Eastern reflector, 28 February 1894






Anything You Want
in the way of
CHEAP -AND- FANCY
STATIONERY
can be had at the
Reflector Book Store.
Blank Books, Tablets, Paper of
all kinds of Envelopes all sizes,
Pens, Ink. Mucilage,
Sponge Cups. Blotters, in
great variety-
The
Reflector.
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO
per Year, in Advance.
This Office for Job Printing.
STATE NEWS
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
The office of the North Caro-
Baptist at Fayetteville was
entirely destroyed by fire
last week.
Progressive If every
Superior and Supreme Court
bench in the Union was filled
with such men as Judge Walter
Clark this country would be a
garden spot as compared to what
it is.
Graham At
haw Cotton Mills Monday Luther
Holt, aged about years, son of
Isaac Holt, attempted to kick off
a belt, when his foot was caught
by the belt and pulley. The
was crushed and both bones
were broken. The injury was
such that amputation was
Goldsboro There
is a certain farmer living in New
Hope township who has been
married nearly twenty-five years
and has a wife and eight children,
four of whom are grown, yet has
never bad a death in his family
nor needed a physician for any
member thus far.
Durham According to
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY
NO-.
joints
Is the place to find the
DEFLECTOR OFFICE
Bring ONE DOLLAR and
get your Homo Paper a year.
This Office for Job Printing
THE GROUND OF THE
Our friends of Iredell County
Alliance, are, like all their
funny. If they can't get
silver coined under an unlimited
free coinage bill, they won't have
any more silver coined at all. If
they get a free trade meas-
they won't have any tariff re-
at all. They bitterly
oppose tho theory that a half loaf
is better than no broad and hold
the contrary of this proposition-
It is better, in their judgment, to
go hungry than to have any less
bread than all you want. Their
resolutions, published last week,
are something of a curiosity.
The desire for a bill providing
for the free coinage of silver is,
presumably, based upon a de-
sire to see more silver coined and
put into circulation. If a bill
were passed which for eight years
kept the mints running at high
pressure, turning out silver
at the ratio of to by the
thousands and the millions, it
looks as if that, bill would
for the time being, all the
ends that could be attained by an
absolute free coinage bill, doesn't
it Well, it does. But the Ire-
dell County Alliance doesn't want
the mints to coin silver for eight
years unless they are going to
coin it indefinitely. The seignior-
LIFT THE MORTGAGE IF
Ward the why age on the silver already in the
American heiresses marry foreign-
is that American youths are
too busy to marry them. Coming
from so eminent authority this
dictum will be received gratefully
by the gilded youth who fill out
the weary hours in club windows
on parade and who, perhaps, had
begun to clearly that
American heiresses have the
shrewdness to choose the real
article to the imitation in ex-
change for their money.
Warren ton Referring
to some old papers we note that
the Richmond Whig in 1841
quotes tobacco in Petersburg as
being active. Lugs to
and leaf to as in
The Warrenton News of
1851, lugs, at to good to fine
to leaf to
to Tho same paper
for 1855 quotes the Richmond
market at from to It
strikes us that those prices were
not any higher on an average
than is now obtained, and when
tobacco is considered, they
come nowhere in reach.
Kinston Free The new
and passenger train over the
A- N C. railroad is a beauty
Ah the cars are newly painted.
the fair is the old fish
car will be off and the hand-
some new fish cat, built in the
company's shop-, will be used-
and then the train will- be first-
class throughout. The A. t N.
C. R- R- continues to improve
under President Chadwick's ad-
ministration.
strange that this road, that used
to be about the poorest in the
State, is the only one in N. C.
that paid a dividend last year
Wilkesboro One
day last week, near Russet's Gap
in Alexander,
aged about yrs, fell in the lower
prong of Little River and was
drowned. He was subject to
spasms, and it is supposed he was
seized with a spasm and fell into
the river. He went out to work
morning and failing to re-
turn to dinner search was made
for him when he was found dead
in river. He was a well to do
and good property
at his death, having about a half
bushel in silver.
Treasury amounts to
They want that
coin it would be a cowardly make
shift. Inferentially they regard
as a mere bauble, a
thing not worth taking into ac
count; yet they will make Rome
howl when they learn that the
Secretary of the Treasury has is
sued of bonds. Then
they are opposed to the Wilson
tariff bill, too. It chops down
duties; there is no doubt about
that. it does not chop the m
down enough. So, unless all the
taxes come off, the Iredell County
Alliance doesn't want any to
come. It has discovered, how-
ever, that there is more
in this Wilson bill for certain
classes than there is in the
bill- This statement
have been accompanied, then, by
an explanation of why it is that
all tho protected manufacturers
are in arms against it,
that it will ruin their business
No. It is not these measures
themselves but the source whence
they sprang which the Ire-
dell County Alliance is opposed.
If the long-bearded and long
winded had introduced
the coinage bill, it
would have been regarded as the
salvation of the country. If Jere-
Simpson, the wailing
prophet of Medicine Lodge, had
j introduced the Wilson tariff bill,
would have been perfect in
j form and substance. For Iredell
County Alliance to know that any
proposition is of Democratic
Does it not look . , . . ,
gin, is for it to spit upon and re-
it.
There is a familiar story about
a New York ward heeler
around after voters on
day and running up on an
Irishman who had just landed.
are your politics asked
the of the Celt. have
a here he was
asked in return. coarse we
said the heeler.
replied the Irishman,
knowing instinctively where his
position was,
But what is the use of
tariff and finance to Our Noble
Landmark.
How to lift the mortgage
the farm, says the Record, is one
of the most difficult problems to
solve, and yet one of the most
There are many farmers
but for the constant drain upon
thorn in the payment of interest
to keep their property from going
under the hammer, would be
have enough
every year, not only to meet all
other necessary demands, but to
provide their families with many
luxuries, but this everlasting
drain keeps them poor, while the
fear of ruin the almost
crushes the manhood out of them
and makes them less prepared
for the struggle. is a re-
tyrant whose grasp is
hard to break. Many men
on for years interest
and their families the
comforts of life and in the end
lose all. We believe in the plan
of settling up in some way or
if possible. If you have your
farm under mortgage, try to com-
promise with your creditors and
get them to take a part and leave
you a home, if a small one- Bet-
have acres unencumbered
than a tract with a mortgage
on it which you can never lift-
There have been many men who
could have settled with their
tors had a comfortable home
left, who have held on, hoping
against hope, until an
of interest has swamped
But men seem to
dislike above all things to reduce
their acreage. If they own a
thousand acres of land they want
to hold on to it, when in a large
majority of cases they would
more money if they only
owned a hundred. But if there is
any possible way to do it, get
clear of that mortgage and stop
that interest which is growing
day and night and Sunday.
Friday is the most agreeable
day in the week in the North Car-
editorial office- It is
day the most of tho weekly ex-
changes come in, and thus the
writing day that the whole State comes
Rich-1 under the eye. These weeklies
Dispatch, gives some inter- j are to be read not only with
and amusing accounts as pleasure but with great profit.
Good For Congressman Bailey.
Amos J-
from Washington to the
The man who would desert the
Democratic party because there
has been a panic throughout the
country caused by Republican
legislation, ain't much of a Demo-
Let him wait awhile and he
will see what he will see, and
just as sure as the sun rises in the
east and sets in the west, he will
find out that the Democrats are
not to blame.
If you were riding on a railroad
train and the cry was raised that
there was a wreck ahead, you
would be the first among the
number to cry out to the engineer
to for fear that some-
thing awful might happen, and
that is the situation of things in
our country. In 1892, the cry
was raised that there was a
wreck ahead, and the p o-
to put on the breaks elected
Mr. Cleveland, President, and
knowing at the same time that
the Democratic train had to pass
a road which the
were thirty years building,
the cry has been heard from the
Captain to and the
Democratic Congressmen have
their hands on the breaks to
check the country from ruin.
Right here we want to say, that
if the grand old Democratic party
can undo in two or three years
that which took the Republicans
thirty years to do, they will most
assuredly deserve the plaudit,
done thou good and faithful
And when they have
done these things and again put
up their candidates in 1896, the
people are going to say by their
ballots, that you have been
faithful over a few things we will
make you ruler
Time only will tell so have a little
Sun.
TO THE BOYS.
Remember, boys, that you have
to work, whether you handle a
pick or pen, a wheelbarrow or a
set f digging ditches or
editing a paper, you must work.
If you look around, you will see
that the men who are most able to
live the rest of their days without
work are the men who work the
hardest. Don't be afraid of till-
yourself with work- It is be-
your power to do that. Men
cannot work so hard as that on
the side of They die
sometimes but it is because they
quite work at and don't get home
until a. in- It's the interval that
kills. Work gives an appetite for
meals; it lends solidity to your
slumbers, it gives the appetite
appreciation of a holiday.
There are young men who do not
work, but the world is not proud
of them. It does not know even
their names, it simply of
them as old so and boys-
Nobody likes them, nobody hates
them, the great busy world
even know that they are there.
So find out what you want to be
and do, take off coat and
make a dust in the world. The
busier you are the less mischief
you will get into, the sweeter will
be sleep, the brighter and
happier your holidays, and the
better satisfied will the world be
with you.
Electric Bitters,
remedy is becoming
This remedy is becoming so well
known mid so popular as to need no
special mention. All who hive used i Sheriff Watts
Electric Bitten the same j ,., . ,
purer medicine does not exist that he
and it is guaranteed to do ill that is thorn to jail,
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all
of the Liver and Kidney, will
remove Boils. Salt and
other affections caused by impure blood
Will drive Malaria, from the system
or money and
1.00 per bottle at Drugstore.
The Tie That Doesn't Blind.
In Ohio a divorce was recently
granted because defendant
pulled the plaintiff out of bed by
the
A Virginia wife was set free be-
cause defendant does not
come home until and then
A Postmaster Who Doesn't Keep Him-
self Informed.
A few day days a man of
hue appeared at
the delivery window of the post-
office and inquired if Squire
Postmaster was
is it asked that polite
keeps the plaintiff awake
A court liberated a
wife because defendant does
not wash himself, thereby causing
the plaintiff great mental an-
A New Jersey wife got a
because defendant, the
husband, sleeps with a razor
his pillow to this
A Connecticut man got a
because
would not get up in the morning,
nor call the plaintiff, nor do any-
thing she was
A New York wife was granted a
divorce because her husband
threw the baby at her when she
hit him with tho coal bucket for
spitting on the stove.
A Michigan wife was released i
because the husband did not
provide the necessaries of
saying would not work his
toenails off for any
gin me a
yesterday I could git it
read sum stole
said the postmaster,
can I do about
wants to tell mo what
was on replied the
distressed individual.
am very said the P.
M., as yesterday was my
busy day I did not have time to
make a copy of all tho cards de-
livered at this
i it said
, the old man, dis postmaster
don't keep up de times, and
what
. through his News.
to how things run in the United
States Congress.
One especially interest in
the fact that there is one Con
who turns back his
salary into the treasury whenever
he is. absent. It is Congressman
Bailey. He is a close attendant
upon all the sessions of the
and is. so conscientious that if he
is absent for only a day he tarns
his salary back into the treasury.
If every member of the United
States Congress could show such
a record, there would be no use
of Secretary offering
bonds with which to assist a de-
treasury.
As a whole they are of a very
high type, and no class is closer
thing to the masses of the people than
are the editors of the weekly pa-
The careful reader of them
gets a good idea of the drift of
public opinion. The Observer
acknowledges obligation to
them for a great deal of the mat-
that goes to make its columns
readable, and for very much of
the information that it carries in
its head and that is drawn on, as
needed, from time to time.
Charlotte Observer.
It U not what its proprietors av,
but what Bo's does, th-it
tells the story of its merit. Hood's
ilia Cures.
Chicago has the honor of being
the first American city to catch
up with the civilization of ancient
Rome. It has provided a public
bathhouse free to all. There will
now no longer be any excuse for
the Chicago going dirty-
Hot running water, washing soda
iron and marble floors and slabs
will render the place so clean
that the most fastidious need not
object to washing himself there-
Fifty persons can be
ed at one time- This bathhouse
is the result of the labors of the
Woman's Municipal Order
League, which took this way of
protesting against the coal soot
of their city. Chicago may now
point with pride to her handsome
bathhouse and say to other cities,
and do
Rev. C- W. Lewis, colored, with
many abases, was jailed at Chat-
last week, and the most
gigantic pension frauds ever
known in the south have been
earthed, which will lead to the
arrest-of probably a hundred
implicated with Lewis
in swindling the government-
He drew a fraudulent pension,
and secured fraudulent pensions
for others, He stole a notary
seal and forged the names
of notaries to false affidavits.
We doubt not in the least that a
great many such cases are on the
pensions rolls, and all good
regardless of party, will en
the efforts being made to
unearth such
Free Press-
Ki in or storm, hail or snow, the letter
carries must be out g along the
slushy streets. His duty compels him
to fie the pitiless storm, and
is the result of such ex-
This, r may be readily
cured by Salvation Oil, the best
A man by the name of Corn
was married at Rochelle, to
a girl by the name of Wheat.
The choir was on hand and sang
shall the harvest be A
boy in the gallery yelled
and they cast him out of
the house.
Beware of Ointment for C
Contains Mercury.
as will surely destroy tin
of smell and completely derange the
whole system when entering it through
the mucous surfaces. Such articles
should never be used except i n pres-
reputable physicians, as
the damage they will do is ten fold to
the good you can possibly derive from
them. Hall's Cure
F. J. Co., To-
contains no is taken
internally, acting directly upon the
bin d and mucous surfaces of
In buying Hall's Catarrh
Cum be sure you the gen line.
It is taken an made in To-
F. j. Co.
free. fold by
price per bottle.
Tho Southern States, a
published at Baltimore, Md-,
in the interest of immigration to
the South, is printing in every
number letters from Northern far.
who have settled in the
South. These letters make the
most and effective
presentation of the attractions of
the South in soil, climate, health-
agricultural capabilities,
Ac, and every locality in the
South should see that ail the let-
of this sort obtainable are
sent to the Southern States. All
Northern settlers in the South
are invited by the Editor of the
Southern States to write to him
about their experiences in
South ore, and their letters
be published-
the
will
JUDGE
DER COURT.
From all accounts there were
some interesting occurrences at
Alexander court last week, and
Judge Whitaker, accordance with
his usual custom, succeeded in
making tho Alexander folks hate
him most cordially. Friday the
foreman of tho grand jury went
into the court room with some
presentments. His honor looked
at them and, because the county
commissioners were not indicted,
made tho foreman put all the
presentments save one into the
stove. Then he sent for the other
grand
the body had not finished its
berated them
and told them to go he had no
further use for them. While this
was going on in the court room
went into the grand
jury room and found on the table
a presentment against Judge
Whitaker for not being present
to open court Monday morning.
It was afterward learned that the
grand jury had voted unanimous
to make the presentment but
whether they would have so
had th y not been so suddenly
and unexpectedly discharged, is
not positively The news
of the presentment came to Whit-
s ears and he asked to see it-
It was shown him and he
to that if the
had been brought
court he would have ordered
every member of the grand jury
to jail. But it is reported that
was heard to re-
would not have
Of course tho
judge could have ordered the
sheriff to jail, but it is not at all
probable that he would
to
this
ency did not
ville Landmark
ALL ft RE SELF-MADE.
Ho that shall
reap also
ix.,
Every man is the creator of a
world, and therein is supreme
until death comes orders him
to abdicate.
There are as many worlds as
there are men and women. Each
one of them has out
of the chaos of circumstance, and
each one does credit or discredit
to the miniature monarch who is
its ruler.
When God endowed man with
free agency it at
possible for tho recipient of
dangerous gift to make his little
world a heaven Of a hell.
Not even the Almighty could
say him nay, for he was as ab
solute as the Czar of Russia.
God gave him two
tho and no
then retired, leaving the
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
They are both in their ill
fortune. The first is a clumsy
youth whom no one will ever
hear of; the other is a Prince who
will never be The
this difference between the two in the
i matter of happiness or misery is
not perceptible.
Your surroundings count for
little; your character counts
I for a good deal. A man is not
I noble because he has a title and
I is permitted to talk with kings.
j There are great souls dressed
little monarch to obey W not, as I tatters and small souls robed in
he chose, and to reap tho purple.
of his choosing. By and by we shall see what
So far as the Omnipotent is j our eyes are now to dull to per-
concerned, He has distributed i whatever our stations
the really good things of life with life we make our own misery
an even hand- Let us careful happiness, and neither wealth
about this matter; we say the nor poverty has anything to do
really good things. j with them. The creative power
Not money, nor yet fame, does ho heart, ard the purpose,
He include in this category, and
had
it is safe to presume that He
good therefor.
The opportunity to increase the
size of the soul is universal, like
the sunshine, and there is no
niggardliness in any corner of
the globe- Never yet lived a
man, whether he slept under a
thatched roof or in a palace, who j
lacked a to hammer his
soul into some shape.
Neither poverty nor riches
Pity it is that we remain so
long blinded in this
York Herald.
The popular saying that a
Christmas makes a fat
or rather its negative
implication, has received a semi
denial, if we may credit
reports, in recent experiments
made by M. a French
I scientist. Trials as to tho pow-
j era of endurance under extremely
to
If you would protect yourself
from Painful, Profuse, Scanty,
Suppressed or Irregular Men-
you must use
FEMALE
REGULATOR
April
This will certify that two of my
family, after suffered for
roan Irregularity,
without benefit by physicians,
.-. at completely by one
I mule
effect i, truly V.
Book tn mulled FREE,
on oil
REGULATOR CO,
ATLANTA, CA.
us
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified m executor to
the last will testament of
Hone, deceased, h fore the Clerk of
the Court of and
letters testamentary having been issued
to me by Bald Clerk on the 23rd of
January. 1884, notice is hereby Riven to
all persons holding against said
estate to present them to the undersign-
ed, duly authenticated, on or before the
of January, 1895 or this notice
will be In bar f their recovery.
All persons Indebted to said estate will
make Immediate payment to the
Tills the 24th day of January.
1884. W. C.
Executor of David House deed.
necessary to character. One L, were made with
need not go to Congress, or paint forms life from
a picture for the Baton, or write
poem which shall sing to
or cross the threshold of
tho White House by invitation of
the people in order to be fitted for
heaven.
God can make great men when
He them as easily as
throw a handful of sand in the air,
but not even He can make a soul
that is worth looking at twice.
That high prerogative rests with
the man alone who is the owner
of the soul.
In tho eyes of the Almighty the
hod carrier who is honest is
nobler than the statesman whose
to a dog
withstood the of OS degrees
below zero, while it was found
impossible to kill microbes at any
temperature that could be
reached. The
power of cold, however, is likely
to survive as a popular belief,
even if it disappear as a scientific
theory.
A Mend in need is a friend Indeed,
and not less than one, million people
have found just such a friend in Dr.
New Discovery for
Coughs, and you have never
this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince that it has won-
curative powers hi all of
Throat. Chest bottle
Land Sale.
By virtue of a Decree of Pitt
Court made at January term, IS Hi.
Honor John Gray
in the case of Latham
i vs J. U. Yellowley, trustee, G. L. Beta
guardian, w. H.
the Commissioner will sen
cash ire the Court House door if
Greenville on Monthly the 5th day or
March, the following described
lots in town of The lot
described in the decree above mentioned
as lot No. and known as the
I ton lot No. t in
. decree as the corner lot. both being part
of the property its the Hotel
property. For de-
reference made to said de-
K. G. James.
Jan. 23rd, 1804. Commissioner
eloquence makes but guaranteed to do all that is claimed or
,,,. , , , will lie refunded. Trial bottles
sells his influence for or ,,.,.,, at Drug Store. Large
preferment. It is not
but purpose that a
man large or small.
Many of us will find when we
overstep the of the be-i
that we are not received
with the envious acclimations
which have greeted us here, and ;
others will be that they i
are cordially welcomed there.
though here no doffed his
when they passed
theory of life is not
theory and the things we work
hardest for must be left behind
when the time to put on
our shroud-
But if the really good
bottles
Drug
and
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK
SALE.
Under power conveyed in a mortgage
from II. SKinner to R A.
in mortgagee
and assignee, will at noon on Monday
March 1884, at the Court House
door. Greenville, county, expose
to public sale the tract of land in
cod Pitt adjoining j
the lands of A. If. Taft, W. Tinker, for
John Calloway et containing
more or less, and known as the
Mills place. Terms cash.
Jan. F. H.
Attorney for Mortgagee Assignee.
for the Cure all Skis hum
IMPORTANT SALE OF LAND.
Under Hie terms of a decree of
United States Circuit Court for the
Eastern District of North Carolina, en-
suit of the Marine Bank
Norfolk vs Latham At Skinner, the
will as commissioner on Mon-
day March 5th, 1894, at noon expose to
are evenly distributed, so also are public sale at the Court House door, in
,, i mi I iii Greenville. Pitt the tract of
the sorrows of Life. They are the J i decree In Con-
fire and anvil in tho smithy by township, adjoining the land
which crude metal is changed to
a Toledo blade- j acres, being part Of the May place
on the left of the road. Terms
cash. F. II. HI'S REE,
Jan. Commissioner.
sale of both the above
I his I has been In
years, and wherever know ha
been in steady It has been en
by the leading physicians all
e country, and has effected cures where
ill other remedies, with the attention
most experienced physicians, have
years tailed. Thia Ointment is
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
its own efficacy, as but little ha
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash promptly at-
tended to. Address all orders
communications to
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
Greenville, X. C
A mica Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for
Bruises, Sores, Ulcers, Halt Rheum.
Sores, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains Conies, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It Is guaranteed to give
Perfect satisfaction, or money refunded
price cents per box. For Sale by
Disease concerning;
a bank account when he
rings the door bell. He is equal-
indifferent to all, and is never
swayed by favoritism. He is
past all bribery, has no com-
but goes where he is
sent.
The millionaire may give his
child a gilded crutch, but it is
just as truly a crutch as that o
tho poor man's boy. A crutch
is always a crutch, and neither
poverty nor wealth can make it
loss.
The rich may place a costly
monument on a grave and the
poor no monument at all, but the
sleepers sleep the same sleep, and
the monument counts
Bismark for three years has
endured the pangs of royal neg-
No more unhappy man
than he in all Europe. Like a
caged lion he has chafed. The
man whose frown meant war,
whoso smile meant peace, was
like the poorest peasant of Ger-
many in suffered-
The peasant boy is torn from
bis home to become a soldier-
the statesman has boon banished.
The of the one and tho bowl
of the other are brimming fall.
mentioned tree's adjourned until
March M.
-d DENTIST, t
Skin
Eruptions
and similar annoyances are caused
by an impure blood, which
result in a more dreaded
Unless removed, slight impurities
will develop Into Scrofula,
ma, Salt Rheum and other serious
results of
Bad
Blood
for some time been
a sufferer from a
blood trouble, for which I
many remedies that
did me no good I hare
now taken four bottles of
with the most wonderful results
Am enjoying; the best health
ever knew, have gained twenty-
pounds and my friends say never saw
me, well. am feeling guile like a new
Man. JOHN
D. c.
Oar Treatise on Blood Skin Diseases
Bailed free to any address.
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having as
administrator on the estate of J . J. B.
Barber on the 3rd day of February,
1894, this is to notify all having
claims against estate to preset t
them within months from this date
for payment or Mi notice will be plead
in bar of their recovery, all persons
owing the will come I and
Settle at one . e. 1894.
B. F. PATRICK,
J. Barber,,
I-. FLEMING,
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
N. C.
Prompt attention to Office
at Tucker old stand.
D R.
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W,
GREENVILLE, NO.
Practice in nil courts. Collections a
L.
BLOW,
in all the Courts.
i. a. n. r.
A TYSON,
N-O.
Prompt attention collection
LATHAM.
MARRY
SKINNER,
N.
For Liver
or
BROWN'S





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
WEDNESDAY. ISM
Greenville
If. C, as lass mail waller.
Though February did not give
this section any extreme
like occurred in various portions
of the north west, it was,
taken as a whole, a month of much
worse weather and more stormy
than usual. And Rev. B.
Hicks, publisher of Word and
Works, St. Louis, in his forecasts
for March, predicts that the com-
month will be even more
severe than the past with storms
more frequent, and advises that
proper preparation be made for
sudden and extreme cold. He
makes the storm periods of the
month about the 3rd, 7th,
14th to 17th and 25th to 28th.
He says on the 20th,
21st and 22nd we have the full
moon with partial eclipse of same,
the equinoctial centers of Mer-
Earth, Venus, Vulcan's re-
disturbances, the
direct pressure of the Mars
which is central on
28th- Unless this unusual
centering of so many disturbing
forces, right at the Vernal
shall have neutralizing,
effects that we do not now
foresee or much
lent phenomena is sure to result.
Expect cyclonic storms of great
extent, resulting in
along the southern tangents,
and blizzards to the north, all to
be followed by a general cold
wave that will be felt to the coasts
of We do not know
just how much stress to lay upon
what Mr. Hicks says, as no one
can foretell exactly how the
is going to be, or just what
will occur, but of his
dictions in the past have been
wonderfully accurate and come
nearer to being correct than the
observations of any one profess-
to make any study of the
So much nearer than others
does he come to the truth in his
predictions and warnings that he
is being considered authority on
them. His caper furnishes very
interesting reading.
New York wants to unite with
Brooklyn, Staten Island. Long
City, Flushing
Jamaica and Westchester, and
parts of Pelham, and
The combined pop-
of these places, added to
that of New York, is about
and they coyer square
I miles. London covers square
mile.-. Paris covers square
I miles. London has a
of ; Paris has 2,447,957-
New York would then stand
second largest city in the world
as to population and first in
of square miles.
The two Methodist papers of the
State, heretofore being pub-
at Raleigh as the of
the N. C. Conference, and the
other at as the organ
of the Western N. C Conference,
were last week consolidated by
a committee appointed from the
two Conferences to effect a com-
promise The consolidated paper
will hereafter be published at
Greensboro.
Last week the President for the
third time, made a nomination to
till the position of Associate Judge
of the Supremo Court of the
United States. The first
was Mr- Hornblower of New
York, and the Senate sat down on
him. the second was Mr-
of New York, and the Senate
again sat down on him ; the third
time Senator Edward D. White,
was sent to the Sen-
ate and within an hour the Senate
had confirmed him and the Pres-
dent had signed his commission.
This relieves the strain and
give satisfaction to the entire
South- It gets a member of tho
Supreme Court, the only one
since the death of the able
lamented Justice Lamar. It is
said that White has ex-
qualifications for the high
office, having judicial experience
He is a man
character and of education. The
nomination was unexpected to
him and came without asking.
Judge White is years old and
in his prime. The United States
Supreme Court as now organized,
consists as Chief Justice
M. W. Fuller, of Illinois Horace
Gray, of Massachusetts; George
Jr., of Pennsylvania ;
Telegrams received Saturday
by Secretary Gresham, at Wash-
stated that Hon. Win. L-
Wilson, who had gone to Mexico
to rest and recuperate his health
after undergoing tho arduous
work required in preparing his
tariff bill and getting it passed in
the House, had developed a
marked case of typhoid and his
condition is serious. We trust
that his life may be spared and
health soon restored.
Mr. Frank Hart, who has for
time been engaged in the
mercantile business in Tarboro,
has made an assignment for the
benefit of his creditors. Mr. H.
L- Staton is assignee. His
will approximate
His assets are not yet known.
Dr. will preach his last
sermon in the Brooklyn
next Sunday. He will
take a tour around the world
going from San to Hon-
and then to Australia, New-
India. The Taber-
will be sold under mortgage.
The trustees of the State
held a meeting in Raleigh,
last week, and adopted
expressing their disapproval
of collegiate games of foot
ball.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
Washington D- C, Feb 1894-
It pleasant, but
it is true, that the signs
of the Senators
ting on the tariff bill
are not as promising as they
were. They all agree that we
must have reform, but a
of them have ideas which they
have so far refused to be argued
out of as to what constitutes tariff
reform. It is this, and not the
interference of President Cleve-
land, which has prevented the
reporting of the bill to the
committee. It would be
useless to get the bill before the
Senate knowing that enough
Democratic Senators would vote
against it to make a majority with
, the aid of the solid Republican
Those who are impatient
at the delay should remember
that tho Republicans have
Senators and that is a majority.
should not be forgotten, either,
I list Senators are uncertain and
may, unless the Democrats vote
together, hold the balance of
power. The charge that
dent Cleveland is trying to dictate
to the Democratic Senators is
absolutely false. He has no
desire other than to see them
agree take speedy on
the bill, and that is a desire that
should be shared by every Demo-
Senator Mills paid his respects
Howell E. Jackson, of ; to Republican Senators who
H. S. Brown, of Michigan J. W. sought to kill a little time by a
Harlan, of Kentucky ; David J. slurring at his connection with
-r T the subcommittee that is consider-
Brewer, of Stephen J. . . fa
Field, of California; and E. D.
of Justice Strong
of Pennsylvania; is on the retired
list. Four Democrats and five
Republicans, omitting Justice
Strong. .
What is the that Green-
ville cannot have something in
the way of a fair We believe
Pitt county could make as good a
display of agricultural products
as any county in the State, and
when it com es to a tobacco ex-
no other could even
following vigorous
have no to make for any
part that I have taken in trying
to reduce the burden which our
friends on the other side have
heaped upon the shoulders of the
people, and which they have been
increasing from year to year for
the past thirty years. I do not
feel that it is the duty of the Sen-
and Representatives to con-
salt the people who are receiving
the from the pockets of
the yeomanry of the country. We
are sent here to discharge a duty
to the citizens and not to consult
the beneficiaries as to how much
we will allow
what we can do here. Be- Senator looked at
sides this when it comes to flowers Senator oar and smiled as he
, . . ,. presented to the Senate a petition
and fruits Riverside P. by more
could eclipse anything that
going- Then our carriage
factories and other industries,
and our merchants could add
attractions that would equal those
anywhere. Now in the face of all
this the Reflector again asks,
why not have a fair The proper
public spirit displayed in concert
can easily bring it about.
The Postmaster General has
settled the long controversy over
the awarding of the contract for
the postage stamps for
the next four year, by rejecting
nil the bids and ordering that the
work be done by the Bureau of
and Engraving.
lot of trouble owing to the
of National banks
receive silver certificates in ex- j
change legal tender notes
forwarded for redemption. W
to know whether he had a
legal right to compel the banks
to accept the silver certificates he
made formal application to
General for an official
opinion defining the status of the
silver certificates. That opinion
is that certificates are not
lawful money, being merely the
receipt for silver,
which will be delivered upon
render of the certificate.
The Senate was very obliging
when it ordered an investigation
of charges made concerning the
connection of Hon.
of Massachusetts, with the change
of contractors for the publication
of the Patent Office Gazette upon
no better evidence than that of a
man whom Mr. Quincy had been
instrumental in kicked out
of a public sinecure. Neither
Mr. Quincy nor his friends have
any fear of the result of the in-
which will be made
Senators Gorman, Ransom and
who have already
been notified by Mr. Quincy of
his willingness to aid them in
every way to get all tho
desired.
Senator White, of Louisiana,
has a right to feel proud of the
good opinions of his colleagues
and the public, of
tics, which have been expressed
since his nomination and
confirmation to tho
Court vacancy. Had he
been entirely unknown his
speech on the Hawaiian
delivered this week would have
placed him the front rank of
the ablest men in tho Senate.
His future colleagues, the justices
of the Supreme Court, regard his
legal knowledge as a decided ac-
to greatest tribunal
in the
Senator Morgan's Democratic
colleagues on the committee on
foreign relations decline to en-
the report he wrote on the
Hawaiian investigation, and will
a minority report. The
members of the com-
will sign Mr. Morgan's re-
port.
The House has not yet passed
the bill for the coinage of
the owing to the ab-
of a voting quorum.
sens of Massachusetts, asking for
the speedy passage of the
son tariff bill because of its
a substantial measure of
relief from the most burdensome
exactions of the existing tariff
Mr. Hoar got excited and
wanted to know who were the
signers of such a petition, but
he was more than
was crushed, for the moment;
nothing short of death can
crash informed
that among them were such men
as John M- Forbes, William
Lloyd Garrison, Amos W. Stetson,
and William C Endicott. The
petition was sent to Mr.
because the Massachusetts Sena-
tors have been of sup
pressing similar petitions sent to
them.
Secretary bad
THE PEANUT INDUSTRY.
The following article by Judge
Walter Clark of the Supreme
Court in the last issue of the
North Carolina Agricultural
is of
Edward Atkinson, the well
known economist, has recently
written an admirable article,
pointing out tho uses of the pea-
nut, especially as a producer of
oil. He it was who, years ago,
pointed out the value of cotton
seed for its oil its
and feed qualities, as cotton seed
meal, tho value of the hulls.
Prior to this, on many farms cot-
ton seed was disposed of as waste-
Now Mr. Atkinson predicts the
future usefulness of the peanut
as an oil producer other
ways.
But before we go into its pro-
extensively, attention
should called to the syndicate
which controls the sale of the
nuts, making its members million-
and the producers paupers.
The number of peanut buyers is
small. These have formed a
trust or syndicate- By this com-
it is decreed that
is not salable, and
all peanuts before becoming mar-
must go through what
they are pleased to dignify with
tho name of peanut
Ry another one of their rules no
factory will take the nuts on toll,
but they must be sold to the
owner of the factory. This do-
livers tho farmer alive into their
hands.
The peanuts are sold the
market at a price fixed Dy the
syndicate, which is at present
about two cents per pound. They
are run thought the at
a total cost of one fifth of a cent
per pound and are then sold to
tho retail merchant by wholesale
at four to seven cents per pound,
according to locality. The pro
fits being pooled are presumably
divided. No wonder the farmers
find no profit making peanuts
and that the factory owners are
becoming Farmers
generally raise small crops of
peanuts, and each not feeling
largely interested, as a class they
are ignorant of the gross
practiced upon them this
as in some other matters.
posed upon by the word
they are led to think that there
is some costly and mysterious
process in preparing the peanuts
for market. There is nothing of
the kind. The peanuts are pour-
ed into a revolving cylinder
which polishes them and blows
out the pops and dirt- As they
come out they fall upon a broad,
endless belt which carries them
along to be bagged. Negroes
stand on each side of this moving
belt and with paddle deftly sort
the peanuts. They are then
double the price paid the farmer.
The process of thus preparing
costs not more than one fifth
of a cent
It was also thought that the
process was not only mysterious
and required we see
is not that the machinery
was expensive. But it is said by
those who know that the ma-
of one of those so-called
will not cost more
than to and that the
whole plant, machinery
building,
should not cost over or
It was also urged that there
was a patent on the machinery.
A party who was bold enough to
defy this claim and establish his
own factory demonstrated by suit
in court that there was no patent
and thereupon it is said the syn-
took him in and ho is now
one of the oppressors, and fast
becoming a millionaire.
As a last resort, to discourage
putting up factories it is given
out that large capital is required
to establish a and pat it
on the market. On the contrary,
the writer has recently had
with numerous deal
from San Francisco to Boston,
and from New Orleans to
and readily had offers varying
from four and one-half to seven
for nuts, without any
as to brand. The only re-
was that they should
be sound and stock.
The syndicate have educated the
public to require the latter, as it
places the trade in their hands.
If the farmers generally knew
the above facts, they could readily
emancipate themselves from sell-
at two cents per pound pea-
nuts which with the addition of
one fifth of a cent work,
are sold at four to seven by
each neighborhood putting up a
factory, or by some one putting it
up to run for toll. But these facts
have been persistently suppress-
ed. Where at very rare intervals
a factory, out of the seaport town,
has been put it is said that it
ways mysteriously and suddenly
stops. Those who know say that
this is done by the syndicate pay-
the owners of the new factory
a sum equal to the estimated
profit of the tolls which would be
likely to come in if the factory
was run. Fortunately, there is
no internal revenue tax on factory
peanuts, as on manufactured to-
by which the syndicate
keep a monopoly.
This is one of the many ways in
which the farming class is pluck-
ed. Will not farmers who are
interested in peanut raising look
into this matter and each neigh-
provide itself with a
for next season at which pea-
nuts may be prepared for market
for toll would be free
themselves must strike the
Walter Clark.
Good Time.
The fastest hear of on
any railroad in this
elsewhere as to reported
from the Norfolk Carolina road,
and it so happens that when these
tine runs are made Capt- Edgar
Hart, one of the cleverest that
ever punched a ticket, is very apt
to be aboard. His train made
another record last Thurs-
day, and the Norfolk Virginian of
the 23rd gives these facts about
On February 22nd, Norfolk and
Carolina northbound passenger
train No. Conductor Hart, en-
No. with Burk at the
throttle, left Rocky Mount at
p. m- and arrived at Point
at p. m., having made twenty-
four stops of two minutes each,
thus making the run in two hours
and fifty two minutes, and actual
running of miles in min-
Fastest time was between
Rocky Mount and Tarboro
seventeen miles in fifteen minutes.
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below are. Norfolk prices of cotton
and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission Mer-
chants of
COTTON.
Good Middling
Low Middling
Good Ordinary
PEANUTS.
Prime
Extra Prime
Fancy
Spanish
5-16
Appointments for Greenville Circuit.
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three
o'clock.
Shady Grove on second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and School
House at o'clock.
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel at three
o'clock.
Bethlehem the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
Baptist Services.
Below arc the regular appointment
of Rev. J. H. pastor of the
Baptist church
At and fourth Sun-
days in each month, morning and night,
and every Thursday night.
At Sunday in each
month, morning and night.
At Ephesus, Person
Sunday In each month and Saturday be-
fore.
-USE-
Springs
W. GREEK,
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly quail-
lie before the Superior Court Clerk of
Pitt as Administrator of P. A.
Fleming, deceased, notice is hereby
en to all persons indebted to the estate
to make immediate payment to the
and all persons having claims
against the estate must present the same
for payment on or before the 12th day
of February, 1806, or this notice will be
plead in bar of recovery.
This 12th of Feb. 1894.
of F. A. Fleming.
Land Sale.
By of the power and authority
given in a decree of Pitt Superior Court
made by His Honor, W. A. Hoke. Judge
presiding at December 1868, In
the case L. C. Latham and Harry
Skinner against Sarah Forties and
Thomas A. the undersigned
will sell for cash before
the Court House door Greenville on
Wednesday the day of March 1894
the following described tract or parcel
of land In township Pitt
county the land of Cell as
Nobles. Thomas Lancaster and others
containing one hundred and acres
more or less.
This Feb.
C. M. BERNARD,
Commissioner.
Mr.
Baltimore, lid.
Run Down
That Tired Feeling-Severe
Headaches, No Appetite I
Six Bottles of Hood's
Bring Back New Life.
T. I. Lowell,
using Hood's
I was frequently sick and did not know
what was the matter with me. One day I would
feel so tired I could hardly stand, the next I
would have a severe headache and so on. not
knowing what tho next day would bring forth.
did not have any appetite and
Was Run Down.
I tried a good many medicines but they did me
no good. Having heard a great deal about
Hood's I decided to try a bottle. I
am glad to say I soon felt better. I have now
used six bottles and feel as well as ever. It has
been of great benefit to me as I haTe regained
my appetite and
Now Enjoy Good Health.
I can strongly recommend Hood's
an excellent blood M.
Street, Baltimore, Maryland.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
OLD STORK
AND MERCHANTS BUT
-I- their year's supplies will
their Interest our prices before
Our stock
n all Its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TEA,
at Lowest M Trices.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
always, on hand and sold at prices
the times. goods are all bought and
sold for therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
S. M.
N,
Hood's Pills act easily, yet promptly and
efficiently, on the liver and bowels.
Notice.
By virtue of the authority granted by
the Superior Court of county in the
cause of Allen Warren, of B. F.
Manning against W. J. Manning, H. A.
Manning, A. Manning and Ba-
and wife Addle, the undersigned
will expose to public before the
Court House door Greenville, on
Wednesday, the day of March,
for cash to the highest bidder,
or parcel of land situate and lying in
the county of Pitt, Greenville town-
ship, on the south side of Tar river,
bounded on the west by the lauds of Mo
sea Tyson, on the south by the lands of
J. T. Lacy, on the east by the lands of
W. A. and Mrs. W. J.
the north by the public road leading
from Greenville to Wilson, containing
forty five and one-sixth acres, more or
less, subject to the dower
which has been aligned.
5th day of Feb. 1804.
ALLEN WARREN,
of B. F. Manning.
Henry
REAL ESTATE COLLECTING
AGENCY.
FOR nice residence,
lid neighbors, line rooms
kitchen convenient, barn stables,
A small house, S rooms, kitchen con-
garden spot, nice neigh-
House and lot on Greene street, only
rooms and kitchen, splendid neigh-
A house just beyond t an I
a tenement houses.
Also for sale or rent alum -0 acres
land, good house, line
trees mid strawberry patch, adjoining
corporate limits. Term easy.
FOB nice residence,
barn Stable, Splendid
A line vacant lot, x
A line residence lot Evans Si,
One house and lot, rooms and
en.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having this day
qualified as administrator of the
estate of s. L. Barber, this is to
all persona having claims against, the
said estate to present them VI
mouths from date of this notice or
this notice will lie plead in bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to the
said estate will come forward and
February 3rd, 1894
B. V. PATRICK,
of S. L, Barber.
J. B. CHERRY CO
To all who want goods that are all light we invite
come to see we will make prices
all light and We have often
been told that we were a little high in
price on some lines of Goods but
our friends would always add
that the quality of your
goods is better than
the lower priced
costing
more and
demand-
b e
priced than the
interior good. This
is what we claim i That
will meet competition on the
different lines of Goods carried by
us, quality considered. Come to
see we have in stock a general as-
and can supply your every want
MONEY
MADE
is
SAVED.
To fully appreciate this old but true adage you will to call
examine their stock of------
which are of tho latest stylos and and are being sold at prices
that will make you think you shotting double your money's
worth. To see is to believe and to believe yon will only
have to examine tho many bargains they are offering in
CLOTHING,
Trimmings, Boots, Shoes, Hats,
all of which have an especially attractive line. Call to see us and
examine our goods which it affords us pleasure- to show.
The must courteous attention extended to all.
We are for tho most popular brands of
of which we have a large stock on hand and which are selling at
prices to suit the times.
Staple Groceries,
always on haul. So when you call if you n t see what you want
ask for it. Remembering always we are your i to please,
well, Co.,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
GREENVILLE, N. C
AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest rater.
AGENT FOB FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
FURNITURE
When we say that we have the largest and best line
of FURNITURE ever kept in our town. We
make no mistake as a visit to our store will
prove. Numbers of our customers ex-
press surprise at our haying such a
large and well selected stock
on hand. Call on us for
anything want
the Furniture
line. We
just re-
lovely line
of CHAIRS,
and
ROCKERS in Silk Plush,
These Chairs
make nice Christmas presents
and we would remind our friends
not to overlook them when making
for Christmas as they will you.
o-
GUNS
Call on us for Guns and Gun
Implements. We some
nice ones on hand and will
make the prices right.
Wishing all our friends and the public generally a joyous and
happy Christmas,
remain, your friends.
CHERRY
ESTABLISHED 1883,
--------WHOLESALE AND RETAIL--------
KT. C.
C. It. Side Meat.
Tabs Boston Lard.
BOO barrels all
Sugar,
C. Sugar,
2.00 boxes Tobacco,
Mills Sud
barrels Three Thistle
Gall ft Ax
SO
eases Sardines.
Full all other
50.000 Luke Cigarette,
i Cakes and Crackers,
ck Candy.
kegs Hand's Powder.
tons
Powders.
cases Star Lye,
barrels Apple
Dust Washing Powder
rolls lb Hugging.
bundles Arrow Ties .
goods carried in my line.
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
-IN-
TO my and Customers of Pitt and adjoining
preparation In preparing
HEAD and propose giving you with inside
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing
Also I have made special arrangements to use best Hoops made White
Oak. special advantages I have in cutting own timber places me In a
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can them at time
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C.
Saving, Making
And Turned Trimming for House., a Specially.
am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing Brackets or anything In hi
line, or turning Balustrades for Pick t- for Stall M ending Of
any kind, Including Piazza Hailing, would I pleased to name you prices on
anything In tho above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you your past patronAge, lam willing to
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give me a trial
elsewhere. Respectfully,
Winterville, N.
V C Joshua Co K
COBB BROS, CO.,
AND-
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA.
and Solicited.
RELIABLE
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds. NOTIONS,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS ft a
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE
GOODS, WINDOWS. and
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER
and Mil L Hat, Rock or p,.
Hair. Harness, Bridles and , i
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY
nil,,, O T . . .
Agent O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at W
per cent for Br.
ration and Star foe at Jobbers Prices,
Bread Pt
Willow Wan. Give me a and I guaranty
. . i





I El I I
MAKE
ROOM
THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections.
to
I w. A
c I
They
Must
CO
They
Will
CO.
Shad still hold up in price.
For reliable Shoes go
Wiley Brown.
Some Dew buildings have re-
gone up on Front street.
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's.
The bad has caused a
temporary suspension of farm
operations.
Nothing equals the Parker
Fountain Pen. Sold only at Re-
Book Store.
The vault question is being
talked again- Pitt county
should have one.
Choice canned Fruits and Veg-
fresh and nice, at
J. S. Smith Co's.
Personal
Mrs. Florence is visiting
in Kinston-
Miss May of Falkland,
spent a few days of last week here.
The Governor
Mr- W. S- Bawls
lie.
has appointed
a Notary Pub-
Mrs. Dr. D. L. James spent
from Friday to Monday in Kins
ton.
J. H- left Mon-
day to spend a few days in
ville-
Hon. G- Skinner, of
Hertford, spent a few days here
last week.
Lena King, of Farmville.
visited the family of Sheriff B.
W. King last week.
Mrs. D- Abram, of Rocky
Mount, is visiting her daughter,
Mrs. S- M. Schultz.
Mr. B- C. Pearce has been
pointed States Deputy
The County Commissioners j Marshal by Marshal Carroll-
meet next Monday, and the Town
CALL
AT ONCE
AND SEE THE
BARGAINS-
DON'T
FORGET THE
PLACE.
BROS.
Leaders of Low Prices.
Council meet that night-
S. B. Pender Co are selling
the Elmo cook stoves as
they can get them in.
If people wanted to build mud
houses now they would not have
to look long tor material-
New Embroideries just
ed by Wiley Brown.
If you the and
Atlanta Constitution a year for
bring on that amount.
J- S- Smith Co. receive fresh
every week the finest Cream
Cheese, and also best Vermont
Butter at cents per pound.
Almost an army of hunters
were out Monday afternoon and
rabbits stood a poor showing.
Shoes to matter
whether you or whether
you sit, at Higgs Bros.
Mr. G- L- has open-
fast as j
Miss Josie of Farmville.
spent part of last week with the
family of her uncle, Mr. E- A-
Messrs. G- M. Tucker and John
Edwards went to Norfolk Mon-
day, the former to buy horses and
the latter on pleasure.
Rev. J. N- H.
preventing, will preach in the
Baptist church next Sunday
evening, at the usual hour for
service.
Mr. C- G- Joyner, of
j is in our midst shaking hands
j with his many friends. He says
he must have the Reflector and
came in renewed.
Mrs. Dr. J. Marquis and little
Leonard, of Philadelphia, who
have been spending some weeks
with Mr. and Mrs. M. B- Lang, re-
turned home last week.
Mr. Frank Wilson
day for the northern markets to
ed a line of samples and is I purchase his spring stock of cloth-
orders for custom made clothing. K dry goods. He will show
some splendid lines on his return.
Greenville, N. C
Last day of February.
Carriages Wagons at
J. B. Cherry Co's.
Two months of 1894 gone-
When in want of good go to
J. B. Cherry A Co.
Look out for the spring bonnet
fever.
The Best Flour on earth l-20 at the
Brick Store
Get yourself in shape for March
winds-
L. M. Reynolds and Boy
shoes are the best. For sale by J. B.
Cherry it Co.
The peach trees are nearly it
bloom.
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need
Furniture, they keep a stick and
sell at prices that will please you.
Next Sunday is the 4th Sunday
in Lent-
Diamond Inks, are the best
Sold only at Book Store.
Try the Book Store
f o r stationery.
Keep it in your mind where the
Reflector office, is just south of
Five Points. Look for the swing-
sign.
This section is planting a big
of potatoes.
A large stock nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
To-morrow is the first of March
end the first spring month.
I pay you cash for Chicken
and Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Another rise in the river fol-
lowed Sunday's snow and rain.
Repairs are made to the
fence around the Methodist
These high winds will put many
a man to after his
Wonder if two up town men
think the weather bureau struck
it Sunday.
The Sundays of March will fall
on the same dates as the Sundays
of February-
The school children re-
member that with every cent
tablet purchased at the
Book Store they get a box of six
pretty colored crayons. They
went fast last week but we have
some of them yet.
good Physician with
some experience to locate at
N- C Nice office with
Drug department attached-
Nice can be had on easy
terns. Best location in the
terr part of North Carolina.
Address, Postmaster,
ft C
Mosey to improved
Beal Estate in sums from to
Apply to,
F. G. James.
Glazier Co., who did
business in the store under the
Opera House, have moved away.
your Cotton Seed Meal at
the Old Brick Store.
The man who sells coal and
wood will soon find his
gone. The icemen will rejoice
Just received large, bright, fat
Mullets at the Old Brick Store.
Wilmington truckers are ship-
ping lettuce, radishes and cab-
north, says the Messenger-
New assortment of Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor.
This is the time to clean up and
get your flower gardens in order
for the beautiful spring flowers.
Every business man should try
a bottle of our Mucilage.
Sold only at the Book
Store.
Keep it in mind that yon get
cheaper stationery at the
tor Book Store than anywhere
else-
If you want your job printing
done promptly and neatly, bring
your orders to the
It looks like the price of cotton
ought to have struck bottom, but
whether it has or not remains to
be seen.
For A. G- Cox's celebrated
Back Bands call on J- B. Cherry
or Co.
The people of this part of tho
State will have to depend on the
ice factories for their supply next
summer.
Always on hand fresh Grocer-
of all kinds and Confections,
Best Flour at and per
barrel. J- S. Smith i Co.
A named
has been established at Mr. T- L
store, in Farmville
township.
Mr. John
the ministerial educational board
at Wake Forest College, paid a
short visit to Greenville last week.
He conducted the prayer meeting
sen-ice in the church.
Thursday night, and made a de-
talk.
Mr. Larry I. Moore has formed
a with Mr- J. E-
Moore, of Williamston, for the
purpose of conducting a law
in Greenville. This is a
strong legal team and a large
practice will no doubt be received.
We welcome Larry to Greenville.
H- O- of Kinston
and Chas. Duffy, of
came to Greenville Saturday, in
response to telegrams, to hold a
consultation with
Bagwell and Laughinghouse as
to the condition of Dr. F. W.
Brown. It was once thought
an operation would have to be
performed on him, but at the
consultation this was found
necessary. We regret that the
condition of Dr. Brown is still
very serious. It is the wish of
every one that he may be speedily
restored to health.
T. is making a
specialty of fine clothing, also E-
P. Co's and
shoes. Bead his advertisement.
March term of Pitt Superior
Court, for the trial of civil cases,
will commence next Monday.
Judge John Gray will
preside.
Tarboro has a Chinese laundry
of which Lung is proprietor.
He may do with
one lung but should be careful
not to cold in it.
New Garden seeds D.
Co. at the Old Brick
M. Ferry
Store.
The Town Council at its
next week might very pro-
overhaul the lamp-lighter
for neglecting to have lights
dark nights last week.
Items failed to come in this
week from several of our
We hope all will write
week.
The sign has been
swung across the street and is
visible from any part of main
street. You can't miss finding
our new office.
Greenville has been better sup-
The large in
Mrs. V- H. s yard is in
full bloom and attracts much
admiration. It is the
flowering tree in the community.
A family servant at Mr. S- M.
swallowed a day
last week, and it remained in her
throat about half a day. Dr.
Chas. Laughinghouse removed it.
Don't forget the
when you come in town to attend
court next It will cost
only a dollar for a whole year and
all who try it agree that it is a
cheap paper at that price,
The principal of the shad
skimmers in this section, last
week, was of the variety known
as hickories. But old fishermen
plied with oysters this season say a good run of shad usually
than for several winters past, and j follows on the heels of these,
the bivalves have been finer.
Clipper, Atlas. Boy
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax
Plows and Castings for sale by J.
B. Co.
The Tarboro tobacco market
will open next season, we are
informed, having suspended
operations fur a season or two
The largest best assorted
line of General Merchandise in
Pitt County, is offered for sale
J. B. Cherry Co.
Bo Cherry says he is going
apply to the Town Council for a
charter to establish a ferry across
the two big ponds on main street.
Sewing machines from to
Latest improved New Home I
Wiley Brown.
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor
en pf all professions, when in
need of goods of any kind, call on
friends, J. Cherry Co.
Now in Stock, Gel
late, Raising. Prunes, Nuts, Rolled
Oats, Cream Cheese,
Mountain Butter
a the Brick Store.
Rev. it. Smith informs us
that the contract has been let for
a new church building at Lang's
School House, near Farmville,
and another church building is
in course of erection at den.
Notwithstanding the snow Son
day morning a few brave souls
ventured and services were
held in both the Methodist and
Baptist churches, but the
bad at night that
vices were but of the question and
none of the churches opened.
The Greenville Index, edited
by Mr. Andrew Joyner, made its
ii t appearance last Friday morn-
It was a bright little sheet
and decidedly newsy. The
welcomes it as a co-
laborer for the of
Greenville and wishes it
Boswell, Co. want
you to save money by examining
the nice spring goods they are
now opening. Their stock and
prices ate winners. They are
headquarters
popular of fertilizer,
their new advertisement
will tell you about.
Handsome Dwelling.
Prof W. H. County
Superintendent of Public
this week begins the
of a handsome residence on
the lot opposite Mr. H. A.
ton s, which he recently
ed. Mr. H. G- Jones has the con
tract for the building.
Masquerade Party.
The young people of tho town
will give a masquerade party
next Monday night at tho
House- The grand march
commence at o'clock,
An admission fee of
cents will be charged to defray
the expenses. Everybody invited.
The re i.
The lad
church
Hatchet
night and it was
hugely en j yo by all.
main feature of the occasion
Hie Methodist
Tea an,
lust
roil patronized
Tho
was
Easter Sunday.
Easter Sunday this year will be cut a
the 25th of March, as it was in
1883, only three Easter Sun-
days in the
have been at an earlier date;
March 1818, and March
in 1845 and 1856- The latest
date of any Easter Sunday in
this century was April 25th
the Roads,
We hope the
will take a good look at
the public roads over which they
travel to come to town next Mon-
day, and inquire among them
selves it they do not think there
could made an improvement
in the condition of these roads if
the county convicts were put at
work on them.
Attend to This.
Again we call attention to tho
blue cross mark that is placed
after the name on margin of the
paper, giving notice of expiration
of subscription We send a
few copies this week with the blue
mark on them, and hope all re
them will renew promptly.
Next week during court is a good
time to renew.
Snowball Him.
Now for Beautiful
The poem that's usually all the go.
When come the flakes, so soft and white,
hide earth out of
Kinging.
Swinging,
-Rhyming
Beautiful poem nothing in that wrong.
t some crank to a column space,
Will it from Its hiding
And inflict on readers that ancient gag
The Be A wag.
More Good Sales.
Mr. J. H. Smith, another Falk-
land farmer, has handed the Re-
an account of tobacco
sales recently made by him,
which are as follows lbs at
; lbs at lbs at
lbs at ; lbs at ;
lbs at Hi ; lbs at ; lbs
at This is another evidence
of what Pitt can do at tobacco
raising.
Organizing.
The Third party leaders of this
county held a meeting here last
Thursday to organize and get
everything in readiness for this
year's campaign. The attendance
at the meeting, all told, was
twenty-nine, and of this number
twelve were of Greenville town-
ship and seventeen from all the
balance of the county. Four
townships had no representatives
present. Of course this meeting
and its proceedings were secret.
Away Last week.
Mr. O- L. Joyner, who edits
the Tobacco Department of the
Reflector, was absent at the
fair last week, hence
does not entertain our readers
this week with his usual good
articles. It is his purpose to fully
make up the loss with the excel-
of his department next week.
We will say here that if everybody
interested in this tobacco market
was doing as much for its
cement as Mr. Joyner has done
and is doing, you would see
Greenville grow and prosper as
the old town never has prospered
before.
Protracted Meeting.
A protracted meeting will com-
in the Methodist church
third Sunday, conducted by Mr.
J. S. a layman of
Danville, Va-, assisted by Mr.
Ramsey, a noted singer. Mr.
has just closed a very
successful meeting in Lynchburg,
Va., where there were
He is now in Norfolk, Va.,
conducting a meeting. Mr.
is not a minister,
ply a layman in the church, with
God at his back and doing a
that will add jewel upon jewel to
his crown- Lets all turn out and
help and do with our might what
we find to do- Christians be up
and doing, put forth every effort
to make this a grand and glorious
and successful meeting. Bro.
Smith says he wants every body
to turn out and help in the meet-
if you can't talk to sinners,
and help sing, if you can't
do either of the above, why come
any way. your will en
courage others. Services will be
held every morning at o'clock
and at night.
A New Offer.
It is always the purpose of the
Reflector to give its readers the
best of is to be had,
and we do this as far as comes
within our reach and ability-
Under a arrangement
we have been giving three papers,
the Reflector, the New York
World and the la
all a whole year for
and a great many have taken ad-
vantage of the rate. While
that offer stilt holds, good for the
three papers, there have been
many requests for a low rate for
the Reflector and Constitution,
and we are now prepared to offer
these two papers a year for
email of l a Sedition
to this low rate the subscribers
we send the Constitution can
take part in the monthly word
contest The sentence for March
is ft We find a serious error in the
navy of the
height of our
pinning a hatchet on a piece of
canvas, on which was painted a
picture of a cherry tree with a
j gap cut in it. You secured a paper
j hatchet, with a pin through it,
and being blind folded and
around several times, yon
advanced toward the
stuck the hatchet on it with the
pin. Two prizes were offered,
for the one who came the nearest
to the cut a handsome tea service,
and the one the farthest from the
bisque Mr. Paul
won the tea set an Miss
Julia Foley won the figure. It
was real fun and every one pros
were r many obligations
to the getters of the evenings,
enjoyment.
Fire in Dim,
Mr. It A Tyson had tho mis
fortune to I me. by fire, his store,
stock of goods warehouse
Beaver township, on Tues-
day night of last week, about
o'clock. It caught from a
defective flu and before Mr. Ty-
son get to tho scene was
sleeping in a dwelling some dis-
from the the place
was in a light blaze. He
saved a few things. Tho loss was
about with some insurance,
not enough to half cover the loss.
This is the third loss Mr. Tyson
has sustained by fire in the last
two years and half. The first two
there was no insurance at all, and
falls heavily on him-
SPRING 1894
S; J .
Last Thursday Mr. C C Kirk-
man went to
get some eggs of the fancy
poultry kept by the latter. He
procured a setting, them
in his buggy, and accompanied
by a friend started back down
town preparatory to leaving for
home. Coming down tho hill to-
ward the railroad track Mr. Kirk
man's horse ran away and did not
check his pace until horse, buggy
and riders had been dumped over
the side of the bridge into the
branch that runs through the
ravine. Mr. was the
first to extricate himself from the
tangle, his topmost thought
being of his treasure made haste
to inspect his egg basket. A
peep within disclosed a
of shell, white and yolk
stirred up in good shape for
scrambling, and caused him to
rend the air with me,
every egg's This was
the extent of the damage, except
that one shaft of the buggy was
snapped in twain. A gentleman
down town said he bad
plated Mr. White's
eggs, but don't like for them to
hatch so soon after being
ed.
Couldn't Convert Him.
A scene like this in a
store here, tho other A
know it-all Third party
pion was trying to convince a
more unpretentious brother tiller
of the soil we farmers must
do to better our and
was expatiating upon one
theme another as advocated
by the drawing pretty
pictures of the big piles of
to flow therefrom into the their
pockets, when the unpretentious
brother cut his tine theory down
by here I can
tell you a much better than
that for we farmers to better our
condition. Go home and get to
work on your farm, attend to
your business and your
money instead of running around
spending been
talking to you who told yon
retorted the t. p. man.
told me, I learned it
from experience. I used to run
around and waste all I made, my-
self, but have quit that way of
doing and get along much
better. No Third party or any
other party is going to put any-
thing into my pocket or yours,
and you had just as well make up
your mind that what you get
work The failed to
make a convert that time, and it
can be safely said he left sadder
if not a wiser man.
prize offered the
Remember both
for
Fair.
About two hundred people from
Greenville and community took
the special train here last Wed-
morning for the
fair, and barring having to wait
forty minutes at Kinston for the
west bound mail train to pass
made the trip through on good
time. was reached
o'clock and most of the
crowd went at once to the fair
grounds, while some others, who
had not been there before hist
took a view of the city.
The exhibits in every deport-
of tho fair were
fully sustained the
has won for holding the
best fair in the State. The racing
was as as can shown on
any tract, while among the side
attractions were some interesting
features. The State made a dis
play of a portion of the North
Carolina exhibit at the Worlds
Fair. The poultry and stock ex-
were especially fine and at-
a great deal of attention.
The ascensions and para
chute leap by Miss De
were the best we ever saw. In
fact everything about the fair
was good and well worth going
to see. The attendance was the
largest that has yet attended any
of these fairs and nobody found
the exhibits below what was ex
The management were
fortunate in selecting the
they did for the fair as they had
favorable weather all the week.
Something worthy of special
mention and was
the entire absence of the horde of
gamblers swindlers that usu-
ally infest fairs. Not one of this
class was seen about the grounds.
The Greenville people got back
home in reasonable time that
night well pleased with the ex-
and the
is to be congratulated
upon having such excellent fairs
and all this section of the State
owes a debt to the people there
for the efforts they make to bring
tho resource, of eastern
before the world, f he right
men are at the head of the fair
management.
this missing word and yon share
the prize offered the heretofore- Even Greenville might
papers .-.
the of the bell
telephone patents telephone ex.
changes can be established and
operated at less cost than
Snow and Slush.
The first snow we had hero this
season with the exception of a
few scattering flukes, fell
day and Sunday morning,
reaching a depth of about three
inches. The ground was good
condition to receive it, and it be-
to look we wore fr a
The snow ceased about
o'clock very soon there-
after rain set in, continuing
through the remainder of the day
and well into Sunday night. Tho
rain and slightly rising tempera-
Sunday melted the
snow rapidly and by Monday
morning Only a few traces of
were left- It was
colder again Monday morning
with plenty of ice, and tho high,
wind the day ex-
uncomfortable. Every
day brings a succession of
changes and tho probabilities are
that the bad is yet to get
in more of its work.
In the Mayor's Court.
The following cases have been
disposed of by Mayor Fleming
since February
William Hanrahan, riotous
disorderly conduct, fined and
costs.
John riotous and dis-
orderly conduct, fined and
costs.
John Wooten, riotous
conduct, fined
costs.
Harry Watson and Loon
rick, riotous and disorderly con-
duct, Watson fined and costs.
Patrick fined and costs.
Peter Clark, assault, fined
and costs.
Willis Clark and John
riotous and disorderly
each fined and costs.
Queen Dupree and
Wooten, riotous and disorderly
conduct, Dupree fined and
costs, Wooten fined and costs
Richard drunkenness,
fined SI and costs.
and dis-
and
Pat-
Wooten,
conduct,
Cherry
E. P. HEED CO.
I will purchase the finest, largest and
most stylish line of
A Good Argument.
An exchange presents the fol-
lowing argument in support of
the beneficial results of tho news-
paper advertisement
A newspaper has 5.000 readers i
for each subscribers. AI
merchant who puts out
handbills gets possibly people I
to read is, if the boy
who is trusted to distribute them
loss not chuck them over the
sidewalk. The cost as
much as a half advertise
in the homo newspaper.
All the women cud girls and half
men boys read the
The merchant
who uses the newspaper has
more readers to each 1.000 of the
paper's readers. There is no
estimating tho amount of business
that advertising does bring to a
merchant, but that each invest-
ed in advertising brings to the
investor somewhere from to
worth of there can
be no doubt.
ft
BY
Boots and Shoes
and fact everything to please the trade, ever
brought to this market.
FRANK WILSON.
Falkland Hems.
February 26th 1894.
B. F. Bryan and wife, of Bethel,
are relatives here-
The young people had a
and enjoyable dance
here Friday night.
J. L. Fountain made a business
trip to Norfolk Tuesday and re-
turned Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. of Ran-
county, have been visiting
the family of Mr. J- S- Harris the
past week.
The clever, jovial Pf eh, of
a former of
Pitt, was here last week baking
with his many friend.
E M- Short, of Washington,
was here last week looking afar
his railroad affairs. Falkland is
delighted with the idea of
having the iron house
through hr borders,
A cold wave passed over this
section Saturday, and a snow fell
Sunday to the depth of five in-
followed by a continued
rainfall which an old farmer says
has thrown all farming operations
out of gear for the present.
Depository of
American
i it Nev Ho die
i M -i
I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF-
SPRING G GODS
NOVELTIES,
and would earnestly solicit your examination.
SHOES
Embroideries, White Goods
and Laces.
I need not say anything about except that I have a new
line. Prices lower than ever. I thank you for your past favors
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance-
Sewing Machines from up.
Respectfully,
New Home latest improved
WILEY BROWN,
New Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So
I got into the
she tried right hard.
business if
Mills Items
Feb. 26th 1894-
Miss Cox, of near
den, is visiting Miss Annie Hard
Quite a number of our citizens
attended the fair last
week.
Mr. Ben Joyner. of
died last Thursday an illness
of several weeks.
Dr. Ben, of Eureka, spent
part of the past week in
ville with his brother.
Mr. L. B. and wife
spent last Saturday and Sunday
in Lenoir county relatives.
We are soon to have another
office in Mr. L.
T. Chapman postmaster- If any
one fails to get their mail, it won't
be for the lack of a post office.
After n illness of several
months, Mrs. Jenni Best died
last Wednesday. Her remains
were buried at the family bury- j
ground Thursday at o'clock.
She leaves a husband and three
boys to mourn their loss-
-MANUFACTURER OF-
Bliss, Mi, Cub k
-ALL KINDS OF-
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE
Only first-class and allowed in my shops. The many
who have my work will testily to Hie bounty and durability of
turned out at my Every vehicle I also tarry line
HARNESS WHIPS.





BUYING REINDEER.
Uncle Sam's to Get
Into Alaska.
The . l Hay
the of the lo Sow
Don the Siberian
Them.
Undo Sam has pone somewhat ex-
into the business of buying
reindeer, and the first consignment is
now in the city, very much the worse
for wear, says the San Francisco
Chronicle. The animals are the sec-1 soon produced and in use.
NOT MUCH OF A
But the to Value
of Two Pair of Aim.
When Got. Lowrey of Mississippi
was in this city, some time ago, says
the Post, be very
took in a few friends with whom
he sat one evening in a friendly
game of draw. The governor and a
party of ladies and gentlemen were
being entertained at an evening tea,
and, after the menu had been dis-
cussed, the gentlemen withdrew to
the library, where cards and chips
of the kind ever brought to the
city. Some time two were
obtained for Golden Gate pork, but
one has since died.
The animals were bought by the
government H. Bruce, in Si-
The purpose of the purchase
is to introduce the reindeer in Alas-
where they will be used instead
of dogs. It is impossible to use
horses, and dogs do not serve the
purpose as well as they might
Some time ago there was a season
of the distress among the
in The report
of it led to a congressional
and the appropriation of
thousand dollars, part of which
was to buy reindeer in Siberia and
have them brought to Alaska. An
agent was dispatched to Siberia, and
his first consignment was stationed
in a lot adjacent to the Lick paths.
The greatest difficulty yeas ex-
in getting the animals
here. Several died on the way and
there are but six remaining.
The animals will be used to great
advantage at the north. They are
small, but swift and powerful. In
Siberia they cost five dollars apiece.
The natives have a peculiar way of
harnessing and driving the animals.
The harness is simply a band over
the shoulders and bet ween the legs.
The deer is fastened to the center
and left of the sled, but not to the
right. It is steered by the horns
and covers the ground as rapidly s
a good horse.
A BAD HALF HOUR.
He Got Away, But the Beauty cf That
Chair Was Ruined.
At the home of a popular girl in
this city a most uncomfortable half
Hour was recently spent by a modest
youth who had called to see her. The
youth is noted for both bashfulness
and nervousness.
The night in question he went
with a friend to the girl's house. He
took a comfortable seat in a large
armchair, and, as was his habit,
began to nervously poke his fingers
into cracks and holes in the
mental parts of the chair. He shoved
finger into a hole in this manner,
but to his dismay, that his
knuckle positively refused to come
back through the hole.
The more the worked to
release his finger the harder it was,
as the finger became swollen. The
youth was too bashful to mention the
ridiculous predicament into which
he had gotten himself, but bore th
pain in silence. He suffered untold
agony for fear his friend would go
before he released his finger.
Finally the hostess noticed his
parent uneasiness. The youth, with
many blushes, then told the cause.
It was not until half an hour later
that the bashful youth and the chair
parted company. The but finally
succeeded in releasing the finger
with the aid of a hatchet and chisel,
tut the handsome chair is a thing of
the
mL
Maternal Devotion.
In the western part of
setts, says the Churchman, a fire re-
destroyed a fine barn on a
stock farm, and a number of blooded
horses and cows perished in the
flames.
Soon after the fire the owner,
walking over the ruins, came upon
an object which touched him more
than the sight of the charred bodies
of his horses and Jerseys.
There sat an old black hen. He
wondered that she did not move her
head to look at him as he came near
her, but he thought she must be
asleep. He poked her with his cane,
and to his surprise the wing which he
touched fell into ashes. Then he
knew that she had been burned to
death.
But out from under her came a
faint little peep, and pushing her
aside with his cane, the man found
ten live yellow chickens. The hen had
sacrificed her own life to save them.
A Giantess.
Gurley, in the Point Rock valley,
North Alabama, has a prodigy in the
shape of a nine-year-old white child.
Her name is Lizzie Beale, and her
parents arc among the best people in
Jackson county. She weighs one
and ninety-two pounds and is
possessed of enormous strength. She
can with the greatest ease lift and
off an anvil weighing two
and twenty-five pounds and
ran carry off a big man who could
scarcely lift her from the ground.
Her hair is very long, and she has
regular, beautiful features.
An Island Missing.
American ship Daniel Barnes,
from, Buena, Chili, reports
the total disappearance of an island
in the South Pacific ocean.
Capt. says, he passed
over the exact spot where
island is laid down on the chart. He
had men aloft looking for land, and,
although it was daylight and per-
clear, he says that nothing
could be seen of it The island was
forty feet high, three-fourths
of a mile in diameter, and In
degrees minute west,
degrees minutes south.
It is thought that some volcanic
disturbance on the mainland caused
the island to
American.
Gov. Lowrey said he knew nothing
about the game, so, while his friends
tried their luck, the southern exec-
remained in the parlor en-
the ladies. Later in the
evening the governor drifted to the
and was prevailed upon
to play the hand of one of the gen-
for a few minutes. As soon
as the governor sat down he re-
minded his friends again that he
knew nothing about the game.
There was a jackpot on the table
which had gone around several times.
Hands were dealt, the pot was
opened and play passed around to
the governor. He didn't seem to
know whether to pass or not. He
studied his for several minutes,
then, showing a card, asked the man
next to him whether it was a king
or a jack.
a king, replied
the gentleman.
Then the governor produced a
queen and take it that
this is a queen. Am I Ho
was informed that he was, and then
very deliberately putting his
money he called for one card.
The gentleman who had opened
the pot had three nines failed to
better his hand on the draw. v He
thought he had a lead-pipe cinch on
the pot and sized up the governor as
having two and queens.
He thought the governor had found
cards like the king and queen he
had shown and was drawing for a
full.
He was somewhat taken back
when the governor raised the bet,
and fearing that the governor did
not know that two pair were not
very good, he called his to
the fact.
go said the governor,
play this out,
The governor kept raising until
finally the gentleman with the three
nines weakened and called. Then
the governor proudly laid down four
aces, and everybody yelled. He had
held three aces all the time, flashed
his king and queen for a bluff, then
drew one card and caught another
ace. The gentleman who held three
nines s he will never again sit in
a game with a man who knows
it.
RODE IN A CATTLE CAR.
A Who Succeeded in Earning
His Free Passage.
The other morning when the
freight train from the east
a man emerged from a car leaded
with long-horned steers, says the
Gazette. He said that
when endeavoring to secure free pas-
sage on the cattle train leaving Win-
the night before, one of the
railroad boys said he would let him
into a cattle car where he could ride
as long as he wanted to keep com-
with the steers. To the
prise of the railroad man the offer
was accepted and the tramp jumped
in. He says he rode the greater
part of the one seventy-
fire miles between and
Reno astride one of the animals, and
when he got cold or tired of that
he stood in among them, where
be found it quite warm and comfort-
able, and would have continued on
bis journey westward had it not been
tor hunger and the absence of any
milch cows in the cars, so he got off
to rustle a little grub.
The railroad men in Reno say that
brake-beam and blind-baggage tour-
are quite common, but they
never before heard of one beating his
way on the back of a steer.
Chicago Hospitality.
The young entered a Chicago
book store hesitatingly, as if she
were uncertain of her location.
I do anything for you,
asked the polite clerk.
I want you to send four or
five books to our house on
Prairie avenue. Here's the address.
Send the bill with the
books do you wish,
inquired the clerk.
any will do, so there's
enough of them. I'm going to have
a girl from Boston visit me and I
want to make her feel at
Detroit Free Press.
Duke of Bavaria's Medical Practice.
What Ha Wanted.
your wife hit you
with the flat iron and poker, did she,
and you want damages
I want ten
of satisfaction, I
kit all de damage I kin stand, sail
Louis Ferdinand, duke of Ba-
recently published an
article in the German Arch-
of Clinical Medicine on Con-
to the Etiology and
of He bases his de-
on the result of his treat-
of twenty-three cases. The
article of the prince has been highly
praised. He is now thirty-four
years old, and is a son of Prince Al-
who died in 1875, and a nephew
of the prince regent of Bavaria. He
follows his profession with the same
assiduity and love as his cousin,
Duke Charles Theodore, tho famous
oculist. He never charges poor
pie for advice or treatment, but
lows the rich to pay him as much as
they wish, devoting the proceeds of
his practice to the maintenance and
improvement of a large hospital
which he built several years ago.
THE BLACK SPOT.
Story of the Hole Burned in
Parlor Carpet.
A Domestic Quarrel
to Away and
to Bar
Match.
FLYING
The
MACHINES.
Would
young West-
side wife to another West-
side wife the other day, you
burn that great black spot on the
parlor
was an replied
Milly.
bad, isn't
And Milly's face took on
a queer expression. don't think
it's too bad. I think it's the best
thing that has happened since I was
married, or before, either, for that
Milly's friend pondered for a min-
she then declared,
can't for the life of me see bow it is
a good thing to have a great hole
burned in a parlor carpet, especially
when I don't think you can afford a
new one any better than Fred and I
It was then Milly's turn to
She finally can't
afford to buy a new carpet, and that
hole is in such a bad place that I
will have to plan a good deal before
I find a way to cover it up. But, for
all that, I think that that is the
luckiest and best thing that has hap-
to me since I was
Milly's friend drew off her gloves,
pulled a couple of cushions about, so
that she was perfectly at ease,
said,
Milly blushed a bit and then
suppose I might as well,
now that I have spoken about it as
I She hesitated, as if at a
loss how to begin her story, and
then plunged boldly in like
and I have been married six
years, never until last night had
we had a quarrel which could be dig-
by the name.
have been plenty of little
spats, of course, but never any out-
and-out quarrel. Last night we did
have one. It's no need telling what
it was about. It began shortly after
dinner after the babies were in
bed. It was pretty bad at the start,
but in half an hour were saying per-
awful things to each other. I
felt that I hated Jack, and I know
from the way he looked at me that
he felt that he hated me.
went from bad to worse,
and finally, about Jack got up,
that was going down-town
; that he didn't care whether he
ever came back or not. I told him t hat
wasn't particular, either, and he
banged out into the hall, threw his
overcoat around him and grabbed
up the first hat he could find. Then
he came back into the parlor and I
said something else mean he
said something that was so awful
that I can't think of it.
he started toward the door.
Now, as long as we have been mar-
Jack has never gone away
from the house without kissing me
good-by. I stood over there by the
door, waiting to see what he would
do. I vowed mentally that if he
didn't try to make up before he went,
away I would go straight home to
mother and never come back again.
I wanted to cry, but wouldn't give
in. and kept saying mean things to
Jack, and he, enraged beyond en-
durance, paid me beck, with inter-
est. I gave him one particularly ex-
shot and he made another
break for the door. He said that he
would never, never come back, and
I think he half meant it, or thought
he did.
stolid looking at him with a
mean smile my all the time,
trying over so hard keep tho tears
back. Jack hesitated again. He
didn't want to go. I gave him no
encouragement to stay and he bit
his lips, said something under his
breath and gave a leap for the hall.
his feet struck where that
burned spot is. Somebody had
dropped a parlor match there and of
course his stepping on it lighted it.
It cracked loudly and Jack gave a
little start of surprise and the most
ludicrous look of fright came over
ins face. It was so funny that I
laughed. And the next thing I knew
Jack had me in his arms and we let
the carpet burn until it burned out.
And that's the reason why I am so
thankful that the parlor match hap-
to burn that in my car-
Express.
Wonderful Things
Accomplish.
Samuel Cabot, a manufacturing
chemist, of Boston, is interested in
flying machines.
At present he is trying to discover
the best form of aerial
which will give the greatest push
with the least amount of power. In
an interview with a reporter of the
Boston he
questions have been
asked, which, perhaps, it
will be worth while to answer now,
and as part of my reply will be in tho
form of a prophecy this may-
be worth the trouble of preservation
to compare with the developments
of the future.
important
of the Greenville Tobacco
Market.
Office of L.
N. C, Feb 1894.
Tips, green
Greenish yellow to
Smokers, common to good to
good to fine
Cutters, common to good to
good to fine to
fine to fancy to
Wrappers, common to
medium to
good to
fine to fancy to
service can
Splendid for a rough. Mrs. Kate
Kidney, Sr., Sin
Cal. writes front fie Golden
. , ,. i have been Dr. Bull's Cough
flight in air serve Manila, Lang-, for ,,.,, ,.
and all who have studied the ways round it a splendid remedy for a
subject thoroughly agree that I am never without a bottle in
speed of will greatly ex-
that of any terrestrial
this follows an entire
economic change in the direction of
rendering immense tracts of com-
worthless territory at
distances of twenty to forty miles
from cities much more available.
There would also result the
of city property in large meas-
to business and storage p- r-
poses. This would to a large extent
accomplish what Henry George sighs
for, but would do it by means which
do not involve any wrong to tho
land owner by the wage earner.
flying navies, capable of
carrying unseen at night large
of explosives to the center of a
city, war would become so
that it would be soon supplanted
by arbitration as a matter of com-
sense and self-preservation.
once established, an
international police system, con-
trolling nations as we do individuals,
and enforcing the decrees of boards
of arbitration, would be enormously
assisted by this power of rapid and,
if necessary, destructive patrolling.
areas of country, now
well-nigh impenetrable, would be
opened to usefulness. Large sources
of wealth would thus be added to tho
civilized world, and would result in
the amelioration of the condition of
the savages of such regions as
Africa.
should have to give up selfish
legislation restriction upon the
commerce of other nations, and
obliged perforce to on a
broader heritage than that of nation
or of
the
WOMANS
t. mm at c Dr. J. fee M l o., j,, ,.
Lit
OLD DOMINION LINE.
SHE WAS
ABSENT-MINDED,
and
A Congressman's Start in
Joe congressman and
president of a great bank, laid the
foundation of his financial prosper-
by feeding on peanuts and
when hustling for the in
Brooklyn. His economy made
his great success in life. He
eats apples occasionally, but says it
is only from force of habit.
some newspaper men who have
found the pot of gold have been
graduated from the ranks, Joe is one
of the most approachable of men,
that is to newspaper men. He
ways sees them and tells them what
they want to know if it is in his pow
Y. America.
How Hannah Fell Off the Horse
Did Not Know It.
The recent celebration of
at Medfield, Mass., was
an event of more than local
Mr. Hezekiah talking
about it, spoke of that old town, its
landmarks, and what it stood for.
Then he said he had learned in con-
with that of one of the fun-
things he ever heard of.
a case of absent-mindedness it was
very, very he said.
Adams was tho first female
writer to receive recognition in this
country. Her home was in Medfield,
and her body was the first to be
buried at Mount Auburn.
was customary then to
horseback to church. used
to ride with her father, on a pillion
behind him, on the same horse. It
happened one Sunday on the way to
church she fell off, pillion and all.
He did not notice it, nor, indeed,
miss her until at the church steps ho
would have helped her alight.
Alarmed, he rode rapidly back,
afraid she must have been seriously
hurt not to have called to him when
she fell. And do you wont
on Mr. laughing
heartily, you know he found her
seated on tho pillion in the middle of
the dusty path, and until he came
up to her she was totally oblivious
to the fact that she was not seated
as usual behind her father on tho
old horse on the way for church.
That's one of the worst instances of
absent-mindedness I ever heard. I
suppose Hannah was busy writing
another book in her mind while sit-
ting there on tho pillion in the
Journal.
An Explanation.
TAR SERVICE
Scientific
Simple
Safe
Sure.
FT
Cures when all else
Testimony of Mr. W.
NEW BERN, N. C.
I began the use of the in
last, discarded medicine entirely, and am
now much improved in health. Am under last-
obligations for the it has done
WRITE US.
We send all information and
FREE.
ATLANTIC CO.,
Washington, D. C.
VICTOR
With only complete bicycle plant in 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
Steamers leave Washington
ville and Tarboro touching at nil land-
on Tar
and Friday at A. M.
Returning leave at A
Tuesday, Thursdays and Saturdays
Greenville A. M. same days.
These departures are subject to stage of
water on Tar
Connecting Washington with
of The Norfolk, Newborn Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their goods
via Dominion Iron
New York. from Hills
Norfolk
more from
more. Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Age a
Washington N.
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
Greenville, N C.
Miss Maria
BOOK
containing receipts which she
lately written for the
SENT FREE
on application to Co.,
Place, New York. Drop a
for it and always buy
Company's
Extract of Beef.
J. S. JENKINS CO.,
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS
n. o.
Is Your Life
Worth Anything
Are there
persons dependent on
your earnings for their
support Are they pro-
for in case of your
death The simplest and
safest way of assuring
their protection is life in-
Business, pro
and working
men generally, should in
sure, for their brains or
their muscle, are their
capital and income too.
Death stops them both.
Insure in the
Equitable Life
and death can not stop
salary or steal your
and your loved ones
will be safe from want
General for the Carolina-,
ROCK HILL. South Carolina.
BREAKFAST-SUPPER.
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING.
COCOA
WATER OR MILK.
Greenville,
Ample Facilities for Re-drying. Large Stock
Buys on Exclusively.
Tyson Raw Is. thinker, Tobacco Board of Trade,
-WHEN IT COMES TO-
STATIONERY
You miss it every time if you fail to cull
what you want this lino at the
for
ft
We make a specialty of this class of goods if
prices, Quality,
count for anything with you, to see us.
JACKSON
Furniture
said the kind,
hearted man, is the second
time you have asked me for ten
cents to help you to a night's
said the man who had just
accosted him.
it is. My opinion is that
you are an
I ain't, kernel; no, I ain't. I
dead honest. You gave me a
dime, didn't
And you don't look much
as if you on the road to a
night's
I am. I invested it square.
You I'm troubled with insomnia,
I am, and it all us takes three doses
of to me
Washington Star.
Insomnia Parties.
Senator Hoar and the Reporter.
On the occasion of the last visit of
United States Senator George
Hoar to New York he was
by a reporter for the New
York Press. He was walking up
and down the corridor, when the re-
porter stepped up to him and
I'm Sena-
tor replied the senator.
senator, I represent the New
York said the reporter.
do, responded tho sen-
grumpily. sir. I'm
glad to Tor,
represented. Good .
he hi.
A society woman seeking
thing has found it In a very
funny direction, if she meets the co-
operation of the guests invited.
Herself a victim of insomnia, she
comes to her own relief and that of
her fellow sufferers by
cards three times each week, the
earthly given for this strictly
feminine social being
p. m. to a.
Guests must appear in negligee
toilets, tea gowns, etc., and even
flannel bath robes will rank as full
dress on these occasions. Not a
bright idea must be advanced, and
if music is allowed it is only the
doleful or lullaby style that will be
acceptable.
Lights dim, plenty of couches and
easy chairs provided, and refresh-
chocolate and thin
wafers.
The greatest compliment paid to
the hostess will excess of
Ly falling asleep at the earliest
possible
A Great-Niece of Gen. Jackson.
Mrs. Donelson Wilcox, of Dupont
Circle, is the great-niece of
Jackson, says the Washington
Post. Her father was Maj.
son, who was a nephew of Mrs. Jack-
son. She was so much of an invalid
that being unable to undertake the
arduous social duties, she
her nephew's beautiful wife to assist
her. And it was at the white house
that Mrs. Wilcox was born, in the
same room which was the scene of
Mrs. Harrison's death. She was
Jackson's pet and delight.
Her husband was Congressman John
A. Wilcox, of Mississippi, since
his death she has occupied a position
in the treasury department. Her
daughter, Miss Mary Wilcox, is very
accomplished, and is popular in
society.
Saucy.
The Transcript records
another instance of a foolish
and a answer.
now, is my
said a young painter to a friend.
the matter with that,
don't answered the
friend, I should say it W a
case of art
COMPANY
JACKSON, TENN.
-o-
MANUFACTURERS OF
AND OFFICE
FURNITURE.
Schools and Churches seated
in the best manner. Offices
Send for
A ft NORTH CAROLINA
R. R. TIMETABLE.
In Effect December 4th,
GOING EAST.
GOING WEST.
Pa.
Ex Sun.
Ar.
P. M.
P. M.
P. M
P. M.
STATIONS
Goldsboro
k ii -lull
Pass. Daily
Ex Sun.
Envelopes a pack op.
Note Paper M a quire up.
Letter, Fools Cap and
Legal Cap equally low.
Tablet from up.
Slate Pencils per
up.
Load Pencils dos. up.
Pen Points in cents
per dozen up.
are com-
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best
authorities and are
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion every-
where.
act gently
but promptly upon the
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual
offensive breath and head-
ache. One taken at the
first symptom cf indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
may be
of nearest druggist.
Tubules
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-
tor's
and
A FEW SPECIALTIES
We are sole agents for A
the very best for school
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage beats any
on tho market. Our Diamond Glue
Magic Cement will mend anything but broken
hearts.
Every business should have DAD
KER FOUNTAIN
last a life time are sold nowhere else in
town.
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence are
the prettiest in town. also keep Mourning
Paper. have Slates, Blank Books,
Memorandum Books, Time Books, Erasers, Rub-
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils.
Cups. Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book
Marks, Pen Holders lots of other things.
BOOKS AND NOVELS.
If you want anything to read come look over
Our supply. Any book not on hand will be or-
for you.
Now remember the place and the only place
at which you can get those goods at such low
prices.
ItEl STORE.
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No No
Oct. Us, dally Fast Mall,
ex
We Idem 12.35 pm OS pm
Ar pm pm
J pm
Tarboro pm
Rocky Mt p m ll pm
Ar
Ar
SO
TRAINS
No H
dally Sun
IA SO
Ar I
iV
Ar Wilson m
SO
Ar.
A. M
A. M.
A. M.
A. M.
Train connects with Wilmington
Weldon train bound North, leaving
Goldsboro a. m., and with D.
train West, p. m.
Train connects with
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro
and with W. W. train
the North at p. m.
S. L. DILL,
Superintendent.
PATENTS
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat
conducted for
Our is Opposite U,
and we can secure patent in time than those
remote from Washington. i
Send model, drawing or photo., with
We advise, if or not, free of
charge Our fee not due till patent la secured.
A Pam How to Obtain with
cost of same in the U. S and foreign countries
sent free. Address,
tOP. Washington D, C.
HAIR BALSAM
mi l and the
Hair to Color.
Cum hair
FIVE POINTS I
The
u CONSUMPTIVE
W. L DOUGLAS
GENTLEMEN.
and Dress Shoe.
CO Police Shoe, Soles.
for
and 81.75 for Boys.
LADIES AND MISSES,
any dealer
offer you W. t,.
at a minced
or lie thorn with-
name
the bottom, put him
down a a fraud.
A r
Tarboro p m
except
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 8.40 p. m., Halifax 4.40
p. in., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. m.
Greenville 0.28 p. m., Kinston pm
Returning, Kinston 7.20 a.
Parker's
Tonic, ll m
are easy fitting, and giro
, .-e advertised than any oilier make. Try one pair and be con-
of W. L. name and price on the bottom, which
, dollars annually those who wear them.
sale W. L. gain customer, which help to
full line of good. , ,, a, m pron.
money oil your of the or
DOUGLAS, KM.
R. L. DAVIS BRO. N. C.
8.22 a. m. Arriving Hal J
at it. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. a
except
Trains on Branch
Washington a, in. an
8.40 a. in. Tarboro 0.50; returning
leaves 4.40 p. 6.00
p. in,, arrives Washington p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb
A Raleigh R. R. daily except
day, M, Sunday S CO P M,
Plymouth 0.20 p. m., p.
Returning Plymouth dally
5.80 a. m., Sunday
N AV 12,80.
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson.
Branch leave
ville a in, arrive Rowland p m
Returning leave Rowland p
p m. Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leas
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A S
N C. a M. Rs
laves N C AM
N C A M.
Train on Nashville Branch lea
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville SO
P Hope P M. Returning
caves Spring Hope H no t w
arrives R. Mount U A
M, dally except Sin
Trains OB Lints R. P.
7.80 p. m., arrive n
m. Returning leave a.
arrive 7.15 a. m. Daily
Sunday.
Train on Clinton Brand, leaves
Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
M Returning
ton at A M, and PM. conn A
with and
Train No. makes a
Weldon for all point North dally.
via Richmond, and dally except Sun-
day via Hay Line, also at Rocky
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A
Carolina railroad for Norfolk
points via Norfolk,
Gent nil
, .-.


Title
Eastern reflector, 28 February 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 28, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17682
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