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                    <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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THE BEST PAPER <lb/>
I i-i-i IN <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
CIRCULATION. <lb/>
ADVERTISING MEDIUM. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
JOB PRINTING <lb/>
AV <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1889. <lb/>
NO.<lb/>
The Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb/>
II TOO, <lb/>
Published Every <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE<lb/>
Subscription Price. <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC, BUT <lb/>
and measures that are not consistent <lb/>
the principles of the party. <lb/>
II yon want a p-i per from a <lb/>
of the State send for the <lb/>
tor. T SAMPLE COPY FREE <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
I LAY <lb/>
The Wichita Eagle says the <lb/>
following poem was left at the by <lb/>
an man. who came to ask for <lb/>
Near the flickering light. <lb/>
In my blanket bed I lie, <lb/>
through the shades of night <lb/>
At the twinkling stars on high. <lb/>
O'er the spirits in the air <lb/>
Silent vigils seem to keep. <lb/>
As I breath- prayer, <lb/>
I down to <lb/>
ill <lb/>
III tilt boughs of tree. <lb/>
tin- <lb/>
Swells <lb/>
may be lurking near <lb/>
In dark <lb/>
I breathe in <lb/>
pray the Lord my to <lb/>
Mid those stare one face I see <lb/>
One the- Savior turned away <lb/>
Mother, who in infancy <lb/>
Taught pray. <lb/>
Her sweet spirit hovers near. <lb/>
In this lonely mountain brake <lb/>
Take me to her. Savior, dear, <lb/>
I die I <lb/>
New York Letter. <lb/>
The City Working- <lb/>
Executions in <lb/>
one Day. <lb/>
special <lb/>
New York, August 1st. <lb/>
The annual payment of city <lb/>
money to the blind, took place in <lb/>
building of the De- <lb/>
coiner of Eleventh Street <lb/>
and Third one day last <lb/>
week. Twenty thousand dollars are <lb/>
appropriated every yea for the re. <lb/>
; lief of t lie blind who are not in in <lb/>
or for whom no <lb/>
provision is made. <lb/>
-o each <lb/>
The Fight <lb/>
The newspapers to a great degree <lb/>
are responsible for the barbaric <lb/>
fights between the Some <lb/>
of the big newspapers do more barn <lb/>
than good. One of the best and <lb/>
of American newspaper s, the <lb/>
New York Evening Post, has an ed <lb/>
in which this abuse of news-. <lb/>
papers in giving so much publicity <lb/>
to slugging and other refined North- <lb/>
sports, is properly handled. It <lb/>
Laughable Reflections. <lb/>
Ana Mirth Provoking Selections as Com- <lb/>
piled by the Bad Boy. <lb/>
B. leathers, suppose you <lb/>
don't speak to the common herd any <lb/>
more, Miss <lb/>
Miss certainly, Mr. <lb/>
How do you do <lb/>
A FREAK. <lb/>
Woman side a <lb/>
,, , fanny little man Were yon never <lb/>
says of certain leading aDV t <lb/>
ma'am, when I was <lb/>
a baby; but I was brought up on <lb/>
milk and I <lb/>
N. Y. World, Sun and N. Y. Herald <lb/>
other and the Boston <lb/>
these virtuous commentators <lb/>
hat their eyes to the fact that the <lb/>
varies according to the number interest, which they deplore <lb/>
ARTLESS INNOCENCE. <lb/>
Mother at her daughter's <lb/>
An Unknown Hero. <lb/>
THE STATE. <lb/>
Deep down in a mine in hat is Happening Us. <lb/>
Colliery, Newcastle, England, there <lb/>
is a brave boy who deserves to be <lb/>
called a hero. In a situation of sad- <lb/>
den peril ho used precautions which <lb/>
prevented a dreadful explosion, <lb/>
simply by behaving with courage <lb/>
and presence of mind. <lb/>
He noticed that his lamp flared <lb/>
As from tho State Press. <lb/>
N. C, bas a girl's base <lb/>
bull club. <lb/>
Thoughts for Reflection. <lb/>
Select for Leisure Houri. <lb/>
Christ leads on through no darker <lb/>
I be went through <lb/>
Richard Maxtor. <lb/>
has been again interfered with the go. <lb/>
work on the Roanoke for I <lb/>
sure sign of the presence of tho Carolina railroad. Let your religion be seen. Lamps <lb/>
dangerous gas. Had he Lexington A A <lb/>
rushed away, his light might have deal of bottom corn has been dam- j <lb/>
burst through the gauze which ; aged and some been entirely <lb/>
by the recent freshets. <lb/>
entitled to receive it. This year I w largely of their own <lb/>
there were and they each They been working like boa-1 you get many scarf <lb/>
ed the sum of in bard cash, Ev- R the past month to excite it. <lb/>
surrounds a miner's lamp, and sit <lb/>
ting fire to gas, caused ft heart- I e. City Capt. <lb/>
accident. j made last season from his <lb/>
lad did nothing so silly. vines covering some <lb/>
ion., I When questioned by three-quarters of an acre gal <lb/>
he. I cot so gentlemen s scarf-1 gt as Low found <lb/>
light-house sounds no drum. It beats <lb/>
no gong, yet far over tho waters Its <lb/>
friendly light is seen by the mariner. <lb/>
C. II. <lb/>
cry recipient is to make a,, I They have published every m of . tS <lb/>
plication for the money several information which they could find <lb/>
G. Fowle, of Wake, Fainter grows the flickering light. <lb/>
M. Holt, j As each slowly dies j <lb/>
of Plaint the of night <lb/>
Secretary of I. Fill the air with saddening cries. <lb/>
of Wake. j Over seem to cry <lb/>
W. of Wake. may never <lb/>
of Wayne. Low Hep . I should die. <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction J <lb/>
Sidney M. Finger of <lb/>
Attorney F. David- <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. <lb/>
SUPREME <lb/>
Chief N. II. Smith, o <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Associate S. Merrimon. of <lb/>
Joseph J. Davis, of <lb/>
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb/>
Alfonzo C. of Burke. <lb/>
I pray Lord soul to <lb/>
I nit- down to sleep. <lb/>
I pi the lord soul to keep <lb/>
I should die lief ore I wake. <lb/>
pray the Lord my soul to <lb/>
Item. <lb/>
N. C, July <lb/>
Ed. cannot recall <lb/>
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT. I , M columns <lb/>
of an article, or <lb/>
Second Philips, of of items from <lb/>
MM II. G. Connor, of <lb/>
ion. i the gadding of a horny handed <lb/>
District-Waiter Clark, of old mother earth. <lb/>
money <lb/>
I months in advance. A blank is any where about the two brutes who <lb/>
j furnished v. bus to be filled eat, preparing to pummel each <lb/>
giving the age, occupation, nation- for no purpose than to <lb/>
etc. of the applicant, this j show which of them was the biggest <lb/>
i has to be signed by two ; <lb/>
I as references. The It gives in tabular form what <lb/>
must show doctor's i space was devoted in each of the <lb/>
that they are destitute, have three New York sensational sheets <lb/>
not during the before and alter fight, <lb/>
, and that they have drawn no 25th and 10th <lb/>
i from any organized. July, From fourteen to sixteen <lb/>
since last pay , days those papers devoted great <lb/>
The sight of these five hundred space to this Americas savagery, <lb/>
and of the city's blind pen-1 It shows that before the fight the <lb/>
drawn up in line to receive space devoted was as <lb/>
their money is something worth go- World, columns ; Son, col- <lb/>
a long way to see. Many of Herald, columns. <lb/>
them ate well-known characters. After the <lb/>
about the city, and as they totter World, Sun ; Herald <lb/>
up to the desk to receive their Grand World, Sun, <lb/>
tickets the superintendent, Herald, <lb/>
their joy and gratitude is The Evening Post well asks.- <lb/>
As no one who has an prompted three thousand <lb/>
night after Gus calls, and to save mo <lb/>
I can't imagine how they get there. <lb/>
restaurant table <lb/>
have you got for dinner <lb/>
Table <lb/>
me the third, fourth, <lb/>
fifth, sixth, and nine- <lb/>
, right thing to do, and then prompt-; <lb/>
been told <lb/>
that you have made an invention <lb/>
that will bring yon great wealth. <lb/>
What <lb/>
Second pocket cir- . . <lb/>
saw, designed to cut j V that <lb/>
rant and hotel beefsteak. between a common <lb/>
; man and a hero. This lit He fellow, <lb/>
an awful is not mentioned- <lb/>
ti Ted, or Jack-bas in him <lb/>
thing over asked of Jones that i,, . <lb/>
he refused making a grand man, cool, <lb/>
ons of wine, <lb/>
that there was gas in tho neighbor j ,.,,. Tic , , ,. <lb/>
hood where he was at work, be re- of , <lb/>
plied, my lamp <lb/>
what did you do then <lb/>
asked the <lb/>
look my picker, and pulled <lb/>
down the wick, but the lamp still <lb/>
my boy. how did you man- <lb/>
age <lb/>
I put the lamp inside my <lb/>
jacket, and covered it up tight, and out eleven <lb/>
i tons ice a day. <lb/>
the lamp went <lb/>
Of course tho lamp would Mrs. Scars, <lb/>
burn without air. To think of the I of Mr. A. A. <lb/>
We must not DOM to he mowers, <lb/>
And gather the ripe gold cars, <lb/>
l we have been sowers. <lb/>
And watered the furious with <lb/>
Alice Cary. <lb/>
of great calamity and con- <lb/>
s section Productive of <lb/>
tins section tho greatest minds. The purest on <lb/>
is almost a foregone conclusion., is produced Iron, the hottest furnace. <lb/>
ought to save all the fruit and the brightest thunderbolt <lb/>
possible and plant all available fall the darkest <lb/>
crops. C. Cotton. <lb/>
Goldsboro The Golds.; ma who <lb/>
has at last love a woman in the grand way a <lb/>
flooded to run at full capacity, ow- j woman to <lb/>
to the inexhaustible supply of <lb/>
Macdonald. <lb/>
surprised to <lb/>
that, for he's very generous. It must <lb/>
have been something <lb/>
D. asked him for some <lb/>
Sears, died yesterday morning, at <lb/>
an advanced age, at home <lb/>
Chatham county. The funeral took <lb/>
place this afternoon and a number <lb/>
of relatives left here this morning <lb/>
to attend the last sad rites. <lb/>
Our citizens <lb/>
have found out that money spent <lb/>
more precious than <lb/>
And in morning when we shall <lb/>
lo the you <lb/>
resolute and clever. <lb/>
.-s-. Fortunately an overseer was near in advertising pays. The amount <lb/>
Finn District-John A. Gilmer, of The farmers arc about through I W and gratitude is Evening Post well . have been something unreasonable. ,,, the spent for the celebration has already <lb/>
r- -r r v corn but it will be some As no one who has an j bat prompted three thousand B. him for some b, lam went been returned ten fold. They <lb/>
r August before they of this world's can to go that remote spot in money he had ,. in total darkness now ready to subscribe liberally to <lb/>
Seventh c. of, cotton, as most of it in j or Mississippi and pay an refused Mr. Temps and set open a door, the closing of <lb/>
C a. this section is yet quite small, and V iD to , jump gas into the <lb/>
Iredell to turn it over yet i o one of two ruffians pound each other T j an offer <lb/>
-John <lb/>
F. Graves, of <lb/>
O. of appearance <lb/>
M. Shipp, of <lb/>
Ninth <lb/>
Tenth District <lb/>
Eleventh <lb/>
Mecklenburg. <lb/>
Twelfth If. Merrimon, M ., is <lb/>
or <lb/>
nil ill in too wet to in a good many <lb/>
it. Vance, of places, and will be for several days <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of u we have more rain. <lb/>
I . <lb/>
House of Crops arc not average with <lb/>
Thomas of j years for the last of July. <lb/>
; tho led letter days tho year. I Was it not the incessant talk in inst I <lb/>
; to be looked after by Green in <lb/>
EXPEDITION. <lb/>
Last Friday this section was vis-; About forty picked workmen of <lb/>
with very heavy rants, and States sailed last week <lb/>
from this city- <lb/>
newspapers <lb/>
else r <lb/>
more than anything <lb/>
for France, where <lb/>
they will inspect tho great j Messenger, <lb/>
at Paris. have so <lb/>
by what is called the <lb/>
which is a <lb/>
chills. <lb/>
of western newspapers banded <lb/>
Second P. Cheat ham col. I , , , . . , . too other <lb/>
l I is looking and well, as it pays all ex-; . <lb/>
Third W, of requires rather a wet season to make ; pen-s of the trip. They were <lb/>
, f by Charles T. Thompson <lb/>
Fourth II. f, a u. i <lb/>
v , tho Detroit direct- <lb/>
. . . , There is not so much sickness, . <lb/>
Fifth . Braver, of or and editor of the expedition; <lb/>
Sixth Rowland of around our little on tho Tar <lb/>
B. . some time back. T- Atwood, of <lb/>
Eighth A. the Post. Williams, <lb/>
Mr. Thomas Sheppard. Cleveland Press, and F. <lb/>
and much citizen Car- <lb/>
Ninth District II. G. of <lb/>
COUNTY GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
know handsome, but I never <lb/>
marry such ignorant man. <lb/>
I Why, I asked him a few questions <lb/>
This is a disgraceful chapter <lb/>
Northern ; molecular bivalves, and do <lb/>
you know, all he said was, sup- <lb/>
pose <lb/>
I have used S. S. for debility , <lb/>
resulting from and fever, and i <lb/>
have found it to be the best tonic . <lb/>
and appetizer that I ever took. It <lb/>
return of the <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
Eureka Springs, Ark. <lb/>
Dick I In in is a respected <lb/>
and well-to-do colored citizen of; he voted for <lb/>
Springfield, Mo. He says that one never touch <lb/>
w , bottle of Swift's Specific cured both chew of gum as long as <lb/>
himself wife of a troublesome <lb/>
or tho mine. <lb/>
All honor to them both <lb/>
Noblemen Neglected. <lb/>
mean to <lb/>
the county fail. They <lb/>
make it a grand success. <lb/>
Lumberton It is a <lb/>
faithfulness In the part <lb/>
Is better at last than proud success ; <lb/>
And patience and love in a chastened <lb/>
heart. <lb/>
Are <lb/>
youth <lb/>
again. <lb/>
AU trouble will seem hut a living Hake <lb/>
And life-long sorrow a breath on the <lb/>
pane. <lb/>
J. T. <lb/>
To be proud an hereditary title <lb/>
is to Haunt in dead men's clothes. <lb/>
Anon. <lb/>
As the tree is fertilized by its own <lb/>
broken branches and fallen leaves, <lb/>
and grows out of its own decay, so <lb/>
men and nations are bettered and <lb/>
improved by trial, and refined out <lb/>
of broken hopes and blighted <lb/>
F. W. Robertson. <lb/>
Cards <lb/>
Scot land Neck Democrat. <lb/>
In all the alter dinner speaking <lb/>
at Chapel Hill last week there <lb/>
nothing said of the University men <lb/>
M farmers. Did it occur to those <lb/>
that some of the noblest and , <lb/>
best and most praiseworthy men <lb/>
who have gone out from the <lb/>
AYCOCK DANIELS <lb/>
N C <lb/>
novel sight to witness a church full <lb/>
to overflowing on a week day, but <lb/>
such was the case at the <lb/>
j church last Monday morning, near <lb/>
if not quite every store in town <lb/>
being closed. We suppose this will <lb/>
continue as long as the meeting will <lb/>
In this way all visitors <lb/>
attend church as there will be no- <lb/>
where else to go. <lb/>
Henderson Gold There has <lb/>
C C <lb/>
N C <lb/>
Is it not the heavy rains for several days <lb/>
Court A. <lb/>
A. K. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of II. James. <lb/>
R. Cherry. <lb/>
Manning. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
n V who a<lb/>
been confined to his room. We arc, in engineer a boat <lb/>
pleased to learn that he is . on Arkansas river, and bis ad <lb/>
. and Germany, although, of <lb/>
proved, and if no relapse will be the will <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson, Chair- <lb/>
I out soon. <lb/>
be the <lb/>
chief object of interest. <lb/>
W. preached ; leaving here the of <lb/>
to a large congregation at for the delegates visited <lb/>
J. S. and J. D. j yesterday. We indeed sorry Mayor Grant who gave them a <lb/>
Cox. j that it is last appointment, welcome. Every individual <lb/>
Public School ; ,,. for . <lb/>
dress is Little Rock. He that <lb/>
S, S. S. has relieved him of blood <lb/>
was the result of ma- <lb/>
that it prevents chill <lb/>
HIS <lb/>
Candidate's say. pa, arc <lb/>
yon going to Halifax before the <lb/>
Halifax What <lb/>
do you mean, boy <lb/>
I heard bosom friend De- are T <lb/>
our butcher last night that case with all our institutions different parts of tho county, and <lb/>
he would see yon in Halifax before learning that they too often forget effects on the tobacco crop is <lb/>
and neglect those men who are the looked <lb/>
bone and sinew of our land The crop <lb/>
Ho wonder that ambitious young, highland corn is reported as being , <lb/>
men do never turn their excellent. The oat crop has been; <lb/>
for the first time to tho farm as tho recent rains, and <lb/>
place where they may do well and was threshed out as <lb/>
their laudable ambition as expected. The fruit crop <lb/>
doing a great work in the field. of every description is large and of <lb/>
I DANIELS DANIELS. <lb/>
WILSON, N. <lb/>
Any Business to m will be <lb/>
Attended to. <lb/>
DENTIST, l <lb/>
hear you say so, my dear ; but what- <lb/>
reformed you so suddenly <lb/>
Last evening Mr. pro <lb/>
posed to just at the moment <lb/>
man, Guilford Mooring, C. V, Newton, j <lb/>
T. Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb/>
up the ,, ,. He <lb/>
s Ida last appointment, <lb/>
leaves <lb/>
jaws got stuck, so I couldn't say They arc too seldom honored quality. Tho shipment of grapes <lb/>
anything, and he went m ; Mr. S. Watkins <lb/>
When the time come when made a shipment on the 17th. <lb/>
LEX <lb/>
BY-AT-LA W, <lb/>
RE. <lb/>
J. H. <lb/>
J D MURPH <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
TOWN. <lb/>
church without a pastor. aptitude in the business to be in- <lb/>
i Quito a number our <lb/>
pie expect to hie away to Ocracoke five to be hung. <lb/>
next in lay where they can enjoy i fact that five men arc to be <lb/>
the gentle breeze that's wafted over, hung on the day in this <lb/>
the bosom of the briny, deep, blue is causing a great deal of discussion. <lb/>
G. James. <lb/>
F. Evans. <lb/>
It. <lb/>
T. Smith. <lb/>
R. Moore. sea. May they all enjoy their This is tho largest number that <lb/>
For bes; T. J. Jarvis and M., News is scarce, and trade is dull the result is that a large i <lb/>
K. Lang ; Ward, W. N. Tolbert. when for I of curious are endeavor- <lb/>
CHURCHES. as it comes hard and goes quick. j permission to sec the j Statue. <lb/>
First and Third Miss Sadie Mayo, of Falkland, i executions. They will all be <lb/>
last week m i only the <lb/>
takes it the spring and summer <lb/>
mouths to prevent sickness from tho <lb/>
malaria of the swamps on the river. <lb/>
Mr. L. M. of Vicksburg, <lb/>
Miss-, says that his system was <lb/>
poisoned with from the ex- <lb/>
use of tobacco smoking <lb/>
cigarettes. He could not sleep, bis <lb/>
appetite was gone, and be was in a ; <lb/>
He took S. S. <lb/>
the poison and <lb/>
A MODERN <lb/>
are you a woman farmer boys may and delight <lb/>
to remember the words of the em- <lb/>
sir; I haven't time to farmer which this writer <lb/>
Well, if you had ed when a child f <lb/>
the privilege voting whom would <lb/>
you support <lb/>
same man I have supported <lb/>
for the last tn <lb/>
who is that <lb/>
They back to us now <lb/>
The corner <lb/>
of Church and Oakum streets <lb/>
a business like appearance. <lb/>
Three new stores in course <lb/>
one flue dwelling has <lb/>
been completed and work on an- <lb/>
other is fast progressing. <lb/>
George Hawkins, a reliable <lb/>
TUCKER MURPHY, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
HARRY <lb/>
Ida Gav, much to the delight <lb/>
Pastor. I last Sunday, Miss Ida accompanying <lb/>
Baptist- Services every Sunday, morn- n j <lb/>
and night. every e <lb/>
Wednesday Rev. J. W. Bert, we miss your kind and <lb/>
face from our midst, but while we <lb/>
LODGES. lose you here, we <lb/>
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A. j-or gain there, and may every <lb/>
M., meets every 1st Thursday and . I hanging Is played out jet. <lb/>
day night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow, M <lb/>
I. L. Sec. <lb/>
Sanford Express . <lb/>
relatives and advisers of tho con- We hope the confederate Jo . Oh, what II I <lb/>
besides the officers will of Moore county will erect <lb/>
allowed at the bronze statue of a Confederate Sol- <lb/>
are being made for the on court house square at <lb/>
executions which will take place on Carthage as an object lesson to <lb/>
Aug. it is said that three of children the valor Pan <lb/>
the condemned will hung first patriotism of the Confederate SoN replied her mother, with <lb/>
two afterwards. Evidently i when all the soldiers have an smile <lb/>
gone from the earth. Such a I I get married will I <lb/>
am a little <lb/>
Work and labor hard I can ; <lb/>
am M happy all the day <lb/>
At my as if play. <lb/>
Let tho boys taught this i worthy employee of the Branning <lb/>
Mrs. Henry, have, and then let them be j MTg Co., was painfully wounded <lb/>
dropped the water pitcher out they have well while discharging his duties as <lb/>
there DOt be of tho gang saws. George <lb/>
Scott, Jane our ambitious boys and i is greatly beloved respected for <lb/>
know what damage you may I young such an aversion to farm his open and frank manner, and his <lb/>
have j It is not because they dread were pained to <lb/>
l the work ; but because they see no the accident, <lb/>
pure china, and can't, be replaced <lb/>
n. i,. <lb/>
future and little distinction it. Tho wind and <lb/>
Hold up the of the farmer, for i storm of yesterday bad more force <lb/>
I AMES M. <lb/>
E Y-AT-L A W, <lb/>
GREEN VILLE, N. C. <lb/>
LT ii. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the courts. <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
depicted be realized to the fullest . The reported dissatisfaction a <lb/>
Such a thing , , , <lb/>
, , i . , I have to be old maid like Aunt <lb/>
ought to be cone at every county <lb/>
be holds up the world. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter, No. meets <lb/>
extent. <lb/>
And then on <lb/>
the smooth <lb/>
let us the way in which the fund for the <lb/>
seat to tench coming generations <lb/>
what were bow much <lb/>
sufferers bas the cause for <lb/>
n. n. y. with tho muse, and dedicate to on been handled and distributed by <lb/>
meet every Tuesday night. . W. a lines poetry as our closing committee appointed by Governs <lb/>
An interesting table exhibited at <lb/>
the Paris Exposition shows the rel- <lb/>
civilizations the several <lb/>
countries from the stand- <lb/>
point, by showing the number of let <lb/>
per capita passing through <lb/>
Great leads with <lb/>
forty per bead. Australia is <lb/>
with thirty-live, and Switzerland <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
N. G. <lb/>
Insurance No. K. of H., <lb/>
Met every first and third Friday night. May thy pa.-age down life's dark <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. Be with roses strewn, <lb/>
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of II., meets . Roses that yield no piercing thorn, <lb/>
every Thursday night. C. A. White, Roses from virtue grown. <lb/>
thy passage over life's <lb/>
i I a . w s v. Be crowned with knowledge deep. <lb/>
Office hours to P. K. Money stern g<lb/>
j And, when old age shall over <lb/>
Bethel mail arrives Sun- then the hand <lb/>
i at 9-10 A. M., and departs That wrote these lines and oft pressed <lb/>
Tar mail arrives Sun- yours <lb/>
t I- M- depart at P. at. ,, friendship's strongest band. <lb/>
mail daily v <lb/>
at M. and depots at P. M. <lb/>
J. J. PERKINS. P. M. The last paragraph of the above <lb/>
I dedicated to our <lb/>
formerly wrote tho <lb/>
I signed <lb/>
or Beaver, has culminated in a big <lb/>
mass meeting at Johnstown, in <lb/>
which speeches were made and res- <lb/>
adopted denouncing the <lb/>
methods pursued and emu , <lb/>
the appointments The object or a conference be- <lb/>
I made on It Postmaster General <lb/>
a tough world for us ain't <lb/>
it <lb/>
which they fought and bled. <lb/>
generation is inspired by a knowN think you a wife, young <lb/>
edge of the sacrifice courage and. man, do you Mr. as <lb/>
moral of its fathers. be looked at agitated youth; <lb/>
a bronze statue there to teach j I V <lb/>
. would she V the zero mark is almost reached in <lb/>
would, indeed, replied which reports only two let <lb/>
the young man, trying to appear at . , <lb/>
ease. the young men who start B ft <lb/>
and did more damage than was <lb/>
possible for its appearance, j J . <lb/>
Numbers of beautiful trees in van-, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
parts of the city were twisted j Greenville, N. <lb/>
broken off and broken up. <lb/>
Most of the roofing of the main <lb/>
of Shaw University was <lb/>
i neatly ripped off and blown a <lb/>
i huge roll. Letters are <lb/>
; received here now members <lb/>
with thirty. The United Stated, <lb/>
Germany and Holland have twenty <lb/>
and Belgium leads them at twenty- <lb/>
fire. ether countries of Europe <lb/>
stated that it costs more maker and Postmaster Van of <lb/>
Appointments <lb/>
For on Bethlehem <lb/>
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at II lock. <lb/>
School House, Sin.-lay at <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Shady 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock, <lb/>
E P. C. <lb/>
n Perry Nelson, wealthy farmer. <lb/>
i known as stingiest man ha <lb/>
Suit h Wisconsin and also as a <lb/>
, beater, was tarred, feathered <lb/>
whipped by White Capo. <lb/>
The South has but recently be- <lb/>
; come the object of interest to the <lb/>
of tho N. C. European <lb/>
All report a sale and com- <lb/>
trip. They <lb/>
were twelve days out and the <lb/>
age was somewhat tedious. <lb/>
Wilmington Tar sold at <lb/>
81.70 per barrel and <lb/>
spirits at cents per <lb/>
colored, <lb/>
newspapers sometimes say in their <lb/>
prospectuses, she would fill a long <lb/>
per cent of the gross amount i New York City, it said to to in- j mean, of course, a. . <lb/>
the present of h in its salary of a year. <lb/>
untold mineral wealth and easy Wilmington Gas Light <lb/>
of the fund to distribute the goods j city to buy ; . lent font <lb/>
the methods employed, it New York Post Office building, in f Mr. per- <lb/>
was further asserted that the state-, which case the government will the bewildered youth, <lb/>
attributed to Got. <lb/>
that a million and a half dollars had <lb/>
already distributed, had no <lb/>
in fact. A suspicion prevail <lb/>
that the fond bas not been bones <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
build Post Office uptown. <lb/>
A sea turtle ten feet long, five <lb/>
wide and weighing <lb/>
pounds, was caught recently in a <lb/>
trap off South Cape Cod <lb/>
This monster is estimated to <lb/>
Ex-Senator Stephen W. Dorsey j folly it stands <lb/>
id under arrest for cot tempt oft tho distance between tore flip- <lb/>
in over ten feet. <lb/>
I should have said a <lb/>
said Mr. K., coming to <lb/>
his relief, you said <lb/>
to Laura, yet <lb/>
air; i thought I ought -to <lb/>
speak to yon <lb/>
he said kindly, <lb/>
my advice; if yon can't got <lb/>
that untangled before <lb/>
yon tee her again, you'd bettor send <lb/>
a more experienced <lb/>
means of development and <lb/>
Thirty years from to <lb/>
it will probably be the of the <lb/>
great Iron industries of the world. <lb/>
These, together with the growth <lb/>
and of the great staple, <lb/>
will put it a plane of <lb/>
ed wealth and power. <lb/>
The physicians attending <lb/>
Collins, the novelist, pronounce him <lb/>
out of danger. <lb/>
it is reported, has been appointed <lb/>
special treasury agent here, with a <lb/>
-------The <lb/>
Company <lb/>
sill soon begin work on a building <lb/>
for the electric light plant their <lb/>
premises at the foot of street. <lb/>
-------The number of foreign <lb/>
grants landed in this country for the <lb/>
hist six months of this year is <lb/>
as compared with for <lb/>
the first six months of 1888. The <lb/>
immigration to Central and South <lb/>
America will account in part for <lb/>
the decrease. <lb/>
P. C F. <lb/>
Certified <lb/>
Civil Engineers, Surveyors <lb/>
and Architects. <lb/>
AND i V N. C. <lb/>
HOTELS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Under management. Hot and <lb/>
cold water baths. Good rooms and at- <lb/>
servants. Table always <lb/>
ed with the best of the market. Feed <lb/>
stables in connection. <lb/>
PEE SAT <lb/>
E. <lb/>
SPENCER BROS., <lb/>
THE NOME <lb/>
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE- <lb/>
Polite waiters. Good <lb/>
table the market afford. <lb/>
city stop at the <lb/>
Rooms. Best <lb/>
When in the <lb/>
Hotel, <lb/>
WASHINGTON N. C. <lb/>
i .<lb/>
4-to <lb/>
a a<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018948_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C<lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE <lb/>
DISTRICT. <lb/>
-hi. Hi IV II l-r year. <lb/>
TOT <lb/>
not to Democratic <lb/>
and that are <lb/>
the true principles of the parry. <lb/>
If too want a paper from a <lb/>
of the State send for the <lb/>
T FREE <lb/>
AT AT <lb/>
Mail <lb/>
Wednesday, august 7th, mm. <lb/>
A Trip to the West. <lb/>
By this caption the reader <lb/>
must not infer that our is <lb/>
raised to sing the praises of the <lb/>
of the Pacific re- <lb/>
where the scum of nil Eu- <lb/>
rope is centering in inauspicious <lb/>
numbers and where anarchism is <lb/>
where the man who in <lb/>
peace of his morning <lb/>
meal and forth for the day, <lb/>
will <lb/>
Thursday afternoon officers <lb/>
were elected for the ensuing year <lb/>
as <lb/>
President--W. W. <lb/>
Lumberton <lb/>
First Vice J. <lb/>
Whichard, Greenville <lb/>
tor. <lb/>
Second <lb/>
Alamance Gleaner. <lb/>
Third Vice F. <lb/>
St. Clair, Sanford Expo. <lb/>
and R. <lb/>
Sherrill Concord Times. <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Orator Haydn, Char- <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
E Christian, Char- <lb/>
Democrat. <lb/>
L. Polk <lb/>
ire Farmer. <lb/>
Executive P. <lb/>
Statesville Landmark, <lb/>
Josephus Daniels, Slate Chronicle, <lb/>
T. B. Eldridge, Davidson Vis <lb/>
W. Scott, Jr. Lenoir <lb/>
Topic, J. A Thomas. Franklin <lb/>
Times. <lb/>
Delegates to the National Edi- <lb/>
Association which meets <lb/>
at Detroit Mich., this mouth <lb/>
W. E- Christian, Charlotte Dem- <lb/>
Daniels, Raleigh <lb/>
Chronicle, T. B. Eldridge, Lex- <lb/>
with the <lb/>
dent and secretary. <lb/>
During our stay at Lenoir the <lb/>
headquarters of the writer was <lb/>
That any member of this Al- <lb/>
violate pledge, shall <lb/>
be subjected to censure or <lb/>
as the Alliance deems <lb/>
That we request all <lb/>
of the county to adopt <lb/>
or similar resolutions. <lb/>
That a copy of this be for- <lb/>
warded to the Eastern <lb/>
Ton and with a <lb/>
request to publish. <lb/>
Also the following appeal was <lb/>
unanimously adopted with the re- <lb/>
quest to be published in your col- <lb/>
hath no assurance that he <lb/>
not return on a dynamite the Austin House, which is <lb/>
or be stuffed into a sewer on presided over by Mr W. F. <lb/>
Not so. tin and his excellent, wife. We <lb/>
been there and we t a going- <lb/>
Bat our West is a far more beau- <lb/>
of the hospitality <lb/>
of Mi. J. Berg and of Rev- Mr- <lb/>
region. It is none Beal. All the editors had a de- <lb/>
than along the sunset slopes of everyone present <lb/>
grand old North Carolina, where the closing Thursday <lb/>
lofty hills and towering mount- night found out. wan- <lb/>
rear their peaks Heaven- to say something nice about <lb/>
ward ; where the hills and vales Lenoir and her hospitable people, <lb/>
pictures <lb/>
form pictures upon which the <lb/>
eye never tires in looking; where <lb/>
delightful breezes and cool <lb/>
and they it, too, those who <lb/>
did not in <lb/>
about it stood up voted loud on <lb/>
g health and I th- resolution or thanks, most of <lb/>
and where the vote <lb/>
I the matter of selecting the place tor <lb/>
holding the next meeting was men- <lb/>
one enthusiastic brother <lb/>
happiness to man. <lb/>
visitor is taken into the home of <lb/>
the people and made to feel the <lb/>
generous, hospitality <lb/>
which abounds there <lb/>
We embarked from home on <lb/>
the 22nd our destination <lb/>
being Lenoir, the place <lb/>
for the holding of the 17th <lb/>
annual convention of N. C Press <lb/>
Association. The committee in <lb/>
whose hands it rested were wise <lb/>
in selection of a place that <lb/>
afforded every attendant upon <lb/>
the convention such unbounded <lb/>
pleasure. Lenoir is a town of <lb/>
about inhabitants and is <lb/>
the capital of Caldwell county <lb/>
It lies about miles out from <lb/>
Hickory, and is reached by a <lb/>
narrow railroad which <lb/>
passes that town. The people <lb/>
wanted to make Lenoir the <lb/>
Meeting place. The selection <lb/>
was with the Com- <lb/>
The brightest lights in the con <lb/>
were Haydn and Christian <lb/>
APPEAL. <lb/>
To the farmers who are not <lb/>
of the Farmers Alliance, <lb/>
At a meeting of tho <lb/>
of Die twelve Southern States, <lb/>
at Birmingham, Ala., it was <lb/>
resolved to use bagging <lb/>
made of cotton- The object of this <lb/>
meeting was to thwart the unjust <lb/>
movements of the jute bagging <lb/>
who have set their means, <lb/>
skill and ability to extort from the <lb/>
cotton farmers of dollars. <lb/>
In order that may accomplish <lb/>
our purpose the New Orleans, New <lb/>
York and Liverpool Cotton Ex- <lb/>
changes have agreed to deduct tare <lb/>
so as to make cotton to jute. <lb/>
Tho members of the Farmers Al- <lb/>
will uphold the Birmingham <lb/>
resolution, the. trust has <lb/>
it out. Now, in order to break <lb/>
down, tho trust proposes to sell its <lb/>
bagging cheaper than ever, hoping <lb/>
that are under no obligation <lb/>
to use cotton covering. <lb/>
Brother farmers, take this <lb/>
method in asking-you to stand by <lb/>
and not the arrogant bag- <lb/>
trust. If fail now you mar <lb/>
look in the future for bagging <lb/>
to be sold at exorbitant trust prices <lb/>
The Jury System. <lb/>
The jury system has almost be- <lb/>
come to be a farce in this land. No <lb/>
man can reasonably expect justice in <lb/>
a these days. It Is a <lb/>
Kind of chance game more <lb/>
than lottery tickets. Sine <lb/>
tenths of the men who go into the <lb/>
jury box, got sense enough <lb/>
to comprehend the simplest points <lb/>
of law. The idea or men acting in <lb/>
the capacity of jurors interpreters, <lb/>
yon might say, of the law, because <lb/>
their decision is <lb/>
of Caldwell, j m not of brain sufficient <lb/>
of and poss <lb/>
a well balanced <lb/>
Daniels of brilliant as <lb/>
a Eldridge, of <lb/>
brained with clear long <lb/>
of Lumberton, <lb/>
ling with wit and with Man <lb/>
Dowd, Thomas, <lb/>
St Clair, Deal, Scott and others <lb/>
playing no minor part. Col Came- <lb/>
of Col. Polk, <lb/>
were sages of the body. <lb/>
There were several invitations to <lb/>
are extremely clever and Association to visit certain <lb/>
able and there is a general degree j points after the adjournment, of the <lb/>
of refinement seldom seen body. Perhaps those caused as <lb/>
small towns. The town seems to j much intent as anything else <lb/>
be a or artistic talent that the session. Whether they <lb/>
is seldom even in cities, j go to Blowing Rock or Hick- <lb/>
An art exhibit had been the of <lb/>
ed for tho enjoyment of the vis- <lb/>
n enable them to remember a <lb/>
sentence three inches in length <lb/>
Just think of a sot of <lb/>
from the pine and black- <lb/>
jack settlements, who know no more <lb/>
about law than a about <lb/>
psychology, sitting as judges among <lb/>
the Think of a sot of men <lb/>
who are infatuated with the idea <lb/>
that the louder a lawyer hollers the <lb/>
greater the weight at to his <lb/>
speech, passing upon the <lb/>
conduct of the best and most refined <lb/>
men in the land I Think of a <lb/>
oner, with the assistance of Ins <lb/>
being allowed by law to pick out <lb/>
in which more than <lb/>
a hundred line all the <lb/>
work of home talent, many of <lb/>
them being from nature <lb/>
sketched from the beautiful <lb/>
scenes surrounding the <lb/>
The Press Convention <lb/>
bled in large hall of Daven- <lb/>
College on Wednesday <lb/>
morning and was called to order <lb/>
by President R. Manning <lb/>
of the Henderson Leaf. The <lb/>
session was opened with <lb/>
ions services conducted by one <lb/>
of the resident ministers. About <lb/>
editors in attendance. <lb/>
We have present when the <lb/>
number was but. for a <lb/>
fide representation of editors <lb/>
and those engaged actively in <lb/>
work this surpassed <lb/>
convention yet held. Those <lb/>
of us who have long been <lb/>
of tut Association this <lb/>
joined in 1878 when a little <lb/>
less than years of <lb/>
wished to it raised to the <lb/>
highest standard of dignity and <lb/>
credit to profession, rejoiced <lb/>
that the labors to that end had <lb/>
proven successful and that the <lb/>
body <lb/>
dead heads and hangers on. <lb/>
There were men of brain and in <lb/>
present and sessions <lb/>
of the Association were vastly <lb/>
interesting. President Manning <lb/>
read a excellent address <lb/>
which was to a <lb/>
suggested various topics <lb/>
from it for discussion. This dis- <lb/>
was set apart for Thurs- <lb/>
day and occupied part of the <lb/>
session for day. <lb/>
the <lb/>
heard address of <lb/>
come from Mayor W. Erwin, <lb/>
which was responded lo by Mr <lb/>
Daniels of the State. <lb/>
After this the animal <lb/>
oration was delivered by Mr. V <lb/>
sessions, and when Christian, Hay- <lb/>
and put in there was <lb/>
all the fun one could look for. <lb/>
Tho vote was for Blowing <lb/>
though only <lb/>
we were among that number, <lb/>
which left on Friday morning for <lb/>
the top of the mountain, and a de- <lb/>
journey it was. What <lb/>
saw there as well as on the remain- <lb/>
of our trip will lie told next <lb/>
week. <lb/>
It was our pleasure to travel <lb/>
a day in company with Judges <lb/>
R. F. and J. G. By- <lb/>
while on our homeward <lb/>
journey last week. Though <lb/>
somewhat from <lb/>
ourself, we greatly enjoyed <lb/>
conversation of these wise jurist <lb/>
Both were to hold <lb/>
court in eastern counties. <lb/>
just a he thinks will <lb/>
give him, not justice, for he don't <lb/>
want that-but the benefit of <lb/>
ignorance then look at the <lb/>
bribery and corruption that are <lb/>
brought into play to clear rascals, <lb/>
at Richmond. of course, <lb/>
has a man, then Gov. Brady and <lb/>
John Wise, the a- <lb/>
bone crowd have a candidate and <lb/>
the third is <lb/>
backed In State Senator Waddell, <lb/>
who hopes to get his name in an a <lb/>
compromise. Doubtless the <lb/>
dent wishes some of the ham <lb/>
which is claimed exist among the <lb/>
republicans could <lb/>
brought lo bear on <lb/>
, The Commission investigating <lb/>
the of pensions have de- <lb/>
to make a preliminary re- <lb/>
port to Secretary Noble next week. <lb/>
This is taken to mean that the in <lb/>
has not in the <lb/>
opinion of the investigator so <lb/>
far sustained any of tho charges <lb/>
made, and that the preliminary <lb/>
report it made to give the Sec <lb/>
rotary of tho Interior a good ex- <lb/>
for ordering the investigations <lb/>
stopped. Hit should turn out that <lb/>
way there is certain to be a Com. <lb/>
investigation of tho <lb/>
have put foot in it <lb/>
said a Naval officer referring to the <lb/>
seizure of the Canadian Sealing <lb/>
vessel by the U. <lb/>
S. cutter for the <lb/>
illegal taking of seals <lb/>
tried the same <lb/>
trick three years ago, but when the <lb/>
the British government, demanded <lb/>
the release of the vessels Secretary <lb/>
had to accede to it, or <lb/>
ho thought it right to do so. <lb/>
The laws have not been changed <lb/>
since tho seizure referred to, but <lb/>
this administration seems put a <lb/>
different construction on them. It <lb/>
is to be hoped that it will now have <lb/>
the necessary courage to to <lb/>
surrender the seized vessel. <lb/>
Considerable commotion has <lb/>
created naval circles by the re- <lb/>
port that the plan tho battle ship <lb/>
now under construction at <lb/>
the Norfolk navy yard are so <lb/>
that would not float if flu- <lb/>
on tho present lines. Tho <lb/>
at the navy department are <lb/>
all ilium on tho subject, but <lb/>
other sources it is learned that <lb/>
experts are now at work on the <lb/>
plan trying to discover whether, it <lb/>
is possible to modify them <lb/>
tho vessel. A court <lb/>
marital may come of it. <lb/>
Wilson of West Virginia, <lb/>
was here this week. He says the <lb/>
contest, now going on the leg <lb/>
committee for the Govern <lb/>
bound to result in Flem- <lb/>
favor, and that as as the <lb/>
committee is ready to report he will <lb/>
call a special session of tho <lb/>
to receive it. <lb/>
Campbell of Ohio <lb/>
who will, it is thought here, the <lb/>
Democratic candidate, for governor <lb/>
t hat State is here. He thinks th at, <lb/>
if nominated he will have a good <lb/>
lighting chance to carry the State. <lb/>
Air. Harrison will leave here <lb/>
Tuesday morning for Bar Harbor <lb/>
where he goes to visit Secretary <lb/>
He will go to New York <lb/>
and from there to Boston, <lb/>
when he. will remain all day Wed- <lb/>
by Steamer. He will be <lb/>
met at Boston by Walker Blaine <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of I and surrounding counties, a line the following <lb/>
that are not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class and <lb/>
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of 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, FLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb/>
kinds. Gin and Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and Saddles. <lb/>
A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per less per cent for Cash, Bread Prep- <lb/>
and Hall's Star Jobbers Prices, lute Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. me a call and guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
TAILORING <lb/>
Spring Display <lb/>
Foreign and Domestic Novelties. <lb/>
Together with exclusive styles from our own <lb/>
workshop, which for beauty, elegance and <lb/>
workmanship equal any that can be found <lb/>
yield the palm to none. <lb/>
R. S. CLARK CO., <lb/>
GREENVILLE, C. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
DEALER <lb/>
k lion rant <lb/>
Are headquarters for all needed in he <lb/>
HARDWARE line. Our stock cannot be <lb/>
but if y want anything in <lb/>
Hardwire, Implements, Moves <lb/>
and Cooking Utensils. Carriage Material <lb/>
and House Cutlery <lb/>
CA LL <lb/>
We can save you money on any of these goods. <lb/>
MANUFACTURERS AGENTS FOR POWDERS <lb/>
which we will sell at Factory Prices. <lb/>
WE are now fitted up first-class and arc prepared to an <lb/>
upon short notice any kind or style of <lb/>
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb/>
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING <lb/>
We also keep a nice line of <lb/>
harness. <lb/>
Come and see us. Flanagan's old st . <lb/>
R. GREENE, JR. Manager. <lb/>
DURING THE SUMMER <lb/>
I will have weekly Of the very nicest freshest <lb/>
Confections. <lb/>
I keep constantly on hand I splendid assortment of <lb/>
GROCERIES, CANNED GOODS, TOBACCO <lb/>
CIGARS, TOILET SOAPS, <lb/>
All your wants In the above goods can he supplied by <lb/>
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb/>
CONFECTION'S PUT UP TO <lb/>
FINE A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
THE FRONT <lb/>
D. Williamson, <lb/>
TO JOHN <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House. <lb/>
CONTINUE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory is well equipped the best put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and improved styles. <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use you can select from <lb/>
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on band a full of <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
the year round, which we will sell as as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
. Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
E. C. GLENN. <lb/>
MERCHANT. <lb/>
STANDARD GUANO ACID <lb/>
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb/>
SMELL LIME. PUKE DISSOLVED BONE, <lb/>
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb/>
Tennessee Wagons, for sale. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. Mar. <lb/>
It-It hero to arrange <lb/>
the. pi in that city, lie <lb/>
lo at <lb/>
about ten days. <lb/>
Civil Service Commissioner<lb/>
thus make the laws on our now editor of <lb/>
books effect. Tho client j t, Vest, new about <lb/>
who has the biggest pile money <lb/>
is the only who may reasonably <lb/>
look for a favorable verdict from an <lb/>
average jury. Money is the. power <lb/>
behind I ho It makes no <lb/>
difference how rascally a may <lb/>
have makes but <lb/>
what of a crime he may <lb/>
have got <lb/>
of money he can just step to the <lb/>
ready to indulge in a quarrel on <lb/>
count of Inc hard ill toil is <lb/>
giving the Civil Service law. <lb/>
of Frank <lb/>
as a a newspaper in <lb/>
and comes back at <lb/>
him by charging in an editorial in <lb/>
his paper that has re- <lb/>
aside from his salary, more <lb/>
money from I he Government <lb/>
front, and pay the he goes than he <lb/>
fort h the court house a <lb/>
but a still. And yet those <lb/>
little orators, who are <lb/>
about on an equality with tho aver- <lb/>
age juror in intellectual ability, will <lb/>
the stump and almost go <lb/>
into over this great, <lb/>
delightful land of justice, and equal <lb/>
rights. There ii more corrupt land <lb/>
on tilt face of green than <lb/>
United Corruption <lb/>
department of the <lb/>
government. Money carries the <lb/>
Col. Roger J. Page, editor of <lb/>
the Marion was <lb/>
assassinated on the night of the <lb/>
22nd of July. Since his death; <lb/>
Mr. C C- Daniels, editor of the j elections and then the successful <lb/>
Wilson has succeeded candidates steal out or the treasury <lb/>
to control of the ; what they paid for campaign <lb/>
However, we are glad to. poses. Oppression holds the reins <lb/>
know that Charlie will remain i and is treading beneath <lb/>
at his post in Wilson and Trusts are roll blast, and <lb/>
cleared of somebody else to robbing the poor of their hard- <lb/>
e paper at Marion. We wish I <lb/>
him success in this new venture. <lb/>
did during Ins entire con- <lb/>
with the public <lb/>
And now is asking every <lb/>
else what mount. <lb/>
Quite a rumpus has been raised <lb/>
among the member of the labor <lb/>
union by the removal of E. W. <lb/>
one of the foremen at the Gov- <lb/>
Printing office. He was <lb/>
once a Republican, but worked hard <lb/>
for Cleveland. <lb/>
Postmaster Paul of Milwaukee, <lb/>
who was so severely in <lb/>
the recent report of Civil <lb/>
Vivo Commission has forwarded his <lb/>
resignation. <lb/>
Prosperity Alliance. <lb/>
Alliance, <lb/>
August 1st. 1889. <lb/>
Mn. n meeting of <lb/>
this Alliance on the date above <lb/>
named, the following resolutions <lb/>
were adopted, and we <lb/>
k for space lo insert Hie same in <lb/>
Hie <lb/>
It being for the fur- <lb/>
of MM <lb/>
therefore be <lb/>
Thai we I he members <lb/>
of Alliance will not mun- <lb/>
groans under its load of iniquity. <lb/>
This may be a great land, and if it <lb/>
is, pity the small Kile, as <lb/>
it is with wickedness and corrupt ion <lb/>
it stand long. J- <lb/>
Washington Letter. <lb/>
From our regular <lb/>
Washington, C, Aug. 2nd <lb/>
Mr. Harrison will probably wish <lb/>
the Virginian republicans <lb/>
much warmer climate that Wash- <lb/>
If they don't stop worrying <lb/>
him. lie had scarcely shaken the <lb/>
dust accumulated on his from <lb/>
Deer Park to Washington <lb/>
or patronage any day out of his clothes before he was <lb/>
W. of the<lb/>
hams or cm or organ <lb/>
men ho in <lb/>
in lulling cot- <lb/>
ton in any <lb/>
pounced by three different, <lb/>
crowds of Virginia <lb/>
each demand tag the appoint men t <lb/>
of a different man to be Postmaster <lb/>
BETHEL ACADEMY <lb/>
FOR BOTH SEXES. <lb/>
INSTITUTION WILL BE BE- <lb/>
opened August 27th, <lb/>
ion in English per session of <lb/>
twenty lo <lb/>
each. 12.60. Incidental Fee BO <lb/>
cents. Board per month from to <lb/>
moral advantages. Convenient <lb/>
railroad and mail facilities. year <lb/>
the principal took a thorough at <lb/>
Business College and <lb/>
ill. the University of Nashville. <lb/>
Tenn. further <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Bethel, N. C. <lb/>
Summer <lb/>
We are no receiving Spring and <lb/>
Summer Goods, and hope that <lb/>
you will not fail to give <lb/>
us a call. We nave a <lb/>
specially attractive <lb/>
line of <lb/>
at cents per yard, which yon <lb/>
will rind to equal to any <lb/>
yon will find at SB cents. <lb/>
A line of <lb/>
CASHMERES <lb/>
at cents. And <lb/>
many other things that we <lb/>
will offer at special prices <lb/>
The government will lake control <lb/>
of all the France We call especial attention to our <lb/>
within a year. <lb/>
So far persons are <lb/>
known to have lost their lives in <lb/>
the West Virginia floods. <lb/>
A of I he business part, of <lb/>
Little small town near Mon <lb/>
mount h, III., was burned last <lb/>
week. <lb/>
The. presence of the militia at <lb/>
West Superior. has served to <lb/>
prevent, trouble. The miners show <lb/>
no disposition to renew rioting. <lb/>
Tho den of William C. the <lb/>
green goods swindler of New York <lb/>
was milled, nod a great variety of <lb/>
trick furniture and good <lb/>
seized. <lb/>
The and <lb/>
turn <lb/>
plow, and the <lb/>
cotton plows. We will <lb/>
also offer to the trade <lb/>
LARD'S which <lb/>
has more merit than anything of <lb/>
the kind ever put on the <lb/>
truly, <lb/>
LITTLE, HOUSE BRO, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
FEED STORE <lb/>
a D. ROUNTREE, <lb/>
Dealer In Hay. Torn, Meal, Oats <lb/>
and Mill <lb/>
Will pay cash for <lb/>
Com and Pew. <lb/>
pay cash for my goods can <lb/>
All the miners examined by the <lb/>
Hoard of Arbitrators at <lb/>
III., testified that they averaged less <lb/>
a month, and were <lb/>
t-i make a lair living. <lb/>
Call on me at the store of Smith <lb/>
Watch-Maker Jeweler. <lb/>
If you want something nice in the way of <lb/>
Sewing Machines, <lb/>
come lo the OLD A <lb/>
large new stock just received. <lb/>
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry end Sewing <lb/>
Machines repaired and warranted. <lb/>
RAWLS <lb/>
J. COBB, <lb/>
Pin Co u <lb/>
C C.<lb/>
. H. <lb/>
Co <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Gilliam, <lb/>
Cotton Buyers, <lb/>
---------Tins apace reserved for--------- <lb/>
MURPHY REDDING, <lb/>
Merchandise Brokers, <lb/>
KT. O. <lb/>
J. B. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
AND- <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
SOLICIT of <lb/>
We have had several years ex- <lb/>
at the business and are <lb/>
to handle Cotton to <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful attention. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
The tad health of Mr. i. P. <lb/>
has compelled him to discontinue the <lb/>
of the for <lb/>
me, which has left a nice stock of Rood <lb/>
material bought Cheep for cash, on my <lb/>
hand. I will out the .-lock at a <lb/>
discount, or Will cay terms <lb/>
with the purchaser, or I will stab make <lb/>
terns with any good reliable man to <lb/>
on the business for me. <lb/>
There is CO better opening for a carriage <lb/>
business hi the county than at this place. <lb/>
I have also a large stock of general <lb/>
merchandise for sale cheap for cash or on <lb/>
time, such as Meats, Flour, Corn, <lb/>
bought in large lot- also a nice lot Of West <lb/>
New Orleans Molasses, nice <lb/>
selected stock of Shoes, flats and Straw <lb/>
Goods, nice lot cf Clothing, ladles Dress <lb/>
Goods, in fact everything that can lie <lb/>
found a General Store. <lb/>
May Nil. N. C <lb/>
Water Mills. <lb/>
The. undersigned having leased these <lb/>
mills for number of yours end put them <lb/>
In thorough order, begs leave to inform <lb/>
the public that he is prepare to rind <lb/>
Com and wheat in a <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed to all patrons. <lb/>
I would inform merchants that I am <lb/>
prepared to furnish them good water <lb/>
mill meal at prices delivered. <lb/>
wanting to buy at retail can <lb/>
he supplied at my store <lb/>
where will also find a select <lb/>
of General Merchandise which will b <lb/>
sold at lowest prices <lb/>
Robt, R. Fleming. <lb/>
THANK YOU THE PATRONAGE WHICH <lb/>
far bestowed upon us and beg for a continuation of the same, we <lb/>
to-day a line of goods that lie excelled in this market durability <lb/>
worth. have now in stock a nice line of Ladies Goods, embracing <lb/>
following <lb/>
Double and Single Width Cashmeres, <lb/>
English Satin Stripe Worsteds, All <lb/>
Wool Albatross, Nun's <lb/>
both plain and fancy, All Wool <lb/>
Cotton Mohair Dress Goods, <lb/>
Lawns in endless varieties, Piques, <lb/>
both Lace, Stripe and Plaid, Per- <lb/>
and Ginghams, Cheviots <lb/>
and Chambrays, Hamburg <lb/>
Edgings and Insertions, <lb/>
Laces, <lb/>
A nice lot of White Goods kept constantly <lb/>
Linen and Piece Linens. A line of Piece Goods and that <lb/>
will astonish you in quality and price. Notions in endless variety embracing a <lb/>
line too numerous lo Hats for Men, and Children. Gent's fur <lb/>
Goods, Shirts. Cults and Collars. Suspenders. Hosiery and a nice line of <lb/>
Scarfs. Shoes, to lit all who favor us their we pay special care to <lb/>
this line our Shoes both in quality and price. A large lot of Lama <lb/>
Slippers from cents up. We especially call the attention of the to our <lb/>
line of Slippers and think they will not do themselves they buy <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Hardware, Nails. <lb/>
Hoes, Plows, Shovels, Trace Chains. <lb/>
Grindstones and Fixtures, <lb/>
Crockery. Lamp-. <lb/>
Wood and Willow ware. <lb/>
Harness, and Whips. <lb/>
fail Ax and Bail Road Mills <lb/>
and Provisions, this line we carry Tea, Sugar, Molasses, Rice, Lard <lb/>
the we can Pepper, Spice, Soap, both laundry and toilet. Star Lye <lb/>
Ball Lye, Starch, best grade of Kerosene Oil. Meats of differ- <lb/>
kinds. Flour which we buy low and sell low for the cash, if you need bar- <lb/>
rel of good Flour come to sec us, we are rock bottom on it. <lb/>
We carry Window Sash and of different stock. Also the <lb/>
V stock of Furniture of any house in Greenville, embracing Suits, <lb/>
both double and single, Lounges, Chair of different kinds, Tables, lied Springs <lb/>
and Mattresses. Children's Cribs and Hods and Cradles. What we have <lb/>
not got in tills line we have from several the boosts in this <lb/>
country and will order anything you wish at moderate prices. Don't forget our <lb/>
Climax and Stonewall PLOWS when you want one. We casting <lb/>
for these Hows in stock. <lb/>
TO i'S when yon conn- to we guarantee fair and honorable <lb/>
treatment, and will appreciate your kindness and patronage. We can and will <lb/>
sell as low as any one who sells as good goods as we do. <lb/>
Yours <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018948_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Land's Column. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, C. <lb/>
SPECIAL <lb/>
A FEW HAYS SHALL <lb/>
have exhibition Fall and Win- <lb/>
Samples for Custom Made <lb/>
Clothing and cordially invite <lb/>
an inspection from those who <lb/>
want line clothing. <lb/>
Remember that guarantee <lb/>
a fit on all sales. The garments <lb/>
made by me during the past <lb/>
give evidence of styles, <lb/>
tit and durability. <lb/>
A full line of Earle Wilson <lb/>
Collars and kept constant- <lb/>
on hand. <lb/>
M. R. LANG,<lb/>
E. Column <lb/>
local <lb/>
It every day. <lb/>
No town is dry now. <lb/>
Grapes and melons. Ah urn. <lb/>
Send the items or news from <lb/>
your section. <lb/>
The Seaside is a new paper <lb/>
recently started at Beaufort. <lb/>
is <lb/>
the time at the Old Store. <lb/>
The roads leading Green- <lb/>
ville are in a very bad condition. <lb/>
The colored people had a big <lb/>
here last Friday The town <lb/>
was full of thorn. <lb/>
Fruit Jars Masons L., Cheap at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Theodore Council, who recently <lb/>
poisoned his wife near Williamston, <lb/>
has been captured. <lb/>
The be paid for <lb/>
at the old Store. <lb/>
U Mr. S. M. from <lb/>
near Bethel Z of <lb/>
last Saturday. <lb/>
Tar is cutting <lb/>
monthly caper of late and is again <lb/>
swelling in another freshet. <lb/>
White Dress Goods at cost for <lb/>
cash. B. Cheeky Co. <lb/>
Put on the passenger coach, Pres- <lb/>
and give us a <lb/>
schedule, and we are yours <lb/>
truly. <lb/>
White Dress Goods at cost for <lb/>
cash. J. B. CHEEKY Co. <lb/>
Sow you want some pleasant <lb/>
rowing parties, get them <lb/>
up while the moon is favorable <lb/>
Ladies and Misses, Opera slip. <lb/>
at cost, for cash. <lb/>
P. Cheeky Co. <lb/>
Nearly every paper we get hold <lb/>
of lately something to say about <lb/>
That class seem to lie on <lb/>
the rampage. <lb/>
Ladies and Misses. Opera slip- <lb/>
at for cash. <lb/>
J. B. Cheeky Co. <lb/>
We bet our delinquent j <lb/>
are glad the editor has been <lb/>
Cone. have had a two weeks j <lb/>
rest from duns. <lb/>
A good horse sale tor cash <lb/>
on time by J. V. <lb/>
This is an August mouth, <lb/>
haps notably so because it holds the <lb/>
editor's birthday, said <lb/>
event occurring to-morrow. <lb/>
Bettie Warren's <lb/>
school for girls and small boys will <lb/>
open on Monday the j <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Cox, of had <lb/>
the finest of the. season In i <lb/>
; town on Monday, lie brought us <lb/>
I one that weighed half a pound. <lb/>
M will buy Point Lace, the <lb/>
Flour at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
This seems to be an I <lb/>
ed year general heavy rains. <lb/>
We venture floods will prove the <lb/>
most destructive element of <lb/>
year. <lb/>
Breakfast lie- <lb/>
liable Pickled Beef, at the <lb/>
Old Buck Store. <lb/>
The July rams were general all j <lb/>
over the country. Throughout <lb/>
trip to western C. we were in <lb/>
more or less ram day except <lb/>
two of the whole two weeks. <lb/>
Lightening Fruit Jars, best in <lb/>
world, save without sugar, <lb/>
sold ii. S. Clark Co. <lb/>
The heavy last week <lb/>
ed washouts which de- <lb/>
mails passengers. We <lb/>
met with two delays of about lour <lb/>
hours each home- I <lb/>
ward. <lb/>
Arrived on matter how j <lb/>
sick you get, you eat Boss Bis- <lb/>
at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The fall session of Mrs. Wiley <lb/>
school for boys aim gills; <lb/>
will open Monday, 20th inst. j <lb/>
The session will be taught in the <lb/>
building lately occupied by Miss M.; <lb/>
F. Tyson. Patronage solicited. <lb/>
After To Day. All our <lb/>
Salines for All our <lb/>
M. R. <lb/>
Just <lb/>
j Caprice Piano, by Fisher. <lb/>
I not difficult, and w to com- <lb/>
to memory. A capital piece <lb/>
young pianists. Mail- j <lb/>
ed on receipt of in 2-ct post- <lb/>
age any music dealer, or <lb/>
the publisher, Tole- <lb/>
The Span a Mills have just been <lb/>
thoroughly overhauled. you <lb/>
want good flour scud your wheat <lb/>
there and try it. L. M <lb/>
Don't forget that we need money <lb/>
all. along now. owe <lb/>
much, but you put several hundred <lb/>
small amounts like it together it <lb/>
makes a great deal, and is sadly- <lb/>
needed. Millie is to pay, the man <lb/>
to the press is to pay, our. <lb/>
board is to pay, the wash woman is <lb/>
to and the is to pay I <lb/>
I and the rest of us like lo have a lit- <lb/>
to pay postage, <lb/>
per lb for Sweet Scotch <lb/>
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which <lb/>
is a of its superiority, at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
economical, <lb/>
Keeper <lb/>
to superintend boarding depart <lb/>
of Greenville Institute. <lb/>
must be well recommended. <lb/>
Apply to Mrs. John <lb/>
Quite a party came home from <lb/>
Ocracoke Monday and they report <lb/>
a delightful trip. Everybody is <lb/>
pleased with Ocracoke. They <lb/>
praise the hotel, they praise the <lb/>
fare, they praise the sailing <lb/>
fishing, and especially do they <lb/>
praise the splendid steamers <lb/>
and Greenville and their clover <lb/>
officers. We heard several <lb/>
say they never saw more courteous <lb/>
men than Capt. and Owner <lb/>
of the When <lb/>
trip is m nice <lb/>
its no wonder everybody wants to <lb/>
go lo Ocracoke. <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. John Simms has been sick <lb/>
a few days. <lb/>
Dr. D. L. left for Ocracoke <lb/>
Saturday morning. <lb/>
Mrs. A. J. left last week <lb/>
on a trip to Baltimore. <lb/>
Mr. Joyner is teaching <lb/>
near Mr. S. Spain's. <lb/>
Mr. G. left Monday to <lb/>
visit his brother in Cary. <lb/>
Mrs. Lucy spent a few <lb/>
days in the country last week. <lb/>
Mrs. John Duckett and children <lb/>
are spending this week Kinston. <lb/>
A grand at to- <lb/>
day. Another at Shady to- <lb/>
morrow. <lb/>
Mrs, S. A. Charlotte returned <lb/>
week from a long visit in the <lb/>
country. <lb/>
H. T. King, of the Tarboro <lb/>
Banner, spent last Friday night in <lb/>
town for <lb/>
Misses Lizzie Peebles Annie <lb/>
Randolph have been visiting Mrs. <lb/>
Wm. Peebles the past week. <lb/>
Mr. J. II. is teaching a <lb/>
public school near Swamp <lb/>
church Carolina township. <lb/>
We were glad to have a call on <lb/>
Mr II A. Latham, <lb/>
editor of the Washing, n <lb/>
The editor wife readied home I <lb/>
Sunday a pleasant <lb/>
trip of two week's to western N. C. <lb/>
Miss Havens Cherry left last <lb/>
week to visit relatives in Clinton. <lb/>
She will also take charge of a <lb/>
school. <lb/>
Mr. Z. M. Potts, who has had <lb/>
charge of the telegraph office the <lb/>
past two weeks, returned to <lb/>
Monday. <lb/>
J. L. Winfield preached in <lb/>
the church here Sunday- <lb/>
night. His sermon was very <lb/>
men. <lb/>
Mr. Louis of Tarboro, <lb/>
was in town Sunday. He came <lb/>
down to sec his son Alex, who is <lb/>
sick at Mr. M. B. Lang's. <lb/>
Misses Pearl from <lb/>
Greece Ella Crawford, <lb/>
from Goldsboro, spent part of last <lb/>
week with Mis. B. F. Sugg. <lb/>
Miss Eliza Ward, daughter of <lb/>
Mr. Fernando Ward, broke her arm j <lb/>
a few days since by falling from a- <lb/>
in which she was riding with a I <lb/>
party of friends. <lb/>
William Laker, who a few <lb/>
years ago spent some time in Green <lb/>
Ville was well known here, died I <lb/>
at his home Charlotte on July <lb/>
ii. of typhoid fever. <lb/>
Mr. B. S. Sheppard and <lb/>
Mr. J. H. Tucker and family, Mrs. <lb/>
Wm. King. Misses Nannie King. <lb/>
Ella King, Forbes, Rosa <lb/>
Forbes, L. C. Latham, Messrs. <lb/>
J. J. Cherry K. A. Jr., W. <lb/>
Higgs, W. W. T. E Ran- <lb/>
Hooker, H. C. <lb/>
Hooker. E. N. and Will <lb/>
Moore, of Greenville, Mr. S. C. <lb/>
Wells and family, of Wilson and <lb/>
Mrs. Dora Carr, of Greene, came up <lb/>
on steamer from Ocracoke on Mon <lb/>
day. <lb/>
The freshet has ran the <lb/>
trestle workers oat again. <lb/>
An excursion from Greenville to <lb/>
is be- i <lb/>
talked as as the gets j <lb/>
to running. That is just the <lb/>
Wilmington would like to sec or <lb/>
so of down that way, and <lb/>
we know the people would enjoy <lb/>
cacao trip. <lb/>
Superior Court Clerk <lb/>
us that he will be absent from town <lb/>
during next week, as he will leave <lb/>
on Monday to attend the meeting <lb/>
of the State at Fayette <lb/>
ville. urgent, bust-1 <lb/>
him had best come <lb/>
week. His sou will keep the <lb/>
open during his absence. <lb/>
An item printed elsewhere which j <lb/>
we clip from the Wilmington Mia <lb/>
is about the best information <lb/>
we can get concerning the opening <lb/>
of i he railroad. A special car came <lb/>
down last Wednesday with Messrs. <lb/>
Divine, Dunn and Ken- <lb/>
officers of W. W., but we <lb/>
learn from the homo people <lb/>
any t definite of their trip. We <lb/>
the information <lb/>
was obtained from some of these <lb/>
upon their return home. <lb/>
Jail Breaking. <lb/>
Three prisoners <lb/>
making their escape from jail Sim- <lb/>
day morning. They had been <lb/>
lowed to come out of the cells and <lb/>
remain in the when they <lb/>
took advantage of this much <lb/>
granted and cut through <lb/>
the brick wall. The escape was <lb/>
discovered and all the <lb/>
were captured before night, j <lb/>
Two of them were caught a <lb/>
distance below town and the other <lb/>
secreted beneath a build- <lb/>
on tbs same square of the jail. <lb/>
They will be confined to the cells <lb/>
hereafter. <lb/>
Scared. <lb/>
and tho Bad Boy were <lb/>
scared. We were our <lb/>
daily when all of a sud. <lb/>
den something come in, at first we <lb/>
thought that a battering ram had <lb/>
been turned loose and was coming <lb/>
at us with every foot then we <lb/>
thought perhaps it might lie a <lb/>
mule who had come around to <lb/>
us in regards to our eon- <lb/>
duet while the editor was away, <lb/>
and then we had almost come to <lb/>
conclusion that it was a young <lb/>
dynamite bomb thrown in <lb/>
midst, when we discovered that <lb/>
lightening had struck some where <lb/>
near as. The first thing that Billie <lb/>
realized was that a very large re- <lb/>
port was as near him as reports <lb/>
generally get, then looking up the <lb/>
room seemed to be in a perfect <lb/>
blaze. Scared I <lb/>
Billie thinks he wont grow any- <lb/>
more in seven years. Tho Bad Boy- <lb/>
why he was scared ho made <lb/>
a plunge for the back door <lb/>
casting his eyes backward, he dis- <lb/>
covered the room all on fire, he then <lb/>
made a rush for the water bucket, <lb/>
nearly demolishing what win left <lb/>
of poor Millie who was lugging the <lb/>
basin of water along, and ran up lo <lb/>
the fire and assisted in putting it <lb/>
out. Scared f But <lb/>
you might where was <lb/>
Ask marines. <lb/>
We hear that Greenville and <lb/>
Washington will cross bats at <lb/>
coke at an early day. <lb/>
The Greenville held their <lb/>
election of officers in the Ar- <lb/>
yesterday afternoon. the <lb/>
evening refreshments were served <lb/>
to the Company invited <lb/>
at the Opera House. We cannot <lb/>
give the new officers until next week <lb/>
L. B. Dead. <lb/>
Friday last our young towns- <lb/>
men, Messrs. G. L. and Moses <lb/>
received a telegram an- <lb/>
critical illness of their <lb/>
father. Mr. L. G. in <lb/>
New York. They left at once for <lb/>
that city and found their father <lb/>
gradually sinking. He breathed <lb/>
his last at o'clock Monday <lb/>
afternoon. The death of this mac <lb/>
is deeply regretted among the many <lb/>
friends of the family in <lb/>
For many years he was a citizen <lb/>
and merchant of this town and <lb/>
was esteemed by all who knew him. <lb/>
We extend our sympathy to the <lb/>
family in their severe bereavement. <lb/>
Marriage Licenses <lb/>
Were issued by the of <lb/>
Deeds to white colored con- <lb/>
pies daring the months of July as <lb/>
and <lb/>
Emily Epsilon Teel and <lb/>
Maggie Elias <lb/>
Catharine Jas. W. <lb/>
and Emma Jones. <lb/>
Jenkins and <lb/>
Mary and Pen- <lb/>
Simon Woolen and Em- <lb/>
ma Patrick, Samuel Teel and Ada <lb/>
Elijah Mason and <lb/>
Peter and Emma <lb/>
Hazel, Henry Bailey and <lb/>
Patrick, Charlie and Mag <lb/>
Frank Cox and Florence <lb/>
Cannon. <lb/>
Freaks <lb/>
office was the scone of much <lb/>
consternation on Monday afternoon <lb/>
caused by a flash lightning. It <lb/>
was dark and stormy and <lb/>
the cut off had been placed on the <lb/>
telegraph instrument to keep the <lb/>
current from the instruments and <lb/>
battery, lint lightning struck the <lb/>
wire near the bridge, shattered a <lb/>
few poles, and in an Instant there <lb/>
was a flash heavy report <lb/>
through the office that startled the <lb/>
occupants. Blazing papers that <lb/>
followed the flash added to the <lb/>
fright of tho moment there was <lb/>
no small stir a minute or two. <lb/>
An showed that <lb/>
charge was too heavy to be taken <lb/>
off the ground wire, hence <lb/>
the explosion. The instruments <lb/>
were not damaged, but much of the <lb/>
wire inside the office was melted <lb/>
and the were no little fright <lb/>
We. were writing up our <lb/>
at the time of the flash and tho <lb/>
piece, of we were writing <lb/>
was half burnt up. It knocked a our <lb/>
thoughts of a part of the trip <lb/>
The office was got in working order <lb/>
early next morning. We learn that <lb/>
lightening also struck the Wash <lb/>
office and at that place the <lb/>
instruments were destroyed. <lb/>
a Sew <lb/>
The Scotland Neck and <lb/>
vi lie branch of the Wilmington and <lb/>
Weldon Railroad, will be open for <lb/>
freight and on <lb/>
Thursday, August 22nd, to <lb/>
which place is located on the north <lb/>
bank of Tar opposite the <lb/>
town of Greenville. Freight <lb/>
Greenville will be rated way- <lb/>
billed to for the <lb/>
The stations on the road their <lb/>
distance from Scotland Neck are as <lb/>
Junction N. C. <lb/>
Railroad. Goose Nest <lb/>
Junction Railroad, miles; <lb/>
IS miles; A. R. <lb/>
miles, <lb/>
miles. <lb/>
The building this road is <lb/>
with a great deal of to <lb/>
iv. and we indulge the <lb/>
hope that the Coast Line people <lb/>
will find it advantageous to con- <lb/>
it from Greenville to Kinston <lb/>
and Jacksonville and thence to the. <lb/>
city of Wilmington. It runs through <lb/>
a of magnificent <lb/>
ties, and it would make a very val- <lb/>
feeder to our city. <lb/>
the prediction that it will be <lb/>
built to within the <lb/>
next two years. If <lb/>
SNOOT. <lb/>
of <lb/>
the Church of Christ <lb/>
at Ml Pleasant Pitt Co. X. <lb/>
Aug. 1889. <lb/>
Whereas it has pleased our Heaven- <lb/>
Father to remove from our midst <lb/>
from his labors on earth to the reward <lb/>
of the true and faithful our much <lb/>
ed brother and former pastor Kid. <lb/>
Latham therefore be it resolved. <lb/>
1st. that while we bow with <lb/>
meekness to the wise dispensation of <lb/>
Providence perhaps of all the church- <lb/>
es for which he has so faithfully labored <lb/>
will realize most the lost sustained in <lb/>
his death he being one of the most de- <lb/>
voted of our plea, the Bible, <lb/>
and Bible alone as of faith <lb/>
and practice. <lb/>
2nd. that the community at <lb/>
large has also lost one of its most use- <lb/>
citizens, whose precept example <lb/>
both as a public and private individual <lb/>
is worthy of imitation and will if fol- <lb/>
lowed lead us to a higher sphere in this <lb/>
life and to perfection in the world to <lb/>
come. <lb/>
3rd. that we shall long <lb/>
him in our memory for the <lb/>
years of earnest faithful <lb/>
and parental care for this church <lb/>
coupled with a life of piety <lb/>
that will if followed by us lead us onward <lb/>
to meet him in that place of rest where <lb/>
congregations never break up and <lb/>
baths never end. <lb/>
4th. that we tender his be- <lb/>
family our profound sympathy <lb/>
expression of the great loss they have <lb/>
been called upon to meet. We also his <lb/>
spiritual children realize our great loss <lb/>
for he might be properly termed the <lb/>
father of Mt. church, having <lb/>
been one pastor of the time since <lb/>
the church was organized. always <lb/>
stood ready to assist us In that <lb/>
was possible for him to do, and like St. <lb/>
he lets fought a good fight, he <lb/>
kept the faith and is now enjoying the <lb/>
rest that remains for the people of God. <lb/>
Mar we all hold out faithful and be <lb/>
pared to meet him where sufferings <lb/>
parting arc unknown. <lb/>
f. that we In our annual cod- <lb/>
to-day drop from <lb/>
roll. <lb/>
that these <lb/>
spread oil minutes of meeting <lb/>
copy be sent to his family to the <lb/>
Missionary Weekly <lb/>
TC and with re- <lb/>
quest to publish them <lb/>
I., A. <lb/>
A. J. <lb/>
New York Letter. <lb/>
special <lb/>
NEW August 5th, 1889. <lb/>
On the west side of Broadway, <lb/>
Houston Street, an immense, <lb/>
twelve-story, fire-proof building is <lb/>
in process of erection which is re- <lb/>
on account-of its <lb/>
builder. He has caused to be <lb/>
printed and displayed on side <lb/>
of the iron pillars the following in <lb/>
script-ion <lb/>
He owns and <lb/>
this marvel of brick, iron and <lb/>
thirteen years ago walked <lb/>
i lies streets and fifty thous- <lb/>
and in to prove that the <lb/>
capitalists of poor men <lb/>
twenty years ago and many a <lb/>
low facing poverty to ma be a <lb/>
capitalist a quarter of a <lb/>
hone IF HE WILL- <lb/>
adorned with ambition <lb/>
backed by honor always com- <lb/>
even without the <lb/>
Broadway <lb/>
I the notice exactly as it is <lb/>
printed which has a look of being <lb/>
very deficient in spelling ; tint <lb/>
is not the case, the being that <lb/>
the gentleman who signs it is a <lb/>
member of an association for the <lb/>
encouragement of phonetic spelling. <lb/>
Mr. is an eccentric million- <lb/>
in the wholesale dry-goods <lb/>
business. In fact, his present store <lb/>
w is on Broadway, near Grand <lb/>
St., and consists of five double floors, <lb/>
is filled every kind of <lb/>
goods, which he bays auction <lb/>
throughout the country and sells at <lb/>
private sale- He came to this city <lb/>
from Winchester, Va. in 1886 with- <lb/>
out a dollar in his pocket, and he <lb/>
succeeded in becoming very wealthy <lb/>
I can hardly agree with his state- <lb/>
that almost anyone can be a <lb/>
capitalist in a quarter a century <lb/>
he as also with his <lb/>
that capitalists of to-day <lb/>
were, poor men twenty years <lb/>
Once a while w-c may come across <lb/>
a gentleman like Mr- Hours who <lb/>
has built himself ,, in a <lb/>
by ability and <lb/>
sable than it n,, <lb/>
me that the moat way of <lb/>
getting rich now a <lb/>
or get a on something that <lb/>
everybody wants. However, the <lb/>
indications Mr <lb/>
got there just the same. His new <lb/>
building will cost One of <lb/>
his eccentricities is to amuse him- <lb/>
self by throwing dimes and <lb/>
to street boys tho back plat- <lb/>
form of Sixth Avenue car, <lb/>
Edwin Arlington.<lb/>
mot <lb/>
THE US NUTRITIOUS<lb/>
FIG i F CALIFORNIA, <lb/>
medicinal <lb/>
virtues known to he <lb/>
beneficial to tho human <lb/>
stein, forming n agreeable <lb/>
and elective laxative to <lb/>
cure Habitual <lb/>
and the many ills e- <lb/>
pending on a weak or inactive <lb/>
condition of the <lb/>
LIVER BOWELS. <lb/>
Ii is th j MM MM to <lb/>
cue is Hilton <lb/>
SO THAT <lb/>
PURE <lb/>
and <lb/>
one is using It and all arc <lb/>
delighted with it. <lb/>
Ai DRUGGIST <lb/>
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. <lb/>
urn CL. <lb/>
Km r <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having qualified before the of <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb/>
Had day of July. u Administrator <lb/>
the estate of <lb/>
is to persons holding <lb/>
claim against said estate to present <lb/>
their claims for payment within twelve <lb/>
months from date or this notice <lb/>
will he plead in Mt of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons owing said estate will <lb/>
forward and make immediate settlement. <lb/>
This July T. It. COBBY, <lb/>
of <lb/>
I. Atty. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The Superior Court Pitt <lb/>
having issued Letter of <lb/>
to the undersigned upon the estate <lb/>
of Mary Hancock, deceased, notice i <lb/>
hereby given to all persons Indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all <lb/>
having claims against said estate to <lb/>
sent them to the undersigned before the <lb/>
mill of July or this notice will lie <lb/>
plead In bar of their recovery. This 19th <lb/>
day of July MM. Cannon. <lb/>
A of Mary Hancock. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
milK JUDGE Of PITT <lb/>
A County, having issued Letters of Ad- <lb/>
ministration tome, the undersigned, on <lb/>
the MB day of June, on the estate <lb/>
of Jane Notice Is <lb/>
hereby given to all persons Indebted to <lb/>
the to make Immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb/>
of said estate to present their claims, <lb/>
lo the under- <lb/>
signed, within Twelve Months after <lb/>
the date this notice, or this no- <lb/>
will be plead of their recovery. <lb/>
This the day of June. 1880. <lb/>
K. W. <lb/>
on the estate of Jane <lb/>
Dry <lb/>
Positively Chancy<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
TO OUT <lb/>
We will sell at. We w ill sell at <lb/>
We will sell Lawn at I to We will sell Cloth <lb/>
We Combination Worsted will sell <lb/>
We will sell Hushing at We sell a lot of Corsets at <lb/>
We will sell Slippers a; to Mo. will sell Table Oil Cloth <lb/>
will sell Cloth at cost. Pants from to <lb/>
of Sample Shoes<lb/>
These figures only i <lb/>
good for days <lb/>
commencing <lb/>
Positively last <lb/>
Geo. S Lloyd, M. D., <lb/>
Specialist in Diseases of the <lb/>
in hi, m m <lb/>
SEVEN <lb/>
------Is now on a boom <lb/>
Bryan N. C FOR THE SUMMER <lb/>
JUST A <lb/>
months course at the Philadelphia <lb/>
and the Will's Eye Hospital, <lb/>
offer my services to the people of <lb/>
and adjoining counties. <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS BOARD <lb/>
privilege of <lb/>
BATH HOUSE, <lb/>
Can had in Beaufort, N. C. at <lb/>
per month. Address. <lb/>
Mrs. V. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
MESS <lb/>
WHO WISH <lb/>
By the Sea <lb/>
Spend the Summer at <lb/>
one of the most delightful on the <lb/>
coast ill to guests on <lb/>
Steamer has been <lb/>
cured will leave Washington for <lb/>
Ocracoke on Tuesday and of <lb/>
each week, and leave New for <lb/>
on Thursday of each week. <lb/>
At Ocracoke ex-cry accommodation <lb/>
will be to guests and every <lb/>
effort will be made to make their stay <lb/>
Can at will. A train road <lb/>
his from the hold lo <lb/>
I he beach. <lb/>
SAILING ii <lb/>
Is sports <lb/>
ill to the heart content. <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
Has been employed tor the <lb/>
who In dancing. <lb/>
it <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Is neatly and comfortably furnished and <lb/>
the table will be supplied with <lb/>
the best that can be procured. <lb/>
to per day. <lb/>
87.00 to per week. <lb/>
per b. <lb/>
Special MM to <lb/>
heal lb and vigor can find no place equal <lb/>
to the Seven Springs, as any one of the <lb/>
seven will compare favorably with any <lb/>
of the mineral springs in this country. <lb/>
There being seven within a few feel <lb/>
each other, having different analysis a <lb/>
of ailments can lie cured <lb/>
any watering place known. <lb/>
Persons coming to the Springs by <lb/>
can get conveyance from the <lb/>
depots at La Goldsboro and <lb/>
Mt. Olive, Grange is the nearest <lb/>
point. coming there on <lb/>
mail reach the spring-- be- <lb/>
fore night. <lb/>
in per day, <lb/>
to Sin week. Liberal <lb/>
the month or season. <lb/>
MAXWELL BROS., <lb/>
Proprietors. <lb/>
Seven Springs, N. C. <lb/>
MID-SUMMER PRICES <lb/>
In <lb/>
the <lb/>
scarcity of <lb/>
have been in-j <lb/>
by <lb/>
Brown <lb/>
And the propel <lb/>
have been <lb/>
from around <lb/>
high priced <lb/>
We are <lb/>
a special <lb/>
on all <lb/>
C, <lb/>
which prices <lb/>
put <lb/>
down lit <lb/>
body, of every. <lb/>
H-<lb/>
SO <lb/>
Of every kind arc <lb/>
be i n g sold a <lb/>
much less than <lb/>
former pi <lb/>
on <lb/>
Shoes and Kits <lb/>
Y ea n gel <lb/>
aerial <lb/>
We have the <lb/>
goods and t <lb/>
to sell yon, and <lb/>
an make prices <lb/>
Interest <lb/>
purchaser. <lb/>
He sure lo call <lb/>
on gel <lb/>
genuine bargain <lb/>
Brown Hooker. <lb/>
SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
North Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County. <lb/>
Robert Jr. and wife a <lb/>
Against <lb/>
J. C. V. Patrick <lb/>
of N. B, Anderson, II. <lb/>
Wilson, of W. L. Anderson. <lb/>
The Defendant, J. C. <lb/>
will take not Ice that ho is hereby <lb/>
summoned to appear before Ilia Honor <lb/>
the Judge presiding tuber Term class Music <lb/>
Ocracoke if yo-i <lb/>
For further particular <lb/>
wish lo enjoy <lb/>
address <lb/>
BROS., <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
A SUPERB <lb/>
Can now seen at store. I have <lb/>
the latest and newest and <lb/>
an experience of several years at the <lb/>
business qualities me for doing all work <lb/>
well. I also do <lb/>
WET AND DRY <lb/>
prices. Will be glad to have <lb/>
you call and examine my stock. <lb/>
MRS. K. A. <lb/>
HAMILTON <lb/>
MALE A FEMALE INSTITUTE, <lb/>
Hamilton, N. G. <lb/>
OPENS <lb/>
1880. OPENS <lb/>
JANUARY <lb/>
Tuition l <lb/>
Sub tier <lb/>
Primary, MO <lb/>
Intermediate, 8.60 <lb/>
Academic, <lb/>
each. i 1.00 <lb/>
Music, not more than 3.011 <lb/>
Incidental Fee per Session, JO <lb/>
Tuition payable monthly. <lb/>
METHOD of teaching will thorough- <lb/>
practical; Training thorough. <lb/>
Pupils from a distance can obtain board, <lb/>
Including lodging. In private families <lb/>
from 18.00 to per month. A <lb/>
Teacher will employed <lb/>
Pitt Court to held In <lb/>
on tin; tint Monday In <lb/>
and answer or demur lo Hie com <lb/>
herein Hied for settlement as <lb/>
of Louisa <lb/>
or Judgment will be prayed a. <lb/>
you and your sureties on <lb/>
Herein fail not to take due notice. <lb/>
under my hand at Greenville, <lb/>
July 20th 1880. B. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court- <lb/>
and also an Assistant as soon as the <lb/>
number of pupils Justine It Patronage <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
For further <lb/>
N. <lb/>
J. I. <lb/>
Of Interest to <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
I I A VINO the clerk of <lb/>
II the Superior court, Pitt <lb/>
on of <lb/>
the estate of <lb/>
this is to all per- <lb/>
sons holding claims against said <lb/>
to present their claims payments <lb/>
within twelve months from this date or <lb/>
this notice will Iv plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. All owing said es- <lb/>
will forward and make <lb/>
This Adm. of <lb/>
Laud Sale. <lb/>
virtue of a mortgage and <lb/>
delivered M. T. Fountain by <lb/>
Harris on the day tit <lb/>
January, which was duly <lb/>
in of Pitt county. In <lb/>
l. H, page which was <lb/>
thereafter transferred for R. <lb/>
King and by him transferred to II. F. <lb/>
Keel, the undersigned will nil for <lb/>
b-fore the Court House door in <lb/>
on August I lie <lb/>
of the said Harris <lb/>
in the following described piece of <lb/>
situated In the town of Greenville, lying <lb/>
near the river, adjoining lots of <lb/>
Arthur and others, <lb/>
the lot deeded lo and <lb/>
by K. C. <lb/>
an or less, II. <lb/>
This Aug. 1st, 1.180. <lb/>
V. U. Attorney. <lb/>
Br <lb/>
mm or north Carolina. <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. G. <lb/>
NEXT SESSION <lb/>
September Bib, Thorough <lb/>
Is offered In Literature, Science, <lb/>
Philosophy and Law. Tuition per <lb/>
session. For address <lb/>
HON. KEMP P. RATTLE. <lb/>
President. <lb/>
RECEIVED AT <lb/>
Woolens Drag Store, <lb/>
Front Reflector Office. <lb/>
Golden Discovery, Win- <lb/>
Bate Cure, <lb/>
of <lb/>
Favorite <lb/>
B. B., B. B. B. <lb/>
Buffalo <lb/>
AN EXCELLENT EDUCATION <lb/>
AT VERY LOW <lb/>
lo <lb/>
Thin Is n <lb/>
School, Is of Ml <lb/>
Schools In the <lb/>
Finn <lb/>
Mild <lb/>
Full Course of Study, or prop- <lb/>
for classes of <lb/>
. Collage or Business. <lb/>
Complete Course In For <lb/>
with full <lb/>
A. C. DAVIS, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
II <lb/>
Mu <lb/>
ENGINE STACKS, <lb/>
HaM to <lb/>
Reefing, Guttering Repairing. <lb/>
TIN SHOP in K. S. ft <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Tar River Transportation Company <lb/>
Greenville, President <lb/>
it. Viet <lb/>
S. <lb/>
N. M. Man- <lb/>
Capt. R. K. Ag <lb/>
The for travel on Tat <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer i the finest <lb/>
and quickest on the river. She has <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Kilted up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb/>
and convenience of <lb/>
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table furnished with the <lb/>
marled <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer Is <lb/>
not only comfortable but <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday. Wednesday <lb/>
and Friday at ft. A. M. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
Sal o'clock, <lb/>
Freights received daily and <lb/>
Lading given to all points. <lb/>
i. arM <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
GREENVILLE INSTITUTE <lb/>
m m <lb/>
TEACHERS <lb/>
Hi <lb/>
. Principal <lb/>
Hits. E, W, Di De- <lb/>
pa <lb/>
in Primary <lb/>
Department. <lb/>
MIS MAI <lb/>
Mm KAMA Music. <lb/>
Miss and <lb/>
Draw <lb/>
J, C <lb/>
and ill, <lb/>
DEPARTMENTS. <lb/>
Primary. Academic. <lb/>
I i. and <lb/>
lie, find <lb/>
Comfortable <lb/>
and <lb/>
I'll Illy of <lb/>
4.1 A Corps of Teachers. <lb/>
all hi graduate, of class <lb/>
Department equal <lb/>
in Work lo any in the <lb/>
New Pianos <lb/>
A of volumes, <lb/>
purchased recent h for the <lb/>
Moderate, from to for <lb/>
Board and Tuition and <lb/>
Day Pupils I he as <lb/>
In Pupils who do not board <lb/>
with should consult bin. <lb/>
before board For <lb/>
further Address, <lb/>
LOW TARIFF <lb/>
CARRIAGE FACTORY. <lb/>
no m nm on mesh <lb/>
tree now. Ah <lb/>
you free lo buy where you but <lb/>
If you want to save money you come M <lb/>
my on till reel, of It. <lb/>
Cherry Co's. For convenience w <lb/>
lime an through II. Y. <lb/>
Keel's Stables I can give <lb/>
you ever had In your life for <lb/>
to less money any one <lb/>
in the county can give yon. <lb/>
for expenses are less I pay Ins <lb/>
sot cash for and save the <lb/>
counts, and It you don't believe It you <lb/>
come mid see. had years <lb/>
experience In business I <lb/>
feel satisfaction or charge. <lb/>
n Don't forget the <lb/>
II. Cherry <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
D. Murphy. and Trustee of <lb/>
r. <lb/>
I. A. and wife, Millie B. Hum, C. <lb/>
T. <lb/>
It appearing to the of the <lb/>
Court T. Is a proper <lb/>
party defendant to the above entitled <lb/>
being an <lb/>
for Hie of a trust <lb/>
and recovering an Interest In certain <lb/>
lands on the old plank road, <lb/>
about three miles from Greenville, <lb/>
known us Hie Wiley Nobles <lb/>
it further appearing said Is a <lb/>
reside t of North Holies <lb/>
In hereby given lo said of the pen <lb/>
of entitled action In this <lb/>
Court, and said John T. Union Is hereby <lb/>
ordered to at the next term of <lb/>
the of Pill County to <lb/>
convened 2nd Monday after the <lb/>
1st Monday Horn, and de- <lb/>
to or answer the complaint Which <lb/>
will be In within first <lb/>
three of the term, or plaintiff <lb/>
Will apply to the for the relief d <lb/>
In Hie complaint. undo <lb/>
my hand this 3rd. <lb/>
A. MOTE. <lb/>
Clerk Court,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018948_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
. -V <lb/>
-f <lb/>
THE WASHBOARD <lb/>
BRIGADE <lb/>
THE <lb/>
REFLECTOR. <lb/>
VILLE, A. C. <lb/>
S KILLING. <lb/>
Why allow your clothing to be rubbed to <lb/>
Pieces on a Tl are of <lb/>
he,. W of <lb/>
the fact that it washes <lb/>
thing better, in less time, with less labor, and <lb/>
thine known <lb/>
with less wear and tear than <lb/>
It has n equal a harmless but effective detergent. <lb/>
MISERIES <lb/>
IV <lb/>
w, <lb/>
from Errors of Forty. Vice. <lb/>
cured at without rail or <lb/>
and <lb/>
pill <lb/>
Snail end of ire. <lb/>
d fie <lb/>
or Boston, <lb/>
B. B. <lb/>
and <lb/>
SOUTH. <lb/>
No No M, <lb/>
. daily Fart Mail, <lb/>
daily Sun. <lb/>
Weldon pin pm <lb/>
Ar Rocky <lb/>
A r Tarboro <lb/>
ill <lb/>
pm T V am <lb/>
Tarboro <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
in <lb/>
; mi <lb/>
GOOD BOOKS <lb/>
Sent post paid on receipt of price <lb/>
In the <lb/>
A most and instructive <lb/>
pages ; paper cloth <lb/>
The Imitation <lb/>
By Trios a Kempis. Paper ct. <lb/>
Humorists. <lb/>
Selections from Artemas Ward. Mark <lb/>
etc. 1-9 paper cloth <lb/>
Metropolitan <lb/>
J Warren Sr., York. <lb/>
HO Any hook in the world <lb/>
Dished at publisher's prior- <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, I <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD BUCK STOKE, j <lb/>
AND MERCHANTS i <lb/>
No N. <lb/>
Ill <lb/>
II <lb/>
nostril <lb/>
tally lily <lb/>
s am <lb/>
S HI <lb/>
II <lb/>
Xi. M. <lb/>
bill <lb/>
-x Sun. <lb/>
H pin <lb/>
s -n <lb/>
IA <lb/>
Magnolia I am<lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson as pin <lb/>
Ar Rocky <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro o am <lb/>
Ar Weldon mm pm <lb/>
Daily except <lb/>
Train ti Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax Neck at Ml <lb/>
M. Neck <lb/>
A. M. daily Sim-lay. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro. N via <lb/>
A R. K. <lb/>
M P M. P M. <lb/>
Williamson. X . -0 P M. I P M. <lb/>
l.-aves X I . daily <lb/>
except A M. A <lb/>
M. arrive Tarboro. X V, A M. <lb/>
on Midland X C <lb/>
except BOO A M. <lb/>
arrive X tO A M. <lb/>
leave- S S A M. <lb/>
arrive N A M. <lb/>
Train on Branch leave- Rocky <lb/>
Monet at P M, arrive- .; M <lb/>
P P M. Returning <lb/>
A M. <lb/>
M. arrive- Mount II IS Ai <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Clinton II <lb/>
for daily, except Sunday, at <lb/>
P M and II leave <lb/>
on JO A M. Mai P. M. <lb/>
at Warsaw <lb/>
train on <lb/>
Branch is No. 1-,<lb/>
Train No. -lop only <lb/>
and Magnolia. <lb/>
No. W make- at <lb/>
for all daily. All <lb/>
ail via Richmond, and daily <lb/>
via Ray Line. <lb/>
Train make for <lb/>
via Kit Inn-ml and W a-b <lb/>
All trains mil <lb/>
and hive <lb/>
JOHN V. <lb/>
i. It. <lb/>
T. M. <lb/>
r supplies will it to <lb/>
their lateral to gel our price before <lb/>
is complete <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
SUGAR. <lb/>
always <lb/>
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb/>
. buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
yon to buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
FURNITURE <lb/>
alway- on band and -old at prices to suit <lb/>
lite times. Our all and j <lb/>
for CASH. no risk <lb/>
to run. we sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C <lb/>
EVERYBODY LOOK. <lb/>
Horses <lb/>
Mules. <lb/>
Haw t Is r On by the Block lat- <lb/>
Con cut <lb/>
I There is both money and fun in <lb/>
, sword fishing. A few year ago few <lb/>
fished for the big, wily, wicked and <lb/>
solitary pirate fish of the ocean; <lb/>
chased him in their swift <lb/>
craft for the sport the novel cruise <lb/>
forded to idlers at summer resorts, <lb/>
who paid a head to sec the fisher- <lb/>
men stand up to a and stick <lb/>
a harpoon into him. Finally, since <lb/>
, the dietary merits of broiled <lb/>
were recognized, became <lb/>
a steady and lucrative vocation. <lb/>
New melon, and <lb/>
Clock Island are the home of <lb/>
To open the sword- <lb/>
season it is necessary only for <lb/>
a to aboard walk up to <lb/>
the ml of his bowsprit, where a little . <lb/>
I cage is erected for the to <lb/>
stand in and lash a long Willed harpoon I <lb/>
i along side of the bowsprit; then lie <lb/>
j is ready to cruise, Ho right out i <lb/>
I twenty, I <lb/>
or forty miles, near whose tepid <lb/>
i water loves la <lb/>
near the surface, his dorsal fin just <lb/>
showing above and cutting the water <lb/>
like the of a sod plow. The <lb/>
smack swims smoothly up to the fin <lb/>
j and the drives his long <lb/>
trident into big To the <lb/>
end of the spar is attached by a strong <lb/>
cord a floating which the <lb/>
; lets as soon as lie <lb/>
strikes the fish. No does the <lb/>
feel the cold steel in his vitals than <lb/>
I lie is off in a furious rush into the wide <lb/>
I ocean, dragging along the buoy, <lb/>
which out to the <lb/>
the course is taking. The <lb/>
men sail after the fish until he tires <lb/>
himself out; then they will kill him <lb/>
at their leisure, lift him aboard, and <lb/>
go cruising for more game. <lb/>
A smitten does not <lb/>
ways and when the <lb/>
notion pops into his bead, as it <lb/>
does, that he will make it live <lb/>
v for the enemy, he is mi ugly <lb/>
last wounded <lb/>
drove their long, sharp <lb/>
words clean through the sides of <lb/>
smacks; and in one instance the vessel <lb/>
barely escaped going the bottom, the <lb/>
st-a in through the broken <lb/>
planks. In another instance a <lb/>
towed a smack several <lb/>
miles, the harpoon Hue being fastened <lb/>
lo the York Sun. <lb/>
wise. BU f. w. <lb/>
no . wit Bis <lb/>
Several ago, when John M. <lb/>
stumping Nebraska In <lb/>
an important campaign, he included <lb/>
its extreme western part, then a <lb/>
wild region. In his circuit Ha <lb/>
wag by stage to Sidney <lb/>
one day, when they stopped at a little <lb/>
station to change horses. While this <lb/>
important operation was going on a <lb/>
large, determined looking roan whose <lb/>
article of cloth- <lb/>
was a big revolver approached <lb/>
the stage cautiously, and while <lb/>
glancing nervously at a <lb/>
small building, some hundred yards <lb/>
away, with a large sign of <lb/>
on it, he for Mr. Thurs- <lb/>
ton. Thai gentleman made himself <lb/>
known and the stranger <lb/>
speak down at Sidney to <lb/>
night, I <lb/>
I expect <lb/>
reckon I'll come down with my <lb/>
partition and do a little <lb/>
is your petition <lb/>
ed tho judge. <lb/>
up and the <lb/>
man pointed with his thumb. <lb/>
there a good prospect that you <lb/>
will get <lb/>
of it, but <lb/>
a few more names wouldn't do <lb/>
no hurt. When git it there's <lb/>
to be tho biggest change <lb/>
you ever seen in a small <lb/>
ain't had a letter out <lb/>
that air office over two <lb/>
critter that has it now <lb/>
says he will shoot me on sight, and <lb/>
you bet he'd do it too, so I lay mighty <lb/>
low. When a letter comes me he <lb/>
mils it to the door, shoots it full <lb/>
holes, sends word fer me to and <lb/>
get it and watches me out the <lb/>
comes he to have such a dis- <lb/>
like for <lb/>
I stole one his steers. I <lb/>
didn't touch one his steers till he'd <lb/>
hooked two my calves and I can <lb/>
prove it But jess you wait till my <lb/>
commission hero and I get hold <lb/>
that I'll wad the first letter <lb/>
that comes fer him in my shotgun and <lb/>
lire it down the well. Jess wait a lit- <lb/>
he'll find that I can pound <lb/>
stamps with one hand and cover the <lb/>
front door with a six shooter with the <lb/>
other as well as he can. My name <lb/>
is old in White, and you bet when <lb/>
I've I can tic up the <lb/>
eastern mail with my teeth and hold <lb/>
a gun on the genial and <lb/>
money order winder both at tho same <lb/>
time. Old Jim White ain't no rabbit <lb/>
when it comes to <lb/>
out for his <lb/>
New York Tribune. <lb/>
A ear load <lb/>
-ale <lb/>
n-t arrived and now for <lb/>
Will sell <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
oral term- on lime. I bought <lb/>
My -lock for Cash and can afford lo sell <lb/>
as cheap as anyone. Give me a call. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING <lb/>
N. T. <lb/>
Al <lb/>
In A. <lb/>
mi.-. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
;. III <lb/>
III <lb/>
0-<lb/>
Mixed <lb/>
II <lb/>
They <lb/>
A correspondent of <lb/>
The Atlanta Constitution tells this <lb/>
story on a resident called Uncle Had <lb/>
On one occasion when Uncle Rad <lb/>
went on to Virginia with clothing and <lb/>
home cooked rations for the boys, he <lb/>
did not get there until lute in the eve- <lb/>
and found the Tenth Georgia in <lb/>
line of battle, so he concluded to stay <lb/>
all night with the regiment, as he had <lb/>
done. <lb/>
That night midnight the <lb/>
sounded, and the alarm <lb/>
given that the Federals were ad- <lb/>
thousands; couriers and <lb/>
aids were dashing hither and yon or- <lb/>
all hands to look out and be <lb/>
ready to advance at a moment's no- <lb/>
Uncle was in a dilemma, <lb/>
but soon took in the situation. He <lb/>
I called lustily for a gun and cartridge <lb/>
I they were furnished him, but in <lb/>
intense excitement of the moment <lb/>
he found the belt was too short to <lb/>
reach around him and then he <lb/>
thought that he could wear it over his j <lb/>
j shoulders like an old fashioned coon ; <lb/>
skin shot bag. <lb/>
This he did, and it drew the box of <lb/>
; cartridges close up to his armpits, so j <lb/>
i that he would have to mount a stump j <lb/>
j on to get his hand to it. At last <lb/>
himself rigged as a soldier, and I <lb/>
i straightening himself to his full six j <lb/>
i feet two, with a sigh he said, <lb/>
j let <lb/>
The boys say that it was a false <lb/>
; alarm; at the Federals did not j <lb/>
i conic, and Uncle Rad to this <lb/>
I day that it because they got wind <lb/>
somehow he wits in line with the <lb/>
bloody Tenth, and being there he <lb/>
saved the fight. <lb/>
Having associated B. S. <lb/>
me iii the Undertaking business <lb/>
are ready to serve the people in <lb/>
capacity. AH notes and accounts due <lb/>
me for past services have been placed in <lb/>
i be baud- of Mr. Sheppard for collection. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
-lock of Banal Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb/>
from the line.-t Case down to a <lb/>
Pill county Pine Coffin. arc filled <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can render <lb/>
services to all who patronize <lb/>
us FLANAGAN SHEPPARD. <lb/>
Pat, <lb/>
The Minister's Score. <lb/>
Rev. n. M. Eaton, writing to The <lb/>
Republican, relates an <lb/>
dent that occurred In the early days <lb/>
of Maine Methodism, which illustrates <lb/>
how easy it. is for a man to imagine <lb/>
that his own inclination is a <lb/>
of the divine will. In the <lb/>
days of which Mr. writes, it <lb/>
was the custom for young ministers <lb/>
to consult their presiding elders before <lb/>
taking a wife. Once during a camp <lb/>
meeting in eastern Maine, a young <lb/>
minister approached the presiding el- <lb/>
and said he wished to be married. <lb/>
do you propose to <lb/>
asked the elder. said the <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday. <lb/>
Wednesday and <lb/>
Train BO connect., with Wilmington <lb/>
bound North, leaving <lb/>
a. m., with Rich- <lb/>
leaving <lb/>
p. III. <lb/>
H connects with <lb/>
Train, arriving at <lb/>
p. in., and Wilmington and I <lb/>
V from North at p. in <lb/>
Train Wilmington and <lb/>
Through Freight Train, leaving j <lb/>
f at p. m and Rich- <lb/>
A Danville Through Train <lb/>
leaves p <lb/>
Season Round Trip Tickets. <lb/>
Rates of Pare. Round Trip <lb/>
Tickets, from stations named below to <lb/>
City. Season of In <lb/>
effect June 1st. <lb/>
From To Season <lb/>
UM <lb/>
and return <lb/>
ARRIVED <lb/>
My Northern Bum Maker and Trim- <lb/>
mer, Miss has arrived and I am <lb/>
prepared to execute In the latest styles <lb/>
fashions any work to my <lb/>
MY SPRING MILLINERY, <lb/>
so arrived and will be pleaded to show <lb/>
i In in in you. My price are the lowest; <lb/>
and guarantee not to undersold by no; <lb/>
one. t-. Special bargains on all goods. <lb/>
Mrs. L. C. King, <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
Pa Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb/>
young man, Lord has made <lb/>
known to me clearly that I <lb/>
should marry sister Mary <lb/>
know her said the elder; <lb/>
is a fine girl. I will sec again be- <lb/>
fore the meeting During the <lb/>
week four other voting ministers con- <lb/>
the presiding elder on the sub- ; <lb/>
of marriage. Each of them gave <lb/>
the name of the woman to <lb/>
, . whom he proposed to offer himself, <lb/>
Hie latest designs have Toy had mm the <lb/>
great deal, and each was certain that <lb/>
it was God's desire that he should <lb/>
marry the person named. Neither of <lb/>
tho live young men knew that any <lb/>
one had consulted the elder on <lb/>
that subject On tho lost of the <lb/>
camp meeting, at noon, the elder call- <lb/>
ed tho five young ministers to his tent <lb/>
to receive his opinion. He <lb/>
brethren, it may be the will of <lb/>
God for you to marry, out it is not his <lb/>
will -that five Methodist ministers <lb/>
should marry that little sister Mary <lb/>
Journal. <lb/>
Sat. Night <lb/>
; . <lb/>
2.-VI <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
in line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
; MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
j all the improved appliances; new <lb/>
, comfortable, chairs. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb/>
for wt outside of my shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very <lb/>
EDMONDS. <lb/>
For Sale.<lb/>
New I will sell my Center Bluff <lb/>
Season of two acres of land with <lb/>
Rates of Fate, Round Trip j wore house, large warehouse tenant <lb/>
Tickets, from below to house on reasonable terms. Property <lb/>
points on the W. N. C. U. K. at Center mi Tar a <lb/>
,; S very desirable location for mercantile <lb/>
business. I have, also a splendid <lb/>
from power steam saw and grist mill that <lb/>
will sell at a <lb/>
J. N. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
S t <lb/>
To m m<lb/>
, Obi 1.70 <lb/>
ti i 15.25 17.10 <lb/>
Id 6- <lb/>
r- ilia <lb/>
I. <lb/>
Nickeled Pen ft <lb/>
MARKS ANYTHING <lb/>
ma Ion iLl. L<lb/>
At a Scotch funeral one of the <lb/>
mourners approached the minister <lb/>
and whispered to ye ken <lb/>
what aye think just when they're <lb/>
letting down the coffin coffin <lb/>
was just being lowered into the <lb/>
thoughts. I suppose, said <lb/>
the minister, death and eternity, <lb/>
I have no said the <lb/>
other, aye a glad it's no <lb/>
All the Year Round. <lb/>
Flood Incidents. <lb/>
Some curious incidents of the floods <lb/>
in Pennsylvania are reported. A man <lb/>
called at the relief headquarters in <lb/>
and asked for a suit of <lb/>
clothes. After he had been fined he <lb/>
remarked that be bad of <lb/>
money, but clothes were he <lb/>
needed. A resident of <lb/>
Cut two pigs in his parlor for safety <lb/>
at soon missed them and supposed <lb/>
were drowned. At bed time, on <lb/>
going upstairs to his room, he found <lb/>
the youthful in his bed fast <lb/>
asleep. A clergyman, who said he <lb/>
had lost a three children at <lb/>
Johnstown, of clothes at <lb/>
the because they <lb/>
were asked for <lb/>
a summer fl a new <lb/>
black one, not take any <lb/>
one of color, and wont <lb/>
dissatisfied. Chicago Times. <lb/>
YOU WANT <lb/>
Paine's Celery Compound <lb/>
Purifies the Blood, <lb/>
Nerves, <lb/>
Stimulates the. Liver, <lb/>
Regulates the Kidneys and Bowels, <lb/>
Gives Vigor to every organ. <lb/>
Use It Now <lb/>
your <lb/>
I ran It an <lb/>
moot <lb/>
it lit a <lb/>
It Ml a <lb/>
Mineral <lb/>
THE <lb/>
BUILDINGS <lb/>
There's nothing like it. <lb/>
. much nm tad <lb/>
procured or <lb/>
The use of two bottles me <lb/>
feel a new man. As a general tonic <lb/>
spring I do not know Its <lb/>
W. L. <lb/>
General V. K. O Vt <lb/>
. . <lb/>
least of any <lb/>
in the South. <lb/>
ENLARGED. <lb/>
In lull <lb/>
view of the Blue <lb/>
Bulge <lb/>
and since It I have <lb/>
I Tops. Vt. <lb/>
DYES<lb/>
A Cat's <lb/>
Ono of Boston's handsomest Maltese <lb/>
cats arrived in this city this noon on <lb/>
the 1254 express via Springfield. She <lb/>
secured passage in a drawing room <lb/>
car, or rather under it, just before the <lb/>
train left the Boston and Albany de- <lb/>
pot in Boston, and came through in a <lb/>
One of the porters on the <lb/>
noticed her seated cozily upon <lb/>
the break beam of one of the trucks <lb/>
just before started, but sup- <lb/>
posed she would jump off when the <lb/>
ear began to move. On the contrary, <lb/>
tho cat fastened her claws into the <lb/>
woodwork all the firmer when the <lb/>
train started, and during her ride of <lb/>
miles maintained her position <lb/>
disturbed by the whirlwind of sand <lb/>
and gravel that would have smothered <lb/>
an ordinary mortal. When tho train <lb/>
reached Use city she was still in <lb/>
session of her senses, and had become <lb/>
so firmly attached to her new home <lb/>
that the porter could scarcely pull her <lb/>
off the truck. When he did she. how- <lb/>
ever, quickly ran back and took her <lb/>
former seat on the truck, and it was <lb/>
only- when tho baggage master again <lb/>
pulled her off and held her in bis arms <lb/>
till the train moved away that the <lb/>
cultured cat could be persuaded to re- <lb/>
main in the capital city. She was not <lb/>
in the least disturbed by her rapid <lb/>
transit, and when Banning <lb/>
placed her on tho back seat of his hack <lb/>
she immediately began to purr con- <lb/>
and rode in great style to her <lb/>
new homo on Barber street, running <lb/>
her claws down into tho cushioned <lb/>
scat and pulling slowly upon the cloth <lb/>
in her musical <lb/>
ford Post <lb/>
Sending it by <lb/>
The telegraph, by which <lb/>
manuscript, maps or pictures may be <lb/>
transmitted, is a species of tho auto- <lb/>
method in which the receiver is <lb/>
actuated synchronously with its trans- <lb/>
By method a picture <lb/>
or map with insulating ink <lb/>
the cylindrical surface of a rota- <lb/>
ting drum, which revolves under a <lb/>
Mint having a slow movement along <lb/>
the axis of the cylinder, and thus the <lb/>
point goes over the <lb/>
surface in a spiral path. The <lb/>
electrical circuit will be broken by <lb/>
every ink mark on the cylinder <lb/>
is in this path, and thereby <lb/>
marks are made in a spiral <lb/>
lino by an ink marker upon a drum <lb/>
at the receiving end. To produce these <lb/>
outlines it is only necessary that the <lb/>
two drums be rotated in unison. This <lb/>
system is of little utility, there being <lb/>
no apparent demand for <lb/>
transmission, particularly at so great <lb/>
an speed, for it will be seen <lb/>
that instead of making a character of <lb/>
the alphabet by a very few <lb/>
as is done by the <lb/>
pr must be greatly increased. <lb/>
dots become necessary to show tho <lb/>
outlines of the more complex char <lb/>
The is interesting <lb/>
type of the method. In this <lb/>
form tho movements of a pen in <lb/>
writer's hand produce corresponding <lb/>
movements of a pen at the distant <lb/>
and thereby a record. <lb/>
diaries L Buckingham in <lb/>
The multiplication of 987.051.321 by <lb/>
gives 41.441.4-14.445. Reversing <lb/>
the tinier and multiplying <lb/>
A Blaster Architect. <lb/>
Mr. C. O. of Maiden, <lb/>
Mass., was not only the architect of <lb/>
his own fortune, but ho was the <lb/>
and builder of his own house as <lb/>
well. In the work of building he was <lb/>
entirely unaided, placing every atone <lb/>
and every beam himself. This would <lb/>
not be so surprising if Mr. <lb/>
were as well supplied with limbs as <lb/>
other men, but he is not He has but <lb/>
one arm, and yet he has done much <lb/>
better than most men would do with <lb/>
two. The house is of stone, with a <lb/>
complete wooden frame inside. It <lb/>
took him four years to do the work, <lb/>
during which tune he was laid- up for <lb/>
one year, having sustained serious in- <lb/>
juries by a of thirty feet, from the <lb/>
to the first Bu- <lb/>
Sores Aches and Pains. <lb/>
When a hundred bottles of sarsaparilla <lb/>
or other pretentious fall in <lb/>
in-born scrofula or contagious blood <lb/>
poison; remember that B. B, IS. <lb/>
Blood has gained many thousand <lb/>
in as many seemingly in- <lb/>
curable instances. Send to the Wood <lb/>
Balm Co., Atlanta. for of <lb/>
mid lie convinced. It is the <lb/>
only true blood purifier. <lb/>
C. W. r, Howell's N Roads, <lb/>
was nine years with <lb/>
sores. All the medicine I could take <lb/>
did me no good. I then tried B. B. <lb/>
B bottles cured me <lb/>
Mrs. S. M. Wilson. Round Mountain. <lb/>
Texas, lady of mine <lb/>
troubled with bump- and pimples <lb/>
on her face and neck. She took three <lb/>
bottles of II. B. II. and her skin got soft <lb/>
and smooth, pimples disappeared, and <lb/>
her health improved <lb/>
jean ago I blood <lb/>
on. had no appetite, my digestion was <lb/>
ruined, rheumatism up my limbs <lb/>
so could walk, my throat was <lb/>
cauterized five times. Hot Springs gave <lb/>
me no and my life was one of <lb/>
torture until I gave B. B. B. a trial, <lb/>
surprising as it may seem, the use of live <lb/>
bullies cured <lb/>
bullet has its says <lb/>
the old soldier, when counseling the <lb/>
recruit to take comfort in the <lb/>
chances or war. Tho ways of bullets, <lb/>
when they seem actually to re- <lb/>
commission to strike, are often <lb/>
very eccentric and whimsical. An <lb/>
army surgeon who was in the habit of <lb/>
carrying in his breast pocket a little <lb/>
sketch book, says that he to <lb/>
owe it a special debt of gratitude. <lb/>
The book itself is ready to tell us <lb/>
why, for it is pierced through <lb/>
parts of its thickness with two dis- <lb/>
bullet holes. About fifteen or <lb/>
twenty sketches were thus sacrificed, <lb/>
but the doctor's life had, at tho <lb/>
time been saved. <lb/>
The Ufa of a war correspondent of <lb/>
The London Telegraph was also saved <lb/>
by such a shield. A curious fact con- <lb/>
with this was that <lb/>
the bullet had revolved in its course, <lb/>
after reaching the so that <lb/>
its track was u circular one. <lb/>
Several cases of the eccentricities of j <lb/>
bullets have been given by Irving i <lb/>
in of a War <lb/>
Artist. He declares that lie has known <lb/>
bullets to flatten round a bone, as if <lb/>
the bone, having been broken, was <lb/>
now joined together by tho pliant lead. <lb/>
In another case, the bullet went six <lb/>
times in and out of a skirmisher's body i <lb/>
without doing him any serious harm. <lb/>
Kneeling as he lied, ball had first . <lb/>
passed in and out of one arm, had J <lb/>
versed the ribs, entering one side and j <lb/>
making its exit at the other, and fin- <lb/>
its erratic course by <lb/>
finally taking its departure from the <lb/>
Other arm of that curiously perforated <lb/>
soldier. <lb/>
A bullet has fired through <lb/>
thick plate glass, and, hitting against <lb/>
a wall flew into particles which be- <lb/>
spattered a man's face without serious- <lb/>
injuring him. <lb/>
A counter instance, however, is <lb/>
that of a spent cannon ball, which . <lb/>
went dancing like a plaything <lb/>
a little In impulsive playful- ; <lb/>
BOB, she ran to catch it. and was <lb/>
to death by its fall. Youth's <lb/>
Companion. <lb/>
The best Salve in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores. Salt Fe- i <lb/>
Sores, Implied Hands, <lb/>
Wain, Corns, all Skin i <lb/>
and cures Biles, or no pay re- i <lb/>
It is guaranteed to give feet; <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded, j <lb/>
For sale , <lb/>
A Safe Investment. <lb/>
Is one which is guaranteed lo , <lb/>
you satisfactory results, or in case of <lb/>
failure a return of purchase price. On <lb/>
safe plan you can buy from our ad- <lb/>
Druggist a bottle of Dr. King's <lb/>
New Discovery for Consumption. It <lb/>
guaranteed to bring relief in every case , <lb/>
when used for any affection of Throat, <lb/>
Lung such consumption, j <lb/>
of Lungs. Bronchitis, <lb/>
ma, Whooping Cough, Croup, etc. etc. <lb/>
It is pleasant and agreeable to male, per- <lb/>
safe, and can always lie depended <lb/>
upon. , <lb/>
Trial bottles free at Me. O. mil's <lb/>
Drug store. . <lb/>
Men Death <lb/>
Who said that men fear death i <lb/>
Who concocted that fable for old <lb/>
wives He should have stood that <lb/>
night with Philip in the midst of a <lb/>
host of men in the full flush <lb/>
and vigor of life, calmly and I <lb/>
making ready at dawn <lb/>
death in its most horrid forms at one I <lb/>
another's hands. It is in vain that re- J <lb/>
invests the tombs with terror, <lb/>
and philosophy, shuddering, averts <lb/>
her face; the nations turn from these <lb/>
gloomy teachers to storm its portals <lb/>
in exultant hosts, battering them wide . <lb/>
enough for thousands to charge <lb/>
through abreast. Tho heroic instance I <lb/>
of humanity with its high contempt <lb/>
of death is and truer, never let j <lb/>
us doubt, than superstitious terrors or <lb/>
philosophic doubts. It testifies to. <lb/>
conviction, deeper than reason, that <lb/>
is greater than his seeming self; j <lb/>
to an underlying consciousness that <lb/>
his mortal life is but accident of <lb/>
his real existence, the fashion of a <lb/>
day, to be lightly worn and <lb/>
dolled at duty's call. <lb/>
What a pity it truly is that the ton- <lb/>
air of air that Phil- <lb/>
breathed that night at Antietam <lb/>
cannot be gathered up and preserved <lb/>
LACTATED FOOD <lb/>
Tombs, Vaults, Tracing. <lb/>
I would Ball your <lb/>
to the following address and ask <lb/>
to remember that yon can buy a <lb/>
or of <lb/>
this house cheaper than any other in the are are so the <lb/>
country. That It is the most reliable j Springs with farm attached, from <lb/>
and known having been represented I which we get mo-t of our <lb/>
over forty year- in thin vicinity, lug a great part of the necessary work <lb/>
That the to none dining season the Springs are open. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
I on . <lb/>
Cincinnati A Railroad. <lb/>
son Station one half mile of Springs. <lb/>
To the Afflicted. <lb/>
tell you that the in- <lb/>
contained in these water, <lb/>
are in their effect Diuretic. <lb/>
Tonic and Alt. making it nature's <lb/>
remedy for Indigestion. Dyspepsia. Ii- <lb/>
of the Kidneys. Liver, Bladder, and <lb/>
all eases of Debility and Weak <lb/>
which need a In <lb/>
and Scrofulous affections. <lb/>
To the Public. <lb/>
Rejector, <lb/>
and has unusual filling <lb/>
den promptly and satisfactory. <lb/>
v respectfully. <lb/>
Refer to P. W. <lb/>
J. . SI or want, Conn. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
of the <lb/>
price; <lb/>
n the Heart <lb/>
The mot work on <lb/>
abject, paxes ; paper cloth <lb/>
limitation of <lb/>
By Thomas a Kempis. Paper. <lb/>
Selection from Ward. Twain, ant <lb/>
others, page.; paper is cent; <lb/>
Metropolitan Agency, <lb/>
Ht., York<lb/>
price <lb/>
5-Ton Cotton Gin Scales, <lb/>
BEAM BOX <lb/>
brass Tare beam. <lb/>
Bar s <lb/>
i s <lb/>
HE PAYS THE FREIGHT., <lb/>
For List. <lb/>
f If. T. <lb/>
Advertising <lb/>
OB<lb/>
.-. . .,. .- . <lb/>
if. ;. i--. .-. . -1.1.1-1. oil <lb/>
TONIC. It <lb/>
t-t-nm i -1 r-i <lb/>
r. <lb/>
PARKER'S <lb/>
HAIR <lb/>
C;. . hair. <lb/>
. . I iambi <lb/>
l Cray <lb/>
color. <lb/>
Pi. . .-i 1.1- <lb/>
STRENGTH VITALITY <lb/>
How Lost How Regained <lb/>
of Evil. <lb/>
Johnny ma I wish <lb/>
you would make me a pair of home <lb/>
made trousers every day. <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
Why. <lb/>
Johnny the <lb/>
scholars all at me so today <lb/>
the teacher hod lo excuse me, <lb/>
and I've bad a bully time fishing; with <lb/>
Bill Free Press. <lb/>
THE SCIENCE OF LIFE <lb/>
A Scientific and Standard Medical Treatise <lb/>
on the Errors of Decline, <lb/>
and of the Blood. <lb/>
UNTOLD MISERIES <lb/>
from Vice, Off <lb/>
the victim <lb/>
for Work, the Marred or Social Relation. <lb/>
treat <lb/>
work. Beautiful <lb/>
full Price only <lb/>
postpaid, in <lb/>
Prospectus Free, apply now. The <lb/>
author, Wm. H. Parker, M. P., n- <lb/>
AN J L <lb/>
far <lb/>
this on <lb/>
of may be consulted, <lb/>
by mail or In at the office of <lb/>
Ne. <lb/>
orders for books or letters for should be <lb/>
directed a <lb/>
THE <lb/>
THYSELF<lb/>
A and Standard on <lb/>
Premature <lb/>
and Physical Debility, Impurities of the Blood, <lb/>
from Folly. Vice, Excesses or <lb/>
the victim <lb/>
for Work. Business, Married or Relation. <lb/>
Avoid unskilful pretenders. Possess this <lb/>
work. It contains paces, royal <lb/>
embossed, full Price, only by <lb/>
mall, . In wrapper, illus- <lb/>
Prospectus Free, If now. Tho <lb/>
author, Parker, M. D., re- <lb/>
the COLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL <lb/>
from the National Medical Association, <lb/>
for the PRIZE ESSAY On NERVOUS and <lb/>
PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker a corps <lb/>
of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, <lb/>
by moil or In person, the office of <lb/>
THE MEDICAL INSTITUTE. <lb/>
No. St., Sm, lo whom all <lb/>
for books r letters for advice should be <lb/>
as above. <lb/>
We desire to say to oar citizens, that <lb/>
for years we have selling Dr. King's . <lb/>
New for Dr. <lb/>
Kings Pills. j <lb/>
and Bitters, and hand- <lb/>
led remedies that sell as well, or <lb/>
have given universal satisfaction. <lb/>
We do not hesitate to them i <lb/>
time, and stand ready to re- i <lb/>
fund price, if satisfactory <lb/>
results do not follow their These <lb/>
remedies have won their great <lb/>
purely on their merits. G. Fr- <lb/>
Drug store. <lb/>
we can favor our with ix-st<lb/>
i But at <lb/>
the extremely low <lb/>
one <lb/>
room two Week. <lb/>
When <lb/>
two 87.00 <lb/>
ii lo twelve years old <lb/>
half Two to rears <lb/>
I fourth iii <lb/>
rendered in earing <lb/>
for room of family or are <lb/>
with. Where arc a family of five <lb/>
or more, or a party of friends from the <lb/>
town or section, who will occupy j <lb/>
one room, a m ten <lb/>
cent. Hill be of <lb/>
I Horses ht Pet week. <lb/>
three dollars. I'm mouth, ten dollars. <lb/>
Amusements and Recreation. <lb/>
Alley. <lb/>
of <lb/>
all kind.-,. -One and I <lb/>
When two will to it daily I <lb/>
one or more hours each day. <lb/>
cents per hour <lb/>
W. G. PATTERSON, , <lb/>
P. or P. <lb/>
X. C <lb/>
c. o. <lb/>
Cotton Seed <lb/>
ANTI-DYSPEPTIC. <lb/>
FROM HOG FAT.<lb/>
O. <lb/>
D. J.<lb/>
II <lb/>
i Price <lb/>
Year, <lb/>
IN ADVANCE <lb/>
is <lb/>
it <lb/>
Newspaper ever in <lb/>
Greenville. It tho <lb/>
LATEST NEWS <lb/>
give- Matter for <lb/>
the money than any taper <lb/>
in North Carolina. <lb/>
The a variety <lb/>
of news. STATUE <lb/>
will devote it- <lb/>
self to the material <lb/>
tickets, representing the the section iii which it <lb/>
in <lb/>
PURE, <lb/>
WHOLESOME, <lb/>
ECONOMICAL <lb/>
Fee Bait by all Bead for <lb/>
traced <lb/>
ABOUT <lb/>
ONE HUNDRED PRIZE DINNERS. <lb/>
how to provide a dinner for Four <lb/>
Persons for One Dollar. <lb/>
An excellent Cook Book of <lb/>
l-mo., containing one hundred <lb/>
Bills of Pare, with instructions how <lb/>
prepare each one. so that the en-t <lb/>
four persons cannot exceed one dollar, <lb/>
also additional <lb/>
Tins valuable will ho given fret <lb/>
to any one or presenting tin <lb/>
twenty J. P. COTTON <lb/>
at on Branch Store, So. <lb/>
W. 42nd St. X. Y. <lb/>
Each pail of our Lard contains a ticket, <lb/>
the n mm i on which corresponds to <lb/>
number of pounds in the pail. <lb/>
The Cotton Oil Company, N. Y. <lb/>
SOLD BY <lb/>
SAT. <lb/>
Broker, Greenville, N. C <lb/>
C. M. <lb/>
N. B. <lb/>
and get <lb/>
SAMPLE COPY. <lb/>
I It <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
RALEIGH, 1ST. O- <lb/>
ii <lb/>
is called to tho its <lb/>
large growing circulation <lb/>
makes it an excellent medium <lb/>
through which to reach I he people <lb/>
We have the large-t most <lb/>
of the to be found in <lb/>
the State, and for all classes <lb/>
o B. a i 1- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STATIONERY HEADY <lb/>
FOR INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOB <lb/>
COUNTY <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
AMI N i . <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
all in the U, S. <lb/>
or ill the Courts attended t <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
arc opposite the V. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
lice engaged in Exclusively, <lb/>
can obtain patents time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing is sent we <lb/>
advise M to free charge, <lb/>
and no change we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Master, the <lb/>
Supt. of the Money Order Old., slid to <lb/>
of S. Office. For <lb/>
advise terms and reference lo <lb/>
actual clients in your own State, or <lb/>
address, C. A. Co., <lb/>
D. C <lb/>
l ha. the Utmost <lb/>
l II. in the world. <lb/>
of <lb/>
fr <lb/>
. trial. II. <lb/>
. ail <lb/>
i rT American. O <lb/>
i- <lb/>
fr of <lb/>
I'm . . r, <lb/>
. C hi <lb/>
ALL ORDERS FOR <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
for baldness, <lb/>
falling out of hair, mil eradication of <lb/>
i before I he public. <lb/>
Among the many who have i-. with <lb/>
wonderful success, I refer you fol- <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of my assertion <lb/>
Latham, <lb/>
as a precious elixir to reinvigorate the I Mb. O. <lb/>
atmosphere in times of peace when <lb/>
faint of heart and ; Any one wishing to give It a trial for <lb/>
and quake at thought of the above complaints can procure <lb/>
ward Bellamy in Century. , it from at my place of business, for <lb/>
i per bottle. <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb/>
March 14th. C , <lb/>
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb/>
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb/>
Greenville, C. <lb/>
have the easiest <lb/>
ever used III the art. Clean towels, <lb/>
sharp <lb/>
in every be con- <lb/>
waited on <lb/>
Cleaning clothes a specially. <lb/>
PROMPTLY FILLED. <lb/>
the Ladies <lb/>
to <lb/>
MILLINERY GOODS, <lb/>
In order to reduce stock before time <lb/>
receive Full Good. I will offer <lb/>
all my present stock <lb/>
i GOODS, <lb/>
from now until the 1st of September at <lb/>
REDUCED PRICES. <lb/>
All Hats on trimmed and 1111- <lb/>
will U- sold at cost. My stock <lb/>
includes many of the most stylish goods <lb/>
of season. I can give bargains. <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
Ho What's This <lb/>
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb/>
Culley in the way of helping the afflict- <lb/>
ed. Hy calling on or the <lb/>
above named you can a <lb/>
bottle of Preparation that is Invaluable <lb/>
for eradicating dandruff and causing the <lb/>
kinkiest hair to lie perfectly soft and <lb/>
glossy, only two three application a <lb/>
week i necessary, and a common hair <lb/>
brush is all to lie used after rubbing the <lb/>
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with <lb/>
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be <lb/>
convinced, only cents. <lb/>
Respectfully. <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, <lb/>
Barber, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
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