i LEC RE Vol. 1. GREENVILLE, N. C., MAY 25, 1896. No. 1: Local Trains and Boat Schedule. train going Pissenger «nd miil Going South, north, arrives 8:22 A. M. arriyes 6:37 P. M. North Bound Freight, arrives 6:45 A. M, leaves 10:15 A. M. South Bound Freight, arrives 1:51 P ., leaves 2:11 P. &. Steamer Myers arrives from Wash ington Monday, Wednesday and Friday leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure day and Saturday. Weather Bulletin. Sunday: rain. — NEARER HOME. What is Happening Over the State. In Wilmington strawberries have sold as low as 25 cents a peck. In Salisbury they retail ct 3 cents a quart and in Plymouth at 5 cents. The next meeting of the North Carolina Press Association will be held in the city of Greensboro on Wednesday and Thursday, July 17 and 18. A very interesting occasion will be the celebration to-morrow at Fayetteville, of the Jubilee of Bisnop Watsop uf the Episcopal church, it being the fiftieth an- nerversary of his elevation to the priest hood. Mr. E. J. Faller, of Fayetteville. who killed Parker last year, was married at nis home a tew days ago to Miss Lula McR. Steele, the lady to whom he was engaged at the time of the homicide. Mr. Iredeli Williams, one of the most prominent farmers of Nash| _Hupgarian papers are county, gave a big dioner the /sible for the statement tha¥a wo-/hig sureties to make up the defi- the 87th |man in Zebulin wae married the ciency, the Inspector turned the : She| postoffice over to a lady who was and |is but 40 yeare, old, and last win-|selected by the bondsmen to con - other day in honor of birthday of his father. gentleman is still strong, The old|twelfth time the other day. We Are Growmeg. The number of buildings that have gone up and cthers contract- forso far this year, show that Greenville is going to surpass the big record she msde last year. We make the prediction now that u0t much lessthan $100,000 wiil be putin buildings here this year. A Strong Team. Combining the energies and ex- perience of two such prominent tobacco men as Messrs. G. F. Ev-; ans and O. L. Joyner, who are to conduct the Eastern warehouse the coming season, will make tha* one of the strongest houses in the State. The success of this market in the past is due largely to these men. Can’t Hit It. We have found one more fellow in about the same fix as ourself. Every time the REFLECTOR sas the weather is fairing off it rains, and the Concord Siéandard savs that every time it declares the backbone of winter is broken a cold spell follows. Pretty good weather prophets, both. The New Order of Things. The twentieth century dude who goes Up atairs to his room at night Will, probably after he doffs his clothes And ere he puts out his light, Stoop down by the side of the couch or not Acd lift the edge of the spread To satisfy himself there’s not A woman under the bed. Marned Tweive T 17 cp 2 > “via Le RZ. Yo Catcha Apa ic ) SA? Bird Put Sal on his ‘Tai \~\_ ‘Tocatch an artistic fit in a bea Nee tifully tailored Suit, worth a thi WW) Xa. more than the price, just put a fe NN dollars in yo a BLO | xX ‘ i te SAN Ait s WS ~S - > \ 2 pocket and con \ SS ome. Ill dot WS => - poe rest. For fi WA Se A Clothing, Shot — a BSS Notions, Fu i SSS nishings come FRANK WILItSOl THE KING CLOTHIER. eel a Postal Officials Disagree The postmaster at Southport bas gotten intotrouble. His house needed repairs, and he claims that it was ebout to tumble down over bis head. He tried to borrow some money to fix it up, but his security was not satisfactory. Hav- ing several handred dollare on hand of money order funds, and; Tone—dull. believing ina paternal govern | cominon ment, he applied that money to/ Prime repairing bis house, asking the , Extra Prime government to wait until be could | F ancy ay it back. He thought this was | Spanish Cotton and Peanuts, Below are Norfolk prices of cof and peanuts for yesterday, as. furnis. by Cobb Bros. & Co., Conamission M chants of Norfolk : OOTTOR,. Good Middling . Middling Low Miudling Good Ordinary PEANUTS. sir, but Postofiice Lnspector Con- Be ioe Fem. K. E. Peas—best, 2.50 to 2.75 per hb rad differed with him, and on D-/ Wednesday last, after requiring; “ “damaged. 1.50 tol.75. Black and Clay, 90 to 1.00 per bushe Greenville Market. Corrected by S. M. Schultz, at seems likely to pass the 100-mile-|ter Jost her eleventh husbard./duct the business for them until | Old Bricx 3tore. _ post. The Coioner Was Enterprising. Tourist—“Dr. Slade, with whom she bad made a trip around the world. She will cel - ebrate the twenty-fifth anuniver-|postmaster hes his house repair- sary of her first wedding next fall|ed, but he is out of a job. =” the cor-/at the side of her twelfth partner oner, seems to be a very enter-/in lite. prisipg man.” Colonel Handy Polk—“Enter-| On the first Monday in June the pa t Youbett Tell youwhat|county commissioners will take|ington, Ga., Enterprise. “A New- the|charge of all the public scbool|ton county color . e done last summer when > ciroug was here. One ofthe cu. riosities in the oe” was aan Egyptian mummy. @ roun up ajury, brought in a verdict: of ‘Dead from unknown causes,’ and ch the county his fee compound interest from the time of Moses "— 7ruth. matters in the county under the recently enacted school laws. County commissioners are requir- ed on that day to appoint the ‘school committeemen, and it is made the duty of the Glerk of the Superior Court to appoint the county school weuktnae 3 the Department at Washington pene Fe Ib eu to shoeld select a successor. The Rage Grr ron iaion | “e . Corn 4D te Cabtase 5O te Flour, Family 400 to 4 An Announcement. Lard 6 to This 18 attributed to the Cov- Potatoes Irish, per bbl 2.00 to 3 pronchee =| oo Sweet,per bu 60 “e ’ the following announcement from Coffee 16 t& his pulpit last Sanday: “The Sli- = i per Sack 8? to’ din’ Elder will open a distracted Ress oes OSs : eens meetin’ in this house endurin’ of | Beeswax, per Ib : the first Sunday in May, if provi-| Kerosene, _ 133 to dent is deine) and de weather sean’ pee a0 i 5 wer eh _ _ de next Sanday. | Cotton ‘Seed Meal 2) he th : : Hides . Tecollection we make the. follow: ‘Phe Committee in the exercise of equivocal utterances of their par- ty in convention assembled. The Committee does not attempt to DAILY “REFLECTOR. D. J. WHICHARD. Editor. Subscription 25 cents per Month. question, but simply declares its | Entered as second-class mail matter. | purpose to-stand iv good taith BYErY APTFRNOON (EXCPPT stNpary)|*be commands of the party and | ————————— Sop penis to all who cai! themselves: THE WISE ACTION OF OUR STATE, Dewmoorats to do likewise COMMITTEE. Being the Executive Committee, — of the party they are bonestly We gee it stated in some.of our'trying to execute and enforce! exchanges, in criticism of the ac- the will of the party as“declared make any pew declarations on the GOOD AS A NOVELTY. A New Species ofr Entertainment cota natal Dat Dutch.” + tt may “goit ' Hoboken ‘avd Other Jersey Towns, Bat Not New York; at Least So Says a Recent Attendant Cpen One. | | “Tt received an invitation the other day,” remarked a young man to 3 |New York Sua reporter, .‘‘which be- gan: ‘You are cordially invited tc latte end a ‘‘Dutch,” to be given at the |residence of Miss Hose, etc.’ Ihave tion of the. Democratic Executiye! by the pariy itself in convention | roonived cards to all sorts of queer Committee, at ite méeting io Ral jassemLied,aud we beloug to those (affairs, from donkey parties up to eigh on the 20th of May, that the who bolieve that the Committee Committee had no right to com (has acted wisely. The only erit-—| mit the party to the free and un jicism we would make, if we were ' limited coinage of silver. Those}to make any, is that the Commit- who take tbat position mast bave yery short memories or they musi tee onght to have commenced this work earlier. We haye a _ think the people have forgotten} notion that the failure of SOWe | what the party in convention &3 | people to stand openly and firmly semblied in August, 1894, saig@ OP apon the State platform of 1894), . i this en bject- To refresb their} had -setmhething to do with our) defeat, bat it is not our Purpose extiuct frum the platform adopt— to deal im any eriumimation or ed by the Democratic State Con. recrimination. We do, b r. vention : “ Be-elved Let. Thut-we ‘relaf geo forward vow and do ati that it firm ihe doctrine of the party as|msy properlydo to execute the enunciated by the Chicago Con | will ofthe party. The party has yention of 1892; eed -desire to} said in as plain language as car sicvifv as follows what isthe con be used that it. favors the free struction placed by us upon the/and unlimited coinage of both 7 — thereof relating to silver, silver aud gold at the ratio of 16. ito lL. Itis the duty of the Com-. Xe hold that itiathe duty of! mittee to strive to carry out this the Jaw aakiug department of the| command of the party and we do Government, now in the hands of/ not besitate to say that if there | PT the Democracy, to take immediate|#s 9 Mogle member of that Com: steps to rsstore by legislation the| mittee who doves not feel equal privilege of silver with goda. at the mints by the free and oan jand who does not in good faith limited coinage of both gold and/intend to carry it out, he ought to silver at the ratio uf 16 to 1, suchiresigu. The eame Convention beiog the rates of coinage whneb! that appointed him a member of. by the declaration of his party, héretofore has held in the United the Committe saidto bimin effeet | States.” . {eo out as the representative of the | The Committee in their resolu |party and advocate the free aod | tions adopted atthe meefing on ‘unlimited coinage of silver at the, the 20th, simply say they “repab- ratio of 16 tok The committee) lish, reiterate and ewphasize the in its meeting on the 20th ‘imply | declaration of the party’ made in,answered- back we will io good | the State Convention August Sth, -fuith obey our imstructions, and) 1894, in favor of silver at the ratic| we repest, if thére is any mem ber} of 16te 1. Now how is it possi- ‘of the Committe who does not in- bie for any reasonable, truthful tend to dosothe ought t6 resign man to say that the Committee | The Rertecrogz beli¢ves in the ‘has committed the party to any frees snd unlimited coinage of thing to which it was notcdm (silver as advocated by the garty mitted by the Convention of 1894" of the State and we sbalt -be these who will cheerfafty its plain duty at this time has bot the Bends of the Com, simply reminded tbe : tic | mitte ‘and we shall from time to ptess and the Decorate eeelah me. give.to oar. Seep Teed Of the State of the plein tad Un-!|tion along this lines % *>- insist that -our Committee eal)” bound |whi ‘cotillions, buta ‘Dutch’ was some- ‘thing newtome. [racked my brain to think what it could be, but was no nearera solution at the end of itive minutes’ thinking than when I |started. As the night of the affair |approached I got to thinking ayain land finally concluded that my prns- ‘nective hostess, having been in a facetious mood at the time of writ- ing the invitations, had used the vord Dutch instead of German, and r that the affair was to be a dance of the conventional order. And so I battired myself accordingly and start- ed out. “When I reached the house I was ushcred into a room, where I found alot of my friends, who had fome to the Dutch, like myself, totall isrnorance of what they were yet ing up against. They were then strug- gling to get their feet into sabots. |The attendant gave me a pair of the wooden shdes, and after a struggle ] \got them on. One by one we drift- \ed into the parlors, where we found |stae everybody was in the same ptedicamentas ourselves. The girls | were making desperate efforts to ap- pear graceful in the clumsy sabots, while we men were acttally begif- ning to enjoy the hovelty of it all. “Gradually the dreadful signifi- ‘cance of the word Duteb dawned up- on me. Et simply meant: that ‘our hostess was giving a dance with as many Dutth adcoth patiiménts as she could comfortably crowd upon “us. | We danced and we danced, or rather 'yum ped Wbhout, for wooden shoes are ‘mot conducive ‘to ninfbteness, and / theti the’ ‘rea¥ Duteh- part of the af- fdlr became ‘Spparént. It was time for refreshment, but Thsteud’ of iée iéream, ' sand Wiches, coffee, | sildas ‘ind the | ‘lfke® ‘the’ servants broaght in Deer, pretzels, bread | stoffdd! with éardwiy seeds, Frank- |turter sausages, sauerkraut, head cheese, . bologna, ke, apple cheescca . ¢ and every other old Dureh dish |. § u Fait think of. “Tt _gertainly, was all ° novelty, r& I bellets Ths Sbeut fhe latest form of entertaisment, but I think, asa matter of’ protection, young ladies who intend giving Dutches might ex- plain what they are in their cards of invitation.” Up, Not Down, to Date. A writer in a Boston paper hap- pened the other day to use the pbrase ‘‘up to date” and that led him into an interesting parenthetical re- mark. In Enyland, he tells us, ohne does not say ‘‘up to date” but ‘‘down to date,” which, funny as it seems, he thinks quite logical, since we come ‘‘down: the ayes and cen- turies.’”” Dut do we? That is the very question. Aren’t the numbers getting higher all the time and if they are getting higher must we not be going up? We should say that it was quite a climb from Anno Domini 13 up to Anno Domini 500; and from that to 1695. From our present pinnacle we can look dawn upon the little 13 and survey all the years be- tween and note the things that hap- pened in them as it seems as though we never could do if we had to look up at the cycles. And it seems to us that it indicates a much finer mental twist to speak of toiling up the years than to be ever sliding down them. — Rochester Post-Ex- press. Victims of imagination. The woman with a health fad ren- ders the lives of all her friends a burden to them. A casual cough is spoken of with gloomy brow as probable consumption; a ‘touch of lumbago formulates itself as incipi- ent spine disease, and the oppres- sion caused by the constriction of a fashionable corset is rapidly diag- nosed as heart disease. She is ever full of remedies, has an invaluable cough mixture, a foreign. dogtor, & }bauseous hot brew which a coyntry ‘nurse has told her is the best. thing for a cold, and a marvelously. ¢con- cocted liniment, which,applied vigor- ously and externally is an actual eure for evergthing: ’ The fads in con- nection with bouses are innumerable; all manner of diseases‘are prophesied to those 'wHo live on clay; rejoice in picturesque old-fashioned roofs, and view. life teneath the kindly shade ot ivy, wistaria or Virginia ‘trails. Yet they survive, and the world goes on.-—N. Y. Commercial. but not the sort, ot novelty I, care |, jedout, Still, l, everyb y, else seemed a4 te. * I gent ink, pe marks be pe a = Yee thee es suppose, it 3 a0 rua. eieilee ment out as pal as vas th ‘int in Mobaken and other Jersey towns. Superior Court Clerk, E. A. Moye. Sheriff, R. W. King. “hy Regis@eBh Deeds, Ww. es. Treasurer, J. L. Little... o .Coroner, Dr. ouse. Sutveyor. . i? - {> % ee <<; etd Smith sna = dh. “TOWN OFFICE RS. Mayor, Ola Forbes. Clerk, C. C, Forbes - Treasurer, W. T. Godwin. Polite—d. W.' Perkins, chief, Fred. Cox, aset;. J. W, Murphy, night. . Conbithhb “Ww . H. PT Raffin, a ans Jenkins. cuvliones:- az Baptiat, | Seryices- every Sunday (ex- cept second) so sees ea and ie prea meeting Phursda . Billings pastor.. ak a Se Sehodl = at 9:8 A. M..C. D, Rountree, : Sup’t. Catholic. Episcopal. No pegallan ser yee on. day morning;.,and night, Rev. A. Greaves, A. M. W..B. Brown, Sup’t. sedi Services pevery Sunday morn and Light rayer, meeting Wedtieeday fitgh Rey. @. ! Smith, Pini: Sun a at. a: 30. A. M. A. Presbyterian. |: jet and 3rd Sanday morning and n wats Piayer meeting, ‘Luegiay: wight, . v. Aygchie McLancthtin, pastor. unday School at 9:30 A, Mi. D. Bvans, Supt. ‘LODGES. Covenant pte Né. Wet. O: meets every ‘lu ay 0 t. ro W. Bagwell, Mes y night. Dr. W & Groep! le Lod Mo. 2A. F,' Lor first and third Monday pig My WM. H iN ht 4, $**@ i 3 + Cc. on a The Passion Vs Salad to Ba Abating Somewhat. ‘According to's ‘writer in the Lon- don Spectator*a change has come over the minds of~ women in respect to feathers;.and-while these pretty ornaments continue to be worn the | | objections to the wanton sacrifice of birds in order to procure them have so far prevailed that substitutes} have been found for those kinds to obtain which birds were kifled. — » While.the egret pluame—the finest of these feathers—is. still .unap- (MERS AND Smith, W. L. Brown, Ww. ‘T. Godwin. T, A, Wilks, Rectoe. Sunday School at 9:30 O, F-. | HESEND sea ii JOB-:- PRINTING . —TO THE— Higuchi Firat-GlassWorE/. L, | Proachable as an ornament, the mil- L | liners say the ladies object to buy tutes, perfect plumes; aad sham ‘‘ospreys,” it is difficult to determine. - Some are fashionad from split quil feathers of 3 darger others even @.microscope: fails. to show the process. of manufacture. Besides substitutes for the “osprey,” all kinds of com art, for which it would puzzle any- otie but the ‘Splumassier” or the ‘tax- adorning headdresses i is almost over. “MESSRS Thefts ‘Almost Impossible. . secret. . the figures on the dial move up one. ‘Suppose, for instance, that the regis- yx Rss ‘delitered at the point of destination the lock is opened, the register wil eventually the number reached 9, 999, thirty-five years to reach. The bay are reset. attempt to'rob a bag in “transit, car with him to aid in the scheme, ‘start ‘at N6. 1 t ‘Know- this.” cead ‘@iscovered’ and: tt e.g have never been tampered with. ling the real article “because itis} cruel” and demand artdfieial substi- | _ or are contented with Jess as they are ¢alled, are made in ways posite, feather, deco- ration are now used for hats and bonnets, and a naturalist ina milli- ner’s shop finds hitnself confronted a 5. M with a hundred varieties of plumage never seen in nature but excellent in idermist to finda name: The era of stuffed, birds and. natural wings ‘Mechantsm Which Makes “Sucessful . The locks on the mail pouches. are ‘wo congtructed thati it. is impagsible tO | lectious. open one without its ‘betraying ‘the |. There is a little dial on the |#! business, lock and every time the lock is : opened ter shows 1,147 at the point of de parture, and that when the pouch, is show 1,148. This increase of ove is|;, o. LATHAM. made for each. trip of the pouch 4nd which In an average., bag requires is then taken apart and the numbers These loeks were- first introduced in 1881 anda mail clerk madé‘a bold soon after their fhtroduction. H« took a ‘small turning © lathe in the After unlocking the bag he rifled| —-: the conteats and connected up the ‘i Jathe to the lock... His idea was: to twist the numbers:around until they were the same as before the lock was touched. He set the lathe humming | —_____ orri> lock must be taken. apart before. it - in, bat he aig o Pattron; are PORK SIDES&SHOTLDERS. FLOUR, COFPELE, SUGAK | RICK, TEA, &. aly wuys at LOWEST. MARKET PRIUES. TOBACLO-SNUFF&CIGA - we buy direct from Mantfacturers, ena ~ plete stock of FURNITURE eee the times. Cux geods areall bought anc sold for CASH esis having to run,we sel at a close margid. / Hespenttnlly /scHULTZ, P Professional Cards. 1) bling you tp Day SF OnG; protit, A ¢om | ; heron. In 8 guhand and seid au pricesto suit he risk Greenville. N. Cc BL F. TYSON, Greenville, Pitt County, N.C, -Prdétices inal the © “ourts. . Civil and Uriuwinal Buginess Sol cited. Makes a special of rand diyorcve,dam- Monry to loan on approved security. ferms easy. Attorney and Counselor at-Law ages, actions to recover land, aud col- :Prompg and careful attention given J. H. BLOUNT. J. L. FLEMING Briovst, & FLEMING - ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, GKEENVILEE; N. C ) er Practice in all the Courts. /a4uAM & =KINWN GR, ATTORNEYS~AT- LAW yHOS J. JARVIS. ALEX, L. BLOW. jARVIS & BLOW, ATTORNEY SARA Ww, - GREEN VILLE, N. aa Practice in allthe Cours 7 John E. Woodard. F.C. Uarding, Wilson, Ni ©. . ‘Greenville, Ni € Woop aD & HXRDING, TLORNEYS-AT-LAW, « Grepnrvilte, Ne Special “tie and settlement ef ¢ im. ei HARRY SKINNER. iven to collections and, soon reeled off the numbers up} |... robe to 9, 999, when to his consternation| > Barb re. _ | the register, remained at that_ figure janes “A. SMITH,- ay And refused tommove any more, Tho TONSORIAL ARTIS’ r. GREENVILLE; Nn.4 . oa OLD a3 feat uh MEKCHAN Ts BUY ng their year’s Supplies will lind =| ><, ei interest toget Our pricés béfore put ; i: chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete ' n allits branches. {t oon e& sit TERRE aide. clerk punished. Since then the I we @ Under Oper Ta pe eo fi yds bie nad Rit ae ia : Ye Ps ; at the ; *r* #70 Bed Hot—Bite = —LINE OF — OF Kew vnindell dig Last Saturday in May. Beaufort county coart begins Monday. The building for the fire engine is about completed. | Good weather ought to be ap- _preciated when it dues come. Wasa Socrr.! Wass Sorts? ‘For Children and Boys,at LANG'S Housekeepers are complaining about flies being so namerous. _ ‘There Rings frost a States in north west ee Ladies & Childrens day morning. q Lapirs come to see LANG for > ‘SLIPPERS! f-| your commencement outfits. i> ke large-t and cheapest ever of- holes have grown almost large | Some of the main street mud J -r@ in ih is town, come and see for encugh to get lost in. pourself asi be conn: | A Brooklyn woman fell four stories, lit on a news-stand, aorta BBY CRS FURNITURE, Se shes | Mr. Forbes will have to make ~* Window Shades and Level snother prediction. It has kept — “un- right on raining since the 2th. Goods sold on their merits and) New Mountain Batter 20 cents. p- ‘cee made acecrdingly. Cream Cheese at the Oid Brick J.B. CHERRY & Co.| a, | PRESS COORS, SILKS, LACES, F Ribbons, Gloves, Mitts, &c., carried by dB. CHERRY & 6. —this season. Our Stock of— S.H.O.E-S, —AND— The commencement exercises of Carolina Curistian Coilege at Ayden take place June Sth and GROCER! ES. | biveds | @Bhoes, Slippers and Gents Far- Just receivell and to be exold low nishing redaced rates Gret-class grocery store. (sociation. This weather may stop other peerage bet the cut worm and Cigar, the finest in the State. \Spetr > bag 6th. This weatber may be all right —a complete line of-—— at LANG'S. FLOUR, SUGAR, COFFEE, A meeting waa held in the right ahead with D. S. SMITH.) It is estimated thst increase in the world’s population is taking H. G. JONES, for dacks and geese, but it does not exactly suit some other IL - >, Meat, Meat, Motasse«, OT. Quart House this afternoou to — everything kept in io gaoize a Tabucco Grower's As place at the rate of nearly seven and «a half millions a year- ) | The Kings ters here re— ARCHITECT ANI) BUI DE ‘ceived a rolling chair for the use - in valivis. ehair wast a Greenville, N.C. To day Mr. Jobn Allen brought some of the finest pew potatoes C meeatn tal for modern | ,.own that ~~ occ ltg Potcbe buildings | as goose eggs- The sun came out a short while, this afternoon, and peo- CATSUP. But We Could Only Catch-Up With These. Mr. A. P. Marray bas returned from Nash couaty. Rev- P. L. Swain, of Ayden, came up this mornipg. Capt. E. M. Pace returned yes- terday from Greensboro. Saperior Court Olerk E. A. Moye returned Friday evening from Raleigh. Miss Mattie Hearne left this morning to attend the commence- ment at Littleton. Mr. J. E. Langley, after spend- ing a few days here, left thi morning for Richmond. Mr. B. R. King arrived morning to spend tw-day Sunday with his mother. Rev. R-T. Wyche, of James- vilie, who has been assisting Rev. L. H. Joyner in a meeting at Tripp’s Chapel, left for home this moruing:- Misses Ada Tyson, Mamie wards and Bettie Tripp, stud from this county to the N. Coliege, returned from G boro Friday evening. Somebody arises to defend the American girl. She needs neith- er defense nor apology. Just wive her a bicycle and her own way.—New York World. We scareely pick up a paper without seeing mention of a pic— pic. Greenville bas not caught the fever yet, as the rain don’t let ap long en%ugh. Sheriff R. W King tells us that since he saw the first item about the blue birds he has been on the lookout for them in his travels over the county, aod in a month has only seen two. If you wish te get full value for the money you pay forthe goods you buy always goto those who advertise. They are auxious to sell their gcods and they will sell. That’s the reason they advertise Latham, Alexander & Oo., on the basis of replies from 3,100 Loan, soongpenrd planters and cotton estimate the decrease in cotton sotton acreage this year, as com. per Oat Services To-morow. Presybterian church Sunday School at 9: 30 A. M. Methodist church.—Sunday School at 9:30 A. M. Preaching at 11 A. M. and8 P.M. by Rev. G. F. Smith. Episcopal! charch.—Sunda School at 9:30 A. M. we burch oda a2 930 AP —Sunday School at ll A. and 8 bw by vy. © M. ple seemed to almost come OP| oat of the ground, they began to| etir on the street so quick. = = = = From the fact that we sell the BEST Clothes, Notions, Hats, Furnishings, Dress Goods, Trim- mings, Shoes, &c. There's nothing equal to a person- al inspection to carry weighty con- victions. The lit- tleness of my prices seems almost to contradict the in- controvertible evi- dence of the quali- ty facts. What- ever you do miss seeing, don’t miss the Neckwear — don’t. Suits, Un- derwear, Furnish- ings—in quantities mountaineous, in qualities majestic, in quotations min- ute. b. |. MUNFORD, Next Door to bank.