<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00018949_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
T . <lb/>
THE BEST PAPER <lb/>
EVER PUBLISHED IN <lb/>
ES i CIRCULATION. <lb/>
EXCELLENT ADVERTISING MEDIUM <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
JOB PRINTING <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL <lb/>
GREENVILLE, Pin COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1889. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
Eastern Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. C <lb/>
a I. Editor and <lb/>
Every ml <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN THE <lb/>
FIRST<lb/>
Price. par year. <lb/>
THOROUGHLY DEMOCRATIC, BUT <lb/>
MY <lb/>
CLARA <lb/>
Years in days of youth, <lb/>
I man i a for <lb/>
I never asked if my love would last <lb/>
Until we both should die, <lb/>
He is grown stout now. <lb/>
His is pray and bald; <lb/>
And half me <lb/>
He ever was aught but old. <lb/>
Hut I had a handsome lover <lb/>
A bold, bad woman am t <lb/>
How I resist his sweet, sweet kiss. <lb/>
help if my heart leap high <lb/>
When his strong young arms enfold inc. <lb/>
His red cheeks laid to mine, <lb/>
And my soul is drunk with loving; <lb/>
As men are drunk with wine V <lb/>
not to <lb/>
arc not consistent My leans o'er my shoulders, <lb/>
flip principles of the party. He sees what have writ; <lb/>
If yon want a paper from a clasp, like a land, his dear old hand <lb/>
arc inn of the State send for the And slip my own in it. <lb/>
tor. SAMPLE COrY FREE <lb/>
This lover <lb/>
As well has won ; <lb/>
And we worship him together. <lb/>
For my lover is my son. <lb/>
THINGS TEAT DIE. <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
The pure, bright, the beautiful, <lb/>
G. Fowle. of Wake, ; That stirred our hearts In youth ; <lb/>
M. Holt. The impulse a wordless prayer, <lb/>
of The dreams of love and truth. <lb/>
Secretary of L The after something lost, <lb/>
of wake. The spirit s yearning cry. <lb/>
W. Rain, of Wake. The striving after better hopes <lb/>
of Wayne, These things can never die. <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction <lb/>
M. of ; The timid hand stretched forth lo aid <lb/>
F. David- A brother in his need, <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. The kindly won in grief s dark hour. <lb/>
COURT. <lb/>
Chief X. H. Smith, o <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Joseph Davis, of <lb/>
James E. of Beaufort and <lb/>
C. A very, of Burke. <lb/>
SUPERIOR <lb/>
First II. Brown, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second Philips, of <lb/>
Third G. Connor, of <lb/>
eon. <lb/>
r Clark, of <lb/>
Wk-. <lb/>
A. of <lb/>
Sixth E. T. of <lb/>
Seventh C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth A. of <lb/>
Iredell. <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Tenth C. <lb/>
That proves a friend indeed. <lb/>
The plea of merry breathed <lb/>
When justice threatened high. <lb/>
The sorrow of a contrite heart <lb/>
These things shall never die. <lb/>
The memory of a clamping hand. <lb/>
The pressure of a kiss <lb/>
Ami all the sweet and frail <lb/>
That make up life's short <lb/>
If with a firm, unchanging faith. <lb/>
And holy and high. <lb/>
Those hands have clasped, I hose lips <lb/>
have met <lb/>
These- things can never die. <lb/>
The cruel and the bitter word <lb/>
That wounded as it fell. <lb/>
The chilling want of sympathy <lb/>
fed but never <lb/>
The hard repulse that chilled the heart <lb/>
Whose hopes were bounding high. <lb/>
In an unfading record kept <lb/>
These things never die. <lb/>
Let nothing pass, for every hand <lb/>
Can some work to do. <lb/>
Lose not a chance waken love. <lb/>
Be and just true. <lb/>
of So shall a light tint cannot fade, <lb/>
ii thee from on high. <lb/>
Amis applied for the con- <lb/>
at Manchester, England, held <lb/>
by Mr. Hale, of N. C. <lb/>
Amis showed an endorsement from <lb/>
the members of both <lb/>
Houses of the State legislature. <lb/>
He failed to receive <lb/>
John Nichols wanted to be <lb/>
Government printer He was an <lb/>
ex-Congressman from <lb/>
and endorsed by Congress- <lb/>
men from the coasts of both oceans. <lb/>
He was not appointed. Colonel <lb/>
Oliver U. applied for a <lb/>
in the consular service. lie <lb/>
wanted a place. He. had <lb/>
served a term in Congress after the <lb/>
close of the war. He has since <lb/>
several times the same office, bat <lb/>
did not got there. He was the <lb/>
candidate for Governor of <lb/>
North Carolina in the last campaign. <lb/>
He has been on the stump from the <lb/>
Tennessee line to the Atlantic <lb/>
sounds every national election <lb/>
the last twenty-five years. He <lb/>
is looked as the best campaign j <lb/>
orator in the State, and was known I <lb/>
all over North Carolina as the War <lb/>
Horse of the Pee <lb/>
therefore wanted a position <lb/>
that would recompense him for his <lb/>
long exile from the political clover <lb/>
fields. He wanted to Consul- <lb/>
General to Liverpool. Col. Dockery <lb/>
came to Washington and waited for <lb/>
Progress of Inventions Since <lb/>
In the year 1845 the present own- <lb/>
of the Scientific American news- <lb/>
commenced its publication, <lb/>
and soon after established a bureau <lb/>
tor the procuring of patents for in- <lb/>
at home foreign <lb/>
countries. Daring the year 1845 <lb/>
there were only patents issued <lb/>
from the U- S. Paten. Office, and <lb/>
the total issue from the establish- <lb/>
of the Patent Office, up to the <lb/>
end of that year numbered <lb/>
Up to the first of July this <lb/>
there have been granted <lb/>
Showing that since the commence- <lb/>
of the publication of the Sci- <lb/>
American there have been <lb/>
issued from the Patent Office <lb/>
patents, and one third <lb/>
more applications have been made <lb/>
than have been granted, showing <lb/>
the ingenuity of our people to be <lb/>
phenomenal, and much greater <lb/>
the enormous number of pat- <lb/>
issued indicates. Probably a <lb/>
good many of our readers have had <lb/>
business transacted through the <lb/>
officers of the Scientific American, <lb/>
in New York or Washington, and <lb/>
are familiar with Munn <lb/>
of doing business, those who <lb/>
have not will be interested in know- <lb/>
Reflections. <lb/>
And Mirth Provoking Selections as Com- <lb/>
piled by the Bad Boy. <lb/>
The Drummer's Ruse. <lb/>
A MORE PRESSING DEBT. <lb/>
owe yon an apology, old <lb/>
said Giles. <lb/>
mind the <lb/>
ed me have the <lb/>
V you <lb/>
REAL ESTATE QUIET. <lb/>
Eastern stirring <lb/>
in real estate out your way this sea-1 <lb/>
son <lb/>
man <lb/>
not even a landslide, <lb/>
Boston now may l <lb/>
ask your father for your hand in j <lb/>
marriage, <lb/>
Chicago ask ma ; I <lb/>
what she says <lb/>
Bangor Commercial. <lb/>
A short time ago a drummer from <lb/>
abroad called at a Bangor livery <lb/>
wanted a double team for a <lb/>
ten day's trio, into the country, and <lb/>
the stable man refused to let him <lb/>
have one on the ground that he was <lb/>
a stranger. There was much discus- <lb/>
over the matter, and finally the <lb/>
drummer said <lb/>
is your team worth <lb/>
and fifty <lb/>
was the reply. <lb/>
I pay you that sum for it, will <lb/>
you pay it back again when I re- <lb/>
turn asked the customer, and up- <lb/>
on receiving Hie affirmative reply, <lb/>
he promptly put up the cash. Ten <lb/>
never saw you act silly driving <lb/>
was <lb/>
time you proposed to <lb/>
was silly <lb/>
you get that box of cigars <lb/>
I sent you inquired his <lb/>
did you them <lb/>
was very nice <lb/>
be said softly. <lb/>
the matter asked the <lb/>
teacher. <lb/>
sore <lb/>
made it sore <lb/>
his thumb with the <lb/>
THE STATE. <lb/>
What is Happening Around Us. <lb/>
As Reflected from the State Press, <lb/>
some weeks to hear of his orders to , ,. <lb/>
i ii i i i . , I something about tins, the oldest this -mil I <lb/>
sail. He concluded to go around i , , .- B ., mis morning, i <lb/>
, I patent soliciting firm in this conn- <lb/>
to the State Department and look . , . ., ., I <lb/>
. try, in the world, <lb/>
into things. J a wise expedient. <lb/>
For some weeks the Colonel held visiting the offices of the yon arc going to mar <lb/>
down a chair in the Secretary's re I American, Broadway, j your father's cashier <lb/>
reception room and waited. He I first <lb/>
was. at length appointed to Jan- on <lb/>
The Brazilian post was tensive and <lb/>
Mt as remunerative as the Colonel ; establishment, <lb/>
wanted, and, moreover, the with its walnut desks, and <lb/>
Pa says if he <lb/>
runs away with the <lb/>
the money will still be family. <lb/>
the stable he alighted and en <lb/>
the office, saying, bore <lb/>
is your team, and now I want my <lb/>
money <lb/>
The sum was passed to him and <lb/>
j he turned and was leaving the place <lb/>
; when the livery called out, <lb/>
j here, aren't you going to set- <lb/>
tic for that team <lb/>
; what asked the <lb/>
drummer in a surprised tone. <lb/>
the you just brought <lb/>
drawled drum- <lb/>
met, fool enough to <lb/>
i pose that I would pay any one for j <lb/>
j the use of own property, are j <lb/>
and ho shook the dust of <lb/>
place from his feet. <lb/>
August Superstitions. <lb/>
HE WAS PREPARED. <lb/>
don't you lay some <lb/>
M. Shipp, of And angel voices say to thee <lb/>
things shall never <lb/>
Twelfth Merrimon. <lb/>
of <lb/>
IN CONGRESS. <lb/>
Sena c Ii. Vance, of <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb/>
House of District <lb/>
Thomas G. Skinner, of <lb/>
Second col. <lb/>
of Vance. <lb/>
Third W. <lb/>
render. <lb/>
Fourth II of <lb/>
Fifth W. of <lb/>
Sixth District lifted of <lb/>
John S. <lb/>
Eighth W. II. A. <lb/>
Ninth District -II. O. of<lb/>
Kicking up a Row, <lb/>
K. Threatens to Bun <lb/>
talk has been beard for the <lb/>
past days reference to the <lb/>
of <lb/>
from this <lb/>
Stale. The following extract <lb/>
A. Move. <lb/>
A- K. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of II. James. <lb/>
It. Cherry. <lb/>
Manning. <lb/>
II. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- i <lb/>
man, Mooring. V. Newton, <lb/>
W. A. James, Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Chairman J. S. and J. D. <lb/>
Cos. <lb/>
Public School <lb/>
ding. <lb/>
of F. W. <lb/>
Mouse. He was nut in <lb/>
the distribution of Carolina <lb/>
the New gives B who had <lb/>
plied for places were not gel tiny <lb/>
I hem. Brewer joined in the <lb/>
of growlers. They resolved <lb/>
themselves into If they <lb/>
claims to not <lb/>
be much disturbed over the. move- <lb/>
Congressman of <lb/>
, ,.,, to correspond, and its rain-v <lb/>
lever was an epidemic at the I Brown have done so. I'm <lb/>
ports the mom a keeping that umbrella Smith loaned <lb/>
and malarial was reported to lark , of ti specification i a week <lb/>
along the Brazilian i all busy as bees, i A <lb/>
i. int .-;. . reminding one a large banking; ,,, , . . ., . <lb/>
lo cut a , , , I Blood good that <lb/>
Colonel did not think he had re- or with its hundred <lb/>
his deserts, and growled, I was <lb/>
concluded to accept the conversation with one of the a <lb/>
with the fevers -11. <lb/>
I of soliciting patents in , , , ., . . <lb/>
; were scaled <lb/>
Others who were not provided of the hardly speak above a whisper. <lb/>
The Scientific American, more than for-; . <lb/>
or ii . . First impecunious <lb/>
U-came demonstrative n of over- <lb/>
Congressman had I bad application patents <lb/>
a grievance. He under a for thousand Second I want is a <lb/>
cloud. He voted for the Mills bill. in the United Status, and square <lb/>
He was not mi favor at White <lb/>
and had filed <lb/>
many in the Office in <lb/>
a single mouth as there were pat- <lb/>
issued dining the entire first <lb/>
year business career. This <lb/>
gentlemen had seen Of- <lb/>
glow from a sapling to a sturdy I <lb/>
, just it. <lb/>
I've mad a house kept by <lb/>
s a short-sighted woman. can <lb/>
always see her Hist when she comes <lb/>
to collect a <lb/>
Whether it be a matter of luck or <lb/>
of learning, many of <lb/>
prophecies for July have been <lb/>
Those, fur lune were <lb/>
while those <lb/>
made for July were verified to a <lb/>
reasonable extent. For August <lb/>
forecasts are more general and ex- <lb/>
tend over a greater geographical <lb/>
space. United Slates is <lb/>
wedding, ed in the following general <lb/>
will be many sad <lb/>
dents and many murders <lb/>
and violent atmospheric <lb/>
The is likely to <lb/>
be hot, with heavy storms of rain <lb/>
and thunder. There will be much <lb/>
sickness, but the of deaths <lb/>
will be below the average. August <lb/>
will be a of stirring events <lb/>
and accidents throughout the <lb/>
Agony from a Buried Foot. <lb/>
ho hinted <lb/>
of the House, but there arc what thought the Scientific W <lb/>
Seven years ago last Saturday <lb/>
s a Franklin dispatch of July <lb/>
to what Hie Amen- ; , <lb/>
proposed laKe Harry a man <lb/>
next to It circulation, had , , ;. . ,, <lb/>
to it. proclaimed this pace, had his toot a <lb/>
himself some days ago a candidate formed no mean share . r , to <lb/>
for shaker of Congress. He kM advancing n <lb/>
made a national from , be interests of the Patent <lb/>
Maine to with his sudden But ls not <lb/>
Carolina m has . it that occupies the attention of <lb/>
made quite a stir in national Con. one persons employed <lb/>
from other States, where by a <lb/>
who behind it a wide- <lb/>
spread disaffection among Southern <lb/>
i and t he complete shat- <lb/>
of Mr. Harrison's elaborate <lb/>
TOWN. <lb/>
tics lately, and now her politicians <lb/>
have threatened to the <lb/>
nest House on a revised and <lb/>
schedule. The announce- <lb/>
of one of her as <lb/>
an independent candidate <lb/>
similar conditions and grievance <lb/>
i are engaged on the four public.- <lb/>
G. James. <lb/>
F. Evans. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
Police-. T. Smith. <lb/>
R. Moore. <lb/>
Ward, B. N. Boyd claims <lb/>
2nd Jr., and Alfred <lb/>
For 3rd Want, T. J. Jarvis and M. strength under his influence to car- <lb/>
R. Lang; 4th Ward, W. X. Tolbert. him He asserts that he <lb/>
has hidden behind his scheme <lb/>
that he has sufficient <lb/>
The foot <lb/>
was buried on the farm where the <lb/>
accident happened. Mr. <lb/>
has an artificial leg and foot. On <lb/>
Saturday afternoon he felt severe <lb/>
pains in his foot and applied to a <lb/>
doctor relief. The pain <lb/>
to such an extent that he was <lb/>
compelled to stop work, and he had <lb/>
the appearance of a man attacked <lb/>
by a severe <lb/>
American, the. Architects and . morning at the <lb/>
a private caucus in . . . . of friends, ho to the grave <lb/>
ton, in advance or the assembling Builders Edition of Scientific. and ft <lb/>
of Congress, and will digest the sit- American. The first two public i J Au Raleigh Ahead of the World. <lb/>
. . . . ft w <lb/>
abound contemplates a <lb/>
of votes to dictate from their office, Broadway, N. <lb/>
of the House. He Scientific American, <lb/>
, that their is that these the Scientific American Supplement <lb/>
Speaker of Congress is outgrowth disaffected Export Edition of Scientific <lb/>
of the Brower . <lb/>
Orphanage. <lb/>
A. G. returned <lb/>
yesterday from the annual meeting <lb/>
of the board of of the <lb/>
located at <lb/>
ville, of which Mr. Mills is president <lb/>
and Mr. secretary. <lb/>
On Wednesday an address was do <lb/>
livered by Gov. Fowle, at the <lb/>
sermon preached by J. S. <lb/>
a collection of 9-00 was <lb/>
taken up by Gov. Fowle, and <lb/>
E A Osborne, of this city. <lb/>
Daring the past year has <lb/>
raised for building and <lb/>
support the Orphanage which has <lb/>
been established four years. <lb/>
at present orphans <lb/>
cared for by this institution. <lb/>
and mature their policy, and <lb/>
are issued every week, and the <lb/>
Episcopal-Services First and Third that are LOt and <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. Closed Until action. <lb/>
he <lb/>
and night. Prayer Meeting every says, will show themselves. The <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. E. B. John, I is the result the dis- <lb/>
state their demands, and announce latter two, the of every month. <lb/>
toes the roots of a pear tree had be- <lb/>
i the terms on which they will act in <lb/>
electing a Speaker of the next <lb/>
.; House. He says one of the de <lb/>
Pastor. T internal revenue tax, which is a <lb/>
Baptist-Services every Sunday, morn- affection among the political . <lb/>
warts the old State. A i , . , <lb/>
claims his scheme is well organized, <lb/>
come entwined. Mr. Gillespie says <lb/>
Raleigh Call. <lb/>
Mr. C. Lee, proprietor of the I and , , l T <lb/>
Lab Hotel reburied them, and from that time largest gas engines in world ate <lb/>
, right here in daily <lb/>
Is will be th abolition of the . i L . are in a special build , <lb/>
and night. Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
multitude of aspirants for <lb/>
his wife for her labors as j The young man, who seemed Tory ; <lb/>
hostess that he can recommend and much in earnest as he told his story, at <lb/>
emphasize the assertion that as <lb/>
tonic for ladies and children S. S. S <lb/>
LODGES. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A A. <lb/>
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb/>
day night 1st and 3rd Sunday at left entirely out of <lb/>
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow, W. M., of <lb/>
G. Sec. ; <lb/>
A. Chapter. No. meets plains. Many, heavily m- <lb/>
2nd and-4th nights at Ma- . . <lb/>
F. W. P. by party, have <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. t come in for a share in the national <lb/>
meet every Tuesday night. O. W.; . . <lb/>
G. <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of H.,, C. L. Harris, editor the Be . ,, <lb/>
. , of them will rally to his bugle call <lb/>
and , . . .-, . <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. . , . , . r. . at the Congress next <lb/>
Durham Mr. W. O. Griffin, <lb/>
route agent between and <lb/>
has resigned and his place <lb/>
has been filled by a <lb/>
Tarboro J. It. Lewis, of <lb/>
Littleton, has been appointed <lb/>
collector by White for <lb/>
ties of Halifax, Wilson I <lb/>
Pitt. <lb/>
Collector White, who succeeds <lb/>
Col. Yarborough, has appointed Mr. <lb/>
John of Snow <lb/>
Deputy Collector Johnston. <lb/>
Greene and Wayne counties. <lb/>
Washington Tuesday <lb/>
while Capt. was cracking a <lb/>
block of ice he found embedded in-j <lb/>
side a very neat, plain gold ring. <lb/>
lost from the finger of; <lb/>
ice gatherer in the <lb/>
The Oxford Orphan Asylum U <lb/>
now crowded to its utmost capacity. <lb/>
It contains children. An <lb/>
to the building is being made <lb/>
which will enable that institution to <lb/>
accommodate more- <lb/>
Bills are out the fair to be <lb/>
held at Winston on August 21st and j <lb/>
It will be rich in special and <lb/>
attractive features. Gov. Fowle will <lb/>
deliver the annual address on 21st.; <lb/>
Smithfield The quickest j <lb/>
house have ever was <lb/>
the one erected last week for J. T. <lb/>
by Mr. J. A. Duvall. It is <lb/>
a neat bi building feet, and <lb/>
was put up in three days. <lb/>
Durham A letter was res <lb/>
in Durham yesterday that <lb/>
has been eight years reaching its <lb/>
destination. It was mailed in Ala- <lb/>
county in and it <lb/>
day was received by Mr. J. T. Lea, <lb/>
for whom it was intended. <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
white boys who ran from their <lb/>
mothers in after a three <lb/>
days tramp in this city <lb/>
Saturday night, as a letter had <lb/>
reached the Mayor their moth- <lb/>
they were kept safely until Sun <lb/>
day. when the Mayor bought them <lb/>
tickets and sent them back to their <lb/>
homes. They were from to <lb/>
years old- <lb/>
The first printing press erected in <lb/>
North Carolina was brought from <lb/>
Virginia to New by James <lb/>
Davis dining the year 1749 and was <lb/>
used until the year 1765 in printing <lb/>
laws and proceedings of the <lb/>
Assembly, when he began <lb/>
the publication of a weekly <lb/>
per called the North Carolina <lb/>
or Universal Intelligencer, the <lb/>
first paper ever published in North <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Headers <lb/>
of News-Observer will remember <lb/>
leading in its columns a few weeks <lb/>
ago of the successful MM of <lb/>
invention for <lb/>
graphing from moving trains. <lb/>
was heralded all ever the world, and <lb/>
appeared in all the leading papers. <lb/>
It is now announced that the <lb/>
has attracted great attention, <lb/>
and that parties in New York I <lb/>
have purchased thirty second <lb/>
interest in the stock of the <lb/>
It looks as if it is <lb/>
destined to prove a valuable <lb/>
session Mr. wish <lb/>
him success with the enterprise. <lb/>
What Vanderbilt Say <lb/>
About the People. <lb/>
Post. <lb/>
Black Mountain is the name of a <lb/>
in Buncombe county N. C, <lb/>
among the peaks of that Black <lb/>
range which is of late <lb/>
years becoming so popular with <lb/>
The office has been in charge <lb/>
of a young white woman, who has <lb/>
performed its duties with entire ac- <lb/>
Assistant- Postmaster <lb/>
General recently removed <lb/>
her, and appointed as her successor, <lb/>
the regular at de- <lb/>
of the local ma- <lb/>
chine, knowing the a <lb/>
who can neither read nor <lb/>
write. When a person calls to make <lb/>
inquiry for mail, the says <lb/>
he doesn't know whether there is <lb/>
anything for him, but dumps the <lb/>
entire of the office in front of <lb/>
the applicant and invites him to see <lb/>
if there is anything addressed to <lb/>
him. <lb/>
A distinguished warrior is com- <lb/>
to North Carolina to live. Chief <lb/>
and his band of Apaches <lb/>
have been confined in very narrow <lb/>
quarters at Mt. <lb/>
Ala. Tho War Department, wish- <lb/>
to provide them with sufficient <lb/>
laud to make them comfortable <lb/>
homes, sent Capt. John G. Burke, <lb/>
of the Third Cavalry, Prof. <lb/>
Painter, the Indian Bights <lb/>
to select a suitable site. <lb/>
They have returned with the <lb/>
that they have chosen the <lb/>
Indian reservation in Swain county- <lb/>
North Carolina, now occupied by <lb/>
CherOkees, who are willing to <lb/>
sell out. wanted to get <lb/>
back to Arizona, is glad to get <lb/>
away from his present location, and <lb/>
promises to be a good <lb/>
change. <lb/>
AYCOCK <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
C C <lb/>
Wilson. N C <lb/>
mi Daniels i mm <lb/>
w. <lb/>
WILSON, N. <lb/>
Any to M will be <lb/>
Promptly to. <lb/>
U JAMES <lb/>
DENTIST, t <lb/>
N. <lb/>
G RE E X V I L L E, N. C <lb/>
RE. J. H. TUCKER. J. D <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
A T-LA W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
fully equipped, and Ins force behind <lb/>
responsibility have not ;. ,, . . . . . , , . has no <lb/>
. Z-7 m , . L be does not disclose what <lb/>
what they wanted. Sonic of the ,, ,,. . ,, ,. . <lb/>
T . . , the names of his supporters are As i Mr. B. F. is <lb/>
leaders the State have been . . . . , . , , , . . ,. <lb/>
. . of the members of merchant of Bust on. La. He says <lb/>
Congress from North Carolina have that he has sold Swift's Specific to <lb/>
cards disclaiming any j many persons, knows of some <lb/>
to join the it be-1 wonderful cases of blood diseases, <lb/>
comes interesting to know who <lb/>
cohorts are where <lb/>
they are to be found, bow many <lb/>
He says the Southern Be- <lb/>
Council, No. IT., meet the at <lb/>
every C. A. White, C. He claimed long and ardent patty I <lb/>
. . . . publicans must have the <lb/>
post office. service and the solid support of i . <lb/>
boors a. m. to p. m. Money of the State. Ho did i. <lb/>
Order hours to x ., J The President has expressed <lb/>
will be from to <lb/>
from to P. M. <lb/>
get it. J. B. Young applied for <lb/>
the of. revenue of the <lb/>
his <lb/>
sentiments to effect that he did <lb/>
arrive daily Sun-1 j- back. I kicking <lb/>
at A. m., and , . t m of the House <lb/>
mall arrives Sun-1 of the members of He had <lb/>
at m. and depart at P. <lb/>
Washington mail s daily <lb/>
at IS M. and at r. M. <lb/>
J. J. PERKINS. P. M. <lb/>
works <lb/>
said ho had felt no to speak of are used to generate the <lb/>
previous to Saturday, when his loot the electric light system J <lb/>
began hurting him, it being the of tho city. One of tho to <lb/>
almost to the fifty horse power; other sixty., <lb/>
his receiving tho injury. They run three immense <lb/>
which supply over one hundred arc <lb/>
She CrOSSeS the Ocean tO Meet electric lights of 1,300 <lb/>
Her candle power each. This station is <lb/>
quite a curiosity and very <lb/>
and has never heard of a failure to I The Orange Observer tells a visitors, <lb/>
cure. Several cases of little story. It <lb/>
two and a half years ago, After reading of the nows <lb/>
Mr. Julian of left ,,.,,,,. comments on his trial, Dr. <lb/>
here with Dr. Florence Cheek is said to have expressed an <lb/>
contract to work with the Doctor ; a round the <lb/>
five years Siam. Since <lb/>
newspaper offices with a shot-gun. <lb/>
The Doctor is wrong that. <lb/>
Appointments <lb/>
For preaching on Bethlehem Mission. <lb/>
Bethlehem. 1st Sunday at <lb/>
School House, 1st Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
Snarl Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
rd Sunday at <lb/>
Salem 4th Sunday at <lb/>
Chapel, 4th S o <lb/>
I P. C. <lb/>
both Houses of State <lb/>
tore, but did not get there. <lb/>
also asked to be <lb/>
pointed to the same office. He was <lb/>
by most of the Congress- <lb/>
men of his State. He was left out. <lb/>
Colonel Cooper wanted the <lb/>
of Western district of <lb/>
North Carolina, and had a good <lb/>
showing of party support. He was <lb/>
not appointed- <lb/>
half worried out of him, he said, by <lb/>
scramble after offices <lb/>
among themselves, and he <lb/>
would not lose any more sleep over <lb/>
their moves, and had really no con <lb/>
about their <lb/>
and disorderly. <lb/>
W bat have to say T <lb/>
Prisoner <lb/>
Ml take frame <lb/>
blood poison were cured after all the <lb/>
doctors and all other remedies had <lb/>
failed. <lb/>
I am of opinion S. S. S. should <lb/>
stand at head of list of blood <lb/>
remedies. I arrived at this <lb/>
from the testimony of scores of <lb/>
persons who have me of the <lb/>
good results from its use. I have <lb/>
been selling S. for years, and it <lb/>
has won a largo sale. <lb/>
G. A. Griffith, Mayflower, Ark. <lb/>
Mercury and potash mixtures dry- <lb/>
up the secretions of the body, cause <lb/>
mercurial rheumatism and leave of mother, and <lb/>
and finally run the system down at tho old home near o, <lb/>
to such a that other dis- and took for New . . ,, , ,, , ., <lb/>
eases are induced. Swift's Specific from , <lb/>
builds up the patient from first E the fall on a platform <lb/>
dose, and gives life and vigor to the j years of age, rather good looking, <lb/>
borne Mr. Brown and Miss <lb/>
Forrest, of Orange, have been car- <lb/>
on a correspondence which re- <lb/>
suited iii their engagement. Re- <lb/>
Miss Forrest received a letter <lb/>
from Mr. telling her to come <lb/>
to Singapore, where he would meet <lb/>
, , . . and most or us will be them. <lb/>
and wed her, as he could not get off ., . . <lb/>
Doctor can then, by <lb/>
On in the <lb/>
day, July Mb, Miss Forrest took the gang of <lb/>
us at once, appeal to a jury of his <lb/>
i fellow citizens vindication at the <lb/>
His plan involves unnecessary risks <lb/>
waste of time and energy. Ho <lb/>
should wait until the Press <lb/>
meets in Charleston next May. <lb/>
Watterson is to speak then <lb/>
and has a fair education. <lb/>
of home protection journalistic<lb/>
There is little fear that Florida <lb/>
will visited by yellow fever this <lb/>
year. Dr. Jerome Cochrane, <lb/>
health officer of Alabama has <lb/>
turned from a trip to South Florida <lb/>
and Havana. He went to invests <lb/>
gate the yellow lever situation. <lb/>
He reports that there has been no <lb/>
yellow fever in Florida since Janus <lb/>
except one case reported in April <lb/>
at Havana found a <lb/>
little fever, only a dozen to twenty <lb/>
coses a week. He says the general <lb/>
health of the people is exceptionally <lb/>
good, gives it as his opinion <lb/>
that there will no fresh outbreak <lb/>
of yellow fever in Florida this sum- <lb/>
mer. Goldsboro <lb/>
Martin Irons who five years ago <lb/>
was a prominent figure in the <lb/>
Knights of Labor organization and <lb/>
led tho great railroad on <lb/>
the Could lines, is running a <lb/>
fruit stand in St. Louis. Denis <lb/>
tho lot orator, who at <lb/>
one lime was a power on the Pacific <lb/>
coast, is driving a dray in San Fran- <lb/>
and Oliver H. Dockery, of <lb/>
towering aspirations, has simmered <lb/>
down in a little consulship. How <lb/>
are the mighty <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
harry skinner <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
TAMES M. <lb/>
Y-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. V. <lb/>
Ll JAMES, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
Practice in all the courts. Collection <lb/>
Specialty, <lb/>
I B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-A W, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
P. hi, C F <lb/>
MATTHEW A <lb/>
M Certified <lb/>
Civil Engineers, Surveyors <lb/>
and Architects. <lb/>
AND 1.1,1-. N. C <lb/>
HOTELS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
Under new management. <lb/>
cold water baths. Good room and at- <lb/>
servants. Table always <lb/>
ed with the best of tho market. Feed <lb/>
stables in connection. <lb/>
TERMS BAT <lb/>
E. <lb/>
HOTEL <lb/>
SPENCER BROS., <lb/>
THE HOME <lb/>
SAMPLE ROOMS FREE- <lb/>
Polite waiters. Good Rooms. Beat <lb/>
table market afford. When In the <lb/>
city stop at the <lb/>
Hotel, <lb/>
WASHINGTON N. C.<lb/>
if you want to save money buy your Boots, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Dress Goods ft Domestics at the <lb/>
. next door to Bawls, the Jeweler. RAWLS ft TYSON.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018949_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
. . <lb/>
a Reflector, <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N C. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
THE LEADING PAPER <lb/>
IN<lb/>
Si. par <lb/>
we get warmed up on this facto I try borne, but never gets dull <lb/>
business we don't know want of amusement. From <lb/>
to fifty visitors are there. <lb/>
Let's see, had started to <lb/>
to Blowing Rock. <lb/>
Well, our journey was continued <lb/>
and in a few miles a toll gate was <lb/>
reached, the balance of the way- <lb/>
being over a turnpike road A <lb/>
few miles further the foot of the <lb/>
mountain is reached and the as <lb/>
DEMOCRATIC, BUT <lb/>
will hesitate to Democratic <lb/>
men that arc not consistent <lb/>
Hi true principles of the. party. <lb/>
It want a a wide-a-wake <lb/>
section of the State sent for the <lb/>
TOR. COPY FREE <lb/>
at <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 14th. <lb/>
be surpassed The <lb/>
waters, iron and free stone, <lb/>
are and Of <lb/>
a place we could say <lb/>
but want space forbids now <lb/>
Our faces on <lb/>
Friday, August and alter <lb/>
meeting with two delays on account <lb/>
of washouts, tackling a <lb/>
cent begins, miles climbing, big freshet at this we <lb/>
being necessary to reach the top <lb/>
Right here our pencil fails us. h <lb/>
We've got it all in our head but <lb/>
there it stays, and we can't get <lb/>
it out Reader, no one can draw <lb/>
you a word painting which will <lb/>
portray in all its <lb/>
Bethel Items. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
We have bad a tremendous <lb/>
of rain during the last three <lb/>
the beauty and grandeur of weeks bas the <lb/>
mountain scenery. You must go ditches to overflow and <lb/>
I here in to MM and <lb/>
ate it. The roadway around <lb/>
the of the mountain, constantly <lb/>
ascending. At times the passage <lb/>
seined wailed in on either side by <lb/>
hills and again one side <lb/>
would be a wild, yawning precipice <lb/>
from whose rocky depths came the <lb/>
sound of rushing waters, and <lb/>
Coming out clear Upon a mountain <lb/>
side, could be had magnificent views <lb/>
.-in rounding mountains and val- <lb/>
These scenes ever <lb/>
giving the voyagers a differ <lb/>
view at every turn. Upon <lb/>
at the top of the mountain, two <lb/>
miles from the town, our party was <lb/>
met by a cavalcade of horsemen <lb/>
headed by the Mayor of Blowing <lb/>
Bock. They took us in charge, and <lb/>
having ascertained that a good view <lb/>
could be had at that hour, took us <lb/>
first by the rock from whence the <lb/>
town takes its name. The place <lb/>
both thrilled and charmed us. Sud- <lb/>
upon a high pro- <lb/>
overlooking a great rolling <lb/>
All this valley in <lb/>
Grandfather, Mt. Mitchell,; K. L. <lb/>
A Trip to the West. <lb/>
LAST WEEK. <lb/>
That unceremonious flash of <lb/>
lightning that came in upon us <lb/>
last week. o knocked our <lb/>
into a the <lb/>
and burnt up part of what <lb/>
had been written, that we desist- <lb/>
ed from saying more of our trip <lb/>
at the time. But according to <lb/>
promise we will try to weave the <lb/>
thread together and tell some- <lb/>
thing of what was seen after de- <lb/>
parting from the beautiful town <lb/>
of pleasant recollections <lb/>
of whose kind people and the <lb/>
happy hours we spent then will <lb/>
go down with us the <lb/>
years to come. <lb/>
Leaving bound <lb/>
the traveler passes the distance were towering <lb/>
through a strikingly beautiful <lb/>
country There is so much to <lb/>
attract the eye that, though the <lb/>
of miles must be made by <lb/>
hack and consumes six or seven <lb/>
hours, one rarely thinks of get- <lb/>
ting tired. Seven miles brought <lb/>
us to the little town of Patterson <lb/>
and about this we want to say a <lb/>
few words before going further. <lb/>
At this point is located a <lb/>
moth factory known as Patter <lb/>
son Mills. It is an immense es- <lb/>
working extensive <lb/>
in both cotton and wool, and <lb/>
giving employment to hundreds <lb/>
of operatives. The mills were <lb/>
reached just at o'clock, when <lb/>
everything stopped for the din- <lb/>
hour, and while nothing <lb/>
con id be seen at work we did not <lb/>
miss the opportunity of going <lb/>
through the building. Our par <lb/>
was kindly shown through by <lb/>
Dr. of Lenoir, who <lb/>
us tar. He explain- <lb/>
ed the workings of some of the <lb/>
principal machines among the <lb/>
and looms and told us <lb/>
much of interest. Seeing that <lb/>
system, and suggest further that be <lb/>
take the advice of Blackstone, <lb/>
honest, no cue <lb/>
render unto every man bis just <lb/>
And St. Paul gives us some <lb/>
wholesome advice on that line in <lb/>
tho Now Testament, <lb/>
the powers that be, owe no <lb/>
anything but love, <lb/>
honor to whom honor is And <lb/>
our Saviour talking on tho same <lb/>
lino told the people to onto <lb/>
the things <lb/>
got here sale on the rooming of the and to God the thing that are <lb/>
Now will just live <lb/>
up to tho principles above <lb/>
the jury system, and all the <lb/>
hollowing, bobtail lawyers combined <lb/>
not hurt him. But if you will <lb/>
fall into the clutches of the law, the <lb/>
woods juryman of your <lb/>
com will deal with you, and the <lb/>
hollowing lawyer will make you pay <lb/>
for to shield your pocket and <lb/>
your corpus from their honest <lb/>
diets. <lb/>
We hope he has cooled down be- <lb/>
fore now is sorry for the harsh <lb/>
things he said about bis fellow <lb/>
his county this is his <lb/>
and if he will abuse people <lb/>
we would be glad if he could change <lb/>
his a little or at any rate <lb/>
tell where he writes from ; as <lb/>
we do nut wish to be taken for him, <lb/>
or rather that he be taken <lb/>
us again, will just add <lb/>
other letter to out name. <lb/>
Very truly, J. <lb/>
sandy lauds are badly washed <lb/>
but have improved beyond <lb/>
the expectation of the most <lb/>
hopeful, as that on stiff lands <lb/>
we have a fair prospect for average <lb/>
crops where the lands have been <lb/>
properly prepared and cultivated. <lb/>
Rev. G. L. Finch assisted <lb/>
J. of Eastern Virginia <lb/>
has been a <lb/>
Baptist church here, which began <lb/>
the 4th Sunday night n July <lb/>
and ended last Friday night with <lb/>
baptism which was witnessed by a <lb/>
very large crowd. During the <lb/>
whole meeting the congregations <lb/>
have been large considerable <lb/>
interest was manifested. but <lb/>
there were only two accessions to <lb/>
the church. Both of these brethren <lb/>
have made favorable and lasting <lb/>
impressions the minds of the <lb/>
people and around Bethel. Bro. <lb/>
took the train for Tarboro <lb/>
Friday morning. Bro. Finch left <lb/>
for Greenville Saturday morning. <lb/>
Tho Methodist brethren <lb/>
their protracted meeting here on <lb/>
Wednesday night last conducted by <lb/>
Hawk's Beak and other noted peaks <lb/>
Over the rock whose dizzy <lb/>
heights stood came a constant <lb/>
breeze from the valley below, hence <lb/>
the name Bowing Book. This breeze <lb/>
is so strong any light article <lb/>
like handkerchiefs, light bats or <lb/>
small bunches of foliage thrown out <lb/>
over the precipice would be <lb/>
upon the rack. The party was <lb/>
taken to the village and as- <lb/>
signed at the hotels, there <lb/>
being two excellent ones- The lot <lb/>
of I he writer fell at the <lb/>
conducted by Col. Williams, of Char- <lb/>
and in most excellent hands <lb/>
had we fallen one seldom finds <lb/>
so courteous a <lb/>
townsman, Mr. J. Murphy, was <lb/>
right there and will bear out this as <lb/>
At night a superb ban- <lb/>
was spread at tho <lb/>
honor tho editors. It was a <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF <lb/>
Men to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, u line of tho following <lb/>
that are not to be excelled in this market. And to be <lb/>
pure straight goods. GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA- <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, CROCK FRY and QUEENS- <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of dim-rent <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and <lb/>
u. Harness, Bridles and Saddles. <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb/>
Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
seed Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
TAILORING <lb/>
Spring Display <lb/>
Miss Carrie James has <lb/>
from her visit to Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Nora Pitt, of Sparta, is visit <lb/>
Miss Lucy Knight. <lb/>
Lewis, the newly appointed <lb/>
Revenue Collector this <lb/>
district, spent Friday and a portion <lb/>
of Saturday in Bethel. <lb/>
Mr. of Martin county, ,, ,, , , <lb/>
was the guest Mr. J II. Johnston smiling maidens, with <lb/>
Saturday and Sunday. tare and there the cheerful laces <lb/>
Watermelons bate been very I the more advanced in years. And <lb/>
scarce but getting to be under the lapping branches stands <lb/>
. the long table, its burden <lb/>
We will say for the information <lb/>
of our corresponded t that it were <lb/>
hardly possible for him to be more <lb/>
erroneous Ins of <lb/>
he is in the above. The <lb/>
author of the article on the jury <lb/>
system is a man who has bad <lb/>
the slightest connection with a jury <lb/>
or a court in any manner whatever, <lb/>
is a good citizen, comes as <lb/>
near living up to the scripture <lb/>
which quotes as any man <lb/>
we know. We say this much with- <lb/>
out waiting for him to reply for <lb/>
himself.- En. <lb/>
Picnic. <lb/>
The occasion, on Thursday last, <lb/>
lust., of a joint picnic, given by <lb/>
the Shady drove <lb/>
and the school which Mr. J. <lb/>
White is Superintendent, will not <lb/>
soon he forgotten by those <lb/>
good fortune it was to be present. <lb/>
Situated about sis miles above <lb/>
Greenville, on the river road, is the <lb/>
large and delightful grove <lb/>
the shade of whoso oaks find <lb/>
Foreign and Domestic Novelties. <lb/>
Together with exclusive styles from our own <lb/>
workshop, which for elegance and <lb/>
workmanship equal any that can be found <lb/>
We yield the palm to none. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
GREENVILLE.- C. <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <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 FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb/>
J. D. Williamson, <lb/>
R S. CLARK CO. <lb/>
mm, cue <lb/>
Are headquarters for all needed in h <lb/>
HARDWARE line. Our stock cannot be <lb/>
but if y want anything in <lb/>
Hardware, Agricultural Implements, Stove <lb/>
and Cooking Utensils. Carriage Material <lb/>
and House Cutlery <lb/>
CALL ON US. <lb/>
We can save you money on any of these goods. <lb/>
MANUFACTURER'S AGENTS FOR POWDERS <lb/>
which will well Price. <lb/>
fill now. <lb/>
We notice an article in the last <lb/>
on the <lb/>
signed but fail to state <lb/>
be from, as it is known <lb/>
that your bumble servant <lb/>
done writing over that <lb/>
accused writing <lb/>
article referred to, your com- <lb/>
just state his where- <lb/>
abouts as we don't want <lb/>
article <lb/>
grand repast, absence of wines <lb/>
tho com,,,,,,,. n,; ,, <lb/>
enjoyment. The dining room <lb/>
been charmingly decorated with <lb/>
mountain flowers and torus and with <lb/>
the many beautiful ladies present <lb/>
made a picture fair to look upon. <lb/>
of good things, which are being <lb/>
brought out large baskets and <lb/>
buckets. All seemed lo anticipate <lb/>
a pleasant day, and the many ex <lb/>
of enjoyment assure us <lb/>
that they were not disappointed. <lb/>
Every in its so <lb/>
while we find some <lb/>
at and among other <lb/>
amusements the hour, to yield to <lb/>
Amid the may find <lb/>
the genial and sprightly <lb/>
Mr Ed. Harris, variously <lb/>
with the article that they have <lb/>
named the wrong Hut <lb/>
as has taken our do <lb/>
plume, and used some <lb/>
who did not go to language a sonic classes <lb/>
used was raised in I Blowing Book missed lots. Hear j pi,. u things that we are peculiar- <lb/>
no in <lb/>
that section we Dr. Beall <lb/>
from whence Mine and German which was <lb/>
material for work in the <lb/>
,,.,., , the lovers of the dance. <lb/>
He the cotton was . , , . ,. <lb/>
. . r-i i . Saturday proved another pleasant <lb/>
ed principally from <lb/>
and from South Carolina, and <lb/>
day, all the forenoon being put <lb/>
wool was purchased in <lb/>
sections. the <lb/>
said he, the wool <lb/>
comes from down in your section, <lb/>
some of the finest right from Pitt <lb/>
it sight seeing. Mayor Clark called <lb/>
with a carriage of as, taking <lb/>
lo points of interest <lb/>
giving much information along <lb/>
way. Blowing was again vis <lb/>
also Fairview and Raven, <lb/>
This remark put us j which splendid views were had. We <lb/>
to thinking, and we resolved j were also taken to quaff the <lb/>
to read our Pitt county waters of a spring which is <lb/>
people a led lire, not so much source changing its <lb/>
for s. their wool, hut for not j reaching the Atlantic <lb/>
baying mills at borne and i <lb/>
ring the cotton and wool where <lb/>
they are made. Here are those <lb/>
mills situated seven miles from <lb/>
n they were built <lb/>
long before the railroad got any- <lb/>
where near must be <lb/>
reached country roads <lb/>
that our Pitt county farmers <lb/>
would pronounce impassable. <lb/>
First the immense amount of <lb/>
from this is another which is <lb/>
the la-ad of a river that flows to the <lb/>
Of Mexico. <lb/>
There were about three <lb/>
at and all <lb/>
seemed delighted. The is <lb/>
feet above the sea, above <lb/>
as that. Tell those who credit you i engaged or otherwise. So passes <lb/>
the lime very pleasantly, when we <lb/>
gather around the of <lb/>
Well, there it was, <lb/>
and to suit most fas- <lb/>
in quantity to satisfy all. <lb/>
Dinner over, the amusements <lb/>
were resumed. Everything worked <lb/>
smoothly quietly, we heard not <lb/>
a of discontent. Every <lb/>
seemed to feel and act as if be had <lb/>
surely <lb/>
To Win- <lb/>
Grey. Alligood, <lb/>
Misses <lb/>
and Belle credit is <lb/>
duo the good and satisfactory <lb/>
arrangement of the matters com- <lb/>
to their To all who <lb/>
anyway contributed lo the pleas <lb/>
lire of occasion participants <lb/>
would make grateful acknowledge- <lb/>
We often think of the <lb/>
day as one of the of our <lb/>
life. Y. <lb/>
to, we will take the <lb/>
of paying our respects to his <lb/>
communication a mild brief <lb/>
way. We have heard people talk <lb/>
the same kind of <lb/>
and they are most invariably men <lb/>
who have just received some of that <lb/>
article says they don't <lb/>
at the of an honest <lb/>
woods and at the <lb/>
of some of those hollowing <lb/>
that of, be is <lb/>
sore About and of <lb/>
it is fair to assume, it is <lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO FLANAGAN. <lb/>
GREEN VI LEE, N. C. <lb/>
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House. <lb/>
CONTINUE THE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
l well equipped with the best I put up nothing <lb/>
but We keep up with the times . improved style.-. <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of are UM you can from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, lorn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full . of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
the year round, which will sell as LOW as lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this comities for past favor hope <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
something concerning <lb/>
and justice, as are what he is <lb/>
spitting at, for no man who was not <lb/>
Inflamed would use such language <lb/>
Mr. Woolen, of Swift Creek <lb/>
was our the early part of <lb/>
last week, and spoke any thing but <lb/>
encouragingly about the crops of bis <lb/>
about the honored jury <lb/>
and the juryman of the Mr c p of <lb/>
country. what he town Saturday and told U <lb/>
about the corruption of whole ; his immediate neighborhood in <lb/>
laud we think he has a terrible ease <lb/>
of the or he knows very little <lb/>
about this as compared <lb/>
Warm and 1,700 above j with some others sad that ha knows <lb/>
Tho air is cool, the tern- j less about other countries, <lb/>
rarely getting as high as . Our County Commissioners would <lb/>
were necessary to j be to hold their positions <lb/>
heavy machinery necessary had comfort at night and some of the j if they were to select such an <lb/>
godly set of as says <lb/>
guests had fire looms. <lb/>
to hauled in wagons for miles <lb/>
over these roads, then freights <lb/>
on material used have to be <lb/>
paid to the nearest depot, and; <lb/>
must be hauled out to the mills, I. <lb/>
, a., i .-. i says angels must have selected <lb/>
then after being manufactured <lb/>
that name. They didn't to <lb/>
Adieu was bid to <lb/>
Sunday afternoon, and not forget- <lb/>
ting slopped to spend <lb/>
another night at Dan <lb/>
into thread or cloth must be <lb/>
hauled back to the railroad for <lb/>
shipment. And everybody knows <lb/>
that freights between eastern and <lb/>
western North Carolina are high, <lb/>
high in fact that most of the <lb/>
trade that would be carried on <lb/>
between the two sections is <lb/>
en elsewhere. Notwithstanding <lb/>
all this the mills are operated at <lb/>
touch the people with their <lb/>
Monday amain we journeyed <lb/>
again, crossing over near the C <lb/>
border of oar State A stop over of <lb/>
seven hours had to be made at the <lb/>
historic old town Lincoln ton. <lb/>
Between a Institute then <lb/>
in session some points of inter <lb/>
est the time managed to pass very <lb/>
course. Now problem to our <lb/>
mind is why cannot Pitt county <lb/>
build such mills right here where <lb/>
we raise <lb/>
can ma <lb/>
a profit. They make money, of woks slow, <lb/>
the people are not that way, for they <lb/>
are taking steps to build a <lb/>
hotel. suit, <lb/>
printing there interested <lb/>
; plenty of cotton <lb/>
plenty wool, and by h <lb/>
raving such heavy freights <lb/>
expenses of hauling, make don-1 ., , , <lb/>
Monday in tune tor sup <lb/>
we reached Patterson Springs, <lb/>
near Shelby, and remained <lb/>
the money that our western <lb/>
friends do I We believe it can <lb/>
be done, and the people most <lb/>
get to thinking about it <lb/>
of jurymen are, <lb/>
perhaps he does not know the Com- <lb/>
missioners have the power to and <lb/>
do, discard such men as in <lb/>
their wise discretion they believe lo <lb/>
be incompetent for jurors, and if I he <lb/>
Sheriff should summon a fool for a <lb/>
talisman the parties have a chance <lb/>
to get him to they need <lb/>
not be injured much by jury- <lb/>
men, not only accuses them of <lb/>
gross ignorance and various other <lb/>
kind of manners, among which we <lb/>
find bribery. Now if be were not <lb/>
mad or insane or something nearly <lb/>
to it, be would remember that <lb/>
the very best men of country <lb/>
serve the jury, and I doubt very <lb/>
much if would tell any <lb/>
table juryman of Pitt county that be <lb/>
had been bribed, and be is <lb/>
no sort of danger of being bur- <lb/>
to death with overload or <lb/>
knowledge if he days not know <lb/>
woods nod blackjack settle- <lb/>
contain some of our best <lb/>
the lower part the township had <lb/>
fair crop Momenta, lie <lb/>
said the late rains and high water in <lb/>
the creek had done much damage <lb/>
lo young corn, bat old and high- <lb/>
land corn which is now made will <lb/>
have a good yield. Cotton was also <lb/>
reported averaging well. In <lb/>
Vanceboro section, he told us, crops <lb/>
were almost a failure. <lb/>
Mr. W. B. from upper <lb/>
reports poor crops bis <lb/>
neighborhood. believes, how, <lb/>
ever, there will a moderately <lb/>
good grain yield. <lb/>
Mr, 11.8. u. of tells <lb/>
us in the Broad Branch sec- <lb/>
of that township are <lb/>
good. He says there will be a good <lb/>
yield of corn, and that if nothing <lb/>
from now to make cotton shed <lb/>
will also be good, as it is <lb/>
very promising now. <lb/>
Generally speaking, crops are <lb/>
poor this year, are glad to <lb/>
bear good reports coming from <lb/>
any section. are still hopeful <lb/>
upon the average a lair crop <lb/>
will be made. Let us hear from <lb/>
farmers. <lb/>
The State Com in of <lb/>
culture of Georgia, North Carolina, <lb/>
South Carolina, Florida <lb/>
ma, met Atlanta, Ga., first <lb/>
for purpose of discussing <lb/>
the question of the tare in cotton <lb/>
baled cotton cloth. The subject <lb/>
was discussed at some length, <lb/>
a was appointed to visit <lb/>
the New York Exchange and confer <lb/>
the authorities there also<lb/>
BETHEL ACADEMY <lb/>
FOR BOTH SEXES. <lb/>
THIS INSTITUTION WILL BE <lb/>
I opened Tuesday, August 27th, <lb/>
1880. ion in per session of <lb/>
twenty weeks from lo <lb/>
each. Incidental Fee <lb/>
cents. Board per month from to <lb/>
Good moral advantages. Convenient <lb/>
railroad and mail facilities. Lust year <lb/>
the principal took a thorough course at <lb/>
Business College and <lb/>
the of Nashville. <lb/>
For further particulars address, <lb/>
Bethel, N. C. <lb/>
until most honest men. Now, We would, <lb/>
Friday. is another charming not undertake to advise i use <lb/>
cotton bagging instead of <lb/>
We arc no receiving Spring and <lb/>
Summer Goods, and hope that <lb/>
you will not fail to give <lb/>
us a call. We have a <lb/>
attractive <lb/>
line of <lb/>
at cents per yard, which you <lb/>
will find to equal to any <lb/>
yon will find at cents. <lb/>
A line of <lb/>
CASHMERES <lb/>
at cents. And <lb/>
many oilier things that we <lb/>
will offer at special prices <lb/>
We call especial attention to our <lb/>
W S. RAWLS, <lb/>
Watch-Maker Jeweler. <lb/>
If want something nice in the way of<lb/>
Sewing Machines, <lb/>
come to the house. A <lb/>
huge new stock just received. <lb/>
Watches, Clocks, Jewelry and <lb/>
Machines repaired and warranted. <lb/>
. J. C C . H. <lb/>
Pill Co K C. KC <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Gilliam, <lb/>
Cotton Buyers, <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
place. Not for style show, <lb/>
no, bin, will suggest he devise <lb/>
But lots solid commit and nicer and mote effectual way <lb/>
says, however, when j It reminds us of a large coon- administer justice than the jury <lb/>
urging upon dealers the <lb/>
of allowing a amount cl <lb/>
Gall. <lb/>
The and <lb/>
turn <lb/>
plow, and the and <lb/>
cotton plows. We will <lb/>
also offer the trade <lb/>
LARD'S which <lb/>
has more merit than anything of <lb/>
the kind ever put on the <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
LITTLE, HOUSE BRO, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
FEED STORE <lb/>
C. D. ROUNTREE, <lb/>
Dealer in Hay, Com, Meal, Oats <lb/>
and Mill Feed. <lb/>
nay for <lb/>
Com and Peas. <lb/>
I pay c ash for my goods and can <lb/>
to sell bottom <lb/>
Call on at the store of J. H. Smith <lb/>
Bro. <lb/>
We have had several years ex- <lb/>
at the business and are <lb/>
prepared to handle to <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
hands will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful attention. <lb/>
Notice, <lb/>
The bad health of Mr. <lb/>
has compelled him to the <lb/>
management of the Carriage business for <lb/>
me, which has left a nice stock of good <lb/>
material bought cheap for cash, on my <lb/>
hand. I will close oat the -lock at a <lb/>
liberal discount, or will make easy terms <lb/>
the purchaser, or will also make <lb/>
easy terms with any good reliable man to <lb/>
carry on the carriage business for me. <lb/>
There is letter opening for a carriage <lb/>
business in the county than at this place. <lb/>
I have also a large stock of general <lb/>
merchandise for sale cheap for cash <lb/>
time, such as Meats, Flour, Corn, <lb/>
bought hi large lots also a nice lot of <lb/>
I and New Orleans Molasses, nice <lb/>
selected stock of Shoes, Hals and Straw <lb/>
nice lot of Clothing, ladles Press <lb/>
Goods, in fact everything that can be <lb/>
found in a General Store. <lb/>
May SO. C <lb/>
Water <lb/>
The undersigned having leased these <lb/>
mills for p number of years and put them <lb/>
in thorough order, begs leave to inform <lb/>
the public that lie is prepared to r ind <lb/>
Corn and wheat in a first-class manner. <lb/>
Satisfaction guaranteed to all <lb/>
I would intone, merchants that I am <lb/>
prepared to furnish them good water <lb/>
null meal at prices delivered. <lb/>
Customers wanting to buy at retail can <lb/>
be supplied at my store in <lb/>
where the v will also find a select stock <lb/>
General Merchandise which will In <lb/>
sold at lowest prices <lb/>
WE are now fitted in first-class are lo an <lb/>
upon short notice any kind or style of <lb/>
RIDING VEHICLES. <lb/>
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING <lb/>
also keep a nice line of <lb/>
HARNESS. <lb/>
Come and see us. Flanagan's old t <lb/>
R. JR. Manager. <lb/>
DURING THE SUMMER <lb/>
I will have weekly arrivals of the very incest and freshest <lb/>
Confections. <lb/>
I keep constantly hand a splendid assortment <lb/>
GROCERIES, CANNED GOODS, TOBACCO <lb/>
CIGARS, TOILET SOAPS, <lb/>
All your wants in I lie above goods can he supplied by <lb/>
V. L. STEPHENS, <lb/>
UP TO <lb/>
A. SPECIALTY. <lb/>
E. C. GLENN. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT. <lb/>
STANDARD GUANO ACID <lb/>
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL, <lb/>
SMELL LIME. PURE DISSOLVED <lb/>
COTTON SEED MEAL AND <lb/>
Tennessee Wagons, for sale, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C, Mar. 1837. <lb/>
-This for- <lb/>
MURPHY REDDING, <lb/>
Merchandise Brokers, <lb/>
o. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THANK YOU FOB PATRON A WHICH YOU <lb/>
have thus far bestowed Upon us and for continuation of the same, we <lb/>
you to-day a line of that cannot he in market for durability <lb/>
worth. have now in stock a nice line of Ladle- embracing tho <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/>
Dress linen and Piece Linens. A line of Piece f <lb/>
will astonish you in quality and price. Notions endless variety embracing a <lb/>
line too to mention. Hats for Men. and Children. Cent's fur. <lb/>
Goods, Shirts. and Collars. Hosiery and a nice line <lb/>
Shoes, to lit nil who favor us with their we y special care to <lb/>
this line and our Shoes both in quality and price. A large lot of <lb/>
Slippers from cents no. We call the attention of the Ladies to <lb/>
line of Nippon and think they will not do themselves justice if they buy <lb/>
examining them. <lb/>
Hardware. Nails. Cutlery, <lb/>
Hoes. Plows, Shovels, Trace Chains. <lb/>
Grindstone and Fixtures, <lb/>
Crockery. Class ware, <lb/>
and Willow ware. <lb/>
Harness, Bridles and Whips. <lb/>
Gail Ax and Rail Bead Mills Snuff, Chewing and Smoking Tobacco. <lb/>
and In this line carry Tea, Coffee, Sugar. Molasses, Rice, Lard <lb/>
the very best we can buy. Pepper. Spice. Soap, both laundry and toilet. Star <lb/>
and Hall Lye, Matches, Candles, Starch, best grade of Kerosene Oil. Meats of differ, <lb/>
cut kinds. Flour which we buy low and sell low for the If you need <lb/>
rel of good Flour come to us, we are rock it. <lb/>
life carry Window Sash and Doors of different in stock. Also the largest <lb/>
stock of of any house Greenville, embracing Suits, <lb/>
both double and single. Lounges, Chairs of different kinds. Tables, Cots. springs <lb/>
and Mattresses, Children's and Reds and Cradles. What we have <lb/>
i not got this line we have from several of the U--i houses In Una <lb/>
country and will order anything you wish at moderate prices. Don't war <lb/>
celebrated Climax and Stonewall PLOWS when you want one. listing <lb/>
for these Plows in stock. <lb/>
SEE L'S when you come to town, we guarantee fair honorable <lb/>
treatment, and will appreciate kindness We can and mill <lb/>
sell as low as any one who sells as good goods as we do. <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
Fleming, B. CHERRY CO,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018949_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
Lang's Column. <lb/>
SPECIAL <lb/>
N A FEW DAYS I SHALL <lb/>
have on exhibition Fall and Win- <lb/>
for Custom Made <lb/>
Clothing and cordially invite <lb/>
an inspection from those who <lb/>
want fine <lb/>
Remember that I guarantee <lb/>
a fit on all sales. The garments <lb/>
made by me during the past <lb/>
give evidence of styles. <lb/>
fit and durability. <lb/>
A full line of Earle Wilson <lb/>
Collars and Cuffs kept constant- <lb/>
on hand. <lb/>
M. R. LANG. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, C. <lb/>
Cut down the weeds. <lb/>
August is about half <lb/>
We have bad a little sunshine. <lb/>
Hamilton is to Lave a newspaper <lb/>
soon. <lb/>
The days <lb/>
be red. <lb/>
of vacation arc <lb/>
Inferior Court this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
burglars are molesting Tarboro <lb/>
people, <lb/>
street force Lave done some <lb/>
work since the rain. <lb/>
No work was done on the railroad <lb/>
at this end last week. <lb/>
White Dress Goods at cost for <lb/>
cash. J. B. Cheeky Co. <lb/>
The river is passable again, the <lb/>
water having subsided. <lb/>
White Dress Goods at cost for <lb/>
cash. J. Co. <lb/>
The State Farmer's Alliance is in <lb/>
session at <lb/>
and Misses, Opera slips <lb/>
at cost, for cash. <lb/>
J. Co. <lb/>
A little good weather will put the <lb/>
to fodder. <lb/>
Misses, Opera slip- <lb/>
at cost for cash. <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb/>
Our Bad Boy has been spending <lb/>
a the at home. <lb/>
II <lb/>
last <lb/>
bad <lb/>
the <lb/>
the <lb/>
pot <lb/>
the <lb/>
M. E. Lang's <lb/>
A good horse sale cash <lb/>
on time by J. C. Lanier. <lb/>
The change in the weather <lb/>
week gave many of our people <lb/>
colds. <lb/>
finest of Batter <lb/>
finest Cheese is sold at <lb/>
Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The regular will be <lb/>
on railroad to this place <lb/>
22nd. <lb/>
Bettie <lb/>
school girls small boys will <lb/>
open on September the 2nd <lb/>
The hue wet weather very mate- <lb/>
injured melon as well <lb/>
as other <lb/>
will buy Point Lace, the best <lb/>
Flour at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
K. A. has <lb/>
ed her by placing a new <lb/>
around it. <lb/>
lightening Fruit Jars, best <lb/>
the world, save fruit without sugar, <lb/>
sold by II. S. c Co. <lb/>
Mr. J. J. Martin has been made <lb/>
pout of Tarboro, vice Mrs. <lb/>
Fender removed. <lb/>
on mailer how <lb/>
sick you get, yon can eat Boss Bis- <lb/>
Al the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
One thing Greenville needs is a <lb/>
large modern hotel. It would be a <lb/>
paying investment. <lb/>
Our lips smack over the prospect <lb/>
of soon passing some <lb/>
grapes them. <lb/>
Mi orders are now issued at <lb/>
the Bethel The <lb/>
town keeps moving. <lb/>
Watermelons are more <lb/>
but they are not very excellent <lb/>
size or in quality. <lb/>
We want to see new life get. into <lb/>
Greenville and people go <lb/>
to work to build up the town. <lb/>
Attention i called to the notice <lb/>
to creditors by J. <lb/>
of Josephus Latham deceased. <lb/>
Every person in is glad to <lb/>
see Alex out <lb/>
again from his recent sickness. <lb/>
time a door has banged <lb/>
the office lately the boys <lb/>
have jumped. it was <lb/>
more lightening. <lb/>
After To Day. All our <lb/>
Salines for All our <lb/>
M. R. Lang. <lb/>
hi a few weeks the schools will <lb/>
all begin their lull terms. In this <lb/>
Greenville is truly <lb/>
the town has good schools. <lb/>
The Mills have just <lb/>
thoroughly overhauled. If you <lb/>
good Hour send your wheat <lb/>
there and try it. E. L. <lb/>
Our office enjoyed a watermelon <lb/>
last Wednesday Mrs. Emily <lb/>
Harris, a Thursday <lb/>
sent by Mrs. II. A. Sutton. <lb/>
per lb for Sweet Scotch <lb/>
lb sold in Pitt Co., which <lb/>
is a of its superiority, at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The matter of the excursion to <lb/>
Wilmington has been definitely <lb/>
settled yet, bat hold yourself in <lb/>
readiness to go in case it is made <lb/>
up. <lb/>
The Commissioners of Edgecombe <lb/>
county have ordered that the roads <lb/>
of the county be worked by the <lb/>
Good for Lets <lb/>
hear from Pitt along this Hue. <lb/>
Some one who observed it said it <lb/>
rained either during the day or <lb/>
every day for forty consecutive <lb/>
days. We did keep up with <lb/>
the record but know there was lots <lb/>
of rain. <lb/>
economical, <lb/>
keeper <lb/>
to superintend boarding depart- <lb/>
of Greenville Institute. <lb/>
must be well recommended- <lb/>
Apply to Mis. John Duckett. <lb/>
Notwithstanding continued <lb/>
wet weather Nursery has <lb/>
had many beautiful flowers. The <lb/>
tube rose, and dahlias <lb/>
have been exquisite. <lb/>
Every citizen of the should <lb/>
have his lot cleared of trash and <lb/>
weeds Immediately and same <lb/>
should be hauled Matter left <lb/>
to decay now might cause much <lb/>
sickness taring the fall months. <lb/>
The fall or Mrs. Wiley <lb/>
school for boys girls <lb/>
will open on 26th ins . <lb/>
Th. session will be taught in <lb/>
lately occupied by Miss M. <lb/>
Patronage solicited. <lb/>
Mr. J. H. Tucker and family left <lb/>
for <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Higgs is visiting the <lb/>
Markets. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. Pitt, <lb/>
are at the Austin I <lb/>
Topic. <lb/>
Mr. Cherry, Jr., family <lb/>
returned Friday night from a visit <lb/>
to <lb/>
Mrs. J. B. Cherry Master <lb/>
James reached home Thursday from <lb/>
Morehead. <lb/>
Mr. A. S. Johnston, of Edge- <lb/>
is spending a few days with <lb/>
relatives here. <lb/>
Mrs. G. A. Ogles by and children <lb/>
who were visiting in Concord, have <lb/>
returned home. <lb/>
Mrs. W. L- Brown and children <lb/>
have been spending days with <lb/>
relatives in Tarboro. <lb/>
Mr. Ed Bacon, of Jacksonville, <lb/>
Fla., spent a few nays of the week <lb/>
visiting his sister, Mrs. L. A Brown. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Hudson and wife, who <lb/>
have been spending the summer <lb/>
here, left yesterday on their return <lb/>
to Florida. <lb/>
Mr. Thomas Small and Mag- <lb/>
Harvey, of Washington, spent <lb/>
Saturday Sunday with Mr. and <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
Miss Irene Grimsley, a charming <lb/>
young lady of Greene conn is vis- <lb/>
the family Mr. <lb/>
son. town, <lb/>
Miss Williams returned <lb/>
home last Friday. <lb/>
Miss Ella Harrington has been vis- <lb/>
her a few days the past week. <lb/>
Miss Susie Brown left Monday to <lb/>
visit friends m Raleigh. She will <lb/>
be absent several weeks, also visit- <lb/>
and other points before <lb/>
returning. <lb/>
Mr. D. one of the leading <lb/>
of Mount a <lb/>
most clever gentleman, has <lb/>
spending the past week visiting his <lb/>
sou in law, Mr. S. M. <lb/>
Mrs. T. M. returned from <lb/>
Morehead yesterday accompanied by <lb/>
of Greenville, N. C, <lb/>
and the Misses Ironmonger, of New <lb/>
York. The party will leave this even <lb/>
for resorts in Western North <lb/>
Carolina. Messenger, <lb/>
The Washington Gone tells of a <lb/>
splendid German given at <lb/>
by Mr. Ed Hoyt. of Washington, <lb/>
complimentary to Mum Agnes Cots <lb/>
ton, of this county- It is currently <lb/>
reported that Miss Cotton is the <lb/>
most popular young lady at <lb/>
Miss Meta Chestnut, who was a <lb/>
teacher at the last session <lb/>
and who since its close has been <lb/>
teaching a short term at <lb/>
has been in this week. We <lb/>
learn that about the first <lb/>
she will leave for Indian Terri- <lb/>
having position as <lb/>
teacher out there. The best wishes <lb/>
numerous Mend will follow. <lb/>
The following left for on <lb/>
last Major L. C. Latham, <lb/>
Mr. Amos and wife, J. J. <lb/>
Peculiar Attachments. <lb/>
Mrs. M. A Ricks baa the most do- <lb/>
lot of ducks and chicks <lb/>
ens to be We saw her out <lb/>
walking the other evening with <lb/>
about twenty-five of them following <lb/>
her as orderly as though bad <lb/>
been so many sheep following a <lb/>
shepherd. We learn that she also <lb/>
has a kitten which associates with <lb/>
fowls, there seems to be a <lb/>
general attachment between them. <lb/>
The kitten can go up and caress <lb/>
little ducks by placing its paws <lb/>
around their necks, while they in <lb/>
turn will run their bills gently <lb/>
through kitty's fur. No other of <lb/>
feline species bat this particular <lb/>
kit can approach the flock. <lb/>
Attempted Murder. <lb/>
Heedless commandment, <lb/>
-Thou not some unknown <lb/>
person went to the residence of Mr. <lb/>
W. B. Boss, in Carolina township <lb/>
Saturday night last week after be <lb/>
and his family retired, and fired <lb/>
a load of buck shot through a win- <lb/>
near the side of his bed. Who <lb/>
ever it was evidently knew how <lb/>
was arranged in the room <lb/>
and to kill both Mr. Ross and <lb/>
his wife one shot. Fortunately <lb/>
this would-be murderer aimed too <lb/>
high to carry out his intentions, as <lb/>
the whole load about an inch <lb/>
and a half above the heads of his <lb/>
victims. It is evident that the per- <lb/>
son who did it with intent to kill, <lb/>
and he ought to be caught if <lb/>
and punished to the fullest ex <lb/>
tent of the law. hear that <lb/>
runs high, but there is not <lb/>
sufficient proof for arrest. <lb/>
Rev. G. closed an inter- <lb/>
protracted meeting at Bethel <lb/>
last Friday night, and this week <lb/>
has begun a meeting at Allen's <lb/>
near Greenville. He is a young <lb/>
who is showing marked power <lb/>
in work, and much <lb/>
good is resulting from the meetings <lb/>
he conducts. He preaches strong <lb/>
sermons and has a bright future. <lb/>
May the abundantly bless his <lb/>
labors. <lb/>
During the past two weeks Rev. <lb/>
I. O. Glenn has been conducting <lb/>
a very interesting protracted meet- <lb/>
at eight miles below <lb/>
Greenville. There have been large <lb/>
congregations out every night and <lb/>
great feeling is manifested. At last <lb/>
reports we have heard there were <lb/>
upwards of forty conversions and <lb/>
twenty-five had given their <lb/>
names for church membership. <lb/>
May the good work and be <lb/>
blessed with the <lb/>
souls. <lb/>
showed that his lot in the town of <lb/>
is excessively value. <lb/>
The Board being satisfied of its <lb/>
justice ordered the same to be re- <lb/>
Petition of Latham Skinner <lb/>
showed an error in their properly <lb/>
listed for 1889. The J. <lb/>
land listed as acres should be <lb/>
and the acres of the <lb/>
S. G. Worthington land be stricken <lb/>
out as they bad sold the said <lb/>
acres of Worthington land acres <lb/>
land to Warren Tucker <lb/>
prior to June 1st, 1889, and the <lb/>
same is charged to said Tucker on <lb/>
the tax list for said year. Ordered <lb/>
that the necessary correction be <lb/>
made. <lb/>
Upon petition of A. G. Cox ask- <lb/>
for a new road from the Tar <lb/>
road the Barber place straight <lb/>
to the Hancock road near A. G <lb/>
Cox's house, the same having been <lb/>
duly advertised, it was ordered <lb/>
that the sheriff summons a jury <lb/>
proceed to lay off said road ac- <lb/>
cording to law. <lb/>
The following persons were <lb/>
lowed to list taxes for the year <lb/>
as per abstracts filed It. A. Tyson, <lb/>
C- M. Bernard, Trustee of G, Ber- <lb/>
Gray Harris, It. B. A. By- <lb/>
It. B. Bynum, Miles Williams, <lb/>
Henry Boyd, James W. L. <lb/>
Smith, Henry <lb/>
Jas. Harrington, C. D. Hooks, T. B. <lb/>
Moore. J. W. Nobles, Marcellus <lb/>
Sutton, S. F. Abbott, Laura <lb/>
son. J. W. Allen, Guardian <lb/>
heirs, L. A. Cobb, Cobb Abbott, <lb/>
Sam Cary, Lazarus Dawson, S. B. <lb/>
Garris, Jesse B. F. <lb/>
W. F. Harrington. James Johnson, <lb/>
Abram Mills, E. <lb/>
Pittman, J. B. <lb/>
Smith, J. J. Stokes, John Allen, <lb/>
H. Allen, E. B. Dudley, J. II. Dud- <lb/>
J. B. Darby, Jas. Harrington, <lb/>
W. G. Alex Nobles, J. <lb/>
O. Pollard,. It. Williams. <lb/>
Jurors for September Court. 1st <lb/>
J II Boyd, Cannon Smith, <lb/>
Chance, Beach, <lb/>
J It A C Tucker, L. J. <lb/>
Moore, S S Harris, Jesse Dudley, F <lb/>
We will sell our entire stock Goods at <lb/>
Cost for Cash until Sept. 1st. <lb/>
This we do to make room for our double stock <lb/>
of fall goods which we will purchase in a few <lb/>
days with the hard cash and by so doing will <lb/>
make all the discounts, consequently we can <lb/>
handle with the greatest impunity. <lb/>
e mean what we say. One visit to our store <lb/>
will make you forget hard times and will make <lb/>
you come to see us every time you get a dollar. <lb/>
HIGGS <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
AN EXCELLENT EDUCATION <lb/>
At very Low Rates <lb/>
It la <lb/>
is a Military Boarding <lb/>
Behind, and is of the <lb/>
tales. location. Fine <lb/>
Mild Winters, <lb/>
On <lb/>
Full Course of Study, or prep- <lb/>
for -1 ill-., of <lb/>
. any or for <lb/>
Complete Course In Telegraphy. For <lb/>
with full particulars address <lb/>
COL. A. C. DAVIS, Supt. <lb/>
Geo. S Lloyd, M. D., <lb/>
Specialist in Diseases of the <lb/>
OFFICE <lb/>
Bryan Hotel, Tarboro, N. C. <lb/>
---------o <lb/>
JUST FINISHED A <lb/>
months comae at Philadelphia <lb/>
Wills Hospital, <lb/>
offer my services to the people f <lb/>
and adjoining counties. <lb/>
J Johnson, Paul Harrington, J T <lb/>
of many Edwards, Josephus Cox, <lb/>
Moore, J S Hines, D C <lb/>
Langley, J Little, F Craw- <lb/>
and the the BE- Bud, John It. Faithful, <lb/>
force took in F L Brown, Nash House, <lb/>
Saturday, and such a fine time they L number, Israel Moore, J M C <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS BOARD <lb/>
with <lb/>
BATH HOUSE, <lb/>
Can lie had in Beaufort, K. C, at <lb/>
per Address, <lb/>
SUE ROBERTS, <lb/>
Beaufort, N. C. <lb/>
SEVEN SPRINGS <lb/>
-----Is now on a <lb/>
For the Summer <lb/>
WHO WISH TO REGAIN <lb/>
health and vigor can no place equal <lb/>
to Seven Springs, sis any one the <lb/>
will compare favorably with any <lb/>
of the mineral springs in this country. <lb/>
There being seven within few feet <lb/>
each ether, having different analysts a <lb/>
larger number of ailments can be cured <lb/>
here than at any watering place known. <lb/>
Persona coming to the Springs by <lb/>
Railroad can get conveyance from the <lb/>
20.001 depots at La Grange, and <lb/>
It. Olive. La Grange is the nearest <lb/>
point. Passengers coming there on the <lb/>
evening mail can reach the springs be- <lb/>
lore night. <lb/>
32.00 to 88.60 per day, 87.30 <lb/>
II <lb/>
ENGINE STACKS, <lb/>
Made to <lb/>
Mg, and <lb/>
TIN SHOP in It. S. <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Greenville. i X. C. <lb/>
By the Sea <lb/>
Spend the Summer at <lb/>
I to per week. Liberal reductions by <lb/>
i the month or season. <lb/>
MAXWELL BROS., <lb/>
Proprietors. <lb/>
Seven Springs, N. C. <lb/>
did bare. Did not get sea sick a bit <lb/>
on the but hail all the long fun <lb/>
we were looking for is <lb/>
nil the go, and as jolly a place as <lb/>
can be found. Spencer are <lb/>
running a popular house the <lb/>
crowd is The boat line <lb/>
from to is as <lb/>
complete as could be asked for. <lb/>
Capt. Mayo and Clerk Calais, of the <lb/>
steamer Greenville never have pas- <lb/>
K i to fall in love with <lb/>
and S. of Wilson, Clarence included. And the <lb/>
i just the best a <lb/>
Home. On Monday Misses man ever with. Capt <lb/>
vis and Cobb, J. <lb/>
and family, W. P. Hindi, It. <lb/>
It. Cotton and son, Bruce, Clarence <lb/>
Whichard, W. II. C. Laugh- <lb/>
Cobb and family, W. <lb/>
It. l lie and family, returned. <lb/>
The almost constant rains have <lb/>
ceased and we hope the. seasons will <lb/>
yet cause such a favorable improve- <lb/>
in crops as to revise the far- <lb/>
spirits. <lb/>
many people have been <lb/>
kept out of Greenville several <lb/>
by high water A great <lb/>
to the people a dead loss <lb/>
to the town. When will that road- <lb/>
way be built <lb/>
lie beaten anywhere, <lb/>
and Manager and Pilot Ow <lb/>
ens are as clever as ever stood on <lb/>
deck. It is delightful to travel with <lb/>
men who are anxious to make you <lb/>
happy. H you <lb/>
want to have the best time in the <lb/>
world go to all we <lb/>
got to say <lb/>
will please make a <lb/>
note of this before going North to <lb/>
get new goods. The <lb/>
office can sis nice let- <lb/>
and hill heads, SC, as you can <lb/>
t where by patronizing us Mayo Patsy Elks 1.50, U. D. <lb/>
you keep that much money at home. 2.00, Moore 4.00, <lb/>
Commissioner's Proceeding. <lb/>
X, C, Aug. <lb/>
Hoard met regular session, <lb/>
C Dawson, Chairman. G. M. <lb/>
Mooring, T. Keel, C. V. <lb/>
and W. A. James, Jr. <lb/>
The following pauper orders were <lb/>
tinned s <lb/>
Taylor Margaret <lb/>
ant 3.00, James Masters Ivy <lb/>
Monday was a good day for the <lb/>
office in the fruit line. Mr. W. It. <lb/>
Whichard brought us two large <lb/>
watermelons, sonic fine apples and <lb/>
peaches, and Mr. James <lb/>
brought us a basket nice peach- <lb/>
es. Thanks all around. <lb/>
Tho merchants are hopeful of a <lb/>
good trade this fall we trust <lb/>
will not be disappointed. Hut we <lb/>
remind them that the best way to <lb/>
secure trade is by advertising. It <lb/>
is now time to begin fall advertise- <lb/>
At tho election held by the Green- <lb/>
ville Guards last week the old <lb/>
were re-elected, viz R. Willi- <lb/>
ams, Jr., Captain; J. T. Smith, First <lb/>
It. W. King. Second <lb/>
Lieutenant. The <lb/>
ed officers will be appointed by the <lb/>
captain. <lb/>
We beard Captain Sykes, of the <lb/>
railroad corps, say Monday that <lb/>
during the month of July the hands <lb/>
could get in only days work, <lb/>
and since came have <lb/>
been able to get in no work. <lb/>
nuns and freshets made serious <lb/>
drawbacks in the work, result in <lb/>
heavy loss to contractors. <lb/>
J It Johnson, James Stokes, j <lb/>
Mien Crawford, James Hardy, J It <lb/>
Hives, L C Cannon, J A Gardner, <lb/>
Augustus Forbes. <lb/>
Second Calvin Mills, Wiley <lb/>
Brown, W It Home, J It Carson, J <lb/>
II ; M Smith, <lb/>
Retort Station, Allied W II <lb/>
Ivy J ii <lb/>
Haddock, P Grimes, J J <lb/>
B A Patrick, M G <lb/>
W T Keel. <lb/>
The. report of jury lay oil <lb/>
establish public road tending <lb/>
from north end of the <lb/>
across Tar river at Greenville, and <lb/>
through the lands of B. J. Wilson, <lb/>
made on the 17th day of May, <lb/>
upon being read was not confirmed, i <lb/>
Ordered that the Clerk list the <lb/>
taxes of the A. It. It. Co., <lb/>
county for <lb/>
A tax cents each <lb/>
valuation real estate in the stock <lb/>
law territory was levied- <lb/>
The report of a jury to levy off <lb/>
and establish a public road in <lb/>
Creek township, leading from the <lb/>
public road near Bridge <lb/>
over the lands S. W. Barney, <lb/>
Israel Moore others, to near <lb/>
II. Smith's resilience was read and <lb/>
received. <lb/>
MID-SUMMER PRICES <lb/>
POPULAR SUMMER <lb/>
one of the most delightful places on the <lb/>
tie coast, will W opened to guests on j <lb/>
A s <lb/>
cured that will leave Washington for <lb/>
on Tuesday and Saturday or <lb/>
each week, leave for <lb/>
on Thursday each week. <lb/>
At every accommodation <lb/>
will be furnished to and every <lb/>
effort be made to make their stay<lb/>
Can be enjoyed at will. A train road <lb/>
has been built from the hotel to <lb/>
the beach. <lb/>
MM <lb/>
Is unsurpassed and these sports can <lb/>
be in to the heart's content. <lb/>
In keeping With <lb/>
the <lb/>
scarcity of <lb/>
have iii- <lb/>
by <lb/>
And the prop.- <lb/>
have been knock- <lb/>
boa Brow <lb/>
high priced <lb/>
We are <lb/>
a special drivel <lb/>
on all <lb/>
mi W <lb/>
On which prices <lb/>
been put <lb/>
right down in <lb/>
body, of every- <lb/>
i MI <lb/>
tor th <lb/>
participate in <lb/>
HIE <lb/>
Has been employed for the benefit <lb/>
those who participate in dancing. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
i-<lb/>
The Tor River Transportation <lb/>
Greenville, President <lb/>
J. I. <lb/>
J. S. <lb/>
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
It. v. Ag <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The I finest <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. She <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for comfort, Ac- <lb/>
and convenience of <lb/>
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table tarnished with the <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer Is <lb/>
not only comfortable lint attractive. <lb/>
Leave- Washington Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at . o'clock, A. M. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb/>
freights received daily and through <lb/>
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb/>
J. J. in . Agent <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
Of every kind sue <lb/>
b Sing sold a t <lb/>
much less than <lb/>
former p r i c e s. <lb/>
and on <lb/>
and Hats <lb/>
Von can get <lb/>
Special Bargains <lb/>
c have the <lb/>
goods and <lb/>
to sell you, <lb/>
can make prices <lb/>
to the interest of <lb/>
very purchaser. <lb/>
Be sure to call <lb/>
us get <lb/>
genuine bargain <lb/>
On Saturday Air. J. F. Joyner <lb/>
presented us with a very nice <lb/>
the finest one we <lb/>
seen thus far during the season. <lb/>
Since writing above Mr. J. S. <lb/>
Easton, of us one <lb/>
that goes pounds better, tipping <lb/>
scales at just pounds. He is <lb/>
ahead so far. <lb/>
Hew <lb/>
Be sure and read Higgs Mun- <lb/>
ford's new advertisement today. <lb/>
They desire to dispose of much of <lb/>
stock before laying in fall <lb/>
goods and are offering bargains <lb/>
until September. Mr. J. W. Higgs <lb/>
is away to make fall purchases. <lb/>
He is visiting Norfolk, <lb/>
Philadelphia, New York, <lb/>
he is going to get goods cheap, be- <lb/>
cause he took solid cash along <lb/>
with him and if that don't <lb/>
cheap goods nothing else will. The <lb/>
fall will be attractive and <lb/>
Look out for Mun- <lb/>
lord. <lb/>
Baker 1.50, Webster 2.00, <lb/>
Nelson William <lb/>
4.00, Lydia Bryant 2.00, <lb/>
Jacob 1.50, J. O. <lb/>
tor Bro. COO, A. G. Cox <lb/>
4.00, Jacob 2.00, J. A. An- <lb/>
4.00, Marcus Whitaker 2.00. <lb/>
B. F. Pat lick 20-00, J. A. K. Tucker <lb/>
15.45. <lb/>
General orders were issued to <lb/>
Caesar Carr 15.00, Barnes <lb/>
Williams <lb/>
11.00, Harris, 3.00, J. P. <lb/>
Downs 1.00, John R. Spier 3.30, <lb/>
Henry Brown 10.75, J. A. Lang <lb/>
24.00, Louis Hudson 1.05, G. W. Ed- <lb/>
Walston James C. <lb/>
7.79, J. J. 193.93, <lb/>
J. W. Page 3.40, G . A. <lb/>
1.20, W. C Dudley 15.50, F. W. <lb/>
Brown 22.44, W, E. Warren 5.00. U. <lb/>
F. White G. F. Graves 1.08, <lb/>
Alfred Harden 02.35, K. A. <lb/>
J. B. Whitehurst 1.92, Zeno <lb/>
Brown 10.00, Louisa H. <lb/>
1.00. Sherrod White 18.00 <lb/>
G. T. 4.00, B. W. King 3.20, <lb/>
J. C Cherry 122.66, J. A. K. Tucker <lb/>
85.80, C. Dawson 7.60, T. E. Keel <lb/>
11.10, C. V. Newton 13.50, W. A. <lb/>
James, Jr., 7.20, G. M. Mooring 5.80, <lb/>
Joseph Cobb 11.30. <lb/>
A petition of John K. Smith <lb/>
showed he has acres of land <lb/>
township, valued at <lb/>
the Board the same <lb/>
excessive ordered that the value be <lb/>
reduced to and correction <lb/>
made on tax list. <lb/>
Petition of Matt Slaughter, <lb/>
shewed that acres of his laud <lb/>
in township is <lb/>
valued, upon investigation <lb/>
the same was ordered reduced- <lb/>
Petition of A. J. Tyson showed <lb/>
that his laud township <lb/>
is listed as 240.1 acres valued at <lb/>
which was ordered corrected <lb/>
to acres valued at <lb/>
Petition Harris <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Judge of of county <lb/>
I having issued letters of <lb/>
to inc. the undersigned, on the h <lb/>
day of August. on the estate of <lb/>
Josephus deceased, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all parsons indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb/>
of said to present their claims <lb/>
properly authenticated, to the under- <lb/>
signed, twelve months after the <lb/>
date of this notice, or this notice will be <lb/>
plead In of their recovery. <lb/>
This the 8th day of August, <lb/>
J. V. <lb/>
of Josephus Latham. <lb/>
Is and comfortably furnished and <lb/>
the table will be supplied with <lb/>
the best that can be procured. <lb/>
to per day. <lb/>
to 810.00 per week. <lb/>
per month. <lb/>
rates to <lb/>
Brown Hooker. <lb/>
Visit if yo-i wish to enjoy <lb/>
the season. <lb/>
For further particulars <lb/>
SPENCER BROS., <lb/>
Washington, N. C. <lb/>
A SUPERB LINK <lb/>
SPRING MILLINERY <lb/>
------00000000 <lb/>
Can now be seen at my store. have <lb/>
i the latest styles and newest patterns, and <lb/>
l an experience of years at <lb/>
business qualifies me for doing all work <lb/>
satisfactory and well. also do <lb/>
WET AND DRY STAMPING <lb/>
at moderate prices. Will be to have <lb/>
you call and examine my stock. <lb/>
E. A. SHEPHERD. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
I qualified before the Clerk of <lb/>
the Superior Court, Pitt county <lb/>
on the 8th day of May, as <lb/>
upon the estate of Joy- <lb/>
deceased, this Is to sill per- <lb/>
sons holding claims against said estate <lb/>
to present their claims for payments <lb/>
within twelve months from this date or <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. All persons owing said es- <lb/>
will come forward and make <lb/>
settlement. Blank <lb/>
This May Adm. of <lb/>
most elegant form <lb/>
HE MM NUTRITIOUS JUICE <lb/>
OF TUB- <lb/>
FIGS OP CALIFORNIA, <lb/>
Combined with the medicinal <lb/>
virtues of plants known to be <lb/>
most beneficial to the human <lb/>
system, forming an agreeable <lb/>
and effective laxative to <lb/>
cure Habitual <lb/>
and many ills de- <lb/>
pending on a weak or inactive <lb/>
condition of the <lb/>
KIDNEYS, LIVER AID BOWELS. <lb/>
It it the most excellent remedy known to <lb/>
When one is Bilious or Constipated <lb/>
-SO THAT <lb/>
BLOOD, <lb/>
HEALTH and <lb/>
FOLLOW. <lb/>
Every one is using it and all are <lb/>
delighted with it. <lb/>
FOB <lb/>
CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. <lb/>
CAL. <lb/>
u. r. <lb/>
HAMILTON <lb/>
MALE FEMALE INSTITUTE, <lb/>
Hamilton, N, <lb/>
PALL OPENS AUGUST <lb/>
SPRING TERM OPENS <lb/>
JANUARY nth. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
RY virtue of a executed and <lb/>
delivered lot;. M. T. Fountain by <lb/>
Harris on the day o <lb/>
Jan nary. 1889, which was duly recorded <lb/>
in the Register's office of Pitt county, in <lb/>
page which mortgage was <lb/>
thereafter transferred for value to B. W. <lb/>
King and by him transferred to II. P. <lb/>
Keel, the will Mil for cash <lb/>
the Court House door in Green- <lb/>
ville, on Saturday, August 31st, 1889, the <lb/>
interest of the said Harris <lb/>
in the following described piece of land <lb/>
situated in the town of Greenville, lying <lb/>
near the river, adjoining the lots of <lb/>
Arthur and others, and being <lb/>
the lot deeded to Harris and others <lb/>
by B. C. containing one-half <lb/>
nil acre, more or less, <lb/>
This Aug. 1st, 1389. <lb/>
F. G. Attorney. <lb/>
fall m m am m. <lb/>
TEACHERS <lb/>
John Principal, <lb/>
Associate Principal <lb/>
K. W, De- <lb/>
Assistant in Primary <lb/>
Depart <lb/>
Miss May Instrumental <lb/>
Music. <lb/>
Vocal Music. <lb/>
Miss Painting and <lb/>
Drawing. <lb/>
Sin. J. Penmanship <lb/>
and Commercial Department. <lb/>
DEPARTMENTS. <lb/>
Primary. Academic. S. <lb/>
Classical and Mathematical, Mu- <lb/>
sic. Painting and Drawing. <lb/>
Commercial. <lb/>
ADVANTAGES <lb/>
Large, Comfortable <lb/>
Healthy Location and Good <lb/>
Plenty of Well Prepared Food <lb/>
Boarders. A Corps of Teachers, <lb/>
all being graduates of first class <lb/>
Music Department equal <lb/>
in work to any College in the State. <lb/>
New and Organs. <lb/>
A library of nearly volumes, <lb/>
purchased recently for the School, <lb/>
Rates Moderate, from to for <lb/>
Board and Tuition Tuition and Terms <lb/>
for Day Pupils the same as advertised <lb/>
In who do not board <lb/>
with Principal should consult Mb <lb/>
before engaging board elsewhere. For <lb/>
further particulars. Address. <lb/>
JOHN DUCKETT. <lb/>
Principal. <lb/>
LOW TARIFF <lb/>
GARBAGE FACTORY. <lb/>
K Um ON BUGGIES <lb/>
For we have free now. All <lb/>
you free to buy where you please, but <lb/>
if want to save money you to <lb/>
my Factory on 4th street, rear of J. B. <lb/>
Cherry Co--. For convenience <lb/>
have also an entrance through II. F. <lb/>
Keel's Stables on 3rd street lean give <lb/>
you <lb/>
That yon ever had in your life <lb/>
less money than any one <lb/>
else in she county can give you. Why Y <lb/>
for my expenses are less and I pay the <lb/>
spot cash for goods and save the dis- <lb/>
counts, and if you don't believe it you <lb/>
come and see. Having had years <lb/>
experience in the business I guarantee <lb/>
perfect satisfaction or no charge. Re- <lb/>
pairing a specialty. Don't forget tho <lb/>
dace on 4th street rear J. Cherry <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Tuition <lb/>
Sub Primary, pet month. <lb/>
Primary, <lb/>
Intermediate, <lb/>
Academic, <lb/>
Languages, each. <lb/>
Music, not more than <lb/>
Incidental Fee per Session, <lb/>
Tuition payable monthly. <lb/>
2.00 <lb/>
2.50 <lb/>
UNIVERSITY V Hill <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb/>
E NEXT SESSION BEGINS <lb/>
1.00 September 5th, Thorough <lb/>
3.00 is offered In Literature, Science, <lb/>
Philosophy and Tuition per <lb/>
session. For address <lb/>
. ; MON, KEMP P. BATTLE. <lb/>
of teaching will be thorough- ; <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
practical- Training thorough. <lb/>
Pupils from a distance can obtain board, <lb/>
including lodging, in private families <lb/>
from per month. A <lb/>
class Music Teacher will lie employed <lb/>
also an Assistant as soon as the <lb/>
number of it. Patronage <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
For further information apply to <lb/>
E. <lb/>
J. L. FLEMING. <lb/>
RECEIVED AT <lb/>
Brag Store, <lb/>
Front Reflector Office. <lb/>
Golden Medical War- <lb/>
Safe Cure, Resolvent <lb/>
Compound, Syrup of <lb/>
Of Interest to Ladies. <lb/>
I S. S. H., Rs i. It. <lb/>
t . -r <lb/>
j Buffalo <lb/>
SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
Static OF Carolina, <lb/>
Pitt County, I <lb/>
J, D. Murphy, and Trustee of <lb/>
Marcellus Moore, <lb/>
r. <lb/>
I. A. Sugg and wife, E. Sugg, C. <lb/>
and T. deft. <lb/>
It appearing to the satisfaction of the <lb/>
Court that Joan T. Bruce is B proper <lb/>
party defendant to the entitled <lb/>
being an action commenced <lb/>
the purpose of establishing a trust <lb/>
and recovering an interest in certain <lb/>
lands situated on the old plank road, <lb/>
about three miles from Greenville. <lb/>
known as the Wiley Nobles <lb/>
It further appearing said is <lb/>
t of North Carolina, notice <lb/>
is hereby given to said of the pen- <lb/>
of entitled action In this <lb/>
Court, and said John T. Bruce Is hereby <lb/>
ordered to appear at the nest term of <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt County to <lb/>
convened on the 2nd Monday after the <lb/>
1st Monday in and de- <lb/>
to or answer the complaint which <lb/>
will be tiled In ray office within first <lb/>
three of the term, or the plaintiff <lb/>
will apply to the for the relief de <lb/>
complaint. Given node <lb/>
fed, <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018949_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb/>
VILLE, i. C. <lb/>
When <lb/>
A SEVERE TEST. <lb/>
you have articles too <lb/>
POT BOILERS. <lb/>
delicate to be washed in the ordinary <lb/>
finest laces or embroideries <lb/>
wash them with PYLE'S PEARLINE. <lb/>
in the manner directed on each package. <lb/>
There is no rubbing, hence no wear and <lb/>
tear of the fabrics. <lb/>
When you have something exceedingly <lb/>
coarse and that you <lb/>
dread the washing PYLE'S PEARLINE on it <lb/>
There is no rubbing, hence no wear and tear on yourself. <lb/>
We guarantee PEARLINE to be harmless, but beware <lb/>
of the imitations. , <lb/>
PEARLINE is the modern means for easy and good <lb/>
washing and cleaning. <lb/>
Manufactured only JAMES PYLE. New <lb/>
tram the folly, ice. <lb/>
Ac, be cured at without fail or <lb/>
and Confidential. <lb/>
only by mail, seller., postpaid. <lb/>
I w. h end Ire. <lb/>
. A the <lb/>
. K. K. ; <lb/>
and branches Condensed Schedule. <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
X. -27. No It,. <lb/>
daily Part Mail, dally I <lb/>
daily ex Sun. I <lb/>
Weldon f pa I j <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount<lb/>
Tarboro a in <lb/>
Ar Wilson pin inn am <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
S N am <lb/>
Warsaw -4 Hi ft ID <lb/>
Magnolia Ml S 5.1 <lb/>
Ar Wilmington l <lb/>
r RAINS GOING NORTH <lb/>
No No <lb/>
daily dally daily <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
Wilmington IS OS MM am <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
I, Warsaw<lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson pm pm <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount s <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
Dally except Sunday. <lb/>
Train M Scotland Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax Scotland Neck at <lb/>
P. M. Returning, leaves Scotland Neck <lb/>
A. M. daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train N C, via <lb/>
A I. If. daily except <lb/>
II. Sunday I M. <lb/>
X t . P M, I P M. <lb/>
leaves William-ton. S daily <lb/>
except A M. A <lb/>
M. Tarboro, X A M. VI <lb/>
mi Midland N leaves <lb/>
daily except M, <lb/>
arrive X C, SO M. <lb/>
leaver N V. S A M. <lb/>
arrive MO, SO A M. <lb/>
on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb/>
Monet M, arrive- Nashville ill <lb/>
M Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring A M. Nashville <lb/>
M. arrives Rocky Mount II A <lb/>
except <lb/>
Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton daily, Sunday, at <lb/>
and A M Returning leave Clio <lb/>
on A M, I. J. connect <lb/>
Warsaw II and <lb/>
train mi <lb/>
ville is No. Northbound <lb/>
No. except Sunday. <lb/>
Train South will stop only at <lb/>
Wilson, and Magnolia. <lb/>
No. makes close com ion at <lb/>
for all points North All <lb/>
rail via and daily except Sun- <lb/>
day via Hay Line. <lb/>
Train make close connection for <lb/>
points North via Richmond and Wash <lb/>
actor. <lb/>
All trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and Washington, and have <lb/>
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb/>
JOHN P. DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
R. Transportation <lb/>
T. M. Passenger <lb/>
GOOD BOOKS <lb/>
Sent post-paid on receipt of price <lb/>
In ft Heart of Africa. <lb/>
A and instructive Hi <lb/>
pages ; paper cents; cloth <lb/>
The Imitation of <lb/>
By Kempis. Paper, unabridged, <lb/>
American Humorists. <lb/>
Selections from Artemus Ward. Mark Twain, <lb/>
pages; paper cents; cloth cents. <lb/>
Press Agency, <lb/>
Warren St., New lark. <lb/>
in the world fur- <lb/>
nut If- at publisher's prior <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
M SCHULTZ-, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb/>
TIME TAP. No. <lb/>
In Effect A. M-. <lb/>
1st, 1860. <lb/>
No. M <lb/>
Ar. Stations. Ar. <lb/>
a in <lb/>
t lateral go MS <lb/>
to Kinston <lb/>
X New <lb/>
S p m City a m <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
East. <lb/>
No <lb/>
Mixed Fl. A Pi i <lb/>
Train. Stations. Pas Train, <lb/>
am p m <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
Caswell <lb/>
Dover <lb/>
Creek <lb/>
Tuscarora M <lb/>
Clark-s<lb/>
Croat an<lb/>
B Atlantic <lb/>
City <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
p m Depot, am <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday, <lb/>
Wednesday and Friday.; <lb/>
Train with Wilmington ct <lb/>
Weldon Train bound North, leaving <lb/>
a. m., and with <lb/>
Danville. Train West, leaving <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
Train connects with <lb/>
Train, arriving at <lb/>
p. m., and with Wilmington and <lb/>
Weldon Train from North at p. in <lb/>
Train con with Wilmington and <lb/>
Weldon Through Freight Train, leaving <lb/>
p. m Rich- <lb/>
A Danville Train i <lb/>
leaves at <lb/>
Season Round Trip Tickets. <lb/>
Special Fare. Round Trip <lb/>
Tickets, from stations mimed below to <lb/>
City. Sea., i of 1880. In <lb/>
effect June 1st. <lb/>
Prom To Season. Sat. Night <lb/>
K-08 <lb/>
and return 3.50 2.50 <lb/>
2.00<lb/>
Season <lb/>
of Pare, <lb/>
Tickets, hum Coupon Stations below to <lb/>
points on the W. m. C. R. R. <lb/>
OLD MUCK <lb/>
AND MERCHANTS BUY- <lb/>
their year's supplies will rind it to <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. is complete <lb/>
in all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
SPICES, TEAS, Ac. <lb/>
always at Lowest Market Pricks. <lb/>
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk- <lb/>
to run, we sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Greenville. N. C <lb/>
EVERYBODY LOOK. <lb/>
Mules. <lb/>
A car load arrived and now for <lb/>
sale by. <lb/>
at old stand. Will veil them <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
oral I <lb/>
my for Mill o sell <lb/>
chimp nit call. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING. <lb/>
Having associated B. S. <lb/>
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
are. ready to serve the people in that <lb/>
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb/>
me for past services have been placed in <lb/>
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb/>
from the finest Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We are fitted <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can render <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who patronize <lb/>
us FLANAGAN <lb/>
22nd. 1888. <lb/>
ARRIVED <lb/>
My Northern Dress Maker and Trim- <lb/>
mer, Miss. has an am <lb/>
prepared to execute in the latest styles <lb/>
and fashions any work entrusted to <lb/>
MILLINERY, <lb/>
the latest designs have <lb/>
so arrived and will be pleased to show <lb/>
them you. My price are the lowest <lb/>
and to lie undersold by DO <lb/>
one. Special on. all goods. <lb/>
Mrs. L. King, <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb/>
ca<lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
i have recently located, and where f have <lb/>
everything in line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBER SHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; new <lb/>
comfortable chairs. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable <lb/>
for work outside of my shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
EDMONDS. <lb/>
To i <lb/>
811.00<lb/>
10.51 <lb/>
17.00 <lb/>
17.6.1 <lb/>
Hot 10.00 17.30 <lb/>
H. U <lb/>
For Sale. <lb/>
I will sell my Center Bluff property <lb/>
of two acres of laud with <lb/>
store house, large and tenant <lb/>
house on reasonable terms. Property <lb/>
located at Center Bluff on Tar a <lb/>
very desirable location for mercantile <lb/>
business. I have also a splendid <lb/>
power steam saw and grist mill that <lb/>
will sell at a sacrifice. <lb/>
J. K. BYNUM, <lb/>
N. O <lb/>
Self-Inking Pen It <lb/>
e- <lb/>
MARKS ANYTHING . <lb/>
. With In <lb/>
is i <lb/>
Are to Write <lb/>
Kind or That Will <lb/>
A. clever and an experienced writer <lb/>
in The Fortnightly Review thus <lb/>
on the trade of <lb/>
Cynicism I Ah, despondent <lb/>
of economic law. These are the <lb/>
conditions under which alone the <lb/>
by trade necessarily lives. But <lb/>
do you think he likes them I <lb/>
Impossible I For the author, too, <lb/>
has had his day of illusion, you may <lb/>
be sure. There was once a time, long, <lb/>
long ago, when ho thought he might <lb/>
say what lay nearest bis own heart; <lb/>
might speak out to the world for good <lb/>
or for evil, that was in him. <lb/>
Never whether the truth was <lb/>
worth speaking or not; to him at least <lb/>
it was all important. Hard experience <lb/>
alone has knocked all that out of him. <lb/>
And to the end, for the most part, he <lb/>
kicks against the pricks. He hates the <lb/>
sordid, squalid necessity for earning <lb/>
his bread by lowering himself to the <lb/>
tastes of the public must needs <lb/>
servo with its daily literature. Slowly <lb/>
and painfully learns to take his <lb/>
place beside the maker of hats and the <lb/>
importer of latest fashions, as n <lb/>
unit in a trade that lives by pleasing. <lb/>
Perhaps boiling is his true <lb/>
in life, but ho at any rate must <lb/>
have other ideals and other interests. <lb/>
For the author has usually aims and <lb/>
and theories of his own. <lb/>
very ability which enables him to <lb/>
spin words into pretty phrases that <lb/>
take editorial mind by their <lb/>
freshness, implies as a rule tastes, <lb/>
feelings and above the <lb/>
common. If he he would <lb/>
gladly say what he has deepest and <lb/>
most within him. lie would <lb/>
the people of best. But when <lb/>
e tries it on, the people too often <lb/>
turn it over listlessly at the railway <lb/>
book stalls, and say with a yawn, <lb/>
prefer his shilling shockers, thank <lb/>
And most of us have tried it <lb/>
on, every now and again. We have <lb/>
as advised, to the intuitions <lb/>
of our inspired genius. The publish- <lb/>
to be sure, looked at our <lb/>
work; they shook their capitalist <lb/>
heads Never mind; we <lb/>
have a few hundreds of our own laid <lb/>
spoils of the Philistines from <lb/>
those shockers aforesaid; let us pub <lb/>
at our own risk and expense. <lb/>
we'll print it. Alas, alas, <lb/>
how flat that work fell, in which <lb/>
tried to elevate the taste or improve <lb/>
the morals or intellect of the public <lb/>
The public chose rather to keep its <lb/>
taste and morals at its own dull level. <lb/>
A loss or two of this sort soon <lb/>
taught us wisdom. We accepted our <lb/>
true place in the world. We boiled <lb/>
the pot, if not cheerfully, yet resign- <lb/>
We began to feel the pulse of <lb/>
the market. Most of us never quite <lb/>
succeed in catching it, to be sure; that <lb/>
is so we ourselves <lb/>
ave such finger <lb/>
we fail exactly to synchronize some <lb/>
how with its erratic movements. But <lb/>
we get near enough to make both ends <lb/>
meet approximately. That modest <lb/>
result for the average <lb/>
ruck of a worked but eminently <lb/>
humble and contented profession. <lb/>
The fact is, as the world is <lb/>
to say out in full what you ac- <lb/>
think about anything is fatal. <lb/>
You write with one eye <lb/>
askew upon foolish popular <lb/>
the Game. <lb/>
Uncle Pete went to see a ball game <lb/>
last Saturday. It was his first view <lb/>
of such a contest in ten years, and he <lb/>
looked somewhat disappointed as the <lb/>
innings rolled with machine <lb/>
promptness, but he said nothing until <lb/>
; he was on board n homeward <lb/>
ear. Than his nephew addressed <lb/>
do you think of it, <lb/>
was a baseball was <lb/>
course it was. Why do you ask <lb/>
they call that <lb/>
punched nobody else from <lb/>
one end to other <lb/>
the umpire was not kicked <lb/>
off the <lb/>
is a rare diversion <lb/>
the whole eighteen men <lb/>
didn't huddle together in a bunch and <lb/>
jaw every time a man was called <lb/>
nobody didn't steal the best <lb/>
bats and with the spare <lb/>
is impossible under the pres- <lb/>
the whole thing didn't wind <lb/>
up in a <lb/>
saw that it <lb/>
know that I saw it didn't, and <lb/>
also know a game of real baseball <lb/>
when I see it, and that confounded <lb/>
croquet party that paid to look <lb/>
at is no more like the real game they <lb/>
used to play than an amateur minstrel <lb/>
show is genuine fun. Let's get off <lb/>
here and En- <lb/>
the Willow She <lb/>
There was once a dinner at the <lb/>
Ohio club, in Fifth avenue, and Gens. <lb/>
Sherman, Sheridan and Carr were <lb/>
there. Stories of curiously wounded <lb/>
men were told, and of the <lb/>
was by Carr, related <lb/>
to a soldier in the Second Sow York <lb/>
volunteers, of which Carr was col- <lb/>
at the outset In the battle <lb/>
a piece of an exploded shell <lb/>
struck the man on the head <lb/>
and gave to him what would or- <lb/>
have proved a fatal wound. <lb/>
He lay insensible among the dead for <lb/>
several hours, nobody supposing that <lb/>
he was alive. Those who went to him <lb/>
found gripped in one hand a small <lb/>
portion of a letter from his In <lb/>
this she spoke of a furlough which <lb/>
had been granted him and which he <lb/>
was going to use for a visit to hi <lb/>
home, his health being poor. She <lb/>
wrote affectionately of their wedlock, <lb/>
reminded of a willow tree under <lb/>
which done some of their <lb/>
courtship, and told him that on the <lb/>
day of Us arrival she would meet him <lb/>
In the and confusion <lb/>
ho was left lying with this paper still <lb/>
in his grasp. Night fell upon the bat- <lb/>
field with the dead unburied and <lb/>
tho living busy with defenses of <lb/>
res and care for the wounded. <lb/>
In the morning the bodies of tho slain <lb/>
were hastily buried in a trench. It <lb/>
was supposed that our soldier was <lb/>
among them. But he was not Dur- <lb/>
the night he had revived and <lb/>
wandered away. Word was sent to <lb/>
his home that he was dead, and this <lb/>
was regarded as beyond doubt, but as <lb/>
a matter of fact he wandered off to a <lb/>
distant hospital, remained there <lb/>
identified until his wounds healed and <lb/>
was discharged, utterly without <lb/>
of the past It happened that he <lb/>
retained the merest scrap of his wife's <lb/>
letter, but without name or place on <lb/>
it This he retained, and with a vague <lb/>
knowledge that it was from his wife, <lb/>
who was waiting for him somewhere, <lb/>
he wandered here and there over the <lb/>
country for four years. Then mere <lb/>
chance or a shadowy recollection of <lb/>
his home led his to the spot <lb/>
where his wife had promised to meet <lb/>
him. It was the willow tree close to <lb/>
his old home, and there lie actual <lb/>
found her Tho shock of joy and <lb/>
recognition nearly if not quite cured <lb/>
him of bis York <lb/>
St Louis Republic, <lb/>
. ; <lb/>
THE SWEET GIRL GRADUATE. <lb/>
with <lb/>
A view of tho a <lb/>
Modem of Education. <lb/>
What does your sweet girl graduate <lb/>
know when she leaves the stage bear- <lb/>
her diploma and loads of flowers <lb/>
asks a gray haired in The <lb/>
Is she fitted for any special calling <lb/>
in life <lb/>
In a majority of instances she has <lb/>
received no practical instruction what- <lb/>
ever. She is scarcely able to put her <lb/>
clothes on, much less to make or re- <lb/>
pair them. She may be able to parse <lb/>
a sentence, but too often she cannot <lb/>
write good English, nor does she <lb/>
speak it <lb/>
She can chatter in French so as to <lb/>
be understood by her teacher, bat to a <lb/>
born French ma n it would be about as <lb/>
intelligent as Choctaw. She probably <lb/>
knows an omelet from a steak, but <lb/>
has only the faintest idea of the pro- <lb/>
by which they are made. <lb/>
To her the world consists of books <lb/>
and good looking young men, and in <lb/>
the more or less distant stands <lb/>
a knightly looking man in tho shadow <lb/>
of a vine clad cottage, surrounded by <lb/>
all the evidences of wealth and com- <lb/>
fort <lb/>
Two years after the s. g. g. has re- <lb/>
tired from the schoolroom French is a <lb/>
dead language to her, geometry a <lb/>
and history a sealed book. <lb/>
What has she gained <lb/>
If she really studied hard she has <lb/>
probably won a place in the ranks of <lb/>
the nervous host of women, a deep <lb/>
seated dyspepsia and an irritable <lb/>
per. <lb/>
If she didn't study hard she is prob- <lb/>
ably an expert coquette or a chatter- <lb/>
box. The four or five years that she <lb/>
spent in school were the years in <lb/>
which she was growing out of girl- <lb/>
hood into womanhood, and the years <lb/>
in which she should have been under <lb/>
tho personal care of her <lb/>
Common sense teaches us that girls <lb/>
should not sent to college or <lb/>
until after they are years old. <lb/>
From to they should be subject <lb/>
to physical culture, incident- <lb/>
ally to mental culture. <lb/>
This view of the case is at variance <lb/>
with the modern idea on this subject <lb/>
but our head school men are slowly <lb/>
coming to it Medical scientists and <lb/>
experts in physical culture condemn <lb/>
the modern idea in unmeasured terms. <lb/>
They know that girls should not be <lb/>
put to hard study before are <lb/>
and they can give tho best of reasons <lb/>
for it <lb/>
Even if no other reason could be <lb/>
given than that they are hotter able to <lb/>
comprehend their studies, it would be <lb/>
sufficient What is tho use of rushing <lb/>
a girl through a course of studies that <lb/>
is incomprehensible to her It is an <lb/>
unnecessary waste of vital energy, for <lb/>
which she must suffer for the balance <lb/>
of her natural life. <lb/>
healthiest happiest and most <lb/>
useful women in the laud today are <lb/>
not graduates of a seminary or high <lb/>
school. <lb/>
The best teachers and best scholars <lb/>
among our women are those who en- <lb/>
upon their collegiate course after <lb/>
they had passed the verdant period <lb/>
known as sweet Then they know <lb/>
what they were doing, and why they <lb/>
were doing <lb/>
There is no doubt but the present <lb/>
system of educating young women Is <lb/>
the of their imperfect physical <lb/>
development, ill health and general <lb/>
unfitness to become the wives of <lb/>
men and mothers of a race of <lb/>
stalwart men and handsome women. <lb/>
This is gospel truth. <lb/>
The average young man stands the <lb/>
college ordeal better than his sister, <lb/>
because he indulges in more physical <lb/>
and less unnatural life. <lb/>
If ho is endowed with a reasonable <lb/>
amount of common he has <lb/>
in view studies to fit <lb/>
for it and in that direction at <lb/>
least he is permanently benefited. <lb/>
His sister, however, has no <lb/>
ill view, and can see no purpose <lb/>
whatever in her education. And it is <lb/>
a fuel that there is little in her whole <lb/>
seminary course that will of the <lb/>
least use to her when she <lb/>
becomes mistress of a homo and has <lb/>
the cares of a family thrown upon her. <lb/>
of <lb/>
It is a most irritating experience to <lb/>
turn over many hymn hooks. There <lb/>
is something intensely provoking in <lb/>
the self sufficient altitude of an editor <lb/>
who is cutting and carving the com- <lb/>
position of another man. For in every <lb/>
case in which is the <lb/>
comes just to Whether <lb/>
eminent author's judgment or the <lb/>
fussy editor's is the To which <lb/>
may be added the further <lb/>
Whether editor or author devoted <lb/>
the more lime and thought to forming <lb/>
a just opinion Whether the respect- <lb/>
Bishop of Exeter added <lb/>
a fourth to Cardinal Newman's <lb/>
exquisite Kindly <lb/>
certainly did himself as others <lb/>
see him. Newman and <lb/>
whirl i was tho better what New- <lb/>
man's hymn should be need <lb/>
said us to the advantage of taking <lb/>
only hymns of established character. <lb/>
A brand new hymn must be very good <lb/>
indeed to be tolerated at all. Half the <lb/>
charm of many hymns lies in this, <lb/>
that they been known so long <lb/>
and so well, they and their history. <lb/>
Doubtless an excellent new hymn is <lb/>
great gain, and every hymn was <lb/>
new. But original hymns offered <lb/>
by members of a committee are almost <lb/>
invariably inexpressibly bad. And a <lb/>
committee ought to be delivered from <lb/>
pressure. One has found that frankly <lb/>
to say that a piece is rubbish tends to <lb/>
wound its author's feelings, and even <lb/>
to make him a bitter enemy. And <lb/>
you do wish to make more enemies <lb/>
than you can help <lb/>
Magazine. <lb/>
In <lb/>
In Australia divorces have never <lb/>
been sanctioned. <lb/>
Divorces are scarcely ever known to <lb/>
occur in modern Greece. <lb/>
In either party for a <lb/>
slight cause may leave the other and <lb/>
marry. <lb/>
In the olden times the Jews had a <lb/>
discretionary power of divorcing their <lb/>
wives. <lb/>
Divorces are scarcely allowed in <lb/>
unless with the consent of <lb/>
both parties. Remarriage is forbid- <lb/>
den. <lb/>
In Cochin China the parties <lb/>
divorce break a pair of chopsticks <lb/>
in the presence witnesses and the <lb/>
thing is done. <lb/>
Two kinds of divorces are granted in <lb/>
By the first the parties can <lb/>
immediately marry again; by the sec- <lb/>
not for a year. <lb/>
Among some tribes of American In- <lb/>
the pieces of sticks given the <lb/>
witnesses of the marriage broken <lb/>
as a sign of divorce. <lb/>
If the wife of a asks his <lb/>
permission to go out and <lb/>
without adding, back <lb/>
they are divorced. <lb/>
In Siberia, if a man is dissatisfied <lb/>
with the most trifling acts of his wife, <lb/>
he tears a cap or veil from her face <lb/>
and that constitutes a divorce. <lb/>
In Siam the first wife may be divorced <lb/>
but not sold as the others may be. <lb/>
She may claim the first child. The <lb/>
others belong to the <lb/>
Among the Moors, if the wife does <lb/>
not become the mother of a boy, aha <lb/>
may be divorced with the consent of <lb/>
the tribe and can marry again. <lb/>
In the Arctic region a man who <lb/>
wants a divorce leaves home In anger <lb/>
and does not return for several days. <lb/>
The wife takes the hint and departs <lb/>
Washington Critic. <lb/>
NORFOLK <lb/>
LADIES. school <lb/>
In tide-water Virginia. Two hundred and fifty Stu- <lb/>
dents in attendance last session. Home comforts; <lb/>
moral training; net son a cart, location and climate <lb/>
delightful. Board Tuition <lb/>
per Quarter. Write for <lb/>
Information. J. A. I. Norfolk Va. <lb/>
Patterson Mineral <lb/>
Pi. Aches and <lb/>
when a bottles of <lb/>
or other pretentious specifics fail <lb/>
scrofula or contagious blood <lb/>
remember that B. B. B. <lb/>
has gained many thousand <lb/>
victories, in as many seemingly in- <lb/>
curable instances. Send to the Blood <lb/>
Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga. for of <lb/>
and lie It is the <lb/>
only true Mood purifier. <lb/>
W. X Reads, Ga. <lb/>
was nine year- with <lb/>
sores. All the medicine could take <lb/>
did me goad, I then tried B. B. B., <lb/>
and S bottles cured me <lb/>
Mrs. S. M. Wilson. Round Mountain, <lb/>
Texas, lady of mine <lb/>
eras troubled with humps and pimples <lb/>
en her face and neck. She took three <lb/>
bottles of B. B. and her skin got soft <lb/>
and smooth, pimples disappeared, and <lb/>
her health improved <lb/>
Jas. La Ga., <lb/>
years ago I blood pois- <lb/>
on- I had no appetite, ray digestion was <lb/>
ruined, rheumatism drew up limbs <lb/>
so I could hardly walk, throat was <lb/>
cauterized live times. Hot Springs gave <lb/>
me no benefit, and my life was one of <lb/>
torture until i gave B. B. a trial, and, <lb/>
surprising as it may seem, the use of fire <lb/>
bottles cured <lb/>
Very Important Lesson. <lb/>
The <lb/>
Perhaps a and in- <lb/>
as to water <lb/>
is to be limn the very dis- <lb/>
tressing and <lb/>
of the young men and women <lb/>
who attended the picnic by night <lb/>
near Raleigh. Of ladies <lb/>
who were present seventeen <lb/>
been ill from typhoid fever, and of <lb/>
forty-two men eight or nine have <lb/>
had the fever. Two young men and <lb/>
one young lady died. We hear that <lb/>
the well used shows a dead hog or <lb/>
dog tn it. It was very poisonous <lb/>
whatever caused it. <lb/>
Mi, <lb/>
I would respectfully eat your <lb/>
to the and ask <lb/>
to remember t hat vim can buy a <lb/>
HEADSTONE or MONUMENT of <lb/>
this house than any other in the <lb/>
country. That it is the most reliable <lb/>
and best known having been represented <lb/>
for over forty years in this vicinity. <lb/>
That the workmanship is second to none <lb/>
and unusual for e; or- <lb/>
promptly and <lb/>
Very respectfully. <lb/>
Refer to W. BATES, <lb/>
J. J. Conn. <lb/>
B. C. <lb/>
GOOD <lb/>
Any of the standard <lb/>
Bent receipt <lb/>
W the Heart of <lb/>
The moat thrilling and instructive work on lb <lb/>
subject. j paper cents cloth <lb/>
Imitation of <lb/>
By Thomas a Kempis. Paper, unabridged, <lb/>
Selections from Ward, Mark Twain an <lb/>
outers. paper cents; cloth <lb/>
Agency, <lb/>
Harms St., New <lb/>
TO US In the world <lb/>
at publisher's price. <lb/>
5-Ton Cotton Gin Soaks, <lb/>
Beam Box <lb/>
Brass tare beam. <lb/>
for <lb/>
HE PAYS THE <lb/>
For Fret Price <lb/>
of S. T. <lb/>
;. ii IV. II <lb/>
I f. <lb/>
.- a <lb/>
M C <lb/>
The best Salve in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt <lb/>
Sores, Chapped Hands, <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin Eruptions, <lb/>
positively cures Piles, or no pay re- <lb/>
quired. It is guaranteed to give feet <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded, <lb/>
per box. For sale by Br mil.<lb/>
.;, . . <lb/>
. t V. t . <lb/>
st <lb/>
Base yon . <lb/>
TONIC. It <lb/>
i. <lb/>
from detective nutrition, .- <lb/>
A Woman's <lb/>
discovery has <lb/>
been made that too by a lady in this <lb/>
country. Disease fastened its clutches <lb/>
upon her for seven years she with- <lb/>
stood its rest tests, but her vital or- <lb/>
were undermined and death seemed I <lb/>
imminent. For three month she coughed <lb/>
and could not sleep. Site <lb/>
bought of a hot tie Dr. King's New <lb/>
for Consumption, and was so <lb/>
relieved Ml taking dose that i <lb/>
she slept all night and with one bottle has <lb/>
Ix-en miraculously cured. Her name is j <lb/>
Mrs. Luther Thus writes C. <lb/>
Co., of Shelby. X. a <lb/>
free bottle Met;. a Drugstore. <lb/>
The <lb/>
w. Suit, Druggist. lad., <lb/>
can recommend Electric <lb/>
Bitters as the very best remedy. <lb/>
sold hits relief in every ease. <lb/>
One man took six bottles, and was <lb/>
cured of of I <lb/>
Abraham Hare, druggist, <lb/>
Ohio, best <lb/>
medicine I have ever handled in <lb/>
j is Electric <lb/>
others have added their <lb/>
testimony. Bi that the verdict i.- <lb/>
that Hitlers do all <lb/>
of the Blood. <lb/>
Only a half dollar a bottle lit Mr Ki- <lb/>
drugstore. <lb/>
Brother John is i. <lb/>
sail down r rat of <lb/>
tolls in i , i <lb/>
ii--i <lb/>
from win to mm a <lb/>
rural. I rather a menu <lb/>
age for to take <lb/>
of his j <lb/>
and Brother Gould protest rig- <lb/>
Hut the interesting <lb/>
is. can he help himself Kiln- <lb/>
sing business might in- <lb/>
him in extremely awkward <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having before the of <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb/>
day of July, as Administrator <lb/>
upon the estate of Joiner <lb/>
is lo notify all persons holding <lb/>
claim against estate to present <lb/>
their claims for payment within twelve <lb/>
mouths from this date or this notice <lb/>
Will he plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons owing said estate will <lb/>
forward make immediate settlement. <lb/>
This inly T. It. <lb/>
of <lb/>
I. Atty. <lb/>
PARKER'S <lb/>
HAIR BALSAM <lb/>
the hair.<lb/>
V Color. <lb/>
PI <lb/>
THE GLORY OF MAN <lb/>
STRENGTH VITALITY <lb/>
How Lest I How <lb/>
KNOW THYSELF. <lb/>
tub of <lb/>
A Scientific Standard Popular Medical Treatise c-u <lb/>
the Errors of <lb/>
and Debility, of Blood. <lb/>
UNTOLD MISERIES <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb/>
leaned Letters of <lb/>
to the upon the estate <lb/>
Mary Hancock, deceased, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all persons indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all persons <lb/>
having claims against said estate to <lb/>
sent them to the undersigned before the <lb/>
mill of July or this notice will be <lb/>
plead in bar of their recovery. This <lb/>
day of July 1880. Jesse Cannon. <lb/>
of Mary Hancock. <lb/>
, Folly, Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or <lb/>
i and unfitting the victim <lb/>
i for Work, Business, the Married or Social Relation. <lb/>
, Avoid unskilful pretenders. Possess this great <lb/>
. work. It pages, royal <lb/>
; embossed, foil gilt. Price, only by <lb/>
j mall, concealed in plain wrapper, <lb/>
Prospectus Tree, if apply now. Tho <lb/>
; author, Win. II. Parker, M. p. re- <lb/>
tho COLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL <lb/>
from the National Medical Association, <lb/>
for the PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and <lb/>
Dr. a corps <lb/>
of Assistant Physicians may be consulted, <lb/>
by or In person, at tho of <lb/>
THE MEDICAL <lb/>
No. St., Huston. Mass., lo whom all <lb/>
orders for looks or for advice should be <lb/>
directed above. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
THE JUDGE OF PROBATE OF PITT <lb/>
County, having issued Letters of Ad- <lb/>
inn to me, tho on <lb/>
the 20th day of June, 1883. on the estate <lb/>
of Jane deceased. Notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all persons indebted to <lb/>
the Estate to make immediate <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb/>
of said to present their claims. <lb/>
authenticated, to the under- <lb/>
signed, within Twelve Mouth after <lb/>
the of this notice, or this no- <lb/>
will be plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
This the Wife day of June, <lb/>
It. W. KING. <lb/>
on the estate of Jane <lb/>
SUPERIOR COURT. <lb/>
North Carolina, I <lb/>
Pitt County, <lb/>
Robert Greene, Jr., and wife Louisa <lb/>
Against <lb/>
J. C. Guardian, B. Y. Patrick <lb/>
of N. Anderson, and I. II. <lb/>
Wilson, of V. <lb/>
To J. Guardian. <lb/>
The Defendant, J. C. <lb/>
will take notice that he is hereby <lb/>
summoned to appear before His Honor <lb/>
the Judge presiding at September Term <lb/>
Pitt Superior Court to he held In <lb/>
Greenville on the 3rd Monday In <lb/>
and answer or demur to the com- <lb/>
plaint herein tiled for settlement as <lb/>
Guardian of the Plaintiff Louisa <lb/>
Greene, or Judgment will be prayed n- <lb/>
you and your sureties on your <lb/>
Guardian bond. <lb/>
Herein fail not to take due notice. <lb/>
Given under my hand at Greenville, <lb/>
July 20th 1880. E. A. <lb/>
Superior Court. <lb/>
BUILDINGS ENLARGED. <lb/>
Charges least of any Springs <lb/>
in the South. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
In full view of the <lb/>
Mountains. <lb/>
MILES SOUTH OF SHELBY, <lb/>
F N. c. on R. Charleston, <lb/>
Cincinnati Chicago Railroad, Patter- <lb/>
son mile of Springs. <lb/>
To the Afflicted. <lb/>
PHYSICIANS will tell you that the in- <lb/>
contained in these waters <lb/>
are in their effect Diuretic, <lb/>
Tonic and it nature's <lb/>
remedy for Indigestion. Dyspepsia, Dis- <lb/>
ease of the Kidneys, Liver, Bladder, and <lb/>
all cases of Debility and Weak <lb/>
which need a and in <lb/>
Rheumatic and Scrofulous affections. <lb/>
To the Public. <lb/>
are are so the <lb/>
Springs with farm attached, from <lb/>
Which we get most of our <lb/>
a great part the necessary work <lb/>
during the season the Springs are open, <lb/>
we ran favor our patrons with the <lb/>
mineral most wholesome <lb/>
food and at <lb/>
the extremely low prices <lb/>
one person <lb/>
pies room two 81.25. <lb/>
When one person occupies room <lb/>
two 97.00. Month. When one <lb/>
person occupies room <lb/>
Children eight in twelve Years <lb/>
half price. Two tn six years old one- <lb/>
fourth price. Servants. rates in <lb/>
accordance to service rendered in caring <lb/>
for room of family or person they are <lb/>
with. Where there are a family of live <lb/>
or more, or a party of friends from the <lb/>
same town or section, who will occupy <lb/>
one large room, a reduction ten per <lb/>
will be made. Care of Stock. <lb/>
Horses per day, fifty cents. Per week, <lb/>
three dollars. Per month, ten dollars. <lb/>
Amusements and <lb/>
Alley. Lawn Tennis, <lb/>
D Foot-Ball, and in-door games of <lb/>
kinds. horse and buggy. <lb/>
When two will contract to use it daily <lb/>
for one or more hours each day, <lb/>
cents per hour each person. <lb/>
Address, <lb/>
W. G. PATTERSON, <lb/>
Shelby P. O., or P. O. <lb/>
Cleveland County, N, C. <lb/>
THE SCIENCE OP LIFE <lb/>
A Scientific and Standard Medical <lb/>
on the Errors of Decline, Nervous <lb/>
and Physical Debility, of the Blood. <lb/>
Untold Miseries <lb/>
from Vice, Ignorance, Excesses or <lb/>
and the victim <lb/>
for Work, the Married or Social Relation. <lb/>
Avoid unskillful pretenders. Possess this <lb/>
work. It contains pages, royal Beautiful <lb/>
binding, embossed, full pilL only 11.00 by <lb/>
moll, postpaid, concealed In plain wrapper. Illus- <lb/>
Prospectus Free, if you apply now. Tho <lb/>
author, Win. II. Parker, M. D., re- <lb/>
AN It JEWELLED <lb/>
from the Medical Association for <lb/>
this PRIZE ESSAY on <lb/>
I'll A I, <lb/>
of Physicians may consulted, conS.- <lb/>
by mail or In person, at the office of <lb/>
THE MEDICAL INSTITUTE, <lb/>
No. St., Boston, to whom all <lb/>
orders for books letters for <lb/>
directed st <lb/>
C. O. P. <lb/>
Cotton Seed Lard, <lb/>
ANTI-DYSPEPTIC. <lb/>
FREE FROM HOG FAT. <lb/>
PURE, <lb/>
WHOLESOME, <lb/>
ECONOMICAL. <lb/>
For sale by all Send for Illus <lb/>
Pamphlet, entitled <lb/>
ABOUT <lb/>
HUNDRED PRIZE <lb/>
or how to provide a coal dinner for <lb/>
Persona for One Dollar. <lb/>
At, excellent Cook Hook of pages <lb/>
containing one hundred <lb/>
Hills of Fare, with instructions <lb/>
prepare each one, so that the cost <lb/>
four persona cannot exceed one dollar, <lb/>
o additional recipes. <lb/>
This valuable book will he given fret <lb/>
to any one sending or presenting the <lb/>
tickets, representing the purchase of <lb/>
twenty C. O. <lb/>
at our Branch No. <lb/>
ll St. X. Y. <lb/>
pall of our Lard contains; ticket, <lb/>
the which corresponds to the <lb/>
dumber of pounds in the pail. <lb/>
Canon Oil Company, M. Y. <lb/>
SOLD BY<lb/>
Broker, Greenville-, N. C <lb/>
O. <lb/>
D. J. Editor Proprietor.<lb/>
s a <lb/>
M- <lb/>
N. B. <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
We have largest and most complete <lb/>
establishment of the kind to found hi <lb/>
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb/>
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
RALEIGH. C. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
and all business in the U. S. <lb/>
or in the Courts attended U <lb/>
r Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We arc opposite the U. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged in Patents Exclusively, <lb/>
can patents hi less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing Is sent we <lb/>
advise as to free of <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Post Master, <lb/>
Supt. of the Order Did., and to <lb/>
Is of the S. Patent For <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in your own or <lb/>
C. A. SNOW Co., <lb/>
Washington, D. C <lb/>
file fries <lb/>
Year, <lb/>
IN ADVANCE <lb/>
THE IS THE <lb/>
ever in <lb/>
it the <lb/>
LATE T NEWS <lb/>
and gives More Matter <lb/>
money oilier paper <lb/>
in North Carolina. <lb/>
The it <lb/>
of news, NATIONAL, STATE <lb/>
will devote it- <lb/>
sell to material advancement <lb/>
of the in it <lb/>
Semi i mid get a <lb/>
SAMPLE <lb/>
ft . <lb/>
Attention <lb/>
is tailed to as its <lb/>
large and growing circulation <lb/>
it mi excellent medium <lb/>
through which reach <lb/>
Notice I <lb/>
tor <lb/>
falling out of hair, of <lb/>
is before the public. <lb/>
Among the many who have men It with <lb/>
wonderful success, I refer you to fol- <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of assertion <lb/>
Latham, <lb/>
Mb. O.<lb/>
Any one wishing to give it B I rial for <lb/>
the above named complaints can procure <lb/>
It from at my place of business, for <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, <lb/>
Greenville. March 14th, C , <lb/>
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb/>
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
We have the the easiest <lb/>
Chair ever used in the art. towels, <lb/>
sharp razors, satisfaction guaranteed <lb/>
In every instance. Call be con- <lb/>
Ladies waited on at their <lb/>
Cleaning clothes a specialty. <lb/>
mum mu Carolina, <lb/>
Chapel Hill, N. C. <lb/>
mill NEXT SESSION <lb/>
i -t <lb/>
. mid ha <lb/>
i . mi; In the world. <lb/>
of Wood <lb/>
. I for <lb/>
y e. <lb/>
i t ., <lb/>
A BUILDER <lb/>
t O <lb/>
. I . . t -up <lb/>
for nae of <lb/>
. m<lb/>
ALL FOR <lb/>
is <lb/>
oil <lb/>
5th, Thorough <lb/>
Moil Is offered in Literature. Science, <lb/>
Philosophy and Tuition per <lb/>
session. For address <lb/>
BATTLE, <lb/>
President. <lb/>
pond. <lb/>
In. <lb/>
tN-l <lb/>
lo <lb/>
Co., who <lb/>
and For <lb/>
it In the<lb/>
. -i . <lb/>
maps. <lb/>
AX. N. T <lb/>
FILLED. <lb/>
For the Ladies <lb/>
In order to reduce stock before time to <lb/>
receive Fall Goods, I will offer <lb/>
all my present of <lb/>
I MILLINERY GOODS, <lb/>
from now until the 1st of September at <lb/>
REDUCED PRICES. <lb/>
All lists on hand, both trimmed and <lb/>
will be sold at cost. My stock <lb/>
includes many of the most stylish goods <lb/>
of the season. I can give bargains. <lb/>
Mrs. <lb/>
N C. <lb/>
Ho <lb/>
another new discovery by Alfred <lb/>
in the way of helping the afflict- <lb/>
ed. By calling on or addressing the <lb/>
above named you can procure a <lb/>
nit tie of Preparation that is invaluable <lb/>
for eradicating dandruff and causing the <lb/>
kinkiest hair to lie perfectly soft and <lb/>
glossy, only two or three application a <lb/>
week i necessary, and a common hair <lb/>
brush is all to lie after 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 <lb/>
Barber, <lb/>
N.<lb/>
a. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>