Eastern reflector, 22 February 1893






PER YEAR IN ADVANCE.
v Office for Job
NORTH CAROLINA.
Things Mentioned in our State Ex.
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the
The report attendance
as Wake Forest, Gail-
ford, Davidson,
Trinity, I; the University,
On last Sat-
a party of disguised
men wont to the noose of a
in Williams township, named Rill
Taylor, and gave him a
because, it is said, be stole some
hogs. If guilty, ho ought to have
a fair trial and been punished
by lawful authorities. Tins
lynching ought to be denounced
by nil good citizens.
A large barn Mr. J- Di
place in township, Pen-
d-r com was destroyed by fire
last v, . The
a large quantity of forage, some
farming tools, etc There was no
insurance. A employed
on the farm was suspected of set-
ting the barn on fire and was sub-
b arrested, charged with
. committed to the
jail in Star.
On Saturday night in the store
of Geo. Curtis, col-, in the Sugar
section of Kinston, Tom Mil-
colored, while not to
fooling with eel
told Tom he
didn't play with drunken boys.
and took up a hatchet and said he
was good to strike him.
Geo. Curtis them not to fight
in his store and began pushing
them out. Tom sod fell
out of the door, with Tom in front,
and ii some way
ed a sash on the forehead about
two inches long. He bled very
profusely and it was thought he
was badly injured. Dr. J. A. Pol-
lock dressed the wound, which
proved to a dangerous one.
Free Pres
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
I .-.
every
and in
. pro-
WILL DO aD that b chased for
it AND MORE It Shortens Laker,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes
Life Mother at Book
t Bailed FREE, con-
i. million and
CO.,
DOMINION LINE.
TAR BITTER SERVICE
l ave for Green-
ville touching at all land-
on Tar River Won Wednesday,
and a; A. M.
leave at A. M.
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturdays.
A. XI. same
These departure subject to stage of
. Tar River.
Washington
en of The and Wash
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. Hew York and Boston.
Shippers should order their
via Tom
Hew York. e .
from i-
v from
Boston,
MYERS-
Washington N. C
J. J.
Agent.
N C.
L J. Unwell, Mass., says tor
cured of
of bad
, to a low condition of health, as it
could not
of
-o over his
when
.-. s induced to
of disease remain.
T. L. Was.
Hi-.-. fr.
Co. a
Eastern Reflect
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
IN TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1893.
NO.
HOUSE AND HOME.
Matter Prepared Especially to
Interest the Housewife.
Mora Nutriment in Than
in to Car-
Tactful Wife and
Her
Six large eggs will weigh about
a pound. Ah producer
one pound of is equal to
one of beef. About
of the weight of egg is
solid which is more
than can said meat. There
are no bones tough pieces that
have be laid aside. Practically
an ,.; is food, and yet
lb iv is none of the disagreeable
A the butcher necessary
obtain it. Eggs at average
are tho cheapest
most nutritious articles of diet.
Like an egg is complete food
in itself, containing everything
necessary for the of
a animal. It is also easily
digested if not damaged in cooking.
Indeed, there is no more
and nourishing food than
The album in, oil and saline
ore. as milk, in the right
proportion for sustaining animal
life. The valuable or important
salts are contained in the yolk, and
k, ace this portion of the is
most useful in some forms of dis-
ease. A weakly person, in whom
force is deficient the
impoverished, may the
yolk of egg with advantage. Tho
iron and the phosphoric
pounds are in a condition to be
easily assimilated, and although
homeopathic in quantity,
less exert a marked influence on
the system. The yolks of eggs,
containing, as they do, less
men, are net so injuriously
affected by heat as the whites, and
a bard-b yolk may be usually
eaten by invalids without
The Wife Who Knows.
The tactful wife wins her
band's confidence, but does not
force it. She shows to him that
the truth, no matter how bitter
will be received by her with bettor
grace than a sweetened
The business and social ox-
actions of each should known
by the other, the first plank
in the barrier deceit torn down by
a full and honest confession.
White lies should abhorred,
and life of each made an open
book for tho other to read. When
this basis is established the wheels
of matrimony will not lie apt to
clog, for mutual confidence de-
.-ill jealousy- and suspicion,
the two greatest of life's
most serious
Tablecloth Pads.
pad of a double-faced can-
ton flannel, which most house-
keepers use under the damask
tablecloth, is usually made long
to accommodate an increased
length of. other times is, often a
small but annoying question.
women keep two pads of different
lengths on hand A mete
i to have a loop of
secured at each corner on the
upper side and catch it kick to a
small hook fastened in the table.
This loop can lie easily
at any time with p. bit of string
and the scheme away with
the clumsy folding under tho pat
Sweeping Carpets.
Don't sweep, or allow your do-
to, with the broom in front
of you. as though you were
the carpet. As sure as
do the dust will to the ceiling
and you will dig the nap from tho
caret and shovel h up in the dual-.
pan. More carpets worn out
by hard sweeping than by regular
wear and Sweep with a
downward, regular stroke, keeping
the dust under the broom. Wang
out a or mop in soda
waiter and wipe over your
the dust has settled, and see
how bright it will look.
Women Lawyers In America.
There are now law
firms in the United States com-
posed of husbands and wives, and
there about two hundred
can ladies who law in
tho courts or manage legal
Mis Cousins
was the first woman admitted to
the Washington University at St.
Louis, and she has now
with her father for
years. Several women make
large incomes by the law.
Chocolate Sauce.
make this sauce put a half-
of water into a saucepan, add
granulated sugar, bring
to a boil, then gradually over
two tablespoonfuls of moistened
stir until perfectly smooth,
return to the fire. Moisten a tea-
spoonful of arrowroot in a little
cold water, add to the cocoa mix-
boil a moment, strain,
add of vanilla and it
is to use.
The Romans had saucepans,
gridirons, colanders, dripping
and forks
m. of aha
and chest. O- Newman.
N. Y., think
there is nothing so valuable for
and hoarseness n Dr. Bull's Cough
Syrup. Have it in our family
San live years, and would not like to
lie without
HIS FUTURE WIFE.
There is an old tradition that
the man who sups alone at mid-
night on All will
ids future wife.
It is indispensable that tho man
should be alone, that ho should
supper while midnight is
striking from the steeple,
and that a cover laid
opposite him, as for an expected
guest.
Lord Peregrine was a great be-
in old traditions, but no
believer in marriage. Ho was too
rich and too young to care about
encumbering himself with a
too good natured to risk break-
a pretty heart by his
incurable propensity for roving.
Foreign travel one's
reverence for homo traditions,
and, sitting outside Tortoni's on
the evening of Oct. SI, Lord
remembered the legend of
All Tho recollections
made him smile. Perhaps he had
lost some of bis mar-
and was wondering what he
should do in his own country,
among new faces and with no one
to care for him. Lord Peregrine
looked at his watch. It was near
eleven, and the of walkers
was flowing down the boulevard
as as at midday.
said he, rising, with a
laugh, mo go to a restaurant
and see whether the future holds
a wife in store for
As he was standing on the
pavement, trying to remember
whereabout tho more ancient
churches lay in tho strange city,
he heard o'clock boom from
Notre Dame. It was a clear
moonlight night, and the
bell is at such times distinctly
audible over half Paris so Lord
Peregrine entered Durand's,
site the Madeleine, and ordered
supper for two, in a private room,
at midnight punctually.
The waiter was an old hand at
serving midnight suppers for two.
monsieur require a
he asked, setting forks on
the table.
why laughed the
peer. me a of
white if
The waiter went out find soon
returned to say that tho flower sir
attached to the establishment had
no white rosebuds at this season of
the but had off to tho
Passage to sec if any
could be procured. Ho laid an
evening paper before tho English-
man, brought a glass of traditional
peppermint and retired.
Baying the supper would be
precisely at
Lord Peregrine had almost an
hour before him. and as ho had
the previous night in a rail-
way carriage, and had contracted
in his travels the faculty of sleep-
at odd moments, he stretched
himself at length on the ottoman
and Began to doze. In his slum-
he of course saw a lady in a
bridal wreath, and with a white
nose-gay. start him.
happily this lady had the
of tho waiter who had just
gone out. Lord Peregrine
dreamed that he tried to run from
her. He was awakened by hearing
tho door suddenly open, and just
at that moment tho stroke of mid-
night ahead through the open
window. Lord had slept his
hour, but remembering the
of beginning supper while
midnight was striking, he snatched
at a roll, broke it, and put a piece
in his mouth, then looked up and
saw a girl holding out to him a
large bouquet of white rosebuds.
She seemed to be about and
was rather ugly than pretty, if
her mere features wore
but she had that freshness and
expression which Paris-
call She
smiled and
appears I startled
ho you,
the peer, with his mouth
Still full of bread.
sister of the flower girl.
I went to several shops before I
could find the rosebuds, for they
are hard to get in
yes, well, if
there is Any faith in traditions you
are my future
These last words Lord Peregrine
muttered in English, the
flower girl smiled again, redden-
a little,
pas
then you speak Eng-
cried the peer, in some con-
fusion.
I better than
I him answered the flower
with as she
dipped her bouquet on the glass
jar on the table
believe you French young
ladies understand every tongue
under heaven when a man speaks
was the Englishman's
reply, and saying this, it
occurred to that the vision of
All Hallows Eve would come to
if he supped in company.
He was not anxious to five under
the that he should
marry a French flower girl, and
so he added.
am going to be
will you sit
atone,
and sup with
What would
sister laughed the girl,
quietly.
your sister to join
more the
sister has her flowers to
mind; and, besides, she wouldn't.
moan no I assure you;
out ac least no me me CO
break bread with a
tom of my Tho girl
hand to break off a
of tho roll which the Eng-
held, but of a sudden she
withdrew shyly, and fixed
eyes on him.
Lord Peregrine protested that
his motives wore but tho girl
was not to be inveigled, add there
was nothing for it but to desist.
Tho Englishman drew a
franc note to pay for his bouquet,
and tho unfastened
from his watch chain a
gold locket.
me tho to accept
this, mademoiselle. I shall know
you by it if ever we meet
shall know you again without
tiny murmured tho girl,
but she accepted the
gift, and vanished just as the
Waiter was entering with a tray
burdened with game, mayonnaise
and champagne. Ho was much
astonished to Aid the Englishman
alone.
thought was ex-
has come and an-
Peregrine, and he set to
work upon his solitary supper with
a good will, which the
waiter think that these love-crosses
which so mar tho appetites of
Frenchmen provoke extra voracity
in the English.
The next day Lord Peregrine re-
turned to his own land, but he
did not that it had unproved
in his absence. After a few
months he grew moody, and one
day set out afresh on his travels,
resolving to stay away until he
had educated himself to sing in
tune with bis countrymen or until
they bad got into harmony with
him. He stayed away ten years,
and when begot back to
was nearly years of age and had
a black beard about a foot long,
but, consistently enough with
man nature, he felt younger than
when he went away. He was
to ask himself whether ho
ad spent his manhood to good
profit, and was longing to retread
the paths of civilization ploddingly
and submissively, like the rest of
mankind.
In pursuance of this desire he
asked the waiter at his hotel after
dinner whether there was anything
doing at the San Carlo, and was
told that the songstress,
was giving a
series of performances there. The
waiter went on to explain that la
was the arch-songstress
of the universe, having been over-
whelmed with applause, flowers
and gold in Milan, Paris, London
and St. Petersburg. She was
going to play in that
evening, and places were
to procure, and it was a benefit
and all the seats had been engaged
a month beforehand.
Lord Peregrine soon proved that
nothing is impossible to a man
who will pay so pounds for an
orchestral stall.
So long severed from the sight
of European beauty and tho
graces of life, the
upon him like a ravishing
of the charms which sweeten
existence. Her was equal
to the melody of her and
her voice transported her hearers
into whatever dreams of joy or
pathetic melody she chose to load
them. At the close of the per-
when the spec-
had risen in their frenzy,
and were making the roof
with then- bravos. Lord
walked out steadily and passed his
card to the manager, saying he
wished to go behind tho scenes
and compliment the in
person. Ho was soon in the
presence of
Lot me thank yon, signora,
for the inexpressible pleasure
have afforded
how do you do,
exclaimed the songstress, quickly
rising and extending her hand to
him. I have given you a few
pleasure, thou I have in
part repaid my-
know me
lated Englishman, trying in
vain, as he gazed at tho beautiful
features glowing upon him, to
recollect where M had soon them
before.
murmured the
archly, yet softly. I warned
you that I should need no locket
to you and she
pointed to the trinket of gold and
turquoises that hung around
neck.
It was the locket which Lord
had given, ton years
before, to tho flower girl of Du-
rand's.
was
the peer, after a moment's
silence. you allow me to
cull on you to morrow,
we will break she
said, smiting The Million.
HAIR-BREADTH ESCAPES.
Thrilling Experience of a Cap-
With Stray Bullets.
; While Taking It Easy Under a
Caisson He Has a Close Call.
A Huge Tree Under Which
Ho Was Resting Shattered.
man is not safe from bu 1-
was hoard to re-
mark Cant. Eugene May- the other
day to a lot of old comrades.
have reason to appreciate the
of this observation when I
upon an experience I had
at Jackson, Miss., once during the
war. Bullets were flying around
pretty lively, but we felt fairly safe,
as wore behind a high embank-
which extended some dis-
our heads. Well,
there wasn't anything to do just
then, so I stretched out beneath a
caisson with my head just behind
a wheel.
The last thing in the world
seemed the coining of a bullet into
shade of that caisson. But
while I was lying there taking it
easy I suddenly heard a sharp
just behind my head. It
was unmistakably the noise of a
bullet hitting something. Well, I
turned over and looked at the
wheel, and. by George, there was
a bullet in the tire of tho
wheel just about an inch from
where my head had been. If that
had been a fraction less wide
I'd have cot the bullet in the head.
wasn't sleepy after that, I can
toll you, and I moved away from
there almost as quickly as I got
from behind the bolo of that tree
at
What tree at
-queried some one.
replied Capt, May,
a long story, and I had
almost forgotten it till I was re-
minded of it the other day by old
Jim Dabney. The way tho thing
happened was Our
had been fighting it alone in a
peach orchard until the other
members of the battery joined us,
when we moved forward and had
quite a brisk engagement with the
enemy. Our ammunition ex-
pended and our men worn out, we
halted at a spot in the woods to
rest and to replenish our
The fighting was going on all
around us and stray bullets wore
coming along past us every now
and then, i don't I was
ever so tired in my as I was
after that engagement. It was
absolutely necessary for me to
a rest, and perceiving a huge tree
near by I concluded to plant my-
self alongside of it. So I leaned
against it with my book to the
enemy's line, stretched out my
feet and was having a splendid
rest, when a twelve-pound shot
came bounding along and struck
the tree plumb on the opposite side
from me at a joint just behind
my head.
Well, sir, I didn't know what
struck me. The shock was
Great Jerusalem But
didn't run from under that tree,
looking sideways up and expecting
momentarily to see the whole
enormous mass of wood and leaves
come crashing down on mo. I
didn't know what had happened
till I saw some of the boys dancing
around in high delight, clapping
their hands and yelling at mo.
for a week as if I had
struck on the of the head
with a
Bearded Women.
B- a led women have existed at
all periods of tho world's history.
Even Herodotus, the of
gives us an account of
one lived
a priestess of Min-
whose chin regularly budded
with B large beard whenever any
great public calamity impended.
See Herodotus Book I, 7-5.
Bartel a woman of
hagen, had a beard reaching to
her waist,
Charles XII. of Sweden had a
grenadier in his army who
tho beard as well as tho
courage of a man. Margaret,
Duchess of Austria and
of the Netherlands, had a
largo, wiry, stiff heard, of which
she was very proud. Of late
years, Albert Duke of Bavaria,
reports having had a young lady
governess in his who was
proud possessor of a very
black
Potato Salad.
To make potato salad cut six cold
boiled potatoes in a dish, and poor
over them two tablespoons of
molted butter or hot bacon fat.
and a tablespoon of vinegar. Add
a layer of sliced eggs; season
highly, being careful, that it does
not burn. Sprinkle two table-
spoons of grated Parmesan or any
dry cheese over the macaroni.
and, when melted, add a table-
spoon of butter. When the but-
is molted, spread it
over the macaroni, and servo
once very hot.
Apple Snow.
Put six largo apples, with-
out paring, into cold water.
Stew slowly, then strain through
a sieve. Beat the whites of
of six eggs to a stiff froth, and
add a cup of sugar. When well
mixed add tho apple, beat until
white as snow. Hake a boiled
custard of the yolks and two
whole ones, and a quart of milk,
and flavored. Pour
around.
A Favorite
Is made of one gallon of
water and four pounds of sugar,
well boiled and skimmed, when
cold, add the juice of a dozen
lemons the sliced rind of
eight, and let infuse an hour;
strain into the freezer without
pressing, and stir in lightly the
well-beaten whites of twelve eggs.
Boat
Egg Gems,
egg without
add to it half a pint
of milk, one
of melted butter, half a teaspoon-
fill of salt, and then put in
of bread Hour; add a teaspoon
of baking powder, beat
and bake in a moderately
quick oven to minutes.
Other Households.
The modern Italian wine jars,
holding about twenty quarts, are
almost identical in shape and
with the amphorae found in
The have a ware glazed
with the rosin of a tree, but it
peals to been derived from
Europe.
The Egyptians kneaded
bread in a wooden bowl with their
feet.
At Roman feasts oil viands were
served in hot chafing dishes.
some
lo coming on this
a sister of
your people coming on this
I'm a
oh By birth or
Truth.
X Peculiar Apology.
must request you not
to stare at my daughter.
B. I beg ten thousand pardons.
I thought she was only your wife.
Texas Sittings,
How the Sound la Produced.
a loud dross that
is of Mrs.
Mrs. It has a bell
To Tell the of Trains.
Arthur G. Leonard, private sec-1
rotary to H. Walter Webb, third
Vice-President of the New York
Central Railroad, has invented a
watch which is said to enable the
to measure tho rate of speed
at which he or she may be travel-
ling on a railroad train, a steam-
boat. or any other conveyance.
It is thus In the hands
of a person on a swiftly moving
train the watch may, by pressing
a tiny lever, started at a given
point, say a mile post, and when
tho next mile post is reached a
quick pressure on tho lever will
stop the hands of the watch on a
figure which accurately indicates
the rate of speed per at which
the train is moving.
Young and Ardent.
Pasha, of Egypt,
who has boon making such a stir
because he thinks he is bigger man
than Queen Victoria, will not be
nineteen years old until July. As
a child he attended the Ali school,
founded and maintained by his
father, the late Pasha, but
at the age of thirteen he entered
the celebrated at
where he remained nearly
six years. He speaks English,
German and French, has traveled
extensively- in Europe and likes
Paris.
Never Too Old to Off.
Mrs. Sarah of
still persists in smoking, after
seventy-nine experience of
the noxious and deadly weed. As
she is only- N years old there is,
however, for to
Times.
Any Point.
Miss jokes, sir,
mind of Gallagher
and his friend.
why
no, pray
Miss have
there before many a
Worth Knowing.
Keep salt in a dry place.
Beep yeast in wood or glass.
Keep lard in tin vessel.
Keep meal and flour in a cool,
dry- place.
Keep vinegar in wood, glass or
Sugar is an admirable ingredient
in curing meat or fish.
Lard for pastry should be used
as hard as it. can be cut with a
knife. It should be cut
the flour, not rubbed.
Songs Without Words.
Novel invitation cards have
been introduced in the best Eng-
and French society. They
are practically without
for aside from date, hour
and signature of tho they
contain nothing but a charming j
very often artistic illustration, j
If the recipient of one of these
dainties holds in his hand a gold-
pasteboard decorated
with a handsome set table he
knows at once that it is an
to a dinner party or a lunch-
eon. Dancing nymphs and cupids
in scant array bid him to prepare
for a prospective ball, a Chinese
damsel tea denotes that
the of tho invitation is ox-
to to an afternoon
tea, and a card displaying tiny j
playing-cards announces a card j
party, etc
MM
Put a loaf of light, flaky bread
baker's whop
two pans, and let it heat through
in a moderate oven. It will take
twenty five for this, i
Take from the oven and with a J
fork tear the soft port into thin.
ragged pieces. Spread these in a j
put them in a hot oven to
brown. It will take fifteen j
minutes to make them brown and ,
crisp. Servo at oner on n napkin, i
Always serve cheese with pulled J
broad. This dish is I
elegant than crackers for the j
cheese course in a dinner or
FATIGUE.
Does It the Susceptibility
Contagious
It has long been accepted
physical fatigue greatly increases
the susceptibility to infectious dis-
eases. Two French physician.-
have recently been endeavoring by
of experiments to confirm
this view. hey subjected a
of white rats to severe
in a rotating
for four consecutive days, for
seven hours each day. Eight
these tired out animals were in-
with attenuated anthrax
virus, four animals in a normal
condition of health
with tho same virus at the
same tuns, in order to serve as a
standard of comparison. The re-
that seven of tho eight
animals belonging to the first
series succumbed, while all the
animals of the second series
The authors thus explain
the carious tendency of epidemics
to break out among soldiers
great and on cam-
and they urge that many a
a soldier is rendered
to disease by fatigue who would
otherwise escaped.
Why Women Net Humorous.
A writer in the open W d
of the current
asks why in literature there no
lady humorists. He then goes on
to answer his question by explain-
that from childhood man finds
the sawdust dropping out of
every tiling, and soon discovers the
of much that passes
for valuable. Therefore he learns
to smile and it not ab-
instead of allowing his pas-
for something to adore over-
ride his desire for truth.
Put. on the other hand, a woman's
idols so much a part of
life that when they broken she
cannot snap her lingers, nor seek
mirth as an avenue of escape.
Women may possibly grow
cal, but satire is only a form
humor. life ceases to in
some way holy, or at any rah
ideal, then woman's creative
says tho writer.
ends where man's talent as u
Ii
PER YEAR IN ADVANCE.
This Office for Job Printing.
re I
If
t Bills
BOTANIC I
i THE GREAT REMEDY
FOR BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES
the people
for year, and rails to
, cure an-1 .
ULCERS, ECZEMA.
RHEUMATISM, PIMPLES, ERUPTIONS.
and all FATING. and
the most
blood if ore fol- I
lowed. p.-r bottle for For A
by
SENT FREE
I I BALM CO., Atlanta,
Every one a Fact.
Maine has wild land worth
at a low estimate.
The marriages of minors six
per cent, of the whole number.
Italy produces more Wine than
any other country in Europe.
Air. earns on tin aver
age by his pen alone.
It is said that varieties of
goods manufactured from
wood.
There are more than
ties of apples raised in tho United
States.
The State of Washington is one
of the heaviest consumers of
milk in the country.
All sorts of lace became
under Louis and was
worn in extravagant quantities.
Shoe on the Other Foot.
Jones on Smith in tho
thought I would find
you at You don't go out
much at night now
Smith No. I've given all
my clubs and societies I should
be glad to have you come tin
spend an evening with mo
your wife might
think mo in the way.
she's never home at
night till late. To-night she is at
a meeting of the Society
for Supplying Thimbles to the
Destitute Poor. To-morrow night
she stops to the Queen's Daughters,
next night to the sociable of the
Royal Women, and so on, every
night. Come up and see a
It's awful lonely to be married, J
tell you.
A Parallel
A fourteen-year-old DOT. writing
for the Tribune,
draws this parallel a dug
and a
have heard it that the
more you whip a dog tho better
he will like you. This is a mis-
take. Ho only pretends to like
you so that yon will not beat
any more. Boys never like a par-
who beats and bangs
though they may to.
There is a good deal of a boy in a
Stars Not After Discoverers.
There is an unwritten law
among that when
new bodies are in tho
heavens they are not to receive
the names of the finders nor of
any ether person. Without ex-
the celestial nomenclature
is taken from Greek and Roman
mythology.
Notice.
Raving qualified the Executor of
Mr-, s. Parker, I hereby notify all
persons indebted to estate to make
prompt settlement, and all
claims estate to present
the for settlement on or before
16th of January, ISM, or this notice
will be plead in of recovery.
It. F.
Justice's Meeting.
To the Justices of the Peace of Pitt
county.
ti are hereby to meet at
Saturday tie 18th day of
February 1890 for purpose of on-
the advisability
Inferior i for the county Wit,
The Justices are requested attend
promptly, as tin matter be eon-
I of ore adjournment of the
present T. TYSON,
Chairman.
Notice to Creditors.
qualified a- administrator do
Mm, upon the estate of V. M. At-
on the day of Dec.
1802. is hereby given to all per-
son- Indebted to the said estate to
come forward and settle the same and all
having claims against the said
estate will present
within the time prescribed by law
or this notice will be plead in Mr of
their recovery.
This the 31st day of Hoc. 1891
J. I. SUGG, do lion,
of the estate of F, M. Atkinson.
Notice to Creditors.
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt
county, having issued letters of
to me. on the
28th January. 1803.-mi the estate
of White, deceased. Notice is
hereby Riven lo nil persona indebted to
make Immediate payment
to tho and to all creditors
of lo their claims,
lo the under-
signed, twelve after the
date of or notice, will
be plead in bar of their recovery.
the 25th ii of 1808.
W.
on the estate of Fannie White.
Superior Court.
Notice Is hereby given that by reason
of a recent General Assembly
Carolina the next term of the
of Pitt county will he
for the trial of Civil Causes only and will
he held on tho FIRST MONDAY in
MARCH next. All defendants and wit-
in criminal actions hound,
or to attend at the
I March Term will ho required to at-
tend at the term of said court to he held
on the fourth Monday after the first
Monday In March, and all such
actions shall be made
to the last rained term of said court.
K. A. MOTS,
Superior Court Pitt Co.
Notice.
virtue of power of sale contain-
ed in a Mortgage executed
delivered by II. A. wife
to John Peyton on the
d iv of Dec. ISM and duly recorded in
Book Page in the Registers office
of Pitt Co., the undersigned will
expo-e to public silo before the Court
House in for cash to the high-
est bidder on the day of Feb. 1898, at
IS o'clock M. the following described
landed pro; city, A certain
of land in township. Pitt county.
N. C adjoining the lands of Elks.
and Mrs. F. C.
containing about acres, to
satisfy said mortgage deed.
Tilts. 14th day of January.
JOHN PEYTON.
Harris
Notice.
I desire to announce to my friends Mid
the public generally that I opened
an office for myself just across the
from my and on the old Dr.
Blow lot where loan be found any
time.
BROWN. M. D.
b.
DENTIST, t
Greenville, K
JAS
A W.
Greenville.
Prompt attention to business.
at Murphy's old stand.
J. JARVIS.
A It VIS BLOW,
l Blow
His Little Slip.
She for an evening
is not time for
, yet. is it. Mr.
HeN, Miss Daisy, but I am
early. The early bird,
know,
aw that comet. Miss Daisy, they
say can be soon quite
with a opera
Driven to Drink.
What makes so thirsty to-
old
to stick one of
largo Columbian stamps
on the letter my wife gave me
S-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
in the Courts.
i. a.
A TYSON,
n. K. TYSON
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
N. O.
attention given to col
r i
N. C.
JO . JAMES.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, S C
In all the court.
spec few rs.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Editor
Mr John M. Pi taxes to be the first Monday of I for the cabinet and other
i . c r,,;, iv August instead of the first day of position, and that there would
dent of the Old Dominion J Allowed until the first have been nest to no delay in
Line Steamship Company, and to State wing this treaty to go over
Treasurer. Mr. moved and be sent to the Senate by Mr.
to add county to the it met with his
and Mr.
the Seaboard Air Lino system,
I died at his home in Baltimore last
j Tuesday.
WEDNESDAY. 12.1833.
Em if at
K. a
The 4th of March will soon be
here and then we are to have in
fad as well as song more
of Grover.
President Cleveland has an-
the following members of
his
Judge Walter Q. Gresham of
Illinois. Secretary of State-
Hon. John G- of Ken-
Secretary of the Treasury-
Daniel S- Lamont. of Sew York,
Secretary of War.
Wilson S. of New York,
Postmaster General.
Hoke Smith, of Georgia,
of the Interior.
J. Sterling Morton, of Nebraska,
Secretary of Agriculture.
The others will be announced as
soon as they notify him of their
The President seems
to have had some trouble in get
some of those whom he had
selected to accept on account of
the small salary, which the
position pays.
The believes that the
Magistrates of the county acted
wisely in their meeting on
by re-establishing the Inferior
for Pitt county The
with which cases are tried by
the Superior Courts, and civil
causes there from tens to
term without having a hearing,
has burdensome to the
and numerous complaints have
arisen.
It is true that since the chair-
man of the Board of Magistrates
issued his call for the to
confer as to the advisability of re-
establishing the Inferior Court, a
bill has been put through the
Legislature increasing the number
of Superior Courts from four to
five each year, and making two of
these Courts for the trial of civil
causes only. This bill was not
petitioned for by the people of the
county, nor does the change it
provides for give satisfaction to
the masses. Five Superior Courts
a year would prove a heavy bur-
den upon the tax payers of the
county, and knowing that the In-
Courts car. be conducted at
much less expense, the action of
the Magistrates shows that they
have the best interest of the county
at heart. They provided for three
terms of the Inferior Court, and
passed a resolution that the Gen-
Assembly abolish two of
Superior Courts which their form-
bill provided for, and make the
remaining three Superior Courts
for the trial of both criminal and
civil causes.
The Magistrates set the times
for holding the Inferior Courts in
February, August and November,
and if the Legislature acts upon
the resolution they send up
which have no doubt they will
Superior Courts will be
held in March, September and
December. The wisdom of this
arrangement can be seen at a
glance. The Inferior Courts com-
just a mouth before the
Courts will dispose of all the
minor criminal clean out
tho jail, and leave the Superior
Courts with only the graver
and the civil causes.
Then if the Superior Courts per-
form their duty as well as the In-
Courts will do, the dockets
of Pitt county will be found up all
the while, and the vexations arising
from tho delays and crowded dock-
will be removed.
However, there are a few op.
posed to the re-establishing of the
Inferior Court, are declaring
that tho action of the Board of
Magistrates is they
had no right to assemble them-
selves without being ordered to do
so by the Board of County Com-
missioners. By this they kept
some of the Magistrates from at-
tending the meeting Saturday,
and since they see that enough
came anyway to establish the
court they are trying to cry it
down by the same talk. Tho Be-
is not up on legal matters,
but when it is remembered that
Board of Magistrates makes the
Board of County Commissioners,
it looks like the creating power
ought to have the right to
if desired without getting
orders to do so from the object
created. But if the action of the
Magistrates is not legal, as some
assert, it can be made so in very
short order. Just let the
tare go right ahead and abolish
the two terms of Superior Court, as
the Board of Magistrates have re-
quested them to do, then let the
Board of Commissioners at their
next meeting, if it is deemed
necessary, issue their official call
to the Magistrates to meet and
ratify what they did last Saturday.
This will establish the legality of
the Court beyond dispute.
provisions of the bill,
Yance, of Mitchell, to add Mitchell
county. Mr. Watson, of Forsyth,
explained the nature of the bid.
For the benefit of the counties
named the bill the act was passed
ten years The bill applies
Mr- J- P- Caldwell has sold a half
interest the Statesville Land
mark to Mr- R. B- Clark. Mr.
Clark has been connected with the j tobacco counties,
Landmark for some years and is a
useful man to North Carolina
Like his partner, there is
character and reason in what he
Our people down this way will
doubt the wisdom of Mr. Cleveland
in appointing Judge Gresham Sec-
of State. We believe with
our loved and distinguished Sena-
tor Vance that the horse which
pulls the plow ought to have the
who can't get their crops ready to
put on the market in time to set-
by the 1st of May. Discussion
of the bill was suspended by the
announcement of the special or-
The bill to amend article of
the constitution, subject, home-
stead exemption. Hie debate
which followed extended over two
hours. The discussion ended at
o'clock, to be continued from
day to day until brought to a
vote.
Mr. Hoffman, to amend the
fodder. We are pretty sure
pharmacy law-
one thing, and that is this that if
it is a master of wisdom
as some put it, that not many be-
sides Mr. Cleveland saw it that
way the appointment was
made, and some of us don't see it
yet. It is rather unusual that a
Democratic President should
point a Republican to the highest
position in his cabinet- We have
never of Judge Gresham's
claiming to be a Democrat- If
Mr. Vance, of Buncombe, to ex-
men of years of age from
jury duty.
The unfinished business was
taken up, this being Mr- Watson's
bill to amend the homestead act-
The bill was made the special or-
for next Tuesday at o'clock,
on motion Mr. Adams.
Mr- Spruill. from
citizens of Franklin, praying a
change in the present assignment
laws-
Mr. Harris, to unify
the President could not get such education and to elevate the
of North Carolina to the
a Democrat as ho wished to fill the
place on of the salary we
are in favor of raising this before
Mr. Cleveland's successor is elect-
ed.
GENERAL. ASSEMBLY.
Below we give some of the bills
of interest that have been intro-
before the G
BEHAVE.
Senator Jonas, to protect minors-
Tho bill to incorporate the town
of Grimesland, in Pitt county,
passed its second reading.
Senator Battle, a bill in regard
to the probate of wills when at-
testing witnesses cannot be found
in the State.
Senator to unify
higher education the State, and
to elevate the University to the
apes of all education in the State-
Senator Battle, a bill to
a school in tho town
of Rocky Mount.
Senator Aycock, a bill to
late the compensation of directors
of tho penal and charitable
of the State.
Senator Kin, a bill to regulate
the compensation and number of
the General
Senator Mercer, a bill to
a benevolent association in
Tarboro.
Resolution appointing a com-
of five to into the
expediency of establishing a car
wheel foundry in connection with
the penitentiary, was adopted-
Senator Pettigrew, in regard to
rape and assault with intent to
commit rape.
Senator Day, for the benefit of
John Flanagan, of Pitt county.
Senator James, to amend chap-
private laws 1873,
The bill to empower the
nor to appoint a judge to hold
court in sicKness or absence of
the regular judge, or to issue a
special commission to a member
of the bar to hold a particular
art came up. Senator Aycock
opposed it, saying it meant to add
three Superior court judges.
The House declined to concur
in the Senate amendment to the
bill of securing the right of jury
trial in certain cases where damage
is done by railways to lands, the
amendment being that it should
not apply to pending cases. It
also declined to concur in the
Senate amendment to the bill pro-
persons calling them-
selves detectives from carrying
concealed weapons. It was stated
that under the act allowing pistols
to be thus carried there were gross
frauds.
There was quite a debate on a
bill to require parties in ac-
before justices of the peace
to pay costs of witnesses from
other counties. The discussion
involved the constitutionality of
this provision. Nearly, if not all
the lawyers took part in the dis
The bill was finally re
committed, as there was so much
dispute as to the bill-
Mr. Vance, of Buncombe, to
regulate the sale of liquors-
Mr- Barter, to amend chapter
laws of 1891, to promote and
protect the oyster interests of the
State.
Mr. to provide for courts
of and
Mr. Robertson, to amend chap-
in relation to public roads-
Mr. Barlow, to
change the name of Elm City back
to
The special order for the hour
was announced. The House bill
to regulate the employment
of women and minors in cotton
and other working
hours to be not more than eleven;
violation of the law to be a mis-
demeanor, the fine not to be less
than nor more than
not to exceed thirty
days. Motion to postpone
Thursday and on a division the
motion was
nays 33-
The bill relating to the abandon-
of animals to die in the
woods, in the road, on the street,
and left in a helpless condition,
was taken up and then laid on the
table.
The bill in relation to the allow-
of time to settle State taxes.
The of sale under levy for
relieve military
jury duties and
apex of all the education of the
State.
Mi- Barlow, to
companies from .
from working on public roads.
Bill to amend section of the
Code, was amended so that a So
shall have in every cap-
ital case, whether the prisoner
shall be convicted or not- Bill
was tabled on motion of Mr. Car-
Bill for the re allotment of the
homestead where such has in
creased in value fifty per cent, in-
by Mr. Fuller, of Dur-
ham, provides that the creditor
shall not be prevented from resort-
to the equity but
may have the court to re-allot the
homestead when it has increased
as much as fifty per cent. The
pill passed its third reading.
Bill to pay jurors per day
who are called to attend upon
special but do not
plies to Durham and Franklin
up; Mecklenburg,
Warren. Alexander, Gaston,
Tyrrell and Hyde, Granville, Stoke,
Person, Currituck, Dare, Bun-
Richmond,
Rutherford, Perquimans,
son- Lincoln and Lenoir,
Transylvania, Vance, Pitt, Polk
and Cherokee were added, and the
bill passed second reading-
Bill to prevent violation of the
insurance laws and to protect the
public finances of the State, by
amending after the word
pretending to be
penalty for violation
being or imprison-
or both. This bill was ex-
plained by Mr. Alamance,
that it prevents agents of
companies from evading the
tax collectors. The bill passed
third reading.
Mr- Erwin, of Cleveland, to re-
the listing of solvent credits
or taxation.
The day was consumed with a
discussion of Mr. Watson's home-
stead bill- Mr. Harris, of
spoke strongly against
it saying it would injure the far-
mer. Mr. Adams favored all the
bill except the amendment
believed in submitting it to the
but he was unwilling to
permit the husband to make a
waiver without the privy
of the wife. Mr- Kitchin
earnestly opposed the bill, Mr.
Watson, after his best effort of the
session in advocacy of the
called the previous question. The
amendment of Mr. Starnes to re-
quire the wife to join in the waiver
was adopted by to Mr.
Adams amendment to strike out
was adopted as were
some verbal amendments offer by
Mr- Jones. Bill failed to pass by
to 38- Mr. Vance, of Bun-
applied the
WASHINGTON LETTER.
That would have been
just and proper; the present
is neither. It is stated
that Mr. Harrison received
assurances before the
was sent to the Senate t it
would be ratified, and he so
easy about it that he has gone
shooting, to remain until
next week. It is, of course,
for the Democratic Senators to
prevent action on the treaty at this
session, but there are so many of
them who have committed f
selves in its favor that it is not
very probable.
The official announcement f the
selection of four members of C eve-
land's cabinet has been much
talked about since it was received.
Mr selection was known
before and had been
received by Democrats in
Congress. Judge Gresham's
is admitted by all, but his De-
isn't, and for that reason
his selection, as Secretary of State,
was not received with as much
favor as was that of Dan
Lamont needed no introduction to
the Democrats in Congress, all of
whom expect to prove a model
Secretary of War and are glad
that he is to up Mr.
is not widely known among
public men, but those who do
know him speak in such high
terms of both his ability and his
Democracy that his selection to be
Postmaster General meets with
much The
have been and are still trying to
use Judge Gresham as a lever to
create in the ranks of
the Democratic party, but they are
meeting with poor success. No
good Democrat is foolish enough
to expect that every man selected
as a member of the cabinet will be
his personal choice for the place.
Every student of history knows
that circumstances have quite as
much, and often more, to do with
the choice of members of the
net than the personal inclinations
of the President, to say nothing c f
other of the party.
The advantage of having clear-
headed business men in Congress
was never more conspicuously
brought out than when Senator
Brice in a five-minute talk explain-
ed what would be the stratus of
the stock issued by the Nicaraguan
canal company, in case the bill
now pending guaranteeing the in-
on of bonds to
be issued, becomes a law. Before
Mr. Brice made his statement Sen-
Sherman and Teller had got
into a dispute in which both used
words which meant are a
but the statement was so
clearly made that further mis-
understanding was impossible- It
was Mr. Brice's first speech in tho
Senate. Although this bill now
has the right of way in the Senate
as the no
one seems to expect that it will
not be voted on in the House, even
if passed by the Senate.
the House,
has made rapid headway with the
appropriation bills this week, and
unless something now unexpected
shall transpire to prevent they will
all disposed of well in advance
of the day of adjournment.
There was some talk early this
week of another attempt to bring
about compromise silver
but the suspicion that New
York bankers are trying to bring
about a financial scare for that
purpose makes it almost certain
that nothing will come of it
Sec Point.
Ever the snow there arc a
roots in town that
Notwithstanding we are on the ground
Boor in a the Re
office has been twice almost
washed out docs. Such
floods make a fellow wish mightily
tor a root of his own, and if the forks will
in their patronage like
ought for an that has done
much for we will
In course of a few yea s to
get the under Its
J. W. Tales,
does good to praise
Botanic Blood Balm. It cured me of an
abscess on the lungs and that
troubled me two yearn and that other
remedies tailed to
Judge Shepherd's Opinion.
Washington, N. C. June 1886.
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy has been
used by a member of my family, and
result has been very beneficial.
it to be a good medicine.
J S. E.
Mrs. Brown, the alluded to In
Judge Shepherd's testimony,
Washington, N. C, July
It is with pleasure I add my grateful
testimony to the host of who
have attested the virtues of Mrs. Joe
Person's great Remedy. After years of
debility and it has proven to
me the best of tonics and blood purifiers.
An obstinate, irritable ulcer on my ankle,
from which I suffered agony for years,
seems to have healed entirely and health-
fully under its purifying effects, and my
general health has greatly improved.
Mrs. T. Brown.
Spring Hope, N. C, Jan. ISM.
I used Bone Fertilizer
by F. S. Royster, Tarboro, N.
C, last year, and picked from one acre
pounds lint cotton where I used
pounds of Bone alone.
J. R.
X. C.
was well pleased with Far-
Bone Guano. I tried it side of
other standards and think it made me
more cotton to the acre than any other.
I put pounds on one acre and it made
over 1,200 pounds of seed cotton. And
where I put H bushels of cotton seed and
pounds of other standard fertilizer,
I got only pounds seed cotton, which
was the same cost of the pounds Far-
Bone. I expect to use
Bone.
B. D- If, D.
Oakley, Pitt Co., N. C, Sept.
of the to hand.
I used about tons of your
Bone under cotton, Irish potatoes, gar-
den peas and peanuts, which gave general
satisfaction.
Yours truly, S. B. Ross,
Notice of Dissolution.
The firm of
has been . day dissolved mu-
consent. Mr, retire
from the an I Mr. Joyner will con-
the assumes all
O. I JOYNER.
Greenville, N. C. Fob. 16th, 1802.
To My
connection with above I desire to
return thanks for your kind patronage
in the past and bespeak for Mr.
a continuance of same. I shall be at
the Eastern Warehouse for some weeks
yet and will be pleased see my friend.
ALEX.
Its a Lucky Say
When your goods of
W. H. WHITE
He Is now offering a full line of
Goods,
Notions, Shoes. Hats. Hardware.
Tinware. and Willow Ware.
Staple and at such low
prices as will always leave money in
your hook.
He also has the Cigar for the
money that can he had in
If you want something good and sub-
for Christmas i all on Mm,
W. II. WHITE,
Greenville, X. C.
If so come us will Ufa yen prices
by an as
Hum be gotten elsewhere. We
-----have in stock
Largest and Most Varied
Selection of Furniture
Ml
I I
GREENVILLE, C.
Oh still be found
the Old
Kan stand.
tared lo do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
Fine Vehicles
Repairing done prompt-
and in Mt manner.
FARMS FOR SALK.
Last Call.
our regular
Washington, D. C, Feb.
Mr. Harrison may have the best of
motives for the manner in which he
acted about the annexation of Ha-
bat there is something about
it which in another man would
have been called sharp practice.
The impression was allowed to
go out that if annexation was re-
commended it would be by act of
Congress, which would give the
House as much say about it as the
Senate. But this week he sent a
treaty which the Secretary of State
had negotiated with the Hawaiian
Commissioners, providing for
mediate annexation and leaving
the legislative details to be
ranged by the next Congress, to
the Senate, urging in the special
message which went with it that
tho treaty be promptly ratified.
It is argued in favor of this rail-
business that it was too
late in the session to get
on the subject, and that it was
necessary to take Much action.
Democrats in the House fall to see
the point in such an argument.
Many of them are strongly in
favor of annexation, bat they can
see no good reason, so long as the
matter will have to be completed
under President Cleveland's ad-
ministration, why it was not left
for his administration to begin it.
Granting that to do it by treaty
and not by an act of Congress was
the best way, there is no getting
around the fact that within two
weeks the Senate of the Fifty-
third Congress will be in extra
session for the purpose of confirm-
Mr- Cleveland's nominations Tone
We see that some of our State
exchanges have been
by the Rod Publishing
of Chicago. This is a
fraud we have reason to believe
after diligent as to the
responsibility of the concern, and
as they refused to pay in advance
for the first quarter, the Gold Leaf
turned them down. We don't bite
at offers of this kind from parties
we know nothing about. By the
way, we see that big prize
old man and all of the
Ford Pill Co., of Toronto, still run-
in some papers, although it
has been denounced as the rankest
kind of a Cold
Leaf.
The had a
from this Rod con-
but to our mind it showed
fraud so plain on its face that the
letter went into the waste-basket
without time or postage being
wasted for reply. However, there
are some papers which bite at
every bait that comes along.
COTTON MARKET-
Reported by Cobb Bros.
Norfolk. Va., 17th,
market has shown animation
for the past day or two for several
weeks past. After our last report prices
continued downward until Wednesday,
15th, when the reports from Great Brit-
pointed favorably to an early
of the strike at Lancashire,
there was a slight reaction and the mar-
gained what it bad lost the early
part of the week and closed to-day at a
over the a week
ago. The strike troubles, however, ate
till unsettled and the course of the mar-
Is very uncertain.
Liverpool is reported firm but little
doing at an advance jug the
WEEKLY MOVEMENT.
All persons in Pitt county owing taxes
for the year arc hereby notified
that I will attend at the following times
and places for the purpose of
the
Calico, Friday. February 188.1.
Saturday. February 1803.
Ayden, Tuesday. February 28th, 1893.
Wednesday, March 1st.
1893.
ThU Is positively the last call I shall
make for the taxes of and all who
do not pay promptly, will be proceeded
against as the law
J. A. K.
Tax Collector.
County ,. mi
Court
James A. Roebuck and wife, Mary E.
vs.
John T. Harrison, George Harrison,
et
To Milliard Harrison
You will take notice that an action en-
titled as above has been commenced In
he Superior Court of Martin county to
foreclose a mortgage upon realty, situ-
in township, county
aforesaid; and the said defendant will
further take notice, that he is required
to appear at the next term of the
Court of said comity to be held on
second Monday after the first Monday in
March 1893. at the house of said
county In N. C. and answer
or demur to the complaint in said action,
or the plaintiffs will apply to the court
tor the relief demanded In said com-
plaint.
Clerk Superior Court.
This 30th January 1893.
Prices Lew,
Terms Easy,
BROS. FOR SALE
The J. I-. Bollard home farm, Bea-
Dam township, adjoining the land
of j. T. Tyson and J. II. A line
farm of about acres, good build-
and adapted to corn, cotton and to-
A Hue marl bed.
A farm near Ayden and King
lately on the railroad, formerly own-
ed by Caleb II. which
arc cleared. Good
hood, and a school within
miles. Plenty of marl on the. adjoin-
farms
A farm of three miles
from Farmville and miles from Green
ville, with large, substantial dwelling
and out houses, known as the I. P.
home place, flue cotton land,
good clay subsoil, accessible to marl.
A smaller farm adjoining the above
known as the Jones place, acres,
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land
good.
A farm of acres In
ship, about miles from
part of the tract
Part of the Noah farm,
acres, adjoining the town Marlboro,
located in an improving section
and can be made a valuable farm.
A small farm of SO acres,
about miles from Greenville, on In
Well Swamp, with house, etc., for-
owned by ox.
ALSO TIMBER
A tract of about acres near
station, with cypress timber well
suited for railroad tie.
A tract of about acres In
township, near the Washington rail-
road, pine timber.
A tract of acres near Johnson t
Mills, pine and cypress timber.
Apply to WM. II. LONG,
Greenville. N. C.
Receipts at U. S. ports
1893
for week
Exports
Stock at ports
Plantation receipts
Net receipts since
Sept.
Crop in sight
Visible supply
4.162.200
4,255,7.88
1892
NORFOLK SPOT MARKET.
A wired by Cobb
Norfolk, Ta., Feb. 1893.
Good Middling,
Middling,
Low Middling,
Good Ordinary,
Tone,
5-16
8-16
firm.
Prime
Extra Prime
Fancy
Spanish
PEANUT QUOTATION'S.
steady.
Sale of
Land.
Pitt County
Superior
W. Charles Hardy, trading as Hardy A
Bros.,
vs.
J. T. Evans. J. B. Galloway.
Pursuant to power and authority
given in a mortgage executed by J. T.
Evans to Hardy Si Bros., recorded in the
Register of Deeds county,
Book B page and In accordance with
a and decree of sale in the
above entitled action obtained in the
Superior Court, Pitt county at
Term 1891 recorded in
docket No case will offer for
sale at the Court House door In Green-
ville on Monday March 8th 1893, to the
highest bidder for cash the following
tract of land, adjoining lands of Frank
John Carroll, Alfred
ton and others containing fifty acres.
Upon to raise a sufficient amount
of money from the sale of said fifty acre
tract to discharge and satisfy said judge-
I will at the said Court House
door on the said Monday, the 6th day of
March 1898, offer tor sale for cash
tract a parcel of land described In
said mortgage and decree as follows i
lot containing one acre on which
my store house now stands and all
being the one tract of land
on which the store house of said J. T.
Evans now stands.
C. M. BERNARD.
Commissioner.
February 2nd 1893.
with plenty of energy
to represent THE MICHIGAN
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO.,
anti AMERICAN ACCIDENT CO. To
whom a good contract will be given.
For terms,
W. J.
District Agent for N. C,
SNOW HILL, N. Q,
ESTABLISHED 1879.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STORE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BU
their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere. If complete
n all branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
TEA,
Prick.
CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A cm
of
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
times. Our goods are all bought and
for CASH, therefore, having no
to sell at a close
Respectfully,
M.
Greenville. N C
Louis
John P. A Boa
Dear Sim lam Got
r that I
Stria say
sad a more
striae. bad on
and re perfect
. of my
Violin and It to day
as when I pat It on, sod I
to tea boon dally. The of
be Bead s at
m in our town.
be
buy front Mir
and ran and will sell
low down. Our
in of
Top Walnut
Solid Oak
Sixteenth
Walnut Finish Salts,
Top and
Wood Top
Ballets, and Side-Boards,
Bedsteads,
Bedsteads all grades and colors,
and Beds and Credits,
Marble Top and Solid Wood Top Tables,
Solid Chairs and
Solid Oak Chain and Bookers,
Fancy Reed Wood Bookers,
Chairs nil grades, Lounges,
Bed Mattresses,
We are headquarters for
FURNITURE
and extend to a cordial Invitation to call OS us when in want
any goods as we carry one or Ml stocks
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
ever our Iowa.
Yours truly,
J. B. CHERRY CO
KM
.-.---
.
.
WE CAN SELL THE
IN
THE WOULD
CUTTING IT.
GALLON IS WHEN IN
COOK STOVES.
PAINTS, OIL.
PLACE YOUR ORDERS or TOBACCO FLUES.
S. E. PENDER CO.,
O.
HIGHEST PRICES
SEED I
Special facilities for handling Seed in any
quantity all Tar River Landings.
Cur Load Lois taken from point in
Eastern North Carolina and Virginia.
BAGS FOR SHIFTING SEED
COTTON SEED MEAL AND HULLS FOR SALE OR
EXCHANGE FOR SEED.
Oil Mills,
N. O.
SAMUEL M. SCHULTZ, Greenville, N. C
Mills on Tar
AT
terns writ
V.
Bee. Tarboro, N C.
and
BETA.
trips between Washington, and Tarboro and Way Landings,





something
of to
OW that the planting
Al season is near
at hand, the question
which is of the most inter-
est to farmers, is, what
shall I plant, where shall
I plant, and how shall I
plant it- After determining
what to plant and when to
plant, it is of equally as
much importance how yon
plant and cultivate. We
think it is conceded by all
that no land will make
a good crop unless prop-
cultivated. The re-
of last years crops, we
think, goes very far to
show that a judicious use
of commercial fertilizers
pays on the lauds in this
section-
It is with much pleas-
and satisfaction that
we again offer for sale to
our friends and patrons
the High Grade
Brands of Fertilizer
which we name below.
The results from their use
justify us in saying they
are all well adapted to the
soils of this section.
will sell them for
cash, or on time, upon
usual terms, and
to give you a better
grade of goods as cheap
or cheaper than yon can
buy elsewhere.
Drop us a line for prices
and term, or call to
and will take pleasure in
naming you low figures
ad explaining to you the
merits of the different
brands. To individuals or
clubs wanting a car load
or more will make
figures. We offer for
your consideration and
choice the following well
established and high
brands of
REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
The fair is In progress.
Superior Court in Beaufort county this
week.
To-day is a legal holiday Washington's
birthday.
The cheapest Furniture is at the
BricK Store.
Old
So much rain recently put a big freshet
in the river.
Several shad were i in the river
here last week.
Use Meal of Cotton Seed, at the
Brick
Old
Capital
Tobacco
Not a
few brands of
made especially
for early truck. This
richest highest
grade brand of offered for
sale in the State. The results ob
by our customers from its
use justify us in saying we
it the best goods for Tobacco
sold in this section and most
heartily it to your at-
As a Potato manure it ranks
with the lest.
National As u n round
moderate priced fer-
H is by
few excelled by none. This
goods has been thoroughly tested
the past two seasons for tobacco
and in no case has it failed to give
entire satisfaction. It is equally
good for both Cotton and Potatoes.
Is too well-known
d q n n to
at our
hands. It has been tested on all
crops and never found wanting. It
has been used on Potatoes with
the most satisfactory results, and
for Cotton it the head of
the list. Such of our customers
who have used it on Tobacco are
much pleased say they want
it again.
Beef Blood This brand of
i r goods as its name
and implies is com-
animal
Blood and Bone, all farmers
know these contain the best
properties of any thing they
can use. This brand of Guano
has been throughly tested on Cot-
ton, Corn and Tobacco and you
will be entirely safe to buy it for
any crop.
Standard This is a new
of goods on
this market but
understand the business.
It is composed largely an-
lone which we think is very
valuable and is of permanent
to the soil. It comes
to us very highly endorsed from
other sections and we do not think
you make any mistake to give
it a trial.
Nearly ill Acid
Phosphate is the
Phosphate.
of Avail. Acid which
it contains. We have a standard
brand tor sale and guarantee it as
good as the best.
German.
Some farmers con-
that makes
them a better return
I ill, or money
any fertilizers they use. It is with-
out doubt a good manure. We
have a large on hand and
know it to be rood and pure as we
take it direct from the
We are in a position to
make you very low prices on
and it will pay you to see
as before you boy.
Write us and we will
come to see yon, or
come to see and we
make prices right
and give you good
goods lours truly,
YOUNG
GREENVILLE, N. C.
A cow to Mr. E. S. Dixon
of township, gave birth to two
calves day last week.
Mrs. Daniel ha- purchased the
house and lot, on Pitt street no the
bridge, and trill make some improve-
Mm the earliest Po-
at the Old Brick Stoic.
The weather is having a hard time get-
ting settled. The prognosticators had
better let it alone so it can come down to
regular work.
The Ladies Aid Society of the Baptist
church have a conundrum supper
spelling bee Tuesday evening of
Match
Side anus for the officers of the Pitt
Bides have been ordered and the
Captain and Lieutenants hope to be out
la them next drill.
will do to
week lie tells you t moires rod
tobacco tine--, stove.-, and so
forth. Don't lead it.
Black and White Seed Oats for salt-.
J. B. Co.
There is more
now than has been in some time. It Is
Milted for by the fact that President
Cleveland's is so near at
hand.
The Third Party 2-e
was really amusing. That ought
lo by Ibis time that i. is not
running
The of county mule
excellent selections in In-
Con t. Each of eh; en
Is a Bail of and ability, and
his well and
An oft repeated more dwelling
es are led in Greenville. This
writer knows that for not a
week has passed without there M
for houses which could not be
supplied.
Cut load Flour just rec which we
will sell p. J. it. Cherry Co.
A newspaper misleads the public when
it publishes incorrect schedule.
We notice some that are
several mouths out of date. The
in a paper should be
as much so as the news service.
J. B. Cherry Co. are the leading
Furniture Dealers in Pitt county. Call
on them when yon want cheap.
A. G. Cos has say in hi--
bat is of c e. i
co ton .
truck ban . o hog beds or o
articles
Joyner proprietors of
the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, have
dissolved Mr.
the interest of Mr. in
the business and assuming sole own-
and management.
I used Guano for the
pa-1 I years on cotton. It has given
me entire I consider it as
good a- any guano -old in tins
Richard
Holland. X. C, Feb, 14th 1893.
We heard Mr. Joe f n say
Friday that he had not been able to
get a week's work done on his this
year, the weather had been so bad.
crop preparations are much behind
there will be a sight of work to do when
the weather does clear pp.
next one
room of building. I will sell
at several a belonging to
the side
board fella,
tables, stove and fixtures, a lot of crock-
Marten, eta.
D. J.
Cotton seed bringing fancy prices.
There seems to be a growing demand for
them. We hope, however, that the
farmers will not be led by the prices of
either the seed or the lint into planting a
big cotton crop this ye-r. If the crop is
large price will be small.
On Monday Harding a
license for the marriage of Mi.
and Miff Jone . The
young lady years of age, but
the for brought
down the written consent of her parent
to the marriage. The groom is
I C B. B. fertilizer pi 1891 on
by side of two other standard
brands of guano. It did fully as well,
and may be a little better than either.
Ward.
X. C, Feb,
A special train leaves at this
morning to take passengers to
connecting with the A. X. C.
train for fair. The special
will Many of our
people go down and send
the day at the fair.
The Reflector is indebted to Mr. j.
B. a native of this county, for
copies of the Mardi editions of the
Picayune, which he gent us from
Orleans. Our good friend Mr. W.
Greer, who was down there taking in the
sights, has also placed us under
to himself for similar favors. These
papers are very attractive and Interest-
and we appreciate them highly.
Attention wish to
inform you that we are still handling the
celebrated Clipper, Atlas, Hampton Boy,
and Boy Dixie Turning Plows, Stone-
wall and Climax Plows. A full line of
Castings for these Plows always on hand.
J. B. Cherry Co.
Personal.
Mr. H. A. Blow Is In on bust,
Uncle Joe Burgess has been in town
the past week.
Mrs. Charles Skinner left yesterday to
vi-it relatives in Bertie.
Mr. Alex has been spending
a few days in Tarboro.
Uncle John Cherry left yesterday to
do up the fair.
Sirs. P. E. Dancy left yesterday to vis-
it f in
i iv Andrew Joyner has been spend-
the past week at home.
Miss Carrie of Rocky Mount,
has opened a school here.
Miss Dora James, of is visit-
her Miss Jennie James.
Mrs. M. M. Nelson left Monday for
to her Mrs Cleve.
We arc glad to see CaTie Cobb
out again after about two weeks sickness.
Mrs. W. M. B. T has
her M-s. Morrill. of Snow
Hill.
Miss Flossy left Monday morn-
for Carthage. Moore county, to at-
tend school.
Mrs. has moved into the Patrick
house, on Foil th street, recently
by Mr.
Rev. J. H. Lambeth went
Monday evening to attend the fair. He
will return this evening.
Miss Grimes, of Grimesland,
took the train here Monday afternoon for
to attend the fair.
Mr. E. A. has moved
to house on the
below his former residence.
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton went to Raleigh
being summoned there by
of
Mr. R. C. Flanagan returned home
Friday from Washington City where he
had been spending months.
Rev. Mr. Wallace, of the Washington
a very acceptable
in the Methodist church here
day night.
Master Charlie Fortes, -on of Mr.
Alfred Forbes, is quite in Oxford
where he was attending Homer
Mr. I went to Oxford to
him.
Mrs. F. G. James home
Thursday from Raleigh where she had
been spending some days. Se
returned home with her and re-
with his family until Monday.
Puck.
An ancient maid will be yo portion.
A I'll pine ;
Of men you have your no. ion ;
Of women, I have mine.
tie Off.
We have lately seen an item in several
of our exchanges that a woman in
Greenville, X. C. bad given birth to
triplets. here, however, know
anything about such an
the fellow who it was be-
ginning on a small scale a view to
king himself up towards
episode of a few weeks
I have used both Po- and
for potatoes with
entire satisfaction. I think either of
them did a well for me as Mat higher
priced I I consider
them as a any.
F. Fleming.
X. C, Jan. 17th.
The
Telegram
X. C,
e-n Fish, and
Association opened i
in v. The exhibit- in
all the are the finest ever
shown. oyster and poultry ex-
ever
in South. Racing every day
this Large crowds of people are
pouring in of country.
Weather i line. The indicate
the best fair and lbs A-.
l ion l
Attempted Suicide.
Monday Hut Mr.
Allen Harrington, a of
township, had attempted to com-
on He had ex-
-ed a desire too -ed a two
ounce bottle of and drank it.
family became and for
Dr. Cox. The arrived and
while preparing medicine to counteract
the i Inn urn Mr. liar, jumped
up and ran out of The doctor
followed him and chasing him
about a mile lo.-t i-i A
went for him and found
him sitting down as quietly as if nothing
had happened. He was taken back home
and ha been getting along all light ever
He ed his doubts about
laudanum all that was claimed for
it. as the dose seemed to have no effect
on at is given for
wanting to his life.
I used Guano on tobacco in
It gave me entire satisfaction and
did as well as any guano used on Mr.
Evans farm, although some of it was
higher priced than the Six
aces of averaged me
and per acre.
A. H.
Greenville, N. C, Feb. 10th, 1893.
B.-d for Business.
The schedule is proving about
be most business
men any that has been in
-he to
The it -elf is enough if
trains were only permitted to inn it,
but of at in
it is no
to get lie. e. as la. e as o'clock.
Coming in at such an our people
either have stay up a good part of the
to get their or writ until next
morning for it; and the latter Is
mo-t of them At the
is not giving much better mail
service than -we had when mails came
country f-om Bethel,
at o'clock a. m. As to the
much grumbling at the road
was never from that as
now. From what we can learn the
cause of the present delays Is
-o wait at Parmele from
one three bears every day for the
freight train on A. It
like the might
remedy this so as not to cause the
public so much inconvenience. If they
tried to make friends of people by
showing a tie for the interest of
those who patronize road, they would
have less ion for being frightened
almost OUt cf hoots every time the
Legislature
Died.
sadder death can be or
pictured than when the Grim Reaper en-
a home removes mother of a
family and of a husband.
tender hand and loving of a
mother seems an actual necessity in
rearing the young and and
them for It leaves
a vacant spot also for husband aid makes
home so e. It Is painful
duty to a death among
us. On last Friday at
o'clock Mrs. H. A. Blow her
last lei- h he
pared for la heaven.
be woman ever lived than Mr;.
Blow red she was ill who knew
her. She in Mir and
faithful death. She leaves a bus-
band and six children together with a
large circle of friends to mourn her
She lived a id prime
of womanhood, dying at age of
years. She had been a sufferer for a
long lime but she bore this
murmuring and seemed meekly resigned
-o the of her Master. The world is
better for such a life. She was a
the church and well de-
welcome plaudit which we all
believed she from her
done good faithful
enter into joys
She was buried in the cemetery of
on Sunday he funeral
being conducted by her
Rev. G. F. The bearers
Messrs. F. G. James, W. L. Brown,
E. A. Move, E- S. T.
and R. V. King.
Many a prayer will ask Him gave
and who hath to comfort
the bereaved children
teach I hat bra gone to
no and mat they en meet
by
she w
end.
I used Fertilizer last year
under cotton and
bad season, I think it did well for
me as it could. I made some One to-
Sam i. el
Bethel,
Inferior Court
In issued by
G. T. the Justices of
the Peace of Pitt county held a
on Saturday s decide about
the Con t. At the
first call of the roll twenty-three were
present, two less than a It was
known, other of the
were in town who would be present
so He Chairman stated the object of the
meeting and said while waiting for the
quorum those present might begin dis-
cussing the subject and offer any
might hare.
Speeches were made by A. J.
Andrew Joyner, J. J. Laughinghouse
and J. D. Cox, the first named opposing
the measure, the others favoring it.
J. J. read the follow-
preamble and resolutions which
adopted as sense of the meet-
Whereas, complaints have
reached us from divers part who
they have been subjected to
grievous losses in and money by
vexatious delays which have prevented
the adjudication of snit- now for many
on the docket, and believing a we do
there is cause for com-
plaints,
Resolved, That we, the Justices of the
Peace for the of Pitt,
call attention of the Presiding
of the Superior t to be held in this
place on the Monday in March
next to this of affairs and respect-
ask him in his wisdom and justice to
ply proper remedies whereby the
people may be relieved these op-
burdens which they have borne
That a copy of these
be In the Eastern Re-
and Raleigh
A in the menu time.
and the the meeting
ready to proceed for
which it assembled. Andrew Joyner
offered motion the Inferior
be III i I
After some yeas
and nays were called, the vote resulting
as
T. Tyson, J. W. Smith, D.
C. Moore, R. M. Jones, J. S. Brown, W.
H. Williams J. W. Page, J.
-I. J. R. Forbes, W. H.
Williams J. D. Cox, F. G.
Dupree. Andrew Joyner, E. F. Williams.
J. B. Little, C. P. Gaskins, S. C.
BI mi it. B. S. L. A. Mayo and
S. L
S. Spain. J. J. Bawls, E.
O- A. J. M- Z. Moore,
J- J. May
It was then decided that three courts
p t year should be held, on the second
in February, August and
The following were elected officers of
the
J. J. D.
Cox, J. B. Little.
L. Fleming.
C. Moore.
The following resolution was offered
by J. D. Cox and unanimously
Resolved. That it is the sentiment of
Board of of Pitt county
that it would be to have abolished
two terms of our Superior Court, there-
fore we recommend to Senator and
Representatives that the January and
April terms be abolished, and that the
December term be for the trial of
civil actions.
The meeting then adjourned.
I have used both the National
and Beef, Blood and Bone
on cotton, with entire satisfaction. It
done as well as any I have used.
J. R.
X. C, Feb. 4th, 1393.
Mr- Jacob B. Gaunt. Bur-
Co. X. J thus a
experience I can say
Salvation OH a good remedy for
rheumatism. I been almost a
for or nine months with this
malady, but Salvation Oil it.
can now do as much as next person.
IV
. too wore o,
WILSON STOCK AT COST
Stand catch the
qualities as they grasped the
knife this time with a grip of
nothing shall stay our turn
our backs on the loss of snap our
finger at the sacrifice of truth of it
is j Wilson st- ck has linen moved
to our Greenville we have not
the room for you know we are
not disposed to dabble in the future until
the present is settled so we arc going to set-
It this of the a
mite of money is worth a mountain of stock
to there yet remains months of
service for these will be
the ear that does not hear breaking of
these the eye that cannot see
the purse
that cannot claim a share of this monster sac-
only be for days
and don't f take advantage of It.
Respectfully, C. T.
Cheapest and Best Fertilizer on the Market for
Has been used twenty years and has the
endorsement of hundreds of practical
and successful Southern Farmers.
BIG MONEY CORN.
MR- A. B. PAGE OVER BUSHELS OF COBS
TO THE ON TEN OF LAND.
From Messenger. J
Mr. A. B- of Nichols, S. C, has this sea-
son gathered the enormous yield of bush-
els of corn from ten of land. This makes an
average of over bushels to the acre, it will be
interesting to know how Mr. Pace secured such fine
results. In a letter to Messrs. Worth Worth, of
this city, he writes as follows, telling how it was
showing result of acre he'd of
corn cultivated by A. B. Page, Nichols, S. Laud
was broken with two-horse plow, November,
1891, having been highly manured for several years
before this- February, broadcast
bushels green seed per acre, broke them in
with turn-plow, then bedded oat in seven and one-
half foot rows. I then put in water furrow seven
tons compost made from Boykin, Cos for-
for Home Fertilizer. On this I reversed two
turn furrows, planting one double row of corn with
corn planter eighteen inches apart to every seven
and one-half feet, March 15th- As soon as corn was
up I commenced cultivation with inch bull-tongue
deep and keeping land as level as possible
until last plowing, which was done about the last of
Juno with a Stonewall sweep. During cultivation I
applied in furrows side of corn pounds cotton
seed meal- In the field there were sixty-eight
rows. Nine rows were measured with flour bar-
yielding an average of barrels to row,
or flour barrels to the acres. Each barrel
yielded pounds shelled corn, pounds or
bushel to the ten acres. A- B.
Jackson, N. C, Oct. 17th, 1892.
Messrs. Boykin, Carmer Co.
reply to your as to the
of Home Formula, I have used the s for tho past
six years in quantities varying from to tons. I con-
sider it one of the most reliable fertilizers I have ever used
and, cost considered, cheaper than other fertilizers that I
have. used. My experience is confined to its use under
and by the side of corn and cotton only. When carefully
and properly made, and used as per directions, I consider
it Respectfully, GEO. P.
Ga., August 1892.
Messrs. Boykin, Carmer Co.
Sirs have tried two tons of your
this year for the first time, and I can safely say that it has
thoroughly proved its recommendation. I have tho best
cotton and corn in my vicinity. Please write me terms
and lowest prices for ten formulas, delivered to
If it will odd to the sale of said Fertilizer to use my
name, do so. Yours truly, DAVID
Everett, N. C, Sept- 30th, 1889.
Messrs. Biggs Davenport.
have used for several years
and I consider it the cheapest manure that I use- I in-
tend using it every year. Respectfully, WHITE.
For Sale By
G. E. HARRIS,
Greenville, N. C.
VAUGHAN BARNES,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS
Vet-
The of the cotton crop thus far this season would
indicate that there was some foundation for the bad crop accounts
daily reaching us from all parts of the cotton territory, if so the
staple is selling too cheap; and parties wishing to hold for higher
prices can do so by shipping it to us and drawing for per
bale on same and having it held for six months is so desired.
Faithfully yours,
VAUGHAN BARNES.
We want one in every
I town to handle the J
JACK FROST FREEZERS.
A Scientific Machine made on a Scientific
Save cost a dozen times a It is not mussy
or sloppy. A child can operate it. Sells at sight.
Send for prices and discounts.
Murray NEW
Makes in
New
Straight
Clean
Large
We are still making a specialty of
Ml mot. HATS
We have a first class assortment and if close. Do not fail o
get our prices
New Bib Machines
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by us.
Respectfully,
BROWN BROS.,
Depositors for American Bible Society
f.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Half Bolls
Bundles New Arrow Ties.
Full Cream Cheese.
Choice Butter.
Boston Lard.
Tobacco, all
Boxes Oaks and Crackers.
-0 Stick Gaudy.
n New Corn Mullets.
A Ax
P. I's
; Barrels Mills Sn .
j Barrels Three Sn
Car load Bib Side Meat
Car load Oat.
Car load Flour, all
j Kegs Powder.
i Tons Shot.
525.010 old Virginia Cheroot,
Full line Case Goods and
j else kept in a first class e-tat
if S
-a a.
Wishing to thank my many
friends for their liberal patronage
for both Merchandise and differ-
articles which I manufacture,
I take this method of
fin while I thank you all I
am also Striving hard to secure
advantages that I can give yon
I in order to further merit your
patronage.
-3
s I u
o a
O X
For other articles in line
as Church Pews. Cut
Wheels, Brackets and
Tobacco Hogsheads and General
Repair Work, you will do well
to correspond with me before
ranging with any one else. I can
give you some advantage.
A. G. COX,
N. C.
fl
C P o
2-c OS B
S-
g o
s x a
tr
CD
R. J, COBB, Pitt Co., X. C.
COBB BROS,
Bros, ft
Cotton Factors
AND-
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA.
and Correspondence Solicited.
THE RELIABLE OF C
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and ENS
WARE HARDWARE, PLOWS PLOW CASTING, LEATHER
kinds. On and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent for Clark's O. X. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers cents per dozen, l percent for Cash. Bread Prep.
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers White Lead and pure
Oil. Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood
Willow W are. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I satisfaction.
Seeing is
And a tamp
must be simple; when it is not simple it
not good. Simple,
mean much, but to sec The Rochester
impress the truth more forcibly. All metal,
tough and seamless, and made in three pieces only,
it is absolutely safe and unbreakable. Like Aladdin's
of old, it is indeed a for its mar-
light is purer brighter than gas light,
softer than electric light and nu-e cheerful than either.
Lot for If the
Rochester, the you to for new
ad will mm ton a lamp safely by over
from in World.
CO Park Place, New CU.
J. L.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG A JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOB A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SATE





DEPARTMENT.
TOBACCO JOTTINGS LOCAL
NOTES.
at J.
Three bales tobacco cloth
C Cobb Son.
The Eastern Warehouse sold on
Tuesday 13.000 pounds of tobacco laud similar
for
If yon intend baying tobacco
doth call on J. C Cobb Sou,
they have a large assortment at
prices to suit.
The weather for the past
the advance in WRAPPERS. into his
territory put cigar-
1890 some of our Eastern to- down to and below cost It
planters realized as high as too, of a
per for their tobacco season the small
following this in 1891 the same could ill afford to sell
returned without profit. I he was com-
to meet prices, and did so.
upon an average about
This of course was
ed to which in re-
was the result of unreason-
I able weather, hence a bad crop of
nondescript stuff that brought but
few ,; little returns. 1892 with but few
days has been favorable for exceptions was a repetition of 1891.
tobacco and the farmers have Some few however, in fact a
been using the advantage. goodly number of OUT Eastern
Mr. R. C. Cannon a prominent j planters were successful in pro-
farmer of this county says W right good crop of wrap
that he can get the lot at which brought good prices
.,, he intends build-,
in- a prize house in Greenville out of sight,
before another season- Ho says this rapid rise of wrappers I It is
he moans business. I
have been consumed, and
Sis mere houses would
are clear
What is the cause of
The trust made a three months
fight, all the time selling cigarettes
at and below cost, with the avow
ed purpose of forcing the smaller
competitor out of the business.
But fortunately for the smaller
manufacturer ho had plenty of
nerve and good backing so he
held out to the end. At the
ration of three months the
restored prices, seeing there was
no chance to drive out the small
competition.
In that same territory, are
informed, that the American To-
Co. is selling or consigning
. cigarettes to the jobbers without
but few and there is . ., . ,,
demand in Greenville. wrappers of the Jobbers signature to the won
say they any clad contract. The goods of the
r .;, local manufacturer mentioned
e are in frequent
with numbers of to-
in nearly all of tho
leading markets both of this State
and Virginia and the opinion gen-
Joyner say
have had no less than half dozen
applications for their house at
nearly times the price for which
it is now renting.
To build and thoroughly
equip
a story prize house will not cost j expressed is that wrappers
to exceed which will easily
rent for from to per month,
while smaller ones can be built at
half the cost that will vent for
or No one in Greenville has
as yet spent much to make the
tobacco market a success. The
farmers have done it all and now
that a market is partially establish-
ed will not some one lend a help-
hand by building more prize
houses and thereby help to build
up the town and at the same time
make for themselves a handsome
percent, on the investment.
this year will be higher than they
have been for years. For two
years past the wrapper crop of
Central North Carolina has been
an almost absolute failure and as
tho boom of supply and demand
regulates to a very great extent
this Ho who makes
wrappers this year may well con-
sider himself fortunate.
ANOTHER STATE WANTS A
CIGARETTE TAX.
Tobacco Journal.
A bill has been introduced in
the Ohio Legislature to impose a
tax of upon every dealer who
handles cigarettes in that State-
Now Ohio is an important State
the passage of the bill would
MORE UNSCRUPULOUS
by the Cigarette Trust to
Break Down a Manufacturer.
Winston Tobacco Journal.
There is a cigarette
not two hundred miles from
Winston who has been specially
persecuted by the American To-
Co., with the view of com
breaking down his business.
This manufacturer has not a great
cf capital and is to
make a support for Ids family out
only another strong pull for of the cigarette business, in spite
cigarette trust and as we stated; of the trusts persecution. What
before it is likely that the trust he lacks in capital is made up in
really at the bottom of all this i nerve, or he would long ago have
special cigarette tax business, j gone to tho wall in the face of the
The passage of the Ohio bill odds against him.
would give that practically This cigarette manufacturer has
over to the American Tobacco Co., a strong trade built up in a largo
not only on its cigarettes, but for section of an adjoining State. He
its other tobaccos as well. Let j has advertised his goods well, he
our readers in Ohio watch this bill, knows the jobbers and retailers
and see that it does not become a, personally and his cigarettes are
law. As this is the law making very popular. The section
season we can expect similar bills pied was coveted by the trust and
to bob up in other Legislatures soring the trust people set
any day. I about to drive out the small
ATTENTION FARMERS
Do you want a strictly I Do you want a Fertilizer that has
high grade j tested by your neighbor and found to be
superior to all others.
IF SO
Call on the undersigned and buy any of the following brands which
are guaranteed strictly reliable.
ORINOCO
S SPECIAL COMPOUND.
BONE,
PREMIUM,
GERMAN J- J
PREMIUM,
I will sell these goods on terms to suit all purchasers.
G. M. TUCKER,
N. C
R. W. ROYSTER CO.
eons
GREEN N. C.
on only.
References and type samples furnished on application.
o.
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners and
for Big Prices High Averages
and are willing to pay good prices for it. stands well on our
market and is eagerly sought after both by our order men and speculators. We are
very glad we can say to the of Pitt and counties
that tobacco has better this year than we have known it In
V prices during the season. Hogsheads can be
had OF CHARGE those planters shipping to us, by applying to S M
Schultz Co. Greenville, . C. or to Amos G. Cox, N. C.
that we bid lively on every pile put upon our floor and buy largely of all grades
that we sell, and will sec to it that you shall have highest market price for
have your tobacco graded for you In our house by skilled bands at 11.00 per
Thanking our friends for the very liberal patronage bestowed upon us in the past
and pledging them our very best efforts to please them in the future, we are with
best wishes. Very truly your friends,
BULLOCK MITCHELL,
Oxford, N. C-
above are popular in that territory
with consumers and the jobbers
know that they sell and hence they
refuse to sign the trust's contracts,
saying they will handle the other
cigarettes exclusively they
will away their rights and in
dependence- The trust has threat
the jobbers in every way, but
they have held out firm, and to-day
those who are selling American
Tobacco goods are doing s
without doing the humiliating act
of signing the iron clad contract.
Oil is rapidly superseding all
high-priced It has been test-
ed for sometime past in all localities and
its results ban Dean rapid and
It is generally conceded to be the
greatest cure on earth for pain.
GREENVILLE
d by Joy nor
Fillers
Smokers.
Cutlers i
Wrappers
Scraps
Common,
Good.
Fine,
Fair,
Good,
Kine,
Common,
Fair,
Good,
Fancy,
Fair.
Good,
Fancy,
j Dark,
I Bright.
to
ft to
to
to
to IS
to
to
to
to
to CO
to GO
to
WILSON
E. M. Pace, Reporter.
Our receipt, this week have been
heavy, necessitating two sales some days.
The has been all would ask.
Bibbing spirited and sellers wearing
smiling faces over prices.
Reported by Owen Davis, Manager
Warehouse.
MARKET QUOTATIONS.
Lugs or
Common to medium.
Medium to good,
Good to
Fillers or
Common to medium,
to
u, to
to
to
C, to
JO, to
to
Medium to food,
Good to line.
Cutters or Rest
Common to Medium, JO, to
Medium to good, IS, U to
Good to line, to -o
Wrappers or Best
Common to medium, to
Medium to good, to
Good to line. to
to fancy, to TO
Common to medium, to
Medium to good, W, to
Good to line. to
Fine to to
The Brunswick
that it is within the power of the
farmers of the the next
throe months to decide the destiny
of the South for years to
If they plant largely of cotton they
will ruin themselves and every-
body else. If they succeed in
raising nine or ten million bales
of cotton in 1803 price will de-
to or sis cents per pound,
but if, on tho contrary, they do
crease tho acreage of cotton and
the acreage of food crops,
cotton will bring ten or twelve
cents per more.
Farmers, show your good hard
sense this year.
-t b inexcusable in persons to go to
Church, and disturb the public
or go to u public meeting and annoy the
audience by unseemly exhibitions of
themselves in coughing, when a few-
doses of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup, that
peerless remedy for and cold, will
surely cure their cold, it.
QUOTATIONS.
Primings common
fall
lino
Fillers common
good to tine
tine
Smokers common
good
common
line
Wrappers normal.
tO
to
to S
to
to
to
to
tog
ft
FERTILIZERS
By J. Meadows,
to
to
to U
Smokers common,
good.
Cutters common,
good,
fine,
fancy.
Fillers
good,
Wrappers common.
good,
line,
fancy.
to IS
to
to
to
to
to
to
O. L. JOYNER, Owner Prop.
To my friends and customers who have so liberally
bestowed their patronage on me during the past
year, I wish to say that I have purchased the entire
Warehouse interest of Mr. Alex. and I
earnestly solicit a continuation of visits with
heavy loads of the yellow weed and I will
tee to get you just as much money as can be had
anywhere on any market.
With this I am before you. Now give me your
co-operation and in less than five years Greenville
S will take her stand among the foremost of North
Carolina Tobacco markets.
Yours to serve,
I AM NOW ON THE MARKET WITH THE
Largest and Best Line
FERTILIZERS
I have ever handled and am prepared to offer to the
OF PITT
and the adjoining counties reliable Fertilizers at from
and Up.
MY BRANDS
filer's,
Island,
rand
are too well known to require comment.
Results from a thousand fields speak
praises that would cost too much to re-
hearse here-
Prices of advanced
and some manufacturers have been com-
to advance the prices of their
goods or run the down, but my
people had laid in a full supply of mate-
rial advance and therefore are
enabled to offer the at tho
same prices.
you want to buy a good Fertilizer
come to see me- If I can offer yen bet-
tor inducements than any one else you
saved money. If I cannot you have
lost nothing. Therefore I say to sen
what I can offer thou if
cant trade yon can go to some other
dealer and buy as. as you
et if you had never seen me.
Yours respectfully,
G. E. HARRIS,
GREENVILLE N. G.
Do You Write
THEN
YOU MUST
HAVE PAPER, PENS,
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK.
SEE WHAT THE-------
GUT
Violin
imitators and Followers But No Competitors
JOHN F SON'S
GENUINE MM GENUINE
Violin Strings
No Dealer or Musician nerd e bothered by poor if ho
to buy ; oms
JOHN F. SON, v.
your Dealer for them and if cannot get Urn report to i.
Goods Band Sold at Retail.
the
It cannot r.
finest fabric
hands.
WASHING
INVENTION
For Saving
Without
Or
NEW YORK.
corroding, destroying the
of animal flesh.
u purging.
Dictionary.
Chemical analysis will prove that Pearline has no caustic
qualities, but that the ingredients of which it is made
been so skilfully manipulated, that Pearline stands to-day
the greatest household detergent known. Science
it; its rapid adoption by and economical
housekeepers, who use many millions of packages each
year, is proof positive that science and chemistry are right.
These facts should lead those who do not use Pearline, to
try it at once; directions for easy washing on package.
I . Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers arc offer-
i- T T imitations which they claim to be Pearline, the
W V- as IT'S and
i besides are dangerous. is
Manufacture only by JAMES PYLE New Tort
Reflector v Book . Store
CAN OFFER YOU IN THESE.
Legal Cap Paper to cents a quire.
Fool's Cap to cents a quire.
Letter Paper cents a quire.
Note Paper to cents a quire.
Envelopes to a pack.
Box Paper from cents up.
Gilt Edge paper to cents a quire.
Pure Linen Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire
Nice Square Envelopes to match the Paper.
Fine Tablets at all prices.
P THESE ABE NO THIN, CHEAP
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT
INK FIRST-CLASS, t
Tablets, Slates,
JUST
SEE WHAT
WE HAVE FOB
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN.
O. L. JOYNER,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Pencil Tablets, Letter
Fools Cap sizes only cents.
You pay cents for these
same tablets elsewhere.
Slates cents to cents.
Slate Pencils cents per dos.
Fancy Colored Crayons
box-
Pens cents per
dozen.
Fine Assorted Pens cents
per dozen.
Plain Lead Pencils cents
per dozen.
Rubber Tipped Lead Pencils
cents per dozen.
Pen Holders cents per doz.
And lots of other things
as cheap.
We keep
the lowest
a full line if Beady tin
Special attention given repairing.
N C.
popular
the lend
Since its Introduction,
baa gained rapidly In
faVOr, until now it is clearly In
among pure medicinal tonics and alters-
nothing which
its use as a or intoxicant, it 1-
recognized as the best and purest
cine for all ailments of Stomach,
or Kidneys. It will core
drive from the
with each bottle or
he will be refunded. Sold
STOKE.
New Barber
I take this op
thanks to my many customer who have
me their liberal support in past
have opened a new shop in the old Club
House and would respect fully ii a
of my former patronage.
I will assure all that they shall receive
every attention besides getting the best
shave and hair cut in town. All I ask is
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All
of the latest Improvements hi the
rial art will in into my shop.
m I
hiving lei my store
Pitt county, X. I am opening
a stock of
and cordially invite the to call
and examine my
GOODS,
Our motto i Standard Goods at Rea-
for
Examine my stock before buying
elsewhere. II the goods and prices do
not suit We charge nothing them.
produce taken in exchange
or goods. W. U.
Do You Read
Then yon want best We handle the leading
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews,
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices. Besides we carry a line of
paper covered Novels at only cents each, and nicely bound
at cents. These embrace books by best writers,
a list too large to mention. Any book wanted is sot on hand
will be ordered.
SUBSCRIPTION'S TAKEN TO ALL THE LEADING PAPERS
TO
If you want to save------
then purchase of a PIANO and
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ
ADOLPH COS-S,
NEW
General Agent for forth Carolina,
who is now handling goods direr; from
the manufacturers, as
GRAPE PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship and
and endorsed by nearly all the
musical journals in the I States,
Made by Paid G. who is at this
time of the best mechanics and in-
of the day. Thirteen new
on this high grade
the EVANS UP.
RIGHT which has sold by
him for the past six in the eastern
PATENTS
obtained, and all business In the U.
Patent office or the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We are opposite the U. S. Patent Of-
Hoe engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents In less time than those
more m Washington.
the model or drawing Is sent
advise as to free of charge,
and make no change unless ob.
Patents,
refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to
U. Patent For
advise terms and reference to
actual in your own Suite, or
address, ;. A. Snow A Co.,
Washington,
OINTMENT
MARK.
h the Cure of all Skin Diseases
This has in use over
fifty years, and wherever know has
been in steady demand. It has been en-
by the loading physicians
and
Walnut or .
Also the CROWS PARLOR
U or Oak
Ten years experience In the music
business has enabled him to handle
nothing but standard goods and he doe
not hesitate to say he can sell
musical instrument per cent
which it has obtained Is owing entirely
Its own as but
ever been to brine It before the
public. One of this will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box free. The usual
discount to Druggist. All Cash Orders
promptly intended to. Address or-
than other are now oiler j pen and A x
fer to banks in Eastern Carolina.
Sole Proprietor,
If.


Title
Eastern reflector, 22 February 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 22, 1893
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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