Eastern reflector, 27 September 1893






Believes in
And takes his
One Dollar gets
C This Office for Job Printing
STATE NEWS.
The Eastern Reflector.
Things Mentioned In our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
It is that crops have
been damaged about per cent,
in this State.
The Winston banks which
pended some time ago have re-
business
Mr. B- L. Perry, who gave
great satisfaction in managing
the Atlantic Hotel,
the past season, will have charge
of it again next
Carthage Blade Mr.
Fry, one of the county's oldest
citizens, died suddenly last Friday.
He was a load of fodder,
and fell off of the wagon dead-
He wad upwards of years of
age-
Scotland Neck
Sheriff B. I. says that
he thinks it safe to estimate the
loss of corn on the Roanoke river
including both sides from Weldon
to Hamilton, at from to
barrels. The floods in the
river destroyed much besides the
corn but this was the greatest
loss. This loss will materially
the supply of corn in this sec-
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
Reaches the
By advertising in an
Therefore he uses
Reflector.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
NO.
Because it Took,
Charles K. Harris, the young
author of the lines and music
the was a poor ban
joist in Milwaukee, Wis., until he
wrote this song last spring. One
morning after ho had attended a
ball the night before he was asked
to write a piece to be sung at a
concert. He wrote it in a few
hours and called it the
He can neither read nor write
music, so he got the leader of the
orchestra to write the music
while he played the tune. It
at once and the sales have
already made a rich man of
Harris. Over copies
been sold and his income is now
per day from it.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt count; as Ad-
of Eliza James, deceased,
notice is given to all persons in-
to the to make immediate
payment to the undersigned, and all
persons having claims against the estate
must present the same payment be-
fore the 1st of Sept-, 1894, or this
notice will plead in bar of recovery.
This the 1st day of 1893.
WILLIAM J. JENKINS.
Eliza
Notice
Having qualified before the Superior
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons
to the estate to make
ate payment to the undersigned, and
all persons having claims against the
estate same for pay-
on or before the day of Aug-
1894, or this notice ill be plead in
bar of recovery.
This 15th day of August. 1893.
W. H. HEATH,
Wm.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk Pitt county as
Administrator of the estate of
Edwards, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons indebted to the es-
to make Immediate payment to the
undersigned, and all persons baying
claims against the estate must present
the same for payment before the first
day of September 1894, or this notice
will be plead in bar of recovery.
This 81st day of August, 1893.
COOK,
of Robert Edwards,
Notice to
Having duly qualified as Executor to
the last will and testament of Abel
Smith, deceased, before E. A. Move.
Clerk the of Superior Court of Pitt
county on the 28th day of August 1898,
notice Is hereby given to all persons
holding i bums against the estate of Abel
Smith deceased to present them to the
undersigned for payment, duly
on or before the day
of August 1834, or this notice will be
plead in bar of their recovery. All per-
sons CO said estate arc
make immediate payment to the
undersigned.
This 28th day of August 1893.
JOHN H. SMITH, Executor of
Abel Smith,
Dissolution.
The Ann of Brown Bros. was dis-
ed by mutual consent on this date,
the Interest of James Brown in the
business purchased by Wiley
The latter assumes the
and indebtedness the firm
and persona owing the firm will make
with him.
WILEY BROWN.
JAMES
ThU 1st day of September, 1893.
Having sole r of
business conducted under
the name of Brown Bros., take
in I. forming public that
the business will be continued at the
staid in my own name. Thank-
all car customers for past patron-
age, I hope to receive a of
now.
RETROSPECT.
BY
a half unconscious waking.
Tail hardly a dream, and ct
My heart had ceased its aching.
My Mai felt no regret.
My every wish was granted
Just like you read about,
My heart with love enchanted
Forgot the world without.
Till pity's not re-
rod
Asked where're the ancient cities
For refuge set by
those guilty refuges
I saw at last.
That I was traveling just like these
From crimes and deeds past.
A sad mist rose o'er me
From a half race poorly run,
I wondered if before
Were many, few or none
Of the love-forsaken regions
Where folly and her train
Cry, thy name is
I turned to look again.
My heart beat quick-
Just coming into sight
Was she as last I'd seen her.
Dressed out out white.
She bore a plain, smooth, sad air.
Peculiarly her own ;
I saw her face, still fair,
Slightly sadder grown.
She spoke love confiding
And sympathizing tone.
She if I was hiding,
Or why I went alone
called her and and
And asked if she would wed,
She then in voice calm and clear,
But half reproachful said
how pledged our love
Five years this date.
So spirits joined by Cod above
Let no man separate.
By earths sorrow, by heaven's bliss
I'm all thine own Believe
And then, O for that sealing kiss
She blushed not to receive it.
Yet she was modest, for all that
Her soul through eyelids spoke
Just ere our in rapture met,
Plague take the luck, I woke
go and claim first I thought.
finish life
that's a dream and goes for
pass off like
was not Joseph warned by dream
To flee the wrath of Herod
My mind was not yet free seem
fancies it had borrowed
But soon these fancies too were failing.
Morn began to break
The soul indeed was willing; but
The flesh, alas was weak
lines were written to
Miss Amiable Independence. The fact
that I love her will explain, I trust to
those curious to know the reason of my
willingness; and that she does not love
me, to the satisfaction of those who
would judge harshly, or con my
weakness or inability.
Author.
Ripped up the Back.
Richmond Times,
There was blood on the face of
the moon this in the
Department, and Post-
master General as pale as
a ghost and with excite-
stood and received one of
the severest and most cutting re-
that ever a cabinet officer
received. Honorable J. W. Mar-
shall called at Mr. Bis office
this morning to inquire when the
charges preferred again st the
postmasters at
ville and Big Stone Gap were to
be investigated. The Postmaster
General replied a little
and Mr. Marshall, politely
thanking him, turned to leave
As he neared the door Mr.
made some side remark about.
the impatience of some Congress-
men, or something of the kind.
In a moment the Congressman
from the ninth district had turned
and in two minutes he had con-
the Postmaster General,
the clerks, and the waiting Con-
that he was justly en-
titled to the sobriquet of
Those who heard it say that
hurricanes, waterspouts, whirl-
winds and tornadoes were but as
refreshing zephyrs to the
that was created then- Mr- Bis-
sell has always assumed an
and supercilious air towards
many of the members of Congress,
and everybody was delighted to
hear that was one Congress-
man who demanded that courtesy
with which he sought officials,
and who knew his rights and those
of his people, and who did not
propose to be rebuked
or lectured by insolence clothed
with a little brief authority.
Electric Bit tan.
Th's remedy is becoming so well
and so popular a to need no
special mention. All who have used
Electric Bitters sing the same song of
purer medicine does not exist
and it is guaranteed to do all that is
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all
aces of the Liver Kidney, will
remove Bolls. Salt Rheum and
other affections caused v impure blood
Will drive Malaria from the system
and prevent as well as cure all Malarial
cure of II-
and Electric,
Hitters Entire satisfaction guaranteed,
or money refunded.-.-Price and
11.00 per bottle at
It you feel weak
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
HEART VERSUS
Battle Make Application of
Zeb. Vance's Reply to
about Prohibition Heart
is With You, but My
is Against
Tarboro. N. C. Southerner April 1892
Battle, Esq., who has
represented the Greensboro, N.
C, Keeley Institute, since he took
the treat met t the first of the year,
occasionally strikes his home
town. On such occasions he is
apt to drop into the Southerner
office, partly from force of habit
being an old Faber-propeller
and to gather the political and
home news.
Monday morning, after the re-
porter had answered all Mr. Bat-
questions, he took a hand at
the rotation end himself and
asked him about other alleged
cures for the liquor and opium
habits.
do you think of them
Mr. Battle was asked. To this
he replied.
and from
of other men, who have
been cured by it, I, of course,
know the absolute and thorough
efficiency of the Keeley treatment
Of other alleged cures I know
nothing. My heart, though, says
if they will cure the terrible
malady, prosper them. If
not, they are frauds of far-reaching
you haven't answered my
question fully, Mr. the
reporter persisted.
He laughed and answered
am somewhat like Zeb Vance
in his reply to regard-
his stand on the prohibition
question. His heart was with it
but his stomach was against it.
I have told you how my heart
stood. My judgment is more
critical. Let's analyze. The
world was nearly nineteen
old before an efficacious and
harmless remedy was found for
the curse of alcoholic opium
addiction that had touched the
world but to blight and destroy,
years of investigation,
that grandest of human
tors, Dr. Leslie E Keeley,
a safe and sure relief. For
some time before, he had been
effecting cures, but in April, 1880,
he opened bis Institute at D wight,
, to which the afflicted flocked
from all parts of the country and
left redeemed from their
cures were the marvels of
the age and attracted the most
relentless, hostile criticism of the
profession. The cures have con-
for over years, until
the mark has been about
reached, disarming the critic by
the infallible test of time. With-
out solicitation, or hawking, on
the part of the Leslie E. Keeley
Co., levelheaded, cool, business
men, for thousands of dollars,
each, bought State rights to ad-
minister the remedies and
Keeley institutes under the
authorization of the parent com-
at Dwight. The Govern-
adopted the right to use the
remedies in twenty-nine
homes. European syndicates
sought and purchased the rights.
The efficacy of vaccination itself
has not been more thoroughly
established.
course Dr. Keeley and his
company reaped the fruits of the
grand discovery in a most em-
financial way.
let us go back a little.
During all these centuries
of fraudulent remedies,
sprang up like mushrooms, were
widely advertised, and, like all
false things, claimed victims and
then died from the ken of men.
profitable success will
have its counterfeits. It doesn't
pay to attempt to simulate the
false and unprofitable. And so it
is with the Keeley cure. There
have been by actual count so
called cures palmed off on
the public. Many have gone
down ; none longer than
to defraud innocent victims and
for a short while.
It see to be only a question of
a short time with any of them.
there are several of these
alleged in North Car-
to-day. Now, to answer
your question, Mr- by
asking another. Isn't it a little
singular, that, considering the
best equipped chemists in the
country have expressed their in-
ability to certainly analyze Dr.
Keeley's remedies, obscure men
should be able to reproduce them
a most wonderful coin-
that these people should
also discover that the fluids
be of tho came color as Dr.
should be administered
in the same quantities, at the same
time and in the same way
Dr. Keeley has
ed the world that alcohol and
opium, taken to excess and con-
form a distinct disease and
that he has found the for it,
which goes under the name,
Keeley's Double Chloride of
Gold you, if
money were not
on the reputation of Dr.
Keeley's remedies, they would call
their liquids or
Gold
your knowledge, Mr.
Reporter, to other shrewdly con-
but exposed, attempted
imitations, will not conclude
that these counterfeits differ not
a whit from all others
many of them have
guaranteed a cure before they
have ever had a patient. In the
name of the prophet who will
guarantee the guarantor
The reporter added
Battle, don't these
cure, as you call them, claim to
stopped men from
believe they do, but any doc-
tor can do that. Often a man can
sober up himself. But it takes
time to prove a cure, and Dr.
he an
unbroken record of over twelve
years. There are men in this
State who took the treatment at
Dwight all the way from eight to
HYPOCHONDRIA'S VICTIMS.
The Demon of Habitual Melancholy
Slays More Men and Women An-
Than War, Pestilence
and Famine.
Salisbury Herald.
The worst feature of habitual
is that it constitutes
gradual and virtual
it is the common and
wholesale mother of alt Insanity
and actual suicide. Of the whole
tribe of the so-called deliberate
follies it is the most unreasonable,
unaccountable and destructive.
Directly and indirectly low
its cause more loss of life than
everything else. Man is away
over two-thirds, perhaps nine
tenth, imagination ; and it con-
him, it misleads him, it kills
him-
At first glance, the leading
causes of suicide at the present
day would seem to be
losses, family
in love, loss of health
reckless dissipation. the
; newspapers these figure quite ab-
and conspicuously. Yet
there is a habit which annually
carries off more men and women
than every one of these combined.
It is the habit of
surrendering soul and body
to the insidious advances of tho
monster of discouragement-
Why do men take to drink
Why do they not rally, when for-
tunes fail Why do they lose
faith in their marital relations
A DEPLORABLE STATE
THINGS.
OF
two years ago and have not lapsed. Why does jealousy without cause
have been treated at mad Why do they
Greensboro and less than three that one kick from
per cent have resumed their old maid baa kicked the bucket of
habits. I and forever Why is a
only way tho counterfeits I violent attack of disease, although
can delude and seduce patients is necessarily fatal, often the
by claiming to be same as j prognosticator and precursor of
Keeley, with death surrender too soon
as time to cure, and majority are just
by cheaper charges. ed enough to even be
Keeley cure remedies are insinuates much less
all mode at Dwight and are pure i demands a surrender,
and costly and the physicians all Man is a constitutional coward;
have to be trained and coward always dies be-
proved by Dr. Keeley. j time, in battle or out of
know what the
remedies cost, but from what How old slave-holders
I can learn, any doctor, went the board
special training, can
them.
it is no wonder that the
and all other Keeley
Institutes are well patronized, for
men don't take such doubtful
chances on a matter of life and
worse than death to then-selves
a lid their families as imitators,
for revenue only, offer. As fast
as one dies a deserving and dis-
graceful death another is sprung
on a gullible public. But there
was no Dr.
employed by
say tho Keeley remedies
are harmless
the war
them of all that kind
of financial prop they had been
leaning on all their lives How
many sick men will the
tell you have died this year be-
cause, when very weak, they were
too they were doomed to die
How many have drowned and
hanged and and
shot themselves, because the
devil had got possession of the
citadel by reason of the coward-
ice of the guards many,
to-day, have given up the battle
of life, sworn they will fight no
longer, and are only waiting till
it suits King Death's convenience
to take away
And here too is the fountain of
I office.
Elephant.
Fruit Culture.
Yes, and the fact was
in this way to my knowledge, L M
and I am no chemist. A new pa-1
Greensboro, while dazed; they got too tired waiting for an
from drink, got up during the
night and swallowed the contents
eight his bottle of
the Keeley medicine at one drink
without perceptible detriment.
know a man in who
was taking the Keeley remedy
for tobacco and, while drunk,
poured out the whole bottle and
gulped it down at once.
These other alleged gold cures
avowedly contain and
Strychnine enough to kill a man
if taken at once- Dr. Keeley says
he has written on his remedies
and he will give his formula to
the public if three reputable
Chemists will find either.
A bulletin now in press
on the subject of fruit culture,
will soon be issued by the N.
Agricultural Experiment Station
at Raleigh. It will be very com-
in scope, embracing
two general heads. The first in-
the propagation, planting
and culture of fruit trees and fruit-
bearing plants, and the
and shipping of fruits. The
second head will embrace insects
and diseases affecting fruit trees,
plants and fruit, with remedies
Since the above interview was I their destruction. The pub
published an eastern branch of
the Institute has been established
at Rocky Mount under Mr. Dos-
Battle's management, which
has been very successful.
The Free Press believes it
would be wise for the southern
states to withdraw to some extent
from national politics. It would
be wise, we think, for each state
to presidential electors with-
out pledging them to any
date, and with instructions to vote
for men who will come nearest to
representing the state platform
This is the way our forefathers
elected the president and vice
president; it is the way the con-
intended they should be
elected. We believe the people
would come nearer getting what
they vote this plan prevailed.
Free Press.
will be copiously illus-
with cuts showing how to
graft and propagate fruit trees
and vines and train and prune
them; also cuts of insects and
how diseases affect them, together
with appliances to destroy these
enemies. It will be a manual for
growing fruit trees and keeping
them, as well as for the care of
fruits in reference to gathering,
packing, shipping, drying,
serving, and canning them-
Varieties of fruits are described,
as well as those most suitable to
various sections of North Caro-
This publication will be sent
free to all residents of the State
who apply, and to outsiders who
send cents in stamps. Apply
to Dr. H. B. Battle, Director,
Raleigh, N.
my He aid.
N. C, Sept 1898-
Mk. does not re-
quire a sago, nor a prophet, nor
the son of a prophet to see
that the tendency of certain things
point to anything but good re-
I have watched this ten
since the beginning of Al-
Third in our
State, and have seen it growing
day by day. And, sad to say,
find of high rank in the
Democratic party who been
poisoned by this doctrine to such
an extent that it boils out in print
at little or no provocation. If I
understand the meaning of a free
government- by tho people and of
the people, it moans equal and
exact justice to all classes and
conditions of and I had
it instilled into me from the cradle
up that that was one of I lie
mental principles of Democracy.
Believing this I have never found
the gall to go recklessly into the
abuse of any special class of men
who had the appearance at least
of benefactors in any sense of the
word. But to the point.
These Alliance Third party
speakers have gone hero and yon-
over the land pouring their
poison into the ears of the
try people, who are honest, yet by
reason of their situation cannot
know as much about men
things as those living towns
cities, till many have reached
the verge of anarchy without
knowing the dangerous ground
they occupy. I say it is sad to
contemplate, but still it is true,
that these faithful tillers of the
soil been made to believe
that the manufacturers and mer-
chants and bankers are their
worst enemies, and enemies, too.
WHERE ARE THEY NOW.
The third is dead. VI hat
was left of it by tho November
baa at last reached homo
and is now resting on
the bosom of its wet-nurse, tho
Republican party. A year or
more ago they were told that
Republican part r
tiny and that populist party
was but a way station on the
railroad that led from Democracy
to rank Republicanism, but they
all swore that it was not true and
that they wore Demo-
than the Democrats. The
proof of the pudding is
the and the present attitude
of the remnant of the populist
party is defined by dim ply
they are The
more or less disreputable element
of the patty, consisting
pally in its candidates and
of the big
G's and little now to
found cheek by jowl with the
more or less disreputable element
of the Republican
for yourself see them daily
communion together, as thick as
thieves and thicker than three in
a bed. They lost the respect
of their fellow citizens and
rapidly losing their self-respect.
It is impossible that it should be
otherwise. A year ago howling
they were the only true Dem-
and the only bulwark of
people against Republicanism
and today consorting
with tho rankest Republicans
The self respecting, consistent
element in both parties has be-
come disgusted with the sure
of an unholy alliance be
tween the disgruntled, disappoint-
ed, self-seeking. office-hungry
horde tint to load them to
destruction last fall. The trouble
J y This Office for Job Printing
Advice
If you would protect
from Painful,
Suppressed or Irregular Men-
you must use
FEMALE
REGULATOR
April
will certify that two members of my
family, after having Buffered for
I oars Irregularity,
treated without benefit by physicians,
completely cured by one bottle
Its
is truly wonderful. J.
to mailed which contain
valuable information on all female dilates.
REGULATOR CO.,
ATLANTA, CA.
BALE
Ult.
dentist,
I I
I I.
ATTORNEY -AT-I-AW
N.
attention to
at Tucker A; old stand.
L. BLOW
J JARVIS.
ft BLOW,
i In all the Courts.
I. A. B. K.
t TYSON,
Prompt attention given to collections
I SKINNER,
N.
I with these poor creatures is that
of all who earn their bread by tho people are too
toil. They have been k
lay aside all feelings for a fellow can
man and cry down the capitalist,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
C. II V L E, N C.
Practice In all court. Collections a
losing sight of tho fact that but
for tho capitalist and
a large class of our
who in mills, in
dries, on railroads and various
other places would have nothing
to do, and that these very men
they furnish a market for
what they and many other
things they could ill afford to
without. I say tendency is
to anarchy, to the breaking down
of every who, by reason of
hard work, has accumulated a
competency. It is a dangerous
condition, its end can be only
evil, and wore it by some unseen
hand cut off from any future con-
there is enough already
sown to require twenty years to
remove tho hatred and ill-will
ready engendered in the hearts
of the country the town,
and people who earn an honest
living by other means than tilling
the soil.
pretty
very well tell when they are being
deceived, when demagogues arc
inconsistent and when the actions
of this fall do not tally with the
professions of a year ago. If the
people were blind and had no
sense at all tho weak-mined
list and Republican
bosses might easily count on
swimming on top. Bat, alas for
them, it is
Topic
A friend In need is n friend Indeed,
and not than million people
have fount Mich friend in in-.
Kin New Discovery for
and you have never
tills Great Cough one
trial will convince yon that won-
curative powers In all diseases of
Throat. Chest an I bottle
Is guaranteed to do all that Is claimed
money will be refunded. Trial bottles
free at Drug Store. Large
; bottles and
DOMINION LINE.
TAR RIVER SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington
ville and Tarboro touching at all land-
River Monday,
Friday at A. H.
at A M.
Thursdays and Saturdays
days.
Tin- departure are subject to stage of
water Tar River.
A Little 0.1
Why do experienced business
men seek newspapers as an
You find numbers of intelligent medium Simply because
countrymen who see this thing as bar learned that p go
I see it. And this fact accounts
for the wholesale withdrawals
from tho Our
country needs wisdom's guidance
at this critical period, and tho
press of the State can perform no ,
higher function than to set feather, or a fan, she does not
showing these deluded people look tor a yardstick or a dingy
who read where tho professions I for information.
to the newspapers for
regarding places to buy
goods, just as they look for then-
daily, weekly, on monthly to fur-
news other of
reading- When a woman needs
of these Judas lead-
to. Men have Buffered
for no worse heresies
than many are now teaching
which many are believing. I
think soberly, and am driven to
these conclusions by what I see
and know herein my own county,
which is not as bad as many
sections of our State.
H. B.
Tarheel Boys and Girls.
We the following malicious
slander in a South Carolina nows-
paper, and copy it simply to show
Novelty, advertising, is
but a passing thought, and that
is the end of it. The newspaper
is tho buyer's resort depend-
It is the only legitimate
source for that kind of
We go to a table to eat, to
a dry goods to buy dry
goods, to a barber shop to get
shaved, to a bed to sleep.
so all classes of people seek
the newspapers desiring in-
formation regard to tho best
to buy what they need.
Tho onion social is the latest
thing out. Ladies stand a low.
onion. A young man pays his
money for a guess as to which
the ladies and gents of One bites chunk out of the
this part of how
grossly they have been
When a timid young bit the onion. If he misses
wishes to express himself it he has to kiss only the with
to his girl, he takes a piece of fat tho onion breath, but if he guesses
rightly he a kiss from each
of the other ladies Orange Ob-
server.
pine, trims it in the shape of a
capital I, and passes it to his girl
That means, I pine for thee. If
she rejects him, strikes a
match and sets the splinter on , .
Z ,. . T , ,. , , , It will cost nothing end will mi re-
tire. Ibis means, make light of good, if you have a Cough,
your pining. If she likes
Which means, pine not. When guaranteed to give relief, or money will
the boy goes to leave, gently paid from
puts his arm around the girl, found It the and under to use
kisses her, and puts some Tr
on the S of
which means, till we bottles free at Drug
meet again. store. Largo size and
Count Washington with steam,
en The Norfolk, Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
New York and
Shippers their goods
marked via Dominion Iron
few from
Norfolk
more Steamboat from
more. Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington N. U
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
Greenville, N C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
M. SCHULTZ.
AT THE
MUCK stow;
PAR M AND MERCHANTS BUT
log their year's supplies will
their Interest our prices before
chasing elsewhere is complete
n all ii- branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE, TEA,
at Lowest Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com-
stock of
FURNITURE
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
the times. Out goods are all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close
Respectfully,
S. k.
PATENTS
and all business in the IT.
Patent office or in the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We arc opposite the IT. S. Patent Of-
Hoc engaged In Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents n less time than those
more remote from Washington.
model or drawing Is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the
Supt. of the Money Order Did., and to
the U. S. Patent Office. i
advise terms and reference to
actual clients in your own State, or
address, C. A. Snow Co.,
Washington, D, C





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
I Edits and
at at O
N. C. as mail matter.
who are viewing our section from District Attorney C. B. Aycock
an unprejudiced standpoint, has been confirmed by the Senate.
The surroundings and advantages , The confirmation of Collectors
to be had here can be found ad Elias and Simmons is delayed
to no other market in tie; for some reason and rumor put
State, and it is but a question of the blame for this upon Senator
a very short while when Green-
Vance- We must still insist that
THE LYNCHING.
Va., was the set no of a
most deplorable affair last week.
On Wednesday morning a
man enticed a poor market woman
into a cellar, she thinking he was
leading her to the house of a
customer to whom some
chases were to be delivered, and
when in seclusion he robbed her
of her money and then cruelly
beat her, leaving as ho sup-
posed dead- In about half
hour the woman regained con-
dragged herself out
to the street and told what had
Search for the
began at once and he m soon
found by a detective and taken
to jail. As news of the brutal
crime spread through the city es-
and indignation against
the aroused. This reach
ed such a tension as evening drew
on that threats of lynching were
loud and frequent. In order to
protect the from the mob.
will as familiar to tobacco j this must be a mistake- It can-
circles of the country as is any of not be that a man who has been
the great markets for the hand- j honored and loved as Senator
ling of the weed. i Vance has been in North Carolina
article also speaks of the j can consent at this late stage of
work Mr. O. L- has clone his political career to betray his
in building up the market here-
And the Reflector wishes to
Hood's Cures
add that not one word is said to
trust and forfeit the esteem in
which he is held in his native
State. We shall have nothing to
the credit of Mr- but what say until the Senator by his ac-
the mayor with a guard went
into the jail and the military of
the city was ordered out and
placed around the prison. The
mob continued to increase until
it numbered several thousand.
About night they made attack
on the jail which was met by a
volley from the military killing
twelve of the mob and wounding
twenty odd more. The mob fell
back when tired upon and while
interest for the time being was
drawn from the to the dead
and wounded on the street
slipped him out of the jail
and took him away. The killing
and wounding of some of the mob
threw tho city into still greater
indignation this time
arising against the mayor and
officers and military, and it
was with difficulty that further
bloodshed was prevented- Next
day the officers started to slip the
back into the jail but the
mob had men on
lookout for this who discovered
the movements of the officers,
them and took the
from their custody. Tho
was swung to the nearest
limb and his body riddled with
bullets. They then cut body
down and started to bury it in
the yard of the mayor, but
to persuasion to desist from this-
The frenzied then dragged
the dead to the outskirts
of the city, made a pile of dry
lumber and shavings upon which
the body was placed, covered all
but the head with more of this
inflammable material, saturated
the whole with oil, sat it on tire
and filled the air with wild shouts
as the pile went up in smoke and
ashes.
This horrible vengeance did not
seem to satisfy the infuriated
mob and threats went out against
the mayor and military until they
had to flee for safety. At last ac
counts all had become quiet.
The whole affair is most
able- The deserved severe
punishment for his brutal crime,
but the people should have allow-
ed the law to take its own course
and not resorted to such violence,
which led to sacrificing the lives
of so many citizens. While sen-
was divided as to the con-
duct of the military, there was a
large element that denounced
them and were because
they tired upon the mob. We
yet to be convinced that the mil-
deserved as much censure
as was heaped upon them. They
were called out by the authorities
to deter a riotous mob from com-
a gross outrage against
the laws of their State, and when
these sixty armed militia saw
more than a thousand wild,
men madly upon
them, it looks like they mu-t
either repel them or be trampled
down before the surging mob.
If they were not expected to use
force if necessary to keep back
the mob then it looks like utter
folly to have called them out at
all. True they may have
firing longer than they should,
but if the people in this instance
had been preservers instead of
violators of the law there would
been none of this dreadful
bloodshed. We hope there may
be no such occurrence again.
is fully deserved by him. are
in position to know how faithfully
and untiringly he has labored for
advancement of this market.
He has worked not alone in the
interest of his own warehouse
but has kept his energy centered
upon the entire business of
market and the whole of it
feels the influence of his
efforts. He has not
to make any outlay if
i he saw that market was to be
thereby, and others
have reaped a full share of the
liberal and work he
has done. He has borne the bulk
of tho burden and is entitled to
highest credit. Every
interested in the establishment
and maintenance of tho market
owes him a debt of gratitude-
and all should see that he is
orally patronized and
confirms the rumors that are
now so wide spread. We believe
better of our distinguished states-
man. We must repeat it
that he will oppose the
of these two most excel-
lent Democrats.
WHERE. MR. WILLIAMS STANDS.
We saw in the Progressive Far-
mer a few weeks ago a letter
which was written by
of another county, which in-
that ex-Senator Willis R
Williams, of this had de-
the Democratic party and
gone to tho Populists. Though
several papers of tho State made
some comment upon it, the Re-
had no belief what ever
in the letter paid no attention
to it other to read it
wonder at tho cheek displayed by
some people who try to make
their side look popular by claim-
that certain leading men
with knew full well that
if Mr- Williams had gone to the
Third party Had no idea that
he had done that ho could
have said so for himself, without
it necessary for some man
off in another to jump up
go to shouting just because
the Senator, who is and has Ions
been President of tho State
Grange, was making a few speech-
es to the farmers.
The was
one of the papers that the
letter published that Mr.
Williams bad joined tho Third
party, and to that paper he writes
the following card that speaks
for
N. C. Sept. 1893-
To Editor of the Southerner
tee you have Informed the public
I have myself a Populist.
It is of the small st what
my politic or party may he.
as I am only yet I
dislike to he misrepresented. How-,
when, or where, you got your inf f
I cannot imagine. the sin-
exception of U -race I hive
voted steadily the Democratic ticket fur
forty-two years, and I am to-day the
same old Democrat, any v i-
or shadow of stand-
ins with both feet on Chicago plat-
form, me I did at last campaign
whilst slumping for Cleveland. If that
platform did not teach free and
ed coinage of both and silver as
money metals, and a further extension
of I did not know how to
read it. In advocating a repeal of the
per cent. tax. it showed opp to
the present banking system, our State
pi that nominated our present
d a graded income
tax. and every State Democratic plat-
form, the National platform, had
universal cry for a lower tariff, or
for revenue These arc my
nothing more
I have given the best part of my life
battling the side of the farmers
laborer, and now when the fight is
between the money trusts
and on one side, and the
fa-m rs and lab mm on the o her, I
shall still he found my old place
whenever my feeble efforts are c died
f it. Truly. W. R. W
THE GREENVILLE MARKET.
The House of Representatives
have at last mustered a quorum
of Democrats. For several days
they were trying to report the
election bill, but the Republicans
could prevent it by breaking a
I quorum. Finally they have
i in getting enough Demo-
to return to Washington for
a day or two to transact a little
business When men are elected
as Representatives it is their duty
to go to Washington and remain
there and to be in their places at
all times. They are well paid for
this, and are not expected to neg-
their work, but there is an
increasing tendency on the part
of Representatives to draw their
salaries and do as little as
remaining at home whenever
feel inclined.
It was owing to the firm action
of Speaker Crisp rather than to
the House that
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
D. C, Sept,
The humiliation of Tom Reed
and his lieutenant, Burrows, of
Michigan, when they learned that
the Democrats of House pro-
posed to put an effectual quietus
upon Republican
against the reporting of the Tuck
bill for the repeal of all laws
authorizing the presence of U. S-
officials at elections, was a pleas-
sight to Democratic eyes.
Because the Democrats of the
House in the adoption of regular
rules had been extremely lenient
towards the minority the
assumed that no check
would be put on their
They were given a free rope
for awhile because there was not
a quorum of Democrats present,
but as soon as a quorum was on
hand they were effectually
ed by an Older reported from the
committee Rules and the bill
was reported to the House. This
order was not the result of any
assumption of power by a single
individual, as were the rulings of
Tom Reed he was Speaker;
it was authorized by a Democratic
caucus, as such things always be.
The Republicans are to be allowed
to name any reasonable length of
time during which the debate on
this bill shall be carried on, but
they are not to be allowed to
against a vote upon it
after legitimate has been
exhausted-
The public tariff hearings were
concluded this week, and the
Democrats on the House Ways
and Means committee are now at
work upon new bill- Although
the number of days were fewer
than were given by some of the
other committees, more time was
given by the committee than was
ever given before for public hear-
Chairman Wilson, speak
of the preparation of the new-
tariff bill, Democratic
members will work together.
Some of the schedules will be
prepared by all of the Democrats
together, while others will be re-
to subcommittees for prep-
previous to being revised
by tho full Democratic member-
ship of the committee. It is not
possible to say when the bill will
be completed, but it will require
more time than some of those
who have never, had a tariff bill
to prepare seem to think
We might fix up a measure
in very short order, but it is not
that kind of a bill we want to
present to tho country.
affecting so many interests
must very carefully considered
arid its effect calculated before we
can nope to perfect, a bill which
can stand the many tests to which
it be subjected when enacted
into a law. Such a measure as
this cannot be successfully
shall, however, lose no
time, and hope to present it to
the House at the earliest possible
moment consistent with the
interests
Claus the sugar
king, was in Washington a few
days ago for the purpose of
his fingers in the Hawaiian
pie, but he cut short his stay when
he learned that the whole matter
was already settled so far as the
administration is concerned, and
that President Cleveland is only
waiting for the Senate to dispose
of the bill before he
sends it a special message on
Hawaii, by Mr.
reports.
the election bill
Oar readers today, and was reported and placed
ally those interested in the j upon the calendar. Messrs. Reed
m t ., land Burrows were on hand and
department of the , they
will not overlook tho on the Speaker and the
Eastern Carolina Tobacco taken but they utterly failed
from the Winston Tobacco to do and have at last realized
The article does full credit
to Greenville as the place
ed to be the leading tobacco mar-
of Eastern Carolina. This is
the conclusion that all arrive at thousand miles away.
Send in Your Orders.
have a nice assortment of
Apples, Pears, Plums,
Peaches, Chestnuts, Pecans, Grape-
vines, J Raspberries, Straw-
berries, Dewberries, and Blackberries.
Also
AND TUB
and Shrub. Roses. Greenhouse Plants,
Dahlias, Hyacinths. Tulips, Lilies, Ac.
Early solicited and will be
tilled at the proper time for trans-
planting. Send for
ALLEN WARREN SON,
Nursery. Greenville, N. C.
that the Democratic if it
is inclined, can do business with
out their assistance or advice, and
that they can do this without
counting as present those who are
TO
I wish ii invite your attention to my
NEW FALL MILLINERY.
I have the latest shapes In Felt
Straw Goods. Very con r
Hue of Pretty and Cheap Rib
also Tips and Fancy Feathers.
You will save money by getting my
prices before you purchase
L. GRIFFIN.
BUYER in Ayden, C.
h opened an office in Ayden
the purpose of Buying
can always rely on finding a
BUYER by on me.
E. A. KEITH.
just Took
Po not Fail to Call on
Sophie
years old began to troubled
on tho head, causing intense itch i i
burning, and her eyes. Her
We gave her six bottles of
Hood's
and she entirely wen. I hare taken It myself
that tired feeling and it does roe great
Mrs. Stock-
st, Baltimore, Hood's.
Hood's Pills ail liver ills, biliousness,
jaundice, indigestion, sick headache.
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOE
Do wear them When next In need by a pair,
Beat In the world.
tin
3.50
2.50
2.25
2.00
FOR LADIES
2.00
FOR BOYS
1.75
If yo want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
styles, don't pay to try my or
b Shoe. They fit equal to custom made and look and
wear as well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do so by purchasing W. L Douglas Shoes. Name and
price stamped on tho bottom, look for it when buy
W. DOUGLAS, Mail. Sold by
R. L. DAVIS, FARMVILLE, N. C.
W. H. WHITE.
TIMES HAVE CHANGED.
Old things hive passed away and ail
things have new. My old
stock of good have be SOW
a new has taken its
place. The old was replaced
by new because my
LOW DOWN PRICES
catch the people keep goods
moving. Now listen to a few plain
I know times are bard and
money scarce just as well as man
who raises cotton, corn and tobacco,
and am going to seal goods just as low
as any honest dealer can afford to sell.
For every dollar spent with me will
get the worth if your money. I keep a
complete stock of
General Merchandise,
Dry Goods, Notions
Boots, Shoes, Hats,
Caps and Gents
Goods,
Clothing
at any price a man can want. Also a
full stock of
Groceries
Cotton Bagging Ties.
-THE-
Bag-
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared lo do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
WAN, CAM VOL
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in best manner
Notice.
To the Tax Payers of Pitt County.
The tax lift for having been
d in my hands on the first Monday
In September for collection, as f am
required by law to make prompt settle-
of all taxes thereon, I
now notify the tax payers of Pitt
that I am determined to protect my-
-elf and bondsmen from all penalties
imposed by law for failure to perform
my duty, and in order save trouble
and expense it will be best for those
owing taxes to make an early settle-
or I shall proceed to collect the
same by distress at the earliest moment
allowed. Don't forget this. I mean
business. R. W. KING,
Sheriff of Pitt County,
Greenville, N. C, September 12th,
Notice.
State Carolina, In the Superior
Pitt County. J Court.
W. B. of
A. D. Summons
vs. for Re-
Jas. K. Lewis T. lief before
Henry E. A.
Lillian and Laura
Fulcher, a minor without a Clerk.
guardian.
Petition to sell Land for Assets
The defendant X. is
hereby notified to be and appear before
E. A. Clerk Superior Court for
county of Pitt, t bis office in
Greenville, on Wednesday, 8th day
of Nov t, 1893, and answer
complaint, a copy which will be filed in
my office within days from the date
this summons, and let the said de-
take notice that if he fail to
answer the said complaint at
time, the plaintiff will apply to
court for the relief demanded in
the complaint. fail not. Given,
under band the 8th day of
September, 1893.
E. A. MOTE,
C. S. C. Pitt County,
FRANK WILSON
as he has just returned from the North with a
beautiful line of
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoes,
u.
And as I make a
IF
I can both as to pocket and quality.
CALL AT THE RED FRONT OPPOSITE THE OLD BRICK
STORE AND WE WILL CERTAINLY PLEASE YOU. I WANT
TO IMPRESS UPON THE PUBLIC THAT MY STOCK IS EN-
NEW, THE GOOD TRADE I HAD DURING THE LAST
SPRING AND SUMMER RELIEVED ME OF ALL
STOCK AND I AM BEFORE YOU BEADY WITH A
SPARKLING, BRAND NEW STOCK OF GOODS.
YOURS TO SERVE,
FRANK WILSON,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
BROWN HOOKER
INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEIR
To see the bargains they are offering on a full line of
DRY GOODS
Boots, Shoes and Hats
For Fall and Winter Service.
We can suit the Ladies exactly on
Dress Goods Trimmings.
o-
A more complete
stock of
NOTIONS
cannot be found on
the market
We continue to sell C. B. Corsets at cents
The balance of Lang's stock of Clothing and Shoes are going
AT AND BELOW COST.
BROWN HOOKER'S NEW STORE.
CO.
DEALERS IN-
GROCERiES.
We arc again in business to and have a nine line of fresh
goods. Will be glad to have our old call and see us, as well as all
others who wish to get Groceries end Confections that arc pure.
Our goods will be guaranteed in every respect. We pay highest mar
prices for
THIS SPACE BELONGS TO
WILEY BROWN
Successor to
BROWN BROS.
Lookout for advertisement next week.
For Liver
BROWN'S SITTERS
RELIABLE
Often to Pitt surrounding line of the following goods
not to be excelled In this market. to be and
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN-
FURNISHING GOODS. OATS and CAPS, BOOTS, LA-
and CHILDREN'S FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, and QUEENS-
FLOWS and PLOW
kinds, and Belting, Hat, Bock or Paws,
Hair, Harness, Bridles and
HEAVY A SPECIALTY.
Agent lot Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers cents per per cent for Bread Prep-
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin
seed and Paint Wood and Wood
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction.
A little drop of printer's ink,
Sometimes causes to think.
And we want to impress upon your minds that we have
------received our new------
SprinG-. -StocK
-----and can a------
OF
Our intention is to sell good goods at the lowest possible
prices. have the largest most varied stock
kept in town. We keep almost every thing
needed in the household or on the farm and
invite inspection comparison of our
goods. We can and will sell low for
cash- want your trade and
will glad to show you the
following lines of
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS.
NICE LINE
AND PIECE GOODS FOB
MAKING HERS AND BOYS
SUm-, ALWAYS IN STOCK.
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE. TINWARE,
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE,
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND
FARMING UTENSILS,
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
best line of FURNITURE
We have the largest and
ever kept in our town.
Consisting in part of
Marble Top Walnut Suits,
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets,
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles,
Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full line of
Tables, Children's Carriages, Keep also a nice line
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor
Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see us
when in want of any goods. We will try to give you
satisfaction at all times.
COATS SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE
db
AND RETAIL-
N. C.
Boxes C. R. Side Meat.
Tubs Boston Lard.
barrels Flour, all grades
barrels Granulated Sugar,
barrels C. Sugar,
boxes Tobacco,
barrels Mills Stiff
barrels Three Thistle
barrels Ax Sniff.
barrels P. Snuff,
cases Sardines.
Luke Cigarettes,
s Cakes mid Crackers,
barrels Stick Candy.
kegs Rand's Powder.
tons Shot,
c sea Bread Powders.
cases Star Lye,
Apple Vinegar,
eases Gold Dust Washing Powder.
J rolls lb Bagging.
bundles Arrow Ties .
Full stock of all other goods carried in my line.
COOK STOVE
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDER'S, GOOD COOK STOVES
are now so cheap that you can not afford to buy an inferior
one- Go to and buy the best------
THE
ELMO,
LIBERTY,
THE
ALLIANCE
COOKS at
to
Tinware, Paints. Oils, Lamp Goods,
Stoves repaired, Tin Roofing and all kinds of Sheet Metal work
done.
S. E. PENDER CO.,
R. Joshua
COBB BROS CO,
FACTORS,
Commission Merchants,
NORFOLK, VA.
and
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG OLD
Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current
AGENT FOE A FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF





s f
Believes in
And takes his
One Dollar gets
This Office for Job Printing
STATE NEWS.
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
It is thought that crops hare
been damaged about per cent,
in this State.
The Winston banks which
pended some time ago have re-
business again-
Mr. B. L- Perry, who gave
great satisfaction in managing
the Atlantic Hotel, Morehead,
the past season, will have charge
of it again next summer.
Carthage Blade Mr.
Fry, one of the county's oldest
citizens, died suddenly last Friday-
He was hauling a load of fodder,
and fell off of the wagon dead.
He upwards of years of
age-
Scotland Neck
Sheriff B- I says that
be thinks it safe to estimate the
loss of corn on the Roanoke river
including both sides from Weldon
to Hamilton, at from to
barrels- The floods in the
river destroyed much besides the
corn but this was the greatest
loss- This loss will materially
the supply of corn in this sec-
Because it Took.
Charles K- Harris, the young
author of the lines and
the was a poor ban
joist in Milwaukee, Wis-, until he
wrote this song last spring. One
morning after ho had attended a
ball the night before he was asked
to write a piece to be sung at a
concert- He wrote it in a few
hours and called it the
He can neither read nor write
music, so he got the leader of the
orchestra to write the music
while he played the tune. It
at once and the sales have
already made a rich man of
Harris- Over copies have
been sold and his income is now
per day from it.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of county as Ad-
of Eliza James, deceased,
notice is given to all persons in-
to the to make immediate
payment to the undersigned, and all
persons having claims against the estate
man present the MM payment be-
fore the 1st day of Sent-, 1891, or this
notice will plead in bar of recovery.
This the 1st day of
WILLIAM J. JEN KIN'S.
Eliza
Notice
Having qualified before the Superior
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
Win. deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons
i to the estate to make
ate payment to the undersigned, and
all persons claims against the
estate must same for pay-
on or before the day of Aug-
1894, or notice Will be plead in
bar of recovery.
This of August. 1893.
W. H. HEATH,
Win.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk county as
Administrator of the estate of
Edwards, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all persons indebted to the es-
to make immediate payment to the
undersigned, and all persons having
claims against the estate must present
the same for payment before the first
day of September 1894, or this notice
will be plead In bar of recovery.
This 31-t day of August, 1893.
COOK,
of Robert Edwards,
Notice to
Having duly qualified as Executor to
the last will and testament of Abel
Smith, deceased, before E. A.
Clerk the of Superior Court of Pitt
county on the 28th day of August 1898,
notice is hereby given to all persons
holding against the estate of Abel
Smith to present them to toe
undersigned for payment, duly
on or before the day
of August 1834. or this notice will be
plead In bar of their recovery. All per-
Indebted to said estate arc
-u immediate pay men t to the
undersigned.
ThU 28th day of August
JOHN H- SMITH, Executor of
Abel Smith,
Dissolution.
firm of Brown Bros. was dis-
solved by consent on this date,
Interest of -lames Brown in the
purchased by Wiley
Brown. The r assumes the
and indebtedness the firm
am persons the firm will make
with him.
WILEY
This 1st day September, 1893.
Having become sole r of the
hi heretofore conducted under
firm of Brown Bros., I take
in informing the public that
the will be continued at the
same in my own name. Thank-
all customers for past patron-
, hope to receive a continuance of
then WILEY
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER
The
Reaches the
patron
advertising; in an
Therefore ho uses
NO.
RETROSPECT.
BY JENO.
a half unconscious waking.
Twas hardly a dream, and i ct
My heart bail ceased its aching.
My so felt no regret.
My every wish was granted
just like you read about.
My heart with love enchanted
Forgot the world without.
Till pity's and not re-
rod
Asked the ancient cities
For refuge set by God
I w those guilty refuges
Until I saw at last.
That I was traveling just like these
From crimes and deed- past.
A cold sad mist rose o'er me
From a half race poorly run,
I wondered if before me
Were many, few or none
Of the love-forsaken regions
Where folly and her train
Cry, thy name is
I turned to look
My heart beat quick-
Just coming into sight
Was she as last I'd seen her.
Dressed out and out in white.
She bore a plain, smooth, sad air.
Peculiarly her own ;
I saw her face, still fair.
Slightly sadder grown.
She spoke in love confiding
And sympathizing tone.
She asked if I was hiding.
Or why I went
I called her and and
And asked if she would wed.
She then in voice calm and clear,
But half reproachful said
how we pledged our love
Five years this date.
So spirits joined by God above
Let no man separate.
By earths sorrow, by heaven's bliss
I'm all thine own Believe
then. O for that sealing kiss
She blushed not to receive it.
Yet she was modest, for all that
Her soul through eyelids spoke
ere our in rapture met,
Plague take the luck, I woke
go and claim first I thought.
finish life
that's a dream goes for
Twin pass like
was not Joseph warned by dream
To Bee the wrath of
My salad was not yet free seem
fancies it had borrowed
But soon these fancies too were failing.
Morn began to break
The soul indeed was willing; but
The flesh, alas was weak.
Hues were written to
Miss Amiable Independence. The fact
that I love her will explain, I trust to
those curious to know the reason of my
willingness ; and that she does not love
me, to the satisfaction of those who
judge harshly, or con my
weakness or inability.
Author.
Kipped up the
Richmond Times,
There was blood on the face of
the moon this morning in the
Department, and Post-
master General as pale as
a ghost and trembling with excite-
stood and received one of
the severest and most cutting re-
bakes that ever a cabinet officer
received. Honorable J. W. Mar-
shall called at Mr. office
this morning to inquire when the
charges preferred again at the
postmasters at
ville and Big Stone Gap were to
be investigated. The Postmaster
General replied a little
and Mr. Marshall, politely
thanking him, turned to leave
As he neared the door Mr.
made some side remark about,
the impatience of some Congress-
men, or something of the kind-
In a moment the Congressman
from the ninth district had turned
and in two minutes he had con-
the Postmaster General,
the clerks, and the waiting Con-
that he was justly en-
titled to the sobriquet of
Those who heard it say that
hurricanes, waterspouts, whirl-
winds and tornadoes were but as
refreshing zephyrs to the
that was created then. Mr- Bis-
sell has always assumed an
and supercilious air towards
many of the members of Congress,
and everybody was delighted to
hear that there was one Congress-
man who demanded that courtesy
with which he officials,
and who knew his rights and those
of his people, and who did not
propose to be rebuked
or lectured by insolence clothed
with a little brief authority.
Electric Bitten.
remedy is becoming so well
known and so popular to need no
special mention. All who have used
Electric Bitters sing the same song of
purer medicine does not exist
and it is guaranteed to do all that is
claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all
of the Liver and Kidney, will
remove Bolls. Salt Rheum and
other affections by impure blood
Will drive Malaria from system
and prevent as well as we all Malarial
care of Headache,
and Electric,
guaranteed,
or money refunded.- Price and
1.00 per bottle at Drugstore.
If you feel
and all worn out take
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
HEART VERSUS
Battle Makes Application of
Zeb. Vance's Reply to
about Prohibition Heart
as With You, but My
is Against
Tarboro. X. C. Southerner April
Battle, Esq., who has
represented the Greensboro, N.
C, Keeley Institute, since he took
the treat me; t first of the year,
occasionally strikes his home
town. On such occasions he is
apt to drop into Southerner
office, from of habit
being an old Faber-propeller
and to the political and
home news.
Monday morning, after the re-
porter had answered all Mr. Bat-
questions, he took a hand at
the end himself and
asked him about other alleged
cures for the liquor and opium
habits.
do you think of them
Mr. Battle was asked. To this
he replied.
and from
of other men, who have
been cured by it, I, of coarse,
know the absolute and thorough
efficiency of the Keeley treatment-
Of other alleged cares I know
nothing. My heart, though, says
if they will cure the terrible
malady, prosper them. If
not, they are frauds of far-reaching
you haven't answered my
question fully, Mr. the
reporter persisted.
He laughed and answered
am somewhat like Zeb Vance
in his reply to regard-
his stand on the prohibition
His heart was with it
but his stomach was against it.
I have told you how my heart
stood. My judgment is more
critical- Let's analyze. The
world was nearly nineteen
old before an efficacious and
harmless remedy was found for
the curse of alcoholic and opium
addiction that had touched the
world but to blight and destroy,
years of investigation,
that grandest of human
tors, Dr. Leslie E Keeley,
a safe and sure relief- For
some time before, he had been
effecting cures, but in April, 1880,
he opened his Institute at D wight,
, to which the afflicted flocked
from all parts of the country and
left redeemed from their
cures were the marvels of
the age and attracted the most
relentless, hostile criticism of the
profession. The cures have con-
for over twelve years, until
the mark has been about
reached, disarming the critic by
the infallible test of time- With-
out solicitation, or hawking, on
the part of the Leslie E. Keeley
Co., levelheaded, cool, business
men, for thousands of dollars,
each, bought State rights to ad-
minister the remedies and
Keeley institutes under the
; authorization of the parent com-
at Dwight. The Govern-
adopted the right to use the
remedies in twenty-nine
homes. European syndicates
sought and purchased the rights.
The efficacy of vaccination itself
has not been more thoroughly
established.
course Dr. Keeley and his
company reaped the fruits of the
grand discovery in a most em-
financial way.
let us go back a little.
During all these centuries
of fraudulent remedies,
sprang up like mushrooms, were
widely advertised, and, like all
false things, claimed victims and
then died from the ken of men.
profitable success will
have its counterfeits. It doesn't
pay to attempt to simulate the
false and unprofitable. And so it
is with the Keeley cure. There
have been by actual count so
called cures palmed off on
the public. Many have gone
down ; none longer than
to defraud innocent victims and
for a short while-
It seems to be only a question of
a short time with any of them.
there are several these
alleged in North Car-
to-day. Now, to answer
Mr- by
asking another- Isn't it a little
singular, that, considering the
best equipped chemists in the
country have expressed their in-
ability to certainly analyze Dr.
Keeley s remedies, obscure men
should be able to reproduce them T
a most wonderful coin-
that these people should
also discover that the fluids should
be of the color as Dr.
should be administered
in the same quantities, at the same
time and in the same way
Dr. Keeley has
ed the world that alcohol and
opium, taken to excess and con-
form a distinct disease and
that he has found the for it,
which goes under the name,
Keeley's Double Chloride of
Gold think you, if
these money seekers were not
trading on the reputation of Dr.
Keeley's would call
their liquids or
Gold
your knowledge, Mr.
Reporter, to other shrewdly con-
but exposed, attempted
in ions, will not conclude
that these counterfeits differ not
a whit from all others I
many of them have
guaranteed a cure before they
have ever had a patient. In the
name of the prophet who will
guarantee the guarantor
The reporter added
Battle, don't these alleged
cure, as you call them, claim to
stopped men from
believe they do, but any doc-
tor can do that- Often a man can
sober up himself. But it takes
time to prove a cure, and Dr.
he an
unbroken record of over twelve
years. There are men in this
State who took the treatment at
Dwight all the way from eight to
two years ago and have not lapsed.
HYPOCHONDRIA'S VICTIMS.
The Demon of Habitual Melancholy
Slays More Men and Women An-
Than War, Pestilence
and Famine.
Salisbury Herald.
The worst feature of habitual
repining is that it constitutes
gradual and virtual
it is the common and
wholesale mother of all insanity
and actual suicide. Of the whole
tribe of tho so-called deliberate
follies it is the most unreasonable,
unaccountable and destructive.
Directly and indirectly low
its cause loss of life than
everything else. Man is away
over two thirds, perhaps nine
tenths, imagination ; and it con-
him, it misleads him, it kills
him.
At first glance, the leading
causes of suicide at the present
day would seem to be financial
losses, family troubles,
in love, loss of health
reckless dissipation. In the
newspapers these figure quite ab-
and conspicuously. Yet
there is a habit which annually
carries off more men and women
than of these combined.
It is the habit of
surrendering soul body
to the insidious advances of tho
monster of discouragement.
Why do men take to drink
Why do they not rally, when for-
tunes fail Why do they lose
faith in their marital relations
Why does jealousy without cause
Over have been treated at I mad T
Greensboro and less than three one kick from
per cent have resumed their old i bas kicked the bucket of
habits. i and Why is a
only way tho counterfeits violent attack of disease, although
can delude and seduce patients is not necessarily fatal, often the
by claiming to be same as prognosticator and precursor of
Keeley, with death They surrender too soon
as time to cure, and majority are just
by cheaper charges. ed enough to render even
Keeley cure remedies are death insinuates much less
all made at Dwight and are pure demands a surrender,
costly and the physicians all Man is a constitutional coward ;
have to be trained and coward always dies be-
proved by Dr. Keeley. his battle or out of
know what the counter-
remedies cost, but from what How old slave-holders
I can learn, any doctor, without when the war
special training, can administer had stripped them of all that kind
ii of financial prop they had been
it is no wonder that the Waning on all their lives How
and all other Keeley men the doctors
A DEPLORABLE STATE
THINGS.
OF
my
Demon, N. C, Sept 1808.
Mis. does not re-
quire a sago, nor a prophet, nor
the son of a prophet to sec
that the tendency of certain things
point to anything but good re-
I have watched this ten
WHERE ARE THEY NOW.
The third is dead. U
was left it by the November
cyclone at last reached
and is now resting serenely on
tho bosom of its wet-nurse, tho
Republican A year
more ago they were told that the
Republican party was their ties
y This Office for Job Printing
Advice to
If you would protect yourself
from Painful,
Suppressed or Irregular Men-
you must use
tiny and that the populist party
since the beginning of Al- ,,;
Institutes are well patronized, for
men don't take such doubtful
chances on a matter of life and
worse than death to then-selves
their families as imitators,
for revenue only, offer- As fast
as one dies a deserving and dis-
grace death another is sprung
on a gullible public- But there
was no Dr.
employed by
tell you have died this year be-
cause, when very weak, they were
too sure they were doomed to
How many have drowned and
hanged and th.-oat-gashed
shot themselves, because the
devil had got possession of the
citadel by reason of the coward-
ice of the guards many,
to-day, have given up the battle
of life, sworn they will fight no
longer, and are only waiting till
Third in our
State, and have seen it growing
day by day. And, sad to say,
find of high rank in tho
Democratic party who have been
poisoned by this doctrine to such
an extent that it boils out in print
at little or no provocation. If I
understand the meaning of a free
government by tho people and of
the people, it means aqua and
exact justice to all classes and
conditions of men and I have
it instilled into me from tho cradle
up that that was one of
mental principles of Democracy.
Believing this I have never found
FEMALE
REGULATOR
on l lie
that led from Democracy
to rank Republicanism, they
all swore ii was and
that they Demo-
than the Democrats. Tho
proof of the is
and the present altitude
of the remnant the populist
party is defined by simply bi ,
they are The
more or less disreputable element
of the potty, consisting
pally in its candidates and
of the big
G's and little now to be
found cheek by jowl with the
or less disreputable element I
the Republican party.
April
Trill certify that two members of my
Immediate family, after having suffered for
years Irregularity,
brine without benefit by physicians,
completely cured by one bottle
Its
. is truly wonderful. J.
to mailed FREE, which
valuable Information all female
REGULATOR CO.
ATLANTA, GA.
BALE BX ALL
UR. I.
DENTIST. t
I C
the gall to go recklessly into the
abuse of any special class of men them in
who had the appearance at together, as thick as
of benefactors in sense of the thieves
word. But to the point-
Alliance Third party
speakers have hero and yon
J I-
over the land pouring their
poison into the ears of the
try who are honest, yet by
reason of their situation
know as much about and
things as those living towns
cities, in my hive reached
KY -AT-LAW
N.
attention to OHM
at Tucker oM
abed. They lost the t
of their fellow citizens and are
rapidly losing their self-respect.
It is impossible that it should be
otherwise. A year ago howling
they were the only true Dem-
and the only bulwark of
people against Republicanism
today consorting
with the rankest Republicans
ARMS V BLOW,
All . L. BLOW
the verge of anarchy without consistent
knowing the ground boll, has be-
they occupy. I say it is sad to with tho sure
contemplate, but still it is true, g of M
that those faithful tillers of the
soil have been made to believe
the disgruntled, disappoint-
ed, self-seeking, office-hungry
that the manufacturers and mar- horde that to lead them to
chants and bankers are their
worst enemies, and enemies, too,
of all who earn their bread by
toil. They have taught to
lay all feelings for a follow
man and cry down the capitalist,
losing sight of tho fact that but
for the capitalist and
a large class of our
who mills, in
dries, on railroads and various
destruction last fall. The trouble
with these poor creatures is that
they think tho people are too
easily fooled. The people can
see pretty straight and they can
very well tell when they arc being
deceived, when demagogues arc
inconsistent and when the actions
of this fall do not tally with the
professions of a year ago. If the
were blind and had no
other places would have nothing at weak
that these very men list Republican would ho
they furnish a market for
what they raise and many other
things they could ill afford to be
without. I say the, tendency is
to anarchy, to the breaking down
of every who, by reason of
hard work, has accumulated a
competency. It is a dangerous
condition, its end can only
and were it by some unseen
hand cut any curative powers In all ills
there is enough already Throat. and bottle
. . . I is guaranteed all that is claimed or
sown to require twenty years money will refunded. Trial bottle;
remove tho hatred and ill-will free Store.
Elephant.
say tho Keeley remedies convenience
are harmless t , to take em away T
Yes, and the fact was
i , , ; political
in this way to my knowledge,; y , ,, ,
and I am no chemist Anew gone to
Greensboro, while dazed j they got too tired for an
from drink, got during
night and swallowed the contents j
eight his bottle of
the Keeley medicine at one drink
without perceptible detriment
know a man in who
was taking the Keeley remedy
for tobacco and, while drunk,
out the whole bottle and
it down at once-
These other alleged gold cures
avowedly contain and
Strychnine enough to kill a man
if at once. Dr. Keeley says
he has written on his remedies
and he will give his formula to
Fruit Culture.
A bulletin now in press
on the subject of fruit culture,
will soon be issued by the N. C
Agricultural Experiment Station
at Raleigh. It will be very com-
in scope, embracing
two general heads. The first in-
the propagation, planting
and culture of fruit trees and fruit
bearing plants, and the
and shipping of fruits- The
second head will embrace insects
the public if three reputable I and diseases affecting fruit trees,
Chemists will find either. plants and fruit, with remedies
Since the above interview was j their destruction. The
an eastern branch he copiously illus-
the Institute has been established hated with cuts showing how to
at Rocky Mount under Mr. Dos- graft and propagate fruit trees
Battle's management, vines and train and prune
them; also cuts of insects and
how diseases affect them, together
with appliances to destroy these
enemies. It will be a manual for
growing fruit trees and keeping
them, as well as for the care of
fruits in to gathering,
packing, shipping, drying,
serving, and canning them.
Varieties of fruits are described,
as well as those most suitable to
various sections of North Caro-
This publication will be sent
free to all residents of the State
who apply, and to outsiders who
send cents in stamps. Apply
to Dr. H. B. Battle, Director,
Raleigh, N. C
has been very successful.
The Free Press believes it
would be wise for the southern
states to withdraw to some extent
from national politics. It would
be wise, we think, for each state
to elect presidential electors with-
out pledging them to any
date, and with instructions to vote
for men who will come nearest to
representing the state platform
This is the way our forefathers
elected the president and rice
president; it is the way the con-
intended they should be
elected. We believe people
would come nearer getting what
they rote for if this plan
Free Press.
bosses might easily on
swimming top. But, alas for
them, it is far other
Topic
A friend in need i a Mend Indeed,
and less than one million people
have friend in Dr.
New for Consumption,
you have never
this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince it baa
N. C.
In all the Courts.
I. A. go. n. K. TYSON
TYSON,
N. C.
Prompt attention Riven to collections
MARRY
j SKINNER,
N. C.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
n n ken e, iV r.
Practice In all he court. Collections a
DOMINION LINE.
ready engendered in the hearts
of tho country against tho
and people who earn an honest
living by other means than tilling
the soil.
You find numbers of intelligent
countrymen who see this thing as
I see it- And this fact accounts
for the wholesale withdrawals
from tho Oar
country needs wisdom's guidance
at this critical period, and the
press of the State can perform no
higher function than to set about
showing these deluded people
who read where tho professions
of these Judas are lead-
to. Men have suffered
for worse heresies
than many are teaching
which many are bettering- I
think soberly, am driven to
these conclusions by what I see
and know hero my own county,
which is as bid as many
sections of our State.
H. B.
Tarheel Boys and Girls.
We find the following malicious
slander a South Carolina news-
paper, and copy it simply to show
bottle and 11.00.
A Little o Advertising.
Why do experienced business
men seek newspapers as an
medium Simply because
have learned that go
to the newspapers for
regarding places to buy
goods, just as look for their
daily, weekly, monthly to fur-
news other kinds of
reading When a needs
a feather, or a fan, she does not
look for a or a dingy
line on a fence for information.
Novelty, advertising, is
but a passing thought, and that
is tho end of it. Tho newspaper
is tho buyer's resort depend-
It is the only legitimate
source for that kind of
go to a table to eat, to
a dry goods i to buy dry
goods, to a barber shop to get
shaved, to a bod to
so all of people
newspapers when desiring in-
formation regard to the boat
plane to buy what they Deed.
Tho social is tho latest
thing out- Ladies stand a low.
the young ladies and gents of One bites chunk out of the
this part of how onion. A young man pays his
grossly they have been
When a timid young
wishes to express himself
money for a guess as to which
bit the onion. If he misses
it he has to kiss only the one with
rightly ho a kiss from each
of tho other Ob-
server.
to his girl, he takes a piece of fat; tho onion breath, but if ho guesses
pine, trims it in the of a
capital I, and passes it to his girl
That means, I pine for thee. If
she rejects him, she strikes a
match and sets the splinter on . ,
m, . x , ,. . , , it will cost nothing will sure
tire. means, make light of i do you It yon a Cough,
your pining. If she likes him I any trouble Throat, Cheat
she hands him a knot,
which means, pine not. When give relief, or money will
the boy goes to leave, ho gently he paid Sufferers from
puts his arm around the girl, found it the thing and under Its um
kisses her, and puts Some Soft a and To
. , a sample our expense and learn
pitch on the end of her nose, for ft p u.
which means, till we bottles free at Drug
TAR SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington
and Tarboro touching at all land-
on Tar River Monday,
Mid Friday ii A. M.
leave at ft A SI.
Thursdays and Saturdays
A.
These depart ii re to Stags of
on River.
Washington
en The Norfolk, Newborn and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. Hew York and Boston.
Shippers should their goods
marked via Dominion iron
New York.
Norfolk
more Steamboat from
Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington H. C
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
Greenville. N C.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
AT F.
BRICK STORK
their year's supplies will And
their interest our prices before Ma,
is complete
n all branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, Ac.
at Lowest
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you lo buy at one profit. A com-
stock
always on hand and sold at prices to suit
times. goods arc all bought and
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respect fully,
S. M.
meet again.
Store. Large size and
PATENTS
and all business In the V, a.
Patent office or the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fees.
We arc the S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patents Exclusively, and
can obtain patents n less time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise as to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we ob-
Patent.
refer, here, to the Post Master, the
of the Money Order Did., and to
of the. U. S. Patent F i
advice terms and reference to
actual clients in your own State, or
. C. A. Co.,
Washington, D. C





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
B. and
WEDNESDAY.
mill at Greenville,
N. C, as mail matter.
who are viewing our section from District Attorney C. B. Aycock
an unprejudiced standpoint- has been confirmed by the Senate.
The surroundings and advantages , The confirmation of the Collectors
to be bad here can be found ad ; Elias and Simmons is delayed
to no other market in the for some reason and rumor put
State, and it is but a question of the blame for this upon Senator
a very short while when Green- Vance. We must still insist that
will as familiar to tobacco this must be a mistake. It can-
circles of the country as is any of not be that a man who has been
the -Treat markets for the hand- honored and loved as Senator
Vance has been in North Carolina
ling of the weed.
This article also speaks of
the
can consent at this late stage of
THE ROANOKE LYNCHING.
Roanoke, Va., was the sci no of a
most deplorable affair last week.
Wednesday morning a
man enticed a poor market woman
into a cellar, she he was
leading her to the house cf a
customer to whom some
chases were to be delivered, and
when in seclusion ho robbed her
of her and then cruelly
beat her, leaving as ho sup-
posed dead. about half an
hour the woman regained con-
dragged herself out
to the street and told what had
Search for the
began at once and ho was soon
found by a detective and taken
to jail. As news of the brutal
crime spread through the city ex-
and indignation against
the aroused. reach
ed such a tension as evening drew
on that threats of lynching were
loud and frequent. In order to
protect the from the mob,
the mayor with a guard went
into the jail and the military of
the city was ordered out and
placed around the prison. The
mob continued to increase until
it numbered several thousand.
About night they made an attack
on the jail which was met by a
volley from the military
twelve of the mob and wounding
twenty odd more. The mob fell
back when tired upon and while
interest for the time being was
drawn from the to the dead
and wounded on the street
slipped him out of the
and took him away. The killing
and wounding of some of the mob
throw tho city into greater
indignation time
arising against the mayor and
officers and tho military, and it
was with difficulty that further
bloodshed was pi Next
day the officers started to slip the
back into the jail but the
mob men
lookout for this who discovered
the movements of the officers,
them and took the
from their The
was swung to the nearest
limb and his body riddled with
bullets. They then cut body
down and started to bury it in
the yard of the mayor, but
to persuasion to desist from this.
The frenzied then dragged
the dead to the outskirts
of the city, made a pile of dry
lumber and shavings upon which
the body was placed, covered ail
but the head with of
inflammable material, saturated
the whole with oil, sat it on tire
and filled the air with wild shouts
us the pile went up in smoke and
ashes.
This horrible vengeance did not
seem to satisfy the infuriated
mob and threats went out against
the mayor and military until they
had to flee for safety. At last ac
counts all had become quiet-
The whole affair is most
able- The deserved severe
punishment for his brutal crime,
but the people should have allow-
ed the law to take its own course
and not resorted to such violence,
which led to sacrificing the lives
of so many citizens. While sen-
was divided as to the con-
duct of the military, there was a
large element that denounced
them and were indignant because
they tired upon the mob-
yet to be convinced that the mil-
deserved as much censure
as was heaped upon them. They
were called out by the authorities
to deter a riotous mob from com-
a gross outrage against
the laws of their State, and when
these sixty armed militia saw
more than a thousand wild,
men rushing madly upon
them, it looks like they mutt
either repel them or be trampled
down before the surging mob.
If they were not expected to use
force if necessary to keep back
the mob then it looks like utter
folly to have called them out at
all. True they may have
firing longer than they should,
but if the people in this instance
had been preservers instead of
violators of the law there would
been none of this dreadful
bloodshed. We hope there may
be no such occurrence again-
trust and forfeit the esteem in
which he is held in his native
State. We shall have nothing to
say until the Senator by his ac-
confirms the rumors that are
now so wide spread. We believe
better of our distinguished states-
man. We must repeat it
be that he will oppose the
of these two most excel-
lent Democrats.
work Mr. O. L- has done his political career to betray his
in building up the market here-
And the Reflector wishes to
add that not one word is said to
tho credit of Mr. but what
is fully deserved by him. We are
in position to know how faithfully
he has labored for
the advancement of this market.
He has worked not alone in the
interest of his own warehouse
but has kept his energy centered
upon the business of the
market and the whole of it
feels tho influence of his
efforts. He has not
to make outlay if
he saw that tho was to be
thereby, and others
have reaped a full share of tie
liberal advertising work he
has done- He borne the bulk
of tho and is entitled to
the highest credit. Every person
interested in the establishment
and maintenance of tho market
owes him a debt of gratitude-
sad all should see that he is
patronized
WHERE MR. WILLIAMS STANDS.
We saw in the Progressive Fat-
a few weeks ago a letter
which was written by
of another county, which in-
that ex-Senator Willis R
Williams, of this had de-
the Democratic party and
gone to the Populists. Though
several papers of tho State made
some comment upon it, the Re-
had no belief what ever
the letter paid no attention
to it other to read it and
wonder at the cheek displayed by
some people who try to make
their side look popular by claim-
that leading men
with knew full well that
if Mr. Williams had gone to the
Third party Had no idea that
he had done that he could
have said so for himself, without
it being necessary for some man
off in another county to jump up
go to shouting just because
the Senator, who is and has Ions
been President of the State
Grange, was making a few speech-
es to the farmers.
The was
one of the papers that saw the
letter published that Mr.
Williams hail joined tho Third
party, and to that paper he writes
the folio wing card that speaks
for
Falkland, V. C. Sept.
To Editor of the Southerner
I sec yon have Informed the public
that I have myself a Populist.
It the small -t what
my politic or pert unions maybe,
I am only a lien, and yet I
dislike to misrepresented. How,
when, or where, you sot your inf
I cannot imagine. With the sin-
exception of II I hive
voted steadily the Democratic ticket tor
years, and I am to-day the
same old Democrat, any v i-
or shadow of stand-
with both feet on the Chicago plat-
form, m I did at the last
whilst slumping for Cleveland. If that
platform did not teach tree and
ed coinage of both and silver as
money and a further
of currency, I did not know how to
read it. In a repeal of the
per cent, tax, it showed opp to
the banking system, our State
that nominated our present
Governor d a graded income
tax. every State Democratic plat-
form, the National platform, had
universal cry for a lower tariff, or
for revenue These are my
nothing more
I have the best part of my life
on the side of the farmers and
laborer, and now when the fight is
raging between the money devils, trusts
on one side, and
m n and lab on the o her, I
Shall still be found my old place
whenever my feeble efforts are celled
tor. Truly-. W. K. W
Hood's Cures
THE GREENVILLE MARKET.
Our readers today, and
ally those interested in the
co department of the Reflector.
The House of Representatives
at last mustered a quorum
of Democrats. For several days
they were trying to report the
election bill, but the Republicans
could prevent it by breaking a
quorum. Finally they have
in getting enough Demo-
to return to Washington for
a day or two to transact a little
business. When men are elected
as Representatives it is their duty
to go to Washington and remain
there and to in their places at
all times. They are well paid for
this, and are not expected to neg-
their work, but there is an
easing tendency on the part
of Representatives to draw their
salaries and do as little as
remaining at home whenever
they feel inclined.
It was to the firm action
of Speaker Crisp rather than to
tho House that the election bill
was finally reported and placed
upon the calendar. Messrs. Reed
and Burrows were on band and
thought could thews the
WASHINGTON LETTER.
our Regular
Washington, D. C, Sept,
The humiliation of Tom Reed
and his Burrows, of
Michigan, when they learned that
the Democrats of the House pro-
posed to put effectual quietus
upon Republican filibustering
against the reporting of the Tuck
bill for the repeal of all laws
authorizing the presence of S-
officials at elections, was a pleas-
sight to Democratic eyes-
Because the Democrats of the
House in the adoption of regular
rules had been extremely lenient
towards the minority the
assumed that no check
would be put on their
They were given a free rope
for awhile because there was not
a quorum of Democrats present,
but as soon as a quorum was on
hand they were effectually
ed by an order reported from the
committee on Rules and the bill
was to the House. This
order was not the result of any
assumption of power by a single
individual, as were the rulings of
Tom Reed when he was Speaker ;
it was authorized by a Democratic
caucus, as such things always be-
The Republicans are to be allowed
to name any reasonable length of
time during which the debate on
this bill shall be carried on, but
they are not to be allowed to
against a vote upon it
after legitimate debate has been
exhausted.
The public tariff hearings were
concluded this week, and the
Democrats on the House Ways
Means committee are now at
work upon the new bill. Although
the number of days were fewer
than were given by some of the
other committees, more time was
given by the committee than was
ever given before for public hear-
Chairman Wilson, speak
of the preparation of the new
tariff bill, said Democratic
members will work together.
Some of the schedules will be
prepared by all of the Democrats
together, while others will re-
to subcommittees for prep-
previous to being revised
by the full Democratic member-
ship of the committee- It is not
possible to say when the bill will
completed, but it will require
more time than of those
who have never, had a tariff bill
to prepare seem to think
We might fix up a measure
in very short order, but it is not
that kind of a bill we to
present to the country.
affecting so many interests
must very carefully considered
and its effect calculated before we
can nope to a bill which
can the many tests to which
it will be subjected when enacted
into a law. Such a measure as
this cannot be successfully
We shall, however, lose no
time, and hope to present it to
the House at the earliest possible
moment consistent with the
interests
Claus the sugar
king, was in Washington a few
days ago for the purpose of
his fingers in the Hawaiian
pie, but he cut short his stay when
he learned that the whole matter
was already settled so far as the
administration is concerned, and
that President Cleveland is only
waiting for tho Senate to dispose
of the bill before he
sends it a special message on
Hawaii, by Mr.
reports.
Scud in Your Orders.
We have a nice assortment of
Apples, Pears, Plums,
Peaches, Pecans, Grape-
vines, Raspberries, Straw-
berries, Dewberries, and Blackberries.
Also
EVERGREEN AND TREES
and Shrub. Roses. Greenhouse Plants,
Dahlias, Hyacinths. Tulips, Lilies,
Early orders solicited and will be
tilled at the proper time for trans-
planting. Send for
WARREN
Riverside Greenville, K. C.
will not overlook the article on of the Speaker and the
Carolina Tobacco taken
from the Winston Tobacco
The article does full credit
to Greenville as the place
ed to be the leading tobacco mar-
of Eastern Carolina. This is
the conclusion that all arrive at
Democrats but they utterly failed
to do so And have at last realized
that the Democratic House, if it
is inclined, do business with
out their assistance or advice, and
that they can do this without
counting as present those who are
a thousand miles away.
TO
I wish invite your attention to my
NEW FALL MILLINERY.
I have the latest shapes n Felt
Mid Straw Goods. Very
line of Pretty and Cheap Rib-
also Tips and Feather,
You will save money by getting my
prices you purchase elsewhere. the court the relief demanded in
the complaint. fail not. Given.
Sophie
When rears old began to troubled with y
tho head, causing ; and
burning, and her Her other
We gave her six of
Hood's
and she la entirely well. I hare taken it myself
for that tired feeling and it does me great
MM Stock-
St, Baltimore, Md. Get Hood's.
Hood's cure ail liver His, biliousness,
Jaundice, indigestion, sick headache. cents.
W. L. DOUGLAS
SHOE
Do yen wear When next In need try a
Best In the world.
KM
3.50
2.50
2.25
2.00
FOR
If you want a fine DRESS SHOE, made In the latest
styles, don't pay to try my or
Shoe, They fit equal to custom made and look and
wear at well. If you wish to economize In your footwear,
do so by purchasing W L. Douglas Shoes. Name and
price stamped on tho bottom, look for It when yea buy
W. L. Sold by
DAVIS,
W. H. WHITE.
TIMES HAVE CHANGED.
Old thing- hive passed away and all
things have new. old
stock of goods have been sold out
and a new has its
place. The old was replaced
by the new because my
LOW DOWN PRICES
the people and keep the goods
moving. Now listen to a few plain
I times arc hard and
money scarce just as well as man
who raises cotton, corn and tobacco,
and going to sell goods just as low
as any honest dealer can afford to sell.
For every dollar spent with me will
get the worth of your money. I keep a
compute stock of
General Merchandise,
Dry Goods, Notions
Boots, Shoes, Hats,
Caps and Gents
Furnishing Goods,
Clothing
at any price a man can want. Also a
full stock of
Groceries
Cotton Bagging Ties.
GREENVILLE, X. C.
Can still be found
at the Old
stand.
pared to do
FIRST-CLASS WORK
on anything in the
mom, cam, n urn.
Fine Vehicles Specialty
Repairing done prompt-
and in best manner
Notice.
To the Tax Payers of Pitt County,
The tax list for 1899 having been
d in my hands on the first Monday
September for collection, and as I inn
required by law to prompt settle-
of all taxes charged thereon, I
now notify the tax payers of Pitt
that I am determined to protect my-
self and bondsmen from all penalties
imposed by law for failure to perform
my duty, and in order save trouble
and expense it will be best for those
owing taxes to make an early settle-
or shall proceed to collect the
same by distress at the earliest moment
allowed. Don't forget this. I mean
business. R. W.
Sheriff of Pitt County,
Greenville, N. C, September 12th,
Notice.
State Carolina, In the Superior
Pitt County. I Court.
W. H.
A. Summons
vs. for Re-
N. Lewis T.
Henry E. A.
Lillian and Laura
a minor without a Clerk.
guardian.
Petition to sell Land for Assets
The defendant Jas. N. is
hereby notified to be and appear before
E. A. Clerk Superior Court for
the of Pitt, t bis office In
Greenville, on Wednesday, the 8th day
of Nov. t, and answer the
a copy which will be filed in
my office within ten days from the date
summons, and let the said de-
take that if he fail to
answer the said complaint at
plaintiff will apply to
JUST LOOK FRIENDS
Do not Fail to Call on
FRANK WILSON
as he has just returned from the North with a
beautiful line of
Dry Ms, Notions, Boots, Shoes,
GENT'S
And as I make a
I can both as to pocket and quality.
CALL AT THE RED FRONT OPPOSITE THE OLD BRICK
STORE AND WE WILL CERTAINLY PLEASE YOU. I WANT
TO IMPRESS UPON THE PUBLIC THAT MY STOCK IS EN-
NEW, THE GOOD TRADE I HAD DURING THE LAST
SPRING AND SUMMER RELIEVED ME OF ALL
STOCK AND I AM BEFORE YOU BEADY WITH A
SPARKLING, BRAND NEW STOCK OF GOODS.
YOURS TO SERVE,
FRANK WILSON,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
HOOKER
INVITE YOU TO VISIT THEIR
To see the bargains they are offering on a full line of
DRY GOODS
Boots, Shoes and Hats
For Fall and Winter Service.
We can suit the Ladies exactly on
Dress Goods Trimmings.
-o--
cannot be found on
the market
-o-
We continue to sell C. B. Corsets at cents
The balance of Lang's stock of Clothing and Shoes are going
AT AND BELOW COST.
BROWN HOOKER'S NEW STORE.
CO.
------DEALERS IN------
We arc in business to and have n nice line of fresh
goods. Will be glad to have our old call and see us, as well as all
others who wish to get Groceries and Confections that are pure.
Our goods will be guaranteed in every respect. We pay the highest mar
prices for
THIS SPACE BELONGS TO
WILEY BROWN
Successor to
BROWN BROS.
Lookout for advertisement next week.
MRS. L. GRIFFIN.
In Ayden, X. c.
i have opened an office In Ayden
of
can always rely on finding a
by calling oil me.
E. A. KEITH.
under band this the 18th day of
September, 1893. .
C. C. Pitt County.
For Mala, Liver
or use
BROWN'S BITTERS
Offers to the Pitt line of the following goods
not to be excelled in tills market. And all guaranteed to be and
pare straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN-
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, LA-
CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, BLINDS, and
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
kinds. Gin and Mm. Hy, Rock of Paris,
H Bridles and
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N- T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
Jobbers cents per per cent for Bread Prep-
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure Lin
seed and Faint Wood and Wood an
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
A little drop of printer's
Sometimes causes to think.
we want to impress upon your minds that we have
------received our new------
SprinG-. -StocK
-----and a------
intention is to sell good goods at the lowest
prices. We have the largest and most varied stocK
kept in town. We keep almost every thing
needed in the household or on the farm and
in vile inspection comparison of our
goods. We can and will sell low for
cash- We want your and
will be glad to show you the
following lines of
DRY GOODS, DRESS GOODS,
NOTIONS, WHITE GOODS.
NICE LINE of
AND PIECE GOODS FOR
MAKING MENS AND BOYS
SUITS, ALWAYS IN STOCK.
HATS, SHOES, CROCKERY,
GLASSWARE. TINWARE,
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE,
HARDWARE, PLOWS AND
FARMING UTENSILS,
HARNESS AND WHIPS,
have the largest and
ever kept in our town,
best line of FURNITURE Consisting in part of
Marble Top Walnut Suits,
Solid Oak Suits, Imitation Oak Suits, Imitation Walnut
Suits, Bureaus, Bedsteads, Tables, Buffets,
of different kinds, Children's Cribs and Cradles,
Tin Safes, Bed Springs, a full lino of
Tables, Children's Carnages, Keep also a nice line
of Lace Curtains and Curtain Poles, Matting and Floor
Oil Cloths. We cordially invite all to come to see us
when in want of any goods. We will try to give you
l satisfaction at all times.
SPOOLS COTTON AT WHOLESALE PRICE
db
ESTABLISHED 1883.
i, A.
WHOLESALE RETAIL----
GROCER
GREENVILLE, KT. C.
-WHOLESALE AND
C. R. Side Meat.
Tubs Boston Lard.
barrels Flour, all grades
barrels Granulated Sugar,
barrels C. Sugar,
boxeR Tobacco,
barrels Mills
barrels Three Thistle
barrels Gail Ax Sniff,
barrels P. Snuff,
cases Sardines.
Full stock of all other
50.000 Luke Cigarette,
s Cakes Crackers,
barrels Stick Candy.
Hand's Powder.
tons Shot,
c Bread Powder.
cases Star Lye,
Apple Vinegar,
cases Gold Dust Washing Powder.
I lb Hugging.
bundles Arrow Ties .
goods carried in my line.
STOVE
YOU CAN BUY ONE AT FENDER'S, GOOD COOK STOVES
are now so cheap that you can not afford to buy an inferior
-one. Go to and buy the best-------
THE
THE
ELMO,
LIBERTY,
THE
ALLIANCE
COOKS at
GOLDEN
GRAIN
COOK
FROM
to
Tinware, Paints, Oils, Class. Lamp Goods,
Stoves repaired, Tin Roofing and all kinds of Sheet Metal work
done.
S. E. FENDER CO.,
COBB BROS CO,
raw
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET, VA.
and
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOE A FIRST-CLASS PROOF SAP





. M . i-
REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
Drop in at the Reflector Book Store
and look at show case of Diamond
and mucilage.
A cold wave U predicted for to-day.
Look our for it and don't let it catch
you in your shirt sleeves.
New crop cotton is no new thing in
town now. The fine weather last week
made it open rapidly and it has been
coming in freely.
It won't be it not,
You who complain so bold
Ere you'll stop asking it
growl with it cold
Several wagon loads of cotton pickers
were taken out of town Monday morn-
Some of them go to extreme sec-
of the county.
Soon after the telegram about
cold wave came Larry wag
on the sidewalk with a heavy blanket
thrown around him.
The Reflector advertisers get the
in-in-tit of an increased circulation to-
day without knowing it beforehand,
extra copies are sent out.
We heard a man remark the other day
that if Greenville had a good race-track
a Pitt county fair would follow it inside
of a year. Then let's have the race-
track.
As soon as are the
will be after the and if
the catch is good and sweet potatoes
handy his happiness will know no
ids.
Mr. Edgar Buck says he and the jury
he served with list week was so favor-
ably impressed with Judge Hoke and
his management that he extends the
compliments of the jury.
Mr. Henry Sheppard, Reporter, show-
ed us Monday an order for on the
Treasurer of the Widow and Orphan's
Benefit fund of the Knight's of Honor,
payable to the of the late Mr.
Samuel Cory who was a member of the
order.
The missed it entirely oil
its weather prognostications for last
week. There was not any equinoctial
storm on or near the 32nd. If we did
miss it on the weather we are willing to
go a wager that Christmas will come on
the 25th of December.
The ex-Confederate veterans of
county have decided to hold their
re-union and at Pollard's grove
three miles from Greenville on Saturday
the 21st day of October. They request
all persons in sympathy with them to
contribute something towards making
the day a joyous and pleasant one for
the old soldiers.
Personal,
Mrs. L. C. King, of Norfolk, has been
spending the past week with friends
here.
Master Rat has almost
recovered from his serious ill-
Mr. G. E. Harris has moved his
into the Yellowley residence just
cast of town.
Misses Annie an Julia return-
ed home Saturday from a visit of several
to
Mr. C. R. Sugg has been appointed by
Congressman Branch as messenger in
the printing office.
Mr. O. II. Guion, of and Mr.
Donnell of Tarboro, were here
part of last track attending Court.
Mr. J. B. Cherry was confined at
home with sickness several days last
We are glad to see him out
again.
Mr. M. R. Lang received a telegram
from Saturday announce-
the death of Mr. L. Henley. He
was an uncle of Mrs. Lang and was
twice out here visiting her. Many of
our remember him and are sorry
to hear of his death.
Entertainment at Farmville.
The young ladies of Farmville are
for an entertainment which
they will give Friday October 6th.
of vocal and instrumental
music. They will be assisted by Miss
Ina of LaGrange, Miss
Forbes, of Greenville, and Miss Emma
Simmons, teacher of Kinsey Semi-
nary at LaGrange. Miss lone May is
director of music and Mr. W. E. Barrett
stage manager. A splendid
is being rehearsed and the entertain-
will be an excellent one.
Surrendered and Bailed.
Last Friday young Isaac Sugg, who
June killed the newsboy named
James at came In and
rendered himself to Sheriff King, and
immediately applied to Judge Hoke
under writ of habeas corpus for
After examining into the matter and
hearing testimony Judge Hoke
decided that the defendant was entitled
to bail, and ordered Sugg to be
placed under a verified bond of
for his at the November
term of Halifax county Superior Court.
The bond was promptly given and the
boy released from custody.
BRIGHT SPARKS.
See Cobb's Stock of dry goods.
The watermelon is a back number.
If you want a rice Hat call at J. C.
Cobb Sou.
Foot ball will take the place base
ball
J. C. i Son arc shape to
competition in all lines.
This i- hi Witt Mi, It was full
Monday-
Fruit Jars Cheap tit the Old Brick
Store.
Quantities of the James grape are now
being shipped.
J. C. Cobb Son have the prettiest
Shoes in town. See our Men's
The base ball gone the box
until another
The Best Flour earth 1.40 at the
Old Brick Store.
The appearance of the weed-choppers
on the streets is longed for.
Just received a car load of Bagging
and Ties at J. C. Cobb Son. Sec them
before buying.
Mr. M. R. Lang enters the market
again this season as a cotton buyer.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick
A little girl of Mr. J. U. Boyd, four
miles below Greenville, died last week-
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Messrs. W. R. Parker and R. M.
Starkey have in business at the
market.
Aug. 23rd, Fresh N. C, Mountain
Butter cents per lb at the Old Brick
Store.
Summer nays along right well, with
all the predictions of early frosts and
cool weather.
Farmers your attention is called to
the fact that Ellington Brown are
ready to fill orders for peanut diggers
to fit Atlas and Dixie Plow.
The dividing line has passed and the
nights increase gradually in their length
over the days.
The James grape is now ripe. We
put up in and pound baskets.
Price and cents per basket. Or.
solicited. Allen Warren
Son. Greenville, N. C.
We hear several strong additions
soon be made to Greenville's corps of
tobacco buyers.
are almost a drug on the
market and sometimes sell as low as
cents a pound.
The acknowledges a
ticket to the Alamance County Fair at
Burlington, 3rd to
The is indebted to
Messrs. Warren Sou, Riverside
for a large basket of James grapes
presented yesterday. No finer grape
ever
New Advertisements.
Riverside Nursery has a full Hue of
fruit and ornamental trees now ready
for delivery and calls attention to the
fact that orders be placed now.
Mrs. L. Griffin calls the attention of
the ladies to her nice line of fall
The firm of R. W. Royster Co. pub-
notice of dissolution.
Higgs Bros, -cheapest cash store on
will quote prices next week.
Attention is called to the advertise-
of summons for relief before E. A.
Superior Court Clerk, in the
matter of W. II. Harrington,
tor of A. D. vs. Jas. N.
Gowan and others.
Colored Sunday School Convention.
The State Colored Baptist Sunday
School Convention was held in Green-
ville last week, beginning Thursday
night and continuing through Sunday.
The meeting was largely attended by
delegates from various parts of the State.
They invited ex-Governor Jarvis to de-
liver the opening address, which he did
on Thursday night, using as his topic
in the church, purity the
school, and purity in the He
gave them some wholesome advice
against associating with and placing in
responsible positions people of unsavory
character and bad reputation, which if
they will follow will go far towards
giving their race a higher standard of
morals and respectability. The
of the convention were interesting
and we trust will result in much good.
den Notes.
Our good friend Col. E. A. Keith, is
with us again this season buying cotton.
Mr. Jesse Wilson's sou is quite sick
with fever.
Mr. W. J. lost a colt Sun-
day with the blind staggers.
Mr. P. S. Swain has moved his family
to Ayden. Mr. Swain has a position In
the college as vocal music teacher and
will also take lessons himself to prepare
for the ministry. He Is a bright young
man and we predict for him a bright
future.
Miss Mollie Winfield arrived
day to take charge of the music de-
at the college. Hope she will
have a full class.
Miss Mollie Bullock, of Conetoe, is
visiting her brother, Mr. W. B. Bullock.
Mr. J. O. Briley has opened a grocery
store and has moved has family to
Ayden.
Pitt County
Register Deeds Harding has fur-
us with an abstract property
returned for taxation in this county in
June, also the number of polls, for
the year 1893. It Is as
White polls Colored polls 1359.
No. Value.
Acres of land,
Town lots,
Horses,
Mules,
65.451
Hogs,
8.169
Farming Utensils,
Mechanic's tools.
Household furniture,
Provisions,
Fire arms,
Libraries,
Scientific instruments,
Money on band,
SolVent
Shares in companies,
All other personal property,
W. W. R. R. Co.,
O. D. S. Co.,
Co., 1,391
Superior Court.
The following the criminal
docket were disposed of.
Redmond Tyson. submits,
judgment suspended on payment of
costs.
D. H. assault, submits,
judgment suspended on payment of
costs,
concealed weapons,
pros.
Luther appeal from Mayor's
court, not
Rodgers, Lewis Johnson,
Joe Vines, Jonas Gorham,
Dupree, Bethel Rudd, gambling-
Jonas Gorham called and failed, others
found guilty Joe Vines sentenced
months in jail, others days in jail.
Lucy Foreman. Susan
Foreman, Jane Foreman, assault with
deadly weapon, Jane Foreman not
guilty, others guilty. Sentenced
days in jail with leave to Commissioners
to hire out.
Perry Hall, Augustus Barns,
and adultery; not guilty.
S. W. Brooks and and Isaac James,
affray, both guilty. Brooks fined
and all costs, James fined
S. W. Brooks, selling liquor without
submits, judgment suspended
on payment of cost.
Robert Davenport, carrying concealed
weapons, not guilty.
James W. Brewer, injury to stock
not guilty.
R. U. Carr, Henry Hinson, assault
with deadly weapon, guilty, Carr fined
and cost, Hinson and cost.
Joseph union. Smith,
fornication and adultery, guilty, sen
fenced months in jail.
J. C. assault with deadly
weapon, submits, judgment suspended
on payment of costs.
John Tucker, Jack Moore,
submit, judgment suspended on pay-
ct costs.
Samuel false pretense, not
Charlie Dawson, affray, submits, fined
and costs.
Moses Jones, unlawful fence, not
guilty.
G. T. Whichard, injury to stock,
guilty, fined and costs.
Benjamin Banks, Bettie Perkins, for-
aid not guilty.
Benjamin Banks, carrying concealed
weapons, not guilty.
Wright House, Anthony Dudley,
larceny and receiving, guilty, sentenced
years in
Simon Barrett, larceny, guilty, four
months in jail with leave to commission-
to hire out.
Ephraim Vines, assault with deadly
weapon, pleads guilty, find and
costs.
Wiley Vines, Silas Harris, assault
with deadly weapon, Vines not guilty,
Harris guilty, sentenced days in jail.
Redmond Wooten, larceny, not guilty.
William alias Emanuel Can-
larceny, guilty, sentenced years
in penitentiary.
Charles Foreman, larceny, not guilty.
J. N. Bennett, seduction, con-
defendant to pay costs.
G. W. injury to stock, guilty,
sentenced six months in jail.
Lorenzo Savage, rape, verdict of jury
guilty of attempt to commit rape, sen-
years in penitentiary.
Hattie Barrett, larceny, not guilty.
W. B. James, Harris, affray,
submit, James fined and costs.
William Richard
and Henry Spruill. assault with
weapon, William guilty fined
and cost, others not guilty.
DEATH OP MISS
The death of this young lady which
occurred on the afternoon of the 20th at
the home of her father, Dr. Richard
mis, was a shock to the entire com-
and caused sadness to many
hearts. She had been sick only u week
and no one thought her sicklies very
serious until the evening before her
death. Miss Estelle was years old
and the community had not a more
charming and lovable young lady than
She.
Death at all times is so mysterious.
While we know that to meet it is to be
the common lot of all mankind, still we
are never fully prepared for the
that some friend or loved one has
over the When the
Reaper comes and robs some home of
the tender infant or prattling child, we
think that perhaps the Father thought
it too for fragile for
the t rials and sorrows of this
so in love took it to His own bosom.
And when some one who has passed the
allotted three score and ten is
ed unto his we look upon it as
but the reaping of that which had
unto But when one
just the vigor of life's morning is
the rose just bursting into
its grandest beauty is bow
our heads in amazement. And thus it is
in the death of Miss Williams.
Called from earth just as the stage of
womanhood is to us it
seemed that she just ready to begin
God's ways are past finding out,
and while we are assured that
all things poor mortals often won-
of His providences. He had need for
her up yonder and called her from earth.
plucked that
Cried the gardener, as he walked through
the garden ;
His fellow servants -The
And the gardener held his
The remains were followed by a large
number of friends Thursday evening as
they were borne to the Episcopal church
where services were conducted by Rev.
and then laid at rest
near the church window. Messrs. J. L.
Little. R. Hyman, R. L. G. B
King A. Jr.,
pallbearers. The floral offerings were nu-
and beautiful. The casket was
completely covered with flowers, and
the Columbian Club sent as a
of esteem a floral tribute that en-
covered the grave.
Our people deeply sympathize with
the members of the grief stricken
The Episcopal Sunday School
Si I of Kings Daughters of St.
Pauls Parish joint meeting assembled
on Sunday morning last adopted the
following memorial and
Whereas, It hath pleased the all-
God of the universe, the Great
Superintendent of Sunday-Schools and
the Omnipotent King, whose daughters
we are, to remove from us by our
beloved schoolmate and sister, Estelle
Williams, whose death occurred on
Thursday, 21st o'clock
P. M.; and while it is sad, beyond our
power of expression, to be compelled to
speak of her as dead it is with pleasure
th.-it we take occasion to give utterance
to our appreciation of her many virtues,
to bear testimony to those high
ennobling qualities in her, that marked
her in many respects, as one of our
sweetest and best of Sunday-school
scholars, and one of the brightest
Jewels that adorned the Sisterhood of
Kings Daughters to which
she gave a place of unusual
warmth in her affections, ever manifest-
In her attachment to Its principles
and to its members that freshness
enthusiastic which so strikingly
characterized her devotion to the
School and to the Sisterhood of which
she was a member and her in test in
all the enterprises and good works
contemplated by the same. Even in
her last Illness in her moments of deli-
she spoke of one of Its unfinished
works, expressing the hope to see it
completed.
But she is gone, and we can only
mourn her loss, and Indulge the hope
that our loss is her eternal gain.
We've buried her in sunshine,
Her soul has flown.
To that fair land whose strand
No winds of winter moan.
heights, purer delights
Than mortal tongue can tell;
So we'll bury her in God's sunshine,
Near the church she loved so well.
Bury her in the sunshine,
Bring forth the rarest flowers,
In love to rest, above the breast
Of this i hope of ours.
Let not the strife and pain of life,
One ray of joy dispel;
And we'll bury her in the sunshine,
By the church she loved -o well.
Resolved 1st That in the death of
our Sister our Fraternity has lost one
of its roost worthy and devoted
2nd. That we will ever cherish her
memory and emulate her many Virtues.
3rd. That we tender the bereaved
family our sincere and heartfelt
4th. That a copy of this memorial
and resolutions be sent to the family.
5th. That the Greenville Reflector
and Mission Herald be requested to
publish these proceedings.
1893. 1896.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Is offering to the good people of Pitt and surrounding counties the largest stock of
Mil Hat mi
-that was ever offered before and------
a Cash Saving
To the Consumer of from to per cent, on every article purchased.
At Prices Which
DRESS GOODS
DRESS
In our DRESS GOODS DEPARTMENT an showing all the In DRESS TRIMMINGS we are showing THE LARGEST
latest and at prices that must cause THE GREATEST SENSATION STOCK and all the LATEST STYLES. They are beauties. Come
ever known in this branch of our business. take a look, no trouble to show them.
V At r prices am
idly .- . China Silk,
Printed India Silk, Black Silk, Novelty Silk,
Silk, Silks.
Read this List of Bargains and come and see them
Gent's Fur fishing Goods.
Linens. Grandest display of s
All Linen worth Collars and Ties ever
cents before shown in any southern
city or town at prices which
Fine Damask Towels from up defy competition.
Fine Damask Table Cloths Mens White Pique, all prices.
prices. I Mens All-Wool Linen, all price.
The above stock of Linens must Mens Stock
. , . Drawers,
be sold if low prices cut any Merino Shirts
Mens Night S halt cost.
Hats am Gaps.
Boys Hats from up. worth
Miscellaneous.
and
Pants all grades prices.
Corsets from cents up.
0-B Corsets a specialty.
Buttons from dozen and up.
Latest styles Fedora and Al 10-4 Sheeting Bleached and
pine Hats. , , ,, . , ,,
I I Brown Sheeting all prices.
Come and see our Great Standard Black Cali-
r cents worth and
Hilts- Standard Calicoes cents, worth
and Sc, our cents.
No trouble to show Goods but a pleasure
Yours anxious to please,
O. T.
Shoe Department.
THING l
14,378.50 STOCK.
Total valuation,
Dissolution Notice.
The heretofore exist-
B. W. Royster, of Green-
ville, N. and J. S. Gorman
of Richmond. Va., under the
style of K. W. Royster Co., u
this day by mutual consent.
J. N. Gorman A Co. assuming all
liabilities of said and all amounts
due said Arm to be paid to J. f.
man Co. This 25th day of
1893. r
R. W.
J. K. CO.
SHOES.
new
Clothing.
Pieces of
New
Dress Good.
and intact
NEW
AH CHEAP
AT
C T AGENT FOR E. P. REED AND
ZIEGLER FINE SHOES. PAIR WAS- Boys Wool Suits for cents Worth
RENTED AS REPRESENTED.
Boys Jersey Suits, all styles and prices.
We quote a few prices of Solid Leather Shoes.
Solid Leather Shoes from cents
Womens Solid Leather Button Shoes up.
Mens Solid Leather Sunday Shoes up.
Boys Prices-
Mens prices.
Baby Shoes stock too large to quote Come and get mean.
Mens Solid Leather Boots Pair- Best and cheapest ever
offered.
Boys School Suits, Long Pants, from up. Worth
Mens Wool Suit 92.08
.
IN MENS FINE CLOTHING WE ARE SHOWING ALL
I THE LATEST FALL EFFECTS. MEN AND YOUTHS
a LONG CUT SACK II SINGLE DOUBLE BREASTED-
No more goods will be shown in front of
my store. Look at the show windows for
prices. All the latest novelties of the season.
Counter.
PANTS DEPARTMENTS-
Boys Pants from cents up, worth cents.
Mens Fine Pants from cents up, worth f 1-40.
Dozen
HOSIERY. You can get anything you want in this lot and at
prices.
,.
CARPETS AND RUGS-
and Complete
TRUNKS AND VALISES-
Come see them, all PIS s and
prices.
GINGHAMS.
stock and prices marked
down. Small and large checks.
TICKINGS.
For Feathers and Mattresses.
Big bargains.
LANG'S
It
Don't forget the name and place. Yours anxious to please,
C. T





VICTOR
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT
THE SEA SERPENT.
O. L.
LOCAL
AND
JOTTINGS.
TOBACCO
With the only complete bicycle plant in the world,
every part of the machine is made from A to Z, is it
any wonder that Victor Bicycles are acknowledged leaders
There's no bicycle like a Victor, and no plant so grandly
complete as the one devoted exclusively to the manufacture
of this king of wheels.
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON, WASHINGTON, DENVER, FRANCISCO.
R. W. ROYSTER CO.
N. C.
Mr. Frank Hodges is back from
I rip to Tarboro Rocky
Mount.
Cooper, at Henderson, pays
. you for your tobacco in currency
or his cheek as you may desire.
EASTERN CAROLINA TOBACCO.
Greenville the Central and
Market of the East.
Life, with its a id
rows sometimes weigh so heavy
upon human heart that it
causes us
makes us feel that after all there
is not enough in life that is worth
the living. The few of
fleeting happiness that is a cord-
ed to the ordinary man an I
sparkling rays of joy that illumine
cotton and are not getting much j the average path of life are so
tobacco ready for the market, deeply buried in and
nevertheless, the Greenville mar-1 by cares and heart
Mr- Pat Gorman, of Richmond,
H- P- of Henderson, were
visitors to our market this week.
The farmers are busy picking
It Proved to Be a Novel Floating Ad-
It was Lou who saw it
Away off toward the horizon she
noticed something shiny rising and
, , , falling with the waves. There was
tobacco department in the , v
, . a spot of this shiny something hero
Reflector and through it he and in a it
has worked hard to teach the j came to her that it looked like
j planters of th East the secret of scales, and she
growing tine tobacco.
Mr. Joyner begins tho new to- j Then the others tn the boot looked
, I at it, the conclusion was
year with one of best that a veritable reptile of the
ocean was in sight.
The men were for rowing nearer,
to get a good view of it, but the girls
declared they would die of fright if
they weren't taken back to the hotel
at once. That is, all but Lou. Lou
wanted to the serpent at closer
quarters, and finally the rest said
almost to and equipped warehouses in the
State. By hard work he has in-
strong buyers to locate at
Greenville who will pay the plant-
outside prices for their leaf.
If there is to be any reward for
hard work unselfish effort in
is getting her full aches that each and every human
being should feel it his moral and
Try Cooper, at Henderson, with j to cast
some lino white tobacco and he
B U ON
Reference type samples furnished on application.
J. S. JENKINS CO.
LEAF
AC-GO BROKERS
Greenville, N. O.
Ample Facilities for Large Stock.
ON EXCLUSIVELY. ,
Tyson A Raul. Canker, Tobacco Board of Trade, Greenville
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
To my Friends and Customer.- of and adjoining
I wish to say that I have made Special preparation in preparing S
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving you HOGSHEADS with inside dressed
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when peeking.
Also I have made special arrangement to me best split Hoops male from
OaK. Tie special advantage I have in cutting my own timber places me in a
to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your Interest use Hogsheads and you can And them at any time
either at my factory or at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C.
will please you. Send your to
where you can get the cash
for it. Cooper is always
We are looking for several new
buyers in the next days. Let
them come, we have a hearty
come for all, and unless the
Greenville market goes back on
its past record, will give them an
opportunity of seeing and buying
some good tobacco.
Cooper's Warehouse, at Hen-
N. C, has been making
the past week, fine sales of and miserably
bright tobacco. All bright to- j when at office we
free from green is selling found Tobacco
at Cooper's fully as well as at this I on looking through its
date la it year. I found the following kind
and generous words from the pen
of its gifted editor, Mr. H. E-
man. The article speaks well for
our section of the State and as to
as many
sunny rays in the path of others
i as possible-
Frequently we see people car-
the frown of on ac-
count of business or other troubles
and then instead of wounding the
already aching heart and heavy
brow kind words should be used
and encouragement given which
throws a different light on every-
thing makes the sky of life
less cloudy and its trials less
heavy. Only a few evenings ago
after a big day's work on a heavy
sale and heavy purchase we were
plodding our way homeward,
the planters behalf then the plant-1 willing to go nearer, If the
of the E isl should soil their , row back the
T minute told them to. Accord-
Mr. Joyner. He can j the w was headed
assure them outside prices on all j the monster, and three pairs of oars
And Tinned Trimmings for Houses a
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything tin
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways. o
any kind, including Piazza Balling, and would be pleased to name you prices on
an thing in the above upon application.
REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you for past patronage, I am willing to
strive to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give me a trial before
arranging elsewhere. Respectfully.
COX, Winterville, N. C
of bright tobacco.
There is more tobacco damaged
than we have ever known. We
have heard it estimated that the
wet spell which have just had
with the storm which receded it
caused a loss of five thousand
dollars to the farmers of this
county. A fact which we very
much deplore, knowing, as we do,
that the farmers are feeling the
hard times as much, if not more
than any other class.
Mr. J. S. Jenkins who for the
past week has been on the
North Carolina and Virginia
markets has returned and reports
only a gradual easing up of
money matters. He says tobacco
is higher on the Eastern Carolina
markets any of the old es-
ones. Mr. says
he has good orders for this mar-
to commence about Oct. 1st,
and that it is the case everywhere
that factories are not placing
their orders before October and
November.
-Ma of-
CARTS DRAYS
We are glad that the business
men are taking an interest in the
market and that they have only
words of praise for it. Of course
there are some who as yet, are
not with us. Stop gentlemen,
take one average for the entire
break day after clay and compare
them with any market either in
this State or it does
not equal any, then we are willing
to acknowledge the fact We do not
intend to take a in each man sec-
them a big price and make
the balance of our friends pay for
for it as some markets do. Hon-
fair dealing with equal
justice to all is tho motto of the
Greenville
My Factory U well equipped with the best Mechanics, ally put up nothing
first-class work. We keep up with the times and the improved styles
Best material used In all work. All styles of are you can select from
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Horn, King
We also keep on hand a full line of Ready Made Harness Whips which we
ell at the lowest, rates. B Special attention given to repairing.
Greenville, N. C.
PAINT
SOLD UNDER GUARANTEE.
YOUNG-
Sole Agents,
GREENVILLE, M C.
DAVIS MILITARY SCHOOL
MEN.
A for
hoc i . for in
i Scientific
College Department,
i cal Counts for Yuan Hen
to ruction in
for family an
Health, C m- I;
in Music Art.
at low rat.-s. Write Ir I
full
Y SCHOOL, .
REAR
mi mu
PARKER'S
m HAIR BALSAM
tho hair.
to
to Color.
Cum
In reference to the general
that went forth last week
that the bottom had dropped out
of the tobacco market we have
this to v Prices are some lower
than prevailed last week for the
reason that only damaged tobacco
has been offered. The same con-
prevails on every market,
buyers will not pay as much for ,
damaged stock as for good, that had
is only natural. Good tobaccos
when offered have been selling at
satisfactory prices. Most plant-
who have good stock are hold-
waiting for their neighbors
to sell, they offer only injured to-
and report prices low, con-
the one who has good
tobacco is afraid to offer it, think-
of course his neighbor sold
good tobacco. The recent rainy
spell caused considerable tobacco
to damage, especially where it
was not carefully watched. We
hear similar reports of low
prices from neighboring markets.
Greenville is all right as a
co market, having a good corps of
active buyers, we are sure the
here can and will
get you as much for all grades of
your tobacco as any market.
Those who have tried shipping,
seem convinced and are now
offering in our home market. We
hope for still higher prices,
on the brighter grades,
see no reason why they should
not go higher, only the scarcity
of money. We look for good
prices this week for we hope most
of the damaged stock has been
disposed of.
his personal references to us we
want to say that it made us feel
good though a great deal of it we
expect is unmerited- It threw a
different light on the warehouse
business altogether and makes us
feel that there is no obstacle too
difficult to surmount if we can
only get the backing of the east-
tobacco
tobacco growing was
first commenced in the Eastern
counties of the State old heads
remarked that tobacco
would never grow east of Raleigh
and Warrenton. But the heads
that wagged were mistaken, for
the golden weed has gradually
gone Eastward for four years and
is now a great industry in East-
Carolina.
And not only this but some of
the finest leaf which the trade now
gets comes from this once
section. The leaf grown in
the Eastern counties is brighter
and silkier that which grows
farther up the State and it is now
a well known fact that the choicest
of bright wrappers and cutters
now come from the tobacco fields
in Eastern Carolina. The great
factories of the West are now be-
ginning to look to that section for
the best wrappers for navy goods,
while the great cigarette concerns
of the country go there to get
their best cutters.
In the heart of this great bright
tobacco producing section is
Greenville which is destined to
be the leading market of East.
Greenville is the most Eastern of
all the North Carolina markets
and for this reason, if for no
she will be the leader. Wilson
is miles away and Rocky
Mount the same distance and
there is no competing market be-
it is but natural to
see that Greenville will become in
tobacco selling in Eastern Caro-
what Danville is to South-
side Virginia. Rich tobacco
lands surround Greenville on
The production of
the weed is increasing rapidly
and more than this the planters
in that section have a strong love
for their home market. They are
as much interested in the up-
building of a great market in
their own section as are the ware-
house people themselves and it is
but safe to say that the planters
of Pitt and the surrounding
ties will see that their tobacco
crops are sold at home. If a
home market is built up their to-
will naturally bring them
money and in the effort to
build up Greenville the planters
of the East are helping them-
selves.
Among the of
the East there is no one who de-
serves more credit than does Mr.
O. L. Joyner, of Greenville, owner
and proprietor of the Eastern To-
Warehouse. Though Mr.
Joyner is the youngest warehouse-
man in the State he is one of the
most enterprising and wide-awake.
He is a type of the new South i
hustler who knows no such word
as fail and who is a credit to
grades sold, as well as the most
clever and gentlemanly treatment.
It is perhaps but just to Mr-
Joyner to say that he has done as
much or more tor the
of the Greenville market during
the past two or three years than
any warehouseman in any of the
Eastern markets has done- He
has over the tobacco
counties of the Eastern Belt and
personally inspected the lands of
the planters and given much val-
advice about tobacco plant-
and tobacco curing. In
Greenville he has been active in
having leaf factories built and in
securing good orders for that
market from some of the largest
firms the country. All this
work has been cheerfully done,
because Mr. Joyner has pitched
his tent and is determined to
stand by the Greenville market
through thick and thin. But the
fruit of his work is clearly seen in
the largely increased sales. This
year the loose sales of leaf in
Greenville have increased over
one million pounds over last year
and the coming tobacco year is
expected to make a still larger in-
crease- For the of a
wide awake tobacco market in
their midst the farmers of the
East are due Mr. 0- L- Joyner a
lasting debt of gratitude-
Notice.
Of the Incorporation of The Green-
ville Tobacco Board of Trade.
C Before
County, i Superior Court.
Notice is given that I have
this day issued letters declaring O. L.
Joyner, J. S. Jenkins, R. W.
W. V. Brogden, J. W. Gorman, G. F.
Evans and S. T, White, their associates
and successors, a corporation under the
name and style of The Greenville To-
Board of Trade, fr the purpose
set forth in the articles of
and plan of incorporation which have
been died and recorded in the office of
the Clew of the Superior Court of
Pitt county, with all the rights powers
and conferred by chapter
sixteen of the Code of North Caro-
and the laws thereto.
The business proposed by said corpora-
is to encourage, promote
late the sale of leaf tobacco trade
therein in the town of
The place of business of said corpora-
is in the town of Greenville, N. C.
The duration of the said corporation
to be thirty years,
This the 6th day of September 1803.
K. A,
Superior Court.
sent it merrily over the waves. All
eyes except those of the oarsmen
were directed upon the serpent,
which did not seem to change its
position, but lay lazily on the water,
the tops of its coils appearing more
or less distinct as the waves rose
and fell around it.
let's go any
pleaded one of girls. might
chose
replied Lou, aren't
half near enough yet. Think what
a nice story we'll have to toll when
we get back to the
we ever do get added
the other, ruefully.
The oarsmen kept on their course,
resting occasionally to gaze at tho
strange animal, and wonder if it
was safe to go nearer. The creature
was from twenty to fifty feet long,
according to tho different estimates
of tho observers, and might be a
dangerous customer to encounter at
close quarters. Still the explorers
kept on, and presently Lou
can its mouth. It's wide
Then the others could see its
mouth, and a savage-looking mouth
it was; something like a crocodile's,
with jaws wide apart.
believe it's said Lou.
doesn't move its head a particle,
but just seems to be floating on the
waves with its mouth wide
it's dead it's safe
said one of the oarsmen. any
rate, I'm not going back now till I've
had a closer
They were approaching the
rapidly now, and presently Lou
burst into a hearty laugh.
what's
she giggled, sea
serpent's made of tin, in its
open jaws is a painted sign which
Lung's Liver
Then we turned about and went
back to the Life.
A Noted London Monument.
The monument erected in London
between 1677 to recall the
great fire was original with Sir
Christopher Wren, but was not car-
out according to his intention.
He proposed that bronze flames
should issue from the loopholes of
the shaft and that the top should
carry a phoenix to represent London
risen from its own ashes. Sir Chris-
gave up the phoenix because
he feared the pressure of the wind on
its outstretched wings, and argued
that the meaning of the emblem
would be lost at so great a height.
He then proposed a colossal statue of
Charles II. for the crowning piece,
and found that monarch by no means
averse. For some reason the plan
was changed and a bronze vase from
which bronze flames issue was hoisted
to the perilous height.
Metal for Bridge.
Another most valuable series of
investigations in regard to the
metal best adapted for the
of bridges has been made by
the Austrian Society of Engineers.
Some two hundred and sixteen
mechanical tests were made by the
committee having the matter in
hand to determine the quality of
wrought iron, of basic, Bessemer
and basic open-hearth steel, the con-
being that the latter excels
all the others in resistance to me-
attack and distortion.
What's in a Name.
Great beats all how
every fool that can't do anything
else thinks he can write Now this
story I Silly, weak, utterly point-
less and without meaning. Send it
back and tell the writer to go and
saw wood for a living. Such stuff
makes me tired I
sir, that story is by
the great writer N. Large Think-
tank I
Great I
Send him a check immediately and
write out a lot of big display ads
announcing that this magazine will
next week give its readers the
greatest treat of the year. A mag-
story,
. thrilling, of breath-
,, . , . . , , less interest, full of pith, originality
Greenville and to the tobacco and point, by the world-famed
N.
The Consumptive and Feeble n k
Tonic.
ml Jot k L
tor can for
v. lib,
WOK
and tube
WU IRON BITTERS.
AU per bottle.
I red Una on wrapper
trade-mart i
trade of the East. Mr. Joyner has
worked continuously for the build-
of the Greenville market
for over two and has spent
much money in the good cause.
For some time he has edited a
N. Large Esq.,
written in that great writer's hap-
vein. And don't fail to again
call attention to the fact that this
periodical spares no expense in pro-
its readers with the finest
literary feasts
Financial Stringency.
The tramp met the business man
on the street.
me a he said,
bowing.
The business man was for going
ahead.
repeated the tramp,
I understand there is a
stringency permeating
there said the business
man, surprised at this form of
peal.
had heard said the tramp,
I disbelieved it for I have been
told that story many, many times
in my
it's true now whether you
believe it or remarked the
business I haven't a
blamed cent for
beg your bowed the
tramp, believe what you tell me
implicitly, and to show you I do, and
that I do not want your money.
shall gratefully accept your order on
tho saloon you patronize for one or
two glasses of
The business man was stumped.
he said, this dime,
and get out of tho
Free Press;
How the Brilliant Poet Was Paid for
His Satire.
The French lyric poet, Le
was a master of satire. Friends
and enemies alike dreaded his
grams. So bitter and scathing was
his wit that it required much
age to incur his dislike.
One of his literary contemporaries,
a lady, did not hesitate to rebuke
him. She, too, was a poet, and she
was indignant with him for altering
one of his odes to make the
agree with popular politics.
In this ode ho had written, refer-
ring to his benevolent
king who honors After tho
downfall of the monarchy ho read
this ode aloud to a company. When
he came to the line just quoted he
paused, hesitated, then
free people which honors
stop you arc making a
cried one of his hearers,
and she repeated tho original verse.
Her own sympathies were royalist
and she know that Le had had
a pension from the king.
Afterward Le said to
have made trouble for me. Is
this the way to treat an old friend
We have chosen each our road, and
must follow it. But need we
rel on that
The lady would not let the matter
pass so easily.
replied, we
need not quarrel. I was only help-
your memory. I saw that it
was better in your head than in
your
Le could not forgive her the
rebuke. Ho made her the subject of
mots and epigrams which
amused all Paris. She was slightly
humpbacked, and he did not spare
even her deformity. Ho wrote of
literary women with tho most cut-
ting scorn and ridicule.
She bore this calmly, though she,
too, was witty, and sometimes she
borrowed his own weapons. Some
one remarked in her presence that
Mme. de la had called La
Fontaine the and
shall we call Le who
writes nothing but
She answered
call him the
PURELY IMAGINATIVE.
Ethel Gives Valuable Information
Her Sister's Suitor.
likes you better than any
of the other men in the said
little Ethel, as she swung back and
forth in the hammock.
. glad to hear that.
some more said Willie Bird,
with pleased surprise.
said Ethel, as she
helped herself liberally. she
likes you a great deal
how do you know What
did your sister say about
she says she don't mind go-
to walk in the woods with
why should
she's afraid to go with
some of the other men. She says
they're always killing snakes, and
hates worse than any-
she,
that's why she's so down on
Jack Ford. He killed a great
black the last time she went
with him, and now can't hardly
bear the sight of
yesterday Mr. Fish took up
a stick and crept up behind a rattle-
snake that was lying on a rock and
knocked him on the head. So
she won't have anything more to do
with
Tom never kills
snakes, but he's always seeing them
and calling her attention to them.
She says she can't stand a man who
sees snakes all tho
I snakes, too, some-
said Willie Bird, doubtfully.
but Mamie doesn't mind
replied Ethel, consolingly.
says knows the makes you
sec aren't real
in Brooklyn Life.
A LITTLE WISDOM.
Some Bright Pickings from the
Daily Globe.
When you want to your best,
you are always your worst.
Being lucky consists of the con-
that there is no such thing.
There is a frightful lot of non-
sense about the best people you
know.
Many a man who thinks he has
aristocratic hay fever finds that he
has plain, common catarrh.
When a man has bad luck, his
friends think they have done their
duty when they is too
Find out what you want to do
most, and then quit trying to ac-
it, for that is the one thing
you cannot do.
It is all right to eat when you are
hungry, but if you talk when you
feel like talking, you will say some-
thing you will regret.
That which a calls her
is really what has
known all tho time, but never ad-
until she marries.
Both in Error.
. About ten years ago I
. J case of blood
I Leading physicians prescribed
after medicine, which I took
without tiny I also tried
rial and potash remedies, with
but
or r
my agony. After
Bring four years I up all remedies
S. S. After
bottles. I was entirely
and to work.
greatest medicine for
poisoning to-day
ho ,
on mil Skin mailed
Co. Atlanta,
of
Robert Lowe, the well-known Eng-
statesman, was a woman of
strong character, and she challenged
criticism in that she was in the habit
of saying whatever came into her
mind at the moment.
She had and courage, a
heart and a head, and she bore a
large part in her husband's public
life.
One repartee ascribed to her
shows that she was at least ready
with loyalty of speech. The French
ambassador one day said to her,
somewhat
know England is said to be
a land of shopkeepers. I had no
idea of finding there such great mil-
replied, people of
different countries do not understand
each other. Now I have actually
been under the impression that tho
French were a great military
Companion.
A Place for Him.
A very respectable-looking person
called at a boarding house up town
the other morning and was received
by the landlady.
you want a good, sober,
steady, industrious man to work for
his he inquired, politely.
I she answered, sharp-
you that
madam, I
got a regular job for
I ask what it is,
work isn't hard, but it will
keep you busy all the
madam, but what is
as an example to my
she snapped, and he went
Free Press.
are com-
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best
cal authorities and are
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion every-
where.
act gently
but promptly upon the liver,
stomach and intestines; cure
dyspepsia, habitual
offensive breath and head-
ache. One taken at the
first symptom of indigestion,
biliousness, dizziness, distress
after eating, or depression of
spirits, will surely and quickly
remove the whole difficulty.
may be
of nearest druggist
are easy to take,
quick to act, and
save many a doc-
tor's bilL
Wives
and Daughters
Often lose the benefit of life
assurance, taken out for their
protection, because of ill-ad-
vised investments. Again,
the intentions of the assured
sometimes fail of realization
through the prodigality of a
son to whom the
session of so much money
proves too great a temptation.
The
Equitable Life
has provided against these
contingencies by offering The
Installment Policy.
The premiums per thousand
are much less than under
older forms of insurance, and
is payable in
or annual payments, thus
comfortable income
for the beneficiary. Write to
W. J. Manager,
For me Carolina,
ROCK HILL, S. C.
OINTMENT
HARK
for Cure of all Skin Diseases
This Probation has been In use oral
fifty years, and wherever know
been in steady demand. It has been en-
by the leading physicians all over
e country, and has effected cures
all other remedies, with the
the most experienced physicians, hive
for years failed. This Ointment Is of
long; standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
its own efficacy, as but little effort has
ever been made to bring it before the
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any addles.- on receipt of One
Dollar. Sample box free. The
discount to Druggist. All Cash
promptly attended to. Address all or-
and communications to
T. F.
Sole Proprietor,
N. O
A R. It.
R.
and Schedule
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No No
April. 18th, daily Fast Mail, dally
daily ex Sun
12,30 pm pm
Ar pm pm .,
pm
Tarboro pm
Rocky Mt y m pin am
lift
Ar
TRAINS
No fl
dally ex Sun.
Ar
lit
Ar Wilson m
Ai Rocky Mont
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro p m
Daily except
Train on Scotland Neck Branch id
leaves Weldon 3.40 Halifax 4.40 p.
m., arrives Scotland Neck at p m.
Greenville p. m., Kinston-7.03
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a. m.,
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Halifax
at a. m. Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily
except Sunday.
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a. m., arrives
8.40 a. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m. 6.00
p. arrives Washington 7.30 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro. N C, via
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, P M. Sunday no P M,
Plymouth p. m., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
a. m., Sunday 10.00 a.
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.25 AM
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
and Fayetteville Branch leave Fayette-
ville a m, arrive Rowland p m.
Returning leave Rowland p m,
arrive Fayetteville p m. Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, A M
N C, AM. Re
retuning laves C All
arrive Goldsboro. NO A M.
Train
at P M, arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
Spring Hope A M, Nashville
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave
Latta 7.30 p. m., arrive Dunbar 8.40 p.
in. Returning leave Dunbar a. m.,
arrive Latta 7.15 a. m- y except
Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except at
and M Returning
ton at A M, and cornice
at Warsaw with Nos. and
Train No. makes close connection at
Weldon for all points North daily. All
ill via Richmond, and daily except Sun-
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A
railroad Norfolk and all
points via Norfolk.
General
J. R. KENLY, Transportation act.
T.


Title
Eastern reflector, 27 September 1893
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
September 27, 1893
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17617
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