Eastern reflector, 7 October 1891






Notice.
In adopting the In
torn for year Tub will
be continued to no one for a longer lime
than it is paid for. If you find stamped
Just lifter your name on the margin
the paper the
Your subscription expires two weeks
this
it is to give notice that unless re-
newed in that lime
will cease going lo yon at the expiration
of the two weeks.
WAITED -A LITTLE
Where have little girls.
With natural and natural curls.
Who love their dollies and like their toys
And talk of something beside the boys
Liitle old women in plenty I find.
Mature In manners and old in mind.
Little old Arts who talk of their
Aid vie with other in
clothes.
Little old belles, who, nine and ten.
Art sack of pleasure and tired of men.
Weary of travels, of hall-, of fun
And find no new things under the sun.
Once in the beautiful long ago,
Some dear little children l used to know.
Girls who merry as lambs at play.
And laughed and rollicked the livelong
day.
They thought not at all of the of
their clothes,
They never Imagined that boys were
and
were they ;
Splendid fellows to help them play.
ere have they gone to If see
i re of any whore, send her to inc.
would give a medal of parent gold
To one of dear little girls oil.
With M innocent heart and an open
smile.
Who not the meaning of
or
Baton MM
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS.
Typhoid is raging in Mr-
W. Va.
Forest fires doing great
damage in Wisconsin, Illinois and
Michigan.
The over Mark
millions in the Salem Court
merrily on.
General has
ed his rain making apparatus to
San Antonia.
wheat crop is nearly
double larger
than in 1890.
Active work is done by
the fleet in waters in
driving out the seal poachers.
in the New Hampshire
river is so low that many of the
can rim only or. half time.
Secretary Boat it been
found by experts that women
make better meat inspectors than
men.
The distress the Russian
peasants is said to he increasing.
and they set fires for the
pose of plunder.
A Buffalo man secured in Ari-
the body of a petrified
woman and is now exhibiting it to
of curiosities.
It is that Dick-
who is still at the home of
Dr. Seward, near Goshen, N. Y.,
will deliver a series of lectures tins
winter.
.
PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 1891.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, Advance.
NEW YORK LETTER.
bate in Fruit in
Out
New York, Sept.
discovery last week of tons of pois-
grapes has created a panic in
the fruit trade as the public arc now
afraid th cat grapes whether poison-
ed or not. The consequence is that
the price come down to about
one or two. cents a pound. The con-
grapes were poisoned by be-
sprayed, while growing with a
solution of sulphate of copper, for the
purpose of destroying the
The growers claim that the solution
is not poisonous, as it has been used
in France for years and was rec
in this country by the
Agriculture. The
chemist the Board of Health, how-
ever, arc of the opinion that the so-
as applied to some of the
is injurious to health, and
dangerous to lite. A large quantity
therefore been seized and destroy
ed by the authorities, though no case
of sickness from eating the
has yet been reported. It is
possible that the solution is really
dangerous when properly applied,
but perhaps it has been used by
sonic in manner.
is
The old monitor
now in dock at the Brooklyn Navy
Yard is to have two big guns placed
in her turret. She then be turn-
ed loose to protect New York Harbor.
She has boon in the Navy Yard since
making an effort lo lie modern-
When in action she can be
sunk so that her deck is almost flush
sea. Thin, with a inch
iron and steel tumor, makes her
practically invulnerable. Her main
battery is composed of two large
inch guns that can throw pound
shot thirteen miles, with an effective
fighting range of seven or eight miles.
Besides this she will carry six small-
cannon and two Galling guns,
making her a formidable fighter.
She is to he stationed here will
be plated in commission Oct.
A new bank is about to be
in this city which will be
known, as distinctly a millionaires
bank. It will be located at the Plaza
hotel, street Fifth avenue,
and will be called the Plaza Bank.
Very hanks are situate I so
as this bet the bulk
financial business is in the extreme
lower part of the city. The idea of
establishing the Plaza Bank uptown
is almost solely for the convenience
the wealthy residents of that
neighborhood who will, no doubt,
furnish it with plenty or business. No
money is being spared to fit up the
new bank's quavers in a manner
worthy of its The combined
wealth of the men backing it is prob-
ably among them be-
William Rockefeller, C. P. Hun-
ting ton and John J.
Our regular Washington Letter
to the was crowded
out last week, but we go back now
to give the paragraph
it
Senator Ransom, of North Car-
as handsome as
ever, dropped into Washington
this week, and as he was just from
home he was eagerly questioned
about the reported rise of a third
party in his State. is
the Senator said, in
my there will not be a
third party in North Carolina.
The great body of the farmer's
Alliance are true, consistent and
patriotic Democrats, who will
stand by their party.
are a few demagogues in
the Alliance who would persuade
the others to embrace a third
party, or, failure in that, will try
to get control of the Democratic
party for their own purposes, but
be this as it may the
party of North Carolina is solid
and will This
not tally with the reports of the
speeches made by Col. Polk of
the National farmer's Alliance,
but that is so much the worse for
. . i
of S. Dray ton Street,
Savannah, Ga. Dec- 1890.
Messrs. Bros. Savannah,
Ht would like to add my
to the almost miraculous
of P. P. P. in the case of Mary
a woman living on ; she
had a constant cough, sore throat,
etc., and was emaciated to a degree
she was unable to get out bed
aided, being given up by physicians
she had taken the ruinous so called Blood
Medicines without the least effect, until
being put under the P. P. P., she
to improve and is now in
as good health as ever in her life. You
can refer to me at any time as to the
of P, P. P. in the foregoing.
Yours truly,
SAMUEL CHERRY.
tale by all druggists.
Ts Eastern gets
there every time, and all it costs is
One Dollar a Year.
The alphabet.
A is the ad, which is sure to be
read,
B is the buyer win by it is
C is the customer flying around,
B is the debtor who never is
K is the editor proud of his sheet.
F is the fakir who tries him
G is the goal where the fakir
should go.
H is the house which for ads, is
not slow,
I is the income good
being,
J is the journal which knows a
good,
K is the key by which fortunes
are made;
L stands for ladies, the makers of
trade.
M is the man who keeps sounding
his name,
N is the which lifts him
to fame;
O is the order for columns of
apace,
P is the printer the best
t is quad that keeps make up
a blank,
R is for whom publishers
thank;
S is the system of which he's the
head,
T is the trader not silent or dead,
U is the user of and ad,
V is the who wishes he
bad;
W it the writer
tell,
X says goods I
can
V is the yawning abyss that must
floor -him,
A Z is the zany he's called ad
SYLVAN SOLITUDE.
Imagine the writer gazing on the
evanescent beauties of a sunset scene
on the rich grassy glade of a forest
where a hundred broad headed,
short wide branched oaks,
which have perhaps witnessed the
stately march of soldiery,
flinging their gnarled arms over a
green, mossy, carpet,
such as the hand of man can never
weave. In some place they are
with beech, holly, maple
and other woods of various
lions so closely as to totally intercept
the level beams of the sinking sun,
in others they recede each
forming those long sweeping vistas
in the intricacy of which the eye de-
lights to lose itself while
lion considers them as the paths to
yet wilder scenes of Sylvan Solitude.
Here the red rays shoots a broken
discolored light that partially
upon the shattered boughs
and mossy trunks of the trees, and
here they illuminate in
patches the portions pf grassy earth
to which made its way, Just
beyond is a deep shady valley, and
over cool mossy bosom a
brooklet sings. This is the
burden of the song.
by lawns and gravy
I slide by hazel covers;
move the sweet
That groan for happy lovers.
I slip, I slide, I gleam, I glance.
Among my skimming mallows,;
I make the netted sunbeam dance
Against my sandy shallows,
And draw them all along, and flow
To join the brimming river,
For men may come and men may go
But I go on forever.
The brooks over
pebbly bottoms, the wild sings
to his chosen mate, the nodding
daisies lift their heads, and reveal
their golden hearts in gratitude to
the in their short lived ex-
speak of nature and nature's
God. The giant oak, the king
the forest, who has in his mighty
strength the storms of ages stood,
what does he tell us Docs he tell
us that beneath his shades the red
chief has wooed the maiden
of the or that lie heard
the whispered vows of the pale faced
to whom he most dear
on earth, and lender spoken
the cold of twinkling
stars, or the silvery sheen a mid-
night moon, or would he say, I, too.
have seen the brave, heroic soldier
of the South yield up their lives in
of this our glorious country,
crimsoning with their hearts blood
nature's flower carpet. Ii
seems to the writer that unspoken
language of these Kings as
they stand with giant arms stretched
in mute defiance against the cold
gray sky would be, on ft
wearers of gray, I, will the
silent midnight watches keep over
thy God
shall wake you op tie resurrection
O, nature nature thy
charms flow on like the free current
of a melodious ream, whose
arc with the sunbeams, and
the shadows, the leafy boughs, the
songs of the forest birds, the dew
upon the flowery banks, and all
things sweet and genial, whose in-
is around us our joys and
sorrows, whose essence is the wealth
that lies boarded in thy treasury.
Wilson.
STATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There at Battered
From our
At the stockholders meeting at
Morehead City Mr. W. S.
was re-elected President of the A. A
N. C. R.
There are now two hundred and
thirty-one students at University
of North Carolina and fifty-three of
that number arc reading law.
Salisbury One of the cu
in county last week
were triplets, two boys and a girl, at
tho household of Newton
The combined outfit weighs pounds
Wilmington The steamer
Passport brought two large Palmetto
trees op to the city yesterday for the
Raleigh Exposition. They came
from Head at the mouth of Cape
Fear river, and are very handsome
specimens.
Free The contract
has been given for the brick to be
used in building Disciple church.
We told that the old building
will be moved and work upon
the new building within three weeks.
It will be handsome church.
The oldest man in Grove
section, county, is Simeon
alley. is ninety, and has a
pocket knife which belonged lo his
wile's mother, he having been
married three limes. The knife is
doubtless tears old
Concord
Goldsboro A horrible
accident occurred Friday in Stony
township. That at
o'clock Mr, Willoughby Sauls
while going into his barn wherein a
large quantity seed was
stored, discovered his five-year-old
daughter with her head and
portion of her body in a two foot
hole in the cotton dead. It seems
that the girl imitated her brother
William, aged years, in digging
the hole and while the went
to the house she deepened the
and stuck her head in it, but owing
to the heavy pressure of the cotton
from all sides was to draw
her head out and thus smothered lo
death.
Children are just as to suffer
from catarrh as grown people. The
and easiest applied remedy is Old Paul's
Catarrh Cure.
The best reform in domestic life is
without doubt the Introduction of Dr.
Baby Syrup. Now no more laud-
need he Riven lo babies.
tat the
He Wants to Teach.
All in la Journal.
Here is a letter that will prove in-
as it is written to a
of the State Board Education
by a man who wants a position to
teach in one of the public
July IS, 1891.
Dear Your card to hand.
You mad a I
they ware tow. If
you pleas Look over my papers
I pay you Just What it is
worth. I will n etc you when yon
come Down I did not miss
eight in the examination.
can remember most everything In
the examination,
I can that I mad up to the
grad. Now we you as A
man who will what is rite and
wee you will what is rite.
I now that I did not
My paper net give me
enough Sow you kin that
man you had op there to see the
and he told me to Jest work
down and that is my reason.
Sow I went to of the education
bored and he told me to yon an
yon to see what you cod do for
me. I now I divided my spelling
but I did not So I did miss
nothing in spelling I don't believe.
me your friend.
as Printing Frets.
Landmark.
objects interests
which will be on exhibition
the Southern Exposition at Raleigh
nil be the wooden frame of the press
upon which the Mecklenburg
ration of Independence was printed.
This old press has a history and is a
relic lo be preserved at the State
capital after the Exposition is over.
It is interesting not only for the use
made of it but to illustrate by con-
the great improvement made
printing press machinery since the
days when it was young. It is the
properly of E. B. Drake, Esq., of this
place, Is years old. It was
used by him in the publication
the Bulletin, and
later in the publication of the Iredell
was only saved from
destruction when raiders
burned the of the Express in
by reason or the precaution
taken by Mr. Drake, who had re-
moved it to his barn before the Fed-
came; and even then only the
frame was saved, the and
other parts, of wood, having been
burned. Instead one pull to print
one side of a newspaper on this old
two had to be last
one by running the form still forward
lo receive the impression, thus
double press work.
Ad Awkward Predicament.
A New Haven letter carrier was
his last round for the day, not long
ago, when ho unexpectedly found him-
self a prisoner. It was about past
in tho evening, and he was hasten-
from box to box, taking up their
contents.
file key was attached to a small but
strong chain, which was fastened about
his waist in such a way that it could be
taken off only by having the key end
of tho chain. It is customary for the
carriers to put the key in a breast pock-
et after opening a box, the box being
fastened again with a spring look.
the present case the key happened
not to enter the man's pocket, but slid
down the box unobserved. He
slammed the loosely closing door.
put on tho padlock, snapped It and
darted
He took two steps, and was brought
up with a that jarred both
the man ard the post The key was
Inside the box and the carrier was a
prisoner. To remove the chain from
his body out of the question. He
stood still, therefore, until a young
man happened along. To him be ex-
plained his predicament, and in half an
hour or so a duplicate key was brought
from the and be was released.
New Haven Register.
III Manner Ml Fortune.
manner is worth a hundred
thousand dollars to That
what the men of the
lately said about a boy.
wouldn't worth so much to one who
meant to n farmer or who hail no
opportunities, but to a
student with ambitious it is worth at
least a hundred
hoy was a distant relative of the
man, and had been brought up by
careful parents in a far off city. Among
other things he been taught to
friendly and to think of other persons
before himself. The boy was on a
visit in the town where the man lived.
They met on the street, and the
younger, recognizing the elder, prompt-
went to his side and spoke to him in,
his cordial, happy, yet respectful way.
Of course the man was pleased, and
knew that anybody would have been ,
pleased. The sentence above was the i
outcome of it
A little later the boy came into tho
room, just as tho man was
into overcoat The boy
to him, pulled it up at the collar
and drew down the wrinkled coat be-
neath. He would have done it for any
man, the haughtiest or the poorest.
Girt.
lifts are too often made as a
not as the expression of any genuine
of regard. An amusing exam-
of this happened on the occasion of
a fashionable city wedding. Young
Mr. Jerome had been invited
to be usher at the of Mr.
and Miss Everett As soon as tho in-
came his mother said,
you must send Miss Everett a present
at once and go to call on
pick me out something for her,
will you, Raid young Mr.
His did so that very morn-
She ordered a rare sent to
Miss Everett, and put her son's card in
it. When be called at o'clock he was
shown the gifts already sent to Miss
Everett, and directly began especially
admiring this vase, not observing his
own card with it
Again and again be returned to this
vase, praising its color and outlines,
and saying at last that he thought it
the prettiest of all her gifts, while
Everett gazed at him curiously.
When he met his mother at the din
per table be described to her this
and said he hoped she would get
Everett something as handsome as that
for his gift to her.
I sent her t hat exclaimed
Mrs. and the laughter that fol-
lowed Jerome's exclamation and
nation Was lively for hour
I I do any
tiling I can't tell her I didn't know it
Mia my mid Jerome, his lace
red with merriment
There was nothing to be done but to
let Miss Everett think one of her ushers
either n or a stupid
and Jerome has always
that she took praise as a piece of
modest, airy intended to prevent
her from expressing her gratitude.
Youth's Companion.
are millions in said a drug-
gist when asked about Dr. Bull's Cough
Syrup. Price
For some time past I've been a
recently tried Salvation Oil
which gave me almost instant relief.
sincerely recommend it as it entirely
cured me.
JAMES Md.
Small cups are now being used with
great success by for the cure of
long sightedness and kindred diseases
of the eye. The capping restores the
circulation and strengthens the
Two Heart.
As she was to be married on the 15th,
Maggie the chambermaid, strait laced
in her Illy white gown and apron, quit-
on the first of the month. A week
the back i
broke my heart, madam, but
broke the engagement I discovered
that he had a white
what is a white liver, Maggie
And how did yon make this awful dis-
discovered it by the stare In his
eyes. If yon marry a white
man you die within a year. I returned
the engagement ring to him. and the
watch marked my monogram, and
He said. will go to
with yon, Maggie, and
fiat I haven't the
Bat I shook my head and
And the tears scintillated on Mag-
pale cheeks the dew In the eon
on the petals of white
An Man Monkey.
It is certain that the at-
an enormous size, fully equaling
much debated African gorilla.
Those specimens which have readied
Europe alive are mere pygmies.
have Been skins in the possession of
natives whose original owners
must have been something terrible to
behold. One, indeed, could not have
been less than six feet high and two
across the shoulders, though the anus
ard legs bad not been preserved. The
hair on this skin was eighteen inches
long.
I also saw at a house a skull
of a evidently a very old
men, whose teeth and Jaws were no
whit Inferior in strength to those of a
tiger. I tried to buy the skull, but the
owner would not part with it, and told
a long story as to how it came In
possession. Front his want of front
teeth and his defective Malay he was
but I made out
that it had been slain by his father or
grandfather after a desperate
and, indeed, the deep cuts in the
bone must have been done by a strong
arm and a heavy
Journal.
She Broke the the Hat.
I'm not said a
citizen in conversation, my wife
is. She went out yesterday and forgot
her parasol, so she came back laid
down her pocketbook to get her para-
sol then went out and forgot her
pocketbook; so back she came the sec-
time and sat down.
you going I asked.
Tea, but if I went out the second
time without sitting down to break the
spell I would have bad
got up and went out, and I saw
that she had sat down on a brand new
silk hat that cost me eight dollars and
had mined It That was not very good
luck for Free
Study of Sea Birds.
In the vast range of subjects the
United States fish commission has to
study that of sea birds is not to be
overlooked. Purely
are secondary to utilitarian ones,
because it often happens that the only
bait obtainable by fishermen are birds,
gulls and terns. Without the gannet
could not tell where the
fish were, and the little sea goose,
always is a good sign of
the presence of York
Correctly Interpreted.
a woman up
an down, an umbrella at us an
to know what
time day it is, I
she
wants tor git
Pete.
John G. pets three dogs in
his old Newfoundland named
Williams, a Scotch terrier dubbed
Charge Dickens, and Carl, a
hound. Springfield
Readily
met such entertaining
at the seashore.
do you know he was
from my city
be teemed to be quite
tell of natural gas, was ironical at
times and at others oily; had steel blue
and a glassy stare and coal black
Bulletin.
Antiquity of the Apple.
Even the 2.000 kinds of apples now
recognized make a trifling list compared
to the apples of the past No one
knows the apple was originally
Indigenous It is common with garden
authors to write that the skill of
the the delicious apple has
been developed from the wild
It is just as likely, from American ex-
that tho wild crab of the Old
World is the degenerate escape from
cultivated trees We know that the
ancient Greeks cultivated it, but as the
root of the won is the same in all, even
the most barbaric tongues, there is lit-
doubt of being cultivated long
the dawn of modern
Remains of what must been
very fine specimens of are found
in the mud under spots where the lake
dwellers of Switzerland had their cab
ins lung before it was safe for Iranian
beings to found town. nod villages
land. That it traveled with the white
man from his early Asiatic home is
much more likely than that nature.
unaided by spread it all over the
woods arid wilds of Northern
names Philadelphia
Ledger.
An old who describes himself
as is devotedly at
to the people who once owned
him. and with whom he still lives. He
declares that ha may be free, but that
nothing can shake his belief that. In
way. be does belong to bis be-
loved mistress. -be has mar
and brought up children of her
own. she is still in his
eyes, mid one of his pet theories is that
she looks exactly us she did years ago.
when she and her little bondman were
children together.
One day be was on at a
dance, and declared proudly to one of
the younger members of the
Carrie could dance better than
that when she was
you remember bow she
t a some one asked.
yes, he said,
Carrie looked as pretty as a rose;
she
isn't she beautiful
long, honey, see bow
mar looks She looks she
always New Orleans Picayune.
NOTHING GREEN HIM.
Opt
THE REFLECTOR
A whole year for only
m ONE DOLLAR,
But in order to it you must
PAY X IN I ADVANCE.
THE REFLECTOR
-HAS A-
JOB
Department that can be surpassed no
where in this section. Our work
gives satisfaction.
us you r-
A Who
Tricks II. City Man.
He was an elderly man, -f
fifty. His whiskers grew in a little tuft
like Sam's, straight out from the
point of his linen duster was
evidently the same In had purchased to
attend the state fair several years ago.
He came out of the front end of the
depot, gazed around in a bewildered
fashion, up and down and across the
street, and a dozen rushed
for him headlong
sir Cab. sir This way
part of the city, sir; nice
Take to a good hotel, sir, tor a
quarter
One had his grip, the other the um-
and a third had him pinioned by
the ample folds of his duster. Just
then a well dressed man who had been
watching the occurrence approached,
and waving the aside said.
do you want to go,
He recovered his grip, umbrella and
breath first, glanced up at the man,
grinned a sardonic, rural, spasmodic
grin, and as be gripped his belongings
and backed of remarked
none of your darned
You'd like- know come
from, too, wouldn't An my
folks is nil an bow the crops arc I
you know somebody down in
our town tin use to play on my farm
when was a out. ain't
I right f my name Smith an don't
remember an his bay
Hick that run to An
don't I you Yea, I guess I
do. an you don't git right
quick I'll the I will
I know I been in In
live times an
don't take the papers Jest lei the crop
reports You git now,
I assure you. sir. you are mis-
taken. I don't know you and don't
want to I only
I'd like to cash a cheek, or
play a lottery, or green goods,
pretty
near time show
tell yon, sir. you are mistaken. I
am in the employ of this railway, and
just thought I might save yon some
trouble with those Now go
on, and if you do get why
don't say it wasn't your own
and the irate young man retired up
stairs to the company's offices.
The agriculturist winked the other
eye in admiration of his own shrewd-
and calling a
man, you take me to the-----
that's Partial In
vestment company Is, ain't it They
advertise to pay in six months on
a week put In, an I'm
buy some shares.
county Chicago Times.
Original
The caterer has, of all tradesmen,
with what the
call and probably always
have unless those who provide
-public all become
The original Tyson opened the first res-
in Manchester. A man In-
himself, ho checked
in others. Ho pro-
vegetables, telling those who asked
for to go market; he
would allow neither reading nor
anybody who came into bis place
of business had to eat what was pro-
without being too
about the cut or the amount fat, sad
without moving any of the chairs, and
then to clear out and make room for
other customers, or else he was asked
to go. was Tyson's, but other
tunes, other manners, and. moreover,
competition is now so keen that we
may see another Wellington before we
see another Tyson. London Tit-Hits.
Not Very Old,
The tomato gut no such early start
in the world as did its homespun cousin,
potato. To be sure, it was carried
to England In 1590, but never thought
of as being eatable then, and was
only for its ornamental appear
and possibly for medicinal
poses. Both there and on tho
it was known as the love apple,
the name winch it still bears in France
and Italy. Old John Parkinson tells
us bi his quaint way, as early as
hot countries, where they natural-
they are much eaten of the
people to cool and quench the
and thirst of their hot
Yet it is only within fifty years that
they have into general
ton Transcript.
Tho Shell.
The being dried
and scraped, forms the Indian hookah.
which is used by all classes for smoking
tobacco In Malaysia, the shell, under
tho name of is used for
games It is taken between tho
two feet and sent as far backward as
possible by a twist of foot. The
shell also furnishes drinking
goblets, which carved exteriorly and
mounted in silver are a great
Small articles, as baskets,
ladles, spoons and other such domestic
articles, are made Beads for
rosaries are also turned from the shell.
Journal.
General Is the third
Confederate officer to have s
desk In the war records office in Wash-
The other two are
Marcos Wright and General George
Field.
One of the old men In New
England Is Nathaniel Dame, of Boston,
who was three years old when the
In. enough he
re a
whom old Brook
will recollect, was
once. A won Id be Benedict wrote to
him to engage his services in tying the
matrimonial knot, and Inured that he
was saving a roll of live dollar gold
pieces with which to fee the doctor.
evening or two said the
clergyman, in telling the story,
honored with a call. He was ac-
companied by one of the prettiest little
women I ever saw. performed the
ceremony, and he insisted upon my
kissing bride. He made an officious
display n long thin roll well wrapped
in tinfoil, and as I bowed him out lie
slid it slyly into my side pocket When
I returned to my library I examined the
roll and
clothespin surrounded with ten-
penny A month or two after-
ward he wrote to me from St.
that he had charged me the
wedding fee was to received for
his bride
is a halter that
concluded the clergyman
warmly, never read a hang-
that do not wonder if ho isn't the
victim traveling to glory under an
New York World.
Electric Bitters.
This remedy is becoming so well
known and so popular as to need no
mention. All who have used
Hitters sing the same song of praise.
A purer medicine docs not exist and It
Is guaranteed to do all that is claimed.
Electric Kilters will cure all diseases of
the Liver and Kidneys, will remove
Salt an other
by impure
Malaria from system and
as well a- cure all Malarial fevers.
For cure of Headache, Consumption
and .-lion try Bitters
Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money
Price -Ml its. per
I, Woolens I Mug Store.
Are
It been stated that the
deadly enemy, the starfish, has
most successfully subdued in the Lona
beds by putting down within Its
reach an instrument very much like
long handled house mop. As soon at
touched by it the starfish invariably
grasps the strands, and can be
and destroyed by the thousand,
for it will not let go until it has
held out of water long enough to
cure the impossibility of its return.
Joel in Magazine.
When iron or steel is in con-
a ship the metal causes serious
derangement of the compasses
board. Let iron or steel be united
with u little manganese its mag-
influence will be reduced to
most nothing, although metal has
gained strength rather than lost it
A LI tie Girl's Experience In a
Mr. and Mrs. are keep-
of the Gov. Sand
Reach, Mich, arc blessed with a
four years April
she wits taken down with fol-
t lowed with a turn-
into a at home
at I ill vain, she
rapidly, she was a mere
of lieu she tried
Dr. New and after the
use of two and a half hollies, was com-
cured. The, say r. King's
New is worth in
gold, yet you Bet h trial bottle free
at John I. store.
Few people in Brooklyn aware
that there is mi excellent club in opera-
the navy yard. It is called the
and only officers of the
army and navy are eligible for member-
ship The clubhouse is situated near
the York street gate, is an unpretentious
brick building, yellow, like all
the rest of the at the navy yard,
and not much for looks on the outside.
The Interior, however, is exceedingly
comfortable homelike. There Is a
restaurant attached to the club, and an
excellent dinner is served there to
officers at fifty cents a head. The other
meals are a la carte.
A number of naval men have
apartments In building, and a
folly time they have of it there.
late Lieutenant Paul, who was William
Waldorf Astor's lived at
club while he was stationed at
navy yard, and made himself very pop-
there. Brooklyn Eagle.
In The American Practitioner
News Dr K T. Wheeler states
while In a nesting of wild pigeons he
found many sick with a
Bore throat. lie dissected
of them with his pocketknife, which
he was obliged to throw away on
count of its offensive odor. There,
millions of in the nesting, and
they were hunted and eaten by the
among whom diphtheria
broke out. fatal to many of the
Several years previously there
was a similar nesting of pi on near
and th el had
tart.
R. I,.
N.
Hen Hare Traveled.
In the matter of mere distance
the records of the world's famous
travelers do not make much of n show
those of some railroad men. An
old railroad man named Layton, now a
sleeping ear superintendent at Indian-
has kept a record of his
since 1863. and the total is
miles Conductor S. G. Boone,
late of Reading, has covered
miles, and another Reading con-
has ridden something over
these figures would
probably be far surpassed by the records
of some of the old captains of the ocean
Now York Sun.
Deep Sea Creature.
There most be myriads of living
In depths of the tea whose form
and characteristics we can never even
guess at, for, should specimens be cue-
hooked, would
into pieces before they be
brought to the surface, being relieved
of the extraordinary pressure under
which they York Recorder.
J.
K. V,
of
in Skinner upper deer
opposite Photograph Gallery.
TYSON,
AT
N. C.
attention to
II. LONG,
WM.
N. c.
Prompt and careful attention to
Collection solicited.
s. .
U. JAM KS,
GREENVILLE, X.
Practice in all the courts.
J.
BLOW,
W,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
In all the Courts.
J.
B.
N.





THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
B. J. Editor d
at the at
Mail Matter.
OCTOBER
Publisher's Announcement.
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF
The Reflector is per
Advertising Rates.-One
year, ; one-hall column one year.
; column one year,
Transient inch
week, SI ; two weeks. one
mouth Two inches one week, 1.50,
two weeks, month,
Advertisements inserted In Local
Column as reading items, cents per
line each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad.
and Sides.
Summons to Non-Residents, will
be charged for at legal
BE PAID FOR IN The
has suffered MM loss
much because of having no
rifle the payment Of this class
of advertisement, in to avoid
future trouble payment in advance
will be demanded.
Contracts for any space not
above, for any length of can be
made by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Copy tor Advertisements and
all changes of should lie
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to receive prompt in-
the day following.
The having a large
will be found a medium
through which to reach the public.
The Wilmington Star entered
upon its year Blight,
progressive, able it-liable, it
goes without contradiction that it
is the best daily
industrial capacity. Now it can j
make a display that not only in-
bat and amazes ;
the sections which were j
thought to the monopoly of
the elements that are the basis of
business wealth and prosperity.
The one talent still remains, but a
score of other talents, long hid in
a napkin, to supply a scriptural
parable, have been discovered
and pressed into active service.
The boom and tho boomer, with
their exaggerated promises and
overdrawn pictures, have of late
hindered progress to some extent
in certain of the Southern States,
but they have not been able to do
it permanent harm or to lessen
the greatness and certainty of the
wonderful The truth is
that, remarkable as Southern de
been in the last
few years, the South is as yet
simply on the threshold of its
career. Striking as is the con-
between what it is now in-
and what it was before
the war, it is as nothing to
which will be revealed by the
future. Its possibilities,
seem almost limitless, its promise
beyond the power of
With a vast domain that
embraces every variety of soil
and climate, and which is
capable of producing nearly
every plant and fruit known either
to temperate or tropical latitudes ;
with splendid natural waterways
in interior sections and seaports
that compare favorably with any
in the country, and with immense
forests of timber of every kind, it
has in addition a dowry of mineral
wealth that in variety, quality and
quantity is unequaled, and is
unsurpassed, anywhere in
the civilized world. In foot, the
South of to day seems to present
forgotten las position us to
openly take sides in civil war i
recently ended and it I
is believed by who are
with affairs that it will
fully shown an impartial
investigation Minister
purposely exceeded his legal
authority, with the intention
goading the authorities into
taking mum step that could he con-
by the United States as an
rift l, and it is further believed
that in this Minister has been
acting in accordance with the wish-
es and instructions of the present
administration. This is not a pleas-
ant thing for a patriotic American
to have to say, but appearances
indicate its
Senator Daniels, of Virginia, v In.
has been making speeches differ-,
sections of that State was in
Washington this week. He says
there is no opposition so far as he
to bis return to the Senate.
His present term does not expire
until Match 1893, but his
will be named by the legislature
ch will be elected this fall.
It will not be the fault of the
the political
known as
do not make the departments
I an out well in
lot use in the important
States this fall, and lest there might
be some on the
part the poor as to how
the administration views the
associations to compel them
to come down with their cash,
just a grade below cabinet of
have been put in charge
various State associations.
Sixth Auditor is the grand
mogul of the Ohio association; he
It deserves to live to celebrate its
centennial, and on through the El Dorado of roman-
long as the democratic party
ex-
tic fiction, and if it is permitted to
work out its own without
interference, the star of industrial
empire inevitably change its
course to Southern skies. Com-
interests in other sections
already perceive this, and with
singular blindness and folly have
sought by political devices to re-
turd results which they ought to
see will ultimately redound to
their advantage and to that of tho
know what are and i whole less than to the
will make the daily Herald a sue- prosperity of the South. Happily
The of Salisbury is now
publishing a daily
beginning with the first of
last week. It is a live column
sheet, exceedingly neat in
and contains as much news
as many of the large papers. J.
R. Whichard and T. B.
are editors, They have both had
enough newspaper experience to
these efforts have so far been
. -k .- ed by the manliness and
A handsome invitation re- J , . -i
, , , , , sense of the American people
by the last week , .,
, ., . . the South is now able in the
announced that the trustees ,
foil-
and
Ex-
faculty of the of North
Carolina request its presence at
the inauguration of George
Winston as President of the
institution, event occurs
on the 14th inst. It will be an
important event in the history of
the University and State. The
honors could not fall upon a man
more eminently worthy to wear
them President Winston.
Governor of New
York, announces that he will do
what he can to latent Demo-
in that State. He has
not come out as independent
candidate. In fact it is said that
he has refused to allow Ms name to
be used the Alliance as its can- to
dictate. This opposition a man
has bi-ea Lieut. Governor
mob a sterling Democrat as
B. Hill looks rasher ugly.
We Will doubtless soon find
among the
THE SOUTHERN INTER STATE
EXPOSITION.
Baltimore Sun
The Southern Exposition, which
formally opened at Raleigh,
N. C, tomorrow, is a notable
event in history of that sec-
and will attract general at-
as much for the moral and
lesson that it teaches as
for the industrial progress that it
illustrates. thirty years ago
the ten Southern States which are
now represented in exhibiting the
of peace at Raleigh were
united in the effort to vindicate by
their title to political
They had at that time,
or supposed they had, but one
commercial resource.
Cotton wan believed to be king,
aWl it was hoped
that it would prove a potent factor
in a speedy and
termination of hostilities.
This hope was not realized, and in
view of the varied and wonderful
resources that have since been
brought to light and developed by
the conditions that followed the
War, what seemed at the time to
people the calamity of defeat
must be regarded as the crowning
its history. To
properly the difference be-
-the South of that period
and the South of tho present, it is
only necessary to contrast the
showing it would have made thirty
ago had it cared to make an
exhibit of its products, with that
which it is making to-day. Cot-
ton, tobacco and fine stock would
theft constituted its chief
exhibits, and had not the travail
of a great revolution come upon it,
would have still continued to rep-
its highest commercial and
position at to show well it
has merited the confidence of other
sections, and to make an
reply to the schemers
who have been seeking to arrest
her progress appeals to
cal prejudice and by such
as the Force bill. Tho logic
of the argument that she makes at
Raleigh is irrefutable. To words
she opposes achievements, to
charges and idle assertions,
lute and splendid results. Is she
benighted or behind tho age
The products of her mills and
of her mines and furnaces
are a sufficient reply, a reply that
makes the manufacturer and the
monopolist of other sections feel,
exceedingly
comfortable. Is the colored race
oppressed and terrorized The
colored race answers for itself in
the exhibits which it makes at its
Southern Exposition and in the
property and wealth which it is
accumulating in all parts of the
South. Tyrants and oppressors
should be made of sterner stuff
than the men who are thus help
the freedmen up to a higher
level and teaching them how to
reach the full stature of manhood.
There is not much solace or en-
in the Raleigh expo-
far disturbers of the nation-
tranquility. The evidence that
it furnishes strikes a death blow
to their malice. It proves that
the heart and soul of the South are
wholly enlisted in the pursuits of
peace, and that her population,
white and black, are working
shoulder to shoulder for the gen-
advancement. All they ask
is to be permitted to carry out
their own fortunes in peace.
WASHINGTON UTTER.
Regular
Washington, Oct.
When Mr. Harrison determined
upon doing the act, in the
hope of a favorable effect upon re-
publican prospects in the State
elections to be held fall, he
should selected a country that
was stronger than prostrate Chili,
which has just passed through six
months of devastating civil war. The
threats been made against
the temporary government
conn try by administration this
week must result in making
United States appear to the nations
of world in the role of over
grown school boy among a
lot of little boys. It will take a
great deal more re-
ports of Minister has
made himself obnoxious to the
by meddling in their local
fairs to convince sensible
prejudiced people present
government Chili, which
has enough at home,
would deliberately and intentional-
slight United States in any
way, notwithstanding its knowledge
bat Minister should have so
prides himself on being known as a
The New York
has elected Cyrus Bus
Assistant of the In-
president, on its cam-
executive committee are A.
J. Davidson, Deputy Commissioner
of Pensions . A. X. Parker, Deputy
Attorney and a
minor departmental officials, care
being taken more than one
the same department. Thus
every department is covered and no
contributor escapes.
Nepotism republicanism have
long been terms in
Washington, a sensation was
nevertheless created week
it came out that three of
the Office had made
and submitted them to
Noble charging that they had
approached by the same son
Commissioner who was
some months ago allowed to resign
his position us appointment clerk in
the Office when he should
have been put in prison tor
in selling of appoint-
and promotions his fa-
a proposition to
them promoted by ins father if they
would pay him B certain amount of
cash. Alter these affidavits had
been made and Commissioner
had been called upon for an
nation official had to
ask Secretary Noble to dismiss the
who made them on the ground
they were engaged in a con-
to injure him
Pension Office. It one
of the old law . ever criminal
think well of the
WINTERVILLE NOTES.
Miss Mary spent last
week with Miss Ellis, of Re.-
of our neighbors went to
the association last at Great
Swamp.
Bey. R. D. Cat roll left last week
to enter Baptist Seminary, at
Louisville, lo prepare himself
the Mr. Carroll is a
very Intelligent man and we
hope him much success.
Death entered circles
last and removed from us
Mrs. Lou Stocks, wife of Mr. W. H,
Stocks, after a sickness.
Mrs. Stocks was a good woman.
.-die leaves a and five small
children and one brother to mourn
their loss. We extend the
ed ones out heartfelt sympathy.
Her funeral was preached by
Fred and she was laid to
rest in the family grave yard
day evening. D.
The following cases were disposed
at the late term o
How.-11 Affray, not guilty.
Briley, selling liquor without
judgment on pay-
of coats.,
Mosely James Bobbins,
Affray, guilty as to Mosely,
on payment s,
not guilty as to
Harriet Whichard and ct
Clement, Affray, not guilty.
Nancy Lang, Jr., L. K.,
n; suspended on payment
George and Polly Ann
May, F A., not guilty.
Augustus Stokes, selling liq
without license, judgment
n payment of cost.
T. selling liquor with
judgment suspended p y
o costs.
K. S. Dixon, obstructing highway,
not guilty-
Hay wood Moore and
Moore, resisting officer, guilty,
each and the cost.
George Dudley, Murder, guilty,
appeal to Supreme Court.
A. with W.,
submits, and cost.
Haddock, slander of
woman, not guilty.
Edward secret assault,
guilty, appeal to Supreme Court.
J. J. Moore removing fence, guilty,
suspended on
K. It. disturbing religious
congregation, guilty, days in jail
and to pay
John Cox and Jerry
A. D. W, guilty, judgment
suspended on payment of cost.
Lorenzo and John A. Crisp
Savage submits, months
in jail, pros as to Crisp.
j. Joseph
Jesse Garris, Charles Smith.
George Parker, John Savage, A B
with W, guilty,
pended on payment of costs.
Richard Cox, Assault, guilty,
suspended on payment
in Dupree, Larceny, guilty six
months in jail, permission to
hire out.
Edward Boll ins and Sarah Jones,
A., guilty, months as to
Rollins, months as to Jones.
Robt. Greene, Sr. and John L.
Daniel, Affray, guilty, as to Daniel,
submits, judgment suspended
on payment of costs.
John N. Cox, selling liquor Sun
day, submits, judgment suspended
on payment of cost.
Adrian Rouse, Larceny,
months in jail with to
hire out.
Wm. B. Carr, Seduction, guilty,
judgment suspended on payment of
cost.
Frank Evans, Larceny,
months in jail.
James Brown, submits,
judgment suspended on payment of
cost.
Ben Larceny, guilty,
years in the Penitentiary.
George Davis, A H., guilty, I
and cost
Alex. Bailey, A with D W., sub-
judgment suspended on pay-
of cost.
Jesse Haddock, Haddock,
Spencer Haddock, Samuel Taylor,
Foreman Adams. Royals. J.
B. Bright. J. G. Taylor, A with
W., submits, judgment suspended on
payment of cost.
Daniel Larceny, months
in with permission to hire out.
John W. Cox, selling liquor on
Sunday, submits, judgment suspend-
ed on payment of cost.
C T. Savage, selling liquor with-
out license, three cases, submits
and cod
OF O
to the barer of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an ,
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN.
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA
and CHILDREN'S SUITERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOOR.-i, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEEN S
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
kinds, GIN and Mill Hat, Rock Limb, Paris, mid
II air. Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers prices, dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep-
ration and Hull's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure
Oil. Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a U and I guarantee satisfaction.
WILMINGTON RAILROAD.
Wilmington, X. C. September 1st, MM.
The following described undelivered freight having remained In warehouse of
this company one year or more, according to law, will be sold at public auction i n
the city of Tarboro, N. C, on the 13th day October, Sale to take place
In front of Court House, beginning at o'clock A. M.
WE COME AGAIN
To enlist attention and claim a fair share of your patronage-
We are determined that if dealings and honest
of our goods will secure you as a customer,
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into
------the Northern Markets with the-------
CASH
DESTINATION.
W. F.
A.
Greenville, N. C.
Hay 1890,
18th, 1800.
Box Glass.
Medicine.
T. II.
Traffic Manager.
II. M. EMERSON,
Freight Agent.
-Is place to ship your-
ARTILLERY SHOTS.
MONROE, Aug.
Your excellent paper been for
some time a regular visitor at this
Post, and those of us whose former
homes was your section of the
State appreciate it feel that we
could not get along without it.
As yon ask for
from other points give yon a few
happenings at this place.
The duties of a soldier
performed. It is that much
their time is occupied with the
different schools and dulls at this
season the year, yet boys e
ample time to participate the
pleasures afforded them here.
Ont of the four hundred station-
ed here, at least hundred
from North And who
is in has been heard to
say make best soldiers
come here and enlist
Battery H of the 4th
is almost entirely composed
Tar Heels. Two from Tarboro have
been recently placed on the muster
tolls, Privates W. M. Pippin and
Last week's hop was one most en-
joyed for some time, boys
it very much, especially the two
youngest, Privates F. L and
W. M. Pippin.
Fishing in Hampton Roads at
present is excellent, and many of
the soldiers participate daily in
pleasure.
It is thought there will be a
change of Battery next spring.
Some of those here will be ordered
to other Posts and make room for
those not had
offered by Artillery school.
u. a a.
Jersey Bull For Sale.
EARL OF
THREE rear old, silver gray, gentle,
thoroughly acclimated, registered in
A. J. C. C. Apply for price and
further particulars to
B. S.
Grifton, X, C.
and buy for the CASH, getting every possible advantage that is
to be offered to first-class buyers, therefore we are enabled
-------to give you at all times the-------
Benefit of Purchases Made
for Cash.
We have bought this season the stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
ever handled by us. The ten days spent in market by our buyer
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our
carried in our double stores will prove. You cannot help but be
interested if yon will call on us. We take pleasure in showing
yon what we have to sell. There can never be a business of any
magnitude upon a falsification of fact and startling statements
of untruth. It is to business interests to deal fairly by all
our customers, and by such means to met it their continued pat-
FOR-
HIGH PRICES AND PROMPT RETURNS.
We sell It for of the prices every day. believe in and
always run a sale. We have recently made large sUes of old stock
are now for new. New tobacco is selling well and oar large corps of buyers
anxious for it and are willing to pay good prices for it. So semi it right along
to the BANNER and we pledge you our word that we will sell for as much
money as anybody else can.
Messrs. Cox of will tarnish yon. free of charge, hogs-
heads in which to ship your tobacco to us. We will have tobacco assorted and tied
for those who desire us to just a cheap as we can got the work done. SEND IT
ON WE FEEL SURE THAT WE CAN PLEASE YOU.
With thanks for favors we respectfully ask a continuance of your
patronage, pledging yon our best efforts to please.
Very truly your friends,
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners Prop. Banner Warehouse.
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.
Greenville Market.
chi km pewits.
Reports corrected weekly by
YOUNG
The cotton market remains about the
same as last week. There has been a
slight advance but th general feeling
has a tendency. We however
hope there will be no decline in the near
future. We quote for spot cotton in
Middling to Si.
S. L. Middling to
L. Middling to
Futures in New York closed on 3rd
Oct. 8.38 Nov.
Dec 8.00 Jan. 8.86 Feb. 8.00
Mar. 9.12 Apr. 9.22 May 9.32
Jun. 9.41. July 9.48
Corn remains unchanged, there is lit-
demand and scarcely any coming
into market. We
White milling corn sacked,
Mixed corn, best quality.
The market for peanuts has not open-
ed yet. Our quotations are therefore
nominal. quote for fancy
OTHER it
Reports corrected weekly by
JONATHAN WHITE.
Peas to per bushel.
Black Peas,
Eggs, dozen
Chickens, each
Ducks,
Tar, large, barrel
Small, 1.50
Sweet bushel
I have just received my lovely stock of
-----consisting of-
hi him, hi U Glares,
Pictures, Easels.
Nice quality of China and Glass Ware,
Am prepared to sell as cheap as an; one.
Trimmed Hats from cent- to 810.00.
Bonnets for Opera and Carriage wear
furnished at short notice.
A trial will convince you.
MRS. FANNIE JOYNER,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
For Sale.
House and Lot, situate on corner of
Fourth and Washington Streets la town
of Greenville. House contains six rooms
with a cook room and dining room at-
Good well of water and all
out-houses-
For terms apply to
L. W.
Greenville, N. C, Sept , 1891.
J.
W.
N.
C.
COL. M.
N.
HARRELL BROS.,
COTTON FACTORS
-----AND
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
FOOT OF COMMERCE STREET,
NORFOLK, VA.
Bagging Ties constantly on hand. Liberal Cash Advances made on Con-
Norman Everett,
------COTTON AX.------
COMMISSION MERCHANTS.
NORFOLK, VA
They do strictly a Commission Business, avoiding all speculation, always
to serve the best interest of the shipper.
-SHIP YOUR-
AND OTHER PRODUCE TO--
ALEXANDER, MORGAN CO.,
COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION M
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK. VA.
Guarantee highest market prices, quick sales prompt
COBS. C C COBB,
N. C. Put Co
T. H. GILLIAM
Co. N C
S. B. HARRELL CO.,
-COTTON FACTORS AND- fl
Corn, Cotton. Peanuts, Stock, Eggs,
and Sawed Lumber will receive our
special attention. Your patronage
solicited.
SOS. AND
NORFOLK, VA.
Cotton Factors,
R. A. k Co.
COTTON FACTORS
and Dock,
NORFOLK. VA.
J. Burgess is our North and South
Carolina Representative.
Special attention given to sales of
Cotton, Grain. Peanuts and Country
Produce generally. Liberal Cash Ad-
on Consignments. Prompt Re-
turns and Highest Prices guaranteed.
B. K.
A. L.
Wholesale and Dealers In
Band.
Fine a specialty.
Satisfaction guaranteed
No, and Union St. Norfolk Va
AND-
Commission Merchants.
SOLICIT of
We have Lad many years ex
at the business and aw
prepared to handle to
the advantage of shippers.
AH business entrusted to our
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention
HARRIS.
-HOUSE AND
PAINTERS,
mm m mum
I. c.
Offer their services to those needing
work In their line. All work en-
trusted to us will be executed in a work-
woman manner.
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest best
line of General Merchandise that was ever brought
to this market Consisting of
Dry Goods Dress Goods,
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes,
Hardware, Cutlery, Tin-
ware, Crockery, Queen-
ware, Groceries, Wood
and
and Whips.
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF
FURNITURE
that has ever been brought to this county. We are headquarters
for all goods in our lines. Also we have a lot of
BAGGING AND TIES
which will be sold at lowest juices.
Come one, come all and us.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
BROWN BROS.
We thank our many friends for their patronage
last season and wish to say that we now
have another
than before.
keep first-class Goods and guarantee
prices. Come and examine the new goods.
In addition to our regular line have taken
the agency for the
New Home Sewing Mine.
And will sell at the same terms and prices. Oils,
Needles and Parts arc kept.
BROWN BROS.
1883.
J. A. ANDREWS,
-Jobber
A large lot
BAGGING AND TIES
-bought just before the rise, for sale low down
POWDER AND SHOT.
J. L, SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
OLD STAND
All placed in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
G. E. HARRIS,
-DEALER IN





EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N.
Local Sparks
Coo
Wait
Is t lie place to
Ship your Tobacco
want highest prices
October.
Shoes, Shoe, the biggest
town at J. B. Cherry
New Sewing Machine
at Bros.
Third supply of Fruit Jars at
the Old Brick Store.
Crockery and Lamps just
ed at J. B. Cherry Co's
For Umbrellas and Rubber
go to J. B. Cherry Co's
First the
Mullets at the Old Brick Store.
Hats new and stylish to
j at J- B. Cherry Co's-
Build prize houses.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
For Blankets, Harness
Whips go to J. B. Cherry Co's
Lace Flour is always uniform
quality at the Brick Store.
Get all kinds of Sewing Machine
needles and parts from Brown Bros.
For cheap and good Trunks and
Valises go to J. B Cherry Co's.
Wanted for Bees-
wax and Hides, at the Old Brick
Store.
For Buffets, Safes, Bed
and Mattresses go to J. B. Cherry
Brown Bros, have taken the
agency for the New Home
Machine.
Court Friday.
Cheapest Bedsteads, Bureaus.
Cradles and Matt at the Old
Brick Store.
We make a specialty of Dry
Goods and Shoes. Come and get
prices. Brown Bros.
you want to
buy Furniture then go to J. B.
Cherry ft Co's.
calling for
can now be at cent
per pound. J. J. Cory.
The Old Brick Store will be
ed Saturday, October 3rd, and Mon
day 12th on account of holidays.
Oh, but didn't we hustle.
L. M. shoes men and
boys hare no equal for wear and
sale by J. B. Cherry
Co.
A line
gloves for per pair, in black
and colors, at Mrs. Joy tier's.
Men's, Women's, Misses
She s in various styles
large quantities at J. B. Cherry
Co's.
D. Y. Cooper furnishes free boss-
heads to persons shipping their to-
to him. Get them from H.
F. Keel.
Cheapest line Bedsteads, Bu-
Chairs, Lounges, Ta-
and Suits at J. B. Cherry
Co's.
Those who are indebted to me
either by note or account will
the same with Brown Bros.
Jas. C. Lanier.
store will be closed
on Saturday, Oct. 3rd and Monday,
Oct. 12th, on account of holidays.
M. R. Lang.
A folding store key was banded
to the Reflector this week
at the Association Sunday. Owner
can get same by proving property
and paying for this notice.
Say where are you going to semi
that Tobacco J To Cooper's Ware-
house, That's right
Ho guarantees better prices than
any house in or out of the State.
Try Cooper's Warehouse,
Miss Rosa Forbes is at St.
school, Raleigh.
Rev. Mr. of Tarboro
preached here on Sunday night.
Mrs. Jane F. Savage, mother of
. Mrs. C. T. is visiting her
this week.
We regret to hear that Deputy.
Sheriff W. F. Evans is quite sick with
pneumonia.
Mr. Jordan Johnson, of
was . Mr. and Mrs. C T-
this week.
is visiting Mrs. R. and
the Misses Higgs.
The Washington mean man
Latham run in to give us a short
shake Saturday afternoon.
W. T. Jones and Miss Florence
Fountain, of arc visiting
Mr and Mrs. C. f.
Elder Chick of Baltimore, a Prim
Baptist Minister preached in
the Opera House on Monday night.
Mr. T. has gone North
for the second time this season. He
will tell you something in his
on his return.
Mr. Henry of Henderson,
who was on the breaks here last week
remained through New Year and
Sunday with his friend, Mr. Alex
Can't the property owners see the
demand in Greenville
At least twenty-five could be rented
out between now and January if they
could be had. The real estate
is being constantly applied to for
Tobacco buyers and others
cannot expected to locate here
unless they can get houses to live in.
Mr. t, Greenville needs a
hotel.
Col. Skinner, Greenville needs a
hotel.
Capt. White, Greenville needs a
hotel.
All please speak at
men.
once, gentle-
NEW GOLDEN BELT.
Inters tat as a Tobacco
and at Ohm tat
for we
Pitt.
Days length hours aid min-
Overcoats blankets almost in
order.
Robinson's circus is to be in Goldi-
Oct.
Cotton movement a little more
the past week.
Greenville as a tobacco market is
a pronounced success.
There seems to be a different life
about Greenville since the opening
break.
See notice sale in this issue of
Henry Sheppard. A bargain far
somebody.
Again we rise to remark that some-
thing ought to be done to Forbes-
town bridge
Early risers yesterday morning
experienced a cool change in
the atmosphere.
The weather was not favorable for
the opening break but the tobacco
was here just the same.
it lacks only a day of being with
us a week, but excuse us if we re-
mark this is October.
We yield much at our editorial
space to-day to an article from the
Baltimore San. Read it.
Home buyers were the floor at
the Tobacco Warehouse yesterday.
Money and good prices ruled.
The Tar River Association meets
with the church at Wan en ton on
Thursday the October.
Have yon noticed C. T.
advertisement Look it up, he has
gone North for the second time.
most prominent needs
new are more dwelling houses, some
tobacco prize houses and a hotel.
was another big break of
tobacco yesterday. Pitt
county tobacco and the Greenville
market.
There the merry-go-round with
its Annie hand organ has
pulled up stakes and left, Let's all
take a long breath.
The Register of Deeds issued
marriage licenses for September, of
which were for white and for
colored couples.
The advertising columns of the
Reflector always tell you which
merchants hare the nicest goods and
which ones can give you the best
bargains.
Rev. Sam Jones will commence his
meeting in Wilmington on October
day after to morrow, and we
suppose reduced rates will be made
on all railroads.
We were shown on last Thursday
a very large leaf of tobacco by Mr.
It was the editor who got sold this
time. The other night he and the
foreman were walking along when
the former, happening to glance in
the direction of the depot,
look what a red A
passer who heard the remark said it
was a balloon just sent up by Fish-
cent show, and we felt cheap-
than the price of admission.
We Bars
Just the things for the boys
girls. The Reflector Book Store has
nice school slates for cents, larger
sizes cents, a great big slate for
cents, a large tablet for cents, good
lead pencils for cent, assorted col-
crayons six in a box for cents,
hollow ball and sponge slate washers
for cents, slate pencils cents a
dozen, best ink a rub-
bands, blue and red pencils and
many other things at low down prices.
F. G. Dupree,
of Falkland. It
son, N. G, the sale of Tobacco, j measured inches and was a
He secures good prices for all sales beautiful mahogany.
and allows no
dissatisfied.
to leave his
Monday was as hot as a July day.
pays a man to raise good To-
it pays still better to get
good prices when it is sold. Send
yours to Cooper's Warehouse, Hen-
and the good prices are
guaranteed.
AH parties bringing to
the Central Warehouse in Tarboro
can obtain board at the Bryan
at one dollar per day. The
Central Tobacco Warehouse, Tar-
N. C.
At the same place, Henderson. N.
yon will find Cooper's Ware-
selling Tobacco for
and getting best prices for
that can be obtained. Your
shipments are solicited.
Cooper's Warehouse at
son, N. will furnish you hogs-
bead and grade your Tobacco
at lowest prices. So you can send
him tobacco graded or
Always mark your name upon
all packages when shipped.
Save money by selling your To-
at Alliance Warehouse Hen-
N. C, where yon will always
get highest market price and save
more than your freight in warehouse
charges. No
Highest prices, lowest charges is
oar motto.
All persons indebted to the firm
of Latham Pender arc requested
to make immediate payment as
books accounts been tarn
. over to me. W. S. Bawls.
Assignee Latham Pender
Sept. 28th, 1891.
O PLANTERS
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson,
S. C, is now ready to receive and
sell all grades of new Tobacco at
FULL market prices, and prom-
the planters Pitt and adjoin-
counties that no market or
in or oat of the State shall
ell tobacco for more net money.
him a trial.
The train comes in lute about
every other day now. This is a
great inconvenience. The schedule
time is none too soon to get your
mail and answer it the same night.
The costs only two
cents a week to subscribers. Now
don't every borrower and every non
in the county feel ashamed
l.-r not having his name on our
books
On our supplement to-day you
will find five columns of reading
matter and five columns of mighty
interesting advertisements. You
always get your
the
money's worth in
Railroad Notes.
The Reflector reporter picked up
this of news around the
the other evening. There are now
two freight on the run between
Weldon, Greenville and Kinston, one
way daily.
The Coast Line office here will sell
round trip tickets from Greenville to
Raleigh, including one admission to
the Southern Exposition, for
good to return any lime before Dec.
3rd. round trip in-
one admission to the Expo-
limited to return in seven days
will be sold for 43.20.
Book tickets for or
miles be sold respectively at
and tickets are good over
any of the following lines of the
Coast Line W. W. and
branches, A. R. X. C. Mid. N.
C, W. C. A., N. B, C. C.
S., Central, Florence, M. A.
Ho Show.
Fisher's Carnival Novelties
opened up a week's slant here on
Friday night to a large crowd.
The company is composed of capsule
and each performer is a stat-
in his line. There is an abundance
of humor and no part of the perform-
was dull. The juggling was of
a high order and repeated applause
was evidence of the con-
act by was
and above the average. The jokes
were fresh and kept things nu up-
roar. It is truly a
ting show. Mr. T. J. Larkins, as
an old maid, is and makes
the girl think of horrors
of single wretchedness every time
he appears in his specialty. Johnny
the comedian or char-coal
is a dandy. He is called back
every time he leaves the stage, and
always has something new and
laughable. make him
so funny
Last Thursday was a great day for
Greenville. It witnessed something
entirely new for our
opening of a tobacco market. In-
in it was at its highest and all
through the day throngs of people
gathered around the handsome new
warehouse. All seemed to
what it meant for Greenville, and
were bent on making the opening
break a grand success. The eve-
before the break farmers began
bringing in their tobacco and long
before the hour of sale Thursday
morning all the available space in
the large warehouse was packed full
the golden weed and scores of
loaded carts and wagons stood out-
side awaiting their turn to drive in.
Enough tobacco came in first day
to continue the breaks days.
Pitt county already being famous
for her line tobacco it was expected
a large number of buyers would be
here to get a chance at some it.
And verily they came, Danville.
Richmond, Winston, Durham, Hen-
Oxford, Wilson. Rocky
Mount and Tarboro, all being
by bidders.
Good prices were obtained and
everybody was satisfied.
The gives three cheers
for Greenville, Pitt county and the
Golden
JOHN F. President.
s. s NASH, l .
C. W.
A. L. Hoc.
Soliciting Agent.
THE CENTRAL
The following marriage licenses
were issued during the month
Avers Man-
William May and Flor-
Dunn, Henry C. Turnage and
Alice C. Jefferson, B. L. Cooper and
Fannie Newton, John Brand and
Hattie Farmer, W. II. Evan and
Eliza Dunn, T. Joyner and Sal-
lie Wall. W. H. Heath and Alice
Campbell, A. U. and Jennie
and Fan-
Davis, Isaac Evans and Martha
Stancill, James Barker and
Fleming, Isaac R. Davis and Susan
D. Boston, William Barrett and Ma-
Johnson, Daniel and
Susan Edwards,
and Delia Thigpen, Noah Cox and
Rosie King, Thomas Little and
Mandie Perkins, Henry Reese and
Mary Jane Boyd, Abraham Little
and Sophia Staton, Bizzell
C. Ewell, Edward Foreman
and Francis Williams, George Shep-
and Matilda Barrett, Michael
Phillips and Cherry Rice, Wm. B.
Can and Addie Randolph.
Our Jewish merchants closed their
stores on Friday Oct. at P. M.,
and opened Saturday at in the I
evening. On next Monday they will
close again, it being a
day atonement.
One of the Reflector job office
patrons received a letter from
more last complimenting the
neat and attractive appearance of his
letter headings. The Reflector
always does that kind of work.
The crowd at Great Swamp last
Sunday was immense. Greenville
was very much depopulated, every-
thing available in the shape of horse
flesh and a vehicle being brought
into requisition, and even then there
were many who had to count the
cross ties In order to get out to the
No civil actions were heard at the
term of court just past, the two weeks
being consumed In trials from the
criminal docket. It is not remain-
when a court here did such
effective work in clearing this
docket, nor is it remembered when a
Solicitor bad such success in prose-
offenders and to
them their deserts. In list
of coses tried there were fifty-eight
verdicts of guilty, only three of not
guilty and one mistrial. speaks
well for Woodard.
The Association-
Association met at Great
Swamp church about miles from
Greenville on Saturday and
through till Monday evening. A
large number of ministers and
members were present. The crowd
on Saturday was large and on Sun-
day has been estimated that from
three la four thousand people were
present,
On Saturday the as-
at o'clock A. M. The
introductory sermon was preached
by Elder S. Hassell, who was chosen
and S. W.
the afternoon two fine
mons by Elders Andrew Moore and
J. H. were preached
pronounced by all as able efforts.
On Sunday the day brake in all its
beauty, the genial warmth of the sun
sending gladness to all hearts.
vices commenced promptly at
o'clock. Elders Gold, of Wilson, F.
A. Chick, of Baltimore, and L.
Hardy, of Pamlico. preached eloquent
sermons to an attentive congregation.
On Monday Association met
at o'clock A. M. Sermons were
delivered by Elders Adams, Gordon
and Wooten. After transacting all
necessary business the Association
adjourned to meet Saturday be-
fore the fit Sunday in October,
with the church at Conetoe,
county.
For Bale.
P. Upright Engine, newly
newly
One II.
repaired.
One H. P. Upright
repaired.
One Saw Gin, Feeder and
One Saw Gin, Feeder and Con-
denser.
One Brook's Cotton
For farther call or address,
X. C,
Tobacco crowded in so fast it
was necessary to run double breaks
on Friday.
Little Ike Sugg sold one pound for
a birth day present it brought
j ten dollars.
The first load of tobacco for the
break was sent in
day evening by S. H Spain.
Frank Meadows, of Oxford, run
the sales the second day and kept up
his end of the racket in good order.
Mr. of the firm of Bullock
and Mitchell, was on the floor
buying extensively at the opening
break.
C. W. put up lye pounds
Friday to be sold for church; it
was bid off by Col. Sugg for
pound.
The books showed that fifty seven
different farmers sold tobacco the
first day. They were not hair
had tobacco here.
Ed Barnes, of Henderson, bought
the first pile that was sold. He
George were the largest buyers
on the floor and invested largely In
Pitt county weed.
The ladies took much interest in
breaks, numbers of them going
out every day. The second day the
auctioneer knocked off one lot of to-
to Miss King.
We made many inquiries among
the farmers during and after the
sales and all with one exception de-
themselves pleased the
prices their tobacco brought.
Andrew Joyner told the
tor that he had just been to several
Other markets and the prices
brought here showed that Greenville
was up to any of them and was
as good a market to sell on.
W. H. Jenkins, manager of the
Alliance Warehouse at Henderson,
run the sales the first day and backed
lip the auctioneer In tine style. The
second day he was a buyer. Jenkins
don't get left every time,
when it down to talking.
After all the sales of the first day
were over several parties lifted Col.
Sugg up on a tobacco hogshead and
demanded that ho give them a
speech. We did not hear this but
learned that he for Pitt
and new golden from a
to
Talk about talkers, J. Collin Neal.
of Henderson, is tho talker
we ever beard talk. He was the
at the opening and ground
up words and spit out at such
a lightning speed that it would keep
kinks in your cars to try to keep up
with him. Neal is a clever fellow,
and everybody he met froze right to
him.
After the floor had Ween gone over
the first day the put on
sale two packages of one pound each
picked from sample in its office and
a one pound package of samples
presented by Henry Sheppard,
proceeds of the three lots to be for
the benefit Auctioneer
Neal mounted a truck and put in some
of his prettiest chinning in response
to which bids came fancy figures.
The first pound knocked off at 15.30
to W. D. representative of
John Hutchinson Co's
Warehouse, Durham. The second
lot was bid off by W. H. Jenkins of
Henderson at Col. Sugg
bought the third pound at
W. D. gave back bis
pound with instructions that it be
sold again for the church with his
compliments. The warehouse can-
for is one of the oldest and
most reliable in the State.
We are furnished the following by
Mr O. L. Joyner, the book-keeper,
who wishes us to say that he will
gladly make any corrections that are
necessary. Below we give the names
of parties who are entitled to the
prizes given at the opening break of
Greenville Tobacco Warehouse
and figures,
Mr. II. J. Hester is entitled to the
stove given by D. D. Haskett and the
Richmond Stove Co., for making
highest average on three grades with
not less than ten pound in each grade
averaging over cents per pound.
The prize offered by Riverside
Nursery to the one making the high,
est average on any two grades
with not less than five pounds in
each grade belongs to H. J. Hester,
averaging c. F. M. Smith sold
pounds that was brought in on the
second for 16.50 which would have
entitled him to this prise had it been
brought in the first day.
H. J. Hester, is entitled, to the
Reflector one year for the
highest price for any tobacco, re-
for one pound. Sold in
in the name of I. A. Sugg, Jr.
S. is entitled to the Cast-
offered by A B. Ellington for
the one having the most tobacco an
floor pounds.
The plow offered by Dr. J. Mar-
goes to O. L. Briley for making
the lowest average 1.50 per hundred
it being untied.
j Gone North for the Second
Time. Wait until my re-
turn and I will surprise
you. C. T.
m. A
-GRAND OPENING BREAK-
23rd,
BRING TOBACCO
As buyers from North Carolina and Virginia
will be present.
Mr J. C. Burch, an experienced
will have charge of
is we have been an-
usually in making
oar fall we will
therefore, be able to succeed
in pleasing yon in your fall
and wearing
have a Urge and varied
stock or Dress Goods, in fact
the largest, most stylish, and
most ever in
our town. They were col
with special pains
the fashion of the
some of them
just been imported a few
days previous to their
chafe. They embrace all the
stylish and
among rough shag-
designs which arc e
productions of rash-
Also new weaves in
Bedford Cords,
Cloth finish Serges, Polka
Dot effects and if.
We have in all
the leading and en
the more
ones we might men
all the mode effects.
too important few
lire of our Dress Goods
by he wort cut-
of the tin In
are artists their profession
and they are pot by
good workmen too and not
by the and con-
labor, as is case with
some goods offered for sale
on The
comprise all the new
fashionable outs and
is mat you will
ways find newest trim-
for your and
always suitable linings
furnishings. Our lines of
Sackings, Wash
Fabrics Cotton effects
are replete with novelties.
Also our Ladies and Misses
Wraps will be sure to attract
your attention on account of
many novelties,
the ladies department
we call your attention to our
lines of Men and Boy's Cloth
mg. We make no boast
when we say that we
more fine Clothing than all
air competitors combined
we will convince you of
this it yon will hot give us
goods are cut
shapes the most
cloths. The most
tic description will scarcely
do justice to our stock
we cordially invite the public
to inspect In boy's
clothing as we are tin
leaders will sustain
reputation. Our
Shoes for ladies, misses, men,
and children are com
blocks all the new colors.
Our line is large varied
and the styles are correct, the
shapes are correct and the
prices are correct. In our
department we show
II the standard grades in
the very best designs;
Floor Oil Cloths, and Rugs
of all kinds. A complete
line of House Furnishing
Goods as
and Curtain Laces, Table
Linens, Curtain Poles
Shades.
Draperies, etc. We call
attention to our hand-
some line of For Rugs
also something new
tit Stool. We show
an elegant
Brass Cur
lit every
the most durable and
comfortable styles. We call
especial attention to fine
ladies shoes which are mar
beauty and style. We
sell none but first class makes
and are always lo
satisfaction. In Hats
gentlemen boys we
the leading shape and
rods. Our stock
Gent's Furnishing Goods is
the most complete ever shown
in town. We have nil the
new styles in Collars, Cuffs
and Shirts. and
Haberdashery are our
We have a com
assortment in every de
and are to
please you. We pay
attention to orders by
mail and give them personal
attention. We cheerfully fur-
samples on application
and customers who prefer to
buy in this way will be treat-
ed as well as if they selected
their goods in person. It
always been aim
please the public and
will he left undone that
will add to interests.
Come to see us and we
of a cordial re-
You are always
welcome. As you have known
us the past, so yon will
find us in the
prompt, attentive and
Every piece of goods
from our is honest
Faithfully yours, M. It. Lang.
THE CASH HOUSE,
LOCATED NEAR DEPOT,
Greenville, N.
-is now prepared lo show
c.
New Stock ii Goods
THE MUD OPENING SALE
this Warehouse will take place on
Thursday October
Our Warehouse which Is about completed U a large, well build-
with a floor space feet, and plenty of light. We also have ample prize
rooms. Arrangements have been made to bring buyers here from various parts of
this other States and we guarantee to make Tobacco bring just s high prices in
Greenville as any market in the Stats.
solicit consignments from the farmers of Pitt and adjoining counties. It
will be to Interest to sell your Tobacco at the Greenville Warehouse, in ad-
to getting as high prices as can be lad anywhere, the large expenses of freight
and passage in order to reach other markets can be saved.
Remember the opening day
OCTOBER 1ST.
and bring us tobacco.
The Greenville Tobacco Warehouse Co.,
O. F. Manager.
And to make prices to suit times.
-Our embraces everything in----
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats, Shoes.
RUG.
tunas goods.
We have some beautiful patterns of
Dress Goods of heavy fabric and latest
styles. Silk Finish Henrietta in colors.
All Wool Henrietta in elegant
quality. All Wool Serge Henrietta in I BOOTH AM
beautiful shades. Black Mohair,
We have sonic beautiful designs
Carpeting Rues and Oil Cloths. We can
save you money goo-Is.
colors.
Dress Flannel in III tie, Brown Gray.
and a full line of colors double width
COTTON GOODS.
A beautiful of Standard Prints,
Cloths, Suitings, Ginghams
and Outings.
CORSETS.
are carrying a larger
than usual. The unsurpassed- a
la is still
Come before they are all gone.
We have the most complete and
cheapest line of Boots Shoes we ever
hail. In certain kinds we can save r
per cent.
HATS AND CAW.
have a splendid selection In Hats
of all grades. Some run as low of IS
cents In both boys and men.
BOY'S CLOTHING.
We only a sample lot of
Clothing which we are selling very low
JAS. L. LITTLE CO.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Filled to Top
. an Elegant Line of
Gist, Ms, M,
AT STARVATION PRICES.
K. REED A
Hand-Made Shoes tor
ladies at HiggS
HIGGS STORE.
THE BEST SHOES
globe-C. P.
for Ladies at Higgs





Bi
TO ANNOUNCE THAT THEIR
and you are most cordially invited to call and examine the same.
FULL LINE
OF REGULAR
And in addition a number of bargains, which, their buyer was able to pick up. We think it will pay you to call
early before the stock is picked over. In addition to other goods they have
PUT VERY AND STOCK OF F
-will sell
also tan Mil COTTON BAGGING AND TIES ml to all
They will save you money if you will see them before making your fall purchases.
ATTENTION
Tobaccos-Growers
Oxford is Your Market
--------WE WANT-
ii along, more the merrier. We are prepared to pay
PRICES or WIRE CURED than any other
set. Freights are cheap, a mere trifle when increased prices
tea into account. railroad facilities are good. Scud
tobacco to Oxford, N. C, you will get good prices and quick
Buyers for nil classes and from every part of the world
are located in Oxford. Yon find us
All Business and no
Hunt, Cooper Co., Meadows Warehouse,
Bullock 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,
X. Buyer,
E. G. Currin, Buyer,
O. S. Smoot, Buyer,
J. D. Bullock, Buyer,
John Webb, Buyer.
W. A. Bobbitt, Buyer,
C. F. Buyer,
B. Glenn,
m In
Is. n
It
all t-l i-t T
P. P. P
-A
CUBES I
P. P. P. i a powerful .- i
Cures
op i-at-m idly.
whose are whose to
n ST
CURES
Malaria
the
properties of P. P. Prickly Poke Boot
P.
Proprietors,
Block,
For sale at L. Wooten's Drug Store
ii
i-
v. r v.- ;
Oily . hi. a rule.
arc of tin-.-. , r four
Cape household Lire . the mo
went; i is
half Dutch mill hall French Huguenot.
with a French mum t lie children
three I'm- is a
Scotchwoman. Hip cook a Zulu, the
half Hottentot half
Dutch, the kitchen girl half Dutch and
half slave, the stable boy a and
the little girl who waits at table a Ha
This household is a type of thou
sands of others to found everywhere
throughout Africa. If a homely and
crude illustration may be allowed, the
people of South Africa resemble the in-
gradients of a pudding when they are
in the process of being stirred together
in a basin--plums, eggs, wine, dour
and water. To hope to re sort them is
vain; for good or for evil, the mixture
is made; they have so permeated each
other's substance that again to re-sort
them is impossible, however much we
may wish it. Fortnightly Review.
of imitations, buy only the genuine
fixed wire
.
SNOW STICK.
Modern Ban i
N. C.
Now Ready
To show the finest of lot of
Horses
Mules,
ever brought to Greenville.
II you want a good Drive Horse
Draft Horse or a Rood Work
Mule don't fail to see me.
I can famish you at
reasonable prices.
My Feed Stables
have recently been enlarged and
cow have ample room to
all horses left in my charge
Best attention given.
Greenville. N. C.
Trees.
Louisiana and Ohio noted
ties for petrified trees. In the former
state, several years ago, turning up
the ground an ancient forest was
earthed, and in succession two others
below the first. Scientists, judging
from the of tho trees, say that at
least years elapsed between the
growth of the first and the last forest
n parts of the island of
one of the British leeward group, there
are come remarkable examples of stone
forests. In Van Land similar
forests are known to exist Some of
these are only partly while
others are changed to chalcedony hard
enough to cut Louis Re-
public
A French amateur photographer has
mounted a camera on a kite, and gets
remarkably clear views from a height
of to feet
Tho sword carried by Ethan Allen at
the battle of Ticonderoga is now in
Jackson, Mich. It an old fashioned
blade, twenty-seven inches long, nicked
and venerable; the handle, which is of
bone, is seven inches long; the mount-
is of diver washed with gold. On
one of the bonds of the scabbard the
name is engraved. A
dog's head of silver forms the end of
the handle, and from this to the guard
Is a silver Express.
blood
DISEASES j
Bi
Manic Blood
farm SKIN ERUPTION, be-
I Ming efficacious In up i
restoring the constitution.
Impaired from any Ha I
almost supernatural properties
in a can.
directions are Miami.
FREE
BALM CO., C.
yourself
If you would
from Painful,
Suppressed
BR.
Scanty,
Irregular Men-
use
D'S
K TOR
April
i of my
.; for
. l
of
effect is J.
Book which contains
. ; .- on all female
REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA. GA.
y.-ti-i.
Cores Fevers
A men we
make the that after ex-
ample believe
will any case of
Typhoid v twelve
hours from Our belief Is
based on Batch us lie-
T. C. BOY KIN,
State S. Evangelist for
i My daughter had a slow fever for
days, the symptoms all pointed
to a protracted case typhoid fever.
We used the usual remedies several
days with but little if any benefit. We
then tiled the Royal
nothing else. The second day utter its
use there was a dear of the
fever, and on the third day she was able.
to sit up. After that she continued to
improve steadily, and now is entirely re-
stored. We attribute these happy re-
to the use of Royal
Decatur. Ga. T. C.
REV. J. I- WHITE,
First Baptist Church,
X. C,
The night after we got to
Reek my wife was taken down
with a fever, with every indication of it-s
being typhoid. I called in the physician
but he did her no good, and on the third
night, at 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
no fever since.
fraternally, J. 1- white.
Durham,
These are film people well known and
thoroughly reliable. Then experience
Is not peculiar, tor the remedy is
the best remedy known far
Fevers.
Do not fail to use its for and
and bowel troubles, such as Cholera
dose often Cholera
Infant urn to give at any
Dysentery, etc.
Keep it always on hand; it will
money.
Sold by your dealer.
Royal
Atlanta, Ga. Manufacturers.
LEGAL
Notice Land Sale
By virtue of a decree of the Superior j
Court of made at June Term
the petition ill an action,
pending I.
ii. n. e. t. n. i f I.
and others
II. and
I.
of said U
u v. ho was
decree, will
Monday the day of November, 1881.
expose to public sale before the Court
House door in the town f Greenville, to
highest bidder, all the lands
ed in said decree, one tract adjoining the
land; of II, S. Tyson and R. v.
Broad Branch, containing two
hundred and sixty acres
less, known as the home
being the tract devised to Janus II.
the last I
of the I. P. and one
tract on Broad Blanch, adjoin
the lands Ii. A. Alfred j
Joyner. one hundred j I
and acres more .-mil
the devised to U B. I
by the will of his father I. P,
Sr. and one other known as t
the
v.
more or less,
all which the said I.
died seized and of. Sold for
assets to pay debts of the estate-
One third of the purchase price lo be
paid in cash on day of sale, the balance
in one and two years, with percent in-
title to be retained until purchase
price is paid , to bear interest from
day of sale. This day of Sept-
L. C.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly the
Court Clerk of 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 having claims against the
estate mast 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., 1801.
J. L, TICKER,
of Nancy Tucker.
Square Pianos
ARE GOING
Out. of Style
fast. We shall probably ho to
allow as much for your old square piano as
can now. will soon have
or no marketable
GET YOUR UPRIGHT OR GRAND NOW
If you contemplate
will semi printed the old piano,
and from Tour we estimate value
M well if we saw it.
low for
W to S years to payment.
fill orders to approval.
keep your old piano till you the new.
Pond Piano Co.,
PIANOS
pictures of
our Pianos and telling about them
MAILED FREE. Our patent SOFT
STOP eaves wear, making the Piano
more durable, and stopping the an-
noise of
We OLD PIANOS in EX-
CHANGE, sell on EAST PAY-ii
and send Pianos ON
to be returned at our ex-
for railway freights if not per-
satisfactory, even though you live miles away. Write US.
Pond Piano Co.,
Pianos on Easy Payments,
However far away you live you can easily got a Piano by
paying a small down and the balance in still smaller
monthly payments. the Piano subject to approval, to
be returned, if unsatisfactory on trial, at our expense for railway
freights both ways. Write us and let us lain our methods to
yon. Clear, simple, easy.
Pond Piano Co,
The best salve In the world for cuts,
sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever
sores, chapped hands,
corns, and all skin eruptions, and
lively cures piles, or no pay It I
is guaranteed to give perfect satisfaction
or money refunded. Price St cents per
box. For sale by Jno. L. Wooten.
COCOA.
n thorough knowledge of the
laws which govern the opera-
of mid nutrition, MM by
a careful application of the fine
ties of well elected Cocoa Mi.
provided out breakfast table with u
which may save
us many heavy bills. It is By
the use of of diet
ilia a may lie gradually
built up until strong enough to resist;
every tendency disease. Hundreds of
subtle maladies arc around us
ready to attack wherever there is a weak
point. may escape many a fatal
shaft by keeping well fortified
with pure blood and a nourish-
ed Service Gazette.
simply with boiling water or milk.
Sold only in half-pound tins, by Grocer-
JAMES CO.,
Chemist.
London England.
ENGLISH. RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND
AND Pill
t in Cold
Take no W and
All pUt c pink At or
. lo for and in by
hi mU
BOOK WANTED for
DARKNESS
SHADOWS OF HEW TOM LIFE.
In
in if Um
New a mm
of t Pun
, to o
.-- t r. . .
WM it
Many Persons
Are broken down from or
Iron Bitters
tho aids ex-
cf bile, and
HALL'S SAFE AID LOCK CO.
of Hali's Patent
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK.
SAFES


Title
Eastern reflector, 7 October 1891
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 07, 1891
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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