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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
-----Solicits your patronage <lb/>
Its be please every reader. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
the <lb/>
JOB i <lb/>
Department that can be surpassed no- <lb/>
where in this section. Our work alway <lb/>
given satisfaction. <lb/>
Wend your <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL IX. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1890. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
D. J. Editor and <lb/>
Wednesday <lb/>
LISTEN.<lb/>
Whoever you are as you read this. <lb/>
Whatever your trouble or grief, <lb/>
I you to know and to heed <lb/>
The near with relief. <lb/>
No sorrow, no woe is unending, <lb/>
heaven seems voiceless and dumb; <lb/>
do sure as your cry is ascending. <lb/>
So surely an answer will come. <lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT, <lb/>
G. Fowle. of Wake, <lb/>
Holt. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Secretary of L <lb/>
of Wake. <lb/>
W. of Wake. <lb/>
of . . ., , <lb/>
Superintendent of Public Instruction- Though stunned with despair I beseech <lb/>
you. <lb/>
Whatever losses, your need. <lb/>
Believe, when these printed words reach <lb/>
you. <lb/>
Whatever temptation is near you, <lb/>
Whose eyes on this simple verse fall; <lb/>
angels will hear you. <lb/>
And help you stand, if you call. <lb/>
Super <lb/>
Sidney M. Finger of <lb/>
Attorney F. David- <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. <lb/>
SUPREME <lb/>
Chief Justice-A. S. of <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Believe you were born to succeed. <lb/>
You are stronger. tell this minute. <lb/>
Than any unfortunate <lb/>
Associate of And the coveted can it, <lb/>
Joseph J. Davis, of Franklin While life lasts never too late. <lb/>
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and I <lb/>
Alfonzo O. A very, of Burke. <lb/>
Whit <lb/>
JUDGES COURT. <lb/>
First EL Brown, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second Philips, <lb/>
Third G. Connor, of <lb/>
son. <lb/>
Fourth <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Fifth . Womack, of <lb/>
Chatham. <lb/>
Sixth T. Boykin. of <lb/>
Sampson. <lb/>
Seventh District-Tames C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
Eighth District R. F. Armfield. of <lb/>
Iredell. <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Tenth O. Bynum of <lb/>
Eleventh M. Shipp, of I <lb/>
Mecklenburg. <lb/>
Twelfth H. Merrimon, <lb/>
of Buncombe. <lb/>
Representatives is <lb/>
B. Vance, of <lb/>
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb/>
House of Rep-cent at District <lb/>
Thomas G. Skinner, of <lb/>
Second P. Cheatham col. <lb/>
of Vance. <lb/>
Third W. Mr-Clammy of, <lb/>
Pender. <lb/>
of <lb/>
ORDINANCES<lb/>
own of Greenville <lb/>
ORDINANCE X. <lb/>
All persons are hereby forbidden <lb/>
to engage in any riotous or <lb/>
conduct either upon the streets <lb/>
or in any public or private house or <lb/>
any other place in the corporate <lb/>
limits of the town. Any person vi- <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each every pay a penal- <lb/>
of twenty-five dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE XI. <lb/>
No person shall be allowed to <lb/>
keep on the public lots, streets or <lb/>
sidewalks of the Town, any <lb/>
as boxes, barrels, bales <lb/>
of cotton, hogsheads, wood, coal, <lb/>
bench, lumber or anything <lb/>
else, except for building or repairing <lb/>
purposes while the work is in <lb/>
Any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance after one day's notice <lb/>
a Officer shall be fined <lb/>
one dollar for each day -said ob- <lb/>
ion is allowed to remain. <lb/>
ORDINANce XII. <lb/>
The owner of a dead animal shall <lb/>
remove the same beyond the limits <lb/>
of the Town within twelve hours <lb/>
from its death. <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each <lb/>
and every pay a penalty <lb/>
two dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE XIII. <lb/>
The of a horse or mule to <lb/>
and shade tree or fence upon the <lb/>
streets or public lots of the tows is <lb/>
The Board of of the forbidden. Any person violating <lb/>
Town of Greenville do enact shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a penalty of one <lb/>
that for the government of said dollar. <lb/>
town the following; Ordinances ordinance <lb/>
or By-Laws shall be in force. All crowds or assemblages of per- <lb/>
from after the 5th day of sons congregate the <lb/>
, . ,,,. sidewalks or streets of the <lb/>
June, and that all j thereby obstructing the same to <lb/>
or By-Laws heretofore of citizens, shall <lb/>
enacted for the government of <lb/>
the said town be and the same <lb/>
hereby repealed and after <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any circus <lb/>
to exhibit within the corporate <lb/>
its of the town without paying the <lb/>
Town Officers the taxes imposed <lb/>
therefor, and any person <lb/>
this Ordinance shall be fined fifty <lb/>
s each day or part of a day <lb/>
he Is guilty of its violation. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
All persons are prohibited from <lb/>
emptying or pouring beef or <lb/>
pork pickle, or placing any other of- <lb/>
matters in the streets or <lb/>
lots of the town. Any person <lb/>
violating this Ordinance shall for <lb/>
each every pay a penal- <lb/>
of five dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
All dealers in meats, fish, oysters,; <lb/>
bides or other articles subject Ur <lb/>
rapid decay are required to keep <lb/>
their free as <lb/>
of bad odor, green <lb/>
hides shall be cared within the town <lb/>
between April 1st and November <lb/>
1st. Any person violating this Or- <lb/>
shall for each and every of- <lb/>
not less than a quarter, <lb/>
may be sold anywhere in said town, <lb/>
and that skimmers may sell fish <lb/>
caught by themselves anywhere in <lb/>
town. Provided further that per- <lb/>
sons to sell fresh beef, <lb/>
pork and fresh mutton may <lb/>
do so by obtaining a license from <lb/>
the Mayor by paying one dollars <lb/>
therefor per month or part of a <lb/>
month in advance, and their places <lb/>
business subject to the laws and <lb/>
regulations governing the Market <lb/>
House. Any person violating this <lb/>
Ordinance shall for each and every <lb/>
pay a penalty often dollars. <lb/>
Sec. No person shall sell or <lb/>
vend any cakes or cider except with- <lb/>
in twenty feet of the Market House. <lb/>
Any one violating this Ordinance <lb/>
shall for each and every pay <lb/>
a penalty of two dollars. <lb/>
Sec. No stalls or stands for <lb/>
the sale of said articles shall be <lb/>
lowed to erected within the <lb/>
limits. Any person violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a penalty of two I <lb/>
dollars. <lb/>
Sec. i. No person shall sell with- <lb/>
to proceed against the owners <lb/>
a citizen of the Town not all <lb/>
hogs at large in the streets <lb/>
under the Ordinances which forbid <lb/>
the same and under any law of tho <lb/>
State which may be applicable there- <lb/>
to. <lb/>
Sec. All hogs, goats and geese <lb/>
running at large on the streets if not <lb/>
known to be the property a non-re- <lb/>
shall be taken up by the Town <lb/>
Officer and impounded and if not <lb/>
redeemed by the owner thereof shall <lb/>
alter ten days notice by advertising <lb/>
in three public places giving a de- <lb/>
of the hog, goat or goose <lb/>
taken up, be sold at public auction, <lb/>
the proceeds thereof be paid the <lb/>
owner said hog, goat or goose, j <lb/>
after deducting the cost and expenses. <lb/>
Sec. G. The Town Officer shall <lb/>
OVER THE STATE. <lb/>
Happenings of Interest Occur- <lb/>
ring in North Carolina. <lb/>
AS FROM OUR EXCHANGES <lb/>
up <lb/>
A new cotton factory is <lb/>
at <lb/>
Honey in great quantities has been <lb/>
found on Pilot mountain. <lb/>
A saw mill will soon <lb/>
erected at Morehead City. <lb/>
Chatham county wheat crops <lb/>
reported will turn out badly. <lb/>
be <lb/>
of <lb/>
pounds <lb/>
have for feeding each hog, goat or j butter tin.-, year is pretty good. <lb/>
ten cents per day, for j T ,,, <lb/>
each goat or goose fifteen tor home. <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
In two days shipped <lb/>
pounds of manufactured tobacco. <lb/>
fence pay a penalty of ten dollars, in the corporate limits of the Town <lb/>
any unwholesome food. Any per- <lb/>
son this Ordinance shall <lb/>
for each and every pay a <lb/>
penalty often dollars. <lb/>
Sec. The stalls of the <lb/>
House shall be rented annually on <lb/>
tin first day of January at public I <lb/>
outcry, out vacant stalls may- <lb/>
be rented by the town authorities, <lb/>
privately after said day, provided, <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
All persons using stoves in any <lb/>
building wit Inn the town shall cause <lb/>
the pipe of said stove to enter the <lb/>
chimney of the building and in case <lb/>
the building has no chimney, to <lb/>
build one, either from or <lb/>
upon joists through the roof, and <lb/>
make the stove pipe enter the same <lb/>
Mr. O. Watson, of N. <lb/>
rich gold mine in <lb/>
corn is <lb/>
the far- <lb/>
be <lb/>
disbursed by the Town Officer, and <lb/>
person or who refuses <lb/>
to obey the warning the Officer <lb/>
shall be deemed to have violated <lb/>
this Ordinance. Any person <lb/>
the 5th day of June, this shall each <lb/>
of <lb/>
Nash. <lb/>
Fifth <lb/>
Forsyth. <lb/>
Sixth <lb/>
Robeson. <lb/>
John Henderson, <lb/>
of <lb/>
II. <lb/>
I rower. <lb/>
Rowland <lb/>
ORDINANCE I. <lb/>
It is hereto declared a nuisance <lb/>
for any person to fire a pistol, run <lb/>
or any her species of fire arms, <lb/>
using of sting shot within the limits <lb/>
of the town except in case of <lb/>
t and all persons are forbidden <lb/>
to fire off any Roman <lb/>
Candles or any other fire works ex- <lb/>
on Christmas or National <lb/>
pay a penalty of j <lb/>
five <lb/>
and all cases when the stove pipe however, that no stall be rented for; <lb/>
shall pass through a wall or than four dollars per <lb/>
t ion a stone or earthen pipe shall be payable in advance, <lb/>
placed in such wall or partition, and Sec. G. Any person a <lb/>
the stove pipe made to pass through stall in the House shall <lb/>
the same. The condition of the keep the same clean, and in case of <lb/>
pipe to be inspected by the Mayor j a failure to do so, and alter <lb/>
or one or more of the of; cation by the town re- <lb/>
the town appointed by the Mayor to I fuse to clean same shall forfeit <lb/>
examine the same. Any person vi- J the paid and the further <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for j use such stall. <lb/>
each every pay a pen- Sec. No barrels, tables or ob- <lb/>
shall be placed the <lb/>
passage way of said Market House. <lb/>
Sec. stall of said Market <lb/>
ORDINANCE XV. <lb/>
it Is hereby declared a nuisance I <lb/>
for any person to be found upon the j <lb/>
Streets or any public place, within <lb/>
corporate limits of the Town in j <lb/>
a of intoxication, or who I <lb/>
be using vulgar or profane <lb/>
language, or who shall indecently <lb/>
Tue of root or or her nakedness. <lb/>
Ninth G. of missile upon the violating this Ordinance <lb/>
; streets or public lots of the town is each every pay <lb/>
GOVERNMENT. j forbidden. Any violating a penalty of ten dollars. <lb/>
Superior Court A. Move. ; this shall for each and <lb/>
A. K. Tucker. I a five N <lb/>
Register of II. James. <lb/>
ally of twenty-five dollars.<lb/>
No person shall throw or place in ; House <lb/>
street of the town any filth, <lb/>
trash, timber, glass, paper, box, or <lb/>
other nuisance whatever only at <lb/>
such time manner as may be <lb/>
designated by Officer for <lb/>
the purpose of removal For each <lb/>
he, she, or they shall <lb/>
fined five dollars. <lb/>
has discovered a <lb/>
that vicinity. <lb/>
In the county of Lenoir, <lb/>
exceedingly scarce among <lb/>
owing to short crops. <lb/>
Mr. C A. Scotland Neck, <lb/>
. will plant acres of rice season <lb/>
to only two last year, lie is satisfied <lb/>
I that it is a paying crop. <lb/>
Las Hawkins was drowned at <lb/>
I Elisabeth city few days ago. lie, <lb/>
was intoxicated, it is thought, and <lb/>
fell overboard from a boat. <lb/>
Sixty-four fertilizer license have <lb/>
been issued this year in North <lb/>
Una. Heretofore companies <lb/>
have done business in this State. <lb/>
New good rain <lb/>
fell Monday and night and Tuesday <lb/>
morning. It is tin first time since j <lb/>
I opening of the spring that <lb/>
hall be kept open the <lb/>
use of the public free of charge. <lb/>
Sec. Every person renting stall <lb/>
shall obtain Mayor <lb/>
license to carry his I <lb/>
Any person holding such license. I <lb/>
and abusing the same upon <lb/>
be com plaint made to the Mayor have <lb/>
license revoked by the Boa id <lb/>
Of <lb/>
B. <lb/>
S. L. Ward. <lb/>
B- Harris. <lb/>
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb/>
man, Guilford V, <lb/>
John Flanagan, T. E. Keel. <lb/>
i every pay a penalty of five <lb/>
dollars. <lb/>
meddling with the public <lb/>
ORDINANCE II. wells or pumps the town or in-1 <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any per- inference with the work thereof, <lb/>
son to drive or ride a Horse or Mule Ordinary way of using <lb/>
at a greater speed than eight miles he same drawing water is pro- ; <lb/>
Herding an hour through any the streets Any person violating his <lb/>
s. Congleton and J. of the or to drive, ride lead Ordinance shall each and <lb/>
i a horse or mule on any of the side- I-- one dollar. <lb/>
Sec. The running of hogs, goats <lb/>
and geese at large in the corporate <lb/>
limits is declare to be a nuisance <lb/>
and is hereby forbidden. every <lb/>
person whether a citizen the town <lb/>
or is prohibited permitting <lb/>
hogs, goats or geese from run- <lb/>
at large the streets of Green- <lb/>
ville and the owner of each animal <lb/>
School Dar- <lb/>
ling <lb/>
of F. W. Brown. <lb/>
Keener- <lb/>
Merer T G. James. <lb/>
B. Greene. <lb/>
K. Lang. <lb/>
Chief T. Smith. <lb/>
R. Moore. <lb/>
Ward. T. A. <lb/>
col., 2nd Ward. W. Smith, and R. <lb/>
Greene. 3rd Ward, M. R. Lang and <lb/>
Allen W 4th Ward, Joe col. <lb/>
CHURCHES. <lb/>
First and Third <lb/>
Sundays, night. Rev. <lb/>
Hughes, D. D-, Rector. <lb/>
Methodist very Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Prayer every <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. K. B. John, <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
second and fourth <lb/>
Sundays, morning night. <lb/>
Meeting every Wednesday night. Rev. <lb/>
A. D. Hunter. Pastor. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A <lb/>
walks thereof. Any person <lb/>
ling this Ordinance shall each <lb/>
pay a penalty of <lb/>
five dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE ill. <lb/>
All persons are prohibited from <lb/>
leaving filth, or from washing <lb/>
ORDINANCE XVII- <lb/>
It is hereby declared unlawful for <lb/>
any person to retail vi- <lb/>
nous or malt by the drink or <lb/>
in quantities less than a gallon in <lb/>
the Town without from <lb/>
the the town a <lb/>
any clothes, at or near any the by the Mayor and <lb/>
public wells or pumps of town or countersigned by the Clerk of said <lb/>
to water a Horse Mule in the town, which license shall expire <lb/>
buckets attached to such wells or the day of April next succeed- <lb/>
pumps or to or carelessly the day upon which it is grant- <lb/>
turn loose the buckets attached to ed. Any person violating this <lb/>
said wells, so that they shall violent <lb/>
descend. Any person violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a penalty of five <lb/>
dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE IV. <lb/>
No person shall encamp during <lb/>
the eight time, with horses, mules, <lb/>
or oxen within the limits of the <lb/>
town. per on violating <lb/>
MOM shall be fined five dollars <lb/>
each day part of a day he is <lb/>
or its violation. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
it shall unlawful for any <lb/>
of goods, wares or <lb/>
merchandise of any description, <lb/>
any conceits or traveling exhibitions <lb/>
of any kind who charge an <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
It is hereby declared to be <lb/>
for any retailer spirituous, vi <lb/>
or malt liquors to permit any <lb/>
disorderly, obstreperous, or <lb/>
on their premises <lb/>
the penalty of having their <lb/>
revoked. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for Hotel <lb/>
or House keeper. Horse <lb/>
or Mule Lawyer. Auction- <lb/>
or any other wherein <lb/>
a tax is required, to pursue <lb/>
their until they shall have <lb/>
obtained a license signed by the <lb/>
Mayor and countersigned by the <lb/>
Clerk. person violating this <lb/>
shall for each every <lb/>
pay a penalty of five dollars, the streets the Town Greenville <lb/>
and has been prohibited by its Or-1 <lb/>
ORDINANCE And it is the. <lb/>
No shall deface, break or this Board of <lb/>
in any manner injure any of the j to use all lawful means to abate such <lb/>
public Lamp Posts or Lamps in the nuisance and to enforce its <lb/>
town. That any person or persons prohibiting the but. <lb/>
who mutilate or otherwise in- <lb/>
building or fence <lb/>
the same or any fence <lb/>
Sec. I. The cattle at <lb/>
large in the corporate limits of the <lb/>
town from October 1st, to April 1st, <lb/>
is declared to be a nuisance and is <lb/>
hereby forbidden. <lb/>
Sec. Cattle all description <lb/>
except small calves, running at large <lb/>
in the corporate limits between the <lb/>
hours of o'clock P. M. and <lb/>
the following morning is declared to <lb/>
be a nuisance and is hereby <lb/>
den. <lb/>
Sec. All cattle, tho property <lb/>
of residents, found at large <lb/>
during the time prohibited shall be <lb/>
taken up by the Town Officer and <lb/>
impounded, and if not redeemed by <lb/>
the owner thereof, shall after <lb/>
days notice by advertising in three <lb/>
public places giving a description of <lb/>
the animal taken up, be sold at pub- <lb/>
auction, and the proceeds arising <lb/>
from such sale be paid to the owner <lb/>
of said animal, alter deducting the <lb/>
cost and expenses. <lb/>
Sec. The Town Officer shall <lb/>
have for taking up each animal ground has been sufficiently wet. <lb/>
cents, for feeding each animal ,. . , ., <lb/>
per and tor L W I <lb/>
in one night was never <lb/>
before last Wednesday night <lb/>
probably in this county. On that i <lb/>
It shall be unlawful for any person Mr- S- Gardner's residence <lb/>
to deface any monuments, or Monroe, Mr. Win. kit-1 <lb/>
are in the Cemetery, or to injure a half from town, and <lb/>
or flowers or receptacle Methodist church, six miles <lb/>
for Bowers in it; or to break or injure down, <lb/>
any lock on the gates or any fence Mill <lb/>
around the Cemetery; or to turn any q , ,,. h,, Gil,; <lb/>
twenty-five cents <lb/>
advertising each animal fifteen cents. <lb/>
or any person <lb/>
snob <lb/>
or Ion I whether a of the town <lb/>
or not shall for each and every viola- <lb/>
lion of this Ordinance pay a <lb/>
of live dollars for each hog and one <lb/>
dollar for each goat or <lb/>
Sec. Whereas it has been time <lb/>
and again declared to be a public <lb/>
nuisance for hogs to run at large on <lb/>
cattle or goats therein. Any person <lb/>
violating Ordinance shall pay a <lb/>
penalty of twenty-live dollars, one- <lb/>
half to be paid the informer air one- <lb/>
to the <lb/>
All persons owning dogs said <lb/>
town are required to procure badges <lb/>
for same from Town Tax Collector. <lb/>
ll is hereby declared unlawful for <lb/>
such dog or dogs to run at large <lb/>
said town without wearing Such <lb/>
badge. The owner of such dog shall <lb/>
pay for each and every a pen- <lb/>
one dollar. <lb/>
whereas the Board is forbidden, by <lb/>
an act the General Assembly <lb/>
passed at its late session, to pass an, <lb/>
Ordinance directing the Town <lb/>
to impound any. hog or cattle. <lb/>
the properly o a person not a <lb/>
of the Town, whereas the <lb/>
Boar desires to conform its action <lb/>
to the laws Stale and to pro- <lb/>
its officers prosecution, <lb/>
The of for And whereas it is utterly impossible <lb/>
the public pound, shall forfeit <lb/>
pay the sum of dollars for each <lb/>
and every said penalty or <lb/>
forfeiture to be collected in the <lb/>
manner prescribed b law. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
It shall be the duty of all land <lb/>
owners to put an keep in good re- <lb/>
pairs the side walks adjoining their <lb/>
property and if any one shall fail to <lb/>
do so after being notified by the <lb/>
street it. shall be the duly <lb/>
of said committee to have the <lb/>
work done and to charge the ex- s months, <lb/>
I hereof to such land owner to <lb/>
pay such charge within days, or <lb/>
lie or she shall pay a of <lb/>
t lie -1 <lb/>
who was so mysteriously murdered a <lb/>
short time ago in Franklin county, <lb/>
has offered a of two hundred <lb/>
dollars for apprehension the, <lb/>
party who committed the crime. <lb/>
Some new developments have been <lb/>
made in the case and this reward <lb/>
may lead to the detection of the as- <lb/>
Wilmington horse inn <lb/>
away with a dray yesterday on , <lb/>
Water street created a brief but <lb/>
lively on that busy, <lb/>
thoroughfare. The driver, <lb/>
Miller, colored, was thrown the <lb/>
dray and falling in front of the wheels I <lb/>
was over and severely hurt about <lb/>
the hips and one of his arms. The <lb/>
accident was caused by the breech- <lb/>
of I he harness breaking. <lb/>
large. <lb/>
XI. <lb/>
The street crossings and drains <lb/>
shall be kept up by the Town under <lb/>
the supervision the commit- <lb/>
tee and tor out the monies <lb/>
the Treasury. <lb/>
Officer the tax imposed <lb/>
ordinance v. person violating j <lb/>
No person shall ant or damage shall for each and every pay <lb/>
fee, to pursue their- avocation i <lb/>
each and every corporate limits of the<lb/>
Masonic Ledge. A. L. Blow. W. M., , <lb/>
G. L. Sec. <lb/>
Greenville R. A. Chapter. meets <lb/>
every 2nd and 4th nights -t Ma- trees Q a of tell dollars. <lb/>
Covenant O. O. F. lots or streets of the nor i ordinance XIX. <lb/>
meets every night, j. A. K. j shall any person tack or post shall be unlawful for any person <lb/>
G. ; advertisement or notice upon said to exhibit lottery or any species <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. No trees or lamp posts or dig up or in-1 f on the public <lb/>
I y tr-et i squares or streets of the town. Any <lb/>
Any violating this <lb/>
night. C. A. White. Ordinance shall each ; a five <lb/>
Pitt county Alliance meets pay a penalty of five dollars. ,,. for or part of a day <lb/>
ordinance vi- winch it is so violated. <lb/>
. iS XX. <lb/>
the second each mouth I houses or lots town arc required u declared a nuisance <lb/>
at o'clock, p . in Hall. to such their lots, houses, for an or persons to exhibit <lb/>
Fernando Ward, D. S. Spain, cellars, privies or stables as emit j Horse or Jack on any of <lb/>
Secretary. odors, and in the event that or commons <lb/>
they are by the Town of town. <lb/>
POST OFFICE. to cleanse the same they shall pat a Stud or Jack to <lb/>
Hours for all business from A. be liable to a fine of one doll to- mare within the limits of the <lb/>
M- it. f is permitted Town u w declared to be <lb/>
to remain. a for person to keep a <lb/>
ordinance vii. Jack Ass the corporate <lb/>
the town. Any <lb/>
the purpose of swapping or trading <lb/>
or selling horses or mules on the <lb/>
streets or public lots of the town is <lb/>
declared a nuisance and is hereby <lb/>
prohibited. Any persons violating <lb/>
this Ordinance shall each and <lb/>
every pay a of ten <lb/>
dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
or persons who I <lb/>
to pay tines and costs imposed by <lb/>
the Mayor or any tax imposed by j <lb/>
the Board shall <lb/>
required to work on the streets of <lb/>
the at such sum as may <lb/>
lowed by the authorities per day <lb/>
until said fine and cost or tax Is <lb/>
paid. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
for the officers of the Town to die <lb/>
the hogs of those who do <lb/>
i in its <lb/>
It is <lb/>
on arrival. The general will <lb/>
be kept open for minutes at night <lb/>
after the Northern mail is distributed. <lb/>
Northern Mail arrives daily <lb/>
at P. M. and departs at <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
person shall suffer his or her <lb/>
Tar Old Sparta and <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
The storage of within <lb/>
corporate limits of the Town, except <lb/>
at or near the steamboat wharves <lb/>
or landings, is considered a nuisance <lb/>
is prohibited. Any per- <lb/>
son violating this Ordinance shall <lb/>
for each and every pay a <lb/>
penalty of live dollars each day. <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
It is hereby declared a nuisance <lb/>
and is forbidden for per- <lb/>
son to sell at auction any goods, <lb/>
wares or merchandise on any of the <lb/>
streets, sidewalks or public lots of <lb/>
Town without permission <lb/>
Mayor. Any person <lb/>
this Ordinance shall for each and <lb/>
every pay a of five <lb/>
every sale. <lb/>
mails arrives shall <lb/>
X each and every pay a penal- <lb/>
Roads, and or five dollars, <lb/>
mails arrive dally at <lb/>
and departs at A. M. <lb/>
Bell's <lb/>
Ferry, Johnson's Mills. <lb/>
and Pullet malls arrive Tuesday <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and <lb/>
Vanceboro, Black Jack and <lb/>
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M <lb/>
and departs at A M. <lb/>
J. J. PERKINS P. M <lb/>
ORDINANCE VIII.<lb/>
If person or persons shall <lb/>
limits of <lb/>
Town, engage in or encourage the <lb/>
fighting dogs, be or they shall <lb/>
each pay fine of five dollars. <lb/>
ORDINANCE IX. <lb/>
It is hereby declared a nuisance <lb/>
I for any bitch when in beat to at <lb/>
large in the Town, and should <lb/>
I owner of said bitch alter one boor's <lb/>
notice the Officer, refuse or neg- <lb/>
to confine such bitch the Town <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb/>
Appointments. <lb/>
2nd and 4th morning and <lb/>
night, Greenville Baptist also <lb/>
Officer shall destroy or kill it, and <lb/>
in case owner can be found the <lb/>
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. Officer shall likewise kill or <lb/>
3rd Sunday, morning and night. Beth- -w hitch <lb/>
el Baptist church- <lb/>
not live within the corporate <lb/>
Greenville the hogs <lb/>
who live within said limits, <lb/>
ordained, <lb/>
That in order that the Town <lb/>
I Officers may not, by mistake, <lb/>
I pound the hogs of any non-resident <lb/>
j at is ordered and made the duty of <lb/>
all non-residents to mark their hogs <lb/>
and to register with the Clerk of <lb/>
this Board his or her mark before <lb/>
the day of June, he <lb/>
shall pay therefor a tax of live dollars <lb/>
to the town and a fee of one dollar <lb/>
to the Clerk. <lb/>
That on and after said 5th day <lb/>
of June, 1890, the Officer shall <lb/>
I Impound all unmarked hogs and all <lb/>
not been reg- <lb/>
he <lb/>
shall be closed on each Sabbath in i shall otherwise know them to he the <lb/>
the from o'clock on property of a non-resident, and deal <lb/>
day flight to o'clock Sunday j with them according to the <lb/>
night, and no person or j in force as to hogs belonging t <lb/>
during or between these <lb/>
Winston this morn <lb/>
at o'clock, Annie Lee. infant <lb/>
daughter of Mr. and Mrs, T. Bur- <lb/>
lier remains will <lb/>
be taken to on to-morrow <lb/>
morning for <lb/>
laving on the street railway bus been <lb/>
completed around court <lb/>
and now the work i progressing out <lb/>
Fourth, up Liberty, down Third to <lb/>
the depot and Chestnut .-tree. <lb/>
Scotland Neck last <lb/>
Friday afternoon during a storm <lb/>
on the farm on Roanoke <lb/>
river two women were killed <lb/>
by lightning. They had come in <lb/>
the field an I were Blinding near <lb/>
the lire to dry themselves, when they <lb/>
were killed. Chore were <lb/>
others in the house but no one else <lb/>
ORDINANCE <lb/>
That the Mayor whom any <lb/>
actions for violating town <lb/>
may be tried may alter <lb/>
of and against any <lb/>
person so violating such Ordinance i Injured. The colored people <lb/>
or Ordinances, in each every <lb/>
i ease have power to reduce the penal- <lb/>
to a sum not less than one dollar <lb/>
and cost by remitting the excess <lb/>
said sum of one dollar. <lb/>
dared that they saw the lightning <lb/>
come down chimney. The hail <lb/>
was right heavy and did some dam <lb/>
age lo the <lb/>
How to Use the Bible. <lb/>
Have for constant use a small <lb/>
portable Bible, with clear type and <lb/>
complete marginal references. <lb/>
Carry a Bible or Testament with <lb/>
you. <lb/>
X Murk freely with ink upon it <lb/>
promises such as Is. to Chris- <lb/>
and invitations to unconverted <lb/>
Rev. in. and <lb/>
Brief notes may be written <lb/>
the margin. <lb/>
Do not be satisfied with simply <lb/>
reading a chapter thrice daily, but <lb/>
study out the full meaning of at least <lb/>
one verse a day. <lb/>
Study to know whole truth <lb/>
contained in n single incident or a <lb/>
single miracle; when and why writ- <lb/>
ten; how it applies to self, and how <lb/>
to use it others. <lb/>
Study to know what for and to <lb/>
whom each book the Bible was <lb/>
written. <lb/>
Believe every word of the Bible. <lb/>
x. Learn one of Scripture <lb/>
each day. Verses from memory will <lb/>
be wonderfully u. in your work <lb/>
for the impenitent. <lb/>
Study how to use the Bible to <lb/>
lead a soul to Christ. <lb/>
Set apart each day <lb/>
for studying It; this little will lie <lb/>
grand in result. <lb/>
Bead the Book as if it was <lb/>
written for yourself only. <lb/>
Always ask God to help you <lb/>
understand it. and then expect He <lb/>
will. <lb/>
Be Not Anxious. <lb/>
reason our Lord gives for <lb/>
worrying about the future, says the <lb/>
Western is that we have <lb/>
nothing to do with the future. <lb/>
not therefore anxious for the morrow <lb/>
for the morrow will anxious for <lb/>
God gives us life by days. <lb/>
day has its own duties, its <lb/>
own needs, its trials and temp- <lb/>
its own griefs, sorrows, <lb/>
and always gives us strength <lb/>
enough for the day as He gives <lb/>
the day, with all that He puts into <lb/>
it. But if we insist on <lb/>
back to morrow's cares piling <lb/>
then. top of to the strength <lb/>
will not. be enough, for God will not <lb/>
add to the day's portion of strength <lb/>
just to humor out of anxiety. <lb/>
Ho the simple lesson is, that we <lb/>
should keep days fenced off, <lb/>
each one by itself. today's <lb/>
duly, fight to-day's temptation, <lb/>
do not weaken and distract <lb/>
yourself by looking forward to things <lb/>
which you cannot see, and could <lb/>
not understand If you saw them. <lb/>
say, could easily enough get <lb/>
through with to day, but this must <lb/>
go on to-morrow and to-morrow and <lb/>
Yet you may have <lb/>
any to morrow to day. When the <lb/>
morrow comes, it will bring its own <lb/>
strength. <lb/>
Somebody has suggested that <lb/>
be hung in the vestibules of <lb/>
churches to enable the young <lb/>
Indies lo register their names on <lb/>
for the evening services. If <lb/>
this plan be adopted the young men <lb/>
have In wait outside until <lb/>
church is out to see their charmers <lb/>
are <lb/>
Health is contagious as well as <lb/>
disease, courage, as well as coward <lb/>
ice, generosity, as well as <lb/>
nobleness action and of nature, as <lb/>
well as Jealousy and malice. <lb/>
tali <lb/>
, Goldsboro Stith <lb/>
The foregoing IS a true copy of ,,.,, o <lb/>
j the Ordinances passed and ratified mysteriously <lb/>
by the Board of from their homes Monday <lb/>
; tho town of Greenville the night and have not been seen since. <lb/>
Goldsboro N C <lb/>
C C <lb/>
N C <lb/>
day of May, 1890. <lb/>
All shops or places for the sale of hogs whose mark, have not bet <lb/>
spirituous, vinous or malt liquors, by their owners, <lb/>
B. GREENE, <lb/>
Clerk. <lb/>
F. G. JAMES, <lb/>
times, in any licensed liquor saloon, <lb/>
sell or give away any spirituous, or <lb/>
vinous or malt liquors, except <lb/>
case of sickness, and then only upon <lb/>
a certificate of a practicing <lb/>
and one or persons <lb/>
seen going in or out of a Bar Boom <lb/>
between said hours shall be deemed <lb/>
evidence of the guilt of <lb/>
of proprietor of said Bar <lb/>
Any person this Ordinance <lb/>
shall for the first pay a fine <lb/>
of ten dollars, for the second <lb/>
pa v a fine of twenty dollars, for the <lb/>
I third have his license re<lb/>
Sec. No person snail vend or <lb/>
sell within the corporate limits of <lb/>
Greenville, except from the stalls of <lb/>
the Market House, any fresh pork, <lb/>
fresh beef, fresh mutton, fresh fish <lb/>
or barbecue. Provided, however, <lb/>
that after o'clock, A. M. whole <lb/>
dressed bogs, beef, and mutton, in <lb/>
citizens of the Town. Provided, it <lb/>
shall be his duty to release the same <lb/>
to the owner, if he he a <lb/>
upon his calling for them within ten <lb/>
days, and complying with the <lb/>
requiring them to lie marked <lb/>
registered. <lb/>
The Town Officers shall <lb/>
pound any hog known to be the prop- <lb/>
of a non-resident, but it shall be <lb/>
his duty to insert a small ling in the <lb/>
nose of the same, and to report the <lb/>
name of the owner thereof to <lb/>
Mayor. It shall likewise be his duty <lb/>
to make a note of each hog found <lb/>
running at large which he is forbid- <lb/>
den to impound and report the name <lb/>
of the owner thereof to the Mayor. <lb/>
These various methods adopted <lb/>
to protect the citizens of the town <lb/>
against the nuisance of the hogs <lb/>
from the county running at large in <lb/>
the Town shall not be considered as <lb/>
in any way countenancing the <lb/>
or as waiving any of legal <lb/>
rights of tho Town to abate the same <lb/>
but it shall be the duty of the Mayor <lb/>
It is suppose that they were kid- <lb/>
napped by a white man hailing from <lb/>
Georgia, who was hanging around <lb/>
Mayor for several days, but has left <lb/>
the very suddenly <lb/>
While Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hunt were <lb/>
; attending the meeting at <lb/>
St. John M. B. Church, Friday night <lb/>
j some person took oil <lb/>
The of endorsing is all; tap fr n one of the buggy wheels <lb/>
Endorsing. <lb/>
and put it inside the buggy. Mr. <lb/>
Hunt, luckily discovered it in time, <lb/>
before starting for home, otherwise <lb/>
the intended joke may have had a <lb/>
fatal termination. <lb/>
wrong, and should be utterly <lb/>
It ha been the financial <lb/>
ruin of mine men than, perhaps, all <lb/>
other a <lb/>
to merchants, clerks, <lb/>
men, advises our I Lenoir Friday <lb/>
men to study the John Martin, of and <lb/>
carefully in all its bearings, and Day, of Lower Creek, met near <lb/>
adopt some settled policy to govern Mrs. I. P. Connelly's on the <lb/>
I their conduct, so as to be ready to ha liver, a bloody light, ensued, <lb/>
answer the man who asks them to Martin cut Day across the face with <lb/>
sign bib note. What responsibility o hoe, knocking him down and jump- <lb/>
does one assume when he endorses on him beat him badly. He <lb/>
a note Simply tie is held for then fled the thinking he <lb/>
payment of the full, had killed Day. The latter came <lb/>
and interest, if the maker home much the worse for wear but <lb/>
the note, through mis- alive. He reported on the road that <lb/>
management, or fails to he had killed Martin. Mrs. <lb/>
pay It. Notice, the endorser as D. A. Lanier, wife or Be. D. A. La- <lb/>
all this responsibility, with of Little River, died at her <lb/>
no voice the management of the i on Sunday morning, May 10th, <lb/>
business and no share in the profits of hemorrhage of the M <lb/>
of the transaction if it proves prof-; was a sister of the late M. M. Huntley <lb/>
but With a certainty of loss and had been in a melancholy state <lb/>
if for any of reasons stated, the mind in bud health since his <lb/>
principal fails to pay the note. death two years ago. <lb/>
mm l DANIELS, <lb/>
n. c <lb/>
IR. L. JAMES, <lb/>
DENTIST. t <lb/>
A LEX L. BLOW, <lb/>
K Y AT-L AW. <lb/>
at. <lb/>
J. M. TUCKER. <lb/>
MOORE, TUCKER MURPHY, <lb/>
A W, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
LATHAM. <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
LI G. JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice all the courts. Collection <lb/>
I B. YELLOWLEY,<lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018989_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
S. I Proprietor, <lb/>
Dishonesty Never Thrives <lb/>
Publisher's Announcement. <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
is 41.50 per year. <lb/>
Advertising One column <lb/>
one year. ; one-half column one year. <lb/>
; one-quarter column one year, <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
one week. two weeks. one <lb/>
month Two inches one week. 81.50. <lb/>
two weeks, ; one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted In Local <lb/>
Column as reading items, cents per <lb/>
line each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb/>
and Notices. <lb/>
and Trait Sales. <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents. etc. will <lb/>
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb/>
PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. The RE- <lb/>
has suffered some loss and <lb/>
much because of having no <lb/>
fixed rule as to the payment of this class <lb/>
and in order to avoid <lb/>
future trouble payment in advance <lb/>
will demanded. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb/>
above, for length of time, can lie <lb/>
made by application to the oilier either <lb/>
in person or by letter. <lb/>
Copy tor New Advertisements <lb/>
all change of advertisements should lie <lb/>
handed In by o'clock an <lb/>
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The large <lb/>
will be found a profitable medium <lb/>
through which to reach the public. <lb/>
at the Office at <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, MAY ISM. <lb/>
Judicial Convention. <lb/>
The Judicial Convention of the <lb/>
Democratic party of the Third <lb/>
District, is hereby called to meet <lb/>
at Rocky Mount on Thursday. <lb/>
July 3rd. at o'clock, for the par- <lb/>
pose of nominating- a <lb/>
F. A. <lb/>
Dem. Judicial Ex. Com. <lb/>
Any one interested in the sick- <lb/>
and death- <lb/>
associations of the <lb/>
United States can help make the <lb/>
statistics of their organizations for <lb/>
the forthcoming- census move com- <lb/>
and disseminate the <lb/>
edge the good work they are <lb/>
doing; by Bending the names of <lb/>
such societies as they may know <lb/>
of, and the addresses of their <lb/>
principal officers, to Mr. Charles <lb/>
A. Special of the <lb/>
Eleventh Census. William street <lb/>
New York <lb/>
There is a fellow out in Chicago <lb/>
who would have acted the part of <lb/>
wisdom to have stopped talking <lb/>
just a little before he did. His <lb/>
i, name was Ed. L. and he <lb/>
did business under the style of Ed. <lb/>
L. Huntley Co. They purported <lb/>
to be in the clothing business and <lb/>
for some months past flooded the <lb/>
the Southern <lb/>
portion-with flaming posters. One <lb/>
of these circulars happened to fall <lb/>
in the hands of the water and we <lb/>
never saw a more vilely disgusting <lb/>
sheet. Instead of proceeding in a <lb/>
legitimate way to do an honorable <lb/>
business set about to build <lb/>
tip a trade for himself by pulling <lb/>
down and slandering others; in <lb/>
other words he thought to bring <lb/>
himself into note and make friends <lb/>
by defaming and slandering <lb/>
classes of business men and <lb/>
trying to excite a prejudice against <lb/>
attacks being <lb/>
upon the merchants <lb/>
who can found doing business <lb/>
in nearly every Southern city. <lb/>
town and village. But contrary <lb/>
to his expectation vile <lb/>
circular only sewed to bring con <lb/>
tempt upon his own head. The <lb/>
Clothing published in New <lb/>
York, began an investigation to <lb/>
sec who Ed. L. Huntley A Co., of <lb/>
Chicago, were. They found no <lb/>
such firm, but found one Ed. L. <lb/>
who has been shown up to <lb/>
be a fraud of the first magnitude, <lb/>
a man void of all principle, and <lb/>
whose character and past history <lb/>
were of the blackest type. Hunt- <lb/>
was doing business, ion pa- <lb/>
that is true, but the large <lb/>
and he <lb/>
himself as owning were all a <lb/>
myth. He never had any factory <lb/>
nor even a did not own a <lb/>
suit of clothes outside of his per- <lb/>
apparel. But his style of <lb/>
of doing business was this He <lb/>
did have enough space for a desk <lb/>
and a pile of circulars in the office <lb/>
of some other firm and did <lb/>
his business through the mails. <lb/>
Whenever someone was deluded <lb/>
into sending him an order for <lb/>
clothing he turned it over to the <lb/>
inn who had rented him the space <lb/>
to fill and had the bill made out in <lb/>
his own name. Huntley <lb/>
also gave the names of several <lb/>
banks in Chicago as reference to <lb/>
financial standing, but these <lb/>
have published a card stat- <lb/>
that the reference was without <lb/>
any whatever, that they <lb/>
knew nothing of such a firm and <lb/>
could vouch for it financially <lb/>
or otherwise. <lb/>
The man who attempts to do <lb/>
business in the above style is de- <lb/>
serving- the contempt of every <lb/>
lover of honesty. From Ed. L. <lb/>
downfall this moral can <lb/>
be drawn Don't try to build up <lb/>
yourself by trying to vilify and <lb/>
pull down somebody else. <lb/>
A of the Raleigh <lb/>
suggested <lb/>
that Dr. T. B. Kingsbury, editor <lb/>
of the Wilmington be <lb/>
chosen to fill the of Mental <lb/>
and Moral Philosophy of tin <lb/>
of North Carolina, recently <lb/>
made vacant by the death of Dr. <lb/>
The <lb/>
also added a hearty endorsement <lb/>
of Dr. Kingsbury and we are glad <lb/>
to see that the mention of his name <lb/>
is meeting with general approval. <lb/>
A man more admirably adapted to <lb/>
this high position be <lb/>
He is a man of high <lb/>
a ripe scholar, and eminently <lb/>
fitted to occupy the position with <lb/>
credit to and honor to his <lb/>
State and to the University. It is <lb/>
time North Carolina was <lb/>
the ability and worth of her <lb/>
sons and bestowing her honors <lb/>
upon them. The hopes <lb/>
Dr will be selected. <lb/>
The North Carolina <lb/>
of the M. E. Church, South, has <lb/>
just lost another of its ablest and <lb/>
best men. and one whose death <lb/>
will be sorely felt. Dr. J. E. Mann <lb/>
died in St. Louis on the night of j <lb/>
As 23rd of typhoid fever. He amount to. <lb/>
gone there as one of the clerical I However, the occasion was very in <lb/>
delegates from the North Carolina j attended <lb/>
Conference to the General Confer-I were of an opportunity to be <lb/>
held in that and was and receive such valuable <lb/>
taken sick while Dr. Mann information. <lb/>
and pursuits. Cause <lb/>
tins the farmers bad been too slow <lb/>
in discarding the old methods arid <lb/>
getting of the ruts of the <lb/>
past. farming the only <lb/>
hope of our country. <lb/>
Gov. Jar vis spoke upon <lb/>
education and benefits to come <lb/>
from A. M. College. While our <lb/>
North Carolina College offered ex- <lb/>
opportunities, he regretted <lb/>
that not a from Pitt county <lb/>
was availing himself of thorn. He <lb/>
also argued a better relation <lb/>
between land owner and laborer, <lb/>
showed bow the farmer could <lb/>
be greatly in this <lb/>
Prof. Massey and spoke <lb/>
upon the value of oyster shell lime <lb/>
as a fertilizer and its varied effects <lb/>
upon soils as B decomposer <lb/>
Of humus. <lb/>
The Institute than adjourned to <lb/>
meet Friday morning. <lb/>
FRIDAY'S SESSION. <lb/>
Allen Warren exhibited <lb/>
and gave examples in grafting, <lb/>
rooting and budding plants and <lb/>
vines, lie also how to <lb/>
set out strawberry plants. <lb/>
Prof. Massey lectured upon the <lb/>
making of ensilage and how to build <lb/>
silos and the best for making <lb/>
ensilage. It. It. Cotten spoke upon <lb/>
the same subject. Remarks were <lb/>
also make by Gov. A. <lb/>
and others. <lb/>
The question how to get rid of <lb/>
nut grass was asked and remarks <lb/>
made upon it by R. R. Cotten, C. <lb/>
C. and Com. Robinson. <lb/>
Mr. Cotten suggested planting the <lb/>
land in some crop to keep it <lb/>
shaded. Mr. <lb/>
geese upon the land <lb/>
plowing it frequently so the <lb/>
geese can get the nuts. Com. Robs <lb/>
agreed with the <lb/>
for shading the laud. <lb/>
AFTERNOON. <lb/>
Prof. Massey spoke at some <lb/>
length upon the methods <lb/>
ration for planting and cultivation <lb/>
Irish potatoes of late crop. <lb/>
Sheriff Warren followed upon the <lb/>
cultivation of <lb/>
no be graciously received and <lb/>
private pension bills have been <lb/>
passed by Congress this session. <lb/>
Senator has introduced a <lb/>
bill to put the rate for <lb/>
val. pensions at month. <lb/>
it or man baa introduced <lb/>
a bill providing for a special pen- <lb/>
of per month to the <lb/>
soldiers, sailors and marine <lb/>
who were on board the steamer <lb/>
when her boiler exploded <lb/>
April sir. enlisted in on <lb/>
who had been prisoners in the <lb/>
South were packed on board and <lb/>
sent North. About miles above <lb/>
Memphis, the boilers of the steamer <lb/>
exploded at o'clock at night. <lb/>
About 1700 were killed or drowned, <lb/>
and about died next day I'm a <lb/>
exposure in the water. <lb/>
have signed a petition for the <lb/>
passage of the bill. <lb/>
Senator Butler presented the <lb/>
of the heads of nine families, <lb/>
aggregating persons, that Con- <lb/>
appropriate per capita <lb/>
to them to emigrate to Li- <lb/>
and maintain themselves six <lb/>
mouths. The petition had a print <lb/>
ed heading, and it was said that an <lb/>
organized movement in the South <lb/>
indicated a scheme of wholesale <lb/>
deportation of the colored people of <lb/>
South Carolina- If these are <lb/>
good and respectable citizens they <lb/>
have no claim upon public charity. <lb/>
If these are good citizens why <lb/>
should the government pay or <lb/>
to get a of them out <lb/>
when it lets any number of bad cit- <lb/>
in. and charges them nothing <lb/>
In the House the tariff debate <lb/>
this week was no a <lb/>
squabble, the amendments being <lb/>
regularly voted down as they were <lb/>
offered. The bill was voted on <lb/>
and passed the House <lb/>
all But wait till it gets to <lb/>
the Senate. Senator Allison is <lb/>
waiting it. The west will show <lb/>
its teeth- lie says that he is pro- <lb/>
convinced that <lb/>
had and will handle <lb/>
the bill so that the author <lb/>
won't know it when he sees it. In <lb/>
the Senate Mr. Teller denounced <lb/>
the silver bill in vigorous <lb/>
terms, and that with tree <lb/>
coinage, wheat would go up to <lb/>
The ceremony of laying the first <lb/>
brick of the new mechanical build- <lb/>
of the A. and M. took <lb/>
place Friday evening o'clock, <lb/>
the brick being placed in position <lb/>
by Miss Merrimon. The <lb/>
first floor the will con- <lb/>
the machine and forge shops, <lb/>
each feet, the and class <lb/>
room feet, wash room <lb/>
feet. The second floor is to <lb/>
be used for pattern shop, drawing <lb/>
room and carpenter's shop, which <lb/>
will accommodate a class of thirty <lb/>
members. Tn the summer of 1892 <lb/>
the machine shop is to be fully <lb/>
equipped with tools, lathes, and <lb/>
other improved machinery. This <lb/>
College is a feature which our <lb/>
are proud of, and have no <lb/>
doubt but it will turn out skilled <lb/>
mechanics that will reflect credit on <lb/>
tho institution. There are already <lb/>
too many young men in the <lb/>
slaving away for a mere living, <lb/>
but there is a demand skilled <lb/>
mechanics and their services com <lb/>
high pay. <lb/>
U. A. <lb/>
Here's a Howdy Do <lb/>
the glad tidings to the <lb/>
four comers of the civilized world <lb/>
Proclaim it from the house-tops. <lb/>
That at a meeting of the of <lb/>
Education of Cumberland county, in <lb/>
this city Monday, the following res- <lb/>
was unanimously passed <lb/>
that the Superintendent <lb/>
of Instruction be instructed <lb/>
to forbid the use Mrs. C. P. <lb/>
Stops Carolina <lb/>
and <lb/>
of the United <lb/>
books as mentioned above <lb/>
have done no little to poison the <lb/>
minds of the general <lb/>
prejudice them against men and <lb/>
measures of the past, men to whom <lb/>
this generation should delight to <lb/>
pay honor, and whose memory they <lb/>
should fittingly perpetuate, and <lb/>
whose is a rich legacy to us <lb/>
all. Cumberland county has here- <lb/>
planted itself in advance of <lb/>
the other counties throughout the <lb/>
State, it becomes them to fol- <lb/>
low suit by emulating the most <lb/>
worthy example she has thus set. <lb/>
lie didn't that it go use a common expression, the <lb/>
that pi ice in Liverpool, when the is a puts <lb/>
world's price is made, but virtually to <lb/>
confessed that inflation was the ob- and written <lb/>
Steps North Carolina His- <lb/>
and another trashy <lb/>
of about equal merit. Such <lb/>
U publications should be. as speedily <lb/>
expunged from our public schools as <lb/>
possible, and our children taught to <lb/>
scorn them and their authors with <lb/>
contempt. For the suppression <lb/>
such, the has the proud <lb/>
THE <lb/>
BARGAINS I I<lb/>
I am every day my spring <lb/>
--------stock of Dry Goods, <lb/>
TO QUIT THE <lb/>
to the <lb/>
Standard Calicoes, I cents pr yd. <lb/>
Homespun. cents pr yd. <lb/>
Yard-wide fine, cents pr yd. <lb/>
and Children's Straw Hats <lb/>
to Trimmed in latest styles <lb/>
in the store at cents to <lb/>
DIG NO <lb/>
BIG NO <lb/>
----Snow Flake Flour <lb/>
Flake Flour <lb/>
I have a Flour which I guarantee for <lb/>
Everything low down for cash. <lb/>
Give me a-trial. <lb/>
W. G. STOKES. W. G. STOKES. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
IV E VOW <lb/>
e Abe <lb/>
To show the ladies the very latest and best <lb/>
of <lb/>
Our stock just opened has the newest <lb/>
shapes while black <lb/>
trimmed and <lb/>
Hats and Bonnets and Hats <lb/>
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats I <lb/>
We also have Ribbons and <lb/>
Flowers of all kinds. Feather <lb/>
Plumes, Trimmings, Crapes, <lb/>
Handkerchiefs. Notions, In- <lb/>
Caps and Sacks, etc.<lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following good <lb/>
that are not to be excelled In this market. And to be and <lb/>
pure straight goods. GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CATS, BOOTS and SHOES, <lb/>
and SUPPERS, and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. CROCKERY and QUEENS- <lb/>
WARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Belting, Hay, Rock Like, Plaster of Paris, and <lb/>
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles. <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I oiler to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less C per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb/>
and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure JAm- <lb/>
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Sail Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a all and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
Shot from Ambush and of <lb/>
Col. A, and U- Col- <lb/>
Matters. <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
On Thursday Friday of last <lb/>
week Hon. John Robinson, <lb/>
of Agriculture Prof. Has- <lb/>
of the X. C Agricultural and <lb/>
Mechanical College, were in Green- <lb/>
ville holding a Institute. <lb/>
every point attendance the <lb/>
Ins tit me was a decided success, but <lb/>
contrary to the expectation of the <lb/>
in the movement <lb/>
very few farmers present to be <lb/>
by the meeting. True it <lb/>
was a busy time with them in their <lb/>
crops, yet we dare say the <lb/>
they could have obtained at the <lb/>
Institute last week would be worth <lb/>
many fold more to them than the <lb/>
days <lb/>
in his career filled many positions <lb/>
of importance conference <lb/>
and made friends of all <lb/>
Commissioner was in- <lb/>
by Hon. Willis K. <lb/>
addressed the Institute <lb/>
whom he While i <lb/>
elder of the Washington and suggested the <lb/>
feast he M frequently in Green- i the same. He was <lb/>
ville and had hosts of warm friends lowed b-v gene a <lb/>
among this people who hear of his <lb/>
death with deep regrets. He was <lb/>
agricultural topics, particularly on <lb/>
the pea culture and the <lb/>
a native of county and of vine- <lb/>
was years of age. The degree I J J was called <lb/>
of Doctor of Divinity was confer- to bis <lb/>
ed by Trinity College in the Irish potato <lb/>
few ago. culture, which he did in an <lb/>
j manner. These consumed the <lb/>
The handsomest trade edition j morning the <lb/>
of any we have yet seen adjourned for dinner, <lb/>
published Carolina was <lb/>
the issue of the Statesville <lb/>
May 22nd. published <lb/>
the of the Statesville <lb/>
Chamber of Commerce. The paper <lb/>
as pages besides the cover, <lb/>
and 11.000 copies were issued. It <lb/>
was complete in every respect, <lb/>
printed, elegantly <lb/>
and interestingly com- <lb/>
piled. The money spent by the <lb/>
Chamber of Commerce in such a <lb/>
paper was wisely invested, for it <lb/>
will bring forth fruit an hundred <lb/>
fold to the of Statesville. <lb/>
AFTERNOON. <lb/>
Prof. Massey was requested to <lb/>
tell the advantage of Agricultural <lb/>
Colleges, and why such institutions <lb/>
are better than other colleges <lb/>
those who expect to follow farming <lb/>
as a He spoke very <lb/>
and showed how such in- <lb/>
were not for the <lb/>
The Institute was most- interest- <lb/>
entertained by C. <lb/>
the propagation of bees, and Correspondence to <lb/>
the management the same. About Tour hundred at- i of knowing it cons <lb/>
the following University the fast I its proportionate share and <lb/>
the . , truly hopes that every from <lb/>
resolutions offered by J. I j Cherokee to Currituck, will adopt <lb/>
mm adopted I f j the above resolution on the first <lb/>
, , . , , i is to preach in the .,,. ., <lb/>
the , I in June. <lb/>
It county are due and oB- j Me. Editor mail a paper <lb/>
considerable, the staple selling here containing an article Horn the lay <lb/>
from to Thursday. <lb/>
The Club have <lb/>
received fourteen new <lb/>
and will give a tournament soon. <lb/>
The tent meeting is in <lb/>
Bet <lb/>
hereby tendered to Hon. John <lb/>
Robinson and Prof. W. P. Massey <lb/>
the information they <lb/>
nave disseminated among the farm- <lb/>
county, and the <lb/>
interest in farming they have in- <lb/>
stilled among those who were pres- <lb/>
That a copy of this <lb/>
sent to the rt <lb/>
to publish. <lb/>
upon the action of <lb/>
the Board of Education of Cumber- <lb/>
laud county with the request that <lb/>
you publish the comments of the <lb/>
in lull. <lb/>
My belief in the Reflector's <lb/>
The John Flanagan <lb/>
BUGGY COMPANY. <lb/>
Are in business at the old Flanagan <lb/>
Shops and are manufacturing <lb/>
all kinds at the <lb/>
VEHICLES. <lb/>
-----We also do----- <lb/>
All Work guaranteed. <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 FIRE PROOF SAFE. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <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/>
WILL CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF . <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory s well equipped with the boat Mechanics, put up <lb/>
hut work. We keep up the times and improved styles. <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All stylos of Springs are can select from <lb/>
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb/>
the year round, which we will sell 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. K. Cherry, and with <lb/>
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb/>
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES <lb/>
At prices fully in keeping with the haul times. I keep <lb/>
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Tobacco, Snuff, <lb/>
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market. <lb/>
Yon are invited to call. Remember the place, at Cherry's stand. <lb/>
progress a large st and its interest in our <lb/>
obi people attend each meeting. <lb/>
The machinery for the cotton lac <lb/>
which has been arriving for <lb/>
synopsis of what transpired j some time, is now being placed in <lb/>
by no mesas conveys the full inter- j position. <lb/>
of the institute. All the talks <lb/>
on the different subjects were good <lb/>
and instructive. We are sorry <lb/>
more the farmers did not bear <lb/>
them. <lb/>
Washington Letter. <lb/>
From Our Regular Correspondent. <lb/>
Washington, D. C. May <lb/>
is a very common impress <lb/>
among the American people, <lb/>
especially those who disdain to <lb/>
inmates of the Deal and <lb/>
Dumb Asylum treated to an <lb/>
excursion by Capt. Smith to <lb/>
on <lb/>
concert given by the graded <lb/>
school children this week realized <lb/>
them which is to be used for <lb/>
the benefit of the library. <lb/>
Governor's Guards and Fire <lb/>
welfare idea <lb/>
that you would hesitate one moment <lb/>
to fully and strongly endorse the <lb/>
action of the Board of Education <lb/>
of Cumberland county. feel as- <lb/>
sured that the Hoard of Education <lb/>
of Pitt will commend this action <lb/>
and adopt similar resolutions. <lb/>
It i well known that Mrs. <lb/>
History is not an impartial <lb/>
one. <lb/>
Besides containing many errors, <lb/>
it does injustice to the dead past <lb/>
present, and to adopt <lb/>
this partisan writing be a <lb/>
Companies have reflection on Carolina <lb/>
Charlotte where a p <lb/>
in exhibition on the 20th inst. who <lb/>
The street sprinkler is every t ed bodies the invader s approach to <lb/>
day sprinkling principal homes to glorification of <lb/>
It is a benefit to our those remained at <lb/>
bother themselves with the tire- people during the hot, dusty ; home rejoicing that the life blood of <lb/>
some details of Congressional the flower of Southern chivalry was <lb/>
and public finance, that the U.; W. A. Wet more, shoe flowing in vain. <lb/>
S. treasuries are filled with will move his plant from the <lb/>
loads of gold silver, penitentiary to Greensboro, and <lb/>
and that problem of j make a a shoe for <lb/>
is great urgency of ; men. <lb/>
the times. All manner of schemes I Saturday the Governor re <lb/>
have been suggested to this Pritchett, of Gran- could accomplish. <lb/>
and by those who should know bet-; was to be banged The authors or such histories can <lb/>
A few billions for sea-coast on to give inherit abolitionist <lb/>
To teach the children of our State <lb/>
such history as this poisons their <lb/>
minds more to living <lb/>
the most vituperative and venomous <lb/>
all his malignity <lb/>
dices of their New England <lb/>
tors and these met nods to foist <lb/>
and force them upon the youth of <lb/>
defenses, with a neat fortune for opportunity of new <lb/>
every soldier, and a good <lb/>
stocked, for every poor <lb/>
T I the Chair j the perchance they <lb/>
relieve this bulging state of affairs.,,., . imbibe these false <lb/>
But it remained for as we have swallowed <lb/>
Kansas, to out most ;, , other Northern histories of our <lb/>
of <lb/>
He has intro- <lb/>
has accepted the position <lb/>
fantastic remedy Financial Agent to the Baptist <lb/>
two bill in Congress pro- p , <lb/>
riding for an organization called , <lb/>
Army All I Colonel i,. Anderson, <lb/>
citizens of of age are President of Citizen's National <lb/>
titled to membership. No one dropped dead in his office on <lb/>
work than hours a day, Wednesday evening about o o'clock, <lb/>
more than days a week, nor from heart disease. was a man <lb/>
than six weeks without an inter- for many good j <lb/>
mission or two weeks. Every qualities, and thoroughly beloved A J t <lb/>
try U. S. is to be provided knew He came <lb/>
with a governmental farm. The Wilmington at the age of <lb/>
is also to undertake and with <lb/>
public enterprise tor the purpose or banking institutions of this <lb/>
providing labor for members, whose I in them <lb/>
daily recompense is to be . till his death. <lb/>
Where is all this money coming j On the 17th inst., about dark, a <lb/>
from The last statement from white man Bryan <lb/>
Treasury showed the amount of about years old, was shot and <lb/>
available cash hand to be about killed on Sense about six <lb/>
Senator Gorman, a from the city. It seems he a <lb/>
member of the appropriation com- , man named Pulley were looking for <lb/>
stated before a boat which was in his charge when <lb/>
people. Such attempts should be <lb/>
frustrated and such publications <lb/>
suppressed. <lb/>
It is to be hoped that day <lb/>
Southern history will written <lb/>
with justice to all, and we hail with <lb/>
gladness the move now on foot to <lb/>
establish a chair of history at our <lb/>
teach our children <lb/>
history or Southern facts <lb/>
Feeling assured that our <lb/>
Board of Education will condemn <lb/>
such works if brought to their no- <lb/>
request publication of <lb/>
clipping. Sincerely, <lb/>
that the pension payments from <lb/>
1891 for several years will amount <lb/>
to and nobody contra- <lb/>
him. The new tariff bill is <lb/>
shot, and it is supposed the shoot- <lb/>
was done by parties employed <lb/>
to watch some posted land near <lb/>
where he was killed. From facts <lb/>
said to reduce the public revenues which subsequently developed it is <lb/>
about This will leave <lb/>
for all public purposes, except pen- <lb/>
about of <lb/>
annual revenue, and which is also <lb/>
about size of the deficit that <lb/>
impossible at this time to <lb/>
bend the men supposed to be con- <lb/>
with the murder, as the <lb/>
against them is only <lb/>
though of the strongest <lb/>
pose of learning and practicing be found in at j kind. The shooting is believed to <lb/>
the pupils such labor as the next ear the I <lb/>
every ordinary farm hand was <lb/>
Editor Caldwell is to be ready acquainted with, but is train <lb/>
lated upon so excellent an edition j both band practically <lb/>
of his paper. It makes as the scientifically that their pursuit may <lb/>
more anxious to vote for him for . .- . ,, ,, . , , <lb/>
Governor. By the <lb/>
might be doing themselves credit <lb/>
and bringing advancement to their <lb/>
gates by Chambers fertilizers <lb/>
It. Cotten spoke upon general <lb/>
cultivation of crops, draining, use <lb/>
bills expenditures which i toned powder and ball pistol <lb/>
have passed one house and <lb/>
likely t pass the other, are perfect- <lb/>
ed. Besides, the importers are or- <lb/>
and are determined to cut <lb/>
down the rates or. every article in <lb/>
the tariff schedule. <lb/>
A delegation of representing <lb/>
all wholesale Houses <lb/>
of New City, will, besiege the <lb/>
. i J- B- spoke of rapid j <lb/>
the , . , of ether cities will also be on hand <lb/>
trade edition development, of Ia of the <lb/>
paper issued. No advertise- U, bat progress J majority is to <lb/>
be equal to it. I had net kept wits other <lb/>
Colt's make, of thirty-eight <lb/>
Dr. James made post <lb/>
examination and stated <lb/>
the ball entered the breast on the <lb/>
right side three inches below the <lb/>
nipple, passing through heart <lb/>
and lungs, producing death instant- <lb/>
The coroner has been <lb/>
gating the case, but so far no <lb/>
features have <lb/>
it is likely important evidence ten <lb/>
ding to discovery of one <lb/>
will be round farther <lb/>
The of the University <lb/>
of North Carolina for 1889-90 is <lb/>
before us, showing students <lb/>
an increase of over last year. <lb/>
The Law School is flourishing, <lb/>
having Tho large <lb/>
number of <lb/>
shows that our young men arc <lb/>
seeking higher instruction. The <lb/>
Medical and Pharmaceutical de- <lb/>
under Dr. R. H. White- <lb/>
head will be opened in <lb/>
next. We note that depart- <lb/>
of Civil, Electrical and <lb/>
Mining Engineering are to be op- <lb/>
also. Large and valuable ad- <lb/>
of apparatus have been <lb/>
added to the departments of Phys- <lb/>
Chemistry and Natural <lb/>
A new course leading to the <lb/>
degree of Bachelor of Letters, es- <lb/>
in which all studies after <lb/>
after the first year, except English <lb/>
are elective, thus giving addition- <lb/>
opportunities for the choice <lb/>
studies looking peculiarly to the <lb/>
business the student intends to <lb/>
pursue. <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
come m <lb/>
We want to have a talk <lb/>
with you and tell <lb/>
you now cheap <lb/>
we can sell <lb/>
you <lb/>
HARDWARE <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/>
early and you will be <lb/>
sure to get them in time <lb/>
LATHAM PENDER, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
another- <lb/>
Car Load of Fine <lb/>
Horses <lb/>
Mules, <lb/>
--------J received by------ <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
-----Arid will be sold----- <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
or at reasonable terms on lime on <lb/>
proved security. my stock for <lb/>
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb/>
anyone. Give me a call. <lb/>
T. O <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY. <lb/>
J. R<lb/>
J. G. <lb/>
LIVERY SALE AND FEED <lb/>
SOLID CHUNKS OF TRUTHS <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO., <lb/>
your careful attention to their large and complete stock <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb/>
And solicit of each every one at least a share of their esteemed patronage.-. <lb/>
The cry of hard times we hear constantly on every hand, but we-. <lb/>
--------wish to remind you that we have ft------- <lb/>
SPECIALLY SELECTED OF GOODS <lb/>
.--To meet not only competition, but to conquer the monster <lb/>
day is passed when the thought of friendship enters into <lb/>
i why f because every one must and <lb/>
buy where they can buy cheapest. <lb/>
WE ARE PREPARED TO SERVE ALL <lb/>
Who will us with their patronage. We will be glad to have you <lb/>
in and see us and let us give you at least a hearty shake of the band JIM <lb/>
and a kindly greeting. Make our place your headquarters while JIM <lb/>
f in the town. Prices and quality are what you want for <lb/>
your hard earned dollars and that is just what we <lb/>
have got for you, <lb/>
No Mistake No Bragging No Back Down <lb/>
We mean every word of it and can and will do what we tell you. Looks. <lb/>
, this column and sec if c cannot interest you in bargain. <lb/>
stock <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Furnishing Hats, Caps, <lb/>
Shoos, Hardware. Groceries, Provisions, Harness and <lb/>
Valises, Wood and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, Tinware, <lb/>
Plows and Castings, Furniture, Mattresses, Bed Springs, <lb/>
And easy and comfortable also a line of Baby Carriages. <lb/>
Look at these prices they arc not leaders but only sample prices through <lb/>
Calicoes at cents per yard. Ginghams at to cents per yard. <lb/>
S to pr yd. Elegant line of White Goods at ft to ct. <lb/>
40-inch White at pr yd. thread N. C. Check Homespun et. <lb/>
Piece from to <lb/>
All wool, fashionable shades, single cents per yards. <lb/>
Nun's Veiling at cents yard, standard goods and worth at least <lb/>
Single and Double width Cashmeres several leading reduced. <lb/>
-We have the best line of- <lb/>
I have opened at the stables formerly <lb/>
occupied by Dr. J. G. James, <lb/>
and will 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 <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
This is to give notice that I am no <lb/>
longer a free trader and am no longer a <lb/>
member of the firm of Johnson. <lb/>
A Co. I have sold out to P. J. Johnson <lb/>
and W. P. records <lb/>
as to my becoming a <lb/>
April 1880. <lb/>
J. I <lb/>
OUR DOLLAR SHOES <lb/>
We have ever had, solid leather and no mistake. Our line of shoe Is complete. <lb/>
Ladies, men, boys and children we can suit you shoes.-------- <lb/>
Give tired mother a rest and please the baby by it a nice Carriage, <lb/>
we to talk to you <lb/>
That necessary and essential element in every household- We are <lb/>
for it in this market, and carry the largest line ever found here. We can save <lb/>
money small as well as large purchases. <lb/>
Our parting injunction to every consumer and buyer of of goods in this market la <lb/>
to come In and look at our goods and compare them and our prices in all <lb/>
lines General with goods and prices elsewhere, and remember we <lb/>
meet competition by lowering the price and not the quality. <lb/>
Yours truly, <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO., <lb/>
N. C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018989_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
ATTRACTION <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
N. G. <lb/>
Local Sparks <lb/>
A CORDIAL INVITATION TO <lb/>
VISITORS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
HOME FOLKS <lb/>
-TO- <lb/>
Visit Our Store <lb/>
Ice. <lb/>
Buy your shirts of Higgs A Mun- <lb/>
Off for Richmond. <lb/>
New good daily at Higgs <lb/>
Man ford's <lb/>
Low water in the river. <lb/>
Nice line or Children's Carriages <lb/>
at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb/>
Three more days in May. <lb/>
First of this P. L. <lb/>
Fruit Jars the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Raspberries are ripening. <lb/>
Mourning paper and envelopes can <lb/>
be had at the office. <lb/>
But a few more days to vacation. <lb/>
lbs Beeswax for <lb/>
cash at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Superior Court in Washington this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Ladies hats all the <lb/>
shapes for at Mrs. L- Griffin's. <lb/>
The strawberry season is about <lb/>
over. <lb/>
Car load Hay cheap at Old <lb/>
Brick Store. <lb/>
Miss Eliza visiting Miss <lb/>
Jennie James. <lb/>
Miss Lucille Owens, of Plymouth, <lb/>
is visiting Mrs. L. C- Latham. <lb/>
Mr. A. L. Blow left yesterday a <lb/>
trip in the upper part of the district. <lb/>
Miss Eva Humber is in William- <lb/>
visiting her sister, Mrs. J. G. <lb/>
Nelson. <lb/>
Mrs. J. C. Kennedy and Mrs. Geo. <lb/>
of Lenoir, are visiting Mrs. D. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Mr. K. B. Higgs left yesterday <lb/>
a commercial tour through South <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
Kill <lb/>
We learn that the large mills of <lb/>
Mr. R. U. in Swift Creek <lb/>
township, were destroyed by fire on <lb/>
Sunday morning. His sawmill, <lb/>
grist mill, gin house and about <lb/>
feet of lumber were consumed. <lb/>
The loss is estimated at <lb/>
upon which there was no insurance. <lb/>
He came near losing his dwelling <lb/>
house and barns also. We are truly <lb/>
sorry that Mr. Garris has met with <lb/>
such a severe loss. <lb/>
The Farmer. <lb/>
DURING THE WEEK. <lb/>
Spring chickens getting c <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. carry a nice <lb/>
line of Ladies Shoes, sell cheap. <lb/>
It time to begin talking <lb/>
Best Shoes ever had for both <lb/>
Ladies and Men's, at J. Cherry <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
Nice rains Monday night and yes <lb/>
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well <lb/>
and sick at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
commencement <lb/>
next week. <lb/>
Just Tar- <lb/>
hosiery ladies, misses, boys <lb/>
and men. M. R. <lb/>
Pitt county <lb/>
after next. <lb/>
Superior court week <lb/>
this week <lb/>
Special Attraction. <lb/>
-ON- <lb/>
THURSDAY <lb/>
We shall place on our counters a <lb/>
Choice Selection <lb/>
-OF- <lb/>
COMMENCEMENT <lb/>
Mo trouble to show Goods <lb/>
M. R. <lb/>
Lang i <lb/>
Evans <lb/>
Street <lb/>
near <lb/>
near <lb/>
Telegraph <lb/>
Telegraph <lb/>
Office. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Writing paper to cents a <lb/>
Envelopes to cents a pack, at the <lb/>
office. <lb/>
The are <lb/>
next week. <lb/>
Car load Ice for sale, by T. A. <lb/>
Cherry. <lb/>
The King's Daughters held a <lb/>
val Monday night. <lb/>
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate <lb/>
was made of Point Lace Flour, at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The Greenville Guard left <lb/>
day for Richmond. <lb/>
The latest Novelties in dress <lb/>
goods and trimmings to match at <lb/>
Higgs <lb/>
This weather brings out thin coats <lb/>
and palm leaf <lb/>
Chickens were more plentiful in <lb/>
market the past week. <lb/>
Greenville and Washington cross <lb/>
bats on of Juno. <lb/>
The soldier left yesterday in <lb/>
great shape Richmond. <lb/>
grow in popularity a- <lb/>
the warm weather advances. <lb/>
The green apple is large enough to <lb/>
get in its work on the small boy. <lb/>
The Norfolk and Carolina trains <lb/>
began carrying the mails last week. <lb/>
Cotton is about all chopped out. <lb/>
The farmers have a beautiful stand. <lb/>
The editor has had snap beans and <lb/>
cucumbers this week. Who is ahead <lb/>
of it <lb/>
The Ball Club of this town <lb/>
have just had their grounds put in <lb/>
nice order. <lb/>
Mr. Cornelius Stephens has two <lb/>
snipe eggs which he is going to set <lb/>
under a hen. <lb/>
per lb for Sweet <lb/>
Snuff. lb bold in Pitt Co., which <lb/>
is a of its superiority, at <lb/>
the Old Brick <lb/>
Wheat and oat crops will be poor <lb/>
this year, but the outlook for every <lb/>
thing else is good. <lb/>
Our Raleigh letters will be found <lb/>
interesting. We now have them <lb/>
regular every week. <lb/>
Mr. J, R. Congleton, Jr., of Caro- <lb/>
township, reported a cotton <lb/>
square to the on the 22nd <lb/>
inst. <lb/>
One fine young year old horse <lb/>
a good single phaeton Si harness <lb/>
for sale. Also a good wagon <lb/>
harness for sale. at the <lb/>
office. <lb/>
Mr. T. A. Cherry received a car <lb/>
load of Saturday, Greenville <lb/>
is now better prepared for the sum- <lb/>
mer. <lb/>
Partial from the vicinity of <lb/>
Creek had quantities nice pike in <lb/>
town for sale yesterday. Large <lb/>
them are caught in the creek. <lb/>
The attendance at the <lb/>
Institute last we k was much small- <lb/>
than expected. Perhaps the far- <lb/>
were too busy in their cotton, <lb/>
but they missed some good things. <lb/>
A. Wood Mowers and <lb/>
Horse Bakes, We have just re- <lb/>
a new lot of these excellent <lb/>
machines. Send for circular and <lb/>
price. F. S. Co., <lb/>
Tarboro, K. C. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge No. A. F. A <lb/>
A. M. will hold a regular <lb/>
cation on the first Thursday in June <lb/>
for the annual election of officers. A <lb/>
full attendance is desired. Brethren <lb/>
are requested to take due notice and <lb/>
govern themselves accordingly. <lb/>
Next Monday will be an important <lb/>
day. Besides the usual monthly <lb/>
meeting of the Board of County Com- <lb/>
missioners, the Justices of the Peace <lb/>
will meet the purpose of making <lb/>
tax levy, and to elect a Board of <lb/>
Commissioners and a Superintendent <lb/>
of Ed u oat ion. <lb/>
Mr. J. Morris and Miss Martha <lb/>
Morris are visiting Mr. and Mrs. S. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
Mr. J. L. Harris left Monday for <lb/>
Tarboro to accept a position on the <lb/>
Southerner. <lb/>
Mr. Allen Taft returned from Col- <lb/>
Ohio, where he had been for <lb/>
a few weeks. <lb/>
Mr. Tyson has moved his <lb/>
family from Greenville to his plan- <lb/>
neat Farmville. <lb/>
Mr. Wiley Higgs returned Monday <lb/>
from Scotland Neck where he has <lb/>
been two weeks. <lb/>
Our townsman, Mr. John <lb/>
was quite last week. Glad <lb/>
to see him out again. <lb/>
Mrs. Whitaker, of Enfield, <lb/>
has recently been visiting her son. <lb/>
Cap. R. O. Whitaker. <lb/>
Messrs. R. A Tyson and C. D. <lb/>
Rountree returned last Saturday from <lb/>
their western prospecting tour. <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner, Mrs. L. C. <lb/>
Latham and Mrs. P. C. <lb/>
yesterday morning for Richmond. <lb/>
Master John Horn returned home <lb/>
last Wednesday from Columbus. <lb/>
Ohio, where had been with his uncle <lb/>
since September. <lb/>
Dr. C. J. has been absent <lb/>
from town several days attending the <lb/>
meeting of the National Medical As- <lb/>
at Nashville, Tenn. <lb/>
Mrs. W. Goodwin and children, <lb/>
who have been visiting here, left, yes- <lb/>
for Neck, where they <lb/>
will remain a few days and then go <lb/>
to <lb/>
State Auditor Sanderlin is a farm <lb/>
and a of the tanners. This <lb/>
being true a large number of Pitt <lb/>
county farmers should come to hear <lb/>
him deliver the address at Greenville <lb/>
Institute commencement on Friday <lb/>
June 8th. All arc invited. <lb/>
Large Orders <lb/>
We stepped into Latham and <lb/>
hardware store, Friday, <lb/>
found them as busy as could be on <lb/>
tobacco flues. told us orders <lb/>
were in hand for sets of flues, <lb/>
of which will o to E <lb/>
county. They are receiving new or- <lb/>
nearly every day. <lb/>
is Hens. <lb/>
Mr R. A. Willoughby, of Beaver <lb/>
Dun township, told us Friday that <lb/>
he has sold dozen eggs since the <lb/>
first of January, for which he received <lb/>
cents per dozen. lie also told us <lb/>
that the Garners of his section have <lb/>
splendid stands of cotton, but worms <lb/>
are cutting down the corn in low <lb/>
lands. <lb/>
Billie and the Bail Boy thank Mas- <lb/>
Louis and Willie Ryan for mag- <lb/>
blooms. <lb/>
We acknowledge receipt from Rev. <lb/>
J. M. Rhodes of an invitation to the <lb/>
commencement exercises of the Lit <lb/>
Female College, June 4th and <lb/>
5th. <lb/>
Misses Annie and Helen Perkins <lb/>
have the thanks of the editor for an <lb/>
invitation to the commencement ex- <lb/>
of Salem Female Academy, <lb/>
May 30th to June 4th, inclusive. <lb/>
Bate Ball <lb/>
The young men of the town have <lb/>
organized a base ball club for this <lb/>
summer. They intend to show the <lb/>
citizens of the town that base ball is <lb/>
not a game played solely by toughs, <lb/>
but is an honest sport and <lb/>
the character of the young men will <lb/>
suffice show that the game can be <lb/>
attended by ladies without fear of be- <lb/>
shocked by indecent behavior or <lb/>
profane language. This game is <lb/>
rapidly gaining ground as the Na- <lb/>
game if those who are <lb/>
against base ball, just simply <lb/>
because it is base ball, would see our <lb/>
boys play and understand the game <lb/>
they would soon become enthusiastic <lb/>
over this great sport. <lb/>
Ordinances, <lb/>
The ordinances adopted by the <lb/>
of Greenville for the <lb/>
government of the town, and which <lb/>
go into force and affect on the 5th of <lb/>
June, arc published in this issue of <lb/>
the a. There is but slight <lb/>
change these from the ordinances <lb/>
heretofore in effect. The best <lb/>
of a community of course are <lb/>
those adhere strictly to the ob- <lb/>
of the laws themselves and <lb/>
love to see them observe by others, <lb/>
and where breeches do occur to see <lb/>
the offender promptly and properly <lb/>
punished. It will be well for all to <lb/>
acquaint themselves with these <lb/>
and every citizen perform his <lb/>
duty toward seeing them observed. <lb/>
This issue the should <lb/>
be preserved so the ordinances may <lb/>
be referred to at time desired. <lb/>
will be or <lb/>
here in Skinner's Opera <lb/>
House on the evening of 9th. <lb/>
A minstrel club Washington will <lb/>
be here on that date and give an <lb/>
entertainment. appeared in <lb/>
Washington recently and the papers <lb/>
of that town speak of the perform- <lb/>
being very amusing high- <lb/>
enjoyable. The bills will give full <lb/>
particulars. <lb/>
Spring <lb/>
Grown Chickens, <lb/>
Barrels Tar, and all the <lb/>
Eggs yon can persuade to <lb/>
lay. Highest cash prices paid. <lb/>
The Crops- <lb/>
Last week the editor traveled <lb/>
through much of Carolina and <lb/>
townships and also in part of <lb/>
Greenville north of the river. It <lb/>
was very gratifying to behold every <lb/>
where such splendid prospects <lb/>
and to see the farmers work so cheer <lb/>
fully and hopefully. They are for- <lb/>
getting the bad crops of the past <lb/>
several years and bend every energy <lb/>
for the coming crop. They have an <lb/>
excellent stand of and corn <lb/>
is good, while the season for <lb/>
toes was all that could be asked. <lb/>
With seasons from now out a <lb/>
bountiful harvest will be gathered, <lb/>
and the Reflector hopes the farm- <lb/>
may reap all they <lb/>
Novel Cholera Cure. <lb/>
A friend, who is an excellent <lb/>
and good stock raiser, told us <lb/>
Saturday he believed he had found <lb/>
a remedy for hog cholera Among <lb/>
his stock was a 3-months old pig <lb/>
which had the cholera. He took the <lb/>
pig and tied its legs together, <lb/>
dug a hole the ground an put the <lb/>
pig in, covering its entire body up to <lb/>
the mouth with dirt. Next morning <lb/>
the pig was taken out of the grave <lb/>
and released and has been improving <lb/>
ever since being buried alive. Our <lb/>
asked us to print this and let <lb/>
somebody else who has sick hogs try <lb/>
the experiment. Bury the animal <lb/>
with head up and leave only the <lb/>
mouth exposed. <lb/>
Tie Fatal Pistol. <lb/>
A pistol in the hands of two small <lb/>
colored boys got in some deadly <lb/>
work Sat evening, and cost one <lb/>
of them his life. Evans, a <lb/>
year-old colored boy who lived <lb/>
Greenville, had gone in the country <lb/>
to visit his cousin, John Evans, who <lb/>
lives a few miles above town. The <lb/>
father of John Bent the boys out in <lb/>
the forest to get some wood. John <lb/>
had a pistol with him and alter get-. <lb/>
ting beyond sight of the house took <lb/>
the weapon his pocket to fire it <lb/>
off- saw the pistol and want- <lb/>
ed to shoot it himself and up to <lb/>
John to get the pistol him. <lb/>
Both the boys wanting to shoot the <lb/>
pistol and trying to get bold <lb/>
of it while in John's hand the <lb/>
on was discharged, the ball going <lb/>
into Arden's neck and making a <lb/>
wound from which he died not many <lb/>
minutes later. After being shot <lb/>
Arden ran several yards and his <lb/>
screams brought out some <lb/>
living in the neighborhood. These <lb/>
are about the particulars as brought <lb/>
out in a preliminary bearing before <lb/>
B. Williams, Jr., J. P., on Monday, <lb/>
John Evans placed in Jail for a <lb/>
hearing before the Superior Court. <lb/>
Boys have business carrying pis- <lb/>
An Aged Couple. <lb/>
Mr. Shade Woolen, a citizen of <lb/>
Swift Creek township, this county, <lb/>
is years old. His wife is years <lb/>
old and they have been living in hap- <lb/>
wedded life for years. Both <lb/>
them are remarkably well <lb/>
their advanced Mr. <lb/>
can read small print, without the aid <lb/>
of glasses. He used glasses up to <lb/>
or years ago, but his eyesight <lb/>
is now as good as in days, <lb/>
lie is quite active for an old man and <lb/>
walks a great deal. The aged couple <lb/>
have nine living children, a host of <lb/>
grandchildren could not learn <lb/>
exact and three great- <lb/>
grandchildren. The hopes <lb/>
there are yet many years of <lb/>
for these excellent people, and <lb/>
that they may live to celebrate their <lb/>
diamond wedding. Their <lb/>
arc among the best citizens of <lb/>
our county. <lb/>
Blow is Bis Kan. <lb/>
taking a days recreation <lb/>
in the country last week, we drove <lb/>
down and spent an hour or so with <lb/>
our good Mr. T. J <lb/>
who lives in the north-eastern <lb/>
of the county. Mr. is <lb/>
a pleasant, social gentleman and a <lb/>
with him is always enjoyed. <lb/>
We found him as busy as could be <lb/>
having his largo water mill repaired, <lb/>
an establishment that is <lb/>
to the people throughout that <lb/>
whole section. A few weeks ago all <lb/>
the water was turned out of the pond <lb/>
and the catch of was immense <lb/>
hundreds of large chub weighing <lb/>
from to pounds besides barrels <lb/>
of other nice were caught. <lb/>
from miles and miles away were <lb/>
there and took quantities of the finny <lb/>
tribe home. One day there were <lb/>
more than a hundred horses <lb/>
around the pond. Of course some <lb/>
politics had to be and we <lb/>
round him a strong advocate of Mr. <lb/>
A. L. Blow for Solicitor. Said <lb/>
Blow is my man and we must have <lb/>
him for Solicitor. He will make us <lb/>
a good one. I want to see him <lb/>
and elected. Yes, sir, Blow <lb/>
is my <lb/>
Off for <lb/>
The Greenville Guard, twenty- <lb/>
strong, left morning <lb/>
for Richmond to be present and take <lb/>
part in the unveiling of the Leo <lb/>
A. special <lb/>
was sent down for the company and <lb/>
the boys left in high glee. The fol- <lb/>
lowing were the company roll for <lb/>
the <lb/>
It, Williams, Jr. <lb/>
J. T. Smith and R. W. <lb/>
King. <lb/>
S. T. Hooker, O. Hooker and <lb/>
J. L. Sugg. <lb/>
Ensign, R. Greene, Jr. <lb/>
Corporals J. R. Moore and Ola <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Privates O L Joyner, J R Cory, T <lb/>
E Randolph, J J Stokes, O W <lb/>
H C Hooker, E C Yellowley, <lb/>
H F Keel, W B James, C C Vines, <lb/>
H W Whedbee, J A Teel, E P Ford, <lb/>
C C Cobb, A Dudley. W H Moore, <lb/>
W F Harding and F Wilson. <lb/>
Musicians, Watson and W C <lb/>
Dancy. <lb/>
The company will return home <lb/>
Friday evening. We hope they will <lb/>
have a fine time <lb/>
Several other parties leave <lb/>
ville on this morning's train for <lb/>
Richmond. <lb/>
Administrator's Notice <lb/>
The undersigned having been appoint- <lb/>
ed by the Clerk of the Superior Court of <lb/>
Pitt County as administrator of the es- <lb/>
of William Mills having <lb/>
as such. Notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons holding claims against <lb/>
said estate to present them to the under- <lb/>
signed for payment, <lb/>
on or before the 21st day of May 1800 <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
their recovery. All persons Indebted to <lb/>
said estate are requested to make <lb/>
payment. This the 21st day of <lb/>
T. O. <lb/>
Many i Is of farmers in <lb/>
North Carolin the high char- <lb/>
of the Carolina farmer <lb/>
as paper, which has <lb/>
been published to <lb/>
the May, a period of <lb/>
fourteen years. <lb/>
Its successor, the Southern Farm- <lb/>
r, is issued by the Farmer Publish- <lb/>
Company, Raleigh, N. C. To <lb/>
increase and diversify its interests, <lb/>
and widen the sphere of its <lb/>
the Company deemed it <lb/>
advisable to change the form of the <lb/>
paper, and publish it as a weekly <lb/>
at the same price, instead a <lb/>
monthly as heretofore. <lb/>
The Southern Farmer will be de- <lb/>
voted to the promotion of the <lb/>
cultural, and commercial <lb/>
interests of the South. <lb/>
It will seek to increase the <lb/>
in improvements, <lb/>
the fostering of diversified <lb/>
and the growth of an in- <lb/>
commerce. It believes <lb/>
that a diversity of industries is as <lb/>
essential to Southern prosperity as <lb/>
a diversity of crops, and the sub- <lb/>
progress of the South <lb/>
no more rest the cotton <lb/>
alone, than it upon the <lb/>
crop. <lb/>
In order to place it in every <lb/>
in the State the subscription <lb/>
price has been fixed at the low <lb/>
price of 81.00 per year. The man- <lb/>
of the paper expects to add <lb/>
new during the <lb/>
present year. Address, <lb/>
Pub. Co., <lb/>
Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
A Family Reunion <lb/>
JUST ARRIVED <lb/>
M. CONGLETON CO., <lb/>
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb/>
J. A. <lb/>
M Q p <lb/>
Q Z o z. . <lb/>
c MM <lb/>
-DEALERS IN- <lb/>
ft o <lb/>
Dry foods, Notions, Boots, Shoes and <lb/>
GROCERIES. <lb/>
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of new <lb/>
Spring and Summer Goods. <lb/>
s- C fT J <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/>
Low Down <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/>
IT C, January, <lb/>
WILEY BROW IS.<lb/>
ROW I <lb/>
I ROW <lb/>
And Celebration of 50th <lb/>
of Mr. and Mrs. <lb/>
B. H. Sugg. <lb/>
On the 20th inst., the residence <lb/>
of Col. I, A. Sugg, the writer had <lb/>
the good fortune being in at- <lb/>
upon one of the most de- <lb/>
of his hie, it being <lb/>
the marriage anniversary of <lb/>
that estimable couple, and Mis. <lb/>
B. II. Sugg, which was celebrated <lb/>
with a family all of whom <lb/>
were present with tho exception of <lb/>
Mr. F. C. Harding, who was away <lb/>
at Chapel Hill attending the <lb/>
and Mr. Joyner, who <lb/>
was prevented from being in at- <lb/>
account of a business <lb/>
engagement in Farmville. The <lb/>
absence of these young gentlemen <lb/>
making the missing link in the <lb/>
family chain was tho cause of much <lb/>
regret, but none allowed this to mar <lb/>
the pleasure of the day; and every <lb/>
one seemed to enter into the enjoy- <lb/>
of the occasion with as much <lb/>
spirit as could be expected under <lb/>
tho existing circumstances. Mr <lb/>
and Mrs. especially seemed to <lb/>
be exceedingly happy, also <lb/>
thankful that Providence had allow <lb/>
ed them to live to see their <lb/>
with one exception, mar- <lb/>
and comfortably settled in life, <lb/>
and that on their 50th marriage <lb/>
they had had the <lb/>
of gathering their children and <lb/>
grand children around them, <lb/>
around family altar, that there <lb/>
they might invoke tho blessings of <lb/>
God upon them and also <lb/>
His watchful care over their future. <lb/>
Among those present besides the <lb/>
members t lie family were Mr. <lb/>
Mrs. T. and son, and Mrs. <lb/>
J. B. Bryan, of Aurora, and Mrs. <lb/>
C. D. Rountree daughter, of <lb/>
Greenville, whoso presence added <lb/>
much to the the <lb/>
The forenoon was spent in <lb/>
conversation, with an occasional <lb/>
of instrumental and <lb/>
vocal music. Just as the clock <lb/>
struck dinner was announced, <lb/>
and all repaired to the dining room <lb/>
where awaited them a most <lb/>
repast, a description of which <lb/>
would be impossible; but. to say <lb/>
that it was tempting would a <lb/>
feeble way of expressing it. The <lb/>
writer could hardly await tho tune <lb/>
to begin to partake of tho good <lb/>
things spread out him. <lb/>
all had assembled around the bible, <lb/>
Mr. Sugg invoked God's blessings <lb/>
those there assembled, niter <lb/>
which every one seemed to vie with <lb/>
each other seeing who do <lb/>
the most towards satisfying the in- <lb/>
man. dinner bad <lb/>
finished, before leaving the table <lb/>
Maj. Henry Harding read a letter <lb/>
of congratulation from their grand <lb/>
sou, Mr. F. C. Harding, which wits <lb/>
very appropriate, and at tho con- <lb/>
of there was not a <lb/>
single dry eye in the room. <lb/>
The whole family including visit. <lb/>
ors then assembled in the spacious <lb/>
sitting room of Mrs. I. A- Sugg, and <lb/>
all joined her in singing that beau- <lb/>
popular song, be <lb/>
with you till meet <lb/>
several other selections were <lb/>
very and appropriate. <lb/>
Then with many congratulations <lb/>
best wishes a much <lb/>
life, the one by one took <lb/>
themselves to their respective <lb/>
homes; and thus closed a day that <lb/>
will ever be prominent the <lb/>
of every one as one of <lb/>
little pleasantries of their lives. <lb/>
It is wish of writer that Mr. <lb/>
Mrs. Sugg may live to see many <lb/>
returns of such and that <lb/>
when they shall be called from time <lb/>
to eternity, that their exit may be <lb/>
one of resignation to their Master's <lb/>
call, that they may be able to <lb/>
gather around them their family <lb/>
again la Heaven, where parting will <lb/>
be no more, where sorrow can <lb/>
ne'er come VT. <lb/>
JAMES BROWN. <lb/>
la <lb/>
i, <lb/>
Er tic his <lb/>
ft H <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
MACHINERY-- AGENCY, <lb/>
t i t i t i<lb/>
-------We have been fortunate in securing a great bargain in------- <lb/>
-------We have been fortunate in securing a great bargain in------- <lb/>
WHITE GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES, ETC. ETC., <lb/>
WHITE GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES. ETC., ETC., <lb/>
will sell them all at very low <lb/>
will sell them all at very low <lb/>
engines and Boilers, <lb/>
All Blues and styles commonly used. <lb/>
MI <lb/>
-We make a specialty of our, line of- <lb/>
r------- <lb/>
make a specialty of our line <lb/>
SHOES. HATS, AND FURNISHING GOODS <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, AND GENTS- GOODS <lb/>
-------are complete.------- <lb/>
-------are complete.------- <lb/>
Call and see us we guarantee all goods as represented. <lb/>
LATH, <lb/>
1ST, <lb/>
a MILLS, <lb/>
Circular and Shingle Saws <lb/>
Rubber and Leather Belting, <lb/>
Shafting, Pulleys, <lb/>
In fact anything hi the machine line. <lb/>
We represent tho standard <lb/>
ere of tho land and can sell u low i <lb/>
the lowest and on better terms. <lb/>
Write for terms and prices. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
O. K. Manager <lb/>
Washington, N. C <lb/>
CO <lb/>
Co <lb/>
C C <lb/>
T. M. GILLIAM <lb/>
I Co. <lb/>
BROWN <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
New <lb/>
DROWN <lb/>
Drown <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. <lb/>
Next door to E. <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Gillian. <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
Commission Mer chants, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
Grocery Store and<lb/>
Meat. Floor, Coffee, Sugar, Oil, Molasses, <lb/>
Candies, Cheese. Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples, <lb/>
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything usually kept in <lb/>
first-class grocery store, as well as Tinware, Crockery, Wood and <lb/>
sum <lb/>
We have bad many years ex- <lb/>
at the business and <lb/>
prepared to handle to <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
Willow Ware, Ac. <lb/>
where in town. <lb/>
Call and see us. Good.-, delivered tree any <lb/>
J. J. CHERRY, Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
hands will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful <lb/>
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb/>
WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICE ASSORTMENT OF------- <lb/>
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb/>
Says there is never any doubt of his giving you entire satisfaction <lb/>
if you will just give him a call when needing goods In hi line. <lb/>
He keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap He also <lb/>
keeps the best Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place. <lb/>
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer. <lb/>
G. <lb/>
r --i<lb/>
COMMISSION <lb/>
-AND DEALER <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
STOKE. <lb/>
AND BUT- <lb/>
tag their will <lb/>
I their inn rest to r our price- before <lb/>
chasing el <lb/>
la all branches. <lb/>
SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, SUGAR, <lb/>
TEAS, Ac. <lb/>
CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb/>
-lock of <lb/>
always on baud and -old at prices to suit <lb/>
times. Our are all bought and <lb/>
sold therefore, having no <lb/>
to run, we sell a; a close margin. <lb/>
Bi <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Greenville. N.<lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
ALL <lb/>
and Coke <lb/>
UNDERTAKING.<lb/>
SOLD <lb/>
Tho Tar foyer Company j <lb/>
Having as dialed I, s. <lb/>
with mo in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
ready i servo the people that <lb/>
capacity. All notes and accounts <lb/>
me lot services have been placed In <lb/>
the. hands Mr. for collection <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
GREENVILLE MARKET. <lb/>
Corrected by Samuel M. <lb/>
Wholesale and Grocer, <lb/>
Old Store, <lb/>
Mess to 14.00 <lb/>
Bulk to <lb/>
Bulk <lb/>
Bacon <lb/>
Bacon <lb/>
Pitt County <lb/>
Sugar Cured <lb/>
to 0.75 <lb/>
to <lb/>
Brown to <lb/>
Granulated to <lb/>
Syrup and Molasses, to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
Alfred Forbes, Greenville, <lb/>
J. B. Cherry, <lb/>
J. S. <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Cant. K. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on Ta <lb/>
. . . <lb/>
The Steamer Greenville is the finest <lb/>
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 ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb/>
A Table furnished <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at o'clock, A- X. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
Freights received daily and <lb/>
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb/>
P. . J. CHERRY, agent <lb/>
Washington Greenville. N. C <lb/>
o. <lb/>
We have opened for the purpose or con- <lb/>
ducting a general <lb/>
Banking, and Ming Business. <lb/>
Money to Loan on Approved Security. <lb/>
Collections solicited and remittance <lb/>
made promptly. <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb/>
stock of Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kind- can furnish anything <lb/>
from toe lineal Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Coffin. We arc fitted <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who <lb/>
us <lb/>
Feb. 22nd. MM. <lb/>
.,<lb/>
The Best Salve in the world for <lb/>
Braises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt <lb/>
Fever Sores. Hands <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin <lb/>
ions, and positively cures Piles, or u <lb/>
required. It Is guaranteed to <lb/>
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
Price cents per box. said by J.<lb/>
GREENVILLE BRANCH <lb/>
North Carolina Sailing and Loan <lb/>
ASSOCIATION. <lb/>
V. JAMES, President, <lb/>
JOHN <lb/>
D. J. A Treas., <lb/>
I. A. SUGG. Attorney. <lb/>
A home institution. Loan.- <lb/>
try as well as town property, <lb/>
for all in get a home.<lb/>
DIRECTORS <lb/>
T. J. <lb/>
Harry Skinner, <lb/>
Flanagan <lb/>
D. H. James, <lb/>
E. A. <lb/>
F. G, James, <lb/>
U. IT. King. <lb/>
J. L. Sugg. <lb/>
For information apply to <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, <lb/>
Local <lb/>
J. Jonathan White, <lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. N. C. <lb/>
Bridgers White, <lb/>
High Street. <lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. <lb/>
Solicit of Cotton, Pea <lb/>
nuts, Poultry, all other <lb/>
Country Reference. Mer- <lb/>
and Farmers Rank, Portsmouth, <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
Now is the Time <lb/>
I son Davis, Family Bibles. <lb/>
the in I Mn <lb/>
prepared U take orders for the these <lb/>
good books, which should be in the <lb/>
home of every person. shall be glad <lb/>
to take orders from all who desire to <lb/>
have any of these books. Orders <lb/>
my father's I <lb/>
or addressed to me will have prompt at- <lb/>
Charlie R. Sims,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018989_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C <lb/>
is in. <lb/>
BY SARAH K. <lb/>
boats lay on the beach. <lb/>
Tangled with seaweed, and <lb/>
A desolate and dreary scene. <lb/>
Far as the eye reach; <lb/>
The tide was out. <lb/>
Stray Bits of Fun. <lb/>
Together by Bid Bey for <lb/>
Those Who Lore to Laugh. <lb/>
Unmixed evil whiskey <lb/>
A the drinks are <lb/>
paid for. <lb/>
Lord, how make me <lb/>
remarked the grasshopper <lb/>
a hen he was created. <lb/>
Thus a life, in want or woe. <lb/>
Lies stranded on a barren <lb/>
But God is God for evermore; <lb/>
Take courage, for we know <lb/>
The tide comes in. <lb/>
And lifted from the rocks and shoals. <lb/>
AVe sail upon a sunlit sea. <lb/>
Night opens on eternity- <lb/>
Sweet rest for weary <lb/>
The tide is in. <lb/>
be any <lb/>
likeness if it <lb/>
kind of a <lb/>
is a likeness of <lb/>
How changed the view when day was ; our <lb/>
done; <lb/>
The boats rode on the deep. <lb/>
Their white sails nodding as in sleep. <lb/>
Kissed the setting sun; <lb/>
The tide was in. <lb/>
Scrambled Eggs. <lb/>
Richmond State. <lb/>
The following melody is respectful- <lb/>
dedicated to Eggs President Hayes <lb/>
accompanied by branches of <lb/>
tine and As long as one is <lb/>
in he must try to in <lb/>
shipping white eggs by eggs-press <lb/>
from the of the <lb/>
dent of the United who has <lb/>
declined to be a <lb/>
date again in spite of the ardent eggs- <lb/>
of his eggs-era and <lb/>
eggs-acting friends, who are egging <lb/>
him on and who are truly eggs-as- <lb/>
at his <lb/>
He is truly an <lb/>
i eggs -president. He is always <lb/>
The <lb/>
Mrs. made you <lb/>
make a race behind my back T <lb/>
Little ma, you <lb/>
didn't think I was fool enough to do <lb/>
it before your face, did you T <lb/>
A revivalist at Iowa, re-1 n for eggs-tray eggs <lb/>
asked all the congregation in which ho takes greatest <lb/>
paid their debts to rise. All light is in the of his <lb/>
rose but an editor, who explained nation. He to <lb/>
he didn't pay his debts because . . <lb/>
New York Letter. <lb/>
Vandalism on the Leslie's <lb/>
Engagement-A Novel Performance. <lb/>
that he didn't p. . <lb/>
the congregation owed him <lb/>
on subscription. <lb/>
do, Joe Taking <lb/>
your morning walk around the <lb/>
i park <lb/>
I I t <lb/>
able to no <lb/>
my fetch so I <lb/>
hair way back <lb/>
in eggs, and becomes, by <lb/>
living on eggs, hale and hearty But <lb/>
it is only an and is <lb/>
very eggs-pensive, and he is likely <lb/>
soon to be Eggs <lb/>
me. K. Q. Eggs. <lb/>
LEGAL NOTICES <lb/>
privilege advertising on the. Inquiring are those <lb/>
by gloves for, Mr. <lb/>
A Safe Investment. <lb/>
Is one which is guaranteed to bring <lb/>
yen satisfactory moots, or in case of <lb/>
failure a return of purchase price. On <lb/>
tins safe plan can buy from <lb/>
Druggist a bottle of Dr. King's <lb/>
New Discovery for Consumption. It is <lb/>
guaranteed to relief in every case, <lb/>
when used for any affection of Throat, <lb/>
or Chest, such as Consumption, <lb/>
of tilings. Bronchitis. <lb/>
special <lb/>
New May <lb/>
It is stated that the ; <lb/>
the <lb/>
Brooklyn Bridge has sold . <lb/>
the trustees for per year.; j me jewel, <lb/>
Exactly what rights are thus they're lot <lb/>
to the advertiser is Dot of them folks as wants to wash inflammation <lb/>
known, as the are vet., and agreeable to <lb/>
reticent about the matter and there u I safe, and can always be <lb/>
are MM of crooked- you prefer having depended upon, <lb/>
concerning the affair. sent in by mail, or would you <lb/>
advertisements <lb/>
ever <lb/>
great structure, <lb/>
in <lb/>
and not wish to be tempted. <lb/>
I if in too short to he I Storm Calendar and Weather <lb/>
Ute appears to me to w R mM <lb/>
spent in nursing animosity or any a two-cent <lb/>
wrongs. W e are, and must I postage stamp. The Dr. J. H. <lb/>
be, one and all, burdened with faults j Medicine Co. St. Louis. Mo. <lb/>
in this world; but the time will come I .,,,,,., <lb/>
when. I trust we shall put them ofT Confess. <lb/>
in putting off our corruptible bodies; AU conscientious, physician <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
All persons having claims against the <lb/>
estate of T. B. Cherry, are hereby <lb/>
notified to exhibit the same on or before <lb/>
the 7th day of May. 1801, to the under- <lb/>
signed, who has duly qualified as the ex- <lb/>
of the last will and testament of <lb/>
the said Cherry, or this notice will lie <lb/>
plead in bar f their recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to the said es- <lb/>
are notified to come forward prompt- <lb/>
and settle the same. <lb/>
John Flanagan, <lb/>
Ex. of T. R. Cherry, <lb/>
May 1st. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified as <lb/>
tor with the will annexed of of j <lb/>
Mrs. Sallie E. Vick, on the day of <lb/>
April. 1800. I hereby notify all persons <lb/>
having claims against the said estate to <lb/>
present them to me duly authenticated <lb/>
en or before the 10th day of May, 1801, <lb/>
or this notice will be plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to estate are <lb/>
likewise notified to make immediate pay- <lb/>
of the same. <lb/>
John <lb/>
Administrator with will annex- <lb/>
ed of Mrs. Sallie K. <lb/>
Greenville, X. May 7th. <lb/>
WHAT <lb/>
SCOTT'S <lb/>
EMULSION <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
CONSUMPTION <lb/>
SCROFULA <lb/>
BRONCHITIS <lb/>
COUGHS <lb/>
COLDS <lb/>
Wasting Diseases <lb/>
Wonderful Flesh Producer. <lb/>
Many have gained pound <lb/>
per day by its use. <lb/>
Scott's Emulsion is not a secret <lb/>
remedy. It contains the <lb/>
properties of the <lb/>
and pure Norwegian Cod <lb/>
Liver Oil, the potency of both <lb/>
being largely increased. It is used <lb/>
by Physicians all over the world. <lb/>
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb/>
Sold by all <lb/>
St <lb/>
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb/>
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb/>
Greenville N C. <lb/>
We have the the easiest <lb/>
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels, <lb/>
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed <lb/>
in every instance. Call and be con <lb/>
Ladies waited on at their <lb/>
Cleaning clothes a specialty. <lb/>
. . . who give B. B. B. Blood <lb/>
v their hands without wetting their Asthma, Whooping Croup, etc., when debasement and sin will a trial, frankly admit its superiority over <lb/>
Up to this time no o <lb/>
have ever been allowed on the <lb/>
nor even in its cars, it by mail. I have <lb/>
a against shedding blood <lb/>
and the idea of starting in now is <lb/>
a fined of indignation from <lb/>
the pubic in general. We see en- <lb/>
too much of that sort of ad- <lb/>
else. In the <lb/>
horse cars, in the elevated cats, on <lb/>
the elevated stations, on every me <lb/>
you think your sister likes me <lb/>
She stood up for yon at <lb/>
Was anybody saying anything <lb/>
from us with, this cumbrous frame I ALL other blood <lb/>
, i of flesh, and only the spark will re- j Dr W J Adair, <lb/>
i the impalpable principle of life , regard IS. B. as one of the best <lb/>
Creator to inspire the creature. j reports of B. B. B. are <lb/>
Bronte. ; favorable, and its speedy action is truly <lb/>
., i <lb/>
Dr J W Rhodes, Ga., <lb/>
Merit Wins. I confess B. B. B. is the best <lb/>
Marriage. <lb/>
fence on i he side.- o every -No, nothing much. Father said i <lb/>
ea be hired, on the side- he <lb/>
. . T. ; an ass, but sis right you <lb/>
walks, and in he ought to <lb/>
may turn we are confronted with better judge a man by <lb/>
this form of advertising. The <lb/>
be drawn and. in gm <lb/>
my opinion, to plaster up the budge do you limp so, <lb/>
towers, cover the interior the . . you got <lb/>
cars and stations and suspend signs in <lb/>
from the cables be Mich nets my feat. <lb/>
vandalism as to call forth the ex- m families. <lb/>
all good citizens, no I must make a <lb/>
matter how much should he family is net per- <lb/>
thereby feet l l <lb/>
obtained tin n o. , aunts and tin- <lb/>
Mils. LESLIE THE j <lb/>
The reported engagement of Tom. don't say a word, so <lb/>
and the Marquis ; I. <lb/>
is causing no end of gossip j <lb/>
and much conjecture as to the prob .-i am i Intended, just so terrible arc the <lb/>
able result The would-lie groom is ed the editor, account for the j consequences If it he perverted <lb/>
a notorious and worthless recently broke in this <lb/>
who is well known in this City be-j it ii-t have timidly <lb/>
cause of bis and his bis youthful assistant, <lb/>
alleged title. It is said that he from some burning thought <lb/>
punts bis lace, dyes his hair, wears ; dentally dropped the waste <lb/>
corsets, is old deformed. Hew basket <lb/>
First Sweet you should <lb/>
dance new minuet <lb/>
perfectly lovely <lb/>
S. hate those poky <lb/>
Marriage is. of all earthly unions, <lb/>
almost the only one permitted of no <lb/>
change but that of death. It is that <lb/>
engagement in which man exerts <lb/>
his most lawful and solemn power <lb/>
the power fit responsibility which <lb/>
belong to him as one that shall give <lb/>
power of doing that <lb/>
which in this world can never be re- <lb/>
verse Yet it perhaps that <lb/>
which is spoken of most <lb/>
frivolously, and entered into most <lb/>
carelessly most It <lb/>
is not a union between two spirits; <lb/>
the intention of that bond is to <lb/>
perfect the nature of both, by sup- <lb/>
their deficiencies with <lb/>
I the force of contrast, giving to each <lb/>
sex these excellencies in which it is <lb/>
naturally the one <lb/>
strength of character and firmness <lb/>
of moral will, to the other sympathy, <lb/>
meekness, tenderness. And just so <lb/>
glorious as the ends arc for which <lb/>
the was contemplated <lb/>
We desire to say to our citizens, and quickest medicine for rheumatism I <lb/>
for years we have been selling Dr. ; have ever <lb/>
King's New Discovery for Consumption. Dr S Farmer, Ga <lb/>
Dr. King's New Life Pills, cheerfully recommend B. B. <lb/>
Salve and Electric Bitters, and B. as a line tonic Its use <lb/>
have never handled remedies that sell j eared an excrescence of the neck after <lb/>
well, or that have given such universal ; other remedies effected no <lb/>
satisfaction. We do not hesitate to <lb/>
guarantee them every time, and we j Dr C II Montgomery. Jacksonville, <lb/>
stand ready to refund the purchase price. Ala., mother insisted on <lb/>
Rev. E. C. Glenn's <lb/>
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
School House, 1st Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock <lb/>
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Shady Grove. 2nd Sunday at o o'clock. <lb/>
Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Temperance Hall Sunday at o'clock <lb/>
Salem 4th Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Chapel, -lib Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Jones Chapel Saturday before 4th Sun- <lb/>
day at o'clock. <lb/>
public Invited. <lb/>
If you feel unable to do your <lb/>
have that tired feeling, take Dr. J. II. <lb/>
Sarsaparilla; it Will make you <lb/>
bright active and vigorous. <lb/>
The most popular liniment, is the old <lb/>
reliable. Dr. J. II. Volcanic <lb/>
Oil Liniment. <lb/>
One of Dr. II. Little Liv- <lb/>
and Kidney taken at night he <lb/>
fore going to bed, will move the <lb/>
the effect will astonish you. <lb/>
Pimples, boils and other humors, arc <lb/>
able to appear when the blood gets <lb/>
Dr. J. H. Sarsaparilla <lb/>
the best remedy. <lb/>
if satisfactory results do not follow their <lb/>
use. These remedies have won their <lb/>
great popularity purely on their merits. <lb/>
J. L. Wooten, Druggists. <lb/>
Some people speak as if hypocrite <lb/>
my getting B. B. B. for her rheumatism, <lb/>
case resisted the usual <lb/>
remedies. She experienced immediate <lb/>
relief and her Improvement has been <lb/>
truly <lb/>
prominent physician who wishes <lb/>
his name not given, patient <lb/>
he can by any possibility Be <lb/>
match for Mrs. Leslie, who beside- <lb/>
being endowed with ability and <lb/>
money, is very at tractive in <lb/>
is something hard to ex- j 0-j <lb/>
plain. If reports are Hue. Mrs. S. it isn't like the <lb/>
Leslie bas had many chance minuet at all. It's too lovely <lb/>
of re-entering the <lb/>
for there is no earthly <lb/>
which has so much power to <lb/>
ennoble and to exalt. <lb/>
Take it and be Well. <lb/>
were confined to religion, but they of mine whose case of syphilis <lb/>
are every pretending was surely killing him, and which no <lb/>
to wealth when they haven't a dollar, j treatment seemed to check, was entirely <lb/>
assuming knowledge which they <lb/>
are ignorant, shamming a cult lire bones and <lb/>
far removed from, adopting <lb/>
opinions they do not bold. They are <lb/>
A HEAD y <lb/>
. , II flag Com- <lb/>
aw j. Welt, far at M <lb/>
B. Pres. <lb/>
HOARD OF <lb/>
BOX. E. Bun, Pies, National <lb/>
Hank Raleigh, <lb/>
K. G. Sec. X. C. <lb/>
Assembly. <lb/>
Editor <lb/>
Chronicle- <lb/>
On. H. B. Director K. <lb/>
Experiment Station. <lb/>
Short-hand. Type-writing, <lb/>
Book-keeping, Banking. <lb/>
Penmanship and Mathematics are <lb/>
taught in the Raleigh Business Col- <lb/>
Send for of terms. <lb/>
J. E. MATH EX Y, <lb/>
Box Raleigh, N. C. <lb/>
FOR MEN ONLY <lb/>
For LOST or MANHOOD; <lb/>
and Y; <lb/>
Weakness of Body and Mind, <lb/>
fully and<lb/>
B Si f Writ them. <lb/>
and mailed free, <lb/>
CO., BUFFALO, N. Y. <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
for baldness <lb/>
falling out of hair. ind eradication of <lb/>
dandruff Is before the public. <lb/>
Among the many who have ft with <lb/>
wonderful success. I refer yon to the fol <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
to the truth of my assertion <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
MR. O. <lb/>
Greene, Sr., <lb/>
Any one wishing to give it a trial <lb/>
the above named can <lb/>
it from me. at my place of business, <lb/>
1.50 per bottle. Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb/>
Greenville, March 14th, C , <lb/>
am <lb/>
DETECTIVES <lb/>
in men to . <lb/>
In Secret Service not <lb/>
re an Co. II <lb/>
. X.- <lb/>
all of <lb/>
It is said that Russell Harrison is <lb/>
in the pay of the Louisiana Lottery <lb/>
Company, and sonic people regard <lb/>
this as shocking. A man who would <lb/>
help to steal a State needn't have any <lb/>
scruples about hiring himself to a <lb/>
lottery Slur. <lb/>
old <lb/>
for <lb/>
and <lb/>
marriage state anything waltz awhile <lb/>
i. . . then the music changes you go <lb/>
and has little use suet, a bas- m a f has <lb/>
as do Perhaps the <lb/>
band <lb/>
nail is hit the head by those who <lb/>
suggest that Mrs. Leslie wants an <lb/>
and not de <lb/>
A IN LATIN. <lb/>
A novel and unique <lb/>
A BAD CASE. <lb/>
turn backward, O time <lb/>
in your flight. Give me nose <lb/>
j through last night <lb/>
i Bring back the that two <lb/>
,. ago, Knew not the torment of <lb/>
continual blow. Wipe from my <lb/>
evening the moisture of sneeze, <lb/>
was last Thursday <lb/>
week, the Put wooden on my poor, <lb/>
of St. Francis Xavier, fills weakened Bob Bay rad <lb/>
which was nothing less than tallow, <lb/>
, , dear mother, ob, it is so sore. Lack <lb/>
of a Roman comedy flow tide of the <lb/>
in Latin. eon- I am so tired from my bead to <lb/>
nested with -v my Tired out with mopping <lb/>
earned ant exactly as might have i and Weary <lb/>
from handkerchiefs constantly <lb/>
have weary of sniffle <lb/>
Gathered from Held and forest are <lb/>
the component parts or <lb/>
There is nothing in it which <lb/>
comes from the chemist's shop, hence <lb/>
it is the great remedy to help nature <lb/>
to ward off disease. In the spring <lb/>
months is the best time brace up <lb/>
the Take S. S. when you <lb/>
feel dull and it when <lb/>
blood is too thick slow, and <lb/>
you feelings will tell you when. <lb/>
Every man, woman and child would <lb/>
be for having taken a few <lb/>
bottles of S. S. in the spring. <lb/>
Treatise on Blood Skin Di <lb/>
mailed free. <lb/>
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
been, done m the days of <lb/>
Remember that there are few things <lb/>
is so to loan as we <lb/>
money. It is curious, too, that <lb/>
a book, umbrella, is commonly <lb/>
reckoned public property. Few <lb/>
trouble themselves t return it. <lb/>
The scenery and costumes were the a, snuff q, wiping my bugle until; Ike vast cost of even an <lb/>
same, the stage setting- were made is rough. Stick my bead a big <lb/>
to conform to require, And sew it up, <lb/>
the ushers were <lb/>
and the were it fell flat. <lb/>
elegantly printed with the Latin i One day, as a Sixth Avenue bar <lb/>
libretto on on side and the English her shop bad but one empty chair <lb/>
, . ., . ., . ii man wearing a very big hat and <lb/>
translation on the other. The play , a of swag. <lb/>
was Two and was ,,,.,. entered, hung his hat a peg, <lb/>
written by Titus I then drawing a revolver he <lb/>
the It will be played Bag ; turned to the idle man and <lb/>
want a shave, just a common <lb/>
shave. want no talk. ask <lb/>
me if I a haircut or a <lb/>
speaK of the weather or <lb/>
politics. If you speak to me I'll <lb/>
He took the chair, held the re- <lb/>
i across his legs, and was <lb/>
the celebrated commentator, sought with promptness and <lb/>
the only and of Mr. When he got up be returned the <lb/>
by the same week.<lb/>
I Know Where He Is Going. <lb/>
When Phillip Henry, the father of <lb/>
Matthews in marriage, an objection <lb/>
was made by her lather, who admit- <lb/>
that he was a <lb/>
and an excellent preacher, but he <lb/>
was a stranger, did not; <lb/>
know where he came <lb/>
said the who <lb/>
had well weighed the <lb/>
and graces of the stranger <lb/>
I know where he is going, and I <lb/>
should like to go with <lb/>
they walked life's pilgrimage to- <lb/>
How honored would that <lb/>
ant have been could he have <lb/>
foreseen that his daughter would <lb/>
become the mother of Matthew Hen <lb/>
And how different would be the <lb/>
world's estimate of men if they were <lb/>
judged less their origin and more <lb/>
by their destiny There is one pride I i fact-at <lb/>
. . the battle of He was a <lb/>
of family commendable; there j th am, f <lb/>
is another of family ineffably an equally gallant gentleman, now <lb/>
that it baa closed. <lb/>
shooter to his hip put on his <lb/>
hat, and after a broad chuckle be <lb/>
said to the cashier <lb/>
the way to keep a barber <lb/>
quiet. He didn't titter a <lb/>
sir, he <lb/>
sir, he's deaf and dumb. <lb/>
Col. to be Married. <lb/>
Durham Globe. <lb/>
B. H. of Connecticut is <lb/>
lobe married shortly to <lb/>
of a Confederate Col. <lb/>
came some years ago and <lb/>
frequently North Carolina. <lb/>
when he is known to He <lb/>
helped to bring a good many North- <lb/>
among us, and he shows his <lb/>
faith in the South by marrying a <lb/>
Southern lady. <lb/>
Col. first visit South was <lb/>
early in 1862, when he came to at. <lb/>
unpretending library, this is very ex- <lb/>
to the eager book hunter, <lb/>
who makes many annual sacrifices <lb/>
that he may add a few choice volumes <lb/>
to his meager store. <lb/>
He may defend himself, however, <lb/>
if will. He may politely decline to <lb/>
lend his treasures. When you have <lb/>
borrowed a book you have no possible <lb/>
excuse for it on your re- <lb/>
To do so is to violate every <lb/>
law of good faith, and to incur <lb/>
the open or tacit displeasure of the <lb/>
friend who obliged <lb/>
Saturday Herald. <lb/>
Nearly Made a Fortune. <lb/>
said Jones, came near <lb/>
striking it rich once in my life. Rob- <lb/>
I went into the patent <lb/>
cine business, you see. We got our <lb/>
stuff compounded and bottled, and <lb/>
then it occurred to us that we hadn't <lb/>
decided what to call it, a cure con- <lb/>
or a cure for dyspepsia. I <lb/>
went for dyspepsia, but Robinson <lb/>
insisted on consumption, and he had <lb/>
his way, confound The weather <lb/>
was unusually mild for six months <lb/>
after we got our stuff on the market, <lb/>
and the consumptives all got better in <lb/>
consequence. The result was that our <lb/>
scheme failed. I'm satisfied that if <lb/>
we'd labeled the bottles <lb/>
it would have gone off like hot <lb/>
cakes and I should have today been <lb/>
worth my Tran- <lb/>
script <lb/>
There is no use going to school, my <lb/>
boy, with the idea that you are going <lb/>
to excel because you are your father s <lb/>
son; for every other boy is bis father's <lb/>
son, and all do not excel who go to <lb/>
Shore. <lb/>
Why , <lb/>
am very much put out about <lb/>
said my young friend who <lb/>
had shown the door by the <lb/>
of a <lb/>
WAS IT A BIT OF ROMANCE <lb/>
in an Car Arouse a <lb/>
Like- to Know More. <lb/>
plead guilty to a good deal of cu- <lb/>
said an old man a rather <lb/>
florid face, kindly, twinkling eyes, <lb/>
and friendly, good natured lines <lb/>
around the mouth. would give a <lb/>
good dual to know all the <lb/>
of an unusual meeting which I <lb/>
saw the other day. I was in an <lb/>
train, and on the cross scat op- <lb/>
me sat a little woman who must <lb/>
have been about years old. She was <lb/>
still very pretty, although her blue <lb/>
eyes were a little faded. She was the <lb/>
kind of a woman who, when a girl, <lb/>
must have been plump, but who bad <lb/>
not grown stout with years. Her <lb/>
complexion was as clear and soft as a <lb/>
girl's, and the curves of her lips were <lb/>
very gently fashioned. I was study- <lb/>
over the top of my paper the, <lb/>
graceful lines of her slender hands <lb/>
when a man seated himself by my <lb/>
aide. I saw two spots of color sudden- <lb/>
appear in her cheeks, and then she <lb/>
quickly turned hr-r head and looked <lb/>
steadily out of the window. <lb/>
could not resist the temptation to <lb/>
take a good look at my near neighbor. <lb/>
He was tall and dark, and in <lb/>
hair was a line sprinkling of gray. <lb/>
His face was smooth save for <lb/>
a mustache, which, like his hair, was <lb/>
grizzled. Fine lines were traced be- <lb/>
neath his eyes, and the eyes had rather <lb/>
a far away expression, as if they were <lb/>
searching for something which had <lb/>
been lost. Apparently he saw nothing <lb/>
around him. <lb/>
his dark eye rested on the <lb/>
little woman before him, he look- <lb/>
ed hurriedly as if he intended <lb/>
to leave seat. The blue eyes across <lb/>
the way were still looking out of the <lb/>
window, and the pink spot had not yet <lb/>
faded from the one cheek which was <lb/>
turned toward me. The man moved <lb/>
uneasily in his <lb/>
one of the story teller's <lb/>
hearers broke in, lovers met <lb/>
long years, <lb/>
said the story teller, have <lb/>
not said <lb/>
were divorced and this was <lb/>
their first meeting in a long <lb/>
ventured another with a laugh. <lb/>
said the narrator, with an <lb/>
impatient wave of his hand. <lb/>
and brother parted in early <lb/>
youth by a cruel cried a third, <lb/>
determining not to be outdone in <lb/>
again, so far as I <lb/>
declared the first speaker. <lb/>
the story, chorus. <lb/>
She shot a glance at my <lb/>
neighbor and their eyes met He leaned <lb/>
forward and took her hand while her <lb/>
face blushed like a school girl's. He <lb/>
moved over and took a seat next to <lb/>
her. years, I heard <lb/>
him say, and then she blushed again. <lb/>
station was at Fifty-ninth <lb/>
street, but I rode past two more <lb/>
just to watch them. What was <lb/>
the romance I'll give a dinner to the <lb/>
man who satisfies my <lb/>
match broken off by a <lb/>
insisted interpreter No. <lb/>
fifteen years spoils my divorce <lb/>
said No. in disappointed <lb/>
tones. <lb/>
and repeated No. <lb/>
with conviction. <lb/>
wish I the <lb/>
man. plaintively.-New York <lb/>
.-. .-. ii rim. I <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
from <lb/>
; l <lb/>
,. i. nil<lb/>
Many people habitually endure a feel- <lb/>
of 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 repute or more <lb/>
widely known than Dr. J. II. <lb/>
Volcanic Oil Liniment, Is a wonder- <lb/>
remedy. <lb/>
Persons advanced in years feel young- <lb/>
and stronger, as well as freer from the <lb/>
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. II <lb/>
Sarsaparilla. <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. II. Liver and <lb/>
Kidney <lb/>
Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a <lb/>
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb/>
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud- <lb/>
changes of temperature, and the <lb/>
least robust are usually the easiest <lb/>
Dr. J. II. Sarsaparilla <lb/>
will give tone, vitality and strength to <lb/>
the entire body. <lb/>
Distress after eating, heartburn, <lb/>
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb/>
Dr J. II. Liver <lb/>
A Costly Lamp. <lb/>
The interior of the grand cathedral <lb/>
in the City of Mexico is, even at the <lb/>
day, after having been success- <lb/>
fully plundered, most magnificent. It <lb/>
contains naves, six altars and <lb/>
fourteen chapels, which contain the <lb/>
bones of some of the viceroys and de- <lb/>
parted great men of Mexico. The <lb/>
of the virgin and re- <lb/>
saints were painted by <lb/>
ed artists. A surrounds the <lb/>
choir of a metal so rich that an offer <lb/>
to replace it with one of equal weight <lb/>
in solid silver was refused. This <lb/>
weighs twenty-six tons, and came <lb/>
. from China in the old days of Spanish <lb/>
dominion, when the richly freighted <lb/>
galleons of Spain sent their cargoes <lb/>
I overland from to Vera Cruz <lb/>
on the way to the mother country. <lb/>
The high altar was formerly the <lb/>
I richest in the world, and yet retains <lb/>
, much of its original glory. It <lb/>
candlesticks of gold so heavy <lb/>
that a single one was more than a <lb/>
man could lift, chalices, cruets and <lb/>
pyxes of gold with precious <lb/>
metal, studded with emeralds, <lb/>
rubies sapphires. <lb/>
The statue of the assumption <lb/>
was of gold, ornamented with <lb/>
diamonds, and is said to have cost <lb/>
There was a golden lamp, <lb/>
valued at which it cost at one <lb/>
time to clean, but, according to <lb/>
a French the joke is his <lb/>
the liberal troops cleaned it for <lb/>
and it has not been seen since. <lb/>
New York Journal. <lb/>
ENGLISH <lb/>
PILLS. <lb/>
lied <lb/>
Tb only reliable rill for and <lb/>
sure. I n-L f r lb- a. <lb/>
m red r,. . . Nixes. <lb/>
with blue ribbon. Take no other. <lb/>
for and Keller for <lb/>
l. <lb/>
PARKER'S <lb/>
HAIR BALSAM <lb/>
Sean . I hair, <lb/>
it <lb/>
r t ; Cray <lb/>
H- V Colo.-. <lb/>
Pianos Organs. <lb/>
The of fastening strings <lb/>
of Pianos, Invented by us. is one of the <lb/>
most important improvements ever <lb/>
made, making the Instrument more rich- <lb/>
musical in tone, more durable, <lb/>
less liable to get out of tune. <lb/>
Both the Mason ft Organs and <lb/>
excel in that which is the <lb/>
chief excellence in musical <lb/>
of tone. Other things. <lb/>
though much less so than <lb/>
An instrument with unmusical <lb/>
tones cannot be good. Illustrated <lb/>
of new style, introduced this <lb/>
season, sent free. <lb/>
HAMLIN <lb/>
Piano <lb/>
new <lb/>
THIS Fl E <lb/>
mo<lb/>
Delicious and Sparkling. . <lb/>
Asa your or Grocer it. <lb/>
C. E. HIRES. PHILADELPHIA. <lb/>
Cheap lamp for <lb/>
Take an ordinary clay pipe, a wad <lb/>
of absorbent cotton and a piece of <lb/>
string. Wrap the cotton around the <lb/>
outside of the bowl and tie it with the <lb/>
string. Take a piece of bulb rubber <lb/>
tubing and draw it over the stem <lb/>
that you can place the tube in your <lb/>
mouth and blow through the pipe. <lb/>
Next weigh out the amount of <lb/>
you want for your flash, then <lb/>
place it in the bowl of the pipe. Take <lb/>
some alcohol saturate the absorb- <lb/>
cotton. When you have focused <lb/>
your subject, and. decided where to <lb/>
have your light, ignite the alcohol. and Standard <lb/>
. a a- I I lie. I <lb/>
To Sick <lb/>
Malaria, Liver Complaints, <lb/>
too sale certain remedy, <lb/>
SMITH'S <lb/>
BILE <lb/>
aw AU. Beam to the <lb/>
most convenient.<lb/>
Price r <lb/>
j n <lb/>
PANEL <lb/>
MO. <lb/>
KNOW THYSELF <lb/>
The flame will stand up sue inches <lb/>
over the bowl of the pipe. Blow <lb/>
through the pipe stem and your expos- <lb/>
is York Commercial <lb/>
Advertiser. <lb/>
Clearly <lb/>
At the <lb/>
Country Jack, <lb/>
how Miss does <lb/>
sing <lb/>
Bat the poor girl is utterly <lb/>
destitute of stage presence. <lb/>
F. C pres- <lb/>
blind bey. Why, site got a <lb/>
Youth, <lb/>
and of U Blood, <lb/>
Exhausted vitality <lb/>
Untold miseries <lb/>
nice, law or <lb/>
the victim <lb/>
Social<lb/>
EMORY <lb/>
Minn eared. <lb/>
in all <lb/>
sent on to Prof. <lb/>
A. Filth New York. <lb/>
C. B. N. . <lb/>
Edwards N, <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
RALEIGH, C- <lb/>
WEI-DON K. R. <lb/>
branches Condensed Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily Fast Mail, daily <lb/>
daily ex Sun. <lb/>
pm <lb/>
Ar Rocky-Mount am<lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Wilson p pm am <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Lt <lb/>
Warsaw <lb/>
Av Magnolia <lb/>
Ar Wilmington <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
No No <lb/>
daily daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun.<lb/>
Magnolia am <lb/>
Warsaw<lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson SOS am IS ST pa pm <lb/>
Ai Rocky Mount <lb/>
SO <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
eaves Halifax 8.87 M. Scot- <lb/>
and Neck at 4.2.1 P. If. Greenville 6.00 <lb/>
Returning leaves Greenville 7.20 <lb/>
A. M. Halifax at 10.10 A. M. <lb/>
don 1.30 r M. dally except Sunday. <lb/>
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday <lb/>
Local Freight leaves Weldon 10.30 a m <lb/>
Halifax 11.30 a m. Scotland Neck 2.00 p <lb/>
m. Arriving Greenville 5.10 p in. Re <lb/>
turning, leave Greenville Tuesday, <lb/>
Thursday and so a m., Scot- <lb/>
land Neck p m. Halifax 8.86 p m. <lb/>
Arriving Weldon p m. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
day. M. Sunday P M. <lb/>
N C, I P M, P M. <lb/>
Returning leaves Williamston, X C, daily <lb/>
. have the largest and most complete I except Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb/>
of the. kind to be found in i arrive Tarboro, N C, A M, <lb/>
. <lb/>
the State, and orders for all j <lb/>
Of Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STATIONERY RE A <lb/>
PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS FOB MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
Ci Send us your orders. <lb/>
BROUGHTON, <lb/>
AND BINDERS, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
and all business in the U. S. <lb/>
Patent the Courts attended to Branch is No. Northbound i. <lb/>
Train Midland N C Branch leaves <lb/>
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. C A M. <lb/>
N C, A M. Re- <lb/>
turning leaves AM, <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro, N C, SO A M. <lb/>
on Nashville Branch leaves <lb/>
Monet at P M. arrives Nashville <lb/>
P IS P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
l H, arrives Rocky Mount n IS A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except at <lb/>
and A M Returning leave <lb/>
on A M. and P. M. connect- <lb/>
at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb/>
Southbound trail on Wilson <lb/>
Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We are the U. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
Bee engaged Patents <lb/>
can obtain patents in less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing i- sent <lb/>
advise as to free of charge, <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Post <lb/>
of the Money Older and to <lb/>
the Patent Office, for <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in your own Stale, or <lb/>
address, A. Snow Co. <lb/>
Washington, D. C <lb/>
FREE, <lb/>
1-S <lb/>
ii; w<lb/>
in the ti <lb/>
Warranted hear. <lb/>
OLD ranee. <lb/>
and gent's <lb/>
work and of <lb/>
value. <lb/>
, h can <lb/>
together our <lb/>
sample. a well <lb/>
watch, are All the <lb/>
. I I. U what en send to who call <lb/>
. a S. <lb/>
, , If I <lb/>
., from MO I i W. <lb/>
Co. Boa Bx, <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
No. South -ton only at <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. close connection <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb/>
rail via daily except Sun- <lb/>
via Bay Line. <lb/>
Trains make connection for <lb/>
points North via Richmond and <lb/>
All trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and and have Pullman <lb/>
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb/>
JOHN F. <lb/>
General <lb/>
I. R. Transportation <lb/>
V. M. Passenger <lb/>
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb/>
TIME IS. <lb/>
In A. U. <lb/>
1-t. 1880. <lb/>
No. No. <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
FREE <lb/>
Tb. <lb/>
Our <lb/>
world. <lb/>
and to <lb/>
we will <lb/>
in locality, <lb/>
Only those no write <lb/>
it-, a-at one can make or <lb/>
AH you have do In <lb/>
out roods m <lb/>
ft<lb/>
p in <lb/>
it.<lb/>
COO ii IS <lb/>
p in <lb/>
Stations. <lb/>
Goldsboro <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
New <lb/>
Ar. <lb/>
SO a in <lb/>
loss <lb/>
a m <lb/>
lb, <lb/>
. . t. A <lb/>
GRAND <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place I <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
everything in my line <lb/>
CLEAN ATTRACTIVE,; <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chairs <lb/>
City <lb/>
Daily <lb/>
S WiT <lb/>
No. t <lb/>
Mixed Ft. <lb/>
Pass Train <lb/>
p tn <lb/>
an <lb/>
Stations. <lb/>
Best's <lb/>
Falling Creek <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
Dover <lb/>
Core Creek <lb/>
Croats n <lb/>
Havelock <lb/>
Atlantic <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
Depot a <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday, <lb/>
Wednesday and Friday. <lb/>
Train connects with Wilmington <lb/>
Weldon Train bound North, leaving <lb/>
Goldsboro a. m., and with Rich- <lb/>
Danville Train West, leaving <lb/>
m. <lb/>
Train connects with Richmond A <lb/>
Danville Train, arriving at Goldsboro <lb/>
p. m., and with and <lb/>
Weldon Train from North at p. m <lb/>
Rail's sharpened reasonable figures Train connects with Wilmington and <lb/>
US-Orders for work outside of my shop Through Freight Train, leaving <lb/>
executed. Very respectfully, Goldsboro at p. in and with <lb/>
Danville Through Freight Train <lb/>
eaves Goldsboro at p. <lb/>
Nixed Ft. <lb/>
Pass- <lb/>
ti <lb/>
in -in <lb/>
SI <lb/>
EDMONDS <lb/>
PHOTO-ENGRAVING <lb/>
it ran to revs <lb/>
Portraits, and cuts hotel, <lb/>
machinery. made to order from <lb/>
stamp for <lb/>
Metropolitan Agency, <lb/>
New York City. <lb/>
KNIGHT'S <lb/>
Blood Cure. <lb/>
A standard household remedy <lb/>
In more than years.<lb/>
all <lb/>
the Mood Stomach and Liver.<lb/>
put in <lb/>
, put In pack <lb/>
m . <lb/>
Ho J <lb/>
another new discovery by Alfred <lb/>
Culler in the way of helping the afflict- <lb/>
ed, calling on or addressing the <lb/>
above named barber, you can procure a <lb/>
bottle of Preparation that is <lb/>
for eradicating dandruff and causing the <lb/>
hair to be soft and <lb/>
glossy, only r three application a <lb/>
week i necessary, and a common <lb/>
brush is all to be used after rubbing the <lb/>
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with <lb/>
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be <lb/>
convinced, only cents. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED <lb/>
Barber. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. G. <lb/>
-a <lb/>
east<lb/>
aW <lb/>
mm <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>