Eastern reflector, 18 October 1893






Anything You Want
ill the way of
CHEAP -AND- FANCY
STATIONERY
can be had at the
Reflector Book Store.
o---
Blank Books, Tablets, Paper of
all kinds. Envelopes all sizes,
Pencils, Pens, Inks. Mucilage.
Spouse Cups, in
great variety-
iv.
The Eastern Reflector.
-PEOPLE WHO USE-
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
This Office for Job Printing.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1893.
NO.
INK a MU
Should not fail to see our assort
merit of
ass mm,
Ink and Colored Ink-
Reflector Book Store.
MENSTRUATION r
a woman of vigorous health passes
off in due time without pain or dis-
comfort; but when she approaches this
crisis MONTHLY with a trail J
and feeble health she endangers
both her physical and mental pawn I. f
FEMALES
REGULATOR
if taken a few days before the monthly
sickness sets in and continued until
nature performs functions, .
equal as a SPECIFIC .
Scanty, .
Book to mailed free. j
REGULATOR CO. Ca. ;
Bald by all
STATE NEWS.
TO ZENO.
LITTLE
Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
i Last
my eye glanced
Work
in the
Three students were recently
expelled from Davidson College
the Present Fashion
Feminine World.
Work is the fashion, nowadays In
the feminine world. The girl who
s of necessity.
right
page
It Caught sight of your sail,
To read it tried, but alas I not. . ,
Pi r my heart would , reels no .
who is not obliged to admit a
write a passion of which yen and tabs her place the
know naught, wage-earners, is nevertheless far
I for which is against the That pare from being a drone. She that
she must do something A hobby,
whether or useful, she must
have, and when she has chosen it she
of has rides it we'd, and with
H Kitchin wen- married, at ; dear has ere this left nest, pluck. she d herself to
rules of the college.
Mr- A.
Gertrude, daughter
and Miss
You know it as smell as, when this life
is o'er,
You will know the re ions above
y This Office for Job Printing
i. i.
DENTIST.
FLEMING,
I Neck last Tuesday.
The Newton Enterprise says
that cutting grass with a mowing
scythe on a bicycle is one of the
latest accomplishment of a New-
ton sportsman.
The Governor appointed J.
S- Carr of Durham a delegate to
represent North Carolina at the
American Banker's Congress to
be held at Chicago October IS
an
A young lady in Nash County,
being jilted by her start-
ed to the creek to drown herself
; but came back stating that the
canal was so full of water she
the creek.
ATTORNEY -AT
Si. C.
Prompt ion to business. could not get to
at Tucker old stand.
M. Co., general
L I merchants at Wilson, have as
Is el BLOW, I . ti
signed for the benefit of creditors.
The assets are not stated
Congressman F. A.
was a of the firm.
Ami we ah vain, an
hoped I lie less
now sorely you'd give us a
music, she by
charms, and loses no opportunity
W.
GREENVILLE.
Practice in all fie Courts.
I. A. B. F.
TYSON.
Prompt attention Riven to collections
The date for the next
fair has been fixed. It will be
But you re at it and in sad, woe- of improvement, practices with
strain I attends concerts and operas
us your dream; in a highly mood,
And it bores us and I ires us and to our stePped to the lips in harmony.
. i. I Does the modern girl paint or
J will a horrid ever seem. , , m, . J, . .
sketch Then she works with real
Now I don't wish to or retard earnestness as the faithful hand-
poetical pen ; of belongs to painting
if I were you. I really not . , , ,
Bore people to death i- a sin. clubs, joins a class for open air work,
this hint will bid you and displays an enthusiasm
j to witness. And so with
And with t deep , everything which she in
I waft yen last one, in literature or fate-
farewell ton. the charitable organizations to
Yours Amiable E. Independence. j which her fresh young energy is so
the flower missions and
visits to and all re-
the attention of her
, . and untiring spirit and glow
I he Conn. brightness of h -r smile,
speaks of the disappointment off older on with
BELOW
COST.
Having decided upon making a change in our business on January 1st, 1894, we now
------offer our entire stock of------
PALPABLE DEFECT.
AT
LATHAM.
HARRY
the people of Haywood county j astonishment, but yield gracefully
last Monday week when they the changes wrought since their
to attend court and i , . hut,
. , ,, , , ,. that m respects the
tamed that Judge Armfield was l m Still
too sick to hold the The ; to hear their
Courier suggests that at this j of surprise when they are
point our laws arc defective i brought into contact with it in the I
need amendment, and the sag- happening of life. An elderly law-
. . ii i Ivor, confined his home in the
held a week commencing Feb. is well made.
Judges are human and are . transact some important business
no more exempt from sick which required for its completion
than lawyers, litigants jurors, the presence and signature of a
and some tilings we will sell for less than Cost our whole stock of Merchandise must
be closed out by December next.
aT-i v
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
G R E E A V L V .
Practice in nil the
OLD DOMINION LINE.
TAR RIVER SERVICE
for fire-,
T at all land
tags on l
and at G A. M.
1-ave at v M.
Thursdays and .-at
a.
24th. The
race been
made tip, and the premiums for
races alone aggregate
Goldsboro The
house of Mr. K. Borden.
located on his farm about six
; miles South from here, was
by an accidental fire,
Tuesday together with
; all machinery and about IS biles
i of loose cotton. The loss is about
I covered by only in
Charlotte There
was a run on the banks
day for greenbacks, the farmers
declining to take silver, protest-
that it would soon be worth
no more than Confederate money.
They failed to note, however, that
a good deal of the paper bills
paid them were silver certificates.
is this in-
OUR STOCK
OF
IT A
notary.
out
person and brought back from the
when the judge the a lady-
must stop. Thus the public is points and italics in profusion could
When some of these are sick the
court goes on just the same, but
Thus the
put to expense, private
suffer, and men charged
criminal and who are
acquitted when their cases do
come to trial, are detained in jail-
This matter is not a new one.
The question of supplying the
place of a judge who is sick or for
any other cause detained from
duties of his circuit, has been of
ten discussed but no remedy for
the hardship has ever been pro
We have no suggestion to
is the business of tin-
lawyers to suggest what
is. needed to meet the case.
said he,
in search of the proper
never do justice to the amazement
in his but be found that the
notary was duly and
as thoroughly as
she performed them modestly and
capably. Harper's
SUPERSTITIOUS STREAKS.
Col. Views on the
of Cranks.
said Co. Peter Sweeney,
of the Union Pacific, t; an Omaha
Bee man the other evening, just
after the man be was walking with
stooped and picked up a pin that
lay close to the curb-
stone, yen ever how
; many cranks there in the world
Of course, I don't refer to present
They ought to put their heads to i no. Rut I
work and out the cure for the , just remarking on the curious
defect in our judicial proceeding, supers it ions that get into
, . their heads. Mow, for instance, you
Raleigh Carolinian A fact show- ll to stopped just now and picked up that
for its action. If there were baa which I infer you arc in
in North Carolina a State Bar As- the habit of doing so whenever you
such as many of the; see one.
States have, a I know lots of men who
ready-made, to which it might ad- never fail to pick a pin, the same
dress Laud- as you do. Then there are the side-
mark, i walk cranks, who always step on
two. and even three old. One each third or fourth crack according
r The Norfolk, and Wash- . . ., The of Silver. I to the width of the boards, or. if
Norfolk. bas cotton four years o I are w a
Hew York .,. lie L , , ,, ,
nU and keens tie Frequent mention is made of they on the cracks.
marked via Dominion Line on keeps the i these come the stair
New York. from balance stored away. When a the papers the of t. wouldn't tell it to
mm is able to hold his cotton he I instances in which people of the anyone if they were asked about it,
. Oil I , , , , . . ,
more. Miners from i n more these persons
Boston.
JNO MYERS- SON.
sitings on N.
J.
V C
that the are not any
hard up than usual is that
many of them are holding back
Them- d part ore are .
their cotton. There are farmers
water OB Tar Bill mi
in this county who have a r
of bales of cotton on hand, one,
MENS, BOYS CLOTHING and OVERCOATS,
and FARMING UTENSILS, SNUFF, TOBACCO and other
Shelf GROCERIES. B. SI LIAR and COFFEE. BAG IND TIES In everything carried in stock by a
, l-- we will give yon special inducements, namely Large lot of
FINE SHOES. BABY CAPS and SHAWLS, Ladies and RUBBER A small lot of
v ii; pattern of Several widths nice
OIL H stock of e also have thousand SNOW TOBACCO STICKS and BASKETS which
we will s, CHEAP. Some PLOWS. PLOW CASTINGS an SHOVELS and HOES We cannot name everything, we are
o to have anything want Try us. , ,,; The whole stock has got to be sold and can buy it at such
ii price as to save you considerable money
OCTOBER 1st, 1898.
o.
YOUNG
N. shall continue to buy Cotton, Peanuts and
Rice and prepared to pay the highest market prices.
When
The as a Tree.
They Can Shell Out Money
They To.
A few days ago the Observer j The Tree of Heaven,
copied from Franklin Press a was formerly
statement about the of a very shade tree in
ranges and sulky plows that have of State,
been in county to the anything bat
by agents. The story was to ,.,, ode given some of thee.
illustrate the fact money is trees when its
not so scarce in that section after has been
all. There is a more recent odor, disagreeable,
F-. M Will.
The will of Rev
was opened and
the presence of
E. Y. Forbes
read yesterday
several wit
We heartily the follow-
from the Charlotte Observer l
One of the chiefest factors in
Georgia's progress is the patron-
the presence of several wit ; ago of home industries by Georgia
people. Anything made in At-
Hr. Forbes left his entire estate is good enough for Atlanta
to the diocese of eastern North people. In fact, the people of
Carolina for charitable purposes Georgia are growing to think that
with directions as to the lines of what is made in Georgia is just a
missions, schools, little better than goods from else-
notable evidence of the is not or
i to which it is to be applied, where-
fact home. A raw toys j The a species and the for each one- The This spirit is growing in North
ago a lot of horses from -the male ate on i.,, nature of
account.
than convict
Charlotte Observer.
1875.
S. SCHULTZ.
their year's will
their interest our prices p
n all its
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE
RICK. TEA,
Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
on hand For
the times. Our goo Is are boiler an. T in,,.
or thereto- j g Iredell Rowan
to sell at a close Stokes Dare has
P. only one, and Tyrrell and
M. only two each-
objections to receiving always start upstairs left foot first
money -or, having it, have sought I
Caps. R. P. Waring has return to get lid of it, through fear that
ed from and extensive summer if has not already depreciated
trip. He says that the I of l soon will. It is being talked
road that Cleveland and Con-
silver. It is
not worth while to say to the in
Oregon was at State- ., ,,,,
ville, turned into a lot and offered another. It is only the male low
for sale. The statement was that that give of the disagreeable
freight was due on then, or of this fact cans-
that the railroad would trans extensive planting of the
on th
Carolina and the State is prosper-
the top of the stairs first, j port them no further. The band ,,,. ,,.,,.,;, the result dollars
These persons, I may remark, arc man l,., l i i r ., c m u. ,.;. i u n.
usually those who been I, , Tl H
with a two three of them. They were This is
Nothing except the as it grows. Let everybody
income from the estate is to be patronize North Carolina
u-ed. so the good results will be
perpetual. The income, we
I will amount to about a
as are those sock and shoe
cranks who put their hosiery and
on the left foot
Nature's Queer Doings.
continued
not ponies, but horses, and many , f
of them very earns, liar of ornamental It
They were at prices all remarkably well on the
the way from to ITS, and in and dries soils, it is of
of them were sold ; and is not
Men who were not ;,,,.,; ,,. et
supposed to have bought go far as known. The tree deserves
. . I ii- . i
h-
ed in any other country in North
Carolina or Virginia. The work
on our roads is being well readers of the Land
wisely done. Mecklenburg now; mark that this is not true, but Following the recent
has more good roads than any these intelligent readers can do rains and heavy floods in New Mex-
other in the State. There thousands of dead fish, weighing
work for convicts, and no , t to forty some who by Boon of consider
better labor can got for road- , . ,, r down the Pecos river, in their debt n . . t , i i , . l t carry mil any
labor.- such neighbors-a friendly and counties, n y
vice by disabusing their minds of drowned by the densely d too near the house nor j
false impression they have re which perhaps had become a walk. It
The list of pensioners is There are now about more noxious through gaining some , home. stock .,.,, from m , ,.,.,. is
completed in the Auditor's office. of silver in circuit element from the wide oat the hidden money. By the , Trees should be brought acting directly upon the Wood
Au unknown man was found
dead in the outskirts of a small
Kansas a few days ago A
search disclosed in cash and
; a revolver on the of the
, fortunate young man. The
One lie- , ,, . , ., ,
wed . that cannot an inquest and it took
Hair to defray the expenses and
How's Th a
bury the body. The police judge
the cashier of the
First
ex
pa i
There isn't a newspaper of any
in the United States that
in the offend somebody almost
Patent or the Courts week, says an exchange.
truthfully too In
fee in Patent Peas of people
r in less time than part of the time, when he
from i to please all the people ail the
th. model or drawing i sent we he makes a dismal failure of
a, to k free of r, it. It is no mm hag
of silver in
Of the soldier pensioners there Tr ; ii so suddenly drained. The ; way
are of the class, of the fish indigenous to the tower Bk of Statesville
second. of the third and 1,361 tender for private debts and are codfish and mullet, but black . . . . . .
of the fourth; total 2.034. Of is receivable by the government bass abound in the clear, , presses opinion mat tn. re is
widows there are 2.804- The for all customs dues and internal streams and pools of the mountain- I more cash in Iredell county now
grand total is Wake taxes. For all practical a J
has pensioners, Han-, -i i cast. Many of the latter fish the
over Mecklenburg Wilkes is as as down to
leads the State in the number The faith of the govern during the high water, to be on
pensioners, baying no less than meat is behind it, and the Wilson its subsidence in overflow pools
The other counties having. bill to repeal the Sherman act along banks, affording great
more than are Catawba which bill has passed the House sport to local fishermen. More than
and is now pending the Senate on, thousand large black bass were
distinctly pledges all the power taken in these impromptu fish ponds
of the government to maintain all, n the vicinity of town of Eddy.
the silver now in circulation on a
with gold. So far from
discrediting the silver now in cir- Mrs. if you don't do
we have no doubt that better than you have lately I'm
and will afraid you will be burned up when
add to its amount and insure its you die.
server.
A Big Capita,, Not a Cure f-r AH
Our Ills.
from reliable nurserymen only,
and the female tree alone
be
N. C. lit Station-
Sit
is becoming so
rind so as to need no
mention. All who used
Electric ring the of
integrity. The only circumstance
which we can imagine which
would cause any depreciation of
our silver money is the enactment
into a law of a bill providing for
the free coinage of silver on the
existing ratio. That would be
d we make change m , ,
n J Pt succeeded in doing, J a doubt cause its
We to the Po-t Ma gave it up long ago. For that j below gold, but nobody is
Sept of the Money Order to reason the man who swears bring that about but the
V. S. Office reporters and editors is liable party people, and their
mate success is about as probable
as he would if he on that next years blackberry
D. j Times. bushes a crop of
I couldn't
stand it.
Mrs. you could.
Dick I don't care.
Puck.
you own
lot of stock in dot North Green-
Insurance
Mr.
you
sells I'm insured in dot com-
for
I've had a dot mine store
down next
Argentina is an object lesson
to our silver They
plenty of
J years ago. The
j was used under
President for
ml money because
When it got to be
abundant it
purer does not exist were while during
and it is to do all that a i i
claimed. cur.-all four
, s and Kidney, will were The present man
pm .
Will Malaria tin- system left by the previous i
r . -t
F. , t
i fasT. years, h- the corpse for carrying
hive perfectly in concealed Weapons and
cared the gun The local news-
as usual gets nothing for
publishing the
change.
Now Try Tilt.
It will cost yon nothing will
yon good, if yon a Cough,
Cold, or any trouble with Throat, Chest
or Dr. King's New Discovery
Coughs and is
guaranteed to give relief, or money will
from
found it just the thing and under use
had a speedy and perfect Try
a bottle at our learn
for just how a thing it I.
bottles free at Drug
Store. Large size Mo, and f 1.00.
and tin Hie system.
. par S ail
a. free.
railroad has
received the annual r. port of the
w, II A. A N. C. R R. During the
four years of the previous man-
in 1880. the earn-
Merit Will Not Down.
The enemies of Dan-
are still trying to do him,
but Josephus don't down. He
I pays no attention to those that
ed under Headache , envy his success, keeps his eves
ed under. v dividend in the roads history. I ,.
nil it was year with I n Promotion
T r -i i a . , t ii, tho Interior Department
at of per cent, ,. . i
Washington as its Chief Clerk
Then came a financial crash,
with tho crash political disorders,
riots, war ceaseless
sis. For some premium
on gold has been over the
like planets twinkle, construction bonds.
There are 17.075 shares of stock.
, ,. , , l. i ii kissing when meet. Che
general distress bought about by j fl. of owns
a too its., o. the -gov. private Craven
and the swells.
Lenoir Free Press.
clerk.
operating expenses less than j
i . ti inside of five months after he en-
, , ,, . See tho promenading of the o linings. The L.
began, unfortunately, to L m of I per cent, to the
millinery their amounts to more than tho
foretells. the per cent, bonds
tinkle on the crowded street by the orig
as
Waynesville Courier.
Salve.
Tho Salve in world for
Bores, Ulcer, Salt
K v.-r Bores, Teller. Manila,
Chilblains nines, and all
lion. or no
it Is to
. , p feel satisfaction, or money refunded
stamp makes discontent traveling county 1,293. Bamboo and
and revolution chronic





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
SUICIDAL. ADVICE.
at Hi-
N. as mail
The majority by which the
House passed the Tucker bill for
Mr Butler his the repeal of the Federal
, . lows, at the tie-
on of the tor taking the vote
eminent owning the Kill Roads the bill was first taken up, was a
so that the farmers can swap their great disappointment to the
The fact is the farmers publicans who had been persistent
of Pitt County at least are getting circulating false stories about
. . the existence of Democratic dis-
r and more I satisfaction with the bill and the
they do have less money because difficulty there would be in get-
they have quit swapping cotton a Democratic quorum on the
for meat, corn, hay, molasses and floor when the time came to vote.
tobacco. A farmer in the Sooth g Democratic member of the
House was in Washington
that can raise his meat, wheat, voted for the bill, and none were
corn, syrup, oats, hay and marl I absent, except from unavoidable
.,.,. ,,,,. not need to swap with any causes. The of the
d do not; House believe in doing business
,, ,. , ., ., i laud in doing it promptly, and
trouble him one half as bad
one year, ore-half would the taxes to pay for and,
; column on.- . ,. ., , i ,, -r, ,,.
. , , , ,. up the rail road and horde. Senators and Representatives
Transient men r . .
one week two weeks. of officers that would fastened seem much in earnest about
month Two inches one week, are i providing for the a new
two one month. St. I , . ., i Printing and
Advertisements inserted in Local gradually raising all these Me to
Column items, and are beginning to real-1 determine upon the location of a
line for each in j something from cotton and site therefor. It is certainly to he
the present efforts
A new is
Carolina cotton for
be paid fob is advance. Nebraska corn, wheat,
cotton aim silo
as a money crop. When h
Commissioners- and Sale-, j Mr. Butler advises farmers to
Contracts for any space not mention d
Above, for any length of time, l-
made by application to the
in person or by letter.
Copy tor t Advertisements am
There is not one word of truth
in the sensational story out
Illinois meat and Indiana hay from here early this week satin
by
mornings in order to receive prompt m
the following.
he in effect trying to put them
back to tho very condition that
brought about so much of the
all changes of his should lie , . .
o'clock on Tuesday present distress an I from a null
by sad experience our tanner
have for the past two years been
slowly recovering. It does not
pay for our to wheat
or oats or hay to sell but it does
pay them to every thing
that would other wise cause an
outlaw of money. It never has
paid then to raise even cent
cotton to swap for corn and
wheat and hay and meat, an I yet
TIME SOMETHING WAS DONE.
The struggle begun in the Sen-
ate last Wednesday as was
after Mr. bad
given notice that on that day be
would ask the Senate to sit in
continuous session a vote
was on tho repeal bill now I Ml. Sutler seriously tells then to
before that body. Mr. Allen, of I buy that ft eight free , S- returned
Nebraska, spoke all night long, they into trouble
fourteen three-quarter hours, j again. Out upon such
SAd shoved sign of being even and enemies to hon-st
tired. D ring the day or successful farming,
night Mr- was
that Secretary had asked
Postmaster General to
reinstate a dismissed Republican
official, stationed in
and had been refused.
Parmele Items.
X. t. 10th. 1893.
Mr. M. C S Cherry, Jr, of
Bethel, is here -day talking in-
Mr. Joe Mayo, one of
highly esteemed citizens is quite
with typhoid fever, in Bethel.
Mr. Harry Sledge is a sufferer
with a mashed hand. The doc
to-s don't think it necessary to
amputate it.
voted down, to On the even-
of the second day it became
evident that tho struggle could
not be very prolonged, because
those opposed to the bill insisted
on there being a quorum present
and continued to demand the roll
call, and the friends of tho bill
had to furnish the quorum or
low the Senate to adjourn for want
of sufficient number to transact
business. This was kept up
about o'clock Friday morn-
when tho Sergeant
reported that he could not g.-t the
members in the hall. Mr.
then arose and said, have
done my duty, I now move
that the Senate There
was silence, unbroken by-
even a second to the motion which
was put by Senator Faulkner who
was in the chair. Thus, after hay
been in continuous for
This has been a year of storms.
The one on last Friday was
most as revere as the one on th
27th of August, and would
have done as much damage
on our coast if the
of the former one had not been so
fresh in our minds- hen the
d service announced its
grater care was taken to
prevent the destruction of life
us bride last Friday night on th
S. N. K. train from a wedding
tour to several northern cities.
A reception was given at the
d of his brother, Mr. William
Powell where they the
congratulations a host of
friends.
Miss Craft spent
day here visiting her cousin Mrs.
D. S. Powell. She left this morn-
for Greensboro College.
Misses Emma Briley and Etta
Harris, of Greenville passed here
a few days ago, for Mr. Bud Lit
where they will grade his
crop of tobacco.
Our merchants say tines are
by the
Do not Fail to Call on
FRANK WILSON
as he has just returned from the North with a
line of
ARE RUN
X.
Rising Sun. Delaware.
Good Family Medicines
Sarsaparilla and He
Pills.
regard Hood's Sarsaparilla and Hood's
PlUs, tho very best family medicines, we
are never without them. I have always been
A Delicate Woman
mud began three
years ago for that tired feeling. It built mo up
so quickly and so well that I feel like n i
and have had great faith in it I
It to my children whenever there seems any
their it doc them good.
My boy it s. well he for it I
cannot find words to tell how I prize it
We Hood's in tho family and they
Act a Charm
I take pleasure In recommending
to all my Mends, for believe If people
Hood's Cures
only keep Hood's
at hand as we do. much sickness and
Mrs. L. Towns-
r-xi, Sun, Delaware.
Hood's act easily, yet promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and bowels
BOOTS Shoes,
Capital and Credit.
GENT'S GOODS
m w
And as I make a
e.
Executor's Sale of Per-
Estate.
On at November, ISM,
at late of Abel Smith,
tin- will fur
the personal
estate of I he late
of torn, cot-
ion, fodder, kitchen
and i other personal property
of
of Abel Smith,
improving,
, large amount of goods they are
property. Considerable
ago was done even th ail the
precaution that could be taken. At
many places on our coast the water
was higher than was known,
notably at and vi-
WASHINGTON I
our Regular
Washington, D. C-, Oct. 1803.
Senator began his
Mr. Lee is on the
sick list this week.
Mr. John M. Lloyd of Bethel
is now the finishing touch-
es on the Parmele
Cos new office.
The alarm of fire brought an
anxious to the Parmele
Lumber Co dry kilns,
last Thursday evening at o'clock.
The were soon
with little damage to the build-
will cover the loss.
The A. R train ran over and
hours, the Senate adjourned.
The prevailing opinion is that attempt to force a vote bill kill, d a pet dog belonging to Mr.
the bill and the anti-re for the unconditional repeal of G J- Cherry a few days ago. Oh
this kills the bill we n. of the Slier- for more trains when more dog-
are much rejoiced. t is on Wednesday, by
compelling tho Senate to remain
in
thought that a compromise must
come, but as yet no proposition
has been made by either side that
seems acceptable. A somewhat
different aspect was put on the
case hen Mr. on Sat-
moving to adjourn,
said he wanted to correct an
ion which seemed to be prevalent
in some quarters that those in
favor of repeal were to give
up. He said ho wanted to give
notice that the fight had only
been by the friends of the
bill.
There is certainly something
radically wrong when a majority
of the Senators favoring a meas-
which has been urgently re
commended by the
are powerless to pass it. It there
ever was a time when the country
would applaud the Senate fur
over-riding a foolish custom of
that body it is now, we be-
almost method forte
a -top tho nonsensical
that has been going on
in the Senate for nearly a month,
will be approved by the country.
Lets have a vote on the bill
whether it passes or kills it. The
country is disgusted with wait-
are on the track.
Mr. G. W. and Mr-
Moss, of the Martin County
Co., were callers at the Par
club house yesterday.
Mr. J. C. left here yes
t spend a few days in
i;. Suffolk, Vs.
he Storm.
section bag a heavy wind and
rain all day and in re
continuous session. It was
clear from the beginning that tho
margin over and above a quorum,
which the followers of Mr.
were compelled to keep on
the floor constantly, was entirely
too small, even if half of them
were not Republicans who had
not pledged themselves to ex-
efforts, to him any
hope of tiring out the treat and fences were blown down than
opponents of the bill, who could I in the August storm. People from the
yet all he rest needed, us country report much cotton blown out,
they only kept two or Sen-; church
on the floor at a time, one to ; ,. h wag
speak and the others demand a ,,.
call of the Senate whenever the of
present fell below a quo-1 , o
rum. being the situation it i , , , . . . ., . .
seems to our that u to
the only real reason for holding
this continuous session is to-, o.- friends in
those outside of Congress to their I Work
who have been BO strenuously J had very rapid y since tin-
insisting upon unconditional re house was id and all
peal of impossibility of soon he read for use. this
mg repeal, and of
the necessity for compromise.
There was some talk early the
week of adjourning Congress if;
the continued session of the Sen
ate failed to reach a vote, but the
idea was not popular with the
ii may not nine Ii delay.
The Virginia State fair at
Richmond last week was a big
success. That is what the North
Carolina State fair at Raleigh
this week will De.
North Carolina seems not to
have attracted the attention of
the administration much as
yet in reference to removals of
Republicans from office. It is
now about seven months since
the President and his cabinet got
their position, yet, is a
fact that at least nine-tenths
of the old officers still hold on in
North Carolina. At this rate it
will take about six years to fill
these places with Democrats who
did the work to Cleveland
ad his adviser in their places and
who deserve some recognition at
their hand- e cannot have a
administration with-
out Democrats in the offices,
t sooner this is done the sooner
will administration be in
favor with tho people. Mr. Bis-
specially needs to learn this
lesson, so far he has been totally
ignorant of its first principles.
Barrow. lad rasher and
I for Mils -pl.-r-
implement and will be clad
Senators, and It looks now as ,.,, cane ft.
though some disposition will As its . Implies, is genera
certainly be made of the silver I that will cut. lilt. turn,
question there is an all in
and that it will be a land to.
i- i. i .
compromise which can be accept
ed without any sacrifice
pie by all Democratic Senators
although Senator is
very positive in saying that he
will take no part in a compromise.
Everybody in Washington knew
that the number of what are usu-
ally spoken of as holding
the members of which
were never known to engage in
any other employment work
for the Government, was
considerable, but no one dreamed
its actual extent
Dockery this week presented
to the House a partial report of
the joint committee is in-
departmental methods
and work. More than
lies have two or more rs in
office, and some as I an v as seven,
eight nine. More than halt
of the United States em-
in this city are furnished
by these families, and yet
there is a rule against the employ
m. of two the same
family. No one was more
prised at the figures in this report
were the heads of the de-
it can be stated to
a that will not wait
for legislation to reduce the mini
of one-family in
their respective department. To
put it popular tie
families bad a snap for a
time and will now be made
to step down out and
other people
rain and fur covering tin
it cannot surpassed. Sever;
size Blade, ft to it. Call
see Harrow
JOHN
Important Sale of Town
Property,
By virtue of a decree of
l of in th ease of John
T. Bruce and wife,
term. of -aid
the court said decree, will sell iii
trout or the Conn hi Hie town
of on Mouthy the
f following de-
scribed real proper A
lot or parcel of land In the town
on the I. A.
wile now
on
c. J. and others on
J. T. on Ur
south, and ting on the extension of
street on the The said
b located of the most
desirable parts of tin- town, a
and dwelling house
with and airy,
outbuildings, well of water.
a grove of shade trees.
a of fruit trees and Una
Jed the elevation in Hie
of town of
one
en, hat
to do so can make
on
Ism
lute
care Malaria.
Land Sale.
of n Pitt Superior,
t on it nude at term in tin-ran
of Latham A Skinner vs. B.
ti. L. W II
the undersigned
Will sell for cash the Court
door in on Monday the
day of November at
tin- following real estate situ-
in the town of and
known in of said town as lots
Nos. and
known as the Hotel property.
The property will he divided
in several lots, of each
can ascertained by reference to the
F. O- JAMES,
Oct 1891. Com mis Inner.
Sale of Valuable Land.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
of c made at
we on Monday. Dee.
1893. at ; s e Court
House door in valuable
farm lying east of the town Green-
ville, known IS the residence and home
place of the late col Edward
containing one hundred and
eighty seres, more or less, and ad-
joining town of the hinds
of Martha Wilson. Frank Johnson and
others. Situated upon said premises
in a grove is an eight room
dwelling with a water cistern attached,
kitchen, stables, ham and other
buildings. the dwelling is a
taring of line water. The farm also eon-
an orchard of a variety of line
trees and a vineyard of James. Con
cord. and other
One-third to be paid cash.
balance in two equal to
U- paid at the expiration of one and two
from day Bale, the deterred pay-
to bear eight per cent interest; ti-
tie withheld full payment of the
purchase money, with privilege to
chaser to pay a greater price or all the
purchase money on day of sale or sooner
than due by a ii-1 terms by paying Inter,
eat to day of payment.
K . IAMBS.
ALEX. I. BLOW.
Oct. 1803. Commissioners.
Invites a lies to inspect her
Fashionable Millinery
She ha recently returned from the
north when she attended several
e and Is prepared to fur-
the correct shades and for
this season. Her Pattern Hals are
models of style and beauty. Large lot
f Caps on hand
Mrs. and Miss
Florence Williams are with her and
ill he glad to serve you.
Cream cents a
Pitt the Superior Court.
Summons for Belief.
It. A. Tyson, w. S. Bawls, partners
fading as I A.
Against
Greenville Combination Store, C.
M. Bernard assignee, J. A. K. Tucker.
Receiver.
State of North Carolina.
To the Pitt
, ,
You are hereby commanded to sum-
mons Combination --tore
Bernard. Assignee G. Comb.
Store, J. A. K. Tucker, Sheriff, K. O,
James, of E. C. the de
above named, if they found
within your county, to appear before the
Judge of our Superior Court, at a court
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the
House in Greenville, N. C, on
the of and answer
the complaint which will be deposited
the office of the Clerk of the Supt nor
Court said county, within the first
three days of term, and let the
defendants take notice that if they fail
to answer the said complaint within the
hue required by law the Plaintiff will
apply to court for the relief de-
in plaint.
Hereof fail not. and
make due return.
under my hand and seal of said
this day of Dec. 1891.
E A MOTE,
Clerk Superior Court Pitt Cut my
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOE
P am saw not In need try t pair.
In the world.
MM
MM
MM
2.50
2.00
FOR
I can suit you both as to pocket and quality.
CALL AT THE RED FRONT OPPOSITE THE OLD BRICK
STORE AND AVE WILL CERTAINLY PLEASE YOU. I WANT
TO IMPRESS UPON THE PUBLIC THAT MY STOCK IS EN-
NEW, THE GOOD TRADE I HAD DURING THE LAST
SPRING AND SUMMER RELIEVED ME OF ALL
STOCK AND I AM BEFORE YOU BEADY WITH A
SPARKLING, BRAND NEW STOCK OF GOODS
YOURS TO SERVE,
FRANK WILSON,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
BROWN k HOOKER
INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEIR
STORE
To see they are offering; on a full line of
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING,
Boots, Shoes and Hats
join to v and
R j id
AND MAINTAIN BOTH, AND
HAVE THE SECRET OF
WE YE Eh TO JOIN
ALL THESE FORCES TOGETHER
BUILD UP A BUSINESS OF SOL
I If MERIT, WOULD BE l
CREDIT TO TOWN. AND A
,, PLEASURE TO OUR FRIENDS AND
CUSTOMERS TO KNOW THAT WE
HAVE SUCCEED EH AS
S STANCE IN DO I NO Tills VERY
I NO. Fill ENDS A ND TO M
WE AND STILL
GIT YOUR HELP A ND
We oiler you a line of that cannot be excelled in this com
for variety and value. Fur very dollar spent with we
try to give value. We have received out
FALL STOCK
and can allow you a beautiful line It is intention
Ball Good Goods at the lowest possible prices with
merit- We nave the Goods.
to
For Fall and Winter Service.
We can suit the Ladies exactly on
Dress Goods Trimmings.
A --complete
cannot be found on
the
o-
We continue to sell O. B. Corsets at cents
The balance of Lang's stock of Clothing and Shoes are going
AT AND BELOW COST.
BROWN HOOKER'S NEW STORE.
CO
DEALERS IN-
AND FANCY GROCERIES.
We are in business to and have a nice line of fresh
Will he glad to have our old en-toners call and sec us, as well as all
others who wish to gel Groceries and Confections that arc pine.
Our goods will he in every reject. We pay the mar
prices for
We invite inspection. We invite comparison. We y pat
want your trade. sec
Dry Goods, Dress Goods,
Notions, Hats,
Piece Goods far Making Mens and Boys
CLOTHING.
Shoes, Crockery, Tinware,
Glassware, Wood Hardware. Plows and Farming
Harness Whips, Heavy ii- s and Flour a specialty
The largest and best line of II D V T U V,
our town, consisting part I U Marble Top
Walnut Suits, Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Imitation
nut Suits, Bureaus. Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets. Chairs
of kinds, Cribs and Cradles, Mattresses, Tin Safes
Bed Springs, Tables and Lace
Poles, Matting and Floor Oil Cloths. J. A P. Coates Best Spool
Cotton at Wholesale prices, Bagging and Ties. Bags.
We and tireless workers for trade and always
ready to make and give Bargains.
ESTABLISHED
f. A, ANDREWS,
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL--------
KT. C.
DO
no
no
C. B. Side Meat.
Tuna Boston
barrels Flour, all
barrels sugar,
barrel
boxes
Milts
barrels
Ax Sniff,
barrels P.
case Sardines.
T like
j i Cakes is.
A; Hand's
j sin urn sin,,
Kraal Powders,
j ii eases Star Lye,
l. barrels Apple Vinegar,
eases Gold n ashing Powder.
lb
; bandies Arrow Ties
Full of nil other goods In my line.
-TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED WORTH OF------
To be sold at reduced
prices, together with large
assortment of Fall and
winter
IN SHORT A COMPLETE
STOCK OF GOODS TO BE SOLD
CHEAP.
Having bought my brother I am determined to sell my en-
tire stock exceedingly close. Come and see for yourself.
Respectfully,
WILEY BROWN.
Hew Howe Sewing Depositor for American Bible So.
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDERS, GOOD COOK STOVES
are now so cheap that yon can afford to buy an inferior
one- to and buy the best.-
e THE
THE
ELMO.
LIBERTY,
THE
ALLIANCE
COOKS
to
Tinware, Paints, Oils, Lamp Goods,
Stoves repaired, Tin Roofing and all kinds of Sheet Metal work
done-
S- E.
m try HO
mt as
sum.
to Pitt line of the following goods
not to be excelled in this market. And to be
nil kinds, CLOTHING,
BAT and BOOTS. SHOE-, Li
WINDOWS. SASH.
WARK, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PL., --------.-.
kinds Hay, Rock or
HA. BRIDIE ad
HEAVY GROCERIES A
Clark's N. T. Spool which I offer to the trade t Wholesale
lobbers percent Bread
Hall's Star lye at Prices White pare
wed and Paint Wood and
Nails a aw a I
Paris, PiAf-
NO
B Cat
COBB BROS CO,
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA.
and Correspondence Solicited.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
N. V-
i OLD STAND
All kinds
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOB A FIRE PROOF





DOLLARS
AND
SENSE
Brain and Bullion
are the wheels upon which rest
and the business of the
world. Some have one,
sonic on
favored
few have
both. Not to
take the trouble
to see and buy
bargains is to prove one
of the three things s
Either you have with-
out dollars, or
dollars without sense, or
Neither the dollars nor the
THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
A. ace milt of our selling
out our entire stock of Merchandise at
cost, a good many people arc the
i-i that we have stopped buying
Cotton, Peanuts and Rice. That is a
mistake. We are still buying, these
and it will pay you to us
before you sell your in. Peanuts or
Rice elsewhere. We want them and
will pay you the highest market price
for them. Young
Greenville, X. C. October
See Stock of good-.
weather sine Friday's
If you want a rice Hat call
Cobb i Sou.
bout time to shoo, fie straw
at.
Personal,
Mrs. E A. is quite sick.
Mr. H. K. Keel left this morning for
Henderson.
Mrs. J. S. left
visit r. lathes in Raleigh.
Mrs. M. I. went to Tarboro
Monday for a short visit to relatives.
Miss Jennie William- is visiting her
sister, Mrs. W. M. Russ, In Raleigh.
Rev. II. left Monday to
spend a few days at the World's Fair.
Miss Winnie Briley, of Martin county,
was visiting Mrs. C. Stephens last week.
Miss Minnie Caraway, of Halifax,
spent from Friday to Monday here vis-
Mrs. Skinner.
Capt. R. O. Whitaker was yes
as smiling and jolly as when he
used to punch tickets.
While returning from the country one
day last week the horse Dr. Charles
was driving ran away
Peanut Bags at tin-Old and him. lit of the buggy. His
back was hurt in the fall and
NOW LISTEN
We have just returned from New
York with the largest and
most select line f
DRY GOODS,
Notions, Boots a Shies
ever shown in Greenville. Come
and look H our Goods and we
will send yon home rejoicing.
Respectfully,
HIGGS BROS.,
Leaders of Low Prices.
Greenville, N- C
Brick e.
The Raleigh fair i- in progress
week,
J. C, Cobb Son arc III shape to meet
competition In all line-.
First bad colds of th season are
around.
Parties paying their taxes by the
November will save cost.
H. w. Sheriff.
fairs are all the Pi t
is not in it.
The Flour on at the
Store.
your gen eat the birds
until Novell her.
Cotton pay Man for
Cotton Bead at the Old Brick Store.
The ladies should sec pretty mil-
at Mr.-. M.
J. C. Cobb on have the prettiest
Sheet in town. See our Card van Men's
There a heavy j
morning and it was genera.
received; ear load of Bagging;
Ties at J. C. Cobb Son. s e then
before buying.
The folks had a dance in
mania Hall Thursday night.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Sore.
he has been confined to his room a few
days.
Mr. Sol. Henley, formerly of
but new of Ca and Mrs.
of Norfolk, Va., spent a few
days of the past week here with Mr. and
Mis. M. R left Monday. Mrs.
was Miss Rosa be-
fore and visited here
years ago.
False Report.
Our neighbor town. Washington, was
very much excited over a that
reached there Thursday, that a ref-
from Brunswick. Ga , had d at
Will of fever. Dr.
d lit of Health, of Beau-
fort telegraphed to Dr.
at in reference to the mat-
and received the reply that there
was no yellow fever in
Our
now has several
good correspondents writing items n
different localities, and th -v
much to the of the
paper. c like also to have a
esp indent at Falkland, at
at and at an I
would he glad f any one either
of those I Minus who can furnish items
call on us the time they are in
Greenville.
Building and Loan.
Betiding and Loan Association
agents visited last week try-
to get branches bed
here. The c is an advocate
of ding and Loan Associations, l.-i t
believes foil people wish to gel the
Boat benefit in one they es-
a home as elation. The
town ha- had with outside
s in t e past has b en de-
A home
at ion is i- needed.
The Hi st boat of the sea Ml
up to Greenville last week.
Greenville tobacco market now j lie. There were several
has sixteen buyers, and they arc Baking having in the
prices mini.
her Oct. 31st is Hie last day
Jim can pay taxes without cost.
B. W. King. Sheriff.
in Washington.
At la t Friday night the
East-in Carolina Dispatch Co's ware-
house and contents was destroyed by
merchants
at time
of the Hie. ill ams ft
of the Armour Co. of
Chicago, lost worth of goods;
A. lost 12.1 barrels of flour, and
Others sustained -mailer losses. The
Mrs. Higgs ha- the very latest I total baa is
styles in new fall millinery and can I was only partially covered by
please all patrons.
Died.
Another home In o r co i
been saddened by a visitation o the
Death Angel and .-or owing
n ill- Ions of a precious
babe. La-t F May morning e
ugh Mr. and Mis.
W. J. i aged fifteen died
after a brief illness of only two days.
The remains were interred in berry
Hi at Saturday afternoon,
funeral e lees conducted by Rev. G
F. Smith. The pall b were
W. L S. n.
and I. F May the
Heavenly Father comfort the bereaved
ones.
at Date-.
Slate and Count T are now due.
The of Pitt are
that the following
times and for the of col-
taxes. The law compels
me to collect, for settle
for the same hope
who have not , I the same will
meet me and do so. These who r
will me in my in the
House, i h.-;. can m- with me
ed they come in tin- month of
J. C. Cobb Store.
October 24th. MM.
Wednesday October
Penny Hill, Friday. October 27th.
I . Saturday, October 18th.
Falkland,
Bethel.
1st.
4th.
After November 1st proceed
to enforce by law. Pay In
time and save Take
Sept. It. W. KING,
Sheriff Pitt county.
here i light to
the home to-
make him en-
High Prices
-ave been
Unconditionally
Repealed at
LANG'S.
And everything
being sold Cheap
or CASH.
Be member I pay you ca-h for Chickens
Egg- and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
The Convention of the Disciples
church meets in Washington to
of this month
Look for the swinging sign
est ash Stoic on Higgs
The lie market can get as
good pr OB for tobacco as any other
market, and i- getting it right along.
The i u toe year will be
collected according to law, pa at one .
H. W.
The re-onion of Confederate veterans
in this county will i-lace at
lard's thee miles from town,
next Saturday.
Fresh arrival Now Buckwheat.
Rolled Oat.-. Prunes, Mack-
r Cabbage, I , at the Old
Store.
Every business man
ave such an ii
b market th t
to build it up.
At the close of the sermon in the
Sunday night, J. II.
announced be would
a series of meetings the first Sun-
day in November.
The colored folks had a big meeting
near store, in this county,
on Sunday. The railroad ran
from Greenville and
his is to state that I have
Mr. Joe Blow as collector for
me His receipt will hold good. All
parties indebted lo me will oblige
by an i settlement. I must make
Several large payments by November
1st.
Mr. Stephens recently ship-
some J lines to Colorado
arrived at their in
perfect c We believe
could across the continent.
Let Town Tax Coll Harris follow
Sheriff example and get a bump
on himself taxes, and put some
funds in the Treasury so the Council
men can h some needed work
done on the streets.
The committee were to get
the for the Sunday
n ready in time to pub-
this week, as they are waiting to
hear from some parties expected to take
part in the exercises. The Convention
will meet morning of next
week.
II. F. Keel has connected himself
the well Ware-
house of Henderson and w ill be glad to
have his Man s give him a trial, be-
that Coopers Warehouse is the
to get the very best prices for
their tobacco. Hogsheads
on application
J. B. Cherry Co. give leaders
their fall announcement to-day. This
enterprising has built up a business
strictly upon merit, and H stands as a
monument to their energy and is the
pride of the community. Such an
as theirs lg an honor to the
town. Shoddy methods and traps to
catch customers are unknown to them,
as they sell goods strictly upon value
S worth for a dollar. Look
through the splendid line they carry
which is the largest in you
will be of what we say.
They invite examination and corn-
Help is
Greenville ought to do something for
the yellow fever sufferers at Brunswick,
Ga Under a quarantine people
are kept there at the muzzle of a gun
and many of them am at the point of
starvation for lack of food. Our people
here are usually very generous and
ready to respond to an appeal for help
f any one wishes to make a dona-
for the Brunswick sufferers they
can it at the office
will be tin y acknowledged and
forwarded.
Murder in Beaufort County.
One day last week Sheriff R. W. g
received a telegram from Sheriff R. T
Hodges, at U to arrest
Shade, colored for murder. Slade
had killed his Wife the night before.
They had separated e weeks,
and about o'clock that evening Slade
went to he hone where his wife was
That
The Third party at Pollard's
Mill on of last w was
considerable of a disappointment to Its
projectors in point of attendance. As
for back as during our last court the
were seen putting large
posters in the hands of some of
and from then on to the
was worked both by advertising and
drumming for all it was worth. The
figure for the prospective attendance
was set any In i- from up, and to
hear some about, it one could
have imagined that there would not be
room for the the mill-
pond was moved out of the way. The
day arrived and the crowd- well, it
not turn up in any such number us had
been hoped and worked for. The high-
est estimate we have heard placed upon
the attendance is while some said
they believed I include every-
body there. Taking i the highest
estimate and deducting the number of
staunch Democrats and ladies present
than and the I bird
contingency d down to almost
insignificant proportions. Marian B t-
and Harry Skinner were both on
the for speeches, but
tried to monopolize thing- and held the
floor fir three-and-a-half hours. lie
waded neck-deep in o corporation law-
too, and put it on so thick as to set
to flight all the Colonels enthusiasm for
a speech, notwithstanding he was lead-
ed and called. It rather looked like
was jealous of Skinner and did
not want him to
Babb, from across the I, Was there
and talked some, but left off telling
when or where he commenced re-
Mills Items.
N. C Oct. in.
A mad ting was t d In this section
last week.
Mr. W went to
on business last Tuesday.
Miss Bessie Chapman came list week
to attend school at
Mrs. Lizzie i came up
last week to visit her parents. She re-
tinned Friday-
Mis. a I lodges returned in her
home in last Monday
ding a week with her patents,
Roach and Smith
spent p it of last week at Mr. J. L
Tuck r.
Miss has been quite sick
the past week Glad to hear aha is con-
Watson p cached John's
list Wednesday six
Rev. Alb in was quite sick at
Mis. Vary hist Week. He
returned to Greenville Friday.
Bethel Items.
N. Oil, 1803.
Mr. Nobles, of spent
last Friday in town.
Col. spent Saturday in
town on ml business.
Mrs. Rand, of Syracuse. New
York, visiting her parents Mr. and
Mrs. J. L. Peal.
Mr. and Mrs. J. D. left for
on Sunday evening's train.
Where Mr. engage in the
mercantile business.
Mrs. Often of Penny Hill, is
her sister Mrs. F. B. Knight this
week
Mr. A. II. one of cur
merchants has b en summoned
to serve as a juror in the Federal Court,
at next week.
Fri was the day we have
hail this season. We learn that it did
much damage to cotton not
he disposed of five eases Sat-
ill which nine were
staying and fled to persuade her to go j all of whom guilty of the
b home with him. She refused offense charged against them,
when he up an and struck i
her a blow on the back of the neck that I
Court, a suit for against
the A. A R. II. R. Co , f r killing stock.
Judgment was rendered in favor of the
th
so near the head from the body
that it hung only by a piece of skin
under the throat,
twelve miles in the country, and Slade
was seen to pass through Washington
early next before news of the
horrible affair reached there.
Our Tobacco Market.
he tobacco growers of Pitt county
certainly very much in their own
light when sell their best tobacco
at home to these men going from farm
to farm trying to buy wrappers and
bright tobacco. Some listen to
the offers mode the traveling buyer,
let him have tobacco and
are with all common lo k on
hand. Then Hi ego to sell their
common stock they can get nothing
hardly for it. If a farmer desires to get
a good average for his crop, and all do.
he should b. all means save his good
tobacco to sell with the common.
ling off the best grades at home as we
have Indicated above proves not only a
loss o the in the end, but it is
treating the home market very unfairly
and unjustly. Some men who have
privately sold off the best bring the
common grades to market because
they do not make as good averages as
the men who sell their crop through on
the warehouse floor are ready to com-
plain of the and of the
market, when if they had brought any
tobacco worth any thing it would have
brought as much money as their Neigh-
tobacco planter in the county
to be interested in the Greenville
market. Many of them no doubt
me in her that before any market was
e here they had to ship their
tobacco away, and not being familiar
with the sales they were entirely at the
merer of the warehouse to
shipped. Some of them paid dearly
this kind of experience too. This kind
of i in the home market
They can see their sold and
know just what it Is and can
take it up If not Greenville
can pay just as much for to-
b as any other market- here is
as good a corps of buyers here as can
be found anywhere they have found out
that this county makes the tobacco they
want and they have here to your
home market for It If the planter
wants the home market sustained he
should stand by It. The
Reflector urges every planter In Pitt
county to sell bis tobacco en the Green.
There was quite a crowd in
town Saturday. Cotton sold readily at
cents per d and business was
lively up to a late hour in the night.
Items.
N. C, Oct. 10th.
Our section has gone through with
another severe I he past week,
hat has done great damage to cotton,
as well as peas
The colored Free Will Baptist Con-
was held near this place the
pas week, and an crowd
ll attendance,
was w. II represented in
our town Saturday.
Mr. Robt. Shaw was in town two days
the past week an I while here tuned a
piano at the Grifton Institute for Prof.
Dall.
Mr. J. E. R. Davis of the Institute,
left Saturday morning, for a visit to his
home near
Quite a large crowd In town Saturday.
Cotton for
Considerable complaint comes from
many sections, about corn being stolen
from the fields.
If any of the i of the
tor desire to purchase pumpkins by the
car load, I will refer them to Mr, O. P.
our town, who can take the
cake on pumpkin crop.
Prof. Dall, of the Institute made a
business Hip to Kinston Saturday.
The steamer May Bell, of this
failed to make her regular trip Friday,
on account of the storm, wind being too
severe to leave her dock at
If the colored preachers are as
of chicken as our white preachers are
said to think some chickens will
have to be from abroad to
raise the next years crop from, if the
number of preachers the con
here have anything to do with
it.
Jack frost made his appearance Sun-
day morning and the nice fall weather
must have had something to do with the
immense throng of colored people who
Conference near this plate, as
the was put at There
was an excursion by rail from Kinston
-d
CD
CD
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and Improvements
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT
Conducted, lay- O- L. Pi so.
Riders of Victor Pneumatics carry an extra inner tube
to be used in case of accident. By simply removing a
inner tube through a hole in the rim, repair is
effected in five minutes by replacing with a new one.
If you are going to ride why not ride the best
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
WASHINGTON, DENVER, SAN FRANCISCO.
J. S. JENKINS CO.
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS
N. o.
Ample Facilities for lie-drying. Large Stock.
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
To my and Pitt adjoining c -unties I
I wish mail- special preparation iii preparing BOOS
HEAD sod propose with i dressed
smooth which cull your when pecking.
Also I Bade special to us.- beat male
Oak. Tin- advantage- in cutting my own Umber places me in a
position to meet cheerfully promise yon will strive to
make it to to and y u dud them m time
either factory at the Warehouse. Greenville. N. C.
Scroll km
And Turned for m ;.
I prepared to any kind of Sawing r or In that
far s. . f
any kind. including Plaits Bailing. would he I to name you puces on
am thing in the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short not ice. for your past patronage. I MB
strive to Meal patronage, and kin II ran me a
arranging elsewhere-
A. O
Winterville, N. C
-Hi of
HIM,
is well will, the heal put up nothing
first-class N a keep MB the and the improved style-
Best material used in all work. All of springs are u-e. you can select
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Raw
We also keep on Hue of Beat Made Harness Whip- we
ell at the lowest rates. given to repairing.
T.
Greenville-, C
Notice.
the cf
of Trade.
i k
PAINT ,
SOLD UNDER
Silk
YOUNG
Sole Agents,
GREENVILLE, X. C.
Land Sale.
By virtue of the power vested in
roe by a decree of the Superior Court
in the J. B. Bullock, . A. Bad.
lock J. E. Bullock against B.
Hathaway. Hathaway.
Wyndham and wife, and others, I will
expose to public sale, for cash
the Court House door in on
Monday the of
the following described, tract or
of to adjoining the
T. A. Dr. J. L. Knight. A.
Cobb and others known as the Mr e-
land containing two
and twenty acres more or and
fully described in Book Pace
SKINNER,
Commissioner,
Oct. and 1893.
ill I
Pitt i
is hereby given I have
is day declaring O. L.
H. It. W.
W. T. J. w. G. F.
T. their associates
and successors, a under the
name if The Ti-
co Board r the
hi the of
of
i sea and recorded in the of
Clem of the of
Hi n all the rights
f by chapter
of the Co of Caro-
and laws thereto.
The Mi i by said
non to cue prom
sale of leaf tobacco and trade
th n-in in t am of
The lace of business of said corpora-
is in the town of N. C.
Tin- duration of the said
to he years.
This the day of
E. A. MOTE,
Superior Court.
Administrator's Sale.
By virtue of an order of the Sui
of county on the day of
September in the cause of Allen
M arr.-n. B. X. of J.
v. Elizabeth Taft, Lena
Taft, Ella Taft and Minnie Taft
the heirs of law of John S Taft. the
undersigned will for sale before
the Court House door in town of
on day of
1883, one tract of land adjoining the
J. Tucker, Harry Skinner,
E. Taft, Vi. W. Tucker and others
and known as the lands the
late Dunn r i
f o bundled fifteen acres.
Terms of sale
ALI EX v D. B. X.
of John is Taft.
Oct. 2nd 1893.
I LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
Mr. an
from Danville, Va., was on cur
breaks lust week- He
well pleased with outlook-
Mr. J. 8- partner, M.
H. Esq., was
after
for tin lira. We are
to have Mr. with u-
E. W. E-q. than whom
is no cleverer
r judge of came hack
to Greenville last
after an extended trip to
several Virginia
buy last Thursday, and
has made flings since. It
seems natural to see Bob on sale.
Mr. Bray, of Bray Bros
co Co., came down last Friday to
locate permanently on our mark
et. His firm have large orders be
with an eye to business
realized the advantages
offered as a market
Hence his To Mr.
Bray we heartily say, welcome, to
others who contemplate coming
we say in behalf of the tobacco
interest of Greenville we extend
to you a cordial invitation to
come.
Mr. Henry P. of Hen-
came down on Tuesday to
make Greenville his future home-
Mr. firm of which
he is a member, are among the
largest wrapper dealers in the
country. As we predicted sever-
w ago, we have the tobacco
and buyers are coming here to
get it. Mr. is quite an
addition to our his hand
some appearance and liberal
bidding will have a good effect
on sale-
Cooper's Warehouse, at Hen
N. C., has been making
the past week, fine sales of new
bright tobacco. All bright to-
free from green is selling
at Cooper's fully as well as at this
late last year. Try with a
of bright tobacco.
We that a
many farmers in the Eastern sec-
who are fortunate Laving
good of tobacco are closing
out their crops at home to drum-
from the interior markets at
averages from to around
excepting the tips and Now
to the farmers who have good to
and who anticipate a home
sale, give us your attention for a
few moments and we will
or to you that it is very
much against interest to
make such a sale.
To begin in the first place, we
will say that an offer from these
drummers should be sufficient
evidence to convince you that you
are not getting worth for your
t if you sell it at barn
or pack house, because these
are in a position to be
accurate in the estimation
of the present future value of
your tobacco. You are not be-
cause you are at home attending
to your farm duties while they
are almost daily on or in
with the market hence
are prepared to price your
co at very near actual worth.
Mind you if you price it to them
at what it is worth, they don't buy
until you reduce prices to that
extent that they know there a
profit in it for them.
Oh well some one may say,
I've got my price fixed and if I
get it then I am satisfied. Who
has worked for this tobacco T
Who is it that has bowed down
under the searching rays of the
hot June and August sun to keep
the worms from eating it up
Who is it that has spent the many
lonesome weary nights keeping
up the heats that it may be cured
well and command a good price I
Is it the man who buys it No,
it is the farmer that has under-
gone all of the drudgery and it is
he that should get U the re-
out of it is
for any one. Oh well again
some one may say that purchases
are frequently made in the
try in which the farmers come
out ahead in the trade. My
friends stop a little and think that
if this were not the case and
the farmer was the loser every
time it would not be long before
the country speculator would
have to in his shingle-
These bargains are allowed some-
times in order that better ones
may be made in the same com-
For an instance if Mr.
country buyer has an eye on a
certain crop in a community that
he wishes to purchase and can't
do it at the prices he would like,
he can very easily spot a small
lot of tobacco in the same
that is much inferior to the
one he wants but which in the
estimation of the parties owning
the tobacco is the same or
very little difference. He goes
and offers this man who owns the
small lot less than what he
ling to pay for the large lot. The
lean sells, a day is and
the farmer delivers the tobacco
and sees it sold at a con
loss to the purchaser, firm-
gets his money and g es back
home congratulating
his shrewd judgment in trading.
The news is of course spread of
h w and for what sold.
The man who owns good to
I ears of it. He gets
strongly the to sell at
home. In a few days he is
tied to see the same drummer and
the loser on his neighbor's
co drive up and want to stay all
night or get dinner with him Of
course he is welcome, for then the
farmer wants to make a sale of
his tobacco. When the subject is
approached the drummer pats on
a long face and looks awfully out
of shape for buying. He tells all
about how ever so much he lost
on his neighbors tobacco,
was about the same tobacco as
his and that he had rather he
would ship it to his house. Says
he will him as much as
he can get else in
world and lots of other just such
stuff. Meanwhile the farmer gets
move anxious ever to sell-
He offers to take the same as he
gave his neighbor, after consider-
able parleying the trade is effect-
ed. But now the scene changes.
of appointing a certain
day the f see the tobacco
B he is told to carry it down
an writes the house to pay
the farmer his price when deliver-
ed which is done, and the farmer
never knows what his tobacco
brought. After he is at home
the drummer comes in,
puts it on the floor, sells it and
then congratulates himself on his
but the purchaser's
profit. My friends instances of
of this kind is the unwritten part
of speculating on tobacco in the
country We have been in some
way connected with tobacco ever
since its first introduction in the
eastern section are acquaint-
ed with a great many of the fakes
that are employed by country
buyers. Of course there are
some who buy tobacco in the
country that are not guilty of
any such doings. There are a
great many who have lot money
heavily right here in Greenville
by buying in the country. But
where a few have lost there are
scores that have made money out
of it and hence the farmers as a
whole are worse if they
had never sold any of their to-
in the country- Drummers
from other markets can afford just
at this time to buy a few crops of
j our tobacco, even at a loss, for by
I that they may possible induce a
j few to ship them some tobacco
otherwise they could not
get. The day for shipping
co from Eastern Carolina to Hen-
Oxford and Richmond is
about past and when the farmers
thoroughly understand the true
inwardness of selling in the
try they will put a to that
too.
Try Cooper, at Henderson, with
j some fine white tobacco and he
j will please you- Send your to-
where you can get the cash
for it. Cooper is always
OF TO
The N. C. Agricultural
Station at Raleigh,
to Send Ila To All
Farmer In North Carolina.
Who Them.
October
The Experiment Station Una No Money
To throw away. So if yon are not go-
to read the bulletins and
other publications, do not ask for them.
These publications costs a great deal of
money, and the Station can afford only
to put them where they will be
If you really- desire to receive
and read and by them, you will
be cheerfully with any
past and all future issues,
if you write to Dr. H. B. Battle,
tor, Raleigh, X. C, for them.
An Example
of the cost of some of Experiment Sta-
bulletins, let us look at Bulletin
Culture of Orchard and Garden
which is just from the
printers, and is ready for issue now.
There are largest
tin the Station yet published.
Best Agricultural
is the next in point of size,
and has pages. The edition of
M is 14.300 copies. The paper necessary
to print this number is l- reams,
and weighs pounds, or over S 1-3
tons. If this paper were spread on the
ground one thickness, it would cover
an area of square yards, or about
acres. If the separate sheets of the
entire edition of tip bulletin were put
end to end, they would extend a dis-
of yards, or
from Raleigh Va-, to a
straight line.
Depth to Plant Wheat.
The result of an experiment made by
the N. C. Agricultural Experiment Sta-
at Raleigh to test the best depth to
plant wheat is as The average
yield per acre when plated at a depth of
two inches was 34.5 bushels; planted
three inches deep, it was 33.1 bushels
per acre; four inches, 23.7 bushels per
acre. It will be seen, therefore, that
the decided preference lay with the
three inch planting. In this teat, the
seed was planted very late, on the 24th
December, after turnips had been taken
off the land. The depth of planting
was carefully ganged by a dibble. The
best stand on the following 28th March
was noted on the shallow planting, and
the more scattering stand on the deep-
est planting, plants on
last were almost as large and
as the others. It is probable that with
an earlier sowing the result of the deep
it planting- would bar bean more
ii hf .- d
This is the title of a
lamed by the K.
I which will Kent gratis to all
residents of the State o apply. It is,
as it name signifies, a discussion of
from a practical stand-
point. The questions involved
are not neglected, for every practical
is baaed scientific facts,
and a of one involves
a knowledge of the other. All stock
feeds are not the same in quality; some
are richer in some ingredients; than
These ingredients when eaten in
food act differently in building up the
body. Some make
bone, some make host and U tree. Foods,
therefore, vary value for
purposes. the
may not wholly be available to the
A portion of a certain constituent
may be easily digested, while the other
part may pass entirely through and go
off as waste. If the is not
served, it is really an absolute waste.
The portions of the various
be determined by a-
tests with animals, while
the constituents must be carefully
chemically, actual feeding it
has been ascertained what quantity of
I digestible constituents is needed
for different purposes of feeding to pro-
duce fat. or growth, or sustain vigor
when worked. In this way we can lay
down a rule for feeding animals, and
knowing foods we have at hand
and the indigestible proportions, it will
t. combine them according to
the desired rule. To simplify and ex-
plain the subject thoroughly in a plain,
practical way. is the object of the above
bulletin, which is written by B. W.
gore. Assistant Chemist.
North Carolina has. according to the
last Auditors returns. horses,
. mules. cattle, and
hogs. There is no question but that
vast quantities of food are wasted an-
improper feeding. If we
suppose that fifteen cents per month is
so for each animal, and
is entirely within reason, we have tho
total of per year, which is
approximately one-sixtieth of the as-
value of the total real and per-
property of the entire State.
Ought not therefore, to
carefully investigate these questions
Dip to
The successful calf feeder will always
use more tact than force in learning a
calf to drink. He will never allow a
foolish calf to betray him into a passion
or display of brute force. not allow
the calf to suck the whole hand, or a
single linger, but placing the palm of
either hand over its nose, gently bring
it to the milk held in a convenient sized
pail in the other hand By separating
the fingers, hold back the sides of the
tongue and insure the entrance of milk
as the calf sucks. If the milk is warm
there will less trouble, then give the
calf more, or less, of the two fingers,
I according to success in keeping it
; in the milk. When the calf is do-
well the fingers will scarcely be
i touching its tongue or lips. If it acts
badly give the fingers to suck and con-
to let in a dash of milk so a sup
j pow then will encourage the calf to
I continue,
I have been obliged to dip my hand
j repeatedly into the milk and thus give
a taste of it before the calf would allow
its nose to be turned down into the pail.
. Some calves will drink during the first
to the third trial, while others will need
the fingers for a much longer
E. Agriculturist, X. C
Station.
Care of Winter.
Soon will be the time when stock-
owners can make some valuable trials
I for themselves in testing the value of
advice given for winter care of stock.
Of two or three milch coats try giving
one a comfortable stall well lighted and
j ventilated without holes for cold drafts
or rain to enter, and keep her dry and
clean. Turn the others off in the usual
way. and compare food eaten and milk
and re member that there is
in the stall a compost worth over
five-sixths of all the fertilizing elements
in the food, and all well preserved.
Try other stock in the same way, and
It will be found to pay well in growth
and compost E. Emery, N. C.
Experiment Station.
QUESTIONS ANa REPLIES.
The Station will be glad to receive
any question on agricultural topics
any one may desire to send. Address
all questions to the C. Agricultural
Experiment Station. Raleigh, N,
will be written as early as
by the member of the Station
staff most competent to do so. and,
when of general interest, they will also
appear in these columns. The Station
expects in this way, to enlarge its
sphere of usefulness and render great
assistance to practical farmers.
I have been told by a raiser
and farmer cotton seed boiled
and potatoes is a reed for
Will you kindly rive me your
opinion as I have a lot of both and wish to save
corn.-J. R. W. N. C.
by F. E. Emery, Ex-
or squash, and Irish
toes are both good food for hogs, and
the addition of cotton seed boiled in
would make a very desirable feed if the
cotton seed can be risked.
Cotton seed is not regarded as good
food for swine. have fed cotton
seed meal to a pig until sick, and there
was less growth than from a litter mate
without cotton seed meal. The pig re-
covered its health, but was stunted.
The Texas Experiment Station has
made some decisive experiments with
cotton seed. fed with corn to pigs, and
in every ease fatal results were found
after six or eight weeks feeding on the
cotton seed ration, but pigs that passed
the ten days, at which others sickened
and died, seemed to be not liable to at-
tack. The cotton seed meal was fed
raw, boiled and roasted, with and
water as wanted. The boiled seed was
less dangerous than the other forms, as
indicated by a lower death rate among
the pigs to which it was fed.
It may be that the bulk of the food
you propose, or some counteracting
compound in it, may overcome the
toxic agent of the cotton seed-
our friend doubtless speaks from ex-
and if he has fed this ration
largely, you may have the assurance of
his practice if none of his stock died
while so feeding. It will at least be
well for you to know that cotton seed is
dangerous, so as to be on the watch for
dangerous symptoms if you feed it.
But why reed an article in which
lurks You have other stock which
can use the cotton seed in rations and
it will do no harm. Then you can feed
corn to the pigs at a more profitable
rate of production of pork than you
could feed the cotton seed ration. Put
your corn with the and
toes and you will be handsomely repaid
if you feed the all they can con-
in comfort a Lie quarters.
We should prefer to grind the corn
and like in l . s
of cud potatoes while hot,
the meal would get moistened and tho
starch grains cracked by the heat.
Wheat bran, middlings, or rice polish
might be used to grow the pigs, and
then the corn meal used as a finisher to
fatten them.
N-w With
Incubator.
I see M of a new forage plant in a pa-
per called which has
been discovered In It says that It is
of the beat forage plant that is known.
The botanical name it Is I
Do you know whether this plant has been
experimented on by any or the Sta-
of the United states If it has what
was
I should like to have your opinion as to
or not it will run an Incubator
for the purpose of raising- chickens for mar-
when ones are only worth cents a
S. a Mills. N. O.
by K. K. Emery, Agriculturist
C Experiment Station.
has been
with by a number of American
Experiment Stations, and at least one
has published its chemical composition
in a bulletin on that plant. From ac-
of it
Scientific
IS
Cares when all else
Testimony of Mr. M. L
OF HICKORY, N. C.
My wife has used the
for Asthma and Bronchitis, and is in
Seller health than for twenty
WRITE US.
We send all information and
FREE.
ATLANTIC CO.,
Washington, D. C.
sacra, or
which is perennial yields two or
three per
seed, however, can la-
worth the price per pound in
pound lots in Ki w for common
use. we have the clovers. Lucerne
corn, the of which we can
freely.
It will to an incubator to
hatch if yon am to handle it
use a mod kind of brooder
chicks are hatch-d. This is
applicable if can be
sold for broilers at cents each. Yon
can supply chicks for market by in-
and brooder when prices are
best and perhaps mall more than the
prices
h Tree.
is heal of
trees Trim W. N. C.
W. P.
Experiment
trees usually break down be-
cause of neglect in pruning and shaping
the tree. The peach bears its
fruit upon last years shoots. If the
growth is neglected the fruit bearing
wood gradually gets further and further
out on the ends of the limbs, and the
Weight of the crop has a tremendous
leverage, and splits the limb off. When
we plant a young peach tree, of one
years growth from the bud. only
age at they should be we
cut stem hack to about eighteen, to
inches from the ground. hen
growth begins in we rub oft all
the shoots except three or lop.
which form the for the future
head. These are again shortened back
in the fall one third, and when the
shoots are too thick in the interior of
the head Interfere with each other,
they arc trimmed out. livery fall the
young growth of the season
one third, and care is taken to
maintain an even distribution of young
wood all through, tho head of the tree.
The crop is thus distributed over the
tree and no damage is If the tree
is planted and allowed to take the
shape it assumed in the nursery,
the limbs will more readily split off than
when formed by heading
Sowing Sea on
W hare a piece of strong land a river
on which i-. a rank of weeds.
We
Dissolution Notice.
The heretofore exist-
I. W. of
and x.
d. Va. under the
style Of It. AT. Co., r
content-
i. K ct all
I nil amount.
s in to be paid to J.
day of
It
J. K.
s i i. r
Notice.
State North In the
Pitt Court,
v. Harriot-ton, of
A. j Summons
vs. r
Henry M K. A.
and j
a minor a Clerk.
Petition to s Land for Assets
The defendant X. is
hereby notified to be and appear before
B, a. M ye. Clerk Superior Court for
the county of hi-
i I i, n lay.
of nib t, and answer the
complaint, a copy which will be Bled In
my office within ion days from dare
this sum air let the said de-
fen hint if fail to
answer the said that
lime, die plain will apply to
for relief demanded In
complaint. Hereof fail II t Given
under hand the
September, 1898.
F. MOTS.
C. s. Pitt Con
W. II. WHITE.
HAVE CHANGED.
We wish know your idea of l Old passed and
clover on this land; what preparation he i . ,.,. M.
preparation he
elven and ho- should seed be R.
P. X. C.
by F. E. -Emery.
North
If it were nit for seeding with the
weed seed i yon sow the clover
among the reeds broadcast if the soil is
light and save working the soil.
II will best to mow the weeds or
roll down with a heavy roller a few days
in advance of plowing in order to let
them partially dry out. and not endanger
Rowing the turning down a great
mass of green matter fermenting in it.
Float well, harrow smooth, sow clover
seed broadcast at the rate fifteen,
teen or twenty pounds per acre of clean
seed, or forty to fifty of chaff per acre, get the worth id money.
Then drag with a light brush, smoothing stock of
harrow, or a plank with a chain at- .
to both ends and the singletree.
Bo the plank will cover nearly its whole
length or. the ground. your
field, so if seed germinates and is killed
by hot or insects, you can
harrow and i
things have new. My old
stock of goods have been s out
and a new has taken its
place. The old replaced
by the new became my
LOW DOWN PRICES
catch the people and keep goo Is
moving. Now listen to a few plain
I know times are hard
money just as well as the
who raises cotton, corn and
and going to sell goods just as low
Bl dealer can to sell.
every dollar spent with will
I keep a
Wheat.
have a et anal CM been crowing
old foe m never worn out. that I
r;. . wheat this tall. The
down las winter.
r i I wish to know if
seed increase the yield
wheat and how per if not. what fer-
would be best um hit much- The soil
Is not v.--. . lea improve A.
Be in KU N. C,
red ii. ii Battle,
Alt
Merchandise,
Dry Goods, Notions
Boots, Shoes, Hats,
Caps and Greats
Furnishing Goods,
at any price a man can
full k.
Also a
I the use of the following
for your land for wheat
AM Phosphate lbs.
Cotton seed meal
Remit
n old not use less than lbs. of
I'd- mixture per acre. I have employed
the most c of the fertilizing ma-
for this as being more
to procure them. A
on tho subject of sent
y this mail will other formulas.
A crop of cow-pea vines
plowed in before wheat has been sown
of great value in adding fertility to
soil. Bulletin. No. which is sent
their effect.
Keeping of
It is claimed by some that ago deteriorates
value of and in order to
us. kindly let us hear from in a
statement if so or W. s., Cedar
point X. C
t- II. II. Wattle, Director North
Experiment
There are no constituents of
would injure on standing or keep-
over from one season to another,
objection would be more in the
mechanical properties than in the chem-
as age would cause the to
become more or lane or moist.
The magnesia salts, especially magnesia
chloride, have a special tendency to ab-
moisture, from the atmosphere and
the w hole mass to become some-
what wet. This causes the caking and
if a large quantity of moisture be
sent, it might, under these favorable
dissolve some of the Tot-
ssh. but this would hardly happen
to leach off any of the
material.
at Henderson, pays
you for your in currency
or his check as you may desire.
The great value of Hood's
as a for catarrh I- for
by thousands of people, whom it has
cured.
C.
i have opened an office in
the purpose of
can always rely on finding, a
CASH by calling on me.
E. A.
TO
l Io Invite attention to my
NEW FALL MILLINERY.
I have the latest shapes in Felt
and Straw Goods. Very
line of Pretty and Cheap Rib-
also Tips and Fancy Feathers.
You will save money by getting my
prices before you purchase
L. GRIFFIN.
Groceries
Cotton Bagging Ties.
Rip-ins 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.
set gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual
offensive breath and head-
ache. One taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
may be
of nearest druggist.
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-
tor's
Good
Blood
is Essential
to
HEALTH.
You cannot
hope II be.
if your
It IMPURE, j
If you are troubled with
BOILS, ULCERS or
PIMPLES, SORES
your blood is bad. A few of S. S-
thoroughly cleanse the system, remove all in
build you up. All manner of
lie
CLEARED AWAY
its use It is the blood remedy on
who used it so. t
. My was p-m n- i lat year, which go
of . if HO. Tn
.-. There ii nob
JOHN Dayton. Ohio
fl on and skin diseases mailed
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
Is Your Life
Worth Anything
to others Are there not
dependent on
your earnings for their
support Arc they pro-
for in case of your
death The simplest and
safest way of assuring
their protection is life in-
Business, pro-
and working
men generally, should in-
sure, for their brains or
their muscles, are their
capital and income too.
Death stops them both.
Insure in the
Equitable Life
and death cannot stop your
salary or steal
and your loved ones
will be safe from want.
W. J.
General Agent for Carol Ilia.
ROCK HILL, South Carolina.
CHRIST MANS
OINTMENT
TRADE
MA
h tie of all lien
This has Won In uncover
years, and Know baa
been In demand. It boon en-
the leading all over
all other remedies, tho attention of
the most experienced physicians, hat
tor years failed. This Ointment Is of
standing and the high reputation
it ha.- Obtained is owing entirely
. Its as but has
ever been made to bring It before tho
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample boa tree. The
to Druggist, All Cash
attended to. Address or-
pan am
T. f. CHRISTMAS,
Sole Proprietor.
Greenville, V- O
and
R. R,
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No
Oat daily Mail, dally
ex San
pm
Ar pm
t pm
Tarboro
Hooky Ml p m I
. Wilson
Ar Florence
Wilson
Magnolia
Ar
Florence
Sofia a
Ar Wilson
Wilmington
Ar U
Wilson
No
dally dally
I Id
ill
II SO
fl
am
daily
ox Sun.
Send in Orders.
We have a nice assortment of
Apples, Pears, Plums,
Pecans, Grape-
Vines. -I
Dewberries, and Blackberries,
also
and
Roses, Greenhouse Plants,
Hyacinths. Tulips, Lilies, Ac.
order solicited and will lie
at the proper time for trans-
planting. Semi for
ALLEN WARREN SON,
Riverside Nursery. Greenville,
GREENVILLE, X. C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared to do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything n the
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in manner
i Ai Rocky Mont CO
i Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
except
Train on Scotland Neck branch Road
leaves Halifax 4.40 p.
m., arrives Scotland at -is p in.
Greenville MS p. in. Kinston p. m.
; leaves a. am.,
a. m. Arriving Halifax
a. in . m. daily
on leave
a. m. arrives
8.40 a. in. Tarboro returning
leaves Tarboro 1.40 p. ., coo
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.30 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. with
trains on
Tram leaves Tarboro, X C, via
K Ii R. R. daily except Sun-
P M. Sunder P M,
Plymouth p. in., 5.20 p. m.
leaves Plymouth daily except
a. in., 10.00 a. m
arrive Tarboro. X C, 10.316 A 12,90.
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
mil leave
ville a in. arrive Rowland p in.
leave Howl mil p m,
l-rive in. Dally ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland X C leave
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M
arrive X C, A M. Re
laves X V AM
X N A M.
Train on Nashville leaves Rocky
Mount at ti P M,
P Hope P K, Returning
Spring . A It,
A M, rives Rocky Mount s A
except Sunday.
Trains on Latta R. R.
7.30 p. in., arrive 8.40 p
m. Returning leave a.
arrive 7.15 a. m- y
Sunday.
Train on Branch leaves
for daily, except Sunday, it BOt
M Returning leave Gill
on at A M. and P. M.
at Warsaw with and
Train makes t
for all points North dally. All
Till via Richmond, and except Sun.
day via Line, also at Rocky Mount
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A
railroad tor and all
points via Norfolk.
General
. R. Transportation
i V,


Title
Eastern reflector, 18 October 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 18, 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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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17620
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