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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 3 May 1893</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18930503</dc:date>
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                <p>
THE BEST <lb />
That is tho <lb />
of work the <lb />
patrons of the <lb />
tor Job say they get. <lb />
This Office for Job Printing <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Things Mentioned in our Stale Ex- <lb />
changes that are of General Interest <lb />
The Cream of the News. <lb />
Jack Brady, colored was hang- <lb />
ed at Bakersville, Saturday, <lb />
the murder of L- D. Taylor, a <lb />
white man. last August. <lb />
Redwood, a colored <lb />
man, attempted to wade across <lb />
Roanoke river at Weldon a few <lb />
days ago and was drowned. <lb />
It is rumored that Row s <lb />
Homer, of the Homer School, Ox- <lb />
ford, will take Minister <lb />
place in the faculty of tho <lb />
The Concord Standard says it <lb />
is estimated that at least <lb />
bales of cotton yet the <lb />
hands of the farmers of Cabarrus <lb />
county. <lb />
Pittsboro An <lb />
named William <lb />
attended church at Rock Spring, <lb />
near here, on last Sunday, for tho <lb />
first time since 1832. <lb />
Concord R. A. Brown <lb />
has a little circus at his home. <lb />
His brooding mare, Sunday morn- <lb />
to twin mule colts. <lb />
They are good size, pretty and <lb />
healthful. <lb />
Charlotte There are <lb />
children at the Presbyterian <lb />
Home at Barium Springs, <lb />
two new ones recently <lb />
ed. The health of the children is <lb />
reported excellent. <lb />
Elizabeth City Up <lb />
to due fewer chattel mortgages <lb />
have been given than usual in this <lb />
county. -----There is <lb />
of the last year's crop of corn <lb />
still remaining unsold in the <lb />
Charlotte A gentle- <lb />
man of this city was yesterday <lb />
wearing a rosebud on his lapel <lb />
which was pulled from a bush be- <lb />
longing to Mrs. Sue Johnson, of <lb />
Davidson, the bush being GO years I <lb />
old. <lb />
Weldon News Albert Gee is <lb />
the proud possessor of iron <lb />
gray horse which has on its up- <lb />
par lip a heavy The <lb />
animal is a real curiosity and per- <lb />
haps nothing of tho kind has ever j <lb />
here before. <lb />
The South Carolina Medical j <lb />
Society, which has been in session <lb />
at Sumter, S. C. for the past few j <lb />
days-, unanimously decided to <lb />
make the North Carolina Medical I <lb />
Journal, of Wilmington, tho <lb />
of that Society. <lb />
Goldsboro Ono of <lb />
our County Commissioners <lb />
recently by mail a lot of chicken <lb />
and duck eggs with a flask of mo- <lb />
lasses to a relative Alabama, <lb />
and now Sam to get <lb />
oven with him for damaging his <lb />
mail bags and contents. <lb />
Graham Mr. J. Mac <lb />
Garrison, near had tho mis- <lb />
fortune to lose two milk cows last <lb />
week. At night tho cows got into <lb />
his barn and eat meal and bran <lb />
enough to founder them, from <lb />
which they died. Ho came near <lb />
losing others from tho same <lb />
cause. <lb />
Salisbury Isaac Hutch- <lb />
a prominent farmer and mer- <lb />
chant of Yadkin county, <lb />
committed suicide Thursday night <lb />
by hanging himself with a rope- <lb />
The body was found hanging Dy <lb />
members of tho family the next <lb />
morning. Financial trouble is <lb />
supposed to have been tho cause <lb />
the sad affair. <lb />
Kinston Free Fla- <lb />
Darden was cutting trees on <lb />
the plantation of his farther, Mr. J. <lb />
H- Darden. in Falling Creek town- <lb />
ship, Monday, when ho was struck <lb />
by a large limb of a falling tree, <lb />
fracturing the base of his skull. <lb />
Mr. Darden recovered con- <lb />
after tho accident and <lb />
died Tuesday at o'clock. <lb />
Durham A colored <lb />
man named Patterson, living not <lb />
far from Chapel Hill, one day last <lb />
week, gave birth to a white child <lb />
in the woods, and then stamped <lb />
it to death and hid it under some <lb />
bushes. It was found sometime <lb />
afterwards and a coroner's inquest <lb />
was held. The print of tho <lb />
man's foot was found on its breast, <lb />
and the heart was crushed to <lb />
pieces. She was arrested and <lb />
placed in the Hillsboro jail Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
Wilmington Messenger Max- <lb />
ton is building a new cotton <lb />
Raleigh is building a new <lb />
cotton factory. Salisbury is build- <lb />
a now cotton factory. Char- <lb />
is building a new cotton <lb />
New cotton factories will be <lb />
erected at Matthews, at Mount <lb />
Pleasant, at Shelby, at <lb />
Mill, in Cleveland county, and <lb />
there are others not remembered <lb />
at this writing. Raleigh, Char- <lb />
Concord, Rockingham and <lb />
Haw River are now very <lb />
cotton milling All <lb />
over the State, in every direction, <lb />
the smaller industries are <lb />
oping. Ice factories, iron <lb />
dries, bi factories, barrel <lb />
knitting mills, canning es- <lb />
box factories, plan- <lb />
mills, machine shops, <lb />
and vehicle industries most <lb />
be resorted to, we believe, if <lb />
is to keep up with the <lb />
great industrial<lb />
Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XII. <lb />
GREENVILLE PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY MAY 1893. <lb />
NO. <lb />
RALPH'S <lb />
Shut the door said Rupert, <lb />
angrily, speaking with a thick <lb />
voice, from the fact that he had a <lb />
quill pen in his mouth, and turn- <lb />
to scowl upon Ralph, who hold <lb />
the door ajar and looked at him. <lb />
the door and go away. <lb />
What business have you to come <lb />
here peeking into my room Can- <lb />
not I have spot where I will <lb />
not be meddled with I say, shut <lb />
the door <lb />
His voice had grown louder with <lb />
each repetition, and Ralph finally <lb />
shut it. a trifle and a <lb />
good deal angry. <lb />
I believe Rupert has been <lb />
he said to Fred Street, <lb />
who stalked along beside him. I <lb />
never heard him speak in just that <lb />
way before, and shall not stand <lb />
it; he needn't think I will. What <lb />
harm does it do to open his door, I <lb />
wonder, just to see if he is in To <lb />
be yelled at as if I were a beggar <lb />
boy of some kind of a tramp I <lb />
shall speak to papa about it this <lb />
very day, and him I think Ru- <lb />
pert has been <lb />
Why, I didn't know he drank <lb />
a said Fred with wide open <lb />
eyes. <lb />
No, more he doesn't pretend <lb />
to. Pupa thinks he doesn't. Papa <lb />
wouldn't have a coachman that <lb />
drank for anything in the world, <lb />
and hoard him say only a <lb />
days ago that Rupert was tho <lb />
steadiest, most faithful driver ho <lb />
ever had ; but I guess ho won't <lb />
think so after what after I have to <lb />
toll him. What should make a <lb />
man yell like that at me if ho <lb />
hadn't been drinking I wasn't <lb />
doing any <lb />
he feels said <lb />
Fred. <lb />
bad What has he got <lb />
to fol about, I should to <lb />
know Pa pa pays him good wages, <lb />
a great deal bettor than most folks <lb />
pay their coachmen, and he hasn't <lb />
got any folks to take of, and <lb />
has a room all his own over tho <lb />
Carriage-house, and am he <lb />
dresses nicely and has plenty to <lb />
eat. What more does a <lb />
want <lb />
Lots of things I said <lb />
Fred sturdily. If you had plenty <lb />
to eat and drink, and clothes and <lb />
a room, and nothing else, you <lb />
wouldn't satisfied it's folks <lb />
yon want friends. What would <lb />
you how many clothes you <lb />
had. if you were alone in tho world <lb />
as Rupert is I guess ho fools bad; <lb />
guess that is what is the matter <lb />
with him. Don't you know his <lb />
brother is <lb />
I didn't know he had a <lb />
said Ralph crossly. Ho <lb />
was not accustomed to <lb />
shouted at in tho way Rupert had <lb />
just done, and ho could not help <lb />
fooling angry. didn't know <lb />
he had a brother or anybody in <lb />
this country. <lb />
a good many years and <lb />
left all his folks <lb />
know that, but one brother <lb />
came over here last Winter, and <lb />
lived way down on the west side <lb />
with some folks that my undo <lb />
knows, and he has been sick for <lb />
five or six weeks. Rupert has <lb />
been with him all tho time your <lb />
father didn't need him ; ho sat up <lb />
nights with him, and all. Ana <lb />
last night ho died. My uncle <lb />
about It this morning, and <lb />
said ho wondered if your father <lb />
wouldn't do something for <lb />
doesn't know said <lb />
Ralph, not a thing about it. He <lb />
doesn't think that has any <lb />
folks in this country ; but I don't <lb />
know what there is ho could do if <lb />
he did know. Maybe he might <lb />
have helped him if he had known <lb />
he a sick him <lb />
things, you know, or something <lb />
like if dead what's <lb />
the use <lb />
like to have things some- <lb />
times for their friends after they <lb />
are said Fred, firmly, <lb />
can tell you some things that Ru- <lb />
pert wants badly enough. He <lb />
wants a lot up in the cemetery to <lb />
bury his brother in. My undo <lb />
says he can't bear to have him <lb />
buried in that part of the ground <lb />
where they bury folks who haven't <lb />
got any He says <lb />
that his brother wasn't a pauper, <lb />
that he worked hard and earned <lb />
his living as long as he could, and <lb />
he cannot like to have him buried <lb />
there. And he wants to have a <lb />
nice coffin, and the hearse and <lb />
things like other folks; but he can- <lb />
not do it, of it takes a <lb />
feat deal of money to bury people. <lb />
guess that la what alls Rupert <lb />
this morning; he feels so bad and <lb />
hurt to think that he cannot have <lb />
everything nice for his brother, <lb />
the only brother he had. Now the <lb />
family are all gone. I'm sorry for <lb />
am said Ralph; but he <lb />
need not have yelled at mo as he <lb />
did. when I wasn't doing any <lb />
harm, only just looking for him <lb />
to ask him a question. I am go- <lb />
to be even with him, <lb />
you go to getting even with <lb />
him just for speaking up sharp <lb />
like that, when his brother is dead, <lb />
and he hasn't got any folks, you <lb />
aren't the boy I take you <lb />
said Fred, his face flushing all <lb />
over with indignation. <lb />
Ralph laughed. <lb />
cannot help he said, I <lb />
am; you watch and see if I don't. <lb />
I am going to find papa, now, and <lb />
talk to him about it to <lb />
you, and sure to keep <lb />
As he spoke he turned the <lb />
which led to the bank where <lb />
he hoped to find his father while <lb />
Wad stalked on alone, his fan <lb />
burning, ms <lb />
He was bitterly disappointed m <lb />
this friend of his whom he thought <lb />
ho liked bettor than any boy in <lb />
school. I like him first-rate, if <lb />
father is ho had said <lb />
emphatically only the day before, <lb />
to a group of boys who had called <lb />
his new friend stuck <lb />
isn't stuck up n bit and there isn't <lb />
a. mean hair in his head Fred <lb />
had declared. <lb />
Now he ashamed and <lb />
How many <lb />
there must be on the of a boy <lb />
who could revenge on his <lb />
father's coachman for speaking <lb />
sharply to him when he was in <lb />
great trouble. <lb />
Ralph found his father in the <lb />
director's room at tho bank. <lb />
very busy, my said <lb />
tho looking up from his <lb />
account books, but if your <lb />
in urgent I will give you <lb />
minutes to transact it; that is <lb />
more time than I generally spare <lb />
for one <lb />
I can do it in <lb />
Ralph briskly. And in point of <lb />
fact, in loss than he had left <lb />
the office with a satisfied look up- <lb />
on his face. As for the bank <lb />
director, within an hour from the <lb />
time his son left him he had sent a <lb />
telephone message for his coach- <lb />
man. <lb />
he said, holding out <lb />
his hand when that faithful follow <lb />
appeared, I am sorry to hoar that <lb />
you are in I did not know <lb />
about your brother, my friend. I <lb />
wish yon had let me help you bear <lb />
j your Then after a few <lb />
j more kindly words and some <lb />
into the condition of things, <lb />
i he added Rupert, my son Ralph <lb />
j would like to show his sympathy <lb />
for you. He wants to buy a lot <lb />
in our pleasant, <lb />
shaded spot that you would like <lb />
and have it deeded to yon. Then <lb />
I ho wants you to have all the <lb />
for the funeral such as <lb />
you would them to if you <lb />
had the money to spare, and the <lb />
bills are to sent to mo for him. <lb />
I am glad to have my boy do this, <lb />
Rupert, and I hope you will in- <lb />
You can the <lb />
carriage, of with Dan to <lb />
drive, and Ralph and I would <lb />
to go with you to tho grave. This <lb />
is Ralph's own plan, tho only way <lb />
he can think or, ho to show <lb />
his sympathy for you ; and he is <lb />
very anxious to do <lb />
Then Rupert broke down <lb />
dropped into n chair, laid his head <lb />
on tho bank director's table, <lb />
mindful of the great solemn books <lb />
piled there which represented mill- <lb />
ions of money, and cried like a <lb />
child. <lb />
It was a great, splendid, bean- <lb />
said pouring <lb />
out the words from a full heart. <lb />
didn't understand you a bit; <lb />
I do now. There isn't a moan <lb />
hair in your head, and I said there <lb />
Pansy. <lb />
POTATO BUGS. <lb />
The Colorado Potato Beetle, <lb />
has <lb />
become so troublesome in the <lb />
Southern States as it has North <lb />
and West. But this is not be- <lb />
cause there is any thing in our <lb />
climate to the spread of <lb />
this pest. Tho beetle has not be- <lb />
come very abundant because <lb />
recently only the early crop of <lb />
Irish potatoes has been <lb />
grown in the South and <lb />
that matures too soon to be <lb />
damaged by the beetle, <lb />
he lack of food during the rest <lb />
of the year has prevented the in- <lb />
crease of the insects. But the <lb />
rapid increase of acreage devoted <lb />
to late potatoes will afford the <lb />
beetle the needful opportunity to <lb />
increase and multiply, and it is <lb />
liable to become a ruinous pest <lb />
unless growers take heed in time <lb />
and guard against it- Just at <lb />
present tho Black Blister Beetle, <lb />
is in this- section more trouble- <lb />
some than the Colorado beetle. <lb />
Both these pests are destroyed by <lb />
the same means and at tho same <lb />
time. The one simple, cheap and <lb />
efficient remedy for the two <lb />
to beetles is <lb />
or London Purple- This may be <lb />
used either wet or dry, according <lb />
as it is mere convenient. <lb />
LIQUID. <lb />
Paris Green or London Purple pound. <lb />
boil. into paste pounds- <lb />
Water to gallons. <lb />
Paris Green or London I'm pound. <lb />
Wheat t pounds. <lb />
Air-slacked lime or road dust pound. <lb />
The liquid may be applied <lb />
most readily with a knapsack <lb />
having the <lb />
A common sprinkling caD <lb />
wastes too much liquid. For a <lb />
small area the liquid may spat- <lb />
on the plants with a short- <lb />
handled broom. The powder may <lb />
be applied from a meshed <lb />
sieve or bag of coarse cloth. <lb />
Usually two treatments made <lb />
about days apart will be all <lb />
that is needed. <lb />
The above formulas are tho best <lb />
insecticides for general use ex- <lb />
upon and nearly <lb />
ripe N. <lb />
Experiment Station. <lb />
GIFT ENTERPRISE JOURNALISM. <lb />
What is going to be the end of <lb />
the remarkable competition for the <lb />
attainment of mere ephemeral <lb />
by many of the news- <lb />
papers of the day If this goes <lb />
on at its present rate the time is <lb />
not far distant when a great many <lb />
of our esteemed contemporaries <lb />
will have abandoned all the old <lb />
and legitimate features and <lb />
poses of a newspaper, and the <lb />
question will not be which of them <lb />
can best record current events, <lb />
but which of them can offer the <lb />
most attraction to the curiosity <lb />
hunter or the seeker after some <lb />
paltry prize. <lb />
The enterprise feature in <lb />
journalism is a confession that <lb />
the newspaper employing this <lb />
method to water its circulation <lb />
cannot stand on its own merits. <lb />
The logic of this is so obvious <lb />
that the gift newspaper loses more <lb />
in its permanent standing than it <lb />
gains in temporary circulation by <lb />
coupon cutting. <lb />
Advertisers ask what benefit <lb />
can accrue to them from copies of <lb />
newspapers purchased bulk for <lb />
the sake of the coupons and then <lb />
to the Readers <lb />
who are saluted every time they <lb />
open a paper with announce <lb />
of votes for tho most pop- <lb />
policeman or of alluring gifts <lb />
of valuable articles turn from <lb />
them in weariness and disgust, <lb />
and sigh for time when the <lb />
fakir and cheap jack were not the <lb />
controlling power in journalism. <lb />
Newark Journal. <lb />
A North Carolinian Called to Georgia. <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
Tho Atlanta Constitution of yes- <lb />
says that Gov. Northern, <lb />
of Georgia, has appointed W. S- <lb />
of North <lb />
gist of that and that ho was <lb />
notified of tho appointment and <lb />
accepted by wire. Tho <lb />
Professor is a well-known <lb />
Ways to Injure <lb />
Wearing thin shoes and stock- <lb />
on damp nights in cool, rainy <lb />
weather ; wearing insufficient <lb />
clothing, especially upon the limbs <lb />
and extremities. <lb />
Leading a life of unfeeling, <lb />
stupid laziness and keeping the <lb />
mind in an unnatural state of ex- <lb />
by reading trashy novels. <lb />
Going to the parties <lb />
and balls, in all sorts of weather, <lb />
in thin dresses ; dancing until in a <lb />
complete perspiration and then go- <lb />
home without sufficient over- <lb />
garments through the cool, damp <lb />
night air. <lb />
Sleeping on beds in seven <lb />
by nine bedrooms without <lb />
at the top of tho window, and <lb />
especially with two or more per- <lb />
sons in the same small bedroom. <lb />
Surfeiting on hot and very <lb />
dinners ; eating in a hurry <lb />
without half masticating tho food <lb />
and eating heartily before going <lb />
to bed, when the mind and body <lb />
are exhausted by the toils of the <lb />
day and the excitement of the <lb />
evening. <lb />
Marrying in haste and getting <lb />
an uncongenial companion, and <lb />
living the remainder of life in <lb />
mental dissatisfaction cultivating <lb />
jealousies and domestic broils and <lb />
always being in a mental ferment <lb />
Contriving to up a con- <lb />
worry about something or <lb />
nothing; giving way to fits of <lb />
anger. <lb />
Being irregular in habits of <lb />
sleeping and eating; too much, <lb />
too many kinds of food, and that <lb />
which is too highly seasoned. <lb />
Neglecting to take proper <lb />
of ourselves, and not applying <lb />
early for medicinal advice when <lb />
disease first appears, but by taking <lb />
quack medicines to a degree of <lb />
making a drug shop of the body. <lb />
Mrs. the translator of <lb />
German novels, is the daughter of <lb />
the late Fanny <lb />
Braiding the Hair, <lb />
People who braid their back <lb />
hair are now raising it up higher <lb />
and braiding it very dose to the <lb />
top of the head ; then it is looped <lb />
down on tho head and fastened <lb />
closely to H. The reason for this <lb />
is that the small bonnets must <lb />
have something more than merely <lb />
a fancy pin to hold them in <lb />
and this of the <lb />
hair makes them more comfort- <lb />
able. <lb />
Men of Many Wives. <lb />
The Sultan of Turkey is said to <lb />
have wives, the King of <lb />
homey the Shah of Persia <lb />
the King of Siam the <lb />
King of and tho <lb />
Morocco shoot <lb />
scientist and his reputation as a <lb />
geologist is all that could be asked , , . ,, <lb />
qualify him for tho position to <lb />
the governor of Georgia Its <lb />
has appointed him. <lb />
He out of college <lb />
An Insuperable Obstacle. <lb />
when you and Charlie <lb />
going to be married V <lb />
This was put by Mabel <lb />
to her friend, Rachel <lb />
says an exchange, with the <lb />
freedom that intimate companions <lb />
among the sex wont to <lb />
each other on love rent <lb />
tors. <lb />
you mean it, Rachel <lb />
I mean <lb />
thought you <lb />
he likes <lb />
parents object f <lb />
think they would be pleased <lb />
than with the marriage, <lb />
if it could <lb />
what is in the way H <lb />
is amply able to support you, <lb />
isn't ho <lb />
yes <lb />
there any one else you <lb />
for tho life of mo, I can't <lb />
be sure, isn't as <lb />
euphonious a as some, but <lb />
he loft his University. He comes ; <lb />
with tho highest recommendations <lb />
from tho New Jersey College of <lb />
Sciences, and also from the Smith- <lb />
Institute, with which ho <lb />
has been connected for several <lb />
years as a teacher of geological <lb />
science. <lb />
He graduated in 1878 but has <lb />
been a hard student of the sciences <lb />
much of the time since then. In <lb />
1881 he was made assistant <lb />
in tho de part men t of minerals <lb />
and economic geology in <lb />
said in a <lb />
I voice of agony, love him de- <lb />
I and could be so hap- <lb />
but how could I put <lb />
i on my visiting <lb />
i cards <lb />
And tho fair creature wept. <lb />
United States National Museum <lb />
and a month afterwards was <lb />
Can You Afford It <lb />
Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb />
Some business men to <lb />
the think it economy not to advertise <lb />
in their local paper. Opinions <lb />
differ on this point, however, and <lb />
placed in charge of the mineral the experience and testimony of <lb />
collection of the department. <lb />
Since the death of the curator he <lb />
has had immediate the <lb />
the most successful men are to <lb />
the contrary. Indeed, it is no <lb />
longer a question as to whether <lb />
department, and his work has advertising pays or not- But the <lb />
been such as has brought him <lb />
close study with all manner of <lb />
minerals, ores, gems and <lb />
stones. He is a thorough <lb />
scientist and a practical geologist. <lb />
The Constitution spells the <lb />
name as above, but correctly <lb />
spelled it is Yeates. The gentle- <lb />
man in question is a son of the <lb />
average business man may well <lb />
ask himself if ho can afford not <lb />
to advertise. Every in <lb />
town is doing all it can or <lb />
less than it can. If are not <lb />
doing all the business you want, <lb />
surely the best way in the world <lb />
to launch on tho flood tide of <lb />
is to advertise it. If you are <lb />
late Hon. Jesse J. Yeates, of doing all the <lb />
you want to, surely you are <lb />
the last person in the world to <lb />
deny your local paper that which <lb />
it needs and ought to <lb />
moral and financial <lb />
return for what it does for the <lb />
community in which you live and <lb />
are interested, and from which <lb />
you obtain your living. <lb />
Hertford, for throe terms a <lb />
of Congress from tho first dis- <lb />
of this State and who died <lb />
in Washington City, where he had <lb />
lived latterly, less than a year <lb />
ago. The Observer has heard <lb />
much that is favorable of the <lb />
young gentleman who has been <lb />
called to <lb />
speaks none too highly of him <lb />
and the Governor has made no <lb />
mistake. feel very <lb />
that his abilities and worth <lb />
man, here is something <lb />
for you to read. The <lb />
Democrat truthfully <lb />
have been recognized by a sister When you see a youth who will <lb />
State. sort of work, no matter <lb />
how menial it may be, rather than <lb />
UM be idle, you can make up your <lb />
mind that that fellow amounts to <lb />
something. The young man who <lb />
would starve before he would do <lb />
anything beneath what he con- <lb />
to be his dignity, is not <lb />
made of the right kind of stuff to <lb />
cut much of a figure in this life. <lb />
port in a is a good <lb />
maxim. Don't be afraid of any sort <lb />
of work, as long as it is honorable. <lb />
Her days are days of pleasant- <lb />
and her nights are nights of <lb />
She goes to bed when she <lb />
pleases, and does not leave one <lb />
ear uncovered to listen to the <lb />
certain steps and wavering night <lb />
key of a late-coming husband. <lb />
Neither does she turn restlessly <lb />
on her pillow beside a sober <lb />
spouse, and wonder where <lb />
the children's school books or <lb />
the family flannels are to come <lb />
from ; she drops into peace- <lb />
slumber to dream of her old <lb />
love, and wake to wonder <lb />
married life with him could <lb />
ever become the sordid, <lb />
affair it is to so many husbands <lb />
and wives. <lb />
HACK A- <lb />
arc all worn <lb />
IRON <lb />
really good for <lb />
Try <lb />
if <lb />
I and em <lb />
The Grand Chapter, Royal Arch <lb />
Masons of North Carolina, will <lb />
hold its annual convocation in <lb />
Tarboro, N. C-, on Tuesday, May <lb />
9th. The Grand <lb />
Knights will meet at the <lb />
same place on May 11th, <lb />
The meeting of the Grand <lb />
Lodge of Odd Fellows will be held <lb />
in Raleigh instead of Winston. <lb />
The date is May 8th. <lb />
MONTHLY METEOROLOGICAL <lb />
REPORTS FOR MARCH. <lb />
The North Carolina State <lb />
Weather Service issues the fol- <lb />
lowing advanced summary of the <lb />
weather for as com- <lb />
pared with the corresponding <lb />
month of previous <lb />
Temperature-The mean tern- <lb />
hire for the month was 47.5 <lb />
which is degrees be- <lb />
low the normal. The highest <lb />
monthly mean was 53-6 degrees at <lb />
Wilmington; the lowest monthly <lb />
mean was 49.7 degrees at High- <lb />
lands. The highest temperature <lb />
was degrees on 24th at Smith- <lb />
field and on 31st at Rockingham ; <lb />
the lowest was degrees at High- <lb />
The warmest March <lb />
the past twenty years was in <lb />
1878, mean 64.0; the coldest <lb />
1872, mean 43.1. <lb />
for tho <lb />
month 2.15 inches, which is 2-75 <lb />
inches below the normal. The <lb />
greatest amount was inches <lb />
at Lewiston; the least amount <lb />
0-75 inches at Warrenton. The <lb />
wettest March occurred in 1884, <lb />
average rainfall inches ; the <lb />
driest in 1893. Tho amount of <lb />
snow was small, largest amount C <lb />
inches at Louisburg. <lb />
Wind Prevailing direction, <lb />
south-west, which is tho normal <lb />
direction also. hourly <lb />
velocity miles. Highest <lb />
city miles an hour from the <lb />
north on tho 4th at Kitty Hawk. <lb />
occurred at various places on <lb />
4th, 8th, 14th, 15th, 24th, 26th, <lb />
27th. Light hail or sleet on 3rd, <lb />
4th, 17th, 24th, 27th. Halos on <lb />
1st, 4th, 13th, 16th, 20th, 24th, 25th, <lb />
26th, 28th, 30th. <lb />
The last killing frost of the <lb />
spring of 1893 occurred March <lb />
30th- <lb />
Less Talk ; More Truth. <lb />
SUPERSTITIONS. <lb />
Not Confined to Savages and <lb />
People of Ancient Times. <lb />
Among the ancient and among <lb />
savages we expect to find <lb />
remedies in rogue. la <lb />
Pliny's day it does not <lb />
natural that the accepted cure foe <lb />
certain maladies, believed in <lb />
the educated and ignorant <lb />
should be a paste made of crushed <lb />
snails found in the ruts of the road <lb />
and gathered at a certain hour in <lb />
the morning nor that other ilia <lb />
were supposed to be cured by <lb />
touching an elephant, the be- <lb />
the more swift and if at <lb />
the moment of being me <lb />
great beast should chance to <lb />
sneeze. <lb />
But it is quite another thing <lb />
when the children of our own pub- <lb />
schools believe that to touch a <lb />
toad will cause warts, and that <lb />
when such warts appear tho pro- <lb />
per way to cure them is to tie a <lb />
bit of toadstool with red thread <lb />
upon the afflicted hand for three <lb />
nights in <lb />
Another wart cure commonly <lb />
among children is still <lb />
more fantastic and absurd. It <lb />
consists in pricking the warts <lb />
it bleeds, allowing tho blood to <lb />
drop upon a and then throw- <lb />
the whoever <lb />
picks up the penny will got the <lb />
is, a wart will appear <lb />
on the hand of that person, and at <lb />
the same time the original wart <lb />
will disappear from the hand of <lb />
tho first sufferer. <lb />
Such a belief as this seems to <lb />
belong naturally in tho Middle <lb />
Ages. the children who in <lb />
the nineteenth century and the <lb />
United States try to rid them- <lb />
selves of warts by a charm for <lb />
transference can be numbered by <lb />
thousands. <lb />
But besides the superstitions <lb />
long current among ignorant <lb />
Americans regarding <lb />
cures, now <lb />
ones are often imported by <lb />
wonder how others win. grants from other lands. A little <lb />
Well, that win make no schoolgirl who had the jaundice, <lb />
shots, men in business must and whoso skin was consequently <lb />
get their business before the pub- very yellow, was recently <lb />
lie and keep it there. Plant your by a Norwegian acquaintance <lb />
advertisement in a paper that what to do. <lb />
goes to the uttermost parts of four <lb />
sections. We take from the To- <lb />
Argus, a paper whose <lb />
editor has extended knowledge, <lb />
not based on his own imagination, <lb />
but on the results of accumulated <lb />
experience. He talks about the <lb />
weekly papers as <lb />
weekly papers of the country are <lb />
honest. They educators be <lb />
cause they tell the truth. There <lb />
is no gold pouring into their <lb />
We doubt if it would mate- will got <lb />
It is of no use to a doc- <lb />
she was told. A doctor <lb />
cannot do anything for the <lb />
dice, but my mother has told me <lb />
how you can cured. You must <lb />
boil a yellow-bird and eat his meat <lb />
the soup made from his flesh; <lb />
that will cure you. If you can- <lb />
not get a then <lb />
yellow is tho yellow you <lb />
mast boil that and <lb />
drink the yellow water, you <lb />
change their expression if <lb />
there were. Tho editors of those <lb />
papers live near to tho people. <lb />
They know their readers and their <lb />
readers know them. They in <lb />
touch with the community for <lb />
which they write and are there <lb />
fore honest in their utterances. <lb />
Many men, to whom is <lb />
the great attribute, despise <lb />
the country press, believing it <lb />
no power or force. <lb />
In this their own sharpness o'er- <lb />
leaps its saddle and falls on the <lb />
other Tho newspapers pub- <lb />
in the towns and hamlets <lb />
of America are a greater force for <lb />
good to-day than the blanket <lb />
dailies of tho largo cities. Why t <lb />
Because they the continence <lb />
of their readers, they print what <lb />
The advice was not taken, but <lb />
nevertheless, tho little girl speedily <lb />
recovered under tho cure of a <lb />
Mania. <lb />
A most violent Is that of <lb />
collecting no matter <lb />
what, so long as n collection is <lb />
made, says Harper's Fans, <lb />
china, gloves, shoes, watches, <lb />
gems and so on ad I <lb />
heard a man fay the other day to <lb />
a young woman, wish I know <lb />
to <lb />
suggested madams. And tho <lb />
fellow wont immediately to work <lb />
china cups and plates. <lb />
One girl I know announced some <lb />
time ago she was collecting plates <lb />
for a harlequin dessert set, and <lb />
they believe, and their readers that contributions would grate- <lb />
believe what print All honor I fully received. Her friends found <lb />
to the country it an easy way to pay her a com- <lb />
and at the present time <lb />
Death to Potato Bugs. <lb />
Charlotte Observer. <lb />
A gentleman of this city, <lb />
who <lb />
had considerable experience with <lb />
the various ways of exterminating <lb />
the Colorado potato bug says the <lb />
following is the best and cheap- <lb />
est way to dispose of them To a <lb />
peck of finely sifted wood ashes <lb />
add about two heaping table- <lb />
spoons of Paris Green and mix <lb />
thoroughly. Put about a quart <lb />
of the above mixture at a time in <lb />
an old flour sifter and walk <lb />
the rows of plants, gently <lb />
the over the rows as <lb />
you so that a light shower of <lb />
the mixture may fall on plants. <lb />
When so treated, vines which <lb />
wore previously infested with <lb />
thousands, scarcely show a single <lb />
bug the next day. A second <lb />
plication within a week may be <lb />
needed to dispose of such as may <lb />
afterwards hatch out. This plan <lb />
is and as good as any. <lb />
Governor Carr did tho wise <lb />
thing in ordering out soldiers <lb />
enough for James City to awe the <lb />
defiant and show them that re- <lb />
would be folly, and he <lb />
did the proper thing in <lb />
them himself. Being on <lb />
the ground enables him to take <lb />
in the situation more readily and <lb />
to give counsel and direction to <lb />
movements in case of need. His <lb />
presence will also have a good <lb />
effect on the lawless element by <lb />
convincing them that he means <lb />
business, and also on the soldiery <lb />
by showing them that he does not <lb />
order them to go where he is not <lb />
willing to go himself- . From the <lb />
beginning of this the <lb />
Governor has acted discreetly, <lb />
and when the time for final action <lb />
came firmly and admirably, Per- <lb />
haps after this is all and the <lb />
supremacy of tho law maintained. <lb />
people who didn't appreciate it <lb />
will the value of the <lb />
State Guard. Star. <lb />
The is only <lb />
her collection numbers The <lb />
young woman would fain have <lb />
Stopped long ago, but the word <lb />
had gone forth and her last con- <lb />
is worse than her first, and <lb />
her will probably be to lie <lb />
these bits of china, <lb />
as did tho Indian maid who had <lb />
betrayed her father's city beneath <lb />
tho gold and jewels the invaders <lb />
heaped upon her. <lb />
Another girl is collecting <lb />
i. She had seventy-one at <lb />
last counting, and is still at it. <lb />
These are a few of the hurt- <lb />
fads. There are others, many <lb />
of them not harmless; and <lb />
think what might be accomplished <lb />
if half tho time and energy ex- <lb />
pended on this one fad of collect- <lb />
wore devoted to some even <lb />
fairly useful purpose A fad is <lb />
pretty sure to be not In the best <lb />
taste. It argues a departure from <lb />
established Form, usually in <lb />
matters where custom, necessity <lb />
and circumstances have chosen <lb />
the best method for establishment. <lb />
The reaction is sure to come, and <lb />
after the prodigality <lb />
perhaps will obtain. <lb />
When we tire of the orchid, per- <lb />
haps we shall go back to the daisy, <lb />
and bethink ourselves that, after<lb />
CHILD BIRTH <lb />
MADE EASY <lb />
a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value and in <lb />
constant use by the medical pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in a ma hitherto unknown<lb />
IT PAYS <lb />
That is what <lb />
the merchants say <lb />
who advertise in the <lb />
Eastern Reflector, -r <lb />
This Office for Job printing<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
It AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Lit. of Mother and Child. Book <lb />
to Mothers mailed FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonial. <lb />
CO., Atlanta. <lb />
sold all <lb />
Save <lb />
Paying <lb />
D BOTANIC <lb />
BLOOD BALM <lb />
THE GREAT REMEDY . <lb />
mid <lb />
cure quickly <lb />
ulcers. <lb />
fOR ALL BLOOD AND SKIN<lb />
for ran, Ami <lb />
run- quickly <lb />
I RHEUMATISM. PIMPLES, <lb />
I all t I <lb />
, rum <lb />
blood if u m- I <lb />
I SENT FREE <lb />
f BLOOD BALM CO. Atlanta, i <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER <lb />
Steamers leave <lb />
and Tarboro touching at nil <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
mid Friday at A. M. <lb />
leave at fl A <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville days. <lb />
These departures subject of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting Washington with steam- <lb />
The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion from <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston, <lb />
SON. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
J. I. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
N C. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. <lb />
OLD BRICK STORK <lb />
MERCHANTS BOt <lb />
J- lug their year's supplies will find <lb />
their Interest to got our prices before <lb />
all its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOOR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Lowest Market Pricks. <lb />
TOBACCO CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb />
the times. Our goods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. <lb />
H O. <lb />
A Card. <lb />
Having changed my location <lb />
I offer my pro- <lb />
services to the people of the <lb />
town and surrounding section. Thank- <lb />
my friends and public <lb />
in and around for their kind- <lb />
lie.-- during my there, and <lb />
whenever needed, am <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
W. BAGWELL. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
I desire to my nod <lb />
the public generally that have opened <lb />
an office for myself just across the <lb />
from my residence on the old Dr. <lb />
Blow lot waste can be found at any <lb />
time. <lb />
PRANK W. BROWN, M. D.<lb />
Andrew Joyner. <lb />
Jas. L. Fleming. <lb />
W. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb />
St Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J. <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
L. BLOW. <lb />
E Y S-AT-LA W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
In all the Courts. <lb />
I. A. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
B. F. <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
Prompt attention given to collections. <lb />
L. <lb />
MARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
H. <lb />
JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
Practice in all the Collection ,,<lb />
.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017596_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
THE N. C. EDITORS. <lb />
The North Carolina <lb />
held a very <lb />
Proprietor <lb />
meeting in last week. <lb />
The visit of the State to <lb />
I had an exceedingly sad <lb />
Press As-. ending- On Thursday afternoon <lb />
enjoyable just after orders bad been pub- <lb />
MAY 3rd, 1893. <lb />
at at G <lb />
mail matter. <lb />
Announcement. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
I The Reflector is 01.00 per <lb />
Advertising Rates.- One <lb />
one year, one-half year <lb />
; one-quarter column one <lb />
Transient inch <lb />
one week, fl ; two weeks, one <lb />
month Two week, 1.50, <lb />
two weeks, one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb />
and Notices <lb />
and bales, <lb />
Summons to Non-Residents, etc, will <lb />
be charged far at legal rates and must <lb />
BE PAID FOB W ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts space not mentioned <lb />
Above, any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor w Advertisements and <lb />
all of be <lb />
landed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt in <lb />
the following. <lb />
President Cleveland was pres- <lb />
in Chicago on Monday and <lb />
took a prominent part in opening <lb />
the World's Fair. He returned <lb />
at once to Washington. <lb />
A Weldon correspondent of the <lb />
Richmond reports the <lb />
assignment of T. T. Gaskins, the <lb />
largest lumber mill owner in Hal- <lb />
county. He carried on an <lb />
extensive lumber business and <lb />
had twenty miles of railroad con- <lb />
with the mill. <lb />
An examination for positions in <lb />
the railway mail service will be <lb />
held in Washington City on May <lb />
9th. North Carolinians desiring <lb />
positions as route agents can <lb />
stand these examinations if they <lb />
go to Washington at that time. <lb />
Standing the examination does <lb />
not guarantee a position, however, <lb />
but qualities application <lb />
for one and gives <lb />
where there are vacancies. <lb />
It has been intimated that <lb />
tor Jim Cook, the fellow that <lb />
writes in languages for the <lb />
Concord would not at- <lb />
tend the Press Convention at <lb />
last week because he <lb />
was afraid to go there while the <lb />
James City affair was unsettle. <lb />
Give Jim a chance to acquit him- <lb />
might have been <lb />
the baby at like an- <lb />
other fellow we know of. <lb />
W. H- Pace, Esq. a prominent <lb />
lawyer of Raleigh, died last week <lb />
in that city. He had cancer of <lb />
the mouth attacking his throat <lb />
from which death resulted. Mr. <lb />
Pace was sou-in law of Col. <lb />
Heck. He graduated from Wake <lb />
Forest College about fifteen years <lb />
ago and was making his mark in <lb />
life. He was just in the prime of <lb />
his manhood and had a bright <lb />
future before him. His many <lb />
friends all over North Carolina <lb />
will be grieved at the announce- <lb />
of his seemingly untimely <lb />
death. <lb />
As announced in the Reflector <lb />
extra, last Wednesday morning, <lb />
the trouble between the James <lb />
City at and Mr. <lb />
J. A. Bryan was settled by the <lb />
agreeing to pay monthly <lb />
rentals ranging from cents to <lb />
a month for three years, and at <lb />
the expiration of that time they <lb />
have the privilege of removing <lb />
their houses from Bryan's proper- <lb />
Leases were prepared and <lb />
the greater part of them signed <lb />
before the troops were ordered to <lb />
withdraw. While the settlement <lb />
of this trouble proves expensive <lb />
to the State, it is a relief to every <lb />
one to know that it was adjusted <lb />
amicably and without any shed- <lb />
ding of blood- Mr. Bryan is now <lb />
in p of his property. <lb />
The course that Gov- Carr took <lb />
in this matter was wise <lb />
and gives him an exalted <lb />
in the estimation of the <lb />
people. <lb />
The Association met at o'clock <lb />
Wednesday morning after or <lb />
and discussing a few <lb />
matters had an excursion around <lb />
the harbor on a steamer. In the <lb />
afternoon President E- E Hilliard <lb />
his address which all <lb />
pronounced admirable. <lb />
day night the citizens gave a con- <lb />
cert complimentary to the editors. <lb />
Thursday several matters of <lb />
were diseased and essays <lb />
read. The following officers were <lb />
elected for the ensuing year <lb />
Dowd, of the <lb />
burg Times, Charlotte, was elected <lb />
President by acclimation. <lb />
Z- W- Whitehead, of the North <lb />
Carolina Gazette, of Fayetteville, <lb />
was elected first Vice-President <lb />
W. F. Burbank, of the Winston <lb />
Sentinel, was elected second Vice- <lb />
President. <lb />
R. A. Deal, of the <lb />
Chronicle, was elected third Vice- <lb />
President- <lb />
H. A- Foote, of the Warrenton <lb />
Gazette, was elected orator. <lb />
W. W- of the <lb />
was elected <lb />
Historian. <lb />
W. C Irvin, of the Morganton <lb />
Herald, was elected Poet. <lb />
Executive CommitteeS. A- <lb />
Ashe, of the Raleigh News and <lb />
Observer; J. A. Thomas, of the <lb />
Franklin Times; H- A- London, <lb />
the Pittsboro E. E. <lb />
Hilliard, of the Scotland Neck <lb />
Democrat; T- R- Manning, of <lb />
the Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb />
Delegates to the National Edi- <lb />
F- Bur- <lb />
bank, of the Winston Sentinel; E- <lb />
E- Hilliard, of the Scotland Neck <lb />
Democrat; J. Dowd, of the <lb />
of the Alamance Gleaner. <lb />
B. Sherrill, Con- <lb />
cord Tunes ; F. M- Williams, New- <lb />
ton W- L. <lb />
Wilson Advance ; W. W- <lb />
mid, Lumberton <lb />
Thursday night a splendid ban- <lb />
was given the visitors at the <lb />
conclusion of which the follow- <lb />
toasts were <lb />
Our North Caro- <lb />
Press Association. E. E- <lb />
of Scotland Neck Democrat. <lb />
Commercial and <lb />
Industrial Enterprises. T A. <lb />
Green, of <lb />
Great News <lb />
Gatherer. Thad R Manning, of <lb />
Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb />
An Intelligent and Patriotic <lb />
Mainspring of Pub- <lb />
Enterprise. Gen. C A- Battle, <lb />
of Journal. <lb />
Friend of the <lb />
Public School and the Nursing <lb />
Mother of Education. J- A- Rob- <lb />
of Durham Daily San. <lb />
The Repository of <lb />
History. Charles R. Thomas, of <lb />
The Advocate <lb />
and Defender of the Rights of the <lb />
People. Capt. S- A. of <lb />
and Observer. <lb />
The Literature of Journalism <lb />
H. A. Pittsboro Record. <lb />
The Old North <lb />
Carolina, Heaven's Blessings <lb />
Attend Hon. F. M- Sim- <lb />
mons, of <lb />
Our Nation's <lb />
Crown and Treasure, its Hope <lb />
and Felicity. James A- Bryan, of <lb />
Jerome C Dowd, editor of the <lb />
Charlotte Times, read a humor- <lb />
poem, personal and topical, <lb />
with reference to the State Press- <lb />
in camp that the troops <lb />
might return home next <lb />
the regiment was out for final re- <lb />
view. The horse which <lb />
Lieut-Col. D. N. Bogart, who was <lb />
then in command of the regiment, <lb />
was riding became <lb />
able and threw the officer, the <lb />
fall upon the macadamized street <lb />
being with such force as to crush <lb />
his skull. He never regained <lb />
consciousness and died about <lb />
o'clock that night. His family <lb />
was notified at once of the <lb />
dent and his wife and one <lb />
started in haste for <lb />
arriving just after his spirit had <lb />
taken its flight. The remains <lb />
were taken to Washington by <lb />
train on Friday. Col. Bogart was <lb />
one of the leading citizens of <lb />
Washington, an excellent gentle- <lb />
man, and as an officer of the State <lb />
Guard was esteemed not only by <lb />
every man in the first regiment <lb />
but throughout the entire com- <lb />
He leaves a large family. <lb />
of Mich.; Mr. J. W. <lb />
Gen. Lee, of <lb />
and Mr. Joseph W. Paddock <lb />
Nebraska. No more appoint- <lb />
will be made until alter the <lb />
President's return from the <lb />
World's Fair, which will be next <lb />
Tuesday night, unless the present <lb />
is changed. <lb />
Nearly all of the prominent <lb />
officials went over to New York <lb />
this week to see the . <lb />
naval review, the largest affair of <lb />
its kind that has ever taken place <lb />
in American waters, and they are <lb />
all glad they went, for they saw <lb />
what none of them probably <lb />
ever see again- <lb />
It seems that all the cranks and <lb />
fools are not dead yet. Last week <lb />
as Mr. Gladstone was returning <lb />
to his home in London, rumor <lb />
has it that some one attempted to <lb />
take his life- A pistol shot was <lb />
fired and the man who fired it was <lb />
afterwards arrested on Mr. Glad- <lb />
stone's step by a policeman. He <lb />
also shot at the officer and made <lb />
a desperate attempt to escape <lb />
rest- The strongest evidence <lb />
that the shot was directed at Mr- <lb />
Gladstone is a note book found <lb />
in the prisoner's possession with <lb />
such phrases as the <lb />
home bill has passed <lb />
its second reading by a f nil ma- <lb />
including the car <lb />
Talking does not <lb />
Now is the time for action. I <lb />
might murder yon. Would <lb />
nothing of the kind be justified <lb />
Now to prove it what says Sir <lb />
Henry Jones t What says <lb />
The was instructed <lb />
to guard the prisoner with the <lb />
utmost care. <lb />
Considerable indignation, <lb />
very just, has been expressed over <lb />
a horrible murder committed at <lb />
Denmark, S. C, last week- A <lb />
little girl had been outraged by a <lb />
man. Several suspects <lb />
arrested but none of them proved <lb />
to be the right man. A <lb />
reached a man named Peterson <lb />
that his name was being <lb />
with the deed whereupon he <lb />
fled at once to Gov. Tillman and <lb />
plead for executive protection. <lb />
Instead of giving this protection, <lb />
which it seems ought to have <lb />
been the first impulse of any sen- <lb />
man, the Governor sent the <lb />
man back to Denmark for the <lb />
matter of his guilt or innocence <lb />
to investigated by a mob <lb />
ready wild with rage- During <lb />
the examination the little girl and <lb />
her brother both testified that <lb />
Peterson was not the man who <lb />
committed the crime, yet when <lb />
the father of the outraged girl <lb />
weeping the murderous <lb />
mob became so infuriated that <lb />
they took the innocent man out, <lb />
swung him to a limb, and filled <lb />
his body with bullets. Horrible <lb />
murder Every man who had <lb />
hand in that awful crime ought <lb />
to receive the fullest penalty of <lb />
the law for murder, and Gov. Till- <lb />
man to ought impeached for <lb />
recklessly throwing away the life <lb />
of a citizen of his State. The <lb />
affair is a blot upon South Caro- <lb />
record that cannot be wiped <lb />
out <lb />
Cyclones continue their fury <lb />
over the West and North-West. <lb />
One occurred oat in Oklahoma <lb />
last week, killing nearly a <lb />
people destroying <lb />
a vast amount of property. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, April <lb />
for the Democratic ad- <lb />
ministration It has proven it- <lb />
self to be the master, not the <lb />
of Wall street, and the gov- <lb />
still lives, and the Treas- <lb />
continues and will continue <lb />
to pay out gold to all who may <lb />
desire it for Treasury notes. A <lb />
greater financial triumph was <lb />
never achieved by any <lb />
It marks the beginning <lb />
of a new era, in which the <lb />
dent of the United States and his <lb />
Cabinet will dictate our national <lb />
financial policy, instead having <lb />
it done Wall street, as it has <lb />
been done already too long for <lb />
the good of the country. The <lb />
Wall street crowd invited the <lb />
knock-down blow they received. <lb />
Seeing that bankers all over the <lb />
country wore following the lead <lb />
of those of the South and West <lb />
in furnishing the Treasury with <lb />
the Wall streeters got to- <lb />
and formulated a <lb />
in they agreed to fur- <lb />
the Treasury with from <lb />
to in gold, but <lb />
the proposition had a string tied <lb />
to it in the shape of a proviso <lb />
that bonds should he issued for <lb />
their gold. Other bankers turn- <lb />
ed their gold into the Treasury <lb />
without question, because of their <lb />
confidence in the government, <lb />
which they thought in need of <lb />
the gold to tide over t temporary <lb />
difficulty, but the Wall street Shy- <lb />
locks wanted their pound of flesh <lb />
in the shape of interest on the <lb />
bonds to be issued before they <lb />
would turn loose the lying <lb />
idle in their vaults. It did not <lb />
take President Cleveland and the <lb />
Cabinet three minutes to <lb />
late an indignant refusal, <lb />
was wired to New York. Later, <lb />
another proposition, less exacting <lb />
was received, but it also was <lb />
promptly rejected It must by <lb />
this time be evident to the <lb />
most obtuse observer that the <lb />
motto of this <lb />
is, Wall street <lb />
The present condition of the <lb />
Treasury is, under the <lb />
and if the <lb />
offers of gold continue to be as <lb />
freely made as they have been for <lb />
the past week it is believed that <lb />
there will be no necessity for the <lb />
issue of bonds, and even if the <lb />
demand for gold shall continue to <lb />
increase, the reserve fund, at <lb />
present intact, will be drawn upon <lb />
to meet it until it becomes <lb />
that it will be exhausted, be- <lb />
fore bonds will issued. <lb />
dent Cleveland and Secretary <lb />
are both fully <lb />
ed that no bonds shall be issued <lb />
until it shall have been fully de- <lb />
that nothing else will <lb />
furnish the relief needed, and <lb />
many believe that if that shall be <lb />
shown the matter will be submit- <lb />
to Congress at an extra <lb />
before bonds are issued. <lb />
Secretary Hoke Smith is the <lb />
only member of the Cabinet in <lb />
the city, and he has just returned <lb />
from New York, where the entire <lb />
Cabinet and the President took <lb />
part in the big naval review yes- <lb />
The President and the <lb />
other members of the Cabinet, ex- <lb />
Secretary Lamont, who is <lb />
compelled by private business to <lb />
remain there for several days, will <lb />
go direct from New York to Chi- <lb />
to take part in the opening <lb />
of the World's Fair. Secretary <lb />
Smith had to miss the trip to the <lb />
World's Fair of some <lb />
pressing Indian business that de- <lb />
his immediate attention. <lb />
The second chapter in the in- <lb />
of the Weather Bu- <lb />
opened with a stormy row <lb />
between those two good <lb />
cans, Prof. Harrington, chief of <lb />
the bureau, who is being <lb />
gated, and Assistant Attorney <lb />
General Colby, who is conducting <lb />
the investigation- The evidence <lb />
taken this time fully bears out <lb />
one of the <lb />
were retained <lb />
after the chief of the bureau <lb />
knew they were <lb />
Congressman Caruth, of Ken- <lb />
carries a very broad smile <lb />
just now- One of the reasons of <lb />
breadth of that smile <lb />
was the selection of his brother, <lb />
George W. Caruth, editor of the <lb />
Little Rock Gazette, to be <lb />
U- S. Minister to Portugal. <lb />
Among the other important <lb />
Presidential appointments made <lb />
this week were those of ex-Con- <lb />
of N. H-, to <lb />
be Minister to Columbia; ex- <lb />
Congressman Thompson, of <lb />
to be Minister to Brazil; ex-Con- <lb />
Wiley, of N. Y., to be <lb />
Consul at Bordeaux, France, and <lb />
the following well-known gentle- <lb />
men to be Government directors <lb />
of the Union Pacific Railway <lb />
Company Mr- Henry F. <lb />
of N. Y.; Hon. Don M. Dickinson, <lb />
The New York Sun remarks <lb />
that the South does not attract <lb />
the foreign immigrant as do the <lb />
North and West- We have i. <lb />
to lament in this, unless we <lb />
could pick our men. While many <lb />
foreigners make excellent <lb />
can citizens, yet the majority of <lb />
them do not The classes of <lb />
migrants, which have sought <lb />
homes in America in recent years, <lb />
while containing many good men, <lb />
have embraced not a few <lb />
able com- <lb />
and anarchists, bred to <lb />
hatred of all forms of government <lb />
and i of appreciating the <lb />
rights and privileges of citizen- <lb />
ship. Senator Sherman was not <lb />
far wrong, when he said, some <lb />
years ago, that receive with <lb />
open arms into citizenship the <lb />
outcasts of every land before they <lb />
know the difference between the <lb />
Constitution of the United States <lb />
and the proverbs of <lb />
For our part, we are glad the <lb />
gates of Castle Garden are no <lb />
nearer us than they are, and that <lb />
they do not open this way. <lb />
Clinton Democrat- <lb />
DO YOU <lb />
THE Latest Styles and Best GOODS <lb />
The Lowest Prices. <lb />
------If you do we have them. We have just the------ <lb />
Largest Stock of Goods <lb />
ever brought to <lb />
Greenville this Spring. <lb />
Announce to the public that they want their <lb />
-The Patronage <lb />
of- <lb />
Sorrowful Reading. <lb />
Richmond State. <lb />
It is painful to read an item of <lb />
news like this from the Chicago <lb />
Tribune . <lb />
Burgeon, once a sold- <lb />
in the Confederate army, died <lb />
Wednesday at No. south <lb />
street of apoplexy. Bur- <lb />
was penniless at the time of <lb />
his death, when application <lb />
for his burial by the county was <lb />
made by those in whose house he <lb />
had boarded, it is alleged that <lb />
they were told that the depart- <lb />
not burying dead <lb />
From Wednesday until <lb />
late last night the body of Bur- <lb />
lay in the little house at <lb />
o. south Carpenter street <lb />
Then it was removed to the <lb />
Morgue in the <lb />
patrol wagon by officers <lb />
who were rendered sick by their <lb />
task. Mrs. C W. in <lb />
whoso Burgeon boarded, <lb />
said last died <lb />
at o'clock Wednesday. He <lb />
had no money, and, as I could <lb />
not afford to bury him. I went <lb />
to the Health Department in the <lb />
City Hall. I told the people <lb />
there that Burgeon was an old <lb />
soldier and they asked me what <lb />
regiment he was in- I told them <lb />
a Southern regiment, and they <lb />
said that the department was not <lb />
burying dead rebels- We were <lb />
driven out of the house by the <lb />
stench yesterday. I complained <lb />
to an officer, who reported it- <lb />
The flesh dropped from the bones <lb />
as the body was lifted into the <lb />
Some months ago a member of <lb />
the Grand Army of the Republic <lb />
was attacked with mortal sickness <lb />
in Richmond and died m a few <lb />
hours after his seizure. Lee <lb />
Camp Confederate Veterans and <lb />
citizens in the vicinity were <lb />
tiring in their attentions to the <lb />
fellow, and his family sent <lb />
thanks and expressions <lb />
of appreciation. <lb />
Shame on Chicago; shame on <lb />
the city which grasped for the <lb />
World's Fair on the ground that <lb />
Chicago is the greatest exponent <lb />
of American civilization and<lb />
On account of being <lb />
late we bought them at very <lb />
reduced prices and now find that we <lb />
bought too many, so we are going to sell them at <lb />
much less than regular prices. If prices is an object to you it <lb />
will you to examine our stock before you make your purchases. <lb />
On and Dress Goods we can save you from to cents <lb />
on every dollar you spend- We will save you on the dollar <lb />
on SHOES. <lb />
We also carry a full hue of Groceries and will sell you Good <lb />
for cents per pound. Good Tobacco for cents. Good <lb />
solicited. A nice line of well selected <lb />
Merchandise <lb />
on hand, and coming now by every steamer <lb />
Coffee <lb />
Flour <lb />
that will well repay you to inspect before making <lb />
your spring purchases. <lb />
for cents per pound, and tho Best Laundry Soap for i cents a cake <lb />
We are agents for Martinez's celebrated PAINTS <lb />
Call and see us. <lb />
YOUNG <lb />
GREENVILLE, C. <lb />
FARMS FOR SALE. <lb />
Prices Low, <lb />
Terms <lb />
Easy. <lb />
Mr. George <lb />
SHAKESPEARE <lb />
What Mr. Smith Think He <lb />
Would Hat <lb />
Said About Hood's Sarsaparilla <lb />
Shakespeare lived here and suffered as <lb />
I hare, I think ho would bare said. Throw <lb />
away all medicine except Hood's <lb />
As an coming to this <lb />
climate, I have felt the heat very much. In <lb />
the I felt as If I had all the care and <lb />
anxiety of America on my mind. I pot <lb />
bottle Hood's Sarsaparilla and after I had <lb />
taken it I felt as if I could undertake <lb />
The President's Duties. <lb />
Last month I bad a return of prickly heat; it <lb />
seemed impossible to stand up or He down <lb />
without almost tearing myself to pieces. I <lb />
then got one more bottle It has not only <lb />
. the beat but I believe it put my blood <lb />
In good condition. I advise all to talc <lb />
Hood's Sarsaparilla In the spring and <lb />
Smith, Texas. <lb />
Hood's Pills cure Nausea, Sick Headache, <lb />
Indigestion, Biliousness. Sold by all <lb />
The J. L. Billiard home farm, Bea- <lb />
Dam township, adjoining the lauds <lb />
T. Tyson and Cobb. Aline <lb />
farm of about acres, with good build- <lb />
and adapted to corn, cotton and <lb />
A tine marl bed. <lb />
A farm near den and <lb />
mediately on the own- <lb />
ed by Caleb acres of which <lb />
arc cleared. Good neighbor- <lb />
hood, churches and a school within <lb />
miles. Plenty of marl the adjoin- <lb />
farms <lb />
A fine farm of three miles <lb />
from Farmville and miles from <lb />
ville, with large, substantial dwelling <lb />
and out houses, known as the L. P. <lb />
home place, fine cotton bind, <lb />
good clay subsoil, accessible to marl. <lb />
A smaller farm adjoining the above <lb />
known as the Jones place, acres, <lb />
dwelling, barn house, land <lb />
good. <lb />
A farm of acres in town- <lb />
ship, about C miles from <lb />
acres of the tract <lb />
Part of the Noah farm, <lb />
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro, <lb />
an improving section <lb />
and can be made a valuable farm. <lb />
A small farm of about acres, <lb />
about miles from Greenville, on In- <lb />
Well house, etc., for- <lb />
owned by Guilford . ox. <lb />
ALSO TIMBER <lb />
A tract of about acres near Cone- <lb />
the station, with cypress timber well <lb />
suited for railroad ties. <lb />
A tract of about acres in <lb />
township, near the Washington rail- <lb />
road, pine timber. <lb />
A tract of acres near Johnson's <lb />
Mills, pine and cypress timber. <lb />
Apply to H. LONG, <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Yours for trade and bargains, <lb />
J. CO., <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
GENERAL <lb />
AND Ml IN <lb />
bin, Hue, <lb />
Oysters, Caviar and <lb />
All Country Products, <lb />
Nob. Dock, Norfolk, Va <lb />
Reference Son Co., Bankers <lb />
CB- <lb />
GREENVILLE, A. C. <lb />
Can still be found <lb />
at the Old <lb />
stand. <lb />
pared to do <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK <lb />
on anything in the <lb />
ISSIE. <lb />
Fine Vehicles Specialty <lb />
Repairing done prompt- <lb />
and in best manner <lb />
JAMES <lb />
-----Dealer in----- <lb />
General Merchandise, <lb />
Has exclusive of these celebrated <lb />
glasses in Greenville, N. C. From the <lb />
factory of Moore, the only <lb />
complete plant in the South, <lb />
Atlanta, Peddlers arc not sup- <lb />
plied those famous glasses. <lb />
Greenville, C. <lb />
In the CORNER HOUSE <lb />
New Cheap Stork. <lb />
NEW NEW GOODS- <lb />
Prices Lower Than Ever. <lb />
FIRST QUALITY GOODS <lb />
MEN'S AND <lb />
CHILDREN'S SUITS, <lb />
HATS, SHOES, SHIRTS, <lb />
Notice these remarkable <lb />
Men's Suits as low and up. <lb />
Men's Pants as low as and up. <lb />
Children's Suits as low as eta <lb />
Shirts as low as and up. <lb />
Men's Shoes as low as cent and up. <lb />
Shoes M low as cent and up. <lb />
Other goods correspondingly cheap. <lb />
We are the place for LOW PRICES <lb />
and solicit the of the people. <lb />
The New Stocking;. <lb />
Outwears the old shape. <lb />
Doesn't deform foot. <lb />
Saves discomfort. <lb />
Saves darning. <lb />
For Sale by <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
N. O.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
HASKETT.<lb />
NAILS, AND AXES, <lb />
Rope, and Packing, <lb />
MECHANIC'S TOOLS, <lb />
THE<lb />
It is with that I announce to <lb />
the citizens of Greenville and Vicinity <lb />
that I have Just returned from tho <lb />
Northern Markets where I visited <lb />
all the openings and am now <lb />
receiving the most and <lb />
stylish selected stock of Millinery ever <lb />
opened in market, <lb />
DUMPS and me and you will get nothing but the <lb />
Tinware, Hollowware, latest fashionable goods prices <lb />
Pipe, and Chimney Pipe, <lb />
Paints. Oils, Glass and Putty, and Mrs. Georgia <lb />
many other articles kept in a first- j N. c. <lb />
class Hardware Call to <lb />
mo if yen want goods cheap for <lb />
the cash. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT, <lb />
GREENVILLE N C <lb />
Next door to Old Brick Store, <lb />
and content is a home <lb />
a lamp the the morning. <lb />
Farmers, <lb />
Your Own Hay <lb />
WE CAN SELL YOU THE <lb />
BEST MOWER IN <lb />
THE WORLD FOR <lb />
CUTTING IT. <lb />
CALL ON US WHEN IN <lb />
NEED OF TIN WARE <lb />
COOK STOVES, <lb />
PAINTS, OIL. <lb />
PLACE YOUR ORDERS for TOBACCO FLUES. <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO., <lb />
KT. O,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017596_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
-ALL AllE- <lb />
RushinG <lb />
-AFTER THOSE <lb />
k Lovely <lb />
-u <lb />
In the new Shades <lb />
to match <lb />
ClothinG <lb />
have beautiful of nice <lb />
and <lb />
for and Young Men. to fit <lb />
and suit all <lb />
SHOES <lb />
Slippers. <lb />
Shots Slippers match <lb />
your dresses son at <lb />
very low prises, at <lb />
HIGGS BROS., <lb />
S. C <lb />
SPARKS. <lb />
I nil lie Sundays from i to <lb />
k A. M. Ed. <lb />
The a boys ten changed from <lb />
bU bill. The- have <lb />
J. A to. have <lb />
of Ladle <lb />
a nice <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
I Reflections. <lb />
Bead Peanut and IVa-c at the old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Lust Saturday changed the order of <lb />
tiling- ii- a hot day instead of <lb />
a cold wave. <lb />
Curtains and Fatal at <lb />
J. B. A Cos. <lb />
Tom t from <lb />
mm Bros- <lb />
May comes in with a full <lb />
Mondays, live Tuesdays, live <lb />
days and live <lb />
am selling Choice Clean Bran at <lb />
Norfolk quotations ton. <lb />
W. IS. S. Washington. <lb />
line of Floor Oil Cloths <lb />
Matting at S. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
pay you tor Chickens <lb />
and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
The not struck Green- <lb />
ville, but the new style dress skirts are <lb />
sufficiently wide to admit them. <lb />
Black, ink, red ink. violet ink and <lb />
mucilage, i cents a bottle at <lb />
Book Stoic. <lb />
The mail- were badly out of last <lb />
week the dailies were very <lb />
in putting in their appearance. <lb />
Allen Warren i Son <lb />
of strawberries last week, and their ship- <lb />
week to crates. <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have a nice line o <lb />
Children's Carriages. <lb />
Pairs S mm over <lb />
alls from cents up, at Bros. <lb />
Some days ago Mr. F. M. <lb />
of Swift Creek township, burned out an <lb />
S-acre thicket, and walking through the <lb />
ground after the fire was out he found <lb />
dead rabbits. That was the biggest <lb />
rabbit slaughter we have heard of. <lb />
Be sure yon big crop of bright <lb />
tobacco. Buy Cotton Seed Meal at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Town County Commissioner <lb />
meeting and Tax Collector's sales all <lb />
coming on Monday made it a right <lb />
busy day. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick <lb />
Right after the fire at Kinston the <lb />
town went to talking fire department <lb />
and water works. That's the way <lb />
Greenville docs, but unfortunately for <lb />
the property holder the talk all <lb />
up in in i very short while after <lb />
the conflagration. is a pointer for <lb />
the board of <lb />
At Con for the Next <lb />
I expect to make change in my <lb />
and have so many notions, pictures, Ac <lb />
on hand will my entire stock at cost <lb />
Hats, Flowers, in fact every- <lb />
thing positively at cost strictly for cash. <lb />
Don't fill to call for Jelly. <lb />
It U May. <lb />
Now for roses. <lb />
Cotton coming up. <lb />
Fifth mouth of the year is with us. <lb />
May ball at Farmville to-morrow night. <lb />
The town election passed off quietly. <lb />
Strawberries sold three quarts for a <lb />
quarter Monday. <lb />
Good morning. Messrs. I <lb />
Have you seen <lb />
Spend your money in Greenville <lb />
you help build up Greenville. <lb />
This weather makes a rush for ice, <lb />
negligee shirts palm leaf fans. <lb />
Mr. straw- <lb />
berry pickers make an interesting spec- <lb />
these evening. <lb />
If you are tired and never hungry, <lb />
Sarsaparilla will make you feel <lb />
well give you a <lb />
The railroads are holding to high rates <lb />
to the World's Fair and will keep many <lb />
people from unless there is a <lb />
reduction. <lb />
Hooker Bros. Greene up their <lb />
steam riding gallery last week in rear <lb />
of the old Dancy building, the <lb />
are happy. <lb />
When the weather did get in a <lb />
notion it jumped clear over spring <lb />
set us right down in the middle of <lb />
a summer temperature. <lb />
We think Greenville's new board of <lb />
will do something for the <lb />
town. Wade in there is <lb />
much needs to be done. <lb />
The papers are reporting that trees <lb />
are killed and we arc to have no figs <lb />
this year. The Reflector will wait <lb />
to hear from Mr. <lb />
worry your neighbor borrowing <lb />
the from him but became <lb />
a subscriber yourself, it will only cost <lb />
you a dollar for a whole year. <lb />
railroads will sell low rate tickets <lb />
to M account of the I <lb />
attending the of the <lb />
of <lb />
Cut worms are playing havoc with <lb />
young cabbage plants. Between the <lb />
worm and the pestiferous potato bug <lb />
the life of the gardener is very m <lb />
we started this writes <lb />
a Georgia editor, had only one shirt <lb />
to our back. The shirt couldn't last <lb />
forever, but thank heaven, we have the <lb />
back <lb />
What grown out of the recent <lb />
of y. Smith that Green- <lb />
ville have a public library Such <lb />
Batten as this should have full <lb />
consideration. <lb />
Changes nave thus far b en Iliads <lb />
two of the fourth class <lb />
Pitt county. Mr. J. O. Proctor <lb />
been made at Grime-land. <lb />
and W. D. Keel at <lb />
Mr. A. who has a well of <lb />
excellent mineral water in his yard, has <lb />
beau by Mr. T. K. of <lb />
Raleigh, to send a gallon or two of <lb />
water for exhibition at the World's <lb />
Fair. <lb />
How about the of the early <lb />
movement among the <lb />
i-haul- These be long days and <lb />
any trade stirring at night. Give <lb />
the clerks a rest which they will <lb />
How close these tax years run together <lb />
week the collector is just selling <lb />
property to get the taxes due from last <lb />
year, and in a month from now it will <lb />
be time to give In taxes for another <lb />
year. <lb />
People who wear loud clothes are do- <lb />
their best to make up for some con- <lb />
Gazette. <lb />
What an awful slam on that white <lb />
duck suit Latham comes out in every <lb />
summer. <lb />
There are a few persons in this com- <lb />
who send to Reflector <lb />
to borrow a copy of the paper, j list as <lb />
though newspapers were printed for t hut <lb />
purpose. It is a wonder they don't go <lb />
into some o the stores and ask for the <lb />
loan of a pair of B day or two. <lb />
A member of the John Flanagan <lb />
Buggy Co. tells us that their factory <lb />
ha- sold six buggies two <lb />
plantations in this county. If some- <lb />
body don't look out those six bug- <lb />
may be occupied by as many <lb />
bridal couples before summer comes and <lb />
goes. <lb />
Mr. Council Dawson, Chairman of the <lb />
Board of County Commissioners, be- <lb />
in truck raising, lie sold a great <lb />
number of cabbages this market last <lb />
season, and yesterday brought a load of <lb />
the new crop to town with him. They <lb />
sold readily at good prices. <lb />
The entire Reflector force is wear- <lb />
nice new straw hats with the com- <lb />
of Mr. C. T. one of <lb />
our most enterprising merchants. He <lb />
has a line of straws that is just <lb />
while the price is at such a low figure as <lb />
to astonish you. Go let him fit you up. <lb />
Mr. tells us that he is now <lb />
selling ice at cents a hundred, and <lb />
this morning will put on a wagon for <lb />
making one delivery a day. <lb />
above worth will be sold at <lb />
the above rate. This is cheap for ice <lb />
and our people will no doubt take ad- <lb />
vantage of the low price. <lb />
The pianos in town being heavily <lb />
taxed under the preparation going on <lb />
for the early June commencements. <lb />
Go whatever street ore may and <lb />
he hears the sounds of persevering <lb />
Music is always delightful, and <lb />
something especially enjoyable is prom- <lb />
those who attend this seasons com- <lb />
newspaper men are blamed with <lb />
a lot of that they can't help; such <lb />
as using partiality mentioning visitors, <lb />
giving news about some folks <lb />
leaving out others, etc. The newspaper <lb />
man can't help this. lie prints <lb />
what news he can find some <lb />
let him know about such things; <lb />
others don't. So it's the people's fault <lb />
mostly. Editors are always glad for yon <lb />
tell them the news. Wilkesboro <lb />
Honor Roll <lb />
Of the public school at N. <lb />
C, for the mouth ending April 14th, <lb />
1803 Pattie Davenport, Sidney Daven- <lb />
port, Blanche Fleming, Eva Fleming. <lb />
Paul Davenport, Peter <lb />
Davenport, Robert Fleming. Le Roy <lb />
Rollins. Highest average on <lb />
dance, deportment and scholarship, <lb />
made by Fannie Rollins. <lb />
Yea, Verily <lb />
The a company <lb />
known as Independent Order of <lb />
Dog has been organized In <lb />
Greenville for the purpose of killing all <lb />
dogs found running at large. Our <lb />
are with the dog killers but we <lb />
undertake to say that if they carry out <lb />
their object there will be bloody war <lb />
all that a man hath will he <lb />
give for dog. Landmark. <lb />
Sample Copies. <lb />
The Reflector sometimes sends oat <lb />
sample copies to who are not <lb />
i ii Quite a number of this <lb />
issue are so sent out. We ask all <lb />
who receive a copy will take it as a per- <lb />
request to become a subscriber. <lb />
Examine the paper carefully and see If <lb />
you will not agree that it is well worth <lb />
the If such is your con- <lb />
send a dollar get the Re- <lb />
a whole year. Fifty <lb />
will get it six months. <lb />
Died. <lb />
Mr. Samuel a prominent <lb />
of Swift Creek township, died at his <lb />
home near G rift on last Friday morn- <lb />
He had been in health for <lb />
sometime. Mr. was years <lb />
old and had been twice married, his last <lb />
wife being a of ex-Sheriff W. <lb />
M. King, who with three children by <lb />
hi- first wife survives him. He <lb />
Pitt county in one session of the <lb />
General Assembly was once a <lb />
of the Board of County <lb />
College at Ayden. <lb />
There was a large gathering at Ayden <lb />
some days ago to hear an educational <lb />
address delivered by ex-Gov. Jarvis. <lb />
After the the Board of the N. <lb />
C. Christian Missionary Convention de- <lb />
to locate a denominational college <lb />
at Ayden. Liberal subscriptions <lb />
donations were made to start the enter- <lb />
and proper committees were <lb />
pointed to prosecute the work. Ayden <lb />
is an admirable location for a good <lb />
school and we wish this movement may <lb />
meet w every success. <lb />
Death of a Virginia Lady. <lb />
It a Were pained to learn by letter last <lb />
week of the death on April 13th, of Mrs. <lb />
of Norwood. Va. mother <lb />
of Miss K. G. the <lb />
authoress, whose name is familiar to <lb />
readers. Mrs. <lb />
wits a woman of sweetest disposition <lb />
and character, <lb />
though we never saw her but once <lb />
cm not forget how was her <lb />
nature how exceedingly interesting <lb />
and it was to be in her pres- <lb />
The home has lost a companion <lb />
that indeed a of God's <lb />
heat sincerely <lb />
h the bereaved family. <lb />
Almost a Fire. <lb />
Mr J. S. Dines, who lives near Ayden, <lb />
told us the other day of a narrow escape <lb />
lire lie bad on I bat windy <lb />
f week before last. His wife concluded <lb />
she would scald the bedding and <lb />
that day, and heating water <lb />
out in the yard the wind blew sparks <lb />
into a lot of bed clothing piled up in the <lb />
piazza of the In a moment the <lb />
tire was a big Fortunately <lb />
inc.- was very near tho and sum- <lb />
help with his farm bell <lb />
n putting cut the tire after a hard light. <lb />
About of bedding was burned <lb />
and the house damaged slightly. Mr. <lb />
received severe burns about the <lb />
hands and singed his hair while light- <lb />
the <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mrs. S M. of <lb />
spent Monday <lb />
Mr. IT. S. Bawls and little daughter <lb />
Velma went to Baltimore Monday. <lb />
Mr. L. E. Cleve was here a day or <lb />
two last week. He is going to locate in <lb />
Louisville, Ky. <lb />
Mr. J. C. Benjamin came down <lb />
from Raleigh Saturday, and is spending <lb />
a few days among his friends. <lb />
Mrs. C. E. Cherry returned home last <lb />
week from a visit to her daughter, Mrs. <lb />
Satchwell. iii Beaufort county. <lb />
Mr. L D. Ames, of Belleville, Va., <lb />
was here a few days last week visiting <lb />
his daughter, Mrs. W. B. Brown. <lb />
Mrs. S. M. Schultz returned home <lb />
last week from a visit to her parents at <lb />
Rocky Mount. Her sister. Kiss Mattie <lb />
accompanied her home. <lb />
Rev. G. F. will begin a meet- <lb />
in the Methodist Church next Sun- <lb />
day. He will be assisted by Rev. R. A <lb />
Willis, of <lb />
Rev. J. attended the <lb />
Baptist Union Meeting at Eagles, in <lb />
be county, which commenced <lb />
last Friday and continued through Sun- <lb />
day. <lb />
Mr. George W. Daniel who left this <lb />
county nine years ago and has been <lb />
the southern part of Florida for <lb />
seven years, returned last and will <lb />
spend the summer among his friends in <lb />
this section. He has but very <lb />
little in his nine absence. <lb />
Rifle Shots. <lb />
There were many glad people in <lb />
Greenville and vicinity when the Rifles <lb />
got home Friday evening. <lb />
When the boys have some time to kill <lb />
now they sit around and tell war stories <lb />
and what breadth they <lb />
bad. <lb />
Jim Jenkins did not have to be shaved <lb />
while he was <lb />
The kinks got back in <lb />
hair by the time he from <lb />
Straight enough the morn- <lb />
the Rifles left home. <lb />
did not succeed ill <lb />
trading off many James grape vines. <lb />
The people and the fruit were too near <lb />
the fame color. <lb />
the camp up about <lb />
one morning yelling his <lb />
sleep good old Pitt county stuff, <lb />
boys, bid on it dreamed he was <lb />
a big break at the Eastern. <lb />
Town Election. <lb />
There was no opposition to the <lb />
nominees either of the Democrat- <lb />
wards at Monday's election, and the <lb />
interest was so small that only a light <lb />
vote was cast. J. S. Smith and W. U. <lb />
White were elected in the second ward, <lb />
and the third J. S. and R. <lb />
J. Cobb received all the votes that were <lb />
cast. <lb />
The first w-ard was the one in <lb />
which two tickets were voted. Over <lb />
there Isaac colored, was, the <lb />
regular nominee of his party convention, <lb />
but C. Forbes thought he would <lb />
make the best councilman and as an <lb />
independent candidate. wiped <lb />
up the ward with him. <lb />
colored, had no opposition in the fourth <lb />
ward and was re-elected. <lb />
The Board of consists of <lb />
four Democrats and two Republicans, <lb />
both the later being colored. <lb />
At the nominating meetings Friday <lb />
night Jas. L. Fleming was chairman <lb />
and D. J. Whichard secretary in the <lb />
second ward ; and tho third, ward A. <lb />
L. Blow was chairman Andrew <lb />
Joyner secretary.<lb />
Good People <lb />
And am opening up a <lb />
OF- <lb />
Spring and Summer Novelties <lb />
Watch out for prices soon. <lb />
YOURS RESPECTFULLY, <lb />
C. T. <lb />
GREENVILLE, AT. C. <lb />
RACKET STORE <lb />
BULLETIN NO. I. <lb />
IN OUR DRESS GOODS FURNISHING GOODS <lb />
we will show all DEPARTMENT. Standard <lb />
of the Colors in Silk Brands of Collars and Cuffs, White <lb />
Bedford Cords in Heliotrope, Shirts, Shirts, in all the <lb />
Pea Green, Cream and all colors, j colors and shapes. <lb />
Worth of SUSPENDERS <lb />
J and and Gauze Shirts <lb />
shades. <lb />
II. B. Ga., <lb />
was under the care of nine <lb />
different but not one did me the <lb />
good that Botanic Blood Balm has done <lb />
Please Advise Us. <lb />
The has frequently re- <lb />
quested town patrons to report promptly <lb />
to the office any failure to receive their <lb />
payer. If they would do this, instead <lb />
of sometimes waiting a mouth or two. <lb />
they would save themselves any unkind <lb />
feelings they may have towards the <lb />
editor about it and help us to quickly <lb />
correct an error that in every in- <lb />
i- purely an oversight. It is no <lb />
easy work to keep up with a <lb />
list and amid a multitude of other <lb />
duties mistakes may sometimes be made. <lb />
But these could be so easily corrected if <lb />
the subscriber would just notify us <lb />
promptly. We wish every subscriber to <lb />
receive promptly every paper due him, <lb />
but arc unable to tell when there are <lb />
failures unless notified. <lb />
Marriage License. <lb />
During the month of April the Regis- <lb />
of Deeds issued licenses to fol- <lb />
lowing couples in county. <lb />
Heath and Tommie <lb />
E. Murphy, Willie E. Short and Maggie <lb />
D. A. R. Faunie <lb />
Coward, Jonas S. and Lizzie <lb />
W. F. Hart and Eliza E. Joy- <lb />
M. G. Nelson and White- <lb />
W. L. Forbes and Louisa Hooker, <lb />
Warren A very and Stokes, <lb />
George and Franky White, Wm. <lb />
H. Moore and Susie L. Mayo, Samuel <lb />
G. and Cammie L. Smith, <lb />
W. S. E. Smith and Mattie J. Smith, <lb />
Alexander Morgan to <lb />
Johnson and Emma <lb />
Moore, Amos. <lb />
Henry and Ida Harrington. <lb />
Henry and Dupree, Red- <lb />
Atkinson Jane <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
as administrator of Mary <lb />
ton, deceased, notice is hereby given to <lb />
all indebted to the estate to <lb />
make immediate payment, all per <lb />
sons having claims against the <lb />
must present the same for payment on <lb />
or before the 1st day of May, or <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar of re- <lb />
This 1st day of May, 1893. <lb />
J. S. KEEL, <lb />
of Mary <lb />
School to be Appointed <lb />
in <lb />
The last General Assembly of North <lb />
Carolina made a change in the school <lb />
law in respect to the time for electing <lb />
school committeemen, and also for the <lb />
beginning of their term of service. The <lb />
law is amended so that public school <lb />
committeemen shall be appointed the <lb />
first Monday in June and whose term of <lb />
office shall begin the first Monday in <lb />
July thereafter. The Board of <lb />
of Pitt county will be in session the <lb />
first Monday in June next for the <lb />
pose of appointing committeemen in the <lb />
several districts, and it Is desired <lb />
that the people in each let interest <lb />
themselves In recommending suitable <lb />
names to fill said office. Much of the <lb />
success of our public school system Is <lb />
dependent the committees in the <lb />
various districts, and the wishes-of the <lb />
people in form of petition or other- <lb />
wise will greatly assist the Board at its <lb />
June meeting in making proper and <lb />
satisfactory selections. <lb />
County <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
f ed as administrator of W. A. <lb />
deceased, notice is hereby given to ail <lb />
persona indebted to the estate to make <lb />
immediate payment, and all persons <lb />
baring claims against the estate must <lb />
present the same for payment on or be- <lb />
fore day of April, this <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This day of April. <lb />
B. S. <lb />
of W. A. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of Pitt. Superior <lb />
Court made at March term, the <lb />
case of tier and wife vs. Sam- <lb />
Cory, the <lb />
will sell, for cash, before the Court <lb />
House door, in Greenville, Monday, <lb />
the 6th day of June, 1893, the following <lb />
described piece or parcel of land, <lb />
in the county of Pitt, and in <lb />
township, adjoining the lauds of Jo- <lb />
Gaskins, Henry <lb />
Samuel Cory and others, containing <lb />
acres, more or less, being the piece on <lb />
said Turner wife lived <lb />
in This April 20th, 1893. <lb />
A. L. BLOW ft F. G. JAMES, <lb />
OUR HAT is j that must sold, <lb />
complete- Alpine and Fedora p. UR WHITE GOODS k LACE <lb />
m all spring shapes. DEPARTMENT is complete. <lb />
CLIPPERS FOR LADIES lino Point Do <lb />
Tan, Red, White, Duck, and i which we are <lb />
and UNDERWEAR <lb />
LINE OF CALICOES.; H DEPARTMENT. carry <lb />
r only Ginghams, tho largo tad best assortment to <lb />
Pants found in the city. <lb />
Come to the Racket Store and look at our Great Bargains in all of <lb />
our different departments. No trouble to show goods. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
MACHINE WORKS, <lb />
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, Cotton Gins, A. <lb />
SPECIAL ATTENTION TO REPAIRING.<lb />
THE BEST <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed or money <lb />
and prices before buying elsewhere- <lb />
ST A few Second-Hand Engines for sale. <lb />
in. <lb />
THE WORLD. <lb />
refunded. Write for <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
--------WHOLESALE AND RETAIL-------- m <lb />
GREENVILLE. C. <lb />
Half Bolls <lb />
Bundles New Arrow Ties. <lb />
Small Full Cream Cheese. <lb />
Tubs Choice Butter. <lb />
Tubs Boston Lard. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco, all grades. <lb />
Boxes Cakes and Crackers. <lb />
Stick Candy. <lb />
New Corn Mullet. <lb />
Barrels Gail Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Railroad Mill <lb />
Barrels Three Thistle Snuff <lb />
Car load Rib Side Meat <lb />
Car load Seed Oat. <lb />
Car load Flour, all grade. <lb />
MO Kegs Powder. <lb />
ons Shot. <lb />
old Virginia Cheroots. <lb />
Full line Cake Goods and <lb />
else kept in a class <lb />
3-5 <lb />
WELCOME <lb />
You brine us air and blue skies. <lb />
Under your magic influence nature <lb />
wakes a fresh beauty and productive- <lb />
People yield to your influence and <lb />
their pulses quicken. Everybody and <lb />
everything Is awake and the watchword <lb />
of the season is I have just <lb />
returned from the Northern markets and <lb />
am now opening a beautiful line of <lb />
Dry Ms, Dress Goods, Notion, <lb />
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes and <lb />
Furnishing Goods, <lb />
which I shall offer to the public at a close margin. We do no blowing, our goods <lb />
talk for themselves. I will be glad to sec my old customers and friends. <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
UR SPRING SUITS are doing duty to-day. Grand, good ones they are. <lb />
., They've got in quality. I desire to get ahead, for I am always <lb />
trying to do better. All the colors, all the cuts, proper lengths, and nothing but a lit. <lb />
I am located In the store formerly by Mr. W. II. Cox. Not one old <lb />
piece of goods in the store. Give trial am sure I can please you. <lb />
FRANK WILSON, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
New. <lb />
Straight <lb />
Clean <lb />
Large <lb />
We are still making a specialty of <lb />
INK, NITS <lb />
mi mm. <lb />
We have a first-class assortment and soil close. Do not fail t <lb />
get our prices- <lb />
COLUMBUS <lb />
DISCOVERED <lb />
And the people have discovered that <lb />
they can bargains by trading with <lb />
WHITE <lb />
MY NEW SPRING GOODS have <lb />
rived and are ready for examination. <lb />
I want every lady to see the nice Dress <lb />
Goods, and every gentleman to see the <lb />
nice CLOTHING and <lb />
GOODS contained in in stock. Bring <lb />
along the boys and girls, too. as I have <lb />
just what Is needed for everyone them <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
Speaking of Groceries, I have fresh <lb />
rivals of such things as every house- <lb />
keeper needs. Examine what I have <lb />
and you will be sure to buy. <lb />
Toon to serve, <lb />
If. H. WHITE, <lb />
-I <lb />
Q. <lb />
i-<lb />
6.5 <lb />
O a u <lb />
pi <lb />
x a r <lb />
r- <lb />
o .- <lb />
r-. a <lb />
u.- <lb />
B X <lb />
Vt <lb />
Wishing to thank my <lb />
friends for their liberal patronage <lb />
for both Merchandise and differ <lb />
articles which I manufacture, <lb />
I take this method of <lb />
ins that while I thank yon all I <lb />
am also striving hard to secure <lb />
advantages that I can give you <lb />
in order to further merit you<lb />
other articles in our Hut <lb />
as Church Pews. Carl <lb />
Wheels, Brackets and <lb />
Tobacco Genera <lb />
Repair Work, yon will do well <lb />
to correspond with before <lb />
ranging any I <lb />
give soma <lb />
A. O. COX. <lb />
Winterville. <lb />
COBB BROS. CO., <lb />
to <lb />
COTTON FACTORS, <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE STREET, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF <lb />
Man to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following gm <lb />
not to be In this market. And to be <lb />
straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, Gall <lb />
GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE <lb />
GOODS WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and Hay, i of PARTS, and <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's T. Spool which I offer to the trade a. <lb />
nor A <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Taint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood <lb />
Willow Ware. a specialty. Give me a -ll and I guarantee <lb />
JACK WHITE X BEFORE YOU <lb />
Bring me your <lb />
CHICKENS, EGGS, <lb />
TURKEYS. DUCKS, <lb />
GEESE, GUINEAS, <lb />
And in fact everything that is raised in tho country and I will pay <lb />
as much in cash as can be had any whore in Greenville. I will <lb />
handle on a small commission anything that my customers may want <lb />
me to. Remember my headquarters is at the old <lb />
store, right at the five points crossing, the most convenient in <lb />
town. Come to see me. <lb />
Tours to please. <lb />
JACK WHITE, A O- <lb />
and parts for all kinds of machines are sold by <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS., <lb />
Depositors for American Bible Society <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
AID FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds of-Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017596_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
TOBACCO GROWING IN CALI- <lb />
There are made in San Francis- <lb />
co every month from to <lb />
cigars, from to <lb />
cigarettes, and to <lb />
pounds of manufactured <lb />
tobacco. The tobacco leaf used <lb />
is practically all brought here <lb />
from the East. In times past the <lb />
cigars made in San Francisco were <lb />
ten times the number made now. <lb />
Even then all the raw leaf came <lb />
from the East- Knowing these <lb />
facts, and also knowing that <lb />
forts had been made in the past <lb />
to produce tobacco in the State, <lb />
we have been making inquiry <lb />
among tobacco manufacturers as <lb />
to the possibility of growing to- <lb />
bore- We must teach our <lb />
farmers to go into diversified pro- <lb />
if the northern and <lb />
portions of the State are to <lb />
prosper. <lb />
More than a quarter of a <lb />
ago a farmer in <lb />
now in Almeda county, raised a <lb />
large amount of <lb />
it was god or bad was never <lb />
known, for the reason that it was <lb />
never worked up. There was no <lb />
market for it at that early day. <lb />
as the <lb />
saying is. Somewhat later a great <lb />
undertaking in the way of grow- <lb />
and manufacturing tobacco <lb />
was made at That <lb />
cost its projectors <lb />
and failed. Other efforts in <lb />
the same line, some large, some <lb />
small, have been made, but none <lb />
of them succeeded. <lb />
Why That is what set out <lb />
to ascertain. interviewed one <lb />
of the Brothers, of this <lb />
city, whoso opinions may be i <lb />
like this <lb />
tobacco in California <lb />
Of course we can, if some one will <lb />
go at it in the right way. The, <lb />
trouble has been that those who <lb />
have tried either did not know <lb />
anything about the business, or <lb />
did not prosecute their <lb />
far enough to learn the <lb />
necessary culture required in our <lb />
soils and <lb />
A member of the firm of Horn <lb />
A Co. was also interviewed, and <lb />
said <lb />
that contain much alkali <lb />
will not produce good tobacco. <lb />
Some farmers try to grow tobacco <lb />
on these alkali soils and their <lb />
forts fail. Besides, the farmers <lb />
do not seem to know what soils <lb />
are best, nor what cultivation is <lb />
Mr. H was then sought <lb />
for. He seems to have given the <lb />
subject much attention. In sub- <lb />
stance he <lb />
course we can grow good <lb />
tobacco in California. We do <lb />
grow it here of the very best <lb />
of domestic tobacco. Not <lb />
much of it, but enough to show <lb />
what is possible. I know several <lb />
farmers who try to grow tobacco. <lb />
know only one who succeeds in <lb />
producing any that I will buy. I <lb />
take his crop every year. It is <lb />
not large, but it is of excellent <lb />
quality. We should not try to <lb />
grow smoking or any low-grade <lb />
tobacco. It costs as much to ship <lb />
as the best. It is low priced and <lb />
there is more than enough of this <lb />
grown in Kentucky and other sec- <lb />
of the East. Good leaf suit- <lb />
able for cigar making is worth <lb />
to per pound. The freight on <lb />
it is only lie to the East, so that <lb />
if there is no sale for it here we <lb />
can send it East, where there is a <lb />
ready sale for it. An acre will <lb />
produce about pounds of cur- <lb />
ed leaf, and there is a large profit <lb />
to the grower. But must <lb />
not rush blindly into it. <lb />
received a letter some time <lb />
ago from a farmer in who <lb />
told me he was going to raise <lb />
pounds of tobacco, and asking <lb />
what I would pay for it He <lb />
did not say what seed he would <lb />
sow, what soil he had, nor did he <lb />
give any other specific <lb />
by which I might any <lb />
intelligent reasoning on. I saw <lb />
he knew nothing about the <lb />
and made him no offer. Our <lb />
leaf where it is grown in proper <lb />
soil and with proper attention is <lb />
excellent It will not do to cure <lb />
it in the open air. -The change <lb />
of temperature i too great A <lb />
small town is the proper place to <lb />
cure Francisco Grocer <lb />
and Country <lb />
CIGARETTES IN LONDON <lb />
It is confessed at last that <lb />
smoking is a recognized <lb />
indulgence in many ladies <lb />
of England. The habit has <lb />
become so general that the pres- <lb />
season has witnessed an even <lb />
bolder innovation at several <lb />
dinner parties. <lb />
have been served with <lb />
the cigarettes or <lb />
gars- For several months the <lb />
sales of cigarettes by to- <lb />
has been a recognized <lb />
branch of trade. Although the <lb />
habit has been increasing for <lb />
years, it is less than a year <lb />
since the small, mild, gold-tipped <lb />
little cylinders, openly marked <lb />
and sold as <lb />
have been on the market A so- <lb />
journal which recently ac- <lb />
the Empress of Russia and <lb />
Princess Maud, the daughter of <lb />
Prince of Wales, of being leaders <lb />
in the cultivation of the feminine <lb />
appetite for nicotine has been <lb />
rebuked. Princess Maud has a <lb />
defender this week in the <lb />
tor of a cigar store, who <lb />
may be described as Court <lb />
He declares that Princess <lb />
Maud does not smoke adding <lb />
that he aid be pretty <lb />
sure to know if she did. He says, <lb />
however, that he knows plenty of <lb />
society women who do, including <lb />
at least one Princess. It was an <lb />
exaggeration, he explained, to say <lb />
that it has become the rule of high <lb />
society to serve the ladies with <lb />
cigarettes after dinner- It was <lb />
not yet common for ladies to <lb />
smoke in the company of men, <lb />
but there had been an astonish- <lb />
increase within a few months <lb />
in the consumption of <lb />
Ordinary observation confirms <lb />
this statement. Returning from <lb />
Paris by the club train the other <lb />
day, I noticed that two of a half <lb />
dozen ladies in the dining car <lb />
smoked cigarettes with their <lb />
fee. In the lists of presents at a <lb />
fashionable wedding a silver <lb />
case is an item constantly <lb />
met with as a gift to the bride, as <lb />
well as to the bridegroom. This <lb />
cannot be taken as a proof of the <lb />
smoking, and <lb />
standing the statement of a deal- <lb />
whose information is trust- <lb />
worthy, that several cigarette <lb />
es were given to the Duchess of <lb />
Fife at her York <lb />
THE ORIGIN OF SNUFF. <lb />
What is the origin of snuff is <lb />
buried in the past This much <lb />
however, is pretty certain, and <lb />
that is that it was first used by <lb />
civilized races as a medicine- The <lb />
first mention of snuff in the liter- <lb />
of China is in the Imperial <lb />
Book of Flowers of 1450, and in <lb />
earlier oral traditions it is alluded <lb />
to as neutralizer of foul <lb />
remedy of head diseases, <lb />
and it was then worth per <lb />
ounce. It was in the second <lb />
age of the great and only <lb />
Coin that he discovered <lb />
the natives in Hispaniola, in the <lb />
year 1494, inhaling the tobacco in <lb />
powder into their nostrils through <lb />
cane half a cubit long, which <lb />
purges them very as his <lb />
companion, Roman Payne, quaint- <lb />
remarks in the chronicle. He <lb />
uses the name for the <lb />
plant and it is a pity that this <lb />
name was not retained instead of <lb />
the present one of <lb />
ascribed to the island of <lb />
Tobago, etc., but really most like- <lb />
from the Chinese name for it <lb />
as early as 1580. <lb />
this snuff in use among <lb />
the old Brazilian Indians, and <lb />
even at that earlier period their <lb />
snuff product was of so high a <lb />
grade that modern experts fusing <lb />
as a basis for comparison snuff <lb />
prepared in one of their old mills <lb />
according to the method handed <lb />
down by declare that no <lb />
modern snuff has ever surpassed <lb />
theirs for purity and <lb />
and that very few have <lb />
even it. <lb />
but not tax-paid. <lb />
has demonstrated that in <lb />
cases like this there is easy access <lb />
to said storage room, and <lb />
for the mysterious <lb />
of the tobacco, and event- <lb />
tho bond given proves f no <lb />
value, the sureties claiming the <lb />
disappearance of the tobacco ac- <lb />
and not through any lack <lb />
of vigilance on their part, and <lb />
various other reasons that, even <lb />
if they were sifted, are so <lb />
with doubt as to generally r. <lb />
in Uncle Sam losing the <lb />
and hence the collector of the <lb />
was informed that if the <lb />
would bond the entire <lb />
premises, qualify as <lb />
and receive the same factory <lb />
number, the old account could be <lb />
closed out the supervision <lb />
of a deputy, and the <lb />
ed tobacco transferred to the new <lb />
ownership bond, without be- <lb />
stamped, in no event <lb />
would the dangerous precedent <lb />
be inaugurated of permitting the <lb />
tobacco to go into the same build- <lb />
with another factory in <lb />
at the time, even though the <lb />
room set apart in the factory <lb />
premises was separately number- <lb />
ed and <lb />
IT. Y. Tobacco. <lb />
AN IMPORTANT RULING. <lb />
Application was made by <lb />
parties to receive unstamped <lb />
the manufactured tobacco from <lb />
their predecessors, the same to be <lb />
stored in a separate and <lb />
room, and there remain as <lb />
the of the discontinued <lb />
firm until sold, and as sold, then <lb />
to be tax-paid. The commissioner <lb />
in ruling upon this subject <lb />
ed that it was contrary to public <lb />
policy, and not in accordance <lb />
with customs and usages to have <lb />
two tobacco factories, or two <lb />
places bonded as such in the same <lb />
building with separate numbers <lb />
one in operation as a factory and <lb />
the other simply a storage room <lb />
or another concern for tobacco <lb />
that had already been <lb />
PARADISE. <lb />
In Washington a man may <lb />
place his good old pipe in <lb />
his shapely mouth and walk <lb />
around town smoking according <lb />
to the dictates of his own con- <lb />
science, none daring to make him <lb />
afraid, says the Washington News. <lb />
It is not so in all parts of the <lb />
countries. There are places where <lb />
such conduct would bring him <lb />
police surveillance, and <lb />
cause him to be by so- <lb />
There has long been a deep- <lb />
rooted prejudice against the pipe. <lb />
A man might appear in public <lb />
smoking a cigar that would cause <lb />
horses to swoon three blocks away <lb />
and nobody would say anything, <lb />
but if he smoked a pipe on the <lb />
streets his social doom was seal <lb />
ed. <lb />
Reason however has assumed <lb />
her majestic sway, the <lb />
barriers of superstition and con- <lb />
the armed hosts of <lb />
dice, and as a result the man who <lb />
smokes is happy.<lb />
O. L. JOYNER, Owner Prop. <lb />
May the Sentiment Continue to Grow. <lb />
Webster's. Weekly A <lb />
healthy sentiment is growing <lb />
against people who make debts <lb />
and refuse to pay them. It is <lb />
honest We have heard of a <lb />
church refusing to grant a letter <lb />
to a member on this ground. The <lb />
religious press is agitating the <lb />
subject. It is a theme for the <lb />
pulpit. <lb />
To the above healthy <lb />
the Statesville Landmark <lb />
If all the churches would <lb />
members who refuse to pay hon- <lb />
est debts there would be a thin- <lb />
out of church members but <lb />
a better state of affairs. <lb />
To my friends and customers who have so liberally <lb />
bestowed their patronage on me during the past <lb />
year, I wish to say that I have purchased the entire <lb />
Warehouse interest of Mr. Alex. and I <lb />
earnestly solicit a continuation of your visits with <lb />
heavy loads of the yellow weed and I will <lb />
tee to get you just as much money as can be had <lb />
anywhere on any market. <lb />
With this I am before you. Now give me your <lb />
co-operation and in less than five years Greenville <lb />
will take her stand among the foremost of North <lb />
Carolina Tobacco markets- <lb />
Tours to serve, <lb />
ATTENTION FARMERS <lb />
Do you want a strictly Do you want a Fertilizer that has been <lb />
high grade tested by your neighbor and to be <lb />
superior to all others <lb />
IF SO <lb />
Call on the undersigned and buy any of the following brands which <lb />
are guaranteed strictly reliable- <lb />
ORINOCO <lb />
SPECIAL COMPOUND, <lb />
PURE GERMAN <lb />
sell these goods on terms to suit all purchasers. <lb />
. G. M. TUCKER, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C<lb />
R. W. ROYSTER CO. <lb />
GREEN N. <lb />
I ON <lb />
References and type sample furnished on application.<lb />
O. L. JOYNER, <lb />
GREENVILLE, NO. <lb />
FOUND A RABBIT'S FOOT IN A <lb />
KM. <lb />
Some years ago a big shipment <lb />
of one of Winston's famous plug <lb />
brands went to Laurens, S- C- <lb />
Among the lovers of the brand a <lb />
that point was the sheriff of <lb />
county and one day he found <lb />
in tho center of a plug <lb />
a rabbit's foot. Having heard of <lb />
the good luck which clusters about <lb />
that animal's pedal extremities <lb />
the Sheriff prized the foot very <lb />
much and had it dressed up in <lb />
gold settings and began wearing <lb />
it as a watch-charm. Shortly <lb />
this the election came on and <lb />
all the odds were against the Sher- <lb />
He had faith in his rabbit <lb />
foot, however, and pulled through <lb />
safely. Not only this but ever <lb />
since he began wearing the mys- <lb />
tic charm he has been successful <lb />
in every election and other con- <lb />
tests and says that he would not <lb />
part with the rabbit foot, so mys- <lb />
found in tho plug for <lb />
anything. <lb />
Commenting on the above a to- <lb />
man remarked, incidentally <lb />
that Mr- Stevenson never had his <lb />
confidence in the late election re- <lb />
shaKen after he left Winston <lb />
last Fall with the famous rabbit <lb />
foot in his pocket- He also stated <lb />
that on the night when Corbett <lb />
hipped Sullivan he had conceal- <lb />
ed under his close fitting tights <lb />
the left hind foot of a North Caro- <lb />
rabbit. <lb />
Crop Prospects <lb />
setts. <lb />
in <lb />
Mass., April <lb />
This is to ho a banner year with <lb />
the tobacco growers of Hampshire <lb />
county. All the large growers are <lb />
planting more seed beds, and, if <lb />
the weather is propitious, it is es- <lb />
that nearly pounds <lb />
will be harvested- New barns are <lb />
being built and tons of fer- <lb />
are being shipped- Last <lb />
year pounds were raised. <lb />
, with a plenty of energy WANTED <lb />
THE MICHIGAN <lb />
MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE CO., <lb />
and AMERICAN ACCIDENT CO. To <lb />
whom a good contract will be given. <lb />
For terms, etc., <lb />
W. <lb />
District Agent for Eastern N. C. <lb />
SNOW N. C. <lb />
MERCURIAL <lb />
Fulton, Ark., says of <lb />
ten years I con <lb />
severe case of blood <lb />
poison. Leading physicians prescribed <lb />
medicine after medicine, which I took <lb />
without any relief. I also tried <lb />
rial and potash remedies, with <lb />
RHEUMATISM <lb />
results, but which brought on an <lb />
Attack of mercurial rheumatism that <lb />
made my life one of agony. After <lb />
four years I gave op all remedies <lb />
ind commenced using S. S. S. After <lb />
taking several bottles, I was entirely <lb />
cured and able to resume work. <lb />
neatest medicine <lb />
i poisoning to-day <lb />
tho <lb />
Treatise on Blood and Skin mailed <lb />
tree Co., Atlanta, <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal authorities and are <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where.<lb />
RUSSIAN <lb />
Violin<lb />
tor and Followers But Competitor <lb />
JOHN F SON'S <lb />
gently <lb />
but promptly upon <lb />
stomach and intestines; cure <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive I and head- <lb />
ache. One taken at the j <lb />
first symptom of indigestion, j <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, depression <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly j <lb />
remove the whole <lb />
be j <lb />
of nearest druggist <lb />
are easy to take, <lb />
quick to act, and <lb />
save many a doc- <lb />
tor's bill. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all business in the U. S <lb />
Patent office or in the Courts to <lb />
for Moderate <lb />
We are opposite the IT. S. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
can obtain patents In less time than <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
the model or drawing is sent we <lb />
advise as to free of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
Patent. <lb />
refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to <lb />
of the U. S. Patent Office. For <lb />
advise terms and reference to <lb />
clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Snow Co., <lb />
Washington, C. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
GENUINE to MM<lb />
Russian Strings <lb />
No Dealer or Musician need ho bothered by poor Strings if be <lb />
desires U buy Good <lb />
JOHN F. SON, <lb />
Ask Deafer for them and if you cannot gt report to us. t <lb />
If o Goods Band Sold at Retail <lb />
-Manufacturer of- <lb />
CASTS DRAYS <lb />
MARK <lb />
For Cure of all Skin <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is f <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its efficacy, as but little <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box free. The <lb />
discount to Druggist. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Proprietor. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
WILMINGTON R. B. <lb />
and Schedule <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
No No No <lb />
April. daily Fast Mail, dally <lb />
daily ex Sun <lb />
Weldon 12,30 pm pm Jan <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Rocky Mt p m C pm am <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the best Mechanics, 1.1 put up nothing <lb />
but work. We keep up with toe times and the styles <lb />
Best used in all work. All styles of arc you can select from <lb />
Storm, Coil, Horn, King <lb />
also keep hand a full line of Mai Harness Whip which we <lb />
ell at the lowest rates. Special attention given to repairing. <lb />
Greenville, N C. <lb />
Do You Write <lb />
THEN <lb />
YOU MUST <lb />
HAVE PAPER, PENS. <lb />
ENVELOPES, PENCILS, INK. <lb />
Wilson<lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
dally daily <lb />
Florence <lb />
Fayetteville <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
No <lb />
dally <lb />
ex <lb />
am<lb />
Is Your Life <lb />
Worth Anything <lb />
to others Are there not <lb />
persons dependent on <lb />
your earnings for their <lb />
support Are they pro- <lb />
for in case of your <lb />
death The simplest and <lb />
safest way of assuring <lb />
their protection is life in- <lb />
Business, pro- <lb />
and working <lb />
men generally, should in- <lb />
sure, for their brains or <lb />
their muscles, are their <lb />
capital and income too. <lb />
Death stops them both. <lb />
Insure in the <lb />
Equitable Life <lb />
and death <lb />
salary or steal your <lb />
and your loved ones <lb />
will be safe from want <lb />
Agent tor Um Carolina, <lb />
ROCK HILL, South Carolina. <lb />
Seeding a tonic, or who want <lb />
up. <lb />
It fa com Malaria, <lb />
Urn <lb />
Ai Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro p m <lb />
Dally except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 Halifax 4.00 p. <lb />
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p. in., <lb />
Greenville 6.28 p. m., Kinston 7.03 p. m. <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m., <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Halifax <lb />
at a. Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington 7.00 a. m., arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 0.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele 6.00 <lb />
p. m,, arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, P M, Sunday P M, arrive <lb />
Plymouth 0.20 p. m., 5.20 p. m. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb />
5.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 a. m- <lb />
Tarboro, N C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson <lb />
and Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette- <lb />
ville a m, arrive Rowland p m. <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p in. <lb />
arrive Fayetteville p m. Dally ex- <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
rive N C, A M. Re <lb />
retuning H C AM <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville W <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave <lb />
Latta 7.80 p. m., arrive 8.40 p. <lb />
m. Returning leave Dunbar a. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m. y <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at <lb />
and <lb />
ton at A M, P. X. <lb />
at Warsaw with Nob. and <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Weldon for all points North dally. All <lb />
rail via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Kooky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
P DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J, B. Transportation <lb />
T agent. <lb />
------SEE WHAT THE------- <lb />
Reflector v Book S <lb />
TORE <lb />
CAN YOU IN <lb />
Legal Cap Paper to cents a <lb />
Pool's Cap Per to cents a quire. <lb />
Letter Paper cents a quire. <lb />
Note Paper i to cents a quire. <lb />
Envelopes to a pack. <lb />
Box Paper from cents up. <lb />
Gilt Edge, to cents a quire. <lb />
Linen Paper, ruled and plain, to cents a quire. <lb />
Nico Square Envelopes to the Paper. <lb />
Fine Tablets at all prices. <lb />
THESE ARE NO THIN, CHEAP <lb />
PAPERS THAT WILL NOT HOLD <lb />
INK FIRST-CLASS <lb />
Tablets, Slates, <lb />
Mi <lb />
lib. <lb />
JUST <lb />
SEE WHAT <lb />
WE HAVE FOR <lb />
THE SCHOOL CHILDREN. <lb />
Pencil and <lb />
Fools Cap sizes only <lb />
You pay cents for these <lb />
same tablets elsewhere- <lb />
Slates cents to <lb />
Slate Pencils per doz. <lb />
Fancy Colored Crayons <lb />
per box- <lb />
Spencerian Pens cents per <lb />
dozen- <lb />
Fine Assorted Pens cents <lb />
per dozen. <lb />
Plain Load cents <lb />
per <lb />
Rubber Tipped Load Pencils <lb />
cents per dozen. <lb />
Pen Holders cents per doz. <lb />
And lots of other things just <lb />
as cheap. <lb />
hit <lb />
Do You Read <lb />
Then yon want the best handle the leading <lb />
Harper, Frank Leslie, Review of Reviews, <lb />
New Peterson, etc., at usual retail prices. Besides we carry a line of <lb />
popular paper covered Novels at only cents each, and nicely bound <lb />
Novels at cents. These embrace books by the best writers, <lb />
a list too large to mention. Any book wanted that is not on hand <lb />
be ordered. <lb />
SUBSCRIPTIONS TAKEN TO ALL TUB LEADING PAPERS MAGAZINES<lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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