weniianse THE DAILY REFLECTOE Vol. 2. GREENVILLE, N. C., SEPTEMBER 238, 1895. Local Trains and Boat Schedule. Passenger and mail north, arrives 8:22 A. M. arrives 6:37 P. M. North Bound Freight, arrives 9:50 A M, leaves 10:10 A. M. South Bound Freight, arrives 2:20 P. M., leaves 2:15 P. M. Steamer Myers arrives from Wash ington Mouday, Wednesday and Friday leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thure day and Saturdav. train yoing Going South, ~t Weather Bulletin. Fair Tuesday, followed by 1ocal showers, cooler. Eleven Years Ago. This fall is very much like the one eleven years ayo. Most every one will remember that when the State Exposition opeued in Ral- eigh the first of Octuber, 1384, the weather was very wuch as it has been the past week. The boys of the oid Greenyille Guard will not soon forget the hot march they had. National League. The following shows the stand- ing of the base ball clubs with the close of Saturday’s games: Won. Lost. Per ct. Baltimore 81 42 .659 Cleveland 83 45 648 Philadelphia 77 48 .616 Chicago 69 56 552 Boston 63 56 548 Brooklyn 68 58 540 Pittsburg 66 6L .521 New York 64 60 .516 Cincinnati 61 60 .504 Washington 39 $2 -322 St. Louis 37 86 -301 Louisyille 33 92 .264 Baltimore has seven more games to play while Cleveland has only three. Soin order to win the pennant Baltimore must not lose more than two games. Just as we go to press we learn ofthe death of Mrs. Annie H. Burch, which occurred at 4:30 o’clock this afternoon. She iack- ed only a few days of being 61 years old. The remains will be taken to Wilmington tomorrow. Sam Jonesisms, and come to roost before sun- down—you ought to pay storage. if I had come here for money, bless your soul, I’d left after the first collection. Every criminal that goes un- whipt of justice isa menace to good citizenship. Lawlessness in a town is a hot bed of anarchy. Policemen find everything that the sentiment of the town de- mands they shall fina. If 1 was Mayor of this town, fone have to stay at home, old uck. No gentleman will do auything he denies his wife the privilege of doing. Your Uncle Jones lifts the same standard for himself ashe does for his wife, Make Sam Jones Mayor, and be’d set up with you bucks. He'd meke you decent or make you leave town. The difference between Sam Jones and many preachers is that Sam Jones preaches like he thinks and they think like they preach. I'd rather be Bob Ingersoll than a cowardly, time serving preach— er. Old church members charging 12 per cent. interest. Ifyou were in hell you’d haye the whole country ander mortgage before the year’s out. When me and my wife ride the same horse, ['m going to be in frout- Agent for your wife! Pay your debts and you won't hav be agent then. Turn an cld dog loose in heay- en and be’d be out before break fast, chinking gold oft the golden street. Preachers, load your old fuail- ade with buck shot, and thea pul! oe trigger there'll be a dead og. Wheu you are in hell frying vou'll feel a heap worse than you do now. I believe if all the members of the charch in Winston were to get to heaven you'd have to sleep with your breeches under your head. They’d rob you. If you are mad, beg my pardon and I'll forgive you. I don't bear any ice. Llikebangs: I bacon always thought they were ing to women You folks that take front seats | Jones’ hit dogs. eteler. [m going to smoke him out. Nhs Smacme) for nothing. Good Clo lair price. We spare no best at a small profit. The King OFFEND | Your judgment by ~~ offering you somethi | thing is always worth a pains to give you the FRANK WILSON, Clothier. ts a This is scalding and scouring day in thistown. Bad day for chinches too. Some of you think Sam Jones It’s a mistake. When bis mouth goes off the hammer is pulied clear back. If you go away yelping folks shoots off his mouth half cocked. ; Cotton and Peanuts,. Below are Norfolk prices of cotton | and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished will say, there goes one of Sam There’s a possum up the tree. Wait about twenty minntes long- Something to Think About. The man who hopes to rise by his own merits should not depend On an alarm clock. In China all the telegraph wires are laid under the ground; here a like fate awaits those who tamper with them. In the the old times they made beer from beets. Now it not in- frequently occurs that “beats” are made from beer. The man who never sees that his wife needs anything excuses his neglect on the ground that loye ls blind. He is a sensible makes use otthe sense of other people. Only the fool feels so who and mules. by Cobb. Bros. & Commission Mer ants of Norfok : COTTON. Good Middling 8 3-16 Middling 7% Low Middling ~ 7 7-16 Good Ordinary 6} Tone—steady. PEANUTS. : Prime 4 Extra Prime “ancy 33 Spanish $1 ba Tone—steady Greenville Market. Corrected by S. M. Schultz. Butter, per lo - 15 to 25 Western Sides 6 to7 | Sugar cured Hams 12 to 183 Corn 4 to 60 Corn Meal 50 to 65 Flour, Family 4.00 to 4°50 Lard 54 to 10 Oats to 50 sugar 4 to6 Ceffee 16 to 25 Salt per Sack 1 00 to 1 75 Chickens ; 20 to 50 Eggs per doz 10 to Beeswax. per lz 3 Kerosene, | 113 to 15 Pease, per bu Hulls. per ton 6 00 Cotton Seed Meal 10 00 Hides & 13 The best line of Ta N Paper, Envelopes, Bos fall that he has no use for coun- sel. i and in town can at the Reflector Book = Store. PPR .Feheate: of war, and | erany . rate AS) ~ In Buch afi_ undertaking the question tor. of transportation is one of natural —_— prominence.,and every person in any- “subscription 25 cents per f\onth. | wise interested in this exposition, every S42 064 persow proposing t become én éxhibi- tor or a vistor has doubtless propound- Entered as second-class mail matter. t edthe inquiry, whether the Seuthern |railroads are equal to the emergency of /handling the enormous travel and traffic (0 and from Atlanta during the period ATLANTA EXPOSITION, re 2 of thé exposition. ‘I'bis question of j » a j i 3] 00d r DAILY a DD. J. Ww i rf € . by ~ * EVERY AFTERNOON (EXCEPT SUNDAY) Ree == The “Chicago of the South,’ _fradspertation of @he Alanta Fair; but 'for the neft of many who: acquired The most important event of the cur- thejr knowledze of t reut year cee cy; sees peciaily ~ he railroats of the C y. ; y South during a period of.ten-or fifteen to the South, @nd Stik thore es ecially veurs sueceeding the ee of the cout Leu pte mang cally notliing gn & wi lolling lazily @md@er look? more or less inebriate and conten his back propped up by the tree, his head on oue_ side, contemplating with serene expression alternately his well rounded paunch and a » course Ras jong since been ‘answered to| tLeirs@figtaction by the Committee on| | and tall. brother fakir, who-was performing | his devotions very energetically a short distance off. ‘*This other was a very lean man When I first noticed him, he was seated in abstraction, Bud- | dhawise, which is sometaing like a | tailor sits, only that the feet are ' to the city ofAt'ant® aad the State of). perhaps it will be wl] to say that, Drought out on to the opposite Georgia, is the Cottup States and Luter-| ), Giparbon ean be well ead be thighs, soles uppermost. He was ap- national Exposition which opened at Atlanta, Ga.. onthe 18th day of Sep- tenaber lose son mae bee day Of with the really splendid roadbeds and a ta > of about 116% 99 “GQuipment, and service of the present. : ‘Atlanta is iailv & population should have the enterprise! essentiaily @ and public spirit, not to say the temeri- t utgertake, almosc single handed o¥ thie £3 so wide in itS Seope, so ma ] and a great railroad center, roads, and good ones, radiating to every section of the .euntry. But without considering any of the Others, there is , vhesystem fully capableoft handling ex- peditiously, comfortably avd satisfac- mam in its proportions and requir- tg &¥ast outlay of money us to bh ‘ Sa entitle it tothe designation of toriiy. all the travel : enti t : and traffic to and Sn eniibiobel,” in the faceuf a nnivet-|trons the exposition from any and mamercial depression and tinancial every direction Mad /that Atlanta’ Ga.. which ‘combination operated by a ainvle mran- was left but fitUe more than a heap ef), t = ‘ é sth ite seement, with headquarters at Wash- ashes and smou'dering ruins. with it8 ingten, D. C under the name of th population of 10,000 scattered and home-| 3 ithern Raflwey. neo © } Dygsti u’s- army, when i pO K ous, “Mdarch fo the Sea,"s | abcity ,it is notsurpesing | minu: at the first : . i enterprise were received with: general nection with the Pennsylvania Railroad misgiving and that even the Sweuthern from New York, through Philadelphia, Dtates and cities counselled against it.) Balrimore, Washington Atlanta to al] , yeSmé to the assistance *parrs of the South and -Seuttwest, in- of a sis er.g¢sty in au undertaking which|cluding New Orleans and points in at such a time was regarde4 as hazard-| Florida, and whieh makes ithe cnn from audthat isthe great >F One'ef its lines hagits riorthern tep- *W ashingtop,-andy ft is over ous in the extreme and too mammoth| New York to Atlanta in 24 honrs. Not 16 proutiae @ven a Measurable degree i beans s0, but its connections in other di- aéeomplittime nt. rectionsenable itto give the same first- A visit to Piedmont Park, however,'class service to passengerr from the about two miles north of the center of) West and Northwest. Adanta. wiil dispel e,ery doubt — of the So important is this great railrcod cys yealization of a degree of success sur-|tem tothe auceess of the exposition and PpRéshiy the most sanguine expectations)so hearty has been its interest in the of the projector: of the Cotton States urdertaking anil its eo-operation with and International Exposition, ithe manazers of the exposition. that it From the roof garden of the new anid has been accorded exceptional privileges poodern “Aragon Hotel.” which oceu- 27d will be the only road having tracks pies the highest bill in this hill city, a in Pielmont Park, which will enabie it #Pagnificent panoramic view of the city to land passengers from any direction, @end~its surroundings is afforded. AH Without change of cars. either in the around you, spread over hills and val-, Pack or inthe Union depot in Atlanta. leys, just sufficiently pronounced tu af-/a$ they may-prefer. saeniar as ford asi variety to the topograthy| The Southern Railway has always is dl 7: ews Attar hestling Chi-)/ manifested the most generous interest cago of the South Gate City of the in every enterprise or effert to promote South, Attanta, with its wealth of well-| the welf:re of the So ‘th, and wil] make paved streets andavyenues. laid out ap-|# most interesting exhibit in a handsowe ‘parentiy regardless of rule or plan,! building which it has erected {n the tair |tW@gm/the miserable a tor rail- ‘roads in the south Sud thot period, | { railpoad city) . having. After a time he took up his conch | shell 'exactly the bruying of a more than t | he rinsed his hands and the conch Suggestions of such au operated @ fast throiigh ‘service in con-! parently contemplating his fire tongs, which were stuck in the |ground before him. Surrounding him were a number of little fires. and blew a blast, resembling usually melancholy donkey. Then | With water and stood up. He raised his bands outstretcbed above his head, and, placing the calf of bis iright leg aeross the thigh of bis | left, stood so, on_.one leg, in prayer | for some time. | ‘*He looked leaner than ever like | ' this. ' His boldly was rabbed well | with gray ash, and his rusty eclored \coarse hair was brouzit up in a ‘bunch above his head and tied firm- (ly with cord so that the ends stood ;up likearagged brush, tipped slight. ily to one side. He reminded me of a |Christy minstrel. | “*When the one legged prayer was done, he dropped down again and | took another turn at the conch and water. Then he rose, stepped out- side the fiery circle and began to walk deliberately, with long strides, round and round it. Suddenly he threw himself down opposite one of q 4 ‘slowly on hands and toes, lowered himself as slowly to the ground again two or three times, touching |it alternately with bis nese and top- ‘knot. He repeated this at every fire (with slight variations, sometimes | drawing his left kneericht up under lhim, so that the leg folded like a {two foot rnle when he touched the the fires, and then raising bimself |’ whieh join the mac idamized toads that} g'ounds, consisting of specimens of the) ground with his topknot. This con- lead through the picturesque suburbs to mineral and other products of the South | ‘@heirteh farming lands bevond. “Tere fe an appearance of solidity, | ‘and illnstrative of the marvelous im- provemeit in railroad construction, op- eluded tho prayers, when he bad an- other go at the conch and water, “‘grand@ur and beauty in her public build-| eration and architecture in this country.) after which he wrapped himself in - . Ings, er hundred churches, her semij-! Wiarfés, col.eyex. numero'is publie schoo! jones, her Henry Grady Hos:ital, her Stor€s and private houses, suggestive of w= “giftmdant building material near by, and King away to the east, fourteen miles = Apeross the foothille, the famouse Stone Atain looms up, a solid mountain of Bre nite, where immense quariies are _9 ted now, but where, th r.y-one . rs ago. zrim-visaged war he!d sway. “td thousands -were Slain. and their! “blood trickied over the 1uggec, granite oRiG Pe OLBtowe Monutain. + Over these lovely bills and s 2» the gi duess of Southern ielding »bundantly to the hand appy husbindman, it is difficult to realize that itz was ever tne T. E. Cy ODD RITES OF FAKIRS. The Cxzrteus Keli-icus Ceremonies Are Practiced In India. The following interesting descrip- tion of an Indian f2kir isfrom a cer respondent in Lahore: ‘*Txwo days azo I returicd trom a short trip with a triend to the sacred city of Ketas, where I had been before. This time I saw several interesting fakirs. There were the ordi , blear eyed, ash smeared fellows, one with long brown hair hanging about his shoulders. There was one flabbv. That |a shaw] and went to bathe in the sa- ‘cred tank, in which men, women ‘and children all do the same. | *“There are usually large quantities of fish here, but when I inquired why there were so few on this occa: sion I was told that so many people ihad bathed there during the festival afew days before that the fish liad died—through the impurity of the water I suppose. Yet, as I stood, I saw &@ woman bathing in one place, & man in another, two children ina third, while a girl drew water for drinking purposes from it in a fourth !’"—London Queen. Daily except Sunday. ‘& WELUON R. R. A iCHES. NCE RAI ROAD. Condensed Schedule. TRAINS GOING SOUTH, + Dated Spin. har July 6th jg el=3) |$s 9, iA A As Zz A. M./P.M. A. M Leave Weldon | 11 53) 9 27 Ar. Rocyk Mt 12 57/10 20 Lv Tarboro 12 20 Ly Rocky Mt | 1 05/19 20 6 00 Lv Wilson 2 03/11 03 Lv Selma 2 63 Lv Fay'tteville! 4 30/12 53 Ar. Florence 7 15) 3 Ou ae oR ye Pp. M. A.M iv Wilson £13 6 35 Lv Geldsbore 2 uv 7 20 Lv Magnolia 4 16 8 29 Ar Wilmington | 5 45 10 00 iP. M. A.M TRAINS GOING NOTRH. Dated 2s B July 5th 6a s 1895. ZA Y- A.M/P.M. | Lv Florerce | 8 15) 7 35 Ly Fayetteville) 10 53) 9 33 Ly Selma 12 32 Ar Wilscu 1 20:11 28 == cz 7 = ae A. M. oP. M. Lv Wilmington; 9 20 7 00 Lv Magnolia 10 56) 8 32 ‘Ly Goldsboro | 12 05! 9 41 ar Wilson 1 00) 10 20 ox os . P M.| IP. MiP. M, Lv Wilson 1 380) 11 37, 10 37 Ar Rocky Mt | 2 33 | 12 00) 11 15 Ar ‘Tarboro | 2 4s Lv Tarboro | Ly Rocky Mt 2 33, Ee 27) Ar Weldon 3 48) 12 60; Train on Scotland Neck Branch Roaqa £aves Weldon 3.40 p. m., Halifax 4.00 Pp. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p m., Greenville 6.37 p, m., Kinston 7.385 d.m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Halifax at 11:00 a. m., Weidun 11.20 am laily except Sunday. , Trains on Washnigton Branch lenve Washington 7.00 a, m., arrives Parmele 8.40 p. m.. Tarboro 9.50; returning leaves Tarboro 4,50 p.m, Pasmele 6.10 p. i1,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m, Connects with trains on Scoth nd Neck Brz.nch. Train leaves sarpore, w .C, via Albe- marie & Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- day, at 5 00 p. m., Sunday 200 P.M; irrive Plymouth 9.20 BP. M., 5.20 p.m. Returning leaves Plymouth daily except Sundey, 6.80 a. m., Sunday 230 a —n., urrive ‘lurLoro 10.25 am and ll. 4% JOHN F. DIVINE, General ‘Supt. ,.“. EMERSON, Traffic Manage :. tk. mENLY, Geu’l Manager, * LOCAL DIRECTORY. COUNTY OFFICERS. Superior Court Clerk, E. A. AL Moye. Sheriff, R. W. King. Register of Deeds, W. M. Kins, Treasurer, J. L. Little. Coroner, Dr. C. O’U. ouse. Surveyor, Commissioners—C. Dawsen, Leonidas Fleming, 'T. Smith ands. M. Jones. echm’n., - Kee), Jesse L. Sup’t. Health, Dr. W. H. Bagwel) Sup’t. County Home, J. W. Smith. County Examiner of Teachers.—Prof. W. H. Kagsdale. TOWN OFFICERS. Mayor, Ola Forbes. Clerk, C - Forbes. Treasurer, W. IT. Godwin. Police—J. W. Perkins, chief, Cox, asst; J. W. Murphy, night. Councilmen—W. Hl. Smith. Brown, W. ‘I. Godwin. ‘U. A. Dempsy Ruttin, Julius Jenkins. Fred, W. LL. Wilks, CHURCHES. Baptist. Services’every Sunday (ex- cept second n.orning and night. Pr: ny ot meeting Thursday night. Rev. C., Billings, pastor. Sunday School a> 9- “30 A.M. Cc. D. Rountree, Sup’t. Catholie. Episeopal. day morning and night. Rey. Greaves, Rector. Stunday School at 9: * A. M. W. B. Brown, sup't. Methodist. Services every Sunday morning and Light. Prayer meeting Wednesday night. Rev G. F. Smith, | are Sunday Scheol at 9:30 8. M.A. B, Ellington, supt. Presbyterian. Services every Ist and 3rd Sunday morning anil night.” Pr hayer meeting ‘Tuesday night Rev. Archie McLaueblin, pastor. Sunday School at, 9:30 A. M.,b. D. nvans, Sup’t. No regular services. LODGE: . Covenant Lodge No. 17. 1. O. O, F.,! meets every ‘uesday night. D.bD. Has: | et, N .G. Greenville Lodge No. 28t A. F. & A. M. meets first and third Monday nights Zeno Moore, W. M SBOE 8 sie Sy _senD. YOUR — JOB -:- PRINTING —TO THE—_— REFLECTOR OFFICE —IF YOU WANT— First-Class Work. cr 8 GAMES. we cis 5 H t % es Laughing. | would be lost. Services ever y ESS S| sas~ Practice in all the Courts.: L. C. LATHAM. {_ AltHam & SKIAW oc, ATTORNEYS*AT-La@, GREED“ ILLE. N.C. John E. Woodard, F.°O. Harding, Wilson, N.C. Greenville, N. C, OODARKRD & HARDING, ATTOKNEYS-AT-LAW, Greenville, N.. Special attention given to collections and setthment of claims. The Charlotte ~ North Carolina’s FOREMOST NEWSPAPER DAILY AND {ndependent and fearless ; bigger and more attractive than ever. it will be an invaluable visitor to the~ home, the office, the club or the work room. THE DAILY OBSERVER. . All of the news of the world. Com- plete Daily reports from the State and National Capitols. $8 a year. THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. A perfect family journal. All the news of the week. The reports from the Legislature a Weekly Ob- Fea- ture. Remember the server. ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR, : Send for sample copies. Ac gt THE OBSERVER, Charlotte, Wee, ALEX. L. BLOW. . Aeoe | ATTORN EYS-AT-LA Wy re Ciyil and Criminal Business Solicited. - Money to loan on approved security. GKEEN VILLE, N. Cu _ HARRY SKINNER WEEKLY. AUTUMN ANATOMY. YOUR-:- ATTENTION IS CALLED 10 THE ELEGANT —LINE OF DRESS GOODS, SILKS, LAGES, Ribbons, Gloves, Mitts, &c., carried by 0. D. GHERRT & GD, —this season. Our Stock of— People Going and Coming These Early Fall Days. O. §.. Joyner went to Tzrboro today. W. F. Barch returned from Wilming- ton Saturday evening. W. F. Morril has taken a position with Ricks, Taft & Vo. E. E. Parker has taken a position as marble cutter with J. C. Lanier & Co, Dr. E. A. Moye left to-day for Suf- folk. Va.. where he contemplates loca- | ting. ry S {4 C) BE . S W.J.Cowell came home from Wil- ° . ees 3 (mington Saturaay evening where he has —AND— | been for several weeks. ° ° | R. Green returned irom Norfolk Sun- Ladies & Childrens | |day evening and says his brother Ed- | ward, who was hurt in the hotel eleva- Briefs That Inform You Whatis Go- ing. Lapg’s. SEPTEMBER SAYINGS. ing on. A good rain would be refresh- New Goods arriving daily at Just a week more of Septem- ber. Don’t fail to see Lang’s new goods now coming in. Court is stil! at work upon the criminal docket. 17th.—Gov. Carr’s fine fresh Butter today. 8S. M. ScHvu.tz. Scuppernongs have struck 10 cents a gallon. ‘SLIPPERS ! * | . . isthe largest and cheapest ever of-| 18anewspaper circulation boom fered in this town, come and see for|\°f ten cents for three months, or yourself and be convinced. free if you cannot pay, journa— BABY CARRIAGES, FURATURE, sco, oes, oo \sends ont ten papars for every » One legitimately paid for, a news- Mattinys, Window Shades and Lace paper filling ‘“‘long felt wants,” or Curtains. is it published for personal glory Goods sold on their merits and Eee ec nan aaa Or, eader. \tor accident ie getting alorg all right. prices made accordingly. J.B. OHERRY & Co. 2 tension at Atlanve Gan H.B.CLARK THEE NEW MAN, HAS OPENED A NEW STORE with a large and attractive stock of tion has come up at every Grand NEW GOODS. |: It is my pleasure to state to the people | of Greenville that 1 have begun the| Dry Goods business here, and respect-| fully solicit a share of your patronage. 16, providing that no saloon keepers, bartenders or profession- (al gambiers shall be eligible fo: 'memtLership in the order. There \was a spirited debate, but it ‘passed by 167 to 32, the requisite soumber being 135. | There was a time when business |men could do without advertising, my stock embraces a full and com-|coaches and tallow candles. Now |hurry gets left. This is a reading SEOs. everything. They want informa— ‘bay. Iguaraatee to giye you as many bar-| ther forms. Pot this in your pipe and take a look through our large Newent advertisers. - ; I guarantee price and quality or but it has gone to return no more. plete line of \every thing is done in a rush and lage. People expect the ne wspa- GENTS FURNISHING GOODS, talons cher uewspaper advertising over all gains for THE CASH, as any concern) #24 smoke it. The most successful Stock. H. B. CLARK. Some people are like preserves; |morrow is comforting. \added another section to artivie This ques-' Our weather bulletin for to— | Riverside Nurseries has com- |menced shipping James grapes. Rev. W. H. Cunninggim died . Raleigh Seturday night. J. C. Cobb & Son have just re- ceived a car load of Bagging aud Ties. Call see them. The Wilmington Star was twenty eight years old Sunday. It grows no dimmer with ege. The yearly meeting at Great Swamp made slim attendance at the town churches Sunday. | Plenty of cornfield peas and \Sweet potatoes haye been made this year, and there is not mucb probability of any body starving. The heat snd drouth is about to do for the town what the town authorities have failed to do—kill out the giass and weeds. j € ge Session for several years past. B-adstreet’s and Dun’s reports for last week show continued general improvement of trade throughout the couutry, and es ,Decially in the East and South. lt can well be said pow that bread is earned by the sweat of the brow. It certainly makes a body sweat to work this weather, aod it has to be done. To THE PuBuiic:—C. J. Rogers having gone off on a_ business trip for a week or ten days, all business connected with The Ger- man Electric Agency will be at- teuded to by John Dobson. Re- GREENVILLE, N. C., Sept. 16,°95.| ESTABLI3HED 1875- S:-N7- Sehultz PORK SIDES &SHOTILDERS YARMERS AND MEKUCHANTS BUY ing their year’s supplies will find their incerest to get our prices befere pua chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete n allits branches. FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR RICK, TEA, &c. lways ut LOWEST MARKET fRI0ES. TOBACLO SNUFF & CIGARS we buy direct from Manufacturers, ena bling youto buy at one profit. A com plete stock of FURNITURE always onhand and sold at prices-tosuit the times. Our goods areall bought and sold for CASH therefore, having no risk to run,we sell at a close margin. Ss. M. SCHULTZ, Greenville. N C THE MORNING STAR. The Oldest Daily Newspaper in North Carolina. The Only Six-Dollar Daily of its Class in the State. Favors Limited Free Coinage of American Silver and Repeal of the Ten Per Cent. Tax on State Banks. Daily 50 cents per month. Weekly $1.00 per year. Ww. H. BARNARD, d. & Prop., Wilmington, NC _ J. L. Starkey & Co. —AGENTS FCR THE— member we guarantee a cure to any one using a German Electric Beit, aud if it does not cure, your will be mooey cheerfully re- fanded. Respectfully, OC. J- Roarers, Gen’! Ag’t. . Money Refunded. ‘Those were the days of stage DRESS GOONS NOTIONS ithe man whodoes not move ina | ’ ’ [per to keep them informed upon ‘tiou in their homes CLOTHING Hence the superiority of s in the State. All are invited to come|Merchants are the most persist- Middle store in Opera House Block. they need lots of sugar to keep | them from getting in a ferment. JoHuN Dobson, Special Agent. it will be ferwarded promptly. lrsts furnished on application: GITY ELECTRIC LAUNDRY, WILMINGTON. N. C. Tiis Laundry does the tinest work in +e South, and prices are low. We nake shipments eyery Tuesday. Bring vour work to our store on Monday and Price