Eastern reflector, 17 July 1895






TH
JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all
in this line
NEATLY,
and
IN BEST STYLE.
The Eastern Reflector
You Need
WHICHARD, Editor Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance.
The Reflector this rear
It will give the news
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best VOL. XIV.
of Stationery.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JULY 1895.
NO.
every week for
a year ,
NEWS.
WEATHER WISE
A SURE WAY TO
Tie Judge and the
Last Saturday there was over The following specimens of The way to mike your town a The old fable of lawyers
1.200 of North folks lore are from the late Gen. j blessing to yourself Bad every and the oyster, in which the
con. at waiting for W. mi's of else and finest and of an oyster being eon
Weather interesting live
If the ball loads the van go- it. talk
Great swarms Lents have
made their appearance Ca-
Their cries can
be heard for miles.
It is the peculiarity of the nag-
t enormously
a city while others with equally I everything, even if she
is to tested. lawyers ate the oyster Rood remain
, , . t i I on the part of a
go- it. talk it no. write it up. aid shall to earth the lit fa in the one ease I is annoying, as it i in
to pasture, be ex-help improve it, its i litigant, is matched by a story of ere man of push and energy who any one, hut it is not a crime- A
Take Hint From
Nagging Wives.
An wants to know
what u ekes one town grow
incl money to improve the
They erect substantial buildings,
parted. products, a which a now
The point to which a of its men. and paper relates as entire
turns and washes her if Von can't say something tic.
shows direction say If you have In a city of Poland, this paper organize stock companies, and
ID and U new, which the wind will blow. means invest in em I says, two men into court establish factories, work for pub
S Storm threatens, if cat ploy somebody, be a hustler- Be, with a suit over the ownership lie use every
tie go under trees it will a sure and be courteous to all vis-j of an umbrella which bad been means their power to induce
shower; if they continue to feed so teat they mar leave our j left in a restaurant. Each one people to locate in their town.
built in Charlotte
the Bra of
The e Republican
are not afraid to spend their time stream of scolding last
three or fear hours, over the
failure to post a letter will cause
man to consider the effect
disproportionate to the cause. If HOW H. K. II. DRESSES.
the be healthy, if he is
Highest of all in Leavening Report
Baking
Absolutely pure
m leavening
since
Club
. . gave
notice that no need apply
i fusing ti admit to member-
ship ii a i, i i
Mr who owned that
which one night in 1871
kick
over a lamp and started
i; J blaze in
probably ; .-. Mimed a impression, j introduced evidence to prove that
Always be ready to encourage the umbrella was his.
cows fail their milk, ex- and support new industries at-d Being unable to match the
poet stormy and cold weather- you will be by a pros- of Solomon by dividing the
When cows bellow in the oven porous and go ahead town. Ex them, the judge
expect snow that night tend a hearty welcome and en- the case. Pending
Texas, cattle hasten to courage all who its, the umbrella was
go, d city a few days I timber, a eating among you as it takes left in the judge's private room.
When stops and shakes to make a town- Never fail Liter, as he left the court to
is bad weather be- to have a good word to say for j go home, the judge
Sir. Waiter ii. Page, one of f lot
. conn- hind her
a id native ; this Star-, baa j If a dog howls when some one
resigned the of the leaves the house it indicates rain.
The- Ml the advantages of their
town they chance to be,
they write about it every letter,
they send their homo paper to
every relative, a friend
comes to visit at their homo they
treat him with such kindness that
he falls love with and
the at Sun.
the man who up the moat the weather was rainy. Ho went I
buildings your town o comes back to his room, took the
Out.
the marriage of Brooke
F . a .
w. q go ab rat with sacks
fifty J
is the oldest expect a-north-
the order of Odd
Allows He has If swine and grout
of the order for if they and jock up
ea a. will be much
Kind- Be proverb,
i thousand j V-
and gen-; Buzzards high indicate
era, i was It ;.,.,; solitary
by fir, in storage warehouse in .
C tag last night. . ,. is
L I Concord, of foul weather, hat if crows
and Bee what cotton in pairs, expect tine weather-
will do where enterprise I Owls hooting indicate rain. If
and back op. they scream in weather it
on will change to fair.
n ,, . . , Parrots whistling indicates rain,
in says when he . , . ., .
marries people he never makes Parrots and canaries dress their
the woman p to the feathers and are
fur he r.-s in- will .- p.
l. nu i. i ti II i iii. Many
. in a man
Similarly, ; y-
a -1-i is at n -i. -i
i w eh i, , in m widely I mitten
S. chairman of the
. , ,
r-s ,. i i i
the Club, New York,
an
auctioneer to let the public
, invites committed
,, c a
was at about a c .
ii the money question on
distinctive propositions to
Lightning a cow, com- agreed upon, and to be earned on
animal, in in.
recently. t.-,
is far ahead i the Jersey would suggest that not more
down the largos, amount of in litigation, and
cash to help along a spread his head on Hiss Fanny
boom or a big day, which is at- street.
ways a blessing to our business On hi i way home he went into
men. Above all don't kick about; restaurant, and the umbrella
necessary improvements the rack; and when ho was
at Kirkwood, Ga., yesterday, a
contract made -I years ago was
fulfilled. When the two were in-
their mothers plighted
them. Mrs. eave a deed
cause it doesn't happen to ; ready to leave the place, ho j for her daughter to the
you as much or more that it had taken DOV- The children did not
does anybody else. L t the away by some customer.
the town be highest Then he bought another
you will and took it. to his court Each knew of the contract and
not cursed with a highly nervous
organization, what happens V The
first thing is that any love he may
have ever had for his dies,
drowned in the flood of words.
Having murdered his for her,
the wife keeps up the nagging ;
he speedily begins to look on her
as being a nuisance from this to
Tho Wonderful Outfit of the
Wales Described.
The Greenville tobacco market
will open regularly for the sea
son on the 1st of August. The
Tarboro market will open
4th.
no a Grew Money
Ills Tailors Much of It I. for
Uniform, of Which Ho
Una Many.
In a chatty article on the prince of
dislike and then to positive ha
trod is not a long journey- If and his clothes, a
there be children, the husband s Saturday Journal As
may to live with her for
their sake, but it is an awful home
which to bring up children.
The man quickly learns that he
has his physical Strength some
thing in which he claim sane
Re may not actually beat
her, because the restraining in-
of Ins have not
lost their hold on him.
it would be bettor for her if he
did, for physical fear of a whip
a matter of fact the Gentle-
man in does spend a great
deal of money with his tailors. It
should be remembered, nevertheless,
that much of this is for uniforms.
The prince is popularly supposed to
possess seventy military uniforms,
this is about accurate.
When we remember that a cavalry
outfit may cost as a low
mate, and subalterns entering
a line rarely with a
be liked and honored
whole community and your name
will never die. bur live long after
you arc I and g me-
Deafness -urea-
loom- the case proceeded to fall in love
the confronted with
it, and neither was able to identify aM
it as ids own. Tho court there
upon fined them both for
mg the law frivolous pretext, The reveals the
How Plies or. Window Panes.
n r,. w only one tenure and decidedly f V u i .
mid is by constitutional of gravity by
lie i- by an
the lining the
When this tube
you
hearing, and when it i en-
s is the result,
unless can be
of the taken out and this lube restored to its
i i f.,.,. u, will ,. ,
. ,,,,.,, of ten buggy, and
Sou. Charles are caused by catarrh, is III drive yon to e
An Omaha real estate story done, buck on
Magazine relates that a
farmer into town, called at
made up of two
pads covered fine, short hair,
an agent s office, and said that each pad a hook above
wanted to his farm for some it. Behind each pad is a
city lute the dealer
which ii- says
The
school to th
was
month.
Ins but Inflamed condition the
inn
We will I
any case by
Hut lie
Cure. f circular.
f. . Toledo, O.
Sold by Druggists,
No Use to Worry.
ill lie
hues
tor, s.
some of the
the
paved streets, cement
sidewalks, electric light and shade
They drove an several
miles, getting pretty out into
The horse
went and his to still fast
as he the
beauty of the the
of the location, its
to turn back the of t re ocean , . .
with a shovel ms to to over-
trouble and menus of
What good is accomplished by
We might as well try
I filled with liquid winch o z out
win,, the puts his foot down.
The which is pressed net
is very small indeed,
taken altogether it is amply
sufficient to bold the insect ;
I position he L mis
A North
Col A. E. Co. of San
is about to become the possessor
of an immense through a
North Carolina grant His
attorneys. Senator Thomas J.
ping might be sufficient to make I lower disbursement than or
her control herself. While ho the amount that the prince's
may not lift his finger to her, he forms has cost him is easily to be
will invariably become brutal. i
such a contest the woman has col The prince, of course, possesses,
chance- H; may not be, he prob- for the most part, colonel's uniforms,
ably is not, aide to give tho but as afield marshal he is compelled
pier like tin list of sarcasm which j often to renew terribly
outfit suited to that rank.
so easily to her, but lie can
bludgeon of abuse and
pi of an with terrible effect The
nervous constitution tho woman
has created herself by nag-
itself lenders her powerless
before this of her
band. Such a family is hell on
Cyrus in North
Many People Hurt.
variety, whether it's in a five or lass the three on a by fretting over them- Went all I the made
or just around, j to the die- times cannot control our thoughts U, i
loose- be held at such time they are liable to run in
gloomy channels, 1st us do our
Atlantic City. N. J. July
frightful accident
the Elks festivities at
the Inlet Casino to-night,
which a luge number of per
sons sustained terrible injuries
from which some will die.
It was at o'clock when
the Grind Exalted Ruler of the
Buffalo body. Mead-
of had
his address at the opening
of of the Bibs
and was about to introduce J.
t. Armstrong, of New York,
when a crashing sound
heard. A moment later
and it is in this One tunic that
he appears at most military
and at royal weddings, or other
great occasions of slate. In
he possesses many naval
forms and the dress of a large
of German, Russian and Austrian
regiments.
Putting aside the question of
forms, upon which his royal high-
cannot spend less than three or
four hundred pounds a year, we
come to his ordinary dress. It is
admitted universally that very few
men in town manage things with
more taste or have a quicker eye for
good cloth. There are youths, no
doubt, bills are far
larger than the prince's, for he is by
no means extravagant, although
exceedingly particular about his
lies.
Nor does he, says the writer, pay
absurdly fancy prices, us many
suppose, being charged the usual
rate of a west end house. This
morns that a frock coat cost
him twelve guineas, which most
pi,, would regard as very
LOCAL DIRECTORY.
COUNTY OFFICERS.
Superior E. a.
Sheriff, K. King.
Register of Deeds, W. M. King.
Treasurer, J. L. Little.
Coroner, Dr. C. f
Surveyor,
Fleming. T. K. I
Smith and S. Jones.
Sept Health, Dr. H. Bagwell,
County J. W. Smith.
Examiner of
W. ii.
TOWN
Mayor, Ola Forbes.
Clerk, C. C. Forbes.
Treasurer, W. T. Godwin.
W. Perkins, Fred.
Cox, asst; J. Murphy, night.
II. Smith. IV.
W. T. Godwin. T, A.
Jenkins.
CHURCHES.
Services every Sunday
morning and Prayer
m cling night. Rev. M.
pastor. Sunday School at
A. M. U.
No regular services.
Services every fourth Sun-
day morning and Rev. A,
U Rector, Sunday
A. W. U.
Methodist. Services every Sunday
morning light. Prayer meeting
ti. F. Smith,
Sunday at M. A.
B.
Services Island
meeting Tuesday night Rev. Archie
pastor. v School at
A.
., , . ,. .- , ., ,, v
vis C floor, upon which there a dress suit somewhere Covenant Lodge No. 17.1. O. O, r.,
O. F. South Carolina I almost a thousand people slow about fifteen, trousers four guineas, ,.,.,, N .
have notified him l this effect.
The which is in the vicinity
f is about twenty miles
and miles wide
loaned in i nth day
at trifle over ha f of one par
pent, and yet there that city
over a
who daily look the
face
A small colored boy named
u it of his
cut the other day. says the
certainty
rapid in tin of the The land,
best, but we can brave trouble the middle j was granted to I'd
Should this meet better than we generally do if of his oration when he by
y up approval I would suggest a
f place as may upon.
opened, and the mass of end an ordinary suit from
inanity was precipitated to Hie eight tn ten guineas.
only make an effort. asked his companion, hire did . III in 1775-
shortens life, so claim those who j yon say your farm
have given metaphysical subjects the other answered, passed it I incendiary.
much study. maps itself ; coming here. It's about two
our faces, we go among our nearer named Edward Watson
Te . Sunday
there. Be cheerful you will, ; the of a colored
notice the faces of all about re- A new telephone line that will on the of in-
Atkinson shows in fleeting brightness; be sad nearly cover the State, has been being in
mealing to agree upon the
and the
under which tho discussion
shall be
One of Hard Times
with dam shell, thrown Ian article in Harper's Weekly you will sec faces of The president of the
by colored boy The eye tat the deficit in the revenues of with whom you associate, is E- A Carr, of
was broken so that it ran out.
J. Morrison k Son
and a party at ate ship
first floor, a distance of
feet. Men. women and
were into the
hole and upon one another. The
cries, and groans were
defending, the direst
Au alarm was
sent out, and all the
responded. The
work of extracting tho injured
proceeded rapidly, and by 1-
they had all been re-
moved to the hospitals their
hotels.
the government was caused by like, cast back a gloomy shadow Durham, who is president of the
extravagant expenditures. Under will not help you Norfolk, Durham
Cleveland's term the cost way, is sure to magnify
government was a head i your trouble.
That is to say that there worn Bern ember the sun for
out of North annually you as all God's
Wellington every days- for the support of the tares, the flowers, the company, is one of the
a car load of chickens to
some of the Brew ha
j scourged
Sheriff Ho of conn- I Dispatch
Company. Col. S. Carr, came down last night after him.
Durham, is secretary and treas-
and Mr. W. Watts,
To Pt Horses brim Balking.
To tho Editor of tho Richmond
of Durham, of the American To-
are sever all colored,
arrest awaiting trial for
the
I have a remedy for bilking
horses which is as as it is
sure, and that it would be
A oar load is about j Federal government, since landscape all , The other
same to of your
of which go from Statesville and
from
At a church meeting recently
the cost has increased of nature are for you,
under the act and big should yon
why Darned above are also directors,
worry even though along with Dr. P, D- and
appropriations. The big you must boar trials Always Mr. dames E. Walker, of Mary
Local
I give it to as n-
Whoa the horse refuses
to pull do strike him a link
made by the last Congress was in remember but for adversity we
near Chicago the question was not reducing the tariff, more than would not know and enjoy the
, , , lit did cutting down greater blessings of
whether a slippery No
of the congregation had re- i can be prosperous with such an
A brother lawyer answer outgo of When a man has to cur of wire
--i think unless it's in his and .,
x lie busiest men
Mrs. M. easiest
county, is the mother of do
of whom are living, by
she grand-children, o with the successful
whom are living, great men J
The annual mo Hang of bU ,, m
North Carol ma Local j of rub ii in his
land.
About one hundred thousand I i
dollars will be invested in build-Conference meets August to ,,,
Jon j th. seat of your vehicle,
on Messenger that three. tabernacle is one out from
speak to him or draw the reins I
When in town the frock coat is In-
variably worn by prince. No
doubt during London season ho
consumes a large number of these
two a month, of
which one will be a light gray.
And it is a habit of his never to
wear a coat two seasons running,
even if it has been used only two or
three times by him. As he is in
town perhaps six months in i he year,
his total of be set
down roughly at twelve.
in dress suits he is supposed to be
particularly extravagant, but this
IS not really the case. Any man
about has live or six dress
suits a year. The prince may have
a dozen, but the story told in a con-
temporary recently that he had one.
a week is pure nonsense.
When the prince is going to New-
market he often wears a suit
with light covert over it. In
suits, perhaps, his total would as-
the humble man who pays his
tailor a year and considers that
heavy.
It i. certain that he never wears
one of these suits more than two or
three times, and his stock of them
is tremendous. Of shooting suits
or the autumn he has an
Lodge A. A.
M. ii eels first third Monday
W. M. King. W. M
ants
T,.
DENTIST, V
K.
DR. H. A.
DENTIST,
i will be embraced in Ion
they forgot the free advertising
are and the lo-
, , cal paper gets it where tho
their busiest moments best the neck-
general is to fa- ; should be rep-
bum- in the local paper, if
age is years.
The
rates.
t has been the
to th
work between Wilmington
at Sun.
David Scott has somewhat of a
curiosity his place on
Gaston. Some months ago he
his mouth as he goes.
S.
As In a Book.
issuing worth of clothing fey .
to the State Guard, just their own business studying
from government
the various companies
the State Guard. There are
now thirty companies, with
plication from thirty others.
A recent of the
Army in Seattle. Wash-, gave
those of others. Keep apace with
the times and people by
Bun.
The dowager empress of China has
I sawed off a limb of apple tree bad a romantic history-. She was an
Sawed The House in Halves. j fa , girl. the
An interesting and little ; When it bloomed. H the spring a of poor parents who lived
squabble between two colored
between
families is reported Raleigh.
In the suburbs of Canton. When
Thousands of bushels of
toes are rotting on the vines in Burton and James Johnson
Some people have more Florida, for want of canneries to their
than character.
preserve them, winter different ends of the
Many a man s religion is be buying The wives of tho two men
lag more a set- of notions. ; from the North I wore continually fussing, so that I
a startling proof of the genuine- the rate of about o. t , the f
i i;. .-,,., m. i i i . . i to a for them. That's a lighting. here no Mr. Walter Fender
There is a good deal of religion
that never came
was
Mrs. E. of Chicago
wants a divorce because her
having sixteen yet to
i x l in this world
serve in the Leavenworth, Kan-, Christ
penitentiary, and that he was , The the band finds it cheaper to move
ready to go back to jail. A few j but than to pay rent,, and for that
days ago a guard from the who wants the most- moves so often that his
arrived Seattle, There is more Help an ounce wife hasn't time to get things
th converted convict, and . of encouragement than there is j straightened out in one house be-
took him back, really rejoicing, j in a ton of good .
the men, and get
, i ,. , ii mi i there night in time to get
ed the house in halves. The the to him to
lot was divided off in equal pro I Horses buggies won't do
and one half of tho house time South
was put lot and Hi i other
half tho other lot. A fence
divides them and there is once
more peace in the and
Hinton families.
, . , . , in the of i an ton.
Single bloom appeared in the, m knew-
enter of the limb, which was . K persuaded
about three or four in cir- her to sell her as a slave.
He kept an eye on ; She by a renowned
it and now there is a large i general, who, delighted with
there, to all appearances j beauty, and general elev-
as sound as on tho tree era adopted and educated her as
his daughter. When later the gen-
was summon- d to Peking, he
could thick of no liner gift to offer
his sovereign than his daughter.
The em found her so charm log
that be her hi i wife. When her
husband In 1881, this slave-
empress became regent, tin
emperor being only seven years old.
She found China crippled by debt and
, torn by internal rebellions, yet live
The manufacturers ago, when over the
are haling the biggest business governing power to her son, peace
of any enterprise in our midst; prosperity feigned throughout
just now. the vast Tribune
known fact that the prince has three
a fortnight, also buying a
number of bowler and square black
bats for country use.
At there is a hat-
room with a man whose chief duty
It is to keep the prince's In a
high condition of polish. In tho
Same palace a number of vast ward-
robes contain the bulk the
forms and clothes which arc not In
regular use.
Those large scarfs which are now
worn with a frock coat often cost
half a guinea. There arc scores of
up-to-date youths who have fifty
pairs of gloves per annum; three
dozen shirts would regarded
absolute minimum. So far as the
is concerned, ho never wear
a pair of gloves twice, and In this,
and in the matter of boots, he Is
questionably the. best dressed man
the kingdom,
I he Largest
The largest Bible in the world is
a manuscript Hebrew In the
Vatican, weighing three hundred and
Meaty
O.
upstairs overS. K. Pander A
Hardware store.
i as. k. moors. i. i. Moons,
Greenville
N. O.
under Opera House. Third St.
V O.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
ti E EN V I L L y t.
Practice all Collections a
B.
Attorney
Till
all the Court
Solicited.
Makes special of fraud
actions to recover land, mid col-
Prompt and careful attention
a business.
Honey to loan on approved security.
Terms easy.
J. II. BLOUNT. J. I-
n.
Practice in all the Courts.
L. C. LATHAM.
VI II
. i i; k.
V j AW,
N.
J. b.
ii.
K. Woodard. F. C.
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. P.
Greenville, S.
Special attention given to collection
and settle went of claim.





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
Entered at the e at Greenville
K. C, u m i matter.
JULY 17th, 1895.
Pattie E. B. Arrington ; The in the case of the
and the printers of her paper J Water Works in Raleigh de- ;
styled, Doc have tided that the is a
been presented in Wake nuisance and must be removed.
Court for libel against They stood to all night,
ex-Judge Whitaker, and in an i bat next morning agreed and
other case for libel against the brought in a verdict accord-
late Chief Justice, W. N. An appeal will be taken.
Smith- j Supreme Court confirms
The language used in the pa- the decision of the lower court
per m reference to judge Whilst will be quite a hardship to
was as
The case against Mrs.
D. IS- Arrington for libel has
been continued until next Jan- doubt my son we all
nary. She will plead her own know you like anything on
i God's green earth called money,
case and promises some start- h every
ling evidence. I way, but the greatest proof was
when you robbed, yes, stole,
the company. It is estimated
that it will cost at least
to remove and put in new ma-
besides an additional
yearly cost of or
B. A. Mil liken, the private
Secretary of Senator Harris, of
Tho Revenue Act passed by the j thirteen hundred dollars
is and the State me, your client, by deception
to be l y and false statements, and then Tennessee, entered the house of
of iSL t. an order paying rt Judge Philips, of Washington,
more
fund
that it nave ten per
the Act of a
Thus it turns out that tho Leg I man against the Arrington es-
that talked much
about public nothings following forms the
for tut destroy in ft large I sis for the for libel
The Tobacco Department
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse-
MAKING
There will be quite a number of sticking a vertically I the approaches from the other
measure their usefulness by
the Board of Education
and Superintendent.
It is said that
for a big silver meeting at
ton on the 7th of August are
being made. Hon. A. M. Wad-
d-11, Maj. W. A. Guthrie and
Senators Pritchard and Butler
have been invited to speak.
Col- Waddell has not as yet
accepted and we predict that
he will not be caught in the
trap of speaking at a third
patty meeting under the name
of a Silver Assemblage. The
plan will not work though it
it being pushed by Senator
Fowler.
There some jut
at present as to whether the act
levy-me the taxes for the State
ever ratified The machinery
act which provides for tho col-
of the taxes has been the
ratifying clause, but it is said that
it fails to appear after the Rev-
Act- The public printer has
the ratifying clause after this act
too but it is said that he pot it
there and not the Legislature.
Secretary of State is quoted
as saying that the original act
wants the ratifying clause. The
in it will be looked at
once. Mr. Coke has taken steps
to get the original draft of the
act. If the ratifying is not there
the validity of the act will be
at once and if the Supreme
Court should decide that the act
is of no effect without this clause.
no State be d.
It is said that the Court has
ready decided that tho ratifying
clause is necessary, and that no
act is a law without it.
against late Chief Justice.
She
does he help hold a
woman's and children's home
gotten fraud The work of
that noted Chief Justice, refer-
red to in that paper. Is
one of the honors handed down
from pap to
Mrs. Arrington is reported as
saying that this is just what
she wanted, and that when she
gets in the courts she will make
it lively for somebody and give
the newspapers something that
will make them
the 4th
the room
Gertrude,
had for some When she roused from sleep he
was standing over with a
saturated with
chloroform. He hail tried
times the day
her but she had declined to see
him because he was under the
influence of whiskey. The re-
was that he went to her
room that night as stated above.
The young lady and her sister
gave the alarm when he fled,
but and arrested.
He was taken to the station
house, and there made the
statement that he
stumbled into the room while
under the influence of whiskey
and was released upon his own
bond. He then made his es-
and has not been heard
from since. Miss Phillips is still
y sick from nervous pros
The family of Milliken
are trying to hush the matter
up with money but Judge Phil-
lips declares that he shall be
punished to the fullest
of the law. Judge Phillips is
well known in North Carolina
Brown and tho
clerks of tho Senate
of Representatives of the
last have been
by the jury in
Wake county for fraud in having
a bill, the mortgage law, enrolled
which never passed the
The presentment is in the
following
Carolina, Sup. Court,
County,
The grand jury present that J.
N. Brown, Enrolling Clerk cf the
Legislature of and S- P.
Principal Clerk of the
House of Representatives of the
Legislature of 1895, unlawfully
and violated the duties of
their respective offices by per-
a certain Act known as
the Assignment Act
being chapter of tho laws of
to enrolled m a public
law of said win u in
truth and fact said Act had
passed tho three leadings re
quired by tho Constitution
either house of said Assembly.
V. B.
foreman
in
The Durham correspondent of
the and Observer sends that
paper the following letter which
he says in being sent out from
the office of paper pub
naked in that
Circular. No. I,
or Editor the Weekly
News-
Durham, N. C
Dear Sir every baud it
can be plainly seen that the time
has come for the to act for
himself in all matters pertaining
to his social, moral, financial
and political rights, and not to
be led by a set of unscrupulous
individuals
act and
the great battles that
soon confront us. The
us race has long been
and has done nothing to assert
his independence and can never
hope to in the scale of
as long as this is the
In then gees to state that a
meeting has been held at Raleigh
and plans formulated with the
purpose in view of the advance
and union of the
along all lines so as to put them
in a position to demand
every where. The persons
to whom the circulars are ad-
dressed are urged to organize
clubs and report the names of
officers and members to Jr- James
Shepard, of this place.
It further that a big State
meeting will called to meet in
Raleigh late in September which
delegates from every county in
the State will attend.
It closes with the following
down to work and
ho to fight. The
shake oil his lethargy and
rise. For further information and
literature the secretary.
Yours for elevation and
D. Latta,
At the opening of Court in Lei-
Monday the in
the case of the Stale against
for the murder of Dr-
Payne brought in a verdict of not
guilty.
We had expected from the
as reported in the papers
that not even a jury could stifle
their consciences to bring in
of less guilty than murder
in the second and only
this from the fact, which they
might infer, that he committed
the deed in a passion, not having
cooled off from the previous
Just such verdicts as this do
more to encourage lynching than
ail of the spirit of lawlessness
which exists even in the most de
We might have thought differ-
about this trial had we been
present and heard and seen all,
but from the evidence as report-
ed we believe the universal
is that ought to
be punished and that not very
lightly. The law ought to be more
rigidly enforced in these grave
offenses- Until it is done we may
expect people to take the law into
PUBLIC SCHOOL
The Raleigh h.-
of the 9th was a splendid public
school edition of twenty four
pages. The issue continued hand-
some illustrations of most of the
prominent public school build-
in rs together with portraits of
the State's leading educators. It
also contained letters from nearly
every in the State show-
the progress of the school
work- Upon the whole the
shows great enterprise on
the part of the Sews
will do much good for the
State.
We copy below the letter writ-
ten by Prof. W. H-
County Examiner, showing the
condition of the schools in Pitt
The schools in this county are
gradually improving. The char-
of the work done, both as
to methods and matter, is good-
The teachers generally are well
qualified for their work. The
average attend the schools
during the past year has been
exceptionally good, and a large
per cent, of the children are en-
rolled in the The inter-
est in public schools is
and there is constant demand
for improvement in every par
and good progress in this
direction is being made from year
to year.
There in the now
white school districts and
for the colored race The number
enrolled in the white schools for
the past year was In the
colored schools were
The attendance the
white schools was ; in the
The length of the
term for whites is weeks; col-
weeks. Average salary
of white
Amount
to to the col-
boasts
orally comfortable. The total of
AND
week at
Hill, I went. I lots
Most all sorts
f i k Sum ho, sum
cold, sum dry as dust,
sum so wet But
dot's not mostly what I wants
talk all read-
way.
I Shanks,
lie gin me a fine de
question.
readers is
shuns ain't
Well, he had two nice
puppies tor make
myself I axed him
names.
he, was de
milk I'd so much at de
instinctive an
heap odder
stuff de speakers stop
de de people
keep com
sense.
to tell de ho
went on, tell de
Bluff, I didn't know no more
bout I did de vi-
de So I
know what do. But
sum fellers cum
told me free silver
de party and I
I listened at
got so mad
I hollered out fer free an
felt Jack I wanted go New
York tare down Wall street.
But I didn't I went home- I told
Mandy I fer free silver
I'd light fer it I got it. I
she
me not tight, sum
men she did look kinder
but, says she, I don't
but better have
reserve Gosh sot me
back put me thinking. So
I hod pups
I'd name one
see which
do
how is I
says he,
one much by
he's slow, won't
much only by sight. Kinder lazy
stuck up, too. He trees up
big tree den he lays down
bark He hates like git
his feet wet, an ain't much fer
rats an lack round
home- But den wen he barks I
know dare, I
mine wen he trees.
Now he way.
He's one home dogs.
He'll kill rats an scratch moles,
mine de gate, an bark an run
out an meet right
good on trail too. is. be
runs well, but he takes
do back track. Den he's so blast-
ed bout
have do too much
day I him
in de paster. I tusk my ax an,
went. He was ever where.
He wanted me cut ever tree in do
whole four acre piece. I called
him blamed dog an
do lack said
I.
pays b know.
success along all lines.
tobacco buyers on this market
during the coming i that
never here before-
Tobacco as a thing is
looking very well all over the
but on an average it is
the latest crop that we had
since 1890- Look out farmers for
the August worms-
Tobacco crops are now doing
fairly well- The recant have
moistened the tho. ugh-
and average tobacco is
looking a great better than
it did ten days ago-
Judging from tho of
tobacco flues that have been car-
out this summer one would
there is a very large
in tobacco acreage in
this county- There is a
increase, it is true, but
remember it has now been five
years since most of our farmers
put in their flues, by this
time they are pretty bad off for
the wear and a good man v who
are buying flues this are
replacing their old
is a great deal of com-
plaint the worm this
year. ravages have been
more destructive years, and after placing
and the strange part of it is
pieces of tobacco the same
farm have almost been by
them, while others not been
troubled at all. Wherever there
ate a good many young turkeys
the horn worm will thrive. It
would pay our farmers to take
special care and raise a good
number of turkeys each year.
get some careful boy to
train them by driving them
the lots of an evening. In a
while would not have to be
driven, but will go
is no need of worming to-
much in hot mid-day. The
worms generally go the
at that time-
Last Friday went
over to Bethel, spout the forenoon
with Mr- Z- D- and
the afternoon with him
Rev Mr. Forbes walked over to
Mr. II. C. S. Cherry's. We found
Mr. Cherry to his room, line
the result of an of the La
Grippe, two or three years ago-
Mr. Cherry says has been con-
fined almost entirely to his room
since January his health is
very feeble indeed, bat his
is as bright as a newly coined
dollar- For several terms Mr-
Cherry Pitt county in
tho lower house of the General
Assembly, that capacity
served his people well and faith-
fully, and won for himself the
highest esteem of the people of
his county. Mr. Cherry has
ways a active and in-
man as one of his
many friends we sincerely hope
that ho may be able to rebuild
his health, and be spared for
much more usefulness to himself
his county.
Richard Maury Co., Export.
era, of Va., have com
arrangements to establish
a branch at N.
C-, the business men of Wilson
purchasing the site at one thous-
and dollars and giving it to them-
There will some more
started in eastern North Ca-
before very long, and with
or two exceptions Greenville
stands a bettor chance to get them
than any other eastern market-
Let our people get themselves to-
see if these objections
net be remedied. There is
only one disadvantage in
establishing a at Green-
ville, writes a very to-
in a private letter, and
of that I am not very certain,
while every natural advantage
otherwise that could be desired,
is in favor. The dis-
advantage referred to, is the
of our climate- With the
exception of a short time, from
about the 18th of Sept- to the 28th
the time of the autumnal
the climate is just as
good for tobacco as any
market in the State- This time is
short and taken in comparison
with the superior advantages of
other markets, we think this could
be very easily adjusted.
GATHERING THE CROP-
Do not be a hurry to begin
cutting your tobacco it is
ripe, and enough fully
ripe to fill a barn- A thin
butcher or shoo well sharp-
wrapped with a soft
cloth the handle ex-
tending an inch along the blade
will do the work of cutting effect-
and be easy to the hand-
Try it- Put knives into the
of experienced cutters only, men
who know ripe tobacco, and will
plants uniform in color and
in the ground over each pile that side of bridge it to
they may be most easily found j be to mate it passable
when wanted- sticks, rived a rise in the creek-
three fourths of by one
and one fourth inches, and four
and one half feet drawn
smooth at best.
Start together two cutters and
one stick holder walking between
them- The cutter takes hold of
the plant with his left hand at the
top near where the enters
the stalk ; with his right he splits
the stalk the center
to guide the knife so a;
to sever the to within
three of the point he in-
tends to sever the stalk from the
as the knife descends
his left hand follows the slit or
opening, and when the plant is
severed from the hill, by a
movement of the left baud
the is straddled across the
j stick the hands of the ho
the stick has received about
six medium plants, if intended for
brights. it is ready to go to the
barn, either carried by hand, if
near, or hauled on a wagon, if dis-
If it is necessary to use the
prepare a bed sixteen feet
long to hold three coops or piles,
on which place tobacco as cut,
twenty or
thirty sticks of cut tobacco on
each coop, drive to tho barn to be
unloaded.
Saturday the Tobacco
Grower's met the Court- House.
Thine was a very largo at-
but just for all
to comfortable- In the absence
of Mr. J- J- Mr.
G- F- Evans, the vice-president,
presided. The subject
discussed was the roads
leading to Greenville. Some one
suggested that tho people of
Greene county who had to
their tobacco to market over the
bridge were very
to have it replied- O- L
stated that he had gone before
the County Commissioners at
their last meeting and was in-
formed by them that the lost
Legislature moved the
line making tho creek on which
the bridge is built the
Pitt and Greene
counties, and PitS county
Commissioners, would not repair
the bridge now unless the County
Commissioners of Greene, would
help. Mr- W A- Darden stated
that the bridge was all right but
the on the Greene side
was in such condition that a load
could be pulled over it and
that Mr. J. W- Dixon who was
overseer of the road would in a
days repair that pare of it.
Mr. G- T- Tyson said that the
right step in the right direction
had never taken, and if the
Association
did else except to get
i goo roads why its mis-ion
was a grand and noble
A committee wan appointed to
confer with the parties owning
the from a point tho
road near the race
course to the college and see
Mr. O- L- Joyner stated he had
thought of bringing the matter to
the attention of the Com-
missioners
Mr. W. A. the
bridge had recently been put in
repair was itself all light, but
the trouble was the approach from
tho Greene county side which
sadly needed attention.
Mr G T- Tyson said he was
triad to see the feeling that
this association to take the
public toad their protect-
wing, gave some
relative to tho of
the bridge matter bi fore
the last Legislature, cited an-
other roadway that
should be opened to save the
a great distance reaching
the market,
Mr. J. S. moved that a
committee of three, which was at
wards to up
pointed to make the proper
to secure the cooperation of tho
laud owners through whose land
this proposed road would
with power to act before the
County The chair
T. Tyson. J. W. Al
lei-. Ail ii. J- S- i is
O. L Joyner.
Mr Sugg stated he heartily
in accord with the motion and
was sure if the proper steps
t tho gentlemen interest-
ed would look at the matter
a business of view.
No business appearing
the association adjourned to meet
Saturday before 4th Sundae
July. G
E M. Pace, Vice-President-
Secretary.
J Alone In the Wood.
William who served
through the late war and was a
good soldier, who lived about
live miles North of Greensboro,
a farm, out Monday
to the woods to do some
chopping. i night lie had not
returned and his wife
aroused the neighbors and search
for him, but not until
yesterday were the
searchers About day-
light bis dead body found
beside a log which he bad
at work- There no
evidences of it is sup-
posed he died a spasm, as ho
had been subject to epilepsy for
years- Tho Record says he
about or years old.
ARE
constitution undermined by ex-
in eating, by
the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
could be towards get- ,. .
ting a right of way for a public constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
an absolute cure.
expect people to take law into roe total wen, , . .
i; Raw Jr Tit Tin. mA in tides
TOBACCO MEN IN SESSION.
The Tobacco
met at tho Court House
Greenville, July 13th, 1805, and
was called to older by G. F- Ev-
ans, Esq.,
of last meeting
read and approved-
Mr. O L- stated that
tho committee to be appointed
under the By Laws, on
he thought should be at-
tended to as time was of some
consideration in the matter of
their duties.
The chair appointed J- Bryan
Grimes. Grimesland ; J. S-
Falkland; G- T. Green-
ville ; A- Darden,
R. S- Greenville ; T.
Bland, Jr., Johnston's Mill. The
section under which they are call-
ed to act is as follows i
shall be appointed
the annual meeting in June a
committee to be known as the
on to be
composed of six members,
in different sections of the to
growing territory, whose
it shall be to observe
closely the crop condition, to note
as nearly as possible the mean
temperature and average rain-fall
The Aurora leaves
ton every night at o'clock,
arriving at Sunday morning
t T o'clock. Returning
coke Sunday afternoon t o'clock,
riving at Washington Sunday night at
Fare for the round trip
91.00
The same steamer makes a
trip leaving Washington Wednesday
mornings at o'clock, touching at Bay-
side, Aurora, and
Swan Quarter, Returning leaves
Thursday mornings at o'clock
touching at same emits. Fare for the
round trip 8.2.50.
J. A. Burgess, Gen. Mgr.
every movement, every
T idea, every transaction at
King It is the pulse of
the great business. Its vibrations an
in every department, every aisle,
on every shell. For
expended Frank Wilson returns full
value. No discrimination is made be-
tween the small purchaser or the meat,
the rich or the pour, the experienced
or the inexperienced. All have the
same advantages, and no one is given
concession, commission or discount.
I must make room for my stock and
will put prices down to a low notch so as
to clean them out. stock of Fine
must be cut down as I intend to have a beau-
line this fall and do not want to carry a
suit over. In
Cents Furnishing Goods
I have knocked the bottom clean and will
sell if you will come and look.
FRANK WILSON.
THE KING CLOTHIER.
o Farmers
I have rented the old Greenville Warehouse
and with Messrs. R. D. Evans and
A. ditcher, under the firm name of Evans
Co., will he in the warehouse business the com-
We earnestly patronage
With the best light in the State for showing your
tobacco, polite and competent assistants, plenty
of prize room, experience and ample means to
successfully conduct the business, we know we
can get as much for your tobacco as any house or
market in the State. Give us a trial and we will
try to please you. Respectfully,
L. F. EVANS. C.
TOBACCO
Flues are Now Read; for Delivery
rM BY
S. E. Pender Co.
-X-
Prices greatly reduced. Same price to all
Terms Cash.
S.
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore.
ESTABLISH
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
Joe and placed piles
Truck Barrels, Pumps
AI
All Kinds of Machinery.
KEGS S NAILS, ALL SIZES.
II Bread
Star
Slick
Ca-i-
Hunt,
Sacks
mi .
Ton Shot.
Kept
have opened at
the old
Moore store and are
prepared to furnish
you may want.
,, a. k given
live, to make of any I
age that may tho to- Putting d O
general to
and in
make a thorough at each
meeting of association, and
to make a report of any
matter arising their
observation pertaining to the
Mr- C D. upon
the subject of public roads lead-4
rag into Creon ville, and specially
and repairing
PUMPS.
All kinds of Pipe
work done and
guaranteed.
Place your orders
for Flues with ,
Greenville, N. C.
Car
Meat.
I Hay,
BO
Sugar.
l Ax
N i; H. Mills Si. 11-.
i Three Thistle
Boxes Tabasco,
nukes v. M. P. Cigarettes.
OW Va.
Ca-es
J.
N- C
OFFICE AT COURT HOUSE.
All kinds placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AGENT FOR FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF





GREAT
IN
These will be sold
CENT.
DISCOUNT
JULY FLIES.
The Reflector Has Wings, Too, and
Caught Up With These People.
Mr. J. K. Is sick.
Miss Velum Bawls is sick.
Mr. Smith is in town-
Mr. went o Halifax Mon-
day.
M. Billings is on the sick list.
Miss Bettie By inn, of Saratoga. U
visiting Mr. W. U. Parker.
Murdered His Wire.
On in Pamlico county a
colored man named Gabe Thomas
and bis wife were cut nulling.
r-Misses Lena and Mamie king, of l T. over the tackle
struck his wile on
the head with an her.
Mr, D, D. of Henderson, attempted to cover up
rho lived us is . . i.
Mr. C S. Forbes is visiting
stem.
in Kin-
who formerly lived among us
again with S. Tender Co.
The many friends of Mr. Will Blow,
of N, C, are glad to see
on the Greenville again for
a short while.
Mr. E. Us. of New York, sou of
Miss Ada is visiting at Hook-
Miss is Mrs. S.
Mr. tiny Williamson has returned to
Suffolk.
Mr. W. 1- Dudley, of Washington is
in town.
Miss Olivia is Mrs
D. S. Spain.
Miss Lucy Kan is Miss
S vis.
Dr. iV. II. Bagwell a- able to lie at
hi
Glad to see Mr. C. O. of
in town.
Mr. T. K. was to be
out thus morning.
as if city life agreed with him.
Mr. J. B. Tripp arrived
from New Orleans. It has
many years since he was in Pitt, the
place of his birth, and his friends are
glad to see him.
The editor has gone to to
attend the Press Convention. He km
and the boys in charge, who will
give folks something to
lead while he is away.
at one
Mr. Bronson who
time a member of the Reflector force,
left here Monday for Trinidad
Colorado, lie goes
We predict success for him.
voting with pleasing
crime throwing body in
the river. But will
His crime was be was
arrested at Stonewall Saturday,
and prison.
A Feast.
Monday the was gen-
remembered by Riverside
Nurseries with a basket of
toes and plums, as tine as we ever
saw. The tomatoes were huge
of them weighing ex-
seven pounds. The plums
were of the variety,
tome of them measuring fully U
diameter. know
how to grow things up at River-
side and make the best that can
found.
to locate.
He is a j
timers, ill-
Illustrious and frugal, and is bound to
Mr. J. It. Cory
residence to-day.
I into his new
Mr. W. II. White
Ga.
Mi-s Lizzie Joins
left Monday for
returned home
relatives
Mr. W. C. limes is visiting
in Sampson county.
Miss Bettie Warren is visiting her is-
at Washington.
Mr. J. R. Crow, of Goldsboro, i.- vi-it-
Mr. W. II. Cox.
Get You
Three young men town went
together to call on a lady
win wherever he may go. The afternoon. It so
wishes a host of friends follow him j ed R .
to his new . . i .
the boy a goat.
BRUNSWICK STEW. men walked
i three hats were hung the rack,
What It Takes to Make Up a out only
Sauce. j r
. . , i search the goat was discovered on
The women now wear their bus- . .
ties on their arms. the back making a meal of
use to wear them there.
Our tobacco men are all alive
making preparations for baud-
ling the coming crop.
The showers last night follow ed
by warm day makes every-
the hat.
A Na-row Escape.
the daughter of Dr.
Cheers, was suffering
a severe headache Sunday
took as she thought a
Miss Dall. of is visit- I thing look as if it is its best j dose cf bromide, but at once dis-
Mrs. L.
to make room for my
fall stock.
HE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections.
Mr- J. A- brought the
fleet watermelon to town Fri-
day-
Fob
known Pens, b J. L
Co.
say i here is more
at this time than
growing
Printers Ink Bays a business
that is not advertised can
along for i time so cm a dug
with three loss.
We notice to-day patties look-
at vacant stores which means
Greenville is to have other
to its
Mr. Charles Skinner is making
extensive repairs and
around Hotel He
will soon have it splendid con-
e that Mr. G- N. War-
of Carolina township, met
with an accident this
which one of his hands was near-
cut off.
A gentleman of some
Margie and Rosalind j enterprises the
went to Littleton t .-Jay. for Green-
Miss has returned to her
home in Washington.
Mr. and Mrs. F. M. have
returned from Tarboro,
Miss Bettie is visit
Miss
Dr. C. returned Friday
evening from Raleigh.
Mr. Z. F. has opened a
jewelry shop in
Miss Delia Marshal has returned
a visit to Greene county,
of Farmville. is
visiting Miss Florence Starkey.
Miss May Turnage and brother,
here
B. W. King and family
id home from Monday.
Mr. went to
this morning to spend a few days.
covered that through mistake she
had taken chloral. Her father at
once began efforts to relieve her.
She hail a narrow escape from
death, but by his efforts, assisted
by of Greenville,
who arrived there early next
she is said to be out of
now.
The doctors
just
A large stock of nice Furniture sheen
at the Old Brick Store.
of water in the river
now for to go through to
Bring your cotton seed to
Henry Sheppard, and buy
Meal and Hulls. Car of each
just arrived tor sale cheap.
There is hardly a section of the
town that does not show signs of
Fob well equipped
Shop. Black-
smith Shop and Wood-working
Shop, with all necessary tools and
machinery- For terms apply to
James Brown.
Greenville, i. C-, June 1895.
Almost every train brings
tobacco curers from Gran-
ville to this county.
A long row of stables are
being built near the Star Ware-
house-
The huckleberries coming in
now are tine, as large as the reg-
blues.
Tobacco Attention
We have just received a large
quantity of tobacco flue iron o-
good quality and clean. Parties
who have ordered flues from us
can get them now at any time
S. E- Co-
One of Mr. O. Hooker's prize
houses is nearly completed and
the other is well way.
The first crop of peaches did
not last long- None have been
in market in several days.
Don't abuse the town live
in. If you don't like it you can
leave you He Jail-
We very much to
that our order for flue
was misunderstood and
of what was
ordered, they sent us a heavy
iron that could not used It is
so late now that it is impossible
get it time for use this sea
sou.
O- L,
it on courteous Capt
Dave Hill, who is command of
the steamer Virginia Dare be-
tween Washington and Ocracoke,
that he out-feeds any hotel in the
whole country- That is just like
him-
Mr and Mrs. I. n. Bloom left, for
Springs this morning.
Mr. Buck Forbes has moved into tho
house recently by Mr. J. It.
Mi.-.- Martha Tyson arrived from
evening, to visit
Miss Pearl of Willow
is visiting her aunt, Mrs. B. F.
W. L. Brown is seeing as
Mayor pro tern the absence of Mayor
Forbes.
Leila is Pattie Dunn,
of I Sod, are K
Mrs. H. is. Sedge and children, of
are visiting the family of Mi.
L. II. Tender.
Mr. and Mrs. D. D. and
v en left Wednesday for Morganton to
relatives.
Tool, of who
was visiting here
home Thursday.
Mrs E. Hooker and daughters, aliases
Mamie nod returned Saturday
from Littleton.
Mr. E. T. Stewart, of Washington,
spent Sunday with Mr. A. I. Griffin.
lie returned home Monday.
Mr. F. P. Ford, who a few years ago
lived in Greenville, returned here from
Thursday to look around.
Mrs. A. L. left Thursday to
take her mother, Mrs. M. E.
to a sanitarium at N. Y .
It. W. King returned iv
evening from Goldsboro where he had
a patient to
Miss Leila of Farmville,
who has been visiting Mrs. Charles
left for Thursday
We learn that Mr. W. R. Smith,
last month went to Oxford to accept a
position, is very there with typhoid
fever.
Mrs. Margaret Tyson and her
grand daughter, of who have
been visiting relatives here, left Friday
evening.
We notice that a
ex-Gov. Jarvis
were among the latest arrivals at
the
Master Williams, the little
mute, came home Tuesday
from Baltimore where be has been at
school. He is a bright boy-
Mr. John Lucas, of has
Mr. W. Hall as foreman of
the planing mills the Greenville
Lumber Co. Mr. Hall will go on the
road.
Mrs. W. M. Baas and little daughter,
of who were visiting relatives
here, left for home Saturday. Her
sister, Mrs. Bettie Swindell,
Her home.
We were glad to so Mr. A.
of Tarboro, in town Tuesday evening.
He was for many years a prominent
merchant here. He left this morning
taking home his Miss
who was visiting Mrs S. M. Schultz.
G. F. Smith, pastor of
Ann St. Church, -lied an excellent
sermon to a large and appreciative
Sunday morning. Smith is
a growing man and his genial presence
among not only brings old and
pleasant memories, but carries a present
blessing with it It is very evident that
he has leaped the full of
old laugh grow
fort Herald.
It ms.
Bethel, N. C., July 13th,
Mr. W. J. Whitehurst to
Greenville
Dr. J. D. Bullock town
Constable M. G- Bullock went to
Tarboro to-day on business-
Mrs. S. T. Carson left this
morning for Panacea Springs to
spend a while.
Presiding Elder G A-
preached in the Methodist church
here last night.
Rev- Mr. Cotton, of
spent last night u.
Mr. Mrs- A- B. Cherry
went to Tarboro Thursday.
wore glad to see Mr. M C
S- y town several times
this week.
Messrs. Bra shipped
hundred quarts of
one day this week
Mr. M- O- showed us the
first ripe watermelon we hare
seen this season the 10th, it
weighed sixteen pounds.
Mr- A- B. Cherry left for
coke this evening to spend a few
weeks.
Tho Methodist
had an supper at the
hotel Tuesday night, which was
greatly enjoyed by all present.
The public schools and
around Bethel all open. Miss
Lizzie Mayo is leach No.
at grove one mile
out of town. Miss Maggie
son in no one mile north of
town and Mr. J, Carson is
teaching no town.
Mrs. C. A. White and Mis
Lola, Reg of Deeds V. M. King,
Mrs. King and Miss Ella, Maj. L.
Latham and Miss Louise, Mrs. Fred
Ox and little son. Misses
Forbes and Winnie Skinner, Mayor Ola
Messrs. J. J. Cherry, W. H.
Long, B. F. I. Moore, J. A.
M. Chas M.
Josh Mills and Master Ben-
f left on steamer Myers this
morning for Ocracoke. .
suggested that he thought a
good grist mill would pay here-
It is said by one who has been
there, that a boy never feels so
near heaven as when he is light
his first cigar or so near the
other place as he is finishing
it
will be in Greenville at tho
King House Thursday, August
1st, for the purpose of treating
and examine diseases the eye.
H. O- Hyatt.
Jolly Capt. Bill had
his company coat and his bright-
est smile when ho took the
large crowd for Ocracoke this
There are cleverer
men the water-
It is small things that count
the battle of live. I have seen
men get oat of an way
without any trouble, hut they
had terrible struggle to get rid
of a flea-
Mr. S- M. Schultz got every-
thing moved over to his new tore
yesterday- He looks perfectly at
home there, will soon have
his new quarters as well known
as popular as was the Old
Brick Store daring the years
be occupied it.
Did you see juvenile pa
last night by the lads of the
town It looked beautiful, There
were from fifteen to twenty-five
boys in single file with box
terns, on which every conceivable
design was cut, and covered over
with different colored tissue pa-
per, lighted with
One of the Finest.
The Pitt Rifles were in-
Monday evening by
A L Smith and passed very
There were men out
and Col. Smith was very well
pleased with them and said
were far superior to some
he inspected-
is the matter with Pitt Rifles
She's is all
Examination for the M.
There will be examination
held for scholarship in the N- C-
A- M. College the Court
House Saturday,
August 3rd, at o'clock, A- M.
Any boy in the who
wishes to enter this college can
stand the examination-
The examination will be con-
ducted by H.
Examiner for Pitt
The Concert Monday
A large and appreciative
greeted the class of orphans
from th Oxford Orphan Asylum
Monday night and well were they
paid The class is composed as
follows
Elizabeth Pitt
man, Penelope Munden, Mary
Ethel King,
Hays, Harriet
Claude Hawley. The
was as as we ever
heard, the voices
together and every in
class shows remarkable training
The bass voice of Claude
King was he could
low notes with ease. They
accompanied by Mr- N. M Law
the
one of the teachers Mr. Law
made a timely talk a
good one.
That Terrible Accident.
The presence of John Crow
in Greenville recalls tie terrible
accident with which he and Mi.
W. II. met a year ago. It is
that while were
out driving their horse away
the rivet bridge, both of
were thrown to tho ground feet
and seriously injured- Mr-
Crow entirely recovered from his
Injuries as sound as
ever, while Mr. Cox suffered
oral mouths confinement is
still a cripple.
They Keep
Ocracoke is still to the front
Two hundred twenty went
down Saturday night. Fishing is
better than ever. One young la-
went out last Friday and
caught forty eight trout.
party caught hundred
four. Dr. Pitt caught a drum
that weighed pounds beating
Col. catch by
pounds. He also caught a sheep
head that tipped at
pounds. Hotel fare is bet
as the season Those
who wish to a little recruit
pleasure fail to
net both if they will goto this de-
place- Excursion again
next Saturday leaving at
o'clock-
At Ocracoke.
Cherry came up
Ocracoke to-day to get the
excursion party ready to take
down He says there
is a nice crowd at the hotel and
Messrs Bell Harris are sustain-
their reputation for keeping
a good house. All of their
guests are supplied-
continues flue. Col.
Williamson, of Asheville, was out
Monday and at four casts of his
line caught eight at
each if he had had
more hooks his Hue there is
telling how he would
have caught- Tuesday he caught
a drum that took him min-
to land, and Wednesday he
caught another lbs
that took him minutes to land,
lie is the happiest the
the champion catcher
of big fish.
A largo crowd will go down
Saturday from Wilson, Tarboro
and Greenville.
COMPANY
Company of the State Guard.
The Pitt were
out drill Friday
a neat There
were line their new
suits cut quite a figure- The
Rifles will compare favorably
with the State
Guard. A drummer in of
the House said he had seen
a goodly number of tin coin I
panics State dull and
had none that could
this one. Capt. Smith takes
great pride his company
tho men love him. A little in- j
happened in sham battle,
at the Captain will par- to Get Hood's
us for alluding to, which
Oakley I ems,
Oakley, N.
Miss Annie Randolph If ft for
her home Friday-
Mr. G- O- Taylor and several
in rs left for Ocracoke
Messrs. H- and I. O.
went to Sun-
day.
Mr- J. E. and wife spent
Saturday
Mrs. W. R- Whichard and Miss
Ida Rogers of
Thursday here.
Mr- W. E. made a bus-
trip to Bethel
Miss Lelia of Farm-
ville is visiting the Misses Belch-
here.
Mi. Z P. Highsmith, of La
Grange, made a flying trip here
last week.
Miss Bettie Manning
home Saturday after spending
several days with Miss Mary
Highsmith.
Mr. W- J- Little
gave ice cream
last Tuesday
and brothel
supper here
S-
Only two applications tins week
to the Register of Deeds for mar-
they wore both
for colored couples.
Nervous Prostration
Could Not Sleep Had No
Appetite
Cured In Body and Mind by Hood's
Sarsaparilla
very much for a long time
with nervous prostration. I had about
given up all hopes
of ever getting bet-
when Hood's
was
mended to
me and I believe it
my duty to let
other sufferers
know the benefit I
derived from it. I
Could Not Sleep
at night, with-
, out appetite, and
. what little I did
Pa. eat I was unable to
keep on my After taking
first bottle of Hood's which
seemed to do me some good, I tried a
and continued to feel better. I
got up feeling
Bright and Refreshed
in tho morning. I continued with the
medicine and am cured, body and mind,
can sleep will and feel better In every
way. I gladly recommend Hood's
to J. Edward
Madison Ave., Allegheny, Pa.
PLAIN FACTS.
DRY GOODS.
Price. Regular Price.
Scotch Lawns
Satin Lace Stripped Mitts
Silk and Wool
Colored Dotted Swiss
Colored
Cloths
French Sateens
Dotted Swiss
Crinkled Cloths
White Goods cents up.
La Vest price.
Sec La Shoe, Butt on
HAMBURGS.
Price.
8-cent
10-cent .
15-cent
20-cent
25-cent
50-cent
Price.
. rents.
. cents.
rents.
cents.
cents.
cents.
Shirt Waists.
Our 35-cent Shirt Waist,,
Our Shirt Waist,. now
Shirt
Shirt
STRAW HATS.
Our Dollar
Our
Our
Our
styles to select from.
Shirts. Collars and Cuffs, Gauze
Underwear, and Suspenders
at panic prices.
CLOTHING.
Men, Youth and Boys must
go to make room for fall stock.
PANTS GOODS.
Our
Our 49-cent
Our
Our
Remember to ct these pi ices it takes the
Hard Cash down and don't you forget it.
Yours for business,
C. T.
WE
THE PEOPLE
Who want your trade 011-
f-f
m.
retires
will how the b.,,, stand j Pills
Greenville Collegiate
Institute.
a little behind
which tho Wilmington.
was stationed- Just
the Rifles reached it tho
arose and ad
vanned, which startled
surprised boys, but the
shrill voice of Capt. Smith was
ht-aid together don't
move county
every man, from Coot Which-
ard to Claude made a
bold other com-
Notwithstanding
the cut down
the appropriation to
the military spirit seems to
be growing, tho people are
determined that the State Guard
shall not sutler. There are Unity
companies in the State and there
are on tile thirty two applications
for tho of other com-
at various The
County recently
appropriated to the Rifles.
We wish they had made it
week gave the
company is a protection ti any
community and need
the service of a company you
it then Dotting else will
We to throw out
a The ladies of other towns
have hold held
fairs, to raise
to enable their military company
to make a creditable
and good quarters- Now
the Indies of take steps
that direction. Let
us hear from you.
Base Ball.
The following is the score of
as played by the National
League
At
Boston 15-
At
Brooklyn
At
more
At
Sew
At St. Louis Phil-
a. .
At Cincinnati. Cincinnati ,
Washington -i-
The following i- record of
the ling games
Boston,
Brooklyn,
New York,
Washington,
St. Louis,
Louisville,
H. C S. D.
A. M. Principal. With full of
Teachers. will begin
All
the Branch's, Ancient and
Languages. will be
taught by plan. Method
by a specialist in her work. Instruction
thorough. Discipline hut kind.
Terms reasonable. Art and Elocution
will lie taught, if desired. Calisthenics
free. For particulars address the
N. c.
North Carolina
OF
m m
he next session of this college Will
begin at
county .-eats first Saturday in Angus,
Young a technical
cation at an illy low cost will do
well to for a to
A. Q.
Raleigh. N. C
Jelly TUMBLERS,
Tobacco Knives.
DRY GOODS,
Shoes, Groceries
FURNITURE.
t.
Elsewhere in ibis issue
the of Greenville
Collegiate Institute, S. D. Bag
A. M-, principal, which will
open August Prof-
has formerly taught in
and conducted a school
here several years ago- He has
a great many among on;
people will welcome
return of himself family to
Save time, money and
-bills. Go where you please, I
when you please, as fast as you
please. Find pleasure, health and
economy all in one.
Rambler Bicycles are the acme of
mechanical perfection. Strong,
and reliable, with not an ounce
of useless material. Tho Rambler
the wheel for record breakers and
for pleasure seekers.
Various models, all the same price
tells all about
free, of course.
JEFFERY CO-
O. O.
The Steamship Co.
will run an from Greenville
to Ocracoke every during
Season, Steamer Myers leaves Green-
ville at A. II., and
Dare leaves Washington at
M., arriving at Ocracoke
at Sunday morning. Return-
the The Virginia Dare leaves
coke at Sunday evening,
Washington at II Sun
day Myers leaves Wash.
at o'clock Monday morning
at Fare for
the round trip from Greenville
Tickets for season.
j. J. Cherry,
We can sell very cheap.
Cull on for lowest prices on all goods.
PORTER'S
ANTISEPTIC
For Barb Wire Cuts,
Saddle and Collar Galls, Cracked Heel
Old Sores, Cuts, Boils,
Pile- and all of c
or beast. Cures Itch and Man; y
Tb K Cat ton B f ft .
t.-.
Ha prepare. keeping it
Ho Cure, Pay. mid
Ir not keep it u a Cl. i's
and we will send it to you by M I,
Paris. Tenn., h. l.
here
wild
C. Mat.
BURNED.
My baby
i other I
mil r. I. I. In a few
the till
I It t-r this t have i u
Yours,
Paris, Tann . .
Neck Male School.
he only High Grade Boarding in Boys
and Young Men.
Ex Ant Literary Societies- -Couplets Business Course.
Good barracks, healthy location, course of instruction thorough. Only the
better of patronage solicited. Session begins Our catalog
will show what education means a boy here. Semi for one.
PRINCE WILSON, Principals,
Scotland Neck, N. C.
PARIS MEDICINE CO.
ST. LOUIS,
In consequence l the removal of the Military from Fay
to the name of this Institution of learning will here,
after be known as Military Academy. The
With greater facilities, better
.-11111 and. if brighter prospects, the school
upon i's third year with every a much larger patronage and more
usefulness. The most U given in literary and
In am lies; and moral culture IN due attention.
The Third Announcement, will lie to
be-- ii plication.
Maj. J. W. Supt.,
Wilson, N. C
University of WALL PAPER.
. , ., ., I have rem.-veil my Wall to
s the I ti; t. ; t Moore and
the I aw and have of
the for Teachers, , the
m. m, I
President Winston, Chapel a mil cost. Prices us Jew as
N an I three cents a reV of
WOOTEN book on I
;. . . . ,
. . , V .





Fertilizers for Fall Crops
should contain a high percentage of Potash to
insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment
of the soil. I
Write for our a illustrated book. It
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and
will make and save you money. Address.
GERMAN KALI WORKS, Street, New York.
OLD
Hundred- or Rids I
cc in Hew York.
Not less pleasing than the sight j
of I lie n and young men
on their bicycles is the sight of the
old
NAPOLEON AND
Had Not the Faintest Idea of
Making Her His Wife.
Louis Napoleon had not the faint-
st intention of making the hand-
Lots of gray beards can I some Spanish girl his wife, either in
be seen along the uptown avenues,
wheeling a that must be ad-
mired. Two or three of them
a squad of their juniors to a
race recently, and heat them badly,
boat even the energetic damsels that
the near or remote future, nays the
North American Review. If proof
this were wanted it be
the fact of his
good as solicited the hands
royal princesses during the period
joined in the race. They sat erect, tie twelve months immediately
N. C
--------DEALER IX--------
It
Send Bullets
Quick Succession.
in
Mud., the Idea Hart No
Though Hart-
ford Men with
Their Own
MARBLE.
Wire and Iron Fencing
sold. First-class wort
and prices reasonable.
Marble Yard erected on old Dane
on the BUM Street as
ESTABLISHED 1876.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STORE
There is a wide range of work
between the making of telescopes
and of but, strangely enough.
says the Times, both re-
lit mi accomplished by the
astronomer, John Hale
before the war Mr. left
his home in and settled
I in Virginia. He was of an inventive
turn of mind, and set himself to
kinds of work that required
and thought and of
the most dogged character. Mr.
Hale produced among other things,
while lie was in Virginia, engine
that could be used in running a mill
which he The start was
made with the raw material and a
wonder, lathe. The next thing
which he set his heart was a rifle
MEi; BUT
X their year's supplies will
interest to gel our before
elsewhere. is complete j That be fired a number of tunes
all its branches. j in succession. This work was also
begun with raw material, and came
I from maker's hands an arm cap.
j able of being fired eleven times In
the cylinder system instead
of the magazine being used. In fact,
the magazine principle as origin-
developed by James P.
Lee of this city had not been
thought of when Mr. Dale's old arm
was wrought out by hand.
The rate was made in or
thereabouts. The cylinder has eleven
chambers, which were drilled in
solid steel. The nipples for the per
caps were also drilled and
bored by hand. While the rifle was
in use it was never known to miss
fire. The barrel is smooth bore,
This curious
WILMINGTON H R. K.
AND
AND FLORENCE ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
FLOUR,
RICK, TEA,
always t Lt w
TOBACCO SNUFFS CIGAR
we buy direct from
you to buy at one profit. A cot
of
FURNITURE
always sold at to suit
times. Om goods bought
sold for CASH thereto e. having no
to sell at a close margin
Respectfully.
not being much larger
than that of the old Colt revolver,
arm, which was put to-
in a primitive way,
brought north by Hale when he
left bis Virginia home at the out-
break of the war, and has been kept
in an out of the way corner until a
few days ago. It was recovered in
Mr. Hale's ransacking of the old at-
tie in bis house at the north end,
has been secured by the .-.-
A- E. Brooks, and will be
M. hereafter in the wonderful col-
of arms which he has in this
Mr. Hale, after he came to this
city, began the work with telescopes
which has made him so widely known
here. Like Dr. John who
has of the best telescopes in the j
city, made by his own hands, Mr.
Hale has made his own instruments.
Dr. began his telescope
fears while residing on Asylum
street, grinding the glass him-
self and making the entire
The idea was thought out
even when he was a medical student
at and carried into effect
after be to Hartford. It
is an interesting noteworthy
fa two in this city have
BOOTH.
i I
Dated
Ar. Mt
v. z. y,
A.
, II
VI
VI ill
got a good grip, and worked their
thews from the finger tips to the
blades, from the big toe the
ilium and even, it seemed, up to the
ribs. A determined old chap on a
bicycle can often give points to the
youngsters.
A good time for bicycling at this
Benson of the year is the early morn-
um early perhaps, as four o'clock,
when the air is cool and the weather
fair. One may start at that hour, or
five, after a solid sleep of eight
or nine hours, and after taking a
cup of a tumbler of hot
with a crust of bread, or a
hard ship cracker, or, better still, n
half of one of those little round,
and crisp crackers. It is best
not to bates a run then-
well, say a half hours for the
business of the day must be at tended
to. and one should not waste his
strength before beginning It is
far better and healthier for n
to go out soon after dawn than
sight when it is dark. A
of live or thousand wheelers.
men and women, on tho boulevard
st five or six o'clock in the morning,
would be worth at--
Wore Too Friendly.
John Ci. Whittier was greatly
loved by strangers, who not only
called on him, but thriftily insisted
on putting up with him all night.
has no bis sister.
much time spends
trying to lose these people in
streets. Sometimes he comes home
and say- sister, I hard
work to lose but I have lost
him. But I can never lose a bur.
The women are more pertinacious
than the men; don't thee thorn so.
THE LAUREL
Its Sentimental Symbolism A
Bad Romans.
lion Also at a of
Victory
In I'm Hi-.
Becky Hi
bill
It
Ar.
I v
Magnolia
Ar
-r
V. M.
. S
4-
A. N
i; 3-i
T ;
A. M
July
IS.
k x-. a
it
, produced of
i . ; wording by
A-
L.
Selma
Ar
A.
A. M.
Magnolia
V. M.
I on
SI
ax
. 1-. Al,
Wilson Ar M.
Mt Ar S
Tram on Scotland Neck
Weldon 3.40 p. Halifax 4.00
p. in., Scotland at 4.55 p
Greenville 6.37 p. Kinston 7.86
p. in. leaves 7.20
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving
Halifax at a. m., 11.20 am;
except
Trains on Branch leave
Washington a. in., arrives
8.40 p. m. 9.60; returning
leaves 4.50 p. m., Parmele 6.10,
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with;
trains on Neck Branch.
Tram N C, via Alba-j
i K. It. daily except Sun-
day, at p. Similar P. M;
arrive Plymouth M., 5.20 p.
Upturning leaves Ply mouth daily
5.30 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a ti.,
a Tarboro 10.25 and
a.
Train on Midland N C Branch
except a
m. a Ki-I
leaves a. m.; j
arrive Goldsboro,
Trains on Nashville Branch
at 4.30 p.
Nashville, i p. m-. Spring Hope 6.30,
p. Bi. Returning leaves Hope
a. m. Nashville 8.35 a. m., arrives;
t Mount a. in., daily except
Sunday.
Trains Branch, Florence R.
R. 6.50 p. arrive Dun-
bar 8.00 p. Returning leave
bar 6.30 a. in. arrive 8.00 a. m.,
Daily
Train on Branch leaves War-
saw Clinton daily, except
at no a. in. Retaining leave Clinton
at Warsaw with
line trains.
No. makes connection
at for nil points North daily, all
via and daily
Sun day via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
railroad for Norfolk daily and
ill points North Norfolk. ex
Capt Sunday.
JOHN
J. Manager.
T.
This
You every day
in the month of
July that if
you have
your Printing
at the
REFLECTOR
JOB OFFICE.
It will be done right,
It will be done in style
and it always suits.
These points are
well worth
in any sort
of work, but
all things in
The tree which is known to us
tin- name of the laurel was held in
high honor by the ancient Greeks
and Romans, says Rev. A. E.
in Golden Days. They chose it as
u reward for virtue and valor, and
it was considered the symbol of
these excellent qualities. laurel
branch was used as an instrument of
in their religious
monies. If leaves cracked loudly
when thrown into fire it was
considered a good omen, and if they
made but little noise it was the re-
verse. To secure pleasant dreams
all that was upon retiring
at night was to put a few laurel
leaves at the head of the bed.
If were planted before the
u or of a house was secure from
influences. Aside from
superstitious dependence upon the
plant It had a place in their code of
medicines. of the leaves
were specific cures for many com-
plaints, while the sap of the tree was
considered by them as an excellent
antidote for poison, and was also used
to cure-epilepsy. this use in
medicine arose the of
the of the
god of medicine, with laurel.
We are told by Juvenal that when-
ever any happy event took place It
was the custom the house
with laurel as a token of the event,
just as we now decorate our houses
with holly on day. The
laurel was especially dedicated to
Apollo consequence of the gen-
belief that it was he who
Conferred upon men the gifts of
poetry and prophecy.
fells us that one of the priests of
this god was always crowned with
laurel, and a laurel crown was the
reward for those who competed in
the games which were held in honor
of the god.
The custom of binding the brows of
conquerors with laurel was a very
ancient one It is described as ex-
at the lime of and
Romans adopted it at an early period,
using t chiefly in their triumphal
ceremonies. The victorious general
not only wore it on his forehead, but
also carried a sprig of tree his
hand. Sometimes this crown was
gold, and merely the form of
laurel.
When the messengers were dis-
patched to tell the news of a victory
laurel was placed on the points of
their javelins, in order that who
saw them might know the news they
bore.
The death of was
announced to Pompey by a Sprig of
laurel. It was also used to or-
letters and tablets contain-
news of this kind. Victorious
ships were decorated with it, as
were those about depart oil some
glorious expedition. The laurel was
placed at the stern of the vessel, be-
cause there were the tutelary gods
of the ship, and it was to these gods
that the sailors prayed when a storm
threatened to destroy them.
The laurel was also a sign of peace
and friendship. In the midst of a
light a soldier would offer it to his
enemy as a sign that ho
rendered and demanded quarter.
Lastly, the laurel was bound about
the brows of the dead who had
distinguished themselves battle
and who died victorious.
his he was
supposed not to be
simply frantically in love with Mile.
de in search of a
wife was nothing to it. The
duchess of Step, do
the I.
berg. another relative on his
and Don Francis the
husband of Isabella of Spain, were
successively but fruitlessly appealed
to by him to provide him with a
Finally, just a month be-
fore the public announcement of the
emperor betrothal to Mile. Eugenic
de he applied to Prince
for tho hand of Princess
Adelaide and a week later the queen
and Prince Albert were still discuss-
a letter from Prince
the subject.
The emperor's offer was kept
S profound secret at the time at the
urgent request of Prince
himself, who feared that the pros-
Of being empress of the French
might prove too for his
daughter, while he, her father, was
in no way fascinated by it. From
point of view the proposed union
was not desirable, he had
about tho settlement, and ob-
moreover, on the ground of
religion and morals. her-
self did not oppose the alliance,
although with a kind of prophetic
instinct she alluded feelingly to the
fate of Marie Antoinette and her
on the throne of France.
Prince Albert tried hard not to let
dislike of Louis
influence his dislike,
by the by, he shared with nearly all
the
THE REAL
An Actual Captured
and Landed.
at I
One of
the Same Variety in th
Tinny
dyspepsia men 1895 VICTOR BICYCLES.
Disordered Organs Said to,
Be a Hair Puller.
Dyspepsia is one most
common causes of I Nature
is a great, economizer when tin
nutrient elements furnished by the
blood are Insufficient to properly
rapport the she cuts
Down on T wharf, in the shop of the supply t. the I Vital,
John R. is what tin j like the hair mid the nails, that th
fishermen believe to be th heart and lung and other vital or-
only original sea is, j may be nourished. In
cases fevers this economy
When Two Virginian
The first thing two Virginians do
when th y meet is to take a mint
julep together; they next talk kin.
if are strangers to one another
the requisite is to locate and
thus identify each other. Then
take another julep. Then the wild
for relationship begins and
generally establishing
from a first to a tenth
from a marriage somewhere be-
tween and Then they
take another and the
takes this turn and goes on
nay one of the Ran-
of
but my mother was a Page.
mother was a BurwelL My
great-grandmother a Carry.
My great -grandfather, was a
My great-great grandmother was u
Washington and my great-great-
was a Ran-
of and.
Here another mint Julep
Post.
those of them who hazard any con-
on the subject at all, for
most of them simply shake their
heads and wonder in silence, says
the Boston Transcript. It was
brought in by schooner Mary
and has since been reposing
in a tub of water in Mr. loft.
It is about five and one-half feet
long, with a round, body,
surmounted for whole length by
a fin eight inches in height, ll has
an enormous toil, which thought
would give- it almost any speed. But
its chief beauty is its mouth. It
would kill a pie-eater with envy.
The jaws arc about seven inches
and the extent to which
can be opened is limited only
by the amount of room there is in
which to open it. There are three
rows of teeth, the first being about
an inch and different from any
teeth which any of the fishermen
have ever seen. They are not saw-
like a man-eating shark's, or
pointed, like a sand shark's, but arc
Mat and blade like, vary sharp at the
point, almost translucent and
flexible.
The creature was taken on a
on Le Have Bank, and made a
desperate fight before it could be got
into tho dory. The man who took it
said that, it came to the top the
water with Us tin erect Its
mouth wide open, and looking as
big as barrel. Mr. and, in-
deed a good many of tho fishermen,
are sure that this beast, or its kind
is responsible, in conjunction with
the tropical imagination of the sum-
proprietor, for most of the
sea-serpent stories. There are the
oft described mane, the big mouth
and the large, glaring eyes. As to
sue, anyone who has seen a fish
jump on a lino and then now
much smaller that same fish iced
after he had been hauled in,
how deceptive the size of a in
the water is.
you should, traveling on
the top of the said Mr. Neal,
his mouth open and about a
third of his length out of water, and
coming straight for you, you'd be
ready to swear he Mas one
feet long when you got
Mr. Neal says he has the highest
authority in the country for stating
this is an entirely now kind of
animal. Another of the same kind,
hut only about three feet long, was
taken about, years ago, and
drawings and a description were
sent to the Smithsonian institute
at Washington. These were ex-
word was sent back that
nothing of the kind had ever been
seen there before. Drawings of this
one have also been sent.
To Your Writing.
have made a discovery of value
to tho said the fat
man. and ho exhibited with pride
his right hand the ring linger
tied close up to the palm in a
string bridle which was passed
around the thumb and tied around
the waist,
see, It came this
way. The end of the finger was
sore and I wanted to keep it away
from the desk while I was writing.
It was after I tied it up that I made
my discovery, Ordinarily when I
write I have an awkward habit of
forming letters by moving my
whole hand and forearm. Since I
tied that finger up and do not
have It to band along upon
I find that I am obliged to write
with a movement of the Brat two
fingers and the thumb in the proper
It. is a great and valuable
discovery put to use
Bun.
A TROPHY.
Is particularly noticeable. A single
hair is a of history of the physic-
condition of the Individual
the time been growing, if one.
read it closely enough. Take
a hair from the beard or from
head and scrutinize it and you will
see that shows some attenuated
places, indicating that, at
period of its growth the blood sup-
ply was deficient from overwork,
anxiety or under feeding,
hair falls out when
strength of its root is insufficient
sustain Its weight any longer, and a
hair take its place unless
tho root Is diseased. For this
person has a certain
Hope.
said the sage,
hear you arc about to be
arc said the young
man.
young man, the day will
come when your wife will make tho
discovery that yon do not know
everything earth. It Will be a
great shock to her feelings and your
supremacy. Still, there is hope for
you. You. while cheerfully admit-
t-ii- that know all, may
be able lo persuade her the
reason for that state pf things i,
tint there is so mu in the world
that worth kn r
a polls Journal.
Breaks Records,
A Prom h has It
the record . ;
d ;. at tin of
the r
iron.
And this sign actually stares one
in the face from a book shelf in one
of the literal enters a down-
town d Children's
Books at Half Chicago
Herald
S .
There ore eight Victor Model, for
Send
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
Maker, of Victor Bicycles
NEW YORK
name
TOM.
CHICAGO.
It.
C.
C. Cell.
till . C,
Skinner.
el-l . Jo,,
COBB BROS Cb;
Merchants
STREET NORFOLK, VA
Consignments and Solicited
ABLE.
--------IS STILL AT WITH a K
OF
;.; i.
me that the lied i- the
. ,, e l. . . in. . ever,
n . and hen-- .,
Mi.- I Dre A
Heavy O SI s .
and and attentive
ALFRED i Oil BUS t
N.
Q.
DOMINION LI l
Your Job Printing.
Diplomacy.
you set your daughter
a good example, Mrs.
Mrs. I, indeed I
call her into the room every time
and I have a row. I don't
.; want her to repeat the blunder that
J in spoiling a husband.
SHERIDAN-S
Tbs General Himself Got Tired
It,
Speaking of how weary and
of its author, Thomas
Dunn English, had lately become be-
cause of the craze, a
an Gen. Sheridan were
English would be sure of
the for If ever a
man got tired of a poem, was
Sheridan of
Mrs. Sheridan was asked
recently to tell the story of the
ride the general himself used
to tell it. Mrs.
H wasn't in the habit of it.
It was told to often enough.
Wherever he went somebody recited
that poem. Whenever he was in-
to entertainments or suppers
or dinners some boy or girl told him
how he rode. It for years,
and the general would come home
disgusted lat he often declared
. never would another in-
for reunions or celebrations
unless promised that he shouldn't
be recited at and told how he rode.
only time I know of when
himself told the story
public was night at a dinner
at Mrs. Halo's
saves the best for the wife of the
senator from Maine, and one night. I
was surprised to hear the general
finishing the account of that ride.
But was told so quietly that only
the group about, him knew what was
going He beard it too often to
ever want to tell of it
V. World.
Wear and Tear.
a great thing to
rich. Look at for ins lance.
He hires a young lady to read all
the stories the magazines for him,
and when
him know. The only trouble is that
he has to change girls so often.
becomes of the old
ones
usually go
v V
The Saving of Our Grand Old Flag
at
From, time immemorial the armies
of every warlike people have apt the
highest value upon the standards
they bore to battle. To guard one's
own, Dag against capture is the
pride, to flag of one's
enemy the ambition, of every valiant
soldier. In consequence, in every
war bet ween peoples of military
record, of daring performed by
color bearers are honorably common.
The civil war was full of such
dents. Out of very many, two or
three stand as especially note-
worthy.
One occurred at
the day when half the brigades of
and lay on the
bloody slope leading up to the con-
federate Among
the assaulting regiments, was the
Fifth New Hampshire, and it lost
of men who made the
charge. The survivors fell back
sullenly behind tho fence, within
easy of confederate rifle
pits. Just before reaching it the
last of the color guard was shot and
the flag fell in the open.
A Capt. instantly ran out
to capture it, and as be reached it
was shot through the heart; another
captain, Murray, made the same
attempt and was also killed, and so
was a third, Moore. Several private
soldiers met a like fate. They were
all killed close to the flag, and their
dead bodies across one another.
Taking advantage of this
works, Lieut. crawled
from behind the fence to the colors,
and bore back the blood-won
Round Table.
Dog's a
People who are habitual dog hat-
should read with some care an
incident of life in Newark, where s
pet dog led a distracted mother to
her little two-year-old, which had
Strayed from home. The dog had
kept near child until the
Individual into whose hands the
child had fallen started a crowd of
boys off with It to drown It, on ac-
count of its strange actions. The
mother came up just in time to
rescue the dog and then it in turn
took her to where the child
The only thing the matter with the
dog was lint granted to protect
its little mistress. of
the time dogs that are simply over-
heated, fatigued or thirsty arc set
upon by a wild crowd of human be-
who go into a panic every tints
a dog pants and are ready to kill
every innocent annual on general
suspicion. Hydrophobia is bad
enough, but it is a rare
while the Ignorant dog hater
with u. the a
He Quit His Tenth Wife.
Abraham Rimes, of
las been granted a divorce from his
wife. hist wife was his
bride. married eight other
for bis affections lie
mi again wedded lo his first wife,
whom he was legally
after marriage.
i i
Poor
Health
means so mom than
yon and
fatal diseases result from
trifling ailments neglected.
Don't with Nature's
greatest
Brown's
Iron
Bitters
If yon
out weak
have no
and v.
begin at
the most J
Me strengthen in;
hit Inn
Iron Bit-
tie
very first do U
and it
pleasant to
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia. Troubles,
Constipation, Bad
Malaria, Nervous ailments
, Women's complaints.
oat the genuine red ,
line, on wrapper All other are MS-
sin . in receipt two 2.-. we
will Beautiful
Fair View,
BROWN CO. BALTIMORE. MD
III
Real
Estate
and
Rental
Agent.
TAR RIVER SERVICE
lots for Bent tor mId
Bent,
and and any other
placed In my tor
I have prompt attention.
leave guaranteed. I
villa and Tarboro at all Inn I patrol
in Tar
and at A. M.
A. M.
and
day.
Them departure arc lo
if water on Tar
in
nil team
is of Tin- mid
direct line for Norfolk.
New and ton
via Dominion
from
Norfolk Bait I
more Steam heal
more. i I I
Agent.
i I A in.
S i
GREENVILLE
WALK ACADEMY,
II
i in when
in .
N .
wort
II N I P NOB I II IV
R. i; I
i i
i I
.;
r. .
l. i
Notice to Creditors.
before tho
Conn lark of Pitt county a ex-
Will
of Warren Tucker, notice i
hereby to all to
to make Immediate
to the and all
raid estate inn-t
present for payment on or before
the 15th of June, 1800, this no-
iii be plead In bar of recovery.
This of June, 1806,
K. TUCKER,
of
OINTMENT
N. .
next of
begin on the day of
and
Ml III
Primary English
English
Higher English
Instruction ill con I through.
mini but n
an additional teacher will ii employed, f
when pupil
early and attend regularly,
Informal Ion apply to
w.
lout
your produce to
Ar.
i. .
r M. P. M
I i i Kinston
ii i
Ar.
A. M
II
is
B If
., I
A. M
Ia. m.
I. I
AM
Train I Tis v Wilmington
n ,, I. H, II
train West, i in
WE W for
will mi them QUICK
W them CHEAP
We will till
J. C. Jr.
Rough Hap Framing, ;
III
Sap inches,
TRADE
MARK
Tor Core o all Skin him
Preparation has wen iii
wherever know has
in steady demand, it has been an
over
. n ml when
all other with
the i . . nils, have
for years This Ointment i of
standing and the high reputation
winch it has lined Is owing entirely
its own as but little
Star been made to bring it
public. One bottle of this Ointment wilt
lie lent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash Older promptly at-
tended Id. Address nil order and
lo
T. f. CHRISTMAS,
X. C
Cotton Factors
AMI
Commission
VA
. Planing Mill and
ion
Persona Attention given to
donate-
Wall i
ill fin
Wood lour door ii
cents a load.
cash,
Thanking won tor past patronage,
i HI
BUILD UP HOME
By Home
of M.
line hr-
and as be found on
Their i brand are
PATENTS
i and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat-
u, a.
we can pair
remote
Send model, drawing or with
We a-i-Tie, U or free of
Oar fee not due till patent i
A to Obtain with
cost in the U. S. sad
pent
. D. C.
a for
tin .
n band made.
very line
Wrapper, Havana band Brad
Named honor of Col. Buck Black
well.
a line t
hand Havana tilled, a sure win-
in honor of Col, J. s.
of Bin Din ban. Tn-
for smoke for
the money.
STATE
Three for cents, a that
ways please.
Stick to home and end as your or
Special brands put up when de-
j sired. Address
N. C
The Charlotte
OBSERVER,
Ninth
DAILY
AND
WEEKLY.
Independent and and
more than aver, ii iii be an
in. in bone
office, the slab or th work room,
DAILY
AH of the news of the world. Cam.
reports Stale
Rational
THE WEEKLY
A perfect family journal. All Hie
non. of week. The reports
from the
the Weekly
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A
Bend tor
x.


Title
Eastern reflector, 17 July 1895
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
July 17, 1895
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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