Eastern reflector, 11 July 1894






ct
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STATE NEWS
Things Mentioned in our Stale Ex-
changes that are of Interest.
The Cream of the News
Mr. S- H. Wiley, a banker of
Salisbury and wealthiest
of that town, dropped dead
evening last week.
Five prisoners broke of
county jail last Friday
night One of the number was in
for robbing and burning; a
at
Prof. Collins Denny was last
week elected President of Trinity
College- He at present fills an
important chair in the
University at Nashville, Tenn.
The Charlotte News says that
there is an epidemic among the
hogs in Mecklenburg, but it is
not the cholera. The hog doctors
can do nothing with the disease.
During the storm of last Thurs-
day afternoon Mr. Jno.
son was struck instantly kill-
ed by at his home near
Maiden, says the Gastonia
There are thirty-six
of the presidential class in North
Carolina. The salaries of some
are changed.
to ; Concord,
to Shelby,
to Statesville, to
The New Journal states
that the railroad debt of Carteret
county, which has given that
county so much trouble for so
many years, has at length been
amicably adjusted, and the first
payment on the debt has been
made-
Scotland Neck Re-
a white infant was one
night left at the door of Fannie
Smith, a colored woman living in
the upper section of the county-
She took it to the county home
where it is being cared for and is
doing well.
The railroad commission has
completed the assessment of all
the railroads in the State, amount-
to an increase
of The assessed value
of the steamship lines is
a decrease of that of the
telegraph companies
Pittsboro Master
Prentiss the year-old
son of Mr- A. P- Terry, of this
place, is the champion hawk killer.
He has killed, this season, with
a breech loading
shot gun, hawks, besides de-
quite a number of nests-
He killed some of them flying.
A few nights ago minks visited
the chicken roost of Mr-
Ray, about a mile and a half
southeast of he e, and killed
half grown chickens
and carried to their den on
the backs of a creek. A short
time several were killed
in the same
Gleaner.
The trustees of the Baptist
State Female university have
accepted the plans A- G- Bauer,
of Raleigh, f main building
there It is to have feet
frontage. The central building is
deep, with wings feet
deep. The material is brick i the
cost It is proposed that
work shall begin next autumn-
Pittsboro Mr. L D
Holland, of township,
informs us that has a bunch
oats that contains beads and
that will average grains to
tho head, that is the product of
one grain- This
to one sown- Mr.
Holland these are not
party or grumbler's either.
The Raleigh of
the Wilmington Messenger
that in the Wake county jail are
two insane twins-
The
Reflector, i
D. J. Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY h, 1894.
joints
Is the to find the
REFLECTOR OFFICE
Bring along ONE DOLLAR and
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NO.
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BRIGHTENING SKIES.
The reports from all parts of
the State touching the condition
of political affairs fire cheering.
Chairman Simmons says the
Democratic party is in better
shape than it was at this time in
1892- We have lately met gen-
from every section of the
State and the news they give is
the Populist party is
not dissatisfied Demo-
are becoming better
and there is an awakening
all along the line.
It is a good time now, while the
blood is cool, for me -i to look at
facts as they are and to consider
the probable advantage of a
change of administration in either
Nation or State. It is quite true
that the national Democratic ad
ministration has not been able
to checK the panic, with its
loss in values, which began
in the winter of 1890-91,
from the consequences of which,
though it has passed the acute
stage, the country continues to
suffer. It needs, however, to be
borne constantly in mind that this
panic began under a Republican
administration, that the Treasury
was depleted under a Republican
administration, and that the last
recommendation to Congress of
the last Republican Secretary of
the Treasury was that authority
be given him to issue gold bonds.
This was not given and the bonds
were not issued for the reason
that it was desired to shoulder
this load off on the Democratic
party, which had at that time
been voted into power but had
not taken possession, and make
it bear the odium of it- It is true
as we have said, that the Dem-
party has not been able
to raise prices again. It is also
true that Congress and the
dent have brought disappoint-
to the people in more mat-
than one. Bat what have
they to hope from the Republican
party and why should they want
it in power Surely we
have had enough of Republican-
ism to last a life-time, and the
choice, when we come to select a
governing power, lies between
these two Democrat
and the Republican- Besides
all this, Congress is still in
; its work is not yet before
the country ; we may in reason
hope that when it is, affairs will
take on a different aspect.
As to our State matters, there
is no room for argument The
solid white men of the State,
country and town, the tax-pay-
already have them in hand
and there is no re. why they
should surrender control. We
could not have better government
in the State and counties than we
now have, or if we could the
Democratic party is the one to
make the improvement. Certainly
no other party could improve I
upon ft. The sway of
in North Carolina is not
a fragrant memory; Populism
has brought nothing but trouble
to the States which have toyed
with it i and there is no ground
for the expectation that this
combination would bring us any-
thing but misery.
The interest of the people is
plain. They have but to meet
together this year, as heretofore,
in their primary and higher con-
and nominate for office
the men of their choice, and then
them- The Democratic
party has shown its capacity to
North Carolina and no
other ever has. It has the
confidence of the people because
it deserves to have it, and it has
but to pursue its usual policy
of nominating good and
men for the officers and the
voters will, as heretofore, do the
rest There is nothing wrong
I with the Democratic party and
people never yet dislodged
from a party which
On the same day they lost their to do do right by
reason- They have never spoken
since- Each doe, what the
other at the same
even the one docs not
the It is a case.
The men were brought from
Middle Creek township, Wake
county
The best re tn the world for Cuts,
Brine, Ulcers, Silt Rheum,
Fever Sure. Chapped Hands,
all
positively cares Pile . or no
pay an to
perfect money I
Prior a its per hex. For sale by
them Let not faint
any Democrat. The
Democratic lion is even now
and stretching himself.
In time he will pounce upon
his Landmark.
The total tenement-
house in the twenty-four wards of
New York city is with a
population an
of to each house. Of
this are
years of age are
rear tenements, with a population I
c of this
THE FADED JACKET OF GRAY.
A Poem in Prose that the
Heart.
Tho following poem in prose
was written by Smith Clayton, of
Georgia
neigh of the iron horse
and the song of the spindle
mingle merrily, and on eagle
wing, the new South sweeps to a
great and glorious future; while
in her weeds, with sad face and
heart, the old South bends
lovingly over the sacred ruins of
a brave but bitter past But the
South is still the South and the
grief of the old shall never be
forgotten in the grandeur of the
new, for between the two there
lies a sweet memorial which
binds our hearts to the past, e'en
while our hands build the future-
Faded Jacket of Gray
The violet breath is not sweeter
than the memories by which it is
shimmering stars
are not more splendid than the
glory amid which it was folded
Bring it forth to day. With gen
tie hands smooth out these
folds A thing inanimate,
it yet speaks with most eloquent
tongue- Its front tells of
the dust of righteous battle, and
its ragged edges voice the cruel
scars of vanquished veterans. It
tells the solemn but grand story
of thousands of bright swords
which sprang from their scabbards
at the call of duty. It tells
of the fiery stubborn
bleeding
dead adroit retreat
the muffled sable
plume nodding above these God-
like men who gave, and gladly
gave, all that is best in life
and life itself, for liberty
Every button has its memory,
both dark and bright; every
seam images some patriot's
daring deed ; its very silence is
the pathos of the honored
this land of the South the
Faded Jacket of Gray is a com-
heritage freighted with a
common woe. It hangs alike in
the hut on the hillside and in the
mansion of the city- In many,
alas how many homes, is it
hung upon the vacant chair,
never more to grace the form
long ago filled a Southern
soldier's grave I Its rustle is the
orphans plaintive cry, and o'er
its blight is breathed the widow's
prayer I
and worn I Yes, but the
gaudiest hue which tints the arch
of Heaven is not more bright
than this same dim shade which
dims our eyes to day, and the
tooth of Time but makes nearer
and dearer the good and true
which is newness proudly decked-
and threadbare What
matter Honor wore it, love
folded it away, grief stands
Sad, sweet
but still young, worn and yet new
you live in the glory of a grand
principle immortal as the white-
winged seraphs which circle the
great white throne
at it and the majestic
farm of Jackson rises to view;
look at ii. and the calm, noble
face of Lee peers kindly upon
yon from the buttons and the
braid; mother, look at it, and the
pale face of your dear son comes
back from a soldier's grave; son,
gaze upon it, and the honored
of your dead father seems
to rise from the earth; wife, look
upon it and the fond husband
who exchanged it for a shroud is
once more before you; sister, look
upon it and once again you seem
to see the gentle face of your loved
and long-lost brother Oh,
Hope Oh, blessed
Be they or dead, all
honor to men who wore the Faded
Jacket of Gray. Palsied be the
hand that would strike a single
star from the crown of their ever
brightening fame
braver bled for a brighter land.
No land had a cause more
grand.
Nor cause a chief like Lee f
HABITS OF PRESIDENTS.
The Ton of Life at the White House
Differ With Us Various Occupants.
General Grant brought
camp into the White House.
Mr. Hayes had lived in Wash-
as a representative at a
hotel or a boarding-house.
General Garfield had settled in
the capital in a house of his own,
and had enjoyed the kind of
social life that may be had any-
where in this country, and that
runs to literary clubs that are
formed to facilitate the escape of
unpublished manuscripts. To
encourage talent and literary am-
was a great of
the President, whose murder cut
short the that would have
been marked by more geniality
and agreeable talk than is usual
at the White House.
Mr. Arthur brought city
toms manners with him.
People who did not know him
were greatly mistaken in him.
There had been a good deal of
refinement and elegance in Mr.
Arthur's home, and its influence
made the White House more of
a social than it had been
before or than it has been since.
Then came Mr. Harrison, who
had passed six years in the Sen
ate and a Washington boarding-
house, and Mr- Cleveland, who
went to the Capitol a bachelor,
having lived most of his life in
in a Buffalo business
block.
None of these men adopted the
manners and customs of court
lite, with the exception of Mr.
Arthur, who insisted that those
with whom he came in contact
should pay his office a respect
something more than the formal
decent respect of good manners.
The rest knew nothing of the
rules which Washington society
had laid down for its own and
their guidance, and which were
as conflicting as the various inter-
that invented and frequently
modified them- Moreover, they
have seemed to care a good deal
less. They or their wives or
their secretaries studied up the
necessary regulations that govern
the intercourse between the head
of the nation and the diplomatic
representative of foreign powers-
And although Mr- Jefferson in-
on taking to dinner
what woman lie would, regardless
of her husband's rank, modern
Presidents have done their best
to observe the proprieties in this
Magazine.
PRINCIPLES FIRST, LAST.
Sam Jones on Third Party ism.
i being Jive years-
Specimen Casts.
S. H. Clifford, New Wis., was
troubled with Neuralgia and
his Stomach was disordered, his
was affected to an alarming de-
appetite fell away, and he was
terribly reduced in flesh and
Three bottles of Electric Bitters cured
him.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg,
had a run nine on hie leg of eight
Used three bottles of
Bitters and seven boxes of
and hi leg is
and John Sneaker,
ha, O. had five sores on bis
leg, said lie was incurable.
C bottle Electric Bitters and one box
Buckley's Salve cured him en-
Sold by J. L. Drug
The third party, or party of
the third part, or whatever you
may call it may go to heaven,
but they'll never get to Washing-
ton. It's not on the way. Wash- Oxford ledger,
is the wickedest place on
earth. It is the home of the
devil. The average democratic
and republican politicians are
little better than rascals, but the
third party is a fool. You can re-
form a rascal, but did yon ever
try to monkey with a fool
They want to borrow money
from the government at per
cent when the government is now
borrowing at We hear a great
deal fool talk about the rich man
getting richer and the poorer
under present law.
There never was a greater lie,
and I'll prove it. There is
the matter with the law. It's
the man that's at fault. There's
a on that side of the house
makes twenty a year.
Here's a little pettifogger whose
family are starving. The law is
not to blame. Here's a physician
making ten thousand a year.
There is a little doctor over on
the other corner that can't make
his salt. The law is not to blame.
I preach nearly every day to
people, and there's a little preach-
sitting behind me that can't
average The trouble is not
in the law, brother, it's in your
noggin.
The difference is organic If
ail the wealth in the United States
were divided out to-day each man
would get about and in
less than six months some fellows
would riding in palace cars
and others would be walking
cross-ties and howling for another
d ivy.-From the Record
Any man who kicks himself off
the Democratic platform makes
an egregious mistake- Any Dem-
who kicks himself out of
the party because Sam Slick or
Tim Titmouse or Bush
whacker failed to vote as he
pledged himself is a very wise
man, particularly if he lives in
North Carolina where the State
government and the county gov-
and popular education
are all involved. Despise if you
will lbs men who deceive you.
but do not desert your principles,
hoary with time, sanctioned by
the wisdom of the fathers, and
tested by long experience. If
you cannot get now, or at once,
all you need, all you desire, all
you demanded, take a part now
and prepare to get more next
time. Put men in office who will
act honestly and stand
up to all the laws of the
party, every pledge in letter and
spirit. Principles are tho things
to fight for. Men are
as the deceived
key held. If the men fail you the
principles will not, for they are
bod rock and survived many
changes and ordeals. Some
editor well says the
of some of
our leaders may forget the com
people, but. like the French
people, we are wedded to the
Democratic though
internal commotions amounting
almost to revolution or even
itself may threaten our
progress, still, through all we
shall live to see our principle
With a true Democrat it is
always and everywhere principles
first, last, everywhere every-
how. Lock shields and fight to
the
Politics of Farming.
A conservative business man,
who has anything to say
about politics and has made
money, got into a
with a rabid Vance of
the blood and thunder species on
Mon lay last.
He said as this was election
year he looked for poor crops
cause the farmers would neglect
their crops for politics.
The replied, is the
sacred duty of every one these
times of uncertainty to look after
politics first and crops
This is part of the cause of the
the are
such a howl about.
We have seen this same Third-
go out of town with a bale of
hey and a chunk of fat meat in
his one-horse wagon, which goes
to prove the assertion he made.
What Bothers Him.
When a feller goes
a hit to watt ;
he. spends time
Vast
The papers have stated that the
managers in Alabama are
raising campaign money in the
Northern and Eastern cities. The
public will recall the exposure of
a letter written last spring by
Senator Hoar, Massachusetts,
to the Home Market Club, of
Boston, urging it to assist
in his fight. To sure the pro-
industries of the North and
East should help out the
lists- It was the example of gov-
dealing with these gentry
that gave the Populists their start
in life. They saw the govern-
coddling a lot of
and making the people
pay their support and they
naturally concluded that if the
government was to take care of
one class after this fashion, it
should take care of another by is-
suing it per capita and
sub-Treasuries where
nips, etc, could be put in hock
and money raised on them.
tho Eastern manufacturers
ought to cough up all the money
the Southern and Western
lists need for campaign purposes.
There must be a natural bond of
sympathy between the protected
interest and the Populists They
are exactly the same lay
Charlotte Chronicle
GOVERNOR JARVIS MAKES HIS
MARK.
Washington, July 2-If the
Senate ever decides to break
away from the ancient rules
which now prevail in that body
and adopt closure Senator Jarvis
is the man to place in tho
officer's chair. This afternoon
the new Senator from North
Carolina gave his Senatorial as
a sample of what a firm
and determined presiding officer
can do, even under the existing
rules.
The proposition to abrogate
the treaty was pending.
The Democratic managers of the
bill were restless at the slow
progress that was made,
because several Republican Sen-
insisted upon making sot
speeches the subject. Senator
j Jarvis was in the chair. Senator
I Harris arose to make his usual
motion to the pending
I amendment upon the and
Hoar, Dolph and
sprang to their feet
I In a firm voice Senator
Jarvis recognized the Senator
j from Tennessee, and with a
I rapidity that would have astonish-
even ex Czar Reed, or Speaker
Crisp, he put the question and
decided it carried instantly.
Senator Hoar was so
that he grew red the face
gasped for breath j his words
refused to come at his command.
other Republicans were
equally astonished at the rapidity
of the ruling of the acting
dent of the Senate, and even the
Democrats could hardly realize
what had occurred. Finally Sen-
Hoar, who had regained his
breath, but lost his temper, in a
voice quivering with suppressed
rage, took exception to the ruling
of the chairman and appealed
from his decision.
Senator Jarvis, with equal
quickness, decided that a motion
on the table took precedence
over a motion to postpone. Sen-
Hoar differed with the pres-
siding officer on that point also,
and demanded the reading of the
rule on the subject- The
read the rule, and it was
found that the Chair had ruled
correctly. the meantime Sen-
Chandler had entered a
motion to adjourn.
Senator Harris, the Democratic
held a hurried
with his associates on
the Finance committee, and con-
that such startling
methods as those of Senator
Jarvis were too great a shock to
Senatorial courtesy and
He hurried over to Senator
Chandler and induced him to
withdraw his motion to adjourn,
and at the same time agreed to
withdraw his motion to lay on
the table the pending amendment
so that further debate might pro-
The scene only occupied a few
minutes, but in that short time
Senator Jarvis demonstrated that
a clever Parliamentarian with a
little nerve may at any time
sweep away traditions of the Sen-
ate, which now block the business
of that august body. He has
frequently remarked that the
rules of tho Senate are liberal
enough if the presiding officer
has the courage to do his duty in
such an emergency, and to-day
was the first opportunity he has
had to give his associates
proof of the correctness of
hie assertion. Senator
right arm is disabled, but his left
is all right, and the way he man-
gavel this evening
during his brief occupancy of the
President's chair will not soon be
forgotten by his associates, es-
Senators Hoar, Dolph,
and Harris.
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Report
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
A YEAR MEN.
It is going to be largely a mat
i of men this year. Party
I bonds sat more lightly
upon the people. We are in the
habit of saying, men are nothing;
principles are everything ; and it
i is so ; but this of the years
when the will look less to
principles and more to men than
they have been in the habit of
doing. It therefore behooves the
conventions of the Democratic
party to consider well the men
whom they offer to the people.
There should be no suspicion as J
I to their capacity or integrity; I
I moreover, they should be men of
acceptability; and all these re-
fulfilled, Democratic
victory will be easy. As to the
fulfillment of them, there should
be no difficulty. It has such a
wealth of material of the
sort for all the places to be filled, i
that mistakes will border on to I
crimes. No matter how great
the dissatisfaction with affairs at
it is not near
as great as many people suppose
the Democracy of North Caro.
is easily able to carry the
State this year upon the person-
of its candidates, and it
will be its own fault if these are
not so capable and so acceptable
as to compel the support of the
Landmark.
Wrinkles.
A life of crime is often the re-
of running debt-
The who has suffered has a
key that can unlock many hearts.
Tho day becomes longer every
time a lazy looks at the
clock.
Put a pig a parlor, and it
would immediately begin to look
for mud.
The man who is cheated is
much better than the one who
cheats-
The old man is a drunkard be-
cause the boy decide not to
take his first drink-
The must feel proud of his
work whenever he looks at the
man who never has a kind word
to say to his wife.
D. W. Fuller, of X. Y.,
its that he always keeps Dr. King's
New Discovery in the house and his
family has always found the very best
result follow Its use ; that he would
not he without it, it p curable. G. A.
Druggist, X. Y.,
says that Dr. King's New Discovery U
the bes; ;
that he has used in his family for
eight years, and t has never failed to
that is claimed for it Why not
try remedy so long tried and re-fad.
trial tree at J. L. Wooten's
According to an interesting re- i
port sent the Charleston News
and Courier by its Washington
correspondent, Senator Jarvis,
temporarily Monday,
stirred up the animals mightily
by the way in which he chucked j
I the of the out j
j of the window and proceeded to
get before the body and j
dispatch it. His senatorial as-1
may it but he
is an old hand as a presiding
officer. He has been Speaker of
the House of Representatives and
President of the Senate of North
Carolina, and neither body ever
had a more prompt, accurate or
presiding officer.
He know any better than
to suppose that legislative bodies
assemble tho purpose of
transacting business and when he
presides over them he sees to it
that they do Ob-
server.
The Danville Register point,
out that the cost of government
to the people of North Carolina
is per capita, while to the
people of Virginia it i per
capita; and the Register wants
to know it one can point
a blessing of government enjoyed
by Virginians that North
do not also enjoy. No;
nobody do it hare no
doubt that North has a
better government than State
in the Union that pays three
as much for it. yet
there among a few people
of ordinary good sense
average who want U
change the administration of this
government of
Observer.
No matter what of
is elected this year, it
ought to have the grit to
do two some kind
of a dog law, and repeal the law
authorizing the merchants tax
Charlotte News.
puses in
yew Watches cleaned for
cents. Main Springs cents, all other
work M cheap in
Call on me at corner store near post-
office. Z. P.
Watchmaker Jewel-r,
Greenville, N. C.
reader of paper will la-pleas
cl to learn that there at least one
dreaded been
I able lo cure in all its and that is
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the
only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh a
disease, requires n constitutional
treatment. Ball's Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, acting directly on the
Wood and mucous surfaces of the sys-
thereby the foundation
of the disease, and giving patient
strength by building up the
and nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much
faith its curative powers, that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it fails to Send for list of
testimonials.
Address. K.
by Toledo, O
u f.
Land And Si
Greenville. X. C.
Office at the House.
DENTIST.
Jas. E. Moore. I.
Greenville.
MOORE.
N E AT-L AW,
X . C
Office under Opera House. Third St.
Senator Double.
Ex-Governor Thomas C Fletch
of Missouri, was in
front of the Riggs House last
night chatting with some friends,
when a member of the newspaper
fraternity ca me and
I want to congratulate
yon on the excellence of your
rulings to-day. The gavel is in
good hands when you are in the
newspaper man had only
a survey of the gen
from Missouri and mis-
took him for Senator Jarvis, of
North Carolina, whereupon
Governor Fletcher remarked that
it was the third time within a
week that he had been taken for
vis.- Washington Post.
ML
Here's Size Of It.
the Republican Con-
convention in Weldon
last week, Solicitor Geo. H.
White, in the course of a violent
is reported to have said
that if the Populists wish
they must go to the
cans. said White,
little camp is too small to ask us
into and you are too young-
You must come to us ; we cannot
go to
Now, the question for the Pop-
is, will they fiddle along
and do nothing by themselves,
go to the Republicans out and
out or remain with the Democrats,
where they
Neck Democrat
Come one has very pertinently
said that it is a wise provision of
Providence that a man can
neither himself nor pat him-
self on back- If such were
p the average man would
be engaged in the one or the
greater part of the timer-
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
N. O.
Prompt attention to
at Tucker old stand.
JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LA
GREENVILLE, X
Practice in all the court.
special
U I. SLOW
J. JARVIS.
BLOW,
KY S-AT-L A W,
GREENVILLE,
In all the Courts.
S. K.
TYSON,
Prompt attention Riven to col
LATHAM.
T A SKINNER,
HOTEL NICHOLSON,
WASHINGTON, X. C
A. Spencer,
attention





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
., Editor aid Proprietor
WEDNESDAY. 1-th, 1894.
Entered at Greenville,
K. C, as l law mail matter.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC
A convention of the Democratic
party of Pitt County will be held
at the Court House in Greenville
on Thursday, July 1894, at
o'clock, M-, for the purpose of
pointing delegates to the State.
Congressional and Judicial Con-
Tent ions-
township will he entitled
to elect to said Convention one
delegate and one alternate for
every twenty-five Democratic
and one delegate and one
alternate for fractions of fifteen
or more votes cast in the last
Gubernatorial election, that is to
Beaver Dam is entitled to
votes.
is entitled to votes.
Bethel is entitled to votes.
Carolina is entitled to C votes.
is entitled to votes.
is entitled to
Totes.
Falkland is entitled to votes.
is entitled to votes.
Greenville is entitled to
is entitled to votes.
Swift Creek is entitled to
votes.
In accordance with the party
plan of organization the Demo-
voters in each township
are requested to meet in their
respective township, at the usual
place of meeting on Saturday,
July 21st. 1894, at o'clock, P. M
for the purpose of appointing
delegates to said County
By order of the Democratic
Executive Committee of Pitt
County. Alex. L. Blow.
R. Chairman.
Secretary-
JUDICIAL CONVENTION.
The Democratic Convention to
nominate candidates for Judge
and Solicitor of the Third Judi-
District will meet at
Mount. Wednesday, August 1st,
1894, at o'clock P.
By order of committee,
F. S- Chairman.
In the District of Columbia,
Massachusetts,
land, Now Hampshire, Now
New York, North Carolina,
Island, South Carolina
and Virginia there are more
males than males.
The Concord Times, Secretary
J- B- excellent paper,
celebrated its twelfth birthday
last week by putting on a hand-
some dress of type. We
glad to note this evidence of
prosperity with the Times. No
paper is more deserving.
Durham is said to be a
town now. All liquor licenses
expired on the 30th of June and
the Board of County Commission-
refused to renew them be-
cause the saloon-keepers had
been convicted of selling to
minors, in consequence of which
the had to close. If this
ruin had applied in Pitt county
there would have been some closed
bar rooms in to-day.
It ought to be the that when
a saloon keeper
h law under which his business
is licensed and is convicted
for, it should a barrier to bid be-
considered a competent man
to have a license.
The Tariff bill passed the Sen-1
ate on Tuesday of last week by a
vote of to Senator Hill
was the only Democrat who voted
against the bill. The Senate also
appointed a conference committee
and requested the House to do
likewise to which the bill shall
be referred for a final adjustment
of the differences between them,
and as soon as this is done, which
is expected to require only a few
days, the measure will be ratified
by the House and Senate
and go to the President for
In only a short while now
the bill will go into effect and its
beneficial influences will be felt
throughout the country.
During the past week all other
topics have been overshadowed
by interest in the great that
has prevailed in Chicago and the
west, the influence of which has
been felt to more or less extent
throughout the entire country.
The strike first started with the
operatives of the Pullman com-
and through sympathy with
these the American Railway
Union took it up and instituted a
boycott against all the western
railroads that carried Pullman
cars and a general strike followed.
Tho men refused to handle trains
that carried Pullman cars and
would not others willing to
work to take their places, thus
putting a to the passage of
mails and blocking passenger and
freight traffic. The strikers failing
to carry their point, the rail-
roads refusing to yield to them,
they gathered great riotous
mobs and set to work burning
property, committing murder and
other acts of lawlessness, setting
at defiance law and order.
Gov. of Illinois, being
himself a sympathizer with an-
took; but little interest in
quelling such disturbances, and
the he did
make for efforts in that direction
proved so inadequate to the needs
of such an occasion of disorder
and riot tho United States
government was appealed to.
President Cleveland called his
Cabinet together to consult over
tho situation and in order prevent
tho stoppage of mails and tho in-
inter-State com
ordered U S- troops to
Chicago to suppress the troubles.
Alt geld exceptions at this
and raised objection to the gov-
troops into his
State, but he found that
dent Cleveland was a little bigger
man than himself, and that
his objections it was within
the province of the government
to do just what the President had
ordered done.
The extent of the damage done
by the strikers and rioters is
palling, and the daily papers have
been filled with long accounts of
the outrages. Thousands o
freight cars and much other
property was destroyed, entailing
a loss of millions of dollars, to say
nothing of the losses arising from
tho interruption of business and
the shutting down of many in-
That such a and its
riots and outrages has
is really deplorable, and
the sooner those engaged in it
are made to realize there are
laws in this government which
must be respected, the better it
will be for the whole country.
At last accounts the soldiers
had fired several volleys into the
mobs, killing some of them, and
natters becoming more
and orderly.
COMMISSIONERS MEETING.
The Populists of this county
held their convention here en the
4th The crowd in town that day
was large, though were far
from all being Populists. Part of
the force being sick
and matters at the office requiring
our personal attention we were
prevented from getting about the
Court House at ell during the
progress of their meeting, but
have been told that it was very
the same meeting with
about the same crowd that they
had at their meeting in March,
only additional work done
being the appointing of
to their State end District con-
s. Col. Harry Skinner
was chief speaker filled
up his time largely with abuses
of Cleveland and the Democratic
party. The almost pathetic
peal to the to come over
and join tho Populists was very
noticeable. Upon the whole it
was the mot disorderly day
Greenville has had in sometime.
There were several fights, a still
larger number of drunks, and the
police were busy making arrests
trying to keep order. If the
claim the 4th as
it goes without -saying that
they-added no new Ian i els to
their already
strength to their
N. C July
The Board of Commissioners
of Pitt county met this day, pres-
C- Dawson, chairman, S. A-
Gainer, J- L. Smith.
Fleming E- Keel.
The following orders for
were
Martha Nelson Margaret
Bryan 3.00, H. D- Smith
Lydia Bryan 2.00, Jacob
born 1.50, Nancy 3.00,
Norris Susan Briley
2.50, Lucinda Smith 1.50, Pat-
2.00, Henry Harris
2.50, Crawford 2.50,
Smith 1.50, Hettie Andrews 3-00,
Kenneth Henderson 8-00, Eliza
Edwards Carlos Gorham
2.00, J H Henry
Sam and Amy Cherry 4.00,
Fannie Tucker J O Proctor
6.00, Alice Corbett 3.00. Easter
Vines Alex Harris 12.00,
Winnifred Taylor COO, Mary
5.00, Lydia John
Ham 1.50, w H Parker 6.00, J G
Nelson 1.50, Daniel Webster
Winnie Chapman 1.50, Henry
Punk 2-00, David
10-00, J W 1.50, James Long
14.00, Polly Adams 1.50, Henry
Tyson 5.00.
following claims for
county purposes were allowed
and orders issued
J W Smith John
Buggy Co. T A Thigpen
E A Move C
B S B
Sheppard G M Tucker L
H Spur W H Williams
B E F
Williams B M Lewis
Tucker G H Little
Henry Brown Reuben
Clark Henry Taft Dr W II
Henry
T A Thigpen B W
D J
Barrow W T Smith
D C Moore D C
Moore G W
SO, W F Harrington Dr
W E Warren J B
rick S A Gainer H
Harding C Dawson J
L Smith T E Keel Le-
Fleming S A Gainer
Greenville Lumber Co
The following for Swift Creek
stock law
J W L H Spier
L B E B
C Dawson
Jerry 87-
Upon petition made in due
form of law the Sheriff was direct-
ed to issue licenses to retail
to the following persons at
their several places of
S. Hicks, J. T.
ft Co.
Beaver D. Smith.
Staton, J. S-
Powell.
E. Fleming.
J.
and J. S. J. B. Garris,
Bryan Gardner, E. O- Edwards,
E- Lang.
M- Moore Co,
J. O. Proctor A Bro.
T. Pierce, L. N-
Dudley
B- Burnett, T.
L. Turnage, W. J. and
J. I. Baker, S. S. Harris.
C. Edwards, J.
A. Brady. B. F. Anderson Co,
W. E. Belcher, Lawrence Hooker,
Oscar Hooker. S. Fleming.
R. Davenport.
Swift A- Bland.
Prof. W- H- appeared
before the Board, received the
official oath was duly
as of Public
Instruction.
Ordered that J. W. Crisp be
allowed to draw 1.50 per mouth
as pauper.
H- N. Gray filed his resignation
as Constable of Carolina township
and tho office was declared vacant.
Dr. W. H. Bagwell tendered his
monthly report as Superintendent
of Health which was ordered
filed.
that the report of A-
L. Blow in regard to the tax of
Latham Skinner he confirmed,
that is that Latham Skinner be
relieved of the taxes on acres
of laud in town
ship valued at the same
having listed and tax paid
by T. A. also on
acres known as Daniel land in
township at
it appearing that the same
was not their property and
been and tax paid by O- E.
R. T. Whichard. Ordered
further that they be relieved of
double tax charged against them
in township and allowed
to pay tax on such property
as own in said township.
A petition asking that the road
leading from the tar road in
township running
east miles across the
lands of S. F. to
a new road leading from
road to White's road he made a
public road, was filed and or-
continued until next regular
meeting property advertised.
Tho Sheriff was ordered to sum-
a jury lay out n public
road from Ayden to the Snow Hill
and Washington road via Carolina
Christian College, in accordance
with petition tiled at last meeting.
The following jurors were
drawn for September term of Pitt-
Superior Court.
FIRST Jones, Luke
C Tripp, JO Nobles,
Cornelius Barnhill, R A Tyson,
D II Williamson, T L Williams.
J C Taylor, Washington Mills, J
D Jones, O W Harrington, Wm
H Harrington, B M Whitehurst,
H R Robinson, W G G T
Allen. W J Laughinghouse, J L
B Fleming, Jas Tingle, Jno
Branch, W J Turnage, E A John
son, B Barnhill, W F Carroll, J
Bryan Grimes. H Barrett, J
D T House, Joshua L
Nobles, W F Keel, S G Williams,
H C Braxton, J E Tucker, Abram
Baker, D C Barrow.
SECOND S Galloway,
Robt Dixon, Fleming W
A Taylor, J A Thigpen, E S Ed-
wards, Jas M Williams, Joel Pat-
rick, J M Loyd, W T H
Carson, J T Hodges, T F
Christman, Jno J Buck, Freeman
Vines, Jno M Gay.
Ordered that J H Smith be re-
of payment of
charged against him for the hire
of Silas Harris, it appearing that
absconded before Smith
had received benefits enough
from him to pay for expenses in-
curred.
Ordered that A. B. Garris and
G. B. be notified to
appear the Board at next
regular meeting and show cause
why valuation placed upon prop-
listed by them should not be
increased-
Ordered that the name of Polly
Adams be placed upon pauper
roll she be allowed to draw
month-
Ordered that G A Stancill be
notified to appear before the
Board at regular meeting in
August and show cause why the
valuation of certain property list-
ed by him should not in-
creased-
The commissioners appointed
by and Pitt counties
to settle and fix the dividing line
in dispute between said counties,
made their report, showing they
and marked the follow-
line ; at a Black
Gum in Crisp Creek and running
South degrees, East poles
to a stake in Joseph H.
field Wallace
Tho commissioners appointed
by the counties of Martin and
Pitt to settle a line in dispute be
these counties, made their
report showing that they had
fixed and marked the following
a stake in
Joseph H. Ward's field
Wallace Andrews and run-
South degrees East 1864
poles to a Willow transplanted in
Cypress stump where the
Cypress stood in run of
Fiat Swamp up the swamp from
the crossing of the public road
near J. B.
VOTES IN CONVENTION.
The counties composing the
1st Congressional and 3rd Judi-
Districts will be entitled to
the following votes in the Demo-
to Wit
CONGRESSIONAL.
Ch o wan.
JUDICIAL.
Franklin.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
C, July
small attendance in both
House and Senate shows that
lots of Senators and
are disposed to extend their
holiday over the rest of the week.
For the ten days previous to the
passage of the tariff bill the Sen-
ate certainly had a hard time
with daily sessions from to
o'clock or later and the
constantly in touching
to ninety degrees. It is
not surprising that the passage
of the bill, a few minutes before
the beginning of Independence
Day, by a vote of to should
have been followed by an exodus
to the mountains and seashore
that the wilted Senators
should be a little slow in return-
to their duties. However, no
time is really being lost on ac-
count of their absence, as the
work of preparing the
for action is going right
along in the Senate
Committee, and the conferees
the part of the Senate on the
tariff
Harris, Vest, Jones, Sherman. Al
and be on
hand as soon as wanted by the
conferees on the part of the
House. No surprises were con-
with the final on the
tariff bill, unless the vote of Sen
Hill against it can be so con
The populists
Allen Kyle voting for the
bill and Stewart
against it.
is speculating on
what the result of the con-
the bill will be, and
everybody is agreed that many
changes will be made, but there is
no agreement as to the nature of
the changes, further than that
they are likely to be mostly
towards the original Wilson bill-
Representative says on
the is an almost in-
variable rule that if there is an
overwhelming sentiment the
House for a particular lino of
action it finds expression and
overcomes all delays and
of parliamentary
I feel certain that in the issue be-
tween the Senate and House the
latter will carry the Mr.
Holman also says that his Con-
experience has taught
to expect considerable delay
in tariff conferences between the
Senate and the House. Let
patient folk make a note of that.
Representative of
is at the of the sub-
committee of the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Com-
that is charged with com-
piling a text book to be used by
Democratic speakers in the Con
Campaign. The work
is progressing, but cannot be
until tariff bill has
finally been disposed of by Con-
The choice of Mr. Bynum
to direct this work was a happy
one. He will be certain to in-
in the book everything that
can help tho stump speaker in his
arguments, as he believes that
stump speaker is always ahead of
the literary bureau as a vote get-
because the average man will
listen to a clever speech while he
will not read pamphlets, however
cleverly they may be prepared.
President Cleveland is com-
mended on all sides for the
promptness with which he de-
and ordered that Federal
troops should be used to prevent
the mail service of the country
being interfered with by railroad
strikers and to back up
of U- S- Court officials.
The President is kept thoroughly
posted, through Attorney Gene-
Postmaster General
Secretary Lamont,
every phase of the strike,
being in constant telegraph-
communication with their
subordinates-
Representatives Catchings,
Miss., who is a member of the
House Committee on and
therefore in a position to know,
says he does not consider it
for Congress to adjourn as
early as the first of August, but is
certain that it will do so very
shortly after this date.
Bethel Items.
July 9th, 1894.
Mr- N. B. Dawson, of Conetoe,
is in town to day.
County Commissioner S. A.
Gainer went to Greenville to-day
on business.
Mr. and Mrs. T. T. Cherry
went up in Halifax to
see Mrs. Cherry's mother who is
quite sick-
Miss Jenkins, of Hamil-
ton, who has been visiting
in Bethel returned home
last Thursday.
Miss Jennie Bunting, of Cone-
toe, and Miss Taylor have
been visiting Mrs J. R, Bunting
the past week.
Misses Mary
Annie Ross, of Halifax, who have
been visiting Mrs. T. T. Cherry
the past two weeks returned home
Saturday morning.
The following Officers of Bethel
Lodge No. I. O. O. F. were
installed July 2nd. M. G.
Bryan, N. G., W. O. Barnhill, V-
G-, S. A- Gainer, R. Sec, W. J.
Rollins, F. Sec, M. O- Blount,
Rev. W. A. Forbes happened
to a sad accident last Wednesday
morning o'clock at Ward
and Barnhill mill. One of the
tracks at or near the dry kiln
fell on him and broke one of
his ribs. He has been in a
cal condition ever since, but it is
thought that be will recover and
has the prayer of the entire coin-
for his speedy recovery
that he may his
labor.
Land Sale.
By of two
ed to the by J. K.
Cobb Lama Colin his wife, dated
and recorded in the
office of the Restate of Deeds of Pitt
County In pages
and Wand the oilier executed by W,
H. Dunn, dated 4th ISM and
molded hi the said office in
Book page I will on Friday.
July Ism, sell at public sale before
the Court House door in to
the highest for oath, a certain piece or
parcel of laud in County situated
on the waters of Meadow ad-
joining the of O. Cobb, Ben-
M. Woolen and other,
acres mow or less. This the 6th
day June I.
VINES.
Mortgagee.
WE WANT ORDERS
On last Wednesday night July,
4th as been previously an-
Col. Jno. F. of
Wilson a public lecture
in the Methodist Church on
to a large and
attentive audience He spoke
about one hour a quarter and
was given attention
through his entire speech which
was one of the most eloquent and
logical speeches it has been our
pleasure to listen many a day.
Our people were pleased
with Burton, and his visit and ad
-s has made a listing-
We will fill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP I
We will fill them WELL
Rough Heart Framing,
Rough Sap Framing, ;
Rough Sap Inches
Rough Sap Hoards, A Inches,
Wail days for our Pinning Mill and
we will furnish yon Dressed Lumber
as
Wood delivered your door for
cents a load.
Terror.
Thanking for past patronage.
iron
X. C.
IF YOU INTERESTED in COOKING FOR
BARGAINS
to go straight to them, their stock is now complete, their store
full of
Merchandise
From which genuine bargain ho had.
We buy for Cash. We sell for Cash, or on
approved credit. We carry the stock. We
do the business. We fear no legitimate
competition. We dread no comparison of
stork, quality and prices. Our i- the
place for you to buy goods at light price-,
for following reasons We buy for
Cash. We leek for quality and durability.
We deal squarely with you. We carry
largest stock to lie found In our
from which to make your We
do seek to take advantage of yon.
lire responsible for all error-or mi-lake- I ha I
may on our part. We do not
a . of Job Iota Inferior
goods n ml off you tiling you do not
want, once our i Mm will remain
our visit
our atom, buy their right
RAMBLER
It carefully
prepared by experienced
from f
Dandelion, Man-
. drake,
Juniper other well known
vegetable remedies. The Combination, Pro-
portion and Process are Peculiar to Hood's
giving it strength and curative
power to Itself, not
by other medicines. Hood's
Cures Scrofula, Salt Sores, Boils,
and all other affections by
impure blood; Dyspepsia, Sick
Headache, Indigestion, Debility, Catarrh,
Rheumatism, Kidney and Liver Com-
plaints. It is Not What
we Say, but what Hood's
Sarsaparilla Does, that
Tells the Story Hood's
an Will with pi go home
the same thing and receive your Worth.
Now why don't yon do
One hundred cents on the dollar
mm n.
X. C.
The RAMBLER look live of the high-
est awards at the World's and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides tho Ram-
make at reduced price. 1894
make all strictly highest
grade. We
Tobacco Finer, Sell Stoves, tare, k,
and do all kind- of Tin work,
S. E. PENDER CO.
Look hero did know that yon could buy from almost any
article you may need in the following lines
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats,
Furnishing Goods,
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses and Children
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery Glassware,
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries,
Mattings, Curtain Poles Lace
Furniture Furniture,
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables,
Sideboards, Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children S Beds,
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Room Furniture.
Hood's Pills vs mild mil
Notice to Creditors.
Letters of administration upon the
of Belcher deceased
to the undersigned, on
the 4th day of June 1801, by Clerk
of Superior Court of County,
notice is hereby Riven to all persons
claims against laid estate to
present them to the on or
before, the 18th day of Jana ISM or this
notice will plead in bar of their re-
All persons indebted to said
estate are requested to make immediate
l-i- to me. This the 13th day of
June 1894. W. K.
X of Belcher.
PIANOS
To Our North Carolina Patrons
Von iv- III Hit-
We tell
at It i
Southern
RELIABLE,
Take a look at our stock it will cost you
save you dollars. We are agents for A P,
COTTON at jobbers prices.
nothing and may
SPOOL
Come One. Come All.
o I
ESTABLISHED 1888.
Room
N. C.
We have In Mock and to arrive
so
SO
Hold in
In
h y
Notice of Dissolution.
Notice hereby given that the
of Ellington proprietors of
the Iron Works, was dis-
by mutual consent on the 14th
day of June. 1894. James Brown be-
sole purchaser of the business,
a-- all indebtedness of the
and all bills due the firm are payable to
him. Those owing the firm are re-
quested to settle at once.
A. B.
JAMES BROWN.
This 19th, 1891.
RALEIGH BRANCH,
J.
yon know
Nut i i- , our . A
direct
in it x
r V
nut mm T
am .
term, in X
era. Our m- Ii A
to your J
to select fronts -ii i. n
from v i . i . . w
n t-n will yon.
if
Bread Preparation,
Soap,
Star Lye.
Cakes and Crackers,
Slick Candy.
Matches.
Dust,
Good Luck Baking Powder.
Sacks
SO Molasses.
Tons Shot,
Kegs
Car- Flour,
Meal.
SO Tubs
urn mil d Sugar,
P.
call t as Snuff,
It. Mill- Snug.
j., Three Thistle Snuff,
Boxes Tobacco,
V. M. Cigarettes,
Old Va. demote,
Ca s r-.
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
-IN-
-lid your for Haul
nil tilt I. hI in.;
Any In the tint
i our
It cub m. i-.-y.
I BATES.
A L Music House.
Main Eon,, , Savannah, Z
I.
N.
T.-iii,.; New Or- j
n. nil our .
e s el
I. L NUMBER'S
---------DEALER IN l
Boilers, Saw Hills
DEALER IN AND REPAIRER OF-
kind of
O.
Machinery
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below are Norfolk price of cotton
and peanuts for yesterday, furnished
by Cobb Bros. A Co., Commission Mer-
chants of
Good Middling
Middling
Low Middling;
Good Ordinary
Prime
Extra Prime
Spanish
Tone-dull.
1-10
; 1.-5-16
Celebrated
Machinery.
THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
Latest Improved Revolving Head.
THE BROWN COTTON GIN.
Write for and prices.
lo my and Customer,, of Pitt and
I that I have rude nous
HEAD MATERIAL and propose
smooth which will prevent or your when Packing
Also I have made special to use best split Hoop- ma
Oak The special have In my own limber places me In a
to meet all I cheerfully promise you Unit I will strive to
make It to your Interest to my and can at any
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco N. C.
Sawing,
And Turned Trimming for a
It rack cm or In
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll for in
Piazza-, or
any kind, Belling, and would be pleated to name you
In the above application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. you your past I
future pat and kindly ask you me a trial
to meet your
here.
Winterville, N.
COBB BROS. CO.
AM
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
Consignments and Correspondence Solicited.
of and surrounding counties, of the
not to be excel led I nth Is market. And all guaranteed to be fir t-elM
pure straight goods. DRY of all kinds, NOTIONS.
GOODS. HATS and HOOTS. LA
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE H RN
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH. BLINDS. and
plows and plow casting, leather of
Gin and Mil l Hat, Rock or Paris, Fist
Hair, Harness, Bridles and
HEAVY A
Agent O. N. T. Spool Cotton h I offer to the trade at Wholes
jobbers cents per per for
ration and Lye at Jobbers Prices.
I Red Oil. Varnishes and Paint umber Wood Pun. and Wood
I Willow Ware. Give a call
Lead Is
Wood
e a call





THE REFLECTOR
Rejections
Personal
We the first cantaloupe of
the yesterday.
In stock Boxes at
the Old Brick Store.
The cloudy weather after the
rains is beneficial to crops.
Oblique cents at
Selector Book Store.
Postal Dotes are no longer used
the money order having taken
their place.
Be rare that you go on the
moonlight excursion Friday night
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
The ordinance of
was observed by the Baptist con-
Sunday morning.
James Long makes the best
drink of Coca Cola. Try a glass.
Standard Music only cents
a copy at Reflector Book Store-
June received Fresh
Grass Butter per lb at the
Old Brick Store.
Thermometers, Tobacco Knives,
at D D.
To-morrow and next day are
examination days for the public
school teachers of the county.
If you wish Id save MONEY
to Lang's store, he is selling
Clothing at Cost.
The Atlanta
Constitution both a year for
bakery caught fire
on the roof, yesterday morning,
but was put out without damage.
July cents per pound
Grass Butter at the
Old Brick Store.
Everybody can have Ice Cream
now. Ice Cream Freezers are so
cheap at D. Haskett
cents gets the Reflector
until the of January-
Mr- H- C Edwards is having
lumber hauled preparatory to
training a dwelling in
Now assortment Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Depositor.
T- C- Manning will open
a writing class here this afternoon.
AH wishing to take lessons should
he present.
If you vast a pleasant time go
the moonlight excursion Fri-
day night.
Our Summer stock is the best
in tn-m. prices are Come
to us. Lang.
A little girl looking at the new
Wednesday evening,
her papa where was the
Other piece of it.
Genuine Atlas. Boy
Dixie, Stonewall and Climax
Plows and Castings for sale by J.
B- A- Co-
Prices and of Victor
bicycles can be had at
office.
A door key, tied with scrap of
cloth, was near
bridge. Owner call at
office pay for this notice.
Soda water, lemonade, sherbet,
coca cola and other refreshing
summer drinks at James Long's.
I just received car load fresh
Flour, the cheapest ever brought
to Greenville. Call and examine
price and quality- D. W.
S mm of our citizens are being
troubled with vegetables thieves.
They have cleaned out the editors
patch and have set in on
his collards-
The largest best assorted
line of General Merchandise in
Pitt county, is offered for sale by
J. B. Cherry Co.
Sewing machines from to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley Brown.
will be a moonlight
excursion on steamer Myers Fri-
day eight Tickets for sale by
Misses Bessie Jarvis and Myra
Skinner.
Policeman Moore had a
rail pot on the bridge
way; for way children
to fall off now they climb
the
, Mechanics and Labor-
of ad professions, when in
need of goods of any call on
your friends. J. B. Cherry Co.
Just- received a new lot of
C images and Cribs-
J. B- Cherry Co.
When in want of good shoes to to
B. Chen V o.
T. Id Mens and By
hoes the bet. For sale by J. U.
Cher- v A Co
Go to it. Cherry Co when in
Of and
sell at prices yea.
A large stack of nice Furniture
at the OM Brick S ore.
Remember I pay for Chicken
Eggs and K the Old
Brick Stem.
line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's.
cents the very best Ten
blended with Fired Japans,
Basked Fired Japans.
Gunpowder,
Formosa
at the Old
Brick Store.
The editor and had the I
office all to
Friday. Coot was sick in bed
an the other boys were off on
the excursion to Scotland
Mr. James has gone to
South
Mr. and Mrs. F. are
at Panacea Springs.
Mr. J. B. Cherry, Jr., left yes
for
Mr. Mrs. C. T.
left yesterday for Ocracoke.
Mr. T. White spent two days
of last week at Seven Springs.
Rey. A. and family
have been spending some days at
Ocracoke.
Mr. J. D. Williamson returned
home Saturday from his visit to
Mr. J. E- Adams, of Michigan,
is visiting his sister Mrs. S. C.
, Hamilton.
Rev. J. C. left yesterday
to attend the Conference
at Fairfield.
Miss Rosalind Rountree is
visiting Miss Nannie Fleming, in
the country-
Miss Hortense Forbes is visit-
her sister, Mrs M-
at Kinston.
Mr. J. J. Cherry and Master
John Ivey Smith to
coke Saturday.
Mr. T. S- of Granville
county, is bis brother,
Prof. W- H.
Mrs. G. H, Little, of
has been spending a few days
visiting Miss Lena Harris.
Mr. H. A. Sutton and Master
Hugh Sheppard left Monday to
visit relatives in Lenoir county.
Mrs. Warren and children,
of Penny Hill, are visiting her
parents, Mr- and Mrs. S. B. Wilson-
Miss Williams, of
Greene county, spent part of last
week visiting Mrs. W. H. White.
Mr- A. B- Ellington left
day for Petersburg to join his
wife who is visiting relatives there.
Mrs. S- A- Cherry has been sick
several weeks. Her many friends
are glad to know she is much
better.
Mr. W. B. Brown and family
returned home last week, from
visiting Mrs. Brown's parents in
Virginia.
Mr. W. S- Christian, a young
man from Georgia, has located In
Greenville and taken a position
with the Index.
Notice
The competitive examination
for the appointment to the A. and
M. College will be held in the
town of Greenville on Saturday,
July 1894. This county will
I be entitled to one appointment.
j Those who desire to compete will
j present at o'clock on the
above day. H.
Co. lust.
Miss Clio spent a few
days of the past week with the
Misses Higgs and left yesterday
for Scotland
Rev. Mr. Taylor, who was pas-
tor of the Baptist church here
sixteen years ago, spent Monday
and yesterday with friends in
town.
Mr. L- H. Pender returned
home Friday evening from Hen
where he had been to
take Mrs. Pender and his little son
who will spend several weeks in
the mountains.
Some one left an umbrella on
the the day of the Baptist
excursion and they can get same
by calling on Mr. C. M- Bernard
and describing it-
The work of rebuilding the
large pi that was blown clown
two weeks ago is progressing rap-
idly. Contractor tells us
he will have it completed in good
time.
There are big times around
Morehead again this week. The
second and fourth regiments of
the State Guard are in camp there
and crowds from all sections are
going down.
Miss Florence Perkins, of
Washington, was married in that
town on last Tuesday evening to
Mr. Harry Webb, of Charlotte.
The bride is a native of this
county and has many friends
here.
The Democratic Congressional
Committee of this dis-
met here last night to select
the time and place for the con-
convention. The Re-
was printed before the
meeting and will report in
next issue.
We call attention to the new
advertisement of W. L. Douglas
Shoe. We have every
assurance from the manufacturer
that the recent improvements in
style and quality will give more
satisfaction than ever to the wear-
s of these poi shoes.
You must look over this issue
and fin Bo well, Co's
advertisement. They open up
their mid summer sale this morn-
and clean out their large
stock t- make room for fall goods.
Prices have been put down and
they are offering splendid bar-
gains.
The Board of County
were in session
day to hear complaints of
tax valuation- Chairman
Damon us they had very
few complaints to investigate,
and Harding said the
tax lists had been taken so well
this year that there would be very
few corrections to make.
The sentence for t u
missing word j contest for
July and August reads as follows;
crept to his and waited
a favorable opportunity. It came
at once, for the keen ears of the
guard heard some sound
as crouched the
. The sentence this
time is for two months instead of
one-
O. O. F. Installation.
Covenant Lodge No. I. O- O.
on Tuesday night of last week in-
stalled the following officers for
the ensuring term.
N. G W. R Smith.
V. H Bagwell.
R. D Rountree.
F L B own.
Notice to Old Veterans.
The Pitt county As-
will have their annual
picnic on the 28th of July at the
College grounds near Greenville.
All the old Veterans are cordially
invited and those who can do so
are requested to bring their bask-
well filled and turn them over
to the table committee. Speakers
have been invited and a good
time is anticipated. All Veterans
are invited, and all who desire to
become members of the State
Veterans, Association can do so by
giving their names to the
and paying the membership
fee of
By order Executive Committee.
B- F. President.
E. A. Move, Secretary.
Steamer Gazelle.
This splendid steamer, Capt.
David Hill master, has com-
her regular summer
schedule between Washington
and Ocracoke. leaving Washing
ton on Thursday and
Saturday nights of each week
mediately after arrival of trains,
returning leaves Ocracoke on
days. The Gazelle is
splendidly equipped for
is a fast and safe steamer,
and makes quick runs
Washington and Ocracoke.
Those wishing to visit Ocracoke
this season make a more
delightful trip than on the Ga-
as all who have taken pas-
sage on her in the past will
There is no more obliging
accommodating master than
Capt Hill and those who go with
him may depend upon making the
trip comfortably, safely and quick-
Be sure that you go on the
Gazelle.
A Bad Man Caught.
One afternoon last week
B. T- King went oat in
the county to arrest Arch James,
colored, who was wanted in
son county for bigamy. When
the officer found his and
went to take him custody the
defied him and struck an
attitude of resistance, saying he
could not be arrested by any one
white man. Knowing that he had
a desperate character to deal with
King shot him through
the forearm to disable him. The
wound frightened the so
that lie started toward the officer
to surrender, and the latter think-
he was advancing for an at-
tack presented his pistol again,
telling him another step
and I'll kill To this the
replied
Sheriff, already dead,
take me He
was brought to jail without fur-
trouble and was carried on
to Wilson next day.
Pitt Female Seminary,
Prof. B. E. Goode, Principal
of Pitt Female Seminary,
has issued his prospectus for the
fall session to open September
5th. His assistants are Mrs.
Goode, Miss Lettie and
Miss Bettie Warren. The pros-
contains a number of the
very strongest testimonials of the
of the ability of Prof. Goode and
each of the assistants. We are
also glad to note the improve-
that he is making in the
college property. The grounds
have been enclosed and he is
having the building repainted in-
side and out, adding very much
to the appearance. These
the earnestness
with which he has entered into
the preparation for the opening
of the Seminary, are viewed with
a great deal satisfaction by our
people, for they see in Prof.
Goode a man of such ability, en-
and perseverance as will
be sure to make his school a
Base Ball.
The first game of ball played
in Greenville this season was be
tween the Greenville and Kinston
clubs last Wednesday afternoon.
The playing was ordinary and
both sides made many errors, the
score resulting in in favor
of Greenville. The Kinston boys
were well entertained and had a
pleasant day here. We hope the
clever young gentlemen will come
over again.
The Greenville boys went up to
Halifax last Friday to play a
game of ball with the club of
that town. Our boys got beaten
badly, the score being to in
favor of Halifax, but they came
back home feeling that they had
done well to make even two runs,
considering that the Halifax team
was largely made up of players
from the college teams of Wake
Forest, Chapel Hill- Trinity and
Oak Ridge. There were bets be-
fore the game that
would not make a run, but the
scores by Dancy and Erwin
showed better. If the Greenville
boys are going out to play they
ought to practice some together.
Dwelling Burned.
On Thursday night of last week
Mr. J. R. Warren, near Falkland,
lost his dwelling house and
kitchen by tire- When first dis-
covered between and o'clock,
one corner the roof of the
kitchen were burning rapidly and
could not be extinguished.
the kitchen the lire was quickly
communicated to the
house and both destroyed.
at all was saved from the
kitchen very little of the fur-
could gotten out of the
house, most of the personal
of the family being lost
with the building. Mr. Warren
had no insurance at all and the
loss is very heavy upon him. He
is a hard working, industrious
man, and much sympathy has
been for him and his
family. It is believed the
en was set on fire by incendiaries
as there had been no fire in use
about the cook room dinner
on Thursday, and members of the
family up late that night were
about the dining room and
have discovered file had there
been any. Mr. and Mrs. Warren
were town and told us
their neighbors and the people
generally had been exceedingly
kind to them since their great
misfortune, for which they de-l
sired us to return their sincere i
thanks through the Reflector.
Their loss was about
items.
July 9th. 1894.
Miss Florence Greene,
is visiting Miss Lula Carr.
Miss Dora James is
friends in and around
Mr. George is spend-
some time at Seven Springs.
Mr. B. F. Sugg, of Greenville,
was in town one day last
Miss Sal lie Carr returned homo
last Sunday after a long visit in
Greene.
Rev. J. R. Tingle filled his reg-
appoint hero en last
Lord's day.
Mr. R- M. Spier, of
spent a part of last week visiting
relatives here.
Miss Myrtle Cox Mr. Lewis
Cox, Jr., of spent
Sunday in town.
Capt. R. E. Pittman came out
smiling this morning. an-
other says he.
Miss Ada Mr.
Tom Griffin left last Thursday
for Washington to visit friends.
Misses Worth and Hodges, of
Raleigh, Sutton, of Kinston.
of Greene, are Miss Lucy
Brooks.
Our section was last
week by several heavy rains,
though crops seem to good
condition.
Miss Meta Chestnut, who for
the past five years has been teach-
school in the Indian Territory,
returned to her home last
day, to the delight of her many
friends.
OBITUARY.
Mr. James L. Tyson, son of
and Mary J. Tyson, depart-
ed this life Tuesday, the
inst, at o'clock, a. m. He was
born on the 2nd day of May, 1871,
consequently had just entered
upon his 23rd year.
Jim mil as he was familiarly
called, was a son, and in
many respects a most excellent
young man. On the 26th of June
he was taken violently sick with
that dreadful disease,
from which he suffered most
intensely until death came to his
relief. Ho was cared for in his
last by kind friends who
were at all times by his bedside.
His remains were interred in the
I family graveyard at Mill,
the inst, in the presence of
a host of warm friends and
I Funeral services by th
Rev. T. T. Phillips, of Marlboro.
The parents have
our sympathy in this their sad
bereavement. J. W. S-
University of
North Carolina.
the the
the LAW SCHOOL, the
AL SCHOOL and the
SCHOOL for Teachers. College
year; hoard to
a month. Sept.
I Address President Winston. Chanel
Hill, X. C.
Sunday School Excursion.
On Friday morning, July 6th,
1894. the Greenville Baptist Sun-
day school, over one hundred in
number left the depot at
o'clock, on an excursion to Scot-
laud Neck, which place we reach-
ed after a few hours run. On
leaving the cars the procession
marched to the Baptist church,
where we were welcomed
by Mr. E. E- Hilliard, editor of
the Scotland Neck Democrat
After remaining in church a short
while, to sweet singing,
and a speech of response by Mr.
Bernard, of Greenville's
successful lawyers, we were con-
ducted to a beautiful grove,
where we found every preparation
for our comfort and pleasure
male. At o'clock P. M. we
bade the shady town and its
hospitable people and
found ourselves
the balmy air, made so cooling by
the refreshing showers of the
day. homeward; each
the other over a delightful
trip, successful excursion, and
that through
entire day to mar our pleasure.
view of the many courtesies
extended us by the Scotland Neck
Baptist Sunday school, while in
their midst,
Resolved 1st. That this Sun-
day school unanimously
its appreciation -f all kind
shown while on the
both to the Scotland Neck
and the railroad for re-
rates.
2nd. That we extend to the
Baptist people of Scotland Neck
a hearty invitation to come to see
us an a similar visit.
3rd. That those be
the Scotland Demo-
and the Eastern Reflector
for publication.
Greenville Baptist
School
Tb above was unanimously
adopted by Greenville Baptist
Sunday School, July
Falkland Items.
July 9th, 1894.
Henry Blow was here to-day.
Miss Ellen Parker is visiting
Mrs. John King-
Bruce Ly man Cotten visited
Tarboro the past week.
Mrs. R. R. Cotten left Saturday
for Park N. J-, to attend
educational convention-
The dwelling house of Mr. J.
R. Warren was burned I
day night, cause of the tire is J
unknown. No insurance.
The young ladies returned
home and two of our men
look forlorn and sell goods with
less animation than generally.
the 4th of July
in Falkland township at the
of the bride's father, Mr.
Joe Walston, Mr. Nelson
and Miss Hannah Walston were
united in marriage.
Dr. O. S. Harman.
Office of M- D.,
Goldsboro, N. C, April 6th,
To whom it may concern
This is to certify that Dr. D. S.
Harmon has given general
faction the practice of his pro-
as has always
conducted himself gentleman
Hill. It D.
W. J. Jones, M.
J. T. Miller, M. D.
Geo. N. Kirby, M. D.
This sworn to and subscribed
before mo this 12th day of April,
1893- W.
Notary
Dr. Harmon is at the Atlantic
Hotel, Morehead City, where he
will remain during July. After
completing his stay there he will
leave North Carolina fur the
pose of locating permanently in
Norfolk. Persons wishing to con
suit him before he leaves the
State should call on him at More-
head.
ATLANTIC HOTEL,
MOREHEAD CITY, X. C.
This Famous Resort i Sow Open for
the Reception of Guests.
The Atlantic ha accommodation for
over and is exempt from
Hies and
Surf and f-rill water bathing and
The celebrated Whiting orchestra of
Chicago furnish concert and
music.
Terms For rates and
pamphlet, apply to
B. L. PERRY, Proprietor.
Wake Forest College.
WAKE FOREST X. C.
COLLEGE embracing
ten Academic and the pro-
School of Law. A select
of volumes. A large
well furnished Reading Room.
Thoroughly equipped and
Laboratories, Literary Societies
In the Sooth. No secret
I nit lea allowed among the students.
c tuition to ministers and the sons
of ministers. Loans for the needy.
Board from ix to ten dollars per month.
A complete system of water-works with
ample bathing facilities. session
begins Sept. Summer Law School
opens July 2nd, For further
. address.
C. K. Taylor,
GOT THE FIGURE
-ALSO THE-
Items.
July 9th, 1894.
Miss Annie Harding spent a
few days in Kinston last week-
Miss Minnie spent last
week in visiting
Misses Annie and Essie Brooks.
Messrs. L. H. Cox and Geo.
Kilpatrick attended the Masonic
picnic at Vanceboro last
day-
Miss Maggie Laughinghouse
returned home last Saturday after
spending a week visiting relatives
in Grifton.
After spending a few days with
Miss Gertie Pittman, Miss
Daniel returned to her home
yesterday in Greenville.
Mrs. Betty Mosley and
Mrs. Clyde, of Hookerton,
spent last Sunday night at Mr.
E- A- Johnson's and returned
home yesterday.
Weaver Dam Items.
July 7th,
I will again make another feeble
attempt to give yon a few items
for your most excellent paper,
from Beaver Dam.
Mr. Benjamin Crawford one of
the oldest citizens of this county,
is quite sick week. He was
born in 1300, which makes
him old.
Tin- Free Will am
mi i called today Ht
Grove for the purpose of
revising their church list. The at-
is very large.
One of the heaviest rain and
wind storms of the season passed
over our section last night. Farm
is at a standstill is lilt.
to so for some
Politics are all right. We will
carry our county in spite of the
Third party and Republicans-
We are not afraid of them if they
do consolidate. All that we
is a good ticket which will
victory.
Mr. W. W- an
overseer on the State farm near
Weldon, was at home part of this
week- He came to attend the
funeral of bis nephew, Mr. J. L
Tyson, and returned on the 5th
inst to his post of duty. Bill
a whole-souled, fellow, and
we are glad to know that he has
made many friends in his new
HUT.
FINE CLOTHING
A few more o For the nest o on our sum- o they can-
of those nice o thirty days o o not be ex-
fitting and o we will make o For fit, o celled. See
cheap suits, o special price o and o and it.
DRY GOODS,
I suit, mm, j
f Gents Furnishing Goods j
r- o-
I M I
o o
o A S GOES WITH OUT
o SAYING THAT WE
o HAVE THE LARGEST
o AND MOST STYLISH
STOCK IN TOWN.
o o o
o e o
Give us a call and look for yourself and you cannot go away
without buying.
FRANK WILSON,
THE LEADING CLOTHIER.
E AT
On Wednesday, July
We will be our first i Sale Mid offer the
r I -ft e f . In order to s we
offer k OF SUMMER CLOTHING
gr- its e
Men Silts worth o. D HUH Boy's Suits worth 1.2 for N
pair Pants from cents u .
BA INS worth cents for cent.
BIG REDUCTION Goods. Lace, d y.
Own Checked for ms worth its for G cents
We are in Greenville for Low P
i cents Sim" c lit. Tobacco cents, Misses and
Oxford Ties, shoo will be sold at a big reduction. We have a
this opportunity making
MONEY for Mon- y i- on y and hen yon commence us our
fair dealings will US.
ft
GREENVILLE, N. C
They Mast So, Shall Go
Look at these Starvation Prices
in White Lawn cents, regular price cents.
Satin Stripe cents, regular price cents.
Check and Stripe White Goods cents, regular price cents.
FRUIT OF THE LOOM BLEACHING cents.
Cambric only cent, prices elsewhere and cents-
Percales, Fast Colors cents, prices elsewhere and cent
Get our prices. Goods we have got, money must have, so come
along good people and bring the Hard Cash, we will do the balance
Yours anxious to please.
C. T.
-I HAVE A COMPLETE LINE OF-
SPRING GOODS
NOVELTIES,
and would earnestly solicit your examination.
SHOES Shoes
Embroideries, White Goods
and Laces.
I need not say anything about except that I have received a now
line. Prices lower than over. I thank you for your past favors
and if close prices will avail me anything I will merit a continuance
Sewing Machines from up. New Homo latest improved 135.00
WILEY BROWN,
New Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So
j. l
GREENVILLE, N- C
OFFICE AT THIS COURT HOUSE.
All placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOR FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
Don't
ESTABLISHED 1875.
Mies chance to get
CHEAP
MILLINERY
S. M. SCHULTZ.
I am celling;
Leghorn and White
Chipped Hats
at greatly reduced prices.
Have also just received a new line of
Moire ribbons. Laces, Insertions,
ill be cheap. All these goods
arc very desirable you
early if you wish to the benefit t
the low prices.
M, T.
Notice to farmers.
If all prison will want i
MILLS and next
fall will Hie their orders me an
early day. I will be aide to the
Mills at a liberal discount by ordering;
all at oner and will the purchaser
the benefit of the discount.
H. HARMING,
Agent.
AND BUY
their year's will
their interest our prices before
Our-I is complete
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA,
west
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Mann en
you to buy at one
stock
always on hand and mid at price-
the l goods are all bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N,
WILLIAMSON,
-MANUFACTURER OF-
Glib k Dim
-ALL OF-
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE
Only and material allowed in my shops. The many
who have used my work will testify to the beauty and durability of i
turned out at my -hops. Every vehicle guaranteed.
HARNESS WHIPS,





VICTORS are Standard Value.
The standard price of Bicycles is 15.00. No deviation,
and Victor riders arc guaranteed against cut rates the current year.
rates
OVERMAN WHEEL. CO.
BOSTON.
NEW YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN FRANCISCO.
DETROIT.
DENVER.
WILMINGTON A WELDON R. R.
AND BRANCHES.
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS SOOTH.
Dated
May
1894.
o a o
Leave Weldon
Ar.
A. XI.
c a
A. M.
HERBERT
TONSORIAL PARLORS,
Opera House,
GREENVILLE,
N. C.
Ar Tarboro
Lt Tarboro
Rocky Mt
Wilson
Lt Selma
Lt
Ar. Florence
0-11
Call in you want good work.
Lt
Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
V.-
v.
0--.
V-
MM
A.
A. M.
Dated
May
Lt Florence
Lt
Lt
Ar
A. M-
IS u.
For NEWSPAPERS and
Advertising
Record. Indexed
RECORD. I through to enter on
the left hand page the Advertiser's name
alphabetically. Agent, commission,
space, position, rate, number of
data beginning, date ending,
amount, when payable. The right
hand page, opposite, the months
wide space fir monthly, intervening
spaces for weekly, and spaces down for
daily, to check when an begins
and ends. pages, or one
loaf to the letter, flexible,
pages. leaves to a letter, halt roan
pages, pages, 81.00;
pages. Size
v. i.
Ly Wilmington;
Magnolia
Goldsboro
at Wilson
Wilson
Ar Rocky
P. M.
s.
XI P. XI.
0.-,
Ar
Rocky
Ar
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. Halifax 1.00
arrives Scotland Neck lit 4.5 p.
n. Greenville 6.37 p. m., 7.--
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston
a. m. Greenville a. Arriving
Halifax at a. m., Wei Ion 11.20 a.
m., daily except
Trains on Washington Blanch leave
Washington 7.00 a. arrives
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 0.90; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.50 . in. 6.10
p. m arrives Washington 7.35 p.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro. N C, via
Appointments for Greenville Circuit.
Salem on the Brat Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Chapel at three
o'clock.
Shad- Grove on second Sunday at
o'clock and School
House at
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Tripp's at three
o'clock.
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
Smith.
J. C.
Baptist Services.
Below are the regular appointment
of Rev. J. H. pastor of the
Baptist church
At and fourth Sun-
days in each month, morning and night,
every Thursday night.
At Sunday in each
mouth, morning and night.
Ai Person
Sunday in each mouth and Saturday be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are the regular appointments
of Rev. A. Rector
and third Sundays in
each month, morning and evening.
Sunday in each
month, morning evening.
vices all other Sunday mornings.;
St. Johns, Sun-
day in each mouth, morning evening
Innocents, Lenoir
Sunday morning.
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
O- L. Proprietor
LOCAL NOTES AND
JOTTINGS.
after the tobacco crop
be connected with the
Warehouse this fall-
He will
Eastern
tobacco to avoid in the lives of their
I children- Getting- back to the
I farm we make the broad
order to meet
highest success, the
has more direct need of
an education than the profession-
man of any other calling in
life, because he has to contend
with plant life of every
animal life of every
and in fact the whole field
of nature comes direct under his
observation and in contact with
his interest. Unless he is
pared to take hold and dispose
of these perplexing problems
that daily present themselves in
an intelligent way, how on earth
can success be accomplished t
Such general knowledge is not
required in the life of the
man, the lawyer, the doctor,
the preacher, the mechanic,
in fact every other profession-
It is only one course of study
and reasoning that brings the pro-
man to the object of his
aim, though there may be many
perplexities entanglements
coming under this one study
while the scientific agriculturists
are called on daily to dispose of
many varieties of nature's
questions- Having started
out with the Disposition that the
farmer has more need of an
cation than any other class of
men, we will now try to show the
necessity of and benefits derived
from scientific methods employed
in farm life.
That the wheels of commercial
progress are rolling rapidly on re-
of the lethargy and care-
of any man or profession
is an indisputable fact. Time
and tide waits for no man. Then
why should the farming
drag behind and not keep
abreast with other professions.
If it should do so it will be the
fault only of the men engaged in
the profession. From a sense of
moral pride every man engaged
in agriculture should feel it a
At last one of the prettiest
rains that we ever saw fall, com-
the last of June and con-
tinned for three days. A slow,
gentle, drizzle the very
thing needed for the crop.
J- A. K. Tucker,
put in two barns of
primings last week- This is
rather early for curing, still we
have heard that the Sheriffs is
one of the most early and best
crops in tho county. We are ex
glad to know this, for
Sheriff Tucker is a hard working
man a very good farmer.
Mr. E- H. Hays who has been
spending the summer at his old
home in Chase City, Va., returned
a few days ago to inspect the
eastern crop. Ho says the pros-
for good substantial
is better than he has ever seen it.
A good many speculators have
unloaded and will of course be on
the market this year. His talk
makes us feel good but it is only
in Hue with our writing.
In last week's issue there were
two errors in tho local notes.
The first was the agreement be-
tween J. W. Gorman and O.
Joyner. This was written on the
outside of the copy was mis-
taken by the printers for what
was to be published.
This however was so much of
an error as the following.
who are unaccustomed to having
money will think Mr. C A-
an extravagant It
should have been those who are
unaccustomed to heavy manuring.
Last week we traveled through
several portions of the county
and while crops on an average
are so large as they were at
The Eight Big Words.
Here are the eight largest
words in the English language at
Incomprehensibleness,
THE CHINAMAN'S QUEUE.
Why Goo Sing Can Never Return
to Hie Native Land.
The royalties of Europe
the bicycle with as much
energy as the boys of America
The King of the Belgians
upon one daily, little Queen
rides one when she
is at her castle of and
the Princes Waldemar
and Carl of Den mark, and
George and Nicolas of Greece,
are all cyclists. The bicycle of
the of Egypt is a
machine, almost entirely
covered with silver
sense of duty to do all in his
time last year they are look-1 power to raise the standard of the
We profession to a higher plain of
usefulness and perfection.
. . A. r
Sunday. 5.30 a. in. Sunday a. m.
10.26 a. m., and 11.15
. m.
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves;
a. I
Re-;
m.
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, at p. Sunday . Services,
arrive Plymouth M-. p. m. i Every Brat morning and
Returning leaves Fly mouth daily alternating between J. X.
II. and Rev. J. W.
Every third Sabbath, morning and
m- night, J. W-
Sunday School every Sabbath
Goldsboro daily except a- D. IS. Evans
m. a m.
leaves a
wive Goldsboro. S
Trains on Nashville leave-.
Rocky Mount at 4.-0 p. in., arrive j
Nashville p. m-. Spring Hope
S. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope
a. m. Nashville a. in.,
at Rocky Mount m., dally except
Trains on Branch, Florence R.
R. p. m. arrive Dun-
bar 8.00 p. in. Returning leave Hun-
bar 0.30 a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m.
Daily
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War-
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday,
at a. in. Returning leave Clinton
at m., connoting at Warsaw with
main line trains.
Train No. makes close connection
at Weldon for points North daily, all
rail via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
about Mount with Norfolk
railroad for Norfolk daily an
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex
Sunday.
DIVINE.
General
J. R. KENLY, Manager.
T. V, EMERSON Manage-
JACKSON
Furniture
COMPANY
JACKSON,
strong vigorous,
are told by a good many who
observed the seasons in 1890
that this is a repetition of that
year. June was very dry with
about the same of rain
that have had this year
nearly all remember than was
a better wrapper year that we
have had since. May it be re-
in this crop.
Prospects for a large increase
in tho sales of tho Greenville to-
market for the coming
year are exceedingly flattering-
Every year since the market open
ed it has largely increased its
sales for every year that the
market has run two additional
houses have built. There
are now eight large convenient
houses on the market. We have
forced attention from the best
manufacturers leaf dealers all
over tho country as a
have a strong corpse of as
good buyers as any market in the
State, and last but not least,
Tyson and Bawls and the tobacco
people say they have plenty of
money to move tho crop.
No man, or set of men, has the
right to override the wishes of
the people. They rule. They
are clamoring for an opportunity
to express themselves as to the
choice of a Senator, and they will
be heard. The party
must provide a for set-
this matter before tho people.
Mecklenburg Times.
Every one in the world can
teach us the greatest
men have generally been the
most eager learners, and have de-
no source which might
supply the want.
The United States manufactures
more iron, steel, copper, and lead
than any other country on the
globe, Great Britain being a little
ahead on zinc and tin.
The new Lakeside City
for 1884, to be issued about
July will announce Chicago's
population as about
It takes one hundred gallons of
oil a year to keep a large-sized
locomotive in running order.
A Locomotive.
SCIENCE IN FARMING.
MANUFACTURERS OF
this were done by every man it
would only be a of a very
short Some wit says the difference
some professions of to-day, would between canine and quinine is a
be an honor to the man who fol- j question of bark.
lowed it instead of the man who ,.,
who followed it honoring tho pro- of warn weather, you need a good
The necessity of tonic and blood like
, . x it.
cal, systematic farm management
should be realized by every far-
mer and the sooner it is done the
better it will be tor the
for unless farmers study for
I the protection of their own inter-
it, like anything else that is
will dwarf and succor
other more vigorous interests by
which it is surrounded with
which it comes in contact. Aside
from the actual necessity of
methods in agriculture in
order that the greatest success
may be accomplished from a
financial point of view, for the
sake of one's own comfort and the
pursuit of happiness, the beauties
and pleasures and charms of rural
life can never be realized so long
as old time methods and systems
are employed, that is to the
of the available
ties that the improvement of
modern times offer to every man.
AND OFFICE
ATLANTIC NORTH
R. R. TIME
In December 4th.
GOING EAST.
WEST.
Pa s. Daily
Ex Sun.
STATIONS
Goldsboro
Kinston
Newborn
Pass. Daily-
Ex Sun.
Ar.
A- M
A. M.
Schools and Churches seated
in the manner. Offices
Send for
OINTMENT
Train connects with j
train bound North, If I
11.55 a. m., and with i.
train West, p.
connects with
Danville train, arriving rt Goldsboro
p. m., and with W . train
the at m.
S. L. DILL.
Superintendent.
TRADE
MARK
Trade-Mark obtained and Pat-J
business for Fees.
On, is U, S. j
mi than u.
remote Washington. . i
Scud model, drawing or photo, with
lion. We if or no., free
fee not d till is secured J
Hew to Fauna,
Male in the U. S. and
sent free. Address,
Like everything else farming to
be made profitable must be made
systematic. Because some few
farmers have made comparative
success or rather made money
farming on a haphazard, half-
system it is no argument
against systematic and scientific
fanning. You frequently hear a
man say that education is of no
service to a farmer, that his
brother John or some one
else has made a success in life
without an education and it is
equally probable that the balance
of humanity can do likewise, that
Mr. A or Mr. B has a fine
and at farming he is a gloomy
failure- These arguments are of-
as proof that only the old
time way of farming is the right
way and that scientific agriculture
is bosh, when fact the truth of
the matter is simply The
man who has made a success, not
only at farming, but everything
else without some education is a
fortunate being indeed and is
gifted with many natural talents,
which if he had developed by
training would have made him
a superior man. One of the
strongest evidences and
that can be offered that
education is essential to the high-
est success in any
is the fact that almost with-
out an exception every man that
has gone through life and made
comparative success without an
education are the most
in their advocacy of an education
for their children- These people
KANSAS KINKS.
For Core of all Skin
This been In use
fifty years, and wherever know
been In steady demand. It has been en
by the leading physicians all
-be country, and has effected cures where
all remedies, with the attention
the most experienced physicians, have
for year This Ointment is
long and the high reputation
which it has obtained Is owing entirely
its as but little ha
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One , , ,
Dollar. Ail Orders promptly at- see and truly appreciate the dis-
tended to. Address all orders and advantages under which they
I labor and the mistake that has
Green J made Ml they want
A woman is as full of tears as a
raw onion-
Mothers get scared so easily
that doctors make considerable
money-
Cupid is always represented as
as baby because love never lives
to grow up-
A man gets so that an alarm
clock has no more effect on him
than his conscience.
Be polite to everybody. There
is no telling when you may have
something to sail-
No one seems to have as hard a
time earning money as the
man who marries for it.
The more elaborate the refresh-
are at a party the worse
the man feels next day.
There are a smaller number of
marriages than ever, but the
are as unhappy as ever.
When a girl burns her hand on
a curling iron, she tells the young
men she did it frying potatoes-
It the dish washing a girl
dislikes so much as the thought
that she is hiding her talents away
from the Globe.
Europe has produced many
locomotives, but among them all
there is probably none stranger
than that built for the Belgian
State railway by the St.
Leonard of Liege. In that country
the weight of the trains has in-
creasing very fast of and the
engines now used for fast
service arc required to haul a gross
load of tons up a grade of 0.5
per cent, with a speed of fifty-six
miles an hour, without diminution
of steam pressure of tho level of
the water in tho boiler, for a dis-
of at least three
stiff requirements for European
practice. These specifications re-
in the construction of a loco-
motive with three boilers, which
have tho same fire-box,
and the same smoke-box in common.
The chimney looks like a big inverted
square cuspidor, such as grace the
barrooms of country hotels. The
area of this oddity is square
feet, and the total heating area of
the fire-box and tubes in the three
boilers is square feet;
large areas even in this
county. The fuel burned is the
poorest quality of slack coal, but
even with such Inferior stuff the
average evaporation in this
is said to be 5.61 pounds of water
per pound of coal. The cylinder
I used are 19.6 inches in diameter,
and have a stroke of 23.5 inches,
are connected to four coupled
wheels Inches in diameter.
The weight of the engine la 56.8 tons
and that of the tender Is 29.6 tons.
G lobe-Democrat.
Prince Bismarck explained to a
friend in recently
that he could stand on it but a few
minutes in succession. tho
recommendation of one of the
grand he said,
consulted a Russian doctor some time
I have since learned that he
an idle and Ignorant fellow
A an Important
Going to Sing
Courtroom
Mo Bin
When Gee Sing was sentenced in
the general sessions recently to four
imprisonment for stabbing
his cousin, Gee no sign of
stirred his placid features as he
was led into tho prisoner's box, and
he sat down on tho bench, leaned
back and closed his eyes
says tho New York Sun. To
all appearances he was the most
concerned of the prisoners. Another
prisoner who had been sent up for
robbery was bewailing his fate. Ho
was n good-looking young fellow
with a head of curly brown hair.
Running his fingers through his hair,
he said,
all have to come off
The Chinaman suddenly sat bolt
upright and looked at the speaker
with Interest.
you he demanded.
said that the Sing Sing barber
will be after all of returned the
young man. There won't
enough hair left on our heads to stuff
a pillow for a
Gee Sing clutched his queue with
both hands and walked over to
the speaker.
cut off he demand-
ed, hoarsely, tapping his pigtail.
was the reply.
It off short and throw it
The Chinaman walked back to his
sent, buried his face In his hands
rooked to and fro for a moment.
Then the courtroom was disturbed
the most unearthly sound that
ever echoed from its walls. Gee
Sing was crying. When n China-
man cries, and there are few men in
this country who have seen a China
man in tears, he cries hard, and the
sound of his lamentation is weird.
The court officials rushed into the
prisoner's pen and after a little
In quieting the weeping man.
Asked what made him burst out so
suddenly, he replied that lie was
forever shut off from friends and
relatives and his native land,
been sentenced to have his
queue cut off.
thought it was only to go to
he wailed. judge did
not tell me It was to cut my queue
He was taken away still weeping.
Inquiry In the Chinese quarter
showed that Gee Sing hod not over-
rat the weight of his misery. An
intelligent Chinaman said to a Sun
reporter in regard to
China a full-blooded China-
man Is nothing without his queue.
If in any way he loses it he loses his
caste with it. His family drive him
out, his friends repudiate him and
he becomes an outcast. I had a
friend whose uncle had his queue
torn from his head by an accident.
Rather than bring disgrace on him.
self and his family he seized It, tied
it about his throat and strangled
himself to death with it. So great,
is the regard In which it is hold. We
have an old Chinese
are reckoned as the dead, the blind,
the leper and the ind the
present generation might add to
this man who has lost his
When a Chinaman comes
to this country It is usually his in-
to amass a sum of money
and return. If by any chance he
loses his queue he is not allowed to
return, but must always be an ex-
Gee Sing has been shut off from
Ids life. He had hoped
to return rich honored and take
his place at the head of his
Now he must always stay hero.
There Is a society of Chinamen In
this city who call themselves tho Mo
Din Tons that is. tho Pigtail
club. They arc Americanized China-
men and take an oath always to
stay here, and they insure the keep-
of their vow by cutting off their
An Incident of Von
When the war
was declared, It Is said that Von
was awakened at midnight
and told of the fact. He said coolly to
the official who aroused to
the pigeon-hole number blank in my
safe and from it and tel-
as there directed to the
troops of the Ho
then turned over and went to sleep
and awoke at the usual hour In the
morning.
Everyone In Berlin was excited
about the war, but Von took
his morning walk as usual, and a
friend who met him
you seem to be taking it very easy.
Aren't you afraid of the
I should think you would be
replied Von
work far this time has been no
long beforehand, and everything
Sticks,
Small Jack's father docs not smoke,
and hence it was that when he saw
his uncle smoking a cigar he was
full of wonder. in a candy
shop, he asked for those
chocolate sticks what has smoke in
Young People.
An Interesting; Discovery.
A discovery has just been made la
the catacombs of Rome which prom-
to lie of singular importance in
the history of Christian worship and
a Mi-
archaeologist, has come upon
a cycle of four paintings of the very
earliest Christian art belonging o
the first half of tho second century,
one of which represents a
of the Eucharist. The paint-
wore found in a chapel of the
St. catacombs which has
open to Inspection for at least
a hundred years, and yet this in-
treasure has lain all that
time concealed and unsuspected. It
was hidden under a crust of
so that no trace of colors, and
certainly none of figures, was per-
to the ordinary observer.
however, declared
that he could discern signs of color-
and allowed to experiment
upon it. lie dissolved the stalactite
crust by n chemical process, and
was rewarded by the revelation of
the remarkable paintings, a full de-
of which is to be published.
Wei minster Gazette,
N c. Ask. VI
of
with the arms
II. Ill t lip lost k- H It i -in.
. .
A. P. BETTS.
T Mm n,
win s from
nil with no
we l l
powers, I, new In I n
w u.
Its
My
i.
mil of th
I I II
l W,
V c , MM-h
ft It m of l.
I- A
fitter of. I I. , i
Fever.
all f
WRITE US BOOK.
ATLANTIC CO., Washington, D. C.
-WHEN IT COMES TO-
STATIONERY
You miss it time if you fail to call
what you want in this line at the-
A Musical Misfortune.
a specialty of this class of goods and if
Quality, Quantity
count for anything with you, to us.
its a pack up-
Note Paper a quire up.
Letter, Fools Cap and
Legal Cap equally low.
Tablet from cent up.
Slate Pencils cents per
S dozen up.
Load Pencils doz. up.
Pen Points f re m cents
per dozen up-
fer
A SPECIALTIES
We are sole, agents for A
the very best for school
INKS
and
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage boats any
on the market. Our Diamond Glue
and Magic Cement will mend anything but broken
hearts-
the pianist, tells the fol-
lowing story of I remember
once a Miss M------playing a sonata,
by Bennett, a work of a
very prosy type, and certainly lack-
In anything like spontaneity or
poetry. Liszt was evidently not fa-
with it; so, after playing
some six or seven pages, he gently
tapped Miss M------on the arm and
would you
kindly name the piece you arc per-
she re-
plied; is the sonata,
of by William
Liszt,
a pity the original manuscript didn't
meet the same fate as tho
A Hint.
ago
was
She sat In quit t patience,
While the hours sped away;
a retiring
lie was constrained to say.
The very words he uttered
Seemed her weary heart to mock;
But she simply
And .-tared hard lit the clock.
tho head of a children's hospital In
St. Petersburg, where he killed off
three thousand patients annually.
He ruined my leg, and I have
rd the ever since.
Unless your envelopes state the
number of days yon wish letters
held, the postmaster, by a new
ruling, will hold them thirty days
instead of ten. This is
to men who do not wish their
letters, when not delivered, de-
or tea
Are tell-tale symptoms that blood
is not impurities, causing
and complexion.
A few bottles of ti.
oil foreign and impure waiter,
the blood thoroughly, and give a clear
His effect-
less.
Chas Laurel Street, fays
rosy complexion,
and entirely harmless.
years humor in
me die id to shave, as boils r
pimples would he cut, causing to
my face Is all smooth a;
It should ii
sleep well like u
foot race all f or the use of
OB blood ind
SWIFT Sf CO, Atlanta, Ga-
Every business man should have a
KER FOUNTAIN PENT
last a life and are sold nowhere else in
town.
Our Box Paper for polite correspondence arc
the prettiest in town. also Mourning
Paper. Then we have Slates, Blank Hooks,
Memorandum Books, Books, Erasers, Rub-
Bands, Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils,
Sponge Cups, Ink Stands. Paper Cutters, Book
Marks, Pen Holders and lots of other thing.
BOOKS AND NOVELS.
If you want anything to read look over
our supply. Any book not on baud will or-
for you.
Now remember the the only place
at which you can get these goods at such low
prices.
BOOK STORK.
HEM POINTS.
W. L.
. CORDOVAN,
LADIES
S E ND OR
e. w-
Because, we are the of
In the
he value by t He name
the bottom. protects
prices sud the V. profits
dealer cannot supply you, we can. sold
CO.
N. C.
It. I.
What is
Life
Assurance
An easy means of
your wife and family
against want in the
of your death.
A creditable means of
curing a better financial
standing in the business
world.
The most safe and profit-
able means of investing
your savings for use in
after years.
All Life Insurance is
good. The
Equitable Life
is the best
fer full particulars, add
N. c, RocK Hill,
OLD DOMINION LINE.
Steamers leave Washington for
ville and touching at all Ian I
on Tar Rivet Monday, Wednesday
and Friday A. M.
leave Tarboro at A.
Tuesdays. Thursdays and Saturday
A. M. tame
depart urea are subject
of water on Tar River.
Connecting at with steam
of The Norfolk, Newborn and
direct for Norfolk.
Philadelphia. New Turk and Boston.
Shippers order their
marked via Dominion fr-
New York.
Norfolk A
more Steamboat from
more. Miners
JNO. SON. Agent,
N.
J. J. CHERRY, Agent.
N. C.


Title
Eastern reflector, 11 July 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 11, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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