Eastern reflector, 8 January 1890


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





THE REFLECTOR;
-----Solicits your
Its will be to plea every reader.
The Eastern
THE REFLECTOR
JOB PRINTING- ,
Department that can be mil no-
in motion. Our work always
gives
Send
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1890.
NO.
Eastern Reflector
N- C.
i t.
a a a canoe.
The maiden sat in a canoe,
on a Mountain late.
And a mail idea shot wildly
The brain of lover rat there
That in canoe.
A stolen would take.
Now the maidens t there unaware
the plot that lie had hatched
And the mountain we played with her
. And fanned her cheek and her brow so
fair,
i As unaware
rat tn i snatched.
Ill net to Then the lover awaited a real
non and es that are not consistent .
the true of the To capture the longed for bis,
When watching the wimpling wavelets
of the send for the I dance,
LEADING PAPER
IN THE
Price. per year. I
lulls, east their Democratic- ballots, institution. but do here declare
and pone back to pray for its wise and
neighbors, and
in Idling the slave to
, , , .,, heights which lie bad not
to read the record of . , . , .
i , -r ii in savage and giving
majority. May the God , , Z.
of the helpless and the heroic help a happiness he has not yet
them, and may their sturdy tribe in-,
ere asp
Par to south, Mr. President,
separated Iran this section by a
once irrepressible
once traced in
Mood, and now, God, but a
vanishing the fairest
found in freedom, our fathers left
their sons a and excellent
heritage. In the of war this
institution mm lost. thank God
as you do that
can soil. Int, the free man
race, compensating error
with and retrieving in
what they lose in passion,
and conscious all the time that
wrong means rain, Admit this, and
we may teach an understanding to
night.
The President of the United
States, in Ins to Con-
discussing the plea that the
South should be left to solve this
problem, they at work
is gone, forever from d
. r. offer When will the black man
cast a free ballot When will
With bin a problem without have the rights that are his I
or. SAMPLE FREE
She tinned her head a quick, shy
glance.
And Mating hack she gave hi ill a
That was really too to miss.
So be bent to meet her and tried lo
The kiss that he burned to get.
Hut be bent so quick in his ardent zeal
the craft upset like a whirling
O. of Wake. I wheel.
M. Halt. Ami hi -missed Che kiss that be
STATE GOVERNMENT.
. . . , . ., dent or para c. Note its appalling shall not here against a
richest domain earth. It , I v that ii. i.
., , ,. , . . conditions. Two otter v nine in
is the a brave and history, in time of peace, has
bl, people. There is all that same soil with equal the great seal of our
can or prosper
A feet climate above a fertile
political and civil lights, almost
equal in numbers, but terribly an-
Secretary of I.
of Wake.
Rain, of Wake.
of Wayne.
Superintendent of Public Instruction
Sidney M. Finger of Catawba.
Attorney F. David-
son, of
pi oil net of the temperate zone. There
by the cotton whitens beneath
the star.-, and by day the wheat
locks the sunshine in its bearded
sheaf. In the same clover
Steals the fragrance of the wind,
and the tobacco catches quick
of the There ore
mountains stored with
treasures; and prime
val; livers that,
i loitering, run wanton to the sea. Of
BY MB the items
and
the Problem in easy control. cotton, a
fixed iron, proven
soil yields to the husbandman every ; intelligence and
pledged against fusion,
steal,
Ami they both got very wet.
Education.
A Great Speech.
at the Dinner of Mer-
chants, a Few Days Before His
Doris.
Justice N. H. Smith, n i
Wake.
Associate S. Merrimon. of
J. Davis, of
E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and
Alfonso C. of Burke.
First Brown, of T invitation to a T artificial
B ,. ., , ,.,, , . cannot much longer prevail, has
Second Philips, b, f ,,,,,
of a political speech-,
one for a in servitude to the
oilier, and freed at last a
ting war, the experiment sought by
but approached by both
with doubt, these are the conditions
Under point,
we are required to carry these two
races and honor to the end.
Sever, sir, has such a task been
given to mortal stewardship. Never
before in this Republic has the
white race divided on the rights of
alien race. The red man was
cut down as a weed, because he
the way of the American cit-
The yellow man was shut out
timber, the reserve
. i i Republic because he is an
supply the Republic, this
Mis. Bidden by assured and permanent advantage,
Mate.
Fifth
ford
Sixth T.
Clark,
A. Gilmer,
of
II appreciate, trying to reconcile of tariff or capita,
u it h the , afar off fullest
of of the little maul who, bidden to est source of supply, but resting in
alien and inferior. Tie red man
was owner the yellow
civilized and
they hindered both sec-
Lions and gone But the black
man, but one is
clothed with every privilege gov
government a stigma upon the
of a great and loyal section ;
though gratefully remember that,
the great dead soldier, who held the
helm of state for the eight
est years of reconstruction, never
found need for such a step;
though there is no personal sacrifice
I would not make to remove this
cruel and imputation on my
people iron the archives of my
country Rut, sir, backed by a
record, on every page of is
venture to make earnest
and respectful answer to the
that are naked. bespeak
your patience, while with rigorous
plainness of speech, seeking your
judgment rather than your applause.
proceed step by We give to
the world Ibis year a crop
bales of cotton, worth
and its cash equivalent it. grain,
grasses and fruit. This enormous
crop could not have cone from
of and discontented
labor. It comes fields,
which laughter and gossip rise
above the bum of industry am con-
runs with the
It is claimed that this
labor law is defrauded of its
hire, j present the tax books
I of Georgia, which show that the
will solemnly my campaigns as this the folly and
that in the Southern I the bitterness the danger of
courts, from highest to lowest. J every Southern community
i has drank the white
for life, liberty or , , ., A i . r r .
people of the ate banded to-
has distinct I us
a apt to banded if
be overreached, oppressed, and black man, not one in a bandied
that this advantage reaches from , able to if, in
the juror in making his verdict to instinct. holding against you
judge m measuring his sen- memory of a century of
i taught by your late conquer-
Now, Mr. President, can it be ere to and oppose you, had
seriously that we already travestied from
terrorizing the people from whose in every
willing hands comes every year j of folly or had wasted
11,000,000,000 of farm crops Or ; your substance and exhausted
have bed a people who, your credit.
years from unrewarded But rigid of the
very, have in one State; to this
20.000,000 of property Or that, we are
we intend to oppress the people we , the of our vote,
arming every day Or deceive long been flippantly char-
them, when we arc educating thorn to evidence, and has now
to the utmost limit of our ability and
Or when we work d to be proof of
by side with them and baseness on our part
then under legal forms, when for us sec. a State now
their benefit we have even
narrowed the limit of
fierce assault for this alleged
crime, east in per cent of
and mitigated the severity of j her vote, the State
My, as in I speak, GO per cent of
of
to swim, was jet
go. my darling, hang your
divine assurance, within touch of
field mine set
eminent and pinned to the soil, and twenty-live years ago a slaw,
my people commanded o make, has in alone
i a limb and amid costly farms from which com
good at any at any assessed property, worth twice
that much. Does not that record
I honor him vindicate his
a. go near the The petition has driven the farmer to U What people, penniless,
, v J of the church, they is despair, but amid cheap sunny that other race , has done so well f For
F. Graves, . ,. , has been louted or excluded Afro American agitator, stir-
tenth
Eleventh M. Dud himself in need of; system of industries is blacks have touched, any era
Mecklenburg. action address than I, bidden mounting to a that shall in clime, there has been an
i to plant the standard of a i and world. That violence. It matters
in j Democrat in Host en's sir. is the picture and t be . . .
B. Vance, of
yon yourselves may sometimes it in I
have to appeal at the bar of human Virginia and natural causes
judgment for justice and for right, Haas. Last month Va.
give to my people to-night the .,,. f ,,,,. and Mas-
unanswerable conclusion of in every dis-l
these incontestable facts But
is claimed that under this fair seem j If Virginia is condemned because
there w disorder mid per f .,. m
This I admit. And there will be ; how shall this State escape in
until there is one ideal per cent was dumb Let
on earth after which we may M this comparison. The
pattern. But hoy.- widely is it sixteen Southern States in cast
misjudged. It is hard to measure their total vote ; the
exactness whatever touches England States but per
the His helplessness, his By what fair rule
isolation, his century of servitude shall the stigma be pat upon one;
these dispose us to emphasize and , while the other escapes
magnify his wrongs. Tins a. congressional election in New
inflamed by and York last week, with the polling
has led to injustice in of every voter,
delusion. Lawless men may brought out only votes of
age a county Iowa and it is ac- I and the lack of op-
as an incident; in the South position is assigned as the
a drunken row is declared to be a district in
the fixed habit of the community I state in which an opposition speech
Regulators may whip vagabonds J hag been heard in ten
in Indiana by platoons and it i the polling places are
Bend.
The following is taken
j from a letter from Mr.
William proprietor of the
House, a;
son, I was
at in this parish
I during the and sold
huge quantities of Swift's Specific
tS. S. i-ii during that time
cry one that used the medicine was
loud its praise. Among
who were bent -fitted by S. S. S. was
I a bad can-
in its most malignant form. He
had spent a small fortune in trying
lag to effect a cure, but without
After the knife bad been
used there was still a
taint, left in bis blood, the wound
never healing. I finally persuaded
him to try S. S. S., and it
eradicated the cancer, and he re-
perfect health. From that
lime until his death, which was
years, a symptom the disease
i never
Not a Symptom in Five Years.
M. of
l the and the Missionary, with which ; or
, , .,,. ., rhyme or reason. It mailers ring the strife In alone be
f wherever he bis flag, will neither season nor soil has set a and j prospers. can show yon a thous-
and happy in their cabin
homes, tilling laud by day,
and at night faking from lips
of their children the- helpful mess
liar, have lived anywhere, at
Matt. W. North I to discuss the prob-j my bind better and fairer the same, sod with equal
. em of the races the home of than have told yon, yet. but rights peace In spite of these
of District; of Rut, fit setting in its material excellence things are commanded to
if a speak in the loyal and gentle
I J American
earnest understanding of the vast we have Hew recruiting he what baa elsewhere been
Fourth II of , interests involved ; if a consecrating ; the Republic from its sturdy j impossible between whites and
W. of of what disaster may follow i shaking from its overcrowded hives to reverse, under the
sixth Rowland of further and es- new swarms of and touch- j
Henderson,
scarcely arrests attention ; a chance j under the unfair reasoning
in the South among rel- , which my section has b en a
constant victim, the is
charged to be of forcible
suppression.
verdict of racial history. And
sage their State sends them from
the door. And the
e bears testimony.
In Georgia we added last rear
to the school a
total more than
this the face prejudice not yet
of the that the
whites are assessed
the blacks for and yet
per cent, of the beneficiaries are
black children the doubt of
In i aver-
age majority of under hope-
less division i f the minority, was
raised to 42.000 in Iowa the
election a of
was wiped out and an opposition
of was established. The
change of votes in owe is
Ninth G. Ewart of
Right .-w. II. A. if these may be count-, this land all over with its sir ,,, task many wise men if education helps,
to steady undisciplined speech and its courage. an impatience that brooks no or can help our problem. Charles-
to strengthen an untried arm; in the of which I have rigor that, accepts no ex ton, with her taxable valuables cut
I -then, sir, shall find the courage told you but per cent of lauds are ; t hit half in two since pays more
, . . i ages frankness and sincerity. WeI proportion public schools than
its mines touch-1 . ,.,,,
Happy am I that this mission has population so scam s interwoven with our Industrial I Although it is easier to give much
my at to press New d set equidistant, the of; fabric that disentangle it j out much than little out of little,
A. Move.
A. K. Tucker.
Register of II. James.
Cherry,
S. I. Ward.
i B. Harris. soil and eves the voice could not be heard we would, so bound up in our the South with one seventh the
rs-Council Dawson. Chair- a in. tone sou,
the same classes is gravely
accepted as evidence that one race
is destroying the other. We might
as well claim that the Union was
ungrateful to the soldiers
who followed its flag because a
Grand Army post in Connecticut
closed its doors to a veteran
as for you to give racial
to every incident in the
South, or to accept exceptional as political
grounds as the rule of our society, i Virginia of on I
Ian not of those who becloud majority is declared to be
American honor with the parade, political I. I
of the outrages of either section, I facts and figure-J home, sir,,
and belie American character by to the heart and of the
declaring them to be , who will not, as- ;
and representative. I prefer to see one section
maintain, that they are neither, for ex-1
cosed If I can
society nice a mac-nine and
stronger than its weakest at the tire
will rest on tho judgment there
formed and the there
and stand for nothing but the pas-
sin of our fallen .
If society, like a machine .
Commissioners
lox.
Pi School
ling.
of F. W. Brown.
Si Keeper.
F. u. James.
F. Evans.
It. Lang.
Smith.
A p.
honorable obligation to the world,
where Webster thundered and Long with troubled eyes, some new this weakest and wisest of
,. . i Pin which to bis modest us do know we cannot solve it with
sang, thought and to Ills
, . I to the
Mooring. C. V, to knowledge of her beauty while on w,. ,,.,
every , ,
Chairman J. B. and J. month Back and Bunker Hill- stands a son, seek- our hands, be alone can
taxable property of the country,
with relatively larger debt, having
received only one-twelfth as much
of public lauds, having back of
its tax books none of the
of bonds that the North.
though it pays annually
dared
It is deplorable, sir, that in both ,
sections a larger percentage of the
vote is not regularly east. But
more inexplicable that this should
be so in New England, than in the
hey are, never saw, dare assert w, to
an outrage committed on a l H fa that
And if they did, no one of you him
patrimony, the strange remains to your section as pension's
die of American letters and almost of
that
Vatican liberty, I hasten to make citizens than she had ,,, Mi
he that every than
England when Way is if, sir. though
sectional line be now bu; a mist
i ;, i, .-, ewer that i ill your veins is yet gives nearly to the
blood and that, when we have public school fund. The South,
apparition This breath may
our whether the issue spent in
lost won, we feel your strong education, and this year is pledged
a his about us and hear I he ting , to more for State and
your approving hearts The res-1 city schools, all hough the blacks,
white, dear beaded, broad minded ; paying the taxes, get nearly
them
and sin of one poor fallen ha- through tho prejudice of the par-
were
part. I should despair of both sec-
But, knowing that society,
sentient and responsible in every
can mend and repair until
the whole has the strength of tin-
best, despair of neither. These
gentlemen who come with me here,
knit into Georgia's busy life as
they are, never saw, I dare assert.
on a
one of you .
would be swifter to prevent or , , j-
punish. It is through them, and .
;, , n i -n I. anneal to
the men who think with then, . . .
,. . ., , a
nine-tenths of every com-
that these two races have
i J i . r i , success meant
been carried thus far with less of
violence than would have been
possible anywhere else on earth.
And in their fairness and courage
, t , ii i, P s
and steadfastness, more than in all; V . , J
. i i n of the in
the laws that can be passed, or all, . . , .,
,, , . . , was denied the
the bayonets tin
is the hope of on
When will the blacks east a free
ignorance any-
where is not dominated by the
bad in and entires
it from my system by
taking seven of Swift's
S. I have not had any
symptoms it that time. C.
Wilcox, Spartan burg, S. C.
blood and Skill Dis-
eases mailed
SWIFT CO.,
Ga.
Wants to Speak a Good Word.
After suffering untold agonies for
three years lieu, rheumatism, and
alter trying various remedies with-
out effect, decided to try S. S S
taking eight bottles I was en-
cure. Therefore I cheerfully
add mine to to the many
which go to prove the great
success of S. S as a remedy for
there suffering from
Jobs
Mill, Ga.
Thick on These Things.
A paper receive patronage
older to be first-class and first.
class in a man's
paying his subscription in advance-
In nearly every town there arc
pie who are willing to lend their
to a newspaper, but
a teal rapport
dot pay for print, paper or ink.
There are people who come in and
subscribe to help you but who
fail to think that unless they pay
for their paper they are asking yon
to lend so much cash. There is rood
for reflection In these few lines.
Ex,
His
to suffrage was the
His second, the threat that
Both have been proved
false in his experience. He look-
id for a home, and he A the
C. C. DANIELS
Ni i-n. N. C
,, l.-.--------a ,.,. promise
m be passed, or I a ; , Dis-,
at can be mustered ll , , ,
,. ,,. and lie n
, . . at last that his best friends
are his neighbors with whom his
lot is cast, and whose prosperity is
bound up in his, and that he has;
. .-. . .
km mm i
AlTO w,
to m; will
Attended to-
jag night, Meeting every rested at its startled, is the very problem we are now his problem in their hearts them from no avenue in which their
Wednesday night. T. D. John, kings emperors gazed and mar- consider. The key that that and by day by feet are fitted lo They could
P Sunday, morn- from the rude touch of i problem will unlock to the world They realize, as yon what, not there be of
Meeting every cast on a Weak and fairest half of this this means, bey owe have been here,
Wednesday night.
Pastor.
Rev. A. I .-- to this kindly and dependent but they do enter there a bun-
unknown shore, should have come bee the halted feet o of to useful trades that, ate closed I
the embodied genius of human gov- eyes are already . m despite they defend- against them We hold it bet
and the perfected model of with its beauty. Better this, ed and maintained slavery. to tend the weeds in
h their are hindered its the garden to water the exotic ;
every 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma- then handiwork. Two years but this problem the j which comes courage. Nor, j of their race to support them.
O O F ago, sir, I spoke some words it breeds hinders a clear i when moments is villages they have their
O. W. York that caught the of and a perfect union. . them I hat aw-, military companies from
M. O. , . , , , . I shadow, with its lurid abysses the armories the their
insurance Lodge. No. K. of II.,, the North. As I stand here to re- Nothing else stands between us churches societies built and
meet
Hat
meets every first and third Friday night. as I have everywhere, such love as bound ever supported largely by their i
D. P. D.
influenced by the power of the rich. so leaders or
W hen the strong and the steadfast the resolute
do not everywhere control the heroism of party friends in
of the weak and shiftless, I Vermont that make their hopeless
then, and not till then, will the over the hills a high and
be free. he shrewdly
white people of the South are the occasional agitator,
Mr. President, not in his Hide a count with
dice against the blacks, not in see- touches up his mule and
estrangement, not in the , q f letting the
hope of political dominion, but in J it will.
a deep and abiding necessity. f con.
Hera is this vast ignorant and
L.
I., blow,
V. C
J. H. TUCKER.
J D MURPHY
i arrival. The deliver nail j than ever wrought with the step further unless you concede possible, race from
should dishonor or at the cannon's j here that the people I speak, its own weakness. In out;
, . . , ., , , . . . . ,.;,. . i bu ire a honest, as sensible and as record the pros-
i Mail arrives ll that confidence mouth. II this does not invite . Ur ire in Lr,
I. M. and departs at- , . . i. i as your people, set King as ear-i art, in
6-o by insincere word, or heat mm as you would In their place to j court the criminal strikes
or. OW and Falkland i w one essential thing more. My people, your broth- rightly solve the problem that; the colored juror, that white men
mails arrives at
M. and depart at P. M.
s X last
Roads. and
daily at; me i-n m to plunder and a the North the percentage of
P. at a. M. I has died on my bps, that I believe this problem that I hen very j J sells prisoners is six times as great as
has died on my lips, that I believe tins problem that very i my sells
units right solution- and tax your patience
wholly to blame j But admit they are men
of common sense and common hon-
wisely modifying an environ-
they cannot wholly disregard,
guiding controlling as best they
can and irresponsible of
I ell ,, b , f depends
Kerry. s Mills, .-,. ,. . ,.
M and Pullet arrive Tuesday, is the V or are
Thursday and at A. M. that twenty-two its presence. slave ships of
Black Jack year-, by deaf., Republic sailed from your
arrives even Saturday at P. M. or version, slaves worked our fields. Yon
J arched over their ragged will not defend I he nor I the
that of native whites, in the South
only four times as great. If
wrongs him in Southern
courts, the record shows it to be
deeper in Northern Courts. I as-
here, and a bar as intelligent
and as the bar of
its neighbor d taught to rely on j
the protection an outside
it cannot be
in the two
logical currents, for it lacks r
.- i ii i wit a tie
conviction and even that ,.
formation on which conviction I J f
be based. It must remain a I ls I
a to on .- .
Of an outside force, do
upon and lost , in -red . and
P I their o es h , old
it through. , .
. to the
mus
faction, strong enough in every
to control on the
test division of the whites.
that division it becomes the
prey of the cunning and
of both parties. Its
made to play its part
in a campaign in which every in-
of society-is jeopardized and
every approach to ballot box
It is against such
not be withstood, power
of the banded an res-
of a
Against it, n aid
cannot p ii cannot be
in the law, or div reed
It is
is on this, that w.- rely in the
Bents. Not t m
of mask or she but the
A VS-A T-LA W,
Greenville, N.
MARRY
J SKINNER,
N. C.
G EX FILL E, C.
in nil the courts.
a Specialty.
YELLOWLEY,
ATTORNEY-A T-LA W,
Greenville, N. C.
HOTELS.
N. C.
new Hot and
cold baths. rooms
o Table always
ed H a the best of the market. Feed
in connection.
TERMS SAY
E.
. .





Eastern B The southerner M grow-
GREENVILLE. N. C. old. but age due not weather
it. The recent celebration of it
birthday anniversary I tern
. ; . in analogy to gold
bring your to the warehouse,
and OB strict and
i All receive warehouse re-
ell We i y
and
rate
THE LEADING PAPER
found it us uprightly and vigorous .
M over. We bore It
orate its centennial under pros- fourteen certs a standard
Tod the ware-.
house a fee of one cent a pound
eT Patriot, whether Democrat or
must desire this eon-
and every protectionist
necessarily approve of
to the cotton planter, tor it
makes his line of argument consist-
secures own position, and
blazes the way for converts to his
economic faith-
subscription Price.
HUT
ill rut to Democratic
men and measures that are not consistent
the true principles of t ; . . de-
It a a wide-a-v Leaf, and there is not molt tie
of the send for the I paper.
COPY FREE
A philanthropist boy large
quantity of Dr. Ball's Cough. Syrup
every winter and gives it to the poor
m, I from and colds.
I say fourteen cents because this j fa a
JANUARY Ma
AT THE OFFICE AT
Mail
There MM a wholesale lynching
Barn well count v. South Caro-
on the 28th of December.
Eight were taken from
the jail by a ml, tarried to the
woods and shot to death. These
frequent are one of the
worst blots the d
of the South.
The cover all costs, and
Manning's splendid paper, never certificates could be issue
does things by es. for and thousand
the beginning of its nil th vol- anti Wade
week, and at the
same time enlarge seven the one t he Government i cannot be at once relieved by the use of
to eight column paper. There , UM received to the price the cotton
is no paper we would rejoice more be purchased enter-1
over its prosperity than the Gold tn If a hugs part Messrs. Davis and Gregory, Ox-
of the crop should pass through ford, sent out a beautiful New Year
these warehouses the revenue would card with the of the
leave a handsome profit to the I New John son Warehouse. The
after paying all j elector receipt of
certificates would be the same
as cash to the planter for all
for hey would be accepted by j That clever traveling salesman,
every one as readily as are gold and Pearce, presented with
silver certificates. These are gen- j a beautiful memorandum book with
Mess.
The Hope of South.
Harry Letter Published in ;
30th-
The verdict of the country at the
more,
here is ho. for the South if we book is
are able properly to nature's I The practical result of the plan i and has a neat calendar for 1890 on
special gift to to pro- thus outlined would to prevent the back-
i king, the Liverpool Cotton Exchange from
and will to k if fair treat-; dictating the price our product,
is accorded it. I the same while European American man-
of were extended to knowing that the plan-
of gel ting
FOULLY
A At
Mr. Sidney Owens Shot from
Ambush near Hotel Macon
as He was Returning
from Supper.
THE TOWN GREATLY EXCITED.
o whatever is made I the producers of this that was sure
of our out- j to the melt
were dealt with
thirteen
standard
The Pulpit the
Rev. F. M. pastor United
Brethren Church, Mound, Kan.,
says feel it my duty to tell
Dr. King's New Discovery has
dune for My dis-
and my rs thought I
for
, ., i with the statistical could live only a few weeks. I took five
side -day to the speech would feel that we , i , Dr New Discovery
delivered Mr. on justly, and be kindly disposed j of the staple, and compelled to lbs.
the race A better article
never appeared in Ami
in fact, we do not remember
have ever read one so good
we are glad t
to give it in full to of
the It should be read
man, woman
pi ion; Ear under have it or to suspend operations,
cotton piling and cot- would go our local markets I
in
Arthur Love Manager Funny
r ton US would march to- thirteen cents rather than to j thorough trial and convincing evidence
to prosperity Every con-1 buy up Government certificates
able I argument for the the higher price, or to pay in the cure when everything else fails. Tl
It is prob- greatest
r thousand is
argument
of the cotton manufacturers be same at the
urged with
of
pro
its Cotton
do many
to urge them to try
able that under this system at least Free trial bottles I.
drugstore. sizes and
of our animal crop.
and child, who is capable of production employs more labor, and would be outside the
and reserved as
priceless treasure. may
again have opportunity of read-
such an able and manly de-
fence of our much abused South.
The South is seemingly
The death of Mr.
Grady, which occurred the 24th
creates a market Northern , at thirteen cents.
higher
and Western produce. Tin
the price of the
for all concerned.
I maintain, as an economic prop-
that the by
extending to the j e same
The old went
out under a
It may be said that such a system cloud,
would induce other cotton countries Jesse Brown has moved his
to increase their the j family to the country,
world would after a time do without, l and wife have
the American crop. Experience j moved to
reaches that this is improbable-j J. F. has moved his
ratio of protection that it extends I the war, from to family up in
to the manufacturer, can to the growing resources of; Mr. J. If. Tucker has moved into
of December, was indeed a severe j former per pound of the globe were tested the Dancy house, Pitt street.
blow. He but a few prior to
his death bed stood on New Eng-
land soil and delivered the great-
for his product. I name to the utmost. 1802 the j p,. Moore has moved his
be obtain of different family into one of the
ed by adding cent, from dwellings.
est speech of Ida remarkably to the present avenge market price, .,,. assembled in London to j Mr. A. Fleming has moved
career. He suffering from
cold at the time of leaving his
Southern home for Boston, where
he and
been invited to make
and that is the average cent- measures for meeting family in Martin county
age of protective duties. T j emergency. Ten years later, in
stand my held in the same; Mr. Ed has moved his
the relative proportion of t e e . fir a I Moore
for this special purpose, only a
cotton-mills of this r never
consume more than of
our annual crop, while
mills must have the remainder to
few of those thirty-five
were represented, and most of those
,. . , ., I her millinery stock to one room
disappointment and j on
ore. America had again entered
of the Southern to that
the exposure incident North- all the world, and also that the
era trip produced pneumonia from
which he died in a few days after
returning home. News of his death
was received with deep sorrow in
the whole South, also in
sections of the North, and it was
a shock to the whole country. Mr.
Grady was only years old, yet
he was a great man. His speech produce three-fourths of this crop, inadequate that, for a time cotton
About o'clock last evening
Greenville was thrown into groat
excitement over the of
Mr. Sidney Owens, a man
who came from Scotland Neck last
year to clerk for
and who had recently
taken a position for the new
with Capt. C. A. White. Two pis-
shots in quick succession near
the corner of and Third
streets followed an outcry at-
the people in that
where they found Mr. Owens
had been shot. He walked on to
Messrs. Latham Skinner's law
office sat down upon the steps.
He was taken up and carried into
the office of I. A. Sugg
t Brown were
immediately sent for. Mr. Owens
had just left dining room A
Hotel Macon. and when crossing
the street diagonally toward the
corner was shot at twice by some
one standing behind a tree on the
right hand side of the street. One
of these shots struck right
arm passing through the arm and
the cavity of the right
chest. Dr. pronounced
it a dangerous though not
fatal wound. Owens
ed Mr. John A. another
young man of the town, with the
shooting. These two young men
had had a difficulty a few
ago in the store of Messrs.
Higgs during which
Owens had fired a at
Circumstances seeming to point
to as the party who did
the shooting, he was arrested in
the corridor by Chief of
Police, J. T. Smith, a few minutes
after the occurrence.
After the medical examination
wounds had been completed
he was removed to Hotel Macon.
About o'clock Judge Boykin.
who, who is presiding at the present
term Pitt Superior Court, began
a preliminary examination of the
case, first taking down
of Mr. Owens in the
room, then going to the Judge's
room to finish, the The
trial lasted until o'clock, A. M., at
which time the matter was
ed until to-day. Daring this
the evidence was so much
Mr. that Judge Boy-
kin instructed Deputy Sheriff King
to take him in custody and hold him
Call and see them at
Latham Fender
Successors to It. S. Clark Co.
FOR
Hardware, Shoves, Tin-
ware, Stove Pipe, Sash,
Doors and Blinds, Iron,
and Putty, Kerosene
and Red Oil, Stoves
Repaired. Tobacco
planters will find it to
their interest to send
us their orders for To-
Flues early.
We sell very low for
the cash.
LATHAM PENDER,
Greenville, N. C.
ANOTHER
far Toad of Fine
Horses
ALFRED FORBES,
OF C
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following
that are not to be excelled in this And to be rat-claw and
pure straight good. DRY GOODS of all kinds, CLOTHING, GEN-
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, d and SHOPS, LA-
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE an HOUSE
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS-
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of
kinds. Gin and Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
O. N. T. Spool which I to the Wholesale
Jobbers j. U. win per cent for ash. lion-ford's Bread
and Star Prices, Lead pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and I oh is. Weed Pumps, and Wood and
Willow H
Nails i specialty. Give me a eH and I satisfaction.
Mules,
received
will be fold-
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on time on
proved I bought my stock for
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap M
anyone. Give a call.
J. L.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
STILL TO THE FRONT
J. D. Williamson,
; the Institute.
Mis. E. A. Sheppard has moved fer farther orders.
The editor the was
LOW TARIFF
FACTORY.
Ml ON
For we have Buggies now. Ah I
you are free buy you please, but
if want to save money you conic to
street, rear of B.
Cherry A Co's. For convenience
have also an entrance through II. F.
Keel's Stables on street. I can give
you
TO JOHN
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Has Moved to One Door North Court House.
WILL THE OF
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory well equipped with best Mechanics, put up nothing
but first-class work. We keep up with the limes and improved styles.
Best material used in all work. All of Springs are use you can select from
Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King.
Also Veep on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the year round, which we will sell as as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope
merit a continuance of the same.
, , , , , , Mr. G. Edwards has moved
the field and defied the world. into the house,
With much of the Southern cotton j Dr.
keep their , running. The between 1861 and , B who for many
total annual crop of world and with the encouragement has lived in a few miles of
estimated at bales of of big prices governmental as- place, has moved
Southern States the world's supply was so
in Boston showed his devotion to
his and is a splendid
to his memory. Peace to
his ashes.
or about bales. The worlds, sold yew York at from one dollar
consumption all kinds of cotton I a dollars a pound,
goods increases fully as as does These indisputable prove
the of the staple, this country has a monopoly of
there is no surplus at staple, and while
A recent issue of the Wilmington j fiscal year to indicate
Star says that the Chris-
Advocate speaks of Mr. Davis,
dead, as traitor, who died
wept, and
It would be more consistent in
that paper to either stop lying or
stop advocating
two do not work well together.
It may be, however, that the
tor of this Advocate is
an exceptionally ignorant man,
end never knows what is going on
outside of his own immediate cir-
in which case he is to be
ed, as are also the people who
look to him to opinions for
them. As a means of his
in this the Re-
would suggest that the
papers published in towns where
memorial meetings were held in
honor of Mr. Davis send copy of
the issue containing report of
meetings and the comments upon
the death of that gentlemen, that
this organ may see
whether Mr. Davis died
and or whether in its
anxiety to cast a slur at the South
it has and maliciously lied.
Bend marked copies to him.
Newspaper Notes.
The Winston Sentinel last week
began thirty-fourth volume.
It is a vigorous paper and reflects
credit its editor, Mr. V. W.
Long.
The notes with pleas-
the prosperity of the
Messenger. The daily
of that splendid paper recent-
passed its third year.
The Oxford Ledger last week sent
out a splendid ten page industrial
issue. There is enterprise about,
that paper from the word
and the people lend their aid sub-
to its efforts.
President jolly
Bro. announced
in his last paper that the
a had attained its majority and is
twenty-one years old. There are
few papers its size that give as
much news as the and
none is more ably edited or has a
batter corps of correspondents.
over-production. long as the
supply is not in excess of a fair
market Mr. Kelley,
the producing nation may name
the price of its The
United States is such a nation. Its
planters produce three-fourths of a
not to employ power It possess-
es to the detriment of any interest,
It has the right as well the ability
to make this crop reasonably profit-
able to its
It may be urged that if cotton
warehouses are for the benefit
of Southern planters, Western far-
county.
Mr. B. II. assistant agent
for the Old Line, has
moved his family to town. They
occupy a house Second street.
Mr. W. J. formerly of Scot-
laud Neck, has moved his family to
Greenville, occupies the
house on
Mr. M. E. Lang moved over into
his just after Christmas,
present at this preliminary trial
took down the but deems
it best not to publish it until all is
heard. Besides to publish it this
morning would necessitate a mate-
rial delay of paper, we already
having waited from p. M. until
a. m. to go to press order to give
this much the particulars.
Mr. Owens suffered very
from his wounds in the first part
the night, but a was rest-
quietly.
This affair IS truly most fort us
and the deeply
regrets its occurrence the com-
If you suffer from loss of appetite,
perfect digestion, insomnia, torpor of
u. I the liver, etc., will relieve and
and is now as as you please I you Price g cU
staple which is of the utmost men want a system for
to the world. Three- argument is
fourths of all the cotton consumed , not tenable. Western products are
by foreign nations is the product of is
our Southern fields. Is it not a re a
a just demand, that the
planters to whom this count is in-
for this annual creation of
wealth should receive such
from the Government as to re-
an equitable share of the prof-
its of their labor Our cotton man-
are protected
rich because of it. Our cotton
planters arc unprotected. They can-
not, unaided by the
the price of their product. What I
contend for is that the Government
shall throw cotton
the same arm of protective care
that it gives to manufacturer,
assist cotton pi inter in
making the European
pay a reasonable price for his pro-
duct, thus relieving the from
his present of
being compelled to market crop
at such a price as
manufacture dictated twelve
months before through the agency
or the Liverpool Cotton Exchange.
It is cruel as well as unjust for the
Government to tacitly permit the
I manufacturers of Europe to control
the price of one of our most
craps, one which is no-
where else in e or of
equal quality. It is to
the benefit of every American in
that, if
the power to prevent
prices, it should exercise it as a
simple act of justice to the poor,
long neglected cotton planter.
Now for solution of prob-
means by which the Gov-
can give this assistance
without hazard of loss. Let a part
of the treasury surplus be expended
in building cotton warehouses at
convenient points in the Let
the Government to cotton
plantar, manufacturers will not-
you thirteen cents a pound.
D. G. Owens. Druggist,
Dr. Bull's Baby Syrup has a
wonderful reputation; mothers will have
I no other. It is the best.
Dissolution.
Moreover, Western voters have tin
acknowledged that they find
incidental protection in the great
home markets made for their pro-
ducts by manufacturing States.
They know also that as the
power of the South increases,
so does the for their meats,
hay. winter vegetables,
and orchard products. No section
has a greater interest the pros-
of Southern planters.
Doubtless other objections will
be made to these but
can met as arise. It
must be admitted that this
to the cotton planter would de-
the cotton speculation of the
world. Liverpool and New
York Cotton would dis-
appear from the commercial horizon
it would mean death to the cotton
speculator, life to cotton plant-
and an equitable division be
him and the of
the and yet work no
to the consumer. The
can party, with its love for
and its professions of love for
the wards of the
by assisting in such a
measure, ingratiate itself with the
South, give substantial aid to
laborers in the cotton-fields, and do
justice to the Southern people gens
by extending to them full
protection which it claims to give to
Northern workmen.
writer is a Southern Demo-
without local, sectional, or race
prejudices, who desires earnestly to
see equal justice meted out, so that
section may keep pace with the
other great sections of our country.
He believes that existing con-
the great need of the South
is such protection as will assure a
reasonable price for its chief staple,
and thereby prosperity to its
sad to all oar people.
his new quarters. It is truly a hand
some
W. A. James, of Bethel, a
of Board of County Com-
missioners, has moved with his
to Asheville, and will conduct a
hotel there, departure from
Pitt county causes a vacancy on i mutual consent on the 27th day of
Board of Commissioners to fill j December. Joel Patrick and A. G.
which a meeting of the magistrates , Coward withdrawing from the firm. J.
of county has called for Tucker will continue
the first Monday in February.
Epoch.
The transition from lingering
and painful sickness to robust health
marks an epoch in the life of the
Such a remarkable, event is
treasured in the memory and the
whereby the good health has been at-
is gratefully blessed. Hence it is
that so is heard in praise
Bitters. So many feel they
their restoration to health, to the use of
the Great and Tonic. If you
are with any disease
Liver or Stomach, of long or shore
will surer relief by
use of Electric Sold at and
per bottle at J I. drug-
store.
the business
scale all debts against the said
and all claims most be paid to him.
J. I. TUCKER.
To the Public.
The School Committee take pleasure
in announcing that arrangements have
been completed to open the Greenville
Public School on Monday, January 13th.
Competent teachers have been em-
ployed, the committee earnestly re-
quest the support encouragement
the patrons to make the school
and the term
i B.
White,
B. F. BOW.
Notice.
Greenville, N. C, Jan. 1st.
I beg to inform public that the
manufacturing formerly carried on by
me will now be carried on by Cox A
Carroll. I will settle all accounts
by me and kindly ask those Indebted to
rue to make settlements with me when
their accounts tall due. I wish pub-
to accept my sincere thanks for
liberal patronage have extended to
me and now kindly ask that the same
favors be extended to Cox Car-oil.
A. O. COX.
We beg to announce to the public that
we now engage in the manufacturing
business as successors to A. G. Cox and
kindly ask those in need of Cotton
Planters, Cart Wheels,
Horse Shoeing, or any repair work.
either wood or Iron, to call on us and
we will try to make it to their
to do so by giving them honest
work at living prices. We make a
of the Cox Cotton Planter and
can furnish any repairs at short notice.
Sale of Laud.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt county, made December
24th, in a certain special proceed-
wherein W. L Smith,
of David C. Clark is plaintiff.
Clark et are defendants, the under-
signed will for sale to the highest
bidder for cash, before the Court House
door in Greenville, on Monday the 3rd
day o February, 1890, the following
tracts of land situated in Pitt county.
township one tract in Creeping
Swamp adjoining the lands of T. A.
tames, Nobles and others, con-
ten acres, more or less ; also one
tract known as the Beaver Dam tract,
adjoining the hums of Clark,
Jessie Sutton, Jr., Taylor and
others, and being the same patented by
David C Clark about the year 1847 also
8-35 undivided interest in a certain
tract of land adjoining the lands of
A Fames, Jesse Lancaster and others,
containing acres, more or less.
Dee 31st.
Tucker Murphy, W. L.
Attorneys. of David
Sale of Land.
By virtue of decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt county, made December
24th. 1889, in a certain special proceed-
wherein Ricky Moore, of
John Moore et are defendants,
will offer for before the
Court House door, In Greenville, on
February 3rd, 1890, to the
highest bidder cash, a lot or parcel
of land situated in the town of Green-
ville, Pitt county, fronting on 5th Street
and being a portion of lot No. in
plot of said town, bounded on east
by Kicky on the south by
J. D. Murphy's lot. on west by Mrs.
Martha Moore's lot, on the by
street and being the lot upon which
Adrian Savage's room Is located.
Dec. 81st, 1889. Ricky
Tucker Murphy, Moore.
Attorneys. deceased.
Of Interest to Ladies,,
. will ad a FREE
for to Judy
That you ever had in your life tor
810.00 to less money any one
in the county can give you.
for my expenses are less and par the
spot cash for goods and save dis-
counts, and if you don't believe it you I
come and see. Having had IS year.- J. B.
experience in the business I guarantee
perfect satisfaction or no charge. Re-
pairing a specialty. Don't forget the
place on 4th street rear J. Cherry
Greenville,
The River Transportation
Alfred Forbes, Greenville,
J. B. Cherry, Vice-Pres
J. S. Greenville, Sec
N. SI. Gen
Capt. K. F. Jones. Ag
The People's Line for travel on Ta
River.
The Steamer Greenville is the finest
and quickest boat on the river. She has
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac-
and convenience of Ladies.
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A first-class Table furnished with th
best the market a
A trip on the Steamer Greenville Is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washing on Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at G. o'clock, A. M.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m.
Freights received daily and through
Bills Lading given to ail points.
t. i.
Greenville.
E. A. TAFT,
Wishes to inform his friends and the public generally that he
bought out establishment of P. R. Cherry, -and with
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES
At prices fully in keeping with the haul I keep Flour,
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery,
Glassware, Tobacco, Snuff,
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market.
You are invited to call. Remember tho place, at Cherry's stand.
J. R.
J. G.
Have again come to your attention and solicit patronage
We do claim that we have the large-l and best Mack ea-l of
Mountains, but we do say arc to the front
--------with a specially selected line of
Nickeled
with faX, C
ti Si
MARKS
name in i
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
gently yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
effectually, dispels colds, head-
aches and fevers and cures habitual
constipation. Syrup of Figs is the
only remedy of its kind ever pro-
pleasing to the taste and ac-
to the stomach, prompt in
its notion and truly beneficial in its
effects, prepared only from the most
healthy agreeable substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all and have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for sale in
and bottles by all leading drug-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may not have it on hand will pro-
cure it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
CALIFORNIA SYRUP CO.
SAM
SPECIALIST Physician 1889
in the diseases and weaknesses of
men will mall a book free, Riving the
remedies which cure abandoned and
hopeless sufferers privately at home.
Specialist, room A, M
corner Hew York.
Suited to the want of a large class of customers. We arc in full with
the hard times and can will make low cash prices to all who us with
their patronage. Look down this column and see if we cannot yon. We
are better prepared than ever before to serve you. We have in
a line of
DRY GOODS,
Embracing and Trimmings, and Calif as,
and Suitings, Piece Goods and Cashmeres for Men's and Boy's
Sheetings, Bleached and Unbleached Domestics. Canton Flannel and Bert
I Boots and Shoes.
For Men. Women, Boys, Misses and Children, at price that will cause the poor to
rejoice, and the hearts of all will he made glad who buy Hoots and Shoes from
why because we sell low and give the money's worth. A full line of Nation,
and Goods that will delight beam of and
HATS and CAPS for men, boys and children. line we
you a stock as complete as the farmer or mechanic can wish. We make a
of Steel Nails and guarantee them to be the best made.
Groceries.
Which we are selling at rock bottom prices, not because we arc o de
but we take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can We interest yon here
if so come in and examine our stock of Sugar, Coffee, Tea. both
Toilet and Lye, Matches, Starch, Meals of different kinds, View
which we are now buying from first hands and can save you money if yen ll
examine before buying elsewhere, Tobacco and Snuff.
Headquarter for Furniture.
of which a line not to he excelled in this market, nth a Suit's,
Bureaus, Double and Single Bedsteads, Tables. Tots. Washstands, Bed Springs and
Mattresses, Children's Cradles and Beds, Chairs of kinds and varieties,
all to suit hard times and short crops. Anything that you want in this line if we
have not got it in stock we will make a special order for you, as we have
from several of the best furniture houses in the Patted States and sat-
as to prices. Wood and Willow ware, Crockery. Lamps,
Bridles and Collars. Cart Saddles, Whips and Horse
Valises and Traveling Bags,
Life is too short to keep on telling what we have and can do. But
you all health and prosperity and giving to every man. woman and child who some
to Greenville a cordial invitation to come in and examine our stock,
We remain yours to serve
J. B. CHERRY
N. C.
Appointments
For preaching on Bethlehem Mission.
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at
School House, 1st Sunday at
o'clock
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o clock.
Shady Grove, Sunday at
Salem 4th Sunday at o'clock.
Chapel 4th Sundays
PI P. C.
Money to Loan.
N IMPROVED FARMS, in sums of
and upwards. Loans are
payable in small annual
through a period of live years thus
sibling the borrower to pay off hi Ism
, without exhausting his
i n any one Apply
Greenville,
-.-





SUP KENT.
Eastern Reflector
GREENVILLE. M. C.
Editor
Every Wednesday
THE LEADING PAPER
IN THE
DISTRICT.
TO t
Price. per year.
BUT
rill not hesitate to Democratic
and measures that are not consistent
the principles of the party.
If yon want a paper from a
of the State send for the
oR. W SAMPLE COPY FREE
Financial Statement of
Pitt County, for the
Fiscal Year ending
r 2nd,
The following is a list of orders,
together number and
amount, as allowed by I be Board of
Commissioners, from December 3rd,
to December 2nd, 1889.
Bridges.
No. To whom issued
Henry Brown
W T Smith
A Bland
SO J J Laughinghouse
J W Tyson
James B Cherry
Brown
J B Galloway
R E Bynum
C P Gaskins
Henry Brown
W B Bland Bro
Henry Brown
John S Smith
W J
C P
Henry Brown
Gaskins
W S
Blown
Wall
II P
C P Cask ins
Henry
James
Jack Barnes
Bum Cherry
U Wall
It Turner Harden
D C
S Smith
Henry Brown
James B Cherry
L H Allen
Jack Barnes
Eugene Williams
Richard
J P Downs
John R Spier
Henry Brown
C P Gaskins
A Harden
H R Hearne
Sherrod White
G T Tyson
James B Cherry
David Parser
B S
F G Dupree
H Brown
Jno S Smith
J W Tyson
W L Robinson
Brown Hooker
Henry Brown
J D Williamson
J H
C P Gaskins
Henry Brown
John S Smith
James B Cherry
B Cherry Co
M Z Moore
C P Gaskins
J If
Poor House.
No. To whom issued
J J
F W Brown
J J
F W Brown
W W Andrew
J J
W W Andrews
J J
F W Brown
J J
W E Warren
J J
Amt.
Moore
John Baker
Polly Adams
Daniel Webster
Tucker
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryan
James Masters
Ivy Mayo
Patsy Elks
H D Smith
Moore
John Baker
Polly Adams
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Braxton
Henry Langley
J F Miller, expenses in-
sane pauper
R I. Hodges, conveying
to Greenville
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margret Bryan
James Masters
Mayo
Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Polly Adams
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Lydia Bryant
Albert Williams, insane
pauper
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret
James Masters
Mayo
Elks
H Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Wm
Lydia Bryant
Polly
Jacob
Stephen Williams
tr I Tumor
Susan Turner
VI Stocks
MS Margaret Bryan
James Masters
, ,,
a Mayo
IS Parse Elk
j Moore
John Baker
Daniel
a Lydia
Polly
Jacob
Stephen Williams
Kennedy,
coffin
J O Proctor Bro, main
taming
Polly Adams
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryan
Barnes Masters
Ivy Mayo
428-Patsy Elks
H D Smith
Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Lydia Bryant
Jacob
J A K
to Goldsboro
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryan
James Masters
Ivy Mayo
Patsy Elks
H D Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Lydia Bryant
Jacob
John Flanagan, D B
C Dawson, conveying Hind
pauper to
W A Jr, pauper coffin
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret
James Masters
Amt.
Ivy Mayo
15-i
ii
on
on
John Stocks
Taylor
Bryan
Masters
Ivy Mayo
Patsy Elks
Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Wm
Lydia Bryan
Jacob
Jacob Pup.
Henry pauper
Moses coffin
S O Watson
J O Proctor pauper
Dawson for blind pauper
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryan
Masters
Mayo
Patsy Elks
n D Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Wen-tor
Nelson
SI Wm
Lydia Bryan
Jacob
Jacob Dupree
Little House A Bro, maintain-
pauper
IN
Paupers.
No. To whom
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
k Margaret Bryan
James Masters
Ivy Mayo
H D Smith
Nancy Moor
John Baker
Polly Adams
Daniel Webster
coffin
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryant
James Masters
Ivy Mayo
Elks
H D
Amt.
am
vS
Patsy Elks
B D Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Lydia Bryan
Jacob
J O Proctor A Bro, maintain-
A G Cox, pauper coffin
Zeno Brown,
Jacob Dupree
W L Smith, pauper coffin
J A Andrews, maintaining
Pr
Patrick, DAD
Marcus Whitaker
J A K Tucker, for
Susan Turner
John Stocks
Taylor
Margaret Bryan .
James Masters
Ivy Mayo
Patsy Elks
H D Smith
Nancy Moore
John Baker
Daniel Webster
Nelson
Wm
Lydia Bryan
O W Venters, for
Marcos Whitaker
Marian Brown,
Jacob
J A Andrews, for
i f
E A
Wm Ross
John
Wm H Cox
E A
H H Wilson
C M Bernard
J A Dupree
W A. Jr
B S
C D
J T Allen
L H Alien
C F White
Austin Flood
C V Newton
Tom Moore
B F Manning
Ed Cox
Isaac
O D
MeG Daniel .
Loots
J H
Jesse Cannon
R B Parker
S Nobles
W-E Hammond
D H Moore
W H Moore
j WM Moore
Daniel
too
too
mm
. . .
1707
Witness Superior Court.
No. To whom
J L Sugg
Wm Peebles
Sam Bryan
Cherry
Jennie Cherry
Wm Edwards
Calvin Pugh
Jesse Jones
Henry
Mary Gorham
E S Harris
Dudley
Major Jackson
C J
J A Dupree
Nelson
W A Fleming
Hardy Johnson
Abram Harries
E A Davis
Jennie
Amos Elks
Patsy Chapman
Louisa
Lyon
Wm
Noah
W L Dudley
W II Tucker
W P Buck
T R Moore
S H
W B
Fred Jenkins
Ellis
C C Forbes
B T Cox
Jacob
Victoria Cox
John Cox
E H
Theo
Sarah
J O Tyson
C D
B S
H H Wilson
J B
W J James
B F Manning
J C Wilson
J L Joyner
W O Vinson
Tyson
Wm Tyson
Margaret A Moon
Jesse Clark
Hettie Moore
T H
Joyner
W H Cox
Amos
J R Mobley
E D Leggett
A B Cox
Wiley Wilkins
Cox
Weeks H Clark
Levi Harriss
B S
S A Redding
Laura Wilson
Ashley
Noah W Tyson
B S
Wm H
Bryant Buck
Holiday
E A Jr
Tl S
J Parker
Simon Johnson
Alphonso Peyton
J L Robinson
D D Bryant
J B Congleton
W H Williams
W A James Jr
Daniel Smith
B Q
Joe Mom
T L Jordan
W A
B Sheppard
Aaron Daniel
Louis H minim
t Jonas
C F White
r B
O F Grave
Moore
W King
W A
John
r G Dupree
R W King
C L Barrett
W R Parker
Sherrod White
R M
Ida Little
D H James
Delia Foreman
It Z Moore
C D Rountree
Jack Dudley
A J Flanagan
Wall
Will White
Warren Bell
Poss Cannon
Tucker
Chas Harris
W C Joyner
J W Pars
Major
Theo Keel
J J Keel
W I Keel
W H Williams
Warren
Eddie
I. C James
v Smith
Williams
K S
J J Jr
K B Moor
U A
Peter Forbes
, F White
x W J Joyner
-66 C F White
James
SO D Jones
Elizabeth
R R Pollard
J R Bunting
J Hart
Cornelius
Sydney Daniel
G W Gainer
in
. no
5.7
i IS
O Dawson
T E Keel
C V Newton
W A James
G M
Jury Tickets.
No. To whom issued.
James B Cherry
Amt.
Sheriff Fees
Ne. To Whom issued. Amt.
W M King
Tucker
W M King
J A K Tucker, J B C
W M King
J A K Tucker
W M King
J A K Tucker
HO
W m King
J A K Tucker
Clerk's Fees.
No. To whom issued. Amt.
E A
Jail
No. To whom issued.
W M King
H F
J A K Tucker
J D Williamson
J A K
P W Brown
1861 J A K Tucker
W E Warren
J A K Tucker
1-65
John B
Wm H
J A K
Amt.
Commissioners.
No. To whom issued.
W A James, Jr
J A K Tucker
C Dawson
T E Keel
G M Mooring
T B Keel
Dawson
G M Mooring
W A James
C Dawson
W A James Jr
T E Keel
C V Newton
G M Mooring
W A James Jr
G M Mooring
C Dawson
T E Keel
O V Newton
O V Newton
T E Keel
W A James Jr
G M Mooring
O V Newton
T E Keel
G M Mooring
C Dawson
W A James Jr
TE Keel .
O Dawson
G M Mooring
C V Newton
W A James Jr
G M Mooring
C Dawson
T E Keel
C V Newton
Register of Deeds.
No. To whom issued.
D H James
part of
Amt.
SO
Constable Fees.
No. issued.
G G Porter
G w Edmundson
L w Reasons
H C
Jno S Easton
G w
H E Ellis
N R Cory
w P Buck
G w
w D Morgan
Daniel
J B
w Edmundson
John S Easton
w B Burnett
G A
H L Ellis
Edgar Ballard
B F
G A
w P Buck
H B
A D Hill
w J
John S Easton
J w Page
A J Flanagan
G R Buck
L B
G A
R w Smith
G w
Amt.
9.3
May
No.
Court.
To whom issued.
Amt.
jury
H B Harriss. coroner
Luke Norfleet
Riley Jenkins
James
Long
Henry Long
J B jury C
James witness
Election.
No. To whom issued.
S Rasberry, registrar
L registrar
O w
J R Congleton,
C D
J R
J R Johnson,
S V Joyner, election
B Cherry, election
Greenville Carriage
works, ballot
S A registrar
Amt-
Miscellaneous.
L n Wilson
E A
Pi F Witness Inf. Court
T Postmortem
F W Brown. Health
J Cherry, Rubber Stamp
D J Public
wards A 1285
G W bullock so
II D Potter Greene Co
Edwards
It W Kins.
It F. Pollard
E A
D J calendar
W l. Best
Flanagan
J B Cherry
F W Brown.
R Williams Jr
I, II
Joe Cobb
Lizzie Hawkins wit, Inf. court
W X Knight
W J
F G James
Town of Police
Apr. C M Bernard.
hire Esau
I K A jury taxes
u so
no
J A K Tucker col
Albert Williams, bill cost
him
May W K on acct
hire Willoughby
Feb. F Warren, In
Atkinson,
gage on lot in Washing
ton, N. t., Jack At-
costs
Cory on of
hire Shade
June James, reg deeds,
tax on marriage
John Flanagan, collector
w II King schedule BAG
for year
Albert Williams bill cost
for oakum sold
Sam Cory on acct of hire
Shade Adams
July I J A K Tucker,
on
Boxy
cost n
Moore
K A jury tax
MA Ricks on hire
Roxy
w K on acct f
hire
J A K sheriff
so CF warren, nest
Atkinson
I 1200
F Smith on hire
Daniel I
A K Tucker, sheriff
3-2
in
7-.
Sept. 14.1
lo
Oct.
E A for code sold
A K Tucker
GO
Summary.
Poor House
i Bridges
I witness
. Jail Account
commissioners
court
Jury Tickets
Sheriff Fees
clerk Fees
of Deeds
Solicitor
Ferry Center Bluff
Tax List
o-2 j
1403
1376
Nov. Moses King on acct of
Ed Nixon
K A Move, Jury tux
B for old
bridge lumber sold to
John Forbes
s will
Edwards
Alfred Forbes hire Sam
Perry
No.
Solicitor
To whom Issued.
D Worthington
Swift Galloway
Ferry.
Carr
Amt
on
W C Dudley
R R Cotten
W A James Jr
G M Mooring
TB Keel
G Dawson .
W A
C Dawson
V Newton
Amt.
Tax List
No. To whom issued.
Edwards Broughton
J R Congleton
R M Jones
T H Langley
E c Blount
John King
S S Rasberry
R G Chapman
B S Sheppard
S V Joyner
J A Lang
D H James, part of
to Board Corn's.
No. To whom issued.
A L Blow
Atty Board
Conveying prisoners jail
. To amt Of General fund
By County order paid
-i
13.087 W
CK.
By unit to
-fund
By amt transferred to stock
law fund
Total
Bill Costs
E A
B S
R Williams Jr
J B
J B
I Fred
N R Cory
E A
193.1 B
Tucker
E A
H G Nobles
E A
constables fees
Court. Election
Bill Cost
Roads
-i P Fees
I Coroners Court
Recapitulation.
Roads.
J S Norman
w L Pollard
G w
w L Pollard
w P Buck
w J Fulford
J w Page
T w
w B Burnett
S Easton
J A K Tucker
G w Edmundson
A K Tucker
Justice's Fees.
John Fleming
J j Perkins
T H Langley
w R
B S Sheppard
w B Moore
D C Moore
J J
To ain't en hand
all
TO in band of treasurer
Dec, 2nd, 1889
of Carolina, i
Pitt
David James
f the Board of
and I he aforesaid do
that lie is a true State-
merit as doth appear of
j my Given under my baud
Soul of said Commissioners at
my on the 3rd
day of December 1889.
D. Clerk officio
-l
CB
Tty to I'd
I'd
To
en
on I
J com
receipts
By
disbursed
13.485
To in hand of treasurer
Bee. gen
Financial Condition of Pitt County,
Dec 2nd, 1889.
DB
To audited
Dec. I'd
To ain't audited
to Dec.
Amt.
ii
So
Conveying Prisoners to Jail.
No. To whom issued. Amt.
John B Willoughby
H E Hellen
John B Willoughby
H C
O W Harrington
G G Ward
W P Buck
LB
G W
G A
W J Page
G A
John
W H Burnett
W D Morgan
G W
L B
W P Buck
W J Fulford
J W Page
G A
G R Buck
W J Fulford
John S Easton
R T Hodges
G W
W B Burnett
Bryant
R Jr
M Z Moore
G T Tyson
J A Lang
S S Rasberry
C G Bradley
J D Cox
B S Sheppard
S S Rasberry
D C
G T Tyson
John Fleming
J A
J May
j K
B S Sheppard
S S Rasberry
B Sheppard
j.
D C Moore
C Stokes
j S Norman
w R Parker
M Z Moore
D C Moore
T E Keel
Holliday
A L Harrington
w H
J j Laughinghouse
Sheppard
R L
A j
J R Congleton
Stokes
By
tn
to Dec. S,
To of c n
Dec. 2nd, 1889
James B in account
with the County of from Dec. 3rd,
1898, to Dec. 2nd, 18-9.
1888.
Dec. To amt on last report
To amt received of.
John
E A tax
Flanagan,
W M King, sheriff
J Flanagan, collector
Boo
Too
old
J G Sheppard on acct
hire of Oscar Jones-
For Guns Patrick
acct liquor license
John
acct liquor license
Boo
Boo
acct liquor license
John Flanagan, collector
i ii
, A K Tucker, sheriff, M
I K for cost
formerly paid by Co.
In care vs
Peebles, Hellen and
county
Feb. J J for of I'd
at poor house
Walter Webb on acct of
hire of Allen Austin
J A K Tucker, sheriff
Win King
Sept
A Jury
Mar. J John Flanagan collector
L C hire of
Oliver Tucker
W R hire
Office the Hoard of
Pitt County.
The is a statement of th
of gs of the Board
of Commissioners Pitt County,
and number days member
liar attended, and the number of
miles traveled by each, and the
amounts allowed to member
services as Commissioners for
the fiscal year ending December
1889.
OF
Council Dawson attended
T B
W A James
G M Mooring
C V Newton
Tucker
Ant allowed Council
For twenty days as
For live days on Committee
Bight thirty-
two miles traveled at five e
Ain't allowed T IS Keel
For eighteen days as
For days on Committee
eight hundred sixty four
miles traveled cents
allowed W A James, Jr
For twenty-four days as com-
missioner
For days on Committee
eight forty-two
miles traveled at
For mileage as error acct.
allowed G M
twenty days as
For ten days on Committee
lour sixty miles
traveled at five eta
allowed C V Newton
For fifteen days as
For five days on Committee
four hundred forty three
miles traveled at five
mm
allowed Tucker
For days as Commissioner
sixty four miles traveled
Albert Williams
M J A K Tucker col
J B Davenport, hire of
Daniel
Tucker
Albert Williams, bill cost
Total allowed Board la
Less cents in error W A James,
Jr., account.
STATE OF CAROLINA,
Pitt County,
I, David A. James, Clerk
of the Board of Commission-
for the County aforesaid, do
certify that the foregoing is a
statement as doth appear upon
record in my office. Given
my band and the official seal of the
Board of for Pitt
County at office in Greenville, this
the 3rd day of December. A. D.,
D. H Jim,
Commissioners fer Pitt Ob





.-
X v-
m WONDER OF THE WORM
DRY
inch Dress Goods at cents.
inch Wool Cashmere at cents.
inch at cents per yard.
Single width Cashmere at to
Single width Worsted at cents.
for Cost
Good Business Suits for
Corkscrew
Boys
4.75
0.99
Calicoes and Domestics S.
Sample Notions at Cost. Corsets cents. Handkerchiefs at 1-2 cents.
Stockings at cents. Collars at cents.
Hoods, Caps and Cloaks for children, and women folks. Ladies
Vest and Pants per suit.
Overcoats
Overcoats
Cents
Glad Tidings for the
Good at
Boys Boots to
All Our Sample Shoes at Cost.
Good Sunday Shoes at Ladies good Sunday shoes at cents.
Children's good Sunday shoe to Whole stock Brogans at 1.00.
Won't Rip, Ravel or Run down at Heel.
GOOD NEWS FOR THE HATLESS
Hats to Hats worth sold for
Will Sell -Our Entire Stock at Half Value. I
Good Hats for Stiff Hats all color
NO GOODS SOLD THIRTY DAYS.
NO NO
THIS OFFER
I I
FOR THIRTY DAYS.
word.





NEW
QUARTERS
We are now fairly settled in our
New Store
for the accommodation of our
--patrons we are
NOW PREPARED
to offer the remainder of our
FALL k STOCK
at reduced figures.
Come to see us at John S.
Smith old place, direct-
opposite our stand.
M. R LANG,
Greenville, N. C.
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR.
A. C.
Personal. Tho firm of S. T. J. R. Carson,
Miss B. He Or. on a visit Bethel, made an assignment Dec.
It in
Boss
Brick Store.
Hotels an this week.
Have you seen the cook
stove at Latham A
Court is session.
Seed Bye Seed for sale,
E. C
Tho first mouth of a new year.
Dec. M. Fen v He
Seed at the OH Brisk Store.
The now gradually
Peanut and Bags
sale, and want
ed by Ii. C. Glenn.
See notice of dissolution of A. fl.
Co.
Highest cash for cotton
Seed by E- C. Glenn. bush-
els wanted.
The usual crowds tor
Court are here this week.
One dollar tiny.- a Solid
Shoe at j. ii. Cherry Co's. i
give a mortgage I
if you can avoid it.
Tons Bulk Lime cheap.
B. C.
to last week.
of Manner,
was in to sec us y
Mrs. B. Brown the
s with her parents in Virginia.
Mr. Willie snout part of
the holidays with his parents in Tar
km o.
Mrs. Lucy A. left
Viv to visit her brother in Jackson
Fla.
Miss Fleming, of
a few days last week
Miss Lena Harris.
Miss Bel lie Wells, of Wilson, has
been spending sometime visiting
Miss King.
J. L. is assignee.
Mr. W. H. Flake was out
on Monday killed a hawk meas
feel inches from tip to tip.
We are requested to announce
I hat lie v. J. L Winfield will preach
at next 12th
The pop-cracker did no
damage In except to the
packets them.
Tue ladle of the Baptist
. last In
I he store vacated by M. If.
Lang.
We were informed, by I he WILEY BROWN.
J. N. H. Summered, that con-l
tract for the building of the
at Falkland had been
all who had sub-
scribed were earnestly
make immediate payment.
This year is mer-
chants ought to When
times are hard toe ate watch-
to make a dollar go as far as
possible and they take advantage
best bargains offered them.
Lei the people km what you are
doing.
There n a ran-away
iii the Northern part of this county,
on after Christmas. Mr. J. now begun going by its name winch
J. prosperous farmer, I the gave it. a year a,,.
and Miss Ross, the l
J. I,. in
JAMES BROWN.
The village of Bell's Ferry, on Hie
Southern border of this has
vet.
in all the
I he Court House
The cook stove is the
stove for the pine made.
For sale low by ham .- Pen-
Carry your New Year resolutions
all through the year with you.
Sow Oats early. bushels
cheap, at the Old Brick Store.
If you have a friend send
him the this year.
87.00 buys a Double Shot
at J. B. Cherry Cos.
Every in Pitt county ought
to take the this year.
lot of tobacco seed for sale
by A. Forbes.
W. L. Smith, Administrator of D
C- Clark, advertises land sale.
Try a Barrel Sweet. Home Flour
Best in town at J. B Cherry
Master Larry who
spent the holidays
I ed to last week.
Mr. J. E. clerked
i last year for Cant. White, now has
l a position with Mr. A. Forbes.
W. H. Slaughter
in the Court House Saturday night
and Sunday and evening.
f. N. H. of Tar-
preached the Methodist
Sunday and Monday j
nights.
C. J. and wife i
January tho holidays in I
Greenville. They left last Friday I
for Florida.
Mr. J. L. Perkins,
went lo Baltimore, lake
a course at one of the commercial
of I hat city.
Mr. E. O. has moved homes or
ins family buck to from
the country. He purchased a
house in ville.
Whitaker, on the
Scotland Neck Greenville road
has brought his family lo Greenville.
They have taken rooms at I he King
House.
Mr. Glasgow Evans has moved
his family to Greenville. He was
formerly a resident here but for
years lived in Tarboro and
Mildred.
The last six weeks of the old year
gave balmy, spring-like weal he.
Now watch the first six weeks of the
in w year.
Here's lo every reader of the
May peace, pros
and be your
during
One week of the new year has
I but everybody has not
i ed to stop dating their letters
1889
Allen Warren Son will sell
some and fruit trees at
auction next Saturday. See
G- M. Tucker is selling goods at
coat for thirty days and will have an
auction every See ad-
The visitors mentioned
last issue of the
all returned to their respective
i n
appears is
Every bad cold that
not so our people need
not be alarmed. The disease will
do no fatal damage here.
We are glad to learn that several
new pupils have already entered the
the Spring Term
others will enroll next
and
The needs what
money is due it on back
a fact we would ask all
to please make a note of.
ship, p
They have our wishes.
A party was given last Thurs-
day night at the residence of Mr.
A. complimentary to our
clever and highly esteemed towns-
man, Mr. A. Jr. It was an
affair. We Wish Bert
a successful year of study. He re-
turned Friday morning to Chapel
Hill.
who had imbibed
two much liquor were on the ramp
age on Dickinson Avenue Saturday
They destroyed one of the
street lamps and tore up some of the
sidewalk bridges. If the
be found out they should be
made the subjects severe punish-
A body of a colored man named
Dick Holiday was found in the
river near yesterday
morning. He was a limber getter
in the swamps near by am
about two weeks ago. B
was at first thought he bail run
away, but Hie discovery of Hie holly
show that lie was drowned.
Brown Bus., have bought out the
dry goods and notion stock of Little
louse Bro., and are offering
same at very reasonable prices.
They are beginning business right
by taking a good space in the
which they
keep the nubile posted as
splendid lines goods. Read their
advertisement this week and
them a call.
I body name
but held on lo us
a Hie Ills year,
In was
new of
villa The hopes it
will develop into a town
and do lo Its new name.
NEW FIRM
Cost Hit
An old colored man named Hen-
who lived on the land
Mr. about six miles
tow was fodder from the
field last week. He climbed up on
top of a load to ride, and when the
cult was passing over some rough
he fell oil head downward
and broke bis neck, lie had been
warned by a fellow- workman
riding on top of the load
until Hie ground was passed,
but replied by know
what I'm
Jurors.
Below are the Jurors at Ibis term
of Pitt Superior .
It. Stocks, W. I. Manning,
T. M. Edwards, J. R. Davis, It. C.
On lion, J. Carroll, N. Tyson,
II. C Venters, C. J. Briber, J. T.
Jenkins, W. W.
White, Jerry Janus
Bunch, T. L. J. D. Jones,
H.
R. P.
Sugg, James, Jr., J. Tyson,
Amos M. Jim. S. Condition,
J. E. W,
T. Mini
Gardner.
Brown Eros,
At R. Williams Son's Old Stand.
------Having purchased the of------
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots,
Sims, and Furnishings.
Of Little, House A Bro, we are to dispose of them at
VERY LOW PRICES.
We do not propose sell at cost or below cost, but by buying
at a discount we can afford to sell at such prices that will astonish
yon.
This is no Humbug, See us before buying.
Some of
I about the
The weather
was the
during the holidays
it our recollect ion.
dollar buys a Whole Stock
Mans Shoe at J. B. Cherry Co's
Good Bargains.
Old Virginia Cheroots
sold. Fit for any gentleman to
smoke, at the Old Brick Store.
dozen Eggs cash or
in trade, J. J. Jr.
The Spring Term of Greenville
Institute will open Monday, January
20th.
Mr. J. Cobb, an old citizen
this town who for several years had
been an in valid, died Christmas day. I
His remains were interred in Cher- nave ears t
Hill cemetery the day
Mr. Sidney Owens who last year
clerked tor spent
the holidays with people Scot-
land Neck, returned last week and
has taken a position with Capt. C.
A. While for year.
were glad to have, a call Christ
mas week Mr. J. B. Barrett,
Foreman on that splendid
I the . He with
his wife Miss Annie
I spent the holidays in Pitt county
. with relatives.
Messrs. A. Lemon and B. Drew
made their accustomed visit here
about the close the year,
hands for the turpentine farms
the Stales South of us. They left
with a car load Thursday
morning.
the farmers are
safety of their meat,
have killed hogs lately
Halifax to a distance
. miles in hours and-29
The of two cent stamps j making nine stops and doing all the
gave out at the Greenville I work of a mixed
hat the warm weather
will cause the meat to spoil.
Yellowley nave
j very pleasant party on Friday
alter Christmas at the splendid
The Scotland Neck and Green- house of Ins lather, Mr. J. B.
ville train made the best run on hist was enjoyed by
Friday evening that it has I his many young h lends. There was
made Capt, Whitaker and the prettiest gathering of girls
Smith brought her down Horn present between the ages of and
Currents, BUCK
pulverized sugar at the Old
Brick
The Episcopal School held
their party on the last night of the
old year.
Mr. W. W. Scott, of Johnson
Tenn, one of the contractors on the
railroad work between thin and
Kinston, brought his family to
during the progress of
the work. They have taken rooms
at the House.
It should have been mentioned
sooner that the return of Rev. G. A.
of Wash-
of much
to the people
churches nuder bis charge. He is
The hopes 1890 will an earnest minister and has done
bring better times to the people than
did 1889.
. , , . . t 11.11 lit- ii v n
My entire stock atones Q
Jewelry must be sold by Christ-
mas on account of removal. ,,.
Moses
All goods low down for the Spot
Cash at J. B. Cherry Co's.
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate
was made of Point Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store.
IT. Carolina Plaid
per yard, at J. B. Cherry Co's.
faithful work in this section.
Mr. Paul Branch tho clever
press Messenger here,
who was
transferred to the main line daring
the heavy holiday work, has return
ed to his run between Weldon and
Greenville. Mr. of
don, was on this during his ab-
Mr. E. A. Buck, of Balloon, Ga.,
was in to see us Christmas week and
Hides, Rags, left five silver dollars with us,
Eggs, Peas, Corn, Oil at the I enough to ray some back
and carry the to
him until the middle of 1891. Mr.
Old Brick Store.
Good lot of Horses and Males
time if
also good Yoke Oxen. Apply-
to R. R. Cotten, Bluff N. C.
per lb for Sweet Scotch
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
Almanac is just as good
as any other offered for sale. Its
calculations are accurate and can be
depended upon.
each Potatoes,
and Peas, pounds
Pitt county Hams wanted at H
Morris Bros.
Mink,
Fox, Otter and
Deer skins. Will more for
them than any man in town.
J. J. Jr.
Tons Coal for sale per ton.
Small quantity cents per tub.
Do not send for coal without send-
money to pay for it. Coal is
cash. E. C. Glenn.
Goods at starvation prices at
Higgs They are selling
good boy's suits for men's
82.75. Nothing like it ever known
before.
Prof. Memory System is
creating greater interest than ever
in all parts of the country and per-
sons wishing to improve their
should send for bis prospectus
free as advertised in another column
have a surplus stock of Evergreens,
Roses, Tuberoses, Chrysanthemums,
Dahlias, Apple trees, which
will sell at auction, at the Market
House in Greenville, on Saturday.
Jan. 11th, 1890. Sale at o'clock,
ALLEN Son.
of Produced from
the laxative and nutritions juice of
California figs, combined with the
medicinal virtues of plants known
to be most beneficial to the human
system, acts gently on the kidneys,
liver and effectually cleans-
the system, dispelling colds and
headaches, and curing habitual con-
Buck is a native of Pitt and
came to the holidays among
his relatives and old He
has living for several years in
Georgia.
On the 2nd inst. Mr. M
moved his jewelry stock
this place to Scotland Neck, where
ho will future conduct business.
While his departure from Greenville
is attended by many regrets it is
with pleasure we recommend
to the good people among whom he
has gone. They will him a
jeweler, an honest, in-
young man, well
worth their confidence.
several days only one cent
Stamps could be had mailing let-
Here's lo the merchants
The trashes every
of you may enjoy a large trade
and have prosperity
year.
Here's to the The Re-
hopes this year may In
you favorable throughout,
and that you will reap bountiful
harvests.
There is not a livery stables
Greenville at which a fairly decent
turnout be hired. Somebody
could make out of a strictly
livery.
hear that parsons
have left the of Bethel for
Western North Carolina Ten-
Some have also left Bell's
Ferry for Florida.
The to-day begins
its visits for the year 1890. We
hope during the tear to see it visit
many homes to which it has not
heretofore going.
The Greenville Carriage Works
shipped a handsome buggy to Way
cross, Ga., on the 1st. inst.
reputation for flue buggies
continues to grow
Forty-eight marriage licenses is-
sued Pitt county during the
month of December. How is that
for a record what every body com
plains of hard
G. W. Cox Sou, doing business
at Dunn, made an assignment on
the 1st. Much of their property
being this county the papers were
brought here to be recorded.
The who now paying at-
to manure about his
premises will not have so much fer-
bills to pay in the fall, that
eats a big part of the crop.
Oat.
We regret very much that the
of House Bro. are go-
In Of business here. They have
sold off all their dry goods and are
out the balance their
stock as rapidly as possible. They
have been among our best
young men and will be missed from
mercantile circles. Success to them
whatever they engage.
Slim Show,
A kind of a fifteenth-class circus
wandered way
after Christmas gave two per-
to very small audiences.
The brass band with it was a
three and a drum. It
went by the name of circus
hut much tho appearance
of the old feet show that came
through this section not many years
A runaway couple the
of Norfolk, spent a night at Ho
Macon last week took the
train out from Greenville next mom
They eloped from Virginia
and were married Elizabeth City
and order to give the old
ire ample time to cool down mad
the return trip around this way.
The hotel guests say the bride was
a handsome lady.
How many of you have resolved
to do something toward building up
your town section this year
The is already to do its
will join bands with it
Review tells us a white-shad
was sold in Wilmington oh the 28th
of December. In a few weeks the
fisherman will be dipping their nets
in the Tar for this very toothsome
fish.
Ricky Moore, Administrator of
John Moore, advertises land for
sale.
Bad colds have n spared the
editor and some of bis help this
week.
Dishonesty may seemingly thrive
for awhile but justice will be sure to
overtake it.
Bo in Time.
In view of the hard times that seem
to be expected this year, the RE-
thinks it advisable
the farmers to make preparation for
an early food crop both for man and
beast. An early crop of Irish
toes would help wonderfully toward
feeding their and an early
crop of oats will help out the short
corn and fodder crops. Every far-
mer should plant a small crop
both potatoes and oats.
Sunday night, January 12th, Rev.
A. D. Hunter will preach at the
Baptist on and
We are all sowing, what
will be the reaping Come and
hear.
The Board of County Commission-
held their first session for 1890
on Monday.
Farmers who are going to try
this year should get their
plant beds ready.
There was much moving around
and changing the first
few days of the year.
The office cat bas
converted the waste basket into a
sleeping
Several horses and mules were
fold for debt at before the
Court House yesterday.
A Deputy S. Marshal arrested
a here yesterday for selling
whiskey without license.
The warm weather of Christmas
week brought out, the files and mos-
The flies linger.
The Whitehead steam mills near
the wharf are to be refitted and
started up again, Mr. S, A. Redding
will be in charge.
A. G. Cox has associated with J.
D. Carroll in the manufacture of
cotton planters, brackets,
under the firm name of
Cox Carroll. See notice else-
where.
Subscribe Fay.
We hope no will wait to be
asked personally to become a sub-
scriber to the It is
impossible for the editor to give duo
attention to bis work inside the of-
and see every body outside. But
there is a standing invitation for
one to become a subscriber.
We also hope those owing for back
subscriptions will come like honest
and pay up, without dodging
around every comer in town to keep
out of way.
years I hat we have seen many
a day, and we were almost
ed to find Greenville possessed so
many of them, some whom will
be sine to develop into as beautiful
women as North Carolina holds. It
was a real treat to look on this col-
ion of merry people in
midst their enjoyment. The
pleasure the occasion was height-
by the most delightful music
rendered by Mr. Ola Forbes mid
Miss Jennie Williams oil violin and
piano. Mr. and Mrs. Yellowley ex-
themselves to make the guests
have just the best time
efforts In this direction could
have proven more successful.
The tournament at on
was a very enjoyable one.
There was a large crowd present
and everything passed off pleasant-
About ten o'clock the crowd
gathered to hear Hie oration and
The oration was
delivered by Mr. Jas. L. Fleming
one of our most promising
one the Principals
Hamilton Institute. His speech
was a fine one was much enjoy-
ed by all present. There wore
teen and the tilting was very
good. Mr. Baker, Jr.,
was the successful knight.
He took eleven rings, and
Miss Emma Keel of
Queen. Mr. B. B.
took nine rings and crown-
ed Miss Sallie of Washing-
ton, First Maid of Honor. Mr. J. J.
Mason, Jr., of township,
took eight lings and crowned Miss
Maggie Moore, of Greenville town-
ship. Second Maid of Mr-
Rip township, and
Mr. Will Moore, of Greenville town
ship, each took seven rings, result-
in a tie, but on another tilt each
Mr. Ward and crown-
ed Miss Fleming Green-
ville township. Third Maid of
or. At a coronation ball was
given at Davenport's Hall.
New Grocery Store
Next door to K. Glenn. opened a Grocery Store and
hand a line line of--------
Neat. Oil. Molars,
Candies, Cheese. Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples,
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything kept in a
first-class grocery store, as well as Tinware, Crockery, Wood and
Willow Ware, Call and sec us. Goods delivered free any
where in town.
J. J. CHERRY. Greenville, N.
Out Look
TO
am not after you tor taxes tout want to
read this
many i
Thanking you for your kind patronage during the pant. I u
dealing continue to receive snare of mum favors. I wish to inform you that
my stock for Christmas h now complete I kinds Candle,
rents lo cents par pound.
Apple. Not, Fig. Bananas, Orange, Flavoring
Current. I still keep a fall line of
FANCY CR
Greenville, N. C.
COMMIT
STANDARD GUANO ACID
PI
OYSTER S
SHELL LIME, DISSOLVED BONE,
COTTON SEED MEAL AND
Tennessee Wagons, for sale.
GREENVILLE. N. Mar. 1887.
AT COST
BOOTS SHOES
Ladies and Cloaks
If the farmers want to make bet-
crops this year they mast get to
work early and not stand around
idle. There is work to be done
about the farm in winter as well as
in and Hammer.
Mew Firm.
popular young Mess.
Wiley Brown and Brown
the mercantile bus-
under the firm name of Brown
Bros. They occupy the store in
which Williams Son formerly
kept. and will carry a nice stock of
dry goods and notions. The
and business qualifications of these
young pictures success for them
m the outset. The
wishes for them a prosperous ca-
Attention is called to the
of Leopold
Tailor, who has just opened for bus-
in this He comes well
recommended and solicits the pat-
of the people here.
baa not got bold of
people, but many of them have
got a grip on had colds that holds
on to them most
large part of the town is suffering
more or less with the
There hare been a few cases of
sickness in town that bordered on
Dr. pro
it influenza but said it was
not the genuine type. We expect
it is about the same kind other
towns are having.
A boiler explosion at Bell's Ferry,
evening of last week, was
attended by disastrous results. It
occurred at the steam mill of
Mess. Spier and seems
to have been caused by allowing
the water to get too low and then
pumping in a quantity of cold
water into the very ho t boiler. The
boiler, engine and mill shed were
demolished, the furnace door being
blown as as a hundred yards
away. Had the. property loss been
all the disaster not have
been so horrible, but the worst part
it is that Mr. It. A. Batts
known as Dick
was killed, and three or four others
were badly wounded. Mr. Batts
was blown several feet in the air,
the fall breaking his neck. The
noise of the explosion heard
distinctly by people eight miles
away, and sounded like the dis-
charge of a cannon.
Carriage Licenses. ,
Daring the month December
tho Register of Deeds issued mar-
licenses to white
colored, the names appear-
below
WHITE.
James A Williams and
Stocks, Jesse Hathaway and
Nobles, W C Jackson and Louisa
Augustus Bell and Hester
Willie and Kate
S T Hooker Pee
bit, T M Moore and Dan-
Moses Elks and Page
Fleming and Annie Powell,
Calvin Tucker Josephine F
Quinnerly, C E Davenport and
Ai mi Ford Pilgrim and Susan
b. lies and
Max If. M
Henrietta Galloway, Win K Wool-
and Gertrude Baker, C G Little
and John C
an and Easter Stocks, Jas W Smith
Victoria Hill, Willie O Barnhill
and Lula Thomas, John J Gray and
Boss, Van Harris and Emma
L H Smith and Augusta
Sherman Foreman and Victoria
Johnson and Louisa
Williams, James and Flor-
Wilson. Noah Brown and
Susan Fleming, Walter Moore and
Moore, Jas A Spain and
Joanna Atkinson, Scott
and Worth-
and Louisa Wilson, John
Teel and Martha Ann Peter
Wilson and Alice Kilpatrick, John
It Joyner and Williams. Na-
than Barrett and Pass Lang,
Chapman and John
It. and Emily Morris, Bowen
and Martha A Jerry
Walker and Martha
and Green, Smith
Mayo and Ann
Banks and Chas
Daniel Annie Boyd, Lent Teel
and Mange W William
Jones and Bettie E. Short,
and Mary
Kilpatrick and Julia Dawson, Wat- i
Williams and Holden, AI I
lea Cotton and Ida Joiner.
HAT
CAPS.
All at Panic Prices.
Our Stock is quite complete above lines, come
cure bargains, this offer only good until January 1st.
and
Greenville, N. C.
Leopold
TAILOR.
Having moved to Greenville and
the room formerly used by Mr.
am to do
in all Its branches, aid in the best man-
Also Cleaning and
Can show beat of references.
Have also a splendid line of samples
from which to select suits, and can do
the work.
L.
AUCTION
EVERY
For the next Days.
will sell at cost during the week and
have an auction every Saturday.
I have a large stock of goods which
most be disposed of, and can give
great bargains to all who my store.
M. TUCKER.
UtTERS
We adopt this method
of informing our old
customers and the pub-
generally that we
have returned from
New York with the
stock we have ever
carried.
The experience of two
years in the Northern
markets together with
increased capital
us to offer greater
bargains than ever.
Standard Prints
Plaids Clothing.
Dry Goods, She and
Rats are all going at
astonishingly low
prices.
A visit from you is
requested.
BROW HOOKER,





THE
EASTERN
C-
Mr. Grady's Speech.
BACKS drawn oat cf shape by the
old-fashioned see-saw, rubbing, twisting, . recking
way of washing clothes and cleaning house than by any
other means. You ruin your health, form, clothes,
paint, and don't get the best results.
Try the greatest invention of this Century m
way of Pyle's PEARLINE. It docs away
with the rubbing, hence there is no wear and tear on
body or fabric. You don't have to bob up and down
over a tub of soiled clothing and dirty water,
poisonous odors and steam ; hence you save
health. Its success is Millions use it Millions
more will use it.
Every grocer sells Beware of peddled
imitations, they're dangerous. James
FIRST
majesty of intelligence re-
and unified
for the protection of its homes and
the preservation of its liberty.
sir, is on reliance and our
hope, and against it all the powers
of earth shall not prevail. was
just as certain that Virginia would
come back to the
control of her white race, that be-
fore the mortal and material pow-
of her people once more unified,
would crumble until its
both. I follow And may God
forget my people when they forget
these
Whatever future may hold for
them, whether plod along la the
from which have never been
lifted the was laid
upon by the Roman Mild it u, made
to bear the cross of the fainting
whether they hulls in .
thus hasten the prophecy o. the
who suddenly
shall hold out her hinds unto
whether forever dislocated and separate,
they remain B week people beset by
and us the Turk, who
lives in tin.- jealousy rather than in the
Europe, or whether In this
miraculous they break through
the date twenty and bely-
universal history, reach the full
stature of citizenship, and m peace
It,
lice abiding friendship. And what-
ever we do, into whatever
K.
II and branches Condensed Schedule.
trains south.
No No
Dee 8th daily past Mail, dally
ex Sun.
Weldon
Ar Rocky Mount am .
Ar Tarboro t
Tarboro am
Ar Wilson
Wilson
surrender your own liberties to
Federal election law, yon may sub-
in fear of a necessity that does
not that the form of this
government may be dunged, yon
may invite Federal interference with the
Xe England town meeting that has
for a hundred years the guarantee of lo-
cal government in America, this old Scare
the boast that
our and whoso arm was
with our renewed hi
all to this government at
he spoke from a heart great
to be false, he spoke for every honest
man from Maryland to Texas. From
that day to this nowhere
the South sworn Hannibal to
hatred and vengeance, but everywhere
The Eastern Reflector,
IN COMBINATION WITH
Tin brighten of the children's says the Springfield Republican.
CO- BOSTON.
EASTERN REFLECTOR
I II
IF FOR AT THIS OFFICE
NOVEMBER
s I it-1 gram fasts
FOR THE YOUNGER YOUNG FOLKS.
. j-j , offers combination rates with
following
l-i. price FOR BOTH
B v d cents a For baby and in the nursery. 1.70 a year.
Men and Women For youngest readers. a
Pansy a For Sunday and week-day reading. a
Send an orders to this where specimens of these may be seen.
SAVE MONEY
1.1
proctor k ma,
Grimesland, N. C.
-Dealers
Merchandise.
Wish t,
Inform their friends and
their
Mm HI M. Hill
SUBSCRIBE
Ar Fayetteville
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
am
SKI
-I
am
ISM
SO
S am
HI A INS GOING NORTH
dally
Sun.
Wilmington
Lt Magnolia a
Warsaw
Ar Goldsboro
Fayetteville
Ar Selma
Ar Wilson
Wilson SI am pin pin
Mount
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm BO pm
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Scotland Branch Road ,
leaves Halifax 2.30 M. arrives Scot-
land Neck at
P. If, leaves 7.00 ;
A. M., Scotland at A. M-
except Sunday.
Train leaves Tarboro, X via
Raleigh R. daily except Sun-
P M. P M.
While introducing our line work, III you
send us a photograph of n.-iv
I member of tout family, will make
you a full life Crayon Portrait Free
f Charge. The only consideration 1111-
i posed you will be that you
i it to friends as a of our
and assist us in
I also, that promise to have It framed
suitably, so that the work will show to
i advantage. Write void full name and
address on back of to secure its
; We guarantee its return.
offer is good for a only, and the
j sample is Worth being as
be made. Address
PORTRAIT HOUSE, i and
Washington St. III.
Largest Portrait Mouse in the
world.,,
GOOD BOOKS
Sent post-paid on receipt of price
In the Heart of
A thrilling end instructive J
pages; paper cents; f 1.00.
The
By
Humorists.
Selections from Artemus Ward. Mart Twain,
etc. pages; paper cents ; cloth cents.
Metropolitan Agency,
Warren St., New
nO Any book In the world
I L at publisher's prior
which holds , j Witness the vet-
standing at the base of a
at- monument, above the graves of his
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT
X C, P M. P M. BRICK
Returning leaves daily
except Sunday. A M. A ; .-, BUT-
M. Tarboro. N A M. -u, supplies will it to
I interest to get our
Train on Midland N C Brant haves j
Goldsboro daily except Sunday. C AM, . branches. C
arrive X C, SO A M. Re-
A I PORK SIDES SHOULDERS.
SPICES, TEAS, c
alway.-at Lowest
we din-et from
C. A M.
on Branch leaves Rocky
at P M, arrives Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
leaves Spring Hope A M,
M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Wars
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at BOO
and AM Returning leave
ton A M, and P. M. connect-
at Warsaw and
Southbound train on Wilson
Branch is is
No. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only at
Ming you to boy at one profit. A com-
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
the Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
S. If. SCHULTZ.
Greenville. N. C
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia. J to run we sell at a close margin.
Train No. makes at
Weldon for all points North daily.
rail via Richmond, and daily except
via Line.
Trains make close connection for
points North via and Wash
All trains run solid between w
ton and Washington, and have Pullman
Palace Sleepers attached.
JOHN F.
General
i. R. Transportation
T. M. EMERSON Passenger
Atlantic N. C. Railroad
In A. M. Saturday.
1st, 1889.
No.
Ar.
p in
Stations.
Goldsboro
Kinston
New
No.
Ar.
a m I
2-.
UNDERTAKING.
Having associated B. S.
ate In the business we
are ready to serve the people in that
capacity. All notes and accounts die
me for past services have been in
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for
JOHN FLANAGAN.
Morehead City a in
Going East. Schedule. Going West
No L
Mixed Ft.
Pass- Train.
a m
SI
IV
SO
p in
We on hand at all times n nice
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets of all
kinds and can furnish anything desired
from the Illicit Case f
Pill county Pine Coffin. We an
up with can
satisfactory services to all who p-
as
Feb. 1883.
and
mil me
V.
Only
He.
via do la
If to
.,
Stations.
Best's
La Grange
Falling
Kinston
Caswell
Dover
Gore Creek
Tuscarora
Clark's
Havelock
No
Atlantic
Morehead
Atlantic Hotel
Morehead Depot am
Thursday and Saturday,
Wednesday and Friday. I
Train connects with Wilmington I
Weldon Train bound North, leaving
a. m., and with Rich-
A Danville Train West, leaving For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hair.
p. m. j
Train connects with Richmond j g
Danville Train, arriving at Goldsboro;
p. m., and with Wilmington and; AT FRONT
House, at which place
, I have located, and where I have
. u- v
i -is a free and independent
may deliver its election ma-
into the hands or the govern-
it bellied to create- but never, sir.
will a single State of this Union, North
or South, be delivered again to the cod.
of an Ignorant and inferior nice. c
d our State government from
supremacy when the Federal
beat rolled closer to the ballet-box, and
Federal bayonets hedged it deeper about
than will ever again permitted in this
free government. sir, though the
cannon of this Republic thundered in
voting district of the South, we still
should in the mercy of the
means and the to prevent its re-
establishment.
I that my section, hindered
with this problem, stands in seeming es-
to the North. If. sir. any
man v ill point out to me a path down
which people of he South, divided, may
walk in peace and honor. I will take that
path though I took it alone, for at it-end,
and nowhere else, I fear, is to be found
the full prosperity of my section and the
full restoration of this Union. But. sir,
if the had not beer, enfranchised,
the South would have been divided and
Hie Republic united. His enfranchise-
against which I enter no protest,
holds the South united compact.
What solution, then, can we
problem Time alone can disclose it to
Us. e .-imply report progress, and ask
your If the problem be solved
at all, I Brady believe it will, though
nowhere else has it been, it will
ed by the people most deeply bound in
most deeply pledged in honor to
is solution. I had my people
render back this rightly solved
than to them gather all the spoils
which baa contended
conspired and Caesar fought.
Meantime we treat the fairly,
measuring to him justice in the
Hie strong should give lo the weak, and
leading him in steadfast way of
that he may no longer be the
prey the unscrupulous and the sport
the thoughtless. We open to him
every pursuit in which he can prosper,
and seek to his training and ca-
We seek to hold his confidence
and friendship, and to pin to the
soil with ownership, that site may catch
in the tire of his own hearthstone that
sense of responsibility the shiftless can
never know. And we gather him into
that alliance of and
that, though it now runs close to
racial lines, welcomes responsible and
intelligent of any race. By this course,
confirmed our judgment and justified
in the progress already made, we hope to
progress slowly but surely to Hie end.
The love we for that race you can-
not measure nor comprehend. As I at-
test here. spirit of my black
from her home up there, looks
down to bless, am through the tumult
d this night steals the met music of
her as thirty year.-ago she held
me in her black arms and led Broil-
into sleep This scone vanishes as
catch a vision of an old
home with lofty and
white pigeons fluttering down
the golden air. l sec women strain-
ed and anxious faces, and children alert,
jet helpless. I see night come down
with its dangers and its apprehensions,
and in a big homely room feel on my
tired head the touch of loving
worn and wrinkled, but fairer to me et
than hands of mortal woman and
stronger yet to lead me than the hands
of mortal man, as they
i leasing there, while at the
truest altar I have yet j ,.
Bod that she i.-. safe in her sanctuary.
Fall and Winter Goods
is now ready for examination, and they
are prepared to supply all your wants at
HARD TIME PRICES.
We keep in stock a large line of Ready
Made Clothing, Boots, Shies.
Notions, Hardware, Heavy and
Fancy Ac., etc., In fact any
article to be found in a general
We pay highest prices for all kinds of
Country Propane.
Cotton bought either inhale or seed.
Parties owing in are requested to set-
as promptly as possible, as we desire
to have all accounts closed by the end of
the year.
Returning thanks for past patronage
we ask a. continuance of your favors.
J. O. Proctor Bro.
I RECEIVED AT
BAIT
SIX-CORD
THE
ac
his empty sleeve tossing in the
April wind, adjuring the young men
about him to serve as earnest and loyal
the government against which
their setters fought. This message de-
livered from that sacred presence, has
gone home to the hearts my fellows
And. sir. declare here, if physical
age be equal to human
that they would die, sir, if need be, to
restore this Republic their fathers fought
to dissolve
Such, Mr. President, is this problem
as we sec it, such is the temper in Which
approach it, such the progress made.
What do we ask of you First,
out of this alone can come perfect work.
Second, confidence ; in this alone can
yon judge fairly. Third, sympathy in
this you can help us best. Fourth, give
its your sons as hostages. When you
plant your capital in millions, send your
sons that they may know how true are
our hearts, and may help to swell the
Caucasian current until it can carry
without danger this black
Fifth, loyalty to the there
is sectionalism loyalty as in
This hour little needs the loyalty
that is loyal to one section and yet holds
for the enduring suspicion and es
Give us the broad and per-
that loves and trusts
with knows
no South, no North, no East, no West,
endears with equal and patriotic love
every foot of our soil, every State of our
Union. A mighty duty, sir, and a
mighty inspiration impels every one of us
to-night to lose patriotic consecration
whatever estranges, whatever divides.
We are stand
f. r human liberty The uplifting force
of the American idea is under every
throne on earth. France,
arc our victories. To redeem the heart
from and is
our Aid we shall not fail.
God has sown in our soil the seed of ids
millennial harvest, and he will not lay
the sickle to the ripening crop until his
full and perfect day has come. Our hi.-
acts
-y.
sac
M M i V
. Oil
, ,
. S
. . t
. . . . M r
I S B
.- I
s vi
. ;
,. .
. .
THE a ;
a n
LEGAL
Notice to Teachers.
Faults of digestion cause of
the liver, and the whole system becomes
deranged. Dr. II.
perfects the of
and assimilation, and thus makes
blood.
The Beard of Education of Pitt conn-
at Its December session ordered the There are times when a
will overcome the most
County Superintendent of Public In-
to call the attention of all
Public School Teachers to chap
JO of the School Law of 1889. which
prohibits private examination except
tor good and sufficient reasons, and even
then the applicant will be required to
pay one dollar, which shall be collected
by the examiner, and by him paid over
to the Treasurer, and the County Super-
is hereby ordered to enforce
this latter clause and every ease
of private examination.
Chm.,
Sec.
Administrator's Notice
The undersigned having been appoint-
ed by the Clerk of the Superior Court
of Pitt county, and having duly
qualified administrator
of estate of James de-
ceased, notice is hereby given to all per-
sons holding claims against said
of las-
robust,
when the system craves for pure blood.
I to furnish tin elements of health and
strength. The beet remedy tor
the blood is Dr, J. II.
Sick nausea.
costiveness, are promptly and agreeably
banished by Dr. J.
and Kidney
If health and life arc worth anything,
and you arc feeling out of sorts and tired
out. tone your system by Dr.
J. H.
Dizziness, nausea, distress
after can be cured and
by taking Dr. J. II. and
Kidney
Even the most vigorous and hearty
people have at a feeling of
and lassitude. To dispel this feel-
Front Reflector Office.
WHITE, BLACK AND COLORS,
FOR
Hand and Machine
FOR SALE-
R. LANG,
Greenville, N. C.
Dr.
Associate Principal
Mae. K. w, De-
in
j Department.
Mi
Medical Vocal
Safe Cure, j Miss Painting and
Celery Syrup of I
S. S. P., U. h B
Water.
Storm Calendar Weather
for 1800. by R. Hicks, mailed
to any address on receipt of a two-cent
postage The Dr. J.
Medicine Co., St. Mo.
and Commercial Department.
DEPARTMENTS.
Primary. Academic.
Classical and Mathematical. Mu-
sic. Painting and Drawing.
ADVANTAGES
Large, Comfortable Buildings.
Healthy Local ion Good
Plenty of Wall Prepared Food
Boarders. A Corps of Teachers,
Notice of Incorporation i. being graduates of rat
., , Music Department equal
I hereby give notice according to law I , lo in the State
that under and by virtue Of Chapter M Of Pianos and Organs.
the Code North Carolina and acts a Library of nearly volumes.
thereto. I have this day purchased for School.
incorporated Com- Moderate, from to
I in
id Is that gen for Day Pupils the
Using and conducting , Pupils tr
December, or this notice will be
plead in bar of their recovery. All per-
sons indebted to said e requested
to make immediate
This the 24th day
D of James Haddock.
Alex L Attorney.
Notice to Creditors.
pending miracle from Plymouth Beak Having duly qualified before the
, . . . Court Clerk of Pitt as
all the even W. Cobb. deceased,
f. hour when, from the gives notice to all persons b-
a; trackless ocean, a new world rose to
the of the Inspired sailor. As we
approach the fourth centennial of that
stupendous the Old World
will come to marvel and to learn amid
oar gathered treasures, let resolve to
the miracles of our past with the
of a Republic, compact, united,
indissoluble in the bonds of
from hikes lo the wounds
of war in every heart as on every
at the sum-
mile, human achievement and earthly
blazing out the path, and making
dear the way up all the nations of
the earth must Come in God's appointed
time
to present them to the undersigned for I take Dr. J. II.
on or before the 28th day of it will Impart Vigor and Vitality,.
estate to make Immediate pay-
to to all
of said estate to their claims
properly authenticated to the undersign-
ed on or before the day of Dee.,
1880. or this notice will be plead bar
of their recovery. This day of De-
1888. Lit
of O. Cobb.
The most delicate can
safely use Dr. -I. II.
Lung Balm, It is a sure remedy for
coughs, loss of voice, all throat and
lung troubles.
Pimples, blotches, scaly skin, ugly
spots, sores and ulcers, abscesses and
tumors, unhealthy discharges, such as
catarrh, eczema, ringworm, and other
forms of diseases, are symptoms of
blood impurity. Take Dr. J.
Lean's Sarsaparilla.
No need to take those big
one of Dr. J. Liver
and y is quite and
more agreeable.
For a safe and certain remedy for
fever and ague.
Chills and it is warranted
to cure.
Administrator's Notice. WIDE AWAKE
honest, s
B. H-
a frankly admit Its
A blood
W.
; B. B. as one Lest
blued
Dr. A. Ii.
reports of B. B. B. are la-
and its speedy action is wonder-
Dr. J. AV.
writes confess B. B. is best
quickest medicine I
have ever
S. Ga.
it-. cheerfully recommend BAB.
I as a Due tonic Its use cured
RESORT
an i . of the neck after other
because her Bum s, sentinel in the remedies effected no perceptible
cabin, on guard at her chamber j ;,, .-. h. Montgomery. Jacksonville,
p. m and with Rich- everything la my hue .
Danville Through Freight Train CLEAN ATTRACTIVE,
leaves Goldsboro-at p.
. nisei the appliances; new
j comfortable chairs.
Why another new discovery by Alfred Razors sharpened at reasonable figures
in the way of helping the afflict- j for work outside of my shop
ed. By calling on or addressing the promptly executed. Very respectfully,
above named barber, you can procure a I EDMONDS.
bottle of Preparation that is invaluable j
for eradicating dandruff, and causing the old
kinkiest hair to be soft and i V f
only two or three application HO med cine f
week is necessary, and a common hair r to
ease-, and the only physicians j on. until his shambling figure is lost In
of this better and brighter day.
the grave comes a voice say-
a black man's loyalty between her and
danger. I catch another vision. The
crisis of battle, a soldier struck, stagger
fallen. I see a slave, scuffling
through the smoke, his black
arms about the fallen form, reckless of
death, bending Ma trusty face to
catch the words that the
stricken lips, so wrestling .
with agony he would lay down his
I see him by
the weary bedside, ministering with
complaining patience, praying with
his humble heart that Hod will lift his
master up, until death comes in mercy
and in honor to still the soldier's agony
and seal soldier's life. I see him by
the open grave, mute, motionless,
suffering for the death of him who
in life fought against his freedom. I see
him. the mound is heaped and the
great drama of his life is closed, turn
away and with downcast eyes and
step start oat new and strange
fields, faltering, struggling, but moving
. writes -My mother on my
B. B. B. for her
her ease stubbornly resisted usual
She experienced immediate
and her Improvement has been
ti
A prominent physician who wishes his
name not given, patient of
mine whose, case of tertiary syphilis was
sun killing and which no treat
id seemed cored
v lib about twelve bottles of is. It. B.
lie -.- fairly made and bones
and i
The undersigned having been appoint-
ed and duly qualified as Administrator
of Use estate of W. S. Cannon, deceased.
notice is hereby given to all persons
holding said estate to
Bent to the undersigned on or be-
fore the h day of December, 1880, or
this notice will be plead in of their
recovery. All persons indebted to
estate requested to make immediate
payment.
This the 18th day of December,
j. W.
A. L. Blow, Adm- of S. Cannon,
Attorney.
Notice.
On the day of
A. D. t the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for cash one tract of land
Pitt county containing about one
acres bounded as follows Sit-
in Greenville township, north Bid
of Tar river, adjoining the land.-, of Win.
Whitehead. Miss S. A. Brown, the
Bridge belonging to R. Wilson
and the homestead of said Wilson, to
satisfy executions in my hands
for collect ion against B. J. Wilson and
which has been levied on said land as
the property of said J. Wilson.
Sheriff.
Per It. W. King, D.
December 5th,
A Good less
The cf the children's
Republican. A err
FIVE GREAT
THAT By William O.
and old will follow Gideon's
adventures and his sister's on
acres with laughter and breathless interest
THE NEW SENIOR AT ANDOVER.
By Herbert D. Ward. A serial of school-
life in famous Andover our Rugby. The
boys, the professors, the lodgings, the fun.
SONS OF THE
Store.
The
era merchant
enterprises
The place of business of the corpora-
shall Greenville. Pitt county.
H. C.
The duration of the corporate exist-
shall be for the period of ten years.
The capital stock of the corporation
shall be one thousand dollars, divided
into shares of par value of twenty-
live dollars each.
The stockholders of the corporation
shall not be responsible to any greater
or further extent than the assets of the
corporation, and the shares of to
which they have subscribed.
That the business of said corporation
shall be under the management of A. X.
This cf November A. D.
B. A- MOVE.
Superior Court.
j.
Co N
C. Co
T. H.
P--.-.-J -.-; Ci n C
Cobb t Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merchants,
NORFOLK, VA.
of c
We have had many years ex-
at the business and are
prepared to handle to
advantage of shippers.
Hoard and Tuition Tuition and Terms
M advertised
ho do not board
with the should consult
before engaging board elsewhere,
fur. her particulars, Address.
JOHN DUCKETT.
Principal.
h. b.
Edwards ,
Printers and Binders,
1ST. C-
We have the largest and most t
establishment of the kind to be found in
the State, and solicit orders for all classes
Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING STATIONERY
FOB INVITATIONS
BLANKS MAGISTRATES
COUNTY OFFICERS.
U Send us your orders.
N.
All business entrusted to our
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention.
PATENTS
obtained, and all business in the . S.
Patent the Courts attended
for Fee-.
We are opposite the S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patent- in less time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing i- we
advise as to free charge,
and we make no change unless we ob
Patents.
We refer, lien-, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of tinier Did., and to
is of tin I . s. Patent Office. For
advise terms and reference lo
actual clients in your own State,
address, Co.,
Washington, D, C
the Ladies
In order to stock time to
receive Fall Good;. I will
all present of
MILLINERY GOODS,
for baldness.
falling out of hair, end eradication of
dandruff is before the public I fa m now until tie of September a
Among the many who have j
wonderful success; I refer you to U
lowing named gentlemen testify All Hats on band, both trimmed and
to the of my assertion trimmed, will be old at root. My stock
Latham, Greenville. I includes many stylish
Mr. O. I of the season. I cm give you bargains.
SB.,
Any one wishing to give it a trial for
By A right. I the above named complaints can procure
down jolly story of modern Norse boys. j it from at my place of business,
Notice.
Salsa.
The Best Salve, in the world for Cut
Bruises. Sores. Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores. Chapped said land to satisfy an
On Monday the day of January A
D. I will sell at the Court House
door in die town to the
highest cash one of land
in Pitt about sixty
s and as follows Situated
in Greenville township, north side of
Tar river adjoining tin- lauds -f William
Whitehead. homestead I.
son and -is. and as the bridge
tract, or pie of land and bought from
s. the Dixon heirs by the said J.
son, and sold for the purchase money of
Chill Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
n quired. It is guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or money refunded.
Price cents per box. For sale by J.
L.
W king thought
pf a bottle be u b w
meed, only cents.
Respectfully,
ALFRED
Barber,
N. V.
I failed is no reason for not using
this medicine. Give express and post
office address. It costs you nothing
Address Medical Bureau.
Broad way. New York.
-Follow him Put your arms
about in bis need, even as lie put
his about me. Be his friend as he was
And out into this new world,
strange to me as to him, dazzling,
Notice.
my
hands for B. J.
son and which has been levied on
land as the property said II. W
A. K.
Per P. It. W. King, D. S.
Notice to Creditors.
HAVING of
of a lien created by Sec. 1783 the Superior Court of Pitt Comity on the
j, we will sell j 4th day as Administrator
AND BAN, one of the best of tie
Mary Hart well serials.
SEALED ORDERS. By Charles Rem-
Talbot. An amusing adventure
story of sheets and a flowing
CONFESSIONS OF AN AMATEUR
PHOTOGRAPHER. By Alexander
Black. Six practical and amusing articles.
LUCY First of a series of
graphic North Carolina character sketches
by Margaret Sidney. .
TALES OF OLD Twelve
true stories by Grace Dean
a Canadian author.
THE WILL AND THE WAY
By Jessie Benton Fremont
About men and women who did great things
in the face of seeming impossibilities.
THE
man. The funny Indian Fairy folk.
BUSINESS OPENINGS FOR GIRLS
AND YOUNG WOMEN. A dozen
really helpful papers by Sallie Joy White.
Twelve more DAISY-PATTY LET-
By Mrs. Ex-Governor
TWELVE SCHOOL AND PLAY-
GROUND TALES. The first will be
LAMBKIN ; Was He a Hero or a
by Howard Pyle, the artist
Postal Votes and Cash Prizes.
SHORT STORIES sifted from
on a Vegetable Cart.
M. Vail. William Preston Otis.
OW Tom Jumped a Mrs. H. F.
IS 1.50
ALFRED CULLEY, Barber.
i Greenville, March C ,
Cl .
hair.
r Cray
Mrs.
X. C.
JAMES A. SMITH,
ARTIST,
Greenville, .
have t
Cross
cs
ASTHMA
Np
I S ft
re Vi-e to I
c.
lie easiest
Chair ever used iii the art. Clean towels,
sharp satisfaction
in every instance. Call be eon
Ladies waited on at their n-i-
Cleaning clothes a specially.
BOOKS
v c.
He keeps on hand a line assortment
I of beat books publisher's prices.
Call on him for Bibles, or small.
pulpit, family or pocket she.
Hymn Books Commentaries, Diction-
I ivies, and standard works generally.
Can furnish yon any book want on
i t notice.
Sr. II. SCI I
The of
Sn. Lieut. K. P. Polly at the
Delia W. Arbutus.
By
of Code, done. .
for before the Court House door in upon the estate of Albert
Greenville, on Jan. 1st. this is to notify all persons holding claims
One the of I,. C. against said estate to their claims
This. Dec. for
d-at-c r V-
O. r.
Golden Margaret. James
C. Bullet. Kate Clark.
How Simeon and Sancho Panza Helped
the Revolution. Miss Tho
Difficulties of a Darling. L. R
One Good Prescott
ILLUSTRATED ARTICLES,
Dolls of Noted Women. Miss Seward.
Bow to Build a Military Snow-Port. An
old West Pointer. How the Cossacks Play
PolO. Madame de All Around a
Frontier Port. Lieut. F. P. Fremont. Homo
Of Charles F. A
Bound-Co. Miller. Japanese
. B. N. Indian
i. i
Se s
MADE
A.
Kites. J
Base-Ball Players. F. L. The
ton Indian A Party In a Chinese Pal-
ace. E. R.
The Funs, and be
more interesting than ever.
n-. l I,
lit
. DICE.
bar of their rec All ow-
estate will come forward and.
make
1889. J.
of Al Moore.
admit
Tale of the South Pacific.
Awake is a year. Vet.
FOR THE FOLKS.
cents a For the nursery.
Otis Little Man and a
Pa n v a Sunday reading.
of any m cent, ; of the four
D.
I would respectfully call your
ti in to the following address and as
inn to remember that can bay a
fl or of
this house cheaper than any other in the
It is the most reliable
and best known having been
for over forty years in this vicinity
That the workmanship is to
has unusual facilities for filling or-
promptly and satisfactory.
Very
to P. W. BATES
J. J.
B. C.
t t; n y w
--.-.
it. h In
with sad et
-sin,
tut
a i
,. w. no to the, who
-t.
,. w, pay all u.
,., for as.
In
.
Prof.
MEMORY
DISCOVERY AN METHOD
In
and practical tn of
the by h.
m am
Mi-nu Culture. Hie
by I c.
is not
Hit Av,
Jut .





THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR.
C.
It
Col ion
Grand, Bow
ill I he Old Brick Store.
Hotels are wet.
Have you seen the cook
stove at Latham ft
Superior is
Rye and Seed for sale.
c.
The first of a new year.
Personal.
-Mis Belle On on a visit
to week.
of
o-a- in to see v
Mrs. B. am the
days with parents in Virginia.
Mr. Willie spent part of
i In- holidays bis parents in Tar-
Mrs. Lucy A. Brown left
to visit brother in Jackson
rifle. Fin.
Miss Fleming,
a days last
Lena Harris.
Miss of Wilson, ha
been sometime visiting;
Miss Nannie King.
Master Larry who
spent the holidays
The Arm of S. T. R. Carson,
at Bethel, made an assignment Dec.
J. L. is assignee.
Mr. W. H. Flake was out
on Monday killed a meas
feel inches from tip to
We are requested to announce
that Rev. J. L Winfield will preach
at Farmville next inst.
The pop-cracker did no
damage In Greenville, except to the
pockets those them.
of tin-
held social, tan
the store recently vacated by It. It.
Lang.
Dee, M. Fen v ft Co's I it week-
Seed at the Old Brick Store.
, ,. . Mr. J. F. Starkey, who clerked
Tl-i days now gradually grow Ion-; white, new has
, fee- j position with Mr. A. Forbes.
Peanut and Bags w ,,
sale, and Bushels want-; e
led by K. C. Glenn. and Sunday morning evening.
Sec notice of dissolution of A. j j N of Tar-
Co ft Co. preached in the Methodist
Highest cash pi ice paid for cotton j Church Sunday Monday
Seed E. C. Glenn. bush- nights,
els wanted. jeT. Q. j, and wife
The usual crowds January spent the holidays with relatives in
The last six weeks of the old year
gave balmy, spring-like
Now watch the first six weeks of
in w year.
Here's to every reader of the Rb-
May peace, pros
and happiness be your
during
One week of the year has
gene, but everybody has not learn-
ed to stop dating their letters 1889
yet.
Alien Warren Son will sell
some, and fruit trees at
next Saturday. See
it Leather
lies Shoe at B. Cherry
mortgage
it.
NEW
QUARTERS I
We are now fairly settled in our
New Store
for the accommodation of our
--patrons we are
NOW PREPARED
to offer the remainder of our
FALL STOCK
at reduced figures.
Court are here this week.
One dollar bay a Solid
don't give a
if you eats possibly avoid
Tons Bulk Lime for cheap-
E. O. Glenn.
Set ices in all the churches
the Limit House Sunday.
The cock stove is the
heaviest store for the made.
For sale low by Latham
tier.
your New Year resolutions
all through the year with you.
Sow Oats early.
cheap, at the Old Brick Store.
If you have a friend send
him this year.
87.00 buys a Double Shot
at J. B. Cherry Cos.
Every in ought
to take the this year.
lot of tobacco seed for sale
by A. Forbes.
L. Smith, Administrator of D
i C. Clark advertises laud tor sale.
Try a Ban Sweet Home Flour
Best in town at J. B. Cherry
The weather during the holidays
I was the mildest our recollection.
One dollar buys a Whole Stock
Mans Shoe at J. B. Cherry ft
Good Bargains.
Old Virginia Cheroots
sold. Fit for any gentleman to
smoke, at the Old Brick Store.
dozen Eggs cash or
in trade, wanted, j. J. Cheeky, Jr.
The Spring Term of
Institute will open Monday, January
20th.
Currents, citron, nuts.;
candy, pulverized sugar at the Old
Brick Store.
The Episcopal School held
their party on the last night of the ,
old year.
My entire stock
j Jewelry must be sold by Christ-
mas on account of removal.
Moses
The Reflector hope will
M. Tucker is selling at
They left last Friday least Unity days and will have an
auction every Saturday. See ad-
Greenville.
for Florida.
Mr. L. of
went Baltimore. Monday, to take
a course at one the commercial
colleges of that city.
Mr. O. moved
ins family back to from
the country. purchased a
house in ville.
This year is on- i mer
chants to When
times are bard the ate watch-
to make a dollar go as far as
possible and they take advantage
bast bargain offered them.
Let the people know what you are
doing.
There was a wedding
in the Northern part of this county,
on after Mr. J.
J. iii. . u prosperous former
and Miss Bow, the
I.
ship,
They have best wishes.
A party was given last Thurs-
night at the residence of Mr.
A. Forties complimentary to our
clever and highly esteemed towns-
man, Mr. E. A. Jr. It was an
enjoyable affair. We Wish Bert
a successful year of study. He re-
turned Friday morning to Chapel
HIM-
who had imbibed
two much were on the ramp
age on Avenue Saturday
They destroyed one of the
street lamps and tore up some oft be
sidewalk bridges. IT the
can be found out they should be
made the subjects severe punish-
A body of a colored man named
Dick Holiday was found in the
river near yesterday
weening- lie was a timber getter
in the swamps near by am
pea-oil two weeks ago. It
was thought lie had inn
away, but the of the
show that he was drowned.
have, bought out the
dry goods and notion stock of Little
House Bra., and are offering the
same at very reasonable prices.
They are beginning business rigid
We are glad to learn that several taking a good space in the Be-
to
visitors
in last issue of the
have all returned to their respective
homes or i
bail cold that appear
not so people
not be alarmed. The will
do no damage here.
conductor on the
Scotland Greenville road
has brought his family to Green j
They have taken rooms at Hie King, new pupils have already the which
House. institute the
others will enroll i i Si,
what this
back j a
Sen.
We were informed, by the
J. N. H. that the con-
tract for the building of the
at had been
and nil those who had sub-
scribed were earnestly to
make immediate payment.
The village of Bell's Ferry, on the
Southern border of this county, has
now- begun going by its name winch
the Legislature gave it. u year
tie name to
lint on In it-
oho the of year,
H i be l i be was
by the
with the new of I he
village. The hopes ii
will develop into a flourishing town
and do full to its new name.
Cost Hist
An old colored man named Hen-
May, who lived the laud
Mr. about six miles
town, was hauling fodder from the
field last week. He climbed up on
top of a load to ride, and when the
was over some rough
he fell oil head downward
and his neck. He had been
warned a fellow- workman
against riding on top of the. load
until Use rough ground was passed,
hut replied by saying know
what I'm
Jurors.
Below are the Jurors at term
Superior
C Fore-
man, J. B. Stocks, W. 1- Maiming,
T. M. Edwards, J. B, Davis, It. C.
j Cannon, J. B. Carroll, N. Tyson,
H. C. J. J. T.
Jenkins, W. W.
White, Jerry James
Bandy, T. L. Williams. J.
H. Hudson.
B.
Bason James, Jr., J. Tyson,
Amos M. Jno. S.
J. K. W, II
H loan. Mun
WILEY BROWN.
JAMES BROWN.
NEW FIRM
Brown Bros.
At R. Williams Son's Old Stand.
------Having lint the entire stock of------
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots,
Shoes, fonts Furnishings.
Of Little, House Bro, we are determined to dispose of them at
VERY LOW PRICES.
We do not propose o sell at cost or below cost, but by buying
at a discount we can afford to sell at inch prices that will astonish
yon.
This is do Humbug. See us before buying.
Mr. Glasgow Evans has moved
his family to Greenville. He was
formerly a resilient here but for
years has lived in and
Mildred.
, Mr. Cob b, an old citizen
this town who for several years had
been an invalid, died Christmas day.
His were interred in Cher-
Hill cemetery the day following.
Mr. Owens who last year
clerked or Higgs spent
the holidays with MB people in Scot-
Jam Neck, returned last week and
bat taken a position with Cant. C.
I A. White for the year.
We glad to have a call Christ
; mas week Mr. J. K. Barrett,
Foreman that splendid
the
bis wife
t Spring Term and the public ported as to Unit j Gardner.
I next I splendid lines goods Bead their ;
week and .
Yellowley gave a
very pleasant party on Friday Bight
after at the splendid
Scotland Neck and Gram- j of Ins father, Mr. J. B.
ville train made the best run on last was highly enjoyed by-
Friday that it has ; his many young There was
made Capt, Whitaker and the prettiest bating; Of pills
Smith brought her down between the ages and
The Reflector
money is due it on
lions, a fact we would ask nil
to please make a note of.
Some of the farmers are
about, the safety of their meat.
Several who have killed hogs lately
have tears that the warm weather
will cause the meat to spoil.
The of two stamps
gave out at the Greenville
several days only one cent I
stamps could he had mailing let- L
Halifax to a
miles in hours minutes
making nine stops and doing all the
work of a mixed tram.
spent the holidays
with relatives.
Hare's to the Green
villa The wishes every
Of you may enjoy a large trade
He and prosperity this
Miss Annie year.
in
Come to see us at John S.
Smith old place, direct-
opposite our stand.
M. R. LANG,
Greenville, N. C.
A. Lemon and B. Drew
made their accustomed visit here
about the close the year,
for the turpentine farms
the States South of us. They left
with a car load Thursday
Mr. W. W. Scott, of Johnson City
Tenn, one of the contractors on the I
railroad work between thin and j
has brought family to
dining the progress of
the work They have taken rooms
at the House.
It should have been mentioned
that the return of G. A.
as Presiding Elder of Wash-
District, is a source of much
to the people
churches under his charge. is
an earnest and baa done
Here's to the The
hopes this year may bring
you favorable,
am that you
harvests.
throughout,
will reap bountiful j Slim Shew,
We regret very much that the
House ft Bro. are go-
log of business here. They have
ail their dry goods and are
out the. their
stock as rapidly as possible. They
have been among our best
men will be missed from
circles. Success to them
in whatever they engage.
There is not a livery stables
Greenville at which a fairly decent
turnout be hired. Somebody
could make out of a strictly
first-class livery.
We persons
have left the vicinity of Bethel for
Western North Ten-
Some have also left Bell's
Ferry Florida.
bring better times to the people than faithful work in this
did 1889.
Spot
All good low down for the
Cash at J. B. Cherry
The loaf of bread I ever ate
made of Point Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store.
N. Plaid
per yard, at J. B. Cherry Co's.
Mr. Paul Branch the clever Ex-
press Messenger here, who was
transferred to the main line during
the heavy holiday work, has return
ed to his between Weldon
I Greenville. Mr. of Wei-
j don, was this run during his ab-
Mr. E. A. Buck, of Balloon, Ga.,
was in to see us Christmas week and
Hides, Hags,; left five silver with us,
Eggs. Peas, Corn, Oil Ban els at the enough to ray some back
Brick Store. and carry the to
him until the middle of Mr.
Buck is a native of Pitt county and
Good lot of Horses and Mules
time if
also good Yoke Oven. Apply-
to R. B. Cotten, Bluff N. C.
came to the among
his relatives and old friends. He
has been living for several years in
per m for Sweet Scotch Georgia.
Snuff. lb sold Pitt Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
Almanac is just as good
as any other offered for sale. Its
calculations are accurate can be
depended
bushels each Potatoes,
and Peas, and pounds
Pitt county Hams wanted at H
Morris Bros.
Mink,
2.000 Fox, Otter and
Deer skins. Will more for
them than any man in town.
J. J. Cherry, Jr.
Tons Coal for sale per ton.
Small quantity cents per tub.
Do not send for coal without send-
money to pay for it. Coal is
cash. E. C. Glenn.
Goods at starvation prices at
Higgs They are selling
good boy's suits for 81.00 and men's
82.75. Nothing like it ever known
before.
Prof. Memory System is
creating greater interest than ever
in all parts of the country, and per-
sons wishing to improve their
should send for bis prospectus
free as advertised in another column
, Ornament
a sun 1-s stock of Evergreens,
Roses, Tuberoses, Chrysanthemums,
Dahlias, Apple trees, which we
will sell at auction, at the Market
House in Greenville, on Saturday.
Jan. 1890. Sale at o'clock,
Allen Son.
Syrup of Figs. Produced from
the laxative and juice of
California figs, combined with the
medicinal virtues of plants known
to be most beneficial to the human
system, acts gently the kidneys,
and effectually cleans-
the system, dispelling colds and
headaches, and coring habitual con-
On the 2nd inst. Mr. M
moved his jewelry stock
this place to Scotland Neck, where
he will future conduct business.
While from Greenville
is attended by many regrets it is
with pleasure recommend
to the good people among whom he
has gone. They will him a
competent jeweler, an honest, in-
young man, and well
worth their confidence-
The Reflector to-day
its visits for the year 1890. We
hope during the year to see it visit
homes to which it has not
heretofore been going.
The Carnage Works
shipped a handsome buggy to Way
cross, Ga., on the 1st. inst.
reputation for Que buggies
continues to grow
Forty-eight marriage licenses is-
sued in Pitt county dining the
mouth of December. How is that
for a record what every body com
plains of hard times
A kind of a circus
around this way
after Christmas gave two per-
to very small audiences.
The brass baud with it was a
three borne and a drum. It
went by the name of circus
but baa very the appearance
of the old show
through this not many years
since.
Hi years we have seen in many
a day, and we were almost
ed to Greenville possessed w
in any of them, some whom will
be .-me to develop into as
women as North Carolina holds. It
was a real treat to look on this col-
of merry people in
the midst their enjoy The
pleasure the occasion was height-
by the most delightful music
rendered by Mr. Ola and
Miss Jennie Williams violin and
piano, Mr. and Mrs. Yellowley ex-
themselves to make the guests
have just the best time
their efforts in this direction could
hardly have proven more successful.
New Grocery Store
Next door to B. C. Glenn. have opened a Grocery Store and
on hand a line line of---------
Scat. Horn. Coffee. Oil. Molasses,
Candies, Cheese. Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples, i
Bananas, Canoed Goods and most everything kept in a
first-class grocery store, as well as Tinware, Crockery, Wood and
Willow Ware, Call and see us. Goods delivered free any
where in town.
J. J. CHERRY, N. C.
Out Look
I am not after you tor taxes but want you to
read this
TO MANY
Thanking you for your kind patronage during the past. I hope. b honest
dealings, to continue U receive a share of favors. I to inform you last
my stock for is now complete I have all kinds of Candies, in
cents to cents per pound.
Apples, liaisons. Fl. Bananas, Orange, Flavoring
A runaway couple the
of Norfolk, spent a night at Ho
tel Macon last week and took the
train out from Greenville nest morn
They eloped from Virginia
and were in Elizabeth City
and order to give the old
ire ample time to cool made
the return trip around this w.
The hotel guests say the bride was
a handsome lady.
Se in Time.
In view of the hard times that seem
to be expected this year, the
thinks it advisable
the farmers to make preparation for
The tournament at on
was a very enjoyable one.
There was a large crowd present
and everything passed off pleasant-
ten o'clock the crowd
gathered to hear the and
was
delivered by Mr. Jas. L.
of our most promising
one the Principals
Hamilton Institute. His speech
as a fine one wan much enjoy-
ed by all present. There were
teen and the tilting was very-
good. Sir. Abram Baker, Jr.,
was the successful knight.
He took eleven rings, and
Miss Emma Keel of
Queen. Mr. B. i. Satterthwaite
v. took nine rings and crown-
Sallie of Washing-
ton, First Maul of Honor. Mr. J. J.
Mason, Jr., of township,
took lings and crowned
Maggie Moore, of Greenville town-
ship, Second of Honor. Mr-
Hip township, and
Mr. Will Moore, o Greenville town
Currents. tie
I ill a full line of
FANCY GROCERIES.
Greenville, N. C.
.--.-
G. GLENN.
I a x
STANDARD GUANO ACID
PULVERIZED OYSTER SHELL,
SHELL LIME. PURE DISSOLVED
COTTON SEED MEAL AND
Tennessee Wagons, for sale.
GREENVILLE. H. C. Mar. 1887.
G Cox Sou, doing business food crop both for man and j ship, each took seven rings, remit
at made an assignment on beast. An crop of Irish j in a tie, but on tilt each
toes would help wonderfully toward i Mr. Ward was successful
feeding their an early I ed
crop of oats will help out the short v
the 1st. Much of their property
being in this county the papers were
brought here to be recorded.
Tho who now paying at
to saving manure about bis
premises will have so much fer-
bills to in the fall, that
ears up a big part of the crop.
corn and fodder crops. Every far
mer should plant a small crop of
potatoes and oats.
Ricky Moore, Administrator
John Moore, advertises land for
sale.
Bad colds have not spared the
editor and some of bis help this
week.
How many of you have resolved
to do something toward building up
your town section this year
The Reflector is already to do its
will hands with
Review tells us a white-shad
sold in Wilmington on the
of December. In a few weeks the
fisherman will be dipping their nets
the Tar for this very toothsome
fish.
Dishonesty may seemingly thrive
for awhile but justice will be sure to
overtake it.
The Board of County Commission-
held their first session for 1890
on Monday.
Farmers who are going to try to-
this year should get
plant beds ready.
There was moving around
and changing the first
few days of the year.
The office cat has
converted the waste basket into
sleeping apartment.
Several horses and were
sold for debt at auction before the
Court House yesterday.
A Deputy S. Marshal arrested
a here for selling
whiskey without license.
The warm weather of Christmas
week out the flies and mos-
The flies linger.
The Whitehead steam mills
the wharf are to be refitted and
stalled up again, Mr. S. A. Redding
will be in charge.
Sunday night, January 12th, Rev.
A. D. Hunter will preach at the
Baptist on and
We sowing, what
will be the reaping Come and
hear.
Pay.
We hope no will wait to be
asked personally to become a
to the It is
impossible Tor the editor to give due
attention to bis work inside the of-
and see everybody outside.
there is a standing invitation for
every one to become a subscriber.
We also hope t hose owing for back
subscriptions will come like honest
pay up. without dodging
around every corner town to keep
out of our way.
Miss Fleming Green-
rile township, Third Maid of
or. At night a coronation ball was
given at Davenport's Hall.
SHOES
Ladies and Misses Cloaks
A. G. Cox has associated with J.
D. Carroll in the manufacture of
cotton planters, brackets,
the firm name of
Cox Carroll. See notice else-
where.
If the farmers want to make bet-
crops this year they must get to
work early and not stand around
idle. There is work to be done
about the farm in winter as well as
spring and summer.
Hew Firm.
Our popular young friends, Mess.
Wiley Brown and James Brown
In the mercantile bus-
the firm of Brown
Bros. They occupy the store in
which Son formerly-
kept, and will carry a nice stock of
dry goods and notions. The energy
and business qualifications of these
pictures success them
hi the outset. The Reflector
wishes for them a prosperous ca-
Attention is called to the
of Leopold
Tailor, who has just opened for bus-
in this He comes well
recommended and solicits the pat-
of the people here.
has got bold of
our people, but many of them have
got a grip on had colds that holds
on to them most A
large part of the town is suffering
more or with the trouble
There have been a few eases of
sickness in town that bordered on
Dr. pro
it influenza said it was
not the genuine type. We expect
it is about toe same kind other
towns are having.
Explosion.
A boiler explosion at Bell's Ferry,
Friday evening of last week, was
attended by disastrous results. It
occurred at the steam mill of
Mess. Spier and seems
to have been caused by allowing
the water to get too low and then
in a quantity of cold
water into the very hot bailer. The
boiler, engine and mill shed were
demolished, the furnace door being
blown as much as a hundred yards
away. Had the property loss been
all the disaster would not
been so horrible, but the worst part
it is that Mr. R. A. Butts
known as Dick
was killed, and three or others
were badly wounded. Mr. Butts
was blown several feet in the air,
the fall breaking his neck. The
noise of tho explosion was heard
distinctly by people eight miles
away, and sounded like tho dis-
charge of a heavy cannon.
During the month of December
the Register of Deeds issued mar-
licenses to white
colored, the names appear-
below
WHITE.
James A Williams
Stocks, Jesse Hathaway Addie
Nobles, W C Jackson and Louisa
Augustus Bell and Hester
and Kate
S T Hooker Lillie Pee
M Moore and Dan-
Moses Elks and Page
Fleming and Annie Powell,
Calvin Tucker and Josephine E
C E Davenport and
At Ford Pilgrim and Susan
and
Mary Ml H M
Henrietta Galloway, Win K Wool-
and Gertrude Baker, C C Little
and Emma Stancill, John C
an and Easter Stocks. Jas W Smith
Victoria Hill, Willie O Barnhill
and Lula Thomas, John J Gray
Ross, Van Harris and Emma
Langley, L H Smith Augusta
COLORED.
Foreman and Victoria
Riley Johnson and Louisa
Williams, James Flor-
Wilson. Noah Brown and
Susan Walter and
Moore, Jas A Spain and
Joanna Atkinson, Scott
and Worth-
ton and Louisa Wilson, John
Teel and Martha Ann Peter
Wilson and Alice Kilpatrick, John
R and Laura Williams. Na-
than Barrett and Lang,
Chapman and Lillie Dawson, John
R. Roach and Emily Morris, Bowen
and Martha A Jerry
Walker and Martha
Ruffin and Green, Smith
Mayo and Ann
Banks and Pennie Chas
Daniel Annie Boyd, Lem Teel
and W William
and Bettie E. Short,
min and Mary Newton, A Dram
Kilpatrick and Julia Wat-
sou Williams and Holden, Al
em
in
All at Panic Prices.
Our Stock is quite complete above lines, come and
cure bargains, this offer only good until January 1st.
Greenville, N.
Leopold AM
TAILOR.
Having moved to Greenville and
the rooms formerly used y Mr.
am prepared to do Tailoring
in all Us branches, aid In the best man-
Also Cleaning and Repairing.
Can show the best of references.
Have also a splendid line samples
from which to select suits, and can
the work.
L.
AUCTION
SIT
For the next Days.
I will sell at cost during the week
an auction every Saturday.
I have a largo stock of goods which
must be disposed of, and can give
great bargains to all who visit my store.
We adopt this method
of informing our old
customers and the pub-
generally that we
have returned from
New York with the
stock we have ever
carried.
The experience of two
years in the Northern
markets together with
increased capital
us to offer greater
bargains than ever.
Standard Prints
Plaids B Clothing,
Dry Goods, Shoes, and
Hats are all going at
astonishingly low
prices.
A visit from you is
requested.
Cotton and Ida
M. TUCKER. I BROWN BOOKER,


Title
Eastern reflector, 8 January 1890
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 08, 1890
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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