Eastern reflector, 26 August 1891






lit A
REFLECTOR
A whole year only
ii order to get It you must
----SAY X IN t ADVANCE.----
THE REFLECTOR
-HAS A-
JOB PRINTING
Department Unit can be surpassed no
where In this section. Our work always
fives satisfaction.
WITH BABES.
U. happy mothers, with your
How dare ye be so glad.
When round ye mourning mothers arc
Thorn misery makes mad
ire ye so high, O hearts
When others, like to
Are brooding o'er the awful thought
That death U not the worst
When golden heads are gathered safe
each happy breast,
Oh. do you think of them who deem
That babies dead were
U, ye who see your little ones
So lovely in their sleep.
y, do ye think of beds of woe
Where other women weep
Oh, as ye bend o'er cradled
How can your hearts but break
To think them who hourly pray
Their babes may never wake
O, happy mothers, with your babes
Your joy but seems a taunt
To them whose little ones are heirs
and Woe Want
God help the mothers who must see
Their babies starve and die
help most, ye mothers glad,
Who pass such mothers by
M. N. B., in Boston Globe.
GREENVILLE, PITt COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1891.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS.
Mexico has no shoe factories.
Hew Jersey promises a big
berry crop.
Every building in Ellsworth,
was damaged by a tornado
Thursday.
Another rich strike of silver was
made in two blocks from
main street.
The President has appointed
W. of Louisville
as Consul to Colon.
The European sugar beat crop
set back by the
wet cold weather.
The miners
have succeeded in con-
labor from their midst.
A peach grown at Va.,
weighed ounces and measured
in
Myron V. Cole. years old,
Mrs. Walter were mar
hi Finn, Mich-, last week.
ilia, X. expects to
scud oat worth of whet-
stones during the present year.
Mis. gowns will lie sold at
auction at New York, as nobody has
appeared to pay duty on them.
German Government has
to establish a complete
graph system on the German East
African coast.
Government authorities are in-
quiring into cruelties practiced
on the United States prisoners at
Little Rock, Ark
The Moscow police have received
orders which mean the
of every Jew from the district
within two months
A that weighed
pounds, was caught last week by
George keeper of the
Cape Porpoise light.
new orchestra of women was
not with at its rehearsal
at Casino, Trouble was ex-
from trades unions.
No satisfactory has been
reached by the negotiations of
foreign legation with the Chinese
Government, relative to the recent
riots.
NEW YORK LETTER.
A Demand for Bettor Wail
at Novel Batter Store.
Regular
The subject of quick mail delivery
for this city is now being quite
discussed and the present
slow service is being roundly de-
The actual time required
to deliver a letter mailed at the Gen-
is so great as to be
simply ridiculous when compared
with the service of other large cities
in Europe. From an hour and
minutes t five hours is the lime
required in New York, while in Lon-
don or Paris, the same service is per
formed in about ten to twenty min-
The fact is. New York is
about twenty years behindhand in
mail facilities, and the public is be-
ginning to find it out. As a result,
they are demanding the pneumatic
tube system of delivery, which has
given such excellent results in Lon-
don and other large cities. If this
system is adopted, it will cost
Government about for the
sixty miles of connections in this city
LEPROSY AMONG US.
The fact that two genuine Chinese
lepers have been discovered in this
city, and, after being sent to the
Charity Hospital on
Island, have been turned loose on the
community, is causing a good deal
of agitation and a large amount of
indignation. It is a curious thing
that, although this disease of leprosy
is one of the oldest in the world, the
arc unable as yet to decide
whether it is contagious or not.
This being so, it appears that there
is no law to prevent a leper from as-
with the public whether
the public likes it or not. Dr. Ed-
son, of the Board of Health, is in
favor of establishing a hospital es-
for lepers, but whether the
lepers can be induced to go to a
place is another question. At
cut writing the two lepers in
are in hiding, while the
Board is in pursuit.
AS
A novel butler and egg store has
just been opened an Sixth
which is sure to attract the
of all passers by. The idea has
to make it elegant establish-
and as unlike an ordinary but-
egg store as possible. The
floor is laid with mosaics and
the walls and ceilings and decorated
with glistening tiles edged with
low. It has white painted doors
while windows arc faintly streak
ed with gold. In the rear of the
Stan stands a huge white and gold
painted The entire
front of the is of
through which the stock in trade
the dairy can be seen, cool and sweet.
Around the room are a number of
Mexican onyx tallies with polished
brass legs. To crown a pretty
maid in a white costume wails on
the tables, while a red man
sells the butter and eggs.
Edwin
TRUTH W PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
NUT CULTURE.
Vick's Magazine.
Learned men of the present day-
arc much exercised about the kind
of food necessary to produce the
greatest amount of muscular health
and strength, and nuts of all kinds
have been their par
excellence an article diet. Be-
sides the beauty of the nut trees and
utility of their fruits,
plantations seems to be rapidly
fortunes for those who have
been sage enough to invest in them.
Chief Van of the depart-
agriculture, predicts the
cultivation of nuts will soon be one
of the greatest and most profitable
industries in the United States. The
large returns from individual trees
and immense profits from establish-
ed orchards, have stimulated the in-1
and our foremost enterprising
are planting nut trees
largely tor market purposes; others
who enjoy nuts during the winter are
realizing that they may be had in
abundance for the mere trouble
planting.
The pecan is a nut of the future,
Mr. Van thinks, but he fore-
casts large returns from walnuts,
chestnuts, pine and hazel mils,
filberts, etc. grower in
Florida has now a grove of
can trees, years old; when they be-
gin to bear their product will be
worth yearly at
But this is counting the chickens too
soon. C. II. Daniels has a pecan
tree which bears annually from
ten to fifteen bushels of nuts, which
sell readily at wholesale for fee
per bushel. Col. Stuart, of Ocean
Springs, Miss., who has made a wide
reputation a successful cultivator
planted those large paper-
shell nuts when I was years
old, and now, at I tell you they
help me live. I got II pounds from
one tree last fall, sold pounds for
and planted the remainder of
and have raised a lot of
young trees, which arc for sale.
culture, planting the very
large I consider one of the
safest sad best paying industries a
THE FALL OUTLOOK.
man can engage
This
com-
A liquid which instantly kills the
without injury to the
vines has been discovered by Pro-
Heavy rains have caused
overflow of rivers Lancashire
Yorkshire, England, all
the suspending rail-
road communication.
The rain machines were tried
Midland Tex., the other day by
Government officials, and ten
altar bombs were exploded there
was a heavy rainfall extending for
many miles.
. The United States vessels off
A coast have bad a busy time
lately chasing off sealers.
British war ships are around, but
have made substantially no
attempt to stop illegal business.
Under all circumstances, under all
conditions, under all influence, Bra-
promptly cure all
headaches.
Tobacco in Eastern Carolina.
Rocky Mount Argonaut.
The Southern Tobacco Journal has
the following to say with reference to
tobacco in Eastern
tobacco crop of Eastern North
Carolina is now playing an
part in the annual yield of
State, while five years ago it amount
ed to practically nothing. Since
1888, markets have been established
in Louisburg, Rocky Mount and
Wilson, and this year Tarboro and
Greenville will come into line. A
new golden belt has come into exist-
which will vie with that in the
central section of the in
production of fine And
yet there is demand for all these fine
goods, increase in production
does not seem to reduce
Notwithstanding the increase in
the product of tobacco in this section
has been so large within the past
five years, yet Eastern Carolina has
but commenced cultivation of
this product, and the next five years
will witness a vastly greater increase
than the past five. The cultivation
of tobacco is still its infancy in
this section. If it were not, our
would dollars where
they have not cents. But it is
better late than never. With diver-
crops, the farmer raising all of
his home supplies, and with tobacco,
trucking, fruit raising, stock raising,
etc., as the money producers, this
will be the most prosperous com-
under sun.
Some twenty years ago three men
owned a newspaper in
Miss., whose names formed a
I combination. They Battle,
Swords Spears.
cloud of witnesses figures
certainly docs make orange growing
and tobacco raising seem much less
tempting.
The forests of Texas furnish
hugs quantities of rich nuts to
market of New Orleans, whence they
are skipped to Europe, where they
are said to bring a higher price than
any other nut. This pecan
is a native tree growing from south-
Indiana to the Gulf of Mexico;
new varieties are being ob-
which are propagated by-
grafting and sold for fancy prices.
pecan is known in our
as but the
genus was first named and
the right of priority of the name has
recognized. It is a
beautiful, symmetrical and rapid
growing tree, with luxuriant, light
green foliage, much narrower than
that of any other hickory. Its nuts
arc oblong, smooth and thin shelled,
with sweet and delicious kernels.
There is a fine specimen tree in the
grounds of the Capitol at Washing-
ton. The trees are generally planted
forty-eight to the acre, covering the
fresh nuts where they are to grow in
the fall, as is the rule in planting all
nut trees.
A Hundred a
A of Prosperity it
New York Commercial Bulletin.
It argues well for prospects
fall trade that we cuter upon
it with such substantially good con-
But when to these
ranees is added the promised results
of the harvest, it seems
to expect a season of exceptional
prosperity. As prospects now stand,
we may calculate upon the crop re-
of 1891, taken as a whole,
passing those of any previous year.
It the present promise of cotton
crop should be realized, we shall
have a close approximation to the
product of last year. Corn,
according to the acreage and
reported to the agricultural bu-
is likely to give at least an
average output. For the wheat crop
the lowest estimated yield is
bushels and the maximum
five hundred and seventy-five to six
hundred millions, against last year's
crop of A harvest like
this is the one thing needed to put
the business of the country in first
class condition. The farmers have
been suffering for so many years, not
only from the grossly unequal tariff
laid upon them, but also I of
from low prices for their products, j of
that their industry has been under of money making in East
going a steady decadence. A bar-
vest such as we have now promised
LET US KEEP ABREAST OF THE
TIMES.
Rocky Mount Argonaut.
We make the following extract
from a letter of Josephus Daniels to
his paper. We publish it because
we wish our people to thoroughly
appreciate exact position in
which this section stands to day,
and we desire to see them
educated up to that
energy mid push, a thorough
advertising to the world, of our
grand natural advantages,
nil that are to bring i
about such an era of prosperity, j
as has never before been witness-
ed in the South. We have
enough advantage, if they were
but known to world, to bring us
all capital we need to develop
our manifold well as
industrious and thrifty addition to
our population, enough to cultivate
our surplus lauds and convert them
into prosperous
homes. Let all pull together,
there is no of one pulling one
way the opposite.
Nothing can be with-
out unity of purpose and harmony
of action. following is
extract referred
devoted at least one-
ABOUT GREENVILLE.
Something An Intelligent Sees
Writes to the Wilmington
Messenger.
A day in Greenville enables one to
sec that this famous old town is
THE COUNTRY SAFE.
Argus.
As the says, with
our abundant grain harvest
with the great shortage abroad the
general business of this country
will be very next fall. The
improving, especially since it has Um has not bad such a
been receiving the galvanic touches
I he has now. We have
advised our agricultural friends to
let their gram out gradually, and not
Special Notice.
In adopting the Advance S,
tern for this year Tn win
be continued to no one for a longer Uses
than It g
just after your name on margin
the paper the
subscription expires two weeks
this
It is to give you notice that unless re-
newed in that time Tub
will cease going to you at the
of die two weeks.
North Carolina. There is no
section of State which offers
will enable them to liquidate a large
Durham Sun.
This is undoubtedly the day of
large things a literary way. There
is in New York an editor of a
who offered M. De-
pew a yearly of for
five years if the railroad magnate
would write his editorial page for
him over his own name. Think of
investing a round half million
in one man, and then think of
that wan declining the offer An
other editor recently paid for
a single feature for his magazine,
and the feature had to be worked
out, involving a very large additional
expense. Senator has had
two offers to take editorial helm;
one of a year, the other of
to which latter offer was at-
the proviso that he would
write only three editorials each
month. Another magazine pays one
of its editors several thousand
per year, and all ex-
to travel around, keep
bis ears open and hie memorandum
book full.
Yet some people kick it a country
editor desires to collect what little is
due him in to pay for hie blank
paper, the expenses of
office and lay up a bank account of
cents. There is a vast difference
in the idea cf work be-
tween sections.
amount of debt and provide them
with better facilities for cultivation.
It will mean so many more millions
capital put into reproductive
sources, and its benefits will there-
fore permanent.
The memory of year's extra-
ordinary drain of cash to the interior
and of the subsequent destructive
stringency in the loan market gives
some anxiety as to how far we
may be exposed this tall to a like
experience. And yet there seems to
be no serious ground for such
Last year confidence was
prostrated by world-wide crisis, and
trade was thereby denied its usual
credit at the season when
it needs them most; no such
exist now. This year, the
cash resources of the Now York
banks available tor helping the crop
movements are nearly double what
they were a year ago, added to
we arc in a position to command
from any amount of gold we
are to need for interior
chases of grain which the continental
nations will have to make our
markets. While, therefore, We
a reasonably active money-
market, we see no reason tor
bending any embarrassing
Assuming then that the harvest
turns out as it now promises, it seems
safe to anticipate for second half
of the year a run of active and pros-
s.
The words which that truly
American, Benjamin Franklin, wrote
for inscription upon his own tomb-
stone serve not only for a beautiful
epitaph, but also for a most
religious creed. They arc as
body
OF
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN,
PRINTER,
the cover of an old hook,
Its contents torn out, and
of its lettering and
Lies here, food for worms.
But the work shall not be lost,
For it will appear once more,
In a new and more elegant edition,
Revised and corrected
settler. The and truck
industries, upon which there is
probably more clear money made
than on anything else, are confined
to Eastern North Carolina.
profits, as printed in the Chronicle,
show the possibilities money
making Eastern Carolina. In
addition to these two source of
profit, mention also been
made the wonderful success at-
in raising tobacco the
Eastern part of the Stale. The
brightest and priced
co is raised These
are new sources of wealth. The
production of cotton, corn, Wheat,
oats, rice and not to speak
other things that am indigenous
of the railroad
The population has
already numbers over twenty-five
hundred inhabitants. Enterprise
and a new life of vigor and promise,
are here sure on ail sides,
are springing up and Green-
ville is on the onward march and is
destined to become one of the most
prosperous towns in the eastern part
the Slate. The Greenville Land
and Improvement company with its
valuable seal estate of one hundred
thirty acres of land adjoining the
crowd the as they are
ways apt to do prices happen
to stiffen up. If they glut the
market they will certainly defeat
their object.
Reasonably regulated, the
can get Hue prices for their pro-
duct Recent dispatches have in-
a slight improvement
the European but after a
careful compilation of reports the
large depot, will be a I
. . , shortage is still very great indeed
This country's wheat is
estimated at bushels
to which must lie added
factor in building up the town
improving Pitt county. It has been
laid off in streets and building lots,
constituting what is called South
Greenville. The company was
by the last Legislature
and numbers, as members, some
the best and wealthiest citizens of
Greenville and Pitt. Its able
dent, and a leading citizen, is Mr. J.
R. Moore, formerly of Pender county.
Coming here two years ago as the
agent of the Atlantic Coast Line, he
remains the energetic and efficient
representative the company, and,
to the personal knowledge of the
writer, has attained a high standing
in this community as a gentleman
and a man of superior business
He originated this Land
and Improvement Company, and it is
a deserved compliment that, without
his solicitation, he has been placed
at the head of its A large
and expensive tobacco
is going up on the properly, end
her tine buildings, and
trial establishments will soon follow,
including the plant known as the
Lumber and Saw Mill
to lie brought here.
A sable Cue,
left last year's crop,
a supply of
this amount only about
will be for home
and about for
next year's seed. This then would
leave about for export.
Philadelphia dis-
cussing the situation,
to the extravagance
or Mr. A. the
Minneapolis miller, and others,
European deficit will not less
than 400,000,1100 bushels the hall of
which can supplied by the farm-
of the United States ; and upon
this basis extremely puces for
wheat are confide-illy
Conservative judges put this deficit
much lower ; but it is conceded by
them that the consumers of Europe
will absorb this country's wheat
surplus, large as it is, the
should be destroyed by the
excessive greed of
. .
Women and
South.
A lady of lion is reported
Landmark.
About IS years ago a country nothing re-
to the soil, makes ideal sec chant in the western State
in of our State. sent an order to a firm
yet, with all these manifest a bill of goods and gave a citizen of
advantages and a health climate, I for reference. This
has been little or was called upon and of
lion this section for a quarter of concerning the customer said hi
a century. Why chief pea- J thought the firm be sale
sen is that no effort has been made I shipping the believed the women are less tolerant of,
to get it. There has been u -1 merchant would pay for them. fewer confidants among,
at ion of the advantages the went on and lie bill was not paid. I Men than among men. A recent
people who enjoy them. have Presently the merchant failed. j writer sinking of the loyal and
not published world meat was gotten against him and J friendship of women
her to a woman but
the lad that she would not have to
many a woman. Perhaps many
women same sen-
in regard to sex,
for it is that as a
they are doing what can be the judgment docketed, but there
done. They have permitted other ; was no property subject to execution
sections, not having so many and the account was charged up to
advantages, to outstrip them in the profit and loss. or twice the
Now, girls, listen Did you ever
slop to think that ever lime you
listen to a remark, a joke, an
that is not perfectly pure in it-
self and in its meaning you lower your
standard of womanhood. That when
you permit a young man in your
presence to use words, expressions
and actions which you know, and he
knows should not be used in a lady's
presence, that you lower yourself,
your sex and his estimation of yon.
Griffin
In this age of misplaced switches,
loose railway ties, rifles,
canned fruit, unloaded gone, misfit
proscriptions, cyclones, dynamite
conn, new explosives, cable cars end
dead wires, it behooves man,
woman and child to have names and
addresses tattooed their bodies
and stitched into their clothing, so
that their friends can be notified and
decent burial
race of
do not like to bring this
against the people of
islet n North There are
no people in the world no bet
tor section of the country. But
every thoughtful man will agree
with me that we bate not
enough pushing out
section ; and that great need
in Eastern North Carol ma is
faith and in that there
may be development
progress. Faith without works in
town is dead, a community
may believe in Us superior excel-
it cannot other
people to believe the same thing
without wonting to that end.
There is opportunity for
every county this section to add
to its population if it will advertise
its properly, work to
secure Immigration. If it
this Eastern North Carolina
content itself to still
see other sections of State grow
rich prosperous at ifs expense.
Mi. Know-it-all. Did yon ever
meet hire Well folks
are constantly across
He knows more own bust,
than you know and is
always offering suggestions bow you
should to succeed, and
truth the whole business is that
be doesn't even know meaning
of the bat i be knows it
all. hobs up -w
a calamity begins by
saying knew it was coming for
that thing wasn't managed right at
be begins to tell
what should be He is always
telling folks what to do,
anything himself,
is about the biggest
nuisance about town.
gentleman the broken
had referred to the
creditor firm if the bill had ever
been paid, once when going to
the mountains, in the direction
the debtor, he took a bill and tried
to collect it but failed. Some days
ago be into the Store the
and calling up the matter said
he didn't, feel
wanted to pay that debt
The head the told him by no
means could he
they had only asked him for his best
opinion about the man had
never thought of holding him re
for debt. lie said he
knew that, but all the same he would
feel better if he paid off the claim,
and alter a lot of on the
part of the merchant and insistence
on the part of the the t
was looked up, the
and gentleman shelled out
and paid the bill.
This is a rare case, but if the
name of this honest,
were told the people States-
would not lie surprised at all;
each them would I
might have known it
just like it is. But
when the recording angel tared up
the transaction he ordered another
star to be put in his crown which
has for years and years hen waiting
for this noble, godly man.
Col. A. K. editor of the
Philadelphia Time, has accepted
invitation to deliver address to
the North Carolina Exposition at
Raleigh, October wilt also
go to Asheville, where he says he
has been long wanting to make a
visit. will see a beau-
and progressive country and
will be warmly
more Sea.
for men ; how friendship
men is of that kind which is quick
to overlook and alert to
tho foibles
to con-
tract ibis with that which
same women will exhibit for
other women, and which they are
lint slow to give expression
he says have
such friendship with other women.
They have their which
STATE
Happenings Here at
From
There are 1,200 deaf, dumb and
blind children in North Carolina
between the ages of and years.
year-old boy has been brought to
penitentiary from county.
is sentenced to seven years for
highway robbery. He waylaid a
poor and old man and
near killing him.
The latest project of that enter-
prising gentleman Col. E. G.
editor or the Carolina
Teacher, is the organization of a
party of teachers for a two
weeks trip to Cuba during the
holidays,
Tarboro A mule be-
longing to Mrs. H. V. Hart got bis
head hung in a trough last week and
despite all efforts to extricate him,
he was so severely injured that death
soon resulted from the wound. The
mule was valued at one hundred and
seventy-five dollars.
John Ker-
of Sugar Lost township, Alex-
county, was on his way to a
still house, Monday, on an ox-cart
loaded with when the oxen got
frightened ran away.
was thrown under the cart which ran
across his body killed him.
Elisabeth City
Jno. C. Jones, of the North
Carolina Conference, stationed at
Swan Quarter, Hyde county, was
married last week to Miss Lula
daughter of A. O. Day, at the
of her father near
C. H. Our kind congratulations to
our young friends.
Kinston Fire While the
simmer was running to
Saturday and when in
about four miles of that city Capt.
Dixon shot and killed an immense
alligator, weight estimated at to
pounds. It was skinned and
When cut open, we learn
from the Journal, a good sized hog
was found in it.
Salisbury Mr. Joe
Neely has a hen that is
Watching a brood of five young part-
ridges. The hatched out the
birds and is as devoted and attentive
to them as they were young chick
ens. The birds show considerable
fondness for their foster mother and
will play all around her, often jump-
on and her hack.
Our good
friend Mr. Jno. G. Britt, of Greene
county, one of the truly energetic
and successful farmers of that sub-
county of good farmers, was
in the city yesterday, and laid upon
our table two specimens of his recent
crop of Irish potatoes that are indeed
rare curiosities. One them is in
the perfect shape a bull frog, and
the other that of a terrapin.
Charlotte J. G.
a citizen of died Thurs-
day at the age of years, and
buried yesterday. Mr. Brown leaves
a wife, age and a sister,
A gentleman walked into the
Register of office yesterday
asked to see Alliance Bible.
He; was and explained
that he the acts of the last
legislature recently published.
Tarboro The Edge-
Homestead Loan association
has not been been in operation quite
two years, yet in that time it has
ten dwelling houses and one
livery stable, besides accommodating
a time may even take form of many with money which they use for
AW
Wayne County Alliance at its
last meeting passed a resolution con-
the conduct of the
and county commissioners in
voting 1500 taxes of the to
to be need in the State Exposition.
extravagant devotion and which
remain as busting friendship if
the two be not too long or two
associated. But the friend-
ship to women which will bear
long and intimate association is very
rare. They grow critical of each
as men who are once
never do, as women themselves
never do In tho case of men with
whom they form friendships. They
irritate each other. many in-
stances they come to distrust each
other where there is reason for
distrust. The truth appears to be
that women do like women so
well as they like irrespective
of love and sentiment. Even the
casual of women find
men more agreeable to them
women are. They prefer to be wait-
ed on by the salesman rattier than
by shop girl, by the waiter than
by waitress. They more
crowd together in
car to make a seat for a
male passenger thou they will to
render a like service to u woman.
When a woman is it is
usually a whom she consults.
If she ill she prefers male to
female doctor, especially she
regard her illness us
This is a very curious trait in
women, if it is true, and observation
seems to settle it that way, as
the writer from whom we have been
quoting remarks, it somewhat tends
to masculine conceit,
and if men have a lurking suspicion
of the superiority of their own sex,
that vainglorious conception
themselves is in part the
of
other purposes. A tobacco prise
and tobacco warehouse la
also to be built by it. Every town
and community should have one.
N .
rot. J. MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
n. C.
of
e In Skinner Building, upper near
opposite Photograph
TYSON.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
N. C.
attention given to collections.
yum. h. long,
n.
Prompt careful attention to
Collection solicited.
L.
SKINNER,
N. a
y JAMES,
if. .
Practice In all the courts. I
J.
BLOW,
ALIX. t.
S-AT-L A W,
N. C.
In ail Courts.
R.





THE
Greenville, N. C.
I and Proprietor.
III AT
y N. C. a S S
AUGUST
out PRICE OF
u per
-BATES.- One
war. one-tad year,
MO; column one year,
Transient inch
week, SI two week. 81.50; one
Two inches one track,
weeks. ; one month,
Advertisements Inserted in Local
as reading items, cents
lint fur. each lion.
such as
Sales
to Non-Residents, etc. will
be charged for at rates and must
earn in advance. The
has suffered some loss MM
because of having no
fixer of this class
advertisement, and in order to avoid
trouble in advance
fer spare not Mentioned
above, for length f time, can be
made by application to the office either
to person or I V letter.
top tor N and
of should
by o'clock on Tuesday
in order to receive prompt
die day
having a large
v. ill be found a medium
which to the public.
A NEW OLD TOWN.
Two ago the
bad the pleasure of H
in While it i an old
; is do looker given over to
rays.
been bat almost as
as any Other town id North
and in wars i
held
a leading business all that
of the The
t-an- r B d
and i i decade or.
k did w, in
Mill to do,
to drag along at
snail barely
keeping and body together, so
to has some little
u, but past glories
don't keep up a town day
and generation. To receive
a town must be in
moving and that is
right where has sot
It has polled itself out
the d ruts a century ago
is at such a rate
is D life entitled to a position in the
of progressive
The who
ten, or thirty ago,
hardly to-day
Mate town. Even a decade
it was of any industry of note,
but among the it has
to-day I that Is
already per cent
and other such
factories live plug
to-
i ii ice
mUs, two sash
door Wind three
mills, the largest
in iii
envy it lo b. two
M various
of or leas note.
and a
are
of the latter
granite.
By the way, has an in
supply of granite of the
kind. There are just
it
the town, to
the whole States with
is great
pour in to
the from for and
that a town
be truly progressive must keep
i-f all other
enterprises, Salisbury has establish
el as tine a graded school town
a in the State can boast.
Tho town also has a splendid sys-
of water works and has voted
a large sum to be expended in
improving and paving streets.
A. very large item the business of
town is the fact that it is a pay-
office for K. D. railroad
company and they pay out
there every month to employees.
are many other things we
might say about smaller
tries of Salisbury, public buildings,
residences, beautiful
mercantile
Geo. bas a
store that would do credit
to a newspapers, etc.,
leave them to the Herald which is
capable of a great deal and
keeping its weather eye the Al-
at the same time.
But Before leaving the subject
personal items which
will no doubt be of to
down here In this section. It
was oar pleasure to meet again
Dr. C K. Barker, as brave and
gallant Confederate as ever was in
a comma d. A number of bis com-
in are living in
them the mention of I
his name revives pleasant memories
their associations together when j
side by side under the C- ,
flag.
Our young friends and former j
merchants of Greenville, Messrs.
also came
for a share of our time and were
to make our stay long
pleasant. We found them I he
dry goods of the
town and having an Immense trade.
They occupy a two-story building
feet and then have hardly
enough their rapidly
business. To an idea
of how much apace they could utilize
profitably they are offering to the
laud owner rental equal t per
cent on the Investment, if he will
build them a store -double
capacity of the one they now occupy.
Before taking our departure they
both insisted that we bring
their establishment a souvenir
our visit lo Salisbury.
The Board of Commissioners of
Anson county to be retained
office all their life lime.
have to be men of
stability and Two years
ago Wadesboro, county seal,
voted dry. As liquor could nut
be sold at seat the Com-
missioners refused to grant licenses
in the List June Wades-
voted wet. The town council-
men at first refused to recommend
any one license. But one of
them resigned alter his
was elected, voted to
recommend for The matter
then went before county c m-
took the matter
under and
after many witnesses on
both sides as to
the people alter Hearing the
of on both sides,
they refused to grant licenses.
this matter they showed care
and deliberation. have
that they hate good the
pie at heart, do not want thorn
cursed with liquor selling. Most
boards of commissioners under such
circumstances would have granted
license at once. But
board is composed of men of
pluck and i and they think and
deliberate well before any
radical changes, them in, ye
It is still in doubt whether or not
Pitt county will have an exhibit at
the Southern at Raleigh,
but the chances are very much
against it. by interest
that is taken in it. For several
weeks the Reflector has been
the measure and
that an exhibit be made that would
be a credit to the county, but all
that has been said has brought
forth one endorsement print, and
only one man has forward
voluntarily offered to contribute
to such an enterprise. of the
leading farmers of the county said
be was ready to contribute to
provide an exhibit whenever a
fund could be started.
to lie but little interest in the
matter the is missing a
chance of showing her industries to
advantage. We are glad to
however, that Mr. Allen Warren
says that whether there is a county
exhibit or not, he will certainly have
exhibit from Riverside
May this step of enterprise on his
part meet a full measure of reward.
Whatever may been
short in yield this year, one thing
is certain, there is an abundant
grass crop. This being so we
no reason why the farmers can
not save all the hay that will be
needed for their stock. This way
of farmers coming to town and
hauling out load after load of
Western hay and corn is a great
factor in keeping them so poor.
The Reflector hopes Pitt county
farmers will do less of this daring
the coming winter and spring.
Corn and hay can be raised here
for much less money than it can
be l o ported.
The University Alumni
offers five fellowships of the
value of two
ace, to graduates of colleges
who desire to advanced lit-
philosophical and scientific
studies at the University. There
is no charge for tuition so that the
two dollars defray all
expenses. None need apply
men whose college record for
scholarship and character has
been highly credited. For par-
address President Win-
at Chapel Hill.
Mr. Hugh F. Murray, a lawyer of
Wilson, died at his home in that
town on Thursday last. His parents
lived in Greenville many years and
if we mistake not be was born in
this town. After moving away and
growing to manhood be was for
several years a regular attendant
upon Courts of this county.
Many of people remember him
well and regret to learn of bis
death.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our .
Washington, August 21st, 1891.
lit-Senator Mahone, of Virginia,
is daring enough and unscrupulous
enough to attempt almost anything,
if my information is correct,
and I here is reason to believe
that it his latest scheme is
I he most desperate which be
ever engaged, lie once captured
State of Virginia got him-
self sent to Senate by getting
control of so-called re ad-
juster movement that State,
he is to get
control of the Farmer's Alliance
move in en i in that State, order lo
capture the legislature and get
sell again sent to the Senate, this
lime as successor to Senator Daniel.
The plot is ah mapped out, and the
decision the Republican Stale
which Mahone is
ow to nominate no Republican
candidates for the legislature was
part and parcel The wold
has pawed the Republican
hues that mast the
nominal ions Alliance tor the
legislature if told to do so by their
local leaders, they a o to be told
to do in every instance that a
blind name is not
yet to be be secured from
the farmers candidate to vote as
they may be told for the successor
to
Harrison
been plenty outside of holders
of the Federal office, but there is
a manifest disposition even
among that class of Republicans to
get aboard of the Blaine train,
which is believed to here been given
impetus enough by the
of the Pennsylvania
State to it make
the to nomination with-
out any difficulty, even
should Mr. liar t attempt to play
the part of tram wrecker by placing
ob.-,; i actions on the truck, which he
may or may not do. as
may determine.
All the rumors about the coining
retirement of Secretary Noble
Commissioner of Pensions
have been revived this week. One
of the causes this was the state-
made by Secretary Foster
that Mr. Harrison would return to
Washington first week in
instead of remaining away
until the first of October as he had
originally contemplated, because
there was some very important
connected with the Interior
department that required his per-
attention. only question
ponding before the Interior depart-
so as the public knows,
that might be considered important
enough to require the personal at-
of Mr. Harrison is that of
compelling the cattle kings to
the Cherokee outlet, they
up to the present time quietly
ignored the orders Uncle Sam to
get out; but the general sentiment
seems to be that important
is naming the successor to
Secretary Noble and to
who are the two most
officials connected with
the department. Another
thing which is probably having Its
effect in making Mr. Harrison
his is, that be can
the wires for securing
gates to national convention,
should Blaine allow to continue
to think him self a candidate, to far
greater advantages in the White
House than anywhere else.
It is now absolutely certain that a
very large amount of the per
cent bonds will not be presented for
extension at per cent,
Foster is now his trust
in the belief that, the most the
bonds that will not be presented for
redemption and that they will come
slowly and small quantities.
Should he be wrong, and the most
these bonds presented re-
immediately after they
mature, September Mr. Foster
will, if he carries out his present in-
of using a part of the
gold reserve fund lo pay
them, the opinion of able
lawyers, render himself
liable to be held personally
for the amount taken from the
Hind, to nothing of impeach-
by congress.
There are those who say that
Land Commissioner Carter, Russell
Harrington's has not over
worked himself i trying lo
the law by driving cattle
kings, some of whom are said to be
warm friends of both and
from the Cherokee outlet.
Some inquiry into this business may
have to be made by Mr. Harrison
senior.
Mr. Wanamaker was
pal speaker at a reunion of the
time and
held here
last night. Wires were ran into
ball and every word of the proceed-
was instantly ticked into more
than one hundred thousand
graph offices throng bout land.
A large number of distinguished
scientists are bore in attendance
upon the convention of the
American Association for the Ad-
of Science.
Startling.
ATTENTION
r B n
It is time to get. ready
-FOR-
FALL TIDE
Therefore we are going
-to-
MAKE PRICES
that will
and make us room for
OUR FALL STOCK.
We have a good many
-OF-
Simmer
A Treat.
-which for the next
THIRTY DAYS
will sell at
ABSOLUTE COST
in order to
to
LOOK OUR STOCK.
Oxford is Your Market
-WE WANT-
J. B. Cherry.
J. R.
CHERRY k CO.
SPRING ANNOUNCEMENT
Bring it along, the more the merrier. We are prepared to pay
HIGHER PRICES for WIRE. CURED than any other
market. Freights are cheap, a mere when increased prices
are taken into account. Ont railroad facilities are good. Send
tobacco to Oxford, N. C, yon will get good prices and quick
returns. Buyers for all classes and from every part of the world
are located in Oxford. You will find us
All Business and no
Hunt, Cooper Co., Meadows Warehouse,
Bullock Mitchell, Banner Warehouse,
Cozart, Rogers Co., Warehouse,
R. V. Minor Co., Minor Warehouse.
R. F. Knott, Manager Alliance Warehouse.
We beg to inform our friends and patrons that we now th
most complete stock we ever had. To our lady friends
we wish to say that our stock of Dress Goods will com-
-pare favorably with any line in town.-------
DRY GOODS
J. M. Currin, Buyer,
W. Reed, Buyer,
John Meadows, Buyer,
Wilkinson Bros., Buyers,
Meadows Yancey, Buyers,
D. S. Osborn, Buyer,
E. O. Buyer,
E. G. Currin, Buyer,
O. S. Smoot, Buyer,
J. Bullock, Buyer,
John Webb, Buyer,
W. A. Buyer,
C. P. Kingsbury,
B, Glenn, Buyer.
.
In Wool Fabrics we have Hen-
Cashmeres, Albatross
and in the leading
Spring and Summer shades.
In Cotton Fabrics we have
Pine Apple Tissues, Swiss
Zephyrs, Batiste, Out-
Cloths, Lawns,
Ginghams, a full line of White
Dress Goods, In all of these
lines you will find beautiful
styles. No prettier to be found
in town.
In all of Men and
Boys Hals we have nice
and will Pell prices to please
our customers.
We invite comparison of
and prices of following
Notions, Gent's Furnish-
Goods, Trunks, Valises,
Hardware, Crockery, Tinware,
Wood and Willow Ware,
Provisions, and all
kinds of banning Implement
and Furniture.
Beware of imitations, buy only the genuine
fixed wire
SNOW STICK.
Modern Tobacco Barn Company.
OXFORD, N. O.
OINTMENT.
MAR-K.
We have made some-
Large Reductions
in price already, -there will be
many more made in the
days.
This Preparation has been in use over
fifty years, and wherever known has
been in steady demand. It been en-
the leading physicians nil over
country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, with the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
to its own efficacy, as but effort has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box tree. The usual
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders
promptly attended to. Address all or-
and communications to
T. F.
Sole Manufacturer Proprietor,
Greenville, N. C.
of Land.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt county, in a certain special
therein penning wherein
K. Dupree, of I.
B, Dupree, deceased, is plaintiff and F.
M. and others heirs at law of
said L. B. Dupree, late of said
deceased, defendants, the undersigned
will on Monday the 21st day of
1891, at tho Court House door in the
town of Greenville, sell to the highest
bidder, all of the lands in the
petition, belonging to said estate, con-
Five Hundred and Fifty-
six acres more or lows, adjoining
the lands of W. R. Williams, the heirs of
J. V. Johnston. E. M. Davis, C. H.
others. The same
sold for assets to pay debt of the estate.
Terms of sole CaMi.
August 26th,
MARV E. DUPREE.
L. B. Dupree,
Skinner, Attorneys for
Notice.
My son, It. L. nearly
years of age. having left my home with-
out permission remaining absent
I hereby warn all persons
under penalty of law not to employ or in
way harbor him.
It. L. GRIFFIN, Sr.
Greenville Iron Works,
A. B. ELLINGTON, Prop.
Engines, Saw Mills, repaired,
Iron and Bras- made to order
Largest stock Pips and Pipe Fittings in
town. Be sure so bring your work to
A. B.
Near depot. Greenville, N. C.
WILSON h w mm
For Young Ladies,
WILSON, X. C.
Fall opens September
A thorough course of
study, with ii Full
equal to that or any Female College in
the South. Standard of Scholar
usually high. for the study of
Music and Art unsurpassed. Depart-
Telegraphy, and
Short-hand. Beautiful and lo-
cation. Moderate Charges, Steady in-
crease of patronage. For
address,
SILAS E.
Principal.
Wilson. X.
D. D. HASKETT,
Notice.
On Wednesday the day of
A, D. 1891, I will sell at tho
Court House door in the town of Green-
ville to the highest bidder for Cash one
tract of land In Pitt county containing
about acres and bounded as
Situated In Greenville township adjoin-
the lands of A. Dudley and wife,
H Langley Home Tract and John
and being the tract of land on
which John Murphy now resides to
sundry executions in my hands for
collection against John H. Dudley and
others and which has been levied on said
AuguSt 24th, 1891. Sheriff.
ByE. W. KING, D S.
We see it stated that tho
of Georgia, following ex-
ample of North Carolina, bas enact-
ed a law to prevent the sale of
to minors. It is one thing
to enact a law and other to enforce
it, however. If law in Georgia
is carried as it is in North
Carolina the boys of that State
continue to get all the
they want.
A musical treat is in store
those who visit the great Southern
Exposition to be bold in Raleigh,
N. C, during October and
band that is to furnish
for the Exposition has been
selected from the most talented
musicians. Some of them earns
from as far as White Mountains
of New Hampshire, end two from
Europe. The of the
was made by musical
rector, who had directions to select
the best, so as to furnish most
complete bond that has yet perform-
ed at a Southern Exposition.
WATCH US.
Toting
GREENVILLE
FEMALE
SCHOOL
The position of teacher of Greenville
Female School, non-sectarian, having
been conferred upon me, Mrs. J. J.
Harrington, I wish
to announce that school will open,
in the Tyson School Douse, MONDAY,
AUGUST 1891.
Terms per
Primary Department,
Intermediate. 2.00
Higher English A Mathematics, 2.90
Languages, 3.00
A share of your patronage is respect-
fully solicited-
Stove Pipe, Hollowware, Tin
ware. Nails, Doors, Sash. Locks
Butts and Hinges, Glass, Putty
Paints and Oils,
The increased stove trade this
season is the best evidence that
the I sell is the stove for
the people. The public are in-
to examine my stock
fore purchasing-
D. D. HASKETT.
University No. Ca.
The Next Term. Begins Sept-
Entrance Examinations. Sept. 2nd.
Tuition -30 per term. Needy young
men of talent and character will be
aided with scholarship and loans. Be,
sides the General Course of Study
which offer a wide range of
studies, there are in Law, Med
and Engineering. For
address the I resident,
GEO. T. WINSTON.
. Chapel Hill, N. C.
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS,
FURNITURE
I We carry the largest and be
selected stock of Furniture in
Our stock of Shoes and Slip
is very active.
think we can suit you both in.
quality and tit. One of the lead- our tom at
Slices with us is our Opera to please.
Toe with Common Sense Heel. We have a nice line of Mat-
This is a long felt want with the m sell at
ladies. figures.
In Men and Boys Shoes . ,. .
have in stock and to arrive the I Children have
best line ever carried by . best hue ever
We have sold L. M. Reynold's
We realize importance of
Shoes for the past two years and
find them to be the best line ever
handled by us. This spring we
will have a complete line of
these Shoes and when our friends
are in need of good shoes e
will be pleased to serve
selling goods at a small profit.
We do not claim to sell goods
at cost, but do claim and back
our assertion, we
give you honest goods for
honest, money.
See Us Talk With Us Try Us
REDUCTION.
REDUCTION.
REDUCTION.
ReductioN.
REDUCTION
REDUCTION.
REDUCTION
BROWN BROS.
Ladies we know full well you remember how greatly prices
after the reduction surprised you in our last year Spring
Goods, so we now make another spring
on the following
Edging, Swiss
Embroideries, India
Linens, and Cheek
Teasel Summer
Cashmeres, Ginghams,
lies, Percale,
stock. Look at the
and all many other things in a l
------reduced prices
els Ginghams at Teasel at eta.
els Ginghams at ct. Teasel at
Vii Ginghams at ll
R C rial lies at S
at
o's Hamburg at
Hamburg at
White Goods at
Wholesale and Retail Dealer In STAPLE FANCY GROCERIES
LIE AT and
gag Oar Load Peed OaK Car load Corn, Car load No. Hay,
Load Side Meat, Car Load St. Louis
Heavy Pork, Granulated Sugar.
H Gail Ax all kinds.
Bail Road Snuff. Snuff.
Molasses, Tubs Boston Lard.
Star Lye, Gross Matches.
Also full line Baking Powders. Soda, Soap. Tobacco, Cigars,
Cakes, Crackers, Candles, Canned Goods, wrapping Taper, Paper Sacks.
Special prices given to the wholesale on large quantities of the
above
J. A. ANDREWS. N. C.
Greenville Institute,
FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.
Z. X.
Warren, i
Miss Lucy Joyner,
Mrs. Z. J
Miss Minnie Carraway, Music.
Session begins Aug.
Instruction thorough. Terms reason-
able. Discipline Arm but not severe.
For further particulars address.
Z. D.
Greenville, N. C.
HARRIS.
-HOUSE AND SIGN
PAINTERS,
I. .
Offer their to those needing
in their line. All work en-
trusted to a will be executed in a work-
manlike manner.
GREENVILLE
Classical and Mathematical M,
The next Session of this School will be.
gin on MONDAY, AUGUST 24th.
Tuition per term of
Primary, per session, 7.73
Intermediate, per session, 10.00
Higher
Languages, each, 3.00
The School will be thorough in all of
its Instruction, mild but firm in its
having view at all times the
oil preparation of young men and
for active business life, or successful col-
courses. Board can be obtained
with the principal, or at other places la
town at reasonable rates. One half of
tuition payable at the of-tho
term, the remainder at Its close. For
further particulars see or address.
W. II. A. B.,
Greenville, N. C. Principal.
ma
stores.-Apply





M. B. COLUMN
M. R LANG.
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
N. C.
This
week
oar
Mr. Lang
is
in
Northern
market
selections
for
Fall
and
Winter.
HiM
stock
will
be
than
ever
and
most
complete
ever
shown
in
the
town.
His
selections
will
be
placed
in
few
and
we
M. R LANG.
Local Sparks
M COLUMN
Cooper's
Warehouse
Is the place to
Ship your Tobacco
If yon want highest prices.
The days are very warm but the
nights delightful.
Third supply of Jars at
the Old Prick Store.
The Rough Ready Fire Company
had a drill Saturday afternoon.
Latest styles of Shirts, Collars
and at C. T.
The luscious grape
will find its way into market.
the Corned
Mallets at the Old Brick Store.
The watermelon that comes in now
looks like its best days are behind.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Night comes much sooner these
evenings than it did a few weeks ago.
Try Cooper's Warehouse,
son, N. C, the sale Tobacco.
He secures good prices all sales
and allows do to leave his
house dissatisfied.
Saturday afternoon was about as
hot as it has been any day this year.
Point Lace Floor is always uniform
in quality at the Old Brick Store.
Mr. B. F. Sugg has been making
additions to his marble works build-
Say where are you to send
that Tobacco To Cooper's Ware-
house, Henderson. That's right I
He guarantees better prices than
any house in or out of the State-
The are giving more
to their books now and less to
Wanted fob Bees-
wax and Hides, at the Old Brick
Store.
Yearly meetings are large
gatherings together in various sec-
lions of the country.
Bedsteads,
Cradles and Mattresses at the Old
Brick Store.
When your subscription expires
any paper have it renewed at the
Hook Store.
It pays a man lo raise good To-
it pays still better to get
good prices when it is sold. Send
yours to Cooper's Warehouse, Hen-
and the good prices are
guaranteed.
See notice of laud sale by the
Sheriff to executions in his
hands against John II. Dudley.
The Free School will not
with the other regular work of the
Institute. Z. D.
Monday was a rainy
day. We must be passing the
equinox. Tuesday was as
bad.
The assignment of Latham
will not with
Tobacco flue trade. Farmers are
requested to come for their flues as
early as they can, and flues are
cash.
Attention is called to the
of land sale upon order of
court by Mary E. Dupree,
of L. B. Dupree.
At the same place, Henderson. N.
C, you will Cud Cooper's Ware-
house selling Tobacco for
and getting the best prices for
them that can be obtained Your
shipments are solicited.
With tobacco curing and fodder
pulling both demanding the
of the farmers you can mark this
down as a busy time with them.
Greenville Institute. For
both sexes, will begin the fall term
August 25th, 1891. For terms or
circulars address the Principal.
Z. D.
Greenville, N. 0-
Mr. Moore, of Carolina
township, told us last week that he
had lost the rise of twenty hogs
the last few weeks cholera.
Cooper's Warehouse at
bod, N. C. will furnish you hogs-
head free and grade your Tobacco
at lowest prices. So you can send
him your tobacco graded or
Always mark your name upon
all packages when shipped.
The Guard had twenty men out on
drill last Friday. Several new
were received at the business I warm in New York and Philadelphia
meeting. Make it a line company, last week. He also tels us there
was much excitement in both those
cities the horrible explosion
that occurred in New York Saturday
which wrecked several buildings and
cost scores of people their lives.
Dr. and Mrs. Frank Brown, are at
Nags Head.
Miss Mary Terrell returned to
home in Tarboro last week.
We wire pleased to sec
Cobb on our streets Saturday.
Miss Rosa Young, of Wilson, is
visiting her sister, Mrs.
Mr. W. S. Green, of Wilson, spent
part of last week with relatives here.
Senator W. R Williams, of Falk-
land, made us a pleasant call Mon-
day.
Mrs. R. H. left yesterday
for Baltimore to purchase new
goods.
Miss Sadie of Washington,
is visiting the family of her brother,
Mr. W. j.
Mrs. P. E. Dancy and Mrs. M. M.
Nelson returned Saturday from their
visit to New
Mr. J. L. of Farmville,
has taken a position as clerk with
J Macs L. Little Co.
Jolly Will Russ was in h i last
week making everybody smile who
got hold of his hand.
Mrs. S. E. Poole, of
who was visiting Mrs. A. M. Clark,
returned home last week.
Master Larry returned
Saturday evening from a visit to rel-
in Tarboro and Wilson.
Mrs. J. R- Moore and children
have been visiting relatives at Elm
City and Burgaw the past week or
two.
Mr editor of the Wash-
was in to see us last
week on his home from Ashen
lite.
Mr. E. G. Barnes, the clever
Cooper's Warehouse,
Henderson, spent several days in this
section last week.
It will be a pleasure to her friends
to know that Miss Lillie Cherry has
so far recovered from her recent sick
as to be lo go out driving.
Mrs. G. A. and three
children, Laura. Albert and Johnnie,
arrived Monday night and are visit-
at Dr. Times.
Miss Lucy Joyner, who has been
spending vacation with relatives in
Franklin county, returned last week
and is now teaching at the Institute.
Misses Rosalind Rountree,
Tyson and Lula White left last week
for a trip to friends.
Miss Lula returned morn-
Miss Warren, recently re
turned home from a visit to her sister,
Mrs. Moore in Bertie, and takes
of one of the departments at
the Institute.
Mr. Barney Wilson, who has been
visiting his parents here a few
weeks, left Saturday to return to his
railroad and telegraphic work at
Ga.
Prof. J. E. Tucker, a young man of
this county who for a month past has
been visiting his relatives here, leaves
this week to return to Alabama where
he has a very fine school.
Prof. John who for six
years was Principal of Greenville
Institute, and who now takes charge
of Hamilton Institute, spent part of
last week among his friends here.
Mr. Wiley Brown went North
Monday morning to purchase new
for Brown Bros. Wiley is a
splendid judge of goods and a safe
buyer, and knows what will please
his customers.
Try It.
A good article and one that should
be in every household is
Ointment. By its own merit in the
working l rainy wonderful cures it.
has won for it a high reputation.
The advertisement which appears
elsewhere in this paper cannot fail to
be of interest.
Coming.
Not many days hence and the bill
boards, cross stores and fences
will be decorated with flaming fair
posters sending forth the intelligence
that the big pumpkin will soon go
on exhibition and bob-tailed nag
be in race. It would be no fall
without fairs.
Elm Tat
Hon. G. Skinner and wile
were in Raleigh yesterday on their
way home from the mountains. He
said mountains might do for the
up-country folks, but for him Per-
county was the healthiest
in the State, and he was in a hurry
to breathe its pure air so he could
feel well again
Chronicle.
Steals Old Iron.
Yesterday morning about day
break a went to the Foundry
and stole a wheel barrow load of old
He took it around to another
part the town then went with it
to Five Points and offered it for sale
to junk dealer down there. He
was caught up with and is having
some trouble over the matter. He
may take quarters at Hotel Tucker
the meeting closes.
for Boy, bat to the
The Tarboro base ball tossers have
returned from their Washington and
Greenville tour in search of diamond
scalps. Their search was a vain one.
Washington Tarboro Green-
ville G, Tarboro In justice to the
boys it should be stated that they
say they only played Greenville for
fun Fun for Greenville it is sup
Southerner.
Ahead.
As soon as the crops now on the
property are harvest. the Green-
ville Land Company
will finish laying out the streets and
will place maps of their lots before
the public. It is desirable property
is going to be an attractive part
the town. The tobacco warehouse
on this property is
and at an early day the company
will have their large lumber mill
moved down from Kenly.
Bound
The little of Ayden sent quite
a delegation up here Monday to in-
a charge of conspiracy
against twelve men of that
who stood indicted that
The case was heard before B.
S. Sheppard, who five of the
parties over to Court. The other
seven were dismissed, no evidence
being found against them. The
charge was of a conspiracy to whip
another man.
The Female Sch-el.
As announced last week be
done, all arrangements for the strict
female school in Greenville have
n perfected. The movers in this
enterprise secured Mrs. J. J.
Josie to
take charge of the school and it will
be opened next Monday in the Tyson
school building on Greene street.
Mrs. Harrington comes with the best
recommendations that could be ask-
ed. She graduated at
Va., and was in college six
preparing herself. She has
had nine years experience at teach-
She is from Suffolk, Va., and
bears high testimonials from Gen. L.
S. Baker, of that city, from ex-Judge
P. B. Superior Court Clerk
county, Va., Mrs. Col.
Wm. Goodman, Campbell county,
Va., J. T. Notary Public,
W. Va., Dr. H. Holmes
Hunter, N. C, Messrs. S.
I. Fleming and J. R. Davenport,
N. C, and others. The
prospects are favorable for a good
school. Advertisement for the open-
will be found elsewhere in this
issue.
BULLETIN.
Mr. Bruce Cotton, of Falkland, was
in to see us yesterday and had his
name placed on our list for the Re
to be sent to him at Chapel
Hill. He will attend the University
the coming session.
Rev. Dr. Presbyterian
Evangelist o Kentucky, in
the Opera House here last night.
To day he goes to Falkland to assist
in a meeting which Rev. Mr. Sum-
commenced there on Sunday.
Prof. G. C. Foust, who taught one
year in Institute, but now
has charge of a large school at
Texas, was in town Friday and
Saturday. From here he to
Falkland lo visit his sister Mrs.
Greenville had a flush Professors
in town Saturday. Besides the
dents. Profs. W. H. and Z.
the Reflector office
had calls from Prof. John Duckett,
of Hamilton. Prof. C. H. James, of
Grifton, Prof. G. C. Foust, of Abilene,
Texas, Prof. J. E. Tucker, of
Montgomery, Ala.
Mr. M. R. Lang reached home
Monday evening from his purchasing
torn- through the Northern cities and
his new goods are arriving ever- day.
He says the weather was fearfully
boys.
bridge will
be op for repairs about four or five
days commencing No
vehicle pass. A ferry for foot-
man will be kept. By order
Commissioners. B. H.
Bridge Keeper.
A large lot of handsome
correspondence and visiting
cards, gilt, bevel and plain, received
the post week at the Reflector Book
Store.
The storm that came up suddenly
Monday morning caught many
without umbrellas and had them
hustling for shelter.
A complete and beautiful line of
Bureau Scarfs and Mats in linen,
Ladies, Misses and Children's
Caps, Infant Sacks and Fas-
in Newport Scarf
for Ladies, for sale by Mrs. Fannie
Joyner.
Last week Mr. R. L. Humber
placed a large new iron lathe in his
machine shops, He is a skilled ma-
and can do any kind of work
that is taken to him
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson,
K. C, is now ready to and
sell all grades of new Tobacco at
full market and prom-
the planters Pitt and adjoin-
counties that no market or
in or out of State shall
sell tobacco for -more net money.
Give him atrial.
Mr. J. B. Cherry, of the firm of J.
B. Cherry Co,, accompanied by his
son, Master James, leaves this morn-
for the northern markets to lay
in the stock of fall goods for tho firm.
Carrying the unusually large stock
of goods that this reliable firm does
their purchases will be correspond-
large this season and
may be assured of rinding any
article they want at their establish-
and that too at a most reason-
able price. They handle general
merchandise and as nice a stock as
any town can show.
Nut culture, and especially the
pecan, is demanding attention in
various sections. Mr. Allen War-
of Riverside Nursery can give
you all information about this very
profitable tree.
Transportation companies are be-
taxed now to bring in new goods
for the merchants.- Their will
get much larger when cotton and to-
shipments get lively.
large law suit. Smith vs
which had been in for
some time and which was being
heard before Mr. R. O. Burton,
Halifax, as referee, was compromised
last Saturday.
Carlos.
Yesterday Mr. W. A.
brought the a corn cob
that looks very much like a human
hand and wrist. It resembles a hand
partially closed with the ends of the
lingers cut oft.
Monday Mr. B. W. Tucker
brought us a l ripple apple. At first
glance it looked like a large apple,
but a closer inspection showed that
it was three grown together.
three stems were distinct.
Bights of Way
There was quite a gathering at
on Monday, composed of
those people living in Pitt county
along the route of tho railroad to be
built from the A. R. Junction to
Washington. They met to receive
pay for the rights of way through
their land for the road. Payments
for the rights of way over the entire
route to Washington w. re completed
yesterday. It is now expected that
work on the road will begin about
September 1st, and be pushed
through rapidly as possible.
Bead Tali Paper.
So many new
crowded in upon us last week that
we could not give them all the special
mention they should have received.
At this season it is greatly to the in-
of Reflector readers to keep
a close watch on its advertising
columns. There frequently bar-
gains offered that arc not called to
your through other
channel, and these man who
and tell you just what offer
are tho ones entitled to your trade
Don't fail to examine every copy of
the paper.
Notwithstanding very bad
weather this week both the Male
School and the Institute opened with
a large and encouraging attendance.
Prof. W. H. opened his
Mule School in Academy Monday-
morning, and though there was a
heavy down pour of at the open-
hour SI boys were present.
entered yesterday.
Prof. Z. D. opened the
Institute for both sexes yesterday
morning amid more bad weather. He
starts with boarders, and a total
enrollment of for tho Institute
and Public School combined.
Almost every day for the next two
or three weeks new pupils will be
coming in lo both these schools. The
Female School will begin next Mon-
day.
Picnic
The picnic at Grove,
near Farmville, last Thursday was
certainly a pleasant one and in every
way a success. People were there
from Pitt, Greene, Wilson and
counties, and they made a pleasant
day of it. A large platform had been
built, a good string band was present
and the young people had a full day
of dancing. The dinner. was a
one; enough and to spare for
even more than were gathered to-
on this occasion. A pile of
twenty-two barbecued porkers dis-
all fears that might been
had any one going away hungry,
managers were M esters, J. W.
Parker, T. L. Turnage, J. Parker.
J. D. Carraway, May and Jerry
Fields, and they know their business
in getting up and conducting a
picnic The of the
day were carried still further in a
ball at Farmville at night. Green
was well at both the
Killed In South Carolina.
Information has been received here
of the killing at S. C,
of W. L. Harris, a native of this
county. He left here last winter and
went to South Carolina, engaging
with a large lumber milling company
near Sometime later
two other young men, and Joe
Harris, went this county to
South Carolina and have been work-
at the same mill. On Saturday,
August when the hands at the
mill were paid off, a party of them,
the three in the number,
got on a tram car and went to
They drank very freely of
liquor and were all more or less under
the influence of liquor when
started back to the mill. On the
way Joe Harris was teasing W. L.
Man is a cigar. The latter
got mad at this and stuck his knife
in Joe Harris. When the cutting
look place John Harris, brother
Joe, pulled a standard from the side
of the car and dealt W. L. Harris a
blow on the head. The blow knocked
him insensible and he never regained
consciousness, the injury causing
his death Sunday evening. John
Hauls stayed around the wounded
man until it was discovered that he
would die then tied to parts
Persona who have written
about the occurrence say the above
are the particulars as they could be
gathered. also say W. L.
Harris received every attention
and was given decent burial.
Tobacco Crumbs.
The tobacco warehouse is nearly
closed in will be ready for the
opening sale as soon as the floor can
be laid. The stockholders will meet
this week to select a manager. The
suggests that also
select a day the break
and begin publishing it, so that it
may made the biggest day Green
has had in years.
Monday morning Mr. Man
brought in a sample that
cured on his place by J. S.
in hours. It is a nice cure
compares favorably with the other
specimens on exhibition. arc
a believer that the time
required in curing a barn of tobacco
be materially shortened.
On Saturday Messrs. L. Joyner
and L. F. Evans, who are farming
together near Farmville, brought the
Reflector specimens of their tobacco.
The cures are bright and everybody
who has seen the samples pronounce
them fine. These young men have
several bares of a superior cure.
The best all around stalk of
co that we have seen was brought in
Saturday by Mr. H. J. Hester. The
was u large one and contained
leaves. Old handlers of the
weed say it is as good a cure of the
stalk through as they ever saw.
Several of tho farmers of this sec-
will curing then
crops this week. Pitt is a longways
ahead of the farmers who
are just beginning to cure.
The talk In town Saturday was
tobacco more thin anything else.
The people of Pitt county are
more and more interested in it
every day.
A tobacco barn on Mr. J. B.
place, just below town,
caught fire and burned down
about one o'clock Friday.
Mr. Jacob Joyner lost a tobacco
barn by day last week.
Hems.
Once again we will endeavor to get
to you what we deem of most interest
in passing of our town.
However it may no use, for it
seems impossible to got anything to
you in time for publication we
send it a week hand Sorely
our mail facilities need
when it n two days
to get miles, and when we have a
daily train to and from place.
Will not our P. M. ask Undo Sam to
come to our rescue give us the
mail by the rail road V This think
is a matter importance and should
be looked after at we ate in
a last age when one day's time in
mail matters amount to a groat deal.
Come to our rescue, you who have
authority in this matter, us
the mail by rapid transit, for
is motto.
Sunday morning and at night the
M. E. congregation enjoyed, rich in-
feasts in sermons by
ding Elder Rhone. His sermons
show deep thought. All become so
charmed while listening to him that
they soon forget his peculiar voice
and are held spell bound at his
The pulp,; t the Christian Church
was ailed Sunday afternoon and
night by Rev. D. W. Davis, to the
delight of all whose good fortune it
was to hear him. He has not reached
the meridian of life yet, and we
that long before he roadies de.
dining years he will climbed
high up the ladder or ecclesiastical
km- Nola.
N. C, Aug. 24th.
Hereafter all cheap novels
Quo
will he at half price, that,
is purchaser of a book can read
it and by returning it unsoiled get a
new one at half price, or one new
one for tan that have been mad.
Central
The is of correspondents of
the Weekly Weather Crop Bulletin
issued by the North Carolina
Station and State Weather
Service tor the week ending Friday,
August 21st, 1891, show that very
favorable weather conditions have
continued. The temperature and
amount of sunshine have been con-
above tho normal.
showers have fallen, but the
rain-fail has generally been deficient,
average less than one inch, the nor-
amount this being 1.52
inches. A hail storm occurred in
Davie county, damaging tobacco and
corn. Local heavy rains one
occurred at Asheville on 20th
and at Raleigh on 21st. As com-
pared with last swell cotton and corn
show slight improvement in
while tobacco has deteriorated
somewhat owing to firing and dam-
age in places by flea-buss.
Without question tho corn crop
be most excellent this year, while
with to cotton a number of
correspondents remark that with fa-,
conditions and late an
average crop can be made. Present
condition of crops for the
Cotton corn S.
reports received, representing GO
Eastern weather has
warm with abundant
and occasional showers; in some
places rather dry now, and crops
needing rain. Reports concerning
cotton rather diversified but
ally showing marked improvement.
Cotton better. Corn is well
tared, and the saving of fodder has
commenced. Lowland rice is re-
ported in excellent condition. Pres-
condition of crops in this
Cotton corn tobacco SI, pea
nuts potatoes reports,
representing counties.
Central weather is
beginning to be rather dry in the
southern portions, while much
rain is reported at isolated places in
the northern portions of this district.
A severe storm passed over
Wake county Friday nigh;.
inches of rain fell at Raleigh and
lightning struck a barn at Apex,
Wake county, destroying a number
of bales of cotton. The past Week
has matured and developed
considerably. Corn is in splendid
condition. Cotton has Improved two
per cent., though not reported fruit
well and still shedding in few
places. Turnips and being
seeded. The fruit very line sad
abundant, but being a little late
prices range low. Tobacco
filing considerably, and has not
proved during the week; some farm
era commencing to cut
condition of Cotton corn
tobacco report
representing,
Western District-Fine season
daring the past week
is needed at some A severe
hail storm occurred at
Davie county, damaging tobacco
over a considerable area and injuring
corn. Prospects favorable lot
heavy crop corn, the condition in
this district i- excellent. Tobacco
improved per cent. It is In cut
and cured in few places. Hay
progressing slowly. Present
condition of crops; Cotton corn
reports received
. g
Condition crops stated b
of
Best condition i
Excellent condition is to
Good condition is SO to
Fail condition is to
Poor condition is under
acre.
reflector
I have been reading your paper
ever since you been publishing
it and I like it well. Ton know I
have been subset the few
have never naked yon to
publish Bat us am a
farmer and wish to say something
yon will please print this in your
weeks paper,
I have one acre of cotton on
which I am trying for the gold
prize offered by tho
Guano Co,, of Norfolk, Va.
bought the guano Messrs,
Young at Greenville
The cotton is in rows has
met. It is from to feet high
and will average to SO bolls with
as high as forms. Tins cotton
did up until May 20th.
It is doing and think with
twenty more good days it will make
four bales. D. R. v ;.
take pleasure in publishing
the above. Daniel u tho
most prosperous colored farmer in
county. Dy Ins industry
honesty be has won the good will
of that knows him, and
has more credit in business circles
than many white men can com-
Ho is a large tobacco farmer
and is making money every year.
If colored people would emulate
example be far
and
them.
We hope will make the
four bales of on bis acre and
win the premium also. His system
of tanning in this instance is along
the of the belief,
that a small acreage well cultivated
pay better than a large acreage
poorly cultivated. If the fertilizers
that most of the farmers
spread over four acres was put
upon one acre harvest results
would be much better to say
of difference in the
of having to cultivate a smaller
number of acres. The way of
two, three sometimes
lour acres to get bale cotton
is a poor system of farming can
be wonderfully improved upon. The
lands of Pitt county are capable or
larger production, as this test
of Daniel King's will
LUST BUT FOUND.
WHO
C. T.
BEEN-
But has at last turned up to the great wonder
of the people, with a large
Stock of Fall Goods
cheaper than ever heard of before. Call to see
him he will tell you all about it.
He buys for cash and sells for the same old stuff.
In ti
Yours truly,
Old Brick Store.
C. T.
JOHN K. President.
S. S. NASH,
W. JEFFREYS, f
to Visit
Chief of the
United State Weather Bureau, and
Commander of the famous
North Pole exploring expedition,
has consented to visit Southern
Exposition t N. C,
deliver an address. The
is open October 1st and
closes December 1st, 1881. Gen.
will deliver an interesting
address, and it will be a great treat
for those who are so fortunate as to
be present at the Exposition at that
Uses,
A. L. Sec. A Tress,
THE CENTRAL
Is located at the landings of the Washington A
Greenville Boats and at the depot of the
A R. Railroad.
ate of Opening will Announced Later.
Having made arrangements largest Leaf Id the United
states to have then- at our sales can obtain here price
for your us any other market In Hie State. How convenient
this win iv fr our Pitt count; ship their by beat
one day attend the sale in person the next day, of
our friends living within .-i lead their teams
drive Warehouse where they will
their teams.
Correspondence and consignments solicited.
The floor will be in of a competent manager and auctioneer of several rears
experience.
Pitt county friends can obtain information of Mr. Alex at
.-
L LITTLE CO, Hug
MUST GO.
.-.
WHITE GOODS,
is,
AND MULLS.
MUST GO.
-mU
The Season waning and we will sell these Goods at a rather than
them over.
We pl.-ice on the tame list. Somethings in line are a job and we can give s
bargain that will please you.
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
STRAW
We will also sell Straw Hats at reduced prices.
STRAW HATS.
STRAW HATS.
STRAW HATS.
STRAW HATS.
STRAW HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
HATS.
Don't forget us when you want
. in this line.
--------Ladies dashing B perfect fitting should try a--------
------294 C-B a la
JAS. L. LITTLE CO.
-SHIP YOUR-
AND OTHER PRODUCE TO--
ALEXANDER, MORGAN CO.,
COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION
Guarantee highest market prices, sales and prompt returns
G. E. HARRIS,
. ff
DEALER IN
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRE
;. ;.





,;
m INSTITUTE
I Private School In X. C
year Jo Lo-
cation
ft beauty and
Prepares fur
Teaching.
Full
Course,
Inc. -1.; Shorthand,
and
Fall
August 12th.
Write for
COLLEGE.
Students during
V H. HOLT, OAK W, C.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
THE
Green villa. N. C
TIM of
New Orleans Picayune.
Colonel of this now in
South America, recalls NM fail that
in .-; . ail II e
in Paris, on
I or 1890. -A
Sin Origin r I
over years old Drought over Cm of
CM
J. Co k. years r-
brown j lit which if.
Moved to next Door Court House
BUGGIES,
l--t up i
ass work. IVe keep with the t lines improved style
Rest Material ma i in all Ail of Springs are you can select
Brewster, Storm, Coil, lorn, King
Also on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
tie J. which we ill sell as BOW as the lowest.
a Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Germany by hi grandfather.
O, precious old jog
Thou retreat
Of the juice of the bug
flow thy presence remind
Of the foaming mug.
And the leer.
And his rapturous shrug.
You cunning old rogue
For centuries past
You bare been vogue.
Will you open your mouthy
There's a terrible
Wont you give me a slug
AU generous old jug
Say, what do you do
For a living, old
a sexton, true blue,
You say Well, well
Will I take a drop more
No, thanks;
I feel it already;
in my shanks
But tell roe, old boy.
put in the plug
you many craves dug
What thousands
You brag. In your time V
Yon have them
With whiskey, and brandy.
And wine
You monstrous old
You bloody old thug
Ha I wring your old neck.
I break your old bones;
A fig for your groans
Dug thousands of graves
Well, you won't din mine F.
Sunny
a well known on
can linguistic matter, maintained
that when Cortex on
of Yucatan, and on what now
known the Mosquito the
whole country was possessed by the
Aztecs, and was known by m as
which in the Aztec t. ague
meant Windy I r the
Country of High This
name of was easily
in pronunciation into America
by the old Spaniards. The Italian
geographer, Vespucci,
fixed it in place of the name by
which he had been christened, and
became known as
in the same manner
the English
Gordon had prefixed Chi
to his name, and became known
to the as Chinese Gorden.
Thanking tin ;
merit a Con c II
of and surrounding counties for past favors we hope to
m on.
LOCK CO.
of Hall's Patent
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK.
Pianos Organs Furniture
Baby Carriages and Mattings
THAT WILL SAVE YOU MONEY
Largest House and Largest Stock in the South.
v. lit Piano or Organ you want write to us for
and and we will save yon money.
J. S. AMES,
Opposite
Main t., Norfolk. Va.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE RELIABLE OF C
to tin- of Pill and surrounding counties, of the following good
not to he e in this market. And to be and
DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN.
HATS and CArS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA
and and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS
WARE PLOWS and FLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
kinds. GiN Hay, Rock Lime, and
II Hit. ADDLES.
HEAVY A SPECIALTY.
Agent for Clark's O. X. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers prices, per dozen, lea per cent for Cash. Bread Prep-
Hail's , at jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil. h . Paint Color. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. X a Give me a nail and I guarantee satisfaction.
Win.
Ind , has done
tor me all other medicines
combined, for that bad arising
from Kidney and Liver John
of same
Electric Kilters to
and Liver medicine,
made me feel like a new J.
Gardner, hardware same
town. Electric Hitters is
tiling a man who is inn down and
cure whether ho lives or dies; he
found new strength, good appetite and
just like he had a new lease on life.
Only a bottle, at J. L. Wooten's
Drug Store.
She Caught on-
St. Louis Humorist.
Nellie, he said, with u kind of an
experimental, immature, early home
grown smile on his face,
I may count on yon as- it
friend, may
Certainly, Alfred, she replied.
a good Mead T
To be
You have no objection to looking
on me a distant relative,
perhaps.
You I have no to looking
on me a distant relative, per-
haps.
No have no objection to that.
cousin as It were
I am willing to be your second
cousin.
Or, first cousin once removed, he
persisted, mopping his forehead
with it trembling
Well I nave no objection that,
either.
And I might as well be a first
cousin, mightn't
Yes, I suppose so.
Do feel, Nellie, he went on
hastily swallowing something large
as if you could be a
be to me
No Alfred.
a a a
The invitations are out.
The Prince of
Patent Wire Tobacco Hangers
CAN BE USED IN ANY BARN.
Wires are movable. Tobacco can be properly on and
Down the Wires when cared. Simplest, Cheapest Beat In the
PRICES, when the Order t
SUcks Complete Wires to
Wires 4.00
PRICES O I
Sticks Complete.
1.000 Wires
Baskets, per Dozen. 4.00
Sample Stick and Wire for
Treatise Tobacco Culture and Caring FREE.
AGENTS WANTED.
TOBACCO HANGER M CO., Houston, Halifax Co., Va.
LIVERY SALE AND FEED
I have removed to new stables on
Fifth street in Cap. White's
where I will constantly
i ii on i- a tine of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
will ma a
solicit a of
CalI and be need.
EVANS.
Mm Greenville, N. a
in
Use
recommend it
creased on w
Now Ready
To show finest of lot of
Horses
Mules,
ever brought to Greenville,
If yon want a good Drive Horse
Draft I or a good Work
Mule don't fail to see me.
I can yon at
reasonable prices.
My Feed Stables
have recently been enlarged and
now have ample room to
all horse left in my charge
Best attention given.
Greenville. N. C.
AGAIN HEBE.
South.
A with I hat inquiring
turn of mind that characterizes the.
among ha been
looking into the income of the
Prince of Wales and has made Hie
discovery that it is about f
a year, of which
comes in the shape of
to himself members of his
family from British govern-
; but that of
not subsist on this small
and so every few years bis
debts have to be paid off by the
government or his thrifty mother.
seems to impose obligations
which cannot be except
at expense of being regarded as
parsimonious, for this same
tells us that household
Prince of Wales is on same
footing as that of a sovereign with
the difference that his civil list is
inferior to that of every reigning
monarch, with the exception of the
king this is
ed upon him the heir-apparent
to the throne of Great Britain it is
simple justice that bis frugal numb-
should help bear the expense.
In all the wonders of the South there
is nothing more wonderful yet discovered
than Is Panacea water for Dyspepsia in
all of its most distressing It
acts upon the Liver and Kidneys and
cures them permanently. It is worth
per case f. at Ask
your druggist or send an order
Springs Co.
Oxford, N. C.
The Georgia editors of weekly
papers are enjoying a grand junket-
tour. They met in Atlanta and
then went to New York in Pullman
sleepers. Living In hotels, eating
with knives and forks and having a
clean towel every morning with store
soap, will make home life dull
and prosaic lo them. With fried
bacon for breakfast, Georgia blue
collards for dinner and cold victuals
warmed over for supper, things will
not look as rose colored as they did
at the Kimball house, or
But the Georgia editor is and
can thrive and write well en one
towel a week and a good, square meal
every Sunday
-I hare again opened a-
Greenville and invite my old
and f patrons to give me a calL
can supply all your wants In the way of
a clean shave, a stylish hair a de-
Of Interest to
So much has been said about the u.-e of
tales at the gin house that we par-
attention lo a new book entitled,
About published by
of Binghamton,
Y. It contains full information re-
costs, patents, and should
be read by every A
will get it.
If.
From Bill Letter.
There are spent in
a year for whiskey, and
for tobacco, and
wasted in extravagant
if the Alliance would
just come down like an avalanche
upon those three save
that 91,000,000,000 a year, all
money would be put into useful
profitable and it would
get scattered among the people and
make everybody comfortable
happy, and farmers wouldn't
need any sub-treasury. Why if
they will just tackle whiskey
alone and stop every still all
importation of spirits our omits
would mighty nigh dry up for want
of business, and our jails would be
empty and our taxes be reduced
or per cent. But the Alliance
can't see it, for they want a little
something for snake bites them-
selves, the whiskey ring Is a
power in the nation, so I have
despaired of reforming people
by myself have concluded to go
preach Hie gospel leave
to the Lord who made
them.
How's Your Wife.
Does she feel poorly all the time suffer
from lack of energy, and a general
listless enervation Shu needs
Something is wrong with her
blood. Run for a doctor Not at all,
my dear air. her a bottle of V. I.
Ash, Poke Root Potassium
tin- very best Woman's Regulator and
Tonic extant. It reaches the source of
trouble quietly and quickly, before
you know it, your wife will be another
woman, and will bless the kind fate that
brought P. P. P. to her notice and re-
lief. Our best
recommend it, and no well-conducted
household where pure blood and its con-
happiness is appreciated, should
be without it. For sale by reputable
medicine dealers everywhere.
The full value an education, es-
in the mathematical line, is
abundantly proved by the following
An Irishman was order-
ed to make a coffin, which he did;
to paint the inscription on the
lid, which he did after a fashion
which caused a little excitement in
the churchyard. By dint of follow-
the written copy, he managed to
get as far as
but try he would, be
could not imitate the -28 At last
he remembered that he could write
and that four made So he
finished it. When they came to
bury Michael, the stood at the
grave-side, and the priest spoke as
he was a fine lad.
He is laying there so still, taken
away in the prime of
he was, too; Here
priest looked down at
lo see how old Michael was.
was only said his reverence
a gain, and he put his glasses on and
went nearer, to see old he really
was; was be continued,
What a stupendous growth in
value railroad properly in North
Carolina within the past few years
We sec it stated upon
of State Treasurer that
aggregate of lie property of
the sixty-seven railways in the State,
as assessed tor taxation by the Rail-
way Commission, is
Is there an industry in North
that, has done so To
know the aggregate value of the in
creased prices of ether property, due
directly to the construct on of
roads, and the increase lo Stale
by the way of taxes thus derived,
would doubtless the
and impart such news as would prove
wholesome reading for us all lo
Observe r.
to Woven
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men-
you must use
years
Young man, the proud possessor of
your first baby listen to When it
begins to teeth or has cholera
don't get excited and give it nauseous.
doses, but send and get a few bottles of
Panacea. It is perfectly harmless and
will cure the child. It is natures remedy.
We tell you only what we can prove. It
Is worth f. o. b. at Littleton, N. C.
Ask your druggist or send order to.
Panacea springs A Hotel Co.,
N. C.
Raleigh and The
editor of the North Carolina Teacher,
Col. K. G. Han ell, is arranging to
carry a party of fifty on a
two weeks charming trip to Cuba
during the Christmas holidays.
The entire expense of the tour not
to be over which will include
transportation, board and sight-see-
FEMALE
REGULATOR
April 1886;
This Trill certify two members of my
Immediate family, alter Buffer for
years from
being treated without benefit by physicians,
ware at completely cared, by one bottle
Of lorn Its
effect truly wonderful. J.
to mallet. FREE, which contain
valuable all female diseases.
REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, A.
TOE SALE BX
nit's Oratory.
The highest impression imparted to
me by words spoken was by those
which I beard from Mr. Pitt, whose
form Is even now distinctly before me.
His powers were of a mighty order, for
beard him without an absorbing
which is proof conclusive.
You felt yon bad been charmed In tho
listening. It was even to that which
you had been thinking of within your-
self. There was tho secret in his
as it is in tho antique. In debate
caught on the moment ho saw
into the minds of his hearers.
He identified himself with them and
impersonated their prevailing thought,
which they with rapture heard In his
language.
In his period- of majestic correctness,
and sometimes so elaborate as to take
two minutes in tho delivery, he never
turned from or broke in upon one
which he felt was pervading
the assembly; all was subordinated to
its yet tantalizing in
expressing as though to
be surer of an interval of
breathless suspense, ho then unfurled
its full display, like that of
mantle, at tho instant of ex-
They voted in delirium.
was tho master of his
art, and the greatest leader the com-
mons ever had or over will have.
Florida's Aquatic Scavengers.
Tho city of Jacksonville protects cat-
fish in the river as scavengers. It is a
five dollar fine to catch of
and the fish seem to know It The
river is full of them, and they vary h.
size from u baby to a pound man.
Atlanta Constitution.
Hie Motive Power.
wonder why the car doesn't start
exclaimed an impatient passenger.
not enough on
board yet to make the replied
another who understood the situation.
-Now York- Truth.
CURES SYPHILIS
t. Finn n
id H mas as
is u pas
shampoo, or anything else in the
I line. Patronage solicited.
ROBERT HODGES.
Merit Wins.
We desire to say to our citizens, that
for years we have been selling Dr. King's
New Discovery for Consumption, Dr.
King's New Life Pills.
Salve Electric Bitters, and have
never handled remedies that sell as well,,
or that have given such universal by that time reach
faction. We do not hesitate to It is announced that on that
w. date the street will be read
and all necessary expenses. A
week will be spent in Havana, and
four days will be given to trips into
the mountains of Cuba.
first will mark a notch in the
calendar of Raleigh if all the enter-
prises which it is contemplated to
J A Remedy
all
I BLOOD and SKIN
ii v. w
Blood Balm
I SCROFULA, ULCERS. SALT
i it eczema,
SKIN ERUPTION, be-
In toning
restoring the constitution,
when
healing properties i
justify In a if .
arc followed.
Best v. safer
FREE
BLOOD BALM CO. Allan's. Ca
v -.-.- .--. .
Salve
The in the world for cuts,
MS, SO res. ulcers, salt rheum, fiver
sores, teller, chapped hand,
corns, and all akin eruptions, and p
lively cures piles, or no pay It
guaranteed to give
or money refunded. M cents
box. For sale by Jno. I,. Woolen.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT
OLD MUCK
AND BUY
their year's will
I their interest to get our prices before
If complete
In all its branches.
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
Lowest Prices.
TOBACCO SNUFF a CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturer,
you lo buy at one profit. A
stock of
El
always on hand and sold at prices to
the I Our goods are all bought mid
sold for CASH, therefore, having no
lo sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N. C.
per
LEGAL NOTICES.
Notice.
This is lo forbid all persons hiring or
harboring Crawford Bullock, who Is
contract to work for me until
of tho year Any person
said Bullock from this date
will do so under penalty of the law.
1801 HESTER
N C
NOTICE.
the terms of a Decree
Superior Court in case of W. II
if Pitt
Cox
vs J. I will sell before the
Court House door in Greenville on Mon-
day, the 7th of September, 1891, the fol-
lowing personal properly that was not
sold at the sale on July 6th, belonging
to the firm of Chestnut
Horses, one set of Harness, and a few
articles usually kept about a livery
stables. Terms Cash.
August Kb, 1801. VA,. JAMES,
Receiver.
Notice to Creditors.
The Judge of Probate of Pitt County
having issued letters testamentary to
me, the undersigned, on the Ml day of
August, 1891, on the estate of Calvin
Stokes, deceased, notice is hereby given
to all is Indebted to the Estate to
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and to all creditors of said estate
to present their claims properly
to the undersigned, within
twelve months after he dale of this
notice, or this notice will be plead
bar of their recovery.
This the 5th day of August, 1801.
KS,
on the estate of Calvin Stoke s
Notice.
North Carolina, la. ,., . .
Pitt County.
Thomas Blount. t Action for Divorce,
vs
Clarissa Blount. J
To Clarissa You are hereby
notified that the above entitled action,
has been commenced In the Court to ob-
a divorce,
returnable on the 2nd Monday the
1st in Sept., you
in favor of the at which time
and place you will appear, if think
proper, and answer or demur to the com-
plaint of the plaintiff, or lodgment xx ii
be prayed at the January Term, 1892, of
said Court, as asked said complaint.
Given under hand this 17th day Of
August, 1801. B. A.
Clark Superior Court.
Notice.
CAROLINA .
Pitt count v.
for Divorce.
To
You arc hereby above
entitled action has been commenced in
the court lo obtain a
returnable on the 2nd
day after the 1st Monday in September,
against you In favor Plain-
tiff, at which time Slid place you will op,
pear if you think proper, answer, or
demur to the complaint of the Plaintiff,
or judgment will lie prayed at the
Term, of said court, as
in said complaint Witness hand
and seal this August 5th, 1891.
K. A.
Clerk Superior Pitt Co.
Notice Notice
On Monday the 21st day of September,
A. D. will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for cash, three tracts of
land in Pitt county, containing
acres and bounded as One
tract on the east side of Content Creek
adjoining the lands of Moses Joyner,
Allen and others, known as the
place, described a
deed from M Ann Tyson to J. L.
and recorded in the Register of
Deeds office of Pitt county In Book V V,
containing acres more or
One other track known as the
Whitty Nichols track, adjoining the J. L.
Ballard land, Jacob Elks land others,
containing fifty-three acres or less,
described In a deed from I. P. Beards-
to J. L. Ballard and
in the Register of Deeds office of
Pitt In Book I, page One
other tract known as the W. C. Moore
land, conveyed by deed from If. C.
Moore to J. L. Ballard, and recorded in
the Register of Deeds office in Pitt
in Book L page adjoining the
lands of the late Josiah Hodges, J. J.
Moore lands, Proctor and others
fifteen acres, more or less, to
satisfy an execution in my hands for
collection against J. L. and
which has levied on said land as
the property of said J. L. Ballard.
J. A. K. TUCKER,
Aug. 17th, 1891.
to refund purchase p He if
result do not follow their use.
These remedies have won their great
popularity on their merits. J.
t. Wooten, Druggist.
for operation, the new Commercial
and Dank will open and
House extension will be
completed.
BROS-
For sale at J. h. Wooten's Drug Store
ABBOTT'S
WART
NOTICE.
NORTH CAROLINA, Before Clerk
Pitt County. Sup, Court.
Notice is hereby given that I have
day issued letters declaring R. J. Cobb,
G. F. Evans, G. T. Tyson. John K.
Jacob Joyner, J. It. Move. J. A.
K. Oscar Jame h.
Little, C. W. J. W. Allen. O. h.
Joyner. B. P, Patrick and their
ates and successors a Corporal ion under
the name and style of The
Warehouse Company, for the
put pose ct forth in the articles of agree-
and plan which
have been and recorded in
office, with all the privileges and powers
conferred by chapter of Code of
North Carolina and the laws
thereto,
The main business proposed to be
done by the corporation Is the general
business of buying, selling, storing,
marketing and otherwise in
tobacco.
The place of business of said Corpora-
fa Pitt county, North
Carolina.
of the stockholders of said
are to be responsible to any
greater or further extent than the assets
of the Corporation, and individually to
extant of shares of stock to
they subscribed.
The authorized capital stock of said
is fifty thousand dollars to
be divided Into two thousand shares of
twenty-live dollars each. The length of
said is to ten veins.
This 11th of
E. A.
Clerk Court,
K. E.
A. I.
Healer.,
Wholesale and
A n EM
Fine Horses a specialty.
tR guaranteed
and Union St. Norfolk Va
Printers and Binders,
1ST. C
We have the largest and most complete
establishment of the kind to be found in
the State, and solicit orders for all classes
Of Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING STATIONERY READY
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY OFFICERS.
us your orders.
EDWARDS
PRINTERS BINDERS,
RALEIGH. N. C.
Smith's Shaving Parlor.
A. SMITH, Prop.
Greenville, N. C.
We have the the easiest
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels,
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed
In every instance. Call and be con-
Ladies waited on at their
Cleaning clothes specialty.
Extract of
BEEP.
COMPANY'S
For Delicious For improved
Beef Tea. Economic Cookery
One pound of Extract of equal to
forty of lean beef. Genuine
only with signature of J.
blue.
and preS
by Physicians, but
introduced generally. if
PLASTERS. T
The best Porous Plaster
and weak places.
other plasters, so be sore
get the genuine with the
I of a bell on the
and
ON R. It
-Condensed Schedule
SOOTH.
No No No
April HI, daily Past daily
daily ex Sun.
Weldon i o ,,, pm
Ar am
Tarboro am
Ar Wilson p m pm am
Wilson H
Ar
Ar Fayetteville S
Goldsboro am
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
TRAINS GOING NORTH
No No No
daily dally dally
ex Sun.
Wilmington
Magnolia
Warsaw
Ar Goldsboro
Fayetteville
Ar Selma
Ar Wilson
Wilson am pm pm
Ai
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar pm pm
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Halifax 3.82 P. M. arrives Scot
land Neck at 4.18 P. M. Greenville 6.02
M. 7-10 p. in. Returning,
leaves 7.00 in., Greenville
Arriving Halifax a. m.
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun-
day
Local freight train leaves Weldon
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at
7.00 a. in., arriving Scotland Neck 10.03
m., 2.10 a. m.,
m. Returning leaves
lays. and at
m. arriving Greenville 12.00
noon, p. m., Weldon
0.20 p. m.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh It. R. dally except Sun-
v, P M. master s p m, arrive
N C, P M, P M.
7.50 n. m., 5.20 p. m-
leaves Plymouth
a. m., Sunday n. mi
X C, 7.10 a m, 9.58 am.
arrive Tarboro, N C, A V
Train Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, CO A M,
N C, AM. Re-
leaves N C AM,
aim Goldsboro, N C, JO A M.
. Train
at P M, arrive
P Hope P M, Returning
leaves A M. Nashville
i, a Mount A
except
Train on Clinton Branch leave Warsaw
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at C
and II A M Returning leave
ten A M, and P. M. connect
at Warsaw with Nos. and
on Wilson A Fayette
Branch Is No. Northbound is
No. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only a
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia.
No. close connection a
Weldon for all points North dally, Al
rail via and dally except Sun
day via Bay Line.
JOHN F. DIVINE.
General
J. B. Soon Transportation
T. M.
why another new by Alfred
bottle of Pr that is invaluable
and lull and causing the
bah lie soft and
glossy, three application a
week a hair
brush is all to be used after the
s-alp for a minutes with
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be
convinced, only cents.
Respectfully,
ALFRED CULLEY,
Barber,
N. J.
UNDERTAKING.
B. S.
with me. in tin- taking business we
are ready in serve the people that
All notes and accounts due
me tor service have placed In
the Mr. Sheppard for
JOHN FLANAGAN.
We keen on hand t all times a nice
Cases and Caskets of all
kinds and can furnish anything
from the fine Case down to a
Pitt county Pine We arc
up with all conveniences and can
satisfactory services to nil who put- ;
FLANAGAN
PATENTS
mid all business the U.
Patent in the Courts attended to
tor Moderate Fees.
We are the U. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents in less time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing Is sent
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patents.
We refer, lure, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to
the IT. S. Patent For
advise terms and reference to
actual clients own State, or
address. C. A. Snow A Co.,
Washington, D. C.
GRAND EMPORIUM
Cutting and Dressing Hair
AT THE FRONT
the Opera House, at which place
f have recently located, and where have
everything in my line
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO MAKE A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
with all the improved appliances;
and comfortable chairs.
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures
for work outside of shop
promptly executed. Very respectfully,
EDMONDS
The Tar River Transportation
Presided
1.1.
I. S. Greenville,
X. M. Tarboro, Gen
Cant. R. F. Washington, Gen Ag
The People's Line for travel on
River.
The Steamer is the
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Fitted up specially fur the comfort,
and convenience of Ladies.
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICER
A Table furnished with th
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Ii
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday,
slid Friday at o'clock, A. M.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m.
Freights received daily and through
given lo all points.
R F. I. J. .,
Washington N. C. Greenville. N. C
COBB, C C COBB, T. H.
Pill Co II C. Pill Co Co. M C
Cobb Bros.,
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merchants.
SOLICIT SHIPMENT of COTTON
We have Lad many years ex-
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to on
will receive prompt and
careful attention
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
Portraits, and cuts of colleges, hotels,
Its, machinery, made to order from
raft
TS
Blood Cure
A household
In use more than to years. A
nervous
the Mood, it I
tire care for Dyspepsia, Hi
Constipation all
the Mood, Stomach and Liver.
In
A botanical put packages
lad seat by mail coil of
by ma-----
Large packages,
packages,
for j
A Agent wanted in
CO., Ml 1.1.
ALLEY HYMAN,
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW
Views of Animal.
Family Gatherings, AV., taken at
Short Not ice, Copying from pie-
to life size, in Inks, Crayon or
Call and tee us.
R HYMAN, Manager.
N.
BITTERS


Title
Eastern reflector, 26 August 1891
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 26, 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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