Eastern reflector, 20 August 1890


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





THE REFLECTOR;
-----Solicits your patronage
purpose will be to please every reader.
Eastern
THE REFLECTOR
--------HAS A--------
. JOB
Department that be surpassed no-
where in tills section. Our work always
driven
Wend
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Proprietor.
IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
Per Year, in Advance.
VOL. IX.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
NO.
The Eastern Reflector
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Editor and
GOVERNMENT.
G. Fowle. of Wake,
M. Holt,
of
Secretary of
of Wake.
W. of Wake.
of Wayne.
Superintendent of Public Instruction
M. Finger of Catawba.
Attorney F.
of
SUPREME
For
W. A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort.
For Judicial
JOHN E. WOODARD,
of Wilson.
THEE.
K. I. STANTON.
They were singing, sweetly singing.
And the sour melodiously
tn the evening air was ringing-
nearer -still to
I In my eyes the tear drops glistened
Chief Justice A. S. of. As it stirred the twilight
Wake. And I wondered as I listened
Associate Clark, If it brought them nearer Him.
Wake Joseph J. Davis, of Franklin Si
James E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and ere they like the wanderer weary.
C. of Burke.
SUPERIOR COURT.
First H. Brown, of
Beaufort.
Second Philips,
Third G. Connor, of
son.
Fourth Whit
Wake.
Fifth Womack. of
Chatham.
Sixth T. Boykin. of
Sampson.
Seventh C. of
Eighth District. F. Armfield. of j Nearer Thee when Love descending
Iredell. Falls in blessing on my
Ninth F. Graves, of Nearer Thee when I am bending
Surry. the graves hide my dead
Tenth G. of Nearer Thee in joy and sorrow
the same
Eleventh M. Shipp, of Nearer Thee to-day. to-morrow
Democratic Nominees. the logical advantage.
remedy they propose is to only sup-
port men are in sympathy with
their demands and enjoin upon these
men to the success of all
measures that will ten to increase
the volume of money to meet the
demands the increased population
of country. In answer to the
question as to what effect this
idea will have the answer coined
that it takes three times much
labor to make a dollar as it did at
the close of the war. How is this
Well, was received for ft hag of
then, but less than is re-
I now. It takes the same land,
the same fertilizer, the same labor
less than is received for the
land. fertilizer and labor. The same
rule may he applied to the national
debt. H takes pounds of cot-
ton now to on the debt what one
pound have paid at the close
of the war. This depressed state of
affairs is attributed to the
of the currency by the
trusts of country these
trusts are upheld by the strong arm
To have wholesome laws,
CAVES IN NEW ZEALAND.
Song and voice in sweet accord
Resting hi the darkness dreary
In that nearness to the Lord
Had His spirit ever sought them
To be slighted or denied
Had that sweet song ever brought them
Closer to His side
I hail loved and sang it often.
Felt its meaning deep and sweet;
And my weary heart soften
Singing at the Master's
Nearer how sweet the feeling j law.
Nearer Thee in gain and
Nearer Thee when I am kneeling
In the shadow of Thy cross.
Mecklenburg.
Twelfth H. Merrimon.
of Buncombe.
Di CONGRESS.
Sena K. Vance, of
Matt. W. Ransom, of North-
House of District
Thomas G. Skinner, of
Second col.
of
Third W. of
Tender.
Fourth H Bunn.
Nash.
Fifth W. Brower.
Sixth Rowland
Robe son.
O, my King, Christ, my home
The Aims of the Alliance.
I the Alliance says we must have law.
i makers friendly to the legislation
will the relief that is
The only possible objection that
can be brought to the above object of j
the Alliance is the manner the
is sought to be applied. Such
legislation will be benefit to
the or trader. The Alli-
to become a secret,
political organization no more than ;
The Tower.
Alliance is receiving more j To bind together in
this lime to accomplish certain political re-
forms is dangerous to our republic.
the or other secret orders.
The Alliance is receiving more j To bind together in secret and seek
gratuitous advertising at
than any organization in existence.
From mountains l the seashore the Alliance does it should do
of the papers are monopolizing their. openly and publicly. They should
of space in emphasizing the virtues attend the primaries the
j the Alliance and condemning, in j conventions and tight these
; measured terms, what seems lo trusts and combines with ail their
of
GOVERNMENT.
Court A.
theories subversive of the principles power. There can be no objection
It is alleged I to this open and continued warfare
co operation upon the laws that mean to rich
richer, and poor poorer. We hope
will move cautiously
I better day, but is imperatively and make no mistake that it will re-
j to correct many or the evils that j in days to come. shall have
; confront us all in every avenue more to say in the future.
j life. So long as the Alliance remains I .--------
St S. Henderson.
V . . , political parties.
Eighth W. H. A. Cowles , . .
that organization and
Ninth G. Ewart of i the part of the laboring class arc-
not wise and a forerunner of a I the
Sheriff J. A. K. Tucker.
Register of H. James.
B. Cherry.
S. L. Ward.
B- Harris.
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- a mutual order and non political its i
man, Guilford Mooring. C. V, Newton, mission will have the sanction and
John Flanagan, T. E. . . , , ,, .
Board of Education-Henry recognition all the people. I his,
S. Congleton and J. D. is what is alleged. The Alliance is
to
The
nations for the political of the
State look and Alli-
men arc asked to clear up this
mystery and give reasons for their
is their
. The legislature of the country is in
favor trusts, combines and
Our politicians tell us on
ding.
of F. W. Brown,
standard
TOWN.
Mar G. James.
B. Greene.
B.
Chief T. Smith.
R. Moore.
Council Ward. T. A.
col. 2nd Ward. W. II. Smith, and R.
Greene. 3rd Ward. M. R. and stump that we cannot have
Allen 4th Ward, Joe col. better times until what is
CHURCHES. the strong arm the law is
First and Third , . . . .,
Sundays, morning and night. Rev. N. C. , I legislation, looking to the
Hughes, D. D., Rector. interest of the farmer, is enacted.
Sunday, morn- Th banking the
and night. Prayer Meeting every . .
Wednesday night. Rev. R. B. John, demonetizing of silver and making
. . the gold dollar standard is all in
second and fourth
Sundays, morning and night. favor of one class and against the
Meeting every Wednesday night. Rev.; class. It is argued the
A. D. Hunter, Pastor. . . J
I ODORS Alliance that placing the currency
Greenville Lodge. No. A. F. A-, control of trust, such as I
M., meets every 1st Thursday and Mon- the national banks, tends to decrease j
G. L. Sec. ; j u of the working masses. It is-
Greenville B. A. Chapter. No. meet f .-ill ,. ,.
2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ma-1 can
sonic Hall, F. W. Brown, IT. P. I survive unless the volume of money
Covenant No. I. O. O. F.; of magnitude to give
meets every Tuesday night. J. A. K. i
Tucker, N. G. j every person per capita. The
Insurance Lodge. No K. of H., currency has been contracted until
meets every first and third Friday night, i , .
D. D. Haskett, D. ls than capita and a j
Pkt Council, No. A. L. of H., meets universal cry of is
Thursday night. C. A. White.
Th of me
with the
Off the cow active participation in
railroad accidents comes the removal
of that called the cowcatcher
from many of the and Albany
For a period of
forty years ever- American locomotive
except the few used in switching
worn its pilot or cowcatcher to keep
obstructions from getting under the
wheels and throwing the train off the
track. Before the plow shaped con-
was invented the cowcatcher was
a horizontal apron or scoop close to
the rails. This literally caught the cow
and carried her along until there was a
good to stop and dispose
of the can-ass. Then an engineer in
Ohio, observing, as his train passed,
the at their work, how the
plow tossed all obstructions aside, de-
vised the present cowcatcher. He re-
fused to intent his invention and is
today a poor man, whereas he might
in all probability have become a mill-
The removal of the cowcatchers
from the freight engines is a procedure
which the train men regard with some
alarm. Any obstruction is liable to
throw an engine from the track if the
wheels come in contact with it. A
row near the rails is the only
thing left to obstacles oft This
serves as a standing place for the men
when the machine is engaged in shift-
cars, and is less In the way a
pilot when the engine is to be coupled
with the rear of a train for the purpose
of pushing. These are the main
sons for the change, which will be
looked -hi by the public as
Pitt county Alliance land to the I as well as dangerous. Over in England
no such thing as a cowcatcher or pilot
is known. Springfield Homestead.
the first Friday in January, April. July . There is no use in the
and October. J. D. Cox, ., . . . . , ,
E. A. Secretary. The government of the
Greenville Alliance meets Saturday . United States is the creator of these
lief ore second Sunday in each mouth
at o'clock, p at. Hall.
Fernando Ward, President; D. S. Spain.
banks. The credit of the nation is
pledged to their support and
When one hundred thousand
dollars is deposited with the treasury
Washington ninety per cent, of
M. to P. M. Ail mail distributed said it can be issued in nation-
bank When to to the
after the Northern mail is distributed. interest of the banks to innate the
Lave an
A. X. when it is to the interest of the
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland banks to contract we have
mails arrives at . .
M. and depart at P. M. it to always be to
Washington. X. their interest to decrease the volume.
Roads, Chocowinity and Grimesland .
arrives daily at Alliance asks with emphasis
P. M. departs at A. M. why not repeal such ft system that is
the
Ha and Pallet mails arrive Tuesday people The Alliance answer is that
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. r. . . I
depart at P. M. makers are to a
Black Jack and large extent with or in
with the banking
J. J. PERKINS P. M system and do not care to repeal
Rev. A. D. Hunter's
Appointments,
1st Sunday
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and
night, Greenville Baptist church, also
Prayer Wednesday
and Beth-
that which antagonizes their own
pecuniary interest Several of the
national legislators are millionaires
and directors of banks, and
from that source cannot be ex-
If it is true, what is created
by law can only be destroyed by
, the Alliance, along this line, J
Claver
Baron Dal the Danish envoy
at Madrid about fifty ago, was
the soul of honor and good nature,
though he had neither the cleverness
nor the brilliancy belonging to certain
diplomatists. One incident, however,
shows he could act, when occasion
arose, and that with boldness and
even dramatic power.
During the childhood of Queen Isa-
there were frequent political com-
motions, and one night the
regent, having incurred the displeasure
of the adverse party, was pursued
through the streets by an infuriated
mob. He ran into the house where
Baron Did had an apartment,
rang the bell wildly, and as soon the
door was opened slipped Inside and
barred it
Presently the ringleaders of mob
arrived and threatened to break open
the door if fugitive were not
to them at once. Baron Dal
go himself unfastened bolts and
on the threshold. lie pointed
to the Banish flag, which he had laid
across the entrance, and said
man you seek is here. Come
and take him if you like, bat if one of
you steps on the colors of my
I w-ll Spain responsible to Den-
mark for the
The attacking party awed
into sobriety, and than tamed about
bed away
Scene Very Fact Contained
In an Official Re-port.
A recent report of the surveyor gen-
of New Zealand contains an ac-
count of a visit to the caves,
in the King Country, In the North
Island, a summary of which is 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. The caves are about
ten miles from railway
The country around is
A quarter of a mile before the
eaves 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
A light canoe can be taken along the
river through the caves to within a
short distance of the egress, where fur-
progress is barred by the roof com-
down to Hie water. At the en-
trance to the cavern the stream is eight
feet deep. The natives have never had
the courage to enter.
The entrance to the cave is feet
wide and feet high, and is in the
face of a cliff. It is beautifully arched
with numerous moss and lichen
stalactites. The visitor is taken
in a canoe ninety feet from the en-
trances and landed on a silt covered
beach. By the aid of candles, for all
is now dark, he finds himself among
ponderous stalactites, three feet to six
feet thick, reaching from the 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
beauty of form and color. At one
place the dark vault is studded with
thousands of giving it
appearance of a starlit sky.
down left bank of the stream for
, feet, over a large deposit left by
, floods, the stream is crossed by means
of a foot bridge. From the entrance
to the bridge the cavern averages
feet in and from to feet
in height. After crossing the bridge a
sharp to the right is made tip a
steep incline for a distance of seventy
feet to the foot of the ladder, which
leads to a narrow passage feet wide
and feet high, which is the entrance
to the Grand cavern.
Here is the bottom of the
narrow shaft to another series
of caves above. The well is lour feet
across and perfectly regular, as if made
by human hands, and 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 roof. Beyond the roof rises
and forms two domes, one feet
high. Forty feet up is the entrance to
another cavern. Beyond the dome
there is a sudden fall, the roof lower-
so much that 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 to feet, and from
to feet in height. Up to point
the color is a dull brown and 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
gallery, so called from the
of the great mass,
feet from its entrance, rising tier
upon 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 CO feet along it is the
Here it is feet in diameter, with
smooth sides of hard limestone, and the
sound of moving water is heard below.
This is feet above where it was first
seen Fifty feet from the upper wall
is a fairy grotto, and through an arch-
way feet in length is the banquet
chamber. At the end of this chamber
is the white terrace, a mass,
in a series of terraces. From this
the upper entrance to the caves is
reached, high in a wooded cliff
above and directly over the lower
trance. The report describes other
galleries and caves hi the same place, I
but these are the principal ones.
A Diet of Lean Meat and Water.
Life and health can be sustained in-
definitely on a diet of lean meat and
water, according to Professor J. W.
Good, of the Manitoba Medical 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 fish. Great bodily and
mental vigor has been retained on such
a diet for periods of twenty or thirty
years, with singular freedom from con-
and indisposition of every
kind. Scurvy has appeared only where
salt meat has been provided for winter
use.
Am Ambition Gratified.
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 hit him
with a brick he raised a row and re-
fused to die and had his assailant sent
to Free Press.
Bate Killed by a Home.
Franklin, Mass.,
owns a bay horse known by the name
of that is possessed of a peculiar
accomplishment. Mr. Franklin's stable,
ft 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
there was to be found every morning
one or more of tho rodents dead. the
crushed bodies of which indicated that
they had died violent deaths, but what
death was remained a mystery
until one of the stablemen discovered
that the big bay was himself their
Ho was then watched at the work,
and the strategy and cunning of the
animal is said to be remarkable. He
will stand over hole for any length
of time without stirring, his cars alert
and his eyes fixed on the hole. Then
as the rat breaks cover abruptly and
hurriedly, as they always do,
brings down the sharp hoof of his up.
lifted foot upon his little but harassing
foe, crushing the life-out of him, and h
he fails to strike the wily creature will
overtake him with outstretched neck,
and seizing him in his powerful teeth
throw him against the side of the stall,
thus breaking his back.
It is but seldom that this curious
ratter fails to kill his prey. The horse
actually seems to enjoy tho sport, for
lie will repent the Trick again and again,
and if any one stands and watches him
at it he will, without ceasing to on
the vive for the rat for an instant,
occasionally turn his intelligent eye on
the spectator, as if to say. pet him
Philadelphia Tunes.
The of the Cur Hone.
The street car horse has no name.
In the stable he has a number, but
business hours he without any
particular identity. His driver seldom
addresses him except in the way of ob-
and. having no faith in the
power of a cheery voice, relies
upon his stub of a whip for an
of speed on the part of his team. In ,
the early days of street railroad travel
the cars were provided with poles and
the horses hampered by much
harness. The poles have gone
out, and so most of the harness,
and now there is nothing left to impede
the animal's movements except the
load, often a dead load, behind him.
After a horse has supplied a part of
the motive power for a car for a few
months he develops a considerable de-
of astuteness and intelligence.
He knows that when the bell rings
there is a stop to be made, and comes
gradually to a halt of own accord. I
Another ring and he is on the move
again. There Ls one point, however, at
which his intelligence or power of i
stops. Up to date he not .
succeeded in on the sum-
mer whistle. Its tones, ear piercing
and weird as they usually are, are en-
beyond his conception. Modula-
in tones makes no impression on
brain, and in the days when the
whistle is heard in the land he stops
and starts solely at the suggestion of
his Eagle.
SOUTH AFRICA'S BANK ROBBER.
the Police Had for Him After ills
All interesting account is given by
The Johannesburg Star, of South
of the police chase after
tho bank whose achievements
in the matter of perpetrating robberies,
escaping from jail and eluding tho
lice entitle him to rank with the
Jack Sheppard, and whose regard
for clever horse reminds
of Dick In the hurried start
after when he escaped from
the Pretoria jail the newspaper in
the mounted police forgot to
take handcuffs with them. Further,
had friends all along the route.
He was in Basutoland, and every
is his fast friend, even to Mama.
Consequently when the police inquired
along the road of if they had
seen two men pass on horseback they
invariably said that they had not.
love for famous black horse,
now at the mounted
was extraordinary. The had to
have three remounts they could
run that horse down. Two of the
mounted sighted and
Cooper of them. They spurred
on after them, thinking that they would
bring the fugitives to halt on the steep
Kinks of the river.
What was their surprise, however,
when they saw leap his horse
down the twenty hank into the
river, swim across, and. when he saw
Cooper's horse would not follow, conic
back, and reaching out pull Cooper's
horse down by the bridle drag him
through. One of the policemen had a
and resolved to take a long shot.
When saw smoke of the
gun rise he and his companion drew
their horses apart aid the bullet passed
between them. Shortly after
drew his horse up, leaped down, re-
moved the saddle and stood patting
his hone on the Load. The police
and he surrendered without
a word, over bis two revolvers
with the remark that he was enriching
tin- government revolvers, for
this was sixth they had had from
him. He said be gave himself up lie-
Cause he did not wish to kill his horse.
Cooper handed over his revolver, too,
looking rather glum. said he
knew he would twenty-five
lashes, bat he would only stay iii jail
for eight months, when he would once
more say by to the
He did nut know why they had given
him twenty-five years, for he had not
murdered any one or stolen a sheep or
ox. Robbing a hank of its surplus
money was no crime. The were
entirely taken off their guard, and con-
at daybreak tho next morn-
the birds hail unobserved by
them. baa recap-
A tIGHT IN THE
Story on Which the Well Known
Song Wm Founded.
Few are probably the persons who
have not time or the other hoard
the Sunday school song, Light in
the Unless I am mistaken,
says a Louisville Times writer, it is
founded upon a story told upon the
little island of but which might
easily have its exact counterpart on
most any seashore where a mother's
heart beats with yearning love for her
sailor son and keeps its fond promise
from night to light.
Among the simple fisher folks on tho
island lived a woman and her son. He
was her only child, tho of her
heart as well as the of constant
dread, for the boy loved the sea as his
father had loved it, and nothing
gave him so much pleasure as to watch
the incoming tide tumble its curling
waves the sands. No sooner was
he strong enough to wield an oar and
steer a boat than ho joined the men in
their fishing expeditions.
Tho mother, with all her fears and
the fate of a long line of sailors in her
mind, yet would not have had it other-
for it would have deemed
dishonor among tho hardy coasters to
have kept tho boy at home or sent him
safely at work for some What-
ever the dangers they must be faced
for the sake of family pride. was a
great favorite among the
folk and with the sailors, and when at
last his year came around and he
obtained the consent of his mother to
go to sea ho easily found a good ship
and captain. Then there was parting,
and tears shed by the mother, while
he looked forward into the great, wide
world with all the joyous eagerness of
a boy. But with her last blessing the
widowed mother promised that every
night a light should bum in tho sea-
ward window of her cottage to light
homeward and to show him that
she still lived, awaiting his return.
The Ship sailed. Six
LOVE'S CHANGES.
Has --.- come without the rM
Or led the hint
Is the changed above thee. i
O world, or am I blind
Will every flower that stows,
Or only pot
Where who lore
Now love thee
The skies seemed above thee;
The rose on the tree;
seemed true the summer
But all proved false to me.
World, is there one good thing in you
love, or what ,
lips that sang love
love thee
I think the sun's will scarce fall
flower's gold cup;
think the bird will me,
And give summer up.
O sweet place, desolate In tall
Wild grass, have you forgot
How loved to kiss me,
that kiss me not
false or fair above me;
Come with any face.
So I care what you do
You place
The He leaves, the earth, the dew-
make the snot.
Here she used to love me,
Hero sin- loves me not.
An
Some seventy years ago, when a me-
was almost a thing unknown,
and a solitary wild beast was now and
then carried the country for ex-
a certain NOW
thrown into great commotion
by the news that an elephant was to be
exhibited in a town. The
Village which is the scene of my story
was not large enough to induce his ex-
to make any stay there, but his
road lay through it. mi elephant
could not or in any
manner lie kept out of sight. His
must lie made in full view, and
could get a look at him, and
was excited accordingly.
Hay after day passed no elephant.
The exhibition had been advertised
for a Monday, and Saturday night had
with no of the famous
traveler. Sunday morning The
of the church going sum
the people. Parson Adams bad
and sailors dropped into the village and
Slightly Sarcastic.
Professor has sent the servant
after a light, and who was slow in
bringing light travels at the
rate of miles a second. Where
did you go to get that light-Ex-
change
An extremely Interesting example
of the serious importance of sanitation
is found in the German town of Mu-
Am
ago -works was there in
and the annual fern
which had numbered
up to 1880, were reduced In 1881 to
A that tints.
Bit Me 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 not
seem to impede the flow of a joke, nor
did the 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
into a burrow.
shouted the
doctor. p-pull him and
kneeling at the hole he thrust arm
in up to tho shoulder. lie
remarked after a moment's fumbling,
g-got h-him.
t-try it, John;
your arm's Monger than
The captain knelt and thrust his arm
down. In an instant he was executing
a KB dance around the tree, waving a
bloody linger.
That's no-
rabbit. It's a ground
he bite you, J-
queried the doctor, anxiously.
Don't you
see he took off tho whole end of my
finger
that's t-too b-b
said the doctor, taking
his own hand from behind him and
showing a sadly lacerated thumb.
ho me
Cot Out of Bed on the Wrong- Side.
A young lady in t his city who is a
light sleeper, and who is on that ac-
count depended upon to awaken her
brother, a fireman, in case of a night
alarm, was badly left the other night
on the occasion of alarm, hearing
i she arose and proceeded as usual
to shout for her brother. Having done
this to her satisfaction she returned to
her bed and sleep. On awakening in
the morning she ascertained to her
that 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-
the fireman, had not heard her at I
Enterprise.
Haft Been There Before.
Hiss Finn don't
spread your napkin over breast
it's excessively vulgar.
Papa have simply spread
napkin as a flag of truce, my child. I
take it down when the waiter re-
that Tribune.
Shoddy is trying to
get into the cream, of society.
is going about it the
wrong way by courting the skim milk,
Mrs. always act like
fool.
my dear, I Always ft
low
Considerate.
A little boy, a pupil of a
bond school, was required to write a
composition upon He wrote
it, and his moral shows that the boy
has in him the making of a noble man.
This is it, put as it was handed to the
sure also all times not to
waste those coals which your Mother
have to work so hard for in washing.
For your Mother child spells that
name always with bless
can't spare more than pence a day
out of and pence, with clothes and
boots to buy. and the rent, and nil that
bread and all the you eat. Be
Nil 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 tho
stares
Money In Harnesses.
Henry S. Ives, the young Napoleon
of finance, drove a team in Central
park whose harness cost 81.000. A
well known New York banker owns a
gold mounted harness which cost
The harness for a stylish turn-
out in Central park costs from to
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,
you have worth of harness
clinking and rattling in Central park
on a fair York Journal.
told how die bad been spoken and all
was well, and the the
Cottage and told the pleasant news to
the waiting mother, who nightly
med the candle, lit it and it in tho
window to make a bright path up the
sands. Again six months elapsed, and
other sailors arrived front far off lands,
but they had no news to tell of the
ship. A great storm had
and she was overdue, she might yet
make port, the people shook
their heads and carried no tales to the
widow, whose candle burned brightly
every night and cast long streamers of
light out upon the sea. Another year
passed, but the sailors going or coining
brought no news of the ship, and tho
neighbors whispered apart and shook
their heads whenever any one spoke of
the widow's son, but no was cruel
enough to cut the 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 played with tho sailor lad
had grown to and women, her
own head had been silvered with age,
her form was bowed, yet no one dared
to cut tho cables of her hope. Tender
words cheered her and tender hands j
smoothed tho way for her she pa-
waited for tho homo coming of
her fair haired boy, every night
tho glow of her candle streamed out to
Seaward and told the story of tho
heart waiting at home.
How many years did she watch and
wait I do not know. Hut day,
at eventide, there was no gleaming
paten of light across tho sands. Tho ,
window remained dark, and the ,
beacon failed the and
when they wondered and went to tho
cottage they found that the mother's
soul had gone out to seek the son.
stood devoutly attentive to
all appearance. Bat there was at least
one exception, for Dr. pew,
near an open window, commanded a
view of the highway, and Dr.
eyes, wide open, were fixed upon tho
prospect. A cloud of dust arose- then
slowly above the hill the
window the head of a huge came
into light The eager doctor forgot
time and place, shouting,
elephant's coming there ho he
was out f the window like a dart. Off
rushed congregation, whether
Parson Adams his prayer
has not Awake.
One Voting- Man's n
I try to keep fairly up with
books of the day, though I don't
want to lie I occasionally
speak of a new one that has pleased
inc. But I rarely find a young man
who knows even the names. A few
nights ago I entertained a young fellow
who is, I am told, considered very
clever in Wall street. Ho is a collage
broil man, one from whom one might
be justified in expecting fair avenge
information on literary matters. But
hi college he hail gone in for athletic,
ho said, since that time he had
been swallowed up In business, and
when I spoke of new writers be
plumply professed ignorance even
of their names. Well, I could have
forgiven it's so hard to keep up
nowadays. But when I spoke of Haw-
dear old Hawthorne, and ha
responded with enthusiasm that he had
read him-read Rod Letter
I made up mind that ho u
Danger Ahead.
Uncle is it,
You're white as milk.
a dispensation, John,
I we'll to bear it. Jeth-
writes that he's tho Seventh
regiment down to York, it'll be th
luck of our if he ain't sent out
west git scalped massacred.
Judge.
Hardly Worth White.
are now years old, Miss Fan-
and 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
while learning to write my present one.
Exchange.
A Touch Salt.
to poke fun at
an old me see. It's a long
time since we met last, is it not, Miss
Antique
Miss very long time, j
How that suit of clothes hung j
York Weekly.
retires De Cachet.
During the administration of
Floury alone granted
or oven sold for a few by minis-
Rome striking illustrations of the
uses to which this summary power was
put at times are afforded in the me-
of tho do There
was in Paris a flower girl named Jean-
whoso beauty attracted tho no-
of tho gentlemen of tho court, and
the Chevalier de happening to
find her looking particularly sprightly
one day, inquired the reason.
husband was such a and such a
she answered, I
bought a de cachet from the
do St. for ten
to free me from
The chevalier lost sight of
for a couple of years, and when ho met
her again she was dejected.
have you been all this
he asked. hardly knew you again.
replied, was a fool
to rejoice. My wicked husband had
the same idea as myself. He, too, went
to the minister and bought a de
cachet for me; so it cost our poor house-
hold twenty to get both of us
locked Century.
Sill. Prohibited by
The Mohammedans considered silk
unclean, from its being produced by a
worm. it was decided a
person wearing a garment made en-
of silk could not lawfully offer
up the daily prayers enjoined by the
Koran. Pry Goods Chronicle.
AYCOCK
C C.
Wilson. N. C
n. c
D. L. JAMES,
DENTIST,
N id
A LEX L. BLOW,
G R E E N V I L I. N. C
J. RE.
J. M. TUCKS.
. o
The Hoy Spoke the Troth.
Tourist boy many
fish hare yon caught, my man
I couldn't count
yon haven't caught
any, yon little
why I can't count
New York Ledger.
far Um
In the or
has been advantageously substituted
for the mulberry in rearing silk
worms. Tho silk produced i said to
be equal to that of worms fed upon
mulberry leaves, and surpasses that
obtained from worms fed upon lettuce
leaves. Goods Chronicle.
Remarkable Vitality.
Professor is an
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 halo and hearty.
Professor Impossible I
Prove it, Who is the woman
wife of the Chinese
minister at Washington; his name is
One
When the King Greece first start-
ed out as a player be made
his mind to always win, and lie has
never lost a game yet. Tho chief
reason for his good luck lies
fact hat every man, who plays
him is given to. understand that if ho
wins over three pp-ts out of five he
will be trotted off v fortresses
MOORE, TUCKER A MURPHY.
A T-LA W
Greenville, N. C.
u. c.
t a skinner,
m. c.
TO JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, C.
Practice all the courts. Collection
a Specialty.
J.
B. YELLOWLEY,
A W,





i,
THE
EASTERN the
Greenville, N. C.
In the Second District Cheat-
colored
bent, has been for
Congress. The Convention met
in Henderson last Thursday and
, j was composed chiefly of
S. J. Editor W j with only now and then a white
the. monotony of the
The says
Publishers few exceptions look rather odd but
SUBSCRIPTION OF j apparently feel that they are quite
in their proper The
thing now for the people of that
The is 91.50 per
Hates.- One
one year. one-half column one year.
year,
District to do is to beat Cheatham
Transient inch I jet no longer remain
one week, ; two weeks. ; one i
month Two inches one week, 1.30,
two weeks, ; one. month,
Inserted In Local
Column as leading items, cents per
line for each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad-
and Notices,
and Sales. I
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will
be charged for at legal rates and must
PAID IN The Re-
has suffered some loss and
much because of having no
fixed rule as to the payment of this class
of advertisements, and in order to avoid
future trouble payment in advance
will demanded.
Contracts for any space not
above, for any length of time, can be
made by application to the office
in person or by letter.
Copy tor New Advertisements and
all changes of advertisements should lie
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.
in Congress as a blot upon our
State. The believes
this can be if the Democrats
nominate Mr. Simmons.
The Congressional Convention
for the First District, which met
last Tuesday at Elizabeth City,
occurring quarrels between
petty so called republics of that
be is going against all the
precedents of the State department,
except the action be himself took
while was lying on his
death bed and Mr. Arthur's
Secretary of Sate repudiated as
MM as he succeeded Mr. Blaine.
This country has no business
with the internal affairs of
other countries; but then Mr. Blaine
like Mr. Quay, is probably control-
led m this matter by capitalists with
whom bin relations have been too
close for to refuse their re-
quests.
The anti-lottery bill will come up
in House Saturday if a quorum
can be kept together. same
bill has been favorably reported to
Speaker Bead has unable
even to count a urn except at
rare intervals during this week.
The Q. A. it. encampment at Boston
was magnet which drew the
members off. Tanner
A Trip Through the Cotton
Belt of North and South
Carolina.
The Roanoke Union.
was one of the most in the of his pen-
business and Mr. Harrison was
Entered at the Office at
C,
Mail
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30th, MO.
Notice to Township Commit-
tees.
The members of the several
township Democratic committees,
to be elected at the primaries on
the of August request
ed to meet at the Court House in
on the day of
August immediately after the ad-
of the County Con-
for the purpose of elect-
a County Executive Commit-
tee for the ensuing two years.
By order of the Democratic Ex-
Committee of Pitt county.
A. L. Blow.
Greenville, N. C, July
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-live Democratic votes, and
one delegate for fractions of fifteen
or more votes cast in the last
election, is to say,
that has been held in the State,
and the attendance was very large.
The Convention met and did its
work in a very short time, only
one ballot being required to make
a nomination which resulted in
the selection of Mr. W. A. B.
Branch, of Beaufort, by a majority
of a fraction of a vote. Mr. Branch
has always been a good Democrat,
he was the choice of the Alliance,
and his nomination seems to give
general satisfaction throughout
the District.
The Elizabeth City in
speaking of Convention and
session was short, having
called to order at p. m. it
adjourned before o'clock.
vote for Branch was not so large as
many expected, his friends having
overestimated his strength, though
his nomination was secured only by
a fraction, impression prevail-
ed that bis vote would have in-
creased on the second Be
that as it may there was a general
feeling of satisfaction over there
suit, all agreeing that it was better
the Alliance should have its choice
of candidates, and the unanimous
endorsement given him was hearty
and sincere. Gen. Roberts while a
member of the Alliance, was not
recognized as the choice of that or
but was a for
candidate, and if an organ-
effort had been made to defeat
the Alliance strength given Branch
he would have changed the result
of the convention. It Mr. Thomas
Skinner has remained in the field he
would no doubt have received the
The heartily endorses the
of Mr. Branch who will
receive a warm support from this
side the Sound. Mr. Branch is a
warm hearted, elegant gentleman,
who became the favorite of all the
Democrats he met here for the first
time. We for him an
large a
large majority.
Washington Letter.
From Our Regular Correspondent.
there hoping to gain some friends
for but these two eminent re-
publicans did not go together, nor
din they meet while
House committee on Terri
has made a favorable report
on the bill appropriating for use
of needy settlers in Oklahoma
unexpended balance of money
appropriated for the Mississippi
Hood
Senator for first time
took part in tariff debate this
week; be did not make a sot speech
he will do this
merely stated some showing
that certain figures relating to the
tin -plate industry, which had been
several times to by
speakers, misleading and
not to relied upon.
At the request of several of
democratic members of the House
committee on Territories farther
consideration of the bill to admit
New Mexico has been postponed
after the new Constitutional
convention is held.
Time for a Change.
Give Every Man a Chance.
Beaver Dam is entitled to
Bethel
Carolina
Falkland
Greenville
Swift Creek
Washington. D. C. Aug. 15th, -90.
Senator Gorman has proven that
the democrats made no mistake in
putting him in charge of party in-
during the tariff debate.
By his adroitness, with the able
assistance of his democratic col-
leagues, in showing the ab-
and general injustice of
the tariff bill towards the masses,
particularly the tillers of the soil,
he has driven the republicans into
In pursuance of the Plan of Or-
of the party, the Demo-
of the several townships are
requested to meet in their
townships, at the usual place
of meeting, on
AUG. 1890,
at o'clock P. M. for the purpose
of appointing delegates to said
County Convention, for the
nation of Candidates for
and the election of five Demo-
to constitute a Township Ex-
Committee.
By order of the Democratic Ex-
Committee of Pitt county,
L. Blow, Chm.
R. Williams Jr., Sec.
It is currently reported that Mr.
C. M. Bernard, of Pitt, is the Re-
publican nominee for Congress in
this District against Mr. Branch,
that the Republican Executive
had met and named him as their
man. Whether or not the Com-
just put him out to kill him
off we are not prepared to say, but
they must entertain little or no
hope of carrying the District or
they never would hare put him up
against Mr. Branch. Unless they
can work up his popularity in
portions of the District to many
fold what it is at his home he will
be the worst beaten candidate
that ever run in the First District.
Some idea of his strength here
may be had from the election four
years ago. In that election Mr.
Bernard run as an independent
candidate for Solicitor against Mr.
Worthington. Pitt county's usual
Democratic majority ranges from
to but that year it gave
Worthington in the neighborhood
or majority. There need be no
surprise if Mr. Branch gets up-
wards of majority in Pitt this
such a state of consternation that
their leader, Senator Quay, has
a resolution which postpones
the Federal Election bill until next
winter in order to try and stop the
damaging debate on tariff
bill. The resolution provides for a
vote to be taken on tariff bill
on the inst. Its introduction has
sot the republicans in Congress near-
wild than were before, if
that could be possible; but Mr.
Quay had no choice; he was com-
by the manufacturers who
furnished him the money to win
with in 1888 and upon whom he re-
lies for the money for the cam
to do it; fear the effect
of exposure of whole sale
robbery of the people of this
try for their benefit which is daily
going on in the chamber,
Vance has just that it
is proposed to rob the people,
through a tax on their tin cups,
pans, and pails, of for
the sole benefit of the newly formed
Pittsburgh tin plate and
attempt is made to secure demo-
votes resolution to
vote on tariff bill by making
the resolution postpone the Federal
Election bill, and it is even stated
m some quarters that the resolution and not for
Mb. times are
changing. The people are
more interested in the
of the Government affairs
than ever before, and are
hold with one common voice and
sentiment, for the purpose of self
protection; as an evidence the prim-
and conventions arc more
largely attended by the people
throughout The
oppression has been submitted to as
long as they can And
in this year of prosperous out-look,
the people are in earnest, in look-
to political affairs. The honest
of country are assert-
their rights against the
of ins, are
The Governor of North Car-
under a wise provision of the
constitution not be bis own
one term is becoming
the Democratic watch word- This
is but just and right. No man
should have a patent right to office
There are many of best and
most hard working Democrats in
county of Pitt who have borne
the heat and burden of the the con-
tests, and yet they have no chance
of promotion as long as patent
right clause exists. When officer
that be cannot succeed him-
self he will not use the office
given him by the people for a re-
election. He will be more faithful
and attentive to discharge of
his duties. Then lot there be a
change. A change In the whole
county ticket, Legislative and all.
The people are becoming tired of
one set of men remaining in office
always. Where is the encourage-
to the young Democracy of
the county if the idea of
in office continues. There are
as worthy men in the county, who
have worked hard for the success of
as any out- holding
has yet held one, still they are under
this patent right precluded from
even aspiring to office, and their
services are needed when the
campaign war begins. Old
and men who have worked
side by side, who have
scratched a Democratic ticket, but
who have stood firm by the
of the party have voted
straight worked hard for the
success the patty. yet by
this iron clad, right,
rule of office holding, they
must take back seats in the Demo-
temple.
The people are not favor of
a state of affairs, and they will
so speak. A change will give great
satisfaction to the larger part of the
masses.
Let distribution be more
equal. Let there be some incentive
to work. emoluments of office
term are enough for one
man, and when be takes care of
By II, J. Cobb, of the firm of Cobb
Bros. Norfolk.
writer left Greenville July
and traveled via Tarboro and
Mount. Stopped awhile at
the latter place bad time to see
several of the good people of that
thriving little town. They all were
wearing bright faces over their an-
tor good crops and fair
prices this season. From here I
took the W. W. B. R. to Wilson,
d as close connection was made
there with the Short I could
only glance out upon the crops in
passing. I reached at
P. m. and spent the night there.
Next morning I walked leisurely
down the streets of that beautiful
town and saw Capt. J. B. Williams,
Col. J. B. Starr, J. O. Evans,
and others. The good people of
Fayetteville are indeed clever to
visitors and my stay among them
was pleasant.
From here I to Maxton, in
one of beet cotton counties,
Robeson. Here I saw J. A.
Carter Mr.
proprietor of the hotel, and many
of whom were in bright
hopes of a large harvest just ahead.
I took a team and went to
ville which is in a good section of
country. At this place I met C.
A. L. W. F. Bullock, who
are most excellent merchants. My
next visit was to Plainview and
from there I went to Rowland,
where I saw G. L. Robertson and
M. both young men but
such push and energy as
will no bring them to the
front rank with the largest mer-
chants of the State at an early day.
From here I left the Old North
State and went to S-
C, in county, which is in
the piedmont section. It is a pleas
a real pleasure, to look
upon the broad cotton fields hero to
be seen. The crop is fine and in
places will yield as much as
two bales per acre. I meet with C
S. R. A. Hodges, S. Strauss
others who are representative men.
This is a live town, several of the
merchants doing from to
business per year, J. B.
is one of Marlboro's largest
most progressive farmers. He
has made in a year bales of
cotton acres of land P. L.
and others raise from
to bales per year.
here seems to be prosperous and
are joyous because of the fine crop
prospects ahead.
drove oat through the country
from and visited some
smaller towns. At I met
with B. F. a very large mer
chant tor a small place. He
from to bales cotton
per season sells goods by
car load. At Clio saw Roper,
Welsh Herring and E.
are up with the
times and if Clio only had a railroad
outlet it would soon be a town of no
small size. is another small
town which has two or three first
class merchants, J. P. Co
and J. amount
business done in that place is
prising.
From here came back to North
The next session will be held with
the Baptist church at Aug.
28-31. the
Union. Is the heathen lost without
the W. Powell, followed
general discussion.
have themE. E
Hilliard, W. C. Allen, J. H. Tucker.
Its
J. D. Its members,
G. J. Its ordinances, J.
W. Hundley; Its missions, L. M.
Curtis. The work and duty of
cation in our churches, John Duckett.
Sunday-school, Sunday a. m.
A. m., L. M.
Curtis; Friday, r. m., G. J.
Saturday p. m., J. W. Hundley;
Sunday a. m., Dr. J. D.
Every in the Union is re-
quested to send delegates.
BANNER
OXFORD, N. C.
Mitchell.
OWNERS PROPRIETORS.
IT
I Ml KAN
ll I C
AN
AN
T ,
ROVE T J
-THAT-
PRATT'S
revolving
evolving Head
iron
IS THE BEST GIN IN THE SOUTH.
TIN
-FOB THE SALE OF-
A Pitt.
Me. deem it a duty
I owe kind people of Pitt county
to tell them a few facts in regard
to the favorable situation they are
placed to prosper in
of fine tobacco. I was born and
raised in the fine tobacco belt of
Old North State, to Gran-
ville county. can say without any
flattery Pitt county produces
the finest tobacco ever saw.
I have been employed in this
county in two places distant
miles apart and have bad the pleas
are of viewing lands and the
growing tobacco on them and can
see no reason why farmers of
this favored section cannot with
proper energy reap a golden bar-
vest in the near future by the
of bright tobacco,
Their addition to grow-
fine tobacco produce the
grain crops and
sweet potato, with any quantity of
forage, an advantage they possess
that my county does not. If they
will act wisely they will plant to-
another year.
J. A.
LEAF -TOBACCO.
FINE BRIGHT TOBACCO A SPECIALTY.
WHY IS IT THE BEST COTTON IN THE SOUTH r-Because it
built upon Improved principles, having Revolving Heads in the ends of Hie
Cotton Box, which revolve with the roll of seed 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 other gins, and, in consequence of this, cleans the seed better, and of
course, yields more lint cotton. This Is common sense, and if you 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 Gin and will have no other.
Bonner, F. B. Guilford, F. F. Cherry. Jno. Pate,
Aurora, N. C; Hooker, N. C; W. R. Rosa. T. R. Boyd. Ed wards
We beat the world on high averages.
With ample capital, one of the best
lighted houses in the State and a good
working force we defy competition.
The Oxford Tobacco Market is as firm
and as solid as the granite foundations
of the everlasting mountains, and we
would say to the handed sons of
of Eastern Carolina we will
guarantee to get for them as much
money for their Tobacco as any other
on this or any other
market. Every lot entrusted to our
care shall have our strict personal
All we ask is a trial.
Very truly.
BULLOCK MITCHELL,
OXFORD, N. C.
Music Scholars Wanted.
AFTER September 1st, Sirs. R. B.
John will give to those desiring it
instruction in vocal and instrumental
music. Prices and testimonials fur-
to those interested.
ORDER wait until the ginning season is upon you to order
your gin. It will cost no more early than late. will take orders now or any
time this summer, at cash prices, and deliver on good notes, without interest,
payable in November, 1890.
MOWING will sell the Buckeye on good
notes, to responsible parties, payable November, and 1891. Order
at once
GINS
Items.
The coming campaign promises to
be a lively one.
Much excitement has been going
on around here of late because of the
report that a large band robbers
was hiding in the swamps near by,
so on Saturday last a large body of
men organized for the purpose of
capturing them dead or alive. But
it was too late, for no trace of
could be found. They must have got
news in some way of their impending
fate and made good their escape.
Crops in this part of our county
splendid, especially cotton and to-
The corn crop seems to be
cut a little short on account of the
dry weather. Mr. J. B. Joyner, of
Marlboro has fourteen acres in cotton
which if damaged in no way from
now will certainly yield a bag to the
acres. Most farmers are done their
crops and groups of them are to be
seen gathered in the shade on the
sidewalks of our quiet little village
arguing politics.
The foxes around here have been
doing much damage to our poultry
yards of late. For awhile they were
let alone in their work of destruction,
but now the farmers are done their
crops and have but very little to do
so they have in their
BETHEL HIGH SCHOOL
FOR BOTH
Fall Term opens Sept.
TUITION from 81.25 to per month.
Board from to per month.
One hundred and five pupils were en-
rolled last year, sixteen of which number
were boarders.
For further particulars address
Z. D.
Bethel, N. C.
GINS
Having received from the Pratt Gin Factory the tools for
and training new saws on old gins, and also other repair work, I here
by announce to all that I can successfully repair their gins
here in Washington for per cent, less than it will at
any factory, and also save largely in freights to and from
the various factories. I can do any work your gin
may need. -Send your gin to the
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY
With freights prepared, and 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 us at once
and send your gin without delay. It will cost no more soon than late.
YE THEREFORE READY.
FARM AND
ARM AND
ENGINES
-1000-
Be
All sizes and styles commonly used, at Low Prices and Reasonable Terms
A M
ILL
ILL -.-
FOR
FOR
TOBACCO HOGSHEADS,
GIVEN AWAY.
Carolina and stopped at and say that Reynard must be
where I met Mr. Jones, of Jones j Almost every morning the
T. J. Gill and others. Spent i blowing
is the result a made by
Mr. Quay with Senator Gorman-
No such bargain has made,
although it is an open secret it
might have been made ago,
and whether resolution, if it is
reported by committee Rules
to which it was referred, will receive
the support of the democrats will
depend entirely upon circumstances.
democrats have their eyes wide
open and are greatly the
republican row now going on and
may be depended upon to do their
part in keeping it a going, and to
take advantage of anything that
turns up. The republicans are to
bold a caucus and a
circus is expected
Speaker Seed has been the mad-
man in town ever since Mr.
Quay his resolution,
he swears that the Senate shall act
upon Federal Election bill at
this season or be will not allow the
House to act upon the Senate
amendments to tariff bill. Mr.
Bead charges it all to Secretary
Blaine, who bas been from start
open and active in his opposition to
Federal election bill
Secretary policy towards
General American Nations, if
persisted in. will undoubtedly prove
a very bad one Mr Ia
setting himself up as a mediator-
he wants to be the eon-
election which is done, be ought to
satisfied and let the co-workers
share the spoils. When the sys-
of change is inaugurated,
Democratic party will be stronger
and toe majorities at every election
will be increased. men be-
come domineering when they think
they bold patent right to office.
Why not promote such men as
B. B. Gotten, John S. Harris, J.
John Flanagan,
B. C. C. D. Major
Henry Harding Fleming,
J. A. Henry Sheppard,
Willis B. J. J. Nobles,
Samuel A. Noah Forbes, Jr.,
John D. Cox, James L. Smith, and
a host of others who are Simon pure
Democrats, and worthy of promo-
When this system of one term is
adopted Democratic will
be safe. will not
have a foot bold, and political
will be out. says
yes Don't all speak at once.
per lb for Sweet
lb sold in Pitt Co., which
is of its superiority, at
Old Brick Store.
good Umber
Baptist Chore be sold at, a
bargain. Apply to J. H,
a pleasant evening and left early
next morning for Pates. B. W. Liv-
at place, who is a
and clever man, is engaged in
merchandising, milling and
tine stilling and makes all pay well-
After spending the next night in
Wilmington, I took W. h W.
train for Goldsboro and Fremont.
Saw Aycock Bros., Bros., J.
D. Best and J. B. Short, all good
practical men who have accumulated
considerable money. Then I went
down the A. N. C. road to
from which point I took a drive
through the country to The
crops around Grifton are better
they have in or
years, it fair prices are had this
fall we will sec Eastern North Caro-
come to the front again. This
section has had a blow but is not
dead by any means. Mr. Alonzo
ton of Scuffle ton has one of the best
Tanners in all this region and will
house lbs seed cotton
per acre this season.
From here I returned home and
must say I never had a more de-
trip. The route indicated
this sketch lies through farming
lands which the world
pass excellence and upon
are such splendid crops as to make
the heart of every beholder glad.
Greenville, N. G., Aug. 13th
A Card.
The report that I intend lo leave
Bethel this fall having gained con-
currency, I take this
method of announcing that I shall
remain here, and the Fall
Term of Bethel High School begins
September 8th, 1890.
I thank my friends tor their kind
and liberal support they have
extended to me during the past,
and trust they may see fit to
grant a continuance of the same.
Very Truly
Z. D.
Another
Mb. saw some time
ago that the name of James L-
Smith would be presented to the
Democratic convention for
of Deeds, of Pitt county. In this
writers opinion no more popular,
capable or worthy man could be
He is a hard working far-
mer and mechanic by occupation
and trade. A well educated man.
a good and in every way
qualified for that important
He is one of people and
if should fall on he
will be triumphantly elected. Let
every Democrat and working man
rally to the support of this genuine
Democrat and laboring man
will be
Falkland.
of horns and baying of
hounds may be beard amid the deaf-
cheers of the hunters, and who
will not agree that such sport as
this will more than amply repay for
the poultry they have destroyed.
Public Sale.
BY virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court made, at March Term, 1890.
in the matter of W. Andrews and
wife against Hardy and Bros. I will sell
at the Court House door in Greenville.
N. on Monday, the day of
1890. for cash the following de-
scribed
One town lot in the town of Bethel ad-
joining the lands of James M. Manning
and William and lot
on which a store stands; also one other
lot in said town, Bethel, adjoining the
lands of Edmund Andrews, deceased,
the same purchased of Edmund Andrews
by Andrews. J. B.
Commissioner.
N. C, July
We arc pleased to announce to the to-
growers Pitt and adjoining
counties that we are prepared to give
Hogsheads free to any person who
will use them to ship their tobacco
Provided they will it to
Davis Gregory, of Oxford. N. C.
Mess. Davis Gregory are very large
tobacco dealers guarantee the high-
est prices for all tobaccos shipped to
them. And since they oner this favor of
furnishing hogsheads and have shown
such interest in the tobacco growing of
our section we hope our tobacco growers
will 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 Greenville, N. C.
COX
The John Flanagan
BUGGY COMPANY.
Are in business at the old Flanagan
Shops and arc manufacturing
all kinds of the best
VEHICLES.
-We also do-
Go to Brown Bros and see their
cheap White Goods and Embroider-
Notice.
OX Monday the 10th day of
A. D. will sell at the
Court House door in the town of Green-
ville to the highest bidder for cash one
tract of land Pitt county containing
about acres and bounded as
piece or parcel of land known as
lot No. the division lands of
Cynthia Manning. Nancy Manning and
J. B. Manning, bounded as Be-
at a stake on road at end of
line, thence with of lane S 421-
E 3-5 poles to a stake on road, thence
along road poles to the beginning
containing acres, more or less, with
one acre deducted for grape arbor,
acres, more or less, and assigned
to B. F. Manning in said division to sat-
a ten ex execution in my hands for
collection against Manning which
has been levied on said land as prop-
of said Manning.
J. A. K. Sheriff.
August 16th, 1890.
ON Monday the 15th day September
A. D. will sell at the Court
House door in the town of Greenville to
the highest for cash one tract of
in Pitt county containing about
one and one-third acres and bounded as
Situated in the fork
of Greek and Sugg Branch in
Bethel township adjoining the home-
stead of W. C- an undivided
interest in ore lot in the town of Bethel
adjoining the lands J. L. Nelson,
Wm. Staten, R. J. Grimes and others
and known as Academy lot. One
tract of land in the town of Bethel on
the north side of the A R railroad and
east side of street adjoining the
lands of J. L. Nelson the Law-
lot and others containing one
acre, more or less, being the land on
which the Steam Mill now
lo satisfy an execution my
bands for collection against W. C.
son and which has been levied on said
as the property of said W. C.
son J. A. K. Sheriff.
August 16th, 1890.
All Work guaranteed.
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY CO.
Greenville, N. C.
Latham Fender.
That will cut 10.000 feet of per day. on good also larger sizes at
rates price.
SEED COTTON ELEVATORS.
That will raise 1,800 pounds of seed cotton from a wagon in l- minutes. No
can afford to do without one. Terms easy and prices satisfactory
3-TON WAGON SCALES, ONLY
Guaranteed correct or no Can weigh cotton or hay on the wagon,
live stock on foot.
For prices, address,
WASHINGTON MACHINERY AGENCY.
O. K Manager, Washington,
j. B. CHERRY.
J. R.
J. G. MOVE
SOLID CHUNKS OF TRUTHS
J. B. CHERRY CO.,
-Invite your careful attention to their large and complete stock
GENERAL MERCHANDISE, j
r-And each and every one at least a share of their esteemed patronage.-
cry of hard times we hear constantly on every hand, but we-x
wish to remind you that we have a-------
SPECIALLY SELECTED OF GOODS
-To meet not only competition, hut to conquer the monster high prices.
day is passed when the thought of friendship enters into
-the buying of good j, why because every one must
buy where they can buy cheapest.
WE ARE PREPARED TO SERVE
Having accepted the of
the Plow Works
we are prepared to
furnish
CANE MILLS
1ST 13-------
EVAPORATORS,
at low prices. First-class ma-
chines. We carry a full line of
HARDWARE, SASH, DOORS
and BLINDS. A full line of
several of the best makes of
COOK STOVES on hand and to
arrive. We sell low for cash.
LATHAM PENDER;
Greenville, N. C.
ANOTHER
Car Load of Fine
Horses
Mules,
--------Just received by
Greenville. N. C.
will be sold-----
CHEAP FOR CASH,
or at terms on time on
proved security. I bought ray stock for
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap
anyone. Give me a call.
Who will favor with their patronage. We will b- glad to have
in and see us and let us give you at least a heart shake of the hand
and a kindly greeting. Make our place your headquarters
in the town, and quality arc what you want
your hard earned dollars and that Is just what we
got for you,
No Mistake No Bragging No Back I
mean every word of it and can and will do what till yon. Look.
down this column and see if we cannot interest you bargains.
stock
Dry Goods. Notions, Furnishing Goods, Caps,
Shoes, Hardware, Groceries, Provisions, Harness
and Willow Ware, Crockery and Glassware, Tin
Plows and Castings, Furniture, Mattresses, Bed Springs,
And easy and comfortable Lounges, also a line of Baby
Look at these prices they are not leaders but only sample prices through
Calicoes at cents per yard. Ginghams at to cents per yard.
to cents pr yd. Elegant line of White Goods at to
40-inch White Lawns at pr yd. Bound thread N. C. Check i
Piece from to eta.
All wool, fashionable shades, single at cents per yards.
Nun's Veiling at cents per yard, standard goods and worth at least is
Single and Double width Cashmeres In several leading shades, reduced.
-We the best line of-
OUR DOLLAR SHOES
We have ever had, solid leather and no mistake. Our line of shoes is
Ladies, men, boys and children we can suit you in shoes-----
Give the tired mother a rest and please the baby by it a nice
we want to talk to you
That and element in every household- We are headers
for it in market, and the largest line ever found here. We can J
money on small as well as purchases.
Our parting Injunction to every consumer and buyer of good in this ms
to come In and look at our goods and compare them and prices in all our
lines of General with good and elsewhere, and
meet competition by lowering price and the quality.
J. CO,
N.





1890.
ram TOTS
19th SEASON.
Oar
is now
in northern
markets
making
chases for
fall and winter
stock,
which will
surpass
any ever
shown in
Greenville.
years
of fair
and square
D-E-A-L I-3--G-S-
years of
You
have
always
looked to
us for the
bright things
the right things,
and
the new
things and
this tame you
will be better
pleased than ever
with his
These goods
will be placed on
our counters in a
few days and we
cordially invite
an inspection.
R. USU-
Street ear Telegraph
Telegraph
THE
EASTERN REFLECTOR,
Greenville, N. C
Local parks
New Good New Goods Did
you ever see toe like of New Goods
at Higgs They are
just have knocked the
bottom out of prices and will sell
cheater now than ever before.
terms will be strictly cash.
H. C.
Cooper's
Warehouse
Henderson, N. C
Is the leading place
For farmers to sell tobacco.
If yon want the highest prices
Don't to ship tobacco
To Cooper's, N. C.
for Branch
Try some of the new corned
lets at the Old Brick Store.
Melons still fine and plentiful.
If you want engine repaired
send It to Ellington Cooper.
Get gun and shoot the bats.
Have your castings made by El-
Cooper, Greenville Iron
Works.
Some good weather the past week.
Don't forget that Cooper's ware-
house at Henderson offers or
hogshead to their patrons free.
D. Y. Cooper, of Henderson leads
all other warehouse men in big
prices and big averages
County Convention Thursday of
next week.
Fresh Boss Biscuits for the well
and sick at the Old Brick Store.
Try Cooper's warehouse
and you will be convinced
that it is headquarters for the sale
of tobacco.
Almost time for early
grapes.
D. Y. Cooper is determined to
handle his part the Pitt county
tobacco, it money and bard work
will get it.
White Mountain Ice Cream Free,
for sale by Latham Pender-
D. Y. Cooper, of Henderson, sells
more farmers tobacco and gives
better satisfaction than any house
in the State.
Still the rush is for the mineral
water at the Institute. Many testily
to its virtues.
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate
was made of Point Lace Flour, at
the Old Brick Store.
Farmers look to your interest and
tobacco where yon can get
the most money, and Coopers ware-
house is the place.
Cooper, of Henderson, will at all
times do his best for Pitt county
farmers. Try him with your
tobacco.
Bettie
will open her school for girls and
small boys September 1st 1890.
Sell your tobacco at Cooper's where
you will have from to seventy-
five buyers with plenty of money to
buy your tobacco.
The stores are getting full of new
goods.
Four reliable parties can get
board with a good family for
per week, by leaving their
names at office.
D. Y. Cooper pays no rent, owns
his Louse and will use every effort
to get farmer full value of his
tobacco. Try him, you cant do
better,
wide-awake, stir-
ring man to take agency tor a first-
class Old Line Life Insurance
Company. Big Monet for the
right man. Address care of
Attend your township primaries
next Saturday.
Tanner
Del any engine in thorough repair,
terms easy. Apply Maj. H.
Greenville, N. C. or DB- Ed-
wards, Hookerton, N. C.
E. G. Barnes, of Coopers ware-
house, says that Pitt tobacco is the
best he has is a good, jolly
fellow; see when you go to
Cooper's at Henderson.
We are moving back to our old
stand right in front of M. Lang,
where we will be glad to see old
customers and every body generally
and show fine line of cook stoves
and other goods
D. D. Haskett Co.
is a boss band
rattle. He handles more
melons than any man in town.
D. Y. Cooper has been in the to-
business at Henderson for
years and always a vises farmers to
sell tobacco where can
get the beat prices. That he gets
these prices for all sold at his ware
is proven his success
during all these years.
D. Y. Cooper, of Henderson, has
made arrangements with Bedding's
saw mill to make a large of
tobacco Farmers who wish
to ship tobacco to Cooper can get
these free of charge by
plying at the mill, two miles from
Greenville, or at Evan's
livery stables.
Pour trains at Greenville at one
time last Friday. Looks like
Mitchell, owners and
proprietors of the Banner ware-
house Oxford, N. C., for Mr.
P. Erwin. of Pitt, a few days ago,
one curing of priming leaves for
snug little nun of f 118.80 after de-
ducting freight and warehouse
charge. Two lots brought one
, one one and one
mi an average of over
for all grades. This tobacco
war cured by Mr. W. P. Brook of
an. g want big
prises prompt M y oar
Miss Mollie Rouse has been sick
the past week.
Mr. H. C. Hooker is clerking for
Brown Hooker.
W. A. Fleming, of Martin, is
visiting relatives in town.
Walter Barrett and Joe Starkey
are learning to ride the
Dr. C. J. returned home
Friday from his trip the Pilot.
Mr. Willis Fleming has taken a
position as clerk with Brown Bros.
Mr. D. D. is moving his
hardware store back the street.
Mr. C. Greene arrived Saturday
to spend a few days at his old home.
Rev. A. D. Hunter is conducting a
protracted meeting at Bethel this
week.
Miss Lillian baa been
spending a few days with Miss Rosa
Forbes.
Mr. G- M. Tucker left Monday for
the Northern markets to purchase
new goods.
Mrs. E. S. Harris, of Falkland,
spent a day or two of last week with
Mrs. C. M. Bernard.
Mr. C T. has moved into
the dwelling in which he
recently purchased.
The family of Dr. Frank W. Brown
and Miss Susie Brown returned last
week from Nag's Head.
Gov. Jarvis left yesterday to
tend the State Convention, which
meets in Raleigh today.
Misses Nannie and Move,
of Kinston. have been spending some
with Mrs. Amos
Mrs. M. T. of the firm of
Joyner, went to Baltimore
Monday to purchase fill millinery.
Mr. Lacy N. Williams, a deaf mute
from Aurora, has been in town the
past week visiting Mr. B. F. Sugg.
The three little girls of Mrs. Lucie
A. Brown left Monday morning to
join their mother in Washington
City.
Pi of. C. H. James was in town
last Friday and dropped in to seethe
His school at Grifton
will open September
Mr. Allen Warren spent last week
in Bertie in the interest of Riverside
Nursery and visiting his daughter,
Mrs. E. B. Moore, at Lewiston.
Dr. G. C. Edwards, of Hookerton,
was in town last Friday and made
the Reflector a call. He says the
handsome depot here is quite an
for town.
Mr. H. B. Clark, of Washington,
came up Friday to join his wife, who
was visiting parents lice, and
they took the train for
Lewiston to spend a few days there.
Through oversight we failed last
week to mention the death of Mrs.
W. R. Parker, of Farmville, which
occurred on the morning of the 11th
inst. The bereaved hare our
Mr. J. B. Cherry went North yes-
to purchase a fall stock for
the large double stores of J. B. Cher-
Co., who carry the largest stock
of general merchandise that comes to
Greenville.
The ought to
double its present number of sub
in Pitt county. Every read
ought to feel that interest in his
county to ask his neighbor to become
a subscriber. .
After the Congressional
at Elizabeth City, last Thurs-
day, about a dozen of the delegates
from Pitt run down to Nags Head
and remained through the week.
say old Nags Head is a fine
place.
Other improvements were made
around the depot last week. The
approach to the front of the building
from Dickerson avenue has been
leveled and covered with gravel, the
elevation around the freight room
and tracks extended. The furniture
for the waiting rooms has arrived.
We hear that some cases of
hare developed in the section
beyond Creek toward Bethel,
about miles from here. Three
members of the family of Mr. Asa
Bullock, two children and his wife,
have died of the diseases. Some
other people in the neighborhood are
sick. We hope there will be no new
cases.
Mr. Alfred Forbes left Monday to
make his fall and winter purchases.
Mrs. Forbes, Mrs. Allie Higgs and
Miss Martha accompanied
him to New York where they will
spend some days.
Mr. J. J. Burgess, representing R.
A. Co., of Norfolk, is in town
this week. He Greenville will
be his headquarters during the cot-
ton season and he wants to help our
farmers get good prices.
Mr. E. G. Barnes, representing
Cooper's Warehouse, of Henderson,
spent several days of last week in
this section. He visited a large
number of the tobacco farms and
made friends wherever he went
Mr. J. F. Joyner, of Greenville,
accompanied by the brightest four
year-old boy we ever saw, spent
days in Oxford the past week.
He is one of the largest tobacco
in Ledger of
12th.
Mr. E. B. Moore, proprietor
of Hotel Macon but now a big farmer
of Lewiston, was shaking hands
Monday with his hosts of friends in
Greenville. He is the same
jolly as can be and wearing as
smiles as ever. The Reflector was
glad to have a call him.
At the State Alliance meeting in
Asheville last week, townsman,
Hon. E. A. Move, responded to
address of welcome which was de-
livered by Gen. R. B. Vance. He
was again elected as one of the
gates to National Alliance,
next meeting of which will be held
December in Florida
The is crowded with
new advertisements this week.
Every true Democrat will be at his
township primary next Saturday if
possible for him to get there.
Mr. J. D. Williamson is making
additions and improvements to his
residence near the Methodist Church.
Secretaries of the primaries are re-
quested to send reports to the Re-
in time for next issue.
Dr. D. L. James has placed one of
the best and latest improved dental
chairs in his splendidly equipped
office.
Mr. Arden Tucker brought the
largest watermelon of the season to
town Saturday. It tipped the beam
at pounds. We don't believe Pitt
county ever before raised one so
large. The one Mr. Tucker brought
the Reflector a few weeks ago
weighed pounds. The outlook is
that he will get the prize of a year's
subscription.
The work of repairing the Academy
building, preparatory to the opening
of the male school, commenced this
week. The school will
1st. The people of this
should give this such a
hearty support as will make it rank
with the best schools of the State.
It is to the best interest of the com-
to maintain school.
The old Tar has been on unusually
good behavior since the railroad
came. From first day of last
year to the close of July there were
live freshets which prevented people
from even driving in form the north
side of the river. During the
months since then the water has not
been high enough a single time to
prevent pedestrians coming in dry
shod.
One year ago to-morrow the first
passenger train came to Greenville
or rather to one mile dis-
The daily trips that have been
made since that event have brought
new life into Greenville and the
pulse of the town is gradually
quickening and strengthening. Ours
is no longer a dead town, but is going
forward with that push and
that, is bringing it rapidly to the
front.
The supplement that goes out with
the Reflector to-day among the ton
growers, is one that was gotten
up by Mr. D. Y. Cooper, of
son, last December. He had a few
of them left which he wished to get
in the hands of Pitt county tobacco
growers and sent them to us for that
purpose. As there are only a few of
them we hope no reader will feel
slighted who fails to get one of the
supplements, and those who do re-
one will confer a favor by pass-
it around among their neighbors
after reading it.
Died.
At N. C, July 19th, Mrs.
Margaret wife of the late
Blount She was born October
4th, 1800, making her years
old at death. For more than years
she had been a member of the
Church her membership being at
Parker's Chapel, near Greenville, up
to 1856 or at which time the
family moved from this county to
Halifax county. She was an excel-
lent woman, greatly beloved by a
large circle of friends. She was an
aunt of our esteemed
Mr. R M. of
Soot
Pitt counts- delegates will do to
count on every time. Returning
from the Congressional Convention
at Elizabeth City, after a series of
delays and stop overs they reached
the Junction Thursday morning, and
rather than lay over there all day
and wait for the evening train to
bring them to Greenville, a number
of them put out on foot and walked
here, a distance of miles. They
came in town in good shape an say
they went on the gravel train but
came back on the gravel. Every one
of them would walk that far to vote,
too, if it was necessary.
New Advertisements.
Mrs. R. B. John will take music
pupils after September 1st.
J. B. Yellowley, commissioner,
offers property in Bethel for sale.
Sec advertisement.
Attention is called to
of Bethel High School. Fall
term begins Sept. 8th.
Sheriff Tucker has two advertise-
of land sale in this issue to
satisfy executions in his bands.
Latham Pender have cane mills
for sale, a machine many of our
farmers need. See advertisement.
No doubt your attention has been
called to M. R. Lang's attractive ad.
This gentleman is now in Northern
markets making his Fall and Winter
purchases. The present season will
make nineteen years that Mr. Lang
has been doing business in our midst
and during that time, by his
integrity and good will and ac-
manners to all, has built
up a business second to none in this
section, and numbering among its
patrons the best people of the
rounding country. Some of Mr.
Lang's goods are now arriving and
we were called in yesterday U look
at those handsome dress goods for
which store is so famous and
they surpass anything in that line
we have seen in
When you come to Greenville don't
fail to call on Mr. Lang and be wait-
ed on by his polite attentive
salesmen and saleslady, Messrs. Guss
and Alex Roy Flanagan,
Pat Foley and Mrs. M. M. Nelson.
SHIP YOUR TOBACCO
Grifton Items.
Over a column of school advertise-
on fourth page of the
tor. How is that for a good
um
Train late every day, all caused by
having to wait at the Junction for
A. i- R. train from
Tar
You ought to have the Reflector
at least during the campaign.
cents will get it from now until the
first at January.
The Board of Managers the
North Carolina Christian Missionary
Convention will meet in Greenville at
a- m Wednesday, August 27th.
Last Friday was regular time for
the Guard to drill but the drill turn-
ed m i Miser- The shoo Id
interest in the of
company.
A but Sad
Two daughters of Mr. J. J. Tucker,
of were recently taken sick
under very strange circumstances.
On Saturday before last one of them
went to visit relatives miles from
home. Next day she had a severe
chill and was quite sick, her sickness
developing into typhoid fever. She
was too sick to be removed home so
Mr. Tucker took another daughter
and went to wait on the sick one.
Not long after arriving at the house
this second daughter was taken with
a chill like the first and a case of
fever developed. At last report both
were quite sick.
Tobacco
Everybody says beautiful
when they look in the
window.
Pitt has over acres in tobacco
this year and the crop will be twice
is large next year.
If Greenville had good tobacco
warehouses the buyers would come
here for the crop and farmers would
save the freight.
Mr. T. C. Bryan brought us some
tobacco Saturday, specimens of bis
own curing. He brought it right on
the stalk as cured, which is the best
way to test it. Our are
learning rapidly how to do their own
What we heard and published last
week about two barns of Mr. C. D.
tobacco being ruined has
turned out to be a mistake.
tobacco is all right and experts who
have examined it pronounce it as good
as any to be found. We are glad to
note this.
Mrs. N. E. Anderson recently
sent pounds of tobacco to Davis
t Gregory, Oxford, received
therefor the sum of an aver-
age of per hundred- Two lots
brought f one one one
and one This is the high-
est sale of the season reported thus
far.
Mr. R. R. Gotten, of Falkland, is
largest tobacco grower of the
county this season. He has in
acres which is more than was ever
planted by one farmer in Pitt. He
was in. the Reflector last
Thursday be had cured
barns up to that day, every barn be-
good. Bis whose crop will
amount to at least It
keep, him to
tor his tobacco
Mr. you allow us a
little space in which to give a few
items from our little town, as perhaps
some of your readers would like to
hear from us.
Watermelons are cheap and
All the farmers are busily engaged
in saving their fodder.
We are having some fine weather
at present after the long rainy spell.
Miss Mary Spier is visiting her sis-
Miss Laura Spier, near
Miss from near
den, is visiting relatives and friends
in town.
Miss Jackson, of Kins ton.
and Miss Myrtle Pope, of New
are visiting Miss Spivey.
Miss Patrick and brother, of
Hookerton, were in town Tuesday
visiting Mrs. L. A. Cobb.
Dr. W. L. Best, of was
in town Tuesday.
Mr. Robert Wood lady, of
Richmond, are visiting his parents at
this place.
Dr. H. Johnson wife returned
from a pleasant trip to Seven Springs
last Monday.
The steamers Howard and Laura
from New came up this week
and took off a cargo of shingles from
Heath Co's mill.
Rev. J. L. has just closed
a series of meetings at Bethel, Lenoir
county, with ten additions to the
church. He is an able and eloquent
minister. His people are thoroughly
devoted to and as a most
Christian gentleman he justly
deserves it.
There have been several new
surveyed old ones put in better
shape by that high toned gentleman,
Capt. Walter civil engineer
of Wilmington, who is employed by
the railroad company to survey the
railroad.
Dr. II. lost his stables
with quite u lot of corn, oats and
by fire one night last week, and
came near losing one of his fine
in the flames. It was the work of
an incendiary who fears neither God
nor man.
Prof. C. H. James will open school
in male and female
Sept. 8th. He comes highly rec-
and deserves to be liberal-
There will be ten or twelve nice
building lots given away to as many
in the town of Grifton during
the next twelve months who will open
up a street and erect respectable
dwellings on the same.
We are glad to see the pleasant fa-
of Capt- Honey and Capt. Adams
who with their families have been ab-
sent a week or more. We are
to know they expect to remain with
us the railroad is completed to
The new bridge, which is
a fine one, will be so nearly com-
by Tuesday, 19th inst., that
the train can pass over and
will begin at once for Kinston.
Viola.
Our readers will enjoy this inter
eating letter from Grifton. We will
be glad to hear from the writer often.
-EH .
GREENVILLE MARKET.
DAVIS GREGORY'S
WAREHOUSE.
OXFORD,
Strict Personal Attention,
Highest Market Prices,
Quick sales and prompt returns guaranteed.
HOGSHEADS FREE
Upon application to Amos G. Cox.
you want any information concerning Tobacco, write us and your
inquiries will have prompt attention.
No Market in the Land Enjoys Better
Facilities than Oxford.
Davis Gregory, Oxford,
M. CONGLETON CO.,
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand.
J. ANDREWS,
S- x K
r c c
Pin
-DEALERS IX-
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoe and
GROCERIES.
We have just received and opened a beautiful line of new
Spring and Summer Goods.
I shall be glad to have my old friends and customers come to
see us, assure them that we can sell the goods
For
Give us a trial and be convinced that the way to buy goods is for
the spot cash.
JOHN S. CONGLETON.
X. C, January,
CO
v.
Its
CM
Z-E Vi
t.
THE FALL
EDUCTION
EDUCTION
era
Pitt Co N C.
C C COBB,
T. H. GILLIAM.
Co.
-M-
LADIES I
T I
------THE
TE GOODS AND
WHITE GOODS AND
WHITE GOODS AND EDGING
GOODS AND EDGING
Pork.
Bulk Skies,
Balk Shoulders,
Bacon Sides,
Bacon Shoulders,
Pitt County
Sugar Cured Hun
Flour,
Coffee,
Brown Sugar,
Granulated Sugar.
Syrup mod Molasses.
Tobacco,
Snuff,
Lard,
Batter,
Corn,
12.00 to 14.06
to
3.50 to 6.60
to
to
to
to II
to
to
to
to
We have been selling this season has been reduced in price and it is need
less to say how when before the redaction we
heard several
never saw such cheap
White Goods . Edging
in all my life where did
you get them
Cobb Bros.,
Cotton Factors.
Merchants,
in. wide
E in. wide
Hamburg Edging in. wide in. wide
Hamburg Edging I in. wide in. wide
White Goods from cents to cents per yard.
White Goods from cents to cents per yard.
Come and see if they arc not what we represent in price,
GREENVILLE, N. C
GREENVILLE, N. C.
INTERESTING INFORMATION
That Man Stephens
-----WHO KEEPS SUCH A NICE ASSORTMENT OF-----
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS
SOLICIT TOUR SHIPMENT of
have bad many years ex-
at the business and an
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to out
hands will prompt and
careful
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD BRICK STOKE.
FARMERS AND BUT-
their supplies will find It to
their Interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere. Is complete
in all its branches.
PORK SIDES SHOULDERS,
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
TEAS, Ac.
always at Market Prick.
SNUFF
I we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock
to Says there is never any doubt of his giving you entire satisfaction
if will just give him a call when needing goods in his Hue.
Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods He also
keeps the best Cigars and Cigarettes. Remember the place. . sold tor cash, therefor, having no
STEPHENS,
Grocer, Confectioner and Fruiterer. . u.





Ta-
G. E. HARRIS,
TO
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
------AND DEALER
Greenville, N.
SCHOOL NOTICES.
Greensboro, AT. C.
The Seventy-first Session of this well-
Institution will begin on the
27th Day of
In addition to thorough instruction In
I Literary Course. advantages are
departments of
and Vocal Music. Elocution, Art, and
, Physical Training. Charges moderate.
For apply to
B. F. DIXON, Pres.
Greenville, N. C
or mm
This is what yon ought to hare; in fact
you must have It to fully enjoy life.
ALFRED FORBES,
THE RELIABLE OF C
Men to the havers Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following good
tit. i ., not to be excelled this market. And all guaranteed tone First-class and
I BY GOODS of all kind,. NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN
HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA
SLIPPERS. and HOUSE
WINDOWS, SASH and and QUEENS-
and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of different
Mill Hay, Rock Lime. Paris, and
Hair. addles.
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
, . O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I oiler to the trade at Wholesale
C per for Bread Prep-
ion a ml Star Lye at jobbers U- ices. N lute Lead and pure
see Oil and Paint Colors. Wood Pumps. and W and
Ware. Nails a specialty. Give a -all and guarantee satisfaction.
J. L. SUGG,
AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE. N- C
OFFICE JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds placed in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE,
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
THE FRONT
D. Williamson,
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN
GREEN VILLE. X. C.
Has Moved to One Door North Court House
WILL CONTINUE THE
PHOTONS, BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory well with the best put tip nothing
but ASS work. keep up with the time- and styles.
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can sect from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ran. Horn, King.
Also M hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
the year round, which we will sell AS AS THE LOWEST.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
-------o
Thanking the people of am surrounding counties for past favor to.-we hope
merit a continuance of the same
J. B. Jonathan White.
Portsmouth. Va. Greenville N. C
Bridgers White,
High Street.
Solicit consignments of Cotton. Pea
nuts. Poultry. all other
Country inference. Mer-
chants and Farmers Portsmouth
Va.
SHIPPING I
HIPPING i
. TOBACCO
-.- I I
We wish to inform the public that w
are to build a
LIST-CLASS HOGSHEAD,
FIRST-CLASS HOGSHEAD,
For Tobacco in.
all of this
and i.- , exam.
mi- Mir and we feel sure that
will it to to buy
u.
You can apply lo Mr. A.
if Greenville. N. c.
or to the of
The Cox cot toil Planter for
further Our
any wish to
apply in we are
south of Greenville.
near the railroad leading
from to Kin-ton,
North Carolina.
We are also prepared to
furnish extra Cart
Wheels, made at
wood. rim and at
pair.
We still continue to manufacture
Well Buckets, Brackets
and for Buildings, either
Turned or Sawed, and
prices and satisfactory work.
Carroll
THE NORTH CAROLINA
College Agriculture f iris.
WILL ITS SESSION SEPT. 4th.
new and large shop buildings for
iron and wood will be
ready for occupation, and the depart-
are equipped for thorough work.
Expenses are less than in any similar
college in existence. Many members of
Freshman class are already em-
ployed at remunerative salaries.
For further particulars address
Q. Pies.,
N. G.
Wilson Collegiate Institute,
FOR YOUNG LADIES,
WILSON, N. C.
STRICTLY
Pall Session begins on Monday, Sept.
Thorough and comprehensive course
of study Moderate charges. Health-
location Unsurpassed home
and successful teach-
m every department. depart-
of music art each presided
over by accomplished specialist.
For and full particulars,
Address.
AS E WARREN.
Principal, Wilson. N. C.
CHOW AN BAPTIST
FEMALE INSTITUTE,
MURFREESBORO. N. C.
Parents and guardians will do well to
note following
The Institute was at
in preference to many other very
desirable places because of its celerity
for health, the history of the school
for more than forty years
wisdom of their course.
The beauty of the location is not
passed North Carolina. The
refurnished and carpeted last
summer.
The instruction is as
as the demands of the public will
allow.
Only the lest and most
are employed all depart-
and the work is done thorough.
The charges are as reasonable as they
can be made for the of work done.
The fall session begins on Wednesday,
or additional
address
Greenville Male
GREENVILLE N. C.
I, J, ,, Principal.
Fall Term Opens Sept. 1st. 1890.
Per of twenty weeks payable
quarterly in
Primary, S 7.60
Intermediate. ; 10.00
Higher English Science and Mathe-
12.00
Languages, French, Greek
and each. 3.00
Or any two of the for 5.00
Board reasonable. Healthy location.
Discipline Young men will be
thoroughly prepared to enter any Cot.
I- go the Stale.
For further address or see
the Principal or
J. B.
Thus.
Flanagan,
J. H
A.
Committee.
BUSINESS EDUCATION.
W. C. TL.
To day is with and care,
To-morrow's skies are bright and
clear;
To-day is filled with doubtful light,
To-morrow's sun shines always bright.
To-day in storm and cloud we cope,
To-morrow weaves the buds of hope.
To-day we walk the thorny ground.
To-morrow roses bloom around.
To-day we shed the bitter tear,
To-morrow notes of joy we hear .
To-day aw work and wait and sigh,
To-morrow rainbows gild the sky.
To-day we sit in cheerless
To-morrow flowers of beauty bloom ;
Thus in life we slight to-day,
And leave its pearls of gladness lay.
too oft we find them gone.
As each to-morrow passes on ;
To-day should be our lamp of life.
To-morrow comes earth's weary strife.
The Pulpit and the Stag-
Rev. F. M. Pastor United
Brethren Church. Blue Mound. Kan.,
feel it my duty to tell what
wonders Dr. King New Discovery has
done for me My Lungs were badly dis-
eased, and my parishioners thought I
could live only a few weeks. I took five
of Dr. King's New Discovery and
am sound and well, gaining in
Arthur Manager Loves Funny
Folks Combination, a
thorough trial and convincing
am confident Dr. King's New
for Consumption, beats all, and
cures when everything else fails. The
greatest kindness can do my many
thousand friends is to urge them to tr
Free trial bottles at J. L. Wooten's
Drug Store. Regular sizes and
A Sunshiny Husband.
A sunshiny husband makes a
merry, beautiful Lome, worth
worth working for. If a man
is breezy, cherry, and
sympathetic, his wife sings ill her
heart, over her puddings and her
mending basket, counts the hours
till he returns at right, and renews
her youth in the she feels
his and a imitation.
You may think it weak or childish,
if you please, but it is the admired
wile who bears words praise and
receives smiles of
who is capable, discreet
have seen a timid, meek,
little body fairly
bloom strong,
manhood, under the tonic the
cordial companionship with a
husband who really went out of hi
way to find occasion showing
her how- fully he her
and how tenderly he
to her opinion. In home life there
should be jar, no striving for
place, no insisting on
or division of interest. The husband
and the wife are each the com pie
of the other. And it is just
as much his duty to be cheerful as
it is bets to be patient; his right to
joy the door as it is hers
to sweep garnish the pleasant
Interior. A family where the daily
walk of the father makes life a
is filled with something like
Thousands upon thousands of dollars are
spent annually by our people in the
that they may attain this boon. And
yet it may be had by all. We guarantee
that Electric if used according
to directions and use persisted in.
will bring yon Good Digestion and
the demon Dyspepsia and install instead
We recommend Electric Bit-
for Dyspepsia and all diseases of
Liver, Stomach and Kidneys. Sold at
and per bottle by J. L. Wool-
en, Druggist
There was a general riot- in the
state prison in Boston and
with clubs and revolver, had
to be called out to quell it. Several
prison officers prisoners were
injured.
S. S. S.
I used Swift's Specific S
about three years ago for an
case of was cured
sound and well, with three bottles.
have had no return of the annoying
disease since. tried various other
remedies before using S. S. S , but
they failed to cure me, or
me in any way.
Olin C.
Fan-field.
I have sold Swift's Specific S.
for a number of years, and can
cheerfully recommend it. As a tonic
and blood purifier it is without
equal. Wm.
Nashville, III.
Considers it Without an Equal.
Four regular courses of study, j
cal, Philosophical. Literary, scientific. I
Special courses In Chemistry, Civil I
and Engineering. Pharmacy, ,
and other studies.
Separate schools of and Medicine, I
students may attend the University
Address
HON. KEMP P. BATTLE. LL D. I
President, chapel Hill. N. C. j
LEGAL NOTICES
WHAT
SCOTT'S
EMULSION
CURES
VIGOR,
Rev. E. C. Glenn's
1st Sunday at o'clock.
School House, 1st Sunday at
o clock
Sparta, Sunday at o'clock.
Shady Grove. 2nd Sunday at I
Sunday at
Temperance Hall at o'clock
Salem Sunday at o'clock.
Tripp, Chapel, 4th Sunday o'clock.
Jones Chapel Saturday before 4th Sun-
day at
public
BANKERS,
O.
R. L. HUMBER,
Steam Engines Boilers
Improved Brown Cotton Gin,
Saw, Grist and Mills.
Hancock Cotton Gin,
Cotton Seed Crushers,
Pulleys, and Hangings,
Also dealer in Steam Fittings.
Orders for any kind of machinery
will be promptly filled at very lowest
prices. Repairing a
R. L. HUMBER,
Greenville, N. C.
We have for the purpose or con-
ducting a general
Mange and Collecting Business,
Money to Loan on Approved Security.
Collections solicited and remittance
made promptly.
UNDERTAKING.
Pro now on will make Pictures at
the following low
Cigarettes at
-Cards
Carree
Cabinets
Boudoirs
or half life size
Owing to low prices no proofs will be
shown anything smaller than a
net. AH those wishing pictures will do
2.00
2.50
4.00
5.00
6.00
Of Kentucky CT.
a. w. w i
ca Maws.
WILBUR R. SMITH, president.
.
S.-U-. rt A
I Ml
I. m T
Can. Sp ll.
SI
a.
a. baa
Sick headache is the lane of man
This complaint may
cured and prevented by the occasional
use of Dr. J. H. Liver and
Kidney
Disease lies in ambush the weak; a
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en-
counter a malarious atmosphere sud-
den changes of temperature, and the
least robust are usually the easiest
Dr. J. II. Sarsaparilla
will tone, vitality and strength to
the entire body.
eating. k
headache, and indigestion are cured
Liver
Many people habitually endure a
of lassitude, think
have to. If would take Dr.
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-
and stronger, as well as freer from
infirmities of age, by taking Dr. J. II.
Sarsaparilla.
have used your valuable
S. for a number of years,
and consider it without an equal as
a blood purifier and tonic. In fact,
I would not attempt to upon a
spring or summer in this climate
without it. never tire
good word for S. S. S. when I have
an
H. W.
Notice.
All persons having claims against the
estate of Harriet A. Yellowley.
are hereby notified to exhibit the same
on or before 29th day of 1891,
to the undersigned, who has duly
as the Executor of the last will and
testament the said Harriet A. Yellow-
or this notice will be plead in liar of
their recovery.
All persons indebted to the said estate j
I are notified to come forward promptly,
d settle the same.
B. Yellow
Ex. of Harriett A.
Notice.
Court
Mai tin County.
Thomas
against
Francis G. David P. Light-1
foot and Wm. J. Lightfoot.
The defendants, David F. Lightfoot
and William Lightfoot, are hereby
notified to be and appear the
Judge of the Superior Court at a Court
to be held for the county of Martin at
the Court House on the
first Monday in September, WM, and
answer or demur to the in the
above entitled action which will lie de-
posited in the office of the Clerk of said
Court within the first three days of said
term. The purpose of this action is to
foreclose a mortgage executed to the
plaintiff by Francis Lightfoot and Mary
the father and moth pi of the
defendants, and which mortgage bears
date the day of January, 1882.
W. T.
Clerk
OPIUM;
and Whiskey
cured at home
pain,
of particulars sent
M. M. D. Atlanta. Ga.
Office Whitehall St.
A.
Treatise on Blood and Skin
mailed free.
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO.,
Atlanta, Ga.
One 40-Saw Hall Cotton Gin.
One Cockade Hand-power Cotton
City, Fla. Press.
Both in running order and will
be sold very low to make room for larger
power.
Address or call on. K. G. COX.
X. Manager.
Queer world Queer people Here i
are men and women by thousands suffer- I
from all sorts of diseases, bearing all i
manners of pain, spending their all on j
physicians and no better, but
rather right at hand there's
a remedy which it can help them lie-
cause it's helped thousands like them.
Another patent-medicine advertise-
you say. not the
ordinary sort- The medicine is Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medical I and
it's different from the ordinary nostrums
in
It does what it claims to do, or it
yon nothing.
The way Is You pay your drug-
gist for a You read the
and you follow them. You get
better, or you don't. If you do, you buy
another bottle, and perhaps another. If
you don't get better, you get your money
back. And the queer thing is that so
many arc willing to be sick when
the remedy's so near at hand.
OCRACOKE.
CONSUMPTION
SCROFULA
BRONCHITIS
COLDS
Wasting
Wonderful Flesh Producer.
Many have 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
being largely increased. It is used
by Physicians all over the world
PALATABLE AS MILK.
Sold by all Druggist.
BUSINESS COLLEGE
N. B.
OF
Hon. B. Pres,
Bank Raleigh,
E. g. Sec. C.
Assembly.
Daniels, Editor
State
Dr. II. P. Battle, Director X. C.
Short-band, Type-writing,
Book-keeping, Banking.
Penmanship and Mathematics are
taught the Business Col-
Send for of terms.
J. E. MAT HEX Y,
258- Raleigh, X. C
Notice I
PREPARATION for baldness
falling out of hair, eradication
is before the public.
Among the many who have MM It with
wonderful success, I refer you to
lowing named gentlemen who will test If
lo the truth of my assertion
Latham, Greenville.
Mr. O.
Any one wishing to give a trial lot
the named complaints can procure
it from at place of business,
Respectfully.
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber.
Greenville. March C .
JAMES A. SMITH
TONSORIAL ARTIST,
Greenville N C.
We have the easiest
Chair ever used in the art. Clean towels,
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed
In every instance. Call and be con
Ladies waited on at their re
Cleaning clothes a specialty.
LOST or
lateral . n
of If at
a.,
P 1.1.1,
III
MOM
to
CO., BUFFALO. H. V.
C. H.
. R.
Edwards IN,
Printers and Binders,
N. C.
SCHEDULE OF
STEAMER
BEAUFORT.
Yes, decent people who would pro-
people from thieves and robbers
oppose the Louisiana lottery, even at
a million dollars a year license to
the State that will permit its offices
and existence. Yet, the
lottery is a saint compared to
the drunkard and pauper making
business which is licensed to tempt
and destroy with
-1 Thought.
Mercurial Poison.
Mercury is frequently injudiciously
by quack doctors of malaria
and I poison. Its after affect is worse
than the original disease. B. B. B. Bo- I
Blood contains no Mercury.
but will eliminate mercurial poison from ;
the system. Write to the Balm
Co., Atlanta. for of convincing
proof of its curative virtue.
A. P. Jackson. Tenn.,
caught malaria Louisiana,
when the fever at last broke, my
was saturated with poison, and I had
seres in my mouth and knots on my
tongue- I got two bottles of II. I.
which healed my tongue and and
made a new mail of
Wm. Richmond, Atlanta, Ga.
wife could hardly see. Doctors
called it syphilitic Her eyes were
a dreadful Her appetite
failed She had pain her joints and
For the benefit of those who desire
to visit dining the season, the
Beaufort will run the following
Washington every Saturday p m.
Monday am.
Wednesday Pam.
Close connection with the steamers
from and Tarboro, and the
train from Jamesville that connects with
the Wilmington Weldon Railroad.
On intermediate days the
will touch at leaving there
p. in. Tuesdays and p. m. Thursdays
connecting with Atlantic Railroad.
From Washington to
and
return
From New to and
return
Single Trip Tickets
From Washington to New
to Washington
Ample Accommodation
BROS.
The Steamer Beaufort has re-
built an I made and is now a
comfortable and sea worthy and
has a permit to carry passengers.
If yon feel unable lo do your bones. Her kidneys were deranged
x. n-i.
FEMALE INSTITUTE.
Fall Tenn Opens Sept.
TEACHERS
John Duckett, Principal,
Miss Maggie Smith,
Mrs. Irene W. Hunter,
Mrs. Ella W. Duckett.
have that tired feeling, Dr. J. H.
Sarsaparilla; it will make you
bright active vigorous.
The most popular liniment, is the old
reliable. Dr. J. H. Volcanic
Oil Liniment
One of Dr. J. H. Little Liv-
and taken at night be
fore going bed, will move the
the effect will astonish you.
Pimples, boils and other humors,
and no one thought she could be cured.
Dr. Gilliam recommended B. B. B.,
which she used until her health was en-
K. P. B. Jones. Atlanta, Ga.,
T was troubled with copper colored
eruptions, loss loss of hair,
sore throat, and great nervousness. B.
B. B. put my system in fine
to appear when the blood gets The Best Salve in the world for
H. Sarsaparilla
the best remedy.
storm Calendar and Weather
for 1890, by R. Hicks, mailed
to any address on receipt of a two-cent
postage stamp. The Dr. J. H.
Medicine Co., St. Mo.
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores. Hands
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
lions, and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded
Pries coats per box. For said by J.
lit.
Having associated B. S.
with me in the Undertaking business we
are ready to serve the people in that
capacity. All notes and accounts doe
me for past services have been placed In
the hands of Mr. Sheppard for collection
JOHN FLANAGAN.
a HP at u nice
stock of Banal Cases and Caskets of all
kinds and can anything desired
from the Case down to a
Pitt county Pine We are fitted
up all conveniences and can
satisfactory services to all who pot- tit
Feb. Sad. 1888.
DEPARTMENTS.
Primary. Academic.
and Mathematical. Music.
Painting and Drawing. Normal.
ADVANTAGES.
Large, comfortable buildings.
Healthy location and good water.
Plenty of well prepared rood 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.
Rates moderate, from to for
board and tuition, including
Tuition and terms for day pupils the
same as advertised in Girl
who do not board with the Principal
should consult him before engaging
board elsewhere.
For farther address,
JOHN
K. C,
Com-
My, -J Slew t
the hair.
ll. r I l it
M- -t Color.
DR.
Bell-cap-sic
PLASTERS
ARK THE BEST POROUS PLASTERS
IX THE WORLD.
They are the best plasters in every
way for the quick relief of
LAKE HACK, PAIN IN THE
RHEUMATISM,
Unlike all other these are
Purely Vegetable and Harmless. Re-
instantly and never fail to cure.
SAFE, AND SURE.
Sold by or mailed on receipt of
cents by
A RICHARDS,
Boston, Mass.
T. do manage to everything so sweet
his no for all It Is and
perfectly ; we use from to the
floors.
always um at home, but I am particular and want every-
as M as
have to la next
Hr JAM nut Yin.
The
Alfred Forbes, Greenville,
J. B.
J. Greenville,
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen
The People's Line for travel on
River.
The Steamer Greenville Ii the finest
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort,
and convenience Ladle.
mm ATTENTIVE OFFICER
A Table furnished
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Greenville is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at o'clock, a. k.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday,
and Saturday at o'clock, a. k.
Freights received dally and
We have the large-t complete
establishment of the kind lo be found in
the State, and solicit order., for la-cs
Of Commercial. Rail-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
STATIONERY READY
FOR INVITATIONS
BLANKS I AND
COUNT. OFFICERS.
us your orders.
and Binders,
n. c.
PATENTS
oil. and all in the S.
Patent in the Courts
for Fee-.
We arc opposite the S. Patent
MS engaged In Patents and
can patents lit less time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing i. -mil we
advise as to free of
and we no miles we ob
Patents,
We refer, here, to the
Supt. of the Money Older I lid., and
of tin t . s. For
advise and n ff
actual client in your own State,
iv
A. Co.,
D, C
No
Why another new discovery by Alfred
in the way of helping the afflict-
ed. By calling on or addressing the
above named barber, yon can procure a
bottle of Preparation is invaluable
for eradicating and and causing the
hair to lie soft and
only r three application a
week is necessary, and a common hair
brush is all to be need after rubbing the
scalp vigorously for a few minutes with
the Preparation. Try a bottle and
convinced, only cents.
Respectfully.
ALFRED CULLEY,
Barber,
N.
R. R,
and Schedule
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No
20th, daily Fast Mail, dally
daily ex Sun.
Weldon pm B pm
Ar Rocky Mount am
and r
r l
fr,
lire
. are Ail h-
Is n to wK
and and
in
ml repaid. pT
tun would
Mini from t t p-r
A Co., I'm
A r Tarboro
Tarboro
Ar Wilson
Wilson
Ar
Ar
Goldsboro
Warsaw
Av Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
am
p m pin am
IS am
TRAINS NORTH
No No
daily daily daily
ex Sun.
Wilmington am
Magnolia am
Warsaw
Goldsboro S
MOO
Ar Wilson
Wilson pm pm
A. Rocky Mount SIS
A r Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
Sunday.
Train on Scotland Branch Road
leaves Halifax 3.37 P. M. arrives Scot-
land at 4.25 P. M.
Returning leaves Greenville 7.20
a. M., Halifax at 10.10 A. M.
don 10.30 P M., daily except Sunday.
On Monday, Wednesday and Friday
Local Freight leaves Weldon 10.30 a in
Halifax 11-30 a in. Scotland 1.00 p
m. Arriving Greenville 5.10 p in. Re
turning, leave Greenville Tuesday
Thursday and Saturday a in., Scot-
land Neck 1.00 p m. Halifax p in.
Arriving Weldon 4.00 p m.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alba.
Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun-
day. P M. Sunday s p M. arrive
Williamston, N C. P M, P M.
Plymouth 7.30 p. in-, 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
a. m., Sunday a. m.
Williamston, N C, 7.10 a m, 0.58 a m.
arrive Tarboro, N C, SO A M
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, GOO A M,
arrive N C, a M. Re-
turning N C AM,
arrive Goldsboro, NO, A M.
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky
at P M, arrives Nashville I
P Hope Returning
Nashville
M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
and AM Returning leave
ton A M, and connect-
at Warsaw with Nos. and
Southbound train on Wilson
Branch Is No. Northbound Is
No. except Sunday.
Train No. South will stop only
Wilson, Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection at
Weldon for all points North dally. All
rail via Richmond, and daily except Sun-
day via Bay Line.
Trains make close connection for
points North via Richmond and Wash
AU trains run solid between
ton and Washington, and have Pullman
Palace Sleepers attached.
General
J, R. Transportation
T. M. EMERSON
On I
III
.- I
i hi world.
and i d-f
moil in
a- t
to at one make
All
f m
tit fit
aV part f P
f AH
mail of
.
la.
r par
GRAND
Shaving, Cutting and I
TOT
AT THE GLASS FRONT
the Opera at
have recently located, and when- have
everything line
LEA t AND ATTRACTIVE,
TO A
With all the improved appliances;
mid comfortable chair.
Razor- sharpened reasonable figures
for work of my shop
promptly executed. Very respect fully,
PHOTO-ENGRAVING.
n to
hotel., factor.
Its. made to
specimen
Agency,
New York City.
KNIGHT'S
Cure.
in successful than to A
live cure for
disrupt ff
the Blood. Stomach and Liver.
A botanical compound, put up in
and sent by mail at
medicine. v far
for c.
A Agent locality,
CO., l M.
To cure Headache, Q
Liver Complaints,
and certain remedy.
BILE BEAN
Tim
I min
Trice of
KISSING-
ST.
EMORY
LIVERY SALE AND
I opened at the for
occupied by Dr. J.
and will keep a fine of
Horses and Mules.
have and fancy
the livery and can suit the most
I will run connection a
AGE and a slut
patronage. Call and be
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. C.
MILKMAID BRAND
CONDENSED
None Richer in
BEST ON
by R


Title
Eastern reflector, 20 August 1890
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 20, 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/19001
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