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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
------Solicits your patronage for <lb/>
It. purpose be to please every reader. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
-HAS <lb/>
JOB PRINT I NO- <lb/>
that i-e <lb/>
where in tills section. Our work <lb/>
satisfaction. <lb/>
vi order. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL IX. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY N. WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1890. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
Miter end tap <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Daniel O. Fowle, of Wake. <lb/>
M. Holt. <lb/>
sf <lb/>
Secretary of T. <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
W. of Wake. <lb/>
LATE. <lb/>
What silence we Veep year after year <lb/>
With these who are most near to us and <lb/>
dear; <lb/>
We live beside each other day by day, <lb/>
And speak of myriad things, but seldom <lb/>
say <lb/>
The full sweet word that lies lust in our <lb/>
reach, <lb/>
Beneath the commonplace of common <lb/>
speech. <lb/>
Then out of sight and out of reach they <lb/>
go <lb/>
These close, familiar friends who loved <lb/>
us so <lb/>
And sitting in the shadow they have left. <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction- Alone with <lb/>
Of <lb/>
Superintendent <lb/>
Sidney M. Finger of Catawba. <lb/>
Attorney F. David- <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. <lb/>
SUPREME COURT. <lb/>
Chief Justice-A. S. <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Associate Clark, or <lb/>
Wale; Joseph J. Davis, off <lb/>
James E. Shepherd, of and <lb/>
C. A very, of Burke. <lb/>
SUPERIOR <lb/>
First II. Brown, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second o <lb/>
Third G. Connor, of <lb/>
son. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Fifth B. Womack, of <lb/>
Chatham. <lb/>
Sixth T. of <lb/>
Seventh C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth F. Armfield, of <lb/>
Iredell. <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Surry. <lb/>
Tenth G. Bynum of <lb/>
Eleventh M. of <lb/>
Mecklenburg. <lb/>
Twelfth II. Merrimon, <lb/>
f Buncombe. <lb/>
B. of <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb/>
We think, with vain regret, of some fond <lb/>
world <lb/>
That once we might have and I hey <lb/>
have heard. <lb/>
For weak and poor the love that we ex- <lb/>
pressed <lb/>
Now seems, beside the vast sweet <lb/>
confessed ; <lb/>
And slight the deeds we did to those <lb/>
done, <lb/>
And small the service spent to treasure <lb/>
won. <lb/>
And the praise for word and , A <lb/>
That should I arc overflowed the simple i hi, let us look tit Hide of the <lb/>
grasping Ins band, and with load <lb/>
cries or Boyle calling for a <lb/>
speech from thin immaculate <lb/>
men, of manhood, bad ho highly <lb/>
honored their town, as to <lb/>
to ravish one of their <lb/>
dens. We do not know on what <lb/>
subject wished him to speak, <lb/>
but his record would clearly <lb/>
the one with which be was <lb/>
most familiar, and winch doubtless <lb/>
would be of great interest to the <lb/>
Vile hounds gave him ova- <lb/>
We wonder what kind of re- <lb/>
these contemptible wretches <lb/>
met from their wives and sisters <lb/>
they heard of the part <lb/>
took in this beastly affair, if indeed, <lb/>
men so lo.-t to all the finer <lb/>
of humanity, bad ever fell <lb/>
the influences of home, or <lb/>
the association of pure <lb/>
men. <lb/>
But it may be said that we <lb/>
unjust in this mutter, that these <lb/>
need. <lb/>
This is the cruel cross of life, to be <lb/>
only when the ministry <lb/>
Of death has been and in the <lb/>
Of some dear presence is hut empty <lb/>
space. <lb/>
What recollected services can then <lb/>
Give consolation for the have <lb/>
Raleigh's Shame- <lb/>
Nashville Argonaut. <lb/>
At the September 1889, of <lb/>
Wake Superior Court, J. J. Boyle, a <lb/>
Catholic priest, was put on trial for <lb/>
his life the in famous crime of <lb/>
rape upon one of bis parishioners, a <lb/>
Serf Representatives-First District I seventeen of age, <lb/>
Thomas G. Skinner, of <lb/>
Second col, <lb/>
of <lb/>
Third W. of <lb/>
Pender. <lb/>
Fourth II Bunn, of <lb/>
Nash. <lb/>
Fifth W. of <lb/>
Forsyth. <lb/>
Sixth Rowland of <lb/>
Robeson. <lb/>
S. S. <lb/>
of Rowan. <lb/>
Eighth District W. H. A. C <lb/>
Anson. <lb/>
a daughter of parents, <lb/>
her lather being an ex mayor of the <lb/>
city of Raleigh. At be <lb/>
was convicted sentenced to <lb/>
death. The case was appealed and <lb/>
a trial by the Supreme <lb/>
court, upon a point of law. <lb/>
On of last week, this <lb/>
case again came on for trial and <lb/>
Boyle acquitted- We cannot <lb/>
Hen- were <lb/>
their convictions in the verdict they <lb/>
rendered, or not. is a matter <lb/>
BOUNTY GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Superior Court A. <lb/>
A. K. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of H. James. <lb/>
B. Cherry. <lb/>
S. L. Ward. <lb/>
B. Harris. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson, <lb/>
Guilford Mooring, C. V, Newton, <lb/>
John Flanagan, T. E. Keel. <lb/>
Board of Herding <lb/>
Chairman J. S. and J. D. <lb/>
Cox- <lb/>
School Superintend <lb/>
ding. . <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
standard <lb/>
TOWN <lb/>
G. James. <lb/>
F. Evans. <lb/>
Treasurer M. R. Lang. <lb/>
Chief T. Smith. <lb/>
Asst R. Moors. <lb/>
Ward, B. N. Boyd <lb/>
and Ward, R. Williams, Jr., and Alfred <lb/>
Forbes ; 3rd Ward, T. J. Jarvis and M. <lb/>
R. Lang; 4th Ward, W. N. Tolbert. <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
First and Third <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. <lb/>
Hughes, D. D., Rector. <lb/>
Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Prayer Meeting every <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
second and fourth <lb/>
Sundays, morning and night. <lb/>
Meeting every Wednesday night. Rev. <lb/>
A. D. Hunter, Pastor. <lb/>
LODGES. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A- <lb/>
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb/>
day night after the 1st and Sunday at <lb/>
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow, W. M., <lb/>
B. L. Sec. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter, No. meets <lb/>
every and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb/>
sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, H. P. <lb/>
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb/>
meets every Tuesday night. J. A. K. <lb/>
Tucker, N. G. . <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. No. K. of IT., <lb/>
meets every first and third Friday night. <lb/>
D. D. D. <lb/>
Pitt A. L. of H., meets <lb/>
very Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb/>
POST <lb/>
Hours for all business A. <lb/>
M. to P. M. All Balls distributed <lb/>
n arrival. The general will <lb/>
be kept open for minutes at night <lb/>
after the Northern mail is distributed. <lb/>
Northern Mail arrives dally <lb/>
at P. M. and departs at <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland <lb/>
mails arrives at <lb/>
M. and departs at P. M. <lb/>
Washington, X <lb/>
Roads, and Grimesland <lb/>
malls s daily at <lb/>
T. M. and departs at A. M. <lb/>
Spring Bell's <lb/>
Ferry, Johnson's Mills, Beds <lb/>
and Pullet arrive Tuesday <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and <lb/>
departs at <lb/>
Vanceboro, Black Jack and <lb/>
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M. <lb/>
and departs Friday at A M. <lb/>
J. J. PERKINS P. M <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb/>
Appointments, <lb/>
1st Sunday and <lb/>
Baptist church. <lb/>
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and <lb/>
sight, Greenville Baptist church, also <lb/>
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, morning and night. Beth- <lb/>
el ch-arch. <lb/>
B. C. Glenn's <lb/>
For preaching en Bethlehem Mission. <lb/>
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at <lb/>
School House, 1st Sunday at S <lb/>
Sparta, at o'clock. <lb/>
Shady Grove, 3rd Sunday at <lb/>
Salem 4th Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Sunday <lb/>
between themselves and their God; <lb/>
but after carefully reading the <lb/>
we cannot sec how they <lb/>
rived at their conclusion. <lb/>
Judge was fully convinced <lb/>
of the guilt of the prisoner, one <lb/>
who reads bis able and impartial <lb/>
charge to the jury, can fail to dis- <lb/>
cover. Yet we were not surprised <lb/>
at the result of the trial, if trial it <lb/>
could be called, for the prosecution <lb/>
looked very like a farce. In the <lb/>
first place, two the attorneys <lb/>
bad aided the prosecution in <lb/>
the former trial, withdrew, giving <lb/>
as an excuse they could <lb/>
afford to appear in the case without <lb/>
compensation. From this it would <lb/>
appear these chivalrous gentle- <lb/>
men bad received no pay, at least <lb/>
from the prosecution. In fact, it <lb/>
looks to us as if King Arthur would <lb/>
have bad considerable difficulty in <lb/>
recruiting Knights for his Bound <lb/>
Table from among the members of <lb/>
the legal profession in Raleigh. <lb/>
This left Solicitor Argo alone in the <lb/>
field, as champion of female <lb/>
and How be acquit- <lb/>
himself, the people of North <lb/>
Carolina will judge. We feel a <lb/>
in the actions of <lb/>
a prominent legal luminary, as <lb/>
Mr. Argo, but when a prosecuting <lb/>
attorney, upon whom is devolved <lb/>
the responsibility, of seeing the <lb/>
majesty of the law is upheld, and <lb/>
the guilty brought to justice, ac- <lb/>
four men as jurors, who upon <lb/>
their examination as to their <lb/>
to serve on the jury, an- <lb/>
belief in the <lb/>
of the prisoner at the bar, be <lb/>
lays open to strong <lb/>
either incapacity or <lb/>
By the way, it seems that <lb/>
Boyle had plenty of money, and <lb/>
the did not. There <lb/>
were several of Boyle's <lb/>
friends in Raleigh during the <lb/>
trial. One of was very <lb/>
and bad nothing to say, at least <lb/>
openly, and a very shrewd suspicion <lb/>
credits with occupying the <lb/>
of Judas, that is, as far as <lb/>
carrying the bag. The witnesses <lb/>
were very and convenient- <lb/>
the prosecution not very <lb/>
zealous in refreshing their memory, <lb/>
and the jury very eager to announce <lb/>
arrival at a verdict of acquit- <lb/>
Can it be possible any of <lb/>
them bad been interviewed by the <lb/>
silent <lb/>
Bat the moat astounding and <lb/>
thing, in connection with <lb/>
the whole matter, wag the action of <lb/>
the people, the announce- <lb/>
of the verdict, yelled <lb/>
I ho question. Lotus take his own <lb/>
and sec. This man was a <lb/>
priest of God; ;. man, who bad <lb/>
taken on himself the vows <lb/>
chastity, yet bis <lb/>
shows his life to have <lb/>
broken and licentious- <lb/>
lie, himself, acknowledges <lb/>
that lie took advantage of the close <lb/>
which exists between <lb/>
man Catholic priest and the <lb/>
members of his flock, and with <lb/>
premeditation, decoyed this <lb/>
girl, a mere child, who looked <lb/>
with trust and reverence <lb/>
as her spiritual father, u the <lb/>
of the to his room, <lb/>
and there accomplished her ruin. <lb/>
Now what doc this prove f <lb/>
A perjured priest, false to his <lb/>
manhood, false to his God <lb/>
This is the man, who according his <lb/>
own showing, alone the <lb/>
most- absolute certainty I be <lb/>
of last September, who found <lb/>
guilty, rendered a just verdict, <lb/>
and that Judge, who sentenced <lb/>
him to die on the gallows tree, pro- <lb/>
a righteous was <lb/>
a wretch too vile to touch the gar- <lb/>
of an honest man, or breath <lb/>
the same air with a virtuous <lb/>
man, Raleigh went wild to <lb/>
honor, hailed as a conquering <lb/>
hero on that Saturday night, a <lb/>
Saturday night which venture <lb/>
to predict, will be a well remember- <lb/>
ed one by the citizens of Raleigh, <lb/>
for if we are not mistaken in the <lb/>
temper of the people of North Caro- <lb/>
Raleigh will have to do a <lb/>
great deal to redeem herself from <lb/>
the stigma of being a city where no <lb/>
protection is thrown around female <lb/>
and innocence. <lb/>
We are very much surprised at <lb/>
the attitude of one of the principal <lb/>
Raleigh papers, which published <lb/>
with great a report of the <lb/>
degrading exhibition of Saturday <lb/>
and its only comments on <lb/>
the matter, although it has left n <lb/>
stain on the city and State, was <lb/>
of eloquence of the at <lb/>
for the saying it <lb/>
was touching and eloquent <lb/>
fort, bringing tears to eyes of <lb/>
in the We pity <lb/>
the tender hearts of the men <lb/>
shed tears over the woes the <lb/>
poor unfortunate ravisher, but <lb/>
will guarantee the same dirty <lb/>
whose tears flowed so rapidly <lb/>
at able counsel's peroration, <lb/>
laughed at the agony of the poor <lb/>
girl, when obliged to stand <lb/>
terrible inquisition of a <lb/>
animation on the witness stand, <lb/>
where she bad dragged broken <lb/>
and mined life, in a feeble attempt <lb/>
to secure justice, where no justice <lb/>
was given her. Now, men of <lb/>
are yon not proud of this <lb/>
f The perjured priest and <lb/>
ravisher goes clear, with the <lb/>
and congratulations of your citizens <lb/>
as a parting benediction, while his <lb/>
victim, heart-broken and with a <lb/>
stigma fair name, creeps <lb/>
away like a wounded thing, to hide <lb/>
her from the light of day. <lb/>
What Shall the Harvest Be<lb/>
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb/>
FIRST. <lb/>
Logan Harris is seen in the <lb/>
field, coat off, grubbing and <lb/>
working as if life depended on <lb/>
harvest; and later on ho appears <lb/>
in the as a manager, <lb/>
directing the hands; his skill. <lb/>
Intelligence, industry and persistent <lb/>
work bring down rounds of <lb/>
The crop Is made, <lb/>
harvest gathered and a least is an- <lb/>
no <lb/>
SCENE SECOND. <lb/>
To the feast all the workers arc <lb/>
invited and sears are prepared <lb/>
for those who have won a title to <lb/>
recognition. Among the moat joy- <lb/>
is Harris, active <lb/>
of hope and ardor. Having <lb/>
the sweet from his brow, he <lb/>
rejoices that be is to bask in the <lb/>
sunshine and share in the <lb/>
good things of harvest. <lb/>
For a time be moves among the <lb/>
men who assemble before <lb/>
banquet begins; and the Ruler of <lb/>
the Feast makes merry him, <lb/>
and tells a high seat is in <lb/>
for at festive <lb/>
and bis much <lb/>
in anticipation. But when the <lb/>
favored guests are called into <lb/>
banquet chamber, the of <lb/>
the North Carolina farm remains <lb/>
overlooked and His <lb/>
friends in dismay ask why is this, <lb/>
and the dismal answer returns He <lb/>
is turned down so Logan is <lb/>
cast and bis high seat u given <lb/>
to another, who takes his place be- <lb/>
fore the tat lambs <lb/>
the savory Brunswick stew <lb/>
sharpen the appetite. And <lb/>
turns aside hungered. <lb/>
SCENE THIRD. <lb/>
As the curtain again rolls up <lb/>
is seen pleading his <lb/>
service in the harvest field and re- <lb/>
against being utterly <lb/>
cast out, declaiming against <lb/>
the who has circumvented <lb/>
and has been arrayed in <lb/>
fine linen originally prepared for <lb/>
himself; but Ruler of the Feast <lb/>
sets bis face to the wall, and <lb/>
dens his and replies naught, <lb/>
but turning to the upper seats of <lb/>
the merry banqueters, smiles <lb/>
the successful rival. <lb/>
SCENE FOURTH. <lb/>
The scene again changes at <lb/>
the second table is seen Logan <lb/>
what he can get. for he sits far <lb/>
down in the middle seats and the <lb/>
servitors are few and the savory <lb/>
dishes are not abundant, while from <lb/>
afar may be beard the music <lb/>
choruses entertaining the suiters in <lb/>
height of their festivity. <lb/>
And so Logan, much disquieted, <lb/>
rises his mighty <lb/>
seeks the presence the <lb/>
Master of the Feast, who speedily <lb/>
orders that still scantier fare shall <lb/>
be placed before unruly guest. <lb/>
when Logan heard thereof his <lb/>
gore rose, and he grew hot under <lb/>
collar and be quit in disgust. <lb/>
and shook the off of bis feet as <lb/>
Ins ill and <lb/>
lie withdrew once more into the <lb/>
pleasanter shades of private life. <lb/>
Stray Bits of Fan. <lb/>
by Baa for <lb/>
Thais Lots to Laugh, <lb/>
Widow with six children suit- <lb/>
love me, George, and ask <lb/>
me to be Well then <lb/>
ask children. <lb/>
BOCK-A-BY, BABY. <lb/>
N. C, boasts but <lb/>
soul.-, but the past six weeks <lb/>
twenty-five babies have been born <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
TOO ENOUGH. <lb/>
Pale Youth dusky <lb/>
Wouldn't I be a fool to light <lb/>
if I tor give <lb/>
black wouldn't show. <lb/>
is that I <lb/>
cut T <lb/>
sir. <lb/>
don't bury him he <lb/>
has <lb/>
When a man tells a gill she is the <lb/>
only woman be ever loved, possibly <lb/>
the reason she does not say <lb/>
is her dislike to those <lb/>
animals. <lb/>
i said Mrs. <lb/>
is that terrible rack- <lb/>
et in the <lb/>
I don't replied her <lb/>
band. guess it is the temperature <lb/>
respectfully ask the <lb/>
attention of the clans. I am <lb/>
to exhibit sonic of the peculiarities <lb/>
of the anthropoid or man-like apes, <lb/>
I wish you all to look at me- <lb/>
PATENT NEEDED. <lb/>
There is a boy <lb/>
Island thirteen years old <lb/>
pounds. When his <lb/>
turn for spanking comes lift <lb/>
with a <lb/>
Star. <lb/>
-Hey, there Can't you <lb/>
fishing on these <lb/>
Farmer- <lb/>
see that <lb/>
grounds i <lb/>
Colored course <lb/>
I see de sign, boss, <lb/>
but lie runt us <lb/>
North Carolina News Papers. <lb/>
Lexington Dispatch. <lb/>
The papers of North Car <lb/>
taken all together, will compare fa- <lb/>
with the country press of <lb/>
any State. The editorial columns of <lb/>
not a show editorial ability of no <lb/>
mean order, and the local columns <lb/>
display enterprise, industry and a <lb/>
true instinct for news, which after <lb/>
all, is perhaps the principal <lb/>
cation for conducting a newspaper <lb/>
papers, are <lb/>
or most part, truly patriotic <lb/>
loyal to party, and withal, imbued <lb/>
with a spirit of manly independence. <lb/>
Progress along lines of en- <lb/>
in the State Is apparent on <lb/>
almost every hand, but no where is it <lb/>
more conspicuous than in the <lb/>
pretentious weekly newspapers. <lb/>
While laboring moat unselfishly <lb/>
the welfare of others, the improve- <lb/>
of of the State and <lb/>
for the common wed, they have been <lb/>
making steady and marked advance- <lb/>
and yet the patronage and i n- <lb/>
many have received are <lb/>
so small that they would <lb/>
courage of anybody except a country <lb/>
editor. These reflections arc prompt- <lb/>
ed by reading an editorial on <lb/>
OVER THE STATE. <lb/>
Happenings of Interest Occur- <lb/>
ring in North Carolina. <lb/>
AS FROM EXCHANGES <lb/>
on de <lb/>
crick <lb/>
in de <lb/>
STOPPED PRAYING IN TIME. <lb/>
Little Johnnie prayed long and <lb/>
ineffectually for a little brother. <lb/>
At he gave it up as <lb/>
Soon after, his mot her bad the <lb/>
pleasure of him <lb/>
He looked at a <lb/>
and exclaimed lucky it was <lb/>
I stopped There <lb/>
might have been three. <lb/>
IT WASN'T A <lb/>
New York school mistresses now <lb/>
inspect the boys pants pretty close- <lb/>
before spank An op <lb/>
of this kind the other day <lb/>
exploded a torpedo, wrecked <lb/>
rear part of boy's pants and <lb/>
scorched school band. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
DISCOUNTING TROUBLE. <lb/>
One little girl was heard to say to <lb/>
a playmate, I grow up, I'm <lb/>
going to be a <lb/>
I'm going to be a <lb/>
and have six <lb/>
they come to school to me <lb/>
I'm going to whip <lb/>
mean thing What have <lb/>
done to <lb/>
is to have a shoe <lb/>
Sam Jones begin his meeting <lb/>
April <lb/>
South port Mr. Freeman <lb/>
has bought two led Jersey <lb/>
bogs, male and female. are <lb/>
beauties, weighing together, <lb/>
although not yet a year old. <lb/>
E. City managers or <lb/>
the Nag's Head Hotel Co. are ac- <lb/>
workers. Not a day has been <lb/>
lost since took hold the <lb/>
A new hotel, nicely <lb/>
furnished, a pleasant steamboat to <lb/>
make daily trips and a new <lb/>
will make Nag's Head a live place <lb/>
this season. <lb/>
Concord Concord can <lb/>
boast of a couple who bear the names <lb/>
of parents. In the eastern <lb/>
part of our town resides Mr. Adam <lb/>
and his wife's name is Eve. <lb/>
the They may not have seen Eden but <lb/>
live in <lb/>
Raleigh One new con- <lb/>
was put in the penitentiary to- <lb/>
. , day from Durham county. This was <lb/>
Good in a recent issue of . was <lb/>
the The article is j of The last words as she <lb/>
worthy the consideration of all , left ham not grieve <lb/>
desire to see more improvement x am to attend <lb/>
c. . , r i School and Church every <lb/>
our State papers. We make the fol- ; <lb/>
lowing <lb/>
from the cordial kindness I, Washington Even <lb/>
. . . . ,. . , j I boys are getting into the <lb/>
with which the press has greeted the ; oars old, <lb/>
return of the to its post i of Slightest boys in this <lb/>
duty, there is the additional motive has show us nicest, <lb/>
of State and professional pride which men of new Irish potatoes yet. <lb/>
rejoices in the prosperity and They are of his own raising, and <lb/>
. ,,. i very fine. He is also something <lb/>
our State press. When H <lb/>
seethe flood of papers which pour in- <lb/>
to North Carolina from every side, A <lb/>
, . ,. . ., from Kinston us that an <lb/>
the eagerness with which they are, occurred at Mr. Edward <lb/>
welcomed, the readiness with which j shop on Tuesday. Mr. <lb/>
subscriptions dues are in j Hodges, while at work, was caught <lb/>
naturally ask if there y band, revolved around a shaft <lb/>
several times and then thrown <lb/>
something wrong in our pa- <lb/>
or our people that creates a dis- <lb/>
against our journals <lb/>
There is one cause we can not lose <lb/>
sight the papers of the larger cities <lb/>
North or South or West, are enabled <lb/>
feet. He was badly braised <lb/>
sustained several injuries about <lb/>
the head. <lb/>
for Reflection. <lb/>
Sentiment from <lb/>
Our to us in <lb/>
Not every head can wear the crown <lb/>
That the hands of love bestow. <lb/>
Phoebe Cary. <lb/>
The avaricious man is a captive <lb/>
the oar of gain. <lb/>
When a great man dies, <lb/>
For years beyond our ken, <lb/>
I he light he leaves behind him lie <lb/>
the paths of men. <lb/>
Anon. <lb/>
The eternal stars shine out as soon <lb/>
as it is dark Car- <lb/>
Time shall unfold what plighted <lb/>
hides; <lb/>
Who covers faults, at last them <lb/>
derides. <lb/>
Hooks are the negative pictures of <lb/>
thought, and the more sensitive the <lb/>
mind that receives their images, the <lb/>
more nicely the finest lines are <lb/>
W. <lb/>
God hath His mysteries of <lb/>
Ways that we cannot tell; <lb/>
He hides deep, like the secret <lb/>
slice <lb/>
him lie loved so <lb/>
C. F. Alexander. <lb/>
As Bowers carry <lb/>
on the edge of the petals, <lb/>
ready to fall at the first wall of wind <lb/>
or brush of bird, so the heart should <lb/>
carry it's beaded works of <lb/>
and. at the first of <lb/>
flavor, letdown the shower per- <lb/>
fumed with the hearts gratitude. <lb/>
U. IV. <lb/>
of <lb/>
selves hoarse, crowding around the <lb/>
prisoner, fighting to see <lb/>
the of In <lb/>
Language of Flowers. <lb/>
girl <lb/>
ates. <lb/>
Four been out-with <lb/>
the boys men. <lb/>
Morning glories Cocktails. <lb/>
Johnny slippers. <lb/>
Son <lb/>
Honeysuckles Been. <lb/>
Spring rose Getting oat of bed <lb/>
t suggestion. <lb/>
Wall <lb/>
him, Tow- <lb/>
For Young Men to Remember <lb/>
clothes don't make the <lb/>
man. <lb/>
if they once get debt they <lb/>
may never get of it. <lb/>
That parting hair in the <lb/>
middle brings on softening of the <lb/>
brain. <lb/>
That to deal honorably with all <lb/>
men begin with washer <lb/>
woman. <lb/>
That they need something more <lb/>
substantial than cigars, kid gloves, <lb/>
a cane to start housekeeping <lb/>
with. <lb/>
can't reckon on <lb/>
father's fortune to bring <lb/>
through life. Fortunes are slippery <lb/>
have something be- <lb/>
sides to fall back on. <lb/>
That a girl herself in <lb/>
the latest things out, and parades <lb/>
in street while her other does <lb/>
washing, isn't, worth wasting <lb/>
much love on. <lb/>
a fellow who deliberately <lb/>
proposes to a girl when <lb/>
he can't support is either a <lb/>
first-class fraud or be <lb/>
marries for money and becomes her <lb/>
hired man. <lb/>
forget-<lb/>
A Milanese inventor named <lb/>
is exhibiting a simplified <lb/>
the <lb/>
man vote, music, etc., with wonder- <lb/>
fol accuracy. cost of the in- <lb/>
is trans. <lb/>
i . t I, <lb/>
are at work at Am- <lb/>
The an look- <lb/>
Mr. know Swipes t <lb/>
Mrs. what's the matter <lb/>
with him <lb/>
is troubled with kleptomania, <lb/>
a great <lb/>
say Poor fellow, he <lb/>
ought to take <lb/>
trouble. Ho takes <lb/>
too <lb/>
BAD DAY. <lb/>
The other day a Minnesota clergy- <lb/>
man traveled thirty miles, made six <lb/>
calls, visited two schools, gave an <lb/>
afternoon lecture shot seven <lb/>
jack rabbits, all between sunrise <lb/>
and sunset, and said it wasn't a <lb/>
good day for pastoral work either. <lb/>
Twin City Daily. <lb/>
A rather plain lady asks the <lb/>
ion of minister. it a sin to <lb/>
feel a trifle of when I am <lb/>
called handsome by a gentleman f <lb/>
a sin for you, my but <lb/>
a terrible responsibility bangs <lb/>
the <lb/>
notice in to-night's paper <lb/>
Pennsylvania capitalists are <lb/>
hunting a site for a gun <lb/>
suppose want very <lb/>
fertile ground tor it. <lb/>
so V <lb/>
make plant send forth <lb/>
more <lb/>
NATURAL FOB HIM TO SMOKE. <lb/>
all said Mr. F. to <lb/>
his wife, say smoking is <lb/>
injurious. Now only to-day I saw <lb/>
in the paper that Dr. Furness, of <lb/>
Philadelphia, who is years old, <lb/>
has used cigars ever since be was <lb/>
a young <lb/>
replied Mrs. F., you <lb/>
roust remember it comes natural to <lb/>
a Furness to <lb/>
A MISTAKE. <lb/>
Managing <lb/>
you made a terrible mistake <lb/>
day in the last edition. <lb/>
Mr. sir <lb/>
put item <lb/>
creditors of young <lb/>
his property under the <lb/>
wrong <lb/>
was that Under what <lb/>
beading <lb/>
mat mail <lb/>
We have trod from the threshold <lb/>
turbulent March, <lb/>
Till the green scarf of April is hung <lb/>
on the larch, <lb/>
And down the bright hillside that <lb/>
welcomes the day, <lb/>
We hear the warm panting of beau- <lb/>
May. <lb/>
O. W. Holmes. <lb/>
Yesterday, last week, last year, <lb/>
they are gone Yesterday was such <lb/>
B day as never fore, and never <lb/>
can be again. Out of darkness and <lb/>
eternity it was born a new fresh day; <lb/>
into darkness and eternity it sank <lb/>
again forever. What were we doing <lb/>
yesterday Thrilling out hearts with <lb/>
the excitement of life contriving how <lb/>
spend the day mot pleasantly <lb/>
Was that our day. F. W. <lb/>
Dear Lord, I have no Easter flowers <lb/>
to bring, <lb/>
No roses fresh, no lilies dewy sweet, <lb/>
But still one ottering I may gladly <lb/>
bear, <lb/>
And lay rejoicing at Thy feet. <lb/>
Enfold my weary love in Thy sweet <lb/>
will, <lb/>
And keep it to Thy pierced <lb/>
side, <lb/>
So shall I rest, nor sad and helpless <lb/>
mourn, <lb/>
While safe in Thee my love and I <lb/>
Anon. <lb/>
It is n good time in these days of <lb/>
Banter gladness, when life is con- <lb/>
death to hold a feast of <lb/>
in honor of on.- dead. Many a <lb/>
home has sacred records of little lives <lb/>
that vanished into the great unseen, <lb/>
strong hands that grew weak, <lb/>
and bright that grew dim. <lb/>
These days of Hope's great festival <lb/>
are days most suitable for men and <lb/>
women are rich in graves, to <lb/>
stand beside them, and pluck sway <lb/>
the moss that gather round the stones, <lb/>
and plant afresh the flowers that <lb/>
breath the message of everlasting <lb/>
lie led the German dress <lb/>
was the admiration of the assembled <lb/>
I and be saved from these three bogs fair, but his stout partner slipped on his <lb/>
The following is an extract from a I lbs. of lard, mess pork, j favorite corn. Sensation Salvation <lb/>
letter written by j lbs. sausage, large the rescue. Happiness again <lb/>
editor and proprietor of Herald, j f The largest of these <lb/>
hogs dressed, <lb/>
lbs. He he is prepared to <lb/>
prove this to anyone doubts <lb/>
The longest <lb/>
freight train, it is said, that has <lb/>
ever been pulled into <lb/>
to furnish a larger volume of news or was brought in here, local, from <lb/>
reading matter than is within the I Wilmington Thursday evening by <lb/>
. o. . Engineer Capt. Steve Meredith-- <lb/>
compass of our Stats papers; and <lb/>
from the vastness of their circulation , train fifty cars, and pack- <lb/>
are able to issue at a smaller cost to ling it away on the yard here, for <lb/>
subscriber. But it is within the the Thursday night, was <lb/>
power of the North Carolina people Job- <lb/>
to lessen the disparity by inc re j Raleigh News and <lb/>
patronage and more ungrudging i wagon factory is now running under <lb/>
justice to our State papers, As soon as a full <lb/>
. j supply material can be obtained <lb/>
more liberally and paying will be in a week or two, the <lb/>
For newspaper life, almost factory will turn out seven or eight <lb/>
more than any other, is dependent up- I wagons a day. The lull amount <lb/>
on money. increased capital has been paid <lb/>
; up and she is now with a vim. <lb/>
Wilmington It is expected <lb/>
trains will be on <lb/>
Wilmington Onslow railroad, be- <lb/>
tween this city and Jacksonville, by <lb/>
first of July, if not at an earlier <lb/>
It is for our people to decide whether j Ante. Four miles of the track have <lb/>
our papers be not made as good as j been laid with rails from <lb/>
any other. It is their direct interest of t he company below Kid- <lb/>
Our State papers, best of them <lb/>
draw upon the time and the talent of <lb/>
a single pen. they do so much <lb/>
under the circumstances is a marvel. <lb/>
v . . , . mill, and the work is <lb/>
that it should so; for the work of . <lb/>
the State press is the advancement of <lb/>
the State interests, moral, <lb/>
and urban and rural. <lb/>
steadily forward. <lb/>
Eden ton and <lb/>
While at Hertford this week we <lb/>
. were told by John D. Parker. <lb/>
Self interest suggests a better treat-j one of and most <lb/>
of the home reliable men of county <lb/>
that be bad beat the record <lb/>
raising bogs. He killed three hogs <lb/>
that together weighed pounds. <lb/>
Best Thing he Ever Saw. <lb/>
Lyons, Mich., date of <lb/>
You will observe that <lb/>
I have given your advertisement <lb/>
on the first Herald <lb/>
while other proprietary medicines <lb/>
have bad to take the ran <lb/>
The reason for doing this is <lb/>
receiving a <lb/>
number of cores effected seemed <lb/>
similar to of which my little <lb/>
son was suffering, a case of blood <lb/>
poison or irritable sores breaking <lb/>
out all over bis body. To-day be <lb/>
is entirely free from disease and <lb/>
bottle of Swift's Specific S. <lb/>
did work. Now this is the <lb/>
son for giving you the position, as I <lb/>
consider Swift's S. <lb/>
the best medicine I ever saw. I <lb/>
wish yon unlimited success in your <lb/>
The above is a sample of letters <lb/>
which are coming to us all time. <lb/>
is nearer infallible than any <lb/>
remedy made, and has probably <lb/>
done more good than any medicine <lb/>
known to mankind. We will <lb/>
a Treatise on Blood and Dis <lb/>
eases to all will send ad- <lb/>
dress. <lb/>
SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
Atlanta, <lb/>
A Mew York doctor says that eve- <lb/>
ought to live to be a hundred <lb/>
years old. Well everybody. Think <lb/>
of Blair and Chandler living <lb/>
to be a hundred years old. <lb/>
How is this for bog raising <lb/>
Charlotte Mr. J. J. <lb/>
Sims, of this city, had acres of <lb/>
timber land burnt over by forest <lb/>
fires in Paw Creek township last <lb/>
Friday, which caused considerable <lb/>
damage. The woods caught, from <lb/>
piles which bad been fired <lb/>
day before. -------The Al- <lb/>
and citizens generally, have <lb/>
come to relief of John F. Gal- <lb/>
of Steel Creek, whose property <lb/>
was destroyed by fire last Friday. <lb/>
At meeting of Alliance last <lb/>
Saturday, it was decided to erect a <lb/>
dwelling and stables for Mr. Gallant. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Little <lb/>
George Bryan, five years old, son of <lb/>
Mr. G. W. Bryan, the clever opera <lb/>
tor at tins place, is perhaps <lb/>
youngest operator on record in this <lb/>
country. On last Monday we drop- <lb/>
into the telegraph office and <lb/>
saw little George send a message <lb/>
over the wires to agent at <lb/>
Goose Nest, who repeated mes- <lb/>
sage- This was proof that the little <lb/>
had sent it correctly. We <lb/>
doubt whether it can be in <lb/>
United States. We have jet to <lb/>
hear of a younger, at any rate. <lb/>
The Mississippi river will do an <lb/>
act of kindness to wash out New Or- <lb/>
leans, for it is the dirtiest, measliest <lb/>
city in the entire South. It is only <lb/>
to be that the river can not <lb/>
affect a moral as well as a <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
DANIELS <lb/>
WILSON, n. c <lb/>
TIE. L. JAMES, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
X . <lb/>
A Eh BLOW, <lb/>
-AT-L A W, <lb/>
G REE C <lb/>
J. H TUCKER <lb/>
MOORE, TUCKER MURPHY, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
r SKINNER, <lb/>
A AT-L A W, <lb/>
N. <lb/>
j e. <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Practice In all the courts. Collect <lb/>
J B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. U. <lb/>
a.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018982_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Editor and <lb/>
Announcement. <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
The Is 81.50 per year. <lb/>
column <lb/>
year. one-half column one year <lb/>
column one year. <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
week. two weeks. one <lb/>
month Two inches one week. 81.50. <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
inserted in <lb/>
Column as reading items. cents per <lb/>
line for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb/>
and Notices, <lb/>
and Sales. <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents, etc. will <lb/>
he charged at legal rates and most <lb/>
HE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. The RE- <lb/>
has suffered some loss and <lb/>
much because of having no <lb/>
fired rule M to the of this class <lb/>
of advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb/>
future trouble payment in advance <lb/>
will be demanded. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not <lb/>
above, for length of time, can be <lb/>
made by application to the office either <lb/>
in person or by letter. <lb/>
Cony New Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of advertisements should <lb/>
in o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb/>
the following. <lb/>
The having a large <lb/>
will be found a profitable medium <lb/>
through which to reach the public. <lb/>
at the at <lb/>
Mail M. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, . 1890. <lb/>
Easter ceremonies were <lb/>
in Rome, Italy, this year with <lb/>
more pomp than at time since <lb/>
1870. <lb/>
Marriage is a tie <lb/>
And it takes something like a <lb/>
Chicago divorce court to declare <lb/>
the tie off. <lb/>
The homestead of Horace <lb/>
at N. Y., was <lb/>
burned to the ground last Thurs- <lb/>
day. Most of the books and <lb/>
papers were saved. <lb/>
The Hammond Hotel at Rocky <lb/>
Mount has changed hands and <lb/>
those of us who have long known <lb/>
Capt. Hart as the clever <lb/>
tor will know him in that capacity <lb/>
no more. He is succeeded by Mr. <lb/>
W. C. <lb/>
The New Jersey Legislative In- <lb/>
Committee heard <lb/>
showing that dead and ab- <lb/>
sent men voted profusely last <lb/>
November. The presiding officer <lb/>
must have been a student under <lb/>
Speaker Reed and how to <lb/>
count a quorum. <lb/>
The mm, of a <lb/>
paper ably edited and splendidly <lb/>
conducted, recently entered it <lb/>
twenty-first year. It is a paper <lb/>
we very much admire, and hope it <lb/>
will meet with all the encourage- <lb/>
it deserves. <lb/>
After the Boyle case and the <lb/>
scenes that marked its <lb/>
close Raleigh should hereafter for- <lb/>
ever hold her peace upon the <lb/>
question of and social en- <lb/>
when it comes to <lb/>
speaking of other towns. <lb/>
One of the worst storms that <lb/>
ever visited Dallas, Texas, is rag- <lb/>
in that neighborhood. All <lb/>
the water courses are over their <lb/>
banks, and many bridges have <lb/>
been swept away- The crops have <lb/>
badly damaged. And the <lb/>
floods on Mississippi has con- <lb/>
during the past week and <lb/>
caused untold damage to property <lb/>
along its course, as well as some <lb/>
loss of life. <lb/>
Wanamaker must have wanted a <lb/>
bad. His <lb/>
at Rocky Mount got several <lb/>
hundred dollars short in his ac- <lb/>
counts and was put in jail. Right <lb/>
on the back of this a woman <lb/>
named Sylvia Drake, who cannot <lb/>
appointed to the position- <lb/>
But it so happened that Madame <lb/>
Drake cannot give bond, and <lb/>
must bring in an- <lb/>
other If his North Caro- <lb/>
gang are not dandies we'll <lb/>
give it up. <lb/>
We find this item in some of the <lb/>
papers about our Congressman, <lb/>
from the First <lb/>
At a meeting of the Commercial <lb/>
of , held <lb/>
Thursday evening, March 20th, it <lb/>
was resolved that Hie Commercial, , v , <lb/>
Ry lender . . ,., <lb/>
to the Hon. T. G. of North to s-o,, the ,. row which <lb/>
Washington Letter. <lb/>
From Oar Regular Correspondent. <lb/>
Washington D. C. April <lb/>
Mr. hits been appealed <lb/>
Carolina, a vote of thanks for <lb/>
cast bis vote In favor <lb/>
as the place for hold- <lb/>
the World's Fair of 1892; and <lb/>
also to extend to him the <lb/>
ties of the city, as the guest of that <lb/>
at such time as it may suit <lb/>
his inclinations and convenience to <lb/>
pay them a visit, <lb/>
Here is the way the Raleigh <lb/>
Mum Observer very kindly ex- <lb/>
presses itself about our section <lb/>
We rejoice with oar friends at <lb/>
Greenville the arrival of the <lb/>
iron horse, all snorting and cavort <lb/>
inc. and breathing fire and smoke, <lb/>
though quite harmless withal, into <lb/>
their midst. Now let him extend <lb/>
his into the good old <lb/>
town of Washington- There has <lb/>
been a great deal of railroad build- <lb/>
going on in the East, and next <lb/>
year where the people hare good <lb/>
crops and plenty of staff to and <lb/>
money in bank, they will largely <lb/>
appreciate their new facilities. We <lb/>
wish them joy.<lb/>
A country paper has a heap to <lb/>
contend with. received i two <lb/>
Saturday asking to stop <lb/>
the paper to their address as the <lb/>
mails are so irregular they hardly <lb/>
ever get their papers. That's a <lb/>
little bit <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
The has had trouble <lb/>
along this same line and it is worse <lb/>
than aggravating. If a man stops <lb/>
a paper and says candidly that he <lb/>
does not like it or does not feel <lb/>
able to pay for it, no one has a <lb/>
right to complain; but when a <lb/>
man wants a paper but has to stop <lb/>
it because of irregular mails and <lb/>
unobliging postmasters it becomes <lb/>
provoking in the extreme. <lb/>
It is that Congress <lb/>
of the United is a part of <lb/>
the Government of the United <lb/>
States, and that members of that <lb/>
Congress are officers of United <lb/>
States and not of a State. They <lb/>
are not paid by the States, hut by <lb/>
the United City <lb/>
n inn. <lb/>
The editor of the Carolinian <lb/>
must be deaf and blind. He <lb/>
been keeping up with the times or <lb/>
he would know better than to make <lb/>
such a statement as the above. <lb/>
We have been led to infer from <lb/>
the doings at Washington, that <lb/>
Congress, instead of being a part <lb/>
of the United States government <lb/>
is the property of Mr. Reid of <lb/>
Maine. <lb/>
This is to be a year of no small <lb/>
importance, politically speaking, <lb/>
and every voter ought to provide <lb/>
himself with two or three good <lb/>
newspapers so as to keep <lb/>
posted in all campaign <lb/>
matters. Already candidates are <lb/>
being talked and there is every <lb/>
that the campaign <lb/>
will open early. The offices to <lb/>
be filled this year are <lb/>
as much <lb/>
as those to be filled in years <lb/>
when Presidents and full <lb/>
State officers are elected, and as <lb/>
most of them bear even closer re- <lb/>
to the people the importance <lb/>
of making wise selections should <lb/>
not be lost sight of. This year we <lb/>
have to <lb/>
A chief justice and an <lb/>
justice of the Supreme Court <lb/>
of the State. <lb/>
Superior Court judges of the <lb/>
First, Second, Fourth, Fifth, <lb/>
Eighth, Tenth and Eleventh <lb/>
districts. <lb/>
Solicitors in all the twelve <lb/>
districts. <lb/>
Nine members of the United <lb/>
States House of Representatives. <lb/>
Fifty State Senators. <lb/>
One hundred and twenty <lb/>
members of the North Carolina <lb/>
House of Representatives. <lb/>
All county officials. <lb/>
And the Legislature elected <lb/>
this year will the important <lb/>
duty of electing a United States <lb/>
Senator, as Senator Vance's term <lb/>
expires March 4th, 1891. <lb/>
Judge and Solicitor Argo <lb/>
have pronounced the cheering of <lb/>
Boyle in the Court House at Raleigh <lb/>
on Saturday night, as a disgrace. <lb/>
This is a mistake. It was only one <lb/>
chapter of a disgrace. The great <lb/>
diagram itself was in the verdict of <lb/>
the jury, by the way, which <lb/>
formed to acquit the <lb/>
the consequent stigma <lb/>
east the young lady's fair <lb/>
lame, holding her up to public view <lb/>
as a wanton and a <lb/>
Am. <lb/>
We agree with in the <lb/>
above. If the applause that greet- <lb/>
ed the scoundrel and debauchee <lb/>
were all, it might eventually be <lb/>
forgotten, because the men who <lb/>
applauded Boyle, and called on <lb/>
him for a speech acted more like a <lb/>
set of outcasts and cut-throats <lb/>
than respective citizens. He who <lb/>
would render Hero-Worship to a <lb/>
fiend incarnate, and glory it the <lb/>
downfall of an innocent girl, is not <lb/>
fit to look virtuous women, <lb/>
or to stand in the presence of hon- <lb/>
men. <lb/>
Shame be upon the miserable <lb/>
The name pi the <lb/>
Alter If. <lb/>
Adopted by the Pitt county Far- <lb/>
in session at Green- <lb/>
ville, Pitt county, N. C April 4th, <lb/>
Whereas, There has been intro- <lb/>
into the Senate of the United <lb/>
States by our worthy Senator Z. B. <lb/>
Vance a bill embracing what is <lb/>
known as the <lb/>
which was adopted by the <lb/>
Alliance and Industrial Union of <lb/>
America at their meeting at St. <lb/>
Louis, an <lb/>
the Alliance <lb/>
of Pitt county heartily endorse the <lb/>
same, Therefore <lb/>
Resolved 1st. That we urge our <lb/>
and Representatives in <lb/>
Congress to use their utmost en- <lb/>
to secure the passage of said <lb/>
bill. <lb/>
-ml. That we tender our thanks to <lb/>
our noble and worthy Senator for bis <lb/>
manly course in behalf of the <lb/>
cultural interests of the country, and <lb/>
feel that in him we have a friend and <lb/>
defender upon whom we can rely, <lb/>
that he has always shown himself to <lb/>
be the of the people and has <lb/>
still further endeared himself to his <lb/>
people, by showing that be is in full <lb/>
sympathy with the downtrodden <lb/>
and oppressed farmers and laborers <lb/>
of his country and is endeavoring by <lb/>
suitable legislation to correct some <lb/>
of the many evils under which they <lb/>
have long been suffering. <lb/>
3rd. That we are carefully watch- <lb/>
Representatives in the Na- <lb/>
Congress and will hold them <lb/>
to a strict account of their steward- <lb/>
ship. <lb/>
That a copy of <lb/>
these resolutions be sent to the Green- <lb/>
ville and <lb/>
Farmer with a request to print, and <lb/>
also he seat to <lb/>
the new tariff bill has created <lb/>
the Republicans in the House. Mr. <lb/>
Harrison will And it a big contract <lb/>
should he decide to undertake it. <lb/>
The Massachusetts me in be is accuse <lb/>
chairman breaking up <lb/>
his pledged word to them, and say <lb/>
that no bill which puts a duty upon <lb/>
hides does shall ever <lb/>
pass the House with their consent. <lb/>
There are a number of Republican <lb/>
members from other sections who <lb/>
are mad because their constituents <lb/>
were not given free carpet wool--, <lb/>
other raw materials and <lb/>
these may be added the sugar and <lb/>
tobacco crowd who do not like the <lb/>
bill. The Republican leaders are <lb/>
very uneasy over the outlook and <lb/>
fear to call a caucus on bill <lb/>
they can stop some of the pro- <lb/>
tests, effort will be made, <lb/>
now that the bill is before the full <lb/>
to make changes <lb/>
in it. If arc bot successful <lb/>
tho bill is likely to be openly op- <lb/>
posed by enough Republicans to in- <lb/>
sure it;, defeat. <lb/>
The bill for admission of Ida- <lb/>
ho been railroaded through the <lb/>
House. <lb/>
The spasm of industry which <lb/>
caused the Senate to pass a <lb/>
o'clock the hour of <lb/>
meeting passed off as speedily as it <lb/>
came on and the old hour will be <lb/>
resumed on Monday. <lb/>
Contrary to general expectation, <lb/>
the Senate Judiciary committee has <lb/>
reported a substitute for Senator <lb/>
Sherman's trust bill. It is sub- <lb/>
the bill stripped <lb/>
of the amendments. The House <lb/>
committee on the Judiciary is also <lb/>
making a great of being <lb/>
engaged considering an anti trust <lb/>
bill. Notwithstanding all this <lb/>
the trusts are sale so long as <lb/>
the Republicans control Congress. <lb/>
Mr. Quay had to ply the party <lb/>
whip very vigorously before he got <lb/>
those Florida nominations confirm- <lb/>
ed, but he whipped the kickers in <lb/>
at last and his orders were obeyed <lb/>
and yet there are Republicans who <lb/>
deny that Mr. Quay is the autocrat <lb/>
the Senate. <lb/>
The dependent pension bill has <lb/>
passed the senate, and the debate <lb/>
it makes it that quite a <lb/>
number of Republicans are opposed <lb/>
to any other pension legislation at <lb/>
present. There is a plot in the <lb/>
to add the service <lb/>
pension bill to this measure as an <lb/>
amendment, and if it succeeds there <lb/>
it may afterwards get through the <lb/>
Senate. <lb/>
The Montana contested election <lb/>
cases were taken up in the Senate <lb/>
this week, and a vote is expected <lb/>
to-day or tomorrow. It has also <lb/>
leaked out why the matter has <lb/>
dragged so slowly along. Senator <lb/>
and one or two other Re- <lb/>
publicans, believing that matter <lb/>
should be referred back to the <lb/>
Absenteeism on the part of the <lb/>
Chiefs of divisions and bureaus in <lb/>
the Interior department has become <lb/>
such an abuse that Secretary Noble <lb/>
has issued order that no chief or <lb/>
other clerk shall be absent in future <lb/>
without obtaining permission. <lb/>
Hamilton the man who <lb/>
was given a posit ion in the Census <lb/>
office as a reward for testifying <lb/>
against the postmaster at <lb/>
by whom he was employed, <lb/>
has been removed from office, bat <lb/>
the Civil Service Commissioners for <lb/>
whom did the dirty work, <lb/>
and who got him the office be has <lb/>
been dismissed from, are still in <lb/>
office. <lb/>
The Senate Committee seems in <lb/>
no hurry to report the World's Fair <lb/>
bill, and will probably not do so he- <lb/>
fore next week. <lb/>
The members of the Pan <lb/>
can Congress will start on their <lb/>
southern excursion in about two <lb/>
weeks. On the inst., Secretary <lb/>
Proctor has ordered a review of all <lb/>
the regular army troops stationed <lb/>
here, and on the evening of the same <lb/>
day the Congress will entertain Mr. <lb/>
Harrison at dinner. <lb/>
Two <lb/>
my and the been <lb/>
passed by the House. <lb/>
The National association of Dem- <lb/>
clubs has established head- <lb/>
quarters in this city, and will take <lb/>
a very active part in the coming <lb/>
Congressional campaign. <lb/>
The members of the who <lb/>
lost their salaries through <lb/>
defalcation were made to feel good <lb/>
by a decision of the court of claims <lb/>
this week that the Government was <lb/>
responsible for the stolen money. <lb/>
The ease will be appealed. <lb/>
The friends of the silver <lb/>
bill will try to have that measure <lb/>
called up for consideration by the <lb/>
House on the 15th, inst. <lb/>
Senators and <lb/>
have not spoken to each other oats <lb/>
side of the Senate chamber fer <lb/>
quite a long while. <lb/>
Opinions of the Press. <lb/>
Ob Leading of tat Say. <lb/>
IT WILL BE SO. <lb/>
Durham Sun. <lb/>
A surplus strictly means <lb/>
thing left Shortly it will be <lb/>
something over the left. <lb/>
BOTH SHAVERS. <lb/>
Raleigh Chronicle. <lb/>
There is a barber in Denver who <lb/>
has made by shaving <lb/>
That's nothing. Jay Gould <lb/>
has made a hundred million dollars <lb/>
at the same business. <lb/>
TIMES HATE CHANGED. <lb/>
Winston Sentinel. <lb/>
Miss Winnie Davis is to marry a <lb/>
Mr. Alfred Wilkinson, of <lb/>
N Y. Had a man twenty-five years <lb/>
ago said that Jeff. daughter <lb/>
would one day marry a Yankee, he <lb/>
would have promptly been licked. <lb/>
YEA, WHAT <lb/>
Wilmington Review. <lb/>
If Boyle was cheered so heartily <lb/>
in the Court House on his acquittal <lb/>
of the well proven charge of out- <lb/>
raging a virtuous young lady what <lb/>
sort of demonstration would have <lb/>
been accorded him if he had <lb/>
as well as ruined the poor <lb/>
NOT FOB BUT FOB JUDGE <lb/>
Washington Gazette. <lb/>
We are authorized by Judge G- <lb/>
H. Brown to state in reply to in- <lb/>
in this county <lb/>
and elsewhere that he is not a can- <lb/>
for Congress In <lb/>
with the Judge said that be <lb/>
prefers to remain on the Bench if <lb/>
the people see fit to nominate and <lb/>
elect him to the Judgeship he now <lb/>
holds. <lb/>
THAT'S ALL. <lb/>
Phil. Ledger, <lb/>
An esteemed contemporary at <lb/>
pains to explain to a correspondent <lb/>
why the current Congress cannot <lb/>
be said to be in extra session. If <lb/>
the correspondent possessed of <lb/>
discrimination be would have <lb/>
perceived for himself that there is <lb/>
nothing extra about this Congress <lb/>
except in the matter of <lb/>
ACT OF A <lb/>
Laurinburg Exchange. <lb/>
His was a act that we <lb/>
most make public mention of it. <lb/>
We refer to the nice suit of clothes <lb/>
presented by Alex Wall, colored, to <lb/>
a little white boy, because and in <lb/>
appreciation of the favors done him <lb/>
the father before his <lb/>
death. This is such a noble and <lb/>
unusual expression of gratitude, as <lb/>
that it should Alex's name <lb/>
in the heart of every sympathizer <lb/>
with the unfortunate. <lb/>
BOUGH ON <lb/>
Advance Thought. <lb/>
Were all thieves other inmates <lb/>
of the prisons of this country <lb/>
elected as a congress or <lb/>
law-making body, they could not <lb/>
possibly inflict the damage upon <lb/>
honest industry that has been in- <lb/>
by the law-making body <lb/>
called Congress, as now chosen, <lb/>
year after year in the interest of the <lb/>
managers of monopolies. The whole- <lb/>
sale thieves who are not prison <lb/>
are the ones we suffer most from. <lb/>
HE CAN'T DO IT. <lb/>
Wilson Advance. <lb/>
The Advance believes the rents <lb/>
charged tenants for land is entirely <lb/>
too high. If the man who farms on <lb/>
bis own land finds it almost <lb/>
to make a living, having no <lb/>
rent to pay, how can a poor tenant <lb/>
who buys all his supplies on time at <lb/>
an exorbitant profit, landlords, <lb/>
are as as merchants to <lb/>
these pay one third of the <lb/>
gross receipts or bis farm, pay the <lb/>
expenses necessary to make the <lb/>
crop and cloth his <lb/>
LET IT GO. <lb/>
Durham Sun. <lb/>
The time is coming, and not far <lb/>
off, when there will a demand <lb/>
for the abolishing of the Electoral <lb/>
College; it will come from so <lb/>
many of our twelve million voters <lb/>
that one more amendment will be <lb/>
made to the constitution, providing <lb/>
for the doing away of this <lb/>
mode of electing the Chief <lb/>
Magistrate. Let the people vote <lb/>
Tor him directly, just as they do for <lb/>
their Governor. Both alike are the <lb/>
servants of the people, and should <lb/>
be elected by the people as they are <lb/>
responsible to the people. <lb/>
Elizabeth City Falcon. <lb/>
The people of the first judicial <lb/>
district will take pleasure in <lb/>
Judge Brown to the position <lb/>
he now fields. George Brown has <lb/>
proved to the people at large what <lb/>
we of this district have long known <lb/>
that be is one of the best lawyers in <lb/>
the State. His circuit at the Fall term <lb/>
of this district court has satisfied bis <lb/>
own people that he is a fair and just <lb/>
judge, who bids fair to advance to <lb/>
the very first place in the ranks of <lb/>
excellent judiciary. We all feel <lb/>
proud of him, and rejoice In the op <lb/>
to endorse him. There <lb/>
will be no opposition to his <lb/>
and he will receive the <lb/>
est support from those of his <lb/>
who are best qualified to contest <lb/>
the honor with him. Judge Brown's <lb/>
nomination is an assured fact. It <lb/>
will be unanimous. <lb/>
Tar Sale. <lb/>
Pursuant to provisions of Chapter of <lb/>
the laws of shall, beginning <lb/>
Monday May 6th. at A. M. In <lb/>
front of the Court door in <lb/>
Greenville sell the. below described <lb/>
lands and town lots for taxes due <lb/>
for the year 1880 and unpaid thereon <lb/>
and cost tor advertising the <lb/>
J. A. K. Tucker, <lb/>
Sheriff of Pitt county. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Campbell, Jas E, acres, <lb/>
Mrs P A, acres, <lb/>
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Rodman, W B. Jr. <lb/>
Rollins, R A, acres, <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Langley, T H, acres, due. <lb/>
Little. B K, acres, <lb/>
SWIFT CREEK <lb/>
S law, <lb/>
Brooks, -Tames, Sr, <lb/>
law, <lb/>
Brooks. Jacob, acres, stock law, <lb/>
Brooks, Z, town lot, Grifton, <lb/>
Blount, Simon, acres, stock law, <lb/>
Bland, T, Jr, acres, stock law <lb/>
Cannon. George, acres, <lb/>
COX. Fred, acres, <lb/>
Gardner, Daniel, acres, <lb/>
Garris, John acres. <lb/>
Hardy, G B, Jr, acres, <lb/>
Joyner. Isaac, acres. <lb/>
Jones, Henry, acres, <lb/>
Johnson, E A. E L <lb/>
acres, <lb/>
acres, <lb/>
Jenkins, Kinton, law <lb/>
Kilpatrick, Louis. acres, <lb/>
Laughinghouse, S V. acres <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Lang, E, BOMb , <lb/>
law, <lb/>
law, <lb/>
Samuel, acres, <lb/>
stock law, <lb/>
Rasberry, S S. acres, <lb/>
w, acres. <lb/>
Smith, Dennis, of J L Win- <lb/>
field. acres, <lb/>
Smith, Patience. acres, <lb/>
stock law, u <lb/>
Sheppard, John, acres, <lb/>
Tingle. James, acres, <lb/>
stock law, <lb/>
Wilson, T W. acres, <lb/>
Wilson, J C, acres, <lb/>
Wilson, G Lizzie. <lb/>
. <lb/>
acres, <lb/>
Windley, W E, acres,<lb/>
L P, acres, <lb/>
Beardsley. J H. acres, due, <lb/>
town lot In Farm- <lb/>
ville, <lb/>
Carr, F T. acres, <lb/>
Darden, R A. acres. <lb/>
Flanagan. James, acres, <lb/>
Jones, G W, acres, <lb/>
Joyner, T A, acres. town lots <lb/>
in Marlboro, , <lb/>
J B, acres, <lb/>
Joyner, Noah, heirs, acres, <lb/>
; town lots in Marlboro, <lb/>
Willis, acres, due, <lb/>
Moore, W D, heir G M Stanton, <lb/>
acres, <lb/>
Morrill, L V. acres, <lb/>
Tyson H S, acres. o <lb/>
Thomas, Mrs Annie, town lots, <lb/>
Q M, town lot in Marl<lb/>
Ward, T, acres, <lb/>
Williams. W. B. acres. <lb/>
BETHEL TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
town lot in Bethel, <lb/>
Atkinson. Austin, due <lb/>
Britton. M L, town lot in Bethel, <lb/>
Bryan, B F, and Taylor, town lot <lb/>
In Bethel, <lb/>
Briley, L L. j acres, <lb/>
Carson. J R, acres, <lb/>
C, acres, 38- lots <lb/>
in Bethel, . <lb/>
Jenkins, Riley, acres, <lb/>
B J, town in Bethel; <lb/>
Kittrell. M L, town lot in Bethel, <lb/>
Little, W G, acres, <lb/>
Moore, A M. town lot In <lb/>
Bethel, <lb/>
Rogers. Co, town lot in <lb/>
Bethel, <lb/>
Rouse Vines, acres, <lb/>
town lot in Bethel <lb/>
Geo G, acres, <lb/>
Taylor, W A J C, acres. <lb/>
Whitehurst. acres, <lb/>
M D, acres <lb/>
Whitfield, Geo B. acres,<lb/>
Battle. F W. lots <lb/>
R R, acres<lb/>
Hopkins, Nathan, acres <lb/>
Hearne, H R, acres <lb/>
Hearne, R K, <lb/>
Harris, J H, acres <lb/>
King. Mrs L C, acres <lb/>
Norris, H A, acres <lb/>
Redmond, acres <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Items From Cox Cotton Plant- <lb/>
Factory. <lb/>
The next census will show <lb/>
people it thought. The <lb/>
Miss Pattie Smith has closed her <lb/>
school and returned borne. <lb/>
Mrs. J. H. Smith has been sick <lb/>
more than a week. <lb/>
on the railroad goes <lb/>
right on. bridge across Swift <lb/>
Greek is nearly completed. It looks <lb/>
like we will soon have a train in oar <lb/>
midst. <lb/>
Farm work goes on very <lb/>
Several of farmers an done <lb/>
planting corn and some of it Is <lb/>
They begin to <lb/>
plant cotton in- a. few. days. <lb/>
Mr. editor of the <lb/>
delivered two excellent <lb/>
mons at on Sat- <lb/>
Mr. C A. of Greenville, <lb/>
deliver mm at <lb/>
of <lb/>
Adams, Reuben, town lot. In <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Barnhill, Judy, i town lot <lb/>
Boyd, John F, acres <lb/>
Baker. Bryant, acres <lb/>
Brown, James, J town lot Green- <lb/>
ville <lb/>
Clark, Mrs A M, acres, town lot <lb/>
hi Greenville ., <lb/>
Cherry. Benjamin, 1-6 town lot in <lb/>
Greenville due <lb/>
Emmet, Nancy, town lot in <lb/>
Greenville f <lb/>
Elks, James L. acres <lb/>
Forbes, Noah wife acres <lb/>
Flake, M A, acres C <lb/>
Flood, W A, i town lot in Green- <lb/>
ville a it <lb/>
Fleming, Mrs Sidney, acres <lb/>
Fleming, Sylvester, acres <lb/>
Gorham. Dinah, i town lot in <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Gorham, 1-6 town lot in <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Harris, Edward, i town lot <lb/>
Nelson, J lot, Greenville <lb/>
Hanrahan, W lot due <lb/>
Hardy, Stanley wife I lot in <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Harris, H F, town lot in Green- <lb/>
ville <lb/>
Harrington. Marina, i town lot In <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Johnson, F M wife acres <lb/>
Knox, Abram, acre <lb/>
W M, acres <lb/>
A F, i town lot, Greenville <lb/>
Moore, H, acres <lb/>
Moore, Reuben, acres doe <lb/>
J B, acres <lb/>
Patrick, town lot in <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Randolph, Wiley, i town lot in <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Sermons, D G, acres a <lb/>
Sugg, I A wife acres, town <lb/>
lot in Greenville <lb/>
Statical, Wilson, acres d <lb/>
Jas A, acres due <lb/>
Tell, Edna, acres <lb/>
J F, acres <lb/>
Wiley, j town lot In <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
Williams, Matthew, town lot In <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
lot Greenville <lb/>
B, E C Yellow- <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
B S, heirs, 1250 acres <lb/>
Bullock, Jerry, acres <lb/>
Braswell, A, acres <lb/>
acres <lb/>
Hams, S S wife acres due <lb/>
King, Daniel R. acres <lb/>
Wiley town lot <lb/>
acres <lb/>
It DAM TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Braxton, Jesse, acres <lb/>
Joyner, W C, acres <lb/>
Parker, E S. acres <lb/>
Tripp, J C, ac-es <lb/>
Notice of Tax Sale. <lb/>
On Monday the 5th day of Mar, 1890, I <lb/>
shall sell at public sale before the <lb/>
Court House door in Greenville the <lb/>
fallowing lands in Pitt county for; <lb/>
taxes due for the years 1884. 1886 <lb/>
and 1887. Parties interested can <lb/>
pay me before day of sale, adding <lb/>
coat of this advertisement. April<lb/>
Ex-Sheriff Pitt Co. <lb/>
Mil II I TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
1884. Noah acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
1885. Noah Joyner's heirs acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
1887. Noah Joyner's heirs acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
in <lb/>
I Noah <lb/>
1884. Andrew Joyner <lb/>
Greenville land, and <lb/>
Andrew Joyner four town <lb/>
lots in <lb/>
Marlboro, <lb/>
Pitt Co. <lb/>
1887. E S Parker acres land, <lb/>
FALKLAND TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
1884. J B acres land <lb/>
1885. <lb/>
1887. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
1887. S V Laughinghouse <lb/>
SWIFT CREEK TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
1885. S V Laughinghouse acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
1887. S V Laughinghouse acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
BETHEL TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
1887. D C Moore acres land <lb/>
STOCK LAW TAX. <lb/>
1885. S V acres <lb/>
land C <lb/>
1887. S V Laughinghouse <lb/>
land <lb/>
Jacob Brooks acres land <lb/>
Simon <lb/>
Trent River Steamboat Com- <lb/>
acres land <lb/>
Jenkins acres <lb/>
land <lb/>
Isaac Joyner acres land <lb/>
SR Wilson <lb/>
E A Smith <lb/>
1884. I A Sugg and wife acres<lb/>
ac res <lb/>
Craft tract <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife acres Skin- <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife acres T A <lb/>
Nobles <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife M acres Jno <lb/>
Flanagan <lb/>
I A S and wife Gard L C <lb/>
Rountree <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife <lb/>
Township acres <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife Farmville <lb/>
acres <lb/>
1885. I A Sugg and wife acres <lb/>
Ron n trees <lb/>
IA Sugg and wife acre Skin- <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife acres <lb/>
Nobles <lb/>
I A Sugg and acres <lb/>
Flanagan OB <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife Farmville <lb/>
Township acres <lb/>
1887. I A Sugg and wife acres <lb/>
Rountree <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife j acres Ra- <lb/>
vine <lb/>
I A and wife acres <lb/>
Flanagan <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife acres <lb/>
Nobles <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife acre Skin- <lb/>
I A Sugg and wife Farmville <lb/>
Township acres <lb/>
1884. John F Boyd, land <lb/>
1886. <lb/>
1887. <lb/>
1887. purchase tax <lb/>
1887, Noah Jr., acres <lb/>
land, balance due, <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
THE OF C <lb/>
counties, a line of the following good <lb/>
arc not to be excelled In this market. And to be and <lb/>
DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING GEN <lb/>
GOODS. HATS BOOTS and LA <lb/>
SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURnIsHING <lb/>
-NO- <lb/>
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS. and <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different <lb/>
Kinds, Gin and Mm. Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles. <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Bread Prep- <lb/>
and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin- <lb/>
d Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and and <lb/>
How Ware. Nails a specialty. Give a and I satisfaction. <lb/>
see <lb/>
Will <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
Town Tax Sale. <lb/>
As Town Tax Collector I have levied <lb/>
on the following lots on the 1st day <lb/>
of April, 1890, listed for taxation in <lb/>
the town of Greenville by the fol- <lb/>
lowing parties who arc delinquents. <lb/>
And on Monday, the day of May <lb/>
1890, at m., I will offer the same <lb/>
for cash to the highest bidder at <lb/>
public auction at the Court House <lb/>
door in the town of Greenville to <lb/>
satisfy the taxes and cost due <lb/>
THE CARRIAGE <lb/>
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb/>
J. D. Williamson, <lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House. <lb/>
CONTINUE THE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRATS. <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, Hy put up nothing <lb/>
but first-class work. We keep up with the times and improved styles. <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep-on hand a full of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
the year round, which will sell as as the lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same. <lb/>
E. A. TAFT, <lb/>
Wishes to inform his friends and the public generally that he has <lb/>
bought out the Grocery establishment of T. R. Cherry, and with <lb/>
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb/>
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY <lb/>
At prices fully in keeping with the times. I keep Flour, <lb/>
Meat, Lard, 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/>
J. B. CHERRY. <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
CHERRY CO. <lb/>
thereon. <lb/>
Adams, Reuben <lb/>
Barnhill, Judy <lb/>
Bryant, Samuel <lb/>
John <lb/>
Blount, <lb/>
Cherry, A B, <lb/>
W. F. Evans, <lb/>
Tax Collector. <lb/>
Cherry, Benjamin <lb/>
Redmond <lb/>
Cherry, Samuel <lb/>
Emmet, Nancy <lb/>
Fleming. W A <lb/>
Flood, W A <lb/>
Dinah <lb/>
Gorham, Austin <lb/>
Gorham, <lb/>
Harris, H F <lb/>
for 1885 <lb/>
Harris, Edward <lb/>
Hopkins, Nelson <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
A lot <lb/>
riot <lb/>
i lot <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
for year 1885 <lb/>
i lot due <lb/>
J lot <lb/>
lots <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
lots <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
due <lb/>
Hot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
so <lb/>
acres <lb/>
CON HI TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
Arnold, Loots, Sr eras <lb/>
Blount. H L, acres <lb/>
D N, acres <lb/>
J, acres <lb/>
W P, seres <lb/>
Brand, C C, for acres <lb/>
Craft, Mary, acres <lb/>
B, SB acres doe <lb/>
Jenkins, J C. acres <lb/>
OB. acres stock law <lb/>
A, <lb/>
iS <lb/>
tat <lb/>
Hanrahan, W C A wife I lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
Stanley i lot <lb/>
Jackson, Washington lot <lb/>
Johnson, John Ben <lb/>
Jackson, J Q, lot <lb/>
lot <lb/>
A P Hot <lb/>
Wiley Hot <lb/>
Alex lot <lb/>
Whitehead, Wiley lot <lb/>
Brown, James Jr, lot <lb/>
Latham, Jacob lot <lb/>
u for <lb/>
1885<lb/>
I B acres <lb/>
A Lady's Perfect Companion. <lb/>
new book by Dr. John H. Dye, <lb/>
one of New York's most skillful <lb/>
shows that pain not necessary <lb/>
In childbirth, but results from causes <lb/>
easily understood and overcome. It <lb/>
clearly that any woman may be- <lb/>
come a mother without suffering any <lb/>
pain whatever. It also tells bow to over <lb/>
come and prevent morning sickness and <lb/>
many other evils attending <lb/>
It is highly endorsed by physicians <lb/>
everywhere as wife's true private <lb/>
companion. Cut this It w ill save <lb/>
you great pain, and your life. <lb/>
Sena two-cent stamp for descriptive cir- <lb/>
and eon Aden rial <lb/>
letters sent In sealed envelope. Add res <lb/>
Thomas A Co,, Publishers, <lb/>
Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
Have come to claim your attention and solicit your esteemed patronage <lb/>
do not claim that we have the largest and best stock east of the <lb/>
Rocky Mountains, bat we do say that arc to the front <lb/>
with a specially selected line of-------- <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb/>
Suited to the want of a large class of customers. arc in full sympathy <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 if we cannot interest you. W <lb/>
are better prepared than ever before to serve you. We have in stock to-day <lb/>
a line of <lb/>
DRY GOODS <lb/>
Embracing Goods and Trimmings, Ginghams and <lb/>
and Piece Goods and Cashmeres for Men's and Boy's Suits, Homespun, <lb/>
Sheetings. Bleached and Unbleached Domestics, Canton Flannels and Bed Ticking. <lb/>
Boots and Shoes. <lb/>
For Men, Women. Boys, Misses and Children, at prices that will cause the <lb/>
rejoice, and the hearts of all will be made glad who buy Boots and Shoes from <lb/>
why because we sell low give the money's worth. A full line of Not <lb/>
and Furnishing Goods that will delight the hearts of and <lb/>
HATS and CAPS for men, boys and children. HARDWARE, in this line we <lb/>
you a stock as complete as the or mechanic can wish. We make a s; <lb/>
Nails and guarantee them to be the best made. <lb/>
Groceries. <lb/>
The in world <lb/>
Bruises, Sores, dears. Salt Rheum <lb/>
Fever Sore. Hands <lb/>
Coma, and all <lb/>
and cores Piles, or r <lb/>
any required. It is guaranteed to gt <lb/>
perfect or <lb/>
taper <lb/>
Which we are selling at rock bottom prices, not because we are forced to do <lb/>
but we take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can we interest yon <lb/>
If so come in and examine our stock of Sugar, Molasses. Coffee, Tea, Soap. <lb/>
Toilet and Laundry, Lye, Matches, Starch, Rice, Meats of different kinds, <lb/>
which we are now buying from first hands and can save yon money if you call <lb/>
examine before buying elsewhere. Tobacco and Snuff. <lb/>
Headquarters for <lb/>
Of which we carry a line not to be excelled in this market, such at <lb/>
Bureaus, Double and Single Bedsteads, Tables, Cots, Washstands, Bed <lb/>
Mattresses, Children's Cradles and Beds, Chairs of different kinds and <lb/>
all to suit hard times and short crops. Anything that you want in this line M <lb/>
have not we a special order for you, as we have cat <lb/>
from several the best furniture houses in the United States and <lb/>
action as to prices. Wood and Willow ware, Glassware, Lamps, r <lb/>
Bridles and Collars. Cart Saddles, Whips Millinery. <lb/>
Valises and Traveling Bags, <lb/>
Life Is too short to keep on telling what we have and But <lb/>
you all health and prosperity and giving to every man, woman and child who I <lb/>
to Greenville a cordial invitation to tome in and examine our stock, <lb/>
We remain yours to serve <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO.,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018982_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
1890. 1890. <lb/>
.-SPRING<lb/>
PEKING <lb/>
PEKING <lb/>
THE <lb/>
REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
Local Sparks <lb/>
MR. M. R. LANG <lb/>
MRS. M M. NELSON <lb/>
who have been north on their <lb/>
PURCHASING TOUR <lb/>
have returned and we are now <lb/>
showing the prettiest line in <lb/>
SPRING GOODS <lb/>
to be seen in Greenville. <lb/>
IO <lb/>
the <lb/>
he Ladies ; <lb/>
WE WILL SAY THAT MRS. <lb/>
SON ASSURES THEM OF A <lb/>
HANDSOME STOCK OF <lb/>
DRESS GOODS. TRIM- <lb/>
AND FAN- <lb/>
CY GOODS. <lb/>
HAVING <lb/>
LARGE <lb/>
WITH <lb/>
THE BEST TRADE <lb/>
OF THE COUNTY WE <lb/>
DO NOT HESITATE TO <lb/>
SAT THAT MRS. NELSON <lb/>
WILL SELECT THE LARGEST <lb/>
AND MOST ATTRACTIVE STOCK <lb/>
EVER SHOWN IN GREENVILLE. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
TWENTY YEARS EXPERIENCE <lb/>
HAS EARNED FOR MR. LANG A <lb/>
LARGE PATRON- <lb/>
AGE WHO AL- <lb/>
WAYS RELY ON <lb/>
HIM TO BUY THE <lb/>
THE BRIGHT <lb/>
STYLES AND THE <lb/>
CORRECT STYLES. <lb/>
WITH IN <lb/>
VIEW WE ASSURE <lb/>
OUR GENTLEMEN <lb/>
OF AN UNUSUAL- <lb/>
LY ATTRACTIVE <lb/>
DISPLAY IN CLOTHING, HATS. <lb/>
FOOTWEAR, FURNISHINGS, <lb/>
To All <lb/>
WHILE OUR TWO BUYERS ARE <lb/>
SELECTING LARGE STOCKS <lb/>
GUSS, ALEX AND PAT <lb/>
ARE GIVING <lb/>
BAR- <lb/>
GAINS TO <lb/>
CLEAR <lb/>
OUT THE <lb/>
OF OUR FALL <lb/>
GOODS AND MAKE <lb/>
ROOM FOR NEW ONES, <lb/>
COME AND SECURE SOME <lb/>
OF THE MANY BARGAINS WE <lb/>
ARE OFFERING BEFORE THEY <lb/>
ARE ALL DISPOSED OF.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY <lb/>
MARCH no <lb/>
ARCH <lb/>
The weather fur n few days past <lb/>
not be improved <lb/>
Mr. R. D. returned last <lb/>
week from Tenn. <lb/>
Mrs. D. H. James returned <lb/>
evening from a to l <lb/>
Mrs. W. A. Fleming, of <lb/>
spent last week visiting Mrs. M. A. <lb/>
Stephens. <lb/>
Hon. G. Bernard was quite sick <lb/>
last week but we are glad to state is <lb/>
now. <lb/>
Bring on for job print-; Mrs. Wiley Brown been sick <lb/>
j for a few days. We are glad to know <lb/>
Dec, D. M. Ferry New j Improving. <lb/>
Garden Seed the Old Brick Mr. the railroad bridge <lb/>
workman who was seriously hurt two <lb/>
Dark coming. , weeks ago, is still improving. <lb/>
One dollar a Solid Leather Rev. Geo. J. Dowel, of Williamson, <lb/>
Lad Shoe at Cherry assisting Rev. Mr. this <lb/>
i week in the meeting at the <lb/>
Church. <lb/>
Cotton <lb/>
Buy your shirts of Higgs Mun- <lb/>
Ar tin- of the brides fa <lb/>
in Beaver Dam township, this <lb/>
on the 2nd day of April Miss <lb/>
Emily Mr. J. L <lb/>
Rouse, Sr., G. T. Tyson, Esq., of- <lb/>
A grand was <lb/>
held at the home <lb/>
of that thorough going, <lb/>
farmer, in township, <lb/>
Henry L. Blount, Esq. Music <lb/>
by the Pleasant Mount and <lb/>
New Road <lb/>
Politics some warmer. <lb/>
Select Inter prising Ken. <lb/>
Calls are published in this paper . <lb/>
for meetings in the two principal <lb/>
wards of the town to nominate can- <lb/>
for The Re- <lb/>
wants to see good men <lb/>
en, men who have progressive ideas <lb/>
and will put their shoulders <lb/>
the old town and give her a strong <lb/>
push the front. If the town <lb/>
bonded for the establishment of water <lb/>
Advertisements. <lb/>
W. F- Evans, Town Tax Collector, <lb/>
advertises the property or delinquents <lb/>
in this paper. <lb/>
the bead of legal notices <lb/>
on fourth page will a sum- <lb/>
mons to F. L. in the mat- <lb/>
of vs <lb/>
M. King <lb/>
a sale of for taxes hie <lb/>
the years in which he was collector. <lb/>
The list will be I in this paper. <lb/>
We failed to attention to the an <lb/>
in toe matter of Tucker. .-, <lb/>
vs Murphy, I; <lb/>
be found in legal notice <lb/>
The John Flanagan Buggy Co. <lb/>
have an advertisement in this paper. I <lb/>
Last week the fact of Mr. <lb/>
Flanagan in the was <lb/>
made. Read the advertisement. <lb/>
JUST ARRIVED <lb/>
M. CONGLETON CO., <lb/>
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb/>
j. a. Andrews; <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Dealer u- <lb/>
STAPLE A N <lb/>
Meat and <lb/>
n c. <lb/>
-DEALERS IN <lb/>
. , works an electric lights it would be <lb/>
Arrived the 15th Boss J- F- left yesterday the better. <lb/>
Milk Biscuit at the Old Brick Store. for Carthage, where he goes to take <lb/>
a position in the Tyson Jones bug- ; All work Together. <lb/>
factory. Some material for the construction <lb/>
Mr W. F. the Reflector of a depot has indications <lb/>
rented one of the Skin now are that the time for <lb/>
dwellings on street and <lb/>
gone to keeping house. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Cooper, of Winches- <lb/>
Tarboro is troubled with spirits. <lb/>
One dollar a Whole Stock <lb/>
Mans Shoe M B. Cherry Co's <lb/>
Easter Sunday was a beautiful day. <lb/>
The loaf of bread I ever ate <lb/>
was made of Point Lace <lb/>
the Old Brick Store- <lb/>
at j ya. their <lb/>
daughter. Mrs. A. N. Ryan, left for <lb/>
trains several evenings last <lb/>
Late <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Bushels <lb/>
cheap, at the <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Court in county <lb/>
Blank Deeds, and <lb/>
Liens sale at this office. <lb/>
The foliage the is <lb/>
rapidly- <lb/>
The office can sell <lb/>
yon good a pack. <lb/>
The small boy is happy-he can go <lb/>
barefooted. <lb/>
per lb for Sweet Scotch <lb/>
Snuff. lb bold m Pitt Co., which <lb/>
is a of its at <lb/>
the Old Brick <lb/>
home yesterday morning. <lb/>
Mrs. S. M. and <lb/>
Brows have a new advertise <lb/>
to-day. They have some <lb/>
attractions for the Indies that <lb/>
none should miss seeing. There is <lb/>
hardly a doubt as to your if <lb/>
yon once examine their goods and <lb/>
learn prices. These enterprising <lb/>
young men arc sparing no pates to <lb/>
please customers. <lb/>
id<lb/>
are <lb/>
the work is decidedly indefinite. It. <lb/>
strikes us that Greenville is standing <lb/>
very much in her own light to allow <lb/>
the railroad to antagonized and <lb/>
the blame laid upon the town when j <lb/>
the town is not to blame. Better by <lb/>
far it be to get a <lb/>
lion, welcome the completion of Che again in the Buggy Manufacturing <lb/>
NOW<lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
FLANAGAN <lb/>
FLANAGAN <lb/>
oils, Boots, Shoes and <lb/>
GROCERIES. <lb/>
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of new <lb/>
Spring and Summer Goods. <lb/>
I shall be glad to have my old friends and customers come to <lb/>
see us, and assure them that we can sell the goods <lb/>
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for <lb/>
the spot cash. <lb/>
JOHN S. CONGLETON. <lb/>
N. C, January, <lb/>
five i in open arms, and then people I <lb/>
u -I corporation to work for <lb/>
j week an I remained a few days. ,,.,, <lb/>
-business at his old <lb/>
Mr. C. P. Wilson, of the <lb/>
Advance, came Saturday even- <lb/>
remained until Monday <lb/>
morning with his parents here <lb/>
Williamson <lb/>
took orders for six buggies to be <lb/>
sent lo Wilmington. How is that for <lb/>
Greenville and the work this <lb/>
can do <lb/>
Engineer George Smith, since the <lb/>
trains re running to the uptown <lb/>
depot, has moved his family to the <lb/>
Ward <lb/>
Democratic voters of the Sec <lb/>
nod Ward are requested to meet at <lb/>
Ike ; Home on Thursday <lb/>
the 24th inst., at o'clock P. M. for <lb/>
I the purpose of nominating Council <lb/>
men for s lid <lb/>
Member Coin, for 2nd Ward <lb/>
The Democratic voters the <lb/>
Third Ward are requested to meet <lb/>
on <lb/>
He has an interest in the <lb/>
Greenville Carriage Works the <lb/>
style of the firm has been <lb/>
change I to <lb/>
WILEY<lb/>
JAMES BROWN. <lb/>
I oh n <lb/>
oil n <lb/>
This <lb/>
Flanagan <lb/>
Buggy<lb/>
T I<lb/>
at the Mayor's office on Thursday <lb/>
night the at o'clock, for <lb/>
the purpose of nominating candidates <lb/>
for in said Ward. <lb/>
Alex L. Blow. <lb/>
Com. for Ward. <lb/>
Institute to be more convenient <lb/>
to his work. <lb/>
Mr. H. F. Keel, who has con. <lb/>
fined at home with sickness for sever, <lb/>
a weeks was town yesterday. His <lb/>
many friends are glad to see him re- <lb/>
gaining health. and <lb/>
Mr. H. L. Fennel, Wilmington, At the meeting or Hoard of <lb/>
has been in town this week, coming j Commit held Thursday night <lb/>
from now until the end of; in response to a telegram announcing I of la -l week the <lb/>
were for Registrars and <lb/>
Inspectors for the town election to <lb/>
be held the first Monday in May <lb/>
H. M. <lb/>
day evening from where Inspectors C. <lb/>
she had been spending sometime with I Alonzo Cherry. <lb/>
They grow winner <lb/>
and the weather. <lb/>
For cash yon can get the <lb/>
CORDIAL INVITATION TO ALL <lb/>
INVITATION <lb/>
M. R. LANG, <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
1890 with an almanac the <lb/>
thrown in. <lb/>
The seines arc catching a good <lb/>
many rocks as well m shad. <lb/>
New goods at riving dally at <lb/>
The Episcopal Church was <lb/>
decorated for <lb/>
The latest. Novelties in dress <lb/>
goods and trimmings to match at I <lb/>
Higgs <lb/>
Some bad sidewalk bridges repair- j <lb/>
last week. Good <lb/>
repair all kinds <lb/>
of old stores and all kinds of <lb/>
at lowest prices. <lb/>
Latham <lb/>
Take stock in the Loan <lb/>
Association and build you a home. <lb/>
The river is lower and getting clear ; <lb/>
enough tor book and lice fishing. <lb/>
Make a good-investment by taking <lb/>
stock in the Building Loan <lb/>
Quite a somber of farmers in town <lb/>
last Friday attending the Alliance <lb/>
meeting. <lb/>
Rock Springs is a favorite Sunday <lb/>
resort during the summer months. <lb/>
Ain't it Henry <lb/>
There were a few over three <lb/>
arrivals at Hotel during <lb/>
last month. A good record. <lb/>
We see some lumber in certain <lb/>
places that probably means something <lb/>
for Greenville, about which more will <lb/>
be said late r. <lb/>
The meeting in the Baptist Church <lb/>
continues this week, two services <lb/>
being held each The public <lb/>
cordially invited. <lb/>
A lot of lumber with which to <lb/>
build trestles on the railroad be- <lb/>
tween here and Kinston has been <lb/>
thrown out at the depot. <lb/>
Just so Many of you would not <lb/>
pay your taxes and now the Sheriff <lb/>
has advertised your land. Look over <lb/>
the list as it appears in another col- <lb/>
The game law went into effect with <lb/>
this month and the <lb/>
have a rest from <lb/>
the hunters until the middle of <lb/>
Mrs. A Joyner will to-day <lb/>
receive their spring stock of millinery <lb/>
and fancy goods, and their Northern <lb/>
milliner will arrive next week. They <lb/>
propose to earn- a stock this season <lb/>
second to none that can be found in <lb/>
any of the towns and will pat up all <lb/>
work in the very best styles. <lb/>
We know a man living more than <lb/>
miles from Greenville who <lb/>
es all bis dry goods in this town. <lb/>
His reason for so doing is that he can <lb/>
get better bargains here. <lb/>
Headquarters for all kinds of <lb/>
Tool, Plows, Plow Castings, <lb/>
Axes, Shovels, Spades, Forks, <lb/>
at the Hardware Store. <lb/>
Latham <lb/>
Our large merchant, Mr. M. B. <lb/>
Lang, last week filled mail orders <lb/>
goods from Warrenton, La Grange, <lb/>
Kingston, Tarboro and several of the <lb/>
small places in this This is <lb/>
a result of keeping a first-class stock <lb/>
of goods and advertising <lb/>
We hope ere long to see him doing a <lb/>
mail order business equal to some of <lb/>
the northern merchants. <lb/>
Children pleasant <lb/>
flavor, gentle action and soothing <lb/>
effect of of Figs, when in <lb/>
need of a laxative and if the father <lb/>
or be costive or bilious the <lb/>
results its <lb/>
so that it is the beat family <lb/>
know and every family <lb/>
have a bottle. <lb/>
Plants foe to <lb/>
Allen Warren A Boa, Greenville, <lb/>
V. C. Cabbage plants cents per <lb/>
per Collard per <lb/>
81.50 per Tomato <lb/>
cents per dozen; Dahlia <lb/>
cents per dozen; <lb/>
plants cents per dozen; Hardy <lb/>
Phlox plants cents per dozen ; <lb/>
Pepper and Egg Plants later in the <lb/>
season. <lb/>
the sickness of little daughter. <lb/>
W are the little one is <lb/>
Mrs. P. E. Dancy I <lb/>
Company will will continue the <lb/>
manufacture of all kinds <lb/>
VEHICLES i <lb/>
and do Genera Repairing. We have <lb/>
competent workmen and every job <lb/>
leaving the shops has our personal <lb/>
We solicit patronage. <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
take pleasure in informing my old <lb/>
friends and patrons that I am again M <lb/>
the business a- above stated, and hope <lb/>
to again lie favored with the liberal pat- <lb/>
they I innerly bestowed on me. <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
COME IN <lb/>
------We have been fortunate in securing a great bargain in------ <lb/>
We have been fortunate in securing a great bargain in------ <lb/>
GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, ETC , ETC., <lb/>
GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES. ETC., ETC., <lb/>
-WHITE <lb/>
-and will sell them all at very low figures.- <lb/>
-and will sell them all at very low figures.- <lb/>
her daughter, Mrs. The <lb/>
latter with her two children returned <lb/>
to Greenville. <lb/>
Rev. J. N. H. <lb/>
preached in the Baptist Church <lb/>
here, night, to a very large <lb/>
congregation. He is an able minis- <lb/>
Ur mil his monthly visits here are a <lb/>
source of much pleasure to our people. <lb/>
The cars in which the family of <lb/>
Mr. J. W. Boney, of j <lb/>
track laying force, have been <lb/>
side tracked near the college the past <lb/>
two weeks. The cars arc Cited up <lb/>
as comfortably and nicely as any <lb/>
house could be. <lb/>
L. <lb/>
Brown. B King and <lb/>
W. T. Godwin. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
Sugg. H. Tucker and <lb/>
Moses King. <lb/>
Forum Ward. D. <lb/>
S. <lb/>
and J. T. <lb/>
We want to have a talk <lb/>
with you and tell <lb/>
you how cheap <lb/>
we can sell <lb/>
you <lb/>
HARDWARE <lb/>
GENTLEMEN <lb/>
-We make a specialty of line of- <lb/>
make a of our line of--------- <lb/>
SHOES. HATS, AND FURNISHING GOODS <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, AND GOODS <lb/>
------are complete.------ <lb/>
------are complete.------- <lb/>
Call and see us we guarantee all goods as represented. <lb/>
BROWN <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
DROWN <lb/>
Drown <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Another racket store was open <lb/>
down the street Saturday. Jack White <lb/>
bought a coop of guinea chickens <lb/>
and they raised a that caught <lb/>
the attention of all passers. <lb/>
We little boy the other day <lb/>
who is not yet out his dresses, <lb/>
with a cigarette in his month. It is <lb/>
hard to tell what parents are think- <lb/>
of in allowing their boys to <lb/>
run at large and contract such bad <lb/>
habits at so early an age. <lb/>
The Alliance of this <lb/>
arc considering the purchase <lb/>
of a lot near the depot upon which to <lb/>
erect a large warehouse. From what <lb/>
we can learn their plans are <lb/>
nearly perfected and such a building <lb/>
seems assured. <lb/>
Our townsman Mr. J. L. <lb/>
has been filling in some leisure time <lb/>
by making and selling a number of <lb/>
pencil pockets. The pocket is a very <lb/>
neat and serviceable pouch made to <lb/>
hold two pencils and fasten securely <lb/>
in the upper vest pocket It is <lb/>
possible for the pencil to fall out of <lb/>
the pocket. <lb/>
Just so long as Greenville has <lb/>
nothing to back her business but <lb/>
agriculture there will be no rapid <lb/>
growth in the town. It will take <lb/>
manufacturing enterprises to carry <lb/>
us forward and these can only be <lb/>
secured by a unison of spirit and <lb/>
of capital. Mark this, <lb/>
men. <lb/>
Soil of Honor. <lb/>
The following pupils were on the roll <lb/>
of honor for the past quarter of the <lb/>
school, taught by Miss Nannie Cox. <lb/>
Cox and Stokes. Boys-W. C. <lb/>
Jackson, J. B. Tripp, and Luther <lb/>
Garris. Highest average was made <lb/>
by Mary Smith. <lb/>
Tie Put st Work. <lb/>
Potato bugs are making their appear <lb/>
very early this year and hardly <lb/>
give the potato vines a chance to get <lb/>
fairly up before they pounce upon <lb/>
them. On the 2nd inst, Mr. S. M. <lb/>
reported the first <lb/>
killed five in his garden that day. <lb/>
The next day he searched his vines <lb/>
and found twenty bugs. The first <lb/>
report last year was on April 17th, <lb/>
which shows that this year they are <lb/>
two weeks ahead. Oar people will <lb/>
have to begin using bug poison. <lb/>
Foiled. <lb/>
There was an effort to break jail <lb/>
last week, a night or two before the <lb/>
prisoners were taken off to the <lb/>
In some way the prisoners <lb/>
who were going to try to break out <lb/>
had obtained two new files, which <lb/>
were supposed to be slipped in the <lb/>
jail by some of their friends. One <lb/>
of the prisoners gave the plot away <lb/>
by writing a note to the Sheriff and <lb/>
telling him some of the prisoners had <lb/>
tools and would attempt to cut out early and you <lb/>
of . This note was handed through <lb/>
the the window to an outsider who <lb/>
delivered it. Sheriff Tucker got <lb/>
or three men to go with him to the <lb/>
jail where upon examination among <lb/>
the cells the two files were found, and <lb/>
thus prevented the escape that no <lb/>
doubt have followed. <lb/>
Dixie and <lb/>
Tobacco Plows, Plow <lb/>
Castings. The Famous <lb/>
Elmo Cook Stoves. <lb/>
Give us your orders <lb/>
for <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
will be <lb/>
sure to get them in time <lb/>
LATHAM PENDER, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
The Town Councilmen last week <lb/>
the town taxes for the coming <lb/>
In a few instances the levy is <lb/>
than last year. For spent <lb/>
the property tax on each <lb/>
has been raised from to <lb/>
cents, and the poll tax always being <lb/>
three times the amount of the prop- <lb/>
tax raises that from to <lb/>
cents. The tax on retail liquor <lb/>
was raised from ft to <lb/>
The tax on lawyers was raised from <lb/>
to On merchants, hotel keep <lb/>
era sad liverymen the tax remains <lb/>
the same as last year, and the tax <lb/>
against was stricken oat <lb/>
entirely. The is glad the <lb/>
taxes in the above were <lb/>
made higher, which mesas the col lee- <lb/>
of more money consequently <lb/>
greater for the town. <lb/>
And every citizen to be glad to <lb/>
see going on. <lb/>
Funeral Sermons. <lb/>
Rev. Noah Tyson was a <lb/>
county a <lb/>
ago, and for some years <lb/>
preached at Swamp church <lb/>
a few miles from Greenville. <lb/>
Dr. B. T. Cox, who is a great-grand- <lb/>
son of Elder Tyson, was in office <lb/>
Monday and said his no w has <lb/>
a Bible that was used by him in his <lb/>
ministry, and in looking through it <lb/>
recently she found a record of the <lb/>
sermons he preached seven <lb/>
years. The aggregate is which <lb/>
the reader will doubtless say is an , <lb/>
unusually large number of funeral <lb/>
mons for one man to preach. But <lb/>
the number for each year is put down <lb/>
and the can not be doubled. <lb/>
In 1794 he preached in 1795, <lb/>
in 1796, in 1797, in 1798, <lb/>
in 1799, in 1800, We sup- <lb/>
pose the large number of funeral <lb/>
mons being preached by one man <lb/>
was due more to the scarcity of <lb/>
in those days than to the <lb/>
of deaths. <lb/>
We find in the Scotland Neck <lb/>
Democrat of last week the following <lb/>
about a citizen of this county, who <lb/>
lives three miles from <lb/>
than whom there is no living <lb/>
enjoying a higher esteem from alt <lb/>
the people who know him. Such a <lb/>
man as he a blessing to com- <lb/>
and bis example and char- <lb/>
will live long after be has been <lb/>
called to enter that rest prepared <lb/>
for the faithful servants God. <lb/>
The Democrat <lb/>
Elder David House, of Pitt <lb/>
has been a minister in the Prim <lb/>
Baptist denomination tor a <lb/>
many years, and has made <lb/>
quite a remarkable record. He is <lb/>
now nearly years old, though <lb/>
by paralysis, his mind is per- <lb/>
clear, especially on the Scrip- <lb/>
His example of thrift is one <lb/>
thy of emulation. He began life <lb/>
with the purpose to make an honest <lb/>
living. He worked with hie own <lb/>
hands four days in the week and <lb/>
the remainder of the tine <lb/>
serving the churches under his <lb/>
charge, and says he has never lost <lb/>
a dollar by his faithful service to <lb/>
the Lord. He has reared a large <lb/>
family, having with him six <lb/>
and three sons, and is blessed <lb/>
with enough of this world's goods <lb/>
to live comfortably on and take <lb/>
care of bis brethren friends <lb/>
when they call upon hiss. He is <lb/>
now leading away his corn crop of <lb/>
and has his cotton raised in <lb/>
1899 on his yard now. <lb/>
He has God <lb/>
baa lived <lb/>
to a ripe old age, Is h the <lb/>
sunset of life and enjoys an abiding <lb/>
hope Of a blessed Immortality, <lb/>
man, go thou d <lb/>
ANOTHER <lb/>
Car Load of Fine <lb/>
Horses <lb/>
Mules, <lb/>
-------Just received by------ <lb/>
and will be sold- <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
or at reasonable terms on time on <lb/>
proved security. I bought my stock for <lb/>
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb/>
anyone. Give a call. <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 fine line <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb/>
the livery and can suit the most <lb/>
I will run in connection a DRAY- <lb/>
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb/>
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
New Grocery Store <lb/>
Next door to K. Glenn. I have opened a Grocery Store and <lb/>
keep on hand a line line of--------- <lb/>
Heat. Flour. Coffee. Sugar. Oil. Molasses, <lb/>
Candies, Cheese. Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples, <lb/>
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything usually kept in a <lb/>
first-class grocery store, as well as Tinware. Crockery, Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware, ore. Call and see us. Goods delivered free any <lb/>
where in town. <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY. Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb/>
Thai Man Stephens <lb/>
-----WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICE ASSORTMENT OF----- <lb/>
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb/>
Says there is never any doubt of his giving yon entire satisfaction <lb/>
if yon just give him a call when needing goods in his line. <lb/>
He keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods. He also <lb/>
keeps the best Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place. <lb/>
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer. <lb/>
HARRIS,<lb/>
JIM MISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
-------AND DEALER IN------- <lb/>
Hay Grain and Fertilizers, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Th Tar Transportation Company <lb/>
Alfred Forbes, Greenville, <lb/>
J. B. Cherry, <lb/>
J. S. Greenville, Sec A <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer Is the finest <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb/>
and convenience of Ladies. <lb/>
POLITE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table furnished <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer Greenville la <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at. o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. u. <lb/>
Freights received dally and through <lb/>
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb/>
n. r. en, asset, . j. ages <lb/>
Washington, N. C. Greenville. N. C <lb/>
enjoys <lb/>
Both the method end results when <lb/>
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant <lb/>
and refreshing to the taste, and acts <lb/>
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys, <lb/>
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- <lb/>
effectually, dispels colds, head- <lb/>
aches and fevers and cures habitual <lb/>
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the <lb/>
only remedy of its kind ever pro- <lb/>
pleasing to the taste and ac- <lb/>
to the stomach, prompt in <lb/>
its action and truly beneficial in its <lb/>
effects, prepared only from the most <lb/>
healthy and agreeable substances, its <lb/>
many excellent qualities commend it <lb/>
to ell end have made it the most <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 hand will pro- <lb/>
cure it promptly any who <lb/>
wishes to try it. Do not accept any <lb/>
substitute. . <lb/>
CALIFORNIA SYRUP CO. <lb/>
kit <lb/>
mM <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
Has in stock and to arrive <lb/>
Car Load Seed Oats <lb/>
Car Load Rib Side Meat. <lb/>
Car Load St. Louis Flour, in all <lb/>
grades. <lb/>
Heavy Mess Pork. <lb/>
Granulated Sugar. <lb/>
Sugar. <lb/>
Gail Ax all <lb/>
kinds. <lb/>
Rail Road Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Snuff. <lb/>
Rico Molasses. <lb/>
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb/>
Cases Star Lye. <lb/>
Gross Matches. <lb/>
Also full line <lb/>
Starch. Tobacco. Cakes, Crack- <lb/>
Candies, Canned Goods, Wrapping <lb/>
Taper. Paper Sacks, <lb/>
Special prices given to the wholesale <lb/>
trade on large quantities of the above <lb/>
goods. <lb/>
J. A. ANDREWS. <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
AGENCY, <lb/>
Engines and Boilers, <lb/>
All sizes and styles commonly used. <lb/>
Shingle <lb/>
Circular and Shingle Saws, <lb/>
Rubber and Leather Belting. <lb/>
In fact anything in the machine line. <lb/>
We represent the standard <lb/>
of the land and era sell as low as <lb/>
the lowest and on better terms. <lb/>
Write for and <lb/>
O. K. Manager <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
R J. COBB <lb/>
Pitt Co N <lb/>
C C COBB, <lb/>
Pitt Co <lb/>
T. H. GILLIAM <lb/>
Co. N C <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Si Gilliam <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
Commission Merchants, <lb/>
s mt m mm of cotton, u <lb/>
We have had many years ex- <lb/>
at the business and are <lb/>
prepared to handle to <lb/>
advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
hands will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful attention. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1876. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD BRICK <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT- <lb/>
lag their year's supplies will find It to <lb/>
their interest to our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. Our stock Is complete <lb/>
In all branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
SPICES, TEAS, Ac. <lb/>
always at Lowest Market <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to run, we sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
M. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
Greenville. N. V. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING.<lb/>
THE HOUSE. will be <lb/>
opened for Boarders on March 1st. <lb/>
The building has just been nicely fur- <lb/>
throughout and guests re- <lb/>
every attention. supplied <lb/>
with best the market Both <lb/>
regular and transient boarders can be <lb/>
accommodated. Terms moderate. <lb/>
Mus. I,. C. KING, <lb/>
BANKERS, <lb/>
IV. C. <lb/>
We have opened for the or con- <lb/>
ducting a general <lb/>
Sinking, Exchange and Collecting Business. <lb/>
Money to Loan on Approved Security. <lb/>
Collections solicited and remittance <lb/>
made promptly. <lb/>
GREENVILLE BRANCH <lb/>
M Carolina Building and loan <lb/>
ASSOCIATIONS <lb/>
OFFICERS <lb/>
F. JAMBS, Presided, <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN, <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD. Sec. A Treas., <lb/>
I. A. SUGG, Attorney. <lb/>
A home Institution. Loans on <lb/>
as well as town property. A chance <lb/>
for all to get a home. <lb/>
T. J. E. A. Move, <lb/>
Harry Skinner, F. G, <lb/>
Flanagan I. A. San, <lb/>
James, R. W. King. <lb/>
D. J. J. L. Sugg. <lb/>
For information apply to <lb/>
D. J. <lb/>
Having associated B. S. <lb/>
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
are ready to serve the people In that <lb/>
rapacity. All notes and accounts dos <lb/>
me for past services have been placed In <lb/>
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
of Burial Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb/>
from the finest Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We arc into <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can r. <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who <lb/>
us FLANAGAN A <lb/>
Feb. 22nd. 1888. <lb/>
J. Jonathan White, <lb/>
Portsmouth. Greenville, N. C <lb/>
White, <lb/>
High Street. <lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. <lb/>
Solicit consignments Cotton. Pea- <lb/>
nuts. Poultry, and all other <lb/>
Country Mer- <lb/>
chants and Bank, <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Now is Tine <lb/>
TO THE LIFE OF <lb/>
son Davis. Family in <lb/>
the In I <lb/>
to take orders for the <lb/>
Cl books, which should be In <lb/>
o of person. I shall be glad <lb/>
to take orders from all who desire to <lb/>
have any one of these books. <lb/>
left at father's Col. I. A. Sugg, <lb/>
or addressed to me will have prompt at- <lb/>
R. Sum, <lb/>
v.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018982_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
WEEN THE DOWN. <lb/>
Though the morning may be dreary, <lb/>
And the day be long and weary. <lb/>
Though the clouds may darkly lower <lb/>
And the tempest fiercely frown. <lb/>
We shall quite forget the shadows <lb/>
That have lingered in the meadows <lb/>
If there be a golden hour <lb/>
When the sun goes down. <lb/>
What though fate our hope opposes <lb/>
What though thorns shut out the roses. <lb/>
And the cross be borne in sorrow <lb/>
That we carry to the crown. <lb/>
By and by well to wander <lb/>
we'll rest forever yonder <lb/>
If there draws a bright to-morrow <lb/>
life's sun goes down. <lb/>
The Census Catechism. <lb/>
Our people will have to answer a <lb/>
powerful sight of question when the <lb/>
census taker comes along. Any one <lb/>
who refuses to answer a question is <lb/>
liable to a Urn- That of <lb/>
our people may post themselves <lb/>
be prepared when the census taker <lb/>
conies submit for their con <lb/>
this catechism arranged <lb/>
complied by the government. <lb/>
Give Christian name in full, <lb/>
initial middle name, surname. <lb/>
Whether a soldier, sailor, or <lb/>
marine during the civil war <lb/>
States or or widow <lb/>
Men person. <lb/>
o. Relationship to held of family. <lb/>
Whether white or black, <lb/>
to, Chinese, <lb/>
or Indian. <lb/>
Sex. <lb/>
Age at nearest birthday. If <lb/>
one year give age in months. <lb/>
r single, married, widow- <lb/>
ed or divorced. <lb/>
Whether married during the <lb/>
census year 1889, to May <lb/>
Mother of how many children, <lb/>
and children living. <lb/>
Place of birth. <lb/>
Place of birth of father. <lb/>
Place of birth of m <lb/>
Number of years in the United <lb/>
States. <lb/>
Whether <lb/>
Whether naturalization papers <lb/>
have been oat. <lb/>
Profession, a la or <lb/>
Months I luring; the <lb/>
census year to M <lb/>
Attendance at school, in months <lb/>
during the census I, 1889, <lb/>
to May <lb/>
Able to read. <lb/>
Able to write. <lb/>
Able to speak English. If not, <lb/>
the language or dialect spoken. <lb/>
Whether from acute <lb/>
or chronic disease, with name of ills <lb/>
ease and length of time afflicted. <lb/>
Whether defective in mind, <lb/>
sight, hearing or speech, or whether <lb/>
maimed or deformed, with <lb/>
name of defect. <lb/>
Whether a prisoner, convict, <lb/>
or pauper. <lb/>
an Is the home you live in <lb/>
hired, or is owned by the head or <lb/>
Golden Bricks. <lb/>
Advance Thought. <lb/>
Better to lose money than man- <lb/>
hood. <lb/>
Backsliding is nothing against <lb/>
Oh list <lb/>
Talk is the parent cf many broods <lb/>
of troubles. <lb/>
He who is afraid to attempt is <lb/>
already defeated. <lb/>
To be great and good a person <lb/>
need not be popular. <lb/>
The wisest persons do watch <lb/>
the faults of others. <lb/>
Entertain guests but not <lb/>
with acts or talk unpleasant. <lb/>
Closed lips strangle spats and <lb/>
before they are born. <lb/>
Till men are honest they are not <lb/>
capable of self-government. <lb/>
more you vex others the <lb/>
easier are yon vexed others. <lb/>
Groaning over departure of <lb/>
the dead is no help to the living. <lb/>
He is no friend who enters your <lb/>
garden to it, or life to <lb/>
worry you. <lb/>
The one who makes drunkards is <lb/>
greatest enemy of the human <lb/>
race. <lb/>
Clouds may come but they can- <lb/>
not possibly remove the clear sky <lb/>
back them. <lb/>
rear their children <lb/>
to idleness and fashion, make only <lb/>
mud pies. <lb/>
The man who refuses to <lb/>
is greater than are all who are <lb/>
against him. <lb/>
The man who is capable of giving <lb/>
advice never gives it unasked, and <lb/>
not always then. <lb/>
There is little difference between <lb/>
supporting a wife who is lazy, and <lb/>
carrying a corpse. <lb/>
Democrats Only Purify Their <lb/>
New York Star. <lb/>
The Democracy of the State and <lb/>
Nation should not fail to recognize <lb/>
that it is the Democratic newspapers <lb/>
of New York city that arc insisting <lb/>
on the punishment of the Democrats <lb/>
who have been found guilty of <lb/>
in the administration of their offices, <lb/>
and that Democratic officials are the <lb/>
real prosecutors. <lb/>
No Republican journal has been <lb/>
half positive in denunciation of <lb/>
the crimes lately exposed as the <lb/>
Morning Star and the Evenings News. <lb/>
None has insisted with half the <lb/>
force consistency that the guilty <lb/>
shall be punished, irrespective of <lb/>
party or faction, as the Slur has <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
The Assistant Republican papers <lb/>
the Sun the World, have been, <lb/>
the one, halfhearted; the other, in- <lb/>
sincere and inconsistent. The Sun <lb/>
defends Mayor Grant, the least <lb/>
No Exaggeration. <lb/>
Facts, and you Can't Around <lb/>
Free Press. <lb/>
you know my <lb/>
a middle-aged woman who I at <lb/>
police headquarters the other day. <lb/>
replied the sergeant. <lb/>
name is <lb/>
Paul Henry <lb/>
know <lb/>
on Champlain <lb/>
is he lost, strayed or <lb/>
sir. He's alive and out <lb/>
on the street, and will probably be <lb/>
here with in ton minutes to Ho <lb/>
is the <lb/>
had a row, sir, and I skinned <lb/>
his nose and pulled his hair. He will <lb/>
come down to tell you that I broke <lb/>
his nose,, but do you feel of it for <lb/>
yourself. Don't be imposed on, <lb/>
he'll say that pulled out <lb/>
disable of the Sheriff's charged with , enough of his hair to stuff a lounge. <lb/>
Don't you believe it. Here's what I <lb/>
pulled out. Pacts is facts, sir, and <lb/>
you can't get <lb/>
extortion, because one of its <lb/>
is a of the Mayor and Score-, <lb/>
of his World's-Pair-Central- <lb/>
Estate <lb/>
Ring, which recently to grief. <lb/>
The World has been, off and on, the <lb/>
defender and accuser of the Ring <lb/>
because patronage received and <lb/>
expected. <lb/>
The Democracy of the country <lb/>
need not fear that justice will be <lb/>
frustrated by such influences as these. <lb/>
The great majority of the Democrats <lb/>
of New York city are an honest body <lb/>
of citizens, dominated at elections by <lb/>
factional organizations without much <lb/>
character, which, as honest voters, <lb/>
they overwhelm when they get <lb/>
ed and are real mad. They are fully <lb/>
in accord with the honest <lb/>
has no <lb/>
has no equal <lb/>
all purposes for which soap <lb/>
is used. It is the greatest known <lb/>
economizer of time, drudgery, and wear <lb/>
and tear in washing and cleaning. <lb/>
MILLIONS of Pearline <lb/>
are consumed annually, by economical, <lb/>
i intelligent who are <lb/>
quick to embrace modern labor- <lb/>
saving ideas; or, not doing the <lb/>
work themselves, are bright <lb/>
enough to supply their <lb/>
y with Pearline. They <lb/>
get the best possible results, <lb/>
and have fewer backaches <lb/>
and complaints. Their clothes and paint wear longer <lb/>
because they are not rubbed to pieces. <lb/>
Beware of imitations which are being peddled from <lb/>
door to door. First quality goods do not require such <lb/>
desperate methods to sell them. <lb/>
Pearline sells on its merits, and is never peddled. <lb/>
Manufactured only by JAMES PYLE, New York. <lb/>
lira<lb/>
LEGAL NOTICES <lb/>
And she produced unrolled a H <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
I is hereby given that I have <lb/>
not welcome on earth as they <lb/>
will be Heaven. <lb/>
Well bred will never say <lb/>
anything in company to hurt or jar <lb/>
upon the feelings of others. <lb/>
Children soon lose their respect <lb/>
for those who use profane <lb/>
and who are quarrelsome. <lb/>
The son who from home to <lb/>
get. should remain from <lb/>
home he is cored of the habit. <lb/>
It costs less to grow strawberries <lb/>
n the field than on the nose, and <lb/>
the result is far more of <lb/>
One pound of <lb/>
to his wheel does more for your <lb/>
neighbor than does a mile of <lb/>
prayer. <lb/>
Some Christians, when they <lb/>
teach Heaven, will never forgive <lb/>
God for admitting those of <lb/>
of the Slate, and will heartily sup- <lb/>
pity that all children Governor Hill in the action he <lb/>
must take to purify the local factions <lb/>
in New York. There will be all sorts <lb/>
of claims that the reformation now <lb/>
going on is the work of the <lb/>
cans, but it should not forgotten <lb/>
for one moment that Democratic <lb/>
are the prosecutors and <lb/>
that Democratic papers are the gen- <lb/>
of the crimes commit- <lb/>
It is an characteristic of <lb/>
the Democratic party that it is able <lb/>
to cope with rascally opponents and <lb/>
with its own wrongdoers also. By <lb/>
paper containing about a handful of <lb/>
grizzly hair, which had been pulled <lb/>
out by the roots, and laying it on the <lb/>
desk, she <lb/>
Would that stuff a lounge Would <lb/>
that even pad a boxing glove When <lb/>
he comes rushing to tell his story- <lb/>
just show this to <lb/>
an awful liar. sir. He lied <lb/>
to me to get me to marry him. Said <lb/>
he was a millionaire but sawed <lb/>
for exercise. Here's the hair, and <lb/>
the he'll bring with him. Let <lb/>
him tell his story and then crush him <lb/>
with the of his falsity. He's <lb/>
anally crushed, sir, and crushing <lb/>
will last him for six <lb/>
Thousands of children who die <lb/>
ally of those diseases incident to early <lb/>
childhood, could have been saved by Dr. <lb/>
Bull's Baby Syrup. <lb/>
The painful consequences of <lb/>
in eating is speedily removed and <lb/>
the depression is quickly banished by <lb/>
the use of <lb/>
Remarkable <lb/>
Mrs. Michael Curtain. III., <lb/>
makes the statement that she caught <lb/>
cold, which settled on her lungs; she <lb/>
was treated for a mouth by her family <lb/>
physician, but grew worse. He told her <lb/>
she was a hopeless victim of <lb/>
and that no medicine could cure <lb/>
her. Her druggist suggested Dr. King's <lb/>
New Discovery for the <lb/>
self purification it thrives, and its bought a bottle an I to her delight found <lb/>
A meal, three times a day is <lb/>
your privilege if yon use <lb/>
whenever digestive or- <lb/>
need a up. <lb/>
Nothing better than Dr. Bulls Baby <lb/>
Syrup can lie used for the diseases of <lb/>
babyhood. Price cents. Sold <lb/>
by all druggists. <lb/>
I most signal victories have been won <lb/>
j after the execution of salutary dis- <lb/>
upon men and combinations <lb/>
; within its own lines so strong that <lb/>
to overthrow them would have dis- <lb/>
a weak or timid organization. <lb/>
Through hostility to official <lb/>
it retains the confidence of <lb/>
the people, emerges from the <lb/>
greatest trials purified and strength- <lb/>
by the fiery ordeal. When it <lb/>
turns one rascal out brings ten <lb/>
good men the party fold. <lb/>
Happy <lb/>
V in. Postmaster of <lb/>
Ind. Bitters has <lb/>
done more for me than all other <lb/>
combined, for that bad feeling <lb/>
a number of the family <lb/>
If owned by bead or from Kidney and Liver <lb/>
farmer and of <lb/>
of family, is same place, Electric Bit- <lb/>
gage best Kidney and Liver <lb/>
of the family is a <lb/>
him or <lb/>
If the head <lb/>
farmer, i- the farm which he <lb/>
hired, is , owned by <lb/>
by a member at his family <lb/>
If owned by head or member of <lb/>
free from mortgage <lb/>
II homo r farm is owned I <lb/>
by head or member of and <lb/>
mortgaged, p a I tress <lb/>
on am. <lb/>
medicine, <lb/>
J. Gardner, hardware merchant, <lb/>
fame town, Electric Bitters is <lb/>
the thing for a man who is all run <lb/>
down and don't care whether he lives or <lb/>
lies; he found new strength, good <lb/>
and felt just he had a new lease <lb/>
on life. Only a bottle at J. L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drug Store. <lb/>
A Daughter's Influence. <lb/>
A Modern <lb/>
One day a <lb/>
peasant who was working his <lb/>
held and said <lb/>
some reason or other there <lb/>
appears to be a want of confidence <lb/>
between the peasants the <lb/>
replied the peasant, as he <lb/>
rested for a moment. <lb/>
makes it unpleasant for <lb/>
of us, and I have been <lb/>
to if we could not to <lb/>
some mutual <lb/>
I am <lb/>
the fox, <lb/>
as he looked at the sky to hide a <lb/>
bis eye. prove <lb/>
confidence in me leave the door <lb/>
your hen-house open to-night. <lb/>
That will be ; that you no <lb/>
longer regard as thieves and <lb/>
The peasant agreed to this, bat <lb/>
while he left the door ops be set <lb/>
a trap just inside, at when be <lb/>
arose next lo the <lb/>
gate was fast in, the jaws. <lb/>
this keeping agreement <lb/>
with Reynard as <lb/>
peasant <lb/>
not. the door <lb/>
but yon set a trap inside <lb/>
Release once, and in the <lb/>
tare my dealings shall be with more <lb/>
honest <lb/>
Gentle, Sir said, tin <lb/>
peasant as he tapped him on the i <lb/>
bead with a ; had yon kepi <lb/>
the outside you would never bare, <lb/>
known my trap. The fact that <lb/>
yen went proves that yon <lb/>
wanted poultry at expense <lb/>
of my <lb/>
Give a thief opportunity <lb/>
to reform, bat wallet in. <lb/>
when in <lb/>
So much has been written in <lb/>
about a mother's influence, <lb/>
and rightly there is no love <lb/>
like no nature so <lb/>
no one surely who cares for <lb/>
in quite the devoted way that she <lb/>
does, consequently her influence <lb/>
over is great. <lb/>
But daughter Did yon ever <lb/>
slop to think of the many quiet <lb/>
sweet lives hidden away, whose in- <lb/>
may not radiate beyond <lb/>
the home circle but just there <lb/>
what a power or good there <lb/>
The mother, bow naturally she <lb/>
turns to her for companionship, <lb/>
comfort, and sympathy. <lb/>
brothers, what a grand opportunity <lb/>
to win their regard, their love. <lb/>
said we are bore brothers and sis- <lb/>
but love and affection we must <lb/>
as so in our homes, <lb/>
as we do abroad. How foil of all <lb/>
charitableness uprightness, truth- <lb/>
and integrity should be. <lb/>
How ofter. have I beard girls <lb/>
whose lives are shielded and pro- <lb/>
h ave pleasant, bright homes, <lb/>
say are disgusted with <lb/>
life; it is not worth the riving, etc <lb/>
the -result perhaps of some annoy- <lb/>
loss, or disappointment. How <lb/>
little they realize that <lb/>
sweetest lives are those to duty wed, <lb/>
Whose deeds both grand and small <lb/>
A re close knit strands an unbroken <lb/>
thread. <lb/>
Whose love ennobles all. <lb/>
And sorely duty is to <lb/>
whom God has placed nearest tone. <lb/>
Perhaps sometimes influencing <lb/>
them unconsciously, but always <lb/>
continually surely. God great <lb/>
that it may always be to His honor <lb/>
and glory. <lb/>
May the this sweet <lb/>
influence always ha yours. Mo <lb/>
life is so hidden, insignificant or <lb/>
obscure, bat that it somehow in- <lb/>
some one. Do not weaken. <lb/>
fatal towards <lb/>
Ml <lb/>
The Country Newspaper. <lb/>
Minneapolis Tribune-Star. <lb/>
It is the habit of a good many <lb/>
people of some over-smart city <lb/>
newspapers to speak slightingly of <lb/>
country newspaper. There is a <lb/>
large stock of old jokes <lb/>
going tending to ridicule <lb/>
and belittle the weekly periodical <lb/>
which is mouth-piece and organ <lb/>
the county scats and smaller <lb/>
cities and villages. The usual drift <lb/>
of such humor is to show the sup- <lb/>
posed poverty, greenness and lack <lb/>
of ability and dignity of the country <lb/>
editor. Of course there are <lb/>
try newspapers country editors. <lb/>
Some are good, some bad some <lb/>
They differ much as <lb/>
City newspapers and city editors. <lb/>
But our observation teaches us that <lb/>
the country newspapers and the <lb/>
count v editors will average up well <lb/>
with nil other business <lb/>
and business men of their re- <lb/>
localities. A thriving <lb/>
locality will always be re- <lb/>
presented by a neat, tidy, bright <lb/>
and able country newspaper. A <lb/>
shiftless locality will often be rep- <lb/>
resented by a shiftless paper <lb/>
in most cases the paper far ahead <lb/>
of its surroundings. <lb/>
The Road to a Woman's Heart <lb/>
How shall women be wooed t <lb/>
Lot no random guide her. <lb/>
Women are various as leaves <lb/>
in the wood, and each leaf has a <lb/>
mood for each hour of its life from <lb/>
swelling spring to crackling <lb/>
that be most accept- <lb/>
able to one might be repulsed <lb/>
stinging force by others, and ad- <lb/>
dresses that were welcome at noon, <lb/>
even though in identical <lb/>
garments, may pall at night. Mo <lb/>
man can telL Arrows shot at a <lb/>
venture often joints in <lb/>
n of a heart well as of a king. <lb/>
Some women were made to be taken <lb/>
by siege, and all storming of <lb/>
Mare Antony could not compel <lb/>
render; and some rash to cap- <lb/>
in swift assault who could <lb/>
defend walls, gates and circling <lb/>
meats forever and a day. Bat mark <lb/>
yon, lady She who <lb/>
late to the stubborn wooer change <lb/>
her liking the faying hours and <lb/>
change it bank rate <lb/>
urn to win. Bat however lady <lb/>
should be was la. as <lb/>
least that reads in <lb/>
tarn <lb/>
herself from the first dose. <lb/>
She continued Its use and after taking <lb/>
ten bottles, found herself sound and <lb/>
well, now does her own housework and <lb/>
is as well as she ever was. Free trial <lb/>
bottles of this Great Discovery at J. L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drug Store, large bottles <lb/>
and <lb/>
Outdone. <lb/>
Wilmington Star. <lb/>
Henry of St. Louis, a <lb/>
wager of fifty cents the other day <lb/>
by drinking a beer glass full of gin <lb/>
and seven ordinary glasses of wins <lb/>
key. He gulped them down in- <lb/>
side of ten minutes, and next day <lb/>
it cost a couple of dollars for a <lb/>
fin and several dollars more to bury <lb/>
him When a St. Louis man starts <lb/>
out to win a bet he is never satisfied <lb/>
he wins it. <lb/>
Women B. B. B. <lb/>
The of women certainly <lb/>
awakens the sympathy of every true <lb/>
philanthropist. Their best friend, how- <lb/>
ever is B. B. B. Blood <lb/>
Send to Blood Balm Co. Atlanta, Ga- <lb/>
tor proofs. <lb/>
H. L. Cassidy, <lb/>
bottles of B. B. B. cured my <lb/>
wife of <lb/>
Mrs. It. Laws, Fla., <lb/>
have never used anything B. <lb/>
B. B. <lb/>
Mm. C. II. Rocky Mount, N. C, <lb/>
a day for years was I <lb/>
free from headache. B. B. B. entirely <lb/>
cured me. I feel like another person. <lb/>
James W. Lancaster. <lb/>
Ga., wife was In bad <lb/>
health for eight year. Five doctors and <lb/>
many patent medicines bad done her no <lb/>
good. Six bottles of B. B. B. cured <lb/>
Miss S. Tomlinson, Atlanta, <lb/>
years I suffered rheumatism, <lb/>
caused by kidney troubles and <lb/>
I was feeble and nervous. B. <lb/>
B. B. relieved me at once, although <lb/>
several other medicines had <lb/>
Rev. J. M. Richardson. <lb/>
Ark., wife suffered twelve <lb/>
years with rheumatism and female com- <lb/>
A lady member of my church <lb/>
tad been cured by B. B. B. She per- <lb/>
my wife to try it. who now says <lb/>
there Is nothing like B. B. B., as It <lb/>
quickly gave her <lb/>
Many people habitually endure a feel- <lb/>
lassitude, because they think they <lb/>
have to. If they would take Dr. J. H. <lb/>
Sarsaparilla this feeling of <lb/>
weariness would give place to vigor and <lb/>
vitality. <lb/>
No liniment is in better repute or more <lb/>
widely known than Dr. J. H. <lb/>
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It Is a wonder- <lb/>
remedy. <lb/>
Persons advanced in years feel young- <lb/>
stronger, as well as freer from the <lb/>
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. H <lb/>
Sarsaparilla. <lb/>
sold out my interest in the Greenville <lb/>
Carriage Works and am no longer u <lb/>
partner. Panics indebted to the said <lb/>
will make settlement to either my- <lb/>
A- my former partner. <lb/>
This Mar. 1st, W. If. COX. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
T v ill Mr. J. M. in his <lb/>
-i- Insurance Agency at Greenville. N. <lb/>
C, on April 1st I will represent the <lb/>
same and solicit a <lb/>
of the liberal patronage given Mr. <lb/>
in the past. en- <lb/>
trusted to me will receive ray prompt <lb/>
attention. Office under Opera House. <lb/>
March 15th. 1890. <lb/>
WYATT L. BROWN. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
HAVING qualified as Executor of the <lb/>
last will and testament of <lb/>
Rives, deceased, on the 27th day of <lb/>
February, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons having claims against said <lb/>
decedent to exhibit the same properly <lb/>
authenticated to the undersigned on or <lb/>
before the day of March, 1891. or <lb/>
this will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. J. H. <lb/>
Executor of Hives, <lb/>
This 12th day of March, 1890. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
HAVING before the Clerk of <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb/>
8th day of as Administrator <lb/>
upon the estate of S. <lb/>
this is to notify all persons holding claims <lb/>
against said estate to present their claims <lb/>
for payment within twelve months from <lb/>
this date or this notice will be plead in <lb/>
bar of their recovery. All persons ow- <lb/>
said estate will come forward and <lb/>
make immediate settlement. This March <lb/>
8th, 1890. <lb/>
Ad of S. J. <lb/>
If You Have <lb/>
CONSUMPTION I COUGH OR COLD <lb/>
BRONCHITIS Throat <lb/>
SCROFULA I of Flesh <lb/>
Or any the Throat and <lb/>
art Inflamed, of strength or Servo <lb/>
rower, you can be relieved and Cured by <lb/>
SCOTT'S <lb/>
EMULSION <lb/>
PURE COD LIVER OIL <lb/>
With <lb/>
PALATABLE MILK. <lb/>
for and let no ah <lb/>
or induce you to <lb/>
Sold by all Druggists. <lb/>
To Sick Headache, <lb/>
Malaria, Liver Com take <lb/>
the sate certain remedy, <lb/>
SMITH'S <lb/>
BILE BEANS <lb/>
re the A <lb/>
ARE THE CONVENIENT. <lb/>
All <lb/>
of either per <lb/>
m. <lb/>
State of North Carolina. <lb/>
Pitt County, J Sup. Court. <lb/>
A. D. <lb/>
against <lb/>
George A. administrator of <lb/>
W. W. and others. <lb/>
It appearing to the satisfaction of the <lb/>
Court that E. L. one o f de- <lb/>
in the above entitled action, <lb/>
cannot, after due diligence, be found <lb/>
within the State, it is therefore ordered <lb/>
that publication be made in the East- <lb/>
Reflector, a newspaper published <lb/>
in the town of Greenville, for ix weeks, <lb/>
once in each week successively, com- <lb/>
the said K. I. Me to be <lb/>
and appear before the Judge of the said <lb/>
Superior Court at the term to be held <lb/>
for the Count- Pitt, at the Court <lb/>
House In Greenville, on the second <lb/>
Monday of June to answer the <lb/>
complaint on file in said action, or <lb/>
will be rendered in said action for <lb/>
the relief demanded in the complaint. <lb/>
Witness my hand and official seal, <lb/>
this the 2nd day of April. 1890. <lb/>
A true copy. E. A. <lb/>
J. B. Court. <lb/>
C. M. <lb/>
Attorneys tor Plaintiff. <lb/>
Sick headache is the bane of many <lb/>
lives. This annoying complaint may be <lb/>
cured and prevented by the occasional <lb/>
use of Dr. J. H. Liver and <lb/>
Kidney <lb/>
Disease lies in for the weak; a <lb/>
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb/>
counter a malarious atmosphere and sad- <lb/>
den changes of temperature, and <lb/>
least robust are the easiest <lb/>
Dr. J. H. Sarsaparilla <lb/>
will give tone, vitality and strength to <lb/>
entire body. <lb/>
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick <lb/>
indigestion are eared by <lb/>
Liver <lb/>
If you feel to de your <lb/>
have that tired feeling, take Dr. J. H. <lb/>
Me Sarsaparilla; It will nuke yea <lb/>
bright active and <lb/>
The moat popular liniment, old <lb/>
reliable. Dr. I. H. <lb/>
Oil Liniment <lb/>
One of Dr. B. L <lb/>
and Kidney taken at . <lb/>
lore going to bad, will move the <lb/>
will <lb/>
Pitt county. J Before Clerk. <lb/>
W. H. Tucker, executor of William <lb/>
Moore, deceased, in his own behalf <lb/>
and such other creditors of Marcel- <lb/>
Moore, deceased, as may make <lb/>
themselves parties <lb/>
Against <lb/>
J. D. Murphy, executor of Marcellus <lb/>
Moore, deceased. <lb/>
To of the of <lb/>
A summons having been issued In the <lb/>
above entitled cause returnable on the <lb/>
of May, 1890. It. is now or- <lb/>
by the Court that publication be <lb/>
made in the Eastern Reflector, a <lb/>
newspaper published the of <lb/>
Pitt, for six successive weeks, notifying <lb/>
all the creditors of the estate of Marcel- <lb/>
Moore, deceased, to appear before <lb/>
Clerk Superior Court of said <lb/>
county on or before the day of May. <lb/>
1890, and file their evidences of debt <lb/>
against said estate properly <lb/>
This the 1st day of April. 1890. <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
Clerk Superior <lb/>
Here are a couple of paragraph s <lb/>
that make a neat <lb/>
In the beautiful State of Ken- <lb/>
tacky,, in sea-coaled <lb/>
Georgia, in picturesque, climate- <lb/>
blessed Tennessee, in Mississippi <lb/>
and in Arkansas, incarnate fiends <lb/>
for years have been, and now are, <lb/>
employed In the practice of <lb/>
ties that are not equaled by the h id <lb/>
eons crimes of the African slave <lb/>
Inter-Ocean. <lb/>
In the great State of Illinois, in <lb/>
windy city of in the <lb/>
editorial rooms of the Chicago In- <lb/>
a picturesque lurid <lb/>
liar for has been, and now is, <lb/>
employed in business of writing <lb/>
falsehoods that are not equaled by <lb/>
the star performance of <lb/>
and <lb/>
can. <lb/>
I would ally call <lb/>
to following address and as <lb/>
you to remember that yon can buy c <lb/>
HEADSTONE or MONUMENT of <lb/>
this cheaper than any other in the <lb/>
That It the most reliable <lb/>
and beat known having ban <lb/>
tony years In this vicinity <lb/>
and baa <lb/>
Jiff KM at rd <lb/>
HI <lb/>
i a. w tor -f rUE. <lb/>
EMORY <lb/>
Mind <lb/>
on all <lb/>
parts of <lb/>
Brit n to Prof. <lb/>
A. At. <lb/>
GENTS WANTED <lb/>
firm; large profits, quick sales <lb/>
I Sample fie A rare <lb/>
A. MS N. Y. <lb/>
ENGLISH <lb/>
PIUS. <lb/>
Brand. <lb/>
pill far an. and <lb/>
Mn. tor th- in. <lb/>
la Mi aw <lb/>
tor Ur <lb/>
PARKER'S <lb/>
. . HAIR <lb/>
I hail <lb/>
f Gray <lb/>
, J<lb/>
n-. .,. . . i. <lb/>
t- a . <lb/>
Agents wanted It is a perfect <lb/>
to sell winter line. <lb/>
Clothes Sample line <lb/>
no more clothes mail for <lb/>
pins needed. It Nil also M ft. line <lb/>
holds the heart- mail <lb/>
est and finest prepaid. For <lb/>
without pins circulars, price <lb/>
Clothes do not I HO list, terms ad- <lb/>
freeze to it and dress the Pin- <lb/>
cannot blow off. less Clothes <lb/>
Line Co. <lb/>
St. Mass. <lb/>
MADE WITH WATER. <lb/>
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. <lb/>
COCOA <lb/>
MADE WITH MILK. <lb/>
THE GLORY OF MAN <lb/>
MOW THYSELF, <lb/>
ow <lb/>
A S <lb/>
Youth, <lb/>
and of <lb/>
Miseries <lb/>
Spool Cotton <lb/>
IN <lb/>
WHITE, BLACK COLORS, <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
Hand and Machine Use. <lb/>
FOR SALE BY <lb/>
M. R. LANG, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Greenville Institute. <lb/>
TERM OPENS 27th, 1393. <lb/>
TEACHERS <lb/>
John <lb/>
Associate Principal <lb/>
Mils. K. W. Primary De- <lb/>
At In Primary <lb/>
Depart <lb/>
Miss Instrumental <lb/>
Vocal Music. <lb/>
Miss House, Painting and <lb/>
Drawing. <lb/>
Mil. J. Penmanship <lb/>
and Commercial Department. <lb/>
DEPARTMENTS. <lb/>
Primary. Academic. <lb/>
Classical and Mathematical, Mu- <lb/>
sic. Painting and Drawing. <lb/>
Commercial. <lb/>
ADVANTAGES <lb/>
Large, Comfortable <lb/>
Healthy Location and Good Wales <lb/>
Plenty Well Prepared Food <lb/>
Boarders. A Corps of Teacher, <lb/>
all being graduates of first class <lb/>
Music Department equal <lb/>
in work to any College in the State. <lb/>
Pianos and Organs. <lb/>
A of nearly volumes <lb/>
purchased recently for the School. <lb/>
Moderate, to <lb/>
Hoard and Tuition Tuition and Term <lb/>
for Day Pupils the as advertised <lb/>
in who do not board <lb/>
with the Principal consult <lb/>
before engaging board elsewhere. For <lb/>
particular. Address, <lb/>
JOHN DUCKETT. <lb/>
Principal. <lb/>
C. M. N. B. <lb/>
Edwards N, <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
C- <lb/>
We have the and most complete <lb/>
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb/>
the solicit orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STATIONERY READY <lb/>
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
Binders, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and all in the U. S. <lb/>
Patent office or the Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We arc opposite the S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged In Patents Exclusively, and <lb/>
can obtain patent n less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or is sent <lb/>
advise as to free of charge, <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
We refer, here, to Post Master, <lb/>
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb/>
of S. Patent Office. For <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in own State, or conn- <lb/>
address, C. A. Snow Co., <lb/>
Washington, D. C <lb/>
turn, <lb/>
w. and . m <lb/>
u o. <lb/>
w r <lb/>
. i in , <lb/>
i M. I <lb/>
. . <lb/>
hi w <lb/>
. i. <lb/>
mom Bi w. will <lb/>
,. . W <lb/>
v ti t. a. <lb/>
k. <lb/>
GOOD BOOKS <lb/>
Bent receipt of <lb/>
IA. of Africa.- <lb/>
A moat and aM <lb/>
paper is n u; cloth <lb/>
Ta. Imitation <lb/>
Humorist. <lb/>
from Ward, Mark <lb/>
etc. paper cloth <lb/>
. j the fr <lb/>
at <lb/>
SUMMER <lb/>
la to <lb/>
for or <lb/>
or <lb/>
and la <lb/>
for Work, or <lb/>
AtoM tall <lb/>
work. It contain, fee pa., <lb/>
tall hr <lb/>
If too. apply <lb/>
B. at. D, n- <lb/>
COLO AND <lb/>
b. <lb/>
or la at l <lb/>
, lo <lb/>
for bock or for <lb/>
Storm Calendar and Weather Forecast <lb/>
for by R. Hides, mailed<lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
Shaving, and Dressing Hair, <lb/>
AT THE GLASS <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
everything In my line <lb/>
NE ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBER SHOP <lb/>
with all the Improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb/>
work outside shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very <lb/>
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb/>
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb/>
Greenville N . <lb/>
have the the easiest <lb/>
Chair ever used In the art. Clean towels, <lb/>
sharp razors, and satisfaction <lb/>
In every instance. Call and be eon <lb/>
Ladles waited on at their <lb/>
Cleaning clothes a specialty. <lb/>
Notice I <lb/>
CULLEY'S for baldness <lb/>
falling out of hair, and eradication of <lb/>
dandruff Is before the public. <lb/>
Among the many who have it with <lb/>
wonderful success, I refer you to fol- <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of my assertion <lb/>
Latham, <lb/>
Mr. O.<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 business, for <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb/>
Greenville, March 14th. C , <lb/>
STRENGTH <lb/>
. HI. <lb/>
aM <lb/>
and <lb/>
R. R. <lb/>
Condensed Schedule <lb/>
NO SOUTH. <lb/>
No IS, No No <lb/>
dally Fast Mai, dally <lb/>
dally ex Ban. <lb/>
II pm <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Wilson 1247 am pm <lb/>
Wilson HO <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar Fayetteville <lb/>
Goldsboro S <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Av Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily dally dally <lb/>
ex Bun. <lb/>
am <lb/>
lit Magnolia I <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Fayetteville<lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson am pm pm <lb/>
Ai Rocky Mount<lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax 2.30 P, M., Scot- <lb/>
land at 4.00 P. M. 6.50 <lb/>
P. M. Returning leaves 7.00 <lb/>
A. M., Scotland Neck at 10.10 A. M., <lb/>
daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro. N via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day, P M. Sunday PM, <lb/>
N C. P M, P M. <lb/>
Returning leaves N C, dally <lb/>
except Sunday. A M, Sunday A <lb/>
A M. <lb/>
i. <lb/>
V. arrive Tarboro, N <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M, <lb/>
N C, A M. Re- <lb/>
turning leaves R C A M, <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro, NO, A M. <lb/>
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb/>
at P M, arrives Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A If, Nashville <lb/>
I A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at <lb/>
and A M Returning leave <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. M. connect- <lb/>
at Warsaw and <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson A Fayette- <lb/>
ville Branch is No. Northbound <lb/>
No. except Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. South will stop only at <lb/>
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points North dally. All <lb/>
via Richmond, and dally except Bun- <lb/>
day via Bay Line. <lb/>
Trains make close connection for <lb/>
points North via Richmond and Wash <lb/>
All trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb/>
Sleepers attached. <lb/>
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. K Transportation <lb/>
T. M. EMERSON <lb/>
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb/>
TIME <lb/>
In Effect A. M. Saturday, June <lb/>
1st, 1889. <lb/>
East. <lb/>
No. No. <lb/>
Ar. Stations. Ar. <lb/>
IN Goldsboro a <lb/>
IT, OS H <lb/>
K It <lb/>
New It <lb/>
p in City am <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
East. Schedule. Going West <lb/>
No. 1.- <lb/>
Mixed Ft. <lb/>
Train. Stations. <lb/>
am 1210 <lb/>
Best's <lb/>
La Grange<lb/>
in Kin-ion <lb/>
Caswell <lb/>
Dover <lb/>
Core Creek <lb/>
II Tuscarora <lb/>
Clark's<lb/>
Croatan <lb/>
Havelock<lb/>
Atlantic <lb/>
City <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
p m Depot a m <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday, <lb/>
Wednesday and Friday. <lb/>
Train connect with Wilmington <lb/>
Weldon Train bound North, leaving <lb/>
Goldsboro a. m., and with <lb/>
mend Danville Train West, <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
connects with <lb/>
Danville Train, arriving at <lb/>
m., and with Wilmington <lb/>
Weldon Train from North at p. I <lb/>
Train connects with <lb/>
Weldon Through Freight <lb/>
p. m and with <lb/>
mend Danville Through <lb/>
Goldsboro at p. m. <lb/>
He <lb/>
Why another new discovery by . <lb/>
Culley in the way of helping the <lb/>
ed. By calling on or addressing <lb/>
above named barber, you can <lb/>
battle Preparation that larval <lb/>
far eradicating dandruff and <lb/>
hair to be perfectly soft <lb/>
glossy, only three <lb/>
week necessary, and a common <lb/>
brush Is all to be after <lb/>
vigorously for a few minutes <lb/>
the Preparation. Try a <lb/>
only SO <lb/>
ALFRED CULLED<lb/>
No. <lb/>
Mixed <lb/>
Pass <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>