Eastern reflector, 11 November 1891






THE REFLECTOR.
A whole year for only
l ONE DOLLAR.
But In order to get it
PAY t IN t ADVANCE.
THE REFLECTOR
JOB
Department that can be surpassed no
where in this section. Our work always
fives satisfaction.
vim your orders
BUT NOT SUITE.
I kissed her as we said
in the hall that
I her faint heart
There wasn't a soul in sight.
I dared dared
The little upturned face;
I dared to almost dared to fold
My love in a fond embrace.
charm of that moment returns to me
As back to that time I
I feel the clasp of that little hand
And the kiss that I
EDITORIAL PARAGRAPHS.
Severe rainstorms visited North
Dakota.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1891.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
Ir case of war in Europe, Spain
will remain neutral.
Paul
New York.
ID
Gold at Ayres closed at
per cent, premium.
The United States cruiser De
was launched at Baltimore.
Fires in the Illinois
threaten total destruction.
Chili remains defiant in her at
toward the United States.
An earthquake in
caused the loss of lives
Typhoid fever has broken out
the Island State prison.
A man named has laid
claim to acres of land in the
of Denver, Col.
The natives of Madagascar have
massacred a number of French
soldiers.
Joseph Pulitzer, editor
World, has arrived home.
The Tendons at
ville, was destroyed by tire.
tires are causing serious
damage in Nebraska, they being
control.
. The postmaster at N. C.
was shot dead in his office by
known persons, without any
known motive.
Burglars entered the express
cat of a train, Kan.,
and carried off the safe-
Rev. J. Talbot Smith has retired
from the editorship of the
The distillery at
Ga-, was
A fire on tho British ship
lying at Savannah, Ga., damaged
bales of cotton.
The congress of Paraguay ac-
the United States; govern-
invitation to the World's
Fair.
The Board of Lady Managers of
the World's Fair will probably
employ a number of
women as guides and interpreters.
A Newsboy.
A chubby, gentle looking little fellow,
about years of age, stood at a
Broadway comer selling evening pa-
a dozen other little chaps
In the same line of business were
him-
And not a little professional Jealousy
was at the bottom of It, for the boy
was gotten up a la Buffalo Bill, with
long hair eat straight across the fore-
head in front and falling over bis
shoulders behind, a broad brimmed
straw hat, trousers with gold
down the legs and attached to a rather
full waist that was once white, bat
now showed signs of several recent
rough and tumble encounters. In this
the little fellow not only at-
more attention, bat sold more
papers than bis rivals. He warily kept
his back to the Iron railing and, face
toward, his
ye here, Billy t Ye
no business here. Stick to the
don't ma eat hair,
sonny r
War
The bedeviled boy stood all this sort
of chaff like another Roderick Duo.
He never said a word until one of the
lads Jostled him. Then be let oat a
string of profane language that almost
curdled the blood of a benevolent
gentleman who bad invented a
nickel in the outfit
blank Don't pat
on TO lick de
out I've done
A CALL FOR A CONVENTION.
Relieving that the time has come
for the organization of the people of
State fur suppression
evils the undersign
oil cordially invite every of
the of temperance in North
Carolina a Slate Convention to he
held iii the city Raleigh on Thurs-
day, November 19th, 1891.
We believe is of
I on part of
temperance lo the growing
power of liquor saloon and its
lung train of evil influences; to the
work of swift destruction into which
our young people are falling by in-
in Intoxicating to the
need temperance liter-
and public addresses on the
same; lo use of the press unit
public teaching generally in en-
of total abstinence
the condemning of the social glass.
fed need of a State
which the temperance
people may express their views
Bake petition for such legislation as
may from to time be demanded
to aid in the restraining sup-
pressing the manufacture and sale of
intoxicating liquors.
In our judgment, n
Convention, on the
shall provide for a permanent
we may so combine all
the temperance forces or the as
to prevent increase of
liquor saloons and in time wholly
abolish the e.
With these th undersign-
ed invite the temperance people of
North Carolina to assemble in this
on Thursday, 19th.
for the purpose of organizing a Slate
temperance convention.
The rate of one cent
mile lo the Southern Exposition
progress here special
for Assembling, with
lodging can be secured at from
st day.
We desire to be understood as col
calling a meeting for any partisan
political purpose or in interest
any party organization.
We invite the co-opera-
all organizations
of whatever name in move-
We ask the presence, and mil
of all ministers of the gospel, teach-
and citizens generally who favor
temperance cause.
is hone that the colored
of the Stale will hold a similar
convention during
and aid co-operation
lo this great cause.
Prominent speakers from this
other are expected to address
tho convention. Lei all the lends
or the temperance reform from all
over the Slate meet in this great
gathering and help to forward the
great work. Let us have a large,
convention,
. . K. L.
Editor
J. W. Carter,
Pastor First Baptist Church.
H. II.
Editor Spirit of the Age.
Jas. U. Cordon,
PaRlor St. M. E. Church.
I.
Rector Church Good Shepherd.
L. L. Nash,
Pastor Methodist Church.
J. J. Hall;
Pastor Baptist Tabernacle.
J. S. Watkins,
Pastor First Presbyterian Church.
J L. Foster,
Pastor Christian
M. Marshall.
Rector Christ Church.
Joseph Daniels,
Editor State Chronicle.
R. L.
President Rutherford College,
E- G. Harrell,
Editor N. V. Teacher.
Lev Branson, J. T. Patrick,
W. S. V. House,
J. W. Scott, IV. R.
S. W. T. J.
P. C. W. J. W. Crowder
N. B. H, B. Battle,
B, H, J. S. Wynne,
T. W. Blake, J. A. Jones,
T. H. Briggs. J.
J. T. T. a Williams,
T. H. Hill.
THE BRAZEN PALACE.
Wonderful Rules In the Ancient City
In inn.
One of the most noteworthy build-
in of the city was the
or the Brazen pal-
ace, erected by King in
the year B. C. It stood upon 1,600
granite pillars, and vied with surround-
In height, rearing Us ninth
the walls gleamed with re-
gems. The great hall was
supported on golden pillars resting on
lions, and in the center was an ivory
HANDSOME TRIBUTE TO GRADY.
Hill, of New York Speaks at the
Unveiling of the Grady Monument.
Urn career resembled a
meteor the
US with mm brilliancy
and us feet skyward; it contained
j dormitories for priests; Its roof
I was of brass, and, according to the
Ii in I one. ht Georgia to he of her
i noble son Proud ought Smith
to be her great Proud
ought the lo be of -her
Be ii mi th lb in bronze
this let
Grade's memory be cherish-
ed by every patriot Let the. story
id his work inspire every true
Let the example of Ins
exalted purpose and generous
fort make fairer and bet-
citizens.
Us sacred task winch he
let no man try to undo. The
reconciliation his eloquence
brought about let dare to
ills nib. Let hand wither
which seeks again lo kindle the
Hies sectional Grady
quenched. A people shall
quickly insult to his
memory, mid smother with reproach
that incendiary effort.
To Georgia this occasion
has a double significance These
exercises to you are merely com
a national or
a nation's They
they
recall to you that affectionate
st which Grady had in your
and public in
sympathy your sorrows and
that your
lo the lame and prosperity
State, lie knew
and fired it lie lived, thank,
en, lo see your prosperity and hon-
or it he said,
the ravages of war had been
effaced from your proud State,
me, my ambition is a simple one.
shall be satisfied with I he labors
of my lite, if. when those labors are
o'er, my sou, looking abroad a
better and grander
Georgia that has filled the
that intended for
towns and cities are hives of in-
dug and her country-side the
fields from which their
stores are drawn when every
stream dances on its way to the
of mid every
hack the mar of passing
I the valleys smile with
abundant harvests, and her
hillsides cones tinkling of bells
as her herds and flocks go forth
from their folds--when more than
two million people proclaim her per-
Sect independence and bless her
w their love-I shall be more
say. my son,
WEE CANNIBAL LOBSTERS.
In Whence They
to Do
By Invitation of a well known
bad not ago an opportunity
lo witness a carious sight In an aqua-
in which about a hundred young
lobsters had been placed.
. lobsters are cannibals of the
very worst type, and can give points to
the most terrible in all Africa.
The lobsters had just passed oat of
the swimming stage and were seen
about in the tank. The tank
had glass sides, giving an excellent
chance for observation, and it had a
capacity of about fifty gallons of water.
throne with a golden son and a silver At one side of the interior of the aqua-
moon on either side. had been piled large stones, with
times the Brazen m why; flat resting on sand. The sand
razed by iconoclastic invaders from In-
and as often restored by
adherents of the new faith, up to the
latter part of the Twelfth century,
when the capital was removed to Pol-
From the stories of
this pile the priestly
pants could view the far extending
city, and look upon six
all within a radius of little more than
a mile, and lifting their huge white
domes as high as some of the loftiest
cathedrals in Europe.
The stood near the
palace, and according to the native
archives, rested on a platform feet
square, its glass pinnacle glittering in
the sun feet above the city, its base
surrounded by marble statues and Its
outer walls mounting elephants of ma-
with real tusks. In the north,
beyond splendid pavilions of king and
queens, loomed the great
with Its cubic feet
of masonry.
The beholder at the palace had only
to turn his gaze in the direction of the
rising sun to look upon the greatest of
the relic tombs, the
in Scribner's.
An Arid Bottle Needed.
A surgeon has called attention to the
fact that a more convenient form of
acid bottle is needed. The ordinary
bottle allows drops to run down the
outside and eat off the labels and bum
the shelves and perhaps the hands of
the user. A form of bottle is some-
times used for essences and oils which
might be adopted with advantage. In
the place of the ordinary
there is a tube with a lip. On the side
opposite the Up there is a groove lead-
back into the The liquid is
then poured out by means of this tube,
bat any drops than run down the out-
side ran back into the bottle. The
whole is then covered by a cap.
This principle is employed in the
nary bottle and in some claret
jugs.
A stopper has been brought out In
England which meets some of the ob-
the ordinary form, it is
really a glass lid with a pin of glass
passing into the neck of the bottle to
keep it from falling off. The external
appearance of the new stoppered bot-
is thus nearly the same as usual,
but the stopper is replaced by a much
smaller body with straight sides. This
form is said to be quite air tight, and
at the same time to avoid sticking.
Chicago Herald.
Stone Forests.
Stone forests are found in carious
parts of the world In many cases they
are hardened by some peculiarity of the
atmosphere, and are found standing
Just as they were when clothed with
green foliage thousands of years ago.
The Little Colorado river, in Arizona, has
long been famous as a for
finds; at one place more than 1,500
such scenes as those, can I cords of solid stone tree trunks, sec-
Stand up and father bore
a part in this work, and bis name
lives in the memory this
is not where a man is, but what
he is makes hi a heaven or bell,
whether it be in or in an-
other. Therefore the Bible deals
very little with the future condition
of bat very much with their
present That is a pithy
expression of a truth is forcing
itself on the consideration of men.
up before, u I'll do it hell and heaven begin on earth.
f don't leave me alone, now.
They let the wild Indian scoot from
Harlem too, I noticed after
that. Bat be never attempted
work that corner since then.
-New York
Character, not locality, makes or
makes human
What bearing baa this on yon.
friend, on you who yourself
I with drink
Points for Boys
A gentleman standing beside a
calm, self-possessed old on
the deck of a vessel
suppose, captain, you know
where every rock and shoal is along
this whole coast, do you
know where are was
the decided reply, and there was
wherein lay the safety of those who
their lives and properly
into bis bands.
There is a great deal of knowledge
which one is wiser and better for not
possessing. If you learn exactly
where there are not rocks or bars you
may sail safely profitably.
A good old merchant prince once
met a man who approached him in a
very confidential way on a new
scheme by which be could make a
great sum with a small outlay, lie
was never averse lo making money
in the right way so he patiently
heard him propound a theory
making an imitation of vinegar
which cost hut a trifle, but could be
sold the reel cider vinegar. The
old merchant came down upon him
like a thunderbolt he under-
stood fully the scheme, and hurried
him from bis presence with such
words of stinging rebuke and warn-
that bis ears must have rung for
a day. The grandsons of that mer-
chant carry on hit great business to-
day with honor and prosperity.
Last Wednesday was
at the Raleigh Exposition.
The parade was more than a mil. in
length, and In it were vehicles
and school children. Th ex-
said to have been very
Writable.
limbs and logs were found by the
government surveyors. Most of them
were many to feet in
and from to SC feet in height
Geologists say that the petrified trees
of the Little Colorado were once
with marl over feet in depth.
Some of the trees have been changed
to Jasper, and have assumed various
hues; others resemble and, when
broken open, the core is often
lined with crystals of most
Louis K. public.
Light Fish.
A correspondent that fishing all
along by bay. Isle of Wight,
was very poor, and that since the set-
ting up of the search light for the forts
it bad become worse. He also heard
that there used to be a very good place
for fish near the lighthouse at St.
point, bat that the light
had driven them all away, and now it
was quite useless patting out nets in a
spot where, a few years since, a decent
haul was looked on as a certainty. He
solicits opinions on this matter from
those who are more versed in sea fish
and their ways than he is himself.
Electrical Review.
Took a at Last.
It was the time of night when bored
belles yawn and linger. Hints
innumerable bad been sown on barren
ground. would stay.
Finally Hiss excused herself
for a few moments. A minute later the
cook, in regalia, entered the parlor,
and, walking op to
would you like to hare for
breakfast,
And then noticing
that Hiss had gone, want.
Hew York Herald.
kind of seeds ought I to plant,
Uncle Si, to get a good squash
coarse. What did
suppose New York Epoch.
She Was a, Bath.
In a pretty up town a newly
rived Hibernian was installed as parlor
maid. Mrs. 8------at porno asked
a gentleman whose ring at the she
bad answered. an It's out
the mistress said
8------, Is she out asked the
visitor. but SIM'S in the tab
was tin
and ready
JOSH PHILOSOPHY.
love may be a little
risky, but is so honest
help hut on it.
I think rather n nose
inches and a half
than be the man In
our for in ease i
should work hard Io shorten mi
hi some
STATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There as Gather-
ed From our Exchanges.
has a soap factory.
The coin crop in the
i section is exceedingly fine this year.
The Governor has offered a reward
of for Henry Jones, the
I who assassinated Ransom Gill, a
Mid while prominent while man, in Franklin
was about two Incites deep, covering
the bottom.
My Informant said that the first per-
of the young lobsters when
pot Into the tank were very Interest-
. They gathered around the sides
of the rocks, and with their
almost against the stone, crossed their
claws in front of them and moving
backward dragged plashes of sand
away from the stone. This was re-
again and again until a hole
had been made big enough to hold the
little lobster with space to spare.
Then the crustacean climbed over
the heap of into the excavation,
and, turning his tail to the stone, pro-
to push the particles from the
bottom of the hole to the top of the
heap by placing its two claws together
with the tips lapping so that the sand
could not slide back. In effect the
claws served as a
After the lobsters had In tills man-
built for themselves caves for de-
purposes they planted them-
selves with their backs to the stone
and kept their little black,
eyes roving outward in every direction.
When took my place to watch
nothing was stirring.
Now and then a lobster would climb
out of his retreat and explore the
mediate neighborhood.
Suddenly, finding an lob
the errant adventurer would as-
sault It. Then would ensue the biggest
kind of a rough and tumble, catch-as-
catch-can contest It was a fight to
the death.
When the struggle was between only
two lobsters the result was usually a
drawn battle, each retreating to his
hole with the loss of a claw or of one
or two antennas.
But when two or three lobsters at-
tacked one in his shallow cave the
fight was soon over. The miserable
victim was dragged oat on the arena
by the sharp pincers of the besiegers,
and in a trice be was killed. It re-
quired but a few minutes for the can-
to dismember and eat their
victim, dragging tho bits to different
parts of aquarium, as dogs would
bones.
These attacks are always made at
night. I was so fortunate as to see an-
other raid, but it was not like that de-
scribed above. One of the lobsters
that had emerged from his lair in
suit of food was himself pursued in
tarn. Caught napping away from his
castle by three or four enemies. It
over the sand toward one corner
of the aquarium. After him went the
and while the
pursued resorted to dodging tactics
that would admired by a football
rusher, the pursuers separated and
closed in around the doomed creature.
It i- by a curious instinct that
pursuit is made in the night, because it
is evidently to the advantage of the
pursuer, on the principle In war that
night attacks are more successful than
those by daylight.
Mi Us of these midnight forays were
to be found in the morning in the
of shells. The result of
among the young lobsters is
that out of a hundred about twenty-
live survive, a demonstration of the
Darwinian law of the survival of the
fittest.
In the cannibal stage of their ex-
they are about three-quarters
of an inch in length, and when the
grow to be two and a half inches
in length from the tail to the tip of the
claws they have outgrown their blood-
thirsty York Herald.
Sleeping- on a Cobra.
An old gentleman living in India said
to his wife one
dear, I nave had a very strange
dream. I dreamed I was sleeping on a
nonsense was her retort.
could that
my he responded meek
did dream It, and I only hope ii
wasn't
The next night he had the same
dream, and in morning announced
the fact, only to encounter his wife's
ridicule on the score of his weak nerves.
Nevertheless he had the same dream
once more.
Thereupon the mattress was ripped
open, and there, snugly coiled in its
middle, was a cobra. He had entered
one day through a rip in the cover
while mattress was in the gar-
den to air. Probably luxurious
beneath the had given
rise to the d Companion.
an uncomfortable ex-
the other said a young
man. tailor had sent me
down a salt of new flannels which fitted
uncommonly well, and I pot th on,
well satisfied, to go to Casino to
play tennis. While waiting for my
trap I strolled Into the dining room and
without looking sat down
I am very you a chair
few the window. A scream from the
caused me to Jump up. bat it was
too late, and I assure you I felt like us-
some very strong language when I
found that I had sat down on one of
those detestable quite covered
with flies. Of coarse the salt was
mined, and I assure you the Hiss were
in the flannel so deep
they looked like a printed
Now York Tribune.
the other ease i
never he by my looking-glass Mr. W. R. Gibson, from Charleston,
that i was a West Va. on his way to Tarter N.
Awl human happiness is C, lo take a position as clerk in
, Hotel, jumped from No.
Rocky Mount, and was kill-
ed by the
Elizabeth City
tiff; thirds the pleasure of s
down hill
sled back. I don't tin re .,.,
would fun in sliding down Alicia, IV. R. Perry,
hill miles long. I struck a log near River in
Awl us complain the abort- j Albemarle Sound on and
waste more
sunk. The water was feet deep.
It is believed that she will be raised.
Hertford A call tor a
State Temperance Convention to be
held in the city of on Thurs.
hen in fuck their grate de- 1891. has been
made, and every lend temperance
in the State is requested to be pres-
life, we
time than we
people arc fond bragging
about their ancestors, and their grate
descent, w
scent what's the matter
them.
are told honest man
the noblest work o But the
demand for the work has been so
limited i thought a large
share the lust must still
be in the author's hands.
never bet money on
man who is always idling what Ire
would did If he had been there;
have kind never
l ha re.
Success in life apt
make us forget lime when we
wasn't much, it is so with
frog on jump; he remember
when he was a oilier
I advise short sermon-, es-
on a hot Sunday. II a min-
can't in in boring
he has either got a poor
or liming in the rung plane.
A Temperance Congress.
A temperance Congress will be
held at Columbian Exposition in
Chicago the flirt week in June,
An elaborate program has been
ranged by
Temperance Society, who
have the mailer in charge. The
congress will be for deliberation only;
no resolutions will he entertain or
action token. Papers prepared
specialists in different parts of the
world on thirty-eight signed topics
will be The reading and
of these papers will be
conduct d in French and English, ill
lour sections of the congress,
Simultaneously and arranged as fol-
Scientific and medical;
educational and economic;
and miscellaneous; legislative
political. The Slate Depart-
will further the purposes
New Heine The
of East Carolina Fish,
Oyster, and Industrial
have held their meeting and
decided on time of its
Filth Exhibition. Ii will be held as
before an entire week, and will begin
Monday. and close
day
Free Saturday
afternoon about three miles from
Mr. Dub Smith and Mr.
John Brown got into a fuss, which
ended for The trouble
was started by Smith teasing Brown,
at which the latter became offended.
Smith struck Brown on head
a piece of breaking
his skull. Brown died Sunday
Smith has for parts
ti.
From Rome, under date
tuber Senator Vance writes a
prominent citizen of Charlotte, and
an intimate of his
time here la now shortening. I ex-
to he you all before very
I have loved
h me people more, or Tell
tenderly than at this
time, I shall rejoice with all my
heart when I see lace lo
The Senator and Mr.-. Vance arc
both enjoying health.
Charlotte Jane Davis
the colored woman who poisoned Mi-
Mrs. John in
on the last August, who
came so near killing them, was
crime. Judge Mears
sentenced her In live years
in In penitentiary.
Jones, while man who was
charged attempting to assault a
daughter of Dixon, in Crab
Orchard township, found guilty
and sentenced to seven years in the
Carthage Neil Goins died
his home, near here on Saturday
last, lie had typhoid fever first, and
afterwards his nose steadily
days, from the diets of which
. . ,.
he died.------On Friday afternoon
In adopting the in Advance
for this year Tun
be continued to no one for a longer time
than it is paid for. If you find stamped
just after your name on the margin
the paper the
subscription expires two Weeks
from this
it is to give you notice that unless re-
newed in that time
will cease going to you at the expiration
of the two weeks.
SHOTS FROM THE FORT.
Special of
Nov. 1891.
Lieut-Col. Frank, out
who has been away on leave
of absence for some days baa re-
turned to the and resumed
command, relieving Penning-
ton who was daring hit
On the evening of the 31st of
the the gave a
hop to of the
hall was beautifully decorated
with flags of We
beat it was quite an enjoyable affair.
The probability of war with Chill
is topic or conversation with the
boys just now. It seems that both
the officers and enlisted men are
anxious to test our new guns on the
War and avenge the
murder of our Tars Valparaiso.
Orders have been leaned for
All
will now be in overcoats. This
form may present to some that
neatness that full dress
it is much more
at this sea sun of i he year, and
our commandant always looks to
the comfort of bis com-
For the past week we have had
but visitors to witness Dress
Parade. cold weather doubt-
less seeps them away.
From Nov. 2nd to 11th we have
tire drill. In the drill yesterday
Battery as usual was first to
arrive the Are, where it was
supposed to having two streams
of playing on the building
a lien the other Battery's came up
causing the commander of
to smile with satisfaction.
The writer was very glad to re-
a from the Kev. Mr. John,
Of your several days since.
Wish we could have seen more of
him.
Dr. H., corn doc-
tor, all smiles; he has several
with corns. He is also
proficient, in the of
teeth, but not without much pain.
The geese and ducks have begun
to make their appearance. Soon
the spoil will begin Inn if. of
who like to them. Fish and
are also quite plentiful.
meeting conduct-
ed the Mr. in
new Baptist Church in
is largely attended by the
soldiers of this post. U. A.
What a
Will you heed warning t The signal
perhaps of the sure approach of that
more terrible Consumption.
Ask yourselves if you can afford the
sake of saving to run and
gathering by instructing consul- Mr. Cunt-, of it
the United Stales lo report, for the
information congress, concern
the alcoholic liquor in the
countries in which they are located.
Tue National Society has shown
commendable wisdom and foresight
in planning thus early and adequate
the presentation of the best
views on temperance reform at the
meeting place of the nations.
A Negro's Prayer.
A teacher, in one of the colored
schools st the South, was about to go
away for a season, and an old
poured out for her the following fer-
vent petitions, which we copy from a
private give you the
said the. writer, they
convey no idea of the pathos and ear-
of the afore
Ir-as a light, an her as
a angel. Rough-shod her
feet de preparation ob de gospel
of peace. Nail her ear to de gospel
pole. Gib her de eye ob de eagle
she spy out off. Wax her hand
to de gospel plow. Tie her tongue to
de line of Keep her feet in de
way and soul in de
ob Bow her head low
knees, her knees way
down in some lonesome valley where
prayer and supplication is much
wanted to be made. Hedge ditch
her, good Lord, her in
de strait way leads to
We know from ex-
was thrown off his in a run- that Shiloh's Cure will cure
away, and so fatally injured by the your cough. I never falls. This ex-
plains why more than a million bottles
were sold the past year. It relieves
croup and whooping cough at once.
Mothers, be without it. For
lame back, side or chest use Shiloh's
Porous Plaster. Sold at Wooten's
tore.
Old Nick s sister.
A story is told of a woman
who tried to wean her husband from
dram shop by employing her
brother to act the part of a ghost,
and frighten John on his way home.
ore the man. the
apparition rose before him from be-
hind a bush. am Old was
the reply. away, said
John, nothing daunted. a
shake of your hand. I am married
to a
wagon his body, that he
died that night. Mr. Carrie was a
prominent citizen, a justice of
peace and a good man.
Wilson Mr. W. II.
of City, was here
Tuesday and tells us about a double
runaway in that town. Mr. Alex.
Jackson a mule away
from Mr. gin, three
of a mile from town. It became
frightened and ran, throwing Mr.
Jackson from the cart. The mule
ran into Kim with the shaft
the cart dangling from his sides and
the sight, frightened Mr. J. H. Bark-
horse, which also joined in the
runaway. Mr. Berkley's buggy was
completely demolished, and his horse
badly injured. No one was hurt.
Wilmington Thus.
a boy sixteen years of age, residing
on Hanover, between Third and
Fourth streets, is the victim of
smoking to the extent of
having epileptic fits. The boy goes
about the streets picking up old
slumps, which he smokes incessant-
his mind is impaired to such
an extent that he frequently absents
himself from home for a week a
time, returning after dark and
crawling under the to sleep.
He has been lied at home, but breaks
loose in frenzy and seeks the
cigarette. What to do with
the hoy is a serious question.
Concord A
mornings ago Rev. Slade, pastor
the colored Methodist church, an-
to his congregation that
they had not paid his salary, and
hat he would positively not
the sacrament to them until
they did so. The morning was the
time of a regularly communion
vice, but he flatly refused lo
it to his flock, and told them
that they should not receive it at night
either unless they him up
There was a rattling among dry
bones that evening, every
who could raise a nickel saved it for
the pastor. His salary was made up
at tho night service, the sacrament
duly administered, and everything is
now moving along smoothly.
. i j
IR. L.
tails, N
J. MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
. C,
of
Office In Skinner Building, upper Beet
opposite Photograph
i. a. a. r.
TYSON,
N. C.
Prompt attention given to
U- LONG,
u. c.
Prompt careful attention to
Collection solicited.
L. C. LATHAM. MAY
T SKINNER,
A A W,
M. C.
LI JAMES,
N.
Practice in all the courts.
A BLOW,
l.
E A W,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
all the Courts.
J.
B.
A W,
Greenville, N.
The and HEW PATRON are still the Leaders in Cook Stoves. For sale by D. D. HASKETT.





EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C.
J, Editor Proprietor.
at at
C,
Mail
WEDNESDAY. NOVEMBER
THE ELECTIONS.
Elections were held on Tuesday,
Not. in twelve States. Goner-
ally, not much except local inter-
est in these years in which
there is no Presidential election.
This year however, been an
exception to this rule. Great is-
sues are agitating the people and
there has been much concern in
reference Jo the verdict of the
country upon these. In several
of the States as interest was
felt as if it had been Notably
among these were new York, Mas
Iowa and Ohio- The
battle has been fought, the results
are sufficiently in to determine the
result. In Ohio the author of the
tariff bill under which
the people are now groaning was
one of the candidates for the of-
of Governor. His opponent
was a tariff reformer and it was
natural that the friends of each
measure should feel unusual
anxiety as to the result. The
election of would be an
endorsement of high and
tariff protection, the
of Campbell would be such a
blow as to almost disintegrate the
Republican party. Under the cir-
it was to expected
that the present administration
should spare neither time nor
money to elect The
Democrats were in the fight with
a gallant and brilliant leader but
without means. There were
among them which were
never harmonized and no well in-
formed politician expected a
result from which we now
see. No man ever made a more
brilliant canvass than Governor
Campbell, and if ever man
ed success ho did, but the odds
were against him and he beat-
en by majority. The bet-
informed will not take this as
an endorsement either of the
lion dollar congress or the
tariff bill. It was carry
Ohio for the Republicans or not
enter the race at all in 1892.
In Iowa Governor Demo-
was elected by a good
over all opposing
dates. This puts Iowa the
column for the
election. Governor
made a splendid canvass,
in every county in the State and
making from two to five speeches
a day. This shows lots of hard
work, when we remember that his
State is not intersected with rail-
roads even as ours is. If a est-
man is to be in the race next
President, Iowa's Govern-
or will not fail to be one of the
prominent possibilities.
Governor Russell was re-elected
in Massachusetts by a good ma-
He is without doubt a
young man of splendid attain-
and a long way ahead of
his years in political finesse. The
campaign in this State may
be said to have been a campaign
of young men. The very best
talent in the State among this
class of citizens was enlisted in
his behalf and gives hope of soon
putting even this old common-
wealth out of the list of the doubt
States.
There has always been a
liar political significance attached
to an election in New York State.
It has almost come to be proverb-
goes New York so goes the
United In fact of all the
wonders that we know New YorK
politics are the most wonderful.
It cast its vote for Cleve
land for President when he was
its Governor, it then elected a
Democratic Governor and at the
same time cast its vote
for a Republican, and so went the
When it looks like it is
Democratic it is Republican and
vice versa. The Presidential
being just one year off made
it exceedingly important for each
party that it should have the as-
in this election,
was this true in reference to
the Democratic party since this
State has the two most prominent
men in the United States for the
next Presidency. The battle was
well fought on both sides as was
shown by the Tact that a few
nights before the election there
were over meetings held
which were addressed
by more than of the most
prominent Democrats in the
States. The fight seemed to be
pretty nearly equal in the Win-
of the campaign, but as soon
as ex-President Cleveland and
David B. Hill took a the
tables turned in favor of Flower,
Democrat, and ho was elected by
majority. Cleveland,
by this result, is put in the front
rank as the Democratic candidate
for the next President.
There were large Democratic
gains in the country districts that
swelled the majority beyond the
expectations of the most sanguine.
The thing most to be rejoiced at is
the fact that the Democrats have
a majority in the Legislature
which will give them an
to undo much of the rascally
work done by the Republicans m
re districting the State.
Virginia, Maryland, and New
Jersey are all Democratic. The
most elections were in
five York, Ohio,
Massachusetts, Maryland and
Iowa, and the Democrats carried
all of them except one. The Re-
publicans eight out of
the twelve States in which
were held November 3rd at
the last Presidential election in
1888, and now they have carried
only five of them. With these
facts it looks as if we may reason-
ably expect to see the next
dent of the United States an
flinching Democrat. If these
elections mean anything they
mean just this. But work is
necessary from now on and the
Democrats must not fail to re-
member this. The Republicans
will have all the money bags, and
offices to draw from. They will
buy where they cannot
and to counteract this the Demo
will have only just principles
and policies backed up with
organization and hard work.
It seems or
Third party has received a blow M
the recent elections, or which its
not t will recover in time to
be in the race in The people
ought to folly realize that they can-
not hope the reforms they de-
a third party. Lot us all
lay aside all ill-feelings toward each
other and work harmoniously the
Democratic party, has ever
been the faithful of the
then we may reasonably
expect that may in time realize
just legislation in favor of the mass-
es no special privileges to the
few. The demands of the Alliance
the Democratic party the
South arc in if
not in word, there is not
cannot arise a third
party among us. It would be
fur all the agitation of the
third party question were dropped
by the and
the both unite in
working for the relief of op-
people.
The President of Brazil has de-
himself Dictator. It is said
that he was forced to this step by
the condition the
by the army. The Republic doe-
not seem to be acceptable to a large
portion of the Two
sous have been suggested that
ed this change of Government. One
that the friends of the late Em-
Dom Pedro are working to
re-establish the Empire, the other
that may had
something to do with it, to break op
the growing trade between the
States and Brazil.
Now that is elected in
Ohio, it is probable that President
Harrison may feel that it is
to issue a
Should ho do so New
York will doubtless be inclined to
observe it with a vim.
The North Carolina Industrial
Journal, recently removed from
Durham to Winston, now comes
out in entire new form and is
printed. Mr. Geo. P.
Hart is President of tho publish-
company.
Some of the Ohio papers since the
election declared
Senator and Blame for
dent. The election there com-
affairs for the
to some extant.
A. J. Smith 3.72, David
vis H. C. 18.00, W B
222.18, John S. Gray
1.88, John A Meets
J. A Tucker 101.85, J. A. K.
Tucker 133.25, A. I. Blow 100.00,
G. W. Venters 4.16, H A
1.16 G M Tucker 1.55, J O Proctor
1.67 R M 12.85, Alfred
2.62, E A Andrew
Robinson 32.00, G P 14.33
B S 7.96, D U Moore 1.30
J J J A K
Woodard 4.50, M P
B B Sheppard 3.22
Staton 15.83, B H 20.00, J
B Williams 1.70. R L Davis 50.00.
J W Crowell 4.10, A J 16.44,
Lucinda Fleming 2.50, T E Keel
15.40, C Dawson 7.80, C V Newton
5.80, E A 1.50, D H James
The following order was passed
by the
The Governor of North Carolina
having notified this board that a
special term or the Superior Court
for Pitt County had been ordered
to be held for the trial of civil
canes commencing on the 14th
day of December, 1891, and
until all the business of said
Court shall be disposed of, provided
said term shall not exceed one week,
it is therefore ordered by the Board
that the Chairman cause
the same to be ac-
cording to law.
It is by the Board that
the Justices Peace for the
be notified to meet at the Court
in Greenville -on Monday,
the 7th day December 1891, at
o'clock M. for the of
ting a member of the Board of
County Commissioners to fill the
vacancy caused by the resignation
of G- M. Mooring, and that
of said meeting be made.
R. made complaint to the
Board that be stands charged
tax list of Greenville Township
or 1891 with 1750.00, under th
head of all other personal property,
when it should be only and
petitioned that be corrected
which the Board granted and order-
ed the proper correction made.
James Whichard made complaint
that lie stands on the tax list of
township 1891 with
acres of land known as the Daniel
and that he should only be
charged with acres, as the
acres is listed by Latham and Skin-
petitioned that be be relieve
ed from paying tax on said
acres. The Board granted
and ordered the correction
made.
Ordered that the Justices or tbs
Peace be notified to file a statement
all fines, penalties
collected by them the pro-
year and to exhibit their
the Board of
on the first Monday in De-
next.
Ordered that the license former-
granted to W. A. to sell
in the town of Greenville for
six months from the first day of
July 1891 be transfered to Mrs. Eliza
Stocks.
Ordered that the order made at
the October meeting
the to issue license to Shade
to retail liquor in the town
of Greenville for six months from
first of July, be and the same Is
hereby revoked.
Ordered that the petition of W.
It. Whichard others for a new
road in be
laid over until meeting.
The petition was pres-
and read before the
To the Honorable Board of Com-
missioners of the county of Pitt.
Gentlemen Whereas, J. J. Laugh-
and J. Bryan Grimes have
recently heavy losses by
incendiary fires, and other of
lawlessness have been committed
this township; and w her as it seems
impossible to apprehend the
we believe the welfare
prosperity of the community de-
that some action be taken to
ferret out the author or these re-
burnings Ibis locality, and
that some to property
should be guaranteed our citizens by
the county within whose
all such matters belong, and
whereas such crimes remaining
unpunished if a direct menace to
law and order and imperils life, we
earnestly petition urgently re-
quest that you offer reward for
the conviction-of person or per-
sons who the property of J.
J. and the
conviction of the or persons
burned the property or J.
Grimes and for the con-
the person or persons who
the property of Mrs. J. H.
S winders.
SIGNED CITIZENS
OF TOWNSHIP.
The brothers who were be-
tried at Shelby murder have
been acquitted and the verdict seems
to give general satisfaction.
The charges of heresy against
Prof. have been dismissed
by the New York Presbytery.
COUNTY COMMISSIONERS.
Greenville Nov.
The Board of Commissioner for
Pitt County, met this day. present
C D. chairman, T. E.
Keel, C. V. Newton and Leonidas
Fleming. Minutes of last meeting
read approved.
The following orders for paupers
were
John Stocks 4.50. Winifred
6.00, Margaret Bryan 3.00, Jam-,
es Masters 2.00, B. D. Smith 2.00
Alex Harris 12.00, Daniel Webster,
2.00, Martha Nelson 2.00, Lizzie
Bryan 2.00, Jacob 1.50,
Asa Knox 4.00, Susan Briley
Wm. 2.50. Susan Harris
John Baker Nancy Moore
Lucinda Smith 1.50, Pattie
Lance 2.00, Winnie Fleming 1.50,
Patsy Adams 6.00, David
10.00. Julia Dunn 4.50, Patsy
2.00.
The general orders were
B. B. J. L.
Elks F. Hodges J. J.
B. Cox 17.05, John Flanagan
Eddie 2.55, George
an E 1.21, E. D.
12.00, B. X. Cox 20.00, B. T.
The Board after due considers
of the petition ordered that a
reward of in each of the above
oases be offered by the county for
the conviction of the person or per-
sons who burned said property.
A petition signed by W. R-
Indian and others, asking the
Board to alter public road lead-
from the of the bridge
across Tar river at Greenville to
the fork of the road near
of B. B. Wilson, and that a
bank of sufficient be made
from foot of bridge to such
a distance as will afford, the con-
passage of persons on loot
or with teams in time of high fresh-
in said river, was read and or
to lie over until next meeting.
A petition for a new public road
in Carolina township leading from
near. W G. Little's to W. T. Keel's
was read ordered to lie over until
next meeting.
The following Jurors were drawn
special term of Superior
Court to be held on the second Mon-
day in
J J Cory, J R L B
Stokes, J R Overton, E E Dad,
C P Gaskins, Smith, W J
James, B A F M Smith,
Turner, Jenkins, M A
James, L O B B Flem-
ming, T J Daniel, B F
Franklin Johnson, Taylor, J
Norris, J R Congleton, J J Griffin,
Asa Bullock, N T
following were drawn m
Jurors for regular term of
Court January
First W
C Bailer, John Coward, B B Dixon,
L O Moore, Lake Bob-
en James Mills,,
James B Johnson, Biggs
J L Robinson, B B
Summered, W W Little, W S B
Smith, Henry Taylor, A S j
ton. E O H B B
A Davenport, W L Smith, J J
Tucker, J W Smith, B W James,
Henry Harrington, A C E
D J B J w Allen,
W J H W
ton, R L C x. S B
Jacob Joyner, Oscar
Hooker, G W Gainer.
Second Week J E
Williams, Samuel Mum-
lord, J J May, M F T C
Cannon, James A Lane, John H
Smith, J J Lang,
Austin B H Ives,
Wm Joyner Wingate,
Major J D Bryan, B F
Moses Turnage.
The following persons were
to list their taxes for
Greenville A Ricks,
J W Turnage, James Briley, S J
Dudley, B T Woodard.
Beaver Dam S Par-
S V Joyner, J F Joyner Bro,
J N Bynum R B Bynum. W J
Manning.
M T
Bynum, Miss Pattie A Bynum, A J
Flanagan.
Swift Creek C
Bland, Mrs Elizabeth W H
Cox, G W B Garris, E J
Nobles, Mew
Wiley
Samuel Bell.
B Price.
Stocks, S S Henry Win-
gate, Cox, J B W
A Noble.
Bethel H
hill.
Falkland township-Henry Vines.
Carolina townshipS A
R F Gainer. Mrs L Cherry
Claims allowed in Law
Jones C
sou
About U o'clock last Tuesday
night some colored people Hying near
by discovered that the stables of Mr.
B. S. Sheppard were fire.
alarm was given but the fire had
made such headway that it could not
be put out. Near to the and
across the rear of Mr. Sheppard's
premises were three tenement
to which fire was communicated
the lour buildings were quickly in
ashes. Mr. drive horse
was in the stables and burned to
death. Efforts were made to get the
horse out but the fire burned so rap-
idly the animal could not be rescued.
He had bought this horse the
week before, having had one to die re-
A lot of stuff was also
destroyed. A colored woman living
tin- house nearest the stables lost
most of her clothing; those living in
other two houses got all their
effects out. It took bard work to
save other houses near by and on the
opposite side of the street, some of
them catching several times. At the
lowest estimate Mr. Sheppard's loss
will reach upon which there
was no insurance. The
with him his loss.
It is thought that tho stables was
set on fire.
Beady for Them.
Greenville has boon tolerably well
aroused on the burglar question, not
from any visitations in our own midst
but as some of them bad been paying
their respects to neighboring towns
it was thought not that a
few stragglers might strike here next.
When it was learned that three
houses in Kinston were visited in a
single night, and two nights later five
houses in Tarboro were entered be-
hind one sun, Greenville at once put
in shape to receive such
tors if they should decide to try a
hand here. Those possessed
shooting irons examined the same to
see that they were in readiness for
immediate and those own-
this species of furniture took
steps to come into possession of the
same; additional locks, bolts and
books made doors and windows more
secure and-when the town went to
bed both ears were left open. But
the burglar has not arrived yet, and
if ho docs come be will find Green-
ville loaded to the muzzle. It is all
well enough that our people keep on
their guard and be prepared to give
any Intrude a warm reception.
Late yesterday news came In town
that Mr. Manning, of Bethel
township, had been shot and killed
by a Mr. Martin, We could not get
any particulars.
NOTICE
Of the Incorporation of the
Carolina Land Company.
North Before Clerk of the
Pitt County, Superior Court.
Notice is hereby given that I have this
day issued letters declaring John C. Me-
W. D. Fender and Carroll
Foster, their associates and successors, a
corporation under the and style of
Carol Land Company, purpose
set forth in the articles of agreement mid
plan of Incorporation which hare been
tiled and recorded this office, with all
the rights, powers and privileges con-
by chapter sixteen of The
Code of North Carolina the Jaws
thereto.
The main business proposed to be dona
by the corporation is to manufacture, buy
and sell lumber and timber, transport the
same and other products, to erect build-
and machinery; buy and sell land,
drain and improve the construct
wharves, bridges, piers and other works
and to do whatever may be necessary in
said
The principal office of said corporation
is be in the town of Greenville, Pitt
county.
The said corporation to
FURNITURE
------We have just received a large and complete------
STOCK Of FURNITURE.
made by the best workmen after the latest designs, an in
order to better display it have converted the whole of the
second story of our building into one large furniture room.
We shall apply one price system to this
of our business also we think it Is the
only legitimate way to do and in or-
to get trade started we re put
the smallest possible profit upon it,
and marked it so low that
you cannot duplicate
the prices in any city in
this country. We
most cordially
ask you to
call and examine it.
CARPETS.
buyer was able to pick up some bargains in this line while
North and if you will examine our stock we feel sure that we
can save you money. We sell them with and without
the lining. They are the very latest patterns and colors.
CLOTHING.
We do handle any second-hand stuff nor misfits. Our Cloth-
is fresh from the manufacturers, AND IS MADE TO FIT
and for further evidence of this we refer you to our many
customers who have gotten such perfect fits from us,
that they prefer them to misfits, which are so
named because the maker found it such a
hard task to get any one they would, fit.
Our Clothing is made by first-class
tailors to fit, and they do their
work so well we usually
in fitting our
the first gar
they try on.
WE COME AGAIN.
To enlist your attention and claim a fair share of your patronage
We are determined that if square dealings and honest
of our will secure you as a customer,
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into
------the Northern Markets with the------
CASH
and buy for the CASH, getting 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 largest 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 you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing
you what we have to sell. There can never be a business of any
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statements
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by all
our customers, and by such means to merit their continued pat-
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest best
assorted Hue of General Merchandise that was ever brought
Consisting of
to market.
SHOES.
For these we are headquarters and defy competition. In
to a full stock of regular goods we have about pairs
which we bought in job lots at about one half their value. They
consist of Misses, Boys, Gentlemen and Ladies Shoes.
We will sell them at same discount at which we bought them,
which is to say for about PO per cent, on the dollar. We
tee these goods first-class in respect, and are only sold
cheap because a large firm north failed and their stock was thrown
on the market and had to be sold for what it would bring. Our
buyer was on the ground and bought what we
All of our lines are complete and having only one price forces us
to be leaders in low prices on everything.
Yon will save money by examining our stock if you don't buy.
We only ask that you call upon us and see what we have.
Young
One Price and Leaders in Low Prices.
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS,
J.
W.
Murfreesboro, N. C.
COL.
M. HARRELL.
Murfreesboro, N. C.
years,
capital at
m be One Million dollars divided into
stock said corporation
into
twenty thousand
dollars each.
Witness my hand and seal at
office la Greenville the 4th day of
November, 1891. K. A.
Clerk Superior
HARRELL BROS.,
COTTON FACTORS
FOOT OF COMMERCE STREET,
NORFOLK, VA.
Ragging and Tics constantly on band. Liberal Cash Advances made on Con-
Norman Everett,
-----COTTON
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
NORFOLK,
They do a Commission Business, avoiding ill speculation, always
to serve best interest of the shipper.
-SHIP YOUR-
AND OTHER PRODUCE TO
ALEXANDER, MORGAN CO.,
COTTON FACTORS AND COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
TUNIS WHARF, VA.
Guarantee highest market prices, quick sales and prompt
S. B. HARRELL CO.,
-COTTON FACTORS AND-
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Corn, Peanuts. Stock, Eggs,
and Sawed Lumber will receive our
special attention. Tour patronage
solicited.
AND COMMERCE STREET,
VA.
Strictly a How.
COBB, C C. COBS,
Pitt Co N. C. Pitt Co N. C.
T. H.
Co. N C
R. L Co.,
COTTON FACTORS
in
Reports corrected weekly by
JONATHAN WHITE.
Peas, to per
em Pet
Chickens,
Ducks,
Sweet Potatoes,
Turkey,
u down
bushel
pair
and Dock,
NORFOLK. VA.
J. J. Burgess Is our North and
Carolina Representative.
fr Special attention given to sales of
Cotton, Grain, and Country
Produce generally. Liberal Cash Ad-
on Consignments. Prompt Re-
turns and Highest Prices guaranteed.
a a. I
. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
A Supply
gin a specialty.
guaranteed
No, Union St., Norfolk Ya
Cobb Bros., Gilliam,
Cotton Factors
AND-----
Commission ants.
SOLICIT of
We have Lad many years ex
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton to
advantage of shippers.
AU entrusted to
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention
For Sale.
One P. Upright Engine, newly
P.
repair
One Saw Gin, Feeder and
One Saw CM, Feeder and Con-
denser.
One Cotton Press.
For farther particulars call or address,
SHEPPARD,
N. C.
Dry Goods Dress Goods,
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, j
Hardware Cutlery, Tin-
ware, Crockery, Queen- j
ware, Groceries, Wood j
and
and Whips j
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF-
FURNITURE
that has ever been brought to this county. We are headquarter
for all goods in our lines. Also we have a lot of
BAGGING AND TIES
which will be sold at lowest prices.
Come one, come all and see us.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
We thank our many friends for their patronage
last season and wish to say that we now
have another
BETTER ASSORTED STOCK
than before.
We
prices.
keep first-class Goods and guarantee
Come and examine the new goods.
-o-
In addition to our regular line we have taken
the agency for the
New Homo Sewing Machine.
And will sell at the same terms and prices. Oils,
Needles and Parts are kept.
BROWN BROS.
1883.
J. A. ANDREWS,
In-----
MEAT AND
-------A large let of-------
AND TIES
--------bought just before the rise, for sale low down---------
POWDER AND
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
Notice.
Is hereby given that a
meeting of of Justifies of
AT peace for Pitt county nulled st
the Court In Greenville on Mon-
STUB L J Member,
o'clock M-, for the purpose of elect-
a member f the of County
Commissioners to fill the vacancy caused
by resignation of O. M. Mooring.
By order of the Hoard of County Com-
This the day of November.
ft H. JAMBS.
WARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will find
prices before
stock Is complete
their Interest to get our prices before
n Its branches.
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA, Ac.
at Pricks.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. Acorn
to sell at a dose margin.
Respectfully,
V S. M. SCHULTZ,
N. C.
Special Court.
Notice is hereby given that His Excel-
Thomas M. Holt, Governor of
North Carolina, has ordered a special
term of the Superior Court to be held
for the county of Pitt, commencing on
Monday, the 14th day of December, ISM,
and all the
said court be disposed of,
said term shall not one wee.
The said term will be for the trial or
civil causes only.
COUNCIL DAWSON,
Com. of Pitt Co.
ti





mm
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR.
SUPPLEMENT.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER I I, 1891
NO
DIVES.
whom now we oil
Steal put the f n
once more his estate,
think of all this
We it bereft,
use speech stunt the dead.
Although he has one friend left;
Be hoarded as and bonds for rears;
With fortune bad his many spats;
Ah, he know how few the tears
Bis heirs fight like
Be hoped the glory of his gain
Would, like the comets, blaze behind;
Alas, they prove he was Insane
Who riches wins most lose his mind.
Be sowed the wind, this moneybags
They harvest It who break his
The whirlwind not a moment lags,
, Ills treasure gets no time to
Be closed his eyes well satisfied.
But all were not so pleased as he.
flourish he died,
for Dives has now the leprosy
Foibles and errors
Lawyers partition his estate I
Bis Virtues are In court eschewed;
It sounds correct to say
N. B. In Traveler.
Birthdays.
An Insurance actuary in former
hardly have considered a
life. The average was
down by those favorite
. of the Muses who thought that decent
living and regular habits were
tent with their vocation. Byron,
, Heine, Poe and others died
young, not because they were poets,
because they did not keep
passions and their appetites in good
order. But in these later days we know
that the greatest poet may be the
and pass into old age, hale
and green, as peacefully as if he had
never wandered over the elopes
Helicon.
The great Goethe grew old as com
as any well-to-do bourgeois,
and was full of life and vigor at four
-score. Bo was Victor Hugo. Brown
at seventy was a constant
and the soul of every party in
he found James Gazette.
Bow Vessels Through the Sues CanaL
The average time of transit of th
Suez canal by day is twenty-four hours;
by night with elect lights it is nine-
teen and has been done in
teen In order to navigate by
night a vessel must light the way by
carrying an projector at
bow as close to the water as possible,
and pay the closest attention to tin
orders from the passing stations o
pares. Three white lights shown
Indicate then the
display of two white lights is the
to stop and haul Into the
steamer presently hauls in, makes fast,
puts out all lights and lies snug in
berth alongside the desert, while the
oncoming vessel, looking like a loco-
motive at night, passes by. Oho white
light from the and lines are let go,
and the Journey continued until
la Hunt
In Scribner's.
FOUGHT WITH BANANA SKINS.
Antiquity of the Umbrella.
No one knows whether the umbrella
was originally used as a defense against
rain or a screen from the son, but it
seems probable that the first
Wen sunshades. In countries where
Very little clothing is worn rain does
not make much difference, but the sun
is a power. Why the palm
leaf be the first sunshade, with its
and handles to order It hints at the
umbrella as well as the fan.
Travelers among the of Japan
often make temporary sunshades
gigantic dock leaves, which ore some
times six feet Ugh, large enough for an
Recount of. Gulliver. The umbrella
has a very great antiquity. The word
itself means a showing
that it wast named for its protection
from the sun in this case. Horace says,
the military standards the sue
beholds an Egyptian
Times.
Dinners.
Styling a dinner a
is something of a mistake; that is, ii
the use of the word is to add
more dignity to the occasion, or even
to be more uppish or bumptious
from the
French and Spanish, means a small
bench, a little seat, and when spelled
banquet, means a three legged stooL
It has reference to sitting while eating,
Instead of taking refreshment in
fashion, as at one of oar
parties or at a free lunch counter. The
truth is that is simply a
grandiose and
somewhat Philadelphia
Ledger.
Thrown on a Stoop by Enemy, the
Peal Prove a Powerful Weapon.
She was walking rapidly up the little
walk leading to the front steps of a
house on Ferry street It was her
walk and her house, and she had a
right to walk any way she chose. That
disgusting Brown family next door
might better mind their own business
and stop watching her. So she was
saying to herself,
her feet went from under her and
she found herself sitting
hard upon that some walk which a
moment before she had been treading
so proudly. Slowly, she picked herself
up and ruefully she looked at the
banana peel which had caused her
downfall. A half suppressed titter
came from the window of the
next door.
that's their trick, Is she
scornfully, tossing her head to-
ward her enemies. it's a game
two con play
The next morning the old man Brown
got up rather early and started to walk
down town. He had barely reached
his front steps when he struck some-
thing. It carried him off his feet like
a cyclone. He went bump
down the steps. At the bottom he
struck something else. It carried him
along a few feet farther and then shot
him into a barbed wire fence which had
been mysteriously strung across the
path during the night.
The fence stopped him. But what a
sight he His clothes were torn
and covered with mud and ashes. Tho
mud and ashes had also mysteriously
got on the path during the night. His
flesh was lacerated and bruised and his
little finger was broken in two places.
He picked himself up and crawled
back into the house and up to the room
of his youngest son.
he said, it you put that
banana peel on the Smith's
walk yesterday
you young rascal, take that
for it, and that and he began
kicks on the person of his son
till the youngster howled with pain.
Then as he crawled off in search of
the bottle he
don't blame the a bit. It was
a mean trick, but it was a blamed sight
meaner of her to take revenge on me
when I'm the only one in our family
that has stood up for
Express.
Buy a Secondhand Boat
When a boy has learned to soil a
boat, and has discovered how very de-
sailing is, he is sure to wish for a
yacht of his own; nor is he likely to be
content until the desire for ownership
shall have been satisfied by actual
session. The chief obstacle with which
he has to contend, of course, is the
cost, for yachts are expensive toys, and
not every one can afford to purchase
them. But a careful and patient per-
son may, nevertheless, possess himself
of a small yacht if he will buy with
discretion and at the right season of
the year, which is the autumn.
Yachtsmen are droll fellows; they
build costly boats, use them a year or
two and then sell them for any price
they can secure, often less than a
of their original cost. Therefore, I
say that the ownership of a nice little
yacht is not beyond the possibilities if
a boy loves a boat and is determined to
own one, for pluck, luck and patience
accomplish W.
in St Nicholas.
USEFULNESS OF
A temptation to avoid is the con-
recurring one to repeat the fun-
sayings of one's own children,
before them. A painful
occurs of a nervous, only child,
whose active brain led her often to
make extremely bright speeches, which
were repeated with much glee by her
unwise mother, whether the child was
present or not One day after this had
occurred the child lifted up her shrill
voice from the corner of the room
where she was sitting, and said,
on, tell that funny thing
I said the other day about God The
mother was much shocked, and it is
hoped profited by the lesson thus taught
You would naturally suppose that
Ice would be thicker on still
lake or reservoir, for it
would be in the of a swift
river. But it is not According to ob-
made by the Davenport
Academy of Sciences, when Ice is nine
inches thick on the lakes the channel
lee is eighteen inches thick on the Mis
Republic.
A Professor That Taught the Art and
Yet Could Not Swim Himself.
In my boyhood days water never had
any love for me. Whenever I used to
go with my playmates to take a bath
in the creek near the town where I was
born, it would do all in its power to en-
me and draw down to the
bottom. I shunned it
But a distressing incident changed
my determination never to go near
water again. I was crossing the old
wooden bridge that spanned the creek
near our house, when a woman and
her child fell into the creek. Both were
being rapidly swept away by the strong
current and I jumped into the creek. I
reached the side of the woman, how I
do not know today, and tried to pull
them toward the shore, but the
of the water was again aroused
and I felt myself sinking. Passers by
rescued us and I was the guy of the
whole town. Even today some of my
friends remind me of that occasion.
Then I swore that I would learn to
swim. Not far from where I lived was
a school for swimming conducted by a
corpulent, good natured gentleman,
known as the It was to
him I went
He made some sarcastic remarks
about the inability of a young man of
my age to swim. The first lesson came.
A rope was tied around my waist and
the professor held the end of it Tho
first thing I knew I was floundering at
the bottom of the tank, gasping for
breath. That good natured professor
had thrown me into the water. I tried
to cry out to him to pull me out, but
my mouth filled with water. Present-
I felt myself drawn to the surface,
and the professor politely asked me
how I enjoyed it. I calmed my wrath
and told him it was the happiest day
of my life. said lie. do
the strokes as I
two, three. One, two,
A little more of that and the first
son was over. So it went on for ten
lessons, the professor never missing the
chance to pitch me into the tank when
I wasn't looking. I made rapid
and was soon able to swim with-
out assistance, although the
professor still persisted in having the
rope around my waist
It was near last lesson. The
professor and I were alone in the
school. He was busily engaged in
beating time with his
two, I was doing the
strokes. Suddenly there was a heavy
splash beside me that sent the water
high in the air. The professor had
fallen Into the water. I had never yet
caught him in the water and I felt
that it was my chance now to get even
with him for always ducking me so
ceremoniously. His big, fat head pres-
appeared on the surface, and I
was rather surprised at the peculiar
strokes he was so
from those he taught the pupils.
heaven's sake, save he
cried.
you said I.
should I save I was afraid that
he had some trick ready to play upon
me.
stay there and look at
he whimpered. cannot
can't swim Why, you ore a
professor of
cried, I only teach by
theory; I never could swim I
crawled out of the water and laughed
aloud. there ever anything to
equal this A teacher of a swimming
school not able to swim himself.
My turn had come now. I called in all
the pupils and explained the situation
to them, and we looked at him helpless
in the water and only greeted his cries
for help with derision. However, when
there was danger of his drown-
we pulled him out, and it is need-
less to say that was no swimming
school in that town after that But
although I was taught to swim by a
professor who was only a master of the
theoretical knowledge of that art, I be-
came an expert at it and I am happy
to say that I was never guyed again
after we had saved the swimming
teacher from drowning in his own tank.
STORY OF A PIANO.
They Shake Their Own Hands.
When among the Chinese settlers on
the tobacco plantations in the island
of Sumatra I discovered for the first
time that the correct way of saluting
is to shake not his band bat
your own, and I was frequently
ed with the sight of two men shaking
their own hand with the utmost warmth
and cordiality, instead of that of their
Ker in New York
A Genius Who Found In Keep-
a Tow to His Sweetheart.
Probably the severest ordeal that
genius can undergo is to be deprived of
the exercise of its powers. M. de
had a pathetic illustration of
this in his acquaintance with one of the
greatest pianists of the present century.
He relates the strange story in
Souvenirs
Though not a player himself, M. de
had a fine piano. One day
the proprietor of the village hotel called
to say that the evening before a gentle-
man, apparently a Hungarian or an
Austrian, had arrived at his house, a
person about M. age,
of appearance and wearing an ex
of touching melancholy.
In the morning, it seemed, the
stranger would take no breakfast, but
besought M. the hotel keeper,
for a piano, saying that circumstances
had prevented his touching one for a
year.
A little later the stranger was seated
at M. piano, and it was
soon manifest that ho was not only a
wonderful artist but an inventor
new methods, whose touch tripled the
power and volume of the instrument
He played on and on. Shortly before
midnight he seemed to put his whole
soul into improvising a funeral march,
which ended with a finale of wonderful
tragic beauty just as the village clock
struck
and said the
guest, not waiting to hear M.
martin's is I who
thank you My piano is sacred hence-
The next morning he went
away, begging M. not to ask
his real name.
The following year, Just after hear-
M. called on
friend, He was explain-
to the incredulous musician that
admiration for the great Liszt was
by the memory of an
parable genius whom ho had heard at
Avignon, when there was a knock at
the door, and as the critic relates,
heard a voice that thrilled me say,
I enter f
in joyful surprise.
recognized my mysterious visitor,
but my delight was checked by the sad-
In his face. He said to me,
dear sir, I owe you an explanation.
On the 30th of April I promised
B------, a beautiful girl whom I
loved, that I would not touch a piano
until April SO of the next year; this is
an evidence that my piano and my art
were not first in my regard. At the
end of the year she was to become my
wife.
you know the rest I
thought that terrible year would never
end. I traveled constantly to distract
my mind and to pass the time more
endurably. I reached Avignon the
29th of
stopped.
asked.
died on the 30th, at the very
hour when I finished the funeral
march, just as the clock in the
struck
Didn't the Name.
At the time when Napoleon was the
most prominent figure in Europe one
man at least was little Impressed with
his greatness. He conqueror's name
actually slipped his mind, so slightly did
his career concern the world that for
the artist centered in his studio.
Edgar relates that when ho
went to Germany ho visited the old
sculptor,
he says,
sculptor was eloquent over his theories.
Suddenly, wishing to fix a dote, be
stopped, reflected, and finally
think it was in the time of that
is his name you know the
man; the one who has won so many
battles, I've forgotten the name. Yon
must know
you speaking of Napoleon r I
asked.
yes, that is cried the artist,
and went on with his interrupted state-
without giving the incident a sec-
Companion.
The largest Meteor.
Probably the largest meteor that ever
tho surface of the earth lies on
the plains of in Sooth Amer-
where it fell It measures 1-3
feet in length and weighs between four-
teen and tons. Perhaps the next
largest is the one, well known to tour-
that lies at the foot of a lesser
mountain of the Alps
York Recorder.
ALLIANCE
CO-OPERATIVE.
Warehouse
HENDERSON, N. C. J
Highest Market at all
Charges for telling uniform and the low-
est living about one half of others
than the Alliance Warehouse.
Our business Is conduct-
ed on the principles
of TRUTH,
which is mighty must prevail.
Highest Prices
Lowest Charges.
Are the only Drummers that we
Do row part save
Thousands of Dollars
Paid to those who
would mislead you
Examine compare our charge with
others and you will see you
can't afford to sell else-
where.
Faithfully yours,
W. II. Manager.
WILMINGTON A K.
and Schedule
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No No
Oct 3rd, dally Fast dally
dally x Sun.
Weldon 12,80 pin pm
Ar am
Tarboro It am
Ar Wilson p m
Wilson
Ar
Ar
Goldsboro
LT
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
TRAINS NORTH
No No No
dally daily dally
ex Sun.
Wilmington
Magnolia
Goldsboro H M
Ar Selma
Ar Wilson U
Wilson pen pm
Ai Rocky Mount
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves 4.22 P. M., arrives Soot-
land Neck at 5.16 P. M Greenville 6.63
P. M., Kinston 8.00 p. m. Returning.
leaves Kinston 7.00 a. m., Greenville
8.10 a. in. Arriving s. in.
Weldon 11.26 s. m. daily except Sun-
Local freight leaves Weldon at
7.00 s. m., arriving Scotland Neck 10.011
m., Greenville p. in., Kinston
5.10 p. in. Returning leaves Kinston st
8.00 ii. m. arriving Greenville 10.50
s. m. Scotland Neck 2.40 p. m., Weldon
5.16 p. m.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
P M. P M, arrive
N C, P M, P M.
Plymouth 8.80 p. m., 6.20 p. s
Returning leaves Plymouth daily
a. m., at
Williamston, M C, 7.40 a m, a a .
arrive Tarboro, N C, A V
Train on
st P M, arrive Hi
P Hope P X. Returning
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville
M, arrives Rocky A
except
Train on Clinton Branch tears Wares
for Clinton except Sunday, st
Returning
ton A M, P. Conner
Insist .
on Midland N C Branch
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, A M
rive Smith d. N C. A M. Re
turning leaves N C AM
arrive Goldsboro. N C. A M.
Southbound train on Wilson A
ville Branch r No. Is
Mo. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only s
Wilson, Goldsboro Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection s
Weldon for points North AI
rail via Richmond, d except Hun
day vis Line.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
J. R.
Passenger





THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door Ai Court House
WILL CONTINUE TIE MANUFACTURE OF
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My factory Is well equipped with best Mechanics, put up nothing
but work. keep with times and improved style
material used in all work. All styles Springs are use-, you can select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King
Also keep on hand a of ready mace
HARNESS AND WHIPS, .
year round, which we will sell as low as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding for past favors hope to
merit a continuance of the same
T. ID. on.
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK.
This has been in use over
fifty years, and wherever known has
in steady demand. It been en-
by the leading physicians all over
country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is or
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained Is owing entirely
to its own as but little effort has
ever been made to It before the
public. One of this Ointment will
be MM to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box The usual
to Druggists. All Orders
to. nil or-
and communications to
T. F.
Sole and Proprietor,
Greenville, W. V.
PHOTO-ENGRAVING
a tin to ion rooms.
Port mils, and cuts collar., factor-
machinery, Ac, mode from
Metropolitan Agency,
York City.
KNIGHT'S
Blood Cure.
A remedy
In line more Mm A
for Dyspepsia, Nervous
Prostration, Constipation all of
the Blood. Stomach and Liver.
ft Our Completion.
A botanical put up in package
and sen by moil at on.- third cost of
medicine. package, sufficient for
quarts. half-size
r pints. -ample packages. c.
A reliable in this locality.
CO.,
BOOK for
torn
n Hit,
j T
Co.,
Because
M Y I
A . , . . , II;.
B- I.-I- . r, T-. W.
I . r.
. n. ., n .,,. ,. r,
m , v I o
-.--. lull of
r. . p. ., , tin- I. a.
mt. n I c it
iT-. Mm . , .-
I- ,. , J,
Eire for m
A. . a ., c,
It will make anything and thing perfectly clean, in
less time and with less labor, than anything now known
in. the way of soaps or washing compounds, which are
withal harmless. PEARLINE is harmless to fabric or
hands. The many millions of packages of Pearline used
annually prove this assertion need it.
Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers are
imitations which claim be
V- or same as ITS FALSE
not. and besides nit dangerous. PEARLINE is never peddled, but
by on y by If MES New
HALL'S SAFE AND LOCK CO.
of Hall's Patent
BANK LOCKS VAULT WORK
SAFES
FACTORY OFFICE
The Tar
B.
J. S. Greenville,
N. M.
Capt. K. K. Jones, Washington,
The People's Line for travel on Tat
River.
The Steamer is the lines
quickest boat on the river.
thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Kitted up specially for the com fore. c
and convenience of Ladies.
POLITE A ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A Table furnished with th
best the market affords.
A Trip on the Steamer la
not only comfortable attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday,
at o'clock, A. M.
Leaves Tuesday, Thumb
Saturday at o'clock, a. m .
Freights received daily and
Lading to all
r. I. J. CHERRY,
N. C.
II What's W
Why another new discovery by Alfred
in the way of helping the afflict-
ed, calling on or addressing the
above you can procure a
bottle of that is invaluable
for eradicating and and causing the
hair lo be soft and
glossy, only two or three application a
week is and a common hair
is all to be used after the
s-alp a few minutes with
the Try a bottle and be
convinced, only
ALFRED CULLEY,
Barber,
GREENVILLE. N C.
Of Interact to
So much ha been said about the use o
scales at gin house that we call par-
attention to a new entitled
About published by
of in
N. T. contains full
carding costs, patents, Ac., and should
be read by every intelligent A
postal get It.
CONSUMPTIVE
Printers and Binders
, N , C
We have the large and moat complete
establishment of the kind to be found in
the State, and solicit for all classes
Of Commercial, Bail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING STATIONERY HEADY
INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOE MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY
us your orders.
RALEIGH. K. C.
Greenville Iron Works,
A. B.
Saw Mills, Ac., repaired.
Iron and Castings made to order.
Largest stock Pipe and Pipe Fittings in
town. lie sure work to
A. B.
Near Greenville, N. C.
Smith's Shaving
JAME A. SMITH,
Greenville, N. C.
We have the the easiest
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels,
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed
every instance. Call and be con-
Ladies waited on at their
Cleaning clothes specialty.
PATENTS
and all business in the I. S,
Patent office or In the Courts attended to
for Fees.
We are opposite the U. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patent n time than those
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patent.
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to
the U. S. For
advise term- and reference to
actual clients in own State, or
address, C. A. Snow A Co.,
Washington. D.
For
House and Lot, on corner of
Fourth and Washington in town
of House contains six rooms
with a room and room at-
Good well of water and all
For terms apply to
L. W.
N. Sept. 1891,
FARMS
Whichard,
m .
UNDERTAKING.
B. S.
with me in the Undertaking we
are ready to serve the in that
i All notes account
me for services have been placed in
hands Mr. for collect, n
Respectfully,
JOHN FLANAGAN.
HAVE several parcels of real
estate for sale. Look over the list
below and call on or write them.
i lot on Third street Mow Co-
in the town of
good house with four rooms
kitchen and smoke house
large stables on the premises,
Two building lots Winner-
ville
A lot on street.
. Front, and Second, has nice of
rooms, good well of water, large gar-
den plot stables.
I A half acre lot in
t. large single story house
of C rooms, cook and dining rooms
all necessary out buildings and
stables, good water
C A fine farm containing HI acres,
about miles from Greenville on Mt.
road, has gin house, stables,
barns. two room tenant houses; ah
acres cleared, balance well wooded,
nod water. This laud is excellent for
the cultivation of line tobacco.
f One farm lying on branch of the
P W. ft W, i nil road half way be-
tween Grifton and Kinston and within J
mile of a new depot, contains acres.
and balance heavily timbered
with pine, oak, hickory, and cypress;
has good tenant houses; railroad
nearly through of this farm.
land has clay subsoil with
is in food state of cultivation and highly
i improved; is line trucking land.
A farm miles from Greenville on
I . Kinston road known as the JacKson
J contains acres, cleared;
dwelling house and all
out building-. This is a
A house and lot in
O- corner B. Cherry and W. S. .
Rawls. now occupied by the family of
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains
rooms, kitchen convenient, is
I location, half a block from main
tin -tin, street of the town. Possession
can lie given January 1st.
A good building lot on
street, between Third and Fourth
splendid location.
The house and lot on Pitt
near
of rooms, large lot with
stables and out buildings.
The house and or.
Pitt street, adjoining the lot of U.
S. Sheppard and the lot in
lo. large, comfortable one-story dwelling
of four rooms, dining and cook rooms,
plenty of room for garden.
Terms on any of the above
can be had on application to
We keep on hand at all times a nice
stock of Burial Cases
kinds an
from
Pitt county
up with all conveniences and can I
satisfactory services to all who
.
Jersey Bull For Sale.
EARL OF
Cases and Caskets of years, old, silver gray,
id can furnish anything thoroughly
e finest Case to A- .,. C- c. for
Coffin. We art further particulars to
gentle,
in d In
. rice and
r particulars I
B. S.
Grifton, C.
SECURITIES
MUNICIPAL BONDS
INDUSTRIAL STOCKS
CORPORATION BONDS
APPROVED BANK STOCKS
CAREFULLY SELECTED,
SAFE.
PAY GOOD INTEREST.
ALSO
IN
FULL AND REFERENCES,
WRITE
IO M
can be found at the store of
MRS- R. H. HORNE
takes pleasure In announcing the
of both town and country
that she has returned from
markets with a
-----line of-----
and
will lie sold at lowest living prices.
Una employed the of millinery
-kill to assist her this
Bits, Sonnets,
Pictures from a to an Oil
Painting, Frames. Plush Good and an
endless variety of other Pink.
lug done at cents la-r yard. Her ex-
of twelve years her to
guarantee every customer.
Call if you bargains.
MRS. R. H. HORNE.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
EMPORIUM
for Shaving, Cutting and
m top
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 MAKE A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
i with all the improved appliances;
comfortable chairs.
sharpened at reasonable figures
for work my shop
promptly executed. Very
CULLEY V
advertising
the best
general store-. Apply at once.
Mai
and
The nest, Session of this School will be-
gin on MONDAY,
Tuition per term
Primary, per session.
Intermediate, per sea-Ion,
pr i. SO
Languages, each. 3.00
the School will be thorough in all of
its instruction, mild but firm In -Its
having in view at all Omen the
young men and
for active business or successful col-
courses. Board can I obtained
with principal, or at other places In
at reasonable rates. One half of
tuition payable at the middle of the
term, the at ill aloe. For
f particular see or address,
W. H. A. B,.
Greenville, N. C. Principal.





LANG'S COLUMN.
Local Sparks
THANKSGIVING
Proclamation
Again it is our pleasure to
sent to our friends
and patrons this, our
And
again we
rejoice with
yon that our
country is in
such a
condition, and we
thank yon for your
kind and liberal patron-
age in the past, and by
the same fair and honest
measures that have marked
dealings heretofore we hope
to merit your future patronage.
Our stock was never more com-
with stylish and season-
able than at present.
No matter what you want
if it is stylish and first-
class we have it. In
Fine Goods
and Trimmings
we show the
most co m
and
stock
in town
AH the new
and
from the
fashion of
the country are
in endless variety
on oar counters. In La-
dies and Misses Fine
Wraps we show the most
serviceable and stylish gar-
of the season. trade
on this line of goods has been
as to a second sup-
ply and we nave them to suit
everybody. In Men's and
Youth's Fine Clothing we
are the leaders. Fine
Tailor-Made Clothing
that comprises all
the advantages of
to order
are a
spec i a y
with us.
In fit,
styles
and ma-
our
goods
surpassed An
line of light
weight fancy overcoats
In Boy's Clothing, as
usual, we always
both parents and boys and
this is what has made our boys
clothing department such a sac
that we
not handle second hand and
In Footwear
for Ladies. Misses, Boys
and Children we show only
the standard and reliable
makes. In Men's Hats
we have all the new
blocks and shapes
in the most
grades. Our
Carpet and
House Fur-
Department was never more cam-
Long in thin
has learned just what is
needed by our people. Carpets
in all grades, Floor Oil Cloths in
all widths, Rugs and Mats, Lace
Curtains, Curtain Poles, Win-
Shades and Drapery effects
are all shown here in quite a
variety Every department is
to see and
we will send yon away satisfied.
All goods as
and no shoddy goods sold.
Is till- to
Ship Tobacco
If you WHO highest
The trees are almost bare.
Shoes Shoes, biggest line in
town at J. B.
New Sewing Mad.
at Brown Bros
bushel Jot-
too Seed,
Lamps jut
at J. Ii. ft
The dust is quite bad.
Umbrellas and Rubber Coats
go to J. B. ft
Hats new stylish to please
j you at J. It. Cherry
Use Cream your
Tea and Coffee, at tree's.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Fair this week.
For Buggy Blankets, Harness
Whips go to J. B. Cherry Co's
Point Lace Flour is always in
in quality at the Old Store.
Give join Evaporated
Cream, at
Get all kinds of Sewing Machine
needles and parts from Brown Bros.
Only two weeks to the Conference.
For cheap mid good Trunks and
Valises yo lo J. B
For Bullets, Safes, Bed Springs
and go to J. B.
Cos.
Brown Hi taken l lie
agency fur the New Home Sewing
Machine.
Don't you see how much Greenville
is in need of a hotel
Cheapest
Cradles and
Brick
Bedsteads, Bu leans,
Mattresses at the Old
make n specialty of Dry
and Shoes. Come and get
Brown Bros.
We
Goods
prices.
First of the New Buck-
at the Old Brick Store.
bushels cot-
ton seed at highest cash S.
B. Wilson.
you want to
buy Furniture then go to J. B.
ft Co's.
L II. shoes men and
boys have no equal for wear
sale by J. B.
Co.
A man, a dog mid a gun;
Number of
A beautiful line of
gloves for per pair, in black
and colors, at Mis.
Women's, Misses and
Shoes in various style and
large quantities at J. B. Cherry
IV.
Wanted for cash, Eggs and Hides
at the Old Brick Stoic
D. Y. Cooper furnishes free hogs-
heads persons shipping to-
lo him. Get them
F. Keel.
Cheapest line of Bedsteads, Bu-
Chairs, Lounges, Ta-
and Suits at J. II. Cherry
Co's.
will be here Monday, Nov. 14th,
with another boat load of fine
for Conference week. Save me
join orders. DANIELS-
Recollect that Bullock Mitchell
sell tobacco high every day, and
that they give to their customers
the best satisfaction and send re-
turns
Say where are you going to send
that Tobacco f To Cooper's Ware-
house, That's right
He guarantees better prices
any house in or out of the State.
barrels mullets cheap at the
Old Brick Store.
Mrs. W. M. Russ returned
day from
Mrs. S. A. Cherry has begun
housekeeping in the
His many friends greatly regret
that Mr. A. N. Ryan continues very
sick.
Mr. Leon Cox, of Washington, has
taken a position on the
force.
Mrs. W. T. Godwin left yesterday
to visit lie.- daughter at Rocky
Mount.
Mrs. N. F. Carr, of Willow Green,
is visiting her daughter, Mrs. B. S.
Miss Savage has recently
been visiting in Raleigh and attend-
the Exposition.
Elder A. A. Tyson will preach in
the Court House fourth Sunday
afternoon at o'clock.
J. J. Cory have
moved harness Mil shoe shop
next door to Mrs.
Kev. Geo. of
will preach in the Episcopal church
here Thursday night,
Mrs. J. L. Moore and Mrs. Nannie
Anderson left yesterday morning
Raleigh and the exposition.
Mr, W. has just returned
from his second trip North to lay in
a new of goods for Biggs Bros.
Messrs. H. F. Keel, W. B. James
and R. Flanagan arc on the list of
marshals for the Rocky Mount fair
this week.
Messrs. . F. Keel and W. B.
lames led yesterday morning for
Rocky Mount where they are to
serve marshals at i fair.
Rev. C. Burro, editor
will preach at King's X
Roads en Monday, 16th, and
Tuesday night, 17th Nov.
Rev. A. D. Hunter, Messrs. J. J.
Cherry and C. D. will
attend the Baptist Slate Convention
which begins Goldsboro today.
Mrs. Allied Forbes and daughter
Miss Hortense, left Monday for
Raleigh, to attend the exposition and
see Miss Rosa, who is at St. Mary's.
M r. J. Bryan Grimes of
and Messrs. and
Mitchell, of Washington took the
train here morning for
Raleigh.
Mrs. R. Walker, of who
was visiting her daughter, Mrs. A.
Hunter, left for home yesterday.
Mrs. Hunter and the young lady
accompanied her home and will re-
main some days in Wake.
Superior Court Clerk K. A.
Sheriff J. A. K. Tucker, Rev. A. D.
Hunter, ex Gov. T. J. Jarvis,
S. T. Hooker, Messrs. J. J. Cherry,
W. L. Brown, J. S. Congleton, Allen
Warren, S. It. B.
and V. Fleming left yesterday morn-
to attend the exposition at
This is Odd day
there, and Gov. Jarvis will make a
speech.
dissolution of the firm or Hart
Mr. Where is
Thanksgiving proclamation
The weather continues beautiful,
but it is too dry for the handling of
tobacco.
Riverside Nursery is now a
show and worth
going lo see.
men should engage ad-
space it the Daily
before it is late.
There's hardly a doubt that old
Joe Forbes cooks the best oyster of
restaurateur in town.
LANG'S COLUMN,
Boats can not get through up the
river, water is so low.
Try Cooper's Warehouse.
son, N. C, the sale
lie, secures good prices for all sales
and do one to leave his
dissatisfied.
It pays a man to raise good To-
it still better to get
good prices when it is Bold. Send
yours to Cooper's Warehouse,
and good prices are
guaranteed.
Don't forget that it costs you
to collect one of Bullock
Mitchell's checks as they are
in New York without
cost to the bolder.
At the same place, Henderson, N.
C, yon will find Cooper's Ware-
house selling Tobacco for
getting best prices for
that can lie obtained. Tour
shipments are solicited.
Remember that Bullock Mitch-
ell, of Oxford, N. C, bid lively upon
every pile tobacco put upon the
floor of the and don't
stop until it has brought highest
price.
Applications houses in Green-
ville continue to come in,
Cooper's Warehouse at
son, N. C, will furnish yon hogs-
head free and grade Tobacco
at lowest prices. So you can send
him tobacco graded or
Always mark your name upon
all packages when shipped.
money by selling your To
at Alliance W a re ho use, Hen-
N. O., you will always
get highest market prices and save
more than freight in warehouse
charges. No Petal No
Highest lowest charges is
our motto.
Tobacco piN-rEs
Cooper's Warehouse, Henderson,
N. C, is now ready to receive and
sell all grades of new Tobacco at
full and prom-
the planters Pitt and adjoin-
counties that no market or
house in or out of the State shall
Bell tobacco for more net money
The town looked almost deserted
yesterday. It. goes down as of
the exceptionally dull days.
Judging from the size the build-
up the Greenville Land
Improvement Co's mill will be an
immense plant.
Run your eye through your pack
house and get out some of the finest
tobacco for the Rocky Mount Expo-
Dec. 2nd.
The Tar River ion Co.
will delegates and visitors to
the Conference over their line at one
fare for the round trip.
Our friends in the country having
turkeys, chickens and hams to
pose of can find ready sale for them
in town between now and the Con-
The Reflector wants lo see
Greenville's population soon double
what it now is, but tins cannot be so
unless there are more dwelling
houses and a good hotel,
The Scotland Neck is
eight years old. Mr. has
had charge of it for about four years
and is making the Democrat well
worthy an extensive patronage.
We just don't believe it would be
healthy for a burglar to hit Green-
ville. He be art find
more shooting pointed at him
than he could shake a stick at.
We see non of outward
rations for the Conference yet. The
certainly ought to be cleaning
up and polling her best looks,
Conference if. only two weeks off.
, .
D. D. A Co. take i margin
advertisement on first page of the
Reflector to tell you the New Lee
and New Patron stoves are the best
made. Paste that line in your bat.
The Reflector office is getting to
be a regular bee-hive of
It now printing three different
paper besides doing its run job
work. Both fores and material has
been Increased.
A telegram by Mr. J. R.
President of the company,
Friday morning, staled that the
lumber mills at Kenly caught on
Thursday but was extinguish-
ed without damage.
The very low price of cotton will
likely cause a much less acreage of
it next year. They wise
the Alliances of some counties
arc adopting not to plant but five
acres in cotton to the horse next
fell
pi
Janus K. Shepherd Jr., a son of
Justice Shepherd of the
Court, died at Bingham School, Ashe-
ville, on the 1st inst. The remains
were taken to Washington, Judge
Shepherds home,
Wednesday.
and interred last
Messrs. Alexander, Morgan Co.,
commission merchants, Norfolk, Va.,
received bales cotton on Saturday
Oct. Slat, Give them a trial when
you ship your cotton, peanuts or
grain if you want prompt returns
best prices.
Two notices of corporation before
Superior Court Clerk appear in
our advertising columns to-day, one
the Carolina Paint Company, the
other Lumber Co. Both
these companies mean the turning
loose of more money in
and will add to prosperity of the
community.
CD
As have been talking about
improving the roads it might be well
to remind the town street committee
now while it is dry would be a
good time do some work at
lop cf the hill leading to the bridge.
Dining wet seasons some very bad
mud holes are and they ought
lo he filled up.
Congleton fr Tyson tell
readers to-day that they will sell
their dry shoes, hate,
crockery, wood, willow and glass
cost. These goods will he
inn off at cost because they want to
close out that part of their stock an i
hereafter conduct only a Hue grocery
business. During the next thirty
days can give you bargains.
Int
In this town on Thursday night,
5th inst., Mr. John in his
38th year. He had been la very bad
health for some weeks. The burial
look place in Cherry Hill Cemetery
Friday afternoon. Deceased left a
wife two children who have the
sympathy of the community.
The editor is in receipt of a neat
invitation card announcing that Mr.
Charles F. Clayton and Miss V.
Ward will be married in Calvary
church, Tarboro, at noon
day, inst.
n-aS S- i
So
mm GOING AT COST.
The parties taken in hand by
Policeman Smith Friday night were
not burglars, as some supposed, and
not bent any mischief. They
were only a couple who were sailing
with too full heads and had lost
their bearings no the Sergeant went j
and pi lotted them in.
So ward.
The Hoard of County
realizing the importance of
suppressing the lawlessness and in-
that has existed in a
portion of township, at their
last meeting supplemented the re-
wards offered by the Governor for
the apprehension of the parties who
set lire to the property of J. J.
Laughinghouse, of Mrs, J. H.
and of J. Bryan Grimes. The
State reward is in each instance,
making The County
duplicated these amounts
offered by the Governor which brings
the total amount of rewards up to
This amount ought to be
to some good de-
to take hold of the ease who
can Work it out and bring I he in
to justice. It is hoped
such may be the result.
Amateur
How could it ho otherwise with
that lady, Mrs. Gov.
at the head who know how
well Mrs. Jarvis such
are well aware of her rare
abilities and enjoyed a treat at
the Opera House last Thursday eve-
those who failed to attend in-
deed missed a rare and choice
The entertainment opened with a
recitation by the charming and be-
witching Carraway, who for
minutes superbly entertained
audience with an excellent
Stampede.
The curtain rose for
which was excel-
rendered by Miss Sallie Mar-
shall and Mrs. Jarvis. Miss Mar-
shall as Susan Deliverance Sweet-
brier was splendid, while Mrs. Jarvis
as brought
down the house. make-up as a
of the old school was
beyond description, and
her recital of the
was admirably rendered received
with applause.
The next was the event of the eve-.
Ding, a drama in two acts,
which was produced with a and
composure rarely shown by
team, and showed excellent train-
Every good feature was strong-
presented. To compliment any
would be impossible, all
were so finely produced.
The graceful and queenly Miss
as fairly sustained
her an of more
than ordinary talent.
The charming and fascinating
Miss Carraway as
the house with the pathos and
feeling displayed in representing the
orphan.
The and vivacious
Miss its elicited
pounds of applause by her graceful
appearance the stage and her
desire t-o wed at all events.
The stately and attractive Miss
King as was applauded
for bearing.
The handsome and Miss
Skinner as maid was attractively
attractive,
For the male characters, the hand
some and composed Mr. as
the excellently performed
the duties devolving on him as
band, father and uncle.
Mr. Jones, sedate and polished,
admirably the of
a reserved young man.
Mr, ugly and awkward.,
kept the In good humor by his
portrayal of a young
man whose were a source of
much trouble to himself and his
the count.
All the minor characters wore also
strongly presented.
A fair audience greeted the
and were delighted to know
that Mrs. Jarvis would soon again
entertain them with another play.
The proceeds go to the
church of this place.
It is rumored that Mrs. Jarvis in-
tends taking the company to Kinston
in which event a rare treat in
I store for our sister town.
Owning to the fact that
we arc to change our
------entire stock or------
business we will sell our
Has Daily Sales and Very-
Satisfactory Prices.
K if lit buyers have located at Tarboro representing the leading Foreign and Do-
Dealers and rs In the World, together with any
home buyer. Thy want Tobacco that Is what
located Tarboro for. They are disposed to
pay the veins for Tobacco.
i conducted on strictly business principles,
market. Best hotel modal ion for tobacco people at 81.00
Bryan House.
We extent a cordial invitation to all.
Tarboro in
per day th
Dry Notions, Hosiery WAREHOUSE CO.
White Goods, Shoes, Hats, Caps, Trunks, Valises,
Crockery and Glassware.
Wood and Information apply to.
AT
I S. S. NASH, Tarboro.
Or ALEX Greenville.
All of these are complete, were well selected, embrace some very d
goods. We wish to close to them all out
And ran oiler you Bargains on them. Von should certainly sec n- before buy.
big your Winter Goods so as to get advantage of our low prices.
Housekeepers in Greenville I before the Con-
should hear in mind ear, get the same from our stock far below
the usual prices.
He sure to call on us.
CONGLETON TYSON.
GREENVILLE,
Nov. 10th, 1891.
U-I i
S a
M O
sac CD. CD
x V
a.
El
s-
s a
U w
BEST CHANCE.
-TO BUY
IS NOW OFFERED. OUR ENORMOUS STOCK OF SEASONABLE STYLES
IS OPENED AND BEADY. ELEGANT GOODS, FINK
COLD DRY
NEVER SO GOOD, NEVER SO CHEAP.
HOOTS AND Hoots tor lieu 81.60 per pair. Shoes
Men per pair. Shoes Ladies and Children.
Shoes at Prices that will Surprise You I
immense stock Clothing for men and boys, rich or poor. An
elegant line of Overcoats. All to he sold at popular prices for Cash.
GOOD STYLES.
OUR STOCK. OP
is now complete
and if you Will examine them we
save you money.
will convince you that we can
NOTICE.-We wish to inform the people of Greenville and country
that C. T. is our only authorized agent In Greenville our Fine
Shoes. Any other parties offering them for Bale are doing so without our consent
and purchasing through jobbers. B. P. REED CO.
-----It is the same th the store.-----
for BOOTS and SHOES.
The High Grade and Low Prices Go
Bargains in Trunks. Valises, Prices within the reach
of all and now is the time to buy. Luck is looking for in the shape bar-
at
In front Old Brick Store. C. T.
Greenville, N. C.
Seven Reasons Why
Mather's Self-Lacing Kid Gloves should be used by every lady.
I any
style to the hand.
I 3rd. not tear the sleeve lining. 8th. They arc made of best anal
They an for sale by of kid.
LITTLE CO.
FILLED TO THE TOP
an Elegant Line of
AT STARVATION PRICES.
E.
Hand-Made Shoes tor
Ladies at Higgs
HIGGS STORE.
THE SHOES on
r.
for Ladies at.
Attention Farmers
Both old and new tobaccos are selling well, and we are still leading on Big Prices
and High Averages. We have a------
A large corp of eager buyers big orders must be filled. Below we
n few of the many good prices made by us in the past
D P. 20.50, 23.50,28.60. T. J.
J. M. 13.75, 14.25, 16.25,
13.76, 17.25.
J. C. 20.50, 15.75,
10.75, 14.75,
17.76, 42.50.
F. fit. 35.50. 15.60,
15,25,
Mrs. S. C. 15.2, 12.50,16.75,
J. R. 10.73.
Warren 20,17.25,
36,37-
L. B. 20.25,
H. B. 15.25, 13.75, 18.25,
Z. EdwardS-10.75, 12,14.25,15.
A. 12,12.25,15.25, 15.50,
W. Tucker
W. L. Mitchell-12, 12.25. 10.50,
20.75, 24.75, 20.50, 80.50.
W. S. 14.75.
Allen A 11.75, 18.50,
14.50.
T. B. 15.25, 13.75,16,
16.75,
J. W.
16.60.
W. R. W. 13.75,
12.75,
11.74,
O. 10.25,
17.26.
O. 16.25.16.75,
We recently uvula sale nearly all our old stock and arc now ready for
the new, and propose It lively for the Remember, we buy largely
of grades. the trash to the finest wrappers, and that arc
good prices. Don't forget that every pile of put upon
floor our personal attention, and is sold strictly upon merit, regardless of
where It was made, how It was cured, or to whom It belongs. guarantee to
get you ad much NET money for tobacco as any one else can. send right
along to the the acknowledged headquarters for High Prices for all
grades of tobacco Fine bright wrappers especially solicited, we want
Our checks are payable in New York Exchange without cost to the holder.
With many thanks for past patronage, and earnestly soliciting a continuance, we
are, very truly. Yours to rely on.
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners ft Prop. Banner Warehouse.
INN
I beg to inform the farmers of Pitt and adjoining counties I
rented
Other locals on editorial page.
from The Greenville Tobacco Warehouse Company and will be
pleased to have them give me a trial on the sale of their
Our market is now as high as any market in the State, and I
guarantee every pile of Tobacco entrusted to my care
------shall receive------
MY i mm A L
end do not propose to allow a single pile to be overlooked, I ad-
vise yon to sell while tobacco is selling high. We have some good
buyers here that are anxious for tobacco and are willing to
good prices for it.
Every Tuesday, Wednesday,
Thursday and Friday.
Bring along your Tobacco to the Greenville Warehouse.
Your friend,
G- F. EVANS, Prop.
W. T. R. J. HART,
Bookkeeper. Auctioneer.





WILL HOLD A GRAND
OF THE GOLDEN COIN WILL BE PAID
IN PREMIUMS
To the owners of
A J ed-
I FOR ALL
DISEASES
Di Bi Bi
Botanic Blood j
HP. ULCERS, SALT J .
RHEUM. ECZEMA,
-----form at malignant SKIN ERUPTION, lit- I
being In toning tat
and
Impaired from any lit
almost supernatural healing
justify in guaranteeing a cure. If i
directions are followed.
SENT FREE
BLOOD CO., Atlanta. i
LEGAL NOTICES.
Dissolution.
The firm of lea Baker Co, is this
day by mutual consent. Parties
Indebted to aid firm can settle with
either member The business will here-
after be by Mr. Baker at same
stand.
This Oct.
Notice to Creditors.
The Clerk of the Superior Court of
Pitt having issued letters of ad-
ministration to me. the undersigned, on
the day of October, 1891 on the es-
of Jesse button, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all persons to
the estate to make immediate payment
to the undersigned, and to all creditors
of mill estate to present claims
properly authenticated, to the under-
signed, on or before October
or this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. ,
This the 16th day of October, 1891,
W. I. SMITH,
on the Estate of Jesse Button.
Notice.
been duly appointed
and
HERE ARE THE
Largest Lot,
Largest Check,
WHITE
1st Mahogany,
2nd Bright,
rd less than pounds.
less
BRIGHT Premium.
1st
2nd
less than i less than pounds.
DARK
1st Premium,
2nd
Not less than than pounds.
HAVING
qualified administrator of the estate
of Cox, deed. the
of Pitt county, all persons holding
claims against the estate of said decedent
are hereby notified to t them to
the undersigned for payment, duly
on or the 1-th day
of October, 1801, or this notice will be
plead as a bar to heir recovery. Also
all persons owing said estate are
that prompt payment is expected.
This October
B. T. COX.
of Cox.
Sale.
By virtue of of the Superior Court
of Pitt county, made at September Term
1891. in an action then and there pend-
between Va-i Than and Barnes, as
plaintiffs and C. O. Brown and wife, and
others are defendants, the undersigned
who was appointed Commissioner, by-
said decree will on Monday the 14th day
of December, expose to public sale
before the Court House door in the town
of Greenville, to the highest bidder, tor
cash, all that certain t met or parcel of
land situate In township, in the
of Pitt, as described in said de-
adjoining the lands of Ed. S.
on the north side. N. Mills and
others on the west. Redding Hudson on
the south, and B. F. Tyson and
Buck on the east, containing by
acres more or less, and
the same which was conveyed by C. O.
Brown and wife and A. T. Brown to
Marcellus Moore on the day of
1887 and recorded in Book
page to which deed reference is had.
Terms of sale made known oil day of
sale. Oct. Sand,
,. C. Latham,
Commissioner.
An Diet.
Mrs. Oh. Titus, the baby ha,
swallowed a hairpin I
Mr. it-, just us ox
peered Now you'll want money to
buy some more It's nothing bat
money, money, money in this house
the whole blessed time, that
baby has swallowed more fifty
worth of hairpins in is last
three months. Now, this
thing has got to stop right here either
that baby will quit eating hail ins and
come down to common like the
rest of as or I'll know the reason why
you York Epoch.
Queer world Queer people Here
are men and women by thousands suffer-
all s of diseases,
of pain, spending all on
physicians and no .-, but
when right hand
there's a remedy which says it c help
them because it's helped thou like
them. ad-
say. not
of the ordinary sort. is
Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical
and it's different from the or unary nos-
In
It docs what it claims to do, costs
you
The way is You pay your drug-
gist for a bottle. You read the
and you follow thorn. You get
better, or you don't. If you do, you buy
another beetle, and perhaps another. If
you don't get better, you get your
money And the queer thing is
that so many people are willing to be
sick when the remedy's so near at
hand.
For Hie of Quiet.
daughter admired both law and
music, so I had her study
impelled you to that
think practicing law is quieter
than practicing piano
fork Truth.
have a speedy and positive cure
for catarrh, diphtheria, tanker, mouth
and headache, in Catarrh Rem-
A nasal injector free with each
bottle. Use it if desire health and
sweet breath. Price Sold Wool-
en's Drugstore.
Good looks are more than skin deep,
depending upon a healthy condition of
all the vital organs. If the be In-
active, yon have a Billions Look, if your
stomach be disordered you have a
peptic Look and if your Kidneys be
you have a Pinched Look. Secure
good health and you will have good looks.
Electric Bitters Is the great alternative
Tonic acts directly on these vital
organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches. Bods
and gives a good complexion. Sold at
John L. Wooten's Drug Store, per
bottle.
Or One Mind.
can't see any sense
In wasting so much valuable time on
dead languages.
College Student Neither can L
Since Wilkins started in to win the
Latin prize he hasn't been worth a cent
In the boat News.
Babies are the institution and should
be guarded from attack of colic by Dr.
Bull's Baby Syrup.
The summer girl while climbing the
mountains or bathing In the sands of the
seashore, should her a box of
Old Saul's Catarrh Cure It is
able for cold in the bead.
The
mamma's got whiter teeth than
your said
have. She changes
retorted
York Epoch.
A Marshal Lift Hair.
FLA.
Jan.
For the last eight years I have in
bad health, suffering with Malaria,
Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Dropsy. My
digestion was bad, and my hair all came
out, in fact I was nearly a wreck. had
taken kidney an blood medicines,
which did me good. When I began
taking P. P. P., about three months
ago, I was as weak as a child. I have
only taken four bottles, small and
to-day I am a well man and my hair has
I cannot id P.
P. P., too highly. W. V. WARE,
Marshal, Fla.
C. Own, Witness.
Wilson Button, Attorneys at I
H. Webb, D.
have been using one of
years, ft little in-
who has been with a
trouble and a dropsical tendency. I
have found relief for him In of
he when the doctors had failed
o give him any relief, and lam
that but for Its use we should have
tat him. have never seen it fail to reduce
Ms fever, or to bring sound sweet sleep. I
would not be It for many times Its
cost. Yours truly, J. O. BI
Mr. la also President of Na-
Winston. N. v., and Is one of tho
men of the South.
For all Information address
ATLANTIC CO.,
HO. , O. C,
S. C.
CURES SYPHILIS
and II with
all of
for
, twit
90.00
20.00
10.00
20.00
No tobacco allowed to compete for premium unless exhibited by
the grower, and of crop of 1591.
No tobacco received premiums after Tuesday night, Dec. 1st.
The Queen of the Golden Leaf Tobacco Belt
YOU
A Cordial Welcome.
FROM PRINCIPAL MARKETS
Highest Prices will be Pail
Fit m kit
YOU
Will miss the chance of a lifetime if you fail to
ATTEND THE
Notice Land Sale.
By virtue of a decree the Superior
Court of Pitt county, made at June Term
1801, upon petition in an action,
then and there pending wherein L. v.
Morrill, d. b. n. c. t. u. of I. P.
and others arc plaintiffs
against J. H. and others,
of said I,. P. late
of said county, deceased, are
. ,
The who was appointed
Commissioner by said, decree, will on
Monday the 23rd day of November, 1891,
expose to public sale before the Court
House door in the town cf Greenville, to
the highest bidder, all the lands
ed in said decree, one tract adjoining the
lauds of H. S. Tyson and It. A. Tyson,
on Broad Branch, containing two
hundred and sixty acres more or
less, better known as the home place and
being the tract devised to James II.
by the last will an j testament
of the said L. P. and one
tract lying on Broad Branch, adjoin-
the lands of K. A. Tyson and Alfred
containing one
and fifty acres more or less, and being
the devised to L. P Jr.
by the will of his father L. P.
Sr., and one other tract known as the
Anderson lands, adjoining the lands of
Willoughby, J. C. others
containing acres, more or less,
all of which the said L. P. Beardsley,
died seized and possessed of. Sold for
assets to nay debts of the estate.
One third of the price to be
paid in cash on day of sale, the balance
in one and two years, with per cent in-
title to be retained until purchase
price is fully paid; to bear interest from
of sale. This 22nd day of Sept. 1891.
L. C. Latham,
Commissioner.
Rocky
Mount.
REWARD.
State of Carolina,
Executive Department.
Whereas, official information has
been received by me that several
offenses of have
recently been committed in the County
of Pitt and State of North Carolina;
Whereas, it appears that the
party or parties committing said offenses
are unknown,
Now. I, THOMAS M.
HOLT, Governor of the State of North
Carolina, by virtue of authority in me
vested by law. do issue this
offering a reward of T
HUNDRED DOLLARS to the person
or persons who shall the arrest,
delivery and conviction of the person or
persons who burned the property of J.
J. and TWO
HUNDRED DOLLARS reward for the
arrest, delivery conviction of the
person or persons who burned the prop-
of J. BRYAN and TWO
DOLLARS reward for the
arrest, delivery and conviction of the
person or persons who burned the prop-
of MRS. H.
These criminals must be delivered to the
Sheriff of Pitt County, at the Court
House in Greenville, and I do enjoin all
officers of the State and all good citizens
to in bringing said unknown
or criminals to justice.
Done in the City of Raleigh
this 24th day of October.
1601, and in the one hundred
and sixteenth year of oar
American Independence.
M. HOLT, Governor.
By the
F. Sector.
Modern
Hotel Guest
like a Sunday paper, but I'm a stranger
here don't know which Is the
best.
Newsstand your breakfast
yet
you'd better take this paper;
three supplements, twenty-four pages.
If the waiter is spry get your order
before you're through reading
Hood News
SCROFULA.
.-, r- -t-l
old
It
R R R
A Investment.
Ir one which is guaranteed to bring
you satisfactory results, or in case of fail-
a return of purchase price. On this
safe plan you can buy from our
Druggist a bottle Dr. King's
New Discovery for Consumption. It is
guaranteed to bring you relief every
when used for any affection of
Throat. Lungs or Chest, such as Con-
Datamation of Lungs. Bron-
Asthma. Croup,
etc., etc It is pleasant and agreeable to
taste, perfectly Bale, and can always be
depended upon.
Trial bottles free at John L.
Drugstore.
Well Endorsed.
When such men as Dr. J. I. Haw-
Rev. Sam P. Jones. Dr. P. S.
M. II. Wells, Gen.
Gov. It. B. Hubbard, Dr. D.
I, Dr. M. B. Wharton, Rev. O.
i. Col. L. F. Livingston, Pres.
Ga. State Alliance, and others too
to mention, of undoubted
endorse a medicine in unqualified terms
it means something-
men give King's Royal
their endorsement, and hearty rec-
will cure all
diseases that originate from poisonous
germs In the blood. To the extent that
the germ theory is correct. King's Roy-
is the remedy. It Is no ac-
It is prepared as a germ de-
and is the result of years
of a medical genius. Every family
should keep a bot tie on hand for burns
or bites of poisonous insects. It is a
for colds. It will arrest and cure
fever quicker than quinine. Newspapers
arc endorsing this wonderful remedy,
and many physicians use it in their
It is destined to be a standard rein
Ask your druggist for it. If he
cannot f h you. send direct to King's
Royal Co., Atlanta, Ga.
Price per bottle. Write them for
one of their little which tells won
D. D. HASKETT
Another has passed and am here
with the same The New Lee
New Patron, Piedmont,
and and all of
these are pronounced nil
right. Also a full
line of Heating
Stoves,
Stove Pipe, Tinware,
low ware. At.
s of Water.
Water ; J now be counted
by Mr. latest
of his for counting the
particles of dust in tho air. In his
on to the Royal Society of
Edinburgh, says of the In-
consists of a glass mi-
divided Into squares of a
known size, a spot mirror for
the stage, and the strong lens of a
microscope for observing the drops on
the In the case of one log ob
served Mr. found the number
of drops falling per minute to reach
nearly per square inch Lon-
don Tit-Bits.
Positive and unsolicited testimony
from every section confirms every claim
made of the wonderful efficacy of Dr.
Bull's Cough Syrup. Trice
A induced me to try
Oil for my rheumatic foot. I used it and
the rheumatism is entirely gone.
JOHN II. ANDERSON.
Baltimore,
n r a
CURES
r.
Got to Money.
A Georgia editor who Is also a
of tho peace granted a quarreling
couple an absolute divorce.
he said, three dollars
out of the can't
said tho bailiff mournfully; they
got a said the
the ordinary before
me and make him issue a and
I'll marry tho woman to the first man
who's got three dollars. This court
can't live on air. Step up lively, gen-
Constitution.
and Liver Complaint.
Is it not worth the small pried of
to free yourself of every symptom of
these distressing complaints, if you
think so call at our store and get a bot-
of every bottle
has a printed guarantee on it, use
and If it does you no good ii
will cost you nothing. Sold at Wooten's
Drug Store.
Too Good All of a Sudden.
College the boys have
attended prayers regularly this week.
one has missed for
two weeks.
I Some
Is brewing. Good
P. P. P.
BROS., Proprietors,
Block,
For Kile at J. I. Drug Store
EAST-
BUNIONS
WARTS
Without
ALLEY HYMAN,
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW
Views of Animal.
Family Gatherings, taken el
Short Copying from snail
tun-rs to life in Inks, Crayon or
Colors.
Head quarters for Photographs.
Call and
R Manager.
N. C.
Sale.
Hy virtue of a decree of tho Court of made at
Term. 1891, In an action then there pending between W. II. Met Co., as
and J. Murphy, Executor of M. Moore, deceased.
who was appointed Commissioner by will on MONDAY
THE Hill DAY DECEMBER. expose to public sale before the Court
House door. In the town of Greenville, to the highest bidder, on terns made known
on day of sale, all the following described pieces or parcel- or land, as follows, to-
One house and lot in the town of Greenville, upon said Marcellus
Moore resided at the time of his death, hounded on the east by street, on
the by the Greenville Academy lot, on the nest by Mrs. E. A. Sheppard and
the Old Plank road, and on the north by the Old Store Warehouse lot.
J. A lot upon which the old store and warehouse are situated, adjoining the
lot, running with the yard fence from to the Old Plank road
bounded on the north and west by the Old Plank road, and on the east by
Evans street.
S. Also one other store and lot on the east side of Evans street, bounded on the
south by Alfred beginning at his north-west corner on street, and
running with said street north feet, thence east and parallel with Fifth street
feet thence and parallel With said street, to said Alfred
i Forbes line, thence with his line feet to the and being the Southern
portion of lot
Also one other piece or parcel of laud In said town
a point on Evans street. Fifty feet from the South East of lot No. being
the corner of J-S. AW. II. and running thence with said Smiths line
feet to the line lot No. thence with the line of lot No. In the direction of
fourth street feet, thence at right angles parallel to the first line, feet,
to a point on Evans Street, thence with the line of Evans street feet to the
being a part of lot. No. 03- in said town.
Also one other lot in the town of Greenville mid being lot No. better
known as the old T. K. Nelson lot, being situate on the South-east corner,
Washington and Front streets.
Also all that certain plow or parcel of laud lying on the Green's Mill road,
beginning at the north-east corner of the land conveyed by said William
Moore to C E. A. on the day of at or near a sweet
Gum stump, thence N. W. poles, thence S. W. poles, thence S.
K. poles, with the Green line now Patrick's line to the public road,
With said road to the containing acres mote or less.
Also one other tractor parcel of land bounded on the cut by the land of
Latham on the south by road, on the west by Mrs.
Nannie Anderson's line, and on the north by Tar river, containing
So acres, more or less, and better known as the
t. Also One Other tract, piece or parcel of laud lying on the road leading from
Greenville to adjoining Mrs. Anderson's Move land, J. I. Moore, the
Jackson Williams tad the Smith land now Warren Tucker, containing
acres, more or less.
l. Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land situated of the town
beginning at Mrs. A. M. Clark's corner or the Old Plank road, thence
with her line north , K poles to line and adjoining the T. B.
Cherry lend, Mrs. . L. Moore, Warren Tucker, and others, containing one
acres, more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land situated in township
lying on the side of Little Creek, adjoining lands of E. C.
Lorenzo II. Ii. W. and others, containing
acres, more or less. to the life estate of Mrs. Ii, F. Tucker, on that
portion lying on the east side of the public road, and upon which she now re-ides.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land in toe
lying Oil the Bide of Little Creek, adjoining lands of Joseph
II. C. Blount and others, and being lot No. In die division the land of
K. J. Blount. deceased, for further reference is had to said
containing ion acre- more or leas.
Also one other tract piece or of land lying on the north side Heaver
Dam swamp adjoining Thomas Willoughby Joe Button land and others, con-
acre-, more or
Al-o one other tract, piece or parcel of land In Heaver Dam township, and
being portion of Lot No. iii the division of the lands of Anderson,
containing acres more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land situated In Greenville township,
adjoining the Flake land, William Allen, Alfred Forbes and others,
I lug acres, more or teas,
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, in township, ad-
I the land- of Alfred Forbes, Fred White and Others, containing acres,
I more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land. In township, ad-
I joining the Hardy Johnson land, J. J. It. It. Jackson and Others, contain-
acre, more or less, lying on the east side of Little Creek.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated in Greenville township,
adjoining the land, the Nobles and others containing acre-.
more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated In township.
adjoining the lands Of Council Dawson, Mary A. Dawson and others, which was
conveyed to Marcellus Moore by James Dawson and wile July containing
more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated ill Greenville town-hip,
adjoining the land of Moore and others, known as the lands, con-
about acres, more or less.
Also one other tract, piece parcel of land, situated in township,
adjoining the lands Latham Oliver Moore. John Galloway and
acres, more or less, upon which Thomas Dunn now resides.
Also one other piece or parcel of land, situated in Greenville township,
which was conveyed by a grant from the. State of North Carol a to one
in 1820, and recorded in book L. page containing acres, more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated In
adjoining the lands Of W. Jones, F. Chapman, Campbell and others,
containing acres, more or less, and known as the Calico Hill place.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land situated In township,
adjoining tho lands of A. Samuel Cory and others, known as the
Marcus place, containing acres, more or leas.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land situated iii Greenville town-hip,
adjoining the place, Louisa W. H, r and oilier-, contain
acres, more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated ii township.
adjoining the lands of Adams, James Elks, Jesse Had lock and others,
sores, more or less.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel cf land, situated in town-
ship, adjoining the lauds of Harrington, the Brown lands, Jerry
and others, containing acres more lea and better known the and
woods land.
To Young
Mothers
r n. Easy.
End- by the
I.,
CO.
ATLANTA, GA
I BY ALL
A Gold Watch and
Now Ready
To show you the finest of lot of
Horses
AND
Mules,
brought to
II
yon want a good
Draft Morse or a good Work
Mule don't fail In sec inc.
I you at
reasonable priors.
Feed Stables
have recently been enlarged and
cow I have ample room to
all horses-left in my charge
Bust attention
C.
T- O-
We
Grimesland, N. C.
to call your attention to
-----fact that our-----
the
That is what our agent receives who
gets up a club on our per week plan.
Our 14-karat gold-filled cases are war-
ranted for years. Fine E gin or
movement. Stem wind and
set. Lady's or Gent's to
any watch . To secure agents where
we have none, we sell one of tho Hunt-
Case Watches for the Club price
and send C. O. D. by express with
examination before paying
for same.
Our agent at Durham, N. C
Jewelers have confessed they
don't know how you can such
w for the
One good reliable agent wanted for
each place. Write particulars.
WATCH CO.,
and Maiden Lane, New
FOR
Blum
it.
Doors, Sash, Blinds. Lock, Butts,
Hinges, Nails, Axes. Class
Puny, Paints and Oils, Ac. Ac.
Agent Brown's Cotton
Gin, Agent for Hall's
Safe A Lock
Safes. Agent
for The
American Sewing Machines.
It will be to your Interest to examine
my stock before purchasing.
D. HASKETT.
LIVERY SALE FEED
have removed to the new stables on
Fifth In rear Capt. White's
Store, where I constantly
keep on hand a line line of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the livery and pan suit the most
I will run a DRAY-
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a sharp of
your patronage. Call be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, M. O.
and
mow
It ems. For ail la
Ur
NEW FALL GOODS
are now ready for inspection. Our b
brought back from northern
a stock of carefully selected
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
From which all your wan Is can sup-
plied. We do not undertake to
ate the many different goods, but come
to us for anything want and get It at
LOWEST
The very highest market prices are
paid us for Cotton and all conn try
produce. also have a large lot of
5-inch Heart for sale.
J. O. PROCTOR BRO.
G R A KORT
COCOA.
BREAKFAST.
a thorough knowledge of the
natural laws which govern the opera-
lions of digestion and nutrition, and by
a careful application of the fine proper-
ties of Cocoa, Mi.
provided out breakfast tables with a
flavored beverage which may save
us many heavy bills. It IS W
the judicious use of such articles of diet
that a constitution may gradually
built up strong enough to resist
every tendency to disease. Hundreds of
subtle maladies are floating around hi
ready to attack wherever there is a weak
point, We may escape many a fatal
keeping well
with purr. a property
ed Saws
Made simply with boiling or milk.
Sold only In half-pound tins, by Grocer,
the.
Chemist.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel land situated III township,
adjoining the Hardy Johnson land, Mrs. Fannie and others, containing
acres, more or less.
BO. Also one other piece or parcel of land, situated In Greenville
the north side o Hardy's run. adjoining the lands of Susan Allen, the Sam
Flake laud, Mary A. Simmons and others, containing ins acres. or less.
Also one other tract, niece or parcel of land, situated in township,
adjoining lands of E. S. W. O. Mills, Redding Hudson and others,
containing acres, more or less, better n as the Brown place.
Also one other tract, piece or parcel of land, situated In town-
ship, adjoining the lands of smith, Harrington place and others,
containing acres, more or less, better known as the John Harrington place.
el. Also one other tract, piece or parcel land, situated In Greenville township,
lying between Tar and the main road leading to Doro, adjoining the lands
of G. F. Marv and others, Containing acres, more or less.
Also one piece or parcel of land, situated in township,
north side of Tar river, adjoining farm. W, II. and
containing acres, more or
A one other piece or of land, III township,
north side of Tar river, adjoining the John Fleming place, the Shivers laud and
others, being lot No. o in the division the Win. Shiver, laud, winch was allotted
to J. Maker, containing acres, more or less.
Also one other lot, piece or pared of laud, situated In the town of
known in the plot of said town as lot No. and the southern half of lot. No.
and adjoining Mrs. M. A. and others, situated near tho lauding.
W. Also one other lot. piece or parcel of land, situated in the of
being an undivided half interest in lot No. in the Of said town, situated
near the steamboat landing- , , ., ,
For farther more particular description of the above described
reference is had to a deed of conveyance same M to J, n.
Murphy- which is recorded in book VI, pages or fie Register Do vis
of Pitt county.
Terms of sale made known upon day of sate. .
This r 22nd, 1881.
OF
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following good
not to be excelled In this market. And lobe and
I RY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
I offer to the trade at Wholesale
d's Bread Prep
pure Line
Wood and
I satisfaction.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN--------
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE INSURANCE
N.
J OLD STAND
All kind, in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
FAR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
London England, of proofs f it r.
at alts
The best In the world
Invisible Tubular , ,,.
Whispers j hands,
all corns, and all skin eruptions, and per
lively cures piles, or no pay required,
is guaranteed to give perfect
or money refunded. Price s cents
box. For sale by L. Woolen.
Ear
table. Successful
fall. Sold F. only,
Broadway. New York. Write for book


Title
Eastern reflector, 11 November 1891
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
November 11, 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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