Eastern reflector, 10 October 1894






DO
NO
That the place to
Buy your
BOOKS
-AND-
STATIONERY
IS
AT
Reflector Hook store.
The
Reflector.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIII.
cc
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1894.
NO.
r-.
FOR GOOD
JOB PRINTING
AT
REFLECTOR
before act. n
.,.
EXAMINE
BE
mm
Before ship or carry your Tobacco to any other market or any other Warehouse in Greenville. Here are some of the prices we arc obtaining for those who arc selling with
JAS-
Price. Amount
60.22
1550. 15.50
. 5.77
1302
Average
1149-11
L. WILSON.
Is. Price. Amount.
4-25
20.70
11-37
26.-
Average
W. R. DIXON.
Pounds- Price. Amount.
18.18
Average
JOYNER.
Pounds. Amount.
Average
J. W. EDWARDS.
Pounds. Price. Amount-
4.90
1775.
28.00.
4.00
36.50. 5.47
3.54
24.50.
Average
834.66
L. H. WILSON.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
2.88
25.50. 10.12
15.00. 4.05
10.00. 30.00
Average
JAMES EDWARDS.
Pounds. Amount.
1.80
1725.
2.00
25.00. 1.75
Average
MISS FLORENCE HORN-
Pounds- Price Amount.
1664
. 10.75
Average
A. JACKSON.
Pounds- Price-
3.42
1800. 3.96
5-87
14.00. 4.76
7.95
Average
As ever, your friends,
FORBES MO YE, Proprietors Warehouse. Greenville, N. C.
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY.
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Session Opens September 5th, 1894, Closes June, 1895.
Full Corps of Teachers. Complete English Course. Ancient and Modern Languages. Special
Advantages in Music and Art. For full particulars apply to
.,
FREE ENGLISH SCHOLARSHIP will be given two young ladies who preparing
to teach in the Public Schools of Pitt and adjoining counties. Tuition will be required in advance, but
will be refunded to the applicants who make the highest average on regular examinations at the
close of the session. Candidates must enter not later than October 1st.
EXPENSES. music Use of Piano or Organ, one
Terms-Half Session-20 Weeks. tour each day,
Primary Latin, Greek, French and Ger-
, a , Conservatory Course,. 20.00 , ,,
Academic. 15-00 man
1500 Board, lights
Collegiate,.
and
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
l I H
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES.
FOR STATE
S. TATE,
of Burke County.
FOR CHIEF E,
JAMES E. SHEPHERD,
of Beaufort County.
TOR ASSOCIATE JUSTICES,
WALTER CLARK, of Wake county.
JAMES C. of Cumberland.
ARMISTEAD BURWELL, of Meek-
FOR JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT,
3rd JACOB BATTLE.
4th District, R. ALLEN.
8th District. BENJAMIN F. LONG.
9th Dirt., WILLIAM N. MEBANE.
10th Dirt B.
12th Dirt., H. BASCOM CARTER.
For Cong. Dirt.
WILLIAM A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort county.
For Solicitor Third District.
JOHN E. WOODARD.
county.
COUNTY TICKET.
FOR
F. G. JAMES.
OF REPRESENTATIVES
J. D. COX,
S. M. JONES.
FOB CLERK SUPERIOR COURT
WILLIS R. WILLIAMS.
For. SHERIFF
RICHARD W. KING.
FOR REGISTER DEEDS
HENRY HARDING.
FOR
JOHN FLANAGAN.
FOB CORONER
DR. C.
FOB
J. B.
STATE NEWS
Things Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest.
The Cream of the News
Joe Williams, Warren
whipped his wife to death
day last week and escaped.
The poor woman died two days
after her cruel treatment at the
hands of the inhuman wretch.
A gentleman living within sis
miles of Raleigh told a News and
Observer reporter that he had
twenty five acres in cotton this
year, and that thus far he had
picked twenty-two bales of
pounds each, and was good f r
seven more bales.
Mr. B. J. Moore, of
Guilford county, has on his place
an oak tree which measures thirty
feet in circumference, covers
half an acre, and will shade rive
hundred people at noon, allowing
two feet to the head.
Kinston Free Press Earnest
Dallas, two-year-old son of Mr.
Jno. T. Aldridge, who lives
three miles from Kinston, was
accidentally run over by a cart
hauling cotton from the field Fri-
day. He was playing under the
cart and was not seen. The
wheel ran over his hip and injured
him so that he died that night.
What Populists Denounce.
The North Carolina Populist
platform denounces
tariff bill and the ponding
Democratic tariff
We quote We especial-
denounce the pending tariff
bill as a makeshift for
tariff The Populists
thus
Free cotton bagging.
Free cotton ties.
Free agricultural
Free salt.
Reduction of on
woolen goods.
Cheaper hardware.
7- Cheaper necessaries in all
lines.
Tito Income tax.
The Anti-Trust law.
That's the Populist platform.
It the law,
bat
reforms which take the place of
the law.
Is there any honest farmer in
the State who can stand on that
Raleigh News and
Observer.
The best Salve In the world for Cuts,
Sores, Ulcer, Salt Rheum.
Fever Sores, Chapped
Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures or n
pay required. It is guaranteed to
perfect satisfaction or money
Price penis per ho- sale
John I.
MEETING.
N. C, Oft. 1894.
The Board of Commissioners
of Pitt county mot this day,
sent C- chairman, S- A.
Gainer, T. E. Keel, Jesse L.
Smith and Leonidas Fleming.
The following orders for
wore drawn
Martha Nelson Margaret
Bryan H D Smith 2.00,
Bryan Jacob
horn Nancy Moore
Susan Norris Susan
Lucinda Smith Patsy
Henry Harris,
Crawford
Smith Hettie and John An-
Henderson
Eliza Edwards
J ii
Henry Sam Amy j
Cherry Fannie Tucker
J O Proctor Alice j
Easter Vines Alex
Winifred Taylor
Mary Briley Lydia Taylor
John Ham W H Par-
J G Nelson Win-
Chapman Henry Funk I
Polly Adams J W
Crisp F Williams
Mahala Braxton John
Crisp for wife James Long
John Williams
America Hartley 50-
The orders were is-
sued for general county
C D Rountree John
Flanagan W R Crawford
W R Parker, Sidney
Spain E A B S
Sheppard J- B- Cherry
Henry Hooker James
Williams Sam Brewer
Jesse Brown Chas Skinner
H T Thigpen D C
Smith T A Thigpen T
C J B Little
Evans J L Rob-
Ed Harrington
T Edwards 3-, W A Barrett
R Greene B S
C E A
Jr R If
Hathaway W T Smith
Wyatt Jones Rich-
ard Turner R L Davis
W H Bagwell A B
Galloway Brown
J T Moore Greenville
Lumber Co R W King
R W G W
Edmundson W E Warren
B Sheppard B
and G M Tucker
C Dawson J W Smith
B Sheppard an I R W
King John E
E A R
H Smith
Moore D U Moore G W
W B
J A H -18, B M Lewis
J L Robertson C
Smith Manning S
A Gainer L B
W J Rollins W H
L A Mayo B S Shep-
A M Joyner O W
Harrington Jesse L Smith
T E Keel C
L Fleming H Shep-
II Harding D T
J R
W B Greene 55-
The Sheriff was ordered to
summon a jury lay out a now
road in township
from the Tar road across the
of S F
others to the new road.
Monthly report of Dr W H
Bagwell, superintendent of health
was read ordered filed.
J L Perkins was appointed
Registrar Carolina township in
place of W D Keel.
C J Smith, of Swift Creek, and
C C Kirkman, of
were of double tax.
John W Carson was granted
privilege of running a merry go-
round.
The committee appointed to
assist in settlement between the
Sheriff and Treasurer, reported
the duty performed and a com
settlement made.
R W King in report he
had laid out established a
public road in township
accordance with an order of
the Board issued at May
also a road in town-
ship as ordered at July mooting.
The following jurors
drawn for December term of Pitt
Superior
First J James
L D F Owens, E B
Dudley, Joel A Manning, W J
W F Harrington. R Hy
man, Henry Dixon, S W Barney,
W S May, R R Fleming, W N
M Lawhorn, J J B F
Anderson, B D Beach, Win T
Gray, Caesar Kennedy.
Second C Moore,
David Hyman, R W Faithful, B
F E D Manning, J H
Whitehurst, James T Joyner, C
C Forbes, T Cox, H C Bed-
J E Campbell, J A Lang, W
B Roebuck, G Whitehurst, C
E Johnston, Augustus Forbes, B
D Leggett, W D Keel,
BOB
MUSEUM
WILL EXHIBIT AT
Thursday, October
ONE DAY ONLY.
A GRAND HOLIDAY.
Ada, Princess of the Arena.
It is that you should
look after your registration for
the election. Books
are open in township. If you
not registered go do so
Do not it of until the
last day.
at A. M. with Men, Women, Horses,
open dens of Lions, Tigers, Leopards,
and Hyenas in the
ROYAL
MALE AND FEMALE
BATS AND JUGGLERS FROM
THE QUARTERS OF THE
GLOBE. EVERY DEPART
IS AT ONCE ENTER
AMUSING, INTER
AND ABOVE ALL
MORAL AND INSTRUCTIVE
NO OTHER BIG- SHOW COMING-.
It comes in its specially constructed cars.
ADMISSION SO cents. Children under years cents.
Doors open at and o'clock P. M. Performances commence at and P. M. Giving you a full
hour to Bee the animals.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Vi,
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10th, 1894.
Entered at th at G
K. C as mail matter.
OUR NOMINEES.
The Reflector resumes to day
the sketch of our candidates and
gives all but the Treasurer and
Surveyor, which are reserved for
next issue.
FOB
It. WILLIAMS
R. Williams of
Revolutionary stock. His groat-
grand-father, John Williams,
walked down off the bench
was judge of the County
and volunteered his service to get
up a Rebel Legislation against
George in 1776.
He was a member during the
seven years war and sever-
His was a
Dupree of the strictest Huguenot
type. Mr. Williams w.-w old
Wake Forest student. His first
political service was
when lie was with the
John Galloway to the Home of
Representatives and
well to the Senate.
lie was then disfranchised by
and bag-
but it did not him
from denouncing them, and as-
to overthrow them by all
legitimate means. He then re-
quietly on his farm until
the Republicans and a few
Democrat took posses-
of the country. When he
was nominated without even his
presence for the Senate, Mr. A-
M- Moore, an able lawyer and
popular man, was his opponent
It was like loading a forlorn hope
with near six hundred votes to
overcome, but ho, together wit h
tho entire ticket was elected with
the exception of the Sheriff- He
was again to
himself till when he deter
mined not to accept a nomination
any longer for the
of a financial nature resulting
from neglect of his farm, by Ids
devotion to the party being tho
cause. When in tho
he was chairman of the committee
of Agriculture, Mechanics and
Mining three terms, lie has
steadily voted the Democratic
years and has been
conspicuous in almost every cam-
during that period. At the
last Presidential election ho was
under the direction of the Demo-
Executive Committee for
weeks, speaking sometimes
twice a day, without any reward,
or the hope of reward.
Mr- Williams has ever been on
the side cf the people. Ho has
Master of the State Grange
for twenty years. In the
he was the author of the
bill mating it criminal to
late in futures, ever fought hard
for lower interest, and was the
first to start in favor of a Rail-
road Commission and first for the
Training School.
He is now nominated for
or Court Clerk and will have two
candidates against him, but he
has never yet been beaten, and
will coma out with the
entire ticket glorious and
FOB REGISTER OF DEEDS H. HARD
Henry our candidate
for Register of Deeds, is years
of age, was born just across the
Pitt county line the county cf
prominent men the e of
Hyde, Beaufort, Craven, Pamlico,
and Pitt. Some of them are prom-
and prosperous farmers,
some, are merchants, some are
doctors, some are lawyers,
quite a number are ministers
of the Gospel Mr- Harding
was four years the
Public Instruction o Pitt
county. How well how
efficiently he discharged the
ties of that office, we leave the
teachers and the children of Pitt
county, both white and colored,
to tell; ask them. Maj. Harding
has served us for two years as
our Register of Deeds, and as
stated two weeks ago. no
in the has a better one,
and the people of Pitt county are
going to try him for two years
more. In all the vicissitudes of
life through which Mr. Harding
passed, whether in or
in war, it has been tho one object
of his ambition to discharge
the duties of his position life,
a manner creditable to himself
and satisfactory to the people
whom served.
J. B- CHERRY.
R. MO YE.
J. G.
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN PRESENTING TO THEIR
MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS THEIR
FALL WINTER
FOR SHERIFFS. W.
Richard W. King, oar lent
Sheriff and candidate tot
is a native Pitt
and was born in what is now
Farmville township. September
His only life as
the- farm his
was that received by at-
tending th country schools-
he entered the Sheriffs
office as deputy an lee bis Uncle
W- M. King, and served under
him six 1833 Mr. J. A-
K- was elected Sheriff
and he was retained as deputy,
serving four years under him
In he received a
very flattering for Via
nation of Sheriff against his chief.
1392 was nominated for
Sheriff tho first ballet over
Several competitors by a big ma-
and was elected, receiving
a majority both his
Harrington and
This year he was re nominated
by acclamation, the same two
against him, out
Dick King is beat
both by a still larger
His official duties lave always
faithfully performed and he
his the county excellent
Sheriff.
FOR i C Oil
Dr. O Laugh
is a young man of w
the county may well feel proud.
He is twenty three years old, a
sou of Mr. J. J.
of and a grandson of
Dr. C J. of Greenville.
If nothing more were said about
him this would all tho
or he
needed to of Pitt county
Dr. attended the
Homer School of Oxford, from
where he went to the
and then graduated
at the University of
Pennsylvania. Since graduating
joining the Medical
Society he has practicing
his profession in co-partnership
with his grandfather and enjoys
a wide practice. He was
n for Coroner by a large ma-
and will make an officiant
official.
Hon. Walter R. spoke
in the Court House last Friday
night. He has been an earnest
laborer for the Democratic party
for the past fourteen or fifteen
years and is a young man yet-
He is a natural born orator, a fine
writer and one of our best cam-
He presented tho is-
been selected with special to the trade in
this It includes the pick the market in Fresh
Fall and Winter Styles and not less astonishing than the
goods, will be the low prices put on them. We
here to compete with
We are after your patronage an I expect to get it by
value received; we do not want it on term, we pro-
pose to inaugurate the rarest bargain season we lime ever
sided over. A half-hour spent in looking over our stock will
you some idea of the popular styles and we Cl n only hope
that ft will be as much pi insure for you to sec as for u to show
our goods.
LUCK and
THE DAY.
Bar Hi I Will k Heard.
I AM PUSHING
for all it is worth. In all of my experience I have never carried or
seen a beautiful line of Fall and Winter Goods. They consist of
BLACK, BLUE. BROWN and OXFORD MIXTURES, in CLAY
WORSTED, WORSTED and CHEVIOTS. are worn
in either SACK, DOVE TAIL, and OUT A or PRINCE
My goods are of the best quality style
speak for themselves. We can lit tho Man, Middle-Aged M-u.
Young Man, or Boy.
---ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT WE CARRY---
potions,
and to fit all.
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Valises, Crockery, Glass-
ware. Wood and Hardware, Guns, Shot and Pow-
Gun Implements, Tinware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings to
lit, Harness, Groceries and Flour.
Th re you struck me right. lave in stock all grades
can suit young old in either heavy or light weights.
Come in, look over
-m . my samples and let
Custom Made Suits-
ore. A lit guaranteed
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS.
I defy the world. I am in the swim on the above goods and can suit
most fastidious. Call mo and be made happy.
Cotton and Peanuts.
Below Norfolk prices Of cotton
and peanuts for yesterday, M furnished
by Cobb Bros. A Co . Mer-
chants of Norfolk
his father owning lauds which are now agitating the
on both sides of the county line-
He worked when a boy in both
counties- He went into the army
at the very of the
war and arose from a private,
through the several gradations of
to the rank of Maj r
of a Regiment. Was a member
of tho House of the Leg
and where
concert with Willis R- Williams
rendered efficient aid in the re-
peal of the and abolished
imprisonment for the
act restoring to married women
the common law right of dower
the passage which acts both
and Williams wore the
principal instruments-
Maj. Hording was years a
member of the Board of County
Commissioners of Beaufort
together with Hon. W. A. B
Branch our present
Congress. their
as we have only to
that their Board found the
county in debt with
script as cents
and their people burdened with
the incubus of a toll bridge across
river at Washington. They
left the county out of debt,
script worth cents and the
t ll bridge a thing of the past.
Maj. Harding informs its that
years of his life has been
iii teaching school, and
their fruits ye shall know
hem, in looking It's list of
pupils we fad the names
We still lead in this line, having the largest and best selected
stock ever carried in our town. We have six thousand
and seventy-five square feet of floor space
to this one line, and when you want
anything in the Furniture line
-------consisting of-------
Good 3-16
Low 7-18
;.
Extra
IN
October, 8th 1894-
Mis. Martha Latham, of Washington,
is visiting Her daughter, Mrs.
Mrs. M. E. left Friday to spend
tune in
Miss Lucy Brooks began school here
Monday with eighteen students.
Parmele Items.
October, 8th, 1894.
Mi. Pope, has been sick
his home in mi-ton, returned
this morning.
Rev. It. w. Hines is at Falkland this
week assisting u meeting.
Mr. Chas. spent Sand in
Greenville looking after his health.
Mr. M. A. of
here to-day.
Mr. Clary, of Williamston, Was
hereto-day Stopping With Mr. Whitley.
American mind with that power
and clearness which gives force
to all of his speeches. His
and short comment on some
of the utterances of the third
party leaders just two years
ago brought down the house.
This was especially true when he
came to those of Col. Skin-
were such as these
knows that I am a
Simon pure us
to divide like butting our
brains out against a brick
What a my countrymen.
Mr- Henry's speech was by
a good audience.
Tho Democracy owes Mr.
a debt of gratitude for the
good work he is doing this
He has just spoken
many of the counties of the
eastern part of the State, in
Pitt county alone delivered four
speeches which Lad telling effect
in winning votes to tho
He will ever occupy a warm place
the hearts of our people who
yet hope to see him rewarded as
his labors and ability deserve.
Georgia had her State election
last week and the Democrats car-
the State by majority.
This is a much lower majority
than that State gave in the
two years ago.
Some gentlemen at the
at Old Sparta, Sunday, were
telling that J B Lloyd, the Pop-
mogul of Edgecombe, had
an appointment to speak on Sat-
i at a place Tarboro,
when he jot there he did
not find a man out to bear him.
Alas is fame.
Medium Price Marble Top Suits.
Oak Suits, Marble Top Bureaus,
Wood Top Bureaus
have their new stock and
show their customers the very latest
designs, styles and colors for fall and
winter.
New Pate Its
while our Ribbon,
all other goods will
be sure to please you.
Call and examine our stock.
Notice to Tax Payers.
Tax List of the town of
. villa t it the year 1894 been
in my bands for collection, and u
am to make prompt settlement
notice is hereby given to tux payers
of the town to make earl settlement
with me. You can both yourself
and collector trouble by not over-
looking this. O. K.
Town Tax Collector.
Notice to Creditors.
HAVING qualified the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
Administrator of the estate of J. B. Ty-
son, deceased, notice l- hereby given to
all persona indebted to the estate to
make payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
against said must present the
game payment on or b fore
day of October, 1805, or ibis notice will
be plead in bar of recovery,
This 1st day of Oct. 1884.
W. K.
of J. B. Tyson.
f; .
u Z . .
c vi h h III I
I am pleased to state that since
from my recent I haw
the northern markets to purchase
NEW GOODS
and am now prepared to show you an
------site line of------
Dry Notions Ma
HATS,
FURNISHING
You will find all my goods rid first-class and prices
Come to see me and let me show what can do.
N. C.
COTTON
BUYERS,
AND DEALERS IN
Tables,
Extension Dining Side Boards, Tin Safes, Mattresses
Bed Spring, Children's Beds and Cribs, Parlor Suits, Hall
Racks, Wardrobes, Lace Curtains, Curtain Poles, Floor Oil
yard, yard and a half and two yard wide, and Door
Mats, call on us.
We have some rare bargains in all lines. We
defy competition. We are here to stay.
can and will sell as low as any one.
Your friends,
To deal fair and square with our friends and patrons and by c
BOTTOM PRICES on Goods and Top Prices for Produce. We intend to I Had
We make a
Specialty of
fill M MME
h W
I A fill
of
pies Law
log nova
J-INS
ii p





SAVED BY HIS
A Man Struck by Lightning and
Lived.
Propped up with pillows in a large
willow rocking-chair, with his eyes
tightly bandage, sits a young man
of Cambridge-port, who was struck
by lightning but lived to tell the
story. His name is Horace W. Fol-
he lives at Green street aDd
tie is one of the keepers on the pilot
boat Florence. It is not too much
to say that a pair of rubber boots
saved his life, says the Trans-
When a storm came up on an after-
noon recently the pilot boat Flor-
was moored a quarter of a mile
from Boston light. The keepers of
the boat put on their oil clothing,
and rubber boots and
Mr. who is about twenty-five
years old, stood on deck observing
the storm, his left hand clasping the
back brae, a wire cord half an inch
in diameter. There had only
two flashes and no one aboard
thought danger near.
Then came a third, and Mr. Fol-
knew nothing for over an hour.
The current evidently selected the
highest bamboo pole
above the main topmast, and tore it
Into small pieces after it had ripped
the flag off. Then the electricity
came down the into Fol-
His rubber boots, however,
offered and so part of the
energy branched off in another
As it was, his left side
caught the force of the charge.
Luckily three women were aboard,
comprising a summer pleasure part-,
and one of them proved an expert in
this emergency case.
After hour of rubbing and
dosing began to show signs
of life and complained of a violent
headache, the sensation of seasick-
a paralyzed condition of his
left side and throat and a prickly
feeling through his whole body. It
waS evening before he became alto-
himself and then he was
taken ashore in the physician's boat
end carried to his home in
an ambulance.
It was not until the next night that
even water passed his lips. In the
meantime his left eye began to pain
him intensely when he opened it and
his skin felt tough as leather,
face gradually assumed its normal
color after the deep purple flush
caused by the flash had faded.
He is feeling much more like
himself and there is a good prospect
of his speedy recovery. He says
that the hour following the stroke
is a blank to
NORTHMEN AND
Proofs of an Ancient Norse Colony
Near Boston.
The late Prof. published
several books in which he under-
took to fix the spot which the
Northmen landed, says the
Ledger, and identified their
with a locality on the
Charles river, near Boston. His
daughter, Miss Cornelia
has followed in her father's foot-
steps, and has recently published,
through Boston,
her proofs the site of
in and her results of the
opening of the graves of the North-
men on the books of the Charles
liver, near the city of
where her father proved to his own
and to that North-
men founded a colony. Miss Hors-
ford gives the steps of the process
of reasoning by which she reaches
the results set down in her attract-
publication, illustrated by
from Du
and from other archaeological
authorities, largely from the
in Peabody museum at
Harvard, and other sources of
knowledge.
Both Prof. and his
daughter have gone to work so
have mastered every detail
of the subject, have studied it on
the spot and gathered evidence
as well as from the results of the
best explorers in other fields of
archaeological and ethnological in-
that there is a special
interest in seeing the results an-
by the father thus, after his
death, confirmed by the daughter.
It is an example of filial piety that
well deserves recognition, and is so
purely a labor of love that it is en-
titled to the gratitude all who
like to see continued effort to solve
a problem which has puzzled
dents at home abroad for many
years. Miss snare in her
father's Investigations and her own
ore marked by scholarly ability, zeal
and earnestness, and example
may well inspire others to pursue
archaeological research in other sec-
of this country, rich in fields
that have not yet been exhausted,
and thus reap its own exceeding
great reward.
Precaution.
She
Dick, II hope you haven't lost the
are so absent-minded,
dear
He Oh, no; not
upon this occasion. I locked it in
the time-lock safe at the bank and
it's there
Mostly a Native.
of this
asked a Scotch sheriff of c witness
who was summoned to testify in o
case of illicit distilling.
was the re-
mean were you born in the
I born in this par-
but I'm moist a native for
came here when you were a
child, I suppose you said the
sir; I'm bore about sax year
how do you come to be
a native of this
ft see, when I come here
year I weighed eight
I'm seventeen
see that about nine stone
me belongs to t is the
eight comes from
debt fended.
are at par- Economy is her
watchword. Turn from these
pleasant things to those other
thoughts suggested by the foul
conspiracy of the worst elements
of Republicanism and Populism.
From this fair
to feed and fatten on that moor-
County government
extravagance, and
to loot the treasuries of a
score of and of as many
defenseless and unmasked
and town ; high arms
struck from the hands of the
State's State's credit
impaired, bonds a drug in
the some Pop
South Carolina ideas, re-
in bloodshed and creating
a feeling of class bitterness, hard,
obdurate and
to tho business out of
the State that North Carolina's
immortal past is gone;
there be none to cherish, pro
and defend her. If we should
fail in November, we fail. But
will screw our courage to the
sticking place and we'll not fail.
Charlotte Observer.
IF WE WE FAIL.
Tuesday, November 1894,
is big with results to North Caro-
Should the Democratic
party meet defeat on that day
there is not a contract from the
smallest to the greatest, from the
hire of the very cook in the
en to the payment of the millions
of bonded debt of the that
will not shake and quiver in the
wake of that, dire event.
The question of the present
status of the race, that has
been so happily settling itself
under wise conservative leg-
will be re opened-
False and illusory hopes will
fill the breasts of the
suspecting but credulous
man where contentment and hap
now universally prevail-
Wilmington will lose its
charter, Newborn will its
charter; Goldsboro will lose its
charter. district any one of
these cities to suit tho hate and
spite of Butler
what decent man or woman would
or could abide the
Populism means this much
more. It means, and we speak
by the card, that the course of
events in North Carolina for the
past twenty years shall be
changed.
In private conversation,
their public utterances, in their
party platform they and
they spare not. Ballots and
lets are with them one and the
same, so cruel their threats, so
hot their hate. unhallowed
hands have been laid upon tho
ermine itself.
The judges of our courts of
last retort, who for a full quarter,
century have so hold the should receive no
of justice that the quivering
has been ever rightly ad is sufficient to demand its
justed, men, too, are in
into the contest to answer that
unholy purpose. No man. be but the
Democrat or he Republican, which the people of
be he Populist or be he lL
can lay his hand on his
heart and say that justice has When a Populist tells you that
been or denied Democratic tariff bill was
on account of is politics. framed in the interest of the
North Carolina, since tho dawn- Trust and other special in-
mg of her bright of Demo- Crests, ask him how it was, then,
in the year 187-1, challenges two Populist Senators voted
the people of tho world to for it as it finally passed tho Sen-
lei her in the just, wise, honest ate, and that seven Populist Rep-
aid economical administration of voted for it and none
all the departments of her gov K ;
TO BEAT
THE MEANS.
When a large
broke from their
party two years ago joined
the new Populist party, they de-
that they had not changed
their principles but had left the
Democratic organization because
it was not true to its time honored
principles- They became
if any Democrat suggested
fr it the
interpreted the action
of the men who utter the cry,
means give success
to the Re-
publican cat has swallowed the
rats.
The Populist party North
Carolina, as a self-respecting,
good
government, does not exist to-
day. It once advocated lower
taxes, more money, better men
many promised to stand out at
that they were getting ready to i, , K, , . .,
combine with the Republican
of tho present political
discord says
the Clinton Democrat, due to
party, and said that such a charge
was foully false for the reason
that their principles were directly
opposed to those of the
can party.
Most of these men were honest
in their indignation and never
contemplated coalition with the
Republicans.
At that time we foresaw and
predicted what the end would be,
and warned our friends of the
least, for certain
visionary. Men who stand for
something always re-
but men who are ready to
trade and dicker with all comers
for a few loaves fishes are
the contempt of all honest men,
and soon perish from the face of
the earth-
Who can that the
lists in this abandoned
every notion and idea that
mated them two years ago Who
, . , longer that it is now
destination that awaited them if; he tail to republican dog
they followed the W J Who the it has for-
been accepted as their leaders. ,, tho
This prediction was verified soon-la of who
than we expected, for in 1892, to ,
in several counties, fusion was d honest
effected between the immaculate
new Populist party and the
old Republican party. At
a failure of the people to under- its birth the Populist party
stand, the situation and the
of the task which confronted
a democratic administration
When the people get better in-
formed some of them will bet-
democrats. It is tho policy of Radicalism.
ready for deals on the sly, but the
is clear. Ho wont into tho
party to advance certain reforms.
Finding that the party has for-
gotten, if not repudiated, these
measures, he is duty bound to
populist politicians to
dissatisfaction among the people,
by attributing all manner of evil
and no good to democratic rule.
leaders engineering these t Self respect,
had to do so with great
for fear of offending the rank and he not longer
whose stomachs stand a party that
But stop by
abuse misrepresentation. n u.
J v for all the evils of
of Democratic action and saying lain.
nothing about tho Republicans
the leaders who had agreed to . i . t v., . l
, ,. . , my people. news and
deliver the Populist voters to the. q, , .
Republican party have so
the people against their old
party that of them wont
with real pleasure.
to beat the Demo
Both Will Choked to
There is doubt in some
pie's mind as to whether the
House T Charlotte Observer.
was the cry raised by, publican party has swallowed tho
Gideon Wilson and without re-j Third party or whether the latter
former Democrats took has swallowed the former- As we
it up, and are acting upon no authority on the question
Gideon Wilson can afford to we cannot give our friends any
this cry and to act upon it, for information, but we can tell them
there is no socialist who wars this however, that believe
more good government than that both will chocked
he- But the honest, conservative to death in trying to perform
voters in North Carolina cannot that Topic.
follow such a leader into
camp of the anarchists, and sac men fulfill the law of
everything for the pleasure Christ they do not need any
of beating tho Democrats. law to make them do right.
Come Facts Government
Ownership of Railways.
In compliance with a resolution
of the Senate, introduced by Sen-
the
Commerce Commission has com-
piled some data regarding the
ownership of railroads by foreign
governments. This is
as
It appears that ten countries
do not own or operate railways,
Columbia, Groat Britain
and Ireland, Mexico, Paraguay,
Peru, Switzerland, Turkey,
States and Uruguay.
The following governments own
and operate some of the railways,
Argentina, Australasia,
Belgium, Brazil,
Canada, Cape of Good Hope,
Chili, Denmark, France,
Guatemala. India, Japan, Nor-
way, Portugal, Russia and
The following governments
own and operate all
their railways, Egypt and
The following governments
part of their railways, but do
not operate any, leading all the
present mileage to private com-
Greece, Holland
and
The relative rates charged for
freight and passenger service on
the government owned railroads
the oilier fasts cited con-
with such roads are cal-
to afford little encourage
to the advocates of govern-
ownership. A comparison
of charges per mile
an average Great Brit-
of 4-42 cents for first-class,
8.90 for second class and for
third class. tho aver-
is cents for first class,
for second class
cents for third class. Ger-
tho rate is 3-10 first-
class, second class and
third class. In United
States the average is
cents.
The average charges per ton
per mile as In
Franco, ; in
cents, and Unit d
States,
God's laws never kept until
they written in the heart.
Every crown that comes from
hand man has thorns in it.
Below we print a portion of the
platform adopted by the
in New York at their
convention. We every man
who has gone or shown any
to go to tho Third
and thence into fusion with
people who are in league with
these New York Republicans, to
read this carefully. If you have
had any doubts about
the tariff bill just passed is favor-
able to the South read carefully
what these Republicans say. If
you don't believe in protection to
a favored few, read what is said
said along this line and see if you
can afford to vote with them. Do
you an tax so
that the wealthy may help bear
the burdens of Read
what tho Republicans say about
this. If you will consider for one
moment you will see that you
have not a single interest in com-
with the Republican party
you are degrading yourself,
when you vote thus in direct op
position to what you know to be
to your interest. Read and
well the following i
The platform denounces the
Northern Democratic Congress-
men for permitting the Southern
members to protect tho chief pro-
ducts of section while re-
moving or largely reducing the
duties on the products
of tho North, thus permitting tho
South by legal enactment time
of peace to destroy our prosper-
and accomplish what it failed
to do by illegal enactment
time of war. especially
denounce tho Democratic
from this, the greatest
manufacturing State in the Union,
whose annual manufacturing
duct exceeds that of tho entire
South by for their
treachery and cowardice in aiding
the passage of a sectional tariff
bill that has crippled the
tries and reduced tho wages of
that levies a lax
incomes which is a tax
ask all who fa-
a discontinuance or tariff a.
or believe in the
of Republican protection, to
elect Republican members of the
House of Representatives in
every district so that our
trial, interests may be properly
represented in the councils of the
nation not as at present left
utterly unrepresented in tie lead-
committees upon which the
framing of tariff and financial
legislation largely depends.
The Selector and Constitution
WILL YOU HELP
In the great contest which is to fought between now and the next presidential election for
THE PEOPLE'S Coinage both Gold and Silver, without discrimination, which means the
free coinage of both as opposed to the policy of contraction, which is being dictated by England, and
which levies tribute on every product of the farm, on valuations of all kinds and on all compensation for
labor.
The Great ISSUe nOW i-s the double standard against the single use of both gold and
silver as standard money metals, against the organized effort to hold the currency of the country strictly
to the gold basis.
THE ATLANTA CIRCULATION,
Weekly Constitution
published at ATLANTA, GA., and having
A CIRCULATION OF MORE THAN chiefly among the farmers of the
country, and going to more homes than any weekly newspaper published on the face of the earth is
The Leading Champion Of the People in this as well as in other great contests in which
they are engaged against the exactions of monopoly.
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THE CONSTITUTION'S SPECIAL FEATURES
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Under the editorial of Clark Howell. its special contributors are writers of such world-wide
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THE CONSTITUTION if among the newspapers publishing daily editions on the side Of
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1st. The Free Coinage of Silver,
Believing that the establishment of a single gold standard will wreck the prosperity of the great masses
of the people, though it may profit the few who have already grown rich by federal protection and federal
subsidy.
Tariff Reform,
that by throwing our open to the markets of the world and levying only import
U- pay the actual expenses of the government, the people will be better served than by making
pay double prices for protection's sake.
An Income Tax,
Believing that who have much property should bear the burdens of government in the same pro-
portion to those who have little.
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A BIT OF
THE CONSTITUTION
heartily advocates an
EXPANSION THE CURRENCY
there is enough of it in circulation to do the legitimate business of the
If you wish to help in shaping legislation to these ends, GIVE THE CONSTITUTION YOUR ASSIST-
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AS A
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION has no equal in America Its news reports cover the world,
and its correspondents and agents are to be found in almost every in the Southern and Western
States.
AS A
It prints more such matter as is ordinarily found in the great magazines of the country than begotten
even from the of them.
AS AN H house within itself, and a year's reading of THE
is a liberal education to any one.
AS A FRIEND AND COMPANION It brings cheer and comfort to the fireside every week,
is eagerly sought by the children, contains valuable information for the mother, and is an
of instruction for member of household.
An Old Bachelor's Peculiar Way
of
A That the
Shocked the Proprietor wt
the
-a
He was a rich old bachelor. Not
too old, either, but just old enough;
and he was a nice old bachelor, too,
who seemed happiest when he was
making other people happy. Tho
pretty waiter girl at the. restaurant
where he took his meals liked him
immensely, but she would have to
do that to like him one-half as well
as ho liked her. Indeed, he liked
her so his friends that
he ate seven a day, not to
mention lunches between meals.
Hut, he didn't care for talk.
He laughed cheerily to aid his
went there as often as
he wished. Ono day after be had
finished a meal he hurried out, and
In a minute or less he hurried back
again.
I something
he asked her as he began looking
around.
think she replied as she
joined in the search.
sure I he Insisted,
around among the tables and
chairs.
was it she inquired.
it's about so big, I've heard
be said, holding up his hands
In measurement.
She looked at him curiously and
tried to remember how many glasses
of wine he had taken at. lunch.
sure you didn't leave It
she said. you left it some-
where
hope
she suggested reassuring-
I come across It I'll keep It
for
you sure you he asked
in a tone so strongly implying doubt
that tho girl's face flushed.
know I answered
warmly. you known mo
long enough to trust
this was he said,
still searching for it.
For the first time in their acquaint-
the girl didn't like him.
you speak to the pro-
about it, then, and let him
keep it for she said, half
angrily.
he exclaimed,
don't want him to have
me what, it she insisted,
I'll return it to
I don't want you he
laughed softly.
The girl's pretty face grew
tier, for was not the next day to be
her birthday
she chirruped, it
something for
He nodded laughingly.
was she coax-
as a child might.
He looked into her dancing eyes,
and it made him so happy that be
fairly fluttered.
think it was my heart, my
he said, becoming serious
and tender at the time,
lb pr was so greatly em-
l c -d that put both
ids i i his right before the
pr . i -tor l him ex-
in until they told him what
had Y. Advertiser.
Work for Christian Unity in England.
The clergymen which
m-t lately for tho
purpose of securing greater unity of
reeling among English Protestants
has issued an appeal signed by the
of Worcester, Archdeacon
and other prominent clergy-
men of the Church of England, as
well as Presbyterian, Congregation-
Baptist and Methodist ministers.
They urge upon the churches of
Great Britain and Ireland, first, the
importance of continuing to pray
for unity on Whitsunday; second,
tho further formation fit social
unions with the object of concerted
action on the part of the churches
for the solution of problems
which confront Christians every-
where, on principles common to tho
whole brotherhood of believers;
third, the adoption of periodical con-
bet ween all Christian min-
in given districts for counsel
and encouragement, with the object
of preventing the wasteful overlap-
ping of Christian agencies; fourth,
the cultivation of the belief that by
brotherly conferences differences
may be overcome, mutual
made and a desire for real
unity cultivated among Christians
that all the disciples of the Lord
may be Post.
When a Girl Is In
When a girl looks fresh and bloom-
and good looking it is a sign she
is in love.
A girl who doesn't know how to
make plum preserves has no right
to allow a young man to call on
a second time.
When a girl Is love she
stay very long when she goes out of
town on a visit. She has to come
home an eye on her property.
The American Florists.
The bill for the Incorporation of
the American Society of Florists
passed by the recent congress pro-
tor an organization with a
charter membership extending from
Washington and Philadelphia to
Louis. Its sole purpose is to prop- i
agate and spread the interest in
and advance the science.
The measure owes its origin to
R Smith, superintendent of tho
Botanic gardens, who been for
forty years in charge of the flower
department of the government. Mr.
Smith is the possessor of the best
and most extensive library on
culture, botany, etc., In United
States, embracing several thousand
volumes, and It Is his desire to see
an organization of florists formed to
which he can donate his books. The
bill passed the senate by a
vote in the last congress,
was never up in the house.
It was introduced by Mr,
but In absence of that gen
man was called up by Representative
and





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 10th,
at th at Greenville,
N. C. as second-class mail matter.
Pases.
A- E- Holton. Esq., chairman
of the Republican State
bas a cir-
his people quoting the
registration law of State and
On Supreme Court's construction
of the same and urging them to
register in conformity therewith-
This is well. The Republicans
and Populists claim that they
were defrauded of votes in many
counties in the last election by
reason of the character of this
registration. It is not claimed
that they were registered accord-
to law that being pi op
registered they were still
denied the right to vote. On the
contrary it is conceded that the
registration was irregular and
illegal, and it is much more
sensible of Mr- Holton to set
about instructing his people how
they should register than to let
tho matter drift and take it all
out in whining about the hard
ship which his party suffered by
reason of the registration of two
years ago. this all cleared
with everybody
and complying with the reg-
law. with poll-hold
representing both parties
judging the November election,
we do not see why we should not
have an end hereafter of all this
gabble fraud and sharp
in the elections North
Landmark.
Nash county a
list paper published at
hope. comes out against the
chine of E W.
Timberlake for Judge and C M.
Bernard for Solicitor, and a
respondent of the same paper-
who is also a Populist, says that
he will not support the bogus
ticket. Another
of the same paper among many
other thing do nut be
here there is a true Peoples Party
man that will approve of such
fraud and deception by casting
his vote in the coming election
for a candidate who was
ed in that
Oh ye hypocrite, pharisees, Ac
how yon fling as any party
the epithets of cliques ma-
chine Ac- when yon have formed
them in nearly every county in
Times.
THE PAINS OF MARRIAGE.
Marriage License.
During the month of
the Register of Deeds of Pitt
issued licensee t tho fol-
lowing couples, four white and
colored
J. White and
Sidney E. Taylor, J. A-
and Lizzie A- F. Ken-
and V- Whichard, Mack
James and Carrie
Jenkins, Henry Smith
and Gertrude Grant, Edward
and Maggie Daniel, David
Black Amy Willie
Papa and Martha Brown,
and Lillie Johnson.
All Free.
who have need Dr. Hint's N--
know Hi and those
who not, have now the opportunity
to try it Fret, on the advertised
Dr and a Trial Bottle, Free.
Send your and address to II. E.
A to. Chicago, and get
sample box Dr. King's New Life,
Pills as as a copy of Guide
Health and Household instructor.
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do
yon good and cost you at John
L. Drugstore.
The Herald, edited
by an able and wise colored mar,
J. L. Sharp, the colored
people not to support the
party ticket He
Third party is unreliable, if it
ever gets into power will prove a
drawback And tho
Herald is right. We don't believe
that the colored voter in North
lie duped by the wily
Populists. Let them vote the
Democratic ticket and for their
own best
fine.
The Number of Voters North
number of poll tax
payers in 1893 White,
4-11; colored, Total
The number for 1891
white colored,
Total, The increase
white voters is Tho de
crease in ed voters in
Free Pills.
Send y address to U. E.
Ho., Chicago, and get a free sample
b Of Dr. King's New Life fills. A
trial will convince yon of their merits,
These arc easy in notion and are
Particularly effective the cure of
Sick Headache. For
and r troubles they have
teen proved invaluable. Tiny are
guaranteed to be perfectly bat from
every substance and to
vegetable. do not weaken
v their action, but giving tone
and bowels greatly
the Regular size per box.
by John L. Wooten Druggist.
My uncle came to a stop outside a
stationer's shop in Oxford street.
When I saw what had caught his at-
I reproached myself for my
thoughtlessness.
said I, me what you
think representative govern-
no good, George. You did
the same thing at the cake shop. Do
you think I never saw the cake shop
Since this affair was settled I think
every shop I pass reminds me of it
even the gunsmith's. I never
before how entirely retail
trade turned on
perhaps, the second-hand book
shops. The whole world seems bent
on marrying.
said he, a lit-
while ago the thing that worried
me to the exclusion of everything
else was the idea of being married,
and now it is near it's entirely
the getting married that upsets me.
I have forgotten the horrid
in the horror of the opera-
much the said I,
an
at those He waved
his hand towards a neat array
of silver and white pasteboard.;
with an arrow
through the Smith, and
written above it, and on the opposite
and Mrs. John
That is where it has
went on past a display of
with a card about
in the window, past a window full of
white flowers, past a carriage-build-
and a glove shop. like
said my uncle; turns an
everywhere and is just the same for.
everybody. In that cake shop there
are piles and of cakes, from lit-
cakes ten across up to
cakes of three hundred-weight or so;
all just the same rich, uneatable,
greasy stuff, and with just the same
white sugar on top of them. I sup-
pose every day they pack off scores.
It makes one of marrying in
swarms, like the gnats. I catch
myself wondering sometimes if the
run of people really are separate
individuals, or only a kind of replica,
without any tastes of their own.
There are people who would rather
not marry without one of those
cakes, George. To me it seems to
be almost the most asinine position
a couple of adults can be in, to have
to buy a stone or so of that
biliousness and cut it up, or
procure other people to cut it up,
and send it round to other adults
who would almost as soon eat
And why cake
Why not biscuits, or cigarettes, or
chocolate It seems to me to be
playing the fool with a solemn
see, it is the custom to have
anyhow, intend to break
the
did I, but I had it all the
My uncle looked at me.
said I. a woman
says you must do this or
have cake at a wedding, for instance
you must do it. It is not a case
for argument. It is a kind of
they categorical
You will soon learn
Evidently the question was open.
why do they say you
women tell them. They
would despise anyone dreadfully who
did not have a really big cake from
that
dear said I, arc
going into matrimony. You do not
show a proper
said my
only a type. There is this trousseau
business again. Why should a
an who is going to marry require a
complete outfit of that sort Then
the costume. Why should a sane
healthy woman be covered p in
white gauze like ha confectionery
in a shop window when the are
about And
He was going on in quite
tone. isn't a
I said, any of This sort of
talk always irritates a married man
because it revives his own troubles.
just the rule. Surely, if a wife
is worth having she is worth being
ridiculous for You ought to be
jolly glad you don't have to wear ft
fool's cap and paint your nose red.
precious than
he said.
must be these ho
began bitterly, after an interval.
Someone must be responsible, and
its just their way. Do you know,
George. I sometimes fancy that they
have hypnotized womankind into
the belief that ail these
things are absolutely necessary
to a valid as they
have persuaded the landlady class
that no house is complete without a
big mirror over the fireplace and a
bulgy sideboard. There is a very
strong flavor of mesmeric
about a woman's attitude
toward these matters, considered in
the light of her customary common-
sense. Do you know, I
really believe there is a secret
of tradesmen, a kind of priest-
hood, who get hold of our woman-
kind and up with all
these fancies. It's a sort of white
magic. Have you ever been in a
draper's shop,
I said; always wait
you ever read a
didn't said I,
there was any part to read. It's
all advertisements; all the articles
are advertisements, all the para-
graphs, the stories, the answers to
exactly what makes me
think the tradesmen have hypnotized
the sex. It may be they do it in
those dens. A man spots
that kind of thing at drops
the paper. Women go on year after
year, simply a paper
hoarding of that kind, and doing pa-
everything they are told to
do therein. Anyhow, it is only in
this that I can account
all these expensive miseries of
matrimony. I can't understand a
woman in possession of her
deliberately exasperating tho
man she has to live suppose
all men submit to it under protest
for all these stale and
antics. She must be
are not stale to I
said.
he began.;
course, a
I said. she seems so young,
you
putting aside the
said my uncle with a transit dash
of cheerfulness at my mistake,
object to the publicity of the whole
thing. It's not nice to bring the
street into the affair, to sub-
yourself to the impertinent con-
and presents of every
aspirant to your intimacy, to be
patted on the back in the local news-
papers as though were going to
do something clever. Confound
them It's not their affair. And
I'm too old to be a blushing bride-
groom. Then think, what am I to
do, George, if that cad
sends me a
would be like him if he I
said. fancy he
can't go and kick said
my uncle.
with I
to pressure of other
are getting
said my uncle, as near
an approach to a querulous tone as
I have heard from him.
are getting Ire-
plied, with the complacency of one
whose troubles are over. it's
a horrible nuisance, anyhow. Still,
the world grows wiser, and the bur-
den is not quite so bad as it used to
be. A hundred years
be willing enough to
said my uncle; I'm not the
only party in this Mall
Budget.
A Costly Bed.
A Bombay man has constructed a
bedstead priced at ten thousand
rupees. It has at its four corners
four full-sized gaudily-dressed
Grecian at the head
holding banjos, while those on the
right and left feet hold fans.
Beneath the cot is a musical box,
which extends along the whole
length of the cot, and is capable of
playing twelve different charming
airs. The music being the moment
the least pressure is brought to
bear from the top, which is created
by one sleeping or sitting, and
ceases the moment tho individual
rises.
While the music is in progress the
lady banjoists at tho head
late the strings with their fingers
and move their heads, while the two
Grecian damsels at the bottom fan
the sleeper to sleep. There is a
button at the foot of tho cot, which,
after a little pressure, brings about
a cessation of the music, if such be
the desire of the
Wisconsin.
PHOTOGRAPHING NEBULA.
Discoveries Made by the Camera
in Recent Years.
Railroad Building in Corsica.
After going about half the dis-
between and
the evidences of the construction of
the intermediate sections of the rail-
road became apparent. The labor-
on the excavations for the bridges
and in the heavy cuts were many of
them women, young girls and boys
and all, including the men, carried
the dirt and stone out in baskets on
their heads. By this slow, toilsome
method is all this work done, and it
appeared to me that the work would
be interminable, but I was told that,
the contractors were under heavy
bonds to complete the road in the
time contracted for, and that it
would certainly be accomplished.
Charles H. Adams, in the Century.
and His Surroundings.
says that next year he is
going to a summer resort
there are only men, if he can find
sighed the other
docs so love to be
Washington Star.
A Bust of Herod the Great.
The Imperial Hermitage at St.
Petersburg has just been enriched
by a valuable historical and
logical relic, The bust of Herod
the Great, the ruler of Judea in the
days of our Saviour. This bust, says
the St. Petersburg correspondent of
the Dublin Irish Catholic, was dis-
covered some years ago in Palestine
by the Russian An-
the late head of the Russian
mission in Jerusalem, and has been
pronounced by experts to
and the only one of Herod exist-
in our times. This valuable
treasure has been bequeathed to the
Hermitage by the deceased arch-
Her Good Day for Snakes.
A young Baltimore girl, noted for
her beauty gentleness, has come
prominently to the front as a snake
killer. While on a visit to
more county she was attacked by a
large snake in the of a pond
of water. She and her youthful
companions were greatly excited,
but she succeeded in killing the
snake. The disturbance aroused
other snakes, and a serpent war of
unusual magnitude was the result.
After the conflict the reptiles were
counted and piled. It was found
that in all, little and big, twenty
snakes had been
Sun.
As to the Doctors Differ.
in
and
have attempted to show that the
Mosaic account of the deluge was
copied with little change from an
original Assyrian version
was a local flood which took place in
the plains of the Tigris and Eu-
not in tho of the
Jordan. In a recent number of
however,
Richard to prove that
a flood took pi ace in the ice
age the quaternary period.
Interesting Revelations In the
The Camera the Development
of the Science of As-
Great surprise was expressed nine
j cars ago when the Henry brothers,
of Paris, discovered by photography
a strange nebulous spiral apparent-
attached to the star Maia, one of
the The nebula seemed to
start from the star, and bending
round through a quarter of a circle,
in a sweep of hundreds of millions of
miles, finally became forked at the
end like the tail of a comet.
Issuing out of one side- of this
great spiral sprang a no
mass, part of which swept backward
parallel with the original spiral in
such a way as to give to the whole
object tho appearance of eddying
round the star.
Two or three years later the same
astronomers made a photograph
which showed that the entire group
of the or Seven Stars, is
mingled with fantastic nebulous
shapes. In this photograph several
stars appear strung, like beads,
upon a nebulous line or ribbon that
must be many thousands of miles in
length. The conclusion was
that an intimate connection
existed between the stars and the
nebula which together constitute
the
Since then a similar condition of
things has been shown to prevail in
other quarters of the heavens. One
of the latest discoveries of this kind
was made by Prof. Barnard at the
Lick observatory last autumn.
Upon photographing what
pears to the naked eye as a hazy
speck near the wonderful red
able star Mu in the constellation
he a picture
showing a huge nebula surrounding
an irregular group of bright stars,
and surrounded by vast
multitudes of small The
nebula, according to the description
of its discoverer, to mingle
indefinitely with masses of smaller
stars and become part of
Photographs have also shown that
the double star Lambda, in Orion,
is involved in nebulous matter, and
that a nebula is attached to the
the leader of the
same constellation.
These facts become very interest-
when one considers that the
nebula are probably composed of
matter in an unformed or
condition, and that the sun, the
stars and the earth itself were once
in that state.
When we see a star, or a group of
stars, closely associated with
spirals and streamers, it looks
as though tho stars were consuming,
or feeding upon, the nebula, or, in
other words, as if the process of sun-
making were, in such cases, not yet
completed.
Yet it is possible that our own so-
orb, which, for our purposes at
least, seems to be a completed sun,
would, if photographed from a far
point in space, appear as a nebulous
star. From such a point of view, if
they were at all, the Zodiacal
light, the and other
glowing appearances that are
connected with the sun,
would perhaps be blended into a great
system of luminous rings of spirals
as wonderful in form as those at-
to the though far
less imposing in
Companion.
Hit Meaning Illustrated.
A lawyer was cross-questioning a
witness in one of tho justice
courts the other day and was getting
along fairly well until he asked the
witness what his occupation was.
a carpenter,
kind of a
calls me a jack-leg
is a jack-leg
is a carpenter who is not a
first-class carpenter,
explain fully what you
understand a jack-leg carpenter to
insisted the lawyer.
I I dunno how tor
any to say hit am
de same twixt you
No Boarders in the Palace.
of the ladies of Hampton court
palace recently undertook to in-
crease her income by taking board-
The lord chamberlain was
therefore obliged to point out that
while rooms at Hampton court may
be temporarily lent with the queen's
consent, and there is no objection to
relatives or friends contributing to
the expenses of the ladies while a
bona fide visit, the queen draws a
line at attempts to make pecuniary
profit out of her hospitality.
AN AWFUL ORDEAL.
The Colonel Tells of the Only Time
He Was Really Scared.
only time I ever was really
said the colonel, in the
edge of a little town
have it,
I along about
ye, boys, I've seen
life in the plains in the
yes; go
it was nigh onto midnight
as I passed through a clump
a college town,
yes; what
seemed to crawl all
over me push the hair right up
through the scalp, I could see
but I knew
wrong. So I blundered right
through the half and
thing I I run plump into
about dozen
wish It had been. They
young, active, men, too,
one of had a
big club. says I,
take me to the boss I'll
give ye my
out, ye old was the
you
about that
crowd seemed to hold I
stayed. Well, putty soon they be-
gin to edge up in a getting
out the They
as I said, fifty. Some of
picked up clubs some
rocks. They in they
eyes death in the
yes, what
fascinated, spellbound, aw-
fully scared, and made a bit
when I the
don't let
But, when the
and I stand it no longer, I
tunned to the biggest man
Heaven's name, what's
the
jaw he asked.
kin keep a secret
with any of
said he, see ah
deeds, will die
a fight
said I, trembling all over.
see that house, aiming the
blamed,
cant little cuss of a sophomore hid
in that house ah f have
him
boys, I quietly went about
my business. I'm an educated man
myself an meddle with the
Plain Dealer.
Rights.
Recently a decision regarding the
rights of passengers in sleeping cars
was handed down by the court of
general term in the Fifth depart-
of New York which further de-
fines the rights of passengers. Courts
in New York and states have
held that the sleeping car company
was responsible for tho loss of
money or other property stolen
while the passengers were asleep, if
porters were not kept on hand to
guard the property of the sleepers.
In the case just decided the
a woman, lost a sum of money
which she had in a small satchel. It
was apparent from her testimony,
and from that of the porter, that she
must have lost the purse while she
was in the dressing room at one end
of the car. Tho general term judges
decided that it was essential for tho
plaintiff to show that the money
was taken from the berth while she
and her husband were sleeping.
The probabilities, however, of the
case were against that and
If she lost the purse, or it was stolen
from her in the dressing room, tho
company would not be liable, for the
only negligence complained of was
that the company had failed to main-
a constant watchfulness over
the interior of tho car while the
passengers were sleeping. The dis-
between the loss of prop-
from tho berth or in the
dressing room is slight, but was
to lead the judges to refuse to
allow a verdict.
OLD-TIME DISHES.
Famous Recipes from Now England
Kitchens and Their Cooks.
To prepare Island baked
beans put one quart of beans to soak-
in cold water over night. In the
morning pour off the water and
cover with fresh cold water; put on
the fire and let them come to the
boil slowly, then simmer until quite
soft, but not broken. Then pour off
the water and put them in a baking
dish with boiling water enough to
moisten. Add a pinch of dry mus-
some salt and two tablespoon-
of molasses. Take about half a
pound of fat salt pork, boiled and
scored, and put in the middle of the
dish. Set in the oven, cover, and
let them cook slowly all About
two hours before night uncover and
brown.
For sponge cake or diet bread
take twelve eggs and the weight of
the eggs In sugar and half the
weight in flour; one lemon, juice and
rind. Beat tho yolks and whites
very light; beat the sugar into tho
yolks. Next add tho juice and
grated peel of lemon, then the
lastly the beaten
these very lightly. Have tins with
perpendicular sides, lined with but-,
paper, and a steady The
cake should be eaten the day it is
made.
For use three
cups of flour, one cup of milk, one
cup of molasses, one cup suet,
chopped fine; two cups of raisins,
one teaspoon of powdered
and cinnamon, and two of powdered
cloves and salt; one of
soda dissolved in a little of the milk.
After mixing pour a tightly-
covered and tin mold.
Tie this in a strong towel and boil
hard for three hours and a half.
Citron and currants may be added.
A hot liquid sauce, flavored with
lemon or brandy, is nice to eat with
this. The man is yet undiscovered
who does not like this pudding.
For raised biscuit set a sponge to
rise for bread at six o'clock. At
half-past nine rub Into one quart of
flour one tablespoonful of lard, a
little white sugar and one teaspoon-
of salt. Make a hole In the mid-
and put In your sponge. Knead
it lightly with enough lukewarm
milk and water to make it Into a soft
dough; let it rise. Early In the
morning knead it down and make
into biscuits and set before tho fire
to rise. Bake half an Y.
Tribune.
PUBLIC SPEAKINGS.
The following appointments of
speakings in Pitt county have
been made by the chairman of
the State Democratic Executive
Committee
County Canvass.
The Democratic candidates for j
the Legislature and county
will address the people at the
following times and places
School House, ,
day, October 10th.
Thursday,
May's Chapel, Friday. October,
lath.
Falkland, Saturday, October,
13th.
Wednesday,
17th.
Haddock's X Roads, Thursday,
October 18th.
Calico, Friday, October,
October,
20th.
Parker's School House, Wed-
24th.
Friday, October, 26th.
Ayden, Saturday, October, 27th
Stokes, Wednesday, October,
31st.
Thursday, November,
1st,
Cobb's Store, Friday,
2nd.
Black Saturday,
3rd.
WANTED.
All kinds of Clod.,
Jewelry for repairs.
Main Springs to fas. leaning
to Bold Spec mid Gold Kings to
mend to
Fine work a All work
guaranteed by
Z. F.
W A Jeweler.
Greenville, X. C.
K. PRICE,
AND
Greenville. N. C.
Office at the King House.
Jas. K. Ii. I.
Greenville.
N. C
Office under Opera House. Third
j;
FLEMING.
Valentine
Verbena during the first
periods of our acquaintance, I had no
objections to the presence of a third
party during cw Interviews, but now
that mill aid admiration has developed
Into love, and love Into betrothal, this
system, at once Insulting and
out. to the of my in.-
mast cease at or all will be
over between
HORRID SHIPMATES.
ATTORNEY
N. O.
Prompt attention to
at Tucker old stand.
Li G.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
G R Et N V L L -V .
tIts n Collections I
BLOW,
tr-. i
GREEN
In all the Courts.
TYSON,
B. F. SON
W.
Prompt attention to collection
A Vessel That Has Been Invaded by
Tarantulas and Scorpions.
Life on board the British steam
ship which arrived at this
port in command of Capt. Davis,
laden with is rendered mis-
by the invasion of myriads of
tarantulas, scorpions and oilier
strangers, and it is difficult
to keep the sailors from deserting
the ship on this account.
These unwelcome visitors found
their way on board with a cargo of
which was taken in at Port
de a small settlement in
and many nights of discomfort
been spent on board the by
both her officers and crew.
by the hundreds and number-
less scorpions have been killed in
the after cabin, and so thickly was
this portion of the ship populated
by these and other bugs that the
officers have boon unable to p
below.
The officers of the like all
sailors, are afraid of the tarantulas
and scorpions, and now that her
cargo is being discharged every FIRST-GLASS IN EVERY RESPECT
fort will be made to rid the ship of Special to Commercial Men.
the plague before she sails from
bare. Banana-laden ships frequent-1
y bring with their cargoes a few
Greenville
Salem on the at eleven
and at three
o'clock.
on Sunday at
and For
o'clock.
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and hotel it three
o'clock.
Bethlehem mi the fourth at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House r- e o'clock.
invited to attend.
n K. smith, ., ,
J. c.
Baptist
am the regular
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the
Baptist
At and f
days in each month, morning and night,
and Thursday
At Sunday In each
month, morning and night.
At Person
Sunday in each month and be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are regular appointment
of A. Rector
and third in
eh month, morning and evening.
Sunday in each
month, morning and evening
vice- id
Si. Johns. Sun-
month, morning and evening
Holy Innocents,
tilth Sunday morning.
Services.
Brat morning and
night, alternating between Rev. J. N.
II. and Rev. J. W.
third Sabbath, morning and
night, Rev. J. W
Sunday School every Sabbath morn-
o'clock,
L. C LATHAM.
AW,
N. C
HOTEL NICHOLSON,
WASHINGTON, H. C
Geo. A. Spencer, Mgr.
Free Buss.
but this ship is fairly
them. only relief
COTTON SEED.
tarantulas,
alive WANT ONE
the crew of the had on their
north was on the day before . ,. . , , ,.
, , i i Will the highest prices, either
sighting the capes, when the cold , small or largo lot. We alto hare lot
weather caused their disappearance cotton Seed Meal and Hulls,
from SHE
As the was being discharged
it was found to be actually alive
with both scorpions and tarantulas.
The old sailors on hoard the
say they will never ship in a log-
again, and remain
now only in the fear that desertion
would cause a forfeiture of their
wages. Philadelphia Press.
DR. II. A. a graduate
Hall College of I
DENTISTRY.
of the
Denial
locate in Greenville ab
Dr. had the practical expo-
of several in hi- profession
and guarantee his work to give
The of his office will be
n in a future issue.
WILMINGTON A It. R
AND
RAIL ROAD.
Condensed
TRAINS or. I no SOUTH.
July P,
Weldon
Mt
S. fl
A. M.
I in
Ar I
Mt
Wilson
Selma
Ar- Florence
in
IS
III
SI
I SI
hi
y. z
M.
e x
on
Magnolia
A i Wilmington
A Family Carriage.
There arc thousands of bicycle
riders in fast racers and
fancy men, women who do their
in a day and many other
varieties of the genus bicyclist. But
so far as we are aware there is only
one man in Buffalo or anywhere else
who has successfully converted his
bicycle into a family carriage with
comfortable seats for five. That is
Mr. Henry J, Von with Ids.
four boys. On setting out the
wheel is steadied by the father and
Johnny, tho youngest, Is lifted into
his place; then Arthur is established j
In front of him, and Willie climbs to
his place In front of all. Tho father
than takes the saddle and when
under slow headway Henry runs
after and mounts to his seat behind, j
In this way the father and four j
boys have ridden over five hundred
miles this season, visiting i
and other
neighboring towns, where, as in
Buffalo's parks and streets, they are
always much gazed at and admired.
They have never had an
The frame which provides the extra
seats for the children was built by
Mr. Von himself; It can be
taken off in a minute and a half and
In three
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before
Court Clerk of Pitt county
Administrator of estate of Martha
A. Moore, deceased, not ire is hereby
en to all sons Indebted to the
estate to make payment
to undersigned, and all persona
having against said estate must
same tor payment on or be-
fore 17th day September. or
this notice be placed In bar of re-
This day of Sept.
II MOORE.
of A.
COTTON
BAGGING
At per Yard.
I am to the trade
which call be at
The Bagging Is put nil In
hair yards weighing
pounds to yard. This
hugging by the New k
I and Is by
. snorters. It Is for sale by J. R. smith
Ayden, and
Co ,
E. A. KEITH, Ayden,
Agent for the Manufacturer,
Florence
Selma
Ar
v II
Hi or i
Ai
A. M.
IS
Ar Rocky Ml
Mt
Ar Weldon
III
ID
To the Tax payers
Pitt County.
I will attend at the fallowing times and
places to collect the Taxes for the year 1894,
as the law directs. Everybody meet me, pay
and save trouble.
SCHOOL HOUSE, Wednesday, October
FARMVILLE. October 1894.
MAY'S CHAPEL, Friday, October 12th, 1804
FALKLAND, Saturday, October 1894.
Wednesday, October 17th. 1894.
HADDOCK'S X ROADS, Thursday. October 18th, 1894,
CALICO, Friday, October 1894.
Saturday, October 20th, 1394.
PARKER'S SCHOOL HOUSE, Wednesday, October 24th, 1894
Friday, October 26th, 1894.
AYDEN, Saturday, October, 27th, 1894.
STOKES, Wednesday, October
Thursday, November 1st. 1894.
COBB'S STORE, Friday, November 2nd, 1894.
BLACK JACK, Saturday, November 3rd, 1894.
R W. KING,
Sheriff of Pitt County.
Train on Scotland Week
leaves Weldon 11.40 p. m. Halifax 4.00
p. in., arrives Scotland Neck at I p.
m., p. in. Kinston
p. in. Returning, leaves 7.10
II. n. G a. in. Arriving
Halifax it . m , Weldon 11.90 a.
daily except
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington Pamela
8.40 a. in.
leaves p. in. It
p. . arrives Washington p. in.
Dally Connects with
trains on boot I ml
Tram leaves Tin horn, N via
A Raleigh K. It. daily except sun-
day, M p. in. I. M;
arrive Plymouth 9.80 P. M., p. in.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
Sunday. 5.8 I a. in. a in.,
an a. in., and II. S
a. in.
on Midland N C Branch n axes
dally except a,
at riving n in. He-
rein- leaves S O.
a W a in
on Nashville level
Rocky Mount at 4.0 p. a
Nashville p. in-. i
p. in. Returning leaves Hope
a. 8.86 a. rives
at. Mount a- m.
Trains on Branch, Florence R
leaves p. in., arrive Dun
; bar in. Returning
I bar a. m. arrive a. m.
daily except .
Train Oil Clinton Branch leaves
Sunday
i-, II a. Returning lea-it Clinton
at 1.00 p. in., conn at Warsaw with
line trains.
No. makes close connection
n Weldon for all points North daily, all
via Richmond, and steep.
Sun lay and Bay Line
Rocky With Norfolk A
Carolina railroad tor Norfolk dally
points N--nil via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
r.
Manager.
, . v
North CAROLINA
A R. R I
in 1808,
Pa. Hi
Bun,
-TAT ON S
P. M
j Kinston
B n
Pass I tally
Ar.
P. M.
a. m., and r a i,
train West,
Train connect, with Rich a
train, arriving or
and A W
from the





THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
Cotton Seed wanted for Cash
at the Old Brick Store.
Personal.
Miss Lena Matthews returned
Saturday from a visit
Mr. J. C. left last
accept a position
in Albany, Git-
Mr. and Mrs- L. H- Pender and
little daughter left for Littleton,
Fort A fine i-ow and one- to some
Mil calf.
l Sirs. C. Stephens left
For reliable shoes to Frank
Wilson.
Silk Velvets, Braids,
Trimming's Silks at J. B-
Cos.
A beautiful line of Hats
received to-day at M. T.
ft Cos.
hats at Frank
are all and I am offering them
to the trade at
low
-------They of
Dry
at
Latest style
Wilson's.
are still at tho old stand
with a tine line of goods. Call be
fore buying elsewhere. Lang.
latest and prettiest styles
of fall and winter Hats at Mrs. M.
D.
on BEST. House and
lot whole I now reside, furnished
or unfurnished- u given
immediately. J. J.
Nice lot Clocks, cheapest
town, at J. L- Starkey Cos
let me show
you my stock, I
am certain I can
please yen. .
Mr. Bernard
mo and will be
friends and cost
is with
n e his
Yours fer rare
H. C HOOKER,
GREENVILLE, N C
Boys
Oct.
the circus will
Don't forget.
here
Keep in mind that tho Planters
Warehouse is the place to get
highest averages for your to-
J. B. t Co. sell
Boots for
New Full goods just received at
M- T. Cos.
A nice line of spectacles at A- J-
the practical
and engraver.
For good reliable Shoes
Wiley Brown.
First class Cart Wheels with
Iron Axle, only a pair-
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
New assortment of Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor.
A large stock of nice Furniture
at the Old Brisk Sore.
The cooler weather the past
week reminds that winter is
nearly here.
Mrs. L. Griffin gives a Fashion
Sheet to every purchaser of a hat.
Nice line of Ladies Dress
Goods and Trimming's to match
at J. B Cherry Co.
Goods to suit all from the fin-
est to the cheapest at M. T. Cow-
ell Co's.
machines from to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley
I you cash for Chicken
and Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Quite a number of our people
the Association
at Sparta on Sunday.
Complete lino of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's.
To get highest average
your tobacco to the
and we will prove it.
Forbes
The Tar Association.
Baptist, meets at Scotland Neck
to-morrow and continues through
Sunday- will be
resented-
Cheap, New Grass Butter
cents per pound. Best Blended
Tea 2-5 per pound. Import-
ed Macaroni cents. Cream
Cheese at the Old Brick Store.
Mans good Shoes a pain
Ladies Shoe at cents
J. L. Co.
Watches, clocks and jewelry
carefully repaired by the old ex-
and practical watch-
maker, A- J- Griffin.
L- M. Reynolds Co. Shoes give
by J. B. Cherry
Co.
J- B- Cherry Co. want your
trade- They deal fair and square.
Give them a call-
Having almanac
we wrote lust week that October
was the ninth month. Of
those who read it knew it was
the .
Just Car load of
Bagging and Ties at J. C-
ft
a nice suit of clothes go to
Frank
Full Buckets, Ornaments,
fancy Pius, Tortoise Hair Pius
and Side Combs, at Airs.
New Fall at Mrs,. L.
Lew Admiral Cigarettes
a thousand,.
J. L. it Co
Give the
a trial with a load of tine
co and you will no home
over the high prices obtained.
Col. I. A- Sugg has presented
the Tobacco Trade with a bell.
It is suspended over tho Eastern
and rings for the
breaks every day.
The Ladies say J B. Cherry
it Co have tho prettiest Dress
Goods Town.
A full lino of Dry Goods at
Frank Wilson's.
Ladies I buy your hats from Mrs
L. and receive a Fashion
Sheet.
See J. C- Cobb Son's fall
stock of Shoes and Boots.
Pretty line of
Gloves, new Collars in green
and at Mrs- M. D.
In Dress Goods, Trimmings,
Cloaks and Fancy Goods we
lead. Lang.
Frank Wilson carries the largest
and best line of in town-
J. B- Cherry Co. have tho
best selected stock of Shoes ever
carried in our town. They sell
them cheap.
Every pile of tobacco brings its
full value the Ware-
house and your check is ready us
Boon as the s.-de is made.
Our stock Goods and
Groceries are complete. Call and
see us- J. C. Cobb t Son-
I to visit the of
her son, Mr. V. L- Stephens.
Mrs. H. Burch returned
to Greenville Thursday evening
after an absence of several months
in Wilmington,
and Raleigh.
Kev. D. D.,
Raleigh, spent from Friday to
Monday with the family of
H- Harding. He preached two
splendid sermons in the
dist church Sunday.
Rev. J. C- returned
Saturday evening from
burg, where he had been to attend
the burial his mother who died
on Tuesday of last week- His
friends this section
sympathize with him his be-
Mr. Frank Newborn,
who is now agent for
Belle Boyd, the famous Rebel
Spy, was here Saturday
for here last
night. It was under the
f the Pitt county Rifles i this
Mr. U. agent of Bob
Hunting's circus, was hire Friday
afternoon and Saturday with his
special car and advertising corps
billing the town for the circus-
He paid tho a visit
and showed his faith
ink by contracting for a largo ad-
space. If is
as good a circus as Mr.
is a clever man you may look for
a tine show.
Fusion Ticket.
The Populists hold their county
convention here last Saturday
and brought out their ticket.
Rev. J. L. Burns was chairman of
the meeting, James H.
secretary and Andrew Joyner
assistant secretary. The ticket
was as follows
For tho A- Forbes-
House of
J. T. Phillips and Victor Cox.
A.
Sheriff H. Harrington.
Register of M.
King.
A. Thigpen.
Coroner Dr. J. W. Perkins.
R. Jenkins.
Three of the ticket are
After the Populists ad-
the Republicans met and
went through the form of ratify-
the ticket-
Every reader of this paper is
asked not to over look the fact
that he can get the
Atlanta Constitution a whole
year for
Look on first page to day at
the large advertisement of the
Planters and note the
high averages the farmers get
who sell tobacco there. You can
do just as well as these have done,
as a trial will convince you.
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets,
up stairs, Old Brick Store-
Large assortment Pattern Hats
latest designs from both
more and New York, at Mrs. M.
D.
Just received barrels first
patent Flour, a barrel, at J.
L. Starkey Co's.
Guns. Call on us when you
want a Gnu- Breech Loading
Died.
Mrs. Elizabeth Hall, mother of
Mr- W. P. died at the lat-
home in this town on Thurs-
day evening- Tho remains were
taken to Mt. Olive, Friday for
burial, G- F. Smith ac-
companying them- She had been
living Greenville only a short
while, coming here after the death
of her daughter which occurred
at Mt- Olive about a month ago.
The Canvass
The county candidates met the
first three appointments their
canvass, last week, and spoke
Bethel.
Good crowds were present each
day, the candidates made a
lid impression, the interest
manifested shows the Democracy
of in good shape. There are
some good speakers among the
candidates. Hon. W- R. Henry
was with them at
Bethel, and Hon. W. M. Bobbins
will with them at Lang's school
house to day.
What the Reflector Does.
all may
be your first impression when
only a has been taken at
to-days But don't
jump at, any such
you have looked over tho pa
per and seen what is on the en
six pages. Besides our
splendid display of
this paper gives you
columns of reading matter
which is more get
time of the year when we send
out a four page issue. Compare
tho with other
paper in this section and you will
find that it gives more
matter than any other, and in
many instances twice as much.
There is just this thing in having
a large advertising
shows that your county paper is
prospering and that is the kind
paper the people want. When
a paper is not prosperous nobody
wants it, but when it is prosperous
everybody wants it. The
men believe in the
tor, hence they give it a liberal
advertising patronage ; the
believe in it hence it has the
largest circulation it has ever
had. And whether advertiser or
subscriber, the gives
full value for your money.
at J. B. Cherry
Guns for
ft Co's.
A number of mowing machines
have been sold the county
this season and much hay has
been saved. Mr. G- M- Tucker
says the mowers, as money
makers, are a long ways ahead of
raising cont cotton.
The latest style Ribbons V 1-
vets, Silk Fancy Feathers
Walking hats etc , M. T. C
Co.
Our sign reads Ware-
Follow that
advice and you will get highest
prices for your tobacco.
A full line of Gents Macintosh
Water Proof overcoats just re-
Cheapest we ever had
J- B- Cherry Co.
Lock Bracelets, Love Chains,
gold, silver and tortoise Hair Pins
and Side Combs, at M- T
Co's.
have opened a restaurant
next door to S- E. and
can serve fresh oysters and meats
at all hours. Oysters cents a
plate, half plate.
sold by measure at lowest
prices.
A horse runaway up in
co burg one day last week and
before the owner could catch him
ho had run in the Ware
house and sold his load of
co at a high average.
A lot has been secured on which
to build a Methodist church at
Grimesland and work on it will
begin at once- Tins will make
three new churches that
nation has built in Pitt county
during the year.
Bethel Items.
October 8th,
lion. F. I- Osborne passed
through here yesterday.
W. A- Forbes preached at
Shiloh Sunday. He filled the
pulpit here at night.
Mrs. Jesse W. Thomas has
been quite sick the past two
weeks. We hope she may soon
recover.
T- T- Cherry returned
home last week from Halifax
county where she had been visit-
her parents several weeks.
Rey. J. W. Powell filled his reg-
monthly appointment in the
Baptist church Sunday morning
and night and probably preached
his farewell sermon. Mr. Powell
in able and eloquent preacher
and has made a host of friends
who will regret to see him leave.
The Democratic candidates ac
cording to appointment were here
Saturday. The speaking began
about half past one o'clock P. M.
The candidates did not make
long speeches but made a fine
impression on the people here
and everybody seemed pleased
both with the candidates and the
speeches. have never seen
an audience pay more marked at
to than did the
people here Saturday. At the
conclusion of speeches of the
candidates, that grand exponent
of Democracy and eloquent
speaker, Hon. W. R. Henry, was
introduced and delivered one of
the most powerful, eloquent and
logical speeches wt ever listened
to- He held the crowd spell
bound until a late hour in the
evening- His speech made a fine
impression here and is to
make votes for the party.
to say Saturday was a day
or Democracy in Bethel
Circus Coming.
Bob Hunting's Big Rail Road
Menagerie with appear
in Greenville, Thursday, October
18th, giving two Performances,
afternoon and night. The tents
will bi pitched on the grounds
rear of the tobacco warehouses
near the depot. The Newark
Advertiser says.
The performances of Hunting's
Railroad Circus, Museum and
Menagerie were greeted
day by packed houses, the
extraordinary performances of
unrivaled aggregation of
first class female h
and male singing and
clowns, acrobatic
exhibitions of and
and last though not least
wonderful performances of the
highly educated ponies,
s, goats and dogs were re
with shouts of
and applause. To say that the
show gave universal satisfaction
would be only to repeat what
has said of it, by our ex
changes throughout tho
during tho past season.
The management are to be con-
upon their thorough
efficiency in joking after their
legion of patrons, more
in the absence of all the rough
of card sharpers
swindling devices so common
with the many shows that infest
the country during the tenting
season, in addition to this feature,
and tho gentlemanly manner of
all with the show, we
bespeak for it the immense
they are to receive.
A Notable Family.
Mrs. Isabella, widow of James
S. Moore, in township
is years old. She raised
twelve children, sis boys and six
to grown- Out of that
number she has lost one,
the second son, Mo. G-, who foil
at the charge of Fort Harrison in
1863. About three weeks ago,
she with her eleven children cause
to Greenville and had a family
photograph made. There
were six girls Charlotte,
B. H- Emily, David
Lissie, Jackie, Ellen and
Isabel, and
five boys sixth being
The boys were G. L., whose wife
died some years ago leaving nine
L. C- who lives
near his mother ; G. C- of
Greene county
fame ; Z- L., living with his moth-
the baby, of Green-
ville. The four last named arc
unmarried.
Their father was a Democrat in
and none of tho six sous
have ever voted otherwise. Mrs.
Moore is the grand mother of
twenty-four children, the
great-grandmother of four At
her advanced age she
the habit formed early life of
rising at o'clock every morning
and takes pleasure
her own household work.
Pitt county may justly feel
proud at having her
such a family as Mrs. Moore
has raised. God bless such
women We trust there are yet
store for her many years
peace and joy.
RESOLUTIONS RESPECT.
It pleated an
Providence to remove from our midst
by death our beloved brother, Fernando
Fleming, who departed this on Tues-
September 1804, be it
we bow in
submission to this dispensation
Master, knowing that lie all
things well.
That in the death of
brother Fleming, Covenant Lodge
lost an active and zealous member,
the community in winch he lived a
thy, energetic and
3rd, That we extend our
mutual sympathies to the I
and friends of departed brother
That we wear
usual badge of mourning and that th-
Lodge room be draped
in mourning for thirty days.
nth, Tint then
be spread upon the minutes of the
Lodge, that a copy b; sent to the
of the deceased, and a copy be sent
to press with request to publish
W. L. Brown,
C. D.
S. T. J
I Was Weak,
May Manning, an only
tor, was with fond loving
parents. Tho fair girl was stand-
at twilight at the garden gate
of her parent's pretty residence.
A horseman soon appeared. He
was handsome and smart.
It was Dr. Monteith- lie loved
May and she loved him. but he
had never made known his love.
He had been a constant, visitor at
tho Manning residence for nearly
two years had just that
nerved himself to auk that all
important question. Mo
rived at the gate and gallantly
doffed his hat and shook band
with May. She greeted him with
a smile and ho saw ho was
come broached tho
nearest to his heart and was ac-
The next day Dr. Mon-
obtained the willing consent
of May's parents. Tho mother,
however, insisted that tho mar
should not take place in less
than four mouths. Dr. Monteith
had a wealthy friend, Capt. Sad-
who had a beautiful
Lillian. The Captain's wife,
an Invalid was a patient of the
r.
May trusted,
with all her She confided
in her f lie nil Foster.
I proved a traitor.
She had fixed her love on Dr
Monteith, May's engagement had
dashed the from her lips.
Gradually she poured into
most terrible
hood-
At last she so far succeeded as
to lead tho poor girl to a spot
where she behold the young doc-
tor and Lillian Sadler, seated
alone. More this, she saw
her lover clasping tho other
woman's hand in earnest entreaty.
This, and the reports that
Helen Foster did not fail to
eventually bung her, convinced
her as to the perfidy of her lover.
When nest ho called, she broke
off the engagement- Yes she
cast co the winds tho man whom
she loved with her heart, soul
and body.
So far Helen Foster
and tho lovers wore
rated.
The news flow round that Dr.
Monteith was about to sell his
practice go abroad. The an-
aroused poor May's
suspicions as to tho truth of
fairs and she was determined to
make amends.
his forgiveness be-
fore he goes abroad toll him
of my she sobbed to
herself.
She sat down and addressed a
note to Dr. h he
hastened to her. Be
very stiff, told, and very
stern ; but ere he had for
half hour in May's presence
all had been explained ; she had
asked his forgiveness for her
he had granted it all
freely-
Nor was this all, for May had
once again vowed to become his
wife, she faithfully kept
promise for they were to mar
lied the next
Preparations were entered into
to her wedding out-fit
and a cheap place to get it. May
her mother drove to Green-
ville and at once began the tour.
As they were passing up Main
street they spied the lovely show
windows and met the smiling
T- at the door and after
the morning greeting they went
inside astonishment was
visible on both faces as
they saw beautiful display
heard the extremely low
prices. Mrs- Manning was heard
to exclaim, the low prices
have struck this store with both
She purchased a lovely-
bridal dress of Shaggy. And
bought two bolts of blenching,
hosiery,
drops trimmings of
every kind at prices truly mar-
They also got two dress-
es of that beautiful camels nail
and hue check tweed. They got
the complete outfit for so small
amount that they said they were
surely going to tell Dr Monteith
so ho could get his outfit and did
On next day Dr. Monteith was
met at the front door by Mi.
escorted through
his mammoth store to look over
and select his wedding suit for
which he paid and
Mr. gave him a
tee. He then passed him over to
Mr. Cherry who fitted him
out with shoes, collars, cuffs,
shirts, underwear, threw
in a for a wedding gift-
Just before leaving Dr-
expressed a desire to find a
cheap furniture store Mr.
politely escorted him
DON'T
Buy your Fall and Winter-
Tired and my food did not digest
In fact I was In poor health generally.
I had to sleep
propped up In bed to
breathe easily at j two doors below to the
night I had packet Store where he was
grip and afterwards
a severe cough. I
found relief In
Hood's
I hare taken seven
can eat
what I please, sleep
soundly and feel
rested unless I over-
I feel as
young as I did at M
when I use
In my dally ex-
Mrs. IT E. Wallace I cannot be-
gin to express my thanks sufficient for such
t great soothing, health restoring medicine
Hood's
Hood's
J.
wife of I. K.
Wallace of
Cures
-until you have looked at-
DON'T
YOUR FALL AND WINTER
Goods.
Flannels, Hamburgs, Hosiery,
UNTIL YOU HAVE THE STOCK OF
DO YOU
WEAR
If so we can fit you both in Price and Quality.
Latest styles in Knox, Dunlap
My stock
O.
to
bought with the hard cash thereby enabling me
offer you special prices.
NEXT DOOR TO BANK.
T.
at the beautiful
sight that met his eyes won-
low price of every thing.
He purchased him a parlor suit
A bed room snit of
antique oak for Then he
completely fitted his house
in way of rugs, pictures and
extension dining table at low
prices. Small tables, carpets,
mattings, safe, the Back
et Hut- he at the
new things he could
get for a mere He
chased glass-
ware, table cutlery, lace curtains.
poles,
and fitted his whole house.
One think that doc
i us broke this lime
sun, tho ROOds SO cheap
Hood's Pills give universal satisfaction. he hardly full
by C. I. Hood a Co., Lowell, Mass, Q
River Association of Baptists. City. Ky.





Wholesale and Retail-
Take Notice.
Notice is hereby given that I will be
in the Court House on the first Monday
September, October and November
for the purpose of testing your measures
and scales. w. M. Moore.
Standard Keeper
GREENVILLE, N. C-
Offers to the retail trade a choice line
Family Groceries,
CROCKERY, TIN WARE
SNUFF,
To the wholesale trade I am prepared to
give jobbers prices on
MEATS, SUGAR, COFFEE OILS.
Molasses, Vinegar, Matches. Star Lye,
Baking Powder, Paper
S.-k. Wrapping Paper and Twine,
Car load Flour, best brands, just received
Car load Bagging and Ties at bottom
of SHOES to fit everybody.
Call on me when you want goods at
the lowest figures.
I want Customers
You Want Goods.
Then call at my store and we both en
get our wants supplied.
I am prepared to furnish anything you
want from a complete stock of
-embracing
Clothing, Dry Goods, Notions,
Shoes, Hats, Hardware,
Tinware, Crockery, Staple and
Fancy Groceries, fro.
ROCK LIME in any quantity.
Car load BAGGING and TIES.
You will find my goods all
and prices low.
W. H. WHITE.
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
We will fill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will till them WELL
Rough Heart Framing, Sn-00
Rough Sap Framing, ;
Rough Sap Inches
Rough Sap Boards, inches, 87.00
Wait days for our Planing Mill and
we will tarnish you Dressed Lumber
as
Wood delivered In your door fur
cents a load.
Terms cash.
Thanking yon for past patronage,
GREENVILLE UH MM
N.
Notice to Creditors.
before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
Administrator of the of J. E.
Tucker, deceased, notice is hereby given
to all persons indebted to the estate to
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
against said are notified to
sent the same for payment within
twelve months from the date of this
it will be plead in Of
recovery.
This 30th day of August, 1894.
J. A. K. TUCKER,
of J. E. Tucker
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
O- T- Proprietor Eastern
LOCAL NOTES AND
JOTTINGS
THE SOLID SOUTH.
Mr. E. O. is new on- Tn; South is solid e the
ployed at the Planters. publican party makes war
Mr. IVY. H. of upon her, Mid her
was here
For sale by
He
with
sold at
to
the
Friday.
Eastern.
The warehouses afford much
amusement for the boys with
their roller skates after the floors
have been cleared off.
Mr. Henry of
son, is again in our midst. Mr.
says he is just from
Richmond, and that the
Co., are slaying there.
The Warehouse has
a large sign across the
street front of their house- A
in to show a solid
front to the North. It is not be-
cause all the southern people hold
exactly the same opinions on the
question of protection to
can industries, or the silver prob-
or the income-tax, or any
other question that divide; the
people of North, but because,
as we have said, they are forced
to stand together in of
their rights.
Naturally the southern people
are more generally States-rights
than the northern. The war
between the States was, so to
under this tells speak, a war the rights
N. C.
The RAMBLER took five of the high-
est awards at the World's Pair and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
make at reduced price.
make all a--e strictly highest
grade. We mike
Tobacco Hues, Sell
and do all kind, of Tin work. Roofing.
Guttering,
S. E. PENDER GO.
urn am,
Real Estate
and
Rental Agent.
Houses and lots for Rent or for Sale
terms easy. Rents, Taxes. Insurance
and open and other
of debt placed in my hands for
have prompt attention.
faction guarantee I your
patronage.
J. O.-
Call
GRIMESLAND N C.
splendid
attention
line
to their
of
Fall k Winter Goods.
They a complete stock of
General Merchandise.
And can furnish
Everything yon need to
Everything you need to cat
Everything you need annul the
Everything about the kitchen.
Everything yon need about the farm.
At prices just as low as can he bad
anywhere.
Highest prices paid for Cotton and all
Country Produce.
Returning thanks for past favors, a con-
of your patronage is solicited.
J. O. PROCTOR ft
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ.
OLD
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT
their year's supplies will find
their interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere is complete
n all its branches.
FLOUR, SUGAR
RICE, TEA,
at Lowest Market Prices.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A com
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices
the times. Our goods are all bought and
old for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N,
THE GREENVILLE
IRON WORKS,
JAMES BROWN, Prop.
of
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons,
And dealer in
Pumps, Pipe, Fittings,
Machinery,
Prompt and careful given re-
pairing
if action guarantied. Tobacco
for sale at lowest prices. v
GREENVILLE, ft. C.
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY,
GREENVILLE, X. C
next Session
begin on Tuesday the 4th day
and continue weeks.
MONTH.
Primary English
Intermediate English
Higher English
Languages
The instruction will continue through.
Discipline mild bat If necessary
an additional teacher will b employed.
Satisfaction guaranteed when pupils
enter early and attend regularly. For
further information apply to
W. II.
Aug. C, 1804.
will
82.00
82.50
88.00
smaller sign
whether they have first, second
or third sale each day.
Mr. W. D. Hobgood was at the
Eastern with another big lot of
tobacco last Thursday and aver-
aged on pounds- He was
well pleased and said he knows
just where to sell all his crop.
The sound of Pat
engine can be heard day and
night, reordering and getting his
tobacco out of the way. For the
last three weeks it has required
several engines to keep our to-
sufficiently out of the way
Last week Mr. J. Bryan Grimes,
of Grimesland, sent several loads
of tobacco up to the Eastern
warehouse, which, owing to the
extreme high and damaged
condition, sold at only medium
prices. We understand Mr.
Grimes, has lots of good tobacco,
and if he will bring some of that
on our market he will be well
pleased at the prices it brings.
Messrs- Hamilton have
had to another prize house
just in the rear of the old Green-
ville Warehouse. The house was
built for J. 8- Jenkins Co., who
have leased it for two years- If
Greenville had many such men
as Hines Hamilton, who never
wait to be shown that an invest
will pay from to per
but are satisfied with a
profit on their outlay,
it would not be long before there
were prize enough to
our increasing and, and it
would not be necessary to beg for
others to be built.
of the several States. We say
therefore, that naturally the
southern people are more dis
posed to stand by the rights of
the States than the northern
who feel themselves
tied with the National Govern-
and disposed to look at all
questions through sectional spec-
Governor Stone, of Mis-
in his campaign speeches,
says the fight is still
As Oliver P- Morton once said
of the Democrats, it may now be
said of the Republicans, that they
are like men riding backwards in
a carriage and seeing nothing
until they have passed it. This
remark describes accurately the
position the Republican party.
It sees too much of what is be-
hind it. It seldom or never for-
gets to keep its eyes upon the
past. Its platforms, State and
national, never fail to be charged
with the sectionalism which has
Who that Nose
One of the most amusing
games for a large company is
called by the
knows that Let a sheet,
or a similar cloth, hung in the
doorway between two rooms.
Let company be divided into
two groups, one for each room.
In one room let a light placed
and let the members of the group
in the other room take turns in
sticking their noses through a
slit in the sheet, into the lighted
room The group on that side is
to guess the owner of each nose-
After three trials, lights in the
first room are to be put out, and
lights in the room lighted
and the game is to be continued,
the parties being reversed. If a
nose is correctly the
owner thereof must go
other side; and so the game
until side or the
other has lost all its
This game He varied by
trying eyes, instead of noses, but
it is not so in that way. It
is astonishing how strange and
of is the nose of oven the
most familial friend, when
from the other features of his
countenance. Indeed, it is
doubtful whether any one of us,
if confronted with an accurate
picture of our own nasal
would it as an old
friend.
This game, and similar games,
startle us with the of
how little have observed, even
in matters that we think we know
all Rule.
Snorting Newt.
The Overman Co , Chi-
Mass, makes of the
that party from the Victor, the best and most favor-
known bicycle
MARKET
REPORT.
obtained and all Pat-j
Pent for MODERATE FEES.
SOUR is Opposite U. S.
M mean secure leas lime
Send or photo., with
advise, if or not, free of
Our fee rot due pate-it is secured.
A Pamphlet. m How
same rte U. S. and foreign countries
n. q j
--------1. D. C. r
THE EATON BURNETT
BUSINESS COLLEGE
12th Charles
Baltimore, Md.
Is prepared to give its
benefit of Office, Bank and Counting
House Practice in all their details.
Long and extensive experience line per-
facilities such as cannot be found
elsewhere.
Commercial branches,
Typewriting and taught
by
tree on application to
A. II. EATON.
Baltimore. Md.
Washington, C
QUOTATIONS-
to
to 7-00
Hue to 10.00
to
to 3.00
to 7.00
to 1500
WRAPPERS.
to 12.00
to 25.00
to
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK.
the Core of all Skin
This Preparation has Men In use
fifty years, and wherever know ha
been in steady demand. It been en
by the leading physicians all
e country, and has effected cures when
ail other remedies, with the attention
the experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This Ointment is
long standing and the reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
its own efficacy, as but little effort
ever been made to bring it before
public. One bottle of this Ointment will
be sent to any address on receipt of One
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at-
tended to. Address nil orders and
communications to
T.
TEACHER WANTED in each
for special work. Will
ninth. P. W.
Box 1767, Philadelphia, Pa.
work. Will pay
a month. P. W. CO.,
FOR THIN
PEOPLE
It makes faces plump and round
out the figure. It is the Standard
no arsenic,
and ABSOLUTELY
Price, l per
box, for Pain to
free.
Co., bit V.
first day of its existence until
now. It born of sectionalism.
It Las lived sectionalism.
It is afraid to go before the
upon the issues which ought
to divide the people of this
try into two parties. No matter
how many appropriate issues may
be incorporated into a national
Republican platform, they must
have a sectional plank or two
worked into that platform to
strengthen them with the sec-
of the North.
The Wilmington Star
says of the that if
they had the power they would
even now deprive tho South of
her strength and negative her as
a political factor. Bat it is the
duty of the southern
people to stand by their allies in
and continue to
sent an unbroken front to the
enemy. there be doubt of
this or of the animus Unit inspires
the leaders of the Republican
party to read their
their platform, their
peals to the old soldiers, their
threats, and their promises- It
would be strange if the South
were not substantially solid under
the it must be
an intolerable for tho
southern Republicans who are
attached to their southern homes
and friends to have to stand upon
such platforms as are those
by the Republican lead
out of rotten sectional timber
Yes, the Republican party is a
sectional party and ought to be
buried out of sight- We quote
from the
it may be afterwards,
until Republican party is so
crippled as to be no longer a rat-
power, the South must of.
necessity be and remain
solid, for weakening or dis
means eventual
ruin. Demo-
supremacy is necessary to
the preservation of white
in the South, and that
means the liberty of the southern
white man and his right to say
who shall make the laws under
which he and his children are to
live and what those laws shall be-
Solidity is not a matter of choice;
it is a matter of imperative
that admits of no debate-
To abandon it is to eventually
lose or surrender all that we have
won by such heroic
is not u matter
choice. It is a matter of
Ponder these
words, ye Democrats, and act
upon them. must hang to-
or hang
Richmond Dispatch-
Referring to the situation in
South Carolina, the Raleigh
News and Observer says
there are but another evidence of
the fatal mistake the Democrats
of the South made when they
to placate the hydra,
Populism. When the Southern
Democrats beg-n to drift into
the Third party, there were those
who let alone, yield to
them now and they will come
right in the end- That was the
fatal mistake. There the Dem-
party warmed a serpent
on its hearthstone. The South-
Democrats now see their
mistake. There is but ore
to deal with it out;
suppress it. It is immensely
and
speaks the words of truth
and soberness, and it affords the
Landmark great pleasure to print
this or vindication of
the wisdom of its course during
the times when an
fort was made by Populists
in the disguise of Democrats to
capture the party organization
and machinery in this State. It
was then that the Landmark
contended that the only way to
deal with heresy was to kick it
it. But
of whom are now
holding high places in the Dem
out
that the Landmark was driving
people away from the party.
Their idea was to give Marian
Butler everything he asked for
and a little more, and how near
succeeded in capturing
the State convention is
known of all men. But, thank
God a who had not bowed
the knee to Baal, and who
defeat to stood
up against a surrender and saved
the party. Today the
recognize who was right
and who was wrong in that
contest, but it is well, as go
along, to remember run down from
who it was that tried to turn wither, you need a
over to the enemy in 92- tonic and blood like Hoods
Try it.
have entered the sporting
goods trade, and will hereafter
manufacture a complete lino of
such goods as base balls, base
ball bats, base ball gloves and
mitts, tennis rackets, tennis balls,
nets, footballs, football
suits, boxing athletic and
gymnasium shoes, sweaters, etc.
The aim of the Overman Wheel
Company will be to have Victor
Sporting as widely known
as Victor Bicycles, and they
guarantee better goods than are
now offered by other
Any article tho Victor
trade mark will as good as it is
possible to make it, all
athletes and lovers of outdoor
sports will welcome tho of
Victor Sporting Goods.
The new Victor line is com-
as a copy of will
show, and this, together with the
fact that impartial
tests nave demonstrated the
superiority of Victor Sporting
Goods over other sporting goods,
makers a clear field for the new
Victor product.
Their as leaders and
makes only of tho best, combined
with unlimited facilities, assures
the Overman Wheel Company of
success in their new departure.
It is when the devil looks least
like a devil that he is most
The fact that enemies are loved
is proof that Christ has been on
earth.
Hanger and -t after right-
is sure evidence that the
face is toward God-
Trials may frighten, but they
cannot hurt a child of God.
A disinterested act of kindness
is something the carnal mind can-
not explain.
Nobody is ever awakened by
the preaching of a man who is
himself half asleep.
Some people are always
God for the troubles they
bring upon themselves.
The principal work of unbelief
is to make a foundation of
look like solid rock-
The only thing that gives us
standing, from where angels look
is likeness to Christ.
Cannot Cured.
By local implications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure Deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
Deafness Is caused by an con-
of the mucous lining the
When this tube
Inflamed you have a rumbling or
Imperfect and when it Is en-
closed Deafness is the result,
and unless inflammation can be
taken out and this tube restored lo its
not condition, hearing will be de-
forever ; nine case out of ten
are caused by catarrh, which is
but an condition of the
mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
any case Deafness by
that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
F. CO. Toledo, O.
by Druggists,
SHALL YOU RIDE THE BEST
Victors are the leading bicycles of the best If you want
the greatest amount of enjoyment you must ride a Victor.
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON.
NEW YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN FRANCISCO.
DETROIT.
DENVER.
THE JOHN FLANAGAN
BUGGY
ARE STILL AT IT MAKING FIRST-CLASS
Wives I
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
son to whom the sudden x-
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
securing a com income
for the beneficiary. Write to
W. J. Manager,
For
ROCK HILL. S. C.
OLD DOMINI IN LIN
AND SELLING THE BEST
HARNESS AND FARM WAGONS,
and doing all kinds of repairing to vehicles. We are also
-----Agents for the-----
IS
The
known
It will cut,
lift, turn,
el and
the land
all in one op-
We
have them in
all sizes from
to feet.
SERVICE
Washington
ville and touching at all Ian I
on Tar r
Friday at M.
leave at A. X.
Thursdays and Saturdays
A. days.
These departures are lo st
of water on Tar River.
Yon can find us at the same old stand ready to serve you.
The John Flanagan Buggy Company.
J. L. SUGG,
Li ail Hi line Aunt
GREENVILLE, N. C
AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
PROOF Si P F
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
at with -team
of Tin- Norfolk, and Wash
direct line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and
Shippers should their
marked via Dominion
Hew York. from
Norfolk
Steamboat Morn Haiti
more.
Boston.
Agent,
N.
Agent,
N. C.
To and n of and adjoining
I wish to say that I have made special preparation In preparing
HEAD MATERIAL and propose with Inside dressed
smooth which will prevent cutting or Scrubbing your when packing
Also I have nude special to use best split Hoops made
Oak. The special advantage- have in my own timber places me a
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your interest to use v Hogsheads and you can find them M any time
either at my factory or at the Eastern Warehouse. Greenville, N. C.
M Sawing, Making
And Turned Trimming tor a Specialty.
Iain prepared to do any kind of Scroll sawing for Brackets or the
line or turning Balustrades for Tickets for Stairways. Mendings of
any kind, including Railing, and would lie pleased to name yon prices on
am thine in the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you tor your past, patronage, I am willing to
meet your future patronage, and kindly ask you to give trial before
elsewhere- Respectfully,
Winterville, N. C
W. L.
S HOE NO SQUEAKING,
CORDOVAN,
FRENCH,
SOLES.
LADIES-
FOR
can W. In
we ore
advertised in the world, and
the value by stamping the name
the bottom, which, protects you
prices and middleman's o
Sou. custom work in style easy filling
cry.
iv
CO
till 1.1 Mil O
L. DAVIS A
N. C
J.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Andrews,
N. C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
STEEL HAILS, ALL SIZE
Cases
Bread Preparation.
Soap.
Star Lye.
Boxes Cakes and Crackers,
Stick Cindy.
Cases Matches.
Gold Dust.
Good linking Powder.
Sacks Coffee,
B Tons Shot,
Kegs Powder.
Curs Flour.
Meat.
Hay.
Tuba Lard,
Granulated Sugar.
P. Snuff,
A AX Snuff,
R. It. Mills
Three Thistle
Tobacco,
V. M. P. Cigarette
Old Va. Cheroots,
Cases Oysters,
ELY'S CREAM BALM.
Is quickly absorbed. Cleanses Nasal
Passages. Allays and
Heals Sores, Protects the
from additional Cold, Restores
the Senses of Taste and Smell.
Directions for Using Cream Balm.
Apply a particle of Balm well up
into the nostrils. After a moment draw
strong through the nose. Use
three times a day, utter preferred
and before retiring.
Price cents at Druggists or by mall.
St
OLD RELIABLE.
IS STILL AT THE FRONT A
YEARS EXPERIENCE has best Is the cheap st.
Hemp Building Pumps, Farming lie n-,
ting necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general lions.- purposes a- well as
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Goods have hand. Am head-
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing agent for Clark s O. N. Spool
Cotton, and keep com and attentive
GREEN M. U.
HERBERT EDMONDS
TONSORIAL PARLORS
Under Opera House,
Call In when want good work.
Ta
HAIR BALSAM
and
a hi. iii l
Mover to
Hair to Ha
In i i
I'm.
N- c
COBB BROS. CO.
-AND
Commission Merchants
FAYETTE VA
and Solicited
c . X l CO., a. SI
Notice.
To the Tax of Pitt
The tax ;, year
been placed in my mi
Monday in tor
as I . by law to n
of nil t charged
I now e payers of MB
county I lo
myself an n from all
imposed by for to
ray and ode- to
It will lie best f r
owing taxes to make an rt
mentor I shall to
same by at the v
allowed. Don't
v rift
i. j. .


Title
Eastern reflector, 10 October 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 10, 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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