Eastern reflector, 8 August 1894






DO
NO
That the place ti
Buy your
IS
AT
Reflector Bookstore.
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. in Advance.
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, 1894.
NO.
FOR GOOD
JOB PRINTING
CALL AT
REFLECTOR OFFICE.
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Session Opens September 5th, 1894, Closes June, 1895.
Corps of Teachers. Complete English Course. Ancient and Modern Languages.
Advantages in Music and Art- For full particulars apply to
GOODS,
FREE -riven two young ladies who preparing
to teach in the Public Schools of Pitt adjoining counties. Tuition will be required in advance, but
will refunded to the applicants who make the highest average on the regular examinations at the
close of tho session. Candidates must enter not later than October 1st.
EXPENSES.
Weeks.
Primary
, , . . . Conservatory
Academic. Vocal-Special,.
Intermediate. 12-50 Oran.
Collegiate.
20-00 20.00
Use of Piano or Organ, one
hour each day,
Latin, Greek, French and Ger-
1500 5-00-
1500 Board, lights and
STATE NEWS
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that arc of General Interest.
The Cream of the News
Eighteen prisoners escaped
from county jail on Sat-
night week.
Re J C of South
Carolina has been
dent of Trinity
Col. A- C Davis, on account of
ill health, has resigned the
of the Davis Military
School at Winston.
Of tho taxes assessed the
railroad, steamboat, telegraph
and canal property of the State, a
calculation at the Auditor's
shows that the part of the State
for general purposes will be
044.34. pension purposes
Mr. Green
living a mile below
Todd, X. C, on New had
the misfortune to lose a small
child by drowning one day last
week- Mr. lives near
the river and the child, about a
year old, wandered out of the
yard into the river and was
drowned when its mother found
it.
Free Press A pig
with five feet is a freak of nature
that Mr- H. B. Smith, who lives
just beyond the iron bridge,
The odd foot is attached
to the left hind foot of the pig
and is much larger than the
The pig is three old.
------The father and grand parents
of Mr. Richard Noble, of this
county, lived remarkably long
lives. His lived Si years ;
one of his grandfathers lived
years, the other years; one
grandmother years, the other
years. The ages of tho five
added 413-
following has been adopt-
ed by the Railway C as
rule No- and to be added to
the rules governing the
of freight already adopted
by commission common
carrier for cause, sub-
any article of freight to
reasonable in receiving, de-
livering or forwarding the
to its destination.
Wen
Our colored citizens, as a race,
have one lesson to and that
is to provide for fat are
The winter season brings
the wolf to many of their doors,
and yet, just now, excursions,
base ball, follow in
quick succession sad tine to their
nature and hurt as well, the race,
make merry to-day with no
thought of the morrow. Their
leader teachers and ministers
endeavor stem this
current of f- a groat
responsibility rests up n them
they fail c to
FACTS ABOUT COTTON.
A Manufacturer's View- as to Present
Outlooks for Ginning.
Mr. D. A Tompkins, of North
Carolina, a cotton manufacturer
of long experience, has boon
spending some time among the
factories of New England. While
there lie had impressed upon him
some facts that will be of interest
to all Southern cotton growers.
In a published newspaper inter-
view he
years ago there was no
Egyptian cotton imported into
the United States. Within ten
years its importation has
ed from nothing to bales.
or about pounds, val-
at about These are
tho figures given by the United
States consul at Cairo- Egyptian
first came into here in
the manufacture of
hosiery- It is this cotton which
gives the peculiar brown color
and silky to some knit goods
The popular color of much of the
best knit underwear is duo to the
Egyptian cotton from which they
are made- All efforts to imitate
this by dyeing tho American cot-
ton have been unsuccessful. The
price of Egyptian cotton is only
from one to two cents more than
the American cotton. Some
have been expecting that the
South would demand protection
against Egyptian cotton. While
it is far cheaper than our Sea Is-
land cotton, it is better than our
ordinary upland, and has a better
color and than our best
grade of improved upland.
is said that the improve-
in tho production of cotton
in Egypt is greatly due to the
Confederate officers who were en-
gaged in this country by the
dive to reorganize his army. These
officers in many cases gave
to other things besides
affairs. Among these things
was the importation from the
States of quantities of Sea Is-
land cotton seed, which were used
in the valley of the Nile- The
good quality of tho cotton now
brought to this country from
Egypt is said to be the outcome
of the work in improving
cotton culture in Egypt by those
ex Confederates.
Egyptian cotton has
most entirely token the place of
American cotton abroad for the
production of goods.
The extent of its introduction in
this country would be enough to
show it most be making even
greater headway abroad. Out-
side tho United States it is now
largely where American Sea
Island was used formerly.
the civil war the
States the tendency down here
has been to gin the cotton
after it is picked It is a
known fact that better cotton
was made before the war, when
the seed cotton was stored as it
was picked, and then ginned at
leisure. It U believed that
before ginning gave time for
the to absorb just a little oil
from the seed, which gave it some
of that brown color and silky
peculiar now to Egyptian cot-
ton. Prior to the war, too, cotton
was ginned by mule-power, a
much slower process than that
now in use, so that tho was
less cut then than it now is by the
steam gins- .
color and gained by
the from the oil in the seed
while in storage are not the only
advantages gained. The dry and
cut cotton as it is now ginned
generates thus
each so that it
tends to stand on end. This ten-
in some cotton has been
found to be so great as to almost
prevent its use for spinning. The
Egyptian cotton is said to be bet-
in this respect, and it is
thought a great improvement
could be made in the American
staple by holding the seed cotton
in storage from one to three
months then ginning it care-
fully, it is probable that by these
means our improved upland
can be made to serve all
poses as well as the Egyptian cot-
ton, and thus the South may get
back some valuable trade lost
the markets both of this country
and abroad. Certainly, if the
South desires to continue to hold
the markets, as, of course, she
does, we must make better and
cheaper cotton and put it on the
market in the best possible shape.
Great Old Man.
It is observable that the more
is seen of this man Grover Cleve-
land the more he justifies the con-
that the people in
him- In some matters of public
policy he does not suit the people
until their sober senses re-
we are not disposed to force
him unnecessarily, in these con-
upon them- But he will
grow upon them, during his pres-
administration, just as he did
during his first, and we can afford
to wait with confidence the result
of the full four years of Demo-
power. What we are think-
of just now, however, is his
dealing with the in the
West. When the time came to
stop the destruction of property
and the invasion of personal
rights, he put his big foot down
and stopped. There was no
undue haste, no unnecessary
But the rioters would
not desist of their own accord, nor
at the command of the manic,
and State. Then our l Id
Man spoke with a voice of
from headquarters and the flames
ceased to light the skies; there
was an end of personal violence ;
tho anarchists their holes,
and tho commerce of the country
was resumed. Say what yen will
of him, ho is a great Old Man.
Landmark;
ELECTING U. S. SENATORS BY
THE PEOPLE.
It seems as if the people were
already prepared to vote on the
question of providing by
amendment for the
of United States Senators by
themselves. The indications are,
however, that the main question
will be fully discussed in the
States before, if ever,
it is submitted to the judgment of
the people at the polls. We mean
by tho use of the phrase
main that the Sen
ate is so conservative a body that
it may decide not to consult the
voters on this subject at all. Tho
members of that body are no
doubt well satisfied with the
constitutional provision on
the subject.
Mr. Hoar a long time ago
an able argument in the United
States Senate against tho
contained in Mr.
proposed amendment-
Mr. Hoar proved that Sena-
tors ought to be chosen by tho
State Legislatures. But his
was based upon the as-
that as the Constitution
and laws now stand United States
Senators are elected by the Leg-
of the several States,
whereas the fact seems to be that
they are chosen by party
or men of long purses, or rail-
road companies, or trusts, or mo
of some other kind. In
other words, it may be said that
if the theory of the framers of the
Federal Constitution were always
or generally acted upon and car-
out by the State
it would be well to let the
provision in the Federal
on this subject remain as
it is; but that inasmuch as the
facts prove that that theory is no
longer respected or acted upon,
the proposed amendment ought
to be incorporated into the Con-
One of our exchanges says that
ton State Legislatures, or at any
rate a number of them, have
ready acted favorably upon tho
proposed amendment. But of
course nothing they could do
the amendment was formally
proposed in the manner prescribed
in the Constitution would
be entitled to be considered. Tho
ratification must necessarily take
place after tho question of
cation is submitted to the several
State Legislatures.
The Springfield
says that having a candidate
endorsed by the votes of the
before he is elected by the
Legislature is same as
having him elected by the people-
As long ago as in 1858 Stephen
A. Douglass and Abraham Lin-
took the stump in Illinois,
and each presented to the voters
the reasons why he should be
elected to the United States Sen-
ate. Mr. Douglas carried the
State. That is, a majority of the
members elected to the
were chosen in his interest-
It was a remarkable canvass which
Lincoln and Douglas made.
We do not think that the
will be willing to continue the
present mode of electing United
States Senators. Having been in
on the subject, and
seen for themselves how the
existing law is perverted from its
original purpose, they will
the subject until they have
compelled their public servants
carry out their wishes. To refuse
to change the Constitution would
be to approve indirectly the
methods now in use in con-
with the election of
States Senators, and give to
the trusts, monopolists, and
charter illimitable
as the wind to blow on whom they
or to elect whom they
might choose to elect, in defiance
of the will of the
the other extreme.
Editor Word and Works
In your June number, page I
was interested in your article on
tho subject of money and hard
times, kind invitation for
one to write on tho subject
WHY THE PEOPLE ARE POOR.
There several reasons why
the people of this country find it
so hard to better their
and anything over and above
the actual cost of living. They
toil as hard, or harder than
has caused me to thus write. Yes, j as hard, or
There are two sides Hy lived, and
as you say,
I to this awful
j war on capitol and the
powers is only communism
hind the curtain- Gen. J. 15-
the populist, in one of
speeches few
own the earth and dictate the
terms upon which the multitudes
may live upon it; this is slavery
pure and Could they
only understand that a man may
be a good business man and not
be a rascal. Or that the way that
men accumulate such vast
stores,
, i i
wealth is giving employ-1 . , ,
,. , , controlled to a
moot to the poor and needy many , . , ,
i . . f. ., . speculation and the consumer is
whom also get rich. Or that .
ti. ii l mi toe trusts and combines
the rich are not tyrants. Their
yet the masses of the people
poorer than were, and
do not enjoy near the comforts
that they did a
know it is said that the
wages of the toiler are higher
now than they then, which
is true, is true not only of
this country, but of all European
but if so is the
cost of living so materially in-
creased that tho wage-earner is
little by the increase
of wages. We live era of
when prices are
great extent by
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Baking
Powder
are
dreams of heaven might be
and the devil's key
stone which they have placed in
the arch of dissatisfaction might
drop out- The rich man is cried
down as the enemy of our great
nation. I should like to ask Gen.
Weaver a few questions s Who
furnished money to make it
possible for the poor man to live
Who built our cities Who
our railroads and our facto-
which in 1862 gave employ-
to the millions who now
country and begging
for bread Who fed and clothed
the sufferers of New York and
Brooklyn last winter at tho
expense of hundred
thousand dollars per day and also
fed the suffering millions of tho
which get rich at his expense.
The increase of machinery, it is
true, has increased production
manifold, but the cheaper articles
which made to sell to the
poor so interiorly made that
in the long run however cheap
they may be they are dearer than
a better article was thirty or
forty years ago, when was
less fewer
methods resorted to meet
the competition that now con-
fronts manufactures of nearly all
kinds of goods.
woolen garments, for in-
stance. How much genuine
fabric does the poor man
or poor woman wear Scarcely
any. Why I Because they can't
afford to buy garments made out
nation Who furnished the of taxed wool, and hence
sixty of money to keep have to content themselves with
the present administration from
making an assignment Not the
poor I am sure. It must have
been few who own the
Tho power-
oppress no one, they take no do-
light in hoarding
they only make money when their
money is in circulation. We may
oppressed because we have
not tho moans to get money, but
work will buy more money
so much howling about few
who own the If the
wealth of the country was equal
no one would have any-
thing to spare. We could build
no towns, cities, railroads and
we would simply be in a
deplorable condition.
of our people are too indolent to
worn only as they are driven to
it by necessity. few who
own the earth can't support all
the people, neither can the gov-
a make-believe article, made out
of old rags and other
stuff, producing shoddy, which is
palmed off on them as
goods because it looks like wool-
goods, and will hold together
until it gets wet and falls to
pieces. This is an illustration of
tho devices resorted to to make the
poor man ho is buying
cheap clothes and to convince
him that he derives groat benefit
from tho tariff system that
home The
stuff such as it is is cheap enough,
but one suit of clothes made out
of cloth would
outlast five suits made out of
shoddy.
The poor man used to eat
genuine butter and use genuine
lard in his kitchen. Now they
palm off oleomargarine and other
vile compounds on him and make
him believe he is getting the gen-
stuff cheaper he over
but the people must
support themselves and the gov- it his life.
eminent, too. It is no part of the I There is another reason why
work of the government to give i tho toiler is kept poor, which is
employment to the people, but that he lives in an era of
Dispatch.
Four
Having the merit to more than
make good all the advertising claimed
for them, the following four
have readied a phenomenal sale. Dr.
Dr. K inn's New Discovery, for con-
Coughs and Colds, each bot-
Electric Bitters, the
great remedy for Liver, Stomach and
Kidneys. Salve, the
best in the world, and Dr. King's New
Life Pills, which are a public pill. All
these remedies are guaranteed to do
just what is claimed for them and the
dealer whose name is attached here-
with will be glad to tell you more of
them. Sold at John L. Wooten's Drug
Store.
Old papers for sale at this office.
the fact is, it is not work they are
after, it is money, and this they
expect the government to create
out of nothing and by saying it
is good make it good. One great
trouble at this age, many of our
people are becoming too well
educated too smart to settle
down to business and go to work,
as few have done who own
the but they spend the
best their lives looking for an
easy job so as to make money
fast with but little work. Many
of our poor people would not be
willing to do the work of the rich
man for all he makes- If we
want money we must work and
get something to buy it with-
Money is the result of work, but
millions of prayers are now be-
offered daily for the govern-
cloud that will send a
shower of money throughout the
land. The prayer will not be
H. Davis, Quiet
Dell, W. Va.
The reader of this paper will he pleas
ed to learn that there I- at least one
disease that has been
able lo cure in all its stages, and that i-
Hall's Cure is the
only positive cure known to tho medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a
disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure Is
internally, acting directly on the
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys-
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the
and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much
faith in curative powers, that they
One Hundred Dollars for any case
that it fails to cure. Send tor list of
testimonials.
, Address, F.
Sold by Druggist, Toledo. O
when a very large
of his earnings go to the
expenses of Fedora State, county
and municipal governments,
which are vastly greater than
they should be, and incomparably
greater than they were a genera-
ago, before the Republican
party got the reins of government
and inaugurated tho extravagant
methods which have prevailed to
a greater or less extent eyer since,
and which have extended from
the Federal to the State, county
and municipal governments. That
party contracted habits of ex-
during the war which
clung to it ever afterwards, until
it seemed that its sole purpose
was to spend all the money which
could be collected by taxation, as
if that was an evidence of its pro-
in contradistinction
to the economy which had
in the previous period both
under Democratic Whig
administrations.
As an illustration of this the
annual average expenditures of
the National Government for a
period of seventy-one years up to
were The total
expenditures of tho Government
under the last year of President
Buchanan's administration were
which tho platform of
the convention which nominated
Abraham Lincoln denounced as
appalling extravagance which
must be stayed if the bankruptcy
of the Government would be
For the last year of
President Harrison's
were which
does not include pensions, inter-
est on the public or anything
of that kind, but plain, ordinary
expenses- this was about a
fair average of the expenditures
of all tho years the war,
both before Mr. Harri-
son's administration. From 1780
to 1816 it cost the people of tho
United States to
run the Government- Since 1861
it has cost them
or over four times as much for
thirty-three years as it cost them j
before tho seventy-one
Taken in the the
are paying now for national,
State, county municipal
government not far from
a year. Is it any wonder
the are poor
ton Star-
Test of Love in a Court Room.
Lexington-, Ky., July
divorce suit was decided here to-
day by a method unprecedented
in judicial history. Some time
ago Mrs. Ella a young
and handsome woman, instituted
suit for divorce from her husband,
Col. A. B. Chestnut. She also
asked for the custody of her
pretty year-old daughter. When
Chestnut appeared tho court
room he claimed that tho child
did not wish to return to its
mother. Judge Parker had the
child stationed in the center of
the room and then the
and father were on
either At a signal tho child
was told to go to the one she
loved best. Both
father stretched out arms
toward the child and called to
her in endearing Tho
girl hesitated a moment and then
ran to her mother, nearly
fainted with joy. Chestnut left
the court room. Judge Parker
then issued absolute divorce
to Mrs; Chestnut and ordered the
child delivered to its mother,
subject to tho orders of the court.
How It Is Cabarrus.
It has boon for some
that Senator Ransom has
little in a
quizzing up and down street and
among tho leading citizens of the
county reveals the fact that Ca-
county is almost solid for
Jarvis to succeed Ransom. Some
few are for both- They feel that
Ransom and Jarvis are the big-
men in the State.
Our shows that HI Demo-
have expressed their prof
in very emphatic manner
and it shows up thus i Jarvis, M ;
Ransom, ; both Jarvis and Ran-
tom, 2-
There is scarcely any doubt
that were tho Democratic voters
of the county polled, tho pr
would remain about the t me.
It is said that Eastern North
Carolina is almost solid against
Ransom, but he has some fine
trotting under-tho wire qualities.
The expressions above secured
for the most not only
anti Ransom, but out and out
Jarvis first, last and
all the as many of them put
Standard.
China's standing army numbers
men to Japan's
But if the nip and tuck comes,
China can muster to
for Japan with
police. Japan has the
advantage however, of having the
better navy, and both American
and English officers in her
my.
Tin Salve in the world for Cats,
Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped
Chilblains, corns, and all skin
and positively or no
required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction money refunded
Price Z cents per For by
John L.
It has been published that one
railroad alone has already
brought in a bill of
against the city of Chicago for i
damage to property during
recent strike. Tho chief misery I
about such a thing as that strike
is that the innocent person is,
after all, the greatest sufferer. A
week or two ago Puck or Judge
had a which represented
a forlorn looking laborer sitting
on a stone, out of a job;
Co., appeared in the background,
cigars tilted between their teeth,
the pictures of contentment; var-
bland looking and well fed
railroad presidents were
as in tho foreground, handing
their bills for damages through a
window to the treasurer of the
city of Chicago, and receiving
bags of in return. And
that's about the way it works.
Everybody and everything comes
out all right in the
tho poor laborer and the public
Observer.
Reduced prices In
Watch Repairing
Have your Watches Cleaned for St
cents. Main Springs N all
work as cheap In proportion.
Call on at corner store near post-
Y.
Watchmaker A
N. C.
It is said that Representative
Sibley divides his among
the charitable institutions of his
district, retaining only enough to
pay his living expenses. That's
what all Republican Congressmen
should do, for the policies which
they have been supporting have
added materially to the
institutions in this country-
Star-
ante
IT F. THICK,
Land And
N. C.
Office at the King House.
I.
N. I
lAS. E. L. I.
A MOORE.
AT-L A w,
N. C
Office under Opera House. Third St.
f L. FLEMING,
ATTORNEY
N. O.
attention to
at Tucker old stand.
Insane Asylums in Virginia and North
Carolina.
In North Carolina the inmates
of asylums are all maintained and
cared for out of tho public treas-
and without private charge ;
while in Virginia tho State char-
every inmate, who has any
property, large board bills, and
collects them at law, if
North Carolina proceeds on the
view that as all citizens are equal-
taxed to care for the insane,
when any citizen falls into this
misfortune the State should care
for him, and leave his properly to
his wife and children. The view
in Virginia is to tax him when
sane and seize his property when
Register.
D U. JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, X C.
Practice in all the courts. Collections s
J. JARVIS.
L BLOW
S-AT-LA W,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
in all the Courts.
B. r.
AT
Prompt attention Riven to collection
HARRY
T A SKINNER,
n. c.
HOTEL NICHOLSON.
WASHINGTON, N. C-
A. Spencer, Mgr.
FIRST GLASS IN EVERY
Special attention to Commercial Men.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Editor and Proprietor
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 1894.
Entered at Greenville,
S. C- as seconds-lass mail matter.
CONVENTION
The Democratic Convention of
the First Congressional District
will meet at Greenville, on Wed-
August 15th, 1804, at
o'clock or the purpose of
a candidate for Congress.
The County Executive Committees
are requested to call County Con-
to select delegates to said
Convention-
order of the Executive Com-
L. Chairman.
Chicago's troubles not to
be coming singly. The big
strike had hardly quieted down
before a great fire breaks out in
a lumber district, on the 1st, and
destroys two millions dollars
worth of property. Well, Chicago
is an awfully place, and
in these troubles the city may be
reaping some of the evils sown
there. We remember reading
the last year that dis-
aster would follow persistent
efforts the city made to desecrate
the Sabbath by having the
Worlds Fair opened on Sunday.
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.
of the Democratic
party of Pitt County, for the
pose of nominating candidates
for and the various
County will be held at the
Court House in Greenville on
Thursday, September 18th,
at o'clock, M.
Township meetings will be hold
Saturday, 8th, 1894, at
the usual places of moating, for
the of appointing dole-
gates to the County Convention,
for the nomination of Township
Constable and the election of five
Democrats to constitute an
Committee for the township-
The several townships will be
entitled to select the following
number of delegates and tho same
number of alternates to represent
in tho County Convention,
to
Beaver Dam
Bethel
Carolina G
Falkland
Farmville
Greenville
Swift Creek
By order of tho Democratic
Executive Committee of Pitt
County- Alex- L- Blow,
B. Williams, Chairman.
Secretary.
Quite a number of names are
being mentioned as possible can-
for the nomination at the
Congressional Convention to be
held in Greenville next
day. Besides Mr. Branch, our
present Congressman, ex-Con-
Skinner, of Hertford,
Judge Brown of Washington, Mr.
of Mr. of
Mr. Williams, of Pitt,
have all mentioned. No
lack of good material to select
from, but the chances from this
distance look largely in favor of
Mr. Branch's
there is no telling what
may turn up, and Pitt county will
be found ready to give hearty
support and a big majority to tho
nominee of the convention.
Maj- the
est and one of tho best and most
public spirited citizens of
died in that city on Saturday
night He had a light stroke of
paralysis a week previous, and
this followed by another stroke
on Saturday was the immediate
cause of his death- Maj. Tucker
had largo real estate possessions
in and around in this
county. He was married in early
to Miss Florence E- Perkins,
daughter of Churchill Perkins,
Esq., of In his death
both and the State loses
an and influential cit-
At the Judicial Convention in
Rocky Mount, last Wednesday,
Hon. J. J. Battle was nominated
for Judge by acclamation, and
Hon. J. E. Woodard was
on the first ballot for So-
Pitt county is well pleas-
ed at those nominations and will
give both gentlemen a handsome
majority on the day of election.
Hon. John S- Henderson was
nominated for Congress on the
first ballot in the seventh district.
This is tho sixth successive time
he has received the nomination-
He is the ablest representative
North Carolina has in Congress
and ho stands a good chance of
becoming Speaker of the next
House.
The Landmark last
week entered upon its twenty-first
year. All concede the
Landmark to tho best
paper in North Carolina. Long
success to it-
Hon. W- A- 13- Branch
the following bill for
the establishment of a home or
homes for tho indigent colored
people and colored orphans of the
it enacted by the
Senate House of
of the United States of
America in Congress assembled,
That tho amount of money now
remaining in tho United States
Treasury, being unclaimed bounty
and pay due colored soldiers who
served in the Union army
the late civil war, be distributed
the States of Virginia,
North Carolina, South Carolina,
Georgia, Florida, Alabama. Mis
Louisiana. Texas, Ark
Tennessee. and
Kentucky, in proportion to the
colored population of each of said
States, to be applied by said
States for the establishment of a
home or homos for the
care of aged and
gent colored people and colored
orphans in such manner as the
respective legislatures of said
States shall
Our esteemed neighbor, the
Charlotte Observer, seems to be
getting in deep water on the Sen-
question. Its fair-
bristle with editorials,
etc., on this fight, but it
all makes mighty interesting
reading- Senator Jarvis
has been using the paper in a
very aggressive and lively man-
and while some may say
that he writes too much, none
can say that he has lost the art
of candid, frank manly utter-
And viewing the situation
from this distance it strikes us
that the gentleman from Pitt is
holding his own in a manner that
is very pleasing to his numerous
friends. For all of which the
Herald is very
Herald.
It is to be said in that
the Populists nominated a clean
ticket at their convention
yesterday, but it id a ludicrous
fact that of tho five nominees
only H. Worth, their
candidate for a
Populist, Judges Faircloth and
being Republicans, and
Judges Clark and Connor Demo-
Of those nominees Judge
Connor, we take it, will decline,
and Judge Clark tells our Raleigh
correspondent that ho will a
candidate only in the event ho is
nominated by a Democratic con-
Observer.
The Populists held their State
Convention in Raleigh last week
and nominated a full ticket. W.
T-, Faircloth, of Wayne county,
was nominated for Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court, and Walter
Clark, Wake. H- G- Connor, of
Wilson, and D. M. of
Iredell, were nominated for
Justices, W- H- Worth of
Wake, was nominated for State
Treasurer. Mr. Worth is the only
Populist on tho ticket. Judges
Clark and Connor are Democrats
and Judges Faircloth and Fur
Republicans- Coalition
was agreed upon between the
Pops and Rads.
The Judicial convention of the
eighth district held at Salisbury,
last Thursday, nominated B. F.
Long, of Iredell, to succeed
Judge R- F. Armfield; and the
convention of the tenth district,
at Lenoir the same day.
nominated W- B. Council, of
to succeed Judge
John Gray Bynum. Judge By
has many friends in this
part of the State who would have
rejoiced at his
An effort was made one night
last week to rob the of An
drew Jackson, near Memphis,
Tenn. was frighten
ed away before his
object,
Mr. Ransom, For Instance.
It is getting to be the
common thing for candidates for
office to withdraw when they
find they are beaten but we
fail to discover, in such action,
any cause for special
or the indulging of a
lot of fulsome nonsense, as some
of the papers are guilty of in this
connection. The latest person to
slip out before he got his caudal
appendage caught in a trap was
Congressman Bunn. who was but
following the example so recently
set by Judge Whitaker and Con-
Alexander. Will some
others have sense enough to do
Cold Loaf.
Hard Times, did you
is a great cry of hard
times, and yet the number of ex-
in this State this season
has been the greatest on record.
It is said that money is scarce
hard to get and yet all the
summer resorts have had larger
crowds of visitors this season
than ever had before. We
are told that times are hard, but
there are now more bicycles, bug-
carts and fine clothes used
than ever before. Hard times we
hear on every hand, but people
are chewing as tobacco,
drinking as much coffee, swilling
as much and contracting
us many bad debts as they
did- Surely it is time to quit
Carolinian.
Miss Lucy Burton, of
bad a tooth extracted
died the of it.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
Washington, D- C, August
The
Democratic Senators have it in
their power to end the tariff dead
look an hour, but they have so
far declined to make use of their
power. It is now apparent that
the Democratic conferees on the
tariff bill can easily reach an
agreement on the bill if they
could be assured that the agree-
would the votes of
the Senators necessary. The
lack of that assurance is the only
stumbling block at this writing.
They naturally hesitate to
an agreement when they are in
doubt whether it would be ac
or rejected by the Senate,
that its rejection would
mean the failure of all tariff leg-
However, the pressure
is becoming so strong on
or-ruin Democratic Senators from
the outside that it is the general
belief that they will soon consent
to give to a sufficient extent
to got a bill through that can be
accepted by all good Democrats-
So strong is this belief that the
House Democratic caucus, which
was to have been held Thursday,
has been deferred for a few days,
when it is hoped that an agree-
will render it unnecessary-
President Cleveland very prop-
declined to officially receive
the commission sent to Washing;
ton by the ex-Queen of Hawaii
for the purpose of trying to
vent the recognition of the Haw-
republic. They saw
Gresham, but merely as
individuals. This whole Haw-
business will probably be
left the hands of Congress,
whore President Cleveland placed
it many months ago, and when
Congress directs the formal re-
cognition of the
resolution to that effect is now
pending in tho will be
done, and not before.
Senator who has
been too ill to take part in the
tariff conference, is now much
better, although not yet well
enough to resume his duties.
Representative Hutcheson, who
is a lawyer of high standing in
addition to being a Texas Demo-
of deserved prominence in
tho House, has grown tired of
every attempt to control
or abolish trusts, by a national
law, wrecked by collision with
the Constitution; and has offered
a joint resolution proposing this
amendment to the Constitution
and monopolies dealing
in agricultural products, or other
articles of prime necessity, shall
not exist the United States,
Congress shall have power
to enforce this article by
This is short,
but there is no doubt of its cover-
the ground, but, in view of
recent exhibitions of the influence
of trusts in Congress, there is
much doubt of its receiving the
necessary two-thirds vote of Con-
Representative Bryan, of Ne-
has received a letter from
executive committee of
Democratic Free League
of that State, asking him to an-
his for the U-
S- Senate and to make a personal
canvas of the State. While Mr.
Bryan has not himself yet so
there is little doubt
among his friends that he will
in a few days accede to the re-
quests of the committee.
There is one reform that
should be forced on Congress by
public opinion, and that is the
absolute prohibition of the at-
of new legislation as
amendments to the general
appropriation bills- No better
example of the viciousness of tho
system need sought for than
was presented by the Senate this
week when an amendment to the
Sundry Civil appropriation bill
providing for tho of the
upon which to
build a new government Printing
Office, was adopted, It would
be impossible to get the House
to agree to this purchase if
in a separate bill; hence
tho action of the Senate, upon
which Mahone has a to
force the House to agree or to
see an important appropriation
bill fail. It is generally admitted
that tho Mahone lot is unsuited
for tho and in
price, and were it not for the
lobbying of Gen- Ma-
hone it would never even have
seriously considered as
among the eligible sites. It
remains to seen whether the
will allow itself to be
bulldozed into voting a gratuity
of public money to Gen- Mahone
just because certain Senators
want to help him along-
The members of the strike
commission Hen- Carroll D-
Wright, U- S- Labor
; John D- of N- Y-,
and N- B. Worthington, of Ill-
called on President Cleveland,
after they held a preliminary
meeting and decided to begin
investigation of the recent
strike in Chicago on the of
this month, and had an extended
talk on the scope of the
and the authority given by
the law under which the com miss
ion was appointed- The
dent impressed upon the minds
of his callers his desire that the
investigation should be thorough
and without fear or favor.
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY,
GREENVILLE, V. C.
The next of School
begin on Tuesday the 4th of
continue weeks.
MB MONTH.
Primary English 12.00
Intermediate English
Higher
Languages
The instruction continue through.
Discipline out Arm. If necessary
an additional teacher will be employed.
Satisfaction guaranteed when pupils
eater early mid attend For
further Information apply to
W. U.
Au-. u,
FOR CONGRESS.
Grifton, N- C, Aug, 4th,
Editor Reflector,
Greenville, N. C-
Dear Sin
As the time for holding the
Congressional Convention is fast
and the necessity of
selecting our best man for a stand-
ard bearer in the coming Con-
campaign is becoming
apparent to true Democrat,
I desire to call the attention of
the Democracy of the First Dis-
to a true and tried Demo-
of Pitt county, who has
oftentimes served the Democracy
and the whole people of the
county in the Senate of North
Carolina with honor to
and credit to himself I has
always proven faithful to every
trust committed to his keeping.
The people of Pitt county
ally, and whole district at large,
would feel that their interest was
watched with vigilant care and
conserved with fidelity of
pose if Willis R- Williams was
our Representative in Congress.
We hope that he will be
by the Convention at
Greenville on the 15th and we
feel assured that his election
would follow. X.
A Swindler on His Rounds.
The Richmond Dispatch has a
special telling of the operations
of a swindler at Windsor. He
was dressed the habiliments
of a Roman Catholic priest, and
came into town with a lot of
patent medicine which he
to give away, but he succeed-
ed in getting about a hundred
dollars from the audience which
he promised be would return, but
having secured what he could he
struck his and left in a run-
He victimized the people of
Edenton out of and
about at Plymouth. His
name was not learned. No doubt
this is the same fellow who
several people in Greenville
a few months ago.
educated Japan In a mission school
directed by Congregationalists. I
do not think the denomination makes
any difference. All I care for Is the
Christian church at large, and so I do
not pay any attention at all to tho
differences in the creeds. Mr. Davis
was settled about fifty miles, that Is
about eighty of your miles, from my
home, and I went to their home and
lived for a little while
to this country. My father thought
I might better do so to get used to
American food and learn to cat with
a knife and fork and to wear the
American dress, etc. No, I do not
think it is so pretty as the Japanese
dress, and the waists of your dresses
I do not like. do not wear any
corset, you know, with our Japanese
dress, and we are so much more com- I
all the time, especially in
the summer. But the lower part of
your dresses seems better to me; tho
underwear and skirts of your dresses
Hike; they easier to get about In.
Oh, really, very much I like America,
what of it I have seen. And the I
American girls, they seem so bright
to me and so nice. I like them very
THE NORTH CAROLINA
College of
Agriculture and
Mechanic Arts.
Three Technical Courses
The Course in Agriculture,
The Course In Science.
The Course in Mechanical and
Civil Engineering,
and with each a good academic
ton. Each course is broad
and the institution Is now equipped
for excellent work. Expenses very
moderate. Session opens September
For address
ALEXANDER Q.
Raleigh, N. C.
Brick Brick
Delivered at on Bead o n
short notice. Quality and prices Will
he made satisfactory,
S. B. ABBOTT,
Manufacturer of Brick and
N. C,
The Magic Touch
Hood's Sarsaparilla
You smile at the idea. But
if you are a sufferer from
Dyspepsia
And Indigestion, try bottle,
ire you have taken hi
Sou
exclaim,
fore you taken half a dose,
you Will Involuntarily think, and no
THE COMFORT OF WIGS.
Especially Do Red Wig Rejuvenate
the Elderly Society Woman.
Byzantium, Russia, and Egypt
have all been in turn borrowed from
by Sarah who Is as eager
on pictures and sculptures at both
salons as If she were not the hardest-
worked actress In Europe, and never
went to bed before two o'clock In
the morning. She Is Rosicrucian In
her hair, the shades of which vary
to the prevailing Of
her get-up. Of course, her locks
are borrowed.
What I wonder at la that wigs are
not universal. They do such good
service in sparing the natural hair.
One can dye a wig to taste without
unpleasantness to the scalp. I am
getting really to like tho wispy wig
of a hue that nature never could
have Invented. A beauty born with
red hair looks so much better in a
dark wig, or a flaxen or an amber-
colored one, than in what nature
gave her. The rod wig makes a
dark-complexioned person going on
to fifty almost seem young.
met the other day a leader of
fashion who danced at the fancy ball
given thirty-three years ago by
Empress Eugenie in her In the
Champs which was then
known as the Hotel It was
the fancy ball to which Princess
Mathilde went as an Indian, wearing
robe This
fashionable person might have easily
passed for being any age from thirty
to She keeps a good fig-
and bright eyes, and the snow
of years is hidden by a red
Truth.
Iron Staging.
Away up in tho mountains In tho
part of India, near a
place called there is a
railway Hue having a of five
feet six inches. Such
lines have to be built with more re-
to curvature and grade than
those not so wide, and the govern-
which owns the railway, has
recently been Improving tho align-
in respect to these features.
At one place it became necessary to
construct a bridge across a rocky
gorge where the level of tho track
was nearly one hundred feet above
the water below. Judging from
of the site of the bridge, it
Is one of bitter cold
parts with never a road
broader than the back of your
of which Kipling has so much to say
In some of his stories. The en-
managed to build some ma-
and on these rest the
spans of the bridge, each
and City feet long. The stag-
used In the erection of the spans
was decidedly novel. Not a of
timber was to be found In the
so the false work was made of
rails entirely. There were four
temporary columns for each span of
the bridge, connected by light gird-
The columns were hollow,
three feet two Inches in diameter,
and constructed of twenty-four rails
arranged with the heads Inside.
They were placed so as to break
joints, odd lengths being used for
this purpose at the top and bottom,
and were bound together every five
feet by flat iron bands. The
lengths of rail were jointed by
fish-plates, and as they were
in any way they were laid In
the main track after the bridge had
been finished.
i ii
A FAIR JAPANESE.
She Is an Interesting Student In an
American College.
One of the most industrious
dents of Radcliffe college, says tho
St. Louis Republic, Is Miss
a Japanese girl. Her father is
a wealthy banker of Kl-
Japan, and all the family are
devoted Christians. Miss has
come to this country to fit herself by
for missionary work in her
country. came she
says, Mr. and Mrs. Davis, who
are missionaries to Japan, seat out
by the Methodist church. My fa-
was converted and into
Just Hits
soothing i a magic
Hood's Sarsaparilla gently
tone and strengthens the stomach
and digestive organs, the
liver, create a natural, healthy desire
for food, give refreshing sleep, and
In short, raises the health tone of the
entire system. Remember
Cures
Notice Dissolution.
Notice Is hereby given that the firm
of Ellington Brown, proprietors of
the Greenville Iron Works, was dis-
solved by mutual consent on the 14th
day of June. 1894. James Brown be-
comes sole purchaser of the business,
assuming all indebtedness of the
and all bills due the payable to
him. Those owing the are re-
quested to settle at once.
ELLINGTON,
JAMES BROWN.
This 19th.
Hood's PHI cure Ills,
bilious jaundice, tick headache, Indigestion
KINSEY SEMINARY
n. c,
A Boarding School for Girls Young Ladies
Full Corps of Teachers.
ART A MUSIC DEPARTMENTS
Not only competes with but excels
in prices any school offering similar
advantages.
LOCATION HEALTHY.
State Chemist in examination o water
says have probably never exam-
a better For
giving full particulars write to
JOSEPH Principal.
Notice to Creditors.
Letters of administration upon the
estate of Sherrod Belcher deceased
been issued to tho undersigned, on
the 4th day of June 1894. by the Clerk
of the Superior Court of Pitt County,
notice is hereby given to all persons
haying claims against said estate to
present them to the undersigned on or
before the 13th day of Juno 1895 or this
notice will be plead in bar of their re-
All persons indebted to said
estate arc requested to make immediate
payment to inc. This the day of
June 1894. W. E. BELCHER,
of Sherrod Belcher.
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
Ml
-o-------
We them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will Jill them WELL
Rough Heart Framing, 89.00
Rough Sap Training, ;
Rough Sap Inches
Rough Sap Boards, inches, 87-00
RAMBLER
Wait days for our Planing Mill and
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber
j as
Wood delivered to your door for
cents a load.
Terms cash.
Thanking yen for past patronage,
GREENVILLE LUMBER COMPANY.
GREENVILLE N. C.
For sale by
GREENVILLE, N. C
The RAMBLER took five of the high-
est awards at tho World's Fair and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
1893 make at reduced price. 1894
Sake all arc strictly highest
grade. We make
Tobacco Hues, Sell Sieves, Tinware,
and do all kinds of Tin work, Rooting,
Guttering. Ac.
S. E. PENDER CO.
mm
To Our North Carolina Patrons
Administrators Notice
Letters of administration upon the
estate of Eugenia Nelson, deceased,
having been issued to the undersigned,
on the 14th day of July, by the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt
notice is given to all per-
sons having claims against estate
to present them to the undersigned on
or before the 14th day of July 1895. or
this notice will be plead in bar of their
recovery. All persons indebted to said
estate arc requested to make
ate payment me.
e 14th day of July,
J. M. C. NELSON,
of Eugenia Nelson.
Yon tho III for
We Just Hull kill.
fit It j T .,,
In
Southern
our hint
RELIABLE,
DURABLE,
and MU --V- .
ill v i
RALEIGH
you know
i .-
Mot ii our .
our I Mi .
honor in
th ml .
not on
All
in
profits i or.
to cry
from. All low
Writ
u on M HI H It on.
tor
Mm.- took,
Hiring nil
Any In United
It can r. ID
SATES
Southern Music House.
Main Savannah,
Iii-h In
K. Now
nil oaf
I. L NUMBER'S MACHINE WORKS.
IN AND OF--------
Engines, Boilers, Machinery
IV. c.
Celebrated
Machinery.
THE BEST IN THE WORLD.
Latest Improved Revolving
THE BROWN COTTON GIN
Write for and prices.
ASK
IF YOU INTERESTED IN LOOKING FOR
BARGAINS I
to go straight to them, stock is now complete, their
full of choice
Merchandise
From which genuine cm be had.
We buy We sell Cash, or on
approved credit. We carry the stock. We
do the business. We fear no legitimate
competition, We dread no comparison of
stock, quality and prices. Our store is the
for you to goods at right prices,
for the following reasons We buy
Cash. We seek for quality and durability.
We deal squarely with you. We carry the
largest stock to lie found In our count y
from to make your We
do not seek to take advantage of you. We
are responsible for all errors or mistake that
may occur on our part. We do not carry
a cheap John stock of job lots and Inferior
goods and push on you thing you do not
want. Once our customer you will remain
our friend. Hundreds f visit
our store, buy at prices
arc Well pleased with their pi rebuses, go home Now why don't you H
the same thing and receive your money's One hundred mil- on Hie dollar
here did you know that you could buy from u almost any
article you may need in the following lines
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats,
Furnishing Goods.
Caps, Shoes for Everybody, Ladies, Misses and
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery and ; lass ware,
Tinware, Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries,
and Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains.
Furniture Furniture,
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tabled
Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's Beds,
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Room Furniture.
Take a look at our stock it will cost you nothing and
save you dollars. We are agents for P. SPOOL
COTTON at jobbers prices.
Come One. Come All.
THE OLD RELIABLE.
--------IS STILL AT WITH A LINE--------
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me that the be-t i- the
Hemp Rope. Pumps, Farming Implements, every-
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general house purpose, a- well M
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress I have on hand. Am head-
quarters for Heavy and jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive clerk
FORBES
Ir
-U n M
xv s
M .,
spin
,. F-
.,
GREENVILLE, N. a
not
not
.
OB
OS
SHOO J
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
-IN-
lo my Friends and Customers of Pitt and adjoining
wish that I have made preparation in preparing
MATERIAL and propose HOGSHEADS with inside dressed
smooth which will prevent or scrubbing, your Tobacco when parking
Also I have made special to two best split made Whit
Oak The special advantages l have In cutting-my own timber planes me in a
position to nice all competition. I cheerfully promise you that I will U
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads you can them at any
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, N.
Making
And Turned Trimmings for Houses a Specialty.
prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything la thy
or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stall ways. Mendings
including Railing, and would pleased to name you prices OS
II
any .
anything la the stove upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you your past patronage, lam willing Hi
to meet your future patronage, kindly ask you to give me a trial before
elsewhere. Respectfully,
COX, Winterville, N. a
COBB BROS. CO.
-AND
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA
and Correspondence Solicited,





THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
TherMometers come high these
times-
Shirts-two collars
must go, at Wilson's.
meetings begin this
at
Yearly
month.
In stock
the Old Brick Store.
was hanged in
Raleigh last Friday.
A nice line of spectacles at A- J.
Griffin's, the practical
and engraver-
Tarboro are con-
a good track.
Clearance sale of all stock to
make room for fall stock F Wilson.
Pitt delegates left yesterday to
attend the State Convention in
to day.
Don't forget D. S. Smith keeps
a choice Hue of Cigars-
Twenty five cents gets the Re-
for the campaign-
Mr. C- T- is
the old store on Five
Points
Oblique cents at
Reflect r Book Store-
R-. R D- horse died
one day last while being
the road.
For good reliable Shoos go
Wiley Brown.
The pile driver is at work
the above the draw
arch of the river bridge
Just received Fresh Butter at
D. S. Smith s. Only pound.
Standard Music only cents
a copy at Reflector Book Store.
Get to your share
of the fall trade by putting an
advertisement in the Reflector-
Coca Cola and Ice drinks a
ice drinks put up
at the of James Long-
Tho Reflector thanks Messrs
Sheppard and Walter
Whichard for apples and melons.
am prepared to fill or-
at all times- Sunday hours
from to a- m- W R Parker.
A furniture and house furnish-
store is soon
here by Messrs. and
Ricks.
to
Personal.
Mr. E. B. Higgs is quite sick
this week.
Mr. John Homo returned to
Greenville last week.
Mrs- John Gay, of Suffolk, is
visiting Mrs. C. T.
Mr- of Mt. Olive,
is spending this week in town.
Wells, of
son, is visiting Miss Lula White.
Mr- Dan of Kinston,
spent last week with Mr- Charlie
Forbes
Mrs. Dr. R. Williams is visiting
her daughter, Mrs- W. M- Russ.
in Raleigh-
Miss Julia White, of Hertford,
is visiting tho family of her uncle,
Mr. J. White.
Mr- Walter Pender left last
week for Texas where he has ac-
a position.
Chief Police W. B. James left
yesterday to spend a few days at
Newport News, Va-
Mrs. Lucy Bernard and
returned home last week
from Pilot Mountain-
Mr. J. B. Cherry and J. B. Jr.,
returned home Monday from their
visit to Wrightsville.
Mr. Edward Greene left Mon-
day morning for Portsmouth,
Va-, to accept a position-
Mr. Jack
spent the past week
at his grandfather's. Dr. C- J-
Mr- of Beaver
Dam, has boon spending the past
week with his daughter, J-
S- Smith-
Mr. and Mrs- J. E. of
Richmond, arrived Friday to vis-
it his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.
L-
Misses and Maggie Shields,
of Scotland Neck, are visiting
sister Mrs- E- B. Higgs
near town-
Mr. J- L- Wooten has gone to
housekeeping. He occupies
Miss Leila Cherry's new house on
Greene street.
Mr- V. L- Stephens, of Dunn,
spent Sunday Monday with
his parents We were glad
to nave a call from him-
Mr. R- P. one of the
Reflector's special drummer
friends and a of
J. C- paper house, at
Genuine Rope for Cot-
ton Presses. and inch, at D-
D-
The Coast Line will sell tickets
at reduced rates for tho
Convention here next
week.
Celluloid Starch for cuffs, col-
and shirt bosom, cents, at
D- W-
We fear that much will
follow the rainy spell. Every
precaution should be taken
against it.
The and Atlanta
Constitution both a year for
Just one week to the
Convention and Greenville
must be getting her best foot
foremost.
to be opened Washington City, spent Saturday
and Sunday here-
Mr. G- H. Haigh, a former
tor of the Observer,
now an agent, spent
the past week in town. Mr. Las-
also an insurance agent, has
been here several days-
is selling Sum
greatly reduced
Frank Wilson
mer Clothing at
prices-
See announcement of Green-
ville Male Academy in this issue-
Fall term begins Tuesday,
4th.
New assortment of Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown. Depositor.
No prettier job printing was
ever done in Greenville than some
turned out at the Reflector
last week.
Go to Cory's and get your
Shoes, Trunks and Valises
repaired
Prices and of Victor
bicycles can be had at Reflector
office-
Sewing machines from to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley Brown.
Another lot of the Parker
Pens just received at
tor Book Store. We have sold
many of them and there is no bet-
pen in use.
Choice Young and
Tea from the
din Tea estate of India, which we
offer to the trade for cents a
pound, this Tea was bought to
sell for This is pure Tea,
BoswelL Co.
Every voter in the county
ought to read the Reflector
during the campaign. Tell your
neighbor he can get it till the
7th of November for cents.
Watches, clocks and jewelry
carefully repaired by the old ex-
and practical watch-
maker, A- J- Griffin.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
Remember I you cash fur Chicken
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's-
Cheap, New Grass Butter
cents per Best Blended
Tea cents per pound. Import-
ed Macaroni cents. Cream
Cheese at the Old Brick Store-
War is on in between
China and Japan- In a recent
encounter lost about
Fred Forbes with his goat
team is a magnet for every boy
in town. A goat catches a boy
every time-
like his
goods, demands your attention
this week. It is too attractive to
be overlooked.
Work commenced last week on
Mr. H. C Edward's dwelling
house in and is
along well. It will be a two
story house.
Mr- D- B. has a hammer
that he has been using for thirty-
nine years. He also a small
hand vise that was used by his
father when he was a small boy.
The young people had a pleas-
and at Germania Hall
last Friday night. Several of
them were given an elegant sup-
per at Dr- after the
dance-
Can you trace to cause in
the fact that the most prosperous
merchants in every community
are newspaper advertisers Or,
is this merely a strange,
countable coincidence
One of the greatest financial re-
forms needed is that everybody
pay their debts and stop making
debts when they have no visible
means of paying
Chronicle.
A farmer who could not raise
SI to pay for his county paper,
sent to an Eastern man to
learn the secret of keeping butter
from getting strong. He received
the reply
Herald.
Mr. Josephus Daniels, chief
clerk Interior Department, has
our thanks for a copy the
of the Manufactures
of Tobacco, and of its
Distribution, Exportation and
compiled from the re-
of the tenth census and
revenue exportation records.
A meeting of citizens at which
Dr. W. H. Bagwell presided, was
held in the Court House Monday
night to discuss arrangements
for the Congressional convention
to be held here on the 15th. A
committee of ten, consisting of B-
F. Sugg, A. L- Blow, W. H. Smith,
W- L- Brown, Q. D. Rountree, B.
C. Pearce, D. L. James, J. R.
R- W. King and Andrew
Joyner was appointed to take the
matter in hand and make all
arrangements.
License.
During July Register of Deeds
Harding issued licenses to the
following couples, five white and
four colored ;
L. and
Henrietta Calvin Joy-
and Florence C. N.
and Hannah Walston,
Joseph H. Smith and Lillie
Peter Dixon Ada Bright.
and
Sarah Sutton, Ben Hyman and
Adeline Joseph
and Penny
Atkinson and Victoria
Brown.
TOBACCO CHEWS.
The Market Open for a New Season
AH the Warehouses Ready--Buy-
Coming In.
Our readers will miss the usual
good supply of matter on the to-
page this week. The
son of this is that Mr. O. L- Joy-
who conducts our tobacco
department, was away last week
visiting markets in this and other
States. As a result of his trip
away there are arriving this week
several shipments of tobacco from
South Carolina to be sold on the
floor of the Eastern Warehouse
and other shipments will follow
Mr- Joyner is a hustler, and he
never fails to get in good words
for the Greenville market in both
his writing and talking-
Messes G- F. Evans, R. H.
Hayes and L. F. Evans have as-
together to conduct the
Greenville Warehouse this season.
Man will drive the
sales, Mr. L- F. Evans will
the general management of the
house and Mr. Hayes will buy-
Mr. N. H. will
books for them and Mr. L. W.
Starke will auctioneer.
Messes Forbes will
conduct the new warehouse, the
Mr- Forbes will run
the sales and have general super-
vision of the house. Mr- Ernest
Forbes will be floor manager and
Mr. R. M- assistant book
keeper. Their has not
in yet, until he arrives
Ola will make the at
the breaks.
Mr- O- L- Joyner is sole pro
of the Eastern
look after the general manage-
and whoop up the sales
Mr- D- S- Spain who was with
him last season will again be
bookkeeper and Mr. J. H- Peebles
floor manager. Mr. W. T. Lips-
sing bids as fast as the
can wink at him-
With three splendid warehouses
in operation this season the
Greenville market is bound to
hum. The figure is set for
millions pounds for Greenville to
sell this
Messrs P- H. Gorman and G. E-
Harrison, two clever buyers who
operated on Greenville market
last season, arrived last week to
help make the market hum again
the coming season- Everybody,
the girls included gives these
young men a hearty welcome on
their return to Greenville-
Mr. W. B- Morgan, the efficient
buyer for the A. T- Co., is on hand
again and will tho weed
rolling into his new as
soon as it is com
Mr. B- E. of Richmond,
has arrived will buy hero
this season. He on the
Rocky Mount market last
Mr. R. B. has joined
the force of buyers for this season.
This early six buyers have come
in to locate and many more are
expected to arrive during tho
month.
Notice.
The competitive examination
for the appointment from this
county to the Normal and Indus-
trial School at Greensboro will
be held at the Male Academy in
Greenville on next Friday August
10th- Those who have applied to
the College for the place will be
present on the above named day.
Any lady not under years of age
in the county may also attend and
compete for the appointment-
Examination begins at o'clock
A. M. W- H.
Co- Supt. Pub. Inst.
Protracted Meeting.
Rev. R. D. Carroll began a pro
traded meeting in the Baptist
church at Ayden on Sunday.
Rev- of Lexington,
who was for ten years pastor in
Greenville, arrived there
day to assist in the meeting- His
many friends hope to see Mr.
in Greenville while he is
in the county- Mr. Carroll re-
closed a very good meet-
at Hopewell mission station
in which he was assisted by Rev.
J- W. Rose, from Cove, N- C.
There were fifteen professions
and eight additions to the church.
To Those Who Write.
In a few days the Reflector
Book Store will be able to show
one of the best lots of stationery
every carried by any house in
Greenville. We have just placed
large orders both for the retail
trade and for our printing depart-
in which are some
lines of papers- There is a
growing demand for good station
here, and if the people will
us their patronage will be
to carry such a varied
line that they can get their wants
at all times- Remember
to come to us whenever you want
stationery.
THE RAINS.
Flood and Freshets Cause Great Dam-
Washed Away
Crops Submerged.
Bethel Items.
August 6th, 1894
The meeting at the Baptist
church closed last Monday night-
Mr. L- of Penny Hill,
was in town one day last week.
Mr- W- N. Hammond was
the recipient of a fine son last
Tuesday night He is a happy
man.
The Bethel base ball club went
over to Falkland last Friday to
play a match game but for some
cause they did not play-
County Commissioner Gainer
could not go to Greenville to-day
to meeting
on account of rain and high water.
The Board of Road Supervisors
were in session Saturday- Owing
to the inclement weather the
Board adjourned to meet
day 18th at o'clock P. M.
We have had the heaviest rains
for many years, the water in Grin-
die Creek is the highest ever
known- All bridges across canals
and Large ditches in this section
are washed up- The crops are
greatly damaged-
the past week this sec-
has had the heaviest rainfall
in many years- Since
Friday there has been no
of the down pour for
more than few minutes at tho
time. Streams are all flooded.
crops are submerged, bridges are
washed away, and there is
disaster throughout tho
try. The tobacco farmers of Pitt
have suffered incalculable dam-
age. Many barns that were cur-
have been ruined by water
rising in them and putting out the
fires in the furnaces. It is feared
the standing crop will take a sec
and growth, in which case there
will still greater damage.
Joe Blow got a little excited in
tolling how fast the was
rising Monday, and said it was
rising an inch a minute. He
meant an inch an The-
Saturday rise for twenty-four
hours was five feet. Water came
in the warehouse at the wharf
Monday.
Mr- E. Back says there is more
water in Parker's run than he
ever saw before from rain. Dur-
the big freshet of the
water from the river backed up
until the run was about one foot
higher than at present.
Col. I. A- Sugg said that the
rain fall from Friday noon to
Monday noon was inches-
Monday his lowland corn was
standing in two feet of water.
Neighboring farms along the
were submerged.
The County Commissioners
could not a meeting Mon-
day because of absence of a
quorum- Chairman Dawson and
Commissioner Fleming were all
who get here, the former
having to come on the train-
Rey. J. C- said he found
so many bridges washed up Mon-
day morning that it was with
much difficulty he got back from
his Sunday appointments.
There was only a
yesterday. The indications are
that the rainy spell has broken
fair weather is looked for.
Mr. O- W. Harrington says
Great is overflowed
crops are being drowned. Water
is waist deep in his corn.
County Commissioner
Fleming said the water on his
place was higher Monday morn-
than he ever saw it-
Dr- W. H. Bagwell tells us
pie living along creek say
they never saw so much water in
it as is there this week.
Tho river was still rising rapidly
and looked as though
it would go to the high water
mark of 1887.
The star route mails between
Greenville and Tarboro are hung
up because of high water-
The water in several wells has
come even with the ground
and many have caved in-
Dies Away From Home.
The sad was
brought by telegram to bis family
here, on Saturday morning, that
Mr Wiley J. Higgs had died
suddenly at Littleton on Friday
evening. Mr. Higgs had gone to
Panacea Springs to spend a few
weeks, was in his usual health
and jovial spirits, and the
of his family were totally
unprepared for such a shock as
the news of his death brought
them. Up to supper Friday
evening he showed no indication
of sickness, but shortly thereafter
was suddenly seized with some
heart affection and died in half
an hour. Upon receiving the
telegram his sons wired for his
remains to be sent to Scotland
Neck and they took the train
immediately to meet his body
there. He was buried on Sunday
in Halifax county by the side of
his wife who died six years
ago. Mr. Higgs was a native of
Halifax county and was about
years of age. He moved to
Greenville four years ago and
had made a host of friends among
our people. He leaves four sons
and three daughters, Messrs. E-
B., J. W-, J. S. and little Rom,
and Misses Fannie, Novella, and
Emily, all of whom live here- To
these the sympathy of the entire
community is extended in their
sad bereavement.
To County S. S. Superintendents.
The Superintendents of the
Sunday Schools in Pitt
county will please report all
to the Secretary of the
Convention at his store in
Greenville by August the 15th.
Let these reports show the
of children and older people
enrolled, the average attendance
of the same, also the per cent of
each and every community not
enrolled any school, together
with the names and post offices
of the officers, number of books
in library, papers and lessons
helps taken
The following persons have
been appointed by the Executive
Committee delegates to represent
this county in the State
which meets in Durham on
the 21st of
J. D. Cox,
Harding, A- G- Cox, L. A-
Mayo, and Rev. J. C
Dr- B- T. Cox,
A- B Ellington, E. F.
Robt- M. and D- J. Which-
ard.
All schools are earnestly re-
quested to take a collection to de-
fray the expenses of these
gates and forward the same to
the Secretary of the County Con-
by the 15th of August-
Let us not be behind in our work.
W. U. Pres.
D- D.
Sec. Co. Convention.
P. S- The County Convention
will be called to meet in the Fall, j
Items.
August 7th,
Mrs. C- L. Tucker is at
Mrs. L. A. Cobb is
Greene county.
Miss Stella is visiting
Mrs. H. Johnson.
Miss Alice Ball, of Raleigh, is
visiting Mrs. Joel Patrick-
Mrs. Brooks is spending
some time at Seven Springs.
Miss Lucy Brooks returned
this morning from a visit at
Raleigh.
Messrs. L- A. Cobb and R.
E. Pittman spent last at
Wrightsville.
Mr- Claude of Now
Bern, is visiting his parents Mr-
and Mrs- C- P-
Rev. J- L- Keen, Dr. P. B.
and Miss Spivey attended
tho conference at Trenton.
Dr. B. F. Arrington, of Golds-
is spending at
the attending to
his dental profession-
Prof. J. E- B. Davis was in
town one day last week
ting for a school next season.
Finding it promising he will open
about September first.
This section has been visited
by the rain fall last week
this that has ever fallen in
the history of the town, crops are
under water and all on low lands
are washed away. Rafts are
breaking loose and coming down
the creek placing the bridge in
groat danger. Nottingham,
Co's., large saw mill is partly
under water and in danger of be-
destroyed-
Falkland Items.
August
Miss Williams, of
son, is visiting here.
Mrs. Neil, of Tarboro,
is visiting near Falkland.
Bethel and Falkland could not
play ball last Friday on account
of rain.
A. B. S- V- King leave for
Wilson to day where they will
spend a few days.
Mr. Joe Home to his
home in Tarboro Thursday after
spending a few days with friends
and relatives.
Cotton and Peanuts.
BelOW are Norfolk prices of cotton
and for yesterday, is
by Cobb Bros. Co., Commission Mer-
chants of
COTTON.
Good Middling
Middling J
Low Middling
Good Ordinary
Extra
Notice.
I hereby forewarn all persons not t
or trade for a note given
by me to the Wrought Iron Range
Company for CS dollars in
Said note was obtained from me through
a fraudulent representation and will
not be paid. J. R.
Demanding
That is what our Superb
Stock and Unparalleled
Prices do.
Such quality and economy of price
cannot be passed idly by.
difference
two dollars and four, or
dollars and This is
about the saving we
show you on all
our Goods.
To this give us a trial.
mm
FINE CLOTHING
A few more o For tho o on our sum- o they can-
of those nice o thirty days o o not be ex-
fitting and o will make o For fit, o celled. See
cheap suits- o special price o and o and it.
DRY GOODS,
Gents Furnishing Goods
we i t i
o AND GOES WITHOUT o
o SAYING THAT WE o
o HAVE THE LARGEST o
o AND MOST STYLISH o
o STOCK IN TOWN. o
o o
Give us a call and look for yourself and you cannot go away
without buying.
FRANK WILSON,
THE LEADING CLOTHIER.
CUT THE HE
-ALSO THE-
They Must Go, Shall Go
Look at these Starvation Prices
in White Lawn cents, regular price cent.
Satin cents, regular price cents.
Check and White Goods cents, regular price cents.
FRUIT OF THE LOOM BLEACHING cents.
Cambric only cent, prices and cents-
in Percales, Fast Colors cents, prices elsewhere and cents
Get our Goods have got, money must have, so come
along good and bring the Hard Cash, we will do tho balance
Yours anxious to please,
C. T.
On Wednesday, July
will be our first Mid-Summer Clearance Sale and offer the CD I A
R A
of the season, a order lo reduce our mammoth stock we
oner our ENTIRE STOCK OF SUMMER CLOTHING at
greet sacrifice. Vt c oiler
Men's Suits 8-5.00 for Suits cents
pairs V from U .
BARGAINS
BIG REDUCTION in White Goods, and Embroidery.
Checked worth for -4 worth ct for
We are Headquarters in Greenville for Low Prices.
Coffee cents, Snuff cents, Tobacco SB cents, Ladies. Misses and
Oxford Ties, also Men's will be sold at a big reduction. We have a
BARGAIN COUNTER- DON'T MISS ibis opportunity of making
for Money saved Is made, and when commence with us our
fair dealings will always hold your TRY US.
GREENVILLE, N.
I HAVE RECEIVED A LINE OF-
SPRING GOODS
NOVELTIES,
and would earnestly solicit examination.
SHOES Shoes
Embroideries, White Goods
and Laces.
I need not say anything about except I have received a new
line. Prices no lower than ever. I you for your past favors
and if close will avail anything I will merit a
Sowing Machines from 15.00 up. New Home latest improved
WILEY BROWN,
Now Homo Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So
J. t,
Lite id Fire line
GREENVILLE, N. G
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AGENT FOE FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
Don't
Miss this chance get
CHEAP
MILLINERY
I am selling the best
Leghorn and White
Chipped Hats
at greatly reduced
Have just received a new line i
Moire insertion, I
that will be .-old cheap. Ail these
very you
early M you wish to get the benefit of
the low prices.
M. T. Co.
Notice to Farmers.
If all sons who want CANE
MILLS and next
fall will lite their orders with me at an
early day. will lo able to get the
Mills at a liberal discount by ring
nil at once and will
the benefit of the discount.
II.
Agent, j
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
OLD STORK
AND MERCHANTS BUT
X their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices before pm
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICK, TEA, Ac.
at
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Hirers,
you to buy at one A com
of
SUB
on hand and sold at prices
times. Out good are although and
sold for CASH therefore, having no rink
Iii sell at a close
s. M.
N,
WILLIAMSON,
-MANUFACTURER OF-
-ALL KINDS OF-
REPAIRING DONE OS SHORT NOTICE
Only . workmen and material allowed in my
who have my work will testify to and durability of
turned at my -hops. Every also carry B
HARNESS WHIPS.





I Before buying your new bicycle look
the field over carefully. The superiority
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully
demonstrated as at present. Our line
will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and we
challenge comparison.
There's but one
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON.
NEW
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN
DETROIT.
DENVER.
WELDON R. It
AND
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
SOUTH.
Dated
July
1804.
Leave Weldon
Ar. Mt
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
Rocky Mt
Wilson
Selma
Ar. Florence
Lt
Goldsboro
Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
B I
O It lo
A.
C at
A. M.
P.
P.
A. K.
A. If.
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
Dated
July
1834.
Lt Florence
Lt
Ar
Ly Wilmington
Magnolia
Ar
K- fa
A. M.
Wilson
Ar Rocky Mt
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
Lt Rocky Mt
Ar Weldon
A.
HERBERT
TONSORIAL PARLORS,
Under Opera He-use,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Call In when you good work.
For NEWSPAPERS and PERIODICALS.
Advertising
ADVERTISING Record. Indexed
RECORD. through to enter on
the left band page the Advertiser's name
Agent, commission,
space, position, rate, number of
date beginning, date ending,
amount, when payable. The right
hand page, opposite, the months
wide space monthly, intervening
spaces for weekly, and spaces down for
daily, to check when an begins
and ends. Prices, pages, or one
leaf to the letter, 81.00;
pages, leaves to a letter, ball roan
82.00; pages, pages,
pages.
P. M P. M.
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax 4.00
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.35 p.
in., Greenville p. in., Kinston 7.35
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a. Greenville 8.22 a. in. Arriving
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a.
m. daily except Sunday.
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a. in., arrives
8.40 a. m., Tarboro 9.50; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m. Parmele 6.10
p. m arrives Washington p, m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, at p. n;., Sunday P.
arrive Plymouth 9.20 P. M., 5.20 p. in.
lg leaves Plymouth daily
Sunday, 5.30 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a.
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. m., and 11.15
a. m.
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a.
m. a. m. Re-
leaves a. m.;
a-.
Trains on Nashville Branch leave-
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. arrive
Nashville p. m-. Spring Hope 5.30,
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope
a. m Nashville 8.33 a. arrives
at Rocky Mount in., except
Sunday.
on Latta Branch, Florence R.
R. C.-50 p. in., arrive Dun-
bar Returning leave Dun-
bar G a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m.
Daily
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War-
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday,
at II a. in. Returning leave Clinton
at p. m., Warsaw with
line trains.
No. makes close connection
at Weldon for all points North daily, all
rail via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
Carolina railroad for Norfolk daily and
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
R. KENLY, Manager.
T. M, Manager
for Greenville Circuit.
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three
o'clock.
Shady Grove on second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and School
House at o'clock.
on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel 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 arc the regular appointments
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the
Baptist church
At and fourth Sun-
days in each month, morning and night,
and every Thursday night.
At Third Sunday in each
month, morning and night.
At Ephesus, Person
Sunday in month 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
month, morning and evening.
vices all other Sunday
St. Johns, Sun-
day in each month, morning and evening
Holy Innocents,
fifth Sunday morning.
Services.
Every first Sabbath morning and
night, alternating between Rev. J. N.
II. and Rev. J. W.
Every third Sabbath, morning and
night, Rev. J. Hines,
Sunday School every Sabbath morn-
at o'clock, D. Evans
JACKSON
Dice Furniture
COMPANY
JACKSON,
ATLANTIC NORTH CAROLINA
R. R. TIME TABLE.
In Effect December 4th, 1893.
GOING EAST.
GOING WEST.
Pa-s. Daily
Ex Sun.
Ar.
P. M.
SO
P. M.
Pass. Daily
STATIONS Ex Sun.
P.
Goldsboro
P. M.
Ar. I
A. M.
MANUFACTURERS OF
AND OFFICE
Schools and Churches seated
in best manner. Offices
Furnished. Send for
Kinston
a.
A. M
Train connects with Wilmington
Weldon train bound North, leaving
Goldsboro a. m., With D.
train West, leaving Goldsboro p. m.
Train connects with Richmond
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro
p. in., and with W. W. train
the North at p. m.
S. L. DILL,
Superintendent.
OINTMENT
TRAPS
MARK
Trade-Marts obtained and all Pat-j
business conducted for Mo debate Fees, i
Our Office is Opposite U. S.
, and we can patent m less lime titan
m I
Send model, drawing or photo., with
We if or not, free of
charge. fee not due till patent is secured.
A Pamphlet. to Obtain
cost of same the U. cad
sent free. Address,
Opp. O. C.
Tor the Cure of all Skin Sis.
This has In use
years, and wherever know ha
been in steady demand. It has been en
by the leading physicians all
-he country, and cures where
all other remedies, the attention
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is
long standing and the high reputation
which it has Obtained is owing entirely
its own efficacy, as but little ha
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
lie sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at-
tended to. Address all orders and
communications to
T.
THE ON JARVIS.
The friends of Senator Jarvis
can look on complacently at the
efforts of those who want to sink
him along with Ransom,
for no intelligent man can fail to
see that Ransom has gone under.
Jarvis is fortunate, inasmuch as
he is armored round with a flaw-
less record. For a man who has
been in public life as long as
Jarvis has, his record is singular-
perfect. He has made so few
mistakes that those who seek his
defeat sift and his public
life in the vain hope of
some charge upon which they
could reasonably cry for his
So far as the News
knows, two things have been
brought against him-
One is that he increased Char-
lie Vance's salary from to
per year-
The other is that ho voted
against the fast mail
If there any other charges,
we have not seen them in print.
The first charge is no charge
at all. It is a feather in
cap. We want to see every North
Carolina officeholder get as much
of Uncle Sam's money as he can,
and tho man who raises his salary
gets our It
would have been all the better
had he made Vance's salary
The money is there, and
tho more the North Carolina
officeholders get, the more will
be put in circulation in this
State- As to the second charge,
Mr. Jarvis is probably able to
defend
If Mr. Ransom is not beyond
being hurt by anything that his
friends may say or do, they are
certainly preparing to finish him
by this war they are inaugurating
on Jarvis- Had Jarvis an assail-
record, it would different-
As it is, the closer Senator Ran-
friends lay, the better it
will be for their cause. The fact
is, Ransom and Jarvis are fine
men, influential men of
brains and of excellent character,
and their exalted standing should
protect them from assaults by the
Democratic press of the State
Charlotte News.
James J- who is now
canvassing Kansas for the Re-
publicans and indulging an
descent of returning to
the Senate, finds that tho
voters of the State are very hos-
tile to him. This is because of a
letter which wrote some
years ago favoring the
of the of this country
to Africa. The letter was written
at a time when was
gusted said disgust
arising from having been recent-
beaten for the Senate. Now
wishes that he had burn-
ed that letter- is also ex-
distasteful to
Republicans, whom he has over
and over again denounced in
mannerly terms- Altogether it
is believed by many Republicans
that unless he is withdrawn from
the canvass he will do his party
far more harm than
Dispatch.
The Danville Times echoes a
note of warning which can not be
too often sounded when it
Too many com-
over to this country,
ate characters of all sorts ; and if
it is not stopped soon, the very
worst consequence will follow.
Tho Northern States are in a groat
deal more danger than the South-
; nevertheless, tho of
Congress from tho South we are
sure, would join in passing
gent laws to check the tide of
migration-
There is no objection to for
as such, but to tho class
that a largo majority of rep-
resent. Indiscriminate
must be and the
sooner it is done the better it will
for tho country. Good
want and will welcome,
but and criminals of all
sorts there is no room for in free
America.
Marvelous
From a letter written by Rev. J.
of Mich., we
are permitted to make this
have no hesitation in recommending
Dr. King's New Discovery, as the re-
were almost marvelous in the
case of my wife. While I was pastor of
the Baptist Church at Rives Junction
she was brought down with Pneumonia
succeeding with La Terrible
of coughing would last
hours with little interruption and it
seemed as if she could not survive them.
A friend recommended Dr. King's New
Discovery; it was quick in its work and
satisfactory in Trial
bottles free at John L. Wooten's
Store. Regular and
Experimental politics is both
costly and dangerous. And Kan-
Colorado, Illinois and South
Carolina are beginning to find it
out. When these States come to
settle with their Populist
tho debt balance will be
something astounding- People
that play with must accept
tho consequences of a
Carolinian.
The earlier symptoms of dyspepsia,
heartburn occasional headaches,
not be neglected. Take Hood's
Sarsaparilla to be cured.
A SERMON FOR BOYS.
We see two boys standing side
by side. Both are intelligent-look-
and kind-looking; but one be-
comes an idle, shiftless fellow, and
the other an influential and useful
man. Perhaps when they were
boys no one could have Men much
difference between them; when
they wore men, the contrast was
marked. One became dissolute
step by step, tho other became
step by stop. As one
went the other went down-
It is a question of great moment
What will you be I One deter-
mines he will do right and
prove his powers and
ties to the utmost. He b
learns his business, be-
comes a partner or proprietor, and
is known as a man of influence
and power. Another does not de
to be bad, but is lazy and
neglects to improve his
He shirks work, he
next he is seen to-
and probably beer and
whiskey follow; his appearance
shows he is unhealthy ; he does
not do his work well; he loses his
position and becomes
rate and probably a criminal-
There are many to day who are
standing at the parting-place.
You can take one path and you
will go down as sure as the sun
rises- If you prefer to hang
around a saloon, instead of read-
good books at home, then
you are on the road to ruin- If
you do not obey your parents, if
you run away from school, if you
lie, if yon swear, you will surely
go down in life
If a boy steadily improves his
time, tries to learn his business,
obeys his father and mother, is
truthful and industrious, is re-
and pleasing toward
he will succeed. No can
stop Iris doing well in life. He
has determined that he will be a
noble specimen of a man, and
good person will help him.
EXPERIMENT
Baby is Dead.
Baby is dead Throe little
words. dainty
form, still and cold, by
mother's arms to-night. Eyes that
yesterday were bright and blue as
skies of June, dropped to-night
beneath white lids that no voice
can ever raise again- Two soft
hands, whose leaf fingers
wore wont to wander lovingly
around mother's neck and face,
loosely holding white buds, quiet-
folded in confined rest- Soft
lips, yesterday rippling with
laughter, sweet as woodland brook
falls, gay as a trill of forest bird,
to-night unresponsive to kiss or
call of love-
A silent patter of
by feet forever cradle-
bed unpressed. Little shoes half
knots of blue to match those eyes
of yesterday, folded with aching
heart away.
A mother's groping touch in
uneasy slumber for the fair head
that shall never rest upon her
om again. The low sob, the bit-
tear, as broken dreams awake
to sad reality. The hopes of
years wrecked, like fair ships
that suddenly go down in sight of
land.
The watching of other babies,
dimpled, laughing, strong, and
this one gone The present ago-
of grief, the future emptiness
of all held in these three
little words, is dead
Indeed, it is well that we can
soon forgot the words so freight-
ed with woe. And yet it can not
harm us now and then to give a
thought to those for whom
our careless pen stroke of
paring such weight of grief
Weldon News
Advice for Young and Old.
Profane swearing is
Vulgar language is disgust-
Loud is impolite-
is offensive.
Tattling is mean. Telling lies is
contemptible. Slandering is
devilish- Ignorance is disgrace-
and laziness is shameful-
Avoid all the above vices and
aim at usefulness- This is the
road in which to become
table. Walk in it. Never
ashamed of honest labor. Pride
is a vice. Never
act the part of a hypocrite. Keep
in good company. Speak the
truth at all times. Never be dis-
but persevere and
mountains will become mole
hills.
The Indianapolis Journal says
would like to see more colored
men in Congress, whereupon the
Washington Post asks why the
Republicans do not be
n the good work. The query
a pertinent one, but the implied
will hardly be acted
upon- Tho Journal would doubt
less like to colored Congress-
men from the South, but when it
comes to Indiana and the North,
it is an entirely different thing
Weldon News.
it
At N. O., Some
of Its Work.
i- in-, Bearing
New
III
-1,11. I Hill.
Th Station
The standing- offer is made to send
the bulletins of the station to all In the
state who really to receive them.
Thousands of farmers already
taken advantage of this offer. Unless
you really want to be by
please do not apply for them. If
you desire to read them, write on postal
card to Dr. II. B. Director. Ra-
N. C.
K.
The botany of the mulberries is much
mixed. They all belong to the genus
except the tree known as the
or paper mulberry, which is a
This is seldom
found batting here as the vast major-
of those grown on the
or male the
Chinese silk worm mulberry--caused a
great excitement in this country fifty
years or ago, with a craze
over silk this species
diaries Downing raised the variety
known as ever-bearing,
which produces a large and very good
fruit, but as it lacks in the
north is now grown only in the south.
There are three classes of
the white, black and red, but
sport greatly, for white mulberries
give black fruit. A specie
the mulberry,
Is largely used for hedging in the
northwest. There have been many-
varieties rained from the foreign
besides that of Mr.
several from our native red mulberry.
The most promising of these native
aorta is the Hick's This
variety was first introduced Mr.
of Macon, Georgia, a tree for
furnishing cheap and abundant hog
food in summer. It is a very profuse
and continuous bearer for three to four
months, and is as valuable for chickens
as for hogs.
is that the Stubbs mulberry,
which was sent to Mr. the
nurseryman of Augusta. Ga., by Colo-
John M. Stubbs, of Dublin,
is the most prolific of all. even exceed-
the Hicks. It produces fruit jet
black and fully two inches long, and
is very good table fruit. Mulberries
are easily grown in the south from ripe
cuttings a foot long set in the ground
full length in the fall. An orchard of
the Hick's or the Stubbs will be found
u profitable adjunct to every southern
farm providing succulent food for hogs
and poultry until the pea fields are
the sweet potatoes
F. Horticulturist,
C. Experiment Station.
Three Koran Plants For Sandy Moll.
Among the plants suitable for very
sandy soils, the three best
plants are
and
Bulla,
SPOUT, belongs to the pink
which includes besides the gar-
den pinks the very common weeds,
chick weed, mouse ear and
wort. From an economic standpoint,
family i far from
and is the only genus
which has been found of use as a forage
plant. Animals refuse this until they
get used to it, and then seem to like it.
The plant is highly valued for sheep
and cow pastures on the sandy heath
lands of Holland and It is
thought to give a superior flavor to but-
and to the flesh of sheep.
has tested on a large scale on the
ban ens of northern Michigan and
is very highly recommended for that
section. It has been tried in a small
way in some of the southern states,
but with no great success. If it has
any value for the Carolinas it will
for the long leaf pine district. For
good average land some of the
will give better satisfaction.
may be sown broadcast, using
about fl pounds of seed per acre, any
time from March 1st, to September 1st.
The plant grows about inches high
Is very prolific in seeds,
seed great vitality, and the
plants break ground t days after
sowing the seed. The subsequent
growth is rapid and the plants may be
pastured in weeks or for hay
weeks after sowing tho seed. This
plant seeds so heavily and the seed has
such great vitality it is liable to become
a more troublesome weed than chick
weed in cultivated ground. It should
not lie used except on land too poor to
produce a better crop.
is a member of the great
and eminently useful pulse
the clovers, peas, beans
etc. Like all the members of this
family. is able to draw upon
the free nitrogen of the atmosphere
and hence for green manuring is
to This plant is a native
of Portugal and Is there highly esteem-
ed as a forage crop for sandy soils.
is an annual, grows about
inches high, seeds fairly well and
the herbage is easily cured for hay, and
well liked by stock. Seed may be sown
broadcast about April 1st, using lbs
per acre. The growth is much
than that of and only one crop
can lie grown in a year.
Is
also a and is a native of
Spain. The uses and value of this
are much the same as
mt it is somewhat inferior to the lat-
All three plants above described
be recommended only for very poor
Sandy hinds or no fertilizer van
be afforded. When the land will bring
a good crop of pens, or soy pees
these latter are the better plants to
grow either for forage or preen ma-
V C
Station.
Recent of the K. C. Experiment
Station, at O.
The following bulletins recently Is-
sued by the N. C. Experiment tut
will prove of interest to farmers
will sent free to those applying for
in North to others a
small charge of cents each will be
made. Apply to the director, Dr.
B. Battle, at Raleigh, N. C., for them.
cultural Topics, contained in the press
bulletins. pages. A popular
tin containing a variety of articles con-
by the Station to the press.
during the last half of the year 180- Ail
of these subjects are treated In a
way, and In language
as far as possible. About farm
are so considered.
Digestion Experiments.
pages. In order to arrive at the true
many of our common feeding
stuffs, so they can be more
and rationally fed, these actual
digestion experiments have been con-
ducted. Animals fed with the
foods and rations, the amount
of food eaten and water drank being
amount of
matters arc also ascertained
and analyzed and compared with the
analysis of tho food eaten. The differ-
in the two affords means for
mating t e quantity of materials ac-
digested and utilized by the
pages are given de-
scribing in detail the digestibility of
foods, and digestion experiments, the
terms used, the animals employed for
the test, and different rations em-
ployed. A summary of results is next
given for popular understanding. These
portions of the bulletin occupy in pages;
the relate to the de-
tails of the work and arc not sent ex-
where desired. The
grass
hay, sorghum fodder, peanut vine hay,
sorghum after Juice
is extracted from and
cotton seed meal, one year old crimson
clover hay, same hay with cotton seed
meal, cotton seed hulls and meal, with
large proportions of meal, corn silage
and cotton seed meal, corn meal,
son clover hay and corn corn and
cob meal, crimson clover hay and corn
and cob meal.
Some Leguminous
Crops and their Economic Value.
These crops have especial value
use they take out that valuable
gas from the atmosphere
and store it up in their roots to be
in their growth, and for future
crops on the same soil. When we buy
nitrogen in a fertilizer it costs us about
cents a pound it is needed by
nearly all crops. These crops get this
material for nothing. All good farmers
should therefore be sure to utilize these
natural benefactors, for they are
of great value to mankind. The
clovers, cow peas, and soy bean are the
best of these crops. Chapters are de-
voted to as of the
soil, the cultivation of leguminous
plan's for forage, and the fungous and
of The crops
tested Included, hybrid medic
or sand black medic,
kidney vetch, clover,
soft tick Bead or beggar weed, yellow
lupine, common vetch, woolly vetch,
hairy improved flat pea,
false vetch, goober pea, giant white
clover, red clover, clover,
clover, crimson clover. South-
cow pea Japanese
pea and Japanese bean
The best of the cow peas
are in the order named, the
or same the
black, the red ripper, tho
and the conch.
Thread Worm of Pork.
pages. A popular account of this worm
or Trichina showing its various
life stages, and how they become
to human life. All eaters of
should understand the danger and
ow it can lie averted, which is easily
done by cooking well all parts of the
meat to at least a temperature of
degrees. Pork is seldom affected in
this way, which is fortunate, but we
ought to adopt measures to prevent the
worm from getting into our system,
even when we are unconscious of its
existence in the pork we eat.
Our Common Insects.
pages. A bulletin to describe the
scientific classification of insects, so
that school children may ac-
with the various insects and
know how to distinguish between
and beneficial insects. If the
children's interest is aroused, the in-
of their parents is at the same
time secured.
Isn't This Worth Investigating
CONVINCER No.
No medicine will give
the permanent relief that
the does. In
my own case of
D a it cured me after
all else
W. R. French,
Wilmington, N. C.
CONVINCER NO.
got tired taking med-
and bought an
i two years ago. It
has done me an infinite
of good. A as well
as ever in my
Wm. E. Worth,
Wilmington, N. C. J
We solicit correspondence and will be to Information
IT IN
ATLANTIC CO. D. C.
Nitrate, of Sod Ashes.
Would there lie any less of ammonia In
nitrate of soda with bard wood
ashes lo use ill easing tor
I wish lo give the nitrate more hulk the
ashes are sooty. Tho ammonia In nitrate
In a form take It that
same harm would not follow as from
with stable manure.--0. II.
N. C.
Answered by H. n. Battle, Director. N. C
Station.
The addition of ashes to nitrate of
soda win not be objectionable. I as-
that you will wish to apply just
after mixing. There might be some
change if the mixture is allowed to
stand over some time.
A Now Potato
Several complaints have reached the
station from Columbus county concern-
the ravages of a hitherto unnoticed
insect upon growing Irish potatoes.
Mr. A. Smith, of Armour. N. C,
of these bugs
have suddenly appeared on
toes, there being an average of three
or four to each plant. They do not eat
the leaves but puncture the growing
tip causing the plant to wither and
soon die. What is it and what shall I
do for it Sir. J. II. of
the same county sends specimens and
writes in much the same strain.
The insect is
a true bug closely related to
Soldier bug-
This in-
sect is not common in this state and
has been considered beneficial because
it feeds upon thistles and occasionally
attacks the terrapin bug of the cab-
In Florida it the
Now that it changed its diet from
thistles to potatoes, it is likely to be-
come a troublesome pest.
this bug does not
the foliage it can not he poisoned
y The only remedies are
the emulsion and
The latter will prove upon the
whole most shallow
pans containing some water and film of
kerosene. Mold the pun under
he vines and jar or shake -bugs
Into it. The host time to do this Is be-
fore sun rise in the morning while the
insects are still
Entomologist. X.
Station.
Question and Replies.
The station will be glad to
questions on agricultural topics from
any on in North Carolina who may de-
sire to ask for information. Address
all questions to the C. Agricultural
Experiment station. X. C.
Replies will be written as early as
by the member of the station staff
most competent to do so. and when of
general interest, they will also appear
in those The station expect
in this way to its sphere of use-
and render immediate assist-
to practical
Uniting for Market -Onions.
DO you think I could make It per raising cab-
for of Danville. Richmond,
could t el curly enough
from Do onions pay any
better late ones f It the Prise-Taker onion
way of ml Yellow
C. S- N.
by W. F. Horticulturist,
N. V. Experiment
I doubt that you would find profit in
growing early cabbage for Rich-
or markets In your sec-
as the eastern part of the state
gets them so much earlier. Hut it will
on the rich bottom lands of tho
to grow lute fall and winter
cabbage for and the southern
market. onions, bunched, grown
in March pay than ripe ones.
The first ripe ones in tho market bring
better prices than Inter in the season
v hen the onions from the north and
west come in. The Prize-taker onion
is larger than Yellow. If you
mean by the to grow them
from sets, you will little difference
in them; but it is entirely needless to
go to the i e of sets to raise a crop
of onions, as by early sowing you can
grow as good, or better, a crop from
seed the same Sets are only
useful for fall planting to raise early
grown onions for bunching.
Remedies for .-.
Will wrapping the buss of n la
tarred paper borer
N. C.
Answered by General
gist. N. C.
Wrapping the base of trunk will pis-
vent the female borer moth from lay-
her eggs on the collar of the tree
If the paper Is wrapped
tight to keep the Insect from crawling
down between paper and bark. This
is difficult to do, an I therefore the
is not reliable. Mounding,
or use of washes mended in
of this station, are much mere
Satisfactory.
Urns For Permanent
or meadow lands that I
desire to Into permanent
Will you pl g of
grass will V- -lost suitable for and cat-
when to ed, long before stock should
be turned ca after J F. H.,
N.
Answered by F. K. Emery Agriculturist, M.
C. Experiment Station.
For permanent pasture. Kentucky
blue, red top, with white clover and
grass is the best possible com-
as one and a
half bushels per acre of the first two,
three to live pounds of one
bushel of grass seed, or cut-
ting . of the stems raked from gardens
can be used. Cut them in any feed
cutter, and and harrow
In. Eight or ten bushels of cut stems
will not be too much to sow per
i. If the land l dry enough plow and
sow to cow peas. Turn down the pea
vines as soon as they are ripe and sow
the seed ; may be sown. too. If de-
sired and this will shorten the time to
turning on stock. If land is In good
condition it could be sown without the
aid of the pea vines in dog
the assurance of a good stand of plants.
ma be turned on only after
the plants have made growth enough
to well cover the ground the turf is
firm enough to support the animals
without much Injury. Too early
zing will work a Injury to
the posture. Ratter wait till the
begins to head the growth Is
very .,
Clover, Timothy, Grass.
tam anxious to sow some wrasses and
on my In county this full and write
tor some Information. When Is the lust time
crimson clover, and how per acre
ought lo piano d I crass need
sowed It will mat ire at tin-
tune I If so. what kind of
Is best to apply nail how much per acre for
of this crop Is It to
nut the fertilizer under, or us a lop dressing
have u piece of deep thickly et In Ber-
I la sow. will It Interfere
with of the or clover
When Timothy lo be and how
much per acre What kind of seed or
clover Is best to sow It J. H. K.
ton. N. C.
Answered by E. Emery,
N. C. Station.
On moist loam or sandy land any time
In September is considered right
time to sow crimson clover. Here on
dry land it must be sown early enough
to get the benefit of the moist weather
which is ushered in by dog days. In
general whenever the next two or three
weeks be counted on for plenty of
moisture and Twelve to fifteen
pounds of clean seed or thirty to forty
pounds of seed in chaff i-- enough to use
per acre if well distributed, us this crop
stools heavily when it has a good
Sow on the or cover
very lightly. Few grasses can
with crimson clover. Common rye. or
even Italian rye grass may be sown
with crimson clover when the design Is
to cut for green food or hay. These
can about keep pace with the clover.
We would use one half bushel of rye
one bushel Italian rye grass per acre
with eight to twelve pounds of the
seed.
Clover finds Its own nitrogen by ex-
traction from the atmosphere aided by-
peculiar microbes of the soil hence only
phosphates and potash, or lime to set
these free in the soil would be needed.
The needs of the particular soil should
be consulted as to the element it lacks
which is needed to produce a bountiful
crop of clover. Hence trials of potash,
and the two combined would
e In order wherever it is desirable to
use chemicals for this crop. Amounts
should be varied, too, as what would be
a profitable amount for one field or
farm might prove too little or too much
for those adjoining. We would broad-
cast before or after the harrow at seed-
or use as a top dressing a little la-
Bermuda grass will smother out some
of the grasses but the soil bearing it
will probably be your best place for
Timothy. For ordinary sowing, or-
chard grass is hardy and a rank grow-
and will beat Timothy, but it gets
if not cut early and has not so
good a reputation for hay, although
properly handled equally as good
or better and of the some
It is one to three weeks earlier than
Timothy. Sow two bushels per acre,
and with it two bushels Kentucky
grass and six pound common red
clover. Of Timothy eight to ten pounds
of seed with six to eight pounds of pea
vine clover would be fair seeding on
the Bermuda grass soil. Where the
Bermuda is absent we would odd four
or five pounds of white clover seed, or
two bushels of meadow foxtail, to fur-
aftermath to protect the Timothy
bulbs from the sun, otherwise ft
would be in danger of destruction
after first mowing. It would
well to grow a crop of pea vines
this summer to plow In for the
grass Plow turning the
vines under nearly or Quito
all harrow to a seed without
disturbing the vines sow the tend
then whether August or us lute as
A Clincher.
Tho News tolls
this Years an old Hard-
shell who lived on tho
border in the days when the In-
wore at war with tho whites
was making preparations
morning to go to bin church miles
away, through a county
with savages. He carefully
an old flint-lock rifle to
take a friend
you going to
gun along, old man Don't
you know that if it is foreordain-
ed for the Indians to kill you, that
the gun won't save you V
very said the old
man, an he rammed
tho ball home, it is
foreordained that the Indian shall
be killed Now, how would the
good Lord carry out his purpose
if I did not have my gun along
the debate and there.
In the convention of yesterday
tho Italian hand of Marion
Butler could be seen in its
action. It had all been planned
and outlined by him,
had been arranged, the
platform and resolutions written
and ovary appointed
hand- Never wan political
machinery morn complete or a
convention morn absolutely under
the control of man. Once or
twice there near a
revolt, bat that was
ever upon tho that
determined and voice
tumult
obedience. Surely of all the
bosses Butler is tho and
of all machine ridden in
the world tho Populists the
Carolinian.
is a law in this winch
makes it a for any
one to got off or on a moving train.
It is a good should
enforced. Nothing is hoard
of it, however, an few
know that it is on tho
statute books. under-
stood that years ago tho gt-
ting trains became such
a nuisance and at New-
born that this law was called in-
to requisition.
of prominent, wore
punished under it, tho
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Our on R
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departures ate to go
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ft


Title
Eastern reflector, 8 August 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 08, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17705
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