Eastern reflector, 18 March 1896






JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all
of this line
NEATLY,
and
IN BEST STYLE.
of new mate-
rial and the best
of Stationery.
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH
NO.
Two Papers for
We have made
to furnish
the Reflector and
North Carolinian for the
above amount. This is
campaign year aid you
should take the two
leading papers.
PAID-
A day or two ago the Asheville
Citizen said that
bad a rich
regular meeting in Dr.
study- The object of the meeting
in general was and the
subject the meeting was
Control in Mr. H. N-
Lockwood and Miss read
papers on this subject- We re pro
duce a extract from the
account
control said Mrs. Lock
wood, in the It
be to convince
not a of
if the age at which an
may form habits and feel
desires. are not formulated
ideas, but a mere instinctive seek-
physical comforts. Does
this It
does. W hen u tiny baby
cries to be taken up, what should
be done about it nurse
maid is employed to do nothing
but hold the baby, the proper
to do is to see
is warm and satisfied as regards
food, thou place it in cradle
with gentle firmness, and leave it-
A great deal of may be
expressed merely in handling
of an inf int. If the child is laid
to reel with an undecided hand,
that child will soon decide the
matter and
This glorious news- It is a
perfection of a most difficult
science. This paper is a patron
of arts and industries
sciences- It has been a delight
to it recently to keep its readers
posted on latest scientific develop-
We lay no claim to
and sometimes get a
en Keller in the wrong pew, but
as a general rule we believe that
we can be found swinging on to
the gate of science every time she
We have followed Prof.
Roentgen's skeleton photography-
invention very closely, and are
even now waiting for runners to
bring in later returns from Dr.
at the North Pole. When,
therefore, we bee what a gold vein
in science of Mrs-
has uncovered, we
feel disposed to make much of
it- We believe that even
herself and the
of the Club, who
meet from time to time in Dr.
Campbell's study, do not realize
fully the great boon and blessing
to mankind which must
from this discovery of teaching
a child bow to still merely
by the way you it down.
The importance of it is seen more
from a than a paid-
standpoint. We know
not, nor do we cure, whether Mrs-
Lock wood made the discovery
after years of patient thought, or
whether, as Roentgen with his X
ray, it flashed upon her
tally while half carelessly expert
The grand fact is es-
that, when, in midnight
hours, on midwinter nights, by
tireless grates, the old man paces
up and down with the high
of tho cradle, he may-
have surcease from sorrow. It
remains for him to
the child in the cradle with gen-
firmness, and leave Then
he may draw the drapery of his
couch about him, and lie down to
pleasant dreams, while the kid,
daring not to the
emphatic way it was laid down,
will lie still and self-control itself
until it silently cries itself to sleep
or its mother wakes
Observer.
Increase of Divorces.
TOWN TOPICS
you give me a lock
of your heir
He It's all I shouldn't
want you to buy a new lot on my
account.
long do you sup-
pose my cold will last V
that whiskey yon
are taking for it is all gone-
Yes, I kissed her- Perhaps
wrong,
But, really, could not resist,
merely to show how it felt
For she said she had never
been kissed.
In the basement of at pa-
apartment house, toe Cu-
a furious and freezing
tenant faced a haughty janitor.
you suppose, you
ant, that we shad ever live to see
the day when we heat
enough
me friend; you'll have to
to see the
Soak tells me that
he's baying a brewery. Did
know it V
; case at a time-
queer to think that science
on your inwards gaze ;
And size up lights and liver
With the
rays.
have you taken
to the cycle so zealously
study stock.
kind
principally-
Teacher English His-
how did the
Earl of Suffolk meet his death
Bobby follows his
was
He'd go out with the boys ;
Have a glorious time,
If he only could hook
The on the
one kiss he pleaded with
outstretched arms.
She into tears.
I you stingy she
wailed.
it sweet to think of
me in my absence
but sweeter still
in your presents, dear
Jones How did your wife hap-
pen to get a bicycle
physician told her
it would make a of
her
THE CRADLE SHIP.
November, 5th; and December
4th-
The first Monday in each
month is as follows on the 6th in I
January, the 3rd in February, the j o or,
2nd in March, the in April, I B
the 4th in May, the 1st in June, s s ,, I, ,. i,
the 6th in July, the in
August, the 7th September,
and the in October, the 2nd
in the 7th De-
Now the .-hip's
Lo the craft is rocking,
Yon I he port so grand
Land of radiant visions
An Amusing Trick.
Curiosities of the Calendar.
The News and
says the public has doubtless
noticed the increase in the
of divorces recently granted
in North Carolina. The last term
of Wake Superior court granted
more divorces than we have known
before at a single term. The
reason for the activity in the
market is found in the new
law that passed the Legislature.
It is chapter Laws of 1895,
amending section 1285 of the Code
and is in these
1- That section one
thousand two hundred and eighty-
five of Code be amended as
Add after the last sub-
division of said Code the words
following, the husband shall
abandon the wife, and live
ate and apart from her two years,
the wife shall be entitled to a
dissolution of bonds of mat-
but the husband shall
not re-marry during the life-time
of the wife i and if the wife shall
abandon the husband, and live
separate and apart from him for
two years, the husband shall be
entitled to a dissolution of the
bonds of matrimony, but the
wife, in such case shall not re-
marry during the of the
Section 2- That tho statue shall
apply to now pending In
courts of this State. This act
shall not apply to any separation
that may occur after the par sage
of this act.
An exchange has compiled the
following information from this
year's calendar
1806 will have days-
Christmas comes on Friday.
Easter will fall on April fifth.
October alone will begin on
Thursday.
Decoration day, May 30th, is
Saturday-
May is the only month to begin
on Friday.
The year began on Wednesday.
March and April will begin on
Sunday.
June the only month to be-
gin on Monday-
The fourth of July will fail on
Saturday.
February and August begin on
Saturday.
August will have five changes
of the moon-
and October end with
the week.
January, and July will
begin on Wednesday.
Forefather's day, December
falls on Monday.
The first Monday in September
will come on the 7th.
May will be Whitsunday,
and May Trinity Sunday-
March, May, August and No-
have five Sundays each.
Arbor day, the first Monday in
April, will occur on the 6th-
May and August will occupy
places in six different
Labor day, the first Monday in
September, comes on the 7th-
Two months, September and
December, will begin on Tues
day.
Thanksgiving will fall on the
26th of November and the
election on the third of that
month.
St. Valentine's day, February
fell on Friday, and Washing-
ton's birthday on Saturday.
Sunday was
February 2nd, and
Sunday the 9th.
falling on the 16th.
There will be fifty two each of
Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Fri-
day J Saturday, and fifty-three
each of Wednesday and Thurs-
day.
The new moon
on the 14th ; the February
new moon on the ; March,
April, May, 12th ; June,
July, 10th; August, 9th ;
September, 7th j October, 6th,
Here is a simple and easily
contrived means of having some
indoor fun- Put a lighted candle
on a table and on the wall
site tack a sheet of white paper.
Between the candle and the pa-
per place a big book or a piece
of cardboard, so that the paper
may be dark. The effect will be
better if the spectators sit be
the table and the wall, or
at least so that the it in
the tear, either so or
side.
Now, place a at the edge
of the table so that it will reflect
the light from the candle upon
the paper on the wall, and if you
hold mirror fancy or
grotesque figures of any kind, an
image of them will be thrown
upon the paper-
for
a Southern
Home.
Soldiers
There is now before the Mis-
Legislature a bill pro-
for the purchase, from the
family of the late President
vis, of the house and lands of
be used as a home
for disabled and dependent Mis-
Confederate soldiers.
Such an organizing
such an institution under proper
safeguards, would be a most
wise move, in that it would not
only provide for the necessitous
Confederate veterans, but it would
consign to a most worthy use a
locality that is of peculiar interest
to all southern people.
The Picayune knows, through
a letter to a prominent citizen of
New Orleans, from Mrs- Jefferson
Davis, that, while the sale of the
property at has repeat-
been refused, because it
would be used for speculative
and commercial purposes, its use
for a home for the old soldiers of
Mississippi would be most
to the family, and it would
be readily disposed of to that
end to the State of Mississippi.
Nothing could be more fitting
than that place, whore the
last years of the President of the
Confederacy were spent, should
to shelter and protect,
during their declining days, the
and dependent veterans
f the southern cause ; there
is no locality in the State more
appropriate, not merely from
sentimental considerations, but
also because of i's salubrity and
accessibility. The Picayune will
most heartily approve such an
enterprise, earnestly hopes
that a bill to that end will pass
the Mississippi
Orleans Picayune-
Mother is the captain,
is the mate;
Drowsy eyes are closing,
For they cannot wait.
Oh the sights and treasures
On that golden strand
Sail we to the haven
Gems of rarest beauty,
All for baby dear ;
Set the watch, safely
To the land steer,
Rocked by gentle breezes,
Ever sweet and bland ;
Oh the blissful harbor
Stars above are twinkling,
they soon will fade ;
Dawn will soon be blushing
Over vale glade
Ho you little sailor,
Then you'll leave the strand,
Sailing back from yonder
Mother of Children.
The New York papers have
been passing through a lengthy
stage of rivalry in the attempt
to the oldest living per-
son with the largest family-
Down on the lower end of Fay-
street, near the Railroad
crossing there resides an old
man, who can not number her
grand children. She has great-
great-great grand children. The
female head of the house in Han-
Litchford- She is said to be
years of age- Judging from
her she looks to be
150- Time has worn heavily on
Hannah ; she is decrepit, bent and
almost dried up.
Hannah's daughter lives with
her. Her name is Helen Wilkins.
She too, has passed the three
score and ten passed
her 85th year.
Hannah is entitled to fame from
the fact that she is the mother
of twenty one living children,
some of these are married and
have grown children-
It is a remarkable
Press-Visitor.
An Immense Chicken Farm.
Some hopeful speculators who
been counting unhatched
chickens are about to start a
poultry ranch near San Francis-
co which is to be largest in
the world. It is to reach its full
capacity in three years, when it is
to put on the market annually
two million eggs and ninety
thousand chickens for
The plant will include two
with a capacity of
eggs each, and no end of hons w
and pens, which will be contained
in a forty-acre ranch- There
will be nine hundred hens laying
for incubators and ten thou-
sand laying for market. The
whole thing figures out a hand-
some profit bat people who have
had experience With liens are
doubtful of its success.
ANOTHER PITT BOY
Nashville, Tens. March
some
time I have thinking of writing a
short letter but I
have ti to do so for various
reasons. This evening, however, while
I am alone in my study, too weak to be
engaged closely with ray duties on a-
count of the recent attack of sickness
from which am just recovering, and
while t lie cold rains without assist in
my longer consignment to the hallowed
confines of my sacred will raw
myself for awhile by writing. I have
often thought pleasantly of our little
but had not realized how much
loved it until I read an account of the
sad misfortune that recently befell it.
It was indeed sad. But let us us not
grieve too long over the misfortunes of
the past. The past is gone, the present
is ours, and the future is before us.
We hold the magic keys that unlock
the future and reveal to us all the
possibilities that she has in store for us.
Let us not try to retrieve the past by
lamenting one loss, but by moving for-
ward in greater strides along those lines
hitherto neglected. Greenville has
made rapid progress during the past
few years but she has left undone some
very necessary things. Among these
is a good water supply. A fire engine
with no water is of little assistance to a
town in time of fire.
I congratulate the town in its
attempt in securing electric
lights. This has been much needed
for some time, but something needed
much more is the erection of factories.
No town is complete without them. A
great many of our towns and cities are
at last realizing this truth and begin-
to build them. Why does Green
ville not share the profits ; and while a
few energetic men are laboring so
faithfully in the tobacco interest of the
town, why does not some one embrace
the fleeting opportunity and the
most opportune time, endue the town
with new life by setting a laudable ex-
ample
But I began this letter for my own
amusement and not for the town's in-
junction. I intended telling you
something of interest at and about
Nashville, but I have been drawn away
to a spot possessing far more interest
for me and have allowed myself to dwell
upon things concerning my native town.
But I hope that in the near future the
desire of the writer may be realized and
the hum of factories may be heard in
our town ; then will this letter not have
been written in vain.
J. T.
in a High Key.
price tor playing
the piano at a private reception is
a minute- A San Francisco
woman wrote to
manager some ten days ago,
hen the pianist was in that city,
asking what would
charge to play for five minutes at
an afternoon tea. She a re-
ply saying that the charge would
be She thought this
steep and wrote another note
offering to pay for five
of music.
She didn't even get an answer to
this note.
towns die for want of
confidence on the part of business
men and lack of public spirit,
than from the rivalry of neigh-
boring towns or adverse
San.
HER BROTHER.
Who comes to greet me when I call,
And with my hat plays indoor ball
And chases it across the hall
Her brother
Who runs to proffer me a chair
And has a bet pin lying there,
And tells his sister if I swear
Her brother.
Who fills my pockets full of coal
And calls attention to a hole
That's worn entirely through my sole
Her brother.
Who nails my rubbers to the floor,
And from the water-urn doth pour
Into their depths a quart or more
Her brother.
who steals behind me on tip-toe
Just when I'm talking soft and low
And pipes serenely so
Her brother.
Who will not go to bed betimes.
But on my knee each evening climbs
And holds me up for all my dimes
Her brother.
Who was it that her father yanked
Upstairs last night and soundly
spanked i
It was, it gods he thanked
Her brother.
Chicago News.
IN NORTH CAROLINA
Matters of Interest Over State.
At the A and M. College
dents are now enrolled.
The town of has voted
for water works.
The Atlantic Hotel, at
City, has been sold to a syndicate of
Washington and Richmond people in
exchange for a block of real estate at
Laurel, Md.
One best preserved old men
whom we know is Mr. Ben Williams,
Williams township, who although
eighty-five years old himself raised
barrels of corn last year, plowing it all
without any Record.
The charred remains of Mr.
Joyce were found in a shuck pen
at his home Brogden township,
Sunday morning. It is presumed that
he went to sleep there Saturday night
in an intoxicated condition, and in
striking a light set the place on fire
and thus was burned alive. Deceased
was in his year. Goldsboro
Headlight.
Poor House in Sight.
It's a matter of wonder how some
men expect a town to grow.
They oppose any and everything on
the ground that it will not help things.
They arc like the boy who expected
to be rich some day, though he was
never known lo do a hands turn but
somehow he always felt that he would
wake up some bright morning find
himself a millionaire.
That same boy died in the poor
house.
Some they are
liar to any locality, for thew
just like this boy so
far as helping develop the resource
of a town. They evidently think the
town will develop itself and that some
bright morning they will wake to find
new inhabitants, with numerous
mills an humming all around
them.
And a town, run by such men, will
find itself in the poor house.
O America, thou chosen land,
Where dwell the noble free,
Wilt thou not extend a helping hand
To those who call to thee
In thy pride mighty strength give
heed,
No other's woes ignore,
But remember Cuba, sore in Deed,
Lies bleeding at thy door.
land of peerless Washington,
Of Grant and Lee,
Recollect what deeds thy sons have
done
From tyrants to ha free ;
the thou hast the
world.
That chains wear no more,
That makes Cuba, with her flag
furled,
Lie bleeding at thy door.
O Columbia, thy boasted love,
Thy brotherhood of man
Hast forgot the days when thy sons
strove,
Bee Liberty began
Poor Armenia shares thy pity, too,
But nearer lips implore;
Cuba, brave and ever
true,
Lies bleeding at thy
Philadelphia Inquirer.
Highest of all in Leavening Govt Report
Royal
ABSOLUTELY PURE
Why Not P
A foreigner, who has not been long
in this country, is learning our
thus liberates his puzzled soul in
If a lot of little mouse
Are a lot of little mice,
Why are not a lot of houses
Called a lot of little
If a lot of little gooses
Are a lot of little geese.
are not a lot of mouses
Called a lot of little
A MYSTERY.
A Competent Witness.
Some only know good fortune, some
ill luck.
Though equal they in talent, tact and
pluck.
Say not that all on same footing
start
I And that by voluntary net they part,
For I have seen it in a hundred
In various stations and with various
races.
Some without effort smoothly, grandly,
rise,
As sparks fly upward, mourning to the
skies j
Prosperity attends they
touch,
Buried Alive.
Mr. II. L. Woolen, of this city in-
forms us of a distressing revelation
which came about through the
of tin; body his uncle, the late
Mr. Charles Wooten, of
Pitt county. Mr. Woolen about
five years ago, and the other day his
brother-in-law, Mr. May,
the remains to place them else-
where.
Both the box and were found
in a good state of preservation but one
side of the was found to have
been forced have been forced
with such violence as to break the
screws, and Mr. body instead
of being on its back, in which position
it is absolutely known to have been
buried, was on the side with the face
toward the part of the coffin which had
been burst open.
There seems to be but one solution
of this condition of affair and that is
that life was not extinct when Mr.
Woolen was interred, and that he re-
before death came and struggled
sufficiently to send the coffin in the
manner described.
We believe such a case as this is of
extremely rare occurrence, but as such
do happen, even it the eases are wide-
separated, ere blame no one for
every precaution possible to in-
sure against premature burial of
their loved Journal.
A little girl was in the witness
and as usual, before she was allowed to
U- mm .-., -ii i And all with them is joy, or
do sworn, she was examined by the
presiding Judge . T .
as to of
an oath and her belief in a future state, , i
i i caret u, wise.
you know what an oath is, my . . , . ,
child asked the judge. i
i . . brook.
es, hi. ; I am obliged to tell the . . , .
, I heir sturdy hearts misfortune never
you tell the truth where will you
go when you die
to heaven,
what will become you if
you lies P
shall go to the naughty place,
Vet
ever
you quite sure of
sir ;
her he said
is quite dear she knows a
deal more than I
patch.
Plant Walnut Trees.
No Use
A Nebraska man who had a car or
two of horses to sell wrote to a friend in
Washington City whether it would be
advisable to try to cell them there.
The friend people cf
Washington ride bicycles; the street
care are run by electricity and the Gov-
is run by jackasses. No need
f horse flesh
An Englishman was boasting to a
Yankee that they had a book in the
British museum which was once owned
by Cicero. that ain't
reported the Yankee; the museum
in Besting they've got the lead pencil
that Noah used to check off animals
that went into the
A gentleman in New England wag
called to address a Sabbath school, and
during his remarks he seemed much
moved ; but no one else appeared to ex-
emotion. The
speaker continued to wipe away the
tears which chased each other down his
manly cheeks, when a boy in one class
said to his Charlie, do
you know what he is crying
said Charlie, you had to
make a speech, and hadn't any more to
than he has, you'd feel bad,
The tree for which was paid
cash sometime ago still stands on
an island in river up
Bridge water. What we wrote about
was advice to farmers and land owners
to plant walnuts and rear walnut trees.
We took occasion to write something
on the same line about two years ago.
We say now again poor land can be
made rich by rearing walnut trees on it.
Look under any walnut tree and see if
the soil is not rich. As we said
trees can be planted on each acre and
land cultivated with profit, and benefit
to the trees. We said that in years
trees could thus be grown which would
be worth or even more per tree.
We now say furthermore, that of the
trees planted on acre at least
of them should arrive at the stage
of maturity without interference to the
crops and an actual enrichment of the
soil; and also, that if the man
study the e of tree as it grows
he am train them to curl and also prob-
ably to produce a Press.
The Charleston News
Courier says in 1393 the many
friends of the Confederate Home
in that city were surprised and
delighted to learn of
cent anonymous of to
the educational department of
the institution as memoriam
from a bereaved mother's
owed for her only
The home had been organized
and by women for
women and had been supported
and successfully sustained for
twenty-six years mainly by small
contributions of impoverished
South Carolinians and Southern-
announcement is now
made for the first time that this
generous anonymous giver was
Mrs. H. Sophie widow
of Warren who, the
News and Conner says, was for-
a Baltimore merchant.
Mr. contributed
toward endowment fund
of Washington and Lee
of Lexington, Va. After
bis death his wife
Hall, one of the most imposing
structures at the University, at a
cost of
He Found Out.
you don't object, I'd like to ask
you said an old man with a
cane satchel as he stopped a police-
man on Monroe avenue.
your the re-
ply.
I live up in county, and I
have a sou Bill who comes down here
party often. The last time he was here
he come home with his coat ripped up
the hack and dead broke and said a
policeman had given him the
what did he
got the collar, probably, just as
he
what is the collar That's
what I want to
he was probably
whooping along the reel, and an of-
look him by the way
and gave him a way
and rattled his heels so
hold on shouted the old man
as he picked up his satchel and Cane
and hat worked himself down into
his
a dark shadow hovered
near,
Unseen, unheard, intangible, severe,
Frustrating their plans mid well
laid schemes.
Tainting their lives and all life's flow-
streams.
they may be honest, truthful
and Indeed
All we may expect in man, don't
succeed.
Why is it thus Have some a sable
line
Which may be fell, but no one
deli
Starling from crib of coward and the
brave,
Reselling through life and ending
the grave,
While others have a star whose beam-
Shine on their pathway through the
darkest night,
Making the crooked r and tho
doubtful clear,
Leading them forward in their glad
career,
With powers celestial but to cheer
and bless
Till they attain to ultimate success
I will not argue, we may not agree;
Let others solve the mystery.
The Bight to Public Men.
Tie- decision Judge
that criticism of a public officer on the
part of a was a public duty
baa been I judicial
iii St. Louis. an action for
libel brought by William Brock-
man, the president of the school board,
against the city editor of a newspaper,
the special judge called to try the case
the m dismissed it on the ground that criticism
I've found out all I want to know, of a public officer in a
If got that kind of collar and ; privileged and that no action would lie
was locked up and fined to boot, I'll This is
go home and raise his wages a
month and him every Saturday
for a Free Press.
to
She had been reading on
the financial question
had heard the only bug
merchant of her town s touting at
a lively rate about a ratio of
to which he opposed, of course.
She had a little gold dollar hid
away among her trinkets
things, so she thought it a good
time to make the piece of yellow
metal do good service.
She walked into the store of the
bug said, would like
to see Home nice dress goods,
said the obliging
yellow metal advocate, pulling
down some late style fabrics.
is this she
asked, with a winning smile.
one dollar a yard, and
you sixteen silver
dollars for yards
certainly, Miss, sixteen
silver dollars will buy sixteen
you would also take gold
in payment at a proper
he said, you
know I prefer gold to silver, yet
sound law and substantial
York World.
Boys and Hatches.
will take sixteen yards,
The obliging merchant soon
had tho package nicely wrapped
The sweet young thing then
laid down in gold, took her
package and walked out, remark-
believe you favor a ratio
of to
here, come shout-
ed the merchant, but the young
lady had gained the and
the who were standing
by, bad a hearty good laugh at
the expense cf the gold who
bad been taken in on the free
coinage plank of silver men.
The boy who carries matches Is
about H dangerous as the fellow who
points the unloaded gun at you. Re-
we printed an account of two
young boys setting the woods on
the eastern edge of town, and it was
only by hard work that the
of property was prevented. Last
week some set the fence on fire
on avenue, between the
of Dr. L. Harrill and Mr. Tom
Murdoch property owned by Mr.
J. J. Sullivan and only a timely dis-
and prompt work prevented
what would have probably been a
conflagration. do not know
that in either of these cases there
was any intention on the part of the
boys to do serious damage ; or that it
occurred to them that disaster might
result, but this docs not help the mat-
A gentleman who was in the
Landmark office when this last fire
was reported, told of an incident with-
in his knowledge, which occurred re-
in the upper edge of South
Carolina. A load of straw was being
put into a barn. A boy playing on
the inside had a match in his pocket.
He struck the match. Barn
burned and boy with it.
It is an extremely delicate matter
to advise parents about the
of their children, but in view of
recent occurrences it may not lie amiss
to say that parents of small boys
should impress it on them by
moral suasion or with th-; limb of a
that they must not carry





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
j. and
Entered at the at Greenville
S. C., as m n matter.
Wednesday, March 18th, 1896.
grew on the subject, but neither the
President nor any member of his cab-
will talk about it, at least for
publication. One thing can be set
down certain. Congress has been
stampeded, but the administration will
not be. Mr. Cleveland wants to know
he is right before he takes action that
cannot be recalled, and which may cost
the United States thousands lives
and millions of dollars.
The anti-option bill of Col. Hatch,
which been killed so often and
which passed the House in the last
Congress and came near enough to
being passed by the Senate to badly
opponents, is about to be
killed The House commit-
tee on Agriculture has agreed to table
the
The report of the majority of the
Senate Election Committee, written by
Chandler, of X. H., in favor of the res-
for investigating the election of
the Alabama legislature that elected
Senator Morgan exposes a Republican
plot to get a majority in the Senate by
unfair Their purpose is to use
the Populists to help them pass this
resolution. Then to have the
committee report in favor of
seating Senator Morgan, when the Pop-
are again expected to join them
in voting for the adoption of that re,
port.
The Ki-publicans in the House In
to get some out p
the hearings been arranged
by a of the House com-
on and Means for next
week. These hearings are announced
be for the purpose of ascertaining
whether the reciprocity treaties and
made by the I; Mr.
during the last republican
were of benefit to this
country to make their renewal
and what and customs
in foreign countries are
mental to an increase in our foreign
easiness. As to the reciprocity ma.
ties, the Democratic Congress which
repealed ascertained by thorough
investigation th -I country received
no all from the most of then
and from the others so little that the
whole business was thrown overboard-
a letter that means business which I
publish in full withholding the name of
the writer for reasons. I sincerely hope
that some one will take hold of the
matter and build these people a good
house, for unless it is a good one they
will not use it.
The advent of a in C-
ville conducted by this firm means the
giving of employment to at least one
hundred hands, and the money paid
these hands will all be spent here in
Greenville and our people will get the
benefit of it. Besides, it will be adding
another permanent advantageous
feature to our tobacco interests. Some
steps must be taken to get this building
equipped. If any one becomes interest-
ed and will call on me I will give them
the name of the parties wanting the
house and all other assistance in my
power.
Danville, Va. March 1896.
Mb. O. L. Joyner,
Greenville, X. C.
you give me the
name of any one in your that
will build us a factory to handle
co in and equip the building with ma
for steam drying leaf tobacco,
The building would have to be at least
and three stories high, with an
engine and boiler house separate one
story high. We would lease the prop-
for three or more years.
OF BOYS WHITES.
Senators Morgan Chandler
B very good imitation of a
key out of Senator Hoar during the
somewhat acid debate which followed
Senator Halo's rather pro-
of bating read a statement
Blade by the Spanish which
accused three Senators by with
having made tits dating
the argument on Cuban
Senator Hear put in his oar by
ottering a resolution to
of there port the Foreign Be-
until April 6th,
aggravated the matter by some steer-
remarks at the expense of t at
committee for having agreed to a
that was binding upon nobody
Just when he was talking about the in-
justice of our meddling with the affairs
f Spain an Cuba, Morgan
upset the old gentleman by
did you get the in-
formation upon which t sustain your
earnest action regarding
After Mr. Hoar had tried to reconcile
his late position towards the
with his present position towards
the Cubans, to the great amusement of
the Senate and the crowded galleries,
Chandler read a telegram
Senator Hoar sent to the
offering his support by
and vote for the most vigorous meas-
against the Turks, even to treat-
ting them as pirates and enemies of the
human race, and turning to Mr. Hoar,
he suppose you intended to
add, provided that nothing is -done
after April
President is the
to monopolize the talk on
Cuban affairs, and they have certainly
done a lot of it that was entirely
necessary, this week, inasmuch as the
acceptance of the report of the
i on foreign relations in favor of the
Senate accepting the House resolutions
as a e for its own resolutions
was a foregone conclusion from the
first. And talking wasn't tin- only
unnecessary thing the Senate did this
week. While the report of its cam
was pending it a
on the President for
the minion in his possession con-
the present state of affairs in
Cuba. Cuban affairs were fully dis-
cussed at the cabinet meeting and
there are rumors of the President
a agent to Cuba to
find out how things are and of his
intention to semi a message Con
TOBACCO JOTTINGS.
BY O. L.
The well for the protection of the
tobacco houses against fire been
completed is a success.
There is a good of
among the farmers that their tobacco
seeds are not sprouting many
believe that the recent cold weather
snow have killed them. A few
warm days of sunshine will tell the
tide, and it they tire not forthcoming
it will he well to resow the beds.
The old adage, that land well
pared was equal to half the cultivation,
applies stronger to the tobacco crop
than any other that our eastern Carolina
farmers grow. The farmer who waits
until all the cold weather is gone and
then hire a cheap hand to break his
land with a slip shod plow had better
employ himself some oilier crop,
tor surely he will be disappointed if lie
expects to obtain profitable results from
such a system of preparation of the
land he expects to plant in tobacco.
Messrs. H. L. Coward and Travis
Hooker from Greene, have in
Greenville prospecting for the past
few days and its a result have bought
an interest in the Star Warehouse and
will be associated with Messrs.
Brown next year m the ware
business. Tobacconists here
welcome these young men to
our town for they will not only be an
addition to the Star but will be a val-
acquisition to the market, hailing
from Greene as they do in he
one of the finest bright tobacco pro-
sections the east. The
Greenville market can safely on
increasing its sales in that section, for
these popular young men will bring it.
And thus we have four redheaded
now on the Greenville
market. Who can beat it
North Carolina tobacconists look
forward to the publication of the to-
in of the and
Observer with great Interest. The
bright tobacco of North Carolina has
years been branded by the foreign
world as Virginia brights, and Virginia
ha- been accorded the credit that
obtained from the silky texture and
superior color of North Carolina to-
A few days ago Mr. F.
Arendell, representing the
Observer, was in Greenville collecting
data from this market, to be used in
this edition. lie says the objects
aims of the Tobacco will be to
prop place North Carolina
co where it belongs and to give to the
world an idea of the importance of
ties vast industry in the State. He
highly of the industry of the to
men of the State who he said in
instance had shown a cheerful
willingness to put their shoulder to the
wheel do their part in making the
Tobacco a success. Mr. Awn-
dell is one of the most versatile and
waters in State and having
carefully studied tobacco industry
for the past three m nubs, tobacco men
can rest assured that far, at last
North Carolina tobacco will have
done it in the largest industrial
publication ever issued in the State.
What class or grade of tobacco
be most profitably grown in Eastern
North Carolina is a question that
every farmer should ask himself and
seriously consider, and after determining
this question then it behooves the
business tanner to grow that kind as
near as possible If you ha-c land
that will grow wrappers and the price
of wrappers is sufficient to warrant you
in making them then the fertilization
of the land and the growth of the plant
should be a question of consideration,
for the same mode of management of
the plant will not make distinctly- either
wrappers or cutters. If want to
make wrappers a application of
fertilizer for them will be needed than
if you want to grow cutters, for in
wrappers the main thing is good body-
while in cutters body you do not want.
Then, too, a plant of tobacco to make
good wrappers must be topped very
low or sufficiently low that the re-
leaves will thoroughly de-
and these leaves must remain
until they are ripe before they are
cut, and in order to get the beef type of
wrapper the stalk must be cat. In
making cutters topping is not so
as it is not Ben Man to have
body and hence a good more
leaves may safely lie left and the curing
just as soon its the bottom
leave.- begin to yellow
When I in Danville a few weeks
was idled by
and what in-
would ottered them to come
a at I
all tin encouragement that
could in B justifiable way. I
Bare been home I talked with
some of our people, relative to
enterprises and every one seemed , Impoverished causes that tired
. . l k- Hood's
to get them Now here comes enriches vitalizes the bl
gives vigor and vitality.
The Reflector takes the liberty of
publishing some extracts from a per-
letter written by Alex
now of New York, to the editor.
All our people know Alex well, and
are aware of the warm interest he feels
in Greenville. He
You well know how much I regret-
to learn of the recent disastrous
fire which swept over a large part of
old Greenville. You are fully
aware of some of the pleasant days
have both had in many of the buildings
destroyed, but with my knowledge of
the invincible spirit of some of our
Greenville citizens, I feel assured in
predicting that the
ruins will be replaced by better
and more modern buildings and
with its hustlers and
its workers and will once
more assume the supremacy of the
Eastern Carolina shore.
Hut there grave responsibility rest
on those in charge of municipal
fairs who refuse to provide adequate
water supply for the protection of life
and property, and some of these days
the long citizens of Greet.
will awake to this fact and place
men in charge of the city government
who can not be influenced a few
ancient relics past generations who
essay to run the affairs of the town,
and who are not afraid to levy
taxes to protect and promote the
town properly. Then and not until
then will Greenville find rank among
l he first in the
progressively speaking.
Too much credit can not be given to
those volunteers both white black,
who with so little encouragement have
held together and who always respond
so willingly to an alarm of fire, but
their efforts must be seconded by a
to give them the means to do
effective work.
sincerely hope that when I next
have the pleasure of walking the
streets of Greenville I shall witness all
these needed changes. I am pleased
to report that since my return my
health has been excellent and the
of my vacation were most
LET'S ASK FOB IT.
The has several times
made reference to the schedule on this
branch of the Coast Line and suggested
that changes could be made which
would give the towns along the line a
much better service than they now
have. We see no good reason why the I this, my last will and testament.
K. E. WILL.
The will of the late Mrs. Mary
Reade, widow of the late Judge E. G.
Reade, was admitted to probate before
the clerk of the Superior court
day afternoon.
Messrs. C. H. and J. W.
Harden qualified executors. They
estimate the estate to be worth some-
thing over
The following is the will, in
the name of God Amen.
Mary E. Reade, of the county of
Wake, State of North Carolina, do
make, publish and declare this to be my
last will and testament.
direct my executor, herein after
named, shall pay my funeral expenses,
and all my just debts, that I may leave
unpaid. My husband, E. G. Reade,
left me two hundred shares of National
Bank, of Raleigh stock, interest of
the same during my life, and the dis-
to his relatives as I direct.
give to my four
phews named for him each twenty
shares of stock named above, Edwin
I Reade, Edwin R. Noell, Edwin
Godwin Long and Godwin
Reade.
give to my namesake, Mary Eliza-
beth Reade, daughter of Walter Reade,
ten shares of stock; to my nephew,
James Harden, of Graham, ten
shares ; to my niece, Mrs. Emma
din, of Graham, ten shares. I give to
Mrs. Lizzie Noell, of Durham, twenty
shares ; to Mrs. Lulu Bowen, of Mt.
ten shares,
give five shares each to Robert
Percival Reade, Reade, Sue Bet-
tie Reade, Elizabeth Baily Reade, An-
Long, daughter of Rachel
Nina Noell, Arthur Reade and Wash-
F. Reade, son of Thomas
Reade.
give of my own property the
following to my nephew, J.
W. Harden, forty shares of stock own-
ed by me h. the National Bank of
to my cousin, Mrs. Miriam
thirty shares; to my cousins,
Mrs. Martha Riddle and Ellen Bernard,
living in Durham, twenty shares each ;
to my cousins, Mrs. Laura Brown and
Annie living in Granville,
one thousand dollars each in money;
to my cousin, Mrs. Margaret Class, five
shares of stock ; to my aunt, Ellen
Farrow, and her daughter, Emma Wat-
son, living in Hyde each one
thousand dollars in money.
give five hundred dollars in
to my cousin, Ella Primrose, to as-
in the education of her daughter,
Eliza Primrose ; to my cousin, Mrs.
Mary Ann living in Washing
ton, N. C, one thousand dollars in
money; to my cousin, Henrietta Rum-
five hundred dollars in money,
in the same place; to my niece,
Annie Hardin, my nine hundred
certificate of stock to Sirs. Nan-
Lee, five shares of stock ; to Mrs.
Hat tie Brown three shares of stock. I
give to my friends, Katie Bessie
and Nannie my Adams
note for two thousand dollars, to be
divided equally between them.
my friend, Mrs. Mary
five shares of bank stock; to my sous
ins, Lola van and
Matthews, living in Rocky Mount, five
hundred dollars in money each; in
memory of my brother, Capt. William
Shaw, of the Confederate I give
five hundred dollars to the Soldiers
Home, in Raleigh; I give to Bari
Springs orphanage two thousand
in money; to
tery, I give two thousand dollars in
money, for the building of churches and
mission work ; I give to Sylvester
my old servant, live hundred
in money ; to old servant Maria
living in Salisbury, one
dollars in money, to Sally Up-
church, one hundred dollars, to be
used in buying her a tome, to be
chased by my nephew, J. W. Harden.
I give to Mrs. Sallie Gallagher, living
in Washington, N. C., Mrs. Laura
White and my cousin Small,
living in Virginia, who has a crippled
daughter, two hundred dollars each ;
the remainder to my nephew, J. W.
Harden, who has like an
son to me.
appoint C. II. and my
nephew, J. W. Harden, to
Precincts.
In accordance with Section
Laws of the voting
and polling places Pitt county
are established as follows
BEAVER DAM TOWNSHIP.
One voting precinct, polling place
May's Chapel.
TOWNSHIP,
One voting precinct, polling place,
Parker's School House.
BETHEL TOWNSHIP.
One voting precinct, polling place,
Bethel.
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP.
One voting precinct, polling place.
Public School House near Turner
s.
TOWNSHIP.
Two voting precincts, as All
that part of the township lying south of
the following line, to Beginning
at the township line where it crosses
the road leading from the Home for the
Aged Infirm to Black thence
with Black JacK road to Boyd's Ferry
road, thence with Boyd's Ferry road to
Grimes Mill road, thence with
Mill road to Grimes Mill, thence with
the mill pond to the Beaufort county
line, shall constitute one voting
to be known as Precinct No- of
township, polling Public
School House at cross Bead- at Sallie
Cox's.
All that part of said township lying
north of said line shall constitute one
voting precinct to be known as Precinct
No. of township, polling place,
Public School House called
near Church.
TOWNSHIP.
Two voting precincts as
All that part of the township lying
south of tile following line, to
Beginning at the township line on the
road leading from Frog Level to the
Kinston road and running with
road to Kinston road at the Ellis place,
then with road toward Green-
ville to Swift Creek, thence down said
creek to the township line, shall con-
one voting precinct to be known
as No. of town-
ship, polling place, Ayden.
All that part of sail township lying
north of said line shall one
voting precinct to be known as Precinct
No, of township, polling
place
FALKLAND TOWNSHIP.
One voting precinct, polling place,
Falkland.
FARMVILLE TOWNSHIP.
Two voting precincts All
that of the township lying on the
south side of Little Creel
shall constitute one voting precinct to
known as Precinct No. of
ville township, polling Paras
ville.
All that part of the township lying
on t side of Little
shall constitute one voting
la be known as Precinct
of Fa; township, polling place.
Fork of road known as
store.
GREENVILLE TOWNSHIP.
Four voting precincts, as
The first ward of the town of Greenville
and all that portion of the township
lying outside the corporate limits of the
town of Greenville east of the
ton A Weldon railroad, on south side
Tar River, shall constitute one voting
to be known as Precinct No. I
of township, polling place,
Court House.
The second, third and fourth wards
of the town of Greenville shall
one voting precinct to be known its
Precinct No. of Greenville township,
polling place. Foundry
Shops of James Brown on Dickinson
avenue.
All that part of the township lying
outside of the corporate limits of the
town of Greenville, west of the W
Weldon railroad. On
south side of Tar hirer, shall constitute
one voting precinct to he known
as
ling School House,
All that part of the township lying
north of far shall constitute one
voting precinct to be known as
No of Greenville township,
polling place, Parker's Cross Roads.
One voting precinct, polling place,
SWIFT TOWNSHIP.
Two voting precincts, as follows .
All that part of the township lying
south shall constitute
one voting precinct to be known as
Precinct No of Swift Creek
polling place,
All Hi it the township lying
north of Swift shall constitute
one voting precinct to be known as
Precinct No. Swift Creek township,
place. Public School House near
L. B.
This 27th day of February,
E. A,
Clerk Superior Court Pitt County.
Bethel Items.
Bethel, N. C, March 14th,
G. A. Windows, of Mount Olive, has
located here.
The Methodists have built a new wall
around their church which adds a great
deal to the looks.
Some thief stole four large turkeys
from W. C. Nelson last night.
Miss Obedience Carson died sud-
at Mr. M. A. yesterday.
She was about sixty years old.
Bethel N. C, March 16th,
Judge T. I Soy kin and J. II. Blount
passed through here Sunday evening
on their way to Williamston, where the
Judge holds court this week.
M. O. Blount and wife left for New
York this morning to purchase the
spring and summer stock for Blount
Bros.
Ex Keel, of Williamston, is spending
a few days in Bethel.
Henry Walters, of Jamesville, a
pupil of Prof. school, who
has been absent for several weeks on
account of the death of his father,
urned last week.
Ward have rented the
River at Tarboro. James
I. Barnhill will superintend them.
Kohl. Bryan, of Falkland, spent Sun-
day in town visiting his mother.
W. J. Briley and daughters, of Great
Swamp, spent Saturday night and Sun-
day in town visiting relatives.
R. A. Peal, of was in town
to-day.
T. WHITE
C. A. White old
-------DEALER IN-------
Probably Not Buried Alive.
Editor sec in the
Journal an article headed Buried
which states that as a proof, on
Opening the grave of Mr. Charles
Woolen his was found
open on one side and that his face was
turned to the open side, which fact I
consider no proof whatever that Mr.
Wooten was buried alive. Because in
the first place had he buried alive
his strength was not sufficient to have
bunted the coffin.
the gas generated in a
coffin from a corpse that is kept out
some time is sufficient the
sides asunder. I have seen this done
even before interment.
As to the body being turned over,
that is easy enough to account for. A
force of that strength-would have been
sufficient to have moved the body some
and in its decay it would naturally roll
as it was inclined.
I write this because I feel that tin-
article referred to is calculated to give
needless anxiety to friends and much
alarm to nervous women.
Respectfully,
P. B. M. D.
Grifton, N. C.
Newborn Journal.
DRY MS, NOUS BIS Hi SIS JEWELRY
Tinware, Crockery and Hardware, Heavy Groceries, and all
Farming Utensils. T. a Brand of Shovels warranted
Axes, Plows, etc., a specialty. Call to son van get prices be-
fore purchasing. Car load Flour, Hay, Lime. Seed Irish Potatoes
just received- I also handle all brands of High Grade
Fertilizers for Cotton and Tobacco.
CLOSING
OUT AT
COST
present schedule of the mail train could
not be materially shortened both ways
and still make the same through con.
The mail ought to reach
Greenville in the evening at least an
hour titan at present and could
be made to do so very easily.
If the Greenville people want a bet-
train service they should get
let the authorities
know what they wish in the matter.
The people of Washington took such a
step as this in a public meeting and the
railroad authorities were very prompt
to comply their request for it bet-
train service. No doubt our people
will be treated as well it they some
action in the matter.
has adopted an ordinance
prohibiting the sale of second-hand
clothing.
Notice to Creditors.
The Court Clerk Pitt
County having Issued letters f Ad-
ministration tome, the on
day of February, on the
estate of decease no-
tic is hereby given to all persons In-
to the to make immediate
payment to the and to ill
ton of said to pr. sent their
I, to the
within twelve months
after the e of this Notice, or this No-
will be plead bar of their re-
This the Jay of
B. ABs,
the e of Belcher.
E. READE.
I i -11 i -r i News and Observer.
TWO PAPERS FOB
Thia Chance Docs Not Come Every
Day.
The has just made
with the North Carolinian,
of Raleigh, whereby we can furnish
both papers, weekly, a whole year for
Our readers are well acquainted with
both these papers. No paper ever
published in Pitt county contained as
much news as is now found
President Isaac Lewis of Sabina, Ohio. I i t t- w
is highly respected all through
section- He has lived in Clinton Co. i while the North Carolinian ranks as
years, has been president the best weekly paper in the State,
the Sabina Bank years. He gladly
testifies to the merit of Hood's
and what he says is worthy
attention. All brain workers find
Bank
Mrs. Anna Gap, wife of Ex-
Deputy S. Marshal,
Columbus, Kan.,
was delivered
of TWINS in
less than min-
and with
scarcely any pain
after using only
two bottles of
ENTIRE STOCK
i 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 pp
the business.
J. O. Proctor Bro.,
N. C.
OLD RELIABLE.
--------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE--------
EXPERIENCE has taught me that the be.-t is the encases
Hemp Bone, Building s. Farming mi and every
ting necessary tor Millers, and general house purposes, a- well a
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods have on hand. Am head
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T.
Cot tun, and keep courteous an I attentive clerk.
GREENVILLE. N. C
J. L. SUGG.
Life Fire and Accident Insurance.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE AT COURT HOUSE.
All placed in
FIRST-Cf ASS COMPANIES
PIKE
DID MOT
on receipt of
per battle.
mailed free.
CO.,
BOLD BY ALL, DRUGGISTS.
FOR SALE.
King House property, on
main street, the most desirable
hotel in the city, largest
I story rooms,
other buildings, good well
water, M inch ice
low. Terms easy.
House lot corner 2nd and
streets. rooms, and other
buildings. Terms easy.
House and lot on Washington meet
rooms and kitchen, good well water.
store lots on main street feet
title. Terms easy.
houses and lots for rent.
have several other desirable pieces
of property for sale. For further
call on
HENRY SHEPPARD,
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Hood's peculiarly adapted
to their needs. It makes pure, rich,
red blood, and from this comes nerve,
mental, bodily and digestive strength.
am glad to say that Hood's
la a very good medicine, especially
as a blood purifier. It has done me good
many times. For several years I suffered
greatly with pains
Neuralgia
In one eye and about my temples, es-
at night when I had been having
a bard day of and mental labor.
I took many but found help only
In Hood's which cured me of
rheumatism, neuralgia and headache.
Hood's has proved itself a true
friend. I also take Hood's Pills to keep
my bowels regular, and like the pills
very Isaac Sabina, Ohio.
Hood's
Is the One True Blood Purl tier. L
Prepared only by L Hood Co., Lowell. Mass.
If you want the home, State and
general news these two papers will fur-
it to you. Remember this is cam-
year and you could not subscribe
at a better time.
C, Jan.
F. S.
Dear can book me
for tons Orinoco Guano for
tobacco. I can buy guanos
or money but I want
Orb I will order some
sent In I and
fur my different places.
Yours,
J. B. PHILIPS.
Mr. Philips is one of the
mo t tobacco mis-
en- in North Carolina.
GUANO CO
NORFOLK
New Goods
Arriving
Daily.
I am New Goods every
day- My stock will soon com-
in every line.
Nails, Axes, Doors,
and Oils, Rope, Belting an Pack
Poultry Netting and Fence
Wire an A
of every
description. Ton w ill find me a
Five Points where I am selling
goods low for the cash. I bay
for cash tell for cash. I
to see me.
Truly
D. D. HASKETT,
Five Points, Greenville, N.
T. A- JONES. Established 1878. P- H- SAVAGE
SAVAGE, SON CO.
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA.
Retail Ac-
given to Miles Cotton, Grain, Peanut and Peas.
liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. Prompt and
Market Prices Guaranteed.
National any Reliable in th
it .
c. Cobb. Pitt Co. H. C.
T. POPE, Va
COBB BROS CO.
COTTON
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers.
and Progress Building, Water Street
Bagging, Ties and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices.
and Consignments Solicited.
1878 Code, used In Telegraphing. ;
Tobacco
Flues.
Ready For Delivery
Having secured a shop
on Dickerson Avenue
near R. L.
I am prepared to fill
your orders for
STEEL FLUES
at same price fas com-
iron. Have put
in new machinery and
guarantee first class
work. Look to
interest and give me
your orders.
Agent tor Wall Paper.
A Twenty Non-
Participating Life In-
Policy in that
old and reliable com-
the
UNION
CENTRAL.
Remember we also have
also added to our list of
Fire Companies
GEORGIA
HOME,
Columbus, Ga., as-
sets over
WHITE
Office in Reflector building.





I I I .-
THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
The catch of shad is improving.
Court will again on the 30th
of this month.
At S. M. Schultz, Link Sausage and
Mountain Butter.
Almost any kind of weather may be
expected this week.
Canned Deviled Crabs and Shells at
the Old Store.
what a big Slate you
can get for cents at Reflector Book
Store.
Drug Store next door to S.
T. White's. Drugs, Medicines, Seeds
Books.
The machinery for the electric light
plant is on the way -and expected to
rive this week.
Work on the bridge across the river
here progresses very slow a id the end
is not yet in sight.
Mrs. W. M. King has decided to re-
tire from the hotel business and will
sell the King House.
Try the Sporting Club,
Filler, when you want a good cent-
smoke, at the Old Store.
THE
WHAT IS BEING DONE P
People See Their Faces and Straight- of Trade and Get a
way Forgot What Manner of
Men They Are.
Mrs. H. B. Harris has been sick the
past week.
J. S. Higgs is spending a few days in
Scotland
W. left Monday morning
for Richmond.
Jesse returned from Golds-
Monday evening.
W. C. Dancy left Monday morning
Newport News, Va.
Mrs. J. W. Brown
mother at
is visiting her
Any one finding the front of a cufF
blood-.-tone set, please leave it
at office.
repairs are being made to the
residence of Dr. D. L. corner
Greene and Fifth
lie.-. N. II. D. went out to
the I Home, Sunday afternoon,
and preached for the
The man who'd keep on p-
Must ne'er neglect his advertising.
The rear the building on h
street, between the and
store, is being torn away.
If you want to know how many
on the railroad between
and Greenville ask Joyner.
Two young ladies went into Baker
Hart's hardware store yesterday and
asked if had any female bicycles to
sell
The Commissioners of Scotland Neck
have passed an ordinance taxing cigar-
dealers town per an-
Mr. J. A. Lang is having a residence
built in his just east of town.
The building occupies a site facing
Third street.
Henry Sheppard, Estate Agent,
advertises some town property
for sale. He also has three dwelling
DOOMS rent.
When we electric lights, water
works telephones Greenville will
Frank Wilson returned from New
York Saturday
G. P. Fleming returned Monday
evening from a trip up the road.
Mrs. J. E. Langley, of Richmond, is
visiting family of J. L.
S. V. King, of spent Sun-
day night here and left this morning.
Mrs. M. D. Higgs left Monday morn-
Baltimore to purchase spring mil-
Mrs. L. II. returned
day from it visit to her mother near
Grifton.
J. W. Wiggins
evening from a
Mount.
returned Monday
trip to Rocky
Move On.
you noticed the number of
strangers that are seen on our streets
most every day This means that
more people are interested in Green-
j ville than you are aware of. Now the
question arises, what are the citizens
I doing to increase the interest of these
strangers in our town Are any
efforts made to point out induce-
or advantage in locating here
Is this the case, or are such prospectors
as come among us left to roam about
alone, learn what they can and go away
any attention being shown
them Herein is where a Board of
Trade could do a good work. These
strangers might be taken in hand by a
committee and shown around, statistics
furnished them, our good business sites
and excellent farming lands pointed out,
the he.- of the community, our
schools and churches, and various other
things brought to their attention. If
was the proper organization here
and a half effort made the
believes factories could be started in
Greenville before year is out.
Father Bead.
A telegram received from Rev. B.
D. Wells, late Friday afternoon, tells
that his father was dead when he
reached Magnolia. Our people
with him in this bereavement.
He will return to Greenville sometime
next week.
Supply
Tuesday afternoon the fire engine
was taken out to test the new well in
the tobacco quarter. Capt. A. J.
fin says it affords an abundance of water
and it is impossible for the engine to
exhaust it. From this well all the to-
buildings can be reached.
Washington Get Good Train Service.
Monday a new schedule went into
on the Washington branch of the
Coast Line. The passenger train now
leaves Washington at A. M., return-
ed to Washington at P. M. Then
a mixed train leaves Parmele for Wash-
at A. M., the same train
for at P.
M. This gives two trains a day each
way over that road and will prove a
great convenience to passengers and
shippers.
W. M. King and daughter, Miss
Ella, have gone to Rocky Mount to visit
Miss Addie Galloway, of Snow Hill,
who spent a days, here, left Thurs-
day evening.
Mrs. Warren and children, o
Penny Hill, are the family of
S. B. Wilson.
Solicitor C. M. Bernard left for
Saturday where cc will be
held next week.
Miss mains Home left Monday
for Baltimore to purchase millinery
goods for her mother.
be it. And they all will be here
in the near future.
If all the go tip are
being talked now you would not know
Greenville twelve mouths from to-day.
We hope to KG them.
There is no lag in building inti rests.
We hear still houses being
of and hope to soon that
work has Hid on
In times like this there is danger of
placing too high a valuation on
lots. The progress of a town is
s hindered in that way.
Lang is getting in his stock an d
opening as rapidly as i
looks like old times to see him in the
corner store where he once kept for
several years.
Cards are out announcing the mar-
of Miss Eloise to Mr.
Zeno Moore at the home of her father,
Mr. W. F. of
Wednesday, 25th.
For the second week in Reg-
of Deeds King issued ten marriage
licenses, the only white couple among
them being C. H. Butler and Etta
Talley.
Cod Fish, Irish Potatoes, Prepared
buckwheat, Oat Flakes, Cheese, Mac-
P. R. Molasses, at S. M.
Schultz.
The Johnson Lumber Co.
Save moving their camp to
on the Washington branch
of the Coast Line, and are now ship-
ping logs from that point.
According to the calendar there are
but a few more days of winter left,
it looks now like the weather is going
to put hard licks during these
remaining days to make up tor lost
time.
A lamp at the corner of Evans and
Third streets would be a great help to
pedestrians having to pass by the
burned district at night. It is difficult
to find one's way along there in the
dark.
can lie found at my old
stand where I will be pleased to see all
my friends who may want Harness,
Collars, Whips, at low prices.
repair work a specialty.
Yours J. R.
Well, the comet did not trouble
either the earth or the sun, so every-
thing goes plodding along in the usual
order. The next fellow who to
make a bit of notoriety over a
can step up.
We heard one man ask another
what he put over his face on Sundays
to keep it from violating the Sabbath.
intimation was that the ad-
dressed takes an unusually ugly face
around with him.
The blizzard of the last few days
d well down into the
States, and the comes that fruit
has been killed. In this section the
fruit trees were not such a big hurry
in putting out.
Messrs. Coward and Travis
of Greene comity, have
chased the interest of Dr.
one-third, in the Star Warehouse, we
understand they will also build two new
prize houses here.
We notice that farmers of
western North Carolina are leaving
for some of the States. If
they to find the garden spot of
the world should come to the
tern section of their own State.
B. Cherry left Sal in day morning
for the northern markets to purchase
I goods for J. B. Cherry Co.
S. C. Hamilton returned Thursday
evening from Me., where he
been on n visit to relatives at his
old home.
Miss Lulu Carr. of who has
been spending some time visiting Mrs.
Jesse Brown, returned home Fri-
day night.
Mrs. Julian Timberlake, of Raleigh,
came down on Tuesday evening train
and went out to to visit
her parents.
M. K. Lang and wife returned Thurs-
day evening, the former from his north-
purchasing tour and the from
. visit to relatives in Norfolk.
Walter left Monday morning
for Henderson to take some instruction
in operating electric plants. He
will operate the plant here when it is
completed.
Sheriff J. W. Crowell, of Wilson,
spent Friday night here. He left Sat-
taking with him a prisoner who
laid run away from Wilson and was
arrested in this county.
It was a very agreeable surprise to
back home Mon-
lie has completed a grad-
the well John's
Hopkins University. Dr. Laughing-
house is one of brightest young
men in our State and he is deservedly
popular, not only with the people but
also with his fellow physicians, as he is
strictly up to-date in his profession.
Take a New Census.
The is of the opinion
that a new census of the population of
Greenville ought to be taken. It is
that the last government
1890, comes far short of doing the
town justice and some step be
taken to set us right and let the out-
side world know what we have here.
The government census of 1880 gave
Greenville population, and in 1890
the number reported was an in-
crease of over one hundred percent in
the ten years. In the five years since
that census was completed the
of the town has increased hugely
until it is believed there are now fully
people here. A new census
should be taken to establish tips.
He Went.
Billie is proud as a boy with a
new pocket That's just what's
the matter with him. Mr. Hart
caught him trying to saw a piece of
with an old Barlow and told him
to step over to the new hardware
store and get a knife that would cut.
Court Adjourned.
term of Pitt Superior Court,
civil cases, adjourned to-day after
the full two weeks for the
term. Only two cases were heard
the first to their length,
but for the second week as many cases
were tried as have been known at any
civil court here. However, their is
still a brae docket.
Cane From the Battle-Field.
Capt. John King, of Falkland, was
here Monday showed us a walking
cane that has a history. It was cut on
the Gettysburg battle field during the
war and was presented to Congressman
Wheeler, of Alabama. The cam- has
changed ownership as a of
friendship two or three times since
war, and getting into the hands of a
Warm friend of Capt. King in Wash-
it was sent to him about two
months ago. The cane is hickory, the
head mounted with a silver horse shoe.
A part of my stock was Damaged by
fire and I am determined to dispose of them at
Greatly Reduced
The Paper an Index.
A newspaper with evidences of sub-
support its columns speaks
volumes of the community in which it is
published. The fact that every trade
seeker has an advertisement in its col-
proves that the people arc up
with the limes and favorably impress
the stranger in whose hands happens
to
CD
The reporter very frequently over-
looks things that would be of interest
our readers, simply because he does
not know of them. Whenever any of
our readers know anything that will be
of interest in the way of news, let us
know of the fact.
Card of hanks.
We, the members of Hope Fire Co.,
desire to return our sincere thanks to
the lady managers for raised
for our benefit at the recent
Also to Mr. Ola Forbes for use of ware-
house.
A. J.
F. 1st
R. D. 2nd
Be Drilling Again
Capt. J. T. Smith has made
on the State for new equipment
for Pitt County Rifles and the boys ex-
to be In good shape for service in
a few days. The upper of W.
H. White's store has been secured for
a temporary armory for the company.
Sergeant H. C. Hooker says the boys
will be ready to tackle Spain if
should need them.
Oakley Items.
N. C. March
R. Congleton returned home Monday
after a two weeks visit to Florida. He
talk; very favorably of the land of flow-
James, we hope there is nothing
like a move.
Capt. Tew, of the A. C. L. and
wile, spent Sunday visiting Capt.
Andrews.
Our farmers are wearing long faces
on account of the recent cold snap
which they say their tobacco
plants.
J. O. Williams happened to a very
painful accident Tuesday last. He was
felling a tree and when it started to
fall it fell across a small sapling about
inches through, breaking it off
feet from the ground, and it struck him
on the head. He lay as dead for some
time and in consequence has been in
bed all the week. It was a hair-breadth
escape.
When yon want a good Ledger, Day
Book or Record Book, go to Reflector
Book Store. Good assortment just in.
How She Economizes.
I Study advertisements, and I know
where and when and how to purchase
tin household supplies. My husband
used to laugh at me for reading
so carefully, but he has long
since learned that I save many
every month. know of hotter
way to practice economy. It is a won-
how soon you learn to detect the
real from the almost.
I think I have never been
by an advertisement. There is always
something about the false hat re-
me. To the economical house-
keeper the advertisements are the most
important part of any publication
Womankind.
Burned to Death.
A two-and-a-half year old child of
Henry Dew was burned to death on
II. C. place, in
county, Wednesday afternoon. The
child went with its mother out in the
field where some stumps were being
burned, while playing too near the
fire its clothing caught. The child's
screams attracted the mother, but it was
so badly burned before the fire could be
put out that death followed in a few
i hours.
CO
Girls Be Careful.
The following was found on the
streets to-day and we must publish it
to warn the girls.
Greenville, N. C. Feb. 1896.
While sitting thinking of you i
thought i would write you. You can
not two girls, i hope you love
me, i thinks the world of you but i
know you does not care for me, lock
up your heart keep safe the key don't
forget me i forget thee, is
the idol of my heart how could i Jive
without you.
From your loving girl,
Our tools were de-
by fire but we
have ordered more and
I will be ready to furnish
all the Tobacco Flues
you want. They will
be made of Steel and
you may depend on it
; our flues will be made
right as heretofore. For
the present you will
find us near our old
the warehouse
formerly used by J. G.
Cobb Son, first floor.
S. E. PENDER CO.
Mar. 1st, 1896.
Pretty Good.
We are told that a year or so ago
Dr. of Greenville, was
in the country and caught up with
a countryman, hauling several loads of
guano home. The countryman was
sitting on the bags of guano and gaily
singing Bye and Dr.
said ; singing
Bye and now, but next
fall you'll be singing Mercy
We hope our farmers, who
are buying so much commercial
will not have to sing a doleful
tune this Free Press.
The Committee Progressing.
The citizen's water works committee
had a good meeting last night. The
committee unanimously favors a
system of water works and are
prosecuting their plans in that
Much corresponding has already
been done and they are now negotiating
with a civil engineer to make a survey
of the town prepare the
and estimate. One contractor has
already submitted a bid for putting in
a system.
in Purses.
The Greenville Driving Association
held a meeting Monday night and de-
to have a series races at the
track here April and 16th.
There will be two races the first day
and three races the second day.
Purses to the amount of have
been made up for these races. Such
large purses will secure a number of
fine horses and some of the best races
ever witnessed in this section may be
expected. These will be big days for
Greenville.
The .
There was a good crowd at the
skating carnival in the Planters
house, Wednesday evening, and a large
number of young people went flying
around on the rollers. There
some good skaters. The prize was
awarded to Mr. G J. Woodward and
Miss Sallie Lipscomb for being the
most graceful couple in the contest.
The amount realized for the fire com-
was about
beg to thanks to our numerous friends for their many
kind expressions since our store was destroyed by fire. We take
pleasure in informing- that we just returned from NEW
YORK with entire new stock aDd have in the for-
occupied by Mrs. Home at the
POST OFFICE CORNER.
Our entire stock was destroyed and every article offered you is
BRIGHT, NEW AND STYLISH. You are cordially invited to call
and examine the beautiful
m. H ii.
Cash House
SELLS CHEAP
But we have come again.
lute fire caught just as we were opening business in Green-
ville, but we hive built a new store next to the Reflector
office, below Points, and are now ready to
---------serve the
HARDWARE
IS OUR
SPECIALTY.
-But we also carry a
SIS.
Paints, Oils and Farming Implements
We buy for CASH and sell for CASH, can defy
on all goods in our line- Come to see
BAKER HART
FIVE POINTS.
Prices.
In fact no reasonable price refused.
NEXT TO TYSON BANK.
FALL
FOR THE-
WINTER
BUSINESS
and cordially invite you to inspect the larges
and neatest assortment of
over brought to Greenville. Our stock con
all the newest and
DRESS GOODS,
Furnishings
Boots
and Slices, Domestics,
Bleached and
ed Sheeting and Shirt-
Calicoes, Fancy
Cotton Dress Goods a
you will
want or need in that
line. Hardware for far
and mechanics
use, Tinware, Hollow-
ware, Wood and
Whips, Buggy
Twine, Heavy Groceries always on hand,
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Salt and Molasses.
The best and largest assortment of Crock-
Lamps. Lanterns, Lamp Chimneys and
Shades, Fancy Glassware, to be found
in the county. And our stock of
FURNITURE
Matting. Carpets, Rugs and is by far
the and cheapest ever to the people
of this section. Come look and sec and buy.
Sole agents of Coats Spool Cotton for this town
for wholesale and retail trade. Reynold's Shoes
for Men and Boys. Co. s Shoes
for Ladies and Children. We buy Cotton and
Peanuts and pay the highest market price for
them. Your experience teaches you all to buy
and deal with men who will treat you fair and
do the square thing by you. Come and see us
and be convinced that what we claim is true.
Yours for business square dealings,
on A
GREENVILLE, N. C, Feb. 26th, 1896.
J. L. SUGG, Agent Victor Safe Co-,
Greenville, N. C
Dear am pleased to say that the Vic-
tor Safe you sold me some five or six years ago
preserved in tact all its contents the late fire
in on the 10th inst. The safe stood
at a point in my office in the Opera House
block that must have been one of the hottest
parts in the great conflagration. It contained
many papers and other things of value.
it was out of the ruins and opened, some
twelve hours after the fire, thing in it was
found to be preserved and in good con-
I cheerfully make this statement of
facts in recognition of the valuable service
me by this safe and you are at liberty to
make such use of it as you may sea proper-
J.
The Victor Safe is made in all sizes,
for home, farm, office or general business
use Every Safe sold with a guarantee to be fire
proof. Prices range from up.
J. L. SUGG, Agent,
GREENVILLE, N.





ESTABLISHED
SIDES
AND
i- their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices
chasing elsewhere
n all Its branches.
FLOOR,
always i. X
ft
we direct M M
y u a e profit. A
plate stock
FURNITURE
and prices
the times. Out goods and
sold tor CASH having
to sell at a close margin.
S. M. M N C
JOHN F.
celebrated Russian Got
Violin Strings
p II in Hie World.
V . j String Warranted.
F-
far Ml, BIS, E. 9th St.
A HUNT,
Bight Thousand Birds Killed in
One Afternoon.
ft t. i
.-
-i
A.
v. t
Rocky
Selma
Ar. Florence
I-
in In J i
Magnolia
Ar
P.
v. M
Mar
Is
i r--
. M.
B IS 7-1
V-. V- i
I a
ft. . I i u
r IV
I y
-I
I .
; .
I BO I
it
Ar Tartar
R.-sky
Ar vi. M
P. M f. M,
Ill
II
HI
Branch
Weldon MS ;. m., Halifax 4.1
arrives Scotland Neck at-i-S-i p
r. i m . 4-5
p. m. leave
a. m. Or.-i . u. Arriving
It Aft a. ,
i x-i-pt
Trails on Branch leave
in., arrives
returning
lames T 4.30 p. m .
. m,, arrives 7.45 p. m.
Daily ex Sunday. Connects
Neck Branch.
Train leaves S C, via
t K. ii.
p. m., p. M ;
I. p. in.
daily
a. a n.
mid II.
Train on N. C. t ranch leaves
daily, except a
m. a. m.
leaves Sn a. m.,
rives at 9.30 a. m.
Trains in Nashville blanch eave
Rn Mount at 4.30 p. m. arrives
Nashville p. in., Hope 5.30
p. in. leave Spring Hope
n. m , a m, at
Rocky Mount 9.05 i in daily except
s on Florence R
rt. lean c I W pin, ;
7-Vi p in. Hi p hi.
a 6.80 a in.
a . a in. except
--i i-i CM War-
saw fir
11.10-i. in p. in
in on at a m. p
No. makes
at. We., all rail via
tie a Hi Mount won
. Cue R R for
a -I. p via Norfolk.
DIVINE.
T. H. Manage;.
Ohio Oat Together
and Devote a Day to the
of the Little Eng-
rests.
The annual sparrow hunt is a big
event in several Ohio counties. It seems
to have originated in Summit county,
and to this day the hunt is conducted
on a more elaborate scale in that part
of the state than anywhere else. Only
Publish sparrows are shot, and no mat-
how ninny arc killed like
victims, never will be
Early in the month of December the
farmers, having got everything stored
away neatly and safely, having pro-
plenty of wood and having
boarded up the cattle sheds for the
winter, decided that it was about time
to go on the warpath for sparrows. A
notice was posted up next day at Rich-
field Center to this
annual hunt will be
held to-morrow. All are invited. Please
be on hand not later than eight
a. in. and Cyrus Hop
kins will be captains of the two
and will choose sides
a.
On the following morning nearly
men were ready for the hunt. It
doesn't take long to circulate such an
announcement in a farming
in Ohio. Especially is this true
the winter season, when there is
nothing that the younger people like
than to visit around.
When the hunters came together
was noticeable that nearly all of them
carried guns of modern make. Very
old-pattern pieces were shouldered
by the stalwart sons of the county, and
I he army musket, which was o con-
immediately after the war,
was no longer noticeable.
done it croaked Elder Paine.
come out here shot quail
with brick loaders now will
do but that boy in the neighbor-
hood must be armed with a new-fangled
gun a hull summer's
As soon as the contestants could he
pined in line the captains chose their
men. It didn't take long
it doesn't require much skill to shoo
English sparrows. They are so tame
anyone can get close enough to pop
them over as fast as he can sight his
The hunters with the guns
can lie operated with the most speed
are almost mil tale to be those to make
the largest scores.
One side went up the valley and the
side went down, the agreement
to hunt in a circle and come to-
I again at the center at a
lated time in the sparrows
to count up to the time that the con-
should report, to the score-
keeper at the center.
In five minutes from the time that the
men started on their way the gun-
to bang. All up and down the
I valley during the entire afternoon the
reports filled the air until the
might have been excused for be-
that a war skirmish was going
i on in the neighborhood. The spar-
i rows never had been thicker. In fact,
i tiny had been so thick during the
I months that they threatened to
eat the farmers out of house and home.
One peculiar fact about shooting spar-
I lows is that the noise of the guns seems
Io frighten them only temporarily.
i They rapidly become accustomed to
the report, as they do to everything
else. They are the most complacent
I that ever immigrated into
j the country. On Fourth of July the
same is noticeable. In
early morning, when the first few fire-
. crackers or miniature torpedoes are dis-
the will fly away
to the brunches of the trees
or to the eaves of the burns and houses,
where they build nests, but before
nightfall they are back again on
streets as chipper as and only
mind a firecracker long enough to fly
a few feet away and sputter like the
mischief when it bursts. So H is
when hunting. The first discharge of
weapons early in the morning sent
the sparrows away to their safest re-
treats, but by noon, between hunger
Bud the fact that they no longer
leaded the noise, they were out on
the roads, in the barnyards
stealing the grain away from the
chickens, as though they never had
heard a shotgun.
As the sun began to sink in the west
the pile of s began to
late. Some of were lucky,
and out of ammunition
they had been out two hours.
were not so fortunate, and
in just, as daylight was about
It has been one of the best
days that the sparrow hunters ever had.
In round numbers birds were
slaughtered. averaged about SO
a man. Stretched to as
put it, birds
would have reached nigh miles,
allowing five inches for a The
next morning, however, there seemed
to be just as many sparrows in and
about Center as ever.
Potter's side killed the most
sparrows, and therefore Cyrus Hop-
side will have to provide a first-
class supper for winners and losers,
with plenty of Summit county trim-
Y. Sun.
of en v of
County
Frank J makes oath
he is the partner of the firm of K-
Co., doing business
the City of Toledo, and State
and tint said firm will
the sum of ONE HUNDRED
LARS lot each and every case of Ca-
cannot be cured by the use
of Hall's Cube.
SI to before and subscribed in
my presence, this day of December
A, D. lets.
DR. DOVER, BUCCANEER.
Be Selkirk, Guayaquil
and Invested Dover's Powder.
Not many persons who have taken
a Dover's powder have any idea of
the career of the man who
gave his name to the preparation.
Professor Osier of Johns Hopkins
in a paper published In
The Lancet, tells his story.
Thomas Dover was born in War.
1660, and after
studying at Cambridge and with the
famous Dr. settled down
at Bristol, for centuries the home
port for adventurers, privateers and
slave traders. Ho was nearly
when be joined in a commercial and
piratical venture with a number of
Bristol merchants. Two ships, the
Duke and the Duchess, were fitted
out for a voyage to the south seas,
from which the
of the world, had
brought wonderful tales of Spanish
riches. who had come to
grief in bis last expedition to those
regions, was taken along as pilot,
while Dover went as third in
to Captain Rogers and appears
in his narrative as Captain Dover.
The expedition was memorable for
two events. On Feb. the ships
arrived off the island of Juan Fer-
and Captain Dover, who was
sent ashore in the brought
back with him to the ship a couple
of days later a man, clad in goat-
skins, who had boon left on the is-
j land four years and a half before.
This was Alexander Selkirk, the orig-
i Robinson Crusoe.
Later the expedition sailed up the
South American coast, and found
what it was seeking in the two
of Guayaquil, which it attacked and
Backed. Dover led the van and cured
the sailors of tho plague which broke
out after the capture of the cities.
After cruising in the for an-
other two years for the Spanish ships
they to England in 1711,
having collected plunder to the val-
of share made
i him a wealthy man, and him
free to wander about the world for
some years.
Ho settled down in London as a
physician in 1731, carrying into his
practice tho pugnacious habits of his
life. To attract
attention, ho published his book.
Ancient Physician's Legacy to
His Country, Being What Ho Has
Collected Himself In Forty-nine
Years of Practice; Designed to the
Use of All Private The
book ran through eight editions, the
last apparently being published in
1771. On on the section on
gout, is given the formula for his
famous
opium one saltpeter
and tartar each four
ounces; one ounce. Put
tho saltpeter and tartar into a
mortar, stirring with a spoon until
they flaming. Then pow-
them very fine; after that
in your opium, grind them to a pow-
and then mix the other powders
with these. from forty to sixty
or seventy grains in a glass of white
wine going to bed, covering up
warm, and drinking a quart or three
pints of tho drink while
The publication of the hook made
a great noise, and brought Dover
into many quarrels with his
lows, who treated him as a quack,
as they did for that mat-
He carried on a bitter war
against apothecaries, too, and died
in 1742. His powder is still in the
British York
Sun.
Feint- on a Point. ,
A student undergoing
tho principles of mechanics
was asked, will not a pin
stand on its He
the following
the first place, a point is de-
fined by Euclid as that which has no
parts and no magnitude, and how
can a pin stand on that which has
no parts and no magnitude In the
second place, a pin will not stand on
its head; much loss, therefore, will it
stand on its point. Thirdly and
lastly, it will if you stick it in hard
enough.
SEAL
A. W GLEASON,
Notary Public.
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken intern-
act- directly on the and
hoc-us surfaces of the system. Send
for testimonials, free,
F. J. ft Co,, Toledo, O-
by
TAX NOTICE.
I will he at lb- following places on
fie named for the of col.
unpaid lac Hi year
Meet or and pay All
owning land who fail will be ad-
on the first is of April, 1896.
will be at
X Roads Fill v. March.
Hill. March
ind. Sat -inlay. Much 21st,
Mate
March Hat,
Grim-slat d, March 21st.
March 21st 18-W.
MM
Cobb's tore. -1st,
F.
6th Fife
Ararat a Difficult Mount to Climb.
Of those who have attempted the
ascent of Ararat, and their number
is not largo, so many have failed to
reach the summit that upon a
which makes few if any do-
upon the resources of the
craft their discomfiture
must be attributed to other
to the peculiar nature of the ground
traversed no less than to the
duration of tho effort, to the
wearisome of the same
kind of obstacles and to the rarity
of the
said the wife as at
p. m. she found her husband
strapping up all the umbrellas in
the hall, as if he were off on a rail-
way darling, surely
you are not going to take all these
to the office with
he responded suavely
but firmly, you remember
that you have an this aft-
She raised her hands in horror.
you do not insinuate that
my guests would
Nonsense. But it's a mil-
lion to one they would recognize the
initials on the
She hung her head in silence,
knowing full well that the man but
spoke the Me Pp.
A tired is very much like a
ankle. If suffer any
of th symptoms of your
is -ired. It needs a crutch. We.
relieve It of all work for a time
r It is restored to its
strength. To do this e
must use a which is already
ed outside of the body, and which will
aid of foods that
may taken with ft. Such a pro In t
is Shaker Cordial.
The Shakers have, utilized the
present in plants for the
of tills and its
been
Yon can try it for the sum of
a sample bottles art- sold
ail at pi lee.
DISLIKE STINGY
specially When the Latter Invite
to a
If there is one object of dislike to
a woman, it is a stingy man. Now,
by this we do not mean that the fair
are anxious for a man to spend
more than he can afford, but
I do feel that it is due to them when
are invited out to have the
j privilege of what they want
I from a menu without being prompt-
ed by their host to select what he
prefers.
The man doesn't have to say,
must take this, or you mustn't
take A woman is quick to
recognize the saving keynote when
be will you have I
think I will have a and
though she may loathe sandwiches
she feels it her duty to say,
then, I will have one Some
mean men know that can easily
bulldoze a woman this way, and it
would serve them just right if their
guest were to say, for my
part, I prefer terrapin, some fresh
mushrooms, a Lorenzo and
some
Oh, no, we never do say that. We
are guided by the inflection in the
man's voice and take whatever he
wants us to, whether we like it or
not Now, we don't one bit
to a man being economical. It is a
praiseworthy trait, but for goodness
sake don't have him practice it when
he takes a woman out to
dinner or supper. If he really can't
afford anything she might ask for,
he has no right to invite her. Let
him do the elegant less frequently
and do it right he is about it.
The woman of the world will per-
order a more extravagant meal
than he would desire, but she won't
break him if he entertains her but
once in decent style, instead of three
or four times in poverty stricken
fashion that makes his guest want
to pass her across the table to
him to help him out of his difficulty.
There is no in eating under
such circumstances, and a woman
would fool much more pleased with
a man if no such suggestion wore
made and thus escaped an
of his meanness. Let it
said right here that the really poor
man is not the one to get into
a predicament. He knows he can't,
and he stays out of trouble by not
inviting yen to a swell restaurant
and then looking pained if you order
something beyond what he had ex-
It is the man who wants to
make a show of being a
who too often proves
by some episode of this sort
that he is not.
boy will know how to order
he grows tip, a young
mother tho other day, I have
write out tho menu for him every
time ho takes a young lady out.
won't be any will yon
about it, but ho will select a
dainty meal that will relieve
from the embarrassment of
but won't up of the
cheapest things in sight, and will,
therefore, give bar r-i chance, if she
does not care for his choice, to make
a in or more dishes with-
out feeling that is an up to date
Jack who has hired an
happy victim into a restaurant, just
to rob
Manners On The Road.
Occupy no more space than you
require.
If umbrella on
floor and a hands it to yon,
say
But don't stare at any man, ex
him offer you bis seat.
No doubt he is as tired as yon
are.
If you are a young girl, don't
look self conscious, if ever so
pretty.
Above all, don't matte your
toilet in the your
nails, your hat-
If a man speaks to you take
notice- He will soon stop.
Don't or look
in any
It is
Never count your money on a
train.
If a strange woman wishes to
cultivate you, beware.
If yon carry a silk hang it
on arm. Never it on the
seat.
Carry own drinking glass;
never use the c at the water
cooler.
Carry lunch in a
be thrown out the window
when finished.
Always have your on the
inside of ; also on
the tag of bag.
If you are compelled to take a
baby in a car, exercise good
sense.
Never take magazines, boxes of
candy or any other salable object
in your hand, you intend
to buy them.
In a sleeping car do not dis
robe. In a case of accident it
would be awkward.
Fee the porter for his
but it be a small
Don't talk of your private
fairs traveling in vehicles
of kind. There are always
listeners.
When traveling with friends be
quiet at times. Many people can-
not stand the motion of a car.
that case silence is golden.
Don't read if you have weak
eyes. It is
Make no friends on shipboard
unless you know who they are
No
alone. A should be on
hand.
Give a boy five or ten cents to
carry baggage. To go load-
ed is vulgar. Be on time. The
train will wait.
To kiss the too of-
ten is very bad form- cry
unless you cannot help it.
To ask questions very
ally is very irritating- If yon
happen to be on the side
of the car, don't fret.
Secret of Beauty
is health. The secret of health is
the power to digest and
a proper of food.
This can never be done when
the liver does not act it's part.
know this
Liver Pills are an
lute cure for sick headache,
sour stomach, malaria,
constipation, torpid liver, piles,
jaundice, bilious fever, bilious-
and kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
SMITH EDWARDS, Props.
the late Williamston store near
Court
GREENVILLE, N. C
Manufacturers and dealers in all
kinds of
VEHICLES,
WAGONS, CARTS. AND mill
FINE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY
All kinds of repairing done
We use skilled labor and good
material and are prepared to give
you satisfactory work.
Canto
If the present ratio of increase in
manufacture is kept up for years,
the United States will as
a manufacturing as it now is an
agricultural country.
The Chinese pen from
memorial has been a brush made of
some soft hair and used to paint the
formed letters of tho Chi-
alphabet.
Tho word worship originally
meant nothing more than to honor.
GOOD K AN D POULTRY
TOO.
is
pared stick, as well as
man, for that is sold n tin
h Ming pound of
cine lot tents.
Franklin Co.,
March l-92.
I have used kinds of medicine, but
I not MM package of Black-
for all the others I ever saw.
It is best thing fr horses or cattle
the spring of the year, and will cure
chicken cholera every time.
R. R-
The Charlotte
OBSERVER,
North Carolina r
AND
WEEKLY.
Independent and fearless ; an
more attractive than ever, it will be a
invaluable visitor to home, th
the club or the work null
DAILY
All f the news of the lorn
Daily reports from the Stat
and National Capitols. a -ear
WEEKLY
A perfect journal. All
news of the wk. The
from the Legislature a
Remember the Weekly Ob-
server.
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
Send for sample copies. Address
i the medic fur
it place
of Oil.
Do yon want
to be In
The bicycle business la
not try lit Yon
can boy one wheel, or a many
yon like, and sell
BICYCLES AT COST.
An order now yon to
a big discount. Apply quick for the
agency for place. Our wheel
are highest grade, most reliable
bicycles made to-day.
Particulars handsomely Illus-
printed matter by mull.
a Mat.
E. Moore. L. I.
Williamston.
MOORE
Y-AT-L AW,
Office under Opera House. Third S
TASTELESS
WARRANTED. PRICE
Ills., Nov.
Medicine Co. Si. Louis.
lost year,
GROVE'S TASTELESS TONIC and
this year. In nil ox-
f II In the drill
never Bold Boca universal
as your Tonic yours truly.
Sold J.
GO
GREENVILLE. N. C.
costs cotton planters more
than five million dollars an-
This is an enormous
waste, and can be prevented.
Practical experiments at Ala-
Experiment Station show
conclusively that the use of
will prevent that dreaded plant
disease.
Our pamphlets are not advertising circular boom-
fertilizers, but are practical works, contain-
the results of latest in this line.
cotton farmer should nave a copy. They are
free for the asking.
GERMAN KALI WORKS,
Nassau St. New York.
v g.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
n. c.
in all the
MARBLE
Wire Iron Fencing
sold. First-class work
an reasonable.
ii, long,
Greenville, N. C.
In all the
Boys at Home.
We frequently see upon the
streets at night, boys from the age
of six or seven years up. They
are constantly the
streets, hanging street
and stores, smoking cigar
and indulging in foul mouth-
ed epithets and indecent talk. We
do not say that Durham is any
worse than other places, for it is
not, but we do say there is entire-
too much of that sort of thin-r
in our midst. The parents, in
many many cases, are responsible.
Th y do not try to kept their boys
at home at night, but allow
to do what they and go
where they please. We do not
say that all of them allow their
sons to do so, for a great many do
not, there are of par-
who do. It is an important
thing to think about. Many a
boy's whole future life has boon
decided by even an idle word or
simple act on the part of some
thoughtless person. Be careful
We would like to ask if
cannot be done to remedy this
evil of allowing boys to run the
streets at Sun.
Swift Galloway, B. F. Tyson,
Snow Hill. N- C. Greenville, N. C.
GALLOWAY TYSON,
AT K Y-AT- LAW,
Greenville, X. C.
Practice in all the
HARRY SKINNER H. W.
k Successors to Latham Skimmer.
N. 0-
John E. K. C. Harding,
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. ,
WOODARD HARDING,
Special attention given to
and settlement of claims.
R. D. L. ES,
DENTIST,
N. C.
DR. H. A. JOYNER
O.
Office up stairs overS. E, o
Hardware-tore.
P, II.
President.
Lovit
Sec. v Treat
A quarrel often begins with a
mere of opinion, apart
from all malice. Standing up for
our side any
giving in, will always provoke a
in another. It
is very hard to maintain
stoutness of without
showing bad blood. If we feel
right, and cannot yield
we should sedulously avoid
prolonging a dispute- When we
feel driven to a dispute, we should
prevent heat of in-
to In of
opinion in mutual work, we would
cultivate a spirit of conciliation
When we cannot conscientiously
with another in propositions
of work or companionship, we
should separate from him in re
and good will. We should
be glad afterwards specially to
show such an one respect and
good will. Above all, we should
not, by severity, discourage
any one who proposes to change
his behavior for the better. Did
yon ever stop to think how fool-
two thirds of the quarrels in
life are Some minor, unintended
slight separating friends to make
them bitter
Sun.
a.
mm I
The modern stand-
ard Family
cine Cures the
common every-day
ills of humanity.
LUMBER CO.
Always in the market
for and pay
Cash at market prices
Can also fill orders
for Rough Dressed
promptly.
Give us
8- C HAMILTON, Jr., Manager.
i Academy.
The next session of this v. I
begin on
SEPT.
and continue for ten months.
The course embraces all the branches
usually taught in an Academy.
Terms, both for tuition and board
reasonable.
Boys well fitted and equipped for
business, by taking the academic
course alone. Where they wish to
pursue a higher course, this school
guarantees thorough preparation to
enter, with credit, any College in North
the State University. It
refers lose who have recently left
Us wall the truthfulness of this
statement.
Any young man with character and
moderate ability taking x course with
us will be aided In making
continue in
The discipline will be kept at
present standard.
Neither time nor attention
work will be to make this lion
all that could wish.
For fin particulars see or ad
W. H. It A Or
July -40,1805.
J.
AGENT THE
CUT
WILMINGTON. N. C.
This work in
mi, I prices m w p
m k Bring
work to our j-to on an
I I b- format -mi promptly.
I -he I AH p
means so much more
you
fatal diseases result
trilling ailments
Don't play with
greatest
If you are feeling
out of sorts, weak t
and ex-
have no appetite
and can't ,
begin at
the most
strengthen ink.
i ,
Brown's Iron Bit-
A few hot-
ties
conies from the,
very first
your .
and Us
pleasant to take. ,
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments
Women's complaints.
Get crossed red
lines en to wrapper. All others are sub-
On receipt of stamps we
will send set of Beautiful World's
Fair Views and
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE.
NOTICE.
By virtue of the powers contained in
the Co
of Pitt County in the case entitled, W.
H. Vets, and Henry Vi trading under
the firm name of t Co., in their
own b half and in the behalf of all other
en of Moore, deceased,
who will join herein and hear the burden
of this a- Plaintiff's, against . I.
Executor of is Moore.
and as
guardian of W. W. Moore and
Bruce M. Murphy, wife of said
w. W. Moore and Bruce
W. and wife,
Helen S. and J. W. Perkin as
of his wife, John X.
and P. Barnes, trading
Vaughan Barnes, Moore and
Oliver Moore, .-is l I will sell
before the Court Mouse Door In the
town of Greenville. N. C. on Mon-
day. the sixth day of April,
the following real
entire undivided half Interest
a tract of land lying and being in Bean-
Township.
the lauds David Smith,
James Edwards, Sum Henry
others, situated In Creep
lug Swamp, Containing nineteen
aces more or and known
the a Edwards or Thomas Ed-
wards tract of laud. Reference is made
to the Will of record-
ed in the hook of wills of Beaufort
county at pages and 1st and a deed
W, II. wife to Mar
Moore and Cox,
deed i trended In Hie Register's
-if t III Book at
page
so one other tract or parcel of land
Situated in the Halifax, ad-
joining the and- of John Randolph,
Henry Baker, Pope and others
and known as Hie or
land, containing tour hundred
acres more or less and being the
same land by I. Dawson,
Sheriff, to on third
of February, 1879, and recorded In
the Register of Office of Halifax
in Book at pages and
mi of sale cash.
M.
II. W. VI
Commissioner.
Prof. W. n.
a i I
Epilepsy, has without
doubt ironic an-1 cur-
ed more than any
living Ms
is
We have heard of cases
standing
fl by
m mm bot-
of his absolute cure, free to any sufferers
tho send their P. O.
We advise one wishing n cure to address
H. F. D., Cedar St., Hew Tort
OLD ML
TAR SERVICE
Steamers Washington
ville and Tarboro at all land
on Tar Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at A. Si.
Returning leave Tarboro at A. X.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
days.
These departures are subject to stage
of water on River
with steam-
of The Norfolk, and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their goods
marked via Dominion from
New York. from
Norfolk A
more Steamboat from Hal-
more.
Boston.
JNO. Agent,
i N.
CHERRY,
N C
PATENTS
Caveats, and obtained and Ba-
conducted for y
and we can secure patent is less
from Washington.
Sent lava.
C.
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK.
Tor the Cure o all I
This Preparation has In for
fifty years, and wherever know has
been In steady demand. It has been en
the leading physicians all over
country, and
all other remedies, with the
the most experienced physicians, who
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long standing and the high
which it has is owing entire
its own efficacy but
ever been made to bring It before the
public. One bottle of this
he sent to any address on receipt
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at-
tended to. Address all order to
T, N. C.
THE MORNING STAR
The Oldest
Daily Newspaper la
North Carolina.
The Only Six-Dollar Daily of
its Class in the State.
Favors Free Coinage
of American Silver and
of the Ten Per Tax on
State Banks Daily cents
per month. Weekly per
Wit. H.
Ed.
WINE OF
for mos.
Tin-,
fR V


Title
Eastern reflector, 18 March 1896
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
March 18, 1896
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17788
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
Content Notice

Public access is provided to these resources to preserve the historical record. The content represents the opinions and actions of their creators and the culture in which they were produced. Therefore, some materials may contain language and imagery that is outdated, offensive and/or harmful. The content does not reflect the opinions, values, or beliefs of ECU Libraries.

Contact Digital Collections

If you know something about this item or would like to request additional information, click here.


Comment on This Item

Complete the fields below to post a public comment about the material featured on this page. The email address you submit will not be displayed and would only be used to contact you with additional comments or questions.


*
*
*
Comment Policy