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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 10 September 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:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18900910</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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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>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18900910</dc:date>
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                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
------Solicits your patronage for------ <lb />
Its purpose will be to please even reader. <lb />
The<lb />
Reflector.<lb />
I JOB <lb />
Department that can in- surpassed n <lb />
In tills section. Our work always <lb />
gives satisfaction <lb />
yum<lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. IX. <lb />
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
D. J. end <lb />
Democratic Nominees. <lb />
For Chief Justice of Supreme <lb />
HON. A. S. MERRIMON. <lb />
For of Supreme <lb />
HON. WALTER CLARK. <lb />
For Superior Court <lb />
1st G. II. Brown, Jr. of Beau <lb />
GOVERNMENT. <lb />
G. Fowle. of Wake, <lb />
M. <lb />
of <lb />
Secretary of <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
W. of Wake. <lb />
of Wayne, <lb />
of Public Instruction <lb />
Sidney M. Finger of Catawba. <lb />
Attorney F. <lb />
on, <lb />
mom court. <lb />
Clark, <lb />
Wake ; Joseph J. Davis, of Franklin . <lb />
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb />
Alfonso C. of Burke. <lb />
SUPERIOR <lb />
First Tl. Brown, of. <lb />
Second <lb />
Third G. Connor, of <lb />
on. <lb />
Whit <lb />
Wake. <lb />
Fifth Womack, of <lb />
Chatham. <lb />
Sixth T. of <lb />
Sampson. <lb />
Seventh C. of <lb />
Cumberland. <lb />
Eighth F. Armfield, of <lb />
Iredell. <lb />
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb />
Surry. <lb />
Tenth . of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp. of <lb />
Mecklenburg. <lb />
Twelfth H. <lb />
Buncombe. <lb />
IN CONGRESS. <lb />
fort. <lb />
M District. <lb />
4th District. <lb />
5th <lb />
ville. <lb />
6th <lb />
7th <lb />
8th <lb />
MA <lb />
11th <lb />
Henry R. Bryan, of Craven <lb />
Spier Whitaker, of Wake. <lb />
R. W. Winston, of <lb />
A PROFESSIONAL BACKSTOP. <lb />
How a <lb />
tar HI. Work. <lb />
The training of the catcher has in it <lb />
leas variety, and is in consequence far <lb />
more tedious than that of the pitcher. <lb />
The work of strengthening the muscles <lb />
of the shoulder and arm Is the same as <lb />
that described for the pitcher; in <lb />
the throwing practice the catcher <lb />
should devote his attention to the <lb />
throw. He should begin at <lb />
the short distance of perhaps fifty feet, <lb />
and increase distance very <lb />
ally. In fact, ho ought, even when he <lb />
ran throw the full distance <lb />
E. T. Roy kin. of Sampson <lb />
D. of Moore. <lb />
R. F. Armfield, of Iredell. <lb />
J. G. of Burke. <lb />
W. A. Bake, of from to second with comparative <lb />
i ease, to do most of his throwing at two- <lb />
For <lb />
W. A. B. BRANCH, <lb />
of Beaufort. <lb />
For Judicial District <lb />
JOBS E. WOODARD, <lb />
of Wilson. <lb />
COUNTY TICKET. <lb />
For the <lb />
WILLIS K. WILLIAMS. <lb />
or House of <lb />
HARRY <lb />
JOHN D. COX. <lb />
For Superior Court Clerk <lb />
A. MOVE. <lb />
For <lb />
J. A. K. TUCKER. <lb />
For Register of <lb />
DAVID II. JAMES. <lb />
For <lb />
FLAN AC AX. <lb />
For <lb />
HENRY F. KEEL. <lb />
For <lb />
J. S. L. WARD. <lb />
K. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of North- <lb />
House of District <lb />
Thomas G. Skinner, of <lb />
Second col. <lb />
of <lb />
Third W. of <lb />
Beaver Dam- W. B. Burnett. <lb />
J. F. Hodges. <lb />
G. IV, E Hudson. <lb />
J. L. Roberson. <lb />
W. B. Buck. <lb />
E. S. Edwards. <lb />
D. J. <lb />
H- of <lb />
-J. W. Brower. of <lb />
Rowland of <lb />
Fender. <lb />
Fourth <lb />
Nash. <lb />
Fifth District <lb />
Sixth <lb />
S. <lb />
of Rowan. <lb />
Eighth W. II. A. Cowles <lb />
Ninth G. Ewart of Hen- <lb />
GOVERNMENT. <lb />
Superior Court A. <lb />
J. Tucker. <lb />
Register of n. James. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. L. Ward. <lb />
B- Harris. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Dawson, Chair- <lb />
man. Guilford Mooring. C. V, Newton, <lb />
John Flanagan, T. E. Keel. <lb />
Board of <lb />
Chairman J. S. Congleton and J. D. <lb />
Cos. <lb />
School If <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
Standard <lb />
G. James. <lb />
B. Greene. <lb />
R. Lang. <lb />
Chief T. Smith. <lb />
Asst R. Moore. <lb />
Con rt Ward. T. A. <lb />
col., 2nd Ward. W. H. Smith, and R. <lb />
Greene. Jr.; 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 />
morn- <lb />
and night. Prayer Meeting every <lb />
Wednesday night. Rev. E. B. John, <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
second and fourth <lb />
Sundays, morning and night. <lb />
Meeting every Wednesday night. Rev. <lb />
A. D. Hunter, Pastor. <lb />
LODGES. <lb />
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A A. <lb />
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- <lb />
day night after the let and 3rd Sunday at <lb />
Masonic A. L. Blow. W. M., <lb />
G. L. <lb />
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb />
2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- <lb />
sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, H. P. <lb />
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb />
meets every Tuesday night. J. A. K. <lb />
Tucker, N. G. <lb />
O. W. Harrington. <lb />
D. s. <lb />
Swift <lb />
Election Tuesday. 4th. <lb />
WHY <lb />
Dear heart, why should this mm be- <lb />
tween. <lb />
After clasped our hands <lb />
Why we always might <lb />
Thinking of golden hands <lb />
Was It your fault or mine I do nut know, <lb />
Sweet, you could never dream <lb />
How I have prayed for light to solve my woe. <lb />
Yet never once a <lb />
For once I seemed to hold you by some charm; <lb />
Was too small la last <lb />
What was the subtle cause that did the <lb />
After our love lit past <lb />
The incense from a lifeless rose you wore <lb />
Faint through the room. <lb />
And stealing to my tortured heart it bore <lb />
Symbol of withered bloom. <lb />
Why did you into my life to steal <lb />
Its peace, and to go <lb />
What ban I done, this sorrow sword to feel <lb />
Dear God, why is It en <lb />
Sew Orleans Times-Democrat, <lb />
A Author's Good Fortune. <lb />
experience of Mr. F. Eaton, the <lb />
winner of The Youth's Companion <lb />
prize of for the best story for <lb />
girls in the recent competition, is a <lb />
illustration of the successes that <lb />
are occasionally won at a bound by <lb />
wholly unknown writers of fiction. His <lb />
prize story, Out the <lb />
which appeared in the me- <lb />
day issue of The Companion, <lb />
was second short story he ever <lb />
wrote and the first one that he ever <lb />
submitted to a publisher. Mr. Eaton <lb />
is years of age, married and a law- <lb />
by vocation. He enjoys a <lb />
practice at N. Y., the place <lb />
of his birth, and is now serving his <lb />
seventh term as city attorney. <lb />
In his fifteenth year Mr. Eaton re- <lb />
a severe gunshot while <lb />
hunting pigeons, which deprived him <lb />
of the end of one finger and filled an <lb />
arm with bird shot. At the age of <lb />
thirds that distance. After the nine <lb />
has begun to work in the field it is not <lb />
advisable for the catcher to throw to <lb />
second anything like the number of <lb />
times the majority of amateurs attempt <lb />
daily. Only after the nine has been <lb />
Ont of doors for two or three weeks is <lb />
so much of the full distance throwing <lb />
safe for any catcher who wishes to have <lb />
his arm in condition. <lb />
The position of the feet in throwing <lb />
is all important. If he be a strong man <lb />
of moderate weight he can and should <lb />
throw without the position of <lb />
the feet. To this object his gymnasium <lb />
practice should be devoted. Standing <lb />
steadily upon his feet in the exact <lb />
assumed at the moment of catch- <lb />
the ball, he should, with a slight <lb />
swing at the hips, able to send the <lb />
ball down. Throwing in a cage <lb />
a low ceiling is the best thing possible <lb />
for him, as it forces him to throw hard <lb />
and on a line. <lb />
A point of catcher's practice, which <lb />
I does not enter into the work of the <lb />
I pitcher, is that of toughening the <lb />
hands. Rowing on the machines, climb- <lb />
the rope, swinging on the flying <lb />
j rings and handball, if there are any <lb />
courts for that excellent game, will all <lb />
tend toward this end. He should con- <lb />
sider, however, that it is not merely <lb />
I toughening the skin of the hands that <lb />
is desirable, but also hardening the <lb />
I flesh so that it is not easily bruised. For <lb />
i this reason he should with- <lb />
out gloves regularly every day. <lb />
At the outset he should receive no <lb />
; swift balls, and should stop at the first <lb />
feeling of anything beyond a moderate <lb />
tingling of the palms. His hands should <lb />
i receive their full preparatory hardening <lb />
i before he goes out into the field, for <lb />
i ordinary carefulness that he <lb />
, should do no catching behind bat <lb />
after the season commences except with <lb />
hands thoroughly protected by well <lb />
padded gloves. What is called a stone <lb />
bruise is one of the tenderest and moat <lb />
lasting of carelessness in this <lb />
respect. In his gymnasium practice he <lb />
should wear the mask This seems to <lb />
most catchers a useless bore, but the cap- <lb />
or coach should insist upon it, and <lb />
the mask should become almost a part of <lb />
catcher himself. AU his throwing <lb />
and catching should be performed with <lb />
his eyes behind its wires, in order that, <lb />
from becoming thoroughly accustomed <lb />
to it, it may add no inconvenience to <lb />
his work. <lb />
The breastplate need not be so rigor- <lb />
insisted upon, but even this <lb />
should be worn frequently. The right <lb />
hand glove must always be worn when <lb />
practicing throwing, in order that this <lb />
also shall offer no unusual difficulty in <lb />
the later work. Many a catcher may <lb />
think that it looks silly to stand up <lb />
with a musk and glove on to throw <lb />
at a mark; but there is every reason <lb />
for doing this, and he will himself <lb />
the value of such practice <lb />
when he stands accoutered on the field <lb />
behind the batsman and with a runner <lb />
on first. <lb />
As often as it is convenient the <lb />
catcher, particularly if a novice, should <lb />
have some one swing the bat before <lb />
him while he is in the <lb />
gymnasium, By the time he gets <lb />
of doors he should be thoroughly ac- <lb />
to the close proximity of the <lb />
Camp in St. <lb />
las. <lb />
A JOCULAR COUNTRYMAN. <lb />
i w Amain Himself <lb />
. While Waiting for a Train. <lb />
A tall, elderly man, with good <lb />
wrinkles radiating from his blue <lb />
yea, walked into the Erie railroad <lb />
station at Jersey City and bought a <lb />
ticket for N. J. <lb />
He wore a long linen duster that <lb />
reached to his heels and a wide brim- <lb />
med Panama straw hat. He had miss- <lb />
ed the train and had a long hour <lb />
to wait. He seemed nervous and <lb />
easy, and paced up and down the wait- <lb />
room for a long time, when one of <lb />
tho began to out a long <lb />
j over winter, and when spring re- i string of stations that nobody could <lb />
turned the deep level roots were understand. <lb />
in their turn and the surface said the talL country- <lb />
roots once more sent out. . nod looking man, much will you <lb />
Then there are certain minute r to teach me tune I want to <lb />
some of them microscopic, which even with a young lady friend of <lb />
Vegetable Intelligence. <lb />
An illustration of apparent <lb />
in plants la the behavior of the <lb />
Egyptian lotus in this In tho <lb />
warmer countries, where it Is at home, <lb />
the roots of the lotus spread laterally j <lb />
close to the surface. In this country j <lb />
the plant learned, after a single year's <lb />
experience of a New Jersey winter, to i <lb />
prepare f freezing season by <lb />
Its surface lateral roots in early <lb />
autumn and sending out a crop of roots j <lb />
lower far down that they j <lb />
were below the reach of frost. In this <lb />
the plant kept up its life <lb />
BUMMER AND LAZARUS. <lb />
grow in wayside pools, and which <lb />
move continually in whorls or spirals, <lb />
without any moving influence in the <lb />
water. In the myriad forms of this mi- <lb />
life the erudition of tho pro- <lb />
men of science is required to <lb />
determine whether they arc animal or <lb />
vegetable in their nature. And then <lb />
who knows whether the scientists are <lb />
quite right I The moral of the whole j <lb />
matter is life in the two forms is , <lb />
identical. But have you said I <lb />
when you said Does the I <lb />
fact of tho identity prove that there is <lb />
spirit in matter, or that animal, human j <lb />
intelligence is merely a phase of mat-1 <lb />
You pay the money of your <lb />
cation and take your choice of the two <lb />
horns of the Tran- <lb />
script. <lb />
or Stones. <lb />
Jews, i. will be possibly <lb />
by many, had a tradition that <lb />
when, on tho day of atonement, the <lb />
high priest asked of the Almighty for- j <lb />
for the sins of the whole <lb />
If they were forgiven, the stones <lb />
in the and shone most <lb />
brightly; if the contrary, they became <lb />
black The breast plate of the high <lb />
priest contained twelve stones, each <lb />
one of which represented the tribes of <lb />
Israel. <lb />
Coming down to a later time, there <lb />
i were certain stones which symbolized <lb />
I the twelve apostles. Peter is represent- <lb />
ed by the jasper or garnet, Andrew by <lb />
the sapphire, James by the chalcedony, <lb />
John by the emerald, Philip by <lb />
i Bartholomew by the <lb />
Matthew by the Thomas by <lb />
the beryl, by the <lb />
James tho lesser by the topaz, <lb />
I Simeon by the and Matthias by <lb />
j the amethyst. It is scarcely probable <lb />
i that these humble men of Galilee, fol- <lb />
lowers of the meek Nazarene, knew of <lb />
mine who lives <lb />
cheese responded the gate- <lb />
man. <lb />
The limn apparently from the <lb />
try the hint and knocked a <lb />
little newsboy's lint off and looked <lb />
quickly in the opposite direction, <lb />
newsboy stood looking around for <lb />
the cause of the accident. <lb />
Another to rattle off <lb />
unintelligible a low tone of <lb />
voice. <lb />
said the man, who <lb />
looked as if his were filled with <lb />
hayseed, must and will learn that <lb />
song. Two dollars if you give two <lb />
bargain was struck, and the big <lb />
man in the linen duster stood for five <lb />
minutes at the gate and yelled out tho <lb />
name of every station he could think <lb />
of. A largo crowd gathered and en- <lb />
joyed the fun. Finally the <lb />
train was announced. <lb />
The countryman left tho gate <lb />
started for his train, followed by the <lb />
crowd At the train a young man in a <lb />
peaked cap, blue suit and brass buttons <lb />
was splitting his throat <lb />
line train on the right; Pater- <lb />
son on the <lb />
individual stopped <lb />
and said, man, let me do that <lb />
for you, and you get on tho train and <lb />
take a <lb />
take a sneak. was all <lb />
the reply tho man who looked like a <lb />
countryman received. <lb />
This is one way Lawson N. Fuller <lb />
passes away tho time when he is com- <lb />
to York Evening <lb />
Sun. <lb />
The ores, or <lb />
As if not satisfied with the harm it <lb />
can do alone, the secures the aid <lb />
of two or three of its fellows, and then <lb />
the pack of monsters start on an <lb />
the existence of this symbolism, but it expedition. Everything is game to <lb />
shows in what valued estimation they j them. If a school of dolphins come in <lb />
were held by those who had been led by I sight, away go the fierce sea wolves in <lb />
their teachings. hot chase. The frightened dolphins <lb />
It is not to be wondered at, since j madly through the waves, urged <lb />
these stones were used by divine to their swiftest speed by terror; but <lb />
to beautify and adorn the office tho ravenous pursuers close upon <lb />
of the high priesthood, that something I the quarry. <lb />
Two Amiable Friends That to He <lb />
In San Francisco Together. <lb />
There were many other <lb />
in San Francisco in those early days, <lb />
but I will simply allude to. two four <lb />
legged celebrities who will easily re- <lb />
membered by the early residents. Bum- <lb />
mer and Lazarus were two dogs that <lb />
were as thorough vagrants as any old <lb />
tramps. Just when It was Bum- <lb />
mer made Ills first appearance I cannot <lb />
say, but when I first knew him, in 1880, <lb />
ho was recognized as a kindred spirit <lb />
by all the bummers in town, which <lb />
gave him tho name he wore with so <lb />
much credit to himself. He was a <lb />
mongrel, having evidently a mixed an- <lb />
noble Newfoundland blood <lb />
coursed through his veins, mingled with <lb />
that of the brave but somewhat vicious <lb />
bull. He could not be termed a <lb />
dog, for he would recognize no mas- <lb />
nor would he respond to any <lb />
paid but treated all with the <lb />
most sublime indifference. He <lb />
nil tho bar rooms and lunch <lb />
though he was never known to emu- <lb />
late his namesakes. He was always a <lb />
come guest, however, and never failed <lb />
to have abundance to cat. He never <lb />
was known to snarl or bite, and was <lb />
never ill used; indeed, it would have <lb />
been a bold man who would Undertake <lb />
to offer him insult, for the freedom <lb />
of the city had been granted him by <lb />
the board of supervisors, none but <lb />
friends were to be found wherever he <lb />
went. <lb />
On one occasion he found a mangy <lb />
cur dog, who had been stoned by the <lb />
boys and generally maltreated. The <lb />
poor dog had come sadly to grief, <lb />
Having his leg broken and being entire- <lb />
disabled. The sympathies of Bum- <lb />
mer were roused. He took the poor <lb />
dog under his care, supplied him with <lb />
food and acted the <lb />
toward him until his leg had healed, <lb />
when he adopted him as his com- <lb />
and thenceforward wherever <lb />
one dog was seen the other sure to <lb />
be seen also. <lb />
The intimacy was noticed, and the <lb />
name of was bestowed on the <lb />
newcomer. ordinance relating to <lb />
Bummer was revised, and Lazarus was <lb />
included in the general freedom of tho <lb />
city. No dog catchers could in any <lb />
way reach them. No licenses were re- <lb />
quired from them. Thenceforward <lb />
life was n picnic for them But <lb />
in 1865, I am sorry to say, mis- <lb />
took advantage of the confidence <lb />
displayed by the dogs and gave <lb />
some poisoned meat, and Bummer <lb />
remained alone. A cry of indignation <lb />
went up from the entire city, and the ; <lb />
newspapers were outspoken in their <lb />
opinions of the action. In what year <lb />
Bummer entered the <lb />
I do not know, but after his death his <lb />
body was stuffed and decorated the <lb />
Why the Dreamers Fall. <lb />
and communists are set at <lb />
work by the belief that equal justice is <lb />
the natural law of the world, and that <lb />
nothing keeps us out of it but the bar- <lb />
of artificial arrangements set up by <lb />
the power and in the interest of a <lb />
class. Break down that by <lb />
legislation and the kingdom <lb />
of equal justice, they think, will come. <lb />
Would that it were sol Who would <lb />
so selfish and so ignorant of the deepest <lb />
source of happiness as not to vote for <lb />
the change, whatever his wealth or his <lb />
place on the social coach might be <lb />
Unhappily, neither equal justice nor <lb />
perfection of any kind is the law of the <lb />
world, as tho world is at present toward <lb />
whatever goal we may be moving. <lb />
Health, strength, beauty, intellect, <lb />
offspring, length of days are distributed <lb />
with no more regard for justice than <lb />
are the powers of making and saving <lb />
wealth. One man is born In an age of <lb />
barbarism, another in an ago of civil- <lb />
No justice can be done to the <lb />
myriads who have suffered and died. <lb />
Equal justice is far indeed from being <lb />
tho law of the animal kingdom. <lb />
is one the beast of prey, another <lb />
the victim Why does elephant live <lb />
for two centuries an ephemeral in- <lb />
sect for a few hours If you come to <lb />
that, why should one sentient creature <lb />
be a worm and another a man In <lb />
earth and skies, in the whole universe, <lb />
so far as our ken reaches, imperfection <lb />
reigns. <lb />
The man who in Back- <lb />
wakes from a magnetic <lb />
to find the lots of nil men made just <lb />
and equal might almost as well have <lb />
awakened to all human frames <lb />
made perfect, disease and accident <lb />
the animals all in a state like <lb />
that of Eden, the Arctic regions Ivar- <lb />
Sahara moistened with <lb />
fertilizing rain, the moon provided with <lb />
an atmosphere, and the solar system, <lb />
which at present is so full of gaps and <lb />
wrecks, symmetrically completed. So- <lb />
like the frame of the individual <lb />
man, is an imperfect organism. You may <lb />
help and modify its growth, but you <lb />
cannot transform it by revolutionary <lb />
violence, and if you try to do this the <lb />
result will only be <lb />
or Cold win Smith in Forum. <lb />
Sea Turtles In New York. <lb />
Nearly 1,500 pounds of turtles are <lb />
made into soups, steaks, cutlets and <lb />
patties even- week in this city. Tho <lb />
turtles vary in weight from to <lb />
pound. They are captured on the <lb />
Florida coast and brought to the <lb />
city by steamers. In order to keep the <lb />
turtles from crawling overboard their <lb />
flippers tied together and the ma- <lb />
reptiles are laid upon their backs <lb />
in coils of rope made for that purpose. <lb />
On arrival in this city, the turtles are <lb />
placed in wooden boxes floating in the <lb />
East river just behind Fulton market. <lb />
They are fed upon cabbage leaves and <lb />
bar room of Martin for many i watermelon rinds. It is an interesting <lb />
years, I am told. It now been <lb />
consigned to their Sat- <lb />
Globe. <lb />
he conceived the idea that a <lb />
Insurance Lodge. No. of life would perhaps restore his health, <lb />
and accordingly he went to <lb />
every first and third Friday night. <lb />
D. D. Haskett, D. <lb />
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of H., meets <lb />
every Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb />
Pitt county. Alliance meets <lb />
the first Friday in January, April. July <lb />
and October. J. D. Cox, <lb />
E. A. Move, Secretary. <lb />
Greenville Alliance meets Saturday <lb />
before the second Sunday in each <lb />
at o'clock, p ht. Halt <lb />
Fernando Ward, D. S. Spain. <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
POST OFFICE. <lb />
ale, N. Y., to a farmer, <lb />
and officiated as a farm hand for six <lb />
months. There seemed to be so little <lb />
money in the business, how- <lb />
ever, he resigned, and in 1877 be-, <lb />
the study of law at The <lb />
pecuniary rewards of a law student are <lb />
not usually great, and to swell his in- <lb />
come Mr. Eaton went to Pa., <lb />
taught school among the miners <lb />
for a time, keeping bachelor's hall in a <lb />
little cabin. In 1880 he was admitted <lb />
Hours tot to the bar. Mr. Baton has been <lb />
M. to P. M. All mail distributed <lb />
on arrival. The general will <lb />
be kept for IS minutes at <lb />
after th mail is distributed. <lb />
Northern Mail arrives dally <lb />
Sunday at P. M. and art. t <lb />
A. M. <lb />
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland <lb />
mails arrives daily at <lb />
M. and M P. M. <lb />
Latham X <lb />
Chocowinity and Grimesland <lb />
malls arrives dally at <lb />
and departs at A. M. <lb />
trees. den. Bell's <lb />
Ferry, Johnson's Mills. <lb />
Ha and Pullet <lb />
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. <lb />
departs at <lb />
Black Jack and Calico <lb />
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M. <lb />
and departs Friday at A M. <lb />
J. J. PERKINS P. M <lb />
A. D. <lb />
an omnivorous reader, and a great ad- <lb />
of Nathaniel <lb />
Literature. <lb />
The Material of Stories. <lb />
For the backgrounds of his stories <lb />
Dumas went naturally to the epoch of <lb />
intrigue, his mots de la fin would not <lb />
easily have come from the bars of a <lb />
helmet in the rougher older days; it is <lb />
the thrust of the rapier he loves rather <lb />
than the downright blow of the heavy <lb />
sword, the coup rather than the <lb />
coup de His is the true drama <lb />
de cape et as the French have <lb />
always called it, and his is its <lb />
cloak to dissimulate, the <lb />
sword to attack and defend. The <lb />
whole epoch of Louis XIII and of <lb />
was mask and dagger, con- <lb />
and duel. Dumas leads us <lb />
among a gilded persona; he <lb />
loves a noble, and though he distrusted <lb />
princes the royal blood was never quite <lb />
a common to him His art 1st <lb />
aide responded eagerly to the <lb />
at the H. and E. <lb />
W. in Scribner's. <lb />
I of their should be held to belong i <lb />
to tho holy men who taught such beau- j <lb />
to Joy <lb />
White. <lb />
i A correspondent writes to <lb />
j English lady resident in Syria reports <lb />
the following interesting discovery in <lb />
; the neighborhood of In a <lb />
about one hour's ride from the <lb />
great French road between <lb />
and Damascus was found a bedstead <lb />
made of gold and silver and inlaid with <lb />
precious stones. An inscription upon <lb />
it in English characters states that it <lb />
belonged to Eleanor, queen of Eng- <lb />
land. The bedstead was discovered in <lb />
a little recess dug out for the purpose <lb />
within a natural cave, must have <lb />
been placed there for security when j and dive under him. <lb />
Edward I left the east in 1272. The him here, there and everywhere, <lb />
Turkish government has taken opens his huge mouth to engulf them, <lb />
of the treasure trove, though the I They only mock at the danger, and <lb />
prevailing opinion in the district seems j soon, wounded In a hundred places, <lb />
to be that it should remain the property weakened and powerless, the whale <lb />
of the man on whose land it was found. R. in St. <lb />
Perhaps a great Greenland whale <lb />
may cross the path of tho marauders. <lb />
Hugo as it largest of created be- <lb />
has no terrors for the blood- <lb />
thirsty pack. They dart about the <lb />
giant with lightning velocity, now in <lb />
front, now underneath, now on the <lb />
sides, until the bewildered monster, <lb />
with a lash of his ponderous tail, turns <lb />
his mighty head downward and seeks <lb />
the ocean's bed. Vain effort His tor- <lb />
mentors follow him apparently with <lb />
glee. <lb />
Up, up again, rage and agony lend- <lb />
added strength, till the surface is <lb />
reached and all that bulk of flesh shoots <lb />
out of water and then falls with a <lb />
crash, dashing the waves <lb />
asunder. Still the agile foes are there. <lb />
They leap over his head, high in air, <lb />
They rush at <lb />
of Vichy Water in Diabetes. <lb />
The effect of Vichy water cannot be <lb />
disputed. The treatment lessens the <lb />
amount of sugar, the feeling of <lb />
the great secretion of the kidneys, etc., <lb />
and many a patient leaves the spring <lb />
with every appearance of health. But <lb />
must not hope for a definite result <lb />
any more at Vichy than elsewhere. <lb />
Mineral waters modify and check the <lb />
course of diabetes, but so far as we <lb />
know it is very seldom that they cure it. <lb />
Vichy is especially suitable for <lb />
patients who fat and bloom- <lb />
for persons with vigorous <lb />
apparently in good health and <lb />
without bronchitis or other <lb />
As a general thing every <lb />
dent or complication of diabetes <lb />
pears to to be a counter indication <lb />
to the use of mineral waters, and <lb />
of Herald. <lb />
I It would be interesting to know what i <lb />
the Turks propose to do with it. But j <lb />
if the inscription calls Eleanor queen j <lb />
of England the words cannot have <lb />
been placed upon it before Edward <lb />
left Syria, as he did not hear of his fa- <lb />
death until he reached Italy. <lb />
There can, however, be little doubt I <lb />
that the bedstead has been buried in I <lb />
the earth for the last six <lb />
London News. <lb />
Nicholas. <lb />
Arena-ed His Mothers Death. <lb />
A 17-year-old boy, whose mother had <lb />
suffered death and worse at the hands <lb />
of Chavez, a notorious <lb />
has been the means of bringing <lb />
Chavez to his end. Chavez had <lb />
treated, robbed the woman. <lb />
The boy, when he heard the manner of <lb />
his mothers death, threw down the <lb />
with he wee working <lb />
on a coffee his ma- <lb />
and declared he would never do <lb />
another day's work until his mUm <lb />
was avenged, and <lb />
Ten days afterward he came to police <lb />
headquarters, and said be had <lb />
the Chavez and his <lb />
accomplices on an ranch a <lb />
few miles out from the He led <lb />
Apparent Idleness. <lb />
Sometimes apparent idleness is only <lb />
a change of work. George Lewes <lb />
one day dredging a roadside pond, put- <lb />
ting all the living treasures he found <lb />
into a glass Jar. <lb />
an you inquired a <lb />
bystander. for <lb />
But when he saw what strange beings <lb />
ware discovered in that unpromising <lb />
pool hie interest excited, and ha <lb />
asked Mr. Lewes many curious <lb />
all of which were patiently an- <lb />
Appointments, <lb />
1st Sunday and n the troops to the place in the dead of <lb />
Baptist ,. The bandits, <lb />
2nd and 4th morning and . .- <lb />
Sunday morning and night. Beth-1 Costa Baa Car. <lb />
h . i ,. <lb />
amid the scoffer <lb />
at the end of the interview, a <lb />
to be able to name all God's <lb />
Companion. <lb />
And this b a portrait of Raphael <lb />
portrait <lb />
dear. no. One of the <lb />
old masters, know.<lb />
Why he <lb />
How Sims Reeves Was Found. <lb />
Sims Reeves, the great English tenor, <lb />
was discovered by accident. When <lb />
was manager of Drury Lane <lb />
he brought out. among other <lb />
revivals, Dryden's with <lb />
all Purcell's music. During the re- <lb />
the musical director was in <lb />
i despair being able to find any one <lb />
who could do justice to the solos in i <lb />
if Ton James <lb />
son, the tragedian, who was a member <lb />
of the company, had noticed the voice <lb />
of a young chorus singer and suggested <lb />
him as a solution of the difficulty. He <lb />
was laughed at by Cooke. <lb />
however, becoming impressed by An- <lb />
desired Cooke to <lb />
try the young man alone. In less than <lb />
twenty minutes Cooke returned in <lb />
raptures of delight Reeves made a <lb />
great hit and was nightly encored in his <lb />
Graphic. <lb />
Costly <lb />
Grandma her <lb />
Here's a notice of my dear Jennie's <lb />
Frankie, what does t-r-o-u-a- <lb />
Frankie I <lb />
Land of <lb />
cost if, a shame and a disgrace. <lb />
What's this world to, anyhow. <lb />
Bulletin. <lb />
A for Gum Arable. <lb />
M. a Polish chemist, has <lb />
discovered what he claims to be a sub- <lb />
for gum by boiling one <lb />
part of flaxseed with eight parts of <lb />
luted sulphuric acid in eight parts of <lb />
water until the mixture, which at first <lb />
thickens, becomes quite fluid. The <lb />
compound is then strained through <lb />
muslin, and four times its volume of <lb />
strong alcohol is added. The <lb />
after being filtered, washed with <lb />
alcohol and carefully dried, produces a <lb />
clear gum devoid of all taste or odor. <lb />
Thirty grains, it is said, are a sufficient <lb />
emulsion for an ounce of cod liver oil. <lb />
The value of this invention will, of <lb />
course, depend on how far this new <lb />
can be relied on as a substitute for <lb />
the original, and the cost at which it <lb />
can be produced for tho <lb />
change. <lb />
Sea for Diabetic Patients. <lb />
Another very delicate question arises <lb />
that of deciding whether, yes or no, <lb />
we can recommend sea bathing to <lb />
patients. As a general thing sea <lb />
baths are useful, but only as an <lb />
means, in diabetic patients who, <lb />
though a little exhausted, are still <lb />
of reacting vigorously, and for <lb />
whom we have specially in view a <lb />
building up of the general condition. <lb />
Paris Herald. <lb />
Free Speech In <lb />
One cannot speak or work against <lb />
the church in Russia. A Lutheran pas- <lb />
tor of Riga called the Greek church a <lb />
and continued a <lb />
girl belonging to orthodox faith. <lb />
He was condemned by the district <lb />
court to the loss of all private rights <lb />
and privileges, with banishment to the <lb />
province of Perm without leave of ab- <lb />
from the place where he lives for <lb />
a period of two years. He was <lb />
from entering other provinces for <lb />
a further period of ten years, and ex- <lb />
for another term of ten years <lb />
from the capitals and from the govern- <lb />
in which they <lb />
sight to see a 400-pound turtle come to <lb />
the surface and take a bite of water- <lb />
melon. A few are kept in the market <lb />
to attract buyers. As they lie upon <lb />
their backs day after day and gasp for <lb />
breath they excite the pity of passers- <lb />
by. Their helpless and suffering con- <lb />
is markedly at variance with <lb />
their former liberty in the cool, green <lb />
sea. Ernest in New York<lb />
tho Youngsters Tittered. <lb />
The is authoritatively in- <lb />
formed that the following was an actual <lb />
occurrence at the gospel tent meeting <lb />
on Niagara street, near Hudson. A <lb />
member had just ceased speaking about <lb />
a cure of asthma effected by prayer <lb />
when a lank individual arose and asked <lb />
for the privilege of the floor. <lb />
you have had experience yon <lb />
may speak, said tho presiding <lb />
officer. <lb />
have experience. My father <lb />
was sick with the asthma for fifteen <lb />
years, and he was finally brought to <lb />
pray for his recovery. interest <lb />
manifested among tho He <lb />
prayed fifty years and <lb />
he died of the <lb />
Hysterical laughter among urchins <lb />
on rear seats and consternation among <lb />
the Courier. <lb />
Breeding; Fleet Dogs far Wolves. <lb />
Canadian farmers, having been <lb />
bled sorely for many years by wolves <lb />
and coyotes, are taking determined <lb />
steps toward ridding of <lb />
these pests. The Canadian wolves are <lb />
not particularly ferocious, but they are <lb />
sufficiently hold to be a constant men- <lb />
ace to the flocks and herds. Digs have <lb />
been utilized for the protection of the <lb />
sheep and cattle, but it remained for <lb />
Sir John to import a <lb />
of Belgian, French and Scotch <lb />
hounds for the special purpose of hunt- <lb />
exterminating the wolves. The <lb />
experiment has been attended with <lb />
fair success, but It Is discovered <lb />
more effectual service would be done if <lb />
the dogs were capable of greater speed. <lb />
With a view, therefore, of insuring <lb />
the desired Mr. Dan Gordon, <lb />
Ottawa, has bought two of rt <lb />
and best bred greyhounds in <lb />
and he expects to secure by means of <lb />
crossing of breeds splendid dogs <lb />
for wolf hunting. The wolf nuisance <lb />
in Canada is more than we <lb />
pose; in one day seventeen of the beasts <lb />
were killed by n party of three men <lb />
who scouted over the Cochrane ranch. <lb />
To Russia, however, must go to And <lb />
wolves of singular ferocity and In large <lb />
numbers. Seventy thousand were killed <lb />
in tho and districts In <lb />
It is officially estimated that <lb />
arc still running at large In <lb />
they multiply exceedingly <lb />
fast. Eugene Field in News. <lb />
The Power of the Moonstone. <lb />
There is u perfect mania for moon- <lb />
stones, not always to lie worn as <lb />
but to lie carried about the per- <lb />
son as a temptation to good fortune <lb />
and success. To show how deep seated <lb />
i- this I will quote from a letter <lb />
reserved by n dealer in gems from an <lb />
unlucky heard your <lb />
wonderful fortune-compelling moon- <lb />
stones I immediately for one. hop- <lb />
that it may the ill luck <lb />
that has followed me for some time <lb />
Though not a believer in necromancy I <lb />
am inclined to accept this with my <lb />
whole heart. If you can add an extra <lb />
charm to it I will remain debtor <lb />
for <lb />
Once in a while one catches a glimpse <lb />
of a humorous side to this superstition, <lb />
in the case of a well known <lb />
per man who, in love with a <lb />
young woman many years his junior, <lb />
did not dare to try his fate until he had <lb />
a moonstone which held a <lb />
One was easily found for him, <lb />
and it must have brought him the <lb />
success, since he was married <lb />
within six months to the of <lb />
his Joy White. <lb />
It <lb />
Together. <lb />
county, Mich- <lb />
there a town named Redhead- <lb />
It is Just across the <lb />
from West <lb />
Shore. <lb />
Henry Ward for <lb />
Henry Ward Beecher was very fond <lb />
of gems of all kinds and a constant <lb />
purchaser. I don't know that he had <lb />
any special superstition regarding them, <lb />
but he loved them as one may love any <lb />
beautiful tiling. To him they meant <lb />
more than mere adornment. <lb />
They represented not so much money <lb />
value as artistic merit. And that, by <lb />
the way, is always true of your genuine <lb />
gem lover. Anything like ostentation <lb />
or display is hateful to York <lb />
Letter. <lb />
Linguistic. <lb />
Prof. his young <lb />
Eh, Bob What's that book you have <lb />
under your arm <lb />
Young at a <lb />
Prof. It's a good deal <lb />
easier to learn somebody language <lb />
than your own, lent It, <lb />
navy, <lb />
Capt Bridge, of the British <lb />
who is said to have visited <lb />
of the Pacific than any <lb />
man, remarks that In all his travels he <lb />
a cannibal who not <lb />
of the practice except on the <lb />
Bismarck's bedroom contains only <lb />
three pieces of an enormous <lb />
wash hand stand, a small bed- <lb />
and a There need to <lb />
be a of hair relishes <lb />
then said the prince a few <lb />
ago-, towel will do to part <lb />
A World. <lb />
it coats money to <lb />
you die, <lb />
and undertakers are <lb />
binned <lb />
you've got married, old <lb />
while I have been <lb />
I congratulate you on having <lb />
shaken off she dragon of a house- <lb />
keeper at <lb />
make any mistake, dear <lb />
boy, she's the woman I've <lb />
too <lb />
man, <lb />
from a Crab. <lb />
A police officer of Chicago has de- <lb />
vised an ingenious mode of signaling <lb />
for the patrol wagon. He has a <lb />
plate fixed in the end of his club, <lb />
an opening of suitable shape to <lb />
respond with and act as a key or wrench <lb />
to turn the lever that sends in the <lb />
alarm. This opening also serves as a <lb />
mouthpiece to a whistle set tn the base <lb />
of the club. This is a most practical <lb />
device, for the subjects of arrest are, <lb />
as a neither very obliging nor <lb />
amiable, and certainly not prone to-re- <lb />
main peaceful and inactive while an <lb />
officer is extracting his keys from his <lb />
pocket to send in an York <lb />
Telegram. <lb />
Many Afore Like Is. <lb />
A dispatch from Chicago says that a <lb />
young inventor that city has but <lb />
his ambition in devising <lb />
an electric propeller to run steamers of <lb />
any size by means of a storage battery, <lb />
and also a device for the economical <lb />
development of the electricity. The <lb />
highway of progress is strewn with the <lb />
bones of dead hopes and ruined fort- <lb />
accounted for by but <lb />
inventions. Detroit Free <lb />
Press. <lb />
Donald G. Mitchell, is <lb />
now years of age. He quietly <lb />
at tin been his <lb />
home since 1865, and which he has <lb />
rendered so well known by hie writ- <lb />
Notwithstanding hie advanced <lb />
age he Is still engaged In literary work. <lb />
Me <lb />
Mary Is In <lb />
makes yon think tor <lb />
she's always before the soak- <lb />
that, no sign. girth <lb />
simply given to reflection, as <lb />
It were. <lb />
the Shape, <lb />
was not until 1869 Pi card, <lb />
under the auspices of the French <lb />
of Sciences, reduced the degree to <lb />
anything like a certainty. His plan <lb />
was to connect two points by a series <lb />
of triangles, thus ascertaining the <lb />
length of the are of a meridian inter- <lb />
between them, to compare It <lb />
with difference of latitudes found <lb />
by making celestial observations. The <lb />
stations used were In the <lb />
vicinity of Paris, and near <lb />
While these measurements <lb />
were being made a discussion arose ea <lb />
to the interpretation of them, some <lb />
firming that they indicated a prolate, <lb />
others an oblate spheroid. <lb />
The former figure may lie popularly <lb />
represented by a lemon, the latter by <lb />
an orange. To prove which was right <lb />
observations were extended far <lb />
to the north south, one expedition <lb />
going to Peru, the other to Lapland. <lb />
Tho Peruvian expedition worked nine <lb />
years on the question, the Lapland <lb />
five. Tho results of the meas- <lb />
thus obtained confirmed the <lb />
expectations of the oblate form. <lb />
St. Republic <lb />
Au ;. now going the <lb />
vises people to eat before going to bed. <lb />
This Is excellent advice, as there at <lb />
nothing more disagreeable than to have <lb />
crumbs between the <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
AYCOCK <lb />
C. <lb />
N. C <lb />
-Law , <lb />
WILSON, n. c <lb />
I kit. L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST. t <lb />
X. <lb />
I. <lb />
ALEX <lb />
E, N. C <lb />
J. C. M Rt. J. M. TUCKER. <lb />
TUCKER A MURPHY. <lb />
If <lb />
N. C. <lb />
marry <lb />
t a <lb />
N. C <lb />
P G. JAMBS, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice In all the courts. Collection <lb />
J. <lb />
B. <lb />
A W, <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00019004_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
J. Editor Proprietor. <lb />
-Mi <lb />
Call for a State Meeting. <lb />
Sept. <lb />
ST Association of <lb />
Mini <lb />
of <lb />
By a unanimous vote of the <lb />
Committee of the State As- <lb />
of Democratic after <lb />
with the Chairman <lb />
S o, Democratic Executive <lb />
the OF I Committee, it is deemed advisable <lb />
Of Hates.- One I g, b of <lb />
one-half column one year. . . <lb />
one-quarter column one year, party has now <lb />
Transient and another<lb />
Greenville, S. a, Sept <lb />
At the meeting of the <lb />
held this date the full Board <lb />
was present. <lb />
Pauper orders were issued as fol- <lb />
John Stocks 2.50, <lb />
6.00, Margaret 3.00, Jas <lb />
Masters 2.00, Ivy 2.00, Patsy <lb />
The t 81.50 per yeT. a Convention or the Demo- Sm. <lb />
I ti a b f and as our Moore 4.00. John Baker 1.50, Alex <lb />
12.00, Polly Adams 3.00, <lb />
i one-quarter column on, year, Ll 2.00, Redmond <lb />
In Local j and is upon us, <lb />
Column a reading items, cents per as there is work to be done, work <lb />
line insertion. in behalf a dear to every <lb />
Advertisements, such as Ad-; Carolinian, and as <lb />
and Executors Notices, ; ST. IS . . to <lb />
and Odes. I <lb />
Summons to etc. will, that share is well and faithfully <lb />
chanted for at legal rates and must I performed, <lb />
he fob in The i, therefore, as the <lb />
has suffered some loss and of Democratic <lb />
much annoyance because of haying no . t t <lb />
rule as to the payment of this class S , h., <lb />
of and in order to avoid to be held in <lb />
future trouble payment is city of on Wednesday, <lb />
will l demanded. the 24th day September. <lb />
for any space not mentioned Our constitution provides that <lb />
above, any length of time, Kin be shall be entitled to three <lb />
made by application to the office either , delegates and one additional <lb />
in person or by letter. ; for every twenty <lb />
Copy tor New Advertisements and. , <lb />
chances of advertisements should be in good <lb />
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday I he certificate pi the residents, <lb />
mornings in order to prompt in- and Secretaries of Clubs will con- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
Entered at the Post Office at <lb />
Mail Matter. <lb />
township should organ- <lb />
the credentials of delegates. <lb />
Such certificate should set forth the <lb />
actual number of members born one <lb />
the Club roster at the time of <lb />
naming delegates. <lb />
Delegates other Club <lb />
attending the Convention will <lb />
be entitled to reduced rates of board <lb />
at the House, to <lb />
Dupree 2.00, Asa 4.00, Henry <lb />
Harris 2.50, Elizabeth Moore 2.00, <lb />
Arthur Dennis 2.00, Julia Dunn <lb />
1.50, Susan Briley 1.50, T A <lb />
pen 1.00, Wm Keel 1.50, <lb />
kins 7.00. <lb />
The following general orders were <lb />
J P Downs 5.00, J A K Tucker <lb />
63.50, G W 3.50, J L <lb />
N H bit ford 22.15, D <lb />
H James 335.90, L B 21.- <lb />
L B 1.90, John <lb />
28.70, Jefferson Murphy 2.00, <lb />
D J 1.00, W E Proctor <lb />
3.50, J J 153.26, Cr A <lb />
Gowan 3.60, W H Wilkinson 10.80. <lb />
E L Joyner, 21.18, J B Cherry 116.- <lb />
Church Mills G W Edmond- <lb />
sou 9.00, B H 9.60, G E <lb />
Harris 4.20, Anderson Robinson <lb />
46.50, F W Brown, 21.00, G M <lb />
Mooring 2.90, John 2.00, <lb />
C Dawson 5.80, C V Newton 3.60, <lb />
T E Keel 3.70. <lb />
Communication read from Coin-. <lb />
of Beaufort county in- <lb />
forming this Board of their <lb />
of one-half of Ward's bridge <lb />
special railroad rates. Full j across <lb />
will be published. <lb />
The objects of this Convention <lb />
a rate -Men's Democratic dub The thorough of <lb />
to foster the <lb />
Democratic Clubs in every town- <lb />
ship in to increase <lb />
our facilities for promulgating Dem- <lb />
principles, to co operate <lb />
more fully with the regular Demo- <lb />
organization promoting <lb />
the Harness Democratic measures. <lb />
To these ends we invoke the Bo- <lb />
at once and help oilier townships or- <lb />
At the Congressional <lb />
for the Second District held in <lb />
last Wednesday, W. J. <lb />
Rogers, of Northampton, was <lb />
nominated on the first ballot. He. on , a the <lb />
is an Alliance man and a food support <lb />
Democrat nut the State, and invite the <lb />
of our Democratic <lb />
License to retail liquor were <lb />
granted to C T Savage, H U Ed- <lb />
wards Co., B C Conned. <lb />
tax books for year 1890 <lb />
were examined and ordered to be <lb />
turned over to the Sheriff. <lb />
Ordered that B H Hearne <lb />
lowed from this date 812.50 to at- <lb />
tend to draw over Greenville Bridge. <lb />
The pennon was read <lb />
To the Corns. Pitt Co.- <lb />
The undersigned of <lb />
Greenville township residing upon <lb />
J. T. Harris Presiding Elder J, . and we request on. party I North side of Tar respect- <lb />
us then aid in Cross <lb />
. <lb />
Washington letter. <lb />
From Our <lb />
C. Sept. 5th, <lb />
Harmony of monkey and par- <lb />
rot kind is that which now prevails <lb />
among the republican Senators, and <lb />
the closing debate on the tariff hill, <lb />
particularly the reciprocity <lb />
would have been mans- <lb />
were it not fact that the <lb />
prosperity of this country for some <lb />
years to come is involved therein. <lb />
This way Senator Edmonds <lb />
paid his respects to Mr. Blaine's <lb />
to reciprocity with Central <lb />
and South America, demand of <lb />
a country for commodities does not <lb />
depend as much upon members as <lb />
upon the state of its its <lb />
wealth and its civilization. When <lb />
look at any Central American or <lb />
South American State, I think that <lb />
any one average people in <lb />
North America have, during the <lb />
last year, consumed more of the <lb />
products, merchandise, food and <lb />
clothing that go to make up the <lb />
comfort, luxury, and happiness <lb />
of mankind than one thousand <lb />
average people in the Central or <lb />
South American States. <lb />
the expectation of the United States <lb />
being able to dispose of a large in- <lb />
crease of its products there, is, in <lb />
my opinion, one of the greatest <lb />
that brilliant men or sober <lb />
statesmen have fallen <lb />
Senator Sherman in advocating his <lb />
Canadian reciprocity was <lb />
equally in condemning the <lb />
Blame idea. It is not that these <lb />
gentlemen anything specially <lb />
against reciprocity, bat hate <lb />
Blaine, in the republican Sena- <lb />
tors all seem to hate each other <lb />
anyway. <lb />
Senator Vance had some fun with <lb />
Senator by giving old <lb />
gentleman rope to get him- <lb />
self up as to the duties <lb />
upon the products of North <lb />
Mr. is an able lawyer <lb />
but be knows simply nothing at all <lb />
about the tariff, and every time be <lb />
has attempted to speak that <lb />
subject be has but exhibited his <lb />
ignorance of it. <lb />
The House, has after a debate <lb />
which should raise a blush shame <lb />
to the cheek of every honorable <lb />
American citizen, unseated <lb />
of Arkansas. <lb />
Representative Cannon having <lb />
Parties desiring to obtain pat- <lb />
or information of any kind <lb />
relating to patents, <lb />
with Messer.-. C. Co., <lb />
St., Washington, D. C. <lb />
The firm prompt, reliable, <lb />
very moderate In Its charges. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly qualified <lb />
the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
county, on 4th day of August, 1890, <lb />
as Executor Last Will and <lb />
of a. B. Kilpatrick. deceased, here- <lb />
by gives notice to all persons indebted <lb />
to estate to make immediate pay- <lb />
to the undersigned, and to all <lb />
sons having claims against said estate to <lb />
present the same properly authenticated <lb />
on or before the 8th day of September, <lb />
1891, or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of recovery. J. P. <lb />
of S. B. Kilpatrick, <lb />
1800. <lb />
BIG- OFFER. <lb />
I am f Tobacco Hogsheads <lb />
free to those who ship to D. Y. Cooper, <lb />
wood hoops, <lb />
much better than the iron hoops. Par- <lb />
ties desiring to ship independently can <lb />
obtain them size at small <lb />
size for less money, at <lb />
Cooper's Machine Shops. I have also <lb />
purchased of B. F. Sugg his Gin Con- <lb />
denser, Ac., and will gin cotton this <lb />
season at cents per hundred or the <lb />
20th. Will furnish Lumber in any <lb />
quantity either In town or at the mill <lb />
as low as the lowest. <lb />
S. A. <lb />
OF N. a WITH <lb />
R. A. DOME k CO., <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
Roanoke Dock, <lb />
YA- <lb />
Special attention given to Sales of Cot- <lb />
Grain, Peanuts and Country Pro- <lb />
duce generally. Liberal Cash Advances <lb />
on Consignments. Prompt returns and <lb />
highest market prices guaranteed. <lb />
STOVES. STOVES. <lb />
NOTICE <lb />
tub Incorporation of the <lb />
Grifton Male and Female <lb />
Academy. <lb />
North Carolina, Before the Clerk <lb />
Pitt County. Superior Court. <lb />
Notice is hereby given that I have this <lb />
day issued letters declaring J L Tuck- <lb />
C P Gaskins, L H Spier, W B <lb />
Bland, J Z Brooks. George Hellen, <lb />
W S Blount, Joel Patrick. Moses Spivey, <lb />
G W Gardner, P B S W Brooks. <lb />
J S C M A Griffin, A M Carr. <lb />
Hardy Johnson, James Dawson. W H <lb />
Samuel <lb />
W B and K Spier, their as- <lb />
successors, a corporation <lb />
under the name and style of <lb />
ton Male Female for <lb />
the purposes set forth in the articles of <lb />
agreement and plan of incorporation <lb />
which has been filed and recorded in my <lb />
office, with all the privileges and powers <lb />
under chapter sixteen volume one <lb />
the Code of North Carolina and the <lb />
thereof. <lb />
The main business proposed to be done <lb />
by the corporation is the erection, main- <lb />
and keeping of a school for the <lb />
i Instruction and education of male and <lb />
Stoves <lb />
are making a specialty of <lb />
COOKING S STOVES, <lb />
and arc receiving the finest <lb />
line ever brought to Greenville <lb />
Our stock will be complete <lb />
embracing every size made. <lb />
Our popular <lb />
still stands at the head. Our <lb />
other brands arc all good. We <lb />
have the heaviest Stove for <lb />
the money ever put on this <lb />
market. We carry a full line <lb />
of Stove ware, Fix- <lb />
Tinware, Hardware, <lb />
Saw Nails, Paints, <lb />
Oils, Doors and Sash, Glass <lb />
and Putty. <lb />
We want to see everybody <lb />
that wants a Cook Stove. We <lb />
are prepared to supply the <lb />
demand. <lb />
c- <lb />
D. D. HASKETT k CO. <lb />
1000- <lb />
-.- <lb />
Too busy to write advertisement this week <lb />
LOOKOUT NEXT WEEK <lb />
J. B. CHEERY CO., Greenville, N. C. <lb />
men of national <lb />
to ii Dr is. Dixon. to land as their presence. <lb />
the <lb />
voters residing in said township <lb />
carry on mos, and no stone Green <lb />
Flem- <lb />
P-l- ., Vance and will <lb />
Tr attend, and every <lb />
Littleton m show-,.,. and nominee nil <lb />
enterprise that <lb />
The covering the above <lb />
undertaken by a female children of the white race with <lb />
met to show House the, <lb />
receipts the the necessary for such purpose. <lb />
present fiscal year would exceed the <lb />
appropriations made by Congress <lb />
for the same period, Representative <lb />
of Texas, who baa to a large <lb />
extent taken the late. Samuel <lb />
. i . . Mars <lb />
place on the Committee I tan. <lb />
on Appropriations, punctured the None of the stockholders corpora- <lb />
and demonstrated are Individually or personally liable <lb />
by a carefully prepared contract, <lb />
b .,. . .,. . , , or demand on said corporation <lb />
and the names Registrars and tor rue wine <lb />
North Carolina <lb />
for I he several townships will for the fiscal year <lb />
published elsewhere. lending June MM, exceed the ; <lb />
,.,, . ., revenues the Government. <lb />
lo lowing persons were , , be <lb />
f county, city, village it-d taxes for the yew Mt f <lb />
Mis M Brown, course that the majority springs <lb />
TOBACCO HOGSHEADS, <lb />
GIVEN AWAY. <lb />
We are pleased to announce to the to- <lb />
growers of Pitt and adjoining <lb />
counties that we are prepared to give <lb />
cur Hogsheads free to any who <lb />
will use them to ship their tobacco in <lb />
provided they will ship It. to Messrs. <lb />
Davis ft Gregory, of Oxford. <lb />
Mess. Davis Gregory are very large <lb />
tobacco dealers and the high- <lb />
est prices for all tobaccos shipped to <lb />
them. since they this favor of <lb />
of business of said corpora- furnishing hogsheads have shown <lb />
is in or near the town of Grifton in such interest in the tobacco growing <lb />
the county of Pitt. our section we hope our tobacco growers <lb />
The capital stock of said corporation will find it to their interest to give them <lb />
is to be not less than eight hundred S most liberal patronage. <lb />
re than three thousand Persons desiring to ship i. other par- <lb />
ties can obtain hogsheads of <lb />
at a piece. <lb />
We promise prompt attention to all or- <lb />
sent to us at Greenville, X. <lb />
Respectfully. <lb />
COX <lb />
the day of September, 1890. <lb />
B. A. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court Pitt County. <lb />
mark f enterprise <lb />
In- imitated by towns expected. <lb />
likewise situated. That town has <lb />
no newspaper of its own. it , ,,,,. <lb />
has taken , page in ,,,,. , W J Solomon; I <lb />
for one year. Tins page is every voter sec- Co, F -I John. , f, Mr. Savers <lb />
to Littleton, to our g j Swift Creek, W H a detailed statement Mrs. E. A. <lb />
I, id filled with in to Campbell J B Curtis L-d- j neatly l <lb />
, ,. . . ,. send V. this and Nettie <lb />
have i honor u. be, H talk- <lb />
etc., W J Hell, Tee.; <lb />
J. W <lb />
ii. II Hui <lb />
lady want- <lb />
see <lb />
Sheppard, <lb />
CHE <lb />
Latham Fender. <lb />
. <lb />
road to <lb />
eek the printers in <lb />
and also in Henderson went <lb />
n i . Tn the latter place <lb />
tin I . as tin- seal <lb />
of the made no <lb />
tint tine. <lb />
IS. Sec. <lb />
Parker. <lb />
be necessary to l he <lb />
the present All <lb />
of which shows that if the United <lb />
States was compelled on the <lb />
day next June to pay all of its <lb />
Boating indebtedness, it could not <lb />
do it. notwithstanding the enormous <lb />
before making purchases. She is still <lb />
to the front with a beautiful stock and <lb />
defies competition in styles and prices. <lb />
With her large experience in the <lb />
she is prepared to suit the tastes of Having accepted the agency of <lb />
every purchaser. Call at her residence Plow Works <lb />
on Avenue <lb />
Miss of our town <lb />
s entered Greenville Female In <lb />
to lie a good printer . She is a lovely girl. <lb />
so went to the ease and <lb />
Hie out <lb />
re. it us i sooner <lb />
i d. printers <lb />
, ; , i Toll is to<lb />
. ii t <lb />
S .--.-<lb />
Washington Jottings. Registrars and Inspectors of <lb />
r, . crane tinned over <lb />
to the March I, 1880. <lb />
I These facts Speak louder than col- <lb />
The have been appoint- j <lb />
by the Board Com-1 Speaker Heed got so <lb />
as Registrars and in am the. i.-ports his <lb />
if the election to he. held <lb />
next <lb />
HAM TOWNSHIP. <lb />
I Anderson.<lb />
O T I O ES <lb />
------When want a good i <lb />
PHOTOGRAPH <lb />
---------Call on--------- <lb />
HYMAN, <lb />
we are prepared to <lb />
furnish <lb />
CANE MILLS <lb />
EVAPORATORS, <lb />
C. Warren is out in a card <lb />
showing th- present. Superior <lb />
is unlit to hold the <lb />
Be he occupies. next <lb />
The railroad question don't seem <lb />
o.- agitated with much vim. The <lb />
been made the town <lb />
Sister voted 910.000. IT work has <lb />
the best. Ami if <lb />
------your old------ <lb />
we are not aware. The W. I T A Tin., j <lb />
going Blaine to carry money <lb />
in In at Heed. Asa mailer Tact, <lb />
Mr. has never been hi <lb />
stale, in his life. X. <lb />
Secretary should hung Davy <lb />
at low prices. First-class ma- <lb />
chines. We carry a full line of <lb />
HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS <lb />
and BLINDS. A full line of <lb />
the best makes of <lb />
on hand and to <lb />
arrive. We sell low for cash. <lb />
LATHAM PENDER, <lb />
x. . Greenville, N. C. <lb />
you want <lb />
that be took off bis sash and russet I , <lb />
shoes and started home this week, i .;. <lb />
Senator Gorman when lie, <lb />
saw detailed which them to Alley they will several of <lb />
certain g i AS All <lb />
,,.;,. off I Co. has the reputation . Vii <lb />
I . <lb />
ill ; <lb />
, . <lb />
.,. ;. j. <lb />
,,. <lb />
, , , , down the river the oilier <lb />
,,. reported dead . <lb />
. Mattie is critical. The way <lb />
I sou. <lb />
I lisp S <lb />
n.,. . . <lb />
Are You Waiting For <lb />
can see it all tun-. Then per AM <lb />
It <lb />
is very critical. The Way <lb />
, j ,. . i.; visit- way the is haul. <lb />
S US e. <lb />
rite <lb />
well i. a-l that paper with <lb />
i . i i r. <lb />
declined to be treated <lb />
; i-y e. ere ashamed of the place <lb />
and where they were- <lb />
IS M John <lb />
Bryant.<lb />
r. It <lb />
. i, W <lb />
. would -oak., another I <lb />
had break as when Our Stock is Goods . Low. <lb />
i staled in official g . <lb />
WE MAKE A OF MAKING BARGAINS IN <lb />
that barley is I be only cereal <lb />
which I is not raised a <lb />
for home consumption. <lb />
day Secretary presented to <lb />
the Senate a <lb />
goods and primming. it. <lb />
Our Schools arc <lb />
have -a i <lb />
. Th. <lb />
III to lake <lb />
School. <lb />
will open in the i The <lb />
will lull Wash- <lb />
will never<lb />
r. . m. -ii-. the <lb />
dented fining <lb />
who . n in Ne- <lb />
his accepted on <lb />
an at the <lb />
the of <lb />
Another feature <lb />
r i fair is there will be no <lb />
id i this year. The editor <lb />
. f the <lb />
was <lb />
. at the many <lb />
devices tip- <lb />
were permitted, the privilege ls Alliance <lb />
of the <lb />
upon <lb />
Tithe H. Y. Hoard Trade, <lb />
ft. Warren j Ru-k. and <lb />
that we , <lb />
bushels i we last The in Styles. in Quality, Utmost in been combined by m in <lb />
MM <lb />
Ii, like Mi. <lb />
he said Wan <lb />
en. <lb />
did minx oilier l hill Us <lb />
a thy the name of c. j <lb />
The old j <lb />
led J. it. of Aurora <lb />
J,,,.,,,, s ail ,,, <lb />
to the and <lb />
as he threatened to do early in <lb />
J It It has been reported <lb />
Caleb Jesse I committee, <lb />
i Senate are <lb />
I predict that Mr. <lb />
Harrison will sign it in spite of the <lb />
which it carries. <lb />
,, . , K K Dad, <lb />
Convention beret <lb />
and several <lb />
likewise. <lb />
the <lb />
u A<lb />
men. <lb />
is <lb />
the <lb />
now <lb />
V C Vines. <lb />
In j G T L <lb />
John II, q th <lb />
J A Mb. t-T-You will please <lb />
Inspector. R L Joyner, W R Par- i give me space your valuable pa <lb />
Ii Johnson, G W Dupree. <lb />
making a <lb />
Mr i . to <lb />
Every <lb />
with it end <lb />
I f and say ever since <lb />
papers the <lb />
year Di-<lb />
. -.-;. . i If<lb />
I This <lb />
he I <lb />
ow <lb />
so still m<lb />
;. v.-.- wisely <lb />
In f <lb />
. fair <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
W F <lb />
C D W T <lb />
J Allen, Charles Webb. <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
S I <lb />
to give you a short sketch of <lb />
travels through the counties of <lb />
Martin, Berlin Hertford. I had <lb />
a meeting at <lb />
Chapel, county; con- <lb />
versions, five to Free Will <lb />
live to the <lb />
We Ion ml crops very <lb />
ONE MIGHTY EFFORT FOB TRADE. <lb />
and winter Stock Offering Will Not and Can Not Be <lb />
Thou a limit which Goods ctn not be Sold. Wt out Pr c, t the Wt. Milk lo. S ind <lb />
GOODS, SOLD <lb />
I INSPECT US. US. US. <lb />
AND YOU WILL FIND WE DEAL FAIR AND SAVE YOU DOLLARS. <lb />
i I . <lb />
W S Calvin <lb />
Stokes. r Frank <lb />
A Word to Tobacco Farmers. <lb />
tor I. -II th <lb />
head of It-the UM <lb />
has us- <lb />
one ions are look the <lb />
, . , i ; meeting <lb />
., t ii; lb ,. ,,. i- on. <lb />
En i i e <lb />
,; ;. mi Ml-. 11.1 Bag- <lb />
. A K -a t-., t-rt h; ,,., , for , M <lb />
.,. . .;. just All. . ,;,. , of <lb />
; . the <lb />
U Moore, John except tho river low <lb />
Belcher, Hem, Ward, Henry most was <lb />
, destroyed by the had to <lb />
in <lb />
i , gentleman. <lb />
h ,,,,,, A. and we had the <lb />
on our of spending <lb />
the with him and hie kind <lb />
noble hearted wife. Mr. <lb />
vis is one of Martin county's model <lb />
Yon And everything in <lb />
. I i on his farm. <lb />
of, , and in <lb />
, ,. He has <lb />
of Sue cotton, with corn, <lb />
sweet potatoes and peanuts in <lb />
tie bad misfortune <lb />
f losing ins very lino trotter while <lb />
Don't read this Advertisement, but <lb />
if you do don't forget it <lb />
Hereafter I will give closer attention to the Fruit and <lb />
trade. During the approaching season <lb />
my work will consist of the finest Candles. <lb />
apples. Oranges Bananas, I will handle <lb />
in large quantities At the same time I shall keep a <lb />
line Fancy Groceries. I challenge the world to <lb />
produce a better Cigar than the old reliable <lb />
It has been on market for l years and <lb />
for n good smoke take lead. Anything in the above <lb />
I will be Ion ml at Finn and store of <lb />
Y. Is. STEPHENS, N. C.<lb />
be perfectly satisfied. <lb />
Dealer AND FANCY <lb />
sod <lb />
Oar Load Car load Corn, Oar load No. Hay, <lb />
Vat Load Rib Side Meat, Car Load St. Louis Flo or, all grades <lb />
Heavy Mess Pot, Granulated Sugar. <lb />
A Ax Snuff, all Wilds. <lb />
Rail Road Mill Snuff- Snuff. <lb />
Rico Molasses, Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Cases Star Lye, Gross Matches. <lb />
Also foil line Baking Powders. Sods, Soap. Starch. Tobacco, Cigars, <lb />
Cakes, Crackers, Candies, Canned Goods, Wrapping Paper, Paper Sacks. <lb />
Special price given to the wholesale trade on large quantities of die <lb />
above goods. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS. GREENVILLE. N C. <lb />
PRATT'S DEVOLVING <lb />
BAITS <lb />
IS IX TH. <lb />
IS IT THE COTTON GIN IN It is <lb />
upon principles, having Iliads in the ends of the <lb />
Cotton which revolve with the roll seed cotton, thus preventing that <lb />
which occurs St the end of the cotton nil other Hence the <lb />
PRATT GIN does ma nor choke, a harder mil of on the <lb />
saws than other glim, and. In of cleans the and of <lb />
course, more lint cotton. This to common and If you don t believe <lb />
what we say. write to any of the gentlemen whose be- <lb />
low, nil of whom arc using the Pratt will no oilier. <lb />
Homier. F. II. F. F. Pate, <lb />
X. W. T. N. 0.1 . T. N. C. <lb />
ORDER wait until you to <lb />
your gin. It will no more than late. will take order now or any <lb />
time this summer, at cash prices, deliver on good notes, without interest, <lb />
payable hi November, <lb />
MOWING will sell the on good <lb />
notes, to responsible parties, payable November, mid <lb />
at once- <lb />
COTTON <lb />
GINS <lb />
Having the Pratt I the tools for <lb />
and training new laws n old gins, repair work, here <lb />
announce to all that I their gins <lb />
here in Washington for par cent, less than it will <lb />
any factory, and also save largely In freights to from <lb />
the various factories. I can do any work your gin <lb />
may need. Send your gin to the <lb />
, WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY <lb />
With prepared, and we will guarantee you <lb />
a good job. Don't wait, hut send our gin at once. <lb />
the last hour is always crowded, and you may he delayed, <lb />
you can't spare the money now make special terms with u at once <lb />
and send without delay. It will cost no more than late.<lb />
FARM AND MILL AND <lb />
ARM <lb />
All size and styles commonly used, at and Reasonable Terms <lb />
its.<lb />
A S <lb />
That will cut o per day. on good terms; also larger sizes at such <lb />
rates of price.<lb />
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS. <lb />
That will raise pound of seed cotton from a In minutes. <lb />
Will v . .-- <lb />
to do without one. Term price <lb />
3-TON WAGON SCALES, ONLY m. <lb />
Guaranteed correct or no Can weigh cotton or hay on the wagon, <lb />
live stock on <lb />
For c., <lb />
WASHINGTON MACHINERY <lb />
K Manager, C.<lb />
pa<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00019004_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
1890. <lb />
Ma, <lb />
1871 1800. <lb />
19th SEASON. <lb />
years <lb />
of tan- <lb />
am square <lb />
i-x-o-s- <lb />
years of <lb />
Our <lb />
is now <lb />
in northern <lb />
markets <lb />
making <lb />
chases for <lb />
fall and winter <lb />
which will <lb />
surpass <lb />
any ever <lb />
shown in <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Yon <lb />
h a v e <lb />
looked to <lb />
for the <lb />
bright things <lb />
the right things,, <lb />
and <lb />
the new <lb />
things and <lb />
this time yon <lb />
will be better <lb />
pleased than ever <lb />
with his <lb />
These goods <lb />
will be placed on <lb />
counters in a <lb />
days and we, <lb />
cordially <lb />
Ian inspection. <lb />
. <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
N. C <lb />
Local S pa r ks <lb />
Good Goods <lb />
yon ever see the like of New Hoods <lb />
at They ate <lb />
have knocked <lb />
bottom out of prices and will sell <lb />
cheaper now than ever before. <lb />
terms will be strictly cash. <lb />
Sew Sew Goods. <lb />
We are daily <lb />
and well selected line of Milli- <lb />
Will carry the most <lb />
goods and sell at lowest prices. <lb />
Yon all can And us at Mrs. Ella <lb />
old stand. Five points. <lb />
Highs Greenville C <lb />
Cooper's <lb />
Henderson, G. <lb />
is the leading place <lb />
For farmers to sell tobacco. <lb />
If you want the highest prices <lb />
Don't fail to ship your tobacco <lb />
To Cooper's, N. C. <lb />
to Brown Bros, for Shoes. <lb />
Try some of new corned <lb />
lets at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Nice and Shoes <lb />
at Brown Bros. <lb />
The merchants had good trade last <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
Uniform goods and trimmings for <lb />
Greenville Female Institute at <lb />
Higgs <lb />
Ladies, examine Brown <lb />
of Dress Goods. <lb />
Don't forget that Cooper's ware- <lb />
house at offers or <lb />
hogshead to their patrons free. <lb />
custom made Shoos for <lb />
children and ladies, at Brown Fros. <lb />
The Old Brick Store will be <lb />
ed September 13th on account <lb />
holiday <lb />
Five new- pupils at the Female In- <lb />
Monday morning. <lb />
For highest prices sell <lb />
tobacco at Cooper's <lb />
Five counties are represented on <lb />
the roll of Female <lb />
They keep <lb />
there is room for <lb />
more. <lb />
When you come to Court bring <lb />
some money for the Reflector, <lb />
please. <lb />
Mrs. W. B. Whichard has our <lb />
thanks for figs brought <lb />
us Thursday. <lb />
It will not do to say oysters yet <lb />
even if the is here. Too hot for <lb />
the bivalves. <lb />
The river steamers are having <lb />
heavy cargoes goods coming in for <lb />
the merchants. <lb />
Uniform goods and trimmings for <lb />
Greenville Female Institute at <lb />
Higgs <lb />
Pitt county Superior Court will <lb />
convene nest Monday. Judge T. B. <lb />
Womack will preside. <lb />
finest loaf of bread I ever ate <lb />
was made of Point Lace Flour, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
In one month the Tar River As- <lb />
will meet Greenville <lb />
should be fixing up for it. <lb />
Don't rail to ship your to- <lb />
to Cooper's at Henderson. <lb />
He is leader of big prices. <lb />
Mr. J. O. Pollard, of Beaver Dam, <lb />
has a mule years old. The <lb />
does some plowing yet. <lb />
The sketch of the Pitt county <lb />
promised for this issue had to <lb />
be postponed until next week. <lb />
Mow it would add to the <lb />
town it Avenue was mac <lb />
ad a mi zed out to the depot. <lb />
The Alliance had a meet- <lb />
here on Saturday, and adopted <lb />
resolutions against jute bagging. <lb />
The Tar has taken a rapid fall in <lb />
the last week. Water is now low <lb />
for to get though to Tarboro. <lb />
D. Y. Henderson, sells <lb />
more Tanners tobacco gives <lb />
lie tier satisfaction any house <lb />
in the State. <lb />
Mr. L. w. Lawrence is sick. <lb />
Mr. H. D. has returned to <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Miss Carrie is visiting rel- <lb />
in <lb />
Miss Sallie Bender, of is <lb />
visiting Mrs. W, <lb />
Miss Leta returned last <lb />
week from a visit to Wilson.; <lb />
Mrs. D. H. James and children re- <lb />
turned last week from <lb />
Miss Annie Perkins is visiting her <lb />
brother, Dr. Perkins, at <lb />
Annie of Scotland <lb />
Neck, was visiting Mrs J. II. Cherry <lb />
last week. <lb />
Miss Winnie Briley, of Hamilton, <lb />
was visiting Mrs. M. A. Stephen part <lb />
of last week. <lb />
Mr. L H- is at <lb />
the general merchandise store of <lb />
Alfred Forbes. <lb />
Mrs. John. S. and <lb />
children returned home last week <lb />
from a visit to <lb />
Mrs. R. H. Home returned Friday <lb />
from Baltimore where she had been <lb />
to buy new millinery goods. <lb />
Mrs. Delia and Mrs. <lb />
Peter Rives, of Hamilton, spent part <lb />
of last week with Mrs. A. M. Clark. <lb />
We were triad to have a call from <lb />
Judge G. II. Brown Jr., on last Thurs- <lb />
day morning. He was on way <lb />
to his home at Washington a few <lb />
days.<lb />
The marriage crop for August was <lb />
small in Pitt, licenses being issued <lb />
to only one white couple and seven <lb />
colored couples. <lb />
C Smith and <lb />
Purser. <lb />
J Moore and Man <lb />
Moldy. Mark and Expel Ty- <lb />
son. George Dixon Nellie <lb />
John Phillips and Francis <lb />
Move, Joseph and Mary <lb />
Morgan, James Simmons Martha <lb />
May, Hoyt Little and Sarah Bauer. <lb />
Mimes. <lb />
Mr. M. C S. Cherry, of Bethel, <lb />
told us a good one not long <lb />
He say that on Lane, near <lb />
his place, lives a colored man by the <lb />
name of Isaac Staton. This <lb />
man has three children, the name of <lb />
the first being Get All, of the second <lb />
Will Have It, and of the third Save <lb />
AIL There is a kind of warfare be- <lb />
tween Get All and Will Have It for <lb />
the possession of whatever comes <lb />
along, and while they are scrambling <lb />
Save All makes away with it. He <lb />
also tells us that M. C. S. Cherry, <lb />
Jr., has two hound puppies named <lb />
Sullivan and <lb />
and that unlike the noted pugilists <lb />
for whom they are named <lb />
knocks Sullivan out on every round. <lb />
New <lb />
ion is called to the notice to <lb />
creditors by J. P. <lb />
of S. B. <lb />
S. A. Redding furnishes tobacco <lb />
hogsheads free to those shipping to <lb />
D. Y. Cooper. Sec advertisement. <lb />
Mrs. S. A. accompanied . . <lb />
her daughter. Miss Lillie and Master I to f <lb />
Vick, is visiting friends near advertisement to-day. She <lb />
New Bern many years experience in the <lb />
millinery business and is prepared to <lb />
Master John Home now belongs to I serve her patrons satisfactorily. <lb />
the force. He comes in as I m, . . . , . . <lb />
an apprentice to work his way up. j rT advertisement <lb />
which he will do rapidly. S. <lb />
j and it is a handsome stock of goods <lb />
Prof they have just opened, goods that are <lb />
onus Saturday. He says prospects j and worth the money you <lb />
arc bright for a good opening his pay for them. They do not carry- <lb />
school at Bethel next Monday. cheap, shoddy that are dear rt <lb />
Mr. D. S. of Tarboro <lb />
has been assisting about the Tobacco Leave. <lb />
graph for a few j were shown a sample <lb />
weeks, has returned f his home. tobacco that come from Miss <lb />
Mr. K. G. Barnes, of n, j Mayo, at Falkland. It is <lb />
this representative Coopers Warehouse pronounced the prettiest leaf ever <lb />
opening i was in town last week. He knows in the county, which is saying a <lb />
in big sales of the warehouse in Wilson to- ; how to make friends with the farm- great deal for it. <lb />
era else. <lb />
Several tobacco farmers <lb />
Y. Cooper, of Henderson leads arc attending the <lb />
all other warehouse men <lb />
prices and big averages day. <lb />
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well Some subscribers are heeding our <lb />
and sick at the Old Brick Store. request and bringing us their sub- <lb />
money out first cotton <lb />
sold. <lb />
NEW GOODS JUST ARRIVED <lb />
M. CONGLETON CO., <lb />
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb />
-DEALERS IN <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes and <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of new <lb />
Fall and Winter Goods. <lb />
I be glad to have my old friends come to <lb />
see us, and assure them that we can sell the goods <lb />
Low <lb />
Givens a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for <lb />
the spot cash. <lb />
JOHN S. CONGLETON. <lb />
Greenville, N. C-, January, 1890. <lb />
j f f Sic <lb />
Our Mammoth Stock Stylish <lb />
warn GOODS <lb />
Just received. has never been a <lb />
better selection brought lo this market. <lb />
Will lead in, Style and <lb />
Sell at Low Prices. <lb />
CAN SUIT THE MOST FASTIDIOUS. <lb />
We have none but the Milliners. <lb />
Higgs Sisters, <lb />
Fall Styles. Greenville X. C. <lb />
I. O. <lb />
W. E. <lb />
OXFORD, N. C. <lb />
Bullock Mitchell, <lb />
OWNERS PROPRIETORS. <lb />
FOR THE SALE <lb />
Jack can he <lb />
found at G. T. <lb />
Brown are selling good <lb />
Calico for per yard. <lb />
Brown Bros don't sell at cost nor <lb />
below cost, but as near to it us any <lb />
reliable firm in town. <lb />
Miss Warren has pupils. <lb />
A nice school. <lb />
Try Cooper's warehouse at <lb />
and you will be <lb />
that it is headquarters the sale <lb />
of tobacco. <lb />
D. Y. Cooper is determined lo <lb />
handle his part the Pitt county <lb />
tobacco, i money and hard work <lb />
will get it. <lb />
Cooper will furnish for <lb />
those who ship tobacco to him. Give <lb />
Cooper a trial and you will get full <lb />
value for your tobacco. <lb />
you want dig prices and a big n v. Cooper sells more farmers <lb />
average sell your tobacco at Coop- i tobacco than House the <lb />
Warehouse Henderson. j state, try him you will that <lb />
Farmers look to your interest and <lb />
sell tobacco where you can get <lb />
sends them right out those <lb />
New Leo stoves. From our window <lb />
we frequently see carts hacking up <lb />
The ladies of Church <lb />
will hold a dinner, for the benefit <lb />
the Church, on Tuesday of Court <lb />
week. <lb />
Alley A- Photographers, <lb />
have a new advertisement to-day. <lb />
Their gallery- is the place to get good <lb />
pictures. <lb />
The weather for a week past has <lb />
bean too hot comfort. <lb />
there is a change more sickness will <lb />
he reported. <lb />
This is the season of the year for <lb />
gin accidents. Camion on the part <lb />
last Thursday Daniel It. King, <lb />
Miss Panic Proctor, a daughter of the most prosperous colored former <lb />
Mr. J. A. Proctor who once lived of sold 1.481 pounds <lb />
here but is now living near Norfolk, tobacco at Copier's Warehouse, <lb />
has been Spending some weeks with , Henderson, for an average of <lb />
uncle, Jesse Praetor, near <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
We very much regret to know <lb />
the critical illness of Bolus <lb />
Fleming, of One day last <lb />
week he was taken with a yellow <lb />
chill and has since been dangerously <lb />
sick, but little hope of his recovery <lb />
b entertained. <lb />
Messrs. W. F. and F. C. Harding <lb />
left last week for Chapel Hill to at- <lb />
tend the University. Messrs. E. A. <lb />
Move, Jr., and left <lb />
Monday morning for the same place. <lb />
The wishes these young <lb />
gentlemen the highest success. <lb />
We were glad to have a call. Mon- <lb />
day , from Mr. Will one of <lb />
of the may save an arm or a <lb />
band occasionally. <lb />
R. Lang, <lb />
Street near Telegraph <lb />
near Telegraph <lb />
Office, <lb />
Office. <lb />
the most Coopers ware <lb />
house is <lb />
Bananas and Northern apples in <lb />
market. <lb />
Cooper, of will at all <lb />
times do bis best for the Pitt county <lb />
farmers. Try Mm with your <lb />
tobacco. <lb />
to good <lb />
pianos. Liberal price will be paid. <lb />
John Duckett. <lb />
your tobacco at where <lb />
you will have from fifty to seventy- <lb />
five buyers with plenty of money to <lb />
buy tobacco. <lb />
Blown A Hooker have raised a hand <lb />
some in front of their store. <lb />
per lb for Sweet Score <lb />
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which <lb />
is a of its superiority, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
store will be closed <lb />
on Monday Sept. 15th and Thurs- <lb />
day Sept. 25th on account of <lb />
days. M. K. Lang. <lb />
Farmers should look to their in- <lb />
selling their tobacco and <lb />
always sell where they can get the <lb />
most money. Cooper's Warehouse <lb />
at Henderson is place. <lb />
Y. toper pays no rent, owns <lb />
his house and will use every effort <lb />
to get full value of his <lb />
tobacco. Try him. you cant, do <lb />
better <lb />
The day of the watermelon arc <lb />
few and of those who <lb />
eat it. <lb />
Dr. G. Lloyd of Tarboro N. C, <lb />
will be at the King House in Green- <lb />
10th, 17th. Practice <lb />
limited to diseases of the eye, <lb />
ear, and throat. <lb />
Daniel It King of Pitt Co., sold <lb />
on 10th of August at D. Y <lb />
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson, N. <lb />
C. lot tobacco 92.00 per pound. <lb />
lot lot This takes the <lb />
lend. <lb />
E. G. Barnes, of Coopers ware- <lb />
house, say that tobacco is the <lb />
best be bat seen. FA. m a good, jolly <lb />
fellow; see hint when go to <lb />
Cooper's at Henderson. <lb />
Next Monday, will be <lb />
ed as a holiday by our cit <lb />
D. T. Cooper has been in to- <lb />
business at Henderson for <lb />
and always advises to <lb />
sell their tobacco where they <lb />
get best prices. That he gets <lb />
these prices for all sold at bis ware- <lb />
house is proven by his <lb />
daring thee years. <lb />
D. T. Cooper, Henderson, has <lb />
mode with Bedding's <lb />
saw mill to make a large number of <lb />
tobacco Farmers who wish <lb />
to ship tobacco to Cooper get <lb />
free of charge by <lb />
be will please you. <lb />
The is <lb />
girl <lb />
ard on the <lb />
It says the girl of the <lb />
period had wings, she would cut <lb />
them off to adorn her <lb />
Mr Marian Perkins, a citizen of <lb />
this county, died at the home of his <lb />
mother-in-law. on Creek, on <lb />
the morning the 1st inst. <lb />
Yesterday Mr. H. F. Keel brought <lb />
us a stalk of corn that about hall <lb />
way up divided into live distinct <lb />
tops. The stalk was large and tall. <lb />
Washington friends, <lb />
who of late has been out on the road. <lb />
He was just through the country <lb />
from Kinston here and said the rail- <lb />
road was completed to l six <lb />
miles of that town. <lb />
We expect that Greenville hat <lb />
about the youngest assistant depot, Tobacco Factory. <lb />
One lot he hail brought as <lb />
high as a pound. The same day <lb />
Sheriff Tucker sold at prices ranging <lb />
from -5 to per hundred; Shel- <lb />
A- Joyner from to 44.50, <lb />
and T. c. Bryan from to <lb />
These sales are specimens of what <lb />
Pitt Bounty can do on her tobacco. <lb />
On Saturday Mr. S. V. Joyner <lb />
brought us several full stalks of to- <lb />
; taken from a barn which he <lb />
had cured in less than two days. In <lb />
April the published an <lb />
article in which a Mr. claimed <lb />
that tobacco could be cured in <lb />
hours, giving instructions how to do <lb />
so. Mr. Joyner cured two barns by <lb />
these instructions, and while be did <lb />
not get it down to hours he short- <lb />
the time to about two-thirds as <lb />
long as it is taking others in this <lb />
I section to cure. We had Mr. Barnes, <lb />
of to examine this <lb />
i he says it is all right. <lb />
of the time required in <lb />
I curing will be a boon to the farmers. <lb />
LEAF TOBACCO. <lb />
PROCTOR <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
N. C.<lb />
We come before our patron scats <lb />
season and invite their attention <lb />
to the largest <lb />
Stock of New Goods <lb />
j ever brought to will <lb />
I not permit Idling all we have in stock. <lb />
but if you want anything in the way of <lb />
CLOTHING. BOOTS. <lb />
Come to it-. We have the <lb />
CHEAPEST <lb />
I in Pitt county. bargains <lb />
On any goods in OUT Store. <lb />
. paid for Scad m Lint Cotton. <lb />
I.- Persona owing U are <lb />
to make settlement- as early its possible. <lb />
I. <lb />
Y. Cooper pays no house <lb />
no big interest account can <lb />
ford to pay you more for your to- <lb />
than any other warehouse <lb />
man. <lb />
The is expecting a <lb />
large lot of stationery to arrive to- <lb />
day. Remember are cheapest <lb />
place in town for paper and en- <lb />
That part of the cotton crop that <lb />
makes in August will lie short, the <lb />
farmers tell us, because of the heavy- <lb />
rains in that month. The top bolls <lb />
are very scarce. <lb />
D. Y. Cooper N. C, <lb />
will get you more net for <lb />
tobacco any other ware- <lb />
house man in the State. Try him <lb />
with your tobacco. <lb />
Rev. J. T. Phillips closed a <lb />
at May's Chapel, <lb />
Beaver Dam township, on Sunday. <lb />
He baptized converts on Saturday <lb />
and one other on Sunday. <lb />
Don't be lead to other Houses by <lb />
men who are getting a little pay for <lb />
talk, but sell at Coop <lb />
Warehouse at Henderson where <lb />
yon will always get the highest <lb />
price. <lb />
There were more errors in the last <lb />
issue of the than should <lb />
have been. Hasty proof reading <lb />
while hurrying the paper ahead so as <lb />
to get a day for moving the oil ice is <lb />
the cause. <lb />
A young man named W. B. Wag- <lb />
staff, who came to this county to cure <lb />
tobacco this season, died near Farm- <lb />
week before last of typhoid <lb />
fever. He was from up near Milton <lb />
we believe. <lb />
Mrs. Joyner have re- <lb />
their fall and winter goods. <lb />
To their superb line of <lb />
have added notions <lb />
gloves, etc. New Advertisement will <lb />
appear next week. <lb />
round R. L. number's machine <lb />
shops is a busy place. From two to <lb />
five engines can be seen on his yard <lb />
nearly any day, waiting tor repairs; <lb />
Bob knows as much about a machine <lb />
any man to be found. <lb />
We met on On breaks Wednesday <lb />
Cd. J. B. a prominent <lb />
and farmer of Pitt county. He bad <lb />
some of his new crop on sale which <lb />
sold for good figure. He sold with <lb />
Davis <lb />
agent on the Line. Master <lb />
Jimmie son of the clever <lb />
agent here, has been put regularly in <lb />
charge as assistant with his name on <lb />
the company pay roll. He is only <lb />
years old but handles his duties <lb />
well. <lb />
Dr. John. of Washing- <lb />
ton, Spent one night of last week in <lb />
Greenville. He was returning home <lb />
Cleveland Springs. His many- <lb />
friends regret that he is in failing <lb />
health and that his trip up the <lb />
try did not benefit him. Since <lb />
ting the above we heard by wire that <lb />
Dr. died a little past <lb />
o'clock yesterday morning. <lb />
The first person to pay taxes <lb />
1890 in Pitt county was <lb />
colored, of Farmville town- <lb />
ship who paid last 3rd <lb />
inst. The first white man to pay- <lb />
was W. H. Stocks, of <lb />
who paid on the <lb />
Prof J. L. Fleming writes that <lb />
his school at Hamilton opened with <lb />
pupils. He has as music teacher <lb />
Miss M. E. Pearce, a graduate of C. <lb />
It. F. Institute, who <lb />
has acquired a reputation being a <lb />
thorough and most excellent teacher. <lb />
Mr. G. T. Tyson was in Oxford, a <lb />
week or two ago,. selling tobacco. <lb />
Before returning home lie purchased <lb />
two thoroughbred Jersey calves from <lb />
a stock raiser up there. Mr. Tyson <lb />
has one of the farms in Beaver <lb />
Dam and believes in having good <lb />
stock. <lb />
BRIGHT TOBACCO A SPECIALTY. <lb />
We beat the world on high averages. With ample capital, one <lb />
of the best lighted houses in the State and a good working force <lb />
we defy competition WE FURNISH HOGSHEADS ON <lb />
PLICATION. The Oxford tobacco market is as firm and as solid <lb />
as the granite foundations of the everlasting mountains, and we <lb />
say to the handed sons of of Eastern Carolina <lb />
that we will to get for them as much money for their <lb />
Tobacco as any other on this or any other market. <lb />
Every lot entrusted to our care shall our personal attention. <lb />
ask is a trial. Very truly. <lb />
The John Flanagan <lb />
BUGGY COMPANY. <lb />
Arc in at tin- old Flanagan <lb />
shops and are manufacturing <lb />
all kinds of the best <lb />
VEHICLES. <lb />
STOCK <lb />
Reliable Goods. <lb />
SHORT MICE. <lb />
All Work guaranteed. <lb />
I JOHN FLANAGAN CO. <lb />
X. <lb />
Master Willie Blow is now <lb />
as Carrier of the Reflector town de- <lb />
livery. The little fellow will do his best <lb />
might make an <lb />
until he gets familiar with the <lb />
route. Anyone failing to get a paper <lb />
can be supplied if they notify the of- <lb />
promptly. <lb />
Mr. Robert Darden, of <lb />
Willow Green, was returning home <lb />
from Greenville, last Saturday, his <lb />
horse took fright near Piney Grove <lb />
church and ran away. Mr. Darden <lb />
was thrown out and knocked <lb />
for awhile but soon recovered. <lb />
His buggy badly demolished. <lb />
All delegates who expect to attend <lb />
meeting of Tar River <lb />
in Greenville, beginning October <lb />
are requested to send their <lb />
names to L. W. Lawrence. The com- <lb />
want to provide homes for all <lb />
who come and desire your name as <lb />
early possible, <lb />
Mr. S. P. Erwin has left us a pea- <lb />
nut curiosity that is quite s curiosity <lb />
indeed. It is one pod formed -inside <lb />
another, both having separate stems. <lb />
The large pod contained one pea be- <lb />
side tits small pod, and the small <lb />
pod also contained one pea. The <lb />
stem of the small pod penetrated the <lb />
side or the large pod was attach- <lb />
ed to the h regular order. The <lb />
small pod grow to sis that it <lb />
split open the larger one. <lb />
Mr. M. C. S. Cherry, of Bethel, was <lb />
in to see the recently. He <lb />
is growing on the sub- <lb />
of tobacco and I to exam <lb />
the specimens we have on <lb />
He said he was in Tarboro <lb />
Saturday previous and saw some <lb />
nice samples there, but he has not <lb />
yet seen anything to up to the I <lb />
While talking <lb />
he unfolded some ideas he has that <lb />
arc exactly in line with those the <lb />
and what we have been i <lb />
trying to get the people of Greenville <lb />
aroused to. He said tell you, <lb />
there ought to be a tobacco ware- <lb />
house right here in Greenville, an I a <lb />
factory too. They ought to <lb />
be established before next fall. You <lb />
estimate in county at <lb />
acres this will be five <lb />
times as much next year. The ware- <lb />
house would create a home market <lb />
for the and the would <lb />
consume it right here, thus giving <lb />
the farmers a double advantage to <lb />
good prices and keep all the <lb />
money home. rather invest money <lb />
in tobacco enterprises in Greenville <lb />
than anything know. If the <lb />
men of Greenville and the <lb />
around here will come together <lb />
and establish them I will put as <lb />
much money in it, according to my <lb />
means, as any other man puts in. <lb />
Get the people stirred up let the <lb />
warehouse and factory be <lb />
The was glad to hear <lb />
this kind of talk. It argues well <lb />
Greenville that people living outside <lb />
of town want to invest their <lb />
money here. What Mr. Cherry says <lb />
about enterprises here is true. Ware- <lb />
houses and factories arc just what <lb />
the town needs and money can be <lb />
made in them. Now what say the <lb />
s men of the town about this <lb />
matter <lb />
This is a time to get the <lb />
people, both the farmer and the <lb />
business men, aroused. <lb />
Since talking with Mr. Cherry we <lb />
have seen a list for stock subscript <lb />
to build a tobacco warehouse <lb />
that had several hundred dollars <lb />
down on it. That is the right step. <lb />
Keep matter going and the ware- <lb />
house will soon be secured. <lb />
Again, there are some gentlemen <lb />
consulting together about the <lb />
of a cigarette factory and <lb />
they want estimates for machinery, <lb />
etc., necessary. This is another en- <lb />
that would pay handsomely <lb />
hero. Pitt county makes the finest <lb />
tobacco in the State and right here <lb />
is the place for factories. For two <lb />
years tobacco has taken <lb />
wherever exhibited. It took <lb />
the premium at. Weldon, N. C, it <lb />
took it at Henderson, it took it at <lb />
Danville, Va. Whoop up the ware- <lb />
house and factories, gentleman, and <lb />
when yon get them yon will see <lb />
Greenville grow like magic. <lb />
The above is what <lb />
the people need and not so <lb />
much cheap goods which <lb />
prove to be <lb />
carry a full line of- <lb />
DRESS m AND WIN., <lb />
k Shoos, <lb />
HATS AND CAPS, <lb />
Cobb Bros.; Gillian,, <lb />
Full assortment and many <lb />
other minor lines that are <lb />
carried by dry goods stores <lb />
COBB <lb />
Co I. <lb />
C C COBS.<lb />
T. H. <lb />
Co. N C <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
GOODS <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
NORFOLK. YA. <lb />
SOLICIT TOUR SHIPMENT of COTTON fa <lb />
BOOTS SHOES, HATS CAPS, <lb />
A FEW LEADERS. <lb />
Checked Home <lb />
spun White to <lb />
Worsted l to 81.00. <lb />
to Brass Pins <lb />
Needle papers and more <lb />
besides for Cakes Soap <lb />
Cap to cents. Hats <lb />
to Pants Goods <lb />
to SLID, and many other <lb />
things in proportion. <lb />
A FEW LEADERS. <lb />
Calicoes Cheeked Home- <lb />
spun White Homespun B to <lb />
Worsted to 81.00, <lb />
to Brass Tins <lb />
etc. Needles papers and more <lb />
besides for IS eta. Soap <lb />
Caps to SO Hats <lb />
lets to Goods to <lb />
and many other things in <lb />
HARRIS WAREHOUSE <lb />
We have had many years ex- <lb />
at the business and <lb />
prepared to handle Cotton to <lb />
advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
hands will prompt and <lb />
careful <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb />
AND MERCHANTS BUT- <lb />
year's supplies will It to <lb />
their interest to get before <lb />
Out N complete <lb />
in all it branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb />
c. <lb />
always at Lowest <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF k CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com- <lb />
of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to nil <lb />
the times. good are all bought anal <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, haying no risk <lb />
to run, we sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ <lb />
Greenville. N. V. <lb />
We make no loud advertisements but will pay as much for any <lb />
all grades of <lb />
As any House Anywhere. <lb />
We guarantee all patrons the best possible attention and <lb />
personal attention to <lb />
Every Lot of Tobacco put on oar Floors. <lb />
We know that a poor sale means n loss of patronage and we as <lb />
business men cannot afford that.- <lb />
We furnish empty hogsheads to all who apply. <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
market is the best market for bright tobacco in the State <lb />
and our facilities for handling tobacco as good as and <lb />
we will do all we can to please yon if yon will give a trial. <lb />
Out house is the best lighted in town and we have every<lb />
a speech and be convinced. . , Cash and can afford to a <lb />
MOT . HARRIS. GOOCH CO. anyone, Give me a call. <lb />
Kennedy of Ohio <lb />
ANOTHER <lb />
Car of Fine <lb />
Horses <lb />
Mules, <lb />
Just received by <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
------and will be<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00019004_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
t TO <lb />
IS- Cm <lb />
-AND <lb />
MERCHANT, <lb />
ER IN----- <lb />
SCHOOL NOTICES. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
ALFRED FORBES, <lb />
Music Scholars Wanted. <lb />
AFTER September 1st, Mrs. B. B. <lb />
John will give to those desiring it <lb />
instruction in vocal and instrumental <lb />
music Prices and testimonials fur- <lb />
to those interested, <lb />
THE. <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
pure straight goods <lb />
and <lb />
CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
SHOES, LA <lb />
HAY, ROCK LIME, FASTER OF and P- <lb />
HARNESS, ADDLES. <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
and pure Lin- <lb />
t and Wood and <lb />
satisfaction. <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AVERT, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRE PROOF SAFE, <lb />
BETHEL HIGH SCHOOL. <lb />
FOR BOTH SEXES. <lb />
Fall Term opens <lb />
TUITION from month. <lb />
Board from to per month. <lb />
One hundred and five pupils were en- <lb />
rolled last year, sixteen of which number <lb />
were boarders. <lb />
For further particulars address <lb />
Z. D. <lb />
Bethel, <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb />
J. D. Williamson, <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Has Moved to One Door IN of Court House <lb />
WILL CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics. put up nothing <lb />
but first-class work. Ho keep up with the times and improved styles. <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use., you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Horn, King. <lb />
Also keep on hand a full Use of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the year round, which we will sell as now as the lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope <lb />
a continuance of the same <lb />
THE NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
College o Agriculture Manic Arts <lb />
WILL BEGIN iTS 2nd SESSION SEPT. <lb />
milE new and large shop buildings for <lb />
-L working in iron and wood will be <lb />
ready for occupation, and the depart- <lb />
are equipped for thorough work. <lb />
Expenses are less than in any similar <lb />
college in existence. Many members of <lb />
Hie Freshman class are already em- <lb />
ployed at remunerative salaries. <lb />
For further particulars address <lb />
Alexander Q. Holliday, <lb />
Raleigh, N. C <lb />
BAPTIST <lb />
FEMALE INSTITUTE, <lb />
MURFREESBORO. N. C. <lb />
Parents and guardians will do well to <lb />
note the following <lb />
The Institute was located at <lb />
in preference to many other very <lb />
desirable places because of its celerity <lb />
for health, and the history of the school <lb />
for more than forty years demonstrate <lb />
the wisdom of their course. <lb />
The beauty of the location is not <lb />
passed in North Carolina. The <lb />
were refurnished and carpeted last <lb />
summer. <lb />
The course of instruction is as <lb />
its the demands of the public will <lb />
the best and most experienced <lb />
teachers arc employed all depart- <lb />
and the work ll done thorough. <lb />
The charges are as reasonable as they <lb />
can be made for the class of work done. <lb />
The fall session begins on Wednesday, <lb />
September 18th. <lb />
or additional <lb />
Jno. President <lb />
J. Jonathan <lb />
Portsmouth. Va. Greenville, K. C <lb />
Bridgers White, <lb />
High Street. <lb />
Portsmouth, Va. <lb />
Solicit consignments of Cotton, Pea <lb />
nuts. Poultry, and all other <lb />
Country Mer- <lb />
chants and Farmers. Bank. Portsmouth. <lb />
Va. <lb />
R. L. HUMBER, <lb />
Steam Engines Boilers <lb />
Improved Brown Cotton Gin, <lb />
Saw, and Mills. <lb />
Cotton Gin, <lb />
Cotton Seed Crushers, <lb />
Pulleys, and Hangings, <lb />
Also dealer Steam Fittings. <lb />
Orders for any kind machinery <lb />
will be promptly filled at very lowest. <lb />
prices. Repairing a <lb />
ii. L. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
Chum lb. lull. <lb />
a luxuriant <lb />
Never Fail to Gray <lb />
Hair to its Youthful Color. <lb />
s tailing. <lb />
at <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
I's Parker's Ginger Tonic. <lb />
Weak lake <lb />
T.- Come, <lb />
PLASTERS. <lb />
Washington Letter. <lb />
From Our Correspondent. <lb />
Washington. D. C. Aug. <lb />
and pugilism were <lb />
pat exhibition in <lb />
the House this week by <lb />
More disgraceful scenes <lb />
were never active <lb />
part wants were all members of <lb />
republican party, claims to <lb />
Greenville Male <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb />
W, J, A. It, Principal, <lb />
Fall Term Opens Sept. 1st, 1890. <lb />
tuition <lb />
Per term of twenty weeks payable <lb />
quarterly in <lb />
Primary, S 7.50 <lb />
Intermediate, 10.00 <lb />
Higher English Science and Mathe- <lb />
12.00 <lb />
Languages, French, Greek <lb />
and each, 3.00 <lb />
Or any two of the languages for 5.00 <lb />
Board reasonable. Healthy location. <lb />
Discipline firm. Young men will be <lb />
thoroughly prepared to enter Col- <lb />
in the State. <lb />
For further address or see <lb />
the Principal or <lb />
J. B. Yellowley, <lb />
Thus. J. Jarvis, <lb />
John Flanagan, <lb />
J. U. <lb />
C, A. White. <lb />
Comm <lb />
EDUCATION. <lb />
THE BEST PLASTERS <lb />
IN THE <lb />
They core Kidney <lb />
Premier <lb />
d all <lb />
by exposure or <lb />
Hi <lb />
Quick Relief<lb />
a a bell or. <lb />
liniment, or I <lb />
such ma. o <lb />
ALL ACHES AND PAINS. <lb />
Dr. <lb />
Vegetable Harmless. <lb />
and tail to core. <lb />
SAFE. QUICK AND SURE. <lb />
SOU by or mailed receipt <lb />
A- RICHARDS, <lb />
Rev. E. C. Glenn's <lb />
1st Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
School House, 1st Sunday at <lb />
o'clock <lb />
Sparta, -2nd at o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove. Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Temperance at o'clock <lb />
Salem Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Chapel. 4th Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Jones Chapel Saturday before 4th Sun- <lb />
day o'clock. <lb />
KS public invited. <lb />
TYSON k RAWLS, <lb />
BANKERS, <lb />
o. <lb />
We have opened for the purpose or con- <lb />
ducting a general <lb />
Of IT. <lb />
S. W. WAIN <lb />
WILBUR R. SMITH, president. <lb />
Bert <lb />
E. V. t tr. E. of Coll-w. <lb />
Medal Bad of H at r <lb />
of <lb />
in Jr. <lb />
from XI auto and lO. <lb />
Joint Stock. <lb />
Cm <lb />
rail<lb />
Law. <lb />
and Board in. <lb />
rooms, <lb />
Cm II, r <lb />
S CT -111 <lb />
. a p la <lb />
a. boo. at <lb />
X- <lb />
. <lb />
FEMALE INSTITUTE. <lb />
Honey to Loan on Approved Security. <lb />
Collections solicited and remittance <lb />
made promptly.<lb />
I'm Tar Hive Company <lb />
Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
J. B. Vice-Pres <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
. Al- Tarboro, Gen <lb />
K. T. Washington. Gen Ag<lb />
The People's Line for travel on <lb />
Steamer is the finest <lb />
boat on the river. <lb />
thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and <lb />
op for the comfort, at <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
OFFICERS <lb />
A Table <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Green is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at o'clock. A- at. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb />
Freights received daily and <lb />
Lading given to all <lb />
a. r. mm, . i. t. ask<lb />
UNDERTAKING. <lb />
Fall Term Opens Sept. <lb />
TEACHERS <lb />
Duckett, Principal, <lb />
Miss Maggie Smith, <lb />
Mrs. Irene W. Hunter, <lb />
Mrs. Ella W. Duckett. <lb />
associated B. <lb />
with me in the Undertaking business we <lb />
are ready to serve the people in that <lb />
capacity. All notes and accounts due <lb />
me for services have been placed In <lb />
the Mr. Sheppard for collection <lb />
JOHN FLANAGAN. <lb />
We keep on hand at all times a nice <lb />
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of ail <lb />
kinds and furnish anything; <lb />
from the finest Case down to a <lb />
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We are fitted <lb />
with all conveniences and can <lb />
satisfactory services to all who<lb />
Feb. 1888. <lb />
For further particulars address, <lb />
JOHN DUCKETT. <lb />
Greenville, K. C, <lb />
Primary. Academic. <lb />
and Mathematical. Music. <lb />
Painting and Drawing. Normal. <lb />
ADVANTAGES. <lb />
Large, comfortable buildings. <lb />
Healthy location and good water. <lb />
Plenty of well prepared food for boarders <lb />
A corps of good teachers. j Nor- <lb />
Department for young teachers. <lb />
Music <lb />
New pianos, and organs. A library <lb />
of more than volumes purchased re- <lb />
tor the school. <lb />
tales moderate, from to for <lb />
board 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 />
Best Salve in the world for <lb />
Bruises, Sons, Ulcers, Salt <lb />
Fever Sores. Hands <lb />
Chilblains, all Skin <lb />
turns, and cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required. It is to Rive <lb />
perfect or <lb />
Price So ousts per box. for said by J. <lb />
L- woolen. <lb />
represent all that is good and moral <lb />
in the politics of the country <lb />
claims, mind yon, <lb />
Representative Gannon, one of <lb />
Speaker Heeds most submissive <lb />
lieutenants, began the trouble by <lb />
the authority to publicly <lb />
reprimand in a resolution forty-four <lb />
members of House by name, <lb />
because they did not sit in <lb />
their seats in order to be counted to <lb />
make up a quorum. Ten of <lb />
gentlemen named republicans. <lb />
The subject before the House <lb />
the compound lard bill which Mr. <lb />
Cannon is anxious to have passed, <lb />
and to there is bitter <lb />
in both parties. gentlemen <lb />
whom Mr. Gannon wanted to <lb />
vary naturally protested <lb />
against such proceeding. Mr. <lb />
the venerable successor to <lb />
Mr. Randall, bis gray locks fairly <lb />
bristling with indignation, said <lb />
you a right to impute mo- <lb />
t That is not the <lb />
power of the majority in this <lb />
House until empire This <lb />
was with applause from the <lb />
democrats. <lb />
There was more same sort, <lb />
and it so angered Mr Gannon that <lb />
be completely lost his bead and <lb />
made use of language no re- <lb />
newspaper can print. <lb />
That fired up Mr. Mason, a <lb />
can opponent of bill whose <lb />
where in the gallery, and going <lb />
to where Mr. Cannon was be <lb />
roundly abused him in the choicest <lb />
Chicago billingsgate; but he had <lb />
good taste to do it a tone too <lb />
low to be beard the ladies the <lb />
galleries. Meanwhile the House was <lb />
in a terrible uproar. <lb />
The lie was passed between Rep- <lb />
of Illinois, <lb />
Walker of both re <lb />
and had it not been <lb />
the interference of members they <lb />
would have engaged in fisticuffs. <lb />
It seem that nothing more <lb />
disgraceful occur; but the end <lb />
was not yet. Representatives <lb />
sou, of Washington, and <lb />
of New Jersey, two more republicans <lb />
got into altercation over the <lb />
Cannon resolution, and Mr. Wilson <lb />
called Mr. a <lb />
blank liar, whereupon the Jersey- <lb />
man himself his con- <lb />
by applying most <lb />
epithet Eng- <lb />
language to the <lb />
of the State which bears the <lb />
honored name of the father of his <lb />
The result was an <lb />
match which <lb />
ed the combined efforts of <lb />
geant-at-Arras and a number of <lb />
members to stop. These be the men <lb />
who asking the voters of the <lb />
to continue in power. <lb />
agreement to begin voting <lb />
upon the tariff bill <lb />
has been unanimously ratified by <lb />
Senator Gorman says <lb />
will be sufficiently exposed <lb />
by that time to show the people of <lb />
the country what outrage the <lb />
republicans are foisting upon them. <lb />
The sugar lobby is again gathering <lb />
here in force in order to get in their <lb />
work when the sugar clause tho <lb />
bill is leached, which will probably <lb />
be next week. <lb />
Senator Gorman is <lb />
over a joke which he very <lb />
played upon the representatives <lb />
of several newspapers <lb />
several days ago. He <lb />
at bis Louse a number of his Mary <lb />
land by the merest ac- <lb />
one of the correspondents <lb />
saw the party enter the house. <lb />
result was that full particulars were <lb />
sent of a caucus <lb />
Democratic Senators. Mr. Gorham <lb />
laughs heartily every time one <lb />
says anything it. There has <lb />
been no caucus of Democratic Sen- <lb />
nor is there any probability <lb />
t bat there will be one. are <lb />
acting a unit and there is no <lb />
to cane us. <lb />
Miracles. <lb />
A singer for breath was distressed. <lb />
And the doctors said she must rest, <lb />
Cut she took G. M. D. <lb />
For her weak lungs, you see, <lb />
And now she can sing with the best. <lb />
An athlete gave out. on a run, <lb />
And he feared his career was quite done; <lb />
G. M. D., pray observe, <lb />
Gave back nerve. <lb />
And now he can lift half a ton . <lb />
A writer who wrote for a prize. <lb />
Had headaches and pains in eyes; <lb />
G. M. D. was the spell <lb />
That made him quite well, <lb />
And glory before him now lies. <lb />
These are only examples of the daily <lb />
triumph of Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical <lb />
Discovery, restoring health and re- <lb />
wasted vitality. Sold by all drug- <lb />
gists. <lb />
When Lord upon earth, <lb />
he was rebuked and his <lb />
motives because he <lb />
reached out his arm to those who <lb />
had been rejected bis disciples. <lb />
For Jesus to go in among publicans <lb />
and sinners and eat with them was <lb />
very offensive to the disciples. Our <lb />
great Exemplar, however, taught <lb />
his followers that be came to seek <lb />
and save the came not to <lb />
call the righteous but sinners to re- <lb />
It was this manifest in- <lb />
that Jesus showed for <lb />
poor that caused the common <lb />
to hear him gladly. The mis- <lb />
of was to go and <lb />
among the despised, and <lb />
east off and bid them God speed. <lb />
Bot, says one, if I go among the <lb />
class that Jesus did and do as he <lb />
did and as be has required his <lb />
church to do, I will not have the <lb />
confidence and respect of the better <lb />
element In the church. This may <lb />
be true. It was true of out Lord ; <lb />
it was true of his church so long as <lb />
formality and worldliness usurped <lb />
the place of spirituality and <lb />
So long as the church was <lb />
loyal to its divine head and felt an <lb />
abiding interest in salvation of <lb />
those popularly known as the com- <lb />
herd, it was a seen and <lb />
felt by all men. So strong was <lb />
their attachment one for another <lb />
that it was said by the enemies of <lb />
Jesus, bow these Christians <lb />
love one Reader, the <lb />
cause of Christ is suffering to-day <lb />
its influence is waning, because <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES <lb />
Notice. <lb />
A stray came to my house on the <lb />
14th day of August 1890. Description <lb />
dark bay mare mule her appearance <lb />
about twenty years old. with <lb />
brand on her left shoulder, a small knot <lb />
on left jaw. The owner will please come <lb />
forward, prove property and take her <lb />
away. Walt,, <lb />
Farmville, N. C, Aug. 20th 1890. <lb />
Notice to Creditors <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt country, <lb />
on the 28th day of August, 1890. as ad- <lb />
of John A. Moore, deceased, <lb />
notice Is hereby given to all persons in- <lb />
to the estate to make immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned. Those <lb />
having claims against the estate, must <lb />
present properly authenticated, to <lb />
the undersigned on or before the 1st day <lb />
of September, 1891, or this notice will <lb />
lie plead in a bar of recovery. <lb />
W. L. Johnson, <lb />
of John A Moore. <lb />
Sept. 1st 1890. <lb />
Notice to Public School <lb />
Teachers. <lb />
On the 2nd Thursday and Friday of <lb />
September, the regular examination of <lb />
Teachers will be held, and all Teachers <lb />
certificates have expired, or will <lb />
expire before the next regular <lb />
nation are required to they <lb />
will do well to observe that the State <lb />
Superintendent has sent us the questions <lb />
upon which the examination will be held <lb />
and the Teachers will not receive a 1st <lb />
grade certificate unless of these <lb />
are correctly word <lb />
to the wise is <lb />
II. Harding, <lb />
If You Have <lb />
CONS OR <lb />
BRONCHITIS Throat <lb />
SCROFULA I wasting of Flesh <lb />
Or any Throat an <lb />
Strength <lb />
Finer, can and Cured my <lb />
EMULSION <lb />
PURE COD LIVER OIL <lb />
With <lb />
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb />
for let no <lb />
or Ion induct you <lb />
Sold by all Druggists.<lb />
JAMES A. SMITH <lb />
TONSORIAL ARTIST, <lb />
Greenville N C. <lb />
We have the the easiest <lb />
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels, <lb />
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed <lb />
every instance. Call be con <lb />
TC, <lb />
in <lb />
Ladies waited on at their re <lb />
Cleaning clothes a specialty. <lb />
A- <lb />
LOST or <lb />
arcana. <lb />
C. B. EDWARDS <lb />
N. B. <lb />
Remember the Poor. <lb />
The Watch Tower. <lb />
minister or pastor who selects a <lb />
few v a of his flock and <lb />
gives them all of his attention and <lb />
presence will find when too late <lb />
that a will have an in- <lb />
n his financial support. <lb />
Bow often have we beard the re- <lb />
mark, pastor never conies to <lb />
our home; be always stops with A. <lb />
or B. We would be glad to have <lb />
come, but we have asked him <lb />
until we have concluded to ask <lb />
no Then n more <lb />
troth poetry in above and <lb />
the time has come when reform <lb />
should pine. If there is one <lb />
thing taught in life our Lord <lb />
and. exemplified to the teaching of <lb />
apostles and early Christians. <lb />
with men than others, it <lb />
that our love should be impartial, <lb />
the poor and <lb />
chief <lb />
aristocracy, in its worst form, is <lb />
sapping the life blood our <lb />
holy religion. you fail to <lb />
have the respect a certain <lb />
element in church, would you <lb />
not have a better conscience here to <lb />
know you had done your duty, re- <lb />
of frowns, derisions and <lb />
sarcasms of the half converted in <lb />
the church Who should care for <lb />
the criticisms of those whose high- <lb />
est ambition is to make the church <lb />
of God a society aristocrats <lb />
How much do they weigh in <lb />
Lord's scales How much will <lb />
weigh in the judgment <lb />
Better, far better have the applause <lb />
of a good conscience and have <lb />
pronounced by your <lb />
descending Judge than all con- <lb />
and respect of these <lb />
narrow and prescriptive members <lb />
who would like to have a heaven of <lb />
their own. <lb />
May the great head the church <lb />
incline us to be more like in <lb />
our teaching and life. <lb />
Scrofula all His Life. <lb />
consider my cure by S. S. S. one <lb />
of the most remarkable on record. <lb />
I had the worst type of <lb />
from my Infancy I was years <lb />
of age. My whole young life was <lb />
embittered and made miserable by <lb />
loathsome disease. I not only <lb />
suffered from the Scrofula, but was <lb />
so marked that I was ashamed to <lb />
associate with, and was <lb />
by, my playmates and fellow work- <lb />
men. I tried every known patent <lb />
medicine, and was first and last at- <lb />
tended by more than a dozen <lb />
table p but in spite of all <lb />
the disease continued to grow worse. <lb />
About four years ago a friend from <lb />
advised me to take S. S. <lb />
S., I did, after taking <lb />
bottles I was cured sound and <lb />
well. The old skin peeled off and <lb />
was replaced by a new skin, as <lb />
smooth and free from blemish as <lb />
any persons. have had no return <lb />
or symptom of the disease. <lb />
V. Smith, <lb />
Belmont, W. Va. <lb />
Treatise on Blood and Skin Di- <lb />
mailed free. <lb />
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO., <lb />
Atlanta, Ga- <lb />
Economy as an Art. <lb />
Anna writes in the American <lb />
it is an art <lb />
to which, like all <lb />
may be cultivated. Economy does <lb />
not mean to pinch and to be stingy, in <lb />
order to gratify an ambition to grow <lb />
rich in possessions. It does not <lb />
demand a denial of moderate luxuries <lb />
and the pleasures of a comfortable <lb />
J so that dollar upon dollar can be <lb />
laid aside. By no means; that would be <lb />
parsimony. One may practice the strict- <lb />
est economy, and yet have plenty and be <lb />
liberal. Prudence, and judicious man- <lb />
of capital at hand, never <lb />
an expenditure recklessly, without <lb />
is whit constitutes true <lb />
economy. It is not so much the amount <lb />
paid out, as for what purpose that sum, <lb />
however small, has been spent The <lb />
great secret of success in practical econ- <lb />
lies in a careful consideration of <lb />
petty expenses, and a rational distinction <lb />
between what is essential and what <lb />
The smallest item should not <lb />
be considered of <lb />
no should the <lb />
expenses exceed the income. It is <lb />
ways more profitable to pay <lb />
than to contract a debt, which should <lb />
not be done unless ft is absolutely <lb />
avoidable. Never an indebted- <lb />
be incurred in anticipation of an <lb />
expected gain. Expectations are not <lb />
the debt is certain and must <lb />
be met, hot the is <lb />
many a <lb />
should be in time <lb />
Of youth, its result to be prudently <lb />
served for need, mis- <lb />
fortune, inevitable feeble and <lb />
Its calls for no <lb />
particular trait of in the <lb />
; it simply require determination <lb />
and strength of will to resist selfish <lb />
gratification, Further, it may demand <lb />
education; that is, that the power of s- <lb />
habit moat be trained to <lb />
to the power economic education. <lb />
man of opulence, through whose <lb />
bands pats hundreds and <lb />
dollars dairy, and the laborer who each <lb />
day toils for his only dollar, both, m one <lb />
farm or another, economy. <lb />
the former may have hie <lb />
the dram on his batik account is <lb />
To a certain <lb />
extant, he is to practice almost <lb />
rigid economy in order to control the <lb />
ha has It depend, not <lb />
how have, hot how to <lb />
that which we <lb />
Notice. <lb />
It Is ordered by the Board of <lb />
that the voting precinct in <lb />
Greenville township on the North side <lb />
of Tar river, known as Cross <lb />
Roads precinct, be discontinued, and <lb />
that the voters of Greenville township <lb />
residing upon the North Bide of Tar <lb />
river shall hereafter register and vote at <lb />
the polling place or place of election in <lb />
the town of Greenville in said township. <lb />
It is further ordered that this order lie <lb />
published in the Greenville <lb />
for live weeks and copies posted at the <lb />
House door and three other public <lb />
places in Pitt county. <lb />
I. II. James. <lb />
Clerk Com. Pitt Co. <lb />
RALEIGH <lb />
BUSINESS COLLEGE <lb />
N. B. Pres. <lb />
OF <lb />
Don. B. Reade, Pres, National <lb />
Bank <lb />
Mat. E. G. Sec. N. G. <lb />
Assembly. <lb />
Josephus Daniels, Editor <lb />
State Chronicle. <lb />
II. B. Battle, Director N. G. <lb />
Experiment Station. <lb />
Shorthand, Typewriting, <lb />
Book-keeping, Banking, <lb />
Penmanship and Mathematics are <lb />
taught in the Business <lb />
Send for of terms. <lb />
J. E. <lb />
Box N. C- <lb />
Edwards N, <lb />
Printers and <lb />
T. C. <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind tribe found In <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY <lb />
FOR PRINTING <lb />
BLANKS MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
PRINTERS AND BINDERS <lb />
K. C. <lb />
Notice I <lb />
Public Sale. <lb />
BY virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court made at March Term. <lb />
in the matter of F. W. Andrews and <lb />
wife against Hardy and Bros. I will sell <lb />
at the Court House door in Greenville. <lb />
N, C. on Monday, the 15th day of <lb />
1890, for cash following de- <lb />
scribed <lb />
One town lot in the town of Bethel ad- <lb />
joining the lands of James II. Manning <lb />
and William and being the lot <lb />
on which a store also one other <lb />
lot in said town. Bethel, adjoining the <lb />
lands of Edmund Andrews, deceased, <lb />
the same purchased of Andrews <lb />
by J. B. Yellowley, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Greenville, N. C, July 1890. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
ON Monday the 18th day of <lb />
A. D. will sell at the <lb />
Court House door in the town of Green- <lb />
ville to the highest bidder for cash one <lb />
tract of land m Pitt county containing <lb />
about twenty-one acres and bounded as <lb />
The piece or parcel of land known as <lb />
lot No. in the division of the lands of <lb />
Cynthia Manning. Nancy Manning and <lb />
J. B. Manning, bounded as Be- <lb />
ginning at a stake on road at end of <lb />
lane, thence with of S <lb />
E 3-5 polos to a stake on road, thence <lb />
along road poles to the beginning <lb />
containing acres, more or less, with <lb />
one acre deducted for grape arbor, <lb />
acres, or less, and assigned <lb />
to B. F. Manning in said division to sat- <lb />
a red ex execution in my hands for <lb />
collection against Manning which <lb />
has been levied on said land as the prop- <lb />
of said Maiming. <lb />
J. A. K. Tucker. <lb />
August 16th, 1890. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
ON Monday the 15th day September <lb />
A. I. 1890, I will sell at the Court <lb />
House door in the town of Greenville to <lb />
the highest for cash one tract of <lb />
land In Pitt county containing about <lb />
one and acres and bounded as <lb />
Situated in the immediate fork <lb />
of Greek and Sugg Branch in <lb />
Bethel township adjoining the home- <lb />
stead of W. C. an undivided <lb />
interest in lot in the town of Bethel <lb />
adjoining the lands of J. L. Nelson, <lb />
Wm. Staten, R. J. Grimes and others <lb />
and known as the Academy lot. One <lb />
tract of land in the town of Bethel on <lb />
the north side of the A It railroad and <lb />
east side of Main street adjoining the <lb />
lands of J. L. Nelson Lewis Law- <lb />
lot and others containing one <lb />
acre, more or less, being the land on <lb />
which the Steam Mill now <lb />
stands to satisfy an execution in my <lb />
hands for collection against C. <lb />
son and which has been levied on said <lb />
land as the property of said W. C. <lb />
son J- A. K. Sheriff. <lb />
August 1890. <lb />
storm Calendar and Weather <lb />
for 1890, by R. Hicks, mailed <lb />
to any address on receipt of a two-cent <lb />
postage stamp. The Dr. J. H. <lb />
Medicine Co. St. Louis. Mo <lb />
and Whiskey <lb />
cured at home <lb />
without pain. <lb />
Book of particulars sent FREE. <lb />
B. M. M. D., Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
Office Whitehall St. <lb />
Sick headache is the bane of many <lb />
This annoying complaint may be <lb />
cured and prevented by the occasional <lb />
use of Dr. J. H. Liver and <lb />
Kidney <lb />
Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a <lb />
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb />
counter a malarious atmosphere sud- <lb />
den changes of temperature, and the <lb />
least robust are usually the easiest <lb />
Dr. J. H. Sarsaparilla <lb />
will give tone, vitality and strength to <lb />
the entire body. <lb />
Distress after eating, heartburn, sick <lb />
headache, and indigestion are cured by <lb />
Dr J. H. Liver <lb />
Many people habitually endure a feel- <lb />
of lassitude, because they think they <lb />
have to. If they would take Dr. J. H. <lb />
Sarsaparilla this feeling of <lb />
weariness would give place to vigor and <lb />
vitality. <lb />
No liniment is In better repute or more <lb />
widely known man Dr. J. H. <lb />
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonder- <lb />
remedy. <lb />
Persons advanced in years feel young- <lb />
and stronger, as well as freer from the <lb />
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. H. <lb />
If you feel unable to do your <lb />
hare that tired feeling, take Dr. J. H. <lb />
Sarsaparilla; it will make you <lb />
bright active and vigorous. <lb />
The most popular liniment, is the old <lb />
reliable. Dr. J. H. <lb />
Oil Liniment. <lb />
One of Dr. J. II. Little Liv- <lb />
Kidney taken at night be <lb />
fore going to bed, wilt mere <lb />
effect win astonish you. <lb />
Pimples, boils and other humors, are <lb />
able to appear when the blood sets <lb />
Dr. <lb />
for baldness <lb />
falling out of hair, and eradication of <lb />
dandruff is before the public. <lb />
Among the many who have it with <lb />
wonderful success, I refer you to <lb />
lowing named gentlemen who will testify <lb />
to the truth of my assertion <lb />
Eli. Latham, Greenville. <lb />
Mr. O. <lb />
Greene, Sr., <lb />
Any one wishing to give it a trial <lb />
the above named complaints can procure <lb />
it from me, at my place of business, <lb />
per bottle. Respectfully, <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber. <lb />
Greenville. March 14th. C . <lb />
What's <lb />
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb />
Culley in the way of helping the afflict- <lb />
ed. By calling on or. addressing the <lb />
above named barber, you can procure a <lb />
bottle of that is invaluable <lb />
for eradicating,, and and causing the <lb />
hair I be soft and <lb />
glossy, only r three application a <lb />
week is y, and a common hair <lb />
brush is all to be used after rubbing the <lb />
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with <lb />
the Preparation. Try a bottle and M <lb />
convinced, only cents. <lb />
Respectfully. <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY, <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
ed. mid all business In the U. S. <lb />
Patent office In the Courts attended <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
are opposite the U. S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents n time than those <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing is sent <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Did., and to <lb />
officials of the r. Office. For <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
actual clients In your own State, or <lb />
address. A. Snow Co., <lb />
Washington, D. C <lb />
Barber, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N <lb />
C. <lb />
WILMINGTON WELDON R. R. <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
south. <lb />
No No <lb />
A pi. 20th, <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Av Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
No <lb />
daily Fast Mail, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
12.30 pm <lb />
am <lb />
SO <lb />
pm pm <lb />
S am <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Ar Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
GOING NORTH <lb />
No No No <lb />
daily dally daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
am<lb />
P. <lb />
SI <lb />
tho world. Perfect <lb />
Warranted hoary, <lb />
i and cent atlas, <lb />
work<lb />
can <lb />
ad <lb />
Three samples, as <lb />
. are All to- week <lb />
need do la show what we send yon to thee <lb />
friends and those about always <lb />
In trade f- holds for years <lb />
and we are repaid. We pay all freight, ate. At <lb />
know all. If like fro to work for m. <lb />
earn from upward.<lb />
, Ono the I <lb />
I I n <lb />
world <lb />
sad to <lb />
goods we will <lb />
in each <lb />
r as those who writs <lb />
IS St Stake Sere <lb />
in Is to oar foods an <lb />
who <lb />
and this yon. The <lb />
of this <lb />
small end of <lb />
Th eat the of it as <lb />
fits bilk <lb />
will also show eon hew ye<lb />
HALLS<lb />
e, <lb />
SUMMER RESORT <lb />
GRAND <lb />
For Shaving, Catting and Dressing Hair. <lb />
TOP <lb />
THE GLASS FRONT <lb />
the Opera House, at which place <lb />
I have and where I have <lb />
everything In my line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
with all the improved appliances; <lb />
and comfortable chairs. <lb />
Baton sharpened at reasonable figures <lb />
for work outside of my shop <lb />
executed. Very respectfully, <lb />
CULLEY EDMONDS, <lb />
pm <lb />
Wilson am pm <lb />
Ai <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Ar Wei don pm pm <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 3.37 P. M., arrives Scot- <lb />
land Neck at 4.25 P. if. Greenville 6.00 <lb />
Returning leaves Greenville 7.20 <lb />
A. M., Halifax at 10.10 A. M. <lb />
don 10.30 F If., dally except Sunday. <lb />
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday <lb />
Local Freight leaves Weldon 10.30 a in <lb />
Halifax 11.30 a m, Scotland Neck 2.00 p <lb />
m. Arriving Greenville 5.10 p m. Re <lb />
turning, leave Greenville Tuesday <lb />
Thursday and Saturday a m., Scot- <lb />
land Neck 1.00 p m. Halifax 3.35 p m. <lb />
Arriving Weldon p in. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-, <lb />
P M. Sunday P M, arrive i <lb />
Williamston, N C. P M, M. <lb />
Plymouth p. m., 5.20 p. m. j <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except , <lb />
6.300 a. m., Sunday 9.00 a. m . . <lb />
Williamston, N C, 7.10 a m, 9.58 a m. <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, SO A M <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro dally except Sunday. A M, <lb />
N C, AM. Re- <lb />
leaves V C 8.00 A M, I <lb />
arrive Goldsboro, NO, A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
at P M, arrives Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
AM, Nashville <lb />
M, arrives Mount A <lb />
M. dally, except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at <lb />
and AM Returning leave <lb />
ton A M, and P. M. connect- <lb />
at Warsaw with Nos. and <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A Fayette- <lb />
Branch Is No. Northbound It I <lb />
No. Dally except Sunday. <lb />
Train No. South will stop only <lb />
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb />
, Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally. All <lb />
all via Richmond, and dally <lb />
via Bay Line. <lb />
Trains make close connection for <lb />
points North via Richmond and Wash <lb />
All trains run solid between <lb />
ton and Washington, and have Pullman <lb />
Palace Sleepers attached. <lb />
JOHN T. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J. R. KENLY, Supt Transportation <lb />
T. M. <lb />
PHOTO-ENGRAVING- <lb />
IT FATS TO <lb />
Portrait, and cuts of hotels, factor- <lb />
its, machinery, Sec, made from <lb />
ten damp for sheets. <lb />
Press Agency, <lb />
New York City. <lb />
Blood Cure, <lb />
A standard household <lb />
use more than years. A <lb />
cure for Dyspepsia, Scrofula. <lb />
Constipation and ail disease of <lb />
the Blood, Stomach and Liver. <lb />
A botanical put up in pack <lb />
mi at one-third cost of r. <lb />
medicine, pack aces, sufficient for <lb />
quarts. sufficient <lb />
for pints, sample <lb />
A reliable wanted in <lb />
BOTANICAL CO., <lb />
To cure Headache, <lb />
certain remedy, <lb />
r-r <lb />
MOST <lb />
nil ft <lb />
Price of either pr<lb />
IS <lb />
LIVERY SALE AND <lb />
I have opened at the stables torn <lb />
occupied by. Dr. J. G. James, <lb />
a line line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and fancy turnouts <lb />
the livery and can suit the most fa <lb />
will run in connection a E <lb />
AGE solicit a <lb />
patronage. Call and be <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
I None Richer in <lb />
BEST ON EARTH <lb />
I Greenville, N. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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