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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 11 April 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">18940411</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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            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 11 April 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>18940411</dc:date>
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                <p>
W-M <lb />
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 />
BOOKS F BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS BOOKS <lb />
BOOKS E BOOKS <lb />
People must read <lb />
they want <lb />
nice, ROM Book. <lb />
If they can he had <lb />
FREE <lb />
It is all the better. <lb />
The question is <lb />
HOW <lb />
book- be had for nothing <lb />
lust 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 />
of as you want <lb />
ABSOLUTELY FREE. <lb />
Here is our <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 following <lb />
book-. Two subscribers for months <lb />
or four subscribers for months counts <lb />
the same as one yearly subscriber. <lb />
Get as many a you can <lb />
receive a corresponding <lb />
of books. <lb />
they must be new subscribers. <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, APRIL n, 1894. <lb />
NO. <lb />
joints <lb />
Is the place to find the <lb />
REFLECTOR OFFICE <lb />
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and <lb />
got your Home Paper a year- <lb />
y This for Job Printing <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Mentioned in our State Ex- <lb />
changes that are of Genera <lb />
The Cream of the News <lb />
THE EXPERIMENT <lb />
Here i m Hit of the books from which <lb />
to make your selection <lb />
Under Currents. <lb />
Soldiers Three. <lb />
Lord Lady. <lb />
One Maid's Mischief. <lb />
Her Strange Amour. <lb />
Bag of Diamond. <lb />
Karl's Error. <lb />
Majors Daughter. <lb />
Crown of Shame. <lb />
Mine Host's <lb />
Jet. <lb />
Ere. <lb />
A Rogue's Life. <lb />
Carmen. <lb />
Art of <lb />
All Sorts an Conditions of men. <lb />
Fast Existence. <lb />
The Lament of <lb />
Way to the <lb />
Misled. <lb />
Ball Night <lb />
Little Rebel. <lb />
Tour of the World in SO Dare, <lb />
Almost Persuaded. <lb />
Affair of Honor. <lb />
R. R. Mystery. <lb />
By Right. <lb />
Oriental Mr. Jacob, <lb />
Nemesis. <lb />
Pioneer. <lb />
Baleful Influence. <lb />
Mexican Mystery. <lb />
House on the Marsh. <lb />
Fortune. <lb />
Dear Life. <lb />
Avatar. <lb />
Willy Reilly. <lb />
Society. <lb />
Beyond the End. <lb />
The Gambler. <lb />
On the Stage and Off. <lb />
His Last Passion. <lb />
Vagrant Wife. <lb />
Story of a Crime. <lb />
Matron or Maid. <lb />
A; the World's Mercy. <lb />
Blind Fate. <lb />
Heroes and Hero Worships. <lb />
or Devil. <lb />
Jane Eyre. <lb />
For Sake. <lb />
Mask. <lb />
Muster of His I <lb />
Cleverly Won. <lb />
Nurse Revels Mistake. <lb />
in mind these not books <lb />
every one of them is beautifully <lb />
bound in cloth and worth cents to <lb />
You examine the books at the <lb />
Reflector office and see just what <lb />
you re getting. <lb />
John Gail, of Baltimore, has <lb />
appointed temporary <lb />
of the Cape Fear <lb />
Valley R- R- <lb />
Many of the gold mines in <lb />
tern North Carolina are very <lb />
active at present and will be <lb />
developed by their owners. <lb />
The young ladies of the two <lb />
male colleges at Greensboro haw <lb />
organized baseball teams and <lb />
have purchased balls, bats, rules, <lb />
etc. <lb />
The President has nominated <lb />
Mr. W. R. Henry, as consul to <lb />
one of the West Indian <lb />
Islands off the north cost of <lb />
Smithfield Herald Mr. L. D-1 <lb />
Wood, of near in <lb />
moving some old timbers last j <lb />
week killed two rats which meas- <lb />
fifteen inches from tip to tip. <lb />
The latest fads for weddings is j <lb />
to have young married <lb />
for attendants. The next church <lb />
wedding in Charlotte will have <lb />
two married women for brides <lb />
made. <lb />
W. Mason, Esq., of <lb />
Northampton county, will deliver <lb />
the oration at the laying of the <lb />
corner stone of North Caro- <lb />
Confederate monument at <lb />
Raleigh on May 20th. <lb />
It now seems quite probable <lb />
that the next encampment of the <lb />
State Guard will be held at <lb />
Sound, where it has <lb />
boon held for the past several <lb />
years, until last year. <lb />
Holland English was taken <lb />
from jail at Mitchell <lb />
county, Sunday morning and j <lb />
hanged by a mob of about <lb />
men. for the murder of his wife,; <lb />
whom he killed to marry another <lb />
woman. <lb />
President Dunn and Secretary j <lb />
of the Newborn fair, <lb />
have been re-elected. It would <lb />
be impossible to find better <lb />
for the fair They are <lb />
right men in the right <lb />
Will the year old <lb />
sou of Archibald of, <lb />
Marion, has been committed to j <lb />
jail for days for assaulting his <lb />
mother. The evidence showed <lb />
that he beat and chocked her and , <lb />
assaulted her with a bed slat. <lb />
A Portuguese merchant of I <lb />
known as John Silva, but <lb />
whose real name is Emanuel <lb />
Mitchell, was overcome by smoke <lb />
and suffocated by a fire Friday <lb />
morning. It is thought he may <lb />
have been robbed and murdered <lb />
and the store set on fire. <lb />
Durham News reaches <lb />
Durham that a colored woman <lb />
named Carter, living near <lb />
Boyce's mill, thirteen miles from <lb />
here, had a fit yesterday morning <lb />
and fell the fire. Her face and <lb />
hands were severely and <lb />
at last accounts she was not ex- <lb />
to recover. <lb />
The people of Maxton are <lb />
greatly excited over the work of <lb />
a fire fiend- The nearly com- <lb />
guard house was set on <lb />
fire Thursday night but was <lb />
out. The A. M. R. depot was <lb />
set on fire about the same time <lb />
burned down. Thought that <lb />
the same person set both fires. <lb />
Hon. Josiah Turner, a <lb />
resident of says <lb />
it is absolutely the most unique <lb />
town in the United States, for the <lb />
reason that not the slightest <lb />
changes been made in over <lb />
a century, and that Lord Corn- <lb />
could he it, would <lb />
every place. The time <lb />
is kept by a clock in the court- <lb />
house presented by King George <lb />
III. <lb />
A good <lb />
many of the Norfolk Va., shad <lb />
fishermen have taken up their <lb />
nets and quit the business be- <lb />
cause the eels and crabs eat and <lb />
mutilate the fish so as to make <lb />
them unmarketable. Fishermen <lb />
here say the same pest are worse <lb />
than they ever knew them to be <lb />
and that they interfere greatly <lb />
with the catch in Neuse river. <lb />
Sometimes scarcely anything <lb />
would be left except the backbone <lb />
of the fish attacked. <lb />
At C, Desires to Assist <lb />
the Farmers of North Carolina <lb />
Publications <lb />
Realty or by Advices as <lb />
to Subjects. <lb />
March 1804. <lb />
The Station <lb />
The standing offer is made to send <lb />
the bulletins of the Station to all in tho <lb />
State who really desire to receive them- <lb />
Thousands of farmers have already <lb />
taken advantage of this offer. Unless <lb />
you really want to be benefited by them, <lb />
please do not apply for them. If you <lb />
desire to read them, write on postal <lb />
card to Or. II. B. Battle. Director. <lb />
X. C. <lb />
Some th <lb />
Station. <lb />
The following gives a short <lb />
of each of the bulletins issued <lb />
lately. Each number will be sent free I <lb />
upon application from residents in <lb />
North Carolina. A small fee cents <lb />
for and cents for each of the <lb />
is charged those living in other states. <lb />
Practical Stock <lb />
This bulletin gives composition of <lb />
various feeding stuffs the nutrients, <lb />
the nutritive ratios, the digestible <lb />
tables of feeding standards, the <lb />
calculation of full values of <lb />
fodder and the comparative value of <lb />
valuable bulletin for the <lb />
feeder who desires to understand <lb />
what he is about. <lb />
No. Some Experiment in Wheat <lb />
pages cuts Describes the <lb />
effect of plowing under a crop of ripe <lb />
cow pea vines for manuring for wheat <lb />
during a succession of four years on <lb />
the same ground. The average gain <lb />
due to this manuring for a series of <lb />
years pr acre was <lb />
With no additional fertilizers, bu. <lb />
With lbs. bu. <lb />
With lbs. acid phosphate, <lb />
With lbs. cotton seed meal, bu. <lb />
With lbs. acid I <lb />
cottonseed meal <lb />
37.5 I <lb />
Seventeen varieties of wheat were j <lb />
also tested, together with the depth of <lb />
planting. It was found that three <lb />
inches was the best depth. Best <lb />
tics were the Winter Green, <lb />
and <lb />
No. Culture of Orchard and Gar- <lb />
den paces. cuts illustrate <lb />
the text. Practical methods for the j <lb />
planting and after treatment of <lb />
and also description of I <lb />
the various insects and fungous pests j <lb />
affecting the growth of trees, vines and <lb />
small fruits, and methods to destroy <lb />
them. <lb />
Feeding <lb />
pages. Includes experiments in fatten- <lb />
stock for beef with cotton seed hulls <lb />
and feeding with corn silage and <lb />
l bean silage with cotton seed <lb />
also feeding an exclusive <lb />
age- ration, and a discussion of what is <lb />
a maintenance ration. <lb />
Horticultural Tests and Re- <lb />
with Garden Vegetables. Fruits <lb />
pages Gives tests <lb />
of cabbages, melons, garden corn, cu- <lb />
cumbers, egg plants, lettuce, onions, <lb />
Irish potatoes, tomatoes. Strawberries, <lb />
raspberries, blackberries, figs, peaches, <lb />
tube roses, lilies, gladioli, early <lb />
and roses. <lb />
The Fertilizer Control during <lb />
pages includes official analysis <lb />
of and fall samples and a de- <lb />
of ingredients in fertilizers <lb />
and their analysis. This bulletin de- <lb />
scribes the materials of which <lb />
are made and th composition; <lb />
also gives the method for arriving at <lb />
the valuation of the ingredients by the <lb />
experiment station, and how to <lb />
late the values per ton reckoned upon <lb />
the percentages of the three valuable <lb />
ingredients. Correct freight rates arc <lb />
to BA interior points in <lb />
Carolina from Wilmington, Norfolk, <lb />
Charleston and Richmond. <lb />
Miscellaneous agricultural <lb />
topics contained in the press service <lb />
pages many practical <lb />
points of value to the agriculturist are <lb />
given in plain language. A feature of <lb />
the bulletin is the collection of the <lb />
questions and replies important <lb />
farm subjects. <lb />
Digestion pages <lb />
the results of the detailed work <lb />
in these pages are described In plain <lb />
language in a few pages in the begin- <lb />
so that a tired man can reach the <lb />
conclusion at once. For the detailed <lb />
scientific student and investigator <lb />
are given showing how the above <lb />
results are reached. The digestion <lb />
work covers feeding with soy <lb />
bean hay, cat-tail millet. Johnson grass <lb />
hay. sorghum fodder and pea- <lb />
nut vine hay. cotton seed meal, cotton <lb />
seed hulls, crimson clover hay, corn <lb />
cob meal and corn silage. <lb />
Some Leguminous Crops and <lb />
Their Economic Value; pages Gives <lb />
the of the year 1893, with a great <lb />
many varieties clovers, cow <lb />
soy beans and other <lb />
The bulletin includes discussions of <lb />
as of the soil, <lb />
their cultivation for forage and their <lb />
fungous and insect enemies. <lb />
Field Peas. <lb />
The Carolina Experiment Sta- <lb />
during had under competitive <lb />
test plats of cow peas and beans <lb />
ten varieties of the former and eight of <lb />
the latter. The experiment has been <lb />
the results are published <lb />
in bulletin No. which is now being <lb />
mailed in time to benefit farmers who <lb />
sow these crops in spring. Here it may <lb />
be said that the pea has <lb />
upon dry, medium and wet soil given <lb />
by far the best results, out yielding all <lb />
others, both in fruit and foliage. This <lb />
pea is also the latest to mature. For <lb />
second place the contest is between the <lb />
black pea and the red ripper, both of <lb />
which are excellent and medium early. <lb />
The earliest of all is the speckled or <lb />
whippoorwill pea. The in <lb />
Georgia, sometimes called <lb />
and are in all re- <lb />
are one and the I <lb />
same variety. <lb />
In the bean class, the old yellow <lb />
variety is the most productive, both in <lb />
fruit and foliage, but is much later than <lb />
some of the newer variety. <lb />
Concerning the popular names of <lb />
these plants it may be said that the <lb />
so-called cow pea is not a pea. but a <lb />
bean and is more properly called Chi- <lb />
beans. The so-called bean is <lb />
a true pea. and should be called soy <lb />
pea. or Japan pea. by whatever <lb />
lines we call them, plants are <lb />
among the most valuable crop the <lb />
southern farmer can grow. <lb />
Gerald <lb />
Botanist X. C. Experiment Station. <lb />
Cabbage Insects. <lb />
Probably the worst pest of the cab- <lb />
field is the so-called calico or <lb />
bug, <lb />
pest is practically proof against known <lb />
insecticides and must be hand picked. <lb />
This is most easily bi <lb />
a pan <lb />
and pouring upon this a <lb />
of kerosene oil. Hold, the pan <lb />
the plant and shake or jar the plant. <lb />
The bugs will readily drop into the <lb />
and be instantly killed tho oil. A <lb />
pure kerosene will burn the leaves bad- <lb />
it must not be splashed on them. <lb />
green and striped worms which gnaw <lb />
the leaves of cabbage may be destroyed <lb />
by the kerosene emulsion, and the cab- <lb />
lice can be held in check by tin <lb />
same remedy. <lb />
Kerosene oil, . pint. <lb />
Soft quart <lb />
Boiling water. . . I quarts. <lb />
Churn the mixture for ten minutes, <lb />
it become a thick cream. Then <lb />
dilute with four quarts of cold water <lb />
and use. Mixing with a stick will not <lb />
do. because on cooling the oil will <lb />
and rise to top. When well done <lb />
the emulsion is stable. Do not dilute <lb />
until ready to use. green should <lb />
not be need on cabbage. <lb />
X. C. Experiment Station. <lb />
Advanced Monthly Summary of Meteor- <lb />
Report for North Car- <lb />
February, 1894. <lb />
The Carolina state weather <lb />
service issues the following advanced <lb />
summary of the weather for February, <lb />
as compared with the correspond- <lb />
month of previous years. <lb />
mean tempera- <lb />
for the month was 43.8 degrees, <lb />
which is 0.5 degrees below the normal. <lb />
The highest monthly mean was 50.9. at <lb />
lowest. Blowing <lb />
The highest temperature was on the <lb />
10th. at lowest, below <lb />
zero, on the 27th, at The <lb />
warmest February during the past <lb />
twenty-one years was in 1890, mean, <lb />
the coldest in 1875, mean, 38.4. <lb />
for the <lb />
month. 4.82 inch, which is 0.57 above <lb />
the normal. The greatest amount was <lb />
inches, at Highlands, least amount, <lb />
at The wettest Feb- <lb />
occurred In <lb />
the driest in 1890; average, 1.41. Snow <lb />
occurred on the 4th, 5th. 14th, 15th, <lb />
Kith, 25th, 98th, at some western <lb />
but on the 25th it was general, <lb />
and the heaviest snow of the winter <lb />
occurred. The largest monthly snow- <lb />
fall was inches, at Bakersville. <lb />
south- <lb />
west. This is the normal direction <lb />
February. Average hourly velocity, <lb />
10.2 miles. Highest velocity. miles <lb />
per hour the 1st at Kitty Hawk. <lb />
or hail <lb />
curred at various places on the, 2nd, <lb />
12th. 12th. 14th. 19th. 25th, all light. <lb />
Solar halos occurred on the <lb />
13th, 17th. 20th. 28th. Lunar <lb />
halos on the 7th, 10th. 13th, 15th, <lb />
19th. Meteor observed at Bock- <lb />
on the 17th. <lb />
AND <lb />
The Station will be glad to receive <lb />
questions on agricultural topics from <lb />
any one in Carolina who may de- <lb />
sire to ask for information. Address <lb />
all questions to the C. Agricultural <lb />
Experiment Station. Raleigh, X. <lb />
Replies will be written as early as <lb />
by the member of the Station <lb />
staff most competent to do so. and, <lb />
when of general interest, they will also <lb />
appear In these columns. The Station <lb />
expects, in this way, to enlarge its <lb />
sphere of usefulness and render <lb />
assistance to practical farmers. <lb />
Cotton Hi-I Hull Ashen. <lb />
Will you Inform mo or <lb />
cotton seed hull ashes have ever been analyzed <lb />
as n fertilizer by Station, and <lb />
what such dhows I tn to contain P. <lb />
A. l. Southern Pines. N. C. <lb />
by H. B. Battle. Director N. C. <lb />
Experiment Station. <lb />
send herewith pamphlet on the sub- <lb />
of which gives <lb />
sis of cotton seed hull ashes. I would <lb />
say, however, that analyses of these <lb />
ashes vary very materially, because in <lb />
many cases they are more or less burnt <lb />
and more or with dirt or out- <lb />
side matters. Exposure to the air may <lb />
also cause absorption of moisture and <lb />
decrease of percentage. It is a <lb />
high grade potash material, containing <lb />
a large amount of phosphoric as <lb />
well. I have had an analyses of <lb />
these when carefully burned, to <lb />
run as high as to per cent, potash. <lb />
The average is probably about per <lb />
cent. <lb />
How to Deal With the Potato and <lb />
Cabbage Worms. <lb />
What shall I use tn kill potato <lb />
If you with what shall <lb />
I dilute it Will do pa. It on <lb />
How much Paris green shall I use per acre <lb />
Where is the to It <lb />
What Is tho best remedy for cabbage <lb />
worms <lb />
i. If emulsion, where can I it, <lb />
and at what How is the emulsion <lb />
C, N. C. <lb />
by <lb />
gist N. C. Station. <lb />
The best remedy for potato beetles <lb />
is Paris green or London purple, both <lb />
being They are about equally <lb />
valuable. Mix pound of either with <lb />
pounds of flour and pounds of dry <lb />
road dust, air slaked lime or fine <lb />
If you have no sprayer apply with a <lb />
sifter or perforated pan. If you have <lb />
a sprayer, mix the in gal- <lb />
of water and spray it on. In either <lb />
case repeat tho treatment after ten <lb />
days to kill the insects hatched after <lb />
the first treatment. Usually these two <lb />
treatments will suffice, but repeat if <lb />
necessary. <lb />
For cabbage caterpillars, the <lb />
best before the plants have <lb />
headed. After that hand pick or use a <lb />
well prepared kerosene emulsion. A <lb />
badly prepared emulsion will barn the <lb />
leaves. It is best to buy t e <lb />
emulsion ready made. It can <lb />
be bought in five, ten and forty gallon <lb />
packages of W. S. Powell Co., <lb />
more, about as cheap as you can make <lb />
it. Always dilute the concentrated <lb />
emulsion before using with nine times <lb />
its bulk of cold soft water. Apply with <lb />
a sprayer, and be sure to wet the bodies <lb />
of the caterpillars, as this substance <lb />
kills by contact only. Paris green can <lb />
be bought of almost any druggist at <lb />
about cents per pound. <lb />
Culture of Pecans. <lb />
Would you be so kind as to give me some In- <lb />
formation in regard to the of pecan nut <lb />
trees, and at what point I can net the sprouts or <lb />
trees to plant B. O. G. Thermal City. N. C. <lb />
Answered by W. F. Massey, Horticulturist, <lb />
N. C. Experiment Station. <lb />
Pecan trees, like all other of the <lb />
family, are rather hard to <lb />
transplant with uniform success. We <lb />
would prefer to get good nuts and <lb />
plant them where the trees are to grow. <lb />
Almost any southern nurseryman can <lb />
supply or trees. P. J. Beck- <lb />
man Son, Augusta, Ga., are nursery- <lb />
men of high character, and will doubt- <lb />
less supply you with a good article. <lb />
We put little confidence in the prospects <lb />
of great profits from growing en <lb />
a large scale. It may now pay those <lb />
well who have bearing trees of the <lb />
large sorts to sell seed and trees at <lb />
high prices, but the article is one which <lb />
tile demand for cannot be largely in- <lb />
creased, and when the trees now being <lb />
planted in the south come into bearing, <lb />
we think the profit problematic. Of <lb />
course it is desirable for all farmers to <lb />
have a few pecan trees for ornament <lb />
and nuts, but we would advise you <lb />
to rush too largely into the culture. <lb />
Proper Temperature to <lb />
Poultry. <lb />
What temperature should butter <lb />
churned to attain the beat results <lb />
Do you consider pare bred poultry, such <lb />
as Plymouth Rocks and leghorns, more <lb />
as flesh producers lovers than <lb />
the common breed of chickens seen around <lb />
most country <lb />
G. F. O. N. C. <lb />
Answered by F. E. Emery, Agriculturist, N.<lb />
i. temperature at ova n. <lb />
suits arc obtained vary somewhat, first, <lb />
with the season, being higher in winter <lb />
than in summer; second, with the kind <lb />
of foods given the cows. and. third, in <lb />
different dairies where difference in <lb />
handling the cream may affect the <lb />
churning conditions. In winter, where <lb />
cows are far advanced in lactation and <lb />
considerable cotton seed or cotton seed <lb />
meal is fed, as high as F., or <lb />
possibly two or three higher may be <lb />
found desirable. In summer, with <lb />
fresh cows on good pasture, as close to <lb />
degrees F. as possible will not be far <lb />
wrong for the same dairy. Each one <lb />
must establish its best degree of heat <lb />
or coolness by actual trials. Too much <lb />
care cannot be bestowed on the proper <lb />
of the cream unless you <lb />
churn more for rich buttermilk than <lb />
Yea, unless you put a pure <lb />
Hock cockerel at the head of your <lb />
flock of common fowls and continue to <lb />
grade up with another from an outside <lb />
source when the first is gone. The high <lb />
grade birds will take on the character- <lb />
of the pure bred male in <lb />
to his purity and powers. <lb />
This plan will be easier for anyone who <lb />
has common birds than breeding pure <lb />
fowls, and they will have the advantage <lb />
of there is oft repeated <lb />
claim that the graded stock is more pro- <lb />
than that bred pure. <lb />
BUSS and for Market. <lb />
Is then money In raising for <lb />
What ore best varieties, how to plant. <lb />
Will II to cultivate blackberries How <lb />
are Blasted and cultivated How many to <lb />
the Which is best variety the <lb />
cost of R. A. K. N. C. <lb />
I Answered by W. F. Massey. <lb />
N. Experiment Station. <lb />
Would not advise planting grapes in <lb />
your soil for market. You would be <lb />
more troubled with rot probably than <lb />
on higher and dryer land. The <lb />
for wine purposes is your best <lb />
grape. <lb />
will pay well if you are <lb />
near the railroad and handle them <lb />
right. Plant them feet and tie to <lb />
stakes and cultivate well, keeping <lb />
down all suckers except in hill. Best <lb />
variety is probably Wilson's early. The <lb />
Early King. Early Harvest and Mr in are <lb />
good, and the is excellent <lb />
when it does not rust. You can get <lb />
plants at to per 1.000. <lb />
of Pea Vines to Land. <lb />
lei me know whet con- <lb />
sider j-ea vines are to land, as compared <lb />
roots, etc. left after vines are cut off. The In- <lb />
about is to <lb />
of old lands most all are now <lb />
more or less by pea sowing. The lime is <lb />
near by when we will prepare lead for wheat or <lb />
fall oats, and an not together as to <lb />
obtained by the vinos to be turned <lb />
under, some that folly as good re- <lb />
Its be had in crops that follow, by cutting <lb />
V e vines off for food, the roots I ring <lb />
more than the vine the land. Do <lb />
vines extract more from Ike than am- <lb />
C. J. B. C. <lb />
I Answered by H. B. Director. C. <lb />
Experiment Station. <lb />
am glad to know that the subject of <lb />
planting cow peas is being revived in <lb />
your section. As a sure renovator of <lb />
old lands, it is of the very best <lb />
crops that can be grown. The cow peas <lb />
have the same property as clovers <lb />
leguminous plants extracting <lb />
gen from the atmosphere. This is done <lb />
through the means of tubercles <lb />
on the roots which fix the gaseous <lb />
so that the roots can utilize it. <lb />
In this way a large amount is retained <lb />
in the roots, as well as carried to the <lb />
leaves in organic combination. The <lb />
plowing under of the whole plant, in- <lb />
vines after they are ripe. is. of <lb />
course, better than plowing under only <lb />
the roots, as there is much fertilizing <lb />
matter in the vines and leaves. The <lb />
ideal way would be to take off the <lb />
vines, cure and feed to cattle, and re- <lb />
turn to the land in manure. The next <lb />
best way would be to plow under after <lb />
ripe, so that the fertilizing value of the <lb />
whole plant is retained in the soil. The <lb />
proportionate part of the total value <lb />
vines is. of course, dependent upon <lb />
the growth of the and no fixed <lb />
ratio can be given. bulletin <lb />
which describes experiments with <lb />
peas preceding wheat. An increase of <lb />
ten bushels per acre, approximately, <lb />
has been secured by method. <lb />
Location for Peach Orchard. <lb />
J have a plat of land on a hollow or <lb />
ravine, and westward. It Is very <lb />
steep, bet slopes gradually to bottom of <lb />
which Is level. Tue lowest <lb />
about twenty feet above the water level <lb />
in the nearest stream. The land is <lb />
land, was originally cover.-d win forest <lb />
pine, bin has a young of ones <lb />
on it now. In the spring oak not <lb />
put out leaves until the leaves are at <lb />
proven on ridges all around. think late <lb />
frosts In spring sad early frosts fa the fall <lb />
are pore severe than on the ridges. Would <lb />
location be a good place to plant late <lb />
trees trees be affected <lb />
the location the same as the young oak trees <lb />
I have a lot of peach trees or <lb />
year.-, old standing near the location I mention, <lb />
only they are on southern and eastern <lb />
and the frost kills the fruit on them every year. <lb />
W. C. M. N. C. <lb />
Answered by W. F. Massey, Horticulturist, <lb />
N. C. Experiment <lb />
Your peach trees are in the worst <lb />
place you could put them. In this <lb />
climate peach trees should never <lb />
planted on a southern or eastern slope, <lb />
out always on a northern or western. <lb />
On the warm sunny slope they are ex- <lb />
cited too early and the blossoms nearly <lb />
always The crest and upper part <lb />
of the north slope of a high ridge are <lb />
the best places here for peaches. <lb />
Peaches may do the upper part of <lb />
your western slope, and apples ought to <lb />
do well on the lower part. <lb />
Fire Blight of Apple Tree. <lb />
I send you specimens of apple twigs from my <lb />
orchard which were attacked last spring. <lb />
attacks both branches and twigs. In <lb />
some cases only the twigs ore killed, but In <lb />
other cases large brandies or the whole tree is <lb />
dead. What Is the cause remedy also <lb />
send diseased or blighted pear twigs. bad <lb />
s hundred dwarf but they ore dying <lb />
off one by one. J- s. H. <lb />
. Bowman Bluff. N. O. <lb />
Answered by Gerald Botanist, M. <lb />
C. Experiment <lb />
. The disease on both apple and pear <lb />
trees is the so-called <lb />
blight. This is caused by a species of <lb />
bacteria <lb />
There is no remedy except destruction <lb />
of affected parts. The disease is very <lb />
contagious, and tbs cutting out must <lb />
promptly attended to or it will in- <lb />
the whole orchard. Destroy by <lb />
all dead branches. <lb />
New Story of Mark Twain. <lb />
A traveler now In town on a visit, <lb />
says the New York Sun, heard a new <lb />
story about Mark Twain from an old <lb />
Mississippi river pilot with whom <lb />
Mr. Clemens once worked for awhile <lb />
in a pilot on that river. It <lb />
seems that he came up into the <lb />
pilot house carrying an enormous <lb />
and expensive black Havana <lb />
which excited the envy of the mas- <lb />
pilot. did you got that <lb />
cigar, the pilot asked. <lb />
gentleman in the cabin gave it to <lb />
said tho budding humorist. <lb />
do you think you ought to <lb />
keep that cigar and I ought to go <lb />
Without the pilot asked. <lb />
look said Mart <lb />
Twain. know I am only your <lb />
helper and I'm willing to play dog <lb />
to you. You can throw sticks in <lb />
the water and let me jump in after <lb />
I'll do whatever you say, <lb />
and here he drawled in his peculiar <lb />
do think I ought to have <lb />
some <lb />
GREAT MORAL <lb />
SHOW. <lb />
It is in the Tho signs are <lb />
all propitious, and every passing <lb />
breeze whispers of it. The <lb />
cal millennium is about to dawn <lb />
on the land of the Tar Heel, and <lb />
the day of our prosperity <lb />
nigh. <lb />
Times are hard now, but hard <lb />
times will soon be but a memory. <lb />
Tho prices of corn and wheat and <lb />
cotton are low now, but soon <lb />
there will not be enough to sup- <lb />
ply the demand at prices that to- <lb />
day would run us crazy. The in- <lb />
and financial skies are <lb />
dark now, but just beyond us the <lb />
silver lining, and soon the sun of <lb />
prosperity will drive the clouds <lb />
away and over the land from <lb />
Hog Back Mountain in tho West <lb />
to Tad Pole Swamp in the East a <lb />
mellow flood of joy, and life and <lb />
gladness and prosperity of which <lb />
all shall freely partake save only <lb />
the wild and Democrats, on <lb />
whose poor souls may the good <lb />
Lord have mercy. <lb />
The reason of it all is as mud <lb />
the carious, comical, <lb />
coalition is about to coalesce. <lb />
greatest show on is <lb />
about to spread its canvas for a <lb />
performance that <lb />
will make Barnum turn over in <lb />
his grave and groan with <lb />
tent rag, and <lb />
While wrongs are being right- <lb />
ed, the will be amused <lb />
and instructed. When the band <lb />
begins to play tho performance <lb />
will commence. <lb />
Dr. Mott, whose picture will <lb />
decorate the show bills as the <lb />
will be <lb />
Twined together the <lb />
arena will be banners bearing ex- <lb />
tracts from the platforms of the <lb />
Republican and Populist parties, <lb />
as adopted their national con- <lb />
in 1892, of which these <lb />
are <lb />
denounce the continued <lb />
inhuman outrages perpetrated <lb />
upon American citizens in tho <lb />
Southern States of the <lb />
Republican. <lb />
civil var is over and every <lb />
passion prejudice which grew <lb />
out of it must with Pop- <lb />
reaffirm the American doc-1 <lb />
of Republican. <lb />
condemn the fallacy of <lb />
protecting American labor under <lb />
the present system which opens <lb />
our ports to the pauper labor of <lb />
the whole world, crowds out <lb />
our wage Populist. <lb />
congratulate our country- <lb />
men on the magnificent march of <lb />
the nation under the banners in- <lb />
scribed with the principles of our <lb />
platform of 1888, vindicated by <lb />
victory at the polls and pros <lb />
in our fields, workshops <lb />
and Republican. <lb />
meet in midst of a <lb />
nation brought to the verge of <lb />
moral, political and material ruin. <lb />
Business prostrated, homes cover- <lb />
ed with mortgages, labor <lb />
Populist. <lb />
maintain that the prosper- <lb />
condition of our country is <lb />
largely due to the wise revenue <lb />
legislation of the Republican <lb />
Republican. <lb />
fruits of the toil of mil- <lb />
lions is boldly stolen to build up <lb />
fortunes for a few and <lb />
the of in turn <lb />
despise the Republic en <lb />
danger liberty. From the same <lb />
prolific womb we breed the two <lb />
great and <lb />
Populist. <lb />
Over it all, with slow music <lb />
and red fire, will be flashed in let- <lb />
of flame the <lb />
is the Spice of <lb />
Marion Butler will perform <lb />
the Alliance trapeze with his <lb />
three thousand dollar <lb />
salary in one hand, and the <lb />
profits of his circulated in <lb />
the other, and while suspended <lb />
by the tips of his patent leather <lb />
shoes, with a pencil grasped in <lb />
his teeth, will write an editorial <lb />
entitled us Money or Give <lb />
us <lb />
Prichard will perform the <lb />
wonderful feat of swallowing <lb />
throe black crows, after which he <lb />
will load into the ring a richly <lb />
caparisoned charger on which will <lb />
be seated the duke of Richmond, <lb />
and a crier shall cry before him <lb />
saying, shall it be done to <lb />
the ninth district Republican <lb />
whom the Duke to <lb />
The Duke will then entertain <lb />
the assembled audience by riding <lb />
three horses around both rings, <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
springing from back to back with <lb />
such that no <lb />
one can tell which ho is <lb />
riding, the while tossing showers <lb />
of golden coin to his cringing <lb />
vassals. <lb />
Harry Skinner, tho versatile <lb />
comedian, imported at enormous <lb />
expense, will sing a song of his <lb />
own beginning, <lb />
to me, set lie <lb />
and did <lb />
Otho Wilson, the celebrated <lb />
chief, will be there <lb />
full panoplied the dazzling re- <lb />
of his office, and will deliver <lb />
his celebrated lecture, <lb />
Poultry, or the of Pick- <lb />
Green, of Wake, will lead a <lb />
scriptural acrostic which he wrote <lb />
to prove that Marion Butler is <lb />
King David, after which he will <lb />
swallow the platform with- <lb />
out crossing a t or batting an eye. <lb />
Eaves, Russell, and Barnes <lb />
will do the Lottie Collins act, <lb />
after Governor has driven <lb />
through the arena a chariot <lb />
drawn by two thousand milk <lb />
white goats, Com. <lb />
give tho Egyptian dance <lb />
holding aloft a rusty <lb />
county case knife, yet, alas, <lb />
and Lieut. Gov. Cobb, <lb />
with one foot the sands of <lb />
and the other on tho neck <lb />
of the minions of Wall street, will <lb />
blow a mighty blast an <lb />
that hard times shall be <lb />
no more. <lb />
Its coming, <lb />
Rain or tho monster <lb />
will spread its tent on <lb />
the day advertised the bills, <lb />
which are to be written in Hus <lb />
soy's most mellifluous and men <lb />
style. <lb />
Wait for the wagon. Listen for <lb />
the music. Get in line, and move <lb />
in solid phalanx on to the ticket <lb />
Keep your hands on your <lb />
money, and look out for pick <lb />
pockets and confidence men. <lb />
Don't drink their red <lb />
and don't bet on their car, tricks. <lb />
If you do, you will wish you <lb />
had never loft <lb />
ton Herald. <lb />
than the Republicans; <lb />
as the governing power the Re- <lb />
publicans would infinitely rather <lb />
see the possession <lb />
of the State than to see the Pop- <lb />
have it. Those two <lb />
have nothing in common <lb />
except a sentiment of opposition <lb />
to the but when <lb />
they come to get together they <lb />
will afford about such a spectacle <lb />
as is presented by a steer and a <lb />
donkey attached to the same cart, <lb />
and when they come to reconcile <lb />
their differences in convention <lb />
their platform can suggest <lb />
except a crazy quilt. <lb />
Let them come on their <lb />
We have a curiosity to <lb />
look it over to examine its <lb />
fine Observer. <lb />
Skin <lb />
Eruptions <lb />
and similar annoyances are caused <lb />
by an impure blood, which will <lb />
result in a more dreaded disease. <lb />
Unless removed, slight impurities <lb />
will develop Into Scrofula, <lb />
ma, Salt Rheum and other serious <lb />
results of <lb />
Bad <lb />
Blood <lb />
have for some time been <lb />
a sufferer from a severe <lb />
blood trouble, for which I <lb />
took many remedies that <lb />
did me no good. I have <lb />
now four of <lb />
with the most result <lb />
Am enjoying; the best health I <lb />
ever knew, have gained twenty <lb />
rounds and my friends say they never saw <lb />
ire as well- am feeling quite like a new <lb />
man. JOHN S- <lb />
Government Printing office, Washington. D. C. <lb />
Our Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases <lb />
mailed free to any address. <lb />
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO,, <lb />
Appointments for Greenville C <lb />
the Sunday at eleven <lb />
O'clock Impel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
drove on second Sunday at <lb />
eleven School <lb />
House at o'clock. <lb />
on Sunday at <lb />
o'clock Impel at three <lb />
o'clock. <lb />
on the fourth Sunday at <lb />
eleven o'clock, School <lb />
House at three o'clock. <lb />
Everybody Invited to attend. <lb />
;. F. smith, . , <lb />
that <lb />
Beware of Ointment for Catarrh <lb />
Contains Mercury. <lb />
as mercury will surely destroy th sense <lb />
smell and completely derange the <lb />
whole system entering It through <lb />
the mucous surfaces. Such article <lb />
should never he used except n pres- <lb />
from reputable physicians, as <lb />
the will do is ten fold to <lb />
the good o II can possibly derive from <lb />
then. Catarrh Cure <lb />
by F. J. A Co., To- <lb />
contains no is taken <lb />
Internally, directly upon the <lb />
d mucous surfaces of the <lb />
system. In buying Hall's Catarrh <lb />
be sure you git the gen line. <lb />
It is taken internally, and made in To- <lb />
Ohio, by F. J. Co. <lb />
fr Sold by Drug <lb />
gist;, price per bottle <lb />
Be Ye Not Unequally Yoked Together, <lb />
There is something very <lb />
cal in the idea of a coalition, as is <lb />
now proposed, between the lie- <lb />
publicans and Populists of North <lb />
Carolina this year. The one <lb />
point of agreement between them <lb />
in State politics is opposition to <lb />
the present election law. What <lb />
article of faith of either in <lb />
politics both are to unite <lb />
upon, is yet to be discovered. <lb />
Who has not heard the <lb />
can orators of North Carolina <lb />
declaim excitedly for a protective <lb />
tariff and <lb />
gold. who has not seen <lb />
the Populist orators of the State <lb />
foam at the mouth and grow red <lb />
in the face in arguing for the <lb />
of all tariff restrictions <lb />
and for wildcat money The <lb />
North Carolina Democracy will <lb />
go forth joyfully to meet them on <lb />
the issue which they raise as to <lb />
State politics, the election <lb />
law; and while we are divided <lb />
among on some pending <lb />
questions, all <lb />
united upon the doctrines of <lb />
party, while there no differ- <lb />
among us as to the tariff <lb />
and none as to currency that we <lb />
cannot either reconcile or waive- <lb />
It will be an unequally yoked <lb />
team and a very funny one. Upon <lb />
the articles of faith the <lb />
are immeasurably nearer the <lb />
Baptist Services. <lb />
Below are the regular appointments <lb />
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the <lb />
Baptist church <lb />
At and fourth Sun- <lb />
days each month, morning and night, <lb />
and every night- <lb />
At Sunday in each <lb />
month, morning and night. <lb />
At Person <lb />
Sunday in each month and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. <lb />
Episcopal <lb />
Below arc regular appointments <lb />
of A. Hector <lb />
and third Sunday in <lb />
each month, morning and evening. <lb />
Sunday In each <lb />
month, morning evening. <lb />
vices all other Sunday <lb />
St. Johns. Sun- <lb />
day in each mouth, morning and evening <lb />
Holy Innocents, <lb />
fifth Sunday morning.<lb />
DENTIST, t- <lb />
U K. <lb />
Land And Surveyor <lb />
Greenville. X. C. <lb />
Office at the King House. <lb />
B. Moore. L. I. <lb />
Williamston. Greenville. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb />
it Tucker old stand. <lb />
D . <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N C. <lb />
Practice in all the courts. Collections a <lb />
J. JARVIS. Al. L. SLOW <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
AT-LAW, <lb />
GREEN N. C. <lb />
in all the Court. <lb />
mi. B. F. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
I N. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
LATHAM. <lb />
T SKINNER, <lb />
A T-L A w, <lb />
H.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017688_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
1.1 Editor ad Proprietor <lb />
Last week Hon. Walter E- Henderson Eliza, of Deeds, has accounted for all <lb />
Henry, of Henderson, received Edwards Carlos Gorham public monies collected by him <lb />
,, , i H David and his report is correct- <lb />
the appointment as consul to it-. , , u <lb />
, . , T ,. Henry Dan treasurer <lb />
one of the est Indies j and Amy Cherry <lb />
Islands The position does not j Fannie Tucker J O Proctor <lb />
draw a large salary, but carries j Alice Corbett <lb />
WEDNESDAY. 11th, <lb />
at the at Greenville, <lb />
K. C, as mail matter. <lb />
privileges with it which can be Harris <lb />
, i- mi Taylor Marv <lb />
made remunerative. The Briley <lb />
At the Baptist church on last <lb />
Sunday morning J. H. Lam- everywhere pleasure to one <lb />
berth preached a sermon which has been tendered him. <lb />
we wish every Christian in Amer- We later that Mr. Henry <lb />
have heard- The gen- J j the appointment, <lb />
theme was murmuring , <lb />
complaining. In that elegant, j The fever that was so high in <lb />
lucid and forcible manner which j South Carolina week before last, <lb />
is characteristic of the speaker he ; was quieted down, <lb />
showed the of complaining, came very near breaking out in <lb />
faultfinding and S- C A number of Gov. <lb />
both in the individual, constables went there <lb />
the family, the church and the and defied the police and the <lb />
State. As to the individual it town, and threatened to search all <lb />
the premises of every man they <lb />
of Mr. Henry is a H Parker <lb />
cognition of earnest, faithful work no G Nelson Jas Lang <lb />
for the cause of Democracy. He <lb />
in every way merited an appoint- i <lb />
and it gives his friends <lb />
Orders for general county <lb />
poses were issued as follows <lb />
C E A <lb />
W U Parker C D <lb />
J H Taylor <lb />
Chas Skinner John <lb />
W F Smith <lb />
Joe Forbes W B Carson GO, <lb />
James T B F Tug- <lb />
well Fred Hardy A J <lb />
Abram Venable <lb />
D J R A Parker <lb />
Alex Little K R Cotten <lb />
1- Andrew Roberson <lb />
The report of John Flanagan, <lb />
County Treasurer, shows that he <lb />
has accounted for all monies col- <lb />
by and his report is <lb />
correct. <lb />
JUSTICES OF THE PEACE- <lb />
The reports of the following <lb />
Justices are <lb />
W H Williams, of Carolina, W <lb />
H Williams, of J W <lb />
Page, G T Tyson, A Horton, C P <lb />
Gaskins, I J Anderson, R M <lb />
Jones, F G Dupree, L B Mew- <lb />
borne. J R Johnson. W A Barrett, <lb />
R L J S Brown. N R <lb />
Cory, Jenkins, J H <lb />
ard, K Witherington. J A Lang, <lb />
J B Little. G H Little, G M Tuck- <lb />
J J May, D C Moon, E O <lb />
S S Ivy <lb />
Smith, G Holliday, A L <lb />
R G Chapman, W L <lb />
J P W F Smith, E C Blount, J J Bawls, J <lb />
W H Bagwell R W I Cox, T A J J i, <lb />
Kins E J Turner <lb />
W H <lb />
soured his disposition, made him <lb />
unhappy and unpleasant to all <lb />
around him. In respect to the <lb />
family it <lb />
trouble, jars and lowered the <lb />
in the estimation of all <lb />
people- The same would <lb />
follow such conduct in the church. <lb />
The greater part of the sermon <lb />
however, was devoted to com- <lb />
plaining our religious <lb />
political leaders. It was for <lb />
this that the were so <lb />
severely punished during those <lb />
long years in the wilderness- <lb />
It is wrong and sinful be- <lb />
cause it is a sin directly against <lb />
God. and will as surely pun- <lb />
by Him as was the wilder- <lb />
travelers. Ail officers and <lb />
religious leaders are of <lb />
God's appointment or by His per- <lb />
mission, and He rules and over- <lb />
rules ail things- Besides, com- <lb />
plaining is not way to <lb />
an evil if one exist- Go to God <lb />
in prayer. We are commanded <lb />
to pray those in authority, <lb />
not to murmur against <lb />
newspaper- <lb />
filled with and com- <lb />
plaints against every thing and <lb />
everybody in authority were <lb />
poisoning the minds of <lb />
and were not helpful to a <lb />
healthy condition of. affairs. We <lb />
have given but a brief <lb />
equate synopsis of this sermon, <lb />
and wish everybody in town <lb />
could have heard it- Mr. Lam- <lb />
berth has the confidence of every <lb />
one and his preaching is <lb />
to do much for those who an <lb />
fortunate enough to hear him. <lb />
The has re- <lb />
to the matter of paying a <lb />
higher tax Greenville and <lb />
using the money to make some <lb />
permanent improvements i a the <lb />
town. It has always been the <lb />
policy of this paper to <lb />
improvements, but those <lb />
cannot be made with the present <lb />
low tax levy. As the Board of <lb />
Councilmen are soon to meet for <lb />
the purpose of making the levy <lb />
for another year, we have lately <lb />
thrown out several suggestions <lb />
that there should be a <lb />
of these matters BO that the <lb />
may learn what is the will <lb />
of the people. The Councilmen <lb />
will hardly increase the tax unless <lb />
there is some general expression <lb />
of sentiment in favor of it, and <lb />
the best war to create a sentiment <lb />
is by full discussion. It would <lb />
be wise if the people interested <lb />
would first concentrate upon some <lb />
specific improvement the streets, <lb />
tor fully what <lb />
should be done and then go be- <lb />
fore the Board asking them to <lb />
levy a tax that this one improve- <lb />
may be Every <lb />
thing cannot be accomplished at <lb />
once, but if there is a concert of <lb />
action to secure one thing at the <lb />
time many needed improvements <lb />
will be seen coming along in <lb />
their turn. Now talk the matter, <lb />
let the Board of Councilmen <lb />
know the sentiment of people <lb />
as . <lb />
Borne Populists cannot stand <lb />
for the truth to told about <lb />
their public utterances. The as <lb />
sault made on this writer the <lb />
day, subsequent threats, is <lb />
evidence of the spirit that is rife <lb />
among them, and that hole <lb />
to the idea of pursuing their <lb />
claims the bullet if they <lb />
can't be by the as <lb />
some speakers wore charged with <lb />
asserting in the last campaign. <lb />
It is a sorry political cause, in- <lb />
deed, that calls to its advocacy a <lb />
resort to violence lawlessness. <lb />
No better evidence could be given <lb />
that such a cause does not stand <lb />
upon principle. <lb />
The assault threats alluded <lb />
to were both made within the <lb />
of the Court, then in <lb />
and to which an application <lb />
summary punishment could <lb />
have been successfully made, as <lb />
it was in contempt of the Court. <lb />
But we as an editor of a <lb />
Democratic paper to resort to <lb />
especially as the <lb />
punishment that would follow the <lb />
wife children have <lb />
suffered more than the real <lb />
offender. <lb />
thought had u jug. The people <lb />
became greatly enraged and turn- <lb />
ed out to mob the constables and <lb />
burn the dispensary. Cooler <lb />
heads interfered and finally BUG <lb />
in persuading the angry <lb />
crowd to abandon their purpose. <lb />
Trouble is yet feared- <lb />
It always takes two-thirds of <lb />
the votes cast to over-ride a veto. <lb />
It was undertaken in the House <lb />
of Representatives to pass the <lb />
Bland bill over <lb />
dent Cleveland's veto, but it was <lb />
a failure- The vote taken was <lb />
C A Bland Leo <lb />
C Dawson T E <lb />
Keel S A Gainer Jesse <lb />
L Smith <lb />
The following orders were is- <lb />
sued for Greenville Stock Law <lb />
J R R A Tyson <lb />
Warren Tucker J T <lb />
Dunn Isaiah Gray G <lb />
The following orders were is- <lb />
sued for Swift Creek Con- <lb />
Stock Law territory <lb />
Moore L B Mew <lb />
borne C P Moore G N H <lb />
Stocks <lb />
The following were allowed to <lb />
list their taxes for <lb />
Iredell Moore for Henrietta <lb />
Gardner, Swift Creek town- <lb />
D J H Little <lb />
R W A o <lb />
R J N Bynum. E F <lb />
L A Mayo. B S Sheppard, <lb />
J Keel. W J Rollins, F M <lb />
for the bill and against J of township. <lb />
it. Fifty-five Democrats voted to I The following were relieved of <lb />
sustain the President and tax for J <lb />
,. , , , Pearson Wingate, Fernando <lb />
Democrats voted not to sustain U Jr, A G <lb />
him. There were Republicans ; <lb />
to over-ride the President, while j It was ordered that be re- <lb />
voted to sustain him. funded to T T Cherry an <lb />
I charge shares stock <lb />
u ,, kaolin company. <lb />
Northern, of i . . it, <lb />
i t -H- i t i petition of A a <lb />
appointed Mr. Pat. Walsh, of reduction was allowed on <lb />
United States Senator I of lands in town <lb />
to succeed deceased. ship from 1.500 to the same <lb />
The appointment was first offered <lb />
Speaker Crisp declined. Mr. <lb />
Walsh is editor and owner of the <lb />
Augusta daily Chronicle gen- <lb />
manager of the Southern <lb />
Associated Press. He is a very <lb />
prominent man in his S-ate- and a <lb />
man of ability and usefulness. <lb />
North Carolina was strictly in <lb />
at Charleston, last week, when <lb />
having been wrongfully listed. <lb />
Upon petition of J V <lb />
it was ordered that he be credited <lb />
on the tax bocks of 1893 <lb />
the same having been listed <lb />
by J W it Bros- <lb />
D Jr, was credited <lb />
on the tax books of the <lb />
of one horse, the same hay- <lb />
been listed by D <lb />
ton, Sr. <lb />
Ordered that the valuation of <lb />
the land of Mrs Bettie Belcher. <lb />
in Farmville township be reduced <lb />
from 2.800 to 2.000. <lb />
The amount allowed <lb />
George of Greens <lb />
defeated in three races the <lb />
champion raters of South j Crawford as pauper was <lb />
This makes dollar. <lb />
mens the champion of the South. <lb />
Tie Reflector regrets to learn <lb />
that the dwelling of Mr. W. <lb />
W. editor of the Rob- <lb />
at was de- <lb />
by fire one night last <lb />
week. The building was only <lb />
partially covered by <lb />
Mr. Thomas E. Benedict, of <lb />
York, who was Public <lb />
for two and a half years under <lb />
President Cleveland's former ad- <lb />
ministration, was early last week <lb />
again appointed to that position. <lb />
One J- C L. Harris, <lb />
of Raleigh, who it looks like <lb />
ought to his hands full try- <lb />
to run the <lb />
list fusion combination, tries to <lb />
figure for the Democrats, too, and <lb />
occasionally fixes a slate for <lb />
the latter in the letters ho writes <lb />
to Washington papers. A late <lb />
letter in which tho whole State is <lb />
reviewed, gives the following as <lb />
his idea of the situation in the <lb />
First District <lb />
In the first Mr. W. A- Bra ch, <lb />
who is now serving his second <lb />
term, will be renominated. He <lb />
will most probably be opposed <lb />
by a Populist in tho person Mr. <lb />
Harry Skinner, of Pitt county, <lb />
who divides the leadership of the <lb />
Populist party in the State with <lb />
Marion Butler. <lb />
Skinner is an effective speaker <lb />
and very popular with his party. If <lb />
he can arouse get the <lb />
vote he will be elected. Tho <lb />
Republicans on a straight fight <lb />
carried the district in 1882. The <lb />
defection to the Populists is large <lb />
in this district, and with a full <lb />
vote Skinner will be elected. <lb />
There is some talk among the <lb />
Democrats of nominating ex Gov. <lb />
Thomas J. Jarvis, but it be- <lb />
that ho will consent to <lb />
make the race, because he is de- <lb />
to contest with Gen. <lb />
Ransom for the He <lb />
would be a very strong candidate. <lb />
In 1892 tho vote for Branch was <lb />
and for Gatling, Populist, <lb />
When the returns come in <lb />
will find that the First <lb />
District remains under the Demo- <lb />
banner. <lb />
Ordered tint Mrs Henrietta <lb />
Gardner, James T Clark. Bryan <lb />
Mrs Abner Slaughter. <lb />
Geo Forbes. Mrs B J Cobb. <lb />
Dinah Gorham. Isaac Joyner, R <lb />
L Smith, S M <lb />
Johnston be relieved of double <lb />
tax. <lb />
Mrs. Henrietta Gardner was <lb />
lowed to list tax on personal pro- <lb />
in Swift Creek township- <lb />
Ordered that all certificates of <lb />
property sold for taxes, returned <lb />
by ex-Sheriff Tucker published <lb />
in the Eastern until <lb />
the 1st Monday May. <lb />
Warren Cherry was released <lb />
from paying tax on property in <lb />
stock law territory, he having <lb />
none- <lb />
Ordered that W R be <lb />
released of payment of tax in <lb />
Swift Creek stock law listed and <lb />
charged to Major <lb />
Of Other Medicines Failed <lb />
But Hood's Cave Per <lb />
feet Health. <lb />
Arthur <lb />
Florida, <lb />
Smith, J Smith. E S Dixon. <lb />
Tho following Justices have <lb />
failed to file- their reports <lb />
W H Sieves, W D Keel, L H <lb />
Spier, S Harris, B If Lewis. <lb />
The report of J J Laughing- <lb />
house shows that he collected <lb />
lino from Noah Buck but does <lb />
not state that he has paid tho <lb />
same to the treasurer, but an ex- <lb />
of the treasurer's books <lb />
shows that it had been paid. <lb />
HIKE OF CONVICTS. <lb />
The following named parties <lb />
are indebted to tho county for <lb />
hire of convicts up to December <lb />
3rd, 1893, in the sums as <lb />
J G Sheppard, hire Oscar John- <lb />
sou SO. Jas. Elks, hire Ray- <lb />
Elks 10.00. W A James, <lb />
hire Brooks G W H <lb />
Cox, hire John Alston E O <lb />
hire Robt Johnson <lb />
J W Perkins, hire John <lb />
Alston H C hire <lb />
Drown L A Mayo, <lb />
hire Moses Belcher 29.15. An- <lb />
drew Joyner, hire Henry <lb />
B hire Geo <lb />
Davis 28.12- Wm Whitehead, <lb />
hire Robt Parker Helen <lb />
Brooks, hire Chris Moore <lb />
Moses King, hire Ed Nixon <lb />
Jno H <lb />
Smith, hire Silas <lb />
Hattie Barrett, hire Simon Bar <lb />
C V hire <lb />
Rogers and others <lb />
C V Newton, hire Joseph <lb />
Vines W H Cox, hire <lb />
Wright Blount 25- W H <lb />
hire Henry Forbes <lb />
C M Bernard, hire Jerry <lb />
way G <lb />
The following wore appointed <lb />
list takers for the year of <lb />
G Town <lb />
Sheppard. <lb />
A K Tucker. <lb />
L H <lb />
Swift B <lb />
Beaver w Smith. <lb />
Farmville M <lb />
Lewis. <lb />
Williams. <lb />
C Moore. <lb />
A Thigpen. <lb />
B Little. <lb />
H Williams. <lb />
Dr. W. H. Bagwell Superintend- <lb />
of Health, his <lb />
report which was ordered <lb />
tiled. <lb />
The dividing lino as established <lb />
in 1853 between portions of Pitt <lb />
I. Hood Co., <lb />
thousand dollars worth of other <lb />
prescriptions, etc. hare failed to do for <lb />
me what Hood's has done. My <lb />
homo Is In but in I went to <lb />
and lived there four years. I was taken sick <lb />
In 1886 and had medical assistance, but found no <lb />
relief. Tie doctors said I had chronic bronchi- <lb />
tis. I was In the Marine Hospital at San Fran- <lb />
several months and at Rush Medical Col- <lb />
Chicago, months, but still did not get <lb />
better, so came back to Pi My weight <lb />
was then pounds with a overcoat <lb />
My Friends Did Not Know Me, <lb />
I was so thin and broken down. Rut the <lb />
mate and being at home gave me a little courage <lb />
and I began trying various medicines. In Au- <lb />
gust, was appointed to a position In the <lb />
United States custom house. My friends <lb />
my wife to have me try Hood's I <lb />
took It three times a day Just to please tier. Rut <lb />
to my surprise I to feel differently <lb />
after a week on Hood's. I found I was hungry <lb />
and that I could sleep better; that tired feeling <lb />
also left mo. So I continued taking Hood's <lb />
used bottles and four <lb />
of Hood's Tills, w result that <lb />
I am Now in Health, <lb />
weigh pounds, a good appetite, sleep <lb />
well, and not lost a day's work since I be- <lb />
to take this When everything <lb />
else has failed, I found that <lb />
United States <lb />
Florida. <lb />
Hoods Pills easily, yet promptly and <lb />
efficiently, on the liver and bowels. <lb />
Town Tax Sale. <lb />
A Town Tax Collector I have levied on <lb />
the following lots in the town of Green- <lb />
ville owned by following parties who <lb />
arc delinquents. Ami on Monday, the <lb />
Till day of May. at IS M-, l will <lb />
offer the same tor cash, to highest <lb />
bidder, at public and ion, at the Court <lb />
Home, in the town of to <lb />
satisfy the taxes costs there on. <lb />
G. E. <lb />
Town Tax Collector. <lb />
John town lot No. 1.30 <lb />
Cherry Benjamin i town lot No. <lb />
Cherry Wilson town lot <lb />
Wiley ; town lot So. <lb />
Win. c. town lot <lb />
Harris town lot No. <lb />
Hopkins town lot So. <lb />
Johnson J. B. town lot No, <lb />
Caesar t town lot <lb />
Joe town lot S <lb />
Royster It. W. A Co, 9th <lb />
and Dickerson Axe <lb />
Tucker Oliver town lot No. <lb />
Luisa town lot No. <lb />
Williams Matthew town lot <lb />
Yellowley est, heirs i town lot <lb />
No. <lb />
Sane for <lb />
Yellowley est. heirs town lot <lb />
No. <lb />
Same fr 1893 <lb />
eat. heirs i town lot <lb />
Same for 1892 <lb />
Brown, B W. heirs lot No Skin- <lb />
Same for <lb />
Cherry. It D, guardian for <lb />
n lot No. <lb />
Bryant, Sam town lot No <lb />
1.73 <lb />
1.48 <lb />
1.80 <lb />
1.13 <lb />
1.02 <lb />
1.38 <lb />
12.73 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.90 <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.00<lb />
Bullock, W. B. acres <lb />
Best. Cherry. lot 1.89 <lb />
Mrs. Mary E., lot 1.21 <lb />
Davis, M. I T. acres 6.81 <lb />
Gardner, Cora I., acre 1.73 <lb />
Hardy, W. lot <lb />
lot J 3.01 <lb />
Reel, J. s., l lot. 4.40 <lb />
Lewis, Me. G. acres 4.07 <lb />
Shaw, J. I,., lot 1.21 <lb />
Stilley, Burton, lot 2.13 <lb />
acres 9.28 <lb />
West. Moses, lot 1.52 <lb />
CAROLINA TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Bullock, -1 G. acres, <lb />
Griffin, Henry, is acres <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
Adams, W. , acres <lb />
oil acres <lb />
acres 1.22 <lb />
Back. C. c , acres <lb />
B. yd, H. A., acres 8.49 <lb />
Cox, Fannie acres 8.9 I <lb />
Cory, Mr.-. Sarah Jane, acres 1.00 <lb />
Dixon, K. M., acres, 9.10 <lb />
Smith, H, acres. 4.10 <lb />
Oliver. acres, 1.93 <lb />
Cecil. acres, 8.48 <lb />
Turner, acres, 4.07 <lb />
Button, l P, seres, 4.22 <lb />
W, acres, <lb />
acres. <lb />
Smith. Really A, acres, 1.31 <lb />
Tyson, H F. acres, 1.89 <lb />
J II, acres, <lb />
TOWNSHIP, <lb />
Blount, W Sharp. acres <lb />
Bell. It. lot 8.13 <lb />
P K. 1892, lets 3.63 <lb />
Braswell, P K. lots 3.03 <lb />
Cox, Mrs Martha E acres <lb />
acres 1.01 <lb />
Frizzle. W. acres 1.16 <lb />
Harrington, John W, acres <lb />
Hardy, lot, 2.74 <lb />
lot 2.44 <lb />
Johnson, Noah Jr, l M 8.69 <lb />
Jackson. Frank. acres 5.32 <lb />
Jones, Win, 8.1 <lb />
Hattie A, I lot 6.10 <lb />
J D. lots 3.00 <lb />
horn. Zeb, i acre 8.09 <lb />
Nelson, -fas K, acres 6.80 <lb />
Powell, Mrs K V. acres 2.12 <lb />
Smith, Mr- Victoria, acres 1.14 <lb />
Smith. Margaret, acres <lb />
Henry. acres l <lb />
Braswell, A. <lb />
U M. acres<lb />
row <lb />
Baker. G, lot <lb />
Cobb, Howell. acres is <lb />
Hines, II. acres I <lb />
heirs. acres I <lb />
Andrew, acres <lb />
Kitchen, I., lot <lb />
lot SO <lb />
Ward, -i T, 2-sO acres<lb />
A Wm. acre <lb />
Adams, Henry, aces 8.08 <lb />
Wm, timber 8.86 <lb />
F. acres 6.40 <lb />
Cherry, Wilson, lot. held 8.86 <lb />
Dancy, J J, lots 11.64 <lb />
Forbes, A A, acres 8.78 <lb />
Griffin, -I J, acres 3.30 <lb />
Harris F. town lot 3.45 <lb />
Harrington, town lot, 1898 1.62 <lb />
town lot, 1892, 1.63 <lb />
Harris. Alex, OH acres. 3.33 <lb />
Harris, Abram, i town 8.84 <lb />
acre. Billy Moore 8.0 <lb />
Lawrence, L W, town lot <lb />
Lawrence. I. W, guardian Baker <lb />
heirs 7.83 <lb />
Moore. II. aces. <lb />
II c, acres 8.80 <lb />
-I B, <lb />
I acres 6.88 <lb />
E O. <lb />
acres j 9.25 <lb />
Settle, Walter, l town lot, near <lb />
river 8.30 <lb />
r B. town lot. <lb />
Patrick, Chas, town lot, 4.11 <lb />
Parker. Mrs M acres 8.18 <lb />
Royster t Jo, K W, town lot 80.86 <lb />
Button, U acres, <lb />
II, acres 8.80 <lb />
Stephen, acres 8.00 <lb />
Tyson, W acres 4.77 <lb />
Tyson, Co 3.50 <lb />
1.10 <lb />
1.10 <lb />
counties, and Harris, II P, town No. <lb />
also between portions of Pitt <lb />
Martin counties, unmarked, <lb />
and several disputes having arisen <lb />
in consequence thereof, it was <lb />
ordered that the Boards of Com- <lb />
missioners of both <lb />
Martin counties he requested <lb />
to each appoint two Commission- <lb />
to act with a number from <lb />
this Board for tho purpose of <lb />
Tho Durham Recorder, edited <lb />
by Mr. E. C- Hackney, has been <lb />
sold to Mr. G- E. Webb, late of <lb />
the deceased Winston World. <lb />
Ordered that C E Philips be re- establishing and making the line <lb />
leased tax. on acres of land, between tho said counties, <lb />
Bethel township be only <lb />
1-7 interest in the above. <lb />
Upon petition of S V <lb />
as receiver of tho B A <lb />
heirs, it was ordered that ho be <lb />
charged only with tax <lb />
acres of land at and that <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
D. C. April <lb />
Senator Harris, of Tennessee, <lb />
Mrs. L C Kin be charged with has been by general admission, <lb />
acres at tho whole j since tho retirement of <lb />
been previously charged to of Kansas, the ablest <lb />
Joyner. the Senate. It is there- <lb />
A petition for a public road be-1 fore no disparagement of <lb />
ginning at the Flat Swamp j whose hard work has <lb />
Greenville road running to entitled him to a little rest, to say <lb />
the road at tho corner that the placing of the tariff bill <lb />
of Eli Moore J H charge of Senator Harris was <lb />
land was ordered advertised and a wise move. In addition to his <lb />
reported at nest meeting. parliamentary knowledge and <lb />
The Sheriff was ordered to j skill, he is full of aggressiveness, <lb />
summon a Jury and lay off a He has already shocked tho Re <lb />
public road beginning at the <lb />
Greenville road between Samuel <lb />
publicans who attempted to raise <lb />
needless obstacles to prolong tho <lb />
Moore a ad Mrs. Charity Daven- tariff debate by promptly brush- <lb />
port accordance with petition , them out of tho way and stat <lb />
previously filed. <lb />
Sheriff R W King made report <lb />
that he had summoned a Jury <lb />
and laid out a new road <lb />
at Allen's new road, in Green- <lb />
ville township, ending at a <lb />
point on the old plank road near <lb />
the Noah road and tho <lb />
same was confirmed. <lb />
The appointed by <lb />
tho Board to examine report <lb />
upon the official <lb />
reports of the public officers of the <lb />
county for the fiscal year ending <lb />
December 3rd, 1893, submitted the <lb />
COURT <lb />
That B W former clerk <lb />
is still indebted to the county in <lb />
the sum of on account of <lb />
fines and the sum of on ac- <lb />
count of jury tax. The report of <lb />
E A the present clerk, is <lb />
correct and he has accounted for <lb />
and paid to the treasurer all sums <lb />
due by him. <lb />
That R W King, sheriff, has <lb />
reported and accounted for all <lb />
county funds collected by him, <lb />
which by law be is required to <lb />
account for, during the fiscal year <lb />
except the sum of two dollars jury <lb />
tax charged against <lb />
at January term 1893, the <lb />
sum of two dollars charged as <lb />
jury tax Redmond Tyson <lb />
at September term. 1893, and the <lb />
sum of ten dollars, a fine imposed <lb />
against Edgar May, that he claims <lb />
In- is not for. <lb />
OP <lb />
MEETING. <lb />
N. C, April 1894. <lb />
The Board of Commissioners <lb />
for Pitt county met this day in <lb />
regular session, present C- <lb />
son, chairman, L- Smith, <lb />
Leonidas Fleming. T. E. Keel <lb />
and S- A. Gainer. <lb />
Orders for paupers were issued <lb />
as <lb />
Martha Nelson Margaret <lb />
Bryan H D Smith <lb />
Lydia Bryan Jacob <lb />
horn Nancy Moore <lb />
Susan Norris Susan <lb />
Lucinda Smith Patsy <lb />
Henry Harris <lb />
Crawford <lb />
Smith Andrews That Henry Harding, Register <lb />
firmly that no such tactics <lb />
would permitted. He proposes <lb />
that the Senate shall every day <lb />
at the expiration of the <lb />
o'clock P. talk tariff <lb />
as long as it remains in session, <lb />
a vote is leached on the bill, <lb />
and not willingly deviate <lb />
from that rule, except it be to take <lb />
up something important that de- <lb />
immediate action. This <lb />
will make the work of prolonging <lb />
the debate beyond a reasonable <lb />
time, just for the sake of delay, <lb />
much more than the Re- <lb />
publicans have been calculating <lb />
upon. <lb />
Morgan, of Alabama, <lb />
has introduced a bill providing <lb />
for a reorganization of the State <lb />
department, which all <lb />
subordinates of that department, <lb />
excepting the his first <lb />
assistant and Ambassadors and <lb />
Ministers, a life tenure and <lb />
cos for promotion according to <lb />
their merits. <lb />
President Cleveland and Sec <lb />
Gresham were both pleased <lb />
when the Senate passed <lb />
and without amendment <lb />
the Bering Sea bill prepared by <lb />
the latter to meet necessities con- <lb />
with carrying out the <lb />
agreement reached by the Court <lb />
of Arbitration which passed upon <lb />
the claims of the United States <lb />
and of Great in Bering <lb />
Sea. It was a double pleasure to <lb />
get tho bill unanimously <lb />
ed and to get it passed ahead of <lb />
action upon a similar bill now <lb />
before the British Parliament. <lb />
Harris. Mary. J town No. <lb />
Lawrence, guardian for Ba- <lb />
heirs town lot <lb />
Lawrence, I. W, guardian for Ba- <lb />
heirs town lot No. so <lb />
K O. <lb />
II A, for Mrs <lb />
Lou town lots <lb />
and <lb />
Same, town lot No. <lb />
1.00 <lb />
1.07 <lb />
1.77 <lb />
1.10 <lb />
3.73 <lb />
2.110 <lb />
Tax <lb />
House a in, sou ; , 2.88 <lb />
lie below described land and town s M. . ,.,., <lb />
or taxes due the year 1803, and ; . ,,,. <lb />
aid and cost for advertising w j , ; <lb />
Sale. <lb />
Pursuant to provision of <lb />
the laws 1889, I Shall, beginning <lb />
Monday. May 7th, at A. M., in front <lb />
of Court House r in sell <lb />
the below described land and town <lb />
to <lb />
the <lb />
K. KING. <lb />
Sheriff Of Pitt County. <lb />
DAM <lb />
Anderson, I <lb />
Amos, acres <lb />
Joyner, W acres <lb />
Parker, E S, <lb />
Atkinson. 1-00 acres <lb />
acres <lb />
Gilbert, acres <lb />
acre <lb />
Spain, acres <lb />
Andrews, P. W., lot <lb />
Brown, Fernando, acres <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
M A. estate. acres <lb />
Belcher, John P, acres <lb />
Hale, John, <lb />
Williams, Henry, <lb />
Bland, W It. Carrie, <lb />
John K. Mary, seres <lb />
W. S. lot <lb />
Cox, acres <lb />
Chapman, Win. II., <lb />
Cannon, Dennis, Abram Smith <lb />
est. acres <lb />
Cox, Fred acres <lb />
Cox. E. A . acres <lb />
i lark. James P., acres <lb />
J. I. acres <lb />
I. SB acres <lb />
Harris, J. Henry, 8-6 acre <lb />
Saml V., acres 8.01 <lb />
Manning, Win., acres <lb />
Smith, t rank. HO <lb />
3.4. <lb />
8.06 <lb />
4.04 <lb />
0.71 <lb />
1.10 <lb />
9.28 <lb />
1.86 <lb />
4.56 <lb />
8.32 <lb />
5.78 <lb />
8.58 <lb />
To all who goods that are all light we invite <lb />
them to come to see. us we will make die prices <lb />
all right and satisfactory. We have often <lb />
been told that we were a little high in <lb />
price on some lilies of Goods but <lb />
our friends would always add <lb />
the. quality of your <lb />
goods is better than <lb />
the lower priced <lb />
goods costing <lb />
more and <lb />
demand- <lb />
tier <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 />
FURNITURE <lb />
When we say that we have the best line <lb />
of FURNITURE ever kepi in our town. We <lb />
make no mistake as a visit to our store will <lb />
prove. Numbers r our customers ex <lb />
press surprise at our haying such a <lb />
large and well selected stock <lb />
on hand. Call on us for <lb />
anything warn <lb />
in the Furniture <lb />
line. We have <lb />
just i e <lb />
lovely line <lb />
of c Hi R s. <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 />
tor Christmas as they will please<lb />
Wilson,. M. D., <lb />
Windier, W. K A. Windley <lb />
seres <lb />
acres <lb />
res i <lb />
lot <lb />
10.10 <lb />
4.27<lb />
USE <lb />
Springs <lb />
s.<lb />
IS IT <lb />
Who is it that will so is it that has a beautiful lino <lb />
known <lb />
By every hearth fireside home <lb />
With bargains that win such great <lb />
renown <lb />
BOB <lb />
of <lb />
With one on, as your girl passes <lb />
you, she will stare, <lb />
And call yon her duckling, darling, <lb />
dear <lb />
What is this that we will <lb />
see spread Who is it that has Clothing so fine <lb />
On every tree and post and shed, Dressed up in a suit all others <lb />
In letters and black and red you'll shine, <lb />
BOB That your girl will exclaim, <lb />
ht, ., i i ho mine <lb />
Who cuts the prices down so low <lb />
And tells the people they must go, n L <lb />
Where you with bargains he'll Who is it that has such a brand <lb />
overflow <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 <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that has a back lot, <lb />
Where you can tie your horse <lb />
not <lb />
Be bothered with shot that are hot <lb />
BOB <lb />
now stock <lb />
Who keeps everything from a silk <lb />
dress to a clock, <lb />
his low your <lb />
nerves such a shock <lb />
BOB <lb />
Who is it that's opened next to <lb />
Andrew's grocery store, <lb />
Where Jas. L, dE Co. <lb />
no more, <lb />
Who will be open from a- m. to <lb />
m. <lb />
BOB <lb />
Yes, every says that BOB can beat the world <lb />
floods, Clothing. Notions, Shoes, <lb />
Furnishing Goods. <lb />
Call on him, he is at the store formerly occupied by Jas. L. Little <lb />
Co., and and his clerks will treat you fair and Square. Mr. <lb />
is with him and will glad to see his many friends- <lb />
Cull on us for and <lb />
Implements. We have some <lb />
Dice mies on hand and will <lb />
make the prices right- <lb />
Wishing all oar friends and tho public generally a joyous and <lb />
happy Christmas. <lb />
We remain, your friends, <lb />
J. B. CH <lb />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
A, <lb />
-------WHOLESALE RETAIL------- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
barrels Ballard's Obelisk Flour <lb />
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES j <lb />
and w of and <lb />
wish to say that have made special In MOO <lb />
HEAD MATERIAL and yon Inside dies up <lb />
smooth which will prevent or your when <lb />
Also I have made special to use spill Hoops made White <lb />
special advantages I In cutting timber places hi <lb />
position to moot all competition. I cheerfully promise yon I will strive to <lb />
make it to your interest my Hogsheads and you can Had them lime <lb />
either .-it my factory at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, N. C. <lb />
And Turned Trimmings for s Specialty. <lb />
am prepared to do any of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything In <lb />
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, rickets for Stairways. <lb />
any kind, Including Piazza Railing, and would b name you prises on <lb />
the above upon <lb />
REPAIR WORK <lb />
on short notice. Thanking you your past patronage, lam willing to <lb />
to meet your tutors . and kindly ask yon me n trial <lb />
elsewhere. fully,<lb />
COBB BROS. CO., <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and Correspondence Solicited. <lb />
RELIABLE <lb />
to Pitt and surrounding counties, the following <lb />
not to excelled in Mils market. Ami all guaranteed to he <lb />
straight goods. GOODS of all kinds. <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. BOOTS. LA <lb />
Hair, and <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Red <lb />
Ware<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017688_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Local R i <lb />
Mrs. Gay, of is visit- <lb />
Mrs. Dr. Bagwell <lb />
Full moon on the 19th. <lb />
April showers are looked for. <lb />
Dove Tail Cutaways and Long <lb />
Cut Sacks at Frank Wilson's. <lb />
Superior Court in Tarboro next <lb />
week. <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
It turned cold again Sunday <lb />
night. <lb />
Business men can get good <lb />
to <lb />
the Reflector Book Store. <lb />
The 4th of July falls this year <lb />
on Wednesday. <lb />
Hon. G- W. Venters says what <lb />
makes my Hens lay so many eggs <lb />
and keep so healthy is <lb />
Food, at the Old Brick Store- <lb />
New Embroideries just <lb />
ed by Wiley Brown. <lb />
Dr- Frank Pitt, specialist, has <lb />
a card in this issue. <lb />
D- M. Ferry's New Garden Seed <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
My Hardware Store will be <lb />
open from A- M. to P. M. <lb />
the spring and summer months <lb />
D. D. <lb />
The bank was moved into the <lb />
new building Monday. <lb />
See Frank Clothing. <lb />
Money to improved <lb />
Real Estate in sums from to <lb />
Apply to. <lb />
F. G. James. <lb />
Two horses, buggies and <lb />
for sale by B. F. Sugg. <lb />
Everything is <lb />
Sugar best Coffee <lb />
best Flour at the <lb />
Old Stoke. <lb />
Bay your Cotton Seed Meal at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
This is the last mouth for <lb />
and don't you forget it. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb />
Negligee <lb />
Frank Wilson's. <lb />
The Journal is twelve <lb />
years old. It is a good daily. <lb />
Genuine Clipper. Atlas. Boy <lb />
Dixie. Stonewall and Climax <lb />
Plows Castings for sale by J- <lb />
B. Cherry Co. <lb />
The colored people had a <lb />
at the river Sunday morning- <lb />
The largest and best assorted <lb />
line of General Merchandise in <lb />
Pitt county, is offered for sale by <lb />
J. B- Cherry k Co. <lb />
Sewing machines from to <lb />
Latest improved New Home <lb />
Wiley Brows. <lb />
Beautiful line of nil <lb />
shapes at Frank Wilson's. <lb />
Farmers, Mechanics and Labor- <lb />
of all professions, when in <lb />
need of goods of any kind, call on <lb />
your friends. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Just received a new of <lb />
Carriages and Cribs. <lb />
J. B- Co. <lb />
The Elmo baud wont to Cone- <lb />
toe Monday to fill an engagement. <lb />
It is getting warmer but you <lb />
had better not discard your stove <lb />
yet. <lb />
When in want of Rood Shoes go to <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
I,. M. Reynolds Men and Boys <lb />
are the bet. For sale by J. B. <lb />
Cherry Co. <lb />
The moon gives Moses another <lb />
holiday from lighting his street <lb />
lamps- <lb />
Go to J. B. Cherry when In need <lb />
of Furniture, keep a Stock and <lb />
sell at price will please you. <lb />
More wind the past week than <lb />
we had during the whole of <lb />
March. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Mr. Andrew deliver <lb />
an address at School at <lb />
Friday afternoon. <lb />
Remember I pay you for Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
The hour for evening services <lb />
in the churches has been changed <lb />
to o'clock. <lb />
A- G- Cox's celebrated <lb />
Back Bands call on J- B- Cherry <lb />
Co- <lb />
You just ought to see the big <lb />
cent Tablets at Reflector Book <lb />
Store- <lb />
Complete line of Dry Goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
Acme Distributors are <lb />
for sale by S. E Fender A Co. <lb />
Glad to see Mr. John Nichol- <lb />
son, of Baltimore, in town. <lb />
Mr. B. R- King was here Mon- <lb />
day on his host of <lb />
Miss Annie Mo nil, of Marlboro, <lb />
is visiting her brother, Mr. W. F- <lb />
Judge Geo. H. Brown, of <lb />
Washington, was in town a short <lb />
while Monday. <lb />
Miss lone May, of Farmville, <lb />
spent part of the past week here <lb />
visiting Miss Maud Moore. <lb />
Miss Daniel was sick <lb />
last week, but her many friends <lb />
are glad to see her out again. <lb />
Editor H. A. Latham, of the <lb />
Washington Gazette, was in town <lb />
Thursday gave us a pleasant <lb />
call. <lb />
Miss Addie Galloway, of Snow <lb />
Hill, daughter of Capt. Swift <lb />
Galloway, is visiting Miss Myra <lb />
Skinner- <lb />
Mr. J. W. Filly left Monday <lb />
to accept a position with the <lb />
company at Greenville.-Kins- <lb />
ton Free Press. <lb />
Mrs. Asa of <lb />
spent part of last week with <lb />
friends here and left Saturday for <lb />
Portsmouth, Ya. <lb />
Mr. R. L. Humber left Friday <lb />
to spend a few days at Beaufort. <lb />
The seaside possesses attractions <lb />
for Bob all the year through. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Goodwin. <lb />
Master Jack little Miss Mary, <lb />
of Philadelphia, arrived in Green- <lb />
ville Saturday to visit relatives. <lb />
Young Men's Meeting. <lb />
The meeting of young men, <lb />
spoken of last week in the Re- <lb />
was held in <lb />
Hall Friday night and the follow- <lb />
officers were elected <lb />
B. Ellington. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
D- Johnson. <lb />
Harding. <lb />
W. E. Warren. <lb />
There were about present <lb />
and have designed next Friday <lb />
night at the same place as the <lb />
time to meet again and at that <lb />
time will appoint a Board of Di- <lb />
rectors. <lb />
For the Town Election. <lb />
The Board of Councilmen have <lb />
appointed the following as Regis- <lb />
and Poll Holders in the <lb />
several wards for the election to <lb />
be held the first Monday in <lb />
First C. C. <lb />
Forbes. Poll Holders, T. A. <lb />
and W. P. <lb />
Second C. F. <lb />
White. Poll Holders, H. A- Blow <lb />
and L- W. <lb />
James; <lb />
Brown. Poll Holders, G- F. i <lb />
Evans and Moses King. <lb />
Forum <lb />
T. Poll Holders, <lb />
Forbes and Harris- <lb />
J. <lb />
Ola <lb />
Opening Service. <lb />
On next Sabbath morning at <lb />
eleven o'clock the new <lb />
church at this place will be <lb />
open, for the first time, <lb />
for the worship God- Though <lb />
not completed, the building will <lb />
be comfortable ; and it will give <lb />
i us pleasure to have our friends <lb />
j and the public generally to join <lb />
us in our services, which will be <lb />
the ordinary morning and evening <lb />
worship. The Dedication <lb />
will take place at a later <lb />
Mr. G. B. King, clerk to Con- after all debts have been <lb />
Branch, came home <lb />
last week to spend a few days. <lb />
He is looking well enjoys <lb />
in the city. <lb />
Mr. E. S. Smith, formerly of <lb />
Hobgood. moved his family to <lb />
last week, and occupies <lb />
re- <lb />
by Mr. W. <lb />
i paid. Of this occasion due notice <lb />
i will given. <lb />
The collection in the morning <lb />
will be for the debt on the build <lb />
; at night for beneficence. <lb />
Most cordially, <lb />
J. N- H- <lb />
the building in <lb />
vacated <lb />
White. <lb />
Revs. G. F- Smith and J. C- <lb />
commenced a series of <lb />
meetings at Bethlehem about nine <lb />
miles from hero on the Farmville <lb />
He Caught Some. <lb />
The of the Salisbury <lb />
Herald picked his flint and went <lb />
hunting for shad again, a night <lb />
or two before returning home, <lb />
and had better luck, succeeding <lb />
in bagging seven more fine ones. <lb />
road last Sunday. We hope thus redeeming his rep- <lb />
work may prove fruitful. j he went home happy, <lb />
i -r-ii- t i feeling that ho could still rank <lb />
Mrs. Ellis, of Wilson. among the old Tar's crack fisher- <lb />
been visiting Mrs. S T Hooker, I He home <lb />
returned home Monday. <lb />
off as a hero on the up country <lb />
folks, showing a lovely lot of <lb />
blisters that adorned his hands, <lb />
but Joe Evans knowingly asserts <lb />
that there more blisters <lb />
besides these- Joe has <lb />
announced his forgiveness for the <lb />
Reflector enticing the Herald <lb />
man to visit his boyhood haunts, <lb />
congregation duel is declared <lb />
j off. Now if Joe will come down <lb />
and let us do him around for a <lb />
Mrs. ft. B. Phipps, of Chicago. will go back home think- <lb />
been spending some Greenville is the biggest and <lb />
grandest place in the world. <lb />
handsomest widower in town will I <lb />
probably soon have business on <lb />
the road leading up that way. <lb />
At the close of the service in <lb />
the Baptist church. Sunday night, <lb />
Rev. J. H. administered <lb />
the ordinance of baptism to six per- <lb />
sons, three ladies and three gen- <lb />
A large <lb />
it. <lb />
weeks hero with Mrs. J. B. John <lb />
sou, left Saturday to spend <lb />
short while in Portsmouth, Va., <lb />
and Washington. D. C-. before <lb />
returning to her home. She <lb />
delighted with her visit to Green- <lb />
ville, her old home. <lb />
Elder T. Philip's horse ran <lb />
away with him, last Thursday, <lb />
broke up his buggy. <lb />
Rev. G. F- Smith, pastor of the <lb />
Methodist church, a lady <lb />
at the river Sunday morning. <lb />
Boswell Co call <lb />
attention to the Wheeler A <lb />
son sewing machines sold by <lb />
them. <lb />
The ladies, course, are in- <lb />
stylish millinery. Mrs. <lb />
M. T. advertisement tells <lb />
what she offer in line. <lb />
Our tobacco department this <lb />
week gives notes of some now <lb />
enterprises that will enlarge the <lb />
strength of the Greenville tobacco <lb />
market- <lb />
Mrs. M. D- Higgs is receiving a <lb />
beautiful line of new millinery <lb />
goods. Look for advertisement <lb />
next week telling the attractions <lb />
she offers. <lb />
C T. talks in his <lb />
space to-day about the marvelous <lb />
values in his splendid stock. He <lb />
received suits of stylish cloth- <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Shoes to <lb />
whether you <lb />
Fit-No <lb />
stand or <lb />
matter <lb />
whether <lb />
you sit, at Higgs Bros. <lb />
New Garden seeds D- M- Ferry <lb />
Sc C, at the Old Brick -Store. <lb />
All white teachers who desire <lb />
to be examined will meet at the <lb />
Male Academy on next Thursday, <lb />
April The colored teachers <lb />
will be examined on Friday at the <lb />
Court House. <lb />
W- H- <lb />
Supt. Pub. Inst. <lb />
Lost-By mistake one set of <lb />
Charles Reade's Works were left <lb />
with some one or at some persons <lb />
house on February 21st, 1894. <lb />
Any information about same left <lb />
with the Greenville Reflector <lb />
will be greatly appreciated. <lb />
J. J. <lb />
Main st, Norfolk, Va. <lb />
Attention is called to the <lb />
of land sale by G. i <lb />
Brown, Jr., trustee. <lb />
Cabbages from Florida have <lb />
been on sale here the last week <lb />
or two. They are sent to Mr- <lb />
John Hudson by his son who <lb />
lives in that State. <lb />
Saturday Mr. G. T. <lb />
of Beaver Dam, brought down <lb />
some of the finest tobacco plants <lb />
of the season. They were plenty <lb />
large to sot out. <lb />
Several new bonnets and spring <lb />
suits that went in pickle for East- <lb />
but got froze up the cold, <lb />
thawed out and made their <lb />
Sunday- <lb />
The Greenville Amateurs will <lb />
present at the Opera <lb />
House, Friday night, for the <lb />
of tho Episcopal Church. <lb />
Tickets at Wooten's. <lb />
A supper under the manage- <lb />
of Mrs. Blow and Mrs. Mon <lb />
will given to night in the <lb />
store occupied Mr. Con <lb />
They have a splendid <lb />
bill of fare. <lb />
The first service will be held <lb />
the new Presbyterian church next <lb />
Sunday, conducted by Key. J- N. <lb />
H. The building is <lb />
nearly completed and is a hand <lb />
some edifice. <lb />
Tho Louis Wilson, who <lb />
we mentioned last week had been <lb />
found in an condition <lb />
beside tho Atlantic Coast Line <lb />
railroad, near Ala,, and <lb />
on whose person were papers in- <lb />
that he was from Green- <lb />
ville, turned out to be Louis <lb />
son of Louisa here- <lb />
Another telegram came Friday <lb />
night announcing his death. <lb />
I May Beetle. <lb />
The bugs that were and <lb />
brought to the Reflector by Mr. <lb />
I W. R. Parker, and specimens of <lb />
I them sent the Agricultural Ex- <lb />
Station, at Raleigh, as <lb />
published two weeks ago, are re- <lb />
ported by the Botanist <lb />
of the station to be a <lb />
known as May Beetle <lb />
name <lb />
In response to our letter Mr. H. <lb />
B. Battle, Director, writes <lb />
is a species of com- <lb />
known as May or June <lb />
Beetle and the parent form of the <lb />
so destructive to <lb />
the roots of strawberries and <lb />
other herbaceous plants. As a <lb />
larva or grub this insect lives in <lb />
the ground for three years. As a <lb />
winged beetle it lives only a week <lb />
or ton days. The beetle feeds <lb />
chiefly at night and often does <lb />
much damage to poach and other <lb />
trees to tho buds of grape <lb />
vines. <lb />
Remedies Spray the plants <lb />
attacked with Paris once <lb />
to gallons of water. <lb />
Jar the insects upon sheets spread <lb />
on the ground and then turn them <lb />
into a vessel containing some <lb />
and kerosene oil. Jarring <lb />
should be done early the morn- <lb />
As a grub the only <lb />
cable treatment is to plow the <lb />
ground deeply and allow fowls to <lb />
follow plow and pick up the <lb />
Sale of Laud. <lb />
By virtue of a power of sale contained <lb />
in a deed of trust executed by II. <lb />
it. Brown and wife t undersigned, <lb />
recorded in book V. page 185-7, Reg- <lb />
Office of Pitt county. I will sell <lb />
the House door in the town of <lb />
Greenville, N. C. on Wednesday the <lb />
day of May 1894, at for cash, <lb />
at public auction to the highest bidder <lb />
the following property, to A <lb />
or plantation on the south <lb />
-tide Tar river in county about <lb />
one mile below Greenville adjoining the <lb />
lands Annie Thomas, Allen <lb />
and others. Tar river at <lb />
the northeast corner of Annie <lb />
land, Boundaries, see said <lb />
containing acres or less, and <lb />
well known as Win. M. B. Brown <lb />
plantation, also all the teams, wagons. <lb />
carts, plows and fanning implements <lb />
now on said plantation and belonging <lb />
thereto. Teams consists of mules and <lb />
one hone. Also the land and farm <lb />
known as the land, containing <lb />
acres more of less on the north side <lb />
of Tar river adjoining Dixon, <lb />
J. Nobles Others, conveyed to <lb />
Win. If. B. Brown by II. <lb />
and wife and Marina Dixon. Also one <lb />
house and tot in Greenville, N. U., op- <lb />
the residence of Mrs Win. II, B. <lb />
Brown and situated in the northwest <lb />
corner of 4th and streets, being <lb />
part of lot No. Also lots <lb />
and in said town adjoining each <lb />
other and known as the brisk yard lots <lb />
of Dr. Win. M. B. Brown. Persons de- <lb />
siring to purchase any portion of the <lb />
property are invited to <lb />
respond with me at Washington, N. C. <lb />
G. II. <lb />
April 7th, ISM. Trustee. <lb />
DR. FRANK PITT, <lb />
SPECIALIST, <lb />
Now renders to the public his profession- <lb />
service in curing Cancers, Tumors, A;. <lb />
Address, DR. PITT, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
OTHER LOCAL. <lb />
Crops have somewhat recover- <lb />
ed from the effects of tho freeze <lb />
and prospects are brightening up <lb />
again. <lb />
New families move to Green- <lb />
ville nearly every week. All need- <lb />
ed to bring people here is enter- <lb />
prises that will give them employ- <lb />
On Thursday, 26th inst, Cove- <lb />
Lodge I. O. O. F., will <lb />
their seventy-fifth <lb />
Rev. J. J. Hall, D. D., pas- <lb />
tor of Park Ave. Baptist <lb />
Norfolk, will deliver the address- <lb />
Last week Mr. A. Forbes sold <lb />
two lots in one to <lb />
Mr. A. J. Griffin adjoining to <lb />
property of the latter, and one on <lb />
the opposite side of the street to <lb />
Mr. H. C. Edwards. Both will <lb />
build. <lb />
Miss Leila Cherry will soon be- <lb />
gin the building of a dwelling <lb />
house the vacant portion of <lb />
her fronting on Greene street. <lb />
She has sold vacant lot front- <lb />
on Third street to Mr. Robert <lb />
Greene. <lb />
A having a house to <lb />
rent pub a cunt advertisement <lb />
in the in one day <lb />
had a good tenant in the house, <lb />
lie handed in the money, saying <lb />
pays to advertise in the Re- <lb />
Every person in Greenville, <lb />
especially the men, <lb />
should carefully read the article <lb />
on our fourth page to-day, head- <lb />
eel up your It tells <lb />
something that should be <lb />
more than it is- <lb />
Mr- J. L. Sugg, representing <lb />
Virginia Fire and Marine <lb />
company, of Richmond, <lb />
showed us a check last week for <lb />
full payment of loss by <lb />
fire of Mrs. Penelope Keel, of <lb />
near Farmville, who had a <lb />
co destroyed a few <lb />
weeks ago. Insure your <lb />
tobacco and other property in a <lb />
good company. <lb />
A business exchange throws out <lb />
the following hint to <lb />
business men If you have any <lb />
with a man of business, <lb />
call at his place of business, <lb />
the hours of business conduct <lb />
your business like a man of <lb />
then go about your <lb />
so that the man of business can <lb />
attend to his business. That's <lb />
business. <lb />
The Constitution's sentence for <lb />
the April missing word contest is <lb />
as moments were <lb />
the strife was <lb />
the vision closed. In the <lb />
ling of an eye our flying horses <lb />
Lad earned us to the termination <lb />
of At <lb />
right angles we wheeled into our <lb />
former direction. The turn of <lb />
the read carried the scene out of <lb />
my eyes in an and swept <lb />
it into my dreams forever. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
virtue of two decrees made, one <lb />
at December term, the other at <lb />
March term, of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court, In the case of vs. <lb />
. P. Brown and others, the <lb />
Commissioner will sell for cash before <lb />
the Court House door, in Greenville, on <lb />
Monday, the 7th day of May, 1894, the <lb />
following described tracts of land situ- <lb />
in the county of Pitt, in Bel- <lb />
township. One tract known as the <lb />
Ida Warren land, adjoining the lauds of <lb />
Betsy Phillips, John A- <lb />
Cobb. O. B. Hathaway and others, con- <lb />
acres. Also one other tract <lb />
if land adjoining the said Warren tract <lb />
O. B. Hathaway, J. II. Clark and others <lb />
known as the Brown land containing <lb />
acres, more or less. F. G. JAM KS, <lb />
Mar. 33rd, Commissioner. <lb />
firing Millinery. <lb />
W PAW HI BE WISE- <lb />
IV CALL AT OUR STORE. <lb />
Why Because you can buy <lb />
FANCY GOODS, <lb />
Notions and Trimmings, <lb />
at reasonable prices. <lb />
AT prices not forced down by <lb />
bat made low from the start <lb />
by judicious purchasing of stock and <lb />
contentment with small Our <lb />
new Millinery arrived. A call will <lb />
convince you. <lb />
M, T. Co. <lb />
BOSWELL. GO <lb />
THE <lb />
ONLY PERFECT <lb />
USE. <lb />
For sale by <lb />
BOSWELL, <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
April 9th, 1894. <lb />
Mrs. Mary Knight who has been <lb />
sick with fever the past two weeks <lb />
is better. <lb />
Mr. G. Ford's children who <lb />
have been sick for some weeks <lb />
past are able to be out again. <lb />
Mr. T. H. Coons, of the firm of <lb />
Coons Cole, New York, is in <lb />
town to-day. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. John D. Blount, <lb />
of Williamston spent part of last <lb />
week in town visiting relatives. <lb />
Messrs. T. T. Cherry and <lb />
Robert Staton made a trip up in <lb />
Halifax Sunday. <lb />
Prof. Z. D. went to <lb />
Conetoe yesterday and organized <lb />
a Sunday School. <lb />
A Social <lb />
to Miss Minnie <lb />
way was given at Mrs. W. F. <lb />
Manning's Friday night, which <lb />
was very much enjoyed by all <lb />
present. <lb />
Mr. F. Barnhill. of Pitt, was <lb />
married to Miss Ella Philpot, of <lb />
Edgecombe, at the residence of <lb />
the brides father, Mr. C- E. Phil- <lb />
pot, on Wednesday March 28th, <lb />
1894, Elder T, H- <lb />
Elder G. A. hold <lb />
meeting hero in the <lb />
dist church on the first Sunday <lb />
in this month and Saturday be- <lb />
fore. He preached some very <lb />
able sermons. There was quite a <lb />
large crowd present on Sunday. <lb />
There was a largo crowd <lb />
town Saturday evening and <lb />
seemed to be lively. Some of <lb />
the crowd took on a little too much <lb />
tea in consequence of which the <lb />
Mayor issued two warrants for <lb />
violations of Town ordinances and <lb />
two cases of wife whipping were <lb />
before Justice D. C Moore to-day. <lb />
Items. <lb />
April 9th, 1894- <lb />
Miss Nannie of Kinston, <lb />
has been visiting relatives near <lb />
here and returned this morning. <lb />
Mr. M- H. was here <lb />
one day last week. <lb />
Mr. Dan of Kinston. <lb />
has been here visiting relatives. <lb />
Mr. Frank Johnson and his <lb />
little son spout Saturday and <lb />
Sunday with his brother Dr. H. <lb />
Johnson. <lb />
Johnson Mills Items <lb />
April 9th. 1894. <lb />
Dr. Best is visiting relatives in <lb />
Wayne County. <lb />
Mrs. Jennie Bender, of Pol- <lb />
is her parents <lb />
here. <lb />
Mrs. Mattie Hughes, of <lb />
is visiting Miss Mary <lb />
Harding. <lb />
Rev. Mr. filled his <lb />
at St. Johns yesterday <lb />
preached an excellent sermon. <lb />
One of our young men <lb />
tho concert at Damon's last Fri- <lb />
day night came home badly <lb />
mashed. <lb />
Sale of Land for Taxes <lb />
ON MON PAY, the 7th day of May, <lb />
I, I will sell before the Court <lb />
House door in Greenville, the following <lb />
land in Farmville township, for pay- <lb />
of the taxes due thereon for the <lb />
year <lb />
L. J. Barrett, acres, 929.68 <lb />
A. K. TICKER, <lb />
Tax Collector. <lb />
THE LAST CONVENTION. <lb />
Held in Greenville, N. C, Adopted the <lb />
Following Resolutions. <lb />
C-, <lb />
April 3rd, 1894. <lb />
1st, That while <lb />
entertain duo respect for the soy- <lb />
existing political parties, we <lb />
are convinced that now is the <lb />
time and that our necessities de- <lb />
that there shall be a Fourth <lb />
party, that tho interest of the <lb />
general public may be protected. <lb />
Resolved 2nd, That every man, <lb />
woman and child in the State to <lb />
better their condition must adopt <lb />
tho Cash System and shop econ- <lb />
and you cannot do this <lb />
at stores where per cent, profit <lb />
are put on goods you need in <lb />
every day life, yon must single <lb />
out the merchant who sells for <lb />
cash and cash only. <lb />
Resolved 3rd, That for a mer- <lb />
chants to do a credit business it <lb />
is necessary to make large profits <lb />
Notice to Delinquent <lb />
Tax Payers. <lb />
Whereas of land for non- <lb />
payment of taxes made by J. A. K. <lb />
Tucker Sheriff of on the <lb />
5th day of Kay. 4th day of May, <lb />
2nd day of May, and Sod day <lb />
of May. Many tracts or parcels <lb />
land were bid off by the county, notice <lb />
is hereby given that the parties who own <lb />
said lands will be permitted to redeem <lb />
the same by appearing before the Board <lb />
of Commissioners and paying to the on customers who will pay, so as <lb />
County Treasurer all amounts due on. , ,, . , <lb />
account of same. to cover tho extra expense of do- <lb />
The list of tho owners and the amounts I a credit and the bad <lb />
due thereon is as follows <lb />
1869. <lb />
Eliza <lb />
Francis Nichols <lb />
Braxton <lb />
It A J <lb />
Jenkins <lb />
Bryant Taylor <lb />
Wiley <lb />
John <lb />
Austin Atkinson <lb />
Kilpatrick <lb />
Noah Joy tier's heirs <lb />
Nathan Hopkins <lb />
Frederick white <lb />
SOU<lb />
1800. <lb />
L l <lb />
J J Parker <lb />
Arnold Spain <lb />
J II Harris <lb />
A d Daniels <lb />
E N Batten <lb />
1801. <lb />
1802.<lb />
Matthews <lb />
AC Daniel <lb />
Allen <lb />
C T Anderson <lb />
A D Cox and wife <lb />
K N and wire <lb />
L A <lb />
W Wilson <lb />
Mills <lb />
w K <lb />
Dawson <lb />
Robert Wilson <lb />
Stocks <lb />
J B Pollard <lb />
W H Parker <lb />
Aaron <lb />
By order of Board, <lb />
H. HARDING, <lb />
Clerk of Board. <lb />
debts which ore the natural re- <lb />
of this system. <lb />
4th, That while it is <lb />
very convenient to have goods <lb />
charged, we have to pay for it. <lb />
Resolved 5th, That we, the <lb />
of Greenville, Pitt county, <lb />
and adjoining counties, having <lb />
adopted the above resolutions do <lb />
hereby elect, that <lb />
A Co., shall our head- <lb />
quarters, where the best goods <lb />
for the least money can be ob <lb />
6th, Thai <lb />
on hand a <lb />
lino of Dry Goods, Shoes, Hats <lb />
and Clothing, fine Dress Goods <lb />
Trimmings a specialty, which <lb />
they are offering at very low <lb />
prices and ask yon to examine <lb />
before purchasing. <lb />
Cash, Chairman. <lb />
Boswell, Co., <lb />
Clerks.<lb />
IS<lb />
HI<lb />
JO<lb />
LEADER OF <lb />
Styles and Prices. <lb />
We have just received and are opening tho largest stock of <lb />
FINE CLOTHING <lb />
EVER BROUGHT TO GREENVILLE.<lb />
Suits for Men, Youths, Boys and Children. <lb />
Cut, Square Cut, Double Breasted, Prince Lou- <lb />
, don Sack and Dove Tail Cutaway, <lb />
In connection with tho above I have purchased a lovely lino of <lb />
Gents Furnishing Goods <lb />
Dry Goods., <lb />
SHOES <lb />
A call from everybody appreciated. No trouble to show goods. <lb />
FRANK <lb />
THROUGHOUT OUR ENTIRE STOCK. <lb />
COLORED DRESS GOODS we've got, everything that's <lb />
new, stylish and desirable. <lb />
OUR WRITE GOODS VIM FABRICS receive <lb />
pleasant commentaries on all sides. Everything that is dainty <lb />
and can lie seen in this department <lb />
OUR UMBRELLA SUNSHADE Department com <lb />
piety with everything to protect one from heat or rain. <lb />
OUR CLOTHING Department is unsurpassed in styles and <lb />
prices. All we ask is an inspections before The latest <lb />
thing in Head Gear for gentlemen and boys. <lb />
OUR SHOE DEPARTMENT is all could ask. Could <lb />
you not be suited we take your measure have them made <lb />
to order. <lb />
-------Come and look at our such as------ <lb />
TICKINGS, FURNISHING GOODS, <lb />
Prices beyond reach of all competition. <lb />
Depository for <lb />
Bible S. <lb />
a Agent Hew <lb />
paw. <lb />
-I HAVE RECEIVED A COMPLETE LINE OF- <lb />
SPRING GOODS <lb />
NOVELTIES, <lb />
and would earnestly solicit your examination. <lb />
SHOES SHOES <lb />
Embroideries, White Goods <lb />
and Laces. <lb />
I need not say anything about except that I have received a now <lb />
line. Prices ire lower than ever. thank you for your past favors <lb />
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance <lb />
Sewing Machines from New Homo latest improved <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
New Home Sewing Machines Depositor for American So <lb />
use tat, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE <lb />
Henry <lb />
HEAL ESTATE COLLECTING <lb />
AGENCY. <lb />
FOB nice residence on <lb />
street, rooms, burn <lb />
and good well water, Ann MERCHANT <lb />
OLD Bit Hit STORE <lb />
AT THE <lb />
i- their year's <lb />
don ins year's supplies will And <lb />
bone, looms, kitchen con- their to our pin <lb />
nice neighborhood. , Our stock I complete <lb />
i, b n it branches. <lb />
House and lot in f or ts <lb />
rooms, all on. building <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ice. <lb />
at Lowest Market Pricks. <lb />
CIGARS <lb />
water, <lb />
have several houses lots sale, <lb />
parties wishing to purchase I <lb />
well to see me before buying. <lb />
I will also make abstracts of title <lb />
to property, satisfaction guaranteed. <lb />
Terms reasonable. <lb />
Notice to Farmers. <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A com <lb />
stock <lb />
always on hand and sold at price to suit <lb />
i the times. goods are <lb />
If all nelsons who will want CANE <lb />
MILLS and next <lb />
will their orders with me an <lb />
early day i will get the, M therefore, no risk <lb />
Mils at liberal by at c -g <lb />
all t once the purchaser <lb />
the the u . <lb />
H. HARDING, <lb />
Agent. <lb />
Greenville. N. <lb />
-MANUFACTURER OF- <lb />
Alt, Ms O <lb />
-ALL KINDS OF <lb />
REPAIRING SHORT NOTICE <lb />
Only workmen and material allowed in my shops- The many <lb />
who have used my work testify to the and durability of <lb />
turned out my shops. Every vehicle guaranteed. I also carry line<lb />
WHIPS.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017688_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
SHALL YOU RIDE THE BEST <lb />
Victors are the leading bicycles of the best <lb />
the greatest amount of enjoyment you must ride a Victor. <lb />
CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
NEW YORK. <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
SAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT. <lb />
NEWSPAPER BEATS. <lb />
notes and tobacco tender diminutive plants are <lb />
jottings easily killed by too heavy <lb />
of fertilize s. At- <lb />
Mr. B. W. Royster, who tor the plants grow to tho size of <lb />
formerly located on this market , gold ,,,, and they are <lb />
is now located in Va. i not near easily by <lb />
Mr. C A. Williams, of if such applied while <lb />
wood, writes us that he sold last the plants are dry. <lb />
Can <lb />
You Read <lb />
The Future <lb />
Do you know what your con- <lb />
will be years hence <lb />
Will your earning capacity <lb />
be equal to support of <lb />
yourself and family This is <lb />
a serious question, yet, yon <lb />
could confidently answer <lb />
if you had a <lb />
in the <lb />
w . i s I CHILD BIRTH <lb />
Equitable made easy <lb />
Quotations of c <lb />
Market. <lb />
Office of O L. Joyner. <lb />
Greenville. N. C. April 3894- <lb />
Tips, green to <lb />
Greenish yellow to <lb />
Smokers, common to good to <lb />
good to line to <lb />
Cutters, common to good to <lb />
good to fine to <lb />
i; fine to fancy <lb />
common to <lb />
medium to <lb />
good to <lb />
fine to fancy to <lb />
A method which guarantees <lb />
all the protection furnished <lb />
by any kind of life insurance, <lb />
and addition largest <lb />
cash returns to those policy- <lb />
holders whose lives arc pro- <lb />
longed, and who then need <lb />
money rather titan <lb />
For facts and figures, address <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
For the i, <lb />
ROCK S. C, <lb />
is n scientific. <lb />
prepared Liniment, every <lb />
i t of recognized value and Li <lb />
constant use by Die medical pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in unknown<lb />
WILL DO nil that . darned for <lb />
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
i Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother Chill. <lb />
to Mothers FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
on price t <lb />
fig CO , <lb />
are com- <lb />
pounded from ; prescription <lb />
widely used by . <lb />
cal aides and are . <lb />
sen -i in a that is be- <lb />
coming the fashion every- <lb />
where;.<lb />
hi <lb />
S pa as <lb />
h . i . <lb />
t , . . <lb />
I ache. One <lb />
; C. in . <lb />
i after <lb />
j spirits, will e <lb />
remove e v. <lb />
fined near,; . . <lb />
j.,. <lb />
arc <lb />
. . .<lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The baring <lb />
the Superior Court of <lb />
Pitt comity as Administrator of F. A. <lb />
Fleming, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
e n to all persons indebted to the estate <lb />
I o make immediate payment to nu- <lb />
ll an ail persons having claims <lb />
against estate present the same <lb />
on or before the 12th day <lb />
o I February, 1895, or this notice will be <lb />
plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This 12th Feb. 1894. <lb />
S. A. <lb />
of V. A. Fleming. <lb />
n. <lb />
The partnership heretofore existing <lb />
K. L, and W B. <lb />
Greene, under the name and of <lb />
ft has been <lb />
by mutual consent. All debts <lb />
d Arm should be paid to U. <lb />
L. and all debts due by the <lb />
said firm will be paid by the said R. <lb />
This <lb />
L. <lb />
W. <lb />
E. It. <lb />
and <lb />
W Mm <lb />
No <lb />
Oct Its, TO, daily Fast Mail, <lb />
daily ex So <lb />
12,85 pro pm t <lb />
Ar Mount pm pro <lb />
pm <lb />
Tarboro pm <lb />
Rocky Mt M p m i Bl pm <lb />
year off of acres of tobacco <lb />
over six thousand five <lb />
dollars worth- We hope to give <lb />
readers in a few days tho <lb />
of how Mr. Williams manured <lb />
and cultivated this crop. <lb />
Three years ago we were in <lb />
Wilson and in speaking of the <lb />
future of Greenville as a tobacco <lb />
market a gentleman prominently <lb />
connected with the tobacco trade <lb />
of that place remarked that <lb />
Greenville not amount to <lb />
much because there was no <lb />
friendly concerted action on the <lb />
part of tho citizens and besides <lb />
Greenville was too far east. A <lb />
few days were told by re- <lb />
liable authority that same <lb />
gentleman was trying to make <lb />
to come to Greenville. <lb />
What changes time docs bring. <lb />
We informed that Messrs. <lb />
Ola Forbes and E. A. are <lb />
going to build another tobacco <lb />
warehouse here during the sum- <lb />
mer. If we can get four more <lb />
prize houses now the third ware- <lb />
house will prove quite an <lb />
manures. <lb />
manures for tobacco <lb />
are all much improved by com- <lb />
posting ; for the compost heap <lb />
pulverizes them and puts them <lb />
in the best condition to afford <lb />
nourishment to the plants. Coarse <lb />
bulky, dry, manures are <lb />
unsuited to tobacco, and on some <lb />
soils do more harm than good, <lb />
especially should the growing <lb />
season prove dry and tho soil be <lb />
naturally thirsty. <lb />
COMMERCIAL FERTILIZERS. <lb />
The component elements of fer- <lb />
for tobacco should be <lb />
adapted to the wants of the plant, <lb />
the character of the soil and the <lb />
class or type to be produced. <lb />
That is, they should be such as <lb />
to promote tho growth and de- <lb />
of that type, and to <lb />
meet the needs of the soil in sup- <lb />
thereto what best con <lb />
tributes to produce the largest <lb />
product of tho finest quality- <lb />
elements most needed in <lb />
tobacco fertilizers are soluble <lb />
phosphoric acid, nitrogen <lb />
to this market. under- and potash. And <lb />
stand that Mr. says he can if planters knew tho composition <lb />
control the section and <lb />
Mr. Forbes having been in the <lb />
warehouse for the past throe <lb />
years they together ought to con- <lb />
quite a nice little trade. If <lb />
Mr. can control the Farm- <lb />
ville people in the sale of their <lb />
tobacco, stronghold in pound fertilizing materials <lb />
Pitt will have been broken and supply tho needed <lb />
and needs of their soils, they <lb />
might then make their own fer- <lb />
to very great advantage <lb />
But this they cannot always do, <lb />
for two lack of <lb />
knowing what their soils most <lb />
need and how to select and com- <lb />
to <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
Wilson <lb />
At Florence <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
, Sr <lb />
So <lb />
twill not be much trouble then <lb />
for Greenville, with proper and <lb />
judicious management, to soil tho <lb />
Greene county crop. <lb />
The contract for tho <lb />
of factory for the American To- <lb />
Co., at this place, has just <lb />
been signed. Messrs. S- T. <lb />
Hooker and C M. Bernard will <lb />
build the house which is to <lb />
feet, four high with <lb />
floors. This building will <lb />
re order during the season be <lb />
tween six and seven hundred <lb />
thousand pounds of tobacco and <lb />
will be the of giving em- <lb />
to at least twenty hands <lb />
more than is now employed. <lb />
Give two more prize houses <lb />
of smaller dimensions and with <lb />
the warehouse already under way <lb />
Greenville will start upon the <lb />
nest tobacco year under tho most <lb />
favorable of any <lb />
market in the State of North <lb />
Carolina. For the past three <lb />
years Greenville has been moving <lb />
slowly but surely and now her <lb />
citizens are beginning to realize <lb />
the advantage the tobacco market <lb />
has been to the town and in tho <lb />
future will not be slow to add any <lb />
new feature that may be needed. <lb />
Tobacco men keep eye on <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
Receipts this week have been <lb />
good. The cold wave will check <lb />
receipts until there is an open <lb />
season for handling. Prices con- <lb />
good for all desirable class- <lb />
es, while and <lb />
scripts are low and neglected. <lb />
ASHEVILLE- <lb />
last week were right <lb />
heavy during tho entire week, but <lb />
on the night of the 24th the seem- <lb />
universal cold wave struck <lb />
us which has cut our breaks <lb />
down to a great extent. The <lb />
bulk of our crop, especially the <lb />
brights, has been but <lb />
sales will continue till up in Juno. <lb />
The larger part of our breaks now <lb />
consist of common stock. Prices <lb />
remain about the same on all <lb />
grades. <lb />
WINSTON- <lb />
Small sales on the loose market <lb />
was the rule this week, due to the <lb />
unfavorable weather. <lb />
Prices on all grades are firm. <lb />
The demand for good stock keeps <lb />
active, tho common grades <lb />
are selling about as usual. <lb />
Probably half or a more <lb />
than half of the crop has been <lb />
marketed. Tho offerings thus far <lb />
have shown a comparatively <lb />
small proportion of good tobacco, <lb />
no improvement in this re- <lb />
may be expected for the <lb />
rest of the season. <lb />
Much interest is manifested in <lb />
the condition of the plant beds. <lb />
The news that has been received <lb />
from the farmers as yet has not <lb />
and is not to affect prices. <lb />
Rich soils rarely produce to- <lb />
of fine quality and high <lb />
color, but of body and <lb />
yield; and the demand in- <lb />
creases for tobaccos of substance <lb />
and elasticity. <lb />
The general practice of North <lb />
Carolina and Virginia over the <lb />
old belt is to use far too <lb />
little fertilizers. It is not <lb />
up North for planters to <lb />
ply to pounds per acre, <lb />
and harvest from 1,200 to <lb />
pounds per acre product. It is <lb />
true, however, that cigar tobacco <lb />
requires heavier fertilizing than <lb />
bright yellow. <lb />
Planters in Eastern North Car- <lb />
are using heavier <lb />
and with results decidedly <lb />
beneficial. And these same plan- <lb />
are getting ahead of planters <lb />
in tho old tobacco districts, in tho duty to speak well of the <lb />
UP YOUR <lb />
In a recent public meeting at <lb />
Cincinnati Mr. Thomas P- Egan <lb />
made a speech that might well be <lb />
studied by tho business people of <lb />
every city and town of the South. <lb />
He pointed out the that <lb />
had resulted in Cincinnati from <lb />
tho lack of that kind of public <lb />
spirit which makes every citizen <lb />
interested in speaking a good <lb />
word for his town and for the <lb />
town What ho said of <lb />
Cincinnati applies with equal <lb />
force to all other places, but es- <lb />
to many in tho South. <lb />
Probably the best illustration that <lb />
this country affords, better <lb />
than Chicago, are the remarkable <lb />
results of up your <lb />
as soon in the history of Atlanta. <lb />
Every man, woman and child in <lb />
Atlanta considers it almost a re- <lb />
as <lb />
IS <lb />
TRAINS GOING NORTH <lb />
No <lb />
daily <lb />
oil <lb />
FERTILIZERS FOR TOBACCO. <lb />
Kinds Adapted to Different Soils. <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor the all <lb />
has been In use <lb />
fifty years, and wherever know ha <lb />
been in steady demand, it has been en <lb />
by leading physicians all ova <lb />
I nil bus effected cores where <lb />
all other with the attention at <lb />
the most experienced <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is at <lb />
standing the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing <lb />
its efficacy, as but ha- <lb />
ever been made to bring it before <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Greenville. X. C <lb />
JACKSON <lb />
Office Furniture <lb />
COMPANY <lb />
JACKSON, <lb />
Flora <lb />
u-ville <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
nils <lb />
ft am <lb />
am II p m <lb />
OS <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun <lb />
SO <lb />
i I <lb />
-o- <lb />
MANUFACTURERS OF <lb />
FURNITURE. <lb />
Ai Rocky Mont <lb />
A r Ta <lb />
V Tarboro m <lb />
except <lb />
on Scotland Neck Branch Boa <lb />
Weldon 3.40 p. in. Halifax <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.-IS p. w <lb />
p. in. p <lb />
Returning, leaves 7.90 a. <lb />
i Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving Hal <lb />
; at a, m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch <lb />
Washington 7.00 a. in. arrives <lb />
a. m. Tarboro 0.50; returning <lb />
, leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m. 6.00 <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.30 p. m. <lb />
j Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via Alb <lb />
i Raleigh R. R. daily except <lb />
j day, P M, Sunday P M, <lb />
j Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. <lb />
J Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
I 5.30 a. m., 10.00 <lb />
; N C, 10.25 AM 12,20. <lb />
Train on Midland M O Branch <lb />
i Goldsboro daily except M <lb />
I rive N C- Re <lb />
laves Smithfield, X M <lb />
Goldsboro, NO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Mount at B P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P Hope P M. Returning <lb />
I Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.35 arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
M, except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. n-av <lb />
7.30 p. m. arrive Dunbar p <lb />
j Returning leave Dunbar a. m. <lb />
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m.<lb />
Clinton Branch <lb />
for daily, Sunday, it <lb />
i and have <lb />
at A M, P. M. <lb />
i Warsaw with tad S <lb />
Train No. makes close connection.- <lb />
i Weldon for all points North daily. <lb />
j via Richmond, and daily except Sun- <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
I daily except Sunday with Norfolk <lb />
railroad for Norfolk and <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
General <lb />
s seated <lb />
i manner. Office j R. Transportation <lb />
furnished. Send for I M <lb />
drawback to the tobacco <lb />
growers of the Sooth is the fail- <lb />
as a rule, to use sufficient <lb />
fertilizers to pet tho returns from <lb />
their crops. In tho tho men <lb />
who have been the most success- <lb />
in tobacco those <lb />
who are not afraid to give their <lb />
just what they require. We <lb />
do not moan necessarily <lb />
your compost, heap <lb />
make your own fertilizer <lb />
I whenever possible. <lb />
LIGHT PAY. <lb />
Tobacco to a success <lb />
must be on tho intensive rather <lb />
than tho extensive scale- Small <lb />
crop fine tobacco is what <lb />
pays. The slovenly tobacco <lb />
grower never makes ends meet, <lb />
because will not thrive <lb />
under the management of <lb />
Therefore the planter who <lb />
grows a few acres, or more, what- <lb />
ever the size of his crop, must <lb />
make the land yield all that it will <lb />
and of the very best- Scanty fer- <lb />
won't pay. If your acre <lb />
lot needs pounds of fertilizer <lb />
to make it yield its best, you <lb />
should not be content to put on <lb />
pounds let it suffer for <lb />
the balance. Let tho planter bear <lb />
this in mind that prolific <lb />
pays best and he is not so <lb />
liable to make a mistake with his <lb />
crop iD the outset. <lb />
Maj. Ragland, who has made a <lb />
study of fertilizers for tobacco <lb />
through a lout; series of years, <lb />
has written some random <lb />
way of more generally using <lb />
proved varieties, newer <lb />
methods, and making <lb />
more money out of the business. <lb />
So much for <lb />
MODE OF <lb />
This varies somewhat, accord- <lb />
to the soil and quality to be <lb />
applied. When the planter de- <lb />
to use say pounds per <lb />
acre, it is best to use pounds <lb />
sown broadcast and apply <lb />
pounds in the drill. But to get <lb />
the greatest benefit from a <lb />
of not over pounds per <lb />
acre, it should applied in the <lb />
hill. But by this latter mode the <lb />
land is not improved. <lb />
The tobacco grower who wish- <lb />
es to get the largest return out of <lb />
the industry in which he is en <lb />
gaged must a close student. <lb />
He must study the quality of his <lb />
land try to determine just <lb />
what his soil needs. Tho careful <lb />
study of a little chemistry right <lb />
here by the planter of ordinary <lb />
intelligence will be found to be <lb />
worth dollars and cents every <lb />
time. <lb />
REVIEW OF THE MARKETS. <lb />
From the Southern Tobacco Journal. <lb />
Our market has been very ac <lb />
for tho past week. Fine to <lb />
scarce- The character of <lb />
city. Meet an Atlanta man who- <lb />
ever you may, he will toll you <lb />
that Atlanta is the best place in <lb />
the world; that it has the best <lb />
climate, tho most enterprising <lb />
citizens, tho best and biggest <lb />
and everything else that is <lb />
good. You never hear him <lb />
other Atlanta concerns- <lb />
Everybody unites in praising tho <lb />
city. The result is that Atlanta <lb />
moves steadily and progressively <lb />
ahead and accomplishes things <lb />
that no other city in the South <lb />
seems to be to do. The <lb />
speaker pointed out the <lb />
good work that could be done in <lb />
any city by such a spirit of <lb />
to its best interests. gave <lb />
several illustrations of how out- <lb />
side people had been influenced <lb />
by talk against local interests. <lb />
Many cities in the South need to <lb />
loam tho lesson which has been <lb />
so well learned in Atlanta, and <lb />
that is the hearty co-operation of <lb />
everybody in everything that <lb />
tends to the business in- <lb />
of tho place. unity <lb />
there is was never bet- <lb />
illustrated in the <lb />
that is made wherever the <lb />
business men of any <lb />
unite in a steady, persistent work <lb />
behalf of their city. The re- <lb />
always satisfactory, and <lb />
any town or city will <lb />
A Republican who is a <lb />
to the Landmark called at <lb />
the office last week and had his, <lb />
changed for the reason, j <lb />
he said, that there were so many i <lb />
Democrats who do not take the <lb />
between his house <lb />
and the that his copy j <lb />
was always delayed and almost <lb />
worn out by all of these sub- j <lb />
reading it before he could j <lb />
get it. This doesn't speak very- <lb />
well for Democrats, for it would <lb />
seem that they, above all others, <lb />
should take their county Demo- <lb />
paper instead of beating <lb />
off a Republican who it and <lb />
pays for it. <lb />
But it is really wonderful how <lb />
many people sponge on the Land- j <lb />
mark's subscribers the Land- <lb />
marks publishers in this way- <lb />
There hundreds of people <lb />
Iredell county who are abundant- <lb />
able to tho but <lb />
don't take it simply because they <lb />
can beat some too-indulgent sub- <lb />
scriber out of tho reading of it- <lb />
Many of them would take the <lb />
paper bat for the fact that they <lb />
get to read it for nothing. We <lb />
know this to be true, because <lb />
time and again we have hod men <lb />
to tell us that they would take <lb />
the paper but they get to read it <lb />
every week any way- <lb />
Now we appeal to our <lb />
to protect themselves and us <lb />
from these habitual beats. A <lb />
subscriber has a perfect right to <lb />
do what he pleases with his own I t <lb />
copy of tho paper. It is his prop- <lb />
and he can give it to <lb />
whom ho will. But we know that <lb />
few of them don't want to lend <lb />
their paper, had <lb />
many of thorn to tell how nut h <lb />
they wore harassed and <lb />
about it; we have actually <lb />
lost subscribers because a man's <lb />
neighbors would go to the office <lb />
get the paper and pass it <lb />
around the neighborhood until it <lb />
was worn out before it got to the <lb />
rightful owner, and sometimes a <lb />
man patience and deprives <lb />
himself of the paper order to <lb />
head off the beats. Now the <lb />
proper way to do is to shut down <lb />
on the boats. let those <lb />
habitual spongers even look at <lb />
the If you have a neigh- <lb />
is really too poor to take it, <lb />
or whose politics are awry <lb />
and yon think you can got him <lb />
right by furnishing him the <lb />
straight gospel; or one who is a <lb />
Stranger to the paper and may <lb />
become a patron by reading a few <lb />
copies of if you <lb />
choose. You may do the publish- <lb />
tho public good by so <lb />
doing. But this class is easily <lb />
distinguished from that other very <lb />
large class who make borrowing <lb />
beating a business- do <lb />
hope our readers will shut down <lb />
on this class promptly and save <lb />
themselves the annoyance that <lb />
know hundreds of them are sub- <lb />
to, prevent tho pub- <lb />
being beaten out of money <lb />
that legitimately belongs to them. <lb />
Statesville Landmark. <lb />
Scientific <lb />
Simple <lb />
Safe <lb />
Cures when till else <lb />
Testimony of Mr. W. <lb />
NEW BERN, N. C. <lb />
I began of the in <lb />
lat. discarded medicine entirely, and am <lb />
now much improved in health. Am under last- Q <lb />
obligations for the good it done <lb />
WRITE US. <lb />
send information and <lb />
ATLANTIC CO., <lb />
r. c. <lb />
We make a specialty of this class of goods and if <lb />
prices, Quality, Quantity <lb />
count for anything with you, come to us. <lb />
Envelopes a pack up. <lb />
Paper 2-J a up. <lb />
Letter, Fools Cap and <lb />
j Legal Cap equally low. <lb />
Tablet from cent up. <lb />
j Slate Pencils cents pet <lb />
dozen up. <lb />
j Lead Pencils doz. up. <lb />
fix in cents <lb />
per dozen up. <lb />
A FEW SPECIALTIES <lb />
We are sole agents for <lb />
V the very best for school and <lb />
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage beats any <lb />
on the market. Out Diamond Glue <lb />
and Magic Cement will mend anything but broken <lb />
hearts. <lb />
Every business man should a <lb />
KER FOUNTAIN <lb />
lust a life time and are sold nowhere else in <lb />
town. <lb />
Our Box Taper for polite correspondence are <lb />
the prettiest in town. also keep Mourning <lb />
Paper. Then have Slates, Blink Books, <lb />
Memorandum Books, Time Books. Erasers, Rub- <lb />
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils. <lb />
Sponge Cups. Ink Stands, Paper Cutters, Book <lb />
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other things. <lb />
BOOKS AND <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 yon ran I those goods at such low <lb />
Money By Mail. <lb />
Everybody who or re- <lb />
cash through Uncle Sam's <lb />
mails will be interested to learn <lb />
that on the first of July next a <lb />
new money order system will go <lb />
into effect, by which both large <lb />
and small sums can be readily <lb />
transmitted by letter with <lb />
lute safety and at rates much less <lb />
than the present. Orders for <lb />
or less can had for a fee <lb />
of only three cents, <lb />
for larger amounts up to one <lb />
dollars at rates graduated <lb />
up to thirty With the is- <lb />
of the new money order, <lb />
tho postal note will abolished, <lb />
since there will longer any <lb />
need for it. Tho form of tho now <lb />
order is both artistic and beautiful <lb />
and withal, of convenient size for <lb />
handling. Its popularity through <lb />
out the country is to be <lb />
great from the very start. Its <lb />
attractive appearance, as well as <lb />
its cheapness and availability, <lb />
Shoes are easy and give better <lb />
th Try one pair and be con- <lb />
I of W. I. price on bottom, which <lb />
. thousand annually to who wear them. <lb />
p ; vale of W. i gain customer, which helps to <lb />
their full line g r i in to it n profit, <lb />
pave money I v of Hie dealer <lb />
upon arr X, <lb />
BOSWELL, CO., Greenville <lb />
R. L, DAVIS BRO. Farmville, N. O <lb />
such a spirit, with it <lb />
common and medium grades adopt every means of making may be counted upon to insure <lb />
improvements. known to the world the It is engraved on <lb />
of tho be steel and as a good illus- <lb />
The continued cold weather I satisfactory results. the tendency recently <lb />
the past week has prevented tho tell of its observable in Uncle Sam, toward <lb />
marketing of tobacco, j climate, if it has a good or la his official issues <lb />
but little selling. No of its vantages for <lb />
or as a place of residence, or <lb />
of its educational facilities. <lb />
Whatever it has that is good tell <lb />
the world about it; and not only <lb />
change in prices. <lb />
TENN. <lb />
Sales this week hogsheads. <lb />
Market stronger at last week's <lb />
advance. Old tobacco scarce and through <lb />
th <lb />
of government paper. Contrasted <lb />
with it, the old form use <lb />
is unsightly and hideous. <lb />
The schedule of fees to be <lb />
charged for tho now money orders <lb />
loose purchases. at <lb />
factories. <lb />
RICHMOND. <lb />
Our market With this <lb />
weeK we reach our half fiscal to- <lb />
year enter home stretch, <lb />
and ask again, will tho <lb />
on this all important sub- j go far we are <lb />
which given below ; pressed with this being a big, <lb />
the j mean crop selling at low average <lb />
best time to make heavy P with the future hanging on <lb />
applications to the plant-bed is planting. tobacco <lb />
, ., , , , . cheap and low, yet it is sell- <lb />
when the beds are being prepared. , <lb />
, j higher proportion to other <lb />
sown and before the <lb />
germinate, for after germination i f <lb />
neglected. Fine seasons this conversation, <lb />
week caused heavy deliveries U in letters, tell <lb />
it in condensed circulars that yon <lb />
e newspapers, hag to basis now <lb />
can send out in every letter that <lb />
you mail to outside people, tell it <lb />
day in and day out, year after <lb />
year, and as sure as the sun <lb />
shines you will see the result. <lb />
up your <lb />
more Record. <lb />
The Knights of Labor propose <lb />
to buyout foreign pauper labor by <lb />
refusing to drink English beer. <lb />
That's about the first real sensible <lb />
boycott we have heard of for some <lb />
Star. <lb />
charged by tho various express <lb />
companies for transmitting <lb />
money. <lb />
, obtained and nil Tat- <lb />
Our office IS Opposite U. <lb />
And e in lime <lb />
fro <lb />
Scad model, drawing or with <lb />
if patent or not, free oil <lb />
charge. Oar fee not due till potent is secured, <lb />
J, to Obtain <lb />
cost of lame in U, S. <lb />
free. Address, <lb />
Opt. Washington, d. C. <lb />
OLD DOMINION LIE <lb />
SUPPER.<lb />
NORTH <lb />
R. R. <lb />
In December 4th, <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
GOING <lb />
leave Washington for n <lb />
teaching at all 1- <lb />
on River . <lb />
Friday <lb />
leave Tarboro at . <lb />
Saturday <lb />
Greenville day. f <lb />
departure are Of <lb />
water on Tar River. <lb />
The Norfolk, and Wash- <lb />
direct Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston, <lb />
their good <lb />
marked via <lb />
New York. from <lb />
more from <lb />
more. <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. <lb />
Washington N. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY. <lb />
Agent, <lb />
N C <lb />
Bx <lb />
V. M.<lb />
II <lb />
P. M <lb />
Train connect With Wilmington A <lb />
Weldon train North, leaving <lb />
and <lb />
train West, leaving U p. m. <lb />
Train with A <lb />
train, arriving at <lb />
bi., and With W. A W. train <lb />
from the North At p. m. <lb />
S. L. mix, <lb />
Superintendent <lb />
or <lb />
m. <lb />
it i j. . mt; cum <lb />
Liter and <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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