Eastern reflector, 26 February 1890


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





. .-
i l
THE REFLECTOR
-----Solicits your patronage
is be o
THE
REFLECTOR
Department can i
where in this Cur WorE
gives satisfaction.
Bend
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, hi Advance.
VOl IX.
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1890.
NO.
The Eastern Reflector
C.
Niter ff
O. Fowle. of Wake.
M. Holt.
of L
of Wake.
W. of Wake.
of Wayne,
Superintendent of Public Instruction
M. Finger of
Attorney F.
in, of Buncombe.
Chief Justice N. H. Smith, of
Wake.
Associate S. of
of
E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and
C. of Burke.
SUPERIOR COURT.
Pint TL Brown, of
Beaufort.
Second Philips, o
Third O. Connor, of
son.
Clark, of
Wake.
District John A. Gilmer, of
Clifford
Sixth T. of
Seventh C. of
Cumberland.
A. of
Iredell.
Ninth F. Graves, of
Surry.
Tenth G. of
Eleventh M. Shipp, of
Twelfth H-
of Buncombe.
U. Vance, of
Matt. W. Ransom, of
House of District
Thomas G. Skinner, of Perquimans.
Second P. Cheatham col,
of Vance.
Third W. of
Pender.
Fourth IT. of
Kai-h.
Fifth W. Brower. of
Sixth Rowland of
m S. Henderson,
Eighth W. II. A. Cowles
Ninth G. Ewart of
GOVERNMENT.
A.
A. K. Tucker.
Register of H. James.
B. Cherry.
S. L. Ward.
B- Harris.
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair-
man. Guilford C. V, Newton,
W. A. James. Jr., T. E. Keel.
of
Chairman J. S. and J. D.
Cox.
School Superintend
of F. W. Brown.
TOWN.
G. James.
F. Evans.
Treasurer M. R. Lang.
T. Smith.
R.
Ward, B. N. Boyd ;
Slid Ward. R. Jr., and
3rd T. J. Jarvis and M.
R. Lang; 4th Ward, W. N. Tolbert.
GIB IS
The New bows her stately
head.
And she fixes her lip
In a firm, hard way, and then let go
In spasmodic
her specs
Ai z th In I face a smile ;
she out her lip, like an
open
And a bean meanwhile.
The St. Louis says never a word.
And you'd think she was rather tame.
With her practical views d the matter
in hand,
. But she gets all the same.
The Baltimore girl, the pride of the
South,
In her clinging and soulful way.
Absorbs it all in a way.
As big as a bale of hay.
The Chicago girl gets a grip on herself.
As she carefully takes off herbal;
Then she grabs up the prize in a
ed way.
Like a terrier shaking a rat.
The Washington girl, so gentle and
sweet,
Lets her lips meet the coming kiss
With a rapturous warmth, and the
youthful souls
Float array on a sea bliss.
Washington
The Charlotte girl, she beats them all.
So charming graceful and good.
As as Eve before her fall.
She'd warm your best heart's blood.
The girl receives a kiss
As every good girl ought;
She takes It not at all amiss
If it along unsought.
Sun-
The girl is the best girl
of all.
Her claims cannot e denied.
For the sweet young Miss will receive no
kiss
the nuptial knot is tide.
Times.
The Greenville girl don't at all.
But gets married just same.
And after that event has passed,
he kiss gets up in a flame.
Bad Boy.
many of it may not sell the one as the
and constitutional at an equal rate to all f
was in close and deadly struggle
It issued stamps at three cent-,
, , . and then for i he greater convenience
wit. the money power the North
which, spirit of dilation, ultimately it can
hat joined the fighters for the them at the general govern
ton in the West, and which has has the right, as the U. Sn
Mince, tamed for the Union has decided it has, to
for monopoly and for absolute control or the
MM, and into defeat for j volume of the currency, is there
for local self . in or philosophy
for evil liberty, i may not in
yon loan me WOO on this so- j business
I said a young friend or mine of at of
The government has
to a b inker in an Eastern town
some time ago. The security was
admitted to be unquestionable.
see about it. Comeback
said the banker.
went to buy an overcoat yes
said the borrower, the
merchant sold it to me at once and
was anxious to sell. I come to buy-
some money of and you
you are going to let me have it, and
ready solved the It hat
already exercised the power of is-
suing a volume sufficient to do the
business of a favored of the
country and a favored class of its
citizens at low rates of interest
Can't i lie be enlarged
Some of us down here already
get money at high rates; bow much
tum exercise of the to
yet yon put me off till I the
want it now or not at Do you
know why a holder of money can
ford to be independent and even
incur v does it take to give us
at low Everybody who has
learned his A B G's In finance knows
indifferent There is a monopoly u as easy for the gov-
in the money. The borrower
lender both feel this and act
A monopoly in any other
to make money cheap and
and plentiful as it is to make it high
and scarce T It is high and scarce
here now because the speculator
would
similar methods of business A mo-
CHURCHES.
First and
Sundays, morning and night. Rev
D. D., Rector.
Sunday,
and night. Meeting
night. Rev. R. B.
every Sunday,
Inc and Meeting
night. Rev. A. D. II
Pastor.
Third
morn-
every
John,
morn-
every
tinier.
Greenville No. A. F. ft A.
M., meets every 1st Thursday and
night 1st and Sunday at
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow, W. M.,
G. L. Sec.
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets
every 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ms-
sonic nail, F. W. Brown, H. P.
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F.
meets every Tuesday night. O. W.
N. G.
insurance Lodge. No. K. of H.,
first and third Friday night.
D. Hasten, D.
Pitt Council. No. A. L. of n., meets
very Thursday night. C. A. White, C.
POST OFFICE.
Hours for all business from P A.
W. to P. M. All mail distributed
on arrival. The deliver-- will
b kept open for minutes at night
after the Northern mail is distributed.
N Mail arrives d illy
at P. M. and departs at
A. V.
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland
mails arrives at
If. and depart at P. M.
Washington, X
Roads, and Grimesland
malls dally at
and departs at A. M.
Ferry, Mills.
Ha and Pullet malls arrive Tuesday
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and
Vanceboro. Black Jack and
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M.
and departs Friday at A M.
J. J. PERKINS P. M
Rev. A. D. Hunter's
Appointments,
1st
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and
night, Greenville Baptist church, also
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night.
Sunday, morning and night. Beth-
el church.
Rev. E. C. Glenn's
For preaching on Bethlehem Mission.
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at
tangs School House, 1st at S
o'clock
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock.
Shady Grove, S at
4th at o'clock,
i, Sunday
The Dollar.
The of
Special to State Chronicle.
you cash this
asked or a banker one day.
be said, have no
than will supply our regular
There was no question about the
being ample, and he admit-
it was perfectly good.
don't yon use your credit in New
York, which you say N
and loan out the money here at
rates I loan on
he replied. He could not put-
ting it out on our long time
ties. He would n it have been able
to get it in when This
That the we need
At our daily business with is at
That the Yankee is
of our securities an I loans
only i short terms.
That the loaned is
still under his control, at. his
and he keeps to see if It
will come.
That we cannot turn his
can pay
its debts but once a year and it j
must have long time or is at
a fatal disadvantage.
That the only is i
country is totally to
THE MAIN INDUSTRY IN THE SOUTH.
A pretty good one
transaction with the Yankee's
But the Yankee has not left
of money and consequent
mercantile to himself
and consequent destruction of our
credit to the secret innate
which he has juggled into
dollar by and covert
He has fortified his
also wild some open legislation
Grown confident bold in his
game, he has enacted
That the National Bank
shall not loan money on real estate
security-
They shall loan only on
to days time.
Having desired a system
not work In any way to the
advantage of the main industry in
the system
which was bound, ultimately, any-
how to work its ruin by putting the
farmer at a fatal disadvantage in
obtaining credit and he
enough to voice the spirit of
bis in the very terms of
his legislation, and actually names
the interest be is seeking to enslave.
Be it said to the eternal honor or
the Sooth that at the time of the
passage of the National Banking
Act, it bad no representation in
Congress. Its voice patriotism,
which had so often sounded the
alarm when the
of the North had plotted treason
against agriculture, drowned
in the din of war. The Sooth,
statesmen bad founded this govern
meat, and it through so
in the carrying trade be-
tween two points breeds insolent
railroad officials. If ordinary mo-
divides the people into class
es and separates their interests,
how infinitely more potent for snob
purposes is in money.
Let the mutterings of discontent in
fifty thousand homes in North Car-
answer my question.
Two hundred million worth
of property in North
million a half people an-l
probably not live million dollars In
circulation
Among the masses, in the largest
richest section the State,
most no circulation except the lieu
bond the mortgage, which
makes but one circuit a year Our
politicians may not know, but the
people feel there is not enough
money circulation not
enough in As-
Mortgagee's, and
sales show it. High rates of inter-
est communities where
is stagnant, m it so plain that a
fool may run and read it.
editor.-, and
who say business requires you
to stand in the watch and
sound the alarm of danger, it
begin now to dimly dawn upon yon
that there may lie rotten
about the system of Federal finance
Yes, I know want good
that will any
but you like to have one
that would circulate your
constituents low enough to
In what school of
did you that the
dollar, which rarely migrate- ;
here, is the best In what, mental
sweat did discover that the am- j
i . ii , . i I great
dollar which always ; .
. . , Borrowers there get. it At was
away from your constituents
J.
P. NO.
Carolina.
Borrower Manteo
applies for 810.000 in
Raleigh money tender employs
in City to find him
reliable agent in Em
ploys agent in Manteo to
status of b
rower
per cent.
The Agent at E. City.
Agent at Manteo.
Suffers delay and great
Pays extra per cent on account
of distance from lender.
Borrower in worth ;
910.000 on his note
without delay, without any extra
rates without agents.
York City.
Advertisement in the Times;
to loan at per cent, on
long
Money Lender.
Application from North Carolina
for at per cent. j
cant worth
Cannot accommodate you.
Yon may be worth acres
land, but, I do not know the mi-
your land.
Would require a very ,
system of agents to keep us posted
on the nature of securities.
Yon are too far m- to as j
certain with ease and accuracy your
credit and financial standing.
Our capitalists had rather in- i
j in New York at lour
j per than North Carolina seen
at eight.
st Lesson
Money l heap.-. I up at the
SUn SCENE IN THE SOUTHERN PART
OF THE FIELD.
Mole standing on his tail ea.
log the I of the era.
I'm-.-
is plenty of manure the
to the stalk.
2nd Provincial
No, there is only seven.
Common Sense. But the tn n-
is it has applied to the
corn.
Old Farmer The manure
all heaped up ever yonder.
. Politician You can't under-
contraction.
Old Farmer But I can see
them heaps, and there's none down
here. I've always heard it was
mighty poor farming. Their scat-
machine, if they've got one,
don't scatter.
Politician I
guess the leaders el the party know
what they are about.
hereafter, open uses the rod
upon Is he not a wise Father,
and does he not know how to train
Ms children Solomon tells to
train a child in the way he
should go and then gives us after-
wants some useful hints to how
that training is to effected. In
They Don't Go Together.
Scotland Democrat
North Carolina is a good enough
the people would read mote
and Mt
The Memorial Volume.
The Wink la and Soon to Us
The Grady Memorial
volume, containing the life, writings
and the Mr. Grady,
There is th
I above quotation iron our able cons of preparation
giving these hints, the rod figures ; ,,;, V well known house
conspicuously. There i at- times Tie of or
more in a application ., Sew and will probably be
hickory switch than two M . i,., during th- mouth
lather, y o , Marc.
or mother, ii you love your child, Millions of wealth Volume will contain an in-
control him, and if the rod is no- ,.;,.,, i,,.,,,.,,,, ,.,. interesting sketch of life of Mr.
use it. unless are wiser fro,,, pen of Mr. Joel
than Solomon or the Bible. When
ever a man or woman gets wiser
than the are reminded for-
that all the fools are not dead.
the suggests Io bring it up the Constitution,
The people need know re
and the to the work
A second evil we men-
is that of allowing girls not yet
out of their short dresses Io
themselves voting ladies; to re-
Old Farmer Yes, them This evil is very closely allied will
heaps didn't grow there just so.
Somebody was knowing to if.
Shifting Scenes.
visitors, ,,,
then they need b Ho- w
or Conner-.
The work is compiled by
Mr. former to workers
the n, and will
all of his s, some of his
most Important letters and writings
con-
them. To know our resources
means a great deal. It does not
simply mean to commit to memory
1.1
I he number of iron mines, go
j mines, copper mine.--, granite beds.
Yankee philosopher sitting on the
manure pile by the river
It's the problem that vexes
me.
, water powers, and of oilier
the one just mentioned; in is; for each and I lamented young
the natural result of its exist- a lo commit to memory a hi
What sad mistake do parents I to whole
make when encourage their development of this great State, and sale of this
daughters to act. Ah rho J alter deducting the
knows how many hasty and unwise , , ours ., will be devoted
marriages are the result of j 0- Most -illy we lo of Mr. Grady's family
Scene on A sand in North I is indulgence. Can a girl four I something of what is around to children, mother and
Carolina. j teen or fifteen years old decide the mt , much. will be the sole benefit
Unprotected to of her j ,,,.,., for this
It's the empty stomach on ice t make of their theories. his is the only volume relating
problem that vexes us. An-V The says that of Mr. Grady that is pub-
Lesson- happens to a and is a good State authority. It is covered
Money and manure must h has people would read and right applied by Mrs.
scattered to do much good. handsome face, can win the heart, the reading and It saW that there are
It is a bail banking system
that banks up money and
too high in one place.
It is bad farming and
where the distributing ma-
chine doesn't distribute money and
W. J. P.
That Need Correcting.
Recorder,
It is a gift, or a grace, devoutly
to longed to lie able always
to see the sunny side every
inhere are clouds about
lo see their silver lining. There
are, ho ranch evil, much sin,
and much imperfection in the world,
the man or woman of the j
and turn the head of such an coupled preparation con-
cent and guileless creature, together. parts or Mr. Grady's speech-
dude may not he worth the clothes j just here is one of cur great biographical
on his back; may be utterly worth-j man sketches. The Constitution desires
less as a yet if you don't ,. read , to give notice that above is
control inexperienced child, he ho bad the time. authorized edition of a
may become law. About j of this character and asks the
the first thing he will do after mar- j he can not for
your fifteen or sixteen time to lead. six to
old daughter, will be to settle down T . . pages, printed in
into the best room R or- s, , , , A d
into tin neat room is , busy containing four handsome steel en-
and stay until his welcome your I d , ,
are worn to a From , ,., The Southern agent for the sale
twelve to eighteen is the best period
of a gill's life, and she ought to be
kept at school much as possible.
Her mind and her he
carefully cultivated. She should be
carefully taught domestic duties.
of this volume is Mr. B. Luther,
lie would manage it intelligently as
I Caused
he does now Horn three. to apply agencies
The laboring man needs to read J can address No. White-
more, hall Street, Atlanta, Ga.
Then there is audio r ,
high with some, that pro I Census of North
leaves them in debt, is tho
soundest For whose benefit is it
sound f
is says law.
and says the
establish says
the Constitution. How about the
a financial system by
which a small class of citizens get
at four per vent to
nothing, a vast multitude must
pay from eight to twenty cent t
Is there nothing suspicious about
a system makes easy
and at the North and
scarce and difficult the South and
Wen t
Are we to the of
Wall street the Yankee's
T Are our leaders
of thought certain that the Yankee
has in a
system which loans at
lo rates to great speculators and
no rates to farmers-which makes
money cheap among robbers and
scarce among their victims Does
not general government claim
control as complete over
Don of money as of the postal
vice I the government charge
the rich and the poor alike two cents
for postage stamps f Is there any
sound reason in law or philosophy
why rich man should pay two
cents his stamp and two cents
for his dollar, and the poor man pay
two cents for bis stamp and from
eight to twenty for his dollar f It
government controls the value
the volume Of dollar as it does
the and the volume of
is there any good and
reason heaven why
unable talcs.
Borrowers fur away get it at
ruinous rates.
Borrowers very far from the
don't get it at all.
Agricultural borrower fares
worse than any.
2nd
Borrower at the gets
money directly the lender.
The greater the center tho
lower the rates.
Distant borrowers get it
through agents.
The greater the distance tho
greater the delay and the greater
the uncertainty.
Fool's Garden.
Manure piled up in several
great heaps in the North side of the
to make it fertile all
over.
Com planted all over the field.
RESULT.
Corn on the manure pitas ex-
luxurious.
Corn near the manure
mighty good.
Corn near enough to gut some
of the washings of manure piles fair
to middling.
Corn far away on the South-
edge of the field exceedingly
low, and spindling.
SUB SCENE IN THE NORTHERN PART
OF THE FIELD.
manure pile Con-
This is a glorious n
On manure pile Y.
Millionaire is
v own native
Idle Yea. yea and
crowd the beat part
of it.
come in contract evil, sin, temp
n, and who vex his
soul, indeed he one,
We endeavor as as within us
to avoid being pessimistic,
but we have notice I so often certain
forms of which art
modern in their nature, that we
hope to do some good by at
ten lo them.
Tho first we ion is the
failure of parents to control their
This is noticeable
in larger towns and cities.
Boys when quite young are permit-
to roam at will wherever fancy-
may dictate. They form associates
among the vile wicked, rapidly
acquire their manner-, their
slang phrase, Wicked
and boys are almost, sure to teach
tho that come their in
to disregard the commands
or desires their parents, tho
creating a disposition to rebel rt-
parental Such
books as Bad which
found such an immense sale a few
years since, have done much to
fuse among the boys especially
our land quite false of filial
duty. If is considered smart to
outwit the It is quite
funny to worry and vex very life
out of hi m. The mother, likewise,
comes in for her share of the
and vexations caused by so
called funny pranks of her progeny.
Parents are often to blame for this
state of things. Our fathers con-
trolled their children; but now you
often find fathers, and mothers, too,
who cease all effort to control their
children before they become of
age. Many a boy now twelve or
thirteen years of age considers him-
self a and nuts accordingly.
He often learns the swaggering gait
and uses the words of the
rowdy. His youthful lips stained
with tobacco; or else he struts along
the streets with a cigar or cigarette
his mouth. The opinion has be-
come quite common that the rod
is a. relic of barbarism and that it
should be utterly banished from
school-room and from the fireside.
Census Superintendent Porter has
pleat temperament must at vents our progress; and that is the
opportunity to study music and j those who do read- ,, ,.
drawing in connection with s., . visions for the taking
studies. Above all, instill the proceedings in Congress,, the census or this State. The Ii-
her mind heart the of
Jesus Christ. Then yon have a no-
emigration, cyclones, or other visions are as
. Ber-
thing that makes their hair stand , ., -i.
, I tie. t
specimen womanhood, and on cud for fear, and then three craven
she lives lo many a man what
Cat
tick, Dare,
Greene, Hyde, Lo-
la many instances before
she will have enough to refuse young man has intelligently read Pitt, and
enough to appreciate her
any other .-he will know history of Ins own State he con j
I Washington counties.
Second Districts Chatham,
. ,. , , , . . ;
make his Ix-me happy oh, that educated people Halifax,
up children that aid be an honor to not to stay in tho sunshine; Mash, Northampton, Orange,
her, a lo their country his board and a suit cT Vance, Wake, Warren,
mankind. We do extra lo somebody's More. Wilson
,. k n. o.-ii m ,
an, c Too , ,,,, Do,
needs more emphatic sons in business before they pi,,,, New Hanover,
the our we are now Know how ox or tender,
is once fully catch Idea
that Hay an- ladle, that
a horse. When boys get a little
educated many of them don't want
to soil hands. don't like
they the;. , w any longer
it i to go any, wan he pale dyspeptics,
where ninny men are ashamed of their
are almost sore lobe of and go too out
and Sampson
Davie, th.
Iredell, Mecklenburg,
pupils at sch and generally
form quite premature often
Deeds to labor more.
, Stanley, Stokes,
way to hide it. The reading man Surry, Union, counties.
Fifth Al
Ashe, Buncombe,
well, Cherokee,
Cleveland, Graham,
our people down this evil, and i 1st. It is entirely vegetable, con-j wood, Henderson, Jackson, Lincoln,
happy Let the common of g g
sense and Christian sentiment
let our parents remember no mineral or poison any
that they are , I kind, and builds up the system from
for moral intellectual rain-
of their children. Ah how
many unhappily married women
I there tire in the land today,
I how many parents there are whose
gray hairs are hastening with
row to assure that would be generations.
their lives could be lived done it.
tho first dose.
It cures Cancer of the Skin.
No other remedy or treatment was
ever known to cure.
It cures hereditary Blood
Taint, even in the third fourth
No other remedy has
Madison, Mitch-
ell, Polk, Swain. Tran-
counties.
again .
A Headache.
4th. It has never failed to
Scrofula King's all
its forms from the system.
5th. It cores contagions Blood
N. C. Farmer. j Poison in all its stages by
A scientific writer j ting tho horrible virus from
if taken at the right moment, will system, thus giving relief from all
in event an attack of nervous head- ; the consequences or this bane or the
ache. If the subjects of such head- j the human family,
aches will symptoms of blood hail been so out of or-
It DANIELS.
C. C DANIELS
N C
its coming, they can notice that it
begins with a feeling of weariness,
and heaviness. This is the time
that a sleep of an hour or even two,
as nature guides, will effectually
prevent headache. If not taken
then it will be too late, for after
the attack is fairly under way, it is
impossible to get sleep until far into
have at our homes an tho com
inned book called the Bible, which
very strongly commends the rod
when needed; aid we are fully per-
that a more liberal use of
in these days for doctors to for
bid having their patients waked to
daring the summer of that
I virtually had no health at all. I
had no appetite; nothing I ate a-
greed with me. I was feeble, puny,
and always feeling bad. I bad tried
various remedies without receiving
any benefit, until at com-
on Swift's Specific
That medicine increased my weight
from pounds to pounds in a
few mouths, made me as well
and healthy as any man now living.
take medicine they are asleep S. S. S. Is undoubtedly the greatest
the hour comes round, blood purifier to day on the
so called relict of barbarism j the lesson
work a wonderful reformation
.,. ., , ,, . that sleep is better for the sick than
among the juvenile population
many of towns and cities. Our
Father in heaven
an
medicine. But it is not well known
that sleep is a wonderful preventive
in heaven, in training disease better than tonic
d fitting us for our sphere of use- tors or
can continent. John
No. North State St., Chicago,
Treatise on Blood Skin
sea mailed free.
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO.,
At la Ga.
a mm i mm.
n. c
L. JAMES,
DENTIST,
N.
A LEX L. BLOW,
KY-AT-L A W,
GREENVILLE.
J. E. M
J. M. TUCKER.
J.
MOORS, TUCKER MURPHY,
A T-LA W,
N. C.
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY
T A SKINNER,
A AW,
N. C.
B G. JAMES,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice In all tho courts. Collection
I B.
ATTORNEY-A W,
N.





THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
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; one-quarter column one year,
Transient Advertisements. One inch
one week. ; two weeks. one
month Two inches one week,
two weeks, ; one month,
Advertisements inserted in Local
Column as reading items, cents per
line for each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad-
and Notices,
and Sales,
Summons to etc. will
be charged for at legal rates and must
BE PAID FOB IN The RE-
has suffered some loss and
much because of having no
fixed rule as to the payment of this class
of advertisements, and in order to avoid
future trouble payment in advance
will lie demanded.
Contracts for any space not mentioned
above, for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office
in person or by letter.
Copy tor Sew Advertisements and
all changes of advertisements should be
handed in by o'clock on
mornings in order to prompt in-
the day following.
The Reflector having a large
will be found a profitable urn
through which to reach the public.
Rocky Mount Fires.
There were three large fires in
Rocky Mount last week. All the
fires are said to be of incendiary
origin, the supposed work of the
many congregated in that
town for the purpose of
The emigration agents made
themselves very troublesome
around that section until the
become so aroused and in-
that they drove every one
out of town who there.
This made the mad and
they started in with a
to burn up the town.
three fires occurred in three sue- -even after Lee's surrender at
recourse could be
ed and most reliable statistician of
age, in respect to id a
paper read a few mouths ago before
the Cotton
of New England,
Appalachian chain gathering
lure from Gulf Stream
spreading it over the ferule fields
or United States, has fixed
supremacy in cotton
It more evidence is desired I refer
the searcher after truth to what is
known as the history of the cotton
fain abroad and
caused by the war the
States, which partially cut off
American crop. The first gnu at
was the signal that marked
a lively advance in the Liverpool
cotton market, was main-
with a rapid pace upward
at the Office at
C,
Mail Matter.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY
Nearly Completed.
Th load be in
Should
Things have hustling about
the railroad bridge and over
that part of the road bed lying in
town during the last week or so
will continue to hustle until the
depot is reached. The cause for
this seems to be a certain agree-
under which the railroad
authorities are bound. When the
extension from Scot land Neck to
Greenville was projected and be-
to look like it might be n real-
some of the railroad men
Greenville to ascertain what
inducements her citizens would
offer to secure the road. Of course
was wanted and some of
our business men were into
signing an agreement that
would pay all the cost in excess of
for the right of way from
Creek to the sight
for the depot in Greenville,
thinking the excess be only
a small amount. it came
down to the rub of getting the
aforementioned right of way the
cost of the same loomed up to
times double what was
pated. Our is the
few who were in this agreement
found out they were caught, but
to the After
much discussing and contending a
compromise was effected by the
signers to the agreement paying
over to the railroad the sum of
the railroad authorities
then entering into an agreement
to forfeit the same if the cars were
not running into Greenville on the
1st of April, 1890. For a month
or so past the indications have
pointed to the failure to get the
cars in town by the time
said indications eating a slight
hope among the payers of the
that they might yet finger
the money again. But there is no
accounting for what a railroad can
do when the test comes, the
indications now arc that the road
will be over in time. All the
force possible has been
at the bridge and the work
fairly goes on with a hum. Keep
p the hustle, gentlemen or you
might lose the Hun ah
for Greenville and her railroad
Now, to be serious, the early
completion of this railroad over
into town should be the source of
much gratification to all the
and the town is to be
upon it. Already much
benefit has been brought to the
community by the completion of
the road to within mile of us,
and its coming on within and
through the corporate limits will
be sure to bring a still greater
volume of business and trade. We
take it as the beginning of a new
era for Greenville, the fogy-
ideas to be superseded by an
air of progress and activity. At
no far distant day we expect to see
more than one railroad to
Greenville, with street cars, water
works, electric lights and various
factories in operation. With such
a splendid country surrounding as
is found here there are no
reasons why all these things
and more should not be.
Greenville ought to rejoice over
the completion of this road and
the Reflector suggests that we
get up a celebration in every way
worthy the town. Let all the
railroad authorities be invited to
come down and spend day
with as and lets show them what
e fine section ours is. As the cars
will be over in town at an early
day preparation for the
should begin at once. What
Mayor James and the
mess men the town to this The
wants to hear from
you. Let as
nights. The first was a
storage warehouse belonging to Mr
R. D. Armstrong which occurred
Sunday night. The loss was
Monday night the
large carriage factory of Hackney
Bros, was burned. Their loss was
no insurance. Early Tues-
day night the floral hall at the
fair grounds was burned. It was
thought that the idea of the
diaries was to attract all the white
men to the Fair grounds, about a
mile distant, and then tire the town,
but enough of the men remained
in town to keep it sufficiently
The Infantry turned out
and peel to guard the town.
seems to be no doubt of the
fires being and of the
being The
were holding was
alleged to be Knights of Labor
meetings, some of the women
heard to say the fires would
not have occurred but for the ac-
of the people in preventing
the agents taking away
the Capt. Henry Thorpe
received a note through the post-
office saying that if the Light In-
fantry were under arms that night
every single member be
killed, sooner or later, if the
to shoot them one by-
one from ambush. The
Alliance also a note
which said the way and only way
to stop the fires was to send a parse
of three or four hundred dollars to
Professor Martin, of Petersburg.
Martin was a emigration
agent who had been run out of
Rocky Mount.
Just what the people of Rocky
Mount ought to is hard for an
outsider to determine. Such a
state of affairs is unfortunate. For
the time being the greatest excite-
prevailed among the citizens
of the town. We hope all has
grown quiet ere this the race
troubles at an end.
The Legislature of New York
has passed a bill appropriating
for the World's Fair
of 1892.
The Board of Trustees of th
North Carolina University held
their annual meeting last Thurs-
day and declared themselves
against the frame of football being
played with other teams. The
Board was wise in its action.
A second article from Col.
Skinner upon the hope of the
South, in which he answers
brought against his former
article and maintains his position,
is published elsewhere in this
paper. The article speaks for it-
self.
The Hope of the
The Col. Barry Skinner, Ex-
plains Dejections and Main-
His Position.
, NO.
Greenville, N.
This writer has watched with in-
the comments of press on
the article entitled of
the which appeared
Frank Leslie's a short time since,
and which advanced a plan for
governmental interference to
vent the unnecessary sacrifice the
American cotton
The premises the argument ad-
therein stand admitted
to wit; that the price of our great
staple can be controlled by the gov-
had to our fields to supply the de
But want no further data than
that the Southern States
produce per cent of the
cotton crop the world, which gives
us a monopoly, and it is axiomatic
that a country that has the
of any production can regulate
its price, analogous to the
that the producers of
any given article of
consumption whose production is
not greatly excess the de-
can control the price of the
whole.
The the question assumes this
Should the government
interfere, take advantage of its
and exercise its in the
premises I Mm government
permit so great an industry to tan
and those engaged in it to
become paupers by raising a staple
so essential to the comfort of the
world, and be forced to accept
prices fixed by the Liverpool Cotton
Exchange, whose manipulation,
backed by world, is
to command the American crop with
as little money as and to
this end brings to bear great con-
capital, which is multi-
plied a thousand fold through op
on the exchange for the
purpose of low prices, when
it the power to prevent it
The cotton producing industry is
second to no in the United
States, and deserves the fostering
care the government. The con-
of the crop, from planting to
harvest, as well a the statistical
position of the product, with the
regularity of the daily course of the
is around world,
and its staple is as as gold
across the counters of every bank
in Christendom It constitutes in
value nearly one-half of all our ex-
ports. Without it we would be
largely the nation on
the balance trade with other
portions of the world. the
greater purchasing power we can
give to this our great export crop
the better it is not only the pro
at the South but for all sec-
the country, which hold a
joint in our national wealth
to which cotton is the largest con-
Is it right fourteen
millions of people estimated
population engaged in this
try, j at the expense of great labor,
of soil and sacrifice
health, to produce per cent, of a
great staple which is necessary to
of fourteen
millions of people, estimated
population the wot at prices
that are to the producers,
when this can be prevented by gov-
interference, and the in-
converted into a to
them without any injustice to any
other interest
But, says the vigilant partisan,
who has the of his par-
at heart more than the material
prosperity of Ins people, your sys-
smacks of protection, pro-
is anti-Democrat Dem.
is essential to the social
peace, contentment and
of the South. I trust my status
the Democratic party is fixed be-
the shadow of question.
I place the social
people far advance any
other and there is no sac-
would make or advise to
made to secure it.
Those who know me know that I am
thorough accord with my party
the tariff, that I am
in taking this new novel
by a desire and, as you may
put it, interest as all have
seeing simple justice meted out to
fields. And my position, with-
out hostility to my
party, is that they are entitled to
the same protection as is or
may be hereafter extended to the
shop-; a nutshell, that
protection or no
and that my is
of all or none.
Those journals who for zeal
or any other interest desire to
summarily dispose of the system as
anti-democratic and impracticable
ought in justice to give the article
and foreign
weak from the assault of the strong
the poor and dependent from the
exorbitant and unjust
exactions of the great
producing classes from the power
and rapacity of combines,
lies and trusts. If advocating such
a principle that contends for
but justice, to those field- from
which we must forever draw not
only oar livelihood bat our
happiness and prosperity makes me
a protectionist then I shall have to
be classed as one. that be
son make the most For I
cannot permit such a shadowy line
as this to between me and a
fraught with so much good
to an unfortunate and wronged
who have been devastated by
war, plundered by carpet bag
robbed by unequal
of their constitutional right of bank
means of
and Lee's surrender have had
such an unfair and unequal race in
that march of progress which we
so much about but can never
hope to attain through unequal
la
Another objection is that it bears
the ear-marks of paternalism. To
be plain, brief and sensible, it is
folly to stickle over this growing
tendency of the government. Let
realize it ask the Pater to be J.
just to all of his children for as
long as holds a monopoly in
banking and facilities,
disguise it. as we may, is a pa-
government. Restore to the
States their constitutional right
over banking and monetary matters
and we ask the general
Letter.
R -T r I
From regular Correspondent.
Washington, C. Feb.
Mr. Harrison has been trying to
lay wires tins week that will result
in his controlling the Pennsylvania
delegation to the next national re-
publican convention, tie returned
to the While House today from
from the pleased ex-
his lace when he got off
the train be evidently thinks he
What Senator Quay, who
is on a trip to Florida,
will think of this invasion of bis
can not. be said, but he will
certainly broadly at the
idea of Mr. Harrison Or Mr. anybody
else controlling the Pennsylvania
delegation without bis assistance
He owns Pennsylvania
can machine.
Politics have got into the contest
for the World's Fair, which opened
m the House which is
to be finally decided next week.
Members of both parties fear
its location will have upon the
Presidential and best
informed now believe that unless
the fair is held at Washington it
will not be held at all. Mr.
says it cannot constitutionally be
under the control of the Gov-
anywhere in the Dis-
of Columbia. Mr. Mills heads
about sixty members who are op-
posed to its being held all, and be
expects to be joined by enough dis
appointed members, after site is
selected, to defeat bill providing
for the fair. the present stat-
without hazard of loss and
to the benefit of all sections of our j referred to credit exemplifying
country. No journal has taken issue very strikingly the gross inequality
with this, as some term, bold
On the contrary, the best
informed men and journal.- concede
that the Southern States hold the
supremacy of the world in pro-
of this great staple, both as
to quality and quantity. Man-
commenting
the article referred to,
as it may to avoid it, the world at
large will have to draw the bulk of
its cotton from the Southern States,
and consequently we can and
to what its selling price
shall be instead cf leaving that to
be dictated by the
Hon. J. M. Husk, Secretary of
at Washington, in a re-
cent letter upon Southern progress,
supremacy which the
South possesses in the markets of
the world as a cotton producing
country there little reason to be-
will ever be forfeited. The
natural facilities of South for
production of this great cotton
crop, aided and directed by
must assure for all time
supremacy of the Southern States
as the cotton producing region of
In the same line
thought, Secretary in
his fiscal reports, refers to the ac-
movement the cotton crop
and the good prices commanded,
drawing largely on old country,
as saving the United States from a
threatened financial Mr.
Edward the heat
is-a-
of present tariff while
throwing its arm protective
care around the in-
of the country, leaves
fields unprotected as a prey
.-peculation, monopoly and trusts
both at home and from
government under which
live possesses the power to protect
all alike- in a new and differ-
manner but in results the same
by securing per cent more for
the cotton crop than is now
on general average from op-
of a speculative market
which is not governed as political
economists would have it by
great economic law of supply and
demand but is entirely within the
control of the money power as is
worked out by ways that are dark
through the exchanges at home
abroad. And yet the bold fact must
be admitted that these fields by
adoption of system I have
or that which the Alliance
has advanced, can be placed beyond
the manipulators of
the exchange and those engaged in
industry be freed from the slay
which baa been fastened upon
them and the industry Itself be
made pi oil table by meting
oat justice, to them- .
So that in lieu of protection it
justice I plead for say people and
secures to each and all of w-
Burnt fur no favors; but as it , . ,
holds the reins over these and only us- b Ta
grants these great privileges to a of combination may be made to
few and a favored
we are compelled to appeal to our
government for help to keep the
great classes from slavery
to this privileged
effort is powerless to avert the
dangers that threaten
popular cry against this, and
almost every other plan conceived
in the interest of the tillers of the
soil, is that it is not practical.
seems practical to the favored
class and the old school of political
economists except to move in those
economic grooves which have
nine hundred and ninety-
nine of every thousand of the pop-
the old world and is
tined to do the same for this. The
thousandth man and bis allies are
always ready to snub every
as impracticable by that
means shut off all investigation.
Practical, as meant to bear upon
the subject matter under consider-
is that can be
plied to The plan suggested
can be applied to use, when
plied will accomplish the purpose in
view and is therefore practical. It
may be possible, owing to see
an apparent in
afore of Congress to do anything to
alleviate the of
to pan the
; but nevertheless with the leg-
the plan be
and successfully operated
accomplish the purpose intended.
With equal force one may say the
reformation of the is
because, regardless of he
complexion of Congress, the result
is all talk and no legislative relief.
There is certainly more mi
practicable building the ware-
; than constructing other gov-
buildings. will not
cost so much as has been expended
heretofore on this line without any
great benefit to the country.
when there is nothing
practicable operating the in
under strict governmental
lance more than operating any of
the great departments of the gov-
certainly not half so
complicated as the Post-
office Department, which the gov-
dispatches with wonderful
promptness and accuracy, though
while a private affair is done
with great benefit to the
and profit to the government.
There is nothing
the certificate system,
which has, already been inaugurated
and operated respect to gold and
silver, and can be as successfully
applied to of a standard
grade and price. The system itself
fixes the price, and an equal
can be reached by proper
i To say otherwise is to
annul the receipt system now
by all Exchanges which forms
basis of their operations that
aggregate more than a thousand
fold the annual crop strength
I of this system is that the cotton is
in the warehouse to redeem the
or when it is sold the gold
or its equivalent is covered the
Treasury to redeem it, so that these
certificates will carry with them ab-
solute confidence in all monetary
transactions. Then the
used to disparage this
and those formulated by the
that the necessary
cannot be secured, Rome was
not built in a day, nor can we expect
a material reformation of this kind
to be accomplished until the great
masses of people are educated in
respect to matter. If the
advanced have the foundations
of right, equity and justice, alter a
season will triumph; if are
errors deserve to perish. More
light will exemplify their truths and
tend to them upon the
thought of the nation.
When the pioneers of abolition
first raised their voice for universal
freedom were denounced a.-
fanatics and almost as criminal
the truth and justice of
their cause caught the ear and chain
ed thought of the country, and
as a result slavery was abolished.
And so the certificate system to
prevent the sacrifice of cotton, or
sub-treasury system as advanced by-1
the founded in truth
and justice, as f believe them to be,
will catch the ear and com-
the thought and heart the
country so as to pass the necessary
legislation to free the great
from slavery of
and trusts make those en-
gaged that heaven appointed in-
tilling of the Mil
happy, contented and prosperous,
which alone can
growth and prosperity oar
to
change it.
Mr. scheme for a
cheap postal telegraph system be-
tween all cities having a free
seems to be very favorably re-
it is generally believed
that Congress is disposed to give it
a trial.
The pension appropriation bill for
the next fiscal year has
to the House. It is for
nearly more than
that passed by the last Congress,
and still the cry for a service pen-
bill carrying an additional
amount of a year is re
through the corridors of
the Capitol. The gentlemen favor-
this last do not tell
where the money is to come from.
It certainly is not in the Treasury
or likely to be in it. ,
The republicans of the House
propose taking up the contested
election cases as as the World's
fair question is settled. There
four reports waiting to be acted
and strange to say, one of
them confirms the claim of the Dem-
The republican members of the
Ways and Means committee the
House, in to make a
about the tar-
propose to the finking
act which requires about
a year. The only that
they are agreed is the repeal
of the tobacco tax. They are
engaged in trying to get up some
sort of a compromise as to sugar
tariff.
Jay who a years ago
posed as the boss the
party, is here in the interest of the
bill providing for the purchase
the Portage Lake canal, connecting
Lake and Lake Superior.
The bill transferring the
bureau to the Agricultural
will reported to the
Senate week. Its passage is
regarded as certain.
The investigation of the civil
service commission opened quite
lively, and Mr. Lyman is far from
being he was compelled
to acknowledge that his
stole a set of questions and
furnished them to a woman who
obtained a position through
knowledge she got the
questions. He also
edged that the stealer of the
was promoted.
How can be kept on the
commission after this without
the whole business more of a
laughing stock than it already is, is
more than ordinary folks see.
The committee will hold another
meeting
The Woman's rights annual con-
ended a four days session
today. Several of the
predicted that women would vote
in less than ton years.
The British extradition treaty,
which the late
succeeded in last win-
has been ratified by the Sou-
ate.
COME IN
We want to a talk
with you and tell
you now cheap
we can sell
you
HARDWARE
Cash
Dixie and
Tobacco Plows, Plow
Castings, The Famous
Cook Stoves.
Give us your orders
for
TOBACCO FLUES
early and you will be
sure to get them in time
LATHAM PENDER,
Greenville,
Car Load of Fine
Horses
AND
Mules,
--------Just received by
ALFRED FORBES,
RELIABLE OF C
lo the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following good
that are not to be excelled In this market. And to be First-class and
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, SHOES, LA
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, Mid HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS-
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster or Paris, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I to the trade at
Jobbers cents per dozen, less per for Cash. Bread Prep
and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, While Lead pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Hood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. me ft H guarantee satisfaction.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAM Kg OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
STILL TO THE FRONT
J. D. Williamson,
will be SOW------
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on on
proved security. I my for
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as
anyone. Give me a call.
LOW TARIFF
CARRIAGE FACTORY.
m urn
For we have free now. Ah
you arc free to buy where you please, but
if want to save money you come M
my Factory on street, rear of J. B.
Cherry Co's. For convenience we
have also an entrance through H. F.
Keel's Stable 3rd street. lean give
That you ever had in your life tor
410.00 to less money than any one
else in the county can Rive you. Why
for my expenses are less and pay th
spot cash for good and save the dis-
counts, and if you don't believe it you
Come and see. Having had IS years
experience in business I guarantee
perfect satisfaction or no charge. Re-
pairing a specialty. Don't forget the
place on 4th street rear J. Cherry
A.
Greenville,
Tar Transportation
Forbes, Greenville,
B. CHERRY,
J. S. Greenville,
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag
The People's for travel on
River. . , m
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 affords.
A trip on the Steamer Greenville Is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday,
and Friday at o'clock, a. m.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M.
Freights received daily and through
Bills Lading given to all points.
J.
Greenville, N. C.
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House.
WILL THE OF
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory d well equipped with the best Mechanics. put up nothing
but FIRST-CLASS WORK. keep up with the times and
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King.
keep on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the j-car round, which we will sell as low as lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of and surrounding counties for past favor hope
merit a continuance the same.
E. A. TAFT,
Wishes to inform his friends and the public generally that he has
bought out the Grocery establishment of T. 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 times. I keep Flour,
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery,
Tobacco, Snuff, fee., fee.
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market.
You are invited to call. Remember the piece, Cherry's stand.
Alliance Resolutions.
the mid and
other papers have published statements
that are and calculated to
the Alliance,
And Whereas our brother E. A.
has written a communication
said statements and setting forth
the of the Alliance which the
and Observer refused to print, now
therefore
that we endorse the
sot forth by our worthy brother
and thank him for so ably our
Asa
Prosperity alliance No.
Whereas the Alliance of
Pitt comity has be n misrepresented by
a certain newspaper of this State, pub-
that the Alliance of Pitt
favored abolishing of public schools,
W n in our worthy and es-
teemed brother E. A. has written
a communication as published In the
Eastern of Feb. 6th, set-
ting forth the of the
therefore be It i-
try Prosperity Alliance No.
i that we thank our brother f r the
of oar order,
we fully the sentiments
et in his and,
limy
has been so kind in print-
resolutions Ac., tor j
the of our
we extend Mr to
the ask tot
and e of from
form or if ear
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R. MOVE.
J. G.
CHERRY CO.
Have again conic lo your attention your esteemed patronage
do not claim that have the largest and best stuck cast of the
but we do say that we are to the front
with a specially selected line of--------
Suited to the want of a large class of customers. are In full sympathy with
the hard times and and will make low cash prices lo all who favor us with
their patronage. Look down this column and see if we cannot yon. We
Notice.
To White Public School
Commit teem en of
Pitt County.
Prof. Alderman, authority of the
School Law of the State, will hold an
Institute White Teachers at the
Court House in the town of Greenville
Monday March 3rd,
Institute will continue one week. There
will de public addresses delivered on
Friday of that week.
Public School teachers of the white
race are required to attend. They will
be compelled to suspend I heir Schools
during the continuance of the Institute
I hope they will all be on hand.
The School of Pitt
County are respectfully in to attend,
especially on Friday.
Respectfully
Henry Harding,
Co. Supt. Pub. Ins.
Splendid Opportunity.
A well established Cash Paying Millinery
business. Trade constantly growing.
Good location. Small capital required.
Address, Look Box
N. C.
MARKET.
Corrected by Samuel M.
Wholesale and Retail Grocer,
Old Brick Store.
Syrup and Molasses,
Mess Pork,
Bulk Sides,
Bulk Shoulders,
Bacon Sides,
Bacon
Pitt County Ham,
Sugar Ham,
Coffee,
Brown Sugar,
Granulated
Syn
Tobacco,
Snuff,
Lard,
Corn,
Hides.
Cotton,
10.75 to 11.75
to
E to
.-to
to
Si to
to
tO to
TO to
are better
a line of
prepared than ever before to serve you. We have in stock to-day
DRY GOO
Embracing Dress Goods and Trimmings, Ginghams and Calicoes.
and Suitings, Piece Goods and Men's Hoy's Suits. Homespuns,
Sheetings, Bleached and Unbleached Flannels Bel
Boots and Shoes.
For Men. Women. Boys, Misses and Children, at prices will cause the poor to
rejoice, and the hearts of all will be made glad who buy Hoot sand Shoes from us,
why because sell low and give the worth. A full line of
and Goods that will the hearts th
HATS and CAPS for men, boys and children. HE, In this line we offer
you a stock as complete as farmer or mechanic can wish. make a
of Steel. Nails and guarantee them to be the best made.
Groceries.
Which arc selling at rock bottom prices, not because we are forced to do so
but We take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can we interest yon here
if so conic in and examine our stock of Sugar, Molasses. Coffee, Tea. Soaps, both
Toilet and Laundry, Lye, Matches, Starch, Rice. Meats of different kinds,
which we are now buying from first hands and can save yon money if yen call and
examine before buying elsewhere, Tobacco and Snuff.
Headquarters for Furniture.
Of which carry a line not to be excelled in this market, such as
Bureaus, Double and Single Bedsteads. Tables. Cots. Bed Springs and
Mattresses, Children's Cradles and Beds, Chairs of different kinds and varieties,
all to suit hard times and short crops. Anything that you want In this lino If We
have not got it in we will make a special order for you, as we have
from several of the best furniture in the United States and guarantee sat-
as to prices. Wood and Willow ware, Crockery. Glassware, Lamps,
and Collars. Cart Saddles. Whips and Millinery. Trunks,
Valises and Traveling Bags,
is too short to keep on telling What we have and d., But wishing
c to prosperity and giving to every man. woman and child who comes
lo t invitation to come in and examine
We remain yours to serve
j B. CHERRY CO.,
Greenville, N. O.





. Attractive
GOOD NEWS
DIES.
A mammoth display
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
NO.
Green villa.
Local Sparks
Imported tor us direct
from Switzerland.
This assortment is com-
posed of many new
and rare novel-
tics in
Hamburgs, Swiss,
Irish Point,
and Van Dyke Edging,
Allovers,
Edgings,
Etc.
These
imported
are
goods
direct
bought
to us
without
Cotton t ,
In new to see as.
Dec, M. Kerry Sew
Garden Eked at Old Brick Store.
What of oysters
One dollar buys a Solid Leather
Ladies Shoe at J. B. Cherry
Sow Oats bushels
cheap, at the Old Brick Store.
was a dark, gloomy, rainy
day.
Arrived on tin-
Milk Biscuit at the Old Brick Store.
The Sew Fair is in
One dollar buys a Whole Stock
Mass Shoe at J. B. Cherry Go's
river is tolerably good
older.
We sell only tor cash therefore
can .-ell very low. Try us
I. Co.
Only mac days in
to-day.
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate
sad Antic of Town Lace flour, at
the Old Store.
It was almost as warm as summer
Monday afternoon.
Seed Potatoes, five
varieties, cheap, at the Old Brick
Store.
Blank Died-, Mortgages and
Liens sale at this
Beautiful designs in Job Printing
at the Reflector office.
per for Sweet Scotch
lb sold in Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
The railroad through
ton u is fairly
Tobacco
a quantity of Tobacco Cloth
for Covering Tobacco Beds at
M. Lang.
Greenville Farmers Alliance bad
a last Saturday.
The office can sell
you good at a pack.
A nice visiting cards, plain,
bevel and gilt, just received at this
office.
Tut Richmond Stove Co's Stoves
sell on their own merit, soother
shipment just Sold only by
D. D. Co.
We are ready to write
receipts in our office.
pure water have no
chills, by iron drive pump
with pipe. Sold by
D. D. Co.
The County
will be in session next Mon-
day.
The train came in on time
Saturday evening at A notch
should have been cut one of the
rails.
Position Wanted.-A man of
eight years experience in
per job a position
as compositor. temperate.
Address care
Greenville, C.
The ordinance baptism will be
administered in the Baptist
to-night.
Prof. System is
creating greater interest than ever
were tried before
Clerk E. A.
court keeps
Personal-
Mrs. A. L. Blow has been sick for
several days. , ,
Hon. L. C. Latham is coil lined to
his
Miss Maggie Harvey, of
is visiting Mrs. O.
i Mrs. V. L. Stephens are
visiting her pa Hamilton.
Florida, who
has been visiting Mrs. Murphy, loft
Monday.
Mr. J. M. has been pros-
Kentucky for the past
week or two.
Mamie Duckett returned
Sunday a visit to relatives in
county.
Mr. L. the Tailor, has
the Baker on
Washington street.
Miss Ollie of Wilson, was
in town last week, visiting
of her Mr. B. A.
Miss Whitaker, representing the
Orphans Friend, spent a
day or two cf last week Green-
ville.
Ex-Gov. J. is
ed at home with the It
vented him attending Sew
Fair.
On Monday Mr. Flem-
the Superior Court
Clerk, Ilia resignation as a Justice
of the Peace.
We were glad to sec friend Joe
B. Latham, who recently left this
section moved to
in town last Thursday.
Mr. Goo. S. Terrell, agent for the
State Agricultural Department, has
town this week looking
business connected with tho De-
Messrs. J. J. Hill and sou,
the S. C Building and
Loan Association, spent the.
week in Greenville. We are
ice came
last
Girl
A copy, ti
to the
an I T-.
kins turned Will
ho assist told
him very
Miss
-is a
est, .
ii
baa
to which Was
given. One
from would have
writer's
name It IS a rule
publish
any article knows
who The need not
be sent for publication,
let I
K i . . p.
.
A waft present
at last
to witness
of the. Deacons,
Messrs, I. Tucker., 0- I.
D. L-. James.
The sermon preach-
ed W. of Tar-
who was -followed in
by J. Dow-
ell, Mr.
was and
qualification
and their duty.
that succeeded in
a good branch association here.
We were glad to have a call from
oar friend, Mr. Amos Brown, a deaf
mute, Saturday. For a number
of be lived near Greenville
with the family of Bey. Josephus
Latham, and early this year moved
to Washington to live with his
Mr, Latham, editor of
the Saturday he was re-
turning a visit to Mi. J, II.
Latham county.
Hot i to Short.
thief rob the
key roost, of Mr. Henry
one night last week, going early in j
the while Mr. Sheppard was
down-town. is wife heard tho
tin keys making a and took a j
pistol-and went out on the porch to
what the trouble was. The
ran the gate she sent
of the pistol alter him.
The doctors will have to be picking
glad balls out of some of these thieves
if they look sharp.
The people down this way with
pleasant weather that has prevailed
all winter sen hardly realize that
our the Western par
the State me having
snows.
was adopted, that all
ministers and School work-.
era present lie .
of Convention.
J. White and C. X. were
to get the names and
address of. -all Sunday
School
-On motion of It. B. a
of three wad appoint ed
rules, etc, K. B D.
Hunter A. N.
on
as follows We rec-
the of the
In; a a Vice-
Corresponding Secretary an
Executive three. To
till these offices we. recommend the
Pies., T. J. Jams; Vice-
Pres E. It. See., J.
; C. Sec, B. John ;
Ex. Com,. A. IX Hunt, r, B. D.
and L. Hi
A. moved to
the report, so as to include a
Vice-President for each township
the county, which with report
was
The retired and
reported the following selection of
from the several
townships Greenville, D. L. James;
ville, A. J. Beaver
Dam, J. B. , A;
Swift F. Harding
J. M. Cox; Ward.
W. U. I lag well; Carolina,
V. U. Whichard; Falkland, John
King ; A. A. Tyson.
R. B. John and G. A. Ogles-
by were appointed to escort the
President to the chair.
the chair Jams very
addressed the
much the interest of Sunday
good done
them. He was by A.
Hunter who of how Sun-
day Schools better citizens.
Mr. J. J. Hill, of Atlanta, was in
the convention and was invited
address toe body, and responded in
a very
The the adjourned to
J o'clock.
CHEAP CASH STORE
M. Co.,
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand.
-DEALERS IN-
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoos and
GROCERIES.
We shall always carry a complete stock of First-Class Goods.
Nothing Shoddy.
to
I be glad to have my old friends and oust
see us, and assure them that we can sell them goods
For
Give a trial and be that the way to buy goods is for
the spot cash.
JOHN S. CONGLETON.
N. C, January,
WILEY BROWN.
JAMES BROWN.
NEW FIRM
Died.
In Saturday morn-
22nd, inst., Mrs. Martha
House, wile of our Mr. J.
It. House, departed this life niter an
illness of Weal months. She was
a daughter of J. W. Car
Bethel, and was not quite years
old at tune her death. Deceased
was married to Mr. House in Match, ., .
husband and two children
her. She a
tent member the Methodist
died in hope
the blessed hereafter. The remains
were interred Cherry
tery afternoon, B. it.
John tho funeral
Meeting opened with prayer.
The Committee on rendered
the
This organization shall be known
as the county Sunday School
Association. It shall be auxiliary
i to the Sunday School
i a lion and hall cooperate it in
S.
ties the people, making their
work mote
a general S. S. work.
All teachers Sun-
all ministers of the
gospel and such delegates as
Churches or Schools may
OWN BROTHERS
At R. Williams Son's Old Stand.
vices.
to them
The Steamer broke
shaft while up the river
evening. A tug boat- came from
Washington yesterday and went
up the to bring the
down.
The only snag we have stuck
this side of street is Ste-
We would down lit in but
he keeps such a nice lot fruit
and confections that it do to
be too hard him.
Some broke into the store
Mr O. M. Tucker, sis miles below
Greenville, Sunday and
stole pairs of shoes
boots and some other goods. There
is as yet no clue to thief.
J. A. who was
with the shooting of
on the of January 7th,
placed in jail, was released on bail
last week, lie was required to give
a vended bond in the sum of
profit and m all parts the country, and per-
to
send for his prospectus
be Cheaper free as advertised another column.
for every
to do in ad the town ll they
expect the town to advance.
OF from
the laxative juice
of California figs, combined with
virtues of plants
known to be most beneficial to the
human system, acts gently, on the
cleansing the system, dispelling
colds and headaches, and curing
constipation.
A cold wave was for
last Thursday but it exploded be-
fore They cannot
stand in our mild climate.
The brick work to the i ail road
bridge has been finished and the
whole structure will soon be com-
The wants lots of
new subscribers this year. It
campaign year they ought to
come in.
Several cases
Superior Court
last week. Ills
busy of late.
Hotel is on a boon in
patronage line. If Greenville only
bad a good hotel building host Skin-
would make a all around.
On Saturday we heard several
farmers speak of farm work being
very far advanced the time
year
The only observation the 22nd
here was several people being beard
to Why this is Washing-
ton's
From the number of people we
see going the stairway to
gallery, he must
be enjoying a largo patronage.
Will anything be done to that
skirt of trees just back tho
They should be cut down, b-
all means, so that a view of the
grounds may be had from the rail-
road- tho grounds ought to
be placed in better order and kept
Mr. Barrett, of Marlboro, was
in office yesterday
told us that several miles of
county fencing between this
had
recently been burned. Tallies in
Wilson county are supposed to have
fired the fence.
n-r Party.
Little Misses Tyson and
gave their little
friends a very party in
Mrs. James Brown's school room
last night. They invited
quite a to attend in mask,
which they did, the following
characters were well represented
Gypsy
tree.
Sugg.
Baby
Flower Sheppard.
Fortune Brown.
Belle of
Baby Williams.
Sugg.
Jockey White.
Robertson.
Country Perkins.
Wild Sugg.
Cow
Clause- Raymond Tyson.
Forbes.
Little Country Shep.
Duke or
Jarvis.
never was a masquerade in
in which the characters
represented were better sustained
by these little folks. It was a
pleasant affair and they had jolly
time until o'clock.
On Wednesday 19th
inst. at the residence of Mr Noah
Forbes, Jr., father of the bride,
Mr. W. A. Forbes and Miss Nannie
Forbes were married, Rev. J. E.
Craft officiating. A large
were the
a pleasant one.
Brigade.
A registered letter was mailed in
this State, the 1st
February a party ville
and was not delivered to him
the Nineteen days to go less
a hundred miles. This gives
some idea as to the slackness in
which mail service is conducted
at present.
Call and see the
grandest display in this
line ever shown in
Greenville
-n
yards Tobacco
Cloth for covering to-
beds, just re-
and will be sold
cheap.
M. R. LANG,
New Advertisements.
A well established Millinery
is offered for sale See
headed
Mrs. L. C. King will the
House for boarders March
1st. The has nicely
furnished and the table will be first
class. See advertisement-
Death of J.
The many friends in Greenville or
that excellent Christian gentleman
and consecrated Minister of tho
Gospel, Dr. J. D. of Set-
land Neck, were pained to on
last Wednesday morning that bis
estimable wife had died the night
previous. For some months she had
been in wretched health, all had
hoped that she might be restored.
The funeral services were
in the Baptist Church of Scot-
land Neck on morning the
The weather was
yet a large crowd was present.
Scriptures read prayer was
offered by Dr. C. T. Bailey, editor
the Biblical Recorder. The
was preached by Dr. T. U.
ard. pastor of Church
The was
the theme of the sermon which was
solemn and well delivered. The
services at the grave were conduct-
ed by C. Durham, Secretary
of the Board of Missions and Sun-
day Schools of Baptist State
Convention of N. C The singing
was excellent well suited to the
occasion. Several preachers from
other were to
their sympathy and appreciation
for Dr. his family.
Rev. A. D. pastor the
Baptist Church was
attendance.
-------Having purchased entire stock of-------
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots,
Stows, and Furnishings.
Of Little, House Hie, we are determined to dispose of I hem at
VERY LOW PRICES.
We do not propose to sell at cost or below cost, but by buying
at a discount we can afford to sell at such prices that will astonish
you.
shall be
entitled to member-snip the
elation. Pastors and
of Schools are
to see to it that each school is
i represented
The of the Association
shall be a President, a
one from each
township, Secretary
responding an
Committee winch
shall he. annually.
The and
with the Ex. Com. time -and
place for an animal
for same and
other arrangements as they may
deem helpful to the
the objects this Association.
Each to i n.-hip shall
organize a township association aux-
to the county association.
After as to make
the of Corresponding
read Corresponding Secretary
and Treasurer the report was adopt-,
ed.
motion of E. C.
the Ex Com. was to
pare a statistical report of the Sun
day Schools the county and have
it ready by next meeting.
the State Convention
were then elected,
D G. A.
H., A. D. Hunter and Mrs.
F. . James. Alternates, J. U.
Tucker; D. L. James and A. L.
Blow.
The following questions which
had been handed to the Secretary
were read discussed by the par
ties named
Is it wise to offer rewards for at-
good lessons, in
Sunday Schools I J. White.
Is it best to put converted and
unconverted scholars a to-
G. A. Hun-
nod E. C.
use of S. S- helps. A. D.
Hunter-
How to teach, J. J. Hill and G. A.
How old aught children to be be-
fore they arc taken to S. B. B.
John.
What is the best plan for
a bad boy J. U. Tucker.
How will you get out an
f B C. Glenn.
Do S- S. picnics and parties effect
any permanent good f D. L. James
H. B. John, A. D. Hunter and D. J.
Whichard.
Aught an unconverted person lie
a teacher in S. S f B. II. Sugg and
A. D.
The convention then adjourned.
This is no Humbug-. See us before buying.
New Grocery Store
Next door to K. C. Glenn. I have a Grocery Store and
keep on hand a fine line
Meat. Hour, Coffee, Oil, Hum,
Candies, Cheese, Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples,
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything usually kept in a
grocery store, well as Tinware, Crockery, Wood and
Willow Ware, Call and see us. Goods delivered free any
where-in town.
J. J. CHERRY, Greenville, N. C.
INTERESTING INFORMATION
Thai Man Stephens
-----WHO KEEPS SUCH A ASSORTMENT OF-----
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS,
Says there is never any doubt of his giving you entire satisfaction
if yon just him a call when needing goods in his line,
lie keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods, lie also
keeps the beet Cigars Cigarettes. Remember the place.
V.
Confectioner and Fruiterer.
G. E. HARRIS,
Greenville,
N. C.
The iron bridge for tho
across the liver here arrived the
earn Sat and the workmen are
engaged this
The movements of the town
had as well be watched
now until the town election, so that
they may be made to vote In the
ward in they actually live.
Guard had a drill last Friday
afternoon in command of Capt.
About twenty-three were
out. The boys made some nice
Movement on the Court
on.
TO
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
-----AND DEALER IN-----
Greenville,
Attention is called to the
of Greenville
of N. C. Building and
The is a
in associations this
one offers splendid opportunities to
Greenville and vicinity.
We take pleasure in calling the
in to- j attention of our readers and of all
the good people to the our
little friend Charlie K. Sugg, sou of
Col. I. A. is prepared lo take
orders tor the life of Jefferson
vis, President of
States. Also be is prepared lo take
fill orders for Bibles, and
in we com-
mend him to the
household should hare these books
Ur. Davis share n
proceeds of the he lire of
Davis. i.-.- .,
S. Convention.
a number people
bled in the Court House last
Wednesday morning at o'clock,
pursuant to call had been
made for a county Sunday School
Convention. After a song lie v. G.
A. led in prayer, when Mr.
K. A. arose and in a short
address explained the object of the
meeting and spoke upon the good
Sunday School work, then declared
the convention ready for business.
motion of Rev. G. A. Ogles-
by E. A. was made temporary
D. J. Whichard
Secretary.
motion of B. John a
consisting one
each denomination represented way
A Lady's Perfect Companion.
Our new by Dr. John II. Dye,
on of Mew York's most skillful
shows that pain is not necessary
in childbirth, results from
easily understood and overcome. It
that any woman may be.
come a mother without any
It also tells how to over
come and prevent morning sickness and
the many other evils attending
It is highly endorsed by physicians
everywhere as the wife's true private
companion. Cut this It will save
you great pain, and possibly your life.
Scud two-cent Stamp tor descriptive cir-
testimonials, and
letters sent sealed envelope.
Thomas Co.,
Baltimore, Md.
THIS OF
i son Davis, Bibles. in
In I am
prepared to take orders for the these
good books, which be In the
of every person. I shall be glad
to take orders from nil who to
any of these bocks, Orders
left at my Col. A.
The commute; R. O.
Glenn, C. D. B.
W. and
or addressed to me will prompt at-
R.
X. C.
ENJOYS
Both the method and results when
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant
and refreshing to the taste, and acts
yet promptly on the Kidneys,
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys-
rm dispels colds, head-
and fevers and cures habitual
Syrup of Figs is the
sly remedy of its kind ever pro-
pleasing to tho taste and ac-
to the stomach, prompt in
action and truly beneficial in its
prepared only from the most
substances, its
many excellent qualities commend it
to all have made it the most
popular remedy known.
Syrup of Figs is for ads in
and bottles by all leading drug-
gists. Any reliable druggist who
may cot have on hand will pro
core it promptly for any one who
wishes to try it. Do not accept any
substitute.
no co.
BAH CAL.
a. mm mac
HOUSE. Will be
opened for Boarders on March 1st.
The building has Inst hi nicely fur-
throughout will- re-
every attention. Table
with best the market Both
regular and transient boarders cm be
moderate.
-Mils. I,. O. KING,
TYSON BAWLS,
BANKERS,
O.
We have opened the or ton-
a genera I
Money to Loin n Approved Security
Oil
and
made promptly.
i-e
GREENVILLE BRANCH
Carolina.
ASSOCIATION.
F.
JOHN
D. WHICH At; Tress.,
I. A.
A home Institution. Loans on
try a well proper. A chance
h home.
TORi
T. J.
Harry
Mm
b. II.
D.
. For I apply to
D. J. WHICHARD,
Wholesale Retail III
STAPLE
GREENVILLE. N
in Mock and lo strive
Car Load Seed Oats.
Cm Load Rib Bide Meat.
Car Load St. Flour, in all
grades.
Heavy Moss Pork. .
Granulated Sugar.
Sugar.
Ax Snuff, all
kinds.
Rail Road Mills Snuff.
Snuff.
Rico Molasses.
II
SO Tubs Huston Lard.
Cases Star Lye.
Gross Matches.
Also lull line leaking
Starch, Tobacco, Co, MS, Crack-
Candles, Canned Goods, Wrapping
Paper, Paper Banks,
Special prices given in the wholesale
Wide on large of the.
goods.
J. A. ANDREWS.
Washington
AGENCY,
Engines and Boilers,
All sizes mid con used.
MILLS,
Circular and Shingle Saws,
Rubber and Leather
Shafting, Pulleys, Ac.
In fact the machine line.
We represent the standard
of the land and can Mil as low a
the lowest and on better terms.
Write for terms and
wan agency,
K. Manager
Washington, N. C.
R J. C C T. M.
Pill Co. N C Co C N C
Cobb
Cotton Factors,
E. A.
V. O,
I. A. Sugg,
J. h-
AND-
Commission Merchants,
SOLICIT SHIPMENT of COTTON,
We have had many years ex-
at the business are
prepared to handle to
advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to our
hands will receive prompt and
careful
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD BRICK STOKE.
AND MERCHANTS BUY-
i- their year's supplies will It to
their Interest to get our prices
is complete
in all Its branches.
SIDES SHOULDERS,
COFFEE, SUGAR,
TEAS, to.
always at Lowest Market Prices.
we buy direct Manufacturers, ens-
you at one profit. A
stock of
always on and sold at prices lo suit
the times. Our goods are all bought Slid
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to run, we sell in t close
Respectfully,
S. M. SCHULTZ.
Greenville. M. C
Having associated II. S.
In the
art really to serve I lie people In
capacity. All notes and
me for past services have been placed
the Mr. Sheppard n.
JOHN
We keep on hand nil limes s nice
stock of Burial Cases end Caskets of ill
kinds can furnish anything r
from the Case down to
Pitt county Pine We an I
up with all conveniences and run
satisfactory to all who in .
US .
1-s-.
RECEIVED AT
Store,
Front Office.
Golden Medical War-
Cure,
of I ins
S. S- S., H.
hum;
Mills
Meal. Will every
TUESDAY
White,
N. C.





i-S J------
f to km p so ct
few BO a I fur sing i . It Hit and
; m Ma from the linens to the
LADY- i -f pi bat I and want every-
clean as .
We to U next akin
in i. u is which
to i . .
la told ma, Row
tr WELDON R. B
and Schedule.
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
HoS, No
Pee. Mil, daily Fart Mail, daily
ex Sun.
Ar Mount M am
A r
Ar am am
Ar
Ar
run
-4
At M,.;,,,,
Ar
GOING
Money to Loan.
ON IMPROVED in sums of
and upwards. Loans are
in small annual
through a period of live year thus
the borrower to pay oft his
without exhausting his
ii an.- one Apply to
MURPHY.
Greenville, X. O
EMORY
MM Bows
an
parts of the globs.
rare, seat on to P-of.
A. SB
daily
ex Sun.
OB a in pin
Magnolia I am
a SI
4-
A r
Ar
T Wilson -i am pin
Ar I S l
A r
Ar
i Sin
t 4-i
In Jo am
pin pin
IT.
Train on i I
M.,
at no M.
I. U. 7.00
A. XI. at A. M.
all except Sunday.
Train X via A
A K. It. daily except
V. Sunday M.
w. Hi no-ton. X P M. M.
leaves X daily
Sunday. M A M. A
K. X M A M.
Train on Midland X C leaves
daily except Sunday. GOO A M,
X C, SO a M.
leaves Smithfield. R S A M.
arrive Goldsboro, X C, A M.
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Bock
at P M, arrives Nashville I
I Hope II P M.
MoM- i A M.
M. arrives Rocky Mount IS A
except Sunday.
Trail, on Clinton leaves
for daily, except Sunday,
II A leave
ton A M, and S P. M.
i lad
train on Wilson A
Is North bound
K. except Sunday.
Train South will stop only at
Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection at
Ti If-II for points daily. All
via and daily except Sun-
via Hay Line.
Trains make close connection for
paint North via Richmond and
Al trans run solid between
ml and have Pullman
Sleepers attached.
J. K. K Transportation
T M. A. t
WANTED r
; s-
Sample A rare
o. A. st M. Y.
ENGLISH
PILLS.
HAIR
i . the hair.
Cr
wanted
to sell
no more I
pins needed. It
holds
est
pins
do not
freeze to it and
blow
NO
It is n perfect
w t r line.
Sample line by
for
also ft. line
b mail
For
circular,
list, ad-
dress Hie
less CI o t h es
I Jim Co.
Ii St.
MADE WATER,
N C.
r v.
,, . .-in M. Sal . e
.
r, v . -o
j. . ., Ii . . .
. . . .
; l in . ii
a, t I SI
I pin Lily
sun
No L X. It
II. Vised I .
f.- I r.
mm p in
ti s
o ; I a SI
ii I
f i ;. S
., Creek .
0.1;
M i
t 4- 3.1 I
S 2-i
.; a-41 .-Oil
AI la -2
Morehead iv
Ml H V Atlantic Until
pm Draft am
Thursday and Saturday.
and Friday.
i mutt i
Train bound North,
a. in., and With
A Train We.-I.
. III.
Train with d
Train, at
in., and with and
Train at p. m
and
Train, leaving
p in and with It
And k
p. m.
no
Why another new discovery by Alfred
Oiler in way of helping the afflict-
a. calling on or the
above named can procure a
of Preparation is
far and causing the
hair to be Soft and
only two or three a
is and a common hair
is all to be used after the
for a few minute with
Try a bottle and be
cents-.
fully,
Barber,
THYSELF,
A Scientific and Standard Treatise
the Youth,
i . Debility, of the
Folly, Vice,
Vt.-r-mine the
or Social
this
It contain page, royal Beautiful
full only by
; concealed In plain r.
Free. Ii yon now. The
author, Wm. ii. M D. re-
AND JEWELLED MEDAL,
from the National Medical
for he, ESSAY on and
PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Ir.
Of may be
I y or In person, at the of
No. St., Ma-, lo
for or for advice be
m above.
SMITH,
ARTIST,
Greenville f .
We have IV
Chair ever in tin-art.
sharp and guaranteed
in every Call h- i
Ladies waited on
Notice I
for
falling nut of hair, end
i before
the many who nave u-en nil
wonderful I refer t.
lowing named who
lo the truth of my .
Lath am. Greenville.
Mr. O.
Any one to give it a trial
the above named can procure
it from in, at my place of business, for
S 1.50 per bottle.
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber.
March C ,
BOOKS
T. of
C.
He on hand a floe
of the book at publisher's prices.
fall on for large or
pulpit, family or pocket size.
II;. urn
and work
Can you any book you want on
short
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
N.
ram mm old.
m old tho hill.
old when tho earth w
Th. Bloom of It -aye t the lay of It
Love's sons wherever It sung.
Tie not Ii in.- bat That woman
as a river flow down to these,
Andaman bow old oceans mores I
Man conies him
The sea Is a bold a the wind and tide
Mar choose, and It shakes the shore;
As H cots a swath In the sands so
With a roar.-
Bat over the bar the waves are lees.
Where old ocean the river.
And she lives be. ah, re I
What doe old ocean give her
The tale Is as old as the oldest hills,
Twas old when the earth you
The Bloom of I the Joy of it fills
wherever It's
Tis nothing bat That a flow
A a woman Urea for her lover;
And the sea T Who the water knows
The likeness he skull discover.
Dispatch.
ram
A Pathetic Which la Vouched far
by
A pathetic story of the late Mr i. Ruth-
B. Hayes, and one that is said to
be for by the ex -President, is
printed in the January number of the
Home Magazine. It is as
Some of her nearest relatives had died
of paralysis and she had a premonition
that she, too, would pass away with the
same disorder. She had a long talk with
her husband on the about three
years ago. He to away
her fears with light and kindly words.
Early last autumn, just about the time
of the anniversary of the death of lier
brother, who had passed away in paralysis,
the spoke of her premonitions again.
Her fears now amounted to an absolute
conviction, and she spoke of her end by
paralysis as an event certain to take place.
None of the endeavors of her to
turn her thoughts to a more cheerful sub-
could a Tail. She quietly on
arranging with him her business and
other affairs. She put her in perfect
order.
she finally said, I be
stricken with paralysis, as I I
be, I will not, as yon know, be able to
peak. But perhaps I still may be
lo hear. You may me then
my mind is serene and clear, whether I
at ease and free from pain. For th i
answer yes to these questions I shall
press your hand. If I cannot truthfully
reply in the my hand will
not clasp
days after this what she feared
would happen came to pass She was
down with paralysis.
Her organs of ch benumbed.
not utter a word. Then all
had cam s sadly back to the
i of her devoted husband. Looking
down into her shining he took her
hand in his and asked the questions
which days before she had
dear, are you at ease Is
ii ml serene and clear and are you
trout
Slowly the poor white fingers closed
n his giving a reassuring
The next day the bravo and
wife was dead.
Trying- to A
Sugar a Larger Scale.
It is pretty generally known that chem-
can produce in their laboratory from
rags a substance very similar to sugar
and the same sweetening proper-
ties, says the St. Louis Republic. he Ger-
mans are at work trying to produce
artificial mi on a large scale, and
though i s production for practical
poses has not yet been consider-
able advancement has been male and
many steps taken toward ultimate sue
Herr Emil Fischer succeeded in
obtaining true sugar, which will undergo
alcoholic when yeast i
plied, just like ordinary sugar. There
is only one thing wanting in this, new
chemical product, it does not
differ from the natural product, and that
U that it is optically in will not
rotate a single beam of polarized light
either to the right or left.
that sweet anchor of so
many recent is tho start-
point in the of
as the new product is called, and which
must not be confounded with
which is not a sugar and can never
take the place of sugar as an article of
diet The discoverers of are
of making a k-i f. sugar at no
distant day, and their work is being
watched with interest not only by the
but by th industrial
commercial world welL
la
The natives in the east who have
r Hi.- familiar with foreigners and
customs very readily to the custom
of New Year's
day, one lady had a very peculiar
experience with a native official in Seoul
year.
She was keeping and
had made some preparations for
her guests in the proper manner.
Among other things, she had prepared
with her own bands a very excellent
rake, which she expected to distribute
in bits to all who might favor her
with n A party of native gentle-
men arrived, and, having given one of
Diem a cup of too, she placed this lino
cake him, with an invitation to
She then went with the
others to another room, and was gone
some time. returned, she
saw to her horror that her beautiful
had all but disappeared down the throat
of the who had tried his best
to do the polite to his
country's not leave any of
the food set before him, thus showing
his appreciation of the host's table
hospitality. The lady's vexation was
banished by a feeling of n
for the miserable man, who seemed to
be very much in need of an emetic just
then. It is said that this call was his
first and last on that day, as he declared
to a friend foreigners must all
stomach, if they could go from home to
house and do justice to the hospitality
of each. Homo
The are much displeased
over a competitor who is steal-
their host practice ; mean Dr.
Hull's Conch Syrup.
To Mm n t u Accident- a re
occurring among en-
ins of time and Keep
Salvation Oil Price K et.
Is a hat yon ought to have, in fact
must have it to folly life.
searching for it daily and
mourning Bud It not.
Thousand noon thousands of dollars are
annually by people In the hope
that, they attain And yet
it may by all. that
If used
Ions and the In trill bring
digestion and the demon
dyspepsia and Install instead
recommend Kilter
awl all eases of stomach
Mid Kidneys, e and It a at
A SAILOR'S
A. II.
believe In the Dutch
man, said Tom as he
took a tip from hi can In the of
the and set It down again.
most certainly do,, for the
like, in my cruising among the water of
the world.
heard a great deal about the Fly-
Dutchman and other specter craft,
but I was However, after my
own experience, I am willing to
phantom ships, witches, sea serpents,
and in fact everything.
just gone home after a fire
year's cruise, and I had saved up my
money so as to take a nice little sum
home to the old woman, and I was
come.
Having been gone for so long, aid be-
no hand with a pen to write home, I
was afraid Mary might hare got spliced
again, believing that I had set sail for the
port of Paradise,
no; the was true to the sailor
lad, though the country parson was
cruising round her pretty sharp, and try-
to beat windward of her affections.
then, Mary had a comfortable
home which was all paid for, and the
son only got half a hundred a year.
broke up that
and silenced his yarns of
for Mary, when I ran in and drop-
anchor at the old home.
was in 1845, that I got connected
with the ship Falcon, cruising for right
whales in the Son t n Pacific
We were away down in latitude sixty-
three, having followed the whales south-
ward with extremely good luck, although
with constant danger from bodies of ice,
which were drifting from the Antarctic
circle, when we fell in with the
doc from our own port; and her captain,
bringing with him his mate
and two boat crews, came on board of
t see Captain Collier, commander.
Of course, a good chat was had among
officers and hands.
left home a year later than
Ourselves, the men had
advantage of us in the way of news; and
they told how such a ship was lying in
docks when they came away; how such
another was loading at tho head of the
wharf; how the Morrison had
just got in, and the L. B. Stafford been
heard from; and who had got married
in the year's interval, and who died
etc., etc.
But presently they informed us of a
singular circumstance, which only a few
days before had occurred in connection
with themselves. Right in the of
a school of whales, they had encountered
Flying Dutchman, which had
cleared their stern by not more than ten
feet, and on her deck they saw the
crew were dressed in white, which were
silent and motionless as corpses.
mates, you know it is
to deny, to a person's face, ex-
of a thing which he assures us
that he has seen; however I'm not over
nice in this particular.
One of our crew said that be would
try to believe enough of their story to
oblige them; this, with an old tar
like Perry Davis Davis he is
and gone an con-
with regard to
doubt Thus it may well lie
that no attempt was to dis-
guise the incredulity with which the ac-
count of the crew was re
in our
mates evidently thought that there
might be some foundation of fact for the
story, but they were not prepared to ac-
all its
was desirable to know the
Captain would have to say
on the subject
our visitors, ask old
man. You can't take the turns out of
what he says.
We soon found that Captain
the story of his men. d
relate I the yum to
lain Collier, while his mate was no lea
in the same direction.
males, therefore, that
tho crew seen some-
thing very remarkable, nil hough to what
degree fear and might have
clothed it with terror beyond the
was i till uncertain.
all we were placed sharply
on tho lookout for an object so a
hoping, yet half dreading, lo sec it.
some days Flying
formed the chief of
on board the and all that any
crew had ever heard or read
the mysterious craft was up
afresh nod related with new
One night as were running t-lowly
we sighted a large which
coming right down upon as, and the cap-
jammed his helm to port and hailed
her hard.
Ii paid no attention to and
came straighten, just our atom
by not more than six feet. It was a
row and tho crew, most of whom
on deck, were
I noticed something that I did
not like.
the schooner was white all over
from hull to and on her decks
crew I saw were in while, and
they were as and motionless as
corpses. schooner also carried with
her a chilly air that made me shiver, and
felt uncommonly uncomfortable. In
fact, it was the Flying D
had appeared to us in the same manner
as had to the crew.
We got safely into port, but we sent a
dead ashore, for one of the crew
died day after we had seen tho
phantom schooner, and this act me think-
more about tho craft,
months later we again sighted
the white schooner. She and
coining on a course that would bi her
across our bows, if tho captain hold en.
mates, the Falcon was a fast
sailor, and the captain was determined to
make white craft go astern. 8- we
out the reefs, crowded on all she
carry, arid sent her ahead a slap-
ping pace. the white her
own without putting Out another stitch
of canvas.
last we were so near that the can-
Han determined to hail her and
Schooner No answer.
Schooner ahoy, ahoy
no answer, and he shouted, Coo-
yon, what is that T
still, and then right
bows went the stranger.
I felt the same chill as before,
and in the d I saw that same
crew.
next moment came one of the
crew from below, and reasserted the cap-
to shorten sail, as the cook, who was
ill, was much shaken up.
took in canvas, hot it did no good,
for the man died the following day, and
then I began to think that the craft was
and not sailed by men.
several months we continued
cruising for whales, without seeing the
craft, and my spirit rose, until one moon-
light night as ware going into port,
we again saw that same identical
tom
come out from somewhere
us, overhauled and glided
by close that I could
have thrown a line board, not
answer could we get to
I I found--at say
old lady had id her life's cable, hes-
Though fiat was-
years ago, I
ABOUT
has passed an act to prevent
the practice of fraud by tree peddlers in
the sale of nursery stock. Peddlers from
other states before being allowed to sell
must file an affidavit with the secretary
of State of Minnesota that they are all
right and enter into bonds to the
same effect
By mulching newly set trees or plants
late in the fall or early winter, the dam-
age from thawing and freezing may be
Another advantage,
with fruit, is that it often delays
in the spring, and in this way
prevent the fruit from being damaged.
The strongest wood in the United
States, according to Professor Sargent,
is that of the nutmeg hickory of the Ar-
region, and the weakest is the
West Indian birch. The most elastic it
the tamarack, the white or
hickory ranking far below it The
having the highest specific gravity is tho
blue wood of Texas.
Magnitude of Agriculture.
As far back as 1890 the value of the
farms of the United States exceeded ten
thousand million dollars. To the
industry of their owners
farms yielded an aggregate annual value
of nearly four thousand million dollars,
in the production of which a vast
of nearly eight million toilers
utilize I nearly half a billion worth of
farm implements. The value of live
stock on farms, estimated in the last
census to be worth over one thousand
five hundred million of dollars, is shown
by the reliable statistics collected by the
Department of Agriculture to be to-day
two thousand five and seven million
dollars. A low estimate of the number
of farmers and farm laborers employed
on our five million farms places it at
nearly ten million persons, representing
thirty million people, or nearly one-half
of our present population. Secretary
Rusk adds that the productive-
of our agriculture and the prosper-
of our farmers the entire wealth and
prosperity of the whole nation depend.
The trade and commerce of this vast
country, of which we so proudly boast,
the great transportation facilities so
greatly developed during the past
of a century, are all possible only
because the underlying industry of them
all, agriculture, has called them into be-
Even the product of our mines is
only valuable because of the commerce
and the wealth created by our
These are strong assertion, but
they are assertions fully justified by the
facts and recognized world over by
the highest authorities In political econ-
frog Farming
Hie frog editor in some
paper must have been let loose again, to
judge from the many inquiries we re-
every day about frog farming.
The principal frog farms are said to
in New Jersey. We have traveled
through the State of New Jersey in all
directions, but hare been able to
discover one of these frog farms, nor
have any of our many correspondents in
that State ever beard of such a thing.
The very nature of frog prevents their
being raised in large quantities in
The young frogs live principally
on small insects and crustaceans, and
how to provide these In sufficient
ties would be the groat problem in such
an undertaking. If their is such a thing
as a successful frog raising establishment
anywhere in existence, we would be
tempted to travel a great way to see it
American Agriculturist
Sawyer's Sam.
It pays to keep a scrap book. It is a
way of storing up knowledge. When
you read a good thing, particularly if it
is new, cut it out and paste it where it
can be referred to again.
Take no advice without submitting it
to the test of your judgment What
man found good may not tho best
thing for you.
A thinking cap is the most useful tool
to keep about the house. It will save
many a dollar from being put it
will do no good.
Educate your boys to work and
to deny themselves tho fripperies and
vanities of life. No boy was ever
a farmer by driving a fast horse or at-
tending all the Kills.
Good books and newspapers arc an at-
traction that no farmer with a family
can afford to do without It is money
well spent make home attractive
and an aid to useful knowledge.
Reading and study arc trees of slow
growth. They do not produce an early
crop; but when they begin to bear they
yield largely and last for a lifetime.
Bar for Home Use and
If to Vie used for tho farm do not
it to got too rip; if to be sold for haling,
the do not mind the hard
stems, they think that there Is more
in it So there would be in
shingles a-id in any kind of wood.
beginning of flowering is the proper
time to begin clover, as well as
the grasses. by hard and
woody i senior thin orchard grass.
It better hay to sell, but not so
good to feed out
Fattening Animal.
Only a portion of the food of an
is stored up as fat; a large share is
expended in keeping tho warm.
If the weather be mild, much less of the
food will be require lo keep up the heat,
and more will go to laying on fat There
are two kinds of food
producers and flesh formers. Every
farmer who fattens animals, whether
beeves or poultry, should study the com-
position of food, that he may feed most
profitably.
The Best Salve in the world for rut,
Sore. Salt
Sore. Hands
and all Skin
and positively cure Tile, or no
It is guaranteed to
or money
cents per box. For sale h
L. Wooten.
All honest, conscientious
give II. ft. B.
a t rial, frankly admit Its superiority over
ALL ether blood medicines.
Pr. W. t I flail Will Ha
regard II. It. B. as one of the best
A. H. Nashville. Tenn.
of II. II. B. are fa-
it speedy action is wonder-
Dr. J. W. Rhodes.
confess B. B. B. is
end quickest medicine for rheumatism I
have
Dr. J. Ga.
cheerfully recommend
as a flue tonic Its use cured
an excrescence of neck r other
remedies effected no perceptible
Dr. II. Montgomery.
Ala., writes mother Instated on my
celling B. B. R. for her rheumatism, as
her stubbornly resisted
She experienced Immediate
and her improvement has been
A physician who w Mies his
name not given, patient of
mil e whose ease of tertiary syphilis was
mil killing him, which no treat-
inn it seemed to check, cured
twelve bottles of B. II. B.
lie tip skin and
The Eastern Reflector,
IN COMBINATION WITH
if says the Springfield
EASTERN M.,
AWAKE
if AT THIS OFFICE
NOVEMBER
WHO Of
OffER
FOR THE YOUNGER YOUNG FOLKS.
B-s , -y f-m , offers combination Tales with
Eastern Reflector-
cents x For baby and in the nursery. 81.76 I year.
Mm add Women a For readers. a year.
Ta a For Sunday week-day reading. a year
SUBSCRIBE aSK SAVE MONEY
When the is with colic
or once Dr. Bull's
Syrup and observe its quick
and effect.
If your id is and the
purities break the skin in
and eruptions, you need a Rood med-
LEGAL NOTICES
It Incurable.
Bead the fallowing Mr. II.
Ark., say down
with abscess of the and friend
and pronounced me an incur-
able Regan Inking Dr.
King's New discovery for consumption,
m now on my third bottle, and able to
oversee the work on farm. It is the
finest medicine ever
Jesse O ,
Had it not been for Dr. King's
Discovery would have
died of troubles, given up
doctors Am now in or health.
Sample free at drug-
store.
Notice to Creditors.
Letters of Administration on the Ks-
I of Keel having
grunted to the undersigned by the Hon.
I K. A. Superior Court Clerk of Pitt
County on the Kill day of Feb. 1800
i is hereby to all creditors of
Keel deceased to present
their claims duly to the
undersigned Administrator on or before
the first day of March A. D.
Person indebted to said are like-
wise notified to make; payment within
that time. D.
Adm. of Keel
N. C, Feb.
net Advisable.
Some nun are always positive, with or
without Mason, while others err on the
other side, and are never certain of any-
thing. General
first secretary of a who afterward
lived at Me., had a
named who was com-
supposed to know more
than did himself.
He was in hi and
could weakness of which
general occasionally made game, j
On one Knox a
new house, which one of
several ho had completed, when
he took it into his head to see whether he
could get a negative out of his
useful superintendent.
he, you think
that the chimneys in this
finished and topped lie
removed without being taken down, and
be put into that house pointing
to another in a less ard state nearly
half a mile away.
as usual.
Then in a moment he saw the
of his answer, and
be done, but it
would injure the building.
Notice to Creditors.
HAVING before the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Pitt county on the
day Jan. as Administrator
upon the estate of Mary Spain,
tins is to notify all persons holding claims
against said estate to their claims
payment within twelve
this date or this notice will be plead In
liar of their recovery. All person ow-
estate will come forward and
make immediate settlement.
25th, 1890.
of Mary Spain.
TO core Biliousness, Sick
Liver Complaints, take
the sale and certain remedy.
BILE BEANS
Use the MM ALL Mae Beans to the
most
Soar sail Sass
f either nag, per
I IS fa.
a.
people habitually endure a feel-
think they
have to. would take Dr. J. If.
this feeling of
weariness give to visor and
vitality.
No liniment i- in more
widely known J. II.
Volcanic Gil It Is n
remedy.
Persons advanced in f. -I
nun stranger, a well as Ires the
infirmities of by Dr. II
i the bane of ninny
lives. This annoying complaint may lie
cured and prevented by the occasional
use of Dr. J. II. Liver and
Kidney
Disease lies in ambush for the a
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en-
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud-
den changes of and the
least robust are the easiest
Dr. J. If.
will give tone, vitality and strength to
the entire body.
Dial re's after
headache, and indigestion are
Dr J. Me Ivan's Liver
If you feel unable
have tired feeling, Dr. J. II.
it will make you
bright active and vigorous.
The most popular liniment, is old
reliable. Dr. J. II. Volcanic
Gil Liniment.
One of Dr. J. Little Liv-
and Kidney taken at night be
fore going in lied, will move the bowels
the will astonish
Pimples, boils and other humors, are
liable to appear when the blood gets
healed. Dr. J. II.
Is the beat remedy.
Land Sale.
By virtue of the given me by
order of the Clerk of the
Court of Pitt county In the case of S.
Sheppard. vs. Naomi and
The undersigned
will sell for cash the Court House
door in Greenville at public auction on
Monday the 17th day of March I a
one half undivided interest in the follow-
described town Situated in the
town of Greenville known in the
plot said town as Lot No bounded
on the North by Front Street, on the
East by Green street, on by
lot No. and on the South by lot No.
B. S.
This February 1800.
Notice.
On the Kill of M A.
D. I will sell at the II -use
door in the town of Greenville lo
highest bidder for cash one tract of laud
in county containing about
acres and bounded as follows Situated
in Greenville township North side of
Tar River, adjoining the lands
Miss S. O. Brown and others.
Sixty acres of described land
will be Bold for the purchase, money of
of said land and known as the Bridge
Field trait, to satisfy sundry executions
in my hands for collection against B. J.
and which have been levied on
said laud the property of said B. J.
A. K Shit.
By It. XV. King. S.
February
Notice.
On Monday the day of A.
D. I Will sell at the Court
don-in town Greenville to the
bidder for Cash the -d
one sixth interest in one tract of land in
Pitt county containing acres
and bounded as Greenville
Township North Side of Tar Ad-
joining the lands of It, II. Carney. S.
Johnson and Also one
tract In Greenville Township on
North Side Tar Hirer adjoining the
lands of A. D. J. A.
mid others, containing
more of less, the said
that of G A. ill I Slide
his fuller, XV. and be-
the one-sixth undivided interest In
the lands of the said IX-. MeG at
lime of his drain, Io satisfy sundry
executions in my for collection
G. A. and
been levied on said land as the property
of said G. A.
J. A. K.
It. XV. King.
February 1890.
Notice.
On 19th day of March
A. D. 1800. I will sell the Court House
door in the town of Greenville to the
highest bidder for CASK one tract of
in Pitt containing about
acres and bounded as follow Situated
Township, on the side of
the public leading from Gum
Swamp Church to and being the
excess of the homestead of T.
adjoining the lands of the late F. C
the Bridges land,
way, G. A, and others, contain-
about six hundred and twenty-six
acres more or less, being all woods
land, to satisfy an execution In
for collection against T. J. and
which has been levied on said laud as
the property of J.
J.
By R. W. KING. Feb.
WHAT
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
CURES
CONSUMPTION
SCROFULA
BRONCHITIS
COLDS
Waiting
Wonderful Flesh Producer.
Many have gained one pound
par day by nae.
Scott's Emulsion a secret
remedy. It contains the
properties of tho
and Norwegian Cod
Oil, the potency of both
being largely increased. It is used
by Physicians oil over the world.
PALATABLE AS MILK.
by all
Tombs, Fencing, k
I would respectfully call your
to the following address and as
yon to remember that you can buy a
HEADSTONE or MONUMENT of
this house cheaper than any ether in the
country. That It Is the moat reliable
and best known having been
for forty years In this vicinity
the workmanship is second to none
and has unusual for Ailing or
promptly and satisfactory.
Very respectfully.
P. W. BATES
Nor
Spool
SIX-CORD
Cotton
IN
WHITE, BLACK AID COLORS,
FOR
Hand and Machine Use.
FOR SALE BY
M. R. LANG,
Greenville, N. C.
TEACHERS
Duckett. Principal,
Associate Principal
Mrs. E. W, De-
Assistant in
Department.
Miss May Ii
KM MAMa Vocal Music.
Miss Painting and
Drawing.
If J. G. Penmanship
and Commercial Department.
DEPARTMENTS.
Primary. Academic.
Classical and Mathematical. Mu-
sic. Painting and Drawing.
Commercial.
ADVANTAGES
Large, Comfortable
Location end Good
Plenty of Well Prepared Food
Boarders. A of Teachers,
all being graduates of first class
Music Department equal
in work to any in the State
New Pianos Organs.
A of nearly volumes,
purchased recently for the School.
Bates Moderate, from to fol
Board Toil ion Tuition and Terms
for Day Pupils the same as advertised
in Pupils who do not loud
with the Principal consult bin.
before engaging board elsewhere. For
fur. her particulars, Address,
JOHN
Principal.
C. B. EH V A MIS
B.
Printers and Binders,
1ST. C-
We have the largest and most complete
of the. kind to be found In
the Stale, and solicit orders for all classes
Commercial,
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING STATIONERY It E A D Y
FOR INVITATIONS
BLANKS AND
COUNTY
us your orders.
AND BINDERS,
N. C.
PATENTS
Obtained, and all business ii. the U, S.
Patent or in the Courts attended is
for Moderate Fees.
We are opposite the I, s. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents and
can Obtain patents III lot time than those
more remote from Washington.
W en the model or drawing is sent we
as to patent- free of charge,
and we make no change unless we on-
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. Money Did., and to
Is of tin- r. S. Patent For
advise terms reference lo
actual clients in your own State, or
address, C. A. Co.,
Washington, D, C
I II N W
e-.-i
i SI
Will. wOrt,
at. an
wits m,
lea. T-Ma , -S
U lo what w. H Una, rail
ilia. far all M. AM
.- Ska la fa u. ea as.
Self-Inking- Pencil
s -ca c-
ANYTHING
four name In J
. -C I- I r- V
PUSS I
One l-f I
y I
the
to
r in
-he
.
all I
retain is ---4 m
the el-
ii ft
t toe
a We will sis- y
fT I day .
bu. aw a a
W. pay .
GOOD BOOKS
Scat post-paid receipt of
In th
A most and sat
Pt's; paper reals; i
of
St A Paper, if eta
from Ward.
He. to pages-, paper cloth
at, Mas lark.
WRITE TO
Refer to
J. J.
B. C.
Storm Weather
for 1800. by Hot. It. Hicks, mailed
to any receipt of a two-coat
The Dr. J. II-
Co. Louis, Mo.
resort
GRAND EMPORIUM
Shaving, Cutting and Dressing Hal.
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Opera House, at which
I have recently located, and where I have
everything In my line
AND ATTRACT.
TO HAKE A
MODEL BARBER SHOP
all the improved appliances;
mil comfortable chairs.
sharpened at reasonable
for work outside of my sh
promptly executed. Very
CULLEY EDMON
. . ,. . . J


Title
Eastern reflector, 26 February 1890
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 26, 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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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/18976
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