Eastern reflector, 28 January 1891






you can get
REFLECTOR
Through 1891 only
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The
THE REFLECTOR
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orders. ;
Editorial Paragraphs.
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Uruguay hits increased its custom
duties.
GREENVILLE, PITT C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1891.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS
Per Year, in Advance.
The Prince of Orange plate fur
the best which is being
brought homo, by its winner,
the American skater, bus
been held in years
past.
re was a lire id Mon-
last week.
is inn old,
poor sad
Zoe Clay tun. a California
in Back Inland. last j
New York Letter.
A VARIETY IN
WORKER
MATRONS IN STATION H
Regular Correspondence.
v York, 1891.
How are
Most Excellent Railroading.
The Watch-To we.
While this piper has n special
before it, still it is also its
mission to its reader No great art is demanded. Only
the living of the day. three or four tiling to
n. of these living complete the work. M me all the
It is enough to spoil a child.
Chin Kan the Treasurer of i questions; one of the nurses wait on fly at his
Tue-day. en to Com , topics; cue of the practical, business biddings ; let him learn never to go
nu for a wager of
to walk from
to New York.
A vegetarian
clan ha bet-u formed.
arrived I considerations the day. The j a drink, but always have it
here Una ween and made is of the in him ; at ten years of age
to take alive j comfort and have Bridget, tie hi shin-string; let
lease a sis story in Pell i the iron horse needs to be pitied; him strike auntie she will
Ii is stated that, a- the of, of making it the person who does not realize the i not get him a sugar plumb. He will
gold fish at the central station of a , A railroads as educators and great j learn house is his
the Commission. York and Boston Chinese schemes to develop oar resources
The Va., locomotive
works were burned; loss f
Steamboats, it is will
soon be running on the Sea Gal-
Charles Hastings i. ninth
Duke Bedford, is dead, at the age
y ears.
There are said to be bras-
band in this country, with 150.000
performers.
in Washington, C., has been ex-
no will be. issued
before next fall.
merchants will take in the
new the capitol stock of
which is to 840.000. The
and space in tins
world i hat is in sense
School and
is to be according to i towns spring op and expand with
ideas, add, if the and rapidity
selected proves satisfactory to wherever tin whistle is heard.
The Indian have burned the
of Wash., and killed
several people.
realm, and he is to rule He will
come up manhood one of those
precious spirits demand
and service. a-id the
that the world is his
which, with be will proceed to
open, if does a him, buy
wilding inspectors, alterations will We have carefully observed the U I i and
I I of that for a man to own such an
A good
hake up lb- liver an helps them
;, has bee The ; f i it is almost
trunk line, at impossible he good too
and opening and developing . e bile, an or a slums
counties of Halifax. off duly. We congratulate any
mainstay in the mechanical depart- in every respect. The plays will be Nash Wilson, Wayne, man b. can a
Seals are not seen New
York waters, but several, if is de-
have made their appearance
III the harbor
They are commonly seals to Chin of money L, and
and come the S ; ,, to the ,. w ,
will one of most
The Geneva, Republican rate in the
excused itself for as j will tit
half sheet last week be. men. an I the will he
had shouldered his the Chinese n-
and for the front to tight doubt the audiences will be Chinese
The United States cruiser San
Francisco will be attached to the
Pacific Station.
Indians.
Ann Millet, t e famous French
painter and sculptor, died yesterday
in Paris, aged
All the agents and
graph operators on the St. Paul
road have resigned.
Violent earthquake were
felt last week in Algiers, Mex co,
and at Out.
sugar 1590-91 M
expected to be the largest ever
gathered on Island.
II. E. Van to
the United States Agricultural De-
declares that there are i
In the southern parts
Arizona. Sew Mexico and Texas
millions of acres which can be made
to produce as good dates as those
grown in Arabia and Persia.
also We had a taste of the Chinese
drama last year and I imagine that
will satisfy Americans for some veins
to
is
The lovers music in its highest
form here have hen agreeably
; prised I his- week the
that, for a time at least, the
Metropolitan Opera House has
over and terminating at tie city of j but a boy own one, he will
Is known far and ride on it m destine he will
reliability, promptness and j slop at tavern for drinks; he
business management Such j s will be
men us Messrs. I hi enough in Hie saddle
and Divine for the idleness to
not he otherwise
than Not
mammoth trunk or main line
the Mid has
been blanching branching until
its now are
transportation ti a few
years ago were almost
the brunch from Rocky
Mount lo I'm The road to
neat Saratoga, u which a six toot i;,, , . . ,
Its kind in the world, has been has been in for a
. , . . . ., . ed to put. aside German opera and
W first rich silver strike, am, .
was recently from which is admitted to
of State Sena-or ; D, u,
vein of silver ore that not
less to the ton has ban
Platte river fr mi Brush creek.
From all parts of the United
States come that electrical
storms are unusually prevalent.
to the census
taken are u less
religious the United
Stales.
Joshua J. has sun
divorce against Eva Hamilton,
the alleged widow Robert Ray
Ha on.
A committee has been formed
to 20.0 Jews, t-n
route to Brazil who have been ex-
Iron
A law is to cm
all aliens owning land
to sell their property or be-
come Russian
exclusively devoted to German j Its extension to
I opera for the past seven years. The Is date and Us
icy was financially the best, as the j Roanoke river, is but recently ac-
French were It is a fact, the
road now only likes nine miles of
being in with
and road and
ii Hi- miles can be built much cheap
same number of miles
from lo Plymouth. If
the line is continued to
Warpath by John
F. is a handsome
of nearly pages, furn-
with well executed maps and
illustrations, the truthful
of
more in
written since stirring
of
The
hook can be author
that our opera goers
will like a change and will welcome
a season of Italian an I French music
without meaning to condemn the
care price in
cloth.
tried were very unsuccessful. Mr.
Abbey, the manager
introduced J Lilian opera there
some eight years ago and, it is said
lost ft quarter of a million dollars in
one season. There are many
from pen of the gallant I , ire now
indent who shared m all its
and vicissitudes.
that hue has . , . r , , , I
spite of this, I he- a. P., it will
m i ii us on m river, where it
can place a steamer c all
I the in Hyde and
jibe best part, of Tins
ideal ha- been and if con-
feet of j what ha- long been
Tb-re arrived at the Barge Office j ed the extreme eastern counties
in this city last week a bit of be to
I three feel high, forty years old,
ind weighing Is. His name
is Lukas an I he came from
Moravia on the North German Lloyd
steamship Eider. The overcoat he
wore measure two feet in length,
eleven inches across the shoulders,
while the satchel he carried weighed
more than himself. The little
one if them and one of
them behind. The bit will be
enough lo it-ill in at
right place. are men who all
lives have been going down
lull, and the reason i- Hi boy-
I hey sprang a horse,
am got going so fast that they
have been aide to stop.
But if the child be to
all lo spoil try
plan never saying en-
him. lie do
him ; hut he lo
well, leading
pretending to see him. There
are excellent people who
of childish Vanity,
are unresponsive lo the very best
when a child earns
applause, he ought to have it. If
lie gets up head at school, give him
a honk or an apple. It lie saw
A Daub of Ink
Worth Tires a
Jam n Gordon Bennett has a way
dropping in examine the Her ;
at the unexpected times
n his visits results in a
general
of the paper's managerial, i
Fen. ii will connect with A. trampling on
W. gets b y, and your sou took
by throat so tightly Hint
he a little variegated in Mi-
praise your boy and let him
know that you love to have the
champion of the weak. Perhaps
would do a day if you
iii. more prospect reward than
which yon have given bun II,
on day, lit- make the
best speech, or read the best essay,
tell him of it. is
harmless, the you Use of
II daughter at the
all Southern A direct
line from river, at
month of river, to Rocky
Mount will be one the
known to our people. o fakes palm, give
her a new piece of music, a
kiss or a
in
The weather in Europe continues and working forces
shall wait see and inform
leaders.
The next branch is is known
as the is a
The heirs of General Garibaldi
have offered by the
Italian Government bis former
home at the Island of
Success Certain.
It is said that Baron Rothschild
is not a museum freak, on by lo the town b d the
in its and are with and trembling is and roan from
Lake Geneva has l-en frozen over his employees, says the 1-i R. D ,.
for the first time 1850.
On one of I I
one of the pressman a man who bad i as supported him-1
It is claimed that Parish.
Louisiana, is the only country in
the United States wherein there
are no homestead mortgages.
worked for the elder Bennett and
was an excellent workman, though
self work. A tor answering the
; maxims famed on his hack walls
The latest is the road Attend carefully details your
list of questions at the B fax, by Scotland Neck, I
guilty an occasional lapse Horn ; mm lo f ,
Fifty saloon have looked
up their places at la-,
and left town because of the rigid
enforcement of the bill.
detail,
Hundreds of ferocious wolves sharply at each employee. When
have invaded the part of about re leave be turned
from Territory, j and pointing to the besmirched
are doing damage the ; pressman said .-
Hayes, what is that man's
bad a black eye, an I -as b-was going lo Texas,
in a as what excuse be a
offer if Bennett MM lodgers.
Ac on a so-1 den Inspiration, he j The question of appointing mat-
ink roller and nibbed a ions public stations is receiving
daub of ink on the side his face, j a great deal of attention now, and
completely the much pressure is being Eastern on
of the skin. Mr. the authorities to accomplish this ll daily and
Bennett came the press room, j needed reform. The fact everything seems lo
the town where it tap
the A. N. C. R. R. Every branch
of business on t Ms line is on a boom.
The town of has sprung
mice
with the superintendent. John j the past year nearly seventy i be onward and upward. Ii business.
Hayes, carefully through and women were compelled to take secured
Be prompt in all things.
Consider then decide
i lively.
Dare to do fear lo do wrong.
Endure trials patiently.
Fight life's
Go not the society of the vi-
Hold sacred.
not another's reputation nor
The Legislature.
From the in
I the Raleigh papers it, is Impossible
j to form correct ideas
the Legislature is doing, as some
i of the bills cannot, he understood
from the unintelligible synopsis
given. We have run ever back
proceedings glee below of
I the hills that have paused
branch. Here after we will endeavor
to give nil hills pass, Mid
the matters up for
are of special interest
to section.
ix the
repeal chapter
1879, relating to sale of seed cotton
passed second and third readings
A bill lo amend charier of the
i town of
A hill to simplify the statute of
I limitations passed third reading,
A hill abolish the December
I term of Davidson Superior Court.
Revolution to create a special com-
consisting or Senators
and three Representatives to
gale the letting convict labor
under the sots of 1883 and 1883 to
the X. C. Railroad Co., and
Richmond and Danville Railroad
inn pa .
A hill the protection of
the oyster interests North Carolina
and for purposes.
S-c gives the Governor
i of die militia and the Treasurers
j shall expenses of carrying s
effect.
Section makes it o
from any of the public
grounds, or natural oyster of
North Carolina with dredge,
scoop patent longs, except such
longs as are worked by
to or
one to live years or
Bill to go into effect immediately
alter its passage for months,
A bill to amend the charter of
. Trinity College.
A bill to amend code in
lion to repeals the provision
I making per cunt a I gal rate under
; written contracts.
H . Williams, whose bill this is,
I made a noble effort in behalf its
passage. He traced the practice
; usury from the days of our Saviour's
upon earth when be drove
i the money changers from the temple
to the present day. Mr.
I limns gotten into the heat
debate when l lie hour for I lie
special order arrive and lie- bill
went over a- unfinished basin
A lull allow persons to change
i names accordance with Art.
; Sec. the
The hill provides any person
I having sufficient good reason, may
i the of go I witnesses
from Cue county in which be resides,
I make application I
Clerk, for a id his and
that Ulcer power
change.
A bill to the the
Western North Carolina Insane
the Carolina Hospital
pas-ed its readings. The
bill provides for the care of limited
j number inebriates
lion an I policy
th Bu-1 C
in
tor limber, relating to n
i Craven, Bertie,
; Pin and
j To define books
I Shall he closed. Tine
Ion week before the n.
p his table may
is for Yon.
Save a part of your weekly
earnings, even if it be no more
a quarter dollar, put your
monthly in i hanks.
Buy nothing till you can pay
I It, sod buy nothing that you do
need.
A young man who h i- grit enough
folios riles will have taken
first step to success iii
business. He may be compelled to
wear n i year longer, a ii it
lie unfashionable; he may bare to
in a sin ; ban me
his young acquaintances; his wile
may i ilium in I- nor
u, reap i silk or In, just
I yet; his children not b.-
j as do
j be plain but an I
the beer or champagne cork
n v . be hear i lie
may have to get along m . the
earliest or vegetables; may
ii to. abjure tie c o i, the
re I he hell a i I
an-l
read an the i
Bible he will
heller every f-n- s If-
discipline, he do all these
without detriment to his manhood,
or or character. True.
led folks may sneer
him an I i pi . . hut he
ii ; two
in art I brave ind
e laugh the lo II has be-
come in n n.-in. lie never
owes an body, I so he is no man's
slave. He has become mast of
himself, and a m is himself
i become a lea am mg men. and
w II crown cry
in in I I if
life's came fro n bar work
and If denial; an . i
success is sweeter the
time when i climb up on
; and yo i i e i propping
Up.
special Notice.
In adopting i Cash in
tern for this year The will
be to no one for a longer time
than it is paid for. If you find stamped
just after your name on the margin of
I lie paper
expires two weeks
from this
it is to give you notice that re-
newed in that time The
will cease going to you at the expiration
of the two week.
MOTHER'S
will list to a word from moth-
my boy;
Yon have only a moment. I know;
But you'll slay I give you my parting
all that I have to bestow.
You leave us to seek for employment,
hoy.
By the world you have yet to be tried;
But in ail temptations and struggles
you meet,
your heat In Savior confide,
And In yon satchel a Bible, my
ho. ;
Is of all others the best;
V will leach on live, it will help
to die.
And lead to the gates of the
gave you to God In your cradle, my
I have taught you the best that I know;
me to
The Muddy Stream.
In his me ho was n
whether his tablet were written
the mere amusement cf the infantile
mind, or u r bi r application
simile m the various conditions
and ii lea o more mature lire.
The attitude of some men toward
others more is very much
skin to a I be
troll and the lamb on the
I never cues for you.
want yon to feel every word I have
said,
ii came from the depth of my
heart;
And. my boy. if we never behold you
Shall meet where we never shall
part.
fast to right, hold fast to
footsteps may roam;
Oh. ton not tray of salvation, my
boy.
That you learned form your mother
THE CF
Anew reading of Tennyson
led poem of the
Through the land, the land
Many -s onward.
Into valley of death
M nil not
Thou- took up their cry
Theirs nor to reason why,
Theirs bat to make reply;
Vis we will drink and die;
valley of death
M many a hundred.
Rain to the right of them,
to the left of them,
Rain to front of them.
Prom no I sundered,
In the field they fell.
battle well,
But in of death,
the mouth of hell.
Marched many a hundred.
s e all husbands there,
And while eyeballs glare.
Pity those i fair.
Hear their cries rend the air
While the world wondered.
See. too, those wretched wives.
and pure their
Now each demon strives
Into those hives.
sun to march onward.
Honor the and brave.
Who from a drunkard's grave
Those weak ones tried
. To death onward.
Many a home shall
How fought, and well.
To save from death and hell
More than hundred.
RECONCILIATION.
the of hitherto limpid jg thou lying, sod still and
stream. The former, through lack white,
, . . In s O mine enemy
pluck, -denial, if i looked on
to own in the
level tins,; who through ;, would conquer ml by
application
of honor
have attained the
, .,. i, ,.,.,,. Of death's sad impotence, and I
See
succeed not, succeed. How i a thing it be
.,. , ,. , ,,. I. with mortal.
in which tiny have So the night.
lie i i
mess pi it .-
. , My soul, unfurling her white of
no management, is sen- p
Li men.
Give these same people a chance,
and place them in positions they
. ii decry, an I what
. ms in f
them, their new an
would become
Can wonder exist the
of to-day ire look to the
dread hour we
meet
The dead lace and living, fain would
cry
Across the years, let our warfare
coat I
Iii. is s short, oil hatred is not
Lei there peace between us ere we
Happy
Wm. master of
A belt of wood the
powder magazine on the
has report-
ed on fire and the is
in of blown up
Twenty ago roamed
over the and ams of
the Far nearly bat-
To-day there arc a than
mo h-ad of the animals in
The culprit quaked hi- slows
Mr. Bennett said slowly
want to Live that man
per week more wages; he is the only
man in the mom looks as if he
had
refuge in the public stations us I BO
is sufficient to show how j J ten
the subject is These women I branch, Capt.
were not guilty of crime or J is a man of sterling
yet they relegated lo
the sole of men. without
and is all push
Mr. Moore at Greenville
the common courtesies of
decency. But even the ones i Mr J-
are entitled to some consideration, is a young man
it is disgraceful is and
are not attended members of,
If the United
has a it would bad in the
next world because unjust and ;
treatment of the if
their own sex. Separate lodging
houses are also being urgently
and if the agitation is kept up
both reforms will no doubt be at-
Edwin
art- men
for positions
they fill.
While this gigantic company has
made wonderful We
the of the times a
grander and more auspicious day is
yet In all the move
nothing else. It does , ell Curtain.
boasted civilization when ii is makes the that she ; up r ate piece and
A monument for Em a. a charged the J n. j develop Old Sate, the
Abbot, the wholly responsible tin tin- butchery physician, hut grew worse. He told her W,. bids them God
who die Lake C the Indian and the killing f speed.
and cure
Utah, is at j Cured Slates troop, m the war her
try. It will be f the now waged In the
the will leaf-
ant The will
he v the gr-vs of
Abbi avail her Ohm- j
n mil mm i
, her. Her druggist suggested Dr. King's t
Discovery for
bought a and to found For would re-
I herself first dose, OIL All
i Its taking ten
I wall, Many eases have our
I Is a of Bull's
ewer Free , i a a
. at J. U. mm mm A.
Join hands only the
Keep your mind from evil
Lie not for consideration.
Make acquaintances.
Never try lo appear what you are
not.
good manners,
your debts promptly.
Question veracity of a
friend.
the counsel of your pas
en is.
Sacrifice money rather than
Touch not, not, handle no;
intoxicating drinks
Use your leisure lime for improve-
Venture not upon the threshold of
wrong.
Wait-h carefully over pas-
lo every one a
not to
Zealously labor for the right.
And success is certain.
No chill can sleep y
with or from Bo-
move the by Or. Ball's Baby
Syrup. Only
Ail cit or
can lark forward speed em Or
IN IRE
bill by M r.
; Hood, o
the of the of
county.
Senate bill No. introduce by
of amen
the Laws of North Carolina
relating lo the selling of
was upon taken up
passed. The I re-
quired all parties selling in
of P.;.
Lenoir should go before a
Peace and register the
To amend chapter of
the Cole, providing for a tonnage
tax on fertilizer. provides for a
lax of cents per Ion I
; license lax has been
decided illegal by courts.
To suppress gambling. bill
was introduced The
judiciary an I
and as amen led the hill I
j second and third reading.
To judges ma-
; election. They shall
a n not to exceed
one
To enable of
in a Passed
a i of hi in- self-pi . .,, . --Electric Bitters has done
i lion i p. o e ;. i. ; i compels
t lie formal i of re Us, other
I sin j pose I odious form conducting
is ii n ;. the met; who de
-ire almost nothing,
a total I of the v slue
so ling as gain
their end-
The modern erase cheap goo la
g tricks in I am
that justice, right
tend to
the inevitable lose of the consumer.
Who finds in Hie run. he
for nu- than all other medicines
for that had arising
from Kidney and John
Leslie, firmer and same
place, Electric Bitters to
he tin- host Kidney and Liver medicine,
made me feel like a new J.
Gardner, hardware merchant, same
town, Electric Bitters is just the
thing for a man who Is run down and
don't can whether he lives or he
found new strength, good appetite and
just like he had a new lease on life.
Only a bottle, at L.
Drag Store.
Tin- Homestead law has outlived
us days, and should be removed
Horn Statute books- At the
time became a law. some
baa net bad the worth of his money j measure was imperative, bat the
Society is best served when all who for its continuance baa
labor receive ad q profit from j led Lat it be
brutes and enterprise. and let return to the
our good old
days when a man's word
Li ft i and no such thing a
c gage was known. We doubt any
. , , . , . , . is done with it, but we think
I. has be-u well that the I f ,
principle grows weak when to take steps tr-ward its
Tin- man who cares j speedy
n an I for whom inbuilt cares , ,
. Z Dr. Pierces
has to live will pay have you and you're
the of k body and The results are not Immediate.
at . And did you the disease Of
soul Yon must have ii , s Puts
heap -rs to make a glowing
lire. them apart, mid
bee -me dun and cold. So In have
a vigor life must have
a o, lives each other
a it afford each
tuber mutual encouragement and
pinch t in every dose Yen would
not call milk poor because the cream
doesn't rise tn an hour If there's a
possible cure. Dr. Favorite
Prescription Is sure to effect It, If gives
i fair trial. You get the one It
bank again if it don't benefit e
you. A wish could give you
the confidence. They shew h
giving money back in all
and support. II you case not
. . , yon to know how few dollars are needed
use to live hie a man, up refund.
not that I,, M
b o he Dr Catarrh Cum Mm
l and he j
I mt
. . .-
, ,
Hi





C. E. Cross and C. White
---------ox officials of the State
EASTERN National Bank of Raleigh, have
-i n pardoned by Got. Fowle.
. petitions for their pardon were
signed by numerous persons
the State, by the
J and Solicitors and by those
who knew them not as well as those
who knew them. It is to be re-
that they ever were SB
tangled in such an We
I always believed that they
writ drawn the matter
M tar
Mail
The Legislature.
Scan of tie Bills fists.
SENATE.
authorizing tho commission-
of Jackson county to levy a
tax, passed
lull giving magistrates
diction cases of cruelty to animals
passed its third
A bill to compel
to plead statue of limitation.
Passed third reading.
A to allow
Publisher's Announcement.
The i-
Bath.-One
one ; one-1 ell
-ear,
one we. H two weeks, on
eta, I
in
Catalan as reading item-.
line for each
Legal w -Ad-
Notices.
and Sales.
Summon et-.
be charged for at legal rates and
PAID FOR IN
has suffered some loss and
much of
rule as to the payment t
order to avoid
trouble payment in
will be demanded.
for spa. not
above, for of M
y application to the office enact
in or letter.
Mew Advertisements and
all changes of i should be
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
order to receive
day
The having large
will found it prof
through I i e.
and did not mean jurors per
the bank. The was j day, in and Union counties,
I doubtless a wreck before they passed third
I took Charge of it The Governor
ID them has done what
most any other man would have
done under similar circumstances.
The mental anguish which those
men have undergone is
punishment than their term
of physical labor would have
been. We see nothing special to
be gained by the State in not par-
them, it is to be hoped
that they may yet become useful
and worthy men. Mr. Cross is
yet a man, and can redeem
himself, and Stake a useful man,
and Mr. White, though advanced
in years, we trust may be spared
to regain his former fair name.
The New York Legislature
elected Got. Hill United States
Senator. suppose this leaves
way clearly open for Mr.
Cleveland's nomination for the
Presidency in 1802. It is evident,
and has been since the election,
that Mr. Cleveland is the choice of
i tho people outside of New York,
and if he should have been beaten
it would have been on account of
the New York delegation. Mr.
Hill is a far-sighted and
doubtless thinks a in
the baud is worth two Presidential
possibilities in the future. All
indications now point to Mr.
Cleveland as tho next standard-
bearer, but there may be some
dark horse developed who is not
yet known to fame.
., ,
elected t., succeed himself. Mr. The President is opposed to five
Blair of New Hampshire, go left, coinage of silver and it is said will
and Dr. succeeds him., veto the bill if it passes the house
be a Democrat I not probable that he will
The past weak has b d one of
nominating and electing United
States Senators. North Carolina's
most beloved son Ho I. B.
Vance, been elected to
himself for another term.
Got. David D. Hill was elected to
to succeed Mr. This is
of one Democrat, and a
good one at that. There is no
better Democrat in the country
than Got. Hill. Senator
There ought to be a
from that State but Billy
played his old game, and stole
the from the Demo-
Mr. Teller of Colorado was
elected to succeed himself. We
would rather it was Mr. Teller
than any other Republican. Mr.
Jones, Democrat Arkansas,
himself. Squire of Wash-
is re-elected so is Mr.
Mitchell of Oregon. Mr. Vest, of
Missouri, Mr. of In-
staunch Democrats,
back. Hon. William who
was in Cleveland's cabinet, will
take the place of a Republican
from Wisconsin. Up to this writ-
no choice has been made in
have a chance to veto it, for it is
certain that Czar Reed is opposed
to it, and lie has to crack the
party whip to kill or put through
any measure he wishes. Mr.
Harrison is very anxious to have
the measure defeated in the House.
it should pass the House he
would be in a very unenviable
with regard to his party.
Should he veto it he would incur
the displeasure of the Western
,, Republicans, and should he sign
it he would incur the displeasure
of the Eastern Republicans. Ho
wants B renomination and he
knows that if the responsibility of
either passing or defeating
coinage would kill his chances of
Illinois, Kansas. South Dakota
and North Dakota. The
favor Moody for re-election in
South Dakota, Palmer in Illinois.
Things ate in a muddle in Kansas.
will hardly get back unless
tho legislature fails to elect and
he is appointed by the Governor.
So far tho Democrats have gained
It is rumored that with little
effort tho branch road that tho
Wilmington Weldon Company
are contemplating building out
from Washington to some point on
the Scotland Neck Greenville
branch induced to come
two with prospects of two more, Greenville instead of going to
one from Illinois and one from ; Junction. The Reflector is
Kansas if the Democrats will do opinion that it is worth
their duty. Tho re- j wale for our citizens to look into
turned and those elected are true matter and see what can be
and tried men who have, and who toward getting it to
will reflect honor on tho country. this way. The people be-
here and Washington are
s ready to help secure this route,
understand. It would a
able aid to Greenville.
were never in the history of the
country brighter at present.
Unless they do some foolish
things to displease the people.
The Raleigh Chronicle says
unless they use their force in Building and Loan
the next House recklessly, it seems ; which has a branch
that they will have a walkover in that city has already
next election. Tho Republicans
recognize this fact and are trying
by every means of cheat, stealing
and to thwart the will of
the people at the poles. If they
can pass tho Force Rill they think
have tho matter secure.
being rebuked at the polls in No-
they are trying their old
tricks harder than ever. They
have stolen tho in
New Hampshire, and are now
trying to gag the United States
Senate, a body which more
than a hundred years has never
been limited in debate. It is to
be hoped that the gag will
not be applied. When such an
august body as the changes
their time honored custom of a
hundred years just for partisan
purposes in order for the
party to keep itself in power
against the will of the people our
government will cease to a
government of the people, for the
people and by tho people. It will
be a government of the
cans, for the Republicans and by
the Republicans, to steal, plunder
and rob against tho will of the
people. Will the majority of the
people submit to tho minority
Republican party is more
hopelessly divided the silver
question than upon tho tariff, and
how It can itself together
to make the fight In 1892 in
is at the present time a
to the closest political
built three or four nice,
homes for some of the share-
holders. Greenville is slow to
take hold of anything like that.
If enough of tho citizens would
take stock in the branch
here they would good re-
coming to our town.
Zeb Vance Walser, the
can State Senator from Davidson
county, has introduced in the Sen-
ate a bill to provide for the dis-
franchising of persons buying and
selling votes. If L his bill could
pass it would make North
an unhealthy State for his Re-
publican brethren Wanamaker,
Dudley, and the balance of the
of gang to move to.
Josephus Daniels, editor of the
State Chronicle was re-elected State
Printer by acclamation, and both
branches of the Legislature
ed by unanimous vote not to make
any changes in the for the
printing. Next time a man wants
to be elected without a dissenting
it would be a good idea to
hire the Durham Globe to go to
kicking against him.
We are glad, to see that Gov.
Fowle is preparing to put the
oyster law in execution. Active
measures should be taken at once
to protect our oyster beds, and if
it cannot be done without force, it
must be done by force. The
beds belong to North Carolina
and should not be plundered by
parties from other States.
The bill prosecution
in the State courts in cases where
mortal wounds are on the
high was, and when death ensues
in passed third reading.
A bill t authorial- the State
r to pay witnesses testify-
before the committee
ting railroads. Toe bill allows 91.50
per day, and the same mileage as is
allowed witnesses in courts. Pass-
ed third
The bill to establish a Normal
and Industrial school for
passed thud reading.
The bill all
county to issue to pay its
floating debt passed its leadings.
Hill to amend charter of the
Georgetown and Charlotte Railroad
passed third
Rill to levy tax in Polk
county passed third reading.
Bill to fund and consolidate the
debt of the city or Wilmington pass-
ed third reading.
Bill to Sec. Chap. laws
of the sale
liquors in Greene county passed
I bird leading.
Bill to amend Chap. OS, laws of
1887. Bill has reference to
lines in cases of con-
weapons.
Bill providing for working
on the public road of Macon,
Clay other counties passed
third reading.
Bill providing that when house-
hold or kitchen furniture is taken
chattel mortgage, married women
must be privately examined, passed
third reading.
Bill to allow the town of Wash-
to issue bonds to build a
railroad, passed its third reading.
Bill to authorize the Commission-
of Macon county to levy a
tax, passed third reading.
Bill to amend section
Code, relative to dower. Allows
heirs to file petition to assign dower
to a widow when she tails to do so
within three months. The bill pass-
ed its several readings.
motion of Mr. Turner the
rules, were suspended, Mr.
bill making R. B.
Lee's a legal holiday, was
taken op,
Mr. Williams said that this bill is
to commemorate name of one of
the greatest men known to history,
lie was tho greatest war-
who has ever lived. His char-
was spotless. Ho possessed
magnetism as BO other man known
to the world had possessed. It is
not his heroism so much that we
would like to bring before the youth
of the land, and his devotion to
We have very few holidays
in this and he thought it
wise and to have days upon
which our people will assemble
talk about the great men who have
made our illustrious. The
bill passed without a dissenting
vote.
At the conclusion Senator
speech upon ins bill to
make General Lee's birthday a
legal holiday, tho ladies m the gal-
presented the Senator with a
of beautiful flowers,
by the following
ladies respond most sincerely to the
grand eloquent sentiments of
tho distinguished Senator of Pitt in
his eulogy upon the grandest of
men, General Lee. Please accept
these simple flowers as a token of
To amend the charter of the city
of allowing a vote of a
special tax regard to the removal
of Bingham School.
S. B. amending the act relating
to the Western N. C. Insane
changing its name to State
Hospital and to provide an
ate department, passed third read-
The bill requiring butchers to
keep a registration book in which
to record the transactions in the
purchase of passed third
reading.
The bill to prevent enticing min-.
from the State, making it a
misdemeanor with fine
passed third reading.
To prohibit emigrant agents
doing the State without
paying a of per annum,
and in failure to procure the same
to be subject to a fine, and
not less than four months
in the county jail or more than two
years in the State
To facilitate the registration of
mortgages, and deeds of trust;
lowing to
made in the county in which
parties reside.
To repeal chapter laws of
which requires payment of a fee to
the register of deeds from all per-
sons who sell seed cotton. Passed
third reading.
To uniform system of
cancellation cf all county scrip after
its payment, it requires word
to be cut through all such
scrip. Passed third
To amend Sec. of school law
of 1889. This changes law so
that County Superintendent is not
required to have assistants in
examinations. It is left op-
Mr. Whit field, bill to compel
owners of sick swine to pen
in Lenoir county so that they shall
not have access to stream, ditch and
It is to prevent the spread
of bog cholera. Passed third road-
To incorporate den, Pitt
passed third reading.
Resolution to pay V M.
as fee for legal services to
railroad investigating committee,
was up. Mr. and
advocated adoption of the
report. Passed third reading
bill to authorize the boards
of commissioners of Craven,
and Onslow, I lei tic Pitt
and Northampton counties to p-
to exceed three tin -or
inspectors, who upon shall
examine logs and timbers. Tin y to
be paid cents per thousand feet
and no more than a day.
Mr. offered a resolution to
appoint the following committee to
take in and secure the
proper ventilation and heating of
the Stancill, in.
Denny of
and Phillips of Mr. Si. n-.
moved that the commit tee
into the matter of smoking, and an
if it were not deleterious to the
health the members. Mi.
made the point of order that Mr.
Skinners amendment was out of
order, and ought to go to the com-
on
Mr. Sutton opposed it,
thought Mr. was trying to
make fun. Mr. Jones asked Mr.
Sutton he smoked the
He said he did, and asked if Mr.
Jones smoked, lie said no. A
motion to add
offered. There was some fun here,
Mr. Skinner withdrew bis
amendment as to sin king.
passed-
Attention I
The fast that there is no real sen-,
anywhere in this country fa-
the Force bill has
not bad a feather's weight with the
Republican bosses whose
idea is to perpetuate their own
Senator Williams, of Pitt, is do-
service for the people
his open opposition to every thing
the character of pending legislation
that looks like granting special
to any class of men. His ex-
ample is to
The Alliance in North
Carolina is happy in having able
friends and helpers amongst tho law-
of the State, and it is indebted
to its friends in tho legal profession
for eminent services rendered to its
cause. But it is perhaps indebted
to no one of these more deeply than
to Col. Harry of Pitt
Col. Skinner has many or- the
ions for leadership. He is
clear-headed, true sighted, brave
and to the people. We
for this talented young North
Carolinian a brilliant in his
county's Par-
Ben Terrell
Alliance at Plymouth.
Wednesday, Feb. is, Washington.
Thursday, Feb. in, Barbara.
Friday, Feb. Newport.
Saturday, Feb. Trenton.
Men, and Feb.
Alliance at
Wednesday, Feb. Snow mil.
Feb.
Friday, Feb. Wilson.
All the people are cordially invited to
attend the lectures of this distinguished
gentleman. AH these meetings will be
public except the second day of the Dis-
Alliance, which will to
drilling officers of County Alliances
throughout the District, all of whom are
expected to be present.
who Is anxious to become familiar
with the Work ought by all
means to attend the District Alliance.
Ami II N necessary for every
Lecturer in the
District to attend, even if his County
Alliance to pay his expenses,
Let the public turn out at these meet-
and Warn what Alliance doctrines
are.
President N. V. A.
K. C.
Secretary N. F. S. A.
C. C.
N. C
DANIELS DANIELS.
n. c
ft. U. L. JAMES,
U DENTIST,
A LEX L. BLOW,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW;
G R E E N V I L I, E, N. C
L C. LATHAM. HARRY SKINNER
X SKINNER,
N. C,
LI G. JAMES,
GREENVILLE, N. G
Practice In all the courts. .
a Specialty.
I.
B. YELLOWLEY,
A T-LA W,
Greenville, N.
J MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
N. C.
of
Office In Skinner Building, upper floor
opposite Photograph Gallery
We have come among yon to
What concerns yon also concern
That which is your Interest is also
to our.
therefore ready to lend a help-
hand, and encourage any enterprise
which seem to your Interest.
The culture of Bright Tobacco was in-
in this county only a years
ago. yet to-day Pitt county is recognized
as one the producing
In the State.
But must not stand still and trust
too much to the already
achieved, you lie up and doing to
keep abreast of the s.
are made each hi the quality
the of Bright To-
We do not think you hive as
what
is best adapted t. and your
mate. Many of you have made a won.
success in cultivation of To-
We feel interested in this mat-
we desire It given a thorough
test. We arc told the success making
tobacco depends largely upon the char-
quality and purity of the seed from
which the plant is raised, and the
Therefore In order that
you may have the best and purest seed
an d a good selection to choose from, we
have ordered and will have In stock In a
few days a limited supply of
SEEK
five different kinds, any of which will
we think, suit lids section. These
seed came direct from the tobacco seed
farm of Maj. It. L. of
Halifax county, Va., who is recognized
as the best authority on the culture of
tobacco the United States.
In order that you may sec he says
about the different varieties print be-
low I he following clippings from his hook
on tobacco seed I
longer and
liner than the Broad-Leaf grow,
more and more popular every year.
One of the best.
tho
yellow which it. resembles, and
most excellent variety,
in some localities where the finest
types are grown.
Is indeed a
line as tho finest, one of
the earliest to makes the silkiest
of wrappers, brightest of cutlers, and
toughest and sweetest of fillers.
new variety of great ex-
Resembles the yellow Orono-
but has a larger leaf; a splendid
tiring sort.
the
development of variety thus named
the originator had failed to find his Ideal
Of a Superb Bright YellOW all
the requisites healthy
grower of the form and Ones
texture, ripening early and uniformly
and easily cured to the brightest color.
The Conqueror has no superior as a
producer of the finest of the finest
type grown, and will surely please the
most exacting. It has come to stay.
These are the lea we have
ordered. expect them In by the
middle of the week. We Intend to give
them away and to get them equally, and
equitably distributed among our
have adopted the following
plan. As soon as they arrive they will
go on distribution.
Every one who spends one dollar or
over with us will get a package of seed
free. If you spend you get two
packages and so on at the same ratio.
Look over the list, make your choice,
come to sec us and buy your goods, and
you get a package of the most reliable
seed that can be gotten.
Allow us to say here, that can not
give away the seed on account of past
purchases because that would defeat the
object which have in view as to a
We have not increased price of our
goods one cent. You can examine the
mark for yourselves and sec that they
have not been changed. We have only
a limited supply of these seed.
Tho first customers will get the
fit of them. If you want any do not
delay
In this connection we beg to say
arc solo agents for High
Grade Special Bright Tobacco
We have bought a large quantity
this fertilizer for sale this season, and
we hope every farmer will try some.
Those who have used it or it used
need have nothing said to thorn In its
praise. Those who have never used it,
but desire some Information before try-
it, we would refer them to those who
have most it used H long-
est We now have some ordered for
Plant Bed use, and shall be pleased to
receive your orders, an at least would
like to have you come to sec us and
the matter We will also furnish
any one buying their Plant Bed
from us with seed free of cost.
We shall have a full supply of
acid
and Standard High Grade Cotton
on hand in due season,
NATIONAL AND HAWK
The North
AGRICULTURAL
LINK WORKS,
FALL AND WINTER
op------
CO.
-0-
Oyster Shell
DEPOT.
WASHINGTON, N. C.
A. Prop.
Tons Agricultural
Lime for Sale.
I am now ready to deliver Lime to the
Farmers of North In
from to tons bulk or
FROM LAST SEASON.
Have completed
FOUR LARGE KILNS
With a capacity of Hundred Tons
per Hay. And the lame delivered will
be from the Kilns, and
Bend in your orders at once us
there is already a number ahead.
Farmers It to Interest to
make up clubs buy
Cargo Lots Tons
A Specialty.
John Flanagan, Agent
N. C.
The leading- General Merchandise in
Pitt County.
We wish to say our customers we
largest and best selected stock that it been our pleas-
tire to place before you. And bag of you that you will
inspect our and compare qualify, quantity and
prices given you anywhere else by first class
house. We realize that competition is the
life of trade but we are fully of
the times and feel able to meet any
competitor fairly and squarely.
We give our customers the
very best that can he
bought for the
MONEY
Invested in that
article. We in with
the people in their do-
that they shall buy
goods cheap. And we promise all
who shall give us their
that they shall have them cheap. If you
fail to get as good bargains, when you buy
of some one else, as your neighbor gets who ban
of us, you have only yourself to blame, because we
have invited you lime and again to come in and see us
Our invitation to all people is this OF KNOW
US, BUY OF US. With these three injunctions ringing fresh in
your ears every week, we again ask you to come and examine the
following of General Merchandise
Staple and Fancy Dry Goods.
After a business experience
Of years we do not
hesitate to tell yon that we can
and do offer yon bargains that
have before been heard
of in mis county, and each
m we are at work
dying to serve your interests
faithfully.
X o OX.
A few things sold by
LATHAM
Hardware Dealers,
GREENVILLE, N. O.
Builder's Material,
Cook Stoves,
Heating Stoves,
Stove Repairs,
Flow Tastings,
Guns.
Pistols,
Ammunition,
Tinware,
ware,
Stove ware,
Lamp
Lamp
Tab,
Wash Boards,
Sewing
Carpenter's Tools,
Iron Nails,
Stool Nails,
Bar Iron,
A idea,
Windows,
Cart Material.
Putty.
Shovels.
Boss.
will our special brands.
Our line of
AND
Now Ready
To show you the of lot of
Horses
1ST T
Mules,
ever brought to Greenville,
II you want a good
Draft Horse a Rood Work
Mule don't fail to me.
I can you at
reasonable prices.
Feed Stables
recently been enlarged and
cow t have ample room to
all horses left in my charge.
Best attention given.
Greenville. N. C.
Notions.
Hats and Caps.
Boots and
Hardware.
Farming Implements.
and Fancy Groceries.
Flour a specialty.
Crockery and
Wood and Willow ware.
Tinware.
Stationery.
Trunks and Valises.
Harness and whips.
FURNITURE
We are headquarters in this market for Furniture and ask you
to look at our line of Suits, both Walnut and cheaper woods.
Bureaus, Bedsteads, single and double, Mattresses and Bed
Springs, Children's Beds, Cribs and Cradles, Cane
and Wood seat and Rocking Chairs.
Children's and Dining Tables, Lounges and
lots other things too numerous to mention. We thank you for
past favors trust and believe that you will continue to patron-
us, for we work not alone for our interest but also for yours.
COBS,
Pitt Co. N
C C COBB.
C. Pitt Co.
T. H. GILLIAM.
Co.
Bros., Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merchants,
of cotton u
We have had many years ex
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton
the advantage of shippers.
to
All business entrusted to our
hands receive prompt
careful
Is large and well assorted.
We have a largo lot of Bed Cloth
just arrived.
We will save yon money it you will
only call to see before you buy.
Tho winter trade i nearly over. We
still have a large stock to sell. We know
that low prices is the only that
will do It. We them, we
have tried to make the prices so low
that they are bound to go. can not
do business and sell goods at and below
cost. But we will yon on a very
small profit, and this we know all fair-
minded men are willing to pay,
AU we ask Is a trial of our goods,
our system of doing business. We are
aura can please you with both.
Troll Ac,
Greenville, IX. O. A
P. also a limited supply
of Int-ohM
ESTABLISHED 1876.
S. M.
AT
OLD STOKE.
AND MERCHANTS
their year's supplies will
their Interest to get our prices before
Is complete
in all Its branches.
HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO.
Manufacturers of Ha's Patent
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK.
SAFES
FACTORY PRINCIPAL OFFICE
STOCK
----AND----
Reliable Goods.
The above is what
the people need and not so
much cheap goods which
prove to be Jr
We carry a full line of
mil GOODS m
Shots,
HATS AND CAPS.
Full assortment and many
other minor lines that are
carried by dry goods
BROWN BROS
IN-
BOOTS SHOES, HATS CAPS,
n sea.
A FEW LEADERS.
Checked Homo
spun White Homespun i to
Worsted to 81.00.
Shoes 81.00 to 84.25, Brass Pius
eta. Needles and more
besides for Cakes Soap
Caps to cents. Hats
to Goods to
and many other things In
proportion.
A FEW
Calicoes r Checked Ho
spun Whits i
Worsted ct to 81.1
Shoes to 84.25, Bras final
eta. Needle and meat
besides for t dikes Sots
Caps to M
to 83.25, Goods
St. mill many other things la
proportion.
W. H. LONG,
Attorney.
D. J.
Editor
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
TEAS, Ac.
always at
TOBACCO SNUFF A
rs,
A com
we buy direct from Manufacturers, en
buy at one
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to salt
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no
S. M. SCHULTZ
Real Estate Agents
The above have formed a ft
general real estate business, for the sale i
letting of town and county property. The l
of the public is solicited. Prompt
letting and punctual settlement





R. LANG'S COLUMN.
I offer my entire stock
of many new and
stylish goods at
Greatly Reduced
PRICES.
Every thing goes
all kinds of
Men's and Boy's
DRY GOODS
CARPETS,
GOODS,
This is a
BONA FIDE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C
I park
Warehouse
Henderson, N.
Is the leading place
For farmer to sell tobacco.
If you want the highest
Don't tail to your tobacco
To Henderson, N. C.
Tobacco
Winter Oats for sale by
G. T. Tyson.
A room for rout apply
to J. S.
Go to J. S. Smith Bra for Hue
Gaudies just received.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at I he Old Brick Store.
Tournament at to-day.
Point Lace is always uniform
in quality at the Old Brick Store.
Will pay cash for Eggs and Furs
and at the Old Brick Store.
Beady in five Minutes, Prepared
Buckwheat, at the Old Brick Store.
Saturday will be the last day of
this month.
Did you see that Stove at
D. D. T It weighs lbs.
Try in the at J.
S. Smith every pound war-
ranted.
In stock, all kinds of D. M. Ferry
Co's Garden Seed, at the Old
Brick Store.
Cheapest Bedsteads, Bureaus,
Cradles and Mattresses at the Old
Brick Store.
Trade with the merchants has been
light recently.
Just received another shipment
of that improved 310.00 Cook
at
Car land Side Meat re
sale cheap at J. B.
Plain candy at cents pound
just the nicest in town at J. S.
Smith
All force- lull
the two devils arc on the sink list
As the goods
must be
closed out
Far i
All goods go at to
per cent, below their
regular values.
M. R LANG.
Bi LAM'S COLUMN
New York Creamery Butter at
cents per pound, guaranteed, at J.
S. Smith A
Fob dwelling house
of P. E. on Pitt street.
Apply to Mrs. M. M. Nelson.
There is great in the sing-
class taught by Prof. Wood.
A beautiful
from the holidays will be sold at a
discount. Mas. M. D. I ho us.
Mrs. M. has added Milli-
Kid Gloves Notions to her
stock solicits the patronage of
the ladies.
We hear that, other mercantile es-
are soon to be opened
here.
See Ford ft Lanier before
chasing marble. will give
you the lowest prices ever offered
Greenville.
Dr. Geo. S. Lloyd, or Tarboro, N.
C, will be at the King House
on Tuesday and Wed-
Feb. 3rd. and 4th.,
limited to diseases of the Eye,
Ear, Nose Throat.
Wizard Oil troupe has struck
Washington. Greenville next, we
guess.
one two cent stamp to
L Co., New N. O,
and learn how some child under
yrs of age will get a handsome
parlor organ stool and instructor
positively
Send one two cent stamp to
L, Gaskill Co., New N. C,
and learn bow some child under
yrs. age will get a handsome
parlor organ stool and instructor
positively free.
Boys we've got big let of
comic valentines, at the Reflector
Book Store.
J.
Cherry yon will find the
celebrated Clipper, Atlas and Girl
Champion Turn Plows and the
Stonewall Climax Cotton Plows.
Norfolk Castings, best quality, to
fit ail these.
The Board of County Commission-
will hold their regular monthly
meeting nest Monday.
Money to
lug to borrow money on long time,
and at a low rate of interest, will
learn something to their advantage
by applying to
HARDING.
N. C.
Office Court House.
There was some very rainy weather
last week and everything was very
muddy in consequence,
Latham Pender are selling a
great many or their Elmo Cook
Stoves. No. Elmo weighs lbs
price No. Elmo lbs
price 912.50, No. Liberty Cook
lbs price
How many resolutions made the
first of year hold good the first
month Hand in your answers.
Latham Pender are selling at
wholesale and retail some very nice
Plow Castings made by Green-
ville Iron Works. Since Mr.
ton took charge of these works they
make castings equal to those made
in Norfolk for nearly all plows need
bole section.
The Patrick block of brick stores,
near Five Points, are being bright
up with the painter's brush.
The town of Littleton is prospect-
for a hotel. Green
ville nothing in that par-
direction.
The Senate again side-
tracked the cloture resolution and
lookup the apportionment bill.
We hope this is the last of the
Force Bill.
Personal.
Mr. J. H. Tucker left yesterday for
Miss Irene and sister, of
Snow Hill, are visiting relatives here.
Miss Bessie Jarvis returned home
Monday from a visit to Washington.
Mrs. C. C. Hinton, Washington,
is visiting the family her brother,
Mr. W. J.
Mr. Walker, of Cary, and Mrs.
Stone, of Raleigh, are visiting Mrs.
A. D. II enter.
Mr. Will Gray, of Tarboro, called
on us yesterday spent a while.
He is visiting the family of Mr. Leon
Pender.
Mrs. W. H. and her sister,
Mrs. II. P. Allen, spent
part of inst week visiting the family
of Mr. L. W. Lawrence.
Mrs. C. M. Bernard and little son
leave this morning for Virginia, in
response to a telegram announcing
the critical illness of father.
Mr. J. L. Daniel, the faithful
of the town, has been quite
sick the last two weeks. Mr. L.
is serving as watchman in
his stead.
Mr. S. Otho Wilson, of Raleigh, a
business agent of the Alliance, was
in town one day last week and met
some of the Alliance representatives
here.
Miss Annie Perkins, daughter of
Postmaster Perkins, is assisting in
the at the post office. We
cay that the mails will be better
ed than before.
Mr. W. H. Willoughby, of Fay-
a Pitt county boy, has been
spending a few weeks with relatives
in Ibis section. He always
hers the Reflector when he tines
up this
Mr. E. A. Buck, of Balloon, Ga.,
is on a visit to his old home in Pitt
to spend a few days with his relatives
He called at the Reflector office
Monday to renew his subscription
for another year.
Mr. Henry Keel returned Saturday
night with as tine a drove of horses
and mules as has been our pleasure
to see. Mr. Glasgow Evans left yes-
morning for another load.
They each buy a car load a week.
Mr. J. B. Lloyd, of Tarboro, spent
Friday night in town. He came down
for the purpose of examining Re-
power press with a view of
purchasing one like it upon which he
will print an Alliance paper soon, to
be started in that town.
We were sorry to see in Friday's
Raleigh papers that Mr. J. D. Cox,
one of Pitt's Representatives, was
quite sick at his boarding house in
city. Mr. Cox is rapidly com-
into prominence as one of the
young men of the body. The
News and Observer says he is an ear-
nest worker and will make his mark
the session closes.
Dr. Marquis continues to meet with
great success filling teeth without
pain.
The Reflector Book Store has a
beautiful line of valentines. Call
early to sec them get your pick
before the rush.
Quite a number of new subscribers
to the added to our list
last week. Plenty room for more.
Let the good work continue.
Taft Bros, have sold out their stock
of general merchandise here. W. II.
Cox bought the groceries Brown
Hooker the dry goods.
It is not exactly popular to call it
la grippe this season, but some of the
grip family ailments is indisposing
quite a number of our citizens.
If the Legislators could see some
of the bad county roads about bow
they would be in favor of passing
some measure for improving them.
The change
passenger and
convenient, as
hustling; out so soon these
of schedule for the
mail train is quite
it does not require
mornings.
Preparations are on foot for build-
a Catholic Church in this town.
A lot for this purpose has been
cured on Second street, a part the
Mansfield property. We hear that
the old Episcopal church has been
purchased which will be removed to
the above site and
Greenville Institute, Academic
May Abbott, Annie Barnhill,
tie Baker, Minnie Cox, Lea Carr,
Bessie Harding, Haddock,
Carrie Latham, Mattie I'll Rosa-
Smith
Lina Bettie Tyson,
Ella Tucker, Gertrude Williams,
Lillie Wilson, Myrtle Wilson,
While.
MM
At the res-
of the bride's father, Mr. Geo.
Belcher, near Greenville, at
o'clock on Thursday last, by the Rev.
Mr. Burns, Miss Winnie Belcher and
Mr. Samuel G. Williams were mar-
After receiving the
of their numerous friends
they repaired to the residence of the
groom where a brilliant reception was
held. The Reflector extends hearty
congratulations and them a
pleasant voyage down the stream of
life.
Singing Clan-
Prof. Theo. Wood has been in
town nearly two weeks conducting a
singing class of about sixty pupils.
During the time ho has proven him-
self to be a music teacher of fine
qualifications, and his work is best,
judged by knowing bow his class has
improved during the short time.
Prof. Wood has fine testimonials
from the North and Northwest where
he has devoted his life in teaching
music His testimonials are from
clergymen of all denominations and
from members of school boards who
have witnessed and known his work.
It only has to be seen what his work
is to know that his testimonials arc
not He is full of
in his work, and knows just
how to bring out what there is in a
pupil. The class will close Friday
night. An admission fee of cents
for and cents for children
will be the proceeds to go
to incidental and
lent work.
Hew
See notice to creditors by John
Flanagan, Administrator of T. A.
Cherry.
G. R. Harris can fill all your wants
in the way of fertilizers, Read his ad-
and give him a call.
D. J. administrator, on
the 20th of February will sell the re-
personal effects and relics
Mary S. deceased. Among
them are articles that arc very
valuable because of their antiquity
just such things as many house-
keepers of to-day want. The
will be at a convenient place for the
ladies to attend. Sec advertisement.
Mr. It, A. Tyson has purchased a
half interest in the business of M.
A Co., and the firm will
hereafter be known as
Tyson. The members of this firm
are well known to our people and will
be to have all their call
on The will
and you can be better than ever
by trading with them. Read ad-
in this
I Superior Court
Grand Jury
North Carolina,
Pitt County. f Jan. Term,
We, the Grand Jury, do make the
following as to the Poor House
in said
We find the Poor House in good
condition, and the inmates say they
are well cared for We recommend
that the be required to live on
the premises.
Em as C. Blount.
Foreman Grand Jury.
North Carolina. Superior Court.
Pitt County. J Jan. Term, 1801.
We, the Grand Jury, after visiting
and examining Jail of the county
do make the following
We find some of the glass lights
out of the windows of the building.
We suggest that other lights be put
in. We think the inmates are well
provided with food and bedding.
We suggest that the keeper be care-
to keep the cleanly
as possible. the exception of
the absence of some lights we find
the building itself in good condition.
Respectfully,
Carr
Grand Jury.
If the number of horses and mules
sold is a good farmers of Pitt
are preparing for heavy crops this
year. More stock has been sold here
this season than during any that
can be remembered. The farmers
having money to buy more team is
an indication of prosperity that the
is glad to note.
The hunters from the North who
have been at Hotel Macon for more
than a week, have killed large
of partridges on their hunting
expeditions. If Greenville had bet-
hotel accommodations to offer
more of these pleasure seekers would
spend the winter among us. They
find this the very climate that suits
them.
Boner Boll.
Of Miss Joyner's school, for the
month ending Jan;
Lizzie Jones, Irma Let.
Mary Alice Annie
Randolph, Smith, Hattie
Smith, Elmer Barret, Willie Evans,
Jimmie
John Smith.
Highest average, made by
Leta and Smith.
Report M Merit's Office.
North Carolina, Superior Court.
Pitt County. j Jan. Term, 1891,
To the lion. Spier Whitaker, Judge
The undersigned begs leave to re-
port that he has, as by law,
made a careful inspection of those
books and dockets required by law
to be kept by the Clerk of the
Court. That he finds same
neatly methodically arranged
and kept, and from hi inspection
examination be believes that the
duties office are performed in
a manner creditable alike to the
Clerk and people of Pitt county.
Respectfully submitted,
E.
Solicitor Judicial District.
Spier Whitaker,
. , residing.
OBITUARY.
On the 7th Inst., at his residence in
Pitt county, father. Moses
departed this life in the year of hie
In his death Farmville Alliance has
lost a true member, and his family their
best earthly benefactor. He leaves two
sons to mourn his death.
The funeral was preached by Rev.
John Phillips, at his residence to a large
audience. His body was laid to rest in
the family burying ground.
Friend after friend departs I
Who hath not lost a friend
There no union hers of loving hearts,
That hath not here Its end.
Our father sleeps forgetful of his
Once bright fame, he has
No feeling of the glory gone ;
That once drew his spirit on ;
He lies in dull, oblivious dreams,
bur cares who the wreathed laurel bear.
a id yet not all forgotten
He there. There are who still
How he bore upward the air,
Seamed living with the crown
Of light he wore,
Nor can, nor will they forget him.
He sleeps, yet on ml the sightless eye
The high powers In dull oblivion He ;
There hovers still the light of other days
Deep in that soul a spirit not
Of earth still struggles for its birth.
Father will not sleep forever,
But will rise to mere daring labors ;
Now. even now as the close
Shrouding of morning Alee
The gathered lumber leaves
Hie loving brow.
From his half opened
In fuller
His wakened spirit stream.
Father's spirit cannot always Sleep,
In dust whose essence to ethereal,
For life's deceitful cup of bitterness.
Rivers of seas of Joy.
Above smiles the ere
love- And underneath,
Sustain him safe, the
Arms, father not his
Spirit la not dead.
But rest in Jesus for he is this.
His has wiped
All sorrow from his eye.
AU from fair
Soul, ethereal love
For pain bath given
C s
the steamer
Balling through the placid
waters of the meandering Tar, on a
recent Thursday morning, and cast
out her bow line on the wharf at
Greenville, the world did not know
that among her precious freight were
a gallant youth and blushing maiden
whose hearts had strung upon
the same wire, and who were anxious
to reach some haven where Hie ends
of wire could be welded so fast
that neither of the hearts could slip
off. Neither did the world know that
beneath those heaving breasts there
same hearts were trembling with fear
lest some hand should interpose and
prevent the on which they
were eager bent. steamer alone
seemed t- realize their condition as
she hurried and landed at perhaps a
sooner hour than usual.
Passing hand in hand over the gang
way they attracted no special
nor did they meet the gaze of
the populace as is the case when u
wedding procession is passing by.
There were no flowers to deck the
pathway o'er which they tread. There
Were no wedding bells. There were
no dulcet strains from
to measure their pace. There was no
comment upon the bridal gown, no
ushers to lead their way, none of
these, but the couple had to go it
alone as they hurriedly the
from the wharf to the Temple
of is I ice.
Register James was little expect-
dusting out preparatory
for the days work that his quarters
were soon to be turned into the mar-
hall. But presently his door
softly opened and two anxious faces
peeped in, one of them
we get in here
exclaimed the Reg-
taking in the situation at a
in.
He gathered up the usual para-
necessary in such cases
begun questions as
to name, residence, age,
is your name asked be
of Miss.
came the response.
your age
near
A cloud of disappointment rushed
the officer's face, as he dropped
his pen and in sad tones informed
the maid that unless she was older
than that proceedings must stop right
here.
you put it down eighteen
she asked anxiously.
were you born ho
again.
or she said eagerly.
yon arc sufficiently
and all lit up with happiness
once more.
is your name, sir address-
the youth.
age
He did not want to sec another
hilt in the affair so he got around on
the other side first and said was
born in
The license was finished and two
faces beamed with smiles as enough
small change was piled together to
cover the fees.
Suddenly the smiles disappeared
again. They had a license but were
not married.
any of you marry us treat.
asked the maid.
They were directed to Deputy
C. Moore, who is clothed with the
authority vested in n J. P. The
arose buttoned coat, cleared
his throat, and proceeded to tic the
knot with as much grace and
dignity as a full fledged bishop, and
alter pronouncing them man and wife
raised both hands aloft and invoked
richest blessings upon their bowed
heads.
After the ceremony fie stat-
ed they were from Tarboro. They
bad to run away to get married and
had taken passage that morning upon
the steamer. The bride looked every
day of while the groom's youth-
appearance indicated that he was
hardly more than
The happy couple left the Court
House, stopped at the Old Brick
Store for a few confections as they
passed down the street, inquired the
road to Falkland and went on their
way rejoicing.
Bethel Items.
Mr. F. James, of
spent Monday in Bethel.
Mr. C. L. of
was in town last Thursday. Glad
to see him.
Mr. Blount Pearce, another
Greenville's well-known citizens,
was here last and
day.
Mr- S. T. Carson, of Bethel, made
a flying trip over to Norfolk last
week, went one day and returned
next.
Dr. J. D. formerly of
Bethel, but who has for the past
year been practicing medicine in
southern Alabama, is in town
ting friends relatives.
The schedule on Albemarle
and Raleigh It, has been
ed ; it went in effect Monday morn-
of last week. The tram In the
morning going west, arrives just
one hour later than formerly, bat
returning it arrives at the same
time as heretofore.
The first quarterly conference
the Bethel circuit was held at Beth-
el last Friday. Bey. W. F. Jones,
who bad not been examined, passed
an examination under Rev. G. A.
P. E., and was
ed to ; and Mr. M. O. Blount
war. appointed Superintendent of
the Sunday School to succeed Prof.
Z. who a short while
ago, and went to
N. C. J.
Notice to Creditors.
. having duly qualified
as Administrator A. Cherry,
before Hon. B. A. Clerk
Superior Court Of I'll notice is
hereby given to all creditors of said T.
A. Cherry to present their duly
authenticated to on or
before the 1st day of February, 1891,
or this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery.
Holies Is also to those Indebted
t said estate to come forward and make
Immediate payment.
N. C, Jan.
Josh Flanagan,
Administer of T. A. Cherry,
with the Will annexed.
Do you remember that the
other day, so it seems, were
the new year Now this
soon one month of is almost
gone.
Letter.
From Our dent.
Washington, D. C, Jan. W.
Senator Gorman is proving him-
self more than a match for the re-
publican Senators, and he is still
continent that active and deter-
mined support of democratic Sena-
tors, and moral support of the
conservative masses the country,
the Force bill and its revolutionary
forerunner, the can be
defeated. He fairly and squarely
outgeneraled the republicans when
they attempted to wear the
democrats by a continuous night
and day session of the Senate, and
now be is winning new
laurels by the manner in which
he is blocking republican at-
tempt to force a vote upon Senator
resolution. He
compelled Mr. Morton to
edge that be bad made an
ruling. republicans have
one hope of succeeding and
that lies in Vice President Morton
making an arbitrary decision in
their favor, and the probabilities
ate in favor of bis doing so,
it will because of great
pressure brought to bear upon him
and not because be wants to do it.
Even if Senate adopts the
resolution and passes the
Force bill, there will still be ground
upon to base hope for its
defeat. The amendments made
to the bill in Senate will make
its return to the House necessary,
and there the democrats renew
the which the nearness of the
4th of March and end of the
session, may make successful. At
any rate the republicans the
House will have to have a quorum
of their own members In order to
pass it, and that's more than they
have had for three successive days
during the session
Czar Reed as he nears the of
bis power shows a disposition to
resume some of bis tricks of the last
session. By the denial of a request
that was right and lair, he, this
week, provoked Mr. Mills an
exhibition of temper that is very
much by that gentleman's
friends; not on Reed's account, be
deserved all that Mi. Mill's said
but on account of the effect
that it may have upon the
of Mr. Mills for the Speakership
of the House. are per-
a fraud upon the
shouted Mr. Mills, advancing
the aisle, and shaking his fist at
the Speaker, you
Mr. Mills then intimated in
not to be mistaken that the
Speaker not an honorable
A minute or two later
Representative Ken, Iowa, had
bud taste to cull Mr. Mills a
are a traitor your-
retorted Mr. Mills,
constitution and laws. Yon are
trying to surround the ballot box
with bayonets and to deprive the
people of their right of
This followed by a
bard to describe. democrats
cheered Mr. Mills loudly
republicans hissed. Representative
Perkins of Kansas said the
dirty loafer and in a
moment he found the big fist or
Representative
close proximity to bis nose and was
told that if there was to be any put
ting out ho proposed
a hand in it. That was the
last heard of Perkins. the mean-
time the Arms trotted
out with the gold beaded mace, tho
emblem of authority the House,
and was restored.
The Dockery resolution providing
for an investigation of the
Silver pools is bearing
Senator Vest has testified that Sen-
Cameron told him that be made
some money speculating in silver
bullion, and Senator Cameron has
acknowledge it, claiming that he
had as much right to speculate in
silver as in corn, wheat or any other
product. How is that for cool
chairman of the com-
Representative of
Maine, Is accused of having ad-
the from last
week until of this week
in order to prevent Senator
from testifying until after
Pennsylvania legislature had re-
elected Cameron to the Senate,
Mr. Vest bad stated his
willingness to testify. It is
ed here that Cameron would have
been defeated had his connection
with the silver speculation
made public before his re-election.
There are two other big republicans
who will be exposed If commit-
tee does its duty without fear or
favor.
The latest scheme of Reed and
the henchmen to force
the silver republican to
vote for Force bill is In
announcement that the Louse
committee on Coinage, before
the free coinage bill now is, will not
report that measure to the House
until Senate passes the Force
bill. It remains to be seen bow
silver republicans in the House will
take this. They will be given an
opportunity of voting with demo-
to the committee
and take the bill up in the House.
Bland has already
offered a substitute for ft resolution
to be reported from committee
on to limit the debate on the
appropriation bills, making free
coinage bill a continual order from
an after January
Appointments for
R.
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at a. m.
Lang's School House, let Sunday at
p. in-
Shady Grove, Sunday a. m,
Tripp's Chapel. Sunday p. m.
Ayden, Sunday a. m.
Salem, 4th Sunday, a. m.
Jones Chapel, 4th p. m.
AT COST
FOR CASH ONLY.
Having purchased the interest of Mr. J. W. of
at a very reduced price, I shall proceed to
sell out the entire stock without reserve
Notice.
THE will sell at Public
Auction on the 30th day of February,
the office of Messrs. Moore, Tuck-
Murphy In Greenville, Pitt county,
the remaining personal property be-
longing to the estate of MaryS, Delaney,
In part of a gold watch
urn chain, net of studs, pair silver nap-
kin rings, spoons, pair silver candle
sticks with snuffer and tongs, pair
butter knife and other
and belonging to said estate
Cash.
D. J. Whig-hard, c. t. a,
i of Mary
Jan. 24th,
e ill
The stock elegant line of--
Dry Goods, and Gent's Underwear, Hats,
Caps, Boots, Shoes and a big lot of
I will Bell Men's Suits at Boy's Suits Men's Boots
1.25, Boy's cent, Men's Brogan Shoes cents, Boy's cents,
Children's Shoes from cents up. A big lot of
Second-Hand Clothing
that must be rushed out at once, will be sold at almost any price.
Come early the bargains offered.
O. T.
Successor to Higgs
Greenville, N. C.
G. E. HARRIS,
Greenville, N. C.
Takes pleasure in informing the farmers that he can supply
-----their wants in the way of
FERTILIZERS,
this season, at satisfactory prices. I carry the best brand
Tobacco and Cotton.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE RELIABLE OF
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a lino of the following good
not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class and
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTION'S. CLOTHING,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and HOOTS and SHOES, LA
and CHILDREN'S SUPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime. Plaster of Paris, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I to the trade at
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Bread Prep-
ration and Star Lye Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
Wholesale and Retail Dealer STAPLE AND FANCY GROCERIES
MEAT and FLOUR-SPECIALTIES
Car Load Feed Oats, Car Corn, Car load No Hay,
Car Load Rib Side Meat, Car Load St. Louis
Rico Molasses, Tubs Boston Lard.
Star Lye, Gross Matches.
Also full line Baking Powders. Soda, Soap, Starch, Tobacco,
Cakes, Crackers, Candies, Canned Goods, Wrapping Paper. Paper Sack
Special prices given to the wholesale trade on large quantifies of tho
above goods.
J. A. ANDREWS. GREENVILLE, N C.
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N- C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES ;
At lowest current rates.
AM FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF
Congleton Tyson,
-DEALERS IN-
Call attention to their large and well select
stock now on hand. We have a fresh
supply of
We carry as usual a line of nice
Dry Goods, Notions,
Shoes, Hats and Caps.
Our motto will be to sell all goods
Lew for
Dissolution.
The of Higgs was dis-
by mutual consent on the 6th day
January 1891. Mr. J. W. sell-
out his to Mr. C. T.
ford. J- W.
Referring to the above card I bog o
return thanks to my friends for the
patronage the Arm of
In the
fully ask the continuance with the new
. .,
Tobacco Seed.
The Newest, Finest and
low varieties and choice of all
classes Tobacco produced in
States, grown by the
Seed on
Class In every
the that none
curable, r better
crops. Write at Cm
free, will be right surf
tire
R. L.





Court
of H.
Cl II I I
V.
Una,. of
J.
K. C. Cannon, i , ii
Superintendent.
H- Tr K. W. g- .
SUICIDAL
N ELECTRIC CENSUS.
Ill I MM Ml m
-C Mi
A new of fee wind
was Iv o la by a
cooler should
ha suets if of kind
wen- to any reward. The
sharpest Diddler would not be
I trick nit upon by these
Parisian At o'clock in the
the
nu noticed a young
man with a very and
standing near one of the
lone.
I Suddenly lit- Kt bin eyes upward, us
I If to take a last view of the skies,
apparently as if in prayer fir a
I aid then headlong
Into the river While all para-
t at this attempt a
came up and with great simplicity
asked what was t lie matter. The ind.
.
t Greene.
Treasurer V. V.
Chief T.
Asst R. Moor.
n . w-rd T A. who wan to the
W. and R- I bid NM-J of the Seine and who had
3rd Ward, M. R. just risen to was pointed
Allen Warren; 4th Ward, Joe to him. when, MM
CHURCHES. hit blouse and ejaculating he would
First and Third the unfortunate or perish in the
Sundays, Rev. N. . j he plunged in utter him.
Hughes, . Rector. . with
morn- , y anxiety as the heroic
bag and Prayer Meeting every Q went
K K- J under la his endeavors to saw the
-Services second and fourth wretch who own de-
X and night. and finally when Fas
Ker.
Meeting every Wednesday night.
A. Hunter. Pastor.
Greenville Late. No. A. K. A
M. meet- l.-t Thursday and Mon-
day night after the 1st and 3rd
Lodge. A. I-. Blow. W. M.
G. L. Sec
Greenville R. A.
2nd and 4th nights at
sonic F. W. Brown, H. P.
Covenant No. I. O. G
meets night. J. it.
X. G. Move. Sec-
Orion En X-. L
2nd and
nights. K. A. Move. C. P.
S.
insurance So. K. of II.,
meets first am third Friday night.
D. P. Haskett, D.
nearly lost, the crowd was rejoiced to
see the suicide brought ashore with life
tin in hi in.
Close by n house, or station where
half drowned persons and
where those who rescue them receive
the municipal reward of twenty-five
francs. Thither rescued and the
were borne by crowd which
had assembled, the latter overwhelmed
with the admiration and praise his gal-
called forth on all
as the reward was
to be given him. while a
4th j for an additional sum was
being raised, a policeman stepped up
knew them both. They were
brothers, were two of the bet swim-
i mere in Paris and made it n business to
Pitt Council, Mo. 2-16. A. of H., meets go about saving each other's lives for a
Thursday night. C A. White. C.
Pitt Alliance meets
the second Friday In
and October. J. D. Cox,
E. A. Move. Secretary.
Greenville Alliance meets
the second Sunday in each month
o'clock. P M-. in Hall
Fernando Ward. I. S. Spain.
Secretary.
POST OFFICE.
Hours for all A.
M. to P M. All mails
on arrival. The deliver will
lie to Ask for
Deacon B------. one of the oldest and
most church members in
has a young grandson who U
generally accounted the worst scape-
grace in the whole congregation. The
boy, who years of age. at-
tended prayer meeting a number of
times, and apparently token a
great deal of therein.
week he attended prayer
, meetings. arose to his feet
he kept open for I- minutes at night
after Northern mail is Distributed. Everybody looked at I III
He wore a very sorrowful countenance,
and many thought that he w truly
repentant for his wrong doings Every
Tit-Bits.
Northern Mail arrives
P. M. and at
M.
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland
arrives at
M. and depart at P. M.
Washington, I X
Roads, and
mails at
P. and at A. M.
Mills.
and Pullet mails arrive Tuesday
Thursday and at A. M. and
departs at 1-10
Black Jack and alien
mails arrives even Tuesday and Friday
at p m and leaves at s m.
J. J. PERKINS P. M.
The Persimmon.
Wilson Mirror.
is a peculiar
ways are not the ways of
body, and it has a stubborn
dogged, uncompromising notion as to
the time it ought to l eaten. There-
lore to eat it and have
aright smooth time of it its I
must lie reflected, or a light rough
time will There is
tree down on the railroad, an i
a specimen of the
homo was seen on Saturday to spy
the fruit with a loosing, eye.
He hesitated a moment, and by-
standers from a glance at
us that he doted
artlessly upon the tantalizing
limb and pulled of
the soundest, persimmons, in
his teeth, and with a hawk, he
let i. drop. Another with like ,
another another, and just then
his assumed a
pucker and looked as if he was Irving
to whistle a one sided lune. He
much alarmed, and n wag see-
and appreciating his fix, said-
i- are you Irvine to
He said the devil
I spec I'm And seeing
that he was butt of considerable
amusement lie vanished into th
of the whither, fully
one listened while he opened I lips to
speak.
would said the youngster
solemnly, ask the prayers of those
assembled for my poor old grand-
The bay sat down, and there was a
constrained for a moment, after
which some one suggested a song, and
the meeting closed in the usual form.
It is needless to add that that young-
jacket received a much needed
tanning before he retired to rest that
night Seattle Press.
Started His I In
I have been told that a few years
there was a westerner in Congress
whose wife kept a boarding house
the two years he served here as a
representative. When he was elected
it was known that he was not worth a
dollar, that the pittance he had to
spend for campaign expenses was con-
by friends. When he returned
home, at the expiration of his term, ho
had This he invested in real
estate in a thriving town. His prop-
rapidly enhanced In value, and
his successor In congress tells me that
this thrifty statesman is in a fair way
to become a millionaire. Probably be
will return here some day as a con-
live upon the income of his
ample fortune and donate his salary to
some charitable
New York Telegram.
Chilblain.
A man once wrote to a
could not write you a longer letter as I
am troubled with chilblains. Yon had
better come and see me yourself, when
I can explain the matter more folly
than in
The friend wrote In
the chilblains prevent your writ-
a long letter, I, too, am to
call upon you, as this morning I cut
one of the of my left hand, and
cannot walk so
tier Weakness.
new doctor you in-
me to. Bowler,
student of human
I nature.
you, does
a dot Had him In
pressed that of that but night to treat my wife for a cold;
was very much over rated and she didn't need any medicine, bat
that a and-a
persimmon were not for New
It is a Republican that has drawn
the color line this Mr. J L
that she must particular, above all
things, to keep her mouth shot and
breathe through her
Courier.
Senator takes no physical ex-
but his apparently frail body
in on,
legislature, his race be is the orly lawyer living who can
dice to him in the matter
a seat. There is no vacant chair ex-
between two He
swears n ill not It, and
rather than tn so he will leave and
return to bis home in
T-A j
out, n .-
Sold
by all In m
eat a big public dinner, washed down
with two or three bottles of wine, and
then pore over law books till daybreak
without showing signs of weariness.
as off
body can be played upon
as if it were a machine. The strokes
of pump, the heart, can
or the vital heat
lowered r increased; pupil of the
expanded or
paralyzed or the blood sent
to the surface or withdrawn to the In-
Most of trim
Mast
hi i K.; I he first telegraph
was worked in England, aft -r a crude
attempt made in on a line of
thirteen miles between Podding, and
In 1544 a telegraph line
opened Washington
more. Tn 1850 n popper wire, insulated
it. was submerged be
Dover and Calais, and the
submarine telegraph was laid by
late T. R.
There are now submarine cables
exclusive of the seven Atlantic cables,
with an of 118.740 nautical
miles. The overland is
ready a world wide institution. In
which there is a total of
miles of wire, enough of the attenuated
metal to go around the equatorial belt
of the globe just thirty times. The
number of words transmitted, the miles
traveled the cash changing hands
would Ta th enumeration table.
The United States miles
of wire, and in 1889 no less than
messages were sent through the
country. Franc i has miles of
wire, on which in wore transmitted
Great Britain
has miles of metal line, and in
sent 50.000,000 messages. Russia
has spun miles, and in 1889
gave the operators 10.280,760 messages
dispatch. Australia has strung no
fewer than miles of wire across
its surface and transmitted in one year
messages Italy has
miles and has made an annual record
of about 7.000.000 electric messages
has miles of wire and
did a business in of
patches.
Egypt has miles, and is in con
with India and England by
cables on which in 1889
communications were car-
from, one end of the world to the
oilier. China has miles of wire
across Mongolia, and Japan owns no
less than 16.500 miles, over which
3.000.000 messages were sent in one
year. Now Zealand strung itself
with 11.375 miles of metal cord. And
dispatched 1.835.391 messages.
mania has miles of telegraph
wires. Persia claims, in partnership
with European wires, about G. miles.
South Africa has a credit of
miles, and even St. Helena, the island
prison of the great has
miles of universal
its rocks.
The telegraph systems of the world
unrolled wire reel without
stint, and if add to the
miles used for telegraph purposes the
wholesale appropriation by the
phone system the sum total would be
The Early of California.
The early foreign residents of Cali
were largely sailors
Many if not most would change their
names. For instance, ranch
where the town of is now lo
was owned by an old resident
under the assumed appellation of Gil
Of course vessels touching upon
this coast were liable, as they were
everywhere, to lose men by desertion
if the men were maltreated.
Such things have been so common that
It is not difficult to believe that those
who left their vessels in early days on
this then distant course had cause for
so doing.
To known as a runaway sailor
was no stain upon a man's character.
It was no uncommon thing after my
arrival here for sailors to be skulking
hiding about from ranch to ranch
till the vessel they had loft should leave
the would catch
and return sailors to get the reward
which, I believe, captains of vessels in
variably offered. After the vessels had
sailed and there was no chance of
reward the native gave
fugitives no further
in Century.
Shot a Deer
An 11-year old Missouri lad has ex-
a remarkable feat in hunting.
The boy's father had bought him a
cheap single barreled shotgun, and in
a few days the boy had shot at every
thing in sight
One morning he began to load bis
gun for a bunt, and after ramming
down a charge of powder found that
his shot hag woo empty. With the
readiness of a boy to try experiments
he thought of his marbles. Finding a
smooth that would just fill the
bore of his gun he rammed it down,
and started out in search of game.
He had not gone far before a full
grown deer was seen running through
the woods about sixty yards away.
boy hod never shot at a deer be-
fore, but he was too much of a
to miss n chance, and he banged away.
gave one great jump and fell,
with a marble through his heart.
When the boy came running into
the house with the news his father was
to thrash him for his rashness,
but was finally forgiven, and the
venison eaten with a
Enquirer.
The Cow Tree.
The cow tree, tho sap of which
closely resembles is a native of
South and Central America. It is a
species of evergreen, and grows only In
mountain regions. A bole bored in the
wood or even a wound made in the
bark of this remarkable tree is almost
immediately filled with a lacteal like
fluid. Alexander Humboldt was
the first traveler to describe this tree
and bring it to the notice of Europeans.
St. Louis Republic.
The Best Salve in the world fats even the natural hue and color
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt of the body can be changed by the
notion of poisons taken
Chilblains, Corns, and all u u., n
turns, and positively cures Piles, or Journal,
pay required. It is guaranteed to -rive I
satisfaction, or money refunded , in High Dinners.
price per box. For sale by The Hoffman in a moment
won. of professional admitted
m. . . that it is well nigh
The MOm Impossible to expend more than
throughout -be Unwed plate upon food of a public dinner;
the entire , a- reported so that the usual ill served dinner,
to R. G. jun with win-, must be highly profitable to
ate in number, the caterer, while
being but twenty de greater than without undoubtedly yield
the year 1889. The liabilities, bow- a high of profit. ,
f a very large A equal I
over 1889. being 188.000 parts of and rhubarb
against an of tar, and to every half pint add two
over the largest drams of The Said b
ties they amounted applied with a feather or hair pass.
to or a day to
A Story.
Speaking of Pike's Peak, a young
lady visiting In Lowell. Mass,, tells a
good story of one of those rare
that first surprise and then
most Inevitably amuse. Her sister,
who went to Colorado for the benefit
of her health, was sojourning at
ton. and there one day fail into eon-1
venation with a gentleman on the,
piazza of the hotel. They bad not met
before. They were admiring together
the pyramid of Pike's Peak,
towering in majesty before them. They
agreed that never before had a more ,
beautiful and inspiring sight mot their
eyes. length remarked
the gentleman, smiling, toe
mountain a peculiar Interest to me
from the fact that my name is
it returned
lady, I may say that own en-
Is greatly due to the fact that
my name is
to have
hundred kinds of soap in France.
Defeated Nine-
nine too many One's enough-
in k. Pa Hut In
Old
Harvesting with the rode implements
was a scrim. Imagine three or four
hundred Wild Indians in a grain Held
armed, some with sickles, some with
botcher knives, some with of
hoop iron roughly fashioned into shapes
like sickles, but many having their
with which to gather . small
handful the dry and grain;
and. us their hands would be-
come sore, they resorted to dry
sticks, which were split to i fjord a
sharper edge with which to sever the
straw. But wildest part the
threshing. The harvest of weeks,
sometimes of n month, was piled up in
the straw in the a huge mound
in middle of a high, strong.
then three or four wild
horses were turned in to thresh it. the
Indians whooping to make ran
faster.
Suddenly they would dash in
the band at full speed, when tho mo-
became reversed, with effect
of plowing up the trampled straw to
the very bottom. In an hour the grain
would be thoroughly threshed and the
dry straw broken almost into chaff, in
this manner I seen bushels
of wheat threshed in a single hour.
Next came the winnowing, which would
often take another month.
only be done when the wind was blow-
by throwing high Into the air
shovelfuls of grain, straw and eh
the lighter materials being wafted to
one side, while tho grain, comparative-
clean, would descend and form a
heap by itself. In this manner all the
grain in California was cleaned At
that day no such thing as n fanning
mill bad ever been brought to this
coast. in Century.
A young woman married and went
to live at the country residence of her
Her was not good.
and it was decided that she should
spend a year in strict retirement. At
the end of six however, she re-
turned to town, declaring that so quiet
a life was more than she could endure.
It appeared
had had thirty-seven different servants,
one of whom was discharged for an at-
tempt to set the house on tire and one
for an attempt to rob the pinto closet,
while half a dozen more were sent
away for violent quarrels in their part
of the establishment.
Her mother-in-law had been thrown
from a carriage at foot of the lawn
and injured her
had to make a visit had
proved opportunity to run
with a man whom had been for
bidden to marry.
The time had further been broken
upon by visits from the six bridesmaids
of the hostess who invited then in
pairs for two weeks each, and then
asked few men to meet It
should be dull. A had blown
down oak so near tho house that Its
branches dashed in tho drawing room
windows bad been
struck by lightning and burned to the
a quiet the young
lady said, concluding her account,
too much for Com-
The Win
A Virginia girl who went to Wash-
D. C, recently for a visit tells
a story of her old
Aunt who accompanied her
to town In the capacity of maid. It
seems that they went through
Art Gallery during their stay,
and every step of the the elderly
and provincial colored woman grew
more more by
she saw. Not word was sold, but
by eloquent grunts and sighs her dis-
approval was manifested, until they
entered hall of sculpture, where her
feelings grew too deep for words.
When they faced the Venus of Me-
naked loveliness and viewed the
beauty of the Apollo
took on an ashy hue. So
thoughtfully was she polishing her
rimmed spectacles as they left
building her mistress was moved to In-
quire whether she liked It all.
Aunt responded cheer-
fully; It only
powerful glad ain't none or my
color in American.
V Urn
DISEASES.
IV Best Household Medicine.
ea-ch year
to oM a, no
with tho
T Soapy Till-OLD FACTORY
la of a
. W. C Wei Art.,
B. B. baa done m good and far
then any Mind purifier used.
1st of my
f. A. Shepherd, lo,
I on H, B. the
et my health. I ll In family bow
nearly two Id nil time nut bed
to a
of
BLOOD CO., Atlanta, Ca, s.
NOTICE.
Sale of Personal Prop.
i of
I unary in the
of the T. A.
-t. nine of
ram mail a, ion loads ma
ire new hi lot In rear of A Hook.
stare, one ice box. one walnut
Mich oilier
found to him. Th
In- in from of
he nous-. The will In- sold
the store him.
Terms of sale
the will annexed,
X Jan. Ml,
i. It.
S. Green He A
N. M. o.
j R. K. Ion-is. Washington, tier
The People's Line travel on
River.
The Is die
boat on the river.
Ix-en thoroughly
i and painted.
Kilted specially comfort, it
and of Ladles.
POLITE. OFFICERS
A Table furnished with
the market
A trip on the
not bin
Leaves Monday,
Bl f. o'clock. A M.
Leaves Tuesday.
and t S m.
and
Lading to all
F. J.
N.
J. O.
B,
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
Art
I t r . . f
facts
New York City,
Bleed Cure.
Executor's Notice.
TI
I of
a eve- if
mil -e Is I given in all
i- to in
ti
and all having the
-aid tin- fur
on or is-f the of
or this notice will be
in of their
K.
Ex. of Downs.
A t-i M fly
in A
tire cure for I i AW
nil of
the Wood. Si
A pit
and sent by el Mir the
medicine. for
or pints. --e
A winter tn tilts
BOTANICAL CO.
Has Moved to One Door Court House
TUB M of
CARTS DRAYS.
My i well with put up
ask work. We keep with mil . . -t styles.
used in all k. All of are roil can
Storm, Coil, Horn, King.
Also keep on hand u nil of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
I die round, which we ill sell Al
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING
Thanking people of this and for past n. ,
merit of the
T- X-
.
When Chief Justice chose to
unbend could be witty as
well as wise. At a social gathering at
bis house when ho was secretary of
war, tho of taxation having
been mooted, n distinguished naval
officer present said ho had paid all his
taxes except the income tax. have
a little said ho,
brings me in a rental, bat the
tax gatherers not spotted it. I do
not know whether I ought to let the
thing go on that way or not What
would you do if you were In my
There was a merry
twinkle in the eyes of Mr. Chose as he
answered i think It Is the duty of
every to live unspotted as long as
he Francisco Argonaut.
One uptown little schoolgirl to an-
other about a she's an
awful t gets or
every week. I
ain't going to play with her after
Philadelphia
in my life saw a
little girl so willful, exacting, cross and
unreasonable as you are.
Little Girl -I I takes after my
stepmother, -flew York Weekly.
Notice to Creditors.
I I G duly qualified before the Sn-
I I At Pitt
of of E
lei-cased. Is given
to all per Otis Indented to the crate to
make --lb e payment Id the
and all h
must the
-am- before the
or notice
plead in bar
lei.
smith.
. AS I
Execute r's Notice.
l J
I I i folk Superior Pitt
of John
r I- given In
II persons indebted to the to
lo the
I ill having the
i estate must the same pay-
on or
r, mi, op ill plead in
This
r.
II
of Randolph, m
Executor's Notice.
. I of a
to nil
to estate lo
hi Mir and ill I
minis the anal
Sane on or lie lore t
16th day of I no
l- in r of recovery,
Is J
D .
Notice to
of the Court for
y having on day
d Issued letters of ad
lie
of Is
given tall
l e estate of slid
to the mule
aliened on or the of l
limber. IN, or this be
III bar of All persons
to tho estate of
re to in
mi-i i lo
This the of
II. Kill-- M I
Alex I. Blow. Ally.
Dissolution.
is notice that the firm of
A Co- per has dissolved
All parties owing
i lie firm f KIM g on ft Cooper will
i with A. II.
A. B. on,
L.
Jan. 1st,
iV
BA-wK-X vS,
ST. o
I We have for the purpose or con-
ii general
Money to Loin on Approved Security
Collections solicited and remittances
made
In
i.
a. .
far
. . .
UNDERTAKING.
k. s.
me ill
arc ready to serve the people in that
All notes
me past services been placed in
the hands Mr. n
JOHN
We keep on hand t all times a nice
stock of Cases and Casket of all
kinds Slid can anything
from the Case
Pitt county Fine Coffin. We an
with convenience and call
ill who p
FLANAGAN
Ho What's .
Why another discovery by Alfred
Culler In the way of helping the
calling on or the
above can
of hi hi i. hi Is
I for eradicating , and lull and the
I hair I lie soft and
glossy, only r a
Week is
brush is all to lie after the
vigorously few minutes with
Try a and
all
Barber,
N. C.
HYMAN,
FINE AND VIEW
Views of Animal.
taken st
Short i limn
to life size, In Ink-. Crayon or
Colors.
fat Rut
Call and sec
N.
A. SMITH,
TONSORIAL ARTIST,
Greenville N r,.
We have the the cash's
ever used In the art. Clean towels.
sharp razors, ion guarantees
iii every I nil be run
hired. Ladles a id d on at
Cleaning clothes a
I A N I-.
Washington, I
nil the .
in the attended
for Model lie fees.
We are opposite the If, S. Of
lice engaged in Patents
obtain patent In lent time than thou
more remote
the model or drawing u sent tee
us p. f
and we make no ob-
Pa louts.
We n bare. the
or the Money Order lo
la Of the I. S. Patent Office,
advise terms t
iii join own Stale,
C. Co.,
Ci
II.
H. B.
Mr A, Stint
. .
aM
OPIUM
New Firm.
Messrs. Latham k Pender having
chased die interest of Mr. II.
in tho firm of ft Cooper, the
from this date will tie known
us I en Iron Works, with A.
It, manager. Mr.
will continue of
the firm t will be sold at
retail from the of
A i.
1st, 1401.
ml
for i
Cream. Full
Host
or
N.
AND
I have removed to new stable on
Fifth opposite. I apt. White's
where will constantly
Keep on hand a flue line of
Horses and Mules.
I have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
end can suit the most
I will run in a
AUK and share of
patronage. Call and convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
CATARRH
weeks, No
hi . lined. f l If sent
at WM CO
also cured. II. r. .
Mich
WHEAT
tin lop-die I
with
One MB per Increase
the of grain straw,
CO . V,
Edwards
Printers and Binders.
N. O
We have largest midmost complete.
I of the kind lo he found In
Mate, and solicit Orders all i
Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or
AND
COUNTY
your
N. Ci
Habits
at with
i i.
, II M , M K
THIS PAPER
NEW YORK.
M V I'll
. S
i . i- An
run us-u i j
I'll- u la
R-.--
lie
,.
BALSAM
hale.
to
Co
V fall
to
Write for
V.
THE SOUTHERN FARM.
1891
Jet
W.
ft r.
Mn of best
America.
EDITED
DR. Wm. L. JONES,
To of
far lbs awl
to
ti
.,
rail
OR MILK
COCOA
LB. ONLY,
OH MY BACK
pain
why Di.
Piaster will III
sure. em a penny
to t
ton. Mass., lean
move a plaster
a ill pay don't
I hat till I
In world has the picture
of ah II nil I lie e. Mi, and
Is
A Mo,,, Mu or
W. co., I'll.
WHAT
COLDS
Waiting
M.--.
of
int
To ., Sick
mi, lake
Dig and
BILE BEANS
I i tn v., In
M.
I M.
-r
EMULSION
CURES
of of overt- will for if. The fan
printed in gold, var
par year. Farm and Weakly
copy u.
Wonderful
have one pound
par day by use.
Scott's Emulsion is not a secret
rained. It contains the
of
and pure Norwegian Cod
Oil, the potency of both
It is used
by all world.
At
by alt
r w a a,
.
TOP
W THU GLASS
tin- which
I have where
Hue
TO A
MODEL BARBER SHOP
ind
at
work of my


Title
Eastern reflector, 28 January 1891
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 28, 1891
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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