb />
and announcing the program for <lb />
the remainder of the day <lb />
ed the morning's exercises <lb />
ed. The procession again form- <lb />
ed, marched to the Court House <lb />
and dispersed. <lb />
J. as chief <lb />
marshal, received innumerable <lb />
compliments. Everybody ad- <lb />
mired him. The men spoke of <lb />
his grand and stately appear- <lb />
; the women praised him <lb />
and lavished their smiles upon <lb />
him, white the old soldiers told <lb />
how he reminded them of the <lb />
noble patriotic, Lee, and express <lb />
ed a desire to get near enough to <lb />
embrace him Mr. J. W. Per- <lb />
kins was voted the handsomest <lb />
assistant marshal by the young <lb />
ladies. They were a fine look- <lb />
body of men, and under <lb />
their courteous and careful <lb />
reel ion the procession was con- <lb />
ducted without interruption or <lb />
accident. The occupants of the <lb />
chariot were greatly admired for <lb />
beauty and were <lb />
on every hand. All of <lb />
the girls were praised, and es- <lb />
the representatives of <lb />
North Carolina, Pennsylvania <lb />
and New York. The ladies who <lb />
decorated the chariot and the <lb />
stand deserve much <lb />
credit for the beauty of <lb />
work. The band seemed to <lb />
pass themselves, their selections <lb />
being beautiful and inspiring. <lb />
THE POLE <lb />
About B o'clock the crowd <lb />
gathered upon the Court House <lb />
square to see some one climb the <lb />
greased pole. The pole was <lb />
there, big end up and well <lb />
greased, with a flag upon the top <lb />
of it. Col. I. A. Sugg announced <lb />
that a silver watch and one <lb />
in gold would be given to any <lb />
one who would climb the pole <lb />
and bring down the flag. Sever- <lb />
would-be-climbers stepped up <lb />
and examined the pole but made <lb />
no effort to climb it. For awhile <lb />
it looked as though the was <lb />
going to afford no amusement <lb />
At last a boy made an effort to <lb />
climb it and the fun He <lb />
went up a few feet only to slide <lb />
back. This induced others to <lb />
try it and for a time the fun was <lb />
high. No one could climb the <lb />
pole but every one who attempt- <lb />
ed it was generously <lb />
After the trials were declared off <lb />
the climbers formed a pyramid <lb />
one upon another's shoulders <lb />
and in that way pushed the top <lb />
man up to the flag. <lb />
BALI. <lb />
At o'clock in the evening a <lb />
large crowd assembled at the <lb />
Base Ball ground, at Skinner-j <lb />
kicking at the decision the um- <lb />
Mr. J. K. the <lb />
umpire seemed to give entire sat- <lb />
acting with the utmost <lb />
fairness and impartially. The <lb />
Washington boys conducted them- <lb />
selves as gentlemen. A more <lb />
manly and gentlemanly set never <lb />
came from that place here. We <lb />
would be pleased to have them <lb />
come <lb />
PYROTECHNIC DISPLAY. <lb />
Hunch oils of the visitors remained <lb />
in town after night to witness <lb />
the display fire-works, and when <lb />
the time arrived a large crowd was <lb />
found in where tins dis- <lb />
play was to take place.- The fire- <lb />
works, like every other feature or <lb />
the celebration, was a success. The <lb />
display was beautiful, lasting about <lb />
an hoar, and the spectators were <lb />
delighted. <lb />
After this a dance was given at <lb />
Germania which was largely <lb />
attended and the lovers of that pas- <lb />
time derived ranch pleasure there- <lb />
from. <lb />
And thus the celebration of the <lb />
4th came to a close. Throughout it <lb />
had been a brilliant success, and no <lb />
one who came to town left <lb />
It was tho best celebration <lb />
Greenville has ever had the <lb />
town brought much credit and <lb />
upon itself. The town was re- <lb />
quiet and orderly. But <lb />
little was perceptible, <lb />
and we never heard of a single fight <lb />
or disturbance. <lb />
ville, where they the There was no unpleasantness, no <lb />
finest game of base ball ever <lb />
played in this town, and perhaps <lb />
in Eastern Carolina. The con- <lb />
test was between the Washing- <lb />
ton and Greenville clubs; and <lb />
they showed plainly that they <lb />
were no at the <lb />
With the exception of a few <lb />
in the third inning on the <lb />
part of each club, the game was <lb />
superb. They played for <lb />
as if it were a case of life or <lb />
death. It made but little differ- <lb />
to what part of the diamond <lb />
the sphere was sent, there was <lb />
some one there ready to take it <lb />
in charge. Both clubs deserve <lb />
the highest praise for their ex- <lb />
work both in the field and <lb />
at the bat. At the Umpire <lb />
gave the command to play ball, <lb />
the Greenville boys went to the <lb />
bat, and were retired with a <lb />
The re- <lb />
the same treatment at the <lb />
hands of the home club. Not a <lb />
man of either side reached first <lb />
base. On second two <lb />
men of the home nine came to <lb />
the bat and retired on <lb />
and the third man reach- <lb />
ed 3rd base, but died there, as <lb />
another of the home club fanned <lb />
the air three times, in a vain at- <lb />
tempt t o knock the cover off. But <lb />
the leather staid there all the <lb />
same, and the Washington catch- <lb />
spread his hands and it dropped <lb />
in, and stayed in, as it did near- <lb />
all the time during the game- <lb />
The Washington lads also failed <lb />
to find the ball in their half of <lb />
the second inning, two of them <lb />
striking out in rapid succession, <lb />
and a third man reached 2nd <lb />
base, but could go no further, <lb />
as a batsman demonstrated his <lb />
capacity to more easily strike on <lb />
vacancy than on that bewitched <lb />
sphere. It just seemed deter- <lb />
mined not to come in contact <lb />
with those bats. <lb />
It was now apparent that a <lb />
fine game was to be played, and <lb />
the interest began to run high. <lb />
It was evident that it was to be <lb />
a contest between the battery <lb />
the pitchers and catchers. And <lb />
while we would not detract one <lb />
laurel from the brow of the van <lb />
we all admit that <lb />
they had an excellent battery <lb />
and a strong team, yet in our <lb />
the masterly work of <lb />
Greenville's two boy pitchers, <lb />
Randolph, surpassed <lb />
that of the Washington <lb />
Neither of them weighed <lb />
much over pounds, and yet <lb />
the stalwart men of the visiting <lb />
club were mowed down like grass <lb />
under their masterly pitching. <lb />
It is but just to say that they <lb />
were amazed, dumb-founded, <lb />
rattled. Why was it they asked <lb />
one another, that they t <lb />
hit the balls pitched by these <lb />
little men. One man would go <lb />
out on three strikes, and then <lb />
another, with a face set with de- <lb />
termination, would go to the bat <lb />
and make a desperate effort to <lb />
knock the ball where it would <lb />
never more be seen; but the ball <lb />
showed more inclination to tall <lb />
into the hands of Greenville's <lb />
splendid catchers, and they saw to <lb />
it that its inclination should be <lb />
respected. Bert did the <lb />
finest work behind the bat of <lb />
man who has ever been connected <lb />
with the Greenville club. He <lb />
made three or four very difficult <lb />
foul catches, and won great <lb />
from the crowd by his ex- <lb />
work. lag <lb />
played well. In third inning <lb />
Greenville club by the timely bat- <lb />
ting of Frank Dancy and Ola <lb />
Forbes, coupled with the errors of <lb />
the visitors, made four <lb />
first of the game. And then the <lb />
crowd yelled and shouted them- <lb />
selves almost hoarse. They knew <lb />
that this gave the <lb />
and they were glad; but <lb />
when the Washington boys came <lb />
to the bat and piled up four runs <lb />
in their half of this inning, the <lb />
crowd was not quite so jolly. <lb />
From the third to the <lb />
For The NERVOUS <lb />
The DEBILITATED <lb />
The AGED. <lb />
A NERVE <lb />
Celery <lb />
are <lb />
Kern <lb />
Celery and Coca, the prominent <lb />
are the beet and sorest <lb />
Tonics. It strengthens and <lb />
quiets the nervous system, curing <lb />
Weakness, Hysteria, Sleep- <lb />
Ac. <lb />
It drives out the poisonous humors <lb />
toe blood purifying and enriching It, <lb />
so overcoming those diseases <lb />
resulting from impure or <lb />
blood. <lb />
A LAXATIVE. <lb />
It cures habitual and <lb />
promotes a regular <lb />
ens the stomach, and aids digestion. <lb />
A DIURETIC. <lb />
In Its composition the best and most <lb />
active the <lb />
are combined scientifically with other <lb />
effective remedies for diseases of the <lb />
kidneys. It can be relied on to give <lb />
quick relier and speedy cure. <lb />
with <lb />
Send far circulars, <lb />
rail particulars. <lb />
Sold by <lb />
WELLS, RICHARDSON <lb />
HARRY SKINNER <lb />
L C. LATHAM <lb />
HARRY SKINNER k CO., <lb />
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN s. CO <lb />
N. C. <lb />
THE LEADERS IN <lb />
Weather Crop Bulletin. <lb />
Central Office, <lb />
Raleigh, N. C. <lb />
Below is the report of the North <lb />
Carolina Weather Service for tho <lb />
week ending Saturday <lb />
RAINFALL. <lb />
The rainfall for the week has been <lb />
below the average, but has not <lb />
crops unfavorably. Grain, <lb />
vegetables, and grass apparently <lb />
arc somewhat in need of more rain. <lb />
Cotton has very favorably <lb />
Cove, Stokes <lb />
reports a rainfall of 2.50 inches- <lb />
Davidson College, Mecklenburg <lb />
County, reports only two slight <lb />
showers in days. <lb />
AND SUNSHINE. <lb />
There has been about an average <lb />
temperature and apparently an av- <lb />
amount during <lb />
the week, and crops generally have <lb />
been very favorably affected. <lb />
OF SPECIAL <lb />
DENTS. <lb />
Weldon, Halifax <lb />
looking well generally ; cotton very <lb />
favorably <lb />
Wilson <lb />
crops arc looking well, but the <lb />
for the week has been too <lb />
cool for crops. Tho weather is <lb />
for all crops to-day tho <lb />
Tarboro County. <lb />
crops doing fairly <lb />
well, though the bad stand of corn <lb />
is last being remedied. The oat <lb />
crop is being harvested and coming <lb />
in <lb />
Mount, County. <lb />
crop still improving. Corn <lb />
has been injured some by worms <lb />
and is below the <lb />
Wayne County. <lb />
are improving <lb />
in <lb />
past week has not been so favorable <lb />
as crops begin to need rain and <lb />
County. <lb />
little rain past week, <lb />
is needed for all <lb />
Smithfield, County. <lb />
crops are now doing <lb />
Monroe, Union <lb />
no rainfall, continued high temper- <lb />
and much sunshine, all crops <lb />
have been unfavorably affected the <lb />
past week. Gardens <lb />
needing rain. These conditions <lb />
ply to about two fifths of Union <lb />
south to southeast of and around <lb />
this station. The rest of the <lb />
has had and crops arc in <lb />
good <lb />
Moore <lb />
dry up to the evening <lb />
Heavy rain on the night of the <lb />
which has greatly crops. <lb />
Cotton and coin looking well con- <lb />
dry weather. Very good <lb />
crop of tobacco. -Gardens generally <lb />
Littleton, Franklin <lb />
weather during the week has been <lb />
favorable, especially the last few <lb />
days and nights. is now <lb />
rapidly. Just in the midst <lb />
of harvesting oat crop, which is only <lb />
Warren County <lb />
generally in good condition <lb />
and growing nicely under the favor- <lb />
able weather. Cotton disposed to <lb />
run up too much. Small grain <lb />
vested in good condition. General <lb />
outlook <lb />
Salem, <lb />
crops and grasses arc growing <lb />
Hillsboro, Orange <lb />
had a good shower last night <lb />
but not enough to make a season. <lb />
Corn, tobacco grass need <lb />
Haw River, Alamance County. <lb />
Carriage Worts, <lb />
R. GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb />
WE are up in first-class and prepared to man- <lb />
upon short notice any kind or style of <lb />
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING. <lb />
We keep a nice line of<lb />
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed. <lb />
THE MAN <lb />
BE EVERY PAY, but the man who keeps a fresh supply <lb />
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars, <lb />
TOBACCO. CAIN NED GOODS, <lb />
Can be found whenever wanted. You only have to look for <lb />
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb />
Ami all your wants in the above goods, can supplied. <lb />
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS PUT UP TO ORDER. <lb />
A. SPECIALTY. <lb />
KINDS OF STAPLE GOODS. <lb />
Our Fall and Winter stock of Dry Goods, <lb />
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, etc., have arrived, and all <lb />
friends and customers are invited to call and ex- <lb />
goods and prices. <lb />
Having purchased the entire 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 getting advantage of the <lb />
discounts, will he enabled to sell as cheaply as any one of <lb />
Norfolk. We shall retain in our employ J. as general <lb />
superintendent of the business, with his former partner Chas Skinner <lb />
as assistant, who will always be glad to see and serve their old customers <lb />
A special branch of our business will be to furnish cash at <lb />
rates to farmers to cultivate and harvest their crops, in sums of <lb />
to with approved security <lb />
farmers differ about tho <lb />
not a single run was made say it la doing well, <lb />
by either The others so well. Gardens need <lb />
work ID these innings was Corn suffering <lb />
. Walnut Stokes County. <lb />
, temperature sunshine <lb />
Greenville received a goose egg i tor tho all we could <lb />
in the eighth inning. Washington <lb />
added one more run to their score, Lincoln County.- <lb />
. , ,, . , . looking well, late. <lb />
which gave them the lead. It was some places by <lb />
the interest was intense. <lb />
Greenville rallied, and made two <lb />
runs in the ninth inning. Frank <lb />
Dancy, Forbes and Clark did some <lb />
timely batting. Washington came <lb />
to the bat, and one man succeed- <lb />
ed in reaching third base, but he <lb />
never got home, as Randolph's <lb />
splendid pitching was too much <lb />
tor the visitors. Greenville had <lb />
won, and a shout of triumph rent <lb />
the air. The crowd was jubilant. <lb />
Three times three cheers were <lb />
given, Washington Club, <lb />
for the scorers, for the umpire. <lb />
The umpire announced the score <lb />
to in favor of Greenville and <lb />
the crowd went home happy. <lb />
Have not suffered for rain <lb />
frost, <lb />
Shelby, Cleveland <lb />
wheat crop is now being harvested <lb />
and an average crop has been made. <lb />
Corn crop fine, especially on the <lb />
land. Cotton growing <lb />
County. <lb />
thunder showers <lb />
Wednesday and Thursday. All <lb />
crops favorably <lb />
Mt. Pleasant, Cabarrus County <lb />
favorably affected. Tho re- <lb />
ports from the wheat crop are very <lb />
unfavorable, some being as low as <lb />
one-half a <lb />
Lenoir, Caldwell <lb />
is promising. Warm nights and <lb />
gentle showers have a One <lb />
H. B. Battle, <lb />
Director. <lb />
II. Baldwin. <lb />
Signal Corps, Assistant. <lb />
THIS ELECTION YEAR <lb />
And has nothing to do with tho price of <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
if you desire to purchase a first-class In <lb />
FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE. MEAT, <lb />
Or anything in that line, sail on <lb />
C. TYSON, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Provisions, Canned Goods, General Family Supplies, <lb />
Tobacco, Always on Hand. <lb />
J. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C- <lb />
OFFICE SUGG i JAMES OLD STAND. <lb />
All of Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates <lb />
AM FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb />
D. Williamson, r. <lb />
Is Reliable Goods At <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 />
COMMISSION <lb />
STANDARD GUANO ACID PHOSPHATE, <lb />
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb />
SHELL LIME. PURE DISSOLVED BONE, <lb />
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb />
Tennessee Wagons, for sale. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. Mar. 1887. <lb />
W. L. BROWN <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT <lb />
AND AGENT TOE THE TARBORO OIL HILLS.<lb />
Highest Cash price paid for Cotton Seed or <lb />
Meal given in exchange. Has for sale <lb />
Acid Lime and Cotton Seed Meal <lb />
Either for Cash or on Time. <lb />
FARMER'S BONE FERTILIZER. <lb />
A SPECIALTY It Is to be superior to any fertilizer on the market. <lb />
TO JOHN <lb />
WILL THE MANUFACTURE <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My is with die best Mechanics, consequently pot up nothing <lb />
work. keep with Hie times the l improved styles. <lb />
Best material used In all m AH stylos of are use I, you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep no hand a full line of ready made <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the year e will sell as low as <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking people of this and surrounding for pat favor hope <lb />
merit a of the same. <lb />
JOHN SIMS <lb />
Merchant Tailor. <lb />
I never put out or an- <lb />
to the public of great sales and <lb />
job lots. I never pretend to oner 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 />
fir lit, Quality- <lb />
J. C. CHESTNUT, Ice Ice <lb />
Save Money Money. <lb />
PIANOS <lb />
The Best In The World. <lb />
HUME. <lb />
Three Big Houses. <lb />
RICHMOND, NORFOLK, AND <lb />
A REVOLUTION IN PRICES. <lb />
OLDEST DEALERS. LARGEST HOUSES. INSTRUMENTS <lb />
LOWEST PRICES. EASIEST TERMS. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
Has on hand a well assorted stock of <lb />
Light Canned Goods, <lb />
Confections, Tobacco, <lb />
Cigars, <lb />
which will he sold at <lb />
Give him a call, it the <lb />
under the Opera House. <lb />
THE NEW MILLINERY STORE OF <lb />
MRS. M. T. <lb />
Has lately been repaired and fitted up <lb />
and has just received display <lb />
New Millinery for <lb />
SPRING AND SUMMER <lb />
Besides her usual lino of trimmed and <lb />
Hats, Ornaments and <lb />
millinery goods, she has the prettiest <lb />
stock of Silks, Rib- <lb />
Gauzes, etc., In the market. Give <lb />
a call at the Old Stand. <lb />
HAVE LOCATED ICE BOX AT <lb />
the store of Messrs. Harry Co. <lb />
where ICE can be bad at all limes of <lb />
the day In quantities to suit at <lb />
Ice delivered in all parts of the town <lb />
morning without extra All <lb />
orders personally attended to and care- <lb />
packed for out of town customers. <lb />
Thanking the public for their lib- <lb />
patronage, I solicit a continuance of <lb />
the same. Respectfully, <lb />
E. B. MOORE, <lb />
May <lb />
Horses <lb />
AND <lb />
Mules. <lb />
A car load arrived and now for <lb />
sale <lb />
KEEL, <lb />
at Keel King's old stand. Will sell <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
or at reasonable terms on time. I bought <lb />
polite m mm <lb />
Have procured several <lb />
Vehicles and w ill take passengers to <lb />
point at reasonable rates. <lb />
SEVEN SPRINGS HOTEL. <lb />
Is now open for the accommodation <lb />
of and visitors to SPRINGS. <lb />
The properties of the waters are well <lb />
known to cure Kidney and Bladder <lb />
Dyspepsia, Indigestion. Debility and <lb />
General Prostration. The house has <lb />
been thoroughly renovated. <lb />
Conveyances can be had o the Springs <lb />
from Mt. Olive, <lb />
LaGrange. The proprietors return many <lb />
thanks for past favors and respectfully <lb />
solicit a continuance of the same. <lb />
Respectfully <lb />
Proprietor. <lb />
Sale. M <lb />
PAY<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018893_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb />
THIS PAPER <lb />
Personal <lb />
lion. Germain has <lb />
to Ocracoke. <lb />
Miss <lb />
Washington last week. <lb />
of Miss Mollie House, of <lb />
YORK. is Miss Nannie King. <lb />
A lit little Deck <lb />
one day last week, hurting him very Excursion <lb />
The Sunday <lb />
Mr. Ii. B. and wife, have <lb />
Hamilton were visiting friends here <lb />
mat bk on <lb />
AT no. <lb />
HO <lb />
AD- <lb />
may be ma-1 U <lb />
Pleas-. with Hit Trip <lb />
A letter received from Mr. Don- <lb />
oar of July orator, <lb />
since his return home from Green- <lb />
ville. expressed gratification <lb />
at the treatment he received at the <lb />
hands of our He says we <lb />
celebrated the day in the hand <lb />
The best Butter kept <lb />
constantly on ice at <lb />
Harry Skinner Co's. <lb />
for the moon. <lb />
, part of last week. <lb />
Mr. C. L. Whichard began teach- <lb />
; a public school at Swamp <lb />
Cook Stoves at Terrell's. School loose on Monday. <lb />
Mr. C. Harding is teaching a <lb />
school near May's Chapel, in <lb />
Heaver Dam township. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. V. L. Stephens have <lb />
been spending a few days with rel- <lb />
near Hamilton. <lb />
to Yankee Hall tomorrow. <lb />
They will leave on steamer Green- <lb />
at o'clock and be joined on <lb />
arrival at Yankee Hall by the <lb />
Sunday School. A pleasant <lb />
time is in store. <lb />
Gentlemen and ladies are invited <lb />
to visit ft Bedding's refresh <lb />
merit parlor when they want ice <lb />
cream of other refreshments. <lb />
L. Blow, J. <lb />
H. Tucker, L. Brown, T. C <lb />
an, o. B. Williams, <lb />
Jr., Oscar Hooker, Noah Forbes, <lb />
Charles Skinner, J. J. Cherry, Jr. <lb />
W. Wilson, W. <lb />
J. J. T. Smith, W. H. Alien. <lb />
Mr. P. Tyson, by unanimous <lb />
request, made a few remarks to the <lb />
club. <lb />
There being no business <lb />
the club adjourned to meet again <lb />
on Friday night I'M inst. <lb />
We are glad to a <lb />
novel by Miss II. G. <lb />
bearing the above title, will appear <lb />
at an early day. It is now in the <lb />
pub <lb />
The weather is oppressively w arm. <lb />
We will pay the Cash 10.000 <lb />
pounds of Beeswax, at the Old <lb />
trick Store. <lb />
Mower pots at Cost at Terrell's. <lb />
Didn't everybody have big time <lb />
on the 4th <lb />
Foe good bag Cart. <lb />
Apply to G. T. Tyson. <lb />
Point Lace Flour has been tried <lb />
and is the best and cheapest at the <lb />
Old Store. <lb />
Just one week to the State Guard <lb />
encampment. <lb />
Large lot E- P. Bred ft OVa band <lb />
made Shoes Ladies, at Higgs <lb />
First of <lb />
Mallets at, die Old Brick Store. <lb />
The Normal School at Washing- <lb />
ton Monday. <lb />
FOB DAYS, <lb />
of our Spring and Summer <lb />
stock will be sold at cost for cash. <lb />
H. Morris ft Bros, <lb />
Miss Jordan, of Washington, <lb />
has been Misses Lang- <lb />
during the past week. <lb />
Mrs. J. B. Cherry and Master <lb />
Jimmie left yesterday for Beaufort <lb />
where they will . spend several <lb />
weeks. <lb />
hands Company, <lb />
Notice. of New York and will soon <lb />
The Democrats of Bethel town-, he ready for the public, is <lb />
ship, are requested to meet at Beth-; Miss fourth book and <lb />
cl on Saturday the 14th July who have read her former <lb />
I at o'clock I. M., the purpose ; splendid <lb />
of organizing a Democratic and <lb />
Club. The meeting will wall be eager to get her new novel. <lb />
Who'll <lb />
BLIZZARD <lb />
ft <lb />
PAST <lb />
addressed by prominent speakers. <lb />
By order of the township Ex. <lb />
D. C. <lb />
Live Snake. <lb />
Mr. J. B. Little, of cap- <lb />
a very large rattle snake last <lb />
Mr. B. U. Warren, of county, Thursday. The snake was <lb />
was married to Miss Carrie Brand, a large cotton bas- <lb />
of Washington, on Tuesday evening i was secured, the snake driven <lb />
of last week. into it and captured alive. The <lb />
snake is about I J, feet long, inches <lb />
The Misses Purvis from near Ham- <lb />
had been visiting their <lb />
in circumference and had rattles <lb />
and a button- Mr. Little writes us i <lb />
We will have more to say of it. <lb />
I De Fourth July Celebration <lb />
. at Hog <lb />
hundred ergo <lb />
more <lb />
I De white folks hilt muster <lb />
Alter by their naps. <lb />
I kinder <lb />
i Laker mule been de horn ; <lb />
am called plow <lb />
row v corn. <lb />
sister. Mrs. . L. Stephens, returned j the snake is getting along fine- <lb />
Thursday. been christened Sam <lb />
Slick. <lb />
Prof. John and Miss <lb />
Moore, who went on the <lb />
excursion to the North, are ex- j <lb />
nested home today. <lb />
Miss Mote Chestnut, w ho recent- <lb />
graduate and returned from <lb />
Nashville Normal Institute, <lb />
is teaching a short term of school <lb />
Prof. W. II. and wife <lb />
Crops look though the and two children, who have been <lb />
growl is not large. the parents and relatives <lb />
T My ma of <lb />
m honest dealer by using P. for their home in <lb />
ft Cos Sweet Scotch <lb />
only at the Brick Mr. Titos. of <lb />
Ga. the inventor of the <lb />
For Tinware go to Terrell's. Power, has been in <lb />
. .,,.,, , . , . for a few days. One of Ins <lb />
We are told that the new hotel at on exhibition Saturday. <lb />
I k see de tax <lb />
j Was most too thick <lb />
j men, mules rid <lb />
Am apt kick. <lb />
Dar was no civil den. <lb />
On last Friday <lb />
C. A. who was bloody shirts <lb />
GOT. Scales par- now de law requires <lb />
at the January term or Pitt <lb />
Court to two years in the Pen- <lb />
for manslaughter. Bland, <lb />
while acting as policeman at <lb />
Ferry in December, 1886, used a <lb />
club upon John Caution, from the <lb />
effects of which the latter died. Gov. <lb />
Seal <lb />
citizens of this county. <lb />
bosses at de wires. <lb />
lint King George <lb />
lie sot upon his throne <lb />
Air de tea. an be <lb />
Would alien bis own. <lb />
Den de while folks got together, <lb />
ELECTED <lb />
Ah that is a hard thing to tell. But there is <lb />
one thing we do know. You can buy Sample <lb />
Shoes at HIGGS at new cost. <lb />
This is your last opportunity this season, as we <lb />
can get no more until the next, <lb />
We are giving BARGAINS on all goods in our line. <lb />
LEFT, <lb />
HIGGS Dress Goods <lb />
But not so the LOW PRICES at the <lb />
Once Wore Is o Block With <lb />
Greenville, O- <lb />
-FOB THE- <lb />
OCRACOKE, <lb />
, c how guessed <lb />
ales granted the pardon on a rec- George's two was Georges <lb />
of a large of Ar best. <lb />
Ocracoke i a beauty. <lb />
Don't suffer with heat during the <lb />
warm weather Go to <lb />
and keep cool. <lb />
The sale of the Famous <lb />
Milk Biscuit during ex. <lb />
ended the ante of the year <lb />
by Try them, <lb />
the Old Store. <lb />
It was grand and glorious old <lb />
of <lb />
Smoke Stacks made to order at <lb />
Terrell's. <lb />
A few small home made water <lb />
melon, were in town Saturday. <lb />
per iV Co's <lb />
Sweet Scotch Snuff at the Old <lb />
A post office has been established <lb />
at in this county. <lb />
milk shakes, soda <lb />
water, ice cream etc., can always be <lb />
found at Ryan <lb />
Fruit Jars at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
New Bern has a grand Democrat- <lb />
ratification meeting to day. <lb />
Stoves at <lb />
Buy <lb />
Terrell's. <lb />
The Guard will leave next Tues- <lb />
day for the encampment a Wrights- <lb />
The machine is a success. He es- <lb />
, to canvass the county with it. <lb />
Mr. Mu. Mover A brains and <lb />
Mrs. of Rocky Mount, <lb />
j Mrs. Joe Morris and Mr. II. Morris, <lb />
i of Mrs. Hannah Morris, of <lb />
Mi. Morris, of <lb />
Washington. Miss Frankfurt, <lb />
and Mr. of Nor- <lb />
folk, were the guests Mrs. A. <lb />
last week. <lb />
Pitt now has three papers. <lb />
The latest is the School <lb />
Journal. It is a newsy little sheet. <lb />
Large of fish have <lb />
lately been caught from <lb />
Creek by people living in that <lb />
The Greenville Base Ball Club <lb />
went down to play the <lb />
Club yesterday but the rain inter- <lb />
with the game. <lb />
The steamer has <lb />
ed her regular trips. The boat <lb />
a handsome appearance since <lb />
undergoing recent repairs. <lb />
Here is a little item that will put <lb />
sonic people to thinking. There <lb />
hare been about pounds of <lb />
Mills Snuff used annually <lb />
in Pitt county at a cost of coats a <lb />
pound to the consumer. Now I. <lb />
it Co., are sending out a <lb />
quality of sweet snuff equally as <lb />
good as any in the market that can <lb />
be famished <lb />
a pound. This affords an <lb />
of a saving of 1.500 <lb />
to Pitt county on one small item. <lb />
The snuff consumers will want to <lb />
raise a monument to <lb />
Having leased the New <lb />
coke, which is now will <lb />
I opened for reception of visitor on <lb />
i the 1st day of July, <lb />
Ocracoke i about TO from <lb />
I and the same from New <lb />
King George j on the Carolina <lb />
suit his style <lb />
jest protest <lb />
de pot begin bile. <lb />
NEW <lb />
JEWELRY STORE. <lb />
I received another lot line <lb />
WATCHES, CLOCKS, <lb />
and Jewelry. <lb />
which are at low <lb />
all m DONE, <lb />
So he sent lot <lb />
In bis ships lea ; <lb />
all <lb />
sot de white free. <lb />
time celebrate. <lb />
each July <lb />
De hill de muster. <lb />
bid King George <lb />
de <lb />
white can't <lb />
So we cam <lb />
celebrate sum too. <lb />
was the poem read by Au- <lb />
Jonson fourth <lb />
de cull ml <lb />
Hog <lb />
We had intended saying am smart <lb />
thing this week some ., ct sec him <lb />
mail routes in this county, but some his in de halls de <lb />
them are so badly mixed that it, legislator, is el his <lb />
is whether anything abstracting <lb />
can be said of them. The route j don't start him <lb />
to the s Mills section seems his state in de black smith <lb />
II out of shape and is de But <lb />
I started write fourth <lb />
a Stand bus been added to my <lb />
where the and <lb />
for bathing can be <lb />
N. <lb />
S. M. <lb />
OLD STORE. <lb />
very inconvenient to the people. <lb />
The mail leaves Green on differ <lb />
days from heretofore and there <lb />
is much greater delay along the <lb />
route. The people deserve good <lb />
mail service -and we hope it will <lb />
some day be all right. <lb />
Crops <lb />
We made a little jaunt through <lb />
The Young Men's Christian country last Sunday and <lb />
hold a short meeting church at Swamp. Along <lb />
n the Reform Club every day the road we noticed some poor crops i <lb />
at noon <lb />
invited. <lb />
to which the men are all <lb />
and some good ones. Mr. John G. <lb />
Mason, just beyond Creek. <lb />
had the best cotton saw any- . , <lb />
where. Mr. W. It. Whichard had <lb />
,. lice. <lb />
July in Hog Now Hog <lb />
no city. Dar aim no <lb />
jail an no post <lb />
stores, <lb />
am other reasons why <lb />
hit no city, de chiefest of which <lb />
am <lb />
j But when hit rite down <lb />
kind, <lb />
den Hog am ring. De <lb />
sun two hours high <lb />
nigger faun <lb />
Then i no better place on the coast <lb />
between Maine and Florida <lb />
and ashing. <lb />
-Sliver only SO yards from the <lb />
Hotel. U one of water <lb />
for ladies and children to row on in mail <lb />
boats. <lb />
The Surf in the an is <lb />
and to the Hotel, <lb />
The will be with the <lb />
the market and with good bed, <lb />
cool room- and polite and attentive <lb />
Board per week per month. . .,,.,. ,,,.,. .,. <lb />
day, MER BUY- <lb />
Theo. 9.8. Line will ran two steam- I tag their supplies will It to <lb />
era a, week from Washington to Ocracoke their Interest to gel our before <lb />
chasing elsewhere. is complete <lb />
in all it.- <lb />
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
FLOUR, SUGAR, <lb />
SPICES, TEAS, <lb />
alway-at <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy <lb />
Ming you to buy at one A <lb />
stock of <lb />
alway- on hand and sold at to -nit <lb />
the times. all and <lb />
-old for therefore, haying no <lb />
to run, we -ell at a close margin. <lb />
Respect fully, <lb />
Greenville, X. C <lb />
and <lb />
For further <lb />
M. J. <lb />
Washington, X. C <lb />
MACHINERY. <lb />
To my friends of and adjoining <lb />
special arrangements <lb />
with my companies I can sell the best <lb />
Saw Mills, Gins. Presses, <lb />
and other Machinery from to M per <lb />
cent cheaper than any body el-e. All <lb />
Machinery warranted and entire <lb />
faction guaranteed before a i- <lb />
Semi for and full pal <lb />
one- <lb />
A. <lb />
Particular Attention has been paid the selection of <lb />
WHITE GOODS <lb />
Of which we have quite a quantity. <lb />
all wool Dress Goods cents per yard. <lb />
Cashmeres cents. Veiling cents. <lb />
WE. HAVE ALSO LOT OF <lb />
CLOTHING, <lb />
Latest Styles and Best Quality at prices far be- <lb />
low anything in town. <lb />
Not Forget The Fact <lb />
That we still have a quantity of CLOTHING that <lb />
was purchased at cents in the dollar, thug <lb />
enabling us to sell at far below <lb />
STRAW HATS <lb />
At warm weather prices, cents up. <lb />
RYAN REDDING. <lb />
E. G. COX, <lb />
Dunn. X. <lb />
c. <lb />
name P. Co., is a <lb />
guarantee that their Street Scotch <lb />
Snuff is the Cleanest, Healthiest, time. <lb />
Cheapest and in the world, i <lb />
will be sold at Manufacturers prices <lb />
the Old Store. <lb />
The little town of Bethel will have <lb />
a Democratic meeting next one patch of the bent corn and he <lb />
day. A Cleveland and Club came in second best on cotton. We <lb />
will be organized. It will be a big were glad to note such improve- <lb />
going on at his place. His <lb />
, , has just been furnished with <lb />
j h Wily blinds, repainted and otherwise <lb />
fourteen miles j <lb />
down de store. De ; <lb />
file Lent King <lb />
hem lie got out in <lb />
the gallows is cheated in <lb />
some way W. A. Potts will be hang- <lb />
ed in Washington on Friday. <lb />
The Walter A. Wood Mowing <lb />
Machine and Horse the best <lb />
in the world, for sale by F. S. <lb />
Tarboro, C. Send for <lb />
and prices. <lb />
The Guard drill every <lb />
week preparing for the <lb />
dental office to room recently <lb />
used as a gallery. The <lb />
doctor has fixed up a splendid office <lb />
in his new quarters. <lb />
at the bridge are now <lb />
in progress but there is <lb />
people from the <lb />
North side of the river coming into <lb />
town as a good ferry will be kept. <lb />
proved and beautified, it is among <lb />
the prettiest and most comfortable <lb />
country residences in the county. <lb />
day this j <lb />
encamp- <lb />
Methodist here last <lb />
day W. H. Moore, Presiding <lb />
I Elder, was present and preached <lb />
The Pride Smoking Sunday and night <lb />
Tobacco is the Cheapest and I lest <lb />
Manufactured in North Carolina. I The County Commissioners held <lb />
Give it a trial and you will like it a special meeting Monday to hear <lb />
complaints of excessive valuation of <lb />
property and do other work in con <lb />
Higgs have a new ad- <lb />
They are just <lb />
taking things by storm in the hat <lb />
and shoe line and give yon <lb />
For sale at the Old Store. <lb />
The mail between Wilson and <lb />
Farmville has been from tn the tax list, <lb />
weekly to daily. <lb />
If yon want Cotton Gins, Grain <lb />
Fans, Feed Cotters, Feed Mills or <lb />
a Grist Mill cheap, call on <lb />
Haskett ft Co. <lb />
Now for the seashore, all who can <lb />
get there. subscribers <lb />
the editor must stay home. <lb />
Ci-PIt is the best <lb />
hewing Tobacco in <lb />
North Carolina. Get a ping at the <lb />
Old Brisk Store. <lb />
His Heart with Vt. <lb />
A letter from Mr. J. Yellowley, <lb />
dated at Miss., the 3rd <lb />
I inst., that after spending a <lb />
in St. Louis he will return <lb />
j home, arriving here on the 23rd. <lb />
meeting was held in the closing Ins letter Mr. Yellowley <lb />
causes me much regret <lb />
that I am at this time away from <lb />
home and unable to enjoy with <lb />
people their grand 4th of July <lb />
lee. My feelings always interest <lb />
me in any observance of <lb />
and I am rejoiced that <lb />
the Southern people are generally <lb />
beginning again to celebrate a day <lb />
road mule <lb />
j Den Sam he <lb />
went out do great riding act. <lb />
i he got de most Sam <lb />
he got de most blood, so we called <lb />
j de lite draw. Den <lb />
foot race Moreover W ilk ins <lb />
Simon Jenkins. Moreover would <lb />
I Hill Jenkins seed <lb />
j he Sim <lb />
sot bis dog on him dog <lb />
at heels <lb />
be turned give kick <lb />
Sim got in Den de <lb />
poem by Mr. den Elder <lb />
made speech. I <lb />
don't know what be spoke <lb />
in he tole me <lb />
he know but den he <lb />
de patriotism <lb />
on occasion made Stan <lb />
unnecessary. de <lb />
speech bin bar- <lb />
but sum niggers over <lb />
Possum bad slipped <lb />
M, R, LANG. M. R, LANG, <lb />
THE GRAND SACRIFICE SALE. <lb />
Everything Slaughtered.<lb />
which should always be dear to eve- stole de while we <lb />
American <lb />
W. A. placed us under <lb />
a sack of large red <lb />
apples, brought on the th July. <lb />
best <lb />
and Cream Cheese at the <lb />
Next Wednesday the editors be- <lb />
longing to the State Press association <lb />
meet in an mi a I convention at More- <lb />
head. <lb />
Buy Oil Stoves at Terrell's- <lb />
Alfred made a shipment <lb />
his Bald Head Preparation to <lb />
Texas, one day last week. <lb />
The Young Men's Christian <lb />
elation will bold a meeting to <lb />
row night- <lb />
Democratic Clubs should be or- <lb />
in every township the <lb />
comity where it is possible. <lb />
We never did boast of being lazy, <lb />
bat nothing save necessity could <lb />
force us to work such days as we <lb />
have bad the past week. <lb />
About this time of the year a string <lb />
is seen going around which has a <lb />
Jane bug at one end and <lb />
boy at the <lb />
Crops have grown rapidly during <lb />
the last two weeks bat they are yet <lb />
behind their size for tins time <lb />
of year. <lb />
more chance to take advantage of <lb />
the bargains they offer. <lb />
Like everything else connected <lb />
with the 4th of July, festival <lb />
given by the ladies the Baptist <lb />
Church that day was a fine <lb />
The net proceeds amounted <lb />
to over <lb />
Everybody seems proud of Green- <lb />
big fourth of July celebration. <lb />
That is right. The Reflector <lb />
predicted it be a big affair <lb />
and so it was. Now lets have a still <lb />
grander one next year. <lb />
i again indebted to Mr. <lb />
I W. Whichard for some nice <lb />
and which he sent us <lb />
Saturday. We also thanks <lb />
to Mr. Fleming for a sack <lb />
of apples brought Monday. <lb />
Y. K. . <lb />
The Democratic Club met the <lb />
one Court House, on Friday evening, <lb />
If want to get off for a season <lb />
of recreation look over the <lb />
columns of the Reflector <lb />
before determining upon a place to <lb />
visit. Seven Springs, Ocracoke and <lb />
Nag's Head ail invite and all are <lb />
, pleasant places. <lb />
We have been requested to an- <lb />
that Dr. C. J. and <lb />
Col. Harry Skinner will be present <lb />
and make speeches at the meeting <lb />
in on the 30th when a <lb />
and Fowle will be <lb />
organized. <lb />
We wish had fifty mer- <lb />
possessing as much enter <lb />
prise as Messrs. Ryan Redding. <lb />
They first movers in the <lb />
of celebration and none <lb />
worked harder for its success. There <lb />
were others who bad the cause at <lb />
heart and worked earnestly for it. <lb />
inst., President E. A. in the <lb />
chair. Minutes of last meeting read <lb />
and approved. <lb />
On motion of J. D. Murphy <lb />
President appointed a committee of <lb />
I to prepare an order of business <lb />
for Club. J. D. Murphy, A. L. <lb />
Blow and V. L. Stephens were <lb />
pointed. <lb />
request Constitution and <lb />
By-Laws were read and all present <lb />
who had not joined were invited to <lb />
enroll their names. <lb />
The committee appointed to <lb />
pare order of business reported <lb />
as follows <lb />
The order of business of the Club <lb />
shall <lb />
Reading minutes of preceding <lb />
meeting. <lb />
Reception of members. <lb />
Reports of committees. <lb />
Motions and resolutions. <lb />
o. Speaking. <lb />
General business. <lb />
Adjournment. <lb />
The report was adopted- <lb />
It was decided upon motion that <lb />
the Club hold a special meeting on <lb />
14th inst., at o'clock, P. <lb />
m . and that the election of Ex- <lb />
Committee be postponed to <lb />
that meeting. <lb />
President announced <lb />
following committees <lb />
A. Sugg, Smith, <lb />
S. A. Redding, J. J. J. <lb />
C. <lb />
Campaign Literature and <lb />
J. Whichard, Allen <lb />
Warren. J. A. Thigpen and J. -M-, <lb />
Norfleet. <lb />
Public and Enter <lb />
D. Murphy, G. B. <lb />
King, E. B. Moore, Tyson, <lb />
Harry Skinner. <lb />
so we had leave <lb />
part out. Late in de rain <lb />
storm cum up we all had go <lb />
in de store, Dar room <lb />
in bat Bill Jenkins Lem King <lb />
bad Dar <lb />
lot flour piled op in de middle <lb />
de floor, on top <lb />
most up de sum <lb />
de boys had on <lb />
keep out de way. de <lb />
scrummage knocked de <lb />
chuck out under de bottom <lb />
down cum de whole pile <lb />
One struck Elder <lb />
on part his bis <lb />
panes which be uses de most be <lb />
turned an bit <lb />
de <lb />
back his bead knocked <lb />
two gallons nigger <lb />
toe run out on his shirt <lb />
bosom could stop de <lb />
hole. Er started fur <lb />
Tildy Jones she started fur home <lb />
but her dress got out fur behind j <lb />
de it. De <lb />
dress stopped but Tildy <lb />
de last I seed sum white under- <lb />
close de bend <lb />
de road loaded close line <lb />
in cyclone. Ben Steel were out <lb />
in front de store on bis ban's <lb />
knees up de <lb />
bull when <lb />
flour bounced through de winder <lb />
bit on de middle bis back. He <lb />
thought de store on him <lb />
so he made spring yelled out <lb />
am de <lb />
am <lb />
body thought must be <lb />
de matter let out far de <lb />
woods. So ended de fourth July <lb />
at Hog <lb />
Pete Carter, F. K. <lb />
Hog K. C, July 1888. <lb />
Mr. G. B. King will address the <lb />
Democratic next Friday night. <lb />
Give bun a large audience. <lb />
I Shall Impute The Largest Sacrifice Ever Held In County. <lb />
At That Time Every Article In My Store Be Marked Down per cent Regardless of Cost. <lb />
MY REASONS A SALE ARK THAT I SHALL RE UNUSUALLY EARLY IN THE <lb />
PURCHASE OF MY FALL STOCK AND I WISH TO GIVE MY PATRONS THE <lb />
OF A. <lb />
fide SALE <lb />
in the midst of the season and not after season is over as such sales arc usually held <lb />
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, <lb />
DRESS GOODS, SHOES SLIPPERS, <lb />
TRIMMINGS, HATS CAPS, <lb />
NOTIONS, GOODS, <lb />
FANCY GOODS. HOUSE FURNISHING GOODS. <lb />
Prices Disregarded And <lb />
Your Bargains. <lb />
M. R. LANG. M. R. LANG. M. R. LANG.<lb />
W. L. ELLIOTT. S. P. ELLIOTT. JOHN NICHOLS <lb />
COTTON FACTORS <lb />
AND <lb />
THE FAVORITE PLACE ON THE <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
and <lb />
BALTIMORE <lb />
NORFOLK <lb />
Established in Baltimore in 1870- <lb />
ill open a House <lb />
in September, 1887, the handling and <lb />
sale of cotton, thus giving our <lb />
their choice of the two . <lb />
This splendid seaside is now opened for <lb />
I the accommodation of guest. The build- <lb />
j has been very greatly and <lb />
I extends out over the Sound and joins to <lb />
the pier. <lb />
NEW FURNITURE <lb />
has been put in the entire building. <lb />
or music, <lb />
the delicacies <lb />
Another Candidate. <lb />
Table supplied with all <lb />
of land and water. <lb />
Surf and Sound Bathing Unsurpassed. <lb />
Board by day, week or mouth at <lb />
rates. Apply for terms to <lb />
E. A. JACOBS, <lb />
Nag's Head, N. C. <lb />
ALFRED FORBES <lb />
The Tar <lb />
Forbes, <lb />
J. B. Cherry, <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb />
Capt. V. Jones, Washington, Gen <lb />
a Day And Boarding School. <lb />
This was in <lb />
hug new building which cost <lb />
The enrollment the was the <lb />
next Mi. and during the <lb />
LAST SCHOLASTIC YEAR <lb />
several counties, have <lb />
this growing <lb />
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
N. C. Bills Lading given to all-point <lb />
Dealer in Dry Goods, Notions, Clothing j, j. i <lb />
Hats, Boots, Shoes, Hardware, Cm Greenville W C <lb />
N. C, July and Groceries. Rock Lime kept constant- N. C. <lb />
Editor <lb />
We beg space in your paper to add <lb />
one more name to extensive list <lb />
of candidates nomination of <lb />
Register of Deeds of this <lb />
We suggest S. I. Fleming, of <lb />
Ins, we know to be fully <lb />
thy and competent as a business <lb />
man. He can carry more than the <lb />
strength of the Democratic party <lb />
Voters- <lb />
on hand. <lb />
I have JUSt received a large lot of <lb />
Braces for boys, girls, ladies and <lb />
need be tried to <lb />
give satisfaction <lb />
I now offer to the Jobbing Trade <lb />
advantages A. A <lb />
I wilt sell t <lb />
cents per doz., per cent. off. <lb />
I keep on band a large supply of Hos-1 <lb />
ford's Bread Preparation, I <lb />
sell at wholesale prices <lb />
patronage of the public is<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 are employed, and the be-t most <lb />
and painted, proved of instruction are <lb />
up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb />
and of Ladies. BOARDING ACCOMMODATIONS <lb />
are well arranged, rooms <lb />
ed with Spring Mattresses. Bureaus, <lb />
A first-class Table furnished with the j <lb />
best the market food <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Is being Interior town, <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday BOARD FOR LESS . , <lb />
and o'clock,,, it. i than School In the part- <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday The rates of tuition arc mod <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m. The Department U <lb />
Freights received dally and through with<lb />
and a very competent teacher of both In- <lb />
and vocal ill-charge. . <lb />
of work <lb />
and cheapness, there is better <lb />
School in Carolina. <lb />
For and other <lb />
i; <lb />
MB a wholesome <lb />
restraint, <lb />
offers the best PHYSICAL and the beat j. apply to <lb />
MENTAL culture, a compulsory <lb />
with SWOT, a reason- <lb />
able but strict DISCIPLINE, and a <lb />
entirely free from <lb />
No or spent attending <lb />
address, <lb />
MAJ. R. <lb />
School, Co., N. C.<lb />
JOHN DUCKETT. <lb />
Principal-. <lb />
Of Interest to Ladies.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018893_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
MRS. E. A. SHEPPARD <lb />
Has mart added to her stock <lb />
of Millinery and has secured <lb />
the services an experienced assistant. <lb />
All orders can now be the short- <lb />
est notice. Dry and Wet Stamping for <lb />
and embroidery neatly executed <lb />
While in the Northern markets she <lb />
wry careful to only the best ant <lb />
latest style in the Millinery Hue, ant <lb />
prepared to offer purchasers special in <lb />
BARBER <lb />
The undersigned has fitted up his Shop h <lb />
STYLE, <lb />
and any person desiring a <lb />
CLEAN k PLEASANT SUAVE <lb />
HAIR CUT, SHAMPOO, <lb />
or anything in the <lb />
TON <lb />
is invited to give me a trial. <lb />
guaranteed or no charge made. <lb />
CULLY <lb />
BRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb />
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb />
Corrected weekly by j <lb />
Wholesale and Grocers. <lb />
Mess Pork <lb />
Bulk Sides to <lb />
Bulk Shoulders <lb />
Bacon Sides <lb />
Bacon Shoulders i to <lb />
Pitt County <lb />
Sugar Cured Hams <lb />
Flour 3-25 to 6.25 <lb />
Coffee to <lb />
Brown Sugar to <lb />
Granulated Sugar to <lb />
Syrup to <lb />
Tobacco to <lb />
Snuff to <lb />
Lard g to <lb />
Butter to <lb />
Cheese to <lb />
Eggs <lb />
Meal to 1.00 <lb />
Corn to 1.00 <lb />
Irish Potatoes <lb />
G. Salt 1-00 <lb />
Liverpool Salt <lb />
Hides to <lb />
Rags <lb />
Beeswax <lb />
Bread 0.2-5 <lb />
Star Dye 3.40 <lb />
Kerosene Oil to <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE. <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT, <lb />
the Opera House, at which dace <lb />
I have recently located, and where I have <lb />
everything in my line <lb />
NEW, ClEA AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO I <lb />
with all the improved appliances; new <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
Razors sharpened at reasonable s <lb />
for work outside of my <lb />
executed. respectfully, <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
STEAM ENGINES <lb />
and all or machines repaired at short <lb />
notice, at home or at shop. Iron and <lb />
Bra Turning in the lies in <lb />
Cylinders bond. Models made to order. <lb />
Locks repaired. or fitted, Pipe <lb />
cut and threaded, Gins repaired in best <lb />
mar Bring on work. General <lb />
Jobbing done by O. P. <lb />
. N. C. <lb />
A R. R. <lb />
Tl and Schedule. <lb />
TRAIN SOUTH. <lb />
IS, <lb />
Dated daily Fast Mail, <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
pin pin <lb />
Mount I <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
am <lb />
Ar Wilson pm pin <lb />
Wilson <lb />
IS <lb />
Ar <lb />
Goldsboro am <lb />
Warsaw BO <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar u <lb />
TRAINS NORTH<lb />
dally daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Magnolia am S <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Ar Goldsboro <lb />
Lt S<lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson pm <lb />
Ar Rocky Mount S <lb />
Ar Tarboro TO <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Ar Weldon SO pm <lb />
Daily except pan <lb />
Train en Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax for Scotland at 8.00 <lb />
leaves Scotland <lb />
9.30 A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb />
N C, via <lb />
Rah R. P. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M. OS P M. arrive <lb />
X C, P M, P M. <lb />
Returning leaves V. C, daily <lb />
except Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb />
M, arrive Tarboro. X C, A SI, <lb />
AM. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
Goldsboro except M, <lb />
arrive Smith field, X C. A M. Re- <lb />
leaves Smithfield. X C A M. <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. X C, S A SI. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
Mount at P M, arrives Nashville <lb />
P M, Spring Hope P SI. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A SI, Nashville <lb />
A SI. arrives Rocky A <lb />
M daily, except <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at <lb />
P M. Returning leave Clinton at A <lb />
II, connecting at War.-aw with <lb />
and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson ft Fayette- <lb />
Branch is No. is <lb />
No. except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. South will stop only at <lb />
Wilson, Goldsboro and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon all points daily. All <lb />
rail via and daily except Sun- <lb />
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 and have Pullman <lb />
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb />
F. <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. KENLY, Transportation <lb />
T. SI. <lb />
C. B. EDWARDS <lb />
N. B. <lb />
Edwards IN, <lb />
Printers, and Binders, <lb />
1ST. C. <lb />
have the large-t and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind to found in <lb />
the State, and solicit older-; for all <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
STATIONERY READY <lb />
WaS. MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
ft <lb />
AND BINDERS, <lb />
RALEIGH. K. C. <lb />
HOTEL <lb />
SPENCER BROS., <lb />
THE HOME <lb />
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE. <lb />
Polite waiters. Good rooms. Best <lb />
the market affords. When la the city <lb />
top at the <lb />
Hotel, <lb />
Main St. Washington, N. C. <lb />
CASH <lb />
We have purchased the stock <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 />
Implements, Tools, Ta- <lb />
and Pocket Cutlery, Plow Bolls <lb />
and Hastings, Cart Material, <lb />
Doors, Sash, Blinds, Hinges, <lb />
Butts, Screws, Nails, <lb />
Glass, Putty, Lead, <lb />
Oil, <lb />
of every description. <lb />
m m m <lb />
and Cultivators. Glut, Grist <lb />
Mills, Cider and Fan Mills, Saw <lb />
Cooking Stoves. <lb />
In fact all goods kept in a <lb />
A pretty deer is dear to me, <lb />
A hare with downy hair ; <lb />
I love a hart with nil my heart. <lb />
But barely bear a bear, <lb />
plain that no one takes a plane <lb />
To have a pair of pairs <lb />
A rake, though, takes a rake <lb />
To tare away the tares. <lb />
All rays raise thyme, times razes all. <lb />
And, through the whole, hole wears, <lb />
A writ, in writing may write <lb />
It and still be wrong <lb />
For and are neither <lb />
And don't to write belong. <lb />
Beer often brings a bier to man, <lb />
Coughing a-coffin brings. <lb />
And too much ale will make us ail. <lb />
As well as other things. <lb />
The person lies who says he lies <lb />
When he is but reclining; <lb />
when consumptive folks decline. <lb />
They all decline declining. <lb />
A quail don't quail before a storm <lb />
A bough will bow before <lb />
We cannot rein that rain tit all <lb />
No earthly powers reign o'er it. <lb />
The dyer dyes awhile, then dies ; <lb />
To dye he is always trying. <lb />
Until upon his dying-bed <lb />
He thinks no more of dyeing. <lb />
A sun of mars roars many a sun ; <lb />
All must have their days, <lb />
And every knight should pray each night <lb />
To Hint who weighs his ways <lb />
i meet that men should meet out meat <lb />
To feed misfortune's son ; <lb />
The fair fare alone. <lb />
Else cannot be won. <lb />
A lass, aim is something false <lb />
Of faults a maid is made <lb />
Her waist is but a barren waste <lb />
Though stayed, she is not staid. <lb />
i The springs forth in spring <lb />
shoots <lb />
Shoot, forward, one and all; <lb />
Though summer kills the flowers, <lb />
leaves <lb />
The leaves to fall in fall. <lb />
I would a story here commence. <lb />
But you might find it stale ; <lb />
So let's suppose that we have reached <lb />
The tail end of our tale, <lb />
and <lb />
thank the public for the liberal pat- <lb />
that they have given us while <lb />
managing the SI. A. hardware bus- <lb />
that they continue the same <lb />
to us. Our motto will <lb />
FOR <lb />
HASKETT CO. <lb />
UNDERTAKING. <lb />
Having associated B. S. Sheppard <lb />
with inc In the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people In that <lb />
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb />
me for pan services have been placed in <lb />
tin hand- of Sir. for collection, <lb />
FLANAGAN. <lb />
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb />
stock of Cases and Caskets of all <lb />
and can furnish anything desired <lb />
from the finest Case down to a <lb />
county Pine Coffin. arc fitted <lb />
up with all conveniences and can render <lb />
satisfactory services to nil who patronize <lb />
us FLANAGAN SHEPPARD. <lb />
Feb. 22nd. <lb />
BUY <lb />
EXCELSIOR <lb />
EIGHTEEN SIZES AND KINDS <lb />
ILL PURCHASERS CAB BE SUITED <lb />
AN <lb />
Isaac A. Sheppard Co., Baltimore, Mi <lb />
OR BY <lb />
L. C. TERRELL, <lb />
H, C. <lb />
See Here <lb />
Do TOO WANT TO SAVE MONEY <lb />
J f so buy <lb />
Combined Harrow Cultivator. <lb />
It is worth as much in the cotton held <lb />
as a good hand. For sale by <lb />
J. H. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. <lb />
N C. <lb />
LITTLE, Agent, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
N S. FULFORD, Wash- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
W. A. Fields, and other Creditors <lb />
vs. <lb />
B. H. of <lb />
Notice hereby given to all the <lb />
tors of the estate of Ivey <lb />
to Hie the evidences of their claims in my <lb />
office or before the day of July <lb />
E. A. <lb />
It Superior Court. <lb />
North Carolina Pine. <lb />
The Now York correspondent of <lb />
Hie Chattanooga writ <lb />
jug up the eastern lumber market <lb />
Everything is looking up in the <lb />
Carolina trade. The <lb />
pine from State, which reaches <lb />
this and other Northern markets, <lb />
meets with good sale, and generally <lb />
at good prices. The car freight is <lb />
not very heavy just now. The <lb />
schooners arc bringing in enough <lb />
to meet all Both rough <lb />
and dressed are selling well. <lb />
some manufacturer is a <lb />
little careless and the consequence <lb />
is a cutting of prices, which warns <lb />
them that they disregard <lb />
the rules and customs of tins mar- <lb />
Carelessness is expensive, <lb />
while the honest preparation of urn <lb />
always pays, especially so since <lb />
the supplies from the South are in- <lb />
creasing, and buyers, when afforded <lb />
the opportunity of are <lb />
sure to select that which suits their <lb />
convenience the most complete. <lb />
From the same copy <lb />
the following paragraph <lb />
Pine Possibilities. Our timber <lb />
owners will begin to see why there <lb />
has been such influx, of timber <lb />
buyers in this section the last year <lb />
or two. <lb />
of the inroads that <lb />
yellow pine is making in the South- <lb />
west upon the trade of the jobbers <lb />
in Northern wood who long <lb />
since found good customers there <lb />
in plenty, says Lumber, prove that <lb />
the ground it is gaining is such <lb />
that it can permanently held. <lb />
The market there for <lb />
lumber and timber of all sorts is <lb />
practically controlled by the South- <lb />
producers, and in flooring and <lb />
ceiling and largely in inside finish <lb />
they have all the advantage, <lb />
seems likely now that a few years <lb />
In . white will be almost en- <lb />
withdrawn from the trans- <lb />
Missouri country, that important <lb />
field being practically given up to <lb />
the lumber from the South and that <lb />
from the West. The competition <lb />
seems likely to rather between <lb />
the Southern and Pacific coast <lb />
manufacturers than between the <lb />
former their erstwhile only <lb />
competitors. The broad stretch of <lb />
prairie country lying between the <lb />
Missouri and the mountains, and <lb />
extending south to the Mexican line, <lb />
is to be the scene of a <lb />
mighty development in the next <lb />
quarter century, and as there can <lb />
no growth and improvement with- <lb />
out the use of lumber, it is it <lb />
must be also a very large consumer <lb />
of this material, in the chase for <lb />
this white pine is so <lb />
handicapped by its high cost as <lb />
stumpage and the steadily declining <lb />
supply, that it cannot long retain a <lb />
place in the field; it must, within a <lb />
few years at most, give way to its <lb />
fresher rivals and seek itself a mar- <lb />
in which it can meet <lb />
on a fairer level. Luckily there <lb />
is room elsewhere for a traffic in <lb />
white heavy enough to take care <lb />
output, otherwise three-sided <lb />
struggle that would made for the <lb />
middle-western district would be <lb />
much fiercer and more important <lb />
to the trade than it it is or is likely <lb />
to be. <lb />
A Social Wrong. <lb />
The groat evil of these days is the <lb />
lightness with which love mar- <lb />
arc regarded. Young women <lb />
are more largely to blame than they <lb />
or their parents are willing to admit. <lb />
While there Ls nothing that can <lb />
justify a man in attempting the life <lb />
of a who declines to become <lb />
his wife, there is nothing on the <lb />
hand to excuse a woman for en <lb />
attention she does not in- <lb />
tend to reward in the way <lb />
plated by the suitor. That young <lb />
ladies, more especially those who <lb />
think flirtation to be a legitimate in- <lb />
of fashionable or gay life, do <lb />
hold out inducements to young men <lb />
without having the affections of <lb />
their hearts engaged is something <lb />
more than a folly, and there is no <lb />
occasion for surprise if sometimes <lb />
they are held to a tearful account <lb />
tor their willful trifling. All men are <lb />
not able to distinguish between real <lb />
love its semblance. Sincere <lb />
themselves they believe the hon- <lb />
and truth of the woman they <lb />
love. They are incapable of diver- <lb />
ting themselves by a make believe <lb />
believe passion, and, by <lb />
the objects of their devotion, deem <lb />
it utterly impossible that a pure <lb />
man could submit to overtures that <lb />
she docs not reciprocate in spirit. <lb />
Many girls young women, who <lb />
are wholly virtuous in <lb />
thought, consider it a triumph to <lb />
lead a man on to a declaration of <lb />
bis fervid when they are <lb />
at the same time similarly engaged <lb />
with other gentlemen equally <lb />
as to their real feeling. Mis- <lb />
guided mothers close their eyes to <lb />
such acts of and seem <lb />
to rather approve condemn <lb />
this species of amuse <lb />
pleased because it argues the <lb />
popularity or their daughters. The <lb />
daughters necessarily gain false <lb />
ideas of their relations to society, <lb />
and it is no wonder if this laxity <lb />
sometimes extends to a disregard <lb />
of moral principles later in life, <lb />
tho contest becomes a frivolous and <lb />
wayward wife <lb />
If women will trifle with pas <lb />
of men, let those who cast the <lb />
spell beware the acid. Flirtation <lb />
is as great a curse to polite society <lb />
as its natural fruit, the social evil, is <lb />
I pestilential to society in general. <lb />
While it is indulged with a total dis <lb />
regard of tho rights honest, sin- <lb />
manhood, mischances must <lb />
cur and the new order of crime <lb />
grow apace. It is well known as a <lb />
fact of mental science that lore may <lb />
be more potent than disease in <lb />
wrecking a system if it is <lb />
abused, and no form of insanity is <lb />
more destructive in its tendency <lb />
than fierce jealous or the desperation <lb />
that often attends hopeless love. <lb />
The passion is flippantly to <lb />
by those who see its humorous <lb />
phase, but it is, for all that, the great <lb />
motive passion of life, and as it is <lb />
well or ill directed is it or <lb />
terrible. The flirt is the deliberate <lb />
with this mysterious force, and <lb />
if she or he becomes its victim, the <lb />
I social verdict should unhesitatingly <lb />
laud without flimsy excuses place <lb />
the blame where it rightly belongs. <lb />
Goldsboro Headlight. <lb />
to <lb />
the newspaper stated, and how many <lb />
men, probably, read the same, and en- <lb />
vied her. Bat little was she to be envied, <lb />
however for spite her great wealth <lb />
she was miserable. It was her lot, in <lb />
common with myriads of women, to <lb />
fer from those <lb />
which arc peculiar to the female sex. <lb />
I Miserable, nervous, and discouraged, she <lb />
would gladly have given dollar of <lb />
. her fortune for one brief of <lb />
I health. How easy, and how inexpensive, <lb />
would be the journey to health, it Dr. <lb />
Favorite Prescription was <lb />
as a remedy, and the use of the <lb />
same persisted In; that is the experience <lb />
thousands of women the <lb />
above manner, teaches us to predict so. <lb />
It is the only medicine for women, sold <lb />
by druggists, under a positive guarantee, <lb />
from the manufacturers, that it will give <lb />
satisfaction in every case, or money will <lb />
be refunded. This guarantee has been <lb />
printed on the bottle-wrapper, and faith- <lb />
fully carried out for many years. <lb />
Dr. Pellets, or Anti-billions <lb />
Granules, cure sick headache, <lb />
and constipation. <lb />
Seven Presidential Tickets Out <lb />
Wilmington Star. <lb />
There are only Presidential <lb />
tickets in the Held as yet. There <lb />
arc the Prohibition nominees; there <lb />
are those of the United Labor party, <lb />
of Illinois, for President, <lb />
and Wakefield, of Kansas, for Vice <lb />
President; the Union Labor party, <lb />
of Illinois, and Cunning- <lb />
ham, of Arkansas ; the Woman <lb />
our fair friend, Belva A. <lb />
Lock wood, of tho District of <lb />
j bin, properly accompanied by Mr. <lb />
Albert N. Love, of Pennsylvania, <lb />
and the Industrial Reform <lb />
Redstone, of California, and <lb />
Calvin, of Kansas, and the regular <lb />
and <lb />
can. <lb />
HOME FOR INCURABLES. <lb />
In the City of Brotherly Love is an in- <lb />
they call Home for Incur- <lb />
Though of itself a noble <lb />
of charity, it is nevertheless a sad <lb />
condition to be in that any one should <lb />
feel obliged to confess himself incurable. <lb />
It is no disgrace to be poor, and so long <lb />
as health Is spared, the poorest may <lb />
bravely light off poverty ; but to be a <lb />
helpless invalid, greatest wealth will <lb />
not compensate for the loss, or make con- <lb />
a happy one. Yet it is a fact that <lb />
many, very many of these incurables, <lb />
might sooner or later be saved from <lb />
their fate, had they resorted to a safe, <lb />
yet powerful treatment. Thousands who <lb />
have been given up by members of the <lb />
medical have been saved and <lb />
restored to health and vigor by the Com- <lb />
pound Oxygen Treatment. <lb />
One of those given up to die in Steam- <lb />
burg. N. Y., writes May 24th, <lb />
February I met a friend, one of <lb />
patients. As soon as she saw what <lb />
a cough I had she exclaimed. -Com- <lb />
pound Oxygen is what you On <lb />
bar advice consented to get It, but I <lb />
did not get it to begin taking until March <lb />
although my left lung seemed all <lb />
stopped, so that the least exertion made <lb />
me pant; besides, there were other con- <lb />
sequent conditions. Such was help, <lb />
decided, positive, that before I took -it a <lb />
week I told a friend I was going to get <lb />
well, with much confidence. <lb />
wish to emphasize the great work <lb />
this remedy has done for me I am so. <lb />
Subscribe to the <lb />
Warmer. <lb />
The modes of death's approach are <lb />
various, and statistics show conclusively <lb />
that more persons die from diseases of the <lb />
Throat and Lungs than other. It is <lb />
probable that everyone, without <lb />
receives vast of Tubercle <lb />
Germs into the the system and where <lb />
these fall upon suitable soil they <lb />
start into 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 you <lb />
must act with promptness; Allowing a <lb />
cold to go without at trillion is dangerous <lb />
and may lose you your life. As soon as <lb />
feel that something is wrong with <lb />
your Throat, Lungs or Nostrils, a <lb />
bottle of German It <lb />
will give you immediate relief. <lb />
The ion, <lb />
of Col. Rowland by the <lb />
Convention at Wilmington last <lb />
week, was a just tribute to the worth <lb />
and integrity of that gentleman. He <lb />
has made a faithful and it <lb />
was only an act of justice to give <lb />
him another term. do not <lb />
know who will be his if <lb />
he has one, but we fee sale in <lb />
that Col. Rowland, if be lives, <lb />
will be our representative in the <lb />
next Congress, and his past record <lb />
justifies the prediction that he will <lb />
make a safe Enquirer <lb />
Express. <lb />
A higher morality, like a higher <lb />
intelligence, must be reached by a <lb />
slow growth. <lb />
Will This be a Hot summer <lb />
From the little foretaste that the <lb />
past week has given us, we are in- <lb />
think that tho Indiana that- <lb />
is about correct. It says <lb />
The weather seems to run in cycles <lb />
of about seven years, that is, when <lb />
we have a hot summer, it is always <lb />
followed by a cold one and it takes <lb />
about seven years to reach another <lb />
equally hot. It will be remembered <lb />
by many tho summer of 1867 <lb />
was very hot, and so dry <lb />
August the grass crumbled <lb />
the feet trod upon. The <lb />
summer of 1308 was noted for its <lb />
coolness, tho thermometer seldom <lb />
getting above dog. and we <lb />
did not reach the top wave <lb />
again until 1871, when it was <lb />
extremely hot. The following sum- <lb />
mer was cold to a remarkable degree. <lb />
From then on the summers grew <lb />
gradually warmer until 1881, which <lb />
was excessively hot and very dry, <lb />
no rain falling for nine weeks, and <lb />
there were more sunstrokes that <lb />
summer than there have been since. <lb />
Tho summer of 1882 was quite <lb />
cold, a few flakes of snow fell on the <lb />
morning of July 4th, followed by <lb />
hail in the afternoon, and during <lb />
tho rest of the month through <lb />
the mouth of August the tempera- <lb />
was so low that overcoats were <lb />
necessary for comfort, particularly <lb />
at night. Tho summers since 1882 <lb />
have grown warmer and j <lb />
last summer was a moderately hot <lb />
one, but unless all signs fail, the <lb />
coming summer will be the climax <lb />
of the cycle, and a hot dry season <lb />
may be expected. So far this Spring <lb />
the signs have been against the the- <lb />
here advanced but possibly the <lb />
may <lb />
by a regular old scorching <lb />
summer whose temperature will <lb />
val for hotness. <lb />
THE <lb />
lag <lb />
The <lb />
many <lb />
i ; <lb />
crowd- . <lb />
in the <lb />
deaths . <lb />
among <lb />
i M<lb />
rental <lb />
parent. <lb />
really<lb />
source <lb />
with ail <lb />
These <lb />
They tin<lb />
Every <lb />
causes, <lb />
answer <lb />
Hi Ink-<lb />
The Verdict <lb />
W. I. Suit. Druggist, Ind., <lb />
can recommend Electric <lb />
Bitters as the very best remedy, Every <lb />
bottle sold has given immediate relief in <lb />
every case. One man took six bottles, <lb />
and was cured of Rheumatism of years <lb />
Hare, druggist, Bell- <lb />
Ohio, affirms; best selling <lb />
medicine I have ever handled In my <lb />
experience is Electric <lb />
Thousands of others have added <lb />
testimony, M that the verdict is <lb />
that Electric Bitters do cure all dis- <lb />
eases of the Kidney-; or blood. <lb />
Only a half dollar a bottle at <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
Truths for the Colored Man. <lb />
Sun. <lb />
The Colored man bad as <lb />
recognition in the way of offices <lb />
from the present Administration as <lb />
ho had Grant or Hayes or Ar- <lb />
He has been just as in <lb />
his rights its he was under any Re- <lb />
publican Administration. The <lb />
is, the can never expect much <lb />
from either party <lb />
he has won bis advancement by <lb />
improvement in education and cult <lb />
A Discovery <lb />
wonderful discovery <lb />
been made and that too by a lady in this <lb />
county. Disease fastened its clutches <lb />
upon her and for she with- <lb />
stood its severest test, but her vital or- <lb />
were undermined and death seem- <lb />
ed imminent. For three months she <lb />
coughed incessantly and could not sleep, <lb />
she bought of us a bottle of Dr. King's <lb />
New Discovery for Consumption and was <lb />
so much relieved on taking dose that <lb />
she slept nil and with one bottle <lb />
has been miraculously cured Her name <lb />
is Mrs. Luther Lots. Thus write W. C. <lb />
Co., of Shelby. N. a <lb />
free trial bottle at Drug <lb />
Store <lb />
The Republicans have said they <lb />
were willing to squarely meet the <lb />
issue to which they are <lb />
challenged by the Democrats. It <lb />
appears that their words were only <lb />
idle boasts. The tenor of the <lb />
speeches at their National <lb />
Convention and other deliverances <lb />
from their leaders, go to show that <lb />
they tire not going to lacs the sharp <lb />
and issue the President has <lb />
sprung his message. It is their <lb />
purpose to try to by waving the <lb />
bloody shirt and the <lb />
holy sectional passions the past, <lb />
which time, if left alone, would heal. <lb />
Chronicle, <lb />
km <lb />
what is this <lb />
which so many seem now to be afflicted <lb />
If you will remember a few years ago the <lb />
word comparatively unknown <lb />
to-day it Ls as common as word in <lb />
the English language, yet this word <lb />
only meaning of another word <lb />
used by our forefathers in times past. So <lb />
it is with nervous diseases, as they and <lb />
Malaria are intended to cover what our <lb />
grandfathers called Biliousness, and all <lb />
are caused by troubles that arise from a <lb />
diseased condition of the Liver in <lb />
performing its functions finding it cannot <lb />
dispose of the bile through the ordinary <lb />
channel is compelled to pass it off through <lb />
the causing nervous troubles, <lb />
Malaria, Bilious Fever, etc. You who <lb />
are suffering can well appreciate, a cure. <lb />
We recommend Green's August Flower, <lb />
Its cures are marvelous. <lb />
The Republican candidates stand <lb />
for a ballot and a fair <lb />
says a organ printed in <lb />
Maine. This is the same, principle, <lb />
we beg to remark, which Chevalier <lb />
Claude upheld so gallantly <lb />
during his career as a Knight of the <lb />
Road. The passengers were <lb />
robbed were invariably invited to <lb />
poll the strength of their valuables. <lb />
Then took the <lb />
History repeats <lb />
The best in the world for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe- <lb />
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb />
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, <lb />
and cures Piles, or no pay re- <lb />
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price, <lb />
For sale <lb />
We have said all the time that <lb />
the record of Oliver Dockery would <lb />
not look fair when the light of <lb />
truth was turned on bis acts <lb />
speeches. son Oliver is charged <lb />
with the following <lb />
long to see the day come when <lb />
placing my right on the bead of a <lb />
little white child and my left hand <lb />
on the head a little colored child, <lb />
I can pass them into Sunday School <lb />
He may possibly see that <lb />
time when he is <lb />
nor and the Legislature is filled with <lb />
both white and black and <lb />
when Mason is superintendent of <lb />
the of the <lb />
Advance. <lb />
Eastern Reflector, <lb />
ear <lb />
-ow the <lb />
The <lb />
terribly<lb />
lawless <lb />
the in- <lb />
strain <lb />
habits; car Vs . <lb />
eating <lb />
tense m <lb />
race after <lb />
money, portion <lb />
a of <lb />
tho use of i and <lb />
. of <lb />
turning y i -o v and <lb />
i; lo ; briefly, <lb />
our to <lb />
for an hour's <lb />
or . So we <lb />
urn life's candle <lb />
and the <lb />
a-1 the <lb />
The i. <lb />
and die <lb />
is seated in ; .<lb />
digestion .;. <lb />
included, is liter- <lb />
even n V- <lb />
to<lb />
its <lb />
in the r <lb />
dull In <lb />
base oft <lb />
loss of <lb />
interest <lb />
breath; <lb />
teeth ; <lb />
strong<lb />
toms . <lb />
use of r<lb />
ed to <lb />
directly <lb />
fully v <lb />
system <lb />
Shake; <lb />
acts as <lb />
the <lb />
its wot upon <lb />
the fan <lb />
I It is s <lb />
n re- <lb />
stored by it fan.- <lb />
of misery to , <lb />
of life and m y any <lb />
or all other treatment <lb />
combined. ,. . <lb />
both ends <lb />
asylums <lb />
ch we <lb />
as it <lb />
and in<lb />
or <lb />
nerves<lb />
7- <lb />
at the <lb />
es and <lb />
bad <lb />
on the <lb />
it; <lb />
i l. of <lb />
i. <lb />
. disease <lb />
, and the <lb />
of Moots <lb />
to cure the <lb />
This <lb />
by the <lb />
t, <lb />
adapt- <lb />
acts <lb />
pro- <lb />
ex- <lb />
the <lb />
blood, <lb />
, leaves <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA, Superior Court <lb />
Pitt County. j <lb />
L. C. Harry Skinner, plaintiff <lb />
V. <lb />
E. H. Dill and D-W. Dill, defendant <lb />
The defendants above named will take <lb />
notice that an action entitled as above <lb />
been commenced by the plaintiffs in <lb />
the Superior Court of Pitt county for the <lb />
partition of certain land held by the plain- <lb />
tiffs and defendants as tenants com- <lb />
and the said further <lb />
take notice that they arc required to <lb />
pear before the Clerk of said Court, <lb />
the Court House it. Greenville on or be- <lb />
fore the day of August 1888 and an- <lb />
the complaint In said action or the <lb />
plaintiffs will apply to the Court for the <lb />
relief demanded in said complaint. This <lb />
the 22nd day of June 1888. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
Cleric Superior Court. <lb />
OF <lb />
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb />
The next session begins August 30th, <lb />
Tuition reduced- to a half-year. Poor <lb />
Students may give notes. Faculty of <lb />
fifteen teachers. Three full courses of <lb />
study leading to degrees. Three short <lb />
courses for the training of business men. <lb />
teachers, physicians, and pharmacists. <lb />
Law fully equipped. Write for <lb />
to <lb />
Hon. Kemp P. Battle, <lb />
President. <lb />
N. O. <lb />
D. J. Editor A Proprietor.<lb />
ENLARGED TO <lb />
Remains <lb />
Per Year, <lb />
IN ADVANCE <lb />
THE REFLECTOR IS THE <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 winch it <lb />
ates. <lb />
Send your name and get a <lb />
FREE SAMPLE COPY. <lb />
is called to tho as its <lb />
large and growing circulation <lb />
makes it an excellent medium <lb />
through which to reach the people <lb />
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb />
Street, <lb />
For Consumption, Bronchitis, <lb />
Dyspepsia. Catarrh, Hay Fever, Head- <lb />
Rheumatism, Neuralgia <lb />
and all chrome and disorders. <lb />
Compound Oxygen <lb />
Arch <lb />
Street, Philadelphia, have been using for <lb />
the last seventeen is a scientific ad- <lb />
of the elements of Oxygen and <lb />
Nitrogen and the compound <lb />
is so condensed and made portable that <lb />
is teat all over the world. <lb />
Starkey have the liberty <lb />
to refer to the following named well- <lb />
known persona who have tried their <lb />
Hon. l. Member of Con <lb />
Philadelphia. <lb />
Kev Victor i,. Conrad, Editor <lb />
ran Observer, <lb />
Charles l. <lb />
ester, N. Y. <lb />
Hon. Wm. Nixon, Editor Inter- <lb />
Chicago, <lb />
W. II Editor <lb />
Ala. <lb />
Judge H. P. Kan. <lb />
Mrs, Mary A Mae- <lb />
lodge B. S. York City. <lb />
Mr. K. c. Knight, Philadelphia. <lb />
Mr. Prank Merchant, <lb />
lion. Easton, Pa, <lb />
And others every part <lb />
of die United state-. <lb />
Made of ac- <lb />
and is the title of a new <lb />
brochure of two hundred pages, publish- <lb />
ed by Starkey which gives <lb />
to all full information as to this <lb />
curative agent and a record of <lb />
severe. hundred surprising cures a <lb />
wide range of of <lb />
after being abandoned to die by <lb />
other physicians. Will he mailed free- <lb />
to any address on application. Bead the <lb />
brochure <lb />
STARKEY A <lb />
No. 1529 Arch Street. Philadelphia, Pa. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the <lb />
U. S. Patent Office or in the Court <lb />
to for Moderate Fees. <lb />
arc opposite the U. S. Patent <lb />
Office engaged in Patents <lb />
and can obtain patents ii <lb />
less time than those more remote <lb />
from Washington. <lb />
When model or drawing is sen <lb />
advise as to free <lb />
of charge, and make no charge <lb />
unless we obtain Patents. <lb />
refer, here, to the Post Mas- <lb />
the Supt. of the Money <lb />
Div., and to officials of the U. S <lb />
Patent Office. For circular, advice <lb />
terms and reference to actual <lb />
in your own State, or county <lb />
address, C. A. Snow <lb />
Washington. D. C <lb />
DO YOU W<lb />
c. <lb />
, v nit- . I . <lb />
r-- w hereto <lb />
bay <lb />
; r II In I <lb />
Moiled I <lb />
fr at <lb />
Linda <lb />
AR E Y U R Y <lb />
THY HOOK. ii <lb />
my <lb />
of nearly all kinds <lb />
of to <lb />
plan for poultry information <lb />
about and to buy <lb />
from h -i 1- A <lb />
per for <lb />
KEEP <lb />
Ii no. th HOOK OF CAM <lb />
Ilia. <lb />
r. i <lb />
I Trent <lb />
i and <lb />
and cum l- build and <lb />
an Aviary. All about Parrot. <lb />
I ail Linda bud. pit for <lb />
Tho Books, III <lb />
ASSOCIATED FANCIERS, <lb />
South Unlit It Pi. <lb />
THE STAR. <lb />
PROMPTLY FILLED. <lb />
Notice I <lb />
for baldness, <lb />
falling; out of hair, and eradication of <lb />
is before the public. <lb />
Among the many who have It with <lb />
wonderful success, I refer you a the fol- <lb />
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb />
to the truth of my assertion <lb />
Latham, Greenville. <lb />
Mr. O. <lb />
SR., <lb />
Any one wishing to give it u trial for <lb />
the above named complaints can procure <lb />
it from mo, at my place of business, for <lb />
per bottle. , fully, <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb />
Greenville, K, C, 1887. <lb />
NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC <lb />
The STAR is the only York news- <lb />
paper possessing fullest confidence <lb />
of the National Administration the <lb />
United Democracy of New York, <lb />
political battle ground of the <lb />
Democracy, pure and <lb />
simple, is good enough for the Star. <lb />
Single handed among the metropolitan <lb />
press, it stood by the men called by <lb />
the great Democracy to redeem the gov- <lb />
from twenty-live yens of lie- <lb />
publican wastefulness and corruption <lb />
despotism to the South, these <lb />
four years past it has been unswerving <lb />
its fidelity to the administration of <lb />
Cleveland. It is for him now <lb />
for Cleveland and four <lb />
years more of Democratic honesty in our <lb />
national affairs, of continued nation- <lb />
and prosperity. <lb />
For people win like sort of <lb />
the Stab is the paper to read. <lb />
The Star stands squarely on the <lb />
National Democratic platform, be- <lb />
that any tribute exacted from <lb />
people in excess of the demands of a <lb />
economically administered <lb />
is essentially oppressive dishonest. <lb />
The scheme fostered and championed by <lb />
tho Republican making the <lb />
government a miser, wringing millions <lb />
annually from the people and locking <lb />
them up in vaults to serve no <lb />
but invite wastefulness and dishonesty, <lb />
it regards as a monstrous crime against <lb />
the rights of American citizenship. Re- <lb />
publican political jugglers may call it <lb />
taxation the <lb />
for it is robbery. <lb />
Through and through the Star is a <lb />
great newspaper. Its tone is pure and <lb />
wholesome, its news service <lb />
issue presents an <lb />
tome of what is best worth knowing of <lb />
the world's history of yesterday. Its <lb />
stories are told in good, quick, <lb />
English, and mighty interesting <lb />
reading they are. <lb />
Star is as good as the <lb />
best class magazine, and prints about the <lb />
same amount of matter Besides the <lb />
day's news it is rich in special <lb />
articles, stories, snatches of current <lb />
literature, reviews, art criticism, etc. <lb />
inimitable sparkles <lb />
Will <lb />
letters arc of its choice offerings. <lb />
Many of the known men and women <lb />
in literature and art an represented in <lb />
its columns. <lb />
The is a large paper <lb />
giving the cream of the news the world <lb />
over, with special features which make <lb />
it the most complete family <lb />
published. The farmer, the mechanic, <lb />
the business man too much occupied to <lb />
read a daily paper, will get more for his <lb />
dollar invested the Star <lb />
than from any other paper. It will lie <lb />
especially during the <lb />
and Will print the freshest and most re- <lb />
liable political news. <lb />
day for one year<lb />
Daily, without one year 0.00 <lb />
Every day, six months 3.50 <lb />
Daily, without Sunday, six months 3.00 <lb />
Sunday edition, one year <lb />
Weekly Star, one year 1.00 <lb />
A free copy of Weekly Star to <lb />
the sender of a club of <lb />
Address, THE <lb />
Broadway Park Place, New York.<lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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