Eastern reflector, 4 May 1892






J THE REFLECTOR
--------HAS A--------
I Job Printing Room
can be surpassed no
here in this section.
u Our work always give sails-
faction.
S Tim I
Good Presses
e Material
US YOUR ORDERS.
The Eastern Reflector.
VOL. XI.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY. MAY 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN
PREFERENCE
TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter.
First Sunday, morning and night,
Second Sunday morning at Antioch
and Saturday night before.
Third fourth
morning and night, also second
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday
night service each week.
Services at school house on
Tarboro road on Thurs lay night
third Sunday until April and then
on third Sunday evening.
Rev. R. K. Taylor's Appointments.
Rev. K. F. Taylor, pastor of Green-
ville Circuit of the M. B. Church, South,
will preach at the following times and
places, regularly each
1st Sunday at o'clock A.
1st Sunday, Chapel, o
P. M.
2nd Sunday, Grove.
A H.
2nd Sunday. School House,
miles west of
p. m.
3rd Sunday. or Spring ,
School A. M.
3rd Sunday, Tripp's
o'clock I. M.
4th Bethlehem, o'clock
a. II.
4th School House,
o'clock r. Si.
An Announcement.
I MO n w ready to treat baldness. I
have improved my preparation and have
observed In the last ninety days that it
will do I claim fur it. Partial
baldness be treated by Hie bottle
an I the patient can use it himself.
Total baldness I must treat myself. I
invite in reference to
treatment Ac. Every one. who tries my
preparation will in- thoroughly satisfied
results. We refer you to a
number of men here in this town as to
its merits. Culley.
X. April 5th,
THE ONLY WAY TO
MAKE
Notice to Creditors.
On In- 4th day of April, the
Clerk of the Superior Court Pitt
to the undersigned letters of
administration as administrator de
of the estate of L. R. Anderson, de-
ceased, who duly and gave bond
as such. Notice is now given to the
of said L. It. Anderson to
sent their claims to me for payment duly
authenticated on or before the 13th day
of April. or this notice will be
plead in liar of their All per-
sons indebted to said estate are request-
ed to make immediate payment to me.
This the 13th day of April. 1808.
It. Conn,
d. b. n. of 1.- It. Anderson.
Land Sale.
By Virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt Comity at March Term
Honor II. Bryan Judge
presiding, in the cane of W. II. Cox vs.
E. J. the
will ell for before the Court
House door in Greenville on
the Sad day of May the following
in the County of Pitt and
in Township, a one fourth
undivided interest in the land, known
as the J. laud also a one fifth
undivided interest in the lands F.
the tract adjoin- the lands
L. B. B. W.
and others, containing acres,
more or the other tract adjoin; the
L. Nobles land
and others containing acres, more or
BY H. C.
I used to wonder why
As smart a man as I
Could never make my business succeed,
III spite of toil and care,
And always being there,
It wouldn't pay and worried me. indeed,
deed. deed.
While others all ,
The road to wealth bad found.
I poorer got aboard sinking ship. -hip.
ship.
alas. I knew
That In a month or two
The sheriff sure would have me ill his
grip, grip. grip.
Each night, with aching head,
I tensed upon my lied
Endeavoring to think out my mi-take,
take, take
Why I With vim and health.
And means Of gaining wealth.
Could never, like my neighbors, money
make, make, make.
At last I thought it out.
noticed tho-c about,
Who advertised were getting lots of gold,
gold. gold.
While those afraid to try
Were left the same as I,
Because our business methods were
old. old. old.
I kicked myself at once
For being such a dunce.
Then in the papers kept a glowing ad.,
ail., ad.
My business right away,
Of course began to pay.
Which makes my friend, the Sheriff, very-
sad, -ad. sail.
This April ISM.
F. G. JAMES.
Commissioner.
Sealed Proposals.
The board of Commissioners of Pitt
county will at their meeting on the 2nd
day of May 1892, receive sealed bids for
the construction of a dam for a public
roadway commencing at the north end
of the bridge across river at Green-
ville, and running from thence north
one and degree east one hundred
and thirty-two poles to the public road.
The dirt to be used in the construction
of said dam is to lie taken from the land
lying immediately the west side of
the said proposed roadway. The bids
are to, lie by the yard for
the dirt used in sail dam, and successful
bidder is to clear the land upon which
the dam is to be constructed of trees,
bushes and logs. The board of Com-
missioners reserves the right to reject
any and all bids. For further
apply to R. or Leonidas
Fleming at Greenville. N. C.
By order of the hoard of Commission-
of Pitt county.
D- II. JAMES,
Important Notice.
Sale of Steamer Greenville.
By authority conferred on me by
Stockholders of the Tar
Company, I will offer for sale at
auction at the Clyde wharf in the
town of Washington, N on Thursday.
May 19th, at o'clock P. M., the
l s. with all her
tackle, apparel and furniture, together
with one Barge of tons capacity decked
all over. The is
a light draft propeller, length of keel
feet, length over all feet, width of
bottom feet, feet over all. speed
miles per hour, capacity
bales Inspected March 20th,
1893- Title guaranteed- For further in-
formation in person or by letter to
John Havens. Washington. N. C. J. J.
Cherry, N. C, or N. M.
Lawrence, Tarboro, N. C.
Forbes.
Tar River Transportation Co.
A New Enterprise.
Wishing to thank our patrons for the
liberal patronage they have given us la
the lines of our manufacturing,
we also wish to let them know that we
building Barrels for Potatoes
would glad to furnish those in
need of Barrels. We think we have as
rd ml well ventilated Barrel as Will
on the market or It has been so pron-
by those acquainted with truck
barrels. We sell for cents apiece.
Id lots of barrels cents. As we
have no idea of the demand we would
thank those wishing to buy barrels to
place orders with us as early a
possible so we may have prepared timber
to build the barrels when needed. Those
who do give any notice of their order
may not barrels hand when they
need them. We are also prepared to
furnish cotton planters or to do any repair
Work on them or furnish any . Also
we can furnish on short notice any
for or anything in our
line of manufacturing.
We would also call attention to our
new style circular seat for churches.
Please address Win-
WHAT AMAZING FOLLY.
Wilmington Star.
For fifty-two years out of the one
hundred and three since the first
President of the United States was
inaugurated the party
was in control of and shaped the
policy of this government. Dur-
those fifty-two years the Re-
public achieved its greatest glories
on land and on sea, and extended
its domain from ocean to ocean.
Up to 1860 there was no com-
plaint of class legislation, no com-
plaint of the government being
administered in the interest of
money lords or monopolists, there
was no exacting of monstrous
tribute from the people for the en-
of the few, no special
legislation in the interest of men
who paid for it by liberal
to campaign funds, no govern-
mental paternalism to make men
by law, no govern-
mental with the
business affairs of the people, or
in the affairs of States. This has
all come to pass within the past
thirty years, since the Republican
party came into power.
Within these thirty years all the
legislation which has been passed
affecting the governmental policies
of this country has sprung from j
the Republican party, which is
responsible, for every grievance of
which the people complain, which j
may be the result directly or in-
directly of the governmental
pursued. No living man can
point to one single act of which
the people or against
which the statesmen of the third
party so loudly protest, for which
the Democratic party is
The Democratic party is not re-
for the so-called
tariff, which is another name
for legalized plunder.
It is not responsible for the
lavish donation of the public lands
to railroad corporations.
It is not responsible for the de-
of our merchant marine-
It is not responsible for trans-
our commerce to British
ships and for making the American
flag a curiosity in a foreign port
or on the high seas.
It is not responsible for the
financial system which locks up
the money of the country in the
money centers, enabling the money
kings to control the volume of cur-
and regulate the rate of in-
It is not responsible for the
tariff system and internal revenue
system that draws the money from
the people and sends it to these
centers.
It is not responsible for the tariff
and financial discrimination
against some sections in favor of
others.
It is not responsible for the pol-
which have weighed so
upon the farmers of this country
and covered their farms with
of millions of dollars of in-
It is not responsible for destroy-
the foreign market of the far-
mer and compelling him to depend
upon the delusive
It is not responsible for the
millionaires whose fortunes
range from to
each, who can and do control
the legislation of this country.
It is not responsible for making
the talisman to a seat in
the United States Senate.
It is not responsible for the
trusts, combines, rings and
against which so much pro-
test has been made, which are the
outgrowth of the governmental
policies which have prevailed with-
in the past thirty years.
All these things, and more, have
happened since the Democratic
party went out of power and since
the party came into
power. It alone is responsible.
Where, then, is the sense or the
justice in arraigning the Demo-
party and charging it with
responsibility for the ills resulting
from blundering or corrupt
when it had nothing to do
with it, but bus fought against it
constantly, resolutely and
through all these years
What folly is it that
inspires men who for all these
years, or the greater part of them
have stood in the Democratic lines
and under Democratic banners
and fought against the combined
powers of corruption and greed,
to desert their colors now when
we are on the eve of securing what
we have struggled so long for, and
when the Democratic party is
stronger than it ever has been
within thirty years
What idiotic ambition, or
treachery is it in the men
once were who
now labor to create dissension,
and to destroy the party which
for thirty years has stood between
the people and oppression, and
prevented the government from
being converted into a centralized
despotism I
This is what some men who have
once been Democrats are now
doing in the South, and doing it
JUST THE OF IT.
ABOUT MEN.
Plymouth Beacon.
Often as we stand upon the
banks of the Roanoke and see raft
after raft of pine logs being taken
out of the State to be manufactured,
we hear men say that in a short
time the wealth of our forests will
be exhausted then the lumbermen
will pull and go elsewhere and
Plymouth will be left flat.
So it is, and has been for many
years, the supply of logs produced
by our extensive forests is so great
that the capacity is
unable to handle it, hence it has
to be shipped out of the State to
be manufactured. While this is
true, it is not a necessity. We
have three mills that manufacture
all the lumber they can, and now
that this number is insufficient we
should increase the manufacturing
capacity to correspond with the
supply, then if the supply of the
manufactured is greater than the
local demand, which it will be, let
the lumber be shipped already
manufactured. What the South,
and especially this section, needs
is manufacturing enterprises, then
if the supply of the forest is ex-
as is predicted, the South
will have reaped the benefit of
what has gone.
What is true of the lumber inter-
est is also true of all other inter-
Cotton for instance, has to
baled and shipped to some
State north of us for
We raise it, go through
with all the trouble, then sell it at
or cents, it is then shipped to
the north, pay the
manufactured into cloth and
then shipped back to us again
pay the that is the con-
sumer does, and in this case the
for the sole purpose of lifting, producer is really the consumer,
themselves into position by taking but he has to pay two freights. If
advantage of the confidence or j we had mills here at home the cot-
credulity of the men who trust them j ton could be manufactured into
In all the North no roan and sold a profit; lit.
has ever been conspicuous enough the transportation expenses,
to attract attention as a Democrat l then if the supply should be great-
has been found to do this. It has than the local demand the goods
been left to men in the South, could be shipped thus bringing
where of all the sections, if a profit to the homo industry,
and patriotism were not Again, there are many other
the people should be united things of minor importance and at
and solid as a stone wall for and the same time a necessity with us
with the party which for twenty- which should be manufactured at
five years has so heroically stood home. Look at the ax, hoe and
in of the South when the scoop handles, tubs, buckets,
arm of the sectional as-; would it not pay to make them
and oppressor was raised j here at home where the material
to strike. I is found in great abundance, as
The innocent minded people; well as it does the northern
who are duped into this may who sell them to us at a
pitied f their credulity, but the j profit with freight added. .
men who take advantage of And again, we buy all our flour
can never rise above the suspicion , at the north or west, pay for
of treachery, venality or demented
ambition.
A Remarkable Character.
this necessary of life from to
per Why is this
There can be no other reason given
than the fact that we have no mills
in this section to manufacture the
Charlotte Observer. flour. Perhaps some may argue
Mr- Stinson, of Clear j that our farmers do not produce
Creek, is a remarkable individual, the wheat, but they can and they
He is years of age ; was born i would if the mills were here- The
raised in the house he now soil of Eastern Carolina will pro-
occupies, never having lived in
any other; never was in any other
county than this and Union, where
he married. He has made
coffins in his life. The first
ever put in Philadelphia grave-
yard was made by him. He was
never on a jury in his life, and
was a witness in court. He
regulates his household by a clock
years old, of the ancient
style. Mr. Stinson
never owned any slaves, but has
been well off all his life- He had
a great mania for hunting in
lies for gold. Once after a heavy
rain, while picking amongst some
rocks in a near his house,
he found a piece of gold which
sold for The old man still
has all his faculties, and is strong
and hearty.
Mr. J. W- Wharton, Jr., tells the
Greensboro Record a snake story-
He treed a huge snake, which he
saw go into a hollow twenty feet
from the ground. He cut the tree
and in cutting into the hollow cut
the snake in three pieces. When
laid upon the ground it was over
six feet long with an enormous
body, and was known as the cow-
sucker snake.
When the Rev. Mr.
prayed for the Ohio legislature
I the other day he prayed that
might be from the
bribes, bribers and bribe-takers
in our As he was praying
for a Republican legislature the
Rev. gentleman knew just what
kind of a prayer was appropriate-
Star.
duce wheat equal to that of the
west
We cry when as
a people are responsible for the
one I hard times. The cause of hard
times and the oppressed condition
of this section of the country is
said to be the result of political
legislation, but we believe that the
inactivity of our people has more
to do with it than politics-
Are northern capitalists and
manufacturers to blame for the
enormous prices charged us for
supplies
Are railroads to blame for
charging us transportation on our
supplies
Is it their fault that we buy our
meat at the west instead of raising
it
Is it their fault that we our
flour, corn, cloth, instead of
producing it
Not by any means. We, the
Southern people, are responsible
for this State of affairs, and we
alone, and so long as we continue
in the present way, there is no
power under the sun that
can bring us relief. We boast of
being a free people, but to be free
we must be independent, and so
long as we have to depend upon
other sections for daily sup-
plies we are not a free people-
If do not wish to see Eastern
North Carolina go backward
must awaken to our interest and
strive to live at home, to raise and
manufacture our own supplies, to
to save the profit which now go to
the middle men and railroads.
us offer inducements to
to come here and
our product, so that we
reap the benefit.
We want to talk a little to our
lady readers, especially the young
girls. have a good time ; be
merry, be gay ; ride, row and enjoy
yourselves generally, but don't
make a step in the wrong
will bring sorrow to
others or cause you in future years
to blush over its memory. Now
we are going to tell you about
what we the think of the boys, for
every wheel should have a
and so should every girl. A most
delightful fellow, who is handsome
enough to cause many a maiden's
heart to flutter and who is well
enough off to be a suitable cause
in mama's estimation, for the
was modest enough to
affirm he remained single
owing to the fact that he did not
feel capable of a woman
happy. This very statement re-
vealed the truth that he would in-
deed the man to make one of
the best of husbands, in con-
sequence make a very happy
woman of the girl he chose for his
wife.
It is not the man who is afraid
he will not the bill in the mat-
play that is the one that
fails signally in the role. If he
ever ventures so far asks a
woman to be his wife she is pretty
sure that her life will be pleasant
so far as her domestic relations
are concerned. If his modesty is
not assumed he will never quite
recover from the surprise at her
accepting him and he will always
regard her love as a possession
that is exceedingly precious and
must be carefully guarded lest it
slip away from him. No mutter
how many years they married
it will always be the same the
modest, unassuming bachelor will
prove the devoted admiring
band to the end.
On the other hand, the superb
who considers that ho be-
stows a little of heaven with
the giving of his name is the one
that is going to make a girl
wretched. He feels as though per-
haps he were too precipitated in
his wooing and shows her by his
actions if he does not tell her in so
many words that there were
other girls just dying for him.
If money is scarce it will not be
he that will suffer. His glorious
form must be arrayed in gorgeous
apparel, his luncheons necessarily
of the finest, and his cigars the
best, though perhaps at home, his I
wife in a garment that may have
been one of the dresses of her
trousseau many years ago, eats
warmed over messes and does her
own work He, in his pride, con-
it enough honor for any
woman simply to bear his name,
and if it were suggested to him
that his wife was miserable he
would not credit such a ridiculous
statement.
Girls, do not be deceived by the
gay, showy men, who are
selfish who could never
love any as well as their own
charming selves. Do not let the
fine figure, handsome face and
dashing air make you snub the
quiet, modest chap who blushes
when you speak and appears a
trifle stupid before the gay
flow of talk of the more
dashing rival. The modest man is
the one for the long race and, if
your head is level heart
in the right place, the evanescent
charms of the one will be complete-
swallowed up and lost sight, of
in the substantial lasting character
of the other.
SHALL CHURCHES ADVERTISE
Somerville
Mu. In reading your
church column I have often won-
why it is that there is so
little in it about some of the
churches. The activities of some
of them are well reported. Take
the Prospect Hill Congregational,
for instance- No reader of your
paper can help receiving the
impression that it is a live, active
institution that exists for the
purpose of doing the greatest good
to the greatest number. Into such
a church people would naturally
be attracted, and this leads me to
tho matter about which I wanted
to say just a word, namely, the
value of advertising to churches.
I may be a upon this sub
but I do not believe that
many things succeed in these days
without being advertised. I don't
mean advertised by displayed
notices in advertising columns in
all cases, but I do mean calling
public attention to them by means
of ink in some way. As
I understand it you insert all these
church notices without
and that being the case I should
think that the pastors would be
swift to embrace the opportunity
to keep tho activities of their
respective churches before the
public. A pastor could sit down
and in fifteen minutes each week
write out enough for a quarter of
a column about his church, all
good readable matter that would
the . interest of his own
flock and perhaps interest some-
body else. I cannot conceive why
that they should neglect such an
opportunity of reaching the public.
A even with its attractions,
be accounted foolish should
it neglect to tell the public what
are upon its boards Why should
not the church use the same
in seeking to uplift and
save men that the playhouses do
in seeking to amuse them I
think that pastors throw away one
grand opportunity for helping
their churches- by not keeping the
public generally better posted
about what is going on in the
It don't often happen that a
young man gets into luck by get-
ting into the but that
young man from Dubuque. Iowa,
who got into the Wisconsin
did. He was released a
short while ago and shortly after-
ward learned that he had been left
thirty-six thousand dollars by a
fellow convict who had become at-
to him while in prison-
But as these occurrences don't hap-
pen often we wouldn't advise any
young man to break into tho
Star.
Wire Fence Swindlers.
Shelby Aurora.
Two Cincinnati, Ohio, men came
here ten days ago and sold the
right to make a patent
wire fence, almost similar to
the fence made here two years ago.
The two swindlers traveled in the
country several days establishing
so-called agencies for the N- a- W.
combination wire and wood fence.
Their soft talk and flattering lies
induced a dozen men to sign these
notes for the commission on the
future-profits- The notes are for
value received and amount to
total. The little machine
is all right and makes a good
fence, but the men are frauds and
have swindled Cleveland county
out of as these notes were
traded to innocent purchasers for
value received. Other counties
have been swindled by these
men who ought to be in the
STATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There as Gathered
Prom our Exchanges.
The State Board of Medical Ex-
will meet at Wilmington
Monday, May
A large and fast steamer will run
between Elizabeth City and Nag's
Head daring the coming season.
Tho hotel at Morehead
City will open June It will be
repainted, largely refurnished and
put in shape throughout.
Gov. Holt will review the troops
at Charlotte May There will
be a sham battle in which ten
companies will take part
The Ninth Annual Council of
the Protestant Episcopal church
of East Carolina will meet in Christ
Church, Elizabeth City on Wed-
May 18th.
Carthage A certain far-
mer near Cameron is so absent-
minded that he plowed half the
day the other Sunday before he
thought of it being the Sabbath.
The North Carolina State
cal Society will hold its 39th
in Wilmington, on
Monday, May 17th. The board of
examiners will meet on May 16th-
Washington A log
fell from the slide at
mill and crushed the cart attached
to a horse, breaking the shafts
short off, but not in the least
tho horse.
Mr. E. E- Billiard, of tho Scot-
land Democrat, will deliver
the commencement address at
Female which
takes place on June 1st. The
address will be a good one-
Rev. Dr. J. F- Crowell, president
of Trinity College, will deliver the
address July 23rd, before the local
conference, at Raleigh,
his subject being History of
Local Preachers and its Bearing
on Methodist
Raleigh Mr- How-
ard found two small
of gold about three miles
Raleigh. He believes there
is considerable gold in the north-
western part of the county, and
intends to wash the gravel in some
of the streams.
The annual convention of the
King's Daughters will be held in
Wilmington, N. C, May 18th. 19th
and 29th. Delegates expecting to
attend should notify the President
of the United Circle, Mrs- P. D.
Swindell, Mulberry Street, or
the Secretary, Mrs. S- H. Burt,
Walnut Street.
Statesville Motion
was made by the
in the Federal Court last week
to remand the cases against the
railroad company growing out of
tho Bostian bridge wreck to the
State court and the motion was
granted by Judge. Dick. These
cases had been docketed in the
Federal Court by the defendant-
Goldsboro Tho bean
crop in this vicinity is taking on a
more promising appearance under
the influence of the present run of
weather, and those of
Miss Madge Williams, of
Texas, has been selected favorable
to christen the Texas, which is now truck farmers who have beans
nearly ready for launching at the to hope
, , .,. that, after all, they may come out
navy yard here. Miss Williams least if not ahead.
is a granddaughter of General j So mote it be-
Sam Houston, and, by permission I , T .
A company
has been organized in our town to
prepare a tar-kiln ready to be
of Secretary Tracy, she was chosen
by popular
The managers of the
Fair estimate tho gate receipts as man ago the building and
expenses
Net profit With such
a nice thing in sight, why don't
the hustling Chicagoans freeze to
that thing quit asking Con-
to bank for
Star.
law m
The i
whole for
; only tine
ill it roil
iii ,
. If yon stamped
after name
on the of the
paper the j
; I
Expire Two Week
From This
It is to yon no- ;
re-1
Dewed in time H
the will
cease to you
I at I he expiration of
, the two
nil. J. MARQUIS,
, C,
Office in Skinner upper
opposite Photograph
R. L.
DENTIST, f
I.
Greenville, N. C.
attention to Office
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
HOS. J.
ALEX. L.
BLOW,
GREENVILLE. N. C.
in all the Courts.
J.
B. YELLOWLEY,
A T-LA
Greenville, N.
B. K. I--ON
I. A.
TYSON,
N. C.
Prompt attention given to
II.
Attorney-at-Law,
K. C.
Prompt and careful attention to
Collection solicited.
L. C. LATHAM,
IV
MARRY
SKINNER.
N. C.
JAMES,
P.
GREENVILLE, M. I.
Practice in all the
a Specialty.
m a
H a
T.
r-
y.
a ;
I -2 i
IT
Here is a scrap of law that may
not be familiar to a great
finder of is compelled
to make diligent inquiry for the
owner thereof and to restore the
same. If on finding the property
he attempts to conceal fact,
ho may be prosecuted for larceny-
The differences between Italy
and the United States regarding
the New Orleans lynching have
been settled. The Government of
the United States is to pay an
indemnity of francs to the
Italian Government.
Don't to
That impure blood in pres-
hi all, and the direct cause of ninny
from which we suffer, Scrofula,
and Specific which
have ravaged the earth and the
blood of for are
the evil parents of indescribable horrors
arc under absolute control of P. P. P.
the only infallible blood purifier known.
The P. P. P. Blood Cure has
cured numerous eases of Scrofula and
Salt Rheum in a -hurt time, where
all other blood purifiers failed.
Pleasant to take ; applicable to diseases
if infancy or old age.
fired, to be taken to the World's
World's Fair. An expert tar maker will
of the kiln the fair. It is to be
a perfect North Carolina Tar Kiln
of ye olden times and will attract
a large crowd and pay handsome-
in our opinion.
Weldon During the
storm Friday there was
hail near and a farmer
who came to town reported a most
singular phenomenon. An
ally large hail stone fell in his yard
which lie picked up. and to his
great surprise, he discovered a
tiny frog in the ice. He
quickly liberated the little hopper,
and to his still greater
the frog hopped gaily
Everybody in North Carolina
will regret to hear that Senator
Vance is suffering from an attack
of facial paralysis. His face is
much drawn and he speaks with
difficulty and it requires much
for him to This is
the second attack, the first being
in 1865 just before he was taken to
the old capital prison. It is the
earnest hope of his friends every-
where that he will be speedily re-
stored to health and to the service
of his State and country.
ESTABLISHED 1375.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD BUCK STOKE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices before pr
n all its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE, TEA, Ac.
at Lowest Market Prices.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to
the times. Out goods are all bought
sold for CASH, therefore, having mi risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. If. SCHULTZ.
W.
Concord Last Friday,
the 22nd, Mr- Thomas Hartsell, of
Locust Level, Stanly county, met
death in a very peculiar manner-
He was the miller at Locust Level
keeping a mill which was run by
steam. On Friday the governor
belt fell off. The engine became
unmanageable and ran at such
speed that the plastering new off
the mill stone. Some of this struck
Mr. Hartsell on the left side of the
head and face, killing him in-
Tar Sim
Forbes,
B. Cherry,
J. S. Greenville,
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro,
Capt. R. F. Jokes,
The People's Line for travel on T
The Steamer is the finest
quickest boat the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted-
Fitted up specially for tho comfort, e
convenience of Ladles
ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A Table furnished with th
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Greenville
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
Friday at o'clock, a. m.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday,
and Saturday at o'clock, a. j,
received dally and through
Bills Lading to all points.
J. J. At.,
N. N. O.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
F. G. James, A. L. Blow, J. G.
Harry Skinner, E. O.
trial of John C- Davis,, Ex. Committee. The following
which we mentioned last week as were chosen as
being in progress at Wilmington, j T. Wilson, G-. B. King, A. J.
ended the jury bringing in J. D. Buck, H. C bridge and J. Smith.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
TO THE VOTING PUBLIC.
5.1 mm Biter
WEDNESDAY, MAY 4th. MM.
at at Greenville,
N. a second-class mail matter.
Publisher's
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF
The Reflector ts SI per
Rates.-One
one year, ; one-half year.
; one-quarter column one year,
Transient inch
one week, two weeks, one
month Two inches one week. 81.50.
two weeks, one month,
Advertisements inserted in Local
Column as reading items, cents per
for each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad,
and Notices-
and
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will
be charged for at legal rates and MUST
DE PAID FOR IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any space not mentioned
above, for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Advertisements and
all changes of should be
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to receive prompt in-
the day following.
The Reflector having a large
will be found a profitable medium
through which to reach the public.
verdict that the prisoner was in-
sane. He was taken to the asylum.
Davis certainly perpetrated some
huge swindles, and it is wonderful
how easily he took in most every-
body with whom he had any deal-
The illustrations in May Wide
J. J. Mills, J. J. Laughing-; On motion it was ordered that
As there are a good many voters
v-,.,,.,,.,.,,. n , . ,,., my neighborhood who take it
Washington, D. for granted that the present
Mr. Harrison did not return j Register of Deeds of our
house, J. Wash. Smith, J. H-Gray, the proceedings of this convention i from his visit to New York feeling j has had the office now for two
Cannon, Nash Edwards,
J. Bryan Grimes, Jno. B.
way, Jno. Elks, Jr., F. Carroll and
J. A- Stocks.
Alternates. J. O. Proctor,
Macon Haddock, W. P. Buck, Win. j
George Venters, Marshall
be furnished to the Eastern in a very good humor. The and that by tho unwritten
tor with the request to the of man is great he law of lie not offer
expected to have secured pledges I himself again to the convention for
a I of from the New York
On the convention ad- bosses, and bis failure to do so
his disappointment
Leonidas great. The fact was
are of peculiar interest and Cox, W. B- Edwards, Mills,
E. J. Hale, the only surviving
son of E. J. Hale. Sr., the original
founder of the Ob-
server, in 1825, has purchased an
interest in that paper. Maj. Hale
is a very strong and able inner
and will be quite an addition to
the editorial staff of the State. He
was Consul to Eng-
land, during Cleveland's
Editor will
also remain on the paper-
excellence. The frontispiece by
Burgess is full of Chinese
sentiment; the profuse
display illustrating the old time
stronghold of is a
practical aid to the text and so,
throughout the number, the illus-
end not
ways achieved in magazine
The number is permeated
with the May flavor and the spirit
cf Decoration Day, and is a
cal spring number. Wide
is a year. D. Com-
publishers, Boston, Mass.
A destructive fire occurred in
Philadelphia last Wednesday
night, in which property to the
value f near a million dollars was
destroyed- The fire originated in
Central the
of which was complete- From
this building the fire was
to the Time eight story
building and only a shell of that
structure was left. In the
building six people perished and
more than half a hundred were
seriously injured. The fire a
terrible one.
Two years ago the South
veiled in Richmond a handsome
monument surmounted by an
equestrian statue of Lee. the gal-
leader and commander in-chief
of the Confederate army- This
monument was erected out of the
voluntary contributions of the
Southern people who
were vanquished and despoiled
and is very justly their pride. Not
until last week, on a picturesque
spot overlooking the Hudson, was
the first stone laid upon which is to
be reared a monument to Grant, the
victorious leader and commander-
in-chief of the Federal
people who have since the war
been drawers of pensions paid
largely by a defeated, impoverish-
ed South. And this first stone has
only been laid after years of
entreaty to Congress and
tent importunity to every other
source except their own full pocket-
books. We have not a word to
utter against a monument to Grant
he ought to have had one long
why did not the North
o ahead and raise the marble
shaft to the memory of its leader
out of its own pocket, like the
South did to her leader, instead of
begging somebody else to erect it
for them- What a picture this is
of their patriotism and love for
their distinguished leader.
The Seaboard Ah- Line has com-
its road to Atlanta and now
has a great through line from
north to south- It runs through
trains between Portsmouth
and Atlanta, the first trains under
the through schedule starting
Monday of this week- These
trains have Pullman sleepers.
The schedule between Portsmouth
and Raleigh will be the same as
heretofore, with a stop of min-
at the latter place. Trains
leaving Raleigh at r. ac. will
reach Atlanta in time for breakfast
next morning. The people of
Raleigh are joyous over the ad-
vantages the city obtains from this
splendid through line-
Verily some sections of North
Carolina and occur-
are sometimes reported,
which in atrociousness would
compare with early scenes in the
wild or happenings in the
alleys of highly civilized New
York. Last Thursday night in the
city of Charlotte, a young lady.
Miss Inez Sikes, who wore a beau-
suit of hair that was her pride
and the admiration of friends, was
knocked down by an unknown
villain by whom her tresses were
from her head. Miss Sikes
had gone from the door of her
home to the wood pile in the yard
to get some wood to replenish the
fire, when a man stepped from be-
hind a tree and made the cowardly
attack on her.
The County Convention meets
here on Saturday for the purpose
delegates to the State
Convention. The primaries were
held in the county on last
day and we are glad to learn that
there was perfect harmony every-
where. This is as it should have
been. The white men of this State
have everything to lose and
to gain by any divisions that
may arise in the Democratic party.
The enemy is professedly
cent, and yet they are on the alert
watching and waiting, for aiding
and abetting every effort however
small to create dissatisfaction and
dissensions in the ranks of Demo-
We are now doing the
most important work to be done
during the campaign- If proper
care is taken selection of
delegates we may look for concert
of action, and the removal of every
cause for dissension-
We predict that the convention
here next Saturday will select rep-
delegates and that its
action will be ratified by the good
of the Let us all
remember that our reforms must
TOWNSHIP PRIMARIES.
The several townships of the
county held primary meetings last
Saturday for the purpose of
delegates to the county
convention which meets in Green-
ville next Saturday, 7th- Below
we publish proceedings of those
of the primaries which
report to the
DAM.
Pursuant to a call of the
Committee of Pitt county the
Democratic voters of Beaver Dam
township met at May's Chapel and
appointed tho following to the
county convention to held in
Greenville on May 7th,
J. Anderson. G-
T. Tyson, J. W- Smith and Amos
Joyner.
Alternates Harvey Tyson,
T. A. Nichols, T. E Little and
Thomas
The following resolution was
unanimously
Resoled, That we applaud and
approve the course of Col. Harry
Skinner in his bold advocacy of
financial relief.
G. T. Tyson, Chm.
Amos Joyner; Sec-
The following were appointed as
delegates from township
to the county
S- Spain, R. A.
Parker, D. C T. A
pen and J. R.
T. Hodges, J.
L. Hathaway, J. G- Sieves,
Jenkins and W- H-
J. T. Hodges, Chm-
J. E. Sec.
BETHEL.
The people of Bethel township
met on Saturday April the 30th.,
for the purpose of appointing
to the county convention to
be held in Greenville on the 7th
of May, 1892- After several good
speeches the delegates were
pointed us follows
C S Cherry, S-
A. Gainer, S. M. Jones, J. E.
Brown, G. W. Bullock, T M- Man-
and D- C- Moore.
Lloyd, F. C-
Martin, J. S- L- Ward, Jas. H-
Barnhill, B. M. Whitehurst, J. B.
Barnhill and H. A- Rollins.
B- M- Whitehurst. Soc
CAROLINA.
No report received up to the
hour of going to press.
Pursuant to the call of the
County Executive Committee the
Democrats of township
met in convention at Block Jack
to select to the
L. H- White, J. T-
M. G- Ross, W- B-
Moore, Jno. Carroll and W- L.
Smith.
By a unanimous vote the County
Commissioners were requested to
immediately established a ferry at
Boyd's Ferry.
J. Bryan Grimes,
Jno. D. Buck, Sec
The following is a list of
gates and Alternates for Content-
P. B.
John Brooks, J- R. Johnson, John
Pierce, R. C. Cannon, Arden Tuck-
John J. May, A. G- Cox, W. J.
Jackson, Jessie Cannon, J. D. Cox
J. R. Smith, E-
Lang and Charles
Cox, P
H. Kittrell, H- E. Ellis, Lafayette
Cox, Asa Garris, L. A- Cobb, Tames
Ira Eli Craft, John
Nobles, P. J. B. Car-
A- L. L- Stocks
and R. R- Jackson.
J. R. Forbes, Chm-
J. D. Cox, Sec.
FALKLAND.
By a requirement of the chair-
man of the Democratic executive
committee of Pitt county, the
Democrats of Falkland township
met at Falkland on tho 30th day
of April. 1892, at P- M. for the
purpose of electing delegates to
meet in Greenville on the 7th day
of May, 1892.
Capt. John King was elected
permanent chairman and M. Z.
Moore secretary. After a few very
appropriate remarks for the ac-
by the chairman, it was
moved that the election of
gates by ballot, the first
receiving the largest number cf
votes to be elected delegates, and
the receiving the next largest
number of votes to be alternates.
The motion being carried voting
was in order.
King, R- R.
Cotton, J. C Cook, R. Williams,
Jr., E. F. Williams, John Peebles,
Jonas
M. Smith, B-
J.
Abrams,
R. King, J. L. Fountain,
Harriss. E- Forbes, J. T-
and J. H. Smith.
There being no further business
it was moved and carried that we
adjourn. Jno- King, Chm.
M. Z. Moore, Sec.
FARMVILLE.
The Democratic primary of
Farmville township, held on the
30th day of April, 1892, was called
to order by T. E. Keel, chairman
of the Democratic executive com-
of tho township, who in a
few remarks explained tho
of the meeting. A. J. was
made permanent chairman of the
meeting and J. A. Lang secretary.
The following were then duly-
elected to the county convention
L- Joyner, W.
H. Wilkinson. B. F. A.
D. Hill. D. M- Edwards. J. H.
Flanagan, T. E. and C F.
Moore.
W. R. Home, M. R. Turnage, R-
P. Sugg, F. M. Whichard, R. L.
Davis, B. M. Lewis and F. M
Davis.
The following resolution intro
by C. L Barrett was passed
Resolved, That the thanks of
this convention are tendered to
Col- Harry Skinner for his activity,
zeal and ability displayed in be-
half of the reform measures now
so earnestly desired by the people.
A. J. Move,
J. A. Lang, Sec.
GREENVILLE.
Pursuant to the call of the
County Executive Committee the
Democratic voters of Greenville
township met at the Court House
on Saturday, April 30th, 1892, at
o'clock P. M.
Leonidas Fleming, chairman of
the township committee, the
convention to order and presided.
On motion Alex L. Blow
pointed Secretary.
The following were elected as
delegates and alternates to the
county convention to be held in
Greenville on Saturday, May 7th i
A. Dudley, Ash-
Whichard, H- B- Johnson, E-
P. Fleming. L. A Mayo. W. M.
Brown, L. F. Evans, G. M. Tucker,
T. C- Bryant, W- H. Allen, B. W.
Tucker. J. B. W. H.
Tucker. W. B. James. E- A.
R. W- King, W. H. Smith, Allen
Warren, B. G Pearce, T. J. Jarvis
and C. D- Rountree.
H. Moore, S-
Alex L. Blow,
The meeting was called to order
and its object explained by the
chairman or the Township
Committee. He was then
made permanent chairman an R.
W. W. Ward elected secretary.
The following delegates
elected i
Fleming, J.
J. Mason, E. P. Daniel. W. W.
Little and S. R. Ross.
Ward, E. N.
Benjamin Abrams, Abram
Baker and Beasley Danial.
J. R. Davenport offered the fol-
lowing
That the chair appoint a com-
of three to wait upon Col.
Harry Skinner and request him to
make or more public speech-
es in the county of Pitt, with one
appointment at for the
purpose of giving his political
views on matters in general.
Adopted.
The chair J. R.
Davenport, W. H. Bagwell and
T- H. as that committee.
Upon motion of Dr. W- H. Bag
well the sense sf the meeting was
taken as to its choice for
nor which resulted largely for
Skinner.
We had a good meeting and the
best of harmony prevailed through-
out. F. Ward, Chm.
R. W. Ward, Sec.
SWIFT creek.
Pursuant to a call of the
committee, the Democrats of
Swift Ci township met in con-
Cross roads,
on April 30th, for the
purpose of selecting delegates to
attend the county convention in
Greenville on Saturday, May 7th-
Meeting was called to order by F.
M. Kilpatrick, chairman of town-
ship committee. On motion he
was elected permanent chairman
and W- S- Wooten elected sec
On motion the following
gates were elected to attend the
county convention.
R. Wilson, W.
C Burney. N. R. Cory, J. M. Dix-
on, S- Wooten, Israel Moore,
C P. Gaskins, L- B.
Lewis Wilson, Jr., and Fred
Harding.
Burney, J.
W- Cannon, G. W. Gardner, Doc.
Smith, J. A- Gardner, Calvin Had-
dock, A- F. Pittman. J. P.
R. H- Garris and J. Ma
Dixon.
Mr. Fred Johnson introduced
the following resolution and plat-
from, which was unanimously
Whereas, We the Democratic
voters of Swift Creek township in
primary convention assembled,
realizing tho urgent need for
which will secure laborers
and wealth producers the
mate enjoyment of the fruits of
their labor ; and knowing this to
be the only political convention in
which can give our individual
commented on that on the
day he was in the Metropolis the
Republican dailies of that city, as
if by agreement, were full of talk
about the probability of
after all becoming the candidate.
Mr. Harrison must have
this as significant; it was
so regarded here. What-
ever tho outcome, it is apparent to
even the most casual observer that
were the Harrison boom is rapidly
ground here.
The Naval appropriation bill,
passed by the House, has
been reported to the Senate with
amendments largely increasing
the appropriation for new ships.
Senator Daniel's amendment
appropriating for the
international naval review next
year was reduced to
The substitute for the House
Chinese exclusion bill, which was
passed by the Senate early this
week, is in the hands of a confer-
committee, and although the
sentiment of the House is strong-
in favor of a more rigid
than is possible under the
present laws, which the Senate
substitute extends for ten years
from expiration, it is regard-
ed as probable that tho House
may accept it as the most that can
be gotten from the Senate-
CHERRY
-DEALERS IN-
Convention to be held in Green- j H- Spain, J. A- K. H.
through the Democratic I May 7th- The meeting Fleming, E- B. Elihu
party and let us not do or say called to order and the object of
anything that
one.
may estrange any
the convention stated by J. Bryan
Joseph Nobles, J- Briley,
L L. Kittrell, Joseph James
Grimes, Chairman of Evans, H. F. Keel, H. J. Heater,
a third nomination, I take great
pleasure in presenting you tho
name of C. L. Barrett for that
The qualifications of Mr.
Barrett are too well known to need
any comment.
His service to the party cannot
be better illustrated than his
to Democratic principle when
in the campaign of 1884, when his
uncle, Capt. L. J. Barrett, was a
candidate for Congress he march-
ed the polls and voted the
straight Democratic ticket against
him, whom he thought a great deal
of, and in fact loved next to his
father. Mr. Barrett has always
been very active in every campaign,
has made many sacrifices for the
party, and while having been be-
fore a candidate for Register of
Deeds, always gave his successful
rival his hearty support. His
name too will bring to the party
all the strength of the
Democracy of Farmville, and if he
is nominated his election will not
only be assured, but the county of
Pitt will have a Register that is
competent, attentive and obliging,
and I know will give perfect
faction for tho next two years to
come. Farmville
The House Judiciary committee
will report a resolution authorizing
an investigation of tho Pinkerton
detective agencies. The
to be reported is a substitute
for the one offered by
Watson of Georgia, several
months ago, which contained
charges against the Pinkerton
system.
Bryan's bill
placing lumber on the list,
which is a duplication of the
section of the old Mills tariff
bill, have reported to
the House this week by the Ways
and Means committee, if the Re-
publican members of that commit-
tee had not requested a postpone-
of final action until the next
meeting of tho committee-
James R- Young, tho deposed
executive clerk of tho Senate,
failed to get the Senate to in-
the charges of betraying
executive secrets under which he
was dismissed, is now endeavoring
to have an investigation of tho
charges made by tho standing
committee of newspaper
in charge of the press
galleries of Congress, the ground
being that if the charges true
he is not entitled to the privileges
f those galleries, as a reputable
newspaper correspondent.
Senator Hill said, speaking of
tho apportionment of New
apportionment is both
ally right and constitutionally
correct. Tho of the re-
publicans that it is unconstitutional
will avail them nothing. The
must and will decide against
them, because their claims are
frivolous ungrounded. For
seven years the republicans refused
to take an enumeration, to make
an apportionment when they had
an opportunity to do so themselves,
and now they must suffer tho con-
sequences of their
Everyone regrets, and none more
than the gentleman himself, that
Representative Enloe, in a burst
of temper, called Commissioner
a liar. It was an
occurrence, viewed from any
standpoint. True, Mr. Enloe con-
tends that Mr. had in a
private conversation admitted do-
that every party plat-
form should represent as nearly as
possible the views of the majority
of the voters from whom it expects
support, therefore be it
Resolved, that our delegates to
the county convention be request-
ed to vote for men who are in
favor of the following
1st. We demand a national
currency, sound flexible,
issued by the general govern-
only, a full legal tender
for all debts, and that, without the
of banking corporations, a
just, equitable and efficient meaDs
of distribution, direct to the people
at a tax not to exceed per cent,
be provided.
a- We demand free and
coinage of silver.
b- We demand that the
medium speedily increased
to not less than per capita.
c. We demand a graduated in
come tax-
d. We demand a revision of our
tariff laws to the purpose that the
necessaries of life shall
taxed.
e. We demand laws as will
effectually crash trusts and all other
combinations of capital formed for
the purpose of extortion.
2nd. We demand that the Pres-
and Senators of the United
States be elected be direct vote of
the people.
3rd. We demand govern-
control of railroads,
4th. We demand that the gov-
secure and operate
graph and telephone lines to be
used in connection with the post
office system fur the transmission
of news.
Moved and seconded that the
proceedings of this meeting be sent
the Eastern for
cation. The meeting then ad-
F.
W- S. Wooten, Sec.
The
the campaign for cents.
House Committee, but his
could have been officially
contradicted and disproved with-
out the use of language that
should never be permissible among
gentlemen.
Chairman Hatch of the House Ag-
committee, to get
his anti-option bill before the House
as soon as the free binding twine bill
is disposed of. He thinks the bill
will pass, but its opponents are
very active and say they expect to
defeat it.
Senator Sherman was
acting under instructions when he
amended Senator Teller's
calling upon the President for
information concerning the inter-
national monetary conference,
which rumor says has been
ranged for, with the words not
incompatible with the public in-
for Mr. Harrison in his
letter answer to the resolution
my it would
not be compatible with the public
interest to lay before the Senate
at this time tho information re-
He promises that the
Senate shall have the
the earliest moment after de-
finite information can properly be
which probably means
when it can best be used to aid
Republican interests in the coming
Presidential campaign. There
will be some interesting talk in the
Senate on Mr. Harrison's letter.
Item.
The farmers air up In
this
was a largo at this place
last fourth EM.
prom-hod MM.
Ilka
most ladies, was in our
tho past visiting relative,
fur the picnic and
There is talk of starting a Sunday
school at this place some time soon. It
is a good thing. Why everybody
do all they can for the good cause,
We beg to announce to our many
friends and customers that we
have the largest and best selected
stock of Goods to be found in our
town. And while we are not sell-
at cost we beg to announce
that we think we and will
PARK and OAKLAND.
To those during the
coming summer a trip to the mountains
in search of health or pleasure. Deer
Park, the dome the Alleghany
Mountains. feet above the sea level.
Offers such varied attractions as a delight-
atmosphere during both day and
night, pure water, smooth, winding
roads through the and valleys
and the most picturesque scenery in the
range. The hotel is equip-
with adjuncts to the entertain-
pleasure and comfort of it
guests, as and Bath,
swimming for both ladles and
gentlemen, rooms, superbly fur-
parlors, and rooms single or en
suite, an cuisine superior
The surrounding grounds as well as
the hotel are lighted with electricity,
have cozy and shady nooks, meandering
walks, lawn tennis courts and grassy
play grounds for children within full
view of the Six miles
distant on the same mountain summit
is Oakland, the twin resort of Deer Park
and equally as well equipped for the
ii and accommodation of its
guests. Both hotels a-c upon the main
line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad,
have the advantage of its splendid
Limited Express trains between
the and West, and are, therefore,
readily accessible from all parts the
the country. Season Excursion tickets,
good for return passage until October
31st, will be placed on sale at greatly
reduced rates at all principal ticket
offices throughout the country. One
way tickets reading from St. Louis,
Cincinnati, Columbus, Chi-
and any point on I. system I
Washington, Baltimore, Philadelphia or
New York, or vice verse, arc good
stop off at either Deer Park or Oakland,
and the lime limit will be extended
agents at resort upon application.
The season at these popular resorts
commences June
Tor full information M to rates, rooms,
etc., address George D. Man-
ager, Deer Park or Oakland,
County, Maryland.
Tobacco Growers
Tobacco Furnace
The best Invention ever mad.- for
With it yon have absolute
control over heating your barn,
and it removes
All Danger of Fire.
Two cures per week can be
made in the same barn-
co of different degrees of ripe-
can be at one time in
the same barn. Saves labor and
fuel.
For further particulars ad-
dress
PHELPS,
Greenville, N. C.
this paper when you write.
Notice.
I will sell at public sale in the
Town of on Saturday,
the 7th day of May. 1892, real
estate to satisfy the taxes of the
following persons for the year
1891 and cost.
D D Andrews, lot W James St,
O C est, lot St,
lots, V M R H,
James St,
hotel store. S H It, S
m J. St,
acres laud. Bethel.
Mary E James lot, W Main St.
lot, E James St,
lot, E James St,
J J, Nelson dwelling, N K R,
t lot near Academy
lot W Main St,
J W Novell, lot, W Main St,
Lewis lot, N St,
SO
Ml
Hardy Bro, lot W Main St,
l lot K st,
W W Hunter, lot E Main St.
W II Harrington, lot E Main St,
lot K Main St,
lot E Main St,
St,
J L lot K Main St,
Bert lot James St,
J S lot. X It R,
Ham- Skinner, office K Main St,
Pollard, store ft Main
lot. R James St,
lot N Pleasant St,
lot W Main St.
Robert Ward est, lot W Main St,
O Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St,
This April the 4th
W. C.
Town Collector.
SHILOH-S CATARRH REMEDY.
A cure for Catarrh,
Canker mouth and Headache
With each there U
nasal Injector for the more successful
treatment of these complaints without
Price Sold at
DRUG
any prices on the different
lines of Goods can-red by us. We
throw out no baits to entrap
To one and all we extend
a cordial welcome to
will be pleased to serve you with
any goods in the following
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions,
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants
Goods, Eats, Shoes, Hardware,
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery,
Glassware, Groceries, deg.
White Oil cents per gallon,
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness,
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools
of the improved makes,
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting,
Oil Carriages,
and the largest and best selected
stock of FURNITURE ever kept
in our town. When in need of
anything in our line try us.
Yours, anxious for trade,
CHERRY CO.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door Court House
CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics. put up nothing
but work. We keep up with the times and Improved styles
material used In all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ran. Horn, King
Also keep on hand a full ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
he year round, which we will sell as as
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t
merit a continuance of the same
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
THE RELIABLE OF C
Alters to the buyers of Pitt and counties, a line of the following goo
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Mi Hay, Rock Plaster of and
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY A SPECIALTY,
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Hereford's Bread Prep
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction,
Mil
A Writing
AND IMPROVED.
GOOD MANIFOLD. .
The Rest Typewriter in World.
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In-
Type in all language. Easiest
to learn, and rapid as
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as
This Machine in
body writing done on tin
Typewriter. It always insures the most
always insures
attention. Address
N. Washington, St., Boston,
One of these machines can be at the Reflector office, where particulars and
can had.
For Accident Insurance the year in one of
the best Companies existence, see
Whichard.





XI
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR.
H. C, MAY 1898.
NO.
A Ohm f C.
women at our hording house
have taken little said a Mew
fork wife the other day, which
they derive considerable amusement.
The men at on t house I am sorry to say
are not very entertaining. Oar
are deeply in and are
generally too tired when they come
borne to dinner to engage to small talk
without a manifest effort. There are
two or three unmarried men who are
talkative enough, often too talkative in
fact, bat their conversation is not half
as entertaining to us as it is to them-
selves.
six of on this We
gather in the parlor before going down
to dinner, and there we agree upon some
well known proverb or
Our object is to bring the
of these talkative young fellows
around to a point where we can intro-
duce this quotation appropriately.
succeeds in getting off toe
quotation first is the winner, and When
each tries to win she also tries to hoed
off the others, if she sees an opportunity
coming. It is rare sport and afforest
plenty of fan. To drag the quotation to
badly, inappropriately, does not count;
it moat come in aptly so as not to excite
the suspicions of these youths that Ire
are playing with them instead of at
as they fondly imagine. Take, for in-
stance, the primrose by
the river's brim, a simple primrose Was
to him, and it was nothing and
try to bring around to that connection
the conversation of a young man which
begins with takes a flight into
flirtation. and ends with the theaters or
horses.
takes some ingenuity, I tell yon.
and the little mystery underlying all our
remarks, which is known only to our-
selves, gives the game additional inter-
est for a woman, of York
Tribune.
i i.
Living in Creeds is about W per cent
higher than in an ordinary sown, ho
meal lit to eat can be obtained for less
than one dollar. A cot in a room with
fifty or others cost from fifty cents
to one dollar per night The water that
courses through the town looks clear
and sparkling, but it is need as
sower the doctors warn every one not to
drink it Beer costs teen a glass.
or thirty or forty rents a bottle.
that will not kill for lea
toast twenty-five cents drink, and the
bartender is careful that your
is no t too Urge at that Horses and
burros to ride over the am
hired at fifty and an
hour.
The streets are so terribly that
one dares not walk and a
ride to any part of the city frill cost yon
cents. have driven over
from Pueblo, a distance of
miles, with their n i
richer harvest than the
is high. Any man who can drive a
nail can command four dollars a day,
sad in some extreme cases they are paid
one dollar on hour. Boos carpenters get
eight dollars a day, and are talking of
raising the scale of wages. Laundry
posts three times as much in St Louis,
and no Chinamen are allowed in cams.
n a soon.
Russell, the heir apparent of
is a strict
He a very lively interest the
members of the to form a
if somewhat biased, opinion of
the
and
on election it was only
after a good deal of persuasion and by
The morning East, was
op very early. He town the
dining room and sat there very quietly
alone. By and by his gubernatorial
morning, but
be heir apparent made no answer. In-
stead he got gravely and circled
about his astonished father, surveying
him from head to foot.
is the matter, asked
toe governor there any-
thing wrong with my coat Is my
Do yen sen any
smut on
the eon. in a
pointed tone. yon ain't any big-
today yen were yesterday.
Nurse said last night if went to bed
early I'd wake this morning and fad
you the loan to
I think she fooled me. Herald.
if early historians.
are tabs
tribe of American n-
who had at the white
of
J and
of Bat
to to the story of creation, the
Tower of Babel and the flood, many of
them having history which
almost exactly with the
stories of these great events as related
One day Davenport, the
agent for the was
telling some about Noah, the
him with We know
that long time. We was to canoes all
tied together. We float on heap water.
We send down one.
times. Ha dive, come Last he go
down and come up with in his
claw. We know water going
TUe wee all the Mr. Dav-
could elicit from the seer.
-St Loan.
Cars few
A ha
been to Boston, brought back
model of. seabed
sample of the kind made in that city.
The upper intended for the use of
smokers and that portion of the female
community who do not object
of tobacco. The official who
the model said it. would not be
on one or two of the principal lines.
Philadelphia
The victims of the liquor habit, or
disease, ore royal with the
sufferers from They
down from an admitted height on the
slave of drugs. They do not want to b
They are above
them. The riotous, the
way, are the sufferers. There
is not a chamber of all the
as
for,
am
The at knot toe boys who
read bad who swell the roll of
youthful criminality, it U toe who
do not read anything. Let any one look
over toe police court of a busy morning
and he see that the style of youth
gathered there have not fallen into evil
way through their depraved literary
tendencies. They were not brought
there by books, bat more probably by
of books, with a
of books of. all kinds.
not a more perfect picture of
in the world a boy buried
to his favorite book. to all
earthly sight end sounds, scarcely
breathing as he follows the fortunes of
the heroes and heroines of the story.
Kansas Star.
It is many years ago since Baron Lie-
each hollow, hungry such roving,
restless ayes; men fearful,
England is robbing all other countries
of the condition of their fertility. Al-
ready. to her for bones, she
has turned the battlefields of
of Waterloo and of the Crimea; already
the catacombs of Sicily she hoe
Carried away the skeletons of several
successive generations. Annually
removes from the shore of other conn-
tries to her own the equivalent
of 8,500.000 men. whom she takes from us
toe means of supporting, and squanders
down her sewers to the sea. Like a
she tongs upon toe neck of
of the satire world, and
sucks the heart blood from nations with-
out a thought of justice toward, without
a shadow of lasting advantage to, I
talk They
not follow yon two They will
move away and walk with frightened
haste up and down the hall. They win
harry and prepare for the injection.
They will crowd and quarrel tor first
the line. They are unstrung
and Chicago Herald.
w vi
not long ago in Philadelphia, and
at a luncheon given to her honor re-
marked in an affable tone to a bright
girl on her right have yon anyone
here who fills the somewhat important
place in society that papa does In New
yes. sweetly re-
plied toe girl addressed, they're all
colored Tribune.
From the side of religion many pro-
have been made against the present
of popular education. The clergy
of the different churches cannot help
thinking that at least the more
doctrines of toe Christian faith
should be officially taught; they
draw most discouraging pictures of
who the moral future of the youth of
this country will be if their counsels
are net heeded. All sound and
moral teaching, they contend, must
upon a basis of theology, and to
stoical to the region of
toe to deprive it of all war-
rant, of all authority, of all coercive
If these views were correct it would
difficult to see how the weakness of our
schools on the moral side could ever be
remedied, for nothing is more
than that any attempt to teach theology
them would be predestined failure.
The people some will pay for
theology to the pulpit, but they are not
willing to pay for it in the schools, and
have shown n most unmistakable ways
that they do not want it there. The
question, then, Shall all attempts at
moral teaching in the public school
abandoned, seeing that it cannot ad-
ministered an adjunct of theology.
or shall a brave effort be made to give
it independent statue of its own and
a fair chance to show what It can ac-
when conducted on purely
Science Monthly.
of Seeker.
Alexander H. B. Stuart, who lately
died at Vs., secretary of the in-
under President used to
the following good story of bow be
got rid of an office seeker shortly after
assuming the office. Said hat was
very much annoyed by a persistent
for the post of messenger. The
man came in regularly every day for
several weeks, until be became an
bearable bore. Finally one day
the man had gone out asked the mes-
then in office if he knew what
that man was after. He said
said I, wants your place, and
if ever sec him again be shall have
never saw the man
ton Post.
This story is told of one of the toad-
tag dry goods men of Mew He
was currying a heavy stock of line mil-
goods when the round topped
derby hat for women became
The market was flooded
with them, and they were regarded as
only tiling to be worn on the bead.
This foresaw a great lose on
his stock of millinery, and decided to
prevent It He Bret bought all the
derby hate he and then
them extensively, offering
for at raw
The result was that the derby fell
Into disfavor among women
at ones, and saved his market tor
more good. It is
stroke such as this and the
watching of the market and reeling of
the popular pole that fortunes
made by toe tow extremely
Ufa.





COURSE WE'LL LET GO.
All Reserve at Cost for tie Cash Only.





A Remarkable Clubbing Rate.
a few Mere Weeks in Which to Take
Advantage of t-
Personal.
Keys Found.
RESOLUTION.
By mortal arrangement that
greater of all American weekly news-
paper, the Atlanta Constitution, we
are enabled t offer our paper with it for
the low rate of for
one
The Constitution a weekly
of and is the model weekly
of America- Hill Joel
Chandler Harris. MM, Or.
Betsy Hamilton,
and a of other of
national reputation contribute to its
columns.
Its farm and department is
the ablest of that of any American news-
paper, women's and
department is conducted with a special
view to interest and instruct those for
whom it is prepared.
Its news department is the most com-
of any weekly newspaper publish-
ed- This great paper has correspondent
in all parts of the world, and covers the
news or the Southern States in every
detail.
This clubbing not last after
the 1st of as by an arrangement
with the Constitution we cannot it
after this time.
Every of our have a
splendid chance to get the Weekly Con-
this paper for only a
sum. Our clubbing offer for the two
papers is open to everybody, but the
cash must be sent with every
can do without a complete
newspaper during the next few months.
Every Important office in the country is
to be rilled, and the Constitution will
give the most complete reports from
section of any southern paper.
The paper should be in every southern
and we
mend the acceptance of this remarkably
low offer for your local paper, and the
American weekly newspaper
at almost the price of one paper.
Mrs. Ellis, of is Two keys have beer left at the KB-1
lug Mrs. C A. White. office for One was Adopted by the Guard, at a
Mis spent a few day of left in the Methodist church during the Regular Meeting on the Third
the past week with Mrs. J. R. Moore. I recent revival there. The other was Friday in April.
Mr. W. F. has moved into the . found in Mr. II. B. Tucker's buggy while
house, earner and Reedy Branch Sunday.
streets.
Local Reflections.
May.
Fifth month.
Moonlight nights.
The river is much lower.
The bad colds are hard to shake off.
Days length hours and minute-.
C- B. Corsets at J- Cherry
Co-s.
Setting out plants goes brave-
on.
Cakes at Shel-
ls urn's.
Rats are about to take possession of the
town.
A handsome display of Parlor
Lamps at J- B. Cherry Cos.
The green, green grass is getting
greener.
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the
Old Store.
Monday was a line day. and how every-
body did enjoy it.
Cheap Irish Potatoes cents
a peck at the Old Brick Store.
The primary brought a good crowd
town Saturday.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros.
This month has live each of Sunday.
Monday and Tuesday.
Try a pair J. B. Cherry
Ladies Button Shoes.
Ripe strawberries were being sold on
the streets last Friday.
line of Lounges at
o. . Cherry
All vegetation has done some rapid
growing the past week.
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book Store.
Greenville has no bicycles. Good
streets would bring them.
Cash given for Hides,
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
Raleigh papers say the next State fair
will be the best ever held.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines and all parts at Brown
Bros.
The more the farmer make- of his home
supplies the less he will have to buy.
J. B- Cherry Co. have a nice
Line of Ladies Slippers
Shoes.
Base ball practice is hi vogue but no
games announced on the program yet.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store.
We have just emptied our waste basket
and put it in readiness for the spring
poet.
M. Ferry Cos
new Garden See J, at the Old Brick
Stow.
Excursions and picnics are beginning
to occupy the mind of the Sunday School
scholar.
For cheap Bureaus, Bedsteads.
Mattresses, chairs Ac, go to J. B.
Cherry Co.
If the weather has settled you may-
look out for the temper-tester-house
cleaning.
A nice and cheap line of
Carriages at J. B. Cherry
Co's.
The past week has given us some
weather more in keeping with the season
of the year.
Fish Hooks and lines post
Slid Address, W. E-
N- C
The fawn just elected are
popular with the candidates for the
offices
A handsome line of Parlor
Chairs at J. B. Cherry Co's.
The. pleasant weather and new clothes
combined helps to make larger
at the churches on
From cotton Is planted
It is the decrease in the acreage
will be quite or near M per cent.
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will
your appetite when nothing
else will. At the Brick Store.
The railroad U completed from the
to Washington, and the people
of our neighbor town are happy.
When in want of a suit of Fur-
go to J. B- Cherry Co's.
Mr. A. has established a saw
mill at We learn that he starts
hi with a good business down there.
lighted their big can-
at o'clock Monday. watch it
bum. So more gulling on it, however.
Mrs. M. I. Wood and two children, of
Bertie, are Mis. Chariot Skinner
at Hotel Macon.
The three younger children of Mr-. R.
II. went to the Episcopal orphan-
age at Charlotte last Wednesday.
Miss Annie Brown has
I he past week. That she may soon re-
cover is the w lab of her many lends.
After to his room I few
days with jovial Bob was
smiling on his friends again on Monday.
Mr. J. I. Harris was called home by
telegram from Scotland last Wed-
to sec his mother who is very
It is learned with pleasure by his host
of friends that the condition of Dr. W. M.
B. Brow ii has improved considerably in
the last few days.
Mr. II. C. Hooker, who has been spend-
the last few mouths in
returned home last week. Greenville
has too many charms for any other town
to hold him.
Sites Ella who for the past
several weeks has been visiting in Ala-
and Mississippi, where she made
such brilliant social conquests, retained
home last v eek.
Our talented young townsman. Mr.
I. Fleming, made an educational address
before the -lames at on
Thursday lie had a large
we hear that his effort was a
brilliant one.
Mrs. . Greensboro,
in company with Mrs. Charles Price, of
Salisbury. They will visit Charlotte and
in the of
Carolina building for the World's Fair.
Raleigh Chronicle.
Mrs. C. A. H. of Columbus.
Miss., who been visiting her sister,
Mrs. E. A. Move, and oilier relatives,
left yesterday for her home, in
accompanied by her bright little
boy. Master Burton
Lang and Skinner would
make a line couplet to compose the street
committee. In wet weather just start
the two down the street together see
what line mud dispatchers their feet will
make. A street roller won't be needed.
had the pleasure of meeting in Ox-
ford Thursday, Mr. C. M. Bernard, a
prominent member of the Greenville bar,
who was in upon the meeting
of the Oxford Land Com-
We were glad to learn from him
that our friend. W. II. Esq.
enjoyed a nourishing and ranked
among the best teachers of the Stale.
Oxford Ledger.
Be Ready.
As Greenville is to be
organization how it
a lire company If a big fire should
cur, the smoke would not clear away be-
fore you would hear on every ham
organize a Too
late to the stable after the horse is
gone. Better get up a Hist.
To the Ladies of
In behalf of my Club, permit me to re-
turn thanks for your kind at
the riding gallery Monday. We trust to
over merit your patronage.
Gratefully,
for Greenville Base Ball Club.
The measles seems to have taken a
fresh hold upon our from the
number of case that are heard of.
see it stated that engagement cups
and saucers are a new fad. To say the
least they arc quite suggestive, so easily
broken.
A number of people settled with the
Sheriff Monday and saved their laud
being sold for taxes. many tract
had to be sold.
Washington is expecting a big time on
next Tuesday, Henry Blount will
be there to deliver the memorial oration.
Excursions will be run.
The first kiln of lumber was dried out
at the mill last week. The planing
machinery is now in readiness for opera
Things keep moving out there.
We rise to ask if this weather can be
taken to indicate that Miss Spring has
slapped old man Winter out of her lap
with the injunction that he may go to
grass
Early cabbage raised an truck farms
near Borne won being sold here
last week. Another rebuke to our home.
people, that they ought to raise such in
this section.
Last Friday night rats killed fourteen
nice Cochin chickens for Larry
and Larry was sorely grieved over the
loss. He had a chance of the
young fowls.
An exchange says the man who no
business of his own to attend to always
goes to bed tired. Perhaps it breaks him
down trying to look after the affairs of
everybody else.
Large crowd exacted in town to attend
the county convention next Saturday.
Bring along an extra dollar with you to
get the for a year.
to get it for the campaign.
B. C. Smith calls attention to the and
cent counters in his store. He has an
endless variety of goods on these
and you will be surprised to know-
how cheap they are. Go look at them.
The town authorities arc hating the
large sewer en Washington street and
through the Academy grove rebuilt. It
ought to have been done earlier in the
season, but far better now than not at
all.
Quite a crowd saw the match applied
to Young ft big candle on Mon-
day. It is burning away and the end is
waited for with much anxiety. Of course
every guesser expects their number will
win the prize.
Mr. Andrew tells us that one
of his tenants killed a mad dog on his
place Saturday. Fortunately it was dis-
covered that the dog had hydrophobia
and the animal killed before any
was done by him.
The Irish potatoes hardly had time to
recover from the shocks given by the
frosts before the potato bug was on them
both feet. We hear some people
saying the bugs are unusually
and troublesome.
The inauguration of a swimming school
at this summer Is proposed.
This will probably give renewed vitality
to the slang phrase the at
least among the pupils of the school.
Verily they will be
The clubbing by which
both the Eastern and At-
ion can be had a year for
61.50. only holds good until June 1st.
Don't miss such an opportunity to get
both papers for almost the price of one.
The hopes the newly
elected Town will not
to tackle the dog.
She's a Ticker, and Strikes.
One or two friends have endeavored to
make a little fun at us for what was said
about that last week. Per-
haps the reference was not as clear as it
should have been. We meant to say that
we had a than la-fore, etc.
The ticker will do to count on at any
rate.
Life of
Every man should buy. The great
of Religious Warfare is dead.
Buy the work for your boy save his
character by encouraging him to read
lives of great and good men. C. L. Ab-
is now ill tow n taking orders for
of Life
of
The Dam Contract Awarded.
On Monday the Board of Commissioners
awarded the contract for building the
roadway from the north end of the Green-
ville bridge out to high land to Ward
of Bethel, who were the lowest
bidders. Their bid was at S-J cents a
cubit yard. It is understood that they
will begin work on it at once.
We the members of Co.
First Regiment, X. C. S. Guards, after
without a eight years of willing service to the State
ready to the orders of our
in command, and alway i
zing the high moral standard which should
ever characterize our
have CO maintain the
same, but feeling that have been 011-
treated by Inspector-Genera
Smith, we cannot in honor to ourselves
anger continue our organization under
the present Regime of management.
Therefore
Resolved That we now disband our
organization, and turn over to our Captain,
S. T. Hooker, all our Equipments.
Uniforms, and all other military supplies
of every kind, to do with as he thinks N-st.
s. T. Hooker,
C C. Vines, 1st Lt. R. W.
O. Hooker. 1st E. C. King 2nd
L. It. W. Ward
R. Greene Ensign. A.
Ted. 1st Corp. J. R- Cory. Corp.
B. F. Sugg. 3rd Corp., W. R. Smith. 4th
Corp., J. B. Fleming. J. O. Briley. J. I.
Harrington. O. L. Joyner. O. W.
C. C. Joyner. S. I. Dudley, II.
C. J. A. Dudley. C.
E. Fleming. L. X. Briley. Win. O.
Little, Harry Harding. E. X.
C. Smith W. F. Burch. R.
Ola. Forbes, Ernest Forbes,
others.
Read It.
To-day B. Cherry Co. have a new
ail. Their amok of dry goods is the
t in this market and they are ready to
offer you reliable goods at prices
low to cause you to buy. They
throw out BO baits to customers but give
an honest dollar's worth of
f goods for each dollar left w it Is them.
Troublesome Curs,
Moses King's ferocious bull dogs made
an attack on another cow, Thursday
night, and alarmed the Southern portions
of the town. The cow was almost ruined.
We arc told one of the dogs attacked two
young men a few days ago and gave them
a narrow escape from injury.
dogs are a nuisance and ought to be kept
or exterminated.
Gone.
has left us. Yes-
Hooker Bros, fl Greene moved
their machine to Scotland and tor a
week at two will afford amusement to the
people of that tow ii. Monday was their
last day here, and the proceeds of that
day wore divided with the
base ball club. Last week they ran it a
day each for the churches. The Rb-
commends these young men to
the people of Scotland who will
find them to be gentlemen, clever in their
dealings and liberal with their machine.
The Meetings.
The meeting which Rev. M. Rose.
Presbyterian evangelist, conducted in
Elliott Hull last week, closed with the
Sunday night service. At that
vice the doom of the church were opened
and one person was received into
Mr. Rose is a thoroughly good
preacher, an earnest and forcible
and preached a number of excellent
sermons during his week of labor here.
Rev. J. E. of Richmond, was
prevented from coming Saturday and be-
the meeting In the Baptist
church, as previously announced, but he
will conic certain some time tills week.
O HUE
RESOLUTIONS.
Adopted by Grimesland Alliance No. 1389
We believe the de-
as re-affirmed at Indianapolis ably
and clearly express the needs and
of the Alliance, it
Resolved 1st. That we find no warrant
for Alliance action In regard to the St.
Louis demands, as the State Alliance has
not adopted them and we have seen no
official action of the Executive Committee
of the State Alliance towards
endorsing such revolutionary measures.
Resolved and, That we deplore and de-
the arbitrary and dictatorial
stand assumed by President Butler in
taking the support of the St. Louis de-
a test of good fellowship in the
Alliance by proscribing all such as will
not stand by St. Louis demands in
the Conference at Raleigh May 17th.
Resolved 3rd, That we regard such ac-
as officious and culpable in the ex-
as well as prejudicial to the best
interest of the order, and question Mr.
Butler's authority hi this presumptions
and overbearing course.
Resolved 4th. That we commend the
action of County Alliance in de-
representation hi this confer-
in defiance of tills proscription and
in opposition to the St. Louis demands.
Resolved That ask the Pro-
State Chronicle and
to publish those
resolutions. J. J. ELKS
Secretary Alliance.
Married.
Vines-Ma the resilience of Mrs.
S. E. Mayo, of Falkland, quite a large
party last Wednesday evening
to witness the ceremony uniting in mar-
Mr. Charles C. Vines and Miss
Mattie E. Mayo. The couple took their
places in front of the officiating minister.
Rev. J. X. II. exactly at
and in a few minutes were declared
husband and wife. The bride was dressed
in handsome drab cloth with hat to match
The groom in the regulation suit. After
the ceremony the happy party repaired
to the home which the bridegroom had
freed up for his bride, where a most
sumptuous supper was served. At a late
hour the company dispersed, many of
the couples determining to go and do
likewise before many days.
The verdict Is, well-mated and well-
matched ; the sentence, life long joy.
At the home of the in
county, on Wednesday, 27th of April
Mr. Moses L. and
were united in marriage, M. T.
officiating.
At the residence of Mr. T. J.
hi township, Sunday, the 1st
Inst., Mr. C. II. Johnston, of
and Mrs. Isabella L. Maiming were mar-
Pulls Them In,
Sheriff Tucker made a big haul last
Friday, and one trip added throe
guests to the county hotel. For some-
time Messrs. Vines Fountain, of Falk-
land, had been losing meat from their
warehouse at the river landing. On one
night last week they lost half a box of
side meat. Suspicion resting upon
in the they got
out a search warrant,. it for the Sheriff
and a hunt for meat begun. And, verily,
they found it. The first they found was
hid away In the barn of Corbett.
In trying to straighten up his side of
account for the. presence of the meat
he implicated Barnes, and at the
house meat was found buried in
a potato bed in the garden. It leaked
out hat Corbett also had too much
meat, in his house some pieces were
found sewed up In a bed, one piece in a
mattress and some had also been in a
trunk. Suspicion also rested strongly on
From the East, West, and Come from the four
winds of the earth. Come from rope, and
Asia, and whole of North South America. Come in
wagons. Come on Come in carriages. Come in
buggies. Come on telephones, Come in balloons. Come
on railroads. Come on foot. Come on
back, hog-back, cat back, dog-back, cow
back, green-hack, or Run up, walk
up, hobble up, limp up, roll up, tumble up, slide
push up, crowd up, jam up. climb
up, jump up, up, tease up, Hare
up, tear up, rise up, rear up, square up,
back up, waltz up, bear up, flip up, and
any in creation to get up, so
you will be sure to be on hand at the
-----GRAND RUSH FOR-----
NEW SPRING GOODS,
SHOES, HATS,
Not at cost but as low as any competitor.
C. T. M U N F O R D,
Opposite Old Brick Store. n. c.
OLD CURIOSITY SHOP.
Call and look over wonderful bargains on our
and see how much money yon can save.
While in our store don't forget to cast your eye over our
BASE BALL SUPPLIES.
BALLS, BATS, MASKS AND GLOVES.
B. ft Greenville, N. C.
mother but the old fellow had
A law should covered up tracks and hid the meat so
be passed at prohibiting any dogs well that they could not get
at large on the street unless wearing a j it is thought this by the Sheriff has
muzzle. To kill about four-thirds of up a band of thieves who had been
those In town would be a Nesting. the Falkland neighborhood.
Base Ball.
This item taken from the
Chronicle will be of interest to our
from the fact that a Greenville boy is
It.
At Winston Wednesday the
base hail team defeated the Davis
team. to Th compose the
. A. Jr. is
manager. S. T.
W. II. Wood, short
catcher Thornton first base ;
right Held Mike Hoke. third
base . II. center Held W. R,
base; K.
left Held B. pitcher.
Marriage Licenses.
During April marriage were
issued by Register of Deeds of Pill
county to the following persons
W. Arnold and Susan
II. M. lingers mid L. Hester,
Phillips and Annie Drury
S. Spain and Fannie Johnston. Sylvester
Williams and Bell, Charlie C.
Vines and Mattie E. B. Craw-
ford and Button, Henry D.
and Julia C. II. John-
I-ah.-Ha I. Manning.
Porter and Delia Ann
Johnson, John II. Moore
Henry Tyson Cox,
Jim Brown Mary Warren
Whichard Cherry Ann Carney, Hen-
Jenkins and Martha Julius
Black and Mary Ward, Thomas Williams
and John Reed and Mary
Mitchell, C. and Laura Bell.
Town Election.
The municipal election was so
quiet that many would not have thought
an election was in progress but for being
reminded of the fact. A nomination now
equivalent to an election, it has
been known since the ward meetings
were held to nominate candidates who
the would he.
In the ward the colored folks ran
C. C. Forbes, colored, and elected him.
In the second ward the Democrats ran
S. T. Hooker and Charles and
elected them without opposition. In the
third ward the Democrats did the same
thing for M. K. Lang and II.
In the fourth ward the folks put in
one of their number. Austin
So the new Council Is four white Dem-
and two colored Republicans, At
this writing we have not heard when they
will meet to choose a Mayor and qualify.
We suppose Mayor James will he his own
The Reflector suggests the new
Council try one for awhile and
see if they cannot save enough to make
some permanent improvements about
town. And don't fail to go for the dogs
early and cause them to be kept off the
streets or muzzled.
Col. John Cunningham says take
great pleasure in recommending Mrs. Joe
Person's valuable Remedy. I have known
several persons who have suffered from
dyspepsia to have been entirely relieved
by taking this excellent vegetable Tonic.
One of my who was a great
sufferer from scrofula used the Remedy,
and is now a well man. I believe we
should patronize home Industries, and
especially those which have been so well
and favorably known for years to merit
public approval. For her personal
Mrs. Person is endorsed by the best
citizens of our
Cunningham, Person county, X. C,
16th, 1801.
L W. DAVIS.
FINE-------
HAVANA CIGARS
-AND-
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
You Are Not In It
If you fail to sec the brand new stock of
GENERAL
-----that is now offered by-----
W. H. WHITE.
-----1 have just the to suit
f GENTLEMEN.
LADY,
HOUSEKEEPER,
FARMER.
BODY ELSE
If you want anything t o wear or anything
to cat, or any article to go in the
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece
of old stock in the house.
My prices will be found as low as
able goods can be sold at.
W. H. WHITE.
Two doors from U. A.
near Five Points
TO THE PUBLIC.
Printers and Binders
1ST. C
-----If you want to save-----
Unify
in the a PIANO and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the of Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW X. C.
Agent for Carolina,
who is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers. HIGH
PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship
and endorsed by nearly all
journals In the I
Made by Paul O. who is at this
time of the l. -f mid in-
the day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade
Also the NEWBY UP.
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by
him for the past six years In the eastern
part of this State and up to this time hits
given entire Tho
Piano just mentioned will be from
to In Oak,
Or Mahogany cases.
Also the PARLOR
from to In solid or
cases.
Ten years In the music
business, has him to handle
nothing but standard goods and he does
not hesitate to say th-it he can sell any
musical Instrument about per cent,
cheaper than agents are now offer-
We have the largest and most complete
establishment of the kind to be found in
the State, and solicit orders for all classes
Of Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING STATIONERY READY
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY OFFICERS.
us your orders.
ft
N.
To the West in Through Cars.
If you are going to Arkansas, Texas
or West, it will lie money In your pocket
to boar in mind that the
St. I,. offers
facilities to all classes of
fewer changes, cleaner and
more comfortable cars, and sure
Elegant Coaches Atlanta
Ga. to Memphis without change, making
direct connection there with trains,
requiring en one change for
and Texas. For reliable Information,
rates, routes, schedules and maps write
to or call on undersigned.
we can give you the very lowest rates, and
that we make no extra charge for seals
in our through Cars. Call on or address
J. W. Hicks; Pass. Aft, Charlotte N. C,
Jas Malay, Pass No
Atlanta W. T. T. P.
A. Chattanooga.
Refer
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS
to all banks In Eastern Carolina.
I have latest designs in
LADIES, MISSES AND
Hats and Trimmings
to suit most
Our Spring Goods
are now open and ready for Inspection.
Come make a before the
stock Is broken. Prices to suit hard
times.
Mrs. M. D. HIGGS,
GREENVILLE.
OTHERS
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading-
we are still in that position. Rivals at-
tempt to follow our methods but find that we
lead them a merry chase and they finally give
it up or come to grief.
Elegance and durability, coupled with low
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods
and Notions in the lead.
BROWN BROTHERS.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
------AND OF------
Country Produce.
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
If yon have anything to ship I ill attend lo it for you on a small
Call see me.
JNO. S.
READ IT ALL.
Sheet Iron Flues for Curing can be had of us during
the months of June. July and August. We now our order
in at the Mills for Elbow Iron and our order for Pipe Iron will be
placed a little later. It is very important for us to hare
orders for Flues at once so we can place our order for iron
there may be some in getting it. Our terms on Flues will
be invariably cash-on-delivery, and the juice cents per pound.
We can make Phelps Patent or any other kind you order
Our factory is opposite Dr. Wooten's Drugstore.
S- E. PENDER CO.,
o.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods
Cm Kid Pork.
tar load Rib Side Meat.
Car load Flour, nil grades.
Car load Seed
Star Lye.
Cases Bread Powders.
Cat et loan.
ion Crackers.
Boxes Tobacco.
SO Boxes Starch.
Barrels Rico Molasses.
Barrels Stick Candy.
Barrels A Ax Snuff.
-i Railroad Mills Snuff.
Cherries and Poaches. Barrels P. Snuff.
Full line Good. Paper Sacks. Cigarette, tut.
N. C.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN-
CO
For sample of work we refer you to the editor of





SIMPLE IN
PERMANENT IN DURATION.
EASILY ITS SKILL-
USE QUICKLY
The is an Instrument for
Cars of Without
on new theories or f
of it deal with the
electric d -n-
the gases it in the
atmosphere, continuing
at will. It is not electricity- DISEASE
is simply impaired vitality. The
adds to the vitality
and assists nature, la
to throw trouble.
A book, describing treatment
and all
lions, and no cure of all disease
mailed free on Address,
ATLANTIC CO ,
Washington, C. Charleston, S.
Ga-
THE TRAIL On THE MESA.
Over the mesa, arm and brows.
Under lbs Maze ;
A worn oM trail I J,
To
A little cluster of graves, forlorn.
lonely. Mill;
While round end
The narrow trail over the hill.
lover,
Under lies;
drama lo
To mortal or
Sin and sorrow love, past.
to and to
These they have known; then, last.
The slow, sad journey over the trail.
Is riding home to his rest;
The of the corral wide;
The trail leads on to the ha art of the west.
Over the of the divide.
E. Pratt.
AS THE FALLS.
THYSELF.
Or new
or.
oil
WEAKNESSES of MAN.
invaluable BUM
scaled.
is with endorsements I SEND
of the and ,
of tin
Consultation in person or by Expert
and CElt-
W. IT. or
The Medical Institute, No. el.,
, .
The Medical Institute
latent, but no equal.
The of or i- a
more than gold. it n-.
vary man, and u,
be
and R,
NO
No
Apr mill. Fast Mail, daily
eX Sun
pin
Ar am V,
Ar
am i
Ar m m B
SO
Ar
Ar
to am
in mi
Mi
Ar
TRAINS GOING
No X. H
daily
Sun.
loam 0-1
Ar
Ar Set
Ar
lam V pm pm
Ai Mount
Ar
Sunday.
Train on Scotland
leaves 4.22 arrives
land Neck at M., Greenville 6.92
P. M. Kinston p. in.
Kinston 7.10 a. in., Greenville
Arrives a. ID.
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun-
Local train leaves Weldon
and Friday
in., Neck
a. m. Greenville p.
7.40 . m. Returning Kinston
Tuesday. and
7.20 a. in., arriving Greenville 6.6
a. m., p. m.,
5.15 p. in.
Train leaves Tarboro, N , via
A Raleigh R. daily except
H M. M,
X C, is I M, P
Plymouth 8.30 p. in., 5.22 p. in.
leaves daily except
0.00 a. in. Sunday a. in
Williamston, N C, a m, an.
arrive Tarboro, N C, A V
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
and Branch leave Fayette-
ville SO a m. arrive p in.
leave Rowland p m.
arrive p m Dally ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch n-av.
Goldsboro daily except OnO A M
N C. A M.
leaves S C S AM
arrive Goldsboro, N A M.
Train
at P M, arrive S-i
P Hope r M.
Hone A M,
S. AM, an Rocky Mount A
Train on Clinton leaves Warsaw
for except a
ton at A M, and lo Connor
ins at Warsaw witH Nos. and
Southbound train on Wilson A
Is No. Northbound it
No. except Sunday.
. No. South and North will
atop sally at Rocky Mount, Wilson,
Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train makes close connection a
all North daily. Al
Va Richmond, and daily except Sun
day via Bay Line, also at. Rocky Mount
daily except with Norfolk
Carolina for Norfolk and all
points Tin Norfolk.
General
J. R- Transportation
T. M
Noon
Night
time. It
the languor of morning, bus-
J energies of noon, lulls
the weariness of night.
sparkling, appetizing.
Don't be if a
larger other kind
s as good false. No
it m god
In tins woods, as time
goes on, and Monday morning conies
with all its depressing blueness to
as have the hours
since Saturday night in riotous living.
For once Franks appetite failed
him. The work ox beefsteak and de-
flapjack were not to his
His muscular neighbor noticed
it and said. eat or
you'll never stand it till
Frank felt grateful for the consider-
but did not act upon the ad-
vice; whereupon his friend
hint with the coffeepot saying,
then, drink some this to
scald oat But no; the
pains of a racking headache and dis-
ordered were not to
soothed by much
and many times warmed up so
Frank got up and went out.
Ho seated himself on the in
front of the to wait for
the others. The morning air was re-
freshing, and it enabled him to think
coherently of the recent woeful
Ho remembered it ail
white fronted saloon at the forks in
the road; the dingy, smelling
the cheap mirror fix-
and tho audacious pictures on
the walls; the card littered floor
the reeking spittoons; the click of
the poker chips and the quaint origin-
of some of the blasphemy.
Then the game. How he did win
at the beginning, and how the on-
lookers craned their necks to see
how he discarded; and when he
his whole on three jacks,
and some one behind remarked,
in a low tone, blooded, you
bet how a feeling of confidence
crept over him. a home
stake to be won right hero and
he said to But the
fates willed it otherwise, for Lucky
Bob him, raid the
displayed three queens from
the hand of the latter, which ended
the game for Frank. But they filled
him up with way of
consolation, and he struck out for
camp by the light of the moon.
Tho track, he remembered
thinking, must lie narrower
than standard and the ties
necessarily close together, and there
was something wrong with the moon,
for she hid herself behind a cloud
until he reached the high trestle,
when suddenly she her
peerless that, glittering in tho
creek below, startled and perplexed
him. He had sat him down to con-
sider all those matters, there
they had found him soliloquizing,
with many gestures and an occasion-
apostrophe, to the inconstant
moon. He remembered their help-
him and putting him to
alas to lo aroused in too short a
time by tho tooting of the relentless
horn.
Tho retrospect ceased as the crew
filed out from breakfast. The fore-
man stood by the door, and with
that strangely retentive memory
which many unlettered people
mentally registered each who
went to work. Among tho first
was old Josh, the filer, who took
his position behind his bench, and
arms folded and pipe
alight waited for the sun to climb a
little before beginning his doily task
of teeth and
The crew, apart from the choppers
and peelers, was into two
gangs. Each gang its
of sawyers, chain enders and
and each had a donkey
engine to haul tho logs from their
beds, where the sawyers left them,
into the The team
took charge of them from there
hauling from the two engines alter-
Farther back in the forest
the choppers and peelers worked col-
for the two
For one of these Frank
sawed chunks. A
is by no means an exalted position
in the wood butcher brotherhood;
still, it often serves as a stepping
stone for something better. The
ties are to cut into movable
any windfalls or worthless tree
may ho in the way of the
and to remove the
lighter obstructing debris by hand.
He needed sharpened saw. Josh
must be interviewed. With a long
drawn sigh, he arose and. walking
wearily across the track to where
the bench stood, made known his
wants.
the country where you're
now asked the old man.
was the brief reply.
what you want,
handing down the implement from
its resting place against a huge
saw for a side-
ling
Just then the came and
you won't need that
today. Big John's partner's in town,
sick, or drunk, or an you'd
better go an work in his place.
No further instructions were need-
ed. The opportunity had come at
last To fell a redwood had been
Frank's aim over since he hired out.
Dropping tho
and all his
woes, he hurried off to overtake his
big friend of tho breakfast table.
It is expedient to adopt, for the
time being and to a reasonable ex-
tent, speech and manners of
those with whom our lot is cast.
Frank learned this bitter ex-
His and
bad but u subjected to much ridicule
when he came. Ho had long
since with both, end
he now could wipe his
mouth with the back of his hand
after a meal and chew
with tho best of them.
He overtook his big friend at the
brow of the hill among tho logs and
rigging. The donkey driver, or j
him-
as he
sen, wan gutting up steam,
the poising of the pomp
strangely with the of the
stillness that the
smoke from the little engine wont
straight up in a bright blue cloud.
Over tho divide, in the region beyond
Jordan, the pare morning light her-
the sunrise.
Out of breath, he began with tho
colloquial
it me
says for me to work in
place of Alec, who ain't up
this morning. was a
nickname applied to the foreman, on
account of his ability to lure high
priced men for less than standard
wages.
After an inquiry or two concern-
his absent partner, John said
earnestly, mo son, did ever
chop any
for skids, stringers, and
the
a big difference between
down poles and rid
Frank knew,, but he said nothing.
The conversation as
they had now to walk in
along the and all
signs of road work were left behind.
The way was over fallen trees and
around stumps, down of a
canyon and up tho other, ending, at
last, in the chopping at tho edge of
the green timber.
be the said
John, pointing to an eight foot tree
of surpassing beauty. mid-
soft, on the grain is straight
you can tell that by the bark; an
she's sound as a green
top shows
premeditated
Frank said to himself, and then
aloud, way are you to
send
them two point-
across the lull. ain't no
room to spare; but if as near
plumb as I think She is, I can land
her safe He took a plumb
from his pocket, squinted up along
the extended line at tho bee, and
was satisfied for ho said, Alec's
ax and snipe off the inner corners of
both them stump. while I fix tho
Both were soon busy, John felling
a couple of which he
afterward cut up into movable
lengths to lie used in filling up a
low that was in the line of direction,
while Frank rounded off tho stumps
as instructed.
The next thing, after the bed was
made, was tho construction of the
staging or scaffold. They cut socket
holes in the tree and inserted the
supports known as Across,
from driver to driver, the stage
were placed, and on these the
men now stood. The undercutting
began when tho big man, with tho
corner of his ax, bad scratched a lino
on the face of the tree to indicate the
height and extent of the notch. Tho
fibrous, springy bark is hard to cut,
and keen axes will often
without making a visible incision,
have to hit a more slanting
lick to get into John said. Tho
effect was almost disastrous. Frank
made a swipe at the tree, the ax
glanced and hid itself between Ids
feet. John Stopped me
said be, mast hit where
you look, an take your time, or you'll
cut damn feet
By noon the undercut was put in
and tins tree A tree is
when a line drawn across
the stump from corner to corner of
the undercut notch will be, at i's
center, at right angles to the
where the top of the tree is intended
to fall.
A chopper's geometrical methods
are simple. Stripping a fern of its
leaves and using tho stem as a meas-
he finds center of the line
aforesaid, from point ex-
tends a at right angles.
The is straight and
slender and about four feet long. A
square is not used to find the right
angle. Fern stalk measurement an-
the purpose fully as well Ho
then sights along the slick, and. if it
points exactly in the intended
tho work on the front of tho
tree is complete. If not, the notch
must be chipped into until it con-
forms to tho mathematical require-
After dinner they moved their
Staging to the back of the tree and
began sawing. This work came to
Frank naturally. Ho was as limber
as an eel, and tho swaying motion
suited him. They rested occasional-
During one of them spells John
said, you as much sleight
with the ax as you have the
saw I'd rather have you for a
When the saw was well buried
they drove wedges the to
keep the tree from g down,
and then worked on until were
but a few inches of timber be-
tween the saw the under-
cut. me son, you kin i
off your handle. Tho wedges do
the said John.
done and tho saw with-
drawn and carefully bidder, away,
and in a the woods ring-
with tho that
sledges make when hammering
wedges into the body a tree
to break its heart. was get-
ting a little nervous, and his blows
were uncertain and poorly directed,
and the big man i
there's been a many wedges
you've never and, to atone
for his sarcasm and the
boy, time, me
son. Make every lick count one, and
don't try to hit too hard.
that little blows kill tho devil
We've raised her some already. See
you km stuff your fingers in gap
A wind had sprung up, and
was gently swaying the green top.
watch when tho swings
her from us and tap the wedges in
lively. She must have leaned back a
little, or she would have gone before
now. And say, when she does get
ready to go, don't get excited, but
just watch your movements and take
along that fallen tree yonder, and
don't look behind until under
tho shelter of the big stub. look
ant for Then he made a
trumpet of his hands and
across the hill
Two peelers heard tho warning,
dropped their bars and made off out
of reach of limbs.
The went on, and there
were a few snapping cracks, each of
which made Frank's heart jump,
he staid until the last loud breaking
boom, when they both jumped from
nod
sue began to sou, a Let every enfeebled woman
wider gap for tho sky to seen There's a medicine that'll cine
through; quickening by degrees, her the proof a
top made a swishing sound it
tho ah-, faster and faster,
noisier noisier, grazing the stand-
trees nearly and causing a shower
of limbs. But fell at length, with
a crash that shook tho earth, into tho
bed they had made for at
know it
tier, and
the it doesn't do yon
good within reasonable time, report tile
fact its make is and get your
without a won't do
it
The remedy Is Dr. Favorite
ban proved itself the
right remedy in nearly even-
tho same time tho butt ed off I
n i-.-. won t cure it has done
more to build-up tired, enfeebled and
lier from to I broken-down women than any other
and from heart to by the great I medicine known.
exclaimed the big man, I Hie woman not ready
when the commotion of swaying All that we've to do Is lo get
trees and falling limbs had ,
and he was pacing back and forth on First lo
tho trunk. how pretty . Second to it. Third to cured
between tho There a It. The one comes of the oilier.
foot of room on either i neat of nick headache is not in
Frank was elated, and that Regulate the and yon
tho absent partner would st. in i c, are the
town, or drunk or
for the remainder of tho season. Per-
Ho the
know
by
haps followed was a judgment
upon him for the wickedness of tho
I must toll the story.
In a week Alec had not j
and Frank was learning tho craft i
rapidly. They moved to a steep
country, where tho timber was small j
and scattering. They felled most of
the trees that is, tho tops
pointed up the hill and the butts j
rested on or against the stump.
on to tho is
tho way John expressed it when tho
butts rested on the stump.
They several, and Frank
had asked him i
they ever take a notion to slip
down
was the reply.
a feller to do to get
out the way They might roll
over or flip up and come clear back
over tho
so, but you've got to
chances, as in all tho work in
bloody
They hail shouted tho warning, for
tho tree was to topple
over. Both men jumped. Frank ran
to the right and John to the left.
Tho tree, but a small one, fell; its
top broke off about two-thirds up,
and tho bull; of trunk balanced
or seemed to a knoll
above Then a strange tiling
happened. She swung to the right,
her bark dropped and in her
nakedness, like p. yellow snake,
slid down hill. John shouted,
hut it was too late. His saw tho ex-
tended arms and he heard the
groan, and the thought of it all
made tho strong man sick.
That evening they held a meeting
in the bull pen to talk tho matter
over. was appointed
He fortified himself With an
unusually largo chew of tobacco, ad-
justed his spectacles very carefully,
and then reverently examined the
boy's effects. He found a photograph
of tho girl at home, of course, a
few letters. Ho read tho
himself, then addressed the as-
Hie trembled a
here, said he.
no scrub, lit;
In-en foolish and reckless
God knows what all, bat, by the
Eternal, he was white Now,
these letters, which I
read to myself, are too sacred to lie
handed around ox even read aloud.
Some from his mother
a widow, I from
his sweetheart; an if you'll agree to
let me take care of I'll see that
his folks get the news as gently as
He paused and looked
around.
There were no dissenting voices, so
he resumed thing is to
raise fluids for a hangup
Tho old man, with his spectacles
dimmed, picked up a battered hat
from of the bunks, dropped a
five dollar piece in it byway of a
and then passed tho lint
around.
The next issue of the local weekly
fly recorded the event under the
headline, Death at Rocky
The woods claim their
so often but little attention
is paid to an occurrence of this kind.
But Josh could toll an eloquent story.
Barn Savage in Argonaut.
Vet
Prom a letter written by Mrs. Ada E.
if S.
with a bad cold, which settled on
my cough set and finally
ed in Consumption. Four doctors
gave up, I could live but a
short lime. I gave up Co my
i r, determined if i could not stay
with n y friends on earth, would meet
my absent ones above. and was
to get lit. Sew Discovery
for C Coughs and fold-. I
a trial, took in eight
ii bus cured lam
now i well an hearty Trial
s free at Drug reg-
and ft 1.00.
Won't Rabbit.
Living almost wholly upon game
as do, the Navajos cannot lie
tiled upon to either fish or
rabbit. I have known some very
ludicrous things to happen when
meanly mischievous Americans de-
Navajos into eating either of
these forbidden dishes; and some-
there have been very serious
for the ill mannered joke.
Rabbits are numerous
in tho country, being mo-
only by feathered and four
footed enemies; but the Indian who
d fight to the death sooner than
a rabbit stew is greed-
fond of the fat and querulous
prairie dog. That whole region
abounds in and they
are frequently besieged by their
swarthy F. in St.
Nicholas.
On. What a Cough-
Will you the warning The
of the sore approach of that
more terrible Consumption. Ask
yourselves if yon can for the sake
of saving to run the risk and do
for it. We know from experience
that Cure will cure your cough
fails. This explains why more
than a million bottles were sold the past
year. It relieves croup and whooping
cough do not be with-
out. For lame back, side or cheat use
Porous Plaster Sold at Wool-
en's Store.
Drinking Cup.
Learn to drink from a public
cup, if you must do this, without
touching the rim. Put the lower lip
in the water first and tilt the cup
higher than usual. When children
Did you read in the news columns that
W. O. was elected president of
the Richmond Terminal road the other
day Well, be was. I'll tell you a story
about him. lie is tho son-in-law of
coo At the time of his mar-
to Bessie her Esther op-
posed the mating, and so accustomed
was Mr. to have his own way
about what concerned him that ho never
forgave his daughter until he came to
die for thwarting his wishes. The ob-
to the match was
simply because of the obscurity of Oak-
man, who at tho was a
superintendent of a minor division of
tho Delaware, and West-
railway, probably did not show
up on tho pay roll for more than twenty-
five dollars a week.
was always a popular young
man and was thought by his friends to
have some future. Mr. did
not think so. On the occasion of tho
wedding Horatio Seymour, of the
bride, threw open tho doors of his house
in Utica and gave tin; young woman an
opportunity Of making a social stir
which her father's purse would not have
permitted, though he had been willing
to the match. Mr. never
to his daughter after until he was on
his deathbed i-i the House. He
sent tot her, and the supposition has
ways been that was a
Interview in Chicago Tribune.
are million.-in said a dealer
when linked about Cough nip.
Price eta.
For some paused been a
rheumatic. I recently tried Salvation
which gave me almost Instant relief.
I since recommend it.
Gordon. Baltimore. M. D.
He said love I am sorry to dis-
appoint you about picnic, but
trotter ha-a lame That's nothing
We've got plenty of Salvation Oil.
The Detroit Free Press Fiend has been
punning Cough Hi
i only gratitude, for all thinking men
know Us
Tho of Eel's
If the conclusions drawn by
men tors are sound it would
seem that were an eel provided with
on apparatus to inject its own blood
into a wound as tho serpent injects
his venom, an eel hi the mud would
even objectionable than a
snake in tho grass. Prof
the Italian scientist, in experiment-
with tho blood of eels has dis-
covered by injecting it under tho
.-kin of rabbits, frogs, mice,
pigs, etc., that it is a rank poison,
being similar in action to the venom
of of the viper kind
Tho viper's bite, it is well known,
causes death by paralyzing tho action
of the respiratory organs; death from
eel blood poison is similar in nearly
every detail. In regard to tho of
a person or animal injected with eel's
blood Professor says that
usually given are wholly use-
less, and that the only hone of a cure
lies in tracheotomy and the artificial
pumping of air into the
Louis Republic.
N. C June JO, 1800.
Last October I indescribable
pain- with what the doctors said was
gravel. As soon as I could get an
I applied it every night for two
week-, and am happy to state have hail
no recurrence of pain, and from present
appearances never will. When you hear
of one louder In the praise of the
than myself, -cud me bis
graph.
ED. M. Pack,
of Danville, Va.
Colonel of Nevada,
tells this was With Judge
Patrick Duffy, of the Essex Market
court, day on Eighth street, in
Now said he, it
curred to the judge that something I
wanted to know got from a
Nevada paper up at tho Cooper In-
library. I offered to wager
that they t have a Nevada
paper there. He said oh, yes, they
did, and laughingly took me up, say-
at length more seriously, that
I they had many of them there.
hod just got to the steps, were
beginning to go up, when I said,
Judge, I want to give you a show
for your white alley; I'll bet you the
they don't know where Ne-
accepted it and went up.
you got a Nevada paper
asked I. have said one of
tho several attendants, and then ho
turned in a perplexed way and said,
the first thing after, is No-
None of tho others
could answer, and the walked
down, convinced that after all there
were many things tho average per-
son didn't know, especially about
Francisco Examiner.
Dyspepsia sad Liver Complaint-
Is it not worth the small price of
to free yourself of every symptom of
these distressing complaints. If you think
so at our stoic and get a bottle
every bottle has a
printed guarantee on it, use accordingly
and if it does you no good it will cost you
nothing. Sold Drug Store.
Feathers Heavier Than
In one of Charles Reade's novels a
Jewish trader i, made to ask,
is tho heavier, a pound of feathers or
a pound of After a while he
explains, to the satisfaction of his
audience of mi sere, that the feathers
are the heavier
, Gold, he say.-, is weighed by troy
want dunks from the railway mug, weight, while leathers are
pass a clean cambric handkerchief ; by avoirdupois; and as the twelve
over the rim,, next the ounces in a pound troy contain but
grains, while the avoirdupois j
pound contains grains, the pound
of feathers is of course 1,240 grains
heavier than the pound of gold
Youth's Companion.
your another know
boy to hi- little brother.
he was the answer, one
bottle of Dr. Bull's Cough has
knot my cold Into a cocked
w nibbing- of Salvation oil will
Instantly relieve hi the neck or
joints.
OINTMENT
SIGN LANGUAGE C THE INDIANS.
A Simple off Many
Hie or Word.
Make a letter A with your hands
and tho i-nils of your fingers; that is
a tepee or tent. Keep your hands in
that bend them down so
that your fingers point away from
you; that's a house, a very good
one, too, because it shows how the
logs are interlocked at the corners of
tho sort of houses sees on the
frontier. If you want to cay you
saw something, point to your eyes.
Companion Sea.
Ocean rat -s have become us mi
avoidable i as storms and
and a plurality of passenger
may continue to them as prof-
J but considering
tho protest of an influential minority
; it seems hard to understand why
their risk has not at last been
Soil in the way proposed by Pro-
I of Hamburg, and
Captain do la of the Belgian
navy, viz , tho use of
In nine out of ten cases
the wont consequences of shipwreck
could have been averted if more
; than that of frail , all oilier remedies, with
had ls-i neat at hand, and as tho
chance against the of
; both vessels icing wrecked at tho
same time would a thousand to
; one, the popularity of tho fleetest
could be eclipsed
MARK.
over
known
To say you heard something, point to
your ears. To say you slept or arc I by rS
sleepy, put up one hand with the ; start and keep up
palm side toward your head communications by means of signal
your head as if you wore going to lay ; ,., f,
it on that hand. i
To say that you saw some one who
was beautiful, pot your between
this thumb and fingers of one hand
and draw your hand softly down
from your forehead to your chin.
A faint smirk or mode at tho
same time greatly helps tho sign. If
the you tell about was a
woman, make believe take bold of a
mass of hair on tho right of
your head and follow it down past
tho shoulder with your hand, as you
see women do when they dress their
hair. signs for seeing, hear-
sleep, and women are
exactly tho same as those used by
George L. Fox. the famous clown,
when he played
I have no doubt that the
great English clown, also used them,
for they are the natural motions for
expressing those terms.
Did you ever notice how tho paws
of small animals are curled in when
they are dead; That is the sign for
or Hold one hand
out with the finger bent toward the
thumb to make the sign. But if you
would say some was killed, hold
out n fist with the knuckles away
from you, and move tho wrist slowly
so as to force the knuckles down as
if tho person was struck down. To
tell about a child, hold your hand as
far from the ground as its head
would reach. Put a finger up to
either side of tho head to say
to say put up all your fingers
like branching horns. But another
way to tell about a deer is to imitate
his loping with one of your hands.
To tell of a snake, wiggle fin-
in tho air as a snake would move
on the ground. sign is the name
for two tribes of Indians. Tho sign
for a Sioux is to make believe cut
your throat with one finger; for a
Blackfoot, point to your foot; for a
Blood, your fingers across your
mouth; for a white man. nib yon
hand across your forehead to show
how white our foreheads are; for a
rub one check.
The sign for water is to make n
scoop of your hand and put it to your
mouth as you would if yon were
drinking at a stream. To tell of a
lake make that sign and spread out
your to cover a big space. To
tell of a river tho water sign
and then trace the meandering course
of a river with your finger. But the
sign for is made by doubling
one fist and drinking out of the
top of it as if it were a bottle. If
you do that mid make to stir
up your brains with finger, or
reel a little, you will describe a tipsy
man. Nearly all signs in the
are mode with tho right baud.
Julian Harper's Young
People.
in
The Puritan Fathers were
addicted to smoking; indeed, the
practice became so common
oven the straitlaced of
times and seasons actually smoked
in church. This custom soon
very considerable annoyance, an tho
religious exercises were greatly dis-
by the clinking of flints and
steels to light their pipes and the
clouds of smoke in church.
in the year 1669 tho colony passed
this law, is enacted that any per-
son or that found
smoking of tobacco on tho Lord's
day. going to or coming from tho
meetings, within two miles of meet-
house, shall pay twelve for
such Under this law
several persons were actually fined;
but the punishment failed to secure
tho carrying out of tho arbitrary sec-
portion of tho
tho Year Bound.
in
Ibis ha been
rears, wherever
been .-lead demand. It bun en-
In I lending nil over
led t tires where
the
s. I mi-
years failed. la
long standing Irish mutation
inch ii baa obtained i,
Its as bin little
been made to It the
public. this Ointment will
be sent to any on receipt One
Hollar, box lice. usual
to All Orders
promptly to. Address all or-
rs communications to
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
Friend is a scientific-
ally prepared every
of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro-
These are com-
a manner hitherto unknown
WILL DO all that is claimed for
HAND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to Mothers mailed con-
valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
express on receipt of price per
REGULATOR CO.,
BY ALL
Mai ,,
P.
i r and
N. .
I I I free
n, N. J.
Pm .-. ESTATE AGENTS,
O.
estate ale.
below Call on
I i arm f real
Look over list
r w lite them.
A i lot on rd street below Co-
in
A lot on street.
Front, and has nice
It farm on
W. A
r. r. r. u
Proprietors,
Block, GA.
PATENTS
Milk.
Machines arc in use in Paris and
some other cities which will heat
great quantities of milk to a tempera-
of about US for a few
minutes, and then cool it rapidly to
a low temperature. The method has
been called tho pasteurization of
milk. It does not kill all tho
hut it does destroy so many of
them that it greatly increases tho
properties of the milk.
Moreover, it almost entirely destroys
tho danger from disease germs in
milk, since nearly all forms likely to
occur hi milk are killed by this
Tho advantage of this
method is that the of
docs not give to tho milk
tho of boiled milk, which most
find unpleasant, and does not
render the milk difficult of digestion.
Professor H. Conn in Popular
Monthly.
York Journal.
Looks.
Good looks are more than skin deep,
upon a healthy condition of
all the organs, if the be In-
active, you have Billions your
stomach-he disordered you have a Dy
peptic and if your Kidneys be
yon have a Pinched
is the
and Tonic acts directly on these vital
organs. Cures Pimples. Blotches, Bolls
and gives a good complexion, bold at
Drag Store, per beetle.
It is hard to rely on portraits, i
have seen, in an exhibition in Paris,
a portrait of at tho
max of his influence, and he looked
like a placid provincial practitioner
whoso brow had not broadened with
power or wrinkled with
I saw at tho same time two con
temporary portraits of Louis XVI,
borrowed from historic
as little like each other as
lot and In one of them
tho artist had idealized the king's
face into certain strength and
tho other might be taken as tho
caricature of a constitutional king
it was such a coarse,
countenance as tho
sometimes unexpectedly reveals, and
a clumsy figure on which royal mil-
looked quite out of
C. Duffy in Contemporary
Be view,
I've been s
obtained, and all ill the r. S
Patent or the Courts
for ate Fees.
We are opposite the u. Patent
lice engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents Id less time than those
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise to free charge,
and are make no change unless we ob-
Patents,
refer, here, to
Supt. the Money Order Did., and to
earns toot the Patent For
term and reference to
actual clients ill your own State, or
address, C. A. CO.,
Washington, D.
ion holies with lour
kitchen and Brooke convenient
large stables on tin premises.
Two good building lots Skinner
-i desirable
location.
between
of
rooms, good well water, large gar
If n plot and
I A ball acre lot in
I r. I story house
rooms, cook and dining rooms st-
all out buildings
stables, good water
A line containing acres,
t. about miles from Greenville on it.
road, baa gin house, stables,
barns, two room tenant houses; ab
SI acres cleared, balance well wooded.
good water. his land i- excellent foe
tin cultivation of i tobacco.
branch of the
ball way be-
tween and Kin-Ion aid Within i
mile depot, contains mi acres,
and balance heavily timbered
pine, oak, hickory, and cypress;
as goo I tenant I railroad passes
nearly through farm. The
land clay subsoil with sandy loam,
in good state of cultivation and highly
Improved; Is fine trucking land.
A farm miles from on
i. Kinston road known as the
farm; contains acres, has
good dwelling and all necessary
out buildings, ibis is a to-
farm.
A and lot In Greenville on
corner Is. Cherry and W, S,
Bawls, by the family of
the late W. A. contains fl
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient
half a block from main
of the town. Possession
an be given Jane 1st.
A good let
street, between Third and Fourth
streets, splendid location.
and let on
street near Avenue,
good house Of looms, large lot with
buildings.
The and on
1- Pitt adjoining the of H.
s. sin and the lot described In
large, comfortable one-story dwelling
of four rooms, dining and cook rooms,
plenty room for garden.
IS. Valuable Steam Corn and Moor
Mills, Cotton Gin and
property located at a X Road
within u hundred yards of a I,. R. u
i is beet
Sections of Pitt county, The mill- are
lilted up with the best machinery. Sort-
cloths, smeller etc., and ire In full
Tile store house la it two
building with dwelling attacked
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear.
I he store is kept constantly supplied
with general salted to a
country store and is a good
The mills the best known in
This properly is Tor sale Hie
OS wish to withdraw from business.
Terms on any of the above property
can be had on application m
GRAND EMPORIUM
For Shaving, Gutting and Dressing Malt
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Open at which place
I have recently and where I have
everything la my Una
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
the Improved appliances;
and comfortable chairs.
r . . ,, i at reasonable figures
DOLLAR A
THE
WATCH TOWER,
Published Semi Monthly.
Devoted lo Apostolic Christianity,
Cation, Intelligence Send
tor Sample Copy. Office of
Greenville, O.
Editorial Office, Wash-
.
i. L. WIN FIELD, Editor.
W. DAVIS. Associate.
promptly- executed. Very respectfully,
Scientific
Agency fop
Hi
i. l. L. -.-I
HAIR BALSAM
Promote a. growth.
Hewer Fails to Gray.
to it Color.
hair
Ml INN i ., M ,;
for
UM bf It Turtle,
MARKS.
tON PATENTS
T, NEW
patent In
, In for
i i in the
from
We have a speedy cure
for any at Oil
relief
A free with it. Mil.
i am
s. .-- .
tore for
n, or A CO M. Y.
r . In th
ii. a
silt AV k CO-
. New
each Use it If you desire
and sweet breath. Price bold at
store.
What so wonderful, as a severe cough i
cured Dr. Bull's Cough for
cents, .
s m PIANOS
FOR EASIEST PAYMENTS.
The MASON HAMLIN CO. now offer to rent any one of their
Organs or Pianos for three months, giving the person
hiring full opportunity to test it thoroughly his own home,
and return if he does not longer want it. If he continues to hire
it until tho aggregate of rent paid amounts to the price the
instrument, it becomes his properly without further payment;.
Illustrated with net prices, free.
Mason Organ and Piano Co,
BOSTON.
NEW YORK.
CHICAGO.


Title
Eastern reflector, 4 May 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
May 04, 1892
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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