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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 21 March 1894</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>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18940321</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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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>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 21 March 1894</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18940321</dc:date>
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                <p>
DO <lb />
NO <lb />
That the place to <lb />
Buy your <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
-AND- <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
IS <lb />
AT <lb />
Reflector Bookstore. <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Things Mention in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of Interest. <lb />
The Cream of the News <lb />
Tho North Carolina <lb />
was recruited last month <lb />
with fifty-nine <lb />
Dr. E. A. Anderson, one of the <lb />
foremost physicians of <lb />
ton died Sunday afternoon in the <lb />
year of his <lb />
In county Ira H. Lee <lb />
set fire to a pine tree on his farm. <lb />
H was working under it, when <lb />
tho top burned off and fell, kill- <lb />
him instantly. <lb />
What is known as the <lb />
Dare made of woods from <lb />
historic Island, has been <lb />
in the State Library by <lb />
Mrs. R. R. Cotten. <lb />
Rodney Gillis, a deputy sheriff <lb />
in Cumberland was shot <lb />
in the head and dangerously <lb />
wounded by Jim Ray, a he <lb />
was attempting to arrest- <lb />
county women are <lb />
unsurpassed for enterprise. One <lb />
of them fell in love with an hon- <lb />
est, but not citizen, recent- <lb />
and she not only furnished <lb />
the license, but bought the groom <lb />
a good suit of clothes to get mar- <lb />
in. <lb />
Free Press Police- <lb />
man Ballard's house was robbed <lb />
of Thursday in broad <lb />
daylight. The money was in a <lb />
bureau drawer, which the thief <lb />
broke open. A trunk was ran- <lb />
sacked but nothing except the <lb />
money was missed. <lb />
Governor Carr has notice from <lb />
Governor that the latter <lb />
has signed a bill authorizing the <lb />
payment to North Carolina of <lb />
being with six <lb />
interest, expenses incurred in re- <lb />
surveying the boundary-line be- <lb />
tween North Carolina and <lb />
Louisburg Times. On Mon- <lb />
day night Mr. Wesley Burnett <lb />
lost his n gin, grist mill and <lb />
saw mill by fire, together with <lb />
barrels of corn. barrels of meal, <lb />
bushels seed, bales <lb />
cotton, Ac. It is all a total <lb />
loss, as was no insurance. <lb />
As there had been no fire in any <lb />
of the buildings or engine <lb />
day it is thought to be the work <lb />
f an incendiary. <lb />
Saturday James Clements, <lb />
a young white man of Durham, <lb />
went home drunk and whipped <lb />
his wife, for which he was arrest- <lb />
ed and put in jail. He was sub- <lb />
to epileptic fits and was <lb />
placed in a where assistance <lb />
be rendered in case he had <lb />
an attack of the malady. While <lb />
eating his breakfast Sunday morn- <lb />
Clements had a fit and died <lb />
before a doctor could be sum- <lb />
Durham A peculiar <lb />
case came up before the county <lb />
on yesterday. A <lb />
man asked for a rebate on taxes <lb />
on account of being drunk when <lb />
he listed his property. He gave <lb />
in some in cash and three <lb />
horses, whereas, he says, in truth <lb />
he never owned a horse, and has <lb />
not five dollars in the world- <lb />
And the magnificent plantation <lb />
was found only in corn juice. <lb />
The rebate was granted. <lb />
The commencement exercises <lb />
at Greensboro Female College <lb />
will be held June sixth and <lb />
Bishop Hargrove, of Nash- <lb />
ville, Tennessee, will preach the <lb />
baccalaureate sermon- Bishop <lb />
O- P. Fitzgerald, an old North <lb />
but now of California, <lb />
will deliver an address to the <lb />
alumnae association- Hon. <lb />
J- J-i vis will deliver tho literary <lb />
address before the graduating <lb />
which is twenty in number- <lb />
Wilmington In <lb />
Justice R. H- Banting's court yes. <lb />
Charles and Ar- <lb />
White, colored, were given a <lb />
hearing upon the charge of steal- <lb />
two watches from the show <lb />
case i i the store of L- P- Dozier <lb />
Co-, about a month ago- There <lb />
was sufficient cause to hold them <lb />
for trial at the term of the <lb />
court, which convenes next <lb />
Bail in the sum of <lb />
each was required- who <lb />
is about years of age, failed to <lb />
give bond and was sent to jail. <lb />
The mother of White, who is <lb />
about years of age, went on his <lb />
bond. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1894. <lb />
NO. <lb />
joints <lb />
Is tho to I <lb />
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb />
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and <lb />
your Homo a year. <lb />
tr This for Job Printing <lb />
THE <lb />
BILL. <lb />
The Herald has received a copy <lb />
of the appropriation <lb />
bill and the report thereon, made <lb />
by Hon. Jno. S- Henderson, <lb />
chairman of the committee. The <lb />
report is a long and elaborate <lb />
one, making a pamphlet of <lb />
pages, and explains fully all the <lb />
objects for which appropriations <lb />
are asked and made. The total <lb />
amount appropriated by the bill <lb />
is including <lb />
614-22 for the fast mail between <lb />
the great centers the North and <lb />
New Orleans, which is <lb />
less than the estimates made by <lb />
the department, and <lb />
more than the <lb />
for the fiscal <lb />
year. The estimated postal re- <lb />
for the fiscal year 1895, in <lb />
the opinion of the Postmaster- <lb />
General, will be or <lb />
less than <lb />
by the committee. <lb />
There are many in the <lb />
report that are interesting and <lb />
the honest and faithful work of <lb />
Mr- Henderson is shown by the <lb />
manner in which the statistics are <lb />
gathered and summed up. The <lb />
following statistics ought to be of <lb />
interest to readers of the Herald. <lb />
From the report of the Fourth <lb />
Assistant Postmaster General it <lb />
be found that during the <lb />
year there were established <lb />
post officers, a decrease of 1,484; <lb />
discontinued, 1,337, and increase <lb />
of number of Presidential <lb />
post-offices, an increase of <lb />
; number of offices, <lb />
65.043, an increase of ; <lb />
of names and sites changed, <lb />
1,563- The greatest increase in <lb />
the number of post-offices in any <lb />
of the States for the year was <lb />
in Texas; Georgia and in <lb />
North Carolina The largest <lb />
decrease was in <lb />
The total number of post-offices <lb />
in the United States on J <lb />
was an increase of <lb />
over the preceding year. <lb />
It is an interesting fact t o re- <lb />
cord that out of the post- <lb />
offices in the United States, the <lb />
enumerated in the table <lb />
show aggregate receipts of 30.2 <lb />
per cent, or nearly one-third of <lb />
the total revenue of the Depart- <lb />
for the past fiscal year. The <lb />
aggregate increase of receipts <lb />
was or an average of <lb />
or 7.4 per cent per office, <lb />
these offices being fair <lb />
of the increase and growth <lb />
of the postal service for the past <lb />
fiscal <lb />
These offices are New York, <lb />
Chicago, Philadelphia, Boston. <lb />
St. Louis, Cincinnati, Brooklyn, <lb />
San Francisco, Baltimore, Pitts- <lb />
burg. The total received <lb />
at them is <lb />
During the year persons <lb />
were arrested for violation of the <lb />
postal laws, and of these persons <lb />
arrested were postal <lb />
postmasters, assistant post- <lb />
masters, clerks in <lb />
railway mail clerks, letter <lb />
carriers, mail carriers, and <lb />
other in other grades. <lb />
When it is remembered that <lb />
there are about persons <lb />
employed in the postal service, <lb />
the percentage is very small; es- <lb />
does this the <lb />
of postmasters, inasmuch as <lb />
out of the postmasters but <lb />
were arrested. <lb />
The total number of post offices <lb />
burglarized during the last fiscal <lb />
year was as against <lb />
during the previous year. There <lb />
were burglars arrested, an <lb />
increase of <lb />
Of the cases determined re- <lb />
in conviction and only <lb />
in acquittal of the defendants ; <lb />
accused persons were discharged <lb />
on preliminary hearing; proceed- <lb />
were dismissed or <lb />
abandoned in cases, and <lb />
in grand juries refused or fail- <lb />
ed to indict. Seven of <lb />
rested escaped from custody, <lb />
forfeited their bail, and died <lb />
while awaiting trial. In the State <lb />
courts cases wore determined, <lb />
and all resulted in conviction, <lb />
leaving but awaiting final <lb />
The most numerous class of of <lb />
fenders is the burglar. This it <lb />
will be understood only includes <lb />
persons accused of breaking into <lb />
post offices, or the buildings in <lb />
which are kept. <lb />
It is a fact to which attention <lb />
has been called in previous re- <lb />
ports, that this crime is a growing <lb />
one, and it is demonstrated this <lb />
year by the number of office re- <lb />
ported burglarized and the <lb />
of burglars arrested- While <lb />
the entire number of arrests fell <lb />
off from the total number <lb />
made last year, the number of <lb />
burglars arrested increased <lb />
A minority report is filed by <lb />
Messrs Kyle, of and <lb />
of California, who disagree <lb />
with the other members of the <lb />
committee in the <lb />
for the fast mail <lb />
In everything except this <lb />
the report is a unanimous one. <lb />
ACTIVE AT <lb />
DON'T MISS THIS. <lb />
Come, Democrats and <lb />
cans all, and learn something <lb />
good for your <lb />
business and your politics- Bead <lb />
this and keep it around where you <lb />
can lead it often <lb />
Last week's gold exportation <lb />
brings the net exports of the <lb />
metal thus far this year up to <lb />
The chances are though <lb />
that the outgo will be far smaller <lb />
this year than it was in 1893- The <lb />
trade balance is heavily in our <lb />
favor and Europe is not dropping <lb />
many of our securities. <lb />
Tho statement, which we under- <lb />
stand to be a calm colorless utter- <lb />
of a fact and an opinion ; <lb />
in the columns <lb />
of the Globe-Democrat yesterday. <lb />
Take notice that a year ago the <lb />
Republican party's place in the <lb />
White House and in the Senate <lb />
was yet warm and that no Demo- <lb />
legislation was to be found <lb />
in the books of the preceding <lb />
years. <lb />
Europe is not dropping <lb />
can securities, because Europe <lb />
has faith in our public and <lb />
credit. A year ago Europe <lb />
was dropping them like hot <lb />
toes and was getting gold for <lb />
them as fast as possible. <lb />
A year of Democratic ascend- <lb />
ency finds men hopeful- It finds <lb />
Europe buying our securities. <lb />
The drain of gold has stopped. <lb />
The Republican panic is over and <lb />
the footing of business is solid. <lb />
The contrast of what <lb />
left to the country with <lb />
what Democracy has to show is a <lb />
campaign argument which ranks <lb />
with the contrast of what <lb />
Cleveland loft in with the <lb />
showing of a Republican term. <lb />
He left a full Treasury, <lb />
credit and general <lb />
prosperity. In three more years <lb />
the Democracy will get the count- <lb />
back to where it was when the <lb />
Republicans of tho Harrison, <lb />
Reed and brand got <lb />
Louis Republic. <lb />
Duke of Medical Practice. <lb />
Louis Ferdinand, duke of Ba- <lb />
recently published an <lb />
article in tho German Arch- <lb />
of Clinical Medicine on Con- <lb />
to the Etiology and <lb />
of He bases his de- <lb />
on the result of his treat- <lb />
of twenty-three eases. The <lb />
of the prince has been highly <lb />
praised. He is now thirty-four <lb />
years old, and is a son of Prince Al- <lb />
who died in 1875, and a nephew <lb />
of the prince regent of Bavaria. He <lb />
follows his profession with the same <lb />
assiduity and love as his cousin. <lb />
Duke Charles Theodore, the famous <lb />
oculist. He never charges poor <lb />
for advice or treatment, but <lb />
lows the rich to pay him as much as <lb />
they wish, devoting the proceeds of <lb />
his practice to tho maintenance and <lb />
improvement of a large hospital <lb />
ho built several <lb />
A Million Friends. <lb />
A friend in need is a friend indeed, <lb />
and not less than one million people <lb />
have found just such a friend in Dr. <lb />
King's New Discovery for Consumption, <lb />
Coughs, and you have never <lb />
used this Great Cough Medicine, one <lb />
trial will convince yon that it won- <lb />
powers in all diseases of <lb />
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each bottle <lb />
is guaranteed to do all that Is claimed or <lb />
money will be refunded. Trial bottles <lb />
free at Store. Large <lb />
bottles <lb />
Not Conclusive Evidence. <lb />
young proposed <lb />
asked a Harlem mother of one <lb />
of her numerous unmarried <lb />
yet; but I think he is going <lb />
to pretty soon. There are some <lb />
pretty strong indications. So <lb />
got orange blossoms on his <lb />
like to know why you think <lb />
ho has orange blossoms bis <lb />
we were at soda-water <lb />
Fountain yesterday evening ho took <lb />
range <lb />
Electric <lb />
Th's remedy is becoming so well <lb />
and so popular as to need no <lb />
special mention. All who have used <lb />
Electric Bittern sing the same song of <lb />
purer medicine does not exist <lb />
and it is guaranteed to do all that is <lb />
claimed. Bitters will cure all <lb />
of the Liver and Kidney, will <lb />
remove Boils. Salt Rheum and <lb />
other affections caused by Impure blood <lb />
Will drive Malaria from the system <lb />
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial <lb />
cure of Headache, I- <lb />
and Electric, <lb />
satisfaction guaranteed, <lb />
r money eta. and <lb />
per bottle at Drug store. <lb />
Richard Hoops, of Missouri, the Old- <lb />
est Man of the Country. <lb />
One of the oldest, if not the very <lb />
oldest, men in America lives in a <lb />
little shanty on the of the <lb />
Osage river at Osage City, Mo., ac- <lb />
cording to the Cincinnati <lb />
Gazette. Ho is a and his <lb />
name is Richard Hoops. <lb />
According to the statements of. <lb />
Hoops, which are well supported by <lb />
accessible records, ho was born in <lb />
Chatham county, N. C, December <lb />
1770, and thus has completed his <lb />
year. <lb />
Born a slave, he was taken to <lb />
Missouri by his owner, John P. <lb />
Hayden, while a mere boy. A few <lb />
years later he was sold to tho man <lb />
whose name he now bears, and lived <lb />
with him near Vienna, <lb />
until the emancipation of the <lb />
slaves. Since that time he has lived <lb />
at Westphalia, but for the last <lb />
years has made his homo at <lb />
Osage City. <lb />
Hoops is remarkably well <lb />
served, and lives in his shanty. <lb />
He fishes a great deal for the big <lb />
catfish that frequent tho waters of <lb />
the Osage, and Is never happier than <lb />
when he can catch a big one and <lb />
makes soup of its head. <lb />
He is still able to do some work, <lb />
and it was only a few years since <lb />
he contracted with a farmer in <lb />
the vicinity of his home to remove <lb />
the stumps and roots off a newly- <lb />
cleared tract of land. He fulfilled <lb />
his contract, tho work him- <lb />
self. <lb />
His mind is still clear on many of <lb />
the events that happened toward <lb />
the close of the last century, and he <lb />
recalls with great that ho once <lb />
hold the horse of Gen. Greene, of <lb />
revolutionary fame. <lb />
In appearance Hoops resembles a <lb />
mummy; his skin looks like parch- <lb />
and he is toothless and hair- <lb />
less, but his stop is remarkably firm, <lb />
and his eyes bright and clear. <lb />
Ho has the record of his birth, <lb />
and there is but little doubt that he <lb />
is the oldest person in the country. <lb />
TRICKS OF THE TRADE. <lb />
The Scheme Will Not Work Equally <lb />
Well in All Cases. <lb />
best story I ever said <lb />
John Thomas to the St. Louis Globe- <lb />
Democrat's corridor man, <lb />
vouched for by Capt. Rivers, of the <lb />
Forth Worth Denver railroad. A <lb />
Russian Hebrew came to this <lb />
try and established a dry goods and <lb />
notion business. He was so success- <lb />
that he sent for his younger <lb />
brother and started to educate him <lb />
in tho business. The boy was slower <lb />
to learn tho ways of the world than <lb />
his brother had been, and tho latter <lb />
sometimes grew impatient. day <lb />
he <lb />
do. a <lb />
lady asked to see some silk, <lb />
which was shown, a piece at two <lb />
a yard. <lb />
I saw some like it a few days <lb />
ago for one. dollar and fifty <lb />
she said. <lb />
doubt id, madam; but <lb />
dot sonic days ago. I selling <lb />
dose goods at dot until <lb />
day, we got dot ail the silk <lb />
in China dead, dot <lb />
goods cost us more as two <lb />
lady was satisfied and <lb />
chased the silk. <lb />
you see how dot done. <lb />
a lady now; you on <lb />
he said to his brother. <lb />
lady entered and asked for <lb />
tape. Tho young man was all <lb />
and the desired article was <lb />
speedily produced. <lb />
tho lady asked. <lb />
cents a <lb />
I saw some for eight <lb />
T doubt it, madam; but <lb />
dot some days ago. to- <lb />
day heard dot all de <lb />
dead, and would no more <lb />
tape less as twenty coots a <lb />
HOUSEHOLD BEAUTY. <lb />
Some of the Things for Use and <lb />
In the Home. <lb />
The exclusive set of the town are <lb />
becoming accustomed to the <lb />
of having their respective coats <lb />
of arms engraved not only on their <lb />
household silverware, but upon <lb />
match boxes, knives, etc. <lb />
Most beautiful silver bowls for <lb />
cracked ice or flowers are shown this <lb />
season. They have waving shell-like <lb />
rings, with highly wrought broken <lb />
edges. <lb />
The now does duty as the <lb />
of a fish knife. The eyes, <lb />
scales, etc., are engraved. <lb />
Bedroom curtains of cornflower <lb />
blue made with a hemstitched <lb />
border embroidered in a spreading <lb />
design with a coarse white linen <lb />
floss, and there bedspread, <lb />
toilet stand, cover and pillow shams <lb />
to match. <lb />
A neat laundry bag can be mode <lb />
of white Java canvas worked in block <lb />
pattern with red embroidery cotton. <lb />
A pretty lamp shade is made of <lb />
rainbow shading from <lb />
primrose to blush rose. Summer <lb />
house lamp shades arc made of fancy <lb />
straw adorned with miniature flower <lb />
baskets hanging from the edges. <lb />
Pink or straw-colored silk veiled <lb />
with black French lace is always <lb />
as a lamp covering, and for <lb />
an oriental room the Japanese pa- <lb />
shape is suitable. Shades <lb />
with loops of narrow ribbon <lb />
ranged as a succession of fringes are <lb />
used, made of solid or variegated <lb />
Louis <lb />
DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM. <lb />
Adopted by the State <lb />
May 18th, <lb />
Resolved That tho <lb />
racy of North Carolina reaffirm <lb />
tho principles of the Democratic <lb />
party, both State and National, <lb />
and particularly favor the free <lb />
coinage of silver and an increase <lb />
of the and the of <lb />
tho internal revenue system. And <lb />
we denounce the tariff <lb />
bill as unjust to the consumers <lb />
of the country, and leading to <lb />
tho formation of trusts, combines <lb />
and monopolies which have op <lb />
pressed the people; and especially <lb />
denounce the unnecessary <lb />
and burdensome increase in the <lb />
tax on cotton ties and on tin, so <lb />
largely used by the poorer <lb />
of the people. We likewise <lb />
denounce the iniquitous Force <lb />
bill, which is not yet abandoned <lb />
by tho Republican party, but is <lb />
being used as a measure to be <lb />
adopted as soon as they gain <lb />
control of the House of <lb />
the purpose and effect <lb />
of which measure will be to es <lb />
a second period of <lb />
in the Southern States, <lb />
to subvert the liberties of our <lb />
people and inflame a new race <lb />
antagonism and sectional <lb />
That demand financial <lb />
reform, and the of laws <lb />
that will remove the burdens of <lb />
the people relative to the existing <lb />
agricultural depression, and do <lb />
full and ample justice to tho far- <lb />
and laborers of our country. <lb />
3- That we demand tho <lb />
of national banks, and the <lb />
substituting of legal <lb />
Treasury notes in lieu of national <lb />
bank notes, issued in sufficient <lb />
volume to do the of the <lb />
country on a cash system, <lb />
the amount needed on a per <lb />
capita basis as the business in- <lb />
of the country expand, <lb />
and that all money issued by the <lb />
shall be legal tender <lb />
in payment of debts, both public <lb />
and private. <lb />
4- That we that Con- <lb />
shall past such laws as <lb />
shall effectually prevent tho deal- <lb />
in futures of all agricultural <lb />
and mechanical productions, pro- <lb />
such system of <lb />
procedure in trials as shall secure <lb />
prompt conviction and imposing <lb />
such penalties as shall secure <lb />
most perfect compliance with tho <lb />
law. <lb />
That we demand the free <lb />
and unlimited coinage of silver. <lb />
That we demand the passage <lb />
of laws prohibiting tho alien ow- <lb />
of land, and that Congress <lb />
take early steps to devise some <lb />
plan to obtain all lands now own- <lb />
ed by and foreign <lb />
; and that all lands now <lb />
held by railroads and <lb />
in excess of such as is <lb />
actually needed by them, re- <lb />
claimed by the government and <lb />
held for actual settlers only. <lb />
7- Believing in the doctrine of <lb />
rights to all and special <lb />
privileges to we demand <lb />
that taxation, National or State, <lb />
shall not used to build up one <lb />
interest or class at the expense of <lb />
another. We believe that the <lb />
money of the country should be <lb />
kept as much as possible in the <lb />
hands of the people, and hence <lb />
we demand that all revenues, <lb />
National, State or shall <lb />
be limited to the necessary ex- <lb />
of the government, <lb />
and honestly <lb />
That Congress issue a <lb />
amount of fractional pa- <lb />
per currency to facilitate the ex- <lb />
change through the medium of <lb />
the United States mail. <lb />
That the Assembly <lb />
pass such laws as will make the <lb />
public school system more <lb />
that the blessing of education <lb />
may be extended to all <lb />
of the State alike. <lb />
10- That favor a graduated <lb />
tax on incomes. <lb />
Beware of Ointment for Catarrh that <lb />
Mercury. <lb />
as mercury will surely destroy tho sense <lb />
smell and completely derange the <lb />
whole system when entering It through <lb />
the mucous surfaces. Such articles <lb />
should never be used except n pres- <lb />
from physicians, as <lb />
the will do is ten fold to <lb />
the good you can possibly derive from <lb />
them. Catarrh Cure <lb />
d by F. J. A Co., To- <lb />
contains no and is <lb />
internally, acting directly upon the <lb />
id mucous surfaces of the <lb />
In buying Hall's Catarrh <lb />
be sure you git tho gen line. <lb />
It la taken internally, and made in To- <lb />
Ohio, by F. J. Co. <lb />
free. Sold by <lb />
price per bottle. <lb />
PEN PICTURE THE DISMAL <lb />
SWAMP. <lb />
f the <lb />
D. C, Mar. <lb />
The President's hunting <lb />
expedition along the Coast of <lb />
North Carolina has awakened new <lb />
interest in that region, tho most <lb />
notable feature of which is tho <lb />
great Dismal Swamp. This vast <lb />
morass is called a paradise for <lb />
In tho Library of Con <lb />
is a copy of a unique report <lb />
of a partial survey mad of this <lb />
swamp 1825 by Col. William <lb />
Byrd of Virginia. <lb />
Tho original of this report was <lb />
sent to with n <lb />
signed by a number of Virginia <lb />
planters, asking the King to give <lb />
them permission to drain tho <lb />
Swamp and to give thorn the <lb />
reclaimed laud which was to <lb />
free of taxes for Ion years. Col. <lb />
Byrd gives a terrible description <lb />
of the place to the King. He <lb />
that all sorts of wild beasts <lb />
roamed at will through it and <lb />
that members of his exploring <lb />
party often sank to waists <lb />
necks the boggy soil. He <lb />
said unwholesome <lb />
made it necessary to take along <lb />
of that in <lb />
life, which did. Ho <lb />
that when ho got to the <lb />
No-th Carolina lino he found the <lb />
lot of ho ever <lb />
made wives got <lb />
up the for them <lb />
every morning and snored <lb />
tho bod until tho sun was <lb />
third of his way across tho <lb />
eta., all of which <lb />
prompts mo to write that hope <lb />
ho had too much of his <lb />
aboard. Later the <lb />
eminent geologist, Sir Charles <lb />
of England over and <lb />
a very different account. <lb />
Ho measured tho swamp. He <lb />
found it to be forty by twenty-five <lb />
miles extent. He visited <lb />
which ho was <lb />
seven by five miles extent and <lb />
one of the most beautiful lakes <lb />
ho had ever soon. He <lb />
tho tall forests of and <lb />
with their fairy like <lb />
draperies of silver moss, <lb />
most charmingly. Lord <lb />
also found out the most <lb />
thing about tho Great Dismal <lb />
Swamp, it is twelve foot <lb />
higher than tho firm outlying <lb />
country. Tho altitude is most <lb />
at tho There many <lb />
romantic Indian legends <lb />
with this swamp. <lb />
When tho poet Thomas Moore <lb />
was in this country ho visited <lb />
this mysterious and unit if <lb />
heard tho story of tho <lb />
Indian girl and her crazy lover <lb />
and wrote tho popular poem <lb />
which embodies the legend. <lb />
Many people who live near be- <lb />
is a <lb />
for tho ghosts which are <lb />
supposed to tho swamp. <lb />
This superstition atone from the <lb />
number of fatal which are <lb />
really seen every night almost <lb />
every part of tho Dismal Swamp. <lb />
Tho especially afraid <lb />
of this extensive bog, and partly <lb />
for this reason, the place abounds <lb />
with coons, rabbits, <lb />
squirrels, birds, all sorts of small <lb />
game, with an occasional deer or <lb />
bear. It is useless to toll them <lb />
the flitting mysterious lights they <lb />
see at night burning gases <lb />
which rise from the <lb />
marshes. They would <lb />
it. I have tried to them <lb />
of this and the result was a pity- <lb />
reproof for my <lb />
They have all heard tho story of <lb />
the Indian hunter and his lady <lb />
who supposed to cross <lb />
Lake at midnight in <lb />
a and the myriads <lb />
of the Will o-tho- Wisps who es- <lb />
them. The <lb />
claim to at midnight on <lb />
tho bosom of the dark lake, was <lb />
perhaps a flock of white swans, <lb />
birds, which with wild ducks and <lb />
turkeys marsh lions found <lb />
in this locality. <lb />
I recall a picture of the Dismal <lb />
Swamp I enjoyed. It was <lb />
in August, and I riding <lb />
through part of it skirting <lb />
A glowing <lb />
was fading into a hot moonless <lb />
twilight; no stirred the <lb />
gossamer tendrils of tho graceful <lb />
moss or dark glistening leaves of <lb />
tho cypress trees. The black <lb />
water was as silent and motionless <lb />
as if a spoil rested <lb />
where the crested ripples should <lb />
have Its surface reflected <lb />
a few stars which shone out of <lb />
the liquid with as sinister <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
and a gleam as if every <lb />
one was a baneful and ill omened <lb />
Algol. Tho air was heavy with <lb />
tho odors of the yellow <lb />
the mimosa, tho magnolia and <lb />
the aroma of shrubs <lb />
which grow in profusion in tho <lb />
dark rich soil. It seemed Ilka a <lb />
vast cathedral which restless <lb />
spirits Of might worship. <lb />
The from swung <lb />
by bore a perfume <lb />
too heavy for the nostrils of <lb />
healthy mortals. As tho sun- <lb />
light faded, tho red glow in the <lb />
west did not suggest the <lb />
religious that loves to <lb />
associate with stately churches <lb />
whose stained memorial windows <lb />
temper soften the of <lb />
garish or mellow refine <lb />
the ardent of tho <lb />
sun. Tho twilight deepened. <lb />
Through tho aisles of tho forest <lb />
tho massive trunks of the <lb />
and juniper trees looked like <lb />
columns of dun marble <lb />
arched with dome of dark <lb />
foliage, frescoed with a <lb />
tracery of moss through <lb />
which not a star or fleck of blue <lb />
sky shone. these dusky <lb />
aisles balls of lire would flash <lb />
and fade as if tho Will o the-Wisp <lb />
had employed a baud of impish <lb />
acolytes to light hundreds of <lb />
tapers on <lb />
able altars. Decaying trees <lb />
covered with a gloaming <lb />
either stood like goblin <lb />
priests or spirits of white robed <lb />
nuns celebrating a <lb />
per service this minster <lb />
of exquisite workmanship. Tho <lb />
with its starry reflections <lb />
was floor of black <lb />
marble i grained the <lb />
tracery of the silver <lb />
moss over a Canopy of dark <lb />
green loaves. No sound <lb />
from tho reedy marshes, no <lb />
per from the motionless trees, no <lb />
song from tho drowsy birds, no <lb />
ripple from the water. <lb />
Silence was supreme for <lb />
until tho oar caught a far off <lb />
like the note of bass pod <lb />
ill of a mighty organ at a great <lb />
distance, and recognized tho roar <lb />
of tho ocean's surf breaking on <lb />
the first of a chain of rocky roofs <lb />
which culminates in the thunders <lb />
and terrors of storm tossed and <lb />
wreck-strewn It was <lb />
fitting music for this unique <lb />
of nature. Tho softer <lb />
son of singing birds and whisper- <lb />
leaves, of noisy and <lb />
rustling would have boon <lb />
out of in this vast shadow <lb />
ed where some <lb />
Circe or King of tho <lb />
have assembled fol- <lb />
lowers <lb />
tor orgies. Or. whore tho spirits <lb />
of tho dead who <lb />
have boon wrecked off tho <lb />
coast since earth's <lb />
throes birth to the hidden <lb />
sand and monster <lb />
might hold a nightly carnival. <lb />
I suddenly realized that I did <lb />
not the so much <lb />
for their superstition. I gave my <lb />
horse tho because ho <lb />
to be as willing as I was at that <lb />
hour of the evening to run away <lb />
from tho of tho Dismal <lb />
Swamp. <lb />
Mrs Di m I n Wilcox, of Dupont <lb />
Circle, la of <lb />
d at Jackson, nays tho Washington <lb />
Post. Her father was <lb />
son, v ho b nephew of Mrs. Jack- <lb />
son. She was so of an invalid <lb />
that being unable undertake the <lb />
arduous social duties, she invited <lb />
her nephew's beautiful wife to assist <lb />
her. And It was at the while house <lb />
that Mrs, Wilcox born, in the <lb />
same room which was the scene of <lb />
Mrs. Harrison's death. She was <lb />
Jackson's and delight. <lb />
II-i husband was Congressman Jobs <lb />
A. Wilcox, -if Mississippi, and since <lb />
his she has Occupied a position <lb />
in the treasury department Her <lb />
daughter, Miss Mary Wilcox, is very <lb />
accomplished, and is popular in <lb />
society. <lb />
The Bout Salve in Hie world for Cuts, <lb />
Bruises, Clear, salt <lb />
Bores, Chapped Hand . <lb />
I Comes. all up <lb />
and or no <lb />
I pay required. It Is guaranteed to give <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
I price per box. Sale by <lb />
MENSTRUATION <lb />
n woman of vigorous health passes <lb />
in due lime without pain or <lb />
hut when she approaches this <lb />
crisis MONTHLY with a <lb />
J n and health she <lb />
her physical and mental powers. <lb />
-9 FEMALES <lb />
REGULATOR <lb />
If taken a few before tho monthly <lb />
sickness in and continued <lb />
nature performs no <lb />
a SPECIFIC for Pro- <lb />
Scanty, and Irregular <lb />
MENSTRUATION <lb />
to WOMAN malted free. <lb />
REGULATOR CO. Ca. <lb />
all <lb />
.-.--,. <lb />
Cough and are R- <lb />
which nature provided t <lb />
warn tin- unfortunate victim that the <lb />
affection la now to the <lb />
client reach the <lb />
lung-i. To avoid such a calamity take <lb />
Ball's Cough syrup when first <lb />
catch raid. <lb />
Manifold <lb />
Disorders <lb />
occasioned by an impure and <lb />
condition of the blood. Might <lb />
impurities, if not corrected, develop into <lb />
serious maladies, such as <lb />
SCROFULA, <lb />
ECZEMA, <lb />
RHEUMATISM <lb />
i other troublesome diseases. To cure <lb />
is required a sate and <lb />
from any harmful ingredients. <lb />
an I purely Such <lb />
It u all <lb />
f blood and thorough- <lb />
the system. Thousands . <lb />
cases of the worst forms of blood dis- <lb />
eases hare been <lb />
Cured by <lb />
for our <lb />
SPECIFIC CO., Atlanta, <lb />
for Greenville C <lb />
Salem on first Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and at three <lb />
Shady on Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock and School <lb />
louse o'clock. <lb />
on third Sunday at eleven <lb />
o'clock and Chapel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
Bethlehem no the fourth Sunday t <lb />
eleven o'clock, and School <lb />
at o'clock. <lb />
Everybody invited to attend. <lb />
P. smith, . , . <lb />
I. C. l M <lb />
Baptist Services. <lb />
Below are the appointment <lb />
Of II. of the <lb />
Baptist church <lb />
At end <lb />
in each month, <lb />
and every I <lb />
At Sunday In each <lb />
month, morning and night <lb />
At <lb />
Sunday each month and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal Services. <lb />
Below are the regular appointment <lb />
of A. <lb />
and third In <lb />
each month, and evening, <lb />
Greenville Fourth Sunday In each <lb />
month, morning and evening. <lb />
all other Sunday <lb />
Sr. Johns, Sun- <lb />
day in each evening <lb />
Holy Innocent-, <lb />
fifth Sunday morning. <lb />
II. <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
if. C. <lb />
r I,. FLEMING, <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT LAW <lb />
N. <lb />
Prompt attention to Office <lb />
St Tucker old stand. <lb />
SIKH, <lb />
W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, NO. <lb />
Practice In nil courts. Collections a <lb />
specialty. <lb />
AC- X. L. BLOW <lb />
J. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
ATTORNEY 8-AT-LAW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
In all the Courts. <lb />
B. r. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
RX E W, <lb />
o nun v i r. c. <lb />
Prompt attention given t c<lb />
r A <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017685_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
D. I Editor m Proprietor <lb />
WEDNESDAY. 1894. <lb />
nU-red at th at Greenville, <lb />
second-class mail matter. <lb />
PASSES THE SENATE. <lb />
The Bland Bill <lb />
passed the Senate on last Thurs- <lb />
day and now goes to the <lb />
dent to receive either his <lb />
or veto. We predicted two <lb />
weeks ago that it would <lb />
pass the Senate, but did not real- <lb />
think then that this body <lb />
would act on it soon. The bill <lb />
was not even referred to a commit- <lb />
tee which is usually the <lb />
and come very near passing with- <lb />
in three days after it reached the <lb />
and would have done so <lb />
had it not been for John Sher- <lb />
man. The people want the coin- <lb />
age of silver and we hare believed <lb />
all along that Congress was <lb />
to some legislation in ref- <lb />
to it- We asserted this <lb />
when the repeal bill was under <lb />
consideration. We believe <lb />
more that if Congress remains <lb />
Democratic the present <lb />
term of office of Mr. Cleveland <lb />
that we may confidently expect <lb />
further legislation which will give <lb />
us us nearly as possible a <lb />
system based upon bi-metal- <lb />
The one trouble lies with <lb />
Mr. Cleveland. There is much <lb />
speculation as to what disposition <lb />
the President will make of the <lb />
present bill, which only needs his <lb />
signature to be a law. Many are <lb />
of the opinion that be will veto it. <lb />
This belief, however, is mere <lb />
speculation because Mr- Cleve- <lb />
land has given utterance to <lb />
in reference to his intentions <lb />
to justify or base a conjecture <lb />
upon. It is Known that Mr- Car- <lb />
lisle does not favor the bill and <lb />
some stress is laid this as <lb />
indicating what the President <lb />
will do- Those best informed <lb />
know this is not the way the <lb />
President does things. <lb />
The is of the <lb />
ion that Mr. Cleveland will sign <lb />
the bill and our is <lb />
based upon the following <lb />
First, the bill is not a free coinage <lb />
bill, it simply provides for the <lb />
coinage of the silver that is now <lb />
locked up in the United States <lb />
Treasury and is therefore <lb />
fitting no one. Secondly, from <lb />
the fact that it is so strongly en- <lb />
by his party in Congress <lb />
as shown by the vote in both <lb />
houses, having passed the House <lb />
by a good majority of Democrats <lb />
over the combined effort of a few <lb />
Democrat's and about all cf the <lb />
Republicans, and having received <lb />
in the Senate the entire Demo- <lb />
strength of that body with <lb />
the exception of ten. We <lb />
that though Mr. Cleveland might <lb />
personally not favor the bill yet <lb />
he will yield to the will of his <lb />
party so forcibly expressed. It <lb />
is predicted by some that he will <lb />
allow the bill to become a law <lb />
without his signature, which <lb />
would be the case if it is not <lb />
signed or vetoed within ten days. <lb />
It is very evident that this will <lb />
not be the case- The record of <lb />
the old fellow is all against shirk- <lb />
duty. He will face the music <lb />
and either sign or veto it and <lb />
take the consequences, let them <lb />
be what they may. look for <lb />
favorable action and think we <lb />
can verify this by reporting in <lb />
our issue that the bill has <lb />
become a law. <lb />
If the Senate will now pass the <lb />
tariff bill as it came from the <lb />
House, which includes the in- <lb />
come tax, we believe that the <lb />
country would feel relieved and <lb />
would say well far as Con- <lb />
press is concerned. Lets have <lb />
the bill through as soon as <lb />
possible. <lb />
We heard Mr. Allen Warren <lb />
say on the street Saturday that <lb />
farmers of Pitt county are <lb />
better off to-day than they have <lb />
been in five years. The <lb />
of the last few years has <lb />
been of incalculable good to them <lb />
and they are just learning how to <lb />
live and to farm- If they could <lb />
have bad this experience ten <lb />
years ago the county would be <lb />
fall of rich farmers to-day. In <lb />
short while now you will see no <lb />
money laving the county for <lb />
anything that can be raised at <lb />
home in my opinion the <lb />
are the best and <lb />
most prosperous era ever known <lb />
in The <lb />
believes that every word <lb />
by the Sheriff is true, <lb />
the people have had a hard ex- <lb />
but the lesson has been <lb />
a profitable one and has learned <lb />
them to be self-reliant <lb />
THE STATE PLATFORM OF THE <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA DE- <lb />
The Democratic party met in <lb />
convention in the city <lb />
of Raleigh May. 1892, <lb />
adopted a platform on which the <lb />
party itself, in the <lb />
most explicit terms, in favor of <lb />
the free and unlimited of <lb />
silver and of financial reform. <lb />
We republish it in this issue of <lb />
the for the benefit of <lb />
those who seem to have lost sight <lb />
of some of its mandates. Upon <lb />
this platform we went forth to <lb />
battle and saved the State in a <lb />
most memorable triangular <lb />
In a few months the people <lb />
will be invited to again meet in <lb />
their primary meetings and <lb />
conventions to appoint <lb />
gates to another State convention. <lb />
Much depends on how we begin <lb />
the work of the campaign of <lb />
which must be won or lost before <lb />
the ides of November- It will <lb />
not do to take any backward step <lb />
on this great financial question- <lb />
The utterance of the party must <lb />
be so plain, explicit and straight- <lb />
forward that it cannot be <lb />
or misrepresented. It <lb />
is folly to attempt to ignore this <lb />
question or to send it to the rear- <lb />
As a party we must meet it and <lb />
we urge that it shall be done at <lb />
the very begin of the cam- <lb />
and in a spirit so frank and <lb />
candid that the people may see <lb />
and know we are in earnest. The <lb />
people are in no frame of mind <lb />
to be trifled with and any attempt <lb />
at concealment or evasion will <lb />
lose us the fight before it is real- <lb />
begun. It is easy to write <lb />
about a North Carolina campaign <lb />
in which State issues to <lb />
be discussed but such a thing will <lb />
not be possible in the present <lb />
temper of the people. The <lb />
party loaders may at- <lb />
tempt to inaugurate such a cam- <lb />
but they will not go far be- <lb />
fore they will find that the people <lb />
are thinking and talking about <lb />
the money question. You had <lb />
as well try to keep hungry, <lb />
men from talking about bread <lb />
as to keep the people from dis <lb />
cussing the silver question and <lb />
other financial questions in the <lb />
coming campaign. If the Demo- <lb />
speakers will not disease <lb />
these questions the people will <lb />
attend where they are <lb />
discussed. The people are <lb />
earnest an they are not <lb />
going to tolerate dodging or <lb />
shutting. There is but one way <lb />
in which success is possible, in <lb />
our opinion, and the sooner we <lb />
recognize that and act upon <lb />
it the batter for us. We must <lb />
make a platform to suit the <lb />
and then nominate men to <lb />
stand on it in whom the people <lb />
have the utmost confidence. It will <lb />
be madness to put up men as can- <lb />
who ever in <lb />
their devotion to the interest of the <lb />
people- In fact if the party <lb />
are wise they will let the <lb />
make the nominations this year <lb />
The candidate goes out as <lb />
the nominee of a packed <lb />
will be overwhelmed at the <lb />
polls- Whether the people are <lb />
right or wrong they that <lb />
the of silver and <lb />
the general financial policy <lb />
by Republican <lb />
Party has something to do with <lb />
the shrinkage in values, the scar- <lb />
city of money and the general fin- <lb />
in which they <lb />
have been struggling for <lb />
and it is useless in our opinion to <lb />
ask them to support either direct- <lb />
or indirectly any man whose <lb />
record as well as declaration, is <lb />
not on the right side of this great <lb />
question. If the Democratic <lb />
party will not famish the people <lb />
with a platform and candidates <lb />
to suit them they will seek them <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
There are two soon <lb />
to be filled from the First Con- <lb />
District, one to U. S. <lb />
Military Academy and the other <lb />
to U. 8- Naval Academy. These <lb />
appointments are under the con- <lb />
of our Representative in <lb />
Congress. We have been re- <lb />
quested by Congressman Branch <lb />
to state that as there are several <lb />
applicants tor these places it will <lb />
be necessary hold a <lb />
competitive examination at some <lb />
convenient place in the district <lb />
not later than the first of June. <lb />
1894- The place a time of ex- <lb />
will be made known in <lb />
the near <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. <lb />
Well, the expected has happen- <lb />
ed. The Senate has passed the <lb />
Bland bill for the coinage of the <lb />
in the Treasury, with- <lb />
out amendment, and the measure <lb />
is now in the hands of President <lb />
Cleveland. It was well known <lb />
that when this matter was first <lb />
broached the President <lb />
it an unwise step to take and so <lb />
stated to members of Congress, <lb />
but he has been careful to ex- <lb />
press no opinion since the bill <lb />
has been pending in Congress, <lb />
and now those who are usually <lb />
well, in deference to the large <lb />
number of Democrats who voted <lb />
for the bill in both House and <lb />
Senate, allow the bill to become a <lb />
law without his signature thus <lb />
them the benefit of the <lb />
in his mind as to the <lb />
of the bill. <lb />
The Democratic members of <lb />
the Senate Finance committee <lb />
had to resort to the very unusual <lb />
expedient of asking the commit- <lb />
tee to adopt are solution pledging <lb />
each member to secrecy while the <lb />
tariff bill is under consideration <lb />
before they could the making <lb />
public by the Republican Sena- <lb />
tors of everything said and done <lb />
at the committee meetings. Since <lb />
the adoption of that resolution <lb />
very little has leaked out of the <lb />
committee room- The Democrats <lb />
on the committee wish, in accord- <lb />
with Senatorial custom, to <lb />
reach an agreement with the Re- <lb />
publicans on the committee as to <lb />
when the bill shall be reported <lb />
and when the Senate shall begin <lb />
its consideration. This they have <lb />
up to this time unable to do, <lb />
owing to the unreasonable de- <lb />
of the Republicans who <lb />
act as though they represented <lb />
the majority instead of the min- <lb />
The Democrats will wait <lb />
until week and if the <lb />
continue obstinate will <lb />
then report the bill and make <lb />
their own arrangements as to <lb />
when the debate shall begin. The <lb />
Democrats on the committee are <lb />
still confident that the bill will <lb />
become a law by June 30- <lb />
It may be necessary to change <lb />
the wording of the clause of the <lb />
tariff bill which repeals the <lb />
law, on of the <lb />
marked difference among Demo- <lb />
Senators as to what would <lb />
be the effect if the bill becomes a <lb />
law as it now stands- Senators <lb />
says it will repeal the <lb />
law but will not affect the treaties <lb />
made under that law; while Sena <lb />
tors Test, and others say <lb />
that the repeal of the law will <lb />
abrogate the treaties- This is a <lb />
very serious question to the sugar <lb />
makers; also in its effect upon the <lb />
revenue expected from the tariff <lb />
bill, inasmuch as about two-thirds <lb />
of the foreign sugar use will <lb />
come in free, regardless of the <lb />
duty imposed by the tariff bill, if <lb />
the treaties now in existence, in- <lb />
that with Hawaii, are to <lb />
continue in force. The Senate <lb />
Finance committee has inserted <lb />
a clause in the tariff bill <lb />
for the abrogation of the <lb />
treaty with Hawaii, but it will be <lb />
opposed by Democratic Senators <lb />
and it is by no means certain that <lb />
it will be in the bill when it is <lb />
passed. <lb />
Representative Tucker, of <lb />
is happy. His joint <lb />
providing for an amendment <lb />
to the Constitution authorizing <lb />
election of Senators by direct <lb />
of the people will be favorably <lb />
reported to the House. <lb />
Speaker Crisp has promised to <lb />
recognize Delegate Joseph next <lb />
Monday for the purpose call- <lb />
up the bill for the admission <lb />
of New Mexico as a State. The <lb />
Republicans are opposed to the <lb />
bill and will break a quorum if it <lb />
is their power to prevent its pas- <lb />
sage. Effects are now being <lb />
made to have a quorum of Dem- <lb />
present when the bill is <lb />
called- If they are successful <lb />
there is no doubt of the passage <lb />
of the bill, as it will receive the <lb />
vote of every Democrat present- <lb />
Secretary Herbert welcomes <lb />
the opportunity given him by the <lb />
House to officially lay before that <lb />
body and the country all of the <lb />
facts connected with the fine <lb />
posed upon the Carnegie steel <lb />
company because of its failure to <lb />
keep the armor plates it made <lb />
the government up to the highest <lb />
possible standard of quality. <lb />
The facts are all creditable to <lb />
Secretary Herbert and to <lb />
dent Cleveland who stood behind <lb />
him. There is a popular <lb />
concerning those <lb />
armor plates which caused the <lb />
contractors to be fined. They <lb />
were not defective. They all <lb />
came within the contract require- <lb />
but they were below the <lb />
best standard that the contractors <lb />
could produce; hence the fine. <lb />
The sensation lovers are enjoy- <lb />
the testimony in the Pollard <lb />
Breckenridge case, now being <lb />
tried here, but, to Judge <lb />
Bradley who is presiding the <lb />
court, the women are excluded <lb />
from He have to <lb />
get the testimony news- <lb />
papers. It is a dirty mess which <lb />
should have been carried <lb />
into court. <lb />
Johnson Mills <lb />
March, 19th 1894. <lb />
Miss Anna Pittman, of Grifton, <lb />
is visiting relatives here. <lb />
Miss Winnie Barney spent the <lb />
past week visiting Miss Eliza <lb />
Patriot <lb />
Mr. Clarence Whichard, one of <lb />
the Reflector boys, v as down <lb />
here on his wheel last Saturday <lb />
in the interest of the paper. <lb />
Items. <lb />
March 19th., 1894. <lb />
Fish are plentiful, bat still sell- <lb />
high. <lb />
Prof. J. B. Davis went to Green- <lb />
ville Saturday on business. <lb />
Another industry in town, it is <lb />
a poultry yard- Hope chickens <lb />
won't roost too <lb />
Oar town is becoming more <lb />
civil, we are again able to do <lb />
without a police, or it seems that <lb />
we are oat now. <lb />
Mr. Clarence Whichard. of <lb />
Greenville, came down Friday <lb />
and returned Monday morning. <lb />
He was attending to business. <lb />
Mr. N. E. Morgan, of <lb />
field, has come down and taken <lb />
charge of the railroad office here. <lb />
We welcome the young man <lb />
among us- <lb />
Mr. J. J. Rhodes took a long <lb />
trip on his wheel last week. He <lb />
went from here to <lb />
sixty-two miles, in four hours and <lb />
returned the next day. <lb />
Falkland Items. <lb />
March. 19th, 1894- <lb />
B. R. King leaves for Baltimore <lb />
this morning. <lb />
Miss Nannie Savage, of Scot- <lb />
land Neck, is visiting Misses <lb />
Daisy and Maud Mayo. <lb />
Our fishermen are right down <lb />
at work now, they caught shad <lb />
and several other smaller fish <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Miss Jennie William's school <lb />
closes Wednesday. We are ex- <lb />
to hear some fine speak- <lb />
by the boys. <lb />
Mrs. L. J. Moore one of the <lb />
oldest and most highly respected <lb />
ladies of Pitt county, died of <lb />
pneumonia at her home last Fri <lb />
day. <lb />
Oar photographer Mr. J. P. <lb />
Taylor leaves for Farmville Wed- <lb />
We are glad to know <lb />
Mr. Taylor has had a good trade <lb />
while he was in Falkland and wish <lb />
him continued success. <lb />
We are sorry to note the death <lb />
of Pattie, daughter of Mr. and <lb />
Mrs. J. R. Warren, which occur- <lb />
red at their home near here on <lb />
March 9th. Father and mother, <lb />
three brothers and a sister mourn <lb />
their lose <lb />
We see that the <lb />
way up ill New York and <lb />
Philadelphia to find the home <lb />
news- As many el our readers <lb />
will remember, we copied an <lb />
article from the Greenville Re- <lb />
about a boy m Greene <lb />
county having the word <lb />
visible in his eyes ; so did many <lb />
of exchanges Our brother <lb />
gets it from New York and Phil- <lb />
papers and comments in <lb />
is a true saying <lb />
that often yon have to go away <lb />
from home to find out the <lb />
If brother would read his <lb />
exchanges with in ore care he <lb />
wouldn't have to go away from <lb />
home to find the <lb />
Herald.<lb />
Whereas it has pleased our Heavenly <lb />
father to remove from earth to Heaven <lb />
if tip Belle Peal, one of our much be- <lb />
loved of Beth el Baptist Sunday <lb />
therefore resolved, <lb />
1st. in her death tills school <lb />
i-h one of its brightest jewels and tier <lb />
parent a loving, affectionate and <lb />
child. <lb />
2nd. That we deeply sympathize with <lb />
the bereaved parents, brother sod sis- <lb />
ten in tills their sad hour of <lb />
and extend to them our heartfelt <lb />
condolence. <lb />
3rd. That Secretary Of this school <lb />
furnish a copy of these to <lb />
the parents of the deceased, and that n <lb />
copy be sect to the Recorder <lb />
and the Eastern with a <lb />
request publish. <lb />
little Belle, sleep, while o'er <lb />
thy breast, <lb />
Thy friends sadness weep. <lb />
Let not their tears disturb thy rest. <lb />
Nor break thy peaceful <lb />
En if. Grimes, <lb />
Hon. y Com <lb />
J. Moore, <lb />
ES, <lb />
Cc <lb />
OTHER <lb />
Services. <lb />
Would it not be a wise step- <lb />
yea, a profitable one in the end, <lb />
for oar business men to close <lb />
their stores from to o'clock <lb />
and everybody attend the meet- <lb />
held by Mr. at <lb />
that hour A business man <lb />
should not be interested alone in <lb />
his own salvation, bat also in the <lb />
salvation of his Be- <lb />
gin the movement to-day and all <lb />
go to church. <lb />
Reads. <lb />
A tug boat belonging to Mr. <lb />
E. M. Short, of Washington, last <lb />
week brought up two flats loaded <lb />
with iron for the lumber railroad <lb />
he is building from near Center <lb />
Bluff out through Falkland and <lb />
Farmville townships- The Sim- <lb />
mons Lumber Co. are also taking <lb />
up their road that has been <lb />
from Red Banks out to <lb />
Grin die Creek and moving it <lb />
in township to ran out <lb />
from Rives landing. <lb />
Fishing. <lb />
We hear that several colored <lb />
men from town went down the <lb />
river and hauled a seine all Ban- <lb />
day evening. If this is so the <lb />
matter should be looked into and <lb />
let Judge get a <lb />
them at April court. There are <lb />
some white people, too, who <lb />
when the water is in proper con- <lb />
ply their nets as <lb />
on Sunday as upon day <lb />
of the week. We are told that <lb />
this is a occurrence at <lb />
Goff Landing, as no doubt it is at <lb />
other places on the river. There <lb />
is a law against fishing, <lb />
and those who will so willfully <lb />
desecrate the Sabbath should be <lb />
give such punishment as the law <lb />
directs- <lb />
Full Moon in March. <lb />
Eleven years ago Easter fell <lb />
on the same day as in this year. <lb />
It was a green March, as this has <lb />
been, vegetation was up and the <lb />
fruit trees were all in bloom when <lb />
on Good Friday night there was <lb />
a change in the weather and on <lb />
Easter Sunday in the middle and <lb />
Western parts of the State the <lb />
earth was white with snow and <lb />
the trees bowed down with sleet. <lb />
We very much fear something <lb />
of the same sort this year. <lb />
full moon in March falls this <lb />
year on the morning of the 21st, <lb />
and the old farmers always look <lb />
to this moon with considerable <lb />
anxiety for they Bay that if the <lb />
crops escape destruction by cold <lb />
op to that time they are safe <lb />
thereafter. Sure is it that cold <lb />
weather now would play <lb />
many happy hopes. <lb />
THE COLORED SCHOOL. <lb />
Mr. <lb />
Please allow space for <lb />
The Colored Public School has <lb />
been in session now for eight <lb />
weeks under the of <lb />
that talented and Christian gentle- <lb />
man Rev. P. W. Williams. I <lb />
have noticed the government of <lb />
the public school very closely <lb />
this term and can <lb />
say that I think the School Com- <lb />
J. It. Russell, T. A- <lb />
and Moses King, could not <lb />
have made a wiser selection when <lb />
they elected P. W. Williams as <lb />
principal and Mrs. E- J. Johnson <lb />
and Miss L. P. Henry <lb />
Both the principal and <lb />
assistants seem to understand the <lb />
art of training the young minds. <lb />
I believe that I express the <lb />
of the entire town when I <lb />
say we are satisfied that <lb />
school is under of wise <lb />
and prudent persons. I hope <lb />
that Rev- Williams may long re <lb />
main in our town to conduct oar <lb />
school, with the aid of his two <lb />
worthy assistants. All that the <lb />
public have to do to keep them <lb />
at the head of oar school, is to <lb />
prove to the that <lb />
they appreciate their selection of <lb />
F. J. Johnson. <lb />
-I as. E. Moons. L. I. Moose, <lb />
Greenville <lb />
A MOORE, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office under Opera Third <lb />
Bethel Hems. <lb />
19th, 1894- <lb />
Mr. D. H- James was In town <lb />
Mrs. G- Bullock is opening <lb />
a millinery store on main street <lb />
next door to W. A- Manning A <lb />
Co. <lb />
Dr. D. L- James, of Greenville, <lb />
spent Saturday night and Sun <lb />
in town with his uncle Dr. F. <lb />
James. <lb />
Mrs. D- II. James, of <lb />
has been spending a few days in <lb />
Bethel visiting relatives. She <lb />
returned home Sunday evening <lb />
Solicitor Jno. E. Woodard pass- <lb />
ed through on the train <lb />
on his way to William <lb />
to attend court. <lb />
Mrs- S- T. Carson will open a <lb />
millinery in the store of T. <lb />
Carson this week. She will be <lb />
assisted by a first class milliner <lb />
from Baltimore- <lb />
Judge Jno. Gray and <lb />
Maj- L- C- Latham were in town <lb />
Sunday on their way to William- <lb />
where Bynum holds <lb />
court this week- <lb />
Mr. R- J. W. Carson is having <lb />
two of the stores on the corner <lb />
near the Methodist church moved <lb />
up town on the Shaw lot which <lb />
he has recently purchased- He <lb />
is also making preparation to <lb />
build where his dwelling was <lb />
in the country. <lb />
A musical entertainment was <lb />
given last Friday night at Prof. <lb />
school room by <lb />
Miss Minnie Carraway, the ac- <lb />
music teacher of <lb />
Bethel High School, and her <lb />
music pupils- The entertainment <lb />
was greatly enjoyed by the large <lb />
crowd present and great credit is <lb />
due Miss Caraway for the manner <lb />
in which her pupils performed <lb />
their pieces- After the entertain- <lb />
Prof. <lb />
had a match by his <lb />
which was very interesting- <lb />
Prof. said that the <lb />
work done so far this year had <lb />
been more satisfactory than any <lb />
previous year in his whole career <lb />
of teaching in Pitt county. This <lb />
speaks well for this school <lb />
we hone will continue to be well <lb />
patronized. <lb />
OBITUARY, <lb />
With a gad heart I write a few lines <lb />
of our departed friend. Clara, wife Pf <lb />
lamas Moore, who tell in Jesus <lb />
on March 15th. Her life so short, <lb />
only In her seventeenth year. She was <lb />
stricken with that terrible disease, con- <lb />
gumption, and although physicians and <lb />
her skill <lb />
could invent, were of <lb />
and she <lb />
death ended her sufferings. We have <lb />
the blessed assurance that she this <lb />
of sorrow to bask in the fullness <lb />
of lief Savior's She loaves many <lb />
relatives and her <lb />
sorely. seemed o have <lb />
of death and talked freely about <lb />
dying, and begged h -r devoted husband <lb />
not S grieve her, as she would then <lb />
be free from <lb />
in Jews, blessed , <lb />
From which none ever wake to <lb />
I have not words that will express the <lb />
of bereaved ones. She was <lb />
an affectionate obedient <lb />
daughter. She Pd beep a member <lb />
the Tree Will I a good <lb />
while, and said diet was a crown p <lb />
her at the end which she w- going l <lb />
wear. She had been married only four <lb />
months when called away from earth. <lb />
Why we mourn God knew best <lb />
taken from the evil to come <lb />
Nichols. <lb />
Missing W rd Contest. <lb />
The Atlanta Constitution has n <lb />
missing word contest every month <lb />
and divides a portion of its sub- <lb />
receipts for that month <lb />
between the persons who guess <lb />
the correct word. The sentence <lb />
for February was society the <lb />
all absorbing topic in England <lb />
during the quarter was the Prince <lb />
of Wales and <lb />
The missing word was <lb />
The number of guesses was <lb />
of guessed correctly. <lb />
The reason so many guessed the <lb />
right word was because the papers <lb />
printed the whole story soon after <lb />
the sentence was announced. The <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO, <lb />
To all who want goods that are all right we invite <lb />
come to see we will make the prices <lb />
all right and satisfactory. We have often <lb />
been that we were a little high in <lb />
price on some lines of Goods but <lb />
our friends would always add <lb />
the quality of <lb />
goods is better than <lb />
the lower priced <lb />
goods costing <lb />
more and <lb />
demand- <lb />
better <lb />
priced than the <lb />
inferior good. This <lb />
is what we claim That we <lb />
will meet competition on the <lb />
different lines of Goods carried by <lb />
us, quality considered. Come to <lb />
see we have in stock a general as- <lb />
and can supply your every want <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1876. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STORK <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb />
their year's supplies will And <lb />
their Interest to our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere. is complete <lb />
n all Its branches. <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ens <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A con; <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 risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
Greenville, N, <lb />
USE <lb />
W. GREEK, <lb />
s,<lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly quail <lb />
fled before the Superior Court Clerk of <lb />
Pitt comity as Administrator of P. A. <lb />
Fleming, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
en to all persons indebted to the estate <lb />
to make immediate payment to the <lb />
number of correct guessers being; and all persons having claims <lb />
against the estate must present the same <lb />
so large they received only <lb />
each. Tn the printed list <lb />
,. ,. v. i of or this notice be <lb />
of correct guessers we find five <lb />
Pitt county people viz s This 12th of Feb. 1894. <lb />
Webb, Mrs. G. H. Keene, E. A. I <lb />
H. T- King and A. J. Move. <lb />
The sentence for March is <lb />
find a serious error in the navy i <lb />
of today to be <lb />
height of our All per- <lb />
sons who subscribe for the Con- <lb />
through the Reflector <lb />
get both papers a year for <lb />
and are entitled to a guess, both <lb />
at the missing word and at the <lb />
cotton crop. The sentence for <lb />
April will soon be announced. I <lb />
S. <lb />
of F. A. Fleming. <lb />
Dissolution. <lb />
The partnership heretofore <lb />
R. L, and <lb />
existing <lb />
W B. <lb />
Greene, under the name and style of <lb />
has this day been <lb />
dissolved by mutual consent. All debts <lb />
due the said firm should be paid to R. <lb />
L. and all debts due by the <lb />
said firm will be paid by the said R. L. <lb />
This Feb. <lb />
R. L. <lb />
IS IT <lb />
Who is it that will be <lb />
known <lb />
By every hearth and fireside home <lb />
With bargains that win such great <lb />
renown <lb />
What name is this that we will <lb />
spread <lb />
On every tree and post and shed, <lb />
In letters blue and black and red I <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who cuts the prices down so low <lb />
And tells the people they must go, <lb />
Whore you with bargains he'll <lb />
overflow T <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who has the store in which we're <lb />
told <lb />
Are Dry Goods and Shoes for <lb />
young or old, <lb />
As cheap as ever can be sold t <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that has a back lot, <lb />
Where you can tie your horse and <lb />
not <lb />
Be bothered with shot that are hot <lb />
BOB <lb />
so widely is it that has a beautiful line <lb />
of <lb />
With one on. as your girl passes <lb />
you. she will stare. <lb />
And call you her duckling, darling, <lb />
dear <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that has Clothing so fine <lb />
Dressed up in a suit all others <lb />
you'll out shine, <lb />
That your girl will exclaim, <lb />
you be mine <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that has such a brand <lb />
new stock <lb />
Who keeps everything from a silk <lb />
dress to a clock, <lb />
And his low prices gives your <lb />
nerves such a shock <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that's opened next to <lb />
Andrew's grocery store, <lb />
Where little Co. keep <lb />
no more, <lb />
Who will be open from a. m. to <lb />
p- m. T <lb />
BOB <lb />
Yes, every one says D can beat the world on <lb />
Dry Goods, Clothing, Notions, Shoes, Hats, <lb />
Furnishing Goods. <lb />
Call on him, he is at the store formerly occupied by Jas. L. Little <lb />
Co., and he and his clerks will treat you fair and square. Mr. <lb />
is h him and will be glad to see his many friends. <lb />
J. L SI <lb />
tans ii <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
at court house. <lb />
COMPANIES <lb />
At current rate. <lb />
FOE FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF I <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
When we say that we have the largest and best line <lb />
of FURNITURE ever kept in our town. We <lb />
make no mistake as a visit to our store will <lb />
prove. Numbers of our ex- <lb />
press surprise at haying such a <lb />
large and well-selected stock <lb />
on band. Call on for <lb />
anything want <lb />
the Furniture <lb />
line. We have <lb />
just re- <lb />
line <lb />
of CHAIRS, <lb />
and <lb />
ROCKERS in Silk Plush, <lb />
These Chairs <lb />
make nice Christmas presents <lb />
and we would remind our friends <lb />
not to overlook them when making <lb />
for Christmas us they will please you. <lb />
GUNS <lb />
Call on us for Guns and Gun <lb />
Implements. have some <lb />
nice ones on hand and will <lb />
make the prices right- <lb />
Wishing all our friends and the public <lb />
happy Christmas, <lb />
We remain, your friends. <lb />
generally a joyous and <lb />
J. B. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
a. <lb />
-WHOLESALE AND RETAIL- <lb />
KT. C. <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES <lb />
To my Friends and Customers of Pitt and adjoining <lb />
I wish to that I made special preparation In preparing <lb />
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving you HOGSHEADS with inside t <lb />
smooth which will prevent scrubbing your Tobacco when packing <lb />
Also have made special arrangements to use best split Hoops made White <lb />
Oak. The special advantages in cutting my own timber places me in a <lb />
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive <lb />
make it to your interest to use m Hogsheads and you can And them at any <lb />
either at my factory at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. O. <lb />
Scroll Sawing, Making <lb />
i am <lb />
And Turned Trimmings for Houses a Specialty. <lb />
In the <lb />
n prepared to do any kind Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways. Mendings or <lb />
any kind, including Piazza Railing, and would be pleased to name yon prises <lb />
anything In the above upon application. <lb />
GENERAL REPAIR WORK <lb />
. I am willing <lb />
to meet patronage, and kindly ask you to give me a trial before <lb />
on short notice. <lb />
ti elsewhere- <lb />
Thanking you your past patronage, <lb />
re patronage <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
Winter ville, <lb />
V C, Joshua <lb />
COBB BROS. CO., <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
J, X <lb />
Oilers to Pl and surrounding counties, a of the <lb />
stare not to be excelled in And all guaranteed to be <lb />
pore <lb />
HATS and CAPS, <lb />
CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, HOUSE Pt <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER <lb />
and l Hat, Rock Limb, Plaster or <lb />
Hair, and <lb />
A SPECIALTY.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017685_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
KEEP <lb />
YOUR EYES <lb />
WIDE OPEN <lb />
lit Anybody to Tc <lb />
Off <lb />
WE THE <lb />
We the Producers ; I <lb />
We are the Regulators <lb />
Produce kind of <lb />
Goods you <lb />
Need and <lb />
The prices <lb />
To suit <lb />
Your pocketbooks. <lb />
OUR ENTIRE <lb />
STOCK MUST <lb />
GO AND WE <lb />
WILL MAKE <lb />
YOU PRICES <lb />
THAT ARE VERY LOW. <lb />
We carry a complete line of <lb />
Dry Goods, <lb />
Clothing, <lb />
Notions, <lb />
Shoes <lb />
and <lb />
Gents Furnishing <lb />
Goods. <lb />
All <lb />
the la- <lb />
test style <lb />
and textiles <lb />
represented in <lb />
my mammoth stock <lb />
It will be a pleasure to <lb />
show you through <lb />
my store- Re- <lb />
member the <lb />
place op- <lb />
COBB SON'S STORE. <lb />
BROS. <lb />
Leaders of Low Prices. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Dotted Swiss and Welts <lb />
at Lang's. <lb />
the Lord while He may <lb />
be found; call upon Him while <lb />
He is <lb />
For good reliable go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
A door key was found near <lb />
bridge. Owner can <lb />
get it at Reflector office by pay- <lb />
for this notice- <lb />
Selected Large Bright Peanuts <lb />
for seed at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Some ladies were asking do- <lb />
nation, yesterday to be used in <lb />
putting a pump in Cherry Hill <lb />
cemetery. This is a move in the <lb />
right direction. <lb />
Business men can get good <lb />
to D <lb />
the Reflector Book Store. <lb />
Sometime ago a bundle was <lb />
left at Reflector office- It con- <lb />
a boy's cap. Owner can get <lb />
it by identifying same and <lb />
for this notice. <lb />
Hon. G- W. says what <lb />
makes my Hens lay so many <lb />
and keep so healthy is <lb />
Food, at the Old Brick Store- <lb />
A- G- Cox is now selling the <lb />
Cox Cotton Planter for Now <lb />
is the time to send in your order. <lb />
Mr. H. C tells us that <lb />
a mad dog was killed last Friday <lb />
in the neighborhood of Reedy <lb />
Branch church. dog had <lb />
done no damage. <lb />
Galatea Cloth for boy's <lb />
suits at Lang's. <lb />
wash<lb />
Choice canned Fruits and Veg- <lb />
always fresh and nice, at <lb />
J. S. Smith k Co's.<lb />
Full moon to-day. <lb />
Just received a new lot of <lb />
Carriages and Cribs. <lb />
J. B- Cherry Co- <lb />
Next Sunday is Easter. <lb />
When in want c-f Rood shoes go to <lb />
J. B. k Co. <lb />
Last Saturday was St- Patrick's <lb />
Day. <lb />
The Best Flour on earth WOO at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
This is almost like summer <lb />
time. <lb />
L. M. Reynold and Boys <lb />
hoes are best. For a by J. B. <lb />
Cherry Co. <lb />
Day after to-morrow is good <lb />
Friday. <lb />
Go to J. B. Cherry A Co when In need <lb />
of Furniture, they keep a f u stock and <lb />
sell at prices that will please you. <lb />
The days and nights are now of <lb />
about equal length. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
is he whose trans- <lb />
is <lb />
Remember I pay you cash for n <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
The snakes come out of <lb />
their winter quarters. <lb />
Read the Reflector's free <lb />
book offer on fourth page. <lb />
This week is known as Holy <lb />
Week in the calendar. <lb />
For A- G- Cox's <lb />
Back Bands call on J. B- Cherry <lb />
Co. <lb />
Oar shade trees will soon be <lb />
numbered with the beautiful- <lb />
ought to see the big <lb />
cent Tablets at Reflector Book <lb />
Store. <lb />
This section was visited by a <lb />
thunder storm Saturday evening. <lb />
Complete, of Goods at <lb />
Brown's- <lb />
The baseball season <lb />
near, let us have a <lb />
here. <lb />
Acme Distributors are <lb />
for sale by S- E. Pender Co. <lb />
Next Sunday is Easter, <lb />
nets will be ripe and can be <lb />
Spots to matter <lb />
whether you stand or whether <lb />
you sit, at Higgs Bros, <lb />
the wicked forsake his <lb />
way, and the man his <lb />
March has only ten more days <lb />
to in. Perhaps April i <lb />
to be <lb />
Garden seeds D, M- Perry <lb />
Co, at the Old Brick Store- <lb />
New Embroideries just <lb />
ed by Wiley Brown. <lb />
We are receiving a lovely line <lb />
of Laces and Trimmings and Mil <lb />
which we will be glad to <lb />
show you. M. T. <lb />
We are glad to see the enter- <lb />
prise displayed by M r. Ed. Shel- <lb />
burn in the erection of a new ice <lb />
house. We can all keep cool this <lb />
summer for he says he will keep <lb />
it on hand all the time. <lb />
If you want the REFLECTOR and <lb />
Atlanta Constitution a year for <lb />
bring on that amount. <lb />
J. S. Smith Co. receive fresh <lb />
every week the finest Cream <lb />
Cheese, and also best Vermont <lb />
Butter at cents per pound. <lb />
Striped and Checked Dimities <lb />
white and Lang's- <lb />
We heard a traveling man re- <lb />
mark, the other day, that if a <lb />
drummer was heard days <lb />
bragging that business was good <lb />
on the road, you might mark him <lb />
down as new drummer or an <lb />
old <lb />
Tax per- <lb />
sons who fail to pay their taxes <lb />
by March 23rd are hereby notified <lb />
that their lands will <lb />
and sold for payment of same. <lb />
R. W. King, Sheriff. <lb />
Money to improved <lb />
Real Estate in sums from to <lb />
Apply to, <lb />
F. G. James. <lb />
A man gave whiskey <lb />
to a dog and in ten minutes the <lb />
animal was dead. If it disposed <lb />
of some two-legged ones that <lb />
quick there would be some won- <lb />
changes on this sphere of <lb />
ours. <lb />
Wool Suitings in now and <lb />
designs at Lang s- <lb />
Buy your Cotton Seed Meal at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
D. D. Haskett has just received <lb />
from factory a large lot of <lb />
Cream which will be sold <lb />
per pent cheaper than last <lb />
season. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B- S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb />
Personal <lb />
Mrs. C. T. sick. <lb />
A little sou of Mr. J A. Dupree <lb />
is quite sick. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. R. Greene have a <lb />
child that is quite sick- <lb />
Mr. J. C- Lanier, of Wilson, was <lb />
on our streets last week. <lb />
Mrs. H. T- Daniel returned <lb />
Monday from a few days visit <lb />
to <lb />
Mr. Ed. of Plymouth, was <lb />
in town last week shaking hands <lb />
all around. <lb />
Miss Sue will <lb />
this week for Baltimore on a <lb />
pleasure trip. <lb />
Mrs. M. D. Higgs loft this <lb />
morning for the North to buy <lb />
spring goods. <lb />
Miss Maggie Doughty returned <lb />
Monday from a two weeks visit <lb />
in the country. <lb />
Mr- Elias Carr, Jr., of Edge- <lb />
was in town part of Sat- <lb />
and Sunday. <lb />
Little Wiley J-, son of Mr. and <lb />
Mrs- Wiley Brown, has very <lb />
sick the last two weeks. <lb />
Mr. J. C- Caddell, representing <lb />
Biblical of Raleigh, <lb />
was hero part of last week. <lb />
Mrs. Israel Harding, of <lb />
has been visiting Mrs. <lb />
for the past week. <lb />
Glad to see Mr. L- H- Roan- <lb />
tree, of here last week <lb />
greeting his many friends. <lb />
Mrs. Georgia leaves <lb />
this week to spring <lb />
goods in the northern markets. <lb />
Capt Henry F. of South <lb />
Carolina, is here this week. His <lb />
many friends are glad to see him. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Forbes left <lb />
for the north this morning, Mr. <lb />
Forbes to purchase spring goods <lb />
and Mrs. Forbes on pleasure- <lb />
Mr. Samuel Vines died <lb />
Edgecombe county on Monday <lb />
night of last week. He was quite <lb />
an old man and had many <lb />
in this section. <lb />
Mr. G R. Pool was to <lb />
Va., his home, by <lb />
friends, who came after him last <lb />
Wednesday. He recovered <lb />
to such an extent as to risk the <lb />
trip. <lb />
Mr J- E- who is <lb />
conducting the meeting in the <lb />
Methodist church, is the guest of <lb />
Mr. W. Bawls while here. Mr. <lb />
Ramsey is the guest of Mr. J. B- <lb />
Cherry. <lb />
Mr. J. G. Monday for <lb />
the northern markets to put chase <lb />
spring goods for J. B. Cherry <lb />
Co. It may be depended upon <lb />
that he will buy a stock no <lb />
f ah surpass. <lb />
Mr. W. H. White moved last <lb />
week into his new residence on <lb />
avenue. He has one <lb />
of the handsomest and best <lb />
ranged dwellings in the <lb />
It is a two-story bulletins <lb />
containing four rooms and hall <lb />
on first floor and five rooms above. <lb />
The interior is beautiful. <lb />
Mr. E- B. Higgs is having the <lb />
dwelling house on the Higgs <lb />
farm, one mile above town, <lb />
enlarged and will live there. <lb />
are glad to know that Mrs. <lb />
who has for several weeks <lb />
past been at Scotland Neck very <lb />
sick, is regaining her health and <lb />
hopes to be well enough to re- <lb />
turn to Greenville sometime this <lb />
week. <lb />
Died. <lb />
last Wednesday, Mrs. <lb />
Bettie Baker, wife of Mr- John <lb />
Baker, died at her home about <lb />
four miles east of Greenville. <lb />
She was in her 27th year. <lb />
services were conducted Friday <lb />
by Rev. J. C In her <lb />
death the community loses a <lb />
good woman. <lb />
and<lb />
Organdies, Irish Lawns <lb />
Soft Percales at Lang's. <lb />
Monday is our collecting day <lb />
for our meat market- All parties <lb />
owing us must pay for the <lb />
week or we shall be com- <lb />
to refuse them father credit. <lb />
Parker Join eh. <lb />
Every business man should try <lb />
a bottle of our Cream Mucilage- <lb />
Sold only at the Reflector Book <lb />
Store. <lb />
Best Flour at and per <lb />
barrel- Pepper cents a pound. <lb />
Other goods correspondingly low. <lb />
J. S. Smith i Co. <lb />
Tan Slippers and Hose for ladies <lb />
misses and children at Lang's. <lb />
Genuine Clipper, Alias, Boy <lb />
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax <lb />
Plows and Castings for sale J. <lb />
B. Cherry Co- <lb />
The largest and best assorted <lb />
line of General Merchandise in <lb />
Pitt county, is offered for <lb />
j. B. Cherry k Co. <lb />
Sewing machines from to <lb />
Latest improved Home <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
Linen and <lb />
at Lang's- <lb />
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor- <lb />
of all professions, when in <lb />
need of goods of any hind, call on <lb />
your friends, J. B. Cherry A Co. <lb />
Pay your taxes by the 23rd of <lb />
March, or your lands will be ad <lb />
and sold. Positively no <lb />
longer indulgence will given, <lb />
ft W- Sheriff. <lb />
Attention is called to the pro- <lb />
card of Moore Moore <lb />
in this issue. <lb />
The Mill In Operation. <lb />
Messrs. Hines it <lb />
started up the large mills of the <lb />
Greenville Lumber Co. on Mon- <lb />
day. In saying that we are glad <lb />
such an enterprise is now a fixture <lb />
in the community the Reflector <lb />
voices the sentiment of all our <lb />
people. Now it behooves every <lb />
other business here to give these <lb />
gentlemen all the patronage and <lb />
encouragement possible. They <lb />
are excellent gentlemen, and they <lb />
have come among us to use their <lb />
means and energy in a way that <lb />
will be of vast to Green- <lb />
ville. The town more men <lb />
like them. <lb />
he Meeting. <lb />
Mr. J- E S.-h-j of Dan- <lb />
ville, Va. began ii aeries of <lb />
in the Methodist- <lb />
here on last Sunday morning at <lb />
o'clock and has since been <lb />
holding services every morning <lb />
and night- <lb />
He took no specific text for the <lb />
Sunday <lb />
There is just much difference <lb />
and praying as <lb />
there is between reading bill <lb />
fare and eating- A man goes into <lb />
his closet to pray, some sin ho has <lb />
committed rises up before him and <lb />
shuts him off from God- Ho <lb />
must come out his <lb />
sin, remove the obstacles, thou <lb />
God <lb />
1894 SPRING <lb />
tears bis prayer and gives <lb />
answer ho desires. If you <lb />
defrauded your <lb />
service but talk-. <lb />
ed generally upon j tho <lb />
of Scripture read. Has defrauded your follow man <lb />
theme was principally upon the d token a dishonest <lb />
church and the world-the l is for yon to attempt <lb />
line between thorn. to go to God until yon first <lb />
said that one reason there gone to your neighbor and re- <lb />
such a want of power in tho <lb />
church today is because almost <lb />
every phase of tho world is in <lb />
some way dragged along with the <lb />
church. To do effective work tho God <lb />
turned that you obtained <lb />
from dishonestly. You must <lb />
get right with your follow man <lb />
before you get tight with <lb />
1894 <lb />
Civil Court. <lb />
The March term of our Superior <lb />
Court, which was for the trial of <lb />
civil causes only, closed Saturday <lb />
afternoon after occupying the full, <lb />
two weeks allotted to the term. It <lb />
was one of the best the <lb />
standpoint of the amount of work <lb />
done, that the county has known. <lb />
A large number of cases were <lb />
gotten off the docket,, <lb />
them having been there for many <lb />
years. Final judgment was taken <lb />
in fifty six cases, besides a few <lb />
cases went on to tho <lb />
Court, and orders and mo- <lb />
were made relative to many <lb />
other cases. Judge Bynum will <lb />
return to this and hold the <lb />
April criminal court, when some <lb />
more of his good work may be <lb />
expected. <lb />
The Atlantic <lb />
There are some Greenville folks <lb />
who will be glad to learn that <lb />
Mr. L. of Beaufort, is to <lb />
have charge of the Atlantic Hotel <lb />
at Morehead again the coming <lb />
season. He kept that popular <lb />
house in such excellent manner, <lb />
last season, that all who went <lb />
there were delighted. <lb />
County Fair. <lb />
We want the business men to <lb />
read our tobacco department to- <lb />
day, especially the article <lb />
to holding a county fair in <lb />
Greenville. This is along the <lb />
line suggested by the Reflector <lb />
two weeks ago. Pitt can <lb />
have and ought to have a fair, <lb />
and the first one should be next <lb />
fall. Just lot the business men <lb />
unite and say it shall come and it <lb />
will come. <lb />
Meeting <lb />
Rev. J. H. Lam berth received <lb />
a letter last week that the appoint- <lb />
for the missionary mass <lb />
meeting at the Baptist church <lb />
here, next Saturday and Sunday, <lb />
would have to be be- <lb />
of the sickness of Rev. R. T. <lb />
Bryan, the returned missionary <lb />
from China. Our people regret <lb />
not being able hear the <lb />
who were announced to <lb />
come to this <lb />
Both for <lb />
There are a number of people In <lb />
this county who send one dollar for <lb />
the Atlanta Constitution without <lb />
over thinking of the fact that they <lb />
can save cents by subscribing <lb />
to that paper through the Re- <lb />
We send both papers <lb />
a whole year for and every <lb />
subscriber we send them has the <lb />
same privilege of guessing at the <lb />
missing word contest and the <lb />
cotton crop. Fifty cents is worth <lb />
saving. Come to see us and get <lb />
both papers for <lb />
A Law. <lb />
Kinston has an ordinance re- <lb />
quiring people to keep their fowls <lb />
shut up from 15th to June <lb />
and if one's chicken is out <lb />
and damages another's garden <lb />
between those dates the owner of <lb />
the fowl must pay a fine of If <lb />
such a law existed in Greenville <lb />
there might be a sweeter <lb />
between neighbors about <lb />
gardening time. For a fact it is <lb />
mighty provoking to got a good <lb />
garden started off nicely and then <lb />
see it scratched all to pieces by a <lb />
lot of stray chickens- <lb />
between church and world <lb />
must be distinctly drawn. For <lb />
his part he was going to draw tho <lb />
line in Greenville and those <lb />
who heard him were going to be <lb />
on one side or tho real <lb />
Christian with him and those not <lb />
coming up to that standard <lb />
against the division <lb />
would not be determined by the <lb />
church <lb />
In presenting this discourse <lb />
tho used a number of <lb />
illustrations that pointed <lb />
and forcible, and they wont <lb />
straight borne to tho hearts of <lb />
many in the audience. wish <lb />
space permitted printing them <lb />
all. <lb />
Monday morning his theme <lb />
I Was Holy Ghost and His <lb />
I and upon this ho made <lb />
He said a Virginia preacher <lb />
came over to preach to a i <lb />
North Carolina church; his first <lb />
sermon delighted everybody and j <lb />
bis next made them all mad. In- <lb />
as to tho cause brought out , <lb />
talk full of <lb />
delightful <lb />
feeling and power. <lb />
Monday his text was a <lb />
portion of <lb />
without which man shall see <lb />
This was also an able die- <lb />
that his first sermon was about and the people manifested <lb />
its beauty, its joy. its <lb />
and his next was to . have been well at- <lb />
get After the first not-only by the people <lb />
an officer in the church went <lb />
up to shake tho preacher's been <lb />
Better Luck. <lb />
Joe Evans sauntered into this <lb />
print shop after reading the Re- <lb />
last Wednesday, and <lb />
here, you've <lb />
me. You've made folks be- <lb />
I can't catch a shad while <lb />
it's given up that I'm the best fish <lb />
on Tar Now, sir, <lb />
get in got <lb />
to go again, and if tho don't pad- <lb />
He me on shad I'll <lb />
That was straight talk, and not <lb />
wanting to be licked we promised <lb />
to meet him at sunset. <lb />
on baud, so was Joe, and picking <lb />
up his net commanded mo <lb />
out there where the shad are, <lb />
and be quick about Out shot <lb />
boat and through the trip she <lb />
glided. Two trips, no fish, when <lb />
Joe soliloquized bad luck to <lb />
catch one right at Go- <lb />
down the third time he fell <lb />
away on his net and a minute later <lb />
dumped a large between <lb />
our feet. again and the <lb />
same performance was repeated <lb />
for three trips in succession. <lb />
roe shad, thats we <lb />
ejaculated, but Joe cut it off with <lb />
not done A few straight <lb />
trips followed and it wasn't long <lb />
before he hauled out a big <lb />
to keep company with the <lb />
A few more straights and he be- <lb />
tugging away at his net like <lb />
it had sturgeon in it, but when it <lb />
came out there wore two more <lb />
fine at one dip. That re <lb />
minded of old <lb />
Another trip or two and Joe said <lb />
we've got enough. Put <lb />
me ashore and then you take half <lb />
of those shad home to the madam <lb />
and tell her there is pay for put- <lb />
ting that patch on your <lb />
Tho injunction was obeyed, and <lb />
feasted on shad for two <lb />
clays. Joe is a boss fisherman <lb />
and <lb />
regular attendants. Mr. School- <lb />
field presents the gospel truths <lb />
a manner calculated to carry con- <lb />
to the hearts of many of <lb />
; his hearers. He is able and <lb />
j convincing talker and is bold and <lb />
in his denunciation of sin <lb />
i His sermons are <lb />
plain and to the point. Mr. <lb />
J. A- Ramsay loads tho singing, <lb />
the town that were rented for bar rich, sweet voice that <lb />
rooms. j easily fills building, <lb />
m, . , choir consists of about twenty <lb />
The evangelist asked if and they delightful <lb />
stranger to a town how can j Lot <lb />
he tell who are Christians and earnestly for tho success of <lb />
who are not Can ho tell by <lb />
looking over tho register of <lb />
church members Go to a ball <lb />
room and you find church mom j Come Down. <lb />
there; go to a and The Salisbury Herald copied <lb />
you find church members there; I the article in last issue about our <lb />
goto a bar-room you find j fishing trip and to say <lb />
church members either about it <lb />
and said toll you that's tho <lb />
kind of preaching for But <lb />
next time in telling about how to <lb />
get to Heaven, the preacher men- <lb />
a many things they <lb />
must not over many <lb />
at tho close of the <lb />
this same officer said <lb />
don't like any such preaching as <lb />
Ho had two buildings in <lb />
E. P. REED CO. <lb />
-AND- <lb />
o. a, <lb />
To fully appreciate this old but true adage you will to call at<lb />
Married. <lb />
At the of J. J. Buck, <lb />
in township near Black <lb />
Jack, Wednesday March, 14th, <lb />
Mr. Mills and Mrs. Mary <lb />
A. Buck were united in holy mat- <lb />
Rev. J. S. Corbitt <lb />
The attendants were J. <lb />
W. Harper and Miss Harriet <lb />
Mills, Marshal Elks and Miss <lb />
Susan Arnold, John Cox and Miss <lb />
Lissie Corbitt, Corbitt and <lb />
Miss Sarah Edwards. After the <lb />
ceremony the bride and groom <lb />
to the home of the groom <lb />
whore we all enjoyed ourselves <lb />
for awhile. We wish them a long <lb />
and happy life and God bless <lb />
them. J. J. E. <lb />
Baptist church, was <lb />
nicely decorated, brightly lighted, <lb />
and well filled with spectators on <lb />
Wednesday evening, 14th, <lb />
1894, to witness the ; <lb />
M- which took place at <lb />
o o'clock that evening. While <lb />
the ceremony was being preform- <lb />
ed by the pastor, Rev. J- H. Lam- <lb />
berth, there stood orderly near <lb />
the bride and groom Mr. W. T- <lb />
Little and Miss Ella Fleming; <lb />
Mr- R. W. Ward and Miss Estelle <lb />
Little ; Mr. R. L. Brown and Miss <lb />
Eleanor Rollins; Mr. J. L. Per- <lb />
kins and Miss Laura Harwell <lb />
Mr. J. J. Satterthwaite and Miss <lb />
Lena Harris ; Mr. H. A- Latham <lb />
and Miss Estelle Thigpen. Their <lb />
many presents consisted of use- <lb />
things, such as a newly married <lb />
couple need in house keeping; as <lb />
Silver cake basket, by <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. Davenport; Silver <lb />
and glass pickle by Mr. <lb />
J. L. Perkins and Mrs. Belle <lb />
Daniel; Fruit and butter knives, <lb />
by R. L. Brown, and H. A- <lb />
Latham ; plates, cups, and <lb />
by Mr- and Mrs. R. Flem- <lb />
Mis- J. B. Little ; Lamps <lb />
by Miss Eva Fleming, and Messrs <lb />
Ward and Satterthwaite; Pitchers, <lb />
by Misses Rollins and Fleming; <lb />
Berry bowls, by Misses Harwell <lb />
and Thigpen; Fruit stand, by <lb />
Misses Davenport; dish, <lb />
by Mrs. J. L. Kitchen ; Picture, <lb />
by Miss Lena Harris ; Cushions, <lb />
by Mr. J. and Mrs- M. E. Fleming; <lb />
To wells, by Messrs Robert, Sugg, <lb />
Fleming, and Miss Estelle <lb />
Washstand set, by Mr. Willie <lb />
Little ; Salt and set, by Mrs. <lb />
H. F. Harris; and Handkerchiefs, <lb />
by Mrs. M. A- Gay. The wedding <lb />
was given at the home of <lb />
the groom about two miles . east <lb />
of We wish all a happy <lb />
future. J. H- L. <lb />
drinking or selling, or both; go <lb />
a card party or gambling don <lb />
and you find church members <lb />
there; go to other question <lb />
able places and you find <lb />
church members there ; let a cir- <lb />
come along and tho church <lb />
members Hock to it. You can't <lb />
tell the by <lb />
the church members- I knew a <lb />
man for ten years, lived in the <lb />
house with him for six mouths, <lb />
and one day asked him about <lb />
giving his heart to tho Lord- <lb />
He said bless your soul. <lb />
I've been officer in tho church <lb />
all I never could <lb />
have told it from his life. <lb />
And that is tho great cause of <lb />
trouble lack of religions pow- <lb />
to church and world <lb />
are on too relations with <lb />
each other. The line must be <lb />
drawn. You must close your <lb />
door against the libertine as <lb />
quickly as against his partner in <lb />
sin. There is constant warfare <lb />
between church the <lb />
if tho church is not <lb />
attacking tho devil, then the devil <lb />
is attacking tho church. I am told <lb />
you not had a revival in <lb />
Greenville for some years from <lb />
which it is judged the has <lb />
had tho church on tho run- <lb />
Sunday night Mr. <lb />
took for his subject and <lb />
He compared prayer <lb />
to a telegraph line. You go in <lb />
to send a message to which an <lb />
answer is wanted and find that it <lb />
cannot be <lb />
trouble with the wires. Somebody <lb />
goes out to see what's the trouble- <lb />
at one place the wire is down in <lb />
the mud ; at another a tree is on <lb />
it; at another a huge rock is on <lb />
it. These are removed <lb />
the wires put in order, then <lb />
your message speeds through and <lb />
the answer comes promptly. <lb />
Prayer is our means of <lb />
cation with God, but the wires <lb />
must be right or your <lb />
will never set above your head. <lb />
Herald read tho above <lb />
with Badness. It brought to our <lb />
mind the hours had spent a <lb />
canoe with man us <lb />
i companion. lie served with us <lb />
for years graduated into <lb />
tho best baud with u paddle that <lb />
there was in Greenville. Many a <lb />
shad fell victim to his skill <lb />
it is indeed distressing to learn <lb />
that he has deteriorated in such <lb />
a short while. Joe Evans has for- <lb />
gotten his cunning, too, for we <lb />
remember him as a all around <lb />
fisherman, and a lucky <lb />
teen straight trips without a single <lb />
is a sad commentary on <lb />
tho patient training the <lb />
man had at the of this <lb />
scribe and almost makes us weep. <lb />
almost feel like running down <lb />
east to give him another <lb />
A skim net hasn't been in our <lb />
hands for more than five years <lb />
but will bet a button we could <lb />
catch a shad in loss than fifteen <lb />
trips, with tho REFLECTOR to pad- <lb />
us. You didn't have the right <lb />
partner, <lb />
Now if the old man of tho Her- <lb />
will read in this issue where <lb />
we got our skill back and had <lb />
better luck ho will seized with <lb />
weeping at tho mouth instead of <lb />
at tho eyes as over our <lb />
luckless experience. Ho bettor <lb />
come and eat shad with us. <lb />
and examine their large stock of- <lb />
New Spring Goods <lb />
which are of the latest styles and colors are being sold at prices <lb />
that will make you think you are getting double your money's <lb />
worth. To see is to believe and to believe you will only <lb />
have to examine tho many they are offering in <lb />
all of which an especially attractive line. Call to see us <lb />
examine our goods which it affords us pleasure to show. <lb />
The must courteous attention extended to all. <lb />
arc headquarters for the most popular brands of <lb />
of which a large stock on hand and which are selling at <lb />
prices to suit tho times. <lb />
band. So when you call if you do not what you want <lb />
Remembering always we are yours to please. <lb />
Co., <lb />
LE. N, C, <lb />
always on <lb />
ask for it. <lb />
Orinoco Guano. <lb />
N. C. Nov. <lb />
Mr. t. s. Royster, Tarboro, N. <lb />
I grew acres tobacco this <lb />
year and already sold <lb />
pounds for than <lb />
Will get. I feel pretty sure, <lb />
for the. acres. I have <lb />
sold all so far to E. M. Pace, <lb />
Wilson. N. C Just sold 1,600 <lb />
pounds as follows pounds at <lb />
cents, pounds at cents, <lb />
pounds at cents, I used <lb />
pounds of your Orinoco and <lb />
Bone per acre. <lb />
C. A. Williams. <lb />
Boswell, <lb />
GREEN <lb />
.- .<lb />
SAm. Bible So. <lb />
Agent Now<lb />
I RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb />
OS <lb />
and would earnestly solicit your examination- <lb />
I always make <lb />
a specialty. <lb />
SHOES <lb />
FROM THE NORTHERN MARKETS BUT TOO BUSY <lb />
RECEIVING AND DISPLAYING <lb />
TO WRITE ALL WE WANT TO SAY TO YOU THIS WEEK <lb />
White Goods <lb />
and Laces. <lb />
I need not say anything about except that I have a new <lb />
lino. Prices lower than over- I thank you for your past favors <lb />
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance <lb />
Sewing Machines from up. Now Homo latest <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
Now Homo Sowing Machines and Depositor for Bible So <lb />
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb />
-ALL KIN OF <lb />
Watch this space and it will toll you all about it. <lb />
FRANK WILSON. HA <lb />
REPAIRING SHORT NOTICE <lb />
Only tint-class workmen material allowed in ray shops. The many <lb />
who have my work will testify to the and durability of <lb />
turned out at my Every vehicle guaranteed. <lb />
S WHIPS. <lb />
. it.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017685_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. BOOKS <lb />
by O- Proprietor Eastern <lb />
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb />
JOTTINGS <lb />
Last Friday's breaks at both <lb />
reminded us of the fall <lb />
The houses were nearly full. <lb />
Greenville will nearly reach the <lb />
two a half million post this <lb />
year. It has already sold about <lb />
two and a quarter. <lb />
Ci <lb />
of leaf factories and possibly <lb />
a warehouse built during the <lb />
summer. <lb />
LET'S HAVE A PITT COUNTY <lb />
FAIR. <lb />
Why Is there <lb />
reason why we should not <lb />
The answer everyone that knows <lb />
anything about Pitt county re- <lb />
sources must admit is no, while <lb />
there are a thousand reasons why <lb />
we should and to have a <lb />
The prospects now are that of public for the <lb />
will have quite a Bum- many industries that help <lb />
to foster and make Pitt county <lb />
she truly is, one of the great- <lb />
j est counties in the State. There <lb />
told us lost week . that will so effectually <lb />
that be had tobacco plants as advantages and <lb />
attractions of the county be- <lb />
Large us a toil cent piece- <lb />
co selling will commence <lb />
this year. <lb />
Greenville is surrounded by <lb />
the largest tobacco territory of <lb />
any market in the State- There <lb />
fore the world as a county fair. <lb />
There is nothing that will so <lb />
greatly infuse new and healthy <lb />
blood into tho sordid veins of a <lb />
people, and there is nothing that <lb />
will as a better mirror <lb />
high table not more than <lb />
yards from the depot and just far <lb />
to be convenient to the <lb />
business part of town. No better <lb />
natural advantages are presented <lb />
anywhere in the State for a fair <lb />
than in Greenville, no better ma- <lb />
can be found anywhere <lb />
from which to make a varied dis- <lb />
play than from the surrounding <lb />
country, the expense attached we <lb />
are informed by reliable authority <lb />
is only a trifle, and hence the only <lb />
obstacle that lies in the way of a <lb />
successful display of Pitt county's <lb />
advantages and Pitt county's in- <lb />
is the lack of a proper <lb />
effort on the part of the citizens. <lb />
Gentlemen, as graphically as we <lb />
the facts have been present- <lb />
ed. From this and within your <lb />
reach are thousands of dollars be- <lb />
sides placing yourselves on record <lb />
as being a progressive and <lb />
people. Will you do it <lb />
are counties that grow which to reflect the true <lb />
extensively and Greenville character, standing and get up <lb />
is the closest market and get of a town than a county <lb />
fair. Besides showing to tho <lb />
It is stated that tho Tarboro <lb />
market will open again nest sea- <lb />
world our natural advantages end <lb />
various industries that can be <lb />
son. we are in sympathy profitably handled there is a two <lb />
with the promoters of the Tarboro j advantage that directly <lb />
market, j-et fail to- this connection- <lb />
how it can ever amount to much.; every class of exhibits there <lb />
Tarboro is miles from of course premiums offered. <lb />
Mount, miles from Greenville These will prove incentives to <lb />
and about that distance from efforts toward perfection <lb />
son. only among the successful <lb />
tobacco than any tobacco contestants but it will tend to <lb />
in the east, hence, it must draw <lb />
most of its support from tho ad- <lb />
joining counties. <lb />
versify and draw out latest <lb />
tries and at tho same time teach <lb />
every contestant the of <lb />
reaching as near perfection as <lb />
,,., 11- n possible in hie particular line of <lb />
I here is much being written , ., ., . K . , <lb />
and said Just now about the over This will of course <lb />
production of tobacco. Tins is draw out. elevate, and <lb />
crop the price of which is <lb />
regulated and controlled more by <lb />
the law of supply demand <lb />
than any product grown, <lb />
and hence this law should be <lb />
rigidly observed by every tobacco <lb />
farmer. There a strong and <lb />
increasing demand i r sine <lb />
co and these grades in our <lb />
ion will co . land a good <lb />
price, the reason for inch is be- <lb />
cause of their scarcity while <lb />
i- little .; co demand for the <lb />
com; the lowest <lb />
re has been . <lb />
really s o I a p of ms <lb />
in the State I while com- <lb />
have been produced in <lb />
super abundance each y u until <lb />
row the farmers in Central and <lb />
Western North a are be <lb />
r to abandon the culture <lb />
of to a ginning to <lb />
curtail their very consider- <lb />
ably. While this is being done <lb />
by the farmers iii the old tobacco <lb />
territory it would e w ii for the <lb />
farmers in Eastern North Carolina <lb />
where our soil ts much <lb />
Quotations of the Greenville Tobacco <lb />
Market. <lb />
Office of O. L. Joyner. <lb />
N. C-, Mar. 1894. <lb />
QUOTATIONS. <lb />
Tips, green to <lb />
Greenish yellow to <lb />
Smokers, common to good to <lb />
good to fine to <lb />
Cutters, common to good to <lb />
good to tine to <lb />
fine to fancy <lb />
Wrappers, common to <lb />
medium to <lb />
good to <lb />
to fancy to 75- <lb />
make more perfect our various on- <lb />
developed resources. A fair of <lb />
this kind will do more towards fa- <lb />
the people of one sec <lb />
of the county tho people <lb />
of other sections i all the- writ- <lb />
and talking of years will ac-i <lb />
There it will be shown j <lb />
the choice selections of each man's <lb />
agricultural product and alike also <lb />
with all exhibits. A man <lb />
living in the Farmville section <lb />
can t on his buggy end in j <lb />
time see the county's <lb />
so to speak. And we might j <lb />
go and write a volume of ad- <lb />
almost to be derived <lb />
from such an exhibit. To every; <lb />
thinking man who has given <lb />
the matter thought argument <lb />
along this line is unnecessary, <lb />
we will next turn tho attention of j <lb />
the leader to the material from <lb />
which we can select as fine an ex-j <lb />
as small an expense as <lb />
any county in the whole State <lb />
from Cherokee Island, j <lb />
We grow in county all kinds <lb />
I of fruits and flowers and <lb />
adopted to the t <lb />
. give so tie heed to the <lb />
central and <lb />
i in Eastern <lb />
action taken by <lb />
western friends <lb />
tables which constitute no <lb />
small item. We venture the as- <lb />
we have never <lb />
I heard Sheriff Warren mention <lb />
that River Side Nursery will <lb />
North o a and floral <lb />
farmers plant very U by any in <lb />
but is ,, . . , ,,, w., i i <lb />
. ,. tho State and Allen Warren <lb />
been planting . . , , , <lb />
Son will take great pleasure in <lb />
nave <lb />
from to acres n <lb />
contributing liberally to an <lb />
,;  this kind. In Pitt <lb />
of or acres inconsiderately. j m be . <lb />
.,. pure bred as in any county <lb />
and given ., c,. , . . , , <lb />
. . , . in the State and it is trouble <lb />
the acres is wherein lies the sue , , T i <lb />
. . , , , ; to find thorough Jersey and <lb />
of the tobacco crop, , .,, , . . <lb />
Durham cattle, and when it comes <lb />
when twenty is planted the proper I. , ,, . <lb />
J , . to fast horses they pep up and <lb />
fertilizing and attention can i. , , , . , <lb />
., , . , u. trot out almost every neigh- <lb />
and as a result , , , . ,. . <lb />
. , , . in the county, <lb />
a very inferior carp tobacco is , ,, , . . <lb />
, . , races alone would draw in <lb />
raised which throw.-, the . . , . , <lb />
, , . , , , spectators enough at cents <lb />
in debt in the year- , . -i ., t , <lb />
apiece to almost defray the actual <lb />
The thing f .- farmer <lb />
to do is to take the situation <lb />
just as it remembering that I <lb />
there i; two or three, year's supply <lb />
of tobacco already on band and <lb />
if the acreage continues to be in-l <lb />
expenses of running tho fair. <lb />
While our poultry industry is not <lb />
what it might just at present <lb />
yet that could be made an at- <lb />
tractive feature with a little care- <lb />
attention. Mr. B. 15- <lb />
creased however, u not , . , ,, .,, . <lb />
, , . . at near Farmville, has <lb />
to be m the course . . , . . . <lb />
an interesting variety of <lb />
a few more years like cut . . . . , , <lb />
D , . . and duck Mr- <lb />
ton, though the price of etch is Jack White has a growing <lb />
by forces will j q <lb />
be worth the cast of ; when it comes a , o <lb />
A great many Ox our East-; . <lb />
have become as firm-L h <lb />
y attached to cultivation of K m <lb />
tobacco as they were formerly at- hero Pitt <lb />
all because of number <lb />
who farm upon business <lb />
pals and belong to the school of <lb />
modern agriculture. These gen- <lb />
among them, Mr. R. <lb />
Cotton, J. Bryan Grimes and J. <lb />
J. and numbers <lb />
of others will help to mike a <lb />
of the agricultural exhibit, <lb />
and hist greatest under the <lb />
head of agricultural products <lb />
comes tobacco. For years past <lb />
Pitt county baa taken the <lb />
um where premiums were offered <lb />
for the finest d hero in <lb />
its native home is the place to <lb />
exhibit it. So much for the ma- <lb />
now for tho fair grounds. <lb />
The tobacco warehouses can be <lb />
conveniently used for <lb />
cultural exhibit, just back <lb />
of the warehouses is tho best- <lb />
place for the entire fair grounds <lb />
that we have ever seen. <lb />
a hundred acres stretch mi a <lb />
crop, and if they wish to <lb />
keep the value of tobacco at pay- <lb />
prices they certainly must pay <lb />
attention to the demand and not <lb />
produce more than a supply. <lb />
The States, of North Carolina <lb />
Virginia furnish the world. These <lb />
States are the masters of the sit- <lb />
They can control the <lb />
price if they will and looking at <lb />
it a business point of view it <lb />
is much better to keep the de <lb />
active than to make an over <lb />
supply thereby lessening the de- <lb />
and prices. In <lb />
our opinion there will not be near <lb />
as much bright tobacco territory <lb />
planted the State this year as <lb />
there was last we. sincerely <lb />
there will not. <lb />
Mr. F. Stair-, St.,<lb />
. Writes n- Oil <lb />
in Mini i. it superior to <lb />
liniment I have ever <lb />
THOROUGH DISINFECTION. <lb />
S x Rules That Conform to the Latest <lb />
Approved Methods. <lb />
Long before people understood the <lb />
manner in which contagious and in- <lb />
diseases were communicated <lb />
from one person to another, the <lb />
had been fully established <lb />
of a thorough disinfection of tho pa- <lb />
clothing and of the room <lb />
which he had occupied; but the <lb />
agents formerly employed for this <lb />
purpose, included, arc now <lb />
believed to be wholly useless. <lb />
At present only three chemical <lb />
agents are recognized as of value in <lb />
completely destroying of <lb />
disease and preventing their spread. <lb />
These are carbolic acid, corrosive <lb />
sublimate and chloride of lime; and <lb />
it is at once apparent, to every one <lb />
at familiar with these chemicals, <lb />
that their employment is necessarily <lb />
restricted, as allot them are irritant <lb />
poisons when used to excess. <lb />
Of the three, chloride of lime is <lb />
perhaps tho one which may be said <lb />
to deserve the greatest <lb />
on account of its cheapness and <lb />
the comparatively little danger at- <lb />
tending its use. <lb />
German authorities advocate the <lb />
employment of steam and heat, <lb />
justly maintaining that in these <lb />
have cheap and efficient agents, <lb />
which are also highly penetrable and <lb />
at the same time dangerous to but <lb />
few household articles. <lb />
The following rules may be said to <lb />
conform to the latest approved <lb />
methods of <lb />
All fabrics which will not be in- <lb />
in the process must be boiled <lb />
in water for at least four hours. <lb />
Fabrics which will not stand <lb />
this treatment are to be subjected to <lb />
the action of dry heat for a much <lb />
longer time. <lb />
Furniture, etc., may be treated <lb />
with a four-tenths per cent, solution <lb />
of carbolic acid. <lb />
All articles which have been <lb />
actual use by the patient must be <lb />
burned. <lb />
The walls of the room must be <lb />
thoroughly rubbed down with bread <lb />
which must afterward be burned. <lb />
The sputa and excrements of <lb />
the patient must be at once treated <lb />
with chloride of <lb />
ft is evident that upon the <lb />
of disinfection depends not <lb />
only the private, but the public <lb />
Companion. <lb />
ENGLISH. <lb />
Professional Tips for the Aspiring <lb />
Young Reporter. <lb />
A young man desiring to become <lb />
a reporter on the daily press re- <lb />
the following suggestions <lb />
from an old-timer to whom he <lb />
plied for professional <lb />
rescuing drowning men, it <lb />
must always be when they are going <lb />
down for the third time. No case <lb />
is on record of a rescue when the <lb />
sufferer was going down the first <lb />
time. <lb />
a gentleman gives a bank <lb />
note it must always be a five- <lb />
dollar or ten-dollar one. <lb />
are of two descriptions, <lb />
the and the <lb />
course every writer knows <lb />
that fire must always mentioned <lb />
as the <lb />
is no one exactly <lb />
knows, but when anything spreads <lb />
rapidly, remember it like <lb />
especially political ones, <lb />
must always be to the <lb />
no matter whether there is any <lb />
breeze or not; fling it, do not unfurl <lb />
it. <lb />
you can manage to get an as- <lb />
sault, a dog fight and a burglary all <lb />
into one column, do it, for it will <lb />
cure the alliterative scare head of <lb />
Carnival of <lb />
of winning or losing <lb />
money, it must always boa five <lb />
hundred or five thousand dollars. <lb />
However heated the struggle, the <lb />
amount must always be <lb />
a person after an accident <lb />
is found to be dead, it is best not to <lb />
say so, but that vital spark has <lb />
on the political side <lb />
which your paper advocates should <lb />
always be <lb />
ton Bulletin. <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
People read <lb />
and they want <lb />
nice, good Books. <lb />
If can be had <lb />
FREE <lb />
It is all the better. <lb />
The question i. <lb />
HOW <lb />
Can books be had for nothing f <lb />
Just read on and <lb />
you will learn how <lb />
to get your own <lb />
selection from the list. <lb />
of splendid books printed <lb />
below, or as many <lb />
as you want <lb />
ABSOLUTELY <lb />
Here is our offer <lb />
Any one who Is already a subscriber to <lb />
THE <lb />
EASTERN <lb />
REFLECTOR <lb />
and will bring or send us one <lb />
NEW subscriber a re- <lb />
for a year, will be <lb />
one of the following <lb />
books. Two subscribers for months <lb />
or four for months counts <lb />
the same as one yearly subscriber. <lb />
Get as many as you can and <lb />
receive a corresponding <lb />
of books. <lb />
must be new <lb />
Here is a of the books from which <lb />
to make your selection <lb />
Under Currents. <lb />
Soldiers Three. <lb />
Preachers. <lb />
Lord Lady. <lb />
One Maid's Mischief. <lb />
Her Strange Amour. <lb />
Bag of Diamonds. <lb />
Karl's Error. <lb />
Majors Daughter. <lb />
Crown of Shame. <lb />
Mine Host's <lb />
Jet. <lb />
Eve, <lb />
A Life. <lb />
Carmen. <lb />
Art of <lb />
All Sorts an Conditions of men. <lb />
Fast Existence. <lb />
The Lament of Dives. <lb />
Way to the Heart. <lb />
Misled. <lb />
Ball Night. <lb />
Little Rebel. <lb />
Tour of the World in SO Days. <lb />
Almost Persuaded. <lb />
Affair of Honor. <lb />
It. R. Mystery. <lb />
By Right. <lb />
Oriental Mr. Jacobs, <lb />
Nemesis. <lb />
Pioneer. <lb />
Baleful <lb />
Mexican Mystery. <lb />
House on the Marsh. <lb />
Oliver Twist. <lb />
Fortune. <lb />
Dear Life. <lb />
Avatar, <lb />
Willy <lb />
Society. <lb />
Beyond the End. <lb />
The Gambler. <lb />
On the and Off. <lb />
His Last Passion. <lb />
wife. <lb />
Story of a Crime. <lb />
Matron or <lb />
At the World's Mercy. <lb />
Blind Fate. <lb />
Heroes and Hero Worships. <lb />
Angle or Devil. <lb />
June Eyre. <lb />
For Sake. <lb />
Yellow Mask. <lb />
Master of His Fat, <lb />
Cleverly Won. <lb />
Nurse Mistake. <lb />
Bear in mind these are out shoddy books <lb />
but every one of them is beautifully <lb />
bound in cloth worth cents to <lb />
You can examine the books at the <lb />
office and see just what <lb />
you are getting. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned haying qualified <lb />
administrator on the estate of J. <lb />
Barber on the 3rd day of February <lb />
1394, this is to notify all persons n <lb />
claims against the estate to preset, <lb />
them within months from this <lb />
for or notice will be plea <lb />
In bar of their recovery, all person <lb />
owing the. estate will come I and <lb />
settle at once. Feb. 3rd, 1804. <lb />
B. F. PATRICK, <lb />
J. i. II. Barber . <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK<lb />
DOCTORS often fail TO Cure. <lb />
Eminent specialists are consulted . <lb />
in vain, change of scene and <lb />
climate have no effect. Your <lb />
case seems hopeless. Do <lb />
not Despair. The <lb />
cures such cases. <lb />
Read the <lb />
of North <lb />
Carolina's <lb />
best <lb />
Rev. Beaman <lb />
of DURHAM. <lb />
he has n the <lb />
with marked <lb />
benefit, and would not be <lb />
Mr. Ralph Williams, <lb />
DURHAM, <lb />
cured me <lb />
of <lb />
Tie wise with your <lb />
WRITE US. <lb />
ATLANTIC CO., <lb />
Washington, D. . <lb />
For the Core of all Skin <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
years, and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en <lb />
by the leading physicians all <lb />
country, and has effected cures whew <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
the most experienced physicians, <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is owing entirely <lb />
its efficacy, as but little hat <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. All Cash Orders promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. CHRISTMAN, <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Couch Syrup <lb />
Kg, <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers leave Washington for Green- <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land- <lb />
on Tar River Monday, <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These departures are subject to stage of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
Connecting at Washington with steam <lb />
of The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
more from <lb />
more. Miners from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
Agent, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Miss Maria <lb />
BOOK <lb />
containing receipts which she has <lb />
lately written for the <lb />
SENT FREE <lb />
on to Co., <lb />
Place, New York. Drop a <lb />
for it and always buy <lb />
Company's <lb />
Extract of Beef. <lb />
JACKSON <lb />
Office Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, <lb />
-o- <lb />
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb />
AND OFFICE<lb />
FURNITURE. <lb />
Schools and Churches seated <lb />
in the best manner. Offices <lb />
famished. Send for <lb />
A NORTH CAROLINA <lb />
R. R. TIME TABLE. <lb />
In Effect December 4th, ISM. <lb />
GOING EAST. <lb />
GOING WEST. <lb />
Henry Sheppard, <lb />
REAL ESTATE IN COLLECTING <lb />
AGENT . <lb />
FOR RENT. A nice residence, <lb />
lid tine rooms <lb />
kitchen convenient, barn and stables, <lb />
A small house, rooms, kitchen con- <lb />
fin garden spot, nice neigh- <lb />
A small house Just beyond town, and <lb />
a few tenement houses. <lb />
Also for sale about acres <lb />
land, good house, fruit <lb />
trees strawberry patch, adjoining <lb />
corporate limits. Term <lb />
FuR nice residence, <lb />
barn and stables, splendid <lb />
A fine vacant lot, x <lb />
A line residence lot on Evans St, <lb />
One and lot, rooms and <lb />
One vacant lot x <lb />
and lo on Dickinson <lb />
rooms and kitchen. <lb />
Pass. Daily <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
P. M.<lb />
Hi <lb />
1-8 <lb />
P. M. <lb />
P. M<lb />
P. M. <lb />
STATIONS <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Kinston <lb />
Pass. Daily <lb />
Ex Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
A. M <lb />
A. M. <lb />
A. M. <lb />
A. M <lb />
Train connects with Wilmington <lb />
train bound North, leaving <lb />
Goldsboro a. m., and with D. <lb />
train West, leaving Goldsboro p. m. <lb />
Train connects with Richmond <lb />
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro <lb />
p. m., and with W. A W. train <lb />
from the at p. in. <lb />
S. L. DILL, <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
and the hair. <lb />
luxuriant <lb />
to <lb />
Hair to youthful Color. <lb />
hair <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
Do You Ride a Victor <lb />
If you ride why not ride the best <lb />
There is but one best and it's a Victor. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
Washington, Denver, San Francisco. <lb />
J. S. JENKINS CO., <lb />
LEAF TOBACCO BROKERS <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
-o <lb />
Ample Facilities for Re-drying. Large Stock <lb />
Buys on Order Exclusively. <lb />
Tyson Bawls. Bankers, and Tobacco Board of Trade Greenville <lb />
f of <lb />
Life Assurance <lb />
is protection for the family. <lb />
Unfortunately, however, the <lb />
beneficiaries of life assurance <lb />
are often deprived of the pro- <lb />
vision made for through <lb />
the loss of the principal, by <lb />
following bad advice regard- <lb />
its investment. <lb />
Under the Installment <lb />
Policy of <lb />
The Equitable Life <lb />
you are provided with an ab- <lb />
solute safeguard against such <lb />
misfortune, besides securing <lb />
a much larger amount of in- <lb />
for the same amount <lb />
of premiums paid in. <lb />
For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
For the Rock Hill, S. C. <lb />
BREAKFAST-SUPPER. <lb />
GRATEFUL COMFORTING. <lb />
COCOA <lb />
WATER OR MILK.<lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from a prescription <lb />
widely used by the best <lb />
cal and arc <lb />
in a form that is be- <lb />
coming the every- <lb />
where. <lb />
STATIONERY <lb />
Yon miss it time if you fail to call for <lb />
what you want in this line at the <lb />
v, <lb />
but promptly upon i <lb />
stomach and intestines; t <lb />
dyspepsia, habitual <lb />
offensive breath and head- <lb />
ache. One taken id <lb />
We make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb />
Quality, <lb />
for anything with you, come to see us. <lb />
Envelopes a pack up. <lb />
Note Paper a quire up. <lb />
Letter, Fools Cap and <lb />
Legal Gap equally low. <lb />
Tablet from cent up- <lb />
Slate cents <lb />
up. <lb />
Lead Pencils doz. up. <lb />
Pen Points cents <lb />
per dozen up. <lb />
A FEW SPECIALTIES <lb />
We are sole agents for A <lb />
the very best for school and <lb />
first symptom of <lb />
biliousness, dizziness, distress <lb />
after eating, or depression of <lb />
spirits, will surely and quickly <lb />
remove the whole difficulty. <lb />
may be ob- <lb />
of nearest druggist. <lb />
are to . <lb />
quick to act, <lb />
save r. <lb />
tor's<lb />
t------- <lb />
INKS, <lb />
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage boats any <lb />
on the market. Our Diamond Glue <lb />
and Magic Cement will mend anything but broken <lb />
hearts. <lb />
Every business man should have a DAD <lb />
KER FOUNTAIN <lb />
last a life time and are sold nowhere else in <lb />
town- <lb />
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence are <lb />
the prettiest in town. We also keep Mourning <lb />
Paper. Then we have Slates, Blank Books, <lb />
Memorandum Books, Time Books, Erasers, Rub- <lb />
Pencil Holders, Automatic Pencils, <lb />
Cups, Stands, Paper Cutters, Book <lb />
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things. <lb />
BOOKS AND NOVELS. <lb />
If you want anything to read come look over <lb />
our supply. Any book not on hand will be or- <lb />
for you. <lb />
Now remember the the only place <lb />
at which you can get these goods at such low <lb />
prices. <lb />
BOOK STORK. <lb />
The Best Shoes <lb />
for the Least Money. <lb />
DOUGLAS <lb />
SHOE <lb />
FOR <lb />
and 83.50 Dress Shoe. <lb />
Police Shoe, Soles. <lb />
82.50, <lb />
and 61.75 for Boys. <lb />
LADIES AND MISSES, <lb />
82.60 <lb />
fee. <lb />
you VI. L. <lb />
hoes at price, <lb />
or Bays he has them <lb />
the name stamped <lb />
the bottom, pat him <lb />
down <lb />
Shoes are easy fitting, and give better <lb />
ice advertised than any other make. Try one pair and be con- <lb />
of W. L. name and price on the bottom, which <lb />
;, saves thousand's of dollars annually to those who wear them. <lb />
sale W. I. Shoes gain customers, which helps to <lb />
full line of goods. They can afford to sell at a leaf profit. <lb />
in save money by nil your footwear of the dealer <lb />
o V. X. DOUGLAS, Mass. <lb />
i-t, . a. ass . <lb />
L. DAVIS BRO. Farmville, N. C. <lb />
WELDON B. . <lb />
and <lb />
SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
Oct daily Fast Mall, <lb />
daily ex <lb />
Weldon 12,35 pm pm <lb />
Ar pm pm <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro pm <lb />
Rocky Mt 4-2 p m pm <lb />
L Wilson<lb />
Ar Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Magnolia<lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No No <lb />
dally daily daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Florence SO <lb />
SO<lb />
Ar Wilson I <lb />
Wilmington am <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Ar Wilson am p m <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ai Rocky Mont <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
v Tarboro p m <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck <lb />
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m., Halifax 4.41 <lb />
m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. r <lb />
Greenville 6.28 p. m., Kinston p <lb />
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. <lb />
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Hal <lb />
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
Washington a, m. arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 a. Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m., Parmele <lb />
in,, arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Scot In Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except <lb />
day, P M, Sunday PM, <lb />
Plymouth p. m., p. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
5.30 a. m., Sunday 10.00 <lb />
N C, 10.26 AM <lb />
Trains on Southern Division, <lb />
Branch leave Fay <lb />
ville a m. arrive Rowland pm <lb />
Returning leave Rowland p n <lb />
arrive p m. Daily ex- <lb />
sept Sunday. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch It a <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C. A M. Re <lb />
retuning N C AM <lb />
Goldsboro. NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville SO <lb />
Hope P M. Returning <lb />
Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.85 arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
M, except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. B. <lb />
m., arrive D unbar 8.40 p <lb />
Returning leave Dun bar a- n. <lb />
arrive Latin 7.15 a. m. <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at <lb />
leave <lb />
ton at A M, and P. M. conn t <lb />
at Warsaw with Nos. ind <lb />
Train No. makes close <lb />
Weldon all points North dally. <lb />
via Richmond, and dally except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
General <lb />
R. Transportation <lb />
v, AMI <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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