Eastern reflector, 7 September 1892






-ii
. J . v.
Jobs Room
Thoroughly Equipped
Reflector.
-WITH-
NEW MATERIAL.
Give Us a Trial
Jones Seminary for
Young Ladies.
VOL. XI.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
NO.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
POLITICAL rs.
The
T. i d party Warren
ill min county held convention and MB-
a part of the ticket.
i all the nominations wens made
the convention broke op in a vow.
candidate for register
m i i Nth. It- v
1.-
PROOF ON WEAVE.
He Acted in Ten-
Both
MRS. Dec Rates
Term
Tuition i-. to 16.70;
Board .
For further particulars aw
Z D.
A tut is
Lot
Institute.
HAMILTON, X. C.
Tin- Fall -if tins open
Monday. Aug. -XI. Enrollment last
M Excellent advantages in
regular Course of study in
Music Elocution, and Draw- h
If Third party people are
bettor Democrats than anybody
else why are seven candidates on
their State ticket J line
cans, and why are they
for office in some
the -n
Terms moderate. in
families or Principal. For
information
John Robinson, col., married
woman about eight miles from
here last week. He reports that
is intended had engaged color-
GREENVILLE
Mrs V. L. Pendleton
ill open a School for Young
Ladies in Greenville on
Tin- full
Course taught. The usual
prices for tuition in will be
Female Institute.
Va.
Opens ISIS. One of the mo.-t
thorough schools for young ladies in the
Sou Twenty-live teachers and
Conservatory course in music. One
I fifty-two boarding pupils
from twenty States.
Special inducements to persons at a dis-
Those seeking the beat school
for the lowest terms, write for
of school to the
dent, A. HARRIS,
Virginia.
OAK RIDGE INSTITUTE
FOUNDED IN 1852.
A CLASSICAL AND COMMERCIAL SCHOOL
---------OF
Elegant buildings and thorough equip-
Large patronage from all the
Southern States- Beautiful and h
situation in view of the mountains.
Term Reasonable.
Summer Opens
June
Fall Term begins August 10th.
For Illustrated address,
J. II. BOLT,
Oak Ridge, X. C.
Tho p
following leaf from
record
while in
in January,
issued mi order to Charles
John H. Rob-
Rhodes and that they
pay into his hands for the
j of refugees
and renegades
This order mi ac-
by tho threat that if
a j the was not paid they and
; their families would be sent South
j and their property giver to said
refugees. All of these parties
are dead now, were over sixty
years old when the order was is-
sued. Can any Southern man
vote for such a heartless f
A man by the name of C- W.
Witt sold Mr. Jasper Cos, a very
poor man, two thousand pounds
of bacon, for which lie received
Press est ates Mr. Cos took the bacon
that in twenty years the people of to
the United States have paid near-
82.000,000,000 of the principal of stored away in
the war debt, in in- i thinking
on the same, and
in j
in all. Of this enormous sum
nearly has been j
taken from the South and paid,
out in the North to remain there.
WaY WE WITHDRAW PROM THE
ALLIANCE.
Co-, of the News and
Hilt, N. C, Aug.
list regular of Union
Hill Alliance, No. we, the
members of said Alli-
ed Methodist preacher to
the ceremony and when he called
on him the. preacher wouldn't mar-
him because he Robin-
son I was a Democrat. He got a
white man to perform the
Herald.
Female
College,
Th of this well-known
school will begin September 1st.
water, no m-
lit irk rooms
Campus of acres well by
gigantic oaks. music
teach.-rs. Art and
from Academy of Teachers ex-
in The whole
Course, Physical Culture and
and fires only
for the year. Special studies in
Send for to
W. D.
N.
Wilson Collegiate Institute,
x. c.
For Ladies. Strictly
If the force bill is such a
or myth, as some
cans say, we ask you the name
of common sense, why is it couch-
ed in the platform
Why is it It means
Don't be mislead by
endeavor to throw you off your
guard. Vote against the party
that will enforce it the first chance
it gets- Don't give that party the
it would assist him in purchasing
a little home after the war, as he
was very poor with a large family
and had no home. Weaver
learned through some source that
he had the cotton twist, and sent a
detachment of soldiers to his
home and took possession of it,
and shipped it to Iowa for his
own use. The cotton twist was
worth at the time it was stolen
Jasper Cox is in
Giles county. John P. Williams,
Republican a Poor but respected farm-
in Giles county, had twenty-five
fat hogs, which at the time was
worth If per hundred, gross,
a lot of turkeys. Weaver, in per-
son, took a file of soldiers into
place and made the sol-
shoot every hog on the place
and had them brought into camp.
When Williams asked for a vouch-
Weaver don't give
rebels in the South vouchers. I
this the he is getting j furnish rope to hang j aloof from polities as a body, but
somewhat tired of the t. p. and of Mr. of doing so it has gone
marked that the principles of is still living and will even beyond the bounds of the
Democrats were right, but to the above constitution made it a
I The hogs were valued at
There was a here a few
days ago who has been very prom-
proclaiming his
party Like a great
many others who are. following
agreed to withdraw from the j ton talk for publication the
order, for reasons herein set forth- they talk among themselves.
It is with sadness and regret published interviews they all
we feel ourselves compelled to
withdraw from an order whose
with one accord talk as though tho
campaign was already settled in I
principles declare for the and the election a mere I
of tho laboring classes, and an
ii- that has done so much, and
have accomplished that
which the farm ore set out t
achieve, but alas politics spoiled
the scheme.
It appears to us from the pro-
of the last county meet-
LETTER. know If such a thin was
plated, to talk it,
our I several of them
Washington, D. C Sept. a of Emigration
A feature th- M help very much in
cholera out of the United
States. Senator of
now in he
does not believe thee is any
for the rumor, and that
this time
campaign is
the
publicans who come
the great difference I
way prominent R-v
to Washing-
there is no necessity at
for any law absolutely prohibiting
immigration, although he admits
that it may become necessary if
h the cholera continues to increase
Europe.
Va.,
WEAVER'S BRUTAL CRUELTY.
Testimony of
O-e Who
through with just to keep up
; but let two or three of
them meet privately, where they
think themselves safe from the
sharp ears of wicked and prying j Editor Reflector news
newspaper men, and to hear them i emanating from a town is a
reminds one of the line of the fa-1 generally a sure indication of the
of the Farmers Alliance that what a and energy of the
the organization has undergone a in the and if we may be allowed to judge
great change, and believing, as we Two office S. Treas- on Hue. we would say that the I
do. that bold designing and Assistant Sec people in and around Green rile
have got into the order and i of the Treasury are a live, aggressive and
control its action, which is just the i who is also the Republican
of Alliance doctrines, in J date for governor of Nebraska
words they have side-tracked returned from visits to their re-
the Alliance principles and taken j States this week, and be-
politics as its main line of fore they had shaken the dust of
pies; adopting resolutions and I travel from their clothes they both
making demands which we are not gave out colored interviews
only unwilling to support, but feel j of Republican prospects in
that it is our duty to array and Nebraska, in which those
States were stated to entirely
out of the doubtful list. By a
more accident I learned the real
opinions of those two men. Ne-
people, and who evidently
know a good thing when they see
it. We are glad to sec that you
give them such a clean, readable
paper. It is gratifying to see that
you have the courage of your con
and do not hesitate to
August
To I Journal
I in your issue of Saturday,
the inst., from a
letter written by an old citizen of
also a copy
of a clipping from o Giles
of the 20th of July,
General Weaver, the
party candidate for Pres-
with beastly cruelty to-
wards the citizens of and
Giles county while in command
of the Union army Hint place
I can fully substantiate
camber of the charges con-
therein, could add
many others of like character, all
from my own recollection. Al-
though quite young at the lime
such a state of terror as we were
kept in by this brute in
form made an
upon my mind. My
Dr. Perkins, was living in
at this time. Our
grandmother's
the
Eastern Reflector
-TILL-
gents in
is the time to subscribe.
human
father.
house, my
D.
now of and Major
Jones, a relative of ours,
selves in line to battle against, to
maintain the principles the Alli-
intended to inculcate.
We can never follow our
in the wild, visionary scheme j sent word to Mr. Harrison j Third party men, and as for Skin ; to dress. Mrs. Jones had to wrap
of turning the order into a and to his man Carter that unless Mr. Rogers says lie face sick child iii bed-clothing and
cal machine that may defeat the something was immediately done what Harry is up to. Mr. Rogers carry it in her arms to a
handle those Third party used as quartets.
aid-society fellows with ; were all subjected to many insults,
gloves off, as they deserve to be- I Major family were ordered
That sterling Democrat, W. J- out of their house about o'clock
Rogers says he does not believe on a cold night
Skinner or at heart I bet. They were not allowed time
only party that will ever give us
the relief so much needed. Our
constitution guarantees no in-
en our religious or
political views, but some of our
brethren think that because we do
not agree to the
reasonable demands, we are
true, weak-kneed and
ought to be out of the order.
to satisfy the disaffected was an aspirant for the
cans in the Fort Wayne district of for Congress from the 2nd
Indiana all hope of carrying the district and while he f tiled to get
State might as well be abandoned.
So much for his confidence Mr.
feels so uncertain about
the result this State that he is
to resign his present office.
it, he is not but will
do all in his power for Fred Wood
ard, the regular nominee. Mr.
Rogers is a Democrat of the
variety and takes no
and wants to fix it so when ho Third party in his.
does resign his pay will run to the A protracted
home. Many acts of
cruelty committed on my
relatives and friends are fresh in
my memory, Men of highest
standing, both young and old,
were thrown into prison, kept
there for months and some shot
down like dogs with never a
The Alliance has good and first of October, and tho place be j at Baptist church recent
its good influence was being felt kept vacant until after tho election, conducted by Rev. J. E. Hut-
throughout this broad land, and order that ho may be i son, of Richmond, assisted by the
, charge entered against them.
held , Ladies were insulted on the streets
there is no estimate of the good it
might have accomplished if it had
only adhered to the principles it
started out with, and kept itself
were right, but
did not promise the office
like tho Third party did. He said
further that if the Democrats
would promise the some
of tho offices, a great many would
vote the Democratic ticket Louis-
burg
Forty-Third S begins
Monday, Sept.
most thorough and
M of t
preparatory course of study, with a
equal to that of an
Female College in the South.
Best facilities for the of Music
and Art. Standard Scholarship
usually I, location.
and grounds large pleasantly
situated, Charges.
and circulars on application.
SILAS
The Third party nominee
Register of Deeds in Vance
is a preacher. In Rock-
county the nominee for
the same office is a white man
who can neither read nor write.
county the
for the Legislature is a
while in our own county two for-
mer Republicans, who have
ways voted for candidates,
and furthermore, one of whom
taught schools, are on the
Third party county ticket for
honors. Such is a result of
the new order of things-Golds-
were val
The turkeys to Mrs.
Williams, and she begged to have
them spared, but tho heartless
wretch had them all killed
ken to headquarters for his own
special use, remarking to her
that she had no business being
the wife of a rebel. Weaver made
it a practice to charge our
cents each for passes to
come into go out of the Fed-
lines. This money ho puts
into his own pockets. This pass
read as
the bearer through
Federal lines.
J. B. Weaver,
the
even
constitution
cal machine, working in the inter-
est of the Republican party, which
we believe to be greatly against
the interest of Southern society-
We believe the office of lecturer
should be filled by a man who
would speak to the Alliance on
topics of interest to the order,
inculcate Alliance doctrine to its
members, that its cause might be
advanced, and not to make
cal campaign speeches as the
of county saw fit to do in
his last canvass through tho
His at least some of
them, were nothing more nor less
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY
The session of this School will
begin on Monday. August 1892.
The advantages offered will be
or to those of any previous session. En-
tire every
Board can be had at lower rates man at
similar school In Eastern
A LIVING ISSUE.
Wilmington Messenger.
White supremacy is no mere
political catch phrase in the South.
It is an over present, living issue,
which must be recognized because
Mr. Cleveland is not opposed to j corner-stone of the South
the free coinage of silver dollars
which are equal to gold dollars,
but he is opposed to the free coin-
age of seventy cent dollars and
that is the position of the Demo-
party as declared in its plat-
form. The free coinage of
We propose to do best work for boys cent silver dollars is nothing
in the town, more the government
challenge to contrary.
are as follows, payable
Primary English month.
Intermediate English per 2.00
Higher per mouth. 2.50
each, extra,
When you are in tow-i call-to see me
or write ma your homes.
will to cheerfully given. If
necessary competent assistant will be
employed-
H.
Greenville, K. July 27.182.
social structure- . Ignore it
and mongrel government and so-
chaos would be the result
This is not a mere speculation,
for we had some very bitter and
not-soon-to-be-forgotten
in this during the period of
construction, from the
effects of which the South has not
yet entirely recovered. There
isn't a single leader in the Third
party in the South who has here-
affiliated with the
of silver bullion, to be j party who not
to carry it to a United j if he spoke candidly, that white
the silver miners a of
cents it coins a
dollar for them. It does not
look fair for a miner, because he
has plenty
i allowed
States mint and get a dollar for
every seventy cents he deposits
ed if he gets defeated. He has i regular pastor, Mr. Morris. Largo
appealed to the national commit-I crowds attended, report it as
tee for financial assistance m his j a glorious of spiritual
campaign, with tho that freshing. understand there
it is money or certain defeat. j wore about accessions to the
It may be that Secretary Tracy church. The writer only had the
can explain the pleasure of attending twice,
charges which the New York We glad to report that the
daily reiterates, that the; sick Spoken of in previous
it was indeed n reign of terror.
Such acts of vandalism and crime
I have never even read of in a
country. All of it was
done by the order or consent of
General Weaver.
Mrs. Hall,
change in the armor of the new
war vessels was made at the re-
quest of the firms that make the
armor, and that it will put several
hundred thousand dollars the
pockets of tho aforesaid firms, but
the ugly fact remains that to
the present time he hits not done
so, and to attempt to pooh, pooh, Joyner's.
charges made by so responsible a
journal as the will hardly
go down with an intelligent pub-
The charge of favoritism, not
to call it by a worse name, has
been specifically made and
Laboratory in Which to Analyze
Charlotte
Squire Hilton has it in
Eddie Harrison. Jeff Wood- to start a laboratory to
ard and Miss Ida Grizzard have ; analyze tho make up of Third
recovered, He will conduct the
R. P. Ellis and daughter Annie. on the same Hues as the old
of arc visiting peripatetic expounders of
Branchville. phrenology, giving a certificate to
S. L. and wife, of Boy- showing the
kins are visiting at Mrs. M. E. leaver-
ONE ON LONG.
Pitt shore Record.
Th- nomination of Thomas B.
Long the Third party candidate
for State Auditor forcibly illus
the utter hypocrisy of that
its and
tensions of n form. To those who
know him it seems strange indeed
that he should be one of the trust-
ed leaders of a party pledged to
financial f, unless that relief is
intended only for the leaders
The court records of
show that dealings
have not been of such a character
as to inspire much Confidence in
him, and. as he is now a Candidate
for an office overlooking our
State's finances, it is proper that
the people should be informed as
to his financial dealings. In the
year 1840. or he removed to
this county from Salisbury, where
h was born and roared, open-
ed a store, at Egypt He went
North and with plausible promises
he had then and has now the
of to a remarkable de-
bought a large stock of
goods on s credit. When the bills
due he refused to pay them,
ho was sued in ten cases tho
old Court of Pleas and Quarter
Sessions of this county. These
suits wore tried at February Term,
1851. of that court and all were
decided in favor of the defendant
on tho That is
in order to avoid paying those
just debts, Mr. pleaded in-
he was not twenty one
years old when ho bought tho
his father. Dr. Alex-
Long highly respectable
was brought here from
Salisbury with the family Bible to
it And by this trick he ob-
for him-
self, and his honest creditors re-
nothing for their goods.
And this is the sort of man who is
put up by the Third party to
bring to the
of North Carolina I
Can men him
Q a Pen.
A STRIKING CONTRAST.
than Third party speeches of the short of an answer just as
A Of High Grade OHS BUnk la the platform adopt
ed at the Third party State con
AND BOYS, held last week at Raleigh,
is viewed with suspicion by some
of the colored as Mr.
Strowd lovingly calls the
It is the plank which demands
passage of a ballot law
by the Legislature at its next
Many colored people and
some white An not like the
of a secret ballot law, of
as if yon are afraid or
then again the colored
will re-open her private
school for girls and Mrs. V. H.
nearly opposite
the Episcopal church. Fall Term
Sept. 1892; ends
Friday. Jan. 1898. The Spring
Term begins Monday, Jan. 1893;
ends Friday, May 1893.
S MONTH.
department
Intermediate department.
Higher
each,
per
Thorough and d instruction will
ed.
be given according to approved I people look with suspicion on this
Satisfactory . . H . ,
arrangements for board be made for proposition as the entering wedge
pupils desiring to come from the of some other proposition, to
For further address, t-i i
try. abridge or take away their right
Saluda, N. C.
I to vote at
supremacy w a vital question-
The edited Marion,
Butler, now one of the leaders of
the Third party, declared until a
few weeks ago that it was. The
another Third
party organ, said so until a few
week ago and both them
that this made it essential
that the Democratic party- in
in North Carolina must be
because Democratic
meant white supremacy.
Now find these two organs
advocating a party ignores
white supremacy sad destroys
the barriers between white and
black by taking into their
conventions as delegates and by
nominating far office. Is
that the way the white farmers
of North Carolina are asked to
preserve white supremacy
most bitter character, denouncing
in a most ridiculous manner the
party that we as be-
to be right, and the only
party through we may hope
to get the needed relief.
We believe the Alliance
was one of the greatest institutions
for good that was ever organized
by man. for its benevolence was so
far reaching in its obligation it
had some semblance of the Chris-
religion, and we regret most
sincerely that it has merged head-
long into partisan politics, which
in our opinion is a complete
of the line of it had
in view at its inauguration.
For these reasons we the
of Union Hill Alliance, No.
hereby resolve to withdraw
our membership from the order.
Resolved further, That these
resolutions be spread upon the
minutes, and a copy be sent to the
and Observer, A aid
Progressive Farmer, fig
W. II Mann, president; L. A.
Powell, vice-president t B. P.
Drake, secretary; T. E. Powell,
business agent; P. H. Smith,
; W- T. Bryant, assistant
; L. A. Mizell, assistant door-
keeper ; Newsom Taylor, sergeant-
at arms; J. A Whitaker, S. N. Ed-
wards, G. W. Ward.
Atlanta Constitution.
Russia emancipated her
ism, Prohibition. Be
forgetful of
mules and babies, and pure
scrambling for office in
each subject. Tho laboratory will
be established close to
works and hopes to do a
fair business. We cannot however,
Everybody in Fay knows
Mr. Tom Gill, and that he says
some very good things. Some
days since be was talking to a
Third party a former Democrat,
now very enthusiastic over
new party. said
wise politician old parties
are rotten, perfectly
specific will satisfy
diced public. If Secretary Tracy
can prove the Herald to be wrong
it is a duty be owes to the
as well as to his own
good name, to do so at once.
Secretary Tracy is coming in for
considerable criticism because of
the position of Amer-
interests in South America,
which was sharply brought to
mind by the forcible seizure of
political refugees on a passenger
steamship carrying the
flag the other day by Venezuelans,
and the consequent hurried order-
of the gun-boat Concord from
the Atlantic coast to Venezuelan
waters. When the social
of the officers of the navy
were many months ago
to have the best ships our navy j
spend the summer on the Atlantic
coast, to give the
who so, delightfully, you
an opportunity to in a
little time at all the fashionable
seaside resorts. Secretary Tracy
was begged by those interested to
keep one or two vessels in South
American waters to look after
American interests which are con-
jeopardized by the unset-
condition of several of the
countries over there, but he could
not stand the social hence
the present unsatisfactory j
of affairs.
The possibility of an extra
of Congress Washington
all in a flutter this week, that is, it
the rumor prevalent about Mr.
Harrison intending to call an ex-
session to prohibit
on account of the spread of
cholera in Europe may be said to
serfs more than thirty years in direction,
ago, several years before our j for, according to his own showing,
Southern slaves were freed. man to
But these white in ed who hoped to
secure the sweets of office under
his father-in-law's name, had a
bad ease of the dry grins and did
not kindly to it at all.
a are practically to-day worse
off than tho Southern blacks were
before the war. They are half the
time on the verge of starvation.
Every year the tax gatherer sweeps
away little property, and in
collection of taxes flogging is
resorted to force payment.
vent peasants, says
flogged in a body, in crowds
singly. In 1885, in one district, J legislation which has
Why Southern Farmers Should Vote
Against
Appeal-Avalanche.
Because lie has favored tariff
had a tend-
1,500 peasants were to I ency to reduce tho markets for
be flogged for nonpayment of tax-, products. Although
es. Under our old slave regime . there has been a great abundance,
there was never such an extensive; in this country and a
use of tho lash as now prevails in abroad, the value of the
free Russia a generation after products exported in 1801 was
emancipation- Turn from this while in 1881 it was
picture of the white freedmen or nearly
Tho Homo has more
inmates than at any time since its
over a year and a half
ago. The number under its roof
is Life at the home is certain-
pleasant and informal, nor tire
those attentions so dear lo the
heart of Hie war-worn veterans
lacking. Neat rooms, good food,
plenty of water and excellent
for bathing, a creditable
library, and a snug home and tidy
grounds, arc some of tho things
provided to cheer their declining
years. How many people in tho
State know that the first man in
North Carolina to propose tho es-
of a homo for the Con-
veterans tho first to
contribute money for that
was Mr. Elias now a
date for Governor Mr. Can- sent
his check for with the letter
in which he urged that the homo
be established. This was twelve
years ago.
I m Angus.
IT. C
Office In Skinner upper
opposite Photograph
L.
DENTIST, p-
N .
LAW.
N. C.
Prompt attention to
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
the Czar to the black freedmen
of the South kindly pro-
On the other hand, our exports of
manufactures have nearly doubled
of their old masters. Our in that time. So that a protective
notion that rotten wood Treasury de-
off the log . officials, who ought to
ex-slaves hold political offices, and
even sit in Congress. They are
accumulating property, and in
Georgia alone they own
They are educated almost
entirely at the expense of the
white tax payers. They have the
same lights in the courts that the
whites enjoy, and no tax gatherer,
ox any other creditor or employer,
flog them. The Russian gov-
has made freedom a
to its former white serfs, but the
patient and sympathetic South-
are standing back of their
old bondmen, encouraging and
aiding them to an extant never
fare witnessed in the history of
the world. To oar Northern
friends who have such a great ad-
for Russia, we commend
this brief chapter of contemporary
tariff, such as Mr. Harrison
ors, outs down the profits of the
farmers restricts their market.
Why should he get tho vote of a
single farmer in the South
HOS. t. L.
ft BLOW,
N. C.
hi all the Courts.
J.
B.
ATTORNEY-AT-LA
Greenville, N.
I. A.
TYSON,
n. K.
A Small Steam Engine.
Weldon New.
Engineer George Smith, of the
Scotland Neck branch road, be-
sides being a good locomotive en-
is a mechanical genius.
We saw once an infinitesimal en-
made by him was run
by electricity supplied from the
telegraph wire. He has in his
shop here an engine which can be
held up by two fingers, which is
powerful enough to ran a sewing
machine. He has another also,
not he uses in his
work.
N. C.
Prompt attention given to collections
H. LONG,
p.
Prompt and direful attention to
tics. Collection solicited.
hurt-
N. C.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice la all the Collection





THE REFLECTOR.
N. C.
T 1802.
said that the tariff is an thread
meaningless issue. In De
last Mr- the Third
party nominee for Congress,
it was burdensome, on-
necessary, cruel, exacting and
satisfactory to the most
monopolists.
Entered at lit Greenville,
J. C., as second-dial's mail matter.
THE CANVASS.
The nut intend-
ed to overlook the county canvass
and the splendid work the county
are doing, because
nothing had been said about them
in the last few issues. We attend
ed the speaking at two
The tariff is the same now and wrote it
TICKET
CLEVELAND.
Of New Tort
ADLAI E STEVENSON,
Of Illinois.
FOB ELECTORS AT UM i
CHARLES B AYCOCK.
B GLENN.
1st Dist.-L. L SMITH.
FOB
A. B- BRANCH,
of Beaufort.
STATE DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
ELIAS CARR.
of
FOB
R. A-
of
FOB STATE
COKE
of Wake.
DONALD W.
of Wake.
FOB
R. M. FURMAN,
of Buncombe.
FOB OF
C SCARBOROUGH.
Of ill II-I
FOB
FRANK I. OSBORNE,
of Mecklenburg.
OF TWELFTH
GEORGE A. SHUFFORD.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
FOB THE
F. G JAMES.
FOB HOUSE
FREDERICK
I. K. WETHERINGTON.
FOB
RICHARD W. KING.
FOR REGISTER OF
HENRY HARDING
JOHN FLANAGAN.
fob
DR. WM. E. WARREN
fob
J. B. KILPATRICK.
EXTRACTS FROM WHAT E. A.
SAID IN
BER LAST.
They tell us our Third par-
friends will not believe what
Democrats write, and that many
of them will not go to hear Demo-
speak. We have therefore
concluded to present to them
this issue what one of own
chosen leaders of this county has
said and published over his own
signature. We refer to Mr. E. A.
who on the of August
was nominated by Third party
as their chosen candidate for Con-
Certainly our Third party
friends will listen to what he says
and it will not be possible for them
to dispute it.
In an Address issued last De-
by him in with
other gentlemen he
would seem of the
great struggle of 1802, and it is
from that Address that the Re-
this morning makes some
quotations and earnestly com-
mends them to oar Third party
In our grievances he
said
real author of the
of which the people so just-
complain is the Republican par
which has administered the
Federal Government for the
fit of favored classes and against
the interests of the toiling masses
of the American people. And we
appeal to our fellow citizens of all
vocations to stand shoulder
shoulder in the tight we must
make against this great
Again he says in further
and our
and their
add to this inadequacy of
money supply and its improper
distribution, the unequal and
necessary burdens of tariff
whose cruel exactions have
realized the wildest dreams of the
most exorbitant monopolies, and
we find a sufficient cause for the
unrest and disquiet existing
among our people affirm that
these evils are the direct offspring
of Republican legislation. Other
causes of greater or less weight
may be for the present
depression in agriculture and
pursuits, but they too, so far
as their origin can traced to
legislation, must be charged to
the same Republican party ; for
has not been an hour in the
last twenty-five years when that
party did not control one branch
or the other of Congress or the
Executive, and thus hold an
check at all times upon the
power of the Democratic party to
give the people relief and redress
by repealing vicious legislation
and enacting remedial ;
so that it cannot in fairness be
said that the Democratic party is
responsible for failing to do these
In these days we hear it said by
some designing men that the
Democratic party is responsible
for the present condition of things
of which there is so much com-
plaint- December last Mr.
the nominee of the Third
party for Congress, declared it
the Republican party and
that party alone-
was then, and we cannot
stand how it oppresses the farm-
less than it did then- On the
contrary we can see how this tariff
becomes more unbearable
every day. The Democrats in the
present Congress have passed bills
through the House repealing the
onerous tariff tax on several of the
necessaries of life, but a
can Senate refuses to consider
these honest measures which
would lighten some of the burdens
of our people-
In the Address referred to, Mr.
points out to the people
words the shortest road to
and urges them to walk
therein. Hear him, ye Third par-
followers Write his words
over the lintels of your doors He
our opinion the shortest
practicable road to the redress of
the wrongs and evils which op-
press the country is through the
complete triumph of the Demo-
which is the party of
the people, whose fundamental
principles are in harmony with
their
Hear him again along the same
line and be governed, we
you, by his then manly patriotic-
advice in the following
we will remain united and
determined we may dislodge the
Republican party from power and
in time work out these needful re-
forms, but if we divide up among
ourselves it can but result in con-
this party in power and
thus perpetuating the evils of
which we now justly
It does look like Mr. saw
with prophetic vision that in Au-
gust 1892 some misguided men
would meet in Edenton and set
about dividing the Democratic
party, and with an earnest desire
for the relief of our people he
them in December last
against it and pointed out the
evil results of such a course- How
can he now join that movement
As strange as it may seem some
of our Third party friends
the
for
last
for him- Referring then to
Mr.
the
national character, lie asked Mr.
Fleming was it, then, the
Third party had brought out both
State and county tickets, when no
roan living could utter a word
against our excellent and
county
up for the next paper, but having
so many letters caused it to be left
out for two weeks. It will be in-
to other sections of the
county to know what was at
so publish it now,
even though a little old-
It was a good day for the Dem-
Several of the Democratic
candidates went down to make
speeches, and had about out
to hear one third of tho
crowd being colored men. J. B-
Little, chairman of the township
executive committee, was master
of ceremonies, and announced the
candidates in their order for speak-
Gov-
says
wise
us there is no danger in
Force Bill. Their nominee
Congress his said Address
December
unity of the Democratic
party of the whole country is es-
also to prevent the en-
of the Force Bill which
would forever destroy the freedom
of elections, perpetuate the rule
of the Republican party and its
vicious measures which have so
oppressed the people, and ruin
especially the South. We have
to apprehend that this danger-
bill which we all had hoped
was dead will be revived again
and enacted into a law if by our
divisions the Republican party
should once more full
control of the law making power
of the Federal
In speaking of our State
and home affairs he
in the same
to these
laws have been wisely
and daring all period
we have had a pure, pro-
Administration of our
home affairs, and we do not hes
to say that the State Gov-
given us by the Dem-
party is as near perfect as
human institutions well be
made- It would be madness in
us to divide up among ourselves
and by this division turn our
State Government over to the
party of 1868 and 1869; and we
think to sow the seeds of discord
and promote division in the ranks
of the Democrats of North Caro-
from whatever motive would
imperil the best interests of the
State should be avoided by
all true
Ye followers of Exum, and Cobb,
and Lang, and Worth, and Lyon,
and Woody, Mr. said in
December last that such a course
as you are now pursuing would
be madness and should be avoided
by all true men. If ye be true
men, we urge you to consider, to
return and help that
Government of our State which
Mr. has declared to as
near perfect as human institutions
can well be made.
There was a large crowd at
Farmville. last Saturday, to hear
the speech cf Hon. C B. Aycock,
Democratic Elector for the State
at large. Mr. Council Wooten, a
Lenoir county Third was
over there and wanted a division
of time. He got it, all he wanted
and more besides. The arrange-
was that each should make
a speech and then have a half
hour rejoinder Wooten led off
for an hour a rambling talk on
the financial legislation of Con-
since war. There was
nothing in his speech and it had
no effect on his hearers. Aycock
followed in a powerful argument
that had force and conviction in
it His was an speech and
did good for the Democracy. He
so completely demolished Wooten
and his argument that that gen-
would not avail himself of
the remaining-half hoar, there
We also hear it was nothing that he could say.
R. W. King, candidate for
Sheriff, was the first called upon.
He said he was not a speaking
man, but was the nominee of the
Democratic party of Pitt county
for Sheriff, and said if elected he
would serve the people faithfully.
His knowledge of the Sheriff's
office and its work qualified him
to make the best Sheriff in the
county, and he wanted everybody
to vote for him.
W. H- Harrington, the Third
party candidate for Sheriff, was on
the ground also and the chairman
invited him to speak. He took
the stand and said he could not
make a speech either, that he was
the of the Third party
and was. satisfied that he would
make a better Sheriff than Mr.
King.
H. Harding, candidate for Regis-
of Deeds, was next announced.
He said he would not get up on
the platform this time but would
stand on the ground so as to be
on a level with all the people. He
had no opponent present and
would not attempt to make any
speech other than to announce
himself as the regular nominee of
the Democratic party of Pitt
for the office of Register of
Deeds. If elected he was going
to serve the people to the very best
of his ability. He believed he
would be was certain
he would be if ho got enough
votes. He wanted the good
of township to help
swell the for him.
Fred nominee for
the Legislature was next called.
After the usual announcements, he
said he had not been present at any
of the speakings of the campaign
and was as yet unacquainted with
the lines to be followed. He had
an opponent on the ground who
would be given a hearing and if
anything worthy cf reply came
from that source ho would
heard from again. He closed by
saying he had no doubts but that
he would be elected, and it was his
intention to advocate such meas-
that would be to the best in-
of all the people.
Fleming, the Third party
candidate for the Legislature, was
invited to speak. He said he was
not the candidate of any party but
the people had
nominated him and he was their
candidate- He was not there
specially to represent himself, but
was the representative of Mr.
Weaver, the peoples candidate for
President. He then made some
random thrusts at Grover Cleve-
land without offering any proof
whatever of his charges. He said
further that the only legislation
that affected the people was
and all they cared about was
the President and Congressmen.
He said he was not so confident of
being elected as his opponent who
had just spoken. He did not
know whether he would be elected
or not, but hoped all there would
vote for
coming from half a dozen colored
people, somewhat took tho
by surprise, and it was here
that the fun started. The colored
people began putting such ones
Mr. Ids past
pasty affiliations, the way he used
to challenge colored voters, etc
that he was completely hacked,
and the audience enjoyed the fun
The next speaker announced
as F. G. James nominee for the
Senate, who spoke for minutes.
As usual he made a handsome
speech and won himself friends-
He said as yet he hod no opponent
in the field, and being interrupted
by Mr. Fleming who said
mind, you will have Mr.
James replied light, let him
show up and I will be ready for
It was left for G. B. King to
make the speech of the occasion in
response to calls for him. Mr.
King is not a candidate for any
is always ready to do
service when the party calls. He
answered every charge Mr. Flem-
mode against Grover Cleve-
land. He also showed
record and hatred for the
South, and said he did not see
how any Southern man could vote
Mr- have several
ons. One is the next Legislature
may have a Senator to elect, and
we nominated the other so
as to help each other along.
Mr. Carolina has two
U. S- Senators whose terms do not
expire some years yet. On
what do yon base your
that tho next Legislature
to elect a Senator
Mr. men than
Vance or sometime
die suddenly.
Mr- it is your wish
that one them may die, is it,
and you are prospecting for it
hand
Mr. Fleming found himself so
embarrassed again that he could
not reply, and Mr. King went on
with his speech, saying the Third
were jumping at the
ditch they get to it.
It was evident that tho Third
party would get little if any sup-
port from township,
either from white or colored
Tho next Saturday following
they had a speaking at Ayden, and
were greeted by a crowd of
more than two hundred- They
found that Third party
in was very scarce
and what little there was of it was
diminishing-
what, j Mr. has not receded far lie lo by his fellow students and
said about all enough from the Democratic party always a favorite with his teacher.
. . , , , to be able to attentive t W simile
legislation needed being of a lo , , n , ,
sham falsehoods which
his so called party have
been industriously circulating con-
our peerless, standard
bearer, Cleveland, the man
whose record has so noble,
that even stalwart
cans f tho North deserted their
brilliant but tricky leader Blaine,
and cast their votes to make him
President instead. It requires
either a native depravity that
makes one blush for our race or a
very long association with the rad-
party South, before any white
man could readily retail false-
hoods of the ordinary St.
get Mr.
says he has beet, for
time opposed to Mr.
Cleveland's
This is no reflection whatever
upon our great Democratic
candidate for President. We
know several cranks of Mr.
type who are ready to step into the
boat with Mr. and drift out
on a piratical cruise in search of
some candidate who will pledge
the United States Government to
clothe and yes, and
furnish medicine when
to as many indolent, impoverished
dead beats as can be found to
hold out hands for rations at the
doors of our National Treasury.
Such an might be de-
to many ; but it is hardly
practicable. Now, will Mr.
tell tho people of Pitt county ex-
what Mr. Cleveland's
views are Will he tell them
in print through your columns
We dare him to do so.
The gentleman says he will,
the campaign discuss the
issues tho people
he has time and opportunity
to do We have heard Mr.
speak and do not think he
can hurt anybody but himself by
so doing, unless it be some
person who may chance to
be peculiarly sensitive to boredom.
But when he deals in sentiment.
and talks of and
and to
he grow eloquent. Let him
dodge finance whenever he shall
speak, and he may hold some of
his hearers the if he
will only have a due regard for
brevity, and some show of point
in argument.
And by the way
of Mr. office have not
heretofore been so binding, but
that he find time, to attend
conventions, as far away as Ashe-
ville, and even and other
points for the sole purpose of
working up a Third party, in
which Mr. intelligence
might be estimated at par with
his recognition which
be could not possibly hope for in
the Democratic party. So, we do
not presume the gentleman will
hesitate to enter the fight and
main in it to the if he can
only feel a reasonable certainty
that it will be to his interest to do
Some of the brethren of the
State press place a splendid value
on their advertising space when
they give the Alden book con-
a line reading notice for
a cent book. should
be looking after these brethren
better and- not allow them to
wander from the path of rectitude.
We shall expect him to give them
a lecture as soon as ho gets
through with Exum-
and was known to In any-
thing in- undertook. The tun often went
down on him tit. hi earnestly en-
to solve prob-
On the ground, too, ho ill-
ways bore a prominent part, on account
his lively, fun-loving disposition. At
early age he great
In national mid in victory of
1884 no one could sound the Cleveland
triumph After
hit studies at Hie he enter-
ed the establishment of R. L. Davis.
As lie hail no In the mer-
lie was given the junior
went into It with the
same to succeed that had
always Two years
passed he wax foil d the
And, he lived, he would
have been a partner in
Integrity, Industry and courage placed
his MOM high ill the e-l it ion of his
fellow-men. I can scarcely that
he b gone. one ago I was In
store, lie In his usual good
spirits, and the l.-mt I heard from him
a farewell tune, on his violin, he lie-
a great lover of music. Only n short
time before his death, not even his own
family could believe his end was so
Hut alas lie is gone. Hut his memory
lives in the hearts of those w ho loved
him And to ends the life of one, ho
prospects seemed so before It had
fairly begun, and as quietly the mid-
night hour stole in, his soul was faking
its flight upward and onward, beyond
world and planet stars. M.
There are some patent medicine- that
are more marvelous than a dozen
prescriptions, but they're not those that
profess to cure everything.
now and then, feels
They've the
will, but no power to vitality.
They're not sick enough to call
but just too sick to be well. That's
where the right kind of a patent
cine comes and docs for a dollar what
the doctor wouldn't do for less than live
or ten. We put our claim for Dr.
Pierce's Golden Medic Discovery.
We claim it to be an
to the blood to invigorate the
liver. We claim to be lasting in its
effects, creating an appetite,
the blood, mid preventing Billions, Ty-
and Malarial fevers if taken
time. The time to take it is when you
first feel the signs of weariness
weakness. The time, on general
Is now.
J. B. CO.
DEALERS IN
-o
We beg to announce to our many
and customers that we
have the largest and best selected
stock of to be oar
town. And while we are not sell
at cost we beg to announce
that we think we and will do-
The other day we heard Mr.
Ben James, of Bethel township,
say the recent Democratic picnic
had done the Demo-
party much good, Some
men who before hearing
Kitchen were strong Third party
advocates, are now talking just
as strongly for the Democratic
ticket. Mr- James is an old
time Republican but takes no
stock tho Third Party fusion-
He says if the Republicans don't
give him a ticket to vote for. he
will not be found voting the Third
party ticket.
A WORD FOR MR. E. A.
Mb- your issue of
Aug. 24th, you published a letter
from Mr. E- A- in which
letter Mr- protests, as you
so ably stated in your editorial.
against your previous criticism of
and because he
and had tho courage of his
and convictions, and
resolved to stand by
What those are we
should be glad to have Mr.
unfold at If he has any
convictions on any political sub-
beyond the point that he
the presentation of his
name before the so called Peoples
party convention for- tho
for Congress from this dis-
and that he means to hold
on to his present office of Clerk
of this county until some
than that the wish of the
Democratic voters of Pitt shall in-
him to resign, we have
failed to to the same.
Mr. states that
and intolerant policy
pursued by you has wrought great
harm to the Democratic party
this Surely Mr. Move
does not complain of We
should infer that he would tender
you a vote of thanks for such in-
jury, since he boasts of tho person-
el of the party
which met here on tho
of July, and triumphantly asserts,
it compared favorably with
any Democratic convention ever
held here in every -i
Certainly this would seem to in
that Mp. has washed;
his hands of the par-
and that he means to fight
it pretendedly for some
imaginary reform ; and that
the
of this assertion, in
view of Mr. very moderate
mental is simply astound-
He blows his horn unasked,
and puts himself at the head of an
imaginary to fight for an
reform, while Mr.
certainly has ability to
understand that every hope for
any reform for beloved laud
and people, must come through
the Democratic party and through
that alone.
Mr. stated that con-
of his error he will be ready
and willing to Perhaps
the gentleman is already
ed since the fiasco of the Third
convention at Raleigh. Per
he does not see bis way so
clearly to an election to Congress
over the present honorable
Mr. Branch, the
promised withdrawal
and concluding that discretion is
the better part of valor, has
ed not to himself out of the
loaves, and fishes of the Clerks
office the dazzling uncertainty
of a couple of winters in Washing-
ton.
Has Mr- anything to say
upon this point
Scotland mi m mm,
The. dying of Garments, Rib-
etc., etc., done with neatness and
dispatch.
Charges for woolen or mixed goods
one-fourth to one-third, and cotton one-
half less than city prices. Also dry-
cleaning by French process. II request-
ed any repair attended to at reasonable
prices. When work done am to
82.00 express will be paid way,
when both ways. Send for price
list,
Scotland Neck, N. O.
so.
Now one direct question
When Mt. Skinner was
Greenville on a certain
Monday morning, to attend the
People's party convention to be
held the following day at Raleigh,
did Mr. authorized Mr-
Skinner to the nomination
for him at the Edenton
convention, or did he not
Let him as Christian gentle-
speak on this point,
We pause for a reply-
Citizen-.
1802.
Km
In your issue of lust week n
reflecting upon me as an officer and
a which I cannot permit to go
noticed. I am constable
this township, and always endeavor to
do wish to say-
that Hie statement about me was wholly
and basely false. Whoever re-
ported such to yon Kited was false
and was actuated by the basest
motives. If your will make
himself known to I will tell he
has lied upon me and has done so without
excuse, j am one of those who try
to conceal the truth. actions
should be exposed, and a serious
injustice is done me which affects my
and standing both as a man
and officer, I can not be have
thus chosen to denounce the false state-
made against me,
Dissolution Notice.
The partnership heretofore existing
between W. Brown and S. T. Hooker,
trailing as Hooker, is hereby
dissolved by mutual consent. All who
arc indebted to the old will please
settle with S. T. Hooker.
W. B. BROWN,
T. HOOKER.
July 27th, 1891
conduct the at the
old stand and solicit the liberal patron,
age bestowed upon the old Hy
consent will continue under the old style
of Brown Booker. Brown will
continue as salesman.
S. T. HOOKER.
any prices th different
of Goods by us. We
throw out no baits to entrap
To one and all we extend
a cordial welcome to our
will be pleased to serve you with
any goods in the following
-------o-
Dry Goods, Dress Goods, Notions,
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Pants
Goods, Hats, Shoes, Hardware,
Cutlery, Nails, Tinware, Crockery,
Glassware, Groceries, deg.
White Oil cents per gallon,
Wood and Willow Ware, Harness,
------o
Notice.
State North In the
Pitt County. I Superior Court.
Eliza Stocks. J. T. Allen and wife Min-
Allen. T. B. Allen and wife Mollie,
Stock-, Cora Stocks. William
Stocks. Annie Stocks, Chas. Stocks,
Queenie Mocks and Stocks. Hie
last six minors by their friend J. T-
Home Benefit Association,
The defendant above named Is hereby
notified to be and appear before the
Judge of our Superior Court, at a court
to he for the county of at the
Court in Greenville, on the 2nd
Monday after the 1st Monday f
it being the Nth day of
1802, answer the complaint which
will lie deposited in the office of
Clerk of the Superior Court of said
the first three days said
term, lot said defendant take notice
that if they fad to answer the said com-
plaint within the time required law
the plaintiffs apply to the court for
the relief demanded the complaint.
Given under my hand and seal of said
court, this day of August,
E. A.
Superior Court.
Very
K.
Dissolution.
The firm of and Edmonds is
of j hereby dissolved Mutual consent.
Those indebted to the will pay the
same to Herbert Edmonds.
Edmonds.
Aug.
It gives me pleasure to announce to
our customers that I will continue the
business a, the old stand. Every com-
fort and convenience will be found in
ray shop. First-class shave and haircut
pan be had at all times. Thanking the
public for pact I solicit
of the same.
Edmonds.
RESOLUTIONS OF RESPECT.
At a palled meeting of the tobacco
board of trade of Greenville N. C, the
following resolutions were adopted
the sudden of Mr. C. It.
It pleased Almighty God in in-
and to take
our midst our friend and
Mr. C. B. and where-
as, we recognize that in him we have
lost a firm friend and a sterling co-labor-
therefore lie it,
Hi -sol That this organization feels
the great that fallen to
his toll is friends and to the trade,
we tender to his
and friends out profound
sympathy in their loss.
That a copy of these resolutions
sept lo his a copy to be sent the
Eastern Tobacco Journal and
and Oxford Public
and also the resolutions be spread
on the mi mites of our organ
O. Evans,
W. T.
IN
Died, on Thursday, 25th, at his
in county, IT.
of Mr- Taylor
Barrow, aged The life and
character of him who has passed from us
I will endeavor to place before the many
readers of the have not
known him In person. He was left
when quite young, r the family
also sustaining a great loss by Are. be
seemed to dismiss all hope of obtaining a
collegiate education which had ever been
his highest ambition. He therefore took
up his father's work and successfully con-
ducted his mother's farm, until big 16th
year, when ambition beating so high In
his breast, he at last reluctantly abandon-
ed the farm and the loved face of his de-
voted mother to attend the at
Farmville, which was then a thriving
school. It was from tills lime, onward
that I bad the opportunity to know and
appreciate the noble character my be-
loved desk-mate. It was in these days
that he those friendships which
ever be warm hearts of those
who survive him. And It was In
days we became dear friends. At
You are Not In It
If you fail to see the brand new stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
is now going offered by-----
W. H. WHITE.
-----1 have just to suit-----
f GENTLEMEN,
LADY,
HOUSEKEEPER,
j FARMER,
ELSE-
If you wan t wear or an
to cat, or any article to go in the house,
call on me. all new, not a piece
of old stock n the house.
My prices will be found as low as
goods can be sold at.
W. H. WHITE.
Two doors from C. A.
near Five Points.
WALTER'S
Street, in rear of Dr. D. L. James
office.
GREENVILLE N. C.
I take great pleasure in informing my
. friends and public generally
that
is now open, A successful career of
YEARS
Is a proof of the satisfaction I give.
My Work Speaks for Itself.
Coll early and examine
Hoping to gain your confidence, and
merit your favor. am
Whips and Collars, Farming Tools
Plows of the improved makes.
Trunks, Valises, Floor Matting,
Oil Children's Carriages,
and the largest and best selected
stock of FURNITURE ever
in our town. When in need of
anything in our various line try us.
Yours, anxious for trade,
J. B. CHERRY CO.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN
J. L. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT
GREENVILLE, N. G
OFFICE 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
Horner Military School, Oxford, N. C.
Very respectfully
WALTER
sent on
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Headquarters for the of
Car load Mei Port.
Car load Rib Side Meat.
Car load
Car load While Seed Oats.
Horses Bread
and Peaches.
Boxes Tobacco.
Boxes Starch.
Barrels Rico Molasses.
Barrels Stick Candy.
Barrels Gail ft Ax Snuff.
Barrels Mills Snuff.
Barrels Snuff.
Paper Sacks, hero Cigarette.
N. C.
MUSIC SCHOOL.
MRS. would be
to have a class in Instrumental
Music at her home In J. Perkins
residence. Session begins September
on
For Sale on Easy Terms
Double Store In I
offer sale on terms Urge
Double Store north of
east Evan- with lot fronting
feet on Fifth street by feet deep. A
splendid bargain. Apply at once to
ii





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THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
The nights arc fine.
It is dry again.
Tin- is first fall month.
Tobacco breaks keep right on.
Some fact are needed in Greenville.
The New Home Sewing Machine for
Brown Bros.
The a quarter for a
See
and have
been in market.
Prof. dancing class gave a
hop Friday night.
Nicholson had oysters last Thursday,
the first of the season.
A handsome flag floats over the Eastern
Warehouse 8.1 feet high.
New Cream X. Y. State
Butter at the Old Brick Store.
Personal.
Mr. I,. II. spent
Tarboro hist week.
a few in
Mr. K. A- Tyson
Friday on business.
went to Baltimore
. J-J
Roll of Honor,
For last month of tire public school
taught hi district by Vi-s Bessie
Tyson.
Alien, John Allen,
Allen, Lloyd Smith, A.
Smith, Robert K. Thomas
Job T. Tyson.
it tic Tyson. Alice
Dora Lizzie
Rosa I. and
Maggie Tyson.
Dr. J. Marquis last week from
a visit to Philadelphia.
Three children of Treasurer Job it
Flanagan are quite sick.
Mrs. W. R. Onion, of to
visiting Mrs. James Brown. I Man
Mr. E. J. Proctor, one of the A young colored man named John May
I tor boys spent Sunday in Kinston. j wan drowned on the excursion to Wash-
I Mrs. I. E. of vis- I Thursday, lie was taking a
her mother. Mrs. P. E. Dancy.
Master Charlie Forbes left Monday
morning for Horner School, Oxford.
Mrs. Z. D. and her mother,
Mrs. J. I. arc both quite sick.
FARMS FOR
Low,
Watch the id Democracy as it
unfurls to the breezes to-day.
Bros, are another store
in the Hall corner.
Want to eat something good Bess
Biscuits at the Old Brick Store.
We see it stated that Weaver will
-peak at Mount the
Everybody join and give three grand
for Cleveland and Carr to-day.
Greenville was full of la-l
Thursday and will be full again to-day.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads and
Mattresses at the Old Brick Store.
The Co. met Mon-
day and transacted the usual business.
Cali given for Produce. Hides, Eggs
and Furs at the Old Brick Store.
The Reflector Book Store has just re-
another of Cleveland but-
tons.
says Food is
good for hog cholera. At the Old Brick
Store.
drum from the upper to the lower
deck of the steamer while walking
along the gangway the drum a
post and knocked him overboard. Be-
fore the steamer could be stopped and
turned around he was some distance
away- The drum kept him afloat for
several minutes, bit the
among the passengers and rail- to him to
Miss Move, of Kinston, has bee.
visiting friends here the past two weeks. I h
j and before a life boat could
Hon. W. Mason and State Senator reach him. This occurred in about
miles Washington. The body was re-
covered Saturday and brought to
Mr. If. R. Lang returned last
day from his three weeks at the north.
i of were
turned warm again
The few day
cool, hut it
Monday.
Cooper's Warehouse. Henderson, is
ready for new chop tobacco. He
highest prices.
The merchant who does not advertise
in the Reflector is missing it. Our
subscription list more rapidly.
The old reliable is Cooper's Ware-
house. Henderson. Send your tobacco
there. Cooper is the farmer's friend.
There are rumors of a circus in the dis-
We hope it will stay in the dis-
so far as Pitt county is concerned.
The Reflector overrun its average
last week and entered new subscribers
for the week. tired writing
receipts.
Ship your tobacco to Cooper's Ware-
house, Henderson, and he will work
honestly and faithfully for your best
interest.
Mrs. Laura Brown has purchased the
house and lot on Pitt street
It was sold through Which-
real estate agents.
Remember if you send your tobacco to
Cooper's Warehouse. Henderson, yon
will obtain high prices and be
Try it.
They are fine tomato vine- growing by
the side of Cobb Son's store. They
arc evidence of what the tomato can do
when properly trained.
Reflector thanks Mr. W.
of for a Carr campaign
button. It bears a splendid photograph
of our candidate for Governor.
The thanks of the Reflector are re-
turned to the Ladies Aid Society of the
Methodist church for ice cream cake
sent to the office last Thursday.
You can get a good for
cents in the vacant store between Con-
and Ladies
Aid Society of the Baptist church are in
charge.
The other day Mr. J. W.
who cures for Mr. J. B. Nichols, sent
a beautiful sample of tobacco. He said
It was Democrat mahogany, and it was
certainly Simon pure.
people, and all others who
pass that way. are now more happy than
formerly. The new foot bridge is com-
mud is all right. It is a larger and
better bridge than the old
On Aug. th. Cooper's Warehouse,
Henderson, sold new primings for K.
It. Carr at 15.50. and
and for F. T. Carr at 4.50 ft, 10.50
II, 13.75 Cooper make just
as good sales for yon.
The Directors of the Weldon fair have
decided to have a fair this fall from No-
1st to 4th inclusive. Weldon
usually has a good fair and there is no
reason why the one this season should
not be excellent In every respect.
There will lie I meeting at
next Saturday for purpose of organ-
a Cleveland and Carr club. Mr.
G. B. King, of Greenville, and
of Kinston. will both speak. Already
names arc on the list of the Club.
The past few weeks have certainly
shown that Greenville ought to have an
ice Who will take hold of this
It seems that some of our money men
should be less backward in taking hold of
enterprises in which large profits can be
made.
Attention is called to the advertisement
of the Scotland Steam Dye Works,
which will be found in this issue. Any
of people having done
will find this establishment very
for t hem and prices lower than cam
be had further away.
The Tobacco Trade of Richmond have
tip an excursion to that city on
e 14th inst. for a big sale of tobacco on
the 15th. Ship your tobacco three days
ahead to Silas Ware-
house and go on the excursion and see it
sold. Fare for the round trip is only
from points between Goldsboro and
Whitakers to Richmond and return.
hog-head- will be furnished all
shippers. Got your tobacco ready and
ship it to Silas who the
best lighted best located warehouse
in Richmond, and promises his best
efforts to get yon good prices.
New Cotton.
The first bale of new cotton at Green-
ville came in Saturday and was
ed by Young It was raised
by Ed on one of the Latham
Skinner farms and weighed pounds.
A new bale was carried to Bethel the
same day bought by
MM.
On Wednesday evening. August 31st,
at the residence of the bride's parents,
Mr. Mrs. J. E. Boyette, in Scotland
Neck. Mr. Harris, of Greenville,
and Miss Blanche Boyette were married.
Key. R. T. Vann officiating. Re-
joins Jim's many friends in ex-
tending best wishes.
Flags.
Cleveland and Carr lags float all over
town. We notice one from the flag pole
on Williamson's carriage streps, and the
patriotism of boys keeps increasing.
Mr. Smith's little boy has raised one
on the corner near bis home and little
David James has one up In front of his
father's residence. the grand
banner will be unfurled from top of
the foot pole in from, of the Court
House amid the shoots of the
multitude.
J. S. Bel will speak ill Greenville to-day.
Miss Mollie E. Kidd. of Petersburg, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. A. B. Ellington.
Mr. J. W. Higgs has just returned from
the north where he went on a purchasing
tour.
Mr. Andrew Joyner has moved his
family back to Greenville. We welcome
them.
Mrs. Eva Satchwell, of Beaufort
is visiting sister, Mrs. A.
Sheppard.
Capt. C. A. White has been sick for
two weeks, but we are glad to know he
is up again.
Mr. C. L. Tyson, who spent part of
the summer at Connelly Springs, has
returned home.
Miss Helen Friday
morning to continue her studies at Notre
Dame, Baltimore.
Mr. D. Bullock, of Oxford, was on
the breaks here last week and bought
largely of the Pitt weed.
Messrs. Robert Hester and R. W.
Royster have located in Greenville
as buyers and handlers of
The family of Mr. D. Gasket re-
turned home last week from their
to Morganton and Connelly Springs.
Mr. and Mrs. L. Langley and
Miss Maggie, have been spending
sonic days with relatives in Washington.
Miss S. Lucy Joyner returned from
Franklin county Saturday and began her
school for boys and Monday morn-
She opened with
Messrs. F. C. Harding and E. A. Move,
Jr., to their studies at the
last week. Mr. W. F. Harding
will leave Hill this evening.
Mr. Silas proprietor of
Warehouse, Richmond, -pent
last week here. He was working in the
interest of the big Richmond excursion
on the 14th.
Sheriff B. W. Edwards, of Snow Hill,
attended the opening breaks here last
Thursday. He reports the Democracy
of Greene county all right and says the
Third party is in over there.
Mr. Y. Cooper, the old reliable,
and the clever proprietor of
Warehouse, Henderson, was at the
opening breaks here last Thursday, and
said we had a fine tobacco country down
here.
Rev. J. X. H. of
preached in Elliott Hall Sunday morn-
and Rev. R. W. Wilson,
preached Hall in the
Rev. II. II. Phelps preached
the Episcopal church both morning
Mr-. J. T. William- will, her children
left Friday to make her home in
more. She has long been a resident of
Greenville, everybody in the entire com-
was her friend and all regret her
departure from our town. The
tor semis its wishes with her to her
new home.
Mr. W. S. Greer, one of the cleverest
drummer.- on the road, was town la.-t
week and dropped for a chat with the
Reflector, lie said he had just been
on a trip all over the State and is satisfied
the Third party not amount to a
hill of He said wherever Gov.
Jarvis had been there were signs of the
best work that had ever been done in any
campaign, for Cleveland and
Democracy grow brighter every day.
Latham, the cartoonist of the
Washington Gazette, dropped to see
us a short while Saturday, while on his
way to inspect his vegetable patch near
Mt. Pleasant. He found his turnips and
onions all had the big root, the cabbage
bad the big head, somebody had pulled
all the leaves off the corn stalks, the
cotton bolls were all breaking open,
and ho thought the was
to pay generally over there. If frost
don't catch he expects his spring
beans to snap and the cucumbers to
double up. The reading clerk plant
was blooming and will ripe enough
to pull by January.
Elder W. A. Ross, of this county, re-
returned home from a mouth's trip
through several counties In the central
portion of the State. He traveled over
fourteen counties, went as far over in
Virginia as Danville, and while away at-
tended three Associations, He reports
that his entire trip was an
pleasant ore. tells the Reflector
that in all his travels he did not find a
Third at any house he visited.
Uncle Alfred is a close observer and a
good of men, and would been sure
to have spotted a Third man had
he come across one. He is not only a
good man and a good preacher, but he is
the best Democrat in Pitt
Last Thursday had a sad beginning in
Greenville. Though he was a stranger
to most of our citizens every one was
saddened upon learning early that morn-
that Mr. C. R. had died at
the King House about half past three
o'clock. Mr. was from Oxford.
A few weeks since he made a brief trip
to Greenville to confer with the
tors of the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse
as to accepting the position of auctioneer
for house. An agreement Ml
made between them and Mr.
was to return to Greenville in time for
the opening break. He came back two
days before the break but was sick when
he came and had to keep his room after
arriving. Wednesday evening he was
thought to be doing moderately well and
stated some plans about his going to the
warehouse the next day, but that night
he grew rapidly worse and died at the
time above stated. Though comparative-
among strangers he was among friends.
Every attention was paid him in his
and every mark of respect was
shown him after death. The Odd
lows of this was a member of
the his body- prepared
the remains to the
depot and sent one of their number, Mr.
J, S. C. Benjamin, in charge of it to Ox-
ford. The news of hi death was a sad
shock to his family who had the
sympathy of the of Greenville in
their
In Fla., July 21st. Col. R. W.
formerly a resident of this
place where he Was well known. De-
ceased lived in Pitt county many years
ago. He was a kindly man, generous
impulses, warm friendship, lofty
and easily moved by appeals to the
high and Advance.
The infant daughter of Mr. Reeve.
died last Thursday morning near En field
where Mrs. Reeves with the little one
was visiting. The Reflector extends
sympathy.
X. C, April
wife used Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy in
family and we found It to be all that
she claimed for it. It cannot he excel led
ville.
Thursday Evening Last.
The scenic entertainment last
Thursday evening under the efficient
management of Mrs. Cherry, Mrs.
Sheppard and Miss Jennie Williams,
assisted by many other faithful
of the King, was a decided
and so received and applauded to the
encore by an enthusiastic audience.
Indeed having mind the ten days only
of practice and rehearsal by our
we were literally surprised out of
certain hypocritical airs were trying
to assume into intense and howling
admiration.
Whence so much talent so much
taste how conjured from amateurs
such genuine, lively acting, the
Even Greenville's bright young
people excelled themselves and those
who were absent missed the thing
of this kind we have ever attended in
Greenville. But a fulsome puff would
be undignified and to real
merit. Just a word to the chief feat-
Yet what was better when nil
was best The scene from the Opera
Wang elicited much healthy applause.
a- Contrary seemed
to well understand how that a dainty
toss of the head, an arch impertinent
lift of the chin, a little superior vanity
would but enhance an already more
than striking beauty. Then fun f wasn't
it fun to see dear old Bob Cox play
the country bumpkin lover and Delia
dear girl, how she and Bob must have
practiced together; they could put up
job on the real old
For want of space we can notice only
the feature, by far, of the whole
the tableau,
Daughter and Her taken
from fine work of art. As
the curtain rose on that
beautiful scene amid breathless silence,
our heart and mind flew away over
to old hills beyond Jordan, to
the times when the daughters of
used to lament the sad fate of hero-
Hebrew maiden. Full of pathos it
was What wondrous resignation in
the beaut upturned face of the mar-
canvass or human
depict the utter hopelessness of
despair more intensely than the marble
features and pose of the half kneeling
maiden friend Thou
en. And thou maiden kneeling at the
virgin's feet, thou wouldst have said
didst know it would have
been in vain. Tears, despair,
tender affection, and over all,
blending all the heroic resolve of the
devoted maiden. More than one eye
familiar with old Bible story felt
the ready tear stayed the
emotion of awe of something
grand. Have it again by all means.
And who did not enjoy Dr. Charlie's
sweet mellow notes as be and won,
his dusky bride and made her a
But the Editor is kicking
we must -top. Would like to say
abort all.
Are you going to Kinston Go by all
means. Sure success would attend you.
and the hearty good will and assistance
possible of your audience, including
yours truly.
Old Black.
NEW GOODS
C. T.
HAS JUST RETURNED FROM TIE NORTHERN MARKETS. SO TAKE A
PEEP AT HIS STOKE. IT OVER NEW
GOODS OF A
Dry Goods, Clothing, Boots, Shoes, Notions,
Furnishing Goods,
The Opening Breaks.
From the way hogsheads and loads of
tobacco rolled into Greenville on Tues-
day, Wednesday and Thursday last, and
the way people poured into town Thurs-
it was seen that the open-
breaks of two tobacco ware-
houses had attracted interest from every
quarter of the county and from every ad-
joining county. It was a great day and
one long to be remembered. The men
in charge of the warehouses arc hustlers,
they had advertised thoroughly and
tobacco came people, too. It is
rare that a tobacco sale anywhere is so
largely attended. The buyers were here,
the planters were here, the spectators
were here all ready for the sales to begin.
Both warehouses had much more to-
than they could handle at onetime
and it was not long before their floors
were covered with bright piles of the
golden weed. The sale began at the
Greenville Warehouse at o'clock, and
old Man never looked happier
since his wedding day than when he said,
it's here, come in bid on
Mr. Eugene Crews, of Oxford, served as
for the day and was a wonder
to listen at. He warbled and trilled
equal to a mocking bird and just made
the piles of tobacco walk right out be-
hind him. Bidding was brisk in no
while pile on the floor had
been knocked off.
The sale then began in the Eastern
Warehouse with the same auctioneer
milking the music, and the more he sang
the better he got. Alex was in all hi
glory checking up the tags, while
never got red of spurring up the buyers
w on her, boys, she's The
floor of the Eastern was not half gone
over when the sale stopped at o'clock
for dinner. After dinner the crowd grew
still larger and hundreds of ladies were
out. The marriage to take place after
the was a drawing card and the
crowd was there to sec it. they
were bent on seeing it, for the crowd s
so large that they could not be cleared
out after the sales to make room for the
bridal party.
It was about five o'clock when the
wedding took place in the door of the
Greenville Warehouse. The couple
joined In wedlock In the presence of the
multitude were Mr. J. of
Franklin county, and Mrs. Mamie Pol-
lard, daughter Rev. A. A. Tyson,
of Pitt. They were attended by J. n.
Fuller with Miss and A.
W. with Miss Ophelia Col-
lens. The ceremony was performed by
Rev. J. T. Phillips, of Farmville, who
looked as happy over the occasion, as the
bride and groom A shout
went up from the c when he pro-.
them man and Wife.
Greenville is bound to be a good to-
market, Men of pluck are
charge of the warehouses and they will
nothing undone to give
Nothing more was expected them
that there should be some kicking, but
there was a small of it
for such an occasion.
Pitt county has the tobacco, Green-
ville has the warehouses, now everybody
lend his aid to make the home market
equal of any.
New Barber Shop.
I take this to return
Hanks to my many customers who have
me their liberal support in the out.
have opened m new shop in Hie old Club
House and would respectfully solicit a
continuation of my former patronage
will assure all that they shall
every attention besides getting the best
share and cut in town. All L ask is
trial. Satisfaction guaranteed. All
of latest Id As
art will in one In mt strop.
LISTEN
and other novelties too numerous to mention.
Fine All- Wool Suits 88.06
All-Wool PaWS worth
Men's Dress Shoes cents worth
Dress Shoes cents worth
Magnificent bargains in all departments,
hard licks and long strides to it.
We want your trade and are making
Respectfully,
Opposite; Old Store.
n. c.
IV. O.
Bullock Mitchell,
Owners and Proprietors.
Headquarters for Big Prices High Averages
are still doing business at the same old stand, where we are better prepared than
ever before to handle to advantage the line bright Tobacco from the Golden
have a very large corps of buyers who are anxious for New Tobacco
and arc willing to pay good for it. stands well on
market and is eagerly sought after both by our order mm and speculators. Wt are
very glad can say to the of Pitt and adjoining counties
Unit tobacco has better this year than we have known it in
and that we look for good prices during the season. Hogsheads can be
OF CHARGE by those planters shipping to us, by applying to S. M.
Schultz ft Co. Greenville. N. C. to Amos G. Cox. c.
her bid lively on every pile put upon our floor and buy of grades
that we sell, and will see to it that you shall have highest market price for
sold with us. that it cost you to collect our cheeks as they
are payable in New York Exchange without cost to holder. forget to try u--
with a good shipment and we will convince you we from
and that get every time on big prices and you know they talk.
Will have your tobacco graded for you in our by skilled bands at per
Thanking our friends for the very liberal bestowed Upon the past
and them our very best efforts to please them in the we arc with
best wishes. Very truly your
Terms Easy.
BROS. OFFER FOR SALE
The J. L. Ballard home farm, Bea-
Dam township, adjoining the lands
of G. T. and J. II. A fine
farm of about acres, with good build-
and adapted to corn, cotton and
A Hue bed.
S. A farm near mid King i
mediately on the railroad, formerly own- I
ed by Caleb B. Tripp, i
are cleared. Good neighbor-
hood, churches and a school within
miles. Plenty of marl on the adjoin
farms.
A farm of three miles
from and from Green-
with large, dwelling
and out houses, known as the I. I.
home place, line, cotton
good clay subsoil, accessible marl.
i. A smaller farm adjoining the above
known as the Jones place, 1.10 acres,
dwelling, ham and tenant house, land
good.
A farm of acres in town-
ship, about miles from
acres cleared, part of the Singlet tract.
Part or the Noah farm,
acres, adjoining the town of Marlboro,
located in an improving section
can be made a valuable farm.
A small farm of acres,
about miles from Greenville, on In-
Well Swamp, with house, etc. for-
owned by
ALSO TIMBER
A tract of about acres near Cone-
the nation, with cypress timber well
suited for I ties.
a tract of about acres in
township, near the Washington rail-
road, pine timber.
A of acres near Johnson's
Mills, pine and cypress timber.
Apply to II. LONG,
Greenville. N. C.
OLD
Vt ants your Tobacco at the
GREENVILLE
WAREHOUSE.
The re ed with a big break en
Thursday, September
Bring on your Tobacco and I guarantee
that you will get n high prices
for it as c n be hail any-
where.
I will have t help in conduct-
the Warehouse and
every patron will prompt
attention. Don't forget to
bring
The following sales have made
this season; M. smith Kr-
nest Forbes Dixon John
Peebles 13.25, 12.75.
M. B. SO, 20.00,
18.75. M. K. Dale 3.0, SO, SO, X.
i. EVANS,
PROPRIETOR.
Notice.
On Monday, the 19th day
A. D. 1802, I will sell at the Court
door in the town of Greenville, to the
highest bidder for cash the following
tract of laud in county, situated
the town of Greenville and known in
said tow n as lots No. and
the lots in K, Bernard
ill the division of the land-of William
Bernard. St. lo satisfy s veil ex in
hands for collection Ann K.
III and which have been levied oh said
hind as the property of said Ann K. Her-
J. A. K.
AND WK ABE PREPARED TO HANDLE R TOBACCO TO THE
BEST ADVANTAGE.
THE
BULLOCK A
MITCHELL,
Oxford. N. C
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTiONS-
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.
W. C,
mi; PLANTERS Of EASTERN CAROLINA THAT WILL
SPARE No EFFORTS TO BELL I TOBACCO
AS HIGH AS THE HIGHEST.
-o------
COME TO THE EASTERN WHERE YOU FIND FOLLOWING
BUYERS ALWAYS ON
Ii. M. HESTER,
R. W.
E. J. HESTER,
E. II.
J. HART,
W. WIGGINS,
S. JENKINS,
W. K.
They all want an will pay for It.
Insurance and Free. Free Stables.
Your friends,
L. JOYNER,
Owners and Proprietors of Jo; -r Eastern Warehouse.
Have on hand a full line of Cooking Stoves, Kitchenware, Tin-
ware, Lamp Goods, Faints, Oils, Glass and Putty.
We make our own stovepipe and pans of cold rolled steel which
the most durable.
We don't try to keep the cheapest goods in town, out if you
want to get the most value your money give a call.
test White Oil cents per gallon.
Tin Roofing and Guttering the Tariff.
S. E. CO.,
O.
the of
to the havers of Pitt and surrounding a line of the following goo
not to he In this market. And an
pure DRY GOODS of all kinds. NOTIONS.
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES,
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. CROCKERY and
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Mm. Belting. Hay, Rock of Paris, and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and
HEAVY GROCERIES A
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers price, dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep
and Hall's Star 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 satisfaction.
COM MISSION MERCHANT,
--------AND OF--------
Country Produce
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them pay in spot
cash.
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it for yen on a small commission.
Call see me.
ma





IS N
AIDS NATURE
IN NATURE'S OWN WAY.
IT COSTS TO
ATLANTIC CO.
Sew York e. P. C.
How Lost How Regained
THYSELF.
A and ml.
MATURE
Tb invaluable
mill, doable
, with endorsements
the Press
of tin
in person or by .
and ILK-
Main v . r r
W W St.
M has many
I, .,
w valuable than .
man I.
STRONG
CO
now.
A Family Affair
Health for the Baby,
Pleasure for the Parents,
New Life for the OH Folks.
Hires
THE TURN Or THE
There's of cold.
And a Wink -f rave stained
the a rood or so.
a roof low;
And h day will seldom fall
its distress lent and old.
root and red than
her black napped doorway tans,
Very frail and meaner and small.
And Ibo load
With a foot she bears
the tall to and fro.
But her steps will ever stay
the turn of tho road
Never reach It, you guess
That they halt for feebleness.
Till you hear her story told.
For she children all
Are while away;
Years Ions since watched them go
Twas when day came glimmering cold
Hound the turn of the road;
And I'm lonesome left behind;
Yet time passes, fast or slow.
And they're coming home some day.
They'll hack to me, they said;
this morn that's overhead
It might for aught I know.
And that's always in my mind.
For I dream It in my sleep.
And I think it when I wake.
And when out of doors I creep
Toward tho turn of tho road,
hen a step I hardly make.
But I'm saying all the while.
Ere another minute's gone.
may see them there, all three.
Coming poor lads, to mo,
I lie turn of the road.
Bat a stone's throw farther on.
If I'd creep to where it showed
Like a stretched a mile.
And the look I'd
Saw stirring on its white.
Sure my heart were fit to break.
So I in fight.
Home I set face again.
Lest I'd lose the thought that's
the day. And then
If find the house so still
That my heart begins to
Ere my foot is o'er the sill.
I can think I needn't fret.
If they're maybe near me yet
At the turn of the
Jane Barlow In
If tho L
CHINA'S MANY DIALECTS.
to Keep trio
his hat and the kettle
I can taste-it in the people in the mu
tarn tho t steam,
Tho fevers ye, raM j trice as distant Crow
Theo, following out pt the water tho pipe only a few miles raw
boat and his aim. cow and the is condensed into j totally different forms. In
Harry shouted. j fresh Water and rune into the jug. some of the larger cities,
water. I tell yon we shall have all It's one of first things I learned
i in chemistry; some use,
It said too
we will Troop
land Hurry
the water we want inside of two
think I'm
all right, I end a
Don't know that lead pipe and n
teakettle arc good a spring
Canton, with more than 1.000,000 in-
often finds several
dialect f in The variation
In the are so great
watch j indeed that it is not too much to say
that there arc many dialect forms
Go and room and get to on tho man on watch ; in the Kingdom day in
Work and shall soon have all the ; to keep the lire going and keep water i the year.
water yon can
i walked oil toward
but not without looking
over his at Harry,
j sudden ext he not
Horn- into the
and drew half inch
. lead pipe fifteen feet long. He
went into the little cabin found
the copper big to hi M
I- he cried,
lake the plenty or
-a big to lest
in a little more
in new, Theo; about a pint at a
Is kettle
than a full and never let
fire go down. New, go and t
sonic more for
At supper time d
half of water apiece.
kept steaming .
night, and the jug was
than a full.
i four after tho of
tho boys lived on and
water. It not a
ids bat they made com
will stay here to help .
abated on the fifth day
that they were on the island. But
tor two days tho sea was too
rough for them to
broken
On the seventh day they heard a
steam close by and a few
woo
i i
took the and
for a thicket, keeping
the shelter tho that shielded
; him from the fury of hurricane.
Theo, look at the end of
this pipe. Now I wish you to make.
The most widely spread language
is tho Mandarin. It is used one
form or another in fourteen or
teen of the nineteen provinces com-
posing China. There are north-
and southern Mandarin t agues.
The northern Mandarin dialect is
spoken Peking, while tho est
southern spoken in Nan-
kin. A marked form of the
tongue is used west China,
especially in People
who speak the various Mandarin
dialects however can understand one
another readily. If we estimate tho
population of China at of
people at least use tho
Mandarin tongue. All persons, from
THE STILL.
the men on her cheering at sight of
the throe boys alive and well.
THE GREAT
DRINK
a family requisite
of The home
Ration, of
for
NO I
us
Scientific American
Agency for
CAVEATS.
TRADE MARKS,
PATENTS
etc.
to
w.
In
oat i i--
the Ly a t it,
f r
i-. . .;. a
0-
t u
MINN CU-
Oldest far
B. E.
and
TRAINS SOUTH.
Apr. 19th. daily Fart Mail, daily
ex Sun
pin S
i -to am u ; it
1288 am CO
p S
Ar
Tarboro
Ar
Wilson
Ar
Ar
Warsaw
Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
sit Magnolia
Warsaw
TRAINS COOK NORTH
So K
daily daily
ex Sun.
fl
i am
It
ii 5-5
1306
Ar OS
Ar Wilson
Wilson am m ii
Ai Mount S SO h
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
except
Train on Scotland Week Branch
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot
at P. M., Greenville 6.62
P. M., Kinston p. Returning,
leaves Kinston 7.10 a.
9.25 Arriving Halifax in.
Weldon 11.25 a. at., daily Sun-
on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.0 a arrives A. R.
Junction a. in., returning A.
B. Junction v. in., arrive-
8.46 p. Daily except
with trains on ml
Raleigh it. B. and Neck
Branch.
Local freight train leaves Weldon
Monday. Wednesday and Friday
10.15 in., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05
a. m. Greenville p. in.,
7.10 p. m. leaves Kinston
Tuesday. and Saturday
7.20 a. m. arriving
a. m., Scotland 2.-1 p. m. Weldon
5.15 p. m.
Tram leaves Tarboro, X via
Raleigh B. B. except Sun-
day. F M. Sunday S On P M,
Williamson, N C, V M, M.
Plymouth 8.80 p. in., 5.22 p. m.
leaves Plymouth daily except
Sunday 6.00 a. in., 0.00 a. m-
in. N t. 7.30.1 in, am.
arrive Tarboro, X C, A
Trains on Southern Division. Wilson
and leave
ville a m. arrive Rowland p m.
Returning leave Rowland p m.
arrive p in. Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro dally except Sunday. A M
M C, A M. Be
laves X A M
arrive Goldsboro. N C A M.
Train leaves Bock
Monet at P M, arrive
P Hope p M.
Spring Hope A M. Nashville
A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for daily, except Sunday.
and
ton at A M, and P. cornice
in at Warsaw And
Trains No. South and North will
only at Mount, Wilson,
and Magnolia.
Train No. makes connection
Weldon for all points daily. AI
rail via and daily except Sun
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
daily except Sunday, with Norfolk A
railroad for Norfolk and all
Norfolk.
Southbound train on Wilson
Branch is-No. Northbound Is
except Sunday.
DIVINE,
General
J. B. Transportation
T,
no use cooking any more
conchs, Theo, I can't cat another
mouthful of anything till I have some
water. Come down to the
Theo, a brawny boy of eight-
or twenty, barefooted, with his
trousers rolled to his knees, his shirt
I open at tho throat and a tattered
straw hat on his head, followed to a
boat lay well up on the beach
i with it great hole stove in her side.
brought you down said
Harry Waterfowl, leaning his back
against the boat and looking seriously
I at the boy. I don't
i want t J -car what I say.
Bat this thing is coining to an end.
You sec how sits there with
i his head on his looking at the
I water He's been that way all day.
That's the thirst. Ho feels it worse
we do because he is a mulatto,
j they the strength of a
, pure black or a pure white.
I well the same way by tomorrow
I and will worse. This is
j the third day without water, and in
I another twenty-four hours we'll not
j be able to help
true, Theo replied;
I is
thirst; but what are we going
to
am going to throw the ballast
j out of patch her up and
try to take her to Nassau. It is a
slim chance, bat I might as well
drown as hero of
They were on Pelican island, these
boys, only twelve miles from
in the Bahamas. But in the
terrific hurricane that was blowing
they might as well a thou-
sand miles away, even if they had
not bilged their boat while landing
on the island.
Harry Waterfowl, an American
boy spending the winter in tho hotel
in with his father, bad gone
out fishing with the two colored
boatmen, and when tho storm sud-
broke up they had managed to
reach Pelican island, with no food,
with their water jug washed full
of salt sea water.
The lack of food was a small mat-
for plenty of conchs are to be
found near the shores of these is
lands, and conchs when properly
pared are as wholesome as clams.
But the water P island was
not more than an acre in extent, a
limestone rock, with thin soil on
top and not a drop of fresh water.
They had terribly for
three days and now they had reached
the danger
Might as well throw yourself into
the once,
i is no small made could
; live this sea. And the wind would
pick it right out of the water. This
j is what we call a long wind
i keeps in the same quarter. It may
blow so for five or six days. There
wouldn't no Nassau boatman come
out while it lasts for no
am going to try Harry re
plied. is sure death to stay here.
can do as you like,
, but I have made up my mind to go.
I The wind blows dead for Nassau, and
I shall lash the sail over this bole in
I tho side and try it with a double
reefed
go down, Theo
expostulated.
can sink if we throw
out the Harry asked.
she fills shell still float. She'll bras
mo a plug out of the hardest wood minutes later tho steam tug City of
yon can find, with tho end just ; Nassau was pulling off their beach
big enough to fit snugly into tho pipe Harry's father on board, and
large end three times as
Hairy twisted tho pipe five times
around a broken limb of a tree that
lay near, five or six inches in
and thus made a coil, leaving
about two feet of the at
tho top cf the coil and a foot or I
I more at the bottom.
the said Theo, re- j
; turning with it.
and now show j
said. me that hatchet from j
for a minute. Now
He inserted the email end of the
I plug into the end of tho pipe- and i
struck it fix or eight smart blows
with the hatchet. This, drove tho
whatever part of China, who
out in to enter political or official life loam
j this tongue.
Tho other Chinese languages are
spoken by comparatively small
hereof people. for
Instance, speak Cantonese in one
I form or another. It is used in tho
greater part of tho province of
j one-third of the
Mr. was hardly on tho of this province use the
island before he saw the still, and ho tongue. In its northeastern part
knew at a glance what meant. j tho dialect is also heard,
that he asked, i Cantonese is also spoken in the
Harry it, Theo
The best salve In the work tor Cats,
Sure-. Salt
Suit's Titter, t
it-, and
it is
lit . or in
Pries box
I'm.- store
Skill
I I . if
.-.- I
III- I
What i Fit
It is as foolish and absurd to try to
wear a shoo too short for you as it
would be to wear groves several
too small
fit it is meant that the
shoe i too nor
scull-. not wrinkle nor
allow the foot room enough slip
around largo
enough for ho foot to
till it. about HaMS
quart i--- of i n
f t .
and
ti k
r, I. ;.
tab longer than your
from the the
. . with low,
Seal s
I.
wonder
Ac
bail f.
e I-. Limbs
id Scabs OH log en
by P. p. p the
; of day.
P. P. p. will ban ah all
an I yo to
en will ion. It lowers
are if out of aorta in
bad with yourself and the nor Id,
take P. p. become healthy .- -1
father Harry in his arms.
ho said, have often
been told that knowledge Is power,
without paying attention to it.
Now you know that knowledge is
Harry learned afterward that his
lather had offered a great sum of j
money while the storm was raging i
plug in and enlarged tho bore of the I to any who would go in i
end of the pipe to more than double
its original size. Then ho took the
plug out.
get mo n. big out of
the boat and drive tho end into any
piece of wood for a handle, you
know. Then heat the spike
in tho
While Theo was doing this Harry
fitted the enlarged end of the to
the spout of the teakettle, and gently
search of him. but no would
venture. The tug was the first boat
out after the storm.
The still was boxed and sent to Now
fork,
There are not so many dialectic
forms of the tongue of the
Cantonese. Passing Up tho coast
I find about people speaking
I In nil probability
Chinese the dialect, which
j as closely
as Portuguese resembles Spanish.
j Still farther up the coast find tho
dialect. It is used in a dis-
about miles long and
miles broad, containing a population
of This is for tho
a new boat,
with any number of copper
Drysdale in Boston
M. Line, wries
summer years while rail-
But i pounded it down snug and tight with ; in Mississippi,
the hatchet.
good as a
don't know what a sea is
breaking on the Nassau Theo
argued.
said Harry, I know
what a thirst is us hen-,
me a hand with these planks, and
we'll get the
Harry picked up the end of one of
tho planks that a false bot-
tom for the boat, under which the
ballast lay, and Theo, seeing it use-
less to expostulate, seized the other
end and the plank was thrown over
the side.
Hairy did not stoop to lift another
plank. Something lay there in the
I bottom of tho hi- eyes
fixed upon. He looked and looked
though fascinated and dreading
to move lest he find it all a mistake.
tho matter, Theo
asked at length.
is this boat ballasted with,
answered.
was than because it
took less room. We it out of
the Spanish steamer that was
wrecked a year
didn't
Harry's throat so parched and
he was so much excited he could not;
speak.
is it, That plank must
have been too heavy for you. Sit
down a few minutes and
rm all right. Didn't I see a
teakettle in the locker V
we always that copper
along. Most boatmen like
coffee, but we like
Before ha had finished Harry had
became badly
affected with malarial blood poison that
When the spike was hot enough j impaired my health than two
ho melted of the pipe,
thus soldered it to the kettle. ,.,.,.,. until i took six
bring the water Jug out of bottles of B. B. It., which cured en
the boat, and that rusty tin pail you
use for he ordered.
Theo brought pail and jug. and
Harry managed to cut a small hole
through the side of tho pail,
t the bottom, through which ho
thrust the straight end of pipe from
the lower part of the coil, thus fix-
the coil in tho pail, and stuffing
pieces of his handkerchief into the
hole beside the pipe to mate it water
tight.
Then he bent down about three
inches of tho end of pipe that pro-
traded from tho pail like a water
spigot. . I
said the thirsty
young scientist, build me a lit-
tie hearth of stones to hold ,
tie where it is now; and you.
Samson, get that other old pan out
of the boat and dip me up some;
Harry scraped sand on the
side-
most part mountainous.
Tho dialects of and
and Samson soon although only a few miles apart,
differ The is
by the people of It
is related to tho and
resembling tho
is spoken by about
3.000,000 people. Tho inhabitants of
about between Japan and
Too
A certain amiable young house-
wife who presides over a comfort-
able suite of apartments in Harlem
is convinced that there is such a
thing being too neighborly. Her
neighbors on tho floor above con-
her. When the aforesaid
neighbors moved into tho building
this amiable housewife considerately
sent her neatly aproned domestic up
stairs to inquire if there was any-
thing that she could do to add to the
comfort of tho newcomers. Down
a prompt request for tho loan
of a hammer and a When
the was returned it was
cracked, but that fact did not deter
from asking for a
bar of soap and a few matches,
The latter articles they forgot to
return, but they kept up borrow-
i habit steadily, and did not get a
f the pail farthest from the fire out m
Formosa, also speak
Lloyd.
From a letter written by Mrs. E.
of Breton, S. we quote
taken with a had sold, which settled on
my Lungs, cough set in and Dually
in Consumption . Four doctors
gave tip, raying I could live but a
time. I Bare lo my
Saviour, determined if could not stay
my friends on earth, I would meet
my absent ones above. My was
advised to get Dr. King's Hi-w Discovery
Consumption, Coughs and Colds. I
nave it a trial, took in ail eight
it has cured me. and God I am
now a well and Trial
tree at Drug Store, reg-
size We, and 81.00.
The instances.
. i for
and when they
it moisten K with milk or water; but
the Italians refuse to put any bread
into their sausages, and they claim
that
is at a more nourishing
and a sausage than
the Is-st man
much as tho must
boiled three times before it
COoke V and the water in which it
has hi boiled n strong
clear soup The Romans main like-
wise a highly ambitious in
which no kind of bread is allowed to
enter. They call it
Which is the foot and of young
pork, the of which is obtained
from
A leg freshly salted is chosen and
carefully skinned, the trotter
preserved; then tho meat is finely
minced, and. after being seasoned, is
replaced in the which is
tied with string and simmered in an
oval an for two hours. Wholly in-
of breadcrumb are also the
renowned of
London Telegraph.
CHILD BIRTH
MADE
is a
Liniment, every
of recognized value and in
constant by tie pro-
These ingredients arc com-
in manner hitherto unknown
Ladies
Sometimes object to a
Pipe, and every one ob-
to a Bad Cigar.
You can smoke
OLD
VIRGINIA
CHEROOTS
with perfect satisfaction
both to yourself and
friends, as their aroma is
equal to the Best Cigar.
FIVE for TEN CENTS.
BUSIES, CARTS
s well with the put up nothing
first-class We u with the and
material all work. AH stylos of Spring- are you can
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, Kin
also on hand a full of lit ml Whip
sell tho lowest rote-. to repairing.
Greenville, N C.
aT- X.
until the of the water jug was
brought on a level with the I
of the pail, with the bent end of the
pipe running into it.
In a few minutes there was a roar-
tee under kettle, for fuel was
plenty.
boas, that soon begin
Theo shouted as the
crackled and roared.
r said Harry. is
no kettle
Theo answered,
the Ant Hear
The Brazilian ant bear survives tho
season in a way of his
own. His hunting grounds,
tho big ant hills of tho underbrush,
are under twenty feet of
water, and tree ants the nooks
of their dens timing tho season of
constant In spite of his
big claws their enemy is not pro-
pared to rip big trees in quest of his
WILL DO ail that is claimed for
It AND MORE. Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to mailed FREE, con.
faining valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
on of price per bottle
REGULATOR CO., Atlanta. Si.
SOLD
A Writing
Fattest
the Royal nine Line trains
the on re-
gent run Sew and
mile in
a mechanical Indicator. At
this rate the train traveled the
meed of a trifle over a nils and
food, and his in climbing j a hall n minute, or
cannot compare with that of the big hour which surpasses all re-
cats, but his talent for long fasts is
REMODELED AND
GOOD
The Rest standard Typewriter In the
Inexpensive, No ink Ribbon, In-
Type in nil
to and a- any.
WASTED
as Represented.
This Machine l friend.
have done the
It always insures the n
attention. Address
N. Boston,
One el can be mm the t office, where particular and
THE CENTRAL
Tobacco
when the young daughter of
family came
door and after
M , ,, . a am v;
mother had unexpected unrivaled even this era of Tanner mi would be a it
guests for dinner begged the loan of
a pie for dessert. will have to
excuse said the amiable house-
wife with gentle frigidity. am
out of now, and if I had
I would not saga to lend
New York Times.
Strength Health. .
has left j weak weary, Kiev- activity. Pet dealers often warn
Bitters. This remedy acts directly
on Stomach and Kidneys
these to perform
functions. f afflicted with Sick
Headache, you will find Speedy and per-
relief by taking Electric Bitters.
One that this is
the remedy need. Large
only Sue. kt Drugstore.
freaks. One drink per week will do j stop to two hours and a half and
him for period of ten or twelve with slops to three hours is
weeks, during which ho husbands now the time between the two
his vital on tho principle of i
minimum expenditure.
With his bushy tail coiled
neck he dozes away the rainy
under the roof of a fallen tree,
while his physical torpor is not apt
tea out of.
Harry
is not a kettle any it is
This coil of pipe is a
The water jug is a Tho
whole apparatus is a I am go-
to distill water now, and you
shall have a drink in very few
A few minutes later the kettle
to sing. Too much steam es-
caped around the lid, and Harry tore
a piece of lining from his coat,
it in and placed it over the
Joints. Then he lay down on the
Band and put bis ear close to the
water jug.
Drop, drop, he heard; but he said
not word.
Drop, drop, drop, drop,
steady now, though slow, nail
every sixty of those a spoon-
It was the sweetest music he
ever heard, the falling of those drops
of life. It woe the singing of birds
in green meadows, the dashing of
cascades over mossy rocks.
wood on the fire, Theo.
Keep her
got into the jug,
Theo asked after the fire had been
replenished.
Harry cried.
no, boss; you can't turn salt
water into
I; Go bring me a tumbler
and a tablespoon out of the boat-
two rum
Theo Drought the tumblers and
three tablespoons, and Harry lifted
the jug from under the end of the
pipe, putting one of the tumblers in
its place.
your
Theo and stood each with
a spoon in his outstretched hand, j
Harry emptied the jug into one of j
tumblers. Such a tiny bit
He filled Theo's spoon, filled San-
and had only a few drops left j
for half a spoonful.
It was warm, but as
water from any well. To taste was j
to swallow to boys in their thirsty
condition. It moistened their parch-
ed throats, gave them new life. Even
revived.
beats me, said he.
something never saw
done before. But there's so little
of
we con make a spoonful, we
can make a add Harry,
An Socialism.
Even if tho modern should
; become more equitable and more en.
lightened j if it should become really
something else than an
collectivity power by
changing and passionate proxies; if
; it should put away its sectarian spirit
i and its tyrannical
i should still doubt its competence and
; its capacity to regulate the mill and
tho shop. The state is a weighty
engine, with running
I uselessly complicated, ex
acts a
customers against tho blunder
of mistaking that lethargy for n
symptom of disease, and an
menagerie keeper told
mo that he would not waste a cent
drugs till the patient
should seem to consider ten days too
long a time between
Francisco Chronicle.
Oh. a Cough.
win you the warning The
mil perhaps of the sure tat
more terrible Ask
yourselves if you can afford the sake
of saving to run the risk and do
i for it, know from experience
I that Shiloh's will
I It fails. This explains why more
than a million were old the past
j year, it relieves croup and whooping
; cough at Mothers, do not be with-
out For back, side or use
at
ion
for cart
Shiloh's Porous Plaster.
. Store.
mm tarT, ard
Cures
Will begin second Mason or
AUGUST 1892.
-o------
Under the same Management,
desires thank the
Planters of Pitt, Le-
and Greene for
their liberal
patronage
last
year and solicits a continuance
of their favors. Especial
given to Shipment. Try
p. r. p. a
fuel and manual labor for least
work. No other instrument makes I
a feebler return and wastes so much j yon to seen in
t.-iv-e. Consequently the more we
extend ration of the state tho Baxter Jim
Respectfully,
The Central Warehouse,
CHRIST MAN'S
OINTMENT
more we impoverishing the
in Pop-
Science Monthly.
. and Liver Complaint.
Is It. not worth the small of
to yourself of every symptom of
If you think
so call at our More and get a
every a
printed guarantee on it. use accordingly
If ii you no yon
nothing. Sold at
indeed, parson, I ain't
ed. don't belong me. What's
I got be of th-
We have a speedy positive cure
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker month
and headache-, in SHILOH'S
A nasal injector free with
Use ii ii desire health
sweet Kola at
k Household Remedy
KIN
DISEASES
Di Bi
Botanic Beta
It Cures
am mum. Its
art i
art
BLOOD BALM CO. G-
U Li
r. r. r.
MARK.
Notice to Shippers.
In order to make convenient and
use of the cm-
ployed the o
thus better servo the
-u of I he
have to merge their
respective lines between Not
and
Washington, Into
one known
Norfolk, Direct
Norfolk with
The Bay line, tor Baltimore.
The Clyde Line, for Philadelphia.
The Old Dominion Line, for New
York.
The A Line fr
ton and Providence.
The Water Linen Vs.
and C
M ill.
The R.
At Washington with
The Tar
Also Calling at Island. N. C.
The new line will m
with such additional sailings a
will suit the needs of business.
I HATES.
The service of steamers,
mill the freedom from handling, are
.; the great advantages thin Line
following gentlemen
Agents of the New
John K. at Norfolk. V-
John Son,
B. II. Gray, II. C.
S, C. at Island,
I J. at N. C.
The will leave Norfolk
on May 18th, from wharf
on Water
I between piers of lie Clyde
Line and Old Co.
II. A.
V. P. A O. M- Old Dominion Co.
W. P. CO.,
Clyde Line
May 14th,
ESTABLISHED
S. M.
AT
For the foe cf Skin to I OLD STOKE
S Swift's Specific
Tested Remedy
For All
Skin
A tun
Blood
-r. Cancer.
a for delicate Women
Children it has no equal.
la
A treat
mat
II-
SWIFT SPECIFIC CO.,
For sale at L. Wooten's Store
This neon in
wherever known
; been In demand. It has-been on.
i toned by the leading all over
he cures where
all other remedies, the of
for year failed. This Ointment Is if
long standing and the high
which it has Is owing entirely
own hut effort has
ever been made to bring It before
public. One bottle will
be to-any on receipt of Ono
Sample box
to Druggists. All
attended to. Address all or-
Sole-Mar. and Proprietor,
. N. C.
For Bent.
A large two-story brick store in the
Clock, Greenville, lost
room, patent
tor, counters, and drawers.
. N. C.
H.
AND
lb year's will And
their get our prices below par
sing el sew lie re
I n all it .
I PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE,
at Lowest Pricks.
TOBACCO A
we buy direct
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
always oil hand and fold n
the times. Our goods
sold therefore, having no
i sell at a
s.
X.


Title
Eastern reflector, 7 September 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 07, 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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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17563
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