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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 19 March 1890</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18900319</dc:date>
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                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
roar <lb />
Its every reader. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB <lb />
Department that I e <lb />
where In this section. Our work always <lb />
satisfaction- <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
IX. <lb />
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY. MARCH 1890. <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C.<lb />
STATE <lb />
G. Fowle. of Wake, <lb />
M. Holt. <lb />
Secretary of <lb />
era. of Wake. <lb />
W. Wake. <lb />
of <lb />
of <lb />
X. Finger of Catawba. <lb />
Attorney F. <lb />
torn, of Buncombe. <lb />
SUPREME COURT. <lb />
i h N. H. Smith, of <lb />
Associate Justin -A. S. of <lb />
; Joseph J. Davis, of <lb />
E. of Beaufort <lb />
C. Burke. <lb />
H. <lb />
Philips, <lb />
District. G. Connor, WU- <lb />
Clark, of <lb />
District-John A. <lb />
Math T. of <lb />
C. of <lb />
a. Armfield, of <lb />
F. Graves, of <lb />
Barry. <lb />
Tenth O. of <lb />
M. Ship, of <lb />
Twelfth H- Merrimon, <lb />
Senate B. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb />
of <lb />
G. Skinner, of <lb />
of Vance. <lb />
Third W. Mr-Clammy of <lb />
Pander. <lb />
Fourth Bonn, of <lb />
Mash. <lb />
Fifth W. of <lb />
Birth Rowland of <lb />
rent S. Henderson, <lb />
Eighth H. A. <lb />
G.<lb />
Court A. e. <lb />
Sheriff J. A. K. <lb />
Register of H. James. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. I,. Ward. <lb />
B. Harris. <lb />
Dawson. Chair- <lb />
man, Mooring. C. V, Newton, <lb />
Flanagan, T. E. Keel. <lb />
Board of <lb />
Chairman J. S. and J. D. <lb />
Cot. <lb />
Ft. <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
Mayor F. G. James. <lb />
F. Evans. <lb />
surer M. B. <lb />
J. Smith. <lb />
Asst R. Moore. <lb />
Ward. B. X. <lb />
Sad Ward. B. Williams. Jr., and <lb />
Forbes; 3rd Ward. T. J. Jarvis and M. <lb />
B. Ward, W. K. Tolbert. <lb />
THESE <lb />
The poet racks his brain. <lb />
And the midnight oil. <lb />
That may worldly notice gain, <lb />
his toil. <lb />
Quite satisfied if ho his name <lb />
In print may see. <lb />
He dutches at the <lb />
What tools hose mortals . <lb />
The miser add to the <lb />
He'll lose when death shall call, <lb />
The heiress weds a foreign count <lb />
Who's no account at all, <lb />
And all the world is crazy quite <lb />
At least to some degree. <lb />
We're chasing phantoms day and <lb />
night <lb />
fools I hose mortals <lb />
The soldier in the raining lead <lb />
His bravery employs <lb />
To die for which when he's dead <lb />
He nevermore enjoys. <lb />
Men would be kings, kings world lie <lb />
gods. <lb />
None are from fully free. <lb />
Peas discontented with their pods <lb />
fools these mortals <lb />
We fancy all the world looks on <lb />
And marvel at our deeds; <lb />
Yet it, when we front men gone. <lb />
Our seldom heeds. <lb />
And be must be a stoic quite <lb />
Who does not smile to see <lb />
How cross eyed is nil human sight <lb />
fools these mortals <lb />
Chicago Herald. <lb />
The Necessity of Training <lb />
the Teacher. <lb />
lead by Kits Smith <lb />
Pitt <lb />
Alfred <lb />
CHURCHES. <lb />
First and Third <lb />
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. X. C. <lb />
D. D., Rector. <lb />
Sunday, morn- <lb />
and night. Prayer Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev. E. B. John, <lb />
every Sunday, morn- <lb />
ran and night. Meeting every <lb />
night. Rev. A. D. <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
Lodge. No. A. P. A A. <lb />
meets every 1st Thursday and <lb />
Say night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb />
Han Lodge. A. L. Blow, W. M., <lb />
. L. Sec. <lb />
Greenville B. A. Chapter, No. meets <lb />
very 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb />
Hall, F. W. Brown, H. P. <lb />
Covenant Lodge, Na. I. O. O. F. <lb />
assets every Tuesday night. O. W. <lb />
N. G. <lb />
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of H., <lb />
acts every first and third Friday night. <lb />
B. T. D. <lb />
Put Council, No. A. L. of H., meets <lb />
Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb />
POST OFFICE, <lb />
ore pen for all business from A. <lb />
S. to P. H. All distributed <lb />
C arrival. The general Oliver will <lb />
kept open for minutes at night <lb />
ft r the Northern mail is distributed. <lb />
Northern Mall arrives daily <lb />
at P. M. and departs at <lb />
Tar- Old Sparta and Falkland <lb />
arrives laity at <lb />
and depart at P. M. <lb />
Washington, X <lb />
Beads, and Grimesland <lb />
ails daily at <lb />
P. M. and departs at A. M. <lb />
Barry, Johnson's Mills, <lb />
Its and Pullet mails arrive Tuesday <lb />
Thursday and Saturday at A. <lb />
Vanceboro, Black Jack and Calico <lb />
alls arrives every Saturday at P. M. <lb />
departs Friday at HAM. <lb />
J. J. PERK INS P. M <lb />
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb />
Appointments, <lb />
st Sunday and n us <lb />
Sod and 4th Sundays, morning <lb />
right, Greenville Baptist church, also <lb />
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night, <lb />
Sunday, morning and night. Beth- <lb />
el Baptist church. <lb />
Rev. E. Glenn's <lb />
For preaching on Bethlehem Mission. <lb />
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at <lb />
School House, 1st Sunday at I <lb />
o'clock <lb />
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove, 3rd Sunday at <lb />
Salem 4th Sunday at o'clock, <lb />
4th Sunday <lb />
New York Letter. <lb />
New York, March 1890. <lb />
the most important <lb />
that has ever been made, <lb />
has just been established by the <lb />
wholesale dealers and refiners <lb />
They propose In-rafter to i <lb />
fix the price of sugar from day <lb />
day on a basis that will guarantee j <lb />
the wholesalers a certain profit on <lb />
pound sold. We are in- <lb />
formed that for the past ten years <lb />
the wholesale grocers have been <lb />
selling ; at a loss, this loss be- <lb />
up for on the other goods sold. The <lb />
National Association now <lb />
intend to make it stand on its own <lb />
bottom, and to that end have <lb />
ranged to give every wholesaler a <lb />
rebate of one quarter of a cent per <lb />
provided he keeps the <lb />
price to be fixed by the <lb />
This price will lie telegraphed every <lb />
day from New to cites <lb />
of the country, by the agent of the j <lb />
Association, and to this the local; <lb />
dealer will add the cost of freight <lb />
and handling. The practical result <lb />
of it all is to raise the price of <lb />
gar at least one quarter of a cent <lb />
per that means the <lb />
7,000.000 a year from the <lb />
lie and placing it in the pockets of <lb />
the wholesale grocers. <lb />
A MILLION FOB PAVEMENTS. <lb />
The Board or Estimate and <lb />
has decided to spend <lb />
a million dollars this in paving <lb />
the streets. will be re- <lb />
payed from the Battery to <lb />
street, a distance of nearly four <lb />
miles, all with granite blocks. It <lb />
seems almost unnecessary that this <lb />
should be done, as the pavement <lb />
from b street down, was laid but <lb />
a short time ago. Eighth avenue is <lb />
to be paved with asphalt, 13th <lb />
street to 59th street, at which point <lb />
it connects with the Boulevard The <lb />
idea of paving it with asphalt is to <lb />
secure a smooth driveway all along <lb />
the west side of the city. Besides <lb />
these, there will be twenty other <lb />
streets and after the work is once <lb />
done it is understood that the <lb />
steam companies, gas companies <lb />
and railroad companies will not be <lb />
allowed to tear it op whenever they <lb />
feel like so doing, at present.<lb />
It is generally believed by non- <lb />
residents that New York baa no free <lb />
library. This, however, is a mis- <lb />
take, as the report the New York <lb />
Free Circulating Library, last <lb />
week, goes to prove. This <lb />
has been in operation for ten years, <lb />
and daring the past year has circa <lb />
lated more than books. It <lb />
is operated, most of libraries <lb />
are, by a society and bet no <lb />
with the government. Be- <lb />
sides the main library at Bond <lb />
street, it baa also three branch <lb />
In different parts the <lb />
the expenses of which are paid <lb />
mainly by voluntary contributions. <lb />
New York also boast of five <lb />
other large libraries, <lb />
Y. M. C. A., Cooper <lb />
Union and Mercantile, all bat the <lb />
latter of which an free. <lb />
select from an immense as- <lb />
of books in these libraries <lb />
without the cost of a cent and <lb />
little red-tape. <lb />
Seventy-one towns and cities in <lb />
Indiana arc using natural gas. <lb />
Alderman, in speaking of <lb />
the necessity of calling the patrons <lb />
of schools th par- <lb />
pose of speaking to on sub- <lb />
concerning work, said that <lb />
we, meaning we lady teachers, per- <lb />
did not have the courage t <lb />
perform the that we should <lb />
secure some one to do it for <lb />
Truly he made a correct statement, <lb />
and fact is to be deplored. We <lb />
should be able to do oar own <lb />
We should be <lb />
in this age. We should have bad <lb />
the same course of study that the <lb />
lawyer uses in preparing his plea, <lb />
the minister in making his sermon, <lb />
the physician in investigating a <lb />
critical case. As it is, we are ex- <lb />
intimidated when called to <lb />
the floor. From years of <lb />
and experience, we are fully <lb />
aware of the deficiencies of our pub- <lb />
teachers. We sincerely <lb />
think it should be a topic to engage <lb />
the earliest attention <lb />
s. If any man desires to bring <lb />
himself before the public a a <lb />
he do it, by working to j <lb />
obtain facilities for the training <lb />
has a position. <lb />
consequently he is trained before <lb />
being allowed to begin his work. I <lb />
Physicians and lawyers arc <lb />
ed to have special preparation be- <lb />
fore entering upon their work. <lb />
How much more important that the <lb />
teacher should be trained, since he <lb />
is to direct and regulate the <lb />
ties of a human soul, the most <lb />
and responsible- of all <lb />
The teacher must shape the <lb />
morals, the manners and the health <lb />
of a score of pupils, coming from <lb />
different homes, with different <lb />
traits cf character and different <lb />
habits. These are to be made to <lb />
conform to one system. Where is a <lb />
work more complicated t <lb />
The teacher must be a of <lb />
human he must know the <lb />
mental disposition of each <lb />
he must adapt himself both <lb />
and collectively to their wants; <lb />
he must be self-controlled, so that <lb />
example will teach as well as <lb />
We can very appropriately com- <lb />
pare these minds to the material <lb />
which the sculptor uses to make his <lb />
Before he begins <lb />
piece he has in mind the precise j <lb />
he wishes to accomplish so that <lb />
every movement of the chisel brings <lb />
him the end for which he is <lb />
Every net in the school-1 <lb />
lour public school teachers. Our room a isl <lb />
the motive that <lb />
proudly boasts a <lb />
Assembly where North Carolina's <lb />
splendid galaxy of education coma <lb />
together once a year for the <lb />
pose of interchanging in <lb />
regard to their great work. How <lb />
many teachers in Pitt are <lb />
financially prepared to avail them- <lb />
selves of this T How many are <lb />
prepared, educationally, to <lb />
ate, nil is in store lot them, <lb />
he so fortunate as to <lb />
i each More head City t We need <lb />
some preliminary preparation in or- <lb />
to derive from this Assembly <lb />
what is designed for us. This need <lb />
many of have experienced, for <lb />
almost every year we hear a lecture <lb />
on Socrates, <lb />
or reference made to them in some <lb />
lecture, and much said about the <lb />
natural order of the development of <lb />
the faculties. We are not sufficient- <lb />
informed on of these topics <lb />
to take home what we desire. <lb />
Nine-tenths of I be children in our <lb />
come under the guidance <lb />
and control of the school <lb />
teachers. As these children in later <lb />
years go out into country to care <lb />
for its welfare with little more than <lb />
the equipment that our public <lb />
schools give them, too much <lb />
can not be attached to the <lb />
training of the teachers who direct <lb />
these minds. If the children <lb />
instructed by our public <lb />
teachers be educated in the <lb />
fullest sense of the word, a greater <lb />
number of our sons <lb />
be occupying seats in Congress, and <lb />
filling other places of distinction <lb />
and illness. Our <lb />
would be manifesting higher <lb />
aspirations in our social circles. <lb />
A child may be much <lb />
knowledge from being instructed, <lb />
still not be on the road to <lb />
Education tends to draw out, <lb />
to develop the mind and Its various <lb />
activities, and not merely to put <lb />
something into the mind. It reach- <lb />
es its end through the medium of <lb />
attraction, and seeks by social <lb />
stimulus guidance and control to <lb />
develop the natural powers of the <lb />
child so as to reader him able and <lb />
disposed to live a healthy happy <lb />
and moral life. Accepting the <lb />
above as a definition to education <lb />
in the fullest sense, bow important <lb />
that the teacher should be trained <lb />
to work with more than the <lb />
side of the mind. <lb />
Psychologists tell us that the <lb />
presents three fundamental depart- <lb />
well marked oat, all of which <lb />
the teacher should understand <lb />
order to be three <lb />
of the mind are Intel- <lb />
Sensibilities the Will. <lb />
When a child sees something that <lb />
pleases him, he gains a knowledge <lb />
of it rough the intellect, is delight <lb />
ed with it through the sensibilities or <lb />
motions, and decides to take part <lb />
in pleasures it affords through <lb />
power of will. <lb />
As the art of modern education <lb />
seeks to ground on scientific <lb />
principles, can we presume to rely <lb />
on experience alone t Oar range <lb />
of observation will be too narrow. <lb />
We need scientific knowledge to <lb />
correct and supplement <lb />
cal knowledge. These troths serve <lb />
same purpose to teacher <lb />
that the general descriptions of a <lb />
plant does to botanist in <lb />
tying Bowers. We never under- <lb />
stand individual thing except is <lb />
forms and colors <lb />
the act. If teacher is unskilled, <lb />
rained, and works <lb />
by giving a stroke here and there, <lb />
it will indentations in the <lb />
structure of the mind where nature <lb />
intends projections. Unless the <lb />
is trained have an ideal <lb />
mind in view, causing every <lb />
l cation of bis tools to bring bun <lb />
nearer the perfection of his object, <lb />
ho is laboring to little purpose. <lb />
complete equipment of the <lb />
teacher includes a of the <lb />
subject of instruction, a knowledge <lb />
of the nature the being to in- <lb />
and a knowledge of <lb />
best methods instruction. This <lb />
knowledge gained by careful study <lb />
and conjoined with practice, <lb />
the training of teacher. A <lb />
knowledge of the nature of the be- <lb />
in is what teachers are so <lb />
much in need of, in order to <lb />
children as nature intends. <lb />
Many teachers have a sufficient <lb />
knowledge of the subject and ma- <lb />
of the best methods at band and <lb />
lack the knowledge of the being is <lb />
like an workman using <lb />
the tools of an artist. Scholarship <lb />
is too often taken for professional <lb />
training. In no other profession is <lb />
this mistake made. No one is pie- <lb />
pared for law, for medicine, or for <lb />
merely because he is <lb />
scholarly. So long as we regard <lb />
general scholarship as constituting <lb />
fitness for teaching, it is <lb />
open to all who are educated. <lb />
The teacher should be trained be <lb />
cause the faculties follow a law of <lb />
progressive development. In ac- <lb />
with this law the teacher <lb />
should for faculties are <lb />
made strong by being properly ex- <lb />
and weakened by being <lb />
properly exercised. The order in <lb />
which nature designs for <lb />
folding of faculties is Per- <lb />
Memory, Imagination Ab- <lb />
Conception, Judgment <lb />
and The circle of <lb />
edge begins close around a man and <lb />
extends concentrically. It proceeds <lb />
from the known to the unknown, <lb />
from near to the remote, from <lb />
concrete to the abstract. Be- <lb />
tween growth and development <lb />
there is a difference. A child at <lb />
the age of ten or twelve may have <lb />
abnormal that of a grown per- <lb />
son, still little of <lb />
So mental growth may be an <lb />
increase of material without any <lb />
reference to orderly arrangement. <lb />
Benjamin Franklin gave us this ad- <lb />
vice .- your knowledge laid <lb />
back on the proper shelf, so it will <lb />
not much bunting when <lb />
In consequence of this <lb />
natural order of development, it is <lb />
necessary that <lb />
primary teacher should be carefully <lb />
trained. instruction given in <lb />
this department brings or <lb />
failure when advanced comes <lb />
primary teachers engage too <lb />
much in abstract, when they <lb />
be dealing with concrete <lb />
and developing perceptive <lb />
With this teacher, every <lb />
day and every have a <lb />
marked-oat plan, the work being of <lb />
a character as to coincide with <lb />
nature's laws. Tate, in bis <lb />
of Education, says that <lb />
use or complete text books with <lb />
little children has formed more <lb />
than Nature <lb />
teacher has It in his power to <lb />
of general knowledge. the road to high sad <lb />
instead, he often <lb />
crushes the best and highest louden <lb />
of the mind, blights the <lb />
leaves a ruined <lb />
If the old sys- <lb />
could be discarded and lime <lb />
devoted to language lessons, con- <lb />
of stones the <lb />
of reading wt would <lb />
be doing fat better work. The <lb />
perception and imagination <lb />
would come to light, the of <lb />
observation, discrimination and as- <lb />
would assert themselves <lb />
as agents for gaining <lb />
knowledge. What pleasure or in- <lb />
does a child find in pronoun- <lb />
such a column of unpalatable <lb />
words as luminary, culinary, semi- <lb />
pulmonary I Parents <lb />
complain because eight <lb />
and three <lb />
not been heard during the day, <lb />
thereby the progress by <lb />
number recitations, Should <lb />
not teachers instead of making <lb />
an effort to meet these requirements, <lb />
earnestly work to pervade the at- <lb />
so with <lb />
which moans culture, as to cause <lb />
both children and parents lo par- <lb />
take of its nature The question <lb />
to be asked is Are the <lb />
in the power lo ac- <lb />
quire and knowledge, and not <lb />
how knowledge have the <lb />
t That acquisitive <lb />
nature should grow strong, the <lb />
should proceed concretely <lb />
and inductively, because a child <lb />
t ids pleasure in work done with his <lb />
own hands, becomes an <lb />
a discoverer on his own account <lb />
and not a passive receiver of the <lb />
discoveries of others. The teacher <lb />
be trained to know precisely <lb />
how to aid the child in gaining sell <lb />
as it is most power- <lb />
agent of culture ; he should know <lb />
where to a link that helps <lb />
in building that process <lb />
of development, which makes <lb />
education self-education. It is sad <lb />
to know that a class of bright look- <lb />
boys and girls in the Fourth <lb />
Readers are not able to close their <lb />
books reproduce the lesson in <lb />
language of own. Are these <lb />
pupils prepared to a column in <lb />
the daily papers so as to make it <lb />
their t This is not education. <lb />
The error was made in the First <lb />
perhaps. are rushed <lb />
from one book to another too rapid- <lb />
The teacher is not asking him- <lb />
self my pupils gaining the <lb />
power to prepare a When <lb />
a child has finished the First <lb />
Bender it docs not follow that he <lb />
should at once enter the Second <lb />
Header. A teacher who is <lb />
alive to his work, will have <lb />
supplementary reading of some <lb />
kinda number of new stories <lb />
would give new words and new- <lb />
ideas. Parents, if yon will think <lb />
what a task for you to read and re- <lb />
read same old papers for months <lb />
in succession, would consent <lb />
to purchase another First Reader <lb />
containing new material. Children <lb />
like novelty. Something new <lb />
ways arrests their attention. The <lb />
art of gaining attention should be <lb />
the prime work of the teacher, for <lb />
attention is the great mainspring <lb />
of education. A child's mind can <lb />
be directed to an object, but an <lb />
attachment between the two can <lb />
not be compelled. Attention is an <lb />
attitude of the mind and not of the <lb />
body. The latter is very often <lb />
deceptive and assures us that <lb />
forced attention is not productive <lb />
of good mental results. Much evil <lb />
arises from imparting knowledge <lb />
to a child when not attending. <lb />
It is apt to make him of a dreamy, <lb />
listless nature. Minds are so <lb />
that inattention arises from <lb />
different causes. The general <lb />
reasons are lack of interest, too <lb />
much work done by the teacher, <lb />
studying too many things at once, <lb />
pleasure not associated with work, <lb />
dwelling too long on one subject. <lb />
Individually the boy with feeble <lb />
intellect becomes lax in giving at- <lb />
in class, because he has <lb />
tried to understand and can not; <lb />
the boy with little mental activity <lb />
is wanting in attention because he <lb />
has not had sufficient stimulus to <lb />
excite his intellect; the boy of a <lb />
volatile nature becomes restless <lb />
for the lack of something new. <lb />
Then we have the timid boy, and <lb />
the boy with too confidence <lb />
who thinks he can get it without <lb />
attending. Can the teacher deal <lb />
with all these phases of mind <lb />
without special training When a <lb />
teacher knows how to secure the <lb />
undivided attention of his class by <lb />
exciting interest by using many <lb />
devices for that purpose, less rep- <lb />
is necessary for making <lb />
lasting impressions, and the will <lb />
of the teacher is reduced to a sec- <lb />
element in governing. An- <lb />
other very important reason that <lb />
calls for special training among <lb />
our teachers is the necessity of <lb />
having a course of study mapped <lb />
out for each term. If every teacher <lb />
in Pitt county knew how much he <lb />
is expected to have completed in <lb />
one term, neither teacher nor pupil <lb />
would be plodding along in that <lb />
aimless manner like one embarking <lb />
upon without a desired <lb />
haven to reach, landing wherever <lb />
Fate chances to carry him. We <lb />
have no permanent Normal School <lb />
in our State, still this is no <lb />
reason that we should be <lb />
with the different mental <lb />
operations of a child and the best <lb />
methods of presenting a subject. <lb />
We have the privilege of coming <lb />
together in a body for the purpose <lb />
of engaging in a course of <lb />
reading. Teachers, let us <lb />
think about it seriously and <lb />
chase such books as the <lb />
qua Text Books, some works on <lb />
psychology, The Life and <lb />
of Laura and <lb />
Rousseau's Emile. The latter <lb />
gives so much valuable j <lb />
in regard to infant education <lb />
that it should have an abiding <lb />
place in every house. Many pa- <lb />
lead their <lb />
to habits of and <lb />
falsehood while fondling with them <lb />
at the fireside. The. result of this <lb />
lack of knowledge in regard to ear- <lb />
training is bringing more pa- <lb />
rents to premature graves than <lb />
any dire disease that pervades our <lb />
land. <lb />
Teachers, let us consecrate our- <lb />
selves to the work of improvement. <lb />
Lot a sense of duty as a <lb />
con-light to guide us onward for <lb />
it has been truly said that <lb />
teacher is the <lb />
Maggie Smith, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Seasonable Suggestions, <lb />
The Sabbath clay is the savings <lb />
bank of humanity. <lb />
useful yourself first, <lb />
friends next and the world afterward. I <lb />
The man who never offends any- <lb />
body usually count his friends <lb />
on the fingers of one hand. <lb />
It takes almost super-human <lb />
strength to hang on when you begin j <lb />
at the top of the ladder. <lb />
Men who have to swear off from <lb />
generally continue swearing <lb />
off and on. <lb />
The world seldom looks to sec the j <lb />
kind of tracts you left behind <lb />
get there. <lb />
Many a is covered with roses <lb />
by hands that never before gave its <lb />
occupant anything but thorns. <lb />
The road to happiness and the <lb />
road to misery follow the same course. <lb />
The difference is in the traveler, not <lb />
in the road traveled. <lb />
What is a Model Wife <lb />
A model wife is the woman in J <lb />
whom the heart of her husband doth <lb />
safely trust. <lb />
She is the woman who looks after <lb />
his household, and makes her hos- <lb />
n delight to him and not el <lb />
burden. <lb />
Who has learned that a soft an- <lb />
away wrath. <lb />
Who keeps her sweetest smiles and I <lb />
most loving words for her husband. <lb />
Who is his confident in sorrow or <lb />
in joy, and does not feel the <lb />
of explaining her private <lb />
fairs to the neighborhood. <lb />
Who respects the right of <lb />
band and children, and in return has <lb />
due regard paid to her. <lb />
Who knows that her strongest <lb />
is in her womanliness, and <lb />
so she cultivates it. <lb />
Who is sympathetic in joy or in <lb />
grief, and who finds work for her <lb />
hands to do. <lb />
Who makes friends and keeps them. <lb />
Who is not made bitter by <lb />
but who strengthens and sweet- <lb />
ens tinder it <lb />
The Rainbow of Promise <lb />
from the store house of nature came <lb />
by intuition a priceless boon to <lb />
unman race, which <lb />
cal in untold thousands <lb />
are made to rejoice the <lb />
of health, and the blessings, <lb />
joys and pleasures thereunto per- <lb />
specific S. baa <lb />
been a blessing to me. Afflicted <lb />
with rheumatism and female weak- <lb />
a number of years, during <lb />
which time I took a great deal <lb />
medicine, nothing giving me relief <lb />
Swift a. What I suffer- <lb />
ed and endured before <lb />
on Specific is pain- <lb />
even to think about; bat after <lb />
taking that medicine I got well, and <lb />
have continued to enjoy best <lb />
health since. I cannot say more <lb />
than I believe in praise of Swift's <lb />
Specific S. <lb />
Mas. M. A. <lb />
N. <lb />
Treatise on Blood and Skin <lb />
mailed free. <lb />
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO, <lb />
Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Washington Letter. <lb />
From Our Correspondent. <lb />
Washington, C. March <lb />
Secretary uttered a sound <lb />
truth, and one that Is worthy the <lb />
most careful consideration when <lb />
in opposing a bill to increase <lb />
the pension of n general's <lb />
widow to f a month, be said <lb />
of this Government being <lb />
one of the people, for the people and <lb />
by the people, it is rapidly becoming <lb />
a Government of the classes and by <lb />
the This is n bill, I <lb />
there is entirely too much class leg- <lb />
in this country, and it is on <lb />
the all the time, and it re-1 <lb />
mains for the people to stop it. <lb />
Now they have power, but if the , <lb />
interference Is delayed too long the <lb />
classes will be than the <lb />
people. <lb />
Again there are whispers to the <lb />
effect that the republicans will re <lb />
port no tariff bill this session <lb />
cause the end of the session, <lb />
Treasury surplus it is expected <lb />
have been turned into a deficiency. <lb />
The rumor possibly be true <lb />
about no bill being reported, <lb />
so It is solely because republican <lb />
protectionists have not been able to <lb />
throttle the demand for tariff reform <lb />
among their republican colleagues. <lb />
The cry for free raw material is be- j <lb />
coming a loud one, particular from <lb />
the Eastern Within <lb />
a week Senator Hale, who has been <lb />
as pronounced u protectionists Mr. <lb />
presented a long petition <lb />
from New manufacturers <lb />
asking that raw materials used by <lb />
them be admitted free of duty. <lb />
The first year of the Harrison <lb />
administration closed, and one <lb />
naturally looks around to see <lb />
bee been accomplished, and is com- ; <lb />
to answer.- worthy <lb />
of even a tingle lino in the history <lb />
of the. country. The year has been <lb />
devoted mostly to removing demo- <lb />
office settling dis- <lb />
among as to which <lb />
should be fed a the <lb />
crib. <lb />
The Senators are some of I hem <lb />
talking of boycotting the <lb />
per men because to <lb />
how they find what is done <lb />
the alleged secret sessions. The <lb />
Senate will do well to very slow <lb />
in this matter because there is <lb />
that the newspapers of the <lb />
country might retaliate by <lb />
ting the Senate, and if they did the <lb />
temperature, he pretty low in <lb />
the north end of the Capitol build- <lb />
The can exist <lb />
without the Senate, but it, is by no <lb />
means certain that the Senate can <lb />
exist without the newspapers. <lb />
Mr. has issued another <lb />
bunkum proclamation warning all <lb />
persons against illegally taking fur <lb />
bearing animals in sea. <lb />
He issued a similar soon after <lb />
he entered office and the Canadian <lb />
vessels seized under it and turned <lb />
loosed with prize crows of one man <lb />
each made the United States the <lb />
laughing stock of the world. The <lb />
farce is presumably to ho repeated <lb />
this year. <lb />
It has been suggested by a prom- <lb />
democrat i hat instead of com- <lb />
four days time in unseating <lb />
a democrat, as was done by <lb />
this week in the case of Mr. <lb />
Late, of that the <lb />
should get Speaker to <lb />
make a ruling compelling the House <lb />
to vote as soon as the report of the <lb />
committee on Elections is received. <lb />
The result would same and <lb />
it save lots o time. <lb />
The members or Three Amer- <lb />
Congress are to make a tour of <lb />
principal cities the South as <lb />
soon as the Congress adjourns <lb />
it is thought will be about <lb />
April <lb />
The public, after coming to the <lb />
conclusion that charges bad <lb />
been sustained, seem to lost in- <lb />
In the proceedings of the In- <lb />
of the Civil Service <lb />
Commission. was the wit- <lb />
that settled things. <lb />
C B. Bates, formerly <lb />
of B. O. Telegraph <lb />
Company and a representative <lb />
Knights of Labor, made <lb />
this week before the House <lb />
committee on Post-offices in favor <lb />
of <lb />
scheme <lb />
Some surprise was caused among <lb />
democrats when War- <lb />
month was confirmed by the Sen- <lb />
ate as Collector of the port of New <lb />
Orleans by democratic votes. If <lb />
democrats had voted solidly against <lb />
him his nomination been <lb />
Ex-Congressman who <lb />
was shot at the Capitol by Com <lb />
Kincaid, is in a critical <lb />
condition and his death In hoary <lb />
expected. <lb />
Senator Barbour, Virginia <lb />
spoke for, and Senator <lb />
against the bill this week. <lb />
A naval court inquiry will in, <lb />
the alleged of <lb />
Capt U. S. Enterprise <lb />
to his men. <lb />
The bill the weather <lb />
bureau to the War department has <lb />
been to <lb />
Senate. <lb />
Secretary silver bill is <lb />
having a hard time in the bands of <lb />
the House committee on coinage. <lb />
Gamblers Brought to <lb />
Kinston Free I Toss. <lb />
Ma- or William mid the police of <lb />
New Heine arc to be commended for <lb />
their efforts to bring to Justice the <lb />
gamblers that infested Nan <lb />
during the Fair. There were nearly <lb />
twenty of them, hut ., <lb />
when the dens Were raided. A lot <lb />
gambling was sent up <lb />
to Kinston in <lb />
bat it was taken of sent <lb />
back to New <lb />
If. If. Hardison and <lb />
Coward gave bonds for their <lb />
appearance at Court tor <lb />
ti tad fir <lb />
gambling purposes. <lb />
A few were acquitted a <lb />
were bound over to court in sums <lb />
of t Some <lb />
amount of their bonds kipped, <lb />
and will probably never be seen in <lb />
New Heine again. <lb />
Another p. <lb />
has been made to to <lb />
make a contribution toward <lb />
head-boards or stones at the <lb />
graves of North Carolina soldiers <lb />
buried There are <lb />
more than three North <lb />
graves there, it is stated <lb />
that North Carolina has contribute. <lb />
only dollars toward casing for <lb />
them. <lb />
We arc glad to note the steady, sol- <lb />
Id growth of Greenville Institute <lb />
the efficient management of Prof. <lb />
John Ducked. shall fully <lb />
of this in the future. <lb />
Appointments of the Bishop <lb />
of East Carolina for 1890. <lb />
March Hi.-St. Paul-. <lb />
March St. John's, Durham Creek, <lb />
March H. in Lent, <lb />
of the Cross, aurora. <lb />
Annunciation.<lb />
March John. <lb />
March <lb />
March Sunday, St. George. <lb />
Lake Landing, Hyde County, <lb />
March <lb />
April Trinity, <lb />
April Eve, Haw Branch. <lb />
April St. Peter. Washing- <lb />
ton. <lb />
April Monday, Church, <lb />
county. <lb />
April s. Easter st. <lb />
Bath. <lb />
April <lb />
April lo, county. <lb />
Communion at all morning <lb />
vices. <lb />
The Children Catechized when <lb />
Offerings to lie for Diocesan <lb />
The will lie prepared <lb />
to meet the <lb />
The Best Salve in the world for <lb />
Sores, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores. Hands, <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
Price cents per box. For said by J, <lb />
I. woolen. <lb />
N. C <lb />
I DaBS i <lb />
WILSON, n. c <lb />
j D. L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
A LEX I,. BLOW, <lb />
BY-AT-L AW, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb />
j. cm at. <lb />
J. M. TUCKER <lb />
J. O <lb />
MURPHY, <lb />
A T-LA W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
c. <lb />
t a <lb />
m. c. <lb />
U i. JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. O. <lb />
Practice In all tho courts. <lb />
J B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
Y-A T-LA W, <lb />
Greenville, N. C.<lb />
A-.-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018979_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
J, ad <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
The Is Si per year. <lb />
column <lb />
one Mr, one-half column one year. <lb />
; one-quarter column one year, t. <lb />
Transient inch <lb />
one week. ; two weeks. el . one <lb />
month Two inches one week. l-M, <lb />
two weeks, ; one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items. cents per <lb />
line each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb />
and Notices, <lb />
and Bales, <lb />
to etc. will <lb />
be at legal rates and must <lb />
BE PAID FOr. IN The Re- <lb />
has suffered some loss and <lb />
much because of having no <lb />
rule as to the payment class <lb />
Of advertisements, and In order to avoid <lb />
The late Teachers Institute in <lb />
this county has left an influence <lb />
that will no doubt be Ion felt for <lb />
good to the public schools. The <lb />
Reflector given the proceed- <lb />
of the Institute in full, so it is <lb />
our purpose now to only say some- <lb />
thing about Prof. Alderman and <lb />
his address delivered at Friday j <lb />
morning's session. In beginning <lb />
norm SESSION. <lb />
The Institute was opened with <lb />
staging. Prof. Alderman read a <lb />
from the fourth chapter <lb />
of St. Mark mid Institute re- <lb />
concert the Lord's Prayer. <lb />
The choir sang, <lb />
Alderman made a few <lb />
i in regard to what kind of <lb />
Ins address he said he had , <lb />
spent a more delightful week, teaching the <lb />
-half column one and professionally, than the rending, and also letting, them <lb />
the teachers of from What Mg <lb />
in i, not vet secure them. Miss Maggie Smith <lb />
county, that ho ha a on the <lb />
visited a county where the or best method of teaching geog <lb />
was so well prepared in advance of which was very instructive <lb />
him. line he very and doubt will do much good <lb />
faithful <lb />
line doubt will do much good <lb />
complimented Mai. H. Harding, towards aiding others teaching <lb />
I j ,,. branch of study. An <lb />
Superintendent was taken. <lb />
work he had don. -to <lb />
such interest in the j <lb />
ailed <lb />
the Institute to order and <lb />
abort song Mai. Henry <lb />
or <lb />
may be- <lb />
come an active member this <lb />
recommendation of a <lb />
teacher and by a majority of the <lb />
members present at any meeting. <lb />
the election shall pay to the is- <lb />
sum of cents and ill <lb />
pay I his sum annually in <lb />
so long as membership is <lb />
officers of the <lb />
council shall consist of President, <lb />
two a Secretary, a <lb />
Corresponding Secretary a <lb />
Treasurer who shall at <lb />
the regular meeting in Sept. of each <lb />
year. <lb />
meetings <lb />
be held once in every three <lb />
social meetings and enter- <lb />
may held at such -a <lb />
and under such regulations as sh ill <lb />
be arranged by the. committee. <lb />
VII. The President, at the <lb />
time of his election shall appoint <lb />
the standing committees <lb />
oft <lb />
Dissolution. <lb />
is h given that I have <lb />
attracted to his room, situated <lb />
at tho their stair steps, by <lb />
his loud breathing as he passed <lb />
door. the was aft I soil out my interest in the <lb />
empty morphine but mute Carriage Works and am no longer a <lb />
told its story. partner, Panics indebted to the said <lb />
Dr. F. was called in at make settlement to either my <lb />
, a. r , so f or A. Greene my former partner, <lb />
and as Dr. J. looker was This Mar. 1st, m <lb />
passing by going Dr. . <lb />
office, in- was informed that, that <lb />
gentleman was in-tin- house, I <lb />
was invited In. The news of Mr. M. in <lb />
affair spread mid earn.- to Hie <lb />
April 1st will represent the <lb />
He also said the material <lb />
for teachers here was as tine as he Harding introduced Prof. Alderman new publication, <lb />
.-. I ,., ., IN flit, <lb />
ad-1 who came forward and addressed <lb />
had met with any where. H a <lb />
dress was upon matters ,,,, people of <lb />
. <lb />
future trouble payment in advance to the improvement of tho I county, upon the <lb />
be demanded. <lb />
Contracts for space not mentioned <lb />
above, for length of time, ran if <lb />
mad by application to the <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
New <lb />
all changes of advertisements should lie <lb />
handed in o'clock on. <lb />
in order to prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to reach the <lb />
AT THE at <lb />
C , <lb />
Mail <lb />
MARCH <lb />
fluently <lb />
schools and ho spoke <lb />
upon them. He had statistics on <lb />
the Mack board that showed North <lb />
Carolina to be much behind many <lb />
for <lb />
The ion should be in the <lb />
hands of every man in Pitt <lb />
during this year, and <lb />
we are <lb />
the Masses, <lb />
showing that t he only possible moans <lb />
of educating the masses was through <lb />
public schools, and also proving <lb />
of taxation Tor education. At <lb />
other States in her public schools, ,., of Alderman's <lb />
while this in itself was address, Jarvis was nailed <lb />
, . m . and for a few addressed <lb />
to be deplored it . <lb />
mg that she was becoming MOO- ,. . u, <lb />
ed and making rapid la subject <lb />
ward improvement. He The <lb />
ed himself as glad that. then adjourned to meet at <lb />
the Alliance was taking <lb />
such tin interest in education At S the was <lb />
, , , i ed o order, usual <lb />
expected much good to come on b and Al- <lb />
He spoke earnestly proceeded to examine the <lb />
more children ought to be attend- for Stale Certificates on <lb />
the schools and the school term <lb />
ought to be longer. He drew ex- <lb />
from Germany and other <lb />
countries. speaking of school <lb />
buildings he said that in <lb />
two months therefore make this prettiest building in <lb />
Tery liberal offer. Any <lb />
coming in during the months <lb />
ears of Dr. W. T. Cheat ham. Al- <lb />
ways ready to do what is in his <lb />
power lb I the distressed, he <lb />
fiend or stranger, and not know <lb />
whether other physician <lb />
had been sent hi hastened to <lb />
the bed the dying man. All <lb />
three of the doctors went actively <lb />
to work, I he proper remedies were <lb />
applied, and by means of <lb />
Mich methods as are necessary to <lb />
produce respiration, after <lb />
several labor the <lb />
patient showed signs of <lb />
vitality and consciousness. At two <lb />
different time, however, alter he <lb />
had been able to partially sit up <lb />
to questions asked him, <lb />
ho sank into a state of re- <lb />
lapse and it looked as if ho would <lb />
die in spite all that could be <lb />
done. This was evidently produced <lb />
by some heart After he <lb />
bad been with the patient some <lb />
time, Dr. left, having to <lb />
go to see a patient, and laser Dr. <lb />
was called upon to go on a <lb />
similar mission. He returned later <lb />
and Dr. Harris, who bad <lb />
working on what at times <lb />
appeared lo be a subject <lb />
left Dr. Tucker In charge he <lb />
could visit a patient he was his <lb />
way to at the lime he was call- <lb />
ed in. Au hour or two alter Dr. <lb />
return Dr. Tucker left, the <lb />
rallied <lb />
same companies solicit a <lb />
patronage given Mr. <lb />
t in the mist. All business en- <lb />
trusted to Will receive my prompt <lb />
attention. under House. <lb />
March 13th. 1890. <lb />
WYATT L. BROWN. <lb />
consumed re- <lb />
Ike afternoon. At the <lb />
conclusion of the examination the <lb />
Institute to at <lb />
P. It. <lb />
SESSION. <lb />
At M. <lb />
town was the school house. I ed the Institute to order. The <lb />
v ,,.;. sang a short song. Mr. L. <lb />
J . <lb />
until the house is a very ,,,. j ,, <lb />
of January. 1891. with an The average number of clays our. ,. them <lb />
almanac for this in. public schools are open is M upon the education of women. Mr. <lb />
Send in name early if yon address is always <lb />
wish to set the benefit of the , . j the ease, was delivered and re <lb />
whole months. Remember the J much applause. Mr W. P- <lb />
this is campaign year. You ought I he spoke at some length, lie then Mr. Geo-I <lb />
to have your county paper any did not. allude to this the p. King, who for about three j <lb />
bureau social meetings <lb />
committee shall work under <lb />
direction of tho officers or the. <lb />
council. <lb />
VIII. The shall <lb />
send one representative annually to <lb />
the North Carolina Teachers As- <lb />
representative or alter- <lb />
be elected by ballot and the <lb />
expenses of his or her attendance <lb />
shall be paid by the council, <lb />
-Laws may be <lb />
local government of the <lb />
provided they do not cm . <lb />
with this <lb />
The shove report was <lb />
by the association and <lb />
the committee discharged- <lb />
notion Maggie Smith it was <lb />
that the Association should <lb />
meet on the. Sat- j patient by this tune <lb />
in May. The President It required the most <lb />
pointed Misses Maggie Smith, Kb constant and careful attention and <lb />
Moore, Messrs no little hard to keep him <lb />
I Tyson, D. M. to going into a state total re- <lb />
of thanks to lapse, I hough, and all night tho <lb />
Aide; man, Supt. Harding, to the j Doctor and hall a dozen attendants <lb />
and to Maj. E. G. stayed with the man worked <lb />
rendered, to Ion By morning he was <lb />
the citizens town Tor their ; over the stupefy <lb />
sown tips teachers of toe drug. During the <lb />
Notice. <lb />
. m of the <lb />
lancing XI last will and testament of <lb />
Hives, deceased, on the -7th day of <lb />
February. 1810, notice is hereby <lb />
to all persons having claims against said <lb />
decedent to exhibit the same properly <lb />
authenticated to tin; undersigned 0.1 or <lb />
before the day of March. 1881, or <lb />
this will be plead in bar of their <lb />
recovery. H. <lb />
Executor of <lb />
This 12th day of March, 1800. <lb />
ALFRED FORBES, <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
Men buyers of Pitt sad s line the tallowing nod <lb />
are not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed tone and <lb />
pure straight rood. GOODS all kinds, <lb />
HATS CAPS, and SHOES. <lb />
and CHILDREN'S and <lb />
GOODS. WINDOWS. HASH and CROCK KB Y and QUEEN S <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE. PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, of different <lb />
and Hay. Rock and <lb />
Hair. Harness, and <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark o. X. T. Spool which offer to the trade <lb />
prices, dozen, per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb />
and Hall's at Jobbers Lead pare Lin- <lb />
seed Oil. Varnishes and Paint colors, encumber Wood Pusses, Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specially. and guarantee <lb />
ring the Institute, to Prof. John <lb />
Docket for the use of the organ, <lb />
black board and maps, and to the <lb />
choir for the music do- <lb />
ring and to <lb />
Williams for so gracefully presiding <lb />
at the organ, and to Miss Maggie <lb />
Smith the splendid essay and <lb />
instinctive lecture, delivered do- <lb />
the <lb />
lay he was to his <lb />
drinking again and Dr. Harris vis <lb />
bull. <lb />
lie appeared to be doing well but <lb />
suffered much from nausea late in <lb />
Hie afternoon. He complained <lb />
not as well as he did in the <lb />
the day but this <lb />
oral under the circumstances. The <lb />
of and <lb />
had died out his nervous system <lb />
COME IN <lb />
We want to have a talk <lb />
with you and tell <lb />
you how cheap <lb />
we can sell <lb />
you <lb />
R E <lb />
Dixie and <lb />
Tobacco Plows, Plow <lb />
Castings. The Famous <lb />
Cook Stoves. <lb />
Give us your orders <lb />
for <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
early and you will be <lb />
sure to get them in time <lb />
LATHAM PENDER, <lb />
Greenville, N. . <lb />
J. L SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INS <lb />
N. C <lb />
JAMBS old stand <lb />
All in smelly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb />
The committee retired and in a <lb />
ts en hour charmed the following was badly but no one a MiA ft <lb />
, i, some of that bail any idea but what he would M <lb />
to the solution to him Isl our soon get all right again. His wants <lb />
as none could be offered. for <lb />
himself be was a white man, j delivered a us Pill conn <lb />
ed a white man's address the I for the profuse of the <lb />
loved the <lb />
way. here is the chance to get <lb />
it cheap. Subscribe. <lb />
Wonder if the <lb />
will pit Harrison against Cleve- <lb />
land again They've better <lb />
sense. Mr. Cleveland would fair- <lb />
-wipe up the ground with him. <lb />
Torn out all the Democratic <lb />
Congressmen who have been hon- <lb />
elected. Turn them out, and <lb />
the States that sent them there <lb />
will speak in thunder tones when <lb />
they vote again. <lb />
. become so prevalent in the State w meet after which the <lb />
that the was being taxed roll was culled for the last tin., <lb />
majority in the low house at tin showing an enrollment sixty <lb />
next election of not less than to educate the He helmed The Supt. an- <lb />
when we get in i education would do the ; tile was ad <lb />
will make things and the paid more than II. Said. <lb />
half the taxes that was spent upon <lb />
him schooling. He then <lb />
We glory in the of the Mine statistics from the records o <lb />
fine <lb />
while race with all bis Schools, and also <lb />
.,,. to the people or Pitt county <lb />
his every sympathy . <lb />
with them. Bat the was with , j,, and also for <lb />
us here he must He j courtesies shown him during his <lb />
here by Providence in Greenville and closed by in <lb />
the solution of the race problem j Maj. E. G. who <lb />
be left to Providence, he had expressed himself very favorably <lb />
in entertain- <lb />
as and as <lb />
our <lb />
were properly administered to, Mr. j <lb />
and his paying him j <lb />
every attention during tho night. <lb />
Borne one was in his room unlit <lb />
o'clock when lie was left sleeping. <lb />
to the Supt, for laboring i hour or two later some one went <lb />
so faithfully for our improvement, to his loom and again he was <lb />
so red sometime alter. He was breath- <lb />
prompt leading the music, to the <lb />
power again we <lb />
lively for the Bads. <lb />
nothing to offer upon it. But be <lb />
wanted to correct idea that had <lb />
become so prevalent in the meet <lb />
that the white man was being taxed was called <lb />
to educate the He believed <lb />
W. P. <lb />
Ohio Legislature in comity which show very con- <lb />
that State so as to give the Dem- <lb />
their just share of <lb />
look for <lb />
a gain of not less than eight or <lb />
ten Congressman from Ohio Ibis <lb />
fall. The South will show a gain <lb />
of not less than thirty. <lb />
Judge Boykin made a good <lb />
charge to the Grand Jury on Mon- <lb />
day. It was rather long for us to <lb />
hear it all through, but the part to <lb />
which we listened was clear and <lb />
practicable. He touched <lb />
that is largely <lb />
paying his own schooling in this <lb />
Bounty. For instance the <lb />
pays poll and property tax for <lb />
school purposes amounting to <lb />
and there is expended on him <lb />
showing that he likes only <lb />
paying all that is spent for <lb />
schools in the county. The <lb />
white pays school taxes <lb />
amounting and there weal <lb />
Secretary for his inestimable aid in I doing well. About daylight <lb />
presiding at the desk, to Prof. Duck- i cue went to bis room ho was <lb />
With the people Green-1 et for the use of I is organ, black- dead. failure brought <lb />
rule and especially the ladies. The beard, maps and other implements, j about by the condition his <lb />
with you to Mrs. Ada Cherry the inter- system, duo to the the <lb />
of sweet music, to Revs. R. j whiskey and morphine he bad <lb />
II. John and A. Hunter for con- was doubtless tho cause his <lb />
dueling the opening exercise, lo death. <lb />
E. G. for his presence ; cue his pockets was a piece <lb />
services rendered to Miss of paper upon which was <lb />
Smith for her splendid es- n n <lb />
wit and lecture. <lb />
2nd inasmuch as <lb />
Plot. E- A. Alderman has labored <lb />
so faithfully, so promptly, so seal- <lb />
for our improvement the <lb />
-------j u-t received <lb />
ASS'S <lb />
Tuesday night after the essay by <lb />
other <lb />
A. Adams. <lb />
am Pitt county, X. This <lb />
was an envelop that had no <lb />
wilting i. if tho man had died <lb />
that night tho would have, in- <lb />
that it was a deliberate <lb />
Put when <lb />
Smith, and other and or the counts do ease I suicide, when <lb />
were over, at the our most about the next day, <lb />
of Maj. Henry Harding, John ,, lie has sown seed fruits; when he was perfectly rational, <lb />
Maj. E. Barrel and we to j said <lb />
the Teachers Association was I h efforts have <lb />
that <lb />
Maj. IS. ;. was a into h <lb />
elected temporary chairman and W. <lb />
F. Hauling temporary secretary. <lb />
On motion of John Duckett, <lb />
Supt. Harding proceeded to take <lb />
the names of all those, who wished <lb />
to become members of <lb />
On notion o Prof. John <lb />
Miss Maggie Smith. Maj. <lb />
Henry Harding, Nannie Cox. <lb />
spent the white schools <lb />
; showing that the whites used all Fleming and Mr. <lb />
L . tax and two-thirds were appointed a committee <lb />
several that are not often on and ten <lb />
the following For <lb />
John Duckett <lb />
one-third White poll tax goes <lb />
to the schools. Later in talk <lb />
privately with Prof. <lb />
about these figures he told his <lb />
into matters in this <lb />
disclosed the fact that last <lb />
r in the way of fail- <lb />
to list and emigration among <lb />
mentioned in a and made <lb />
the law upon them very plain. His <lb />
legal knowledge is confined to no <lb />
small limit. <lb />
Did you hour tin- report from <lb />
the elections in Iowa and New <lb />
York t Almost every town and <lb />
city in both States elected Demo- <lb />
mayor and We <lb />
welcome Iowa as a permanent ad- <lb />
to the Democratic fold. <lb />
Other States will ere Ion follow <lb />
her example in throwing off the <lb />
fetters of corruption and villainy <lb />
which have bound them for these <lb />
many <lb />
coil <lb />
the the county i about <lb />
ought to ha been pawl, <lb />
Greenville College; Vice Presidents, <lb />
Z. D. of Bethel; E. <lb />
Newborn, Farmville; W. F. Hard- <lb />
Greenville, Hiss Annie <lb />
Miss Maggie <lb />
Smith, Cox wile; Miss Keel, <lb />
Nan- <lb />
Cox, Miss <lb />
I Smith, Miss Annie ill, <lb />
Mrs. Dr. <lb />
Ferry. Hard <lb />
This report was <lb />
Of nil the administrations which <lb />
these United States have ever had, <lb />
that of Mr. Harrison bears the dis- <lb />
of being the silliest and <lb />
weakest. It is a burlesque on all <lb />
the administrators that have <lb />
ceded it, and will be a source of <lb />
amusement to all that shall follow- <lb />
after. It haunt got brains <lb />
behind it to do any good, and for- <lb />
not enough do any <lb />
A weak, helpless thing <lb />
we can but pity it. while others <lb />
may laugh at it. <lb />
The other day Mr. H. F. <lb />
brought the half <lb />
of a newspaper that is over <lb />
years old. It is the New YorK <lb />
Morning dated November 7th, <lb />
1783, and was published every <lb />
and Friday. This paper <lb />
contained General Washington's <lb />
farewell orders to the armies of <lb />
United States, issued the 2nd of <lb />
November, 1783. The paper is <lb />
in old time type the letter <lb />
being principally used in place <lb />
of Mr. Harriss says some <lb />
and lad Ibis amount been j On motion <lb />
would have paid early Miss Maggie Smith, Misses Lucy <lb />
every dollar that is spent on him tor <lb />
schooling in this county. <lb />
closer communion with each other <lb />
we feel even before we dis- <lb />
band, consequently we <lb />
ling to separate without <lb />
our debt of gratitude. May his <lb />
life be long and happy may he <lb />
always pleasure and encourage- <lb />
helping others to teach the <lb />
young idea how to shoot, and may <lb />
lie have many happy repetitions of <lb />
his sojourn in Greenville. <lb />
The above report was unanimous <lb />
adopted. <lb />
The President appointed Mr. <lb />
V. Harding, Misses Smith, <lb />
and Parker <lb />
a committee to arrange a <lb />
next and report to the <lb />
teachers of the Association through <lb />
the columns of <lb />
On motion of Maggie Smith <lb />
the Association to meet <lb />
first Saturday in May <lb />
John <lb />
W. Sec. pro. <lb />
be <lb />
he always carried his <lb />
name and address in his pocket. <lb />
That he was in the habit of getting <lb />
drunk and people some limes took <lb />
him for a tramp. case anything <lb />
should to him he wanted to <lb />
have something about him by which <lb />
he might be Identified so <lb />
could be with. He <lb />
usually carried a small note book, <lb />
but he got drunk and lost it. lie <lb />
then wrote his piece <lb />
paper question. This he said he <lb />
did Friday or Saturday before. <lb />
He disclaimed any intention of kill- <lb />
himself and said he did not <lb />
want to die. He thanked the doc- <lb />
tors others who had worked so <lb />
will be sold----- <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
or at reasonable terms lime <lb />
proved security. bought my stock for <lb />
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb />
anyone. Give me a call. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
STILL TO THE FRONT I <lb />
J. D. Williamson, <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Has Moved to One Door North Court House. <lb />
ran of <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory i well Hie best put up nothing <lb />
work. keep up with the times and vies. <lb />
Best material Used in all work. All styles o, Spring are 11-e you can from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Earn Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep on hand a full ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the year round, which will sell AS AS <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding for past favor hope <lb />
merit a continuance of the name. <lb />
R A. TAFT, <lb />
i Wishes to inform his friends and the generally that he has <lb />
I bought out establishment of T. K. Cherry, and with <lb />
j new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb />
PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES <lb />
At prices fully in keeping with, the haul times. keep Flour, <lb />
Meal, Laid, Molasses Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery. <lb />
Glassware, Tobacco, Snuff, <lb />
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market. <lb />
You are invited to call. Remember the place, at Cherry's stand. <lb />
TAFT, <lb />
KT. O <lb />
J. B. CHERRY <lb />
J. If. <lb />
J. Q. <lb />
Buggy Failure <lb />
At Flanagan's Old Stand. <lb />
Having failed to sell Buggies at our <lb />
own prices we arc now prepared <lb />
------in sell them------ <lb />
A Great Deal Lower, <lb />
for cash or on time. <lb />
manufacture all kinds of vehicles <lb />
and can sell yon a good <lb />
BUGGY OH <lb />
At utmost your own price. Harness <lb />
sold proportionately low. All kinds <lb />
of repairing promptly and neatly <lb />
done. <lb />
CHERRY CO. <lb />
Have again come to your and solicit your patronage <lb />
do not claim that we have the largest and stock east of the <lb />
Mountains, but we say that we are to the front <lb />
--------with a specially selected line <lb />
Suited to the want of a large of customers. in full sympathy with <lb />
the hard times and can and will make low cash prices to all who favor us with <lb />
their patronage. Look down this column and see <lb />
I are better prepared than ever before to serve <lb />
I a line of <lb />
If we interest yon. We <lb />
you. We have stock to-day <lb />
Thanking the public for past lib-nil <lb />
we hope by fair dealings <lb />
save his said i and good work to merit a continuance <lb />
of your favors. <lb />
Greenville Carriage Works, <lb />
PROPS. <lb />
Greenville, X. -March <lb />
Dead Among Strangers. <lb />
Got. vis made n ch <lb />
after Prof. Alderman and <lb />
Other things In; <lb />
to see the school North Ohio- <lb />
Una twice as as it now is, then <lb />
there would be such improvement <lb />
our schools that everybody would <lb />
be glad that the taxes were higher. <lb />
It is well for Speaker Heed to <lb />
read his title clear, while he can. <lb />
He knows full well that the day of <lb />
Radical and lawlessness <lb />
will he of short duration. The <lb />
people of this country will teach <lb />
these impudent rascals a lesson <lb />
that they will not soon <lb />
November be a sad month for <lb />
for the Republican party. <lb />
An <lb />
of the <lb />
Vary <lb />
C. L. Tyson O. L. Joy <lb />
Were appointed a , Hand of <lb />
Constitution and <lb />
to report at next meet <lb />
On motion of Henry Harding j Henderson Gold Leaf <lb />
the Association to meet <lb />
Friday March 7th at o'clock. <lb />
Temp. Secretary. <lb />
7th. <lb />
The Teachers Association was <lb />
to order at o'clock as per <lb />
adjournment. The President called <lb />
lie hoped some day to be to <lb />
show his appreciation of what they <lb />
bad done tor him. He bad often <lb />
taken large quantities of morphine <lb />
and could stand a great deal of it. <lb />
He took it to quiet his nerves <lb />
et sleep and ease. This is why <lb />
he took the morphine he did Wed- <lb />
lie had in tins <lb />
once before Dr. Charles <lb />
Greenville, got him <lb />
out as he expressed. <lb />
Frank A. Bishop knew the <lb />
man and recognized as as <lb />
he Went into I lie room. He was fa- <lb />
with his knew <lb />
what sort character ho was. The <lb />
love liquor was bis chief fault. <lb />
He good and could <lb />
have done well but tor drink. His <lb />
county, it <lb />
train and stopped at the <lb />
House. It was evident that he had <lb />
been drinking was apparently <lb />
just recovering the effects of a <lb />
the report of the Committee Balances. Next morning he did not <lb />
Constitution and By which j get up to breakfast but later <lb />
was as follows committee the went to a drug store <lb />
appointed to a Constitution to purchase some morphine, <lb />
By Laws Tor the Pitt County He had here before and had <lb />
Teachers Association do recommend I obtained the drug at the same <lb />
the adoption the Constitution and I place. lie ho had been in <lb />
of the North Carolina j habit of taking it, that he was ad- <lb />
Teachers which is as dieted to strong drink and a victim <lb />
to the morphine habit, and that he <lb />
Article organization knew how to handle it. So when <lb />
shall be known as asked for the morphine last <lb />
No.------ of Pitt Wednesday he got it, buying <lb />
North I t grains, lie did appear to <lb />
Tuesday night of last week John <lb />
A. Adams, a machinist by trade,, , <lb />
whose home was Greenville, Pitt relatives are good people, he <lb />
in on the cW In Green- <lb />
A Lady's Perfect Companion. prime object shall be under the Influence liquor at <lb />
hook by Dr. John II. Dye, be social acquaintance, and enjoy- the time but immediately to a <lb />
one of New York's most skillful broader general saloon and got some whiskey. It is <lb />
pain is not necessary ion beat methods o known that, ho <lb />
-ulna. an., practical aid j- <lb />
dearly that any may good schools for our in t n <lb />
come a mother without suffering any teachers and good teachers for Ibo . <lb />
pain whatever, it also tells how to over of our county, united <lb />
come and prevent morning sicklies and <lb />
elite whose husband is a successful <lb />
is held <lb />
esteem community. He was <lb />
notified by telegraph of what had <lb />
happened instructed <lb />
Mr- Bishop to have Mr. de- <lb />
send the bill <lb />
costs to him and he would pay it. <lb />
He wrote bit-el that his wife is in <lb />
dedicate health be was afraid if <lb />
the her father were car- <lb />
home the might prove <lb />
lo Deceased was <lb />
years old, was a native of <lb />
Charles county, Mil., but had been <lb />
living in this State years. <lb />
effort towards progressive <lb />
everywhere as the true private of our schools inter- <lb />
one carried the paper to his shop companion. Cut this it will save , est h public and private tho <lb />
wrapped around a pair of shoes i of such plans for <lb />
and lie tore <lb />
brought <lb />
mm <lb />
but tho part j <lb />
I no <lb />
the <lb />
6-S <lb />
that ho took at least two <lb />
later, the morphine <lb />
me be took a <lb />
drink of whiskey. When asked <lb />
what it was, it being the original j <lb />
not lie, he replied that- it was <lb />
Alter this he seems to <lb />
lost sight of until about <lb />
o'clock p. in., when he was found <lb />
his room be was stopping, <lb />
at dying condition. He was undress- <lb />
ed, 1.5 across the bed, Mr. <lb />
was called to <lb />
LIVERY SALE AND FEED <lb />
I have opened at the stables formerly <lb />
occupied by Dr. J. G. James. <lb />
and will keep a Hue Hue of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
I have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb />
the livery and suit the most <lb />
I will run in connection a <lb />
AGE BUSINESS, solicit a share of <lb />
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
Mow is the Time <lb />
RE <lb />
son Davis. Family Bibles. in <lb />
the In I am <lb />
prepared to lake orders for these <lb />
rood hooks, which should lie hi the <lb />
home of every parson. shall be glad <lb />
to take orders from all who desire to <lb />
have any one of these books. Orders <lb />
my father's office, Col. a. Sugg, <lb />
or addressed to will have prompt at- <lb />
Charlie R. Sugg, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Dress Goods and Trimmings, and Calicoes. Salines <lb />
i and Piece Goods and Cashmeres for Men's and Hoy's Soils. Homespuns, <lb />
Sheetings, Bleached and Unbleached Flannels and Bed Ticking. <lb />
The Tar River Transportation <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
j. is. <lb />
Greenville,<lb />
Boots and Shoes. <lb />
For Men. Women. Boys. Misses and Children, a price that will the poor to <lb />
rejoice, the hearts of all will be made glad who buy Boots and Shoes from us, <lb />
why because we sell low and the money's worth. A full line of Notions, <lb />
and Goods that win delight the hearts of the and old. <lb />
BATS and CAPS for men, boys and children. II BE, in line <lb />
you a stock as complete as the farmer or mechanic wish. We make a specialty <lb />
Nails and guarantee them to be the best made. <lb />
Groceries. <lb />
S. <lb />
Tarboro, Gen <lb />
F. Jokes, <lb />
The People's Line for travel <lb />
River <lb />
The Steamer the finest <lb />
and quickest boat on the river <lb />
thoroughly repaired, <lb />
specially for the comfort, c- <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. I <lb />
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
A first-class Table furnished with th <lb />
bet the market <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at o'clock, A. M. <lb />
heaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
Which are selling at rock bottom prices, not we are force to do BO <lb />
but we take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can we interest you here <lb />
if so come in and examine our Stock of Sugar, Molasses. Coffee, Tom Soaps, both <lb />
Toilet and Lye. Matches, Starch, Meats of different kinds, Flour <lb />
which we arc now buying from first hands and can save you money if you call and <lb />
examine before bin elsewhere, Tobacco and Snuff. <lb />
Headquarters for Furniture. <lb />
Of which we carry a line not to be excelled in this market, such as <lb />
Bureaus. Double Single Bedstead, tables. Bed Springs and <lb />
Mattresses, Children's Cradles Beds, Chairs different kinds and varieties, <lb />
all to suit hard times and short crops. Anything that you want In this line if <lb />
have not got It stock we will make a special order for you, as we have <lb />
from several of the best furniture in the States and guarantee sat- <lb />
as to prices. Wood and Willow ware. Crockery, Glassware, Lamps, Bar- <lb />
and Cart Saddles. . <lb />
given to <lb />
r v I. J. agent <lb />
C Greenville. N. O<lb />
marks <lb />
With j-our In m <lb />
I W <lb />
Valises and Traveling Bags, <lb />
Life is too short to keep telling what we have and can do, But wishing <lb />
yon all health and prosperity and giving to every man. woman child who comes <lb />
to Greenville a cordial invitation to come in and examine our stock, <lb />
We remain yours to serve <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO., <lb />
Greenville, N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018979_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
EASTERN <lb />
N. C <lb />
1890. 1890. <lb />
Spring <lb />
PEKING <lb />
Personal- -.-- <lb />
Br. l. Cherry is very <lb />
Dr T. Paul, Aurora, is vis- <lb />
in <lb />
I A. Sugg MB been quite sick <lb />
daring week, . <lb />
A. will preach in <lb />
Washington tomorrow night. <lb />
King is visiting in <lb />
Mount. . <lb />
Con on <lb />
Changeable wen r. <lb />
Bay your shirts of ft Man <lb />
lord. <lb />
is in session. <lb />
Mr. II. T. King of the Tarboro <lb />
is in town week. <lb />
-Coldest Day, <lb />
Warren says that last <lb />
Sunday was the coldest day be re- <lb />
members to have seen in <lb />
March. It was freezing day in <lb />
Hie degrees the <lb />
maximum height of the <lb />
The temperature was at. <lb />
o'clock Saturday night, and <lb />
i Sunday a Tall <lb />
degrees in hours. <lb />
Rev. A. <lb />
Der, M. Ferry CA, Sow K f t i Scotia <lb />
Garden Seed at the Old Brick Store. v .,. <lb />
ML. <lb />
M. Ii. LANG, <lb />
ASSISTED <lb />
MRS. M. M. NELSON, <lb />
ARK NOW IN NORTHERN <lb />
MARKETS MAKING <lb />
SELECTIONS FOR <lb />
STOCK. <lb />
have been this <lb />
section. <lb />
One dollar buys a Solid Leather <lb />
Ladies Shoe at J. Cherry Co's. <lb />
Three new pupils at In- <lb />
Monday. <lb />
are the 8th <lb />
wonder the world on low prices. <lb />
The cry the crop being <lb />
killed i abroad in the land- <lb />
Hunter D. <lb />
A little daughter Mr. C C. Blond <lb />
of township, died <lb />
Mr. II. Johnston, of Bethel, is <lb />
among the visiting attorneys at Court <lb />
I his week. <lb />
West. <lb />
The town authorities had <lb />
bad looking trees the vicinity of <lb />
Five Point cut down last week. <lb />
One citizen living down that way <lb />
bad moved in yard <lb />
lo make room fur it sidewalk <lb />
Avenue, end last <lb />
week put his fence out on the side- <lb />
walk gain because he was Hot <lb />
consulted about cutting down one <lb />
of i he I recs. <lb />
Two lo <lb />
Yesterday <lb />
We made an but Week in re- <lb />
to the of the <lb />
quarterly meeting --a tern <lb />
dist will be <lb />
next Saturday, the <lb />
meeting of. . . Church <lb />
j will be the day r. Sunday. <lb />
Rev. A. EX pastor <lb />
announce I I <lb />
day night as his subject for to-night I <lb />
This is ; <lb />
an important matter for Christian <lb />
people All arc invited to hear. On I <lb />
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb />
Sunday morning next he will preach <lb />
on the parable of the sower, using as <lb />
text Luke heed there- <lb />
fore <lb />
IV <lb />
text Luke heed there- fl <lb />
fore ho JO parable i <lb />
leach.-s great and truths Xii II <lb />
for all. S m <lb />
-DEALERS <lb />
Mr. M. R. Lang returned Monday <lb />
from his purchasing tour to <lb />
the Northern cities. <lb />
had departed very materially from <lb />
the usual order. It was what it call- <lb />
ed a soft shell Inn egg and in size <lb />
Mrs. A. Hunter accompanied j was as large as a goose egg. Inside <lb />
Arrived on the Bern by little Elsie and Miss Anna Mm-j the .-oft shell was a perfectly formed <lb />
Milk Biscuit at the Brick Store. <lb />
A very pleasant and Instructive <lb />
feature has been introduced in the <lb />
Methodist clinch at Wednesday even <lb />
services. The Pastor, Rev. <lb />
Iv. I. John takes as his subject the <lb />
showed us an egg that its make up Sunday School lesson for the coming <lb />
Sunday, and after making a talk <lb />
Mr. W. A. Barrett <lb />
We snail always <lb />
J. H. Johnston, Executor of <lb />
Rives has a notice to creditors in <lb />
this paper. <lb />
One dollar buys a Whole Stock <lb />
Shoe at J. Cherry Co's <lb />
Otter's Guano lakes the lead as a <lb />
fertilizer, it is sold ;. <lb />
E Harris. <lb />
raw left last. on a visit <lb />
Cory. <lb />
Judge S. H. Brown, of Washing- <lb />
ton, accompanied by Mrs. Brown, <lb />
spent Friday night <lb />
were for Raleigh. <lb />
I egg of about the usual with the <lb />
regulation hard shell on it. Between <lb />
these two sheik was considerable of <lb />
the white but no yolk. Pitt <lb />
county hens easily take the prize for <lb />
b complete stock <lb />
Shoddy. <lb />
First lass <lb />
I be glad lo my old friends and customers come <lb />
see tis, and assure that we can soil goods <lb />
to <lb />
S. Lloyd, specialist, is in <lb />
upon the subject is discussed by <lb />
teachers and officers of the <lb />
and by others who desire a <lb />
word upon it. This makes the <lb />
vice interesting. r; .,. . i i i i . . i . <lb />
Wive us a trial and e convinced the way to buy goods is for <lb />
S. <lb />
X. C . January. <lb />
At o'clock- <lb />
the evening of the 12th inst., at <lb />
the residence of Mr. J. T. Williams, <lb />
A. ANDREWS, <lb />
j, Dealer in <lb />
AID <lb />
GREENVILLE. N C. <lb />
Ha- iii and to arrive <lb />
Car Load Seed Gate. <lb />
Oar Load Rib Side Meat. <lb />
Car Load St. Louis Flour, in all <lb />
grades. <lb />
Heavy -Mess Pork. <lb />
Sugar. <lb />
Sugar. <lb />
Gail Ax all <lb />
kinds. <lb />
Hold Mills <lb />
Polo Rico Molasses. <lb />
II <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Gross Matches. <lb />
Also full line Baking <lb />
Starch, Tobacco, Cake. <lb />
Candies, Canned <lb />
Paper, Paper Sacks, <lb />
Special prices given to the wholesale <lb />
trade on large quantities of the above <lb />
rood-. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS. <lb />
Belie <lb />
and take a <lb />
look at those Shoes at A- M mi- <lb />
lord's. <lb />
Prof. Alderman is conducting a <lb />
Institute in Washington <lb />
tins week. <lb />
Have you seen those cheap <lb />
goods it <lb />
TO T I <lb />
o Ladies I <lb />
WE WILL SAY MRS. <lb />
SON ASSURES THEN OF A <lb />
STOCK OF <lb />
DRESS GOODS. TRIM- <lb />
MINOS FAN- <lb />
CY GOODS. <lb />
HAVING <lb />
LARGE <lb />
WITH <lb />
THE REST TRADE <lb />
OF THE WE <lb />
DO NOT HESITATE TO <lb />
SAY THAT MRS. <lb />
WILL SELECT THE LARGEST <lb />
AND MOST ATTRACTIVE K <lb />
EVER SHOWN IN <lb />
town this week and has an office at <lb />
the King House. His practice is <lb />
limited to diseases of the eye, cir <lb />
nose ail throat. <lb />
Mr. T. R. Latham, a brother of Sir <lb />
J. M. Latham, in the Hardware <lb />
here, and Air. J. Gardner, <lb />
both Wayne county, are visiting <lb />
j Mr. M. Latham in this place. <lb />
Rt. Rev. A. A made a <lb />
visit S;. Paul's lurch. Greenville <lb />
The crowd ii town in attendance fast Sunday, preaching both morn- <lb />
upon Court ha- been very large ling and evening. At morning <lb />
ibis week. persons were confirmed. <lb />
The of bread I eyer ate <lb />
was made of Point Lace Floor, at was a very impressive <lb />
the Stoic. no- <lb />
The saw mill near Mr. W. Fleming left <lb />
opened up work and is tilling this county for one of the Stales <lb />
orders lumber. <lb />
bushels Sued Potatoes, <lb />
varieties, cheap, at the Old III <lb />
Stoic. <lb />
i cannot wen no u. us h. <lb />
Cream and fresh milk sale -I can I never , to nil, and bearing such evidences <lb />
Mrs. C. Lamer. a dollar ton more cause in snow, but integrity as to win the esteem <lb />
in the i as a bell Sun- all his acquaintances. <lb />
day morning and took away the The couple many hand <lb />
Solicitor is sick at n,.;,,,;,. his usual The and bridal presents. <lb />
his home in s week. has been right sharp since l In dotting them down we <lb />
and could be to prosecute for Saturday, though spring will likely noticed the following <lb />
the State this term ,.,,. ,.,,. Fair waters. Mi and Mrs. <lb />
Cap;. Goldsboro <lb />
is in his stead. The Captain <lb />
is by no means a now man in serving On Monday. Mr. the <lb />
in this capacity, having once filled showed us a proof of the <lb />
photograph o the Pitt teach- <lb />
; Jurors. <lb />
The following compose the Jurors <lb />
at this term of Pitt Superior Court ; <lb />
II. Williams, <lb />
Foreman, Samuel Johnson, Clayton <lb />
J. Ruck, Joseph <lb />
J. Baker, G. T. Allen, Bryant <lb />
II. Joel A. Ward, <lb />
W. F. f. L. W. K. <lb />
Alston Amos <lb />
T. L. Moore, J. <lb />
March <lb />
W. Mouse, fl. C. <lb />
Moses Joyner, J. o. <lb />
tor, A. . <lb />
J R. Warren, I. C. J. <lb />
Smith. K. S. Parker. C. Barney. , <lb />
I favorite with all our people, her <lb />
SnOT. lovable disposition and sweet, gen- <lb />
Saturday made a strong effort to manner endearing her to every <lb />
be a Host of The groom has resided <lb />
and forenoon it rained bat clear- over a year. <lb />
in this town, his beautiful <lb />
charming daughter Miss . , <lb />
Williams, happily married to <lb />
Mr. W. F. the handsome and <lb />
popular Foreman of the <lb />
Rev. A. D. Hunter, <lb />
of the baptist church, <lb />
mating. It was Ids <lb />
in Greenville, and the beauty and <lb />
the ceremony as per- <lb />
formed by bun was very impressive, j <lb />
A large number friends <lb />
the happy were present <lb />
to w tee and many <lb />
were the well-wishes extended <lb />
the reception which <lb />
followed. The bride is general <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
Son's Old Stand. <lb />
-------Having purchased Hie entire stock <lb />
A few days ago we re- so bright in the afternoon and the writer Q <lb />
a letter from him at Port pretty weather. However j ft-els a In all of into V <lb />
Worth Texas that It bail again and was raining j desired. life here has <lb />
be sent him there as be and by it was . been that of a gentleman. <lb />
I cannot well do without it. He ad- with wind enough to With the highest courtesy I <lb />
Engines and Boilers, <lb />
All sizes and -Ivies used. <lb />
MILLS, <lb />
Circular and Shingle Saws, <lb />
and Leather Belting, <lb />
Shafting, Pulleys, Arc, <lb />
In In the machine Hue. <lb />
represent the standard <lb />
pis the land and can sell as low as <lb />
the low st on heller terms. <lb />
rite for terms and . <lb />
U. K. Manager <lb />
Washington, N. C. <lb />
R C <lb />
P C <lb />
e c c <lb />
N. C. <lb />
I. H. <lb />
in Co. <lb />
Everybody seems lo be as <lb />
a- an the of the <lb />
railroad celebration. <lb />
and <lb />
To ii <lb />
EXPERIENCE <lb />
HAS Fill MIL LANG A<lb />
W II A L- <lb />
WAYS <lb />
HIM TO BIT THE <lb />
THE BRIGHT <lb />
STYLES AND THE <lb />
CORRECT STYLES. <lb />
WITH THIS IN <lb />
VIEW WE ASSURE <lb />
OF It GENTLEMEN <lb />
OF AN <lb />
LY ATTRACTIVE <lb />
DISPLAY IN CLOTHING, HATS, <lb />
FOOTWEAR FURNISHINGS, -C. <lb />
Blank Deeds. <lb />
Liens tale at this <lb />
new made on <lb />
our list the last two <lb />
weeks, room for others. . <lb />
-V nice line of spring Clothing just <lb />
received by Higgs k <lb />
can sell <lb />
you good at a pack. <lb />
A have the <lb />
hue or Gents goods <lb />
in town <lb />
The little cold snap did not kill <lb />
up the and the pretty weather <lb />
has caused some of them to come out. <lb />
no or <lb />
crops you see G. E. <lb />
He handles the best bran is. <lb />
It would add to tin. <lb />
appearance of <lb />
the position for a number of years. <lb />
Gee. Smith, engineer on <lb />
Scotland Neck and Greenville road. <lb />
could not make his run yesterday, <lb />
having to appear as a witness at <lb />
Conn. lie put another man in charge <lb />
this for the day nod the <lb />
train went jest the same, but we will <lb />
go a Wager that the clever Captain <lb />
was badly missed from post. <lb />
Air. Elliott. President, and Mr. <lb />
Walters, Vice President, the At- <lb />
Coast Line, passed through <lb />
Greenville last Wednesday, stopping <lb />
a short while in town. They came <lb />
through the country from <lb />
Bel of rugs, Greene. <lb />
Two tidies and a lovely cushion <lb />
; with and <lb />
ranged With pins, Mrs. Annie <lb />
Lurch, of <lb />
Linen table one <lb />
, dozen napkins to match. G. L. lied- <lb />
Damask table and napkins, <lb />
Alex <lb />
Hand painted crescent watch <lb />
Of Little, House w are determined to dispose of them <lb />
VERY LOW PRICES. <lb />
We do not propose lo sell coal or below c by buying <lb />
at a discount we can afford to sail prices that will astonish <lb />
you. <lb />
This is no See us before Inlying. <lb />
Bros., <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
AMI <lb />
.-.-. <lb />
taken during the session of the <lb />
Institute, week before lost. The <lb />
picture is a splendid one and shows <lb />
up all the faces remarkably well far <lb />
a group of such size. In fact the <lb />
of each one i; vi good. <lb />
The photograph will be a splendid <lb />
souvenir of the Institute, and we sup- <lb />
pose lucre was a teacher pres- <lb />
but who will purchase one. The <lb />
are well worth what he for . set <lb />
i T. E. <lb />
Large stand lamp, C. L. Which- <lb />
ft <lb />
Next door to<lb />
ft <lb />
VA. <lb />
Beautiful steel engraving, Misses <lb />
m lease and Forbes. <lb />
tun <lb />
.-bowed us a view he bad taken of <lb />
Evans street while the snow was on <lb />
the buildings. Ii was beautiful. <lb />
loves, Miss <lb />
things if the Court House square was <lb />
enclosed and the beau- met here by a special <lb />
train. We hear that their visit to <lb />
Washington was to complete <lb />
for running a branch <lb />
road from Greenville to Washington. <lb />
Firing n boom wood please. <lb />
TO ILL I <lb />
o All I <lb />
WHILE TWO ARE <lb />
SELECTING LARGE STOCKS <lb />
ALEX AND PAT <lb />
ARE GIVING <lb />
M EN DO IS BAR- <lb />
GAINS TO <lb />
CLEAR <lb />
T THE <lb />
REMAINDER <lb />
OF FALL <lb />
GOODS AND MAKE <lb />
ROOM FOR NEW ONES. <lb />
COME AND SOME <lb />
OF THE MANY BARGAINS WE <lb />
ARE OFFERING BEFORE THEY <lb />
ARE ALL OF. <lb />
lb for Sweet Scotch <lb />
MM lb sold m Pitt Co., which <lb />
is a of its superiority, at <lb />
the Stoat. <lb />
The i pa rein en; on the corner <lb />
of the Bernard property was . n.-ti v <lb />
ed last week. It is a good improve- <lb />
For SI cash you can get the <lb />
Loin until the cud <lb />
UM n lib an almanac the year <lb />
thrown in. <lb />
W. H. ha.- a notice <lb />
in this paper his with- <lb />
the Greenville Carriage <lb />
Works. <lb />
Ibid- <lb />
Ms. <lb />
Ray <lb />
Mrs. . <lb />
hey are coming right along with <lb />
The next crop has been injured by <lb />
I be cold weather. <lb />
Some of Earner tell us they <lb />
believe the cold snap will do much <lb />
W. L. Brown has succeeded Mr. J. <lb />
M. in the insurance business. <lb />
Sec card in this paper. <lb />
large Bed Sow. mark It is a blessing that traps I <lb />
crop off right ear. in the kit. to Court have A <lb />
pay to <lb />
her recovery. E. O. <lb />
The sidewalk bridge over the sewer <lb />
that crosses has some <lb />
dangerous holes it that ought to <lb />
be repaired. <lb />
Position Wasted.-A man of <lb />
eight years experience <lb />
become things of the past. <lb />
Work progresses rapidly on the <lb />
church at Falkland. It <lb />
is expected to be for use in <lb />
Soil. <lb />
Of Greenville Public <lb />
the month ending March 14th. <lb />
1st Anderson. Fan- <lb />
j Blow. Stocks, Jimmie <lb />
I Anderson. Willie <lb />
Jesse Marlowe, Brace Sugg, <lb />
Milton While. <lb />
; Brown. Alice <lb />
i Galloway, Ella Proctor, Skin <lb />
Charley Honey, Charley <lb />
Boyd, Blanch <lb />
Sadie Harding, Mary <lb />
I Collie Florence <lb />
Harris. He ; <lb />
Sheppard. Maggie Tyson, Hut-tie <lb />
Smith, Haskett, Tyson, j J. C. Tyson. <lb />
Daniel. Bowl and pitcher, Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
Tyson, Edward Flanagan, W. T. Godwin. <lb />
Jarvis. Pair of glass fruit J. <lb />
Woolen and L. Harris. <lb />
Linen towels, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley <lb />
Brown. <lb />
Monogram sofa pillow, Mrs. E. A. <lb />
aid. <lb />
Pair kid <lb />
Silver butler disk, Mr. and <lb />
W. G. Lang, of <lb />
Set of and <lb />
Tyson. <lb />
Set of silver forks, Mr. an I <lb />
It. A. Tyson. <lb />
Set of silver spoons, Miss Belie <lb />
Greene. <lb />
Silver butter knife, Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
C. D. <lb />
Beautiful plush Mrs. <lb />
A. Buster. <lb />
table cloth and napkins. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. White. <lb />
C. Glenn. have opened a Grocery Store and <lb />
-------will keep on band a fine line of <lb />
m. H, <lb />
Candies, Cracker, Tobacco, Apples, <lb />
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything usually kept in a <lb />
first-class grocery store, us well as Tinware, Crook Wood and j <lb />
Willow Ware, Call and see us. Goods delivered <lb />
where in town. <lb />
j. J. CHEERY, Greenville, S. C. <lb />
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb />
We hare had many years ex- <lb />
at the and are <lb />
prepared to handle to <lb />
advantage of <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
hands will receive prompt and <lb />
s. <lb />
ft Mi <lb />
-WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICE ASSORTMENT OF<lb />
.-. <lb />
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb />
Says there is never any . Ins giving yon ii e satisfaction <lb />
if you him a when needing goods in line. <lb />
Misses keeps Goods; Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods He also <lb />
and Sheppard. keeps the bes, Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the <lb />
Silver butter Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
Thirty emigrated from <lb />
this section last Thursday, and it <lb />
per job a position took two to get that many <lb />
as compositor. Strictly temperate, off. <lb />
Address <lb />
C. <lb />
The needs a few <lb />
loads of wood now. Oar wood pay- <lb />
subscribers can bring on <lb />
Can and <lb />
The essay read by Miss Maggie <lb />
Smith before Institute <lb />
will be found on the first this <lb />
paper. <lb />
The people of have re- <lb />
been imposed up <lb />
on. Little more than two weeks ago <lb />
a man by the name of Lucas i . . . . . . . <lb />
his wife came here soliciting aid.; f stand, little vis, <lb />
represented that they from ; <lb />
near Bethel, and that their house had I <lb />
burned down a few days before in <lb />
which they possessed was <lb />
that they had six children; . <lb />
Who wire without food and clothing. . . <lb />
wile went so tar as to say that I <lb />
the she had on had been Jg , <lb />
loaned her a It was a . White and <lb />
pitiful talc had fixed and I I Randolph <lb />
Grocer, and Fruiterer. <lb />
TO <lb />
Silver bowl, baud-, <lb />
some design, Mr. and Mrs. S. j <lb />
Bawls. <lb />
Fall set china toilet, painted, Mr. <lb />
MERCHANT, <lb />
-----AND DEALER IN----- <lb />
i m , i <lb />
Mr. J D. Bock, of told <lb />
Bender are to re- as Monday that had a Jersey <lb />
pairs and stoves ma By the red months old, that weighed <lb />
Stove Co. They are agents for pounds. <lb />
Excelsior Cook Stoves <lb />
and also for Charles Nobles Co's <lb />
lip <lb />
it very much excited the sympathies <lb />
of those before whom it was rehear- <lb />
The people here were very lib- <lb />
their response to the appeal <lb />
help, thinking . the man and wife <lb />
and Miss Florence Williams, J. L. <lb />
and Miss Villa King. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs Burch have made <lb />
I heir home temporarily at <lb />
Macon. We extend hearty best <lb />
Greenville, N.<lb />
-OX- <lb />
celebrated Cook <lb />
Brother Eldridge has failed lo send <lb />
some us the We <lb />
i place reserved for it and want <lb />
it to i-e <lb />
railroad bridge is an <lb />
The stand on the ball in need, and nearly every house- , <lb />
boa in compliments without; hold to which they applied save <lb />
number. A leading citizen of S in way clothing,; Yesterday at the residence of the <lb />
land sends down says provisions, ate , the mer- Miss Mattie <lb />
he wants the paper a on the ; chants helping up the contributions and <lb />
of it. with articles from their stores. j Banner, 14th inst. <lb />
a mention of <lb />
WEDNESDAY <lb />
March <lb />
Latham has recently had that the fact of their being here, and that i <lb />
place, judging from the number portion f his premises adjacent to imposition leaked out. As Ten mouths Ten mouths, <lb />
o there every day If soon as our <lb />
progress. , improvements were made all saw the item they knew <lb />
along route of the road through people of Greenville had been he office is a busy <lb />
town it would add much to the The other Mr. M. G. two papers and do <lb />
of that portion of the town. told us he knew all about Lucas,; lots of job work. <lb />
T , i that he was a first class humbug, that <lb />
to that GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb />
s With the go-ahead spirit that char . neighborhood before Chi Hat <lb />
the place there is no i hf bis cm-j Corrected <lb />
hood of failure in for but prove such a <lb />
. . a worthless that he had to <lb />
A lady became so interested in <lb />
j reading other <lb />
I that she forgot some broad she bail <lb />
cooking and let it burn. <lb />
HOUSE-Will be <lb />
for on 1st. <lb />
Tho lion been nicely fur- <lb />
and ts will re <lb />
every attention. Table <lb />
Both <lb />
regular and transient boarders cm be <lb />
a i. Term moderate. <lb />
M; . . <lb />
tress, <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1675. <lb />
SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb />
and MERCHANTS BUY- <lb />
their supplies will Ibid <lb />
their interest to prices before <lb />
elsewhere. Om stock Is <lb />
in nil its branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
SPICES, TEAS, o. <lb />
TOBACCO <lb />
we buy direct from <lb />
bl you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb />
stock of <lb />
IT R x ES <lb />
always on hand and sold to suit <lb />
the times. Our arc all bought n ml <lb />
-old for therefore, having no <lb />
to run, we sell a close margin. <lb />
lb <lb />
s. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
Greenville. X. C <lb />
. -i<lb />
Ravine associated B. s. <lb />
With in taking we <lb />
Ai ready M the people In <lb />
All notes <lb />
past services have been in <lb />
the hands Mr. n. <lb />
JOHN<lb />
We keep on bind at all time s nice <lb />
stock, of Cases and Caskets nil <lb />
Kinds and can I <lb />
I W,. Have opened for the or .- <lb />
. i a gem .-I-.-. I ,, conveniences and can <lb />
ALL <lb />
Invitation <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
There are several investor <lb />
in this community, and when reports <lb />
from the drawing came in some of <lb />
them were not over elated at getting <lb />
left. <lb />
The limit to the time for collect- <lb />
taxes draws near to a close. In <lb />
a few weeks more the Sheriff will ha <lb />
advertising some lands for sale for <lb />
says the lot has been <lb />
chased and building will commence <lb />
as soon as warm weather arrives. <lb />
by M. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Grocer, <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
ENJOYS <lb />
the method and results <lb />
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is <lb />
refreshing to the taste, and nets <lb />
gently promptly on the Kidney., <lb />
be discharged. Other persons <lb />
that section say Lucas also purported <lb />
to be skilled in tobacco culture and <lb />
The seasons sorely seem-to hi engaged himself to show several of <lb />
changed. During winter had farmers over there about prepare ,., <lb />
spring weather and now in spring we for and cultivating <lb />
co crops, but they soon found <lb />
he was a fraud. There is no truth J Coffee, <lb />
in the story the- told in Greenville Brown <lb />
Mess Pork, <lb />
Bulk Sides. <lb />
Bulk Shoulders, <lb />
Sides, <lb />
Bacon Shoulders, <lb />
10.7. to 11.75 <lb />
to m <lb />
l to <lb />
to i <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
taxes due thereon. <lb />
., . . j arc having winter weather. Three <lb />
The of our neighbor I nows of March <lb />
town. Washington, have passes, an <lb />
ordinance the interment <lb />
of the dead within the corporate <lb />
limits of town after April <lb />
of need from <lb />
laxative juice <lb />
of California figs, combined with <lb />
the medicinal virtues of plants <lb />
known to be most beneficial to <lb />
human system, acts gently, on the <lb />
and <lb />
the system, dispelling <lb />
colds and headaches, and caring <lb />
heavy record for the first spring <lb />
month. One consolation about it is <lb />
that kind of weather cannot last long. <lb />
at this time a sermon on <lb />
dancing would be a very appropriate <lb />
thing. An able one delivered <lb />
Rev. J. L. White, of Durham, has <lb />
been banded for publication <lb />
could not be put- this week. It <lb />
will be published on first page of <lb />
next issue and will be followed the <lb />
week after by a sermon on <lb />
their house getting burned up, <lb />
and they only one child. It is <lb />
evident from the manner in which <lb />
they related their story of that <lb />
Lucas and bis wife are old hands at <lb />
this kind of business. In the men <lb />
we made of it his name <lb />
was printed as but <lb />
Mr. Manning tells us the name is <lb />
Lucas. He also tells as <lb />
that the parties took many the <lb />
things they begged bare to <lb />
Sugar. <lb />
Syrup <lb />
Tobacco, <lb />
Snuff, <lb />
Lard, <lb />
Butter, <lb />
Cheese. <lb />
Meal, <lb />
Com. <lb />
Pearl Inc. <lb />
Bags. <lb />
Star Lye <lb />
Liver and Bowels, cleanses sys- <lb />
effectually, dispels colds, <lb />
and fevers and cures habitual <lb />
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the. <lb />
remedy of its kind ever pro- <lb />
pleasing to the taste and ac- <lb />
to Le prompt in <lb />
its action and beneficial in <lb />
to effects, prepared only from the snort <lb />
healthy agreeable substances, it; <lb />
many excellent qualities commend it <lb />
to all and have made it the <lb />
popular remedy known. <lb />
Syrup of Figs is for sale in <lb />
and bottles by all leading drug- <lb />
gists. Any reliable druggist who <lb />
may not have it on band will pro- <lb />
cure it promptly for any one <lb />
to wishes to try it Do not accept any <lb />
M substitute. <lb />
CALIFORNIA FIB SYRUP CO. <lb />
or. k rm. . r. <lb />
ham <lb />
Money Security. <lb />
solicited and <lb />
promptly. <lb />
GREENVILLE BRANCH <lb />
Urn <lb />
ASSOCIATION. <lb />
services to all who . 7.0 <lb />
m FLANAGAN a <lb />
Mad,<lb />
n. X. <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
M to M <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to SO <lb />
to M <lb />
to <lb />
;. <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN, <lb />
D. V . <lb />
I. A. SUGG, Attorney. <lb />
White, <lb />
High Street. <lb />
Po r h, Va. <lb />
Solicit of Cotton. <lb />
nut. Poultry, and all other <lb />
Mer- <lb />
chants and Farmers Bank, Portsmouth, <lb />
Va, <lb />
I to <lb />
3.40 <lb />
home Loans on conn- <lb />
s veil as town A <lb />
for to a home. <lb />
V. A. <lb />
Skinner. F. G. <lb />
Flanagan I. A. <lb />
II. K. W, King. <lb />
J. <lb />
For information apply to <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, <lb />
Local Agent. <lb />
BRING It CORN TO------ <lb />
Mills <lb />
For Meal. Will grind every <lb />
TUESDAY AND SATURDAY. <lb />
White, <lb />
Greenville, N. O.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018979_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
N. C <lb />
ODD CUSTOMS<lb />
Is better than any soap ; handier, finer, more effective, <lb />
more for the money, and in the form of a powder for <lb />
your convenience Takes, as it were, the fabric in one <lb />
hand, the dirt the other, and lays them <lb />
speaking, washing with little work. As it saves <lb />
the worst of the work, so it saves the worst of the wear. <lb />
It isn't the use of clothes that makes them old before <lb />
their time; it is rubbing and straining, getting the dirt <lb />
out by main strength. For scrubbing, <lb />
washing dishes, windows and glassware, has <lb />
no equal. . <lb />
Over One Million Families Use it. <lb />
Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers are <lb />
ff offering imitations which they claim to be <lb />
ITS FALSE- <lb />
arc not. and besides dangerous. PEARLINE is never peddled, but <lb />
by all good grocers. Ell I I I Y MKS LE- <lb />
WILMINGTON R. <lb />
and Schedule- <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
lie. dally Fast Mail, daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Lt II pm <lb />
Ar Rocky Mount am <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
At Soil ma <lb />
Ar <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt Warsaw <lb />
At Magnolia <lb />
Ax Wilmington <lb />
am <lb />
am I <lb />
no<lb />
ft <lb />
pm am <lb />
Money to Loan. <lb />
ON IMPROVED FARMS, in sums of <lb />
and upwards. Loans are re- j <lb />
payable in small annual <lb />
through a period of live years thus <lb />
Ming the borrower to pay off his <lb />
without exhausting Ills crops <lb />
n one to <lb />
TUCKER MURPHY, <lb />
Greenville. N. <lb />
NO <lb />
dally daily <lb />
am <lb />
No <lb />
Sun. <lb />
am <lb />
am <lb />
re <lb />
II 4- <lb />
pm<lb />
am <lb />
pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Lt Wilmington <lb />
Lt <lb />
Lt <lb />
Ar <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
an <lb />
A Rocky Mount <lb />
tr Tarboro <lb />
T Tarboro <lb />
Ax Weldon <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 2.30 P. M. Sent- i <lb />
land M . <lb />
T. VI. leaves on 7.00 <lb />
A- M. Scotland at A. SI- <lb />
daily except Sunday. <lb />
Tarboro. N via <lb />
A Raleigh It. R. daily Sun- j <lb />
H P M. I I M. <lb />
X P M. I M P M. I <lb />
leave- X C, daily <lb />
except A M. M A <lb />
M. arrive Tarboro, N C, A M. <lb />
Train on Midland X C leaves i <lb />
except COO A M. j <lb />
X O, SO A M. Re-1 <lb />
leaves Smithfield. S C S A M. <lb />
NO. O A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaven Rocky <lb />
at P M, arrives Nashville j <lb />
W Hope P M. Returning <lb />
M. Nashville <lb />
MA M. arrives Rocky Mount II A <lb />
on Clinton leave Warsaw <lb />
Mill lay. at <lb />
II A M Returning have <lb />
tn at A M. and In P. <lb />
a at Warsaw SI <lb />
train on <lb />
We is No. Northbound i <lb />
. a. Sunday. <lb />
Train will stop at <lb />
Magnolia. <lb />
No. makes at <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb />
II Richmond, daily Sim- <lb />
y via Bay Line. <lb />
make close connection for j <lb />
point and <lb />
Mali <lb />
All trains run solid <lb />
and Washington, have <lb />
falser Sleepers attached. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE. <lb />
General <lb />
a. . Supt <lb />
m S. <lb />
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb />
la Effect A. If. <lb />
WeB <lb />
EMORY <lb />
in -inK all <lb />
of the r- <lb />
tn Prof. <lb />
A- Firth Aw. New<lb />
; hi <lb />
I 1.11 .,. <lb />
WANTED an old <lb />
Me urge s. <lb />
Sample fie A tare <lb />
A. t. N. Y. <lb />
ENGLISH <lb />
PILLS. <lb />
Diamond Brand. <lb />
pill <lb />
Km <lb />
m Ur <lb />
BALSAM <lb />
i I In the hair. <lb />
; i r--- <lb />
i .<lb />
. W <lb />
to Lu. <lb />
to sell <lb />
I no <lb />
ulna It <lb />
holds lie <lb />
st <lb />
It is a perfect <lb />
winter <lb />
Mo for <lb />
thought <lb />
in seeking friendship, <lb />
you. Miss <lb />
The proud beauty shook her head and <lb />
the costly diamonds in her ears <lb />
and flashed in the mellow light like <lb />
arctic aurora with the radiant <lb />
dog star for a center, whirling and <lb />
on a jeweled kaleidoscope. The <lb />
sight dazzled the eyes and dazed the <lb />
brain of Marcellus and con- <lb />
fused images of a paradise luminous <lb />
rainbows, shimmering sunsets, glory <lb />
of melting mack eyes, and by <lb />
an intoxicating perfume of musk, <lb />
and essence ore <lb />
his vision. <lb />
Mr. replied. <lb />
thanks <lb />
The young man ventured to bet <lb />
hand. <lb />
he said, in a <lb />
rich baritone tremolo, all the eleven <lb />
months and sixteen days during which <lb />
have enjoyed your acquaintance <lb />
never conducted myself otherwise <lb />
with the respect, have <lb />
have not, Mr. <lb />
have never seemed <lb />
my as it he went on <lb />
anxiously ; stayed later than <lb />
o'clock on ordinary nights nor later than <lb />
o'clock when we were reading Brown- <lb />
or <lb />
think not Mr. <lb />
have seemed to coincide in our <lb />
views of philosophy, the tariff, the <lb />
question, and the <lb />
value of various foods as regards <lb />
persisted the young man, <lb />
while in the matter of dialect stories we <lb />
have always jibed exactly. <lb />
He edged himself a little farther for- <lb />
ward in his chair and <lb />
view of all this. Asphyxia, and <lb />
moved by a resistless passion <lb />
me right along on its <lb />
bosom, I am emboldened to <lb />
-Please say no more, Mr. <lb />
said Miss haughtily. not <lb />
at apprehend the bearing of your re- <lb />
it possible you did not know <lb />
what I was going to say Do you <lb />
tend. Asphyxia he demanded, <lb />
hotly ; you were not encouraging <lb />
you didn't egg me on <lb />
I certainly did not, sir. Such an idea <lb />
never entered my head. I may as well <lb />
tell you, Mr. that my heart is <lb />
not free. The proud heiress of millions <lb />
breathed a tremulous sigh, the haughty <lb />
look faded from her eyes, and her voice <lb />
sank into a dreamy like a dis- <lb />
is going to <lb />
next week to buy me a prince. <lb />
Way in Which Natives Cm It <lb />
The boomerang consists of a stick of <lb />
hard wood about two feet in length, <lb />
with a projection at one end, notched so <lb />
as to receive the butt of a long, slender <lb />
spear. When the is launched at <lb />
any object the stick is retained in the <lb />
hand, and by a dexterous movement <lb />
gives an added impulse to the weapon <lb />
that which a sling imparts to a stone. <lb />
So great is the force given by this con- <lb />
that a spear with <lb />
metal or bone as it is and consisting <lb />
i simply of a shaft of hard, pointed <lb />
thrown by it has been known to <lb />
completely through the body of an <lb />
my at a distance of fifty yards. This <lb />
aid to spear throwing was evidently, <lb />
says the Boston Journal, the result <lb />
applied reasoning by some ancient phi- <lb />
among the black fellows. <lb />
boomerang was probably discovered by <lb />
accident Its shape is almost precisely <lb />
Tl <lb />
Not. <lb />
It strikes the northern observer very <lb />
forcibly, a writer on in <lb />
New York Times, to see a house in course <lb />
of erection and progress on the <lb />
suspended while two men are ripping <lb />
from great logs with a the <lb />
joists for the second floor. And J for <lb />
more than a month I have <lb />
from the horse cars this old-lime sawing <lb />
going on, all construction on the build- <lb />
being meantime arrested In fitting <lb />
up an office for the Equitable life As- <lb />
of the United States, <lb />
which is establishing a branch here, the <lb />
carpenter and cabinet work has all been <lb />
done without the aid of wood-working <lb />
machinery, the rough boards being <lb />
ripped up by hand, and wrought with <lb />
tools of the last century. The woo I i <lb />
exquisitely beautiful in grain, <lb />
being employed for and the <lb />
workmanship is perfect, but the cost is <lb />
excessive. <lb />
Recently the streetcar companies hart <lb />
put on baggage cars, which run at <lb />
intervals, doing an express business <lb />
along their routes. Singularly enough, <lb />
innovation has been appreciated, and <lb />
has largely d the revenues of tho <lb />
corporal ions. There is no system of de- <lb />
livering goods. If one buys anything <lb />
the buyer porterage. Iron safes <lb />
are carried by the porters. They charge <lb />
so much for bringing it to one's place, <lb />
leave it at the door if one does not <lb />
pay additional for putting it in position. <lb />
The as the people of <lb />
arc called, are in some ways very p. Lite <lb />
and well bred; in others rude and <lb />
gar. The men have a coarse habit of <lb />
rudely staring at every lady that passes <lb />
by, and a crowd on a street corner will <lb />
never give way to let ladies pass through. <lb />
If two or more Brazilians meet on the <lb />
sidewalk and stop to talk they coolly ob- <lb />
the pavement and expect <lb />
by to take the roadway. The tram Ban <lb />
arc not fit for a lady to ride men <lb />
all smoke, and usually very <lb />
tobacco. <lb />
The Brazilian women are not pretty, <lb />
in the presence of gentlemen are <lb />
usually shy. At a reception or the <lb />
gentlemen gather in knots and talk pol- <lb />
at the top of their voices, the <lb />
ladies sit around and know not <lb />
what, for if a gentleman comes near <lb />
instantly stop short <lb />
The men of birth, as a rule, are <lb />
low of stature and slender. But <lb />
are Brazilians of girth commanding <lb />
presence. The Brazilian women are dark, <lb />
and not comparable to our northern <lb />
beauties. They make good <lb />
though rather indulgent ; but <lb />
allows them no liberty, and their <lb />
days are monotonous and without ex- <lb />
Their daughters are taught <lb />
French. Music is a natural gift They <lb />
can embroider a little, but the world and <lb />
what goes on in it is a sealed book to <lb />
them. Until they are married they <lb />
never left alone in a gentleman's com- <lb />
A young man can not call often <lb />
and any particular <lb />
for a young lady without being asked if <lb />
his arc mother <lb />
has scarcely more liberty than <lb />
daughter. Her place is at home, and, <lb />
it said to Brazilian's credit, the <lb />
bands, as a rule, are domestic in their <lb />
habits. are at homo <lb />
or at of amusement with their <lb />
wives and children. <lb />
And yet Rio do Janeiro has the <lb />
of being awfully wicket While <lb />
it is not a Sodom or Gomorrah, it is like <lb />
London and New <lb />
ways than one. men are <lb />
libidinous, and the houses are filled <lb />
With recruits from Paris, Bordeaux, <lb />
Genoa, and Marseilles. <lb />
line eucalyptus leaf; nor can one <lb />
mail for j , , mt a ;., and M <lb />
also ft. line <lb />
by mail <lb />
est -11111 ma prepaid. For i <lb />
rips bout pins circa tr, price j <lb />
I I O list., terms ad-i <lb />
freeze to it and the Pin- <lb />
blow Clothes <lb />
Line Co. <lb />
Herman St., Mass. <lb />
MADE <lb />
MADS WITH BOILING MIX<lb />
pm<lb />
S W <lb />
an<lb />
p in<lb />
Stations. <lb />
fragrance <lb />
Kin-don <lb />
New <lb />
NO. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
City a m <lb />
Daily <lb />
No . <lb />
Pass- Train. <lb />
No. t <lb />
Mixed Ft. <lb />
Pass <lb />
p in<lb />
Of; <lb />
I M <lb />
it <lb />
mm THYSELF, <lb />
in; <lb />
0.1 <lb />
i- <lb />
i; <lb />
Stations, <lb />
a m Vi <lb />
IS Best's <lb />
y l lo Grange<lb />
t so <lb />
Sr. Dover <lb />
If Core Creek<lb />
IS C<lb />
Croat no <lb />
OS <lb />
Newport s <lb />
ii <lb />
Atlantic <lb />
Morehead v <lb />
1-1 Atlantic Hot. <lb />
p m a m <lb />
Thursday and Saturday, j <lb />
Wednesday and Friday. <lb />
enamel with Wilmington j <lb />
Train North, leaving. <lb />
a in., and Rich-1 <lb />
Train West, leaving <lb />
Ml p. m. <lb />
Train connects with <lb />
Train, arriving at <lb />
. in., and and <lb />
Train from North at p. in <lb />
with <lb />
Through Freight Train, leaving <lb />
in and with <lb />
A Through Freight Train <lb />
at n, in. <lb />
TUB , <lb />
A Treatise <lb />
the Youth, <lb />
Miseries <lb />
Folly, r <lb />
the <lb />
Work, Married or <lb />
U royal <lb />
foil girl. only by <lb />
i. i.-t-raid. Id wrapper, <lb />
tr. . Free, if yon apply Tho <lb />
II. Parker, If. re- <lb />
the COLD AND JEWELLED MEDAL <lb />
from tho National Medical <lb />
for the PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and <lb />
of Physician may <lb />
by or lo at the of <lb />
THE INSTITUTE, <lb />
St., lo all <lb />
for books or for should ha <lb />
at above. <lb />
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb />
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb />
Greenville N . <lb />
We have tho <lb />
Chair in the art. Clean <lb />
razors, and <lb />
I In every instance. Call con <lb />
I waited on at their <lb />
Cleaning clothe.- a <lb />
flight in which one of these <lb />
leaves Kettles to the ground in erratic <lb />
curves when dislodged from a lofty <lb />
bough tail to remark the of <lb />
its movements to those of the boomerang, <lb />
and to see in it at least the possible <lb />
gin of that paradoxical weapon. <lb />
Native Australians km a certain <lb />
alertness and which b some- <lb />
thing more than animal, but in general <lb />
but little allied to the human be- <lb />
of development is in <lb />
tho direction of w-or the chase, and <lb />
in these pursuits they still manifest <lb />
survival of an ancient proficiency with <lb />
rude weapons which must have been <lb />
simply marvelous, was not long ago <lb />
that one of these aboriginals, coming <lb />
upon a cricket practice with one of <lb />
rude shields of Ins tribe, showed an <lb />
amazing adroitness in its use. An <lb />
native shield is simply a piece of <lb />
wood about two feet long and three or <lb />
four inches wide, with a at its <lb />
brick, and pointed at each <lb />
indeed, the general shape of a broad <lb />
Protected simply <lb />
row shield, held at arm's length, and <lb />
twirled and turned here and by <lb />
movements of the wrist as rapid <lb />
pliant as could be shown by the <lb />
expert fencing master, this black per- <lb />
about twenty of the swiftest <lb />
throwers among the assembled cricket- <lb />
to range themselves before him and <lb />
hurl cricket balls at him as rapidly <lb />
as possible. Not one could hit him the <lb />
balls flew from his rapidly whirling <lb />
shield like of mud from a carriage <lb />
wheel, until the throwers slopped <lb />
from -dicer exhaustion he stood there <lb />
calmly grinning, accomplishing with <lb />
easy a feat which tin <lb />
story of the swordsman who never used <lb />
an umbrella, kept himself dry in a <lb />
rainstorm by diverting th drops with <lb />
foil, almost <lb />
Ho V bats <lb />
Notice <lb />
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb />
Oil in the way of the <lb />
PREPARATION for baldness <lb />
falling hair, eradication of <lb />
dandruff U before public. <lb />
n the many t with <lb />
named barber, you can procure a . I refer you <lb />
of Preparation is invaluable <lb />
far f and causing the j -r,. <lb />
to be soft and <lb />
SR., <lb />
Any one wishing to give it a trial for <lb />
the above named complaints can procure <lb />
it from me, at my place of for <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, <lb />
; 14th, C , <lb />
. two or a <lb />
weak it a Mr <lb />
is all to be used after rubbing the <lb />
for a few minutes with <lb />
Of Preparation. Try a bottle and be <lb />
SO cents. <lb />
Barber, <lb />
A Carr. <lb />
Only little over a year ago a <lb />
mi-i came into possession <lb />
of a fortune of He <lb />
proceeded to scatter it to the <lb />
rant winds, and this winter was an <lb />
clam-peddler about town where <lb />
lie formerly cut such a sweeping <lb />
Then be committed suicide. <lb />
is the ordinary career of the prod- <lb />
There is in some men an inability <lb />
to act rat in sunshine of pros- <lb />
which appears inexplicable to tho <lb />
majority of rearming and reasonable <lb />
to these men wealth is a <lb />
curse. Tho man had worked <lb />
out his ; no more. <lb />
persuaded a friend to <lb />
for neuralgia and head- <lb />
aches. It a relief after a <lb />
few implications I cheerfully <lb />
it to all who likewise suffer. G. IT. <lb />
To chronic we <lb />
recommend use of Dr. Bull's <lb />
Syrup. cents. <lb />
This is what y ought to bare, in fact <lb />
mast it to life. <lb />
for It daily and <lb />
they find it not. <lb />
of dollars are <lb />
nail f our people the <lb />
t hey in a v this Ar d yet <lb />
it may by all. e that <lb />
Bitters if used to <lb />
and the- use laUd In will bring <lb />
good and demon <lb />
and instead <lb />
for s- <lb />
at <lb />
Too Much Ice <lb />
a pity Mr. Blank drinks <lb />
said a Wet Philadelphia <lb />
physician in hearing of a friend of <lb />
i he former. <lb />
doctor, you astonish <lb />
the have known Mr. Blank <lb />
years and I never saw him <lb />
lake a drop of intoxicating liquor In my <lb />
.- <lb />
don't suppose anyone else over did. <lb />
for I never knew him to replied <lb />
doctor. <lb />
you were <lb />
was never more in earnest Unless <lb />
he changes his habit he will drink <lb />
to in six <lb />
doctor, drop your paradox. <lb />
What to you mean <lb />
mean that lie is with <lb />
water. lie six or eight glasses <lb />
of it day In spite of my protests <lb />
and it is killing him. The lining of his <lb />
become so much <lb />
I hat he cannot properly digest his food, <lb />
lie has lost his appetite and makes up <lb />
for loss of food by swallowing more ice <lb />
water. He complains of neuralgia and <lb />
insomnia. I give him medicine, but in- <lb />
on his drinking no water. Ho will <lb />
agree to it when I see him. but he don't <lb />
keep his promise. He says he cannot, <lb />
an I I almost believe him. I have treated <lb />
many confirmed drunkards, but I never <lb />
knew one more addicted to rum <lb />
Blank is to ice water. Before long he <lb />
will be unable to digest any food ; he <lb />
will become dropsical, and must <lb />
ensue. I cannot make him believe his <lb />
peril. He at me, and I can do <lb />
nothing in matter. I am now try- <lb />
to get him off on an ocean trip, in <lb />
hope that lie will get seasick and <lb />
have a terrible time of it While he is <lb />
recovering his appetite may return to <lb />
doctor, is this an isolated <lb />
no means. There are not many <lb />
cases so serious as this, but the harm <lb />
done by drinking ice water is ex- <lb />
I do not wish to be construed <lb />
as favoring alcoholic stimulants, but I <lb />
state candidly that ice water is doing as <lb />
much injury, if not more, than all the <lb />
liquors that are drunk. It is vice of <lb />
the American people, and it must o sup- <lb />
I sometimes wish there were <lb />
not such a thing as ice in the <lb />
George Abbot, of Garden City <lb />
has threshed 1.894 bushels of <lb />
oats from thirty acres of land. The grain <lb />
was very heavy, making by weight sixty- <lb />
seven bushels per acre. <lb />
In many of the animal ailments, <lb />
dents and contagious diseases, preventive <lb />
measures are of the most essential <lb />
ice. For instance, when an animal shows <lb />
signs of illness, it should be immediately <lb />
separated from the herd, flock or drove. <lb />
It may have been the only one exposed <lb />
to a fatal contagious malady, and Urn <lb />
lows thus prevented from taking the <lb />
disease. For what is called the <lb />
of varies in the different <lb />
maladies from a few days to several <lb />
weeks. This, every breeder, stock-raiser <lb />
and farmer should understand, as it <lb />
might not save their own and <lb />
neighbor, but in contagious <lb />
th herds of the entire <lb />
country may be endangered. In fast <lb />
export and import trade of <lb />
be seriously injured, or entirely mined <lb />
for years. Dangerous stakes, by <lb />
unruly animals, may result la the <lb />
loss of considerable sums of money. A <lb />
farmer might batter make Ms tutors safe, <lb />
sit will entail but a trifling expense, <lb />
than run the risk of losing a valuable <lb />
Marrow doors to in the <lb />
sight a horse <lb />
to<lb />
honest, conscientious <lb />
who give B. B. B. <lb />
n trial, f admit superiority over <lb />
A her d <lb />
Dr. W. in., <lb />
regard II. It. It. as beat <lb />
Dr. II. Kenan. Trim, <lb />
sot It. It. It. av <lb />
and iv I- <lb />
Dr. J. W. I raw ford <lb />
II. it. B, l I he ls--t <lb />
Dr. S. i t. f ii ST Ga. <lb />
Write- <lb />
as a line tunic Its n-e <lb />
an excrescence of the r <lb />
effected no <lb />
Dr. . II. Jacksonville, <lb />
Ala., -My on my <lb />
getting ii. H. for , is <lb />
i usual <lb />
remedies. She <lb />
her has been <lb />
A who his <lb />
name not given, <lb />
mine case of was <lb />
killing him. and which treat <lb />
seemed to check, was entirely mini <lb />
with about twelve bottles of II. It. B. <lb />
lie was fair y made up if skin bones <lb />
and terrible <lb />
SCIENTIFIC NOTES. <lb />
silk b not <lb />
on an industrial scale, but it appear <lb />
this will very shortly be done. and. while <lb />
it as impossible to foretell with <lb />
will be commercial of <lb />
this curious invention, it ii <lb />
to resist the conclusion that it is highly <lb />
practicable, and that it even contains <lb />
the elements of great future <lb />
The announces <lb />
the of a new opiate by Pro- <lb />
of It has been <lb />
called and belongs to <lb />
group. crystals are <lb />
tasteless, without smell, and readily dis- <lb />
solved. It is. stated to bare the <lb />
of producing sleep in invalids, <lb />
nervous people, but not in healthy <lb />
people. Such drugs should, of course, <lb />
only be used under the authority of a <lb />
qualified medical adviser. <lb />
A successful trial recently made <lb />
of electrically opening railway gates on <lb />
Western Maryland Railroad A <lb />
special train, which conveyed the party <lb />
to station, ran over the plates which <lb />
are some distance from the gates. The <lb />
gates were closed or opened as the train <lb />
approached or departed from the <lb />
Edouard Eiffel, son of the man whose <lb />
towering ambition is c <lb />
illustrated at the French exposition, <lb />
stated in a few days ago that <lb />
his fathers latest triumph is a portable <lb />
iron bridge feet long for the trans- <lb />
of troops over wide <lb />
He says it can readily be carried with <lb />
any army and put up worst kind <lb />
of country in five hours The day <lb />
when soldiers burned the be- <lb />
hind them have gone. They will now <lb />
carry their bridges with them. <lb />
Not very long ago aluminum brought <lb />
a pound ; later it was reduced to U, <lb />
and now it is said that it can be bought <lb />
in pounds lots for per pound <lb />
Every cheapening of its price brings <lb />
nearer the time this metal <lb />
come into general use. Light as oak, <lb />
strong as hammered brats, and of <lb />
passed ductility and malleability, alum- <lb />
will inevitably assume a com- <lb />
among the metals <lb />
when once mysterious secret of <lb />
simply releasing it from the clay shall <lb />
have been discovered <lb />
It is said that Mr. Edison has perfected <lb />
a new cell for telegraphic use, which <lb />
possesses some points. A <lb />
cylinder of zinc, an inside this a <lb />
thick stick of caustic soda, constitute the <lb />
cell, which among <lb />
is said to be free from <lb />
and not to need cleaning. <lb />
ore very wide and if they <lb />
in pi net ice. the cell will <lb />
have an extensive held of usefulness. <lb />
A prominent naval officer was sic <lb />
recently of now war ships, and <lb />
be said in opinion of tho foremost <lb />
naval officers of the country, ten or f- <lb />
teen years hence a war ship will have no <lb />
steam engines outside of her room. <lb />
Boston twenty two steam en- <lb />
of various on board her, <lb />
electrical rapidly super- <lb />
steam naval vessels. <lb />
There are wanting signs that tho <lb />
hi coining to front in elect rip <lb />
A well-known Kentucky <lb />
railway contractor on hand a big rail- <lb />
way which, it is expected, will <lb />
be shortly carried out This is the <lb />
and operation of an electric <lb />
railway between Atlanta and <lb />
a distance of over miles. The water <lb />
power of the and other riven <lb />
along the route b to generate the elect <lb />
city to move ins, it is <lb />
mated I hat horse will <lb />
within the reach of tho road. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, <lb />
IN COMBINATION WITH <lb />
lit says the Springfield Republican. <lb />
rest <lb />
fOR <lb />
13.00 <lb />
I II <lb />
AT THIS <lb />
NOVEMBER CD C C new <lb />
I P WHO ADVANTAGE Of <lb />
I I off f mus <lb />
FOR THE YOUNGER YOUNG FOLKS. <lb />
Eastern <lb />
For baby and In the nursery. <lb />
Mm and Women a For youngest readers. <lb />
Pansy a For Sunday and weekday reading. n <lb />
sad an to Otis onto, where of sear be sen. <lb />
offers combination with<lb />
OUR MICE FOR BOTH <lb />
an to this where of these sen. <lb />
SUBSCRIBE BK SAVE MONEY <lb />
WHITE, BLACK AND COLORS, <lb />
A remedy fur the disorders <lb />
ho tho is the <lb />
remedy. only IT, cents. <lb />
Sold by all druggist. <lb />
Is All who have the <lb />
future happiness of Make, <lb />
know that Dr. Syrup <lb />
nothing injurious. <lb />
The No t- <lb />
Von heard mid <lb />
talking it. You <lb />
yourself he one of the win <lb />
from personal <lb />
a thing it If you have ever tried it, <lb />
you ire line of its staunch friends, be- <lb />
cause wonderful thing about it i, I <lb />
that when once Riven a trial. In. <lb />
Hew Discovery ever after hold, a place <lb />
in the house. II you have never used it I <lb />
and should be with cough, <lb />
cold or any Throat, or trim- j <lb />
secure a tie at once and give it a <lb />
fair trial. It is guaranteed every time. <lb />
or refunded. Trial r <lb />
at John I. <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
on the Es- <lb />
of Keel having <lb />
to the undersigned the Hon. <lb />
K. A. Move of <lb />
ob the day of Ki-b. no- <lb />
is hereby given to all of <lb />
Keel deceased to present <lb />
claims duly authenticated to the <lb />
Administrator on or before <lb />
the day March A. D. <lb />
indebted to said like- <lb />
notified to make payment within <lb />
that time. D. Km. <lb />
Adm. of Keel <lb />
. C, Feb. Kith, <lb />
Hand and Machine Use. <lb />
FOR SALE <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Greenville Institute. <lb />
fall AUGUST 27th, 1890, <lb />
TEACHERS<lb />
in <lb />
De<lb />
If you can not procure meat for your <lb />
fowls, buy them cotton-seed meal. <lb />
If fed daily, one pint to a mess of soft <lb />
food for hens is sufficient. is <lb />
also an excellent substitute for meat, and, <lb />
in fact, at considered preferable by some <lb />
poultry-keepers. No matter well- <lb />
balanced their ration may change it <lb />
often. A variety food Rives zest to <lb />
the appetite and stimulates digestion. <lb />
Of Editor of Vernon parish. La., <lb />
who went u ii in i in.- fur the riff got <lb />
killed, the News re- <lb />
many friends his generous, <lb />
manly qualities had for him <lb />
his short sojourn in our midst will re- <lb />
to learn of bis untimely but heroic <lb />
and will themselves with <lb />
the reflection that in Alexander <lb />
his adversary met a worthy of <lb />
his <lb />
A Bangor druggist has a pair of scales <lb />
lo accurate as to enable the to weigh <lb />
l-64th of a grain, though he is not called <lb />
upon to balance below of a grain. <lb />
he weighed I-11th of grain of <lb />
atropine. which afterwards made <lb />
Into twelve for some believer <lb />
minute <lb />
To care Biliousness, Sick Headache, <lb />
pat lo n, m Liver Complaints, take <lb />
the safe sad certain remedy. <lb />
MEN AND WOMEN. <lb />
is fond of American apples. <lb />
The Marquis of has made his <lb />
first essay as a novelist in A Canadian <lb />
Lore <lb />
No one wears more gorgeous-diamonds <lb />
in Washington than Mrs. Morton, and <lb />
her manner is most engaging and <lb />
dial. <lb />
A writer in the New York Times <lb />
mates the wealth of Mr. Rockefeller, <lb />
president of the Standard Oil Company, <lb />
at 139,000.000. <lb />
John O. is so fearful of the <lb />
collector that he instructs Mi <lb />
hair from <lb />
his-venerable head. <lb />
Mary Anderson's reported of <lb />
retiring from the stage is confirmed by <lb />
herself. She wants it distinctly under- <lb />
stood, at least, that she will not return <lb />
to her profession for an indefinite period. <lb />
M. Th-ard, the French prime minister, <lb />
is sounding the chambers of commerce <lb />
throughout tho country in regard to their <lb />
views on to give women <lb />
engaged any trade right to roil <lb />
at elections for judges of commercial <lb />
tribunals <lb />
the Japanese min- <lb />
at Washington, who has been sum- <lb />
home his government, has <lb />
made a great many friends at capital. <lb />
He is a highly educated man. fond of so- <lb />
; and his recall is regrettable. Ho <lb />
does not understand bis unexpected sum- <lb />
mons. <lb />
Marshall P. Wilder learns from lib <lb />
London publishers that the copy of his <lb />
book, I've Smiled With. which <lb />
was presented to Prince of Wales, <lb />
was bound fat morocco and bad <lb />
presentation engraved in silver. The <lb />
tips also surer. Mr. Wilder <lb />
and the Prince are great friends. <lb />
Mrs. Wade, president of the <lb />
Women's Club, in a late speech said <lb />
did not believe that woman should a <lb />
doormat for the convenience of her bus- <lb />
band. She defied St. Paul and his <lb />
women, and said she believed <lb />
St. Peal was jilted by some fair maiden, <lb />
and per consequence his bitterness. <lb />
The daughter of Just ice Harlan and <lb />
Justice Fuller have been intro- <lb />
in Washington society. The for- <lb />
mer, a tall, graceful wore a gown <lb />
of soft while crepe and bold a bouquet <lb />
Hi roses. Mildred Fuller, who is <lb />
the <lb />
sod has a <lb />
BILE BEANS <lb />
Use Mae little Beans to <lb />
ABE THE MOST <lb />
all i <lb />
of Bottle. <lb />
Ms. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
HAVING before the Clerk of <lb />
; the Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb />
; 8th day el as Administrator <lb />
I estate of <lb />
this is to notify all persons holding claims <lb />
j said estate to their claims <lb />
for within twelve months I <lb />
j this data or this notice will be plead In <lb />
i bur of their recovery. All persons <lb />
ilia said estate will come forward and <lb />
j make immediate settlement. This March <lb />
8th,<lb />
of S. J. . <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of the authority given me by <lb />
order of Clerk of the <lb />
of county in the ease II- S. <lb />
vs. Naomi and <lb />
; Stanly The <lb />
I will sell for cash before, tho Court <lb />
door in Greenville at public auction on <lb />
I Monday tho 17th day of March a <lb />
one half interest in the follow- <lb />
described town lot Situated the <lb />
town of Greenville and known in the <lb />
plot of said town as Lot No bounded <lb />
on the North by Front Street. the <lb />
by street, on West by <lb />
lot Me. and on the South by lot No. <lb />
B. S. <lb />
This February r. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On the day of March A. <lb />
D. 1890, I will sell at the House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville lo <lb />
highest bidder for cash one of <lb />
in Pitt county containing about <lb />
acres and bounded follows Situated <lb />
hi Greenville township North side of <lb />
River, adjoining the lands of <lb />
Miss S. O. Brown and others. <lb />
Sixty acres of the described land <lb />
will he sold for the purchase, money of <lb />
of said laud and known at the Bridge <lb />
tract, to satisfy sundry executions <lb />
Ml my hands for collection against B. J. <lb />
and which have levied on <lb />
said laud as the property of said B. J <lb />
Wilson. <lb />
A. K <lb />
By U. W. king. D, S. <lb />
February <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Monday the day of A. <lb />
D. I will sell at the Court House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for Cash the ; in your own Stale, <lb />
K. W. <lb />
Department. <lb />
Miss May <lb />
Music. <lb />
Mis-. Painting and <lb />
Drawing. <lb />
Mn. J. <lb />
and <lb />
DEPARTMENTS. <lb />
Primary. <lb />
Me- <lb />
and Drawing. <lb />
Commercial. <lb />
ADVANTAGES <lb />
Large, Comfortable Buildings. <lb />
Healthy Location and tAt <lb />
IS, Plenty of Well Prepared <lb />
Boarders. A Corps of Teachers, <lb />
all of first class <lb />
Music Department <lb />
in work to any College in the State. <lb />
New and Organs. <lb />
A of volumes <lb />
purchased recently for the School. <lb />
Hates Moderate, from to <lb />
Board and Tuition Tuition and <lb />
for Day Pupils the same as <lb />
in who do not <lb />
with the Principal should <lb />
before engaging board elsewhere. For <lb />
fur. Address. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
C. B. N. B. <lb />
Edwards <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
I OH, 1ST. O- <lb />
We have the and mo-t <lb />
of the kind to be found In <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all <lb />
Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding.<lb />
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOB AND <lb />
us your oilers. <lb />
AND <lb />
K N. C. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
d. all the V. <lb />
Patent or in <lb />
for Fees. <lb />
We arc the S. Patent <lb />
lice engaged and <lb />
can obtain patents In less time than <lb />
more Iron Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing sent we <lb />
SI to free of <lb />
and we HO change we de- <lb />
We In-re. to the Pot tar <lb />
Hunt, of Did., and e <lb />
the Patent far <lb />
advise term and reference <lb />
one sixth Interest in one tract of HUM in <lb />
Pitt county containing about acres <lb />
and bounded as follows In Greenville <lb />
Township North Side of Tar River Ad- <lb />
joining the lands of K. II. Carney, S. <lb />
and Also one other <lb />
tract in Township on the <lb />
North Side Tar River adjoining the <lb />
address. <lb />
C. A. Snow A Co., <lb />
D, <lb />
Many people <lb />
of lassitude. they think they <lb />
have to. If would take Dr. II. <lb />
this feeling of j- <lb />
weariness would give place to vigor lands of A. J. A. I , <lb />
land others, containing twenty-live <lb />
. . , more or less. said interest be-I <lb />
No liniment . in better or h of A. la the <lb />
widely know., than Dr. II. mid be-1 <lb />
the one-sixth undivided interest In I <lb />
lands of the said W. W. at <lb />
lime of his to satisfy sundry <lb />
executions ill my for collection <lb />
against G. A. and which have <lb />
been on said laud as the property <lb />
of said ii. A. <lb />
A. K. <lb />
R. W. King. <lb />
February . <lb />
Volcanic on Liniment. It is a wonder- <lb />
remedy. <lb />
Persons advanced in years feel young- <lb />
and stronger, as well freer from the <lb />
infirmities of age. by Inking Dr. II <lb />
Sarsaparilla. <lb />
Sick headache is the of <lb />
lives. This annoying complaint may he , <lb />
cured and prevented by the occasional I <lb />
use of Dr. II. Liver and j <lb />
Kidney <lb />
Pi-can- lies in ambush for the a I <lb />
feeble is HI to en- <lb />
counter a malarious atmosphere and j <lb />
den changes of temperature, and the <lb />
usually the easiest <lb />
Urns. Dr. J. II. lie-Lean <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On the 10th day of March <lb />
A. It. 1800. I will sell at the Court lions <lb />
door in the town at. Greenville to the <lb />
bidder cash one tract of <lb />
will give tone vitality and strength to ,<lb />
ft.-i. u end th <lb />
b. .,. in i- fr-. <lb />
ff <lb />
. repaid. We pay all Mm aw <lb />
m all. if you <lb />
i Pencil <lb />
m, r <lb />
MARKS . <lb />
w-in your tn robes. <lb />
J t <lb />
the body. <lb />
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick <lb />
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb />
Dr J. II. <lb />
If you feel unable your <lb />
have that tired feeling, take Dr. J. II. <lb />
it will make yon <lb />
bright active and vigorous. <lb />
The most popular liniment, is the old <lb />
reliable. Dr. II. Volcanic <lb />
Liniment. <lb />
One of Dr. J. II. Little Liv- <lb />
and Kidney taken at night be <lb />
fore to bed, will move tho <lb />
the effect will astonish you. <lb />
Pimples, boils other humors, are <lb />
liable to appear when bleed gets <lb />
heated. Dr. J. II. Sarsaparilla <lb />
s remedy. <lb />
acres and bounded follows Situated <lb />
Township, on of <lb />
the public road leading from Gum I <lb />
Swamp Church to and being the <lb />
exes of homestead of T. J. Stancill. <lb />
ail joining lands of the late K. C. <lb />
the Bridges land, K. D. <lb />
way, G. A. Stancill and other-, contain- <lb />
six hundred and twenty-six <lb />
more or and being all woods <lb />
land. U satisfy an execution in my hands <lb />
for collection against T. I. Stancill and <lb />
Which has been levied on said land as <lb />
property of said T. J. Stancill. <lb />
J. A. K. <lb />
Ry R. W. KING. P. Feb. <lb />
rm <lb />
late- <lb />
n ii it I<lb />
M t .<lb />
WHAT <lb />
EMULSION <lb />
CURES <lb />
BRONCHITIS <lb />
COLDS <lb />
Wonderful Producer. <lb />
Many have gained one pound <lb />
per day by nae, <lb />
Scott's Emulsion is sot a secret <lb />
remedy. It contains the <lb />
ma of the <lb />
and Norwegian Cod <lb />
aver Oil. the potency of both <lb />
being largely increased. <lb />
by Physicians all over the world, <lb />
PALATABLE At MILK. <lb />
Sold by all Drum- <lb />
k. <lb />
I would respectfully call your <lb />
to the following address and <lb />
j to remember that yon can <lb />
or MONUMENT of <lb />
j this house cheaper than any other in the <lb />
country. That it is the most reliable <lb />
and best known having been <lb />
for over forty years in this vicinity <lb />
That the workmanship is second to none <lb />
; and has unusual for Riling or- <lb />
promptly and satisfactory. <lb />
Very respectfully. <lb />
P. W. BATES <lb />
to <lb />
J. <lb />
B. C. <lb />
Nor walk, <lb />
Storm Calendar Weather <lb />
for 1890, by Rot. R. Hicks, mailed <lb />
i for work outside of <lb />
GOOD <lb />
Scat post-paid on <lb />
In Of <lb />
A aid <lb />
paper <lb />
By S Paper, <lb />
from Ward, <lb />
etc. ; p pet . <lb />
WRITE to <lb />
SUMMER RESORT <lb />
BRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
Cutting and Dressing User., <lb />
AT THE GLASS <lb />
the Opera House, at which <lb />
I hare recently located, and where I hat <lb />
everything in my line <lb />
AND <lb />
TO A <lb />
with all the improved <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
sharpened at reasonable <lb />
Vet; <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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