Eastern reflector, 14 September 1892






Job glinting Room
Thoroughly Equipped
The Eastern
B He
THE
Offer.
The Reflector
-TILL-
NEW MATERIAL.
Give Us a Trial Order.
Jones Seminary for
Young Ladies.
Superior educational
location, mineral water, commodious
buildings with Are entire ex
ml
Rev. U. HAMPTON.
All Healing Spring. N- C
INSTITUTE.
For Bi it Sexes.
Term
fins Rates
for
Tuition Marie
Board ft I.
further particulars see. r address.
II.
A school unsafe for boys girl is
rot safe for either sex.
VOL. XI.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
Institute.
X.
The Term tins will open
Monday. Auk. Enrollment last
session in a
Preparatory Course of study in
Music. Elocution, Painting and Draw-
Terms moderate. in
families or with Principal. further
information address,
JOHN
GREENVILLE
FEMALE SCHOOL
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton
Will open a Select School for Young
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on
1893. The full Collegiate
Course taught. The usual
prices for tuition in Greenville will be
charged.
WESLEYAN
THE STATE UNIVERSITY.
What it Does Men.
Within the past two months
over ti thousand letters have been
received Chapel Hill,
what the University offers to
young men Let us answer this
question briefly, for the benefit of
tin- thousands who have not writ-
ten and who do not know how
easily th y may secure within
North the very best op-
for broad and liberal
culture.
TO
EM.
1- Five general courses of I
study from the I
other, and each furnishing a broad
liberal education. There are a
Latin and Greek course, a Latin
course, a Science course, a Liters
course, and a Mathematics
course. Each of
these courses secures a degree,
and requires ordinarily four years
study. The variety of courses
is intended to meet the needs of
various young- men who have
kinds of preparation and I
different purposes in life. each
course the studies of the first two ,
years are fixed, but the studies of
the last two years may be selected
mainly by the student under the
advice of tho Faculty. A student
is thus enabled, not only to select
4- A Reading-room well supplied
with magazines, papers and re-
views.
A Gymnasium, large and well
furnished, in charge of a trained j
instructor in gymnastics.
G- Buildings, nine in number,
affording ample room for
and lecture balls.
Athletic Grounds for base
HOW HE SUCCEEDED.
How a Gritty Farmer got Along With-
out Borrowing.
The following letter to the
is a very
sensible one. There is not a farm-
in the South who will not be
benefited by reading it, and who
cannot, if necessary, achieve the
same success.
one you may meet with
a few exceptions, has something
to say about bard times, tight
h ; c ii -t money, etc., and if you were to
halls fine collections of oil i , , .
. . . , on to the complaint you
portraits of members who have
been eminent in all departments of
life in the State in the nation.
There are sixty portrait.
ball, foot ball, running, tennis and
other athletic games, large, well
graded and well kept.
Literary Societies
to any in Their
would be about as gloomy as the
most of the people appear to be.
I have short, faithful story to
till in paper and hope it may
aid the wise men our State to
arrive at the cause and the remedy
for hard times among the farmers-
In I found myself on a fair
Societies for spec
Elisha Mitchell Scientific Society
and the Club, which
offer unusual facilities for original
research and study.
A Young Men's Christian am
Association, which meets five times
. . , ,. , ,. , mule, a broken down army horse,
each week, is active, and
useful.
The University offers a
based manliness and
self-reliance. There is no system
of spying, nor of demerits, , .
, . , for us to -pitch our crops for the
nor of unnecessary and , , . ,
quantity
a fair set of farming implements,
mostly secondhand, but without a
dollar of credit and just in
cash. It was the last week in
January, and the time bad come
Female Institute.
Va.
Sept. Si, 1832. One of the
thorough schools for young ladies the
South. Twenty-live teachers a nil officers.
Conservatory course In music. One . . f , f .
hundred hoarding pupil a course
twenty States. led to give him general culture.
Special inducements to persons at a ills- ; b t also t f b
I hose seeking the best school . . J ,
for the lowest terms, write for wise selection last two
of this time-honored school to the j so as to fit for some
profession.
dent.
A. HARRIS. D. D.
Staunton. Virginia.
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE
BOUNDED IX 1868.
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
-OF
ant
menu.
situation in view of the mountains.
Reasonable.
Summer School Business Opens
June 16th.
Fall Term begins August 10th.
For Illustrated address.
J. A. M. II. HOLT,
Oak Ridge, N. C.
Louisburg
Female
College,
The next session of this well-known
school will begin September 1st. 1802.
Pure water, no sicklies, thorough in-
Brick building with rooms
Campus of acres well shaded by
gigantic oaks. Conservatory music
teachers. A.-t and teachers
from Academy of Alts. Teachers ex-
perts in their specialties. The whole
Literary Course, Physical Culture and
and fires only
for the Special studies in
Send for to
S. D. BAGLEY. President,
N- C.
2- Six courses of study;
each requiring two years of study
and arranged for tho benefit of
young men who have not the
time or the means to spend four
Elegant buildings and thorough years at college. These courses
Large patronage from all the are intended to supply the
Beautiful and h ., , ,. , ,
possible preparation for business,
for law, for teaching, for farming,
for medicine, for journalism ; and
each course only those
studies essential to the profession
selected.
Three professional courses .
in Engineering, in Medicine and
I Pharmacy, Law. Each of
these courses furnishes special
technical training
and experienced teachers.
4- An unlimited number of
courses. These special courses
are in any subject that the student
desires. He may confine himself
to one subject if ho prefers. A
great many students have taken
special courses Chemistry, fit-
ting themselves to be chemists
while others have taken special
courses in drawing and
or in English or
in Greek, or in Philosophy, or in
History. Any study taught in the
University may be selected for a
special course, and it may be j
sued as long as the student desires-
5- Graduate courses. These are
offered in all studies to graduates
of colleges or universities who
wish special advanced training to
fit themselves better for profession-
life, or for literary careers, or
for teaching in colleges. Five;
students pursued these courses
last year, two ministers, two teach-
and a journalist.
UNIVERSITY HELP AS
WELL AS INSTRUCTION.
It offers time to those whose
property is not now available.
2- It offers sixty scholarships
to needy young men of talent and ,
character.
It offers loans of money to
the very needy who show unusual
talent.
It offers free tuition to the
young men afflicted with bodily
Wilson Collegiate Institute,
WILSON. N. C.
For Ladles. Strictly non-Sectarian.
The begins
Monday, Sept. 1892.
A most thorough
preparatory course of study, with a
course equal to that of an
Female College in the South.
Best facilities for the of Music
and Art. Standard Scholarship
usually high. Healthful location.
and grounds large and pleasantly
situated. Moderate charges.
and circulars on application.
SILAS E. WARREN ,
petty interference with student
life, nor of compulsory pledges.
Tho discipline aims to develop
character through the education
of the conscience.
The University offers a broad
and manly spirit. It places
manliness and humanity
above sectionalism, sectarianism,
and political partisanship. It is a
State institute, governed by the
Legislature, and it invites to its
opportunities of culture all the
youth of the State, of whatever re-
faith, political belief or
geographical section. It is a little
world itself, a sort of
state, where young men of all
classes, conditions, faiths,
and talents mingle freely
together on terms of equality,
breathe the atmosphere of liberal
culture, and learn the
lessons of self reliance, of respect
for the opinions of others and of
love for truth- There is no place
where a young man learns so
quickly that he must stand on his
merits. Geo. T. Winston-
Coming Alright.
Plymouth Beacon.
Hello. Jake.
Good morning, Tom.
How are you going to vote, Jake
For Weaver.
You
Yes I am.
For what I
Because he is the Third party
nominee.
I thought you were a Democrat-
So I was, but yon see the two that
old parties are corrupt
year- I had a small quantity of
corn, about enough with economy
to feed my stock and give my
meal for four or five months.
I Times were hard me with sure
enough. My near neighbor was a lit-
I tie off, but not as much as I
thought him to be at the time- We
were talking over the matter when
he informed me that he was go
to Gadsden the next day to
make some arrangement for credit
to enable him to make his crop,
and asked me to go with him and
see what I could do. We went to
town. It long before my
neighbor had secured his credit
with a note and mortgage, which
ho was to trade out during the
year.
I tried to do the same, but it
was no go- The merchant did not
I know me and I make the
i security they demanded. Well.
I we went back home together, my
neighbor with a smart load of
. con, coffee, dry goods and shoes
j for the children, with a dress for
his wife and a Sunday coat for
himself- My wagon was empty
and I disconsolate, with nothing
to take to my fireside but a heavy
heart and a will to work. I told
my wife all about my failure to
get credit and we talked the, mat-
over until
said she, we have got two
good cows, some hens, and a few
pigs, a good garden, and the best
of health. So we will stay at
home and got our living from our
work. Bless her soul, was the
was the wisest woman, I think,
ever lived on earth, and
I among tho best that went to
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY
lo------
The next session of this School will
begin on Monday. August 1802.
The advantages offered will be
or to those of any previous session. En-
tire guaranteed every patron.
Board can be bad at lower rates than at
any similar school in Eastern Carolina.
We propose to do best work for boys
that has ever been done in the town,
and challenge proof to the contrary.
Imp are as follows, payable
Primary English per mouth.
Intermediate English per month,
You don't mean the Democratic I en. I took her advice, and at the
party end of the year I had seven good
Well, not the party exactly, but bales of cotton, bushels of
there are so many men in it who j corn, saved 1,200 pounds of bacon,
are mean and dishonest. banked snugly bushels of
Then you are going to quit the sweet potatoes ; while my good
2.00
Higher English per mouth. 2.50 j infirmity, to school I
languages each, extra, to -ons n
When you are in town call to see j to sons oil
or write me your homes. j and to young men intending
will be cheerfully If
necessary a competent assistant will lie
employed-
H.
Greenville, N. C. July 1892.
h School of High Grade
LS A D BO
Miss net will re-open her private
school for girls and in Mrs. V. H.
nearly
the Episcopal The Fall
begins Monday, Sept. ends
Friday. Jan. 37th. 1803. The String
Term begins Monday, Jan.
nils Friday, May 28th, 1893.
KM.- MONTH.
Intermediate department. 2.50
Higher English. 3.00
Latin and each,
Elocution lessons per 1.00
Thorough and will
be given according to the beat approved
common s methods.
arrangements for be made for
pupils desiring to come from, the
try. For further address.
Kiss s. Lucy
to me preachers.
It offers advanced
free to the graduates of col-
The University offers an equip
which is a guaranty of good
honest work, its equipment
A of twenty-two
professors and who
represent the culture of twenty of
the foremost American and
Universities.
Five Scientific Laboratories,
on which ten thousand dollars
have been expended recently, sup-
plied with apparatus for training
as wed OS illustration. There
laboratories in Chemistry, Geology
Mineralogy and Physics.
A Library of thirty thousand
volumes, open five hours daily to
all students.
party that has done so much for
this Old North State of ours just
because there are a few corrupt
Democrats
Yep.
Do you belong to the church,
Yep.
What church
Methodist.
Pretty good church, isn't it, Jake
So far as religion goes with me,
it is the best, Tom.
Why you have your name
taken off the church book and go
off and join another church. Jake
For what
Are there no mean men in the
Methodist church, Jake
Yes, Tom, I must say there are
lots of them.
Then that's why y u ought to
leave the Methodist
But the church is alright, it's
only a few of the members that are
bad, and any other church has as
many bad men in it as the
it church has.
Is your political faith more hon-
est than your religious faith
No.
You arc a bad man, Jake-
Why
Because you quit the Democratic
party for no other reason than
are o few bad men in it
but you don't quit the church for
the same reason-
What should I do, then
Why, stay in the Democratic
wife had made from her
eggs, chickens, butter and honey,
and had bought herself a summer
dress and bonnet and cloth enough
to make the for all
the children. And best of all, I
did not owe a man on earth a
cent.
My neighbor who bad the
it I could not get, made eleven
bales of cotton, a small com crop,
no meat, and had bis credit until
be was several hundred dollars in
debt. I met him in Gadsden
the month of January, 1868,
after he bad settled with the mer-
chants and had sold his cotton.
All he had to show for his year's
work was a new buggy that he
really did not need and about
in cash. In 1872 my neighbor
sold out to pay his debts and keep
the sheriff away and moved to
Texas, where he came to want
The same year J had loaned
out and drawing a good interest,
well secured, and I have never
borrowed a cent, or a thing, or
had my name on a merchant's
book for a nickel's credit. I have
often thought and believe most
firmly that the best thing that
ever happened to me was my fail-
to get credit 1867. Nearly
years have passed since I had
my disconsolate ride back to my
humble home from Gadsden. I
have since reared a family of
en children, given the
the country could offer, have
built a large house and barn, and
party, Jake and help drive the bad i have enough, thank the Lord, to
out. keep me and my family in comfort
I hadn't thought about this thing
in that way, but you are right, and
instead of leaving the glorious old
as long as I shall live- I want no
Sub-Treasury and never wanted it
once, and then, thank God. I
party of my father stick to it could not get it. There is not a
and make the bod fellow git Come j farmer Alabama, worthy o the
let's drink. to Cleveland's health name of farmer, who cannot do as
and the success of Democracy. I have done.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
Mr. letter of accept-
was a very decided
that line- It breaks all
precedents and instead of being
n letter of pore and
simple, it is, in addition, a care-
i fully and skilfully prepared law-
plea for tho Republican par-
; general and the Harrison
; administration particular,
j like other able pleas it is
impose on who are
familiar, who will not
; take the trouble to familiarize
themselves with the other side.
It shows, too. that the stories
which have from time to time been
told of Mr. Harrison's intentions
j to individually boss tie
j can side of the campaign were all
the solid truth. The
intention has become a fact, and
j to-day Mr. Harrison is the ac-
boss of the
can National committee, which is
conducting the campaign accord-
to his orders. It is known
here that the publication of the
letter of acceptance this week was
directly against the wishes of
Chairman Carter and a number of
the working members of the coin-
i they wanted it held back
at least a month, but boss Benji-
ordered it given out.
I en it
Mi. attempt to dodge
the Force bill issue such a way
I as to leave the impression upon
those who favor that outrage upon
Constitutional liberty that he is still I
with he really is. heart
i and at the same time
make those opposed to it believe
that he has abandoned it. is like
most efforts of a similar
supremely ridiculous, and meets j
only with moaning smiles
; quarter. Democrats and Re-
alike know just where
Mr- Harrison stands upon this
question ; that, if he be re-elected
and the next House of
be controlled by the Re- i
publicans, he will in his first mes-
sage to the Fifty-third
sic that a bill similar to the no-
Lodge bill of the Fifty-
first Congress be passed. There
is only way for this country to
escape the horrors of the
bill, which in section of the
would be as bad as a vis-
of the cholera, that is.
to defeat Benjamin Harrison and
Republican party-
Mr. Blaine's letter, made public
the day after that of Mr. Harrison
fell like a wet the
candidate's It
nullified about half of Mr. Harri-
son's letter by advising tho Re-
publicans to ignore all issues, ex
three, in the campaign, and
worse than all, for Benjamin, the
his own
nowhere mentioned Mr. Harrison's
name- No Republican with whom
I have talked has a doubt about
this slight to the head of the Re-
publican ticket being deliberate
intentional on the part of Mr-
Blaine. It is a slight, too, that
Mr. Harrison not resent at
this time ; but you may be sure
that he will try to after
tho election, whichever way it
goes, by jumping on the
Republicans wherever he finds
them-
The milk in the con-
the application of the
man Line Steamship company for
American registry for two of their
best steamers, which was granted
at the last session of Congress,
was exposed when tho bids for
carrying mails, under the
mail subsidy act of billion dollar
Congress, were this week opened
by Mr. Wanamaker. The In man
Line, under its new American
International
Company, of Philadelphia
adopted, solely with the idea of
getting a slice of this subsidy, was
the only company that put in a
bid for the European service,
I the only company that proposes
to carry the mails in vessels of the
first class. It put in two bids, and
Mr. Wanamaker says they will both
be accepted. Each of them is-for
a weekly service and in each
compensation asked is per
mile. Multiply the number of
miles across the Atlantic by and
j the result by and a sum of
I money is piled up that fully ex-
plains the of the
this company to charge the
flag over such of their ships as
they could get subsidized so high-
Some people have said that
J Mr. Wanamaker had some very
near friends who were allowed to
purchase stock in the
company at a nominal
price, but, of course, that had no
Influence in the deal.
Representative of
Mississippi, is in Washington.
Be says the Democrats will not I
lose a single electoral vote in the ,
and that the par- ;
will not have as many members
in the next as they have the
present House. He. figures on a
Democratic majority of between
forty and fifty in the next
Cheap Excursion Rates to Washington. ;
Wilmington Messenger.
The cheap to Wash
D. Cm by way of the At-
Coast Line, are dealing a
great deal of interest, and the j
are that a big crowd of j
people in and around
and elsewhere on the
take advantage of the low rates to
take a trip to the National Capital,
to Baltimore. Philadelphia.
New York and other cities
It has already been announced
that the cheap rates are offered on
account of the encampment of
Grand Army of the Republic at
Washington, but. of course, the
excursion rates offered to the
general public as well as G. A. R
men. Tickets will be on sale from
September 13th to 20th inclusive,
and will be good returning until
including the 10th of October.;
The rate for the round trip has
been fixed at one fare, and as there
has been some inquiry in regard
to the matter, we arc authorized
to state that passengers will have
the privilege to stop over at all
points beyond pro
on their journey at any time
the limit of the ticket ex j
pares. This will give a splendid
opportunity to those who desire to
stop over and visit the battle fields
along the including the
battlefields around Richmond and
at Stony Creek, Station.
Five Forks, Run, Lee's
Mills. Run.
Hill. Seven Pines,
Chancellorsville, the Wilderness .
and other historic spots.
The cheap rates by the
Line, which is the shortest and I
quickest route north, will afford a
good opportunity to merchants for
an economical trip to the northern
markets. The service will be
double daily with through Pull-
man palace buffet sleeping ears,
and tho will just as com-
as one could desire.
OF BURKE.
Landmark.
Mr. R. A- Cobb. of Burke.
nominee for Lieutenant Gov
is getting his record pretty
well ventilate about now. along
with Exum, Dr. Durham
and Col. Long. The
has examined the records in the
office of the Clerk of the Federal
Court at and the exam-
reveals the fact that Mr.
Cobb has figured in the Federal
Court a number of time- in the
capacity of defendant At the
October term. 1878. of the Federal
Court at Mr- Cobb was
then storekeeper and ganger at
tho distillery of N. Huffman Co.
in Burke county, was indicted in
six different cases for violating
sections and
of the internal revenue laws of
the United States. The
was that Cobb. while stole-
keeper ganger, made
to defraud the govern
by the removal of distilled
spirits on which tho had not
been I being ail officer of
government not reporting the
violations of the law aiding and
abetting the removal of the
spirits ; retailing without license,
transporting empty spirit
casks with revenue stamps on
them. These indictments were
found at October term, 1878, and
at October term. 1879, a pros,
was entered. In 1883 Mr. Cobb
was a special deputy
and at May term of the Federal
Court of that year he was indict
ed at Asheville for making, pro
and swearing to false ac-
counts against the government.
As special deputy collector he
was allowed his expenses by the
government. Items his ac-
count were per day for board
in cents bus fare at
Morganton. The per day
board bill seems to have caused
the trouble and the indictment.
The case was to
ville at October term. 1883, certain
witnesses having left the country,
a pros, was entered.
This is the record of Mr. Cobb
in tho revenue service. Along
about the time Cleveland was
he turned Democrat- From
tho above record it would be fair
to assume that had he remained
in the revenue service a while
longer he would had landed in
Albany penitentiary.
1st.
gents in Advance.
Sow is the time to subscribe
OUR HOME
pas- away
spot.
wonder who will come and
In- deserted out.
tin- who stand
And think home i-
VI hen we have gone Into that laud
Where parted
Oh. who will walk beneath tile
the pine.
To dream again little dream,
When not your- nor mine
Will my favorite tree,
down I In- mossy
The things -11 to you and me.
I they destroy ally
Who-r name will he on yonder door
Who-e pictures deck the
Whore feel pi roughly on the floor
VI your dear falls
And when I he yearn to awing;
Will all we love are read.
i I any backward bring
The have said
I hope the down there will
All old familiar time.
When in a happier home than tub
We talk all our own.
oh. thin little home is sweet,
Each corner i- no
Can Heaven without it he complete;
I would that Heaven were here.
DO YOU EVER TRY.
A mixture of alum,
vinegar and water for mosquito
bites t
Salt or ashes for removing dis-
coloration from coffee cups or
other dishes
Cleaning tho lint from a clothes
wringer with a cloth saturated in
kerosene
Alcohol to remove grass stains
from the children's white aprons
skirts, etc.
Pulverized chalk and ammonia
for removing stains from marble
basins and closet bowls
To clean a gilt picture frame by
using a sponge wet with hot
spirits of wine or oil of turpentine,
then leaving it to dry I
To cook onions, cabbage or
nips without having the odor es-
cape to all of the If
have, then you probably fail-
ed, even if you had a dish of vine-
gar on the stove.
To do over the much used baby
carriage, staining with equal parts
of solution of extract of
and solution of saffron in diluted
spirits of wine, with a solution of
tin thrown in for tone i Good
Government Ownership cf Railroads,
Wilson.
Now the first thing the Weaver
propose is for the government
to own the railroads. Now what
is government Merely, an
agency for the transaction of our
business.
has nor can it ever own any-
thing- In a man
owns the Wash-
I replied,
own It belongs to us. When
they come to you and talk about
owning thorn,
you say pshaw talk about
We are the govern-
and it is ours. There is only
two ways to get these railroads to
buy or to steal them- My friend
would say,
them, but I will be plain and say
If I could put on a black-
board the number of miles of road
and the price per mile, there's
hardly a man in Nash county who
could tell what amount would
be. I can't see how putting upon
our people, our children and our
children's children such a load as
that can afford relief.
We have had some experience
in North Carolina in owning rail
roads. a red-headed Irish-
man came to mo from Now York
and wanted to buy the Western
North Carolina Railroad. I con-
tho General Assembly in
extra session and they said to me i
it, Jarvis, sell it
To-day that road and the whole
Danville is in the
hands of a receiver,
they were in the hands of the
best talent to secured. And
yet our party COl
to us and say let's bank-
property and, saddle our
with this tremendous debt
In Warren this same man said
men who own these roads are
do you want to them richer
Do you want to bankrupt us to
help them f Now those roads
cease to do want us to
pay them a good price for
tax ourselves to run them V
And he not o word.
AN APPEAL TO REASON.
Kin-ton Free Press.
The asks the Third
party people to make a careful in-
and see if they can't
realize wherein they are mistaken
in their course. know you do
not believe much you see this
paper, but ask you to investigate
for yourselves.
yourself seriously, if it is
not possible that your leaders are
fallible mistaken And hero
we wish yon to reflect on what
good has come to you from the
advice you have already acted
from them. For instance, did their
advice to you to hold your cotton
last fall prove profitable to you, or
did you lose by following it
Have the other advice they have
given you. as a rule, proved to
your advantage or disadvantage I
Marion Butler The
karma- advised you last
fall to hold your cotton- You
lost by following that advice.
They were mistaken. Now we
ask you, is it not possible they
are making a mistake in advising
you to support a Third party.
Don't unreasonable, but think
for yourselves
Reflect and see if any possible
good can come from deserting the
Democratic party and turning the
State over to the Republicans.
The only result possible from tho
Third party movement is to turn
the State over to tho Republicans,
who will certainly put out a State
ticket
You have been prejudiced
against Grover Cleveland, but ho
is a good and a true patriot.
He is battling for the true inter-
of the people, and you will
recognize this fact sooner or later
as soon as you recover from
blind prejudice. haven't
space now to discuss this line
further, but we do ask you not to
convict Grover Cleveland and the
Democratic party without giving
them bearing. We appeal to you
in common justice to listen to a
candid and fair discussion. It is
possible you may yet brought
to realize the fact that Tho Pro-
Farmer and National
Economist liable to be
en. You have lost in a of
instances so far by following their
advice, and it may be that they
giving yon bad advice now.
We believe they are-
BOY.
A jolly boy.
A boy full of vim.
A boy who scorns a lie.
A boy who will never smoke.
A boy with some to
A boy who takes tho bath-
tub.
A boy who is proud of his big
sister.
A boy who thinks hard work no
disgrace.
A boy who does chores without
grumbling.
A boy who believes that an ed-
is worth while.
A boy who plays with all his
might during playing hours.
A boy who listens not to unclean
stories from any one.
R. J.
DENTIST,
X. C
Office in Skinner Building, upper
opposite Photograph Gallery
P. I,.
DENTIST.
I AS. L.
KY-AT-LAW.
Greenville, N. C
Prompt attention to business.
at Tinker Murphy's old stand.
JARVIS
BLOW,
ALEX. L.
X. O.
in all the Courts.
Greenville, N.
I. A.
TYSON,
AT
N. C.
Prompt attention given to collection
ii. long,
Attorney-at-Law,
c.
and careful attention to
Collection solicited.
L. C. LATHAM. MARRY
SKINNER,
n. c.
U . JAMES.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N C.
Practice in all the Collections
a Specialty.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Es-Gov. Jarvis
Coke will
-f county on Tuns lay
C 20th.
and Notwithstanding committee H. C was
in cut who. Sf .
.,, IO A
J .
W,.
N. mini matter.
given
of pt-
NA TICKET
CLEVELAND.
Of Hew York.
ADLAI E. STEVENSON,
Of Illinois.
CHARLES B AYCOCK.
ROBERT B. GLENN.
1st Dist.-L-L. SMITH.
W. A. B-
of Beaufort.
STATE TICKET.
ELIAS
of
A. DAL
of
FOB
COKE .
f Wake.
DONALD W.
of Wake.
R. M.
of
B BOW.
J. C
of Johnston.
FRANK OSBORNE,
of
GEORGE A.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
JAMES-
I. K- W
RICHARD W.
REGISTER
HENRY HARDING.
President Harrison
to the public bis
am-. After
and ricing that the
is prosperous pro-
with a plea to the American
people to elect him again to
Instead of an outline, of the
policy to pursued him it is
simply a stump speech given out
lot the purpose of trying to catch
votes. It is evidently far inferior
to what ought to be expected from
a candidate for such an exalted
position. Benjamin will have
necessity for writing letters of ac-
the future-
Bight here the season when
our farmers could be Baring
and tons of good hay. we sec
quantities of the Northern
Western article being shipped
here. Is it not the
In re were
out t- h-
for our Southern farmers
to abusing the people of the
North and West for having all the
money, when they won't make
their supplies at home but look to
the far away markets to furnish
them Learn to be producers
instead of all consumers you
will have more money.
report Mint
that they conic not ., road in
as thoroughly as they wished,
fully seven I order issued, ., th
Tho
. i
and Hon. J. Bell, State
Senator Clay county, at the
speaking hero on last Wednesday-
The Cleveland and
Can- flag x feet was raised to
tho top of the foot pole at
noon, at o'clock tho speak-
commenced the Court
House
The first speaker, Mr. Mason,
was introduced by G- B. King,
Esq., of the Cleveland
and Carr Club. Mr. Mason spoke
for an hour and minutes,
gave his hearers the
racy and He
touched upon all tho issues, con-
fronting us and gave s points
in support of the Democratic side,
showing that none of the reforms
agitated could be
CONFEDERATE VETERANS AS-
OF PITT COUNTY,
CAROLINA.
FOB
JOHN FLANAGAN.
DR- WM. E DARKEN
J. B-
Tho Democratic Congressional
nominees in this State, are as fol-
First district, W- A. B-
Second. F-A.
Third. B. F. i B. H-
H- A-
Sixth. S- B Alexander; Seventh.
JohnS- Eighth-
H- Bower; Ninth. W. T- Craw
lord. Messrs Woodard and Bow-
are the only new men-
Now Orleans was the scene of
three prize fights last week, one
Monday night, one Tuesday night
and one Wednesday night. Most
interest centered in tho last fight
which was between the former
champion. John Sullivan, and the
present champion. James
Sullivan was severely
Corbett came out victor without a
scratch in the twenty-first round.
There are many people who be-
that Marion Butler is hired
by the Republican party to take
the steps ho is now pursuing to
overthrow the Democratic party in
North Carolina and give the State
over to Harrison and the
cans. How does this strike yon
as proof or substantiation of such
a belief The
During our visit to Mount Olive
last Friday we mot a gentleman
who us that he saw Ma-
Butler open a letter a few-
days ago which contained a check
of issued by National
headquarters. Our
was heretofore a strong
Third but since Friday
has become a convert to
racy.
This country has been in right
much of a cholera scare for the
last few weeks. That scourge has
been raging in sections of Europe,
and several vessels have brought
cases right to the door of our
American ports. Only the strict-
est quarantine has kept it from
getting a foot hold New York,
and it may yet break out- There
should be every precaution taken
against it.
The Republican
held in Raleigh last
day nominated D. M. of
Iredell. for Governor; J. M.
Moody, of Wayne, for Lieutenant
Governor ; Rufus Amis, of Gran-
ville, for Secretary of State ; II. C-
Dockery, of for Treas-
E. C- Parish, of Guilford.
for Superintendent of Public In
; H- L. Grant, of
for T. It.
Attorney W S. Ball, of
Guilford, for Associate Justice
Supreme Court; W. L- Norwood.
of Haywood. for Judge of 12th
District.
It became around that
the Third candidates were
going to speak at May's Chapel.
Beaver Dam township,
day afternoon, and Maj. Latham
went out to reply to them. About
CO to men gathered there to hear
them, but the J candidates failed to
show- up. Their only
there was Mr. A. J.
who off for awhile but
never got out anything except
abuse of the Democratic party.
Maj. Latham took the stand after
him, threw out Democratic doc-
straight from the shoulder,
wiped up the earth with the Third
party remnant and came home
leaving old Beaver Dam solid for
Democracy.
It has for some time been an
open secret that the leader of the
Republican and Third parties had
entered into a combination in this
county for the purpose of defeat-
tho Democratic party, now
there be no possible doubt of
it. At the meeting of the Board
of County last
week, when they were considering
tho appointments of Registrars
and Inspectors of Election, the
Chairman of the Republican com-
and tho Chairman of
Third party committee, presented
petitions for the appointment of
two inspectors, and what was
amusing about tho whole matter
was that of the twenty-two names
on each petition they were
cal, except in two solitary
Neither of the petitions con-
the name of a single Re-
publican. We wonder what our
Republican friends will say of this
neglect of their right of
Seeing that it was a fusion
the Board of Commissioner very
properly ignored both petitions
made their own selections.
needed a
looked for through any other
source than the Democratic party.
J. D- Cox, Esq., member of the
last Legislature and ex President
of the county Alliance, introduced
Mr. Boll, who spoke about an
hour. It was his first speech of
the campaign, but he proved him-
self master of the situation and
thoroughly posted on tho topics
under discussion. He was State
Lecturer of the Al last year,
but was asked to resign at the
late meeting in Greensboro be-
cause ho was too good a Demo
to suit Third party
in control of that body. He
thoroughly exposed Marion But-
duplicity and also the turn-
coat course of the
Farmer. He spoke of the
faction expressed by both of these
at the ticket nominated by
the Democratic convention in May.
The Farmer under
flaming head lines and crowing
roosters declared it a great victory
for the Alliance, and Butler up
near the close of July was ad-
the ticket and declaring
it would be suicidal to the inter-
of the Alliance and the State
to bring out a Third party ticket-
Now both of these had
right over were doing all in
their power to defeat the ticket
they had helped to
May. which meant giving the
State back into the hands of the
Republican party if their
pose can be accomplished. He
said he was an good an Alliance-
man as ever, and deeply regretted
that designing men and office
seekers had been allowed to con-
it and break down its power
and influence for good. Ho said
it was folly to think any reforms
could be accomplished by turning
against the Democratic party.
Stay the party and light for re-
forms within the ranks. Mr. Bed
several witty illustrations in
his speech and frequently had the
audience roaring with laughter.
These were two just such speech-
es as Pitt county needed left
their impress for good. A few la-
dies were present and at the close
of the speeches presented,
through Mr. A. L. Blow, beautiful
to each of tho speakers.
aid
in
an
He
Sled l. ii i .
., v. J L,
ii i v an
order issued by the Board. Both
i ts and copies f too
orders and reports ordered s it to
tho Boards of Supervisors the
respective townships.
J. H. Evans, Haddock, H.
C and others
that the Board order the
Sheriff to summon a and lay
out a public road to begin near
Run on Red Banks road
and run out to the beginning f a
now road near W. P. Mills.
to tho Board the
same had been legally
due notice given tho order
was made accordance with tho
M. C. Cotton
to retail liquor at Marlboro for six
months from July 1st.
The following listed taxes for
1392
Fleming, R. M.
Kennedy, J. Johnson, J. E-
H. and wife,
Mary Lucas, J. M. H- M.
Rogers, Z- D-
Swot Mills, Jack-
son W. F- Pittman, P L.
James Tingle, William
Barney, S. H. Taylor and Wash-
Chapman.
W. Cox
J. L. Boss, Mary Cannon, W.
S. Little, W. W.
Susan E.
Smith, H A.
Boyd.
A- Tyson and
E. S. Porker. r .
and F- Fleming.
Joyner.
Jen-
L. Nelson.
J. Nobles,
Tho following were appointed
Registrars and Inspectors of an
election to held on the 8th of
November
DAM.
J. Anderson. In-
F. Allen, G- T. Tyson,
George Redmond
Peyton.
A- Thigpen. In-
B. F. Shelton, W. H.
Rives, Virgil Robinson, Arnold
Spain.
S. Keel.
T. Cherry- S- M. Jones.
It. D. Whitehurst, James H-
Bryan.
D. Keel In-
W. J. Little, W. H.
W. A. Chance, Benjamin
Chance.
Proctor, J.
Grimes. Alex Grimes,
Armstrong-
L. Harrington,
D. Cox. J. C
Lawhorn, George W- Daniel
Hatch.
Sal i
This
H.
mat, and A. Blow
secretary.
Co
perm
n zed by elect-
in chair
temporary
appointed to perfect B. Loft
CLUB AT GRIFTON.
At of a number of
sens of
held at Sept 1893, a
Democratic club was
. of one hundred and fifty
members.
officers are as Dr.
W.
A Forbes and C-
O.
A.
A.
Randolph.
Following names for officers to
hold until tho first Monday in
March 1893, reported commit-
tee H. Spain, President, W.
G- Vice President, C A.
Randolph, Treasurer, H. A. Blow,
Secretary.
to revise Roster of
Pitt county troops, IT. A. Blow,
B. P. Sugg and t Greene.
Committee to
D. II. James, F. Sugg
and O. Smith.
Permanent G. F.
Evans, Robert Carney, S. A. Dud-
J. and John B.
Kilpatrick.
Committee to extend thanks to
citizens of Wilmington for
to our old comrades at
G. B. King and
James L. Fleming.
Committee to memorialize the
next Legislature for a better ad-
of pensions to soldiers
L. C Latham, T. J. Jarvis and B.
J. Wilson.
Picnic at X Roads,
Saturday, October 1892.
Committee on be
appointed
Committee be
appointed
Regular meeting of this
to be on first Monday in
March every year.
Every person desiring to be-
come a member of this body will
please hand in his name.
Regiment to tho
Tho object of this organization
is to perpetuate the names of all
men of our county who served in
the Confederate Armies. Lot us
make a success of it.
H. Spain. Pies.
H. A. Blow, Sec'y.
The Republicans as was
met in Raleigh on the 7th
inst. and nominated a full State
one has doubted this
be done who has heretofore
been familiar with that party. The
few that have opposed nominating
a ticket have only done so because
they wanted to encourage
among the Democrats. All
Third can see now that
they have only been duped by
their Republican friends it
will be manly them now to
show these Republicans that they
are conscious of this by returning
to the Democratic party and fight
tho same old enemy they have
been fighting for the past twenty-
five years- Dr. Exum is reported
saying that he had telegraphed
S. Otho Wilson that he need not
make any more appointment for
him if the Republicans nominated
a ticket. It is to be hoped this is
true and that his example will be
followed by Butler and others
who are among the more
gent of the Third party leaders.
White men come back into the
Democratic party and let all of
fight OUT common enemy.
At the recent Republican
Convention held hero for tho
purpose of appointing delegates to
tho State Convention. Mr. C- M-
Bernard. Republican elector, ad-
dressed the Convention in a
speech of bitter denunciation of
tho Democratic party. Among
the many epithets that he applied
to it were such as thieves, ballot
box dishonesty,
oppressors, Ac. He ad-
vised the to go home and
organize their Harrison clubs and
when the time comet
We supposed that the
tho advice and we have no
doubt but what they will be ready
to stand by the Republican
on the Nth of November. Judging
from the mutterings we hear, both
loud and deep, their leaders had
better stand from under in their
attempt to deliver the vote
according to the terms of barter
and sale that they have made
with tho Third party.
Moore, a colored lawyer,
the Convention that it was best
for the Republican party to have
full and complete tickets in the
field from President down to the
lowest advice was loud-
applauded and seemed to be the
sentiment of those composing the
Convention. Tho Convention was
composed of C white men and
MEETING.
N. C, Sept. 82-
The Board of Commissioners of
Pitt county met this day. present
C- Dawson, chairman, S. A. Gain
ex, Fleming. C- V. New-
ton and T. E. Keel.
The following orders were
drawn for
Winifred Taylor Margaret
Bryan 3.00, Alex Harris Do, H.
D. Smith 2.00. Daniel Webster 2-00.
Martha Nelson 2-00, Lydia Bryan
2-00, Jacob 1.50, Susan
Briley Nancy 3.00.
Susan Norris Lucinda Smith
1.50. Patsy L Harriett
Williams 2.00. Henry Harris 2.50.
Emily Edwards 3.00. Benjamin
Crawford 1.50. Folly Adams, 2.50
Smith 1-50. Easter Vines
1.50, George Turner 2.50. Mrs.
Asa Knox Kenneth
son 2.00.
The following orders for general
purposes were issued
E. B. T. A.
Thigpen O. Hooker 3-25, R
W. Smith R. W. Smith 8.40.
E. B. G. W.
Edmondson 7.20, H. P.
82.59. Wm. House 2-88, O- W.
1.20. B- S- Sheppard 2.39.
Dr. B. T. Cox J. H. Man
8.10, Elias James Sher-
man Foreman Henry Bennett
1.75, Wiley Clark 3.00. Lewis Ives
2.70, T. C Bryan 51-1, John A.
3.60, W. B-
W. B. Moore 1.00.
J. A- K. Tucker 2.60,
J. A K. Tucker W H.
T. R. Hodges 154-47,
I. Fleming 37.45. N. R. Cory
1.00, W. P. W. F.
J. B. Bullock 6.00,
D. H. James 11.12, D. H. James
300.00. D. J. Holland 3.71, E- A.
M. G. P. P.
Johnson 2.00, C P- 3.33
Henry Brown 10.00, J- B.
k Co. W. W. Harper k Co.
743.75, James Brown. 1.00.
A petition from certain citizens
in township, asking
for the sum of if dollars to be
appropriated to bridges in Fork
Swamp, was granted and a sum
not exceeding that amount
mended to be paid when lumber
is furnished labor performed
at said bridges.
Upon petition liquor license of
FALKLAND.
Registrar. H- Smith.
R. King, B. P.
Oscar Johnson, Ed- S- Harris.
R. Davis.
A. Barrett, W. T. Joyner,
J. S. Bennett, Jack Pitt.
Registrar AV. L. In-
-O. AV. Harrington, B.
S. Moses King, S. P.
Humphrey-
Registrar--- B- Little.
tors-AV. G- J. R- Over-
ton, James Holiday, Samuel
Daniel.
SWIFT
E. Powell. In-
Slaughter, C P.
Moore, Arch Cox, Henry Hardy.
S. A. Gainer and Leonidas
Fleming, committee on dam, re-
ported the work completed and
that they had received tho dam-
Balance duo on the was
and they recommended
that an order for that amount be
issued.
The tax list for 1892
made out according to law, it was
ordered that the same be turned
over to the Sheriff for collection
and that the Clerk make the proper
endorsement thereon.
DAY.
September 6th 1892.
The following is-
sued for general county
Walter Nettle 2.00. AV. M. Kin-
19.00, C 16.00, B. S.
Sheppard 2.00, B. S. Sheppard
Henry Sheppard 2.00,
Abe 2.00. George
2.00; C. Dawson 7.60. C V. New-
ton 6.60, Leonidas Fleming 19.50,
T. E. Keel 9.40, A- Gainer 10.80-
and Swift Creek
Stock Law H.
James 16-00.
Greenville Stock Law Territory
D. H James
The Board then proceeded to re-
vise tho Jury List accordance
with law.
are
n, Pres., W.
1st A. P., E. Pittman, 2nd P.
L. 3rd V. P., F. L.
Ives, See., J. K. Leery. Treas.
After tho of officers the
President, Mr. Fred Harding and
E. J. Brooks made short speeches
to the club.
The following elected as
executive V. A. Bonn-
tree, AV. F. Harper, C P.
E. A. Johnson, and C. Dawson.
The following committee of ad-
was appointed by the
E. C Spier. E. F. Harper,
Albert Fred Hard-
and G. W. Hellen.
The following delegates were
elected to D.
Calvin Tucker. Dr. P. B. Loftin.
J. E. Pittman, C L. Bonn
tree, J. C. Koonce and E. C- Spier.
Upon motion in the event any
of tho delegates failing to go the
President was empowered to
point his
The President appointed E- J.
Brooks, Fred Harding and C P.
a committee to a
speaker for our next meeting.
Upon motion the club agreed to
meet Saturday 24th of September,
1892, at o'clock P. M.
Upon motion the club called a
meeting on Tuesday night, 13th at
o'clock.
No farther business being before
tho house the minutes were read
and upon the proceedings
were ordered to be sent to the Kins-
ton Free Press, Greenville
and Lamp Light.
F. L. Ives, Secy.
9-i
Ladies
RH
Mil
completed my
N. I am opening
a of
MERCHANDISE,
cordially fie to call
and examine my
GOODS, BOOKS, NOTIONS,
Ac,
Our motto i Standard Goods at Re.
Prices for
Examine my stock before buying
elsewhere. If the goods and prices do
not unit charge nothing to snow them.
Country produce taken In exchange ,
for goals, n.
VA JOTTINGS.
Editor have
been quite a number of revivals in
this part of the country recently,
mainly Baptist churches and
great good seems to have been
done. Large numbers have pro-
fessed faith joined the differ-
churches. A grand meeting
closed at Hebron church a few days
It was conducted by Rev. J.
E. Hutson, the same preacher that
conducted the recent meeting at
Boy-kins. Quite a number joined
Hebron church and baptized
yesterday near Hailey's bridge.
Your correspondent attended one
day during the meeting and thinks
there were at least people
sent that day. tho church being
crowded and quite a number sat
in their vehicles outside at the
windows.
After Service we rode op a mile
so to see sometimes
called Church. This is
the oldest church in the county
and one of tho oldest the State,
having built in colonial
days. While it has undergone
at different times the or-
brick and timbers in
it yet and in good state of
stumbled across an
account a few days ago. when
preacher Asbury, one of the
of Methodism, had preached
in the building in 1801. It was
originally an Episcopal church.
The old graveyard is near
gazed on the tombstones ft
feeling of sadness stole over us to
reflect on the shortness of life and
think that those who had
shipped in this old church
gone to the majority.
There is not much to
to report this week we are glad to
state.
A colored girl. Rob s
daughter, very suddenly a
few days ago, from what is
not known- Tho fa wont off
visiting and left alone to take
care of the house, she being about
K years When they returned
she was lying in the yard dead but
no marks of violence on per.
Tho Methodist church is being
plastered adding very much to its
appearance.
R- D- Moore, of Franklin, was
in town one day last week.
Hay riding seems to be a favorite
pastime and the young people
around have been in-
in it these pleasant moon-
light nights.
A fawn came up in town Friday
being chased by and Mr.
James tried to get a shot at it but
failed.
Dissolution Notice.
The heretofore, existing
W, II. Brawn Hooker,
trading at Drown A Hooker, is hereby
dissolved by mutual All who
arc Indebted to old will please
settle S. T. Hooker.
W. B. BROWN,
s. T.
July
I will business the
stand and solicit the liberal patron-
age bestowed upon the old firm.
consent will continue under the old style
of Brown ft Hooker,
continue as salesman.
Mr. Brown will
T.
Notice.
State In the
County. i Superior Court.
Eliza Stocks, J. T. Alien wife Min-
Allen. T. Allen wife
Pattie Stocks, Cora Stocks, William
Stocks. Annie Stocks, Clint. Stocks,
stocks and Stocks, the
sis by their friend T.
Allen.
Home association, defendants.
The defendant above named U hereby
notified to be and appear before the
Judge of our Superior Court, a court
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the
Court House in on 2nd
Honda; after the Honda; of
it the 19th day of September,
answer the complaint which
will be deposited in the of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Bald
within the first three days of said
let said defendant
that if .- said com-
plaint the. time by law
the plaintiffs apply to the court for
the relief demanded in the complaint.
Given under my hand and -real of said
court, this day of August, 1892.
K. A. HOVE,
t Superior Court.
Dissolution.
The of Culley mid Edmonds is
hereby by mutual consent.
Will pay the
same to Herbert Edmonds.
Culley.
Edmonds.
It gives pleasure to announce to
our customers I will continue the
business at the Every com-
fort and convenience will be found in
my shop. First-class -have and haircut
can be had all times. the
public for past I it a con-
of the same.
WALTER'S
aw-
Evans Street, in rear of Dr. D. U James
office
N. C.
I take great pleasure In Informing my
and the public generally
u now open. A successful career of
is a proof of the satisfaction I always give.
My Work Speaks for Itself.
Call i ally and examine,
to gum your and
merit favor. am
respectfully,
THOMAS WALTER
Peanut Pickers and
Cleaners.
Will pick and clean bushels of
Peanuts a day. Manufactured by Card-
well Machine Co., Richmond. Va.
Action for Divorce.
Henry i Pitt County,
Sheppard j In Superior Court.
Defendant above named, is here-
by fled to be appear before the
Judge of our Superior Court, Court
to be held for the County of at
Court Mouse In on the 8th
Monday before 1st Monday of March
and answer the
will be in the office of the
the Superior Court of said
Count;, within three of.
said term, and let
take notice that if she fall to answer the
complaint within the time required
by law the will apply to the
Court for the relief demanded the
complaint.
Hereof fail not.
i; under my and seal of said
Court, this day 1892.
E. A.
Clerk Superior Court
TO
-----If you want to save----
in the of a and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
X. C.
Agent for Carolina,
who Is now handling from
manufacturers, as
GRADE PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship and
and endorsed by nearly all the
United
Made by Paul O. M. is at Ibis
time one of the mechanics mid In-
of the day. Thirteen new
patents on tills high Piano-
Also the BY A EVANS
which has been sold by
him for the part -is rear hi the eastern
part of tills State ii to this has
given entire Tho Upright
Piano he sold at from
1904
f eases.
Also PARLOR ORGAN
from to in solid or Oak
cases-
Ten years in music
him lo handle
nothing but Standard goods and he does
not hesitate to say that he sell any
musical instrument about per
than other agents are now offer-
T to all banks in Eastern
Sometimes object to a
and every one ob-
to a Bad Cigar.
You can smoke
OLD
VIRGINIA
CHEROOTS
with perfect satisfaction
both to yourself and
friends, as their aroma is
equal to the Best Cigar.
for TEN CENTS.
DEALERS IN
beg to announce to our many
friends and customers that we
have the largest and best,
stock of Goods to be our
town. And while we are not sell-
at cost we beg lo announce
that we think we and will
any prices on the
lines of by us. We
throw out no baits to entrap
To one and all we extend
a cordial welcome to our
will be pleased to serve you with
any goods in the following lines
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions,
Furnishing Goods, Pants
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware,
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery,
Glassware. Groceries, deg.
White Oil cents per gallon,
and Willow Ware, Harness,
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools
Plows of improved makes.
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting,
Oil Children's Carriages,
and the largest and best selected
stock of FURNITURE ever kept
in our town. When in need of
anything in our various line try us.
Yours, anxious for trade.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN
He Q,
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT
N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed strictly
FIRST-CLASS COW PAIN
At lowest current rates.
AM FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
hi w i ii i ii
ESTABLISHED 1833.
Headquarters for the following lines of
load Ms Pork. Dome .
Car Meat.
Car load All grilles.
Bread Powder.
Ca cs Soup.
Cases ilia inly Cherries reaches.
Pull line Case
inn Boxes
no
M Gail Ax
Mills
Barrels Dinners
Paper Sacks, Cigarette. Ac.
GREENVILLE. C.
For Accident Insurance by the year in one ox
the best Companies in existence, see
Whichard.





V-d
-TO-
Overflow
GOODS.
THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
Warm days, cool nights.
The fall crop Is line.
Early are ripe.
have been plentiful season.
Our had line
The New Home Sewing Machine
Mat Bros.
these warm
Personal.
Mr. Andrew Joyner has sick a
few days, but Is now out again.
Died.
On the morning of the 8th
lust, while
I darkness yet hung over the earth, the
Maj. wife and hi young- of U
daughter are eh with fever. h Mr. and Mia. John
and took away youngest
girl of
several days she
been very -irk. and many prayers
w v she might be spared to
her pa hut our kind
Father in Ii- wisdom thought it best to
Misses Rouse and Bogart here call the little one from earthly home
l d. I. A. Sugg returned from Greens- child, little Lela, a
much improved in health. . t
Mr. Henry has engaged as.
in the Eastern Tobacco
op mis rapidly
dry
New Cream Cheese and N. Y. State
Batter at the Old Brick Store.
paring to move art studio to Tar-
Mr. J. B. Cherry returned home
day evening from New York and
more.
The family of Rev. A. D. Hunter re-
turned Monday evening from their visit
to Cary.
is about on its
for a
Cash given for Produce. Hides.
and Furs at the Old brick Store.
Men's Hats.
The boy is father the man,
and when the boy dons the man's
hat he is of sight These
boys are in and have
old heads on young shoulders.
The yelp of the coon dog up the
denizens of the forest these nights.
Wart-house, Henderson, is
for new chop He
prices.
Superior Court begins next Monday.
Judge George II. Brown will preside.
The rain yesterday morning settled
the dust but left the temperature warm.
to Silas
get free hogs-
The Ice cream season
last freeze.
Want to eat something good
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store.
1st of v
came down to cents
gallon Saturday.
says Food is
good for hog cholera. At the Old Brick
Stoic.
Cheapest Bedsteads and
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store.
Squirrel hunting season is about on and
the hunters are after them.
P-o
CD
CD
CD
ft
CD
CO
Si
CD
heads from a. F. Evans.
some change along and get the
you come to Colin
next week.
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware-
Henderson. Send your tobacco
there. Cooper is the farmer's friend.
Tablet usually selling for 2.1 cents
lie had for cents, at Reflector
Book Store.
The new tobacco of the season
was sold by Harris, Co., Hen-
N. C. They are always at the
front.
Novels formerly costing cents can
now lie had for cents, at Reflector
Book Store.
Ship your tobacco to Cooler's Ware-
house, Henderson, he a work-
honestly and faithfully for your best
interest.
Registration will be opened in
the several townships on the 29th of this
month.
Remember if you send tobacco to
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson, you
will obtain high prices and be happy.
Try it.
Is it not strange that our do not
appreciate a cornet band enough to give
one any encouragement
Some of the best cures of tobacco are
those men recommended by
Co. of Henderson. X. C.
Their price.- are always up with the
market and their market up with any.
Breaks every day last week but
day. That for us
a new tobacco market.
On Aug. 11th. Cooper's Warehouse,
Henderson, sold new primings for R.
R. Carr at 15.50.
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 C. 10.30
15.73 and Cooper can make just
as good sales for you. f
The Southerner reports that the Par-
lumber mills at the -1 unction, re-
destroyed by tire, will be rebuilt.
Everything about Harris,
business is conducted strictly business,
principles, they do what they say and
will be surpassed by none. They do not
run by gas or wind. Their motto is
makes the
Strike while the iron is hot. Get the
from now until the 1st of
January for cents. This is the last
campaign offer for
There is not a township in the county
that can show anything like the number
of Third party that were said to
two or three weeks ago.
Use plenty of lime about your premises.
It is very important that sanitation should
be well looked after now. Proper
may save some cases of fever.
Mr. J. J. Nobles brought the
six tremendous pears on Saturday,
the of which weighed 11-2 pounds.
were not only large but elegant.
Leap year is almost to the waning
quarter and we hear of no marriages
peeked for the fall. May be the girls arc
not making good use of their
The yearly meeting at Swamp
was held last Saturday and The
fourth Saturday and In
month is the date for the yearly meet-
at Great Swamp.
Judging from the quantities of
goods in the are ex-
a large trade this fall. They
need plenty of advertising to realize
their full expectations.
The star mail route from Tarboro now
supplies the offices on both sides of the
river, giving Holland and Penny Hill
both direct service. It comes down on
one side of the river and returns on the
other.
Thomas Walter, the photographer, ha
been doing some splendid work since
coming to Greenville. If you want first-
class photographs be sure and see him
before he leave. His work always give
satisfaction.
Hon. Elias Carr, Democratic
for Governor, in company with ex-Gov.
Jarvis, passed down the railroad
day to meet an appointment to speak at
a grand Democratic rally in Lenoir
to day. Quite a number of our
sens were at the depot to greet our next
Governor.
Harris, Gooch Co. of Henderson, X.
C. arc making a specialty of eastern to-
and they have for several years
past paid the best prices for eastern to-
as many will testify, though they
pay for all alike. They do not consider
it honest to pay u big talker two prices
for his tobacco get big poorer neigh-
for nothing.
At a meeting of the board of trustees
of Washington Male and Female
my, Prof. C. H. James, of High
Improved School, was elected principal
for the next term, which is to begin Oct.
3rd. 1892. The trustees are to repaint
and thoroughly prepare be-
fore the school The
lie of a high grade for and,
Mr. W. B. Brown has moved his
into the Fleming house, opposite Ir.
Williams.
Mrs. of Atlanta, arrived
last week on a visit to her son. Prof. Z.
Mr. W. J. who has in
Wilmington for some time, returned
home last week.
Mr. C. W. is in the Northern
markets making purchases for his
Young and
Forties returned Saturday
the North, where lie has been
making
Rev. J. E. L. Presbyterian,
will preach in Hall next Sunday
morning evening.
Mrs. F. Smith recently returned
from Beaufort, where she has been
part of the summer.
Mr. Willis Brodie, of Franklin county.
down Monday- to see his
sister, Mrs, n, a. Blow, who is sick.
Thomas and
Coke will address the people of Pitt
county on Tuesday in Court week, 20th.
Mr. C. who for several
months ha living in Norfolk, is
spending a few days at his old home.
We were glad to see him in town Mon-
day.
Rev. R. T. Vann, of Scotland
will lecture in the Baptist church to-night
in the interest of the Centennial Mission
Work. This work is educational ill its
nature and our have an
of hearing something
All invited.
Clerks for the Pall.
There have recently been some changes
ill the clerkship and hiring of new clerks
our mercantile houses.
Mr. Harry Harding has taking a
with Young
Mr. Bach, of York, has come
among us and taken a with M.
R- Lang.
Mr. Emmet Savage, of Scotland
has taken a position with Bros.
Messrs. Ed. and Alton Taft are both
clerking for C. T.
Mr. Will Ricks i for J. C.
Cobb A Son.
Mis Estelle Williams
with Brown A Hooker.
Mr. F. Joyner I with Brown
Hooker.
Miss Jarvis a position with
Brown Bros.
has a position
The Pain Disappeared.
Mrs. Dr. of Newton Grove.
Sampson county, is now at Carolina
Beach. She a great deal with
her eyes and when he went to the
dare not venture out of her
rooms. The suffering was in the
of intense headache, caused by tile con-
other eyes. Dr. D. S. Harmon
was called in and in a few days a mark-
ed improvement was the result. She now
wears the glasses ordered by him with
ease and comfort and the pains have dis-
appeared. Mrs. cheerfully give
these facts to a Review reporter and
feels very grateful to Dr.
Review.
The Sermons Had Effect.
Rev. G. F. Smith in his sermon Sunday
morning, and Rev. A. D. Hunter hi his
sermon Sunday night, both had some-
thing to say about dancing that their re-
congregations will not he hasty
to forget. One effect o those sermons
was that the dancing school which had
been in progress here for some weeks
came to a close Monday night and the in-
took his departure yesterday
morning. These ministers heard some
charges against the professor that proved
him a man of questionable morals and
disqualified him as an instructor or com-
of young people. An
substantiated the charges.
Marriage Licenses.
The Register of Deeds issued sixteen
marriage licenses during the month pf
August to the following
A. Moore and Adams,
William Baker and Mary; J. Gray, H. B.
Tripp and Alice E. Nelson, E. F.
and Emily Francis
and Emily
W. A. White and Ida E. in.
and Alice
Henry Brown and Ida Pol-
lard, Savage and Sarah Mitchell.
Minter Northern and Olivia King, James
and Easter A. Joseph
Jones and Ellen Daniel
Dupree and Queen Webb, Abraham
Venable Julia Hill, John Gorham
and Fannie Israel, Willie and
Dora Perkins.
Sunday School Work.
At a meeting of the Pitt county Sunday
School Association held last March, a
resolution was adopted looking to the bet-
organization of the work in the county,
and the following were to attend
and organize branch associations in the
several Is.
ex-Gov. T. J.
Swift Creek, A. L. Blow.
Rev. A. V. Hunter.
Falkland. Rev. J. N. II.
Farmville, E. A.
Prof. W. II.
-Beaver Dam, D. J.
Bethel, Rev. D. H. Tuttle.
Revs. G. F. Smith and A. A.
The Rev. A. D. Hunter, re-
quests that the work the several town-
ships be performed as early as possible
and full reports be made of the enroll-
of Sunday School in he
county, so that statistical report may-
be complete.
Sunday School
The Independent Sunday School, con.
ducted at Smith's school house, In Bea-
Dam township, bad a very nice picnic
last Friday. About or people
were present and the occasion passed off
as pleasantly as could be for. A
tine dinner was spread and it was
Two or three had promised to go
out and make Sunday School talks but
the man was the only one
who could be on hand. He talked about
minutes and at the close was present-
ed by Mr. C. L. Tyson with a beautiful
box of flowers with the compliments of
Miss Fannie Smith.
Mr. E. Little is Superintendent
of the Sunday School of which this was a
celebration, and there Is no doubt
to that bright mansion He had prepared
for her beyond the skies. Little Lela
was not only the joy of the immediate
household, but nil who knew her loved
her for her sweetness, for her gentleness
and for her own loving nature. In this
sad that tills the heart of her
loving parent- with bitterest anguish,
they have the deepest sympathy of the
entire community and the earnest
prayers of Christian. May the Lord
lib tenderness and mercy heal their
heart with Hi own great love
and cease them to feel that their little
darling ha been plucked from earth to
be transplanted amid the shining hosts
of angels Heaven, and I here
tenderly folded in the arm of a loving
Savior, awaits the coining of pupa, mama
and loved ones, mid all reunited around
the Great White Throne there will be no
more pat ting, and Godwin wipe away-
all
On Friday morning the remains of lit-
Lela were taken Baptist church
where services were conducted by Rev.
A. D. Hunter, and thence to Cherry Hill
for interment. Mews, W. B.
Wilson. J. L. Little, J. R. J. R.
Starkey, Jarvis and D. J.
ard acting as pall bearer. The Infant
class of the Sunday School, of which lit-
Lela was a devoted member, followed
behind the when the grave
was tilled covered it with beautiful floral
I he midst of their great grief Mr.
and Mrs. Flanagan remember with
gratitude the numerous kindness and
expressions of sympathy shown them in
their trouble and sore
and request to urn their
sincere I banks to I heir many friends, and
to their physician. Dr. for such
acts of kindness and manifestations of
sympathy.
Resolutions Adopted by the Greenville
Baptist Sunday School.
Whereas, Oar Master in Hi
wisdom has by the band of death re-
moved one of our number from us. one
tender lamb from the fold, little Lela
Flanagan, who died on I lie morning of
the 8th and, Whereas, this Sunday-
School desires to respect her memory
and console bereaved one, therefore
Resolved 1st. That in the death of dear
little Lela the Baptist Sunday School and
especially the Infant class loses one of its
sweetest and brightest little pupils, one
ever regular in attendance, always loving
and lovable to teacher and scholars and
apt to listen and learn of her
Savior who so tenderly said,
little children to come unto me and for-
bid them not for of such is the kingdom
of and to whom she Is now gone
to lie kept in His loving embrace for all
time to come.
Resolved 2nd. That though. we shall
miss her and mourn that her little seat is
to lie forever vacant with us, we bow in
humble submission to the will of Him
who all things well, remembering
that He hath said that tilings work
together for good to them who love the
Resolved That we extend our
heartfelt sympathies, to the sorely
father and mother, brothers a ml
sisters, and say to that though they
hall bear no more on earth the patter of
those little feet and the prattle of that
little tongue which gave so much joy, and
that though they may receive no more
here the fond embrace and the sweet
cares of dear little hands and lips
that has brought so much com-
fort to their hearts, yet they should real-
the sweet consolation that dear little
Lela has only been transplanted from a
world of sorrows to a Heaven of eternal
bliss, that their loss is her everlasting
gain, and that she is now another link to
draw to that home prepared for all
who love and serve their Lord. She i
in the arm of Jesus.
Safe on Hi gentle breast.
There by His
Sweetly her soul shall
Resolved 4th. That a copy of these
resolutions be. spread upon the record
honk of the school, a copy sent to the
parents of the deceased and a copy to the
Reflector with request to
publish the same.
W. II.
Mrs. M. If. Nelson,
Miss
Committee.
rat. i
Prices Low;
Terms Easy,.
NEW GOODS
o-
C. T.
HAS FROM MARKETS. SO TAKE A
AT HIS STORE, IT IS OVER WITH NEW
OF A LINK
Dry Goods, Clothing, Hoots. Shoes, Notions,
Furnishing Goods,
oil novelties numerous to mention.
Pine All- Warn Sails
Men's worth i I
Men's lire.- Shoes cents 81.50.
Dress Shoos cents worth fin.
bargains In all departments.
hard licks it.
50111-
Respectfully,
Opposite Old Brink Store.
C. T. M U N F O R D,
N.
A SCALE.
Business conducted on a large.
scale reduces proportion of
expense and eases sum
of receipts. It enables one to
buy cheap and sell cheap. That
accounts for
He offers largest
of goods at. lowest
Delegates to Raleigh.
At the last meeting- the Cleveland
and Carr the following were
pointed delegates to the meeting of Dem-
clubs in Raleigh on the
Cox, B. F. Sugg,
L. C. Latham, J. L. Fleming, Dr. C. J.
W. H. Smith,
V. D. Rountree, D. J.
O. Move, Charlie
Dudley. Dr. J. Marquis, J. T. D.
C. Moore. Noah Forbes. J. D. William-
son, H. F. Keel, W. H. Long, Jesse L,
J. L. Little, Charlie
Let Them Come.
A subscriber remarked
tor man the other day talk-
tobacco warehouses until yon got two
here; you kept talking
bridge until you got that rebuilt, now
keep on with your talk for more prize
houses and a hotel you will get
them, That's what we are after.
The is in for just that kind
of and it to the
The dying of Garments, Sashes,
bong, etc., etc., done with neatness and
dispatch,
for woolen or mixed goods
one-fourth to one-third, and cotton one-
half less than city prices. Also dry-
cleaning by French process. If request-
ed any repairs attended to at reasonable
prices. When work done am tints to
82.00 express will be paid one way,
when both ways. Send for price
list. STEAM DYING CO.,
Scotland X. C.
For Sale on Easy Terms
Large Double Store In Greenville. I
offer for sale on terms the large
Double Store north of Fifth street,
east of street, with lot fronting
feet on street by feet deep A
splendid bargain. Apply at once to
Wm. EL
MUSIC SCHOOL.
MRS. would
glad to have a class In Instrumental
Music at her home in the J. J. Perkins
residence. Session begins September
5th. Terms on application.
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners and Proprietors.
for Big Prices Averages
are still doing business at the same old stand, whet we are prepared than
ever before to handle to the line bright from the Golden
have very large corps of buyers who are anxious for New Tobacco
and arc willing to pay good for it. stands well on our
and Is eagerly sought by our order men and speculators. arc
very that we can say to the of and adjoining counties
tobacco has better this year than we have known it in
and that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can he
had FREE OF CHARGE by those planters shipping to us, by applying to S. M.
Schultz Co. Greenville, N. C, or to Amos G. Cox, Winterville. N. C.
that bid lively on every pile put our buy largely of Nil grades
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest price for
pound sold with us. that it cost you nothing to collect our checks a they
are payable New York Exchange without cost to holder. Don't forget to us
with good shipment mid will convince yon that we from
and that we every time on big prices and yon know they talk.
Will have graded for you our house by skilled hands at per
Thanking our Hie very liberal bestowed upon us tin- past
and pledging our very to please them in the future. We are with
best wishes. Very truly your friends,
BULLOCK MITCHELL,
Oxford, X. C.
I. farm. Bea-
township, adjoining t to tenth
of T. Tyson and J. II. Cobb. A line
of acres, band-
am lo corn, cotton and to-
A line lied.
i. A near and King
mediately on tin- railroad, own-
ed hf Caleb R. Tripp. Ml which
annul are cleared. neighbor-
hood, and a within
miles. Plenty Of marl on the adjoin-
farms
A One f.-1 of three mile I
from Farmville and
with large, dwelling
and out borne, known I lie I,.
home In cot It'll
good clay accessible to marl.
A smaller farm adjoining
known as the dunes place, loll acres.
dwelling, barn tenant house, laud
good.
C. A farmer acres in
ship, about miles from
part of the tract. .
of the farm,
acres, adjoining I he town of
located all improving section
can be a valuable farm.
A small farm acres,
about to miles from Greenville, oh In-
Well Swamp, with house, etc., for-
ox.
B.
A tract of about acres near
tile station, with timber well
suited for railroad tics.
A tract of in
township, near the rail-
road, pine timber,
A Of acres near
Mills, pine and press timber.
Apply to .
Hie, N. C.
at the
GREENVILLE
WAREHOUSE.
The reason with a big break on
Thursday, September
Bring on your Tobacco and I guarantee
that will get as prices
for it as o ii lie had any-
where.
I will have help in conduct-
the Warehouse and
every will prompt
attention. forget to
bring me Tobacco.
The following ales been made
it. Smith Kr-
i i-t Forbes T. Ill ton M.
Peebles 40.86, 80.25. 18.76, 13.2-5, 12.75.
M. R. SO, 30.60, 13.25.
12.75. M. B, Dale SO, x.
i. F. EVANS,
PROPRIETOR.
Notice.
On Monday,
A. U. 1811. I will House
iii tin- town to the
Milder for rm-h Hie following;
Iran land iii Tit county. ill
town of and known in
tow ii as lots No. X and Si. lie.
t lots set apart lo Ann IS. Bernard
Iii the division of the lauds of William
Si., to a veil ex in my
lot Ann K. Her-
I aid and Lave levied on said
land a- tin- of -aid Ann K. Ber-
-i. A. K. Sheriff.
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS-
There is a great deal of satisfaction in leading
we are still in that position. Rivals at-
tempt to follow our methods but find that we
lead them a merry chase and they finally give
it up or come to grief.
Elegance and durability, coupled with low
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods
and Notions in the lead.
BROWN BROTHERS.
AND WK PREPARED TO HANDLE It TOBACCO TO THE
ADVANTAGE.
THE PLANTERS OF EASTERN CAROLINA THAT THEY WU,
SO TO TOBACCO-
AS HIGH AS THE HIGHEST.
TO EASTERN WHERE WILL FIND THE
BUYERS ALWAYS OS
R. M.
R. W. ROYSTER,
K. HESTER,
R. If. CREWS,
R. HART, J. s.
W. E. Lulls.
They all want will pa. for It.
O-
when the weather was eta that the
could out,
After the many of
those present went to a base ball ground
near by to witness a match game
Beaver Dam and Bridge
It was a good game and closed
with a score of to In favor of Bea-
Dam.
A. t, 1888.
MB. Joe
used your Remedy and Wash twelve
years ago for sore eyes, and found great
relief, which has been permanent. When
I began using the Remedy my eyelid was
very cow there to no sore, lid
Insurance and Free. Free Stables.
Your friends,
L. JOYNER,
ALEX.
owners end Proprietor of Joyner Eastern Warehouse.
A Hogshead Story.
I wish by this means to tell the people
that have prepared and am still
paring a large lot of material for
co Hogsheads. And to make it as con-
us possible for my customers I
have decided to run two wagons on the
road to deliver them at most convenient
places. And I further promise that I
best efforts to put such
size and quality of Hogsheads as tie
may want. And think I cap, com-
in
t will also pay special attention to
making and Brackets for trim-
any house yon may build.
Please see mo placing your or-
or add res, me at Winterville, N. C.
Respectfully,
A. G.
New Barber
I take this to, return
thanks to, my customers who have
Fran e liberal support in past.
have opened a new shop in toe old Club
and would respectfully solicit a
continuation of my former
I will assure ail that they
every attention besides the best
share and hair cat town. All I i-
trial. All
of latest In the
rial art will be In use in shop.
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchen ware, Tin-
ware, Lamp Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty.
We make own glove pipe and pans of cold rolled steel which
is far the mot durable.
We don't try to keep the cheapest goods in town, out if yon
want to get the most value for your money give a call.
test White Oil per gallon.
Tin Roofing and Guttering less the Tariff.
S. E. PENDER CO.,
ST. O.
THE OF C
to the buyers of and surrounding count a line the following goo
not to excelled in this market. And to he I an
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING,
GOODS. HATS and C MOOTS mid SHOES, LA
and SUPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOOR.-i. WINDOWS. SASH and and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds. Gin and Mill Hay, Rock and
Hair, ii and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade lit Wholesale
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less b per cent for Cash.
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
-ANTI BUYER OF-
Country Produce
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
It you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yon on a small commission.
Call see me.
JNO.





IS
HOPELESS
AIDS NATURE
IN NATURES OWN WAY.
IT COSTS YOU TO
A HAILED
ATLANTIC CO.
1406 Tort tea, Washington. D. C.
MANHOOD
How Lost How Regained I
THYSELF.
Or SKI. . M
Gold Medal oil and
PHYSICAL of
Si
Sal
unions, a.
r diV sealed.
as
the Press and
u SEND
the F NOW
of I HUS. . MOW-
Institute ho. j
but no equal-
The or 1- I
than ll am.
,.,,,. an man, and loam
h, .
A Family Affair
Health for the Baby,
Pleasure for the Parents,
New Life for the Old Folks.
CAPO.
She Kit at the- old
Her
Th-- of minor scale.
Hit
form lib
twin look and tone,
the
instrument, quaint and olden.
With single
Was little more than a spirit.
And its tone seemed a whir of wines.
And the keen chisel of sorrow
And the cruel of care
Hod cat in her dear old feat ares
Deep furrows here and there.
Till all that was and earthy
Had been chipped and smoothed away,
disclosed the patient
its thin mask of clay.
She paused, and with upturned features
And reminiscent eyes.
Was translated in one brief moment
Back to young life's Paradise.
And the lovely spirit of childhood.
So and and sweet.
Came back and her
beaming forehead to feet.
Then she swept the keys, and the
Of vanished years leaped out;
Each note was a patter of merry feet.
And a gleeful, childish shout.
And dimpled and
Tripped o'er the enchanted keys.
And the music was fresh as ht ugh
Or warble of birds in the trees.
No strain from the old tone masters.
No -t of harmony grand,
Sprang from the old piano
At of that magic hand.
the simple airs of her girlhood
in melody
As in days when her was all
And the hours were M happy as fleet.
And sparkled the light that
eyes long dried of tears.
And twinkled feet her music
That have In for years.
And as and listened
She to our moistened eyes
Already beyond the
That opened toward he I
Nor it longer a marvel
That when, in the morning gray.
The disciples came to tomb cf the Lord
To bear the body away.
They found his cast off garment.
With Its odor of and myrrh.
And rolled from the open do-r
Of an empty
Transcript-
THE BLACK BOX.
THE GREAT
TEMPERANCE DRINK
a family a requisite
of the home. A
makes gallons of
if a dealer, for
hf profit, you
sonic tit her is Just at;
as genuine
Scientific American
Agency for
CAVEATS,
TRADE MARKS.
DESIGN PATENTS
etc.
mil, fro writ tn
ML XX A CO. . New
patents in America.
patent taken out is in-fore
tbs public by a notice given free charge in the
of any
world. No
It. a
rear; all months. CO.-
York.
WILMINGTON A K.
and Schedule
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
No No Ti. No
Apr. 19th, daily Fast Mail, daily j
daily ex Sun
Weldon 12,30 pm pm G MM
Ar am
Tarboro
Ax Wilson
Ar
Ar Fayetteville
Goldsboro
Warsaw
Magnolia
am CO
S am
Wilmington
Magnolia
Warsaw
Ar Goldsboro
Fayetteville
Ar Selma
Ar Wilson
am
5-5
TRAINS NORTH
No No No
daily daily daily
ex Sun.
Wilson am p m pm
Ai Rocky Mount
Tarboro am
Daily except
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot
land Neck at 5.15 P. M., Greenville
M., Kinston p. m. Returning,
leaves 7.10 a. Greenville
a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m.
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun-
day
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives A. R.
Junction a. . returning leaves A.
R. 7.1-5 p. in., arrives Wash-
8.45 Daily except
Connects with trains on
Raleigh R. R. and Scotland Neck
Branch.
Local freight train Weldon
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05
a. m. Greenville 5.30 p.
7.40 p. in. leaves
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at
7.20 a. arriving Greenville
a. m., Scotland 2.2-1 . in., Weldon
5-15 p. in.
Tram leave Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, P M. P M, arrive
N C, P M, P M.
Plymouth 8.30 p. m., 5.22 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
6.00 a. m., 0.00 a. m-
N C, 7.30 a m, 9.58 a in .
arrive Tarboro, N C, A
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
Fayetteville Branch leave
ville T a m; arrive Rowland IS p in.
Returning leave Rowland p m.
arrive Fayetteville p Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M
Arrive N C, AM. Re
retuning laves S C A V
Goldsboro, NO A M.
Train No. makes close connection a
Weldon for all points North dally. Al
-all via Richmond, and daily except Sun
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
crafty- except Sunday with Norfolk A
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all
points via Norfolk.
train on Wilson
No. Northbound is
Daily except Sunday.
Train
at P M, arrive Nashville id
P Hope P M. Returning
Hope A M, Nashville
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
P M. and AM Returning leave
Um-at A M, P. M.
in at Warsaw with and
Trains No. Sooth North will
atop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson,
and Magnolia.
DIVINE,
General
-I R. KENLY, Transportation
T U. Passenger
It was in tho of a dark
dreary winter. But it m in the
middle of a and
summer when the deed was done.
As yet I am not alluding to any-
thing mysterious at all. at the
same time I am anxious to
explain how it was that I. a humble
and not altogether solitary English
man. found myself located in the
Hotel at
berg.
I was traveling alone one summer
time, full of health and uncommonly
full of and rashly got out of
the Rhine steamer at
in order to a flying visit to a
miniature Paris, hedged with
avenues and to the
and deliver some letters of in-
to an English
engineer, who was doing his best to
make tin- stolid Germans energetic,
and make a fortune during the
enviable process.
Strange to nay, he took to me.
There was no the
bush. We were friends once, and
a few noun after my
were raid and thrown aside, I found
myself walking with my arm in his
toward that cozy and hospitable
mansion in which lie lived, and
where he had introduced that de-
home feeling, and those
pleasant family associations, so dear
to the strange to the
foreign mind.
Hero was a miniature English
home planted in a strange land, and
I can tell you it was by no means ob-
to enjoy my cut of joint
under his mahogany in the company
of men worth talking to and women
decidedly worth admiring.
I an now gradually nearing the
point. Before the next sun sank my
portmanteau was moved from the
hotel to my friend's house, and the
first night I slept under his
table roof I was dreaming, strange
to say, of his daughter.
There was no help for it. It was
the very place of all others to make
love in. It was the very weather of
all weather for tho operation.
A house surrounded by a wilder-
of varied trees overarching one
another, and making love in their
quaint and fanciful fashion; a lake
at the end of tho garden full of
late weeds, and owning a crazy old
boat; a soft croquet lawn for the
more worldly, and bright flowers for
the lovers of nature; a sun which
perpetually gleamed upon the warm,
white house, and laughter forever
out of such a
place as this was the one of all others
love in.
They her Annabel, and I
called her so first on the brightest of
nil the moonlight nights, when half
a dozen of us had been frightening
the girls in the shrubbery, and we
found ourselves deny that
it was the gloomy lake.
There we were. Tho one word
came trembling from my
lips, and the one look which her an-
eyes gave me persuaded me
I had not made a mistake.
We were engaged, and a few days
after I left for England with all the
parental got
husband that was to be of as true
and sensible and as pure a woman
as ever fell to a young fellow's lot.
This was in the summer time, and
at midwinter I found myself, of
course, at the at An-
It was a bitterly cold winter, but I
heeded it not. The thoughts of see-
her again almost warmed me.
My excitement to get away from
London was tremendous. I was
bound for Germany and my love.
My holiday was short, but under the
circumstances where in the whole
world could it better spent
And what with sleeping and
and dreaming and thinking and
fidgeting and longing, I arrived
after midnight at the
It was too late to present myself
at the white house. Besides, I was
not presentable. I was dirty,
and woebegone from con-
traveling. A quiet night at
the hotel I thought the best plan,
that I might myself
and span the next morning.
Such precautions as these should
never be forgotten. The female
mind is generous but susceptible,
and this susceptibility not
conquers generosity. I de-
to be on the right side of
the hedge, and made up my mind
for a refreshing sleep at the
But reckoned without my host-
It was after when I
drove up to the hotel from tho
and though, as luck would have I
it. mine host had not retired for tho
night, I found anything but pleasant
news awaiting me. I was absolutely
thunderstruck. There was no room
in tho hotel.
What at this time of the
I with something like
A stupid and very positive
answered me
But have you no corner in which
you can squeeze me for the I
The landlord consulted his slate.
He also consulted a very sleepy and
obstinate kind of man
who seemed determined not to smile
or genial, and appealed to a
quiet and fiendish delight in my
misery.
yes; there was one
There was one room; but should I
object. There was not somebody,
but something in it.
What is I asked
blank
I looked astonished.
there is nothing to lie alarmed
my host, wondering at the
curious expression of countenance I
had assumed.
The fact of the matter is
An officer, who is to be attached to
the cavalry regiment quartered in
the town, telegraphed to me only
this morning for a room
which he always uses. He said that
he would send on his luggage lief ore-
hand, and arrive by the last train to-
night. The luggage, consisting of
this one black box, arrived, not be-
forehand, but on tho last train, and
as the officer has not up to this mo-
made his appearance, and as I
cannot imagine that he is remaining
so late with any friends in the town,
there will surely be no harm in your
occupying his
Accordingly I went very grateful-
up to bed, and too tired oven to
take tho precaution of locking my
door. I surveyed tho black box for a
few minutes, wondered how officers
could use such ridiculous and
sightly coffers for conveying their
impedimenta and very shortly after
turned into bed.
I was dead tired, but, strange to
say, I was restless and could not
sleep; indeed I was, if anything,
overtired.
I was excited with my rapid
excited with the thought of see-
worried with the pro-
of the landlord and curious
the black box.
I was gradually becoming excited
about this box. I fancied all sorts
of horrors. My mind wandered
from the murderer, to
the horrible tragedy; from
Portia to Bluebeard; from the
narrative of the
to the thrilling tragedy of
the -Iron which I had seen
during Mr. Charles Kean's manage-
at the Princess theater.
then I suppose from sheer fa-
I must have dozed.
A sudden and sharp click
me
up In bed and listened.
Not a sound.
The again fascinated me; so.
shrinking down beneath tho sheets
again, I watched it.
by inch,
I saw the lid of the box move.
There was no use denying
was in a terrible fright. I don't
mind the natural, but I have a holy
horror of the supernatural. I was
in a fevered, nervous and
state, and in that horrible con-
between sleeping and waking
I hardly knew what I was about.
Still the the box rose grad-
There was no doubt about it.
Then a head appeared and it
looked stealthily around the room.
I instantly pretended to fall asleep,
and gave a very good imitation of a
snore.
The head lengthened into a body.
The lid of the box flew back, and a
short, thickset man stepped out of
his hiding place.
It was no ghost.
He paid no attention to my Jewel-
but made at once for the door.
He walked as noiselessly as a cat,
and slipped quietly out of the room.
There was no time to be lost. I
hurried on a few articles of
provided myself with a stout wait-
stick, the only thing I had handy,
thrust my money and jewels into
my pockets and started off on the
pursuit.
I was wide awake by this time,
and was now terribly eager to arrest
my midnight visitor.
I was determined not to arouse the
house until it was absolutely
The clock struck three as I darted
into the passage to surprise him.
Down stairs went-in than no
time.
But I was too late. Those minutes
occupied in collecting my valuables
and slipping on my things were all
wasted time.
There was no trace of him. It
was terribly dark In the passages,
and I was rather nervous of a sud-
den encounter in the dark.
Besides he might have firearms,
while I was comparatively unarmed.
The notion of coming flop up against
him in the pitch darkness
some portion of my
Besides, while I was reflecting
what to do and where to go, I found
that I had lost myself entirely. I
knew nothing about the ins and outs
of the rambling old hotel, and I bad
not taken my bearings and
forgot the number of my room.
I wandered about the passages for
quite half an hour, and at last, after
a fruitless search for the mysterious
man in the box, I happily discovered
a half open door and found out my
room by my boots.
Now came the question what
There was no trace of the man in the
room. Tho door of the room was
open as I left it, but the black box
was shut.
What should I do Should I alarm
the house and get called a fool for
my pains, supposing the box was dis-
covered empty Should I lift the lid
and risk everything in a final
Should I lock the door from the out-
side or lock the door from the inside
and go to bed again
I went deliberately up to the hex
and struck it violently with my
stick. It was not quite closed after
all, and I heard to my surprise a
howl of pain from the inside.
As luck would have it, I had got my
man after all. My mind was instant-
I darted back
gave lox violent crack
with my k, rushed put of the room
end locked door.
And then I shorted with might
main, h eH pull was handy
and I at it. Up came Half a
dozen waiters, and. lastly, up came
the puny of the
Having collected my I
opened tho door. We were just
in time, for tho window was
open, and with one bound across the
room I just managed to secure his
last retreating leg.
I dragged the culprit back into the
middle of the room and him
show his guilty face.
cried the landlord and the
waiters with one voice.
They the object of I is visit
when they looked into the black
box. for there were every
atom of forks,
and tho
possessed.
The mystery was soon explained.
The midnight visitor was a dis-
charged waiter, and he had hit upon
tho happy expedient of the black box
and the false telegram in order to
conveniently rob the house.
Tho thief was immediately handed
over to the police. The detestable
box war, dragged out of my room into
the passage. I locked myself into
the room and slept without a break
mi every in woke
me out of my slumbers and reminded
mo it was morning.
As for my dear Annabel, she made
far more of a hero of meas all good
women I really deserved,
and after dinner that night, over tho
walnuts and the wine, with a
little hand resting in mine
under the told the assembled
guests, with as much picturesque
force and dramatic intensity as I
could muster, the true and authentic
legend of Night at tho
or. Landlord, the Lackey
and the Black V.
Scott in Boston Globe.
THE BULL'S EVIDENCE.
Electric en.
Ties remedy is becoming so well
known and popular as to need no
special mention- All who have used
Electric slug the same song of
purer medicine doe not exist
and it is guaranteed to do all that is
Electric Bitters will cure all
Abeam Of the Liver and Kidneys, will
remove Pimples, Boils. Salt Kin urn and
other affections caused by impure blood.
Will drive Malaria from the system
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial
cure of Headache,
and try
guaranteed,
or money and
f 1.00 per bottle at Woolens Drug stir.
MAli. There j
A story is told the
English and the Eurasian worshipers
at St. cathedral, Calcutta,
forty years ago. It seems that at
that time the English of the
congregation always sat on one side
of the nave and the Eurasian
were rigidly kept on the other.
Bishop Daniel Wilson was preaching
one day. and while denouncing the
feeble religion of the European world
in Calcutta was struck by tho
quid indifference of his English
With a sweep of the arm
over the aristocratic side he passion-
exclaimed. there ye sit,
yo sinners, and
other arm above his darker yet more
attentive listeners to the right,
there sit the fruits of your
Contemporary Review.
Salve
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Rheum,
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands.
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and cures Piles, or
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded
Price cents box. For sale at
Drug Store.
Fin Work pa Photographs.
The art of painting and mounting
photographs has been carried to such
perfection that a careful inspection
is sometimes necessary to distinguish
a photograph from an ivory
The photograph smoothed
and polished over a glass a
glass cover is fitted over it so care-
fully that the two pieces of glass
seem but one, so close is the union,
When work is done, no,
ivory painted miniature is prettier,
and with a reasonable amount of
practice any amateur can learn to
do the Louis
Sh urn re.
This is beyond question the moat
Cough have ever
sold, a few doses invariably cure the
cases Cough, Croup Bron-
while in
cure of Consumption Is without a
in the history of Since its
first discovery it has been sold on a
a test which no other medicine
can stand. If you have a cough we earn-
ask i try it. Price
and If your lungs ate chest, or
back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster.
Sold at DRUG STORE.
Mot Infallible.
As Shakes-
was Be
wrote nothing in which there were
not admirable passages worthy of
himself. But we, like Ben Jonson,
should him this side idol-
Criticism is absolutely worth-
less if it is We are not
to read Shakespeare as if he were m
fallible, nor to accept all he did in a
spirit of blind and
faith. At the same time we must
in speaking of so divine a
genius, what Pope says of others that
blamed as great a mind t
It la not J it nods, bat dream.
Andrew Lang in Harper's.
SHILOH'S REMEDY.
A cure for Catarrh,
Canker mouth and Headache.
With each bottle there Is an ingenious
nasal Injector tot the more
treatment of these complaints without
extra charge. Price Sold at
EN'S DRUG STORE.
be
assisted to throw
does It so well, m
promptly, to
safely as
Specific
Smith Objected to Its Admission
cod the Court Sustained Him.
Who is there in or around about
Janesville, Wis., that does not know
Billy Smith, the lawyer Billy add-
ed fresh laurels to those which
ready crowned him by some cute ob-
he filed in a case tried in that
city. It was a very odd case, and it
excited much interest in the town.
A farmer named Broughton,
t ear Janesville, has a neighbor who
owned a blooded bull. This bull
broke into a field of and
that farmer, in an attempt to drive
him out, rather got the worst of it.
The bull chased him, and as the
pursued and pursuer reached the
fence tho bull aided Mr. Broughton
in scaling it. He took him on his
horns and threw bodily over it.
Broughton warned the owner that
ho must keep the animal tied up or
there would lie trouble.
No attention, however, was paid
to the warning, and only a few days
after first mishap the bull was
found again hi field.
Calling to his help some of his men,
Broughton got the bull into his barn,
where injuries were inflicted upon it
from which it died. The owner of
tho bull sued Broughton for the
value of the beast and that gentle-
man retained Billy Smith as his
counsel.
On tho day of the trial the court-
room was packed, for it was hinted
that Billy Smith had several
mote he intended springing. I am
sorry my informant's memory was
so defective, for in relating the story
to mo he could only call to mind one.
but that one was important and had
much to do with his winning the case
for his client, Billy's wit and humor
on this occasion exceptional
even for and he hail tho
tors and even the judge himself
laughing the greater part of the
time.
Among others there was one wit-
for the prosecution, a farmhand,
who was endeavoring to make out
that the bull only did his duty in
chasing Mr. Broughton and tossing
him out into the road. He tried to
make out that the bull was more
playful than ugly, and if Broughton
had only acted properly he would not
have been hurt.
said the witness, is true
the bull did chase the defendant. He
went after him and said, boo,
the witness endeavored
to imitate the sound of a bull
mildly and not savagely.
Billy Smith was on his feet in an
instant with an objection. ob-
said he, turning to tho judge,
the admission of what the bull
said as evidence. You are well aware,
your honor, that it is a common max-
in common law that the speeches,
remarks or sayings of persons who
may have died in the interim be-
tween the utterance of such sayings
and a trial cannot be admitted, be-
cause of the fact that death makes it
Impossible to produce them that they
may acknowledge or deny having so
spoken. The bull in the case is dead,
your honor, and what he said to Mr.
Broughton when he chased him can-
not be The judge saw
the point and sustained the objection,
Chicago Post.
LIFE HAD NO
for three rears I was troubled with
poison, which canted to fall,
and was greatly reduced hi flesh, and life
lost all its charms. I triad
remedies, but to no effect I could
medicine Bud a
cure, and I now enjoy batter i-
Our book on Blood and Skin Diseases
mailed free.
Co, Atlanta, Ga,
A Word In Time.
A prompt action and a few season-
able wort-, at the beginning of a
young man's career often produce a
lasting effect on his after life. Many
years ago, when Samuel Phillips, of
Andover, Mass., afterward
ant governor of the state, was a
dent at Harvard college, owing to
some boyish freak he left the college
and went home.
His father, a grave man. of sound
mind, strict judgment and few words,
was greatly disturbed by the seem-
lack of stability in his son's char-
After learning tho facts ho
deferred expressing any opinion
the next day.
At he said, addressing
his
dear, you any cloth in
the house that would be suitable for
making Sam a frock and
she replied.
said the old gentle-
man, may follow me, my
As they approached the common
Samuel ventured to
yon going to do with
me,
replied old gentleman,
apparently roused from a pleasant
speaking in a cheerful tone,
am going to bind you apprentice
to tho blacksmith over yonder. You
can take your added Mr.
Phillips firmly, as he saw the look of
consternation his son's face.
turn to college and stay there, or you
must work.
had rather replied
Samuel meekly.
said tho old gentle-
man, turning toward home
sou did return to college, con-
fessed his fault, applied himself to
study and a much respected
man. And his father never regret-
the day when ho offered Samuel
such an unpleasant alternative,
though he often admitted that he
have been a little put to if
if Sam had elected to follow the
blacksmith's
But he would have held to his word
in any Companion.
Answer This Question.
Why do so many around
us seem to prefer to sillier and be made
Indigestion, Constipation,
Dizziness, Loss of Appetite. Coming up
of the Food. Yellow Skin, when for
we will sell Shiloh's
guaranteed to cure them Sold at
Drug Store.
Ways of
The ladies of Arabia stain their
fingers and toes red, their eyebrows
black and their lips blue. In Persia
they paint a black streak around
their eyes and ornament their faces
with representations of various fig-
Miller Illustrated.
A Slip of tho
do you mean by
writing such repel in the
as defendant and
Typewriter s-sup
pose it's because I have an
in tho
Field's Washington.
nine Flowers for House Culture
There no several blue flowers for
; culture. Per-
the st. ; things considered,
is soft lavender
blue, very and an
constant loonier. data
is a brighter blue and vary pretty.
The veronicas several blues
their
tho boys is
to have a circus. May I act
I so. What
are you to do
Little much. They
is to have a pyramid of sixteen
boys, en all I has to do is to stand
on News.
A in,. Spell.
The Indian, it is said, measures dis-
in by One
pipe is the interval the
is allowed to make for a
smoke. Evidently a must
vary a good deal with the good
of the employer. Field's
Washington.
There is a clergyman in
Kan., who is such a that
he won't ride in the street ears on
Sunday, and he is BO that
ho will not ride in on week
days; no walks all the
A Household Remedy
FOR ALL
t BLOOD and SKIN
Botanic Blood Balm
I SALT
i IT. RHEUM.
form st SKIM
Di Di Eli
In
system and restoring
Impaired from in cause. He
healing
I guaranteeing a II
directions are to I lowed.
CO. Atlanta,
For Rent.
A two brick lathe
Opera Greenville,
splendid room, With pair in . mi-
counter-, and drawers.
Apply lo
II. LONG.
N. C. Attorney-at-Law.
THIS WEI
NEW YORK.
AT V.
i.
All-
It
r or
BOWES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory i well equipped with the best Mechanics, i put up nothing;
but We keep up with the time and ii-n improved
Rest material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use., you can select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King
We also keep on hand a full line of Harness and Whips which
ell at the lowest rates. CW Special given to repairing.
It Should In Every House.
J. Wilson, Clay St., Sharpsburg,
Pa., says he will not be without Dr.
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and Colds, that it cured his wife
who was threatened with Pneumonia
an attack of when
Various, other remedies several
physicians had dope her tip good. Robert
Barber, of Pa., claims Dr.
King's New Discovery done him
more good than anything he ever used
for Lung Trouble. Nothing like it. Try
it. Free Trial Bottles at Drug
Store. Large bottles. and
Telegraphing-.
The greatest sum ever paid for
telegraph tolls in one week by a
newspaper was the expenditure of
tho London Times for cable
from Ayres during the
in the Argentine Republic
The cost of cabling from
Ayres to London was a word,
and The Times paid out for
one week's
It Took Twopence Pus.
have forgotten my purse, but
you will surely allow mo to pass
when I tell you that I am mas-
of said an don
to the keeper of a turnpike near the
town. may be the master of
but you don't pass my gate
if you the master of two-
was the unexpected reply.
London Standard.
M, D, Line, wries
summer several years ago while rail;
reading in Mississippi, I became badly
affected with malarial blood poison that
impaired my health for more than two
years. Several offensive appear-
ed on my legs, and nothing seemed to
give permanent relief until i took six
bottles B which eared me en
They had just dined, and tho host
hands around a box of cigars.
smoke he says,
you will find them my
man steals more of them than any
other brand I ever
Tit-Bits.
Overhead Wires In Philadelphia.
There are i, miles of overhead
telephone and
trip lighting- -in Philadelphia, some
of them dangerous, Philadelphia
Record.
Erysipelas, Limbs, Bad Sores,
Scales and Scabs on the leg have been
entirely cured by P. P. P., the
wonderful blood medicine of the day.
course of P. P. P. will banish all
feelings and your health to
perfect powers
Era marvelous. If out of sorts and In
bad humor with yourself and the world,
take P. lien I ml
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
II it a scientific-
ally prepared ma .-
of recognized value In
constant use by the medical pro-
These ingredients are com-
pined in a manner hitherto unknown
WILL DO all that is claimed for
ft AND MORE. Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Di m i Danger let
of Mother and Child. Boo
FREE, cote.
fining viable information
voluntary
price
CO., ,,
h sold by
The Longest Sign.
The longest wooden sign in
America, it is said, is that of the
and
of this
which shows raised gold letters on a
ground of imitation cop-
per. It is feet York
Times.
They poulticed her feet poulticed
her head.
And blistered her back till
smarting red.
Tried tonics, elixirs, pain-killers
Salves,
grandma declared it WM
nothing hut
The poor woman thought she must
certainly die,
Till she hap-
to
No wonder its praises so loudly they
speak i
She grew at once and was well
in a week.
The torturing pains distressing
which accompany, at times,
certain forms of female weakness, yield
like magic lo Dr. Pierce Favorite
It is vegetable, per-
h harmless, and adapted to the
pf woman. It allays
and subdues the nervous symptoms and
relieves the pain accompanying
organic troubles. Guarantee
printed on and faithful-
carried out for rears.
X. ID-
Greenville, N. Q.
TIE NEW MODEL HALL TYPEWRITER,
a Machine Characters.
REMODELED AND improved.
GOOD
The Best Standard Typewriter in the World.
Inexpensive, Portable. Mo Ink Ribbon, In-
Type in all Easiest
to learn, and rapid a any.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as
This Machine i- everybody's friend.
should have their writing done on the
Typewriter. It always insures mos
prompt attention. Address
N. COMPANY, Oil Huston, MM
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector e. where particulars and
CURES SYPHILIS
SB P. R P. B.
and It tor th rm of
ill and of at-d
r R R R
Cures scrofulA.
HI ll old
that to nil
fa,
foaM
I. P. f. ts t.
P. P. P.
Cures rheumatism
an n
CURES
r. p. r. am,.
Cures dyspepsiA
For sale at J. L. Wooten's Drug Store
THE CENTRAL
Tobacco
Will begin its second season
AUGUST 1892.
same Management,
and desires to thank the
Planters of Pitt, Le-
and Greene for
their liberal
patronage
last
year and a
of their favors,. Especial
given to Shipments. Try us.
Respectfully,
The Central Warehouse,
TARBORO.
MARK.
For the Core of all Skis Bums.
This has in use over
years, and wherever known has
been in steady demand. It has been en-
by the leading physicians all over
country; and has cures where
all other remedies, With the attention of
most experienced
for years failed. This Ointment Is of
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained Is owing;
its own as but little effort has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One hot tie of this Ointment will
be to any address on receipt of One
tree. The usual
discount to Cast Orders
promptly all
and communications to
T.
Mar Proprietor,
T if. C.
Notice to Shippers.
In order to make more convenient and
economical use of the vessels now em-
ployed In the North Carolina service
and thus to better serve the inter-
of shippers, the undersigned
have decided to merge their
respective lines between Nor
folk and and
Washington, N, into
one be known as
The Norfolk, Dim.
LINE.
-Connecting at Norfolk with-.
The line, for Baltimore.
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia.
The Old Dominion Line, for New
York.
The Merchants Miners Line for
ton and providence,
water Lines far Va
and Washington. D. C.
At with
The Atlantic North It. R.
At Washington with
The Tar Steamers.
Also Calling at Island, N. C.
The new lino will m
Service. With such additional sailings as
will beef suit
NO ADVANCE I HATES,
The direct service of steamer,
and the freedom from handling, are
among the great this Line
oilers. The following gentlemen have
been appointed Agents of the New
John E. at Norfolk. Va.
John Son, at
s. II. Gray, at N. o.
S. C. Whitehurst, at Island.
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C
The steamer will leave
on Monday. May from
on Water street Clyde
and between piers of Clyde
Line and Old Dominion Steamship Co,
II. A.
V. P. C. H. Old Dominion S. S. Co.
W. P. CLYDE A CO-,
Clyde Line
No-folk, May 14th, 1892.
S. M.
AT THE
OLD STOKE
AND BUY
their year's supplies will And
their Interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere
n all its branches.
SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA, p.
Lowest Pricks.
TOBACCO SNUFF A
we bur from Manufacturers, en,,
buy at one profit. A c
stock of
always op hand at prices to sulk
he Out goods are all and
sold CASH, therefore, having no rial
to sell at a margin.
Respectfully,


Title
Eastern reflector, 14 September 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 14, 1892
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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