Eastern reflector, 12 December 1888


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





EVER
G- R. E- N K
I M MEDIUM.,
The
Reflector.
LOOK FOR
THE MARK
The e-o mark after roar name on
the margin of this is a request
tor e payment of what you owe It.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
VOL. VII.
GREENVILLE, PITT C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER
NO.
Reflector,
GREENVILLE, N. C
J. Ml
THE LEADING PAPER
IN THE
Price. per year.
DEMOCRATIC,
will not hesitate to Democratic
men that are not consistent
the true principle of the party.
If want a a wide-a-wake
eel ion of the Slate send for the
tor. C-r SAMPLE FREE
STATE GOVERNMENT.
Scales, of Guilford
M.
Bin. of New Hanover.
Secretary of
of Wake.
W. of Wake.
P. of Gates.
Superintendent of Instruction
Sidney If. Finger of Catawba.
Attorney F. David-
sen, of Buncombe.
SUPREME COURT.
Chief N. H. Smith, of
Wake.
Associate S. Ashe. of
Anson Augustus S. Merrimon, of Wake.
JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT.
First E. Shepherd, of
Beaufort.
Second Philips, of
Edgecombe.
Third District- H. G. Connor, of
son.
Clark, of
Wake.
Fifth A. of
Guilford
Sixth T. of
Sampson.
Seventh C. of
Cumberland.
Eighth J. Montgomery, of
F. Graves, of
Tenth C. Avery,
Eleventh M. Shipp. of
Mecklenburg.
Twelfth H- Merrimon.
Representatives in
Sena B. Vance, of
Matt. W. Ransom, of North-
, I
House of District j
Louis C Latham, of Pitt
Second M. Simmons, of
Craven.
Third W. of
Pender
Fourth Nichols, of
Wake
W. Reid, of Rock-
Sixth T. Bennett, of
An
S. Henderson,
Rowan.
Eighth H. H. Cowles,
f Wilkes.
Ninth D. Johnston,
Buncombe.
GOVERNMENT.
Court A.
A. K. Tucker.
of
B. Cherry,
Manning.
H.
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair-
man. Guilford Mooring.
W. A. James. Jr. T. E. Keel.
Public
of F. W. Brown.
TOWN.
. M. Bernard.
C. Forbes.
J. Perkins.
B.
Ward. T. A.
and J. P. 2nd Ward, O. Hook-
and R. Williams Jr.; 3rd Ward, J. J.
Perkins and A. F.
CHURCHES.
First and Third
morning and night. Rev. N. C.
D. D., Rector.
Sunday, morn-
and night. Prayer Meeting every
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John,
Pastor.
every Sunday, morn-
and night. Meeting
Wednesday
Pastor.
LODGES.
Greenville Lodge, No. A. F. A.
M. meets every 1st Thursday and
day night 1st and 3rd Sunday at
Masonic Lodge. W. M. King. W. M.
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets
every 2nd and Monday nights at Ma-
sonic Hall. F. W. Brown. H. P.
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F.
Tuesday night. D. L.
James, N. B.
Lodge. No. K. of H.,
m- every fl-t and third Friday night.
D. D. D.
PUt Council, No. A. L. of H. meets
Thursday night. C. A. White. C.
Temperance Club meets in their
club room Monday night, at
Mass meeting in the Court House
fourth Sunday of each month, o'clock
p M- 9- C. Glenn,
Woman's Christian Temperance Union
meet the Reform Club Room Friday
of week. Mrs. V. H.
Band of Hope meets in Reform Club
Friday night. Miss Eva
POST OFFICE.
Office hours A. M. to P- M. Money
hours if. a. i. to No or-
will he from to P. M. and
from to S P. M.
Bethel mail arrives daily Sun-
st A. If., and departs at p M.
Tar mail arrives ally
at I at p. m.
Washington mail arrive daily
at M. and departs at P. If.
Ml leaves for Ridge Spring and inter-
mediate office. Mondays, Wednesdays
r. M.
mail arrives Friday at
TEE LAMENT.
written fob d. j. by
a Lady Friend.
Leap chance is swiftly fleeting.
Still alone and lorn am I ;
Maidens give me kindly greeting.
But they passed me by.
Love's dream now seems but a bubble.
Soon or late its sure lo
What, I wonder, is the trouble t
I would gladly know the worst.
I am voting and fairly handsome.
With loyal, loving heart;
Educated, modest, and some
People think that I am
Still, I'm six and twenty.
But no maiden has proposed ;
Sweet girl friends I have in plenty.
But to wed they're not disposed.
So I am glad that leap year's going.
Soon it will be ended quite ;
Then I have a showing,
I'll on New Year's night.
Th's little poem came into our
session just three months ago. It was
not published then because happened
to know a tiling or two that the young
lady friend did not know, and concluded
it would be a nice little surprise to hold
it until we had passed the age of
and then let it appear in print to
show how easily some people can be
mistaken. It is a pretty rhyme even
if mark was missed- Ed,
The Firms and Vegetable Pack-
Business.
Editor
Sometime last winter I culled
attention of your readers to
packing of it tut vegetables as
one of the growing and promising
industries adapted to our Slate.
The of some our citizens
have been turned toward sub-
and they bare manifested
by desiring to know prob-
able cost of the outfit, needed. For
benefit and others I send yon
a letter which I clipped from an old
paper relative to expense
to establish and a can-
writer, accurate
reliable correspondent of Lynch
burg given lead-
facts and figures. I add.
however, that since bis letter was
written, a year ago, has
an immense increase of the business
in the sections referred to; and
though the last season was peculiar-
disastrous to crop
because of long continued rains,
there is no thought of abandoning
the canneries. Now that we are to
have a railroad as well as water
there is still greater
to start a cannery in
Greenville- After inspecting
works and process last summer, I
hesitate not to say any
intelligent farmer, who has
the requisites capital, can run the
business successfully with aid
of man. crop
can be sold before it is packed and
immediately afterwards.
J. W-
The referred to says
In no section of Virginia has
fruit vegetable packing business
made such rapid strides as in
From small beginnings it
has grown to be
interest our county,
advantages Sowing it
are so patent to everybody,
reach so many of our people,
its continued grow is looked for-
ward to with great interest.
Herald has always fell an abiding
interest business, bas
watched its growth with pride.
is room for much greater
expansion business here in
and we are glad to note
tact that many who
have already embarked in it will en-
large facilities, whilst quite a
a number of new establishments
will be put into operation next year.
this connection we give below
a letter an accurate and
able correspondent of Lynch-
relative to ex-
necessary to establish and
operate a cannery. Says
In response to your correspondent,
D, L. T., I am enabled,
alter some unavoidable delay, to
following information
as a guide to any proposes
to embark in business of can-
fruits and vegetables. The
capacity of fixtures herein de-
scribed, is adapted, as your
desired, to a can-
with one kettle
would prepare enough of tomatoes,
etc., to fill daily cans, or throe
times tins number of peaches or
I plea- Every additional kettle would
proportionately increase the
cost of a boiler of twelve-
j power is The kettle.
j open, to will do for
apples, peaches and all
j kinds of berries.
If corn or pea are to be canned,
j a patent process kettle will be
i This will coal 1223- With
kettle you will nave a set of
crates.
Leaving out we have
, following additional items
I kettles and crates, extra, coat to
i exhaust box, ; crane to
; crates out of kettle, air
; pumps, oil tank, ft to free
pots, to capping
tools, each Two of these will
be for each man, but one
is sufficient in a small can-
prices of cans, if they are
b -tight at the right time, are, for
two ml cans 91.78 cents per
three pound cans, 92.45
to 93.00 per hundred.
The cases of boxes in which the
packed for shipment, and
which bold two dozen cans, cost, for
cases that I old m
two pound cans seven cents
each ; for cases that hold twenty-four
three pound cans nine cents
The price paid tor shelling peas
is five cents gallon ; for peeling
tomatoes one cent per that
is, the common wooden bucket;
for peeling and seeding peaches,
twelve cents per bushel; peeling
apples ten c -tits per bushel. These
are prices when bands are
boarded at cannery. If they
board themselves fifteen cents per
day is allowed
Mr. C. at
cannery of J. C. Co.,
county, Vii-
will further
to who may write to him,
will sell bis receipt for
to who may desire to
purchase- He is the inventor of a
improved adjustable solder-
can give information
as to the purchase of cans
cases.
In the foregoing statement of ex-
of starting a cannery,
is said about a house to cover
machinery This
may be a very plain, cheap shed,
or a more costly building, or some
old building may be adapted to
A with an area of
floor equivalent to by feet
be sufficient. Leaving out
the cost of the Louse of the
process Kettle, if corn
are to lie canned, the sum of
will, I am informed, cover
expenses of starting a cannery for
tomatoes, peaches, and all kinds of
berries.
several communications on the
canning business I have aimed at
strictest accuracy, because it
was probable that these statements
would Ins relied upon by persons de-
siring to engage in the business,
and because so-called,
are based upon facts, are
doing infinite injury to our State.
In order to avoid a false impression
as lo value of tomatoes
which may be produced upon a Sing
acre, I stated in a former article,
that a peel; to the plant, which ac-
cording to the figures then given,
would yield to the acre, was a
that could only be reached
under most favorable
stances, because it was obvious that
a yield could seldom or ever
be obtained throughout an acre,
much less throughout a field.
In order to satisfy m;. self on this
point. inquired of Mr. William El
lei. the experienced superintendent
of farm fruits and
tables are raised at cannery of
J. C. Co., what was
largest be bad ever obtained from a
single His reply was, six
hundred and fifty At
twenty cents per bushel, price
paid by the these would
yield Mr. Eller, I find, prefers
to plains to acre-
The average heretofore stated of
per acre is I think, near the
truth. Fields of tomatoes have been
cultivated this
and it is evident very few acres
of corn or wheat or anything else
have brought so much money.
More could have sold at
can tie if more bad been raised.
statement that to
cans of tomatoes wore packed in
a part of
daily for weeks during season
was probably received with
prise, and perhaps by some with
It was based upon
There are in Hot
and mat part of
which lies North of Norfolk and
Western Railroad, bounded by
on the West, fourteen canning
houses. new and smaller ones
canned about an average of
per day, and some of older and.
larger ones went tar beyond this
One to and on some days
a all as low as
per day gives at
for average we have
cans per day.
The immense number of cases
cans required by business de-
serious attention of
capitalists. The late Mr.
J. C. deserves great credit
for his efforts to manufacture these
articles, and thus give employment
and money to our own people. A
large amount is be-
the borders of State that
might be kept at home. Boards
ready to be made up boxes are
bought abroad, and cans by the
hundreds of thousands. sub
bas been discussed in Fin-
castle Herald, and Mr. Las
publicly signified bis readiness to
take charge of such an enterprise.
Blue Ridge, in the
county, Va Oct.
Gov. Returns.
Elizabeth City Economist.
distinguished
Thomas J. Jarvis, is
as we learn a letter n-
him last week. He left
on the 17th November and we
suppose will wrestle with his Christ-
mas turkey at his old home in
Greenville, this State. Got. Jarvis
is the most distinguished citizen
this section his useful life has
marked by devotion
to bis to State of
North Carolina that he has loved
wisely and well. We suppose bis
purpose is to resign his position cs
minister to Brazil remain in
our old State where he is so greatly
beloved honored, it is need-
less us to say that no one will
more rejoice at his coming
or extend to a more cordial
welcome home than out-self. Our
private friendship glows with
warmth at his coming and we feel
a sense of public safety from
having him again among us. He is
an eminently wise man, of almost
unerring He is not
with brilliancy but
of bis character grows bright
with the glare of
is dim beside
his substantial endowments. His
practical good sense is the strong
feature of bis character.
We once heard Gov. Jarvis say,
when we were discussing do easy
way the character of our mutual
friend, present Secretary of State
of North that had
rather have opinion of Bill
upon any practical matter
it you would just give him a chance
to w over it, any man
he bad ever Now we
would rather have Gov.
upon any matter
cal or speculative, even without
the whistle, he
than any man we have known.
is incident in Gov.
history that is we sup-
pose, but which
recurs to us when we
of mm, which indicates his
political wisdom. early and
troubled days of reconstruction
Norm Carolina was a Demo.
convention the town of
at which Tom Jarvis,
then a young casting the shad
of his distinction
was present and addressed con
his which was
calm but aggressive, he took ad-
grounds the policy of
Democratic party. He was in
advance of his party he
his party friends halted. Vet-
i lie party, bowed with
row and humiliation of
existing conditions, hesitated to
me impetuous ardor of
young Democrat, bis
teachings. As he warmed his
subject Jarvis declared that the
black tan party, composed of
scalawags carpet bag-
was then upon
the vitals of North Carolina should
be stamped out existence by all
the political and social influences
could be brought to bear upon
it in our troubled old State, that
decent men should turn backs
upon it, its membership should
be a badge of and
tin mug to ladies who were pres-
be said that our lovely
beloved daughters, should not
countenance or associate
with or receive attention any
man who was an acknowledged
Republican. These opinions of Jar.
vis were not approved by press
even of his own party. But had
they been adopted and a public
sentiment in accordance with them
created, it would have stamped out
the Republican party the State
or have confined it to the
and made the Republican party
odious and a decent white
can would have been as scared as a
But the remedy of Jar
vis was too heroic for the time.
They Succeed in Spite of Fate.
Man Who Ears a Living Without
Eyes. Arms, or
To temporize with health instead
of promptly using is not
much
is sold by all druggist.
Many of young married people
don't know what a blessing Dr. Bull's
is until the youngster is able
to by the hour.
Wilmington There were
twenty candidates for
as ministers at
of North Carolina
of the Methodist
Sooth at
By innumerable cures. Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup bag won for itself a most
enviable reputation.
I've been suffering for the past three
weeks with a strained wrist. I tried Sal-
Oil. and find myself,
need one bottle, entirely cured,
KEYSER, 1888 Mulberry St., Baltimore.
Md.
An Apt Rejoinder.
Wilson Mirror.
day an Irish tramp,
through mistake, went into a young
lawyer's office, and asked to
give him a bit of something. The
young lawyer, who was reading an
article on astronomy at time,
thought he would have some fun,
and asked the Irishman if he would
like to get an asteroid.
said Irishman,
want an ass to ride, and if I did,
yon would be too wake to carry
That lawyer don't offer asteroids
now, particularly if green looking
Hibernians are banging around
loose.
New York World.
Annie Leaks, armless
should eat with her toes, and
that William Pollock, who was born
with one leg, should be able to walk
without crutches seems to so many
people so strange they and
scores of other men and women
of usual complement of
liens and senses earn a good
living by gratifying curiosity
of public. museums do not
hold, however, any very consider-, ,
able portion of the people who, controversy
New York city them- on
selves and live cheerful, industrious
a. ;. u-a throat. The late was an
He went to California for nine
years in a climate which
makes all work seem easier since
simple existence is almost a pleas-
For the last nine years be
has been a regular figure in the
Washington marketplace. In the
afternoon for three years be bas
sold cutlery and stationery on the
Fall River boats. He was born at
Me., and it was there
he lost the his courage
ingenuity have supplied the
place of.
Cigarettes and Throat-Cancer.
From the Youth's Companion.
Since the death of the Emperor
and useful lives with natural hand-
might easily discourage
more timid spirits from entering the
great race for existence.
The achievements Laura
man, who came into the world de-
of all a rudiment of
five senses which most men and
men find too have
become a household example in the
literature of success under
ties. Since she set them the exam
pie, blind, deaf
dumb have taken heart, and.
aid of schools, nave made
themselves more more useful to
themselves and valuable to the
world. Were achievements
physically bereaved, the maim-
ed and unfortunate taken from
the sum of human accomplishments
a gap would be left in history. It
isn't necessary, however, to go to
history for instances. New York's
streets present them continually to
the observant eye.
On Twenty-ninth street, near
Fourth avenue, lives Henry Wood,
an man of some fifty-five
years of age. Mrs. Wood takes
boarders, and by her husband's
aid keeps a well-regulated
hold. Mr. Wood is totally blind,
but be is the bead of house, as
should be, and without him
things would soon go wrong. His
energy and skill are the pride of
family. When the postman
in the morning Mr. Wood
goes to door receives the letters
and carries them from room to room
distributing mail as
as if be could read the addresses.
Each boarder takes bis
what belongs to him or her, and
there is nothing left he knows
remaining boarders got no mail
by that delivery and goes tells
them so. If t is necessary for him
to enter their rooms on his errands
before the occupants are in
presentable costume he does so with
The boarders start
sometimes, but be After
breakfast Mr. Wood washes the
dishes, wipes and dries them, puts
them carefully in china
closet, folds and puts the
table linen and is ready for
day's duty. When table
is soiled and
he becomes instantly aware of its
condition by running bis fingers
over its surface. Debarred from
outdoor occupation to a great ex-
tent, Mr. Wood domestic
ties a pleasure. He collects
lamps of household about
every morning, washes them
and, when they it, renews
wicks, cleans chimneys, puts
them all together again and leaves
the whole lighting apparatus of the
house in first class trim.
When the door-bell rings he ans-
the call and shows the visitors,
a moment's hesitation,
to the parlor or to the room of
the particular lodger they desire to
see.
habitual smoker; so was general
Grant, and both of them died of
cancer in the throat. Physicians
attached to large hospitals mention
other cases similar to theirs. Some
of them attribute the throat disease
to tobacco; others to paper used
in making cigarettes; others still to
the beat of short pipes.
It has been shown, in the course
of discussion, both the pa-
per and tobacco of some brands
of cigarettes are drugged. A
cal officer the British Army in
Egypt certifies to the presence of
opium in cigarettes of native
Egyptian and gives
reasons for this assertion. On
buying cigarettes at Cairo and
Alexandria, be was ask
whether he wished them highly
or moderately flavored ; is, with
much or little opium in them.
When we consider that cigarettes
called are a regular
of sale in every part of the
world, we not be at a loss to
the strange symptoms and
the lowered tone of health that of-
ten follow their use.
The London Times, which has
published many interesting com-
on this subject, at-
tempts an editorial summary of the
arguments for and against use
of tobacco. Addressing a public of,
smokers, it does not bear very ; Dr. Hume
hard in discountenancing j Course in trench and
It admits, in a mild way, the German, Toy.
moral evils resulting, as a lazy Greek
tolerance of evil, a Alexander,
of character, a fear of Classes will be organized In
a shiftiness of one these courses on
which have of late years come into from five teachers, No ens
prominence among public men. The trance nor oilier examinations will
by putting a be required.
which is just as pertinent on; The courses will three
this side of Atlantic as the. mouths. Faculty
other. . mend that the teachers come at the
it over-fanciful to suggest I opening remain for the full
that such a decadence from three mouths. Where that is not
by our empire was won. possible, two mouths or even
and which alone it can be main; may prove of great benefit,
be, in some small meas There are no charges tor MB
to the perpetual The fee So,
employment of a narcotic which, includes matriculation, room-rent,
on the very showing of its servant's
and admirers, helps men to Board can be seemed at from
lire in a fool's paradise, to to pet month,
their eves to the facts which it For further
manufacturers- and all our people
ed in having a railroad
com mission, and we heartily endorse
view of our contemporary, that
the commission and the law under
which it acts, should
hold the scales of
justice evenly. The do not
want to oppress, but to aid oar rail-
roads all other enter
es for developing the country, but.
want and they demand
their own interest. They
believe a railroad commission
ed under wise and just law and
composed of wise and true men,
can and will them protection, j
and believing it, they are calling
for that must be heard.-
Progressive Farm
Special Courses Instruction
University of Carolina,
Chapel Hill, N. C, June
In continuation of the plan of last
year the authorities have decided
to offer special courses of instruction
for benefit of the teachers of
State. These courses will begin on
February 1889. From the fol
lowing outline of studies it will be
seen shat large liberty of election is
possible. These are special
adapted to the teachers are not
ordinary college classes
Special
Science and Art of Teach-
President
Course Mental
Moral Science with special ref-
to Teaching, Dr. M align m
Algebra and
Geometry. Profs. Graves and Love.
Short course in Latin Prof.
Winston.
Teacher's Course in
try, Prof. Venable.
Geology and Physical Geog
North Carolina, Prof.
Holmes.
Elements of Natural
Prof. Gore.
Law of Domestic Relations
Manning.
English Language and Lit
OF
FALL
AT
be unpleasant steadily to con-
template
Fatal Neglect.
The breaking of the smallest wheel
in a mammoth factory, if not repaired
or replaced, will the entire plant,
as a of dust will the deli-
machinery of a watch. Were
as thoughtful to repair their broken
address
Kemp P. Battle, President.
Or, W. T. Patterson, Bursar.
Failed to Give Bond.
Kinston Free Press.
We learn that Republican
Sheriff-elect Greene, Bob
was to give bond, which was
j health on the first approach of disease, as lacked
the owner is to mend his machinery,, up the
would escape indescribable suffer-; m ,
Slight causes will ts elected John t lie
candidate, instead, bond-
ed immediately.
scape
and often death,
sometimes derange the digestive o-
on whose healthy action the health
of the whole system so much depends,
feverish blood, headaches, and con-
itself, set in. The wise per-
son will at once arrest the cause of
symptoms, ting to that
lie is a practical carpenter Dr. Pierce's Gold-
of no mean skill, and en Discovery, which purifies
when a bed breaks down or a spigot blood and cures liver disease Of
In 1864 New York voted for Lin-
; in 1868 for Seymour, in 1872
tor Grant; in 1876 for
1880 for in 1884 for Cleve-
land ; in 1888 for Harrison. So
very election it has given Its vote
alternately to Democratic and Re-
publican ticket. According to the
succession, in 1893 will be
east a Democrat. We hope so.
Concord
It pays to raise tobacco. One
man sold about eight thousand
j pounds here last week and made an
leverage of over per hundred.
Who can beat it
leaks be goes to work and mends it
a thorough and workmanlike way
He chairs and does all the
little cabinet making of
with ease and skill. Not
ago of the Wood family's
lodgers complained that bis bed
was falling to pieces. He also com
plained that it had ten-
ants Mr. Wood took it to pieces
with alacrity. After the repairs
were properly made be
the other charge, and after a
careful digital examination of every
nook and cranny in the bedstead
an equally thorough search of
and bed clothing, as-
sured lodger that his suspicious
were groundless. And so the result
of an examination by two eyed ex-
pert proved them to be.
Charles the armless, or
rather cigar seller in
Washington market, bas a con-
figure ever since
1879. He disposes of
wares with and alacrity, and
makes change without trouble. Mr.
has no right-arm and no
left hand. When he was eighteen
years old be joined Fort Maine
battery. He fought through the
war without receiving a wound and
come oat, a veteran, full of
energy and ambition. But
Wade Hampton through
war, seamless, to lose a leg
afterwards by kick of a mule.
Mr. fared almost as sadly.
On October 12.1866, at a
of Grand Army of the Re
public, was active In help-
fire the By
mature explosion of a cannon he
lost bis right arm, his left
and almost lost bis life. After a
tedious convalescence be found him
self face to face with the problem of
existence, dependent on his own
forts, deprived of the pension which
I would have so helped him bad be
maimed on the battle-field-
all druggists.
The Worn Nasal Catarrh,
no matter of how long standing, is
cured by Dr. Sage's Catarrh Kern-
ed;. not mealy give relief, but
produces permanent cures in worst
cases. cents, by druggists.
A Railroad Commission.
It is probable that the
of North Carolina will create
a railroad commission to investigate
the management of the lines
are operated in this State and to
be made for
If the bill to establish this com-
mission becomes a law, best in-
of the State demand that
the men will be selected the
be of unblemished
of stem resolution, and of judicial
mind. They must be friendly both
to farmers and to railroads
neither partial nor prejudiced, so
bis that may decide between the
conflicting interests with
justice to both sides.
The farmers do not to crush
or cripple railroads, for what
become of their crops if there
were means of transportation to
markets t The railroads do de-
sire to impoverish farmers, for
if the producers are poor to
work their lauds faithfully, the
amount of to be done by
the freight cars will be injuriously
effected.
Therefore, if there is to be a rail-
road commission let it be
of men whose disinterestedness is
above suspicion, are hostile to
neither and who will net for
greatest good of greatest
of the residents of North
We clip to endorse it.
It is a fair, and patriotic view of
this question. Not only
but mechanics, mill men,
the stock sen, the merchants tad
John Patrick, Republican Treas-
elect, also failed to give bond-
lacking his time was
extended till
All the other Republicans give
bond.
Democrats refused
to go on any of the Republicans
bonds. This is as it should be. Let
it be understood hereafter
true Democrat will go any Re-
publican's bond. Let the people
elect officers them is fair
as it should be.
The Republicans Greene are
greatly disturbed, as is natural,
say they will go to law. We
see them to make
any fight on. If an officer can't
give bond why one will have to be
elected who can.
The best in the world for Cuts
Bruises. Sores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum, Fe
Sores, Chapped Chi
Corns, and all Skin
and cures Piles, or no pay re
quired. It is guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or money refunded. Price
per For sale
The Lord's Prayer.
Little, House A
GREENVILLE, N.
STANDARD CALICOES
AT CENTS.
HENRIETTA CLOTH
YARD WIDE,
ALL WOOL. mm. WIDE,
Best
LADIES SHOES AT
Our Nice Fitting
62.50 SHOES ARE
Our
BUFF SHOES ARM
GOOD VALUED.
We also invite you to exam-
our General Stock, which
is better than eyer before.
We have a good line of Do-
and Kentucky Jeans,
Hats and Caps and a splendid
stock of Men's Boots.
LITTLE. HOUSE k BRO.
Y JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice in nil the courts. Collections
a Specialty.
L. JAMES.
DENTIST, p
TAMES M.
GREENVILLE, N.
KY-AT-L A W,
G VI C.
AUG. C M
BERNARD,
A T-LA W,
N. C.
Practice in the and Federal Court
J. H. TUCKER
J.
MOORE, TUCKER A MURPHY,
A T-LA W,
N. C.
LATHAM.
I A
HARRY SKINNER
SKINNER,
Did you ever think, short though
it is, how much there is in it Oh,
it is beautiful like a diamond
in the of a it unites a
thousand sparkling gems one-
It teaches all of one
look to God as our
It teaches us to
raise our thoughts and desires
above the art in
It us that we must
reverence Heavenly Father
be thy It breathes
the saint j
And a submissive
us day our daily
And a forgiving
us our as we
forgive those who trespass against
And r cautions
liver u from And, last of
all, an adoring thine
is the and the glory, for
ever.
AT-L A W,
N. C.
T V.
Attorney and at Lin
S C.
A W JOYNER,
Attorney and at
N. U.
Will practice the Courts Pitt,
Greene, and Beaufort
ties, and the Supreme Court.
Faithful attention given to all business
to him.
DR. H. SNELL,
WASHINGTON, M. C.
Surgeon Dentist.
Tenders his professional services the
public.
Teeth extracted without pain
of Nitrous Oxide
B. YELLOWLEY,
ATTORNEY-A W,
Greenville, N. C.





Eastern Reflector, N-. th Carolina Conference.
c.
I'll
IN
.
will not hesitate t
en and that
with the true principles the
tilde
The session of this body rt-
held in New
largely attended and was mark-
ti lot -the intelligence of those
its deliberations
Bishop i residing
and Donald W.
Stale was Secretary.
The reports show
all churches in
Conference was and
increase of last year.
The sum of was
ed to worn out preachers and
the widows and orphans of de-
ceased preachers. The sum to
be raised the several districts
section of tho fur . .,. tr
roB. T SAMPLE COPY tile . n i
at at
Greenville,
Mail Matter.
The last issue of the Herald pub-
at Salisbury, stated that
Mr, K. Whichard of Green
taken editorial charge
of that paper- He knows how
to run a and we wish
for him and the If. much
success.
The Faculty of the University
offer to the teachers of the State
a course of three months free
instructions specially adapted
to their needs. The by J.
recommended by the Board,
were for home missions;
and for foreign missions.
The appointments for the Wash
District are as follows
K. A. El
Washington station W. K.
Ware, II Call
Tarboro- P. M.
Temperance Hall and
K. Karen.
Bethel E. L. Pell,
v G.
son
Greenville B. John.
Mount Zion B. Gil-
Bethlehem mission -E C Glenn.
Vanceboro Reid.
Aurora A Green.
beginning with Science
and Art of by
dent is an attractive one.
There is no charge for tuition
the only fee being 16,00 which
the Act of the Assembly re-
quires and which entitles to
matriculation, room-rent,
ants hire A more lengthy
explanation will found on
first page of this
One work to lie done by the
next General North
Carolina is to elect State Printer.
So far as we now there are
two candidates for the position,
Mr. S. A. of the News
r, a id Mr Dan-
of the Cl The latter
now very creditably holds the
we see
Pegram.
W. Rob.
Columbia Lowe.
O.
tint
Fail-field W. Down
Swan Quarter D.
II. Guy ton.
and
J.
Farmville Notes.
N. C Dec
Mi.
For sometime past I have been so
engaged in various
that have time to
a promise made you sometime
since, giving you a
neighborhood.
our letter we note that-
position and we see do reason j m of the Fa tn
why he should not be re elected. hate their crops
and we dunk the yield van
The Reflector most assuredly, ,.
favors that it be given Mr. the farmers, the ones
He i- a young man who in I
, . , ,. to the eye. it is
the few years his public Hie , . Km ,
has shown what he is, and be from election
paper, the Chronicle, baa proven entire Democratic Comity ticket or
his devotion and love for because marriage is a booming.
State and the Democratic party.
No one labored more earnestly
and actively for Democratic sue-
i, ,; Ho hood, vet we take
l great consolation Horn the tact
The last reason is one in Which ail
t lit young and Myself take
ii special interest though we are
still ten in the shades bachelor
well deserves to be re elected as
State Printer and we hope the
members from Pitt county will
cast their vote for him.
Build the
we believe the field is ripe unto the
harvest.
Tins tilings us to note the two so-
events of the season. The first
was the marriage of Will
laid, of Beaver Dam, to Miss Dip-
pie daughter of M. D.
j ton of on the of
For nearly a mile beyond month. The second at winch
., . ,. ., , , j your correspondent was was
Greenville the railroad will f M T o
immediately by the side of the Dora B. Askew. The
county road and when Mr. no B. Davis and Miss
the bend in the road leading to I
the bridge the railroad will take
the entire space for the county
and Mattie Belcher. Mr. John
Baker and Miss Lucy
ho Rev. Means More officiating.
the people living on the other
side of the river will not be kept
out of every freshet that
means of a substantial dam. Of
course the railroad will hare a
dam across a part of the dis-
from the the river,
and that road being above the
county road would break the
force of the water Off the lower
dam. It would cost no great;
the county road and it would
be money well invested. While
it is the duty of the county to
provide a way for the people be-
the river to get to the
county seal, we believe the
men of Greenville and
private citizens of the county
would readily subscribe half
enough to construct the dam if
the County Commissioners
take the matter in hand and
pay the other half. Now let
this be pushed forward at once
and a good roadway leading in-
to toe town will be the result.
Col. I. A. who return-
ed home last night, brings
the news of the death of
R. R. Bridgers President of the
Wilmington Weldon Rail
road, which occurred at
S C, on Monday evening.
President Bridgers had gone
therefrom Wilmington to at-
tend a railroad meeting, and
was taken sick and died very
Moore's Report.
Washington Gazette
The following creditable re
port was made by W. II. Moore
at bis last visit to Washington.
The membership the Washings
ton District increased in four
years to
Sunday schools I rout withes
scholars to schools and
we churches and
parsonages, now churches and
parsonages. Besides these
have been completed,
the whole at an expense of
The district is composed of
pastoral charges, served by pas
tors; increase salaries
Three churches connected with
circuits have become stations. One
mission hits become self sustaining.
The contributions missions
hare more than doubled what they
were four years ago.
The people of Pitt county and North Carolina need no
to the above gentleman. He them faith-
fully and with ability from the Commons to the Chief
At the of his Executive office, from absolute he
had to accept a mission that was not genial to him, because of its
banishment from home and friends he loved so well. But he has
now returned the people here couple his returning to
his almost assured elevation to the Senate. Without Minister Jar-
knowledge his friends hare been at work in his
interest. Doubtless he will now add new impetus to he work of
organizing his strength to be tested in caucus. It is ascertained by
those who know that he can command practically the votes of
the First he has strength from other sections of
the State which will approximate his strength at about in the
caucus. This much is certain, that Alexander holds the balance
of power He can name the next U. S. Senator. There is every
reason why he and the Alliance should support Gov Jarvis. By ref-
to his State papers it will be found that he has taken an ad-
position against Co-operation and Trust, while Senator
Ransom during years service in the Senate, has never
to a sen on the Hoot of the Senate that can be
ed to be in of the general principles of the Alliance or that
has had a tendency to check the monopolistic march of aggression
and oppression.
Tom is of the people He knows their wants and on the
floor of the Senate he will prove an assistant of our noble Vanes in
his open war against protection, monopoly and trust. The
entertains kind feelings for Senator Ransom, Col. Waddell and
Caps. Alexander, but its subscribers, and its editor, and the people
of Pitt, county and the First District desire to see Thomas J. Jarvis
the next Senator, and we are glad to say to his that the
prospects are cheering.
R. S. CLARK CO.,
uM; goods.
Are headquarters for all needed in the
HARDWARE line. Our stock cannot be
but you want anything in
Hardware, Moves
and Cooking Material
and House Material. Cutlery
CA II
We can save you money on any of these goods.
AGENTS FOR POWDERS
we will sell Factory Prices.
Help Still Needed. Chat as tn the
road. This will necessitate the i Alter the marriage party ,
. .,. , ,. , a rude over Farmville to
building of a road w mm a mm
from the bridge out to hill supper awaited
this side of Mr. Wilson's to newly mar
As the work on this end of ,
. wishes ho-
railroad progresses it will be in;,., may arise to
the way of travel on the county j mar their happiness but rather may
road, and for that reason work who golden
i u u worlds overhang and shadow their
on a new county road should be i
started as early as possible. of a happy married life are re-
Aid in building this road it
, , . . Miss organized
a School
ac School House, and Mr.
W. B- organized in
interest the
I are in a flourishing condition,
comes an by was
since that the government would
Postage stamps no The
laces o several fair maidens were
lo behold, but they some
what more when they were
that it was the opinion of
the officials at Washington, that
they stamps we were
enough already.
Mr. C. P. Wilton of the Advance
construct this for Oat-
a broken down he
seemed The buggy though
had rather a shaky appearance. No
reflect on
Flu., Doc. 1888.
Editor Eastern
I see that Mrs. at the
panic stricken city of lie
ville, Fla., has and
that it has been made in
the columns of the
the good people of I'm county
take at to help the
family, as am sure they need
assistance. I can speak from
been one
caught ten miles
from the city of Jacksonville
and will say that no one knows
what the people have undergone Hi
parts of For
the past four mouths all business
was shut down thousands of
people both men and women, were
thrown of employment. All the
railroads and steamship lines were
almost forced to business
also machine shops steam mills.
Provision
and such supplies as the people
were compelled to have advanced
to per cent and hardly
could be had even The fever
still rages and parties ate compelled
to stay here by the authorities
by the quarantine. There have been
several cases of yellow fever in this
place and it is unpleasant to see a
special train doctors and yellow
flags visit a place and take the sick
to the hospital.
Now let the people help the
the
start a fund the benefit
the good woman. hope see
in issue that a good
has made up and sent
them. J. A.
The tor will gladly
forward all
that may be
Our friends of the country press
bare all settled down to the
they accept the national de-
feat philosophically, and hare
cheerfully gone back to work of
booming their towns and promoting
the progress their neighbors
hoods. The press of the Sate was
never under more vigilant direction
or in more enterprising bands,
to a lover of the State it is a least
to sit down to a table of North Car-
exchanges, such as the Ales
sonnet daily
The House yesterday by
consent took up the direct tax
bill, which caused the long dead-
lock last spring. It is expected
that it will be passed, but hopes are
expressed by its opponents that
Mr. Cleveland will veto it.
Mr. Harrison's backbone is likely
to suffer a severe strain between
now and the March. The
leaders here have de
upon having an extra
session of the Fifty first Con-
called to meet In
March or early in April There is
not the slightest necessity of ex-
session; the republicans ac-
knowledge that their only object in
having it called is to gain the. six
Senators and as
as South Dakota, Montana
Washington, when admitted as
states, be entitled to.
have decided that owing to their
very narrow margin in both
es, this is necessary in order
to enable new states to organ-
and send their and
Representatives in time for the be-
ginning of regular December
session. It remains for Mr. Harris
son to decide if be will allow his
party leaders- to compel him to call
a needless for the sake of a
few more rotes.
Charlotte Chronicle.
The Senatorial fight North
Carolina is growing hot. At
this writing, from the most
investigation, the situation
seems to be about as follows Sen-
Ransom is a candidate re-
election. He is opposed
M. Waddell. The Mends of Thomas
J. Jarvis are pushing him forward
in the race. Capt. Sid
is being presented by a large
prominent papers and
people. Capt. Alexander baa not
taken any part race.
The friends of Gov. Jarvis are
making a vigorous light for him.
They claim that votes are already
pledged to him, and who oppose
Senator Ransom are As
many as have expressed them-
selves openly for Capt.
Col. Waddell has surprised the
friends Gov. Jarvis, in their can-
for they have found as
freely admit, that the Colonel has
far greater strength than they
dreamed of. Gov. Jarvis sailed
from Rio de on the 12th of
November. He reaches Washing-
ton on the 15th when be will
resign as minister to Brazil Al-
though he has made no an-
of being a candidate,
it that his friends are ma-
king a most active canvass in bis
behalf- The magnitude of the Jar-
strength may he imagined from
the fact that the
the almost undivided sup-
port of Methodists.
The claim is made by persons
who are proposing Senator Ran-
that a canvass of the
demonstrates that a majority
are opposed to the Senator's re-
election, and they claim that it is
about certain that he is, point of
fact, already defeated.
In Charlotte, the of
course, is divided between Ransom
and Alexander. It is not regarded
here that Capt. is a
candidate, and therefore the feeling
has been almost fa-
of Ransom. The
heard a prominent democrat say
recently that lie would bet two to
that Ransom will win
down.
The asked Capt. Alex
under if he were u candidate for
Senate, jut before be left for Mis-
He said be would not try
to defeat Senator but that
if a of the legislature
proved to be against the Senator,
the contest would open to the
field, and t hat case, he saw no
reason to believe that any contest-
ant bad a priority or preemption
Should Capt. Alexandria under
contingencies permit his to
be used, there Is no doubt it would
prove a power a caucus. Capt.
Alexander is the only man
from this section for the
and in case he runs, be
would scarcely be opposed
West; he would have
competitor from bis section.
A serious riot occurred at
I Ala., a few days ago.
A nice Christmas present for you
to make editor is to pay him
what yen owe him. It will enable
him to enjoy Christmas like other
folks.
Valuable Town proper-
at Auction.
That desirable dwelling and lot now
occupied Dr. Sledge Forbes town
will be offered for at public auction
at the Court Reuse door, on Saturday
of December, 1888. Dwelling
two-story house with two annexes,
contains eight rooms with necessary
outhouses, nil new and In good
I is a corner lot and contains
acre ground extending from one
street to another, good garden, a
of which set in fruit trees. Terms
sale, two-thirds cash, balance In one
and two years, with Interest at per
on payments from day of
sale. to purchase at
private sale, or wanting full particulars,
will apply to
IT, C.
r M
R. GREENE
Manager.
WE are now fitted up in first-class and are prepared to man-
upon short notice any kind or of
RIDING VEHICLES.
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO ALL REPAIRING.
We also keep a nice line of
READY MADE HARNESS.
Come and see us. Satisfaction Guaranteed.
THE MAN
BE SEEN EVERY DAY, but the who keeps a fresh supply of
Groceries, Fruits, Confections, Cigars,
TOBACCO, CANNED GOODS,
Can he found whenever wanted. You only have to look for
V. L. STEPHENS,
And nil your wants in above goods can be supplied.
BOXES OF CONFECTIONS PUT UP TO ORDER.
FINE A SPECIALTY.
ESTABLISHED IN 1870.
Luther Sheldon,
SASHES, DOORS AND BLINDS,
MIXED PAINTS, TIN FANCY CUT BRACKETS,
VARNISHES, TARRED ROOFING PAPERS, ENAMELED GLASS. RAIL,
Coach Colors in Japan. Plain Sheathing Cathedral Newels,
Dry Paints, Plaster or Wall Papers, Venetian Glass, Mood Mantels,
Brushes, Wire Cloth Window Screens, Rubber Roofing Paint,
Slate Mantels,
Hardware, Paints, Oils, Glass, Putty,
AND BUILDING MATERIAL OF DESCRIPTION.
Nos. West Side Market Roanoke Ave.
NORFOLK, VA.
W. L. BROWN
COMMISSION MERCHANT
AND AGENT FOR THE TARBORO OIL MILLS.
Highest Cash price paid tor Cotton Seed or
Meal given in exchange Has for sale
Acid Lime and Cotton Seed Meal
Either Cash or on Time.
FARMER'S BONE FERTILIZER.
A SPECIALTY it is to he superior to any fertilizer on the market.
J. B.
J. K.
J. G. MOVE.
J. B. CHERRY CO.,
LOOK TO YOUR INTEREST
Having received fresh line the following goods, we arc now
ready to to the public just what they Stand in need goods
at prices that will please the purchaser.
WE HAVE IN STOCK
STAPLE AND FANCY DRESS GOODS,
Dry Goods,
Etc.
SHIRTS COLLARS.
BOOTS AND SHOES
To fit all who favor with their
Hardware, Nails, Cutlery, Guns, Shot, Powder,
Glass-ware, Wood and Willow
ware, Furniture, Harness, Whips,
Gail Ax and Railroad Mills Snuff, Chewing
and Smoking Tobacco.
IN THIS LINE WE WILL
Tea, Coffee, Sugar, Molasses, Flour, Rice, Meats
of different kinds, very best Lard we can
buy, Butter, Cheese, Spice, Pepper,
Soap both toilet and Laundry,
Star Lye, Ball Lye,
Matches, Candles, Starch, best grade of White
Kerosene Oil, Machine Oil,
We are a New Firm, but not new men to the public-
AH who stand in need of goods in our line are to come to see n.
can and will an low as any one who sells good a we do.
TM GO
We still have some very desirable goods in
that must be disposed of
BEFORE JANUARY FIRST,
and we are letting them go without reserve
AT COST
and many of them at far below cost. You only
have to come to our store and let it be known
you want goods and we will convince you that
THE CASH
WE CAN GIVE YOU
BARGAIN
which no other house can equal. Don't tail to
ONCE.
H. Morris Bros,
BARRY SKINNER.
L. C. LATHAM
SUCCESSORS TO JOHN S, k CO
GREENVILLE,
THE LEADERS IN
j -l w i l-i
ILL KINDS OF STAPLE GOODS.
Our Fall and Winter stock of Dry
Clothing, Shoes, Hats, etc., have arrived, and air
friends and customers are invited to call and ex-
goods and prices.
Having purchased entire mercantile business of John S.
Co., i i notes, book ail evidence of debt and
we solicit and increased patronage.
Being able to make all purchases cash, getting advantage of
discounts, we will be enabled to sell as cheaply as any one Sooth of Na
folk. We shall retain in our employ J. S. as genera
of the business, with his former partner Sunnier as assist
ant, who will always be glad to see and serve their old customers.
A special branch of our business will be to I'm cash at reasonably
rates to farmers to cultivate and harvest their crops, in sums of
with security.
J. Li SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
SUGG JAMES OLD
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
STILL TO THE FRONT
J. D. Williamson,
SUCCESSOR
WILL OF
BUGGIES, CARTS
My Factory Is well equipped the put up
but work, we up time tin- latest Improved
Host used in all work. All stylos of Spring lined, you can Befall
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King,
Also keep on hand a full of ready made
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the ear round, which will sell as low as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for put favor hot
merit u continuance of the same.
E. C. GLENN.
MERCHANT
STANDARD GUANO ACID
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL
SHELL LIME, PURE DISSOLVED HONE
COTTON SEED MEAL AND
Tennessee Wagons, for sale.
GREENVILLE. N. C. Mar. 1887.
Notice to Creditors.
Having qualified administrator of
the estate of Ii. K. Smith, be-
fore the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt
county, on the day of October,
notice is here by given to nil creditors of
said estate to present their claims to me,
properly authenticated, within twelve
months from the date of this notice, or it
will be plead lb bar of their recovery.
Persons to said arc here-
by o make payment
to the undersigned. This October Nth
1888. W. E.
Smith.
FEED STORE.
C. D.
Dealer Ii Hay, Corn, Meal, Peas, Outs
and Mill reed.
Will pay highest Cash prices for
Corn and Peas.
pay cash tor my goods and can
ford to sell BOTTOM
Call on me lit the store of. Smith
Farmers
Save Your Cotton
bushels Good See-I wanted by the FA
CO-OPERATIVE
COMPANY.
CASH
Or in exchange. at
Greenville, N.
Or E. V Sec Treas.,
Tarboro,





THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR.
THIS PAPER
Al
be made for It In
FILE AT I-.
Local Spares.
Greeting
BY THE
LEADER OF
LOW PRICES.
In this, my annual
greeting to my friends and pa-
desire to return for
liberal patronage during the
past and hope by the same honest
dealings to merit the same in the
future.
I have an unusually large assort-
in ivory department and it
will be to your advantage to exam
goods and prices before making
purchases.
GOODS-
I have now on exhibition a
of high class novelties in black
and colored Dress Goods, which far
surpasses anything previously ex-
in county. The styles
are a marked departure from former
seasons and include the widest range
of fine plain materials in the newest
shades.
TRIMMINGS.
stock of Trimmings was never
more extensive and varied than now.
It comprises all the leading
and most fashionable designs of
novelties suitable for combinations
and trimmings.
AND WRAPS.
The latest styles, including La-
Circulars, etc.
A full line of Wrap and
Short Jackets.
A stylish lino of garments.
SHOES.
Special values on
Hand Made Goods.
and School Shoes
re specialties.
Boots at all prices.
MEN'S CLOTHING.
None but first-class makes are in-
eluded in my selections.
Fine Cheviots and do
Serges, t
Diagonals, English fact
n assortment that will satisfy the
most fastidious.
CLOTHING.
Two piece Suits from to
years.
Three piece Suits from to
years.
Knee from to
Tears.
The celebrated Bough and Tumble
are famed for their
and durability. I am sole
agent town for them.
HATS.
A of Fur and
Stiff Hats.
Derby can't be
beat.
Special bargains in
FURNISHING GOODS.
Underwear. Shirts, Collars Neck
wear Hosiery and other novelties in
this department.
CARPETS, OILCLOTHS, RUGS,
TRUNKS,
All at prices that will be
by economical buyers.
Elegant sets and Boas at
Lang's.
Hyacinth for sale. Apply
to Allen Greenville N. C
Nice lot of cheap Lounges at
J. B. Cherry Go's.
Buy your Shirts at
Biggs
and and
Clothing at
Fresh arrival of Salines
Ginghams and Calicoes at J. B.
Cherry Co's.
An elegant display of all Woo
at Lang's.
Buy A. A. Battles war-
ranted Calf Shoes
of Higgs Sf
Lace window with
attachments complete at
Lang's.
Point. Lace Flour has been tried
and is the best and cheapest at the
Old Brick Store.
One Power Feed Cutter for
at D. D. Haskett Co's.
Valuable in the town of
Greenville for sale. For and
particulars apply to L. W. Lawrence.
rhinestone scarf pin.
Finder will please return to the RE-
office.
The sale of the Boss Famous
Lunch Milk during 1887 ex-
ceded the sales of the former year
by 380.701 pounds. Try them, at
the Old Store.
A lull line of and
woolen merino Vests
at Lang's.
to B. Cherry Go and
your furniture cheap.
One Under Grist Mill,
French Burr for 9100.00 at D. D.
Haskett Co's.
Finest lot of ever brought
to this town now on exhibition and
for sale by V.-L. Stephens.
hats for at Higgs
Try a pair of E. P.
Co's Hand
Made Shoes at
Higgs y
Received Oct. 3rd lbs P.
Go's Sweet Scotch Snuff,
the best, cheapest, cleanest and
healthiest Snuff in the world,
cents per lb. at the Old Brick Store.
II you want the best Cook Stove
the Acorn, with ventilated oven
of it- Co.
Ladies
something new.
J. B Cherry ft
sewed shoe is
Co.
s per
THE FRIEND
Candies from to
pound at A. L.
three of the section Thom-
as narrow left at D. D. Haskett ft
Go's.
Finest Buckwheat, and
Rico molasses at the Old
Brick Store.
V. L. Stephens is headquarters
for Apples, Oranges, Lemons, Ban-
and
Valuable property in the town of
for sale. For terms
apply to Dr. T. Sledge.
For a good second hand Parlor
Suit of Furniture apply to
V. L. Stephens.
A good young and gentle horse
for sale by J. C. Lanier.
All the store fixtures now being
by H. Morris ft Bros., will be
Id cheap cash.
A crate of imported goods, vases
latest styles and patterns, direct
from France. At the Racket Store.
The year is nearly gone.
Only twelve days more to Christ-
mas.
issue of the
tor in 1888.
is an excellent time to lo-
in Greenville.
Trade is just splendid with the
We are glad.
Cold weather makes a big de-
for old newspapers.
The Stare Grange is in session
this week at
Greenville should have a boom
next with a great big B.
If a cross mark is on your paper
come on pay what owe us.
Mr. C. F. Wilson, agent of the
Wilson Advance, has been in town
this week.
Dr. J. T. Sledge offers valuable
town property for sale. See
Sunday was a balmy, spring like
but it has cooler since the
rain Monday,
The nights are brilliant with
moonlight. In other words
is lit by of
The water in the river has been
low a few days but we suppose
the rain will start it up.
Rev. J. G. Nelson and
have been spending a few days with
the of Mr. O. P.
Our new Register of Deeds, Mr.
D. James, issued eleven
age licenses during his first week in
office.
The enterprising firm of Ryan
Redding have sent out an
holiday pap. It is a nice
sheet.
One thing that stands out as a
great inducement for to lo-
in Greenville is our excellent
schools.
Two popular people of
will this evening join hearts
and hands and start upon mat
voyage.
Greenville resident tailor.
The right man could make money
hem. Since putting this type we
learn one is coming.
See if you can't get your neigh-
to take the Reflector next
year. It will be interesting to
cry man the county.
Rev. H. B. Anderson preached in
the Methodist Church here Sunday
morning and Rev. G- Nelson
preached Sunday night.
Minister Jarvis and wife are ex-
here a days. Our
people will be delighted to have
them again among us.
appear
to be in a nourishing
says the Henderson Gold Leaf.
Glad the little one gets along so
nicely, That.
Last, week a force of hands cut
out the way for the railroad through
the woods between the river
the field. The work
goes right on.
The Spectator bearing
date Dec. has come to hand.
Somewhat ahead of time. Our
brethren over must not want
any Christmas.
Mr. C. D. Rountree has moved
his feed store S. Smith
using their warehouse for a store
room and having his office the
front of their store.
The railroad of itself is not going
to make Greenville- It will require
cooperation, energy and push mi
the part of our men and
Let the work begin now.
Mr. John Simms, of LaGrange,
was in our office Monday and told
us he was going to locate his tailor
establishment in Greenville this
week. He will move over to-morrow
We hear that the store of Mr. F
T. Carr, at Willow Green, Greene
county, has been destroyed by fire.
Full particulars have not been learn-
ed. Our truly sympathize
with Mr. Carr.
Mr. W. B. Parker, whose sickness
with typhoid lever we recently an-
died on Wednesday of
last week. his re-
mains were taken in the country
about seventeen miles from town,
and interred. He leaves a wife
three children.
V. L. Stephens keeps the
Cigars of the town.
When you want to buy Oysters
by the Bushel or Gallon call on
Frank Johnson, at the Red Front,
near the Market. Prices per Bush
el to per quart per
gallon to
Received Dec lbs
lard's Sweet which has
come to stay. It has no equal for it
is the best and healthiest. cents
per lb at the Old Brick Store.
hereby given that
plication will lie made to the
Assembly of North its
next session to amend the charter
of the town of Greenville.
For your Prunes, Dried Apples,
Raisins, Currants, Citron, Candies
of every description, of all
kinds, go to V. L. Stephen.
We keep a fine line of shoes and
sell cheap. J. B. CHERRY Co.
Just received at the Old Brick
French Prunes, Smyrna Figs,
Citron Currants, Icing Sugar, Nuts,
liaisons. Chocolate, Gelatin, Apples
and Oranges. New Herrings.
Johnson pays the highest
cash prices for fresh Pork, Beef,
Chickens. Eggs, Hides, dry or
green; and is also prepared to fur-
the town and community with
fresh meats at the lowest market
prices.
class female op-
on clothing. Apply
to John Simms, Tailor.
don't borrow Harrows
from your neighbors when yon can
a Seat ion Thomas of D. D.
Haskett for
A notice to creditors by J. G,
Taylor, administrator of C. H.
appears in this paper.
On the fourth page of this paper
win in- found an advertisement of
Pearline. the best article in
the world for good and earn wash-
. It is sold by
Greenville will ere long have a
canning establishment. We would
the attention of those interest-
ed to an on first page of this
issue which was us by
Rev. J. W.
V. L. Stephens a neatly
ranged and well kept store. His
stock and confections is
fresh and very attractive, all
your wants in that Hue can be sups
plied without trouble.
Now if there is a cross mark after
your name on the margin of this
taper come like a man pay
what you owe us. If you live coo
far come conveniently send
some money by mail.
The Reflector is going to
the completion of the. railroad
to Greenville with a large
issue. The business men say the
town must be given a good send oil
and that means it will be done.
Some of our people are paying more
to good stock animals.
Mr. E. B. Moore, of Hotel Macon,
two good cows from
last week, and on Monday Mr.
K. O. received one.
One railroad has already reached
Greenville and the depot is at Ryan
Bedding's. People crowd around
see the train but the only
accident so far is the running over
one of Mr. B. Moore's fingers.
was too beautiful too
the weather of last week, and now
place of the bright, beautiful
weather, we have set down in
the midst of a slush, The pros.
now are for fairing off again.
people generally are glad
that the M. E. Conference returned
Rev. Mr. John to the pastorate of
the Greenville church. He ex
eel lent man and earnest worker ever
faithful to the for which he
labors.
Oar neighbor, Rev. E. C. Glenn,
was among the new ministers ad-
to the N. C. Conference at
its recent session word for it
there is not a better man in the
Conference, and none will be a more
worker be.
Friend Guss one or
the clerks at popular store
brought us a scrap calico, the
other day, cut in the shape of a
shoe sole. The scrap measured
inches in width and inches in
length. Guss said it was carried to
the store by a colored woman who
was looking for n pair of shoes with
a sole to fit that measure.
New Goods
New Goods lining out He Old, Ring is tie
It is a real treat to visit the
stores of Ryan Redding, both the
racket and variety stores, and see
what beautiful goods they have.
Their stock is immense
contains more pretty goods than
displayed here before by
Him. Besides their nice goods
they are such clever and polite gen-
that ills a pleasure to make
purchases of them, Read their
new advertisement to day.
It is nearly Christmas, and what
is occupying mind of the people
is what to bay and where the best
can be made. To those
who read the Reflector we would
say look over all the advertisements
you will be directed to firms
who have such goods to sell as
desire and they desire patron.
age The men whose names appear
this paper are all reliable and will
give yon good articles for your
The completion of a railroad to
this town will be followed by the es
of several very
taut industries. The
has already mentioned several
will try to keep its readers well
posted. Among other things now
in contemplation is a cotton seed
oil mill. We learn that one of our
citizens has obtained
all estimates of costs in establish-
one and will put the project in
motion next spring.
There was an attempt to
jail by the prisoners in Washington
Sunday afternoon. A tunnel
had been made in the wall and was
nearly to the outside when
the Deputy Sheriff discovered what
was going in time to prevent an
escape. The jail contained eleven
of the rioters the late disturbance
in Washington, the man Newton
who as just convicted and
to seven years for in
the Cox murder, and some other
prisoners.
At the home of the bride's broth
Mr. E. A. Coward, in Greene
county, on Wednesday, the 5th inst.
Mr. Dixon was married to
Miss Coward, Rev. Mr. How-
ard, The attendants
were E. A. Coward and Miss Bet tie
Dixon, Joe. Dixon and Miss Fannie
Coward John R. and Miss
Hattie Harper. George Hart and
Miss John Barrett
and Miss Carrie Hail. Thomas Dixon
and Miss Lilla Hooker, William
Lawrence and Miss Hattie
John Dixon and Miss Patrick.
A reception was held at the home
the groom's mother. The couple
received handsome present.
Marriage Licenses.
During the month of November
marriage licenses were issued by
the Register of Deeds of Pitt
to the
WHITE.
M. C Smith Maggie Gard
J. W. Smith and Dora M.
Smith, J. S. and Lula Gore, J.
T, Evans and Sarah J. Blight, Red-
ding Warren and Nancy D.
J. Whichard and W. Sui-
ton, J. Garris and George Ann
Dennis, E. Maiming
Thomas, A. Pollard and
COLORED.
Biggs Hill.
Grant and Dicey
son, Henry and Rhoda Ann
Williams, Elijah
Thorns.-. Howell Vines and Ru-
John E. Grimes and
M. II. Hardy
Lizzie Mills Rollins
Mary Jane demons.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
t dirt of Pitt county us
Administrator of the estate of C. II.
deceased, on the day of
1888. All Indebted to the
mid estate are hereby notified to make
immediate payment to the undersigned.
and nil creditor of said estate must
sent their claims, duly Authenticated, to
the undersigned for payment before
3rd of December, 1889. or
this notice will be plead their
recovery. J. O.
of C. II. Taylor.
Land Sale.
On Saturday the 29th day of
1888. I will sell at the Court
door, in Greenville, to the highest bid-
a valuable tract of land Minuted
three Greenville on the river
road, Said tract of hind contains
acres and adjoins the lands of Alfred
Forties, and Charles Dr. It I
suitable for tobacco, corn and cotton.
The tract contains a barn. house
and two small houses, also an excellent
well of water, a large
vine and thirty or forty peach trees. Am
that wine of the land will rent
for a n acre for tobacco.
Caroline K.
Of the quality and prices of the Milli-
goods now kept In stock by Mrs,
E. A. with those to be had
elsewhere, will convince you that her
stock can In no particular lie surpassed.
line trimmed and
Hats. The very latest styles In trim-
Novelties and Notion. Your
patronage is solicited.
Watch-Maker
If you want something nice In the way of
J w
e r W ARE
Sewing Machines,
come to the old House. A
large new Meek Just received.
and
Machine, repaired and warranted.
GOODS OF EVERY VARIETY
Arriving daily at the well known dry
store
Many of the of bargains ever
offered in Greenville.
Will quote prices in next issue of this paper and
shock the public.
HIGGS k
Greenville, N. C.
HEAD QUARTERS.
WE ARE HEADQUARTERS FOR BARGAINS ON
DRY GOODS, CLOTHING, HATS AC.
st Specialty.
Whole Stock Brogans per Pair and
and other fine Dress Goods.
WE ARE SOLE F R
k SON'S FINE SHOES.
to See Us.
Respectfully
Brown S Hooker.
Farmers
Look to Your Interest
L.
has Just received n handsome and well
selected if
CLOTHING. BOOTS. SHOES.
.;
s Coming
REDDING
Have prepared for it.
They have the Nicest, Largest and Prettiest
DISPLAY OF
to Creditors.
Having duly before the
Court Clerk of count v. on
the 3rd day of December. 1888, u Ad-
of the estate of
Whichard, deceased, all persons owing
the estate are hereby notified make
immediate payment the undersigned,
and all persons having claims against
said estate must present the same on or
before the of December, 1889,
or this notice Will be plead bar of
their
John V.
Notice to Creditors.
The Superior Court of Pitt county
having issued letters of
to me. the undersigned, on day
of December, 1888 on the estate of L.
notice is hereby which in superior quality and make
to all persons Indebted t mid es- .
to make Immediate payment to the be surpassed, and will sell them at
undersigned to all creditors of said
estate to present their claims duly
to the undesigned within
twelve months from the date of this
notice or this notice will be plead In
of their recovery. This 3rd of De-
L. B.
of T.
I. A. Attorney.
Lowest Bottom Prices.
CALL AND LOOK
Notice to Creditors.
Having before the Clerk of the
Superior Court of county as
tor to the last Will and Testament of
late Hardy Johnson
day of August 1888. Notice is hereby
given to the Creditors of said estate to
present their claims to me properly
on or before the day of
September 1889 or this notice will he
plead in the recovery. All persons
Indebted to said estate at nodded to
make immediate payment to me. This
20th of September 1888.
K. Johnson
Executor.
STATE NORTH CAROLINA,
COUNTY OF
OR COURT CLERKS OFFICE.
John P. Biggs against Chas
Baker Hall trading and doing bus-
as and Hall.
are hereby
ii. that the plaintiff, John D. Biggs
has commenced an of attachment
against you in the Superior Court of
Marl county, for the purpose of
the sum of eleven hundred and
sixty-five dollars. That one S. L.
Wallace and others of county,
been for any amount
due from them to you. Yon arc further
notified that this action is returnable to
Spring Term of the Superior Court of
Martin county, commences in
on the Monday In
March. And you are required to
answer or demur to the com pi bit which
will be died at said Term, or
will be taken against yon. and a lieu de-
for the amount due by
sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff's,
claim.
W. T.
Clerk Superior Court.
November 8th, 1888.
BARGAINS BARGAINS
To close out. AT COST, all the Dry
Goods and Dress on hand.
Country Produce taken In
Two doors South of Store
N. C.
TO
PLUSH
Bridal Presents,
Imported Vases, China Ware
THAT HAS EVER BEEN IN GREENVILLE AND AM
OFFERING AT
LOW j
In fact any one can be suited at prices that
tally with the hard times.
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS
IN GREAT ABUNDANCE.
COUNTRY MERCHANTS
will do well to visit our stoics before purchasing
On goods purchased in large quantities we
Heavy Discount
THE
STILL, TO Till-. FRONT
ft Leaders
TA PAYERS
If you want to save
costs your taxes must
be paid at once. Long-
indulgence will not
be given.
John Flanagan.
Tax Collector.
Our stock is kept complete by getting goods
nothing n SECOND class.
All
Hotel
on Monday. 7th, before
door, in N. will be
sold t public auction largo and com-
Hotel known n Macon
House, or for late years called the
Hotel. The same Is now under the man-
of Mr. K. II. Moore and has a
large patronage. Three whole town lots
solo with the Hotel. Terms of sale one-
third cash, one-third In twelve months,
balance In two years, with Interest at
per cent, from day of sale.
Parties to purchase private
sale, or wanting full will
F. G. AMES.
Greenville, K. C.
please to
r r-
all. r.
. .
AT
j Moses
A FINK LOT OF
M Jewelry, Clocks and
FOR SALE CHEAP.
All kinds of and flock Work
hi Workmanlike Manner and
moms
For the next THIRTY DAYS we will sell
Ready Made Clothing, I
Boots Shoes, etc.,
At figures that will astonish you.
Men's Boots per pair.
Men's Brogan Shoes per pair.
Men's Congress Dress Shoes per pair.
Calicoes Be per yard.
And everything in like proportion.
awl be j
RYAN REDDING.





A CHAPTER ON
OF THE DEAD
Little Do Snow if
I-actor.
Slant- have learnedly
dreams, pi ; theories and
yet no one
has ever arrived at any real dilution of
the matter. It ii only a of cloud
that bars to knowledge thereof,
yet no fortress wall could be more
It is but n from our
noisy, busy world to the vague and vast
territory when,
II as a breathing spell.
Dreamland lies forlorn of tight
no man may set up milestones along
Tho
mat ii ii loss every
i, or allow others t
, or snow outer. . . .-.,.,,,., v-r,
I CK V. ASHING
arid
n-
USE i I
-.-----
For Shaving, I and Dressing Hair.
TOP
AT THE GLASS FRONT,
the Opera Home, at
I have recently located, and whew I have
in line
KW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
with all i, , i . new
table i hair
d i--a-. figures
outside f my shop
prompt-, executed. Very
New Firm
am Hi .
found the i . ii
I- i-vi m
Smith and B h
Tar
J. I.
S.
X. M. Tarboro,
iv. -idem
-i
Can
can be
t i
i James A.
i They
t- re the
I at
ii lb- an
m . IT have
I Amt
proved and our
.- Hair Col
or any in line
be bad Ladle can b
on
III a HODGES.
t R. F. Jokes,
People's Line for travel on Tar
River.
The Strainer is the finest
and boot on the river. She has
been thoroughly repaired,
and painted.
Fitted for the ac-
and of Ladies.
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A Table furnished with the
A trip on the Steamer is
not only Inn
Leave .
an at a. a m.
Leave-
and at f A. M.
Freight receive d daily and
IO all point-.
J.
o. X. C.
a B. II.
and
BOOTH.
. Ho -V.
; daily Fat Mail, daily
d pa
W a pm
Ar Bo Hi IT
vi
Ar I 1-1 ;
I I
Ar
Gold bi I HI f
Magnolia I
Ar Hi I
i into
X 7-
an
in
II
dally daily
ex Sun.
iS pm
L-.
y,
Ar
w n ;
I , n p-
Rock; ml I
T am
Ar -v, i l
iv. pill
i Seek Bond
leave ii I Scotland
Re k-ave Scotland
I S A. V. ill fly I
re r . V via
R. B. J illy Sun-
day. I H. Sill II i I- H,
-Ion, X . M. i. M P M.
lea r S
el . ; .- T HI A IV SO
M. arrive . N . Hi V,.
A H.
N leave
Sunday. A M.
arrive N C,
X s mi M.
arrive n M.
Train on leaven Rocky
at I P id
I'M. Hope H.
II--.- M.
II A H. II V,
H daily, except
I tin on Clinton Branch leave Warsaw
To my of and
i ray I can the beat
Saw
and other from i to r
cent cheaper than any
Machinery warranted
faction guaranteed before a i- paid.
Send tor and full
E. G. COX,
Dam,
School
N. C,
s- -f Modern an I
Education
by a .-f Ky.
i and
Free to th-.-e
Fail
October Water
Tin ,
v low. Beard from m
per wet k. 030.00 for coarse.
i-an enter lime. For
full pan
A. II.
ILL IS E R Y.
Mm. B II. Hon.- to an-
the Pitt and
-he ha- again
it the i Id formerly occupied
iv Forbes better known as hi-.
OM Store. And has last returned from
the Northern with a complete and
entirely new of
v- Ii -lie i low for
ASH. I he service;,
of Hull a who
he the in the
in-.-t manner. Mr- Hull i
well known to many of yon as has
for before Thanking
for your very the
hope by fair dealing you will
give me a the
R. II.
THE STOKE OF
M. a-.
Ha- lately been repaired fitted up
and she baa merited a
of
brief and circumscribed they may be.
The dog in the cat
its battles and tho bird
in Us Bleep, while even tho most
commonplace person can usually give
some crude account of his in
Certain dreams are common
to all from a precipice,
down, down, to Home gulf
striving to walk upon a floor that links
horribly beneath the
in urgent haste, to put on garments that
drop off, turn wrong side out. and de-
other
ii coach which suddenly crumbles to
pieces, and leaves one staring in the
road. So to speak, it is a marked
of dreams the bottom drops
out of
Bo rebellious are dreams, and so erratic
in their course, that cannot be com-
by any effort of will; wild fire
could be more cosily chained. We may
long ardently to sec once more, in
wilderness of beloved and
vanished face; yet this poor solace may
he denied, while alien images crowd into
the brain. this subject Hazlitt
wrote. never dream of the face of any
one I am particularly attached to. I have
hi . u almost to agony of the same per-
son f r years, nearly without ceasing, so
as to have lier face always before me, and
to be haunted by a conscious-
of disappointed passion, yet I never
in all time of that person
, more than once or tn ice, and then not
can the lost impression
received by tho mind before
it be calculated upon; for
may read of Blood's execution,
and dream, immediately afterward, of a
cabbage garden; or. transversely, we may
cradled by the most soothing, placid
meditations, yet the weird magician,
who bears the branch of poppies, will
beckon us to follow seas of gore.
Experiment has prov-l that dreams
may be influenced, if not controlled,
through the of the senses; the
of drays upon the cobblestones
a tempest to the dreamer, and the
fumes of or the pleasant odors of
aromatic water near his nostrils trans-
port him to countries. For this
reason the noises of awakening life
color and movement to the visions that
hang upon the edge of rendering
them more real vivid than those
which come at dead of night.
is one of the peculiarities of dreams
to seem to tending toward some Btu-
climax, and then to turn away
with utter irrelevance. The dreamer re-
main.-, imperturbable in the face of tho
transformations; if
and even inanimate objects, become
gifted with speech, he is not surprised;
yet he is likely lo startled and terrified
by the most trifling things. If he dreams
of being pursued, it is not by a lion or
tiger, but, perhaps, let us say. by an in-
distinct yellow blur, hovering near tho
ground like a
ably sinister to his from
thickets, and gliding in out among
the tries.
It is what disenchanting to realize
that is one of the prime factors
in dream making. It matters little
whether the conscience clear, if the
digestion be not in equally good case.
Most people experienced the
the supersensitiveness of every
faculty, brought about by a febrile con-
of the lightness of head
and limb, extending, as one fancies,
even to the loss of gravity the strange,
unfamiliar aspect assumed by well known
objects about the room; for fever, like
indigestion, is a breeder of
Orleans Times-Democrat.
Old Custom and the
Clothing Dealer.
It used to l, am mg tho women of a
past generation, a custom to their
clothes by in the same manner that
they did their best
gilt They divided
their furs, laces, brocades
among their nearest kin. and gen-
tho plainer and more worn
things to old family servants or poor re-
But these personal possessions,
with the exception of lace, rarely
bequeathed nowadays. Mrs. John Jacob
Astor kept to the old customs, and I saw
a girl wearing one of lier
sealskin coats last week, having been
specially to her in the will.
Tho usual is that taken I v the
heirs of Mrs. A. T. Stewart, who all
her enormous to in
second hand clothes. Though little was
tail it the time, a good many
society women took occasion to purchase
certain things through dealers,
generally handkerchiefs, stockings, silk
underwear and gloves, which would not
be recognized and which they got very
cheaply.
There is a woman on Fifth avenue who
makes a of buying the ward-
lobes of dead and who is fast
making a fortune out of the bargains she
gets. Most of her customers who
chase goods from her have no idea of the
real secrets of her trade. She is
n dealer in goods and has
certain French and English and
cases into which she packs many of her
goods sells them as new. She will
take the whole the deceased,
new and old, good at. i bad. and then this
goes through a careful process of
The new things, or those nearly
so, which arc imported or
that appearance, packs into foreign
cases and ties them up daintily and dis-
poses of them to rich customers. Many
a time a woman has come to her and
want to And
gloves or what some I
once saw Mrs. See
if you can find them for And tho
dealer has in course of time sent her a
note saying that she has found some-
thing very near what she asked for. In
reality they are Mrs. own,
and the dealer had them all the while.
The gowns that are new or very nearly
new she sells to the dressmakers, who
freshen them up a bit and sell them to
out of town customers.
Then the dealer a list of customers
who are perfectly familiar with the real
nature of her trade. They arc mostly
women who arc struggling to keep their
places in society, with lean purses and a
great desire to keep up appearances.
They keep the run of her place and get
some bargains, because though the things
they buy are somewhat worn, they are
worth the money the good Parisian
cut and style. They buy from black
and inconspicuous gowns that are like
those worn by a dozen other women and
not likely lo recognized, and some-
they have them made over at home
and buy them for the sake of tho good
material in them. There is a third
of the and shabby clothe,
nets, shoes and general longings which
arc sold in a lump to the second hand
dealers in the Bowery. And so all the
pretty frills and fancies of the dear dead
women of our households become scat-
to the far winds, worn by her
friends, her enemies, her servants,
strangers and women whom in life
would have turned her eyes away from
as she passed. There is something very
pathetic, it seems to me. in such dispersal
and use of these most intimate personal
possessions of a lovely women. The old
way was Brooklyn Eagle.
Important Advantage over all
other prepared Foods.
BABIES CRY FOR IT.
INVALIDS RELISH IT.
Plump, Laughing, Healthy Sublet.
Regulates the and Bowels.
Bold
WELLS, a CO. T.
Baby Portraits.
A Portfolio of i. printed
paper photo MM
in. born a
Mother thee picture; n-. ml
.,
k CO., P.-opt., Vt.
It's Easy to Dye
WITH
Superior
IN
Strength,
Fastness,
Beauty,
AND
Simplicity.
t than other
ever mud, U and
Ask for the and take
each,
WELLS, RICHARDSON A CO., Burlington, ft
For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles,
DIAMOND PAINTS.
Gold, Silver, Only w
How to Save Clipping.
After trying many ways of preserving
scraps and clippings of transient value,
which are wanted for reference in writ-
any article. I have adopted this
of putting them away in en-
or where it would hard
to find them, I simply put them in order,
with a letter clip at the top to hold them
I can immediately refer to
any of them, and when I fin-
with them I throw the worthiest
in tho basket and paste the
others in ray E. in The
Writer.
for Clinton, except Sunday, at GUI
PM. at A V fl
M. U .
and Beside- her
Southbound on
Branch i- No. SI. i-
X. BO. Sunday.
Train No. stop only
an Magnolia.
l Etta 7- at
for all point North daily. All
rail and daily except
day via Bay
close connection for .-ill
points Worth tit and
trains run between
ton and and have
Palace Steal i attached.
r.
General
J. Transportation
T. M.
line of trimmed and
and
millinery good, she ha flu-
of silks, -haded
Gauze. in tin-
her a call at the Old Stand.
N. B.
. M.
Edwards
Printers and Birders,
N. C-
have tin and
of kind to found in
Um State, and i
Of Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding-.
INVITATION'S
BLANKS FOR AND
u your
ADO
X. C.
OPERA HOUSE CORNER
be found a treat of
Light Ere Caused
Confections, Tobacco,
Ci Ac,
Which will sold mi
Give me a call.
J. CHESTNUT.
mi ii
mt g t.
TOO. t
of
a kens Stool
For
and left
Paris Train.
An endless railway train, consisting of
platform cars, is to one of the at-
tractions at the Paris exhibition. Tho
line will be sunk so the platforms
be on a level with the surface, and
the train will run slowly enough to per-
most people to step on and off while
it is in motion; but for the
elderly people a stop of fifteen
seconds every minute will be made. The
motive power will be
York Sun.
Bad for tho rye.
For some time past the school author-
have recognized the injurious effect
on the vision of the use of writing paper
ruled with blue lines. The grand ducal
school committee at is the first
in Germany that taken positive steps
in banishing this paper from the public
schools. From and after the 1st of Jan-
no ruled is to be allowed with
lines other American
Register.
A Coincidence.
dear, arc you feel-
any better
dunno; am the jell all
Fond my dear.
I guess I am well enough
to get tip West.
X. .
S M.
Greenville, X.
Corrected weekly by Wholesale Retail
Mes. to
Bulk SAM Bulk Shoulders Bacon Sides Bacon II
Pitt
sugar Cured
lo 6.75
Brown to
Granulated to
Syrup to to -Ml
to
to
to
Eggs
to
Irish
O. A.
Liverpool Sail
Rags
Bread
Star
Kerosene t
OLD
I ii g their it ill lo
lo gel our prior before
In all ii- branches.
PORK SI
SUGAR,
Ac.
always Prices.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
buy direct from Manufacturer,
you to buy at one profit. A com-
stock of
it
always on band and sold at price tn suit
the limes. Our goods are all hough
sold for therefore. In no
to run. we -ell a clone margin.
Greenville, X. C-
UNDERTAKING.
Valuable Town Property For
Sale.
That dwelling lot form-
K. B. Moore, Esq.
; with outhouses, all new and In
good condition. For terms are
i apply to. B.
Greenville, Oct. 1888.
J L. ELLIOTT S P ELLIOTT.
How to Develop
The exercise which I have found of
most value in developing the lungs may
be described as Standing erect
as possible, with shoulders thrown back
and chest forward, the arms hanging
to the body; the head up, with
firmly closed, inhalation is to lie taken
as slowly as may be, at the same time
the extended arms are to lie gradually
raised, the lack of the hands upward,
until they closely approach each other
above head. The movement should
be so regulated that the arms will be ex-
tended directly over the head mo-
tho lungs are completely filled.
The should be maintained from
five to thirty seconds before the reverse
process is begun. As the arms are grad-
lowered the breath is exhaled
slowly, so tho lungs shall be as nearly
freed from breath as possible at the
the arms again reach first position at
the side.
By these movements tho greatest ex-
possible is reached, for upon in-
the weight of the shoulders
pectoral muscles arc lifted, allowing the
thorax to expand fully, while upon ex-
in lowering the arms utilize
the additional force of this pressure
the upper thorax to render expiration
complete as possible. These deep
should be repeated five or six timer,
and the exercise gone through with five
or six times a day. It is hardly
6.1 to remark that the clothing must In
no way interfere with the exercise. In
some cases this exercise is more
when taken lying flat on the
back, instead of standing. this position
the muscles become rapidly
strengthened by opposing the additional
pressure exerted by the abdominal organs
against the expanding lungs. And, on
the other hand, is more per-
and full on account of the pressure
of these organs. This is an exercise now
advocated by several leading vocal teach-
of L. Davis, M. D.
COTTON FACTORS
Hating B. s.
with me in the we
are ready to people in that
All notes and account due
mi- for have been placed in
the hands Mr. for collection.
Respectfully,
We keep on band at all a nice
of and Caskets of all
kind- and furnish anything desired
from the Metallic down to a
Pine Coffin. We arc tilted
up all and can render
services to -ill t ho patronize
us FLANAGAN
Feb. -2nd.
BALTIMORE .
NORFOLK
Established In Baltimore in 1870.
Will open a House ill
won
ill September. for the handling and
sale of cotton, giving our customer
their choice of the two market.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly qualified
before the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt
county as executor of Sidney Helton, de-
ceased, notice is hereby given to all debt-
ors lo make immediate payment to the
undersigned, and all creditors of said
to their claims properly
authenticated to the undersigned within
twelve months from Ibis or this no-
will bit plead in bar of their recovery.
This day of October,
G. W.
of Sidney
Horses
Mules.
A load and now for
nil by.
at Keel A King's old stand. Will sell them
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on time. I bought
my stock for Cash and to tell
a cheap a- anyone. Give me a call.
Have procured several
s and will take to any
Sale, feed and Liver
ALFRED FORBES,
THE ABLE OF C
rs lo the buyers of Pill and surrounding a line of the following good
are not lo excelled in market. And lobe and
straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kind-, I ION'S, GEN-
GOODS. HATS and BOOTS and SHOES, LA-
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, Fl and
GOODS. DOORS, m SASH and BLINDS. and
WARE. HARDWARE, i LOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
kind, GIN and Mill Hay, Rock Lime. Paris, and
Hair. Harness, Bridles and -saddles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark. O. X T. Spool which I offer to the trade Wholesale
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, per cent for I ash. Bread Prep-
and Star at jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Color. Cucumber Pumps, Salt and nod and
Willow Ware. a v Give me call and I guarantee satisfaction.
A at
That a Chicagoan dislikes to lose any
time is patent to an observer in any of
the down town restaurants during the
con hour. Almost every second cater
has a paper propped up before him
against a glass or a bottle, and
while he devours his lunch he also de-
the news at the same time. When
ho finishes side of his paper ho lays
down his knife and fork long enough to
expose a fresh side to his view, when he
resumes the double occupation of reading
and eating. The average Chicago
can consume a fry without
missing a news item, and can keep
posted on the affairs of the day without
overlooking an Herald.
FALL AND WINTER.
Our Display Eclipses Anything Ever Seen
j.
THE HOME
-.-SAMPLE ROOMS FREE.
Good room. Best
the market afford. When in the city
stops the ,
Hotel,
from an j-
or
t on
ten An i
r. B Ire
t-e kit lo ante , and as
Solid
when tab It
n Mayor April 1888. by a
majority.
H. W.
New
at e
Greenville, N. C.
Under nett management. Hot and
water baths. Good rooms and at-
aw rants. Table
ed with bis. of the market.
tables ii connexion.
E.
Sis Million of
If of those giants about which we
heard so much in our younger was
to develop a modern Bill tendency
and select treasury department as
of his operations, he might make a
pretty good haul, provided the watch-
men allowed him to get away.
Suppose all money the
was piled up in one room. giant
burglar would find hand
in gold and silver, in
bonds, and an additional in
new silver dollars, if he happened to time
his visit when the new silver vault in the
courtyard is and a silver
stream of a day is steadily flow-
that subterranean treasure house.
Here is nearly Just
think of U Moro money than can be
Europe. Bank
of England bat only the
of France, tho
Bank of Germany,
Washington Boston Globe.
A t. Stall.
That food has an effect on the mind
and actions was believed in by
who always ordered hie dinner to the
character he was about to play. Fat
in the toe
veal cutlers,
r-- m
Tin- Annapolis Naval
or as
also called, ore at once quartered on
board a old wooden
frigate, which always lies alongside the
dock, and does duty during the school
sessions as a gunnery ship. The vessel
becomes the during
tho summer months; they have
their first experience of sailor life,
here, among other things, they first
acquire tho art of sleeping in a hammock. ,
It is truly an edifying sight to tee these
lads on their first night struggling with
their hammocks.
The hammocks used in navy, you
bear in mind, are very unlike those in
which people swing under the trees in
tho country. The navy are
made of heavy canvas, and slung
from the beams of the ship. They are
usually hung quite high from the deck,
so that it u not easy for a beginner to
climb into one with any degree of grace
even if he manages to get in at all.
Usually tho novice struggles hi from on
aide and goes head over heels oat at the
pillows and bed clothe
all him. After two or j
three unsuccessful attempts of this sort i
however, tho greenest begins to improve i
at. J one . r t weeks of j is j
to i nuke any b adapt to ah t
Merchant Tailor,
Beg-
in connection with above, we desire to say o u
prices are strictly net cash and no discount,
PIANOS ORGANS.
The Best In The World.
COMPANY.
Three Big Houses.
RICHMOND, NORFOLK. AND
A REVOLUTION IN PRICES
HOUSE. INSTRUMENTS
BUY
ILL CAM I
U,
AMI V
L. C. TERRELL,
M C.
O-
I. HARD. Editor A
c-. v-,
Jill.
Per Year,
IN ADVANCE
THE IS THE
largest,
ever in
It the
LATEST NEWS
and gives More Beading Mutter for
the money than any other paper
published En North Carolina.
The a variety
of NATIONAL, STATE
and LOCAL, Mid will it-
self to
of the section in which it
Send roar name and get a
SAMPLE
is called to tho an
large and growing circulation
makes it excellent medium
through which to reach the people
AIL ORDERS FOR
PROMPTLY FILLED.
Notice
Pk for
and of
b fore tin put II-.
Among the
wonderful i I on
named w
to the truth of ;
Lath am.
Mr. O.
Rob t Or kn, s.,
Any one w to give It a Sal for
the shove named ran recurs
it from tee, at my place of he for
ALFRED CULLEY.
X. , March
I ii i h.
ache.
and nil and
Compound Oxygen
Dr.
Street, have been
hit years, i- a it
and the compound
I- -o condensed and portable that
It I Hat all over world.
A have the
refer to the following named
known hive tried
Treatment i
Hon. Win. Kelley, Member of
Philadelphia.
Rev Victor I. Conrad Editor
ran Observer, I
lushing .
ester, N. v.
Hon. Win. Nixon,
HI.
W. II Editor
Ala.
II. P.
Mrs, Mary A Mas
Judge R.
Mr. K. Knight, Philadelphia.
Mr. Merchant,
w. Pa,
And other- in every part
tin- United State
Oxygen- It of ma
and i-tie- title a new
brochure of two hundred pages,
ed b A
to all full in ti
curative and a record el
hundred in a
of chronic man; el
after being abandoned to by
physicians. Will be mailed free
to any on application. Read the
brochure
No. Arch Mi eel.
Obtained, all in I.
In Hie attended fa
for Pees.
We are the I. s. Patent Of-
engaged i Patent Exclusively, and
can Obtain patent lest time than
more remote from .
the model or Inn i- tent
a- patent free
and make no change t.
refer, here, lo the Post Master,
Supt. of Money Order I i . and a.
of the U. K, Patent
and to
actual Clients in your own Mate,
iv address, I . A. -now o.,
l, ft.
THE STAR.
he is the only New
paper possessing the
of National and
I Democracy of New York, the
ground of
pure sad
simple. good enough for the
Single handed among
has stood by the men called J
the great Democracy to redeem the
yen Of H-
publican wastefulness aim
and despotism to the south. For
four tear- U ha been
in its to the
Cleveland. It i- bin now
for Cleveland and fur
years more
national affairs, and of
i and p-
For like sort
I Si tn is I be paper
The -i mi on th
National platform, ii ha
an from lb
people in excess of demands of s
administered
is essentially oppressive and dishonest.
The scheme fostered and championed by
Republican of making the
government a miser, wringing
from people locking
them up in vaults tn serve, no
but Invite and
it regards as a
tin- rights of tan i K-
publican political Jugglers mat U
; tin Bi H
for It is
and through the Star is a
great tone la purr
wholesome, its
Each
tome of what Is best worth knowing
the of
are told in Quirk,
i i i English, and
rending they are.
The Si is a- as
best , and pi lots tit
same of matter
ts rich in
live stories,
literal me. reviews, art criticism, et.
Inimitable sparkle
tn Its columns i win
fill letters are of choice
Many s known men and
In and art are
Tin is a
giving the errant of the world
ever, features which make
the most complete family
The farmer, the
the man too much a
rend a paper, will more for his
dollar Invested the Stab
than from any other paper. It will b
alert during the
tad will print the freshest and most re-
political news.
I r.
L one rear
l TM
Daily without one year
day.
Without six mouths
Sunday edition, our teal
year
A free of t n Star la
the sender of a club of tan.
THE STAB
and Part Place,
Tome
Off
Sm n,.,. --j; J
I.
.


Title
Eastern reflector, 12 December 1888
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
December 12, 1888
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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