Eastern reflector, 31 August 1892






Sob
The Eastern Reflector.
THE
Thoroughly Equipped
-WITH-
NEW MATERIAL.
Give Us a Trial Ore
VOL. XI.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1892
NO.
D. J. Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
POLITICAL POINTS.
With three doctors and a
Jones Seminary for
Young Ladies.
Superior educational
location, mineral water, commodious on tho ticket the Third
buildings with lire place, entire ex- to
tuition 8- per
For circulars address.
Rev. C. A. HAMPTON,
All Healing Spring-.
pretty
Star.
good
minis-
party
i to in
shape. Wilmington
WEAVER AT TENN.
of his Robbery and
of the Names
and Amounts
Which Cannot
be Denied.
Greenville Institute.
Both
Fall Term August
closes Dee. B,
put
Hoard on the Harrison
For we or address, .,.,, ,.
Z. D. L
A unsafe for boys and girl-, is
not safe for either Marion Butler says that -Harry
j is all right Harry
Skinner is not all right now.
Charlotte Observer.
A Massachusetts man is making j Having seen in some paper an
campaign roosters a day. account Gen. Weavers conduct
We trust he will see the signs of in
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Co . to
Aug.
j rotary Charles Foster brought the
most assortment of
rainbows with him when he
v turned from Ohio that has
I yet been exposed to the
I of
a Democrat made the rounds of-j
to wager any part of
at odds of two to one that Harri-
and would not get a
single Southern State's electoral
votes no takers could be found.
It is the of many shrewd
observers that
are so eh talking
SKINNER ONLY GRINNED.
STATE NEWS.
All a Put-Up Job and Republican Money Happenings Here and There as Gathered
Behind It. From our Exchanges.
Reflector
-TILT-
DECEMBER 1ST
gents in Advance.
the According their to
Hamilton Institute.
N. C.
The Fall Term of tins ill open
Monday. Aug. Enrollment last
session M. Excellent advantage-, in a
regular Preparatory Course of study in
Music, Elocution, Tainting and Draw-
Terms moderate. hoard in
families or with Principal. For farther
information address.
JOHN
GREENVILLE
Mrs. V. L. Pendleton
Will open a Select School for Young
Ladies and Small Girls in Greenville on
August nth, MK. The full Collegiate
taught. The usual
prices for tuition In Will be
charged.
WESLEYAN
Female Institute.
Va.
Opens Sept. 1893. One of the
thorough schools for young in the
South. Twenty-live teachers
Conservatory in One
and boarding pupils
from States.
Special inducements per-ons at a dis-
Those seeking the best school
for the lowest terms write for
of this to the
dent, WM. A. HARRIS. D. D.,
Virginia.
POUNDED IN 1852.
A AND SCHOOL
-------OF
Elegant building- and thorough equip-
patronage from all the
Southern States. Beautiful and h
situation in view of the mountains.
Terms Reasonable.
Summer
June 16th.
Fall Term begins August
For Illustrated address,
J. A. A M. II. HOLT,
Oak Ridge. X. C.
is all wrong, and is traveling to
the old Harry about as fast as he
Star.
Tom,.,
I wrote to the clerk of the county
court for either a verification
denial of the charges. I receive I
the letter which I you.
Very respectfully,
W. E.
Rutherford College, N. C Aug.
I him the national election is already States with the hope of
settled all the none that the Democratic
be spent between this and tho o efforts towards
of next November will simply be
I thrown away. His modesty in
New- and
The Raleigh correspondent of
i the New York Burning Pot gives trotting stallion
that paper the details of an inter-1 to Mess. J. R. and E.
view with Col. Harry
carry
managers
ear
j the northwestern States.
e reproduce the interview.
Col. Skinner said
I believe in financial
re-
form
making claims is something quite j
as wonderful as his manipulation
of the figures which show, or are j
supposed to show the amount of
c surplus in the United States
N. C. Railroad vs. Thomas B. Long.
endorse the Omaha
i platform, I do not believe in
political rule in tho Southern
, States- Therefore I stated to the
; convention that if it became
parent that the People's party
The white voters of the South,
says the Atlanta C are
asked to desert their own party, or-
because the Democratic
party, not having control of
the government, has failed to re
peal Republican legislation.
Gleaner.
Thomas Long is the nominee State ticket could not win, and by
Pulaski, Tenn., Aug. he is positive that every of the People's party the State its continued candidacy the Re-
Will E- Bother northern the word to ticket for Auditor. Mr-Long was publicans would win, I should fa
the Third
party from the field. The view
did not suit many, perhaps a ma-
of the delegates, and so I
could not consistently longer
stand as the nominee of the con-
for the
ford College, N. sent all except the southern the -agent for the North Carolina the withdrawal
letter of in- State will be carried by Harrison j Railroad at Salisbury from August,
in regard to the acts of Gen. and at least six of the Southern ; 1868, to October, 1869, a little over
Weaver while in command of States. It is not clear why he year. He had given a bond in
place was handed me to answer. I; does not claim all of the electoral the sum of for the faithful
was between and years old j votes. Such a claim would not be honest conduct of the duties
when Weaver was here, and a more ridiculous than those pertaining to this trust. The rail-
know whereof I write, and in he has made. He should have road company discovered by and As electoral candidate
II n is costing this country port of what I shall write. I refer i known that those absurd claims by agent was not making; main lo the finish,
a round million dollars a a few citizens of this county J. would cause his rainbow complete returns of the
more than Arthur cost it president Peoples about the condition of the proceeds of the office- Ho was
we must have Republicans, give Z W- Ewing, ex-i Treasury, given out at the same dismissed from service, and an in-j your own argument, your c
us a better quality for Speaker of the Senate time, to be discredited, as stories, ; instituted which shall endanger the election
cannot afford to pay ; J. B. Sta-; like people, are usually judged by the fact that he had been
prices for such shoddy i and master of Chan-; the company they keep. unfaithful to the employing com-
Coy, Mr. which are tune of several thous-
i Sheriff, Giles county Col. Solon obviously on a par with the small
The admirable manner in which . Battle, is not a bit but An action was instituted by the
the Republicans are prepared to C S. W. judge M might while company to recover the amount of
milk the Third party cow in case I county Court, R. H- through the dark places, The suit was
the Third warty and trustee, an L E- had a contrary effect to what m Alamance county,
malcontents succeed in driving president Commercial Bank he and expected. it being the domicile of the com-
and Trust Company. of bow Mr. now upon trial a verdict was
these men were here and know called, is so well known tricky rendered b a jury for the sum of
the facts. The others know from in matters
reputation. . bis rosy tau-. has serious
The said Weaver seemed to alarmed many Republicans, who
have a perfect hatred for believe that he has discovered
some new and very serious danger
to the Republican party, and that
Mr. W. P. Bachelor, of Raleigh,
has sold interest in his noted
for
D.
of Lexington, Ky.
Governor Holt has issue a
recommending that Co
be ob-
served as a public School holiday
, in North Carolina.
The fall term at Trinity College
will at Durham, in the new
September 1st; but tho
has been postponed till
October or 12- Bishop Galloway
j will preach the dedicatory sermon.
Tho sympathy of the whole
State goes out to Cant S. A.
, of the News and Observer because
of the death of his wife. Mrs.
Ashe was Miss Hannah Emerson
Willard, was years old and died
on the 18th,
her into the pasture, shows how
they have the of
their Alliance
Washington Mr.
e of Governor, so of Edwards Mills, will be
I will re- years old in November. He has
SO, lam in his life.
. -n i i i has one child dead and eleven
W for President. hag -0 d
I asked, according to one great grand-child.
Dr. P. Wood, one of the
, , most prominent physicians in
of the Democratic electoral ticket, North Carolina, hist week in
will you withdraw, as in the first Wilmington of heart He
case, because you think the j was secretary of the North Caro-
result would be tho election of Board of Health and editor of
Republican
sir. I am opposed to the
election of Mr. There are now convicts at
you prefer Harrison to h penitentiary, and at the canal
Cleveland near
, . , . , , remainder, are all on the three
The only reply was a broad and
grin. So it is apparent that the, ton. For the first time in years
. against defendant Long principal object of the Third party there are no convicts at work on
i . . , . railways.
President Harrison says one of
tho most trying ordeals ho has to
encounter in his position is the
amount of hand shaking he has to
do. He will relieved in No-
Then the people will
give him one big shake, and that
Southern people,
robbed, persecuted,
Ho
and
abused our in every bis stock of rainbows has been
way. . brought forward order to dis
Ho had citizens arrested and I tract attention from this danger.
will be the end of on trumped-up To Democrats Mr. Fosters
Slur.
Louisburg
Female
College,
X. C.
The next session of this Well-known
school will begin September 1st.
Pure water, no in-
building with rooms
Campus of acre- well shaded by
gigantic oaks. Conservatory
teachers. and teachers
from Academy of Teachers ex-
perts in their specialties. The whole
Literary Physical Culture and
and tires only
Special In
Send for to
S. U. President.
X. C.
es, and mad to pay to be released. amusing show.
He made the friends of D. K- which although not prepared
pay for his release. Mr. Cos specially for them, is being great-
S in favor of the plaintiff company, j movement North Carolina is to
All the records of the proceedings defeat Mr. That
and all are now on file publican money is at the command
the office of the Clerk of the j of, and is being and will be freely
Superior Court of Alamance used for that purpose by the
the judgment has tot Third party people, is very
been satisfied to this day. parent. Dr. A. S- of
Several years ago, when said Seymour, Connecticut, was
B. Long began to aspire to to the convention and said
political honors, tie wont to Col. ho would home news that
M. Holt, then president of would gladden hearts
Institute,
K. C
Pi Strictly
She begins
Monday. Sept.
A most thorough and
preparatory course of study, with a full
equal to that of an
Female College in the South.
Best facilities for the Music
and Art. Standard l Scholarship tin.
high. Healthful location.
large and pleasantly
and circulars on
K. .
son so as he was the day
after the now famously disastrous
Third party State convention. He
added that for the first time in his
life he actually felt a touch
row for
Wilmington
A gentleman tells me that never pay for release. Mr. specially for them, is being great- the N. C R- R-Co., now Governor From the above it sufficiently
in his life did ho see S- Otho s dead, but his son. Ed. R. Cox, by them. of Commonwealth, and asked appears that the whole Third par-
living here, can testify to; There are reasons for the belief the company's best terms for the performance is known and
said facts. So can Maj. J. B. Sta-It the administration is doing all adjustment of the matter. Col. by Col. Skinner Bot-
any and Col. S. E. Rose, friends of it to date for the meet- Holt proposed to remit all interest and the crowd of leaden to be
Cox, who paid part of the money. I in the international monetary and to fifty cents on the merely the interest of Harrison.
He robbed Mr. Jasper Cox re- j conference set so late in the fall as as satisfaction of the It is a false pretense from beg
D. K. of to make it certain that the result Mr. Long said the
worth of spun thread. Jasper I of conference cannot be known proposition was liberal and
Cox is a citizen of this j before the Presidential election, in factory, and that he would pay it
county, and now lives near order that Republican stump oft Already several years have
ham, Giles county. Tennessee- i speakers and editors may have an elapsed. Mr. Long has not paid
He robbed John P. Williams, j opportunity to influence votes by a penny of it.
an old farmer and soldier pretending to forecast that result-
Clinton There is a
widow woman in this county who
makes at home all the provisions
necessary for tho support of her
family large and buys
for cash. She says
that any man who lives on a farm,
and who buys bacon corn to
feed his family, ought to be chop-
up fed to hogs.
Raleigh News We
understand the ladies of Raleigh,
with their energy,
Two facts to call to mind now
then are, that the Democrats
left a treasury overflowing with
funds when the Cleveland
went out; and
Democratic congress came in find
empty coffers,
to meet, tho result of two years of
Republican
to end. The radical
knew all about it-
Such is the record of the man
the of the Mexican. of all his hogs and I Mr. Harrison and his puppets who and Republican whom the
meat. Mr. is are this campaign will has nominated for
tins place- have much more exalted opinion
He had Dr. J. C- Roberts, of this the intelligence of the Amen
State Auditor, whose business it
is, briefly stated, to manage the
When tho loaders of the
Republican Aid alias the
tho party, instruct the
people to stay away from Demo
speakings, it shows they
arc afraid for the people to hear
j the truth. We do not believe our
patriotic citizens will be such
slaves the
Republican Aid
pines, affronted, and tried to make
I pay for his release, but
j he had found out that tho
i doctor would not pay it, he turned
him loose- The doctor is now
living, will answer any letter. On
January he made the fol-
lowing parties pay him the sums
opposite their names. I have the or-
receipt he gave my father,
Charles C- All the
can voters on the
of next November than they
appear to have at tho present time.
According to an official opinion
of the Attorney-General, which
suspicion points to having been
dictated from Loon Lake, made
public this week, the good people
of Vicksburg. Miss., must
to have their city
sided by the notorious
of the tonne
such a
of
next session of this School will
begin on Monday. August
The advantages offered will be
or to those of any session. En-
tire guaranteed every
Board can be had at lower rates at
any similar school In IT Saturn Carolina.
We propose to do the best work for boys
that ever been in the town,
and challenge to the
Terms are as follows, payable
Primary English par mouth.
Intermediate English per month, 2.00
Higher English per month,
Languages each, extra,
When yon are in call to see me
or write me homes,
be cheerfully If
necessary a competent assistant be
employed-
W. H.
C, July
he except whose nomination tho
Republican Senate declined to
me
Thomas Martin, Dr. Wm,
Battle, Charles G
f he orator of the Third
State convention was a from i J. H. J. M. Morris,
Vance county. that Reynolds, D-
were quite B. Daly,
nous, as speakers and work-1 Total,
They spoke and worked j He claimed in his order that it
against the Democratic party. was for the support of Union
They were there with their white j gees coming within his
associates for no E, son It-
Raleigh Chronicle. Daly, and Wm. S- son of
J. H. are living here and
will answer any inquiry. I could
give other incidents, or acts of
said Weaver, if necessary.
A School of High Grade
FOR--------
GIRLS AND BOYS
Mies net will private
school for girls and boys in Sirs. V. H.
early opposite
church. The Fall Term
Monday, Sept. ends
Jan. Toe Spring
Monday, Jan. 80th, 1893;
Friday, May 1893.
department.
Intermediate department,
Higher English,
Latin and French,
two lesson pr
Thorough Instruction will
be given according to the best approved
methods.
for board will be made for
pupils desiring to come from the
try. For further particulars address,
Loot
82.00
3.50
1.00
The tax-payers of the State
should not forget that with
success will come the
of taxing them to pay
of the special tax
bonds. Is it not better to decide
that question forever at the polls
than to trust the to Re-
publican If the
succeed in carrying the
J. F.
A Boston says one of
the prime causes of tho great
among summer is
there will be increased tax- too much clothes. He says the
and no hope of financial re-
The of the man
who trios to create bad
among neighbors, or who
tempt to array any class of his
low against another, class,
who endeavors to incite the farm-
class against the towns people,
or men engaged another hon-
and legitimate
fewer clothes children have on in
warm weather in
cool weather they should be re.
quired to wear only enough to
them
bury
SUI b CATARRH
A for
mouth and
I With each Lottie there Is en ingenious
pursuits,; nasal injector for the more successful
is not a desirable member of any
Democrat.
treatment of these complaints without
extra charge, Price at
DRUG STOKE.
confirm. The Attorney-General
holds, or at least pretends to, that
a failure to confirm the
of a postmaster who is in
session of a bore the
assembling of the session of Con-
which fails to act on the
nomination leaves him the legal
postmaster until his successor is
nominated. If that be law
j the department from the
foundation the government has
in similar eases acting
Senator Morgan, of Alabama, is
in town. He is a strong advocate
of retaliation on Canada, and
thinks that Mr. Harrison's
should prohibited the
Shipment of
through the United States.
The Marine Hospital
bureau is taking active measures
to prevent the introduction of
cholera into our ports by any
of the steamship lines running
from Hamburg or where
the disease is to be rap-
idly spreading- All steamships
arriving from those and other for-
ports are to be rigidly in-
and if any traces, pi the
dreaded disease are found they
will be and
disinfected before being
allowed to land their passengers.
The Republicans here are doing
lots of talking about breaking the
this year, but when
the State. Should
man be chosen to take
charge of the State's finances how
long would it be before he would
bankrupt the State A defaulter
to manage the finances of the
State be a public disgrace
and calamity. The people who
believe in honest government and
faithful public servants should see
to it that only honest and capable
men are nominated and elected to
office.
steps to raise funds for laying the
coiner stone of the Confederate
monument. Let our citizens, one
all, join in the undertaking.
Many other counties in tho State
have signified their intention to
aid.
It Has Gained Nothing, But, Thank
Heaven, it is Getting Clear of Such
Cattle.
Charlotte Observer.
We just happen to recall, off-
hand. W. P. of
A. C Greene, of Wake. J. M-
Harry Skinner and
E. A. of Pitt, who have with-
j in the past two given the
The folly of the strike as a
means adjusting differences be-
tween workmen and their employ
has again shown by the
outcome of the switchmen's strike
at Buffalo, New York. Here were
a handful of men who demanded
a small increase of wages, which
refused they struck, Democratic party tons of good
of the order issued by vice about the course to pursue, if
is the time to subscribe.
DO ANIMAL COMMIT SUICIDE .
is a story of a poor cat,
deprived of her kittens, who hang-
ed herself in the fork of a branch.
But this may have been an accident;
we should have given the cat tho
benefit of the doubt. News
of a dog who committed suicide.
His master declined lo take
out to shoot rabbits, and the dog
went and drowned himself in a
pond. Tho story is true, but Au-
and the dog may have
merely an extreme form
of colonial sensitiveness. If we
once admit that dog reason
on life and death being a mad
and exercise a hasty but
choice, is plain that the
whole system ethics will have
to be altered.
The poor Indian may right
about the equal sky, which is a
poor prospect for people who are
not fond of dogs. The ghosts of
dogs have been seen, and are as
well vouched for as any others;
so, on the the poor Indian
may be less untutored than the
poet Lang in
Magazine.
Some Very Poor People.
Exchange.
Tho man who keeps two dogs,
but is too poor to take a news-
paper.
The smoker who can't afford to
give more than twenty five cents
towards missions.
The Christian who has not
found out that there is a luxury in
giving.
People who never pat much in
the basket, for fear God will not
get in with them.
People who live in a eel-
lax and go without the light of
heaven if they had to pay any-
thing for it
People who have to all
their money to the devil's
blacksmith shop and have it made
into chains with which to bind
themselves.
Men who have to take own
manhood, the happiness of their
wives and children, and the good
of the country, all to tho
and get back nothing but
dust and ashes in the place of it-
Hotel Burns.
August
Belmont Hotel, at White
Springs, five miles from this city,
was destroyed at midnight last
night by a fire which broke out in
the laundry and spread with great
rapidity. There wore nearly
guests in the house at the time
and all escaped with their lives,
many of them by jumping from
the windows. Mrs. Dr. Von Rack,
of Asheville, was badly injured,
and was fatally injured,
and died this morning. Charles
Green, of New Orleans, had a leg
dislocated, Clerk also
had a leg dislocated, and a colored
nurse a leg broken. A few others
were slightly bruised, but none
seriously hurt. All the guests lost
their baggage and some of them
other personal belongings. A
good many diamonds and n good
deal of money were lost in the
fire, numbers of in the build-
escaping only in their night
clothes. The guests made
way, as best they to
villa, where they were made
The hotel property owned
by a corporation and to Dr.
Von Back. The building was
erected at a cost of and
there was insurance of
on it-
head Not content with quit-
ting work they showed a lawless
spirit, resorted to violence, which
necessitated the calling out of a
large body of State troops to
tho peace and maintain the
supremacy of the law. They
counted on the co-operation of
other organizations of railroad
endeavored to secure
this, and failing, the strike fizzled
out and was declared
by the boss man, Sweeney.
Wednesday night, and now the
strikers having lost a couple weeks
time, got into a good deal of
caused the death of some men
the arrest of. more, stopped
the running, of freight trains, and
hung up a great deal of freight at
Buffalo other and put
the State to many thousands of
dollars expense which the tax pay-
will have to pay, will be glad
to return to work at the old wages.
and sadder, if not wiser
men. The strike as an adjuster of
disputes is no
Star.
their
Ashe-
com-
The manner in which chickens
are shipped to this market is not
in with the spirit of the
law with regard to cruelty to
They are packed in a
basket sort of a cage, and without
food ox water while i n transit- The
result is that many suffocate before
reaching the destination. We
heard a produce merchant gay it is
rarely that less than five
percent of original shipments is
lost to the shipper from these
Commercial
it would escape the wrath to come.
Partly through fear and partly
from a willingness to be
tho party has sacrificed a large
measure of its self-respect in
to follow the advice of these
and has again
gotten up to the very dividing line
between standing and surrender-
Because it would take
tho one remaining step, to wit
Renounce Cleveland, they, having
duped it, now desert it. leaving it
to itself what it has
ever made or saved by going with
them as far as it has-
The Progressive
of those who go to Demo-
speaking are not in
thy. The paid and pa-
do the This is false,
and is an insult to the best citizens
of the State. There are less whisk-
-drinking Democrats than Third
party men; there are many times
more sober Democrats than Third
party men. If there arc any
they are,
hired by Republicans to yell for
tho Third party, in order to break
down white men's government in
North tree
North Carolina now leads the
southern states in the number of
spindles operated in cotton facto-
as well as in the number of
cotton mills.
Before the war Southern farm-
were, as a general thing, pros-
They lived well, some of
them in magnificent style, were
out of debt, and had plenty of
money to meet every demand up-
on them- If they needed money
for any special purpose more than
they had, they had State banks to
supply their needs at reasonable
rates of interest, and their land
was security enough upon which
to borrow all the money they need-
ed. Then they had no tariff
to pay, no pensions to pay.
They were not compelled, as they
are now, to sell in the cheapest
market buy in the dearest
market, They were free to sell
where they could sell to the best
advantage. Now the Southern
farmer is taxed to tariff tribute,
pensions, and th enormous ex-
of running the Govern-
the proportion of the South
a outing in the aggregate to a
couple hundred millions a year,
all this must come regardless
f the price that he may receive
for his crops. The prices of these
may go down but the tribute
posed upon him goes up goes
up higher every year. And yet
the Third party ace
working to the system
s the farmer of
the proceeds of his keeps
him Star.
J. MARQUIS,
Office in Skinner Building, upper
opposite Photograph Gallery
v-
rtE. L.
DENTIST. J
Greenville, N A.
l. Fleming-,
Greenville, X. O.
Prompt attention to business. Office
at Murphy's old -laud.
HOS. J.
ALEX. L.
J.
VS-AT-LA W,
N. C.
In all the Courts.
N.
B. F. TYSON
I. A.
TYSON,
AT TORS
N. C.
attention Riven to collection
H. LONG,
Attorney- at-Law,
N. C.
Prompt and careful attention to
solicited.
HARRY
SKINNER,
A N A W,
N. C.
M ft, JAMES.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice In all courts.
it Specialty.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N.
J. term of Associate Justice Davis.
WEDNESDAY, AUGUST
II at the at Greenville,,
N. C, as matter.
TICKET
FOR I
CLEVELAND.
Of Sew York.
FOR
STEVENSON,
Illinois.
FOR ELECTORS AT
CHARLES B
B- GLENN.
1st Dist.-L L. SMITH-
FOR 1st
W. A. B- BRANCH,
of Beaufort.
Gov. Holt made a speech in Ala-
county and said
that he met Col. Harry Skinner
, just after the Third party State
convention, and him how it
was that he had been treated so
Skinner answered that he had
turned down the
damned fools didn't have sense
enough to stand If the
, Colonel's opinion of that convention
is that it was composed of a of
it does not look
reasonable that any Democrat
should be led away to vote for the
mongrel ticket it nominated.
true Southern white man ought
not only to vote against it but n so
every endeavor to drive it fr om
forever. He showed ail
Third party men the folly of ac-
but God forbid that he should be
the means of destroying others.
it destroying the Democratic
party, and with it the
and and peace,
the Democratic party of his county, his State, his
being of inflicting the Fatherland. Follow him not
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
MB
ELIAS CARE,
of
for I III I III
R A.
of
FOB OF STATE
COKE
of K
for
DONALD W. RAIN.
of Wake.
FOR
E. M. FURMAN,
of Buncombe.
FOR OF PUBLIC
J. C SCARBOROUGH,
of Johnston.
FOR
FRANK I. OSBORNE,
of Mecklenburg.
FOB OF TWELFTH
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
FOR THE
F- G- JAMES.
FOR HOUSE
FREDERICK
I. K.
FOR
RICHARD W. KING.
FOB REGISTER
HENRY
MM II
JOHN FLANAGAN.
FOR
ML WM. E
FOB
J R
The letter from Mr.
which we publish in this issue
speaks for itself and needs no com-
It should be rend by every
white man not only in Pitt county
but throughout the whole State.
All over the -State many of the
Third party candidates are drop-
ping out and stating that they can
not take any part with that party.
Mr. W. A- who was
by them for Associate
of the Supremo Court, pub
a card that he cannot accept-
John A. Bennett, who was
on the c ticket in Mar-
tin county, publishes a card de-
and says he has become
thoroughly satisfied that the re
forms needed can only come
rough the success of the Demo-
party. Capt. D. A. Cogdell,
the Third party nominee for the
Senate in Wayne county, refuses
to accept the nomination.
The Hon. L. C- Latham will
speak at Aurora. Beaufort county,
on Saturday nest filling the
of Governor Jarvis at
that place. As soon as the
court is over he proposes
to make a series of speeches in the
District.
The Republican pow-wow will
open up in Raleigh
day and it may be expected that
there will be some fur flying
Loge Harris swears and snorts that
they shall have no ticket, while
Eaves is equally determined that
there shall be one. thieves
know the rest.
The time for the meeting of the
Democratic Clubs in Raleigh, has
been changed to the of
which is the day upon
which Gen. A. E. Stephenson,
Democratic nominee for Vice-Pres-
is to speak in that city. It
will be a grand occasion and
will be full of pure
Democracy- The railroads will
reduced rates.
A telegram sent from Goldsboro
to the daily papers, last Thursday,
shows what kind of a man
the Third party nominee for Gov
is- How a decent white
man can vote for a man of his
character and ideas is beyond our
comprehension, and we believe few
will Jo so. Hero is the telegram
X. August
prominent when review-
here tin- evening- in the presence of
the good done in this
Si site mi the past present
administration and danger
the of
undoubtedly menu- it
force hill supremacy, received
the follow tag from
rather would
ride or anything to tin- rule we
have These are the
exact word- mined by Dr. and
will a minted the editor of the
Goldsboro Headlight .
Goldsboro; Oliver.
;. W. Petersburg. Va. and
others. Since utterance the
next day wanted to
shut the affair up and tried to
bribe Mr. editor of the
Goldsboro But lie
struck the wrong man and the fol
lowing telegram showed his
V. C August
Pat the candidate far
Governor, told Mr. of
the Headlight, if he would
the words uttered by him
as telegraphed lo the Chronicle
M 111- and if lie
would make his favor the
Third party, he would guarantee
him 20.0110 subscribers, where
upon the editor replied that
was god enough for him. Mr.
is ready willing to
to the at any time failure
to hi- object has produced him
a political
On Saturday there was a big
Democratic rally in Goldsboro at
which speeches were made by
Carr. Sanderlin and Jarvis. D.
M- Hardy, the man who placed
Exum nomination for Governor
at the Third party convention, was
present. He went upon the speak-
stand, repudiated Exum and
the Third party, and said he is
going to work for and vote the
whole Democratic ticket.
wrongs upon us under which we
are now His argument
in showing these people that by
being in the Third party they
were aiding the Republicans was
conclusive and no man who has
the good of his country at heart
could remain out of tho
Democratic fold. Capt Kitchen
was at his best and his plea in
behalf of Democracy was such as
will toll in the present crisis. He
said no man had fought Grover
harder than he did be
fore he was nominated- He had
gone so fur as to say that he would
not vote for him but he had taken
it all back because he represented
Democracy, and that now he
would vote for him if it cost
Ids life to do so, and he would not
vote for Harrison if it cost him
his life.
Capt. Kitchen is a man of con-
He has the boldest to
express these No
man in North Carolina has for the
past twenty years done better
work for the Democratic party at
the same cost than ho. No man
deserves more at her hands and
no honor that the State con-
fer on him would be unmerited or
unworthily bestowed. Pitt county
gives three rousing cheers for the
old Democratic war-horse,
Kitchen.
After Mr. Kitchen's speech din-
was served and this was fol-
lowed by dancing and other
amusements- The dinner was el-
and abundant-
At three o'clock speaking was
again announced everybody
was ready to hear it. Hon. Jas.
E- Moore, of Williamston. was the
next speaker. Mr. Moore has
vim about him as well as true or-
and never before have we
heard him when he appeared to
better advantage. He clinched
every argument in such a manner
Democrats of Pitt. Folio him
not ye white men who the
white man's civilization to
serve to transmit to your
If you do follow tin, you
will sorry for it Follow him
you will repent in sack cloth
and misery and in I
Follow Inter on, midst
ignominy and disgrace, will
find your reward, and that i -ward
shall be the bitter consciousness
that you allowed yourselves to
become conspirators the
peace and dignify of firesides,
your your State,
and your whole Southland.
Would to God that I could in-
fuse into the hearts of my fellow
citizens of North Carolina the
feeling that is in my own heart
Would to God that I could bring
them to see, as I see, the utter
folly and wickedness of the
business I all is said,
it is nothing more nor less than a
cleverly laid scheme on the part
of the Republicans to break up
the white vote of the South-
And have not Southern men
sense enough to see it I Are
they such fools as to be blind to
a fact so patent What is plainer
than the fact, that, if the
can decoy some twenty or
twenty-five North Car-
Democrats into voting the
ticket they
will be able to
sweep tho State for Harrison
And is there a decent white man
in the Old North State that wants
such scandalous things to be Is
there in all North Carolina, from
Currituck to Cherokee, a white
man who wants his grand old
State to cast her electoral votes
for Ben Harrison and his
Force Bill White men of
every vote cast by you for
Col. Skinners crowd will mean a
vote for Harrison, a for the
BARGAINS
J. B. CHERRY CO.
-DEALERS IN-
OUT SAIL
COMMENCING--
Tuesday Morning, August
-WE WILL OFFER FOR-
Only
The following goods at the following prices which are very much
less the goods cost Bat we prefer to selling them now
at these prices to carrying them over to another season.
This offer is only open two weeks and please under-
stand that we do not agree to ever duplicate these
prices again, and nothing sold at these prices
on this list will be taken back or exchanged.
Come at once and get the choice, it will pay yon. We give you
the former prices at which the goods were sold, and the prices
at which we are now offering them. Look over the list
and see if there is not a bargain in them yon.
Edging, price cents.
that all were put to rout Force Bill, a vote for the return
and every Democrat present could of Reconstruction Days, a vote
not help from for . for Southern degradation and
the gallant Jim Ed Moore The , ruin Think well before you
8th day of November will reveal i cast such infamous ballot May-
some of the fruits of his speech. be, some farmer will chance to
Swiss Inserting,
Edging,
Cheeked
Bob L. C Latham was then
called for. No man in the State
has a better command of chaste
and ornate language and of his
subject than Maj. Latham,
those who are accustomed to
read this letter. Then I say to
him. you can never
prove your condition by deserting
the Democratic party. All that
and I has been dote for you, as a
or, has been done by tho Demo-
him speak, know that he never party- if anything more
leaves unsaid anything which j is to be done for you, it must be
to be said to make his done by the Democratic party,
complete. Those who What I tell you is as true as the
heard this gentleman Thursday, i Skinner to the con-
gay that it was one of the best j notwithstanding,
political speeches they ever heard j What the Southern farmer
Major Latham make. Suffice it to wants is, not the Force or
say that Pitt county never had the Sub-Treasury Bill, but the
Mr. Abe told us yesterday
that his brother, Mr- E- A.
would not accept the
nomination for Congress in the
First District. He says further
Mr- said he could net spare
the time from his office Clerk
Superior Court to make a
thorough canvass of the District
It is just possible that after this
present term expires, Mr.
will have all the time he desires.
The Democrats of Pitt county may
decide that he ought not be con-
fined so closely, and shoulder the
onerous duties of the office upon
some one Advance.
This is just what will take place-
THE PICNIC AT
Three Thousand People Assemble
Enjoy the and Hear
Democratic Doctrine.
to
three better speeches upon her
soil on tho same day.
The good accomplished can
only W known when the news
from the 8th of November
shall tell that old Pitt has again
rolled up usual Democratic
majority for all the candidates
from President to Constable-
Everybody voted the picnic a
grand best they had
ever attended. The Reflector
man heard old men say they had
so large an assemblage,
not even at a preaching, where
the crowd was more orderly or
better behaved. Not the least
pleasantness disturbance of any
kind occurred, and everyone
sent experienced a day of unbroken
enjoyment. The Greenville band
mode some splendid music and
helped to enliven the occasion.
The managers of the picnic.
Messrs. J. L- Fleming, O-
J. B. Fleming. Edgar Buck,
J. B. Little, J. J- Satterthwaite.
W. J- Little, W. D. Keel, M- C. S-
Cherry, Jr. W. O. Little, showed
themselves indefatigable workers.
and are deserving of unbounded
praise for the success of the
The suggests
that they could do the Democracy
of Pitt county untold good by
one or two more such picnics
in other of the county.
Ex-Gov. T J. Jarvis came home
Sunday to take a weeks rest from
the very active canvass he has
been making with Mr. Carr,
date for Governor, and Mr- Fur-
man, candidate for Auditor. He
will return to his appointments
next Saturday- The Reflector
has watched with no little pride the
comments of the State press upon
the speeches of our honored towns-
man, and the reference made to
the excellent work he is doing-
There is but one Tom Jarvis, and
and he is doing the Democracy of
the Old North State more good in
this campaign than any other man
within her borders. His speeches
are so plain and convincing that
there is no disputing his
Everywhere he goes he
shows the Third party followers how
they are being deceived by the lead
ere of that faction, and wins them
back into the Democratic fold. In
response to an inquiry as to the
outlook in the State the Governor
said he can see that the
gaining ground every day and
the prospects of success are con-
growing brighter.
WHITE MEN THINK
When it was proposed by a
of young men to hold a Dem-
picnic at those
to whom they first unfolded their
plans at once declared it a capital
idea, but hardly any one dreamed
that it was going to be the
success that the occasion
proved to be- The result, how
ever, only shows what Pitt county
can accomplish when her sterling
young, men set their heads to a
thing.
The morning train from Green-
ville bore two cars filled with
the Greenville Cornet Band
in the number. These
reached the picnic grounds at
by o'clock, and found
that were by no means the
first arrivals- Already several
hundred people hod gathered,
and the crowd kept swelling until
noon, by which time it was
mated that fully 3.000 people were
present. A glance over the
grounds showed that the commit-
tee had made every preparation
for the pleasure of the multitude-
A table enough to
date upwards of persons at a
time had been prepared, and for
the dancers was constructed one
of the best platforms that we ever
saw at a picnic. A ball room
floor could not surpass it. The
Robersonville string band was on
hand and dancing began at an
early hour.
At o'clock it was announced
that the speaking would begin-
The committee who hod charge cf
this department were fortunate in
their selection of speakers. Many
people in this county were anxious
to hear Kitchen and when
it was known that be was to be the
first speaker the entire crowd men,
boys and ladies repaired to the
stand. Capt. Kitchen began by
, saying there were only two
To
Halifax, Nova Scotia,
Aug. 1892-
The Editor Reflector.
the
of August 16th. I had the
pleasure, and of reading
a selection from your paper en-
titled, They I found
pleasure in reading the aforesaid
selection on account of the clear-
directness and unflinching
courage, and, above all, on account
of the unmistakable ring of its
patriotism, but I- was pained,
deeply the fact that
it was my old friend, Col. Harry
Skinner, who had
Col. Skinner gone over to
the enemy Is it possible Is
there not a mistake somewhere
Were my eyes did
I read the type
was what I read true t Col.
chum of my boy-
hood, the Democratic son of a
Democratic sire, the gifted,
champion of Southern
and Southern progress-
Col. Harry Skinner gone over to
the enemy; in the midst too, of
the most threatening contest
than has aver beset his people
Mr. Editor can this thing be
Is thy servant a dog, that
he should do this thing Write
to me, and tell me that the types
you were misinformed
regarding Harry Skinner, and
that in this great and trying bat-
for supremacy,
he is still with the Old Guard,
following the Standard of
and the Eagles of Victory
But Mr. if J most be-
here the it is indeed a
fact that Col. Skinner had
the Ark of the Covenant
and gone over to the enemies of
Israel, then allow me, through
the columns of your journal,
of the Bill.
He wants freer he wants
the wide markets of the world;
which he would have if the Chi-
of Protection was torn
he wants the. markets of
the world, I say, wherein he may
sell his corn, cotton, wool and
other produce, and realize for the
same a living price. The Sub-
Treasury idea is the dream of
idiocy, and is as degrading as it
is nonsensical. The farmer is not
a beggar, be made a ward of
the Government; he is amply able
to look out for himself if he is
given half a chance. Elect
elect a Democratic
House, and a Democratic Senate;
abolish and its re
on give us the
free benefit of the great foreign
demand for our produce ; and the
farmer will be able to hold his
head up and be a man amongst
men.
Mr. Editor, I am a North Caro-
by birth. lived for
years upon Carolina s no-
and though
have kept me for some time in
an alien land, I hope yet to return
to my native State, to dwell there
for some years in peace and hon-
or, and, when I am dead, to be
buried in its protecting earth-
Mr. Editor, I assume that you,
too, are a North Carolinian, and
that to the love that burns in my
own heart for my Native State,
you are no stranger; and so we
will together join in the patriotic
Carolina
attend
we live, we will cherish, protect
defend
Yours for the Right,
Thomas B. Gregory.
All
Percale,
Saline
Yard Wide
Wash Silk
Pineapple Tissue
Solid Brown Chocked lawn
India Muslin
Muslin
Chantilly
Bedford Cord
Inverness t
Cloth
Calico
Embroidered Flouncing
IS
down o cents.
. M .
M .
t, .
h . .
n .
IS
. n .
u . .
.
IS
beg to announce to ear many
friends and customers that we
have the largest and best selected
stock of Goods to be our
town. And while we are not sell-
at cost we beg to
that we think we can and will
any prices on the different
lines of Goods by us. W
throw out no baits to entrap ens-
To one and all we extend
a cordial welcome to
will be pleased to serve you with
any goods in the following lines
former price cents, marked down to
IS
Si.
1.85
1.55
1.44
1.30
Worsted Dress Goods
Gingham
Lot Hack China Silk Handkerchiefs
Child's White Lawn Hats
Ball Cotton
Handkerchiefs
Gauze Vests
Mitts
Dress Goods Remnants At
Straw Hats J
Roll Straw Malting, former price S
IT cents
fl
CO
I c
S c
I e
1.25
1.10
------o-
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions,
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware,
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery,
Glassware, Groceries, deg.
Oil cents per gallon,
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness,
one-half first cost.
cents, marked down to cents
buying now you safe at least per cent, on article pi this list
as the we have pat upon these goods are much below what they cost us. But
we would rather sell now and lose something to carry them
season. Call and examine for yourself. Ask to see our Bargain
over for another
Counter.
YOUNG
Mil
I think I was then off a j
fishing ff rule was to examine i
the bridge on top twice a day. i
went over it Monday after sunset,
it was all right I had employed j
a man to attend to it Tuesday. If you fail to sec the brand new stock of
he
Ton are Not In It
When I returned he told me
had mended a bod hole in the
bridge and that it looked like it,
was broken with an as. The hole
w as reported to the Commission-;
ere that day but by whom I never
find out, but one of the j
Board told me some one was try-.
to get my job, and that I
an
Mr- Editor have been ask-
ed the question often by both
Democrats and Third party men,
why it was that a Democratic
Board of Commissioners took the
bridge from me, a life long Demo-
and gave it to a colored man
When I took the draw I was to
have forty cents every day I opened
the draw. made three dollars
cents the first month,
and nine dollars and sixty cents
the second month. After that the
Commissioners gave me twelve
dollars and fifty cents per month.
A few months later my was
raised to fifteen dollars, and I was
to keep the bridge
thing that I could do. I worked
at that price a few months. Mr.
Mooring one of the Commission-
that lived on tho north side of
tho river who crossed the river
several times during a week, told
the Board it was an imposition on
me as I done so much on the
bridge, that ha would more to give
me twenty dollars. Mr L Flem-
another Commissioner who
lives on the north side, seconded
the motion, as he saw the amount
of work that I was doing. I tried
to do my duty and told Messrs.
Mooring and Fleming if I should
overlook anything just call my at-
to it and it should be done-
I bad not lost a day only for rash-
in about eight months
Tuesday after first Monday in
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
------that is now being offered by-
W. H. WHITE.
------1 have Just to suit-----
GENTLEMEN.
LADY.
HOUSEKEEPER,
BODY ELSE
If you want anything to wear or anything
to eat, or any article to it in the house,
call me. Goods all new, not a piece
of old stock in the house.
My prices will be found as low as
goods can be sold at,
W. H. WHITE.
A.
WALTER'S
near losing my place that day. I
then told several men to
and see if I did not do my duty.
I took a man then under the
to examine the posts with j
me- There were sis poets
which all of the sap had rotted but
the heart was good. Four of them
ore still standing, two have
cut down. I measured the heart
in them which was inches in
ampler. I saw one of the from C.
call another to him m
their meeting the first Monday in
January and after they had a talk
I saw one of them come out of the
Court House with Mr. 0-
and go down to the bridge
went to tho and after they;
came back without a word of re-
proof or a single charge made in I
the notice another man was hired
in my place- I had no chance to
defend myself, if I had I could j
have proven on good evidence,
that myself and another had ex-
of my duty.
Good judges say I kept tho bridge
in as good repair as it has been
kept since, while the tax payers of
the county have paid every month
this year, except July, from to
dollars, and added to this ex-
help and the whole amount is
on the heels of five hundred
Street, in rear of Dr. D.-L. James
office.
GREEK N. p.
I great pleasure in informing my
friends and public generally
that
S-NEW STUDIO-;
is now open. A successful career of
. YEARS
Is proof of the sat ion I always give
are or more with the lumber. My Work Speaks for Itself.
Mr. Mooring said I kept the , ,
bridge in the best condition at one;
less expense than it had been
kept while hp had been
which was a long
The captain on the boat signed
paper that I was the most prompt
draw-keeper between Tarboro and
Greenville.
Respectfully,
B. H.
Call early and examine
Hoping gain your
merit roar favor, l am
Very respectfully,
THOMAS
Sale an Easy Terms
offer for sale on the Urge
Double Store north of Fifth street.
east of street, with lot fronting
feet on Fifth by feet deep. A
splendid bargain. Apply at once to
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools
I lows of the improved makes.
Trunks. Valises, Floor Matting,
Oil Children's Carriages,
and the largest and best selected
stock of FURNITURE ever kept
in our town. When in need of
anything in our line try
Yours, anxious for trade.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
THE RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door in Court House
CONTINUE MANUFACTURE OF
My Factory is well equipped with the host Mechanics, put up nothing
but WORK. We keep up with the times and improved
Rest material used in all work. All styles of Springs arc use J. you can select
Also keep on hand a full i., ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
he year round, which we will sell as as the
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hop
merit a continuance of the same
My is well equipped with we put up
nothing but work. We keep up with the times and best
in all work. All styles springs used, select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King
Wu also keep on hand a full line of Harness and Whip which we
sell at the lowest rates. Special attention given to repairing.
N.
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE
Homer Military Oxford, N.
C.
buildings, hot and cold baths, gymnasium, healthful climate,
surroundings, numbers limited. A home school for boys,
sent on implication.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
f,
for the following lines of
Boxes Crackers.
Car load Mess
Car load Side Meat
Oar load Flour, all
Car load White Seed Oaf.
Cases Star Lye- , ,
Cases Bread
Cares Soap.
Cases Cherries
Full line Case Goods
Boxes Tobacco.
Boxes Starch.
Barrels Rico Molasses,
Stick Candy.
Barrels Gail Ax
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff.
Barrels Snuff.
Paper Sacks, Cigarette,
K. C.
. v.-, .
Ac.
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of
the best Companies in existence, see
ft d





w.
CD
CD
CD
CD
CD
if
THE REFLECTOR.
Local
ThU i- the- last of August.
Moonlight nights an with
conies in to-morrow.
The boys arc at girls, too.
Republican next Saturday.
The Prohibitionists have nominated a
ticket Beaufort comity.
Chip in a quarter now ant the H
is your Dec. 1st.
Lumber was unloaded last week for
repairing the bridge.
Cotton is right along. The
pickers will soon be in the Holds after it.
The Greenville Land and improvement
Company arc building a store near their
mill.
The weather, or something else, brings
out the bugs in full force when lamps are
lighted.
The Home Sewing
Moat Brown Bit.
Machine for
S ore has the
offered
The Reflector Book
cheapest lot of
Greenville.
Tobacco Is coming in for the opening
breaks of the Greenville and Eastern
Warehouse to-morrow.
Ship your tobacco to Cooper's Ware-
house, Henderson, he will work
honestly and faithfully for your beat
interest.
The Greenville Warehouse takes the
lead. It got the first load of new crop
tobacco, which came in last M
Cream Cheese X.
Butter at the Old Brick Store.
Y. State
Work commenced last week on the
Eastern prize house. It will be
before. gout.
Remember if yon semi your tobacco to
Cooper's Henderson, you
will obtain high prices be
Try it.
The colored people will have
from here to Washington to-morrow
on the steamer Myers. It is the
of the Good Samaritans.
Want to eat something good Boss
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store.
Any man having surplus money and
wanting to make a good investment could
not do better than put it in prize
iii Greenville.
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware-
house, Henderson. Send your tobacco
there. Cooper Is the farmer's friend.
Mrs. W. R. brought the
half a pound
on Friday. It was a line one.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads and
at the Old Brick Store.
Some as pretty tobacco as we have seen
till- season was brought to the
last Friday by Mr. F. M. Smith.
Warehouse. Henderson, is
ready f. new chop tobacco. He
highest price.-.
Just one week from to-morrow and the
Cleveland and Carr grand old
Democratic be unfurled to
the breeze.
Cash given for Produce. Hides,
and Furs at the Old Brick Store.
Eggs
Personal.
Mr. W II. Cox is Net buying new
goods.
Hon. E. Moore, of
been in town this week on business.
Mr. V. R. Parker has been sick for
weeks. We are glad to know he is
now improving.
Mr. it. T. Spier, of went to
the at Chapel Hill, last week,
to take a medical course.
Miss in tense Forbes returned Wed-
from where she had
been spending several weeks.
Miss Estelle Williams returned home
Thursday evening from a visit of several
weeks to Raleigh and
C. B. Esq., Democratic
tor for the State at large, will speak at
Friday, 2nd. and at
3rd.
Miss Minnie Caraway, of Halifax-,
rived Friday evening and upon
her duties as music teacher at the
morning.
Mr. W. S. Rawls and wife, and Mr.
Zeno Moore went on the recent
to Asheville. Mr. Moore tells us
they had a delightful trip.
Rev. X. Harding, of Washington, made
a short visit last week to his brother, Maj.
II. Harding. He preached in the
pal church Friday evening.
Mr. O. L. Joyner, one of the
tors of the Eastern Warehouse, came
last Thursday from a trip to sever-
of the up country markets.
Rev. R. W. of the Disciples
church, will preach in Hall.
Greenville, next Sunday afternoon at
o'clock. Public cordially invited.
Mr. W. of Oxford, who
served so acceptably as book-keeper at
Greenville Warehouse, last season
returned to take the same position the
coming season.
Sir. Lawrence who for a year
past been here with his uncle, Mr. C.
W. returned to bis home In
Oil Monday. Lawrence made many
friends in Greenville we would be
glad to see him hack.
Mr. B. Cherry left for the
markets Monday to buy new goods for
the of j. B. Cherry Co. Keep
eye on their space in the
tor and it will tell you all about their
new stock. This Ann is never surpassed
in the selection and quality of goods.
Mr. W. B. Greene Is opening a
Racket Store in the building opposite A.
Forbes, and next door to Griffin's. He is
a young man of good business experience
ml has the push about him to make
things hustle. He says he is going to as-
the natives in selling cheap goods.
Messrs. Eugene Crews and Robert
Hester, representing Bullock Mitchell's
Oxford warehouse. Mr. R. G. Hart, rep-
resenting Coopers Henderson warehouse.
and Mr. W. H. Jenkins, of the Header-
warehouse, have all been put-
ting some good tobacco talk with the
farmer- the past week.
Rev. A. D. Hunter returned from Gary
last Friday. Since arriving and consult-
a number of the members of the Ba-
church the slot Men was that
Ms resignation be withheld until the close
of the year, and be will continue bis pas-
here during that time, lie will
preach to-night at the usual hour.
Tobacco Board of Trade.
The Greenville Tobacco of Trade
wag organized mi Monday night with the
following
F. Evans.
M. Hester.
Sec. A.
The following committees were
pointed the ensuing
W. T.
and C. B. Blackley.
T. Joyner, Ola Forbes
and R. M. Hester.
A. W. T. Man-
gum and R. W. Royster.
The Secretary will take pleasure in
furnishing buyers and planters the
rates governing the trade.
The Tobacco Journal.
The Eastern Journal
Guide made its
in Greenville last Thursday with Mr.
Chas. A. managing editor. It is
a sixteen page journal enclosed a
handsome orange cover, the latter in-
tended to represent the color of bright
tobacco. The Journal is devoted to the
advancement of the tobacco interest of
Eastern Carolina. It believes
there is a future for this section in
the establishment of such enterprises as
grow out of the cultivation and handling
of tobacco. The Reflector extends its
hand to the Journal. We are with yon
in everything that tends to build up
Eastern Carolina, especially where
Greenville and Pitt county are to come in
for a good share of the benefit.
PARIS FOR
A gentleman out what cheap
honk- could be bad at the Reflector Book
Store bought forty at one time last Fri-
day.
Bear mind the fact that the Green-
ville Amateurs will give an entertain-
Elliott Hall to-morrow night.
It will be enjoyable.
On Aug. 11th, Cooper's Warehouse,
Henderson, sold new priming- for R.
R. Carr at 15.50, and
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 n, 10.50
15.75 and Cooper can make just
as good sales for you.
The Greenville Warehouse Company
have erected a lot of stables for the free
use of farmers selling tobacco at that
warehouse.
The flag pole stands on the coiner of
the public square, towering its head
feet in the air. The flag goes up
Wednesday.
The Reflector Book Store has the very
thing the way of slate to suit
every school boy or girl. Come and sec.
Also a new line of tablets.
The subscribers keep coining right
along and getting on the Reflector
roll, but there Is always at the
for more. It is now going the
first of for cents.
Somebody has said, though they could
give no reason for it, that lightning never
strikes a sycamore tree, but Mr. W. R.
Whichard tells us it struck one in his yard
a few nights ago.
The weather wise are up a-ready
talking about our going to have a severe
winter. The first thought that will pop
into heads of folks in these hot times
is care if
It seems to be the rule now for the
not to go through a week with
less than twenty-five new subscribers.
This is a good item for advertisers to
make a note of.
Dr. J. X. of town-
ship, lost a tobacco barn last Thursday
night. We heard two others were burned
In the same township, last week, but did
not learn names of the looser-.
The trade that the tobacco industry
brings to Greenville helps the business
of every man in the town. And the last
one of them ought to feel Interested in
ma Wing this a tobacco market equal to
any in the State. Do not stand back and
expect to reap miles- you sow.
Greenville township Republicans held
a primary last Saturday to appoint
gates to the county convention which
meets next Saturday. The county con-
is called to select delegates to a
State convention which meets on the 7th.
The Coast Line has completed its de-
pots at and Whichard on the
Washington of their road. At
the latter place Mr, W. R.
built a nice store and will open a stock of
general merchandise there by the 1st
October.
The flag pole of the Cleveland and Can-
club was put up Saturday morning
during the day the Greenville Guard flag
floated from the top of It. The regular
dub flag will be raised next Wednesday,
Sept. 7th, the day appointed for Pitt
county's grand Democratic ratification.
The Ladies Aid Society of the
dist church will have a dinner to-morrow
the store formerly occupied by Mr. J.
M. Latham nest to grocery
store where all the delicacies of the sea
son be obtained at figure,
Everybody invited and the ladles assure
you plenty to eat.
To-morrow Is the day, and the ware-
houses and the Reflector both expect
to come out with flying colors. The
warehouses are hopeful of selling many
piles of tobacco, and we are hopeful of
adding many subscribers to our list. At
any rate we are confident of
happy bride-groom of the occasion.
The Most Popular Physician.
Yancey t Stronach. of Raleigh, have
donated a phaeton to the Soldiers Home,
the vehicle to be voted to the Most
physician In Carolina
Christmas. If Dr. C. J.
does not get that phaeton the
tor will have to acknowledge itself not
a good prophet.
Still Joined to His Idols.
Rev. J. T. Phillips, one of the Third
party nominees for the Legislature, was
in town Friday and told the REFLECTOR
that he had reconsidered and would not
withdraw, lie was at onetime
plating withdrawing but lie got a new
inspiration from a caucus with the
that day made up Ids mind
to go through with them.
The Club.
At the. meeting of the Cleveland and
Carr club last Thursday night Mr. G. B.
King was elected President for the next
month. A line speech was made by
Cape. W. II. Kitchen, of Scotland
and a vote of thanks was extended him.
It was decided to hold the next meeting
on Friday night of this week.
fir Walter Raleigh's Hat.
Will James made a trip through Con-
township, one day last week,
searching for Third lie said
he could not find but one of them in the
whole township. But while making the
search he .-tumbled across
may prove interesting, being decided-
antiquated in its character. It is an
old hat that was the property of and worn
by Sir Walter Raleigh. Mr. James
cured the hat, brought it to town with
him and presented it to the Reflector.
It shows age and looks as though it
done good service its time.
The Schools.
Three of Greenville's schools opened
Monday with a flue beginning. The Male
Academy, in charge of Prof.
bad the first day. The Male and Fe-
male Institute, charge of Prof.
opened with Mrs.
ton's Female School had only though
she would have had more but for some
slight misunderstanding as to the open-
The enrollment of each school has
l increased since Monday, and there
will be constant additions for several
days to come. Prof. begin-
at this session was just twice as
large a year ago.
Your Harmon.
Dr. D. S. Harmon, the Russian, Op-
and Inventor, has open-
ed a permanent office in Wilmington.
He has rooms and in the Allen
building, elegantly fitted up, where he
has a number of callers daily- In
to the local work in Wilmington,
persons from all over the State and from
South Carolina who have trouble with
their eyes, are going constantly to
to consult him, have their eyes
examined by his original method and
lasses fitted. When Pr, Harmon was
In Clinton several months since,
be did a great deal of work for persons in
Sampson and adjoining counties. They
have all been greatly pleased with bis
work. He deals squarely and honestly
with even- one, so all who know have
learned to trust him. He has had several
orders from Sampson since locating in
Wilmington. By his efficiency and fair
treating he has beta a real benefactor to
those who have eye troubles, at the
same time he is adding to his reputation
and Caucasian.
Rather Mixed.
Saturday night at John
Dickens knocked George Cater down
with ii chair. George fired at Dickens
with a pistol, but Dickens dodged behind
Jack who was struck in the hip
with the ball. The wound is not con-
dangerous. The constable arrest-
ed George, tied his hands together and
tied the rope to himself to goto Falkland
for trial. On the way the officer, who
was a state of fell
out of the buggy. George of course fall-
out too. George untied, the rope
with his teeth that bound to the
officer, drove the to Falkland and
back after the sleeping sentinel of
justice. George stood his trial Sunday
like a man. gave a straw bond and late
Sunday afternoon was seen near Farm-
ville giving leg ball for Greene county.
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy Will Cure
Rheumatism and Dyspepsia.
Como, Hertford Co. X. C,
Joe Madam
After having been a great from
Rheumatism and Dyspepsia, and finally
Erysipelas, and getting
relief from other treatment, I was entirely
relieved of these troubles in
short time by the use of your
Remedy, and heartily recommend ft to
all who are similarly afflicted. I know
of other instances in which it has been
most effective and satisfactory.
Yours
MRS. B. S.
Piper Picked pick-
led a line of alliterative
nonsense, that children used to sty.
Nowadays they can practice on the Per-
Painless, Powerful Properties
Pierces Pleasant Purgative Pellets. It
will impress a which will lie useful
to know. These cure sick head-
ache, billions attacks, indigestion,
and all stomach, liver and bowel
troubles. They are tiny, sugar-coated
pills, easy to take, and, as a laxative, one
is sufficient for a dose. more groans
gripes from the old drastic remedies
Purgative Pellets are as pain,
less as they are perfect in their effects-
MUSIC SCHOOL.
MRS. ANDREW would be
glad to have a class in Instrumental
Music at her home in the J. J. Perkins
residence. Session begins September
5th. Terms on application.
Dissolution Notice.
The partnership heretofore existing
between W. B. Brown and S. T. Hooker,
trading as Brown ft Hooker, is hereby
dissolved by mutual consent. All who
are indebted lo the old firm will please
with S. T. Hooker.
XV. B. BROWN,
S. T.
July 27th, 1892.
I will till conduct the business t the
old stand and solicit the liberal patron-
age bestowed upon the old firm. By
consent will continue under the old style
of Brown Hooker. Mr. Brown will
continue as
T. HOOKER.
Notice.
State Carolina, the
County. Court.
Eliza Stocks, J. T. and wife Min-
Allen, T. B. Allen and wife Mollie,
Pattie Stocks, Cora stocks, William
Stocks, Annie Stocks, Chas. Stocks,
Stocks and Stocks, the
last six minors by their friend J. T.
Allen.
Against
Home Benefit Association, defendants.
The defendant above named Is hereby
notified to be and appear before the
Judge of our Superior Court, at a court
to be held for the county of Pitt, at the
Court House In Greenville, on the 2nd
Monday after the 1st Monday of
it being the 19th day of September,
1892, and answer the complaint which
will be deposited in the office of the
Clerk of the Superior Court of said
within the three days of said
term, and let said defendant take notice
that If they fail to answer the said com-
plaint within the time required by law
the plaintiff's will apply to the court for
the relief demanded in the complaint.
Given under ray hand and seal of said
court, this day of August, 1892.
K. A.
Clerk Superior Court.
flea
ear
Everybody Come.
Next Wednesday will be a
in Greenville. The Democratic
will be hoisted and to the
breeze from a poll, feet high, that has
been raised In front of the Court House
Some fine political speaking will be Marti.
Two distinguished a the kite
will be present discuss the living
political Issues the campaign. Every,
body is invited to one and
all and help make it a glorious day for
Cleveland, Carr sad Democracy.
A Hogshead Story.
I wish by this means to tell the people
that have prepared and am still
paring a large lot of material for
co Hogsheads. And to make it as con-
as possible for my customers I
have decided to run two wagons on the
road to deliver them at most convenient
places- And I further promise that I
will use best efforts to put up such
size and quality of Hogsheads as the de-
may want. And think I can com-
in pride with any.
I will also pay special attention to
making and Brackets for trim-
ming any house you may build.
Please see me placing your or-
or address me at N. C.
fully,
-A. G. COX.
O-
NEW GOODS
C. T.
HAS JUST RETURNED FRO V ff NORTHERN MARKETS. SO A
PEEP AT HIS STORE, IT IS OVER NEW
GOODS A COMPLETE LINE OF
Dry Goods, Boots, Shoos, Notions,
Furnishing Goods,
LISTEN
and other novelties numerous to mention.
Pine All-Wool Suits 88.00
Men's All-Wool Pauls worth 11.00.
Men's Dress cents worth
Dress Shoes 7- cents worth
bargains in
hard licks and long stride
all departments.
to obtain it.
We your trade and are
Respectfully,
Opposite Old Brick Store.
C. T. MUN FOR D,
N. C.
BANNER WAREHOUSE
OXFORD, O-
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners and Proprietors.
Big Prices High Averages
We at the same old stand, where are better prepared than
ever before to hand; to advantage the line bright from
have very lam corps of buyers who arc anxious for New Tobacco
and are willing to nay good prices for it. stands well on our
market and is eagerly sought alter both by our order and speculators. We are
very glad that we can say to the of and adjoining counties
that tobacco has latter ibis year we have known it in
awl that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can be
had FREE OF CHARGE by planters to us, by applying to S. M.
Schultz Co. Greenville, N. C, or to Autos G. Cox. X. C.
that we bid lively on every pile put upon our and buy largely of grades
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest market price for event
pound sold with us. Recollect that it cost you nothing to collect our checks as they
are payable in York Exchange without cost to holder. Don't forget to us
with a good shipment will convince you that we an from way-
that we every time on big prices you know they talk.
Thanking our friends for the very patronage bestowed upon us in the past
and pledging them our very to please them in the future, we are with
best Wishes, Very truly your friends,
BULLOCK ft MITCHELL,
Oxford, x.
New Advertisements.
tie people some
news in his advertisement
talk.
Mrs. Andrew Joyner announces tho
opening of a music school in Greenville.
Mrs. Joyner took the first music medal of
her class at the celebrated Wesleyan In-
at is a brilliant per
former on the piano and thoroughly
the science.
to-days the
advertisement of the Banner Warehouse,
Oxford, Bullock Mitchell, proprietors.
This warehouse is known to the planters
of Pitt county, and it is known that every
seller there gets fair and square dealing.
They want the bright tobacco of this sec-
and are In position to guarantee the
very best prices for It. Mr. Crews,
r remain In
ft week
will take pleasure in giving shipper
any Information wanted.
The Ladies Aid Society of the Baptist
Church will have a dinner next
day, Sept 7th. Price of dinner M
There is a great deal of satisfaction in leading
we are still in that position. Rivals at-
tempt to follow our methods but find that we
lead them a merry chase and they finally give
it up or come to grief.
Elegance and durability, coupled with low
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods
and Notions in the lead.
BROWN BROTHERS.
Terms Easy, j
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE
I,. farm, Rea
Dam township, lira lands
of T. Tyson and J. II. b. A Hue
farm of about build-
adapted to cotton lo-
A line Burl
A farm near lying
mediately on the railroad, own-
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, which
are cleared- Good neighbor-
hood, and a within
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin
log farms.
A line farm of three miles
from and ti lies from
ville. with substantial dwelling
and out known as the I .
home place, line col ton
good clay accessible to marl.
A smaller farm adjoining the above
known as the Jones place,
dwelling, barn tenant laud
good.
I. A farm of acres in town-
ship, about miles from
part the tract.
C. Part of the Joyner farm,
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro,
in an Improving section
and can be made B valuable farm.
A small farm of Mores,
about miles from mi In-
Will Swamp, with etc., for-
owned by ox.
K.
A set of about acres near
station, with
suited for lies.
A of about SUD acres in
township, near the Washington
pine limber.
A tract of acre, near
Mills, pine limber,
OLD MAN GUSS
your Tobacco at the
GREENVILLE
WAREHOUSE.
Tie season opens with a big break en
Thursday, September
Bring on your and i guarantor
that you Hill get M prices
for It as e n be bad any-
where.
Apply to
m. II,
X. c.
I Will have experienced help in conduct-
the Greenville Warehouse and
every patron will receive prompt
attention. Don't forget to
bring ms your Tobacco.
G. F. EVANS,
PROPRIETOR.
Notice.
Monday, the day of September,
A. D. I w sell the Court House
door in the town of to the
highest bidder for cash the following
tract of land county, situated In
town of known in
town as lots No. and lie.
I lot- set apart to Ann K. Bernard
In the of the lands of William
Si., veil ex in ray
hands for collection against Ann K. Ber-
and which have been levied on said
land as the property r said Ann B. Ber-
A. K. Sheriff.
Bring a load of your best tobacco and
we will show everybody that we
have the best tobacco in the
BELT.
j A large number of buyers have de-
their intentions of
------coming to------
i GREENVILLE.
Our new Warehouse just been
completed and is one of the best
warehouses in the State.
We have free Stables for your
teams.
We charge you nothing for
and storage.
We have an experienced force to
I handle your and will see that
get lull value for every pound.
CD
Presents in household and kitchen
furniture and provisions
Given Away
ion our opening day to any worthy
c, white couple that will be married pub-
O in our house on September 1st.
j The list of present and donors
j below.
Remember the day and date and
come all to see the Knot Tied.
Eastern Warehouse,
L. Joyner and Owners A Props.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
-o-
Dis solution.
The firm of and Edmonds is
hereby dissolved mutual consent.
Those indebted the will pay the
same Herbert
Au.
It gives me pleasure to to
our customers that I will continue the
business the old stand. Every com-
fort and convenience will be found in
my shop. First-class shave and hair
can be had at all times. Thanking the
public for past I solicit a con-
of the same.
Edmonds.
New Barber Shop.
I take this to return
to my many customers who have
me their liberal support in the past.
have opened a new shop In old Club.
House and would solicit a
continuation of my former patronage;
I will assure all that they shall receive
every attention besides getting the best
have and hair out In town. All I ask Is
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. AU
of the latest Improvements In the
rial art will be in use in my shop.
Have on band a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchenware, Tin-
ware, Lamp Goods, Paints, Oils, Glass and
We make our own stovepipe and pans of cold rolled steel which
is far the most durable.
We don't try to keep cl goods in town, if yon
to get the most value for money give us a call.
test White Oil cents per gallon.
Tin Roofing and Guttering less the Tariff.
PENDER CO.,
o.
j Joyner Hod Room Sot. C. W.
j Chamber Set. s. K. Handsome Hanging lamp. D. D.
I Basket, Complete Bet Kitchen Furniture. M. K.
Dr. Pair Window Shades. A. J. Berg,
Smyrna Bug. C T. Oil Painting. Mrs. Fannie Joy-
Laos Pillow alums. W. J. Biggs, pr Towels.
Set S. M. Schultz, Mirror. R-
Hyman, Doc Bride and D. J.
years subscription to Reflector. Jack Smith, i Spool
Rosa Forbes, Coffee Pot. J. J. Starker,
Zeno Moore, Sifter. L. Lamp.
Brawn Bros, yards Bleached Domestic. W. II. White,
Bucket J. I., Dipper. T. f. doz
Ii. K. Harris, Bale W. B. Wilson. pounds
S die Flour, . I,. Brown, pounds Sugar. J.
C. Sun. pounds Roasted Coffee. H. C. Coffee.
W, II. Cox, pounds Flour. A. Andrews, id pounds Flour.
Smith. pounds often. D. W. pounds Flour,
Long, pound French Candy. Tyson Check
j S. K. lbs. cake. digs. A. Marriage License.
i Ceremony to take place at o'clock P. M. Ceremony will be
performed by any minister the couple may choose. The only re-
for the couple is to make known their intentions to
i Mr. Alex. one week September 1st, who
will keep the matter profound secret until that day. Call early
and avoid the i
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed lobe First-class an
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS,
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS. BOOTS and SHOES, LA
CHILDREN'S FURNITURE HOUSE
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH BLINDS. CROCKERY and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Hay, Rock Link, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and -addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent for Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale-
Jobbers price, cents per dozen, less U per cent for Cash. Bread Prep-
ration and Hall's Star Lye jobbers Prices. Lead and pure Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction.
COMMISSION MERCHANT.
--------AND BUYER OF--------
Country Produce
Bring all of your Chickens, Eggs,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yon on a small commission,
Call see me.
. JNO. S.





YO
IS
NO.
AIDS NATURE
IN NATURES OWN WAY.
IT COSTS YOU NOTHING TO INVESTIGATE.
A MAILED
ATLANTIC CO.
1405 N York Av. Washington. C.
GOD YOU
e la tins
And I It,
-i. ; .
Ta . i I
n from tho heart,
i m-n yon,
mill clouds depart
That common phrase Hod you
Life often Is n
here thorns and briers beset
Ant while you stance
Ire Min-r and fret yon.
It dries the tear
When ail tin M lib yen,
H from n yon bear
The phrase. you
An often the heart would speak
other are nil too weak
Its dot P to reader.
Or a seeks
w it would address yen.
Then in the ;.
TIm
Item.
was ab use- to me. as
sometimes to give the his down I see the white on the
coup tie grace, and in tho mint it of tho dim gleaming in
was employed to cut the throat of a ; a ray of light that streams through
stag which bad been brought down foliage, and I think involuntarily
by a bolt from a j of the tradition associated with tho
Arthur Macgregor turned Use j knife in tho Macgregor family.
.,. ml-r in hands wish I could hear what they are
I say to myself. should
like to be an eavesdropper, but I
am afraid of Arthur when hi gets
into one of those terrible of
over in his hands affectionately,
i as ho described its uses, and then re-
turned it to its nest in his stocking.
where tho butt on tho black
handle looked like the evil eye of a
; Cyclopean imp in ambush.
An hour later Arthur and I
the where the ball was in
progress. saw him look swiftly
around, then he marched to the
Upper end of tho largo room, whore
the stag. a mass of flags and ever-
greens, was occupied by
In America.
Till beyond question the moat sue- f was not confined to
earful cough bare trills of
Mid. H few doses cure, the i T ., , , ., .
I north worship tho sun and
How Lost How Regained I
THE
lei the girl go, Arthur. I
would not worry myself about her
I were you. If die the Other
fellow yon can r make her
transfer her affection by running
his. In his jealous frenzy he i
even kill that
I can see the largo fan of Miss
Jamison languidly waving to and fro
as she apparently listens to Ar-
is saying. There is no doubt
that be is desperately in earnest. His
show that.
Around ha hall were the stalls in I gentle movement of the
which fancy had been offered ; chafe If I could only see
for sale the past two weeks, faces I do not know whether
I arc quarreling or not. Now ins
the stalls themselves converted forward and takes bar hand.
into arbors, where, amid cool looking ; snatches it away. The fan stops
and artistically disposed flow- , waving. I we him bring his fiat down
ere, the most delightful j on his knee, and
worst eases of Croup and Bron-
while its won success in the
cure of U without a
in the history of Since its
discovery it has been sold on a
a test which no other medicine
can stand. If yon have a cough earn-
ask yon to try it. Price
and If your lungs are fore, chest, or
back bone, use Shiloh's Plaster.
at WOOTEN'S STORE.
A Cane of Charmed.
A N w Yorker tailing a Sunday
stroll tho city limits was
at . conduct of of
that fluttered in the air a
foot or so above a bare rock in the
midst of en empty posture. Now
end then a bird would light on the
rock, but most of the time tho gray-
brown uneasily just
could enjoyed by the tired
Into one of these Arthur made
a flash fly to the
KM
s I A T, 1.1
after her. Besides, such on j glowering around the
your part would be unmanly and room and looking. I knew, for Miss
A only
and
of
all
K N of SOU Cloth
by Descriptive
utterly in a i
going to run after her I
simply state I
at night, and you
the P
testimonial
of the Press
of cured.
in person or
menu
m iv II- I u or
B X,
many
Mn . ,
The Science of Idle, or I
than cold. H
i man, and
I he running after
I Helen I cannot help it if
NOW.
Expert
The Science or i .
more than cold,
every and m
he CaW.
She to go. At these public
charity anybody of average re-
with the ability to pay
five dollars for
come. I and I have no
doubt that that valuable institution,
the Asylum for
or whatever is, wall be
to tho extent of five dollars
from the pocketbook of Jamison
for his daughter's
Arthur. I am
not going to make a fool of yourself.
From what yon say, I
does v. it look upon you
with favor as we thought. Is
Sam Bangs going to take her to the
ball
should I
responded with
and I not say any move.
Arthur Macgregor was
and his disposition so veil
for
temper, especially when
knew I had given ample
provocation. My regard for him
was fully know, but he
often used to say, when B Baking f
me, that Ned
things a cold blooded way
that would strain tho
strongest ties friendship. Per-
haps Arthur was right, but I nip
sure
shall go in Arthur
j announced after n pause, during
j which we had b smoked so
; that my tittle den looked more
i like the private room of a Gorman
student than the b i race of a
respectable rising young lawyer.
As a Highlander, I suppose, Ar-
I, waving my hand to die-
course, i Lave the dross,
I feel more h ma i-i a and
kilt than anything else, except an
A Family Affair
Health for the Baby,
Pleasure for the Parents,
New Life for the Old Folks.
Root
THE GREAT
TEMPERANCE DRINK
is a family requisite
of tho home. A cent
linkup makes gAllon of
a delirious,
Don't ho If a dealer, for
Hie sake of you
Scientific American
etc.
to
Ml
i is
fat
s co,
by
of In th
world.
mat, It.
Tear; i i-O-
York.
WILMINGTON WELDON
and Schedule
TRAINS GOING SOUTH.
No No No
Apr. 19th, daily Fast Hail, daily
dally ex Son
pm
Ar am -17
u coat and w
The ball, to
L am
Ar pm S
Ar
Ar
am
Ar
TRAINS GOING
ex bun.
Ar
Ar
u was to ring to a
close the fair
charity, to be the
social event of the
not a fancy dress gather-
it . i It . the i of those
attending w appeared in
I ;. evening dress. Jinny
of the gentlemen had signified
intention of going in fancy
that
most of the ladies appear only
in the of
moth
Macgregor.
American, prided his
blue blooded Scottish descent. Tito
of the olden time had
been terrible fellows, who took a
prominent part
I with, the and of
j that ilk, and who, claymore
and led their neighbors a sad
life of it when they took it into their
A. Mount S to real
IS . to their
; way, and then he sat, in hilt of the I see the
j white eye glistening in his
band as he raises the weapon
Tarboro am
Daily except Sunday.
Train on I Neck Branch
leaves 4.22 P Scot
land Neck at 6.15 P. M. Greenville 6.63
M., Kinston p. m.
leaves a. m., Greenville
a. m. Halifax a. m.
11.25 a. m. daily except Sun-
Trains on Washington leave
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives A. R.
Junction a. in., leaves A.
ft R. n. Bl., arrives
8.45 p. m. Daily except
Connects with trains on Albemarle lid
Raleigh R. R. and Scotland Neck
Branch.
Local freight train leaves Weldon
Monday, and Friday at
clan.
do yea think of
asked as ho showed
himself to an before we d for
the baD on the following evening.
yon think I hare passed
muster if I had lived the
century, when tho
ors were a power the bonny hind
of
I was obliged to admit that he did
look well. A tall, handsome fellow,
with a massive, frame, of
which his at the knee.
were somehow tho most conspicuous
portion, tho dress of a
him y.
m., arriving Scotland Neck the tip of the long, raven black
feather in bonnet to ;
Ins shoes he looked every
inch a Scotch warrior.
is that in your stocking,
I asked.
Ho stooped and ht. v.-forth a
m. 5.30 p. m.,
7.40 p. in. h
Tuesday. aid Saturday
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville
a. m., p. m.,
p.
Tram leaves N G, via
ft R. R. daily except Sun- i row
day, F ii. P M, arrive ,,,.,. r
Williamston. N C, IS P ii, P M.
Plymouth r- 5.22 p. there,
Returning leaves Plymouth daily i as if tho rust of blood from a
a. in. a. in- ; not
N G, 7.30 a m, am
arrive Tarboro, N C . 11.20.
Trains on Division.
removed, was still bright and gleam-
As flourished it in the
and Branch leave
a m. arrive Rowland p in.
Returning leave Rowland p m,
arrive Fayetteville p in. Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
daily except Sunday, G A M
arrive N C, A M.
laves Smithfield, C AM
arrive Goldsboro. NO A M.
Train
at P M.-arrive Nashville
P Hope ft P M. Returning
Hope A M, Nashville
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except
Train on Clinton Branch leave Warsaw
gaslight it looked a murderous
on, would do terrible ex-
in the hand of a desperate
man.
this is one of the most
heirlooms of my family. This
knife hundreds of old. It
eras to n Macgregor by Dong-
I las himself, and there i- a tradition
that v me of name i bet rayed
in love he can regain tho affections
of the maiden of his heart if he can
manage to draw from
bosom with this
a villainous am
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, at afraid that in this prosaic ago such a
proceeding would result in a very
ton at A M, and P M. charge of felonious
Warsaw with Nos. i ,, .-., of
Southbound train on Wilson ft
Branch Is No. Northbound Is
Sui-day.
Trains No. South and North will
stop only at Rocky Wilson,
Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train No. makes connection a
Weldon all points North dally. Al
rail via Richmond, and daily except
day via Bay at Rocky Mount
daily except Sunday with Norfolk ft
railroad for Norfolk and all
points via Norfolk.
DIVINE.
General
J. R. Transportation
T.
and I ;
reunion of two loving re-
marked. heathenish
launched
that mission and no
A weapon of this kind is
part of every warrior's
equipment. It is called the
black knife. When the owner was
hard pressed in combat, and
no longer use his sword, he drew his
from hie stocking and
tried to tum the tide of battle by
plunging the blade into his
Helen Jamison.
I had fallen with a group cf ac-
and was talking the
usual conventionalities about the
tasty decoration of the hall, the pros-
of a large attendance, the
merits of the charity, the
results of the fair and so on. Then
a certain lady sailed through
the doorway with her brother, and
as I had tho best of feeling toward
this same brother I took his sister
off his hands and joined in the grand
just then forming. As
paraded slowly around tho great
hall to tho strains of a selection
from I looked at every
couple as they passed us in the mazes
of the march to see if Helen Jamison
were there.
At last Yes, there she is, and
leaning on tho arm of Stun Bangs.
But was Not in the
arbor near the stage, where I had
last seen him Not among tho
Not standing in that group
of young men near the
of them in evening
the kaleidoscopic effect of the march,
wherein the quaint costumes of the
gentlemen and the rich party dresses
of the ladies seemed in every in-
so well matched Not in the
gallery, where many who did not
care to dance bad betaken them-
selves to enjoy a full view of the
proceedings below Where was he
you see muttered a
hoarse voice in my ear, as I was
handing my head to speak to the
lady arm through tho music.
I turned with a start.
There at my elbow, his mighty
frame trembling with passion as he
kept step in the march, his face
flushed, and his strong, white teeth
savagely biting at his blond mus-
was Arthur Macgregor.
you see he repeated.
As he spoke the black feather in
his vibrated in sympathy
with tho tremor of hate that went
through him like electric current.
and I saw tho nervous fingers steal
down toward the black hilt of tho
which, to my imagination,
seemed to actually wink lawless en-
with its white eye.
be a fool, was my
response, but he was gone.
As Helen Jamison passed and re-
passed me in the march I was obliged
to admit that there was some excuse
for Arthur mad love for
her. A decided brunette, with the
I oft brown eyes that will play the
Hence with an impressionable young
heart when the
young man has Gaelic
Veins --cheeks in which the rich color
comes and goes with every passing
emotion, a tall, stately figure, car-
with the easy grace born of per-
health and tho lifelong drill of
good la-ceding, and to crown all. a
Wealth of blue black hair
above white shoulders in the classic
coil so in Keeping with her
statuesque beauty.
What if brown eyes could flash
file while the color
the fair cheeks Just now
aha was smiling at some remark of
her
not a shadow upon her mind.
To be sure I thought I could sec
signs of preoccupation in her man-
as if conversation
were not the only thing she desired
in this life. But then I had had pain-
experience of Mr.
as a bore, and I did not won-
at Helen Jamison's attention
wandering from his stream
of small talk.
if this quarrel between
Arthur and Miss Jamison is as
as he seems to
as, after delivering my part-
into tho care of her brother, I
strolled up into the gallery and sat
by myself to gather strength for a
waltz for which I had booked myself
with a notoriously vigorous dancer.
am sure she does not care anything
for Bangs. I guess it is only a
quarrel, and that and
Arthur will nil right in tho
of a few
As I this philosophical
I glanced carelessly the
of the stage. Tho musicians
were sitting quietly in their bower
Of foliage, turning over the of
their music and start-
ling the company with fugitive toots
Of a few liars where they did not feel
quite wire of a passage, or giving a
violinist an in a brotherly de-
sire that his instrument should lie in
tune.
But what is this Yes, surely
Helen Jamison in the little
arbor near the stage, where Arthur
Macgregor took up his position on
our first entrance Half hidden by
the drooping fronds of tho palms,
she is looking around the hall,
for Perhaps for
Sam Bangs, who, in his as a
Revolutionary soldier, is wandering
feebly the floor, evidently wish-
that he had not come in cos-
wherein the trousers are cut off
at the
No Tins is the person she wanted
to see. I can tell that by her
manner, as Arthur Macgregor
stalks up to the arbor, and after
Standing at the entrance for a few
seconds, doffs his blue bonnet and
enters.
From where am sitting I can see
into tho arbor, though the two
pants aw conceded from nearly
in the hall by the palms
over the head of tho helpless girl,
act then I suddenly regain control
of my paralyzed I
I rush wildly down the stairs,
a dozen at a time, and fly along the
hall the little arbor where a
fearful tragedy is being enacted in
the very midst of a festive gather-
get a hasty glimpse of people
staring at me in open mouthed
prise, of young men bestowing on
mo a supercilious grin, of
couples moving hastily out of my
path. I hear tho young men and the
couples asking each other what is
the matter with me But I take no
heed I
All I can see is the
The terrible Made is still in his up-
lifted hand, while the girl sits quite
still, evidently too frightened to
move. I hear her saying some-
thing in low. broken accents. Then
ho flourishes the knife to make the
death stab deep and sure.
I reach the arbor. Another sec-
and my hand will clutch his
arm.
Too late I
The glittering steel comes down
like a flash of lightning
into a fan.
There is a burst cf silvery laughter
from Miss Jamison as she takes the
fan from his hand and
you, Arthur. It is a very pretty
You know my weakness
or curiosities in fans. I will use this
to kill off all tho bores of my ac-
with Sam Bangs, I
puts in Arthur.
are a silly boy. Sam Bangs,
indeed Who will you be jealous of
next Show me once more how this
is managed and do not talk
As I turn away to look for my
partner in the waltz just com-
I have only breath enough
for the incomplete
I'll C.
in Bulletin.
II. Line, wries
summer several years ago while rail-
in Mississippi. I became badly
affected with malarial blood poison that
impaired my health mere than two
years. Several offensive ulcers appear-
ed on my legs, and seemed to
give permanent relict L took six
bottles of B. which cured me en
i over the spot. It looked at first as if
the birds wire insects.
though was visible. On the
human . approach
tho birds still in the air took flight,
and as many more sprang cut
of the grass immediately about the
rock. At the same instant tho head
and moving tongue of a large
blacksnake became visible be-
hind the rock, and he too made off.
It wee apparently o clear ease of bird
dunning the snake.-New York
Hood
Good looks are more than skin deep.
depending upon a condition of
the vital organs. If the be in-
active, you have a Look, if your
he disordered you have a
peptic . and if your Kidney be
you have a Pinched Looks
Bitters is the great
and Tonic acts directly on these vital
organs. Cures Pimples, Blotches, Boils
and gives a good complexion. Sold at
Drug Store. per bottle.
I;, ii u Cow.
A comic scene took place a few days
i go at A peasant from
was driving a cow into
the capital, and had arrived at the
when the animal bolted,
and jumping the rails around the
well known boar pit arrived at the
bottom without injury. The pro-
thought feat his cow was
lost, but he was mistaken She at-
tacked the bears
routed, retired into their den. into
which she would have followed them
had she not been prevented by the
beeper of the animals, who let down
the trapdoor. Then the cow went
to the slaughter house and fulfilled
her destiny.- Pull Mall Budget.
Salve
The best salve In the world for Cuts,
Bruises. Sores. Salt Rheum,
Fever Sores. Chapped Hands.
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded.
Price cents pet box. For sale at
Drug Store.
Prices you must understand to
ply to good coins. Better or worse
preservation would make a great
in every case. On that
basis a United States copper cent of
1703, with tho clover leaf, is worth
twenty-five dollars, or- times as
much as the valuable cent of 1790.
From that tho premiums on cents
ran all the way down to five cents.
The valuable dates, in order of worth,
are 1709. 1804, 1795, 1809,
1811. 1808, 1797. 1818,
. 1857, 1810 and
in Washington Star.
Answer This Question.
Why do so many people we see around
us seem to prefer to be made
Indigestion, Constipation,
Dizziness. at Coming up
of the Food. Yellow Skin, when for
sell them Shiloh's
to cure them Sold L.
Wooten's Drug Store.
Indians of Central
live in mini
Amelia. . a
hers in a single hut. i.-.
visited comprised about fifteen huts.
She dead are buried in the
and the earth covering the
graves settles until it is about a foot
below the surface of the floor. As
time goes on the graves become less
distinct, and finally they are com-
obliterated When a pecan
lies the relatives wail crying.
am
When a warrior buried his body
is provided with certain feathers of
moon, and the i are and Iroquois ,
Indians sacrifice to both. was
the moon, rut deified in For-
miles to the north of tho capital is ;
the site of tho ancient city of
twenty miles in j
In the center of tho ruins are
tho remains of a pyramid of the sun j
and one of the moon. Adjoining the j
temple of the sun at Cuzco
stood several chapels of smaller
One of these was
to the moon, tho mother god-
of the race.
A vast silver almost
one wall the apartment, and
open it was emblazoned
of tho deity, consisting of a
human countenance surrounded by
numerous rays of light emanating
from it in all directions. All tho
other decorations of the temple were
of the same metal, as fitted to the
pale, silvery light of the moon.
London Standard,
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
is a scientific-
ally prepared Liniment, every
of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro-
These ingredients ere com-
hitherto unknown
Some Men
Pay ,
TEN GENTS FOR A
CIGAR THAT IS NO
BETTER. THAN AN
id Virginia
Cheroot.
ARE SOLD
FIVE
FOR
TEN CENTS.
WILL DO ail that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother Bid Child. Book
to Mothers mailed FREE, con-
valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Sent by express on pt of price per
REGULATOR CO.,
MOOT ALL DRUGGISTS.
between the WOMAN who is
wedded to ideas and
she who is t to
a new one. Everybody is
striving to something to make
Fastest Time Ever Made.
One of Line trains of
the Baltimore and Ohio on a re-
cent run York and
on. coveted mile ill seconds as
recorded by a mechanical indicator. At
rate the train traveled at the
speed of a trifle over a mile and
S half a minute, ST Over ninety a
hour which surpasses all previous re-
time, if the speed were
maintained the tune between New York
and Washington reduced with-
out stops to two hours and a and
with stops to three hours. Five hours
now the fastest time between tho two
cities, mid it is made dally by Royal
Blue Line only.
life it's right
beside who are
bright enough to embrace it
get the benefits, those who
don't go
work grows Pearline
makes life easier and cleaner.
Washing and cleaning done
with Pearline has about
enough work in it to make it good
enough to tire the body or ruffle the temper.
Not ours, but the word of the millions who use it as
to whether it hurts the hands, clothes or
your neighbors can tell you all about PEARLINE.
tome grocers will
tell vi-ii is-., g. or as
IT'S
and if your sends you place of the honest
thing to it balk. JAMES New York.
-Manufacturer Of-
BUGGIES,
Ht a Ia.
A weakness fr observation and a
natural liking for re-
incited a young man
resides in Brooklyn and in
Now York to talk to a friend in this
yon ever observe the
traffic in tho busy
and evening
have been in
Well, then, you .
pressed with the fact .
crowded train moves enough persons
from of tho river to the
other to make a good sized village.
The trains an packed early in the
morning and between and
o'clock at night. Each train carries
between and passengers.
Now a country village with that
of inhabitants thinks very
well of itself. It has or four
a library, an opera,
and id at j
department in Washington for a new
And yet the restless cable
that stretches across the bridge two a bunch being
villages back and forth at the ; placed in each hand, and for some
rate of twenty-five or thirty an hour.
I tell you this is a moving ago in
which York Times.
P. I. f. M
and for
mil form, i-d of
cw
old
that all
P. P. P. b ft
id to
art and la
blocs.
Puke K--t
My Factory is with tho Aye put
nothing but work. We keep with the best
In all work. AH styles o. spring used, you cm select from
Storm, Coil, Horn, King
We also keep on hand a full line of Ready Made fatness and Whips width a
. the lowest Special attention given to repairing,
j . N. C,
New Try This.
It v. ill Betting end will sure-
do you good, if you have a Cough,
Gold, or any trouble with Threat,
or Lungs. Dr. King's New Discovery
for Consumption, Coughs and Colds is
to give relief, or money will
On paid beet. Sufferers from
found it just the thing and under Its use
n speedy and perfect Try
a Sample bottle at expense lean;
how good a thing it is.
Trial hot free at Drug
Store, Large size Me. and
into the surf this morn-
I think so. Are you
I think not. Fact is, I'm
afraid of tho pitas.
are there catfish about
here
Erysipelas, Bad Sores,
Scales and Scabs on the leg have been
entirely cored by P. r. the most
wonderful medicine of the day.
A course of P. p. p. will banish all
bad and your health to
perfect Its curative powers
are marvelous. If out of sorts and in
bad humor with yourself and the world.
take and become healthy and
time after death cacao is placed upon
the grave, in order that the departed
Warrior may he supplied with drink.
Anthropologist
I had a malignant breaking out on my leg
below the knee, and and well
with two and a half bottles of
Other blood medicines had failed
to do me any good. C.
Viii
She is seated in a chair .
A Household Remedy ;
FOR ALL
BLOOD and SKIN
Bi Bi
. Bate
ii
say c
at pi
SENT FREE
CO., ea.
I was troubled from childhood with
of and three bottles cf
cured me permanently.
Oar book on Blood and Diseases
fine, Co Atlanta, Ga.
Cures dyspepsiA
Block, GA.
For sale at Wooten's Drug Store
. MM Writing Character.,
For Rent.
A large two-story brick
Opera Block,
in
just
patent
drawers.
Splendid room
tor, counters,
Apply to
Wit. H. LONG.
Greenville, X. C
PARKER'S
HAIR
th
ft
Restore Cray,
to Color.
ft
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD STOKE
MERCHANTS BUT
hag their year's supplies will And
their Interest to get our prices before
abasing else where Is complete
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE.
RICE, TEA, Ac.
Lowest Marks Pricks.
TOBACCO SNUFF A CIGARS
we buy direct front Manufacturers,
you to bay at one profit. A own
stock
OINTMENT
MARK.
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
the time. Our all
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
M.
For Cure of all
This has been in over
years, and wherever known has
been in steady demand. It has been en-
by leading all over
country, and ha effected cures where
all other remedies, with the attention of
the moat experienced have
for years failed. This Ointment is of
long standing and the high
winch it has is owing entirely
x its own as little effort has
ever been made to bring It before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address en receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box The
discount to Pi All Orders
promptly attended to. Address all r-
mid to
Greenville, N. C
AND IMPROVED.
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World.
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon. In-
Type in all Easiest
to learn, and rapid as any.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as represented.
This Machine is everybody's friend. Every-
body should have writing dope
Typewriter. It always insures moat
prompt attention. Address
N COMPANY, Boston,
One of these machine, can be seen at the where particulars and
prices can he had.
Notice to Shippers.
In order to make more convenient and
economical use of the vessels now em.
In the Carolina
thus to better serve the inter-
of shipper, the undersigned
have decided to merge their
respective lines between Not
folk and Newborn and
Washington. N.
one be known as
fa Mi I Washington Direct
LINE.
-Connecting Norfolk
The Bay line, for Baltimore.
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia.
The Old Dominion Line, for
York.
The Merchants Miners Line for Boa-
ton and Providence.
The Water Lines for Richmond, Va.,
and Washington. C.
At with
The Atlantic A North Carolina R. R.
At Washington with
The Tar River Steamers.
Also Calling at Island, M. O,
The new line
with such additional sailings a
will hew suit the needs o the business.
NO ADVANCE l HATES.
The direct service of steamers.
and the freedom from handling, are
among the great advantages this Line
following gentlemen have
been appointed Agents of the New
John E. at Norfolk, Va.
John Son, at
S. II. Gray, at N. O.
S. C. at Roanoke Island.
J. J. Cherry, at Greenville, N. C.
will leave Norfolk
on 16th, from wharf
strew, Clyde
and between the piers of the Clyde
Line and Old Dominion Co.
A.
V. P. all. M. Old Co.
W. CO.,
THE CENTRAL
Tobacco Warehouse
Will begin its second season
AUGUST 1892.
-O--------
the same Management,
and desires to thank the
Planters of Pitt, Le-
and Greene for
their liberal
patronage
last
year and solicits a continuance
of their favors. Especial
given to Shipments. Try
Respectfully,
Central Warehouse,
TARBORO, N.


Title
Eastern reflector, 31 August 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 31, 1892
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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