Eastern reflector, 29 August 1894






DO
NO
Thai tho place tn
Buy
BOOKS
-A
The Eastern Reflector.
IS
AT
Bookstore.
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
t Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1894.
NO.
FOR GOOD
JOB PRINTING
CALL AT
OFFICE
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY
GREENVILLE N. C.
Session Opens September 5th, 1894, Closes June, 1895.
Full of Teachers. Complete English Course. Ancient and Modern Languages.
Advantages in Music and Art. For full particulars apply to
B. GOODE, Principal-
FREE ENGLISH SCHOLARSHIP will be given two young ladies who preparing
to teach in the Public Schools of Pitt and adjoining Tuition will be required advance, but
will be refunded to the applicants who make the highest average on the regular examinations at the
close of the session. Candidates must enter not later than October
EXPENSES.
Weeks. Piano,.
MUSIC-
Primary
16-00 Vocal- Special.
Organ,.
Collegiate,.
. 1500
. 15.00
Use of Piano Organ,
hour each day,
Latin, Greek, and
man, each,
one
Ger-
Board, lights and
STATS NEWS
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest.
The Cream of the News
WHY DO
John P- Jones, colored, of
Beaufort is an aspirant for
Congress.
Col J H- Holt, of Burlington,
is to be chief marshal at the
State fair.
It is said that Halifax county
will raise enough corn
son to do two years.
The Judicial held
Weldon last week nominated
Mr. W- E. of Weldon, for
Solicitor.
Tue Southern Railway com-
bought the Western North
Carolina railway the 28th
for 500,000-
Kinston Free Press Maj. W-
J. Barrett, who lives about three
mile from Kinston, says he has
had three hogs to die with what
looked like hydrophobia last
week-
Charlotte Mr. R- H.
Flow, of Mallard Creek, has a
cow which has presented him
with four calves in months.
Mr. Flow has also raised the big-
tomato It weighed
pounds and ounces-
Weldon The State
farms this year will gather one of
the finest crops ever known on
the river lands before. Those
farms this year will not only be
self-sustaining but the State will
receive a nice profit on its in-
vestments.
Scotland Neck Em-
J- Lynch, a colored woman
years old living near the
mill, from January to Aug
yards of
cloth and worked a one horse
crop also. She was assisted by
her boy who is about years
oil.
Burlington last
Wednesday, while a storm was
raging in Chatham county near
the Alamance line, a tree was
across the wagon of Mr.
killing him and
one of his and dangerously
one of his sous and
other mule-
a Woman.
It pleases her to called a
sensible little
It pleases her to be called a
well dressed woman.
It pleases her to be told that
sue is fascinating.
It to be told that
she improves a man by her com
It pleases her to be love and ad-
mired by a who ts strong
enough to rule and subdue her
and his way her way. To
her an take care of her.
Philadelphia Mu-n-; end Drama-
Now is my soul troubled; and
what shall I say Father save
me from this hour; but for this
cause came this hour
Father, glorify thy name- Then
came there a voice from heaven,
saying, I have both glorified it,
and will glorify it
xii
There is a wonderful bit of
philosophy is these words. They
open up to our astonished vision
a long of ideas which we
seldom We
to the mountain's summit and get
a glimpse of the world from
entirely new standpoint. We are
amazed and startled, for Christ
practically commands us to sac-
ourselves in order to attain
perfection.
You are a block of rough mar-
You may sometime come to
be a statue of splendid
but you must be
and hammered before that con-
summation can be reached.
Grief, struggle, disappointment,
the whole range of sad
which fill life so full, are the
tools with which the Great Artist
will change your shape by slow
and convert you from a
mere block to a thing of beauty.
You may not enjoy the process
by which you made to as-
a new form, and the ham-
mer of God seems at times mer-
in its blows, but every
stroke of the Artist's arm has a
distinct purpose and in the
Artists heart is an ideal which.
He if, compelling you to
ideal which you will
most certainly when He
has fully accomplished His task.
You stand face to face with a
most sorrow. Your
head is bowed, your very soul
suffers a wrench. But you re-
facts ; j broad
enough and thoughtful enough
to sec that there is a meaning in
it all. Or if your eyes are so
blinded with tears that you may
not see, yon still have a devout
faith that His way is better than
your way, and hat submission,
quiet, serene, trustful, is the
noblest attitude your soul can as-
You that the
Artist has no other purpose than
to convert the rough block of
marble into a beautiful statue,
that He takes no pleasure in
using the hammer, and is eel gov-
by but is working
with a plan in His mind
-Now, what w ill you say Your
first is found the
text, soul is That
is inevitable- You are human
cannot help shrinking from pain.
He does not to do
wise, but he does wish you to
submit, even though it be with a
groan or a of agony- Will
you. dare you say, mo
from this hoar What would
become of the block
if it should pray the Artist
to use the chisel or the ham-
heed the prayer lay his tools
aside, what then If you
your body some malignant
we cannot cry,
save me from this but
must needs pray, glorify
Thy angels will
come from the upper air and
minister to York
Herald.
In Politics.
PAY YOUR LITTLE BILLS.
The Baltimore Sun Suggests a Rem-
for Hard Times.
A most affective way to relieve
financial stringency is to keep
money in circulation by the pay-
of To as
THE CRIMES OF ALCOHOL.
There is a growing tendency
among physicians to ascribe
to ask for
credit. It is wise to pay bills at
short intervals for many reasons.
The creditor may have a great
number of small bills outstanding
seriously embarrassed
by their The long-
a bill unpaid the hard-
it is to pay. To the man in
receipt of an income which is no
more than his necessary ex-
require, it may be easy to
pay a small bill but if he allows
it to unpaid, other bills may
be added to it and the aggregate
be a serious burden.
A fails to pay what he owes to
B and the is thereby
t Suppose the Artist should
in your body some
growth, will you beseech the
to save you from the
of the knife would he
be your friend if he replaced that
its case and left you to
your fate
One must a
spiritual attitude to be able
to say to the artist, what you
will, only see to it that when your
task is finished I leave the work
shop a statue of noble
or to the surgeon,
at the thoughts of what you
are about to do, but you must
not heed my cry, and your hand
must do its work with
steadiness and relentless
But that must be the at-
of every great soul which
desires perfection and in-
stead of comfort and ease.
The hardest but the best thing
to say is in the time of
and bereavement. With
the conviction that He is in very
reality your Father well fixed in
your mind, and the reposeful con-
in your heart that
your suffering is your
; that souls which never
experienced agony are not equal
to souls that have passed hours
in ; that climbing
with weariness is better than
on the level plain of
nous good fortune, you are en-
to say as the master did
pray you not to consider my
wishes, but to do what is best,
though it cost me dear. Make
me all I be, even though I
Then you see things as
God sees them. Then the pa-
side of life, the side that is
clouded, has a rich significance.
You are forced to look up for
help, and looking up brings you
that mysterious peace that pass-
understanding
It cannot be that we are
ed wounded and bruised for
nothing-
If the stars in their courses are
obedient to a physical law, then
behind the stars is Some One who
made the law. If our days and
years are marked by sighs and
tears, by death that follows on
the heels of birth, by graves
which are within arm's reach of
cradles, by disappointments which
cannot by any be avoid-
ed, then these things must all be
by a spiritual law, and
behind the law Some One
who ordained them for our good,
Either this is true or the universe
is a cruel and inexplicable
But it is true. Men never see
the heaven above them, except
when their eyes are wet. Suffer-
are the hammer and the
chisels ; God is the artist who re-
the possibilities that are
hidden within us; we are the
blocks of marble, and if we are
conscious of what re may be-
The average Populist is by circumstances
if not amusing when ho at-
tempts to assume the duties of a
politician and conduct a
simply absurdly
ridiculous. Two instances of this
have recently come to
our notice.
The chairman of the Populist
Executive committee Beaufort
county has called a to
meet in Washington, N- C-, on
September 4th, the purpose
of nominating
ticket From this it would
rally inferred that the Populists
in that vicinity are dissatisfied
with tho present Populist State
ticket and propose to put another
in the field. This will give them
two State tickets and
for the members of
that party to decide will be
whether will support the
Beaufort State ticket or
the one recently nominated in
Raleigh.
Another very amusing instance
of simplicity occurs in
a circular letter just issued,
a notice of a joint debate be
Hon. C- M- Cook Capt.
Buck at Smithfield on
August 28th- The letter refers
to Capt. Cooke as tho Con
from this and
is signed by Mr. Creech, chair-
man of the Populist Executive
Committee.
Though this is a prophecy
which will be proved to be
November, by a handsome
majority, yet it is just a little
amusing to see a Populist, who
usually claims the whole earth,
ad mitt it thus early in the
campaign, and he chairman of an
executive committee at that.
But he is perhaps level
headed than he is getting credit
for and is only acting the
scriptural injunction that an hon-
est confession is good for tho
soul. At any rate Mr. Cooke
will be the next Congressman
from this News
and Observer.
naught but to the use of
Dr. R. Drysdale con-
tributes an article to tho Echo of
London, showing that on the
continent there is a wave of
you is always best, but some ; cal opinion in favor of total
persons occasionally of healthy persons from
drinks- He quotes from
article by Dr. E. of
the following from
which show the of
cal opinion-
1803 one in seventeen deaths
which occurred in Switzerland
were ascribed to habits
women
Dr. says that eighth
of the insane public asylums
were sent there from
tho Lunatic Asylum
one-fourth of the cases were as-
to drink.
Dr. Bier, a well known writer
on German prisons, alleges that
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
PURE
TO SETTLE
IN NORTH
CARO-
able to pay debt ho owes Pr of -e prisoners were
and so on. By prompt payments a
small sum of money be made
to cancel a large sum of indebted-
A ten dollar bill, probably
often pays debts amounting to a
hundred dollars of a week.
Tho most excuse heard
for the non-payment of bills by
persons who are asked to make
payment is that they can collect
no money. In most
this excuse is an honest
one, and a little reflection will
convince any man of the wisdom
of thus keeping money
The Quickest on Record After MI.
of
the tariff
previous
e same task
Will Electricity Dethrone Steam
There is no telling what
may yet accomplish, and
it is therefore interesting to fol-
low its developments in other
countries.
The Albany Argus predicts
that within six years the death-
knell of steam as a motive power
will be sounded. It believes that
the storage battery problem is
about solved, and this leads The
New York Press to say
seen tho
sudden development of the idea
of generating electricity cheaply
by water power and it
long economically by
wire. Various experiments in
Europe in the last half dozen
years, notably the transmission
of electrical power from to
Rome, have proved the feasibility
of the idea.
The harnessing of the
tails for this purpose has attracted
extraordinary and
rightly, for it marked the begin-
of tho new era of electricity,
but nearly a dozen other
can companies have quietly be-
gun work in the same direction in
the past twelve months, and the
total amount of horse-power they
are promising to supply in the
form of electricity as soon as
there is a demand for it is rough-
estimated at That
figure takes on amazing
when one stops to reflect
that the total amount of steam
horse power in use in the United
States at the present time is be-
tween and
It has been proved that the
electricity be generated by
water power and transmitted to a
distance of at least eighteen miles
cheaper than steam can be pro
on the spot The
are inclined to think the
loss of electricity in transmission
to a distance of, perhaps,
of miles can be sufficiently
reduced by processes now ready
for use to keep the cost below
of steam.
This notwithstanding
all impressions t- the contrary,
true hug really dispose
more quickly th ti
Congress that had
to perform.
Morrill was reported
to the House March
passed that body tho following
but did not pass the Senate
until February 1861, and was
finally approved March 1861,
just before tho expiration of the
Congress that enacted it-
The tariff of 1883 was reported
in the House in March, 1882, and
passed in June, but remained in
the Senate till February 1883,
and was approved March 3rd, the
day before the expiration of that
Congress.
The tariff was not so
but it was
longer before the committee on
ways and moans, not being re-
ported in the House till April
1890. It passed the Senate in
September, and was approved
October 1890, a month before
the of a new Congress-
The Wilson tariff was reported
in the House December 1893 ;
passed that body February 1st,
passed the Senate July and
passed finally August 1894.
The time that elapsed between
the of this Congress and
the enactment of the tariff is less
than in former
Times.
intemperate.
Mr- Otto Lang found that
per of the crimes committed
in were due to drink-
Professor
says that alcohol has an evil in-
the causation of i
diseases, and is the
of dyspepsia in adults
The noted professors of
Gale
and
in Geneva, total ab-
from alcohol.
Mr. found that barrow
who avoided alcohol could
j do as much work eight am. a
half hours as non-abstainers
j could do ten hours- Swiss
I contractors the same true
I among Italian workmen-Tho
Methodist Recorder,
Playing Burglar not so Funny,
Our old colored friend, Bill
Woods, has about decided not to
play burglar right soon again.
His experience last week will do
him for a season. The other
night, Bill home from work
late at night. He took a notion
to have some fun out of his wife
by playing burglar. He crawled
up to the house pretended to
be trying to break whoa tho
old picked up an iron
wedge let drive at him, hit-
ting him on the head and knock-
him down, senseless.
He had of mind enough,
however, to squeal out forthwith
and immediately to let his wife
know who he was- Bill's head is
about well now, and he has de-
to let the burglar
Chronicle-
Some Strike Figures.
A careful compilation of
losses growing out of the recent
strike by
shows tho amount to be
distributed as follows
United States Government
000,000-
Railroad earnings in Chicago
Railroad earnings, other points
Destruction railroad property
Railroad wages
Loss in exports
Loss on fruit crops
Loss to manufacturing
Loss to
Loss to on quick
goods
Total
From the it will be seen
that the direct losses to the labor-
men is The loss
to tho railway companies is
and is set
down as the loss to the general
public, which had nothing what-
ever to do with the strike- These
are great sums to pay for the
mistakes of a few people, and
demonstrates that strikes do not
pay- The lesson is one which
may be studied with profit.
A dispatch to the Now York
Evening Post from Raleigh, N-
C-, says that a great influx of
Westerners is looked for in North
Carolina during the next
months. It says that H- H.
of Kearney, Neb., has just
arrived at Raleigh as the advance
agent of a large colony of Ne-
who intend coming
the fall, most of whom will follow
the dairy These
say it is too cold out there,
and that they have become
that they can do better in tho
South.
George K. Sherwood, of
Neb-, writes to tho North
Carolina Commissioner of
culture have no idea of
the number of farmers this soc-
who decided to go
South. had a failure of
crops out here for three years in
succession, the failure this
year is If our West-
farmers could buy of
your Southern farms on easy
payments, you would be surprised
at tho large number that would
North like Virginia,
is an inviting field to better their
condition. Land is plentiful, the
soil fertile, climate good Los
and conservatism of the
people
Virginian-
As it Now Is,
It was considered patriot-
ism to live for one's country
later it was considered patriotism-
to die for one's country ; but now
it is considered patriotism to live
upon one's country.
that
large increase
A medical writer suggests
the admittedly
crimes of violence and in suicides
the past two months has been due
to the fact that the scarcity and
of fruit in our markets
have compelled more flesh eating
than usual. This assumes, of
course, that animal food
late the passions and arouses the
latent beast mankind
There is a very largo territory
in the northern part of
which has never been explored
was supposed to be
uninhabitable wilderness. A
young Scotchman who has recent-
traveled through it with an In-
that it abounds
fine timber, and that there are
great tracts of splendid farming
Star.
Swallowed a Live Pike.
A fish story comes from Au
but we it from a
young man whose reputation for
truth has never to our knowledge
been questioned. He tolls, upon
the authority of a second party,
that some time a
Dismal caught a red tin about
five inches long, and offered to
wager that he could swallow the
pike alive, fins, scales and all.
The wager was accepted and
the pike disappeared down
the mouth. The wage
won was an taking
it up the winner walked away
making a joyful noise upon it,
while the expiring pike fluttered
in the last agonies of death in his
Democrat.
How's This.
We offer One Hundred Dollars Be-
Ward for any case of Catarrh that
be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure.
V. J. A Co., O.
We the undersigned have known F.
for the last years, and be-
him perfectly honorable in nil
business transactions and financially
able to carry out any obligation made
by their firm.
West Wholesale Druggist,
Toledo, O-
W aiding, Marvin, Whole-
sale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter-
acting directly upon the blood
and mucous surfaces the
Price per Sold by all
Druggists. Testimonial tree.
-Reduced pi ices in-
Watch Repairing
Have your Watches Cleaned at
cents. Wain Springs cents, all other
i work as cheap In
Call on at corner store near post
V.
Watchmaker A Jeweler,
Greenville, X. C.
Free Pills.
Send your address to H. E.
Co., Chicago, and get a free sample
box Dr. King's New Life Tills. A
trial will convince you of their merits,
These pills are easy action and
particularly effective in the cure of
Constipation and Sick Headache. For
Malaria and troubles they have
been proved invaluable- They
guaranteed to be free Iran,
every his substance and
It is a significant fact that
while the New England cotton
mills are reducing the wages of
their operatives and giving as a
reason therefor the small
earned in tire past nine
mouths, tho cotton mills of the
South have been earning good
dividends at the same time in-
creasing in number and in ca
There is no talk of a re-
wages in this section
and no talk of strikes and there
never was more confidence among
our manufacturers as to the
and their ability not only to
keep their wheels
pay fair wages but to make
money- While they not
fish enough to enjoy the prospect
of the threatened protracted
strike the New England mills
they would the gainers by it-
Capitalists who have money to
invest in the cotton
business will not fail to note
the difference between the two
sections and that while- there is
trouble and unrest up there, and
com plaints of small earnings by
the manufacturers, the business
Something Curious .
By a very simple the
of night and day can be
determined at any time of the
year. All you have to do is to
multiply tho time of the
rising by two and it will you
tho length of the night- Multiply
the time of setting by two and
you got the length of tho day.
It is easily demonstrated at tho
time of the year the sun
rises sets at G o'clock and day
and night are of equal duration.
It is just as true as the days
lengthen shorten- Thus, as
winter approaches, take a day
when the sun rises at C
sets at Apply tho rule and
you have a night of hours and
a day of hours. The rule will
be found absolutely accurate at
any season of the year.
It is said that there is a post-
office for every men, women
and children in the United States,
that if the expense of carry-
the mails was paid directly by
the people pro each
would pay an average of cents
a year.
tarts
IT F. PRICK,
Land Ami
Greenville. N. C.
at the House.
kit. L. JAMES
DENTIST,
Jas. E. L. I. Moore,
Williamston. Greenville.
MOORE A
N. C
Office under Opera House. Third St.
J.
L. FLEMING,
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
N. O.
Prompt attention to business.
at Tucker old stand.
is getting a day for
lecturing in Indiana. His de-
followers are almost
near Washington.
purely vegetable. They do not weaken is running smoothly in the South
by their action, but. giving tone to j paying handsome profits on
stomach and bowels invigorate i . . f , a .
the system. Regular size per box. I investments whether large
PoW by John L. Wooten Star.
All Free.
Those who have used Dr. King's New
Discovery know its value, and those
who have not, have now the opportunity
to try it Free. Call on the advertised
Dr and get a Trial Bottle, Free.
Send your name and address to II. E.
A Co. Chicago, and get a
sample box of Dr. Kings New Life,
Pills Free, as well as a copy of Guide
to Health and Household Instructor.
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do
yen and cost you nothing at John
L. Drugstore.
JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, t.
Practice In all the courts. Collections a
J. JARVIS.
A BLOW,
L. BLOW
S-AT-L A W,
GREENVILLE,
In all the
A TYSON,
II. r.
Prompt attention given to collection
L. C. LATHS.
MARRY
SKINNER,
N. C.
HOTEL NICHOLSON,
WASHINGTON, N. C
Geo, A. Spencer, Mgr.
Special attention to Commercial Men.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N.
and Proprietor
WEDNESDAY. AUGUST 29th, 1804.
at at Greenville,
N. C as second-class mail matter.
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES.
FOB STATE
S. TATS,
of Burke County.
OUR NEXT CONGRESSMEN.
AH Name J -Work of the
Conventions Well Done.
FOR THIEF
JAMES E. SHEPHERD,
of County.
FOB ASSOCIATE
WALTER of Wake county.
JAMES C. of Cumberland.
ARMISTEAD of
FOB JUDGES
3rd JACOB- BATTLE.
4th WILLIAM R.
District, BENJAMIN- F. LONG.
9th WILLIAM N.
10th
Dist. BASCOM CARTER.
For Cong. Dist.,
WILLIAM A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort county.
For Solicitor Third Judicial District.
JOHN E. WOODARD,
of Wilson county.
DEMOCRATIC CONVENTION.
of the Democratic
party of Pitt County, for the
pose of nominating candidates
for and the various
County offices, will be held at the
Court House in Greenville on
Thursday, September 13th,
at o'clock. M-
Township meetings will be held
Saturday, September 1891, at
o'clock P. M-, at the usual places
of meeting, for the purpose of
appointing delegates to the
County Convention, for the
nation of Township Constable
and the election of five Democrats
to constitute an Executive Com-
for the township-
The several townships will be
entitled to select the following
number of delegates and the same
number of alternates to represent
them in the Convention,
to
Bethel
Carolina
Falkland
Farmville
Greenville
Swift Creek
By order of the Democratic
Executive Committee of Pitt
County- Alex. L. Blow,
R. Williams, Chairman
Secretary-
The several Township Demo
Executive Committees,
which will elected at the
on Saturday. September
8th- are requested to at the
Court House in on the
following Thursday immediately
after the adjournment of the
County Convention, for the
pose of electing a
Committee for the ensuing
two years. A full attendance is
desired- Alex. L. Blow.
Dem. Ex- Committee-
President Cleveland did not
sign the tariff bill Monday, tie
day on which the limit expired,
but allowed it to a law
without his signature.
Congressman F- A-
was on the first
lot at the second district
held Mount last
Wednesday. He has made a
good representative.
Congress was expected to ad-
yesterday, an agreement to
that effect having been made last
week between the Senate and
House- The now
return to their respective districts
and look after the campaign.
A. cotton export-
of Wilmington, have sent in-
to their agents not to
any cotton packed with side
pieces or double heading, to
give to bales weighing
lbs. or more- This is in ac-
with a rule adopted by
the Liverpool Cotton Association-
North Carolina has been ex-
fortunate this time in
her Congressional conventions.
Fortunate in the first place in the
perfect-harmony that has
from tho mountains to the
seashore, and the disposition on
the part of all candidates to sub-
ordinate personal ambition for
the interest of the party. Not a
single has adjourned
without the nominee having been-
assured in the most positive
terms that no man in tho district
should do more for his election
than the defeated candidates. We
nothing in saying that
there never was field convention
in the State, where there yore as
many good and
dates as there were last week at
Lumberton. and yet every man
comes out without even the
slightest suspicion of any unfair
many having been used, and the
body adjourned without any one
having made an enemy- This
harmony and go feeling can
not help resulting in an increased
vote for each nominee.
But we started out to write
specially about how fortunate
the State has been the selection
of men that have lived and are
living with characters that are
unsullied by oven tho scent of
scandal-
In the first district Hon. W. A-
B. Branch is the standard bearer-
He is known to all men as a man
of sterling character, free
from bad habits. He has been
faithful to every trust. He has
served his district for four years
and we defy any man to show
that he has been derelict in a
single duty. He has always
been in his place and voted right
every time.
In the second district Hon.
Fred A. Woodard has been re-
nominated. He has served his
district with marked ability and
has made a record of which any
man might be proud of his
first service Hie National Con-
In character stands
tho poor of any man, and, if re-
elected will heard from in our
legislative halls.
The third district bag placed
its banner in the hands of a new
man, Hon. Jno. G- Shaw- He is
a lawyer of marked ability, and a
man of sterling worth with a char-
by evil.
C. M. has been
chosen to lead the to
in tho fourth district, and
ho will do it, too. There is no
man in North Carolina with a
clearer record and more admirable
character than Charlie Cooke, of
Franklin county. He has held
many positions of honor
trust tho State has never
been found wanting- any
Ho is a due type of an
honorable, noble, en-
every
tho State wants to see him elected.
The fifth t made up its
mind that it did not intend to
represented any longer by a Re-
only one from the
State. To accomplish this only
thing was necessary that
was to get Hon. A- W. Graham,
of Oxford, to accent
The convention
asked him to do so, and
he consented. This gives us a
solid delegation, for Graham will
certainly hash. For
unblemished character, popular-
and ability Gus Graham
stands in tho
He comes of a noble feral-
and has freely inherited their
virtues. No man can put his
on a flaw his char-
The sixth district had so many
worthy sons that it was
to predict the
who would be the choice
The honor fell to Hon. J is. A-
Lockhart, of county- We
quote a few sentences from a
splendid editorial the Charlotte
Observer in reference to Mr. Lock-
hart- is worthy to win
would wear worthily tho highest
honor that the Democratic
of Carolina has to bestow-
He is fit to
There was a long contest in the
Congressional convention of the
sixth district which met at
last Wednesday. The
convention held an all night
ant made a nomination on
the 340th ballot. This
us of a convention at Elizabeth
City, siT years ago, when more
than four hundred ballots were
cast before a nomination was
reached- But this is a long ways
behind a Texas convention which
ha been in session at two places
and made over tour bur
ballot, and Seek a to
is a fine worker, and like those
who are to be his associates from
this State stands above reproach.
Hon. W. T Crawford is still to
represent the district- He
won an enviable reputation in the
present Congress He is quiet
and but his ability is
recognized as equal to that of any
for his years. Not less can be
said reference to his character
than has been said of the pro-
eight.
Taken all all don't be-
there is a State in this
Union that has more worthy
nominees for the lower House of
Congress than has North Caro-
If elected, and they should
be, the State's
be safe in their hands.
No will be attached to
their public no
will rest upon their private
They will live lives of
purity at Washington as they do
at home. If there is a man in
North Carolina who will not
for these men he does not love
purity of character public men-
Amis, of Oxford, has
come out as an independent
candidate for Congress
in the filth district. This makes
a fight in that district
and Graham will wipe up the
field.
Col. J. M- Winstead,
of tho Piedmont Bank at Greens-
met a horrible death in
Richmond last Thursday morn-
He was seen to fall off the
tower of the city hall, a distance
of feet, his body impaling on
some iron pickets. he
jumped off with suicidal intent or
fell off accidentally will never be
known positively, though several
explanations have been advanced
on both shies.
The cotton grower is in a
lemma to know just how to get
his staple ready for market this
season. The New England millers
tell him not to put sugar sacks on
it but cover his bales with jute
bagging only. Then comes the
New York Cotton Exchange and
tells him sugar sacks just as
good as anything use them
if he wants to. He is advised by
writers in agricultural papers that
great loss arises from
of the bale exposed, that it
should be put small bales,
closely with an increased
number of ties. On tho of
this the Liverpool Cotton
sends him word to make
less than pound bales
use no side strips and put on as
little bagging as possible- With
so much advice tho farmer may
go on id the old way bale
his cotton to suit himself.
A pretty spectacle s
from Wake county. The
held their- convention last
Saturday. was n caucus
with a from he
in which it agreed that
the latter should name the
dates for Senator, member of
tho Legislature half of the
officers. Some
cans opposed this, saying it was
simply done to get office. A
called on S. Otho Wilson, the
Populist and in answer
to a direct question if the
lists would support a
Wilson said they would carry
out their agreement and support
any man put by the
cans, provided the Republicans
kept their part of the agreement.
Thereupon the Republicans
James H. Young, colored,
as one of the Legislative
dates Wilson has pledged the
Populists to vote for him. If that
is the order of fusion, watch out
for tho kind of ticket they put up
in Pitt county.
OUR NATIONAL CAPITOL.
Income Tax. News and Observer
Stealing our Stuff. Other
Points of Interest.
Washing i ox, D. C, Aug 27th
obstacle presents it-
self to tho tinkers. The
Senate bill includes the income
. which will yield the Govern
justice about
the Supreme Court right now. fr collecting tho tax has
Morally ho is as white as the not been supplied however, and
driven snow. No scandal sullies
his name, lie is as much a gen
as any man that
There was no need for a change
in the seventh district, for no
State in this Union has a better
representative than Hon. John S-
Henderson. No man who has
been in tho House of
from this State for the last
century has a better record than
he has. It would have been a
misfortune not only to North
Carolina but to the United States
for him not to have
In character, ability
statesmanship lie has no superior
among us.
eighth strict tried Hon.
II- Driver, last
Dan
train it said to him ; .
to meet at another place in th do as y, done,
of arriving at a nomination, land all will well- He- Sower tad in thirty-five
the Secretary of the
asks for with which he
can employ the necessary tax
collectors.
Roy- Gudger who
was for tho Collector-
ship of the N. C district
has been given position in the
department of Justice by Senator
Ransom, worth about
Next time we will probably be
informed that Senator Ransom
has secured a big foreign
for Maj. E. J, Hale-
This will reward a most
gentleman and heal an
other breach. Maj. Hale has
been here and filed additional
i endorsements.
The President returned last
Friday night at from Gray
Gables.
The News and
r here eon-
the of
Manning; Cleveland and
weekly papers about two weeks
ago. Mr. Daniels credits the
story to Mr. Noel of the Person
Co. Courier. If he is going to
make the only morning daily at
the State capital a
success he will have to steal fresh-
and incidents, for I shall
tell on him every time he g ts any
of mine.
The Senate adjourned early to-
day because there was no quo-
rum. Soon after the hour for
meeting the President Mr.
Pruden with a batch of
but ho had to return with-
out announcing them. Very lit-
was done tho House- The
Civil Service commission
mends that the Taylor re-
commissioner
of deeds by the President shall
removed for soliciting sub-
from office
Taylor called at the White louse
to see tho President about it this
but failed to
audience.
to Preach.
Mu- Editor I have
identified myself with tho Free
Will Baptists, tho brethren
anxious for me to preach for
thorn around Greenville. I am
here Sundays if they will
notify me the week before and
will come or send for me Sunday
mornings I will gladly visit their
churches and preach for. them.
Yours,
B. H.
items.
August 28th 1894.
Mr Hermon Wilson, of Kins-
ton, is visiting relatives in this
Mrs. M- O- Dixon returned to
her home after a long visit to her
Miss Louise Sutton, of La
Grange, is visiting at Mr- George
C. J. and Chas.
were in town
Monday night-
Mr- L. A. Cobb left Monday
for the markets
Bros and L. J. Chapman
will leave to-morrow morning-
WASHINGTON LETTER,
our
Washington, D. C, August
The President has been a busy
man since his return to Washing-
ton, as this is the first
he has had to confer with
of the cabinet and
Democrats Congress since
tho tariff bill was to him, he
haying compelled by sick-
to leave the White House
soon after that measure was sent
there. At the cabinet meeting
hold yesterday the tariff bill was
thoroughly discussed in all its
and it is understood
that the cabinet was practically
unanimously in favor of allowing
the bill to become a law, and
of the members advised the
President to sign it at once.
of the cabinet will not. of
course, talk for publication, but
from other sources I learn that
tho President made no definite
and that it was in-
from his talk that he had
not mapped out his action to his
own satisfaction.
Representative Bryan, cf Ne-
who has more than a
fighting of being Senator
Bryan in near future, is an
ardent admirer and disciple of
Thomas Jefferson, the great
Democrat. During a recent
pilgrimage to Monticello. Mr.
Bryan conceived the idea of
the quota of plants
lotted to him as a member of tho
House, from the U. S. Botanical
Gardens, to be used in decorating
Jefferson's grave. Among the
plants to be to Monticello is
a sprig of ivy from a plant grown
from a sprig cut from the grave
of Robert Burns, the great Scotch
poet. By the way, pilgrimages
to the grave of Jefferson are be-
coming quite popular with Dem-
Vice President Stevenson
and Senator Hill were among tho
week's pilgrims. The hospitality
of Hon. Jefferson M. Levy, the
present proprietor of Monticello,
makes the pilgrimage as pleasant
as the surroundings make it pat-
Considerable surprise was felt
by Col. Stump. Superintendent of
Immigration, when he found that
several Democratic members of
the House objected to his bill for
the prevention of the coming of
alien anarchists into the United
States and for the deportation of
those already here- The bill was
passed by the without
objection and the attempt was
made to rush it through the
House by unanimous consent, in
order that it might become a law
in time to prevent the landing of
the French and Italian
who have been driven out
of countries by adverse
legislation and are said to be now
on their way to the United States
But action was prevented upon it
by the objection of Representative
Warner, of Now York City, and
in the absence of a quorum his
objection was effective. Mr. War-
objects to the bill because it
does not define
and because it gives the
Superintendent of Immigration
too much authority. Col. Stump
is now trying to get enough Re
to return to Wash-
to make a quorum, and If
he succeeds will endeavor to get
tho bill put through the House
under a special rule. If he can
get the quorum the rest will be
For Months
I have been a sufferer from trouble with my kid-
My back was so lame I could not raise
my sell from my chair,
nor could I turn over ;
In bed without great
pain. I also suffered
much with
Since taking
four bottles of Hood's
with
most gratifying re-
I now feel like
t a new person. Hood's
has done
more for me all
the other medicines
I have ever- taken.
Suffering has ceased
to be a dreaded
and I have been
Through sympathy
-v
THE GREENVILLE
IRON WORKS,
JAMES BROWN, Prop
Mrs. F. I. Battle
restored to perfect health.
Hood's
-1
with poor mortals who
eat or sleep with
I hare given ,
experience with
Hood's F. I
R. c. Bo sure to get
Cures
Pills are best. per box.
THE EATON BURNETT
BUSINESS COLLEGE,
19th lad F fits, Baltimore A Sis.
Is to its student the
benefit of Bank and Con tit ins
House in their details.
extensive experience has per-
as cannot be found
elsewhere.
Commercial branches Shorthand,
Typewriting and taught
by
tree on application to
A. II.
Baltimore,
L, II.
Washington, C.
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY,
-o
Manufacturer f
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons,
dealer in
Pumps, Pipe,
Machinery,
Prompt and careful given
palling Sat-
guaranteed. Tobacco
for sale at lowest prices.
x. c.
B.
X. C.
The next Session of this School
begin on Tuesday the -lib day of
and weeks.
PER MONTH.
Primary English
Intermediate
Higher English
Languages
instruction will continue through. I
Discipline mild out firm, if necessary
an additional teacher will be employed.
Satisfaction guaranteed when pupils
enter early and attend regularly. For
farther Information apply to
W. II. Pi-in.
Aug. S, I.
will
Sop-
82.30
Mrs. Bernard's
Select School
FOR GIRLS.
The next session of school will
begin on
Monday Sept. 10th.
Instruction will be thorough and
the discipline Full English course,
Mai Latin and French taught.
For further particulars and terms
ply to MRS. G. BERNARD.
August 1804.
Notice to Merchants of
Pitt
The New Tariff Law a duty on
Playing Cards and all dealers arc re-
quired to render a Sworn Statement of
the number of picks they had on hand
on the morning of August 20th. The
statement must be sworn to before an
Officer with a seal and forwarded to W.
T. Caho., Deputy Collector, New Bern
X. C. must be forwarded
at once. W. T. Caho.
Collector Division 4th List.
WANT ORDERS
Ill
Real Restate
and
Rental
Houses and lots Rent or for Sale
terms easy. Bents, Taxes, Insurance,
and open and any other
of debt placed my hands for
collection have prompt attention,
Satisfaction guaranteed. solicit your
patronage.
Take Notice.
Notice is hereby given that I will be
in the Court House on the first Holiday
of September, October and November
for the purpose of testing your
and scales. W. M.
Standard Keeper
RAMBLER
We them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will fill them WELL
Rough Heart Framing,
Rough Sap Framing, ;
Rough Sap Inches
Rough Sap Boards, A Inches,
Wait days for our Mill and
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber
as
Wood your door
cents a load.
Terms cash.
Thanking you for past patronage,
X. C.
I PIANOS
For sale by
i e,
GREENVILLE X. .
The RAMBLER live of the high-
est awards at the World's Fair and
b World's Records.
pion of the South rides Ram-
make at reduced price. 1884
all arc highest
grade. We mike
Sell
and do all kind i of Tin w irk, Tooling.
Ac
S. E. PENDER CO.
j X ORGANS
To Our North Carolina
I Vim the
a We m-ll Mail.
It ream, and . . .
ii--. Ii.
n v
It 2.1 ream, .
In
Sou II
that our
T RELIABLE,
DURABLE,
PERFECT,
mid until hi
I mm uric
RALEIGH BRANCH
know
flier-
hut our
OUT
In It-
in i . int
not .-
All tin. A
term. Mine In
profit i
n- in Raleigh, ii-
on
i mi ii j f
t. Our In- A
. to your very
T to from. All new Y
V from Writ- V
T nil. m III yon.
A your for Sheet A
W Mimic T
X all small n i i in-i X
W Any i r . In the V
our h. A
It ran you mom-y.
I BATES f
L Southern Music House. A
Main Savannah, j
Urn in he In
N. C; Ti-fin.; New Or- j
in-. I nil r our man- i
-DEALER IN AND REPAIRER OF-
Boilers, Machinery
KT. o.
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below arc Norfolk prices of cotton
peanuts for yesterday, as
by Cobb Bros. A Co., Commission Mer-
chants
11-115.
0-1
-------o-
ASK
-IF YOU IN LOOKING FOR-
to go to them, their stock is now complete, their
full of choice selected--------
Merchandise
From which genuine bargains can be had.
We buy for Cash. We sell for Cash, or
approved We carry the stock. We
do the business We tear no legitimate
competition. We dread no comparison of
stock, quality and prices. Our store Is
place for you to buy goods at- right prices.
for the following reasons We buy for
Cash. We seek for quality and durability.
We deal squarely with you. We carry the
largest stock to be found in our county
from to make your selections. We
do not seek to take advantage of you.
are responsible errors or mistakes that
may occur on our part. We do not carry
a cheap John stock of job lots and Inferior
goods and push on you things you do not
Wane. Once our customer TOO will remain
our friend. Hundreds of customers visit
our store, buy their good a at right prices
are well pleased with their pi go home satisfied. Now why don't you do
the same thing and receive your money's worth. One hundred cents on the dollar
Look here did you know that you could horn us almost any
article you may need in the following lines
Dry Goods, Notions, Hats,
Furnishing Goods,
Caps, Shoes tor Everybody, Ladies, Misses and
Oxfords, Men's Fine and Heavy Shoes, Crockery and Glassware,
tinware. Hardware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings, Groceries,
and Flour, Mattings, Curtain Poles and Lace Curtains.
Furniture Furniture,
Cheap and Medium Grades, Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Tables,
Sideboards, Tin Safes, Mattresses, Bed Springs, Children's Buds,
Cradles, Bureaus and Full Suits of Bed Room Furniture.
Take a look at our stock it will cost yon nothing and may
save you dollars. We are agents for P. SPOOL
COTTON at jobbers prices.
Come One. Come All.
THE OLD RELIABLE.
IS AT WITH A
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught ma that the best is the cheapest.
Hemp Bone, Building; rumps, Farming implements, and every
Boa; necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general purposes, as well as
Hats. Shoes. Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am
for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent lark's O. N. Spool
quarters Heavy
Cotton, and keep and attentive
GREENVILLE, N. C.
out
, .
ii
SnitS H n
xv
.
v-m
OS
.,
spin
.,
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
-IN-
Celebrated
Machinery.
THE IN THE WORLD.
Latest Head.
THE BROWN COTTON GIN.
Write for and prices.
o Pitt and adjoining n,
I wish to that I have made social preparation
and propose with inside
cutting or your Tobacco when packing
Also l have special arrangements to use best split Hoops made from White
Oak The special advantages I have in rutting my own timber places me in a
position to meet all competition. I cheerfully promise that will strive lo
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can them at any t me
either at my factory at the Eastern Tobacco N. C.
Scroll Sawing, Making
And Turned for Houses a
am prepared to kind of Scroll Sawing for Bracken -r In
line, turning Balustrades for or Mending, o.
any kind, including Hailing, and would I pleased to name you prices on
anything In the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short, notice. Thanking you tor your past patronage. I am willing to
to meet your future patronage, and kindly ask yo me a trial
elsewhere.
Winterville, N. 0-
COBB CO.
----AND-----
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA
and Correspondence Solicited,





H. C.
HOOKER
Personal.
Mr. J. A.
for Norfolk.
left Monday
-WITH THE
Save Your Orders
FOR HIM AND HE WILL
SAVE YOU MONEY ON
Dry Goods,
Clothing,
Boots, Shoes,
Hats Gaps
L. C wont to Pl-
Mr. J. Walker has
position as clerk with A.
Forbes
Next Week.
-O-
A CARD.
To my friends and many pa-
that have known me for the
past years. I wish to state that
I am with H. C. Hooker and
ready t serve them at any time
at the lowest prices that can be
had.
Yours to please,
BERNARD GREENE.
Come to next door to J.
A- Andrews.
THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
Local politics getting warmer.
rim spec-
Call at office-
New Wheat Flour at J.
v Son's.
on
day.
A nice line of spectacles at A. J.
Griffin's, the practical
and engraver.
Goods cheap at J. C- Cobb it
Sou's to make room for fall stock-
Schools begin opening next
week.
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
All Summer Goods go.
New Fall Goods arriving.
BOSWELL, Co.
Eggs arc scarce, the hens must
be taking holiday.
Just received Car load of Hay
at J. C- Cobb Son's.
The Greenville Iron
does all kinds of repairing.
Bring you engine before the busy
fall season arrives.
James Proprietor.
It took cooler weather to
break up the rain.
New assortment of Bibles from
American B- S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor.
Go to Cory's and get your
Shoes, Trunks and Valises
repaired.
Johnston sent a bale of
new cotton to Raleigh last week
am now
a life size Crayon free with
every dozen Photographs.
R. Hyman.
A large of nice Furniture cheap
at the Brick Store.
The shortening of days is be-
coming perceptible.
Sewing machines from US to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley
J. C. Cobb A Son's stock of fall
shoes is now complete- them.
Moon changes Friday,
two new moons this mouth-
Remember I pay you cash for Chicken
v Produce at the
Brick Store.
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Brown's.
Splendid of tablets and box
paper at Reflector Book Store.
Cheap, New Butter
cents per pound. Best Blended
Tea cent per pound. Import-
ed cents.
Cheese at the Old Brick Store
Witches, clocks and jewelry
carefully repaired by the old ex
pi need and practical watch-
maker, A. J.
Watermelons are waning, not
many find their way to
market.
if yon the best, full cream
go to J. S- S Co-
Miss Myrtle Wilson is visiting
her sister, Mrs- Warren, at
Hill-
Mrs. If. A- King is sick at the
Lome of her son. Sheriff R- W.
King.
Mr. H. C. Hooker went to New
York Monday to in a big fall
stock.
Mr- J. II. Cobb, of was
on the train north Monday
morning
Mrs. of Kinston,
is visiting her daughter Mrs. R.
J. Proctor.
Mr. J. IV Moore is spending a
few days sight-seeing
Washington.
Miss Daniel went to
Bethel Friday to visit her sister,
Mrs. Hammond-
Messrs. W. H. White T.
White both went north
to buy new goods.
Mr. E. H. left Mon-
day for the northern cities to
make purchases.
Mrs. S. P- left last week
to visit relatives in Rowan and
Cabarrus counties.
Messrs. J. W. and J. S. Higgs
wont north last week to purchase
new goods for Higgs Bros.
Prof. B. E- Goode returned
from Virginia. Saturday evening,
bringing Mrs. Goode with him.
Miss Sarah Cohen, of Tarboro,
who has been visiting Mrs. S- M.
Schultz, returned home Monday.
Mrs- J- R. Whichard and
Salisbury, who were visit-
relatives here, left for home
on Friday.
Miss Julia White, who was
visiting the family of her uncle
Mr. Jack White, left Friday for
her homo in Hertford
Mr W. P. Harding loft last week
for Charlotte, where ho has ac-
a position as assistant
principal a large military
school.
Mrs J. C. was vis-
relatives here, left Friday
for homo Wilson,
by mother. Mrs. S- A-
Peebles.
Miss Martha Tyson after spend
some time with relatives hero
returned to Baltimore Friday,
taking little Ronald Williams
with her.
Miss Smith, of Tarboro,
has been spending some weeks
the family of uncle, Mr.
E. S. Smith. She returned home
yesterday.
Miss Lena Moore, of Scotland
Neck, who has visiting Miss
Lillie Harris for the past two
weeks, returned homo
day morning-
Miss Emma Lee Wells, of
son, who was Miss Lulu
White, returned home Friday. .
Miss Lula accompanying her
home for a visit.
Mr. Wiley Brown has recover-
ed from his recent long attack of
typhoid and left last week
for the northern markets to
chase new goods.
Mr. C. M- Jones left Saturday
for the markets to
chase new goods for the firm of
Boswell. Co. He will
special attention to the
of clothing and dress
goods-
interference of
nights are fine
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets,
up stairs, Old Brick Store-
Rev. Austin Flood, a well known
colored man of this died
last week.
Barring the
mosquitoes the
for sleeping.
Three kinds cf Canned Pine
apple at J- S. Smith Go's. He
has two kinds of grated and one
of sliced-
Another rainy spell set Sun-
day evening seems inclined
to continue.
Mr. A- J. Griffin is having
hauled to build a new house
in
Don't wait until cotton is all
open and you ere crowded to
bring your engines to be repaired.
The Greenville Iron Works does
all kinds of repairing.
James Proprietor.
The very thing you want in
school tablets can be found at
Reflector Book Store.
Boneless Pickle Pigs Feet and
loose cucumber pickles at J. S-
Smith Cos.
The town is boxing up the ditch
lending from
Mr. Cory's lot-
Bicycles for sale by
S E. Ponder Co. agents for
Western Wheel Works. The
largest Bicycle factory in Amer-
Get prices and
Render.
Mr. J L. Wooten has purchased
a lot on Fifth street and will soon
erect a handsome
Mr. R. J. has not been
anything but smiles since
morning. Its a girl, his first.
County S- A-
has been appoints I post
master at Bethel- A good
non-
Big lot blank
journals, day books, drafts,
receipts, Reflector Book
Store-
The a good
grist mill Greenville would
pay handsomely. The community
needs one.
Our tobacco warehouses had
sales Friday-
counties had tobacco on the
floors. Prices were well up.
Next Saturday week, Sept 8th.
is the day for township
Remember this, Democrats,
and attend your township
meetings.
Policeman James says he is one
of the men who don't com-
plain when business is dull.
Several days without a scoop
worries him at all.
There came near a tire
one week in the stables
back the King House- It was
discovered and put out be-
fore any damage was done-
There was a pleasant ice cream
party given at the residence of
Mr. G. E- Harris on last Tuesday
night complimentary to Miss
Lena Moore, of Scotland Neck.
Since the Greenville Lumber
Co. got their new mill to
running they are doing a larger
business than ever- They are
crowded with orders all the time-
County Commissioners will
meet next Not being
able to hold the August meeting
they will have more than the
usual amount of work to do next
Monday.
A mad dog caused some ex
hero last Thursday. The
rabid animal bit a mule, a pony,
a calf, a dog and a duck before
overtaken and killed. It is for-
no person was attacked
by him.
The merchants are realizing
that our tobacco market is a
great help to Greenville- If they
would just show enough interest
to start a tobacco factory or two
they would even much more
benefit coming to them this
source.
Mr. A- T. Porter, of
township, has a pig that weighed
i pounds at Nothing re-
markable that, yon say, but
it is known that this same
pig has legs and toes he is
entitled to be classed as a wonder
rooter.
From the large quantity of new
goods already coming
many of our merchants still north
making purchases it is evident
that a heavy trade is looked for
this fall. Every etch of
course, wants his share of the
and the way to get it is to
let the people what you
have to sell- Don't be afraid to
use ink-
The Furniture and Racket store
is a new candidate for public
favor- This enterprise has just
at the Racket store stand
Mrs. is dis-
playing a line of goods
They carry a complete line of
furniture, furnishing goods and
notions. A glance at their
to-day will show re
low prices. Give them
a call.
The marriage of Alfred Culley
Ella Dudley and the
that followed, last
day night, was the most high
toned and best conducted social
event that has occurred among
tho colored people of
The marriage took place at the
home, which had been
handsomely decorated with flow-
and evergreens for the
The ceremony was per-
formed by Rev. P. W. Williams-
Lost Their Way.
Several of our tobacco buyers
went over on Friday evening's
train to spend Saturday in Kin-
Late that evening they hired
team to come back to Greenville
and started home about o'clock.
On the way they got lost in a
swamp and were five hours find-
their way out. They got
to Greenville in time for breakfast
Sunday morning. It is amusing
to hear some of them tell about
the big mosquitoes they tackled
in the swamp.
Free
Pitt Female Seminary, which
opens next Wednesday, holds out
a splendid opportunity to young
ladies who expect to fit
for teaching in the public
schools of this and
counties. To the ones making
the best and second best records
on the final examinations of the
session a year's is
they have paid for
during the year being
refunded to them. Such a liberal
proposition ought to bring a large
number of competitors for this
scholarship
Jail Delivery.
Five prisoners, all colored, es-
caped from Pitt county jail in
broad time, Tuesday of
last week, tho jail empty.
While the weather was so
the were a I lowed to slay
the upper corridor. They cut
a hole through the brick wail
this corridor from the
passage. Crawling through this
hole they descended the stairs to
the lower passage, took the lock
off tho front door and deliberately
walked away The
were all colored and wore for
minor Their names
were Adrian Rouse,
Henry White, Frank Ellis and
us Cherry. Though searched
for every direction none of
them had captured at this
writing-
full Session.
Pitt Female in
of Prof. B. E- Goode
his competent will
begin its fall session next Wed-
The prospects for the
opening are very favorable in-
deed. The character of the
school is going to be such as to
it to those who are
looking for good work well done.
The people of the town and
county ought to give their hearty
support to the school and thereby
enable Prof. Goode to give us a
female school of which all will
proud. Every advantage is
offered that can be had in any
similar school. Send your girls
in the first day if possible.
Miss Dora of
Canada, has been engaged and
will teach in all the departments
of art. She is a highly cultured
lady and brings the very strong
est recommendation with her.
Greenville Male Academy, in
charge of Prof. W. H.
begins its fall session next Wed-
Prof. has
too long in this community for it
to be necessary to say anything
as to his ability as an instructor.
Eastern North Carolina offers no
better school for boys his.
The work done by him is the very
best always results in entire
satisfaction. Let your boys
present at the beginning of tho
term-
m OPENING
Come to see us and we will
do the balance.
T.
Tho Low Tariff Cash Man.
W. I. BOSWELL.
JESSE
C It. JONES
c.
n time of peace prepare for j
time of heat prepare for
T Conventions.
There were two Republican
conventions here
day. One was called by J. H.
the Other by G. W.
Cox, both claiming to be the
chairman of the county executive
committee. The first convention
was bossed by J. J. B.
Cox and T. W. C- Moore- Some
speech making against fusion
advocacy of a straight Re-
publican ticket, and the selection
of delegates to the State, Con
and Judicial
was the sum total of their
proceedings-
The second convention was
called to order by C- Forbes.
being who called J.
L Langley to the chair. C M-
Bernard dictated the work of tho
meeting, all of which had
cut dried before hand- This
convention was said to have been
the interest of
no demonstration to that effect
was the delegates
selected were favorably thereto.
A new political luminary, in the
person of a young man named
Cox, amused the crowd with a
speech and the
mightily, though the subjects he
discussed were in the main far
beyond their comprehension. At
the outset he offered the apology
that he had come to town not anti-
making a speech and was
totally unprepared, but the
use he made of manuscript
and clippings produced from
his pockets was a dead give
away on him- Ho was loaded for
the occasion.
The Democracy of old Pitt was
not hurt in the slightest by these
conventions.
This is what we are now doing while the thermometer reg-
up the nineties. I am in the northern markets
a lino of Goods the Fall and Winter that will
far Surpass anything of the kind eyer shown Greenville.
v -v.
RACKET
You can't miss seeing H. C-
Hookers announcement to-day.
He is north after the goods and
his space will tell you about
them next week.
Bird and squirrel hunters go to
J. Smith Cos., get your
loaded or unloaded shells, pow-
and shot. Prices to suit.
experienced to
buyer wants a partner with
some capital to engage in the
leaf business on the Greenville
market. Guarantee against loss-
Call at Reflector office for
The Mule Charlie.
On Saturday Master Charlie
Home donned a big star and arm-
himself with a club went out
to play policeman. He walked
up to arrest a mule and gave the
latter a punch in the side with
his billet. The mule resisted,
drew his left hind foot on Char-
lie let it go at him. The foot
came close enough to Charlie's
face to take him on the ear, and
that appendage was split open
from the tip clear to the head.
Dr. Bagwell took Charlie in hand
and attended to his wound. If
that foot had given Char-
lie a blow on the head
there would have been one loss
boy to play policeman.
Items.
August 27th, 1894
W. Z. Morton Jr., of
ville, spent last Thursday in town.
Mr. M- O. Blount, of the firm of
Blount left for New York
this morning to purchase their
fall and winter stock.
Mr. T. T. Cherry, who has been
up in Halifax the last few days to
see his wife at her father's, will
return to night a happy man. It's
a girl.
Superior Court Clerk W. T.
Crawford, of Williamston, spent
last Thursday town. He re-
ports Democracy in a healthy con-
in Martin.
Mr. Samuel A. Gainer has been
appointed postmaster here. He
received his
day night. He will take charge
of the office as soon as he gives
his bond and receives his com-
mission.
The revival in tho Methodist
church is still going on and will
continue through this week every
night- About twenty five or
persons have joined thus far.
of the number were
in creek Sunday
evening by Rev. W. A- Forbes.
More interest has been manifested
than in any revival held here for
several years. The church has
been crowded every night-
According to previous an-
the Bethel and
baseball clubs played
a match game at Bethel last
Thursday, in which the Bethel
boys were badly beaten. The
Bethel club had prepared a nice
barbecue which was greatly en-
joyed by all who partook. After
the game was over the William-
boys said that they could
beat the Bethel boys playing
drafts and throwing ball. Tho
Bethel boys accepted the
and beat them in both as
badly as had beat them play-
ball.
Women and
men, women preferred, to canvass
for a handsomely illustrated, in-
expensive patriotic book- A lib-
oral percent allowed. Address,
men's Washington Book Agency,
Washington, D- C.
-the people arc making over the-
You can find anything you from a paper of Pius to the finest
FURNITURE.
Antique Oak Suits
GONE NORTH.
Watch, this Space.
NEW GOODS
Are Arriving Daily
WILEY BROWN
is in the
Markets
purchasing
Fall and Winter
GOODS.
Don't buy until you
see him.
Bedsteads
RATTAN ROCKERS, Ac
Chairs, per h f-3 j
and if tho any Racket Goods why the prices have struck bottom
---------with the tariff off.---------
cents Shirts cents.
Paper Noodles cent.
Boys Hats cents.
Umbrellas cents.
Paper Pins cent.
Pens, Pencils, Paper, Ink, Crayon. Slates, everything for tho
school room or other room can be found at the
Furniture Racket Store,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Old Racket Store Stand, Opposite Mrs.
is now in the-
purchasing a fine line of
Clothing
N. C
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lower- current rates.
a GENT FOR FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF
-j.
N. C.
Call your attention to splendid
line l
Vail k Winter Goods.
They carry complete stock of
General Merchandise.
And f
Everything yon need to wear.
Everything you mod to eat.
Everything yon need about the house.
Everything about the kitchen.
Everything you need about the. farm.
At just
anywhere.
low as be had
Highest paid for Cotton and all
Country Produce.
Returning thanks for pact favors,
J. O. ft
S. M. Schultz.
AT THE
OLD
FARMERS AND BUT
their year's supplies will
their interest to get before
n all its
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE, TEA, Ac.
at Lowest
TOBACCO SNUFF II CIGARS
we buy direct from
you to buy at one A corn
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices
the i lines. Out goods are all
sold for CASH therefore, having no rink
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N.
WILLIAMSON
OF-
DRY GOO
ETC.
REPAIRING DONE ON SHORT NOTICE
Only workmen and material allowed in my shops. The
who have used my work will testify to tho beauty and durability of
turned out at my shops. Every I also carry
HARNESS. WHIPS.





Before buying your new bicycle look
the field over carefully. The superiority
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully
demonstrated as at present. Our line
will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and we
challenge comparison.
There's but one best---Victor.
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON.
NEW YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN FRANCISCO.
DETROIT.
DENVER.
WILMINGTON WELDON K. R.
AND BRANCHES.
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS SOUTH.
Dated July
Leave Weldon Ar.
Ar Tarboro
Rocky Mt Wilson Selma Ar. OS 3.1
t. OS
A. M.
JACKSON
Office Furniture
COMPANY
JACKSON, TENN.
-MANUFACTURERS OF
Wilson
Goldsboro
Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
AND OFFICE
Schools Churches seated
in the best manner. Offices
Furnished. Send for
Train on Scotland Neck branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax 4.00
p. m., arrives Scotland at 4.55 p.
in., Greenville 6.37 p. in., Kinston 7.35
p. n. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a. m. Greenville 8.22 a. in. Arriving
Halifax at a. m. Weldon 11.20 a.
m., daily except Sunday.
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a, iii. arrives
8.40 a. Tarboro returning
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m. 6.10
p. m,, arrives Washington 7.85 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, at p. m., Sunday P.
arrive Plymouth 9.30 P. M., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily
Sunday, 5.30 a. in., Sunday 0.30 a. m.
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. m., and 11.45
a. in.
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a.
m. arriving a m. Re-
retuning leaves a. m.;
a. Goldsboro. a. m.
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive
Nashville p. m-. Spring Hope 5.30,
p. in. Returning leaves Spring Hope
a. m Nashville 8.35 a. in., arrives
at Rocky Mount a. m., except
Sunday.
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R.
R. Latta 6.50 p. in., arrive
bar 8.00 p. Returning leave Dun-
bar a. arrive Latta a. m.
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War-
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday,
st a. m. Returning leave Clinton
at m., connoting at Warsaw with
main line trains.
makes close connection
at Weldon for all points North daily, all
rail via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
Carolina railroad for Norfolk daily and
all points North via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
R. KENLY, Manager.
T. V. Manage
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK
For the Cure of all Skis
This Preparation has been In use
years, and wherever know
been in steady demand, has been en
by the leading physicians all
e country, and has effected cures where
all other remedies, the attention
the most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is
standing and the high reputation
which it has is owing entirely
its own as but little has
ever been made to bring it before the
On bottle of this Ointment
be sent to address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at-
tended to. Address all orders and
communications to
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
C.
OLD LINE
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
O- L. Proprietor Eastern Tobacco
KENTUCKY MAN-BEAST.
Story of too
of Washington County.
SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington for Green
ville and Tarboro touching at all land
on Tar River Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Greenville
These departures are subject to stage
of water on Tar River.
A NORTH CAROLINA
R. R. TIMETABLE.
In Effect December
GOING EAST. GOING
Daily
Sun,
P. M A. M.
P M
Train connects with Wilmington
Weldon train bound North, leaving
Goldsboro a. m., and with D.
West, leaving Goldsboro I p. m.
Train connects with Richmond
Danville train, arriving at Goldsboro;
p. m., and with W. W. train
the North at p. m.
S. L. DILL,
Superintendent.
HERBERT
PARLORS
Under Opera House,
GREENVILLE,
Call in you
with steam
of Tin- Norfolk, Wash-
direct line for Norfolk, Baltimore
Philadelphia. New York and Bo-ton.
Shippers should order their goods
marked via Dominion from
New York. from
Norfolk
more from
more. Merchants from
Boston.
JNO. SON. Agent,
Washington N. C
J. J. Agent.
N. C.
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 sudden
session of so much money
moves 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 bf Write to
W. J. Manager,
For U
. ROCK. S. C,
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS
Mi. Forbes Kennedy is marking
tickets for Greenville-
Good breaks at the warehouses
last week and satisfactory prices
were obtained.
Messrs- Reagan, of Danville,
Va-, of Wilson,
were among the visitors to our
market last week.
The auctioneer of the Eastern,
Old Man Bill Lipscombe, the
say, is a dandy. Well, he
does have lots of fun on sale.
Mr. J. L. Wiggins, of Rocky
Mount, has decided to locate
here. He and Mr. 15- E- Parham
will operate together. They will
make a strong team.
Hon. Goo. F. Parrot, of Lenoir
county was on sale last Tuesday.
He brought a lot of tobacco
and sold with the Eastern. It is
needless to say he wont home
pleased.
Who says work don't pay. Last
Thursday's freight brought large
consignments of tobacco from
both ways over the railroad, also
several more packages from South
Carolina.
Mr. Bailey, from
Va., came down last Wednesday
to accept position as auctioneer
with Messrs. Forbes
To him as to all strangers who
come in the interest of the trade
we extend a hearty welcome-
Messrs- J. N. Gorman Co.
having their factory on
the inside preparatory to hand-
ling fine grades of tobacco this
fall. There is no cleverer man on
tho market than Patrick Henry,
their buyer here-
Thad R. Hodges, Esq., of
Washington was up with a fine
load of tobacco last week. He
always makes the Eastern
headquarters in Greenville.
He has a fine crop of tobacco,
consequently always gets good
prices.
The new leaf factory for the
American Tobacco Company is
nearing completion- Mr-
the buyer hopes to move in
nest week. Mr. Morgan is
ready buying liberally, but when
he gets in his now building we
expect him to bull the market.
All grades of tobacco are sell-
well, with of
tips, which are low, but all
tobaccos are selling well up. No
one seems to know just how long
the market will hold up or
it will go even higher- Tho
up country crop will have some-
thing to do in regulating prices
year. Ono advantage have,
raise all the brighter grades,
consequently we will regulate
prices on them- Greenville with
her liberal buyers will pay as
much for all grades as any
market-
GREENVILLE TOBACCO MARKET
REPORT.
O. L.
For the past week each o
the three warehouses has had
good and while the
were principally prim-
they showed splendid color
and sold for good prices.
The damage done the tobacco
crop by the heavy rains, while
so as was once
thought is very heavy. From
what we can gather from farmers
living in different sections the
crop be a very bright one,
but on account of the rainy
weather the per cent, of fine
wrappers will be considerably cut
off.
SMOKERS.
to
to 7.00
to 10.00
to
Com mm to
to 7.00
Best. 7.00 to 1500
WRAPPERS.
to
to 25.00
to 45-00
Senatorial Primaries.
The State convention lat Wed-
sat down on tho motion
relating to the primaries for Sen-
It could hardly have put
the motion to any other use. To
begin with, it has never been
settled that the State convention
had jurisdiction in the matter.
Besides this it was late, and the
delegates were tired. And then
everybody knew there w is an
uncomfortable dearth of
on the subject-
But the Convention didn't set-
the business at all. A number
of counties will go right on and
vote their choice for Senator as
instruction to their
The fact is this primary
matter belongs solely to the
ties- In the confusion of much
talk and excessive muddying of
the waters on both sides, the
autonomy of the county seems to
have been forgotten. The
ties elect their representatives
and they have tho right to in-
them as to their vote for
Senator as on other important
matters.
The election of United
Senator is too far from
the people. They know and feel
it and restive- A Senator
does not have that feeling, so
conducive to loyalty, of direct
responsibility to his party and
the people, and is tempted to for-
get his sovereigns- The closer
tho relationship the more faithful
the representative. The
underlying those county
primaries is a correct one- Under
conditions objection
might made against the ex-
of such primal but
the principle can not be
by any friend of a Democrat-
form of
Gazette
The Horn Merchant.
Speaking in advocacy of pat-
the home merchant, the
Goldsboro Argus says this
Do yon buy your goods from a
distant market or do you purchase
them here at home is in-
deed a very important question
and one that should interest
everybody ; not only the business
men, but the entire community.
Your homo merchant is entitled
to your patronage just as much
so as other home industries, and
when you send your money away
from home you do yourself,
town and your business people a
gross injustice- You can always
do as well at home as
and nine times out of ton you do
better, but this is a hard thing to
make some people believe; it is
Home and its
interests should always come
first. But to be successful in
business of any kind yon must
advertise and keep it constantly
before the people. How can a
merchant expect to be patronized
when the people don't know
what he has. or where he does
business Notice tho merchants
who fail in business. Do they
It is estimated from
the reports of Bradstreet that
per cent of the merchants who
fail never advertise. Advertise
your business in your home pa-
per, and help to sustain
it and, at the same time, benefit
yourself.
Twins all Around.
Congressman J. Paul of
Ohio, who is a tobacco
and one of the richest men
in the State, began life in West
Virginia, where he was born, as a
tobacco-stripper, earning a few
dollars a month- Mr. em
ploys men at his factory at
Ohio, and it is his
boast that he knows them by face
and name. He has never re
their wages and never had
a strike. Mr. has served
several terms on the Middleton
of Education, he has
invariably nominations
to offices when he be-
he could be of to
his Grocer.
A very mixed up business is on
Mr. Tom Stack's place, in the
western part of Union county.
He is a good farmer and has
everything around him he wants
and some things he does not
want. Friday morning of last
week he went to his barn and
found in of his twin
mules. They were both healthy
looking and doing well. On Sat-
night one his fine Jersey
increased his personal prop-
by twin calves- Mr. Stack
began to think fortune was
him and that ho was
walking a road. He did
not reach the full height of his
glory, however, until Tuesday
morning when his wife presented
him with twin boys- At last ac-
counts all of the twins were do-
News.
The Stopped His Whistling.
The mystery of is
hard to solve. One man is happy
one man is miserable with
no apparent reason for either
condition of spirits. A man gets
up feeling cheerful and goes to
bed Another gets up
in the and when day is
over he is as merry as a lark.
Those moods. Moods are,
however, sympathetic. A boy was
hurrying up Park Row with a
bright look on his face- He was
whistling merrily and tripping
along with a light step when he
was stopped by a middle-aged
man of apparent prosperity and
cod position.
wish I wore
as happy as you. I'd give
if I could be in your
The boy answered that he was
sorry for the other, and the two
went ways- But the boy
did not resume his whistling and
his face was York
Tribune.
Cinnamon and Cholera.
A of cinnamon is re-
commended as a drink to be
taken freely localities
there is typhoid fever or cholera,
for cinnamon has tho power to
destroy all infections microbes-
Even its scent kills them, while it
is perfectly harmless to human
It is said that the es-
of when exposed
in the sick room, will kill typhoid
bacilli in and prevent
fresh City Times-
The Topeka and
Santa Fe Railroad Company has
miles of line in operation
the Southern Pacific, miles s
the Chicago, and St.
Paul. ; the Louisville and
Nashville, 4.700; the Northern
Pacific, miles the Chicago
and Northwestern, miles ;
tho Chicago Rock Island and Pa-
miles ; the Illinois
Central, miles ;
miles; the New York
Central and Hudson River,
and the Baltimore and
Ohio,
American.
China's imperial canal is the
largest in the world and the
greatest in point of traffic. Its
length is miles, and it con-
cities situated on its
It was completed in 1350,
after GOO years spent its con-
It has been computed that the
death rate the globe is per
minute, per day, or
per year. The birth rate is
per minute, per day,
or per year, reckoning
the year to be days in
length-
A farmer near Banger, Me-, has
received and order for bar-
of cider. Should the State
call on him for service in case of
riots he can rightly claim to have
pressing business on hand-
Mrs. Bond died at her
home near Greenville, Miss.,
Monday, having reached the ago
of years. She drew a pension
as widow of a soldier of the war
of 1812-
humor
caused or promoted by Impure blood or
low state of the system, cured by
NAMES OF CHILDREN.
Salve-
The best Salve hi the world for Cuts,
Sores, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns and all Skin
and positively cure Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
satisfaction or money refunded
rice cents per box. For sale by
John L. Woolen. Druggist
Mr- James T- of
Sand Hill township, left home
one day last week after sunrise
and returned o'clock
with ten coons. The dog he
hunted with is common hound
belongs to Mr. J-
Custom of Baptismal Christening and
Odd Results of Mistakes.
Down to the early part of tho
present century it was usual to
a child after the saint on whose day
he happened to be born. A writer
to Notes and Queries in 1853 states
that he had recently baptized a child
by tho name of Benjamin Simon
Jude. On his expressing some
prise at this somewhat singular con-
junction of names, he was informed
that the birth had taken place on
the festival of Simon and Jude.
and that it was always considered
very unlucky to take the day from a
child.
The custom of naming children
after any particular saint has fallen
into general disuse, except in those
countries the population is
almost entirely of Roman
Catholics. The giving of a name in
baptism Is really no essential part
of the rite, but is merely a custom
derived apparently from the Jews,
which through long practice has
become an Important element in Hie
ceremony.
Many instances might be fur-
of children who have
received wrong names.
The registers in church
contain the following
January Charles,
of John and Betty This
child ought to have been christened
Charlotte, but owing to mistake of
his sponsors was wrong
July William, daughter
William and Sarah N.
was intended that this child,
being a girl, should have- been
Maria, but through a mistake
t godfather it -was Wit-
First Known by tho
of and
Young
of I lie
Over in Washington says
the Ashland Citizen, near
line of Mercer, reigns a being,
whether man or beast, mystifying
all the, neighborhood. For months
the housewives have missed their
chickens, eggs, milk, meat from
meat houses and half grown pigs
and young lambs. At first all
forts and schemes to catch the guilty
one proved of no avail.
White cap bands were organized,
and several suspected
whipped or shot. Some time ago
Jack told what he saw
from his spring house, and as
the story got circulated the children
and women were seared nearly out
of their The male portion of
the neighborhood, however,
put no credence in the story, but on
the quiet all set watch for the
being, and. on a recent
Wednesday morning Joseph
arose before daybreak and went to
the spring house, a hundred yards
distant from his dwelling.
His wife and nearly grown son, be-
coming alarmed at his continued ab-
went in search of him, and
found him at the door of the spring
house in a faint. They restored him
to consciousness, and he told them
he had seen Jack A man-beast,
and that he ran out of the spring
house as he opened the door; that he
had long while hair hanging down
from his head and face that was as
His legs were covered with hair,
and the only article of clothing he
wore was a piece of sheepskin over
the lover portion of his body, reach-
nearly to his knees. He said a
light came from his eyes and mouth
similar to fire.
When it noised around
that had seen man-
beast, sober-headed men began to
think and set a plan to catch the
monster, be it what it may. In tho
neighborhood near the mouth of
Deep creek is a cave of considerable
proportions, and the natural con-
of nearly all was that there
would be the place to find their
game.
In the meantime they, as a neigh-
were to keep watch for
sights of their man-beast, and early
the next Sunday morning Hos-
ton and his sons and James saw
the object of their watch walking in
gallop, half run for their barn.
Notwithstanding the men were
armed, they were badly frightened,
and after they saw the object enter
the barn all three were afraid to en-
to try and capture the terrible-
looking creature.
They kept hid, and were not seen
by the monster, standing in a half-
erect position nearly six and one-half
feet. His feet were like the claws of
a bear or brute, with long claws.
His hands also were like those of a
feline more than a human. The men
had only to wait a few minutes. In
fact, before they could come to some
action or gel over their fright the
creature came out of the barn in the
same halt-gallop-run and made
for the creek.
this time the men started in
safe pursuit. Tom Boston foolishly
shot at it, and the creature half
turned and glanced at them, in-
creasing his gait, but never dropping
the three large chickens he. hold in
his claws. The Bostons managed to
keep in sight of the creature for only
He or so, vowing that
he ran swifter than a horse. Just
as got to the top of a hill about
five hundred yards off they were re-
warded by seeing the brute-man
turn with a wild, scared look, glance
around and enter the cave.
. The men went to the mouth of the
cave, but would not enter. They
saw feathers, bones, etc, scattered
around the entrance. They returned
home and reported what they had
seen, and Tuesday they, with a half
dozen other men, went to the cave
and made a partial survey, pro
in several hundred yards.
They saw fresh indications of
bones, feathers, pieces of
calf and sheep skin being strewn
around. The passages grew smaller
and dwindled, and no one of tho
party would enter alone, though one,
Joe Smith, went thirty or forty
feet, when the most unearthly yell
that men ever heard greeted them.
They were good, stout men, but they
cowed before that yell, and beat a
hasty retreat to the main passage of
the cavern, but after consultation
they agreed it would not do to kill
or be killed, and they gave up their
search for another time.
The men brought two bludgeons
from the cave with them that showed
considerable handling and resembled
an Indian war club. Another party
will make a survey of the cave in an
effort to capture the monster. In
the meantime women and children
are staying Indoors in that neighbor-
hood. The men built a great heap
of brush and wood, and tried to
smoke lain out, but could not.
CREEPING RAILS.
Attempted Explanation of a Cu-
Railroad Phenomenon,
BOOK FREE.
Our new is a grand portfolio of all the latest and
best Styles of Organs and Pianos. It illustrates, describes
and gives prices on Organs from up
and Pianos from up. It shows how to buy at wholesale
direct from the manufacturers, and save over per cent.
THE CORNISH ORGANS AND PIANOS
Guaranteed for yrs., have been played and praised for nearly
y yrs.; to-day they are the most popular instruments made.
our SPECIAL TERMS of Credit, framed to suit the time.
Remember this grand book is sent Write for it at once
CORNISH A CO. N. J
You miss it if you fail to call for
what you want in this line at
make a specialty of this class of goods, and if
prices, Quality, Quantity
count for anything with you, come to us.
Envelopes eta a pack up.
Note Paper a quire up.
Letter, Fools Gap and
Legal Cap equally low.
Tablet from I cent
Slate cents per
dozen up.
Lead Pencils doz.
cents
per dozen up.
A Fit SPECIALTIES
a. for
the very best for and
purposes. Our Cream Mucilage any
on tho market. Our Diamond Glue
and Magic Cement will mend anything hut broken
hearts.
The Lawn of One So-
Application of Brakes and
of Heavy II.
Nature In
Unless there are counteracting in-
the natural tendency of
rail is to downward, obey-
the well-known laws of gravity.
If, however, says the Charleston
News and Courier, the grade is too
slight to give much effect to this
law, and, in fact, so slight as to re-
quire the use of steam in the hand-
ling of descending trains, this
tendency may be minimized, and,
indeed, overcome and reversed, by a
constant draft of loads in the
of Its descent. Heavy loads
pulling constantly in one direction
have a tendency to drive the rail in
the opposite direction. Should it be
to the
In
Every business man should have a
KER FOUNTAIN
last a life are sold nowhere else
town.
Our Paper for polite correspondence
tho prettiest in town. We also keep Mourning
Paper. Then we have Slates, Blank Books.
Memorandum Books. Time Books, Erasers, Rub-
Pencil Holders. Automatic Pencils,
Cups, Ink Stands, Paper Cutters. Book
Marks, Holders and lots of other things.
BOOKS AND NOVELS.
If you want anything to read come look over
our supply. Any book not on hand will be or-
for you.
Now remember the the only place
at which you can get these goods at such low
prices.
BOOK STORK.
FIVE POINTS.
or moving train. On a
perfectly level track the rail almost
Invariably in the opposite
direction from the movement of the
heaviest and most constant traffic,
except at points where It is custom-
to shut off and apply the brakes,
at which the is in the same
direction.
On roads having grades which
change abruptly from ascending to
descending grades over the crown
of a hill it often happens that the
rails up grade on both sides
of the crown, and this is especially
true where long, heavy trains
run, as the heavy pulling of the en-
after has passed the crown
going down grade causes it to drive
the rail upward on the one side,
while the rear of the train has some-
what the tendency to pull or at
least to hold the rail on the opposite
ascent. One rail often
faster than tho other; this is not
confined to the east rail or the west
rail, the north or the south. It Is
due to a variety o causes, and to
none perhaps than to the fact
that there is a difference, and often
a peculiarity, in humanity.
There are in railroad parlance
what are known as a and a
roil. In nine cases out of
ten the rail gets the most at-
from the foreman in charge,
in addition two men usually
selected to tho bolts on
joints, one of whom is generally the
most trusted man in the
The other works under him. Al-
most Invariably this trusted man
gets on the rail, and thus it
will be seen that the joints and bolts
are kept in better shape on one rail
than on tho other, and are, there-
fore, more capable of resisting the
tendency to This habit
among of adopting a pet
rail Is one of the peculiarities of
man nature; barbers have somewhat
the same lather
and rub, shave and powder one side
of a man's face until human
rebels against the injustice. I
wonder what magnetic at-
Is held responsible for
this Idiosyncrasy
for Greenville C
Salem on the first Sunday at eleven
o'clock Chapel at three
o clock.
Grove on second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and School
House at o'clock.
on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and at three
o'clock.
on the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, Lang School
at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
;. Smith, ,
Baptist Services.
Below arc the regular appointments
Of J. II. pa-tor of the
Baptist church
and fourth Sim-
in each month, morning and
and every
At Sunday each
month, morning and night.
At
Sunday in each month Saturday be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are the regular appointment
of Rev. A.
and third Sundays in
each month, morning and evening.
Sunday in each
month, morning and
vices all other Sunday
St. Johns, Sun-
day in month, morning and evening
Holy Innocents,
fifth Sunday morning.
Services.
Ant morning
night, alternating between J.
II. and Hines.
Every third Sabbath, morning and
night, Rev. W- Mines.
Sunday School every Sabbath
l. Evans
Caveats, obtained and all Pat-;
business conducted for Fee.
is Opposite Office;
and we an secure tune than
remote from Washington. i
Send model, or
lion. We if
charge. Oar fee not due till pate.
K MUM In U. S. and countries;
. OM, D. C.
If THE
NO
CORDOVAN,
FINE
3.5 SOLES.
FINE.
LADIES-
END
Von money I,.
Shoe
v.-; Hie ft r
I in v mid pi.-
tho value tamping and price en
the .,.; ,, M h j s v. -t
prices a profits, par at s j
equal v in i . i i . i
W it HI . e- .-
. I for I ; i
o .-. t II
-y
nos A CO
N.
It, E


Title
Eastern reflector, 29 August 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 29, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17708
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