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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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. <lb/>
LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN TUB <lb/>
inn mm. <lb/>
ONE SIX <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
VOL VII. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1888 <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and <lb/>
Wednesday <lb/>
LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE <lb/>
it <lb/>
Subscription Price. M <lb/>
. DEMOCRATIC. BUT <lb/>
will not hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men and measures that are not consistent <lb/>
with true principles of the party. <lb/>
If you want a paper from a wide-a-wake <lb/>
section of the State send for the <lb/>
TOR. SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb/>
Democratic Nominees. <lb/>
NATIONAL,. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
GROVER CLEVELAND, <lb/>
Of New York. <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
ALLEN G. THURMAN, <lb/>
Of Ohio. <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Scales, of Guilford <lb/>
M. <lb/>
of New Hanover. <lb/>
Secretary of . <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
W. of <lb/>
P. of Gates. <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction <lb/>
M. Finger of Catawba. <lb/>
Attorney F. David- <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. <lb/>
SUPREME COURT. <lb/>
Chief H. H. Smith, of <lb/>
Wake. . , <lb/>
Associate S. of <lb/>
Anson; S. Merrimon, of W <lb/>
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
First District E. Shepherd, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second Philips, of<lb/>
Third G. Connor, of <lb/>
on- ,,, . <lb/>
Clark, <lb/>
Wake. , <lb/>
A. <lb/>
T. of <lb/>
Sampson. <lb/>
Seventh C. <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth J. Montgomery, <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Tenth Avery, of <lb/>
h M. Shipp, of <lb/>
Mecklenburg. . <lb/>
Twelfth Merrimon, <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
REPRESENTATIVES IN <lb/>
Sena B. Vance, of <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb/>
House of District <lb/>
Louis C. Latham, of Pitt <lb/>
Second M. Simmons, of <lb/>
Craven. , <lb/>
Third W. of <lb/>
Pender , <lb/>
Fourth Nichols, <lb/>
Wake <lb/>
Fifth W. of Rock- <lb/>
Sixth T. Bennett, of <lb/>
S. Henderson, <lb/>
H. n. Cowles, <lb/>
Wilkes. <lb/>
Ninth D. Johnston, <lb/>
Buncombe. <lb/>
GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Court A. Move. <lb/>
M. King. <lb/>
Register of H. Wilson. <lb/>
B. Cherry. <lb/>
S. Congleton. <lb/>
Coroner-J. P. Redding. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb/>
man, Guilford Mooring. J. A. K. Tucker, <lb/>
W. A. James, Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb/>
School <lb/>
Latham. <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
TOWN. <lb/>
Mayor-C. M. Bernard. <lb/>
C. Forbes. <lb/>
J. Perkins. <lb/>
Ward. T. A. <lb/>
and J. P. 2nd Ward. O. Hook- <lb/>
and R. Williams Jr.; 3rd Ward, J. J. <lb/>
Perkins and A. F. <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
First and Third <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. <lb/>
Hughes, D. D., Rector. <lb/>
Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
every Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
ELECTORS AT LARGE <lb/>
ALFRED M. WADDELL, <lb/>
Of Sew Hanover.- <lb/>
FREDRICK N. STRUDWICK. <lb/>
Of Orange. <lb/>
FOR DISTRICT ELECTORS <lb/>
1st H. Brown. Jr. Beaufort. <lb/>
Dist Woodard. of Wilson. <lb/>
B. Aycock, of Wayne. <lb/>
4th W. of Johnston. <lb/>
6th II. Dobson. of Surry. <lb/>
6th J. Pemberton, of Manly. <lb/>
7th DIst I- C. Caldwell. of Iredell. <lb/>
M. Vance, of Caldwell. <lb/>
th T. Crawford, of Haywood <lb/>
FOR FOR FIRST DISTRICT <lb/>
THOMAS G. SKINNER, <lb/>
Of <lb/>
STATE- <lb/>
FOR GOVERNOR <lb/>
DANIEL G. FOWLE, <lb/>
Of Wake County. <lb/>
FOB LIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR <lb/>
THOMAS M. HOLT, <lb/>
Of County. <lb/>
FOR SECRETARY OF <lb/>
WILLIAM L. SAUNDERS, <lb/>
Of New Hanover County. <lb/>
FOR TREASURER <lb/>
DONALD W. <lb/>
Of Wake County. <lb/>
FOR auditor <lb/>
GEORGE W. SANDERLIN, <lb/>
Of Wayne County. <lb/>
FOR SUPERINTENDENT OF IN- <lb/>
SIDNEY M. FINGER, <lb/>
Of County. <lb/>
FOR ATTORNEY GENERAL <lb/>
THEODORE F. DAVIDSON, <lb/>
Of County. <lb/>
FOR SUPREME COURT <lb/>
JOSEPH J. DAVIS, <lb/>
Of Franklin. <lb/>
JAMES E. SHEPHERD, <lb/>
Of Beaufort. <lb/>
A. AVERY. <lb/>
Of Burke. <lb/>
COUNTY. <lb/>
For the <lb/>
WILLIS R. WILLIAMS. <lb/>
For House of <lb/>
M. C. S. CHERRY, <lb/>
GEORGE B. KING. <lb/>
For <lb/>
J A. K. TUCKER <lb/>
DODGES. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A A. <lb/>
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb/>
day night after 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
Masonic Dodge. W. M. King, W. M. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter. meets <lb/>
every 2nd and 4th Monday at Ma- <lb/>
Hall. F. W. Brown, H. P. <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb/>
meets every Tuesday night. D. L. <lb/>
James. N. G. <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of H., <lb/>
first and third Friday night. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. <lb/>
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of H., meets <lb/>
every Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb/>
Temperance Reform Club meets In their <lb/>
club room every Monday night, at <lb/>
Mass meeting in the Court j <lb/>
fourth of each month, at o'clock <lb/>
p. M. E. C. Glenn, <lb/>
Woman's Christian Temperance Union <lb/>
meet In the Reform Club Room Friday <lb/>
of each week. Mrs. V. H. <lb/>
ard, <lb/>
Band of Hope meets in Reform <lb/>
every Friday night. Miss Eva <lb/>
t.------- <lb/>
POST OFFICE. <lb/>
hours a. M. to p. M. Money. <lb/>
Order A. M. to P. M. No or- <lb/>
will be from to P. M. and <lb/>
from to i P. M. <lb/>
Bethel mail arrives daily <lb/>
at A. M., and departs at S. p u. <lb/>
Tar mail arrives Sun- <lb/>
at M. and depart at I P. m. <lb/>
Washington mail daily <lb/>
at M. and departs at p. at. <lb/>
Mall leaves for Ridge Spring and Inter-1 <lb/>
mediate offices. Mondays, Wednesdays <lb/>
and Fridays at a. u. at p. K. <lb/>
Vanceboro mall arrives Fridays at I <lb/>
For Register of <lb/>
DAVID H. JAMES. <lb/>
For <lb/>
JAMES B. CHERRY. <lb/>
For <lb/>
MANNING. <lb/>
For <lb/>
JOHN H. <lb/>
I. E. S. <lb/>
HERMAN <lb/>
of God, not all unknown <lb/>
To those who hourly seek thy throne, <lb/>
Oh, make us more and more thine own, <lb/>
Even we <lb/>
the battle to begin <lb/>
Against the dull, besetting sir. <lb/>
An- foothold in light to win <lb/>
From -y to day. <lb/>
To those thought has dared to rise <lb/>
Straight to the presence of his eyes <lb/>
No grace, for thee God denies, <lb/>
In what we love <lb/>
Even halt and stumble still, <lb/>
Though loving good, and hating ill, <lb/>
So strong in wish, so weak in will, <lb/>
Thou art above. <lb/>
O God to even to those <lb/>
Who thy greatest foes, <lb/>
The like.-. Bod that ever rose <lb/>
sons of men, <lb/>
Be with us when we fail fall. <lb/>
Thou who nor fell at all; <lb/>
Nor. for the sin's sake, when we call. <lb/>
Leave us again <lb/>
After North Carolina, <lb/>
Desperate Republican Efforts to Break the <lb/>
Solid Sooth with Boodle. <lb/>
Here is bit of news, gossip or <lb/>
way you in <lb/>
take at least has the merit <lb/>
is in a position to know the plans of <lb/>
the Republican campaigners. At <lb/>
the. Democratic headquarters Col. <lb/>
Brice heartily when <lb/>
upon the subject Senator <lb/>
Ransom, of North Carolina, who was <lb/>
present at the time, also scooted the <lb/>
idea that any alarm was felt by the <lb/>
Democrats as to which way the old <lb/>
North State go. <lb/>
Blame got to town Saturday, and <lb/>
there was another big in <lb/>
the evening. Gov. of Ohio, <lb/>
who wax hilled for the opening speech <lb/>
began to wave the <lb/>
with great vigor, as is his wont, but <lb/>
the hail not come to see a <lb/>
side show and howled and hoot- <lb/>
ed the <lb/>
off the platform. Foot times he was <lb/>
dragged to the front by the Chair- <lb/>
man who expostulated on the <lb/>
courtesy this proceeding, and <lb/>
pleaded for at least polite <lb/>
It was a crowd, <lb/>
and nothing Blaine would <lb/>
them. So had to pocket <lb/>
bis chagrin as best he <lb/>
Business circles have been much <lb/>
perturbed lately over successive rev- <lb/>
elations of gigantic peculations. Fol- <lb/>
lowing fast upon the theft of <lb/>
by confidential clerk of <lb/>
the law firm of Barlow, <lb/>
came the expo- <lb/>
sure of the embezzlement of nearly <lb/>
as much money from the Produce <lb/>
Exchange by its counsel, William R. <lb/>
Foster, Jr. The is now sup- <lb/>
posed to be in Canada, with a little <lb/>
army of detectives on his <lb/>
He is, by the way, a brother <lb/>
of being in a manner <lb/>
indicating the hopes and plans of trail. <lb/>
the Republican Campaign managers. I of Deacon Foster, the President <lb/>
In a well-known a of the league of Republican clubs, and <lb/>
two since I heard an author of the fry-out-the-fat <lb/>
of the political situation, <lb/>
growing out of some large bets <lb/>
which had just been recorded be- <lb/>
tween well-known local politicians <lb/>
by one of the many <lb/>
that haunt these resorts. A gentle- <lb/>
man whom I recognized as being <lb/>
connected with the National <lb/>
Headquarters, and who has <lb/>
evidently tailed inculcate Chair- <lb/>
man Quay's of silence, was <lb/>
circular. <lb/>
E. <lb/>
Wise and Witty Truths. <lb/>
I Extract from the great Speech of Hon. <lb/>
Sun Set Cox on the Tariff. <lb/>
It will not be doubted that it is <lb/>
I understatement, that to get <lb/>
into the Treasury it costs <lb/>
181,000,000.000. this be ac- <lb/>
as true, then go to the ens <lb/>
decanting on the situation from the the bills <lb/>
Republican point view. wk i o <lb/>
he said in sub <lb/>
of lading. When yon find the <lb/>
. ,, as I did, yon will not wonder at <lb/>
stance, the South m all of the tariff; yon will <lb/>
Is <lb/>
Bead the Mr. C. H. <lb/>
Newark, Ark., says down <lb/>
with Abscess of Lungs, and friends and <lb/>
physicians me an incurable <lb/>
Consumptive. Began taking Dr, King's <lb/>
New Discovery for Consumption, am <lb/>
now on ray third bottle, able to over- <lb/>
see the work on my farm. It is the finest <lb/>
medicine ever Jesse <lb/>
Decatur. Ohio, says It not <lb/>
for Dr. King's New Discovery for Con- <lb/>
I would have died of lung <lb/>
Was given up by doctors. Am now in <lb/>
best of Try it, Sample bottles <lb/>
free at Drag Store. <lb/>
We regret to chronicle the sad <lb/>
news that Robert S. Moran D. <lb/>
D. at one time pastor of the <lb/>
dist church in this in New <lb/>
York city last Saturday night Dr. <lb/>
Moran was a fine <lb/>
beloved by the people of this <lb/>
community. We have heard from <lb/>
his lips some as fine sermons as <lb/>
ever fell from unman <lb/>
Mercury. <lb/>
The best in the world for Cots. <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe- <lb/>
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, <lb/>
and cures Piles, or no par re- <lb/>
quired. It is guaranteed to give perfect <lb/>
or money ref untied. Price, <lb/>
For sale ErnuL <lb/>
their calculations as a foregone con- <lb/>
Then very <lb/>
add enough Northern or <lb/>
to them <lb/>
out of the woods. The favorite <lb/>
are, first, the South, New <lb/>
York, New Jersey and Connecticut; <lb/>
the South and <lb/>
of which combinations is <lb/>
to do the work. They also <lb/>
do a deal of talking about <lb/>
Wisconsin, Michigan other <lb/>
Northwestern States. <lb/>
this is all bosh, pure and <lb/>
simple. We have certainly as good <lb/>
a chance gaining from the South <lb/>
any votes that we may <lb/>
lose in the Northwest. I am put- <lb/>
ting it mildly. For instance, the <lb/>
normal Democratic majority in Flor- <lb/>
is not largo A change of a few <lb/>
thousand votes will give us the <lb/>
State. We believe that this will be <lb/>
accomplished by the demoralizing <lb/>
conditions brought about by the <lb/>
plague which is devastating <lb/>
of that State. Even if the <lb/>
scourge should let up, there is not <lb/>
sufficient time remaining before the <lb/>
election for the voters to rally. It <lb/>
goes without saying that with a <lb/>
large colored population, which is <lb/>
unable to get away from home, the <lb/>
demoralization will not effect us <lb/>
nearly so much as the other side. <lb/>
We will play Florida then against <lb/>
Connecticut. <lb/>
apart from this, unless our <lb/>
people have been woefully <lb/>
formed, we have excellent, pros- <lb/>
of carrying one Southern <lb/>
State that has nearly as many <lb/>
votes as Indiana, and more than <lb/>
New Jersey. Virginia T Not at all. <lb/>
The State that we confidently <lb/>
count on is North Carolina, and we <lb/>
not only expect to carry for <lb/>
and Morton, but to get a ma- <lb/>
of the Congressional <lb/>
Our agents there report the <lb/>
outlook as highly encouraging. <lb/>
Now I have had something to do <lb/>
with this State and I <lb/>
what I am talking about. Our par- <lb/>
is solidified and strengthened, <lb/>
and yon may be sure our friends <lb/>
there do not want for means. <lb/>
be precise, we expect to car-, <lb/>
the districts now <lb/>
represented by Congressmen Lath- <lb/>
am, Simmons, Nichols, Brower and <lb/>
Johnson, with a strong probability <lb/>
of adding the Wilmington district <lb/>
to string. We have a strong <lb/>
candidate in the first district <lb/>
and he can have all the <lb/>
he wants. <lb/>
eh we have only to <lb/>
hold oar own, but will do very much <lb/>
better. The second or dis- <lb/>
represented by Congressman <lb/>
Simmons, will go overwhelmingly <lb/>
Republican and we expect at least <lb/>
1500 majority in the Asheville dis- <lb/>
now represented by Johnson. <lb/>
As candidate Governor we <lb/>
have one of the most popular men in <lb/>
the man who a few years <lb/>
ago without the slightest <lb/>
aid from scaled the <lb/>
Democratic majority to leas than <lb/>
GOO. And be will carry the state <lb/>
this time by at least <lb/>
Now I will do a little figuring from <lb/>
standpoint. Waiving the <lb/>
i of Florida, suppose the Demo- <lb/>
should carry the south <lb/>
Carolina New York and <lb/>
would they be f Or <lb/>
Instead of Indiana, New Jersey and <lb/>
Connect T I tell yon some of the <lb/>
finest work in this Campaign has <lb/>
been done in North Carolina. Of <lb/>
course we have not made any <lb/>
over is not cur <lb/>
I merely give above as having <lb/>
been said in perfect good faith and <lb/>
Massachusetts howls for cheap <lb/>
coal; Pennsylvania says, no; and <lb/>
so Massachusetts goes out with a <lb/>
Home market Club and knocks <lb/>
down the West South, to rifle <lb/>
them of half their gains on raw cot- <lb/>
ton. . Virginia, and North <lb/>
Carolina, fleeced all round in cloth- <lb/>
sugar, and what not, go for <lb/>
goober at a cent a pound. <lb/>
California demands a large <lb/>
reprisal for her because she <lb/>
is fleeced on salt by New York, <lb/>
West Virginia, Ohio, Michigan. <lb/>
The States form a band of <lb/>
brigands, and march forth with <lb/>
little hope for any steal worth <lb/>
the powder; but being reduced to <lb/>
extremist, call on <lb/>
from to lead against the <lb/>
robber gang of cut throats on cot- <lb/>
ton ties and trace chains. <lb/>
the Robert. of the lot <lb/>
steals on all articles from a <lb/>
plate glass to a locomotive; and to <lb/>
make up for the general loss, the <lb/>
Northwest masks herself behind <lb/>
her forest and demands timber re- <lb/>
; and so on. Nothing is <lb/>
Even the corsets of <lb/>
cut, around which hover so many <lb/>
happy associations laughter, or <lb/>
the brier wood pipes of <lb/>
arc safe from the interchange- <lb/>
able piracies of the tariff. <lb/>
and Applause. Oh, the beauty <lb/>
of reciprocal I Laugh- <lb/>
Gentlemen seem to take umbrage <lb/>
because we call these tariffs which <lb/>
take from one class <lb/>
other But I have the best <lb/>
ethics for the statement that the <lb/>
right of property is violated by the <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
Farmers Taxed to Death. <lb/>
AU Bound. <lb/>
Some of the Heavy the Farmer Pays <lb/>
Articles of Household Necessity. <lb/>
Boston Globe. <lb/>
Who that is obliged to seek his <lb/>
bread within the heated walls and <lb/>
among the dusty of city <lb/>
does envy the happy lot of the <lb/>
tanner at this season, as in his rides <lb/>
across the country the eye sweeps <lb/>
over the verdant panorama dotted <lb/>
with homes and rich in thriving <lb/>
fields <lb/>
But what were all the bounties <lb/>
nature to a farmer or any other man <lb/>
without protection f So the <lb/>
party, which of course loves <lb/>
the farmer as it does the <lb/>
generally, or- <lb/>
a system some quarter of a <lb/>
century ago by which to protect this <lb/>
neglected factor of the general com <lb/>
How Is It <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
If a high Tariff Ir indeed such a <lb/>
great blessing and has so much to do <lb/>
with the wages of laboring men we <lb/>
would like for Oliver to ex- <lb/>
plain following <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That the country prospered very <lb/>
much more under tho Walker Low <lb/>
Tariff than it has prospered under <lb/>
the Republican High War <lb/>
Tariff f <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That during the twenty seven years <lb/>
of a great War Tariff the farmers <lb/>
the entire Northwest have been <lb/>
gradually impoverished until now <lb/>
most of tho farms ore over <lb/>
with <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That American shipping which <lb/>
once nearly in magnitude <lb/>
that of Great Britain and greatly <lb/>
OF <lb/>
FALL GOODS <lb/>
AT <lb/>
along with the rest of us that any other nation, <lb/>
who labor. It was in time of war, total decay, so <lb/>
of course, but the protectors had not commerce is now main- <lb/>
the hardness of heart to withhold J <lb/>
their generous succor merely because <lb/>
times of peace were upon and so I <lb/>
still enjoy their generous protection tax always levied for <lb/>
twenty four years the times of against <lb/>
poor, as may seen in <lb/>
which called for it. Ami that we <lb/>
must pay for what we enjoy, to say <lb/>
nothing of what we do enjoy, is <lb/>
as self evident, as the tact that the <lb/>
tariff Acts of 1804 imposed the great- <lb/>
est measure of taxation that is <lb/>
to give to an; corded of any nation in history. <lb/>
Behold, then, the happy farmer as <lb/>
he rises in the morning and on <lb/>
his common flannel shirt, taxed 0.3 <lb/>
individual by cheating, stealing cent. It is perchance and <lb/>
robbery, or violation of contract;, be puts on a coat taxed per cent, <lb/>
and universally, just is these crimes I He cannot go without shoes taxed <lb/>
wonder that the father of all <lb/>
SIN AND LIES IS THE FATHER OF <lb/>
the Mom <lb/>
grow indignant at the percent- <lb/>
ages levied on the necessaries and <lb/>
the immunity on the free list of <lb/>
but they grow reconciled <lb/>
when it is known that these sums go <lb/>
to carry on government. They are <lb/>
reasonably content with even <lb/>
though they create a surplus and <lb/>
endanger values and credits. <lb/>
this is not the devil in the <lb/>
business. tariff makes horns <lb/>
and hoofs tree, while it taxes the <lb/>
Word of God. The devil is in that <lb/>
but only a little devil. It is <lb/>
he adds to the tax that goes to the <lb/>
Treasury the robberies outside that <lb/>
the worst begins. Do you deny <lb/>
this result T I give yon a touchstone <lb/>
to test it. <lb/>
We import, say, a <lb/>
year of the protected goods, and pay <lb/>
an average if 47.10 per cent, on <lb/>
them. Alongside in merchant's <lb/>
store are the competing American <lb/>
goods. They are 47.10 per cent, <lb/>
higher than they would be sold out <lb/>
side the United States. And <lb/>
since they are five times the value <lb/>
of the foreign goods, in dollars, we <lb/>
must pay tax to the protected <lb/>
manufacturer where we pay to <lb/>
the Government. Any who <lb/>
buys Irish linen in Cork, or a shawl <lb/>
in Paris, will when she brings <lb/>
it in the unhappy fact. It is some, <lb/>
times true, as this debate develops, <lb/>
that American goods are cheaper <lb/>
over our own borders. They have <lb/>
to be sold in foreign markets, and <lb/>
to compete they must be under- <lb/>
sold. <lb/>
The devil is never dressed up so <lb/>
elegantly as when he appears as a <lb/>
protectionist. <lb/>
Oh how is the devil <lb/>
He Is dressed in his Sunday best, <lb/>
With a scarlet coat of blue. <lb/>
But there is a hole for the tail to come <lb/>
through. <lb/>
Laughter. <lb/>
It is said that when the devil <lb/>
walked the earth full dress he <lb/>
took most delight in seeing a <lb/>
old lawyer by state <lb/>
Laughter. II he bad known <lb/>
the complicated machinery of the <lb/>
tariff, ad and mixed <lb/>
in his own dress, by the square inch <lb/>
and by the threads, he would have <lb/>
more, the legislative <lb/>
cheat. Laughter. <lb/>
I do not of gentlemen <lb/>
desiring to help their local <lb/>
Truly it requires a little sacrifice to <lb/>
vote for the general weal when it <lb/>
causes a particular home woe. Local <lb/>
color in art gives grace to <lb/>
Our polity has as a <lb/>
presiding genius autonomy- Let us <lb/>
respect it, let us not carry it to <lb/>
such excess as to make the removal <lb/>
of general wrongs impossible. States <lb/>
should how best to <lb/>
reconcile the jarring and diverse in- <lb/>
of extensive land. <lb/>
Members admit that there are <lb/>
certain productions that upon <lb/>
should not have protection; <lb/>
but they declare that they will make <lb/>
reprisals for the clamors and <lb/>
of the tariff in other matters <lb/>
where they are unprotected. I have <lb/>
Inveighed against this system as <lb/>
mutual brigandage the <lb/>
of robbery. Applause and <lb/>
laughter <lb/>
tariffs illustrate them in every <lb/>
paragraph. Kentucky wants cheap <lb/>
copper stills for her whiskey. She <lb/>
gets even with the Michigan robber <lb/>
by demanding a tariff on hemp. <lb/>
Now hemp is on the free-list, and <lb/>
why not copper Maine steals on <lb/>
lumber to make up for the <lb/>
production languishes, in- <lb/>
diminishes, and the richest <lb/>
soil fails these few and impoverished <lb/>
inhabitants. But when Govern- <lb/>
lays its powerful grip on tho <lb/>
property of the citizen to bestow <lb/>
that property on favored enterprises <lb/>
it is none the less robbery because <lb/>
done under tho forms law. <lb/>
The gentleman from Ohio Mr. <lb/>
says it is not a tax, <lb/>
only a Laugh- <lb/>
this he differs from every <lb/>
writer upon political science. I am <lb/>
inclined, notwithstanding the <lb/>
to call it otherwise <lb/>
The suave expression <lb/>
sounds pretty, but it is all the <lb/>
same a tax and something worse. <lb/>
But stop should apologize. <lb/>
must be decorous. Laughter. It <lb/>
is not robbery. Since the tariff <lb/>
forces one person to give <lb/>
to another by indirection, by a <lb/>
sleight of hand manipulation, is it <lb/>
not merciful to call it by another <lb/>
name than T Ah, sir, it is <lb/>
done in the season. <lb/>
It is the defense- <lb/>
less victim when he or she is asleep <lb/>
Little, House <lb/>
GREENVILLE, X. <lb/>
STANDARD CALICOES <lb/>
AT CENTS. <lb/>
HENRIETTA CLOTH <lb/>
per cent, and the hat that he puts <lb/>
on is taxed per cent. He draws <lb/>
water in a bucket percent. <lb/>
and washes his face hands a <lb/>
tin bowl per drying j as come <lb/>
them on a cheap cotton towel taxed <lb/>
per cent. <lb/>
But still more happiness is in <lb/>
store. He down to breakfast <lb/>
and cats from a plate taxed per <lb/>
cent, with a knife and fork <lb/>
per cent. The sugar be puts into <lb/>
the Tariff schedule where it is <lb/>
found that all low grade goods are j <lb/>
taxed higher than all fine grade <lb/>
goods. The poor have to wear the <lb/>
high taxed goods T <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That Free England pays <lb/>
very much higher wanes than High <lb/>
Protection Germany, France, or It- <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That if Protection brings high <lb/>
and Free Trade makes low <lb/>
wages, that three times as many <lb/>
immigrants come to the United <lb/>
States from High Protection <lb/>
from Free Trade Eng <lb/>
land t <lb/>
How is it <lb/>
That if the Tariff fixes wages and <lb/>
makes higher that the <lb/>
in North Carolina in cotton facto- <lb/>
receive so much less than the <lb/>
YARD WIDE, <lb/>
ALL WOOL. WIDE, <lb/>
operatives and <lb/>
LADIES SHOES AT <lb/>
Our Nice Fitting <lb/>
82.50 SHOES ARE <lb/>
Our <lb/>
is taxed per cent, and is that mechanics in Illinois <lb/>
seasons his food with salt taxed or York are paid so much more <lb/>
per He looks fondly at they are paid the same <lb/>
wife and children who share sections the <lb/>
bis protection with him. and then T If the Tariff Axes wages <lb/>
goes and fills his pine with tobacco be the <lb/>
taxed percent., or perhaps lights the American Union. <lb/>
a protected cigar taxed per cent. <lb/>
Meanwhile, the smiling sun That in the estimation of <lb/>
through the protected glass window V and Plutocracy it is such an aw- <lb/>
of bis domicile on a tax of per to have Trade Is <lb/>
there the of trade be- v u. ii. <lb/>
tween too states of the is better than ever before. <lb/>
BUFF SHOES <lb/>
GOOD VALUED. <lb/>
We also invite you to exam- <lb/>
our General Stock, <lb/>
and in their <lb/>
would call it <lb/>
and cheers. But I must be <lb/>
Laughter. Therefore I <lb/>
call it trade regulation. Laughter. <lb/>
I have read a volume by M. Hue, a <lb/>
Catholic priest, who, dressed in the <lb/>
yellow robes, traveled through <lb/>
et. He made many graphic <lb/>
of the then strange land of the <lb/>
Grand Llama. Among other de- <lb/>
quote from is <lb/>
that of an adventure in the <lb/>
tan mountains. <lb/>
The thrice happy farmer now takes <lb/>
Nell out of the stable and puts <lb/>
nu a bridle taxed per cent. A <lb/>
neighboring smithy shoes her, <lb/>
nails taxed per cent, driven by a <lb/>
He <lb/>
homes. folks hitches her to a taxed per <lb/>
burglary. Laughter j cent., with chains taxed per cent. <lb/>
. and proceeds to his highly protected <lb/>
labor, <lb/>
The day's work being done he <lb/>
reads a chapter from the family Bi- <lb/>
taxed per and kneels to <lb/>
pray on an humble carpet taxed <lb/>
per cent. At last he lies down <lb/>
wraps his weary limbs in a sheet <lb/>
taxed per cent and sinks the <lb/>
arms of Morpheus under a blanket <lb/>
that is taxed per cent. <lb/>
Nor have bis good Republican <lb/>
brigand meets the priest upon protectors been so as to <lb/>
the road. The brigand does <lb/>
a pistol at his breast nor draw <lb/>
a knife. He says with perfect <lb/>
ts it a sound moral principle as <lb/>
well as a sate economical principle <lb/>
that all men should have the right <lb/>
to buy where obey buy cheapest <lb/>
and sell where they can sell highest . <lb/>
If not. why not <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That Clay, over whom OH <lb/>
sheds the <lb/>
tears, was the Father of the <lb/>
of Protection, <lb/>
only favored a Tariff per <lb/>
while Dockery is not satisfied <lb/>
with that averages tho <lb/>
enormous sum of 47.10 per cent., <lb/>
but actually demands still more. tax. <lb/>
In this particular our Oliver reminds <lb/>
us of Oliver Twist, who <lb/>
was always for <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
That the of <lb/>
the country actually grow weaker <lb/>
We have a good line of <lb/>
and Kentucky <lb/>
Hats and Caps and a splendid <lb/>
stock of Men's Boote, <lb/>
HOUSE BRO. <lb/>
Cards <lb/>
U G. JAMES, <lb/>
elder brother I It is <lb/>
cold today in the mountains. I <lb/>
would like the loan of thy <lb/>
And again <lb/>
friend, dost thou not see <lb/>
that I am tired with Thy <lb/>
horse, if thou pleases <lb/>
This is a the <lb/>
land of the Grand Llama. Great <lb/>
Laughter. <lb/>
But the great bulk of our tariff <lb/>
larcenies is done in the night season; <lb/>
and if Dr. Wayland and other <lb/>
be correct beyond a cavil, these <lb/>
unequal, unlawful, and outrageous <lb/>
taxes are flat burglary. I beg par <lb/>
again the language of <lb/>
my from Ohio, used in this <lb/>
House, and not in is not <lb/>
even taxation. It is a little <lb/>
by Ohio is made <lb/>
magnificent and prosperous at the <lb/>
expense of our Southern <lb/>
neglect his wife and daughters. <lb/>
Even the broom which his <lb/>
wife sweeps the floor with is taxed more sickly, the more sock a Specialty <lb/>
per cent, and tho utensils; the bounty <lb/>
which the daughters are scouring Tariff gruel f <lb/>
How is it, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, iV. C. <lb/>
Practice In all the courts. <lb/>
and are fed <lb/>
What Do You Think <lb/>
Scotland Neck <lb/>
What do you think of a politician <lb/>
who enjoys the puffs his county pa- <lb/>
per gives him, and then either does <lb/>
not even subscribe to it or not <lb/>
keep his subscription paid t We <lb/>
think that people who want puffs by <lb/>
newspapers ought to keep <lb/>
paid We think that <lb/>
who puffs by newspapers <lb/>
ought to keep subscriptions paid in <lb/>
advance. Now, don't chuckle too <lb/>
soon, dear If you have not <lb/>
paid your subscription don't bother <lb/>
about the yon <lb/>
square up. We just began about <lb/>
to call attention to <lb/>
the matter. <lb/>
Brace <lb/>
You are feeling depressed, your <lb/>
is poor, yon are bothered with Head- <lb/>
ache, you are nervous, and gen- <lb/>
of sorts, and want to brace up. <lb/>
Brace up, but not with stimulants, <lb/>
medicines, or bitters. Which have for their <lb/>
basis very cheap, bad whiskey, and which <lb/>
stimulate you for an hour, and then leave <lb/>
yon worse condition than before. <lb/>
What yon want is an that will <lb/>
with great earnestness by a man who on fabrics. <lb/>
Liver and Kidneys, restore your vitality, <lb/>
and give renewed health strength. <lb/>
Such a you will And in <lb/>
and only cent a bottle at <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
after the frugal meal are taxed at an <lb/>
average of per cent- The soda <lb/>
which they use in lightening their <lb/>
daily bread is taxed per <lb/>
Thankful to their kind <lb/>
protectors they nil sit down in the <lb/>
evening to sew with needles taxed <lb/>
per coot, with thread taxed <lb/>
per cent, they make a calico dress <lb/>
that is taxed per cent. Grandma <lb/>
joins the happy circle, knitting a pair <lb/>
of socks with yarn taxed per <lb/>
cent. <lb/>
Ob, the farmer With the <lb/>
oil of protection his cop <lb/>
over. That he Las not been killed <lb/>
with kindness ere this is due to the <lb/>
tender mercies of bis protectors, who <lb/>
here there have diminished a <lb/>
tax. Yet, as stated shown by <lb/>
Prof. of Harvard, his ad- <lb/>
little book, the rates on <lb/>
most all the articles with which the <lb/>
protective controversy is concerned <lb/>
are still those of the tariff Act of <lb/>
while protective duties set <lb/>
down in the Revised Statutes as <lb/>
been fixed by Acts passed later <lb/>
than 1864 show not a reduction, but <lb/>
an increase over the rates of the war <lb/>
tariff. <lb/>
Who not be a happy mer <lb/>
and enjoy perpetually a war tax in <lb/>
time of peace, such as no people ever <lb/>
endured with such wonderful pa <lb/>
before, while of <lb/>
idle surplus gluts the national treas- <lb/>
t yet, if a deal of on taxed <lb/>
light does not the American <lb/>
farmer as to now dearly he is paying <lb/>
for the whistle of over-protection be- <lb/>
fore next November, we shall be <lb/>
greatly mistaken. <lb/>
Are you r Do you feel f <lb/>
Hare you the Take a dose of <lb/>
Price All druggists <lb/>
Keep It. <lb/>
If your baby is restless teething, <lb/>
get Dr. Bull's baby Syrup; a dose of it <lb/>
will relieve the little sufferer at once. <lb/>
Only cents a bottle. <lb/>
the Baptist church on Sunday <lb/>
9th mat. Dr. <lb/>
nine persons the fellow- <lb/>
That the Republican Tariff Com- <lb/>
mission of 1882, their final report, <lb/>
after traveling over the whole conn <lb/>
try and interviewing manufacturers <lb/>
and working people and capitalists <lb/>
at many places, recommended that <lb/>
tho Tariff of 1882, then averaging <lb/>
per cent, than should <lb/>
be reduced to per cent <lb/>
That would have cut it down to not <lb/>
more than per cent, average if <lb/>
the lowest reduction proposed bad <lb/>
been adopted. Now the Republicans <lb/>
and with them, are actually <lb/>
demanding an increase of the Tariff <lb/>
47.10 per cent. <lb/>
If the shade farmer will candidly <lb/>
and successfully answer the <lb/>
will not laugh at his <lb/>
isms any more. We would even <lb/>
promise to vote for him, but under <lb/>
no circumstances can we be induced <lb/>
to promise to vote for a radical- It <lb/>
is unwise, <lb/>
immoral and wrong to vote that <lb/>
way. <lb/>
D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
-0 DENTIST, t <lb/>
TAMES M- <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
A LEX <lb/>
KY-AT-L A W, <lb/>
N. A <lb/>
AUG. M. MOORE. <lb/>
BERNARD, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
Practice in the State and Federal <lb/>
J. M. TUCKER <lb/>
purify your blood, start healthy action ship of the church and received one <lb/>
by Neck<lb/>
It is now time for those indebted <lb/>
to the Reflector to pay up. <lb/>
Caution <lb/>
If there be any Democrats who <lb/>
propose to vote against the amend <lb/>
increasing the number of <lb/>
Court Judges, or any who <lb/>
propose not to vote on it at all, let <lb/>
them be sure, nevertheless, to vote <lb/>
for the Democratic candidates, lest <lb/>
it happen that the amendment be <lb/>
carried and Davis, Avery and Shep- <lb/>
herd be beaten. The Radicals will <lb/>
vote for the amendment and their <lb/>
nominees. The Democrats must <lb/>
take no risks in this or any other <lb/>
matter on election day. <lb/>
No matter bow you vote on the <lb/>
amendment, be sure you for <lb/>
Davis, Avery and Shepherd. <lb/>
Mr. R. Beale brought to town <lb/>
on Wednesday a queer freak of <lb/>
of the cat family. It was a <lb/>
kitten with two bodies, eight legs, <lb/>
and two tails with only one neck <lb/>
and head. The kitten was found <lb/>
on bis premises, and be thinks that <lb/>
it lived for a short time after it <lb/>
born. He has placed it in alcohol <lb/>
and thinks of sending it to some <lb/>
TUCKER k MURPHY, <lb/>
A T-LA W, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
MARRY <lb/>
SKINNER,<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
r V. <lb/>
Attorney and at <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
Law <lb/>
a W <lb/>
Attorney and at Law <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. V. <lb/>
Will practice in the Courts Pits, <lb/>
Greene, Edgecombe and Beaufort <lb/>
ties, and the Supreme Court. <lb/>
Faithful attention given to all business- <lb/>
entrusted to him. <lb/>
DR. H. SNELL, <lb/>
WASHINGTON, H. <lb/>
Surgeon Dentist. <lb/>
Tenders his professional services <lb/>
public. <lb/>
Teeth extracted without pain by i <lb/>
of Nitrous Oxide Gas. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
A T-LA W, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018906_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
Published Wednesday <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
A strong effort is being made by <lb/>
the Republicans to Con <lb/>
District, as will be seen <lb/>
by reference to New York Let-. <lb/>
. . tar on first page. The Democrats <lb/>
aim of District will see to it that no <lb/>
such calamity shall befall us, <lb/>
will elect Tom Skinner to a seat in <lb/>
the Fifty-first Congress by a band-, <lb/>
dome majority. There are many <lb/>
very many--reasons why Skinner <lb/>
should be sent to Congress, a of <lb/>
which we give Fie is honest; <lb/>
our people or of people in other <lb/>
States. <lb/>
A similar work is announced <lb/>
in connection with injurious in- <lb/>
sects and their ravages, with <lb/>
remedies for their prevention, <lb/>
also identification of these in- <lb/>
sects when sent to the Station <lb/>
and publication in the bulletins <lb/>
of their habits and etc. <lb/>
TC it <lb/>
per year. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC, BUT <lb/>
will hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men measures that arc not consistent <lb/>
with the true principles of the party. <lb/>
If want a paper from a wide-a-wake <lb/>
of the State send for the <lb/>
roil. SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb/>
he is capable; he has had i Publications of the Station will <lb/>
he has been tried and found to those desire <lb/>
to every trust; he is and i <lb/>
about the expenditure of the j them. <lb/>
people's money ; he is the friend of <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER <lb/>
Entered at the Office at <lb/>
ville, . C., as <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
Dockery says lie would lose his <lb/>
right hand before he would divide <lb/>
time with Kitchin. <lb/>
Kitchin gets done with the <lb/>
he will be willing to Rive <lb/>
both hands to have him back at his <lb/>
home in Halifax county. <lb/>
the laboring man and Is in favor of <lb/>
a modification of iniquitous tar <lb/>
that is now grinding down the <lb/>
people. Other reasons could be <lb/>
given why Mr. Skinner ought to be <lb/>
elected to Congress from this dis- <lb/>
but the above are sufficient to <lb/>
convince reasonable Now i . <lb/>
for a reasons why Mr. White night before in secret conclave, <lb/>
should be elected to stay at Tuesday the <lb/>
He is untried; he is allied to a party I sections of the <lb/>
that is opposed to the best interests . . . <lb/>
of the be is the Mend of the county were seen coming into <lb/>
The Republicans of this <lb/>
held their nominating <lb/>
on last Wednesday, or at <lb/>
least they went through the <lb/>
form of a convention, as their <lb/>
selections had all been made the <lb/>
Northern monopolist and <lb/>
and against the poor laborer; <lb/>
ho declares a protective tariff, <lb/>
preferring to give the people free I <lb/>
whiskey, free tobacco and free play <lb/>
rather than that they <lb/>
should have cheaper <lb/>
clothing and cheaper necessaries <lb/>
of all kinds. This should be enough <lb/>
to keep patriotic from voting <lb/>
for Mr. White, but ii there is any- <lb/>
thing needed to make him more ob <lb/>
Hon. W. M. Bobbins has been <lb/>
placed on the canvass in the Bast <lb/>
with Capt. Strudwick in place <lb/>
Capt. Kitchin. Maj. Bobbins is one <lb/>
of the best campaigners of the West <lb/>
and will do much effective work m <lb/>
this section. The exchange effected <lb/>
by the Executive Committee will re- <lb/>
in much good to the party. <lb/>
The arrangement bad made <lb/>
for Hon. W. . Kitchin to canvass <lb/>
the East in company with Capt. <lb/>
one of the Democratic <lb/>
electors the <lb/>
the State Executive Committee <lb/>
better work for Mr. <lb/>
and sen <lb/>
Son <lb/>
had looked to . <lb/>
pleasure, but they Here it is white men, <lb/>
tide their disappointment and bid f <lb/>
him God speed in his new field. A- W candidate <lb/>
town, and until the hours of the <lb/>
night growing very small <lb/>
did the leaders rub their heads <lb/>
together in Hall <lb/>
up a slate for the following <lb/>
day. o'clock Wednesday <lb/>
the ringing of the Court House <lb/>
bell the hour for <lb/>
their love feast. About the <lb/>
time for the work to begin we <lb/>
noxious and distasteful to the <lb/>
his record in the Legislature of j went over to look in upon them. <lb/>
North Carolina will provide it. Our. Truly it was an ideal Republican <lb/>
people who heard th- discussion be-, color <lb/>
Mr. Skinner and Mr. White is as to color <lb/>
at Bonn tree's will remember being white and <lb/>
the reply made by White to <lb/>
tier's charge that ho was a member <lb/>
of the Legislature of 1868 that <lb/>
the special tax bonds, stole so <lb/>
much money and brought disgrace <lb/>
shame upon the State, was that <lb/>
the same Legislature that issued <lb/>
these bonds turned round and <lb/>
them, finding that they were <lb/>
bin, to look after . EM M, White did not tell <lb/>
of our people Pf connection with these tax <lb/>
forward to j Skinner charge <lb/>
I i i . i . II. it i n it . i t mull <lb/>
man in the State is bettor equipped <lb/>
for Dockery than is Kitchin. <lb/>
He will bun to all of his <lb/>
and will expose even- <lb/>
one of his lies and slanders. <lb/>
tor Congress in this district, was a <lb/>
member the Legislature of <lb/>
and in that body he voted in <lb/>
the special tax bonds. <lb/>
a Supreme Court had <lb/>
declared these bonds <lb/>
it is always cm aim to <lb/>
make the interest- <lb/>
inside and oaf, there are <lb/>
times we are more <lb/>
r. others in <lb/>
of outside matter. This <lb/>
week we present an <lb/>
ally attractive having <lb/>
there selections veil worth a <lb/>
careful reading by every one. <lb/>
We would especially direct at- <lb/>
to our New York Letter <lb/>
and the editorials copied from <lb/>
the Wilmington Star and Boston <lb/>
black participants The dozen <lb/>
whites ought to have blacked <lb/>
their faces to be in keeping <lb/>
with the surroundings. <lb/>
The proceedings began by the <lb/>
meeting's being called to order <lb/>
by J. J. Perkins and upon mo- <lb/>
of one of the crew lost <lb/>
who made he was made per- <lb/>
chairman, putting the <lb/>
question to the house himself. <lb/>
Marcellus Cotten, colored, was <lb/>
nominated and elected <lb/>
but declined to serve where- <lb/>
upon C. C. Forbes, colored, was <lb/>
elected in his place, all these <lb/>
a and fraudulent, extra session motions being made by <lb/>
of the Legislature of repeal w. Johnston moved that <lb/>
act, which he himself acknowledges j delegate from each township be <lb/>
unjust, and loudly and boasting i appointed to retire and make <lb/>
It the , nominations. The motion <lb/>
dinted. alone, should <lb/>
damn him with the honest people of <lb/>
the First District, and we believe it <lb/>
committee endorsed a <lb/>
dissenting voice. <lb/>
The bosses thought it best to <lb/>
stop proceedings right here lest <lb/>
pow wow should follow, so <lb/>
adjourned and dispersed <lb/>
White men of Pitt county, the <lb/>
action of this Republican con- <lb/>
we might say this <lb/>
nine-tenths convention <lb/>
brings the issue squarely before <lb/>
you. These men who have here- <lb/>
figured as Independents <lb/>
are out-and-out Republicans, <lb/>
just as the Reflector has <lb/>
ed that they were, and are <lb/>
with the party. <lb/>
Now can you vote for them <lb/>
The State Fair will begin October <lb/>
and continue four days. Every <lb/>
effort has been made to make each <lb/>
days attractive On <lb/>
Tuesday the Fair will be formally <lb/>
opened by the Governor and there <lb/>
will be a good attendance and every- <lb/>
thing will be in position. <lb/>
On Wednesday there will lie a <lb/>
balloon ascension the most <lb/>
able of its kind ever seen in North <lb/>
Carolina. This attraction has been <lb/>
engaged at a large and it <lb/>
is will be very popular be- <lb/>
cause of its novelty. It is a thrilling <lb/>
sight to see a jump from a <lb/>
loon a thousand feet in the air. On <lb/>
Thursday the racing will be <lb/>
fine and there will be an <lb/>
enormous crowd in attendance <lb/>
Friday has been set aside as <lb/>
school day it is hoped that a <lb/>
large number of our larger schools <lb/>
will be present, collectively as <lb/>
schools. <lb/>
The display of Live Stock will be <lb/>
the greatest ever seen in North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
The amusements for the week <lb/>
will be all of a very much higher <lb/>
character than <lb/>
The greatest tragedienne of the <lb/>
day will appear at the and <lb/>
there will be news and fun for <lb/>
young as old. <lb/>
The wonderfully cheap Rail <lb/>
fare, a cent a mile gives <lb/>
everybody an opportunity to visit <lb/>
the capital of the State and meet <lb/>
thousands of their friends at mere <lb/>
nominal cost. <lb/>
Come yourselves and tell your <lb/>
friends to come. <lb/>
Bulletin No. of the N. C. <lb/>
Agricultural Experiment Station <lb/>
Dr. II. B. Battle. Director, has <lb/>
been received. Among the con- <lb/>
tents we notice a continuation of <lb/>
nominations. The <lb/>
was not seconded, the chairman <lb/>
never put it before the house, <lb/>
but announced a committee of <lb/>
his own selection all the same. <lb/>
The committee consisted of six <lb/>
whites and six blacks who <lb/>
ed as ordered, the whites in the <lb/>
lead, the blacks following their <lb/>
bosses. Prominent on this <lb/>
The former a con-i , ,., w- <lb/>
a former article describing the -t white <lb/>
,. ,, . . mating commit tee was a wane <lb/>
. held experiments now in opera- w convicted for- <lb/>
and the latter are able . . . who was <lb/>
at the last term of Pitt <lb/>
exceeding to <lb/>
out just at this time. <lb/>
In New York City the local Dent- <lb/>
the size of plots experiment- <lb/>
ed on, the kind and amount of <lb/>
fertilizing ingredients used and <lb/>
organizations have selected j the exact cost and analysis of <lb/>
different candidates for the Mayor various applications. The <lb/>
and the The i . . . <lb/>
County Democracy am a of these experiments will <lb/>
of without regard to be looked for with much inter- <lb/>
State. Details are given show- He <lb/>
to the committee, of <lb/>
politics have Mayor <lb/>
Hewitt, while Tammany Hall has <lb/>
placed Sheriff Hugh J. in the <lb/>
field as its candidate for Mayor. <lb/>
It is said that the Republicans will <lb/>
also nominate a ticket the van <lb/>
one City and County then <lb/>
making the a one. <lb/>
What effect split will have upon <lb/>
the and Slate tickets <lb/>
est. <lb/>
A meteorological summary <lb/>
fir the whole State for the <lb/>
month as well as a table show- <lb/>
the state of the weather at <lb/>
various places from co-operating <lb/>
observers are given by Mr. H. <lb/>
M. P. Baldwin, meteorologist. <lb/>
in Sew York ii is impossible to lay. <lb/>
The opinion of New Yorkers importance of good drink- colored, <lb/>
widely in regard to <lb/>
Some argue that the split will weak- <lb/>
en Cleveland because will be <lb/>
trading done with the <lb/>
and others say with equal confidence <lb/>
that Cleveland's chances will be <lb/>
strengthened as each of the rival <lb/>
factions will bring out their hill <lb/>
force and each will support <lb/>
Presidential ticket. We nope <lb/>
the best. <lb/>
course, and was a fit man to <lb/>
select nominees for officers to <lb/>
take charge of the affairs of Pitt <lb/>
county. How does tins strike <lb/>
the intelligent white voters of <lb/>
the county i <lb/>
While chairman Perkins was <lb/>
appointing this committee there <lb/>
stood around upon the <lb/>
bench and in front of it, Col G. <lb/>
W. Johnston. Policeman T. B. <lb/>
Cherry, Shade <lb/>
Calvin Stokes, George Simmons, <lb/>
colored, and Redmond Peyton, <lb/>
while Rev. Austin <lb/>
waters, the value and need <lb/>
the <lb/>
for <lb/>
the interpretation of chemical <lb/>
analyses, as well as a table <lb/>
showing the result of <lb/>
of various drinking waters <lb/>
in the State made by the <lb/>
Station in the last few <lb/>
weeks arc given by Mr. R. G. <lb/>
Grissom, assistant chemist. <lb/>
All those interested in the Ex- <lb/>
Flood, colored, would step up <lb/>
f analyzing the waters in use, occasionally to put in a word of <lb/>
advice. <lb/>
During the absence of the <lb/>
committee the time was passed <lb/>
in lobbying among the blacks. <lb/>
Calvin Stokes takes a seat be- <lb/>
sides the chairman and examines <lb/>
the slate more closely to see if <lb/>
all is correct. After sometime <lb/>
Chairman Perkins vacates his <lb/>
penmen t Station will be pleased; seat and goes down to lobby <lb/>
new work with cattle and dairy Old man John Tucker, colored, <lb/>
interests, other investigations <lb/>
will shortly be commenced which <lb/>
we are sure will be acceptable to <lb/>
our people. These additional <lb/>
investigations will be possible <lb/>
ascended on one side and gave <lb/>
Stokes a cordial greeting and <lb/>
hand-shaking. As he withdrew <lb/>
Rey. Austin Flood ascended on <lb/>
the opposite side and extended <lb/>
by reason of Station's a greeting. Both were <lb/>
the benefit of the Hatch cordially received by Stokes <lb/>
In the West Hon. W. H. <lb/>
Kitchin is doing noble work for <lb/>
the Democracy. After <lb/>
ting from Judge Fowle Dockery to learn that in addition to leaving Stokes upon the bench, <lb/>
took Mr. Devereux, the Radical <lb/>
candidate for Attorney-General, <lb/>
and started on a canvassing iota <lb/>
of the West. Kitchin was sent <lb/>
after these two worthies to hold <lb/>
them in check, and he does so <lb/>
most effectually. It is said that <lb/>
two men never received worse <lb/>
than he is administer <lb/>
to them. They have refused <lb/>
to let Kitchin share their time, <lb/>
and have tried to run him off by <lb/>
speaking until night and then <lb/>
trying to carry the crowd away <lb/>
with them, but the courageous <lb/>
old Democratic veteran bides <lb/>
his time and then pours hot shot <lb/>
into the ranks of the enemy, and <lb/>
the people stay to hear him out. <lb/>
He denounces the slanders and <lb/>
lies of Dockery and Devereux, <lb/>
and out upon their guilty <lb/>
heads the most bitter <lb/>
At Taylorsville, where <lb/>
he first spoke, Kitchin began his <lb/>
speech by declaring in <lb/>
an the door and <lb/>
let the cowards and slanderers <lb/>
pass <lb/>
Met bod give their <lb/>
pastor, B. John, a <lb/>
pounding a few nights <lb/>
Th- people of He arc not <lb/>
to rood Mr. i-an <lb/>
earnest laborer is <lb/>
here. <lb/>
Funds from the U. S., and will <lb/>
embrace Botanical and <lb/>
logical investigations under the <lb/>
charge of experienced special- <lb/>
The Botanical work will <lb/>
include the examination of <lb/>
seeds on sale in the State ; for j <lb/>
it should be the duty of the <lb/>
Station to protect the farmers <lb/>
against adulterated seeds as well <lb/>
as adulterated fertilizers, for it <lb/>
will be easily seen that one can <lb/>
be practiced as well as the other <lb/>
if care is not taken to prevent <lb/>
it. <lb/>
It is stated also that samples <lb/>
of grasses and so called weeds <lb/>
will be when they <lb/>
are sent to the Station, and their <lb/>
habits and value reported. An- <lb/>
other feature which will <lb/>
valuable be the <lb/>
in the Station's bulletin of a de- <lb/>
of each of <lb/>
the grasses or Hover, which can <lb/>
in the State, with <lb/>
with them of <lb/>
and their greetings returned. <lb/>
Throughout the meeting C. M. <lb/>
Bernard stood to one side of the <lb/>
room in apparent earnest con- <lb/>
with J. J. Moore, his <lb/>
back to the crowd as if entirely <lb/>
oblivions of all that was going <lb/>
on. <lb/>
In little less than half hour <lb/>
the committee returned in the <lb/>
order in which they had retired <lb/>
and their spokesman <lb/>
Col. Johnston, announced the <lb/>
following <lb/>
M. King <lb/>
For House of Representatives <lb/>
J. J. Perkins and Calvin <lb/>
Stokes. <lb/>
For J. Wilson. <lb/>
For Register of H. <lb/>
Wilson. <lb/>
For be supplied <lb/>
by the Executive Committee. <lb/>
For H. Barnhill. <lb/>
For Surveyor-W. H. Britton. <lb/>
The nominations were <lb/>
before the body as a <lb/>
whole and the selections of the <lb/>
Mk. hear numerous <lb/>
complaints the management <lb/>
of our public schools. In <lb/>
township lam informed that schools <lb/>
are open for months and that no <lb/>
branch of mathematics is taught, <lb/>
teachers applied to the <lb/>
of Edgecombe county <lb/>
and were refused any grade of <lb/>
but immediately came to this <lb/>
county were furnished second <lb/>
grade certificates. Mathematics is, <lb/>
in the opinion of most people, <lb/>
to a business education and <lb/>
should especially be taught in <lb/>
public schools. Why are such com- <lb/>
plaints made, and where does the <lb/>
blame lie f X. <lb/>
R. S. CLARK CO., <lb/>
DEALERS<lb/>
Are headquarters for all needed the <lb/>
HARDWARE line. Our stock cannot be <lb/>
but if y want anything in <lb/>
Hardware, Agricultural Implements, St ores <lb/>
and Cooking Utensils. Carriage Material <lb/>
and House Cutlery <lb/>
CALL us. <lb/>
We can save you money on any of these goods. <lb/>
MANUFACTURER'S AGENTS FOR POWDERS <lb/>
which will sell at Factory Prices. <lb/>
.--I <lb/>
R. GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb/>
WE are now fitted up in and are prepared to man- <lb/>
upon short notice kind or style of <lb/>
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb/>
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING. <lb/>
We also keep a nice line of <lb/>
MADE <lb/>
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed. <lb/>
Benefits of Advertising. <lb/>
Our merchant patrons are <lb/>
the benefits to derived from <lb/>
advertising in the <lb/>
Several of them last week told us <lb/>
some things the paper was doing <lb/>
for them. J. B. Cherry Co. say <lb/>
that I he very first day their <lb/>
and locals of shoes .- <lb/>
a man who received his pa- <lb/>
per early went to their store and <lb/>
purchased a pair of shoes for each <lb/>
his family, saying he wanted some <lb/>
A from the <lb/>
extreme section of <lb/>
the county was at M. U. Lang's store <lb/>
the other day. The man had bis <lb/>
wile with him she said it was <lb/>
her first visit to <lb/>
always gone to Washington hereto- <lb/>
fore to do her she had <lb/>
reading the <lb/>
determined to come here to see if <lb/>
the advertisements were true. They <lb/>
found even greater bargains <lb/>
was expected and bought largely. <lb/>
The proprietor of the Old <lb/>
Store says he is selling <lb/>
Boat all over the county, <lb/>
that the brings in <lb/>
from every section. Higgs <lb/>
say that they sold fifty <lb/>
pairs of sample shoes in a single <lb/>
day. which they attributed to <lb/>
advertising. They say <lb/>
vestment pays them over two <lb/>
per cent. Now all this was <lb/>
not told us with any idea its gets <lb/>
ting into print, but just happened <lb/>
to be the drift of conversation when <lb/>
we were among the mer- <lb/>
chants. There are many others of <lb/>
the Reflector patrons who can <lb/>
tell equally as good results, and all <lb/>
of them are good men to trade <lb/>
with. <lb/>
prop- <lb/>
Corn- <lb/>
THE MAN <lb/>
p BE SEEN EVERY DAY, the man who keeps a fresh supply of <lb/>
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars, <lb/>
TOBACCO, CANNED GOODS, <lb/>
Can be found whenever wanted. You only have to look tor <lb/>
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb/>
And all your wants in the above goods can be supplied. <lb/>
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS TUT UP TO ORDER. <lb/>
A. SPECIALTY. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED IN <lb/>
Luther Sheldon, <lb/>
SASHES, DOORS AND BLINDS, <lb/>
MIXED TAINTS, TIN SHINGLES. FANCY GLASS, BRACKETS, <lb/>
VARNISHES, ROOFING TAPERS. ENAMELED GLASS, STAIR RAIL, <lb/>
Coach Colors in Japan. Plain Sheathing Papers, Cathedral Glass <lb/>
Dry Paints, Plaster or Wall Papers, Venetian Glass, W Mantels, <lb/>
Brushes, Wire Cloth Window Screens, Rubber Rooting I <lb/>
Slate Mantels, <lb/>
Hardware, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty, <lb/>
AND BUILDING MATERIAL OF EVERY DESCRIPTION. <lb/>
Nos. West Sine Market ft Roanoke Ave. I <lb/>
NORFOLK, V-A. <lb/>
W. L. BROWN <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT <lb/>
AND AGENT FOR THE TARBORO OIL MILLS.<lb/>
Highest Cash price paid tor 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 ho superior fertilizer on c market. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY. <lb/>
J. R. MOTE. <lb/>
J G. <lb/>
New Ads <lb/>
Sec advertisement of town <lb/>
for sale by Alex Blow, <lb/>
J. J. Nobles, administrator of AN <lb/>
Teel, advertises a sale of land <lb/>
by order of in this paper. <lb/>
D. D. I Co arc offering <lb/>
bargains in some lines of their <lb/>
goods this week. See advertises <lb/>
in another column. <lb/>
H. Morris Bros., have their new <lb/>
goods to which the attention of the <lb/>
public is called- In clothing they <lb/>
have the very latest styles and fig- <lb/>
their stock of dry goods is <lb/>
equal to the best. <lb/>
W. S- Rawls informs the Kin <lb/>
readers that he has on <lb/>
hand a full line of jewelry, watches, <lb/>
clocks spectacles, silver ware, sew- <lb/>
machines, etc., and wants yon <lb/>
to call and examine them. His long <lb/>
standing him to <lb/>
the public as fully reliable in <lb/>
every branch of the jeweler's <lb/>
before going to press we are <lb/>
informed that the speaking oat at <lb/>
May's Chapel yesterday was a big <lb/>
triumph for Democrats All of <lb/>
our candidates were oat and made <lb/>
speeches they were assisted by <lb/>
Messrs. A. L. Blow and J. H Tuck- <lb/>
Of the Republicans Messrs. J. <lb/>
J. Perkins, B. Wilson and L. H. <lb/>
Wilson were present. Perkins did <lb/>
most of speaking for his side and <lb/>
declared himself a straight-out Re j <lb/>
publican. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST <lb/>
Having just received a fresh lino o the following goods, we are now <lb/>
ready to offer to the public just what they stand in goods <lb/>
at prices that will please the purchaser. <lb/>
WE HAVE IX STOCK <lb/>
STAPLE AND FANCY DRESS GOODS, <lb/>
Dry Goods, <lb/>
SHIRTS COLLARS. <lb/>
BOOTS AND SHOES <lb/>
To fit all who favor us with their <lb/>
Hardware, Nails, Cutlery, Guns, Shot, Powder, <lb/>
Crockery, Glass-ware. Wood and Willow <lb/>
ware, Furniture, Harness, Whips <lb/>
Gail Ax and Railroad Mills Snuff, Chewing <lb/>
and Smoking Tobacco. <lb/>
IN THIS LINE CARRY <lb/>
Tea, Coffee, Sugar, Molasses, Flour, Rice, Meats <lb/>
of different kinds, very best Lard we can <lb/>
buy, Butter, Cheese, Spice, Pepper, <lb/>
Soap both toilet and-Laundry, <lb/>
Star Lye, Ball Lye, <lb/>
Hatches, Candles, Starch, best grade of White <lb/>
Kerosene Oil, Machine Oil, <lb/>
We are a New Firm, but not new men to the public <lb/>
All who stand in need of goods in line are invited to come to see <lb/>
We can and will sell as as any one who sells as good goods as w do. <lb/>
THEY HAVE <lb/>
WE I <lb/>
WHAT <lb/>
our immense stock of new <lb/>
Fall and Winter Goods <lb/>
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS, <lb/>
BOOTS, SHOES, HATS, <lb/>
Notions, Trunks, <lb/>
and all to be found in a first-class Dry <lb/>
Goods establishment. We will be found at our <lb/>
old stand and can supply all your wants with <lb/>
reliable goods at prices as low as be obtain- <lb/>
ed elsewhere. <lb/>
COME AT TO STORE. <lb/>
H. Morris Bros, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
HARRY SKINNER. <lb/>
L. a LATHAM. <lb/>
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN S, CO <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
THE LEADERS IN <lb/>
ALL MS OF STAPLE GOODS. <lb/>
Our Fall and Winter stock of Dry Goods, <lb/>
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, etc., have arrived, and all <lb/>
friends and invited to call and ex- <lb/>
goods and prices. <lb/>
Having purchased the entire mercantile business of John S. Congleton <lb/>
Co., including notes, book accounts and all evidences of debt and mer <lb/>
we solicit their former and increased patronage. <lb/>
Being able to make all purchases cash, getting advantage of <lb/>
discounts, will be enabled to sell as cheaply as any one South of Nor- <lb/>
folk. We shall retain in our employ J. S. Congleton as general <lb/>
of the business, with his former partner as assist <lb/>
ant, 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 reasonable <lb/>
rates to farmers cultivate and harvest their crops, in of to <lb/>
with security. <lb/>
J. L SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE FEE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMBS OLD STAND. <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in Strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
STILL TO THE <lb/>
J. D. Williamson,<lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO <lb/>
CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped with the boat Mechanic, consequently put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and the latest Improved vies. <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are need, you can from <lb/>
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full line of made <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, j <lb/>
the year round, which we will sell as low as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and counties tor past favor hops <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
E. C. GLENN. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT. <lb/>
STANDARD GUANO ACID <lb/>
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb/>
SHELL LIME. PURE DISSOLVED <lb/>
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb/>
Tennessee Wagons, for sale, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C, Mar. 1887. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having qualified as Executor of the <lb/>
Last Win and K. A. By- <lb/>
deceased this day This Is to notify <lb/>
all persons owing the estate of the said <lb/>
R. A. to come forward and set- <lb/>
and all persons holding claims <lb/>
against the said estate will present them <lb/>
to me properly authenticated within <lb/>
twelve months from this date or this no- <lb/>
will be plead In bar of their <lb/>
This the 7th day of September 1888. <lb/>
J. N. BYNUM, <lb/>
I. A. Sugg Atty Executor. <lb/>
S. P ELLIOTT. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The having duly qualified , <lb/>
on the 16th day of Sept., 1888. as ad- <lb/>
of the estate of N. A. Buck, j <lb/>
Is hereby given to all per- I <lb/>
sons owing said estate to make <lb/>
ate payment, and to all creditors of <lb/>
estate to present their claims, properly <lb/>
authenticated, to the undersigned or <lb/>
before the of September 1889, or <lb/>
notice will be plead In bar their <lb/>
MARY J. BUCK, <lb/>
A. Buck . <lb/>
COTTON FACTORS <lb/>
BALTIMORE <lb/>
and <lb/>
NORFOLK <lb/>
Established in Baltimore In 1870. <lb/>
Will open a House In <lb/>
In September, 1887, for the handling <lb/>
sale of cotton, thus giving our <lb/>
then- choice of the two markets.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018906_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
THIS PAPER <lb/>
tag <lb/>
NEW YORK. <lb/>
FILE AT <lb/>
Al-<lb/>
may In for it in <lb/>
Local <lb/>
Houses with <lb/>
J. L. <lb/>
sets of Muff Boas at <lb/>
for Apply <lb/>
to Allen Greenville. H. <lb/>
Nice Lounges <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
Buy your Shirts at <lb/>
The finest Hotter and Cheese is now <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Place for Coal early <lb/>
with E. C. Glenn and save money. <lb/>
and and <lb/>
Clothing at Lang's. <lb/>
a Double Barrel Shot <lb/>
at J. B. Cherey Co's. <lb/>
Fall Onion Sets re <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
An elegant display of all Wool <lb/>
at <lb/>
Bun A. A. Battles war- <lb/>
ranted Calf Shoes <lb/>
of Higgs <lb/>
Ladies Sewed Shoes for at <lb/>
J. B. Co's. <lb/>
Buy your Coal from E- C. Glenn, <lb/>
lowest cash prices. <lb/>
Lace window Curtains with I <lb/>
attachments complete at <lb/>
Point Lace Floor has been tried <lb/>
and is the best and at the. <lb/>
Old Store. <lb/>
Valuable property hi the town of, <lb/>
Greenville for sale. For terms and <lb/>
particulars apply to L. W. Lawrence. <lb/>
For J. B. Cherry Co. can <lb/>
give you a Men's Boot that will <lb/>
prise yon. <lb/>
The sale of the Boss Famous <lb/>
Milk Biscuit during ex- <lb/>
ceded the sales of the former year <lb/>
pounds. Try them. at. <lb/>
the Brick Store. <lb/>
A full line of and <lb/>
woolen and merino Vests <lb/>
at Lang's. <lb/>
Look on page for appoints <lb/>
menU of speakers. <lb/>
buys a Whole-stock, Doubles <lb/>
sole, High cut Man's Shoe at <lb/>
J. B. Cheery Co's. <lb/>
Try a pair of E. P. <lb/>
Reed Co's Hand <lb/>
Made Shoes at <lb/>
Higgs <lb/>
Oct. 3rd-500 lbs P. <lb/>
Sweet Scotch Snuff, <lb/>
the best, cheapest, cleanest and <lb/>
healthiest Snuff in the world, <lb/>
per lb. at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
If want the best Cook Stove <lb/>
boy the Acorn, with ventilated oven <lb/>
of B- S. Clark ft Co. <lb/>
Desiring to close my business in <lb/>
Greenville by 1st I offer my <lb/>
entire stock of Stoves, Tinware, <lb/>
at greatly reduced prices. Come at <lb/>
once and secure a bargain. <lb/>
L. C. Terrell. <lb/>
All we want out of this is <lb/>
n honest, square living. And if <lb/>
square dealing, pluck and energy <lb/>
will give it to us we will be Mire to <lb/>
win. We would respectfully ask the <lb/>
public for a portion of their patron- <lb/>
age in the Beef business. We will <lb/>
keep on hand the Beet to be <lb/>
bad in the market during the sea- <lb/>
son. Please leave your orders with <lb/>
US. CO. <lb/>
Cotton cents. <lb/>
Cotton opens rapidly. <lb/>
Don't forget to register. <lb/>
Frost several times recently. <lb/>
Bead all our advertisements. <lb/>
Election lour weeks off yesterday <lb/>
The county tickets are now before <lb/>
Ho., do like the Republican <lb/>
ticket t <lb/>
The Farmer's Alliance met here <lb/>
on Friday last. <lb/>
The election on. Get to <lb/>
work. Democrats. <lb/>
All the churches in town had <lb/>
vices last Sunday. <lb/>
The fair began <lb/>
day and will close Friday. <lb/>
There was quite a for <lb/>
change in town on Saturday. <lb/>
Don't forget your subscription <lb/>
when yon bring cotton to town. <lb/>
A circus started Southward and <lb/>
failed through financial difficulties. <lb/>
Many or Pitt county farmers are <lb/>
covering their cotton with burlaps. <lb/>
The crowd in town Saturday was <lb/>
large, making it look like a genuine <lb/>
fall day. <lb/>
As cold weather approaches look <lb/>
to the wants of the suffering of the <lb/>
community. <lb/>
Neighbor Glenn is making things <lb/>
stir in the cotton market. lie is an <lb/>
active buyer. <lb/>
The registration books are now <lb/>
open. See that your name is prop- <lb/>
entered. <lb/>
The Reflector circulation <lb/>
grows. It is twenty four larger this <lb/>
week than last. <lb/>
The first oysters appeared here <lb/>
Friday. Joe Forbes the hon- <lb/>
ors for getting the first. <lb/>
Flour and pork both have taken <lb/>
rapid advance in the last two weeks, <lb/>
while cotton has declined. <lb/>
The Tax Collector begins bis <lb/>
rounds this week. Watch his <lb/>
and meet <lb/>
The water in the river was get- <lb/>
ting low last week bat the rain Sat <lb/>
started it up again. <lb/>
H. F- Keel Co's livery stable <lb/>
have suspended a large sign across <lb/>
the street in front of their place. <lb/>
Miss Nannie Hooker is sick. <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner is in <lb/>
more on business. <lb/>
Mrs. Violetta has been <lb/>
sick for several days. <lb/>
Mr. John A. Moore returned Mon <lb/>
day from Ala. <lb/>
Mrs. J. J. Corey was quite severe <lb/>
burned a few days ago. <lb/>
Mrs. Virginia Banks of <lb/>
burg. Miss., is her sister, <lb/>
Mrs. J. B- <lb/>
The family of Mr. A. N. Ryan re- <lb/>
tamed last week from their summer <lb/>
visit to Winchester, Vs. <lb/>
Pearl Morris, of <lb/>
Sarah Cohen, of are <lb/>
visaing Miss Minnie <lb/>
Rev. J. W. left <lb/>
day Tar River <lb/>
which meet near <lb/>
Master Willie Fowler, who <lb/>
been staying with Mr. D. D. Has- <lb/>
returned to Oxford yesterday. J <lb/>
Mrs. Docket., at the Institute, <lb/>
was quite sick the first of the week. <lb/>
We are glad to learn she is <lb/>
Deputy Sheriff R. W. re <lb/>
turned Friday from Raleigh where j <lb/>
he had been to take prisoners to the <lb/>
penitentiary. <lb/>
A little daughter of Mr. John M. <lb/>
King, who lived with relatives in <lb/>
township, died suddenly <lb/>
on morning. <lb/>
Mi-.- Annie Bynum and Miss <lb/>
Maggie Sheppard, Farm- <lb/>
spent from Saturday to Mon- <lb/>
day visiting Mrs. B- S- Sheppard. <lb/>
Messrs. Jacob Cohen, A. L. <lb/>
Henry Mania and Carl <lb/>
of Tarboro, spent hist <lb/>
Sunday with friends in this town. <lb/>
Mr. John the merchant <lb/>
tailor of LaGrange, was in town <lb/>
Monday orders. He has a <lb/>
large trade at this place and his <lb/>
work always gives satisfaction. <lb/>
Mr. S. M. Schultz and bride <lb/>
rived in Greenville last Thursday, <lb/>
and made their home at the <lb/>
of Mr. A. Our <lb/>
people cordially welcome Mrs. <lb/>
Schultz this town. <lb/>
Rev. It. B. John returned from <lb/>
Chapel Hill last Thursday and fill- <lb/>
ed his regular appointments in the <lb/>
Methodist Church, Sunday. His <lb/>
family, who had been visiting rat <lb/>
lives in section of the State, <lb/>
returned with him. <lb/>
Bar. C. M. Andersen and wife, of <lb/>
Morganton are visiting their <lb/>
Mrs. D. Baskets. Mr. <lb/>
son was a few ago pastor of <lb/>
the Methodist here and has <lb/>
many warm friends Greenville. <lb/>
We were glad to have a call <lb/>
him Monday. <lb/>
The fairs do not seem to arouse <lb/>
great interest this year. Perhaps <lb/>
it is all centering in the election. <lb/>
The Odd Fellows lodge of this <lb/>
town has seat to relieve the <lb/>
Odd Fellows of Jacksonville. <lb/>
The a t a a in a r <lb/>
sold and taken to other service. <lb/>
future she will run <lb/>
Creek. <lb/>
The at the close of Miss <lb/>
Novella dancing school last, <lb/>
Friday night was largely attended <lb/>
and the participants it <lb/>
greatly. Miss Higgs had a very <lb/>
successful class and hear that <lb/>
site will another at once. <lb/>
When They <lb/>
As the time, of meetings of the <lb/>
Alliance is not generally <lb/>
known, we have requested lo <lb/>
publish id -in. The Greenville <lb/>
some setts on the wound <lb/>
in each month. county <lb/>
swain up m the <lb/>
Friday la January. April. July sad <lb/>
October.<lb/>
a a king <lb/>
SAMPLE H <lb/>
are <lb/>
show <lb/>
I he. <lb/>
have ill <lb/>
stocks and propose <lb/>
to keep them on hand to look at, <lb/>
hence are selling at very low prices. <lb/>
If you want to make purchases <lb/>
come to Greenville, and always look <lb/>
over the advertising columns the <lb/>
Reflector before starting out. <lb/>
Record <lb/>
At the conclusion of the morning <lb/>
sermon on Sunday Rev. J. W. Wild- <lb/>
man read a report of the year's <lb/>
work done by the Baptist Church <lb/>
here, which was to be sent to the <lb/>
Tar River The Church <lb/>
has ninety odd members and for <lb/>
the year ending October Isl, raised <lb/>
for all purposes the sum of 91429.50. <lb/>
The pastor congratulated the church <lb/>
upon having done such good work. <lb/>
Gin <lb/>
Mr. W. M. who at <lb/>
in Greene county, on <lb/>
Monday, tells us that the gin house <lb/>
Messrs. Holton ft <lb/>
that place, burned down on Mon <lb/>
day morning. Three bales cotton <lb/>
and s quantity of seed were <lb/>
with the The loss <lb/>
is estimated at with no <lb/>
The fire is supposed to <lb/>
have from a match that <lb/>
passed through the gin into the lint <lb/>
mom as it was first discovered <lb/>
there. <lb/>
Bead This Again <lb/>
When you sell your don't <lb/>
look for the editor on the street to <lb/>
pay him subscription, but come <lb/>
at once to the office. Nearly all Of <lb/>
our time is required office, giving <lb/>
us but little chance to get on the <lb/>
office is conveniently <lb/>
located and there is no danger of <lb/>
not finding anyone there who can <lb/>
give you a receipt. Now come, on <lb/>
like honest men and pay honest <lb/>
debt. Don't wait until it becomes <lb/>
necessary to send you a dun through <lb/>
the or to run you down on <lb/>
the street. <lb/>
The boy who stole the horse and <lb/>
buggy from Mr. G. F. Evans, last <lb/>
week, was captured Tarboro and <lb/>
the stolen property recovered. <lb/>
The Alliance in this <lb/>
county is booming. Their member- <lb/>
ship increases rapidly, so the <lb/>
Mr. W. A. Fleming tells us. <lb/>
At the meeting of the V. M. D. C. <lb/>
last Friday night, the Mr. <lb/>
E. A. made a stirring speech. <lb/>
It was complimented by ail present. <lb/>
colored women and children <lb/>
tan be seen every returning <lb/>
to town from the fields. It is <lb/>
the best season of the year with <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Messrs. R. S. Clark Co. the <lb/>
other day presented us with a <lb/>
checker board, set of checkers and <lb/>
a yard stick, all with the <lb/>
Acorn cook stove. <lb/>
Col. I. A. Sugg went to <lb/>
ville, Greene county, and matte <lb/>
a speech last Saturday. He dis- <lb/>
sound Democratic principles <lb/>
and his speeches do much good. <lb/>
The farmers hereabout are very <lb/>
much down on the bagging trust <lb/>
and are determined that their aid <lb/>
shall be to breaking it down. <lb/>
There is little doubt their success <lb/>
so doing. <lb/>
The county canvass opened at <lb/>
May's Chapel yesterday. The can- <lb/>
will at <lb/>
X Roads to-day. We hope the <lb/>
pie will turn out largely at all the <lb/>
appointments. <lb/>
Mr. C. D. Rountree, Registrar <lb/>
; for that of Greenville town- <lb/>
ship South of the river, has the reg- <lb/>
; at books at the office of <lb/>
j Col. I. A. Sugg. Call on him there <lb/>
get name down right. <lb/>
Miss Bessie Jarvis was soliciting <lb/>
j contributions a days ago to <lb/>
chase blankets for Mr. Cobb, a <lb/>
needy invalid of this town. <lb/>
has rich blessings in store for <lb/>
messengers of charity. <lb/>
The Farmers. <lb/>
There was such small <lb/>
dance at the meeting the Farms <lb/>
the first in <lb/>
this month that their question for <lb/>
discussion was postponed until the <lb/>
first Monday in November. The <lb/>
question is is BOB <lb/>
to the the cropper or <lb/>
hired It is hoped a large <lb/>
attendance will at the next meet- <lb/>
It costs nothing to belong to <lb/>
the Institute, but it <lb/>
a meeting held once a month to <lb/>
have free open discussion of such <lb/>
subjects as may be of interest to <lb/>
The farmers certainly <lb/>
be benefited by meeting together <lb/>
for such discussions as many as <lb/>
possible should be present at every <lb/>
steeling. <lb/>
Thanks. <lb/>
Last night after <lb/>
we heard somebody at our back <lb/>
piazza. When went to the door, <lb/>
found a member of our church, and <lb/>
a colored man with a large box in a <lb/>
wheel barrow. arc you to- <lb/>
night, Bro. John Here are some <lb/>
things our people sent When <lb/>
we examined the contents of the <lb/>
box, we some of nearly every- <lb/>
thing kept a first class grocery <lb/>
store, from very numerous friends. <lb/>
The are valuable par e, <lb/>
and will be enjoyed three times a <lb/>
day are gone. That <lb/>
won't lie soon. My wife I talk <lb/>
ed that night of how kind the <lb/>
pie of Greenville had been to <lb/>
year, as we had done many times <lb/>
before. We appreciate this <lb/>
as we have all others. We <lb/>
thank you, dear friends, the full- <lb/>
est meaning of the term, and hope <lb/>
to be able to more fully repay you <lb/>
than we have yet done. <lb/>
Affectionately yours, <lb/>
R. B. John. <lb/>
There are over students at <lb/>
the Institute now. A Debating So- <lb/>
for the boys and a Literary So- <lb/>
for the girls have been organ- <lb/>
The girls will adopt a nice <lb/>
budge for their society. <lb/>
Mr. J. B. of this town, <lb/>
made an excellent speech before the <lb/>
Y. M. D. C at Bethel on last <lb/>
day. There was a large attendance <lb/>
and will result in much <lb/>
good to the Democracy. <lb/>
The quantity of cotton coming ins <lb/>
to market increases, but <lb/>
receipts are yet very light. <lb/>
Hope our farmer friends will do bet- <lb/>
by the Reflector. All due <lb/>
the paper is now needed. <lb/>
Whenever the farmers of the <lb/>
Sooth get their products ready for <lb/>
market the price of provisions ad- <lb/>
This seems the <lb/>
case. Look at pork floor now. <lb/>
j This is another argument that the <lb/>
I farmer should make his supplies at <lb/>
I bone. <lb/>
Announcement. <lb/>
Everything suited for personal wear <lb/>
and including all the <lb/>
latest novelties from the leading <lb/>
fashion of the country, at <lb/>
prices that will be appreciated by <lb/>
the economical buyers everywhere. <lb/>
Dress Goods. <lb/>
Elegant all wool and <lb/>
silk warp, Flannels, <lb/>
Cloth, Merinos, Cash- <lb/>
meres, Faille, Silk, and <lb/>
Silks, Moire, and Satin and <lb/>
Grain Stripes. <lb/>
TRIMMING. <lb/>
Silk Braids, Braid- <lb/>
ed and Headed Sets, Plushes, Fur <lb/>
Trimming, Feather Trimming <lb/>
Ribbons in all shades and widths <lb/>
desired. <lb/>
CLOAKING. <lb/>
Flannel Suiting, Eider Down in <lb/>
superb designs. <lb/>
WRAPS. <lb/>
Jackets, Plush Wraps, <lb/>
New Markets, Circulars, our <lb/>
own special bargains In the <lb/>
HOSIERY. <lb/>
Tarn and a <lb/>
full line of novelties adapted to the <lb/>
season and style. <lb/>
Superb <lb/>
screws, Diagonals, Foreign <lb/>
and Worsteds in all the leading <lb/>
including double single <lb/>
breasted Prince round and <lb/>
square cut sacks, four but- <lb/>
ton frocks and Cutaway and Full <lb/>
Dress Costumes. We are agents <lb/>
for the celebrated Rough and Tum- <lb/>
Clothing. <lb/>
SHOES. <lb/>
A glance at our stock will <lb/>
you that our styles are <lb/>
our shapes are especially <lb/>
adapted to this climate and our <lb/>
right. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
Tribute of Respect. <lb/>
Mrs. Mary K. whoso <lb/>
death we noticed a few weeks since, <lb/>
was one of the most devout Chris- <lb/>
women of our acquaintance. <lb/>
She was one of the oldest and most- <lb/>
faithful members the Baptist <lb/>
Church, and was the best informed <lb/>
as to its history and work. No <lb/>
member of the church was a more <lb/>
earnest laborer than she, and none <lb/>
was more regular attendance up. <lb/>
on the services. At preaching, <lb/>
prayer meeting and Sunday School <lb/>
she could be found In her accustom <lb/>
ed seat and always delighted in the <lb/>
service of lier Maker. Her death <lb/>
proved a severe loss to both the <lb/>
church and the community and her <lb/>
place cannot be filled. As a tribute <lb/>
respect her memory the follow- <lb/>
was read before the Sunday <lb/>
School on the morning the 7th, <lb/>
and adopted as the sentiment of <lb/>
the <lb/>
friend, our pupil, our teach- <lb/>
our sister, Mary K. has <lb/>
gone home to her Heavenly Father. <lb/>
In her lite she gave us many <lb/>
of pure Christian usefulness. <lb/>
of abiding faith in God nu <lb/>
changing love in Redeem, <lb/>
Her walk in life was upright <lb/>
and consistent profession. <lb/>
Her duty to her maker was well de- <lb/>
fined and cheerfully performed. <lb/>
Hers was the life or the pore, sweet, <lb/>
quiet Christian many virtues <lb/>
become a priceless heritage to us <lb/>
who are left behind her. While we <lb/>
deplore her loss we that for <lb/>
her to live was Christ but to die was <lb/>
eternal gain. As she was faithful, <lb/>
true, obedient and always <lb/>
ding the work of tho Lord, so <lb/>
may we also live that we too shall <lb/>
meet her with our Savior on the <lb/>
other <lb/>
You are requested to come for- <lb/>
ward and pay your subscription. <lb/>
ATS <lb/>
Much could said of our hand- <lb/>
some assortment but limited puce <lb/>
prevents. A glance will suffice to <lb/>
show that our selections were right. <lb/>
Carpets, Oilcloths, Etc. <lb/>
Extra Super, Three <lb/>
Ply, Ingrains, and Tapestry. 4-4 <lb/>
0-4 8-4 10-4 Oil Cloths. <lb/>
Beautiful designs in Rugs. <lb/>
A complete assortment <lb/>
in every department at <lb/>
prices that will induce <lb/>
you to buy. A call is <lb/>
all we ask. <lb/>
To Fit Everybody, <lb/>
AT PER CENT BELOW <lb/>
NEW COST <lb/>
HIGGS k <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR BARGAINS ON <lb/>
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, <lb/>
Whole Stock Brogans per Pair and Upwards. <lb/>
and other fine Dress Goods. <lb/>
WE ARK AGENTS FOR <lb/>
SON'S FINE SHOES. <lb/>
Call to See <lb/>
Brown Hooker. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
J, J. VS K. L. <lb/>
To K. h. <lb/>
notice that on Hie 14th No- <lb/>
1888, motion will be In <lb/>
above entitled notion by the Plaintiff to <lb/>
renew <lb/>
to Hie collection of <lb/>
at which lime yon will <lb/>
appear at my in N. <lb/>
It any why Judge- <lb/>
shall not <lb/>
United thereon against yon. This <lb/>
k. a. Move <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court. <lb/>
Look to Your <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having before the k of the <lb/>
Superior Court Pitt county m <lb/>
tor to the Will mill Testament, of the <lb/>
late Hardy the <lb/>
day of 1888. U hereby <lb/>
to the Creditor of to <lb/>
present their claim i to me properly an- <lb/>
on or before the of <lb/>
September or notice will be <lb/>
In bur of the recovery. All <lb/>
Indebted to laid estate notified to <lb/>
make payment to inc. <lb/>
Mb of September 1888. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
NOTICE. <lb/>
J. Nobles. Teel. <lb/>
vs <lb/>
Teel others. <lb/>
to order decree of <lb/>
Superior Court of county In the j <lb/>
entitled Special Proceeding, I shall <lb/>
tor sale at public auction on Monday j <lb/>
November 6th, the Court Mouse <lb/>
door In Greenville, N. C. the following <lb/>
real personal to- ; <lb/>
One tract of land adjoining <lb/>
White-head, H. May and <lb/>
ere, containing sixty acres, more or <lb/>
less, one mule, cart, four plow and <lb/>
one plate, one dish. of wile <lb/>
cash. . <lb/>
of Alfred Ted. <lb/>
Moore i <lb/>
Sale of Town Property. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt county, made on the <lb/>
day of In a certain Special <lb/>
Proceeding therein pending, entitled I. <lb/>
C. Latham E. <lb/>
I will on Monday, November <lb/>
sell at public sale to the bidder <lb/>
before tho Court House door In Green- <lb/>
ville, a lot or parcel of land <lb/>
SM In the town of Greenville and <lb/>
ed as follow, Hounded on <lb/>
North by Third street, on the Wet by <lb/>
Washington street on the South by lot <lb/>
number HO and on the East by lot number i <lb/>
and known In the plan of said town <lb/>
as lot number The said lot will be <lb/>
sold subject to the life estate of Mis Ann <lb/>
therein. Terms of sale cash. <lb/>
L. BLOW, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
has just received and wall <lb/>
selected of <lb/>
CLOTHING. BOOTS. SHOES. <lb/>
which In superior quality and make can- <lb/>
not and will Mil them at <lb/>
Lowest Bottom Prices. <lb/>
CALL LOOK <lb/>
BARGAINS BARGAINS <lb/>
To close out, AT COST, all the Dry <lb/>
and Dress Goods on hand. <lb/>
Produce taken In <lb/>
Two doors South of Store <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
T. 1ST <lb/>
ALL AND <lb/>
GOODS. <lb/>
WE DEFY COMPETITION <lb/>
And Invite all lo Our Stock. <lb/>
It is the most complete and varied of any <lb/>
in town. Time and space prevents our quo- <lb/>
ting prices, but rest assured we will <lb/>
NOT BE UNDERSOLD. <lb/>
Jeweler. <lb/>
If you want something nice in the way of <lb/>
Jewelry, <lb/>
Sewing Machines, <lb/>
come to the old A <lb/>
large near stock Just received. <lb/>
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and Sewing <lb/>
Machine repaired and warranted. <lb/>
W S. RAWLS<lb/>
Probably no one thing has caused such <lb/>
a general revival of trade at <lb/>
Drug Wore as their giving to <lb/>
their of so many free trial not- <lb/>
ties of Dr. King's New Discovery for <lb/>
Consumption. Their trade is simply <lb/>
very valuable article <lb/>
from the fact that it always cures and <lb/>
never disappoints. Coughs, Colds, <lb/>
Bronchitis. Croup, and all th-oat and <lb/>
all throat and diseases quickly cur- <lb/>
ed. You can teat It buying by <lb/>
citing a trial free, Si. <lb/>
very bottle <lb/>
FOR CASH <lb/>
due Inch French Mill, <lb/>
cost will sill <lb/>
One cost <lb/>
sell for r. <lb/>
One Centennial Orals Kan, cost <lb/>
will sell for MM. <lb/>
One Grant Grain Kan, cost will <lb/>
sell for <lb/>
One No Mill, cost lit, will tell <lb/>
for m. <lb/>
One No Iced Mill, cost HO, will sell <lb/>
for U. <lb/>
One gallon Farm Holler, cost <lb/>
will sell <lb/>
One second hand Georgia Gin, saws, <lb/>
cost SOy, will sell for <lb/>
Hide Feed Cutters, cost <lb/>
will sell for <lb/>
The above goods will lie sold for the <lb/>
named figures cash. Come early and <lb/>
cure bargains, <lb/>
HASKETT CO. <lb/>
Ml TO BIG CLOCK <lb/>
Moses <lb/>
A KINK LOT <lb/>
M Jewelry, Clock and <lb/>
FOR SALE CHEAP. <lb/>
All kinds of Watch and Clock Work <lb/>
repaired In Workmanlike Manner and <lb/>
warranted months. <lb/>
MOSES <lb/>
Dress <lb/>
line Slinks lints, <lb/>
Ostrich Tips, tuns, <lb/>
And everything needed to complete a Lady's Costume. <lb/>
will find that we carry the most complete and best <lb/>
stock of and <lb/>
the, Stood of <lb/>
CLOTH IN Q <lb/>
Of town. Nothing SECOND-HAND or <lb/>
CLASS, but PURELY FIRST-CLASS GOODS, purchased <lb/>
with the Hard Cash and will be sold at <lb/>
PRICES TO SUIT THE TIMES <lb/>
Of articles needed in the House and Kitchen <lb/>
we are chock block, and can give you great <lb/>
bargains on anything from a Frying Pan to a <lb/>
CHINA TEA SET <lb/>
Our stock in this line is very complete and we <lb/>
say without fear of successful contradiction <lb/>
that we can cause you to rejoice when you ex- <lb/>
our goods and learn our prices. <lb/>
in general we are offering at blizzard prices. <lb/>
So what you Mil it <lb/>
RACK ET <lb/>
and you will be sure to get it. <lb/>
We Particularly invite Country Merchants to vis- <lb/>
it our store. We can give them immense BARGAINS.<lb/>
Just across the street door to Harry Skin- <lb/>
we carry a full and complete line of <lb/>
Heavy and Fancy Groceries, <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
REASONS WHY YOU SHOULD TRADE WITH <lb/>
lat. We deal fairly with every one. <lb/>
2nd. no good. <lb/>
3rd. We treat you gentlemen. <lb/>
4th. If you an article from it la not what rap <lb/>
resented we take It back and re fond money. <lb/>
And n reasons we could If want of apace did sot <lb/>
prevent. <lb/>
everybody, and be convinced that what <lb/>
we is true. Respectfully, <lb/>
RYAN REDDING. <lb/>
Or you might miss some of our great bargains<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018906_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
m I A. SHEPPARD <lb/>
JUST ADDED TO STOCK <lb/>
Goods, and has secured <lb/>
an I need assistant. <lb/>
ft can now be filled on the short- <lb/>
eat notice. Dry and Wet Stamping for <lb/>
and embroidery neatly executed <lb/>
While in the Northern markets she l <lb/>
saw careful to select only the best ant <lb/>
latest style goods in the Millinery line, am <lb/>
prepared to offer r- special In <lb/>
Corrected weekly by <lb/>
Schultz, Wholesale and Grocers. <lb/>
BARBER SHOP. <lb/>
The undersigned baa fitted up his Shop Ir <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS STYLE, <lb/>
and any person desiring a <lb/>
CLEAN A PLEASANT SHAVE <lb/>
CUT, SHAM TOO, <lb/>
r anything in the <lb/>
TO 1ST <lb/>
Is invited to give me a trial. i Eggs <lb/>
guaranteed or no charge made <lb/>
ALFRED CULLY <lb/>
Mess Pork <lb/>
Bulk Sides <lb/>
Bacon Sides <lb/>
Bacon Shoulders <lb/>
Pitt County Hams <lb/>
Sugar Cured Hams <lb/>
Flour <lb/>
Coffee <lb/>
Brown Sugar <lb/>
Granulated Sugar <lb/>
Syrup <lb/>
Tobacco <lb/>
Lost <lb/>
Butter <lb/>
Cheese <lb/>
summer inn <lb/>
BRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving. Catting Dressing Hair. <lb/>
THE GLASS FRONT, <lb/>
the Opera at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
everything in my line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
With all the improved appliance. ; new <lb/>
and comfortable chair-. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at figures <lb/>
for k outside of <lb/>
promptly executed. Very <lb/>
HERBERT EDMONDS. <lb/>
Meal <lb/>
Corn <lb/>
Irish Potatoes <lb/>
G. A. Salt <lb/>
Liverpool Salt <lb/>
Bags <lb/>
Beeswax <lb/>
Bread <lb/>
Star <lb/>
Kerosene Oil <lb/>
15.75 to 16.25<lb/>
to 5.75 <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
H to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to 1.00 <lb/>
toW <lb/>
1.00 <lb/>
2.25 <lb/>
to M <lb/>
0.25 <lb/>
8.10 <lb/>
to <lb/>
Electoral Canvass. <lb/>
Geo. II. Brown, Jr., and Geo. A. <lb/>
Sparrow, Democratic and <lb/>
can Candidates for Presidential <lb/>
Electors, will address the people In <lb/>
joint discussion as follows <lb/>
county, <lb/>
Wednesday October <lb/>
Martin comity, Thurs- <lb/>
day October 11th. <lb/>
Bethel, Pitt Friday <lb/>
12th. <lb/>
Pitt county, Saturday <lb/>
October 13th. <lb/>
Other Appointments will be <lb/>
Speaking will commence at noon, <lb/>
changed by Commit <lb/>
John Small, <lb/>
Dem. Ex. Com. <lb/>
and all other machines repaired at short <lb/>
at home or at hop. Iron <lb/>
Brass Turning done the best manner. <lb/>
Cylinders bored. Models made to order. <lb/>
Lock repaired. Keys made or fitted, Pips <lb/>
and threaded, Gins repaired in best <lb/>
manner. Brine mi work. General <lb/>
Jobbing done In O. P. <lb/>
Greenville X. C. <lb/>
WILMINGTON A R. B. <lb/>
and branches Condensed Schedule. <lb/>
GOING SOUTH. <lb/>
No No In, <lb/>
Dated -s Fast Mall, daily <lb/>
daily ex Sun. <lb/>
Weldon pin <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Selma <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
L Warsaw <lb/>
Lr Magnolia <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
M am<lb/>
.-, <lb/>
OB <lb/>
north <lb/>
No No <lb/>
daily <lb/>
pm am<lb/>
its <lb/>
am <lb/>
I a <lb/>
II <lb/>
No M, <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
ti <lb/>
I am <lb/>
SO<lb/>
If i <lb/>
iS <lb/>
M SO am <lb/>
pm <lb/>
; n <lb/>
. pin <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
A r Goldsboro <lb/>
Lt Fayetteville <lb/>
Ar Selma <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar t N <lb/>
Daily pm <lb/>
Train en Neck Branch <lb/>
leaves for Scotland at 1.00 <lb/>
ling, leaves Scotland Neck <lb/>
A. M. daily Sunday. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N via <lb/>
Raleigh R. B. except <lb/>
P M. Sunday E P M. <lb/>
N C, M. M. <lb/>
Returning leaves William-ton, daily <lb/>
except HI A M. A <lb/>
M, arrive Tarboro, N C, IS A M, SO <lb/>
A M. <lb/>
Train on Midland N C leaves <lb/>
Goldsboro except M, <lb/>
Smith Held. N c. A Re- <lb/>
turning leaves X C A If. <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. N C. A M. <lb/>
Train on Nashville Branch leaves <lb/>
Mount at M. arrive- Nashville <lb/>
P M, Spring Hone P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring in A M. <lb/>
A M. arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
M daily, Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch haves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton, daily, except Sunday, at ti <lb/>
M. Returning leave Clinton at S A <lb/>
If, connecting at Warsaw Nos. <lb/>
Southbound train on <lb/>
Branch is No. SI. Northbound is <lb/>
SO. Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. South will stop only at <lb/>
Wilton, and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb/>
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb/>
say via Bay Line. <lb/>
Trains make close for all <lb/>
points North via Richmond and Wash- <lb/>
trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb/>
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb/>
JOHN K. DIVINE. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. KENLY. Transportation <lb/>
M. EMERSON <lb/>
Tip Transportation Company.<lb/>
Forbes, Greenville. President <lb/>
J. U. Cherry, <lb/>
S. Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Cat. R. Washington, Gen <lb/>
The Line for travel on Tar <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer is the finest <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. She has <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Kitted up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb/>
and convenience of Ladies. <lb/>
POLITE ATTENTIVE <lb/>
A first-class Table furnished with the <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer GREENVILLE Is <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb/>
an Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Leaves Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at e o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Freights received daily and through <lb/>
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb/>
I, J. CHEERY, Agent <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
MACHINERY.- <lb/>
I o my friends of Pitt and adjoining <lb/>
counties. Through special arrangements <lb/>
with my companies I can sell the best <lb/>
Saw Mil's, Hiss, Presses, <lb/>
and other Machinery from to IS per <lb/>
cent cheaper than any else. All <lb/>
Machinery warranted and entire <lb/>
faction guaranteed before a cent is paid. <lb/>
Send for and full particulars. <lb/>
E. G. COX, <lb/>
Dunn, N. C. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR <lb/>
GREENVILLE. -V. C. <lb/>
an <lb/>
k Warning. <lb/>
The mode of death's approach are <lb/>
various, and statistics show conclusively <lb/>
that more persons die from diseases of the <lb/>
Throat Lungs than any other. It is <lb/>
probable that everyone, without <lb/>
receives vast numbers of Tubercle <lb/>
Germs into the the system and where <lb/>
these germ-, fall upon suitable soil they <lb/>
into life and develop, at first slowly <lb/>
and is shown by a slight tickling <lb/>
in the throat and if allowed to con- <lb/>
their ravages they extend to the <lb/>
lungs producing Consumption and to the <lb/>
bead, 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 is dangerous <lb/>
and may lose you your life. As soon as <lb/>
feel that something is wrong with <lb/>
your Throat, Lungs or Nostrils, obtain a <lb/>
bottle of German Syrup. It <lb/>
will give yon immediate relief. <lb/>
Commercial School <lb/>
Washington, N. C, <lb/>
Smith's System of Modern and <lb/>
cal Business Education thoroughly taught <lb/>
by a regular graduate of Lexington, <lb/>
College. Rapid Calculation and Pen- <lb/>
Free to those stud- <lb/>
Rook-keeping. Regular Fall <lb/>
opens October 1st 1888. Winter <lb/>
opens 7th Terms <lb/>
very low. Beard from to <lb/>
Week. Tuition 8.10.00 for full course. <lb/>
Students can enter at any time. For <lb/>
full particulars address <lb/>
A. II. WILKINSON. <lb/>
Principal. <lb/>
Mrs. B II. Home begs leave to an- <lb/>
to the ladies of Pitt county and <lb/>
that she has again resumed bus- <lb/>
at the old stand formerly occupied <lb/>
by Alfred Forbes better known as his <lb/>
Store. And has Just returned from <lb/>
the Northern Cities with a complete and <lb/>
entirely new stock of <lb/>
which she is offering extremely low for <lb/>
CASH. I have also secured the services <lb/>
of Mrs. Hull a first-class Trimmer who <lb/>
will he pleased to serve the public in the <lb/>
most fastidious manner. Mrs Hull is <lb/>
well known to many of you as she has <lb/>
worked me before Thanking you <lb/>
very liberal the <lb/>
pa st I hope by fair dealing you will <lb/>
give me a continuance of the same. <lb/>
MS. B. II <lb/>
MILLINERY STORE OF <lb/>
T. <lb/>
lately been repaired and fitted up <lb/>
and she has just received display <lb/>
of New for <lb/>
FALL AND WINTER <lb/>
j Besides her usual line of trimmed and <lb/>
Hats, Ornaments and general <lb/>
millinery goods, she has the prettiest <lb/>
stock of Silks, shaded Rib- <lb/>
Games, etc., in the market. Give <lb/>
her a call st the Old Stand. <lb/>
Congressional Canvass. <lb/>
There will be a joint discussion of <lb/>
the issues of campaign between <lb/>
Hon. T. Skinner, Democratic <lb/>
candidate for Congress, and Mr. K. <lb/>
A. White, the Republican candidate, <lb/>
at time and places, <lb/>
Mill, county, <lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 10th, a. m. <lb/>
Beaufort comity, <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Thursday, Oct. A. M. <lb/>
Pantego, Beaufort county, Friday, <lb/>
Oct. M. <lb/>
Hyde county, Saturday, <lb/>
Oct. P. M. <lb/>
Swan Quarter, Hyde county, Mon- <lb/>
day, Oct. 15th, a. M. <lb/>
Lake Landing, Hyde county, <lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. 16th, A. at <lb/>
Hyde county, <lb/>
day, Oct. 17th, r. m. <lb/>
county, Sat- <lb/>
Oct. P. <lb/>
Martin county. Tues- <lb/>
day, Oct. 23rd, A. M. <lb/>
Martin county, <lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. 24th, M. <lb/>
The Executive Committees of <lb/>
each county are requested to <lb/>
these by band <lb/>
bills and posters, and to make all <lb/>
local arrangements. <lb/>
Jno. H. Small. <lb/>
Hem. Ex. Com. <lb/>
He love I am. sorry to dis- <lb/>
appoint you about the picnic, but my <lb/>
trotter has a lame That's <lb/>
We've got plenty Salvation Oil. <lb/>
The Detroit Free Fiend been <lb/>
punning on Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. <lb/>
His is only gratitude, for all thinking <lb/>
men know its <lb/>
Appointments <lb/>
Tor Horn. P. Tow and T. t. <lb/>
Hon. Daniel G. Fowle, Democrat <lb/>
candidate Governor, and Hon. <lb/>
T. P. Davidson, <lb/>
date for Attorney General, will ad- <lb/>
dress the people on the issues of <lb/>
campaign at following times <lb/>
and <lb/>
Thursday, Oct. Carthage, <lb/>
Moore Co. <lb/>
Friday, Oct. <lb/>
Co, <lb/>
Saturday, Oct. Maxton, Robe- <lb/>
son Co. <lb/>
Monday, Oct. <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. Co- <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Thursday, Oct. Washington <lb/>
Pender Co. <lb/>
Friday Oct. <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Saturday, Oct. Clinton, <lb/>
son Co. <lb/>
Monday, Oct. Elizabeth City, <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. Chows <lb/>
an Co. <lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. Plymouth, <lb/>
Washington Co. <lb/>
Thursday, Oct. Washington, <lb/>
Beaufort Co. <lb/>
Saturday Oct. Quarter, <lb/>
Hyde Co. <lb/>
Monday, Oct. Stonewall, Pam <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Tuesday, Oct. Kinston, Lenoir <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Wednesday, Oct. Snow Hill, <lb/>
Greene Co. <lb/>
Thursday, Nov. Pitt <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Friday, Nov. Tarboro, Edge- <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Saturday, Nov. Goldsboro, <lb/>
Wayne Co. <lb/>
The local committees are urgently <lb/>
requested to advertise these <lb/>
by hand bills and <lb/>
Spier <lb/>
Dem. State Ex. Com. <lb/>
One Mack <lb/>
Byron was wise when he wrote, <lb/>
drop of Ink may make a million <lb/>
This is Indeed true when the black aid <lb/>
is used to enlighten the world on the <lb/>
of Dr. Golden Medical <lb/>
Discovery. Let every- <lb/>
where hear the glad tidings. Try it all, <lb/>
who breathe with pain and to-- In fever <lb/>
through the long night hours. You will <lb/>
find the cough gone and sleep as balmy <lb/>
as a child's will visit your You <lb/>
will thank the drop of ink that brought <lb/>
the message of mercy to you. <lb/>
Reward. <lb/>
So confident arc the manufactures of <lb/>
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy in their <lb/>
ability to cure chronic nasal catarrh, no <lb/>
matter how bad or of how long standing <lb/>
that they offer, in good faith, the above <lb/>
for a case which they cannot <lb/>
cure. Remedy sold by druggists at <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
, B. <lb/>
S. B. <lb/>
OPERA HOUSE CORNER <lb/>
Can be found a fresh of <lb/>
Light Groceries, Canoed Goods, fruits, <lb/>
Confections, Tobacco, <lb/>
Cigars, <lb/>
which will be sold VERY LOWEST CASH <lb/>
Give me n call. <lb/>
J. C. CHESTNUT. <lb/>
Democratic Canvass. <lb/>
The candidates of Democrat <lb/>
party for Legislature and the <lb/>
nous County offices will address the <lb/>
people of Pitt County at follow- <lb/>
times and places, <lb/>
Harrington's X Road, <lb/>
day, October 10th. <lb/>
Friday, October <lb/>
Calico Hill, Saturday, October <lb/>
13th. <lb/>
Tuesday, October <lb/>
Parker's School House, Thursday, <lb/>
October 18th. <lb/>
Friday, October <lb/>
Keels Store, Saturday, October <lb/>
20th. <lb/>
Other appointments will be made <lb/>
in due time. <lb/>
L. Blow. <lb/>
Chin. Dem. Ex. Committee. <lb/>
Public Speaking. <lb/>
Hon. F. X. Strudwick, <lb/>
candidate Bettor for the State <lb/>
at Large, and Hon. W. Bobbins, <lb/>
will address the people on the issues <lb/>
of the campaign at the following <lb/>
times <lb/>
Monday, Oct., Bethel, Pitt <lb/>
Oct., <lb/>
Oct., <lb/>
Oct., <lb/>
Oct., <lb/>
Edwards <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
INT. C- <lb/>
We have the large- and most complete <lb/>
establishment of kind to be found in <lb/>
She State, and solicit all classes ; <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- j <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STATIONERY <lb/>
FOR INVITATIONS <lb/>
MAGISTRATES <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
printers add Hinders, <lb/>
k. c. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Under new and <lb/>
cold water baths. Good rooms and at- <lb/>
servants. Table always <lb/>
ed with the best of the market. Feed <lb/>
-tables in connection. <lb/>
E. B. MOORE, Manager. <lb/>
T T <lb/>
THE HOME <lb/>
ROOMS -s- <lb/>
Polite waiters. Good rooms. Best I <lb/>
Die the market afford-. When in Hie <lb/>
top at the <lb/>
Hotel. <lb/>
Main St. N. C I <lb/>
nil a pis <lb/>
g to g <lb/>
Thin <lb/>
ft acts . r nods,<lb/>
And Book free. For only <lb/>
With and<lb/>
in. n as to your re- <lb/>
from any bank- <lb/>
r. or <lb/>
will b promptly on <lb/>
lift <lb/>
all. <lb/>
aV ti true ate, <lb/>
r. <lb/>
h, <lb/>
h i cM by a tart <lb/>
H. W. <lb/>
Sew <lb/>
or <lb/>
Tuesday, 23rd <lb/>
Pitt <lb/>
Thursday, 25th <lb/>
Beau fort county. <lb/>
Saturday, 27th <lb/>
Hyde county. <lb/>
Monday, 29th <lb/>
Mill, county. <lb/>
Wednesday, 31st Oct., <lb/>
mere, Pamlico county. <lb/>
Friday, 2nd Nov., Trenton, Jones <lb/>
Saturday, 3rd Nov., Lenoir <lb/>
county. <lb/>
The local committees are urgently <lb/>
requested to advertise these <lb/>
by hand bills other- <lb/>
wise. Spier Whitaker, <lb/>
Dem. State Com. <lb/>
-Mien ion Tax Payers <lb/>
I will attend at the following time and <lb/>
places for the purpose of collecting the <lb/>
State and County taxes for the year <lb/>
Mays Chapel. Tuesday, Oct. 9th legs <lb/>
Harrington's X Road, Wednesday. 10th <lb/>
Kerry, Thursday, Oct. 11th <lb/>
; Friday, Oct. 12th <lb/>
Calico Hill, Saturday, Kith <lb/>
I Tuesday, 16th <lb/>
Wednesday, 17th <lb/>
Parkers School Thursday, 18th <lb/>
Oct. 19th. <lb/>
Keel's Store. Saturday, Oct. 20th <lb/>
Bethel. Monday, Oct. <lb/>
Black Tuesday. Oct. <lb/>
House, Thursday, 25th <lb/>
All other I shall be at the Court <lb/>
House In or represented by <lb/>
my deputy Mr. B. S. <lb/>
The laW requires mo to make <lb/>
and full settlements to do SO <lb/>
t imposes penalties. I propose to <lb/>
with the law, and that end <lb/>
and to save others trouble and expenses, <lb/>
I I hereby rive notice that individual tax <lb/>
payers must also comply with- the re- <lb/>
of law or I shall certainly en- <lb/>
i payment of such taxes. <lb/>
I Tax for Pitt County. <lb/>
A through the pages of <lb/>
Wide for October gives one <lb/>
that the editors are very <lb/>
indeed, in securing <lb/>
best work of authors and artists <lb/>
for pleasure of people. <lb/>
The instructive articles are spic- <lb/>
ed with entertainment, and the <lb/>
purely amusing or entertaining <lb/>
and poems serve their special <lb/>
purpose admirably. The historical <lb/>
paper on the home life and heart <lb/>
traits of Daniel Webster tells a <lb/>
great deal about him that very few <lb/>
people know. <lb/>
George Parsons Lathrop a <lb/>
droll dog story and Puppy- <lb/>
Miss Seward's article, <lb/>
is descriptive of the <lb/>
dog communities existing <lb/>
Constantinople. The Webster <lb/>
and articles alone are <lb/>
worth price of the number, if <lb/>
looked at merely as furnishing <lb/>
fresh material for supplementary <lb/>
reading in schools. Such subs <lb/>
appeal to a pupil's intelligence <lb/>
at the same time arc as enter- <lb/>
as a story. We need more <lb/>
such reading of this nature in our <lb/>
schools. <lb/>
The two serials are the <lb/>
end, increasing interest. Ed- <lb/>
ward E. Hale's of Boston <lb/>
is completed with his <lb/>
script ion of as a pleasure <lb/>
The poems, together with several <lb/>
stories and articles, complete an <lb/>
together issue. <lb/>
This number gives the Prospectus <lb/>
for a serial by <lb/>
Trow bridge, Adventures <lb/>
David Vane and David and <lb/>
another by Margaret Sidney, author <lb/>
of the famous Little Peepers <lb/>
There are two other <lb/>
rials also by Coolidge and <lb/>
Charles It. Talbot. <lb/>
Wide Awake is a year. A <lb/>
great deal for a little money. D. <lb/>
Company, Boston. Send <lb/>
five cents for a specimen. <lb/>
ONLY <lb/>
Brilliant <lb/>
Durable <lb/>
Economical <lb/>
Are Diamond Dyes. They excel all others <lb/>
in Strength, Parity and None others <lb/>
are just as good. Beware of <lb/>
are made of cheap and inferior materials sad <lb/>
give poor, weak, colors. <lb/>
colors; to cents each. <lb/>
Send for Dye Book, Sample Card, <lb/>
coloring making the Ink or Bluing <lb/>
cu. n etc. Sold by or by <lb/>
WELLS, RICHARDSON CO. Burlington, ft. <lb/>
Tor or Bromine Fancy Articles, USE <lb/>
DIAMOND PAINTS. <lb/>
Silver, Copper. Only to <lb/>
CELERY <lb/>
Cr Wry my ck Mrs. I-. A. <lb/>
Nervous <lb/>
via bottle of False s Celery Compound, cured N. <lb/>
Kidney ft me iron 1- i Li ill in f r fir,. i Flo-., <lb/>
All Liver . I 1- la as-TH <lb/>
LIFE UNDER THE CANVAS. <lb/>
SHE LOOKED COLD. <lb/>
You looked so cold sod proud; nod yet, <lb/>
Tho tender spray of the mignonette <lb/>
Close to your heart, -mid lace, <lb/>
whispering; from Its resting <lb/>
That I of hope and love might know, <lb/>
If I could speak to you. although <lb/>
You looked so t <lb/>
You looked so cold, so proud; yet still, <lb/>
tho window sill <lb/>
devour with so was <lb/>
Your eyes, like sprays of mignonette. <lb/>
Snowed roe the flush upon your cheek. <lb/>
And yetI could not speak-. <lb/>
You looked so cold I <lb/>
hours later over the <lb/>
I feel so cold, and chilL <lb/>
I sat beside the window I, <lb/>
I sat and froze for two long boars. <lb/>
Among those chilly palms and <lb/>
Thinking De Jones would surely <lb/>
Re looked so pensive and so <lb/>
Be clasped my hands In yet <lb/>
He only mignonette. <lb/>
With icy tears my were wet <lb/>
I felt so cold I <lb/>
First with <lb/>
A foreigner's first with <lb/>
chopsticks are more amusing to the <lb/>
Japanese than a tyro's performances on <lb/>
skates are to us, and tea house girls tit- <lb/>
and incessantly when a <lb/>
sight is at hand. It is the <lb/>
in tho world to manage chopsticks <lb/>
you once know how, bat <lb/>
in the most and <lb/>
way. A tyro is SaM to <lb/>
brace one stick in the <lb/>
thumb and against the finger. <lb/>
stick is kept rigid, and the other <lb/>
stick, held like a pen with the <lb/>
and first finger, plays it, <lb/>
and letting go with a sureness and <lb/>
hardly attained with any <lb/>
The test of <lb/>
skill with the chopsticks is to lift <lb/>
the round surface a <lb/>
and firm hold while <lb/>
strength would all. In <lb/>
tearing of silk warms, the <lb/>
that are too t to <lb/>
handling with the fingers, am mored to <lb/>
beds of mulberry leaves twins <lb/>
day. the transfer being made with <lb/>
chopsticks daftly <lb/>
to TO <lb/>
A Hard <lb/>
and Winded <lb/>
The of incident afforded by <lb/>
a circus and tho nomadic <lb/>
sort of ft grants appeals strongly <lb/>
to traits of human nature, and <lb/>
art m-v ranting men to fill <lb/>
sort of partition j.-i under <lb/>
show, for In- <lb/>
a of subordinates ate <lb/>
and every one is as carefully <lb/>
drilled for his work as a soldier is for his <lb/>
But the invests <lb/>
the Hie of a will <lb/>
found to disappear behind the scenes and <lb/>
many to appear. <lb/>
On fast night that was In <lb/>
Brooklyn a Tribune reporter <lb/>
with the man <lb/>
of the performing seals <lb/>
their on wheels, before <lb/>
appeared upon the and <lb/>
went through their tricks of thrumming <lb/>
the banjo and guitar. One of the u n <lb/>
was picking away at the <lb/>
bar of with his nipper. <lb/>
he. has his remarked the <lb/>
man m he will lie there by <lb/>
the hoar and do that. We take the <lb/>
to teach them tricks when we are spend- <lb/>
tho winter In Bridgeport. One has <lb/>
to know Iris animals to get along with <lb/>
them. I do anything with these <lb/>
sot would bite a stranger. <lb/>
Bee that scar to tho back of one <lb/>
of Ms Well, a strange seal was <lb/>
put In the a few days ago, and <lb/>
when I went to clean it out ho bit me. <lb/>
Ton see, he. didn't know me. <lb/>
Of the case of the lions and <lb/>
the ts the most dangerous. A man <lb/>
came near killed in the cage <lb/>
this maiming- e all thought ho was a <lb/>
man has two cages to <lb/>
care foe sad we have to go in among all <lb/>
tho I hare one of tho <lb/>
cages We only control them by <lb/>
fear, our being of steel <lb/>
with The men In charge of the <lb/>
hare their goads ready to stick <lb/>
into the animals they are not <lb/>
chained. The man there to the <lb/>
next has to sleep with the giraffe <lb/>
every to see that It does not get <lb/>
sick, ft Is the tenderest animal we have <lb/>
and the only giraffe in this <lb/>
The reporter to remark that <lb/>
if the throat sore it <lb/>
would be to a serious mat- <lb/>
so long. <lb/>
said the keeper. man was <lb/>
here the. other day who wished his <lb/>
throat was as long as the giraffe's when- <lb/>
ever ho drank Bat that was <lb/>
better than the questions some people <lb/>
ask. Why, some of them appear to <lb/>
know nothing at ail when they get in <lb/>
circus. They will ask if an animal eats <lb/>
or lies down to sleep. If lion roars <lb/>
they ask what be does that One man <lb/>
to know if the giraffe ever put its <lb/>
down to sleep. Tho women seem <lb/>
to think that the wild animals must do <lb/>
everything from what tame ones <lb/>
do. The majority of people don't know <lb/>
tho simplest facts in natural history, <lb/>
would If the animals could talk <lb/>
they would be able to tell many <lb/>
things said about them. I don't mean to <lb/>
say people read, but they will look <lb/>
at words, on my <lb/>
wagon, and then ask mo what tho <lb/>
arc. they want to know why <lb/>
we have water for them, and what they <lb/>
eat, when they sec feed them. <lb/>
It is a pleasure to talk to any who <lb/>
understands something the animals. <lb/>
I don't i a month and board pays <lb/>
for what have to from the <lb/>
animals every <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Tarboro, V. C. <lb/>
H M. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
AT Tint <lb/>
k SCHULTZ, <lb/>
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb/>
their year's will it to <lb/>
Interest to get prices before <lb/>
in all branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, SUGAR, <lb/>
spices, <lb/>
always at Lowest Prices. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ens <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to run, sell at a margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
A SCHULTZ. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C <lb/>
THE <lb/>
associated B. S. <lb/>
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
are ready to serve the people In that <lb/>
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb/>
me for past services have been placed In <lb/>
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for col <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
keep on band at all times a nice <lb/>
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb/>
from the finest Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Pine Coffin. fitted <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can render <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who patronize <lb/>
us FLANAGAN ft SHEPPARD. <lb/>
Feb. 22nd. 1888. <lb/>
Horses <lb/>
Mules. <lb/>
A car Jut arrived and now for <lb/>
sale by. <lb/>
at Keel King's old stand. Will sell them <lb/>
CHEAP TOR CASH, <lb/>
or at reasonable terms on time. I bought <lb/>
my stock for Cash and can afford to sell <lb/>
as cheap as anyone. Give a call. <lb/>
Have just procured several <lb/>
and will take passengers to any <lb/>
at reasonable rates. <lb/>
Sale, Feed id Liver; Stable., <lb/>
Of Interest to Ladies. <lb/>
n-i Ft <lb/>
to y who <lb/>
to f t before S. i stamp for <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of Pitt and counties, a line of the following goods <lb/>
that arc not to be excelled in this market. And to be and <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS-f all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN- <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS. BOOTS and SHOES, LA- <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS. and QUEENS- <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Mm. Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and Saddles. <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
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In of of Oxygen <lb/>
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Mb, O. <lb/>
Sb., <lb/>
Any one wishing to give it a trial for <lb/>
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in its to administration or <lb/>
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The scheme fostered and by <lb/>
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annually from the people and locking <lb/>
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