Eastern reflector, 16 May 1894






DO
NO
Thai the place to
rout
BOOKS
-AND-
STATIONERY
IS
AT
Reflector Bookstore.
Eastern
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL XII
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MAY 1894.
NO.
joints I
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REFLECTOR OFFICE
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Henry
REAL ESTATE COLLECTING
AGENCY.
FOR nice residence on
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nice neighborhood.
Huns, and lot in
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parties wishing to purchase would do
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PARR PLACE, NEW YORK.
STATE NEWS
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes are of Genera Interest.
Tho n of the News
The street railway was
sold at auction for
statement is made
to the Davis monument
fund at Richmond.
Four cows belonging to James
of- county, were
killed by one bolt of lightning.
The State convention of the
King's Daughters will meet in
May
A boy at was killed
one day last week, as be stood
near window during a
storm.
Senator George Gray, of Dela-
ware, will deliver ad-
dress at Trinity com-
The Supreme Court has granted
a new trial to Edwin Fuller who
was convicted of the murder of
B. C- Parker at Fayetteville.
It is stated Geo. H. White,
colored, is be the Republican
nominee for congress in this dis-
this Press-
and Banks aged
respectively and were found
in the yard yesterday by their
mother, having a fight with a big
copper bead snake. They had
almost succeeded in Killing it
when Mrs. Auten arrived on the
Observer.
The North Carolina
t .
. .;
the complete. This
treat Temperance
of too
Ions. Be son and eel the genuine.
Sod only by
The Chas. E. Hires Co.,
l--a f r, Book.
.
and and all Pat-J
t business con J f r MODERATE
Office is Opposite II, S.
leas
u a,
I model, drawing or with
We arise, c of
fee iv t due patent b
Pamphlet. m
of the Us . and
PATENT WASHINGTON. D. C
The North Carolina
Assembly, which is the largest
State educational organization in
the States, will meet
in its eleventh annual
in its own handsome
at City, N. C-, on
June and in session
until
The work of the coming session
of Assembly will be more in-
and valuable to teachers
than ever before. The subjects
to be discussed are new
timely, the very largest
and ability of the most
prominent of North Carolina
teachers will be given to the con-
of every question.
There have also been made en-
with some of the most
noted educators of other States,
who will be present on the
Railroad rate;, to the Assembly
are very low, tickets will be
on June with limit
of return until 15-
membership coupons will be
attached to each ticket, which will
entitle the holder to all privileges
of the session. Baggage may
checked through to Morehead
City from any in the State,
thus saving all trouble of trans-
at Goldsboro.
and other
concerning the Assembly
may obtained upon
to E. G. Secretary,
Raleigh, N. C
The Power of Gold.
He loved her.
She loved him.
loved each other.
But the father objected because
the young man was almost a total
stranger.
The time had come when the
youth must ask the father for his
daughter, and he feared to go to
He held a long conference with
his beloved.
Ho told her he did not want to
ask her father.
she asked in a
tremulous whisper, much
are you worth
million dollars, he
responded proudly.
Her face shone in the twilight.
you don't have to ask
she said with simple trust.
him mow that, and be will
ask
And George gave the old man
a Free Press.
A CONGRESSMAN'S PAY AND
DUTIES.
The absence of members of
either house of Congress from
their seats is too often spoken of
as if all absentees were en-
gaged on business of their own,
neglecting that of their con-
; and we constantly read
what are intended to be sharp
reproofs of our representatives
based upon the assumption that
when they are not in their seats
they are neglecting their public
duties. The usual remedy pro-
posed is a deduction from every
congressman's pay for all the
that be neglects to to
his country's service.
We have not been remiss in
urging upon Congress to hurry-
up tariff legislation. Indeed, we
believe that the Dispatch was one
of the first papers in the laud to
dwell upon the importance of an
early settlement of that question.
But it must not be forgotten that
our representatives
spend a great deal of time in
waiting personally upon their
constituents who visit Washing-
ton city for one purpose and an-
other- Indeed, suspect that
they firmly hold to the opinion
that they would earn all the pay
get if they did nothing but
second the efforts of people from
districts to secure employ-
in the government service.
Day after day our telegraphic
columns testify that Mr. Jones,
of the First District, or Mr. Tyler,
of the Second, or Mr. Wise, of
the Third, or some other Virginia
congressman, has been pressing
upon the head of some depart-
the claims certain of his
constituents to places under the
National Government. In like
manner, these same congressmen
have to attend to the requests of
delegations of their constituents
sent to Washington to see that
peanuts, Irish sumac,
tobacco, iron-ore, coal, and what
not put upon the free list.
Again, a congressman's duties
are not confined to the work of
legislation, or to that of seeing
his constituents when these hap-
pen to visit Washington. It is
just as important a part of his
duties to bad legislation
as it is to promote good
Much of the time which a
congressman spends out of bis
seat is devoted to committee
ties, if ho happens to be on a
committee empowered to sit
the sitting of Congress.
Much more of his time is in
before committees of
which he is not a member to
vent legislation which would be
injurious to business interests in
his own district.
In a word, a congressman's
place is not a sinecure. He has
SUFFRAGE IN LOUISIANA.
The committee on revision of
the Louisiana Constitution, now
in session at Baton Rouge, have
adopted an amendment to article
concerning the qualification of
electors. After stating ago.
registration, the
Ho shall
have paid his poll tax for the
year next proceeding the election ;
he shall be to read the Con-
of the State in his moth-
tongue, or shall be the bona
fide owner of property, real or
personal, located in this State
and assessed to him for tho year
next the election at a
cash valuation of not less than
mother has a
significance in Louisiana,
as there are so many people there
who can only read and speak in
French. However, this provision
would likewise make voters of
Italians, Germans, and others of
foreign birth who can read their
language but not ours.
We do not quite understand
tho proposed poll-tax prerequisite.
If it leaves any opening for the
voter to pay in 1894 a tax which
was due in 1893 it may not work
well otherwise the provision is a
good one. Virginia tried the
poll-tax prerequisite, but our con-
proviso on the subject
was not as rigorous as it should
have been, and soon became
popular, and was repealed several
years ago.
It will be observed that the
committee propose to give suffrage
to any man who can read
who is otherwise and
to any man who cannot read, pro-
that he is the owner of
worth of real or
property.
If these provisions become a
part of the organic law of
the number of ignorant and
venal voters in that State will be
vastly reduced-
In time every Southern State
will have put some restriction
upon suffrage. Experience
shown that it is a necessity.
may profit by the
of Mississippi and Lou-
In addition to the persons who
are given the right of suffrage, as
proposed by the Louisiana com-
was should
who have born arms at the call of
the State during any war,
or Thus
every such veteran would be en-
titled to vote whether he could
read or could show he held
property of the value of
Some of the Northern and West-
err. States accorded the right of
suffrage to all foreigners who en-
LET US BE JUST.
When a man is mad his first
impulse is to hit tie first head in
sight. Times are hard the
most conspicuous object view
is the party, in power
at Washington. A groat many
people, acting upon impulse in-
stead of reason, are dis-
posed to hit it. These
should remember that we are still
under the laws that the
Republican party gave
and the financial sys-
excepting only that tho
purchase law has been
pealed having been in force
three years. Those people
the Democratic
also for its recent issue of
bonds, and yet they should re-
member that Mr. Foster,
dent Harrison's Secretary of tho
Treasury, advised, in his last re-
port to Congress, that
be make for on issue of bonds.
Why Because the Treasury
which had been left full by Cleve-
land when he went out of the
presidency in 1889, was nearly
empty by tho close of Harrison's
term and the gold reserve was
declining so rapidly that Mr.
Foster and everybody else saw
that unless some means were
taken to protect it it would soon
fall below the hundred million
limit. People forget these things
when they shouldn't- To blame
the Democratic party for tho
hard times, which began tho
winter of have been get-
ting harder ever since, for
the nation's empty treasury now
is no more rational than to
an administrator because his in-
testate was a spendthrift and he
found the estate insolvent.
CAROLINA.
What a Northern Editor Thinks of the
Old North State.
North Carolina is now single
from the other reconstructed
States haying solely
by the efforts of her own people,
a higher degree of general pros-
than she ever before at-
in her history.
She has a more prosperous and
thrifty people to-day than at any
period of the past, and there is
more capital employed and less
debt, State individual, than
at any time in the last century.
Texas has the Old
North State of her large
influx of immigration and wealth
but North has fewer
foreigners and more complete-
homogeneous population
than any other State of the Union.
Since tho rescue of the State
from the tempest of profligacy
that swept over it after the war,
taxes steadily diminished, and
the schools have increased until
they proffer education to every
child this commonwealth, re-
of color.
Her legitimate debt is steadily
her treasury has a largo
surplus, her humane institutions,
conducted with equal care and
outlay for both races, i
meats of credit; her public
have kept pace with
the growing wants of her people
her authority reflects the pride of
tho State integrity,
and thrift content are tho
blessings of her people-
When it is considered
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Report
Baking
ABSOLUTELY PURE
THE PRESS AND ITS ENEMIES.
The New York World says,
with great a
in or out of Congress
is especially venomous against
newspapers, one or two things is
pretty certain Either the news-
papers have exposed him in
something discreditable or he is
afraid of being
This deserves to be taken to
heart. in or out of
Congress, who have writhed
the deserved lashings of the
press, or who wish to discount
the effect of the lashings they are
to get, often affect to sneer at it,
using such terms as news-
and the like, seeking
thus to belittle the which
holds them to account. The
should know that the news-
It is estimated that the narrow
tires on wagon wheels cost the
farms s of this country
ti year, in the loss of time
and horseflesh loads over
bad roads, made bad and kept
bad by the narrow tires. It
to us that they ought to get
tired of Star.
Gen. Alger says that he begun
life barefooted All of
us did, is, about
half of us began life as barefooted
boys. We must give the girls a
Observer.
Notice.
The People Murmur.
The people of New York,
have. There is less corruption
among them than there is among
politicians; and the cry of
from whatever
quarter it comes, is the cry of the
purchasable, who are afraid to
have the search-light turned upon
their own deeds.
There is no reason why any
average intelligence
be able to
between the newspapers
which are honest and
variety of crops, from wheat to which have a proper
that every variety of j of their public
To whom it may My wile
A. White having left my place
without my consent to re-
turn to my bed board, this is to for
bid all whatsoever not to fur-
board or house or in liar-
papers are the best friends her, In order that may
North Carolina has every import
ant mineral within her borders, not
from gold to iron; that she has
every variety of soil for
a climate, from the sunny southern j striving in good
lore, Norfolk, and many Other chm Uh for the promotion of the
no time to spare from his duties. were
though these duties may not honorably discharged therefrom.
Thus a foreigner might have ac-
quired suffrage by less than
I thirty residence in such a
one and the same moment the
hall of the House of .
. . t n l l Virginia is going to a con-
in one of the depart-
always keep him in
Let us not overwork
censure him for not
his seat,
him, not-
being at
Dispatch.
is
HAIR BALSAM
sod a the hair.
I a growth.
Fails to Restore Gray
I H to it Youthful
CONSUMPTIVE
cur for
CO, N-
From a letter by Rev. J.
of Mich., we
are permitted to make this extract
have HO hesitation ill recommending
King's New Discovery, as the re-
were marvelous the
case my wife. While I was pastor cf
the Church at junction I
she was brought down with Pneumonia
with Grippe. Terrible
of coughing would last
hours with little interruption and it
as if she not survive them.
A friend recommended Dr. King's New
Discovery; it was quick in its work
highly satisfactory in Trial
free at John T. Wooten's Drug
size and
Judge Proverbs.
What a statesman don't
sometimes
a farmer has to fasten
his with a he has an
that he kin help himself by
into
The more rules a
congressman the less likely
ho is to tend to the he was
fer.
When a man wants to go into
he ain't a
but how much money
he kin put up fer
poses.
A man kin be a and
ho kin be but he got
no time to he to be
both at the same time.
ain't no way how
many votes is to a
licker tell the jug's empty.
now and then the
liberty wonders what she is
here fer.
The money power is a
majority all the time.
little the purity
in that don't need
The country wood be full
monuments church
every
long. Year by year the
of a convention in
number. When our people see
how easily other Southern States
ate able to rid themselves of ob-
voters, they will not
consent to continue living under
the Underwood Constitution.
cities are arranging to hold pub
lie meetings to pass resolutions
beseeching the Senate to act
promptly on the tariff
stop talking, hold all-day sessions,
go to voting on the various
amendments proposed or to I
proposed.
It is inconceivable that all
senators know or fully appreciate
the cost and distress which delay j
imposes upon the public. If they
rightly understood the situation
we believe that they would
willing to sit nine or ten hours a
day until the bill was amended,
and returned to the ;
I peak of tho Appalachian range ;
l that she has enough
in a single river to spin and weave
the cotton of the South,
land that her lauds are nearly as
I cheap and her climate better
than the these facts
are weighed in tho scale of
the momentous meaning
of a New South, may be under-
stood the North as it is now
understood in the
K. in Philadelphia
Times.
AS TO IMMIGRATION.
general welfare and which
are in the market for illegitimate
gains. The papers of the first-
class deserve the confidence and
her home. JOHN WHITE,
Till April 1804.
for Greenville t
Salem the lust Sunday St eleven
O'clock Chapel three
o'clock.
Grove on second 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 no the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
Smith,
J. C.
tore.
Baptist Services.
Below are the regular appointment
of the people, for these pester the
are their surest bulwarks, and i , . .
. , , At fourth
man who would decry them days each month, morning night,
may well regarded with night.
They have put jails and At Sunday in each
House. Hence they should lie
told that every day of delay costs The Richmond Times says that
this country a million of dollars officer of hi rank in a West-
that every such day of delay railroad system was recently
penitentiaries many of those who
have been loudest in
of them, and driven many
others in disgrace from public
position. Let it be remembered,
when one is heard railing at the
press, that
e'er felt the bailer draw
With good opinion of the
of He
was delighted to see the orderly
brings financial death upon in one Richmond
business man, it is the
duty of Democrats to
selves on record daily against
this merciless waste of time.
The people are hoping and
praying for action ; not for prom-
but for action. They want a
good bill of course, but they
that are more likely to get
Reward.
The reader of this paper will be pleas-
ed to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that has been
able lo cure in sill its stages, and i-
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the
j only positive cure known to the medical
way in which business proceeded I fraternity. Catarrh being a
disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is
month, morning and night.
At Ephesus, Person
Sunday in each month and Saturday be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are regular appointments
if Rev. A. Hector
and third Sundays in
mouth, morning and evening.
Sunday in each
month, morning evening.
other Sunday
St. Johns, Sun-
day in each month, morning evening
Holy Innocents,
Sunday morning.
in it, and exclaimed; if
your bring you many
curses they also secure you tho
blessing of keeping away from
you the foreign anarchists who
are the curse of our This
Special Officer
taken internally, acting directly the
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys-
thereby destroying the foundation
of the am giving the patient
strength by building up the
and assisting nature doing it
work. The proprietors have much
in its curative powers, they
, i .,, ,, , i i t ii offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
its undivided and enthusiastic at- Associated that it falls to cure. Bend for list of
patch from Cleveland, O., a few testimonials.
days ago which, describing the
riot there,
such a one when tho Senate i to De n connection
to the tariff than if tilings
continue as at present. Hence
the proposed meetings. The
are aroused and indignant,
and from all quarters of the
try will soon come protests ; pro-
tests against the present useless
consumption of time and
destruction of many
interests.
Without a doubt much of the
of the Reading railroad's police responsibility for delay in the
tells an interesting
that recently happened to
him. He was walking through a
deep wood one day when he was
startled by the appearance of a
rough-looking fellow, who
a revolver at his head and
demanded all his valuables.
said I've got
is and a watch that my father
gave all said
the highwayman. The officer
complied with as good grace as
the allowed. Then
he said to the
work for a farmer near by who
gave me that money to buy a
cow with. He won't believe
have been robbed. Can't you
shoot a few holes through my
and in a jiffy four holes
were shot through it. Seeing
that there was still one bullet left
in the revolver, took off
his hat and persuaded the fellow
to fire a bullet through the crown.
Then he pulled his own pistol
statesman had as big a one and lodged the robber in the jail
as he thinks he ought t have. j at where he received ten
Detroit Free Press. sentence.
Senate is due to the Republicans,
but the Democrats force
them to a vote soon. In doing
this Vice-President Stevenson
may render assistance which will
greatly increase tho popularity
which ho Dis-
patch.
Just Like two School Girls.
Washington, April fact
that when they met this morning
in the Senate chamber, the North
Carolina Senators locked arms
and held a pleasant confab, was
remarked upon from the report-
gallery, am the junior Sen
afterward said Mr. Jarvis,
I do not propose to forget
the fact; we will co-operate for
the good of the Both
Senators think the tariff is in
good shape that the bill will
pass in reasonable time. Senator
Ransom is emphatic on that
side.
Senator and Mrs. Jarvis called
on Mrs. Cleveland to-day He
had already visited the President.
He will go to the departments.
street riot there,
were English speaking
in the mob. It was a rabble
composed almost entirely of
Sold by Druggist,
Toledo, O.
Tho tobacco growers of North
Carolina will in
that the Attorney Gen-
of Illinois has instituted pro-
file South has not enjoyed tho j to force the American
increase of population that tho I Tobacco the
North and West have from the i cigarette of that State,
influx of immigration, and are tho ground that it is doing
Z.
F.
Jeweler,
Greenville, N. c.
Watches, cloths and Jewelry repaired
at reasonable fall on meat the
comer store near
II F. PRICE,
Land
Greenville. N. V.
at the King House.
told, in explanation of this,
will not come to a sec-
in which tho colored
is so large a factor as it is
business in violation of tho State
statutes and is obnoxious to tho
common law. If he will put every
devil of them jail, including
in the South. That is all right- j those who sit in corners,
Let them stay away, if will.
welcome all orderly foreigners
but as between bomb throwing
or riot-making foreigners on the
om hand, and home made
on the other, we choose the
niggers. The fact is that we are
getting along pretty well down
here. There is no
except in the imagination of the-
and the people who are
charitably deploring our
and our failure to
tho tide of
build churches and endow col-
all will be
Observer.
Pour Bis
Having the needed merit to more than
make good all the advertising claimed
for them, following four remedies
reached a phenomenal sale. Dr.
Dr. King's New Discovery, for con-
and Colds, each bot-
Bitters, the
great remedy for Liver, Stomach and
Kidneys, Salve, the
back- best in the world, and Dr. King's New
Life Fills, which are a public pill. AH
these remedies are guaranteed to do
just what Is claimed For them and the
dealer whose name Is attached here-
as it comes, had much better be with ,, lo more
in our situation than to be catch-1 them, at John L. Wooten's Drug
as they are, the driftwood of s
foreigners, who are creating riots
in Northern streets and are not
able to understand the orders of
American
Observer.
The marvelous success of Hood's
is based upon the corner stone
of absolute merit. Take Hood's
throughout the spring months.
The standing collar does not
often figure as a life preserver
but it did in the case of a denizen
of Chicago whose stiffly starched
collar turned a bullet which was
shot at him and would have gone
through his neck if it hadn't hit
the collar and
ton Star.
.
DENTIST,
i.
E. Moore. L. I. Moore,
Williamston. Greenville.
ft
X E A W,
N. C.
Office under Opera House. Third St.
L. FLEMING,
Elf
N.
attention to business.
at Tucker old stand.
D JAMB,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, X V.
Practice in all courts. Collections a
J. JARVIS.
BLOW,
L. BLOW
GREENVILLE, N. C.
in all the Courts.
A TYSON,
B. F.
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW.
C.
Prompt attention given to
A SKINNER,
at-L a w.
n. g.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Proprietor
WEDNESDAY. MAY Kith, 1894.
at the at Greenville,
N. C, as mail matter.
The Southern Baptist
met in its annual session last
week at Dallas. Texas. There
were a number in attendance
from this State.
A. Southern industrial congress
will assemble in Augusta, on
tho of May. It will be corn-
corn of delegates appointed
by the chief executives to which
also will by the Gov-
of Georgia, the Governors
from ail the Southern States.
Among tho speakers invited to
Gen. John C
of Virginia, on Southern
Transportation Senator Jarvis,
of North Carolina- on
to Southern Progress Governor
Carr, of North Carolina, on
Revival of the Agricultural Inter-
of the
WASHINGTON LETTER,
MEETING.
After several months of delay
the nomination of Hon. P. M.
Simmons for Collector of the
Eastern North Carolina district
was on last Friday confirmed by
the Senate.
The laying of the corner stone
of the Confederate monument at
Raleigh next week promises to be
a memorable occasion. Raleigh
is expecting an immense crowd
present.
Capt. H. of Scot-
land Neck, has gone the way of
the disappointed office seeker.
lie could not get the position he
wanted under the Democratic
administration so shows his dis-
appointment and spite by kick-
ins out of that party and joining
the Populist.
The Wilmington in
commenting upon tho addresses
published in the two
weeks ago, that were delivered at
the Vance memorial meeting
here by Messrs. L- C- Latham. E.
A- Andrew Joyner and
Harry Skinner, nays it supposes
all the speakers are lawyers.
Not all of them, brother- Mr.
is not a lawyer, but is Clerk of the
Superior Court.
When tho Court of
South Carolina rendered a de-
that tho dispensary law
was unconstitutional, many rush-
ed in to open bar rooms and be-
selling liquor. This has been
stopped, however, by another de-
from the Supreme Court
that the State is under
rule. This is butter still,
neither the State nor individuals
can now sell liquor Sooth
Carolina-
The suggests that
when tho County Commissioners
and the Magistrates of the county
hold their joint meeting tho first
Monday in Juno to levy taxes and
transact such other business as
may come before them,
also consider the matter of work-
the convicts of the county
upon the public roads This
plan hr . been adopted by a
of counties in tho State, and
we have yet to of an instance
where it does not work
Pitt county certainly
poor enough roads for some-
thing to be done to them, and
every person in the county should
feel an interest in having them
improved. Much can be in
that direction by working con-
upon them.
Writing from Washington to
his paper, the Carolinian, about
Mr. Josephus
Daniels
A funny thing happened a few
days ago. I was out driving with
three other gentlemen. Sitting
in the carriage with two of them,
one a new comer in Washington,
and the other I
asked them their opinion of
and whether they
thought he ought to be re-elected
to Congress. The
was decided in his denunciation,
and the equally pro-
in stating his that
would be
Before we were joined by the
fourth gentleman said am
going to ask Col. X------his
ion. wager that he is a
man- has lived
in Washington rive years, and I
have observed a residence of
that duration makes men callous
to immorality public
Furthermore, -1 if you
will take a census of tho office-
holders Washington, you
To day in Raleigh the Central
Democratic Executive Committee
will meet. Tins meeting is for
the purpose of calling the State
Committee together to confer as
to the proper time for holding the
State Convention- The present
outlook is that all conventions
this year will be much later than
two years ago. While much work
is to be done there is hardly need
of a campaign as long as the last
one.
Last Thursday at Fredericks-
burg, Va. a monument was
veiled to Mary the mother
George Washington, the first
President of our Nation. It was
a great occasion and a great
speech was delivered by Senator
John W. Daniel- President
Cleveland, who presided over the
ceremonies. Steven-
sou, most o the members of the
Cabinet and many other
men honored the
with their presence
holders in Washington, you will
find that nine-tenths of the
are
and nine t u f the ban rs
are far him. The new fellows,
fresh from the country, have not
rel passed stage regarding
vice as a creature of
and even if they
they are but ready to
At this juncture Col. X------joined
us. I requested the other two
gentlemen to give me a chance to
prove my theory- Col. X------was
an enthusiastic
as I expected. He had
lived here rive years which
is the
If living in Washington causes
men to lose their chastity and
morality so soon, two terms for
a Congressman and one term for
a Senator is as long as any man
should be allowed to stay there.
Of course there are many
to Mr. Daniels theory.
oar Regular
Washington D- C May
The more tho Democrats study
tho proposed amendments to the
Wilson bill, and the causes which
led up to their adoption by tho
sub-committee, tho less they
object to them as a whole. When
the amendments wore first made
public there were some extremely
vigorous protest from Demo-
Senators and
and for a time it looked as
though the concessions made in
those amendments might prove
to be but another case of
of tho frying pan into
the but to-day the feeling is
decidedly better, and the impress-
ion general, regardless of politics,
that tho proposed
will all be adopted and the bill
passed by Democratic votes.
Even Senator Hill is expected to
vote for tho bill.
understood that he has about
made up his mind to first test the
sense of the Senate regarding the
income tax, by moving that the
bill be recommitted to the
committee with instructions
to report it without the income
tax. He declined positively but
politely to make any additional
statement concerning his
since the amendments were
made public. There are few
Democrats, however, who believe
that his vote will cast against
the bill when it is put upon its
passage.
Secretary Hoke Smith made
no mistake when he determined,
about a year ago, that the con-
tract for printing tho Patent
Office Gazette should open to
competitive bidding every year.
Last year the saving was com-
and the scandal involving the
name of Hon. Josiah Quincy with
the successful bidders, the Nation-
Lithographing Co. followed
but this years bidding enables
the Secretary to have tho wont
done by the same old concern
that did it for years and at a
price nearly below what
was paid for it for the fiscal year
ending June 18113-
is on its
last ledge in Washington.
Browne and Jones counted upon
being acquitted when they were
tried for violating the laws for
the protection of the Capitol
building the grounds, and they
have not yet recovered from the
N. C, May
The Board of Commissioners
of Pitt county met this date in
the regular session, present C
Dawson, chairman Leonidas Flem-
and T. E. Keel.
The following orders for
were
Martha Nelson Margaret
Bryan H D Smith
Lydia M
Nancy
Susan Susan
Lucinda Smith Patsy
Henry Harris
Crawford Smith
Andrews Ken-
Henderson Eliza Ed-
wards Carlos Gotham
J H Henry i
Sam and Amy Cherry Fan-
Tucker J O G
Alice Corbett Easter Vines
Alex Harris Winifred
Taylor G Mary Briley
Lydia John Ham
W U J G Nelson
James Long 00-
Tho following orders for
t purposes were
G P Buck C D
M W Parker
A B Ellington Chas
Skinner W P
T King C John
Flanagan D C Moore
J B Cherry Co H T King
J O Proctor Bro Dr.
W E Warren Jacob
D J Whichard E W
King W T Smith E
A Bland It L Roberson
J A Harrington E A
S W Burney GO, P. King
R W King Andrew
Robinson B S Sheppard
If A Bryant J M Loyd
S Fleming Henry
Brown Edwards
Dr W H Bagwell E A
R W King
Harding E O
LATE ITEMS OF STATE NEWS.
North Carolina stood sixth at
the World's Fair in point of merit
of agricultural display.
George of Greens-
won three races in the
tournament at Atlanta.
Consul General T-
and his private secretary, Mr. 1-
E. have arrived in
China.
Mr. George W- Watts, of Dur-
ham, is to build a hospital
in that town and will endow it
with
President J. S- Carr and
Hal. Ayer, are endeavoring
to induce President Cleveland to
attend the State Fair.
YA G- Sugg, a young mar-
man while seining on
day with a party of friends, was
drowned in a creek near
M. London, tho oldest lawyer
in Wilmington, N. C-, and one of
the and most distinguished
in State, last Thursday
night, aged years.
The sale of the Western Bail
road will lake place at Statesville
tho 21st of August. The min-
bid is with a de-
posit of required.
John II. Benson, a former
treasurer of county, who
embezzled several thousand
of tho county's funds and
absconded, was last captured
at his homo near
In several counties in tho upper
section of the State seventeen
year locusts are reported to have
put in their appearance in largo
numbers- We hoar of note down
An Esteemed Pastor
Found Cure in Hood's After
Other Medicines railed
After the
Muscular
shock of being convicted. They
have applied for a new trial, but
there t the
that
The new Town Council at their
meeting Monday night took some
very proper steps in the
of economy- While they raised
the salary of the night watchman
from to per month and
empowered him with full police
duties they will not adopt a
more just measure than this
throughout their entire
they reduced tho salaries
of the two day policemen more
than enough to pay this differ-
Their making the Mayor
a salaried officer at a year and
requiring all fees that he has
heretofore received to turned
into the treasury will another
considerable saving to the town.
Now the makes an-
other suggestion to them, that is
to let the policemen purchase
their own clothes and not furnish
them at the expense of the
town. A blue uniform may-
cause a policeman to look a bit
more but it does not make
him one whit a better officer.
Besides the Councilmen no
more justified in furnishing the
day policemen with suits of
clothes than they would be in
furnishing tho Mayor, the Clerk,
the night police and the lamp
lighter- Again, we think it would
be a saving to tho town if the
street lamps were lighted by con-
tract instead of the town furnish-
the oil and paying the lighter
a salary to attend to tho lamps.
The saving resulting from tho
measures already adopted by the
Council will leave more funds
with which general improvements J at
in the town may be made-
The Supreme Court has sent
Governor Carr a letter containing
its opinion regarding the length
of terms of justices and judges.
The court does not entirely agree
with Attorney General Osborne.
but at time compliments
him highly as it also does the
opinions of able lawyers.
The court says that the
construction pat upon the
matter is entitled to the highest
consideration and it is of the
opinion that any doubts existing
should be resolved in tho way
that the Legislature hod con-
the constitutional
in that a good many acts of
Assembly had been passed
elections to for
justices of the Supreme Court and
judges of the Superior Court in
all cases where the original eight-
year term had not been tilled by-
popular election. That is to say
the court holds that when the
Governor appoints to fill a
the election following such an
appointment is to fill only the
expired term and does not have
the of entitling the person
elected to the full term of eight
years. The court says that when
there popular elections the
safe and sound rule to be follow
is to give the people at the
earliest period tho op-
to exercise their power
and authority in filling the
The court does not give an
elaborate discussion to the sec-
of the constitution and the
terms employed therein in refer-
to filling vacancies, but says
that that is unnecessary when
considered in view of the
construction which has been
repeatedly put upon it. But the
court treats the question mainly
in connection with the history of
our own court as it has existed
under the constitution of 1868
and the amended constitution of
1875, which went into effect Jan-
1st. 1877-
The opinion is by the
Chief Justice, Justices and
Burwell- The three have no per-
interest whatever in the
matter as Judge Avery's term
does not expire for two years and
Judges Shepherd and Burwell
being recently appointed will, of
course, have to be elected at the
next election-
While the decision cannot,
strictly speaking, be termed tho
judgment of tho court, it has
the effect weight
will have ti I
will get it. They
fined or imprisoned, or
both, in the discretion of the
Judge- The commissary depart-
at the camp has
begun to get low and the men
now only given two meals a day,
and desertions are getting quite
frequent The health officer of
the District of Columbia is also
after them with a sharp stick,
reported their camp to be
a menace to the health of the
city, and given them a
peremptory notice to put it in a
healthy condition or get out.
Force has been added to this
recommendation by information
stating that two deserters from
s were with
smallpox at Philadelphia,
is trying to curry favor by de-
that he has no connection
with the various bodies of
headed for Washington and
styling themselves
Tho House on Labor
gave him ten minutes to make an
ass of himself, and ho did it in
half that time.
Public Printer Benedict took
charge of tho Government Print
office this week, and he is
already up to his neck in the
work of reducing the force which
has been kept far too large by
Mr. Palmer, because ho did not
care to discharge any of the Re-
publicans was compelled by
Democratic Senators and Rep-
to put on a few
Democrats. Mr, Benedict says
of tho force is
without precedent. There are
3.594 persons on tho rolls, and
when I stepped out before I left
2.132- We cannot accommodate
so many ; there is no place for
them to won- are
now working only from one-half
to one-third time i daily furloughs
being a regular thing. This
has got to reduced down
to a working basis, and I shall do
it as soon as The
Republicans in the office all
looking for their discharge, and I
violate no confidence in saying
that the most of them will get
what they are looking for- They
certainly have no right to com-
plain. It is more than fourteen
mouths since the Democratic
administration came into power.
The Courier refers to
the North Carolina Pr-
as the Admiration
A large majority of
the best papers in the State be-
long to the Press association, such
as the Charlotte Observer, Raleigh
Statesville Land-
mark. Concord Times, Greenville
Reflector. Henderson Gold Leaf
and many others. While pleasant
relations as a rule exist between
its members, there is nothing
about it to justify the slur cast at
it by The Courier. Perhaps the
editor of The Courier sometimes
writes too hastily and does not
give proper consideration to what
lie writes, and may he will
learn after he has had more ex-
that it is better to use
greater care in what is written in
order to avoid
The Free Press
professional and not at all nice in
The Courier editor making such
slur at association of men in
the same lino work as himself,
for which he cm have DO
Gil Smith B S Shep-
E F Williams John
E Woodard L B Mow born
W F Harrington GO, C
son SO, T E Keel
Fleming Jesse L Smith
SO, W T Smith 00-
For Swift Creek and Content
stock law
Washington Mills A R
Holton C Dawson 25-
T M Manning was allowed to
list taxes for 1893-
Heath. Lewis Wilson,
Barry Henry
Lovelace Joyner, J J Cannon.
Elias Johnson and T B Cherry
were relieved from poll tax for
1893.
Ordered that tho lands of J L
Cherry which been listed by
who at that time
was claiming title thereto, be re-
of the poll tax of tho said
John Whitfield. W G
Tony Chapman, Cage Atkinson.
Henry Hardison and Isaac James
were allowed to pay single in-
stead of double tax.
Ordered that Hellen Brooks
be relieved of paying for hire of
the prisoner Chris Moore, and the
estate of J G Sheppard of Oscar
Johnson.
Ordered that Clerk the Board
notify all persons indebted to the
county for the hire of prisoners
to appear before this Board and
show cause why payment
not be made for tho same-
Ordered that the Clerk of Board
notify all Magistrates in the
county to meet with tho Board of
County Commissioners on the
first Monday June, next, to
levy taxes and transact such other
I as may come before said
Board Commissioners and
men Magistrates.
Upon petition it was ordered
that Frank Smith relieved of
tax on acres of land in Swift
Creek township, it appearing to
tho satisfaction of tho Board that
the same is and was at the time
of listing tho property of R H
and is charged to said
on the tax books-
Ordered that valuation of land
of D X Branch be reduced from
to the same having
been wrongfully listed.
Upon petition of W B Bland it
was ordered that Carrie L Bland
be credited on the tax list of 1893
with tax on acres of land in
Swift Creek township, tho same
having been listed by D H
who a life estate
Ordered that John Flanagan,
County Treasurer, authorized
to- insure the Court for
for five years.
J B having declined to
accept the position of list taker
for township. G II Little
was appointed his place.
Dr W H Bagwell,
dent of Health, presented his
monthly report which was order-
ed filed-
Ordered that S A Gainer and
Jesse L Smith appointed com-
to settle with Sheriff King
for taxes for 1898 and that they
meet on May 25th for that-
purpose.
J B Kilpatrick was appointed
a committee to meet with com-
appointed by tho Com-
missioners of Edgecombe and
Martin for tho purpose
of establishing boundary lines
between Pitt and said counties.
Ordered that Daniel Webster
be allowed a month as pauper-
this way, though it is not too late
for them to come-
If our merchants, warehouse-
men and business men generally,
would advertise as they did ten
or twelve years ago, tho town
papers judiciously, they would
rind a great along all
lines- There is great
printer's ink. Advertisements in
small doses will not last several
months, any more than you can
cat enough in day to last a
Gold Leaf.
Tho voluntarily from a highly
esteemed T. pastor
the- Church Creek in Dorchester
County,
C. I. Hood Co., Lowell,
I feel It a duty to the public to send this
I saw In a Philadelphia paper a letter
a man who had suffered from
Muscular Rheumatism
and had been restored by the use of Hood's
I had tho grip in tho winter of
o severely It me of
use of my arms so that my wife had to dress and
mo, and when away from homo I had
to Bleep my I tried five doctors and
not one accomplished Then I saw
tho letter alluded to and determined to try
HOOD'S
to them, their stock now complete,
-------is full of choice selected-------
store
Hood's. Before I had taken one bottle I had
the use of my arms, thank Sod. These, are
tacts and can e verified by many persons here.
J. M. Colston, Church Creek, me with
Bond's. I am pastor of the M. K
C W. Church Creek. Maryland.
N. B. If you decide to take Hood's
do not Induced to buy any other Instead.
Merchandise
From which genuine bargain can be hail.
We buy for Cub. soil for Cash, ; on
approved credit. We tho stock.
do tho business. fear no
competition, We dread no comparison of
quality and prices. Our store i- the
place for you to buy foods rigid prices.
for following reasons We buy
Cash. We tor quality and durability.
We deal squarely with you. We the
largest stock to be found in our county
from make selections, no
do not sock to take advantage of you.
are responsible for all errors or mistakes
may occur on our pan. We do not
a cheap k of j lots and Inferior
goods and push off on you things you do
n int. Once our customer you will remain
our friend. Hundreds of customers visit
our store, buy their goods right prices
ill.
well pleased with their pi
same and receive
p borne Now why don't yon
worth. One hundred on the dollar
Hood's Pills liver constipation,
biliousness, Jaundice, sick headache, indigestion.
Sale Land.
By of n power of contain Kl
in a deed of executed by Win. M.
B, Brown and wife to the
id
Look here did you know you could buy any
article yon may need in the following
Stale Normal and Industrial
Commencement
May 23rd, m-.
Address. W. J. Bryan of
Nebraska.
8.30 p. Class Exercises-
Thursday. May 24th. a. m-
Sermon. Rt. I'd ward Bond-
D- D., of North Carolina-
Awarding of Diplomas and
Certificates.
8-30 p. in., Address, Senator
John 15- Gordon of Georgia, on
the Last Days of tho Confederacy-
Sale.
Nothing But Right.
If the columns of a newspaper
are worth anything as a medium
for announcing yourself as a can-
for any office, or for offer-
endorsement of your friend
for any office, it is nothing but
right that with such announce-
or such endorsement, yon
send a cash remittance for its
publication. Frequently an
or endorsements of
the kind sent before tho con-
is held, and if they
crowded out sender is dis-
pleased. If the money should be
doing sent with such communication
thinks it is on- they would not no neglected.
A newspaper is not ran for the
personal convenience of any who
may wish the free use of its col-
for their own particular
benefit- A word to tho wise is
On Monday the 4th day of Juno A.
1894 will sell at the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder cash several tract- of
land in Pitt county to
AU the right title interest in the
lands described in tho division of the
lands of James Joyner known
and designated in division
containing acres more or loss, and
seven lots in the town of Marlboro.
known as the lot, Frank
hit, Casey lot, Win.
lot in rear of and including jail, vacant
lot west John Dal lot, and New
lot, and fully described in
Book T on pages and
in office of Register of Deed
county, and the same appropriated
to the Noah Joyner heirs, except the
two ninths Interests In the same,
which has been allotted to Andrew
a- Dart of his homestead
being the him-
self and one-ninth purchased by him
of James Joyner.
A certain tract or parcel of land con-
in a deed from Allen Warren,
Sheriff of Pitt county, to Andrew Joy-
dated 1882, and recorded
office Register of Deeds for
Pitt county look-Y. page situ-
in and near the town of Marlboro,
Pitt county. North Carolina, adjoining
the lands Of Francis Joyner. J-is. .
May. Thomas and others contain-
acres more or leas, end the fol-
lowing t-own lots within the corporate
limits of town of Marlboro, to
the
the Applewhite
and being the same lands
appropriated and assigned to George
Joyner and known in said division
as lot except one fourth interest
of said lands which has been allotted to
the said Andrew Joyner as a part of his
homestead exemption, bounded as fol-
lows; beginning ate state, on the old
plank road a corner of the woodland of
lot No. I, inns X. K. poles to J.
iv. line, thence with his line, S.
E. to lot in Mays line, thence
S. W across the park and Held, with
the line of lot to the plank road,
then with said road to beginning,
and also the following town lots situated
and being In town of Marlboro and
known and designated as the Office lot,
Smith lot. it being one-fourth of the
whole containing by estimation
acres more or less.
One tract of land conveyed by
Whitehead to Andrew Joyner,
April 16th 1888. and recorded In Hook C.
and and bounded as fol-
lows situated in Pit county, beginning
at bridge across the canal,
thence a line west to
Creek, thence down said creek to Mill
Swamp to the beginning, containing
acres more or less it. being the
portion of the Godfrey Stan-
plantation.
Four tracts of land conveyed by
William Whitehead to Andrew
on the 10th day of April and re-
cord d in book pages. and
and as tract
Pitt County on the north
side of Tar River, adjoining land of
Godfrey and others, containing
acres, and known as tho
James descended to her from
Martha Elisabeth
other tract in said county hi
township, adjoining the lands of Daniel
Lute Moore, Mary Which-
ard, and Others, containing
more or less and known as the Godfrey
land other tract, ad-
joining the lands of Simon Nobles,
Godfrey land and others con-
acres more or less the
land of the late Bob D.
one other adjoining tho land-, of
Mat hew James, Button James. Samuel
Moore, and others
to sundry in my
hands for collection against
Joyner and Which have been levied on
said lands as the proper of said An-
drew Joyner.
V. I, page is-i-7. Reg-
u will sell
at the House door in iii- town of
Greenville, X. on Wednesday
16th day of May 1894, at noon cash.
at public to the highest bidder
the following properly, to A at-
farm or plantation on the south
side of Tar river in Pitt about
one mile below Greenville adjoining
lands of Thomas, Allen Tucker
and others. Beginning on Tar river at
the northeast corner of Annie
land, boundaries, boo said
containing acres more or less, and
well known as Win. M. Brown
plantation, also all the teams, wagons,
can-, plows and tanning implements
now on said plantation and belonging
thereto. Teams consist I mules and
one horse. Also the land and farm
known as the land,
acres more of less on the north side
of Tar river adjoining Edward Dixon,
J. J. Nobles and others, conveyed to
Wm. M. B. Brown by s. Langley
and wife and Marina Dixon. Also one
house and lot in Greenville, X.
Hie residence of Mr- Win. M. B,
Brown and situated In the northwest
corner of and streets, being
part of lot No. Also lots Nos.
and in sail town adjoining each
Other and known its tin brick yard lots
Wm. M. B. Brown. Persons de-
pun portion of the
property are invited
reg me W Ins . N . C.
;. II. Bl v .
April 7th, 1884. Trustee.
The
o-----
hand.-o line of
SPRING HATS
r -ho n
HAT bl dainty creatures of
beaut the style Spring; Hats
-kill, what taste, what In-
milliner art ha displayed.
what, combination of feathers and
flowers and ribbons and straws be
seen at
I. i, I, ltd
EMPORIUM.
Dry Goods,
Notions, Hats,
Goods,
Furnishing
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Sinus, Crockery and Glassware,
Tinware. Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries,
Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains.
Furniture Furniture,
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Tallies,
Sideboards, Tin Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Boom Furniture.
Take a look at our stock it will you
save you dollars. We are agents for v- P.
COTTON at jobbers prices.
nothing and may
SPOOL
Come One. Come All.
ESTABLISHED
I. A, ANDREWS
AND RETAIL
O.
C.
v.
to please. Call and exam-
and sec for yourself. to
suit the times.
CO.
NEW
of
Hay.
Low down for Cash.
A AC ES
p.
lo my Friends an of Pitt and adjoining count lei i
I wish to say that I have made special preparation In preparing
HEAD MATERIAL and Riving
smooth which will prevent cutting or your Tobacco when packing
Also have made special best split I loop- made whit e
The special advantages I have in my own timber me in
position to meet all competition. I cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your Interest u e my Hogsheads you can them any time
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco
I rested
aid Turned for Houses a Specialty.
I am prepared to do any kind Scroll sawing Brackets or anything in
me or turning Balustrades for Picket tot Mendings of
Piazza Railing. id would lie pleased lo name you purr, ,,,,
anything in the upon
ML REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you your past
to meet your patronage, kindly
elsewhere.
patronage, I willing lo
to give a
A.
COBB BROS. CO.,
AND
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
and Correspondence Solicited.
Neck Dem This May 4th 1791. u. ; j i i T
THE
ONLY PERFECT
I-or mile
RELIABLE
the Pitt and the
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be
pure straight good. GOODS of all kinds, NOTION
FURNISHING GOODS. and CAPS hoots
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE,
BASH, and
WARE, HARDWARE,
Hay. Kook of Paris,
bring and
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool which I offer to the trade at
pi lees cents per ft per cent for Bread
ration Mall Star at Jobbers Prices, White pare LI
o,. ,;,, and Wood an
Willow Nails a





THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
Farewell oysters.
But ain't the ice men happy I
Blank tax notices for
sale Reflector office.
The fishermen are having good
luck.
Latest style Hats at Frank
Wilson's.
The beautiful roses are now
blooming.
For all kinds of refreshing sum-
mer go to James Long's.
Oblique cents at
Reflector Book Store.
Sprinkle Paris green on your
potato vines.
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
Picnics and excursions will
soon be in vogue.
Embroideries and Dotted Swiss
all colors at Boswell
it Co's-
Standard Music only cents
a copy at Reflector Book Store.
If you wish to save MONEY
to Lang's store, ho is selling
Clothing at Cost.
Boys don't venture in the
water bathing too soon-
The and Atlanta
Constitution both a year for 51-50,
The crowd in town last
day was smaller than usual.
Money to improved
Real Estate in sums from to
Personal.
Miss Maud Moore
in Farmville-
is visiting
been
Apply to,
F. G.
James.
It is almost warm enough for
the snake stories to out.
Butter Colored Point De Venice
Lace and at Boswell
Go's-
Everything is
Sugar best Coffee
best Flour at the
Old Brick Store.
Croquet seems to be more
popular this season than usual.
For a nice Suit of Clothes go to
Frank Wilson's.
Cotton is coming up and we
hope the farmers will have a good
stand.
New assortment of from
B. S-, just received.
WILE Brown, Depositor.
Our Summer stock is tho best
in town, prices are correct- Come
to see us. Lang.
Latest proved New Home
Wiley Brown.
Soda water, lemonade, milk
shakes and coco cola every day
at James Long's-
The Rifles a good drill
Friday afternoon. Thirty men
were out.
Coffee cents. Snuff cents
Boswell Co-
Genuine Clipper, Atlas. Boy
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax
Plows and Castings tor sale by J.
B. Cherry Co.
reliable Shoes any style go
to Frank Wilson's-
The largest and best assorted
line of General Merchandise in
Pitt county, fa offered for sale by
J. B. Often Co-
Sewing machines from to
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor-
of all professions, when in
need of goods of kind, cad on
your friends. J. B. Cherry Co.
New line Negligee Shirts, pretty
styles at Frank Wilson
Just received a new lot of
Carriages and Cribs.
J. B- Cherry A Co.
When in want of flood shoes SO to
I. B. Quern Co.
Sweet Potato
and Norton cents per
per 1000- Yams
cents per per 1000-
and Acme
per Allen
J , Reynolds and Boys
the best. For tab by J. B.
A G can
Potato Bu Tels at
you would do
to j. H. i
of Furniture, they l a l
sell at prices that
New line Spring
ed this week at
A large stock of nice
at Old Brick
Remember I pay you e l
Eggs and Prod ice at
Brick Blare.
tor A G. Cox's celebrated
Back Bands call on J- B-
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's.
The Rambler Bicycles are for
ale by E. Pender k Co.
Rambler holds worlds records
for speed and took of the high
awards at the worlds fair.
The commencement season is
very near at hand and new dress
the attention of the girls.
Mr. R. R- Cotton, who is one
of the most successful modem
agriculturists in Eastern North
Carolina, says that he never knew
how to appreciate the advantages
of the tobacco planter
this year. Daring the dry
weather he is setting right along
and no trouble in getting
a stand- M-- Cotton says too
much cannot be- said in i
the planter.
Miss Myra has
sick the past week.
Rain was threatened Monday
but only a slight
fell.
Miss Ruth Harries, of
ton, is visiting Miss Jennie
James.
Little May, daughter of Rev. G-
F. Smith has been very sick the
past
Crops in some sections of the
county are suffering considerably
from the drought.
Mrs. Hellen Perkins left Mon-
day for to visit her sis-
tor, Mrs. J. D. Murphy.
Rev- J. H. is assist-
Rey. W. S- Ballard in a moot-
at Hobgood this week.
Mrs. L. E. Cleve left Monday
for after spending
some time with relatives hero.
Mrs- Dr. J. P. Brown returned
home Friday from Oxford where
she had been visiting her
Mrs. Bullock.
Mrs. L. and two
of Tarboro, came down
Friday to spend a few days with
Mrs. Lang.
Mr. W. H- Humber, of Jones-
spent from Thursday until
Monday here with his brother
Mr. R. L- Humber.
Mrs. H. F. Harris went to
Scotland last week to attend
tho burial of the infant child of
her sou. Mr. J- L. Harris.
Mis. J. W. Goodwin and
of Philadelphia, who have
been visiting relatives here, left
Saturday for Hertford.
C J- and Chas.
left Monday for
to attend the meeting
of the State Medical
Mrs. E. B- Higgs has been very
sick for some days. Two her
sisters. Misses Shield, came down
from Scotland Neck last week to
visit her.
Mr. C- T. received a
telegram Monday, summoning
him to the bedside of Prof. Silas
E. Warren, at Wilson, who was
sick.
Messrs. J. White, S. T. Hooker
and W. L. Brown attended the
meeting of tho Grand Lodge of
Odd Fellows held last in
Goldsboro. Mr. Brown was elected
Grand Herald-
Mr. W. F. Harding, son of
Register of Deeds H- Harding,
has been elected one of tho
class orators for the
coming University commence-
This is quite honor
upon our young townsman.
Mrs. I. C- of New York,
General Corresponding Secretary
and Business Manager of King's
Daughters, will arrive hero on the
25th of this Month and deliver
on address before the King's
Daughters of Greenville, in the
Methodist church. Due notice
will be given of the hour. She
will stop with Mrs. J. B. Cherry.
Both
are a number of people in
I this county who send one dollar for
tho Atlanta Constitution without
ever thinking of the fact that they
can save cents by subscribing
to that paper through the Re-
We send both papers
a whole year for and every
subscriber we send them has the
same privilege of guessing at the
missing word contest and the
cotton crop. Fifty cents is worth
saving. Come to see us and get
pap ors for
On the Bridge.
Mr. R- D. Bo. Cherry gave a
very pleasant
on the bridge, Monday
evening, complimentary to Miss
Harriss, of Wilmington. About
i ten participated and they
had the Italian band along to
make delightful music and awaken
the denizens of the majestic Tar.
The party was chaperoned by
Chief of Police William
J and Mayor James E. Flem-
whose presence was a
that all except of the
tender were promptly de-
off.
Pitt County
Several prominent
chewers here recently received
cards from the
co Co., of St. Louis, to call on S
M- Schultz for cents worth of
plug tobacco man-
b them. Besides its
being a splendid chewing tobacco
there is a feature about it that
should recommend it to
chewers of this section.
Tobacco Co.,
large buying of Pitt county to-
Mr. R. H. Hayes buying
for them on the Greenville mar-
and Mr. Schultz tells us that
Pitt county wrappers are used on
this tobacco.
the
The
are
Ocracoke.
Mr. Selby, the proprietor of
Ocracoke Hotel, has moved his
family down there and is putting
the house in order for the coming
season. He is giving the build-
a general overhauling, paint-
it nicely, putting blinds to
the windows and carpeting sever-
of the best rooms. He says he
is going to furnish the best table
this summer the guests there
have ever known. Greenville
people will glad learn of
these improvements at this de-
resort, as many of them
expect to spend part of the sum-
mer there- Uncle John Cherry
will get up several excursion
parties for Ocracoke.
Moses King received two very
large sturgeon last week the
of tho season.
are so low that
there is no profit in shipping
them now.
well to send m
s early as possible
The young folks took
of the presence of an Italian
baud and had a. Gorman last night-
Register of Deeds Harding
brought us some corn tassels
yesterday, tho first reported this
season.
C- T. calls attention
to to some specialties he is
offering. He is always up with
the times.
Tl ore wore drums and drums
on the streets last Friday. Both
bands and tho Rifles were out
that day.
See what Boswell,
to about huts, dress
goods and seeing machines.
They are headquarters for these.
Tho commencement of the
North Carolina University takes
June 4th to The Re-
acknowledges an
The Tar got real muddy last
and the skimmers had an-
other opportunity of trying their
luck for shad. May shad are
usually very fine-
Another lot of those large pen-
tablets in at Reflector
Book Store- We also have the
nicest assortment of lead Is
to be found here.
The congregation of St. Paul's
Episcopal church here have just
in the church a very hand-
some memorial window to the
late Dr. N. C Hughes.
Cherry
The Reflector thanks Misses
Smith, Ada and Lucy
Tyson for imitations to the com-
of the Normal and
Industrial College at Greensboro.
black
over
funnel-shaped
the southern
A vet;
cloud
edge of town Monday morn-
It looked a cyclone
cloud but was too for
effects to be felt it-
Greenville is slow in giving aid
to erecting the monument to
Vance- We have not heard of
the first contributor yet. Sub-
lists are at convenient
places here and our people should
make early response.
The Y- M- C- A. has rented the
Town Government for the Next Year.
Tho new Board of Councilmen
of Greenville qualified and held
their first meeting on Monday
night. They
1st A. colored.
2nd S. Smith, B. C.
Pearce.
3rd Ward-L H. Pender, W.
J.
4th Ruffin, col-
The first work of the new Board
was the election of Mayor.
Pearce stated that the
members of the second and third
wards had held a caucus at which
they agreed to present the name
of j. L. Fleming for Mayor.
Pender presented the
name of E. H. A
lot was taken resulting in a tie-
Without taking a second ballot
tho members to Mayor
to decide the tie, which
he did by saying if they would
not continue to ballot and decide
the matter among themselves he
would settle it by holding on to
the office.
Over the next office, Chief of
Police, there was a long contest.
Councilman Pearce for the
presented the name of W. E.
Belcher and Councilman Pender
nominated J. T. Smith. About
twenty ballots were taken during
which a great deal of random
voting was done in order to
vent a tie or an election. Finally
the matter was settled by four
votes being cast for W- B. James
and he was declared elected.
T. R. Moore was elected
Police by acclamation.
Over the office of Treasurer
there was another long contest-
Councilman Pearce for the caucus
presented tho name of J. S. Smith
and Councilman nominated
L. H. Balloting for this
office continued about an hour,
the vote nearly every time result-
tor Smith, for Pender,
for Ruffin. When they had
grown weary of this Councilman
Pearce moved that J. S. Smith be
elected by acclamation- This
motion received a tie vote which
Mayor Fleming decided in favor
of J. S. Smith and declared
elected Treasurer-
G. E. Harris was elected Clerk
and Tax Collector by acclamation.
J. L. Daniel was elected watch-
man and night police by
Moses Williams was
lamp lighter by acclamation.
All the officers except those re-
quired to give bond were duly
sworn in-
Several motions wore made in
reference to salaries as had been
agreed upon in tho caucus. The
Mayor made a salaried
at per year, all fines,
penalties and costs hereafter
posed and collected to be turned
into the treasury.
The salary of Chief Police was
made per month; Assistant
Police Watchman and Night
Police ; Clerk per year ;
Lamp Lighter per month.
The meeting then adjourned
subject to the call of the Mayor,
which will be when the Treasurer
and Tax Collector are ready to
tender their official bonds. The
appointment of the usual com-
was deferred until next
meeting.
The old Board of Councilmen
finished up their business for the
past year at a meeting Monday
OTHER LOCALS.
Frank Wilson reminds our
readers today that he is still
leading in fine clothing. He also
has a complete stock of every-
thing in the dry goods lino on
which he defies competition.
Talk about a of prom-
but the man who carries
around a lot of bills trying to
collect money will encounter a
good many parties of promises,
or promising parties these days.
Salisbury Herald.
The Torchlight, the paper
here for the colored
has the best written
timely articles of any paper we
we see published for that race-
The colored people should heed
tho good advice Elder Williams
gives them.
Mr. H- W- Dunn, of this town-
ship, is the farthest advanced
with his crops of farmer we
have heard of this season. His
cotton is all chopped out, his corn
has been plowed over the second
time and lie has tobacco plants
five inches across.
Tho Reflector acknowledges
the receipt from Secretary
of a complimentary certificate
of membership in the North
Carolina Assembly.
The of the assembly will
in their hall at Morehead
from to July 2nd, and
promises to be one of the most
interesting yet held.
The colored lodges here had a
celebration last Friday,
n the afternoon they paraded
the streets, both the Tube Rose
and Elmo bands making music for
them. The Elmo boys were out
in regulation blue uniforms and
white helmets that made them
look quite trim- Both bands con-
to improve in their music-
Mr. Lew's Hudson has been a
blessing to the community this
spring. For several weeks his
son, in Florida has been
shipping him early vegetables
which he has been retailing every
morning. So far he has sold
twenty barrels of cabbages be-
sides several crates of beets and
onions.
There were no services in the
Methodist church on Sunday
owing to tho extreme illness of
the little daughter of Rev. G. F.
Smith, the pastor. At the
church Rev. J. H.
offered a beautiful prayer for the
sorrowing family and for the res-
to health of their child
which touched a chord
in every heart in the
Three Legged Chicken.
Sallie a colored woman
of this town, sent a legged
chicken to the Reflector office
last Thursday. The extra limb
was located a little behind the
left leg. There were only seven
toes on the three feet, one of the
feet not being perfectly formed.
Th little chicken hearty
enough, but did not know how to
navigate so many legs.
Items.
May 14th, 1894.
Dr. Best reports several cases
of scarlet fever in this neighbor-
hood.
Rev. filled his
regular appointment hero yes-
Mr. L. J. Chapman wont to
last Thursday returning
Friday.
Miss Nannie school
had a jolly picnic at Jolly Old
Field lust Saturday.
Mr. Theo. Bland caught a
at his seine beach last Fri-
day that measured eight in
length.
Messrs. Walter Harding and
Geo. Kilpatrick attended the
memorial exorcises at Kinston
last Thursday.
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below arc Norfolk prices of cotton
and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission Mer-
chants of
COTTON.
Good Middling
Middling
Low Middling
Good Ordinary
Prime
Extra
Fancy
Spanish
15-10
13-16
RAMBLER
For sale by
CO
Falkland Items.
May 14th, 1894-
Mr. J. S. Harris is improving.
Little Mabel King has been
sick tho past week.
We are sorry to hear B. R
King is sick at Littleton.
We are having more bites from
mosquitoes this season than fish.
We have Sunday school in the
Presbyterian church now at
o'clock P. M.
The rain we had on the 7th
did lots of good, the farmers
commenced to sot out tobacco in
a hurry.
Mr. E. M. Short, of Washing-
ton, was here the latter part of
tho past week looking after his
railroad a Hairs and is well
with it.
S. V- King has a very funny
egg. It is a fair looking color
and is marked H.
Tho letters seem to be in tho
shell so they cannot be rubbed
out- Ho has set it to see what
would tho result.
-0
Straw Hats,
Felt Hats,
Wool Hats.
HATS that are HATS
and HATS that are
not HATS, but is
all right.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
My Paper
After you get stop
your paper, just poke your finger
into water, pull it out, and look
for the hole. Then you will know
how sadly you are missed. A man
who thinks a paper cannot thrive
without his support ought to go
stay awhile. When ho
comes back half his friends will
not know he has gone, and the
other half will not care a cent,
while tho world at large kept no
account of his movement. You
will find things that you cannot
in every paper. the
Bible is rather plain, and hits
some hard raps. If you were to
get mad and burn your Bible,
the hundreds of presses would
still go on printing it, and when
you stop your paper and call the
editor names, the paper will still
be published, and, what is more,
you will read it on the sly
Louisburg Times.
That Awful Borrower,
The Greenville Reflector truly
are people who
will not subscribe for their county
paper because they happen not
to agree with its politics, yet they
always read it, even if they have
to sponge on their neighbor and
worry him almost to death by
continually borrowing his
Yes, there are plenty of just
such people, and the Journal has
had experience with a few of
them- In fact not very long
since one of our good paying
subscribers advised us to dis-
continue his paper on account of
one of these like kind
always borrowing it.
The reason for stopping the
paper, said the good paying sub-
scriber, was that he thought the
borrower would subscribe himself
and then he would take it.
We thought it would work like
a charm but it didn't. They said
borrower just went across the
street and immediately warmed in
with another subscriber and
though continuing to abuse it,
actually wanted to borrow the
paper before the real subscriber
had finished with it These kind
of are
Journal.
The RAMBLER took five of the high-
est awards at the Fair and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
1893 make at reduced price. 1804
125.00, all are strictly highest
grade. We make
Tobacco Flues, Sell Stores, Tinware,
and do all kinds of Tin
Guttering, Ac
s. e.
DO
And as are always up to the times with tho HARD CASH we
------are tho greatest bargains of the season, in-----
and other Goods too numerous to mention.
still showing the latest.
A Jew line
by yesterday's steamer. All colors. A special sale of
CLOTHING
for the next few weeks in all tho latest cuts and designs, direct from
our New tailors. If you can't come, writes for samples.
Yours anxious to please,
C. T.
I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF-
SPRING GOODS
NOVELTIES,
and would solicit examination.
SHOES
always make
a specialty.
SHOES
fort
W. S.
A-6
DR. FRANK PITT,
SPECIALIST,
Now renders to the public his profession-
service in curing Cancers, it c
Address, DR. PITT,
X. C.
County, N. C.
Lynn Johns, a of the afore-
said State and hereby certify
that I been treated by Dr. Frank
Pitt for two cancers, one on my head
and one near my eye. And after being
treated by him I pronounce myself cur-
ed and now well of said cancers. This
-March 12th 1804. LYNN JOHN'S.
Witness T. R. YOUNG BLOOD, J P.
I, W. S. Stephens, of Superior
Court, do hereby certify that I am ac-
with Lynn Johns and
him to be a man of truth and what he
says
W. S. STEPHEN'S, Sup, Court.
F. Ellington, Sheriff.
J. W. Register of Deeds.
That will open your eyes, they
are beautiful.
We have just accepted the
agency for the New Improved
No. Wheeler Wilson Sewing
Machines and expect a car load
within tho next ten days. We
can sell you a machine on easy
terms. Come and examine them.
Embroideries, White Goods
and Laces.
I need not say anything about that I have received a new
line. Prices lower than ever. I thank you your past
and if close prices will avail mo anything I will merit a continuance
Sewing Machines from up. New Homo latest improved
Respectfully,
WILEY BROWN,
New Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So
Li ill Ere Inn
GREENVILLE, N- C
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AGENT FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
up stairs room in the Tyson brick
building that was once used for
the Reform reading room
and it is being nicely fitted up.
Tho first meeting will be held .
there Friday night to which all afternoon and had left in the
men of the community Are J Treasury,
ally, invited-
Bethel Item.
May 14th 1894.
Dr. W. R- Mayo, of Jamesville
is in town to-day.
Mr. Robert is on the
sick list this week.
Mr. J. R- Rollins, who was sick
last week is able to be out to-day.
Mrs. Dr. J. D. Bullock and
child who have been sick for tin
Cast two or throe weeks are
Rev. W A. Forbes was sick part
of last week, but was able to fill
his pulpit Sunday morning and
night-
Crops in this section are ex-
backward owing to the
extreme dry We learn
the potato crop is greatly dam-
Tho newly elected Mayor and
Commissioners qualified to-day.
will meet again next Tues-
day to elect a Clerk, Treasurer
and Constable.
Look up J. A- Andrews
this week, he has j
ed car loads of No. Timothy
Hay.
ST J-
LEADING
FINE CLOTHING
A few more
of those nice
i y fitting and
cheap suits.
For tho next
thirty days
we will make
special price
on our sum-
For fit, style
and
they can-
not be ex-
celled. See
and it-
DRY GOODS,
SUES, RATS,
Gents Furnishing Goods I
t mom it i
o AND GOES WITHOUT o
o SAYING THAT WE o
o HAVE THE LARGEST o
o AND MOST STYLISH o
o STOCK IN TOWN. o
o P
call and look yourself and you cannot go away
M tali CALL AT OUR STORE.
Why t Became you can buy
FANCY GOODS,
Notions and Trimmings,
lit reasonable prices.
AT prices not forced down by
but made low from start
by judicious purchasing of stock and
contentment with small profit. Our
new Millinery bans arrived. A call will
convince
M. T. Co.
Notice to Farmers.
If all who will CANE
MILLS and EVAPORATORS next
fall will file their orders with rue at an
early day, I will be able to get the
a liberal discount by ordering
all at once and will give the purchaser
the benefit of the discount.
H. HARDING,
Agent.
ESTABLISHED 1876.
S, M. Schultz.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STORK
ANTS BUT
their year's supplies will find
their our prices before
chasing elsewhere.
n all Its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICK, TEA, Ac.
a at Lowest Market
TOBACCO SNUFF
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
I always on hand and sold at prices to suit
I the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully.
M.
N,
WILLIAMSON,
-MANUFACTURER OF-
-ALL OF-
Give a
without buying
FRANK WILSON,
THE LEADING CLOTHIER.
REPAIRING DONE SHORT NOTICE
Only first-class workmen and material allowed in my shops. The many
who have used my work will testify to the beauty and durability of
turned out at my shops. Every vehicle
HARNESS WHIPS.


Title
Eastern reflector, 16 May 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
May 16, 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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