<?xml version="1.0"?>
<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
    xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd">
<teiHeader>
    <fileDesc>
        <titleStmt>
            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
            <author></author>
            <respStmt>
                <resp>Text encoded by</resp>
                <name>Michael Reece</name>
            </respStmt>
        </titleStmt>
	<publicationStmt>
                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
        </publicationStmt>
			<notesStmt>
				<note type="job"></note>
				<note type="isPartOf">Eastern Reflector</note>
			</notesStmt>
        <sourceDesc>
            <bibl>
            </bibl>
        </sourceDesc>
    </fileDesc>
    <encodingDesc>
        <samplingDecl>
            <p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p>
            <p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p>
            <p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p>
        </samplingDecl>
        <classDecl>
            <taxonomy xml:id="LCSH">
                <bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl>
            </taxonomy>
        </classDecl>
    </encodingDesc>
    <profileDesc>
        <creation>
            <date></date>
        </creation>
        <langUsage xml:lang="en-US">
            <language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language>
        </langUsage>
        <textClass>
            <keywords scheme="#LCSH">
                <list>
                    <item></item>
                </list>
            </keywords>
        </textClass>
    </profileDesc>
</teiHeader>
<text>
<body>
<div type="dirtyOCR">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>

<pb facs="00018991_0001" n="1"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
Solicits Tour patronage for------ <lb/>
Its will be to please every reader. <lb/>
The Eastern <lb/>
THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
, JOB PRINT IN a- <lb/>
Department that can be surpassed no- <lb/>
in Our work <lb/>
gives satisfaction. <lb/>
Send us <lb/>
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
VOL. IX. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1890. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector i <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C<lb/>
The face of her whose dulcet voice <lb/>
once to <lb/>
A SHORT STATEMENT. <lb/>
There often greets me in my dreams, <lb/>
A pictured face that life-like seems <lb/>
whose dulcet voice <lb/>
my heart rejoice <lb/>
My gal <lb/>
was little blue eyed fairy. <lb/>
GOVERNMENT. But sad to tell, was <lb/>
p of i She married rich, to my regret. <lb/>
Fowle. of wake. <lb/>
Lieutenant-Governor . <lb/>
, In W.-uh <lb/>
Secretary of L <lb/>
Wake. <lb/>
Treasurer <lb/>
Superintendent .-.- My <lb/>
Sidney M. Finger of Amiss <lb/>
Attorney General Theodore F. David- <lb/>
son, of Buncombe. <lb/>
Same result. She loved another. <lb/>
COURT. But said that I -might be her <lb/>
Chief Justice-A. S. of I But shall ; unmarried die, <lb/>
Undaunted yet. I think I'll try <lb/>
t i <lb/>
, . n ,; But fate an adverse doom written, <lb/>
W . of j . , <lb/>
in second refused, <lb/>
of Public Instruction- jg <lb/>
Associate Clark, of Again <lb/>
Wake; Joseph Davis, of In Penn. <lb/>
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb/>
C. of Burke. <lb/>
First II. Brown, of <lb/>
Beaufort. <lb/>
Second <lb/>
R. one <lb/>
AM District-H. G. Connor, of by with fear <lb/>
on. . . And clasp a hand <lb/>
WHICH ONE <lb/>
H. MAY. <lb/>
There were but two houses of <lb/>
worship in at the time I <lb/>
speak of. in one the Methodists <lb/>
had religious services, some two or <lb/>
three Sabbaths each month, and in <lb/>
the other the Baptists <lb/>
as as a preacher of their faith <lb/>
chanced to come along. They had <lb/>
stated pastor. There was <lb/>
family in the town. <lb/>
Perhaps here there a hard shell <lb/>
Baptist might have been discovered, <lb/>
and the church leanings of a few <lb/>
were in the direction of the <lb/>
Episcopal church, one solitary blue <lb/>
Stocking completed the Christian <lb/>
assortment of the village. That <lb/>
one is glad to learn through the <lb/>
Raleigh paper that there are more of <lb/>
the blue sort in Greenville now <lb/>
than there were in his day. <lb/>
their tribe and go on in-. <lb/>
creasing until build them <lb/>
house of worship, and become <lb/>
The Grandest he ewer Saw. <lb/>
a citizen <lb/>
of Gainesville. Fin., writes the follow- <lb/>
under date of Feb. <lb/>
contracted a severe case of <lb/>
Wood Poison that gave a great <lb/>
deal of trouble, and baffled the <lb/>
of this place. I was finally <lb/>
advised to try Swift's S. <lb/>
and I can say. with great pleas- <lb/>
that a few bottles of it has en j <lb/>
I have no hesitancy <lb/>
in laving that S. Sf S, is the grand- <lb/>
est medicine I ever saw, and cheer- <lb/>
fully recommend it to any one suffer, <lb/>
as I was. <lb/>
Treatise on Blood and Skin Di- <lb/>
mailed free. <lb/>
SPECIFIC CO., <lb/>
Atlanta, <lb/>
Congress and Prohibition. <lb/>
Tim results of the Supreme Court <lb/>
Married her Notwithstanding. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Democrat. <lb/>
A remarkable marriage occurred <lb/>
Lewiston in Bertie comity a <lb/>
few days ago. About two years <lb/>
ago some girls in that sec- <lb/>
saw an advertisement in a <lb/>
newspaper asking for correspond- <lb/>
with a young man looking to <lb/>
matrimony. <lb/>
A young named Eliza Drew, <lb/>
who neither read nor write, <lb/>
jokingly said she believed she would <lb/>
answer it. of her friends <lb/>
said they write her, and <lb/>
so <lb/>
Her answer to the advertisement <lb/>
I responded to by a quarter mas- <lb/>
in the United States army at <lb/>
Port Riley, Kansas, A correspond- <lb/>
was then in which <lb/>
It is said letters passed between <lb/>
The young girl wrote him fall <lb/>
She told him she <lb/>
Stray Bits of Fun. <lb/>
by the Bad Soy for <lb/>
Those Who Love Laugh. <lb/>
Some girls are pressing for time <lb/>
and others for the fun of it. <lb/>
Now is the Time. <lb/>
New York Letter. <lb/>
Weldon <lb/>
Williams says the colons j A Dal <lb/>
exodus movement will be renewed in <lb/>
the that the demand will be <lb/>
as great for the next few years as <lb/>
has been in the past. He says the <lb/>
number of taken from North <lb/>
Carolina within tin last twelve <lb/>
months has been between<lb/>
Juno 7th <lb/>
The most magnificent hotel in <lb/>
on <lb/>
Men are apt to worship they <lb/>
cannot for ex- <lb/>
ample. <lb/>
Extremes easily meet in infancy, and <lb/>
It is no work at all for the baby to J than any other State. This , avenue. It is to be built by <lb/>
rack his ton number includes men, women and family, and will be man <lb/>
children. by Mr. George C. now <lb/>
v A .- . i believe Williams speaks the Proprietor of the hotels, <lb/>
Jersey I L, ,,. and of Philadelphia. It <lb/>
l -e-s . , . . . --u . . -------r <lb/>
forty larger i is about to erected <lb/>
o . i v wow. l lie . <lb/>
City Sportsman n jg will occupy the e of the residence <lb/>
of the late John Jacob at <lb/>
street and Fifth avenue, and will be <lb/>
feet wide by feet long. Out <lb/>
respect to Mr. Astor, the old <lb/>
, .,. , and the ease with which a living can will not torn down be- <lb/>
in the room and see the new j be had farther South will close of the present year, <lb/>
minister. He'll tell all about I to cause thorn to hotel will be absolutely the <lb/>
Heaven. emigrate. Of course the who in the world, an <lb/>
Son; Has ha em South under contract will not be only <lb/>
ten hunting all day for a patch of. be <lb/>
a sign on M, the tendency <lb/>
of the colored race is toward the sun. <lb/>
The warm climates suit them beat. <lb/>
oil; i Kins <lb/>
Pious Now, Johnny, <lb/>
there <lb/>
District <lb/>
-Spier Whit <lb/>
. Womack. of <lb/>
T. of <lb/>
cold it feels for the spirit <lb/>
Fifth <lb/>
Chatham. <lb/>
Sixth <lb/>
Seventh District James C. of <lb/>
Cumberland. <lb/>
r Armfield. of <lb/>
Iredell. <lb/>
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb/>
Tenth C of i One of us. dear<lb/>
Eleventh M. Shipp, of ; an oh.-ii grave-will drop tear. <lb/>
And homeward go and John b. Hawks, Bean <lb/>
Twelfth II. Merrimon, The anguish of an u <lb/>
which one, <lb/>
set upon a hill that can not , <lb/>
decision on the package j neither read nor write, was not good <lb/>
There was no newspaper publish looking, had worked in the field all <lb/>
ed in Greenville at the time alluded, the prohibition States in vast quail- <lb/>
nor was there a single resident shoe. <lb/>
At court times the half gallon to the ho a ago with <lb/>
for the ac- <lb/>
of very <lb/>
allowed to live of ease, if reports la for those <lb/>
from those who have already it can pay the most. Mr. <lb/>
bridal His name is <lb/>
i . , i i i reported- It should be <lb/>
them, and see that they did <lb/>
it according to law. Edward Stan- through at once. will her a little <lb/>
fort all branches of tho back <lb/>
count v. Henry of government. It can easily show its j Kan <lb/>
u with the friends <lb/>
Asa Biggs, of t . aft, <lb/>
from Edgecombe county, and Moses u the passage or this mil. as <lb/>
are but those who remain be who is to manage the new hotel has <lb/>
a great mind to kiss you. believe these reports and marvelous success in <lb/>
you do, ring it is probable that as more them and is mi old acquaintance of <lb/>
please------. , homes in the wanner climate The building will be <lb/>
have James tell their condition may improved, erected and furnished entirely ac- <lb/>
that I'm very busy and must not be, But, be this at it may, we believe the cording to his ideas. It will <lb/>
will leave North Carolina, sent some novel features in hotel <lb/>
will not all wave North Caro- architecture, one of which will be a <lb/>
the con- <lb/>
with <lb/>
band- <lb/>
below. All <lb/>
street, <lb/>
avenue. <lb/>
by which they pan meet the effect of The hotel will be stories high, <lb/>
the exodus. There are various ways and will cost <lb/>
of doing Probably each one and It will be famished <lb/>
Farmer What time do <lb/>
have dinner <lb/>
can get dinner <lb/>
you wish <lb/>
Makes alive, don't have <lb/>
may adopt a different course, but <lb/>
avoid the scarcity farm labor which <lb/>
of <lb/>
Third <lb/>
Pender. <lb/>
Fourth <lb/>
Fifth W. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Robeson. <lb/>
Henderson, <lb/>
Eighth W. II. A. Cowles <lb/>
G. Hen- <lb/>
GOVERNMENT. <lb/>
Court A. <lb/>
A. K. Tucker. <lb/>
Register of Deeds- David II. James. <lb/>
R. Cherry. <lb/>
S. L. Ward. <lb/>
One of us, darling, it must lie. <lb/>
of It lie. will slip from <lb/>
My little life may first be <lb/>
I in glad we not know <lb/>
Which one. <lb/>
i ally was in attendance, but he was <lb/>
; not there in my day. On the <lb/>
of voters who will refuse to support <lb/>
it a moment after they have proof <lb/>
r ,., . of its devotion to the liquor power as <lb/>
one of his visits ma landlord, . ,. t t . <lb/>
V . . , . the refusal to pass this act of relief <lb/>
a man who had never mastered the .,.,,. . ,. <lb/>
would imply. It is a gratification, <lb/>
en Va i philosophy Horace's apothegm . the issue of eighteen <lb/>
Greenville Years Ago. to note that senatorial leader., n <lb/>
ix, Tex., May <lb/>
To The <lb/>
A friend in town has lately <lb/>
sent me a Raleigh paper, in which <lb/>
I find a very letter de <lb/>
of Greenville as it now is, <lb/>
favorably prophetic of its <lb/>
do yon think yon will many again <lb/>
when I am gone <lb/>
I don't know, John, d the lady <lb/>
a Of tears. I haven't given <lb/>
Representative of the matter very much thought as yet <lb/>
Mrs. of <lb/>
owning a Jersey Has <lb/>
Farmer I dunno as <lb/>
lady. <lb/>
in I lie richest and most elegant <lb/>
style, and will be ready by 1892. <lb/>
MEMORIAL DAY. <lb/>
On last Friday, Memorial Day <lb/>
celebration was of an extensive <lb/>
character, and more general-.- ob- <lb/>
n, la . prob- <lb/>
m which must be met in the near strewn with <lb/>
dinner just to suit my some of must arise a or two on ac- <lb/>
these other folks may want it some <lb/>
other time. <lb/>
n n <lb/>
count the exodus of <lb/>
those should at once <lb/>
to some plan. They have <lb/>
time now; it will save much loss and <lb/>
the third North Carolina district, <lb/>
has a bill prepared provided for <lb/>
future, and present consideration of <lb/>
the subject is necessary, <lb/>
The drat thing to done is to <lb/>
supply good and comfortable houses <lb/>
for and rent lands on <lb/>
advantageous terms. Nature has <lb/>
done With <lb/>
tutor undertook million soup, to loaned to the <lb/>
., ,. . , -as Wilson. Hoar and have . <lb/>
to argue with some legal several States for the people. , <lb/>
, , . . put themselves on for the pas-; , , , , ,. , Mis. I <lb/>
lion, and urge, as he conceived, the of to inter- arc to be tender -No <lb/>
palpable injustice of the statute, for all dues except interest on the <lb/>
, ,, ,, , state law. ,,.,,.,,, <lb/>
governing tho matter. Mr. , .,, public debt; loans are to bear <lb/>
beautiful flowers. The parade was <lb/>
an imposing spectacle. The right <lb/>
of the line was composed of the <lb/>
First Brigade, National <lb/>
Louis Fitzgerald command- <lb/>
The General and his staff and <lb/>
all troops, and men were in <lb/>
good homo,, cheap lands, a mud , ,,, Hy. <lb/>
and soil It should not M came <lb/>
be hard to secure a class , by in <lb/>
, ,, ed the Court decision soy <lb/>
listened to him with commendable wt. per cent, interest, and not <lb/>
, ., , ,. . among other things bearing <lb/>
for a while, and then a., u , more than will be loaned <lb/>
, . . . , . . upon the subject that when once hi <lb/>
silenced bis criticisms by telling , ,, .,.,. .; to one person. <lb/>
which would b- most desirable <lb/>
. i , i i <lb/>
maim. Not an ache or a pain about and his staff came next <lb/>
,. hope the subject receive escorted by the Fourth New York <lb/>
consideration I <lb/>
Oliver commanding. The various <lb/>
Mr. his mom- which it deserves, <lb/>
Over live <lb/>
hundred thousand lives lost <lb/>
Entire Where <lb/>
A Victory for the <lb/>
divisions of the Grand Army of the <lb/>
Republic by posts, fourteen <lb/>
files front, on the left of the De- <lb/>
Commander and staff. <lb/>
Next following the Grand Army <lb/>
were several and posts of the <lb/>
I Sons of Veterans, followed by other <lb/>
deigns will be pleased to <lb/>
I how far ahead they are of <lb/>
O. <lb/>
B. Greene. i of fifty odd years ago, <lb/>
I have concluded, as briefly as I can, <lb/>
Asst R. Moore. . outline tie village of that day, <lb/>
X f <lb/>
Ward, M. R. Lang Raleigh paper's letter, and <lb/>
Allen W 4th Ward, Joe col. m, down reminiscences by <lb/>
of <lb/>
The letter is i,, <lb/>
D. T., Rector. habited bi <lb/>
Sunday, morn- <lb/>
and night. Prayer sleeting eve <lb/>
Wednesday night. Rev. B. B. Mm <lb/>
alter they got there.- <lb/>
Evangelist. <lb/>
military and civic bodies, among <lb/>
which were Cadets, the <lb/>
Berkeley Guard, the Veteran Fire- <lb/>
is- men and other organizations. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
that of the long ago. Jove's <lb/>
own birds never roost permanently <lb/>
in the neighborhood of a car- <lb/>
pass. May it grow in fatness and; <lb/>
they with it. In the time that I <lb/>
wot of, there were but two <lb/>
lug physicians In Greenville. They <lb/>
kept their own drugs and coin- <lb/>
of United States <lb/>
Names. <lb/>
their school population. The of the You took the <lb/>
measure, in brief, embodies some- constable out lest a while ago and <lb/>
i measure, in brief, embodies some I constable out jest a while <lb/>
of the features of Bab treasury <lb/>
i and some of the features <lb/>
bill. <lb/>
K. It. which was held in trust for the <lb/>
Indian Fund. The other <lb/>
BO FOR THE ISLAND. <lb/>
New York's great seaside resort, <lb/>
. Island, was opened for the <lb/>
season on Decoration Day. From <lb/>
this time on thousands of oar pop- <lb/>
will daily set their faces in <lb/>
Ohio is an Indian word <lb/>
Montana, from or Congress. He has no hope <lb/>
,. . ; meaning hill. <lb/>
n- . . ., , . . I pounded their own prescriptions. <lb/>
bore that relation to the place their ex- Georgia was named honor of <lb/>
K would have made a taker To a their ex- f must have he j <lb/>
,. OH all accepted the adjustment oiler <lb/>
treated him. an never said a word to . l J , <lb/>
j ed in the case and received <lb/>
the coin. Carolina bonds, now worth <lb/>
I'm after those lour-in about The United States de- <lb/>
to accept, Secretary of the e this great breath- <lb/>
being advised that he had mg-spot, there to relax their cares <lb/>
The bonds fell and obtain a h-w hours of rest and <lb/>
passage of some relief measure by m cents each, sir. in and remained duo some lour . ZS <lb/>
Mr. is a farmer and hand neckties for fifty cents. <lb/>
is very much earnest about i <lb/>
by They arc fifty cents each, sir. in <lb/>
hope Why I you got four in i after maturity. Governor Fowle , <lb/>
J not hand fir fifty don't n offered to pay all the coupons J, <lb/>
i what in bonds, but th <lb/>
. business tor declined to pay interest after some <lb/>
Pastor. <lb/>
count me as one <lb/>
s a taker . . of <lb/>
of its citizens its far the <lb/>
of its citizens is from the SB <lb/>
of the bonds. There was an <lb/>
side of New York have but a faint <lb/>
place Co- <lb/>
residents of <lb/>
the hot days <lb/>
summer its enjoyments are par- <lb/>
Baptist-Services second and fourth <lb/>
and night. Prater people hardly one-third <lb/>
wary night. enumeration. But ,,,, , ,.,,.,,. . . <lb/>
; filled a smaller roll than those the letter says of ,,. m honor <lb/>
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A A- who have come <lb/>
as now, two hotels in the village, with snow, <lb/>
and think I can say of them what i <lb/>
meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- deserved the <lb/>
after die 1st and 3rd Sunday at. <lb/>
A. L. Blow. W. M., I on <lb/>
them Lille's present were; Elizabeth, the virgin queen of <lb/>
P letter writer's good hotels as could have England, <lb/>
been in town of its size <lb/>
G. L. Sec. <lb/>
successors, that I j,, one be excepted <lb/>
of being congenial, clever, law- Mrs. Gregory at <lb/>
Tucker <lb/>
Insurance Lodge. K. of day, in all the Well, as have reached the Green- <lb/>
meets every and third . ., ;,, were the i ville hotels, I will atop with them <lb/>
a while, after resting a spell, <lb/>
will continue, my story, <lb/>
J. H. H. <lb/>
Ulcerated Sore Throat. <lb/>
Two years ago I had Ulcerated <lb/>
Sore was so weakened and <lb/>
reduced in flesh that ray friends <lb/>
thought it for me to <lb/>
I was aliened by the very best <lb/>
their endeavors re- <lb/>
me were futile. My mother see- <lb/>
Swift's high- <lb/>
recommended, decided to give me a <lb/>
course of after taking the first <lb/>
bottle I was greatly after <lb/>
taking several bottles I was entirely <lb/>
cured. I have not had any signs of <lb/>
a return of the disease since. <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett, D. make good <lb/>
Pitt II. meets of those the best <lb/>
communities, either in this or other <lb/>
in January, April, July <lb/>
and October. J. J. letter ewes to the <lb/>
E. A. Secretary. I letter gives <lb/>
Greenville Alliance meets Saturday Greenville of to-day quite a long <lb/>
of business establishments. <lb/>
day of small day <lb/>
Secretary. I of long ago that I carry in my <lb/>
i posses. <lb/>
Hours pen for all of enterprises, <lb/>
to p. M. All mails distributed can now recall but ten stores, each <lb/>
on arrival. The general deliver, will. a, merchandise <lb/>
be kept open for minutes at <lb/>
after the Northern mail is distributed. and each carrying a mod- <lb/>
Northern Mail arrives daily were no <lb/>
at P. M. and departs at, . , , , <lb/>
M. establishments in the place at <lb/>
Old Sparta and Falkland mm exclusively dry goods <lb/>
mails arrives . . . . . <lb/>
M and departs at l P. stores, clothing house, no drug <lb/>
Washington, X no millinery establishment, <lb/>
j nor was the., any iron <lb/>
mails <lb/>
P. M. and departs at A. M. <lb/>
Bell's <lb/>
Mills- <lb/>
la and Pullet arrive Tuesday <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday at A. m. and <lb/>
departs at <lb/>
Vanceboro, Jack and <lb/>
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M <lb/>
marble yard, any coach shop, no <lb/>
tailor shop and to best of my <lb/>
recollection, there was not a single <lb/>
saloon in place. II <lb/>
did exist, it most have hart its <lb/>
location near the bridge, where <lb/>
on. horse carts uniformly <lb/>
l landed barrels of tar and <lb/>
The letter fails to <lb/>
the of saloons among <lb/>
the present industries of Greenville, <lb/>
and it is devoutly to be hoped that <lb/>
omission is pot the result of a <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb/>
Appointments, <lb/>
1st Sunday and <lb/>
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and <lb/>
night, Greenville Baptist church, also <lb/>
Prayer every Wednesday night. <lb/>
3rd morning and night, Beth- we <lb/>
at Baptist church. <lb/>
, , , , . , Statistics of the Episcopal <lb/>
is an Indian teem n,, . . . <lb/>
or State, <lb/>
river. The following statistics of the <lb/>
Louisiana was named by the church in North Carolina are <lb/>
French in 1682, in honor of Louis condensed from an address delivered <lb/>
XIV, of France. ; by Rev. Dr. M. M. Marshall before <lb/>
I window. the Supreme Court of the United land, but a rule visitors will find <lb/>
Yeah, It struck whether North was old <lb/>
Well three is out, and she j pay interest on her bonds <lb/>
. slammed the shutters, while maturity. The bonds <lb/>
, sat down on the door steps. j interest thereon at the rate <lb/>
a BOX. six per cent per annum, payable half <lb/>
Irate thunder yearly at the said bank on the first <lb/>
I Where's the editor of this sheet j day of January and July of each year <lb/>
Smart He's stepped in from the date of this bond, and <lb/>
next door. Come along I'll show principal be paid, or surrendering <lb/>
as in years gone by. All the boats <lb/>
are running now, but season will <lb/>
not be in full blast for several weeks. <lb/>
ARLINGTON. <lb/>
Missouri is named after the convention in the way to a building the proper coupons hereto <lb/>
river. The signification of In by several Tho United States relied largely <lb/>
the term is o of <lb/>
AYCOCK DANIELS <lb/>
C. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
-.- I Carolina thews ware just <lb/>
Pennsylvania is a v J <lb/>
of the name William Penn and and j. <lb/>
via wood or grove. baptisms. Bishop the man he was after. <lb/>
, J. ,, j salary was payable Subscriber <lb/>
Irate in hall- i upon the words the principal <lb/>
Eli What's yelling up be as a definite contract to <lb/>
stairs pay interest until was <lb/>
Sappy Boosters. <lb/>
Win. Postmaster Ida ville <lb/>
I writes; Bitters has done <lb/>
more for me than all other medicines <lb/>
combined, for that had feeling arising <lb/>
from Kidney and Liver John <lb/>
Leslie, tanner and of same <lb/>
place, Electric Bitters to be <lb/>
best Kidney and Liver medicine, <lb/>
made me feel like a new I, <lb/>
G ard hard ward merchant, game <lb/>
Electric Bitters Is just the thing <lb/>
for a man who all run down and don- <lb/>
care whether he lives or dies; he found <lb/>
new strength, good appetite and felt just <lb/>
,. , to that as <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Vermont is <lb/>
Green mountains, from the <lb/>
green, and <lb/>
Wisconsin signifies in the In- <lb/>
language rushing <lb/>
The State took its name from the <lb/>
river. <lb/>
Delaware, from Lord De la Ware <lb/>
or Delaware, of <lb/>
who entered the bay <lb/>
in 1620. <lb/>
Maine is supposed to have been <lb/>
named by the early settlers <lb/>
after the ancient province of Maine <lb/>
in France. <lb/>
Massachusetts is named after a <lb/>
tribe of Indians of the great <lb/>
It signifies <lb/>
the great bills. <lb/>
cried the Irishman, and <lb/>
I'm to a estate <lb/>
my father's will. When he <lb/>
died, he ordered my brother to <lb/>
the with me; and <lb/>
by Patrick, he did he <lb/>
tuck the inside himself, and gave <lb/>
me the <lb/>
ally, exclusive of what he might re- <lb/>
as rector of church, in <lb/>
Raleigh. <lb/>
Bishop succeeded Bishop Ra- <lb/>
in 1831, and found fifteen <lb/>
clergy and Bis- <lb/>
hop Episcopate lasted twenty, <lb/>
one years, and when he was <lb/>
by Bishop Atkinson in 185-3, there <lb/>
were forty clergy in the diocese and <lb/>
over communicants. <lb/>
Bishop Lyman was elected to assist <lb/>
Bishop Atkinson in his duties in 1873 <lb/>
and at this time notwithstanding the <lb/>
disastrous effects of the civil war, <lb/>
the clergy had to fifty, and <lb/>
communicants to while the <lb/>
reported contributions for 1873 <lb/>
amounted to <lb/>
From 1873-1883 or from the <lb/>
of Lyman to the <lb/>
vision of the Diocese, the number of <lb/>
clergy increased from fifty to seven- <lb/>
and tho number of <lb/>
cants increased to The eon <lb/>
for 1883 were <lb/>
The Diocese was divided in 1883, <lb/>
and since then the number of clergy <lb/>
In the State has gone to and <lb/>
the communicants now number <lb/>
about in the diocese of N. C. <lb/>
and in the East Carolina <lb/>
There are parishes and <lb/>
mission stations in the State. <lb/>
Guess the editor has caught <lb/>
call again. <lb/>
A ATLANTA <lb/>
Papa, cried a little 7-year old, I <lb/>
want some money to get <lb/>
Don't go any further, he interrupt- <lb/>
ed, throwing down a coin. <lb/>
The child came slowly up to him, <lb/>
after pocketing the money, and bare- <lb/>
touched his cheek with a kiss <lb/>
Humph, ejaculated the parent, <lb/>
from the kiss you give I should judge <lb/>
that you don't appreciate it very <lb/>
much. <lb/>
She caught hold of his hands, and <lb/>
looking squarely into his eyes, soN <lb/>
Do you expect a kiss for fifty <lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Mrs. Michael Curtain, <lb/>
maker the statement that she caught <lb/>
cold, which settled on lungs; she was <lb/>
treated for a month by her family <lb/>
and grew worse. He told her she <lb/>
was a hopeless victim of consumption <lb/>
and that no medicine could cure her. <lb/>
Her druggist suggested Dr. king's New <lb/>
Discovery for she bought <lb/>
a bottle and to her delight found herself <lb/>
from dose. She <lb/>
Its use and after taking ten bottles <lb/>
found herself sound and well, now does <lb/>
her own housework and is as well as she <lb/>
ever was. Free trial bottles this <lb/>
paid. The State relied upon the <lb/>
that the general law con- <lb/>
did not bind the <lb/>
sovereign, and that a State could not <lb/>
be held liable to pay interest except <lb/>
by express contract; upon the <lb/>
of the act under which the <lb/>
bonds were issued; and upon the <lb/>
limiting in the bond <lb/>
rendering tho proper coupons hereto <lb/>
which it claimed did not <lb/>
include interest after maturity. <lb/>
In the Supreme Court the United <lb/>
States was represented by Attorney <lb/>
General and Hon. S. F. Phil- <lb/>
lips; the State by Attorney General <lb/>
Davidson and S. G. Ryan, of <lb/>
Raleigh. <lb/>
Attorney General Davidson made <lb/>
a forcible and clear presentation of <lb/>
the case for the State, as he always <lb/>
docs. Owing to the engagements a <lb/>
the Attorney General upon the North <lb/>
Carolina Reports, upon Mr. Ryan, the <lb/>
special counsel employed by Gov. <lb/>
Fowle with the approval of the <lb/>
the larger part of the <lb/>
burden of the preparation of the brief <lb/>
and of the argument The brief is <lb/>
one which shows the careful labor <lb/>
employed upon it, is clear and, as the <lb/>
decision shows, convincing. His <lb/>
in the Supreme Court was <lb/>
greatly complimented. The firmness <lb/>
of Gov. Fowle and the Council of <lb/>
Mate and the ability of the Attorney <lb/>
General and Mr. Ryan have won a <lb/>
Store, large and decided victory for North <lb/>
km. DANIELS, <lb/>
n. c <lb/>
D. L. JAMES, <lb/>
DENTIST, t <lb/>
ALEX I. BLOW, <lb/>
G RE E I C <lb/>
RE. J. M. TUCKER. J. <lb/>
TUCKER ft MURPHY, <lb/>
A T-LA W, <lb/>
Gil KEN VILLE. N. <lb/>
L. C LATHAM. HARRY <lb/>
T SKINNER, <lb/>
A A W, <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
G. JAMES, <lb/>
N. O. <lb/>
Practice all the courts. Collections <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
C. <lb/>
. . <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018991_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
S. Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
Publisher's Announcement <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
The is 81.50 per year. <lb/>
Rates.- One column <lb/>
one year. column one year. <lb/>
one-quarter column one year, <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
one week. ; two weeks. one <lb/>
month Two inches one week. 81.30, <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb/>
Column M reading items, cents per <lb/>
line for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb/>
and Notices, <lb/>
and Sales, <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb/>
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb/>
V-y. PAID FOR IN ADVANCE. RE- <lb/>
has suffered some loss and <lb/>
much because of having no <lb/>
fixed rule as to the payment of this class <lb/>
of advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb/>
future trouble payment ix advance <lb/>
will be demanded. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb/>
above, for any length of time, can lie <lb/>
made by application to the office either <lb/>
in person or by letter. <lb/>
Copy tor Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of advertisements should be <lb/>
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The Reflector having a large <lb/>
will be found I profitable medium <lb/>
through which to reach the public. <lb/>
Entered at the Office at <lb/>
Mail Matter. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, JUNE <lb/>
Judicial Convention. <lb/>
The Judicial Convention of the <lb/>
Democratic party of Third <lb/>
District, is hereby called to meet <lb/>
Rocky Mount on Thursday, <lb/>
at o'clock, for the <lb/>
pose of nominating a for <lb/>
Solicitor. F. A. <lb/>
Ch. Judicial Ex. Com. <lb/>
Democratic County <lb/>
A Convention of the Democrat- <lb/>
of Pitt County will be <lb/>
GREENVILLE INSTITUTE. <lb/>
Fifth Annual Commencement. <lb/>
Large G. <lb/>
W. <lb/>
c. <lb/>
Commencements are always joy- <lb/>
occasions in Greenville, and <lb/>
the one just past afforded no less <lb/>
enjoyment than did the previous <lb/>
ones. The fifth annual commence- <lb/>
of Greenville Institute is <lb/>
past now, and all that is left are <lb/>
the pleasant recollections. The <lb/>
first exercises of the were <lb/>
hold in the College Chapel. Before <lb/>
dark throngs of people were seen <lb/>
their way to the Institute <lb/>
and by the time the exercise com- <lb/>
the chapel was crowded <lb/>
to the extent of its capacity, the <lb/>
halls and balconies were and <lb/>
there was not even standing room <lb/>
about any of the windows. It was <lb/>
nearly o'clock when begun <lb/>
the <lb/>
Little Eyes, Children <lb/>
and Jolly <lb/>
Oscar James <lb/>
Some why Idleness <lb/>
Should be suppressed In <lb/>
Thomas <lb/>
Recitation. The Whistling Regiment <lb/>
Larry <lb/>
Piano Smile Haunts <lb/>
me Still, . Lee Foley <lb/>
Original Live for a <lb/>
Purpose, Joyner <lb/>
When the Swallows Homeward Fly. <lb/>
Six Girls <lb/>
Dean. Wilson <lb/>
Holiday March <lb/>
Lizzie Annie Sheppard, Helen <lb/>
Laughinghouse. Rosa Forbes <lb/>
Unwritten Music. <lb/>
Myrtle Wilson <lb/>
Original Men of <lb/>
the Nation's Greatest <lb/>
W F Harding <lb/>
Lullaby, Lizzie <lb/>
Scenes <lb/>
Garden Palace <lb/>
Cast of Character <lb/>
Interpreter, Carrie Latham <lb/>
Cinderella, Novella Higgs <lb/>
Prince, Ralph House <lb/>
Sisters. Annie Ora <lb/>
Whit-hard <lb/>
Aged King. Ernest <lb/>
Wicked Stepmother, Nichols <lb/>
White Bird, Lizzie Salisbury <lb/>
Chamberlain. Hairy <lb/>
Turtle Doves, Mamie Duckett. Rosalind <lb/>
Guests at the Hall. <lb/>
Portions of this <lb/>
very good and deserve <lb/>
ville on Thursday Juno <lb/>
at o'clock for the purpose <lb/>
of appointing delegates to the <lb/>
State, Congressional and Judicial <lb/>
Conventions. <lb/>
Each township will be entitled to <lb/>
elect to said Convention one <lb/>
gate and one alternate for every <lb/>
twenty-live Democratic votes <lb/>
and one delegate for fractions of <lb/>
fifteen or more votes cast in the <lb/>
late Gubernatorial election, that <lb/>
is to say. Beaver Dam is entitled <lb/>
to elect Bethel Car- j piece ever <lb/>
Falkland j pleased the <lb/>
mention. Oscar James pen- <lb/>
formed his piece exceptionally <lb/>
well and evidenced the <lb/>
of splendid musical talent and that <lb/>
his training had been under ex- <lb/>
hands. <lb/>
Larry recitation was <lb/>
well rendered. As he spoke <lb/>
was played softly on <lb/>
piano by Miss Bridget's and <lb/>
by Harding. The <lb/>
by the the four young ladies <lb/>
named was as well executed as any <lb/>
heard hero and so <lb/>
audience that their <lb/>
Green- j applause was generous. Mr. Joy- <lb/>
ville and Swift <lb/>
Creek <lb/>
In order that each township may <lb/>
be fully and fairly represented, <lb/>
the Democrats of the several town- <lb/>
ships are requested to meet in <lb/>
their respective township at the <lb/>
usual place of meeting, on <lb/>
Jane 21st 1800, at o'clock P. M. <lb/>
for the purpose of appointing <lb/>
delegates to said County <lb/>
By order of the Democratic Ex- <lb/>
Committee of Pitt <lb/>
ALEX. L. Blow. <lb/>
It. Chairman. <lb/>
Secretary. <lb/>
s original declamation was <lb/>
good both in composition and de- <lb/>
livery. Mr. Harding's was excel- <lb/>
lent in composition but his <lb/>
was rather stiff and droll. In <lb/>
the operetta Miss Carrie Latham <lb/>
did herself much credit as inter- <lb/>
speaking her parts with <lb/>
marked clearness and composure. <lb/>
As Cinderella Miss Novella <lb/>
Higgs was excellent, and Misses <lb/>
Annie Sheppard and Ora <lb/>
ard as the wicked sisters sustained <lb/>
their parts well. All the others <lb/>
in their respective positions were <lb/>
good and some of the singing was <lb/>
a high order. Perhaps the best <lb/>
and most pleasing piece in the <lb/>
whether in the little village church <lb/>
the man of God stood be- <lb/>
fore his little flock and in earnest <lb/>
yet broken English told the story <lb/>
of the cross, both were equally <lb/>
deserving of honor. The next <lb/>
class was woman, and here the <lb/>
speaker grew eloquent and paid <lb/>
to woman a beautiful tribute. He <lb/>
said he was unable to understand <lb/>
why God had placed Adam to <lb/>
his ribs from which to make <lb/>
man, that the man of to-day would <lb/>
remain awake and never flinch <lb/>
the process of removing <lb/>
he had that many <lb/>
that from them might be made <lb/>
such beautiful beings as those then <lb/>
before him. The third class was <lb/>
the editor who in his tireless work <lb/>
was here, there and everywhere, <lb/>
with a do every- <lb/>
body. The fourth was the teacher, <lb/>
upon whom was the <lb/>
of molding the mind and <lb/>
the character of those under <lb/>
his or her It was to this <lb/>
latter class that he wished to <lb/>
ply himself to-day. Teaching he <lb/>
defined in its past, present and <lb/>
future tense. He spoke of the old <lb/>
time school with its customs, what <lb/>
the present is accomplishing and <lb/>
the vast work going on in <lb/>
Carolina, the bright of <lb/>
the future with its certain attain- <lb/>
At times the speaker <lb/>
soared in such grand eloquence <lb/>
as to meet with bursts of applause. <lb/>
His reference to ex-Gov. Jarvis <lb/>
and his earnest labors in behalf of <lb/>
education in North Carolina met <lb/>
with a hearty response from the <lb/>
audience and brought tears to the <lb/>
eyes of our distinguished citizen. <lb/>
the whole Mr. <lb/>
effort was the finest educational <lb/>
address to which our people ever <lb/>
had the pleasure of listening. He <lb/>
was complimented on every hand <lb/>
and Prof. Duckett congratulated <lb/>
upon making such a happy <lb/>
for commencement orator. <lb/>
After the address Prof. Duckett <lb/>
made some announcements. <lb/>
Pupils make an average of <lb/>
on all examinations are placed <lb/>
on the Roll of Honor. Those that <lb/>
make or more on any study are <lb/>
distinguished in that <lb/>
branch. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Tucker, Oscar James, <lb/>
J T Boy Flanagan, J <lb/>
Tucker, J M Moore. W P Harding, <lb/>
J O L Joyner, Charlie <lb/>
W B Tucker, William <lb/>
Daniel. <lb/>
Carrie <lb/>
Latham, Rosalind Bessie. <lb/>
Harding, Helen <lb/>
Lina Ora Whichard, <lb/>
Nichols, Mamie Duckett, <lb/>
Lucy Tucker, Bessie Patrick. <lb/>
The following pupils who perhaps <lb/>
would have passed creditable ex- <lb/>
were absent on account <lb/>
of sickness on days of examination, <lb/>
Novella Higgs, Myrtle Wilson, <lb/>
Annie and House. <lb/>
following were distinguished <lb/>
in the mentioned <lb/>
J B White, J B <lb/>
Tucker, Ella Tucker, Bessie Hard- <lb/>
Boy Flanagan, Lizzie <lb/>
J T Oscar James, O L Joy <lb/>
Lucy Tucker, W E Tucker, W <lb/>
F Harding, Nichols, Ora <lb/>
Whichard, Leon Shep- <lb/>
James, O L Joy- <lb/>
W F Harding, J T Mo- <lb/>
Nichols, Lacy Tucker, W B <lb/>
Tucker. <lb/>
own Washington was the lullaby <lb/>
-one on -i boom in MisS She <lb/>
appeared on the stage with a very <lb/>
large doll in her arms and sang <lb/>
the lullaby to it very sweetly. <lb/>
The music part of the concert <lb/>
reflected much credit upon Miss <lb/>
May Bridgers, teacher of that de- <lb/>
in the Institute. The <lb/>
success of the occasion was due <lb/>
mainly to the efforts of Miss <lb/>
Bridgers and Messrs. O. L, Joy- <lb/>
and W. F. Harding, as upon <lb/>
them rested the responsibility of <lb/>
getting up the concert- <lb/>
At the end of the regular pro- <lb/>
Misses Hortense Forbes <lb/>
and Nana Fleming sang a duet <lb/>
and were loudly encored. In the <lb/>
meantime Prof. Duckett <lb/>
ed to the audience Hon. G. W. <lb/>
tax of j Sanderlin, who was present, as the <lb/>
climax it i gentleman who would address <lb/>
them the next day. This was <lb/>
for Mr. Sanderlin. but he <lb/>
was equal to the occasion and talk- <lb/>
ed for a few minutes in such a <lb/>
vein of wit as to completely cap <lb/>
tare the audience. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Thursday morning a very large <lb/>
audience assembled in Court <lb/>
House to hear the address by <lb/>
Hon. G. W. Sanderlin. The <lb/>
cine were opened with prayer by <lb/>
Bey. A. D. Hunter, who in a well <lb/>
worded supplication implored Di- <lb/>
vine favor upon the educational <lb/>
, I interests of our county. <lb/>
The orator was introduced by <lb/>
Mr. G. B. King Mr. King is <lb/>
a beautiful speaker and has a rep- <lb/>
for handsome <lb/>
and this effort by no means <lb/>
allowed his reputation to wane in <lb/>
the slightest but added new <lb/>
els to the wreath. Mr. Sanderlin <lb/>
said at the beginning of his speech <lb/>
that it was the handsomest intro- <lb/>
he ever had, and he told <lb/>
us later in the day that he never <lb/>
heard a finer one. Mr. Sanderlin <lb/>
spoke for little more than an hour, <lb/>
and notwithstanding the weather <lb/>
was very warm and he held <lb/>
the undivided attention of his <lb/>
audience. So highly were they <lb/>
entertained that there were many <lb/>
regrets when the address came to <lb/>
a close. His subject was <lb/>
and dignity of Teaching <lb/>
as a profession and the honor done <lb/>
the Teacher in such <lb/>
He said there were four classes <lb/>
people to whom he felt like paying <lb/>
special honor when in their pres- <lb/>
The first of these was the <lb/>
at cents,. loss of cents preacher of righteousness. <lb/>
losing his; not whether it was the <lb/>
hard earned labor because the man i logical graduate who held his <lb/>
for whom he worked paid Mm thousands of hearers spell-bound <lb/>
orders instead in cash. swaying them to and fro with his <lb/>
dealings as this- a way t. power and melting them to tears <lb/>
wards creating a labor-j with his -burning eloquence or <lb/>
class. in order to remove one of <lb/>
Our sister <lb/>
has certainly <lb/>
the way of levying specific taxes, <lb/>
and to a certain degree it looks <lb/>
like she is about to overdo the <lb/>
thing. The last issue of the Go <lb/>
antes contained a long list of enter- <lb/>
prises and professions against <lb/>
which taxes had been placed, and <lb/>
in s at an unreason- <lb/>
able figure. It charges steamboat <lb/>
companies, railroad companies <lb/>
and telegraph companies-the very <lb/>
things that the town could not get <lb/>
along without-a tax for the <lb/>
of business. Then the <lb/>
business is so <lb/>
that he must pay <lb/>
But to cap the <lb/>
has taxed its very <lb/>
enterprises that do more <lb/>
building up the town than every- <lb/>
thing else, for which the town <lb/>
might well show its <lb/>
by making handsome yearly dona <lb/>
to thought Wilson <lb/>
was the only town in North Caro- <lb/>
that appreciated her <lb/>
so little as to levy a tax, <lb/>
against them for the privilege of <lb/>
doing business in the town. <lb/>
One the <lb/>
laborer who works a man who <lb/>
pays him oil orders, <lb/>
exemplified I ere on Saturday. A <lb/>
colored man had been doing some <lb/>
work for a man, and time <lb/>
came gave the laborer an order <lb/>
to a certain amount upon lie <lb/>
with whom be traded <lb/>
a credit, and where goods were <lb/>
charged at tune price. The laborer <lb/>
.-aw nothing in the Mara which <lb/>
be had an immediate being <lb/>
hi have some <lb/>
money earning about for <lb/>
he could take from the <lb/>
store and sell again, lie <lb/>
decided to bin corn, and had to pay <lb/>
per The <lb/>
laborer then lank lb ears to a <lb/>
grain dealer and off-ti-d to m-H it to <lb/>
Mm at cents a The <lb/>
that puce aim all <lb/>
chained corn and c be <lb/>
could not afford to pay as much <lb/>
if as he sell it at again. The <lb/>
laborer finally bad o sell bis corn <lb/>
Capital Gossip. <lb/>
The remotest Cele- <lb/>
Mention of Other <lb/>
Correspondence to <lb/>
The prospects for good crops in <lb/>
this county are very good. <lb/>
A branch office of the <lb/>
B. L. Association has been or- <lb/>
Here by the colored people. <lb/>
The gospel meeting closed <lb/>
on Sunday night, May 31st, and <lb/>
Kev. Mr. Smith returned to his borne <lb/>
in Brooklyn, N. T. <lb/>
The revenue collections for this <lb/>
district the past month amounted <lb/>
to which is the I <lb/>
collection made in any one mouth <lb/>
fur more fifteen years. <lb/>
The Baptist Sunday-school ex- <lb/>
on Tuesday carried about <lb/>
one thousand persons to Tar born. <lb/>
They seemed perfectly delighted <lb/>
with the people of that place. <lb/>
The closing exercises of Mason <lb/>
Benson's Male Academy took place <lb/>
This is of the best <lb/>
male schools any where, and has a <lb/>
splendid patronage. <lb/>
The commissioner of agriculture <lb/>
has ordered the withdrawal of <lb/>
Phosphoric <lb/>
Acid from sale in this State, on ac- <lb/>
of not being to the stand- <lb/>
ard of analysis. <lb/>
The City Alder in en have <lb/>
toward the proposed <lb/>
celebration on July 4th. The com- <lb/>
on funds are now soliciting, <lb/>
and no doubt we will have a <lb/>
old that day. <lb/>
E. S. Cheek, Esq., left Saturday <lb/>
to attend the Convention of the In- <lb/>
Typographical <lb/>
which meets in Atlanta, It is <lb/>
two or three hundred <lb/>
will be present from the <lb/>
various Unions the United States. <lb/>
A most strenuous effort will be <lb/>
made next election to oust C. D. <lb/>
the radical Superior <lb/>
Court Clerk of He has <lb/>
held the same position for many <lb/>
years. This man seems to be the <lb/>
particular the people wish to <lb/>
see defeated. <lb/>
The contest for the <lb/>
temperance medal was held Friday <lb/>
night in the Sabbath- <lb/>
school room of Edenton Street <lb/>
Methodist church. It was open to <lb/>
all contestants between the ages of <lb/>
six and six girls <lb/>
and buys declaimed for it. The <lb/>
medal, a handsome silver one, was <lb/>
awarded to Miss Laura <lb/>
whose subject was the <lb/>
Hope of Our The <lb/>
the medal was made by <lb/>
Bey. Dr. Gordon in an appropriate <lb/>
manner. <lb/>
K. A. <lb/>
Cox Cotton Planter Factory <lb/>
Items. <lb/>
The tax lister, J. D. Cox, Esq., is <lb/>
making his this week. <lb/>
Mrs. A. G- Cox, who has been <lb/>
confined to her bed by continued <lb/>
sickness, is slowly improving. <lb/>
name Ham-burg, has <lb/>
been to our new town, to be <lb/>
built at the depot. <lb/>
Aunt Betsy, the wile of <lb/>
that venerable old gentleman, Mr. <lb/>
J C. Cox, is quite sick at this writ- <lb/>
with fever, but we none <lb/>
ere this goes print she will be re- <lb/>
V Harding, O L to health. <lb/>
Lucy Tucker, Ma- A. D. of Greenville, <lb/>
accompanied by Col. A. Sugg, <lb/>
delivered excellent <lb/>
church on Sunday <lb/>
This is his visit to this place. <lb/>
nods Nichols, Carrie Latham, Boy <lb/>
Flanagan. <lb/>
F O <lb/>
Joyner, Tucker. <lb/>
E Tucker, j and we hope he will call us again. <lb/>
House, B White, Bonn- J Crops generally are looking bet- <lb/>
tree, Charles John Lina more prosperous than for <lb/>
Sheppard, Oscar James, Helen I several years; but the wheat <lb/>
J B Yellowley. oat crops are not so good, and in <lb/>
English some places they are almost a fail- <lb/>
paid, Helen Ora <lb/>
Whichard, Tucker, J M Moore, <lb/>
Carrie Latham, Charlie <lb/>
J B Tucker. Bessie Lizzie <lb/>
Mamie Duckett. <lb/>
Whichard, Oscar <lb/>
James, Bessie Harding, Lina Shep- <lb/>
Novella Higgs, Lizzie <lb/>
The fruit crop will be a com- <lb/>
failure in our section unless we <lb/>
have a few grapes. <lb/>
Editor Messrs. <lb/>
Cox Carroll are busily en- <lb/>
gaged preparing timber for <lb/>
for next season. They also in- <lb/>
tend making tobacco hogsheads for <lb/>
bury, Lee Foley, Bessie James, Boas j our tobacco farmers, which will add <lb/>
Forbes. Sheppard, Carrie <lb/>
Latham. <lb/>
Total enrollment for the year, <lb/>
Certificates of Proficiency were <lb/>
awarded J T Erwin in English <lb/>
Grammar, Geography, <lb/>
Algebra. General History, Rhetoric, <lb/>
and Latin; O L Joyner in English <lb/>
Grammar, Geography, Arithmetic, <lb/>
Algebra, History, and <lb/>
Latin; W F Harding in Arithmetic, <lb/>
Algebra, Rhetoric and Latin ; Miss <lb/>
Nichols in English Gram- <lb/>
mar, Geography, Arithmetic, <lb/>
bra, History, Rhetoric and Latin; <lb/>
Miss Lucy Tucker in English Gram- <lb/>
mar, Geography, Arithmetic, <lb/>
History, Rhetoric and ; <lb/>
U C Flanagan Arithmetic, Gram- <lb/>
mar, Geography W E <lb/>
Tucker in Grammar, Geography, <lb/>
Arithmetic and Algebra. <lb/>
name of the school <lb/>
hereafter will lie Greenville <lb/>
instead of Greenville Male and <lb/>
Female Institute. girls will <lb/>
be received in the Academic and <lb/>
Departments. Miss Mag- <lb/>
Smith, who is a graduate of <lb/>
Salem Female Seminary, and has <lb/>
spent nearly two years in a North- <lb/>
Normal School, has been em- <lb/>
ployed as one of the teachers for <lb/>
session. She has taught a <lb/>
great deal in the county, and is the <lb/>
ablest teacher this section <lb/>
of the State. Her connection <lb/>
the school will no doubt bring a <lb/>
number of new students from the <lb/>
country. <lb/>
The music department will be in <lb/>
charge of Mrs. Irene W. <lb/>
Mrs. Hunter has resided in Green- <lb/>
ville only about six mouths, but no <lb/>
higher testimonial of her proficiency <lb/>
as a teacher is needed than <lb/>
the following extract from a letter <lb/>
to Prof. Duckett by Miss L. <lb/>
M. of Durham, is <lb/>
one of the moat thorough music in- <lb/>
of the South. In speaking <lb/>
of Mrs. Hunter, she would <lb/>
congratulate you securing such <lb/>
a valuable teacher. She was with <lb/>
me five terms ail, and was <lb/>
attentive to all instruction, <lb/>
and by her work <lb/>
rapid progress; and as a <lb/>
teacher <lb/>
to the popularity convenience <lb/>
of the I me is of our place. <lb/>
D. <lb/>
Commissioner's <lb/>
N. <lb/>
1890. <lb/>
of Commissioners <lb/>
met i egoist session at o'clock <lb/>
A- M. Members C. <lb/>
sou, Chan man, G. <lb/>
M. Mooring. T E. Keel, C. V. New- <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
Minutes of last meeting read and <lb/>
approved. <lb/>
The following orders were issued <lb/>
John Stocks Taylor <lb/>
Margaret Jas. Masters <lb/>
Ivy Mayo Patsy Elks M, <lb/>
n. D. Smith Nancy Moore <lb/>
John Baker Daniel Webster <lb/>
Martha Nelson Win <lb/>
Jacob Asa <lb/>
Henry Han- Moore <lb/>
Alex Harris, maintaining pauper, <lb/>
Jas. It. witness, <lb/>
Sam Page, <lb/>
The Board then adjourned to meet <lb/>
in joint session with the Board <lb/>
Justices. <lb/>
In obedience to an order of the <lb/>
Board of County Commissioners, <lb/>
in accordance with the laws of <lb/>
North Carolina the Board <lb/>
of the Peace of Pitt county met <lb/>
in the Court House in in <lb/>
joint, suasion with Board of <lb/>
Commissioners at o'clock A. M. <lb/>
The chairman, Capt. <lb/>
absent, C was called to <lb/>
the chair. The chairman stated the <lb/>
object of the meeting, to elect a <lb/>
Superintendent of Public <lb/>
levy taxes for 1890, elect a <lb/>
Board of. County Commissioners <lb/>
and transact such other business as <lb/>
may properly come before them. <lb/>
The roll Justices being called <lb/>
responded to their names, a quorum <lb/>
being present the Board proceeded <lb/>
to business. <lb/>
levying of taxes being in or- <lb/>
the following levy made for <lb/>
1890 <lb/>
Twenty cents on each one <lb/>
dollars value of real and per <lb/>
do ; <lb/>
same as State, schedule <lb/>
same as State, schedule same <lb/>
as fur the year 1889. <lb/>
The election of Superintendent of <lb/>
Public Instruction next in order <lb/>
Major Henry Harding was placed <lb/>
nomination unanimously <lb/>
elected. C. then vacated <lb/>
the chair and Board Commission- <lb/>
withdrew. Capt. J. <lb/>
man of the Board of Justices re- <lb/>
the chair the Board pro- <lb/>
to elect a Board of County <lb/>
Commissioners. J J. Laughing <lb/>
house in the <lb/>
present Board, lo C. <lb/>
John G. M. Mooring, T. <lb/>
E. Keel and C. V. Newton. There <lb/>
no other nominations the old <lb/>
Board was re dented by <lb/>
On motion A. J. Move, J. J. <lb/>
Laughinghouse R. Williams <lb/>
Jr., were a committee to <lb/>
them of their election. R. <lb/>
Williams Jr., behalf of the com- <lb/>
reported their acceptance. <lb/>
Maj. H. Harding came forward <lb/>
and accepted office of <lb/>
of Public <lb/>
requested that the Report of <lb/>
the Superintendent be published in <lb/>
Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
On motion it was that <lb/>
the report of the <lb/>
as as completed be published <lb/>
and the expense- of publishing be <lb/>
paid from the contingent school <lb/>
land of Pitt county. <lb/>
On motion it was ordered that <lb/>
the Board of Commissioners <lb/>
be allowed to make <lb/>
not to exceed one thousand <lb/>
dollars to construct or build a public <lb/>
dam or highway from end <lb/>
the Bridge through <lb/>
the tow grounds to the high laud <lb/>
recommend convict labor of the <lb/>
county to work on the same. No <lb/>
further Board adjourn- <lb/>
ed. <lb/>
Board of Commissioners <lb/>
bled at P. M., all the members <lb/>
present, when the following orders <lb/>
were issued <lb/>
W M Lang B L Davis <lb/>
O Gray t <lb/>
W L Gray W T Gray <lb/>
J B a R Ross <lb/>
l re <lb/>
W P Buck w R Whichard l <lb/>
U Williams <lb/>
L B Davenport <lb/>
J S Smith is J o Proctor Bro <lb/>
J J Polly <lb/>
Adams F <lb/>
Andrew o, Edmund A i km-on no. <lb/>
J W Harrington W P Buck <lb/>
D H James B Roebuck <lb/>
W T Crawford D <lb/>
V W Brown <lb/>
T A Thigpen On, J <lb/>
C V Newton <lb/>
John Flanagan <lb/>
G M Mooring <lb/>
Upon petition the following per- <lb/>
sons were exempt from Poll tax ; T <lb/>
M G Ross, loss of arm. Wm Rob- <lb/>
lame leg. <lb/>
Robert A Darden complains that <lb/>
he is charged on the tax list of 1889 <lb/>
Pitt county with acres of laud <lb/>
valued at 91.100 said land <lb/>
listed Greene county in said year <lb/>
and tax paid said county, asks <lb/>
that he be released from said tax in <lb/>
Pitt county. Upon examination <lb/>
the Board ordered same to be <lb/>
and the tax collector to have <lb/>
credit for same. <lb/>
Ordered that the order passed by <lb/>
this Hoard under date September <lb/>
3rd, 1889, regulating travel over <lb/>
the bridge at be <lb/>
same i hereby revoked. <lb/>
Ordered that the office of Super- <lb/>
Bridge at Greenville <lb/>
the same is hereby <lb/>
John be <lb/>
pointed Bridge Committee. <lb/>
F Brown<lb/>
A K Tucker <lb/>
T E Keel I <lb/>
GREENVILLE <lb/>
Corrected by Samuel <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail <lb/>
Old Brick <lb/>
Mess Fork, 13.00 to <lb/>
Bulk to <lb/>
Bulk to <lb/>
Bacon <lb/>
Bacon too <lb/>
Pitt County <lb/>
Sugar Cured <lb/>
to 5.75 <lb/>
to <lb/>
Brown to <lb/>
Granulated to <lb/>
Syrup and to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to 4-i <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
to <lb/>
too <lb/>
Star <lb/>
The Sparta Hills <lb/>
Has been repaired and are male <lb/>
A full head of water. Send your <lb/>
Com and to them you <lb/>
will get good Floor and Meal. <lb/>
E- Ti. MOO <lb/>
OLD SPARTA, O. <lb/>
I SIS Bl I mil I Pk IT <lb/>
REV <lb/>
SOLVING <lb/>
HEAD <lb/>
BAD <lb/>
is THE BEST GIN IN THE SOUTH. <lb/>
IS IT THE BEST IN THE SOUTH it ii <lb/>
built upon improved principles, having Revolving Heads in the ends of the <lb/>
Cotton Box, which revolve with the roll seed cotton, thus preventing that <lb/>
which occurs at the end of the cotton hoy in all other gins, the <lb/>
PRATT GIN does not break nor choke, carries a harder rail of seed cotton on the <lb/>
saws than other gins, and, in of tins, cleans the better, and of <lb/>
course, yields more lint cotton. This is common sense, and if you don't believe <lb/>
what we say. write to any of the gentlemen whose names and appear be- <lb/>
low, all of whom are using the Pratt Gin and will have no other. <lb/>
Aurora <lb/>
F. B. Guilford, F. F. Cherry. Jno. Pate <lb/>
X. C; F. B. Hooker, Idalia, X. C.; W. R. Ross. T. It. Boyd. <lb/>
bargains i i <lb/>
Bargains <lb/>
I am receiving every day my spring <lb/>
stock of Dry Goods, <lb/>
PRICES TO QUIT THE <lb/>
RICES TO THE <lb/>
Standard Calicoes, G cents pr yd. <lb/>
Homespun. pr yd. <lb/>
Yard-wide Stine. Hue, cents pr yd. <lb/>
and Children's Straw Hats <lb/>
to 85.00. Trimmed in latest styles <lb/>
in the store at cents to <lb/>
BIG NO <lb/>
BARGAINS SO HUMBUG <lb/>
Snow Hake Flour <lb/>
Flake Flour <lb/>
I have a Flour I guarantee for <lb/>
Everything low down for cash. <lb/>
Give me a trial. <lb/>
W. G. STOKES, W. G. STOKES. <lb/>
Grimesland, N. C. <lb/>
WE PREPARED <lb/>
e Are Wow x re <lb/>
To show the ladies the very best <lb/>
of <lb/>
.;. <lb/>
Milliner I <lb/>
Our stock just opened has the newest <lb/>
shapes white and black <lb/>
trimmed and <lb/>
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats <lb/>
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats <lb/>
We also have Ribbons and <lb/>
Flowers of all kinds. Feather <lb/>
Plumes, Crepes. <lb/>
Handkerchiefs. Notions. In- <lb/>
Caps and Sacks, etc.<lb/>
Greenville, X. C. <lb/>
ORDER wait until the ginning season is upon you to order <lb/>
your gin. It will cost no more early than late. We will take now or any <lb/>
time this summer, at cash prices, and deliver on good notes, without interest, <lb/>
payable in November, 1890. <lb/>
MOWING will sell the Buckeye on good <lb/>
notes, to responsible parties, payable November, 1880 and November 1891. Order <lb/>
at once- <lb/>
The John Flanagan <lb/>
COMPANY. <lb/>
Are in business at the old Flanagan <lb/>
Shops and are manufacturing <lb/>
all kinds of the <lb/>
VEHICLES. <lb/>
------We also do- <lb/>
m m <lb/>
AU Work guaranteed. <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb/>
Greenville. C. <lb/>
COME IN <lb/>
We want to 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/>
--------Just received by-------- <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
will be sold <lb/>
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb/>
or at reasonable terms on time on <lb/>
proved security. I bought my stock for <lb/>
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb/>
anyone. Give me a call. <lb/>
LIVERY SALE AND FEED <lb/>
I have opened at the stables formerly <lb/>
occupied by Dr. J. G. Jame.--. <lb/>
and will keep a tine line of <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb/>
the livery and can suit the moat <lb/>
I will run in connection a DRAY- <lb/>
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb/>
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
Greenville, X. <lb/>
The Be st Salve in the Id for <lb/>
Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum <lb/>
Sores, Hands <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin <lb/>
and positively cures Piles, or n <lb/>
required. It is guaranteed to <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
Price cents per box. <lb/>
N GIN S REPAIR E <lb/>
GINS <lb/>
Having received from Pratt Gin Factory accessory tools for <lb/>
new saws on old gins, and also other repair work, I here <lb/>
by announce to all that I can successfully repair their gins <lb/>
herein Washington for percent, less than it will cost at <lb/>
any factory, and also save largely in freights to and from <lb/>
various factories. I can do any work your gin <lb/>
may need. Send your gin to the <lb/>
WASHINGTON AGENCY <lb/>
With freights prepared, and will guarantee yon <lb/>
a good job. Don't wait, but send our gin at once, as <lb/>
the last hour is always crowded, and you may be delayed. If <lb/>
you can't spare money now make special terms with us at once <lb/>
and send your gin without delay. It will cost no more soon than late.<lb/>
.;. AND <lb/>
Farm <lb/>
All sizes and styles commonly used, at Low Prices Reasonable Terms. <lb/>
A J S <lb/>
AW <lb/>
AW <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
will cut 10.000 feet of per day. on good also larger sizes at such <lb/>
rates price. <lb/>
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS. <lb/>
That will raise 1.800 pounds of seed cotton from a wagon in minutes. No din- <lb/>
can afford to do without one. Terms easy and prices satisfactory <lb/>
3-TON WAGON SCALES, ONLY <lb/>
Guaranteed correct or no Can weigh cotton or hay on the wagon, or <lb/>
live stock on foot. <lb/>
For prices, address, <lb/>
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY. <lb/>
O. K Manager, Washington, M C. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY. <lb/>
J. R. <lb/>
J. G. <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 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 w. <lb/>
--------wish to remind you that we have a-------- <lb/>
SPECIALLY SELECTED GOODS <lb/>
To meet not only competition, but to conquer the monster high prices. <lb/>
day is passed when the thought of friendship enters into- <lb/>
the buying of goods, why t because every one must <lb/>
will 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 <lb/>
and a kindly greeting. Make our place your headquarters while <lb/>
in the town. Prices and quality are what yon want <lb/>
your hard earned dollars and that is just what we <lb/>
got for you, <lb/>
No Mistake No Bragging No Back Down <lb/>
mean every word of it and can and will do what tell you. Look. <lb/>
this column and see if we cannot interest you in bargains. <lb/>
stock <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Furnishing Goods, Hats, Caps, Boots, <lb/>
Shoes, Hardware, Groceries, Provisions, Harness and <lb/>
Valises, Wood and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, Tinware, <lb/>
Plows and Castings, Furniture, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Cots, <lb/>
And easy and comfortable also a line of Baby Carriages. <lb/>
Look at these prices they arc not leaders but My sample prices through our <lb/>
Calicoes at cents per yard. Ginghams at to cents per yard. <lb/>
to pr yd. Elegant line of White Goods at o to ct. <lb/>
40-inch White Lawns at pr yd. Round thread H. C. Check Homespun ct. <lb/>
Piece from to <lb/>
All wool, fashionable shades, single at cents per yards. <lb/>
Nun's Veiling at cents per yard, standard goods and worth at-least cents. <lb/>
Single and Double width Cashmeres in leading shades, reduced. <lb/>
have the best line <lb/>
OUR DOLLAR SHOES <lb/>
We have ever had, solid leather and no mistake. Our line of shoes is complete. <lb/>
Ladies, men, boys and children we can suit you in shoes. <lb/>
Give tired mother a rest and please the baby by it a nice <lb/>
Now we want to talk to you <lb/>
That necessary and essential element in every household- We are <lb/>
for it in this market, and carry largest line ever found We save <lb/>
money on small as well as large purchases. <lb/>
Our parting Injunction to every consumer buyer of of goods In this market is <lb/>
to come in and look at our goods and compare them and our price in all our varied <lb/>
lines of General Merchandise with goods and prices elsewhere, remember we <lb/>
meet competition by lowering the price and not the quality. <lb/>
Tours truly, <lb/>
J. B, CHERRY CO.,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018991_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
-o <lb/>
ATTRACTION <lb/>
A CORDIAL INVITATION TO <lb/>
VISITORS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
HOME FOLKS <lb/>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Local Sparks <lb/>
If. <lb/>
Washington <lb/>
bushels Seed for <lb/>
J. White. <lb/>
Court. <lb/>
First of this P. L. <lb/>
Fruit fen it the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Vacation. <lb/>
lbs Beeswax wanted <lb/>
for <lb/>
T. A. <lb/>
cash at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Blackberry pie. <lb/>
Car load Ice by <lb/>
Cherry. <lb/>
The streets look much better. <lb/>
J. B. Cherry Co. a <lb/>
line of Ladies Shoes, and sell cheap. <lb/>
Greenville certainly can play ball. <lb/>
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well <lb/>
and sick at the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The farmers say they <lb/>
never <lb/>
crops grow faster than they did <lb/>
week. <lb/>
saw <lb/>
last <lb/>
Best Show ever had for <lb/>
Ladies and Men's, at J. B. <lb/>
Co's. <lb/>
both <lb/>
Cherry <lb/>
Visit Our Store <lb/>
DURING THE WEEK. <lb/>
Washington can play ball, too, <lb/>
out Greenville comes in just a little- <lb/>
ahead. <lb/>
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate <lb/>
was made of Point Lace Flour, at <lb/>
Old Brick Store- <lb/>
Mr. T. A. Cherry has bought out <lb/>
the grocery establishment of Mr. J. <lb/>
J. Cherry. <lb/>
The latest Novelties m dress <lb/>
goods and trimmings to match at <lb/>
Mr. T. M. G. Ross told us day <lb/>
last week that he saw in <lb/>
township an apple tree in fail bloom <lb/>
on the first day of June. <lb/>
per lb for Sweet <lb/>
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which <lb/>
is a of its superiority, at <lb/>
the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
Pitt county Superior Court is in <lb/>
session. Judge Boykin presiding. <lb/>
White Mountain Ice Cream Free- <lb/>
I for sale by Latham ft Fender. <lb/>
The weather certainly gave us <lb/>
something warm last week. <lb/>
ODe fine young year old horse <lb/>
a good single phaeton harness <lb/>
for sale. Also a good wagon and <lb/>
harness for sale. <lb/>
office. <lb/>
The closing exercises of Bethel <lb/>
Academy will take place on the 10th <lb/>
inst. <lb/>
this week <lb/>
Special Attraction. <lb/>
-ON------- <lb/>
THURSDAY <lb/>
We shall place on our counters a <lb/>
Choice Selection <lb/>
or <lb/>
COMMENCEMENT ROBES. <lb/>
trouble to show Goods <lb/>
-m. r. <lb/>
LANG <lb/>
Eras <lb/>
Street <lb/>
Street <lb/>
near <lb/>
near <lb/>
Telegraph <lb/>
Telegraph <lb/>
Office <lb/>
Office. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
m Con <lb/>
Walter A. Wood Mowers and <lb/>
Horse Rakes. We have just re- <lb/>
a new lot of these excellent <lb/>
machines. Send for circular and <lb/>
mice. F. S. ft Co., <lb/>
Tarboro, N. C <lb/>
Wheat harvesting is in order, but <lb/>
there is not a great deal of it to <lb/>
vest this year. <lb/>
Tobacco attention <lb/>
All those who expect to get their <lb/>
flues for barns will please <lb/>
let us have their orders at once, and <lb/>
those who have already ordered are <lb/>
requested to get them as soon as <lb/>
possible, as we are greatly crowded <lb/>
for room to store them. <lb/>
Latham <lb/>
Quite a rain storm, accompanied <lb/>
by much thunder and lightning, <lb/>
early Friday night. <lb/>
A boat race for the 4th of July is <lb/>
being talked. Go ahead, boys, and <lb/>
get up a big one. <lb/>
Commencement brought lots of <lb/>
people here last week and Court <lb/>
brings many this week. <lb/>
This is the weather that runs <lb/>
off to the seaside and mountains <lb/>
and they will soon be hieing thence- <lb/>
ward. <lb/>
Weldon is no dead town by a long <lb/>
shot. The tells us <lb/>
worth or lots have been sold there in <lb/>
the last three weeks. <lb/>
Knock down the first man who <lb/>
asks it hot enough for that <lb/>
is unless it happens to be the census <lb/>
enumerator who does <lb/>
By attending to listing your taxes <lb/>
within the time prescribed by law <lb/>
you will save the cost a double <lb/>
tax or of having to list before the <lb/>
County Commissioners. <lb/>
The M. E. Conference for Wash- <lb/>
District will meet tomorrow <lb/>
with the Church at Williamston and <lb/>
continue through Sunday. Green- <lb/>
ville will be well represented. <lb/>
The building committee of the <lb/>
Baptist Church are ready to receive <lb/>
bids for the painting of the interior <lb/>
of the main audience room. <lb/>
and full particulars can be had <lb/>
by applying to or addressing Rev. <lb/>
A. D. <lb/>
Greenville wants a first class male <lb/>
school. The time is here for the <lb/>
citizens to get to work and secure it <lb/>
To speak of the advantage it would <lb/>
be to town would be saying what <lb/>
every citizen ought to know. <lb/>
Mr. W. F. Hart was in to see us <lb/>
Monday and said old is <lb/>
just spreading himself this season. <lb/>
They have the finest crops down <lb/>
there for several years past and <lb/>
with no misfortune from now the <lb/>
harvest will be abundant <lb/>
Watches are frequently sent to <lb/>
Greenville from towns some distance <lb/>
away to be repaired by A. J. Griffin- <lb/>
He is jeweler and master <lb/>
of his profession. We have even <lb/>
heard of other jewelers Ill- <lb/>
cult pieces of for him to do <lb/>
for them. <lb/>
Greenville Lodge No. A F. <lb/>
A. M. held its annual election of <lb/>
officers last Thursday, resulting as <lb/>
A. L. Blow, W. M. <lb/>
F. W. Brown, S. W. <lb/>
J. W. <lb/>
M R. Lang, Treas. <lb/>
G- L. Sec. <lb/>
The Lodge decided <lb/>
officers with those to <lb/>
publicly installed on the 24th of <lb/>
June. Further will <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Dr. G. S. Loyd, of Tarboro, is in <lb/>
town. t <lb/>
Miss Alice of Washington, <lb/>
is visiting Miss Carrie Cobb. <lb/>
Miss Annie Brown has returned <lb/>
from Henderson Female College. <lb/>
Mrs. Dr. Johnson, from Plymouth <lb/>
is visiting Mrs. Dr. F. W. Brown. <lb/>
Mrs. J. D. Murphy left Monday <lb/>
morning to visit relatives in Raleigh. <lb/>
Miss Susie Brown came <lb/>
from a visit to Greene County. <lb/>
Miss Mamie Singling, of Charleston, <lb/>
S. visiting Miss <lb/>
Forbes. <lb/>
Mr. W. S. Rawls <lb/>
day from a visit to his home in <lb/>
Virginia. <lb/>
Miss Gertrude Smith, a former <lb/>
pupil of the Institute, is visiting Mrs. <lb/>
Duckett. <lb/>
Miss Lizzie Fleming returned <lb/>
home Friday evening from <lb/>
Female Seminary. <lb/>
Misses Lucy <lb/>
returned home last week <lb/>
Seminary, LaGrange. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. re- <lb/>
turned Saturday evening from a visit <lb/>
to Wilson and other places. <lb/>
Miss Ella Harrington returned <lb/>
home from C. B. F. Institute; <lb/>
Thursday evening. <lb/>
Annie and Helen Perkins <lb/>
leached home Thursday evening <lb/>
from Salem Female Academy. <lb/>
Emily of Hyde <lb/>
a former pupil of Greenville Institute, <lb/>
has been visiting Mrs. a few <lb/>
days. <lb/>
Hiss Jennie Gray Hodges, of Was- <lb/>
been visiting Misses <lb/>
and Rosa Forbes the past <lb/>
week. <lb/>
Misses Parker and Lida <lb/>
Newton, of Falkland, spent last week <lb/>
visiting the family of Mr. W. M <lb/>
King. <lb/>
Dr. W. R. Mayo, of Bethel, a re- <lb/>
cent graduate of the Baltimore Med- <lb/>
College, called in to sec us one <lb/>
day last week. <lb/>
Hon. Geo. W. State <lb/>
Auditor, was the guest of Mr. J. H. <lb/>
Tucker while at Greenville Institute <lb/>
commencement last week. <lb/>
Miss Lizzie of <lb/>
pent last Friday night and part of <lb/>
Saturday with Mrs Wiley Brown. <lb/>
She was for Washington. <lb/>
Messrs. S, G. Sizer and Hugh <lb/>
Watson, of Tarboro and Z. M. Potts <lb/>
of Washington, all belonging to the <lb/>
the I telegraph force, spent Sunday in <lb/>
Mr. H. A. Latham, editor of the <lb/>
Washington Gazette, spent from Sat- <lb/>
evening to yesterday in town. <lb/>
He was just back from the <lb/>
Chapel Hill. <lb/>
M instructor <lb/>
of Greenville Institute the past year, <lb/>
Saturday for Franklin county, <lb/>
where she will remain a few days <lb/>
with relatives before returning to <lb/>
her home in Petersburg. <lb/>
GREENVILLE vs STABS. <lb/>
were glad to have a call yes- <lb/>
from Gen. W. P. Roberts, of <lb/>
Gates, who is in town for a few days. <lb/>
He is looking his usual self and is in <lb/>
fine health. By, the way, the <lb/>
is on the list of Congressional <lb/>
aspirants from the first district and <lb/>
has a good following. The district <lb/>
has fine timber to select from, no <lb/>
doubt about that. <lb/>
The Odd celebration, <lb/>
spoken of last week, will be on Tues- <lb/>
day, 17th instead of on Thursday a <lb/>
published. <lb/>
Quite a number of items which we <lb/>
wanted to get in to-day's paper had <lb/>
to be left out, and even then we have <lb/>
no room at all for editorials. <lb/>
A lawn was given at the <lb/>
Academy last night for the benefit of <lb/>
the Greenville Base Rail Club. The <lb/>
entire Reflector returns thanks <lb/>
to Capt. Alex. for being <lb/>
kindly, remembered with ice cream <lb/>
and cake. <lb/>
The case against John A. <lb/>
for the shooting of Sydney Owens <lb/>
was tried before the Court <lb/>
yesterday. Owens was the <lb/>
only witness who went the <lb/>
stand, the defense offering no <lb/>
whatever. The Jury brought <lb/>
in a verdict of guilty against <lb/>
We doubt there being a the <lb/>
size of Greenville whose business <lb/>
houses are more built of brick than <lb/>
this town. Ten years ago Greenville <lb/>
had only one brick store while today <lb/>
there are here, eighteen <lb/>
of them being two stories high. <lb/>
It is was organizing <lb/>
with a view of building up the town <lb/>
and placing it where the many <lb/>
rounding advantages entitle it <lb/>
What is the reasons land and <lb/>
company could not be <lb/>
formed and start the town ahead. <lb/>
to have these <lb/>
be appointed <lb/>
Greenville Captures the Broom <lb/>
and Wipes up the Stars <lb/>
Closely Contested Time <lb/>
Ail Takes <lb/>
Back Flag Unfurled. <lb/>
TO FAVOR- GREENVILLE <lb/>
The first of a aerie of throe <lb/>
games arranged for between the <lb/>
Greenville Base Ball Club and the <lb/>
Stars, of Washington, was played <lb/>
on the grounds at Greenville on <lb/>
afternoon at o'clock. <lb/>
The game was closely contested <lb/>
and witnessed by a large crowd. It <lb/>
was a pretty game, and as fair one <lb/>
as could be played, and there was <lb/>
some splendid work on the part of <lb/>
both clubs. The players and <lb/>
were as <lb/>
next game will be <lb/>
played in Washington. <lb/>
Stars brought a large flag up <lb/>
with them under which to march <lb/>
through town in case they won the <lb/>
game, but Greenville made them <lb/>
take it back home without being <lb/>
to the breeze. for <lb/>
Greenville <lb/>
At night the Min- <lb/>
who accompanied the Wash- <lb/>
boys, gave an entertainment <lb/>
in the Opera House. We have not <lb/>
room now to speak of it further <lb/>
i ban Mint the audience was highly <lb/>
pleased. After the performance a <lb/>
dance was given the Moore store <lb/>
near Five Points, in honor of the <lb/>
visitors. Come up again boys. <lb/>
JUST ARRIVED <lb/>
Weldings <lb/>
Cards a <lb/>
GREENVILLE. <lb/>
E A, s <lb/>
Move, R M p <lb/>
Moore. W, <lb/>
Forties, O, <lb/>
Flanagan, R, f <lb/>
A, c <lb/>
Yellowley, E, lb <lb/>
Hooker. H, r f <lb/>
Whedbee, H, c t <lb/>
W. B. James <lb/>
STARS. <lb/>
Hoyt. F, p <lb/>
Harris. J, r f <lb/>
Potts, Z. c <lb/>
Forbes, f <lb/>
Forbes, S, c f <lb/>
Short, F, is <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Morris, Abe, <lb/>
Potts, F, lb <lb/>
was umpire. W. <lb/>
There is some money in Greenville <lb/>
yet, and if the holders of it would <lb/>
coma together and inaugurate meas- <lb/>
to attract outside capital <lb/>
you would see a different air <lb/>
the old town. More posh <lb/>
and enterprise is needed. <lb/>
One can't make a town. <lb/>
less the men of Greenville unite up- <lb/>
n some of the many suggestions <lb/>
offered f the improvement of the <lb/>
town, they can not hope to s.-e the <lb/>
improvements going on that ought <lb/>
to be in progress. <lb/>
A serious trouble occurred just <lb/>
north of Greenville Sunday morning <lb/>
in which E. S. Moore was assaulted <lb/>
and severely and beaten, by E. N. <lb/>
and the brother in law. <lb/>
Ben Langley. The assault, we hear <lb/>
was because of insults said to have <lb/>
been offered to Mrs. by Moore <lb/>
evening previous to the <lb/>
Moore's wounds are reported <lb/>
very serious, his body being cut in <lb/>
a number of places and his head <lb/>
beaten with brass <lb/>
Co. f. V. C. <lb/>
A. D. their old Chap- <lb/>
lain, hopes to meet many of old Co. <lb/>
F. Sunday. June 15th at Old <lb/>
Sparta. He expects to call the Roll <lb/>
of the living dead. Let <lb/>
these who read this notice send word <lb/>
to others, try to have all present. <lb/>
He expects to preach, and <lb/>
very <lb/>
M. and G. A. Morton, <lb/>
scorers. <lb/>
The game started with Stars at <lb/>
the bat and the first man, Hoyt, <lb/>
scored, but not another was allowed <lb/>
to touch the home plate during the <lb/>
inning. Greenville went to the bat <lb/>
and Burt. Move, scored, then two <lb/>
men went out in succession, and <lb/>
Forbes scored; another man got on <lb/>
base but couldn't get off and <lb/>
side went out with one score ahead. <lb/>
Stars went to the bat the second <lb/>
time and came off with a goose egg; <lb/>
Greenville followed and met with <lb/>
precisely the same fate, both sides <lb/>
doing some excellent work. By <lb/>
this time spectators saw the <lb/>
game was to be hotly and <lb/>
interest ran high. Scars go to the <lb/>
bat again, measures the <lb/>
once more and reaches the <lb/>
home plate safe, being followed by <lb/>
Harris, who also came in for a score. <lb/>
It was but a short while before <lb/>
umpire called out, side <lb/>
Stars retired with a total of <lb/>
runs for the innings, <lb/>
comes up again the first man to <lb/>
the bat strikes out. Three men get <lb/>
on bases another strikes out. <lb/>
This leaves things in a critical con <lb/>
when Whedbee takes bat <lb/>
and drives a 2-base hit out in the <lb/>
field bringing the three in. <lb/>
and when the last man struck out <lb/>
Greenville had piled up runs <lb/>
the inning. Bob Moore, <lb/>
Forbes and Flanagan coming in, <lb/>
making the game stand to <lb/>
Some enthusiastic got off <lb/>
on this <lb/>
was In the third inning. <lb/>
Greenville was at bat with one <lb/>
run to the bad Three men warn <lb/>
bases and two out. is that <lb/>
tall military looking man at the <lb/>
bat It is Whedbee, and the game <lb/>
s bis hands; A hit of any kind <lb/>
would tie the game. <lb/>
called the umpire. Wizard <lb/>
smiled at Capt. Potts. <lb/>
Potts smiled reassuringly at Hoyt. <lb/>
Hoyt glanced toward <lb/>
and there met a pair of dark brown <lb/>
eyes which completely him. <lb/>
In a spell of tenderness gave <lb/>
Whedbee a slow out. Whack It <lb/>
met the end of the bat when <lb/>
Forbes had recovered the ball from <lb/>
far, far left, the three men had <lb/>
crossed home and <lb/>
bee was on It was a half <lb/>
dollar hit and the crowd fairly shook <lb/>
mother earth with their <lb/>
and Whedbee was the hero of the <lb/>
Stars came in again and retire <lb/>
with a single run. this score going <lb/>
down in favor of Short, who was, <lb/>
b the way, smallest player on <lb/>
the game. He was as spry as a <lb/>
cricket, a pet with everybody, <lb/>
all girls smiled at him when be <lb/>
went skipping as short stop. <lb/>
Greenville came up for the fourth <lb/>
time, but was back to field <lb/>
with another egg, the clever visitors <lb/>
not allowing a single man to get <lb/>
anywhere. Stars came op once <lb/>
more, and Greenville the <lb/>
compliment by sending the boys <lb/>
back to the field without a score. <lb/>
The home boys try their hand again <lb/>
and by heavy batting pile up four <lb/>
more runs, Yellowley, <lb/>
Hooker and Whedbee all making <lb/>
the round. The visitors take the <lb/>
bat for sixth time and send the <lb/>
home boys well out in field <lb/>
searching for balls, in the mean- <lb/>
time three of their men reach the <lb/>
borne plate and raise their score to <lb/>
a total of before the umpire calls <lb/>
Short, and <lb/>
making these runs. Greenville <lb/>
gets ready for business again but <lb/>
the Stars shut them right square <lb/>
out The visitors try their skill for <lb/>
seventh time but only allowed to <lb/>
mark the diamond once, the umpire <lb/>
calling Sam Green- <lb/>
ville comes up again only to get an <lb/>
other egg in her basket, and from <lb/>
out the game was nip and <lb/>
Each side comes up to the bat and <lb/>
as it come, nobody else be- <lb/>
able to make a Balls went <lb/>
in with such cannon force that <lb/>
they could not be batted and if one <lb/>
did happen to get struck it was <lb/>
allowed to touch the ground. The <lb/>
game ended to in favor of <lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
playing was all so good that <lb/>
it be hard to compliment one <lb/>
player more than another. Only <lb/>
one ball was muffed the whole <lb/>
game. We has <lb/>
the best catch, as was <lb/>
frequently applauded for the way <lb/>
fie took hot balls right off the bat. <lb/>
However, Potts ran down two foul <lb/>
flies on a single inning and took them <lb/>
in so handsomely that shouts <lb/>
up for him. Whenever a good play <lb/>
was made on either aide it was <lb/>
and best of <lb/>
kept up all time. It was a <lb/>
square, hard earned victory for <lb/>
and the visitors accepted <lb/>
defeat very gracefully, sending op <lb/>
three cheers for home boys, <lb/>
Washington boys were exceed <lb/>
and well behaved. <lb/>
The would be glad to <lb/>
see them in oar midst again. After <lb/>
the game Deputy Sheriff <lb/>
King took both dabs down to By-, <lb/>
for cream, and Stephens added <lb/>
liars to the treat from hie <lb/>
are out for the of <lb/>
Mr. George Blount to Alias <lb/>
Gainer, at Bethel on the morning <lb/>
of the 17th at o'clock. <lb/>
And a handsome card received <lb/>
announced that our handsome friend <lb/>
Mr. John H. Small will be married <lb/>
to Miss Isabella Carter, daughter of <lb/>
Col. and Mrs. R. W. Wharton at <lb/>
near Washington. The <lb/>
happy event will take place this <lb/>
evening at o'clock. <lb/>
Bow They Stood. <lb/>
At the meeting of Justices of the <lb/>
Peace of this county, held here on <lb/>
the first Monday of June, the editor <lb/>
went among this body of <lb/>
men of the county and asked <lb/>
etch one personally this <lb/>
is your choice for <lb/>
Many of them very readily expressed <lb/>
their choice while others preferred <lb/>
not to commit themselves. There <lb/>
were about Justices in the meet- <lb/>
but there being others present <lb/>
the question was asked to persons <lb/>
in all. The answers were, Blow <lb/>
Sugg non-committal <lb/>
Street Cleaning. <lb/>
The town authorities put in some <lb/>
good work on streets last week. <lb/>
They sent out a force of hinds and <lb/>
had all the weeds cut down and the <lb/>
streets nicely cleaned up. We walked <lb/>
around Street Commissioner <lb/>
Lang to view the improvements, and <lb/>
he said the are <lb/>
ed to keep the town clean. Let such <lb/>
good work continue, and let the <lb/>
have the co-operation of <lb/>
every in such matters. The <lb/>
premises should be kept clean as well <lb/>
as the <lb/>
All In fifty Lilies. <lb/>
Friday evening just before o'clock <lb/>
when the sun was blazing hot and <lb/>
the mercury towering up above <lb/>
the Washington telegraph operator <lb/>
asked over the wire if it was raining <lb/>
in Greenville. Getting a negative <lb/>
answer he said they were having u <lb/>
squall down there and it was <lb/>
raining hard. The Tarboro office <lb/>
heard this and said the policemen <lb/>
were out sprinkling the streets up <lb/>
there. These towns are just miles <lb/>
apart, and the above shows what <lb/>
there can be in short dis- <lb/>
Before o'clock <lb/>
and Greenville were both having <lb/>
storms. <lb/>
M. CONGLETON CO., <lb/>
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb/>
Kind They Are. <lb/>
If the census enumerators are go- <lb/>
to ask a man if he is in arrears <lb/>
for county paper, we hope some <lb/>
of them will put the question to them- <lb/>
selves several times over. We have <lb/>
not the list before us right now but <lb/>
can recall there of the Pitt county <lb/>
enumerators whose names had to <lb/>
scratched off the Reflector <lb/>
list for non-payment and placed <lb/>
on the dead beat roll. However, the <lb/>
present administration are not at all <lb/>
particular about the kind of men <lb/>
they put in office. <lb/>
Sear. <lb/>
Last Thursday Mr. Council <lb/>
eon, Chairman of the Board of <lb/>
Commissioners, sent a huge <lb/>
foot to the Reflector office. The <lb/>
colored who brought the foot <lb/>
said the bear was killed the field <lb/>
of Mr. Steve Dawson, just over the <lb/>
Lenoir county line, a man named <lb/>
Dick firing the fatal shot. <lb/>
A party was hunting the bear in the <lb/>
creek and pursued him so closely <lb/>
that he went up a ditch into the field. <lb/>
Several shots were fired in the chase <lb/>
but without effect until got <lb/>
up close enough while the bear was <lb/>
in the ditch to get a fair shot at him. <lb/>
The animal was very large, weighing <lb/>
pounds. <lb/>
Association. <lb/>
The next meeting of the <lb/>
Association will be held in the Court <lb/>
House on Saturday before the 2nd <lb/>
Sunday in July. Rev. J. L. Winfield <lb/>
will show the methods of teaching <lb/>
grammar to beginners. This subject <lb/>
ought to interest all of our teachers, <lb/>
for they have all experienced, great <lb/>
difficulty in getting beginners to <lb/>
the first principles of gram- <lb/>
mar. <lb/>
Miss Smith will continue <lb/>
the methods of teaching history, and <lb/>
give a practical outline lesson on the <lb/>
black board of Washington's Ad- <lb/>
ministration. Every teacher should <lb/>
post up on this period of history, and <lb/>
be prepared to answer any question <lb/>
that may be asked. Other topics <lb/>
will be discussed. If the teachers <lb/>
expect to have good schools they <lb/>
must get people interested in <lb/>
their work, and if they do not have <lb/>
interest enough themselves to attend <lb/>
these meetings and take part in the <lb/>
discussions, it will be readily inferred <lb/>
that the teachers are cot much con- <lb/>
about education, and are <lb/>
teaching for other considerations. <lb/>
We hope to see a large crowd present. <lb/>
Who are Valuable liens. <lb/>
The most valuable citizens in a <lb/>
community are those expend <lb/>
their money most liberally in <lb/>
new industries. Money can <lb/>
be loaned freely, by establishing <lb/>
these enterprises you give employ- <lb/>
to many who would have to look <lb/>
elsewhere for their support. Men <lb/>
who believe in advancing the inter- <lb/>
of a community and appropriate <lb/>
their money in that way are very <lb/>
valuable Southern- <lb/>
-DEALERS <lb/>
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoos and <lb/>
GROCERIES. <lb/>
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of new <lb/>
Spring and Summer Goods. <lb/>
I shall be glad to have my old friends and customers come to <lb/>
see us, assure them that we can sell the goods <lb/>
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for <lb/>
the spot cash. <lb/>
JOHN S. CONGLETON. <lb/>
N. C, January, 1890. <lb/>
WILEY BROWN.<lb/>
JAMES BROWN.<lb/>
T I<lb/>
T I<lb/>
T l<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 , <lb/>
-WHITE GOODS, LACES, EMBROIDERIES. ETC., ETC., <lb/>
-and will sell them all at very low figures.--------- <lb/>
-and will sell them all at very low figures.--------- <lb/>
GENTLEMEN GENTLEMEN<lb/>
---------We make a specialty of our line of--------- <lb/>
---------We make a specialty of our line of-------- <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, AND FURNISHING GOODS <lb/>
SHOES, HATS, AND GOODS <lb/>
------are complete.------ <lb/>
------are complete.------ <lb/>
Call and see us we guarantee all goods as represented. <lb/>
BROWN . . <lb/>
SOWN <lb/>
BROWN <lb/>
BROTHERS. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
BOTHERS, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb/>
That Man Stephens <lb/>
-------WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICE ASSORTMENT OF------- <lb/>
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb/>
Says there is never any doubt of his you entire satisfaction <lb/>
if you just give him a call when needing goods in his line. <lb/>
He keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods. He also <lb/>
keeps the best Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place. <lb/>
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
merchant, <lb/>
-------AND DEALER IN------- <lb/>
Hay and Fertilizers, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
ALFRED FORBES, <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following good <lb/>
that are not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to he and <lb/>
Pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds NOTIONS. CLOTHING. GEN <lb/>
MEN'S FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
GOODS DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. CROCKERY and QUEENS- <lb/>
WARE HARDWARE, PLOWS PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different <lb/>
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and <lb/>
Hair. Harness. Bridles and addles. <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
tot Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb/>
and Hall's Star at jobbers Prices. Lead and pure Lia- <lb/>
seed Oil Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber wood Pumps. Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
E. A. TAFT, <lb/>
Wishes to inform his friends and the public generally that he has <lb/>
bought out the Grocery establishment of T. R. Cherry, and with <lb/>
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb/>
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES <lb/>
At prices fully in keeping with the times. I keep Flour, <lb/>
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery, <lb/>
Glassware, Tobacco, Snuff, <lb/>
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market. <lb/>
You are invited to call. Remember the place, at stand. <lb/>
J. A. ANDREWS, <lb/>
sT C O <lb/>
a-.<lb/>
l P ST<lb/>
s S <lb/>
a B . <lb/>
. c O <lb/>
son v<lb/>
COP- <lb/>
if <lb/>
i B . <lb/>
KM <lb/>
So <lb/>
-.- a <lb/>
III <lb/>
z V-- <lb/>
J. <lb/>
Li <lb/>
5-8 . <lb/>
m O g <lb/>
H- <lb/>
Oil <lb/>
COBB, C C COBB <lb/>
N C <lb/>
T. H. GILLIAM <lb/>
Co. <lb/>
Cobb Bros., Gilliam <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
Mer chants, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
SOLICIT SHIPMENT of COTTON, <lb/>
We have had many years ex- <lb/>
at the business <lb/>
prepared to handle to <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb/>
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT- <lb/>
their supplies will And it to <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. Our stock is complete <lb/>
in all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb/>
SPICES, TEAS, Ac. <lb/>
always at Lowest Market Prices. <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A com <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our goods arc all bought and <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb/>
to run, sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. It. SCHULTZ. <lb/>
Greenville. N. <lb/>
UNDERTAKING. <lb/>
Having associated B. S. <lb/>
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb/>
are ready to serve the people in that <lb/>
capacity. All notes and accounts <lb/>
me for past services have been placed In <lb/>
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collect ion <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb/>
We keep on hand at all times a <lb/>
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all <lb/>
kinds and can furnish anything desire <lb/>
from the finest Case down to a <lb/>
Pitt county Pine Coffin. fitted <lb/>
up with all conveniences and can <lb/>
satisfactory services to all who <lb/>
us FLANAGAN <lb/>
Feb. 22nd. 1888. <lb/>
J. D. Jonathan White, <lb/>
Portsmouth, Va. Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
Bridgers White, <lb/>
High Street. <lb/>
Haifa of sugar will re- <lb/>
vive a lying fire, and will not send <lb/>
the girl to <lb/>
Democrat. <lb/>
Thia is not the information we want, <lb/>
Tell us how to quench the fiery liar <lb/>
and will be yours <lb/>
Leaf. <lb/>
him to revive the fire with the <lb/>
Gases that will quench <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb/>
J. D. Williamson, <lb/>
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN AN. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House <lb/>
WILL THE OF <lb/>
PM TONS, BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory ts well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times improved styles. <lb/>
Best material used In all work. All styles Springs are use, you 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 low as the <lb/>
Special Attention Given to <lb/>
o. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hops <lb/>
Solicit consignments of Cotton, <lb/>
nuts. Poultry, Eggs and all other <lb/>
Country Reference. Mer- <lb/>
chants and Farmers Bank, Portsmouth, <lb/>
Va. <lb/>
TYSON RAWLS, <lb/>
BANKERS, <lb/>
O. <lb/>
We have opened for the purpose or con- <lb/>
ducting a general <lb/>
Banking, and Collecting Sum <lb/>
Loan on Approved <lb/>
Collections solicited and remittance <lb/>
made promptly. <lb/>
The Tar River Transportation Company <lb/>
Alfred Forbes, Presides <lb/>
J. B. Cherry, <lb/>
J. S. Congleton, Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag <lb/>
The People's Lino for travel on <lb/>
River. <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, Wednesday <lb/>
and Friday at n. o'clock, a. it. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. at. <lb/>
Freights received dally and through <lb/>
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb/>
k Washington N, C.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00018991_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
THE <lb/>
EASTERN <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
OF SCHOOL LIFE. <lb/>
mm <lb/>
I remember. I remember. <lb/>
The happy days gone by. <lb/>
The merry times used to <lb/>
When the teachers not thy. <lb/>
I remember. <lb/>
The warn lovely <lb/>
then we popped seed. <lb/>
And a bat in that light. <lb/>
I I <lb/>
The Invitations sent. <lb/>
one which received. <lb/>
on mischief bent. <lb/>
I remember, I <lb/>
Late one in the spring. <lb/>
We were walking homeward by the <lb/>
brook <lb/>
Bating like everything. <lb/>
I remember, I remember, <lb/>
a of the past <lb/>
The the games, the parting kiss, <lb/>
let the past bury its past. <lb/>
MATHEMATICS. <lb/>
awl hi-voice was stern; <lb/>
V m must .-ct this in liter <lb/>
What time did that sophomore the <lb/>
sent in his card <lb/>
work was pressing, father, dear <lb/>
And his love for ii was great. <lb/>
lie leave went his way. <lb/>
About a quarter of <lb/>
a twinkle came in her bright blue <lb/>
eye, <lb/>
And her dimple Slew. <lb/>
sorely BO sin to tell that. <lb/>
For a quarter at eight is <lb/>
JESSE PRISON LIFE. <lb/>
TRUE TO HIS WORD. <lb/>
Good Advice Warn nod <lb/>
mi ii ii <lb/>
Giving advice is one thing, and feel- <lb/>
the effects of having it followed is <lb/>
quite another thing. Professor <lb/>
the well known violinist, <lb/>
says lie once had as a pupil a <lb/>
promising little fellow of some years, <lb/>
who would not study. As the hoy was <lb/>
with family for the <lb/>
country, where they . pass the <lb/>
summer, Mr. asked him what <lb/>
he should do there. <lb/>
.-aid the boy. shall play <lb/>
and and have a good <lb/>
hut suppose you made up <lb/>
your mind to got an hour earlier <lb/>
to You <lb/>
would have lime for sport and in <lb/>
the fall yen would be able to play <lb/>
those sonatas you <lb/>
The result of the conversation was <lb/>
that Otto Hung himself upon the neck <lb/>
of bis teacher, of whom he was very <lb/>
fond, and promised lo do what was <lb/>
asked of him. <lb/>
A few weeks later, as Mr. <lb/>
was driving through the mountains <lb/>
his family, he was one day de- <lb/>
so that the hotel where they <lb/>
to pass the night was reached at <lb/>
a late hour of the night <lb/>
The were poor, and <lb/>
the night was warm, and it was near <lb/>
morning before the travelers fairly got <lb/>
and i; Mr. <lb/>
that he scarcely closed his eyes before <lb/>
he was aroused by the doleful sound <lb/>
of a violin in a room overhead, where <lb/>
sonic one was at work upon an <lb/>
with which the was only <lb/>
too familiar. <lb/>
interminable hour he tossed <lb/>
about, hoping that the noise would <lb/>
cease; then he rose and dressed and <lb/>
hastened to the office of the hotel to <lb/>
protest. <lb/>
i -s, it is something of a <lb/>
the clerk answered, coolly, we <lb/>
are used to it here. The hoy baa played <lb/>
every morning this Bummer, and it <lb/>
was in the bargain when they took the <lb/>
rooms that he should he allowed to do <lb/>
It was evidently of no use to coin <lb/>
plain to the clerk, and Mr. <lb/>
relieved his mind by declaring that he <lb/>
should at least like to sec the player of <lb/>
the violin. <lb/>
you can see hint if you want <lb/>
the clerk said. has <lb/>
downstairs. You will out- <lb/>
side <lb/>
Away harried the guest, the more <lb/>
irritated by the way in which his re- <lb/>
monstrance had been received, and be- <lb/>
fore the door on the law n stood a trim <lb/>
little lad with his face turned away. <lb/>
u the demanded Mr. <lb/>
sternly, has been <lb/>
such a noise on the violin for an <lb/>
The boy turned and looked at him, <lb/>
at first with an expression of fright; <lb/>
then, cry of joyous recognition, <lb/>
little Otto tiling If impulsively <lb/>
into his teacher's arms. <lb/>
my dear Mr. he <lb/>
am so glad to see you I I have <lb/>
got up and played every morning just <lb/>
as I pr Youth's <lb/>
A i. <lb/>
pi . <lb/>
to elude ; <lb/>
the <lb/>
his mind. <lb/>
ii- Hill. <lb/>
Buffalo Bill's first performance in <lb/>
pretty w ell on <lb/>
counting up the receipts, the cashier <lb/>
discovered that over two thousand <lb/>
francs in spurious bank notes had been <lb/>
paid in at the ticket for which <lb/>
change had been given in good, <lb/>
hard cash. Col. Cody hurried <lb/>
off to the prefecture in great excite- <lb/>
to lodge his complaint. The <lb/>
civil functionary, after listening to <lb/>
his grievances, could nothing bet- <lb/>
to say than, <lb/>
like those What a <lb/>
nation <lb/>
ii. <lb/>
.; accused of set <lb/>
hoping thereby <lb/>
Professor I <lb/>
i i. d to examine <lb/>
i -I report on the state of <lb/>
lie found the man lying in <lb/>
bed. questions he put, j <lb/>
such as be was. where ho , <lb/>
lived, what he was called, the patient <lb/>
invariably <lb/>
don't <lb/>
Then Professor M----- look sixpence <lb/>
out of his purse and asked again how <lb/>
much it was <lb/>
don't was the answer, as <lb/>
before. <lb/>
The doctor then asked for the <lb/>
oner's purse-, out of which he took a i <lb/>
shilling, and once more the man do- <lb/>
be know its value; <lb/>
whereupon M------ put <lb/>
into the prisoner's purse while <lb/>
transferring shilling to his own. <lb/>
Here the patient interfered, <lb/>
doctor, you've made a mis- <lb/>
The imposture was laid <lb/>
Courier. <lb/>
DOGS AND THEIR TRICKS. <lb/>
Studying Trying to Com- <lb/>
n Sharpening <lb/>
An pamphlet on <lb/>
prepared by Dr. D. Saw- <lb/>
in, for live years physician at the <lb/>
Massachusetts state prison, contains <lb/>
authoritative statements concerning <lb/>
Jesse Pomeroy. Dr. <lb/>
public estimate of his char- <lb/>
as revealed in the newspaper ac- <lb/>
counts of his actions in prison, is with- <lb/>
out justification in fact. The <lb/>
boy <lb/>
however applicable they may have <lb/>
been to a former state, are <lb/>
able at the present time. The various <lb/>
stories circulated about his <lb/>
a up mice and are <lb/>
absolutely without <lb/>
Dr. gives a summary of the <lb/>
circumstances of Pomeroy s conviction <lb/>
of the expert opinions given as to <lb/>
his sanity at his trial for the murder <lb/>
f a boy years months old, and <lb/>
then <lb/>
entered the prison, his <lb/>
sentence having been commuted to <lb/>
solitary imprisonment for life. Sept. <lb/>
1877, when he was years old. Dur- <lb/>
a portion of his term he has been <lb/>
permitted many privileges and diver- <lb/>
as reading and painting. <lb/>
At time he evinced a strong desire <lb/>
to improve his mind, and he <lb/>
French, German Latin. His <lb/>
knowledge of the languages is, how- <lb/>
ever, only a smattering one. Of late <lb/>
he has taken a special liking to chem- <lb/>
a slight spark of inventive <lb/>
genius has been manifested in his en- <lb/>
to construct a hollow self <lb/>
sharpening lead pencil, in which he <lb/>
takes great pride. His paintings are <lb/>
hardly worth admiring, but he looks <lb/>
upon them as works of art, this fact <lb/>
demonstrating to the observer that his <lb/>
standard is not very high. <lb/>
doubt his intellect and <lb/>
moral sense must have improved to a <lb/>
certain degree, since he has not been <lb/>
associated with other prisoners, <lb/>
he hasn't passed through any stage of <lb/>
His first punishment in <lb/>
prison was four and a half days in a <lb/>
dark cell on Nov. for trying <lb/>
to escape, digging cement out of <lb/>
On the average be has received six and <lb/>
one-half each year, <lb/>
in mast eases for tampering with his <lb/>
cell structure in attempting to escape. <lb/>
He on one occasion was punished for <lb/>
to an once re- <lb/>
fusing to obey an and once <lb/>
writing an insolent letter to the war- <lb/>
Not very serious offenses these. <lb/>
lie baa never exhibited love <lb/>
to torture at any lime during his <lb/>
in prison, which seems rather <lb/>
strange were ho insane at the time of <lb/>
the murder. He is remarkably <lb/>
clever and quick to sec the drift <lb/>
of any conversation, logical clear <lb/>
in understanding, but notably self <lb/>
willed and persistent. His bodily <lb/>
health has been remarkably good, eat- <lb/>
and sleeping well, seldom com- <lb/>
plaining of his diet, and never asking <lb/>
for favors of extra rations. <lb/>
a recent interview he stated that j <lb/>
he thought his memory was very good <lb/>
in regard to sonic occurrences; as. for j <lb/>
instance, life in jail and his i <lb/>
in prison, but he had no rec- I <lb/>
of ever meeting Dr. i <lb/>
and only an indistinct remembrance of <lb/>
his <lb/>
One day, when off the savage island <lb/>
of of the Solomon group. Mr. <lb/>
and others, under the pro- <lb/>
of entries, Went to bathe in a <lb/>
pool. While in the water he saw a <lb/>
lingo butterfly coming slowly along <lb/>
the beach, and. hurrying out as he <lb/>
w is. he seized his net. dashed off, fell <lb/>
over stones, rose again, and just in <lb/>
lime to catch the fly. What a picture <lb/>
leave it to any ardent <lb/>
ha says, imagine my feel- <lb/>
He had the long <lb/>
lost and why <lb/>
should he not feel like Alexander on <lb/>
the or Hannibal at <lb/>
These butterflies are <lb/>
some nine inches across the wings. <lb/>
One is blue with a yellow- body, an- <lb/>
other is velvety black and metallic <lb/>
green. They excel in size, but other <lb/>
kinds wear equally magnificent <lb/>
and make the glorious forest <lb/>
beautiful. -Spectator. <lb/>
Heights. <lb/>
For practical purposes clouds are <lb/>
into four <lb/>
stratus, cirrus and nimbus. <lb/>
however, recognize many differ- <lb/>
of form in each class. <lb/>
gives these ton principal i- <lb/>
with their mean height in sum- <lb/>
mer at Cirrus <lb/>
wispy <lb/>
high, wispy or straited sheet <lb/>
cloud of feet; <lb/>
cumulus cloud at high <lb/>
feet; similar <lb/>
eh lid to the but at a low <lb/>
feet; <lb/>
lumpy feet; <lb/>
cumulus rocky feet <lb/>
at base; rain <lb/>
feet at base; nimbus <lb/>
rain 4.500 feet; stratus <lb/>
sheet York <lb/>
Telegram. <lb/>
A grand organ is being built at <lb/>
for the sanctuary of <lb/>
It is called a or- <lb/>
The chief characteristic of the <lb/>
instrument is the perfect imitation <lb/>
which it can produce of almost the <lb/>
whole orchestra, especially of the <lb/>
strings and wood wind. It has three <lb/>
with Cl notes, M <lb/>
pipes, divided into <lb/>
registers. Philadelphia Ledger. <lb/>
Mt Any Con Be Tour-lit Some <lb/>
Trick and He'll Never Forget It. <lb/>
Professor Burton, who has a troupe <lb/>
of clever dogs, is an old circus man. <lb/>
He used to be tumbler in the ring. <lb/>
There comes a day in the life of every <lb/>
circus tumbler when he must quit the <lb/>
business and go into something else. <lb/>
Burton went to training dogs. He has <lb/>
been with several companies, but is <lb/>
now on his own hook. He had a val- <lb/>
troupe of dogs once in NeW <lb/>
York, but somebody poisoned them. <lb/>
The professor's present family of <lb/>
dogs consists of Italian greyhounds, <lb/>
German poodles, a Russian poodle, a <lb/>
Russian spaniel, a <lb/>
spaniel, a a black dog that does <lb/>
the somerset act, and several others. <lb/>
is no said the <lb/>
taught a trick of <lb/>
some sort. Of course there are some <lb/>
dogs that learn quicker than others, <lb/>
and more tricks. I am always asked <lb/>
how I teach dogs these tricks. Well, <lb/>
there is no trick about it that I ever <lb/>
knew. It takes patience and <lb/>
kindness. I seldom use the <lb/>
whip, never in giving instructions. <lb/>
In fact, I have to be very cautious. <lb/>
The other day two of my family got <lb/>
into a squabble. I separated them, <lb/>
but with trouble. In doing so I had <lb/>
to cut one of them with the whip. <lb/>
That fellow is heartbroken. He has <lb/>
had the sulks ever since. He won't <lb/>
eat and he won't act. I've got to send <lb/>
him away for a few days. <lb/>
dog should be at least a year old <lb/>
training. I select different <lb/>
breeds for different acts. The <lb/>
hound is a natural reaper. The spaniel <lb/>
is a trickster. The is the clown. <lb/>
The black black-and-tan one <lb/>
is the acrobat. <lb/>
ordinary circumstances the <lb/>
average dog will learn his trick in five <lb/>
weeks. Then the test comes when he <lb/>
goes on the stage the first time. Talk <lb/>
about people having stage fright <lb/>
known dogs when brought on the <lb/>
stage for the first time make a break <lb/>
and run away and tremble like a <lb/>
frightened child. When they get used <lb/>
to it, though, they like the stage, and <lb/>
the more applause they get the better <lb/>
they act. You may think that is <lb/>
stretching it, but it is a fact that trick <lb/>
dogs do better if they arc applauded, <lb/>
and this is especially true if the <lb/>
comes from children. <lb/>
trick dogs know their places <lb/>
on the stage and take their cue from <lb/>
my looks. They are as eager for the <lb/>
show to begin as Children are eager for <lb/>
play. This. I think, is instinct, for <lb/>
anybody could go on the stage with <lb/>
them if he knew the words to speak <lb/>
and the motions to make, and <lb/>
would go through the same pro- <lb/>
gramme they go through with me. <lb/>
keep them in cages after the <lb/>
show. Every morning at I take <lb/>
them out for exercise. They are fed <lb/>
twice a the morning and after <lb/>
the show-at night. This troupe con- <lb/>
about fifteen loaves of bread and <lb/>
a large size market basket of cooked <lb/>
meat every day. <lb/>
never forget a trick. I laid <lb/>
off some months ago and sent <lb/>
to the country. I had a vacation of <lb/>
several and the dogs. <lb/>
When I returned to the stage with <lb/>
them they went through every part <lb/>
without a break. There is good feel- <lb/>
between the members of the pres- <lb/>
family. They arc healthy and <lb/>
full of fun. There isn't a cynic in the <lb/>
Chicago Tribune. <lb/>
Up. <lb/>
said tho mater as he <lb/>
set down the tray, came near lipping <lb/>
over that had your tipsy <lb/>
ding in. Tiptop weather, ain't <lb/>
said tho guest, you have <lb/>
no antipathy to a cold And <lb/>
when he went out tho waiter closed <lb/>
his hands on tho tips of his lingers. <lb/>
Detroit Free Press. <lb/>
I Little Children So. <lb/>
Little Maude a Sunday <lb/>
school Do all good children die <lb/>
young, ma <lb/>
has returned from the <lb/>
my child. They used <lb/>
to die young, but nowadays they go <lb/>
the stage instead and play Little <lb/>
Lord for and years. <lb/>
Chatter. <lb/>
While prospecting in the <lb/>
swamp, Georgia, a man killed an <lb/>
animal in the swamp of which natural <lb/>
history gives no account It resembled <lb/>
turtle in some respects, but was four <lb/>
one-half long and <lb/>
across. The back was covered <lb/>
with a hard, scaly substance, some- <lb/>
what like an alligator's bide, and the <lb/>
animal had a long, hooked bask <lb/>
v N <lb/>
to an <lb/>
.-. <lb/>
kn <lb/>
JAMES <lb/>
many i <lb/>
packages of consumed <lb/>
testify to its merits, likewise the <lb/>
imitations; beware of these, they <lb/>
the dirt and the clothing with k. <lb/>
of <lb/>
Sack <lb/>
and Whiskey <lb/>
cured at home <lb/>
pa in. <lb/>
of particulars sent <lb/>
B. M. M. D., Atlanta. Ga. <lb/>
Office Whitehall St. <lb/>
OPIUM, <lb/>
Craw for Odd hi r. <lb/>
An extensive leather dealer of Lou- <lb/>
don, traveling in this country, says <lb/>
that never before was there such a <lb/>
erase in London for queer leather as <lb/>
the present time. He <lb/>
kinds of skins, from elephant's to <lb/>
frog's, are pressed into service to meet, <lb/>
the demands of the fashionable. Some <lb/>
of our shops are stocked with a supply <lb/>
of fancy articles that made from <lb/>
the skins of all sorts of beasts, reptiles <lb/>
and fishes. These queer objects are <lb/>
displayed in the windows, where their <lb/>
appearance attracts wondering crowds. <lb/>
Made up into various are <lb/>
low pelican skins, lion and panther <lb/>
skin-;, buffalo skins, fish skins, monkey <lb/>
skins, snake skins, and the coverings <lb/>
of almost every living thing known. <lb/>
They are tanned and sometimes color- <lb/>
ed with blue, gray or red. I think it <lb/>
looks hideous to see pretty English <lb/>
girl walking along the street swinging <lb/>
a made of the scaly <lb/>
hide of a boa constrictor. But it's <lb/>
ion's you <lb/>
Ills Own Importation. <lb/>
Col Reynolds was wounded. His <lb/>
thigh bf a ball, and <lb/>
a grave and protracted <lb/>
the surgeons informed the brave <lb/>
Irishman that his must be <lb/>
in to save life. He was <lb/>
grit i the backbone, and protest- <lb/>
ed against this strongly. you <lb/>
cure the be pleaded. The <lb/>
geom -hook their heads, and one of <lb/>
them informed him that it would not <lb/>
be so bad after all. its he could wear a <lb/>
cork leg. a Cork leg I have <lb/>
he replied, with a grim smile, <lb/>
I think a great deal of it because <lb/>
I imported it imported it <lb/>
from In Herald. <lb/>
Administrator's Notice <lb/>
The having been appoint- <lb/>
ed by the Clerk of tho Superior Court of <lb/>
County as 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 authenticated for payment, <lb/>
on or before the day of May <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/>
This the -1st day of <lb/>
1800. <lb/>
T. C. <lb/>
of Wm. Mills <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb/>
before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb/>
county, on the 2nd of June, ism, <lb/>
as Executor to the Last and <lb/>
Bent of Rogers, deceased, <lb/>
notice Is hereby given to all persons In- <lb/>
to the estate to make Immediate <lb/>
payment, and to all creditors of said es- <lb/>
to present their claims properly <lb/>
to the undersigned before <lb/>
the 4th day of June. or this notice <lb/>
will be plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
R. <lb/>
of Harriett <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/>
Co. I have sold out to K. J <lb/>
p. The records are <lb/>
as to my becoming a free <lb/>
This April <lb/>
There is one pauper in every <lb/>
inhabitants in England <lb/>
and Wales. <lb/>
WAS IT A BIT OF <lb/>
iii a <lb/>
When a judge tells a prisoner that <lb/>
he has been tried by a jury of his <lb/>
peers, ho may correct, but the <lb/>
chances are. with the jury system run <lb/>
the way it is, that the average prisoner <lb/>
has more sense and intelligence than <lb/>
the average mail sitting on his case. <lb/>
Ho got to be a mighty man <lb/>
who is the peer of a <lb/>
Free Press. <lb/>
In Ocean <lb/>
Dr. has raised the question <lb/>
as to whether a corpse which to <lb/>
a very great depth is preserved <lb/>
or otherwise from putrefaction. <lb/>
According to his researches, published <lb/>
in the archives of tho Biological <lb/>
of Paris, putrefaction does not take <lb/>
place in decomposable substances sub- <lb/>
to a pressure of to at- <lb/>
These figures Correspond <lb/>
to a depth of to meters at <lb/>
sea. From these experiments it must <lb/>
not be concluded, according to Dr. <lb/>
that there is a total absence <lb/>
of putrefaction in tho greater depths <lb/>
of the sea. The curious <lb/>
fishes discovered in the Challenger <lb/>
and other expeditions appear to rise <lb/>
alter death, so that they are sometimes <lb/>
found on the surface, though, as a <lb/>
rule, they go to pieces, as the <lb/>
pressure diminishes long be- <lb/>
fore they reach tho air. Still, there is <lb/>
no proof that or abysmal <lb/>
micro do not exist; and, if <lb/>
so, they could decomposition in <lb/>
tho corpses of men m veil as in the <lb/>
dead banes of<lb/>
A in an Car m <lb/>
Man-He Like to Know More. <lb/>
plead guilty good deal of cu- <lb/>
said an old man with a rather <lb/>
florid face, kindly, twinkling eyes <lb/>
and friendly, good natured lines <lb/>
around the mouth. would give a <lb/>
good deal 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 seat op- <lb/>
little woman who must <lb/>
have been about yearn old. She was <lb/>
still very 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 had <lb/>
not grown stout with Her <lb/>
complexion was as clear and soft as a <lb/>
girl's, and the curves of her lips <lb/>
very gently fashioned. I was study- <lb/>
over the top of my paper tho <lb/>
graceful lines of her slender hands <lb/>
when a man seated himself by my <lb/>
side. I saw two spots of color sudden- <lb/>
appear in her checks, and then she <lb/>
quickly turned her head and looked <lb/>
steadily 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 his black <lb/>
hair was a fine 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 <lb/>
searching for something which had <lb/>
been lost. Apparently he saw nothing <lb/>
around him. <lb/>
Finally his dark eye rested on the <lb/>
little woman before him, and he look- <lb/>
ed hurriedly around as if ho intended <lb/>
to leave his seat. The blue eyes across <lb/>
the way were still looking out of tho <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 this was <lb/>
their first meeting in a long <lb/>
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/>
tho story, in chorus. <lb/>
She shot a glance at my <lb/>
neighbor and their eyes met He leaned <lb/>
forward took her hand, her <lb/>
face blushed like a school girl's. Ho <lb/>
moved over and took a seat next to <lb/>
her. years, heard <lb/>
him say, and then she blushed again. <lb/>
station was at Fifty-ninth <lb/>
street, but I past two more <lb/>
just to watch them. What was <lb/>
the romance I'll gives 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. disappointed <lb/>
tones. <lb/>
repeated No <lb/>
with deep conviction. <lb/>
wish I knew said the. <lb/>
Calendar and Weather <lb/>
for 1800. by R. Hicks, mailed <lb/>
to any address on receipt of a two-cent <lb/>
postage stamp. The Dr. J. II. <lb/>
Medicine Co. St. <lb/>
Physicians Confess. <lb/>
All honest, conscientious physicians <lb/>
who give B. B. <lb/>
a trial, admit Its superiority over <lb/>
other blood medicines. <lb/>
Dr W J Adair, Ga., <lb/>
regard B. B. B. as one of the best <lb/>
Mood <lb/>
Dr A II Nashville. <lb/>
reports of B. B. B. arc <lb/>
favorable, and its speedy action is truly <lb/>
Dr J W Rhodes, Ga., <lb/>
confess B. B. B is the best <lb/>
and quickest medicine for I <lb/>
have ever <lb/>
Dr S J Farmer, Ga., <lb/>
cheerfully recommend B. B, <lb/>
B. as a line tonic Its use <lb/>
cured an excrescence of the neck after <lb/>
other remedies effected no <lb/>
Dr C II Montgomery. Jacksonville, <lb/>
Ala., mother insisted on <lb/>
my getting B. B. B. for her rheumatism. <lb/>
as her case stubbornly resisted the usual <lb/>
remedies, she experienced immediate <lb/>
relief and her improvement has been <lb/>
truly <lb/>
A prominent physician who <lb/>
his name not given, patient <lb/>
of nine whoso case of tertiary syphilis <lb/>
was surely killing him, and which no <lb/>
treatment seemed to check, was entirely <lb/>
cured with about twelve bottles of B. B. <lb/>
B. He was fairly made up of skin and <lb/>
bones and <lb/>
Many people habitually endure a feel- <lb/>
of lassitude, because they think they <lb/>
have to. If would take Dr. J. II. <lb/>
Sarsaparilla this feeling of <lb/>
weariness would give place to vigor and <lb/>
vitality. <lb/>
liniment is in better repute or more <lb/>
widely known than Dr. J. II. <lb/>
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonder- <lb/>
remedy. <lb/>
Persona advanced in years feel young- <lb/>
and stronger, as well as freer from the <lb/>
infirmities of age, by I <lb/>
He Lean's Sarsaparilla. <lb/>
headache is the bane of many <lb/>
lives. 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 a <lb/>
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb/>
counter a malarious atmosphere <lb/>
den 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, sick <lb/>
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb/>
Dr J. II. Liver <lb/>
La Nature two in- <lb/>
photographs illustrating <lb/>
the difference between a volley fired <lb/>
with ordinary powder and with smoke- <lb/>
less powder. The pictures were taken <lb/>
at the moment when the commander <lb/>
gave the order, In the first a <lb/>
thick, black cloud of smoke is <lb/>
through which the gunners <lb/>
are barely perceptible. In tho second <lb/>
photograph only a thin haze is ob- <lb/>
which evidently would total- <lb/>
disappear a second or two and <lb/>
which probably would not be seen at <lb/>
all from a short distance. The gun- <lb/>
stand out in the background <lb/>
clearly and sharply defined. <lb/>
A Good Kink. <lb/>
Insurance <lb/>
this Mr. is a good risk, eh <lb/>
be better. <lb/>
he has sonic dangerous <lb/>
indeed. He'll never get hurt. <lb/>
, He's a York <lb/>
i Weekly. <lb/>
a. Technical. <lb/>
lucking action, that <lb/>
picture of Smith's. Must have used a <lb/>
lay figure, don't you think. <lb/>
no indeed How could <lb/>
he All the figures stand as straight <lb/>
as York Press. <lb/>
LEGAL NOTICES <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
All persons having claims against the <lb/>
estate of T. R. Cherry, arc hereby <lb/>
notified to exhibit the same on or before <lb/>
the 7th day of May. 1891, to 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 be <lb/>
plead in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
All persons indebted to said es- <lb/>
are notified to come prompt- <lb/>
and settle the same. <lb/>
John <lb/>
Ex. of l. U. Cherry, <lb/>
May 1st. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified as <lb/>
tor with the will annexed of of <lb/>
Mrs. Sallie E. Vick, on the 80th of <lb/>
April. I hereby notify all persons <lb/>
having claims against the said estate to <lb/>
present to me duly authenticated <lb/>
on or before the day of May. 1801. <lb/>
or this notice will plead in bar of their <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
All 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. K. Vick. <lb/>
Greenville, May 7th. <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-1 o'clock. <lb/>
M Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Temperance Hall Sunday at o'clock <lb/>
Salem 4th Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Chapel, Sunday at o'clock. <lb/>
Jones Chapel Saturday before -lib Sun- <lb/>
day at o'clock. <lb/>
Invited. <lb/>
If yon feel unable to do <lb/>
have that tired feeling, J. II. <lb/>
Sarsaparilla; it will make you <lb/>
bright active and vigorous. <lb/>
The most popular liniment, is the old <lb/>
reliable. Dr. II. Volcanic <lb/>
Oil Liniment. <lb/>
One of Dr. II. Little Liv- <lb/>
and Kidney taken at night be <lb/>
fore going to bed, will move the bowels; <lb/>
the will astonish you. <lb/>
Pimples, boils and other humors, are <lb/>
able to appear when the blood get <lb/>
Dr. J. II. Sarsaparilla <lb/>
I he best remedy. <lb/>
M A Hoists <lb/>
.-,.,, <lb/>
-Mi h. UM<lb/>
DETECTIVES <lb/>
Warned in load instruct <lb/>
hi .--, n, f--.-. <lb/>
Bureau Co. <lb/>
kit MS <lb/>
v ; Rn <lb/>
t i . . I i . I <lb/>
v. i . i ii T t <lb/>
PARK.- TONIC. <lb/>
i w nil <lb/>
1- and <lb/>
t r <lb/>
I ,. . . t the Ilia. <lb/>
I ft red n <lb/>
. s-n-l <lb/>
I r j-l <lb/>
i I<lb/>
. . I l.- hair. <lb/>
A western man is said to in- <lb/>
vented a machine for putting on wall <lb/>
paper. If the average housewife can <lb/>
operate the thing, do away with <lb/>
the average paper banger, blessed will <lb/>
be that man's name among women. <lb/>
Tho name is said to <lb/>
be derived from be- <lb/>
cause emigrants journeying from New <lb/>
England to tho west were obliged to <lb/>
bake their Indian meal cakes in the <lb/>
ashes of their camp fires. <lb/>
Keep a clasp knife knife with a <lb/>
handle different from those com <lb/>
i use for the sole purpose of peeling <lb/>
I onions, so avoid the flavor and <lb/>
j odor of them where it is neither es- <lb/>
I nor desired. <lb/>
Twelve cartloads of crushed eggs, <lb/>
sandwich papers and other rubbish <lb/>
I were taken from the White House <lb/>
grounds after the children's egg roll- <lb/>
j picnic on Easter Monday. <lb/>
An observing Georgia man claims <lb/>
; that the crow digs a hole buries in <lb/>
it the com which it secures in the <lb/>
field, holding tho supply until <lb/>
compels its use. <lb/>
The largest individual taxpayer <lb/>
Boston is John M. Sears, who <lb/>
; on worth of real es- <lb/>
and a personal estate of <lb/>
the French dramatist, start- <lb/>
ed oat as a surgeon's assistant and be- <lb/>
came a <lb/>
The of strings <lb/>
of Pianos, invented by u-. is one of the <lb/>
most Important improvements ever <lb/>
made, making the Instrument more rich- <lb/>
musical In tone, more durable, and <lb/>
less liable to get of tune. <lb/>
Both the Organs and <lb/>
Pianos excel el icily in that which is the <lb/>
chief excellence in musical <lb/>
quality of tone. Other things. <lb/>
though Important, are much less so than <lb/>
this. An Instrument with unmusical <lb/>
tones cannot he good. <lb/>
of new styles, introduced this <lb/>
season, sent free. <lb/>
BOSTON NEW CHICAGO <lb/>
ROOT BEER <lb/>
I net . . -.-. <lb/>
i .,; ; <lb/>
i .---j- <lb/>
Delirious -rd it. <lb/>
A -x Ore err Am <lb/>
C . PHILADELPHIA. <lb/>
ii .-. . <lb/>
.-; I<lb/>
To re <lb/>
Malaria, t <lb/>
the sate certain <lb/>
WHAT <lb/>
SCOTT'S <lb/>
EMULSION <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
CONSUMPTION <lb/>
SCROFULA <lb/>
BRONCHITIS <lb/>
COLDS <lb/>
Wasting <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 Norwegian Cod <lb/>
liver Oil, tho potency of both <lb/>
being largely increased. It is used <lb/>
by all over the world. <lb/>
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb/>
Sold by all <lb/>
Chemists. <lb/>
RALEIGH <lb/>
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb/>
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb/>
Greenville N C. <lb/>
We have the the easiest <lb/>
Chair ever used in the art. towels, <lb/>
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed <lb/>
In every instance. Call be con <lb/>
Ladies wailed on at their <lb/>
Cleaning clothes a <lb/>
Notice <lb/>
; PREPARATION for baldness <lb/>
; falling out of hair, end eradication of <lb/>
j dandruff is before the public. <lb/>
Among the many who have it with <lb/>
i wonderful success, I refer you to <lb/>
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb/>
lo the truth of my assertion <lb/>
I Eli. Josephus Latham, Greenville. <lb/>
Mn. O. <lb/>
i Greene, <lb/>
Any one wishing to give it a trial <lb/>
I the above named complaints can procure <lb/>
I It from at my place of business, <lb/>
I 1.50 per bottle. Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb/>
Greenville. March 14th. C . <lb/>
Hall l WILMINGTON B. K. <lb/>
and branches Condensed Schedule <lb/>
SOUTH. <lb/>
No No <lb/>
A pi. 20th, daily Fast Mail, daily <lb/>
daily ex Sun. <lb/>
12,80 pm pm C <lb/>
Ar -it; am <lb/>
X. Pres. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
Hon. K. PM, <lb/>
Bank <lb/>
Max Soc. N. <lb/>
Assembly.<lb/>
Dr. H. B. Director N. <lb/>
Station. <lb/>
Short <lb/>
Hanking, <lb/>
Penmanship and Mathematics are <lb/>
in the Col- <lb/>
Send of terms. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
MEN ONLY <lb/>
Ar pin <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
am <lb/>
Av <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
LOST or MANHOOD <lb/>
n of and Hind, <lb/>
Ex--et n OM <lb/>
laMe foils- flaw <lb/>
la a Car. <lb/>
Men Hi ard i i then.<lb/>
CO., N. V.<lb/>
.- <lb/>
i I <lb/>
; k. A. Ki <lb/>
C. It. N. Ii. <lb/>
Edwards IN, <lb/>
Printers and Binders, <lb/>
RALEIGH, O- <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb/>
the Slate, and solicit, orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
WEDDING STATIONERY R E A Y <lb/>
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb/>
BLANKS MAGISTRATES AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
us your orders. <lb/>
EDWARDS <lb/>
AND <lb/>
RALEIGH. N. C. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
and all business in the V. S. <lb/>
Patent office or the Courts attended tn <lb/>
for Moderate Foes. <lb/>
We are opposite the. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged Patents and <lb/>
can obtain patents less time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
model or drawing i- -cut we <lb/>
advise as to free of charge, <lb/>
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb/>
Patents. <lb/>
We refer, here, to Master. Hie <lb/>
Snot of the Money Order and to <lb/>
Is of the C s. Patent For <lb/>
terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in your own Stale, <lb/>
address, A. Snow A Co., <lb/>
Washington, D. C <lb/>
FREE. <lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
daily daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun.<lb/>
Magnolia am M <lb/>
Warsaw 4-s <lb/>
i OBI<lb/>
Ar Selma <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson pm pm <lb/>
A, Rocky Mount<lb/>
Tarboro in am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb/>
eaves Halifax 8.87 P. M. arrives Scot- <lb/>
and Neck at 1.88 P. M. 6.00 <lb/>
Returning leaves Greenville 7.20 <lb/>
A. M. Halifax at 10.10 A. M. <lb/>
don 1.80 P M., daily except Sunday. <lb/>
On Monday, and Friday <lb/>
Local Freight leaves Weldon 10.30 a m <lb/>
Halifax 11.30 a m. Scotland Neck 2.00 p <lb/>
in. Arriving 5.10 p m. Re- <lb/>
turning, leave Greenville Tuesday, <lb/>
Thursday and Saturday s m., <lb/>
land Neck 1.00 p m. Halifax p in. <lb/>
Arriving Weldon 4.00 p in. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro. N via <lb/>
Raleigh R. R. daily Sun- <lb/>
OS I M, Sunday I M, arrive <lb/>
Williamston. N C. P M, P M. <lb/>
Returning leaves Williamston, C, dally <lb/>
except Sunday. A M. Sunday A <lb/>
M. arrive Tarboro. N C, A M, <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb/>
except Sunday, GOO A M. <lb/>
rive N C, AM. Re- <lb/>
turning leaves S C AM, <lb/>
arrive N C. A at <lb/>
Train on leaves Rock v <lb/>
Monet at P M, in rives Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M. Nashville <lb/>
M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at <lb/>
on A M Returning leave <lb/>
ton A M, and P. M. <lb/>
at Warsaw with Nos. And <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson <lb/>
is No. Northbound is <lb/>
No. BO. Daily except Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. will stop only <lb/>
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection at <lb/>
Weldon for all points North daily. All <lb/>
via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb/>
day via Ray Line. <lb/>
Trains make close connection for <lb/>
points North via Richmond and Wash <lb/>
All trains run solid between <lb/>
ton and Washington, have Pullman <lb/>
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb/>
JOHN F. DIVINE. <lb/>
General <lb/>
I. R. Transportation <lb/>
P. M. Passenger <lb/>
ii iii. . i <lb/>
. Warranted.,, <lb/>
.,., <lb/>
J. and can. M I <lb/>
h OB <lb/>
our <lb/>
Samples- Them nU <lb/>
All <lb/>
m i. t. <lb/>
It. hold. <lb/>
I e ere w. pay all <lb/>
v. u all. If Ilka It, ax, lo work fur <lb/>
M I-. per week and upward,. <lb/>
. Co. I <lb/>
of MM <lb/>
i- <lb/>
. m. <lb/>
I It.- Our la. <lb/>
unequal, d. and lo our <lb/>
trill <lb/>
in <lb/>
ton at once tan make of <lb/>
I. to u <lb/>
the entail end of <lb/>
The tea . of n <lb/>
of <lb/>
, make mm. . ., <lb/>
P i i. Um, <lb/>
Till, <lb/>
tr <lb/>
r rice of ;. i r <lb/>
-S W t, i. r. i <lb/>
j. <lb/>
GRAND <lb/>
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair. <lb/>
KNOW THYSELF. <lb/>
A on <lb/>
the Error, of I J <lb/>
OF <lb/>
iT <lb/>
MISERIES<lb/>
for Work, lb. or<lb/>
iii S <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
the Opera House, at which place <lb/>
I have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
everything in my line <lb/>
CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chairs. <lb/>
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures <lb/>
for work outside of my shop <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb/>
ft EDMONDS <lb/>
PHOTO-ENGRAVING- <lb/>
IT FATE TO <lb/>
and cuts hotels, factor, <lb/>
Sec, made to order from <lb/>
stamp <lb/>
Metropolitan Press <lb/>
New York City.<lb/>
Atlantic N. C. Railroad <lb/>
Hi. <lb/>
A. M. June <lb/>
East. <lb/>
No. SO <lb/>
Ar. Ar. <lb/>
p in n a in <lb/>
I Mi 10.- <lb/>
Kinston <lb/>
Hew Barns ft <lb/>
s pm City am <lb/>
East. Going <lb/>
No l. No. t <lb/>
I Mixed Ft. ft Mixed Ft. <lb/>
station. Pass Train <lb/>
am p tn <lb/>
Best's KID <lb/>
Grange <lb/>
Fall Creek <lb/>
Kinston<lb/>
Dover <lb/>
Creek <lb/>
lion <lb/>
Clark's<lb/>
ft <lb/>
Croatan ft <lb/>
ii Havelock<lb/>
Atlantic <lb/>
ft <lb/>
Atlantic Hotel <lb/>
pm s m <lb/>
Saturday, <lb/>
t Monday, Wednesday and Friday. <lb/>
connect with Wilmington <lb/>
Weldon Train bound North, leaving <lb/>
a. m. and with Rich- <lb/>
ft Danville Train West, <lb/>
p. in. <lb/>
Train II connects with Richmond <lb/>
Danville Train, arriving at <lb/>
p. in., and with Wilmington and <lb/>
Weldon Train North st p. m <lb/>
Train Wilmington <lb/>
Weldon Through Train, leaving <lb/>
Goldsboro at 10.00 n. in and with Rich- <lb/>
Danville Through Freight Train <lb/>
Goldsboro st <lb/>
Cure. <lb/>
A house old <lb/>
in more year. A <lb/>
pure <lb/>
A pt In <lb/>
and by mail at cA <lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
to <lb/>
Ho <lb/>
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb/>
in the way of helping the afflict- <lb/>
ed, calling on or addressing the <lb/>
above named you can procure a <lb/>
bottle Preparation that is invaluable <lb/>
for eradicating dandruff causing the <lb/>
hair I be Soft <lb/>
glossy, only r three application a <lb/>
a common hair <lb/>
is all titled after th <lb/>
for a <lb/>
the Try a bottle <lb/>
convinced, <lb/>
ALFRED <lb/>
Barber, <lb/>
N. G. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>