Eastern reflector, 16 September 1891






VIA k
ThE OR
A whole year only
i ONE DOLLAR.
Hut in order to get It you
PAY IN ADVANCE.
Eastern Reflector
THE REFLECTOR
A-
JOB PRINTING
Department that can be surpassed no
where in this section. Our work always
jives satisfaction,
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1891.
NO.
Special Notice.
Bi
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
MAKING AND BREAKING
TRACTS WITH PREACHERS.
I want a wife to roast and toast.
To boil Mid bake and brew;
To pickle, and make preserves
And every Mad of stew.
I want a wife to knit and sew,
And patch and darn and
To keep the buttons on my clothes,
Repairing every rend.
I want a to mop scrub,
To wash and rinse and wring;
One that can in the parlor shine,
And dance and play and sing;
One that can drive the team to town,
And buy and sell or trade;
And one that knows a shovel from
A hoe, or rate, or spade;
To milk the cows I'm
To strain and and churn,
hare an eye to save as well
As have eye to earn.
want a wife that's not afraid
To Are off a gun;
One that can face a snake or toad,
neither screech nor run
I want a wife to and write;
To post me on the
Get up and build the kitchen fire.
shine my Sunday shoes.
T want a wife never sec
The smiles of other men.
But give her heart and soul to me
And to my want- attend.
She must be gay and full of fun
A smiling, happy elf;
If there is scolding to be done.
I'll see to that myself.
I want a wife to cheer my life
A bachelor's a dunce
The girl who will may fill the bill.
But ail speak at once.
NOTES.
Western are blocked
with cargoes of grain.
Monuments to Illinois veterans
were dedicated at Gettysburg.
Mexico's new tariff makes a re-
in the duty on paper.
The new cable between this conn-
try Brazil has bean opened.
Germany removed the restrictions
the admission of pork.
the
was with good effect.
Kev. Dr. Ward, father of
Ward, died at
August
Destructive frosts occurred in the
neighborhood of Boons and Mar-
la.
At Poland, I. T., a Kiowa chief
was shot and instantly killed by a
cowboy named
The river Barrow, in Ireland,
overflowed and carried away many
homes and destroyed crops
It is that the bank of
Paris has offered to take the
loan of pounds
at percent.
The cotton crop of the United
States for the year ending August,
1891, was the largest ever grown by
bales.
The lower of the Tennessee
Legislature voted in favor of con-
the convict lease
Reports from Cat, an-
that the Salton lake is
still rising now covers
acres
Between and miners are
a strike at III., to
cure the benefits of the weekly pay
law.
Five thousand acres of bay land,
studded with stacks, Northern
Dakota, were swept clean by a
prairie fire.
James R. second son of
the martyred President, was de-
for a Senatorial nomination
u Ohio last week.
Mr. Porter's census only shows
asses on tbs farms in this
country. But this d es not include
the asses in the cities, among whom
Brayer is conspicuous.
Wilmington Star.
Jerry Thompson and two other
ad men, caught changing brands
on cattle, were all banged to
same tree in Caster county, Mont.,
Ecuador has given notice of bar
intention to terminate existing
ties with the United States for the
purpose of making new ones.
A syndicate has been
to build a ten million dollar hotel in
New Tort. It is intended only for
editors and other rich
Star.
J. A. Lincoln, in Watch-Tower.
The Reflector being a secular
I paper does not make a practice of
handling the topics that belong to
the brethren the religious press,
but we expect some our preacher
readers will thank us for giving the
following which is from
the
This may seem a heading
but there is a sufficient amount to
justify a notice it.
HOW IS THIS
The preacher is called to bold
a of many times,
and is not as successful as was an-
He may labor earnestly
and ably and yet to reach the
hearts of men and women, and
this reason it is taken tor granted
as a matter of course, he ought
to fail reach the pocket-book of
Every honest man knows this is
dishonest. The preacher's success
and ability ought never to be meas-
by the number of additions.
He may accomplish more without
additions with them. These
remarks apply as well to pas-
as to holding
stipulate with preach
induce them to move, take his
time, cut off from all other business,
go in debt because the brethren
have not the ready cash and i
when pay time comes, plead hard
times and poverty, as if the preach-
was independent these more
they. This drives
the preacher from to
with an injured for debt
paying, and even the better to-do
class of not credit bun
for necessaries of life nor loan him
money to pay his honest debts.
I believe that in cases out
ten where the preachers become
soured, morose and despondent it
can be traced to such unchristian
conduct as this. And worse
all, if he should mention his
he is set down as a
and no place wants him for a
for we will tell his
wrongs.
the day of judgment
will bring many things to
light. Of all the vows that be
made, those to our Lord should be j
the most binding. David in
enumerating the that make
us a citizen Zion, says, that
to bis own hurt
xv It may
hurt us dear brethren to do what
we promise, but with the Lord it is
as as the vow.
Ananias Sapphira should be a
warning to us. Lord help us to be
true.
Contracts are sometimes
with preachers by what call
by the world it is called
business To illustrate
A preacher is employed for part or
all bis time at a stipulation ; but
whatever failures, of high water,
providential hindrances, sickness of
himself or family, he is made to
bear all loss and his time is
docked, because they do that way
in worldly business. This may
seem right at first, but upon a
investigation it will be seen that
there is no clearer violation of
law and spirit of love and equity
ever among brethren.
In the first place the preacher
has given up all other pursuits that
he may fit himself for that certain
work and hence has no other in-
come. This must go into the con-
Providential
ate as much out of tbs
power of the preacher as any
else. He regrets to be water
bound. He is pained that himself
or should get sick more than
any other could be. If be or his
family are sick need aid more
than any other time. In reality
such conduct is worse than Free
Masons, Odd Fellows, or other
man institutions will do, and can
be accounted for only on the ground
of
writer labored for a chore h
two years that did this. At one
time he was water bound, ac an-
other be lay himself in bed four
months not expected to live. He
tried to get them to let him make
op time that he might have the
money to pay his debts, rather than
be docked and bare to
when the money. It seems to
me the preacher ought to have this
last privilege even if be must lose
all time. I was not a little
prised not long since to see
name of one of oar strongest men
advocating this practice, lie
had not considered. And
new for feat some one would
j this part was penned because I bad
feeling in the matter, I will say not
so, for love those brethren will
labor them, and they love me,
but this is a wrong, and is getting
i more common. There are not many
preachers that like to say these
things for fear some one will
their motives but
it is generally admitted that it.
makes no difference as I am not
likely to go very far home
wax.
I would call to
other evil before closing this
Churches stipulate with the
for his entire time. There is lull
in the home work. They
decide to send to place
to labor whatever proceeds
in from that labor they put it
the treasury and they pay
out of the proceeds. IT there IS;
anything over they keep it, if any-
thing under it. This at first
seems right enough, but it must be
remembered that the church is
obligations to help the weak
places and I he destitute, hence
should support die preacher while
be labors such a place. The
preacher to employed
as a I have labored
for two churches tins way and have
brought in twice of
stipulation each time. This is a
speculation the preacher.
such cases they send him to
the weak, where he will get but
little, but generally him out to
the strong he can bring in
the proceeds. Lord help us in our
wrongs.
Depth sf the Sea.
At a depth f-et waves are
not temp is the
game, varying only trifle from the
ice of the pole the owning sun of
the equator. A mile down the water
a of over a ton to the
square inch. If a box six feet wide
were filled with sea water and allow-
ed to evaporate uDder the sun, there
would be two inches of salt left in
the bottom. Taking the average
depth of the ocean to lie three miles,
there would be a layer of pure salt
feet on the bed of the At-
The water colder at the
bottom than at the surface. In
bays on the coast of Norway
the water often freezes at the bottom
before it does above.
Waves are very deceptive. To
look at them in a storm one would
the water traveled. The water
stays in the same place, but the mo-
goes on. Sometimes, in
these waves are forty and
travel fifty miles an
than twice as fast as ha swiftest
steamship. The distance from valley
to valley is generally fifteen times
the height, hence a wave five feet
high will extend over seventy-five
feet of water. The force of the sea
dashing on Bell Rock is said to be
seventeen tons for each square rod.
Evaporation is a wonderful power
in drawing the water from the sea.
Every year a layer the entire sea,
fourteen feet thick, is taken up into
the clouds. The winds bear their
burdens into the land, and the water
comes down in rain upon the fields,
to flow back at last through rivers.
The depth of the presents an in-
problem. If the Atlantic
were lowered for feet, the dis-
from shore to shore would be
half as great, or 1,500 miles. If low-
a little more than three miles,
say feet there would be a
of dry land from Newfoundland to
Ireland.
This is plan on which the great
Atlantic cables were laid. The
Mediterranean is comparatively shat-
A drying up feet would
leave three different seas, and Africa
would be joined with Italy.
The British Channel is more like a
pond, which accounts for its choppy
waves. It has been found difficult
to get the correct soundings of the
Atlantic. A midshipman of
navy overcame the difficulty, and a
shot weighing thirty pounds carried
down the line. A hole is bored
through the sinker, through which a
rod of iron is passed, moving easily
back and forth. In the end of the
bar a cup is dug out and the inside
coated with lard. The bar is made
fast to the line and a sling holds the
shot on. When the bar, which ex-
tends below ball, touches the
earth, unhooks and shot
slides off. The lard in the end of the
bar holds some sand, or whatever
may be on bottom, and a drop
shuts over the cup to keep the sand
la. When the ground is reached a
shock is as if an electric current
had passed tin the line.
Heavy frosts are in
A STORY WITH A MORAL.
Johnnie Greene was the son of a
poor widow whose husband went out
to feed the hogs one evening and
never returned to the bosom of his
dear family. It was supposed by
some that he was abducted and held
for ransom, and by others that he
was devoured by s cow, but.
ever way it was, his wife
I with a mighty small farm and a
mighty big mortgage drawing per
cent, and she couldn't waste any time
FRESH FUN.
us break this cup.
Little it doesn't be-
long to a set.
talks like a book.
a pity he doesn't shut
up so easily.
If you don't give me a penny, said
a young hopeful to his I
know a boy that got the measles, and
I'll go and catch
First Messenger let us
CHILD AND MOTHER.
O, Mother-My-Love, if you'll give me
your hand.
And go where ask you to wander,
will you to a
land.
STATE NEWS.
Happenings and There as
From oar Exchanges.
In adopting the in Advance
tern for this year The Reflector win
be continued to no one for a longer time
than it is paid for. If you find stamped
just after your name on margin
the paper the
subscription expires two weeks
from this
it is to give you notice that unless re-
newed In that lime The Reflector
will cease going to yon at the expiration
of the two weeks.
tying back her dresses or f go and deliver our messages.
her hair.
Had it not been for Johnnie
she would have given up in despair.
He cm the wood, brought water
from the spring, labored in the gar-
den, and when she sometimes broke
down under her burden of grief
stood before bee and manfully
let her get the start of yon,
dear mother. Shut your teeth and
hang on. It will all come right, and
ride around in your own top
buggy
And thin she was consoled and
comforted. And the patted him on
the head and said how glad she was-
that he had been spared to her. Ore
day little Johnnie found his mother
weeping as if her heart would break
and when he demanded the cause
she confessed that interest was
due on the mortgage that very day,
while she had only cents and a
lottery ticket in the house. Old
who held the mortgage,
would no doubt be there before night
to
them interest or skip
What, no sugar Then consider
yourself
do not plead d
the boy. will redden the of
your none to cry, and besides old
cannot disturb us. There
is a hen
child, you speak
What is it Do not keep me in
There is the mortgage, mother,
and here is the discharge of it in due
from the
awake or Child
child What means she cried.
a little surprise, dear moth-
Last June Elder Davidson offer-
ed cent for every ten tater bugs
I'd kill on bis vines, and during my
spare hours, when you thought I
was felling frogs and playing mar-
I killed 17,000,000,000 bugs
and got my cash on the nail. To-
morrow we go over to the Red Cliff
farm, which I now own, and there
will be four loads of new furniture
on hand before noon. There comes
my carriage and driver now, and if
you will put on these diamonds and
lock up about five bushels of gold in
the pantry, we'll take a little whirl
around the school house to show
And wasn't that real nice.
Slew, I
New York Herald.
Scarcely a day passes without its
newspaper story of some young
man who met a man so interesting
that she thought she couldn't live
without him, so she married in
haste and afterward teamed that he
was an ex convict or a brute or
ready a wife or two from whom
he had separated the formal-
of a legal divorce.
In such cases the blame is laid up-
on the man, who generally deserves
more abuse than he gets. But, girls,
look at matter seriously a few
minutes see if trouble might
have been avoided if you had tot
been in too much of a hurry.
Marriage means partnership for
life; decrees of divorce- are merely
exceptions that prove the rule.
Would any man enter into a business
partnership with as little knowledge
of the other party as you seem
with Well, unless he
were a sweet souled lunatic.
Talk is cheap, girls; it can be
made to order as fast as the tongue
can run, especially when there is a
pretty face to inspire it and two cars
willing to receive it.
Don't fear that some other girl will
get the fellow unless yon secure him
at once. A fish that any one can
catch isn't worth a line for.
Play to find out whether he
amounts to If he becomes
impatient and dashes away, why
follow that
rd of a knave,
to say to our that
for years we hare selling Pr. King's
Hew Discovery for Dr.
King's New Life nils,
Salve Electric Bitters, have
never handled remedies that sell as well,
or that have given such universal
We do net hesitate to
tee these every time, and w stand ready
to refund the purchase
results do not their use.
These remedies have won great
purely on their merits. J.
Second Messenger RoyAll right.
I'm tired of down to.
Mrs. Bellows daughter
Why did you throw kisses at Mr.
across the aisle at church
to-day
wasn't
near enough to reach him.
all fish hooks
The deuce you say Why, I got
mad at the editor and stopped that
paper five years ago, and
supposed, of course, the had
busted and quit.
Was your elopement a success
Hardly.
What went wrong
Her rather telegraphed us not to
return and all would be
Ever had your life insured, old
fellow
No; companies won't take me.
Heart action too feeble. Nobody to
insure my life for, anyhow.
Ain't you married
No; heart action too feeble for
that too.
Courtney, the girl I
used to before we were en-
gaged, behind us at the
to-night.
she Just wait a
minute; think my high hat is more
becoming than this toque.
have you ever had your store
broken into
N; you sec every thing is so very
cheap here that if a thief wants any-
thing he simply comes and pays
for it.
Winkers, I hear
you married a woman with an
pendent fortune.
Winkers I married j
a fortune with an independent woman
this is your new
sister.
Tommy-Where did she come from
heaven.
y don t won-
they wanted to get rid of her.
Bobby, do you
think will be a better little boy
this year than you were last
Bobby think so, sir;
I began taking end-liver oil last week.
A young woman sent to a
per a poem, entitled, Cannot Make
Him and was much dis-
pleased when the editor seat it back I
with a line saying that she would
probably succeed if she showed him
the poem.
Mrs. do you
ways manage to have such delicious
beef
Mrs. select a good,
honest butcher and then stand by
him.
Mrs. mean that you
give him all your trade
Mrs. I mean that I
stand be him while be is cutting on
the meat
The Baptist Stale Mission Board
i ,, , . . . has decided to change the place of
The Dreamland that's waiting out of
w on. . . , I of that church from Raleigh to
We'll walk in a sweet garden ,
out there,
Where moonlight and starlight are New Mr. Win.
streaming, Gaskins has a long and prolific
And flowers and the birds are; pumpkin vine in his garden. It has
filling the air yielded pumpkins, a of
With the fragrance and music them large ones. He thinks of
dreaming. ling them all to Fair to show
n., ,., . ,.,., . , . , ; what one vine can produce.
There'll be no little tired out boy
undress, Senator Vance
No questions or cares to perplex I was at Vienna, Austria, on the 3rd
you; of August, at which time he reports
There'll be no little bruises or bumps that he is rapidly acquiring
to caress,
Nor patching of stockings to vex
you;
For I'll rock you away on a
dew stream.
And sing you to sleep when you're
weary.
And no one know of our beau-
dream
But you and your own
And when am tired I'll nestle my
head
In bosom that's soothed me so
often,
And the wide awake stars shall sing
in my stead
A song which our Dreamland shall
soften,
So, let me lake
your dear hand,
And away through the starlight
we'll wander,
Away through the mist to the
land.
The that's waiting out
yonder.
Eugene Field.
Friday Is not an Day.
Raleigh Chronicle.
Lee surrendered on Friday. Mos-
cow was burned on Friday; Wash
was born on Friday; Shakes-
year was born on Friday; America
was discovered on Friday; Richmond
was evacuated on Friday; the
was destroyed Friday; the May
flower was landed on Friday; Quern
Victoria was married on Friday;
King Charles I was beheaded on
Friday; Fort was bombard-
ed on Friday; Napoleon
was was
assassinated on the battle of
Waterloo was fought on Friday; the
battle of Bunker Hill was fought
Friday; Joan of Arc was burned at
the stake on Friday; the battle of
New Orleans was fought on Friday;
the Declaration of Independence was
signed on Friday. Friday is not an
unlucky day, no more so than any
other day, although a man
to be hanged on day may think
so.
Dutch accent in talking and the
Dutch palate for beer. The beer
part is all a joke, but about the
cent is true.
There is a man in Mount Holly,
says the of that place, aged
about years who can write a
did letter, and cannot read a word of
printed matter. He can take a clip-
ping from a newspaper and copy it
in a very lair hand but cannot read
the printed matter.
Dunn Mr. C. W. Lee,
Averasboro township, has three
children, the first was born
1st, 1886, next day after earth-
quake. The second one just three
years later and the third one just
two years from the second birth.
Every one on the same day which is
rather a remarkable occurrence.
Raleigh The assessed
value of real and personal property
in Wayne county this year exceeds
that last year by half a million
dollars. This county has had no
extraordinary boon-, and has lost
many of its laborers by exodus,
and yet it shows progress and stead-
increasing weak;. Wherever
the tax assessors have been faithful,
there is evident progress. North
Carolina goes forward.
Goldsboro We regret to
chronicle the death of Mr. John Hill,
one of Wayne county's energetic
farmers, which occurred Tuesday
evening after a protracted illness, at
his home in Stony township.
The funeral took place yesterday
from his late home and the interment
was made in the old family burying
ground the Hams. He was highly
esteemed by who knew him. He
leaves a wile and several children to
mourn their lees.
Scotland Neck Mr. S.
W. Edwards had the misfortune to
lose a good tree this week. He
died of staggers. he Sc
Neck Mounted Riflemen had target
practice and their annual dinner at
Mr. T. W. farm Tuesday.
They had a good time, a line dinner
and all went with them.
Mr. and Mis. Walter Shields found
disturbance among their chickens a
few nights ago, and upon
lion they found a large,
among the fowls.
A Scolding.
It's about the brothers. Your
brother and mine gets his idea of
what girls are from his sisters, so I
want everyone of you to learn not to
answer quickly or indifferently,
but to feel that it is worth your while
to be as attractive, as loving, and as
sweet to as possible. I
want you never to find it a trouble to
chat pleasantly, brightly
with him. I want you to be in-
in whatever is of interest to
him. I want you to make feel
good a girl can be, and how
sweet a good girl is; then you are
doing for him the best thing in the
are making so
the virtuous woman,
whose price is above rubies, that he
will never want to see or speak to any
other kind. That's what I want you
to do for your brothers. You sec it
was a very little scolding after all,
but I wanted to point a good moral.
Wm. Postmaster of
Ind., Bitters has done
more tor me than all other medicines
combined, for that bail feeling arising
Kidney John
Leslie, farmer and of same
Bitters to
s best Kidney and Liter medicine.
mads me test like a new J. W.
Gardner, hardware merchant, same
town, Bitters Is lust the
thing for a man who Is all run down and
care whether he lives or dies; he
aim
jest like lie had s new lease on We.
Mo. a bottle, at J. L.
Store
at Greensboro, a young
Some years ago two farmers
Polk county lost their wives by
death. They naturally felt lone-
some, and in tin j time began to think
a second wife in each household
would be a most excellent addition
thereto. They were neighbors and
friends, and each had a of
children, including one or more
grown daughters. After careful
consideration, each took other's
. ,. , ., ,., , Free
his second wile. Through Ml, A. mill
these marriages children were born
night,
roan named
Richard to his
home on street, was as-
sailed by an unknown person who
knocked him down with a fence
paling, rifled his pockets of and
left him lying apparently dead or
dying Some time later he recover-
ed consciousness and succeeded in
attracting the attention of two men
who went to his relief and removed
him to his home. His injuries, for-
were not serious. The
police have no clue to the robber.
were
to each. These children now reside
in Polk county. What was the re-,
between the men and their
wives, and in what relationship did
the children stand to each other and
to the old folks The old farmers
were lather-in laws to the other and
also son-in-laws. Who will carry
out the relationship of the mothers
and their children
None of us know the power of
temptations which may assail us or
the degree of strength we shall have
to resist them; we can neither fathom
the influence inherited tendencies
nor foresee how future events are to
shape our course. But we can all
form a fair general idea what is
right to be done; we can all cherish
a conception of a pure, virtuous and
beautiful character, of just, generous
and noble conduct, and strive to
conform out daily life to our highest
ideal.
Queer world Queer people Here
are men and women by thousands suffer-
from all sorts of diseases, bearing all
manners of pain, spending their all on
physicians and no better, but
rather when at hand there
Is a remedy which says it can help them
because It's helped thousands like them.
patent medicine advertise-
you say. not of the
ordinary sort. The is Dr.
Golden Medical Discovery, and
It's different from the ordinary urns
in
It does what it claims to do, or it costs
you nothing
The way is this s You pay your drug-
gist for a bottle. You read the
directions, you follow them. You
better, or you don't. If you do, you
buy another bottle, perhaps another.
If you don't get better, get your
money And queer thing is
that so many people are willing to be
sick when the remedy's m near ft hand.
saw
about nine miles from here, broke
all to pieces while being operated
about two weeks ago. There was no
apparent cause for the collapse. Mr.
Cameron thinks the engine was
weakened by the recent fire which
burned his mill. J. F.
Miller brought us a curiosity. It is
a cluster of about cypress balls
as close together as they can be.
-------Cotton in this section been
damaged, we hear it estimated, about
fifteen per cent, by the recent heavy
rains.
Raleigh We learn
through Commissioner Robinson,
that a capitalist of Ohio is making
arrangements to establish a Pony
Ranch in Western Northern Carolina
and will raise nothing in the horse
line except Shetland ponies. There
is no better country on the globe
for such an enterprise. Not only
this, but the Angora goat thrives
well in our mountain country. The
native grass supply being
and the climate mild makes
that section of North Carolina an
open field for profitable investment
in stock raising.
Durham Mack Best, a
was lynched near Garland, on
the Cape Fear Yadkin Valley
railroad, Sunday morning at about
o'clock for an attempt of rape on a
Mrs. Peterson, who resided near by.
The shrieks and cries of the lady for
help at once attracted the attention
of near-by parties who ran post
to her rescue, only in time, however,
to see the bottom of the feet
tor the time being. He succeeded
in making escape but the prompt-
and vigilance a posse of
men pursued offender capturing
him about ten miles distant, when
and where he was speedily made to
pay the penalty of his crime at the
end of a rope, suspended from a
graph pole. The people's verdict is
that served him right. Let
rs take
THE SAILOR'S HOME-NEST.
Her cheeks are wet and her blue eyes
dim,
And her baby upon her knee.
She drones a song as she sighs for him
Who travels upon the
The wild sea bird hath its nest on
shore
Which it seeks at the close of day.
Rut back to his home may come no
more
My sailor so far away.
Ha, ha her eldest, a laughs out,
As he models his boat,
III sail the world o'er in a schooner
stout
When lam but once afloat
Hush, hush she cries, and around
him throws
Her arms, i fate to brave,
Contentment never the rover knows
Who wanders upon the wave.
I'll marry a sailor lad some day,
Her little girl softly hums;
A sailor lad, so bonny and gray,
one to my liking comes
Not you, as I am a sailor's wire
Cries the mother, more fretful still,
You little madcaps, you vex my life.
I fear you will make me ill
Then the baby tosses its hands and
toes
In a seaward-straining reach,
Papa turns home turns home it
In its prattling, imperfect speech.
Sweet child what a sailor's own you
arc
She sobs, as she hugs it tight;
For there at last by the out bar
Is the well-known sail in sight.
Then a triple rush to the headland's
crest,
Whence flutter their signals free,
While still the baby, less closely-
pressed,
Outstretches its hand in glee.
The anchor is out, the eager oar
Dips, flashing, along the sea,
And the sailor is home
once more
With his wife and children three.
Quick Eyes and a Clear Head Needed.
When a railroad company, says
the Philadelphia Record, handles as
many million tons of coal annually
as the Reading does, the question of
weighing it becomes a matter of some
importance. Skill and long
have solved the problem, how-
ever, and the bulk of the vast coal
tonnage of the leading coal carrying
road in the country is weighed on
four scales, then are not
crowded.
The weight the empty car is
marked in chalk on the outside.
As the car approaches, a clerk takes
number of the ear and its weight,
the weigher calls out too gross weight
and the difference is the weight of
the coal. The ears run as fast as
ten miles an hour across the scale,
and it is very seldom that one has to
be stopped and brought back for re-
although that is done
when the weigher is at all uncertain
about is figures.
The men at the scales can
ally tell within a hundred pounds of
what a car contains. As soon as
they see the class of car coming, they
know the number of tons it contains,
and have the scale so prepared that
only the hundred weights need be
adjusted while the car is moving
over it, Expert officials of the com-
can tell at a glance what each
class of cars should contain, and if,
in looking over the weight sheet, any
car appears too heavy or too
light, it is brought back and re
weighed.
word to the wise is
but it is not always wise to say that
word to one who is suffering the tor-
a headache. However,
ways risk it and recommend Brady
D. L. JAMES,
R. J. MARQUIS,
St. C,
of
Office In Skinner Building, upper fleer
opposite Photograph Gallery.
B.
F. TYSON,
N. O.
Prompt attention given to collections
M. H. LONG,
Attorney-at-Law,
m. c.
Prompt and careful attention to
Collection solicited.
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY
T SKINNER,
N. C
LI G. JAMES,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice in all courts.
a Specialty.
St, BLOW,
N. C.
in all the Courts.
A T-LA W,





THE
Greenville, N. C.
but plods miles of Antioch sud by
. ST
can see a brighter day within f
North Carolina in the increased it to ordered that
of students the ; by this at its
and Coil, J in 1891 the
, ii-i ii a Or be
demonstrated ad the M is hereby
tins
AT
Mail
WEDNESDAY. MM,
Publisher's Announcement.
THE PUKE OF
U 81.00 per W
year. o yea.
; one-quarter column one -j.
Transient
one we. two weeks. one
month Two inches one week. M
two weeks, t; one month, J.
inserted in Local
Column as reading items. . cents per
line for each insertion.
regal Advertisements, such as Ad.
and Notices-
and Trustees
to etc. will
be climbed for at legal rates and MUST
BE PAID IN ADVANCE. Hie
suffered Ion and
much of having no
rule as the payment class
of arid in to avoid
future trouble payment in advance
will be demanded.
Contracts for any MS mentioned
above, for of time, can be
made by application to the either
in person or by letter.
Copy tor v Advertisements and
all changes of should
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to receive prompt in-
the day following.
The a large
will be found a medium
through which to reach
interest in public an
schools. children have at-
tended the public schools in this
State year than
ever before in its history,
there are to-day more at
school in North Carolina than at
any time.
Our
and with
teachers are doing much in till
higher schools. do not U i .
to disparage the work of the
lusher schools m the . .,,. and or-
Jo
M. Lang made show.
that lie stands charged on tax
list with an income tax of
which should not. chanted as be
lid not give ill income, and
raked that be be relieved said
tax on incomes. The Board order
necessary correction.
Ordered that the Clerk of
as skilled .,,., the Board
r Bil in re-
to their duty a certain pub-
road partly in Swift Creek
The Republicans have
ed J. Sloan for Governor,
of Sew York. He was collector of
Customs and a ma.
Secretary Proctor has an
pointed by the Governor of
to fill term of
resigned. This
will cause a vacancy in the
net. It will no trouble to find
some one willing to take the place.
Senator Hawley seems at present
to be the winning card.
The State Raleigh, X.
C. entered on its tenth volume on
the inst. The is one
of the best dailies in the State.
The Democratic party owes much
to it for the harmony heretofore
existing in its ranks. It is, always
conservative and prudent, and has
weight in Democratic councils.
May it continue to prosper.
The colored Alliance has order-
ed a strike of all its members in
the cotton section. They have
issued a circular requesting that
all pickers refuse to pick cotton
for any one for less than one
per hundred pounds. The
strike was ordered to go into
operation on last Saturday the
12th. Col. Humphrey is at the
head of this Alliance. He has
white skin and sometimes passes
for a white man. He evidently
suggested this to the
is responsible for the whole
He has been sneaking
around heretofore pretending that
he could unite the colored Alli-
on all important issues of the
white Alliance. What he may say
hereafter will have but little
weight with this Alliance. Those
who will suffer most, if this strike
is successful, are the bone and
sinew of the white Alliance. The
reason given for this strike is that
there had been an to re-
duce wages for cotton picking to
prices. This is all
bosh. A larger per cent, of the
value of cotton will be paid for
picking this year than since the
war.
We are glad to see that
dent Butler says that this strike is
to be confined to the States of
Texas and South Carolina- He
says that the colored Alliance is
not strong enough in this State to
attempt anything of the kind. He
furthermore says that should it
reach this State the white Alli-
would take steps at once to
meet it and would be able to
it successfully. We are glad
to see such utterances from the
President of the State Alliance.
It shows that the Alliance in this
State does not propose to
any such proceedings under
whatever name they may come.
Thirty-five thousand colored
number in this State,
can fix the price for picking
cotton. We trust that the body of
the colored Alliance in the State
not be enough to allow
any such demand to be made by
their State Alliance.
We see from exchanges that
the University and of our Col-
have opened with a larger
number of than they
hare before since 1860.
North Carolina is awakening
from her lethargy, educationally.
This is a hopeful sign. No State
can be greater than its citizens.
No citizen can be greater than
his opportunities. The solution
of many of the causes which re-
pi ogress in North Carolina
lies in an educated citizenship.
Ignorance is easily duped. It
never suggests means to
ends. It never aspires to
do believe that much of the hard
work molding and
the minds of the and
girls in the channels of thought is
done in our academies, de-
serve to rank higher than they do,
and are far more worthy of pat-
than their rates show.
Whenever we all our .
with competent i a
teachers and crowd their
with students we need
fears for our University and C
no other result than an in-
creased patronage can be exp t-
ed.
prof
in matter.
A petition signed by E.
J. O. Proctor, L. A.
others asking for a new road
the Evans place on mill
mad in a northerly direction via
bridge a Black
Jack and Boyd's Ferry road, a dis-
of about two was read
the Sheriff was to
a Jury and lay off said road in
accordance with the petition.
following persons were allow-
ed to list taxes the year
T.
J. A.
heirs.
Carolina L.
of A. Moore es-
We deem it apropos Pugh.
here, since our schools h re in
Greenville have now opened
the supervision of first class
teachers, that there arc least ;.
hundred boys and in Pitt
county who ought to these
schools that are not . ; an
parents afford to let tip
able opportunities for ding
their children pass l
Are you treating your .
right Are they not more de-
serving at your Can you
afford for their to let them
grow up in . ;. mi
doing you circumscribe fields
of labor and bring them to plains
in which the of an inferior,
. . ,. road
race is m direct . ,,,
theirs. There is
for educated men worn n no
than when your school days wt re
passing. Conditions are very
much changed and demand in-
creased facilities for
The man who recognizes i trill
find when his Q are
that he was wiser than many of
his neighbors. Let the fathers
and mothers of Pitt county bestir I which came on to be beard before
T Cory. Smith.
Farmville Township- J M Trot-
man.
Greenville J Bell,
Cherry Ann Ward, Peter
ton.
L Moore,
W N
Swift Creek Township Stew-
Si Asa
License to retail six
months from of July granted
A petition by John
Galloway, Stanley Arnold
, d SB others asking for a new road
beginning in the new road
mill at the place
to the Beaufort county line, was
ii ad and the Board ordered the
Sheriff to summon a and lay
I accordance with
A petition signed by G W
I Edwards, J Edwards
and others for a new road
at New road
near W W Tucker's out to Wash
toad near Phillips church,
. i- rend and Board ordered Ilia
.- . to a Jury and lay
-aid road in accordance with
said petition.
In the case of Miles Little against
Belcher others,
Cotton is a perishable
crop and when it i ripe for
the mast be done promptly
or there is a heavy
Secretary Foster loses no
boast of then plenty
of money the Treasury to
all demands, but he doesn't tell I W
shrewdly lie has played bis o
a deficit Every
of Treasury was so e
weeks ago given to understand
that the more delayed
which involved the payment of
money, better they would
with Secretary,
is that very little money, aside
pensions and the redemption of the
lour and a half per cent
being held up on every possible i x-
in order to let a little -y
accumulate in the Treasury I
The claim agents
are wild over the situation, for they
cannot get settlement on claims
that have passed as correct,
account of some quibble
has raised by some Treasury
of course under orders
from the Secretary. It ought
to be difficult for Mr. Foster to ac-
cumulate a considerable surplus if
the policy paying out nothing is
to continue.
There is one Democratic official
connected with this
who has been trying without sue
ever since the 4th March,
to retire office. His
is Moore, and he is Third
Secretary Slate,
a well Busied
law. Ur was
ed by Mr. Cleveland, as soon is
Mi Blame look charge of de-
linen t. he handed him his
nation, it was returned to
the that he bold It
until it was for. It never
was asked it was tendered
again a short time ago, this
time it most be accepted because
Mr. Moore has accepted the
of International Law in
Columbia College.
Speaking of the State depart-
the Mr.
Wharton is very, very mad at Mr.
Harrison, he has, whenever
he has desired to transact
with the department since Mr.
went away, done so
Tracy, thus ignoring
acting Secretary entirely.
Gen. John C. Black,
of Pensions, is in Washing-
ton this week, in attendance upon
the meetings of the board of
of the Home for Dis-
Volunteer Soldiers, winch are
being held at War department.
Democrats here regard
as easy to defeat for the
governorship of New York. It will
be sufficient for the people to know
that he is Tom Plait's
OINTMENT.
MARK.
This has SOW i- use over
fifty years, and wherever known has
been in steady demand. It has been en-
the leading all over
the country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, with the attention of
tho most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment Is of
lone standing reputation
which It has obtained is owing entirely
to its own efficacy, as hut effort has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. Una bottle of this Ointment will
be to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box The usual
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders
promptly attended to. Address all or-
and communications to
F.
Sole Manufacturer Proprietor,
Greenville, N. C.
D. D. HASKETT,
Pipe, Hollowware, Tin
ware. Nails, Doors, Sash. Lo
Butts and Hinges, Glass, Putty
Paints and OHs,
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 be-
fore purchasing-
D. D. HASKETT.
GREENVILLE
themselves and see that their sons
and daughters are prepare I to
fight life's battles successfully.
Mo other legacy will be half ho
valuable. Increased capacities
lot happiness and
a value not counted in d and
cents and are best i most
prominent gift which parents can
leave to their If yon
are able to do nothing else for
them make a sacrifice and educate
your children.
COMMISSIONERS
Greenville, X. C, Sept.
The Board of of
Pitt county met this day in
session, present C. Dawson, chair-
man, G. M. Mooring, T. E Keel, C.
V. Newton and Leonidas Fleming
Minutes of last meeting and
approved.
The following orders ; paupers
were allowed
John Stocks 4.30, Winifred
Margaret Bryan fames
II. D. Smith 2.00,
Alex Harris Daniel
2.00, Martha Nelson 2.00, J.
Bryan 2.00, Jacob I
Asa Knox 4.00, Susan 2.00,
Wm. 5.00, Susan .-
1.50, John Baker 1.50, Nancy
3.00. Lucinda Smith
Lance 2.00.
Orders for general county
es were allowed as follows
G. E I-
4.20, G. W. an
2.40, It. W. Smith 1.00, ll. W.
7.80, Cornelius James
2.00, J. A. K. Tucker
It. L. 45.51, II.
16.90. Marshal 2.00.
Wilson 1.55, John Flanagan
John Flanagan 1.20, Jesse
J. 10.00, B-u
Clark 2.50, W. B. Burnett.-
W. B. 2.20, J A. Which.
ard 4.20, W. U. Wilkinson 11.40,
John A. Manning John A Man-
G. w. Venter w. II
Wilkinson W. F.
3.50, W. J. Teel 1.19, . II.
son 1.40, N. B. Cory and W.
Board of
from the Board of Supervisors
of township, which latter
bad injected of the Jury and
Constable of said township
i j sol over the lands
defendants as for in
petition of the plaintiff and
. h d been to be laid
off by of Supervisors;
hearing the and
on both sides it was or-
the I of
ere of the Constable
laying off
as i to the visors be
that judgment of
t Board of Supervisors be over-
ruled.
The books of 1891
and ordered to
tin lied over to the Sheriff with
the proper endorsements for
Mai
Classical and
The next Session of this School will be.
gin on MONDAY, AUGUST 24th.
Tuition per term of N
Primary, per session.
Intermediate, per sea-ion, 10.00
Higher pr 12.60
Language, each. 3.00
The will be thorough in all of
its instruction, but in its
having ill view at all times the
I full preparation of young men and beys
j for active business life, or successful col-
courses. Board can be obtained
with the principal, or at other places in
town at reasonable rates. One half of
payable at the middle of the
term, the remainder at close. For
Hither particulars see or address,
W. H. A. B.,
Greenville, N. C. Principal.
m tonic, or that want building
take
CLOWN'S
It is pleasant to take, cures Malaria,
All
WASHINGTON
WASHINGTON, Sept. 1891.
The administration has
Tracy and Gen-
ital Miller, won a diplomatic
with which Secretary Blame
will doubtless be very glad that be
bad nothing to do. They have not
prevented the new
. vi-i demanding dam-
ages for the seizure of steamer
which was chased in open
seas the strength of
against Mr. Blame's ad-
vice. Out they have prevailed
that, govern-
whom they mercilessly snub-
bed a few weeks ago, to pay the
i of the and foolish trip
of the cruiser Charleston, in return
having the case against the
of violating neutrality
laws, which able lawyers have said
was no case at all, pressed in
the courts. This worthy pair of
diplomats are said to lie of
this victory, but it is one for which
they should really be ashamed.
They have simply taken advantage
of the desire of a weak
government to obtain the
of and stronger gov-
183.19, J. A. K. to compel acceptance
Wiley Clark their proposition. Mr. Blaine,
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified Ix-fore the
Court Clerk Pitt county as
Executor of the last Will and
of Nancy C. Tucker, deceased,
notice Is hereby given to all persons In-
to said decedent to make
payment to the undersigned; and
all persons having claims against the
estate must present the same for pay-
on or before the day of
1892, or this notice will be plead
in bar of their recovery.
This 10th day of Sept., 1831.
of Nancy C. Tucker.
The Tar River- Transportation Company
s. Greenville,
I. B.
j. S.
N. M. Tarboro, Gen
It. F. Washington, Gen Ag
The People's Line for travel on
River.
The Steamer is the finest
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac
and convenience of Ladies.
ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A Table furnished with th
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at o'clock, A. M.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m.
Freights received daily and
Kills Lading to all points.
s- F. J. t agent
Washington Greenville, N. C
Greenville Institute,
FOR BOYS AND GIRLS.
Z. S. Principal.
Miss Hettie Warren,
Miss Lucy I Assistants
Mrs. Z. J
Miss Minnie Carraway, Music.
Session begins Aug.
Instruction thorough. reason-
able. Discipline but severe.
For further particulars address,
Greenville, N. C.
14.00, B. S.
J.
C Dawson 7.80, W Ii Ai
C V I E Keel
with all his faults, would hardly
i aye guilty of such a trick as
that.
Mills has gone to
7.70, Leonidas Fleming D II Ohio, where be makes bis first
9.13, B H in- G speech next week.
M Mooring 2.90. II James ;, and Bynum have
Wm Staton 0.00. gone to Chicago, where are to
Stock Law territory of meet the rest of toe missionary
Creek and
X Ii 1.00, D II James
25.00, C Dawson 2.00.
Greenville Stock Law territory
D H 25.00
part v, which is to that city
next week on its to Pacific
Coast.
Mr. I Ian will have a
as well as a Democrat to
J. H. came the Interstate Commerce
Board in accordance order Commission, as bad health baa
made at last meeting remitted compelled Judge to resign,
amount for Representative Catching, of Mis
tax list and of thinks the circular recently
Carolina township, the be- issued calling on the colored labor-
was turned over to of the Sooth increase their
the Treasurer and receipt taken for demand for picking this year's
ton crop, U work of Republican
following order was then mischief makers whose is to
This Board having at. its j trouble between the
in July, 1891 passed an or-j and the laborers. He says
directing the Sheriff to issue proposed is excessive
C. T. Savage a license to retail being equal to about
at Ayden and it appearing in one of value of cotton.
Board that said license has j threat of a said Mr.
been issued, and it further appear- among farm
that Ayden is within three j is not a natter to be lightly con-
FORD o.
Is the place to ship your--------
HIGH PRICES PROMPT RETURNS.
We sell it for of the prices every day. We in hustling and
always run a sale. We have recently made large sales of old stock and
are now ready for new. New tobacco is selling well and large corps of buyers
ate anxious for it and are willing to pay good prices for it. So scud it right along
to the and we pledge you word that will sell it for as much
money as anybody else can.
Messrs. Cox of will furnish you, free of charge, hogs-
heads in which to ship your tobacco to us. have tobacco assorted and tied
for those who us to just as cheap as we can the work done. SEND IT
ON WE FEEL THAT CAN PLEASE YOU.
With many thanks tor favors we respectfully ask a continuance of your
patronage, pledging yon our best to please,
truly your friends.
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners Prop. Banner Warehouse.
G. E. HARRIS,
-DEALER
Young
Startling,
It is time to get ready
-FOR-
FALL TIDE
Therefore we are going
-TO-
MAKE PRICES
will
and make us room for
OUR FALL STOCK.
We, have a good many
odds
-OF
Summer Goods,
-which for the next--
THIRTY DAYS
we will sell at
ABSOLUTE COST
in
It will pay yon to
LOOK OUR STOCK.
TOO BUSY
Receiving and opening our
Mammoth Stock to tell you
of the many we
have to offer this week. Next
issue don't fail to look in this
column you will be sure to
see something to interest
you and save you money.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
BROS.
We thank our many friends for their patronage
last season and wish to say that we now
have another
than before.
We keep first-class Goods and guarantee
prices. Come and examine the new goods.
-o-
In addition to our regular line have taken
the agency for the
And will sell at the same terms and prices. Oils,
Needles and Parts are kept.
BROWN BROS.
1883.
made some-
Large Reductions
in price already, there will be
many more made in the next
days.
WATCH US.
J. A. ANDREWS,
Heavy
MEAT AND
large lot
BAGGING AND TIES
just before the for sale low down.
POWDER AND SHOT.
J, L.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE. N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Ki -o placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRE
-SHIP YOUR-
AND OTHER PRODUCE TO
ALEXANDER, MORGAN CO.,
COTTON FACTORS. AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
TUNIS NORFOLK, VA,
Guarantee highest prices, quick sales and prompt





Greenville, N. C
Local Sparks
Cooper's
Waif so
Is the place lo
Ship Tobacco
I you highest prices.
Sew Home Sewing Machine
at Bros
supply Fruit Jars
Old Brick Store.
Personal
Mr. J. S. South is sick ibis week.
Mr. J- T. is at Trinity
Ur. K. T. Ford gone to Wilson
tide.
Mr, W. II. Cox been sick
days.
M r. J. J. bus been quite
sic . be past week.
I. Ii. Walker, of is vis-
ii Mrs. A.
The tremendous new safe being put
in batik yesterday was all the
attraction.
Mrs. Annie has been sick
I some days but we arc glad to know
To get best full Cream cheese
go lo J. S. Smith Bra. Mr. C. Lanier and family re-
Latest Shuts. Collars I ed to Wilson on last Friday where
and Cuffs T. IV reside in the future.
rt-1 II III I M I Mr-C W. reached home
at Old evening from Ins Northern
Next week you'll hear him say
If the farmers of want of
for
For i h lie
i B I, . S IS-20,
I m.
v. M.,
p in R o, John.
Monday we learned from
Sheriff Evans that eight prisoner
arc now in jail. Five of
a good home they
must it Greenville
the sale of the
villa warehouse will take place
first, and Let to work tor it.
LOST BUT
awaiting trial at Court next week one
for murder, one for lighting, one for
secret assault and two for larceny.
Property owners have no idea how
many applications come to the real
r .
t Prof. A. C.
be sanction the
.- ; intoxicating liquors
as a .- Rev. ft.
. . J . Christian
bath and it L. L.
Fresh Boss for the veil
and sick at Old Store.
Point Lace Flour is always uniform
in quality at the Old Store.
Get all of Bowing
needles parts Horn Brown Harry Skinner leaves to-day
Bee- for Concord where he Makes a speech
wax and Hides, at Old I at the County
I I he wood is much in
Brown Bros, have Hie I . .
agency for I he New Home Sewing .
The last Quarterly Conference for
year of the M. E.
will be held to night and a
lull is desired.
Fair,
demand for
M M
leaves this
g I if I to purchase new
a i goads The in-
Lob-lead.-. . . v.
Cradles Old modeled and repainted and oho will
Brick Store. carry a aid
We make a specialty of Dry
Mr. Dean, of Henderson,
Goods Slices. Come and get . the of Harris Gooch
v hi v. t talking to our
mere. He had two goad
I things to talk about to-
I and bis
Mr. J. J. Burgess,
presenting U. A. Co, of
folk, is with us again, and will be
keeping his jolly presence in and out
I among shippers of this section
; during the cotton season. Oar word
I it lie will get his share.
. P. G. Mayo, of Falkland, tells
be will be on the breaks at Green-
and rill come to stay. Peyton
bad considerable experience in
tobacco, and another good
prices.
nailing for
Ice now be furnished cent
per pound. J. J.
A lot of Lunch Biscuits,
Crackers and Cakes just received
J. S. Smith
D. Y. Cooper furnishes free bogs-
beads to shipping their to
to him. Get them H.
F. Keel.
Another new brand El
Mercado, just at Bi B e
tor Book They are dandies
for a
We have been obtain thing he will bring along- to this
a few boxes of sun cured i.- market with him is plenty of back-
which is selling like cakes
J. S. Smith
Mr. II, manager of the
Alliance Warehouse, of Henderson,
spent a or two in this section
last week. He is not what you might
term a hummer with wings, but as a
way back is in
it iii can talk tobacco faster than
. ever saw. He expressed
i as charmed with this section
so I says i to be the garden
tobacco of the State.
H-o--3
The Fair is in
There is a warmer turn in the
A few the firemen
Monday afternoon.
had a drill
Bring a dollar to town with
reek for the
you
Nigger or The com-
passed by Saturday evening.
inks to Mr. Walter
. a box of brought us Friday.
Tl i had a calico party
. night which was
i i i be a big success.
Mis. is roe
her fall display of Milli-
A new supply of the C B.
Spirit-- Corset.
Say where are you going to -end
that Tobacco f To Cooper's Ware-
house, Henderson. right
He guarantees better prices than
any in or out of t i. State.
Try Coopers Warehouse, x-
son, N. C, sale Tobacco.
He secures good prises for i
and allows no on to leave his
house dissatisfied.
It pays a man lo raise g i d To
it still better get
good prices when it is sold. Send
to Cooper's Warehouse. Hen-
and good prices are
guaranteed.
At same place, S.
C, you will find Cooper's
house selling
getting the best prices for
them that be obtained. Your
shipments are solicited.
Cooper's Warehouse at r-
son, N. IX, will fa
bead tree grade your Tobacco
at lowest prices. So you can ad
him your tobacco graded or
Always mark your up in
all packages when shipped.
Central Tarboro, N. C,
will open Wednesday, Sept.
Bring on your tobacco, as man-
guarantee that every
pound of tobacco will bring its
value. forget day and date.
I will sell at Court House door
in toe town of Greenville on Si-pt.
to highest bidder the en-
tire stock of hardware Lit ham
Fender. Terms sale known
on day of sale.
W. S. Bawls, Assignee.
Attention Tobacco
Cooper's Warehouse,
K. C, is now ready to receive and j
sell all grades of new Tobacco at
prom ;
the Pitt and
counties that no market or into market. a
house or out of the State I producers
sell tobacco for more net money, i who to be shippers.
him a trial. A us Saturday he
TOBACCO-Alter a tobacco crop is some especially fine
A colored man was arrested at
the other day putting obs
on the railroad.
county Court con
next Monday. His
Pit
rotes
Connor, will preside.
Grifton letter was
out this week. Much
other matter had to be left out.
warehouse drummers loom
up thick. The Reflector
columns tell where to sell.
Sec
first man in Pitt county to pay
. for 1891 was C. of
Beaver Dam township, who paid on
the
The farmers take up fodder when
they can, but the days when they
have been the
of late.
This northern fruits are
is housed the next most
for grower to ask
himself is, must I sell my to-
to realize best prices
Take warehouse circulars and read
them, and you will be struck with
expression of best
market, prices and all such
expressions, let us give you a
pointer.
tobacco to bring to Greenville at the
opening break October 1st.
A white man was committed to
Jail Monday evening for earning
concealed weapons and refusing to
pay the line imposed by a Magistrate.
We heard two men inquiring and
calculating as to the profits accruing
market offers ad- Horn a plug tobacco factory. That's
vantages that you would do well to ; the kind of talk, gentlemen, keep it
consider. In the first place their
buyers have no old stock on Laud,
warmed up along this line and
Warehouse has re-
n and now to com ls
no averages to reduce, Is in the
field for the fine tobacco raised by
readers of the
Wilson Tobacco
bee
claims the largest and best lighted
sales floor in Eastern
being feet wide feet long.
solid skylights, and will find
the proprietors, Messrs. Pace and
Woodard always at their posts and
ready to serve you. They don't at-
your tobacco to be galloped over,
but take a steady
there in prices all same.
bey write us they can present no
stronger claim our patronage
than the very top of the market for
tobacco. Give them a trial and be
convinced.
It you think there are too many
tobacco items in the Reflector this
week don't fret. We are a little bit
The following officers of Orion En-
No. O. were
elected last Friday night ensuing
term
J. C. P.
C. D. H. P.
W. L. Brown, W.
8- T. Hooker. J. W.
J. J. Cherry,
J. A, K, Tucker, Treas.
estate agency for neat cottages that Nash, It.
rent at about a year, Relation of the to the
of such buildings were erected Rev. G. G. Bar
tenants could be easily secured tar I Icy.
them. Relation of the
,, . , ,. I School to the Sabbath, Dr.
The merchants of Greenville x
bear in mind that building up a good i
tobacco market here means largely I
increased trade for them. The ore . A ;. Feast conducted
work warehouse the more Rev. G. b . P. K.
they help themselves. Money I A. M in Missions, by
lost to Greenville every lime a
carries his tobacco to smother town. U. mass
met
Dr. D. S. Barman, the noted Parental
who two years ago ream Ru. G. A.
several weeks in Greenville has I P. E
opened an office in Hotel Gregory,
Goldsboro, where he will remain
few The doctor writes us
that since he here BO has been
to Europe taken another special
course in bis profession. His work
and skill is spoken highly of D.-
Hyatt.
Some merchants attest, I it
do not believe in advertising, w i ;
we approach them on the subject,
these same merchants hang
signs, put goods the sidewalks
and stick boards tho lives and
fences. This is advertising, but
in near so profitable a way as i
it in a paper, and it also iii i
the merchant has not enough pride
to help sustain s. home enterprise
when it would pay him to do so.
Nest week a supplement will be
added to the Reflector which will
give a considerable increase in read-
matter. There never was such a
demand before for space in our ad-
columns. It is becoming
evident that the business man who
does not advertise gets left behind.
A man who keeps the Reflector
among his reading matter said to
the other paper has the
best and -most attractive display of
advertisements of any weekly I know.
It speaks well for the merchants of
Greenville and is creditable to their
Here's the way the ball gets to
rolling. A large tobacco
company of Winston is
responding here with a view of
its own prize house in Green-
ville and putting a buyer here. Oar
home people should be uniting and
offering inducements for such enter
prise to come here.
Now here is t problem that
How can
become a tobacco market without
prize houses storage
for a few be secure., I
if buyers come here to the
and after largely lot
find that no place I had l
store it they might not want to cot
to this market again. Business me .
should look at this Matter as i
is and see that homes are
speedily built.
If the merchants will put their
surplus money together and establish
a tobacco factory to off the
crop which the warehouse ;
they make a grand i
a successful market here
more money that is paid out
and wages the more the merchant .
will get in exchange for go
Gentlemen, we hope yon will not. let
these things the
about go into one ear an out
other. They arc said for your
and in the interest of your .
Attention is c I to the notice to
by j. . Tucker, Executor
Nancy C
Brown Bros. I tell you about
ii Is. y have
New
Hi in . I which will
I Give them
call fur . 1-. a
; i. A. Andre i has a new
t I la Besides having a
v boat grocer-
ht i big lot Of
. lb at were bought
he lore the rise. He give jobbers
trices in goods save you money.
J. B. Cherry Co. are just so busy
receiving o; their
; i ; ; tint they
write a new ad-
paper and tell
y are
their column
ling what
i st week.
Go's, Cash
. in to their
-day. Buying
as tor cash will be
very lowest prices
, their ad-
give in an idea of
en i they They
i the ; m Is want to sec
III miss it iii i weed
i I vi i ti
. Co-opera-
. y,
l warehouses
-i that can
e Lo get the
can be had
WHO
F. President
S. S NASH. l .,
C. W.
A. I. See
THE
But has at last turned up to the great wonder
of the people, with a large
STOCK OF FALL
cheaper than ever heard of before. to
him he will tell you all about it.
see
He buys for cash and sells for the same old stuff.
Yours truly,
In from Old Brick Store.
C. T.
. .
-GRAND
ember 23rd,
As buyers from North Carolina and Virginia
will be present.
Mr J. C. an experienced
will have charge
II ll
ti
.
of dollars
The
Pitt county was first of any
her neighbors to go to any extent
into tobacco culture, and the
with which it met here in i r
counties to try it. Still is be-
hind both and Wilson ii
home markets. Green
ville just completing one ware
house, while Tarboro an Wilson
have several prise house. to go
along with them. It is tin.; our
people were looking m ire lo the
building up of their county town.
Pitt county tobacco has done much
toward building up other towns in
the last few years.
louse Send
. away.
Stop a
lob
. . .-
them
False Carry no Weight With
Them.
The believes in being
truthful, square and honest, therefore
does not blow that Greenville is the
biggest town in the State, or that
is the livest tobacco market, that
it is largest cotton market.
Should we say so it would bi read
people who know better, and they
would laugh at such a display of
ignorance. But we do say that
Greenville pays as prices
kinds of crops brought here, an
disposes of goods at as low a i
any town show, handles a
pretty good share both in-earning
and out-going. So while Greenville
is not the market on the
it is about as a one at
you will stumble over.
mi S iv you're got
want and will
It p market
n Hound i to the
Pitt county
and know
prompt returns
i i It their to.
as we have been
usually in making
our fall selections, we will,
therefore, be able succeed
in pleasing you in your fall
winter wearing apparel.
We have a large and varied
stock of Dress Goods, in fact
the largest, most stylish, and
most complete ever shown in
our
were col
with special pains trow
the fashion of
country, some of them having
been imported a few
days previous to their
TI embrace all the
i-h and serviceable effects
among Hutu the rough
By designs which arc the
productions of
.-.
e v weaves in
Cords,
Serges, Polka
them in all
. more
men
mode i Hi it-.
i Goods de-
is mat will
ways find newest trims
for your and
always suitable linings and
furnishings. Our lines
Sackings, Wash
Fabrics and Cotton effects
are replete with novelties.
Also Ladies and
Wraps will be sure to
your attention on
he many novelties. I. .
the ladies
we call your attention to
lines of Men Boy's
make no hoist
when say that we
more fine
our
and will convince
this it you will B
trial. These arc
by the most enlightened cut-
of the country, men
are artists in their profession
and they are put together
good workmen too
by the and con-
labor, as is the case with
some goods offered for sale
on our The Style
shown comprise all new
and fashionable cuts and
in most stylish
s. The most
tic description will scarcely
do justice to our stock and
we cordially invite the public
inspect them, boy's
clothing as usual are
leaders and will sustain our
reputation. Our lines of
Shoes for ladies, misses, men,
and children are com-
. .
i. -day
advertisement
Che , that the
of the
e it a red
To oiler
the cause
by offering
the for one year to the
farmer i i highest price for
that day. else
will
five a prize;
ALLIANCE
CO-OPERATIVE
. . .-. a
HENDERSON,
.,. , , . highest prices and
The Public School Committee for charges for selling much lower than
this white district, accompanied by those of
a of business men of the
town, the Institute last Tues-
day. The Committee had combined
the Public School with the Institute
for the fall session, and expressed
themselves as highly gratified with
houses, thereby
the tan u thousands of dollars.
have no drummers. pets but
give to the who sell with us
what i paid o her houses for this
necessary expense.
the manner in which the work is Prompt made
progressing. The first room visited
was taught by Mrs. in I
which was a class of
thirty five pupils. In the nest grade
were some over forty pupils
k. ; r . i t . i and our but sell
by Miss Lucy Joyner. In the
were about twenty-five taught by
Miss Bettie Warren. In the higher
grade, Prof. room, were
between forty and fifty. The pupils
in every department showed that
they were rapidly getting into the
regular work.
The Principal, Prof.
reported to the Committee an enroll-
of for the
on day of sale,
Po not b by the many false-
hood- to I y i by enemies of this house,
with us and
save
authorized capital
is
Our facilities for buying,
and to manufacturers are
unsurpassed by any in or out
of the Slat-. We will he to have
members Alliance taKe stock in
. i i and feel confident that
pupils for the Public the will yield large
pay pupils i Make and be convinced
a few of these also getting a par that to sell elsewhere.
benefit of the Public School J. I Faithfully your.
This made a enrollment of i ii. Manager.
for the Institute. The I .,, , s--7-
pupils numbered at the Institute; WORKS;
with four or five boarding with
lies in the town. The music depart-
in charge Miss Minnie Car-
ram has pupils.
Greene and Craven counties are
resented besides Pitt.
The Committee have for
congratulation in the excellence of
the school. Placing the Public
School In efficient bands and
raising the standard as they
enables more people to get the
fit of it than formerly. It also goes
a long ways toward removing the
prejudices that exist against Public
Schools.
Since the visit of the Committee
several other pupils have entered the
Institute, making a
increase in departments.
The employment teacher
will be necessary.
A. H. Prop.
Engines, Ba Mills,
Iron and Brass Casting made to order
Largest stock ripe and Pipe Fittings In
town. lie sure so work to
A. B.
Near depot Greenville, N. C.
It, A. k Co.,
COTTON FACTORS
and Dock,
var
I J, J. is our North and South
i in i-n-i and
e and
We call
I lo i line
are
to
Hats
boys we
es and
all the new cob
Our line is large and varied
and the styles are correct, the
shapes are correct and the
prices are correct. In our
Carpet we show
all standard grades in
the very best designs; also
Floor Oil Cloths, and lings
of all kinds. A complete
line
Goods such as Lace Cur
and Curtain Laces,
Linens, Curtain i
Fixtures, Window S
Draperies, etc. V,
attention to
some line of Fur a
Mats, also something
an Stool. We
an elegant
Brass and
rods. Our stock
Gent's Furnishing Goods u
the most complete ever shown
in town. We have all the
new styles in Collars, Cuffs
and Shirts. and
Haberdashery are our ape
We have a com-
assortment in every de
and are sure
please yon. We pay
attention to orders by
mail and them personal
attention. cheerfully fur-
samples on application
and customers who prefer to
buy in this way will be treat-
ed as well as if selected
their goods in person. It
has always been our aim
please the public and
will be loft undone
n i i
j interests.
ad we can
a cordial re-
always
known
o will
and
of goods
is honest.
. U. H. Lang.
LOCATED NEAR
Greenville,
THE-
this Warehouse will take place on
Thursday
Our New Warehouse which is about completed is a large, well equipped build-
with a floor space feet, and plenty of light. We also have ample prize
rooms. Arrangements have been made to bring buyers hero from various parts of
this and other States and we guarantee to make Tobacco bring high prices in
Greenville as any market in the State.
We solicit consignments from the farmers of Pitt and adjoining counties. It
will be to your interest to sell your Tobacco at the Wan house, as in ad-
to getting as high prices as can be had anywhere, the large of freight
is now
And to make prices . .
-Our
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, Trunks, Boots, Shoes.
. . .
designs In
e can
WOOLEN
We have some beautiful patter
Dress of
styles. Silk Finish
All Wool
quality. All Wool Serge
colors, beautiful Black Mohair. complete and
Dress flannel in Blue, Brown and Gr ,. i .,,, we over
and a full line of colors In double width j .,, ,., ,, yOU
f heavy id W
Henrietta In colors.
Cashmeres.
COTTON GOODS.
A line Standard Prints,
Cloths, Suitings, Ginghams
and Outings.
CORSETS.
We are carrying a larger assortment
and passage in order to reach other markets can be saved.
Remember the opening day
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1ST.
and bring us your tobacco.
The Greenville Tobacco Warehouse Co.,
G-. F.
la Is still
Come before they arc all gone.
I I I.
n lid in Hats
Some run as low
and men.
lot of Boy's
i widen we are Bailing low.
J AS. L. LITTLE CO.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Filled, to Top.
-With an Elegant
Boots,
AT STARVATION
HIGGS STORE.
Hi
E. IV REED
Hand-Made Shoes
Ladles at
THE BEST on the
C P. Shoes
for at Bros. s.





THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has
Moved to next Door Court House
PHOTON, BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
material used in all work. All styles of Springs are yon can from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Horn, King
keep on band a full of
HARNESS AND WHIP
the year round, e s. II as MM
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this rod surrounding counties for past favors hope to
merit a continuance of the
on.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE ti OF C
Man to the of pm and f
not to be excelled in this And
DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, N .
Hair. Harness. and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Clark's O. X. T. Spool Lotion which I oiler to the trade at W
prices per cent
ration rod Star fore Jobbers Prices. Lead and pure Lin-
Oil, Varnishes and Paint Cucumber I umps.
Willow Ware. a
Salt and Wood and
Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
ATTENTION
Oxford is Your Market
-WE WANT-
Bring it along, the mart merrier. We are prepared to pay
HIGHER PRICES for WIRE CURED than any other
market. Freights ore cheap, a mere when increased prices
are taken into account. railroad facilities are good. Send
your tobacco to Oxford. N-C, will get good prices and quick
returns. Buyers all classes and from every part of the world
are located in Oxford. You us
All Business and no
Hunt, Cooper ft Co., Meadows Warehouse,
Bullock ft Mitchell, Banner Warehouse,
Cozart, Rogers Co., Warehouse,
R. V. Minor ft Co., Minor Warehouse.
R. F. Knott, Manager Alliance Warehouse.
J. M. Currin, Buyer,
W. C. 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. D. Bullock, Buyer,
John Webb, Buyer,
W. A. Bobbitt, Buyer,
C. F. Kingsbury, Buyer,
B. Glenn, Buyer.
beware of imitations, buy only the genuine
fixed wire
SNOW STICK.
Modern Tobacco Barn Company.
OXFORD, N. C.
BALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO.
Manufacturers of Hall's Patent
BANK LOCKS WORK.
SAFES
THE
EASTERN
Greenville, C
THE OF ART.
The play la done, and shadow
Where Late the empire of an hone
Waxed great and waned before
And homeward I, with brooding thought
Of art that bravely to flower.
And soon la
I dream of Art, remembering well
The hopes It gave, that up-soared.
Rut one by one defeated fell-
Cast out eternally from Heaven,
those that their Lord
From grace had driven.
So moved, to royal Westminster
Betimes come, and gladly find
Those stately churches towering there.
Whose walls that Milton saw, we see;
Ah were, I cried, like these my mind.
Great praise might be.
Were strength like theirs that hold the
night
With solemn watch, though London sleep.
To arm my soul with steadfast might.
Then fear might end hope be sore.
Could I like them my vigil keep,
endure.
But they were built hope and fear
By men who took the passing day.
And gave its moments heavenly wear;
Though they who built are darkly gone
Their art remains, and In it they
Are greatly known.
So art is frail, but art Is strong;
And he Is who keeps the way
His shall lead, and sings his song,
Or bids dead stone take life and climb-
So yields his service for a day.
Or for all time.
Ernest Rhys in Magazine.
Deaths In Hotels.
Even an ordinary death in a hotel
causes a landlord great distress, while
a suicide almost drives him frantic.
you said a hotel clerk,
consequences follow a suicide
In the first place, the event is
graphed all over the land, and every
traveling man sees it. Nothing on
earth would ever induce one of the
traveling fraternity to lodge in that
particular room. So the first thing to
be done is to get rid of the old number
of that guest dumber. The number
is disposed of, never to return, and a
new number is placed on the door.
surroundings must be entirely
changed. New paper must be put upon
the wall, new carpet upon the floor,
new furniture, new bedding, and then
the domestics are instructed never to
mention the circumstance of the death
to any guest. A suicide always
an expense of several hundred
dollars to the hotel proprietor, and an-
questions asked of landlord
and clerks for months
Journal.
e Mew Contrary
take a good deal to kill a
does it not I asked, talking of electro-
cation and the tremendous force re-
quired to make that delicate yet ten-
machinery stop suddenly like a
clock held by the hands.
it replied my
friend the doctor; then, again,
it seems as if they die abominably
easy.
remember a case we had in the
Harlem hospital. A man had tired
three bullets into his abdomen with in-
tent of suicide. Nasty wounds they
were too. But Dr. Blank located the
ballets and got them oat, and then
sewed up the intestines in several
places, making a splendid Job of it.
several days the man did finely,
and Just the time you would
said he was out of danger be and
died, but from what the
only knows, for in the autopsy we f
all his organs healthy, and as for the
wounds, they were almost entirely
he; led. was no inflammation
about the stitches save in one place,
and that was so small and slight that it
was scarcely worth mentioning.
that is the way with man. If
you want him to die for his own sake
and everybody he will hang on
and on, tenacious as a turtle. On the
other hand, he will often go off as If a
breath had blown him into
New York Herald.
A Household Remedy j
i BLOOD
. wit Ma m W
la r-
The Smallest American City.
Many people have been told that
Vt., is the oldest city in the
Union. But they are misinformed.
took out her charter
1788. Hartford and New Haven,
took out theirs in
however, can truthfully claim to be the
smallest and the most quiet in the
United States, as she a population,
after years of of 1.773
souls, and covers a territory of only
1,200 acres.
Her boundaries are a mile and a half
one way and a mile and a quarter the
other. She has a mayor, a city
a full board of aldermen and a com-
city government. There are of-
fices enough so that nearly every man
in the town may one. In this
way the political squabbles and selfish
struggles for power common to most
cities are entirely overcome. There are
offices enough to go around and every-
body is Herald.
Mr. Curious Receipt.
An interesting character in American
history is Rev. Mason L.
pastor of church and biographer
of George Washington. Ho was some-
thing of a romancer, and to his powers
of invention we owe some very inter-
stories of the childhood of the
father of the country. The most
of these anecdotes is the one
j which tells how little George hacked
his father's favorite cherry tree, and
when taken to task it nobly re-
can't tell a lie, pa; you know I
can't tell a lie. I did cut it with a
At one time Mr. was engaged
as a An incident which
occurred during this time shows that he
had a good deal of human nature, and
despite his cloth, exhibited occasionally
something of the old Adam. It seems
that of customers, to whom he
had sold a Bible, demanded a receipt
for the money paid for the copy of
holy writ. Mr. construed this
demand as an insult. He gave the re-
but in so doing contrived to
avenge his wounded feelings. The
event occurred in the season of the sum-
mer solstice, and the receipt read as
on the longest day of the
year, from the most particular man in
the world, the smallest possible price
for the best book ever
Washington Post.
The Largest Catch.
Telling fish stories over about the
court house has suggested the great
catch made by at Canton
many years ago. The time and the
amount caught were discussed consider-
ably, but no definite conclusion was
reached until a few days ago Mr. Miller
wrote to Frank for
The catch was made in March,
1868, near Canton. With one large
feet penned the
fish in a chute and caught them out
with smaller seines. To one firm, Cur-
tis, of St. Louis, they sold
netting them This was by
far the greatest catch ever made before
or since on the Mississippi river. Monti-
cello Journal.
The Value of an Oculist.
In the early stages of the art
made were rude and crude, the
glasses very rough, though they
great aid to the afflicted. At the
present time an optician who under-
stands his business can, by successive
experiments, discover the actual defects
of the eye and furnish a glass that will
make the eye almost perfect. The per-
in the means of assistance is due
to the experiments and inventions of
Dr. and Dr. Giraud, of Paris.
The latter scientist promulgated the
idea and the former practically put the
theory in Louis Re-
public.
Grew Two Inches at Thirty Years of Age.
That the period of growth is not
to the legal age of maturity is true.
A gentleman thirty years of age, con-
with a literary journal of this
city, two years ago was six feet two
inches in height and is now six feet
four. He is in perfect health and
a remarkably youthful appear-
York Times.
DISEASES
ii
ii
ii
ii
Botanic Blood Balm
A, ULCERS, SALT
RHEUM. ECZEMA.
Ism t SKIN ERUPTION. IS
Met being efficacious
system and restoring
hen Impaired any
almost healing properties
lustily US In guaranteeing a cure, II ,
Ir. taring up the A
the J
i cause. Its I
directions are
FREE
BLOOD BALM CO. C
Cures Fevers.
A. responsible intelligent men we
make the statement, that after ex-
ample test, believe
will bleak any of
v or Typhoid Fever within twelve
hours from first dose. Our belief is
on such testimony as we offer be-
T. C.
State S. Evangelist for
My daughter bad a slow fever for
days, and the symptoms all pointed
to a protracted case of typhoid fever.
We used the usual remedies for several
days, with but little if any benefit. We
then tried the Royal and
nothing else. The second day after its
use there was a clear remission of the
later, and on the third day she was able
to sit up. After that t-lie continued to
improve Steadily, and now is entirely re-
stored. attribute these happy re-
to the of Royal
Ga. T. C, Boykin.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
A I I L
Salve
The best salve in the world for cuts, I
sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever j
ores, chapped hands,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and
lively cures piles, or no pay required. It
is to give perfect i Ii t U
or money refunded. c per
For sale Jno. L. Woolen. I BU,
their year's supplies will
Ho What's This
AT THE
Why another new discovery by Alfred
in the way of helping the afflict-
ed. By calling on or addressing
above name barber, yon can procure a
bottle of that is invaluable
for ii. and run and causing the-
hair lo be soft and
Notice to Creditors.
The Judge of Probate of Pitt Count
having issued letters testamentary to
me, the on the 5th day of
August, 1891, on the estate of Calvin
Stokes, deceased, notice is hereby given
to all persons 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 the date of this
notice, or this notice will be plead in
bar of their recovery.
This the 5th of August,
STORES,
Ex on the estate of Calvin Stokes
Notice.
Court.
Thomas Blount. i for Divorce.
vs I
Clarissa Blount. J
To Clarissa in hereby
lied that the above entitled action,
has been commenced in the Court to ob-
a divorce.
returnable on 2nd Monday after the
1st Monday In Sept., 1881, you
n favor of the plaintiff at which time
and place you will appear, if yon think
proper, and answer or demur to the com-
plaint of the plaintiff, or will
be prayed at the January Term. 1892, of
said its asked in said complaint,
under my hand this 17th day of
August, 1891. E. A. MOVE,
Clerk Superior Court.
in all its branches.
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS
FLOUR, SUGAR
RICK, TEA,
always at Lowest Market
TOBACCO SNUFF k
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M. SCHULTZ.
N. C
brush is all to lie used after rubbing
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be
convinced, cents.
ALFRED CULLEY,
Barber,
GREENVILLE. N.
E. E.
A. L.
in the Time of Homer.
Tho horses used in Homer's time
were war horses. The warriors were
drawn in chariots. The art of riding
was known, but it is alluded to as
something unusual. Ulysses at the
time of his shipwreck a
plank, like a horseman on a big
There are reasons for believing that
the practice of riding was much later
than that of driving, and the myth of
the Centaur, where, according to
Shakespeare, is and
with the probably
originated at an early period, when the
appearance of a man on horseback was
a novel Herald.
Men with
What a vast difference there is be-
tween one beard and another There
is the long, untrammeled beard, broad
and thick, which the owner caresses as
if it were an infant Men with such
beards may, I think, as a rule, be
trusted rather more than other men.
Can you Imagine a Venetian doge or a
member of the council of ten
a beard I can not If you have seen
a man of mark fondle his long beard
during the processes of reflection, you
will be apt to wonder whether or not
his mind would lose Its equilibrium if
he were in the night to be clean.
All Tear Round
REV. J. L. WHITE,
Pastor First Baptist Church,
N. c,
Tho night after got to Blowing
my wife, was taken down
with a fever, with every indication of its
being typhoid. I called in the physician
but he did her no good, and on the third
night, st midnight. I began giving her
every two hours. Soon she
fell asleep, began perspiring, and awoke
next morning without any fever. The
did it. We started home
that day, still using and Mrs
White improved all the way, and bus
no fever since,
Fraternally, J. L, WHITE.
Durham,
These are people well known and
thoroughly reliable. Their experience
is not peculiar, tor the remedy is
tho remedy known for
Fevers.
Do not fail to use its for and
and bowel troubles, such as Cholera
dose often Cholera
to give at any
rhea, Dysentery,
Keep It always on it will
money.
Sold by your dealer.
King's Royal
Atlanta, Ga. Manufacturers.
Of Interest to
So much has been said about the use of
at the gin house that we call par-
attention to a new entitled,
About published by
of
Y. It contains full information re-
costs, patents, and should
be read by every intelligent A
postal will get it.
A large turtle was captured on a farm
near Lexington, Lafayette county,
H. N., First Illinois cavalry,
inscribed on its upper shell. The
inscription was no made by a
member of that company while
in Lexington in 1861.
A Air Indicator.
One of the many curiously devised
instruments patented during the last
few years is an apparatus for measuring
the amount of impure air which may
gather in a room within a given length
of time. This machine
from the fertile brain Professor
pert, of It is well known
that air is very poisonous to the human
system when the carbonic acid gas in
the air exceeds part in
In order to test the matter and tell
exactly when the one-thousandth part
limit has been reached, Dr. has
provided an instrument or apparatus
consisting of a vessel containing a
of soda and phenolphthalein,
which every seconds there emerges
a red drop a which is
so arranged as to travel down along a
prepared white thread a foot
and a half in length.
Behind the thread is a scale begin-
with to 0.7 per
at the bottom, and ending above
with at the top. In
pure air drop continues red down
to the bottom, but it its color by
the action of the carbonic acid gas;
sooner the more there is of that gas
Louis Republic.
The Present Owner of Hand S.
Mr. Robert Bonner, the publisher, is
the man who owns the fastest trotter.
The prize is Maud S, who used to be
the star of the late H. Vander-
private stable on Madison avenue.
Mr. Bonner secured Maud by
chase from Mr. Vanderbilt Every-
body who loves horses knows Maud
and connoisseurs have never grown
tired praising tho intelligence, the
grace, and the speed of the beautiful
mare. She is the professional beauty
of the wonderful Bonner stable. Mr.
Bonner also owns who surpassed
Maud S's time for a quarter mile.
New York Sun.
Wonders of Surgery.
Tears ago, where a false teeth
had to be inserted, the dentist put in a
great clumsy plate, partially covering
roof of the mouth. At present, if
there is a support to build on, we make
a regular bridge, and cement it in
without any plate at all. In a
week the patient forgets that he ever
lost a tooth. More than that, teeth
are even implanted. Suppose you go
to a dentist tad say you a tooth
five or six years ago, but you want a
new one implanted. He drills a hole
in your Jaw and takes a human tooth
that has been extracted maybe months
or even years previous to correct an
irregularity in somebody else's mouth.
He scrapes and cleans the other fellow's
tooth and plants it in the hole in your
Jaw, and therein it
in Philadelphia Record.
An English statistician estimates the
world's indebtedness at
Advice to
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Profuse, Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men-
you
FEMALE
REGULATOR
Is
REGULATOR CO.,
ATLANTA.
MY
E.
Dialers in
Wholesale and
Holies ml
A on
Fine Horses a specialty.
guaranteed
and Union St., Va
Notice.
On Wednesday the 23rd day of
D. MM, will sell at the
Court House door in the town of Green-
ville to the highest bidder for Cash
J. II. Dudley's Interest in one
tract of land in Pitt county containing
acres and bounded as
Situated Id Greenville hip adjoin-
the lands of S. A. Dudley and wife,
II. Home Tract and
B ROUGH TO
Printers and Binders,
N. 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.
f and being the tract of land Oil STATIONERY READY
which John Murphy now resides to FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS
sundry executions in hands for FOR MAGISTRATES AND
collection against John II. Dudley and COUNTY OFFICERS.
B.
with me in the Undertaking business we
are to serve the people in that
i pacify, All notes and accounts due
me for past services have been placed III
the hands Mr. fill
Respectfully,
JOHN
We keep on hand at all times nice
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all
kinds and can furnish anything
from the finest Retails Case down to a
Pitt county Pine Coffin. We arc
up with all conveniences and can rest
services to all who
FLANAGAN A
CURES SYPHILIS
P. P. r. ;
II u.
. pt
of
P. P. P.
. Malaria,
I that
c CURES
B KS II.
Sold
F. P. P. la ft E
P. R P.
do
TO
CURES
B W -J
J . .
p. p. p.
Proprietors,
Druggists, Block,
For sale at J. L. Drug Store
ABBOTT'S
PAIN.
Di J I
LIVERY SALE AND FEED
I have removed to the new stables on
Fifth In rear White's
Store, where I will constantly
keep on hand a line line of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run connection a DRAY-
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
your patronage, Call and be
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. O.
others and which has been levied on said
land as the property said John II.
Dudley. J. A. K. TUCKER,
August 1891. Sheriff.
By R. W. KING, D
Notice.
CAROLINA g
Pitt county.
Keen. fol.
,,
To
Ton arc hereby notified that above
entitled action has been commenced in
the court lo obtain a divorce,
returnable on the 2nd Mon-
day after the 1st Monday in September.
against you in favor of the Plain-
tiff, at Slid place you will
pear if you think proper, and answer, or
demur to the complaint of the Plaintiff,
or judgment lie prayed at the
Term, of said court, as asked
in said complaint Witness my hand
seal this August 5th, 1891.
E. A.
Clerk Superior Pitt Co.
of Land.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt county, in a certain special
proceeding therein pending wherein
Mary E. Dupree, of L.
B. Dupree, deceased, is plaintiff and t.
M. Dupree and others heirs at law of
said L. B. Dupree. late of sail county,
deceased, defendants, the undersigned
will on Monday the 21st day of
1891, at the Court House door in the
town of Greenville, sell to the highest
bidder, all of the lands mentioned the
petition, belonging to said estate, con-
about Five Hundred and Fifty-
six acres more or less, adjoining
the lands of W. R. Williams, the heirs of
J. V. Johnston, E. M. Davis, C. II.
and others. The same being
sold for assets to pay debts of tho estate.
Terms of sale Cash.
This August 28th, 1891.
MARY E. DUPREE,
of L. B. Dupree,
Latham Skinner, Attorneys for
Notice Notice
On Monday the 21st day of September,
A. D. 1891, I will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for cash, three tracts of
laud in Pitt county, containing 1871
acres and b as One
tract on the east side of Creek
adjoining the hinds of Moses Joyner,
Clemmy Allen and others, known as the
place, described in a
deed from Ann Tyson to J. L.
Ballard and recorded in Register of
Deeds office of Pitt county in Book V V,
page containing acres more or
less. One other track known as the
W bitty Nichols track, adjoining the J. L.
Ballard land, Jacob Elks land and others,
containing fifty-three acres more or less,
described in a deed from L. P. Beards-
to J. L. Ballard and
in the Register Deeds office of
Pitt county in Book L page One
other tract known as tho W. C. Moore
land, conveyed by deed from W- C.
Moore to J. L. Ballard. and recorded
the Register of Deeds office n Pitt
in Book L page adjoining the
lands of the late Josiah Hodges, J. J.
Moore Proctor and
containing fifteen acres, more or less, to
satisfy an execution in my hands for
collection against J. L. Ballard, and
which has levied on said land as
the property of said J. L. Ballard.
A. K. TUCKER, Sheriff.
Aug. 17th, 1891.
HARRIS.
-HOUSE A SIGN-
PAINTERS,
mm m
H. C.
Offer their services to those needing
any work in their line. All work en-
trusted us will be in a work-
manner.
us your orders.
PRINTERS AND BINDERS,
N. C.
Smith's Shaving Parlor.
JAMB A. SMITH, Prop.
Greenville. N. C.
We have the the easiest
Chair ever used in the art. dean towels,
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed
In every instance. Call and be con-
Ladies wailed on at their
Cleaning clothes specialty.
PATENTS
and all business In the U.
Patent office or in t he Courts attended to
for Moderate
We arc opposite the V. S. Patent Of-
engaged In Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents in less time than those
more remote from Washington;
the model or drawing is sent we
advise a to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of Money Order Did., and to
officials of Patent Office. For
advise terms and reference to
actual Clients in your own State, or
address, C. A. Snow A Co.,
Washington, D. C.
GRAND EMPORIUM
Catting Dressing Hair
HAIR BALSAM
Tills ST
So It.
Cans dimes
ST
academy.
tor ObIt. of V
Now Ready
To show the finest of lot of
Horses
Mules,
ever brought to
yon want a good Horse
Draft Horse or a good Work
Male don't fail to see me.
I can yon at
reasonable prices.
My Feed
bare recently been enlarged and
cost I have ample room to
all left in my charge
Best attention given.
Greenville. N. C.
COCOA.
a thorough of the
natural laws which govern the opera-
of digestion and nutrition, and by
a careful application of the line
well-selected Cocoa, Mi.
provided out breakfast table a
flavored beverage which may save
us many heavy hills. It is by
judicious use of such articles of diet
a constitution may be gradually
built up until strong enough to resist
every tendency to disease. Hundreds of
subtle maladies Moating around us
lo attack wherever there is a weak
point. We may escape many a fatal
sh aft by keeping well fortified
with pure blood and a properly nourish-
ed Service Gazelle.
Made simply with boiling or milk.
Sold only in half-pound tins, by Grocer-
JAMES CO.,
London England.
WILMINGTON WE R. B
and Schedule
TRAINS
No No No
Sept. 1st, daily Fast Mail, dally
dally ex Sun.
Weldon 12,80 pm pm
Ar am
Tarboro am
Ar Wilson p m pm am
Wilson
Ar Sell ma
Ar
Goldsboro am
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
TRAINS GOING NORTH
No No No
daily daily daily
Sun.
Wilmington
Magnolia
Warsaw
Ar Goldsboro
Ar Wilson IS
Wilson am pm pm
Ai
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Halifax 3.53 P. M., arrives Scot
land Neck at 5.00 P. M., Greenville 6.50
P, M., Kinston 7-55 p. m. Returning,
leaves Kinston a. m., Greenville
8.10 a. in. Arriving Halifax a. m.
Weldon 11.25 a. m. dally except
Local freight leaves Weldon
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, at
7.00 a. m., arriving; Neck 10.03
a. m., Greenville 2.10 a. in., Kinston
4.25 p. m. Returning leaves Kinston
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays at
10.00 a. m. arriving Greenville 12.00
noon, Scotland Neck p. m., Weldon
6.20 a. m.
Train leaves Tarboro. N C, via
Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun-
day, P M, Sunday P M, arrive
Williamston, N C, P M, P M.
Plymouth 7.60 p. m., 5.20 m-
Returning leaves Plymouth daily
Sunday 8.20 a. m., Sunday 9.00 a,
Williamston, N C, 7.40 a m, am.
arrive Tarboro. N C, A M
Train on Midland N C Bran oh leave
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M,
N C, A M. Re-
turning leaves I C AM,
arrive Goldsboro. N C. A M.
Train
at P arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville
M, arrives Rocky Mount
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Warsaw
for Clinton except at
and A M Returning Clip
ton at A M, and P. M. connect
and
Southbound train or. W Fayette
rule Branch Is No. M. Northbound is
So. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only a
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train o. makes close connection a
Weldon for all North dally. Al
-all via Richmond, and dally except gun
lay via Line.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
J. B. KENLY, Transportation
r. M.
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Opera House, at which place
I have recently located, and where I have
everything in my line
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
with all the improved appliances;
and comfortable chairs.
Razors sharpened at reasonable figures
Sir-Orders for work outside of shop
promptly executed. Very respectfully,
EDMONDS
ALLEY
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW
PHOTOGRAPHERS.
Views of Animal.
Family Gatherings, taken at
Short Notice, Copying from small
to life size, in Inks, Crayon or
Colors.
Head quarters for fine Photographs.
Call and fee us.
R Manager.
N. C.
Pitt Co N
C C COBS,
T. H. GILLIAM
Co.
Bros., Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
COMMISSION
NORFOLK, VA.
of cotton
We have Lad many years e
at the business
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to on
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
IT FATS TO MM
Portraits, and of Osaka, hotel., factor-
machinery, made to order from
Agency,
New York
KNIGHT'S
Blood Cure,
A household remedy
In use more than A
cure for Dyspepsia, Scrofula, Nervous
Prostration,
the Blood, Stomach r
diseases of
I. v-r.
Clear
A botanical com pound, put up In parka
sent by mail at one-third
medicine. Large package, sufficient for
quarts, 1.00; sufficient
or pints. sample
A reliable Agent wanted in this
MIGHT CO.,
MUNICIPAL
INDUSTRIAL STOCKS
CORPORATION BONDS
APPROVED BANK STOCKS
CAREFULLY
TRIED, SAFE,
AV
ALSO
IN
FOR FULL PARTICULARS AND
WRIT
Mo DONALD
a h at.
Task,
AGAIN HERE.
-I hare opened a
Greenville and Invite my old fr i
former to give me a
supply in the
, shave, a hair
shampoo, or anything else B .
I line. d.
HUBERT


Title
Eastern reflector, 16 September 1891
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 16, 1891
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17513
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional questions or comments.


*
*
*
Comment Policy