Eastern reflector, 14 June 1893






Believes
And takes his
Ono Dollar gets
This Office for Job Printing
STATE NEWS.
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
A horse sold at Stokes court for
cents.
is a
phone exchange.
There are now veterans in
the Soldier's Home.
The mayor of Fayetteville gets
a salary of per annum.
Grasshoppers are destroying
the crops in Sampson county.
The camp ground near More-
head City have been laid off to
accommodate men-
The Salisbury Herald
that a man in Rowan county was
married last week to his stop-
mother.
The National Bank, of
Raleigh, sent to the Secretary of
the Treasury Monday in
coin-
Ten months ago the wife of
George Smith, of Mecklenburg
county, gave birth to twins and
last week she gave birth to
triplets.
The Free Press mentions that
the colored people of
have organized a hook and lad-
company with about fifty
members.
Sterling aged and
totally blind, of was
married at Raleigh Thursday to
Miss the of
Bishop Lyman.
Mr. George V. Strong-- a young
hardware merchant who recently
settled at Rocky Mount commit-
suicide by himself
in the breast with a pistol, at that
place, last Monday.
A young
and lively alligator some six or
seven foot was an attraction
at the market wharf yesterday.
He was caught by Mr. All Toll-
man while fishing in Neuse river
with a drag-net about fifteen
Raleigh Carolinian Thomas
M. Argo, Esq., a widely known
Raleigh lawyer, was Monday
night quietly married to Miss
Sallie Spear, also of this city.
There is a bit of romance about
the affair. At the last term of
court the bride, then Mrs. Perry,
obtained a divorced, and Mr.
Argo was her counsel.
Raleigh News and
of our papers are speaking
of two in Burke county
one named Worry and the other
Joy. That reminds us of the two
in Moore county, not
far apart, one called Noise and
the other Quiet In Moore county
also, there are Tempting, Pros-
and Pocket.
Beaufort Herald A black
weighing between 1,800 and
pounds, was caught near
Cape Lookout last week. It took
men to it oat of the water,
and to turn it over on its back
after landing. Old fishermen tell
us that turtles larger than this
been caught off this shore.
This species is not fit to eat. This
one was fried to get the oil,
which is very valuable.
of New Hope township tells
the Landmark of a conjuring case
in his neighborhood. He says a
neighbor of his had a hop that
was curiously affected and it was
asserted that two old ladies in the
neighborhood had put a
on it The owner of the hog, be-
it to be worthless, gave it
to our informant and he says ha
carried it a white oak
back and the
necessary signs over it and now
the hog is all right
In view of what Hood's Sarsaparilla
ha done for others, it not reasonable
to that it will also be of
to you.
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
Reaches the.
Patron
By advertising in an
Raper.
Therefore ho uses
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY JUNE 1893.
NO.
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
is a scientific-
ally prepared Liniment, every
of recognized and in
constant use by the medical pro-
These ingredients are com-
in a hitherto unknown
WILL DO all that is claimed for
It AND MORE It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to FREE, con-
valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
at price
CO.,
OLD BY AU.
OR. a. T. WINSTON'S ABLE AD-
DRESS.
Recently Delivered Before the
Club New Win-
Think That the Problem is
Not Social Nor Bat In-
the North the Ne-
Has All the Social
He Can Get, But He
Cannot Get
South's Kindly Fee-
for the Negro.
In the address recently deliver-
ed before the Club of New
York, President of the
University of North Carolina, dis-
cussed the race problem in the
South, essentially, as
The race problem cannot be
understood without what
intellectual, moral and material
progress the made
since emancipation and to what
extent this progress has affected
the social, political and industrial
relations between the two races.
Intellectually the has
made great progress, mainly
through education. In North
Carolina he enjoys better
ties for education the mass
of He has tho same op-
in public schools, and
his facilities for higher education
are beyond the roach of white
people of the same poverty. Tho
State supports for his benefit
public schools, eight nor-
schools and a school for She
deaf, dumb and blind- Northern
philanthropy has given him ten
colleges and seminaries for high-
education, including a
cal college, a law school and
theological schools. The
race has learned to read and write-
in one generation it has
a supply of teachers and
preachers, and it is now rapidly
educating its own lawyers and
The mass of the race,
however, is less zealous for
cation it was or even
ten years ago ; and the attend-
on public school is
ally decreasing. The has
learned that education is not es-
to freedom nor has it aid-
ed him materially as much as he
expected. Tho finer and remoter
influences of education do not
appeal to him as to the white
race. It is possible that his zeal
for education will diminish as
rapidly in the next generation as
it sprang up in this. The dull
edge of his intellect has been
easily sharpened on the school-
master's grind-stone, but the
quality of the has not been
changed, and the edge may
turned or blunted as quickly as it
was formed.
The moral progress of the race
is very discouraging. Both the
average white man and the aver-
age over forty years old in
the South will tell you that the
younger generation of
are worse morally than they were
in slavery. This is not true of all.
There is gradually forming among
them a highest class who respect
themselves, and who honestly de-
sire to elevate their race. This
class includes the best educated
of the younger generation and
the most thrifty and industrious
of the older generation. This
class, however, is small, not ex-
five per cent, of the pop-
and its moral influence on
the mass of the amounts
to very little. The great mass of
the race is probably in the same
moral status as during slavery.
The restraints of slavery have
been removed, and passions
repressed by fear are not yet
controlled by character. The
younger generation of men are
as a rule no more industrious and
reliable than the older, while tho
women are generally quite as
lewd.
the penitentiary convicts in the
United States, -although he con-
only twelve per cent, of
tho population. In the North At
States he is five times as
criminal as the white man ; in the
South Atlantic States one and a
half times ; in the South Central
one and a half; in the Western
ten times. It is a striking fact
the is more criminal
in the Northern States, where he
has long enjoyed freedom than in
the Southern States, where he
is still greatly restrained by fear
of the white race. The moral
status of the race is about this
the best class, being not under
ten per cent, has made decided
retrogression ; the great mass is
in the same condition as during
slavery.
The material condition of the
race is similar to the moral- The
great mass is essentially in the
same condition as before. Those
who had bad masters are
better off; those who had
good masters are possibly worse
off. The highest class is very
much improved, and enjoys all
tho comforts of life in a great do-
The lowest class is much
worse It includes not only
the vicious and the idle, but also
the weak minded, the afflicted,
the uncared for young, and the
old. Under slavery these were
all cared for by tho master, and
shared equally in the common
earnings. Now they are driven
to the wall by competition, not
only with the whites, but also
with the strong of their own race.
The result is a degree of suffering
and a death rate unknown to
slavery. The rate of mortality in
this class will explain the large
relative decrease of the
population in the South from 1880
to 1890.
Tho between the two
is not what it was is in slavery-
There is a chasm between
them that seems to be growing
wider. No longer do white and
black children play and eat to-
No longer does the
white lady gather children of both
races about her knee to hear the
story of the gospel- The white
boy and the boy no longer
hunt and swim and frolic
The colored servant no long-
sleeps by the bedside of her.
mistress, within easy touch of her
hand- No longer do family
share family secrets, and
rejoice or weep over family for-
tunes- The bond is broken that
bound the races together- The
has passed out from the
semi-social supervision of his
master, and no desires or
the aid of the white race
in his children from
vice and immorality.
The struggle over the as
a political factor began in the
convention that framed the Fed-
constitution, and has con-
since with a violence and
a power that have shaken the
foundations of our government,
and threaten to destroy its
Thus far the has
been merely the object of this
contention, while the Northern
and Southern white man have
fought over his political mastery.
The constitution recognized the
as equal to throe fifths of a
white man politically. He was
established as a political
weapon in the of South,
although his vote was not cast.
This political vassalage lasted j by we're growing
eighty years. It was based upon i old, and don't care for so much
j slavery, and it fell with slavery, j variety in our In the pure
i With emancipation the be unselfishness of his soul he always
came a weapon in the hands of j speaks of and as if it
tho North, and was counted a full j naturally followed that because
; man politically. His vote was he is getting antiquated his wife
I now cast but his qualifications as must keep pace with him in his
understood voter, dependent upon decline. Men all too often make
willing to surrender the
and manhood which the
English race has wrought out
through centuries of struggle and
suffering. It is willing, however,
to give the every
for development, to educate
him, to protect him the la -s.
and to give him generous and
kindly help.
It is giving him this help to-day,
and it affords the best field on
earth for development
The himself is recognizing
this fact, and leaders in the
South, of intelligence, character
and education do not differ from
white leaders in their views of
what is for the development
of their race. There is abundant
room for Northern philanthropy,
but the of the
must be accomplished by their
own efforts under the guidance
of their own leaders, assisted by
Southern white men, who
their virtues and sympathize
with their vices.
The First
Colony of the
Reach Burke.
an-
To Keep a Wife Young.
A certain amount of social life
is absolutely essential to us
to the old as well as the young,
writes Edward W. in a
on man's inability to
see things as others see them, in
tho May Home Journal.
A woman never grows so old that
she to enjoy the company
of others, and generally the older
she grows the more she enjoys it.
It is always a pity to see a man
fall into a state which he explains
and character,
than before.
The ballot was given him by
philanthropists for the purpose
of protection and education ; by
their wives too old. It is a greater
credit to a man to keep his wife
young than to make her grow old.
His actions and his habits
influence those of his wife.
I to see a man proud
wife because she keeps
races are
by both white black in the I intellect
South, and thoroughly were not greater
stood by both blacks and white
in the North- Socially there is
no relation between them- The
black do not expect it, and the politicians for perpetuating their Let him keep in touch with tho
whites do not think of it for power- Both purposes have fail-j world, and both he his wife
moment. Unquestionably The is slowly losing I will be tho bettor and younger
is deep at the bot-1 interest in politics as in
tom of the social chasm. He will probably retire
is taken for granted by gradually politics, either
both races. Intermarriage is j voluntarily or by compulsion of
prohibited by law. It is not de-; educational or other
sired by either race. Even
understands that he would f The real struggle of the
get the worst of the in at present is not for social equal
marrying the sort of white woman nor for political power,
for industrial opportunity- The
difference between the races is so
that any other conflict
between them is simply
with less reason. Wherever the The long struggle between j pleasure from tho life of good
exists in large numbers in j the North a. id the South was in woman, a true wife, or a
the North, he is socially separated-i the last analysis a struggle be j mother. The best home a man
He has his own churches, his own tween white labor and j can give a woman becomes
for industrial supremacy and for j as woman I know expresses
who would him. The North
complains of Southern prejudice
against the ; but the North
is guilty of the same offense, and
for it-
of his
young.
Old age is beautiful and has its
advantages, but a man makes a
great mistake when he rushes a
woman unnecessarily toward it.
And he does it most perfectly
when he deprives of those en-
which every man should
give his wife- No economy is so
hollow, and so misguided as that
which seeks to withhold one
quarter for residence. He has a
legal right to go to white church- the possession of the soil
of
Besides the highest class and
the great mass of there
is a lowest class, which did not
exist in slavery. It is made up
of drunkards, gamblers, loafers,
vagabonds, petty thieves,
prostitutes and others who
lives by vice instead of labor.
This class flourishes mainly in
villages and cities. It constitutes
about ten per cent- of the
and is steadily increasing
by recruits from the younger gen-
Its moral condition m
almost brutal, and is worse than
any thing known to slavery.
The criminal propensities of
the race are very marked. Ac-
cording to the census of 1890 the
furnished per cent. of
es, and to live in white quarters,
but he does not go there as a mat-
of fact, and he is kept away
by social prejudice, which is
stronger than law
In New York city he may ride
in the street cars, but he cannot
earn a dollar by driving one ; he
may sit in the but he can-
not law a brick or drive a nail; he
may take the sidewalk, but he
cannot get a contract to pave it;
he may be the subject of humane
editorials in the city papers, but
he cannot Bet a stick of type ; he
may go to school with the whites,
but he cannot teach them; he
may sit with the whites in church,
but he be their pastor ; he
may spend his money at Macy's
but he cannot stand behind the
counter; he may study in
College, but he cannot teach
there; he may cast his ballot, but
be cannot get an office; he has
the legal right to marry white
women, but no white woman will
marry him ; he has all the social
privileges that he can get, but be
cannot get any. Everywhere in
the United States he is branded
as a The North says to
him are my and then
excludes him practically from so-
intercourse, from political
power, and from industrial
The South has kindlier
feeling to wad the to
day than the eve tad, o
of- m
who this
fueling by representing the
as saying to the
slave, and bless while
the North free, and
The kindly feel-
between Che however,
this
continent. No sooner was tho
constitution adopted than the
North and the South both started
West The North was mounted
on the back of a steam engine,
the South on the back of the
The result shows that
the white man plus the is
unequal industrially to the white
man plus the steam engine. Tho
is now contending with the
white laborer both North and
South. This contest must be set-
by his adaptability to
conditions based upon vital
power. The competition in most
of the States is already settled.
In the whole country the
has diminished from one-fifth of
the population in 1790 to one
eighth in He is less than
two per cent, of the
in twenty-four States and
Territories i less than ten per
cent- in thirty-four over ten in
no Northern State; over two per
cent in only three States that
voted for Harrison- Competition
in the border States is growing
more intense every year. The re-
is a steady diminution of
population relative to white-
From 1880 to 1890 the white rate
of increase in North Carolina was
three times as groat as the black,
in Virginia ten, in Tennessee two
and a half, in Missouri four, in
Maryland six, in Kentucky thirty.
Freedom with its
and
or
helped the vitality of tho
Hie vital and industrial powers
are now in test. If he wins this
fight he will then develop
and intellect, and enter upon
a political and social struggle.
In this contest the South is
it, she is asked to live in it
days of every The Good
Lord knows that woman's life in
this world is hard enough. She
travels a path of endurance and
Buffering, to which man, he
ever so heavily afflicted is an en-
tire stranger.
It was given to man to make
that path as pleasant, as easy, and
as bright as possible- Every
that a man spends for the
happiness of the woman of his
house will come back to him in
double, yes, in four-fold measure.
A Little Girl's in Light-
house.
Mr- and Mrs. Trescott are keep,
of the Lighthouse at Sand
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a
daughter, lout old.
she was taken down with Measles, fol-
lowed with a dreadful cough and turn-
into a fever. Doctors home and
at Detroit treated her, hut in vain, she
grew rapidly, she was n
mere of Then she
tried Dr. King's New Discovery and
after the use of two and a half bottles,
was completely cured. They say Dr.
King's New Discovery is worth its
weight in gold, yet yon may get a trial
bottle free at John L. Woolen V
We suggest to all the good
who are spending so much
time in dangerous social
and great moral
that they pause
in the midst of their
occupations and snatch an
opportunity to say their prayers-
For it must not be forgotten that
it is possible for a man to become
so busy in setting the universe
right as to forget his own spiritual
needs and grow oblivions to his
own Advocate.
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
cures Dyspepsia, In-
digestion A Debility .
Some months ago it was
that the
Church, which has its home in the
Alps, contemplated founding a
colony in North Carolina- Later it
was announced that an agent of
the Church had bought to
acres of land in Co.
Monday last tho first of the colony
passed up the Western North Car-
Railroad and took posses-
of its new home- The colony
Forty-three came
over but four men got lost in
New York. These people are in
charge of an English speaking
preacher of their own
they themselves speak French.
The land company from which
the property on which they have
settled was bought, had houses
built for them, gardens planted
and cows ready for their when
they according to the
terms of the contract. Among
tho new arrivals are three
and four
others are farmers, vineyard-keep
etc. These people are farm-
grape-growers and weavers.
Those who have just arrived are
a test they got along
well and like tho country, some
will follow, and tho next
will be This is a
Church movement, made under
tho direction of the Synod of the
Church, which is Cal-
and thus akin to the Pres-
Church. A part of the
property bought for these
grants ties in the thermal belt and
is in finest grape and fruit
growing section of They
are thrifty, frugal and
and it is hoped that the success
and contentment of those who
have come to spy out tho land
will such that all of their co-
religionists will follow them.
They are over-peopled at home
hence
Landmark.
The Black Mole.
A in great trouble
Ir. Prather yesterday,
stating that a mole on the back
of his neck was paining him and
asked if he could remove it. The
doctor examined it and told him
that he could do so and without
any pain. The was fearful
of bleeding to death and caution-
ed the doctor that if ho killed him
he would come back to see him
give him no rest. He was assured
of speedy relief from suffering, he
said go ahead. Dr. Prather got out
his and the shook all
over. The doctor took a firm hold
on the mole and giving it a quick
jerk threw a big dog tick on the
ground which started to crawl off
but was killed- The doctor know
what it was all the
Record.
This Office for Job printing
. Household
Tho Times quotes
a prominent of that
section as made a
mistake by going into politics, but
we were led astray by false teach-
by demagogues, and now
are going to begin again to
tho old alliance
he-
said, mistakes, and after
all, tho alliance has been m
sinned against
S. II. Hew was
troubled with Neuralgia and
bis Stomach disordered, bin
was affected
appetite fell away, and he was terribly
reduced in flesh Three
bottles of Electric Hitters cured
Edward Shepherd, III.,
had a running sore on bis log of
standing. Used three bottles of
Electric Hitlers and seven boxes of
Salve, and his leg i
sound and well. John Speaker. Catawba,
religious, O. bail live large Fever sores on hi-1,
doctors said be was Incurable. Ono bot-
one box
Salve cured him entirely. So
at Drag Store.
Moral, Intellectual, and
Material Pro-
We regard the wonderful
progress of the present period in
every department of human de-
as of itself, an ample
and sufficient proof to our mind,
that the time of times,
by and others bib
students, is not in the neat-
and honest
and sincere they may in their
prophetic tho great
work of the Omnipotent
but yet in the infancy of its do.
Electricity, tho great
material lever the business of
the world, is in tho pudding
time of its infinite possibilities
and is advancing with the steady
step that characterizes all the
great works of nature and
Astronomy, that great science I
which brings us nearer to the
Deity and trenches upon tho
domain of the Infinite, is in a for- ;
of development. All nature,
all art, every industry, every in
every enterprise,
with a new vitality, and upon
that chart is written for man
youth of the plainer words
than tho prophecies which to
to learned and inquisitive minds
is the language of the dissolution
of the world and all that therein
is.
To the Hands Soft.
A ammonia or borax in tho
water just hike will
the skin clean and soft. A little
oatmeal mixed with tho water Will
whiten tho hands.
Many people use on
hands when go to bod,
wearing gloves to keep tho
ding from but
skins hard and
red. people should their
with dry and wear
gloves In bed.
preparation for tho
hands at night is white of egg,
with a grain of dissolved in
it.
toilet is merely
of egg, barley, and
honey.
They sty it by the
Romans in olden times. Anyway,
it is a first thing; but it is
mean, sticky stuff to use, and docs
not do tho work any bettor than
oatmeal. The roughest and hard-
est hands can be made soft and
in a month's time by doc-
them at bedtime.
will remove stains from
tho hands. Manicures acids
in tho shop, but tho lemon is quite
art. as good, and isn't poisonous, while
tho acids are. You should have a
nail brush, of course.
A Home Without a Newspaper.
What is home without a news-
paper t A home without a news-
paper is no home at all. It is a
kind of dreary
of bedbugs and fleas, where the
inhabitants live in blissful
of what the world is doing.
It is inhabited by a class who do
not know who is president, or
what he is president
never find out that a thing has
happened until long after every
one else has forgotten it. The
children grow up in rags and dirt
while tho generally finds
consolation in darning socks,
hugging a pipe loaded with long,
green tobacco, and the man gen-
lives because he can't die
and he is too lazy to kill himself.
He goes out on election days,
and does not know ho is
fat, bat just tho ticket
the great-grand-
grandfather voted
Herald.
an
A Post Office
Letter boxes have been attached
to the street cars in
England, and letters can posted
in boxes as tho cars
tho suburbs, the boxes being
emptied by tho post office
on the arrival of the car at or near the
central post on each trip. If
a person stops the car especially for
the purpose of mailing a letter a
penny collected by the conductor
and deposited in the fare box. This
doubles of sending the letter,
but the advantage of an immediate
special delivery is secured, and let-
greatly expedited by the
scheme. Tho scheme is yet an ex-
but it is largely approved.
Modern Woman.
When the modern woman comes
into a crowded railway station
comes with a straightforward,
resolute, unassuming air, like a
man. She knows exactly what
wants; she is not flurried;
does not need to go about nervous-
asking questions of stupid men.
has her watch and her time-
table and takes place
and her rights. Only one thing
she has not learned, and that is
not to break into the head of a line
waiting tho ticket-office or tho
window.
Regular Windfall.
Fond what
have you in your apron
Little
Such good Dotty Simpson's
cat had six kittens, and her
would not let her
hut so gave mo tho
five.
The In world for
Sores, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped
Chilblains, Coins, and all
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It Is guaranteed to
perfect satisfaction, or money
Price cents box. For talc
Drug Store.
Cures suit
ever,
Ma c tn nil, t be-
when Impaired He
iii ; ,
a If
-e
BLOOD CO., Co.
tote
Notice.
ire to announce to my friends and
public generally that I have opened
Office for myself just across
my residence and on the old Dr.
lot where I can be found at
time.
FRANK W. BROWN. M. D.
C.
L. Fleming. Andrew
AW.
Greenville, N. O.
Prompt to business. Office
Tucker Murphy's old stand.
ALEX. BLOW
BLOW,
GREENVILLE.
. Practice in all the Courts.
A.
TYSON,
B. F. SOU
pt attention given to collections
L C LATHAM.
HARRY
SKINNER,
GREENVILLE. N. C.
JAMES,
F.
G E E X V L L E, NO.
Practice In all Collections
GENERAL
AND DEALERS IN
fro, Eggs,
Oysters, Fish, Caviar and
All Country Products,
Woe. ft Dock, Norfolk, Va
Reference Sou ft Co., Bankers
TAR RIVER SERVICE
leave Washington for Green-
ville and touching at all land-
Tar Rivet Monday,
Friday at c A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro at A M.
Thursdays and Saturdays
Greenville A. M. same days.
These departures are subject age of
wall r on Tar River.
i at Washington with steam-
of The Norfolk. and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their good
via Dominion
HOW York. from
Norfolk A
Steamboat from
more. Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington N. O
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
N C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STORE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will Mini
their interest our prices before
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA, Ac.
at Lowest Market Prick.
TOBACCO SNUFF
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com-
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices
the times. Out goods are all bought and
sold for C therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close
Respectfully,
it. SCHULTZ.
N Q





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Wat mi
WEDNESDAY. JUNE 14th, 1893.
roil at Greenville,
if. C, as second-class mail matter.
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICK OF
The Is per
Advertising Hates.- One
one year, one-half column one year
one-quarter column one
Transient inch
one week, ; two weeks. ; one
mouth Two Inches one week, 1.50,
two weeks, one month,
Advertisements Inserted In Local
Column as reading items. cents per
line for each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad-
and Notices
and Trustees Sides Polly Dad 2-00, John Ham 1.50.
MEETING.
Greenville, N. C, June
The Board of Commissioners
for Pitt county met this day.
Present G- Dawson, chairman, 8-
A- Gainer, T. E. Keel,
Fleming and Jesse L- Smith.
The following orders for
pets were
Winnifred Taylor Martha
Nelson 2.00, Margret Bryant 3-00,
H. D. Smith 2.00, Lydia Bryan
2.00. Jacob 1-50, Nan-
Moore Susan Norris 1.50,
Susan Briley 2-50, Smith
1.50, Patsy 2-00, Henry
Harris 2-50, Emily Edwards 3-00,
Benjamin Crawford 1-50, Polly
Adams 2-20, Smith 1-50,
Easter Vines 1.50, Kenneth Hen-
2-00, Eliza Edwards 1-50.
Carlos Gorham 2.00, J- H-
2.00, Henry 2.00, Sam and
Amy Cherry 4-00, Fanny Tucker
1.50, J. O. Proctor 6.00. Alex-
Harris 12.00, Alice Corbitt
Jordan and Nettie Andrews 3.00,
Summons to etc., will
be charged for at legal rates and must
SE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any space not d
for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Copy Advertisements and
all changes of be
landed in by o'clock on Tuesday
in order to receive prompt- in
the day following.
President Cleveland has
pointed Charles W. Dayton, post-
master at New York. Dayton is
a well-known lawyer and is prom-
in politics. He was not an
applicant for the and
was much surprised at his appoint-
He is a Tammany man
has fought the methods of
that organization.
However much some may be
disposed to complain of the speed
with which President Cleveland
is making appointments real-
such complaint is
there is no occasion to doubt the
wisdom of his selections in those
he has named to hold responsible
positions- The latest for
North Carolina was the appoint-
last week of Col- Wm. H- S-
Burgwyn. of Henderson, to be a
National Bank Examiner, his
embracing this and
Virginia. Search the two States
go elsewhere, as to that
and a more capable man for
this position could not be found.
He has hart large experience with
banks and has a thorough
edge of banking, and besides is a
high-toned, intelligent gentle-
man-
One of the most distressing ac-
that has happened in the
United States for years occurred
in Washington last Friday. The
old Ford there was
chased by the Government after
the assassination of President
Lincoln in it- For years it has
been considered unsafe and had
been condemned by but
Still it was being used by the Gov-
as one of the Pension
buildings. Last Friday morning
about o'clock a crash was
and it was soon known that
the building had collapsed- The
third floor went down first carry-
the second with it. There
were in the building at the time
something over five hundred per-
sons. Twenty-two were killed
and more than fifty injured. The
news soon spread through the
city and hundreds rushed to the
scene- Never were witnessed
more heart-rending scenes. Moth
era, fathers, brothers, and sis-
were bewailing lost ones,
and many were anxiously en-
quiring after loved All
the physicians and hospitals in
the city were brought into
and did valiant service in
relieving as much as possible the
untold suffering that was being
realized.
A jury has
a coroner's inquest will be held
to see where the blame lies. The
Government will doubtless be
held responsible for the
No such building should
be used for to work in
anywhere.
JOHNSON'S MILLS ITEMS.
Hon. G. B- King delivered an
admirable address at the close of
Miss school yesterday.
It is the opinion of many down
here that he is the silver-tongued
orator of Pitt county-
Misses Taylor of Kinston,
Jennie Gray Hodges of Washing-
ton, Sallie Dixon and Clara Fields
of LaG range, are visiting
and friends in this vicinity.
The crops are all fine in this
section except the potato crop
which is cut off at least one-third
from last year. The good prices,
however, cause broad smiles
upon the faces of our potato
growers-
Oar tax lister went to meet his
first appointment last Tuesday
but decided after he got there
that another day would be better
and posted a notice that he
be back June 13th,
years hence. We hope it
will be that long before another
is appointed by a Demo-
Board of Commissioners.
A. F. Pittman, late Populist can-
for Register of Deeds, is
assisting the list taker-
Scribbler.
We hope Scribbler will come to
see with more
The following orders for gen-
county purposes were issued
D H Moore 1.12, Earnest Car-
1.15, W H Whichard B
S Sheppard Ned Spell
Reuben Clark Sherman Fore
man 1.00, F G Dupree 1.67, John
Nobles J O Proctor D S
Spain H P Thigpen 9-03,
Richard Harris 2-30, Moore and
Lassiter 1.78, B P Harding 3-90,
N R Turner W S Manning
Robert Johnson 10-98, Abram
Venerable 1.00, C 30-00,
Edwards Dr.
F C James 5-50, W T Smith 198-37,
D C Moore and J S Keel
Joel A Ward Andrew Rob-
1550, C P Gaskins 3.52, M
G 6.64, James Long 14.00,
T A Thigpen Elias James
1.00, M O Gardner 3.00, J D Cox
and J R Forbes J D Cox
3.00, J S Higgs 1.75, Leonidas
Fleming W F Harrington
10.09, R W King 85-50, R W
King 1608, T E Keel 7-40, Jesse
L Smith 2.80, C Dawson 3.80, S
A Gainer 3-60, The Pitt County
Rifles H H Harding 1830,
Western Union Telegraph Co.,
9-75.
For and Swift Creek
Stock Law
W F 9.00, John White
2-50, L B Cox 3-55. Joseph
17-71-
The Board then adjourned to
the court room to hold a joint
meeting with the Justices,
proceedings of the joint meeting
were published last and
the joint meeting having com-
its work the Board ad-
and the Commissioners
returned to their room-
F. G- James appeared before
the Board in behalf of the Pitt
County Rifles and asked an
to help them defray
their expenses, and after
the Board allowed them
W- H- Harris, of
J. W. Hudson, of ; J. S-
Smith, of John Rogers,
of Bethel, were exempted
from payment of poll tax for 1893-
W- K. then appeared
before the Board in regard to the
amount charged against him for
hire of Langley and it appear
to the Board that the said
Langley remained in jail a part
of the time for which the said
stands charged and
that he had payed for all labor
and time that tho said Lang-
had worked for him it was or-
that he be released from
the payment of the amount
ed against him.
John Ham was suspended from
the pauper's list.
Ordered by the Board that after
this date all jurors and witnesses
attending court shall receive the
sum of five cents per mile of
el going to and returning from
court, and that the clerk of this
Board furnish the clerk of the
Superior Court with a copy of
this order.
Ordered that the Board visit
the Home of the Aged and In-
firm on Saturday tho 17th day of
June-
A petition signed by M- G-
Wm. G. W.
Gowan and others asking for a
public road in Greenville town-
ship beginning near the residence
of Noah Forbes on the Green-
ville and Kinston road and end-
at a point on the Old Plank
road near Red Oak church was
read and laid over till next meet-
The Board ordered the Sheriff
to summon a jury to lay out and
establish a public road running
from Parmele to the county road
near S. 1- in accordance
to the petition filed on the first
Monday in May.
The following report was
To the Board of Commissioners
of Pitt
The undersigned committee
pointed by your body to assist in
a settlement between J. A- K-
Tucker, sheriff, and John
treasurer, of the taxes col-
for the year 1892, beg leave
to report that we find that the
said sheriff is charged with the
sum of and is entitled
to credits to the amount of
443-79 leaving him still indebted
to the county in the sum of
284.13 for which he holds re-
We further report that
the statement hereto annexed
shows that the sheriff has not
been allowed credits for any in-
solvent list or commissions, can
further that the said state-
does not include any amount
due on account of taxes collected
for Stock Law territory.
Respectfully submitted,
Leonidas Fleming.
RE-UNION OF THE 7th N. C.
REGIMENT
As the senior officer of the 27th
Regiment N. O- State troops, I
have been requested by a
of the old veterans, who be
to that command to invite
all the members and their
lies to assemble in pleasant re-
union at LaGrange, on Friday,
the 4th day of August, 1893-
The families of the old soldiers,
and all others who desire to do so
can make such contributions to
the entertainment of the remain-
members of that gallant com-
as they may see proper.
Messrs. Shade Wooten, Wm-
H- Button, Jr., Wm.
Fuller, J. H. Sugg, J- H. Wade
and G- W. Jones will receive con-
either in money or
provisions, as may be forwarded
to them at the above named place.
The people in the section
the reunion is proposed to be
held are noted for their hospitality
and those at a distance who de-
sire to meet face to face, once
more, with their old comrades,
will be cordially welcomed and
kindly cared for while in their
midst. W- Joyner,
State papers please copy.
Hood's Cures
Annie L.
Augusta, Ky.
A Brilliant Wedding.
Tarboro Southerner.
Wednesday evening at o'clock,
at the residence of the bride's
father, in the town of Tarboro, N.
C, Mr. Joseph H. one
of the leading merchants of Pitts-
burg, Pa-, with Miss Theresa
the oldest daughter
of Mr. Louis of this
place.
The were performed
by the Rev. Mr. of
Goldsboro, N- O- The groom's
best man was Louis Weinberg.
The bride was given away by her
father.
The bridesmaids were Misses
Weinberg, Hattie
and Bella Spier and
Sam acted
as Master of Ceremonies.
The bride was attired in a beau-
white satin, decked with
diamonds.
The bride is a favorite with all
in the city, and she has the best
wishes from her many friends,
who regret to know that she will
no longer be one among us. The
groom, Mr- Joseph H. Weinberg,
is to be congratulated on
such a prize. For them both,
tho Southerner wishes a long and
happy life, with not one wave of
trouble to annoy their connubial
bliss.
A dance was the bridal
party at the Armory directly after
the marriage. I
They were the recipients of
many handsome presents.
Mr. and Mrs. Weinberg left last
night on a special train for Rocky
Mount- They take the north
bound train for Atlantic City.
They will spend the summer at
Beach and Boston.
Their future home will be in Pitts-
burg, Pa., the present home of the
groom. k
The guests who attended the
marriage are as
Bernard Pa.
Louis Weinberg, Pa-
Miss Annie Pitts-
burg, Pa.
Nathan J.
Max Hoffman and wife, Mrs.
Steam, Miss Nona Hoffman, M.
Scotland Neck, N. C-
A. R. Spier, Misses Hattie and
Bella Spier, Goldsboro, N. C
Mr. and Mrs. Lang,
N. C
Miss Hannah New York-
Alex. New
More Than Pleased
With Hood's
and Blood Impurities
Stronger and Better n Ever
I have been mote than pleased with Hood's
I hare with break-
out on my faro and nil over my body all my
I could Bud anything to do it good
until I began to take Hood's I
hare now used about eight bottles, and Oh, It has
done me so much good that I have the unmet
Hood's s Cures
faith In It and recommend It to Besides
purifying my blood. It has made me so much
stronger and better I do not feel like
person t Augusta, Ky.
Pills act yet promptly tad
the and bowels.
Notice.
B virtue of a mortgage to
by Alfred Walker and
duly recorded in the Register's office of
Martin county, in book FF, pages
and I shall sell cash before
the court house door, in Martin county,
on Monday, tho 3rd day of July, 1893,
the land conveyed In said mortgage.
This the 12th of May. 1893.
Mortgagee.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly
fled as administrator of Mary
ton, deceased, notice is hereby given to
all persons indebted to the estate to
make immediate payment, and all per
sons having claims against the estate
must present the same for payment on
or before the 1st day of May, 1894, or
this notice will be plead in bar of re-
This 1st day of May, 1893.
J. S. KEEL,
of Mary
A CARD.
To the of Greenville and vicinity
I am now prepared to treat success-
of the feet from which
arises the exceedingly unpleasant odor
with which many are afflicted and which
i so to them and those with
whom they associate. can relieve
this entirely at once, and I respectfully
ask you to give me a trial and I will
guarantee to remove this most worry-
and offensive affliction. My
vices can be secured by calling at my
shop or it will give me pleasure to serve
you at your homes whenever notified in
any way . This treatment will obviate
the necessity of almost daily bathing
to which many are subjected and is so
troublesome. Try ray treatment and
you will not regret it.
ALFRED CULLEY.
, mm j
Notice
On Monday the third day of July, A.
D., will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for cash one tract of
land in Pitt county containing about
acres and known as lot No.
five in the division of the lands of
Peahen, deceased, bounded and
described as Beginning at a
stump in Louis D. thence
south twenty one degrees east one
seventy poles to a pine and maple
north sixty seven degrees west one
hundred and sixty eight to the great
branch, down said branch to maple
branch then up maple branch to the
beginning containing ninety-five acres
and being a part of the home tract.
Said lot No. allotted to Nancy Ann
the said land being situated in
Falkland township, Pitt county, N. C,
to satisfy a ex in my handset or col-
against Nancy Ann and
which has been levied on said land as
the property of said Nancy A.
This 3rd day of Jun 1893.
R. W. KING. Sheriff,
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S.
SOLD UNDER GUARANTEE.
YOUNG
Sole Agents,
GREENVILLE, C.
Land Sale.
What About Other Towns
One of the pastors of our city
churches made tho open
confession in the pulpit last
Sunday morning that owing to
the tardiness of some of his
he is unable to pay promptly
for what he buys, and requested
them, most earnestly, come to
his relief. And this came from a,
i minister of one of our most prom
Greenville, N. C.
In the CORNER HOUSE
New Cheap
NEW NEW GOODS
Prices Lower Than Ever.
FIRST QUALITY GOODS
MEN'S AND
CHILDREN'S SUITS,
HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS, Ac.
Notice these remarkable
Men's Suits as low as 82.50 and up.
Men's Pants is low as and up.
Children's Suits as low as
Shins as low as and up.
Men's Shoes as low as and
Shoes as low as cent and up.
Other goods correspondingly cheap.
We are the place for LOW PRICES,
and solicit the patronage of the people.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt County made at April
Term 1893 in a certain cause therein
pending, F. M. Davis vs Louisa
T. Lang ct ills., I will on Monday,
July 3rd. 1893, sell at public sale before
the Court House door in Greenville, lo
the highest tor cash, all the right
title and interest which Robert J. Lang
deceased had at the time of his death
in and to a certain piece or pieces of
land in township. Pitt county
is to say a one-hall undivided inter-
est in said tract of land, described
follows. side of Little Content-
Creek, Beginning at gum on said
Creek running North with S. G.
Una to a pine on prong
of Branch said corn-
down with said Branch east
to Gideons corner
thence with said Ward's line to the Big
Branch ; thence up said Branch
with the meanderings thereof to a pine,
Bennett Field's Conner; thence with
said Fields line to the run of Little
Creek thence with the
run of said Creek to the beginning, con-
six hundred and thirty acres
more or less. In tho event the said In-
of J. Lang shall not sell
for a sufficient sum to pay off and dis-
charge the amount duo under a certain
mortgage executed by R. J- Lang and
wile to Albert R. recorded in
the Registers office of Pitt County in
book page ct seq, I will on the
name day and at the same place and upon
the same terms sell the undivided one
half interest of Louisa T- Lang in said
tract of land.
This the 7th day of June, 1893.
ALEX. L.
Commissioner
TOWN TREASURER'S REPORT.
Report of Charles Skinner, Treasurer
of tho Town of
DR.
June
No. To whom issued. Amount.
Skinner, street work
II J Hoyle,
J II Johnson, night watch
R D Cherry, night watch
Latham, night watch
J R street work
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
Z L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
F G James,
M J Latham, mdse
Dr Warren,
D J Whichard, printing
G L A I Co,
I- W Lawrence,
July
T R Moore, police
I. Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
J T Smith, i
J J Stocks, rent
Chas Skinner, street work
A J Berg, watch
James,
S Vines, rent
J T rent
August
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
Chas Skinner, street work
A Dudley,
D D Ha mdse
F G
S E
J B Cherry Co, mdse
September 1892.
J L Daniel, night lighter
M Williams, lamp lighter
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
Chas Skinner, street work
F G James,
J S Smith,
D J Whichard, printing
G L I Co, lumber
October
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
F G James,
S E Pender ft Cu. mdse
L W Lawrence, tax list
B S tax list
J J Stocks, rent
F Greene,
A Dudley, board
B Cherry, witness
November
J T Smith,
T B Moore, police
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
F G James,
Harrell Printing Company
D J Whichard.
December
J T Smith, police
T It Moore, police
J L Daniel, police
M Williams, lamp lighter
F G James,
S E Pender Co, mdse
Flood, work
S E mdse
M D D mdse
Chas Skinner, street work
Ed Clerk
January 1893.
J T Smith, police
T B Moore, police
M Williams, lamp lighter
J L Daniel, night
F G James,
T B Moore, wood
J J Cherry, mdse
J J Stocks,
J Williamson,
ChaS Skinner, street work
January 1893.
A relief com.
February
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
Brown Hooker, muse
Chas Skinner, street work
Alfred Forbes, mdse
S E mdse
SO S M Shultz, mdse
H A Blow, police
Dr Warren,
March 1893.
J T Smith, police
T It
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamplighter
Chas Skinner, street work
S E Pender ft Co, mdse
F G James,
A Dudley,
D D Haskett, mdse
J B Cherry ft Co,
April
J T Smith, police
T Moore,
M Williams, lamp lighter
J L Daniel, night police
F G James,
Chas Skinner, street work
O D S S Co. mdse
S E mdse
May 1893,
J T Smith, police
T R Moore, police
J L Daniel, night police
M Williams, lamp lighter
F G James,
F G James, salary
W B Greene,
Chas Skinner, street work
E B Ellington, rent
T R Moore,
D J Whichard,
SE mdse
J T rent
L Hooker A Co, rent
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly
M administrator of W. A.
deceased, notice is hereby given to all
indebted to the estate to nuke
mediate payment, and all persons
having claims against the estate must
E resent the Same for payment on or be-
ore the 26th day of April, this
will be plead In bar of recovery.
This 6th day of April.
B. S.
of W. A.
. Notice.
Count v.
L. C. Latham, Harry Skinner and A-
L. Blow, formerly partners as Latham,
Skinner A Blow, in their own names
and In behalf of themselves and all
creditors of John A. Manning,
against
Charlotte Manning, executrix of John
A. Sr. John A. Manning, Jr,
W. A. Manning, W. D Manning, W. C.
Manning, E. D. Manning, R. R. White-
and Courtney his
wife, John and Florence
his wife, G. B.
and Mary his wife and Chair
Manning.
The shove action having been com-
In this court on the of
June 1898 for a settlement of the estate
A. Manning, deceased, under
Chapter of the Code of North Caro-
notice is hereby given to the
of the said John A. to
before me, at my office In the
town-of Greenville, on or before the 27th
of July and the evidences
of their claims,
This the 14th of June MM.
A.
of Superior Court of Pitt
3-5
12-5
1210
It is with pleasure that I announce to
the citizens of Greenville mid vicinity
that I have Just returned from tho
Northern Market- where I visited
all the fashionable openings and am now
receiving the mo-r beautiful and
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever
opened in this market. Come to see
me and you will get nothing the
latest fashionable good. Low prices
and satisfaction
Mrs. Georgia Pearce,
Git N. C.
Next door to Old Brick Store.
Roots,
A little drop of printer's ink,
Sometimes causes to think.
we to impress upon your minds that have
-------received our now-
SprinG-.-StocK
BEAUTIFUL LIKE OF
and can now show n
Our intention is to sell good at the lowed possible
prices. We have the and most stock r
kept in town. keep almost
needed in the household or on the farm and
invite and comparison of our
goods. We can and will sell low for
cash. We want your trade
will be glad to show you the
lines of
i i Mi Mi Mi Mil
HASKETT.
NAILS, AND AXES,
Rope, Bolting and Packing,
MECHANIC'S TOOLS,
DUMPS and
Hollowware,
Stove Pipe, and Chimney Pipe,
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty, and
many other articles kept in a first-
class Hardware Store Call to see
me if yen want goods cheap for
the cash.
HASKETT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS.
NICE LINE
AND PIECE GOODS FOR
MAKING MENS AND BOYS
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK.
FARMS FOR SAUL
Prices Low,
Terms
Easy.
Reed J It
F G
Ch of
J T
To paid out
NO to
cent
The J. L. Ballard home farm, Bea-
Dam township, adjoining tho lands
of G. T. and A line
farm of about acres, with good build-
and adapted to corn, cotton and to
A fine marl bed.
A farm near and lying
mediately on the own-
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, acres of which
about are cleared. Good neighbor-
hood, churches and a school within
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin-
farms
A fine farm of acres, three miles
from Farmville and miles from Green
ville, with large, substantial dwelling
and out houses, known as the I P.
Beardsley home place, fine cotton
good clay accessible to marl.
A smaller farm adjoining the above
known as the Jones place, acres,
dwelling, barn and house, land
good.
A farm of acres In town-
ship, about miles from
acres of the Singletary tract
Part of the Noah Joyner farm,
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro,
located in an improving section
can be made a valuable farm.
A small farm of about acres,
about miles from Greenville, on
Well house, etc., for-
owned by Cox.
ALSO TIMBER
A tract of about acres near
the station, with cypress timber well
suited for railroad ties.
. A tract of about acres in
township, near the Washington rail-
road, pine timber.
A tract of acres near Johnson s
Mills, pine and cypress timber.
Apply to Wm. H. LONG,
Greenville. N. C.
Cash on hand, MM
Due Fund
For work,
Report of T R Moore, Town Tax Col-
for the year ending May
DR.
Amt taxes property and poll,
purchase tax
to July, 1892,
purchase tax from July
to January, 1893,
license tax, SO
By fire company
insolvent list,
per cent, 1,887
cash paid
Approved by
Ed. H.
C. C. Forbes, Com.
M, K. Lang.
Report of Charles Skinner, Town
Treasurer of the Town of Greenville,
ending May
DB.
Amt reed from former
treasurer, I
Amt reed F G James,
Mayor,
Amt reed from citizens
of
Amt T R
Moore, market house
Amt from J T
Smith, lines costs
Amt from T B
Moore, tax collector, 1,887
town
By per cent, 2,407.67
Cash on band,
Due Cemetery Fund,
Approved by Ed. H. I
C. C. Forbes,
M. B.
JIM
GREENVILLE, C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared to do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
wagon, mm l Ml
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in best manner
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE, TINWARE,
j WOOD AND WILLOW WARE,
j HARDWARE, PLOWS AND
FARMING UTENSILS,
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
Groceries, Flour a specialty. tho largest and
. ever kept in our town.
lino of FURNITURE Consisting in part of
Top Walnut Suits,
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets, Washstands,
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles,
Mattresses. Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full lino of
Tables, Children's Carriages, Keep also a nice lino
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor
Oil Cloths. cordially invite all to come to us
when in want of any goods. will try to you
satisfaction at all times.
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE
J. db
ESTABLISHED 1883.
i. Anna
-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL
New Corned Herrings
Boxes C. R. Side Meat.
Tubs Boston Lard.
barrels Flour, all grades
barrels Granulated Sugar,
barrels C. Sugar,
boxes Tobacco,
barrels Mills
barrels Three Thistle Snuff.
barrels Gail Ax Snuff,
KT. C.
50.000 Luke Cigarettes,
barrels P. Snuff,
Cakes and Crackers,
Stick Candy,
j kegs Rand's Powder.
tons Shot.
c ties Bread Powders.
cases star Lye,
barrels Apple Vinegar,
cases Gold Dust Washing Powder.
Full stock of all carried in my line.
. . -.- , i , . . T.
Farmers. Make Tour Own Bay
WE CAN SELL YOU THE
BEST MOWER IN
THE WORLD FOR
CUTTING IT.
CALL ON US WHEN IN
NEED OF TIN WARE,
COOK STOVES,
PAINTS, OIL.
PLACE YOUR ORDERS FLUES
S. E. PENDER CO.,
JAMES LONG,
-Dealer In------
General Merchandise,
Has exclusive sale of these celebrated
in Greenville, N. C. Prom the
of A Moore, the only
complete optical plant In the South,
Atlanta, Ga, Peddlers are not sup-
with those famous
Notice.
SUPERIOR COURT,
Pitt County.
Jane trading as
burg Iron in her own name
and in behalf of herself and all other
creditors of Rufus Fleming, deceased,
against
R. R. Fleming of Rufus Fleming.
The above entitled action having been
commenced In this Court on 17th
day of May, 1803. for a settlement of
the estate of Fleming, deceased,
under chapter of the Code of North
Carolina, notice is hereby given to the
creditors of the said Fleming to
appear before me on or before the 15th
day of July. 1893, and file the
of their claims.
This the day of May,
Clerk of Superior Court I Pitt Co.
If you feel weak
and all worn out take
IRON BITTERS
-i





JUNE.
All of this
month we
have
ed to sell
oar entire
Stock at
greatly reduced prices. DRESS
Our stock of Dress
Goods is complete, the best thing
in town 40-inch Linen Lawns
at cents.
stock was
never bet-
We
have a big
lot Ladies
Gauze vest
and C-B
Corsets all
to be sold
-c-h-e-a-p.
ClothinG
Our spring
and summer
Suits are cheap
and SHOES
and SLIPPERS to
match dresses and
SAMPLE STRAW
HATS at cost. Everybody call.
HIGGS BROS.
GREENVILLE, N. C
Special Ladies Gents
Underwear and Straw Hats at
Vacation.
ice at
Best Butter in town kept on
Vegetables of all kinds ate plentiful.
Sheriff R. W. King advertises four
land sales to Satisfy
hands.
executions in his
Most of the commencements are
now. r
Fruit Jars Cheap at
Store.
the Old Brick
P have
week.
Black Eye Teas at
Old Brick Store.
The season
morrow.
Bros, will offer special induce-
during June. See their new ad-
in market for a
the
at begins to-
a cook.
The Durham
What for. Jim
The Best Flour on earth 1.50 at the
Old Bi Store.
Cotton, com and growing
rapidly.
to-day ii X. C.
Butter at cent at the
Old Brick Store.
The boys are now,
for ten weeks.
no school
ties
Buy
Bros.
Potato shipments continue heavy and
prices are
Coolers, Milk Buckets and Milk
Pans at D.
The hot spell was sandwiched with a
couple cool days last week.
The lee Cream
is the best, at D. D.
Proper to sanitation now
may save some cases of typhoid fever
later.
Keep the flies and mosquitoes out of
your rooms by using the Adjustable
Window Screens at D. D.
The military company is growing.
new members added at the last
two meetings.
Remember f pay you cash for Chickens
and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Shipments of watermelons
ready commenced from the States fur-
south.
Pairs S ample over
alls from cents up, at Higgs Bros.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
Fob bes.
school building in Eastern Carolina.
Healthy location, good water, In a live
town with splendid back country. For
further Information apply to Alfred
Greenville H. C.
Halts Adopted by the N. C.
The sum of not less than five cents
per line will be charged for of
of and
obit poetry; also for obituary notices
other than those which the editor him-
self shall give as a matter of news
Notices of church and society and all
other entertainments from which rev-
is to be derived ill be charged
at the rate of live cents a Hue.
Local Reflections.
Weddings ought to follow commence-
seasons, but we hear of none on
Hie
Another largo lot of nice linen tablets
ruled and plain, at
Price for them reduced to cents.
The raises no objection
to receiving subscribers any season of
the year. Books open all the time.
Keep the fact in mind that the list
taker wants to see you. Comparatively
few people have as yet listed their taxes.
The largest turnip of the season was
brought to the Reflector Friday even-
by Mr. Richard Garris of Content-
It weighed
The tobacco department of the Re-
in this one issue is worth to
every tobacco planter the subscription
price Of the paper for a whole year.
When the freight train going north
passed Greenville last Wednesday it
had thirteen full car loads of potatoes
all of them being taken on from Kin-
here, in miles.
We Were unable to get the lift of
school for the county in
time for publication to-day. The list
will be published as soon as it can be
obtained.
Young arc sole agents here
for the celebrated Martinez
Pure Paints. If yon arc going to build
or have any building to repaint your
should give this point a trial.
Just so many visitors here at the
commencement last week that the RE-
could not begin to k-op up,
with them. The pretty girls were here
without number and in all their glory.
Miss music class gave a re-
in the Opera House last
The Reflector was in press be-
fore the entertainment re we
must wait until next week to give a full
report.
Agent Moore at the depot now has
summer rates and tickets to the
pal resorts in this State and Virginia.
Persons Inquiring either at the depot or
office can learn the rate to
different points.
Closing exercises of Miss
Music will take place at
the Opera House Thursday 13th.
Exercises begin P. M.
Public invited and requested to be on
time as doors will close when exercises
begin.
From the Headlight we
learn of the death of Mr. B. J. Langston,
which occurred in that city on Tuesday
of last week. Mr. Langston lived in
Greenville last year. He was one of the
original owners of the Tarboro, Green-
ville and Washington telegraph line.
The rates from Greenville to More-
head on account of the As-
are higher thin year than any
past season, almost double what
were last year. Tickets now cos
via while last year they
sold for 95.33. The railroads are hold-
up rates.
A few days ago Willis Johnston
brought the Reflector a curiosity the
like of which we never saw before. Its
is commonly known as a wild
rather a cluster of
weighed pounds. It had very much
the smell and outward appearance of
the real potato-
very
Personal,
Mrs. Dr. F. W. Brown has been
sick for several days.
Miss Nannie of Kinston, is vis-
Miss Forbes.
Ex-Gov. Jarvis spent several days of
last week In Norfolk on business.
Miss Pearl of Greene
county, ts Mrs. B. F. Sugg.
Cadet Charlie Forbes returned
last week from Homer school at
Oxford.
Master Guy and Mr. C. C,
Joyner came home Friday from school
at Bethel.
Miss Minnie Carraway, of Halifax,
came down Friday evening and spent s
few days with friends here.
Mrs. Joyner left Saturday lo
spend several weeks visiting friends at
points in this State and Virginia.
Misses Minnie Exum, Lucy Ada
Tyson, Nannie
are visiting Miss Sugg.
Messrs. F. C. Harding, W. F. Hard-
and E. A. Jr., of this town
and Mr. Roscoe Little of Bethel, return-
ed home last week from the University.
Mr. J. D. Williamson went to Suffolk
Saturday. He returned home
day evening bringing with him his little
daughter. Miss Jessie, who has been at
school there.
Rev. G. F. Smith, pastor of the
church, exchanged pulpits Sunday
with Rev. J. O. Guthrie, of Rocky
Mount, the former preaching in that
town and the latter preaching here.
The following item taken from the
Weekly News of has
something about a Greenville young
lady that will be of interest tuber many
friend
Webster and Miss Emma
Taft, both of Dunkirk will have charge
of the new store of Taft Co. in Jones-
Miss Fannie Russell of this place
will assist
Two More Prise Houses.
The stockholders of the Greenville
Tobacco Warehouse Company held a
meeting in the Court House Monday
afternoon and decided to two more
prize houses. Work will begin at once
and the be completed time
for the coming season.
COMMENCEMENTS.
IMMENSE GATHERINGS AT THE
OPERA HOUSE.
Excellent Entertainments by the Pupils
of the Greenville Male Academy and
Greenville
from
of
High School.
To say that the commencements last.,
week of Greenville Male Academy and
Greenville. Female School were enjoy-
able occasions is putting it but mildly.
There has been but little else talked
since, and It Is on the lips of everybody
that they were the most excellent school
entertainments Hist have yet been
here. The two schools gave their
together taking alternate
parts in the Immense
present both nights,
the crowd being so Urge the
that could not find, seating
room eve in the aisles of the
Opera Rouse.
FIRST
The for-Hie first night was
us follows
Prayer by Rev. A. O. Hunter, of
Va.
Lilly Drill Clients, Female
School.
Boy's Essay on Girls,
Master Hugh
Inst. Miss
Tyson.
Hands,
Master James Anderson.
Diver, Miss
Sheppard.
Receipt for Courtship,
Master Tyson.
Dear Little Girls of
Old, Master Hal Sugg.
Vocal Furies Trip,
Misses Rountree, Sugg, Flanagan,
Moore, Sheppard, White.
United Workmen,
Masters Richard White, Charlie Skinner.
Carl Parker, Fred Forbes. David Jarvis,
Cum Noble, Louis Latham, Foster
Quinn, Jesse Smith, David James, Hugh
Sheppard, Walter Wilson and Romulus
Higgs.
Piper, Miss Sarah
Way, Miss
Lula White.
Rehearsal, Master
Charlie Latham, Charlie James, Willie
Daniel, Willie Harry Skinner,
Raymond Tyson Hal Sugg.
Graduates, Misses
Rountree, Sugg, Flanagan, Moon-, Shep-
Forbes, White.
A Dinner
Sugg and Mr. Jarvis Sugg.
Comic Drunkard's
Soliloquy, Mr. Forbes Kennedy.
Gossip class of little
girls.
A Mock Great
on Case, By class of young men.
The Reflector would be glad to
comment upon each piece separately
and give the participants the praise due
them, but space will not permit this.
There was not a dull selection In the
entire entertainment and the whole
passed as smoothly and as
as clock work. The Illy drill
was charming. Misses LIna Sheppard,
Sarah Hooker and Lula White recited
beautifully and won many compliments.
The recitations and by the
little boys were all good and did credit
to the little gentlemen. The small
girls In the gossip pantomime looked
real little women with long dresses,
spectacles and queer bonnets, and were
just as sweet as could be. As a duck
carver at dinner Jarvis Sugg was a
howling success and kept the
in a roar. could
not have surpassed Forbes Kennedy in
Impersonating a drunkard, even every
coming in the time to be
most effective-. The young met to the
mock trial well,
Mile mad mt Of the
girls almost do good
looking as Sally
At an interval in the Mrs.
J. B. Cherry sang
very charmingly.
THE SECOND
drilling and Mrs. J. B. Cherry
sang s solo. Hie skill perfection
with which Miss executed the
different movements of the drill was
simply wonderful, every move-
carried with It perfect grace and
ease. It is useless to undertake to com-
the singing of Mrs. de-
fails to do her full justice.
THE MEDAL.
A portion of the entertainment
around which great Interest centered
was the contest for the med-
This contest was entered Into by
five young D. S. Smith,
Harry Harding, J. B. Jackson, E. F.
Mu in ford R. E. Cox. Each one of
them is entitled to special honor for the
excellence with which he declaimed.
They each manifested such earnestness
as to show conclusively that
he who won the medal must indeed ex-
cell. The judges of the d in
Mayor J. L. Fleming, Rev. J. B.
i and Mr. Charles Skinner, voted that
R. E. Cox was the winner, and the
medal was very handsomely presented to
him by, Senator F. G James.
NOT ON THE
As Prof. W. II. principal of
the Male School, stepped out upon the
rostrum to make some announcements.
he was accosted and Interrupted by Mr.
Zeno Moore who followed him the
stage and in behalf of the boys of the
Academy presented him with an ex-
gold ring set with large initial.
Mr. Moore was Indeed felicitous in his
remarks and paid Prof. a high
compliment upon the excellence of hi
school and teaching- Then calling f.-
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton, principal of the
Female School, in behalf of her
pupils he presented her with a hand-
some plush rocking chair. In this
presentation bis remarks were also very
appropriate and complimentary to Mrs.
Pendleton's faithful work. Prof. Rags-
dale responded very happily for
Mrs. Pendleton himself, and this
scene closed amid the of the
audience.
On the the
was as
Prayer by Rev. G. F. Smith, Pastor
If. E. Church.
Instrumental
Misses Sheppard and Moore.
Bachelor's Growl, Mas-
Charlie James.
Flower Girl,
Miss Tyson.
Git Ye,
Master Louis Skinner.
arc the School that's
Gay and Misses E. Smith. M.
Quinn, H. Smith, R. Fleming, J. Tyson,
G. A. Flanagan. S. R. Hooker.
South Once More in
the Union, Mr. D. S. Smith.
Wedding
Day, Miss Aylmer Sugg.
Miss Carrie Indian Club
Drill.
Grave of Nations,
Mr. Harry Harding.
Miss Mary
Justice, Mr.
J. B. Jackson.
Solo and in the
May Time, Misses Sugg, White,
tree, Flanagan. Moore, Tyson,
Sheppard-
Measured, Mr. E. F.
Musical Peak Sisters,
Misses Jarvis, Forbes, Hooker, A.
Smith, E. Smith, U. Smith, M.
Dying Speech of
Hubert Mr. R. E. Cox.
Perilous Position of John
Joseph James
Presenting Medal.
Rountree, Tyson,
Flanagan, Sugg, Moore, Jarvis, Shep-
White, Forbes.
All that might be said praise of the
first evenings entertainment might be
said with equal justness of the Second.
In fact this was all that
could be wished for and the audience
did not withhold Its expressions of de-
light. The recitations by Misses Bettie
Tyson, Aylmer Sugg and Mary
were faultless and reflected honor upon
both themselves and teacher. And
the boys in their recitations were tight
to the front, dividing honors with the
girls every time. The musical selections
were pleasing, the songs being well
rendered. The musical comedy by
Peak a surprise beyond
the expectation of the audience and was
received with genuine relish. While
every one f the did well, Miss
Sarah Hooker as leader, spokesman and
apologist, Miss Mary a the deaf
and dumb sister, and little Miss Battle
Smith as and interrupt-
lost won the hearts of everybody.
The boys in the fare came out In burnt
cork and ancient coats and made
such a jolly set of little niggers as would
pot Hie real African specimen to blush.
Daring an Miss Carrie
gave an of Indian
Whatever may be said of Mr.
in criticism of his superfluous use of
words, there Is one thing certain, a man
who has the ability to plunge his mental
faculties into the Intricacies of the ad-
kingdom and select therefrom
words to convey the exact shade
meaning that he wishes, Is no ordinary
man.
close of the address Mr. Chris.
Wooten, of Snow In behalf of I he
good ladles of presented him
with a beautifully arranged to
he responded In appropriate
terms.
As we listened to the closing refrains
of the soul-stirring music and noticed
the silvery hair of Col. Sugg who only
years ago held a proud head of raven
locks, our every impulse was moved to it
deepest sensibilities, for a short
while ago we too were reminded of our
school boy days in the same building,
and by memories aid tills reflection
floating to our mind What will
another quarter of a century
Appropriate Memorial Services.
Memorial services were held in
Episcopal Church last Sunday u
in memory of the late Rev. N. Collin
Hughes, D. D. Col. Harry de-
livered an address a brief sketch of
his life and labors was read by Major
U. Harding. We will publish this
sketch In our next issue. At the close
of the services a collection was taken to
erect a memorial window for Dr.
Hughes in the church here.
The bad weather early last week
vented the presentation of the above
drama by the Greenville Amateurs
Wednesday night. A large audience
greeted them that night and the play
was enjoyed to the fullest. It was the
best presentation the company ha.- yet
given and reflected credit both upon the
participants and upon the excellent
management of Mrs. Jarvis.
Notice to Creditors.
Having qualified before the Superior
Court Clerk of Pitt county as executrix
the will Weeks II. Clark,
ed, notice Is hereby given all persons
indebted to the estate to make
ate payment to the undersigned, and
all persons having claims against the
estate must present die same for pay-
on or before the 10th day of May
1891, or this notice will be plead in bar
of recovery.
This Utah of May. 1893.
ELIZABETH CLARK,
Executrix of Weeks H. Clark.
Notice
On Monday the third clay of July. A.
D., I will sell at the Court House
door In the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for cash one t of land
in Pitt county containing one
hundred and twenty-two acres
bounded as Situated In Green-
ville, township, Pitt county, N. C, ad-
the town of Greenville and the
lands of B. F. Patrick, W. A. Manning,
Alfred Forbes and others being
tract of land on which located the mill
Laud and
formerly owned
by Mo iv deceased and
to Mrs. Higgs, t, sundry
in my hands for
the Greenville I Is.
mid bus
said land us the property of
said Company.
This 1st day of June 1891.
R- W. Sheriff,
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S.
MACHINE WORKS,
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins.
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING.
HONOR
Prof. then read the names
of pupils of both schools who had at-
the roll of honor, an average of
on all examinations being the re-
to this distinction. Those
reaching this distinction the
my were E. F. Mumford, J. B. Jackson,
J. B. Jarvis, R. E. Cox. James Daven-
port, Julius Fleming. J. B. Harding, L.
U. Skinner, A. J. Wilson. M. II.
day, Jarvis Sugg, J. II. has.
Latham, Harry W. W. Per-
kins, M. Tucker, John Smith,
Raymond Tyson. A. F. Kennedy.
Charlie Skinner, James, Hugh
Sheppard, J. M. Moore, C. J.
Those in the Female School entitled
to distinction were Misses Alma Sugg,
Rosalind Rountree, Tyson, Lina
Sheppard, Lula White, Blanche
Alice Smith, Hattie Smith,
Jarvis.
The names of J. B. Jarvis and
Skinner were read aS being absent from
no duty during the entire ten mouths ;
J. M. Moore, W. W. Perkins and Julius
Fleming missed only one day; In five
month- Louis Skinner, Raymond Tyson,
David Smith and Carl Parker were ab-
sent from no duty.
The total enrollment of the Academy
for the session reached Tho won-
growth of the school can be
judged from the fact that when Prof.
took charge of it two years
ago he opened with an enrollment of
only He is by far the best manager
Of boys that ever taught here, and as a
teacher has few superiors
The next session of the Academy will
begin on Monday, August 28th.
It tho enrollment of the Female
School has not been very large do
not know the exact still has
been satisfactory, and the work ii the
school has been good. There are few
teachers for girls Hie equal of Mrs. Pen-
She is a most accomplished
and about her is such refine-
culture and grace of manner
that at once Axes the admiration of
those with whom she comes in contact.
The fall session of her school will open
Monday, August 28th-
Greenville is fortunate in having two
such competent teachers as Prof. Rags-
dale and Mrs. Pendleton, and our Male
Academy and Female School should be
the pride of the town and
High School.
In company with Co. I. A. Sugg tho
writer left Greenville Friday morning
to attend the closing exercises of Farm-
High School and to hear the ad-
dress of North Carolina's gifted word-
painter, Henry Blount, of the
Mirror. At o'clock Prof.
whose management the Farm-
Academy has been raised to a high
plain of success prosperity, an-
that the exercises would begin.
The string baud, with Miss
Lillian Askew at the piano opened the
entertainment and for a few minutes
held the audience In quiet listening to
the mellow strain- of flowing music.
Col. I. A. Sugg, who had been selected
to introduce the speaker, came forward
and in a few rounded sentences led the
audience into a retrospective view of
and her people twenty-fire
years ago. Said he, quarter of a
century ago yesterday I stood upon this
same rostrum on an occasion like this,
an ambitions youth just launching out on
life's sea. Before me I see
a few of the many faces that gladdened
my life on that occasion, while some
have made their homes In other lands,
and others in that mystic land from
which no traveler He then
Introduced Mr. who after telling
several anecdotes took up his
Its and
For an hour be delighted his hear-
with the diversity of his flowing Ian.
To the young man he said,
hopes and anticipations as com-
pared with the realization of life are
like the sparkling dew drops fiat
ten and sparkle for a while, but melt
away at the very first kiss of the morn-
His description of the
life and disadvantages of Charles
nor, T. J. Jackson and Walter Scott
were especially striking, because they
had made life a success in the face of
disadvantages under which the
nary man bow lo submission.
His speech all the way through was
based on good ideas couched in pretty
words and a description of It from our
pen be an injustice to him In the
minds of those who did not bear It.
New Bank Building.
Greenville is to have a handsome bank
building at an early day. Messrs.
Tyson Rawls have purchased from
Mr. Alfred Forbes feet front of t he
vacant space lying to the north of his
store. The order for material to con-
the building has been placed and
work-will begin as soon as the material
is delivered. The price paid for the lot
was or per front foot,
which shows that Greenville dirt is
worth something.
On Monday the 3rd clay of A.
D,, 1893, will sell at the Court liaise-
in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder tor cash two tracts of
land in Pitt county containing
four hundred and fifty acres and bound-
ed as One tract Situated in
Falkland township containing acres
more or less, adj Mining the lands of J.
F. Edwards, W. F. the
en tract and others and lying along
Kitten Creek, also another tract
acres more or less, in Falk-
land township adjoining the lands of
V. G. Webb, Harry Skinner, Corbett
place and others, the above lands being
the excess of the Homestead exemption
of A. V. Newton to satisfy an
in my hands for collection
A. V. Newton, which has
on said land as the of
A. V. Newton.
This 1st of June 1893.
it. W. Sheriff,
Per HENRY T. KING, D. S.
Notice
Journalistic.
The Tarboro Southerner changed
management last week, Mr. Paul Jones
having leased the paper for four years.
He is a good writer and will keep the
Southerner at a high standard.
A very brilliant and newsy paper
recently started is the Saturday Night,
published at Durham by Edwin S.
He handles items in a manner
that is strikingly attractive and tho
arc forceful. Taking the
copy we have received as an index to
what it is to be Saturday Night should
receive a hearty welcome, and no doubt
it will be so.
On Monday the third day of July, A.
D., 1893. I will sell at the Court House
door for cash one tract of land in Pitt
county containing about at-rps
and bounded as Situated in
Falkland township, Pitt county. N. C,
known as lot No. in the division of
the lands of Win. deceased
bounded and described as Be-
g at a ditch tie- line between L
B- at a stake running
with the north eighty three de-
east one hundred and fifty two
to a south south two degrees
east four poles to a stake to
forty degrees west fifty
piles to a branch, then down ii t
to beginning
acres and allotted
ill said division, to satisfy ex
in my bawls for collection
which has Been ed
on a- the property of I
3rd of June 1893.
R. W. KING, Sheriff,
Per HENRY T. KING. D. S-
TO THE PUBLIC
OWING to the dull trade
we propose to close out
Spring and Summer Stock a
prices that defy
Such as CLOTHING, HATS,
SHOES, DRY GOODS
NOTIONS. In connection
our stock
have an elegant line of SAM-
SHIRTS,
SUSPENDERS, to be
THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write for
and prices before buying
A few Second-Hand Engines for sale.
CONGLETON CO.,
-----DEALERS IN-----
MB
We are again in business to and have a nice line of fresh
goods. Will be glad to have our old call and see us, as well as all
others wish to get Groceries and Confections that arc pure.
Our goods will lie In every respect. We pay the highest mar-
prices for
5--
P. c m
--i a c S t, -a
s i
w t
is
O B
IO o a m o . v. Z St
Z. a
Wishing to thank my many
friends for liberal patronage
for both Merchandise and differ
articles which I manufacture,
T take this method of
that while I thank yon all I
am also striving hard to secure
advantages I can you
order to further merit you
For other articles in our line
as Church Pews, Cart
Wheels, Brackets and
Tobacco Hogshead and General
Repair Work, you will do well
to correspond with me before
ranging with any one else- I can
give yon some advantage.
A. G COX,
g.
fa
tr-g
B S
2.8-00 a
B-G
.
S E.
O t
DO
CO
rs COBB BROS CO.,
EMPORIUM.
SOLD at New York cost.
SHIRTS from cents
; GENTS TIES from cents
STRAW HATS from
up. A big line of DRESS
; GOODS at reduced prices.
; We are also Sole Agents for
BROS, and E P.
REED fine SHOES
Call and
see them and be pleased.
C. T.
GREENVILLE. A. C.
Joshua
-AND
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET, NORFOLK, VA.
and Correspondence Solicited.
New
Straight
s.
Clean
Large
We are still making a specialty of
am
MM
-o-
We have a first-class assortment and sell close.
get prices
Do not fail
and parts for all kinds of
BROWN BROS.,
Depositors for American Bible Society
THE RELIABLE OF
to the buyers of Pitt surrounding counties, a line of the following goo
not to excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be First-class
mire straight goods. DRY GOODS of nil kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. H ATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOORS. WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kind- Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Limb, 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 Prep-
and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, Lead and pure
Oil, Varnishes and Paint Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty, nut a call and guarantee satisfaction.
JACK WHITE
IS AGAIN
BEFORE YOU.
Bring me your
CHICKENS, EGGS,
TURKEYS, DUCKS,
GEESE, GUINEAS,
And in fact everything that is raised in the country and I will pay just
as much in cash can be had anywhere in Greenville. I will also
handle on a small commission anything that my customers want
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old Moore
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient place id
town. to see me.
Yours to please,
JACK WHITE, Greenville, N. C
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N- C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD ST
All kinds placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
FOB A FIRST-CLASS PROOF SAFE





DEPARTMENT.
Conducted by L. JOYNER, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse.
LOCAL NOT
JOTTINGS.
Two weeks American
Tobacco Cos preferred stock sold
for new it is in eighties.
There seems to be a general
decrease in the tobacco acreage
everywhere. Reports from the
western crop show a considerable
decrease from last year-
Mr. R. W. Royster is now in
Richmond Ya. on business. He
will spend some time on different
markets looking after the interest
of his business. We are told
there is a handsome widow in
Durham. He will spend a few
days in that place.
Reports from all sections of the
county are very encouraging and
the prospect for a good crop was
never better at this season of the
year. Mr. R. L. Joyner says he
has eight acres that will average
two and a half feet high and
growing rapidly every day.
The National Cigarette and
Tobacco company of New York
have recently put in a lot of new
machines and their
capacity now is an-
or about per cent, of
the yearly consumption. They
seem to have no fears about the
future as doubt about disposing
of their stock.
There is a great deal of com-
plaint among planters about their
tobacco buttoning too soon-
This will be the case with all to-
set out very early and
about the only effectual remedy
is to plow deep, close to the to-
either with a or
cotton plow. Most people
a turn plow and the deeper
it goes in reason the better for
the tobacco but the dirt n be
thrown back light away-
Last Saturday night in Ed-
barber shop four of
Greenville's best and most
young men were to
be shaved. Mr. J. G. intro
the prize house question
and asked each one of the
it they wouldn't help build some.
Mr- said a good
investment and if he had the
money to out of his
he would surely build one
himself. To Mr- Brown,
W. B. and Mr. Sugg said, me too.
They all agreed that the tobacco
market was bringing them lots of
trade from sections of the
try from which they had never
drawn trade before and which if
it were not for the tobacco
would go to Snow Hill, Kin-
Wilson and elsewhere where
they could not control it but said
that they couldn't spare the
money out of their business to
build the houses for the
tobacco. These young men rep-
resent some of the largest
interests that we have and
this writer is persuaded that if
they could be shown conclusively
that it is to their interest
it evidently and for the up-
building of the town that they
would soon find money enough
to spare out of their business to
build as many houses as are
needed.
and
A LOOK AHEAD
Few men in North Carolina
more energy and thorough
going earnestness than our towns-
man ex-sheriff Allen Warren. A
few evenings ago, ho took us
through his nursery and it is
astonishing, a man of his
years should remember accurate-
and be able to name and call
by their technical term every one
of the many hundred thousand
different plants that he has grow-
in Riverside. After delight-
us for some considerable
time in strolling through tho
many curvilinear walks strewn
alongside with flowers of
gated colors made our way
down the hillside to the R. R.
bridge, there in the quiet
shade of the rustic trees near by
where the peaceful waters of the
Tar glide laughingly along down
to their mother's bosom, Sheriff
Warren showed his mind to be
fully as active in conversation as
in horticulture- We listened
while be talked upon different
topics he is a well informed
man on and as a number
of women and were seen
not far busily engaged fishing,
they seemed to afford a theme for
a change in the conversation.
The Sheriff said if the people of
Greenville who have their lives
and hopes and prospect before
them would offer some induce-
for foreign capitol to come
here and establish factories of
different kinds, ping and
that
who to-day have no visible
means of support would be em-
ployed and a great deal of the
mischief that idle brains and
hands conceive
would be avoided. These people
given work and the dizzy rattle of
city life would soon be humming
its busy buzz through every
interest of Greenville, giving
new life and new energy to every-
thing Said he, have you been in
Winston recently and did you
see a single idle man on her
streets I We told him that we i of this
had not been in Winston in three
years. Well, he said, I was there
not very long ago and visited P.
H. Haynes plug factory, which
was recently burned. He said
Mr Haynes was exceedingly kind
answering ail his questions and
showing him every department of
his business. Mr. Haynes worked
over hands in his factory de-
and gives them all com-
living wages. Some of
his hands he employed by con-
tract while others he employed
regularly by the month. The old
gentleman then went on to show
the necessity of factories of this
kind here in Greenville where we
have at last idle ones, the ma-
of whom would be glad to
get work of that kind to do. He
says why, surely, we have men
here with as good business
as other towns in our
State that are not half as old as
Greenville in fact have made
their towns and their fortunes
within the last fifteen years while
Greenville stands a century old
and until recently has not
proved much by age. Think, said
he, of the fact that in North Caro
there are over one thousand
factories of different kinds and not
a single active one in Greenville.
After dwelling extensively on
those points he said, Mr. Joyner,
if you live to be as old as I am
you will see all these things in
Greenville, I shall never. Our
natural advantages, climatic con-
our deep and fertile soils
with long summer seasons in
which all vegetable mutter has
ample time for development,
offers inducements and
which if our people don't
take advantage of and improve
others will. Th busy hand of
industry and research is feeling
for undeveloped resources and
already its quickening touch has
increased the business pulse of
the town. We asked why he did
not expect to live to see these
himself. Oh, well, he said, the
older heads who have made their
money in other ways are not ex-
to take hold and build
new enterprises- reminded
him that each generation of
actors on the stage of life were
supposed to leave the world in a
more advanced stage of
than they found it and each
succeeding generation better
pared to advance the cause of
civilization and progress. That
if each generation lived only for
their own personal considerations
and not to progress from whence
their fathers left them that in-
stead of steam and electricity and
tens of thousands of other things
that the march of progress and
Christian civilization have brought
to light America be a bleak
and desolate wilderness with the
wild and wandering savage roam
over her vast and fertile
plains and the of man
as we know his ancient historic
man would be like their fore-
fathers of the valleys of the Nile
and Tigris wandering nomads
or even worse combats because
naturally he would have retro-
graded if ho had not advanced.
To these things the Sheriff agreed
but said that the young men were
the ones on whom depended the
responsibility of introducing new
industries. There was a rumbling
and a whistle in the distance and
as we looked up saw the mail
train coming lunging along, and
as our homes lay in different
we parted.
execute asking us to secure a place
for them to cure during the fall
which we take great pleasure in
doing. The class of people to
which these remarks are intended
are those who come highly
pretending to
know all about tobacco and when
they ruin your crop attribute it
to the peculiar climatic conditions
section. Climatic
within power of people
here to make our section wide
famed the world over, for
statistics show that North
Carolina is the only State fa the
Union that grows the bright
on leaf tobacco and without
at all it can be said that
Eastern North Carolina is head
and shoulders above any other
portion on this particular
The Basis of Good Coffee
The ideal cup of coffee can, it is
said, be made only in one
The coffee must be the best q
and must be roasted, ground
immediately and used as quickly
as possible. Connoisseurs in
fee assure us that it is out of the
question to make this beverage
absolutely perfect out of factory
roasted coffee that has been
lowed to stand in the open air any
number of hours; addition,
have something to do with
it but a man that has got cheek
to demand per month for his
services ought to have sense
enough to calculate the difference
in climatic conditions and cure
the second barn properly. A
gentleman living near
told us a few days ago that his en
tire crop was ruined last year by
his curer. This same fellow made
money enough out of this man to might say that such a thing
keep him up in his laziness S coffee from that
,, j -ii i i. which is purchased ready ground
the summer and be is quite impossibility. The fine
again this fall working for , aroma of the berry evaporates in
job. He ought to be promptly a very short time. Given the
denounced and driven out of the freshly roasted and ground c
community. Pitt county will
hardly be troubled with this class
of curses anymore. The farmers
here are beginning to learn too
much about it themselves.
Greene, Lenoir and Craven, are
the fields in which they will do
much of their work because these
counties are just beginning to
learn tobacco. Numbers and
numbers of farmers told us at the
warehouse last fall that their to-
had been ruined by the
curer. The facts of the case are
that the didn't know as
much about tobacco as his em-
and had simply come down
here because no one would have
him where he came from. Farm-
can generally tell whether
their curers know anything about
tobacco or not. If they cure by
receipt it is conclusive evidence
that they don't know much about
it There is a great deal of fraud
practiced in grading tobacco.
We have got to keep our eyes
open and see that the tobacco is
cured and graded properly be-
fore we c an command first class
prices-
an earthen coffee pot heated very
hot by being filled with boiling-
water, which must be poured out
again, and a coffee bag strainer.
Then put in the coffee, ground
very fine, almost to a powder;
pour it boiling
merely tightly and
low the coffee to filter through.
Have the cups, heated by
pouring boiling water in them, put
in the required quantity of cream
and sugar, then fill up with the
distilled nectar from the coffee
one has a beverage that is a
revelation. Never expect good
results from poor coffee or
warm water and half cold utensils.
The Correct
The question of is
probably one which does not vi-
tally affect the condition of the
community. At the same time
it is satisfactory to learn, on ex-
authority, that coats of
fashion will not this season be
adorned with multicolored and
built-up arrangements of flowers.
Simplicity is to the order of the
day. A La France rose, a gar-
or a carnation
reposing in its own foliage, and
with a stalk as long as possible, is
to be carelessly thrust through the
aperture which no tailor ever
meant to be confronted with a but-
ton. In short, the innocence of the
days is to
be re-established. In any case the
searching For IMPROVE- movement should be supported If
only for the reason of
the unnatural nosegays which
have for so long waxed fiercer in
In the course of a few days the wealth of wire.
writer of this department intends
making a trip through the
co belt of Eastern Carolina. We
want to spend some time in each
locality where much tobacco is
grown looking after the local
management of the tobacco crops
and from those who have been
most successful in the cultivation
and sale of we want to
get their plan of preparing the
land, manuring, cultivating, cur- becoming to stout figures than the
housing and selling and pub- l or wide
it in these columns for the
benefit of those who are just be-
ginning to grow tobacco and
sire information on this subject.
Spring Capes.
Spring capes are made
of very fine cloth in light colors, as
well as of velvet and brocade.
Fawn colored cloth models are
fined with pale green shot with
Pretty velvet capes in
Breton shape are lined with red,
yellow or mauve moire or brocade,
and finished with a deep jetted
yoke and flaring Medici collar.
These collars and are more
A Narrow Escape.
Two old-time met in the
road.
Mr. Green, good
Mr.
Jackson. How's
little
in de congregation once in
While. no trouble in
church, does
I does, better
De de
listers
once In while,
stay right plum, by
would be dun gone to rack ruin.
Wall, now, from de
family de Lewd de family de
flesh, how's own folks
well,
ain't got no
here, you mean
tell me ain't got no twins
down to
you did twins down
not twins, tell
you come in one it ten times
jest come in
I you elder had
twins down a mighty
Good I
go on down look de
family de
Traveler.
com-
pounded from a
used by the best
cal authorities and arc
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion, every-
where.
FRAUDULENT CURERS.
It is only a short while now be-
fore eastern planters will begin
curing primings and as the curing
season comes on we feel it our
duty to expose the frauds that
have been put off on a number of
our farmers here in Pitt county
by would be from
the upper counties. While it is
exceedingly distasteful to use
language that will prevent anyone
from getting a position to cure,
yet these, mole practices have
been carried to their fullest ex-
tent in Pitt county during the
last eight years and it is now
high time that they were stopped.
We want to be thoroughly under-
stood on this subject and no
means Would we have any one
think that all of those who come
here looking for work are frauds,
for of good honest men
have come to this county who
thoroughly understood the pro-
of curing, and at present
It seems to us, though are
young and limited in experience,
that the farming profession could
be raised to a higher plain of pro-
fit and success by an exchanging
of ideas as to the methods em-
ployed carrying on agriculture.
Those who have made the best
success in this profession are
those who are constantly
with ideas.
When we see a man making a
success of anything in which
others have failed, the natural
inquiry is how did he manage -it.
In this one word management lies
the secret of per cent of south-
failures. Bad management
and not the lack of resource is
the direct cause of so many
wrecks. So it is this that
of the direct causes of the
low ebb to which the farming
has fallen. George
Washington said that agriculture
was the highest, most healthful
and noble calling of man. It is
not any the less so to-day than
when it fell from the f
America's greatest statesman and
only deserves the careful and
systematic judgment that has
crowned other professions with
success to raise this most
able of all others to an equal
footing with them. And as above
stated we are fully convinced that
if the farmers would investigate
the plan pursued by our success-
agriculturist greater profits
would be realized when their
crops were marketed, hence our
object in visiting each section
and examining their methods of
farming in tobacco in particular
and other crops in general.
Eastern North Carolina the
garden spot of the State and it is
our object to aid as far as we can
in making it the of the
in the production of
bright tobacco. Only a short
time ago a tobacco man from
Virginia was in Greenville for a
The Kitchen Sink.
When you have any trouble in
securing perfect cleanliness about
the kitchen sink and drain pipe,
have a little concentrated lye
sprinkled over the strainer every
night. Some of it, of course, u
washed into the pipe, and there
unites with the grease and forms
strong soft soap. As soon as there
is boiling water in the morning,
pour a gallon of it down the pipe.
This will cleanse it thoroughly.
Celery After the Coffee.
Short, crisp bits of celery are
passed about the table, after the
black coffee of a course dinner, to
accompany the cheese. A sensible
freak of fashion, as tho digestive
qualities of celery have long been
well known.
Orange Pies.
Two cupfuls each of sugar and
j flour, five one of
cream of tartar, half a
i of soda, the juice and rind of one
is j orange.
add the
then add the orange. Mix tho soda
and cream of tartar with tho flour,
and sift over the beaten eggs and
sugar. Stir well, and bake in six
deep plates. When baked, put a
thin layer of the icing between tho
cakes and ice the top. There should
be three layers In one
keeper.
few days and he was hoard to say
that Carolina
of curing, and at present we the finest section of the country
have two letters on file from gen- that he had ever seen
onlooker.
Beat the eggs very light;
sugar, beat until frothy,
Sacred to the German Government.
Most of us know that tho French
government reserves to itself the
right of using white paper for post-
tho powers that be on the other
side of the Rhine have one
In future no advertise-
circular or poster must lead off
with the word
i. e., Henceforth
this word is sacred to the German
government, and its use will cost the
private individual very heavily.
A Canary Captured by a Spider.
The strength of some of the
spiders which build their webs in
trees and other places in and
around Santa Ana, Central
America, is astonishing. One of
them had in captivity in a tree
there not long ago a wild canary.
The ends of the wings, the tail,
and teat of the bird were bound
together by some sticky substance,
to which were attached the
threads of the spider, which was
slowly but surely drawing the
bird by an ingenious pulley
The bird hung head
downward and was so securely
bound with little threads that it
could not struggle, and would have
Electricity as a Purifier.
Electricity seems to be coming
prominently to the front for use
purification processes. It has been
successfully introduced in France
and England for purifying sewage,
and if worked with a refuse
tor, in which tho heat can be used
for generating the current, it is
thought it will be found not only
more satisfactory, but more
than existing methods.
In Germany an electrolytic process
for purifying mercury for use in
very accurate work is coming
into general use. A new
of bleaching starch by
is also reported, by
which, it is said, second and lower
qualities of the product can be
treated so that they
can compare favorably with the first
quality. Methods of manufacturing
ozone by electrical action are also well
known. In fact, it seems as if tho
electric current were destined to
play a very important part in the
sanitary engineering of the future.
About Allspice.
Island of Jamaica produces
about all the allspice that is used.
It is known also as pimento or
Jamaica pepper. The tree on
which the berries grow is ever-
green, and the flowers grow in
dense clusters ; these develop into
small, green aromatic berries the
size of black pepper. If allowed
to ripen they become pulpy and
loose some of their pungency. For
commercial purposes, the berries
are gathered when green, carefully
dried in the sun and afterwards
packed in bags holding to to
pounds and shipped. Pimento
trees grow in many parts of
cal America, but nowhere do they
thrive as in Jamaica. The trees
are never planted by man and re-
no cultivation worthy of th
name. The seeds are dropped by
the birds, And the rains and tho
tropical sun do the rest. Surplus
trees are cut down and become
walking sticks and umbrella
This spice is more mild and
innocent than most other spices.
A cure for Contagious
Poison, Inherited
Skin Cancer.
As ft for delicate Women
and Children it has do equal.
Being purely vegetable, is
less la
A on and Skin Dis-
ease application.
Sell it.
MOT SPECIFIC CO.,
Drawer
Is Your Life
Worth
Are there not
persons dependent on
your earnings for their
support Are they pro-
for in case of your
death The simplest and
safest way of assuring
their protection is life in-
Business, pro-
and working
men generally, should in-
sure, for their brains or
their muscles, are their
capital and income too.
Death stops them both.
Insure in the
Equitable Life
and death
salary or steal your
and your loved ones
will be safe from want
ROCK HILL. Sooth Carolina.
moot
R. W. ROYSTER CO
. gently
but promptly upon the liver,
and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, ha ;
breath and head- i
ache. One taken at the
first symptom indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, depression of
spirits, will surely end quickly j
remove the v. hole difficulty, j
may be
of nearest druggist
are to take.
quick to act, and
save many a
tor's bill.
.,.
PATENTS
obtained, and nil business in S
Patent office or in the attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We are opposite the II. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents in less time than those
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing Is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and make no change unless we ob-
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the
of the Money Order Did., and
the U. S. Patent Office.
advise terms and reference to
clients in your own State, or
address, C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, I, C.
N.
BUYS
References and type samples on application.
I town to handle the
JACK FROST FREEZERS.
A Scientific Machine on a Scientific Principle
Save their cost a dozen times a year. It is not
or sloppy. A child can operate it Sells at sight
Send for prices and discounts.
Murray St., NEW
in Seconds.
-Manufacturer of-
CARTS DRAYS
OINTMENT
MARK
For the Cure of all Skin Diseases
This Preparation 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
-he country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, with the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
a Its own 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. Tho usual
discount to Druggist. All Cash
promptly attended to. Address all or-
and communications to
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
Sole Manufacturer and Proprietor,
Greenville, N . C
Also, for sad
ST
R. B.
and Schedule
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No No
April. 18th, daily Fast Mail, daily
daily ex Sun
Weldon 12,30 pm OS pm
Ar Rocky Mount pm pm
pm
Tarboro
Rocky Mt p m pm am
is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing
but work. We keep up with the times and the improved styles
Best material used in all work. All styles of springs arc used, you can from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King
also keep on hand a full line of Made Harness which w
ell at the lowest rates. Special attention given to repairing.
X. ID-
Greenville, N C.
Do You Write
THEN
YOU MUST
HAVE TAPER, PENS,
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK-
SEE WHAT THE-
Wilson
Florence
Wilson
Goldsboro
Magnolia
a r Wilmington
TRAINS GOING NORTH
No No
daily dally
Florence
Ar Wilson
f-v Wilmington
Magnolia
Goldsboro
Ar Wilson
Wilson
No
dally
ex Sun.
am
Ai Rocky Mont
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro p m
Daily except
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 Halifax p.
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p. m.,
Greenville 6.28 p. m., Kinston 7.03
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m.,
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Halifax
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily
except Sunday.
Trains on Washington leave
Washington 7.00 a. in., arrives Parmele
8.40 a. in., Tarboro 9.50; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00
arrives Washington 7.30 p.
ally except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, P M, Sunday P M, arrive
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
6.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m-
N C, 10.26 AM 12,20.
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
mil Branch leave
ville a m, arrive Rowland p m.
Returning leave Rowland p m,
arrive p m. Daily ex-
sept Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, A M
rive N C, A M. Re
lining laves Smithfield, N C AM
arrive Goldsboro. NO A M.
Train
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
Hope A M, Nashville
8.86 Rocky Mount A
M. dally, except Sunday.
Trains on Branch R. R. leave
Latta 7.80 p. m. arrive Dunbar 8.40 p.
m. Returning leave Dunbar
arrive Latta 7.15 a. in. y
Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
and AM Returning
ton at A If, P.
at Warsaw with Not. and
Train No. makes at
Weldon for all points North daily. All
via Richmond, and dally except Sun-
day via Bay Line, also, at Mount
dally except Sunday With A
railroad Norfolk and all
points via Norfolk.
General
J. B. Transportation aft
T. If
Reflector V Book Store
CAN OFFER IN THESE.
Legal Cap to cents a quire.
Fool's Cap Per to cents quire.
Letter Paper cents a quire.
Note Paper to cents a quire.
Envelopes to a pack.
Box Paper from cents up.
Gilt Edge aper to cents a quire.
Linen Note Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire.
Nice Square Envelopes to match the Paper.
Fine at all prices.
THESE ARE NO THIN, CHEAP
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD
INK but FIRST-CLASS
Tablets, Slates,
-O---
JUST
SEE WHAT
WE HAVE FOR
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN.
Pencil Tablets, Lotter and
Fools Cap sizes only cents.
You pay cents for these
same tablets elsewhere.
cents to cents.
Pencils con's per doz.
Fancy Colored Crayons
per box.
Pens cents per
dozen-
Fine Assorted Pens cents
per dozen.
Plain Lead Pencils cents
per
Rubber Lead Pencils
cents per dozen-
Pen Holders cents per doz.
And lots of other things just
as cheap.
Do You Read
Then yon want tho best handle the leading
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews,
New Peterson, etc, at usual retail prices. Besides we carry a line of
popular paper covered Novels at only cents each, and nicely
Novels at cents- These embrace books by the best writers,
a list too large to mention. Any book wanted that is not on hand
be ordered.
TAKEN TO ALL LEADING PAPERS A


Title
Eastern reflector, 14 June 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
June 14, 1893
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17602
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