Eastern reflector, 29 March 1893






LEDGERS,
JOURNALS, TABLETS,
CUPS,
AND
RECEIPT BOOKS,
JUST IN AT
THE REFLECTOR,
BOOK STORE.
This Office for Job Printing.
NORTH CAROLINA.
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
Laud Bert
who lived in the Amity
section of town-
ship, this county, hitched his two
mules to his wagon, about two
weeks ago, and lie and his two
boys and the family dog put out
Indiana. The was
quiet and unexpected and now
several of Mr. neighbors
are mourning over various small
debts in all to about
that ho owed them. His
wife and two daughters were left
behind but they will join the
in Indiana in a short time.
Whatever property was left be-
longs to Mrs. personally
and the creditors touch it.
Salisbury Herald In the pen-
squad at there
was a named John Young
who was serving a sentence of
seven years- A pardon had been
issued for him on Wednesday last
and was on the way to him. On
this day he attempted to escape
and was shot by the guard and
killed.
The Asheville Gazette It
was reported yesterday that Mr.
George W. Vanderbilt has decided
to build forty ten thousand dollar
houses on his near
ville- This great outlay of money,
nearly will of groat
advantage to Asheville West-
Carolina.
Graham Mr. W. D.
Holt, of Loy's Shop, this county,
has secured letters patent on a
sulky plow which he has invented.
It has valuable new features.
Raleigh News Observer Col.
Eugene Harrell has just been
pointed by the National Bureau of
Education an honorary vice
dent of tho World's E
Congress, to be held at Chicago
July. This honor conferred
upon is most
and properly bestowed.
Mr. H. B. Hardy, who has been
traveling correspondent of the
State for tho past seven
years, has bought an in
the North Carolinian, and has as-
the business management
of the same.
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
Friend is a scientific-
ally prepared every
of value and in
constant use by Hie medical pro-
These ingredients are com-
in a manner hitherto unknown
FRIEND
WILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Book
to con-
valuable and
voluntary testimonials.
on receipt of per bottle
REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Ga.
BY AM.
TAR SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington for Green-
ville at
on Tar River day,
Friday at A, M.
Returning leave at t Al Sf.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.
Greenville days.
These departures are subject
water on Tar River.
of
Connecting at Washington with steam-
of The Norfolk, and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. ,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should order their
marked via Dominion
New York. from Phi
Norfolk
more Steamboat from Ba II-
Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
W N. C
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
N C
Swift's Specific
A Tested Remedy
For AH
Blood and Skin
diseases
A reliable cure for Contagious
Blood Poison, Inherited
an. kin
As a tonic for delicate Women
cad Children it has no equal.
purely vegetable, is harm
i. -a its effects.
A t on and Skin Dis-
ease Hawed application.
Sell It.
specific ca,
Draw Atlanta, Oft.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT N. CL WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1893.
NO. II
IN WAR.
Roll of Honor of Some Bravo
Canines.
A French paper has published a
roll of honor of dogs which Lava
distinguished themselves in war.
This is not inappropriate,
that the dog has been pressed
into military service. For instance,
there was Bob, tho mastiff of tho
Grenadier Guards, which
tho Crimean campaign with that
gallant corps; and also
a brave French
of Bob, that tho
campaign with tho Ono Hundred
and Sixteenth of the line and was
wounded in tho flag.
Another, was
on the strength of his regiment as
entitled to a grenadier's rations.
The barber of his company had
orders to clip and comb him
a week. This gallant animal
received a bayonet thrust at
at and recovered a flag
at Marshal
had decorated with a
medal attached to his neck by a
red ribbon. Corps do a
among dogs, followed a
soldier to was wounded
at and perished in tho
retreat from Russia. Tho Sixth
of tho guard had a military mastiff
named which wan three
white stripes sewn on his black
hair. We have also to
of tho Be-
tho best sentry of the bag-
gage train; a Crimean
heroine; killed at Inker-
that saved
bis master in Russia, and was lost
or lost himself, but found bis way,
going from Moscow to Milan, his
first dwelling place. Tho most
remarkable, however, was tho last,
an harrier named Mus-
which went into action
with his English comrades at
and. are seriously
told, alone by a Hold
piece of the gunner, his master,
clapped the match to tho
of the cannon and thus killed
seventy and it is further
added that was
to King George II. and
was rewarded with a pension
Just tho crimson curtain.
She is v. n. u silent,
Of his coining she is certain.
And her thrill.
Out the window. Just before her
Is n blinding, miring storm,
Ann the Moorish lantern
Throws soft on graceful form.
In the grate n fire glutens,
o'er the polished floor.
Still she waits, still she
Near the half-way opened door.
She's a sinuous, supple creature
And her eyes bright and clear.
Hi-ail lie in every feature.
Ab At last At last hoy
Just a moment and be her.
the springs upon her feet.
He. It must be said, he her.
But. like her. he's lithe and fleet.
There's e there's a scurry.
Out the doorway, through the
He is in a hurry.
She's a cat, he's
Late In the Day.
glad I met your
wife. She seemed to take a fancy
to me.
she I wish you'd
met before I
Burner.
RUTH OR MATILDA.
Wonders of Animal Life.
The complexity of animal
is A caterpillar
contains muscles.
In a BOOM
perspiration glands,
with the service by ducts,
having a total length of ten
miles; whilst that of arteries, veins
capillaries must very great;
the blood contains millions of mil-
ions of corpuscles, a
in itself; tho rods in tho retina,
which are supposed to be tho
mate recipient of light, are
mated at and
has calculated that the matter
tho brain is built of at least
cells.
Sparks.
A fancy drink has no necessary
relation to a feast of tho
When a boy has a boil ho is in a
position to keep his family in hot
water.
You may jocularly tell a man
a lyre, but it to harp
on it much.
It is quite possible for folks to
shine intellectually without being
some men to whom a
loss of their would moan
good luck.
men are born but
of them promoted to the
police force afterwards.
What tho solar system needs
now is a good stringent law for
the punishment of vagrancy.
The shooting stars appear to
have no aim, and no one
heaven knows what they shoot-
for.
When people got on the
roll of honor they think they must
roll it up and take it off with them
THERE'S MANY A SLIP.
Cough and cold are the
which nature has provided to
the unfortunate victim that the
affection which is now confined to the
head and chest may soon reach the lungs.
such a calamity take Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup when yon first catch coW.
John Bennett could not decide
of the two Burton sisters
was the For years ho had
Said attention to Ruth and
a Burton; ho had cared more and
more for them, and had even
come to think that he would some
day ask of them to be his
wife. Yet for the life of him ho
could not decide which ho would
ask; and if both the girls had boon
drowning in a lake, so divided
were his affections that ho prob-
ably would not have decided
which of them to save until both
had gone under; Ho used to
provoked at this indecision, and,
as ho would walk out Elsworth
avenue to call at the he
often wished that ho could ask to
see only of them. But then
there always tho question
which it should be; ho could not
think of slighting of them,
and so every ho called, ho
asked for both the girls, and both
always came down, cordial and
beaming.
Outside the Burton mansion,
also, his was
If, at a ball, he
took Ruth in to -supper ho was
sure to have an extra with
Matilda; and if he went with Ma-
to a concert week the
next week he took Ruth to an
opera. But tho most provoking
thing about it all was ho
wanted to marry, and, since ho
had become secretary of a steel
company in tho city, was
nothing to prevent his being sot-
tied in life Besides this, ho
thought ho loved tho Burton girls
with something more than a broth-
affection. In fact, he was
continually being congratulated
upon his engagement to of
probably tho
whom he had taken out last
But ho was not much to
for his hesitation, since
Ruth and Matilda possessed
charms that were both equal and
complimentary.
was possessed of much more
than ordinary beauty and of a
mind that was keen as it was
Matilda, though positively
tho readiest wit and
and her homeliness was
forgotten in an
undefined
Uncertainty of grace,
which tho poets have sung as
been tho peculiar charm of
Rose If Jack vowed one
night to the slave of Ruth, tho
next night ho was sure to be the
servant of Matilda.
For time the three had
talked of visiting of the steel
mills, and one night Jack actually
did tho two girls to see tho
Edgar Thomson Steel Works at
Bessemer. As they stood in one
corner of the great room of tho
converting mill, Matilda especially
was mystified by the apparently
intelligent action of tho
while Ruth, now and then,
asked questions in regard to tho
practical workings of the mill.
isn't that cried
Matilda, as the huge egg-shaped
vessel shot a great shower of
sparks feet across tho room.
out, Jack. You'll got
burnt by sparks. Quick,
why don't you run
you asked Ruth,
those sparks fall right off
the clothes of tho workmen that
they hit They do no
sold Matilda in a mo-
fountain of fire re-
minds me of the bouquet of flow-
gave me for my coming-
reminds replied Ruth,
without giving Jack a chance to
speak, pictures of volcanic
Just then a huge iron dipper,
large to drown a dozen
men, was swung into place, and
received tho molten metal from
the mouth of tho
isn't that cried
Matilda. big thing goes
all by itself. I know it will fly
over and hit
big said Ruth,
you see that it is hung on
a crane and worked by
power That man away back in
corner is guiding it all a
I don't replied
Matilda, dangerous; and I
know Jack wants to kill us. Those
funny, big, jumping-jacks and
huge dippers and teapots move
around as if by magic I'm going
out of this she continued,
as she moved toward the door,
I'm
All this time Bennett could hard-
contain his amusement over
the mystification of the one and
the wisdom of the other of the
he said, go
yet There's really no danger,
and I wont you to wait for me.
Stand here in this corner while I
go and get a permit for the rail
mill. Ruth, you can play the
guardian angel to your poor, little,
frightened
Before Matilda could
at being left in the mill,
Jack had gone out by the southern
door, and the sisters watched
the engine pushing through the
same door a train of small cars,
each holding its huge iron mold.
Just as the train had gotten into
the open air and Matilda
heard a dull thud outside, and the
engine reversed its wheels and
stopped. The three or four men
in the room rushed for the door,
ran nut them-
a Dad jolted the first car,
and its mold had, in falling,
knocked a man down. As the girls
came near saw him lying on
his back in tho dust, with his face
and shoulders hidden by tho mold.
He seemed to stunned, for ho
lay motionless, and tho end of the
mold, after throwing him to tho
ground, had rested on a stone be-
hi in.
Supposing him to in-
Matilda throw herself
tho man, and passionately seized
of his hands, covered it with
kisses. Ruth, however, stood
and immovable; then two
of the men standing idly by, she
called to
you two, that that
mold is lifted. Got help if you
need To you,
hurry and run for a
Then, becoming more earnest, to
a fourth she cried, for water,
quick, it may revive
Just at this moment Jack him-
self came around the hoard
Ruth's last speech and saw
sobbing over tho man. Tho
latter, covered with mortification,
jumped to feet,
thought it was
But Ruth remained silent an d
unmoved.
Tho left the workmen to
care of tho man, who
to only stunned. It was a
rather silent party that rode back
in the train to East Liberty. In
spite of Matilda's embarrassment
in tho mill, when first got
into the cars did her best to
laugh off tho
fun of Ruth's impervious
and joked about tho stupidity of
tho workmen. could not,
however, induce Ruth and Jack
to make light of tho affair, and all
throe soon relapsed into a silence
that was maintained until Jack
loft the girls at tho door of
home.
When, shortly after, ho was
thinking it all over in his room,
ho was quite overcome
agitation. ho said to
himself, does love and
as ho moved about his rooms
the rest of the those
words sang in his mind
like a refrain. Ho was so mean
that even tho distress of Matilda
delighted and as he prepared
to retire he was rejoicing that
his uncertainty about tho two girls
was at an end. He knew now, ha
thought, which of the girls loved
him, would settle tho
tho next day. go out
row he said to himself,
tell Matilda It was
only as ho retired that ho
tho of mind and tho
constancy of Ruth. But ho was
soon and dreaming of Ma-
When ho however, tho
next morning, for reason his
feeling had begun to change Tho
beautiful face of Ruth seemed to
between him and Matilda,
and her actions then to
show more depth of feeling, as
well as more decision, than even
those of her more demonstrative
sister. He remembered, also, what
he had no thought of tho night be-
fore, that, beneath calm com-
Ruth's countenance had
shown a delicate flush of agitation.
The more he thought of tho
firmer became his belief that
feeling for him was stronger
even than Matilda's. He could
not get rid of tho thought. Ho
had awakened early, at o'clock,
and in a few minutes he was out
on the street pacing restlessly up
and down.
ho thought.
demonstrations would probably
not last long; and they certainly
cannot mean so much as did
Ruth's terrible composure.
ho concluded, sense and
devotion are good enough, and
Ruth is the girl for
So elated was he by tho last de-
that he wheeled about and
began striding terrifically towards
the home of tho Burton girls. But
he could hardly call at in the
morning, even if it was to say that
Ruth was the girl for him, and so
ho turned abruptly around and
went back to his breakfast All
the morning, however, Ruth's
countenance was before him, and
at o'clock he was on his way
out Elsworth avenue. It was with
the greatest satisfaction that he
rang the Burton's doorbell, for at
last he had come to a decision, and
knew which of the girls to ask for.
When the maid came to the door,
he sent up his card for Ruth alone.
George Breed in the Am-
Its Practical Uses.
what is that big
hammer for in the box at the side
of the car
serves two purposes,
my enable the conductor
to knock down fares and to help
the commercial traveler to crack
Future Vengeance.
be sorry for this some
day howled the son and heir as
his father released him from the
position he had occupied across
paternal knee.
sorry
I get to be a
will revenge by whip-
pine your father when you are big
and strong and I am old and
feeble, will you.
blubbered Tommy,
rubbing himself, I'll spank
your grandchildren till they can't
AMONG TEE
Hairless Dogs, Lazy Bees, Lit-
Whales and Stupid Foxes.
Rapid Inhabitants of the Air-
Peculiarities of tho
Where Ducks Lost their
Aquatic Tastes
Perhaps no birds spend more of
lives on tho wing than par-
rots and the latter being
also among tho most graceful and
rapid of the inhabitants of the air.
In Now Zealand a species of par-
rot is found that, finding its food
on the ground, has lost tho
of flight It differs from tho rest
of its family only in this particular
and in being almost voiceless.
Among recent broods of
is tho parlor tumbler, which has
not only lost the of flight,
but has very nearly lost that of
Walking as well. Its queer mo-
when it attempts to walk
have given it its name, the
thick as the hair on a dog's
expresses nothing in Mex-
for the Mexican dog is utterly
devoid of hair on his back or any-
where Tho hot
rendered it superfluous. Moth-
Nature kindly divested him of
it Nor does little busy boo
improve each shining in
that country. On tho contrary,
it soon learns that as is no
winter there is no
for laying in a store of honey, and
degenerates into a thoroughbred
loafer.
big as a might be
rather small, as there is a species
of the cetacean genus hardly throe
feet long.
cunning as a would
have sounded idiotic to the
of Kamchatka. They found
foxes in largo numbers, but so
stupid, they hail
before seen an that
could killed with clubs.
Tho of a that
do not belong to
tho penguin family, as are
entirely destitute of feathers,
for a covering a kind of stiff
down. Another penguin
is that it swims not on but
water, keeping more
than its head out, and when fish-
coining to the surface at such
brief rare intervals that an
ordinary observer would almost
certainly mistake it for a fish.
Ducks swim tho world over,
but geese do not. In South Amer-
a domestic species is found that
cannot excel an ordinary hen in
aquatic accomplishments. It has
lived so long in a country where
water is only found in wells that
it has lost its aquatic tastes and
abilities Afield.
How He Popped the Question.
A story is told by the Atlanta
Constitution of a bashful young
Georgia swain, who called on his
girl to propose. Hero is a sample
of tho
can you sweep the
yes; of course I
you
I can
can you cut
have,
ever
I can't
I can for both of
He got her.
what are you
going to do with that ton cents I
gave you
going to spend it
upon that little reprobate you were
talking about the other day.
who's that
Budget
A Generous Offer.
must be a very gen-
man. I heard him say last
night that he would lend a friend
his last
know was the reply,
he's so rich he never gets down
to
Near It.
Inquiring a
church I wonder, now, what
the interior is like. Have you ever
been inside it
can't ex-
say as I but I bin in
Red Lion there, opposite.
Had No Fears.
your mother--
in-law was sick did you fear she
would die
I thought
die, but I wasn't afraid.
Brooklyn Life.
Telescopic steel masts or rods
are to be used in lighting the pub-
squares in Brussels. The ob-
of this system is to preserve
the beauties of parks in
daytime. .
A Proof of Love.
she said, shall marry
Harold, for I know he loves me.
watched me sharpen a pen-
nil and didn't
HOUSE m HOME.
Carefully Selected Items for the
Housewife.
The Many Uses for Brushes
To Remove Coffee and Ink
tho Hands
Other Valuable Hints.
tho various kinds of
brushes Used for scrubbing, keep
one exclusively for washing
tables; potatoes, turnips, boots,
etc., more easily in
this way than in any other.
a small tooth brush for
cleaning around the of
cups and and for dishes
with rough surfaces or raised de-
keep it convenient and it
will mad I mine
a drawer of my kitchen work-
beside my silver polish,
chamois skin and useful
cleaners.
found a small paint or
varnish brush, costing five cents,
a accompaniment to the
larger brush, as it
can made to reach into corners
where the will not go.
A nail brush for the cook's and
tho children's is indispensable.
Of course, are dust brushes,
crumb and tooth brushes.
only mention which I do
not find in general but which
cost much and aid much in
easier tho work which many
doom Tran-
script
Manicuring the Hands.
In manicuring tho hands,
should first softened by
in tepid water, in which have
placed a few drops of ammo-
and a small of
soap. Tho cuticle around the nail
should then carefully loosened
with the little spoon-shaped
provided for the purpose-
never with a knife, the use of
which is always detrimental. The
nails should be filed into a round
oval shape, avoiding tho French
point, which is no vogue.
Should the rough pieces of skin
known as appear,
they should cut away with a
sharp pair of scissors, and should
in any circumstances torn
out They will cease to be
troublesome if the hands are care-
fully and systematically treated.
The white spots which so often
disfigure tho nails said to be
directly attributable to physical de-
are by no means
easily got of, but a little refined
pitch mixed with myrrh, laid over
them at night and rubbed off in
tho morning with a bit of cocoa
butter, is said to an efficient
agent in removing thorn.
Painting on Chamois.
Painting on chamois leather is a
style of decoration which is still
used for dross trimmings, and for
various household ornamentations.
The natural ecru color of
leather is sometimes preserved,
though quite often tho leather is
stained to a different color. A de-
sign in dark shading into
the natural color of tho chamois,
is probably as effective as any-
thing Small pieces of this
work been in for
but large hangings are now
made decorated in the bold,
way which gives tho best re-
in this material. Quaint
bolts, with long, hanging ends, de-
signed from old peasant costumes,
are decorated in this way.
Removing Coffee Stains.
stains should wet with
cold, soft water before being t
into the wash, and will usually be
found all right when tho launder-
is done. A surer way is to
run boiling water through the fa-
which will carry away the
stain at once. Where an
fine damask suffers from this cause
it is to apply a mix-
made from the solution of
yolk of egg in clear water, with a
few drops of wine added. Allow
the solution to penetrate tho fabric
thoroughly, then wash out with
t water and tho stain will
be gone.
Ink Stains.
Ink stains may be from
colored covers by dissolving
of oxalic acid in a
of hot water and rub-
bing the stained part well with the
solution. Ink steins may be taken
out of anything white by simply
putting a little powdered salts of
lemon and cold water on tho stain,
allowing it to remain about five
minutes, and then washing it out
with soap and cold water, when
the stain will disappear.
Styles Year Ago.
During 1770 French women
wore shoes with very pointed toes
and high, slender heels. In 1789,
the year of revolution, an
dance of rouge, many patches and
very high hells was considered es-
aid to female beauty. The
men wore shoes of similar
while their attire as a whole
was marked by many
lies.
What is done, cannot
done, especially if it's a hard-
boiled
there any way to avoid
Cultivate
BEAR.
He Never Refuses to Take
a Drink.
ANEW
LOT
OF
STATIONERY
JUST
IN AT THE
REFLECTOR
BOOK STORE.
This Office for Job Printing
Cs an Inebriate of tho First
Appetite
or Hair, and Is a Mark for Biting
Ours and Stone-Throwing Boys.
The boars best known to San
Franciscans those aptly named
and wholly disreputable members
of tho tribe kept in Golden Gate
Park and known as Danger and
Calamity.
The latest corner is and
his home is on tho just
above the Union Hotel, near tho
Union Iron Works.
has never pretended to
anything but tho property of
Frank the of
tho a title that was self-
conferred in tho days before the
had its per-
work in transforming
from a brawling, drunken
person into a frank and pleasant
man of business.
the bear, was the inti-
mate of in old days
of terror, and ho has not been able
to change his as readily as
has his owner.
When was drinking
it was his habit to invite
to join him, and the ursine palate
soon accustomed itself to the
variety of wot goods at the
Union bar. Nothing wont amiss
with tho bear. Tho dregs of the
bar buckets wore all with the
dainty sweet toddy especially
pared. As a natural result
became obese, and with that
condition countless ills.
Appetite fled. The glossy coat
became patchy from The
jolly tamper was soured by
and grew
and misanthropic. Tho other
day brooding over the
distress of his long- time
ion, hit upon tho idea of shaving
the bear to parts of his
body that particularly
afflicted.
A posse of sturdy of
offered their services, and
the grumbling boar was stretched
flat, deft hands removed
every vestige of hair from the
body of tho beast, leaving only a
front of brown fur and a
general absurdity of appearance
that made even blush.
When tho boar climbed to the
top of the card for a glass of
now and then ribald laughter
saluted him. Tho that had
I icon his bosom friend and play-
mate refused to
in tho monstrosity
that wandered about s
promises, and much of
was wasted in trying to got
within boxing distance of tho in-
grate dog.
Tho curs of tho neighborhood,
proverbially fond of
nipped his flanks when saw
him of his cinnamon locks,
and tho boar had many a
and suffered innumerable pinches
in maintaining his accustomed
But two pleasures re-
for they wore
assiduously cultivated. To
from a
and drink strong liquor from a
bottle were accomplishments in
which tho terrier nor the
other dogs disputed tho with
the boar, and as a result
is fast becoming a sot.
When ho ventures out of doors
to walk his naked body excites re-
mark and boys pelt him.
So he stays pretty near tho stove
In the of and
accepts all offers to treat, which
are so many that it is believed
surfeit is increasing and
may soon result in if not
delirium Francisco
Examiner.
The Tallest Kings.
The exact height of Napoleon
is variously stated by
at feet 1-2 inches, I foot S
inches, and feet 1-2 inches.
Several have been be-
low the height
of Franco, was known as the short,
Napoleon III. rather
low the common of
The two tallest kings in history
were probably Charlemagne and
Maximum of Roma The former
was over feet high, and so strong
that with thumbs and lingers he
could straighten three horse-shoes
at once. the Roman
Emperor, was feet Inches, and
incredible stories his physical
strength are told by ancient his-
A co om mo dating.
will you give
me five cents to buy some candy
with
Papa No, indeed; candy Is
ruinous to the teeth.
I will not buy
candy; give me live cents and I'll
buy an City
Journal .
His Usual Fate.
you ever attend
any of Miss Rudd's
De Bore but I've
attended a good many of her not-
at-homos. New York Weekly.
Didn't Go.
as you is my rule,
said the man who was about
rent a house.
replied the real
estate w can't wait
for you to go. You'll have to pay
in Star.
The Odor of musk.
The most potent of all perfumes,
musk and attar imported
from the East, but are too power-
especially the former, for
European tastes at the present
day. It was, however, the favor-
scent of that most elegant of
royal ladies, the Empress Jose-
Down to the epoch of the
destruction of the palace of St
Cloud by fire, during the war of
1870, tho dressing room of the suit
she had been wont to occupy, and
especially tho drawers of tho
bureau she had used, were redolent
of that odor. Tho mortar employed
in the now ruined
of at was mingled
with a quantity of Musk by the
piety of tho masons engaged in
the work, and to this day the
rounding atmosphere is highly
scented with it, especially when
the sun shines upon the ruins.
This extraordinary durability of
tho scent producing quality has
brought about various interesting
experiments. A French chemist
once exposed a small quantity of
musk after weighing it to the rays
of the sun in a closed room. tor
a certain period musk was
again weighed and was found to
have lost no perceptible portion of
its substance, even when the min-
tests were applied. Yet the
scientific experiment calculated
that tho volume of perfume evolved
had amounted to no less a
than 57.000.000 of particles.
Save
Paying
Bills
BOTANIC
BLOOD BALM
THE GREAT REMEDY
FOR ALL BLOOD AND SKIN DISEASES ,
bye
for and never falls t
A quickly and ,
, ULCERS. ECZEMA. .
I RHEUMATISM. PIMPLES. ERUPTIONS.
I I all of
. RUNNING purr mo .
I blood If dilution.
. per for . Foe .
FREE
, BALM CO., Atlanta. Si. I
Notice to Creditors.
The Superior Court of Pitt
having issued letters of
t me. the undersigned, on the
Nth day of on the rotate
of Fannie White, deceased. Notice it
hereby given lo all persons Indebted e
the estate to make Immediate payment
to the and to all
of estate to present their
properly authenticated, to the under-
stoned, within twelve after the
date this notice, or this notice, win
be plead in bar of their
This the day of January 1808.
J. W.
on the estate of Fannie White.
Indispensable in
Every good Kitchen.
As good housewife knows,
the difference between
delicious rooking and the
opposite kind is largely la deli-
sauces and
vies. Now. these require a
strong, delicately flavored stock
mid the best stock is
Company's
Extract Of Beef
-----PARKERS
HAIR BALSAM
and
rails to Mr
Hair to Cola
Cm scalp ft hair
Th Consumptive and Feeble
ToniO.
Notice.
I desire to announce to and
public generally that I have opened
office for myself just across the
from my residence and on the old Dr.
Blow lot where I can be found at any
time.
FRANK W. BROWN, M. D.
L. JAMES,
DENTIST, t
FLEMING.
AW.
Greenville, N. O.
Prompt attention to business.
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
JARVIS.
BLOW,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
In all the
I. A. B. F.
A TYSON,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
N. a
Prompt attention Riven to
t a skinner,
n. c.
G. JAMES.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
V C
In all The heart. Collections





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
MARCH
Km red at at Greenville
N. C. second-class mail matter.
k Announcement.
SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF
I The Reflector is per
column
; column one year.
; one-quarter column one
Transient inch
one week. i two weeks. 81.50; one
mouth Two inches one week,
MM one month,
Advertisements inserted in
Column as reading items. cents per
line each insertion.
Advertisements, such as Ad.
and
Commissioners- and Trustees Ma
to etc. will
be charged for at legal rates and must
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any not mentioned
AW, for any of time, can be
by application to the
in person or letter.
Advertisements and
all of should
handed in by on
morning in order to receive prompt
the following.
NEWSPAPER WORK ON SUNDAY.
The good friend of the
chides It
having issued a paper the morning
after last Thanksgiving Day and a pap-r
morning of last one
involving work upon a solemn holiday
the other work on Sunday. We cannot
that from our friend s the
has any good to make.
it confesses that work upon
Sabbath is to be deprecated,
but certain sorts
Of labor have become absolutely
on and the public desire
a paper is sometimes so strong
do not feel when
it. In times of pop-Mar ex-
for instance, it seems a long
time to wait from Sunday to Tuesday.
We do net think that labor on Thanks-
giving needs to be apologized for
and we do think that the full reports of
Mr. sermons last Sunday week
in Monday's paper than
could have been in Tuesday's, when
there were report of two to be
and their wide distribution, ac-
perhaps, a great deal of good
more enough to for
the wrong done. We might remind our
that the Observer printed
a paper, also, Honda morning preceding
Tuesday of election.
The nervous was very great; the
public was v eager for n . and our
did not fur having per-
formed mis almost humane service nor
did the performance shock the moral
of this enlightened, moral. Christ-
bUt question ,
morning papers
promised land they wearied of the
government God had placed over
them, and through a desire to be
like other nations began clamor-
for a king. They were given
their desire and those who read
their history can see what direful
results their brought.
It was their disobedience of God's
too, in the
of the Sabbath-that caused
these same people to be banished
from their country and taken cap-
into a strange land.
to a later period of the Bible
It was the of the
Him I Crucify Him
when the Son of God himself stood
before Pilate, that caused the per-
of a crime so horrible
that the sun hid his face rather
than be witness thereto ; and the
earth t-poke her disapproval in
mutterings and
Profane history also bears many-
striking illustrations of this same
point It was the of
the people of England that be-
headed their king and gave the
throne into the hand of Cromwell,
a worse despot than ever Charles
I had been. But what the need
of citing more of these when the
world is full of such examples I
Give the public all it clamors for
and you will see a reign of
One has to go back no
further than the campaign of last
year for an indication of this right
here in our midst. would
have been the result if all that was
being clamored for in the name of
the Alliance could have been put
into effect I Because there was a
clamor for these things did the
Press acknowledge that they were
wrong and then look quietly on
and say because the people desire
it we do not feel right to resist it I
Contrary to this the Press, seeing
the evils in these things, arose in
its might and by being of
caused such an awaken
among the people that what
two years ago looked like a party
that would increase so rapidly as
to soon have the Nation in its
grasp is to-day almost wiped out
of existence- In this warfare the
Observer was one of the bravest of
the and honor be to it for
the part it took and the good it
accomplished.
Once more. America is a boast-
ed Nation and points to
the world to look to her for an ex-
J. M- Benson, of
den county, embezzled of
the county funds and fled to parts
unknown. It is thought that he
went to Texas or Mexico. Got-
Carr has offered a reward of
for his capture and delivery to the
sheriff of county.
lie lives a century. It is also safe
to say that the head of the afore-
said slimy serpent will not be rear-
ed in any of the executive depart-
of Government for four
years to come, all of which is a
decided gain for the country.
The executive departments are
put upon a Democratic
basis as rapidly as possible, and
Republican chiefs of and
divisions arc being succeeded by
Democrats as fast as the head., of
the departments can select the new
officials. Democratic economy is
also being put into opera-
Following Secretary
ton's order dismissing all of the
superfluous of the de-
of Agriculture, came an
order from Secretary to
the division chiefs of the Treasury
department, ordering the
ate dismissal of every
absolutely essential to keep up
the work of the department. The
Democratic administration was
voted into power to reduce the ex-
expenditures of the
Government, and every member of
it is fully determined that the
wishes of the voters shall be car-
out to letter.
Fourth Assistant Postmaster
Maxwell, the gentleman
b m
his Democratic associates. Let us, the ,
The Republicans in the Senate
will oppose the of
the Senate before it meets next
Fall. The Democrats have made
several propositions for a
and it is probable the
will accept one of them-
The National Association of
Democratic Clubs has issued a
notice recommending ft
celebration on April 13th
next of the birth day of Thomas
Jefferson. The address
time is peculiarly appropriate for
a general renewal of our devotion on the
principles of Jefferson. For the first
time since the civil war the Democratic
party is about to return to power in all
political branches of the general govern-
We have professed the purity
Democratic people, see as
that these professions are
our public
best we may
redeemed by
-and one warn to walk all around ample, yet who has not heard the
an i look at u from of view . of the past year for the
and turn it over and scan it in all its pi-
rim plain beta opening
upon Observer. Sunday Against this great evil
a the Pulpit and its coadjutor, the
and leaders of
The Reflector may appear
bit puritanical by referring to this
again, but we take it
the best time to correct any evil or
tendency thereto is in its
their voices
until Congress decided that the
Fair should not open on Sunday,
ency, and for that reason we speak . and thereby prevented a spectacle
upon it once more. There is only j that to end of time would have
one sentence in what the Observer, been a monument of shame and
says that we now wish to comment disgrace to our civilization.
upon, but not wanting to take any
advantage in the discussion the
whole article is given above that a
full hearing of its side of the
may be had.
Desecration of the Sabbath is
wrong, wholly wrong, and there
are few instances in which labor of
any kind on that day is justifiable-
The tendency of the age toward
Speaking for itself the non-observance of the day
says it confesses ought to be met by the Press and
work upon the Sabbath day is to the people educated against it. The
be deprecated, and avoided when j Reflector re-affirms its utterances
possible, but certain sorts of labor, of last week, that it has no desire
have become necessary
on Sun- to take the role of censor or critic,
day, and the public desire for a
Monday paper is sometimes so
strong that publishers do not feel
right when they resist Here
the evil is acknowledged, but be
cause of the of the
public the sin is committed.
The Press claims to be, and is, a
moulder of public opinion. It
claims to stand next to the Pulpit
in its work, the Pulpit and the
world conceding the claim. When
the Press ceases to be a leader of
the people its mission fails. In-
stead of yielding to the public de-
sire for evil it is the duty of the
Press to take a bold stand for right
and convince the public of its
People have time and again
been known to clamor for things
that were directly detrimental to
their interests. History bears us
out in this. As the question now
up is one of a religious character,
two or three illustrations from the
Bible will lend strength to this
point-
Look at the children of Israel as
they stood on the verge of the Red
Sea and saw no way of progress
or getting beyond reach of
their approaching enemy- They
began clamoring to return to the
land of bondage from which they
had just been delivered, and ask-
if there were no graves in
Egypt that they had been brought
out here to perish. Fortunately
they had a leader who instead of
yielding to their desires bade them
wait and see the salvation of the
Lord. A moment later the waters
divided and a way of escape open-
ed before them- What if their
had been listened to
and they allowed to return to
Egypt t See them again when
they had come so near the
ed land that spies could be sent
over, upon whose return the
began clamoring to follow the
evil report of the ten which result-
ed in forty years weary wander-
in the wilderness. Again,
after entering and possessing the
but it does wish to see the Press
of North Carolina take a stand for
the purity of the Sabbath. We
recognize the ability of the
and know full well that for a
paper of its standing to lend its
influence to either side of a
carries great weight to that
side, therefore how much more
commendable would it be for such
a journal to advocate what it sees
and confesses is right, rather than
to pander to the of the
public for that which is wrong.
Col. Elliott F. Sheppard, of New
York, died in that city last Friday.
He was editor of the Mail and Ex-
press the bitterest partisan sheet
in the United States. He was a
man of some reputation, and was
the son-in-law of Vanderbilt
There probably is as much grief
in the South over his death as
there was over the demise of
Beast Butler. The day has pass-
ed when men will even after death
praise any man who was so narrow
minded that he never saw beyond
his immediate section and who
never lost an opportunity to slander
those who once differed with him.
The number of such men is fast
diminishing and the sooner we are
freed from them the better it will
be for this government.
The first appointment in North
Carolina made under the new ad-
ministration was that of Special
Collector at Wilmington, James
W. Young present
bent being removed and Col. E. D.
Hall appointed in his stead. This
shows the tenor of at least the
Treasury department in reference
to removals- Young was a blue-
blooded partisan and never lost
an opportunity to show this. He
is said to have carried Congress-
man Cheatham of that District in
his pocket and these two controlled
almost entirely the Federal pat-
of Eastern North Carolina.
They had exerted themselves to
such cm extent that they had
en almost every white Republican
of this section into the Democrat
party. Such men must go and
go quick under Secretary
The Executive Committee of the
North Carolina Press Association
met in Raleigh last Thursday.
Messrs. H. A. London, S- A. Ashe,
Thad Manning and John B. Sher-
rill were present. It was decided
that the Convention would meet
in New on the 26th of
April. The Association will go to
Chicago to the World's Fair about
the middle of May and Mr. Eugene
Harrell was requested to make
for the trip.
The next State Fair will be held
next October regardless of the
fact that many think that the
Fair cannot be a success this
year it being the time of holding
the World's Fair. An Executive
Committee composed of many of
the most prominent men in the
State will have in charge the
and will doubtless en-
to make the Fair even bet-
than heretofore
Gen. W. R Cox of North Caro-
has been chosen by the
of the Democratic members of
the Senate for the Secretaryship
of that body He is admirably
for the position and will
make a faithful and efficient officer.
The salary is a little over five
thousand dollars and North Caro-
is to be congratulated that
each an honorable position has
been i
son Gen- William R. Cox.
PUBLIC for GREENVILLE
Is it needed T I think the
people of Greenville will
answer this question in the
It is the duty of every com-
to provide for the culture
of the intellectual and the social
nature of the young people-
There can be no conflict between
our schools and a public library.
Each will help the other- The
minds of the boys and girls in
school are trained mainly by the
study of text-books, but they as
well as the young men and ladies
out of school ought to have access
to a good library. Many of them
cultivate a taste for good
reading and instead of
their evenings idly and sometimes
sinfully their time would be
pied much more pleasantly and
profitably.
We should buy a lot centrally
located. Erect a suitable building
with a large reading room Put
a piano in it, select some of the
best papers and reviews, provide
innocent games Then let our
young people and older ones meet
and enjoy the music, readings and
recitations. Would this not
fit them morally, socially,
But some will think it impossible
to raise money enough to buy a
lot, erect a suitable building, and
purchase books. I believe we can
collect all that is necessary. Talk
it and agitate it until the people
feel their need of it-
Shall we have a public library
for Greenville G F Smith.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
famous by Steven-
son, is on deck and already hard
at work. There are several thous-
and resignations of fourth-class
postmasters on hand, and these
will be disposed of before he be-
gins the work of removing
postmasters.
Speaking of postmasters, P- M-
G- stated to a delegation of
Missouri Congressmen that the
policy of the department concern-
appointments had been mis-
represented by a certain class of
newspapers. In the first place, it
had been stated by these news-
papers that the recommendation
of Congressmen would count for
nothing. As a refutation of that
statement the fact was pointed out
that not a single postmaster had
yet been appointed who did not
have the endorsement of his Con-
While not disposed to
Ignore the Congressmen, Mr- Bis-
sell said that the question of who
should be postmaster should in a
measure at least, be decided by
the people of the locality, who
were more directly interested than
anyone else, and that the wishes
of the people,
would certainly be considered in
making appointments. No-
body is to be ignored; what the
department wants is the co-opera-,
of both the people and the
Congressmen in the selection of
such postmasters as will increase
the efficiency of the postal service-
Mr also denounced as
false the statements that women
and editors are to be discriminated
against in the selection of post-
masters.
The number of nominations sent
to the Senate this week is con-
ahead of any other sin-
week. There necessarily
been some personal disappoint-
but with the exception of
the nominations of Burke and
Hawkins to be S- Attorney and
Marshal for Indiana, over which
there was a little flurry, no adverse
criticisms have been made of any
of them by Democrats
The Democratic caucus decided
to elect the officers of the
at the present extra session, and
nominated ex-Congressman W.
R. Cox, of North Carolina, for
Secretary Richard J. Bright, of
Indiana, for Sergeant-at-Arms, and
Rev. W. H. the blind
preacher who has been Chaplain
of the House for several terms, for
Chaplain. The Republicans threat-
en to resort to filibustering to
prevent an election of these
but it is believed that they
are only making a bluff to enable
them to keep as many
cans in the subordinate positions
as possible-
Senator Harris, of Tennessee,
has been elected president pro
of the Senate, but as
President Stevenson gives
of his intention to stick
more closely to his duties than his
have usually done
e will not be called on to
side over the Senate very often.
So he will enjoy the honor, which
is fully deserved, without having
to do much extra work. There is
no truth in the report that Senator
Harris and the President had
quarreled.
two-thirds of a crop of cotton
should be planted. All pledged
themselves to this course. An ed-
passed by a large farm and
asked the overseer if that
was all the colonel was planting-
no, sir There
are acres here, but he has
at the old home and acres at
The editor said
that was more than he planted last
year, and yet the colonel pledged
himself to plant less. The colored
brother replied sir, the old
is a sight. He knows de
others are to plant less, so
he is long-headed, and he is
to plant
It is to feared that there is
too much truth in this anecdote.
Our farmers know that it is
to feed their horses on the
Northern hay, keep their wheat
fields in the great West,
smoke-houses in Louisville,
and Chicago, and their
fertilizers in distant islands of the
sea. They ought to know, after
a long experience, that a big cot-
ton crop means low prices.
Still, there is no unanimity of
sentiment among our farmers.
They have made a start in the
of diversified crops, but
the upward tendency of cotton last
year will cause them to turn about
and repeat past mistake of
planting more cotton. Look out
for bales at or cents.
We know it is urged that an ex-
currency would enable us
to sell even this big crop at a fair
price and the point is made that
merchants will not credit planters
unless they plant a good deal of
cotton- But we have no expansive
currency, and pressure of pub-
opinion must be brought to
bear upon the merchants. If the
farmers are not encouraged to
diversify their crops, they will
soon be so despondent that they
will sell or give away their farms
and go West or flock to the towns.
Even at great sacrifice and
it is better to turn over a
new leaf right now. If the farmers
will not plant less cotton, let them
at least produce more bread and
meat.
That cure of Geo. W. Turner, of Gal-
way, N. Y., of scrofula, by Hood's
was one of the most remark-
able on record.
Every Man
A Capitalist.
You can become a capitalist at
once by laying by a small part of
your yearly income and invest-
it in a policy of the
Equitable Life
t-or you can instantly
cure a capital of for
a capital of thus
acquiring an estate which you
may leave to your heirs, or
as a for your own
support in old age, if your life
be prolonged.
Such a step will prompt you
to save, will strengthen your
credit, will increase your con
will preserve you from
care and will give you lasting
satisfaction.
The Plan is
The Security Absolute.
It is the perfect development
of the life policy. To-day is
the right time to get facts and
figures. Address
W. J. Manager,
For the Carolina.
ROCK HILL, S. C;
COTTON ACREAGE.
It Should be Reduced by all Mean.
Atlanta Constitution.
The Times-Demo-
are, therefore, two
against a large
low price of the staple the high
price of provisions. The latter is
a further argument in favor of in
creasing the acreage in food crops.
During the war the South raised
its own meat and bread, although
nearly all of its able-bodied men
were in the field- It can do so to-
day with profit and advantage.
The market quotations, not of cot-
ton alone, but of all provisions,
are a strong argument against a
big acreage in the Southern
We do not see how these
can be successfully
Certainly, if we could raise
all our meat and bread during the
war, we can do it now. This policy
would make cotton a surplus crop,
and, even at low prices, our people
would still be self-supporting.
And yet we do not look for any
from the
in favor of reduced cotton
acreage passed by various con-
The Wilmington Mes-
remember in about
several editorials
on this very line. It was beating
the wind. We recall a suggestive
fact- In Georgia a great meeting
, . , ,. i was held of planters in which it
to say he will never forget solemnly that but I
our regular
Washington, D. C, Mar.
President Cleveland has done
no more popular thing since he as-
his high office than when
he to use a bit of ex-
slang, the head of the
slimy serpent, nepotism, which
had started to wriggling around
entirely too promiscuously. He
first took occasion to inform a dis-
southern Senator who
had appointed his son to be Clerk
of the Senate committee of which
he was lately made chairman, that
in consequence of that appoint-
indicating a desire to look
out for his personal and family in-
first of all, his
had been much weakened.
Next, he took a western Congress-
man's breath away, when as a
clinching argument in favor of the
appointment to an office of one of
his constituents he said s he
is a relative of yours. Mr.
by settles it
No relative of mine shall be
to office by He
then gave that Congressman a
GENERAL
Commission Merchants
DEALERS IN
Gram, Potatoes, Poultry, Eggs, Game,
Oysters, Fish, and
All Country Products,
Nos. Dock, Norfolk, Va.
Reference Sou Co., Bankers
CRYSTAL LENSES
n.
secured by its distinguished m
William R.
JAMES LONG,
Dealer In-----
General Merchandise,
Has exclusive sale of these celebrated
in Greenville, N. C. From the
of A Moore, the only
complete optical plant in the South,
Atlanta, Ga, Peddler are not sup-
plied with those famous glasses.
Many Persons an broken
down from overwork or am.
Brown's Iron Bitters the
mum, aid excess of bile.
Cancers Neck
Terrible Choking Sensation
James Baker
of Locust Valley, Lone Island.
years ago, while living In Trinidad,
Colorado, a lump on my neck,
which gradually swelled and developed Into an
1- painful livid with a
filled with granulations like shot. Another
appeared an inch or two and to
give up and return to my parents In Brooklyn.
pronounced cancers and
Performed An Operation
for their removal. a great deal
the operation, and far Ono
of tho cancers, the smaller one, healed over but
was as as ever, while tho other did not
heal and worse. Tho physicians told mo I
would have to submit to another but
I said I would First
A lump a year ago came on the right side
of my neck. For many months could swallow
only or very soft food, and found
la At the
of a friend, Hood's
the I Is that
I did not take It mid have
vented terrible for taken the
medicine, sincerely I should not
needed any operation at all. These sores are
now, two
Completely do.-c
and, I am permanently healed up.
Tho lump on tho of my neck has
nearly all dried up, and no longer causes mo
Hood's k Cures
any Inconvenience. can rat anything once
more, and use my voice as veil as
Mrs. James Baker, Locust Valley, long Island
Pills Nausea, Sick Headache,
Indigestion, Biliousness. Sold by all druggist,
SALE.
Prices Low.
Terms Easy.
ELLIOTT BROS. OFFER FOR SALE
The J. I,. Billiard home farm,
Dam adjoining the lands
T. Tyson and J. II. A lino
farm about MM, with good build-
and adapted to corn, cotton and to-
A line marl bed.
A farm near and
mediately on railroad, formerly own-
ed by Caleb It.
about a are cleared. Good neighbor-
hood, churches and a within
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin-
farms
A flue farm of three miles
from Farmville and milts
with large, substantial dwelling
and out houses. Known as the L. P.
Beardsley borne place, line cotton land,
good clay subsoil, to marl.
A smaller adjoining the
known as the Jones place, acres,
dwelling, barn and tenant house, land
good.
A farm of in town-
ship, about o miles from
acres cleared, part of the tract.
Part of the Noah Joyner farm,
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro,
located in an improving
and can be made a valuable farm.
A small farm of a boa acre.-,
about miles from Greenville, on In-
Well Swamp, with, house, for-
owned by Guilford Cox.
ALSO TIMBER
A tract of about acres near
station, with cypress timber well
suited for railroad ties.
A tract of about in
township, near the Washington
road, pine timber.
A tract of acres near
Mills, pine and cypress timber.
Apply to Wm. II. LONG,
Greenville, N. C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STOKE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT.
their year's supplies will find
their interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere. is complete
n all its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE, TEA, Ac.
always at Lowest Market Pricks.
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
S. M.
Nil
Baggy
GREENVILLE, C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared lo do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
NOON,
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in manner
If so come to see us and we will you prices
are conceded by our customers as being lower
than be gotten elsewhere.
------have in the------
Largest and Most Varied
Selection of Furniture
kept in our town.
We buy direct
s and can and will sell
low Our stock consists
in part of .
Marble Top Walnut Suits,
Solid Oak Suits,
Sixteenth Century Finish Suits,
Walnut Finish Suits,
Marble Top Bureaus and Washstands,
Wood Top Bureaus and
Ward and Side-Boards,
Walnut Bedsteads,
Bedsteads of all grades and colors,
Wire Cribs and Beds and Cradles.
Marble Top and Solid Wood Top Tables,
Solid Walnut Chairs and Rockets,
Solid Oak Chairs and Rockers,
Fancy Reed and Wood Rockers,
Chairs of all grades, Lounges,
Bed Springs, Mattresses,
We are headquarters for-
FURNITURE
and extend to all a cordial invitation to call on us when in want
of any goods as we carry of stocks of
MERCHANDISE
ever kept in our town.
Yours truly,
J. B CHERRY CO
Farmers, Make Tour Own Hay
WE CAN SELL YOU THE
BEST IN
THE WORLD FOB
CUTTING IT.
CALL OX IS WHEN IN
COOK STOVES,
PAINTS, OIL.
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TOBACCO FLUES.
S. E. PENDER CO.,
o.
Special facilities for handling Seed in any
quantity from all Tar River Landings.
Car Load Lots taken from any point in
Eastern North Carolina and Virginia.
BAGS FURNISHED FOR SHIPPING SEED
COTTON SEED MEAL AND HULLS FOR SALE OR
EXCHANGE FOR SEED.
Oil Mills,
N. C.
SAMUEL M. SCHULTZ, Agent, Greenville, N. C.
on Tar River
AT
prices and terms
K. V.
Sec. A Trent., Tarboro, N C.
Owners
STEAMER BETA.
Semi-Weekly trips between Washington and Tarboro Way Lauding.





THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Tubules.
W. J.
Dr. W. II.
W. M. Keeper.
Mrs. Georgia
Frank Spring.
Sunday is Easter.
Lent closes with Sunday.
Base Ball is picking up.
Base ball talk is stirring up.
The grip is appearing again.
Friday is the last day of March.
After Easter picnics will be in order.
The head of the average boy is on top
now.
Garden sass has got its head above
ground.
And still the weather keeps up its
fickleness.
Sample Hats at Brown Hooker's
store.
We haven't heard a man say factory in
a whole week.
Next Saturday is All Fool's day. Keep
both eyes open.
The finishing getting on
the b
Fut it in the if you want
the people to read it.
Tin- hardest rain for several months
fell here Friday evening.
The rains of the past week have caused
the river to rise
the earliest Po-
at the Old Brick Store.
Shad are getting nearer to poor men's
price- and we have indulged.
Hatch has not been as windy as some
politicians, but f illy as
Plenty of light at Hooker's
new store to show goods.
The heavy rains of the past week have
still further delayed the farmers.
All the talk don't make good roads
something ought to be done to them.
This is the kind of weather for
Be about taking cold.
Use Meal of Cotton Seed, at the Old
Store.
Tile dais have taken the outside track
on the and arc growing longest.
A dollar invested in the
goes a long a whole year.
The Baptist Sunday School is talking
of having a picnic or excursion about the
first of May.
The trial of O ho the Old-
is in progress this week before
Wake county Superior Court.
C. B. Corsets cents at Brown
Hooker's.
A large audience was out Sunday night
to witness exercise by the pupils of
the Methodist Sunday School.
Keep up with the
that is always to your
Several new ones to-day.
Remember the Lang stock is still going
at cost at Hooker's. There are
good bargain- in it.
hue you have plenty of time on your
hand- now you speak a go-id word
to your neighbor about the Reflector.
From the number of showers and
storms Friday one could almost
imagine that April was with us.
; Before starting out to purchase your
spring goods read the The
enterprising advertiser is the to
buy
Hiss Spring seems to be making no
complaint about man Winter linger-
in her lap. And the old man
to stay.
shooting birds between the 15th
of March and the 1st of do so
violation of the law. Sportsmen
should take warning.
Our new Spring goods are coming in,
the prettiest Styles imaginable. Be sure
that you Brown A Hooker.
Some paper rises with the information
that a postage stamp has been in-
vented. We've been carrying one around
with n- for thirty years.
So many people will want to go to the
naval rendezvous at Norfolk, that the
railroad would do a wise thing to run an
excursion from this section.
Don't pay a big price for a hat when
you can get one of those nice sample
hats from Brown Hooker for half the
money.
April term of Superior Court will
begin next Monday. This term will be
trial of both criminal and civil eases.
Judge Shuford will preside.
The behavior of some young people
church is quite a reflection on their
parents, to say nothing of the reproach
such conduct is to themselves.
If yon want to see beautiful spring
goods examine our new stock. Brown
Hooker.
A two-year-old of Mr. J. II. E
near was so badly
burned on Saturday evening a week ago
that it died the following morning.
Hundred Dollars Worth of
Work Given get your
trimmed Free of Charge you
buy the materials of I get a month-
guide of the latest style from New
York and have on exhibition a beautiful
of Trimmed Hits. Having bought
good cheaper than ever before I can
ford to sell cheaper. Baby Caps
from cents up. Black Silk Lace
inches wide at cents. AU Silk
Ribbon, No. at cents. AU Silk
Double Faced Satin Ribbon at cents.
All Notions. Pictures, Easels and Jewel-
positively at cost. Stamping done
cheaper than ever by a new and
process. Come and be made
beautiful by using Re-
removes tan, freckles and pimples, also
moves Dandruff and makes the hair soft
and healthy, price cents per jar. No
trouble to show goods, call whether you
intend to buy or not. Thanking you
much for past I am yours
very Mrs.
Personal.
Mr. J. M. Blow returned to Greenville
last week.
Mr. B. C. came home from
last week. .
Mrs. R. W. Moore, of is visit-
the family of Mr. J. R. Moore.
Rev. J. N. H. will preach
Elliott's Hall next night.
Miss Lucy Joyner has closed her school
here and is now teaching near
Miss May Harris, of Falkland, was
visiting Mrs. C. M. Bernard last week.
Mr. Herman Wilson, of Kinston, has
been spending the past week with friends
here.
Capt. W. W. Can-away, representing
the Richmond Dispatch was here last
week.
Mr. D. H. Fleming, of Washington,
spent Saturday and Sunday with relatives
in this community.
Mr. W. II. of Tarboro, has
been spending the past week among his
many friends here.
Mr. J. C. Greene returned home last
week from Chester, S. C. where he has
been for some time as manager for the
W. U. Telegraph Co.
Rev. C. M. Anderson preached again
in the Methodist church Sunday morn-
The pastor, Rev. G. F. Smith, has
been suffering with his eyes during the
past week but he is now almost well
again.
Rev. J. II. has been conduct-
a meeting at during the
past week. He is expected to return to
Greenville by the close of this week, and
services will be held the Baptist
church Sunday morning and evening.
The quarterly observance of the Lord's
Supper will take place on the second
Sunday morning.
Too many people out of employment.
needs enterprises that will
give all her citizens work. Everybody
cannot sell goods. Factories are what
we need.
A paper called the. Re-
view has just been started at Mount
Olive, Mr. Arthur editor. It
starts off well and we hope will meet
success.
Mrs. Martha Smith, a widow lady of
Beaver Dam township, has been quite
unfortunate with her team. She lost a
very valuable horse last fall and lost
another last week.
Our neighboring towns which have
small factories are boasting of the benefit
they are to community and the good
dividend the enterprises pay. Greenville
is slow to take a hint.
Mrs. Georgia has opened her
new stock of millinery in the store one
door north of the Old Brick Store. Her
advertisement to-day will prove
ally interesting to the ladies.
The Reflector has no scruples
against distributing subscription receipts
during Court week. If you bring along
a dollar next week you can get a whole
year's reading for it.
There is more money in raising corn at
a barrel than there is in cotton at
cents a pound. Farmers make a note
of this, and if you want cotton to be
even lower than cents next fall put in
a big crop of it this season.
An insurance inspector who was
through here last week examining the
buildings on which his company has is-
sued policies, pail the REFLECTOR boys
a compliment upon the cleanliness of the
office, said he rarely sees a printing
office as neat as ours.
Poor Fanning.
We heard a farmer complaining the
other day that corn was high. That
the cake. Corn Is one thing that
every farmer ought to have plenty of and
feel good when it will bring a big
price. That is Just the cause of the
trouble with so many farmers to-day,
instead of raising such supplies as
need on their farms they have to go else-
where for them. Any man who has
go off of his farm to buy corn and hay and
meat ought to be made to pay high prices
for them. Raise these things at home
and be sellers of them instead of buyers.
What would you think of a grocery mer-
chant who went to some other dealer to
buy all the groceries he uses In his own
family What would you think of a
buggy manufacturer who went to some
other factory whenever he wanted a
buggy for his own use Such actions on
their part would be just about as reason-
able as a farmer going somewhere else to
buy everything he needs and should raise
his farm. Plant a big cotton crop this
year to the exclusion of food crops and
yon will hear more complaint next win-
about corn and meat being high than
you have heard the past season.
TO THE LIVING WHO WEEP.
WRITTEN- ON THE DEATH OF MB.
W. F,
His work has been finished, he's gone to
that rest
Which Our Father's prepared for his
own,
Where no moth doth corrupt nor no thief
shall molest,
But ye weep for a loved one is gone.
Oh God may they consoled
Thy name.
For true love does not end at the grave,
Though we know dust to dust shalt re-
turn whence it came
And the spirit to God who it gave.
Tho unknown, to his memory I offer a
tear
To be lost in the ocean like dew,
For my heart swells with grief for their
loss is severe,
Though death life to true.
Then scorn not my tear, so sincerely
shed
From the depths of a fond heart
given
To the living who weep. It is not to the
dead;
His tears are all dry ; he's in heaven.
A FRIEND.
Greenville, N. C, March 24th, 1893.
A business man told us the other day
that advertising pays him better in the
spring and summer than any other season.
This explodes the idea that some have
that it never pays to advertise a dull
season. The hustler the year
through is the man who scoops in the
dollars.
COTTON MARKET-
NORFOLK, Va., Mar. 24th, 1893.
We have another slight decline in the
cotton market this week under the con-
of dull foreign markets and the
dread of increasing acreage.
New York contract market has been
nervous and unsettled. The demand has
been limited and this together with the
prospects for a big crop this year has de-
pressed values. The market closed ten
to eleven points lower this week than
last week.
Liverpool market has shown a slight
since the Lancashire strikes
were settled yesterday but It is not prob-
able that we will see better prices until
after Easter, on the contrary we may
have lower prices.
WEEKLY MOVEMENT.
MM 1892
at U S ports
week,
Exports for week,
Stock at ports,
Net receipts since
Crop sight, 5.919,300 8.289,117
Visible supply,
NORFOLK SPOT MARKET.
As wired by Cobb Bros,
Norfolk, Va., March 28th, 1893.
Good Middling,
Middling,
Low Middling,
Good Ordinary,
Tone,
3-16
nominal.
THE
Cheat-side, Tex-, March
thought I would write a few lines
which I consider of importance for
North Carolina.
The a religious sect
f o uncled by Peter a mer-
chant of Lyons, France, who want-
ed to re-establish the purity of the
Primitive Christian church
and whose followers now living in
three valleys, in the Alps
Val Mart Val
and Val for centuries
have proved themselves faithful to
their belief, contemplate to
grate to the United States. Their
principal resources, the
of are on a decay,
so that they in spite of all their
economy, hardly can make a
Their pastors
ed to send two delegates to
North Carolina in order to study
the resources of the State and the
chances of settling there.
The are a very in-
people who distinguish
themselves by purity of morals
and excellent culture of their fields
and vineyards. They at present
are composed of parishes and
stations. Since the
17th of February 1848 they enjoy
perfect religious and political lib-
During the middle age they
had to endure many persecutions.
Pope Lucius III anathematized
them in 1248, and Pope IV
even had a war preached against
them in 1477. If the
should settle in
North Carolina, I think they
would be a grand acquisition, and
their delegates ought to
received.
Here in this section of Texas,
corn has been up for over three
weeks and a good deal of cotton
is planted, and partly appearing
from out of the ground.
The weather is beautiful, though
we had to feel somewhat the bitter
cold that had lately visited the
Northern and Eastern States.
J. A. Lorenzo De
It is with pleasure that I to
the citizens of Green ville and
that have just returned from the
Northern Markets Where I visited
all the fashionable openings and am now
receiving the most beautiful and
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever
opened ill this market. Come to see
me and you will get nothing but the
latest fashionable good. Low prices
and satisfaction
Mrs. Georgia Pearce,
GREENVILLE, X. C.
Next door to Old Brick Store.
Master Harvey Jones now delivers the
to our town patrons Wed-
mornings. He is not thoroughly
familiar with the route yet but does his
best to avoid making any mistakes or
omissions. Anyone failing to get their
paper can be supplied by reporting to the
Rifles had their regular semi-
monthly meeting drill on Friday.
Masters Jarvis Sugg and Ed Foley were
elected Markers for the company. The
company was out at the drill ground
when heavy storm came up and had
to seek refuge in the home of a neighbor.
About thirty-live were out.
Frank Wilson asks the attention of
Reflector readers to his advertisement
to-day. He has just opened an entirely
new stock has some pretty styles in
spring clothing and dress goods to show
you. He has had sufficient experience to
qualify him to make the best selections
which an examination of his stock will
prove.
Some of our people don't seem to
it that way, but the Reflector
man always appreciates being told of any
news or personal item. ought
to wish his home paper to be as interest-
as possible. Sometimes, too, you owe
a visitor in your home some courtesy in
this direction. Remember the
tor is your town's representative and
people away look to it what is going
on Greenville.
One of the best publications of the day
is Current published at Detroit,
Mich. It is a magazine, and
gives a complete record of all important
matters that occur during the quarter
previous to publication. Any one wish-
to keep thoroughly posted on all
leading topics should have Current His-
The price is cents a number or
a year. The Reflector Book Store
will order it
Query,
People sometimes look at some of
these miserable wood sidewalks along
street and do a bit of thinking.
More than once we heard this kind of
question asked If some one should get
hurt at night over these bad places,
would it be a cause for suit for damages,
and would the action come against the
town or against the owners of the proper-
adjoining the sidewalks Somebody
up in law might answer these questions,
while the property owners might wise
in fixing up these sidewalks.
Prime
Extra Prime
Fancy
Spanish
Tone
PEANUT QUOTATIONS.
steady.
JO MERCHANTS AND DEALERS
I will be at my in the Court
the Monday in each mouth
for the purpose of testing the weights
and measures used in this county.
M. MOORE,
Keeper.
NEW GOODS
-WE ARE
and invite you to call and examine before
you purchase.
O- T. ISA U Greenville, N. C
WILSON STOCK AT COST
CLEAR THE TRACK
New
Straight
Clean
Large
We are still making a specialty of
notions, hats
km
-o-
We have a first class assortment and sell close. Do not fall to
get our prices
THE
Racket Store
has and is con-
receiving
the best
cheapest stock
of Dry Goods,
CArs, Gents Fur
Goods,
Caps
Men and Boys Hats
from cents up.
Men Boys Shirts at up.
Men and Boys Suspenders up.
Men Shoos cents up.
Men Half Hose cents.
Ladies Fine Shoes cents.
Ladies Opera Slippers cents.
Ladies Dress Goods from cents
to per yard.
HAS
ever been offer-
ed in Greenville.
Read these stub-
born facts- Ex-
these
matchless prices
and think before
you spend your
hard earned
cash.
Ladies Hose cents.
Ladies Hemstitch
Webster's Unabridged Dictionary
for
A large Family Bible for
Standard Novels for cents.
25-cent No els for cents.
Quire of Paper and Envelopes
for cents.
Papers of Needles for
o o
o We carry a full line of Ladies and Gents Underwear o
o White Goods and Laces that can't be matched for the o
o money. A full line cf Ladies Dross Goods, the best o
o and cheapest ever offered in this market. Look in o
o our show windows and on our board for o
o prices that can't be found elsewhere. Look for our o
o sign, we are now tho store formerly occupied by o
o Brown Hooker. Call and see us and will do o
o good. o
o o
TH Store,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Ton bring us air and blue skies.
Under your magic influence nature
wakes a fresh beauty and productive-
People yield to your influence and
their pulses quicken. Everybody and
everything Is awake and the watchword
of tilt season is I have just
returned from the Northern markets and
am now opening a beautiful line of
Of Civil Cases Set for Trial at April
Term, 1893, of Pitt Superior Court.
WEEK.
Thursday 6th.
Germain Bernard vs Elizabeth Buck
ct
Friday
Hurst, Miller Co. vs J.
ct all vs Smith et
L. N. vs S, II Ty-
son.
State ex D. Worthington vs J. B.
Whitehurst.
Saturday 8th.
Joyner vs J. F, Hellen.
J C Cobb vs Augustus Phillips.
Allen Warren. vs
Cooper.
C. A. White vs Greenville
Store.
Samuel Cory vs Church Mills.
J. D. Murphy vs E. C. Blount.
A Card.
Having changed my location from
I offer my pro-
services to the people of the
town and surrounding section. Thank-
my friends and public generally
in around for their kind-
during my stay there, and services
whenever needed, I am
Respectfully,
DR. W. II. BAGWELL-
SECOND WEEK.
Monday
S. W. Travers Co vs R. J. Grimes
A Co.
Eliza James vs W. B. Roebuck.
Tuesday nth.
J. M. Lloyd vs R. R. R.
Oscar vs L. C. Latham
et
W. II. Cox vs J. B.
W. H. Cox vs B. F. Quinn,
W. II. Cox vs B. H.
W. H. Moore vs Louis N.
Wednesday 12th.
Samuel Cory vs Hunter
143-J. B. Taylor M.
I. A. Jones vs R. W. Stancill.
H. S. Congleton vs W. A W. R. R.
B. D. Nelson vs W. A W.
T. II. Barnhill vs W. A R. E.
J. R. vs W. w. R. R.
Thursday 13th.
Ill Henry Sheppard vs Shep-
H. F. Worthington.
Alfred Cannon vs W. A W. R. .
R. R. Fleming vs C. E. Bradley.
Aaron Woolen vs G. A.
Friday 14th.
Nelson Nichols vs J C A R J Cobb.
Oscar Hooker vs Nelson Nichols
et alt.
Sarah Cox vs J. B.
L. F. Elliott vs G. T. Tyson.
All cases not reached on the day set
for trial shall have precedence on the
following days in the order In
stand upon the Calendar.
are com-
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best
cal authorities and are
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion every-
where.
act gently
but promptly upon the liver.
Stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual
offensive breath and head
ache. One taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
may be
of nearest druggist
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-
tor's bilL
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and
Furnishing Goods,
which I shall offer to the public at a close margin. We do no blowing, our goods
talk for themselves. I will be glad to my old customers and friends.
CLOTHING CLOTHING
OUR SPRING SUITS are doing duty to-day. Grand, good ones they are.
They've got in quality, I desire to get for I am always
lug to do better. All the colors, nil the cuts, proper lengths, and nothing but a lit.
I am located in the store formerly occupied by Mr. W. II. Cox. Not one old
piece of goods in the store. Give trial I am sure I can please you.
FRANK WILSON,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
JACK WHITE
IS AGAIN
BEFORE YOU.
Bring me your
CHICKENS, EGGS,
TURKEYS, DUCKS,
GEESE, GUINEAS,
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by
Respectfully,
BROWN BROS.,
Depositors for American Bible Society
ESTABLISHED 1883.
--------WHOLESALE AND RETAIL--------
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Half Rolls Ragging.
Bundles New Arrow Ties.
Small Full Cream Cheese.
Tubs Choice Butter.
Tubs Boston Lard.
Boxes Tobacco, all grades,
Boxes Cakes and Crackers.
Barrels Stick Candy.
Kens New Corn
Barrel Gail Ax Snuff.
Barrels P. Snuff.
Barrels Railroad Mil . . .
Barrels Three Thistle
Car load Rib Side Meat
Car lo.-id Seed Oats.
Car load all
Kegs Powder.
Shot.
old Virginia Cheroots.
Full line Case everything
else kept in a first class grocery
-I
B-
t-
J u
a P. D
m u a
a f s
et
Wishing to thank my man
friends for their liberal patronage
for both Merchandise and differ
articles which I manufacture,
I take this method of
that while I thank you all I
am also striving hard to secure
advantages that I can give you
in order to further merit you
For other articles in our line
such as Church Pews, Cart
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
you some advantage.
A. G. COX,
Winterville, N. 0-
J. COBB, Pitt Co.,
C. U. COBB, Pitt Co., N. C
COBB BROS,
Bros. A
COTTON FACTORS,
-AND-
Commission Merchants,
STREET, NORFOLK, VA.
and Correspondence Solicited.
THE RELIABLE OF
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following go
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOOR, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and Plat
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Pref
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices. Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a -ill and guarantee satisfaction.
Si
And in fact everything that is raised in the country and I will pay just
as much in cash as can be had anywhere in Greenville. I will also
handle on a small commission anything that my customers may want
me to- Remember my headquarters is at the old Marcellus Moore
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient place in
town. Come to see me.
Tours to please,
JACK WHITE, Greenville, N. C
Salvation
For Liver
BROWN'S IRON
, LOOK HERE
punter
mm
THE GREATEST TIME AND
LABOR SAVING INVENTION
IS NOW BEFORE YOU.
has been in Eastern North Carolina for the last three years and without a
single exception has given entire satisfaction. Mess. Edwards and Move purchased
one of these machines last year and Mr. Edwards will testify that the machine was
the salvation of his tobacco crop. Besides many others arc willing to give any
testimonial in its favor. A few of its advantages over hand setting are
Plants grow It leaves the A more It saves many,
land in better shape form growth Is many aching backs
earlier. for cultivating.
and sore fingers.
served, hence the
worming and suck-
season is
shortened.
Call on me at tho Eastern Warehouse where I have some of the Planters on cs
ion and will take pleasure In showing ail of Its advantages,
Seeing is
And a good lamp
must be simple; when it is not simple it is
not good. Simple, Beautiful,
words mean much, but to see The Rochester
will impress the truth mere 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 and brighter than gas light,
softer than electric light and more cheerful than either.
Look for this If the
the style you want, send to us for our new
and we will send you a lamp safely by choice of
ties from the Largest Lamp Store in World.
CO., Place, Haw
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND
All Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOE A FIRE PROOF





TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
TOBACCO JOTTINGS ND LOCAL
NOTES.
For the success of the this
market more prize room is needed.
Give four more large prize
houses for the next season we
will let up on this until another
year.
Capt- Paces leaf tobacco the
Advance adds another
and interesting feature to
that already wide awake
sparkling journal. The Wilson
tobacco market owes its success to
the interesting efforts of Ed Pace,
and if Greenville had a few such
men we would soon have the big-
market in the State. Sup
pose you come down Capt. we will
give you more elbow room, better
background and hence more to
talk about.
Mr. Wesley T. Mangum one of
the pioneer buyers of the Green-
ville market, says that he is
great preparations for the
nest season on this market. Al-
though he has not been the
buyer here nor paid the high-
est prices for fancy tobaccos, yet
he desires credit for the straight
forward course that he has always
taken in defending and support-
the Greenville market. May
success crown your efforts with
large orders from large firms ere
another season comes.
One thing is noticeable and en-
Greenville has never
taken any fancy flights by
bag Her steps have
been slow and measured and the
solid basis on which it stands as-
her business men that there
is no danger of a collapse. What-
ever helps to up a town helps
each individual in that town and
if the people of Greenville would
only learn this lesson of political
economy it would only be a short
while before every business man
in town would have his shoulder
to the wheel marching on to
going to and o. AFRICAN pipes.
so it is with the of I
Greene and Lenoir and other j A long and slender stemmed
places who will under proper was brought from Central
management do most of the ; Africa some years ago from the
trading here. neighborhood of Albert
All of those things tend to build by the Stanley expedition, and
up a town and of course the more
business that is done here the
larger number of people are going
to be
That a brighter day is dawning
for the people of Greenville no in-
observer of the times will
dispute- That under ordinary cir-
Greenville with the
best natural advantages and
ground of any town the
State will eventually the lead-
city of Eastern North Carolina
we believe time will reveal before
many years- And now lets all
rally to the front and help build
up one another's interest and not
wait for one man to do all the
work. This writer is directly in-
in the tobacco industry
here, yet he wants to see every
other interest prosper from a sense
of pride in domestic enterprises
believing at the same time that
the success of others will tend to
his prosperity and to that end
what talent and energy he
will be directed.
STRONG
A BUSINESS VIEW OF
FUTURE.
There is no town within the
borders of North Carolina that has
a brighter prospect of future
than Greenville. Situated as
it is in the western part of the
eastern or tide-water belt renders
its climate delightful and healthy.
Its soft and genial atmosphere is
often compared to the climate of
Northern Italy and Eastern
whose balmy and sunny shores are
annual resorts of numbers of our
rich American tourists.
The rich alluvial lands by which
it is surrounded makes it one of
the finest agricultural and truck-
sections in the world. The
of soils with which nature
has so abundantly blessed this
section of our State presents a
advantage in the
of crops. Almost any pro-
duct that is grown throughout the
United States, tobacco, cotton,
corn, wheat, oats, peas, sweet and
potatoes and all kinds of
garden vegetables and fruits can
be successfully grown anywhere
and in any direction in a radius of
ten miles of Greenville.
For a number of years the only
means of transportation available
to the people of Greenville and
surrounding country was a line of
steamers that connected with Nor-
folk Va., but within the last four
years the Scotland Neck branch
of the W. W. R- R- has been
built and now it connects with all
points north and south and is
within twenty-four hours ride of
Baltimore, Philadelphia and New
York.
The North Carolina Experiment
Station is doing much for this sec-
of the State in the way of dis-
tributing grasses and
stock farming. Until a very few
years ago the farmers of this sec-
depended only on cotton as
their source of revenue, while now
they are becoming more
dent in the cultivation of tobacco,
truck, ac. and in the production of
most of their articles of home con-
such as meat, flour, corn
Another, and one of the most
important features in connection
with the future progress of Green-
ville is the fact that the tobacco
market that is being es-
here is bringing the
farmers and their trade from a
number of counties that formerly
Greenville has not been reaching.
For an instance there are a
of farmers who will this year
plant heavily of tobacco from near
in Craven county.
They all have been selling their
tobacco in Greenville. They com-
here and being impressed
with the market will of coarse con-
and this year will sell largely
on this market- Now if the mer-
chants here are men and
care anything about the success
trade of their town they will
establish a trade with these farm
era and hence do that much more
business that has formerly been
TOBACCO LIKED BY
SOLDIERS.
Sir Evelyn Wood in his report
on the recent military
at as summarized by
Captain John Lancet- says that
there was less smoking in the
ranks on the line of march than in
the previous year, with the result-
advantage that fewer men fell
out. He appears to be in favor of
regulating the quality as well as
the quantity of tobacco smoked
by the soldier. By far the larger
number of soldiers in all armies
smoke. During the Franco Ger-
man war one of the first things
the German soldiers sought was
tobacco. The loss of his pipe is
keenly felt as a real deprivation by
the military and civilian smoker
green- alike, and there is no gilt more
valued the inmate of a work-
house or lunatic asylum than to-
Without entering into the pros
and cons of the tobacco
it cannot be doubted that
the immoderate use of the strong
kind of tobacco which soldiers
affect is often very injurious to
the very young soldiers- It
them nervous and shaky, gives
rise to palpitation, and is a factor
in the production of the irritable
or so-called and
tends to impair the appetite and
digestion- It would be a great
point gained if soldiers could be
induced to smoke some of the
milder kinds of tobacco and we do
not see why these should not be
sold in canteens. The soldier
fortunately prefers the strongest,
because it is cheaper, inasmuch as
a small quantity produces an effect
that would only result from the
consumption of a much larger
quantity of any of the milder
kinds. On active service it would
be a good plan for the government
to supply the soldier with tobacco
of the latter sort, either at a free
issue or at a trifling charge-
was obtained from the dwarf tribes
inhabiting the and
forests, near the equator. To
make the pipe the little people
take mid rib of the banana leaf,
which is cellular, by pushing
a long, hard river reed through
the rib, they are enabled to get the
bore required for the pipe stem-
They plug the lower end with
clay, and rolling up a section of
banana leaf into a tiny
cut a in the stem and
insert it for bowl, the sap in the
green leaf preventing its
the tobacco bums. This
pipe recalls the bowl made from a
potato and the stem made out of
a piece of twig from which the
pith has been driven, which was
employed by many American sol-
during great war. An-
other curious pipe is made from a
shell which comes from New Gui-
While the pipes used in the in-
are more generally made of
bamboo, those smoked in the
neighborhood of the coast, and
especially in and the Solo-
man Islands, are made of shells
which are picked up on the sea-
shore. At present the principal
pipe used in the southern portion
of New Guinea and the adjacent
islands is the English clay, and .
pipe of this description is
ally acceptable as a part of the
payment for a day's labor in that
Y. News.
Electric
Bitters has gained rapidly in
favor, until now it
among medicinal tonics and aVerT-
t nothing
Its Use as a beverage or
Sr -m Liver
PREPARING LAND FOR TOBACCO.
Having put the land in nice
lay off the rows with a
shovel three feet three
inches apart, and follow drilling
along the furrow, a good
at the rate of some two hundred
and fifty to four hundred pounds
per acre, according to the natural
strength of the soil and the
of manure previously applied,
then follow with one-horse turning
plows, lapping four furrows on
the fertilized trench, and when
finished in this manner your lot is
ready to be planted when the beds
have been with hoes,
with two feet ten inches
apart to make points for setting
the plants. In the older portions
of the fine yellow tobacco country
the applications are becoming
heavier from year to year, some
planters using as much as six
pounds to the acre-
New ground, or old field, that
has grown up and been cut down
will require different preparation
from the old smooth land. But on
the former our best brights are
raised Any preparation, that will
put the soil in fine condition, clear
off roots, and trash, is all
that is required.
Experience teaches that if land
is cut down two or three years
to its being prepared for to-
it greatly facilitates the
preparation and helps its fertility.
Much of the vegetable material,
both in and upon the soil, rote,
the roots break easily and the
oil is altogether lighter and finer.
R. L.
HE THREW AWAY THE CIGAR.
she said softly, ,
looked trustingly into his eyes.
is it, he asked
tenderly.
you think, she
said slowly, yon had better
throw away that cigar
you object to smoke, pet
he asked.
no George, dear George j
not at she replied quickly.
I rather like the smell of a good
cigar,
your mother object to
gar smoke in the house
no; papa smokes here all the
time,
what, dearest V
you are so
and if you should forget to take
the cigar out of your mouth you
you a slight burn on
my cheek, you knew, would cause
The cigar went into the grate,
and a minute later there was
but a blush on a fair cheek to
indicate that George could take a
broad hint.
For Young Housewives.
Dry the tin dishes putting
A few drops of salad oil on
tar stains will thorn
Add a pinch of salt to of
to make them be.; up
Vinegar will remove th-i dis-
odor of kerosene, from
tinware.
Never wash raisins that are to
be used in sweet dishes. It will
the pudding or cake heavy.
To make brooms last longer
than they ordinarily do dip them
once a wees in boiling suds. This
toughens the strands.
Spirits of ammonia, if
applied with a sponge to fad I or
discolored spots in a carpet will
restore the color.
If ink is spatted on woodwork
it may be taken out by scouring
with sand and water and a little
ammonia; then rinse with soda
water.
Gossip. .
Miss Mabel tho sister of
the famous novelist, an
is perpetually on
the road, and thinks nothing of a
of thirty or forty miles.
At Battle Creek, Mich., there
are 1,201 women taxpayers.
Their property is assessed at
of which is personal
property. Their total tax amounts
to-over
One of the women to use her
privilege of voting for the Boston
School Board was Mrs. Catherine
Stearns, who was Maine
in 1800.
A Convertible Bedstead.
A model Paris workingman's
bedstead is made so that it can be
taken down and pat up again in
half a minute. By a com-
of springs, the bed can be
instantaneously surrounded with
curtains, wheeled in-
side, and the occupant can go
through his or her toilet without
being seen. By another spring tho
bed is turned into a canopy suited
for invalids, who have no need to
stir to perform the transformation.
Light Eyelashes.
To darken and increase the
growth of the eyelashes apply
melted cocoa butter nightly with a
fine hair pencil to the roots on the
upper eyelids. Darken them with
the black of cloves burnt in a
candle or on a hot or the
charcoal of almond A
pencil for the eyebrows will
color the lashes, and needs repeat-
only once a week in many
cases.
Reported A
Fillers
Smokers.
Cutters
Wrappers
Scraps
Green,
Common,
Good,
Fine,
f Common,
Fair,
Good,
Fine,
f Common,
Fair,
Good,
Fancy,
f Cop
Fair.
Good,
I Bright,
to
to
to
to
to .,
m to
to
to
to
to
to
to
to
to
A in need a friend indeed,
and not less than one million people
w a friend hi Dr.
King s New Discovery for Consumption.
Coughs, and you have never
used this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince yon that it has won-
powers in all diseases of
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle
is guaranteed to do all that is claimed or
money will be refunded. Trial bottles
store- Large
bottles and 61.00.
LADIES
Needing a tonic, or children who want
should take
It is core Malaria, Indication,
Liver and
WILSON
E. If. Pace, Reporter.
The breaks have been more or less
light the past week, owing to the con-
cold, wet weather, and which has
also retarded farming operations, while
most of our people have burnt and sow-
ed their plant N. Boyd
of has been with us past two
days. He predicts a great future for
Wilson in tobacco.
HENDERSON MARKET.
Reported by Owen Davis, Manager Davis
Warehouse.
MARKET QUOTATIONS.
Lugs or
Common to medium, to
Medium to good, to
Good to fine, to
Fillers or
Common to medium.
to
to
to
12,16 to
Medium to good,
Good to fine.
Cutters or Best
Common to Medium, to
Medium to good, 12,15 to
Good to fine, to
Wrappers or Best
Common to medium, to
Medium to good, to
Good to fine, to
Fine to fancy, to
Common to medium, to
Medium to good, . to IS
Good to flue, 12,15 to
Fine to fancy, to
ATTENTION FARMERS
Do you want a strictly Do yon want a Fertilizer that has been
high grade Fertilizer T j tested by your neighbor and found to be
superior to all others.
SO
Call on the undersigned and buy any of the following brands which
. are guaranteed strictly reliable-
i SPECIAL COMPOUND,
BONE,
PURE GERMAN f
Mr. F. Portland St., Boston,
Mats., gives it superlative praise. He
have used Salvation Oil for
neuralgia, and find it superior to any
I nave ever
PREMIUM,
I will sell these goods on terms to suit all purchasers-
G. M. TUCKER,
R. W. ROYSTER CO.
st
GREEN N.
Curious Pacts.
The fixed stars are and
each may have its own planetary
system.
The fixed stars are of all colors,
violet, blue, green and red
The strongest telescopes
the moon to an apparent distance
of miles.
To the naked eye stars are
visible; the host telescopes show
The tail of a comet is believed to
be matter similar to that contained
in the nebulae.
The planets Venus and Mars
most nearly resemble the earth in
climatic conditions.
The sun's volume is
times that of the earth, and
times greater than all the planets.
The spectroscope has shown
that the prominences on the sun
are outbursts of glowing hydro-
gen.
------t v. to
The glowing crop in Cuba seems
to be a fair to good
sections not as good as in others,
but in the it promises
some fine leaf.
WASTED
to represent MICHIGAN
MUTUAL INSURANCE CO
and AMERICAN ACCIDENT CO. To
whom a good contract will be given
For terms, etc.,
. J.
District Agent for Eastern N C.
SNOW HILL, N. C.
MEW
Having completed my store at
Pitt comity, N. C, I am opening
a stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
and cordially invite the to Bail
examine my
DRY GOODS, SHOES, NOTIONS,
GROCERIES, Ac, Ac.
Our mono Is Goods at
Prices for Cash.
Examine my stock before buying
elsewhere. II the goods and prices do
suit we charge nothing
produce taken in exchange
goods. R.
PATENTS
obtained, and all business in the If. S
Patent office or in the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
are opposite the U. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents n less time than those
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless ob-
Patent.
refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to
of the U. S. Patent Office.
advise terms and reference to
actual clients in your own State, or
address, C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, C
TO THE PUBLIC.
-If you want to save
then purchase of a PIANO and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
In the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW N. C.
General Agent for North Carolina,
who is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers, as follows- HIGH
GRADE PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship and
and endorsed by nearly nil the
musical journals in the United Spates.
Made by Paul G. who is at this
time one of the best mechanics and in-
of the day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade Piano-
Also the EVANS UP.
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by
Mm for the past six years in the eastern
part of this State and up to this time
given entire The Upright
will be sold at from
in Rosewood, Oak
Walnut or Mahogany cases.
Also the CROWN PARLOR ORGAN
from to in solid or Oak
Ten years experience in the music
business has enabled him to handle
nothing hut standard goods and he doc
not hesitate to say that he can sell an
musical instrument about per cent
cheaper than other are pow offer
Refer to all banks In Eastern Carolina.
New Barber Shop.
I take this to
thanks to my many customers who have
given me their liberal support in the past
have opened a new shop in the old Club
House and would respectfully solicit a
of my former patronage.
I will assure all that they shall receive
every attention besides getting the
shave and hair cut in town. All ask is
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All
of the latest improvements in the
art will be in use In my shop.
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK
for the Cure of all Skin Diseases
This has been in use over
fifty years, and wherever know has
been in steady demand. It has been en-
by the leading physicians all over
be country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long standing the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
a its efficacy, as but little has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box free. The
discount to Druggist. AH Cash
promptly attended to. Address all or-
and communications to
T. F.
Sole M mm far i ii in id Proprietor.
Greenville, N. C
E,
O. L. JOYNER, Owner Prop.
To my friends and customers who have so liberally
bestowed their 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 your visits with
heavy loads of the yellow weed and I will
tee to get you just as much money as 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
will take her stand among the foremost of North
Carolina Tobacco markets.
Tours to serve,
RUSSIAN GUT
Violin Strings.
and Followers But
JOHN F SON'S
GENUINE TBS GENUINE
Russian Violin Strings
No Dealer or Musician need be bothered by poor if he
desires to bay Good Ones.
JOHN F. SON,
Ail your Dealer for them f you cannot get than report to m
lo Band Sold at Retail,
-Manufacturer of-
Y-4
is well equipped with the Dot
M, work We keep uP the time, and
Best material used all work. All styles of are you can from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King
liar.,. n Whip which we
ell at the rates. special attention given to repairing.
T. X.
Greenville. N C.
Do You Write
THEN
YOU MUST
HAVE TAPER. PENS,
ENVELOPES. PENCILS, INK-
-------SEE WHAT THE-------
Reflector V Book
CAN OFFER YOU IN THESE-
Store
Legal Cap Paper to cents a quire.
Fools Cap Per 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 to cents a
Pure Linen Note Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire.
Nice Square Envelopes to match the Paper.
Fine Tablets at all prices.
THESE ARE NO THIN, CHEAP
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD
INK but in Strictly FIRST-CLASS.
Tablets, Slates,
JUST
SEE WHAT
WE HAVE FOR
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN.
Pencil Tablets, and
Fools Cap sizes only cents.
You pay cents for these
same tablets elsewhere.
Slates cents to cents.
Slate Pencils doz.
Fancy Colored Crayons
per box.
Spencerian Pens cents per
dozen-
Fine Assorted Pens cents
per dozen-
Plain Load
per
cents
Rubber Tipped Load Pencils
cents per dozen.
Pen Holders cents per doz.
And lots of other things just
as cheap-
lib
O. L. JOYNER,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Do You Read
Then you want the best handle the loading
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews,
New Peterson, etc., at retail prices Besides carry a line of
paper covered Novels at only cents each, and nicely bound
at These embrace books by the best writer,
a list too large to mention- Any book wanted that is not on hand
will be ordered.
SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN TO ALL THE LEADING MAGAZINES.
References and type famished on application.


Title
Eastern reflector, 29 March 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
March 29, 1893
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17591
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

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

Contact Digital Collections

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


Comment on This Item

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


*
*
*
Comment Policy