Eastern reflector, 6 August 1890


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





THE REFLECTOR;
. -----Solicits your patronage
Its be lo please every
yr
s j c
-ST
The Eastern Reflector.
-HAS A-
JOB PRINTING-
that can be surpassed no-
in tills section. Our work always
satisfaction.
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
VOL. IX.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
NO.
The Eastern Reflector
GREENVILLE. C.
Hoary
Democratic Nominees. subscriber sometimes
waits on him a hickory stick
and the sheriff is not always
But the bitterness of these me in
For Judicial I
B. WOODARD,
Wilson.
STATE GOVERNMENT.
O. Fowle. of Wake.
M. Unit,
Secretary of L
of Wake.
W. Bate, of Wake.
of Wayne.
Superintendent of Public Instruction
Sidney M. Finger of
Attorney F. David-
son, of Buncombe.
Chief Justice-A. S. Ml of
Associate Clark, of
Joseph Davis, of
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and
Alfonzo C. of Burke.
First District II. Brown, of
Beaufort.
Second Philips.
Third G. Connor, of
on.
Whit . .
Take.
. of
Chatham.
Sixth T. Boykin. of
Seventh of
Eighth F. of
Iredell.
Ninth F. Graves, of
Surry.
Tenth C. of
Eleventh ML Shipp. of
Mecklenburg.
-Twelfth II.
of Buncombe.
IN
Vance, of Meek-;
Matt. W. of North-
House of District
G. Skinner, of
Second col.
of
W. of
Fender.
Fourth II.
Nash.
Fifth District. W. Brower. of
Sixth Rowland of
Robe-on.
S. Henderson,
of Rowan.
Eighth W. II. A. Cowles
Ninth G. Ewart of Hen-
GOVERNMENT.
Court A. Move.
Sheriff Tucker.
Register of II. James.
B. Cherry.
S. L. Ward.
B- Harris.
Commissioners Council Chair-
man. Guilford Mooring. C V, Newton.
John Flanagan, T. E. Keel.
Board of Binding
Chairman J. S. and J. D. j
fox.
Superintend liar-
ding.
of F. W. Brown.
Mayor F. G.
B. Greene.
Treasurer M. B. Lang.
Chief T. Smith.
R. Moore.
Ward. T. A.
col Ward. W. Smith, and R.
Greene. 3rd Ward, If. R. Lang and
Allen Warren; Ward, Joe col.
CHURCHES.
First and Third
vs. morning and night. Rev. N. C.
Hughes. D. D., Rector.
Sunday, morn-
and night. Prayer Meeting every
Wednesday night. Rev R. B. John,
Pastor.
second and
Sundays, morning night.
Meeting every Wednesday night. Rev.
A. D. Hunter. Pastor.
LODGES.
Greenville Lodge. No. MA, A. F. A-
If., meets 1st Thursday and Mon-
day night liter 1st and 3rd Sunday at
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow. W. M.,
G. L. Sec.
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets
2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma-
sonic Hall, F. W. H. P.
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F.
meets every Tuesday night. J. A. K.
Tucker, N. G.
Insurance Lodge. No. fin, K. of
meets first and third Friday night.
D. D. D.
Pitt Council, No. A. L. of meets
Thursday night. C. A. White, C.
Pitt county Alliance meets
the first Friday in January. April. July
and October. J. J.
E. A. Secretary.
Greenville Alliance meets Saturday
before the second Sunday in each month
at o'clock, M. Hall.
Fernando Ward, D. B. Spain.
Secretary.
poetry.
fade under the influence of
; Durham's good cheer and in
company of each other and of Dur-
hams people-
Now gravely, my country
I admonish you to magnify
minimize your sorrows
lo realize the dignity of your
Id rather lay out here among the trees, calling. You have a mission
h the singing and the bees.
A-knowing that I can do as please.
Than to live what folks nil's a life of ease
Up in the city.
Fer really
Whom the comfort is lei any man
In hot bricks a fan.
himself as he says lie can
in the city.
It's kinder lonesome, you'll say.
out here day day
In this kinder easy, careless
Hut a hour out here is a day
in the city.
look at the Bower
then heads up all over the
groan
fruit a the trees
down.
You don't such tiling- as these in
town.
rather, in the
As -aid afore, such things as these.
your own and minister to all
people who weigh your words.
There was never a time when your
to society were
greater or when it was more
tor us to be
able. At this period when, as it
would seem, a social revolution is
upon us, prejudice is about
being enthroned in seat of
son, commend to you the words of
you
may save me you will; you may
me if you will but whatever
happen, I shall keep my rudder
The Difference.
Henderson Gold Leaf.
In observing different towns and
The the birds and the bees their growth and how it
out here among the trees,
you can take your case as lies, are struck with
you please, amazement, and wonder such
Make-it Hie city.
a One thing that goes
Now. all the talk don't to -null , . .,., . . ;,.
Bout this life rough. u
I'm sure plenty good enough, seen ill the nation of their citizens.
you inc. taint half as i a every is lock
rough
As in the
mil for self and earing nothing
tor town and its growth. He sits
in his store or other place of
waits for his trade or for
to turn If
a at the Press Banquet thing is proposed be is a
in Durham by J. I. Editor cf unless he thinks he sees how
Joys and Sorrows of the
try Editor.
the Landmark-
You know I lie lecturer who had
for his subject. in
exhausted it in the six
no snakes
It is given to me to escape so
for though there be no
snakes in Ireland there be joys
in the cup editorial in Ire-
The assignment to me the sub
in hand, i take to be a
to my capacity
for lo be sine the oil in the
cruse would run out t lie
patience of my hearers should I is by its inhabitants,
to all that my fellow- How is it in a live,
of Joys . business n,,,,, active
Sorrows en- , . . ,. ., .
the latte,; and moreover, They are wide awake
what is now comedy might become public spirited. They work to-
as in the case of the for the public good, knowing
dwelt with such power individual prosperity,
upon the of life that
of his hearers out and
themselves.
he is to make a dollars out of it
and no one can possibly make
any I lung. On this principle he turns
down every public enterprise or
Lie too much
will come any way town
come and oilier such things
the whole import of which is that
town is the tile universe,
when truth of the matter is that
the at large hardly knows
that there is such n place, and will
never know it as long as such a pol-
With reference to the joys which
They advertise their business
their town keep on the alert
ever ready to extend their territory
POST OFFICE.
Flours open for all business from A.
M. to P. M. All mails distributed
on arrival. The general deliver will
be kept open for IS minutes at night
after the Northern mail is distributed.
Northern arrives daily
at P. M. and departs at
A. M.
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland
mails arrives at
M. and departs at P. M.
Washington, X
I loads, Chocowinity and Grimesland
mails daily at
P. M. and departs at A. M.
Hell's
Ferry, Johnson's Mills.
and Pullet arrive Tuesday
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and
departs at P. M.
Vanceboro, Black Jack and Calico
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M.
and departs even Friday at A M.
J. J. PERKINS P. M
Rev. A. D. Hunter's
Appointments,
1st
Baptist
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and
night, Greenville Baptist church, also
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night.
3rd Sunday, morning and night. Beth-
el Baptist
brighten the lite of the meal j and increase- their They try
are certain popular of endeavoring to
misapprehensions which I am glad,. . . . .
to have this opportunity to correct I B can
To be able to the printers, customer they do it at once.
Saturday evening out of a If they cannot they try to enable
wages, is one peculiarly his own. their to sell him.
but the main his joys are in
different from thane of other . ,
To open a letter which he feels ct all home enterprises, with
his bones contains a dun, and to them, and of their
find a postal note a conversation is and how
who is three years in arrears, it ls boat and livest place
a sensation which can be com , . .
, . . . . where. Propose any enterprise and
pared to except the stern i , , , ,
joy with which lie bails the appear- Is not how
of a load of fuel brought by can I get out of in six months
a wood subscriber when the snow is but will it to promote the
falling and the printers are setting progress of town
by a fire made bound vol . . . . . . ,,. .
r , d it bung more people Will it
nines of the Congressional B
let other men have found agree- give more employment to
able surprises mail and here You do bear any
have been cold this class objecting to any enterprise be-
and have warmed some else started it or
the, strong man rejoices in one class more
his strength, so does Cue country directly than another, for they re-
editor in his influence. I, even i, that to help one business in-
have power to control over men , in a live town is to help all.
No longer ago than Saturday To the property bolder is to
afternoon a help the laboring man and met
There were four men in it who the laboring wort to do
waited to see how voted and then the capitalist reap a
they went voted the other way. ht. Help the property holder
have in time taken my public u must have the work of labor-
moulder from behind my man.
ear advocated the claims of a
to office carried
every township the
him. In all the of my ac
do not of but
other who, I believe beat
Times the
South.
The Record this
week
Regardless of efforts of a
politicians to retard the South's in-
progress, the great mass of
the American people North South
are becoming more and more impress-
ed with the wonderful activity that
is seen every where from Maryland to
Texas. Enterprises involving mil-
lions of dollars are being pushed
ahead by men who a year or two ago
would not believe that the South
the advantages which the
for years
claimed for nor would they believe
that it was ever lo hold the command-
position in industrial
which now doing all in their
to give it. At Norfolk and at
Salem, Va., plans arc being
by outside capitalists extensive
steel plants, the one at Norfolk to
make Bessemer steel from Cuban ores
an the one at Salem for basic steel,
while at Vista the money has
been raised a steel plant
At Ala., work has been
commenced upon the large steel en-
recently reported, which is
to have a daily capacity of tuns
of finished steel, and include rolling
mill, rail mill cotton tie mill.
Here are four great en-
which arc signs the
times that indicate that the South is
now to turn its attention to steel
making with the same vigor that it
has for several years given to
crease in iron production. This is
the rounding out of the South's de-
and is but the natural
order of growth from the Drat stages
of a country's development in the
making of coarser glades goods to
the liner productions. As iron
and steel, so will it be in the
cotton goods, for the South
having gained control of the
Tor the cheaper grades of cotton goods
will, now turn its attention to liner
qualities, and in all other lines of in-
we may look I r the same
The past week has been prolific of
new enterprises, large and small, in
addition to the four steel plants
mentioned. At Charlotte Harbor,
large phosphate works are to be
built a company having a
capital of At Rome, Ga.,
brick works are to be built,
at Savannah, a wall
plaster company has been
At Greensboro, N. Philadelphia
are to build a
rolling mill. In Maryland a
querying company has been organ-
At Marion, X. C, a
gold mining company will put in
machinery and establish
lion works;, at Wilmington, in the
same State, a factory to ex-
tract oil from pine has been built; at
a land company
been organized, at Marion, a
land company; Chattanooga,
Tenn., is to have a new ice
factory, Nashville will probably
secure a packing-house,
in Virginia a company has
been organized at to build
a beef a mining
has purchased
acres land, and will build a
new town; at Mineral City an Eng-
company with a capital
has purchased extensive gold
mines, and will erect sulphuric acid,
phosphate and reduction works.
This is a summary only a of
the big enterprises for one week. and.
taken in consideration with the many
smaller concerns that are being es-
in almost, every town of
the South, it gives a fair idea
what the South is doing, despite
and the heat of mid-summer.
A Fight Whiskey in
Georgia.
There is going to be a big fight
the next Legislature for the sup-
of bar rooms in Georgia.
A general law making it to
sell whiskey quantities of less
than one will be asked
Five thousand petitions are now
being circulated over the State and
fifteen hundred ministers arc at
work for t lie law.
Judge John Cunningham, at
Atlanta, is the leaders the
movement, he and his co-labor-
are very much The
gentleman who are at the bead of
this movement think that now is the
time to press their bill, the original
package decision having made the
liquor question a new issue.
also base hopes the fact that the
Alliance is against bar-
keeping. ion.
A LIGHT IN THE
Happy
Win. Postmaster of
Bitten has done
more for me than all oilier medicines
combined, for that bad arising
from Kidney and User John
Leslie, and of same
place. Electric Hitters to
be the best Kidney and medicine,
made me feel like a new J.
Gardner, hardware merchant, same
town, Electric Hitters is just the
thing for a man who is all i down
don't care whether he lives or he
found new strength, good appetite
Id, just like he had a new lease on life.
Only a bottle, at L.
Drug Store.
Pretty Wives, Husbands.
A little man asking how it hap
pencil that many beautiful ladies
took up with but indifferent
bands-, after many fine offers, was
thus aptly answered by a mountain
during a walk, requested her to go
into a delightful and
there get the handsomest reed.
She must get it once going through
wit boat I inning. She went, and
coming, out brought quite a
mean reed, when he asked if that
was one she saw.
replied she; saw
liner as went along, but kept
hopes of a much better until i
had gotten through, and then was
obliged select the best that was
Fork Ledger.
A Banquet Without Wine.
In giving a banquet without
to so distinguished a body of
as the North Carolina
this record. He is a country editor I Association, the Common-
too. In Greece an Club of this city made a de-
general said the victories of laded innovation upon long
his rival would not permit him usage. It is true that the
sleep. leave this branch of my of wine at public, and private
subject least arouse the jealousy dinners, as well, has been condemned
my brethren. , m leaders of social reform,
And must condense. There is, nothing short of genuine
joy in the heart of the country, age was required to cut loose from
editor alter the church the custom. The
val. the ladies come around and ask ; Club decided to come out on the side
for his bill; when the commence virtue, and take the risk of offend-
season is over; when he is told public opinion. The result was
of the death of the man who comes that could be desired and more
op and reads exchanges to him. than could be expected. The Press
But as suggested by my subject, Association not only approved the
admitted at the outset, be has, action of the club, but attested its
his sorrows, too. There are times approval by adopting following
when the grasshopper is a resolution without a dissenting voice
first cotton boll, the egg with
crooked neck and man with the of Durham
the first of season, through its committee of arrange-
demand elaborate notice; chick- j has established the precedent
with four legs and a banquet without liquors in its
back, and calf with three legs entertainment of the N. C. Press
an eye the top of his head, I Association, it is resolved by the
clamor for recognition. The ad- Association that its thanks are
How to Avoid Bad Husbands.
Never marry for wealth. A
man's not things
she
Never marry a fop who struts
about dandy like his gloves
j ruffles, a silver beaded
and rings upon bis
i There is a trap.
Never marry a niggardly, close
I fisted, sordid wretch, who saves
penny, or it
Take care less be stint you
to death.
Never marry a stranger, whose
character is not known or tested.
Some girls jump into the fire
knowing.
Never marry a who treats, his
mother or sister unkindly or
Such treatment is sure
indication of a mean and wicked
man.
Never on any account marry a
gambler, a profane, or who
the least lightly of God or
religion Such a person will never
make a good husband.
Using agent who wants top of
column on the. local page, read-
matter on both sides and fol
and are hereby tendered for
this mark of Durham's regard for
the cause of temperance and for the
lowed by reading, and wants it at testimony such action bears to the
half-price leas per cent, bars the sobriety of North Carolina
editor's way to a strictly religions Globe.
Are Ton an
More than half a billion of dollars in
unclaimed estates are awaiting the right-
heirs In England, Scotland, Wales
and Ireland. Most of these heirs are in
the United States, and have been
for in English papers. Thousands
of heirs have never seen these advertise-
If your ancestor on your father's
or mother's side came from any of the
above named countries do not fail to
write to E. Ross, European Claims
Agency, Grand St., New York, and
ascertain if you are an heir. Your de-
ceased ancestor's rights are yours by
British law. We have information of
every estate and deceased person whose
heirs have been advertised for in
years. Send postal note for cents to
insure information. If yon are an heir
we will recover the estate for you. No
recovery, no fee.
What a Leading Physician
Dr. S. Gordon, a leading
of Ml. writes the
following under date March
cheerfully recommend Swift's
S. as a Ionic and gen-
health restorer, also in case of
Blood Poison it always gives ;
Years Suffering.
years have been troubled
with a blood taint that has
the skill the best physicians of.
Ohio and Indiana, the disease finally
affected my eyes to such an extent
that I was almost blind. I was then j
induced to lake a course Swift's
Specific S. and am thankful
to say that alter taking a few bottles
I was entirely cured. My eyesight
is and my general
health is better than it has been for
years, and there is no trace of I lie
disease left. I consider S. S. the
best blood purifier and general health
tonic to day on the
Ind.
Treatise and Skin Din
mailed free.
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
Equivalent
units have the following
A shekel of gob was S.
A firkin was seven pints. A talent
gold was A talent of silver
was reed was near-
feet. A cubit was nearly
inches. A bin was gallon and
pints. A mite was less than a
quarter of a glass. A shekel silver
was about cents. A piece of silver,
or a penny, was A sabbath
day's journey was about an English
mile. An or bath, contains
gallons and pints. A day's journey
was about 1-5 miles. A hand's
breadth is equal to inches. A fin-
breadth is equal to inch. A
farthing cents.
The Story on the Well Known
Song
Few are probably the persons who
have not one time or the other heard
the Sunday school song, Light in
the Unless I mil mistaken,
says a Times writer, it is
founded a story told upon the
little island of but which might
easily have its counterpart on id-
most any seashore where a mother's
heart beats with yearning love for her
sailor son and keens its fond promise
from night to light.
Among the fisher folks on the
island lived a woman and lie
was her only child, the pride of bar
heart as well as the source of constant
dread, for the boy loved the sea as bis
father before had loved it, and nothing
gave Mm so much pleasure as to watch
the incoming tide tumble its curling
waves over the sands. No sooner was
strong enough to wield an oar and
steer a boat than he joined the man in
their
The mother, with all her feats and
the fate of a long line of sailors in her
mind, yet would not have had it other-
Vise, for it would have bean deemed
dishonor among the hardy coasters to
kept tho boy at home or sent him
safely at work for some What-
ever the they must be faced
for the sake of family pride. He was a
great favorite among tho
folk and with the sailors, and when at
last his year came around and ho
obtained the consent of his mother to
go to sea he easily found a good ship
and captain. Then there was parting,
and tears shed by the mother, while
he looked forward into great, wide
world with all tho joyous eagerness of
a boy. But with her last blessing the
widowed mother promised that every
night a light should burn tho sea-
ward window of her cottage to light
him homeward and to show him that
she still lived, awaiting his return.
The ship sailed. Six months passed
and sailors dropped into the village and
told how she had been spoken and all
was well, and the neighbors came to the
cottage and told the pleasant news to
the waiting mother, who nightly
the candle, lit it and set it in tho
window to make a bright path up the
sands. six months elapsed, and
other sailors arrived from far off lands,
but they had DO news to toll of tho
ship. A great storm bad happened
and she was overdue. She might yet
make tho people shook
their beads and carried no tales to tho
widow, whoso burned brightly
every night and cast long streamers of
light out upon the sea. Another year
passed, but the sailors going or coming
brought no news of the ship, and the
neighbors whispered apart and shook
their heads whenever any one spoke of
the widow's son, but no one was cruel
enough to cut tho slender threads
which held the anchor of her hope.
And thus tho light continued to glow
out toward the sea at every gloaming
and burned steadily through every
night.
Years came and went. The children
who had played with tho sailor lad
had grown be men and women, her
own bead had been silvered with age.
lier form was bowed, yet no one dared
to cut the cables of her hope. Tender
words her and tender hands
smoothed the way for as she pa-
for the homo coming of
her fair haired boy, every night
the glow of her candle streamed out to
seaward and fold the story of tho
heart at home.
How many years did she watch and
wait I do not know. But one day,
at eventide, there was no gleaming
patch of light across the sands. The
window remained dark, and the
beacon failed the and
when they wondered and went to the
cottage they found that tho mother's
soul bad gone out to seek son.
Killed by a Horse.
Franklin, Mass.,
owns a bay horse known by the name
of Shiloh that is possessed of a peculiar
accomplishment. Mr. Franklin's stable,
a rather old is infested by rats
that give the horses much trouble, steal-
their food and making themselves
pests generally. It began to be observed
a short time since that in Shiloh's stall I
there was to be found every morning I
one or more of tho rodents dead, tho
bodies of which indicated that I
had died violent deaths, but what
that death WM remained a mystery i
f until one of the stablemen discovered ,
that tin big bay
He was then watched at the work.
and the strategy and cunning of the
is said to be remarkable. Ho .
will stand over a rat hole for any length
of time stirring, bis ears alert
Slid his eyes fixed on tho hole. I
i us the rat breaks cover abruptly and ,
hurriedly, as they always do, Shiloh ,
brings down the sharp hoof of his up-,
lifted foot upon his little but harassing
fix-, crushing the life out of him, and if
he fails to strike the wily creature
overtake with outstretched neck,
and seizing him in his powerful teeth
throw him against the side of the stall,
thus breaking his back. I
It is but seldom that this curious
ratter fails to kill his prey. The horse
I actually seems to enjoy the sport, for
I lie will repeat the trick again again,
and if any one stands and watches him
i at it he will, without ceasing to lie on
; the vivo for tho rat for an instant,
i occasionally turn his intelligent eye on
the spectator, as if to say. get
Philadelphia Times.
THE OLDEST COLLEGE GRADUATE.
Ho- Cur
street ear bus no name.
In the stable he has a number, but
business hours he is without any
particular identity. His driver seldom
addressee him except in the way of ob-
and. having no faith in the
a cheery voice, relies mainly
upon his stub of a whip for an increase
Of speed on the part of his team. In
the early days of street railroad travel
cars were provided with poles and
the horses hampered by much
harness. The poles have gone
out, and so has most of tho harness,
and now there is nothing left to Impede
tho animal's movements except the
load, often a load, behind him.
After a horse supplied n. part of
the motive power for a ear for a few
months be develops B considerable de-
of astuteness and intelligence.
He knows that when tho bell rings
tin re is a stop to ho made, comes
gradually to a halt of bis own accord.
Another ring and he is on the move
again. There is one point, however, at
which his intelligence or power of
stops, to date ho has not
succeeded in on sum-
mer whistle. Its tones, car piercing
and as they usually are, are en-
beyond his conception. Modula-
intones makes no impression on
his brain, and in the days when the
whistle is heard tho land stops
and starts solely at tho suggestion of
bis Eagle.
A mysterious explosion occurred
in a boarding house in Savannah
last week. Three persons were
killed and seven two of
whom will probably die.
A Scrap of Paper her Life.
It was just an ordinary scrap of wrap-
ping paper, but it saved life. She
was the last stages of consumption,
told by physicians that she was incurable
and could live only a short time; she
weighed less than seventy pounds. On
a piece of wrapping paper she read of
Dr. King's New Discovery, and got a
sample bottle; it helped her, she bought
a large bottle, it helped her more, bought
another and grew better fast, continued
its use and is now strong, healthy, rosy,
plump, weighing pounds. For fuller
particulars send stamp to W. H. Cole.
Druggist, Fort Smith. Trial bottles of
tills wonderful Discovery free at J. L.
Drugstore.
Dr. receives a
year from his Brooklyn
from a firm for the ad-
publication of his sermon,
for his contributions to a
journal, besides what he earns
on his lecture platform and from
general literary work.
He Cachet.
During the administration of
were granted
or even sold for a few by minis-
Some striking illustrations of tho
uses to which tins summary power was
put at times are afforded in the UM-
of tho do There
was in Paris a flower girl named Jean-
whoso beauty attracted the no-
of the gentlemen of tho court, and
Chevalier de happening to
find her looking particularly sprightly
one day, inquired tho reason.
husband was such a brute and such a
she answered, I have
bought a do cachet from the
do St. for ten
to free me from
Tho chevalier lost sight of
for a couple of years, and when be mot
her again she was pale and dejected.
you been all tins
he asked. hardly knew you
she replied, was a fool
to rejoice. My wicked husband had
the same idea as myself. He, too,
to the minister and bought a de
cachet for mo; so it cost our poor house-
hold twenty to get both of us
locked Century.
Bit Ha Too.
The old doctor and the old captain
were fast friends, both inveterate
Jokers and both, despite their
gate years, rabid sportsmen.
The doctor's frightful stammer did
seem to impede the flow of a joke, nor
did tho captain's equatorial girth lessen
his agility.
One afternoon the old men set out
On a rabbit hunt. As they passed
through an orchard something scurried
burrow.
shouted the
doctor. p-pull him and j
kneeling at the hole ha thrust his
hi up to the shoulder.
remarked after, a moment's fumbling,
g-get
t-try it, John;
your arm's Monger than
The captain knelt and thrust his arm
down, in an instant lie was executing
a war dance around the tree, waving a
bloody finger.
That's
rabbit. It's a ground
lie bite you, J-
the doctor, anxiously.
Don't you
took off the whole end of my
that's t-too
said tho doctor, taking
own hand from and
allowing a sadly lacerated thumb.
he mo
lie Ix m Man, and He Rode In
a Carriage with Lafayette.
That elderly man who bought a ticket
for depot, N. H., at the
Union station yesterday noon attracted
no special attention, simply because his
carriage was erect, his step ordinarily
firm, his eye clear and his hair brown.
Yet Amos A. Parker, of N.
H., is nearly years old, and by
of having graduated from tho
of Vermont in tho class of 1815
is not only the oldest college graduate
alive, but the alumnus who been
graduated longer than any other man
in America, not excepting George Ban-
croft, the historian, who graduated
from Harvard in the class of 1817. Mr.
Parker travels alone, and was on his
way home after a swing around the cir-
his route including Worcester.
and Hartford,
Conn., and this city, where Monday
night he visited his niece, Mrs. M. H.
Now. in to the facts
already stated or implied concerning
this astonishing old man, whoso men-
acumen is even less impaired than
bis vitality, are others
fully as interesting.
Knowing that Mr. Parker is his
90th year, one is puzzled to account for
his crop of One, brown hair. A wig, to
be sure, but why brown Simply be-
cause the wig was bought fifty or sixty
years ago. when the wearer had a right
to brown hair. Moreover, tho color
becomes him now. So much for the
wig. A very good humored and
man. be will give you the main
facts of his career, of which the most
recent in a sensational way was his mar-
a few years ago to Miss Julia
Smith, of Conn., when
were years old. Miss Smith, it
will be recalled, made herself famous
by refusing for years to pay taxes be-
cause women were not allowed to vote.
It was her translation of the Bible, by
the way, that Interested Mr. Parker so
much as to cause marriage. And ha
had been married Boon after
graduating he had married the college
president's daughter, while his second
wife was the daughter of Gen.
Even more memorable than tho mar-
of Ibis country
at Keens and until he
was past SO. were his experiences with
lien. Lafayette when that Revolution-
hero revisited America in 1825. Mr.
Parker, who was the son of a former
United States senator and the nephew
of three uncles who died on the battle
ground of Lexington, at that time was
On the staff of the governor of New
Hampshire, He was sent to Boston
with the state equipage to bring tho
marquis to Concord. It was a wonder-
journey for the young man, riding
with the friend of Washington along
the country roads. His reminiscences
of the journey and the visit of the gen-
to New Hampshire are all careful-
preserved in form, entitled
and Recollections of Gen.
Mr. Parker represented
in the New Hampshire leg-
fourteen times, but has not
held other elective state offices. He
busies himself nowadays in reading and
literary work, and in entertaining both
friends and Strangers With his vast store
of recollections. As he boards the
n be shows no sign of being unable
to reach his century
field Republican.
I spotted Man.
Admiral William of Ann.
Ills., who has returned from
in county, reports
that colored farmer who has
lived in that vicinity for years is
turning white. The first indication
of the change was the appearance of
while spot on his face. These have
grown until some of them as large
a silver dollar, and they are still
getting bigger. As tho rest of the
man's face is a coal black color tie-so
white spots give him an odd, piebald
appearance. His health is not affected
by the color of skin, and he Is en-
unconcerned about
change.
fraternal
AYCOCK DANIELS.
N. C
C C DANIELS
Remarkable Vitality.
Professor is on
fact that a person cannot live
for any length of time with only one
lung.
know a woman who has
been living with one lung for a good
many years and is hale and hearty.
Professor Impossible
Prove It, sir I Who is the woman f
wife of the Chinese
minister at Washington; his is
One
Silk Prohibited by
The Mohammedans considered silk
unclean, from its being produced by a
worm. Hence, it was decided that a
person wearing a garment made en-
of silk could not lawfully offer
up the daily prayers enjoined by the
Koran. Dry Goods Chronicle.
Got Out of Bel on Wrong Side,
A young lady hi this city who is a
light sleeper, and who is on ac-
count depended upon to awaken her
brother, a fireman, in case of a night
alarm, was badly left tho other night
on occasion of alarm, hearing
which she arose and proceeded as usual
to shout for her brother. Having done
to satisfaction she returned to
her bed and sleep. On awakening in
the morning she ascertained to her
mortification tint she had got out of
bed on the wrong side, and had been
shouting into a closet instead of
through the usual door, and her bro-
tho fireman, had not heard her at
Enterprise.
Attorneys-at--Law,
WILSON, n. c
L.
DENTIST,
Greenville. W.
ALEX I,. BLOW,
B Y-AT-L A W,
G RE E N V I
J. EM RE. J. H. TUCKER.
TUCKER
There
Miss Finn don't
spread your napkin over your breast;
it's excessively vulgar.
Papa simply spread the
napkin as a flag of my child. I
will take it down when the waiter re-
moves that Tribune.
When the King of Greece first start-
ed out as a euchre player he made up
his mind to always win, and ho has
never lost a game yet The chief
reason for his good luck lies in the
fact that every man who plays against
him is given to understand that if he
wins over three out of five he
will be trotted y some,
a.
A T-LA W
Greenville, N. C.
LATHAM. MARRY SKINNER
T SKINNER,
a w,
VI N. C.
V G. JAMES,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice in all the courts. Collection
a Specialty.
I B. YELLOWLEY,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,





EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C.
J. Editor and
Publisher's Announcement.
puke of
I The W
Durham and the Press Con-1 in charge of a
committee from the Common-
t they were taken on a
. special, car and carried to various
r-n-t wood
Just mention Durham now am
you at once catch the ear of the
Carolina editor. He has
factories. Cotton factories, wood
working factories, Duke's cigar-
Carolina editor, no j-l Blackwell's smoking
been there, met her people, enjoy-
led her hospitality, and found that f which
j Durham is the biggest town of its forbids
j size in the world. minutely. Before leaving the
For seventeen years the N. C. President Carr
At
MB
their decision that no , of the visit
In The Border Land.
Grand Big Sinner- Beautiful
Women--Fine
P Association has been meet- th a
SyS, U annual convention at and.
transient Advertisements.-One inch places as the body might decide These boxes
two weeks,
Inserted in Local session has held in
Column as reading items, cents
line for each Insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad-
and Notices,
and Sales.
to etc. will
be Charged for at legal rates and MUST
PAID IN The
has suffered some loss and
much because of having no
rule as to the payment of this class
of advert and in order to avoid
future trouble payment is advance
will be demanded.
Contracts for any space not mentioned
for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Copy Mew Advertisements and
all changes of advertisements should he
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to prompt in-
the day following.
The having a large
will be found a profitable medium
through which to reach the public.
and a number of packages of
tobacco. Returning to
the history of the Association than
the one in Durham which began I room
two weeks ago to-day. The edit- Mr Duke had
ors were invited by the Common- up a for
I wealth Club to be their packs of
. while in the city, by them were , packages of
I most loyally entertained and every j and bar-
mother's son of left charmed I that for
with the town and in love with the ; to abandon-
people. A good representation of j because of the
; editors present and they cu- j Tho Association elected Mr. J.
I joyed the occasion to the utmost. p as President for the
About CD or were there, among ;
some of the best editors in the editors
the State. Joe Daniels truly said 1.11 by tho lay
of them . two corner stones that
The bare are i genial, able, j marked beginning of two other
progressive set young men; few enterprises in that town.
Id in rears hut till young in
the Post Off ice at
Mail
of Durham,
literally been
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 6th, 1880.
Notice to Township Commit-
tees.
a re
heart and They are being
royally entertained by the generous
and hospitable people
the big pot
put in the little one.
The Association went promptly
to its work Wednesday and had a
session fraught with interest and
profit to the members. The pro
j not being, perhaps, of
to reader, we
desist from boring him with de-
right here that one
in the progress of
The members of the
township Democratic committees,,
elected at the primaries on ails, and only make
here and there m passing.
to b
the f August request
ed to meet at the Court House in
c of the
President, Mr. W. W.
Greenville on the 98th day
August immediately after the ad-
of the County Con-
for the purpose of elect
Commit- Historian, Mr. Jerome Dowd, of
the Charlotte read his paper
livered his annual address which
was sound from beginning to end
and well received. The Association
a County Executive
tee for the ensuing two years.
By order of the Democratic Ex- which started oil with some very
Pitt county, i provoking statistics as to
Committee
A. L. Blow. Chin.
Greenville. N. C, July
Congressional Convention.
At a meeting of the Democratic
Executive Committee of the first
Congressional District held at
the number of words used in the
papers of the State during the
past year keeping-the Alliance out
of politics, getting tho Alliance
into politics, and advocating the
merits of blood balm,
salve, ginger tonic,
cod liver oil, star lye, Ac. He ad-
Washington. X. C, this day from this to the more sober
topic of hygiene and hints on
was ordered that the Democratic
Convention of the first
District to nominate a can-
for Congress Ac, should be
held in the town of Elizabeth City New Journal, and Mr. J. J.
Brunei-, of the Salisbury Watch
tan, paid a splendid tribute
raising children. closing
he gave an interesting sketch of
the lives of Mr. H. S. Nunn, of the
August
N. C on Tuesday,
1890, P. M.
The attention of the county and
township committees of the sever-
counties of the district is called
thereto, to the end that there may-
be a full representation at said
convention.
John H. Small,
Chm. of the Committee.
County Democratic
A convention of the Democratic
party of Pitt county, will be held
in the Court House in Greenville,
on
28TH, 1890,
at o'clock M., for the purpose
of nominating candidates for the
Legislature and the various
offices.
Each township will be entitled to
elect to said convention one
gate and one alternate for every
twenty-five Democratic votes, and
one delegate for fractions of fifteen
or more votes cast in the last
election, that is to say,
Beaver Dam
Farmville
Greenville
Swift Creek
pursuance of the Plan of Or-
of the party, the Demo-
of the several townships are
requested to meet their
townships, at the usual
of meeting, on
1890,
at o'clock r. M. for the purpose
of appointing delegates to said
County Convention, for the
nation of Candidates for
the election of five Demo-
to constitute a Township Ex-
Committee.
By order of the Democratic Ex-
Committee of Pitt county.
L. Blow, Chm.
K. Williams Jr., Sec.
Id the Judicial Convention for
the first district bold at
Judge G. Drown, was
Judge and Mr, J. H.
Blount for Solicitor.
our recent rambles we met
with a State Senator from one of
the counties in the Metropolitan
District, who your
down Pitt whatever else
do this year, do not fail to send
my old friend, Willis Williams, back
to the
to both these deceased editors.
Wednesday night a public meet
was held which was attended
by a large number of the citizens
of Durham. At this meeting Mr.
J. S. Carr. President of the Com-
Club the biggest
man in this biggest North
delivered an address of
welcome to the editors, which was
warm, cordial, and pronounced by
everybody a gem. Tho response
to this was happily made by Mr.
W. E. the
Leader, the acknowledged wit of
the Association. Then followed
another feast in tho shape of tho
annual oration by Mr.
Haydn, of the Charlotte
It was bright, sparkling with
and kept the audience con-
with laughter. So good
was this oration that tho
v ill publish it full next week
and allow our readers to have a
little laughing spell, too. After
these exercises there was a ban-
in Hotel Claiborn, where tho
Commonwealth Club, editors and
other invited guests sat down to a
sumptuous After
of the superb menu, there
followed a of reason and
flow of that kept the
together until a. M. This
was a banquet entirely without
wines, in which the Association
felt highly complimented as will
be seen from a resolution adopted
and published elsewhere. Half of
the toasts on this occasion were
responded to by editors, by far the
most pleasant being tho closing
one was on the joys and
sorrows of the country editor, by
Mr. J. P. Caldwell, of the States-
Landmark. is published
on first page of this paper, but
tho print lacks the speaker's ex-
to make it truly
Thursday the editors came down
to Association routine again, and
at night were entertained by the
grandest concert ever given in
North Carolina. It was arranged
by Miss Lessie the
highly cultured musician of
our State, assisted by much of
Durham's best talent. A program
was rendered that was truly en-
trancing from beginning to end,
some of the performers had to
appear several times upon the
stage, so generous were the en-
cores.
Friday there was an-
other treat in store for the editors,
and it was then they began to see
Durham and find out what it was
Let us add
great factor
Durham is that every citizen of
the place works for Durham, and
a spirit of co-operation exists there
which is seldom seen in any town.
At noon the editors departed
from this city for
Morehead. As they left a choir
from Blackwell's factory stood by
the train and be with
yon till we meet
to Morehead, through
kindness of editor
of the and some of
of Goldsboro, the editors were
feasted upon refreshments at St.
James hotel in that city during the
val between trains. Morehead
was reached in time for supper,
the editors a few days
at the seaside as the guests of the
Atlantic Hotel. Gov. Jarvis said
in our presence, is the most
delightful place I ever and
right there he a
There were about guests at the
hotel. The fare was superb, the
music entrancing, the sailing so
joyous as to keep each soul
and fill every heart with rap-
delight, as the white wing-
ed fleet the moon's
light, went gliding through waters
that sparkled and shone like a
coronet of diamonds in some rich
crown. And the air was so
orating, and old ocean hap lost
none of its sublime
What more was needed to make it
delightful Had it not been that
some of us left wives at home
occasional desires to
creep into our hearts to home,
too; we would have right
there in Durham.
L. J. Moore, of New
heretofore a very prominent
has published a card with-
drawing from that parry, and has
tendered bis services to the Demo
Executive to labor
for the advancement of Democracy
He has discovered that
are too corrupt a white
to remain in and have any
principal.
While there are hosts of people in
first Congressional district who
sincerely regret that lion. T.
Skinner has withdrawn from the
race for the nomination, everybody
speaks in praise and admiration
his card. It oilier
his earnest desires
in the party, discord and
wrangling, in conventions, would be
a thing of the past. The district
can ill afford to dispense with Mr.
services. The convention
at Elizabeth City next Tuesday
nominate his successor.
One of the meanest, vilest
most circulars ever
circulated this State was sent out
last week, we
as the one
at this office was postmarked
there. It is even ahead the noted
Bares circular of two years ago,
from the fact that the author of that
was known, while the author of this
last production has so in
the depths of that he deals
his fellow man blow
cover of and keeps his
name a secret. The circular was
attack upon Gov. Fowle, Judge
Clark, Col. A. B. Andrews and Mr.
Spier Win taker, whom it charges
with having formed a combination
by which Judge Fowle was
tor the Governorship, in
of which Judge Clark was to
be appointed on the Supreme Court
it being then apparent,
Chief Justice Smith's health be-
very bad, that a vacancy must
occur the very near future. The
only apparent object of the circular
now is to besmirch the character of
Judge Clark and prevent his re-
ion for a seat upon the
Court bench, it is falling
fat short of its debased purpose, as
every district convention that has
met since the appearance of the
circular has adopted resolutions con
its anther and strongly
endorsing Judge Clark, It is even
having the effect of causing other
Falkland, N. C Aug. 2nd., 1890.
OF the Reflector.-
We have good crops about Falkland,
but among the farmers tobacco is
the talK. Mr. William Little hid
I he misfortune to lose his by
fire Thursday evening. They had
just pulled down the rip- when I he
tobacco caught an
almost like powder. Mr. Little is
a worthy, hard working man, and
loss falls heavily turn. He
has the entire sympathy of the vi-
We often read of Interstate
and out Pennsylvania
Grange's have interstate picnic--;
but the farmers of
Pitt had a border or
picnic at Lauding on the
day of August, which for
unalloyed enjoy-
not immense
was the kind a
This border country along
the line of these two counties
be beat tor pretty farmer-girls
rosier cheeks or sweeter
or with boys of more ruddy
health and daring manhood,
any portion of the Old North Caro-
State; and that is it
strong. The table was erected near
the was
what raging after the latter
rains, and was filled and heaped
up with all the good things for
which our border women are pro-
Alter all tho white people
hail dined colored were called
up there were many baskets
fragments left.
Senator Williams being on the
determined
to have a speech out of him, but he
until the girls
c old Senator always
had a weakness for them sort of
and then lie gave So the
boys hoisted the bottom of an old
and mounted
carts, wagons and
seats planks arranged under a
dense made all comfortable.
Mr. Williams got tho attention of
the crowd from the start and held
it more than one hour, lie took tor
his text ought to be
not to array one class
against another, that he did rot
believe in class that we
not dislike a man because lie
lives in town, him he
was a for his profession
lint that farmers should be
simply to protect themselves
He said the government had been
run, and was still being run, en-
for the rich, lie then discuss-
ed the silver tariff issues, in
their relation to the and the
laborer. In there were fifty
dollars per capita in circulation, and
now it is stated by Col. Polk his
speech of last week, that
there is not more than seven dollars,
lie interspersed his speech with
splitting anecdotes, and again with
pictures of sadness which brought
tears to the eyes both the aged
as he described how the
a thing got too
and the price too low for their
greed, would shut their works
and turn out tho operators without
food or shelter ; heedless of the
tears and deaf to orphan's cry
for bread ; that these men worship
no God, but gold, no laws
but protect and conceal their rob-
no but to uphold
heartless inhumanity.
These are the men who if you are
hungry, and ask for a fish would
give, yon a serpent; or for bread
would give you a stone. We heard
but one fault of tho speech, and
it was too short, and the regret
that every farmer laborer in
tho county could not hear it. In
order to make they day's enjoy
doubly sure, the of
the audience, repaired to the hos-
house of Julius Dupree,
then to sweetness long
drawn paid their devotion to
Terpsichore. D. G. F-
B. C. Pearce for Register.
Bethel, N. C, July
time
is fast approaching for the Demo-
of Put to again make a
to the position of of
Deeds. After consider and
weighing events have occurred
our county in with
the lives certain citizens, and ob
serving their zealous in behalf
the glorious old party that has
ever stood the storm, I rt my
duty as a voter and one who has
ever been true to Democratic
to place before the people for
their consideration a worth- gentle-
man whose name is familiar to every
man the I refer to B. O.
Pearce. He is a man who has ever
stood firm. While a youth he be-
his work the grand cause of
Democracy and has ever been true
to its under all
stances. Never did the beat of drum
marshal our forces together this
cause that Mr. Pearce was found
the front ready
to perform any duty that might be
allotted him. He has known what
it is to suffer the humiliation of
arrested at the point
bayonet marched by a guard
to the federal courts. Not only has
his time given, but Year alter
year his have spent in
furthering success of his party.
hope the people of con-
sider these matters and give
who spent his life in the service
and is now for eternity
the horror respect due him. It
we a man of honor, integrity
business qualifications let us
not forget U. Pearce. If
we will elect him and he will
stand firm as tho rock of ages.
N.
Th's seems to be a good year for
retiring faithful public servants. At
this writing, The has in mind
three judges of the superior court.
Womack, and Philips,
who have been to make
room for favorites.
congress are meeting with
no better fortune. has
been defeated
land has been run off Hack be-
fore tho assembling of the
convention, and there is
probability will be laid
on the in
is good policy, especially
when the public service may be
proved by a change, but there is
is danger of making mistakes in
displacing men of known integrity
and acknowledged and
I I WIS I CitS P
no vi
ROVE
-THAT
. DRAFT'S DEVOLVING TIE AD
REVOLVING
IS BEST GIN IN SOUTH.
-----1000-
HOGSHEADS,
GIVEN AWAY.
WHY IS IT THE BEST COTTON GIN IN It i
built Improved principles, having Revolving Heads the cuds the
Cotton BOX, which revolve with the roll Med cotton, thus preventing that
which occurs at the end of the cotton box In all other gins. Hence the
PRATT GIN does not break nor choke, carries a harder rail of seed cotton on the
saws than gins, and, in consequence of this, cleans the seed and of
course, yields more lint cotton. This is common if don't believe
what We say. write to any of the gentlemen whose names and appear be-
low, all of whom are using the Pratt and will have no other.
F. B. W. Cherry. Jno.
Aurora, F. B. Hooker, N. C; W. It. Bow. T. R. Boyd. Edwards
Mill, N. II. Fowler, Stonewall. N. C.; J, tucker. A. O. Cox,
N. C ; W. L. Smith. Calico, N. C; E. S. Waters, N. J. T.
son. X. C. W. S. I. V.
X. C; M. A. Windier, X. C. S. M. Smith,
N. C.; W. T. X. T. Gaylord, X.
H. Hampton,
M. A. Windley. Hath, S. M. Smith, Then. Bland, Johnson's
Washington Letter.
From Our Correspondent.
We arc pleased to announce lo the to-
growers of Pitt and adjoining
counties that we are prepared to give
Hogsheads free to any person who
will use them to ship their tobacco in
provided they will ship It to Messrs.
Davis ft Gregory, of Oxford, N. C.
Mess. Davis Gregory are very large
tobacco dealers and guarantee the high-
est prices for all tobaccos shipped to
them. And Since tiny offer this favor of
furnishing hogsheads have shown
such interest in the tobacco growing of
our section we hope our tobacco growers
will it to their interest to give them
a most liberal patronage.
Persons desiring to ship to other par-
ties can Obtain hogsheads of size
at a piece.
We promise prompt attention to all or-
sent to us at X. C
COX ft
wall until the ginning season is upon you to order
your gin. it will cost no more early than late. We will take orders now or any
time this summer, at cash prices, and deliver on good notes, without interest,
payable in November, 1800.
MOWING will sell the Buckeye on good
notes, to responsible payable November, 1890 and November Order
at
COTTON
GINS
To show the ladles the very latest and best
vies of
ti e Abe-Mow i i
show the ladies very
of
Are
aspirants tor the position to with-
that made this stirring, bustling, in favor.
In the Race.
one
who is anxious to read me out of the
race for Register of ban cir-
a report I bad with-
drawn from the contest to be decided
by the County Convention
to be held in Greenville August
next
Please be kind enough to say to
your readers that I am still in the
field, don't propose to get out
the Convention so decides,
and judging from my present
chances, it don't seem to be at all
probable body will decide
that way. Respectfully,
C. D.
All Work guaranteed.
Other Items from
N. C, August 4th, 1890.
Editor Reflector It has
been some time since you have had
any notes from our section. We
have such nice crops, which
every one to feel happy and grate-
we wish yon to know it.
The debate at the Irving Liter
Society on Saturday night was an
interesting and edifying one. The
speakers gave evidence of careful
preparation. The query was,
Resolved, the liquor traffic
has been a greater draw-back to the
than the credit system. The
entire evening was an enjoyable
one. The children entertained
with recitations and songs.
Mrs. G. W. Cox, of Dunn, N. C,
with several of her children is
spending sometime with her son
Mr. Eugene The first month
of School, near Mis. Mary
Smith's has closed. Below will be
the the roll of honor.
Their grade of deportment and pro-
in study combined.
Haddock, W. J. Slaughter.
John A. Hugh Cory, Olivia
Cox, Lena Bland, Theodore Cox,
Carrie Harris, Julia
Slaughter, Dora Bland, Jessie
Fred Nannie
Cox, Solomon Harris,
Harris, Minnie Haddock, Mat-
tie Stocks, Lula Haddock. W.
Washington. D. C. Aug. 1st 1890
Senator Hoar is a remarkable
product even tho republican
patty, lie has many absurd
things his life, but the climax
was reached when ho in advocacy Hats and Bonnets I
of the Federal Election before
tho republican caucus used the lei-
lowing language, which should
from public life for tho rest of
his natural favor pass-
the tariff bill, sooner than that
this Congress should pass the
Federal Election bill, would prefer
to every manufacturing
Massachusetts burned
ashes and the people of that
State required to labor callings
which they could not make more
than cents per day and that they
be required to live on It
is a great pity this ranting
demagogue could not be required to
live on cod and cents per
day.
The Senate now meets at
daily for the consideration of tho
tariff bill.
The Lodge bill still lies a state
coma, care of the
Privileges and Electrons.
The Behring sea troubles occupy
a groat deal of tho
at
present. Whether or not any leg-
will be the sub-
this session cannot be deter-
mined.
has introduced
a lull to incorporate the American
National Association of the Red
Cross, with Clara Barton, George
J. M and
others as its Alter
passage of the bill, it will be
lawful other association to
the symbol of the Red Cross
in this country.
Senator has introduced a
bill the benefit Dr. Mary
Walker. It calls for -10,000. It is
considered as a reimbursement to
her for her services
as an physician during
the war. This bill for her relief has
favorably by the
House committee military affairs
lour times
The tariff question will prob-
ably be settled for a mouth yet,
of Vermont, is the
prominent republican champion in
the Senate, this subject. Rut
all his arguments seem to be
more for the purpose or dis-
playing bis talents convincing
any of the sincerity of his re-
The Civil bill is also
the of the
Mr. has just finished a
severe attack on the Geological
Survey. It was respect to the
of the Great American
Desert. He ridiculed the work of
tho bureau in tho preparation of
typographical maps. These maps
reminded him of a little incident. A
merchant failed, and
went into bankruptcy. While re-
his misfortunes to a friend,
he was approached by a
and asked to buy a map of
queried the
bankrupt, what does a man in my
condition with a map of Cal-
Should not United
States with a deficiency
staring it in the lace ex-.
claim with the
Heavens. What do of a
logical map, more than
There is a lot of fresh talk about
Blame's resigning, and the fact
Mr. Harrison bas sent Mr.
Blaine word to meet him at Cape
May whither he bas gone bas
caused people to think
is something it. There is
certainly the biggest kind of a
row among republican lead-
and it would not be surprising
if it resulted in somebody's
A family figure in Washington
hotel lobbies will be removed when
W. G. Riley old
gentleman, by gad, is con-
firmed by the Senate as Consul to
some in to which
he has been nominated. Ho is the
original of the familiar in
the cartoon of the and the
and has always professed to
be an authority on the dueling code.
He was never known to refuse a
drink, nor was be ever
it is thought the
admiration made a mistake in
sending him to Mexico. If
American can stand he is
the man.
Our stock just opened has the newest
shapes and black
trimmed and
Hats and Bonnets Bonnets and Hats
Bonnets and Hats
We also have Ribbons and
Flowers of all kinds. Feather
Plumes, Trimmings, Crepes,
Handkerchiefs. Notions. In-
Caps and Sacks, etc.
Mrs. ft
N.
Having received from the Pratt Gin Factory the tools for trucing
and training new saws on old gins, and also other repair work, I here
by announce to all sinners that I can successfully repair their gins
heroin Washington for per cent, less than it will cost at
any factory, and also save largely in freights to from
the various factories. can do any work your gin
may need. Send your gin to the
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY
With freights prepared, and we will guarantee you
a good job. Don't wait, but send our gin at once, as
the last hour is always crowded, and you may be delayed. If
you can't spare the money now make special terms with at once
and send your gin without delay. It will cost no more soon than late.
HE YB HEADY.
FARM AND If ILL AND
ARM AND -.- ENGINES -.- AND
All sizes and styles commonly used, at Prices Reasonable Terms
OILERS.
RS.
The John Flanagan
COMPANY.
in business at the old Flanagan
shops and are manufacturing
all kinds of the best
VEHICLES.
We also do-
PAW
A -.- Mill . for .,
That will cut 10.000 feet of lumber per day. on good also larger sizes at such
rates of pries
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS.
That will raise pound- of seed cotton from a wagon in minutes. No cm-
can afford to do without one . Terms easy and prices satisfactory
3-TON WAGON SCALES, ONLY
Guaranteed correct or no Can weigh cotton or bay on the wagon, or
live stock on foot.
For prices, address,
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY.
O. K Manager, Washington, C.
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
Greenville, K.
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R.
J. G.
COME IN
We want to have a talk
with you and tell
you now cheap
we can sell
you
HARDWARE
Dixie and
Tobacco Plows, Plow
Castings. The Famous
Elmo Cook Stoves.
Give us your orders
for
TOBACCO FLUES
early and you will be
sure to get them in time
LATHAM PENDER,
Greenville, N. C.
ANOTHER
Car Load of Fine
Horses
AND
Mules,
--------Just received by-------
Greenville. N. C.
------and will be sold
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at reasonable terms on time on
proved security. I bought ray stock for
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as
anyone. Give me a call.
Salve.
The B est Salve in the world for
Bruises, ores. Ulcers, Salt Rheum
Fever Sores. Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded
cents per box. For said by J.
L.
Administrator's Notice
The having been appoint-
ed by the Clerk of the Superior Court of
Pitt County as administrator of tho es-
of William Mills having
as such. Notice is hereby given
to all persons holding claims against
said estate to present them to tho under-
signed duly authenticated for payment,
on or before the 21st day of May 1890,
or this notice will be plead in bar of
their recovery. All persons Indebted to
said estate are requested to make
payment. This the 21st day of
May 1890
T. C
of Wm. Mills
for
SOLID CHUNKS OF TRUTHS
J. B. CHERRY CO.;
your careful attention to their large and complete stock
GENERAL MERCHANDISE,
And solicit of each and every one at least a share of their esteemed patronage.-.
The cry of hard times we hear constantly on every hand, but we-,
--------wish to remind you that we have a--------
SPECIALLY SELECTED
-To meet not only competition, but to conquer the high
day is passed when the of friendship enters into
the buying of goods, why i because every one must and
will buy where they can buy cheapest.
WE ARE PREPARED TO SERVE AU
will favor us with their patronage. We will glad to have you
in and see us and let us give yon at least hearty shake of the
and B kindly greeting. Make our place your headquarters while.
in the town. Prices and quality are what you want
CT hard earned dollars and that is just what we
got for you,
No Mistake No Bragging No Back Down
We mean every word of it and can and will do what we tell you. Look
this column and see if we cannot interest you in bargains.
stock
Dry Goods, Notions, Furnishing Goods, Caps,
Shoes, Groceries, provisions, Harness and
Valises-Wood and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, Tinware,
Plows and Mattresses, Bed Springs, Cots,
And easy and comfortable Lounges, also a line of Baby
Look at these prices they are not leaders but only sample prices through our
it I rents yard. Ginghams at Vi to cents per yard,
-to cents v Elegant line of White Goods at to
t Lawn, at To pr yd Bound C. Check Homespun
Piece from to
All wool fashionable shades, single at cents per yards.
Nun's Veiling at cents per yard, standard goods and worth at least
Single and Double width Cashmeres in several leading shades, reduced.
We have the best line
OUR DOLLAR SHOES
We
Give the tired mother a rest and please the baby by it a nice Carriage,
we want to talk to you
That necessary and essential clement in every household- We are
for it in this market, and the largest line ever found here. We can save yea
money on small as well as purchases.
Our parting Injunction to every consumer and buyer of of goods in this market
to come in and look at our goods and compare them and prices in all
lines of General with goods and prices elsewhere, and remember we
meet competition by lowering tho price and not the quality.
Yours truly,
J. CHERRY CO., f
N. C.





Column
W j
WEARING
APPAREL
Make
yourself
comfortable
for the summer
months. Below we
quote quite an array of
hot weather goods for those who
wish to make the of
life during the MUM
All our Lawns and re
to the uniform price of
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
N. C
I S p a r ks
CENTS.
CENTS.
CENTS.
CENTS.
Many among them worth double
the money.
LL Oil BLOUSE WAISTS
T COST.
No More Hard
news for every body. Old Folks,
Young Folks, White Folks, Black
Folks body else. Our Mr.
is now visiting the
em markets, and with the hard cash
is buying bargains that will open
the eyes of all
No more time business, these
goods will be sold strictly cash
August.
Eighth month.
Town full of melons yesterday.
Butter on ice at T. A. Cherry.
1800 is slipping right away from us.
Crop housing will begin early this
season.
Many grapes were shipped from
this section last week.
Butter on ice at T. A, Cherry.
County Commissioners in regular
mi nit session Monday.
This month live each of Fri-
day, Saturday and Sunday.
Try some of the new corned
lets at the Old Brick Store.
Mora rain Sunday and Monday.
hope it will not get too wet.
load solid Com at
the Old Brick Store.
A hot wave was
week her
predicted for last
, oceans of it.
Choice display
of Sateens,
hams, etc. New
lot Embroidered
Robes just received
which we are
ling for merely
cents on the dollar.
Nice line of Sun Umbrellas.
Nice line of Umbrellas.
ACTIVE
A SHOES.
Full line of Summer Coats.
SERGES.
FLANNELS.
TE.
MOHAIR.
PONGEES.
For men of all sizes.
line for Clergymen and
Stout Men.
Stylish array
Clothing
of all styles
and qualities.
New stock
WORLD'S IT AT
Hat
Just received.
All these good must be sold
within days even at a
Our loss is your gain.
R. Lang,
Bran
Evans
Street
Street
near
near
Telegraph
Telegraph
Office.
Office.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Just a few peaches came into mar-
last week. How scarce they arc.
If you want a Grist Mill or a Cot-
ton Gin call on Co.
Merchants are making early trips
to the Northern markets this season.
White Ice Cream
for sale by Latham Ponder.
The nights last week were as beau-
as courting couple could
wish.
Go to Brown Bros see their
cheap White Goods and Embroider-
The interior of some of the stores
in town been given a new dress
of paint.
The finest loaf of bread I over ate
was made of Point Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store.
A protracted meeting is in progress
at Mt. Pleasant church, miles from
Greenville.
Bettie Warren
will open her school for girls and
small boys September 1st
After the rains were through the
weather buckled right down to some-
thing warm again.
Last Friday Mr. T. H. Langley
showed us a cabbage that had
distinct heads on one stalk.
New crop cotton is expected to be
plentiful on the Greenville market
before August is out.
Rev. J. L. closed a pro-
meeting at on
Sunday. There were about
to the church.
per lb for Sweet
Snuff. lb sold in Pitt Co., which
is a of its superiority, at
the Old Brick Store.
There is not a dissenting voice to
the rumor of line crops. Everybody
seems ready to rejoice over the
did prospects before us.
We hear of no damage to crops be-
cause of the wet spell last week in
July. There was considerable rain
but the crops seem all right.
Mrs. Eliza died at the
home of her son, Mr. E.
on Creek, yesterday morn-
She was about years old.
Latham Tender have done tn
immense business in the manufacture
of tobacco flues this season. They
should have the order of at least
every Pitt county tobacco farmer.
We arc better prepared than ever
baton to furnish you with good
Cook Stoves. Richmond Stove
Co's Stoves have been tried the
balances and found all Yon
will find at D. Co
We regret to hear that Mr. W. G.
Little, of Falkland, lost a tobacco
barn and contents by lire one
last Tobacco carers should
take every precaution against lire.
salesmen for
clothing trade must have some ex-
steady employment with
liberal salary.
Address care
tor Office.
The right of way is being secured
for the extension of the W. W.
railroad to Washington. The route
selected is from the A. R. junction
via to Washington. Work
will soon begin.
Street lamps arc not much service
to a town unless lighted when need-
ed. True the moon rose about
o'clock Sunday night, but it was
very dark when people were return-
home from church, and the lights
were greatly needed.
We hear that a small boy on
the plantation of Mr. C. Dawson, in
accidentally shot him-
self in the abdomen while fooling
with a pistol. There is n moral to
this, but its a hard matter to gel a
boy to look at it that way.
Cannot some one well acquainted
with him during his life time give the
Reflector a sketch of the fate Dr.
P. H. Mayo, of Falkland He was a
good citizen, a splendid physician and
a man well worthy further tribute
than the mere announcement of his
death.
Mi. A. C. Tucker has brought
more watermelons to Greenville
this season than any man in the
county. We have never seen but
one larger than that he left at the
Reflector office competing for the
prize of one year's subscription.
The weight, of it will be published
later.
Mr. J. D. Murphy is home on a
visit from Tennessee,
Miss Gardner, of Wilson, is
visiting Mis. S. T. Hooker.
Miss May Bagley, of Louisburg, is
visiting Mrs. W. B. Wilson.
Mrs- R. H. Horne and children re-
turned home Monday evening.
The family of Mr. J. B.
left Saturday evening for
Miss Bettie Harvey, of Washing-
ton, has been visiting Mrs. O.
for a few days.
Mr. W. of the of
Brown Hooker, went North last
week to purchase new goods.
Messrs. E. L. and W. F. Sutton, of
Lenoir, spent day or two in town
last week with the family of Mr. H.
A. Sutton.
C. C. Hinton, of Washing-
ton, has been visiting the family of
her brother, Mr. W. J. for
two weeks past.
Rev. C. F. Smith, of this county,
has accepted charge of the parish at
Hertford. He began his duties there
a few weeks since.
E. and J. S. Higgs, who
arc numbered with the commercial
tourists, came in last week to spend
a few days with their home people.
Misses May Laughinghouse, of
and Eva of
Wilson, have been spending a few
days with the of Dr.
Mr. and Mrs. C. T. have
been in the Northern cities the past
week or so. Mr. is
goods for the firm
ford.
Mrs. A. X. Ryan left Monday
morning for Winchester, Va., in re-
to a telegram announcing the
death of her mother, Mrs. J. R-
Cooper.
Mr. Wiley Brown left Monday for
the Northern mark.-ts to purchase
the fall stock for Brown Bros., of
which firm he is a
member.
Sunday School
There will be a Sunday School and
missionary conference at Bethel on
August to 1890. The follow-
persons are expected to make
Revs. D. H. Tuttle, F.
W. E. L. Pell, F. L.
Reid and Messrs. A. L. Blow, T. J.
Jarvis and T. H. Gatlin. The public
arc invited, as there will be a nice
time for all.
A Pitt County Industry
What Brain, can Bo
of Higgs v Mun-
ThU is Farming.
Its a pleasure to hear farmers talk
about their crops now, especially
when they can talk like Commission
T. E. Keel, of Farmville. He told
us Monday his crops arc the finest
they have been since 1882. He has
acres in cotton from which he
expects to harvest bales, and it
all things continue favorable his
corn crop will amount to at least
barrels. He also has acres in to-
which is fine, besides small
crops of potatoes, sugar cane,
etc. He has both last year's and
this year's crop of wheat still
touched. Last year's crop was the
only one upon which he has ever
failed to make a handsome profit,
and even then he made enough to
supply him until the next crop is
harvested. The man who manages
his own affairs so well is the right
man for County Commissioner. If
it was not for losing his services on
the Board the Reflector would
him for the Legislature. A bet-
man could not be sent.
Mr. Amos Brown, the deaf mute of
Washington, called to see the editor
Monday. He and his sister, Mrs. M.
F. Latham, had been spending a few
days with friends here.
Mr. R. J. Cobb left last week for a
trip through the Southern part of this
State and South Carolina in the
of his commission house, Cobb
Bros. Gilliam, at Norfolk.
Mr. G. L. left yesterday
morning for Wilson to remain a few
days in Mr. M. Lang's store at
that place while Mr.
manager, goes North for new goods.
Mrs. N. F. Carr and Mrs.
Harper, of Greene county, mother
and grandmother of Mrs. B. S.
ard, were waiting her last week.
Miss Dora Carr is now visiting Mrs.
Superintendent John F. Divine and
R. Dunn came to
Greenville on a special car one eve-
last week, and went down over
the new road to They arc
satisfied with the progress of the
work.
Mr. C. W. Hunter, of came
down on the train Saturday evening
and remained until Monday with
Capt Bob Whitaker, the inimitable.
It was his first visit among us, and
goes without saying that he is charm-
ed with Greenville.
learn from the Free Press that
Prof. G. A. Grimsley and Miss
Toll were married in Kinston
on Wednesday of last week. Miss
Tull was a teacher in Greenville In-
one session and Prof.
is well known here.
Prof. Joseph Kinsey, Principal of
Kinsey School, LaGrange, an
very popular throughout this
section of the State, made us a call
Friday. lie says Pitt furnishes his
school the largest number of pupils
of county outside his own.
We were glad to have a call last
Thursday from Prof. Silas E. War-
principal of Wilson Collegiate
Institute for young ladies, who was
spending a few days in town. He
reports a favorable prospect for the
fall session of his excellent school.
Ex Governor J. Jarvis re-
turned home last week from his sum-
mer sojourn at at which
place he was a of attraction
and much admired by the large
of distinguished visitors at that
excellent resort. Mrs. Jarvis and
Mrs. L. C. Latham arc now at Seven
Springs.
At their meeting Monday the
County Commissioners ordered anew
registration in Pitt county for the
next election. It will be necessary
for voter in the county to
before he can exercise the
of casting another ballot.
There is some talk going on among
certain business men that is of the
right tenor to secure certain
enterprises of which Green-
ville stands in great need. Keep up
the talk, gentlemen, and let the
be accompanied by that more
certain companion, action.
Time to Act.
The Reflector continues to sound
the note of warning that Greenville
business circles had best be
toward securing manufacturing en-
tori irises. With such fine crop pros-
before us, and with our rapid
development of tobacco culture, there
can be no better time to put these
enterprises in motion than pres-
It may be too late if you neg-
these important measures until
other towns all around us step in
and secure prizes that should be ours.
Were issued by the Register of
Deeds of Pitt county to ten couples
during the month of July, as
and Sarah
L. C. Smith and Martha
Griffin.
Harris and Ellen
Digging, and Bertha
Brooks, John Wilson and
Cannon, Benjamin and
Tucker, Henry Ward and Mary
Williams, Robert Hardy and Rachel
Galloway, James Barnes and Emma
Williams, Lawrence Anderson and
Olivia Peyton.
The A. M. College, at
The North Carolina College of
culture and Mechanic Arts, Raleigh,
begins its second year on the fourth
of September. Its first session was
successful beyond expectation, and
seventy young men were enrolled in
the Freshman class. The College
offers two complete in
Agriculture and one in Mechanic's.
These courses include departments
of Agriculture, Horticulture, Me-
Chemistry, History, Eng-
sh, Book-keeping. The students
in both Agriculture and Mechanics
have practical work on the farm and
in the shops every day. The State
is providing liberally for its young
men who want to be practical work-
at a very cheap rate. A
man who secures, by
examination, a county appoint-
can take a year's course for
one hundred dollars. Each county
entitled to as many students
as it has Representatives. Pay
dents will find that one hundred and
thirty dollars will carry them through
a year. See advertisement in an-
other column.
Tobacco Loaves.
Tobacco shipments have begun.
Tobacco warehouses should be es
in Greenville and a home
market created.
Give Greenville some
warehouses and factories a tobacco
yield the palm to no town, it will
Pitt county's tobacco crop is so-
interest just now not even
second to political enthusiasm.
Mr. J. W. Chandler, of Granville
county, who is curing tobacco for
Mr. J. A. brought us some
specimens Saturday that arc line.
He is making good cures.
Saturday Mr. C. F. Manning
brought us a bunch of tobacco from
his farm a mile above town. His to-
is being cured by Mr. Will
Crabtree, of Granville, and those who
have seen it pronounce it good.
On Saturday Fred.
horn sent us some samples of tobacco
from a barn just cured for him by
Mr. R. L. of Granville.
The bunch contains some beautiful
leaves that arc hard to surpass.
Saturday evening Mr. B. S.
brought us an unstripped stalk
of cured tobacco just as it had been
taken from the barn. Every leaf on
it was a high grade, and experts told
him it would 1.25 per hundred.
The front window is
showing a line of tobacco
which have been left at the
office by some of the tobacco growers.
AH the are invited to ex-
them and make comparisons,
Those wishing to place samples on
exhibition can do so.
There was a full car load of tobacco
shipped from Greenville Saturday
morning. The car was consigned to
Davis A- Gregory, and will run
through solid to Oxford. Several of
our had tobacco in the ear,
Joyner shipping over a
thousand pounds themselves. Where
is the county that can come up with
Pitt in shipping a car load of new
tobacco the 2nd day of August
There are fifty tobacco carers from
Granville county down here in Pitt
helping our Pitt county farmers cure
their crop. Many of them are. just
delighted with Pitt, and say it has
some of the finest tobacco lands in
the world. From talks the
has had with some of them we
expect a Granville men
will be cultivating crops in Pitt an-
other year. One or two more such
tobacco crops as the present one and
there will be such a demand for Pitt
county land as was never heard of
before. Verily, it is becoming the
banner tobacco county.
There are thousands of people
North Carolina and other States to
whom the name of the Cox Cotton
Planter is indeed familiar, but per-
haps comparative few of them have
an idea of the immense business car-
on at the factory in which they
are made. The location of thin
is about miles South ;
upon the laud of Mr. A. G.
Cox. Ten years ago where the
and Mr Cox's bone now stand
was right In a thick wood-,
acre of the land Mr. Cox,
then young married man, moved
on the place and had to live in a
small log cabin until be could
some land erect a dwelling.
lie also put up a voile shop and
began manufacturing tins cotton
planter, which his father, Mr. J. J.
Cox, had invented and patented-
From this small beginning has j
grown the establishment I
of which we now write, and hose I
reputation has reached
Southern state. While the
enterprise was year by
year growing larger, Mr. Cox was
constantly clearing and improving
his plantation, and to-day ho has
one among the best m the
county with acres under
where was
but woods land. From very
small building his factory has en-
to a three story structure
with a number buildings
for different depart-
of the The
in
itself a large enterprise is by no
means the only output of this
which is destined to become
of the largest wood H kin es-
in the State.
To visit this factory is to into
a bee hive of industry, were
there one day last week and spent
the time with much interest and
pleasure. From it are turned out
about cotton planters per year;
the saw mill and plaining ma
cut and dress l I of
lumber per the well
machinery has a capacity of
buckets per day; a mill on A c
floor of the building can easily
grind bushels of meal p d a
cotton gin in another building, m
enough for power to be supplied
from the same engine, gin . b de i
of cotton per day In season; n new
Industry just started is the
of tobacco hog-head-- of which
will be made this s i in,
SHIP YOUR TOBACCO
DAVIS GREGORY'S
WAREHOUSE.
OXFORD.
Strict Personal Attention,
Highest Market Prices,
Quick sales and prompt returns guaranteed.
Upon application to Amos G. Cox.
If you want any information concerning Tobacco, write us and your
and binds will have prompt attention.
mg ornaments are made in x l l
brackets,
Items from
As have not seen anything
your paper sometime from our
section I thought I would write a
short piece to let yon know
have the finest crops we have had
in many years. Its no trouble to
find cotton that will bide a mole.
Our corn is very fine and everybody
seems cheered Some of our
farmers planted a few acres in to-
which is very fine. There will
be much more planted next year.
Miss Maggie Smith is teaching the
free school for us. After it closes
she will go to Greenville Institute
to teach. I am sorry for her to leave
and wish we could keep Her for she
is an able teacher. The children are
progressing finely under her charge.
I understand there are about for-
or fifty candidates for Register of
Deeds. Is it the office or the money
If it is office they
want please instinct them to pay
money over to me. I am in favor of
more coming out yet. We have
bat little sickness in this section.
Mrs. Bettie Cox has been very sick J
but is improving last. Mr.
Gardner is very low with heart dis-
ease. N. R.
4th 1800,
smaller work like
of build
large quantities. Another bi . i
recently added is the
of coffins, which they ; in
a nice article. Nor
this all, tor wishing meet
demand that is ma upon
them the of brick is
sometime engaged in, a good yard
for this purpose having been
pared about ball a mile distant.
Living adjacent to this and
wood factory arc s families, and a
regular force of bands are em-
ployed, frequently
the number to be increased
hands.
Mr. J. B. Carroll, a I h r-in-
law of Mr. Cox is his partner in this I
business. Both of them are in
strictest integrity, and I
both are Christians
and zealous workers in the
to which they belong. An idea
the moral influence exerted by i
can be had from the hot that among
their large number of i s not
one touches Intoxicating
an oath is novel heard on the
premises.
Another business that re
came near overlooking is t,. mer-
department. This
they make no effort to push,
big started to supply the an I
people of the neighborhood, yet
do a large business in i . as w. .
judged from the sales of pork and
flour alone for months of this
winch have amount
of the former and of the latter, I
They have a large storage
house the here
keep goods to out as needed,
cotton planters ready for ship I
All their transfers are
by wagon but they never
way unloaded
Mr. told
interest were growing so large
that they had neither room or kw-
in the present plant s n to
meet the constant and the
railroad now passing through his
land within half a mile the t i
they are thinking moving up
side the railroad and doubling
the size of their factory, it would
indeed be a prize for lie
could Messrs. Cox Carroll could be
induced to move their plant to town.
There was a feeling of as and d
sympathy in this when it was
last Saturday moral that Miss
Smith was dead. About two
weeks before that day left her home
in this town to visit relatives near
ville. was at the home of her aunt,
Mrs. R. Miss Laura had
been in poor health for few mouths but
at the time of leaving home was thought
to be better than sometime. a
week after going in the country she
constantly improving and thought to he
almost as well as ever. But on Monday
she was suddenly taken sick and c
to grow worse until death relieved
her suffering Friday night. Her parents
were sent for about the middle of the
week and remained with her She was
a few months past years oil at the
time of her death, possessed a lovable
a kind disposition. She
was a member of the Methodist
and lived life of an exemplary Chris-
All who knew her were her
and by her gentleness she won the
of everyone. The remains were brought
to the smith burial place, two miles from
Greenville, and interred Sunday after-
noon. Deceased i of Chief
of Police T. Smith, and
daughter of the late Henry who
for years held of honor and
trust in this county.
No Market in the Land Enjoys Better
Facilities than Oxford.
Gregory,
SPRING GOODS JUST ARRIVED J. A.
M. CO.,
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand.
j. l
have received and opened a line of new
Spring and Summer Goods.
shall be glad to have my old friends customers come to
B us, and assure that ire can sell the
For
us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for
the spot cash.
JOHN S. CONGLETON.
BF. C, January,
g S a j.
EDUCTION
EDUCTION
EDUCTION
j I
K EDUCTION
THE FALL
T I
-------TI i E------
j adieu; i
VII TE GOODS AND EDGING
WHITE GOODS AND
g g, CU r M
a a
a a
R J.
Co. N
C C COBB,
Co
T. H. GILLIAM.
Co.
Cobb Bros., Gilliam
Cotton Factors,
-AND-
COMMISSION MER CHANTS,
NORFOLK, VA.
. EDGING
GOODS EDGING
have Belling this season has boon reduced in price rind it need-
less to say how when before the reduction we
heard several
never saw such cheap
White Goods Edging
in all my life where did
you get them from
Hamburg Edging in. wide in. wide in. wide
Hamburg Edging I-J in. wide in. wide in. wide
White Goods from cents to tents per yard.
White Goods from cents to cents per yard.
Come and see if they arc not what represent in price, Ac.
SOLICIT of
We have had many years ex-
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business to our
hands will receive prompt and
careful
GREENVILLE, N. C. GREENVILLE, N. C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
OLD STOKE.
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT-
their year's supplies will find It to
their interest to our prices before
i is complete
mm in all its branches. CK
INTERESTING INFORMATION pork sides shoulders,
That Man Stephens
-----WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICK ASSORTMENT OP-----
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS
TUT
j. FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
SPICES, TEAS,
Market Prick.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
, we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A con
j stock
there is never any doubt of his yon entire satisfaction I i n-m
if you just give a call when needing goods in his line. on hand and mid at price, to
He keeps Nice Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods. He also . the times. Our goo all bought
keeps the best Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember place. CASH, therefore, having no
V-r . iii to run, sell at a close margin.
S. M.
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer.





WHAT
EMULSION
CURES
CONSUMPTION
SCROFULA
BRONCHITIS
COLDS
Wasting Diseases
Wonderful Flesh Producer.
Many Lave gained one pound
per day by its use.
Scott's Emulsion is not a secret
remedy. It contains the
properties of the
and pure Norwegian Cod
Liver Oil, the potency of both
increased. It is used
by Physicians all over the -world.
PALATABLE AS MILK.
by all
RALEIGH
BUSINESS COLLEGE
B. Pies.
BOARD OF
Box. B- National
Bank
K. O. BARBELL, Sec.
Assembly.
Est;
State Chronicle.
Db. II. I. Director
Experiment station.
JAMES A. SMITH,
Greenville N C.
We have tin- the easiest
Chair ever used in the an. Clean
sharp satisfaction guaranteed
ill every instance. Call be con
Ladies wailed on
Cleaning clothe. a specialty .
MANHOOD;
U, and NERVOUS Y;
Body and Elect
f or Excesses in Old or
J. How and
Vi K. IS
i I. .
assail, . cat to I -o-t. Writ-
proof,
CO., BUFFALO, N. V.
C.
K.
N. U.
tor
X. C.
Type-writing,
Banking.
Penmanship and are
taught in the Raleigh
Send of terms.
Box N
Notice I
GULLETS PREPARATION for baldness
tailing out of hair, and eradication of
to before i lie public.
the many who have It with
wonderful success. I
lowing named gentlemen who will testify
lo the truth of assertion
Greenville.
ROBT
Any one wishing to it a
the above named . i can
it from ice, i
fully,
ALFRED
Greenville, March I
Ho
Why another wry l i
in lie of lie afflict-
ed. the
. nod yo
f Ii. Unit i
ii r. rd
t- be soft and
o--y. r three application
week is necessary, and common hair
brush in i after rubbing tin
vigorous few minute with
the Preparation. Try bottle and
Respectfully,
ALFRED CULLEY,
GREENVILLE, H.
A WELDON
and Sell
K.
trains south.
No Me ST,
daily Fast Mail, daily
dally ex Sun.
Weldon 12.30 pm
Ar
Ar p in Hem
Ar
Ar
urn
Av
Ar
ex Sun.
am o pm
Slam
IA
; -l
Ar
Ar
i
a. 1-
r j
Ar pm
Daily excel day.
Train mi Bran
i. arrives Scot-
land Neck 1.23 6.00
tin I.- 7.20
A. M. at A. el-1
don i. P M. daily except
On Monday, in and
leaves Weldon 10.80 nil
Halifax m. Scotland Seek p
3.10 p m. He j
Tuesday
Thursday a m.,
land Meek p in. II 8.83 p in. i
Arriving Weldon m.
Tram Tarboro. S . eta
A K. It. daily Sun-
P Sunday r M.
M C. P M, I I . I
p. in. 5.20 p. m. j
nine leaves daily except
in. Sunday 9.00 a.
N m. a in.
X V, A M
on Midland X C Branch ;
daily M. j
M C, H AM.
toning leaves X C S A M,
arrive X a m.
Train on Nashville Branch leaves
at P M, arrives Mash villa
P p M.
leaves Spring Bone A M, Nashville
M. arrives Mount A
except
Train on Clinton Branch leaves
for Clinton Sunday, at G
and A M Returning leave
ton A U, and P. M. connect-
at Warsaw with No. and
train on Wilson A Fayette-
Branch is No. Northbound to
No. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only
Wilson, and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection at
Weldon for all points North daily. All
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun-
day via Bay Line.
Trains make close connection for
points North via Richmond and Wash
All trains run solid between
ton and Washington, and have Pullman
Palace Sleepers attached.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
i. R. Transportation
T. M. EMERSON Passenger
Edwards IN,
Printers and Binders,
1ST. o-
We have the largest and most complete
of Hie kind to found in
the State, and solicit for all Classes
Commercial. Bail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING READY
FOB PRINTING INVITATIONS
BLANKS It'll MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY H-Kits.
Ct Send us your orders.
RALEIGH, X. C.
PATENT
obtained, and all business in the S.
Patent office or in the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We are Opposite the S. Patent Of-
engaged In Patents Exclusively,
can obtain patent-in leas time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing i- sen we
advise a- to free of charge.
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patent-.
We refer, here, to the
of the Money Order and to
tin S. Patent Office. I'm
advise term- and reference lo
actual client- ill your own Stale
Sick headache is the of many
This annoying complaint may be
cured and prevented the occasional
use of Dr. II. Liver and
Kidney
Disease lies in ambush for the weak; a
feeble is ill adapted to en-
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud-
den changes of temperature, and the
least robust are usually the easiest
Dr. II. Sarsaparilla
will give tone, vitality and strength to
the entire body.
Distress after eating, sick
headache, and indigestion are cured by
Dr J. II. Liver Fillets
Many people endure a feel-
of lassitude, because they think they
have to. If would take Dr. H.
Sarsaparilla this feeling of
weariness would give place to vigor and
vitality.
No liniment is in better repute or more
widely known than Dr. J. ii.
Volcanic Oil Liniment. It is a wonder-
remedy.
Persons advanced in years feel young-
stronger, as well as freer from the
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. II.
Sarsaparilla.
If yon feel unable
have that tired feeling, take Dr. J. II.
it will make yon
bright active and vigorous.
lie most popular liniment, is the old
reliable. Dr. II. Volcanic
Oil Liniment.
One of Dr. II. Little Liv-
and Kidney Fillets, taken at night be i
fore Going to bed. will move tin
the effect will astonish you.
Pimples, bolls and other humors, are
able to appear when the blood gets
Dr. Sarsaparilla
the beat remedy.
storm Calendar and Weather
for 1890. by K. Hicks, mailed
many address on receipt of a two-cent
postage stamp. The Dr. J. II.
Medicine Co., SI. Louis. Mo.
THE
N. C
SOUTH AFRICA'S BANK ROBBER.
CAVES IN NEW ZEALAND.
Mm Had Him After Ills
An interesting account is given by
The Star, of South
of the police chase after
tho bank robber, whose achievements
in the matter of perpetrating robberies,
escaping from jail and eluding the
entitle him to rank with the
Jack Sheppard, and whose regard
for his clever black horse reminds one
of Dick Turpin. In the hurried start
after when lie escape from
the Pretoria jail the news; per in
the mounted police to
take handcuffs with them. Further,
had friends all along the route.
He was born in Basutoland, and every
is his fast friend, even to Mama. I
Consequently when the police inquired .
along the mail of if they had
seen two men pass on horseback they
invariably said that they bad not.
loon's love fur his famous black horse, j
DOW at the mounted police barracks, j
was extraordinary. Tho police had
have three remounts before they could
ran that horse down. Two of the;
j mounted police sighted and
Cooper far ahead of them. They spurred
on after them, thinking that they would
bring the fugitives to halt on the steep
banks of the river.
What their surprise, however,
when they saw leap his horse
down the twenty foot bank into the
river, swim across, and, when ho saw
Si me Very Interesting Facts Contained
In an Official Report.
A recent report of the surveyor gen-
of New Zealand contains an ac-
count a visit to the caves,
in the King Country, in the North
Island, a summary of which to given in
The London Times. The
river, a tributary of the which
passes through these caverns, lies about
eighty-five miles south of Auckland, in
a straight line. Tho caves are about
ten miles from railway
The country around is
A quarter of a mile before the
caves are reached the about
twenty feet in width, is seen emerging
from the side of a hill under which it
has flowed through limestone caverns
of various sizes for about twenty chains.
A light canoe can taken along the
river through the caves to within a
short distance of the ogress, where fur-
progress is by the roof com-
down to the water. At tho en-
trance to the cavern the stream is eight
feet deep. The natives have never had
the courage to enter.
Tho entrance to the cave is feet
wide and feet high, and is in tho
face of a cliff. It is beautifully
with numerous moss and lichen
stalactites. Tho visitor is taken
in a ninety feet from the en-
trances mid landed on a silt covered
beach. By the aid of candles, for all
is now dark, he finds himself among
ponderous stalactites, feet to six
feet thick, reaching from tho roof,
twenty feet above, to within a foot of
the ground. Everywhere and over the
extensive and intricate cavern are seen
stalactites and stalagmites of immense
size in vast numbers, with marvelous
of form and color. At one
B.
If you try this remedy you will say as
many others have said, that it is BEST
blood purifier and tonic. Write
Balm Co. Atlanta, Ga., for book of con-
testimony.
J P Davis. Ga.,
consider that B. B. has
permanently cored me of rheumatism
and
it R Athens. Ga.
B. B. cured me of in ulcer that had re-
all other
K. G. Ala.,
mother and sister had
cerated sore throat and scrofula. B. B.
B. cured
Jacob F. Ga.
B. It. entirely cured me of
rheumatism in my shoulders. I used
six bottles.
Chas No. Fountain St.,
Baltimore. Mil., suffered
with bleeding piles two years, and am
glad to Bay that cue bottle of It. B.
cured
I Hardy. Ga.,
B. is a quick cure catarrh. Three
bottles cured me. Iliad been troubled
several
A. Atlanta, Ga ,
bottle of B. completely cured my
child of
W A Pepper, Ala.,
B. cured my mot her of ulcerated
sore
LEGAL ICES
SCHOOL
north Carolina,
Cooler's horse would not follow, conic ,
back, and reaching out pull
horse down by the bridle and drag him thousands of glowworms it the
through. One of the had a I of a starlit sky. Passing
rifle and resolved to take a long shot.
When saw the smoke of the
gun rise lie his companion drew
their homes apart and the bullet passed
Tall Term Opens Tuition, between them. Shortly after
Four regular courses of study.
cal. Philosophical, Literary, scientific.
address.
C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, D.
FREE.
. i
i,.
-I
n n I
. r j
GOLD I
and cent a I
nil It run
value. On I
i-b can one I
with our .
well
h, arc free. A. yea
end yon to who
w for year when at
. aid like to to work t
MB P-T
in Civil
and
other
Separate schools of Medicine,
may the University lee-
HON KEMP P. BATTLE. LL. D ,
Hill. N. C.
MUM-
V. C.
Co. SIS, Portland,
FREE
EYE-
The cut give
in
t once, an
i to to
end fl the
to
fits
boot the fin;
It
r all
Cutting and Dressing Hail
S TOP
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Opera House, at which place
I have recently located, and where have
even thing my line
TO MAKE A
MODEL BARBER SHOP
with all the improved appliances;
comfortable chair-.
Razors sharpened at reasonable figure
Orders for work my shop
promptly executed. Very respectfully,
EDMONDS
PHOTO-ENGRAVING-
tats rs
made to order
Km for
Press
New York City.
KNIGHT'S
Bleed Cure.
drew his horse up. leaped down, re-
moved the saddle and stood patting
his bone On the head. The police
and he surrendered without
a word, giving over bin two revolvers
with the remark that be was enriching
the government with revolvers, for
this was the sixth they- had had from
him. He said he gave himself up be-
cause he did not wish to kill his horse.
Cooper handed over his revolver, too,
looking rather glum. said ho
knew he would receive twenty-live
lashes, but he would only stay in jail
for eight months, when he Would once
I the authorities.
Day August, He m not
In addition to thorough in
Lit Course, advantages are
n I in the depart incurs of
and Vocal Music, Elocution, Art,
Physical Training. Charges moderate.
For apply to
Notice.
All persons having claims against the
estate of Harriet A.
are hereby notified to exhibit the same
on or before the day of June, 1801,
to the undersigned, who has duly
as the Executor of the last will and
testament j the said Harriet A. Yellow-
or tills notice will be plead in bar of
their
All persons indebted to the said estate
are to come forward promptly
and settle the same.
I.
Ex. of Harriett A. deed,
G. E. HARRIS,
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
------AND DEALER IN------
Hay,
Greenville, N. C.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following good
that are not to be excelled this market. And to he and
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds Mil IONS. CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS BOOTS and SHOES,
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS. and
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
kinds. Gin and Mill Hay. Rock of and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I oiler to the trade at
Jobbers prices, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep-
and Hall's Star at jobbers Price.-, White Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil. Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
lion u
Session i hi-
will begin on the
IV they hail given
him twenty-five years, for he had not
murdered any one or stolen a sheep or
ox. Robbing a bank of its surplus
money was no crime. The police were
entirely taken off their guard, and eon-
F, DIXON at daybreak the next morn-
the birds had unobserved by
THE NORTH CAROLINA
Ml
f Arts.
I'll E new and large shop buildings for
t working iron and wood will lie
them. has
tun d at
since been recap-
am
occupation, the depart-
are equipped thorough work.
are less than in any similar
Many members of
in existence.
he Freshman class are already em-
ployed at remunerative salaries.
For particulars address
Raleigh, N. C.
Collegiate Institute.
FOR YOUNG
WILSON. N. C.
STRICTLY I .
Fall Session on Monday, Sept.
Thorough and course
of study. Moderate charges. Health-
location. Unsurpassed home
Experienced and successful teach-
in every department. The depart-
music and art each preside
over by an accomplished specialist.
For and full particulars,
Address.
Principal, Wilson. X. c.
EDUCATION.
A little boy, a pupil of a
board school, was required to write a
composition upon Ho wrote
it, and his moral shows that the boy
has him the making of a noble man.
This is it, as it was handed to the
sure also at all times not to
waste those coals which your Mother
have to work so hard fur in washing.
For your Mother child spells that
name always with a capital, bless
can't more than pence a day-
out of and pence, with clothes and
boots to buy. the rent, and all that
bread and all the you eat. Be
ore and not light the fire till she comes
home at night, but keep yourselves
warm by playing in the street, or when
it is wet, running up and down the
stares
A standard Id remedy
In successful use more years. A ;
th care la,
of
the and Liver.
A ill
and seat by mail f
sufficient tor
its, ;
fur
h .
Sick Headache.
and certain
CW
HOST
ml
per
iT, it I
EMORY
Dooms
ST. MB.
LIVERY SALE AND FEED
I have at the stables formerly
occupied by Dr. James.
and a tine line of
Horses and Mules.
I have and fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run in connection a
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
patronage. Call and be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. C.
MILKMAID BRAND
CONDENSED MILK
None Richer in Cream
BEST ON EARTH,
Sold by S. E.
Greenville, N. O.
in
Henry S. Ives. the young Napoleon
of drove a team Central
park whoso harness cost A
known New York banker owns a
mounted harness which cost j
The harness for a stylish turn-
out in Central costs from to j
Taking only per set as the
average cost of the harness of
teams, and as the average cost of
the harness of the other teams,
yon have worth of harness
Blinking and rattling in Central
on a fair York Journal.
down the left bank of the stream for
feet, over a largo deposit left by
floods, the stream is crossed by means
of a foot bridge. From the entrance
to the the cavern averages
feet in breadth and from to feet
in height. After crossing the bridge a
sharp turn to the right is made up a
steep incline for a distance of seventy
feet to the foot of tho ladder, which
leads to a narrow passage -1 feet wide
and IS feet high, which is the entrance
to the Grand cavern.
Here is the bottom of the a
narrow shaft running to another series
of caves above. The well is lour feat
across and perfectly regular, as if made
by human hands, its sides are
beautifully marked with horizontal
streaks formed of laminated limestone.
In the grand cavern is an immense
mound of materials, evidently fallen
from the Beyond the roof rises
and forms two domes, one feet
. high. Forty feet up is the entrance to
j another cavern. Beyond the dome
I there is a sudden fall, tho roof
I big so much that the visitor has to
; stoop. The length of the grand cavern,
at the end of which the stream is again
met with, is feet. It varies in
width from IS to feet, and from
to feet in height Up to this point
the color is a dull brown light
yellow, but in the upper galleries,
thirty feet above, there are alabaster
and scenes of
surpassed loveliness. Twenty feet
above the grand gallery is the organ
Battery, so called from the
of the great mass,
feet from its entrance, rising tier
tier, like the front of an organ
with marble pipes. From the grand
gallery the main gallery above is
reached by a twenty-five foot ladder,
and feet along it is tho
Here it is feet in diameter, with
smooth sides of hard limestone, and tho
sound of moving water is heard below.
This is feet above where it was first
seen. Fifty feet the upper wall
is a fairy- grotto, and through an arch-
way feet length is the banquet
chamber. At the end of this chamber
is the white terrace, a mass,
rising series of terraces. From this
the upper entrance to the eaves is
reached, high in a wooded cliff feet
above and directly over the lower en-
trance. The report describes other
galleries and caves In the same place,
but these are the principal ones.
Notice.
Court
Mai I'm County.
Thomas
against
Francis G. David F. Light-
foot and Win. Light loot.
The defendants, David f.
William Lightfoot, are hereby
I to be and appear before the
I Judge of the Superior Court at a Court
I lo be held for the enmity of Martin at
the Court House Vt on the
I first Monday in September,
j answer or demur to the in the
I above entitled action which will bade
I posited ill the office of the Clerk of said
Court within the fire three days of said
I term. The purpose of this action is to
a mortgage executed to the
I plaintiff by Francis and Mary
Lightfoot, the lather and of the
I defendants, and which mortgage hears
I date the 1st day of January. 1882.
T.
Clerk Superior Court.
and Whiskey
cured m home
Without P a i
Book of particulars sent FREE.
B. M. M. D. Atlanta. Ga.
Office Whitehall St.
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES 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
THE FRONT
J. D. Williamson,
SUCCESSOR T JOHN
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Has Moved to One Door North Court House
WILL or
BUGGIES,
OPIUM,
it. mother
ATTEND
Kentucky University. LEXINGTON, KY.
S. W. r
Court
R. SMITH, President.
; It.-1
r W. W. It. Coll--, the
of SI World's
S.- of
Kit in pt
soil
In rt a AMIS
sf . -1 .
Si-ck.
of Fall nun. o.
. T.
M Cos; art
an I sod b lakes .- or with the
department for
C .
open on pay
I with
for s lo
Uncle is
You're white as milk.
a dispensation. John
we'll to bear it. I mental vi
writes that he's the Seventh
, regiment down to York, it'll
j luck of our if he ain't sent out
. west scalped
j Judge.
Worth
now years old,
yet you can hardly- write your
own
Miss a fact; but it
will be such a short time before I get
another name that it is hardly worth
learning to write my- present one.
-Exchange.
A Diet of Li-nit Meal Water.
Life and health can sustained in-
definitely on ti diet f lean meat and
water, according Professor J. W.
Good, of the Manitoba college.
The servants of the Hudson's Bay com-
in the Athabasca district and in
the Mackenzie river region depend en-
on the natural food supply of the
country, some living on meat alone and
some solely on flab. Great bodily and
or has been retained on such
u diet for periods of twenty or thirty
years, with singular freedom from con-
and indisposition of every
kind. Scurvy hits appeared only where
bait meat has been provided for winter
use.
ii. s.
FEMALE INSTITUTE
Fall Term Opens Sept.
TEACHERS
Docker, Principal,
Miss Maggie Smith,
Mrs. Irene W. Hunter,
Ella W, Duckett.
DEPARTMENTS.
Primary, Academic.
and Mathematical. Music.
Painting and Drawing. Normal.
ADVANTAGES.
Large, comfortable buildings.
II. location good water.
of well prepared food for boarders
A corps of good teachers. Nor-
Department for young teachers.
Music
New pianos and organs. A library
of more than volumes purchased re-
for the school.
BATES.
moderate, from to for
board and tuition, including music.
Tuition and terms for day pupils the
same as advertised in Girls
who do not board with the Principal
Should consult him before engaging
board elsewhere.
further particulars address,
JOHN DUCKETT,
Greenville, N. C, Principal.
A Stilt.
to poke fun at
an old mo see. It's n long
time sine we met last, is it not, Miss
Antique
Miss very long time.
How well that suit of clothes hung
York Weekly.
The Boy Spoke the Truth.
Tourist boy many
fish have you caught, my man
I couldn't count
you haven't caught
any, you little vagabond I
why I can't count
New York Ledger.
Counting the Chickens.
I was- with Chauncey M. Do-
pew about his recent trip south. Dur-
our conversation he found
the people very interesting.
The are much more interesting
than I expected to find them. You
know in the north we rarely, if ever,
see tho real ragged, lazy and
happy as he is naturally. I overheard
one conversation between an old
and her daughter that will
amuse you I know. Here it
Jane, up all
all
count Liza
was, Liza
Lb York
An Ambition
When Joseph Darby, the English
jumper, set out to learn jumping he
said that if he could beat any man in
England he would willingly lay down
and die. The day came when he was
champion, yet because a man tilt him
with a brick ho raised a row and re-
fused to die and had his assailant sent
to Free Press.
Slightly
Professor has sent the servant
girl after a light, and who was slow in
bringing light travels at the
rat of miles a second. Where
did you go to get that
change
About
Raisins are named from the
they as Smyrna or
or from the grape as
Muscatel, bloom or sultana; but the
quality depends chiefly on the mode of
cure. The black Smyrna grape is one
of the cheapest. The best raisins are
called of the and are
served by cutting half through the
stalks of the branches when nearly
ripe, and leaving the fruit to dry and
candy in the sun's rays. The next
quality is gathered when completely
ripe, dipped in a of ashes of
burned tendrils, and spread out to bake
in the sun. Tho inferior is dried in an
oven. The muscatels of are
the York Ledger.
Many Patent Tear.
Patent No. was issued April
1790. Tho closed with No.
In tho first half of tho
years the patent laws not so en-
In fifty years only
patents were issued. But we are now
making up lost time. There were issued
in 1889 patent. The United
States office paid expenses from
the fees taken hi and op. a
Notice.
To applicants for county appointments
in the North Carolina College of
culture and Mechanic Arts
By request of Holladay, Pres-
of the above mentioned College, l
will hold a examination of
applies for the appointments
in said College on Saturday the day
of August next. Those desiring to
ply will please notify me of their
at early day.
H.
Co. Pub. Ins.
One Hall Cotton Gin.
One Cockade Hand-power Cotton
Press.
in good running order and will
be sold very low to make room for larger
power.
Address or call on, E. G. COX.
Manager.
OCRACOKE.
SUMMED SCHEDULE OF
STEAMER
BEAUFORT.
For the benefit of those who desire
to visit Ocracoke during the season, the
ill inn the following
Washington every Saturday ; m.
Monday m.
Wednesday in-
close connection with the steamers
from and Tarboro, and the
I rain from that connects with
Wilmington ft Weldon Railroad.
On intermediate days the Beaufort
will touch at New leaving there
p. m. Tuesdays and p. m. Thursdays
connecting with Atlantic Railroad.
From Washington to
return 82.50.
From New to Ocracoke
return
Single Trip Tickets
From Washington to New 82.50.
New to 83.60.
and
and
Ample Accommodation
SPENCER BROS.
MANAGERS
The Steamer Beaufort has re-
built and made larger; and is now a
comfortable and sea worthy and
has a permit to carry passengers.
laW arT. Whispers Com-
fall.
, HI sf
PACKER'S
BALSAM
-ii. -s the hair.
It Restore Gray
K-l
Color.
hair falling
DR. GROSVENOR'S
Bell-cap-sic
ARK THE BEST POROUS PLASTERS
IN WORLD.
They are the best plasters in every
way for the quick relict of
LAMB BACK, IN THE
RHEUMATISM,
Unlike all other these arc
Purely Vegetable and Harmless. Re-
instantly and never fail to cure.
SAFE, QUICK AND SURE.
Sold by or mailed on receipt of
cents by
Boston, Mass.
put up
improved
yon can select from
My Factory well equipped with the best
but WORK. We keep up with the times and i
Best material used all k. All styles of Springs are line
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ran, Horn, King.
Also keep on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the year round, which we will sell AS as LOWEST.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past favor hope
merit a continuance of the same
J. Jonathan
Portsmouth, Va. Greenville, X. C
Bridgers White,
High
Solicit consignments of Cotton, Pea
nuts. Poultry, top and all other
Country Reference. Mer-
chants and Farmers Bank, Portsmouth.
Va.
FOR
SHIPPING
HIPPING
. I TOBACCO
We wish to inform the public that w
are prepared to build a
FIRST-CLASS HOGSHEAD,
FIRST-CLASS HOGSHEAD.
For purpose of shipping Tobacco in.
and a-k all the glowers of Ibis
and adjoining counties, please exam-1
our hogsheads, and we sure
they will it to their interest lo buy ,
from us.
Yon can apply to Mr,
Forbes, of Greenville, N.
or to the manufacturers of
The Cox Cotton Planter for
further instructions. Our
is Greenville. C.
Should any poison wish to
apply ill person are
miles south of Greenville,
near the railroad leading
from Greenville to Kin-ton,
North Carolina,
CD
also prepared lo
furnish eXtra Cart
Wheels, made of light-
wood, rim and huh. at
816.00 per pair.
We still continue to manufacture
Well Buckets. Brackets.
and Trimmings for Buildings, either
Turned or Sawed, and promise reason-
able prices and satisfactory work.
Respectfully,
R. L HUMBER,
Steam Engines Boilers
Improved Brown Cotton Gin,
Saw, Grist and Shingle Mills.
Hancock Cotton Gin,
Cotton Seed Crushers,
Pulleys, and Hangings,
Also dealer in Steam Fittings.
Orders for any kind of machinery
will be promptly tilled at very lowest
prices. Repairing a
K. I,. HUMBER,
Greenville, X. C.
Rev. E. C. Glenn's
Bethlehem, Sunday at II o'clock.
School House, l-l Sunday at
o'clock
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock.
Shady Grove, 2nd Sunday ;
Sunday at o'clock.
Temperance Ball at o'clock
Salem Sunday at H o'clock.
Chapel. Sunday at o'clock.
Jones Chapel Saturday before Sun
day o'clock.
The public
BANKERS,
O.
We have opened for the or con
ducting a general
Bunking;, and
Money to Loan en Security.
Collections solicited and
made
UNDERTAKING.
NOTICE
From now on will make Pictures
the low prices
Cigarettes
Cards
Carree
Cabinets
Boudoirs
or half life size
Owing to low prices no proofs will be
shown of anything smaller than a
net. All those wishing pictures will do
well by calling early.
Respectfully.
Manager.
GREENVILLE, N. C
associated B. S.
with in the Undertaking business
are ready to serve the people In
capacity. All notes and account
me for past services have been pi
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for coll
Respectfully.
JOHN
We keep on hand at all times a
stock of Burial Cases and Caskets I
kinds and can furnish anything
from the Case down I
Pitt county We arc
up with all conveniences and r
satisfactory s. to all who
us FLANAGAN A
Fob. I.
.


Title
Eastern reflector, 6 August 1890
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 06, 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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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/18999
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