sd ¢ ad fg D.J WHICHARD, Bditor and Owner. TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. = TERMS: 25 Cents a Month, Vol. 6. GREENVILLE, N. C. TUESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1897. ale: Sig No. 884. MUNFORD ' , Fam BO , One Look is Enough. service.in them and they’re ~ all wooland go ai Free Wool “x, prices. Fabrics comprise all the new browns,greens, blues olives and drabs in neat check plaids, stripes and mixed col- or effects as well as solid col- ors. We want more of the trade of discriminating buy- erswhoappreciate true value in honest Clothing. Your part isn’t done with reading this. You don’t know that this is all true untilyou have seen our goods. If what wesay is true youdon want to be left out in such clothing selling. ey FRANK WILSON, iTdE KING CLOTHIER, eater nena 0 pace = mali dineateeigine sean hor UE Be “ rat | \ » % é 4 * a * te ‘ tao * , a] ” r MQ be ssa: NOTIONS ,ie==- DRESS GOODS, ~~ HATS— Is - Now = Grandly = Ready. here is wisdom and true economy in com- |. ing here before buying. We are straining evely fibre of our physical and intellectual life to do better by you than anybody else. Com- etition is keen, vigilent and strong. We re- cognize the strength of surrounding dealers. The knowledge arms us for stupendous cn- deavor. Disinterested critics tell us that we have won and are keeping the lead. Have lyou bought the Fall Hat yet? It not, con- sult us. | TS oleate Ga tilk pat a ‘H. M. HARD One - i bb Vales Btates Jia nena i ae a as Bowred as second-class mail matter.) SI'RSCRIPTION RATES. Wat, « * Sains $3.00 month, - . Woe ee) 4, week, al =, = ez 10 " Delivered in town by carriers mithons axtra cost. Advertisng rates are liberal andcan be [i on application to the editor or at [nee amtll - One We penn a five correspondent at every postoffice in the county, who will gend in brief items. of NEWS a8 it occurs fn each neighborhood, Write plainly and oniv on one side of the paper. seme “. Lonspar. OcToBER 19, 1897. A woman has been arrested at Durham for bigamv. She had one husband in Cumberland countyyand another in Durham. She left husband number one, ‘and after two years sevaration from him thought she had aright to marry again, but she bas foand out difféerently. _ Greater New York is having a quadrangular tilt for the. first Mayor of the consolidated burg that reaches across the river and fakes in all the adjacent islands. That is, there are four candidates for the office in the field, and the expectations of each one can be jndged by-the respective claims he is making. Henry George says he wiil be elected. ! Yan Wyek says very positively he will ‘be ’elected. General Tracy says he will be the next Maycr of New Ycrk, Seth Low says that the prize is already assured to him- « dust how they are ali going to be elected wher only one can hoid the office is what the out- side world fails to see. The truti: of it is, one will be taken and the others left. WASHINGTON LETTER. (From our Regular C orrespondent.) Wasuineron, D. 9., Oct 18, 97. The: Platt-McKinley deai, first shown ap in this correspondence, has been fully proven by the administration, public and pri- vate, within the past few days. It was to whip all administration Republicans into line for Platt’s man Tracy, that Mr. McKinley had Secretary Bliss write that gushing letter in Tracy’s fayor and announce his intention to pertonally take part in the New York campaign. The fate of other national administration candidates in New York should have warned Mr. McKinley, According to a private letter receiyed from those who move in diplomatic circles in Lonéon, Mr. McKinley became very much afraid about the time the Gov: ernor of the Bank of England made that silver bloff, that his own bloff, the international bi- metallie commission was being Seriously taken. by tue British government, and caused it to be Unofficially intimated to Lord 3 Salisbury that this government bad no real desire that any steps ahonld be taken that were likely to leaa to international bimetal- , and it was slowly but surely dving the way to make the gold siandard permanent Ht A 4 letter to the publisher of the Baltimore Sun, offering to with- draw from the leadership of the management of the present cam- paign, has been the most absoro- ing topic ot conyersation in Washington since 1¢ was publish- ed. Inagmuch as. the,Spn bas claimed’ Senator Gorman’ to be the obly obstruction to 1ts sup- port of the nominations of the Democratic party, in. Maryland, Senator Gormay’s offer has placed it where it must present. some better excuse for ignoring the} offer than.ithas yet done, or run} therisk of losing the confidence} of many Democtiats. Wemocratic sentiment in Washington. is practically’ unanimously on the side of Senator Gorman in this controversy: In that open letter Senator Gorman thus detines his attitude towards the Civil Service Law: “I am unalterably opposed, except in judicial places, to life tenure of office. It is incompati- ble with our free institutions. I believe that the highest standard for admission to the Ciyil Service |’ ‘should be honesty and capacity. When appointed, persons in pab- lic employ, should. be: free from political assessment, but I am unalterably opposed to any. rule which will prevent the people, at stated and fixed pericds’ from changing their public. servants.” It is no longer a secret that Gen. Fitz Lee, who has been much before the public since he became our’ Consul. General to Cuba, will be a candidate for the seat now held by Senator Martin. It'is also fully understood that Gen. Lee will, when he returns from Cuba, probably early. next year, begin a personai canvass for the WSenatorship, which he intends sball cover the entire State of Virginia, even to its re- motest corners. The administration fully re- cognizes the danger cf a big Treasury deficit during the next fiscal year, added to that which is being piled up during the cur- rent fiscal year, and av the last Cabinet meeting 16 was deter- mined that the departmental es~ timates for appropriations to be submitted tothe coming session of Congress, should be cut down as low as possible, in order to try to get the expenditures down to the receipts of the government. This 1s confirmation of the argu- ments presented by prominent Democrats while the tariff bill was before Congress+-that the bill would not raisé sufficient revenue. No one in the auministration circles has denied the statement that Attorney General McKenna is to have the vscancy made by the retirement Justice Field from the U. S- Supreme Court, on De- cember 1, althoagh there is one special and particular reason why Mr. McKenna shou!d never sit on the Su} reme Court—he is too friendly to the big corporations, this was known before he came to Washington, but additional proof was given to his acidity to ratify the bargain made under the Cleveland administration for the sale of the Union Pacific Railroad to the Huntington reo:- ganization committee, under coa- ditions which practically shut out competition im the bidding.. An attempt 18 now being made to get Mr. McKinley to interpose his} authority in some way tostop the} sale of the Union Pacific at least until the conditions of the sale can be changed g0 as to make them as fair to one set of bidders as to another, but there seems to be some doubt of nis authority and more of his inclination to interfere, after Boss Hanna had if ry ns Capon! and its ialdigies vonia ‘ak the told the Huntington ring that the sale should be put through under the old agreement, although the nt Will lose miliiong® of thé sale under pre Yellow Jack Preventative. Guard against Yellow Jack by tree from germ breeding matter. cearets Candy Catbartic’ will cleanse disease germs. DO YOU KNOW ——,. ‘That glass windows were first. introduced into, England in the eighth century ? That until 1776 cotton spinning was, performed by the hand- spinning wheel ? That.the first iron ore discoyer- ed in this country was found in Virginia in 1716. That the first steam engine on this continent was brought from England in 1753? That tooks in their present form were inyented by Attalus, King of Pergamus in 887? That the first complete sewing machine was patented by Elisha Howe, Jr., in 1846? That glass was made in Egypt in 3000 B. G., and that the earliest date of transparent glass is 719? That the electric light was in- vented by Lodyguih and Koss- loft at London in 1874? That the daguerrotype was in- yented by Daguerre and Nieper in 1489? That the Mormons arrived at Salt Lake Valley, Utah, July 24, 1847? That $1,000,000 in gold coin weighs 3,685.8 pounds avoirdu- pois? That Robert Fulton launched his newly invented steamboat on on the Hudson in the sammer of 1807 ? That William IV, of England, was called the “Sailor King ?” That in 1833, the first cheap newspaper ever published, which sold for one cent, appeared in New York? ‘That Dr. William T. G. Morgan introduced the plan of producing artificial sleep by the breathing of the yapor of ether in 1846? That George Washington was born in the year 1732 ? 'The owner of an extensive yine- yard in Bradley county, Aakan- gas, has been furnishing wine for almost nothing to the young men of the neighborhood. In conse- quence there has beon an epi- demic of drunkenness. Qn Thursday last, however, a mob of older men totally destroyed the vineyard. aR RRELEET So ED Yellow Fever Germs breed in the bowels. Kill.them and Cascarets destroy the germs throughout the system and mak) it impossible for vew ones to form. Cascarets arc the only reliable sate guard for young and old against Yellow Jack, 10c, 25c, 50c, all druggists. Ee Arabian Horses In Battle. Arabian: horses manifest sremark- able.courage in battle. It is said finds himself wounded and that he will not be able to bear his rider much longer he quickly re- tires from the conflict, his: master to a place of safety while. has etl sufficient assur ie it e other hand, :the, rider: wrote and ‘falls to, the the faithful, animal remains besi him, unmindful of ¢ = a keepin x‘ the system thorougly clean and} Cas- : the system, and - kill all. y COMLAEIONS | That the first electric telegraph ; ' ¢. ; was used in 1835, from Padding-) 3 ton to Brayson, England ? you are safe from the awtul disease. | - that when a horse of this breed | | 25¢ 50¢ ABSOLUTELY GUARANTEED 32 DRUGGISTS stipation. Cascarets are the Idéal Laxns ripe. but cause easy natural — Sam- asd 1. | Wee aud, tae! never ore pe and booklet free. Ad. STERLING REMEDY co Chicazo, Montreal, Can., or New Ui f A ¥ wi a Be A a : ee ROLES DAVIS, Pres’t. R."A. TYSON, ViceePres: ; Me Jt L. LITTLE, ¢ Coen . REORGANIZED JUNE rth 1896 STATHMENT OF THE | : : : GREENVILLE, N. C. At the Close of Business Oct, 5th. 1897. RESOURCES. LIABILITIES, Loans and Discounts $56,792.58 Capital stock paid in Premium on Stock 1,000. 003 Surplus and fot he cot ip ‘Due from Banks 20,865.30} Deposits subject to Check 67,507.03 Furniture and Fixtures 1, 507.253 Due to Banks "607.90 Cash Items 8.619. 05¢ Cashiers Checks ortstanding 241.66 Cash in Vault 95,139.49 pe Payable 17,500.00 ——————eew ? Time Certificates of D 5 eis) ite ose er eposit 3,605.00 Total $113,923.67 We study carefully the separate needs of our patrons, and shall b your account, promising every accommodation consistent with good evi ae UN DERTAKER FMERAL DREGTORS AND EMB. \LMERS. - -0—— We have just received a new hearse and t he nicest line of Cof- fins and Caskets, in word, metal lic and cloth ever brought to Greenville. _ We ate prepaced to Jo.embalm- lng iz all its forms. EETABLISHED Ove. Personal attention given to con- ducting funerals and bodies en~ 5 AV Mi SGHULT L trusted to our care will receive | * « al every mark of respect. Onr prices are Jower than ever. PORK SIDES& SHOULDER Ve do not want monopoly but uivite con, petition. ARMERS AND) MEKCHANTS BUY ing their year’s supplies will find We can be found at any and all their interest toget our prices befcre pun times in the John Flanagan chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete Buggy Co's building. uallits brenches. | BOB GREEN PLOUR,COFFEE,SUGAR|——— GREENVILLE Q- ALWAYS‘AT LOWEST MARKET PRICE, Tobacco, Snuff’ &c, we buy diroc} from Mancfactur.> en| The next session of, the school will ling you to bay at one proit, A eow - rs cte stock of pen ony MONDAY SEPT. 6,° 1897 FURNITURE always on hand and sold at oe to suit the times. Our goods areall bought and sold for CASH therefore, having no 1isk and continue for 10 months.” The terms are as follows. to run we seliat a close margin. Primary English : ci S, M.'SCHULTZ, Groonville,N. C ane 5 taal = a Intermediate ** ‘ $2 BC — Higher és bé ae $3 Languages (each) ** = * _ $1.00 sarbders. The work and disclpline of the sehoo ~~ | will be as heretofore. Hi A. B.P 7 We ask a continuance of your past FASHIONABLES BARBER, liberal patronage. Can be found below Five Points. W H.RAGSDALE.B next door ‘to Reflector office, SEE AMES A, SMITH, pete manent Dares i TONSORIAL ARTIST, on etdy ney GREENVILLE, N.C, | Wille Po cn af tl } Patronage solicited. Cleanin , Dyeir isda es TD Pf Charge and Pressiag Gents Clothes 2 apebalty oa has 0 Be) ‘ OD Re ure. “it pes | pa ins Mu ; ihe es _— ae eric: ERBERT EDMUNDS, ee hae elie ate cases and f “ms >) FASHIONABLE BAREER, EO LIMY a SS Nee = spec stat to cleanin ESS at OF PRILERE om, _ - . BAPTI51—Services every Sunday, Thursday evening. Rev. A. W. Setzer, Pastor. Sunday school 9:30 A, M. C. D. Rountree, Superintendent. CATHOLIC—No regular services. EPISCOPAL—Services fourth Sur- day, morning and evening. Lay ser- vices second Sunday morning.» Rev. A. Sunday schoo! 9 30 A.M. W.4B. Brown,JSuperintendant, MMETHODIST—Services every Sun- ‘|day, morning and eyening, Prayer meeting: Wednesday evening. Rey. N. M. Watson, Pastor. Sunday school 9:30 A. M. A’ B. Ellington, Superin- { tendent, PRESBYTERIAN—Sarvices — third Sunday, morning and evening. Rev. J. B. Morton. Pastor. Sunday school iii M. E. B. Ficklen Supeérinten- ent LUDGES. A. F. & A. M.—Greenville Lodge No. 284 meets first and third Monday eyen- tog J. M, Reuss W. M. L. I. Moore, ec. I. 0.0. F.—Covenent Lodge No. 17 Meets every Tuesday evening. J. V. Johnson N.G. LL. H. Pender, Sec. K. of P.—‘'ar River Lodge No, 93, ineets every Friday evening. H. W. Whedbee, C. C. A. B. Ellington K. of R. and 8, R. A.—Zeb vance Conucil No. 1696 meets every Thureday evening, W.B. Wilson, R,; M.R. Lang, Sec. meets every Friday evening. Fianagan, D. Henry Sheppard, R. A.L of H, Pitt Council every Thursday night... J. B. 'W. B. Wilson. See. Cherry Se i moring and evening. Prayer meeting K.of H.—Insurance Lodge No. 1169 Johr 236 meets phhbhth What I “== _ ‘It is a picture ot tae celebrated an PARKER FUNTHN. Best in use, The outfit of no business mantis complete without one:: Tes pg the Reflector Book Store has a nice assortment of these Fountain Peng also a beautiful line of Pearl Handle Gold Pens. You will be astonished when d varnhow very cheap they are. mrteatrtotctatrae «i A a “hk a , i. / “art ik if a pee a ers, cee aN o anes 4 at ue Be FY S j aN you sée them an But should you Want Greenville Market. Corrected by S. M. Schultz. “ag Come to see us, : «+4. Shingles! Shingles !' aeart Hand Made Cypress. Shingles, ville. . Apply to * . J. R. SME, BRO. s ma Ay en, N.. C, ! — « PARKER as Manager. FLAP ee ae Mane, Tk $3.15 per thousand delivered at Green-| E HAVE; ESTABLISHED ' A) * ‘Lumber Yard at Grgemyille :with| -. Orders. an ve} The Daily Reflector «2|Lhe Kastern Reflector. : , 4 e | "a ‘Hieteimibh bien ith bert tena be ete es 4 fs an? FS . a "+ » HENRS BROS) LUMBER CQ: [cha go ; A Sd Si ‘ OB, ‘ 2 ‘ 4 4° Laat | Hy ae | ps ei hae te Wye ty hy Ae Aah wad inte Qs erage fp “nd fof Laer MPRA) ne oe ie an ‘ ‘ i 4 ' iia as od out pats anergy a 6 deen ma: Aten) ean iy di spe ey _- TWICE-A-WEEK.” hte ato i ° oa eh aie! >. e+ the a subseriptian. price. 1} ‘ "habs hd 1) : 4 hi K: + ahr ‘wt a P ay Le { , ‘i r) if ach eee hs Pee ais. bona tight Pc) Soa: et a cP rents pt; Ry atoms 4 j iH 1 se aot a oe Qs asta eg Mai. ol RAGad m. ah hapa i Cae Gives the home news: : » every afternoon at the | small price of 25 cents a. month. Are you a sub-;. scriber? If not you. % ought, to be. Yo Sener y On) OF ee ROT ae OTF & wht tin aast “Ts. only, $h)a. yepty hoe con Pee. ° vtion’ to the Rete s, 2 Oa ‘pecially those growing tobacco, that is worth — Many times, moreadRAR re ‘ i? ad a 2 utiful nul a : * os ee ae This indispensable re- quisite to every La- dy’s Toilet and abounds in - endless variety on our counters We: give _, especial attention to this line and have Fibeen careful to select only the prettiest and newest to offer in this _ Great LACE — SALE. A A tremendous stock of real genuine Bargains isthe outgrowth of our careful buying. We are offering one special lot of 600 Yards of new andelegant Tare all Smal PIECES at prices unheard ofin the retail Lace world and we cordially invite our customers and friends to come and see them, examine styles and quality, compare prices with what you usually pay for same goods and we believe you willagree with us. We still have a few ot those beautitul BUREAU SCARFS, | __ PILLOW SHAMS AND TABLE COVERS : i | ‘a 3 ae A ae i ane es oh Ray ay Vy \ aba ¥ + epee DRESS LACE) —" DAILY REFLECTOR “~" THEY MOVE FASTER. a aaa JUDICIOUS ADVERTISING Creates many a new business, fnlarges many an old business, _ Preserves many a large business, Revives many a dull business, Rescues many a lost business, Saves many a failing business. eee a To “tadveztise udiciously,’’ use the ‘ .nsoft. REVLEOTOR. ~~ TRAIN AND BOAT SCHEDULES. eget: PEE Posyenger and mail train going Nerth, arrives 8:52 A.M: Going South, arrives 6:57 P. M Steamer Tar River arrives from Wash- ington Monday, Wednesday and Friday leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure- day and Saturday. _ Keeping Censtantly et it Brings Snocess ey om WEATHERS BOLLETIN. a RENT Threatening weather and rain to- night, Wednesday showers. CUTS eee i LITTLE!REFLECTIONS Caught o: the Small'Things That Occur. New Goops—Fresh Butter and{ amaica Oranges at S. M. Schultz, J Odd Fellows meet tonight with work intke second degree, A full atten- dance is desired. Somebody facetiously remarked atter the fire alarm Monday night, that the colored Odd Fellows should not allow their yoat to kick so hight as to knock down « swinging lamp. Bulbs. For Hyacinth, Tulips, Narcissus and Lilly bulbs, also for Green Tomatoes for making sweet pickles and preseryes send your orders to Riverside Nurse- ries, Goods delivered free in town. Phone 46. JUST FOR FUN. ce er A queer calling—the counterfeiters. Tiamps and the birds are flying to he South, Autumn is giving the mosquitoes the ice house ha! ha! The mother tongue—‘Qo’s ’ittle ootsums wootsums babesums 1s ooms?’ Wife—“] won’t haye you calling me a goose.” Husband— ‘Well, you're}. no chicken.” It’s natural that a good hittle boy chould like Sunday school better than the other kind. Sunday school only comes once a week. Willie—“Pa, .the horn of the hunt- er’ is never heard any more, is it?’ Pa —“I don't know, I suppose the hunter hears its merry gurgle while he's tak- ing it. “When a man spends most of his lite treating himself to drunkenness,” says the Manayunk Philosopher, ‘it is natural that he should finally have to treat himself for it.” Hoax—‘‘Jigley is losing his grip. Joax— I] heard he wassick, but 1 didn’t think it was as bad as that.” Hoax— “Bad? He had the kind of grip thata man is glad to lose.” NO CURE—NO PAY. 3 ‘ That is the’ way all druggists sell GROVES TASTELESS CHILL TON 11G for Chills, Fever and all forms of Malaria. It is simply lron and et in a tasteless form. Children love it Adults prefer it to bitter, {nauseating Tonics. Price, 50c. eet Secures success to any business the fire alarm sounded. by the falling of a swingirg lamp in the colored Odd Fellows hall on Froze and other apparatus out ready to go to advertisment brought him $100 worth }, But We Catch Their Names. J. RB. Harvey, of Gritton, was here today: L. J. Chapman, of Centerville, was here today. — ) J. A, Pridgen, of Kinston. spent today hcre. E. C. King, of Falkland, was here this afternoon: Elias Turnage, ot Ormandsville, wae in town today, 2 friends at Castoria: L, I- Moore returned Monday eve~ ning from Whitakers. Miss Rosalind Rountree is” visting | ||: You ita Des Su “#H. W. Whichard, of Whichard, was in town today on business. Miss Ada Bynum, of Farmville, is visiting Miss Etta Hinnes. J. L. Taft came home Monday eve ning froma visit to Elm City. J, B. Cherry, Jr., came in Monday evening trom a trip on the road. F.C, Harding went to Kinston Mon- day evening on legal business. wd We learn by wire that the Bank of Wheu you go home tell your wife you bought a Sunday- go-to-meeting Suit. down at TAFTS and will go to church with her nex Sunday. She will love you more and. vou will wonder why you had not thought of that before. Incidentaliy it will sae your business suit and took much better. English and French worsted, granites and tri- cots ready to wear in five minutes, without a wrinkle, and stay that way, too. A. fvll ine of Dress Goods and Capes. Nashville, in this State, failed this morning. O. Cuthbrell left Monday evening for Kinston to accept & =osition in a car@ riage factory there. Mrs. Maggie Briley, of Martin coun- | ty, is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. 8. - Benjamin in South Greenville. Mrs. Fannie Bazemore, of Gold Point, Martin county, is visiting Mrs: J.§. C, Benjamin in South Greenville’ R. L. Smith, Tobe Hardee, J. A. Brady C. M- Bernard and H. T. King| went to Raleigh today io attend the fair. Miss Eva Whitfield snd two of the ebildren of N. H, Whitfield came in Monday evening irom Oxford to visi: him. enema B. Y. P. U- The firsi meeiing of the Baptist Young People’s Union will be held in should be present. Fire Alarm... About 8:30 o’clock Monday night It was caused street, ‘Lhe firemen had their engine the scene when word came that the fire was out, Nuggets Near Home, Oe WE BELIEVE That, after taking a look at our new styles in Gall and Winter Dry Goods, Shoes, and Sloaks for ladies and children, that any person would agree that our styles are prettier and prices lower, quality consid- ered, than other dealers in Greenville offer. Do us the favor to call and see our goods, even though you are not ready to buy. Competent. salespeople to LANG LAMM HOUSE, the Baptist church Wednesday evening wait upon you. at 7:30 o’clock. Asa constitution is — _— to be adopted ‘and several committees | Ai R. FLEMING, Pres, to be appointed it is important thet all o : CHERRY t View Prec. HENRY i . CAPITAL: Minimum $10,000; Maximum: $100,000, Organized June lst, 1897. The Bank of Pitt County, GREENVILLE, N. C. IS Bank wants youririendship anda shar if not all, of yur businesss, and wll grant every favor consistent with safe anda sound ‘banking. We invite correspondence ot a per: A New Yorker boasts that a 90-cent sonal interview to that end. - of business. On the whole, the Klon- | dike could not pan out much better.. it is spread, and where.—Philadelphia Reeord. : The Leaders La:t Monday and Tuesday Mesers: Evans, Joyner & Co. sold both days heavy breaks of tobacco and their av— erage for everything sold from tip to B made that we have heard of in Eastern North Carolina this season or since There are rich nuggets: in printers, ink|jayndering send them to me. Price all the time; but much depends on how | 50 cents a patr. W Saturday evening. ans, Joyner plicate wili be issned. All persons are eh exceeded any sale that bas been | war : < The Bauk of Greenville on which it was drawn has been noti Tethe Ladies It you have lace curtains that need Goods sent off every and. retarned ednesday morning, C. B. WHICHARD, Agt. Witmington Steam Laundry, Notice. ee HEOK NO. 6704 DATKD OCT 21, 1897, amount $40 payable to Lovit ines (Receiver) or bearer, signed Ev- & Co. has been lost. A du- ed not to cash or trade for same. fied not to pay it, EVANS, JOYNER &CO 1898. Thisfirm is composed of the pioneers of the tooasco industry in Kas- tern North Csrolina and the oldest warehcusemen on the Greenville marke: are Messrs. G. F. Evans and QO. L. Jeyner, ‘Their experience in handling eastern tobacco, being eastern met themselves entilles them to leadership in volume of business done ag well | as leaders in high prices—a distinction which it seems they sre destined to hold, it present indications amount to | anything. Valuabio Property for Sal HAvNs BEEN APPOINTED and ville Lum er Company, for the purpose of settling I hereby offer for sale the and adjoining the belon } erty will lots to dress UMTS ualified as Receiver of the Green- the affairs of sald Company, real estate in town of Gree to said Company. This prop” sold on reasonable terms ad t purchasers, ae Hturther information ‘see Or 'ad- | LOVIT HINES, Rereiver Kinsion, N. © For j Webave alarge Hi LIB TAGE eet ere Me Tela WOR AN pepe Cl PE tir OM, Pere rng Rae OA LR UWA: EME SNC Ree PCM StR RINT NE RT STOuUs vf MD GOODS just arrived. Comeand see us. MA FL au) i me dd