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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 30 July 1890</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18900730</dc:date>
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                <p>
I S Sc <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
-----Solicits your patronage for------ <lb />
purpose ill be lo please every reader. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
Department that run be no- <lb />
where In Our work always <lb />
gives satisfaction.<lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. IX. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JULY <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
D. J. <lb />
Democratic I the end prospective de-I <lb />
or the plant, season. Just here it may be well to give <lb />
whether propitious or unfavorable, J ,,,. practice in sun-curing. If the <lb />
strength the soil and amount of crop too rich and coarse for blights <lb />
material applied. On then it may be good polity to core it <lb />
soils, in ordinary seasons,, sweet. To do this properly, erect <lb />
the first topping should be from ten j at or the barns, on <lb />
j to thirteen which place the tobacco as soon as <lb />
blights. For sweet fillers from But some, in order to obviate <lb />
For Judicial District <lb />
JOHN K. WOODARD, <lb />
of Wilson. <lb />
PUT THE GLASS. <lb />
STATE <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
M. Holt, <lb />
of <lb />
of I. <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
IV. of Wake. <lb />
of Wayne, <lb />
of Instruction <lb />
M. Finger of <lb />
Attorney F. David- <lb />
ion, Of <lb />
Justice- A. S. of <lb />
Associate Clark, of <lb />
Joseph J. Davis, of <lb />
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb />
Alfonso C of Burke. <lb />
SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
II. Brown, of <lb />
Second Philips. <lb />
I Hold on. my friend, put down the glass <lb />
Else it may shortly come to pass <lb />
j Your every farthing will be gone, <lb />
i And not a house to call your own. <lb />
Your wife will be ii drunkard's wife. <lb />
Your children's days spent in strife, <lb />
dearest friend will turn his back <lb />
And mental power begin to <lb />
Ami all the places you loved best <lb />
You'll seek, but find in them no rest. <lb />
. I can drink or let alone. <lb />
The to quit is all own. <lb />
To take a drink or two each day <lb />
Will lead no gentleman astray. <lb />
I deeply scorn the man <lb />
Who won't resist a thing he can. <lb />
i As for me. with greatest ease. <lb />
I Can drink or not. just which I <lb />
ye.- I know the tale's not <lb />
For other men, as firm as you. <lb />
to ten, and for dark, rich shipping <lb />
from eight lo nine leaves <lb />
. As the season advances reduce the <lb />
I number of leaves accordingly; re- <lb />
j that quality more than <lb />
regulates returns.<lb />
Many devices have been resorted <lb />
to in order to lessen the number and <lb />
mitigate the ravages of the horn <lb />
the hauling of green tobacco, <lb />
place the scaffolds in or near the to- <lb />
But ii is never safe to <lb />
scaffold tobacco away from the <lb />
for after the leaf is partially dry it <lb />
ought never to be caught out in I lie <lb />
rain; which may happen if the <lb />
co is placed on scaffolds away from <lb />
the barn. When rain threatens, that <lb />
on scaffolds near the barn may very <lb />
worm, but the lack of general and i be placed out of danger, but not <lb />
continued efforts from year to year afar off. <lb />
has brought partial relief. Bat the flue-cured fillers command <lb />
veins they come in great numbers, nearly or quite as much cured. <lb />
land despite the best efforts of the <lb />
planter, seriously damage his crop. <lb />
j the next year they are few, <lb />
land give him no trouble. It is <lb />
nature of this insect to raise at least <lb />
I two broods during the year. The <lb />
hawk-moth or tobacco fly usually <lb />
I makes appearance in Virginia in <lb />
the risk is much less. <lb />
To cure fillers with flues, let the <lb />
tobacco be placed in the barn as soon <lb />
as cut, and raise the heat in the barn <lb />
lo eighty-five or ninety degrees Fall- <lb />
and then go about other bus- <lb />
kindle fires in the flues every <lb />
morning raising heat to ninety <lb />
Have said the same, and yet they fell. <lb />
And why or when they knew full well. <lb />
Th best to never touch the <lb />
It then can never come to Ban <lb />
That loving hearts for yon will wring <lb />
Because you serve the whiskey king. <lb />
Beware strong drink, there is no dearth <lb />
I Of aching hearts in all the earth; <lb />
bean <lb />
It is an adder in the grass. <lb />
Think twice, my friend, put down tin <lb />
I'LL TRUST <lb />
MM. II. II. WILLIAMS. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus, for I know <lb />
That He looks on me below <lb />
all the I do. <lb />
Whether they be good or no. <lb />
I rust Jesus. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus, <lb />
With the keeping Of soul. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus, though I've been <lb />
In the iron jaws of <lb />
But no more I need to <lb />
promised to be near. <lb />
I'll trust or wrong. <lb />
Whether life be short or <lb />
And His holy counsel heed. <lb />
For He'll help me need. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus, that I may <lb />
Follow In the narrow way. <lb />
To the realms of endless bliss. <lb />
Where that Holy City is. <lb />
I'll trust Jesus I die. <lb />
Then to glory I shall fly, <lb />
And with all the loved and <lb />
I shall have a peaceful rest. <lb />
Tobacco Culture. <lb />
Third O. Connor, of <lb />
son. <lb />
Whit <lb />
. of <lb />
Chatham. <lb />
Sixth T. Boykin, of <lb />
Sampson. <lb />
Seventh C. of <lb />
F. of I <lb />
Iredell. And liquors caused the greater put <lb />
Ninth F. Craves, of I Turn from strong drink with all your <lb />
Tenth of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp, Of <lb />
Twelfth Hist II. <lb />
of <lb />
IN <lb />
Sena It. Vance, of Meek- j <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of North-; <lb />
House of District <lb />
Thomas G. skinner, of <lb />
Second P. Cheatham col. <lb />
Third W. of <lb />
Fender. <lb />
Fourth of <lb />
Nash. <lb />
Fifth W. of <lb />
Forsyth. <lb />
Sixth Rowland of <lb />
of Rowan. i <lb />
Eighth W. H. A. Cowles <lb />
Ninth G. of Hen- <lb />
GOVERNMENT. <lb />
Court A. <lb />
A. K. Tucker. <lb />
Register of II. James. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. I,. Ward. j <lb />
B. Harris. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb />
man. Hoofing. C. V, Newton. <lb />
Flanagan, T. E. Keel. <lb />
Board of <lb />
Chairman J. S. Congleton and J. D. , <lb />
Cox. <lb />
Public School <lb />
ding. <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
Stands Keener <lb />
C James. <lb />
I. Greene. <lb />
B. Lang. <lb />
Chief Policed-T. Smith. I <lb />
Police- R. Moore. <lb />
Con Ward. T. A. <lb />
Ward. W. II. Smith, and R. <lb />
Greene. 3rd Ward, M. R. Lang and <lb />
Allen Warren; 4th Ward. Joe col. <lb />
CHURCHES. <lb />
First and Third <lb />
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. <lb />
D. D., Rector. <lb />
Sunday, morn- <lb />
and night. Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
second and fourth <lb />
Sundays. morning and night. <lb />
Meeting Wednesday night. Rev. <lb />
A. P. Hunter. Pastor. <lb />
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A A. <lb />
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb />
day night after the 1st and 3rd Sunday at <lb />
Masonic A. L. Blow. W. M., <lb />
G. L. Sec. <lb />
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb />
every 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb />
sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, II. f. <lb />
Covenant Lodge. No. I. O. O. F. <lb />
meets every Tuesday night. J. A. h. <lb />
Tucker, N. G. <lb />
insurance Lodge. No. K. of II., <lb />
meets first and third Friday night. <lb />
D. D. D. <lb />
Pitt Council, No. II. meets <lb />
night. C. A. White. C. <lb />
meets <lb />
the first in January. April. July <lb />
and J. <lb />
E. A. Move, Secretary. <lb />
Greenville Alliance meets Saturday <lb />
before the second Sunday in each <lb />
o'clock, r M. in Hall. <lb />
Fernando Ward, President; D. S. Spain. <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
the month of The eggs de-1 degrees, and then leave as before, <lb />
posited the first moths hatch to do this for lour or <lb />
in from five to days larva- of days until the tobacco <lb />
IS I <lb />
ll the tobacco has <lb />
be necessary to <lb />
j worms. The worm <lb />
skin twice it gets its growth. sap, it, may <lb />
The growing stage of the Worm lasts continue the yellowing process from <lb />
from twenty-fire to thirty days, and to <lb />
after it hue growth it When the leaves have a <lb />
gorges a few days longer, and <lb />
then crawls or burrows into the <lb />
i ground, where it soon passes into <lb />
; pupa and alter some twenty- <lb />
or twenty-live days from <lb />
I time of its crawling into the ground <lb />
I the pupa sends forth a to lay <lb />
more and hatch out more worms. <lb />
. moth is capable id laying on an <lb />
average two hundred eggs. So that <lb />
I tor moth in May we may <lb />
I expect at least one hundred <lb />
i worms of the brood; and if none <lb />
of these are destroyed, but arc allow <lb />
led to change to moths, and <lb />
latter to raise a horde worms, what <lb />
mottled, piebald appearance, run the <lb />
heat to one hundred degrees let <lb />
it remain at that point for three or j <lb />
four hours. Then raise the heat two <lb />
and a half degrees an hour until one <lb />
hundred and thirty is reached. Keep I <lb />
the heat this until the leaf is <lb />
cured, and then move up gradually <lb />
to one hundred an-, seventy or one <lb />
hundred and eighty, and thus cure <lb />
stalk and stem. If cared properly, . <lb />
there will be much of the <lb />
while the remained will run <lb />
from a bright, dapple to a cherry red. <lb />
heavy and nothing <lb />
wonder that the second brood some-1 which does not possess size and sub- <lb />
times appears in such countless I stance is fit for this grade, may be. <lb />
numbers as to defy all efforts to de- cured with flues than in any <lb />
then before they have rained j other way. Smoke from the open <lb />
I the crop. moth ought to be wood objectionable, and <lb />
I destroyed as they appear; and this the flue you get the heat, which is all <lb />
maybe done to great extent by is wanted, without the smoke. <lb />
a few drops of sweetened Co- Curing with open wood fires belongs <lb />
i halt is a into the past, and none but the old <lb />
flowers of the Petunia. j will continue the old <lb />
i or Jamestown weed, which because they know no <lb />
will give them their final quietus. J Taste and fashion are against smoke, <lb />
I But this hunt for the moth is and nothing else is needed to banish <lb />
POST OFFICE. <lb />
Hours for all business A. <lb />
M. to p. M. All mails distributed <lb />
on arrival. The general deliver will <lb />
be kept open for minutes at night <lb />
after the Northern mail is distributed. <lb />
Northern Mall arrives daily <lb />
at P. M. and departs at <lb />
Old Sparta and Falkland <lb />
mall arrives daily at <lb />
M. and depart at P. M. , <lb />
Washington, Latham s A <lb />
Roads, and <lb />
malls arrives daily at <lb />
P. M. and departs at A. M. <lb />
Ridge Ban s <lb />
Ferry, Johnson's Mills. <lb />
and Pullet arrive , <lb />
and Saturday at A. M. and <lb />
departs at <lb />
Vanceboro, Black Jack and <lb />
mails arrives every Saturday at I. M <lb />
and depart. M <lb />
Rev. X D. Hunter's <lb />
Appointments, <lb />
1st Sunday and <lb />
and 4th Sundays, morning and <lb />
night, Greenville Baptist church, also <lb />
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. <lb />
3rd Sunday, morning and night. Beth- <lb />
el Baptist <lb />
A VALUABLE AND <lb />
On the of Topples- Priming. Cur- <lb />
and Handling the Weed. <lb />
Henderson Gold Leaf.<lb />
this, head there is a wide <lb />
of opinion. Breaking Off the <lb />
small and inferior leaves the plant <lb />
near the ground is called <lb />
which operation is done along with <lb />
the if done at all. There <lb />
are advantages for and against prim- <lb />
but all resort to <lb />
out the bud and adjacent small <lb />
leaves with the thumb and linger. <lb />
Some contend that pulling off the <lb />
lower leaves saps the plants and re- <lb />
growth, if the weather is dry. <lb />
That permitting lower leaves lo <lb />
remain on the stalk protects the up- <lb />
per ones from sand and grit, makes <lb />
them cleaner and therefore more <lb />
able. Sand grit are the terror of <lb />
the tobacco buyer. On the other hand <lb />
it s contended by some that by <lb />
off the lower leaves, which are <lb />
generally useless, the remaining leaves <lb />
receive more nutriment and contain <lb />
more wax, oil and gum, and that the <lb />
lower leaves harbor worms and make <lb />
the worming process more tedious. <lb />
It is best to wait until a <lb />
number of plants begin to but-on <lb />
for seed before commencing to top. <lb />
Topping should be the work <lb />
and trusty who <lb />
can top, leaving any required number <lb />
of leaves on plant without counting. <lb />
The secret of longer a secret <lb />
to the that the topper <lb />
soon learns to know that counting the <lb />
bottom leaf and the leaf that hangs <lb />
over it in the third tier going upward <lb />
make nine leaves, including both top <lb />
bottom leaves. Fixing this in his <lb />
mind, the topper has only to add lo <lb />
or deduct from this index leaf mark <lb />
nine, to leave any desired number <lb />
of leaves on each plant with certainty <lb />
and without counting. Young man, <lb />
if don't know how, get some old <lb />
to show you. Topping, you <lb />
will find, is a slow business if you <lb />
have to count the leaves on all the <lb />
plants lopped. If the plants are not <lb />
then the leaf <lb />
must be fixed by the eye. looking up- <lb />
ward for the leaf in the third tier, <lb />
which hangs over it, to catch the cue <lb />
as If priming is done don't <lb />
err in pulling off too many leaves. <lb />
No regular rule can be given, so the <lb />
planter most judge for himself. The <lb />
reason given for waiting until many- <lb />
plants are ready to be topped is <lb />
mainly that more plants may ripen <lb />
together and be ready for the knife <lb />
at the same time. This is an ad- <lb />
vantage that applies with strong <lb />
force to all tobacco intended for flue <lb />
curing. <lb />
The number of leaves to be left on <lb />
each plant varies according to the <lb />
time toe work is done early or late <lb />
general, and if it were some would <lb />
escape. But if every planter would <lb />
wage a war of extermination on the <lb />
Brat of <lb />
a thing rarely would <lb />
never appear in such unconquerable <lb />
hordes later in the season. The <lb />
j suckers should be pulled off <lb />
week as they appear, and ought <lb />
; never to be permitted to get over two <lb />
inches long; for it permitted to grow <lb />
they abstract much that would <lb />
otherwise go lo perfect a rich, silky- <lb />
leaf. planter need expect a crop <lb />
of fine gr; de who does not pull off <lb />
the suckers while small, and prevent <lb />
the horn-worms from riddling the <lb />
leaves. <lb />
Do not be in a hurry to begin cut- <lb />
ting your tobacco until it is ripe, <lb />
and enough fully and uniformly ripe <lb />
to fill a barn. A thin butcher or <lb />
shoe knife, well sharpened, and wrap- <lb />
with a soft cloth around the <lb />
handle and extended an inch along <lb />
the blade, will do the work effectually <lb />
and be easy to the hand. Try it. <lb />
Put knives into the hands of <lb />
cutters only, men who know <lb />
ripe tobacco, will select plants <lb />
uniform in color and texture, and <lb />
the old and the new I <lb />
mode. If a dark color is desired, <lb />
which is not so fashionable as for- <lb />
it can be secured as easily <lb />
Over fines as over wood fires. But <lb />
the world wants tobacco, and <lb />
this can be produced certainly <lb />
with the line than in any other way. ; <lb />
Besides, by the Hue the leaf is cured <lb />
sweet free from smoke or soot. <lb />
A skillful can produce the <lb />
Colors most in demand, and by the <lb />
flue better, and with more certainty, <lb />
than in any other way. The main I <lb />
object of the author is to induce <lb />
planters, who have never used flues, <lb />
to try them for all grades. <lb />
There are two modes for j <lb />
low with charcoal and <lb />
the other with flues. The first is the j <lb />
primitive mode, but is fast giving <lb />
place to the latter, which is cheaper <lb />
and efficient, and is being adopted by <lb />
most of our best planters. The chief <lb />
agent in mode is dry. <lb />
curing expel the sap from the <lb />
leaves, stems and stalks of the plants, <lb />
and catch the color, yellow, next to I <lb />
Nature's color, green, and to fix it in I <lb />
This is the science of curing <lb />
tobacco. are several; <lb />
will cut no other. Have your sticks all I prismatic of green j <lb />
ready in the field, and placed in piles the middle the prism. By the <lb />
a stick vertically j process of nature, leaves in <lb />
in the ground over each pile that they j in color from first to j <lb />
may be more easily found when yellow, then orange, then red finally I <lb />
wanted. Pine sticks, rived throe all color as they were go to decay. <lb />
fourths of an inch by one and one- j Now, a quick dry heat, so regulated <lb />
fourth inch, and lour and one-half j as to dry out the leaf and catch <lb />
feet long, drawn smooth, best. yellow, and fix it, is the <lb />
Start together two cutters and one I and of curing fancy bright tobacco. <lb />
carrying <lb />
j two rows each and the stick holder <lb />
walking between them. The cutter <lb />
I takes hold of the plant with his left <lb />
hand the top near where the knife <lb />
A barn containing seven hundred <lb />
sticks of green tobacco, six medium <lb />
plants on each stick, holds <lb />
the tobacco four thousand five Iran <lb />
I red to five thousand pounds of water <lb />
enters the stalk; with his right ho which must be expelled in from <lb />
splits the stalk down the center five to one hundred hours. <lb />
serving to guide the knife so as not Charcoal pro n open, dry <lb />
to sever the to within three i heat, well suited for the purpose; but j <lb />
; inches of the point he intends to its preparation is costly, its use <lb />
I sever the stalk the hill; and dirty and laborious and it <lb />
posits a black dust on the loaf that <lb />
is objectionable. With flues construct I <lb />
ed with furnace and the wood <lb />
is burned as cut in the forest or <lb />
field, and the whole process of curing <lb />
is less laborious, and j <lb />
the tobacco cured therewith free from j <lb />
dust, and has a sweeter flavor. The; <lb />
flue process possesses so many ad van- i <lb />
over all other modes of curing <lb />
tobacco, is so safe, if properly con- <lb />
and free from smoke, that <lb />
when its merits become better known <lb />
it will come into general use and <lb />
all other modes. <lb />
The first step in coring is called the <lb />
steaming or process. Me- <lb />
tobacco will require from twenty <lb />
four to thirty hours steaming at about <lb />
ninety degrees to yellow sufficiently; j <lb />
but tobacco with more or less sap, <lb />
larger or smaller, will a longer <lb />
or shorter time to yellow. Here the i <lb />
of the curer must be his <lb />
guide. Inexperienced planters would <lb />
do well to procure the services of an <lb />
expert curer, if they have tobacco <lb />
suitable for fine yellow. The planter <lb />
saves in value of bis crop <lb />
many times the money paid to the <lb />
curer, and besides, by close attention, <lb />
he may learn in one season to cure <lb />
well himself. Theory alone, however <lb />
good, and directions, however minute <lb />
I will not do here, but it is practice <lb />
J that must qualify one to cure well. <lb />
j When it is remembered that no two <lb />
; plants arc exactly alike, no two <lb />
I precisely similar in every particular <lb />
I that the weather may change <lb />
j every hour, is it reasonable that a <lb />
fixed can be followed for <lb />
every curing with any reasonable hope <lb />
success The experienced know <lb />
better. On work so variable, only <lb />
general directions can given. <lb />
The next step is called <lb />
; count When the tobacco is sufficient- <lb />
yellows I, best leaves of a uniform <lb />
yellow, and the greener ones of a light <lb />
i pea-green color, it is lime lo advance <lb />
the heat to one hundred degrees; ob- <lb />
serving the leaves closely to detect <lb />
, sweating, which will soon redden and <lb />
i spoil the color; unless driven off. To <lb />
, do this, open the door and let it stand <lb />
I open, and if, after an hour or more, <lb />
the sweat has Hot disappeared, open a <lb />
space the logs on opposite <lb />
sides of the barn to let in more air, <lb />
and permit it to remain open until <lb />
the tobacco has dried off all appear-j <lb />
Mice of the sweat. Bight at this point <lb />
more arc spoiled than at any <lb />
other of the process. It may be, <lb />
well to remember what is a fact, <lb />
at least five are spoiled by <lb />
proceeding too fast, to one <lb />
from going too slow. stick <lb />
pin here. <lb />
But to go back to the barn where <lb />
we have just dried the leaf, and <lb />
where the thermometer indicates a <lb />
fall of five or ten this <lb />
need not concern the curer to put, <lb />
him out of hope, for a little cooling <lb />
under the circumstances was <lb />
close up the opening and <lb />
raise the heat to one hundred de <lb />
But a curer detects <lb />
the indications of and, <lb />
prevents it by regulating the heat. <lb />
Keep the heat at one hundred de- <lb />
for four hours, and then ad- <lb />
Vance two and half degrees two <lb />
hours, until one hundred and ten de. <lb />
are reached. Here you have <lb />
reached the most critical point in , <lb />
the difficult process of curing bright <lb />
tobacco. The condition and appear- <lb />
of the must now be <lb />
guide. one can success ; <lb />
fully cure tobacco until he can dis <lb />
the effect of too much or too <lb />
little heal in the appearance of the <lb />
leaf. Too little heat, in fixing <lb />
color, operates to stain the side <lb />
of the leaf a dull brown color, and is <lb />
called and may be <lb />
known to the novice by its appear-1 <lb />
only on the face side of the leaf. <lb />
Too much heat reddens the leaf, first <lb />
around the edge and then in <lb />
which are visible on both sides. <lb />
Now, to prevent sponging on the <lb />
one hand at. i spotting on the other, <lb />
is the aim of the experienced curer. <lb />
No definite time can be laid down to <lb />
run from one hundred and ten to one <lb />
h nod red and twenty degrees. Some-1 <lb />
times four hours will suffice, then, <lb />
again eight hours is fast enough. <lb />
While it is usual at this stage lo ad- <lb />
about five degrees every two <lb />
hours for medium tobacco, the <lb />
of the tobacco often indicates. <lb />
to the practiced eye, the necessity i <lb />
for slower or faster movement. <lb />
is safe not to advance above <lb />
hundred ten degree-- until the <lb />
tails begin to curl up at the ends, j <lb />
Arrived at one hundred and twenty <lb />
or one hundred and twenty-live de <lb />
this is the curing process. <lb />
The heat should remain at or near <lb />
these figures until the leaf is cured, <lb />
which will require from six to eight <lb />
hours, according to the amount of <lb />
sap in the leaf to be expelled. When <lb />
the leaf appears to be cured, advance <lb />
five degrees i very hour up to one <lb />
hundred and seventy degrees mid <lb />
main until stalk and stem are <lb />
cured. To run above <lb />
hundred and eighty degrees is to en- <lb />
danger scorching the tobacco, and; <lb />
haps burning both barn and to- <lb />
To <lb />
First. Yellowing process, de- <lb />
from 2-1 to hours. <lb />
Second. Fixing color, degrees <lb />
hours. <lb />
Second. Fixing color, to <lb />
degreed every two hours. <lb />
Fixing color, to ; <lb />
to re. <lb />
Third. Curing the leaf, to <lb />
to hours. <lb />
Fourth. and stem, I <lb />
to degrees an hour. And <lb />
Continue at one hundred and seventy <lb />
degases until stalk and stem are, <lb />
thoroughly killed and dry, which <lb />
usually requires from twelve to <lb />
teen hours. I <lb />
i The heat, by expansion, opens the <lb />
I sap cells and starts the to the <lb />
j surface, facilitates evaporation <lb />
I hastens the yellowing process. <lb />
This process, of <lb />
his tobacco will certainly go on the <lb />
and buyers have good <lb />
memories. <lb />
If your tobacco is fine, sound and <lb />
handled. have the <lb />
heat at the start, must, be of I faction of get I at the least, a re- <lb />
I short duration or else great Injury I numerating price for it, although <lb />
j will be done to the tobacco. j poor nondescript stock may be <lb />
Following this mo e. the yellowing selling for less than the cost of pro- <lb />
is greatly shortened, , I. Hali- <lb />
. from four to eight hours less to fax county, Ya. <lb />
I yellow sufficiently, and also . <lb />
i the second of <lb />
the color. <lb />
It is well to slate that there is so <lb />
great a difference in the character of <lb />
tobacco grown in different localities, <lb />
that no rule can given for the <lb />
lowing process, applicable to all. <lb />
The tobacco of middle and western <lb />
North Carolina, will yellow much <lb />
less lime than grown in middle <lb />
Virginia. Then again, tobacco will <lb />
bear higher temperature in the <lb />
lowing process during some years <lb />
than in others. Notably the season <lb />
; of 1881, was so dry and held so little <lb />
I sap when ripe, that many com- <lb />
yellowing at degrees, and <lb />
I had the leaf in hours. But <lb />
this is exceptional, and for general <lb />
practice would spoil both color and <lb />
tobacco. <lb />
The season, therefore, it must be <lb />
borne in mind, greatly determines <lb />
the amount of beat tobacco will re- <lb />
quire to be yellowed and cured. <lb />
Some of the patented flues are so <lb />
constructed heal is easily <lb />
controlled, and the tobacco smoked <lb />
or or both, as may be <lb />
in the yellowing stage. Some <lb />
tobacco will require neither to yellow <lb />
right, while some other will dry <lb />
green or red without yellowing, <lb />
smoke or steam be not used to assist <lb />
the yellowing process. Smoke and <lb />
heat will facilitate the yellowing of <lb />
thin poor tobacco, holding very little <lb />
sap. Wetting the barn floor from <lb />
time to lime will assist in yellowing <lb />
tobacco. Then there is an occasion <lb />
barn tobacco that defies all the <lb />
known modes and appliances to el- <lb />
low or cure bright. <lb />
But for all practical purposes, <lb />
whenever the curer has mastered a <lb />
knowledge of the effects of too much <lb />
or too heat, as evidenced in the <lb />
color of tobacco, clearly described <lb />
heretofore, he possesses a k-v to <lb />
solve the problem in the <lb />
science of curing tobacco. By close <lb />
observation this may soon b.- <lb />
learned then success is easy. <lb />
After curing, as soon as the <lb />
co is sufficiently soft to move, you <lb />
may run it up in the roof of th , barn <lb />
and crowd it close, or if the barn is <lb />
needed for other the tobacco <lb />
may be carried to the storage barn <lb />
or bulked down in any dry house on <lb />
I lie premises. But he sure that <lb />
is bulked with green stalks <lb />
or swelled stems, for if such are <lb />
placed down in bulk will be sure <lb />
to heal and utterly ruin. <lb />
If, after the tobacco is <lb />
remains dry and it fails to <lb />
get soft readily, so that it can be <lb />
moved, it may he brought in order in <lb />
the following Place green <lb />
bushes with the leaves on over the <lb />
A SELECTIONS. <lb />
I Writ ten by a prisoner in State prison <lb />
It's curious, isn't It Billy, <lb />
The changes twelve months ma <lb />
bring. <lb />
Last year was in Saratoga. <lb />
As and rich as a <lb />
I was raking in pools on the races, <lb />
And feeing the waiters with <lb />
And sipping mint by twilight. <lb />
And to-day I am licit- In the <lb />
THE HONORED <lb />
THE <lb />
From sept. <lb />
11th. MB, <lb />
Cheap, thorough and popular. <lb />
capital to young men. This amount of <lb />
money and two or three months time <lb />
Invested at the Commercial College of <lb />
Kentucky University, Lexington, K- <lb />
m a business education <lb />
proven an imperishable capital to thous- <lb />
ands of young men. <lb />
j Talent has to be paid for, as shown <lb />
the large salaries paid by this College to <lb />
, its teachers. Five Principals who assist <lb />
Wilbur Smith in the departments <lb />
of Book-keepings. Penmanship, <lb />
Type-writing and Telegraphy of <lb />
this College are paid from to C per <lb />
day These, with several other efficient <lb />
high <lb />
for many sessions. <lb />
teachers who ban <lb />
turns in the <lb />
retained. <lb />
For thirteen years the Professors <lb />
, Smith have managed this College so as <lb />
l to win the esteem of its patrons, for <lb />
among the nearly annually in at- <lb />
come by the <lb />
of its graduates, <lb />
Prodigal Son. whom read of, I. w have the esteem of the good <lb />
Has altered somewhat in his time community <lb />
He spends his freely l Is as shown by Prof. <lb />
As the biblical of <lb />
when ii i gone he fancies <lb />
What me to it What always <lb />
Leads men destruction and <lb />
The husks will turn into gold. <lb />
Champagne, and a box at the opera. <lb />
High steps with fortune in Hush, <lb />
The passionate kisses of women <lb />
Smith being elected Vice-President of <lb />
the Chamber of Commerce and Director <lb />
of the National Hank, and too, <lb />
by the faith of the citizens in superiority <lb />
their College by old patrons from that <lb />
I city purchasing from t to three, <lb />
each, until are registered <lb />
Whose checks have forgotten to blush, i <lb />
The old, old Billy. <lb />
Of pleasure that end In tears. <lb />
The froth that for an hour. <lb />
The dregs that are tasted for years. <lb />
Last night as I here and pondered <lb />
Oil the end of my evil ways. <lb />
There roses like a phantom before me <lb />
he vision of my boyhood days. <lb />
up I thought of my old home, Billy, <lb />
Of the school house that stood on the <lb />
Of the brook that flowed through the, <lb />
meadow. <lb />
ran e'en hear Its music still. <lb />
Again I thought my mother, <lb />
Of the mother who taught me i pray. <lb />
Whose love was a perfect treasure <lb />
That I cast away. <lb />
I again in my visions <lb />
The fresh lipped, careless boy. <lb />
To whom the future was boundless, <lb />
And tin- world but a mighty toy. <lb />
thought Of all this as I sat here. <lb />
Of my ruins and wasted life, <lb />
And the of remorse were bitter I <lb />
They pierced my heart like a knife. <lb />
It takes some courage, Billy, <lb />
TO laugh in the face of fate, <lb />
When the yearning ambitions of <lb />
hood <lb />
Are blasted at twenty-eight. <lb />
Mrs. Michael Curtain. Ill,, <lb />
makes the statement that she caught <lb />
cold, which settled on her she <lb />
was treated for a month by <lb />
physician, grew worse. He told her <lb />
was a victim of <lb />
lion and Unit no Medicine could cure <lb />
from Lexington the past thirteen years, <lb />
with the compliments paid the <lb />
Professor by the leading Hankers and <lb />
business men calling on him for his <lb />
graduates as Book-keepers, Cashiers. <lb />
Stenographers, and Type-Writers, over <lb />
Phi of whom have occupied leading <lb />
enumerated above, within a few <lb />
squares of the allege. <lb />
The of this College con- <lb />
about coon former -Indents, and <lb />
Hie explains different courses <lb />
and also letters of from <lb />
hundreds of among whom arc <lb />
several members of Legislatures, a Con- <lb />
also City, County and State <lb />
officials. Bank Presidents. Cashiers. <lb />
and endorsements from the <lb />
leading business men Lexington. <lb />
K, IV. and W. R. Smith <lb />
the gold medal at the World's Ex- <lb />
position over all other Colleges for their <lb />
system of book-keeping. Free <lb />
is giving the student of the <lb />
at this College Business <lb />
Arithmetic. Practical Penmanship, <lb />
Banking by a Bank Official, Lectures. <lb />
Ac. Their graduates receive the Ken- <lb />
University Diploma under seal, <lb />
and are more successful than those of <lb />
any College within our knowledge. For <lb />
practical education, success and honor- <lb />
able reference, attend the old reliable <lb />
and popular Commercial College of Ken- <lb />
lucky University, Lexington. Sec <lb />
advertisement. <lb />
Young men desiring to attend Business <lb />
College will find it to their advantage to <lb />
call at this office before making arrange. <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
Both Ankles Crushed. <lb />
In a railroad up in <lb />
badly crushed, <lb />
bought a bottle, and to her delight found Soon alter Blood set in, <lb />
herself from dose. She i i. . . ,,. I,.,,.,. , i.,. <lb />
continued its use and after taking ten . <lb />
bottles, herself sound and well, covered with ulcerated sores <lb />
now does her housework and is as that a to heal. <lb />
well as-he ever was. lice trial bottles , <lb />
of this Discovery at J. L. was virtually for tell years, <lb />
Drug Store, large and 1.00., being bedridden most of the time. <lb />
During all the time was attended <lb />
by the best physicians in this sec- <lb />
Tin- Child Dog. <lb />
In the stable of a famous sportsman <lb />
New York there is mi j lion the State, and must have <lb />
floor and sprinkle water over them where a bulldog is kept a prisoner. The, taken a load of medicine, <lb />
copiously; if the tobacco <lb />
and the atmosphere contains but <lb />
little moisture, and if the weather is <lb />
cool, a little lire kindled in the lines <lb />
will assist in making the tobacco <lb />
soft. Straw wet, or made <lb />
answer the same <lb />
damp, <lb />
weather is damp, there will be <lb />
necessity lo use straw, brush <lb />
or water. But when it is necessary <lb />
to use any means loonier tobacco, it <lb />
is best to apply them in the after- <lb />
noon, that the tobacco may be re- <lb />
moved the next morning. <lb />
If the weather continues warm and <lb />
damp or rainy, tobacco that remains <lb />
hanging will be apt to change color. <lb />
unless dried out by flues or charcoal. <lb />
When this becomes necessary, build <lb />
small fires at first, and raise the <lb />
heat gradually. <lb />
Tobacco should never be stripped <lb />
from the stalks except in pliable or- <lb />
the leaves on every plant <lb />
dog Las won thirty or forty battles and <lb />
is so fierce that everybody except tho <lb />
man who handles in bis fights <lb />
keeps at a from the brute. <lb />
Very often of dogs make u visit <lb />
so, will to the stable to have a look at the ca- <lb />
the nine pugilist, but they are <lb />
no shy approaching him. One morning <lb />
the owner of the dog went to the <lb />
stable about half S o'clock. <lb />
the coachman had gone with the <lb />
to the blacksmith's be let himself <lb />
With a pass key and went over to <lb />
a look at his prize dog. <lb />
When he arrived at the pen he was <lb />
astounded and startled to see the 4- <lb />
daughter of the coach an sit- <lb />
ting on the dog's and cheerfully <lb />
pounding the in the face with <lb />
an Iron bolt. The dog lay there with <lb />
his enormous jaws open, his <lb />
hanging out and bis face transfixed <lb />
a look of faith and devotion to <lb />
tho infant. The little girl pulled his <lb />
ears, pounded his head, stack her fin- <lb />
in his mouth, and after she had <lb />
should he carefully snorted and every, got through playing with trim went <lb />
his knife his left hand fol- <lb />
lows the slit or opening, and when <lb />
; the plant is severed from the hill, by <lb />
a dexterous movement of the left <lb />
I hand the plant is straddled across <lb />
i the stick in the hands of holder. <lb />
When the stick has received about <lb />
six medium plants, if intended for <lb />
brights, it is ready to go to the barn, <lb />
either carried by hand if near, or <lb />
hauled on a wagon if distant. If it <lb />
as to use the wagon, prepare <lb />
a bed sixteen feet long to hold three <lb />
coops or piles, on which place tobacco <lb />
las cut, and after placing twenty-five <lb />
or thirty sticks of cut tobacco on each <lb />
coop, drive to the barn to be unloaded. <lb />
Tobacco suitable for brights is <lb />
best handled in this way, as it is <lb />
bruised less than handled by any- <lb />
other. Try It, planters, and know <lb />
for yourselves. Very heavy tobacco <lb />
will break less it, after being cut by <lb />
the above mode, the sticks are placed <lb />
gently on the ground and the plants <lb />
allowed to wilt before being removed <lb />
to the barn. But tobacco of medium <lb />
bruises less to handle it without <lb />
willing. Cutting and housing by <lb />
this mode you never have any sun- <lb />
cured tobacco. For brights, it has <lb />
been found best to commence curing <lb />
at once, as soon as the can be <lb />
filled. <lb />
HEW <lb />
The curing process for yellow to- <lb />
as heretofore laid down, was <lb />
first published in the year 1871, and <lb />
was the systematic treatise <lb />
given to the public on the difficult <lb />
art of curing yellow tobacco; and it <lb />
has remained substantially unaltered <lb />
through six editions of the pamphlet, <lb />
aggregating largely over <lb />
copies. Thousands in several States <lb />
hove taken it for their guide and <lb />
been enabled to learn to cure success- <lb />
fully, without any other assistance. <lb />
But the yellow tobacco industry <lb />
has greatly progressed and extended <lb />
during the past decade, and new- <lb />
light has come through experience to <lb />
further perfect the art of curing. <lb />
The following is as the latest <lb />
improvements in curing <lb />
House the tobacco as soon as cut, <lb />
and after warming up the barn for <lb />
two or three hours, at a temperature <lb />
of about degrees, advance the heat <lb />
rapidly up to as <lb />
high as it will bear without scalding <lb />
the the heat remain <lb />
at degrees only a few minutes, <lb />
and then by drawing the flies and <lb />
turning the dampers, cut off heat <lb />
and lot the temperature or the barn <lb />
descend to degrees. <lb />
This is generally called <lb />
The rationale of the process is <lb />
grade tied up separately- Usually <lb />
will be three as- <lb />
sorted with reference lo color and <lb />
size, two of lugs. Of leaf six lo <lb />
eight leaves in a bundle, and of <lb />
eight to ten. As fast yon strip, <lb />
either hang the on sticks <lb />
twenty-five to each hang <lb />
up or bulk down in two layers, the <lb />
heads of hands or bundles facing <lb />
outward. The latter mode is best, if <lb />
you intend to sell in winter order <lb />
loose, on the warehouse floors. If <lb />
down, watch frequently to see <lb />
that it does not heat. If bulk <lb />
becomes warm it must be broken up, <lb />
aired and or hung up if to <lb />
soft. It is safer always to hang up as <lb />
soon as stripped, unless you design to <lb />
sell soon, and strike down in <lb />
keeping in spring or summer. <lb />
It is considered in when <lb />
the leaf is pliable, and the stem will <lb />
crack half-down from the tie. <lb />
If you sell loose, delivered in large <lb />
uniform will cost less and <lb />
your tobacco bring more in price. But <lb />
to sell in a distant market, pack in <lb />
make the <lb />
best and weigh about <lb />
four hundred pounds net, taking care <lb />
not to the tobacco so as to <lb />
bruise it, or pack it too closely to- <lb />
The best leaf is wanted for <lb />
wrappers, and it must open easily <lb />
when shaken in the hand. Pack one <lb />
grade only in each uniform in <lb />
color and length; but if it becomes <lb />
to put more than one grade in <lb />
a place strips of paper or straw <lb />
between to mark and them. <lb />
Pack honestly, for honestly is always <lb />
the best policy. The man who <lb />
to another the stable, while tho <lb />
bulldog whined a plaintive appeal to <lb />
her to some back and see him again. <lb />
It turned out that this went on <lb />
day. and that, too, with the knowledge <lb />
of the child's father. never knew a <lb />
to hurt n little kid like <lb />
eon. -11111.111 remarked sent <lb />
ain't built that <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
out receiving any or <lb />
in any way. Ia 1887 I <lb />
i was induced to try Swift's Specific <lb />
S. commenced to improve <lb />
from the first dose, and continued <lb />
I to get better, until today I am as <lb />
sound and well as any man in the <lb />
universe. This was two years ago, <lb />
which I have had no return of <lb />
I of sores or any pain in the legs. <lb />
From my experience I <lb />
believe that Swift's Specific <lb />
I s. has no equal as a blood <lb />
j purifier, and cheerfully <lb />
mend it to any from <lb />
any disease of the blood. <lb />
E. Hamilton, <lb />
Treatise on Blood and Skin <lb />
senses mailed free. <lb />
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO., <lb />
Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
tote <lb />
AYCOCK DANIELS <lb />
C. <lb />
N. C <lb />
I DANIELS I Mia <lb />
WILSON, N. C <lb />
DENTIST. t <lb />
i Greenville, N <lb />
I A LEX L. BLOW, <lb />
-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
J. EM RE. J. M. TUCKER. J. D <lb />
TUCKER MURPHY. <lb />
Avoid the Booking <lb />
As an awful warning to young I L. <lb />
to mindful of this shun the art- i <lb />
seductions of the rooking on <lb />
certain solemn occasions of their lives <lb />
we are drawn to relate tho following <lb />
o'er true tale of how a young man once <lb />
wrecked bis matrimonial hopes in <lb />
yielding to the cozy suggestions of this <lb />
American institution. For long years <lb />
he bad wooed a certain rather cold and <lb />
inaccessible young woman, and seemed <lb />
at last just on the edge of success. AD <lb />
tho interested friends were waiting to <lb />
be asked for congratulations, when sud- <lb />
the young man mode a hasty and <lb />
significant departure for the far west. <lb />
When inquiries were made of tho <lb />
young woman explained that on <lb />
the eventful evening when John <lb />
come for the decisive word she had en- <lb />
the room fully determined to I <lb />
make him the happiest man this side <lb />
heaven. As was fitting the occasion, <lb />
felt very solemn and unsettled. <lb />
But there sat as she came In, <lb />
installed in the biggest <lb />
rocking chair in the room, and swing- <lb />
himself easily buck forth as if <lb />
his soul were at its supremest ease. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. MARRY <lb />
t skinner, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
V U. JAMES,<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice in all the courts. Collections <lb />
Do a Specialty. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
you think for a moment could believe <lb />
in the love of a man, she concluded J , <lb />
tragically, sit and rook ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
himself a rocking chair while waiting M fl <lb />
an from the woman he pro-1<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018998_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
-T- <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
ft I OH Editor aid <lb />
Publisher's Announcement. <lb />
OF <lb />
The i- 81.50 per yest <lb />
one <lb />
one-ball year. <lb />
year, <lb />
MB i one-quarter column one <lb />
Transient Advertisements.--One <lb />
on.- week. i two week <lb />
month Two inches one week, <lb />
two weeks, V ; one <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, as Ad- <lb />
and Notices. <lb />
and Trustees sales <lb />
Summons to etc. will <lb />
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb />
FOR IN I <lb />
hits suffered some loss and <lb />
much because of having no <lb />
fixed rule as to the payment this class <lb />
of advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb />
tutor trouble payment in <lb />
will demanded. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, for length of time, can <lb />
made by application to the oilier <lb />
in person or letter. <lb />
COM New Advertisements and <lb />
all of advertisements should be <lb />
banded in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
AT THE AT <lb />
Mail Matter. <lb />
see from the <lb />
that Alfred Rowland <lb />
has withdrawn from the contest <lb />
for to Congress. He, <lb />
Virile in office was true to the <lb />
trusts reposed in him. <lb />
What is the matter with South <lb />
Carolina Her politics are in a <lb />
terrible stew. the Alli- <lb />
candidate, seems to have <lb />
sworn dire vengeance against the <lb />
straight out Democrats. Trouble <lb />
is ahead sure. It is to be hoped <lb />
that our sister State will to <lb />
her senses in time to save <lb />
self from rule. <lb />
A very occurred <lb />
in Danville, Va., a few days ago, <lb />
a botcher was imprisoned for <lb />
the city ordinance where- <lb />
upon all the butchers closed their <lb />
Stella and swore they would sell <lb />
no more meats the ordinance <lb />
was Since that time no <lb />
fresh meat could be bought in that <lb />
market for love or money, and the <lb />
people were pot to great <lb />
The butchers at last de- <lb />
that they Wet getting the <lb />
worst of the so-called strike and <lb />
opened up for business. <lb />
It will not do to let our boys grow <lb />
up without educational <lb />
It is not only unjust for <lb />
parents to neglect the education <lb />
of their children, but it is in many <lb />
cases sinful. We are glad to <lb />
that the prospects of the Female <lb />
Institute is highly encouraging. <lb />
Prof. says that the <lb />
cations arc that he will open with <lb />
as many girls as there have been <lb />
and girls heretofore. <lb />
WEDNESDAY. JULY SO, <lb />
Notice to Township Commit- <lb />
tees. <lb />
The members of the several <lb />
township Democratic committees. <lb />
to be elected at the primaries <lb />
the of next request <lb />
ed to meet at the Court House in <lb />
Greenville on the day of <lb />
immediately after the ad- <lb />
of the County Con- <lb />
for the purpose of elect- <lb />
a County Executive Commit- <lb />
tee for the ensuing two years. <lb />
By order of the Democratic Ex- <lb />
Committee of Pitt county. <lb />
A. L. Blow. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, July <lb />
Congressional Convention. <lb />
At a meeting of the Democratic <lb />
Executive Committee of the first <lb />
Congressional District held at <lb />
Washington. N. this day <lb />
was ordered that the Democratic <lb />
Convention of the first <lb />
District to nominate a can- <lb />
for Congress Ac. should be <lb />
held in the town of Elizabeth City <lb />
N. C, on Tuesday, IS, <lb />
1800, P. Al. <lb />
New York Letter. <lb />
ONE MORE <lb />
NEW TELEGRAPH BUILDING <lb />
ANOTHER GREAT DAILY.<lb />
York, July <lb />
sensation of the week has <lb />
been the disclosure of the downfall <lb />
and terrible death a cigarette <lb />
girl. And. as the details <lb />
developed prove i. to be, the case <lb />
would perhaps have never come to <lb />
light except through the accident of <lb />
a detective overhearing a <lb />
a horse car. The clew thus <lb />
found was followed up and a star <lb />
worthy to rival the <lb />
of any writer of Act fan. The <lb />
victim in the case, of her <lb />
sister's lost first honor <lb />
then her life; the heart <lb />
of tills city, her body was <lb />
taken away in the dead of <lb />
night and buried under a false <lb />
name, so that, as far as her <lb />
the rest of the world was con- <lb />
it was a case of <lb />
and forever <lb />
have remained so, were it not for <lb />
the above referred to Not <lb />
one her acquaintances knew what <lb />
had become of her until nearly two <lb />
weeks alter she had been buried in <lb />
an It is not my <lb />
to give details, and indeed <lb />
the attempt would useless in so <lb />
short a space. The guilty ones will <lb />
Tho of me <lb />
with the disappearance <lb />
In the Democratic <lb />
Convention which convened at <lb />
Clinton tho 24th nominated <lb />
Mr. B. P. Grady on the <lb />
lot. The Judicial which convened <lb />
at Weldon the 23rd nominated <lb />
Mr. Henry E. Bryan on the 57th <lb />
ballot for Judge to succeed Hon. <lb />
Fred. Philips. Capt. J. M. Griz- <lb />
of Halifax, was nominated <lb />
by acclamation for Solicitor. The <lb />
Congressional in Durham <lb />
Hon. B. H. on the 1st <lb />
ballot to succeed himself. On <lb />
motion it was made unanimous. <lb />
Highway robberies in and around <lb />
Wilmington and Wrightsville have <lb />
of late become no rare thing. For <lb />
the last four or five weeks the <lb />
papers of Wilmington have been <lb />
giving thrilling accounts of their <lb />
depredations. On the turnpike <lb />
leading from the former to the <lb />
latter Mr. Nathan Fails, a highly <lb />
respected and worthy citizen was <lb />
waylaid and killed and robbed of <lb />
all the money he had, He was <lb />
shot in the head and the <lb />
is that he was killed instantly. <lb />
An old was knocked down <lb />
and robbed while on his way from <lb />
to Greenville Sound. <lb />
A Mr. Mills was stopped and <lb />
forced to give up what he had. <lb />
afterward a man by the name of <lb />
Edwards was arrested and <lb />
by Mr. Mills as the one who <lb />
him and the Criminal <lb />
court of New Hanover sent him <lb />
to the penitentiary for ten years. <lb />
The citizens are stopped on their <lb />
be tried and perhaps convicted, and <lb />
Washington Letter. <lb />
From Oar Correspondent. <lb />
Washington. D. C. July, 1800. <lb />
The Southern Senators deprecate <lb />
boycotting, but decline to talk <lb />
about it; some of them, for instance <lb />
Gorman, of Maryland and Vance of <lb />
No, th Carolina, see in it <lb />
but the silly vaporings of super- <lb />
heated Highly excited imaginations. <lb />
Senator am a <lb />
Christian, and therefore I not, <lb />
swear; but were a profane man, <lb />
I should call it the d------st nonsense <lb />
We ought to oppose the Force bill <lb />
by every constitutional legal <lb />
means within our power. It it be <lb />
passed in spite of us, then we <lb />
should do as the town clerk of <lb />
did, counsel our people <lb />
do nothing <lb />
Senator Gorman was equally free <lb />
in expression. The Maryland Sen- <lb />
is very blunt, although <lb />
that manner is liable to offend, it <lb />
usually carries with it the sincerity <lb />
of the speaker. He <lb />
utterances are senseless in tho ex- <lb />
No public man in <lb />
ton is sympathy with such a <lb />
or would encourage it for a <lb />
moment. The effect of the passage <lb />
such a measure as the Lodge bill <lb />
would be bad in both sections. It <lb />
is having its effect already, as a <lb />
result of the mere agitation of the <lb />
He that several Baltimore <lb />
gentlemen had called upon him, <lb />
who have projected large enter- <lb />
in the South, told <lb />
he continued, they would <lb />
go no in the matter until <lb />
th-force bill has been dis- <lb />
posed the measure passes <lb />
will drop the affair altogether, <lb />
and similar action will no doubt <lb />
follow in scores of cases. All <lb />
a boycott, however, is <lb />
Attention is directed to the Forty <lb />
Third Congress and the attempt to <lb />
pass the bill when was <lb />
speaker the House, and F. <lb />
was chairman of the Judi- <lb />
committee, which reported <lb />
the bill to the House. General <lb />
Wheeler, of Alabama, recently made <lb />
a against the pres- <lb />
bill, and battler wrote to <lb />
him a copy, as worth preserving, <lb />
and received an answer as <lb />
tho question of tho spirit, basked by D. <lb />
involving Rockefeller. Both of these gentle <lb />
us right to take charge of federal <lb />
in cases of emergency, <lb />
by the United <lb />
of the i- v<lb />
of that <lb />
from in <lb />
forty j <lb />
except <lb />
wheel <lb />
track, <lb />
v. <lb />
the is <lb />
and en <lb />
good <lb />
of the i . <lb />
Ohio. <lb />
tho far.; <lb />
plow t <lb />
via active participation in <lb />
dents comes removal <lb />
. called the cowcatcher <lb />
. Mm Boston and Albany <lb />
period of <lb />
. American I motive <lb />
. a. ed in ring has <lb />
pilot or cowcatcher to keep <lb />
i getting under tho <lb />
vowing the <lb />
the plow . <lb />
the <lb />
. or p <lb />
rally earn.; <lb />
tho <lb />
con- <lb />
i- was <lb />
to <lb />
t he cow <lb />
along until ii was a <lb />
to stop I dispose <lb />
Then an in <lb />
a- Ills <lb />
at th. i; work, tho <lb />
all obstruction aside, <lb />
IT . I IT I IT . <lb />
Say I t -.- Can It I <lb />
-THAT- <lb />
DEVOLVING piN, <lb />
BAIT'S <lb />
is THE IN <lb />
sol TH. <lb />
vised the c I lore- <lb />
fused to patent his invention and is <lb />
today a poor man, whereas ho might <lb />
in all probability have become mill- <lb />
The removal of the cowcatchers <lb />
from the freight engines is a procedure <lb />
which the tram men regard with some <lb />
alarm. Any obstruction is liable to <lb />
throw an from the track if the <lb />
wheels in contact with it. A <lb />
row near the rails is tho only <lb />
thing left to throw obstacles off. <lb />
serves as a standing place for the men <lb />
when the machine is engaged in shift- <lb />
cars, and is less in the way than a <lb />
pilot when the engine is to coupled <lb />
with the tear of a train for the purpose <lb />
of pushing. These are tho main <lb />
the change, which will <lb />
BARGAINS I <lb />
spring <lb />
I am receiving every day my <lb />
--------stock of Dry Goods, <lb />
TO THE <lb />
TO Of IT THE <lb />
Standard Calicoes. cents pr yd. <lb />
Homespun. o cents pr yd. <lb />
Yard-wide line, cents pr yd. <lb />
and Children's Straw Hats <lb />
to Trimmed in latest styles <lb />
in the store at cents to fl. <lb />
bargains <lb />
big bargains <lb />
no HUMBUG <lb />
NO <lb />
let us hope the of this more <lb />
will be a fearful <lb />
to all whom it may concern. <lb />
THE WESTERN <lb />
Tho Western Union Telegraph <lb />
Co., whoso office was recent- <lb />
damaged by fire, has de- <lb />
to remodel the building <lb />
build four new stories. The build- <lb />
will then be nine stories high, <lb />
with a Sat root instead of the man. <lb />
tower as <lb />
Au addition will also be made <lb />
Day street which will make the <lb />
building when completed the largest <lb />
one for telegraphic purposes in the <lb />
world. The seven opera- <lb />
tors will have two whole floors to <lb />
themselves, the Associated Press <lb />
will have offices in the street <lb />
extension, the rest of the build- <lb />
will be used substantially as <lb />
before. Although the fire destroyed <lb />
the company's instruments, <lb />
together with thousands of wire <lb />
batteries, tho service was <lb />
bat a days, and at this <lb />
writing, everything is proceeding <lb />
as smoothly as the fire. <lb />
AS JOURNALISTS. <lb />
Another great daily newspaper i. <lb />
to started in New York, this <lb />
time with money to keep H going <lb />
an indefinite length of time. Mr. <lb />
Henry M. is said to be tho <lb />
The attention of the county way home after dark and are coin- <lb />
township committees of tin sever- polled to give up <lb />
counties of the district is called other valuables. must he <lb />
thereto, to the end that there may <lb />
be a full representation at said <lb />
convention. <lb />
John H. Small, <lb />
Clim. of the Committee. <lb />
County Democratic <lb />
A convention of the Democratic <lb />
party of Pitt county, will he held <lb />
in the Court House in Greenville. <lb />
on <lb />
at o'clock M. for the purpose <lb />
of candidates for the <lb />
Legislature and the various <lb />
offices. <lb />
Each township will he entitled to <lb />
some slackness on the part of the <lb />
officials that such bold <lb />
are perpetrated. <lb />
Educate your Children. <lb />
It will soon be for the usual <lb />
school sessions to open; the <lb />
time now is for parents to begin to <lb />
I think about it. <lb />
a long time some men have <lb />
i been crying hard times, and Saying <lb />
that they must economize ; <lb />
strange to say. eight men out of ten <lb />
will begin economizing the matter <lb />
of education first. <lb />
That is the wrong thing to do. It <lb />
is a matter to educate our <lb />
children when good schools are at <lb />
our very doors. But the fact is <lb />
quite clear that some our good <lb />
citizens are letting the time slip <lb />
a about making an effort to make <lb />
elect to said convention one of their children brighter <lb />
gate and one alternate for every than their own lives have been. <lb />
man are millionaires many times <lb />
over are well in <lb />
States Statutes I the Standard Oil Co. <lb />
constitution be Sec. j new paper will be a cent morning <lb />
Chapter When the State sheet of to pages. It will em <lb />
shall refuse or neglect to provide for special all over em town w <lb />
the election C. B- Senators country make a specialty of white throat <lb />
out of town news. Its principles will <lb />
he clean politics. <lb />
Very little positive con <lb />
the new enterprise can he <lb />
as well as dangerous. Over in England <lb />
no such thing as a pilot <lb />
is Homestead. <lb />
Clever <lb />
Baron Hal the Danish envoy <lb />
at Madrid about fifty years ago, was <lb />
the soul of honor and good nature, <lb />
though he had neither the cleverness <lb />
nor the brilliancy belonging to certain <lb />
diplomatists. One incident, however, <lb />
shows that ho could act, when occasion <lb />
arose, mid that with boldness and <lb />
even dramatic power. <lb />
During the childhood of Queen Isa- <lb />
there were frequent political com- <lb />
motions, one night the <lb />
regent, having incurred the displeasure <lb />
at the adverse party, was pursued <lb />
through the streets by an infuriated <lb />
mob. He ran into the house where <lb />
Baron Pal had an apartment, <lb />
rang the bell wildly, and as soon as <lb />
door was opened slipped Inside <lb />
barred it. <lb />
Presently the ringleaders of the mob <lb />
arrived and threatened to break open <lb />
the door if the fugitive not <lb />
to thorn a once. Baron Dal <lb />
go himself unfastened the bolts and <lb />
on tho threshold. Ho pointed <lb />
to the Danish which he had laid <lb />
across the entrance, and said <lb />
man you seek Is hero. <lb />
and take him if you like, but if of <lb />
steps on the colors of my county <lb />
will make Spain responsible to <lb />
mark for the insult <lb />
The attacking party paused, awed <lb />
into sobriety, and then turned about <lb />
and marched quietly <lb />
Blake Flour <lb />
Snow Flake Flour <lb />
I have a Flour which I guarantee for <lb />
Everything low down for cash. <lb />
Give me a trial. <lb />
W. G. STOKES, , W. G. STOKES, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
THY IS IT THE COTTON GIN IN THE SOUTH r Because It it <lb />
built upon improved principles, having Revolving Heads in the ends of i he <lb />
Cotton Box, which revolve with the roll of seed cotton, thus preventing that <lb />
which occurs at the cud of the cotton box in all other gins. Hence the <lb />
PRATT GIN duel not break nor choke, carries a harder rail of seed cotton on the <lb />
saws than other gins, in consequence of this, cleans the seed better, and <lb />
course, more lint cotton. This is common sens,;, 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 arc using the Pratt Gin and will have no other. <lb />
REFERENCES.-Henry Homier, F. B. F. F. Cherry. no. <lb />
Aurora, N. B. Hooker, N. W. R. Ross. T. If. Boyd. <lb />
Mill, X. II. Fowler. Stonewall, N. C; J. A. G. Cox, Greenville, <lb />
X. C ; W. I. Smith, Calico, N. E. S. Waters. N. C; J. T. <lb />
son. X. I- Banyan N. C; IV. II. Hampton, Plymouth, <lb />
N. M. A. Windley. Bath. N. C.; S. M. Smith, The. Bland, Johnson's <lb />
X. W. T. N. T. Gaylord, X. C. <lb />
ORDER wait until the ginning lessen is upon you to order <lb />
your gin. It will cost no more early than late. We will take orders now or any <lb />
time this summer, at cash prices deliver on good notes, without interest, <lb />
payable in November, <lb />
MOWING will sell the Buckeye on good <lb />
notes, to responsible parties, payable November, and November 1891. Order <lb />
at once- <lb />
COTTON <lb />
COTTON <lb />
GINS <lb />
VOW PREPARED <lb />
i b Abe Wow <lb />
To show the ladies the very latest and best <lb />
of new--- <lb />
MILLINERY <lb />
Milliner I i-v <lb />
Our stock just opened has tho newest <lb />
shapes white and black <lb />
trimmed and untrimmed <lb />
Hats and Bonnet- Bonnets and Hats <lb />
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats I <lb />
We also have Ribbons <lb />
Flowers of all Feather <lb />
Crepes, <lb />
Handkerchiefs, Notions, In- <lb />
Caps Sacks, etc. <lb />
Mus. <lb />
Greenville. X. C. <lb />
Having received from the Pratt Gin Factory the accessory tools for tracing <lb />
and training new saws on old gins, and also other repair work, I here <lb />
by announce to all that can successfully repair their gins <lb />
herein Washington tor percent. than it will cost at <lb />
any factory, and also save largely in freights to and from <lb />
the Tattoos factories. can do any work your gin <lb />
may need. Send your gin to the <lb />
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY <lb />
With heights prepared, and we will guarantee you <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 the money now make special terms with us at once <lb />
and semi your gin without delay. It will cost no more soon than late. <lb />
v e <lb />
and <lb />
Farm and Mill and <lb />
All sizes and styles commonly used, at Low Prices and Reasonable Terms <lb />
representatives, national <lb />
may appoint the <lb />
of the State. Hut the tunes, <lb />
places and manner holding <lb />
Senators and obtained, but it is understood a full <lb />
Shall be prescribed in each j has been engaged and that the <lb />
orate by the legislature <lb />
It is a notorious that a <lb />
her of Senators are dis- <lb />
gusted with the Lodge bill, and <lb />
would say so, hut for the trouble <lb />
such frankness brings. No sooner <lb />
does a say that he <lb />
such legislation than he <lb />
hounded by a lot or partisans into <lb />
denying, or modifying, his publish. <lb />
ed expressions. It has become as <lb />
as a republican Senator's life <lb />
is worth, to aloud, contrary to <lb />
republican journals in this mat- or the that, all the <lb />
t rants, whose names are now <lb />
I paper will appear about September <lb />
list. Its name may he <lb />
To the Democratic Voters of <lb />
of <lb />
North Carolina. <lb />
After a careful survey of the <lb />
situation our district, am <lb />
The John Flanagan <lb />
BUGGY COMPANY. <lb />
Are in business at the old Flanagan <lb />
Shops and arc manufacturing <lb />
all kinds of the best <lb />
VEHICLES. <lb />
-We also do- <lb />
A Saw <lb />
FOB <lb />
FOB <lb />
Democratic votes, and <lb />
one delegate for fractions of fifteen j <lb />
or more cast in the last Urn-1 <lb />
election, that is to say, <lb />
Beaver Dam is entitled to<lb />
Bethel <lb />
Carolina <lb />
Falkland <lb />
Farmville <lb />
Greenville <lb />
Swift Creek <lb />
In pursuance of the Plan of Or- <lb />
are good this year, the <lb />
are much better than they <lb />
have in a number of years. If <lb />
we do the right thing, the schools <lb />
will experience a large increase in <lb />
the number enrolled for the coming <lb />
year. <lb />
long to see the lime when one <lb />
of the schools of the State <lb />
can be established Scotland Neck <lb />
and we think we see a chance to do <lb />
it. But. the first thing that is needed <lb />
is home patronage. We have good <lb />
schools our town, as gang as can <lb />
be found of their character, are <lb />
well worthy of patronage of our <lb />
people. <lb />
we want better things in the <lb />
both in educational <lb />
financial point of view, let us <lb />
of the party, the Demo- and speak a <lb />
word our schools whenever the <lb />
opportunity presents itself. Scot- <lb />
of the several townships are <lb />
requested to meet their respect- <lb />
townships, at the usual <lb />
of meeting, on <lb />
AUG. 1890, <lb />
at o'clock P. M. for the purpose <lb />
laud Neck <lb />
All that the Democrat says is <lb />
equally true of our own town and <lb />
people. We have had a most ex- <lb />
Every who is reported as <lb />
being lukewarm is immediately <lb />
seen ; if he does not authorize <lb />
a contradiction of any little <lb />
that escaped him, it is contra- <lb />
anyhow. It is not strange <lb />
that under the circumstances <lb />
tors the sake of <lb />
keep their views to themselves. <lb />
They Will not, however, be regulated <lb />
subjugated, iT ever the time <lb />
I to jump upon the neck the <lb />
Lodge bill and choke the life out <lb />
it. <lb />
Harrison must have learned <lb />
something recently which caused <lb />
him to think that his chance of be <lb />
mg are improving j he <lb />
has authorized a to be <lb />
made to the effect that his wife did <lb />
accept the cottage at Gape May <lb />
Feint, because no refused to allow <lb />
her to do it; and that he paid for <lb />
it with of his own money. <lb />
effect of this statement would <lb />
have greater if it had been <lb />
made sooner. <lb />
The House in obedience to the <lb />
dictation of Speaker has pass- <lb />
ed the Original Package bill and <lb />
the National Bankruptcy bill. <lb />
The Sea correspondence <lb />
has been sent to Congress, and the <lb />
fact is apparent that Mr. Blaine has <lb />
nothing but maintain <lb />
claims of Mr. Cleveland s <lb />
Story of a <lb />
is a young woman in an <lb />
who has worn about hat <lb />
during the past season a <lb />
very handsome diamond necklace set <lb />
with thirteen stones of <lb />
value. As the parents of the <lb />
woman were not persons of <lb />
wealth, the ornament naturally waS <lb />
the occasion of considerable <lb />
among her women friends. Finally <lb />
one woman, privileged or <lb />
more audacious the rest, remarked <lb />
on the beauty of tho necklace, <lb />
asked how she came to hare it. <lb />
With Charming frankness She re- <lb />
course It Is a very valuable <lb />
but value is In <lb />
associations. Each of these stones <lb />
has a separate and sweet memory for j <lb />
m. You see, a composite, it H <lb />
out of the diamond engagement <lb />
flint I hare worn different <lb />
There were thirteen of <lb />
All Work guaranteed. <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
That will cut feet of per day. on good also larger at j <lb />
rates of . <lb />
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS. <lb />
That will raise 1,800 pounds of seed cotton from a wagon in minutes. rm- <lb />
can afford to do without one. Terms 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 />
K Manager, X. C. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY. <lb />
J. R. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
school for years, which has <lb />
of appointing delegates to . <lb />
not been appreciated and patron <lb />
by our people as its merits <lb />
demand. This lack of patronage <lb />
County Convention, for the <lb />
nation of Candidates for <lb />
and the election of five Demo <lb />
to constitute a Township Ex- <lb />
Committee. <lb />
By order of the Democratic Ex- <lb />
Committee of Pitt county. <lb />
Alex L. Blow, <lb />
R. Williams Jr., bee. <lb />
Blame's letter is certainly stir- <lb />
ring up the politicians and they are <lb />
asking if is <lb />
paring for another Presidential <lb />
campaign. <lb />
did not come about from <lb />
to school, but mostly <lb />
from lack of interest in the <lb />
education of our children. Owing <lb />
to the change Prof. Duckett has <lb />
made, a male school is an absolute <lb />
necessity in this town, and though <lb />
he announced at the close of his <lb />
Juno 6th, that be would <lb />
not take boys hereafter over ten <lb />
years of age, still there is no <lb />
arrangement for a male school. <lb />
The committee appointed to take <lb />
charge of the matter has worked <lb />
The correspondence between <lb />
Great Britain and the United j faithfully, there is so little in- <lb />
states relative to the Behring Sea I manifested in the matter on <lb />
fisheries has been transmitted to j the part of parents their work has <lb />
Congress. It is very long discouraging from the first, <lb />
contains a full of the case, j Something must be done at once. <lb />
A Card. <lb />
of the <lb />
people of Pitt desire <lb />
to place Convention for <lb />
of Deeds, James L. Smith, <lb />
a man worthy support <lb />
Democratic party. time has <lb />
come one man should not <lb />
hold office by a Mr. <lb />
Smith is a man lolly equal to <lb />
duties of office, has always been <lb />
a Democrat, served party faith- <lb />
fully and well. He is a law of <lb />
Henry who so long lead <lb />
party to victory and would make <lb />
a good officer. He has a host of <lb />
friends, and no enemies, a plain, <lb />
popular man, and if elected <lb />
would make a good of <lb />
Deeds that would be creditable to <lb />
and satisfactory to the <lb />
party. A <lb />
July, 24th, 1890. <lb />
i as i <lb />
A mysterious explosion occurred <lb />
in a boarding in Savannah <lb />
last week. Three persons were <lb />
killed and seven injured, two of <lb />
whom will probably die. <lb />
the people, remain in the field, a <lb />
nomination can only be made after <lb />
a holly contested in <lb />
which would tend to weaken <lb />
the chances of the nominee for <lb />
election and prejudice the <lb />
of the Democratic party in Dis- <lb />
After the experience the <lb />
Congressional convention at <lb />
City in 1886, determined <lb />
never again to lie willingly a party <lb />
to such a contest. Therefore I ask <lb />
my friends I have not con <lb />
suited in this matter, but who I <lb />
believe will appreciate the motive <lb />
that actuates mo, not to present my <lb />
name to the convention, but to <lb />
choose between other aspirants and <lb />
use their every effort to harmonize <lb />
the party and insure success in <lb />
November. <lb />
I will not that I take this <lb />
course without regrets. There are <lb />
several measures for benefit of <lb />
District that I bad begun, <lb />
which I wished to finish and I <lb />
was ambitious to take part in <lb />
reforms me tit <lb />
agriculture and labor from the <lb />
of money power, but as <lb />
all gentleman who are competing <lb />
for the Democratic nomination are <lb />
sound Democrats and have at heart <lb />
good of the District and the <lb />
interests of agriculture. I feel <lb />
that the District, the Party and <lb />
cause of Farmer, will be in safe <lb />
bands. So my regrets are merely <lb />
personal and must not come be- <lb />
tween me my duty to the Dem- <lb />
Party, to maintain which <lb />
should be the first purpose and <lb />
object of all who desire the <lb />
of our government. <lb />
I thank my friends and all <lb />
Democrats of the District for <lb />
earnest support heretofore and be- <lb />
speak that same support for <lb />
nominee of r arty at the <lb />
convention. <lb />
T. G. <lb />
COME IN <lb />
We want to have a talk <lb />
with you and. tell <lb />
you how cheap <lb />
we can sell <lb />
you <lb />
HARDWARE <lb />
For <lb />
Dixie and <lb />
and naturally I couldn't on wear- TobaCCO S, 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 />
men, I them all set <lb />
in a necklace. And now I can wear <lb />
them all at once and be- <lb />
yon see how handsome an <lb />
I Francisco<lb />
Tho Shall <lb />
When the shall and hi west <lb />
ha England they annoyed tho royal <lb />
family beyond all telling. Of <lb />
they had to be entertained, and the <lb />
queen made a groat show of hospitality, <lb />
but, from the queen down to Batten- <lb />
berg, tho royal family was constantly <lb />
in trepidation during the sojourn, <lb />
lest at any moment that eccentric <lb />
whimsicality should <lb />
in some particularly shocking <lb />
manner. The shah made a practice of <lb />
rooming about the palace to <lb />
use in la his feet, and <lb />
en one he bare- <lb />
footed Into tins street la front of the <lb />
to see a go by. <lb />
Field In News. <lb />
Mr. Carnegie's bridal gift i Mr. <lb />
Stanley and his bride was <lb />
diamond. When Mr. <lb />
maker presented Mrs. Harrison <lb />
with that Cape May cottage he <lb />
said it was from unknown friends. <lb />
Mr. Carnegie might also have in- <lb />
formed Mr. Stanley and his bride <lb />
that this great diamond was the <lb />
gift of unknown American farmers <lb />
who had paid for it in the protect- <lb />
and steel which they bought <lb />
from mm. <lb />
wheat reserves on July is I <lb />
estimated at bushels. <lb />
Only On. <lb />
Opt. King, of the India army, that <lb />
s tiger through the heart, and <lb />
animal seized him and gore him <lb />
hake. It was only a shake, but <lb />
It put the in the hospital for <lb />
At weeks. He says that a Al <lb />
from an an wounded tiger mast <lb />
equal to a small <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
Th win <lb />
Mother I an <lb />
obliged to yon far my <lb />
fettle boy bask. <lb />
Organ I ha <lb />
rank Haw York Weekly. <lb />
ANOTHER <lb />
Car Load of Fine <lb />
Horses <lb />
SOLID CHUMS OF TRUTHS j <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO., <lb />
your careful attention to their large and complete stock of-- <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, <lb />
.-And of each and every one at least a share of their esteem. <lb />
cry of hard times hear constantly on every hand, but we-. <lb />
--------wish to remind we have a------- <lb />
SPECIALLY SELECTED <lb />
meet not only competition, bat to conquer the monster high prices. <lb />
day is passed when the thought of friendship enters Into <lb />
baying of goods, why r because every one must and <lb />
-will buy where they can buy <lb />
WE ARE TO SERVE All <lb />
Who will favor 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 hi <lb />
and a Make our place your headquarters while. <lb />
in the town. Trices and quality are what you want for J <lb />
Mules, <lb />
-Just received by- <lb />
C. <lb />
Justin H. play adapt- <lb />
k a member of th house of com <lb />
and a son of <lb />
was wall known and <lb />
latter Is also a member of the boos <lb />
g commons. <lb />
Major Held, of Ga., has <lb />
Has dog that on his seal <lb />
th for boors at a <lb />
night. The Inference <lb />
skat the major has no<lb />
John an inmate of the <lb />
County asylum, hat <lb />
keen granted a pension of <lb />
a is a lunatic, having received in- <lb />
juries during the wax which destroyed <lb />
ob mind. <lb />
On the Congo there are today <lb />
steam vessels of various <lb />
teas, and every one of them was car- <lb />
on th backs of men <lb />
Greenville. N. <lb />
-----and will be sold- <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
or at reasonable terms on time on <lb />
proved security. I bought my stock for <lb />
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb />
anyone. Give me a call. <lb />
The B est Salve in the world for Cuts <lb />
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum <lb />
Fever Sores. Hands <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
turns, and positively cures Tiles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
Price cents per box. For said by J. <lb />
L. <lb />
Administrator's Notice <lb />
The undersigned having been appoint- <lb />
ed by Clerk of the Superior Court of <lb />
Pitt County as administrator of the es- <lb />
of William Mills having <lb />
as Notice is hereby given <lb />
to all persons holding claims against <lb />
said estate to present them to the under- <lb />
signed duly authenticated for payment, <lb />
on or before the 21st day of May 1890 <lb />
or this notice will be plead in bar of <lb />
their recovery. All persons Indebted to <lb />
said estate are requested to make <lb />
payment This the day of<lb />
Mills <lb />
your hard earned dollars and that is just what <lb />
got for you, <lb />
No Mistake No Bragging No Back <lb />
We mean every word of it and can and will do what we tell you. Look <lb />
down this column sec if cannot interest you in bargains. <lb />
-Our stock embraces <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Furnishing Goods, Hals, Caps, <lb />
Shoes, Hardware, Groceries, Provisions, Harness and <lb />
and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, <lb />
-Plows and Castings, Furniture, Bed Springs, <lb />
And easy and comfortable Lounges, also a line of Baby Car <lb />
Look at these prices they arc not leaders but only sample prices through our <lb />
cents Ginghams at to cents per yard. <lb />
pr Elegant line of White Goods at to i <lb />
at pr yd. Round thread S. C. Check <lb />
40-inch White Lawns from to <lb />
All wool, fashionable shades, single width Albatross at cents per yards. <lb />
Nun's Veiling at m cents per yard, standard goods and worth at least f <lb />
Single and Double width Cashmeres in several leading shades, reduce <lb />
-------We have the best line <lb />
OUR DOLLAR SHOES <lb />
We <lb />
Give the tired mother a rest please the baby by it a nice <lb />
Now we want to talk to you <lb />
That and essential element in every household- are lies <lb />
for this market, and , the largest hue ever found her-. We can, <lb />
money on small as well as purchases. <lb />
Our Parting injunction to every consumer and buyer of goods in this m <lb />
to come in and look at our goods and compare them and our prices in all <lb />
lines of General with goods and prices elsewhere, and <lb />
meet competition by lowering the price not the quality. <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018998_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
Column <lb />
WEARING <lb />
WEARING I <lb />
Make <lb />
yourself <lb />
comfortable <lb />
for the summer <lb />
months. Below we <lb />
quote quite an array of <lb />
hot weather goods for those who <lb />
wish to make the most of <lb />
life during the summer. <lb />
All our Lawns and re <lb />
to the uniform price of <lb />
CENTS. r <lb />
CENTS. <lb />
CENTS. <lb />
CENTS. <lb />
Many among them worth double <lb />
the money.<lb />
ALL BLOUSE WAISTS <lb />
AT COST-<lb />
Choice display <lb />
of Sateens, <lb />
hams, etc New <lb />
lot Embroidered <lb />
Robes received <lb />
which we are <lb />
ling for merely <lb />
cents on the dollar. <lb />
Nice line of Sun Umbrellas. <lb />
Nice line of Sun Umbrellas. <lb />
SI <lb />
ATTRACTIVE <lb />
DISPLAY OF <lb />
SLIPPERS A SHOES <lb />
Full line of Summer Coats. <lb />
SERGES. <lb />
FLANNELS. <lb />
TE. <lb />
MOHAIR. <lb />
For men of all sizes. <lb />
line for Clergymen and <lb />
Stout Men. <lb />
Stylish array <lb />
Clothing <lb />
of all styles <lb />
and qualities. <lb />
New stock <lb />
WORLD'S <lb />
Hi <lb />
Just received. <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
N. C <lb />
Local Sparks <lb />
Fans <lb />
Hi M i <lb />
Last paper in July. <lb />
Graces arc in the market. <lb />
are somewhat scare . <lb />
Dog arc approaching. <lb />
Four full moons this month. <lb />
ice at T. A. Cherry. <lb />
Seventh month of about gone. <lb />
man eat much <lb />
Have seen the Star of <lb />
ham <lb />
on ice at T. A. Cherry. <lb />
Have you tried the water at the <lb />
Institute <lb />
arc popping up all over <lb />
the county. <lb />
The length of the days is hours <lb />
and G minutes. <lb />
church is <lb />
on completion. <lb />
Try some of the new corned <lb />
lets at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Blankets were comfortable a <lb />
of last week. <lb />
The Durham Situ has a white <lb />
buzzard. Next <lb />
the cat's away, the mice <lb />
will <lb />
Cheap- Car load solid Corn at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The crops still give promise of a <lb />
most bountiful harvest <lb />
New sweet have arrived, <lb />
and they arc ones. <lb />
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well <lb />
and sick at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
pay up your subscription at <lb />
once- AVe want it bad. <lb />
Greenville is one of the most or- <lb />
in the State. <lb />
If you want a Grist Mill or a Cot- <lb />
ton Gin call on D. Haskett Co. <lb />
A tobacco warehouse ought to be <lb />
built, here. It would pay. <lb />
Cant c-lope Why, of he <lb />
can if the girl is willing. <lb />
White Mountain Ice Cream Free- <lb />
for sale by Latham Fender. <lb />
The tobacco crop in Pitt county <lb />
promises to be a grand success. <lb />
The river is up and boats went <lb />
through to Tarboro on Monday. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. carry a nice <lb />
line of Ladies Shoes, and sell cheap. <lb />
There were a peaches in town <lb />
last week. They were very small. <lb />
Best Shoes ever had for both <lb />
Ladies and Men's, at J. B. Cherry <lb />
Co's. <lb />
What's the matter with getting up <lb />
an excursion to Wrightsville during <lb />
Go to Brown Bros and see their <lb />
cheap White Goods and Embroider- <lb />
Improved designs in job printing <lb />
at this stock station- <lb />
cry put in. <lb />
Twelve bales of new crop cotton <lb />
were received at Texas, <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr. A. C. Nobles left yesterday for <lb />
Salisbury. <lb />
Mr. R. D. Bo Cherry was at <lb />
Wrightsville last week. <lb />
Rev. and Mrs. E. returned <lb />
from Ocracoke Monday. <lb />
The genial Russ was seen <lb />
on streets the past few days. <lb />
Mr. J. S. Congleton and family <lb />
went to Waynesville Monday. <lb />
Master Larry returned <lb />
last week from a trip to Nags Head. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. M- R. LAng returned <lb />
Nags Head on Friday night. <lb />
are glad to sec Mr. J. S. C. <lb />
Benjamin out after u few days of <lb />
sickness. <lb />
Mr. W. B. James and sister. Miss <lb />
Jennie, left morning for <lb />
Head. <lb />
Mr. Edwin M. Evans, of <lb />
is visiting the family of Mr. L. <lb />
H. Bender's. <lb />
Miss Ida Irwin, from near Green- <lb />
ville, is visiting friends and relatives <lb />
in Salisbury. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Burgess is in our midst <lb />
representing that popular firm, <lb />
If. A. Co. <lb />
We were pleased to see M r. It. J. <lb />
Latta on our streets yesterday. He <lb />
is as pleasant as ever. <lb />
Col. Harry Skinner left Monday <lb />
evening to attend the Judicial Con- <lb />
at Edenton. <lb />
Miss Pat tin Cobb has just <lb />
from Washington City, Nor- <lb />
folk and Nags Head. <lb />
Mrs. Hardy Johnson, of Content- <lb />
her daughter, <lb />
Mrs. . <lb />
Mr. R. J. Cobb and family re- <lb />
turned from a pleasant trip to Wash- <lb />
City, Norfolk and Nags Head. <lb />
Mr. W. T. Johnson, of Winston, <lb />
was in town on Saturday and <lb />
enlivened things with his splendid <lb />
music. <lb />
Mr. I. A. Tyson, of the firm of <lb />
Tyson has returned after a <lb />
adjournment for several weeks in <lb />
Lenoir, Tenn. <lb />
Capt. Dick Williams, in command <lb />
of the Greenville company, is an <lb />
and is popular with his <lb />
Star. <lb />
We were pleased to see Mr. R. Hy- <lb />
man on our streets again last Friday, <lb />
he had just returned from a trip to <lb />
his old home, <lb />
Mrs. D. D. Haskett and children <lb />
went to Morganton yesterday morn- <lb />
to visit her father. They will <lb />
spend the rest of the summer, <lb />
Mrs. J. C. Tyson and son, Clifford, <lb />
who has been spending the past week <lb />
in Greenville visiting and rel- <lb />
home Sunday. <lb />
Sergeant O. Hooker and Ensign R. <lb />
Greene, Jr., returned Friday night <lb />
from the encampment at Wrights- <lb />
ville. They report as spending a <lb />
very pleasant lime. <lb />
Master Thomas Jarvis Sugg, a son <lb />
of one of the soldiers of Company B, <lb />
First Regiment, and a namesake of <lb />
ex Gov. Jarvis, is in camp, taking his <lb />
first lessons in military life. It is <lb />
needless to say that he is the pet of <lb />
the Star. <lb />
On the first page of this issue we <lb />
publish an article on <lb />
Every farmer in the county <lb />
ought to read it. <lb />
All good must be sold <lb />
within days even at a <lb />
Our loss is your gain. <lb />
-M. R. <lb />
Street near Telegraph Office, <lb />
Evan Street near Telegraph Office. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
A Democratic Club should be <lb />
formed in Greenville and every town- <lb />
ship in the county. <lb />
The finest loaf of bread I eyer ate <lb />
was made of Point Lace Flour, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Catching watermelons is a past <lb />
time around the vacant lots now. <lb />
You drop, you pay. <lb />
Chickens were more plentiful last <lb />
week. They were selling for <lb />
and cents each. <lb />
lb for Sweet <lb />
Snuff. lb sold in Pitt Co., which <lb />
is a of its superiority, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Trade was not as good last <lb />
day as it was the previous one. The <lb />
rain no doubt interfering. <lb />
A very large crowd was town <lb />
Saturday, and the topic of <lb />
was curing tobacco. <lb />
Walter A. Wood Mowers and <lb />
Hakes. We have just re- <lb />
a lot these excellent <lb />
machines. Send for circular and <lb />
price. F. S. Co., <lb />
Tarboro, N. C. <lb />
Our politest bow to Mr. E. <lb />
Little for one of the largest musk- <lb />
melons we have seen this season. <lb />
Mr. Spain, an aged <lb />
and respected citizen of town- <lb />
ship, died last Monday morning. <lb />
will want a fer- <lb />
for your turnips and I bare <lb />
just received a lot of Guano for that <lb />
purpose. Call early and leave your <lb />
orders. G. E. Harris. <lb />
Watermelons arc plentiful. The <lb />
rich and the poor, the lame and the <lb />
halt, everybody have their fill. <lb />
Greenville can't stay in her old <lb />
ruts. She will surely get a move on <lb />
her if her citizens will only work to <lb />
will change my grind- <lb />
days from Wednesday and Sat- <lb />
to Tuesday and Friday. Will <lb />
commence fourth in this <lb />
month. I am better prepared to <lb />
make good Hour than heretofore. <lb />
Come and see. BRYANT <lb />
Greenville Female School is one <lb />
the best schools in Eastern North <lb />
Neck Democrat. <lb />
Truth, too. <lb />
If the people of Greenville want to <lb />
see the town move on to perfection <lb />
let them work together. we <lb />
stand, divided we Take this <lb />
as your motto, and stick to it, and <lb />
you will soon see the glorious effects. <lb />
We arc better prepared than ever <lb />
to furnish you with good <lb />
Cook Stoves. Richmond Stove <lb />
Co's Stoves have been tried in the <lb />
balances and found all You <lb />
will find them at D. D. Haskett Co <lb />
Our many thanks are extended to <lb />
Mr. John Fleming for a line melon <lb />
brought to us on Saturday. It <lb />
weighed pounds. <lb />
Ocracoke is enjoying a splendid <lb />
patronage. Those wanting to spend <lb />
a while pleasantly should go down to <lb />
that popular resort. <lb />
The much looked for rain came on <lb />
Friday night and Saturday, and the <lb />
already beaming face of the <lb />
puts on a brighter line. <lb />
Dignity is a good thing; but if <lb />
in the rear a big crowd and <lb />
wish to sec the procession, don't <lb />
stand on it. Get on a barrel. <lb />
The following is said to be the <lb />
shortest sentence which contains all <lb />
the letters of the Pack ray <lb />
box with five dozen liquor jugs. <lb />
Place your orders for job printing <lb />
with us. We have the facilities and <lb />
experienced workmen, and give <lb />
you satisfaction in every instance. <lb />
Do not permit weeds to grow up <lb />
and run to seed or bloom in your <lb />
yards. They are dangerous. Better <lb />
cut then down and have them carried <lb />
off. <lb />
Report reaches us that quite a hail <lb />
storm was had up the Tar river about <lb />
eight miles above Greenville. No <lb />
damage to crops are glad to re- <lb />
port. <lb />
Friend Ryan bad <lb />
last week. Three that <lb />
weighed and respectively. <lb />
He received cents and <lb />
cents for them. <lb />
To cure a wart place the thumb <lb />
upon the wart and press it against <lb />
the bone. Move the wart backward <lb />
and forward upon the bone until the <lb />
wart becomes irritated or when <lb />
the wart will disappear. <lb />
A sign displayed by a Boston firm <lb />
store closed from <lb />
Thursday, July until Tuesday <lb />
July to allow the boss and <lb />
to gambol on the green and to dip <lb />
their in the salt sea <lb />
Treasurer M. Schultz of the <lb />
Council, American Legion of <lb />
Honor, has just received a draft, of <lb />
85.000 due to Mrs. H. T. Daniel, by <lb />
the of her husband, <lb />
Daniel, companion of the Legion of <lb />
Honor, who died Jan. 1890. <lb />
Fifty staunch and handsome log <lb />
cars have just been turned out of the <lb />
Atlantic Coast Line shops in <lb />
the use on the Norfolk j <lb />
and Carolina Railroad. The saw- <lb />
in ill on that road are <lb />
and it keeps the road busy to <lb />
supply the mill with timber. <lb />
Ocracoke. <lb />
The steamer Greenville leaves here <lb />
on Saturdays after arrival of train, <lb />
and not on Fridays as previously <lb />
stated. They surely are having a <lb />
big tune down there. There are <lb />
about seventy-five guests, and fishing <lb />
is very good; a party caught be- <lb />
fore breakfast the other morning. <lb />
Star of Bethlehem. <lb />
That particularly bright and <lb />
star which may be seen these <lb />
evenings a few degrees south of cast <lb />
is said to be the Star of Bethlehem, <lb />
and some of the religious papers do <lb />
not doubt the claim. It is said that <lb />
this star makes its appearance once <lb />
Horse Killed. <lb />
We sorry to learn that Mr. H. <lb />
C. a farmer who lives about <lb />
five miles from Greenville, had the <lb />
misfortune to lose a fine black <lb />
one day last week. He said he had <lb />
been for the and it <lb />
is truly a great blow to him. She <lb />
fell in a ditch and sustained injuries <lb />
that caused her death. <lb />
Fifteen Sold. <lb />
We were informed by Maj. Henry <lb />
Harding on Saturday last that fifteen <lb />
building lots were disposed of at <lb />
and a number of business <lb />
lots. is a new town on the <lb />
Scotland Neck and Greenville Rail- <lb />
road leading from Greenville to <lb />
Kinston. Quite a boom in real es- <lb />
at that place. <lb />
Mineral Water. <lb />
The mineral well at the Institute is <lb />
attracting a great deal of attention. <lb />
From fifty to seventy people visit it <lb />
every day, and a great many others <lb />
send for the water. A number of <lb />
persons express themselves as <lb />
It is a general opinion that <lb />
this excellent water will benefit the <lb />
school. <lb />
in Session. <lb />
The North Carolina Press <lb />
held its annual session at Dur- <lb />
ham, commencing Wednesday, July <lb />
and continuing through the <lb />
week. The attendance was very <lb />
large, and the treated <lb />
them in fine style. In our next issue <lb />
will give a full report, as at pres- <lb />
the editor is in attendance and <lb />
we have not the particulars at hand. <lb />
Samples of Tobacco. <lb />
Samples of tobacco were brought <lb />
in and put in our show window from <lb />
John Randolph, E. A. <lb />
and G. T. Tyson on Saturday. Mess. <lb />
Randolph and Tyson's were of a <lb />
beautiful yellow and will command a <lb />
good price. Mr. was a ma- <lb />
and pronounced by <lb />
tent judges as very fine. If old <lb />
ain't a daisy on tobacco this year <lb />
we'll eat it. She leads the world; if <lb />
yon don't believe it come down aid <lb />
will prove It in two minutes. All <lb />
samples brought in are tagged and <lb />
placed in the show window where <lb />
everybody can see what Pitt is doing. <lb />
Suicide. <lb />
Mrs. Dicey wife of <lb />
Guilford residing about C <lb />
miles from Greenville, committed <lb />
suicide, it is supposed, on last Thurs- <lb />
day. It seemed that she sent her <lb />
step-daughter off and immediately <lb />
her departure she went to an <lb />
old well standing in the pulled <lb />
off her shoes and deliberately jumped <lb />
in. The well was about twenty feet <lb />
deep. She was found drowned short- <lb />
after and taken out. Her remains <lb />
were interred in the family burial <lb />
ground on Saturday last. She was <lb />
about years of age. <lb />
New Enterprises. <lb />
We told you so. Greenville is not <lb />
on a stand still. And in a short <lb />
while you will see enterprises of all <lb />
kinds spring and prove successful. <lb />
Mr. A. N. Ryan has entered in one <lb />
of a paying kind, that is the <lb />
of cakes of every description. <lb />
He docs his own baking, packing and <lb />
shipping. We passed there <lb />
day morning and was shown boxes <lb />
of assorted cakes that he intended to <lb />
ship on the first out going freight. <lb />
Our clever merchants, Mess. S. M. <lb />
Schultz and J. A. Andrews were the <lb />
first to place their orders, and they <lb />
say they sell equally as well, if not <lb />
better, the northern cakes, as <lb />
their customers know they are per- <lb />
fresh and clean. Mr. A. <lb />
of Tarboro, also handles them. <lb />
For some time Mr. Ryan has been <lb />
shipping or the old- <lb />
fashion ginger cakes all over the <lb />
State a good trade on <lb />
them. Help home enterprise. <lb />
Mr. A. C. Tucker brought a <lb />
yesterday to this office <lb />
competing for the sub- <lb />
No, can't tell yon the <lb />
weight yet. <lb />
Dr. P. H- Mayo, a prominent <lb />
of Falkland, died on Sunday <lb />
night and was on Monday. <lb />
He leaves a wife and several children <lb />
to lament their loss. <lb />
Winston is to have a canning <lb />
to cost It is high time <lb />
for the people of Greenville to bestir <lb />
There will be money in <lb />
a canning factory here. <lb />
Mr. John Daniel, our efficient night <lb />
watchman, comes to the lead on to- <lb />
He showed one on Sat- <lb />
that weighed one pound and <lb />
five ounces. Who can beat it <lb />
In Count;. <lb />
In township on Fri- <lb />
day might, the 18th inst., a company, <lb />
styling themselves the <lb />
visited a house on the land of Mr. <lb />
Samuel Potter, said to be one of dis <lb />
order, and commenced shooting. Mr. <lb />
Potter was home and heard the <lb />
shooting aDd said to his wife he was <lb />
going there and protect his house. <lb />
In spite of the entreaties of his <lb />
he went, and next morning he was <lb />
found dead in the house and the in- <lb />
mates had fled. He was shot in the <lb />
breast with a load of buck shot. A <lb />
jury was impaneled, but we have not <lb />
heart their decision. Parties have <lb />
been arrested on suspicion. A week <lb />
before the above happened they visit- <lb />
ed a house similar to this one some <lb />
distance below and run the inmates <lb />
off and tore the house nearly down. <lb />
Judging from the course that is be- <lb />
pursued they intend to adjust <lb />
matters on that line. <lb />
The town paper is a constant ad- <lb />
of the town and section, <lb />
and no matter what is said in foreign <lb />
papers, outsiders desiring to locale <lb />
in a place first write for sample <lb />
copies of the town paper. The town <lb />
is judged by them, hence the <lb />
of having good papers well <lb />
Notice. <lb />
We were shown on Saturday last <lb />
three mammoth watermelons by <lb />
friend Van Stephens, the aggregate <lb />
weight being pounds. He bought <lb />
and they weighed pounds. <lb />
Three young boys packed their <lb />
grips and started to see the world at <lb />
Raleigh last week. One bad a fiddle <lb />
and another had cigarettes in <lb />
their but the police nipped <lb />
their scheme in the and carried <lb />
them back home. <lb />
Davis Gregory. <lb />
On second page to-day we <lb />
have a large double advertisement of <lb />
Messrs. Davis A Gregory, proprietors <lb />
of the New Johnston Warehouse of <lb />
Oxford. Read it and act according- <lb />
They are the men to trust with <lb />
your business. They've done a great <lb />
deal to induce the farmers of Pitt to <lb />
plant tobacco. Last season they <lb />
furnished seed to a great and <lb />
this season they will furnish you <lb />
with hogsheads to ship in, providing <lb />
you ship to their house. Freight to <lb />
Oxford is as as to any first-class <lb />
market in North Carolina. They <lb />
have good railroad facilities, enjoy <lb />
the lowest freights and with seven <lb />
warehouses there is certainly <lb />
more competition. By September <lb />
1st they will have their new ware- <lb />
house finished, and It will be known <lb />
the Davis A Gregory Warehouse. <lb />
Ship your tobacco to Davis A- Greg- <lb />
Oxford, N. C. <lb />
On day of August, <lb />
1890, there will be a meeting in the <lb />
Court House, in Greenville, of per- <lb />
sons interesting in the movement to <lb />
secure the drainage of <lb />
Creek. Persons living adjacent to <lb />
the creek and all others interested <lb />
should be in attendance. <lb />
News Jottings. <lb />
Gen. census supervisor, <lb />
announces the population of New Or- <lb />
leans to be <lb />
Within a few days that sold <lb />
for have been found in streams <lb />
in Wisconsin. <lb />
It it estimated that is <lb />
invested in the Delaware river <lb />
fishing industry. <lb />
General Fremont at the time of <lb />
his death was engaged in writing a <lb />
paper for the Century, to be called <lb />
Pathways to <lb />
The Manhattan elevated railroad <lb />
has acquired property in the upper <lb />
wards of New York with the view of <lb />
extending its lines to Yonkers. <lb />
It is now very generally admitted <lb />
that the cost of sustaining the <lb />
called the federal govern- <lb />
is a day. <lb />
The exact population of Rochester, <lb />
N. Y., is an increase in ten <lb />
years of <lb />
A reduction on the postal rates in <lb />
Japan was expected to cause a de- <lb />
in the revenues, but instead <lb />
they showed an increase. <lb />
Island boasts an increase in <lb />
in population of under the <lb />
new census. <lb />
The manufacture of cotton goods <lb />
in Ceylon has for the last few years <lb />
made progress. The <lb />
Island promises to become n. danger- <lb />
rival to India. <lb />
Ezra H. Heywood, publisher of <lb />
the Boston was sentenced <lb />
to two imprisonment on a <lb />
charge of sending literature <lb />
through the mails. <lb />
Seven thousand persons were em <lb />
ployed in getting out Mr. Stanley's <lb />
book, and more than six hundred <lb />
tons of paper have been in <lb />
Bo gland. <lb />
Eighteen newspapers have been <lb />
started in San Diego, California, in <lb />
the past three and all have <lb />
proved to be rank failures. <lb />
Chief Doe, of New <lb />
shire, delivered a long opinion to- <lb />
day on the petition of <lb />
Kicker, of Dover, for admission t <lb />
the bar. The decided that <lb />
sex is no disqualification for <lb />
We were in the eastern part of <lb />
the county the past week and the <lb />
crops were the finest we have <lb />
seen. We saw two small fields of <lb />
cotton upon which no fertilizer of <lb />
any kind had been used and they <lb />
wore exceedingly nice. The <lb />
lest lot of ten acres sure <lb />
without any disaster from now, <lb />
will make more than a bale to the <lb />
Rural Some. <lb />
The Republicans went to Wash- <lb />
for the purpose of spending <lb />
all the money in the treasury, it <lb />
seems. Well, they have succeeded <lb />
so well that the fact is apparent that <lb />
they have spent more than all, for <lb />
there appears to be a deficit of some <lb />
hundred million of dollars. But they <lb />
arc still getting up new tricks to <lb />
spend more. But where they expect <lb />
to get it from, they have not yet <lb />
made Neck Deni- <lb />
Wins. <lb />
desire to say to our citizens, that <lb />
for years we have been selling Dr. king <lb />
New Discovery for Consumption, Dr. <lb />
King's New Life <lb />
Salve an Electric Bitters, and have <lb />
handled remedies that sell as well, <lb />
or that have given such universal <lb />
faction. We do not hesitate to <lb />
tee them every time, and we stand ready <lb />
to refund the purchase price if <lb />
results do not their use. <lb />
These remedies have won their great <lb />
purely on their merits. J, <lb />
. Druggist. <lb />
SHIP YOUR TOBACCO <lb />
DAVIS GREGORY'S <lb />
WAREHOUSE. <lb />
OXFORD, <lb />
Strict Personal Attention, <lb />
Highest Market Prices, <lb />
Quick sales and prompt returns guaranteed. <lb />
HOGSHEADS FREE <lb />
Upon application to Amos G. Cox. <lb />
If you want any information concerning Tobacco, write us and your <lb />
inquiries will have prompt attention. <lb />
No Market in the Land Enjoys Better <lb />
Facilities than Oxford. <lb />
Davis Gregory, Oxford, <lb />
JUST ARRIVED J. A. ANDREWS, <lb />
i f U f <lb />
M. CONGLETON CO., <lb />
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb />
-DEALERS IN <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoos and <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
We have just received opened a beautiful line of new <lb />
Spring and Summer Goods. <lb />
I shall be glad to have my old friends and customers come to <lb />
see us, and assure them that QUO sell the goods <lb />
Low For <lb />
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for <lb />
the spot cash. , <lb />
JOHN S. <lb />
Greenville, N. C,<lb />
SO---- a p <lb />
ft T <lb />
a a OLE<lb />
d w<lb />
s .<lb />
V. <lb />
p mS H <lb />
r.<lb />
Stir <lb />
ED <lb />
DEDUCTION I I <lb />
I REDUCTION I <lb />
THE FALL <lb />
---------M <lb />
T I <lb />
T I<lb />
go I <lb />
-THE- <lb />
TE GOODS AND <lb />
WHITE GOODS AND <lb />
WHITE GOODS AND EDGING <lb />
GOODS AND EDGING <lb />
13.00 to 14.06 <lb />
Mess <lb />
Bulk to <lb />
Bulk <lb />
Bacon <lb />
Bacon to Si <lb />
County <lb />
Sugar Cured <lb />
to 5.77 <lb />
to <lb />
Brown toO <lb />
Granulated <lb />
Syrup and Molasses, to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
Star<lb />
have been selling this season has bean reduced in price and it is need- <lb />
less to say how cheap when before the reduction we <lb />
heard several <lb />
never saw such cheap <lb />
White Goods . <lb />
in all my life where did <lb />
yon get them from <lb />
Hamburg Edging in. wide in. wide in. wide <lb />
Hamburg Edging in. wide In. wide . in. wide <lb />
White Goods from cents to cents per yard. <lb />
White Goods from cents to cents per yard. <lb />
Come and sec if they are not what we represent In price,<lb />
ROW IN<lb />
ROW IN <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb />
That Man Stephens <lb />
-WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICK ASSORTMENT OP- <lb />
p- <lb />
R J. COBB C C COBB. T. H. GILLIAM. <lb />
Pit Co N C. Pit Co C <lb />
Cobb Bros., Gilliam <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
Merchants. <lb />
of <lb />
We have had many years ex- <lb />
at the business and <lb />
prepared to handle to <lb />
All business entrusted to out <lb />
hands will receive prompt and <lb />
careful <lb />
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS <lb />
Says there is never any doubt of his giving you entire satisfaction <lb />
if you will just give him a call when needing goods In 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 />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. Schultz, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb />
their will find <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing else where. <lb />
in all it-s branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb />
SPICES, TEAS, Ac. <lb />
always at Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct Manufacturers, <lb />
at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to . <lb />
the time. Our foods all bought I <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no <lb />
to run, sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
B. M. <lb />
Greenville. N.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018998_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
HUM <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
A LIGHT IN THE <lb />
The on Which the W.-II Known <lb />
Sony <lb />
Few are the persons who <lb />
have not one time or the other heard <lb />
the Sunday school song, Light in <lb />
the am mistaken, <lb />
gays a Times writer, it is <lb />
founded a story told upon the <lb />
little island of but which might <lb />
easily have its exact on i <lb />
most any seashore where a mother's <lb />
heart heats with yearning love for her <lb />
sailor son and keeps its fond promise <lb />
from night to light. <lb />
the simple Usher folks on the j <lb />
island lived a woman and her son. He ; <lb />
was her only child, the pride of her j <lb />
heart as well as the source of constant ; <lb />
dread, for the boy loved the sea as his <lb />
father before had loved it. nothing <lb />
gave him so much pleasure as to watch <lb />
the incoming tide tumble its curling <lb />
waves or the sands. No sooner was <lb />
he strong enough to wield an oar <lb />
steer a boat than he joined the men in <lb />
their fishing expeditions. <lb />
The mother, with all her and <lb />
the fate of a long line of in her <lb />
mind, yet would not have had it other- <lb />
wise, for it would have been deemed <lb />
dishonor among the hardy coasters to <lb />
have kept the boy at home or seat him <lb />
safely at work farmer. What- <lb />
ever the dangers they must be faced <lb />
for the sake of family pride. He was a <lb />
great favorite among the <lb />
folk and with the sailors, and when at <lb />
last his 13th year came around he <lb />
obtained the consent of his mother to <lb />
go to sea ho easily found a good ship <lb />
and captain. Then there was parting, <lb />
and tears shed by the mother, while <lb />
ho looked forward Into the great, wide <lb />
world with all the joyous eagerness of <lb />
a boy. Bat with her last blessing the <lb />
widowed mother promised that every <lb />
night a light should bum in the sea- <lb />
ward window of her cottage to light <lb />
him homeward and to show that <lb />
she still lived, awaiting his return. <lb />
The ship sailed. Six month.- passed <lb />
sailors dropped into the village and <lb />
told how she hail been spoken and all <lb />
was well, and the neighbors came to the <lb />
cottage and told the pleasant news to <lb />
the waiting mother, who nightly <lb />
the candle, lit it and set it in the <lb />
window to make a bright path up the <lb />
sands. Again six months elapsed, and <lb />
other sailors arrived from far oil lands, <lb />
but they had no news to tell of the <lb />
ship. A great storm had happened <lb />
and she was overdue. She might yet <lb />
make port, the people shook <lb />
their heads carried no tales to the <lb />
willow, whose candle burned brightly <lb />
every night and cast long streamers of <lb />
light out upon the sea. Another year <lb />
but the sailors going or coming <lb />
brought no news of the -hip. the <lb />
neighbors whispered apart and shook <lb />
their heads whenever any one spoke of <lb />
the widow's son. but no one was cruel <lb />
enough to cut the slender threads <lb />
which held the anchor of her hope. <lb />
And thus the light continued to glow <lb />
out toward the sea at every gloaming <lb />
and burned steadily through every <lb />
night. <lb />
Years came and went. The children <lb />
who had played with the sailor lad <lb />
had grown to be men and women, her <lb />
own head had been silvered with age. <lb />
her form was bowed, yet no one dared <lb />
to cut the cables of tier hope. Tender <lb />
words cheered her and tender hands <lb />
smoothed the way for her as she pa- <lb />
waited for the coining if <lb />
her fair haired hoy, and every <lb />
the glow of her streamed out to <lb />
seaward and the story of the <lb />
heart waiting at <lb />
How many years did hub watch and <lb />
wait I do not know. Hut one day, <lb />
at eventide, there was no gleaming <lb />
patch of light across the sands. The <lb />
window remained dark, and the <lb />
beacon failed the and <lb />
when wondered and went to the <lb />
cottage they found that the mother's <lb />
soul had gone out to seek the son. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
To applicants for county <lb />
hi tin- North College of <lb />
and Mechanic Arts- <lb />
By of Alex Pres- <lb />
of the above mentioned College. I <lb />
will hold a examination of <lb />
tor the appointments <lb />
i in said College on Saturday the day <lb />
lot August next. Those desiring to up- <lb />
Sick headache is the of many <lb />
lives. This annoying complaint may be <lb />
cured and prevented by the occasional <lb />
use Dr. J. H. Liver and <lb />
Ii- a-e in ambush for the weak; a <lb />
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb />
count r a malarious atmosphere and sud- <lb />
den change of temperature, and the <lb />
least robust are usually the easiest <lb />
Dr. J. <lb />
ply will please notify me of their will tone strength to <lb />
lions at an early day. , the entire body. <lb />
Co Snot In. Distress after eating, heartburn, sick <lb />
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb />
Dr II. Liver <lb />
Proof- <lb />
In Instances it ha been proven <lb />
B. B. Blood <lb />
made In Blood Balm Co., Atlanta. Ga, <lb />
will cure blood poison in its worse <lb />
phases, even when all oilier treatment <lb />
tails. <lb />
Branson, <lb />
had -I running on one leg and <lb />
fl on the other, and felt greatly <lb />
I believe I actually swallowed a <lb />
barrel of in vain efforts to <lb />
cure the disease. With little hope I <lb />
finally acted on the urgent advice a <lb />
friend, got a bottle of B. B. <lb />
experienced a change, my <lb />
was somewhat dispelled. I kept <lb />
using it until I had taken sixteen bottles <lb />
and all the ulcer-, rheumatism and nil <lb />
honors of Mood have dis- <lb />
appeared, and at last am sound and <lb />
well again, after an i of <lb />
years of <lb />
Ward. writes <lb />
disease was pronounced a tertiary form <lb />
of blood poison. My face, head and <lb />
shoulders wire a mass of corruption, <lb />
and finally the disease began eating my <lb />
bones. My bones ached; my kid- <lb />
deranged, I lost strength, <lb />
and life became a burden. All said <lb />
must surely tile, but nevertheless, when <lb />
had bottles of B. I. B. I was <lb />
pronounced well. Hundreds of scars <lb />
can now be seen on inc. I have now <lb />
been well over twelve <lb />
SCHOOL NOTICES. <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 feeling of <lb />
weariness would give place to vigor and <lb />
vitality. <lb />
No liniment i in better repute or more <lb />
widely known than Dr. J. II. <lb />
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonder- <lb />
remedy. <lb />
Persons advanced in feel young- <lb />
and stronger, as well as freer from the <lb />
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. II. <lb />
Sarsaparilla. <lb />
If you feel unable to do your <lb />
have tired feeling, take Dr. J. II. <lb />
Sarsaparilla; it will make you <lb />
bright active and vigorous. <lb />
The most popular liniment, is the old <lb />
reliable. Dr. II. Volcanic <lb />
Oil Liniment. <lb />
One of Dr. J. II. Little Liv- <lb />
and Kidney taken at night be <lb />
fore going to bed, will move the <lb />
the effect will astonish you. <lb />
Pimples, boils and other humors, are <lb />
able to appear when the blood gets <lb />
Dr. II. <lb />
the beat remedy. <lb />
mm <lb />
OCRACOKE. <lb />
lino-, <lb />
of <lb />
Pearl inc <lb />
Wilson Collegiate Institute, <lb />
FOR YOUNG <lb />
WILSON. N. C. <lb />
STRICTLY <lb />
Pall Session begins on Monday, Sept. <lb />
Thorough and comprehensive course <lb />
of study Moderate charges. Health- <lb />
location Unsurpassed home <lb />
Experienced an. successful teach- <lb />
in every department. The depart- <lb />
of music art each presided <lb />
over an accomplished specialist. <lb />
For and full <lb />
Address, <lb />
AS E <lb />
I, Wits, n, X. C. <lb />
CF <lb />
i The Pall Term Opens Sent. Tuition, <lb />
hour regular courses study, Class- <lb />
Philosophical, Literary, <lb />
Special courses In Chemistry, Civil <lb />
and Engineering. Pharmacy. <lb />
and other studies. <lb />
Separate schools of Law and Medicine, <lb />
students may attend the University <lb />
Address <lb />
HON. KEMP P. BATTLE. <lb />
President. Chapel Hill. X. C. <lb />
ma <lb />
Greensboro, V. C. <lb />
The Seventy-first Session of tin- well- <lb />
known Institution will begin on the <lb />
27th Day of <lb />
In addition to thorough instruction in <lb />
Literary Course, special advantages are <lb />
Bend In the departments of <lb />
and Vocal Music, Elocution, Art. <lb />
Physical Training. Charges moderate. <lb />
For apply to <lb />
B. F. DIXON, Pres. <lb />
BUSINESS EDUCATION. <lb />
-----FOR <lb />
SHIPPING <lb />
HIPPING I <lb />
. I TOBACCO <lb />
-.-I I i <lb />
for all purposes for which soap <lb />
is It is the greatest known <lb />
r of time, drudgery;, and wear <lb />
and tear in washing and <lb />
MILLIONS of packages <lb />
arc consumed annually, by economical, <lb />
who are <lb />
-J-- quick to embrace modern labor- <lb />
saving ideas; or, not doing the <lb />
work themselves, are bright <lb />
enough to supply <lb />
with They <lb />
o-et the best possible results, <lb />
and have fewer backaches <lb />
and complaints. Their clothes and paint wear longer <lb />
because they are not rubbed to pieces. <lb />
Beware of imitations which are being peddled from <lb />
door to door. First quality goods do not require such <lb />
desperate methods to sell them. <lb />
Pearline sells on its merits, and is never peddled. <lb />
Manufactured only JAMES New York, <lb />
OF <lb />
STEAMER <lb />
WHAT <lb />
SCOTT'S <lb />
BEAUFORT. EMULSION <lb />
For the benefit of those who desire <lb />
to visit daring the season, the <lb />
will run the following <lb />
Washington every Saturday in. <lb />
Monday in. j <lb />
Wednesday a in. <lb />
Close connection with steamers <lb />
from and and the I <lb />
train from connects with <lb />
the Wilmington A Weldon Railroad. <lb />
On Intermediate days lbs Beaufort <lb />
win touch New leaving there <lb />
ii. in. Tuesdays and p. m. Thursdays <lb />
connecting with <lb />
CURES <lb />
We wish to inform the public that we <lb />
arc prepared to build a <lb />
FIRST-CLASS HOGSHEAD, <lb />
FIRST-CLASS HOGSHEAD, <lb />
For purpose of shipping Tobacco in. <lb />
and aide all the tobacco growers of this <lb />
mil adjoining counties, to please exam- <lb />
our hogsheads, and we feel sure that <lb />
they will find it to their interest to buy <lb />
u-. <lb />
You can apply to Mr. A. <lb />
Forbes, cf Greenville, X. <lb />
or to the manufacturers of <lb />
The cotton Planter for <lb />
further instructions. Our <lb />
X. <lb />
Should any person wish to <lb />
apply in person are <lb />
miles south of Greenville, <lb />
near the railroad leading <lb />
from Greenville to Kin-ton, <lb />
North Carolina, <lb />
We are also prepared to <lb />
furnish ex Cart <lb />
Wheels, made of light- <lb />
wood, rim huh. at <lb />
per pair. <lb />
We still continue to manufacture <lb />
Wall Buckets, Brackets. <lb />
and Trimmings for Buildings, either <lb />
Turned or Sawed, promise reason- <lb />
able prices and satisfactory work. <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
-----AND DEALER IN----- <lb />
Hay, n- and <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
From Washington <lb />
return 82.60- <lb />
New to <lb />
return <lb />
Trip Tickets <lb />
From Washington to New Heine 92.80. <lb />
to 92.60. <lb />
and <lb />
Ample Accommodation <lb />
MANAGERS <lb />
The Steamer has re- <lb />
built and made is now a <lb />
comfortable and ten Worthy and <lb />
bass permit Co carry passengers. <lb />
CONSUMPTION <lb />
SCROFULA <lb />
BRONCHITIS <lb />
COLDS <lb />
Wasting Diseases <lb />
Wonderful Flesh Producer. <lb />
Many have gained pound <lb />
per day its use. <lb />
Emulsion is not a secret <lb />
remedy. It contains <lb />
properties of <lb />
and pure Norwegian Cod <lb />
Liver Oil, CM potency of <lb />
being largely increased. It is used <lb />
by nil over tho world. <lb />
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb />
Sold by all <lb />
A Chemists. <lb />
BUSINESS COLLEGE <lb />
N. B. Pits. <lb />
BOARD <lb />
B. Pres, National <lb />
Bank <lb />
K. Sec. N. <lb />
s Editor <lb />
Stub <lb />
B. BATTLE, Director N. V. <lb />
JAMES A. SMITH, <lb />
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb />
Greenville N C. <lb />
We have <lb />
ever in the towels. <lb />
sharp and um <lb />
in every instance. Call coo <lb />
Ladies waited on at their <lb />
clothes a specialty. <lb />
Notice <lb />
CULLEY'S PREPARATION for <lb />
falling out of hair, eradication of <lb />
dandruff is before the public. <lb />
Among the many who have it with <lb />
Wonderful I refer you lo <lb />
lowing named who <lb />
lo the truth of my assertion <lb />
MB.<lb />
Any one willing to give it a trial <lb />
the above call procure <lb />
it from my place of<lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb />
C , <lb />
A R. It, <lb />
and <lb />
Tit INS Ml SOUTH. <lb />
No a, No N <lb />
20th, dally Mall, ally <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Weldon pm .-, .,, <lb />
Ar I Id am <lb />
ALFRED FORBES, <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the of and counties, a line of the following good <lb />
that arc not to be excelled in this market. And to he and <lb />
Dine good. DRY GOODS of all kinds NOTIONS, GEN <lb />
IT FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CATS, HOOTS and SHOES, <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS DOORS. WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different <lb />
kinds, Gin and Mill Hay, Rook and <lb />
Hair. and <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I oiler to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less ti per cent for Cash, Bread Prep- <lb />
and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Wood Pumps, Salt Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. a specialty. Give me a -ll and guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
Ir <lb />
Daring the of <lb />
alone were scanted <lb />
or even for a few <lb />
Some of the <lb />
which this summary power <lb />
times are in the me- <lb />
of the de There <lb />
amain flower girl Jean- <lb />
WHOM beauty the no- <lb />
of of curt, and <lb />
de to <lb />
find her looking particularly sprightly <lb />
one day. the reason. <lb />
husband was such a brute a <lb />
she I have <lb />
a de cachet from the <lb />
de St. for ten <lb />
to free me from <lb />
chevalier lost sight of <lb />
for n couple of years, and when lie met <lb />
her again she was pale and dejected. <lb />
have you been all this <lb />
he asked. hardly knew you <lb />
she replied, was a fool <lb />
to rejoice. My husband had <lb />
the s; m. idea as myself. He, too, went <lb />
to and a de <lb />
cachet for me; so it cost our poor house- <lb />
hold twenty to et both of us <lb />
locked Century. <lb />
ATTEND <lb />
Of Kentucky LEXINGTON, KY. <lb />
. W. m <lb />
limn <lb />
WILBUR R. SMITH, president. <lb />
t II -I <lb />
r. ft it. th, <lb />
., of M<lb />
m Bum., <lb />
L- <lb />
II o. <lb />
J , <lb />
u a <lb />
aM or with the <lb />
hi LI. <lb />
o- <lb />
D., <lb />
MM <lb />
B Com- <lb />
. . r.-i a a. -ad No <lb />
n u R. K. <lb />
storm Calendar and Weather Forecast <lb />
for It. Hicks, mailed <lb />
to any receipt of s two-cent <lb />
postage stamp. The Dr. J. U. <lb />
Medicine Co. St. Louis, Mo. <lb />
R. IT NUMBER,<lb />
Steam Engines Boilers <lb />
Improved Brown Cotton Gin. <lb />
Saw, Grist and Shingle Mills. <lb />
Hancock Cotton Gin, <lb />
Cotton Seed Crushers, <lb />
Pulleys, and Hangings, <lb />
Also dealer in Steam <lb />
Orders for any kind of machinery <lb />
will he promptly filled at very lowest. <lb />
prices. Repairing a <lb />
i. L. <lb />
Greenville, X. C. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds of Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE,<lb />
hand, Type-writing,<lb />
Penmanship and <lb />
taught in the Col-1 -v Magnolia <lb />
Bend of terms., <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Ar Wilson<lb />
I Ar <lb />
Goldsboro lo <lb />
Warsaw I <lb />
Av Magnolia h <lb />
Ar Wilmington BOO IN <lb />
No No <lb />
am <lb />
nu p in nu pm v an <lb />
l l <lb />
II M <lb />
daily daily <lb />
X Sea <lb />
HI am limps<lb />
N. C <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
STILL TO THE <lb />
D. Williamson, <lb />
MILKMAID BRAND <lb />
CONDENSED MILK <lb />
None Richer in Cream <lb />
ON EARTH, <lb />
JOHN <lb />
VILLE. N. <lb />
Has Moved to One Door North Court House <lb />
WILL OF <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My is well equipped With the boat Mechanics, My put up nothing <lb />
but FiRST-crASS We keep up with the time- and improved styles. <lb />
Best material In all work. All styles of Springs arc use. you can <lb />
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the <lb />
year round, which we will sell AS AS LOWEST. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past hope <lb />
merit a continuance of the <lb />
Vitality. <lb />
Professor is an <lb />
fact that a person cannot live <lb />
for any length of time with only one <lb />
lung. <lb />
know a woman who <lb />
been living with one lung for a good <lb />
many years and is hale and hearty. <lb />
Professor <lb />
Prove it. sir Who is too <lb />
wife of the Chinese <lb />
minister at Washington; his name is <lb />
One <lb />
A . man is said to have in- <lb />
vented a machine for putting on wall <lb />
paper. If average house wife can <lb />
operate the thing, do away with <lb />
the average paper hanger, blessed will <lb />
be that name among women. <lb />
FEMALE INSTITUTE. <lb />
Fall Term Opens Sept. <lb />
TEACHERS <lb />
Principal. <lb />
Miss Smith, <lb />
Mrs. Irene Hunter, <lb />
Mrs. W. Duckett. <lb />
Id hi S. K. <lb />
Gr <lb />
I N. O. <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES <lb />
DEPARTMENTS. <lb />
Primary. Academic, <lb />
and Mathematical. Music <lb />
Painting and Drawing, Normal. <lb />
Large, <lb />
Healthy location and good water. <lb />
Plenty of well prepared food for hoarders <lb />
A corps of good teachers, Nor- <lb />
Department for young teachers. <lb />
Music department <lb />
New pianos and organs. A library <lb />
of more volumes purchased re- <lb />
for the school. <lb />
HATES. <lb />
Hales moderate, from to for <lb />
in I and tuition, including music. <lb />
Tuition and terms for day pupils the <lb />
same as advertised in Girls <lb />
who do not board with the Principal <lb />
should consult him before engaging <lb />
board elsewhere. <lb />
Km- further particulars address. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
N. C, Principal. <lb />
The name is said to <lb />
be derived from be- <lb />
cause emigrants journeying from New <lb />
England to the west were obliged to <lb />
bake their Indian meal cakes in the <lb />
ashes of their camp fires. <lb />
Keep a clasp knife or a knife with a <lb />
handle different from those in com- <lb />
use for the sole purpose of peeling <lb />
onions, and so avoid the flavor and <lb />
odor of where it is neither ex- <lb />
nor desired. <lb />
Twelve cartloads of crushed eggs, <lb />
sandwich papers and other rubbish <lb />
were taken from the White <lb />
LIVERY SALE AND FEED <lb />
I have opened at the stables formerly <lb />
occupied by Dr. J. G. James, <lb />
and will keep a fine line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb />
the livery and can suit the most <lb />
will run in connection a DRAY- <lb />
AGE and solicit a share of <lb />
patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
Greenville, B. <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
From now on will make Pictures at <lb />
the low <lb />
at <lb />
Cards <lb />
Carree <lb />
Cabinets<lb />
or half life size <lb />
Owing to low prices no proofs will be <lb />
own of anything smaller than <lb />
net. All those wishing picture- do <lb />
well by calling early. <lb />
R. AN, Manager. <lb />
IT. O. <lb />
2.00 <lb />
2.50 <lb />
4.00 <lb />
5.00 <lb />
0.00 <lb />
Manage <lb />
x. o. <lb />
The Sparta mills <lb />
just been repaired art <lb />
good--------- <lb />
A lull head of water. Send <lb />
Com W beat to and you <lb />
will get good Flour and Meal. <lb />
H. Ti. MOORE, <lb />
OLD SPARTA, N. <lb />
The Tar Hirer Transportation Company <lb />
Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
J. B. cherry, <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
If. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb />
Cant. B. F. Jokes, Washington, Ac <lb />
The People's Line for travel on Tat <lb />
The Steamer is the finest <lb />
quickest boat on the river. <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the comfort, <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
A first-class Table furnished <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Greenville Is <lb />
not only comfortable bat attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb />
and Friday at A. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at . If. <lb />
Freights received dally and <lb />
Bills Lading to all <lb />
a. r Men, tr, J. J. <lb />
K, C. <lb />
Notice, to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb />
before the Superior Court Cleric of Hit <lb />
county, on the day of June. <lb />
as Executor to the win and <lb />
of Rogers, deceased; <lb />
notice hereby given to all persons in- <lb />
to the estate to make Immediate <lb />
payment, to all creditor of said es- <lb />
to present their claims properly <lb />
to the undersigned before <lb />
the 4th day of June. 1801, or this notice <lb />
will lie plead in bar of their recovery. <lb />
JAS. R. <lb />
of Harriett <lb />
Notice. <lb />
All persons having claims against the <lb />
estate of Harriet A. Yellowley. deed, <lb />
are hereby notified to exhibit the earns <lb />
j or before the 28th day of June. 1801, <lb />
I to the undersigned, who has duly <lb />
lied as the of tin- lust will <lb />
j the said Harriet A. Yellow- <lb />
I or this notice will be plead in of <lb />
their recovery. <lb />
All persons indebted to said estate <lb />
arc to come forward promptly <lb />
settle the same. <lb />
J. B. <lb />
of Harriett A. Yellowley, <lb />
June <lb />
TOWN k RAILS <lb />
Rev. E. C. Glenn's <lb />
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Lings School House, Sunday at <lb />
o'clock <lb />
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at H o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove. 2nd Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
l Sunday <lb />
Temperance at o'clock <lb />
Salem Sunday at o'clock, <lb />
4th Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Jones before Sun- <lb />
day at o'clock, <lb />
The public d. <lb />
FOR MEN ONLY <lb />
LOST or <lb />
IT pi <lb />
Tor LOST or TAILING <lb />
General and NERVOUS <lb />
Body and <lb />
i or In Old or <lb />
a Ml. 11.- r <lb />
I. .,. <lb />
P. I <lb />
and <lb />
ERIE MEDICAl CO. BUFFALO. N. V. <lb />
I am <lb />
1.1 <lb />
s in<lb />
Wilson <lb />
A, Rocky In <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro M am <lb />
Ar Weldon I 1.1 pm <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train Oil Scotland Neck Branch Rm <lb />
leaves Halifax M. arrives Seal <lb />
land Neck at M. <lb />
A. SI. Halifax at M. <lb />
don 1.80 M., dally except <lb />
On Monday, <lb />
Local leave- Million J <lb />
Halifax 11.30 a in. Nick <lb />
in. p R <lb />
turning. have I <lb />
I'll M in. Scat <lb />
land Heck 1.011 p in. Halifax p <lb />
Arriving IV <lb />
Train leave- N via Alb <lb />
It. K. daily except <lb />
day. M. M. <lb />
William-ton. N M. I P <lb />
p. in. p. <lb />
Returning leave- daily <lb />
m. a. <lb />
William-ton. N in. a I <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N , i A M <lb />
Train on Midi and N <lb />
Goldsboro except <lb />
N M. I <lb />
I I turning leaves N I Al <lb />
road Or Goldsboro, N c, a m. <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
EMORY <lb />
Mind <lb />
In one all <lb />
part, of <lb />
on l-i I <lb />
A. Now <lb />
C. II. <lb />
Edwards a IN, <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
N. C <lb />
We have the Largest and most complete <lb />
the kind t he found in <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all. lasses <lb />
Commercial, Rail- <lb />
Pianos 1.80 <lb />
free. Oil <lb />
Washington W, <lb />
MESS a It <lb />
. <lb />
lark. tor bat of <lb />
. m hear <lb />
DEAF <lb />
. men u. i <lb />
BALSAM <lb />
growth <lb />
Nov r I i Ii On <lb />
. I In <lb />
I.<lb />
BANKERS, <lb />
BX. <lb />
O. <lb />
points. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Court <lb />
Mai tin County, <lb />
Thomas <lb />
against <lb />
Francis G. David F. Light- <lb />
foot and Wm. J. Lightfoot. <lb />
The defendants, David F. Lightfoot <lb />
and William J. Lightfoot, are hereby <lb />
to be and appear the <lb />
Judge of the Superior Court at a Court <lb />
to be held for the county of Martin at <lb />
the Court House on the <lb />
Ant Monday In September, 1890, mid <lb />
answer or demur to the complaint in the <lb />
above entitled action which will be de- <lb />
posited in office of Clerk of said <lb />
Court within first three days of said <lb />
term. The purpose of this action is to <lb />
a mortgage executed to the <lb />
by Francis Lightfoot and Mary <lb />
the father and of the <lb />
defendants, and which mortgage bears <lb />
the 1st day of January, 1882. <lb />
W. T. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court <lb />
We have opened for the purpose or con- <lb />
ducting a general <lb />
Bilking, and Collecting <lb />
Honey to Loan on Approved Security. <lb />
Collections solicited and remittance <lb />
made promptly. <lb />
Jonathan <lb />
Portsmouth, Va. Greenville, X. C <lb />
Bridgers White, <lb />
High Street. <lb />
Portsmouth, Va. <lb />
Solicit consignments of Cotton, <lb />
nuts. Poultry, and all other <lb />
chants and Farmers <lb />
Va <lb />
UNDERTAKING. <lb />
Having associated B. S. <lb />
with inc in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people in that <lb />
capacity. All notes accounts due <lb />
me for past services have been placed in <lb />
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb />
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all <lb />
kinds and can furnish anything desired <lb />
from the finest Case down to a <lb />
Pitt county Pine CoHn. We are <lb />
op with all conveniences and can i o <lb />
satisfactory services to all who <lb />
us FLANAGAN A; <lb />
Feb. 1888. <lb />
cored at <lb />
w pain. <lb />
Book of particulars sent <lb />
B. M. M. D., Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Office Whitehall St. <lb />
IMPROVED <lb />
ROOT BEER <lb />
FIVE <lb />
it <lb />
ROOT BEER. <lb />
The moat and <lb />
Dim Id world. <lb />
and IT. <lb />
your or for It. <lb />
HIRES. <lb />
I CLEARANCE SALE <lb />
Fine Parlor <lb />
Church, <lb />
from<lb />
Organs <lb />
WEDDING <lb />
FOB PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOB MAGISTRATES <lb />
COUNTY <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
EDWARDS k <lb />
and <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
business in the I . S. <lb />
Patent office or the Courts attended in <lb />
Moderate Fees. <lb />
i- are opposite the S. Patent of- <lb />
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents In less time than <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing U sent we <lb />
advise as free charge, <lb />
we make no change unless ob- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
We refer, here, to the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
the r. s. Patent Office. For <lb />
terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Know to., <lb />
Washington, c <lb />
i i <lb />
ii r.-t. <lb />
I r-iii <lb />
and <lb />
. Ova<lb />
a. well<lb />
to who call-your <lb />
W all <lb />
., ii all, a lo work for <lb />
at Co. <lb />
. . i M <lb />
I h.- world, <lb />
FREE <lb />
ill i <lb />
c our <lb />
MM -h. <lb />
make off <lb />
only <lb />
one et. . <lb />
All bee to do <lb />
-r go.-e <lb />
those <lb />
MM <lb />
following cat f. <lb />
the -n <lb />
The he<lb />
r of <lb />
I it <lb />
ABOUT <lb />
. J a, pan <lb />
t paid <lb />
to <lb />
monthly. Beat Bar- <lb />
in one SO MO SATED <lb />
Band <lb />
tor hT <lb />
Sam. <lb />
la Mid b. <lb />
at <lb />
and la It. <lb />
to SO <lb />
No Cheap <lb />
Pianos <lb />
CHEAP <lb />
To Sick <lb />
Liver take <lb />
the sale and remedy, <lb />
SMITH'S <lb />
BILE BEANS <lb />
the <lb />
They the host <lb />
ail <lb />
of per Battle. <lb />
Ml. <lb />
Ono 40-Saw Hull Cotton Gin. <lb />
One Cockade Hand-power Cotton <lb />
Both in order and will <lb />
be sold very low to make room for larger <lb />
power. <lb />
or call on, K. O. <lb />
S. C; Manager.<lb />
GRAND <lb />
for Cutting and <lb />
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb />
the Opera at which place <lb />
I have recently located, and where I <lb />
everything in my line <lb />
LEAN 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 />
work my shop <lb />
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb />
EDMONDS <lb />
PHOTO-ENGRAVING <lb />
it pats w snouts. <lb />
Pot rain, and factor- <lb />
machinery, made to order from <lb />
Press Agency, <lb />
New York City. <lb />
KNIGHTS <lb />
Blood Cure. <lb />
A standard <lb />
In more than years. <lb />
cure for Scrofula <lb />
and all of <lb />
the Blood. and <lb />
dial <lb />
A botanical compound, pot In <lb />
and by at at <lb />
packages, for<lb />
in package <lb />
for<lb />
on Nashville Branch leaves Rod <lb />
ill M- N <lb />
I M- <lb />
loon A M. <lb />
I M, arrive- Kinky Mount <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clio Inn ran eh leaves Want <lb />
for Clinton Sunday, <lb />
A M leave Cl <lb />
ton -ii A M, <lb />
Warsaw with No-. II and <lb />
Southbound mi A Fare <lb />
i- No. <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. Smith only <lb />
Wilson, Magnolia. <lb />
Train X. make- en-e <lb />
fur nil daily. J <lb />
ail Richmond, daily exceptS <lb />
y via Bay Line. <lb />
Train- make tor <lb />
North via mil <lb />
All run solid <lb />
ton and and have <lb />
Sleeper- <lb />
Supt <lb />
I. It. <lb />
I M <lb />
Atlantic N. C. <lb />
Hi. <lb />
In n A. M . -at May, <lb />
1st, 1880. <lb />
Si 1.1 r. <lb />
No. g <lb />
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