Eastern reflector, 5 February 1896






. ,
JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all wort
of this line
NEATLY,
and
IN BEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best
of Stationery.
J. E. Ii- 1- Moons,
MOORE.
MET-AT-L A W,
under Open House. Third S
i. JAMES,
G R E E S F
dice ti all th
L L E. V
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL XV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1896.
NO.
W,
H. LONG,
Greenville, N. C.
all the Courts.
B. K. Ty-on,
Snow Hill. N- C. N. C.
G WAY A SOW,
Greenville, N. C.
in all the
J. II. BLOUNT. J. l
BLOUNT
n. c.
Practice in all the
H. W-
N A
to Latham A Skimmer.
A I
N- c
A FEW YEARS FROM NOW.
Oh. the Twentieth Century Girl
What a wonderful tiling; she will be
She'll evolve a whir
A woman unfettered and free
No to her waist.
No to encumber her brain ;
Unafraid, unlaced,
Like n goodness of she will reign.
She'll wear a or
course
the will vote, not a question of
doubt;
She will ride like a man on a horse,
At club hue at she'll stay
out.
If the to love, she'll propose ,
To blush will be quite out of date.
She'll discuss politics with her
her masculine mate
be up in the of things,
She will smoke cigarettes, she will
swear
If servant a dunning note
the Ml isn't served up with care.
No longer she'll powder her nose
Or cultivate even a curl,
Nor bother with fashion or clothes.
This Cent-try
Her voice will be heard in the land,
She'll in matter of State,
In council her work will command.
And her whisper the laws regulate.
She will Hand her banner
furled.
Inscribed with her principles new.
But the question What in
world
The Hew Century Baby will do
Chambers Journal,
E. Woodard. I. C. Harding,
Wilson, X. C. Greenville, N. ,
HARDING,
Greenville, N.
Special attention given to
settlement of claims.
K. P. I. JAMBS,
DENTIST,
K.
C.
EUROPEAN LETTER.
A Lady Visits Vesuvius and
Hew it Impressed Her.
our special
Naples, SB, BUS.
We have returned soaked and
appointed from Vesuvius. Our clothe
our tempers have been ruined
Advertising- for Farmers.
I hack. Ones sympathy for
I guide prevents him leaning very
Tell ; far at first, but lat.-i- sympathy is lost
fatigue and one resigns himself to
i pulled bodily up the I
the deep ashes. The crater win point
; ed out to us and we were not
I to go too close, but we saw but
la place a more foggy than the
I dense mist covering the mountain, we
j saw the running lava ii looked
Cook the excursion fiend has fallen in j temptingly warm, and tin
our estimation and Vesuvius is simply was a bright yellow and
beneath our notice. We went to the J ., j; the
crater in a nun that was sufficient to j hill again to the the Tidies
have put out the volcano. We ; hung limply on the arms of the
jolted miles in a we j beat shoes, an silk
have ridden donkeys, waded suffered themselves , he
in ashes to our ankles, and all dragged through the ashes,
the interest of pleasure. and wet to protest.
We left Naples about nine o'clock fad At I lie lower station a stop of
t he morning under the supervision offal tours was made in anticipation of a
Cook , one of Cook's wagons. Hearing up of the weather, a hope that
The morning was not altogether proved to be vain however. During
but springs and time the album. luge
we thought the day would probably be blank book in which tourists may find
clear. Naples was just to a to relieve their fur-
should
THE REFLECTOR
for 1896. .
Brim full of fresh, crisp
foreign
and domestic
Only a year.
really wake up for the day, for the
far of the people begins by-
lying in bed in the morning. At last
we reached the open country and while
the clouds gathered overhead our spirits
were kept up by a band of strolling
musicians who walked along by the
carriage and gang
other delightful Italian songs, varying
them occasionally with Daisy in
honor of our and seeming
disappointed when we failed to look
appreciative. We stopped at a little three gloomy n
mountain inn where our honest driver, A man who had a
us diversion. We Were called
upon to be proud of our erudite
and women when we
these inscriptions after the big. Hack
U. S. must be seen to b
predated. Grand beyond all -rip
I imagined it a furnace fanned
by a hot and raging to avenge
her Another hail w.-
should have had it for Chi.
and still another of a less
summed up the in
a I
DR. II. A. JOYNER
DENTIST,
While waiting at a country feta-
I became acquainted with an
intelligent, nicely dressed farmer.
During our conversation be learn
ed that I was connected with the
advertising department of the
press.
believe he .
. , , . . I who probably shared profits with the I ours for the ascent had
remarked, practice it, as . .,,, . , , ,, , ,
, , , , proprietor, told us we could get the day is dark, and cold and
do several of m neighbors. . . . ., ,, .
m. ., . . i best wine all Italy. At the next rain and mists are never weary,
The possibility of a farmer ad
. , stop we left the carnage
had never occurred to c
. donkeys to cross the lava fields.
and upon expressing a
, . this nature s feelings overcame
to in what manner . . . e .
s ,. i -j her as ii in anticipation the late
farmers could advertise, ho .
that awaited us, to weep, c-very-.
live in one of the best ,
. . T ,,.,. cue commented on the fact
ties addition to ; ,
. . and we mounted the diabolical beasts,
growing all kinds of
and mounted
At;
It is too windy, chill and ;
For ought but to
cu.-.
A Strange Looking Family.
Greenville, rT. O.
Office up stairs overS. CO
on our
Same Old Game.
If anybody that this
part of the country is not still
Bather an odd was no
as premier said when the French on the town this
j conclude that I am ready to sell
my stuff insert a local three
or four local papers stating j
mount and quality end, if stock,
,, , , , and those who found voice at all
when it will be ready to go. ., . , ,
, , , . nil i lifted it declaring that hence
instead of being c impelled to go
from dealer to another in or-
to receive a fair price, they
started to with
When we reached that spot
m we had seen Vesuvius but a
strange silence had fallen on all the
their mission would be to dissuade
from the ascent the volcano.
An incompatibility had sprung up be-
populated a lot of come to me and put a on It.
. . . . , . tween all the members of the company
and eves that looked love at the be-
the greenest that ever
lowed a sharper's bad, then he
is proof
which it is only necessary to in-
stance the with which
about a hundred of them paid Si
for a rag, tied to it,
by courtesy called
Tuesday
Tue fakir who relieved these
of their money first appealed to
their cupidity selling them
one of the for and then
giving them back. After
this part of the had been
sufficiently worked, the fakir
proposed to sell the for
but each r
was to be given a present. About
taking two and
one or two as many as six
even. Of course no presents were
given, and the deluded suckers
are now wiser, but poorer, men
Wadesboro Messenger.
A Pleasant Winter.
Speaking of the weather, con-
fusion has been brought upon all
those prophets who last fall
prophesied, from the flight of wild
geese, the thickness of the bark
on the hickory nuts, and
other outward visible
that this to be a winter of
usual As a matter of fact
it has been one of the most de-
winters in history. There
have been a
days and nights; sharp mornings
and crisp evenings have not
lacking; but the cold has not been
severe and there has been a re
markable absence of snow and
rain, bright skies bending upon
us almost every day. It now
too late in the season to expect
long continued cold
though there may be cold days
yet- The spring may be, indeed,
is likely to be, late and cold, as
cold goes in the time, but
the danger of a winter has
practically passed. This means
that there has been a saving in
expense in the purchasing of
in the consumption of
fuel, in horse- feed and in many
directions. Most of all it means
that length has been given to life
in many cases, for one of the
wisest and most observant men
among us has said that a winter
severity is invariably
followed by many deaths among
the old people, and it in
S Landmark.
The buyers know my methods
are after me, and as a
they bid the highest price
they can afford. I always got the
best prices going, and little
outlay advertising pays me.
Then another If I want
to a milk cow what is the use
ginning of tile trip were now singularly
inexpressive behind straightened bangs,
and under dripping hats.
Probably were no worse
than donkeys, but the road they
had to was but a rough path
from the Columbia brain. It was
a family of A- thy
came up the mother
in front of the She
had a leather belt around her
waist, stuck in it was a big
pistol. The father brought up
the rear and he carried old
fashioned flint lock rifle. They
were going to
News.
and it to me that any self-re-
of my riding all over the country, I
spending four of five dollars j Vantage of so many rock in the road
worth of valuable fifty of stumbling as these in-
looking animals did. The Sticks its ears, every foot
of land kicks The horses even
When people talk about there
being a better Stale than North
Carolina, every potato slightly
winks its eye,
shakes its head, every beet gets
red the face, every onion feels
stronger, every oat held is shock-
ed, rye stroke its corn
cents invented an advertise-
,. will not fastened securely and the
to give my premises the appear-
of a fair
Ink-
Whiskey's Sad Work.
News comes from Henderson that
Captain Charley died at
hat place on Thursday ill destitute and
peculiarly distressing circumstances.
From being the honored, popular and
trusted agent of the R. D. road at
Durham, and at Henderson, and after
wards general traveling passenger
agent of the Seaboard Air Line; the
courted guest of the best people
ever he was known; the best man at
many marriages and the acknowledged
good fellow at all gatherings of good
society, he died a pauper, a physical and
mental wreck.
With most generous impulses he
his friends the hundreds,
and many there are who will drop a
tear of pity on his bier. That such a
soul -Ii have yielded to the absolute
power of alcoholism is OHM of much
regret; but, his soul in
Durham Sun.
rider and shouted dreadful threats , neigh and the their
the donkeys, were expected to hold the shooting Sun.
saddle on. When the donkey fell
down, the saddle slipped and never was a year when
curled the animal on the head. When political movement in North Car-
lie went up ti hill it settled insecurely i began as early as it has
I on his tail and finally when the guide Here are the Republicans
had grown tired of holding it on, it; f county
tumbled altogether. J called to assemble in convention
The rain at last began to pour and the first Monday in February to
Didn't Bother Him at All.
In one of General Benjamin F. But-
political campaigns, says The
Boston Budget, he was to .-peak in a
hall which had a small over
the speaker's desk. Some of the
younger and dare-devil element
themselves in the loft from
which the hole opened and at an
moment in the General's
speech a wooden spoon suspended
by a cord was seen descending slowly
from the ceiling. The effect upon the
audience was instantaneous, amid
roars of laughter in which even the
dignified of the platform
could not help joining, the spoon
sued its downward course, halting only
when directly opposite the speaker's
face. Mr. Butler gazed calmly at the
cause of merriment. Then, reach-
for the trophy, he said
-Hello There's one I didn't and
pocketing the prise, he resumed his
the wind rushed violently down the
It was impossible to hold
umbrellas and cold, wet and
the party reached the Mat ion of
he road that leads up the
steep yielding ashy cone to within a
few hundred yards of the crater of the
volcano.
The only fire in the restaurant was
in the kitchen and the head-waiter,
who speaks five languages and probably
gets about a mouth, invited us to
ourselves, an invitation we glad-
When the world had as-
a brighter hue through the me-
of an and steaK we start-
ed up the mountain again. The road is
almost perpendicular and one feels
much more as if the ascent were being
made in an elevator than on a rail
track. It is called a but is
really a cable with double tracks
the cam are balanced so they each
her midway of the distance.
either side are the great fields of
and ashes, the former of course, now
cooled and the most fantastic shapes
in which, as in clouds, one sees most
clearly what his fancy suggests. Per-
haps it was the influence of the donkey
ride and the weather, but if seemed to
me of
been photographs of
these formations.
At the top the we were
by a new relay of guides who took
heir big coals and wrapped
about drenched women the par-
Chairs carried by four men were
to be bad for those unable to walk to
the crater. ; A-guide went ahead o
each of throwing a strap over his
consult as to the welfare of the
party. Executive committees have
been called together in many
counties. From the of the
times it appears that we are to
have no end of politics in North
Carolina in this year of grace-
Charlotte Observer.
Why We Are Poor.
The Rocky Mount Argonaut,
remarking upon statement of
the Raleigh correspondent of this
paper that cabbages Den-
mark are for stile Raleigh, de-
that can
raise as good cabbage as can be
raised in or anywhere
else and it is a disgrace to the
State that we should import them
from away the other side of the
It is almost that. Finer
cabbages grow nowhere on earth
than in other of our
mountain counties, and
perhaps, do they grow in greater
luxuriance,. In this same con-
we r. in the Raleigh
Press Visitor that the esteemed
Dr. Blacknall, of Raleigh, had
two large bottles of persimmon
beer, Friday, asked in hands
to sample it. While they
he discoursed- all
the and
to waste on the said be,
they would make the fin-
est kind of beer. Farmers could
fatten their children and live off
of beer, but I can't get them to
do it. But if some sharp Yankee
was to come along and put the
cider in a red barrel and ask
barrel for it and take a
gage or a on the cider, they
all drink
is hardly as bad as that but the
doctor was along the
neighborhood of the bull's eye.
talk about being poor, and we
ire. It's no The won-
is that we've got a dollar. It's
no use. though, to blame it all on
are no worse
ban the town
Observer.
Money.
Senator secretary is a
G Scot, by
name, who has a dry sense
Recently he injured his
thumb, and the matter became so
that he went to a surgeon
He was told that he would have
to undergo operation.
to stand
the operation. He was ready to
have it performed then there.
The physician asked him
he wished to take chloroform
ether.
it make me lose my sen-
the Scotchman.
should say said the doc
tor.
deliberately thrust
his hand into his pocket be-
tn count his
no hurry about the
said the doctor; can
it out to me after the
is
But said it would make
lose b st-s to take
form or didn't
. .
said the doctor.
will i u
excuse said Mac-
with a twinkle
rather my money
A Lively Pa.
A Cleveland family was in
court the other says an ex
change. A daughter was f
the witnesses she bad the
lowing cheerful tale to tell of
father's daring and disastrous or-
was sitting in his saloon,
feeling He went to the
barn and put a halter on his horse
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
GEORGIA RESPONDS.
THE LAST BUGLE.
brought him into the house, -p, , , . , ., . . . , ,
, I the day she called they answered, her
saying be the to
eat supper with him. Pa made
sons, the brave and free.
down
me set a plate for the
he took hold of the horse's
front legs lifted them upon
the table. We all eat down to
supper the began to
eat. Pa picked up a of beer,
and began to laugh and throw up J
his Lauds. The mug hit the horse souls.
on the nose. The beast pulled its thousands in free-
Far from her mystic mountains,
to her circling sea
They answered from the highlands,
whose brows were lit with
And from her wave-swept islands tin-
sons of Georgia came
feet dragging off the table-
cloth upsetting the table
The horse backed against the
stove and burned his, tail, and he
kicked the stove over and ran out
to her poll- ;
The battle of the ballots fought
from sun to sun,
And Georgia men true again, and
Georgia valor won
of the house. I screamed, and Pa j in her cities
threw a lamp at me. The house victory where the breeze
came near catching fire, and a Sweeps
policeman came in. Pa Las storms her was
arrested in her quiet bones,
, her noisy
All Fools Not Yet Dead.
But more than victory
twice a million hearts
An English judge decides that I Still the old state stands brave and great
throwing rice at a Be t. sunlight her throws
couple is assault, whether the ; A halo where she triumphs o'er her
eyes of either of them are put out fled, beaten foes
or j And from her bills and singing rills, her
A Missouri farmer figured it out skit's whoM
one rainy day that he had walked Georgia shouts her victory in music
miles in cultivating acre the world I
of corn. He therefore sold his
farm moved to A Goat Butts a Moving Train,
he walked miles to find a job. Chan of the
I have one fervent prayer
That every day I pray
God grant that when my battle's o'er
And I my helmet lay
Aside, that I may fold my hands and
slip
From life's worn fields away.
God grant the cares of age,
Its weakness and its fears,
May not be mine ; that I may know
No failing, lingering years ;
No letting go of my strong grasp,
No dull eyes blind with tears.
To-day my heart bents brave.
And I life's march
With onward, hopeful pace. The
bugles play,
glory in the Meanwhile
I pray, let and be the
call
When I drop out of tile.
Maude Meredith, in New
White.
A boy of fourteen a girl of
eleven were recently married in
Johnson county, Ga, with full
consent of their parents.
In San Francisco a
year-old husband recently obtain-
ed an absolute divorce from bis
wife. He was
employed as a messenger boy.
A Chicago says he con-
to a reputable cit-
whom he had never met, for
Such a fellow is too enter-
prising to be at large.
Buried in the Same Coffin.
Present Varieties of Legal Tender,
Free to Our Readers.
A first class, high-grade month-
home journal has come to be a
necessity in household
Such a journal, well conducted
copies a special relation to every
member of the family circle. One
of the best journals of this char-
that we have seen, is The
Woman's Health
at Chattanooga, Tenn. The
choice stories, charming verse
and interesting miscellany, appeal
alike to young and old. Its
departments of Fashion,
Among Our Girls, A Page for
Mothers, The Home-Keeper,
With the Children and the Health
and Hygiene edited
by a competent and experienced
physician, make it invaluable to
any home.
The ways the
lookout for what will profit its
readers, has secured fifty yearly
subscriptions to The Woman's
Health Journal, which it pro-
poses to give away the
next days.
A years subscription to this
j will given to every sub
scriber to the Reflector who will
get new subscriber for a
year.
These subscriptions won't last
long- First come, Brat served-
Call at this and see
it tight copy.
The foil -wing varieties of legal
tender exist at the present time
the laws of the United
Gold coins, legal tender with-
out any express limit.
dollars and Treasury
notes is-11 d under the act of
legal where other-
express stipulated the con-
United States notes
It gal tender except for in-
o-i the public debts and for
duties en imports. Since the re-
sampling of specie payments
these notes have made
receivable for duties by Treas-
order, to avoid the trouble of
parrying to ad from
House.
National bank notes, legal
tend payment of any debt or
liability to any National bank;
also receivable tor all Govern-
dues except duties on
ports, and for all Gov-
debts except interest on
bonds.
5- Silver coins smaller than
one dollar, tender to the
of ten dollars in one pay-
Coins of nickel and cop-
per, legal tender to the
of twenty five cents in one pay-
Theodore Runyon, States
Ambassador to Germany, is dead. He
was from New Jersey.
A correspondent of the Wades-
Messenger Died, at
his home ii township,
Anson county, on the night of the
at o'clock p. m.,
his 77th year. In
the Same home, on the
at about m , his beloved wife,
Sarah in her 75th year,
her last, and her lifeless
form was laid by his in the same
room.
The remains of those d
were placed side by side in the
same and gently laid to rest
in the family graveyard, on the
homestead, on which they had
lived lovingly and happily to-
for over fifty years.
After the Fourth of July next,
will be in the flag of our
and consequently as many states
in our Union, for the admission of Utah
s a state fixes another star in the field
of glory. Had it not been for the
Church with its polygamous
would have been admitted
as a State long ago. The most
requirements in the admission of
Utah have been fulfilled, and now all
that remains to be attended to are but
the usual formalities. The last of
these will be an official order for the
army and navy declaring the addition
of another star to the Union. This
will take effect on the Fourth of next
July.
Wilmington and Norfolk
railroad tells us the following
On the morning of the 21st as he was
running a few miles from Wilmington
at the forty miles an hour he no-
a goat on the track. Goats near-
always get a railroad track in
time, hut this one as if he wanted
to dispute the engines right of way,
and he faced toward it as if determined
to butt off. The goat and the engine
collided, and the goat was sent
flying up into the air about ten feet high.
The fireman looked hack to see what
became of the lie reports that
he saw him get up after striking the
ground and then fall again.
On the return inquiry was
made as to what became the goat,
and Section Master Koonce the
information that after lying where he
fell for about an hour he got up and
walked off.
There is now plainly to be seen on
one of the bars of the cow-catcher a
small hole a little over a half an inch
depth. Mr. says he
knows that the hole was not there
ore he encountered the goat, and he
knows it was there directly afterwards.
The natural supposition is. that in
some way one of the goat's horns so
track it as to penetrate it,
standing that their shape would seem to
Tender it not at all likely to do so.
Journal.
In David Whipple's barn at
Groton. Conn., is a brisk little white
horse, weighing not over pounds,
which David Whipple would not sell.
That little white horse, worth, perhaps,
not more than or lately
took David Whipple, his wife and two
daughters all the way from
Ala., to Groton. in
The journey occupied a little more than
two time, counting in a visit in
a Virginia town.
The little white bravely en-
the journey, which lay through
Tennessee, Virginia, Pennsylvania and
New York State, the party crossing
the Hudson into Tarrytown. The lit.
tie horse arrived at Groton as
sleek and glossy as when it trotted out
of the Alabama town two months be
fore. The horse on aver-
age, thirty miles a day.
little said David Whip-
as kind as a kitten, the pet of
the whole family. No, sir, I would
not sell York Herald.
Found the Distinction.
Tomorrow the Liberty Bell will
begin its journey back from At-
to Philadelphia. The bell
will be stopped a short while in
this State at Charlotte, Salisbury
and Greensboro. It will be taken
by a special train and occupy a
car constructed for its
Forty prominent
of Philadelphia and Atlanta, and
the Mayors of both cities, will ac
company the bell on its home
journey.
Mrs. Betsey Moody, mother of the
note evangelist, Dwight L. Moody,
died at Mass,,
years.
The Marseilles com-
of Ottawa, has failed for
Was He Earth's Oldest Man.
Ga., Jan.,
Lester, supposed to be the oldest man on
earth, is dead in the Henry County
at the age of one hundred
and twenty-eight. He was in Hal-
N. C, eight years before the birth
of the Republic.
There is no question as to his great
age, as he leaves a son ninety-two
years old, who is an inmate of the
same institution, and a daughter, who
lives in Heard County and is ninety,
five years old.
as he was
known, came from a long-lived an-
His father lived to be a
and his grandfather to be one
hundred and fifteen. The old man
claimed to have enjoyed the hospitality
of George Washington for three days,
and spoke fluently on the subject of the
act of Jefferson, Madison and
Jay. He to have fought in the
war of 1812, but he never drew a
pension. He lost three sous in the
civil war. In he was obliged to
take refuge in the
In he was married to Mrs.
Mary Mosely, aged eighty-one, the
housekeeper of the poorhouse.
A recent letter from Justice Walter
Clark, of Raleigh, who is now touring
Mexico, gives an interesting and
amusing account of the distinction
drawn between first, second and third
class passengers on the stage roaches
of t- at country. AU those who read
the will recognize the
graded in the of
with which the different classes
of passengers arc treated
Judge Clark bought a ticket and
mounted to his seat on the stage.
As the vehicle off, he noticed on
one side a man who had a second-class
and on the other a third-class ticket.
As the journey proceeded Judge Clark
began to wonder wherein the difference
between the tickets lay.
When n hill was reached he found
out, for the stage stopped, and the
driver shouted out
passengers get out
and walk up; third-class
get out and push ; first-class passengers
keep
A San woman is
suing her sister for
in
promoting the successful mar-
of tho latter. In her bill of
particulars tho plaintiff specifies
that she the pros
bridegroom in respect to
tho engagement between him
and her sister, and him
Catching Bears With Beer Kegs.
Beer kegs are being used with
great success for the odd purpose
of catching bears in the vicinity
of Wash-, and are said
to make the best bear traps ever
used in that One end is
knocked out of the keg, and then
a number of strong, sharp spikes
are driven into the sides, tho
points slanting slightly towards
the closed end. A big dab of
honey or other delicacy especially
liked by a bear is then placed at
the further end, and the keg is
dropped in the woods
where the bear is likely to
across it. The device caught
five bears in one week for one
keg planter recently. The bear
just pushes right into tho
keg after the honey in the end,
and the spikes effectually prevent
from backing out, and all he
can do is to roll around until be
it tired, and then for the
trap layer to come.
Tax every pistol and pistol
seller heavily, and require him
to keep a word of his sales, and then
tax person who owns pistol,
as by those sales, and enforce
this system by fining who do
to keep, fulfill and perform j no, News and
and that the interview ,, .,.
wan had at nor stater's request. j





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
J, Motor
Entered at the at Greenville
X. as second-class m l matter.
1896.
MOTT AND BUTLER
Form a New Alliance Pritchard and
Skinner
Letter With Name to
it Seems to Have Raised
a Sow.
It looks like allowing those Kinston
incendiaries to leave the State rather
than serve a term in the penitentiary is
loose a had set of men on some
other community. If they were guilty
they should have been punished. Send-
them to another State is no punish
There must have been n change in
mail schedules somewhere. For two
days now the Charlotte Observer
reached us the same it is pub
The rejoices at
this, the is always looked
for and the sooner it comes
the better. If it can continue reaching
this section of the State the same day
it is published it will have an equal
showing down this way with other
daily papers.
The Suites Congress at
Washington presents a spectacle not
very promising for financial relief. The
House passes a bill to issue It
is sent to the Senate. That body
amend it and makes a free coinage of
silver bill. This when returned to th
House will be changed back to a bond
bill and so on ad The Sen-
ate is playing politics to catch the vote
of the silver States. The House
it good politics at present to look
out for the gold-bugs and so their work
one of and not states-
and nothing whatever need be
expected from this
Cuban matters came to the frost
with a rush when Senator Morgan, of
Ala., on behalf of the Senate committee
on Foreign Relations. reported a
lengthy resolution setting the
fortunate condition of affairs in Cuba
and their depressing effect upon our
commercial interests, and requesting
the President to use his good offices
Spain to get the Cubans
as belligerents, in order that the
fighting in Cuba may be governed by
the rules of war. Nobody expects
that Spain will agree, but if she doesn't
it is altogether probable that the United
States will, unless there is a change in
the situation.
Senator of Nebraska, more
than balanced the speech of Senator
of Colorado, against the Mon-
roe doctrine resolution, now before the
Senate, by one in its favor which
pointed out the errors upon
which Mr. built bis argument.
Answering the statements made in
papers the people of the
United States divided in
Senator Thurston said
upon the floor cf the American
Senate, knowing whereof I I
to the people of Great Britain that
the grave issues which have been net.
tied by brave men upon American bat-
am lie again.
Sir, there is no division of sentiment
in the United States. Let but a sin-
drum beat lie heard upon our coasts
announcing the approach of a
foe, and there spring to arms in
North South the grandest army
the world has ever known ; animated
by a deathless loyalty to their country's
Hag, and on to the mingled
inspiring strains of our two Nation-
airs, Yankee Doodle and
President Cleveland spent a day
duck-shooting this week and that may
have started the rumor of his intention
to decline forwarding to the European
nations which signed the treaty
that concurrent Congressional
expressing sympathy for the
and calling upon the powers
named enforce the Berlin treaty
compel Turkey to protect the
on the ground that to do so would
be a violation of the American
inaugurated by Washington and en
by all our Presidents, of avoid
entanglements European politics
Whether tile President has any such
intention is doubtful. The
itself a rent one, does not.
require the President's signature to lie-
binding, nor can it lie vetoed by
him. It him to
the resolution to the governments
of the named, and while it
would be unusual fur him to decline, he
has the right to do so if lie thinks it
bast. Should he do so it w ill not be
docs not sympathize with
the condition of the Armenians, as lie
expressed bis sympathy for them in
Washington, Jan.
Watch out Harry Skinner He
went to North Carolina last night. As
he puffed out of the station, he had
wicked in his smoke-stack, no
body in his pilot house, and no cow-
catcher on. He'll gather speed as he
goes, and if somebody put a log
on his track he'll smash himself up or
somebody else up. One could hear the
of hot thoughts in his boiler, and
his safety-valve and air-brake
were all gone to the bow-wows. He'll
be a hard man to run against. Let
somebody mention Butler and he'll
blow a breath-full of tacks in his face.
Yesterday morning Senator Prichard
and Mohawk Harry sat in close confer-
in the House before it was called
to order. Pritchard had at last caught
on to the capers of Butler and Mott,
and later prove the
of the statements in my letter
last Saturday that Mott went away
leaving rain-barrel behind him
as a memory only.
But about Harry first he had a
wounded vanity to nurse he bad made
a talk at the silver conference last
week it was in the afternoon, and was
pronounced a spinner it made such a
hit that the gathered
about him and put him on the pro-
gramme for a long speech at night.
Night came, but no speech. Butler
had grown jealous hail had I
stricken from the list That's What
first made Harry mad. Then he began
looking about and found that Butler
had elevated Mott to the Chairmanship
of the Silver to lie resident
here in the spring. This made him
madder. But to be briefer, a running
will better serve the story.
Mott had grown suddenly very excited
on silver, and had practically, accord-
to my letter printed Sunday, cut
loose from the Republican party. Any
way, that was the way it WM to go to
the Populists. But it does not take
shrewd guessing to say that Mott is the
same Republican of old in silver guise,
and that Butler will attempt to deliver
the Populist party over to his silver
Republican camp, while Mott is pro-
fessing to deliver the party
over to the Butler silver camp. And
it is all done to unseat Pritchard in
favor of Mott and Pritchard knows
it, and he, also, Butler are
on account of this. The i
that Pritchard has not come forward
with his silver views fast enough for
Butler, and on this will rest Butler's
pretext for deserting him now in favor
of Mott. And just here steps in Mr.
Harry Skinner to remark that Butler
has made the worst break of his life,
and stung by the memory of a speech
suppressed, he vows that Populists c
his class will never follow any faction
under the management of Mott. whose
very name is politically repulsive to ;
large part even of the Populists win
left the Democratic party, and who will
now return to the Democratic party
rather than follow in his lead. Skin-
went so far as to say that Butler
might have suggested the name of a
man like Jarvis for the position to be
held by Mott, but this, of course, is
ridiculous, especially in the light of a
wise remark made to me last night by
a Democratic Congressman from North
Carolina namely, that the
should play fighting shy
of the detestable and disgraceful broils
of the unholy alliance. In this new
scheme are said to be
included Russell, Logo Harris, Jim
Young is if they
get Loge to stick. Harry Skinner was
more Democratic than Populist in his
thoughts when he left here last night,
and the breach between him and the
Wind-bag of Wayne is distinct and deep.
Now as to the other side. The
thoughts of Skinner have been the
thoughts of others even before the an-
of the deal.
The Wood letter has a history ask
Mr. Spier Whitaker be deny writ-
that Did not Mr. Spier
put Dr. Wood, the
of the letter signer, in charge of the
Raleigh Asylum for the Insane More-
over, are not Wood Whitaker
ins In any event will Whitaker deny
that in the of the Wood letter,
his object was to an anti Butler
faction of the Populist party to be
headed by himself And does not Mr.
Spier Whitaker propose in his mind to
deliver this faction over to the Demo-
in case they will make
overtures to him And does
not Mr. Whitaker know that many
Democrats would prefer even Mott, or
anybody, as Governor to Whitaker
These are questions rhetorical,
not expecting answer except in the
strangely peopled caucus of Mr. Whit-
own But the soul
of Whitaker, the person, will on
a conference with the soul
of Whitaker, the politician, he
thinks on these thing-.
So that it may be taken as a fact
that is the word now for the
Populist party. The Mott incident is
the last straw that broke the camel's
back, and Butler is no longer roosting
on the leader
Jim Boyd was here hist night fresh
as one of Emerson's Seltzers,
but in the main just practicing
law. Mr. Boyd is sure ct one thing,
that there will be three distinct tickets
in the field. By the bye, it is due to
Mr. Boyd to say that he was not my
source of information as to the things
related above. Mr. has the
of the situation by the nape of
the neck, he says, and is willing to bet
on it, that the next vote will show
figures; Republican Demo-
Populists, There
is no doubt in the Greensboro states
man's mind that the Republicans will
BOW get together in true Holton-Settle-
Boyd style, the differences Boyd and
Holton have been healed.
Among other things in the air is the
statement that Marshal Molt is
at the new relations assumed by
his father. It is thought that Marshall
is not in line with the new movement.
To sum the whole matter up, the pro-
gramme is to shelve Pritchard, who
will now make tracks the
can party, abandoning the Electoral
Fusion scheme; for Butler to attempt
to deliver the Populists to Mott, with
Mott pretending to deliver the silver
Republican's ill exchange for the Sena-
and for Whitaker to attempt to
deliver the disgruntled Populists to the
Democrats, with a faint Gubernatorial
smile of E. Christian in
Raleigh News Observer.
CAROLINA
Look Over and Select Your Place.
TOBACCO JOTTINGS.
o. i.
MEET WITH THE COUNCIL.
Mayor Makes a Good
the business men
of Greenville have been requested to
express their views as to the best
of advancing the interests the
town, it is my opinion that it would be
well for the business men of the town,
and especially those who have energy,
push to meet the Board
of Town at their meeting
on Wednesday evening, February 5th,
express their ideas as to what can
lie accomplished. So I take the
of asking such as are mentioned
above to be present at this meeting-
The Board would especially like to
have some advice as to water works,
and as the Board is composed of only
six men feel a delicacy in taking
the whole responsibility upon them-
selves. They wish to do something
and something must be done.
The people of Greenville are too
slow to act upon matters this kind,
but like some of our sister towns, seem
disposed to sit still and take no action
as to the town's greatest needs. We
will wait until the town is in ashes and
our property destroyed, then will be all
in a fume for water works It will be
too late then, and our error will be
parent.
Let all who have a warm spot in
their hearts for the welfare of Green-
ville and who feel an interest in the
prosperity of the town, be pres-
at this meeting as requested, and
advance such suggestions as they think
will best accomplish the desired results.
Mayor.
BOARD OF TRADE NEEDED.
Much Could Be Accomplished By One.
Reflector occurs
to me that the most necessary step to
be taken in order to increase the mate-
rial of the town, during this
is the organization of a Board of
Trade for the town. To do this it
will much time or to
do anything else that will invite
amounting to anything this must
be done first, for not many projects of
business nature have ever succeeded yet
where there was not some system by
which to work. The most thoroughly
systematized organizations to-day in
the world are those that are making
the most rapid progress, and where
system is neglected or overlooked in
the rapid march of progress, ruin and
failure is the universal result,
hence repeat, if we would place our
town and its advantages before those
seeking new homes, in order to do so
successfully we should have some
our business men who are inter-
in this matter manifest an interest
in ii and see that a
our inducements is made A
Board of Trade organized and
constituted would, ill my opinion, at
this lime do more toward advancing
and promoting the internal development
of the town than any other one agent.
It is true there are other things that
the town needs, but it seems to me
that we need a Hoard of Trade first,
and then the board will help to get
things that we need, are
business men enough in the town who
ought to be interested in this matter to
take it right up and push it on until we
get one. A room could be rented and
neatly furnished right in the central
part of town at a very small cost Give
us a Board Trade first and in less
than one year there will be greater
domestic improvement then there has
been in any one year in the past
O. L. J
There are peculiar names
among the in North
and in looking over the list we find
places suitable for a large number of
people and things in general. For in-
stance, we would send
The indolent to Action.
The Israelites to Ai.
The wicked to
The sick to All Healing.
The farmers to Alliance.
The swine to Apple Grove.
Red headed girls to Auburn.
Old maids to Bachelor.
Depositors to Banks.
Tramps to Bath.
The soldiers to Battle Ground.
The skaters to Big Falls.
The birds to
Girls wanting sweethearts to Beau-
fort.
The newly wedded to Bliss.
The washerwomen to Boiling Springs.
The insects to Bug Hill.
The populists to Butler.
The children to
Wine drinkers to Catawba.
The to Charity.
Story tellers to Chestnut.
The cows to Clover.
The pugilists to Corbett
The crooked to Erect.
Truck planters to Farmville.
Florists to Flower Hill.
BlacKsmiths to Forge.
ball players to Fowle.
The geese to Goose Nest.
to Goldsboro.
The old family clock to Grandfather.
Paper money folks to Greenback.
Cabbage heads to Greensboro.
The canines to Hanging Dog.
Those in search of good luck to
Horse Shoe.
to House.
Sportsmen to Hunting Creek.
The girls who cling to Ivy.
Those having relatives to Kinston.
The small boys to
Bookkeepers to Ledger.
Those fond of sweets to Little Sugar
Loaf.
Those fond solitude to Lonely.
Those light in the upper story to
Lovers of good poetry to Milton.
The financially embarrassed to Mon-
Africans to
The discarded lever to New Hope.
For hard wood to Oakley.
Fur dealers to Otter Creek.
Noisy people to Quiet.
The weary to Rest.
S. A. L. people to St. John.
Delinquent subscribers to Settle.
Sleighing parties to Snow Hill.
Irishmen to Shamrock.
White advocates to Silver.
The insincere to Sincerity.
Drinking people to
Riders to
The lawyers to Suit
Turpentine hands to Tarboro.
Lovers of the weed to Tobaccoville.
Indians to Tomahawk.
Lovers of soup to Turtle-town.
To get a clean shirt to Washington.
Seekers for cold weather to Winter-
ville.
But if you want to strike the
place of all just come to Greenville.
There is not as heavy preparations
as a general thing, among the
for a large tobacco crop this year
usual.
OAKLEY ITEMS.
By the close of this season the
Greenville tobacco market will have
sold nearly twice as much tobacco as
it ever has in any one year before, and
as much as any other eastern market.
Next year we expect to lead.
While in Danville and Lynchburg a
few weeks ago I met with several
exporters who were very much inter-
in Greenville. I was asked the
question by some them what induce-
would be offered them to come to
Greenville and locate a
here. These people mean business.
They expect to come to eastern North
Carolina, and say they prefer
any of the other eastern mar-
but they want to see if the
of Greenville desire them as much
as some other places. These
work quite a number of hands and
all of their money would be spent
among the merchants here. Before
the beginning of the next tobacco year
I expect some of you will have mi
opportunity to show whether you want
them or not.
From in every section of
the eastern country I have inquired
diligently as to the probable acreage
that will be planted in tobacco this
year. From the information gained
from this source am led to the con-
that in Pitt county there will be
no increase at all in the acreage over
last year. In most sections of the
county there will be a decrease I
have found a strong disposition on the
part of the large planters to curtail the
crop considerably this year, while the
smaller planters, from to acres,
will plant about the same as last year.
From Greene county the reports are
conflicting, some contend there
will lie a heavy increase while the
more conservative claim that the acre-
age will on the whole be about the
same as last year. Lenoir county will
increase largely, so will Craven, but
when it is considered that Pitt plants
nearly, if not quite, as much as all of
these it will be clearly seen that on t
our principal bright to-
producing eastern counties, will
not increase the tobacco acreage this
TO ALL FREE MASONS.
Oakley. N. C. Feb.
Elder J. L. Ross was the guest of
W. II. William- Wednesday.
S. It. Ross, near here, sent n young
man, Ed Ho, for his mail Monday,
and on his return happened to a bad
accident. The horse became unman-
and ran away and on turning
a short bend in the road be slipped am
fell and broke the boy's collar bone am
otherwise bruised him. Dr. Nelson
was called and dressed the wounds and
the boy is doing well.
Susan Jenkins was visiting rel-
near Robersonville last week.
Mrs. Sallie Bryan, wife of Guilford
Bryan near here, died Saturday even-
after a long illness with
The bereaved husband and rel-
have our sympathy in their
row.
T.
WHITE
C. A. White's old stand
-----DEALER IN-----
A Plea for Peace Between the Nations
strong words in his annual to buoyant as a soap bubble, spending his
.;,.;. . .
During the first eight months last
year horses, valued at
were shipped from the
States to British ports, as against
in the same period of 1804, and
in 1893. The shipments to
Continental ports show a large increase,
too. The variety of horses in demand
are different in almost every country
WASHINGTON, D. C. POST
It is barely possible that some of the
members of the Ohio Legislature are
not as black as they are indicted, but all
of the evidence tends to show that they
are.
Mr. threat of an armed
force moving on Washington, is a base
plagiarism from Col. at-
tempt to solve the Presidential
very of 1876.
The Cuban cause is to he
lated on the fact that Field Marshal
Halstead is not going down there in an
advisory capacity.
Russia denies that deal with Turkey,
but at the same time maintains a tight
grip on her carving knife.
Doubtless an early adjournment would
materially assist Mr. Reed's boom, but
there are u number of booms stabled in
the Senate.
Now that it is assured that Mr. For-
is to be one of the Ohio delegates
to St. Louis care should be taken to
provide him with a room near the fire
escape.
The Spanish press censors are
liberal with their marks.
It appear- that the
the Illinois Republicans was
confined to the press dispatches.
It looks as if John L. Sullivan's last
drunk is a sine die affair.
It is said that Mr. Harrison is unable
to fix mind on his law business.
Very likely the approaching New York
and St. Louis events are somewhat dis-
The South Carolina Legislature is
to wallow ill
In case Dan Stuart succeeds in pull-
off that carnival he might be a good
man to tackle the St. Paul.
The old Venezuelan maps are turn-
up with the same frequency with
which the oldest Mason dies.
Mr. Tillman says he a brick in
Nashville, January,
To all Ancient, Free, and Accepted
Masons Throughout the
Grand Lodge of Tennessee,
now sitting in annual communication,
in the city of Nashville, send their
greeting to the brethren of the
Mystic Tie wheresoever dispersed, and
sincerely hope and pray that the war-
clouds which now seem hovering over
the nations of the earth will soon be
dispersed, and the white wings of peace
v. ill again cast their lengthening shad-
over the world.
t. is end we urge upon every
Grand Lodge of Ancient, Free, and Ac-
Masons meeting during the year
to issue some fraternal sentiment
favoring a peaceful termination of all in-
strife; also, that they use
great influence with the
and peace-keeping Powers of the
two worlds, to exhaust all honorable
and peaceful means to settle all con-
without resort to arms.
between nations means death
and destruction and untold agonies, and
we who believe in the Fatherhood of God
and the brotherhood of man can net re-
from raising our voice in
nation of the needless shedding of
human blood.
we greet you, and strike
hands with you in bringing about a
peaceful solution of the impending
of
BETHEL ITEMS.
N. February
II. Mount C. M. Bernard passed
through town Sunday,
Dr Gregory, of County,
spent Saturday and Sunday here.
J. R. Bell, of Mount Olive, who
lived here in 1894, spent Saturday and
Sunday here.
Rev. J. W. Powell, of Rocky Mount
filled his regular appointment at the
Baptist church Sunday morning and
night and preached excellent sermons.
G. W. Mount, of spent
Sunday in town.
II. W. A. Martin has moved
to town and will occupy the J. I.
Britton house on Main street.
Walter Dawson. of Conetoe, is in
town today.
The Board of Supervisors of Bethel
Township were in session here
day evening.
Financial Statement of the Atlanta
Exposition.
According to the reports of the
Committee the receipts of the
company has been while
the total expenditures reach
866.44. This leaves a deficit of
806.31. This amount however does
not include the loss sustained by stock-
holders, bondholders and the railroads.
It is the amount that will lie lost by the
holders of the flouting claims.
According to reports of the
the the company was unable to
pay of its income bonds and
will be unable to pay about per cent
of its issue of of mortgage
bonds.
The Company received in
from the city and citizens
of Atlanta for which stock was issued.
This will be a total loss as there will be
no funds with which to pay the amount
This statement shows that Atlanta
invested in the exposition.
Atlanta Journal.
and Oats just I handle all brands of High Grade
Fertilizers for and Tobacco.
Death entered and stole from the
home, daughter of Nelson
and Emily Nichols. She was
Dec. 1879, and died Jan. 1896.
She was a faithful daughter and
only a few days with pneumonia.
I pray her dear friends will take fresh
courage and march on and strike
hands with her in that bright home
just over the river of death, where all
is peace and love.
Her place is now left empty
And friends left alone,
She saw bright angels coining
From a quiet and beautiful home.
She has found a resting place
Free from sorrow and care,
She has met with loving faces,
We will try and meet her there.
Is she gone yes she is gone forever,
To a land so happy and bright,
The chords around our hearts will
ne'er sever,
Through many a dark, lonesome
night.
Oh do not grieve mother dear
For the loss of your dear one,
She did not fear to go,
God has taken her for bis o
The Lord hears and pities all ;
He all our wants,
And what we kindly ask of him
His love withholds or grants.
J. T.
The Herald says that only one in
six of the wells of are fur-
water. must b
in Europe, varying, of course, with the pocket for Mr. Hill. We would copying after Greenville in the water
Fooled Her That Time.
A story is told of a Island
woman whose husband is a chronic
He belongs to so many
secret societies that he is away from
home nearly every night until nearly
o'clock. This was very
ant for his wife, and she waited one
night till he came home before she
went to bed. Sin- waited until
o'clock and no familiar footstep was
heard on the gravel walk. She
paced up and down the hallway like
a sentinel on guard. The clock struck
and still no husband appeared.
She waited another hour and then with
some talk to herself about divorce pro-
she went to the bed chamber
and there she saw her husband peace-
fully sleeping the sleep of the just, and
then she remembered that he had
gone to the lodge meeting, but stayed
at home on account of a headache and
so went to bed at
CLOSING
OUT AT
COST
ENTIRE STOCK ;
MERCHANDISE
Will be closed out at cost without reserve. There
will be a change in our business next year and
these goods must go. Remember everything
goes at New York cost. Parties owing us must
make immediate payment so we can settle up
the business.
J. O. Proctor Bro.,
GRIMESLAND,
THE OLD RELIABLE.
--------IS STILL AT THE WITH A LIMB--------
PORTY YEARS taught me Unit the best Is the
Hemp Rope, Building Pomps, Farming Implements, and every-
necessary for Millers, Mechanics general house purposes, a- well as
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods have on hand. Am head-
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T.
Cotton, keep courteous and attentive clerks.
FORBES,
GREEN N. C
J. L. SUGG.
Li pi Firs line Ami I
N. C
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-Cf ASS COMPANIES
At current rate
AGENT FOB FIRE
Our National Honor.
It is highly desirable, should war
ensue, that all the country stand to-
Our national honor is worth
more, from a Christian standpoint,
than the which, in the
name of pence, will suffer another
to take steps which, whether they
touch our confines or not, cannot be
interpreted than as indicative
that they will be reached in due time.
For one, we believe in the Monroe
doctrine. We know a little trouble
now, in demonstrating it as a principle
of a great people, will save a great war
Recorder.
Dissolution Notice.
The firm of Ricks. Taft Co., have
this day by
in it u consent. Higgs Bros withdraw-
the firm.
of January
RICKS, TAFT O.
T. A. JONES. 1878- P- H- SAVAGE
SAVAGE, SON CO.
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants,
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers In Bagging, Ties, Bags. Ac- Sew
Attention given to Sales Cotton, Grain, I and
Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. Prompt and Highest
Market Prices Guaranteed.
Norfolk National Bank, or any Reliable its Reuse Ii th
of the firm will now be
Hicks Taft and on found at the
old stand, just opposite the millinery
stores, where they will be glad to sec
all old customers and welcome new
ones. RICKS
Mrs. Anna Gage, wife Ex-
Deputy U. S. Marshal,
Columbus, Kan., says i
was delivered
of TWINS in
less than min-
and with
scarcely any pain
after using only
two bottles of
C. O. Cobb, Pitt Co., N. C. T. J. POPE. Co.,
COBB BROS CO.,
Vet.
and W near C. R. B.
COTTON AMI ill; It MS
Bagging , Ties and Peanut Sacks Furnished at
Code, edition used in Telegraphing.
and Solicited.
Congress.
time, as he said, trying to be Got- of work are him keeP
Hie.
DID NOT
or Mill, on of price,
Book
CO., Si.
ALL
CO
tel
Ai
Differ in their tastes. The foremost
thought with the men just i ow is
tobacco and prices, while
the ladies are thinning the
LATEST STYLE IN MILLINERY
at Lowest Prices.
It they will call at the store of
will H a fill line of
Mile, Laces Em-
IS, Fancy Hair
Pine, Side Combs, Belt Buckles, and
other style goods.
Agent for Standard





o J
are finding it profitable
to their
CLOTHING
from me. T will treat
you fair and square. It
you want a suit of
clothes to fit you neat
ind up-to-date in figure
come and see me.
THE REFLECTOR
The King Clothier.
There is a big catch
in my store for eleven
dozen men who desire
to purchase from my
beautiful line of
They consist of all the
latest novelties. A call
will convince you.
F WILSON
The Leader.
Some homely
has remarked that
the good things of
life seem to be on the
other side of a barbed
wire meaning
that the price was big-
than the pocket-
book. That
hadn't seen my
beautiful display of
Local Reflections.
February.
Second month.
Hard rain Sunday night.
Plenty of mud since the ruin.
Twenty-nine days month.
Kain is on the now.
The interior work is being placed in
the Court House vault.
The outlook is the cotton acre-
age will be increased this year.
Mr. D. S. Smith is haying lumber
hauled to u residence ill
Get to work now on your gardens
and have them to plant by the
14th.
New York city is getting so
that they want to stop pie from spit-
ting on the streets.
Buy the cheapest and best Sewing
Machine, Standard, o years guarantee.
S- M.
best Floor is
Knot sold by S. Al. Schultz. a
lb bag.
For best Carts and Wagons go
to A. G. Cox, Manufacturing Co-
Winterville, N- C-
The incoming steamers are
heavy freights just now. The fertilize
are also large.
Although a girl may lie bright enough
to know that is a. she's
frequently unable to decline it.
This month will give live Saturdays
but four of every other day of the week.
Leap year causes the fifth Saturday.
Mr. D. D. Haskett has purchased
four lots from the Greenville
Lumbar Company, and will build there-
on.
It is beyond the knowledge of the
oldest inhabitant when there has been
a better January for farm work than
last.
Tell the truth at all times. Perhaps
you won't make as much money by it
but it will insure a much happier here-
after.
Cod Fish, Irish Potatoes, Prepared
Buckwheat. Oat Flakes, Mac-
P. Molasses, at S. M.
More people are inquiring for dwell-
houses in Greenville than can be
accommodated. The build
more houses.
There are only foreign born
citizens in North Carolina or per
cent. This is the lowest proportion of
any Stale.
Ex-Sheriff Warren says have
commenced planting potatoes at River-
side. This is the earliest planting we
have heard reported.
It i said that an Indian girl has in-
vented a lamp that will go out at
o'clock, p. m. Greenville
girls don't want that kind of a lamp.
We did not see the ground hog Sun-
day, but caught a mosquito out basking
around. It was a bad day tor that mos-
to be out, too, for lie never got
back in.
From the way lots are being sold
buildings going up on the southern side
of Greenville, it looks like that will be
most popular residence portion of
the town.
car loads of Iron for Tobacco
Flues has been bought by A. G. Cox
Manufacturing Company at low price
and you had better see them before
buying flues.
Every now and then telephone talk
springs up through the air
and not over wires, however. We be-
a telephone exchange would be a
good thing for the town.
the Fair, begin-
on the 24th and continuing
through the week will be the best vet
held. pays the round trip from
Greenville, including admission to the
fair.
Dr. C. M. Payne lied two
splendid sermons in the Presbyterian
church, on Sunday, to large
He will preach tonight
his subject being the Chris-
Miss Smith gave a party of
friends a Thursday
afternoon, chaperoned by Mrs. Frank
It was a jolly, pretty crowd
when they drove by our office. For
pretty girls Greenville Hie
Greenville, on the
Tarboro road, a brown overcoat. Had
pair red home knit gloves and
probably red bordered handkerchief in
pockets. Liberal reward for its return
W. M. Smith,
Falkland, X. C.
The were out Thursday
night and made good music. There
were four of them, and all girls, and
when we first heard them we thought
it was the Boston Star favor-
us with a complimentary selection.
were singing the
FOLKS
Get Around Just Like in any Other
nth. Faces Foremost.
AN ACT OF GREAT MERCY.
which are offered low
to make room for ray
spring goods.
FRANK WILSON,
N.
Lecture Friday Night.
Rev. J. T. of Richmond,
who has recently returned from Pales-
tine, will arrive in Greenville next
Friday morning and give his lecture
and Scenes in in the
Baptist church that night. The pro
reeds of the lecture will go to the
Aid Society of this church.
His lecture is illustrated. The
are thrown on n seamless canvass
feet with Marcy's
The entertainment will be interspersed
with vocal music, solos and in
which Mr. Betts will be assisted by
his sister. Mrs. Thomas, late of Boston
Conservatory of Music. Both are
gifted in song and Mrs. Thomas es-
received the highest
the Boston Herald saving
is quite an artist in her This
entertainment promises to be of a very
high order and the people Green-
ville are to be congratulated that they
will have an opportunity to hear it.
Everybody ought to be present,
rs the price of admission has been
fixed the low rate of cents for
adults lo cents for children under
years of age.
J. R. is sick.
Mrs. Alien Warren is reported much
better.
S. W. Coates has gone to St. Louis
to buy horses.
Miss Pool, of Williamston,
is visiting Mrs. A. M. Clark.
Misses Ella Anderson and Bessie
Patrick are visiting at Ayden.
Mr. T. R. Moore has commenced
building a residence in
Miss I lumber came home
from Hobgood Wednesday evening.
Mis. J. A. Dupree has recovered
from her recent attack of pneumonia.
W. B. Brown is out after having
been eon lined at home for a few days.
Mitt Morrill, of Marlboro,
is visiting her brother, W. F. Morrill.
Cornelius Stephens has greatly
proved and baa been walking out the
last few days.
R. Cherry returned home Wed-
evening from a trip over on
the Norfolk Carolina road.
Ed Randolph went down to
Wednesday evening, and from there
may return to Central America.
Ex-Sheriff G. M. Mooring came in
town this morning on crutches. Friday
evening he made a misstep in going out
his door and sprained ad ankle.
Alex bade his Green-
ville friends good bye, Monday
and left for Tarboro. After a few
days there he will return to York.
Rev. J. W. who
in the Baptist church, Sunday
night, left Monday morning tor Dunn.
He was the guest D S. Spain while
here.
Remarks of Judge Hoke in Passing
Sentence Upon the Bonner
A SUDDEN DEATH.
Mrs. B. Latham was sick last
week, having had two or three light
chills. Saturday when Mr. Latham
went to return from his dinner to the
store of Mr. II. B. Clark, for whom he
clerks, his wife seemed much better
and during the afternoon expressed
herself as feeling so well that no one
need stay in the room with her. A
little past five o'clock Mr. W. B. Bur-
a relative of the family living near
by, went in to see how she was getting
along minutes Mrs. Latham
talked cheerfully with him. Sud-
she expressed herself as feeling
worse and asked for some medicine
which she had been
an unusual look on her face Mr. Bur.
became alarmed and ran to the
door to call some neighbors and to
send a for a physician and
for Mr. Latham, but before any of
them could reach the house she was
dead.
Her sudden death was a shock to the
town and a severe blow to her husband.
Mrs. Latham was Miss Dixon
before her marriage and was in her
year. A husband and three small
children are left to mourn their
able loss.
Mr. mother and brother
arrived from Washington Sunday
morning, but the latter leaving his wife
sick had to return in the afternoon.
Mrs. mother arrived
day evening from Littleton, and the
funeral took place at Mt. Pleasant
church, four miles from Greenville
Tuesday.
Vault Completed.
B. F. Smith, of Richmond, who had
the contract for putting the vault in the
Court House is here inspecting the
work which has just been completed.
The contractor and the county both
have cause to feel proud of the work.
county in the State has its records
better protected than Pitt.
Paste This in Your Hat.
The 24th to 29th
whole The
The annual fair of the
East Carolina Fish, Oyster, Game and
Industrial Association. The
for r trip from Greenville. The
exhibits attractions this year will
surpass all former fairs. Don't fail to
attend.
Gone to the Penitentiary.
Today Uriah Bell, Sherrill Bell,
Brantley and David Credle, the
damn of J. B. Bonner, were taken
from Washington to the State prison at
Raleigh. So it seems that the notice
of appeal given by counsel for the de
was only a big
They had better be thankful that their
clients escaped the gallows.
Cotton and Peanut.
Below are Norfolk prices of cotton
and i ennuis for furnished
by. Cobb Bros. Commission Mer-
chants of
Good
Low
Good 13-16
Corrected by S.
Batter, per to if.
Western to
Sugar cured In IS
II to
Corn to it
Flour, to
i to to
to
to
Salt to
to
Beeswax,
Special to Reflected
Washington, Feb. the
jury in the Bonner ease returned their
verdict of guilty of murder i. the sec-
degree yesterday afternoon, counsel
for the Bells requested that the jury be
polled. A motion for n m w trial for
all the defendants was then made, but
overruled by the
In passing sentence upon prison-
era, Judge Hoke said my mind
there has been an act of great mercy
done this day in the county of
What has led the jury to this conclusion
I do not know. It may be Shut it was
on account the youth of defend-
ants. Possibly they thong,; the kill-
was not designed or intend d by the
parties at the outset, but the fatal shot
fired by Sherrill Bell, young-
est of the defendants, after th- others
had fled, and in some frenzy, fright or
of discovery. Th Jury I
believe have acted from
motives have the s.
of knowing that if they it
has been on the side of mercy. But
there has been an atrocious and
murder done on an innocent and in-
offensive man, and no one heard
the evidence, and heard it impartially,
but was forced to the conclusion
defendants were perpetrators of
deed. They are all guilty, and
one of them, and the jury in
this verdict of murder in the de-
have extended them all ill.-
they deserve or should receive, on
this verdict the extreme if the
law for such an offense must be
ad. In this case it is considered and
adjudged by the court that Uriah Bell,
Sherrill Bell, and W. II. Brantley, Jr.,
be confined at hard labor in the
for and during the of
thirty
After the notice of f the
defendants Bell was given, the ease of
David Credle, the
murder who made the was
called. He entered a plea of guilty of
murder in the second degree, and S. C.
one of his counsel, made a
touching appeal for mercy. He refer-
red to fad that Credle had do the ;
Slate great service in the and ;
that he was a weak and ignorant man
who had no parents to rear and train j
him. Credle was given fifteen years-
Neither of the defendants to j
manifest any emotion or surprise under
the verdict of the jury or sentence of j
the court.
It is stated the ballot taken j
by the jury after retiring from the box
stood seven for a verdict of guilty and j
five for acquittal. They deliberated j
upon the case twenty hours before
riving at their verdict.
GUILTY IN SECOND
And Sentenced Thirty Tears in Prison
Much Indignation at the
Bolls Appeal.
Washington-. Jan.
trial that has been in progress
here nearly three weeks came to a close
today. The argument of counsel was
completed yesterday afternoon, when
Judge Hoke delivered his charge and
ALL ACQUITTED.
On Wednesday afternoon, of last
week Redmond Bob Williams,
Ross Joyner. J. B. Colic- and B X.
Fields awn arraigned before Lenoir
county Superior Court on the charge
of Mating fire to the stables of B. X.
Fields, at Kinston, on February 88th,
last. The trial continued a whole
Week and much was intro-
some of i very strong
and gave the case to jury a little ,,.
before C o'clock.
This afternoon the jury reached
decision and a verdict of
of murder in second
Judge Hoke immediately sen-
upon William Brantley, Uriah
Bell and Sherrill Bell, giving them
each thirty years at labor in the
State prison.
Sentence has not pronounced
upon David Credle at this writing.
There is considerable indignation
here over the verdict, a majority of the
people believing they all should
been found guilty of murder in the first
degree and hanged for their brutal
crime.
for the Bells took
an appeal to Supreme Court. Credle
was sentenced to fifteen years in State
prison
Will Leave the State.
We learn tin who were
Wednesday in the incendiary
trial at Kinston arc to leave State.
There were charges of perjury and
other matters against some of them,
counsel for the defendants proposed
to the court if the eases were not pros-
further would till leave the
State within ten days.
Railroad to Snow Hill.
There is a on foot for a
railroad from Greenville to Snow Hill.
Petitions looking to this end are being
circulated in Greene county. The
hour- the road will lie
secured. Snow Hill is badly in need
of railroad facilities and a road
here to that town would also be con-
benefit to Greenville.
I he ease was given lo jury yes-
morning, and after out an
hour and a quarter a verdict
acquitting all of the defendants.
the verdict was brought in Judge
remarked to the
have the having tinned
loose four very guilty men ; poor en-
for law abiding people to
come to a court of
We learn that there is much in-
in Kinston over the result of
the trial. The Free Press showed
creditable enterprise in publishing a
fourteen-page issue and giving a full
report of the evidence in the ease.
That paper says of the
of this community believe the de-
are
Exporting to Germany.
Every day the possibilities of Green-
ville become more and apparent, and we
see no good reason why this town might
not yet one the most
of tobacco markets. At the de.
pot Saturday we noticed forty hogs-
heads of tobacco exported
to Bremen, Germany. The shipment
was made by T. E. Roberts Co., and
is the first lo exported from here. If
this shipment proves satisfactory, and
no doubt it will do so, the way is open-
ed for Greenville to become a large ex-
porting point.
To Build an Office.
Mr, Alford Forbes has let the con-
tract to build an in the vacant
space between his store and the bank.
This space is only about feet wide,
but sufficient room tor a very
neat office. When completed it will be
used by Mr. Henry Sheppard. Capt.
J. T. Williams has the contract and
says be is going to put some nice work
there.
GOV. JAR VIS HURT.
Friday night the horses to
Hotel Macon omnibus ran away at the
depot, T. J. Jarvis, who was re-
turning home, had just assisted Jar-
vis into the vehicle and was about to gut
up himself when the horses jumped off in
a run. In trying to get Mrs. Jarvis out
the Governor was thrown from the
omnibus, falling on his back and left
side, but fortunately no were
or serious injury dune. He
received a on the left leg
and on the back and left hip. These
were very painful during the night but
he is resting more comfortably to-day,
and hopes to be out in a day or two.
Mrs. Jarvis was not thrown from the
omnibus and was not hurt.
The difficulty occurred from the
fact that the left the omnibus,
with no one to care for the horses, and
when the other vehicles started the
horses to the omnibus finding they were
unrestrained started off at full tilt after
them.
There is generally much carelessness
among the drivers, and the way horses
are left standing around the depot with
no one to attend to them it is a wonder
more accidents of this kind do not
FALLS SPEECHLESS.
Special to Reflector.
X. C, Jan.
a highly respected citizen
of Greene count-, went out early Wed-
morning to feed his horse, and
fell speechless. He never again,
and died about o'clock, p. m. He
was about 0.3 years old and used to car-
the mail between Fountain Hill
Greenville in
At a party near here, last
night, one Jacob shot
Pitts, slightly wounding him.
was sent this morning.
Ayden, N. C, Jan. F. W.
Braxton, who has been sick for several
months, died hist night.
At this writing Mrs. Susan
ton is dying at the home of her son,
Mr. J. A. Harrington. She is very old
had a stroke of paralysis
day.
Change of Firm.
The firm Cobb Bros. Co., com-
mission merchants of Norfolk, has been
dissolved, R. -L Cobb and Joshua
Skinner from the firm. The
business will be continued under the
old firm name by C. C. Cobb and T. J
Pope. The new firm will operate a
private wire to York, Or-
leans and Chicago and do a general
commission business in cotton, grain
I and provisions.
Put in the Guard House.
Last week Policeman Cox placed
John Curtis, colored, in the guard
house. Not long ago Curtis was tried
for disorderly conduct, the fine
cost-amounting to having
money to pay the tine a party
stood for Curtis until he could work it
out, but Curtis becoming disorderly
again the officer was sent for and told
to take him in charge.
Public School Opens March 2nd
The committee for this public school
district, while, held a meeting Tuesday
night decided to open the school
on the first Monday in March. The
school will be taught by Mrs. J-
Sugg and Miss Sadie Short. Both
these i are excellent teachers and
the committee made good selections.
The length of time the school will con-
has not yet been decided upon.
Mary
Iowa.
Years
Tenacious Chronic Gives Wry
to Hood's Sarsaparilla.
years attar
Illness, my neck begun to swell- It did
not give me any tea
for many years. About ten
ago It commenced to pain mo and ill took
I have
Terrible Choking Spells.
Even my people thought lost hour
came, I read of a lady in
Mich., who had been cured of by
Sarsaparilla and immediately be-
to this medicine, using several
My neck measured inched last
May against inches f f O
now. It a wonder v
astonishment to
ray friends and neighbors, for I grow-
worse all the time and no one thought
I could live through the winter. All
thought a core impossible an I am years
f Mas. Fred-
Iowa. Take only Hood's.
Marriage Licenses.
Register id Deeds King issued only five
marriage . last week, the small-
est of any week during the
mouth. Two of these were for white
and three for colored couples
WHITE.
James A. and Anna Tyson.
A. Dickinson and Minnie Young.
Henry Cox and Mary E. Garris.
W. II. Ray and Martha Brown.
Walter Askew and Nancy Gay.
The total Dumber issued for the
January was forty-eight,
twenty-one. while and twenty-seven
colored.
Hood's PillS
Flues,
STOVES
e are now orders for
Tobacco Flues. Give us your
order for Flues and they will
be made right.
We sell the Elmo and Gold
en Grain Cook Stoves, none
better
for Columbia
We can sell yon a bran
new for
Gall and see it.
S. E. PENDER CO
lam making room f i
Spring Stock and will
prices on all good to
then. The new ye
caught us with a little to
many goods to carry over m
will rush them out at bottom ft
See me for great bargains. C.
ford. Next Door to Bank
FOR THE-
FALL
BUSINESS
and cordially invite you to inspect
and neatest assortment of
Tobacco, Irish Potatoes, Cotton.
and Cotton Seed Meal.
------Before yon buy don't fail to on-----
for priced. If yon do not find Mr- Jesse at
his office cross the street and talk with Mr. Chas. Cobb
They are both prepared to supply your wants at low-
est prices and give the best the market affords.
db Co
ever brought to Greenville. Our
all the newest and
DRESS GOODS
Furnishing
Good Boots
and Shoes, Domestics,
Bleached and
ed Sheeting and Shirt-
Fancy
Cotton Dress Goods
everything you will
want or need in that
line. Hardware for far
and mechanics
use, Tinware, Hollow-
ware, Wood and B
Whips, Buggy Robes, folk
Twine, Heavy Groceries always
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Salt and
The best and largest assortment of
cry, Lamps, Lanterns, Lamp
Shades, Fancy Glassware, etc., to
in the county. And our stock of
Matting, Carpets, Rugs and Foot Mate
the and cheapest ever offered to
of this section. Come look and see
Sole agents of Coats Spool Cotton for
for wholesale and retail trade.
for Men and Boys.
for Ladies and children. We buy Cot
Peanuts and pay the highest market
them. Your experience teaches you I
and deal with men who will treat
do the square thing by you. Come fl
and be convinced that what
Yours for business square
LANG'S CASH
Now located in our new store, nil
Wooten's Drug Store. Everybody
the prettiest store in town. It is
to see the beautiful display of Novell
and Fancy Goods we are
Middle Counters. Many early N
early Spring Dress Goods, White
Laces and Embroideries.





ESTABLISHED
PORK
FARMERS AND
their supplies will
their interest prices before
n all its branches.
FLOOR, COFFEE.
RICE, TEA, c.
always LOWEST I VIET
SNUFF A CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
FURNITURE
and sold at prices
the times. Out goods bought am
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close martin.
S. M. C
a i.
six
our I lead-
s. i. I Si.
Ian., brine yea atoll try
rules it
measurement, of our fa-
pants; 13.23;
Overcoat. 10.25, and up. tut
to order. warned every-
where.
New Plymouth Rock Co.
WILMINGTON W EL DON R. It.
AND BRANCHES.
AND FLORENCE RAIL RoAD.
TRAINS
Jan. 6th
s It S
i e
K S
Leave
Ar. Ml
Tarboro
A. M.
c s
a. m
Rocky
Ar.
At
TRAINS GOING
Dated
Jan.
Ar n
A. M
II
Wilson
Ar Mt
JO . r
Id
V o
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
Rocky Mt
Ar
P. M
is
M P. N,
II II
GOOD FOR STOCK
TOO.
Is
pare especially for stock, as well as
man, and for that purpose is sold in tin
cans, holding one-hall pound of
cine cents.
Lambert. Franklin Co., Tenn ,
March 11-92.
I have used all kinds of medicine, but
I would not give our package f black-
for all the others I ever saw.
It is the best thing for horses ore- till in
the spring of the year, and will cure
cholera every time.
R. R
P P. P.
cures all skin
and
blood diseases
Physicians endorse P. P. P. as a
splendid combination, and preset Hie
with great satisfaction of the cure of all
forms and primary, secondary
and tertiary syphilitic
P. P. P.
Cures RheumatisM.
ulcers and sores, glandular swelling,
rheumatism, malaria, old chronic ulcers
that, hive restated all treatment, ca-
P. P. P.
Cures Blood Poison.
skin diseases, eczema chronic ft male
mercurial poison,
staid head, etc., etc.
P. P. P. is a powerful tonic and an
excellent
P. P. P.
Cures Scrofula.
building up the system rap
Idly.
Ladles whose are poisoned
and whose blood in an impure
due
P- P- P.
Cures Malaria.
to Irregularities, are
benefited by th tonic
blood cleansing
Prickly ash. Poke root and Potassium.
P. P. P.
Cures Dyspepsia.
Bros., Props
DRUGGISTS. BLOCK.
Ga.
Boo id His.,. mil; I f
Sold at Drug Store.
SMITH EDWARDS. Props.
the late store near
Court
GREENVILLE, N. C
Manufacturers and dealers in all
kinds of
mm, and mm.
FUSE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY
All kinds of repairing done
use skilled labor and
material and are prepared to give
you satisfactory work.
P. II.
President.
Lovit Him s,
Sec. A
Train on Scotland Neck Branch
3.55 p. m., Halifax 4.13
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p
Greenville 0.47 p. m., 7.46
p. m. Returning, leaves 7.20
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving
Halifax at Km a. m , Weldon 11.20 am
tally except
Trains on Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a, in., arrives Parmele
in. Tarboro 10.00; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.30 p. m , 6.20
p. arrives 7.45 p. m.
Dally except Sunday. Connects with
Scotland Neck I
Tram leaves C, via
Raleigh R. daily except
p. m., Sunday; p. M ;
arrive Plymouth P. St. 5.25 p. in.
6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a -n.,
Tarboro 10.26 and
Train on Midland N. C. branch
daily, except Sunday. COS a
m. arriving a. m. Re-
turning leaves a.
rive 9.30 a. ill
in Nashville branch leave
Mount at . in., arrives
Nashville 5.06 p. m.,
p. in. I, inn. g lei. e Spring Hope
a at
Mount a in. daily except
Sunday.
s on branch, R
It., leave p m,
p m. lo p
leave a in. r i m,
e 7.50 a m. dally t Sui-
Train Branch lea es War-
saw for t
11.10 n. m. aid 8.50 p, m-
a. p in.
No. makes close connection
a I rail via
me at Mount
Ohio R for
all North vis Norfolk
JOHN F.
r. ., Manage-.
R H
LUMBER CO.
Always in the market
for LOGS and pay
Cash at market prices
Can also fill orders
for Rough
Lu m
Give us your orders.
C HAMILTON. , Manager.
On
J. F.
STABLES.
Fifth Street near Five
Points.
ks.
The man could not trust
is supposed to do
on a cash principle.
The lady who went of in
came back on the L road.
The gentleman who too
far in an argument was brought
home on a stretcher-
The man who wrestled with ad-
wore out the of his
and got worsted.
The man who jumped upon
the spur of the moment was soon
glad to sit down again.
The girl who burst into tears
has been put together-
The man who painted the signs
had his wings clipped.
man who was taken
y surprise has returned.
The man who painted
the of the times is now out
of a job-
It is rumored that lent
to the view now
the view refuses to return it.
The man who was moved to
tears complains of the
of the premises, wishes to be
moved back
News.
Came by Private Conveyance.
Mrs. Mamie Lloyd and family,
of Mecklenburg county, Va.,
rived in last and
spent the with the family
of Mr. They came as far
as this point private convey-
This morning they took
the train for Greene county,
this State, where they will reside
in the future, Mrs. Lloyd's
band is now in Greene county,
where he is engaged in the
of tobacco. He made the
entire trip from Mecklenburg
county, Va-, to his present home
by private conveyance. Durham
San-
Every one knows what the
shopping woman has done for
the shops. What have the shops
done for her They have
her many articles of wear and
comfort at less cost than she
could have made them for herself;
and they have saved her nerves
her dollars in ways
able- The could not have
done this if they had not paid
themselves out of the service.
Their is publicity; and
it is a liberal paymaster, paying
the shoppers as well as the shops.
No wonder the women read the
store news as faithfully these
days as they do the lists deaths
Mid marriages.
NOTICE.
By of power contained in a
decree of the Superior Court of Pitt
county In the cause entitled K. S.
administrator de
the will annexed of O. C. Farrar
M. Farrar and others. I
will sell b-fore the in Bethel.
N. on Monday, second day of
March. a lot or parcel of
I o of an sere,
in the town Be Pitt
N. beginning on the South
side of the A. K. at R. J.
Grimes A Co's corner, then S. h
their line to F. James line, lien
W. wit hi-i line to new then
with th- street North E 1st to the
railroad, then east with the railroad
the beginning, on is a
two stores. Also house and lot in
said town of Bethel, adjoining the lost
of M. Hammond, Melissa A.
ant and D. James, formerly
pied by James, Jr., as a dwelling
house, both of parcels of realty be-
more particularly described In the
deed from right O. O.
recorded In Pitt county
book D. pages and
to which reference is made for a par-
description thereof.
For the Hist parcel
of land aforesaid, one half cash, the
am e, evidenced by of
to commissioner, payable in twelve
mouths, with six percent, interest from
the day of sale, for the second panel of
land aforesaid, e hundred dollars of
the price in cash, the
by bond of purchaser to the
in twelve mouths, with
six per cent, interest from day of sale
The title to I realty to be
until purchase pi ice Is paid.
F. S.
This Jan. 1896. Commissioner
AMATEUR MASSAGE.
Passengers carried to any
point at reasonable Good
Horses. Comfortable Vehicles.
Notice of Dissolution.
The H in of f, L. A Co., was
this day dissolved by mutual consent.
L. purchasing the Interest
of of the Arm. All
outstanding business t the will be
settled by J. L.
L. STARS KY.
J. E.
ZENO
This of December,
Notice of Dissolution.
ll, A
is by
mutual consent, the will
hereafter be conducted by A
OLA FORBES.
This day of
NOTICE.
By virtue of the powers contained
certain decrees of superior court
County In die case entitled. W.
II. and Henry Me trading under
the name Marts Co., in
own b half and in the behalf of all other
tors of Marcellus Moore, deceased,
who will join herein and hear burden
of this sup. as Plaintiffs, against J. D.
Murphy, Executor of is
J. i. Murphy Individually and as
guardian of W. W. Moore and
Bruce . Murphy, wife of said J. D
said W. W. Moore and Bruce
M W. and wife,
Helen S. and J W. Perkins as
of his said wife. John N.
P. Bane-, trading as
Barnes, Sarah Moore and
Oliver Moore, as I will sell
the Court House Door in the
town of Greenville. N. C., on
day , the fourth day of March, 1896,
the following real
entire undivided half interest
a tract of land lying and being in
In Township,
lands Of Smith,
James Edwards. Sam Dixon, Henry
Edwards and others, situated In Creep-
Swamp, Containing nineteen
acres more or less and known
as the Sophia Edwards or Thomas Ed-
wards of land. Reference Is made
to the Will of record-
ed in the book of of Beaufort
county at pages and and a deed
W. II. and wife to Mar-
I us Moore and A in am Cox. which
deed Is recorded In the Register's office
of county In Book at
page
one other tract or parcel of land
situated in the County of ad-
joining the of John
Henry Baker. P and others
and known as the or
land, containing four hundred
acres more or less and being the
same land conveyed by J. L. Dawson,
Sheriff, to Moore on third
lay of February, 1870, and rec In
tin of cods Office of Halifax
in Book ill page and
Terms of gale cash.
U. W. WHEDBEE,
Commissioner.
of the
ml What At For.
The benefits of massage are so
well known that it is needless to re-
count them, and no ill person should
be denied tho invigorating effects of
laying on of Many
persons are kept from the curative
effects of massage by the thought of
expense, skilled masseuses
high wages. To enable the home
attendant or friend in some
to take her place is the aim of this
article.
The skilled masseuse must know
the body, with the location of nerves
and muscles, that he or she may he
able to give such as need it special
treatment.
Massage supplies to the the
exercise they are unable to obtain
otherwise and includes a series of
movements of limbs, fingers and
toes, as well as tho strokes of the
masseuse's hands. Those, some-
what violent, should not tried
without the the
and no direction for their use is in-
in this article.
Tho strokes given in massage are
for restfulness or for the purpose of
rousing blood and other or-
to action and may be light or
hard, the same variety of stroke be-
varied to suit the patient No
rule can he given for this, as
is something given only by
and experience.
Massage must never be to
weary, and the should
have a hand firm, but soft, flexible,
sensitive and strong. Even an
may have this kind of hand,
and practice, will make it fall of
healing to the sick.
The masseuse must stand or sit In
a position comfortable for herself, or
otherwise she will be unable to give
comfort. It is the rule to rub the
limbs toward the body. Beginning
at tip of fingers, rub with steady
stroke toward the shoulder, varying
tho according to tho wish of
the patient, and covering the whole
arm. Starting with the toes, rub
toward the thighs. The rubbing of
the abdomen is in a course.
On the back it follows the course of
the and must have some
force to it.
With all tho motions, in a general
treatment tho arms are taken first,
then logs, chest, abdomen, back
from one end to the other of the
Rubbing with the flat hand is the
ordinary method known to every
one. is also rubbing with the
tips of the fingers, which is very
soothing when done lightly and of-
ten induces sloop when practiced on
tho head and wrists.
An invigorating motion is given
by resting the base of the hand on
arm or body, placing tips of fingers
firmly on tho skin and drawing to-
ward the base of hand, working in
this manner from wrist to shoulder
and from foot to thigh. The hand is
never flat when doing this, but bent
to give to the notion of
the fingers.
It will found that the motion
of kneading tho which is
most precisely that of kneading
bread, will give both stimulus and a
restful sensation to tho invalid. On
the limbs this is taken from side to
side, not up and down, as tho former,
but like it in it starts at the
wrists and ankles, working upward.
Last of all, and often omitted save
in cases of sluggish circulation,
comes percussion, which is slapping
tho entire body from hand to
from foot the head be-
omitted. This may he done with
the entire hand flat, or with it bent
so only the fingers, thumb and
of hand touch tho and
must done carefully, as even gen-
blows on tender surfaces are of-
ten not beneficial.
will make those hints
plain and enable any one with a
sound body and nature
to aid in curing tho or in
sufferings more easily
and are many women
and children who will take massage
from those they love who will not
take it from a more skilled masseuse
who is a stranger. Those notes are
written to those who long to help
others, and who know nothing of
massage save rubbing, which soon
wearies both persons concerned.
By these four motions a be-
can give an hour's massage
without becoming greatly fatigued,
and their benefit is marked to the
York Ledger.
AT PARTING.
A Veteran's Opinion.
you advance in your
said Gounod ton young poet,
will come to think of tho great
of the pastas I now appreciate
tho groat musicians of former times.
When I was your ago, I used to say
at I said and at
and now I say
sleep
I'm not a scientist, I don't be-
any particular was made
for sleep. Man at first slept at night
he had no artificial light by
which to work. Of course the habit
of the race for centuries counts for
something, but I don't know any
habit that is more easily overcome
than that of sleeping nights and
working days. It is just as easy to
follow the opposite course. Night
workers, as a class, are healthy and
long lived. When the night worker
through his stint, there is no
one for him to play with. The other
half of the world is about to take its
shift at the treadmill.- Therefore ha
goes to bed instead of dissipating or
recreating, generally amounts
to the thing. night
workers get more and More regular
than the day force.
In general, I think that
mankind sleeps too much. There it
a great deal in the theory of Check-
Icy, the latest authority on hygiene,
that the man who wants to long
and happily must shake off the
bondage implied in having regular
for sleeping and Eat
when yon arc hungry is tho best
and sloop when yon
provided your employment will
Every in civilization
has been by discovering some
way to contravene a so untied law of
nature.-Buffalo
Ho, with a last
In this gray hoar yon die
To as we to yon;
Parting la dying, too.
distance, heart to heart despairing
la a for death.
Tomorrow we shall say,
thoughts reflect today
His quiet room stairs.
The lonely look it wears;
For alt the house and dim
With want of only
What household things shall stand
Hallowed because your hand
Has touched them I We shall
Your help In that or this.
And treasure trivial words yon said
of the dead.
will bear with yon thus
Remembrances of us;
And, now and then
Of stranger lands and
Your tidings from afar shall reach us here
As from another sphere
Jr.-1 if you, at last.
That greater sea had
Whoso winds and waters yearn
Outward and never turn.
And, looking through the waste of silence lone.
You called from the unknown.
Even death is nothing more
Than opening of a door
Through which men pass away
As stars Into tho day,
And we, who sec it not, blinded by the light,
Cry, are lost In
Thus ever, near or far,
Life seems bat where we are;
Yet those we bid
Find death is not to die.
you, departing from our daily
Go hence from life to life.
Clasp hands, and now
The word's a passing knell.
But ripening year by year,
Life triumphs there as here.
Nor dark nor silent would tho distance be
Could we hoar and ace.
A. St. John Adcock in Spectator. .
About the Mouth.
tasks arc not III In
Bad mean poor digestion.
Firmly dosed lips indicate
lion.
An open mouth is an indication of
stupidity.
lips indicate low vitality, some-
times actual
The ant cater has no teeth. Ants
do Dot need to lie chewed.
The curve of the upper lip is called
by poets
in there WON
dentists in the United States.
The Sturgeon is the only large fish
not provided with teeth.
Many kinds arc provided with
teeth on their tongues.
Dentistry was practiced ill Egypt at
least years fore Christ.
Many kinds of shed their teeth.
US animals their fur.
Corbett Handled.
Story of a Careful Man.
Ho was a careful and thoughtful
man. In fact, it may said that
he was an extremely careful and
thoughtful man.
Ho was resting comfortably in his
easy with his feet resting on a
when he discovered that his
needed sharpening. Any
other man would have taken out bis
knife and begun work at once, but
he was too thoughtful for that, also
too careful.
He sighed, got up out of his chair
and went across tho room for a lit-
paper that was
standing in tho Then ho re-
turned to his seat in tho easy chair
and placed the basket on tho floor
between his logs.
His wife smiled approvingly, and
ho felt proud of himself.
He opened his knife, loaned
his basket and began work on tho
pencil.
is just as easy to be careful
and he said as he de-
tho first shaving from the
end of tho
his wife as she fol-
lowed tho shaving with her eye and
saw it go over his shoulder and land
on the carpet behind him.
But why continue There are few
who have not tried to sharpen a pen-
a small basket in some mo-
of temporary insanity.
When ho bad finished, were
three shavings in the and
tho rest on tho floor.
That is usually tho way it hap.
Post.
Where to Plant Watermelon.
Several young farmers were dis
cussing the raising of watermelons,
says a correspondent of tho New
York Post. Many opinions wore ex-
pressed as to the most soil,
the best seed, tho best and
tho like, and finally one of tho group
accosted an aged colored man who
happened to pass. Tho was
stated, and tho young man
now, Uncle Winter, what
is your opinion about all this Yon
must have made many a fine crop
in your
Tho old man's eyes twinkled. Ho
took off his hat, scratched his gray
wool and
ain't rightly do
of as to do
kind oh seed what is more
better common. But I's
able to pick out de best patch
for do
land is dis county or de
adjoining one ho added,
pausing to his words,
done figure it out long time do
place for raisin
is do patch what all do win-
do big house up and down,
and is lost sight
The Fatal Postscript.
you fond of asked
a young man who had the
pretty from tho
try down to supper.
a general thing, an-
looking up into his eyes
with an encouraging frankness that
threatened to his
she added hastily, he started to
say something pretty, any to-
night, thank rather late.
A very little lemonade is all I care
A Queer Care.
In Spain a favorite panacea, in
theory, for the whooping cough is
found in three hairs from
the back of an ass. This remedy
not often resorted to in
however, from an accompany-
belief that tho ass from
the hairs have been will de-
as the patient is restored to
health and will die when the cough
is completely gone.
TASTELESS
CHILL
IS JUST AS FOR ADULTS.
WARRANTED. PRICE
Pa, January
Champion James Corbett, while
playing at the National be-
came involved in a light with a fireman
named II. Murphy. Blows were
track on both sides, and the
was unceremoniously tumbled
down a flight of stairs.
The fight started after
ejected the fireman from bis dressing
room, which he had entered to order
the champion to stop smoking.
was detailed at the National, and
while room
smoke. He rapped at the
door, and AS Corbett opened it saw him
put the cigarette behind him. Murphy
told him it was against the rules lo
smoke, and Corbett denied that he Was
doing so.
Murphy insisted mid then Corbett
forced from the room and locked
the door. Murphy rapped for admit-
The dour was opened sudden-
and he received a stunning blow
iii the lace, which knocked him from
his feet. He arose quickly, however,
and landed one on mouth,
drawing blood.
The men then grappled, and reach-
a stairway. Murphy caught
by the feet, and sent him ling lo
tin lower floor, lien-they again
when some of the -age
and the company separate J them. The
Bremen is about twenty-five years of
age. and is medium build.
Not.
Parts Co., SI Mo.
Wt year, of
TONIC
three year In HI our ca
et ll In the have
that save
yow Tonic Yours
Bold A
druggist.
CO.
GREENVILLE. N. C
II
MARBLE
Wire and Iron Fencing
sold. First-class work
and prices reasonable.
Ground Hog Day.
Next Sunday, the 2nd February,
is called by some sons -ti round
Hog because day
ground hog is said to come out its
hole to see if the winter is past. Th
tradition is that if it sees its shadow then,
that is. if the -1111 shines that day.
it goes back Into its hole because the
winter is only half gone. Rut if it
docs not then see its shadow, if it is a
day, it remains out and there
w lie no more weather.
The modern stand-
ard Family
cine Cures the
common every-day
ills of humanity.
or Ohio, City of
Lucas County j
Frank J. makes oath that
he the senior partner of the Arm of K.
J. Chunky A Co., doing business in
the City of Toledo, County and State
and that said will
the sum of ONE HUNDRED
LARS for each every case Ca-
that cannot be cured by the use
of Hall's catarrh
Sworn to before me and subscribed in
my presence, this day of December
A, D. 1696.
seal f A. W
j Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken Intent-
nets directly on the and
surfaces of the system. Send
fir testimonials free.
K. J. A Co,. Toledo O
by Drug
JOHN P.
CELEBRATED
GUITARS,
ARE YOU
health,
constitution undermined by ex-
in eating, by
the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
A drowning would have little
use for a method of rescue which would
require days. A dyspeptic doesn't want
to bother with a remedy is going to
take weeks to show its effect.
The Lebanon Blinkers are of-
a product under the name of
Cordial which yields
Immediate relief. The very first dose
prows beneficial In most cases, and it
Is owing to their unbounded
In it, that they have put cent
bottles on the market. These can
be had through any druggist, and it will
the afflicted to invest the trifling
sum necessary to make a trial.
Shaker Digestive Cordial relieves
by resting the stomach aiding the
digestion of food.
is the best for
Doctors recommend It in place
of Castor Oil.
Administrators Sale
of Land for Assets.
virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court in the case of W. II. ad-
of J. L. Nobles, I will
sill tor cash at the Court House door In
on Monday, the 27th day
January, 1890. the following of
land, lo A tract of land situated
In Township adjoining
lands of Amos W. II.
Redding and others, containing
forty more or less. Sub-
to the dower of Mary Nobles, will
ow of J L. Nobles.
Dec. MM.
of J. L. W. Nobles.
I. Atty.
Trustee's Sale.
By virtue of a
OUted to me by K. B. Staton and wife
Augusta Staton and J. B. Staton
his Nancy J. Staton. on the 1st
of May, 1805. and duly recorded In
the Register's Office In Pitt County, Ir
Book V page to secure the pay-
of a certain bond bearing even
date therewith, and the stipulations in
said Deed of Trust not having been
with, I shall expose at public
n, for cash, on Tuesday, the 18th
of February, 1896, at Court
House door In In Pitt
following The tract
of land as scribed by the said of
conveyance which Is said In contain
hundred and fifty-two acres,
and the lands of J. T. Taylor
nut others and laying on h sides of
creek.
Tins
JOHN D. MOOS, Trustee.
Poor
Health
means so much more
you
fatal diseases result from H
trilling ailments
Don't play with
greatest
t Brown's
Iron
Bitters
If you
out sorts, weak
and generally ex-
nervous.
have no appetite
and can't work,
beg in at
the most
strengthening
is
Iron Bit-
A few hot-
ties
comes from the
very first dose- if
won't stain your J
and
pleasant to take.
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments f
Women's complaints.
only has crossed red
lines on wrapper. AU others are sub-
On receipt of two ac. stamps we
will send of Tin World's
Fair Views and
SHOWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE,
OLD DOMINION t LINE.
With careful rotation of
crops and liberal fertilizations,
cotton lands will improve. The
application of a proper
containing sufficient Pot-
ash often makes the difference
between a profitable crop and
failure. Use fertilizers contain-
not less than to
Actual Potash.
is a complete specific
against
Our are nit advertising Wm.
fertilizers, but arc writs, contain-
the results in tin
Even cotton farmer should have a copy. They
lent tree the asking.
GERMAN KALI
St., New York.
THE MORNING STAR
The Oldest
Daily Newspaper in
North Carolina.
The Only Daily
its Class in the State.
Favors Limited Fret Coinage
of American Silver and Repeal
or the Ten Per Cent. Tax on
Stale Daily cents
per Weekly
year. H. BERNARD,
Ed.
Male Academy.
The next session of School will
ti- on
I I
and for ten months.
The course embraces all the
in an Academy
Terms, tor tuition mid board
reasonable.
well lUted and equipped
the
stone. in
I in . higher rums.,
guarantees thorough preparation t.
enter, credit, College In
r Stats University. It
refers who have
H wall the of this
statement.
limn
moderate ability inking a course
us will In- in making
to continue in tin-
will be kepi at it
present standard.
Neither Urns nor attention nor
work win be spared to
that parents could wish.
For fin her see or
dress
W.
July
WINE OF
for monthly paint In hip. back,
shoulder, and
Throe are f am
lo
Wine of corrects de-
care Whites and of
Womb, relieve Suppressed Menstruation and
Flooding, quiet the nerve and
to women.
urn
One Hollar
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK
For the Cure of all Skin Di
TAR RIVER SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington for Green
and Tarboro touching at all land
Inn on Tar River Monday,
mill A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays Saturday
Greenville A. M. same
These departures are subject to stags
of water on Tar
with steam-
of The Norfolk, Newborn and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk.
Philadelphia. New York
Shippers their
marked via tr mi
York. from
Norfolk
more from Bat-
more. Merchants, Miners
Boston.
JNO. hON. Agent,
N.
cherry,
Caveat, and Trade-Marks obtained and all F
than Units
from Washington. , .
Bead model, or With
advise, or not, of
patent
a M with
LI. S. sod
sent free.
D. C
This Propagation has been In use tor
years, wherever know ha
been in Steady demand. It ha
the loading all over
where
all other remedies, with the attention of
the most have
for years failed. Tills Ointment is of
standing and the high reputation
It has obtained is owing entirely
xi its own as but little ha
ever own made to bring II before the
One bottle of this Ointment will
sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash Outers promptly at-
tended to. Address all orders and
communications lo
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
N.
The Charlotte
OBSERVER,
N Carolina t
FOREMOST
DAILY
AND
WEEKLY.
Independent fearless ; bigger an
more attractive than ever, it will be
Invaluable visitor to the home,
the club or work room.
I HE DAILY
All of the news of the World,
reports from the State
National Capitols, n par.
WEEKLY OBSERVER.
A family All
news of week. The reports
from the Legislature a
Remember Weekly Ob-
server.
ONLY DOLLAR A Y FAR
for copies,
OBSERVE;







Title
Eastern reflector, 5 February 1896
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 05, 1896
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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