Eastern reflector, 26 July 1893






in
takes bis
One Dollar
Job Printing
Office
STATE NEWS.
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream o the News.
The suspended First National
Bank of Winston will soon be re-
organized.
The attendance at the summer
law school at the University is on
the
Mill hands at Char-
struck for a new president
and superintendent.
The Grand Lodge Knights of
Honor of North Carolina will
meet in August
are now leaving
New at the rate of from
one o two thousand barrels per
day.
Monroe aldermen have passed
an ordinance a tine of
on any minor who enters a
barroom.
A now cotton mill at Concord
has been contracted for. The
hard times have not stopped work
on new mills.
On the and inst., a
total of car loads of melons
passed through Charlotte for
northern markets.
The store of Sample S
at Greensboro, wag bully dam-
aged by fire Friday, causing a
loss of nearly
A white convict from Cleveland
county was dangerously shot in
the thigh while attempting to
escape from the stockade a the
State farm, at Castle near
Wilmington.
A new cotton mill is being erect-
ed at Riverside, about three miles
from Catawba Station. Iredell
county. The capital stock is i-MO.-
000- The mill will commence
work with spindles.
Solomon an aged citizen
who died in Northampton county,
had laid by, in cold cash, a for-
tune of which he had
hoarded up daring his life time-
He leaves an invalid wife. The
old couple lived without the
comforts of life, few
pie suspected that posses-
so much ready money.
Fayetteville Gazette says that
the Bank of New Hanover
our neighbor,
entity, for over cf the
county funds, and the town of
Lumberton for about one
estate having over on de-
posit there at the time of the fail
The sum total of Fayette-
loss, by private citizens,
will not exceed
The people of James City an-
their intention of appeal
to the citizens of for
aid to purchase a site for them to
locate on in the near future, they
having to move from
their present homes in a body.
They have the refusal of several
tracts of laud that suit them for
the purpose several citizens
of the are now out with
the subscription papers soliciting
contributions toward the
chase.
The Charlotte Observer
that there was little short of a
riot at Sunday night
and two lives now in jeopardy.
A named King,
who lives near the depot and is
known as a wife boater in
burg, beat his wife so badly
she is now dying. A of
white men hearing her screams
went to her rescue and one of
them was attacked by King with
a chair. Some one than shot the
twice- His skull was
en by the bullets and his brain
was oozing out when the doctor
came to his relief.
PAINT ,
SOLD UNDER GUARANTEE.
LESS
Sole Agents,
GREENVILLE, M C.
The Eastern Reflector
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
Beaches the
patron,
By advertising in an
Therefore he uses
Re fleeter.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1893.
NO.
This Office for Job Printing
CAPTURED BY KINDNESS.
BY
Darkness Lad begun to settle over
the muddy waters of the Ohio, and,
one after another, a company of men
gathered upon its hank in u secluded
spot some ten miles above the city
of Cairo, and consequently that dis-
from the river junction with
the mighty Mississippi.
Six in all formed the group when
they were assembled, last
arrived in a from down
stream. This seemed to the lead-
for as he sprang ashore and made
the boat's painter fast he said, he
cast, a
all here, see. That's
good. Now to
The half dozen individuals wore
hard-looking is, all
but the chief. He might have passed
for a steamer pilot, had he been en-
countered on a vessel's deck, and so
he had been; fact, Jo Humphrey
still carried a license to servo in
that capacity on both
for same reason he was out of a
at the present time.
all here. I repeated
the loader, I'm glad of it,
we've got to decide on a pretty
weighty job
thought wed decided already
to board the River Monarch on her
up remarked one of the men.
you detail each one of
for a certain part of the
course did. and if you only
faithfully perform that to which you
aw assigned, we'll have the
safe, and its contents all right and
tight. But there is something
to lie done that I did not know of at
our last
went on the chief.
am almost positive that Hi Burn-
ham is on to
then. I don't see why a
little lead, or maybe half afoot
steel won't answered
the man who had first replied to
Humphrey.
I don't like the idea of doing
away with the fellow. You know,
boys, that and I wore
once, and he's never done anything
to cause me to get down on him
will though, if ho runs
athwart of us in lay, returned
another of the men.
was thinking, con-
Humphrey, we might
give wrong
if we do. and we succeed in
capturing the pile, won't Hi know
who to look to to settle the blame
if there is any possible
chance of the sheriffs suspecting
that we are going to board the Mon-
arch, why. I move that we call upon
him when he ain't us, and
lay him
I second the
ran through the group.
seem to have settled it
among returned the
chief. you must do the job
yourselves. I'll lead you aboard the
steamer, and take the biggest part
of the risk there, but not lend a
hand toward the death of old
mind, we don't blame
you for that way toward Hi,
for we know you two run together
on the river several years. But. it's
a matter of business,
as it were, you can leave
him to us. We'll have him out of
the way
suppose it's got to be, but it's
pretty returned Humphrey.
Then he sure that you're
on hand to-morrow afternoon when
the boat makes a landing at Cairo.
We'll board her
be afraid of us, we'll be
around on
Thus assured, the ex-pilot and
present pirate cast his skiff adrift
a ad floated away down stream.
In the suburbs of Cairo, and not
far from the river, was Jo Hum-
home. A cozy place, it was.
and one would hardly think that it
housed an outlaw.
The pirate's wife was a pa-
and had at one time been a
handsome woman. She suspected
her husband's crimes, but was too
to remonstrate with him, and
she lived along from day to day
trusting that he would escape
and hoping that he would even-
reform and become an honest
man, a credit to himself and an
honor to her.
An hour after leaving his
Humphrey stepped upon the
porch of his house, but stopped as
though he had been smitten by an
unseen hand. It was voices that he
heard which arrested his progress.
Peering in at the open window,
saw his wife in earnest conversation
with the man to whose murder he
had so recently consented.
he heard the woman
are very kind. I will be-
Jo to renounce the attempt,
and I know that he will feel grateful
to you for your
do it. replied the
they will be arrested, they arc
known. Tell Jo that you received
this intelligence from an old friend
of his, but do not mention my
will not be necessary, ex-
claimed the suddenly step-
ping into the room. will not be
necessary. You have received my
wife's thanks; now accept mine,
coupled with the assurance that I
appreciate the warning, and re-
the enterprise. Not this
alone, but all similar ones. The last
few moments has convinced me that
I possess a true and loyal friend,
who will be sacrificed wore I to con-
the path in which I have been
following of late. re-
Humphrey, his cheek paling.
Then in a determined manner
he
You must not leave this
house
leave the house What do
you
death awaits you at your
awaits returned the
sheriff. can wish to compass
my end I know that I have many
enemies, but I did not think I
any so hitter as to wish to
seek my
there men even
now lying in wait to kill
I cannot follow your advice
and remain here. You must
my wife and child may in
and my is by their
I had forgotten them.
if you must go I will
Turning to his wife. Jo Humphrey
gathered her in his arms, and
printing a kiss upon her lips
your husband is not the
man he was an hour
Extending his hand to his friend
ho
Hi, the river gang shall
shim; before they harm a hair of
your
Side by side the reformed pirate
and the sheriff walked out into the
night. When near the hitters house
two men were on slinking
away by the roadside. On
them, Humphrey
the Same is up. The sheriff
and are again, mm-
aver dares to harm him has got to
run up against
A week later Jo was at his old
place in the pilot house, and to-day
there is mil a man more respected
and popular than Humphrey, the ex-
pirate who was captured by kind-
Blade;.
The Last Stages Disease.
In paralysis, or the last stages of
many diseases where then- is no con-
of the discharges, the suffering
is pitiable unless the most extreme
care is used. Oakum pads are in-
valuable. The oakum should
picked apart to make it light and
porous, then covered with a piece of
choose doth to form a cushion. The
bed should protected with a rub-
sheet, the cotton sheet pinned
firmly over this, then a square of
rubber shooting folded in old cotton
placed in the middle, and the oakum
pad on this under the hips of the
sufferer. Those should be frequently
changed.
If the skin is chafed it should be
anointed each time with oxide of zinc
ointment gently rubbed in. Pow-
with French chalk,
acid, or lycopodium powder may
substituted occasionally.
When a rubber sheet cannot be
obtained several thicknesses of news-
paper can be used, changing them
frequently.
The oakum pads useful in eases
of dropsy when the fluid exudes from
the logs and it is difficult to keep the
bod dry.
In cases of long-continued confine-
to bed a water bed is a great
luxury when it can be afforded. A
good one costs about twenty dollars.
The yielding surface equalizes the
pressure and lessens the danger of
Journal.
BECKY'S BAD INVESTMENT.
She Pays Wonderful
co Cure Discovery.
you seed a
slick tongue chap here
do said the
old man as he dropped wearily
the-wood box.
He was terribly excited,
QUESTIONS.
Do Not Send Them Away Without
a Answer.
Many Way Kill fur I
Tim.- and Your a
Chancre to the
Next
Oh, the questions and the
From early morning until
bedtime the busy little tongues are
there- was a dangerous in in conversations
his right eye. with the dollies and
Uncle I said, folks, the burden of their
why do you ask speech is for,
,,., , i -it until mamma's
does I ax I if I
lays two on him
head seems to be spinning round and ; devotes much attention
round like
PRIZES ON PATENTS. attorneys of Washington. In-
tending competitors should fill
, out the following blank, and for-
HOW TO GET TWENTY FIVE ward it with their application
HUNDRED DOLLARS FOR
NOTHING.
submit the within described
, , , , , , invention in competition for the
The has a Clear a Small, Twenty-five Hundred Dollar
Fortune, and the Losers Have . Claim
Patents that may Bring
Them in Still More.
NO IN lilts
Would you like to make twenty- This is a competition of rather
five hundred If you unusual nature. It is com
would, read carefully what follows to prizes for the best
and you may moo. ii way to do it. story, or picture, or architectural
The Claims the risking
to pat
; the loss of their
labor
oh
th
a U-p, among It has handled thousands successful one merely his
body's order a lively Interrogation points Do we i of applicants for inventions, I , of toe prize. But
it would like to handle thousands Company
coat, and no mistake it. not all
what has he done
did my
you a five
in times when
do banks till a cf I
could only
did he manage it I
De are
by a bill de rainy into the easier
day- Dis I went r the eager
era,
aim Is la it much wonder
by and by. or put
tie questioners off with almost any
answer occurs to our bewildered
know about of us. .
fathers and mothers and grand- more. There is plenty of something entirely different,
mothers, sisters and cousins and talent at large in merely to
we say nothing but encourage- and the one who
it. to produce practical results. to the
encouragement the Press
j Claim Company proposes
Save
Paying
Bills
BOTANIC
BLOOD BALM
THE GREAT REMEDY
FOR LL BLOOD SKIN
am
for w fail, to
find i--i
ULCERS. ECZEMA,
PIMPLES. ERUPTIONS. I
ant nil r or mad I
mat
I lilt r I
.-id. tor i.
lie
r SENT FREE
BLOOD BALM CO., Atlanta. Ga. I
give.
NOT
so HARD As KM
brains Unfortunately we
with our full nerves,
and constant dropping will wear
. A patent strikes some people as
T n appallingly formidable thing.
fall. and naturally enough, is an inventor must
be a genius, like Edison
or
and up dis slick tongue
sinner, and he war
mi good
he said, nice
man dis tine
gone said Becky.
tickled his
Well, sorry he's said
do rascal, for he I
I want do gratis
boom to what is to
fashion of meeting
and
with careless answers that
leave the little folks and
disappointed. I am not so sure but
that we are punishing ourselves in
that way. fr small minds are so
easily silenced, and, moreover, the
small owners of the small minds have
a generous amount of
to use a vulgar phrase, and
the half-answered questions are quite
apt to return upon us with reinforce- complex,
that
done Are to their authors.
rewarded for doing
The prize is only a stimulus
do something that would be
well worth doing without it. The I
architect whose competitive plan
for a club house on a certain I
nor is not accepted has spent his j
labor on something of very little I
use to him. But the person who
that he must devote I patents a simple and useful de-
to driving in in the Press Com-
problems and that he need not won
most spend a fortune on delicate he fail to seem-,; the prise- He
experiments before he can a I has a substantial result to show
new device t. a his work one that will com j
of perfection. This delusion the its value in the market
company desires to dispel. It I any time-
desires to get into the head of the j The plain man who uses any
I public a clear comprehension of in his daily work ought to j
I the fact it is not the great, ho to improve it
expensive
best returns
but the little
Notice.
I desire to announce to Menus and
ii.- public generally that have opened
an office for myself Just across the
residence on the old Dr.
Blow lot where I can lie found at
M. I.
DENTIST,
I.
F. PUSHING,
ATTORNEY AW
X.
attention to business. Office
at Tucker t old stand.
J JARVis.
BLOW,
L. BLOW
I possess a
for husband, although
man . of bis Motions can scarcely
Toll him that his
achene- to rob the Monarch
has boon discovered, and that should
lie or any of his associates try to
board the. steamer when, she arrives
A Novel Way or Landing an Ocean
Monster.
Mathias hostler of the
Seal Rock house, near San Francis-
co, has caught largest sea bass
that the coast has seen for many a
long day. It is business
to rise early each morning, and,
hitching a horse to a wagon, patrol
the sands for a couple of hours in
search of driftwood.
But Mathias other callings.
He is the of the
beach. Each day, as he scours the
shore for wood, he takes a long line
with him, which he throws out into
the sea and awaits results. A few
days ago he got more than he bar-
gained for.
Mathias had scarcely thrown his
line to his it
was pulled from his grasp He bad
to spare, however, and grasp-
anew endeavored to land his
prize. Soon the and
of a large object came in-
to view, and Mathias concluded that
he had hooked some sea monster.
Then his inventive genius asserted
itself. Hastily making fast the line
to the of tho cart, he
shouted for his horse to
got. The result
was that the prize was landed, and
proved to an enormous sea bass
Mathias put his catch into his
wagon and started for home. There
his fish was weighed. It was four
feet seven inches in length and six-
pounds in weigh, the largest
fish of its kind that has been caught
of the coast.
I'll warrant it equal to the patient an
i i i i i or. harder
cure de man o de habit in
two
Do said Becky, how
does sell it V
ax for dis wonder-
ho said, producing
little red sealed envelope, I'll
fur case it fails
and
till, to the
acknowledging ourselves unable to
answer, oftentimes The babies are
sure to prove too much for us, over
and over again. We may have
studied the wisdom of the world and
have stored our minds and
with all the valuable knowledge
within our reach, but sooner or
later some bit of a philosopher will
stand at our knee, looking up into
simple, and cheap
seem so absurdly
vial that the average citizen would
feel somewhat ashamed of bring
them to the attention of the
Patent Office.
Edison says that the profits he
has received from the patents on
all his marvelous inventions have
not been sufficient to pay the cost
of his experiments. the man
who conceived the idea of fasten
K Y S-AT- LAW,
Practice in all the Courts.
i. a.
TYSON.
II. K. SOU
It a said do our face with a world of wistfulness a rubber cord to a child s
in his blue eves, and calmly await ; ball, so that it would come back
Mi old man
quit
Becky gen him mi bran
now V dis
piece ob paper. She war
all her face when I got hum.
got remedy cure you
de she said,
de in mi
our answer to some awful question.
What Let us see to it that
we do not put him off lightly.
us the woo bit philosopher
into our arms, and, hugging him
tightly the while, confess our
; simply and humbly. Let
us toll him he could not understand
we do not understand our grown-
up he must wait for his
to tho hand when thrown, made, a
fortune out of his scheme The
modern sewing-machine is a
of integrity -the product of
the toil of hundreds of busy
brains through a hundred and
fifty years, but the whole brilliant
results rests upon the do
vice of putting the eye of the
n. at the point instead of at
the other end.
than the mechanical expert who
studios it only from the
cal point of view, rid of the
idea that an improvement can
too simple to worth patenting.
The simpler the bettor. The per
sou who best in
simplicity and popularity, will
gel the Press Claims Company's
twenty five hundred dollars.
The responsibility of com
may be judged from the fact attention Riven to collections
that its stock is held by about
three hundred of the leading
newspapers of the United States.
Address the Press Claims Com-
John
attorney, P. street. N. w.,
Washington, D. C
HARRY
SKINNER,
N. C.
Secretary Pugilism.
P.
U K E E N V I L L E, N C.
all courts. Collections a
-in
OLD DOMINION LINE.
in and she de answer until he is old enough to find
she made de chap. I it for himself and too.
opened it now. Boss, heath's ; Then, perhaps.
what I scrap
T b a SI T i almost everybody has been struck,
I took the paper, and on it were ; in that we can answer. Is . another, v. ideas
these words, for which his wife possible that we do not see the calculated to reduce
matter with a frolic
Mother store.
might end tho
or a good old
But there
LITTLE i THE VAL-
Comparatively few people re
card themselves as inventors, but
had paid
using tobacco, you darn
ed fool, and yon are c
patch.
which his wife not
importance of this
. how our answers failures
I some of the little frictions of life,
are
x you darn-1 our or failures to j
mod Din. answer may be molding the ht- further thought.
minds that lie behind the , K;
bi. , make its car windows
Where is the Jag
So small a thing will change
the current of a stream. With all
its sweetness and its blessedness it
After the return of tho drummer comes close upon being an awful
from his travels his wife-thing to father and mother, those
explored his grip with an expect-1
ant face. Failing to find that of
which she was in I As possible, then, shall
turned to him we not answer the countless
Where is the with all patience and truthful-
The what he asked in i u
. . . tests every fiber our nervous and
mental strength When re-
Mi-s says her ,. last, then it
husband saw your in Chicago with i is high time to put a gentle, firm
a lovely jag on. Whatever it to all questioning for awhile,
you are not wearing it, and it isn't i and, by the exorcise of a little tact,
turn the little questioner s thou
hi your
Oh, that's all right. left it
at the office. By tho way. saw
a handsome spring hat in a mil-
liner's shop down town. If you
care we will go down town an
you can look at it, and if you like
it you can have
Grocer.
What America Possesses.
its
into an entirely different channel.
Send him off on an imaginary trip
down town to buy you a
blue or a pair of chickens
for dinner. Sit down for a minute
and tell him a jolly little story. Give
a responsible little task to do
that will fill his small soul with pride.
There arc a hundred and one ways
and means to end tho questions tor
i a time and allow your tired brain a
chance to recruit and make ready
I for the next attack which is sure to
We have the prettiest woman come,
and the pest dressed woman in j O, yes, we shall get tired
the wide world.
We have the men and
the most long suffering in the
world.
We have the cheekiest politic
inns and the most ignorant in the
world.
We have more kinds of climate
and some of the worst in the world
We have the best hat's and
they charge the most in the world.
We have the finest fancy drinks
and we know how to make them
better than anybody tho world.
We have better fruit, tho
rich and the poor alike c in get it,
which can be done, no place else
in the world.
We have invented the type-
writer at least, I think we have,
and nobody else in tho process
comes up to it or her. plied with to the water of
We have the World's
don't exactly what it is I
haven't been it, but judging
from tho pictures I don't believe
anything in the world can beat
those beautiful buildings. Bab
in Courier-Journal.
in
make car winnows so
i that they can be slid up and down
without breaking tin passengers
back exclaims
I wen running the road would
make them in such n
What was the man that made
wonder that fee so impotent thinking
sometimes grumbles the cook. r
had to work over a or he
would have known how it ought
to have
such it collar
growls the man who is for
breakfast T wore, the
I'd make buttons that would
not slip out, or break or
out the back of my
And then tho various sufferers
forget about their grievances
begin to think of something else.
Secretary is not a believer
i in the manly and elevating qualities
of the sport of as ex- j
by Hon. John Lawrence
Sullivan, of Boston, Mr. James
I tho eminent hanker of the
Pacific slope, el ah A few nights
since when Mr. Dixon, a colored
gentleman of delicate physique but
preeminent as a despoiler of the
countenances of his fellow men, was
exhibiting his skill in the art of de-
and offense at theater,
he i Ted fifty dollars to the person
who would undergo his thumping
for the period of four rounds. A
young colored from Sec TAR H SERVICE
rotary school of finance, ;
by name
oppose his
enough
before the little heads have grown
out of their curls into their student
caps, and gone away from us to
answered by wiser minds than ours.
But it is a kind of tiredness to
proud Agriculturist.
Purifying Filthy Water.
The filthy water of the River Nellie
is purified for use in Antwerp by be-
passed through revolving
containing small pieces of iron.
Fifteen pounds of metallic iron will
purify one million of water.
The water thus treated is said to be
completely freed from germs, bacteria
and matters. Eng-
and French chemists find that tho
contact with iron reduces the organic
matter by from forty-five to eighty-
five per cent., and am-
by from fifty to ninety per
cent., and all free ammonia is
moved. The process has been
r of
the Delaware river Pennsylvania.
It is simple and cheap. From c
which it may be Inferred the
passage of drinking water through
pipes it.
essayed to
ts to those of Mr.
Dixon for glory and the emolument
aforesaid. Johnson made a
noble fight For three rounds and the
curtain finally fell just as he was
sinking to rest upon the floor. In-
chair legs were wafted
about by bis admiring friends, who
asserted that the fourth round had
been prolonged forty-nine seconds
before Dixon could put his
to sleep. The manager gave
Johnson live dollars a-- balm for his
wounded feelings and face and as-
sured the public that be was
honor to the treasury
This view of Johnson's accomplish-
was not taken by Secretary
or else he thought they
If they would sit down at the should have a wider scope for their
next convenient Opportunity, put When the newspaper no-
their ideas about car windows. show- red upon came to
saucepans, and collar buttons the secretary's eyes he ordered that
practical shape, and then the name of the young pugilist
ply for patents, they might find should be stricken from the roll.
themselves as
wealthy as the man who invented A Sure
the iron umbrella ring, or tho one
who patented the fifteen Apparently the World is the same
old place that it ever was, and the
a TEMPTING elegant adage concerning
To induce people to keep track ; the way to a mans heart is as
of their bright ideas and see what now as in the days of tho genius
there is in them, the Press Claims I who evolved the noble sentiment.
Company has resolved to offer a i For the club of unmarried women
whose members took turns in order-
To the person who submits serving a club din-
it the simplest most j nor, to which feast one man might
from a commercial be every girl, has entire-
point of view, the company will collapsed owing to the fact that
give twenty-five hundred dollars i there have been as many marriages
in cash, in addition to refunding ; as there were members. Every girl
the fees for securing the patent. has a dinner to got at home, and
It will also the there is no time to devote to club
free of charge.
This offer is subject to the fol-
lowing
Every competitor must obtain
a patent for his invention through
the company- He must
ply for a preliminary search, the
cost, cf which be dollars.
Should this search show his in-
to be he,
can withdraw without further ex-
Otherwise he will be ex- i
pouted to complete his
and take out a patent in the I
regular way. The total
including and i
fees will be seventy dollars
For this, whether he th- ,
prize or not. the inventor will
have a patent that ought to be a ;
valuable property to him. The
will be by n
of three reputable pat
prize
leave Washington for Green.
v and touching at all land-
on Tar River Monday,
at If.
Returning leave Tarboro at A SI.
Thursdays and Saturdays
A. N. same
lure, am subject to stage of
water on Tar River.
Washington with steam-
era The Norfolk, Newborn Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. New- York and Boston,
Shippers their good
marked via nonunion Iron
New- York. from
Norfolk
more Steamboat from
more. Miners from
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington N. C
I.
Agent,
Greenville, N C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
OLD
ANTS BUT
their year's will
their interest prices before
is complete
n branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICK, TEA,
at Lowest Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com-
stock
on band sold at prices
the times. Out goods are all bought and
CASH. no
to sell lit a close margin
Respectfully,
S. M. SCHULTZ.
N C,
LESSENS SAFETY
to LIFE of MOTHER and CHILD.
My wife, after used Mother's
Friend, pasted through the ordeal with
little pain, was stronger one hour
than in a week after the birth of her
former child. J. J.
Mother's Friend lobbed g
shortened
L.
by J
suited free.
For by
IF WANT ABOUT
.-. r i,
Ml
art
WIDOWS,
PARENTS.
W 1.--3
r-i-.
-w CM
I a u





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
WEDNESDAY.
at at O
N. C as second-class mail matter.
Publisher's
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF
The Reflector is 81.00 per ye v.
Rates.- One
one year, one-half year
; one-quarter column one
Transient inch
one weak, ; two weeks, 81.50 one
month fl. Two inches one week, 81.50,
two weeks, one month,
inserted in Local
Column an items, cents per
line tor each Insertion-
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad
and Notices
and Sales.
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will
charged for at legal rates and must
BK PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any met not mention d
above, for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in person or 1-y letter.
Copy Advertisements and
all changes of should lie
banded ill by o'clock on Tuesday
morning.- in order to receive prompt- In
following.
Mr- L- V. Blum, of Salem,
the oldest editor and publisher
the State died last week. He
was years old and had been
for many years previous to his
death engaged in the newspaper
business. He retired only a short
while before his death.
Comptroller has written
a letter to the Presidents of the
suspended banks in Denver in
which he says that every aid
will be given them by the
Treasury, such as plenty of time
for reorganization, for the speedy
resumption of payment, and for
making all necessary collections.
Secretary has returned
to Washington after a three weeks
stay at the World's Fair. A
of appointments under his de-
may be looked for soon
and it is thought that F- M. Sim-
mons for the Eastern District of
North Carolina will be one of the
first appointed. However, the
appointment may be delayed
Congress meets as the time is
so near at hand.
The trouble between France
and Siam is becoming interesting
Russia has decided to stand by-
France, and China will come to
the rescue of Siam. The pros-
is good also for England to
join Siam and China. Russia has
already sent a fleet to aid France.
The ultimatum sent by France to
Siam with only forty-eight hours
to answer it may not be heeded
under the circumstances.
The dispute arose from the
fact that France persisted in
the river in Siam
with a warlike fleet Siam resist-
ed and fired upon the French
fleet. The French have demand-
ed a heavy indemnity and gives
but a short time to accede to
their demands. This little con-
seems like to involve the
dragons of China, the lions of
England and the Russian
bears. If war results its
must of necessity be
tic as already the most powerful
nations of Asia and Europe are
involved and this would as a
consequence the
affair all of their allies. War is
always horrible but when two
countries are involved such as
this at present promises to be
the would be appalling.
DOWN BY DEEP BLUE SEA.
H- C July
This charming place continues
the scene of pleasure and gaiety.
New guests arrive almost daily to
take the of those who have
stayed out their time and de-
parted, at this writing the
crowd is larger at time
during the season.
The steamer Gazelle on Wed
brought down a large
party among whom were Mr. J-
R. Davenport and wife and Miss-
es Rena Fleming and
Daniel, from Pitt
There were also from Wash-
the family of Capt David
R. R Warren and family, F.
M- Wright and family, Misses
Matter Blount, and Lucy
Myers, E K. Willis, T. W. Han
J, and a number of others,
Mrs. B. A. Bell, of Norfolk, Miss
Alice Daffy, of and
Miss Morgan of Camden, N. J-
Saturday morning the
of Washington arrived after
a two day's voyage on a sail yes
They started from home
Thursday, but met with an
dent that delayed them. The
being rough Thursday
night their vessel lost her
board and had to lay at anchor
the remainder of the night Fri-
day morning a passing schooner
was hailed but failing to under-
stand their signals they had to
pat back to Swan Quarter and
wait for a new to be
made- A large number of the
party were made very seasick bat
came ashore in good spirits.
The club consists of Messrs- W.
; K- G. R. E. S
I Hoyt. Jr., H. E Bonner, F. C
Mitchell, F. V. Rowe, N. S.
Jr., J. H. Hodges, G. J-
F. H. Short, F. C
Alston Perkins. J- P-
Brown, J. W. Brown, E. M.
Brown, J. B- Will
Thompson, Misses P. B. and
Janie Myers, Abbie Randolph,
Mattie Russell, Cathrine Shaw,
Cora Dunstan, Belle Blount, An-
Satterthwaite, Julia Jordan,
Bettie Latham, Jessie Gray Bur-
banks, Jennie Gray Hodges, Julia
Hoyt Rachael Mes-
dames F. V. Rowe and Sarah
Russell There are
also with the club as invited
guests Misses Gertrude Royster,
Raleigh ; Florie E. Duke, Rich-
mend ; Fannie Jones,
ton ; Cora Mitchell and
Badham, Edenton; May Bell,
Norfolk, Annie Yeates-
Pearl Percival,
and Mr- A C Mitchell, Edenton
The club will remain a week and
will fill up the time a series of
dances, and fishing, sailing and
surf parties. A club from New-
is expected to come down
and join them.
Three steamers came in Sun-
day morning bringing enough
people to fill the hotel and send
many to the boarding houses
about the island. I notice among
tho now arrivals Lieutenant and
Mrs. L. Lucas, of Wilmington
and Mr. Burbank, of Washington,
both gentlemen connected with
the government service, also Hon.
Chas- F. Warren, Capt. A. W.
Styron, R. B. Smith and wife, of
Washington, H. A- Latham, editor
Washington W. H. Smith
and family of Greenville and a
number of young men from sever-
towns.
One of the most pleasant boat
parties so far was a combined
sailing and surf party Saturday
afternoon, excellently managed
by Mr. H. N- Blount, of Washing-
ton. In the party were Mr. and
Mrs. Blount, Mrs. W. P.
Mrs. A- W. Thomas, Misses
and Lucy Myers and T-
W. of Washington,
Mr. and Mrs- W. J- Davis, of
son, Mr. and Mrs. D- J. Which-
ard and B. F. Tyson, of Green
ville. Mrs. B. A Bell, of Norfolk,
W. M. Pippin, of Tarboro. After
a delightful sail several of the
party went in the surf, and before
returning melons were served on
the beach.
There are several very
married ladies here and they
receive a full share of
To no one are the guests
so much indebted as to Mrs- W.
P. for the excellent mu-
sic she renders. She performs
charmingly and requests for her
to play are numerous. Her little
daughter Pattie, aged four-and-a-
half years, sings very sweetly and
sometimes delights a few friends
with a song.
This is the most delightful sea-
son Ocracoke has had in a
of years, if not the best in its
history. If it only had adequate
daily communication it would be
the most popular coast resort in
the south.
We inadvertently made an
in the initials of a name in last
letter. It was Mrs. T. W.
man to whom we were indebted
for the buggy ride on the beach.
D. J. W.
WASHINGTON LETTER
our Regular Correspondent
Washington July
Secretary is again on
duty, having returned from the
ten day vacation which is
the only one he will get for
many long months to come, as the
general belief, fully shared by
himself, is that he has now en-
upon a long period of the
hardest work of his life. His
department deals exclusively with
the two great questions that will
occupy the time of
tariff and it is his
desire to be prepared to furnish
all of the information on both
subjects that will from time to
time be asked for from the time
that Congress takes up these
until it disposes of them,
and when that will be is a
drum that no wise man will try
to answer at this time.
Not the slightest bit of a sen-
was caused by the alleged
news, received here early in the
week, of the disabling of the 8-
S- by a shot from a
poaching sealer flying the Hit
flag, for the very simple
reason that nobody believed a
word of it. The department has
had reports from sea
dated a month later than when
the alleged disabling took place,
which make no mention whatever
of any such incident That's why
nobody believes the story.
The number of pensioners ab-
dropped from the roll
since March last is bat in
the period have been
suspended, pending further in-
Judging from past
experience in such cases it is es-
that a large majority of
the latter will finally be dropped.
The work of examination is being
as rapidly in possible
and will be confined for a long
time to pensions granted under
the act of 1890.
Now that Secretary Lamont has
taken a years lease on the
Washington residence the
the
pay
j mongers will probably cease start-
i stories of his intended early
retirement from the Cabinet He
will live in good company as his
house is next door to that of Sen
and within a stone's
throw of the White House- The
Secretary came here this week to
consult with Secretary
regard to several matters under
. tho State department which were
i when the President left
; town, and while here he signed
the lease for his house. Although
accompanied by Mrs- Lamont
whose face is almost as well
known as his own the Secretary
spent several hours in Washing
ton and got safely away before
the newspaper men knew of his
visit. However, it would not have
made much difference, as Lamont
is a past-master in the art of talk-
without saying anything
which Talleyrand said was the
first requirement of diplomacy.
During the short time Secretary
Lamont remained in town he
found to decide that Army
officers who desire to attend the
World's Fair must pay their own
fare like other people, and that
permissions granted officers to
attend the fair do not carry free
transportation- While this will
upset the plans of numerous Army
who have been calculating
to take in the big show at Uncle
Sam's expense its justness is man-
to all. The salary of the
Army officers who will visit
fair go right along and they
should be willing to
their own expenses-
attorney General has
been accused of not looking very
favorably upon the practical side
of politics, i. e., putting out the
opposition and putting in
of his own party, but before
leaving Washington for a short
vacation he showed that
to have been undeserved by
notifying a number of the assist-
ants to the Attorney General with
salaries ranging from to
that their resignations
were desired, and it is stated by
those who know that every re-
publican connected with the De-
of Justice, outside of
the classified service, is to be
made to walk the plank.
A good many guesses have
been printed about the chairman-
ships of the important committees
of the next House, and one of
them was that Representative
Bland would not again be chair-
man of the Coinage committee.
Now, it can be stated upon excel-
lent authority and without
confidence that
Mr. Bland will be chairman of
that committee in the next House,
unless he declines to serve again,
and there is no apparent reason
why he should do that.
Speaker Crisp is not expected
here until about August two
days before Congress assembles
and a movement is now on foot
to postpone the democratic House
caucus for the nomination of
until the morning of the 7th
as it will only require a few min-
for it to transact its business
The canvass for
Doorkeeper is going on quiet
and all of the candidates are
claiming to be safe. There is
practically no contest for the
other Postmaster
and Chaplain-
SILVER.
Reply to Mecklenburg Alliance.
Near Black Mountain, N. C,
July 1893.
R. W- Elliott, Esq., Sec
Mecklenburg Co. Alliance
have received a copy of
the resolution of Mecklenburg
Alliance, adopted at a recent
meeting, urging Senators and
Representatives to stand by the
present silver purchasing law
some satisfactory substitute
shall be adopted.
I observed this action with
great pleasure, for two reasons
In the first place, it is the
of one of the most valuable
and legitimate functions by which
the Alliance can be made to sub-
serve the interest of the farmers
tho concentration of their whole
influence upon the issues of the
day. In view of the notorious
fact of combinations among all
other branches of industry and in
every form of capital, I years ago
urged upon our agricultural class-
es importance of such organ
as would enable them to
make their vast bat widely scat
and disjointed strength felt,
promptly and efficiently, in
Now, the preservation of
silver as a part of our currency is
one of the most vital of all the is-
sues which our people have been
called upon to decide for half a
century. The enemies of silver
money have displayed a wonder-
sagacity in their tactics.
Though scattered throughout the
civilized world they have obeyed
a single voice from headquarters
in London. From New the
word comes down the line to all
American capital and the response
is immediate- What is known as
the Sherman law is the only
on our statute books which
binds as to the use of silver, and
the cry is raised for its re-
peal under various all
equally false- The banks, stock
brokers, bond-holders, chambers
of commerce, et id genus,
clamor for its repeal and urge the
calling of an extra session of Con-
to assemble and sit daring
the dog days for that purpose
alone. Tariff repeal, which form-
ed chief issue of the past cam-
is throat to the rear and the
interest of capital is placed in
front, to be dealt with under the
demoralizing conditions of a
fraudulent panic created by
itself and called by Mr.
banker's
Under these alarming
stances I have listened, and most
in vain, for the voice of the
Alliance sounding their
opinions and wishes and of those
they represent, composing folly
of the nation ; giving the
feeble and vacillating among pol-
to understand what they
had to expect if they betrayed the
people's this great
question- The action of your
Alliance is the first official utter-
on the subject I have seen
in the State. It is time your or-
was bringing every atom of
its influence to bear. It should
use every means possible to let it
be known that there is yet
and entirely different w in
the fields and homes toil,
whose interests demand
as well as that combination
of money dealers, stock-brokers,
gamblers and speculators who
assume for themselves to con
the
of the land. The effect of this
prompt and united action cannot
possibly be doubted.
In the next place I was to
read the resolutions of Alli-
because they concurred
with my own most serious con-
Many years ago, after
as thorough and impartial an ex-
of the question as
was capable of making, I came to
the absolute conclusion that the
use of silver as well as gold, on
equal terms, as basis of our
currency was best for the welfare
of the people of the United States.
This view has governed my
course in Congress. The fact
that nature sometimes yielded
more of one metal than of the
other, thus causing a discrepancy
in their intrinsic values, did not
disturb me; for I learned from
history that for nearly three
years daring which a ratio
between the two metals was fixed
by laws, the fluctuations in
sic value had never exceeded
per cent, and that soon after that
law was withdrawn great and ma-
fluctuations immediately
began, which will doubtless con-
so long as we treat one met-
as of fixed and standard value
and the other as a commodity. It
is not necessary to go over all the
grounds in which my conviction
was founded. I simply wish to
assure you that my opinions are
unchanged-
Recent developments which
seem to have unsettled so many
silver advocates and make them
give way to the repeal of the
Sherman law, has rather strength-
me in the determination to
yield nothing to the mono-metal-
whose schemes I regard as
absolutely selfish and unpatriotic.
The so industriously ad-
is known now to have
been created by them; and will
be known hereafter as the rich
man's panic; the explosion of the
Indian bomb is already discount-
ed as tho grasping by the govern-
of the profits of coining
rupees which heretofore had
been reaped by British merchant s.
The coining will go on as largely
as ever, only the Indian govern-
will pocket the per cent
gain and not the merchants.
England does not dare to demon-
silver in India, which alone
makes her demonetize it at home-
There is not spare gold enough
in the world to replace the
of silver in that country.
The attempt to do so would
bankrupt half of Christendom
and England well knows it The
suggestion is pure bluff, and can
only disturb a politician who
holds a very weak hand- Nor
have the allegations so distress-
shouted that the Sherman
law was causing oar gold to leave
the country had any effect on me.
From the beginning I knew them
to be false. Gold went oat be-
cause we owed it abroad and the
balance of trade was against us.
Shipments of wheat have turned
the tide and it is now coming in.
Some of our securities did come
home and take off gold in pay-
but this hurt nobody ex-
speculators in them, who
were fearful that the price would
fall and they would lose money.
But even those which did come
from abroad came in consequence
of the scare got up by our own
capitalists. Of course foreigners
believed the stories of the ruin
and bankruptcy if the Sherman
law was not repealed, which our
own people told them.
Finally, I hope it is
for me to say that the hope
of ingratiating myself with the
administration in order to secure
patronage at its hands, has in no
sense affected my opinion of
right in the premises- How far
such a motive may operate in the
repeal of that law I have no means
of knowing- I however,
it will not go a great way. But
let things go as as they may, it
shall be my earnest endeavor to
do my maintaining the
cause of the people by preserving
the character of their money and
increasing its abundance.
Very truly yours,
Z. B. Vance.
President Chadwick presiding,
the board of directors found from
his annual report sufficient funds
in the treasury from the year's
earnings of the road, under his
management to declare another
dividend of two per cent, payable
on and after 1st, to all
stockholders of record August 1st
which will result in another
to the State treasury, besides
taxes paid to it by the above road
and will still leave a surplus this
year of over in the
of the road.
W. C. Allen
Of Atlanta, Georgia, that ho was
with Flying- the intense
pain going from part of the body to another.
After taking seven bottles of Hood's
he was in good health. In two month,
Increased from to pounds In weight
Hood's Pills are purely vegetable.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as ad-
of J. W. S. Tyson, deceased,
notice is given to all persons in-
to the estate to make immediate
payment lo the undersigned, and all
persons claims against the estate
must present the same payment be-
fore the 24th day of June, 1894, or this
notice will plead in bar of recovery.
This the 24th day of June, 1893.
NOAH W. TYSON,
of J. W. S. Tyson.
Notice
The undersigned having duly been
appointed by the Clerk of the r
of Pitt county on the 1st day of
May 1893, as do
non of deceased, notice
is hereby given to the creditors of said
estate to present their claims to me
duly authenticated, on or before the
12th day of July or this notice will
be plead in bar of their recovery. All
persons indebted to said estate are
to make immediate payment to the
undersigned.
This the 12th day of July 1893.
JAMES T. JOYNER,
de non of Joy-
Notice
On Mon the of August, A.
I., 1893. will sell at the Court House
in the town of to the
highest bidder tor cash one tract of
land in Pitt county containing about
fifty acres and bounded as Sit-
in township, Pitt county,
N. C, adjoining the land of C. A. Ran-
Spier heirs and
others being the excess of the home-
stead of J. Hathaway, to satisfy ex-
in my hands for collection
against J. J. Hathaway and E. S. Dix-
and which has been levied on said
land as the property of said J. J. Hath-
away.
This day of 1803.
Sheriff,
Per Henry T. King, D. S.
OXFORD FEMALE
OXFORD, N. C.
The 43rd Annual Session open August
30th, 1803. All the comforts of home
with all the advantages of a first-class
at very reasonable rates.
Culture prominent. Special
in music and art. Apply for
HOBGOOD, Pres.
University No. Carolina.
of teach-
buildings, scientific
library of volumes,
dents.
Five general
courses, G brief courses, professional
courses in law, medicine, engineering
and chemistry, optional courses.
per year.
Scholarships and loans for the needy.
Address,
PRESIDENT WINSTON,
Chapel Hill. N. C.
do not believe this institute has a
superior in the so writes an em-
scholar and divine of the
WILSON FOR
COLLEGIATE YOUNG
INSTITUTE, I LADIES,
WILSON, N. C.
in
This Institution is entirely non-sec-
and offers a thorough
course of study, together with an
unusually full and Col-
course. Excellent facilities for
the study of Music and Art. Healthful
location. Fall term, or 33rd school
year, begins September 1893.
For and circular, address,
SILAS E. WARREN,
SUCCESSFUL ADMINISTRATION.
N. July 20-
One year ago, when the present
Board of Directors of the
tic and North Carolina railroad
under the superb administration
of President Chadwick, declared
a per cent dividend on the en-
tire capital stock of the company,
resulting in a revenue of
to the State from her stock in the
road, it was the marvel of the year,
because this road, which had
been operated for thirty-three
years under passing
of more or less business
and in thrifty times, had
never before declared a dividend,
and all hope of its ever declaring
one under State management had
long since vanished from
the minds of even the most
sanguine. Bat there it was,
a dividend of two per cent,
and it took in round
to pay it, leaving however,
still in the treasury of the
company and this after baying
and paying cash for two fine new
locomotives, two new first-class
passenger cars, a superb parlor
chair car, twenty freight-cars, and
many other substantial improve-
and all of the floating in-
of the road-
down from former administrations
To-day, in session in this city,
Special in An.
a-
French.
CRYSTAL LENSES
Tint
THE
It is with pleasure that I announce to
the citizens of Greenville and vicinity
that I have just returned from the
Northern Markets where I visited
all i lie fashionable openings am now
receiving the most beautiful and
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever
opened in this market. Come to see
me you will get nothing but the
latest fashionable goods. Low prices
and satisfaction
Mrs. Georgia Pearce,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Next door to Old Brick Store.
Stoves,
Sash,
HASKETT.
HASKETT.
HINGES. NAILS, AND AXES,
Rope, Belting and Packing,
MECHANIC'S TOOLS,
PUMPS and
Tinware, Hollowware,
Stove Pipe, Chimney Pipe,
Paints, Oils, Glass and Putty, and
many other articles kept in a first-
class Hardware Store Call to see
me if want goods cheap for
the cash.
D. D. HASKETT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
FARMS FOR SALE.
Prices Low,
Terms Easy.
BR
The J. L. Bollard home farm. Bea-
Dam township, adjoining the lands
of G T. Tyson and Cobb. A line
farm of about acres, build-
and adapted to corn, cotton and to
A tine marl bed.
A farm near Ayden and lying
mediately on the own-
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, acres of which
are cleared. Good neighbor-
hood, churches and a school within
miles- Plenty of marl on the adjoin-
farms
A farm of acres, three miles
from Farmville and miles from Green
ville, with large, substantial dwelling
and out houses, known as the L. P.
Beardsley home place, fine cotton
good clay subsoil, accessible to marl.
A smaller farm adjoining the above
known as the Jones place, acres,
dwelling, barn and tenant land
good.
A farm of acres in town-
ship, about miles from
of the Singletary tract
Part of the Noah farm,
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro,
located In an improving section
can be made a valuable farm.
A small farm of acres,
about miles from Greenville, on In-
Well house, etc., for-
owned by Guilford ox.
ALSO TIMBER
A tract of about acres near Cone-
the station, with cypress timber well
suited for railroad tics.
A tract of about acres in
township, near the Washington rail-
road, pine timber.
A tract of acres near Johnson s
Mills, and cypress timber.
Apply to H. LONG,
Greenville. N. C.
JAMES LONG
Dealer In
General Merchandise,
Has exclusive sale of these celebrated
glasses in Greenville, N. C. From the
factory of Moore, the only
complete optical plant in the South,
Atlanta, Ga, Peddlers are not sup-
led with those famous glasses.
HAIR BALSAM
Hi. k.
The m and .
.
-THE-
Buggy
GREENVILLE, M C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared to do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
WAGON, Mm BUM LIE
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in best manner
Cough
A little drop of printer's ink,
Sometimes causes people to think.
And we want to impress upon your minds that we have
A ------received our new------
SprinG- -StocK
----and can now show a-----
intention is to soil good goods at the lowest possible
prices. We have the largest and most varied stock
kept in town. We keep almost every thing
needed in the household or on the farm and
invite inspection and comparison of our
goods. We can and will sell low for
cash. We want your trade and
will be glad to show you the
following lines of
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS.
NICE LINE of
AND PIECE GOODS FOR
MAKING MENS AND BOYS
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK.
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE. TINWARE,
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE,
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND
FARMING UTENSILS,
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
Groceries, Flour a specialty. We have tho largest and
. ever kept in our
line 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 line of
Tables. Children's Carriages, Keep also a nice lino
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor
Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see us
when in want of any goods. We will try to give yon
satisfaction at all times.
COATS SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE
ESTABLISHED 1883.
I.
New Corned Herrings
Boxes C. It. Side Meat.
Tubs Boston Lard.
SO barrels Flour, all grades
barrels Granulated Sugar.
barrels C. Sugar.
boxes Tobacco,
barrels Mills Snuff,
barrels Three Thistle
bands Gail Ax
GREENVILLE. KT. C.
50.000 Luke
barrels P. Snuff,
box s Cakes and Crackers,
barrels Stick Candy.
kegs Rand's
Ions Shot,
c Broad Powder.
cases star Lye,
Apple Vinegar,
eases Gold Dust Washing Powder-
Full stock of all other goods carried in my line.
Make Tour Own Hay
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 for TOBACCO FLUES
S. E. PENDER CO.,
KT. O
Notice
On Monday 7th day of A.
. I will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the ,
highest bidder for cash ts of laud
in Pitt county containing about one
hundred and twenty-three acres and
bounded as One tract contain-
about seventy-live acre in
township adjoining the lands of Israel
Edwards, James Galloway, Henry
son and others being the land on which
colored now lives. One
tract containing about forty-six acres
Id township adjoining tho lands
of Israel Edwards, J- Hudson, Jno.
Smith. Henry Hudson and others be-
tho land on which Jesse Smith now
lives. One tract containing about two
acres more or in township,
being the land on was located the
steam mill of E. S. adjoining
the lands of Root. Ed.
heirs, W. H. Arnold and others, to sat-
sundry executions In my hands for
collection against E. S. and J. J.
Hathaway and which have been levied
on said land as the property of said E.
Dixon.
This 7th day of July 1893.
R, W. KING. Sheriff,
Per Henry T. King, D. S.
Notice.
Superior County.
L. C Harry Skinner and A.
formerly partners as Latham.
Skinner Blow, In their own names
and In behalf of 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, B. R. White-
and Courtney Whitehurst his
wile, John Florence
his wife, U. B.
and Mary his wire and Char-
Manning.
The above action haying been com-
in this court on the 14th day of
June 1883 for a settlement of the estate
of John A. Manning, deceased, under
Chapter of the Code of North Caro-
notice is hereby given to the
of the said John A. Manning to
appear before me, at my office lo the
town of Greenville, on or before the
day of July and file the evidences
of their claims.
This the 14th of June
E. A.
Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt Co





Ready to Make Things
Lively.
THE
Earth Do Move
THE REFLECTOR.
Rules Adopted by the N. C. Press
The sum of not less than five cents
per line will be charged for of
of and
obituary poetry; also for obituary notices
other than those which the editor him-
self shall Rive as a matter of news
Notices of church and society and all
other entertainments from which rev-
is to be derived ill be charged
for at the rate of live cents a Hue.
SO
AT
DOES OUR GOODS
THE MIRACULOUS
LOW PRICES GIVEN BELOW.
All Calicoes and Domestics at
cents. Ginghams to cents.
Nice White Lawn to cents.
Nice White Lawns inches at
cents.
NOTIONS.
Ladies Cool Vests cents a pair.
Ladies and Gents Hosiery at
cents per pair. Spool Cotton at
cents per dozen.
CLOTHING.
Nice Suits for Boys
Nice Suits for Youths
Nice Suits for Men
for to
SHOES.
In Shoes can fit both your pocket
book and your foot- Ladies Shoos
cents. Slippers to cents.
Men Shoes to
HATS.
A Nice Line Sample Straw Hats
and Pants to be sold at your own
price-
HIGGS BROS,
GREENVILLE, N. C
Local Reflections.
Malting the Fur Fly.
BRIGHT
Fruit Jars Cheap at the Old Brick
Store.
Crops continue to grow.
The Best Flour on earth at the
O Id Brick
Watermelons are plentiful and cheap-
Received to-i fresh X. C.
Butter at per pound at the
Old Brick Store.
The tobacco market will open here on
the first of August.
Buy Your Shirts and tics from
Bros.
The are not wearing long
faces this year.
Money thrown away in youth will be
needed in old age.
Do not forget to call on A. B.
ton if you want a lift or force pump.
The Orange Observer says it will take
icebergs on
Smack your lips, fellow, smack your
lips, watermelons I cents each.
Now is the time to send your
to A. B. for repairs.
Bros, in their space to-day
quote some unusually low prices on
goods.
A. B. Ellington has received a lot
of pipe and fittings which he is selling
cheap.
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
R. I. is agent for
the famous Douglas Shoes. See
We heard of immense of cat fish
Creek day last week. Mr.
Teel at dip caught
The rain we had last week did some
damage to the growing crops but it is
believed they will pull through all
right.
Pairs Sample over
alls from rents up, at Bros.
We hear that the colored base ball
teams of Rocky Mount and Washington
will meet here next Friday afternoon
and cross bats.
is now getting the drop
on said Billie as he was making
our little job press hum this week with
a good run of work.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap-
at the Old Brick
It a hot July is any sign of a good
crop year there is good times ahead.
Good returns from the soil means a
good fall business, and that is nothing
less than better times for all.
To the have no
longer to be worried
of your You only have
to stop down to our store while in town
and be properly fitted in a pair of White
Ballad Slippers which we are selling
very cheap to close out. Bros.
We had our share of drummers this
and last week. In front of
stoic one day we counted ten
trunks, besides there were three sample
rooms with from I to three in each.
It might be while for country
grocers and general storekeepers to re-
member that seed are very
much in demand, and that if they can
induce their neighbors to save the seed
and sell to them Is will bring good
prices from the leading in
large cities.
Our informant as to the cutting at
Bethel two Saturday nights ago was in
error as to the name. It was a man
named Jesse James ard not Prof.
James whom one assaulted and
cut. We are sorry that any one should
get cut, but in this out arc glad that it
was not friend Chester.
If anybody don't believe that Pitt
comity is of pretty women just go
up into the Institute fir a
short while. In the midst of such
it is no wonder that
King smiles and smiles and puts
on his sweetest looks. Boom girl ought
to break up his prospects of being an
old bachelor
Our should pay more
to lite making of hay. Instead of
having to buy they should be able to
ship. Our lands are adapted lo the
raisin of lino hay and cheap too. What
is the use of sending away money when
we can keep it at home. This is a good
market for hay and the farmers can
a sale fur it.
Died.
At Falkland on Sunday, July 23rd,
Aimer daughter of Mr.
and Mrs- It. W. Smith, aged nearly
months, of fever. She was a bright
child and the pet of the household.
At hi- home near Falkland about three
weeks ago Mr. Abel Smith, aged years.
He was a leading citizen of the
in every respect a truly good man.
He reared a large family I i them
a priceless heritage In the excellent
name ho always bore.
Sunday-School Convention,
The of the Sunday-
schools of the county of Pitt are hereby
requested to meet the Court House
in the town of Greenville, on Saturday,
August 12th at O'clock P. M., for the
purpose of selecting delegates to
sent this county the Slate Sunday-
school Convention which is to held
in Greensboro, N. C. August 32-34.
Also for the purpose of selecting the
time for holding the County Sunday
school Convention. Every
dent in the county is urged to be present.
E. A. Move,
D. D. Haskett,
Executive Committee.
A Good Hotel.
Readers of the Reflector know how
anxious we have long been for Green-
ville to have a good hotel. Sitting in
Hotel Nicholson, at Washington the
other day we could but wish that this
town had as excellent a hotel building
as that. It is a handsome three-story
brick building, conveniently located,
well furnished, and spreads an excellent
table. Spencer Brothers, the clever
proprietors, know how to make their
house popular and secure a large pat-
It is no wonder that the travel-
men love to stop with them, and
stopover there Sundays as often as
Resuming Business.
It is very gratifying to the
and we are sure will also be to a host
of our readers, to know that M. R.
Lang will soon be in business again in
Greenville. He is now the northern
markets selecting a new stock which
be opened at his old stand just op-
the Reflector office. Mr. Lang
was for years numbered among our
leading business men and always car-
a stuck of stylish goods- that few
towns could equal. Now that lie is to
return to a business of the same kind
bespeak for him the liberal patronage
that he formerly enjoyed. Our readers
will be duly informed as to the time of
his
Good Crops.
Mr. W. W. Little, told us
yesterday that the crop prospects in his
immediate neighborhood are at this time
the best he has noticed in
the war. During the last three weeks
there has been a wonderful improvement
in all crops. He also told us that from
seeding one barrel of Irish potatoes this
spring he harvested a crop that paid
him forty dollars, and now the same
half-acre in a flourishing crop of sweet
potatoes from which he expects to reap
as much more. Tin- is just one of the
many incidents that show what
farming will do. and that more
money can be made
else than cotton.
Now For
Those who wish to go to the seaside
for a few days will soon have an
of the cheapest trip ever offered
to our people. On
5th, there will be an excursion from
Greenville to Ocracoke, the entire fare
for the round trip, including one week's
board at Ocracoke hotel being only
The party will go from here to Washing-
ton on steamer from Washing
ton to Ocracoke on steamer Gazelle and
Susannah, the steamer taking
the schooner in tow. This will insure a
quick safe trip. It is useless for any-
thing to be said about the attractiveness
of those who have been
reading the Reflector for a few weeks
past have an idea of what a delightful
place it is.
Personal,
Mr. Ed. returned from
Monday.
Mr. R. J. Hart, of was In
town Monday.
Miss Ellen of Tarboro, is
visiting in town.
Mrs. Henry S has been sick
or the past week.
i to learn that Mrs. I. A.
Sugg is quite sick.
Mr. D. D, Haskett is on a visit lo his
sister at Beaufort, N. C.
Mr. W. T. Brogden, of Oxford, was
in town a few days last
Mr. and Mrs. S. M. Schultz left Mon-
day for a visit to the World's Fair.
Mr. and Win. Rugs, of Raleigh.
arc on a visit to Mrs. parents.
Mr. Ed. Greene, of Norfolk, Va.,
rived home Monday night to visit -his
mother.
Mi's Mary of Oxford,
Miss Marie Dennis, of arc visit-
Miss Novella for a few days.
Miss Lizzie Blow and her little brother
and sister, Tom and left last
Saturday for a trip to for the
summer.
Mr. E. L. of St.
S. C, a former resident of this county,
i visiting relatives here. He is
by his family.
Mr. W. A, of Baltimore.
arrived here Monday and will take a
with Mr. J. D. Williamson, in his
carriage factory as painter.
Mr. II. B. Hardy, representing the
Raleigh North Carolinian, spent
day here. Ben is the all-round
newspaper canvasser we ever saw and
has friends in every section of the State.
This.
A blight J lady, says
has hit upon a novel plan of de-
riding a matrimonial question. Three
yo mg men are in love with her. and
should she accept either as a husband,
two rejected suitors will horsewhip
the favored one. She has proposed the
following plan, which has been eagerly
by the lovers. She will set a
hen on three eggs, the names of the
men will be written on the eggs,
and the first to hatch out will be the one
she will marry. The result will be
watched with interest by all interested.
Oxford Female Seminary.
This prosperous and progressive
school will open its next Session on Aug.
89th, I and the for an in
patronage arc very blight.
Besides doing the most thorough
work the Literary Department, and
furnishing exceptional facilities in Mu-
sic and in Art, it has an Industrial De-
that supplies the needs of the
times this are taught
Type-Writing. Stenography and
Dress Cutting and Fitting. Much at-
has always been given to
Culture.
At Morehead.
The Raleigh N. O. Chronicle
has the following to say of
some of our home people
evening was in many re-
the most brilliant and entertain-
one ever known at the Atlantic
Hotel. There were features which were
thoroughly appreciated and enjoyed.
One was a gorgeous Japanese
planned by Mrs. T. J. Jarvis, and
ranged with the assistance of the many
lady guests. One side of the grand
ball room was transferred into an
booth of ornamental net work,
into which was interwoven a profusion
of evergreens and flowers. Gorgeous
lanterns were made to
give forth light of every hue, and
this a number of young ladies
robed in unique Japanese costumes
served tea and delicacies of every de-
The tea was for the benefit
of the Greenville Presbyterian church
fund, and the patrons included every-
body in the hotel, as well as a large
from Camp Several
hundred dollars was realized.
During the evening Mrs. J. B. Cherry,
of Greenville, sang some
songs with orchestral accompaniment.
This was a most delightful part of the
Institutes.
The Institutes for white and
colored arc being held here this week,
and both are well attended. The one
for the white teachers is conducted in
the Court House, and besides daily
sessions exercises of some kind will be
had each night. Profs. Alexander
ham, of Charlotte, and M. C. S. Noble,
of Wilmington, arc the conductors of
these Institutes. The State has been
exceedingly fortunate in the selection
of these gentlemen as teachers. Those
who have attended the Institutes con-
ducted formerly by Profs. mid
Alderman had about reached the con-
that they could never have any
successors who wire so nearly born
teachers a; they, and yet we hazard
nothing in saying that those who have
heard Profs. Graham and Noble are
fully that their mantles have
fallen on worthy shoulders, and every
North Carolinian ought to feel proud
that within our borders such
distinguished educators. These
have made their life work teaching
and have not failed. to grow ripe with
their experience and observation. We
congratulate the teachers of Pitt county
upon the privilege they have in attend-
the present Institutes. Many w the
citizens of the town are as regular in
attendance upon the meetings as the
teachers are and seem not less interested
It is specially desired that as many as
possible of the citizens of the county
shall be here on Friday as this day will
be devoted entirely to matters which
all ought to be thoroughly interested.
We hope to see a very large gathering
at this time. Don't forget to be here
on Friday.
Miss Rosa Forbes gave a picnic to a
party of friends at the College one day
last week.
Administrators bare.
By virtue of an order of the Superior
Court of Pitt county, granted on the
day of September 1888 In the case
of Allen Warren. B. N. of
J. S. Taft vs. Lena
Emma Taft, Ella Taft and Minnie
Taft. the undersigned will expose for
sale before the Court House Door in
Monday the 7th day of
one tract of land adjoining
the binds of J. Tucker, Harry Skin-
G. K. W. W. Tucker and
others and known as the place whereon
late Thomas Dunn resided, contain-
two hundred and fifteen acres more
or less.
Terms of sale cash.
ALLEN WAR KEN,
D. J. N., of John
Lectures.
Rev. A. T. a delivered
a vary interesting lecture Tuesday
night of last week, at the Methodist
church and it was well received. Mr.
Is a native and one of only
five In United States. His lecture
was on and the He
is traveling about lecturing to raise the
necessary amount to return to his own
country as a missionary of the South.
era Methodist Church. In his country
there arc no from any of
the southern churches. Ills lecture was
a high-toned, logical effort and although
broken in tongue he conveyed to the
the methods, uses and
of his people. He showed the Cos-
worn by his people and lie was
very interesting all the way through.
He interspersed his lecture with a few
good jokes and amused all. Ho left the
next day for Washington where he
at night.
Monday night Rev. B. W.
delivered before the
in the Court House his celebrated
entitled and Grow
Mr. has delivered this lecture
in many parts of the United States and
everywhere it has well received
and complimented. He was at
his best here on Monday night, and well
sustained the reputation lie has acquired
as a lecturer. Mr. is quite a
man yet, but he is a close,
student and has every indication
of eminent success, and with the
iii format ion he is getting
subjects cannot fail to become dis-
We cannot do justice in re-
porting the lecture with the limited
space at our disposal. It is a scientific
explanation of laughter presented in a
philosophical, sensible, instructive, and
thoroughly and manner
and gave unalloyed pleasure and de-
light to the very large audience present-
Every point in the lecture was
ti-d with a joke or anecdote that for
timeliness and telling intensity
clear the point at issue we have
rarely heard and probably
surpassed. he at times was
laughter many pounds
was a result of the evening's
entertainment.
Mr. II. B. Hardy of The North
added greatly to the enjoyment
by rendering only as he can a ling
solo and the humorous song
Brown Everybody knows and
fully enjoys Ben Hardy.
TO THE PUBLIC
OWING to the dull
propose to close out our
Spring and Summer Stock at
prices that defy competition-
Such as CLOTHING, HATS,
SHOES, DRY GOODS
NOTIONS. In connection
with our regular stock we
have an elegant line of SAM-
SHIRTS,
to
EMPORIUM.
EMPORIUM.
SOLD at New York cost.
SHIRTS from cents up.
GENTS TIES from cents
STRAW HATS from
up. A big line of DRESS
GOODS at reduced prices.
We also Sole Agents for
BROS, and E. P.
REED fine SHOES
and SLIPPERS. Call and
sec them and
C. T.
A. C.
Mi
VICTOR
sH . r
AN OLD ROAD MADE NEW.
Great Improvement in B. O. Equip-
Route to the West.
The Baltimore Ohio Railroad has ,
prepared to handle a large i
while the World's is in Chi-
The terminals at Chicago are .
capable of a very heavy
Important changes have been i
made for the handling a large freight I
and passenger business to the West from I
New and Baltimore.
New equipment lo largely increased
passenger business and an extensive I
stock of freight cars have been I
The various roads of are h-
improved by lines,
reduced k rates, extra tide Back, and
interlocking switches. The new line
between Chicago Junction and Akron
has shortened the distance between
Chicago and tide water twenty-live
miles, between Pittsburgh Chi-
miles.
The distance between Chicago
Pittsburgh and Chicago and I
by the construction of the Akron line,
and the acquisition of the Pittsburgh
Western line and the Valley
road of Ohio, is about the same as via
the Lake Shore from to
Chicago. alignment is to be changed
grades to a minimum of
twenty-six feet. It -s expected that
within t months the old Baltimore
and Ohio through line Chicago
and the Atlantic will have passed
away and the new Hue via Pittsburgh
will
curvature than on any the trunk lines.
Work is progressing rapidly east
Pittsburgh to meet improvements
west of Pittsburgh. These
consist of additional second
and third tracks, a general correction of
the alignment, aim completion of the
doubled track on the Metropolitan
Branch. Another important enterprise
of the Baltimore and Ohio Company is
the construction of the Belt Line tunnel
nuclei the City of Baltimore, which is
intended to unite the Washington Branch
with the Philadelphia Division, do
way with the present line via Locust
Point, forty new and powerful
engine.- nave recently added
to the equipment, and others arc in pro-
of construction. The permanent
improvements now under way and
contemplation involve the expenditure
of some live of dollars.
With the only complete bicycle plant the world,
every part of the machine is made from A to Z, is it
any wonder that Victor Bicycles are acknowledged leaders
There's no bicycle like a Victor, and no plant so grandly
complete as the one devoted exclusively to the manufacture
of this king of wheels.
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON, WASHINGTON, DENVER, SAN
THE CAROLINA
Colleges cf Agriculture Art
Will its Fifth
1893. ThU Co is
now well equipped for its work,
having extensive Wood and iron Shops,
up Drawing-
Botanical I Horticultural La-
Greenhouse and Barn.
The teaching force the next year
consists of men. two courses
lead to graduation In Agriculture and
in Mechanical and Civil Engineering.
Total cost a year, including
County Students Pay Students
1123.50. For to
A. Q. Pres.,
Raleigh. N. C.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
administrator of Samuel Moore, de-
ceased, notice is hereby given to all
indebted to the estate to make
immediate payment to the undersigned,
and all persons having claims against
the estate must present the same for pay-
on or before the 17th day of June
1891, or this notice will be plead in bar
of recovery.
This 17th day of June, 1393.
J. MOORE,
of Samuel Moore.
Breathe
sea air and get
healthy.
Steamer leaves
Washington on
Wednesday morn
day nights after
train arrive-.
fur the
round trip.
day, 81.-50; per
week, to
according to
Per month
children
years old
an I servant- half
price.
NEW
th
1893.
This Famous Summer-
Place promises greater
attractions titan ever.
Address,
J. MAYO, ,
Washington, N. C
Finest Surf Data
log,
and Hunting
on the coast.
Table supplied
Oysters.
Clam- mid Fl-h i
right out of
water. the
best the market
affords.
and
comfortable.
by
Line to Washing-
ton, and by
or steamer from
w ashing t o ii
down the
to
the Island.
New
Straight
Clean
Large
We are still making a specialty of
MY GOODS, L AGO, NOTIONS. HATS
Ml
We have a assortment and sell close. Do not fail to
get our prices-
and for all kinds of machines are sold by
Respectfully,
BROWN BROS.,
Depositors for American Bible Society
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOE
Wm awl I. try a pair.
test in the world.
3.00
sauna
2.00
1.75
ran BOYS
If o wart a fa SHOE, WM
If yea to wain la yew MU ,
L. She. Kim m
I took for
ft. I, N, C.
HOW TO GET-THERE.
Is Ocracoke you are thinking
oil The way to get there is
to go to Washington by rail,
by from Green
and from there
the splendid
GAZELLE
will take you quickly and safe-
to Ocracoke. The Gazelle
will Washington every
Saturday at P. M. and re-
turning leave Ocracoke at P.
Sunday. Also leaves Wash-
every Wednesday at
A. M. and returning leaves
Ocracoke at P- M. same day.
Fare for round trip
HILL, Master.
, .,
Stomach
. .
All keep it. It
------1 wrapper
Greenville, C.
In the CORNER HOUSE
New Cheap Stoke.
NEW STORE. NEW GOODS.
Prices Lower Ever.
FIRST QUALITY GOODS
MEN'S AND
CHILDREN'S SUITS,
HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS,
Notice i.
Suits low as and SB.
Men's low ct and up
Children's Suits as low as ct
Shirts as low as cents and up.
Men's Shoes as low
Shoes as low as cent and up.
Other correspondingly up.
We are the place for LOW PRICES
sad solicit the patronage the people.
MACHINE WORKS,
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins,
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING.
THE BEST IN THE WORLD-1
Satisfaction guaranteed or money refunded. Write for
and prices before buying elsewhere.
T A few Engines for sale.
DEALERS IN-----
AND GROCERIES.
We again in business Slid have a nine line of fresh
Will he glad to have our old pis call and see us, as well as
others who wish to get Groceries and Confections that are pure.
Our goods will be In every respect. We pay the highest mar
prices for
. in
I-
-I
g t
Wishing to thank my many
friends for their liberal patronage
for both Merchandise and differ-
which I manufacture,
I take this method of
that while I thank you all I
am also striving hard to secure
advantages that I can give
order to further merit you
patronage.
y.-
-IS
other articles n our line
as Church Pews, Cart
Wheels, Brackets and
Hogsheads and General
Repair Work, you will do well
to correspond with me before
ranging with any one else- I can
you some advantage
A. G. COX,
Winterville, N. C
CD
ft
Pis.
a o-b B
B m
a gr
p -i
2.1
PI
Skin
COBB BROS CO.,
----and r
Commission Merchants,
STREET, NORFOLK, VA.
and Solicited.
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo
not to be excelled in this market. And to be First-class an
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA
CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, and FLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting. Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and Plat
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
JACK WHITE
IS AGAIN
BEFORE YOU.
Bring me your
CHICKENS, EGGS,
TURKEYS. DUCKS,
GEESE, GUINEAS,
And in fact that is raised in the country and I will pay just
as much in cash as can be had anywhere in Greenville- I will also
handle on a small commission anything that my customers may want
me to. Remember my is at the old Marcellus Moore
store, right at the live points crossing, the most convenient place in
town. Come to see me-
Yours to please,
JACK WHITE, Greenville, N. C
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
N. C.
SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOE A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF





TOBACCO DEPARTMENT
X.- Tobacco
AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS.
Tobacco it is said derives its
botanical name from
Jane who introduced its
use into France-
Thermometers are being sold
to the tobacco curers now at fig-
five times as high as they
were in January.
The mammoth tobacco factory
of Messrs. P. H. Co.,
Winston, was destroyed by
fire recently, will be rebuilt.
The well known tobacco
firm of Bros
of Winston N. C, have as-
signed with liabilities
Tobacco curing has commenced
in real earnest, most every
day some one is showing fine
samples on the street and boast-
of his crop.
said a traveling man the
other day as he stood before
show-case in the office
and at some samples of the
new crop. My what fine
co Pitt county does grow.
Mr. J. S. Jenkins of this mark-
et who was in camp with the Pitt
County Rifles, returned Thurs-
day. The boys say he is better
at shooting the price of tobacco
up than ho is at shooting his rifle-
CAMP BOGART.
On the right side of the
tic and N- C- R. R-, three miles
west of Morehead City on a beau-
hill covered with pine and
ceder trees in open of the
broad Atlantic is the encampment
of the North Carolina State
Guard. No site on the North
Carolina coast would answer the
purpose of i ground bet-
than the one near Morehead
City. It is named in honor of
our late deceased Lt. Col. Daniel
N. Bogart. So far as railroad
transportation facilities to and
from the ocean beach is concern-
ed. is a hotter place
but the sail boats here fully sup-
ply the demand for passage and
as most of the Stale Hoard are
the country now sailing is sup-
posed to be much enjoyable
and truly since the Guard first
arrived the sail boats have boon
busy taking the soldiers fishing,
sailing to the light house miles
at sea and that fancy
might direct. The first and sec-
regiments with companies
each are now on the grounds.
Battalion drill and guard mount-
is the first order of the day
which generally requires from
two to three hours and then tho
boys are at leisure till in the
when they go on
drill for one hour and j
they go dress parade, j
Immediately after guard mount-
Saturday morning Maj. W. B.
Rodman of the first or-
the Captains to report
his headquarters for examination
as to their proficiency on
lion drill. Tho officers present
were Captain of company
D-, Goldsboro Captain
Blount, of company Washing-
ton Light Infantry Captain J.
T. Smith, company H., Pitt
Rifles; and Lieutenant A.
Williams, Jr., commanding com-
C. Governor's Guards. All
these reported promptly at j
o'clock and immediately
upon their examination- Capt. J.
T. Smith of Company H. Pitt j
County Rifles is the only Captain
of the first that ans-
every question correctly.
We are informed that after ans-
accurately every question
offered by the Major, Capt. Smith
as a matter of information asked
the Maj- several questions on in-
fantry tactics, some of which he
did not answer. Aside from Capt.
Smith's thoroughness as a I
man. he is frequently spoken
of here in camp as the next hand-
soldier in the first j
meat- Col. Wood, of Elizabeth j
City is beyond doubt, the finest;
looking soldier in the State Guard.
He is our Colonel, and nest to
him is our Captain and next lo
him is our first all of
whom were old in the
late civil war in fact our Captain
and both Lieutenants, present as
fine an appearance, as any officers
in the entire Guard- On the day
of our arrival at camp there was
no duty assigned the soldiers and
as there was several hours of the
day yet unspent, the writer with
several others, chartered a
and went to see Fort Macon.
This was the first trip that we
over took on water larger than
the Tar and it is nothing bat
natural that we were a little
frightened, especially so when we
tell yon that on return
were caught in what tho Capt.
called a small it
seemed to us like a right good
size storm. Fort which is
a familiar name to every student
of history, is about two miles
from City, overlooking
the bar and surrounded on all
sides by the ocean except the
rear. A sergeant of the U- S.
Army, from the State of New
York, is in charge of the fort.
He draws a salary of per
mouth- He was very kind and
seemed perfectly willing to show
us through every department.
The fort is built of brick and is
said to have cost a considerable
sum of money. we had
gone through this fortification
and saw how everything was so
for waning
cannon placed for every ten or
fifteen feet the parapet and
facing the sea every direction,
we could but wonder why tho
render was made- It must have
been like Burnside said, a set of
officers who neither
knew how to fight or to inspire
others-
On account of the failure of tho
Manufacturing Com-
to comply with their con-
tracts in regard to furnishing
forms, the Wilson Light Infantry
and Pitt County Rifles were placed
j under very embarrassing
stances. This company contract-
ed to furnish uniforms by July
days previous to the
and in order to be sure
to get them on time they
telegraphed to and they prompt-
reported they would have them
ready for the encampment. The
uniforms have not arrived yet
and these two companies are
forced to the necessity of wear
on all drills their old dusty,
dirty suits. Maj. Harrell has
fully discharged his duty in try-
to get the uniforms. The
manufacturing company are
alone responsible for tho delay
this should be held in strict
remembrance whenever the State
has to buy uniforms- With
but few exceptions everything
has passed off pleasantly among
the soldiers. There are of course
Bone companies that think they
are of so much importance that if
it was not for them the State
Guard would disbanded but
these like individuals would soon
be forgotten when they are gone-
Pat Foley Jarvis Sugg arc
two of tho best soldiers in camp.
Notwithstanding they are less
than years old they are over I
ready for duty never
heard begging for excuses to keep
of of duty. of the older j
members, could a good
son from these men. The .
Greenville company is one of the ;
largest and finest looking ,
in camp and fully as
drilled as of them.
is an old one and the ware-
houses know what it costs to con-
duct the business. There is little
money in it even at tho regular
charges and the failure of the Al-
attempts to sell tobacco at
reduced rates proves this state-
beyond a doubt.
The Henderson Gold Leaf in
noting the fact that the Alliance
houses wore started to reduce
rates in the interest of the
farmers. But economically
veil managed as they been,
have not succeeded, and of
the more than half dozen that
have been started within the last
five years, with the closing of the
Henderson house there will be
but one ware-
house tin State- We regret
that this has been the history of
such houses, because as a friend
of the farmers we desire to see
every measure prosper that looks
to their welfare. There must be
some for this. Let us see
then what it is if possible. Has
it been bad management We
think not. Has there been
fair dealing toward the stock-
holders No. Then the only
way account for failure is
the fact that they undertook
than they could carry out for the
charges demanded.
This with regard to the Alliance
warehouses generally. Of the
Henderson house especially it
j may be said they all clever
gentlemen, and
business
directors and
did as well as any one could have
I done, but you may put it down as
j a fact that no or any
other business can succeed in the
l long run on cut rate charges.
No man or association of men can
i afford to do business at a loss.
j We know that there is an
abroad that the warehouse
getting rich and that
their charges are too high all
that, but we seriously question
whether any of them have as big
piles to their credit as so much
clear gain Iron this source alone
after all expenses been paid
at tho end of each year as
people think. while their
charges may seem too high ex-
appears to demon-
that warehouses cannot
successfully maintained with
lower rates. say this as
much in tho interest of tho farmer
as the warehouseman- It is well
for us to look at such matters
fairly and say whether are not
better oil by maintaining a strong
homo Tobacco
Journal-
A PLEA FOR THE WAREHOUSE
MEN.
At a meeting of the
of the Farmer's Alliance ware-
house held here this morning, it.
was determined to discontinue
business after July 31st,
The business of tho
in good shape and tho stock
has proven a good investment to
its owners, but tho scarcity of
money has compelled quite a
number of stockholders to with-
draw their capital and it was the
sense of the meeting that it
better to close than attempt to
continue business on a reduced ;
capital.
The has quite a lot
of tobacco on hand and as soon
as this can be converted into
the stockholders will be paid
in full and the profits divided.
The above is a special sent from
Henderson to the News and Ob-
server at Raleigh shows that
the attempt to run a warehouse
in North Carolina on cut rate
charges has proven a failure.
For a long time there was a clam-
or among planters that our ware-
housemen were making too much
money and that the charges for
selling tobacco should be reduced.
Here in Winston an Alliance
warehouse was and
a short season of varying success
was closed, it did not
The Alliance warehouse in
Henderson has held out for
years but after a long
we see that it must succumb
to the same It has no
doubt been well managed, but
after all it did not pay and hence
the closing of its doors.
The Journal contended when
the Alliance people first agitated
the opening of warehouses in t ho
State that they would not be
and asked that the matter
be let alone- Had our advice
been followed some money would
have been saved and a good deal
of engendered ill feeling been
averted. But the experiment has
boon made and the lesson has
been thoroughly learned, and
there is no need to reckon up the
cost-
The leaf tobacco Belling
desire to say to our
for veal's we have been sailing Dr. King's
New Discovery tor Consumption,
King's New Life Pills.
Salve Electric Bitters, and have
sever bandied remedies that sell as well,
or that have given universal
faction. We do not hesitate to
tee them every time, and we stand
ready to refund too purchase price, if
satisfactory results do not follow their
use. These remedies won their
great popularity purely on merits.
s Drag Store.
To nervousness your nerves must
be fed by pure blood. Hood's
make- pure blood. Take it now.
Whits Caps administered a
whipping at
Tuesday night, to L- A.
his wife and daughter, for con-
ducting a disorderly house the
heart of tho town.
It Should Be in House.
Wilson, St., Sharpsburg,
Pa., say- lie will not be without
King's New Discovery for Consumption,
Coughs and it cured his wife
who was threatened With Pneumonia
after an attack of when
various other remedies and several
physicians had done her no good. Robert
Barter, of claims Dr.
King's Hew Discovery has done him
more than anything he ever used
for Trouble. Nothing like it. Try
it. Free Trial Hot ties Drug
Store. Large bottles. and SI
I KEEP COOL
inside, outside, and all tho way through,
by drinking .
j Root
Beer
by
HIRES
groat Temperance drink;
Is healthful, us It Is pleasant. Try It.
Salts
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to rive
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded.
Price cents box. For sale at
Drugstore.
If you feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
DO YOU WANT A WATCH
AND THE
Weekly World
THE
ALL FOR
THE EASTERN SELECTOR home
i every issue speaks for itself- It
should he in every household the county.
I THE NEW YORK WEEKLY WORLD is
leading American paper, and it is the
and best weekly printed.
I THE COLUMBIAN WATCH is on
timekeeper, with clock movement, spring
u barrel, steel pinion, clean free train and
la good timekeeper. It is inches in
1-12 inches thick, and requires no key
wind
We thus furnish the Time and all
j up to time for one year for
he news
Send your order with above price this
and the Watch and. Papers will he forwarded
at once.
Good Things to Eat.
Bread all pieces of
dry bread. Soak in hot water
soft. Then work up fine with the
hand and add to your pancake batter.
It makes them very tender and nice.
Prairie Farmer.
Scalloped Cod.-Butter an earth-1
pudding-dish, and place in it
neat flakes of the cold fish with any
of the that is left; line the
bottom of the dish, and then pour
over it any of the sauce or melted
butter you may have. Sprinkle with
salt, a very little red pepper, a
pinch of mace; place alternate lay-
of fish and sauce until the dish is
full. Cover the top with fine bread-
crumbs, put bits of butter over the
top and bake for twenty minutes.
Old Cook Book.
Pork or Veal the
meat fine, add an equal amount of
celery cut fine and mix. Veal may
prepared In the same way. A
dressing for these is made as fol-
To half cup vinegar add one
each of salt, sugar and
mustard, half of pepper
and a tablespoonful of butter. Beat
an egg well and stir it with the
other ingredients over the fire until
quite Judd Farmer.
Nature's
Remedy
FOR
Liver
Liver Pills
SENDING FOR-
DR. J. H.
has published a book of
LONGS, LIVER AND STOMACH,
which ho will mail post paid to all applicant.
Address, DR. J. SON, Pa.
Mr.
ton years ago I eon-
a ease of blood
Leading physicians prescribed
medicine after medicine, which tool,
any relief. I also tried
rial potash remedies, with
Pleasing an Invalid.
is difficult to tell from outward
says a constant visitor
of the sick and suffering, what
will bring most pleasure to an
lid. I took jelly, fruit and wine to
a destitute consumptive, whose
petite needed encouraging, without
provoking a grateful smile. But
when I followed a chance confession
that she was fond of flowers with a
bunch of white hyacinths her face
glowed with happiness. I tried the
flowers on a cultured, well-to-do
blind woman of my acquaintance.
She scarcely noticed them, but the
dainties that the Ignorant girl had
refused the lady fell upon with the
voracity of a
This philanthropist neglected to
take into consideration in her work
that all-important factor in the re-
lief of part decay
has preyed upon. In the case of the
consumptive, disease had consumed
the vital nature past desire to the
greater quickening of the spiritual.
On the other hand, the blind
appetite was stimulated to ab-
normal activity by the infirmity
that shut her off from the sights
which promote the soul's growth.
N. Y. Times.
Mora Reliable.
Maude showers
bring May
May showers
aren't in it with the young
now
but which brought on
cf
my of agony. After
four years I up all
ind commenced using S. S.
baking bottles, I entirely
pored and to work.
is the greatest medicine
gM blood poisoning on
fit
on Diseases
two. Co., Atlanta,
Is Your Life
Worth Anything
Arc there not
persons dependent on
your earnings for their
support Arc they pro-
for in ease 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 cannot stop you r
salary or steal your
and your loved ones
will be safe from want.
W. J.
fr
ROCK South Carolina.
are com-
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best
cal authorities and are
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion every-
where.
act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual
offensive breath and head-
ache. One taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
may be
of nearest druggist.
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-
tor's bill.
R. W. ROYSTER
ON
mi. type on j
PATENTS
obtained, and all business in the U.
Patent office or in the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We are opposite the V. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patent
can Obtain patents in less time than
remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patents,
We refer, here, to the Post If aster, the
of the Money Order Did., and to
the U. Patent Office.
advise terms and reference to
actual clients In own State, or
address, C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, D. C.
OINTMENT
We
I town to handle the
JACK FROST
A Scientific Machine a
Hive their cost a dozen times yen
or sloppy. A child can operate
for prices and discounts.
Murray St.,
Makes in Thu
MA
-Manufacturer of-
PHOTON, BUGGIES,
MARK
Tor Cure all
This Preparation has Dean In use
and wherever know has
been in demand. It has been en-
the leading physicians all over
country, and effected cures where
all other remedies, with the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long and the high reputation
which it has obtained is Owing entirely
its own as but little effort has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box free. The,
discount to Druggist. All Cash
promptly attended to, Address all or-
communications to
T. f.
Sole Mai; Proprietor.
N . C
R.
and Schedule
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
No No No
April. daily Fast Mail, daily
daily ex bun
Weldon pm
Ar H pm pm
pm
Tarboro pm
Mt p m r, am
Wilson
Ar Florence
Wilson
Magnolia o
Ar
NORTH
No No No
daily daily
ex Sun.
Ar Wilson
Wilmington
Magnolia
L v Goldsboro
Ar Wilson I
Wilson
Ai Rocky Mont
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro p m
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 Halifax p.
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p in.,
Greenville 6.28 p, m.,
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m.,
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Halifax
at a. m., Weldon 11.90 a. in. daily
except Sunday.
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.30; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00
m., arrives Washington 7.80 p. m.
ally except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb.
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, P If, Sunday p M, arrive
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
5.30 a. in., Sunday 10.00 a. in-
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.96 AM 12,20.
Trains on Division. Wilson
Branch leave
ville a in. arrive Rowland p in.
Returning leave Rowland p m.
arrive p m. Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train Midland N Branch leave
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, AM
rive N C, AM. Re
laves N C AM
Goldsboro. N V A M.
Train
Mount P M, arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
Spring Hope A M,
8.35 A M. arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Trains on i R. R. leave
Op. in., arrive. Dunbar 8.40 p.
in. Returning leave Oil a. m.,
arrive 7.15 a. m. y
Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, ax ix
and H M Returning leave
ton at A M, and P. M.
at Warsaw with Nos. ind
Train No. makes close connection at
Weldon for all points North dally. All
ail via Richmond, and daily except Sun-
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A
railroad for Norfolk and nil
points via Norfolk.
General Sire t.
J. R. Transportation
T. M Passenger agent
is well equipped with the best Mechanics.
hut WORK. We keep up with tin- t;,
Best material used in all work. All styles of arc
Brewster, Storm, Coil. Ham
We also keep on hand a full in.- of
ell at the lowest rates. Special
X. 13-
Do You Write
THEN
YOU MUST
HATE PAPER, PENS,
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK.
SEE WHAT THE-------
V BoOK
CAN YOU IN THESE
Legal Cap Paper to cents a
Fool's Cap Per to cents a
Letter Paper cents n quire.
Note Paper to cents a
Envelopes to a pack.
Box Paper from cents up.
Gilt Edge to cents a quite
Linen Note Paper, ruled and plain, to
Nice Envelopes to match the Paper.
Fine Tablets at all prices.
THESE AUK
I HAT Will
INK BUT Si
Tablets, Slates,
ST
SEE WHAT
WE HAVE FOE
THE SCHOOL
Tablets, Letter
Cap sizes only
pay cents for
tablets
cents to
Pencils per
Colored Crayons
Pens cent
Assorted Pens
II
Lead
Tipped Lead Pencils cents per
Holders cents per
lots of other things
Do You Read
Then yon want best We handle
Harper, Frank Leslie. I
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices. Besides
popular paper Novels at only cents each, a
Novels at cents. Those embrace books by the beat
ins; a list too largo to Any book wanted
will be ordered.
SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN TO ALL LEADING


Title
Eastern reflector, 26 July 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 26, 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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