Eastern reflector, 17 October 1894






DO
NO
That the place to
Buy your
BOOKS
-ASP-
STATIONERY
IS
AT
Reflector Bookstore.
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIII.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 1894.
NO.
FOR GOOD
JOB PRINTING
CALL AT
REFLECTOR OFFICE.
cc
EXAMINE THE
Before you ship or carry your Tobacco to any other market or any other Warehouse in Greenville. Here are some of the prices we are obtaining for those who are selling with us
JAS.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
22.50.
18.20.
1550.
.
7-00
. 25-90
. 60.22
. 15.50
,. 5.77
. 1302
Average
L. WILSON.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
4-25
17-50.
Average
W. R. DIXON-
Pounds- Price. Amount.
18.18
Average
CHAS- JOYNER.
Pounds. Amount.
Average
J. W. EDWARDS.
Pounds. Price. Amount-
17-75.
28.00.
20.00.
36.50.
i-5
4-90
4-64
4.00
5.47
3.54
2.94
L. H. WILSON.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
2.88
10.12
15.00. 4.05
30.------ 30.00
Average
JAMES EDWARDS.
Pounds.
Price. Amount.
1.80
17-25.
25.00.
2.00
Average
MISS FLORENCE HORN
Pounds. Price Amount.
1664
31.00. 5-27
25.00 .
15.00.
1200.
10.75
10.35
Average
A JACKSON.
Pounds- Price. Amount
4-83
18.00.
1400.
3.42
3.96
5.87
7.00
4.76
7.95
Average
As ever, your friends,
FORBES
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. full particulars apply to
B. EL
FREE ENGLISH SCHOLARSHIP be given two young ladies who preparing
to teach in the Public Schools of and adjoining counties. Tuition will be required in advance, but
will be refunded to the applicants who make the highest average on the regular examinations at the
close of the session. Candidates must enter not later than October 1st.
EXPENSES. music Use of Piano or On
Terms-Half Weeks. hour each day,
, Conservatory Course,. 20.00
ran, one
Latin, Greek, French and Ger-
15.00
Organ,.
Collegiate,. 20.00 Conservatory,
Q man, each,
1500 Board, lights
20.00
and
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES.
THE
S. TATE.
of County.
FOB CHIEF
JAMES E. SHEPHERD,
of Beaufort County.
ASSOCIATE JUSTICES,
WALTER CLARK, of Wake county. ,
JAMES C. of
of Meek-
From ,
Tho next State Senate, like the
last, will miss tho presence of tho
popular from
Hon. Willis It Williams who has
represented his county in tho
Senate for than a decade.
He was a landmark that body
until ho voluntarily withdrew.
His friends all over the State,
ITEMS.
October 12th. 1894.
Weather is considerably cooler.
Rev. P. S. Swain filled his re-
appointment at Timothy, on
Sunday, and had a very large at-
as usual.
FOR SUPERIOR COURT,
3rd JACOB BATTLE.
4th WILLIAM R. ALLEN.
8th District, F. LONG.
For Cong. Di-t.,
A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort county.
For Solicitor District,
E. WOODARD,
of Wit-on county.
COUNTY TICKET.
his withdrawal mi , t
from a in which his voice sickness in
was always heard in advocacy of neighborhood at present,
the right of tho people, are glad Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Moore and
know that the Pitt Democrats Mrs. J. L. Causey are all on the
have nominated him for Clerk of g
the Superior Court, an office of
9th Dist, William N. good salary. Mr. Williams re- j The deer have the luck
10th B. deemed Pitt years ago after the of it.
12th Dist., H carter. Independents and Republicans
carried it several times. He is
so honest and so true that ho en-
the of all who
mow him. His competitor is E.
A- Move, who was elected as a
Democrat, but two years ago he
flopped over to the Populist par-
to. If he had possessed the right
and delicate conception of his
he would have resigned tho
FOR
F. G. JAMES.
FOR HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
J. D. COX,
S. M.
FOR CLERK COURT
WILLIS R- WILLIAMS.
FOR SHERIFF
RICHARD W. KING.
FOR II WISH
HENRY HARDING.
for
JOHN FLANAGAN.
DR. C OH.
for surveyor;
J. B.
A crowd goes every once
in a while, but they seldom
the venison. It is to be hoped,
though, that the death of some
noble old buck will follow the
efforts of our hunting gentleman
erelong.
The quickly recognize merit
mid is the reason the sales of
office given him by the Democrats Sarsaparilla are continually Increasing.
when he ceased to be a Democrat. s
But he has held on in order to j
use the emoluments of the office Electric Bitters.
to help re elect himself to the j This remedy is so well
office he now holds. That's the known and so popular as to need no
kind of he mention. All who have used
he
Bitters sing the same song of
, . , , ; purer medicine does not ex-
The kind of
has. He will do all
hold on to his office, me and it is guaranteed to do all that is
he wants for tho people is claimed. Electric Bitters will cure all
a big office for himself. j diseases of the Liver and Kidneys, will
The people of Pitt county remove Pimples. Boils, Salt Rheum
and other a caused
In to I by Impure
i blood-Will dive Malaria from the
the old Roman and give Mr.
an unprecedented majority
in order to show their
of bis services and their de-
to pure
News and Observer-
system and prevent as well as cure all
Malarial cure of Head-
ache, Constipation and Indigestion try
Electric satisfaction
guaranteed, or money
and per bottle at John L.
Drugstore.
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
FROM FAR AWAY TEXAS.
A Pitt Writes an
Carolinians Kc
are the Same
Mills, Texas,
October 3rd 1894 j
Dear
When I left North Carolina
more than three months ago I
promised to write to so many that
I take the liberty of writing to till
through your paper. I have
traveled moat of the Ar-
Indian Territory and Tex-
of tho time in Texas
If there ever was a country where
trees grow and honey
Springs it is in the Terri-
but a white man own
land there- Ft. Worth I met
Mr. Jarvis an own cousin of our
Senator Jarvis, he is a leading
lawyer of that city. At
I also met another North
Carolina leading lawyer,
his name is Skinner- He is
in to Harry. I have bought a
farm one mile from Mills.
together a-i h
will come into tho harbor with the
doors of sweet peace resting on
her bosom. I hope many will
leave the sinking ship of
and in the mast of the
flag of t Democracy with deck
room for all the Democratic tick-
et and then you can safely leave
all to the God of storms, tho
lightening and the breeze
W-
MUSEUM
WILL EXHIBIT AT
The only excuse given by tho
populists for fusing- with the re
in this State is,
allege, on account of our election
law by which tho democrats corn-
mil great frauds. Yes, they
to make this tho is-
sue. They do not deny that the
democrats have given good gov-
to North Carolina, but
they say that our election law is
a great wrong and that our
not fair- Well, if this is
the only reason for voting with
the republicans, let us carefully
consider it-
the first place who changed
It is located miles east of Ft- j the old election laws under which
Worth and miles east of t our people had voted until
Greenville, on the M. K. T. R- the war Who first required the
R. The town is neatly built on
an elevation overlooking the
beautiful timber valley of the
which breaks the vast
prairie level stretching away as
far as eye can reach in
cent waves of the most
and healthy
in the great State of Texas. The
party hero, like in North
Carolina, is an upheaval
of the times and a refuge for
every crank who is the advocate
of every that can be con-
by human imagination,
that if the party was placed in
power it would divide up into
factions, each faction to
slap a statuary mustard plaster
on every spot that developed an
ache or a weakness. Each
would have its favorite
be it herb or pill or plaster,
and would discredit the faith of
every one who would not accept
their prescription instanter- The
party here M elsewhere is a con-
mass of putrefaction,
sloughed off from every political
party, which promises everything
to everybody and nothing to no-
body. I trust that Old Pitt
will still remain in the Demo-
only party that
the armament of true
cal economy. Lot tho old of
truth float proudly from In r war-
head, her sing loudly
ONE DAY ONLY.
A GRAND HOLIDAY.
registration of every voter in
Carolina Why, of course
the Republicans during the
days. Yes, the
republicans themselves first
changed our old laws and
introduced this registration of
voters.
In the next place, if the present
election law is wrong, why did not
Marion Butler and other populist
members of the Legislature try to
have it repealed The present
law has been in existence several I
years, and under this law Marion
Butler and other populists were
elected to the Legislature in 1890,
and not one of attempted to
it either amended or re-
pealed
But if this law prevents fair
elections, if it allows democrats
to commit all sorts of frauds and
to whomsoever they
please, how do the populists ex
to carry the next election t
What is to proven, the democrats
from then counting in
they please T For, of course.
the next election must be held
under the present law, and if it
allows the democrats to commit
all forts of frauds, how can tho
populists prevent such frauds
It does seem very strange and
inconsistent for the populists to
say, that under the present law
tho democrats can count in any-
body they please, and yet boast
ho-v they to the
Slat and elect all their
Record.
Mile Ada, Princess of the Arena.
at A. M. with Men, Women, Horses,
open dens of Lions, Tigers, Leopards,
and Hyenas in the
ROYAL
MALE AND FEMALE
GYMNASTS,
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 cats.
ADMISSION cents. Children under years cents.
Doors open at and o'clock P. M. Performances commence at and P. K- Giving you a full
hour to see the





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Li Editor Meter
OCTOBER 17th,
t th at Greenville,
K. C, as mail matter.
OUR NOMINEES.
FOB Jill FLANAGAN-
This gentleman is now nearly
six years old and is one of
best and most highly
respected citizens. He was born
in Pitt county and lived here
his twenty-fifth year
when he moved to Washington.
Ho married in that town and a
few years moved to Hamil-
ton. He came back to Greenville
in opened a buggy factory
here, and built up a reputation
for fine work that tot only cover-
ed Eastern North Carolina but
extended into adjoining States.
During- years he has been
one of our most
men and always had the in-
of the community at heart.
When Mr. lived in
Martin county he held the office
of Constable a short while before
moving- to this town. He was
once elected Mayor of Greenville
but resigned that office as
as he qualified. He served one
term as Town Commissioner, one
as County Commissioner, and
was one year Tax Collector for
the county- Be was
averse to public life, never
ambition for holding-
office, and refused the prof-
fer of a nomination. He did allow
bis name to be used for Treasurer
four years and was elected by
a majority, leading the en-
tire ticket. Two years ago he was
re-elected, and is going t be elect-
ed this year. All his deal-
in business and all his
Prof. W- H. County
Superintendent of Public
showed us a requisition oil
the State Auditor for a warrant
on the State Treasurer for
to go to the school fund of this
county. This from the
vision of the money which
in the Treasurer every
few years from the sale of
swamp lands, This is
tangible evidence of the good
which results to the Public
Schools when the Democratic
j party has control of the State.
Who ever heard of any money ac
cumulating in the T. and
being divided out to the schools
under Republican rule
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R. MO YE-
J. G-
The Democrats of Pitt have en-
joyed no speeches more
those of Hon. C. B. Aycock. He
in Ayden on Monday of
last week and in Greenville that
night. As an enthusiastic,
speaker Mr- Aycock has no
superior- He handles issues
before the people clearly and
convincingly, showing that the
Democrats have been faithful in
fulfilling their pledges, doing
even more than they
ed. He also deals such rapid
blows at claims of
the Populists their fellow
as to knock all then-
argument from under them
leave them nothing to upon
except for office
Verily, Aycock carries the day
wherever he speaks. Parson
John actually went to
Ayden he was going to
squelch Aycock, but the conflict
was about as as if a
low fly should rush out and at-
tack an elephant- Phillips went
home a sicker and sadder men.
but hardly any
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN PRESENTING TO THEIR
MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS THEIR
FALL WINTER
which has been selected with special reference to the trade in
this locality. It includes the pick of 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 all,
The
Hunting's circa will be in
Greenville tomorrow. If yon
want to know bow good it i, read
the following from the Hartford.
Hunting's Circus. Museum and
were largely
enthusiastically received
duties have been marked with by two great audiences which
greeted them last Saturday. It
the strictest integrity honesty,
and the people of Pitt county
know that their money is safe in
the hands of John Flanagan.
FOB SURVEYOR B.
John B. Kilpatrick was raised
in Swift Creek township- He is
nearly sixty years old and has
and no mistake and we extend
cordial welcome whenever the no-
occurs visit us again. The
gentlemanly courtesy of all con-
with the entire outfit is not
one of its least commendable feat
is superior to the average shows
as the cash in advance
list is to the old time pay-
when-you get ready style is
a Jim Dandy and don't yon for
ticket admits to all
these excellent shows, and either
more cf merit than
some whole shows of far greater
, pretensions. Mr. Hunting has
lived all his days upon the farm, on show business
part of the time doing a
tile business in connection with
his farming operations. He rep-
resented his county term in
the Legislature and was for many-
years a Justice of the Peace. He
has already been twice elected to
the office of Surveyor, his duties
always being faithfully perform-
ed. The people can make no mis-
take in again electing him.
The Reflector in this and the
two preceding issues has given a
brief sketch of each of the
nominees, and now we ask
every reader to conscientiously
contrast men with those
are running against them on
opposition tickets and see if you
are ready, or can afford, to take
the affairs of Pitt county out of
the hands of these tried and true
man and give it into the hands of
men, some of whom have been
tried and found wanting.
If you don't want to see
present system of county govern-
destroyed, you don't want
to Bee Marion and a Re-
publican sent to the United
States Senate to mis-represent
North Carolina, go to the polls on
election day and vote the Demo-
ticket.
Tar Fiver Association.
This body, which embraces
seventy churches, met in the
church a Neck on
Thursday of last week and con-
through Sunday. There
was a large attendance and the
subjects discussed were of a very
interesting nature. Capt. N. L.
Shaw, of Warrenton. was elected
Moderator, and Rev. G- W.
cox was re-elected clerk- The
Association decided to double its
mission efforts during the next
year and the churches made
pledges to that end. A fund was
also raised to put a missionary in
the field as a memorial to Dr. I.
D- who spent seventeen
years laboring in t his Association,
but is now located in a different
part the State. Scotland Neck
entertained the Association hand-
and seemed delighted at
having so many visitors within
her borders. Certainly were the
visitors delighted at the splendid
hospitality lavished upon them.
This writer never a few
days among more clever and
courteous people.
We are after your patronage and expect to get it by giving
value received; we do not want it on terms. We pro-
pose to inaugurate the rarest bargain season we have ever
sided over. A half-hour spent in looking over our stock will
give you some idea of the popular styles and we can only hope
that it will be as much pleasure for you to see as for us to show
our goods.
REMEMBER THAT WE CARRY-
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
tit, Harness, Groceries and Flour.
Items.
October, 15th 1894
Jack frost paid respects on Mon-
day morning. welcome bright
lace once more.
rev. R. regular
eat here and Sunday
Another big in river
ha caused all work to suspended at
both mills for a as they are
under water.
We are to note the very serious
illness of Mr. Swell Ho had a
chill, but we are glad to learn
is improving.
We to look upon train
robberies as incident only in the
and west, or in sec
lions newly opened to civilization
But it seems they are coming
near-.-1- to us, and on last Friday
night one was perpetrated in
that for daring almost
the exploits of the once
famous James boys. An express
train on the Richmond,
and Potomac
which left Richmond at o'clock
in the evening, was held up by
masked men, near and
the express car robbed of some-
where between and
some of the estimates
the haul at even larger figures
than The door of the car
blown open with dynamite,
the express messenger made to
open safe at the muzzle of a
and the engine was detach
ed from the train and sent wild
down the road, having to be
wrecked in order to stop its
course. All this lacked of being
a regular Jesse James or Dalton
affair was the killing of a few of
the hands and masked men
with pistols going through
the cars rifling the pockets of the
passengers. But on this occasion
person was harmed and the
passengers were not molested;
And this within twenty-
of the National Capitol.
Items.
October 15th, 1894.
Mr Willie W. Thomas and Miss
Callie were happily
married on last Wednesday even-
at half past o'clock at the
residence of the bride's father,
Mr. R. D. D. C
Moore Esq officiating. The
were Mr. J. R. Ward with
Miss Maud Barnhill, Mr. W. J.
Whitehurst with Miss Lena
ins, Mr. Jesse Thomas Jr., with
Miss Mollie Bryan, Mr. J. T-
Ward with Miss Bettie Jenkins.
After the ceremony the bridal
party and invited guest repaired
to the residence of the groom's
father, Mr- Jesse a
sumptuous and bountiful supper
awaited them. After doing full
to the supper and spending a
while in conversation with the
party present, we bid the bride
and groom good evening, wishing
them a happy voyage through
life.
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-------
Medium Price Marble Top Suits.
Suits, Marble Top Bureaus,
Wood Top Bureaus
Items.
October, 15th 1894.
Rev. filled his regular
appointment at St Johns yesterday.
Mr. It. Of Washington, i
spending some time hero.
Miss i Fields, of La Grange, is
friends near here.
A Debt frost visited this section last
Thursday night.
Mr. X. II. wont to Kin-ton
Friday returned Saturday.
Dr. W. T. Best returned homo last
Friday from Asheville he has
been for his health.
Master Willie Best wen to
Friday night to his eye operated
on by Dr.
BERRIES.
I have Strawberry Plants.
Cabbage Plants, ready In
Tulips,
10.000 Grape Vines.
The price of the James Grape Vines
has been reduced one half. I hive a
tine lot of fruit and ornamental trees of
all kinds. Send for
low. Allen Warren
Greenville. N. C.
parlor Court Clerk of Pin county as
Administrator of the estate of J. B. Ty-
son, deceased, notice is hereby given to
all persons indebted to the lo
make payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
against said estate must present the
same for payment on or before the first
day of October, 1896, or this notice will
be plead in bar of recovery.
This 1st day I Oct. I.
W. R.
of J. B. Tyson.
LEADING ATTRACTIONS
IN
winery
Ml CO W ELL CO.
have received their new stock and can
show their customers I he very latest
designs, styles and colors for fall
Our M Pattern Hats
are beauties, while our Ribbons,
and all other goods will
be sure to please you.
Call and examine our stock.
I am pleased to state that since recovering
from my recent sickness have visited
the northern markets to purchase
NEW GOODS
and am now prepared to show you an
------site line of------
Dry Goods, Notions
FURNISHING
Yon will find all my goods strictly first-class and prices
Come to see me and let me show you what can do.
WILEY
GREENVILLE. N. C.
BUYERS,
Tables,
Parmele Items.
October, 15th, 1894.
Mr. David Gibb, late of
accepted a position
in the office of the P. E. I. Co.
We are to see Miss Emma
Mayo, who is visiting her sister,
Mrs. W- Harper, this week.
Rev Mr. Hines returned
Falkland Friday night and left
Saturday for Fayetteville to till
Dr. pulpit there.
Messrs F. W. Samuels, T. F.
Whitley, Herb Pope- and J. A-
Lawson spent Sunday in
We would be glad to have some
good, Democrat honor us
with a speech or stump talk
campaign.
Extension Dining Table, Side Boards, Tin Safes, Mattresses
Bed Se Children's Beds and Cribs, Parlor Suits, Hal
Racks, Wardrobes, Lace Curtain Poles, Floor Or
yard, yard and a half and two yards wide, and
Mats, call on us.
We have some rare bargains in all lines.
def y competition. We are here to stay. We
can and will sell as low as any one.
Your friends,
t.
COTTON
AND DEALERS IN
deal fair and square with our friends and patrons and by Riving them
BOTTOM PRICES on Goods and Top Prices for Produce We intend to
We make a
Specialty of
FINE MA
full lino of
JUST
-m
-max p k
job p
MM
I'M





. t
AN AGE OF BRIDGES.
The Enormous Expenditure Rep-
resented In Artificial Highways.
the Cost and
of of New
The River
Bridge That I. to Be.
It has become a custom to speak
of the present time as the age of
electricity, but there are good
reasons for calling it also the bridge
age. Some of the artificial high-
ways which now in course of
construction, others which are in
contemplation, and some of the
greater oops which have been built
in recent years represent an
expenditure of capital.
Few people know how great the
of money is that is Invested in
the bridges which connect
tan Island with the mainland and
with Long Island. When those new
ones for which charters have been
obtained are put across the East
river, Hell Gate and the Hudson
river, the bridges of New York will
represent an investment of capital
equal to that of the New York-
Central railroad system, or to the
Western Union Telegraph company.
Each of these great corporations is
capitalized at about a hundred mil-
lions of dollars.
The don bridge over the
East river cost fifteen millions, the
beautiful Washington bridge over
the Harlem more than two millions,
and the proposed Hudson river
bridge will cost about forty mil-
lions.
The two suspension bridges
to be built over the East river, each
larger than the famous bridge that
suspended between New
York and Brooklyn, will cost ten
millions apiece, and when they and
the Hudson river bridge are com-
Manhattan Island will
with its outlying districts
by thirteen artificial highways, each
a triumph of engineering science.
These bridges over New York
waters illustrate a comparatively
small part of the energy, capital and
engineering genius that are being
devoted to bridge construction in
the United States.
Two great bridges are to be built
over the Niagara river, one near the
falls and one connecting the city of
Buffalo with the Canada shore.
It is proposed also to construct a
mammoth bridge across the
near New Orleans.
The science of bridge building was
revolutionized when
planned the Brooklyn bridge. His
daring amazed the engineers of the
world. He had no previous example
on so large a scale to aid him, and
therefore was compelled to rely upon
theoretical demonstrations.
Yet after eleven years of use it
has been found that mis-
calculated In no detail, however
small. The science of bridge build-
has advanced so greatly since
in his closet thought out
the principle upon which the Brook-
suspension bridge should
built, that it is now p to build
structures much more rapid-
the Brooklyn bridge
built, and at greatly cost.
bridge can be
say, in five
required nearly
construct the
Moreover,
bruin its
more
The Hudson riv
built, the
years, although it
twenty years to
Brooklyn bridge,
though it is to b
long as the Brooklyn
estimated cost is only a
than half as much again as the
expense of construe the Brook-
Companion.
A Laughing Plant.
A grows in Ara
It obtains name from the
effects produced by eating its seeds.
The natives of the district where the
plant grows dry these seeds and re-
duce them to powder. A small dose
of powder has similar effects to
those arising from the excessive use
of intoxicants. It causes the most
sober person to dance and laugh,
with the boisterous excitement of a
madman, and to rush about, cutting
the most ridiculous capers, for an
hour. At the expiration of this
time exhaustion sets in and the ex-
cited person falls asleep, to wake
after several hours with no
of his Times.
Whistling for Digestion.
for half an hour after
meals says Mrs. Alice Shaw, of
whistling fame, best possible
aid to digestion. Try It, weak-chest-
ed, slender-throated sisters, and
profit by my she adds.
PASSING OF THE
Hotel Managers Mourn the Growing
Scarcity of Wedding Couples.
At a recent conference of hotel
proprietors the bride as a guest
came up for discussion. All those
present agreed that she has changed
her haunts and habits, Is a shy bird,
and, though as easily recognized as
of old, is seldom captured by the big
hostelries. A well-known Niagara
was full of regrets and in-
on the subject. He de-
says the New York Sun, that
the frequent and unfeeling
per paragraphs directed against her
had cost him hundreds of couples
annually.
The manager of a famous New
York hotel remarked that among
the wealthy people publicity
mediately after marriage is
avoided. The honeymoon,
which was formerly passed on
trains, ocean steamer's or at
Inns, Is now spent In the
of a loaned by a friend
for. the occasion, or tho wife
goes to new home. The
Idea, he observed, was imported I
from England, where brides are
as choice as out flowers, and think it
bad to show themselves
weeks et least. New York, he con-
catches a lot of southern and
western couples, whose wedding
Is possibly tho great event
of their lives. Bot the bridal suites
that to be the of a hotel
heart occupied half
th-J nowadays by old bachelors
married on in their an-
. .-
eminent system, and overturning
a good government, and I believe
if we follow the Populist gang it
will be done; so I can no longer
have anything to do with them.
I am going back home again ; I
invite you all with me.
October 1894.
THY AR COMING BACK.
There is no better evidence
that fusion will not fuse than the
constant desertions from the
of the Populists to the
Democratic party. Prodigals are
every day coming back home, and
the Democrats are giving them a
hearty welcome.
President Lincoln never
a greater truth than when
he said you can't fool the people
all the time. Butler and his
minions have for a long time held
many honest, men
at his command, because their
zeal for reform they were as
to bis selfish schemes and
and were loath to believe ill
of him. But that he is try-
to deliver them bodily into the
party in order to
serve his ends, they are
to awake to the situation
and protest against the
transaction.
Below given letters from
three Populists
farmers in Moore Durham
counties, in which they declare
that they have been deceived and
that henceforth they will vote the overwhelming ma
I, Win. Woods, of the county
of Durham, formerly a Populist,
endorse the above statement of
Mr. Currin, and will accept of his
invitation. Wm. Woods.
October 1894.
I, D. C Walker, with Mr. Wm.
Woods, Mr. Currin and
will accept of his invitation-
D. C. Walker.
October 1894.
These letters have the ring of
true gold. The writers of them
having been deceived have
it out, honest men, that
they are. they are willing to ac
knowledge their error and do all
in their power to show others
their mistake. Breaks like this
in the ranks of the are
daily more and more
frequent and will continue to do
so from now until the election,
COMING NEXT WEEK.
A Story With
OF PETERSBURG, VA.
is now working Scotland Neck, N. C Parties who
Democratic ticket-
follows
They write as
I have been fooled by tho
pie's party. I was conscientious
in my views heretofore and did
believe that the People's party
was right, but now I see that they
were trying to lead myself, as
others, a party that all white
men is the cause of our
this State from to 1876. i horse knows about Hebrew,
will be given against this
mongrel combination that it will
not soon News
and Observer.
it is really amusing to hear
men who are absolutely
who do not take and road a news-
paper, who know no about
knows about Hebrew, dis-
cussing the matter of free silver
should wait and Mr. of the Company.
Carry Mr Own Expert Roof
Mr. the inventor of tho Paint, gives his personal
to all work to the company.
I am free to that I am
yet of the opinion that tho Farm laud tho tariff, and abusing the
was an excellent Democratic party. We just wish
if it had been carried; to to no
out on the principles set forth
its organization, it would have
done the agricultural classes
good. I can now see what our
late representative, Hon. W. J.
Adams, told us two years ago is
fast being verified I do
commend him for exposing the
fraud at tho time he did.
am a white man and in favor
of white supremacy, that
through the Democratic party, as
it is the only political party that
I know of that has steered clear
on that line. I will no longer
listen to uncertain sounds. I am
a Democrat, feel free to say
so, believing the door to the
party is wide open for our
as well as it is for all others.
Come, brethren, let's go back
home- I am not in favor of tear-
down our present county gov-
Democratic, Republican
or Populists, will put bushel
of com their crib or a piece of
moat their smokehouse, which
they do not make by hard labor.
Every man must work out his
destiny. Tho man who has the
brains and can make a
success regardless of party and
tho man who does not possess
those qualities will be a failure
under the of any
party. Close to business
rather than politics is the royal
road to
Record.
Old
papers for sale at this
They will be in Greenville
Next Week.
Tho comes highly recommended from towns they worked.
Can Stop Leaks and in all
of feather.
Tho Paint is endorsed by the Norfolk v Western K It. and Atlantic
Coast Lin R. R.
Wait for the Faint
Mr. J. G. Warlick of tho Rack-
et, is back fro n a trip in
county. His attention was called
one day to a m in going by with
A Tortoise.
AN AMERICAN D LONDON.
a bale of cotton. see that
cotton said a
that man working with a
Third party man. The Third
party was always going to
That you see go
by told him that ho was go
to an of cotton and
only work in during the the
Third party man was at
He did so, and is in a bale of cot
ton. Tho Third party man could
have had not one but several
bales hail ho stayed at home
to his
Observer.
A correspondent
oldest of resilient in Colombo will
remember a famous tortoise which
for years has been a curiosity In Up-
lands The death of this
reptile has formed tho subject of
correspondence between his excel-
i the governor of Ceylon and
j the curator of the local museum,
with whom its remains have been de-
posited In preference to the British
j museum, It is supposed that the
creature was brought to Ceylon over
a century ago, when the Island was
taken over by tho British from tho
Dutch. It had been blind for years,
and from snout to tail measured
fully six feet, though experts
are of opinion that it reached
Its fullest fifty years ago. So
j I nearly extinct has this species of
tortoise become that Dr. Gunther,
of the British museum, made an of-
fer of ten pounds sterling for It,
dead or alive. Mr. curator
need to has undertaken the
of prows of
. .,; ling is now going forward. The
make mad war on one that was confined to the
retreating Seychelles the Mauritius group,
cans, and routs thorn, horse j This has now died out, and the class
dragoon. Democrats have the can only obtained the north of
light and all tho argument on, Times.
Whet tho Do
do is to put on their
their there's apologies
to be made. While the lust Con-i
seemed slow to a waiting
Buffeting and
Cooking by Electricity.
Cooking by electricity Is still
finding favor among an Increased
I number of people, and has no draw-
patient through years of Re- back except that It is comparatively
publican and high expensive. This has been all along
yet it worked the right tho drawback to tho electric
direction, did all they could tent, and the length of time it
. . . has been known its use has gone
tho of ,,., . , ,
, iV j- i . . beyond that In places,
and actually did for the. Cooking by electricity has hardly
any since i reached that point of being In com-
the war. Louisburg Tunes. M public places, but it bids
fair to do so In tho near future.
The In the range In which coal
; is used is not so intense as the
mice through which tho electric cur-
It is said that the smallest piece, of , , . , ,
. , . ,, , ., i rent passes, and the latter Is also
painting in the world has recently, , ,. , ., ,,
i .,. . i . more controlled. Then there
been executed a Flemish artist. , , ,
t, . i i . no raking of ashes, no soiling of
It is painted on the smooth side of a , . , . , , .
. , , ., , . , the hands with coal-dust, and no hot
gram of common while corn and pie- i Hit . u
r i . to lift and burn
a null and a miller mounting a
stairs with a sack of grain on his
back. The mill is represented as
horse and cart
era
Pretty Small Business.
summer-
time the kitchen and the dining-
room may be with comfort one and
the same
the fin-
Then tho intensity of tho
is regulated for
; viands at pleasure. Tho popularity
standing on s terrace and near it s of th
appeal to those who live
peasants to shown to the road ,, ,
nearby. The picture is beautifully ; .
distinct, every object being
with microscopic fidelity, yet by
careful measurement it is shown
that tho whole painting does not I Artificial
cover a surface of half an Inch
O. Picayune. A German has Invented a means
Mn ex-Governor Now Chief of j artificial whalebone. The
material is leather soaked for two or
Ex-Gov. of Island, three days in sulphate of potassium,
is living In a small cottage near the i and then stretched en a frame, slow
beach at Tier. He dried exposed to a
discharges tin. of chief of It is afterwards put,
lice at the pier. heavy pressure with tho
I that It becomes hard and elastic.
The Reflector and
WILL YOU HELP
In the great contest which is to be fought between now the next presidential election for
THE PEOPLE'S Coinage of both Gold and Silver, without discrimination, which means the
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 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 OP MORE THAN chiefly among the farmers of the
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S tr
He la Like a Bit of
Through the Tog and
A London
from Opt. Crawford, tho Well-
Known Tort nod Mr out
We all In tho nethermost hell
of despair over our awful weather,
and we are longing for the sunshine,
writes George R. Sims In the Lon-
don Referee. But there are people
who In some parts of the world
grumble at and
long for the fog and the rain of Old
England. As I was thinking of
these things there strode Into my
room, out of the mist and the rain
of the park, Capt. Jack Crawford,
the famous Poet Scout of America,
the Ideal frontiersman, with long
hair hanging over his shoulders,
tall, lithe and with eagle
eyes and shading brows; and he sat
himself down In my study, and,
shaking the rain from his leonine
locks, like
does me I
asked. ho replied;
and then ho told me how for live
long years In New Mexico they had
not a drop of rain, only the eternal
scorching, blinding sunshine, and
how seventy-five per cent, of tho
cattle died, and the fish lay in tho
dry bed of the river and fanned
themselves with their tails, tho
snakes crawled about with their
skins blistered and crackling; and
he called the ceaseless downpour of
Thursday a and
wished he could take a stock of our
special summer weather back to
New Mexico with him.
I told the genial that
I would pay him a visit In his land
of as soon as I could settle
my In this sun-forsaken land
of mud and mildew, and asked him
if I should have to go about with six-
shooters all over me. Then ho
laughed.
aren't any six-shooters
now except In the he
said. real men of the west are
quiet, good
Hut In the old days of tho six-
shooter the Poet Scout often had a
rough time. Ono night In a lawless
town ho to meet Wild Will
James n. one of tho
greatest scouts America ever knew,
a man who once killed seven men In
five minutes. They were guerrillas
during tho war, and belonged to
John gang, and they got
round Wild Will him, and
It was lives or his life, and ho
accounted for seven on his own. On
the occasion when Capt. Jack and
Wild Will were in tho bar,
rough came In all over six-shooters,
and a wolf, you
and I'm on tho howl to-night. Up
to the bar with you, and red liquor
for the
The company obliged, and the red
liquor otherwise
otherwise was
served. But Wild Will and Capt.
sat still. sold the
stranger, you to
replied Jack,
never had a drink in my
h n, by thunder, you'll begin
well, then; I'll take a
Lemonade hanged
Rod liquor, and down with It,
And he drew his revolver. And then
Wild Will rose, and with blow of
his huge fist stretched tho frontier
rough on tho floor. And as he
put his hand to his six-shooter,
u man came
Will, by And the hand
and tho Wolf
I thought there was only
one man with a fist And
when Jack lifted his glass of
lemonade the Wolf gave him a sickly
smile, and when the captain
ordered your own drink
he answered,
think I'll take a lemon-
It was five o'clock In the afternoon
when he came Into my study just to
bring me a message from my friend,
Robert P. Porter, of census fame,
and I shouldn't like to tell you what
time it was when I let him out f my
Into tho night, with his
long hair waving in the breeze, and
then went up to bed reviling the
which had made me a melancholy
London scribbler Instead of a poet
scout, with a ranch in New Mexico
and n glorious record of gallant deeds
on the frontier of the wild west.
A A TORCH.
When Wants to Est Ho Turns On
Light.
Scientists have recently intro-
a novelty in the animal world
In the of the
fer, but it is a deal easier to call it
by its everyday torch-
fish. He is a deep-sea fish carrying
on bis nose an organ which he can
Illuminate with a phosphorescent
light or extinguish at pleasure. He
does not use his lantern to
him on his pathless course In tho
dark depths of ocean or enable him
to look around him, but when meal-
time comes he lights up to attract
smaller fishes, which, mistaking the
lantern for a phosphorescent Insect,
dart straight for it, only to find
their way into tho capacious jaws of
The mode In which the lantern la
lighted and extinguished is not yet
clearly understood. Nikola Tesla,
tho eminent electrician, Is of the
opinion that If such a fish exists,
and If it has the attributes credited
to It, it Is very strange that neither
Lord nor Prof. S. P. Lang-
had made any mention of It in
their researches. Mr. Tesla is also
of the opinion that If tho phosphor-
docs exist It Is not of an
electrical origin.
G. Brown Goode, assistant
of the Smithsonian institution,
writes of the Is not
positively known that the organ on
the nasal filament of Is
luminous, although It appears prob-
able. The idea that the fish
power of illuminating It at pleasure
Is, so far as I know, purely
the idea having been
by Dr. Gunther, of the British
I think no one has seriously
that the phosphorescence
H Ml r. W





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
BATTLE WITH A BOA.
Wrapped About
His Windpipe.
S. I mi
WEDNESDAY. OCTOBER 17th, 1804.
at at Greenville,
K. C, as mail matter.
Pages.
County Canvass.
The candidates for
the Legislature and county offices
will address the people at the
following times
Wednesday,
17th.
X Roads, Thursday,
October 18th.
Calico, Friday, October, 19th-
Grimesland, October,
20th.
Parkers School Wed-
Friday, October.
Ayden, Saturday, October, 27th j
Stokes. Wednesday.
31st.
Thursday, November,
1st.
Cobb's Store, Friday,
2nd.
Black Jack, Saturday,
3rd.
Congressional Canvass-
W. A- 13- Branch and
Harry Democratic
Populist-Republican candidates
for Congress, will Speak ac the
following and places in Pitt
county
Ayden. Wednesday, Oct. 24th.
Falkland, Oct. 25th.
Bethel, Friday, Oct.
Greenville, Saturday, Oct.
THEY WILL NOT FUSE.
J. Sara Sharps, the colored
tor of the Wilmington Herald,
was in the city yesterday.
He has been over the
State in the of his paper,
and has taken occasion during
his goings lo look into the
cal situation.
Sharpe is intelligent, observant,
conservative, a straight-out
Republican, opposed in to to to
fusion.
ho yesterday,
out of seventy-five
that I visited, that not mere
than are
in favor of fusion.
fusion chairmen you
rind in Fayetteville,
sou, Goldsboro,
Jacksonville, and Rock-
county, and in a few
places, the rest of the
seventy live that I visited
the Republican are opposed to
fusion and will have none of it
those white or
colored f
of are
do the colored people
dislike the Populists more titan
they do the Di-mo cats
we the Pope
lists, the Populist fused,
hating ticket. It is headed no a
by the same crowd that started
the White Man's Republican
League at Asheville,
namely, and
They fought the
they will do it u m.
Marion Butler sought the build-
of few years
ago, and said if the
went to Heaven he didn't
want to go. They were the lead-
of the which was the
tail of the Democratic party.
will be the result of the
defection of colored
the defeat of the
Populist ticket by major
that benefit you
colored people any V
if have got to have
Democrats we want Democrats,
but don't want men who pro
fens but don't possess. We
poking our men or letting
things go on as they in the
convention- v. went for Fusion
here, there were four or five white
men to one colored man. It was
all up with utter
of the of our race.
the in which I
a delegate Weldon,
June 28th last, where
was nominated, J. F- Dobson
tried to run the machine the same
way
it wort do, tho Populists
are without their host,
if they bank the colored
for fusion. They are giving us
no recognition now pro
pose to give them none at the
and Observer.
Under the new law taxing the
incomes of the wealthy it is
mated that William
or will contribute to the govern
per annum, John
D. Rockefeller Gould
state Russell Sage
Vanderbilt
Wm. K. Vanderbilt
of other million
in all the cities from
to each per a.-
An Incident of the In Venezuela
Clever or Ills
Native Servant from the Em-
At a Serpent.
During my snake-hunting
eastward through the
Ian forest, writes G. B. of;
the Ireland Royal Zoological society,
whenever for any length of time I j
made my headquarters in any j
or settlement, I almost
had one or two young fellows
trained under my own eye, to cap-j
Hire without fear the largest
and most deadly kinds that the
primeval wilderness could produce j
Pedro Vargas, a swarthy-skinned
stripling of seventeen, clad only in
shirt and trousers, with a palm leaf
bat upon his head, barefoot and,
to the knee, was the
quickest and bravest of all my j
daring serpent chasers.
One morning at sunrise Pedro and j
I started off for the forest in search j
of huge boa constrictor reported
have been seen by some hunters on ,
tho previous evening. We had each j
a cutlass with which to sever
entangling vines in our route, a
long slick to use in dealing with rat- J
or bushmasters, a wallet.
of provisions for the day and some j
stout to confine our expected
Captive in, but none of extraordinary
capacity, judging the size of tho re-1
ported boa to be, as usual,
Before we had proceeded far the
sounds of gunshots the distance
attracted our attention. We soon
came up with the shooters, and were
delighted to find that they were the
very hunters who had yesterday en-
countered the boa we were in
quest of.
Over the forest-dad hills for some
two miles we with difficulty made
our way, continually slashing a road
with our cutlasses, to where there
was a deep ravine.
It was among the rocks en the
side of this ravine that they
had seen the boa on the evening be-
fore. About half way down, or, per-
haps, fifty feet from the gravelly
bottom, they showed us the spot
where he had lain, and the hole in
tho rock into which they said he had
glided at their approach.
As he was not now in his hiding
place we set diligently to work to
search every rock and bush the
vicinity. Pedro, meanwhile, left us,
and, going down to the dried
up river bod, began to seek him be-
neath the bushes overhanging the
sandy margin. lie was very soon
successful.
he shouted.
On hearing this we all stood still,
anxiously gazing down at him, won-
what it was he had
As he uttered the words we
saw him in the act of ascending a
huge overshadowed by a
spreading fan-palm's spacious leaves.
For a moment he was lost to view.
The palm leaves swayed and
violently, before we had
time to move a step there was Pedro
roiling off the down to the
sand below, with the enormous
snake coiled with its many folds
around him. As he fell he yelled
out wildly for assistance. I shouted
to him to hold him fast and not let
go any account, and while we
hurried down the rough incline he
could be heard swearing lustily as
he struggled to free himself from the
tightening embraces of hie prisoner.
There he lay on his back holding the
great boa, with one hand clutched
about its throat. There was coil
upon coil of the monster's length
wound around his neck and arms and
body. His legs only were free, and
with these he tried vigorously to get
on his feet; but in vain, for the
weight around his neck and
as well as the pinioning of his
arms, completely prevented any
such action. He could only lie there
helplessly on his back and kick.
When reached him he could speak
no more and his face was fast grow-
livid, though otherwise he was
conscious enough; but the pressure
round his throat was too much for
him. The swollen veins stood out
upon his forehead and his eyes
the snake
was strangling him, while he still
kept it clutched by the throat, for
though a boa constrictor cannot
crush one's ribs, he can easily
squeeze a neck quite enough to
choke. Now, the best way to
loose a coiled boa is to commence at
the tail, so for that jumped at
and found it stoutly en
around the stems of the bushes. I
proceeded to untie it, but as fast as
I could get it off from one place it
instantly twisted afresh around an-
other.
As it was clear that this delay
might have serious consequences,
at once prepared for other tactics.
I knew that if I threatened the ex-
cited reptile while Pedro remained
perfectly still and quietly let go his
hold on its throat, the beast would
at once attack me by biting, but not
by winding around me, for this
they never do, except with animals
they intend to swallow or when held
prisoner, as Pedro was now holding
this one. Preparing myself, there-
fore, for the onset by taking the bags
we had with us and wrapping them
around my hands to protect them
against its teeth, I stood off a little
by the reptile's head and shouted to
Pedro to let go, which he had till
now been afraid to do The other
hunters, meanwhile, paralyzed by
stood around, not knowing at
the what course to pursue.
They never uttered a word, in
pugilistic attitude, I took my
before the hissing snake, and,
with both hands protected by the
tags, as with boxing gloves feigned
a blow him the moment Pedro
loosened his grasp. The enraged
animal, seeing me thus menacingly
moving in of him, gave vent to
a in st terrifying hiss, and bit to-
ward me with widely-gaping jaws.
He struck right toward my face, but
Ml short of his mark, for he was too
entwined around the boy to
out inc.
His folds now began to loosen on
all his being directed to
me. This was just what I desired,
draw him from hi relaxing cm-
brace of my and so allow
the latter to come to my aid in
his capture. For several
minutes I kept the angry snake
biting at me, and as after each at-
tack he would unwind another twist
of his body Pedro, whom repeated-
warned to stay quiet, was soon
almost entirely free, while I sparred
vigorously with my hissing
without, of course, ever
lowing him to catch me.
Alternately he would dash madly
at me then gather himself anew
for another spring. Slowly he was
following me, while I retreated. At
every attack his powerful tail would
swish through the loose gravel,
sending the dry dust in yellowish
clouds about himself. Now that he
was far enough away, I gave the
word to Pedro to jump up and cut a
good-sized polo In the thicket. With
this we both to press down
his neck, pinning him firmly to the
ground, upon which he tried vainly
to turn and bite the offending wood,
and twisted himself around it right
up to our very hands. Quickly at
my call the other hunters came to
our assistance and while they held
some to the pole and some to the
snake, I caught him firmly, just as
Pedro had done before, around the
neck with both hands. Now that I
had him by tho head, Pedro by the
tail and some others by the middle,
we soon got him loose from the pole
and triumph bore him off home-
wards, through tho forests, for none
of the bags we had with us was any-
thing like large enough to Stow him
in.
We stopped to rest in open
spot where there lay a remnant of a
prostrate tree about twenty feet
long-and eighteen inches in
with its interior entirely
lowed out by the combined work of
natural decay and wood-boring in-
sects. It was suggested that, if one
end of tho cavity was stopped up,
we could allow our captive to glide
into it, and then, having closed up
the other end also, carry him home
our shoulders, for the whole
was as dry as tinder and not
heavier than so much cork. Accord-
having plugged up end
with bundles of vines and weeds
tightly wadded In, we got the snake
to enter readily by releasing his
head in tho mouth of the open end
scratching him vigorously about
the tail, because ho thought he was
escaping into the darkness of the in-
As we were stopping up the
second end in a similar manner to
the first, so securing the hissing
prisoner within, we noticed some
small ants making their appearance
through the interstices, but being
SO taken with the success of our ex-
didn't pay much attention
to them at the time. As soon, how-
ever, as we took the burden on our
shoulders the efforts of the
serpent became frantic for es-
cape, with the result that his
disturbed a whole colony of the
terrible in the interior,
which, swarming millions through
every crack and crevice, covered our
necks and shoulders, getting down
between our clothing and our skins,
slinging and biting us with such
fury that simultaneously we dropped
our load began to tear off our
clothing as fast as possible to rid
ourselves of our tormentors. This
was not the worst, for the
frail receptacle in which we carried
our prisoner smashed to pieces with
the fall and liberated the tortured
BICYCLE IN WAR.
An English Experiment to Demon-
Its Usefulness.
A Distance of Miles
in Fifty-Two Twenty-
Seven
in Many Line.
The practice of bicycling has In-
creased with such rapid-
as to have become one of the dis-
features of modern so-
The connection of this art
with the development of an extend-
ed system of good roads is obviously
very close, and as the roads of
this country are still to a great ex-
tent ill-constructed, the use of the
bicycle may be regarded as here In
its infancy. In the older c
where the density of population
Is such as to make the of
building perfect roads tolerable, bi-
have multiplied to such an
extent as to far outnumber,
those who use horses. One
satisfactory result of this new sys-
for tourists promises to the
rehabilitation of the wayside inn;
an institution which was practically
ruined this country by the decay
of the stage coach. An experiment
recently tried England shows
that it is not improbable that the
art of war may receive some
cation from this new method of
movement.
A club of cyclists, wishing to show
what might done in the way of
carrying dispatches hi time of war,
when other means of communication
had broken down, asked the war of-
to let them carry a dispatch
from London to Edinburgh and bring
back a reply. The war office, with
the usual stupidity of a government
bureau, declined to have anything
to do with the matter, but it was
arranged with the Pall Mall Ga-
that their offices in the two
cities should be used as termini.
Relays of cyclists, riding in pairs to
avoid loss of time by accident, were
duly stationed, and the letter once
started was carried through Eng-
land, as the Spectator says, like a
fiery cross. Tho weather was ex-
bad, the rain falling in tor-
rents and a head wind being
all the way to Edinburgh.
less between o'clock of
a Thursday morning and of the
next Saturday the dispatch was car-
to its destination the an-
brought back. Tho distance
of miles was thus covered in
hours and minutes, an average of
miles an hour. In the very best
days of coaching the shortest time
made between London and Edin-
burgh was hours and minutes.
Such a result as this will open the
eyes of the war offices of the
if not of England. It indicates
that we may presently see bodies of
cyclists attached as orderlies to the
staff of every general. Nor is it
probable that such a body would
not take tho place, for many
poses, of cavalry. The same causes
that lead men to sell their horses
and take to bicycles will be opera-
in military economy. In this
peaceful land may not witness
such a development of bicycling as
this; but we shall be contented if it
leads to the improvement of our
roads and Y. Even-
Post.
Sounds.
A new fad adopted by owners of
phonographs is tho collection of
that give forth musical notes
of odd character obtained directly
from nature, each as the song of
birds, the chirp of insects, even
the cries of wild animals in
occupant on the open ground in the One of the pleasures derived
midst of us, scattering the ants
about for yards on every side.
he scurried through the woods with
all the energy he could muster.
Cleveland World.
you not give me a
kiss, beauteous Waiter
much do I give you c
Guest
you might as well bring me a
of Schweitzer cheese and
a glass of bock
Joke.
New Use for Natural G.-is.
The possibilities of natural gas
evidently have not yet. been ex-
The latest use which
would Beam to have been found for
it is the making of ice, the idea be-
simply to expand the gas from
its usually high initial pressure down
to or near that of the atmosphere,
nature having done all the
nary work of compression and cool-
making the ready to ab-
heat from its surroundings
mediately upon being released from
confinement. All that would be
necessary would be suitable coils or
chambers into the gas could
be allowed to expand. It has been
calculated out quite plausibly, in
fact, that with an ordinary gas well,
furnishing 1.500,000 cubic feet per
day, something tons of ice
could be turned out daily at an ex-
of about fifty cents a ton.
The gas loses nothing but its press-
retaining all its calorific value
and hence all its virtue for rolling-
mill and glass works use, for heat-
brick, lime and pottery kilns
and the endless number of Other
furnaces to which it is adapted. In
a certain therefore, the gas
may be regarded as affording some-
thing for desideratum to
which many in this world are con-
looking forward.
The Deep, Deep Sea-
It b a remarkable fact that the
deepest parts of the sea in all
eases very near the land. The
deepest sounding known,
fathoms, or feet, was obtained
miles from the islands;
the next deepest, fathoms,
was found seventy miles of
Rico. With a few exceptions
like these the depth of ocean as
far as now known does reach
fathoms, or four sea miles.
The North Pacific has a mean depth
of fathoms, the South Pacific
of tho Indian ocean of
from such a collection consists in
submitting the notes to others for
identification. Recently, in search-
for sounds still more fanciful, a
young woman of Philadelphia dis-
covered a secret of acoustics not
noted In any of the books on that
science and which she terms
auricular Arranging eight
sea shells of differing size so as to
form an octave she expected to re-
cord the roar of the sea as heard with-
in from nearby break-
and gradually diminishing
to a distant though she
could distinctly hear the roar with
something of this effect whenever
she applied her ear to the lips of the
shells, yet the cylinder refused to
receive any sounds whatever, no
matter how carefully the funnel was
adjusted, and she therefore con-
that the sounds are purely
Record.
Vienna's Novel Exhibition.
Vienna will have a novel
in the winter of the
for which have just been
made. It is to be a collect ion of all ob-
of interest connected with the
congress of Vienna in 1814-15, which
redivided Europe after the fall of Na-
It include portraits of the
persons who took part in
Metternich, Talleyrand, -Welling-
ton, other
men of the time; paintings
of the chief occurrences during the
session of the congress, and
of the fashions, uniforms,
court dresses and furniture of the
New Barber Poles.
A Spruce street barber has taken
a trolley polo and painted it a bright
red white as a mark for his
He secured permission from
the Tract company to use the
pole for a trade sign, and now it can
be seen several blocks up and down
the Many now go to his
shop who never knew there was a
in that vicinity before.
is now a run on the company's
officials by other who want
to use the poles. a few weeks
the enterprising barber expects to
hare an electric hair-cutting
at It -cord.
Salisbury's Daughter Writing a Novel
Lord Salisbury's daughter, Lady
Gwendolen Cecil, is engaged, it is
said, on a political novel. She has
already proved herself a clever and
capable in several Prim-
rose league leaflets she has written.
and the Atlantic, by far the best in- more than one well-known
ocean, has a mean
fathoms.
be included in the
forthcoming book, if Um
A STAMP COLLECTOR
SCARED THE AGENT.
WANTED.
Louis and His Collection j
of Postage Stamps.
It fa Pronounced by Who
Seen It to He tho In the
United Recent
Addition.
Louis the possessor of
what Is pronounced by all who have
had the felicity of viewing it the
finest collection of postage stamps
in the United States, is now so-
in this city at the Palace
hotel, says the San Francisco Call.
He is a gentleman of mature years,
and makes the collection of postage
stamps the diversion of his leisure,
just as others go in for pictures,
jewels, entertainments or any other
hobby.
Of late he has been traveling
about considerably, and wherever he
stops he makes the rounds of the
stamp dealers and frequently picks
up a few varieties for his album, but
does not hesitate to buy good stamps
if he can secure them at what ho
considers reasonable During
his stay in this city, for instance, he
has purchased in the neighborhood
of one thousand worth of
stamps, among which were but two
that he did not possess. Both of
these he bought at bargain prices.
They were a pink of British Co-
unperforated, of 1861, and a
of Western Australia, by
mistake has been printed in violet,
tho color of tho It is said that
but one sheet of one hundred of these
stamps were thus printed when tho
error was discovered and corrected.
For the first mentioned ho paid
thirty-five dollars and for the latter
forty dollars. Each is
for one hundred dollars, but tho
seller was unaware of their real
value. Mr. said ho had
never before seen either of
stamps in any collection during
fourteen years of philatelic
Since the local collectors
have heard of his they
arc exceedingly wroth at themselves
over their stupidity In overlooking
these prizes.
With the lapse of years his printed
album became so crowded and
unsightly that ho had special books
prepared for his collection, which
now includes also entire envelopes,
postal cards, wrappers and letter
sheets. His adhesive stamps are
contained in three albums, one for
tho western hemisphere, one for
Europe and one for Asia, Africa and
Australia. His envelopes and wrap-
fill two albums and his postal
cards four. He also has a special
album for Russian rural stamps.
He estimates that he has in tho
neighborhood of twenty-five thou-
sand varieties of stamps, envelopes,
wrappers and postal cards in his
collection. Their value he places at
about fifty thousand dollars.
The mention of a few facts regard-
it will give a fair idea of it. In
confederate local or provisional
stamps he has no less than thirty-
five, ranging in price from ten to
one hundred and fifty dollars, and
aggregating about two thousand
dollars. His Russian rural stamps,
mostly old issues, number about six
hundred, and are worth an
gate sum of fifteen hundred dollars.
Then he has, so far as he can re-
member, about two hundred stumps
worth fifty dollars or more each.
When he left Europe he did not
his stamps with him, but had
them shipped later by express, with
an insurance on them of thirty thou-
sand dollars. They are now in safe
deposit vaults in New York city.
That Is Why Ho Took tho Total
. Swell Tenement with Entrances
How It a nook Agent
the
Fleming
There is a private hotel in
composed of four houses In
a block. Doors have been cut
through the partition walls so that
the four comprise one great
It is a very swell tenement,
of says the Cincinnati
but inasmuch as it is a hive of
people, It is a tenement just tho
same.
Well, the other day a book agent
was coasting along that rocky shore
of houses. He put into one after
another, only to be beaten and have
to put to sea again. But ho was
not discouraged. Ho kept on pa-
and last he came to the
swell tenement calls itself a
private hotel.
Now this estimable book agent
had bad habit. He would now
and then take a drop too much. On
this particular day in question ho
had not been doing well financially,
and as a solace to his soul he had in-
in a number of beers. Ho
was calmly superior to the world as
he walked up the steps at the first
door of the hotel and rang the boll.
A very pretty little maid in cap
and apron answered the bell. She
dismissed him politely but firmly.
They did not want any new books at
their house. The agent tipped his
hat and put out to sea again.
At the second door ho made for
harbor again. The same little maid, j. Mavis.
however, passed through the con-
door and answered the bell
a second time. She smiled at his
blank look and at the backward
glance he gave her as he went down
the steps, disconsolate. He was
still shaking his bend in
when he pulled the third bell.
Once again the little maid
at the door. This time she
was grinning from ear to ear.
gasped the agent. Then
he fled.
But he was a conscientious man,
and he felt that ho must, do his duty, j
He stood for some time in the street
mopping his head industriously be-
fore ho could summon courage for i
the next ascent. Finally ho went ,
up the steps of tho fourth door,
climbing them fearfully as a man
might climb them in a dream. He
had realized suddenly that the day
was frightfully hot, that tho boor
within him was frightfully cold, and
that between tho two he was likely
to perish speedily. His agitation
was very great.
see her he muttered,
I see her again I'll quit drinking
All Watch., Clocks, and
Jewelry for repair.
Main Springs BO lo SO
I Gold and Gold Rings lo
mend to
i fine work a All work
guaranteed
, Z. F.
Greenville. X. C.
Civil
N.
at the Shut House.
Sin day at
DENTIST,
N. C
I AS. B. I.
MOORE
T-LAW,
N. C
Office mi Mouse. Third St.
N. ;.
Prompt to badness. Office.
ill Tinker old stand.
G U E E N V L L E, t .
Practice in s
.
BLOW,
In all the Courts.
it
iS
II,
AT TO It N B VS- AT-I AW,
-U.
Prompt attention Rive.- collection
LATHAM.
Si.
y- .;
i I.
v.-.
HOTEL NICHOLSON.
WASHINGTON, N. C
Geo. A. Spencer, Mgr.
IS
Spatial m to Commercial Mon .
Tree Bra.
for
on the first Sunday at
o'clock and i Imp,. Hire
o'clock.
Grove on I
eleven o'clock
ill k.
Ayden on third Sunday at
o'clock and Impel at three
o'clock.
on the Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's
at three
Everybody Invited to attend.
Baptist
Below arc the regular
o Kev. J. II. pastor of the
Baptist church .
At and f, Sun-
days in each month, morning and
and every Thursday night.
At Sunday in each
month, morning and night.
At Ephesus, Person
in each month and be-
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are the regular appointments
of Rev. A.
third in
each month, morning and evening.
Sunday in each
month, morning and evening.
vices all other
St. Joints, Sun-
day in each month, morning and evening
Holy Innocents,
fifth Sunday morning.
Services.
Ev first
night, alternating between Kev. N.
II. Summered and Kev. J. Nines.
Every third morning and
night, Kev. W-
Sunday School every morn-
o'clock, H. Evans
WILMINGTON WEI. DON It. R
AND
RAM, ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS SOUTH.
Hated
July
i Weldon
Ml
Ar
Rocky Mt
Selma
Ar. Florence
COTTON StiED.
ONE MILLION
She's times worse ONE MILLI
than snakes. That grin on COTTON SEED.
Lord what a grin I
Will highest prices,
sale Cotton Seed Meal Hulls.
The Odds Too Great.
But when tho door opened he saw or Iota.
her just the same. There was,
slight and pretty and coolly dressed
as ever. There, too, was the
It rippled over her whole face and
puckered up the corners of her
mouth. He felt that the end had
come.
beg your pardon, ho
said, as steadily as he could.
beg your pardon very much,
you don't mind would you good
say,
how many of are there any-
The maid let of the grin and it
on
Magnolia
Ar
Dated
July k,
1804.
Florence
Selma
Ar u
i- . M Jr-
A. M. T. M.
It
DENTISTRY.
DR. II. a graduate
I College of Dental S y
will locate in about Oct.
Dr. Joyner has had practical
of several years his
and guarantees c-
The location his office will be
given in a future issue.
Tax Payers.
List of town of
r the year ha- been
f. I- i . ,
Magnolia
ah r ,
. z,
A. M
III I
.,,
in
y. a
Tax
Wilson
Ar Rocky Ml
slipped away from her into a saucy cod III my hands for and as I i
I.- Rocky Ml
j Ar
A good story is told on a
gentlemen of this city who had
on several occasions been a
date before the people for
honors. The gentleman is a smart
politician and knows how to secure
votes, or, at all events, he has been
successful at the polls. However,
on one occasion the prominent gen-
admits to having mot a
smarter man. The latter approached
him on election day with the state-
that if he had some he
could vote a man for him. The can-
gave up half a dollar in com-
Latter in the day, meeting
the smarter man again, the
greeted him
I suppose you voted your
came the response.
other fellow had a quart of
and voted Demo-
The Pope's Monument.
One of the most celebrated Roman
Sculptures has now
the sepulchral monument for tho
pope, ordered by himself. It is of
marble. On the cover of
the sarcophagus lies a lion, with one
paw on the papal tiara. On the
right is the statue of Faith, holding
in one hand the Holy Scriptures and
in the other a torch. On the left is
the statue Truth, holding the arms of
the pore. Under the lion, on the
face of the tomb, is a Latin
HOW ACCIDENTS OCCUR.
Didn't- Know- It Was Leaded
Cases Might Bear Investigation.
The frequency with which
loaded guns and pistols are dis-
charged with fatal results Is
of the suspicion that some of
the alleged deplorable accidents are
the results of deep design.
These peculiar accidents
one of a conversation that occurred
between two
has got wrapped up in
a pistil, one ob dis
pistils what's easy on de trigger,
what cocks and shoots
does a pistil
The other who was a very
case, shut one eye, and with a
smile that was calculated to produce
a shudder,
a pistil goes off and kills a
man, can make folks believe that
it went off by but you
soy a knife killed a man
ally some folks will be shore to
Sittings.
little laugh.
said she, had bet-
go home and take some
There arc a great many of
great many
arc right, he re-
plied with a gesture.
But she had shut the door in his
face.
Freckles and Parasols.
ion required to make prompt settlement
notice is hereby liven to the tax payers
town to make earl; settlement
with me. You can save both yourself
and tho collector trouble not over-
looking this. i. E.
Town Tax Collector.
P.
II
M P. M.
IS
u on
The fondness for red parasols,
which has been pronounced for
seasons post, has, it seems, a
very rational cause of being. It. is
regarded as tho most efficient freckle
preventer in the whole list of colors,
destroying, as it does in a great
measure, the actinic power of the
i sun's rays. The peculiar property
possessed by light transmitted
through a red medium has long
been recognized in science and med-
and the summer girl who
spreads one over her fair face may
feel that she secured an especial-
excellent protection from the
sun's Post.
A Slander Refuted.
takes a war, or least some-
theatrical war, lo bring
out the patriotism of said
the oracular man. plain,
everyday work for tho good of the
country they haven't the least
happen to know better than
the other man. know
the wife of a congressman who took
the manuscript of a tariff speech
her husband was intending to per-
and gave it to the girl to
light the Arc
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before
Court Clerk of com as
of the estate Martha
A. Moore, deceased, is hereby
to the
estate to make ray;
to the all
having claims against estate
tor on or In-
fore 17th day i-f September, or
this v ill placed in bar of re-
17th of Sept.
II MO
Of Martha A.
COTTON
At fits per Yard.
I am to the trade a handsome
at el
The Is put In
bales yards u a bile, weighing
and pounds to the yard. This
Is the New York
Exchange ail is preferred by
. I is for sale by H. Smith
A Ayden. and
On, Greenville.
E. A. Ayden,
Ac-en, for the Manufacturer.
To the Taxpayers
Pitt County.
I will attend at the following times and
places to collect the Taxes for the year 1894,
as the law directs. Everybody meet me, pay
and save trouble.
GRIFTON, Wednesday, October 17th. 1894.
HADDOCK'S X ROADS, Thursday, October
CALICO, Friday, October 10th. 1894.
Saturday, October 1304.
PARKER'S SCHOOL HOUSE, Wednesday, October -24th, 1894
Friday, October 20th, 1894.
AYDEN, Saturday, October, 27th, 1894
STOKES, October 31st, 1894.
Thursday, November 1st. 1894.
COBB'S STORE, Friday, November 2nd. 1894.
BLACK JACK . Saturday, November 3rd, 1804.
K. W. KING,
Sheriff of Pitt County.
on Scotland
haves Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax 1.00
p. in., arrives Sent land Neck at B-r p.
6.87 p. in-, 7.3.5
p. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a ID., Greenville 6.22 a. Arriving
Halifax at a. to 11.20 a.
in., daily except Sunday.
Trains on leave
Washington a.
a. in. on; returning
leaves p. in.,
p. in., arrives Washington p. m.
except with
trains on Branch.
Train leaves N C, via
A K. K. daily except
St p. in., Sunday P. M;
arrive Plymouth 9.20 M-. 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves daily except
Sunday, 5.80 a. in., a.
arrive 10.25 a. in., and II.-5
a. in.
Train on Midland N C Branch
daily except Sunday, COS a.
in. riving a in. K
leaves s a. in.;
a- Goldsboro. a. in.
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves
Mount at 4.80 p. in., arrive
I i p. in-. Spring Hope
In. in. Returning leaves Spring Hope
on a. m. Nashville a. arrives
j at Rocky Mount i in., daily except
Sunday.
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence P-
I U. p. in., arrive Dun-
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave
liar a. m. arrive Latta a. m.
i I tally except
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War-
for Clinton except Sunday
a. in. Re leave Clinton
at 1.00 p. in., at Warsaw with
n line trains.
No. makes close connection
at Weldon for all points North daily, all
rail via Richmond, and daily except
I Sunday via Portsmouth and
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk St.
Carolina railroad for Norfolk daily and
points North via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
JOHN F.
General
R. Manager.
. v. Manage
L ft NORTH CAROLINA
R. R.
In December 4th. 1898.
Pa.
P. M.
Train connects with Wilmington ft
Weldon train bound North, leaving
Goldsboro a. m., and with D.
train West, p. m
Train connects with non ft
Danville train, at
p. in., W. W.
from the North at p. m.
S. L. DILL,





are nil in and I am offering them
to the trade at
LOW
------They consist of
Dry Goods, Hotting, Hots,
ts, Note
see hod let show you my stock, I am I can please you.
Mr. Bernard Greene is with
me and will he glad to his
friends and customers.
Yours fer rare bargains,
He G, HOOKER,
GREENVILLE. X C.
Is
THE REFLECTOR
Id
CD
ts
If-II
-8
h g.
Hi
Local Reflections
weather is fire.
Seed wanted for Cash
the Old Brick Store.
Sale A fine row and one-
buffer calf.
Locks
For reliable go to Frank
Wilson.
Much damage van done to cot
ton by last week's storm.
Observer bas nisei
pole from which dis-
play the signals.
Allen ready to till
for mid ornamental
trees, vines, plants, etc See ad-
We i to announce
that there b.-t a party
at
on eight; 19th.
Riverside Nursery
Personal.
Mr. R. M from
Littleton Monday.
Mr. J. White bad a yellow chill,
Saturday, and has been very
sick.
Mrs. F- G- James left
day for Wilmington to visit
Miss Margie left Fri-
day to visit, relatives in Rich-
Rev. R. D. of
the at Scot-
The election is less than three grape vines yesterday land Neck.
is a shipment of 1400 ,, r n w-mm n , .
Hon. L. C- Latham is able to De
out after haying been sick
was aim several days.
Sunday by large
i dance upon the association at
nine miles from town.
A. G- Cox, is
king lead fl mi
patronage will be
weeks off.
A beautiful line of Hats ready for to-morrow mono
received to day at M. T
k Cos.
Latest style bats at k
Wilson's.
Very Intent and prettiest s
of fall and wilder Hats at M.
D.
May Manning, only
was with
parents. The fair girl was stand-
at twilight at the garden gate
of parent's pretty residence.
A horseman soon appeared. He
was and swart
He I.
There was considerable
Monday morning.
Sale Rent- and
lot where I now reside, furnished
or unfurnished- given
immediately. J- J.
Nice lot Clocks, cheapest
town, at J- L- t Co's
Ca- load of
Bagging an Ties at J. C
Mrs. A-J- has
be lot
F a nice suit of clothes go t
Prank Wilson's.
Full line
fancy Pins, Tortoise II Pius
Side at Mrs.
new Admiral Cigarettes
a thousand .
J. L- k Co
Mrs. A. F- Kennedy has been
quite sick several days but is now
improving.
Mi-s Lillie Wilson returned
from a visit to her sister
at
Mist Lena Harris is
her brother, Mr. J. L. Harris, at
Scotland Neck.
Mr. J. home,
Monday evening, much improved
from his few days stay at Little-
ton.
frost predated. His prices are extreme- j
low.
Those who try the Greenville
tobacco market come the
time keep on coming.
high prices bring the
farmers.
A C. C-x is conveniently lo-
on railroad at Messrs. H- C- G,
has splendid ad M. Tucker returned Friday eve
ha i all kinds of from Richmond where they
had been to purchase horses.
The Baptist Mr. Morris Myer to Tar
u el at Monday. His brother,
church, from ; recently MM
ville. and continue through his business his ab
Thursday.
A of Mr. Mrs. Mr. E. Warren, who for
H- L. of Wilmington, i several has living in
lied SI They
relatives
many
here.
i trial ii a load fine ,
Ii. Ling must out
co sod you will go him I
over the high obtained, j
A full line of Dry at
Frank
The rain a week ago caused
another high freshet in the Tar.
See J. C- Cobb fall
stock of Shoes and Bo its.
stick of clothing by Doc.
and until
will dispose of it at cost.
bis advertisement to day-
The tobacco men and mer-
chants f Greenville are sending
cut id extra copies a
week of If you
Pretty hue of a subscriber receive
s, new style Collars in green
at Mrs. M. D-
Frank Wilson carries the largest
best hue of clothing town
Every pile of tobacco brings
full value the Ware-
house and your cheek is ready as
soon as the sale is made.
Ladies it will pay you to exam
my Mrs L
Our stock, Goods and
Groceries are complete. Call and
see us- J. C. Conn
Every reader of this paper is
with their
a copy it is sent
co
Let the days be-
now and the election be
in active, earnest work on
the part of every Democrat.
Much is at stake and it is
that we should win by a
hue majority.
There was a large crowd at the
sale of the personal property of
the late J- D. Williamson, last
Wednesday, and everything sold
well. The carriage shop
was purchased by the
Salisbury, has returned to
v. lie is with his father
at Nursery.
Mrs. Elizabeth Swindell return
i ed Monday evening
Raleigh. Her sister, Mrs. M.
See I Russ little daughter
her home for a visit here.
Mr. J. J. Cherry attended a
meeting of the directors of the
Odd widows orphans
fund, which was in
hist Thursday.
Mrs. R. A. Tyson, Mrs. C. D.
Mrs- M- F. Dancy, Rev.
J. H- Zeb Johnson
and D- J. attended the
Tar River Association at Scot-
laud Neck-
asked not to over look the fact John Buggy Company,
that he can get the
and Atlanta Constitution a whole
year for
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets,
up stairs, Old Store.
The Commissioners of Vance
county are going to use
piping in place of the small
bridges on the public roads. The
Commissioners of Pitt very
Large assortment Pattern Hats I profitably consider such an
latest designs from both With in
use washed up or broken-in
bridges would not be heard of.
more and New York, at Mrs.
D-
Go today and attend to tobacco, cotton, or any
your name registered for the product you ob
just as nigh prices Green-
Just received barrels first ville as elsewhere. There is
patent Flour, a barrel, at J. j plenty of money to pay cash for
L. Starkey Cos. yon here.
The latest style in Ribbons when it comes to cheap
vets, Silk and Fancy Feathers goods, just look the
Walking bats and etc . M. T Cow ion see what
Co.
Our sign reads Ware-
Follow that
advice and you will get highest
prices for your tobacco.
Mr. J. M. Williams, of Falk
land, lost a hundred logs in the
freshet last week.
Lock Bracelets, Love Chains,
gold, silver and tortoise Hair Pins
and Side Combs, at M. T.
Co's.
Keep in mind that tho
Warehouse is the place to get
highest averages for your to-
New Fall goods just received at
M- T. Cos-
Everybody is in high-
est terms of the speeches Senator
F- G- James is making in the
county canvass.
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
First class Cart Wheels with
Iron Axle, only a pair-
John Flanagan Buggy Co.
Dr. is having tho
dwelling house occupied by Mr-
S. M- newly painted, very
much improving its appearance.
Now assortment of Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor-
A large of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Bride ore.
offer.
While coming into town one
night recently to attend a speak-
Mr. Edgar Buck was into
by two who were go-
out of town to their best
girls. The horses collided and
one f them was knocked and torn
loose from the buggy. Fortunate-
no damage was done except to
tho harness.
Last Saturday while Mr- J. F.
Joyner and family were at the
association, a broke into
his kitchen. Mr. W. G-
who lives on the place, saw
the and with some
him. Tho
was brought to Greenville, tried
before Esq. B- S- and
was in jail before night.
We noticed that the Richmond
Dispatch in about tho
tobacco market of that city said
that seventy-five were at
work around the warehouses and
Greenville beats that
bad, there being less than two
and fifty people at work
in the warehouses
here. Greenville takes the lead
as a tobacco market-
Belle Boyd, the famous rebel
spy, delightfully entertained a
good size audience at the Opera
House, last Wednesday
in a of thrilling
scenes of the late war.
Goods to suit all from the fin- Whether she is tho real Belle
est to the cheapest at. . Cow- Boyd is not entirely clear, but
surely her entertainments are
very enjoyable well worth at-
Revs. B. W, of Wei
don O L of
sigh spent and Monday
here. Mr- preached ill
the Baptist church morn-
Mr. preached
at night.
Mr. O. L- Joyner being sick
last week could not get up his
usual excellent tobacco
for this issue- He is now
at his post again running up the
high prices and will be heard
from next week.
Mr. W. T. Caho, one of the
Deputy Collectors of Internal
Revenue for this district, was in
town a day or two last week. He
told us that he found more en-
and a stronger
nation to win among the Demo
orate of Pitt than any county ho
his visited.
Mr. R. D. to
last week to accompany
his mother back home. re-
turned Monday Mrs.
Cherry's friends are glad to
that her eyes have been greatly
by the operation she
had formed. Bo says ho was
on the held-up train near
co, Friday night, is the one
who furnished the conductor with
a gun to shoot the robbers.
ell Co's.
Sowing machines from to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley
Remember I pay you for Chicken
Eggs and Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
Henry Sheppard, real estate
has sold part of the H. F.
Harris lot on Dickerson avenue
to Zeno Moore.
Complete line of Dry Goods at
Wiley Brown's.
To get highest average bring
tobacco to the
Warehouse and we will prove it.
Cheap, New Batter
cents per pound. Best Blended
Tea cents per pound. Import-
ed Macaroni cents. Cream
at tho Old Brick Store.
Mens good Shoes a pair-
Ladies Shoes at cents,
J. L. Stark et k Co.
A horse up in
co burg one day last week and
before the owner could catch him
he had run in the Ware-
house and sold his load of
co at a high average.
If you want cart wheels
at sea A. G. Cox, Winter-
ville. can get cart bodies L
there also, or any repair work on
carts or promptly done.
Paint Co.
On the sixth page of the Re-
to day will be found a
large advertisement of the
Paint Co. This company is
now at work in Scotland Neck
and will be in Greenville next
week. The work of the company
is highly recommended, as the
following testimonial from two
leading firms of Scotland Neck
will
Scotland Neck, N. 0-,
October 13th, 1894. j
Mr. Henry arrived here
last Monday from Petersburg,
Va., with his expert roof painters
and painted the roof of our stores,
which is long and flat, and has
given a great deal of trouble.
It leaked so bad at times that an
umbrella had to be used in the
store below. But since Mr. Pan
painted it with his roof paint
we have not seen a sign of leak.
It stood the test of throe days
and two nights hard rain, but no
water came through. We have
tried man times to get the leak
b it all failed to stop the
leak except Mr.
Respectfully,
R. C- Co.
A Town.
The Reflector man has in tho
last few weeks made two visits to
to Bethel very much
gratified at the splendid additions
to our subscription list.
Outside of Greenville the Bethel
office now receives our second
largest list, Grimesland being
ahead of it by just three. Bethel
is a good business location, and
Col- Hammond, the railroad agent
there, tells us it is the largest
shipping point between Tarboro
and Plymouth- Prof.
is flourishing and a
largo saw mill is in operation
there.
E- T.
The Canvass,
Owing to the heavy reins of
last Tuesday away
bridges the county candidates
could not get to Lang's
school home appointment
Wednesday. But they had good
days tho remainder of the week
at May's Chapel and
Falkland. Parson John Phillips,
the Pop-Rep apostle, took it
upon to speak against the
the at two of the
and he got pretty
decently skinned by both Sena-
tor James and representative
Cox, with a cradle song lullaby
thrown in by Clerk Williams as a
kind of benediction.
Buy your Fall and Winter
. . -j
The Magic Touch
OF
Hood's Sarsaparilla
You smile at the idea. But
if you are a sufferer from
Dyspepsia
And Indigestion, try a bottle, and be-
fore you have taken half a
Sou will Involuntarily think, and no
exclaim,
Just Hits
soothing effect Is a magic
Hood's Sarsaparilla gently
tones and strengthens the stomach
and organs, Invigorates the
liver, creates a natural, healthy desire
tor food, gives refreshing sleep,
In short, raises the health tone of the
entire system. Remember
Hood's
Cures
Hood's
It Dr.
May she loved him. but
never made known bis love.
He had been a constant
the Manning resilience for nearly
two years and had just that
nerved himself to ask t-at all
important question.
rived at the gate and gallantly
his hat and shook hands
with May. She erected him with
a smile and be saw he was
come and broached the
nearest to his heart and was ac-
The next day Dr. Mon-
obtained the willing consent
of parents. The mother,
however, insisted that the roar
should not place in less
than four months. Dr. Monteith
had a wealthy friend, Capt. Sad-
who had a beautiful
et, The Captain's
an was a patient of the
i doctor.
I W lieu May trust-id,
with all her She
her Helen Foster.
Ibis girl proved a traitor.
She had fixed her love Dr
Monteith, May's engagement had
dashed the cup from her lips.
Gradually she poured into
most terrible false
hood-
At last the so far succeeded as
to lead the poor gill to a spot
where she behold the doc-
tor and Lillian Sadler, seated
alone- More than this, she. saw
her lover damping the
woman's band in earnest entreaty.
This and the reports that
Helen Foster did not fail to
eventually bung her, convinced
her as to perfidy of her lover.
When next ho called, she broke
off tho engagement. Yes, she
cast to the winds the man whom
she loved with all her heart, soul
and body-
So far Helen Foster had
the were
rated.
Tho news flow round that Dr.
Monteith was about to sell bis
practice and go abroad. The an-
aroused poor May's
suspicions as to the truth of
fairs and she was determined to
make
ask his forgiveness be-
fore he goes abroad and tell him
of she sobbed to
herself.
She sat down and addressed a
note to Dr. Monti he
hastened lo her. He as
very stiff, cold,
stem ; but tie be been
half an hour in May's presence
all had been explained ; she had
asked his forgiveness for her
and ho had granted it
freely.
Nor was this all, for had
once again vowed to become his
wife, and she faithfully kept
promise for they were to be mar
the next mouth.
Preparations were into
to arrange her wedding out tit
and H cheap place to get it. May
her mother drove to Green-
ville and at once began the tour.
As they were up Main
street they spied the lovely show-
windows and met the C.
T at the door after
the morning greeting they
inside astonishment was
plainly visible both faces as
they saw th beautiful display
heard tho extremely low
prices. Mrs. Maiming 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 bleaching,
hosiery, ribbon, buttons, laces,
embroidery, dress of
every at prices truly mar-
They also got two dress-
es of that beautiful camels hair
tine check tweed. They got
the complete outfit for so small
amount that they said they were
surely going to tell Dr. Monteith
so he could get his outfit and did.
On next day Dr. was
m at the front door by Mr.
and escorted through
his mammoth store to look over
select his wedding suit for
which be only paid and
Mr. gave him a
tee. Ho then passed him over to
Mr. Bo Cherry who fitted him
out with shoes, collars, cuffs,
shirts, underwear, and threw
in a for a wedding gift-
Just before leaving Dr- Mon-
expressed a desire to find a
cheap furniture store and Mr.
politely escorted him
two doors below to tho
Racket Store where ho was
dumbfounded at the beautiful
sight that met his eyes and won-
low price of everything.
He purchased him a parlor suit
for A bed room suit of
antique oak for Then he
completely fitted up his house
in the way of pictures and
extension dining table at low
prices. Small tables, carpets,
mattings, safe, the Rack-
et line be fairly shouted at the
new and things he
get for a mere He
chased crockery, tinware, glass-
ware, table cutlery, lace curtains,
curtain poles,
and fitted up his whole
One would think that the doc-
lorn broke by this time
SO, the goods were so cheap
until you have looked at
DON'T
BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTERS
Goods,
Flannels, Hamburgs, Hosiery,
UNTIL YOU HAVE SEEN THE STOCK OF
C.
YOU
WEAR
If so we can fit you both in Price and Quality.
in
Latest styles in Knox, Dunlap
is
My stock was bought with the hard cash thereby enabling me to
offer you special prices.
O. T
NEXT DOOR TO BANK.
W r
of
ts
at
S, S e
ES
if.
i-3
era
-i
Hi
.-
r.
as
ft
X y m
x-
I.
PHIS car. liver Ills, I, . . Kit H. YOU gO





V f
Wholesale and Retail
Take Notice.
Notice is hereby given that I will be
in the Court House on the first Monday
of September, October and November
for the purpose of testing your measures
and scales. W. M. Moore.
Stand Keeper
RALLY ROUND THE FLAG BOYS
An Address to State Democrats.
GREENVILLE, N. C
Offers to the retail trade a choice line
Family Groceries,
CROCKERY, TIN WARE
SNUFF, AC,
To the wholesale trade I am prepared to
give jobbers prices on
MEATS, SUGAR. COFFER OILS.
Molasses, Vinegar, Matches. Star Lye,
Baking Powder, Paper
Wrapping Paper and Twine,
Carload Flour, best brands. Just received
Car load Bagging and Ties lit bottom
of lo fit everybody.
Call on me when you want good at
tho lowest figures.
I want Customers
You Want Goods.
Then call at my store and we can
get our wants supplied.
I am prepared to furnish anything you
want from a couplet stock of
Clothing, Dry Goods,
Shoes, Hats, Hardware,
Tinware, Crockery, Staple and
Fancy Groceries,
MOCK LIME in any quantity.
Car load BAGGING and TIES.
You will my goods all reliable
prices low.
W. H. WHITE.
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
We will fill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will fill them WELL
Rough Heart
Rough Sap Framing
Rough Sap inches
Rough Sap Boards, IS 87-0
17.00
Wait days for our Planing Mill and
we will you Dressed
as her of ore.
Wood delivered your door for
cents a load.
Terms ca.-h.
Thanking yon patronage.
GREENVILLE . C.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk 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 estate are notified to
sent the same for payment within
twelve months from the date of this
notice, or it will be plead in of
recovery.
This 30th day of August, 1894.
J. A. K. TUCKER,
of J. E. Tucker
I or sale by
GREENVILLE, N. C.
The RAMBLER took five of the high-
est awards at World's Fair and
holds World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
1898 make at reduced price. 1894
main 1135.00, all a-e strictly highest
grade. We make
Sell Stem,
and do all kinds of Tin work, Roofing,
Guttering,
E. PENDER CO.
mm ah,
Real Estate
and
Rental Agent.
Houses and lots for Rent or for Sale
terms Rents, Taxes. Insurance,
and open and any other
of debt placed in my hands for
collection have prompt attention,
Satisfaction guaranteed. I solicit your
patronage.
GREENVILLE
MALE
X. C.
Tho next Session of this d will
begin on Tuesday the 4th day of
and continue weeks.
TERMS MONTH.
Primary English
Intermediate English
Higher English 83.00
Languages
The instruction will through.
Discipline mild out If necessary
an additional teacher will be employed.
Satisfaction guaranteed when pupils
enter early and attend regularly. For
further information apply to
W. II. Pita.
Aug. 1891.
H C.
Call your attention to their splendid
line of
Fall Winter
They carry a of
General Merchandise.
And car furnish
Everything yon need to
Everything need to cat.
Everything you need about the
Everything about the
Everything you need about the farm.
At pries just as low as can he
anywhere.
Highest prices for Cotton and all
Country
g thank; for past favors. eon.
of your patronage is solicited.
O.
as. -1 i . ,
Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat-J
lifted MODERATE FEES.
Office is u. S. patent
less time than
j remote from
S Send mode, drawing or with
We if or not, free of j
due till patent is secured. I
A to Obtain with
o mac the U. S. and countries
A.
WACO.
Sr M. Schultz.
AT THE
OLD BRICK
WARMERS AND
-I their year's supplies will find
their interest to get our prices before
n all its branches
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TEA,
always at Lowest Market Prices.
TOBACCO CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
yen to buy at one A com
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices
the times. Our goods are all bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin
S. M.
N,
THE GREENVILLE
IRON WORKS,
JAMES
-o
Manufacturer
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons,
And dealer in
Primps, Pipe, tines.
Prompt and careful attention
pairing Sat-
guaranteed.
or sale ft lowest prices.
H. c.
THE EATON
BUSINESS COLLEGE
Charles
Washing Baltimore, ltd.
Is prepared to give its the
benefit of Office, Bank and Counting
House Practice in all their details.
Long and extensive experience has per-
facilities such as cannot be found
elsewhere.
Commercial branches, Shorthand,
Typewriting and Penmanship taught
by
free on application to
A. H.
Baltimore, ltd.
L. II. BURLING,
n, C
OINTMENT
TRADE
Tor the Cure of all Skin Biases
This has been In use
fifty years, and wherever know
been in steady demand. It has been en
by the leading physicians all
and cures when
all other remedies, with the attention
the most experienced physicians,
for years failed. This Ointment is
long standing the reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
x its own efficacy, as but little bat
ever been made to bring it before the
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 all orders and
communications to
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
WANTED in each
A for special work. Will
a month. P. W. CO.,
Box Philadelphia, Pa.
FOB THIN
PEOPLE,
It plump round
nut the figure. It
for leanness, no
and
y.--. Price, prepaid. Si per
Box. C for Pamphlet. to T
Fr,
To the Democrats op
Carolina
This committee bogs to remind
yen that in a few days an election
will be held, and upon the result
of that election depends the
and well-being of our
The constitution and character
of our Supreme and Superior
Courts depends upon the result of
that election. A Chief Justice
and three out of four Associate
Justices of the Supreme Court
are to be chosen on November
6th. Six judges of the Superior
Court are to be elected. These
reach nearer to the homes
and hearthstones of our people
than any other class of officials
The life, lib arty, property and
every interest that we hold sacred
and dear is more absolutely and
directly in the of our State
judges than of other officers
in the republic.
You will decide that day
your laws shall be interpreted,
administered enforced by
tried true men or whether
you prefer that they shall be ad-
ministered by or
possibly Populists. The
declared the judiciary ex-
when the lives of our
best purest fellow citizens
actually in and it
is impossible to tell what a
list judiciary would do, with that
party's anarchistic tendencies.
No claims that our judiciary
is not as pure as judiciary
upon tho face of the earth, no
one makes a charge against the
capacity of our judges, or against
the records they have made while
in office; no one charge that they
have been derelict in their duty,
or that in a single act have
proven unworthy of their high
position-
Tho opposition asks that its
candidates elected not upon
the ground that have are
fitted for the office, or
that have made
Whisk have entitled them to the
greater of the people,
but solely on the ground that it
is time that North Carolina had a
non-partisan judiciary.
trust that this specious cry will
enable them to persuade the
to turn the Democratic judges
solicitors out of office and till
their places with Republicans
and Populists. In their zeal for
a non partisan judiciary their
forts appear to have been ex-
with the utterance of
their slogan. Proclaiming aloud
their zeal for a non-partisan
they have nominated for
high positions on the bench two
gentlemen who for a quarter of a
century, have proven themselves
to be partisans of the
most strictest sect, and who have
exhibited the partisan-
ship every occasion
They have chosen two
cans who, tho old
occupied seats upon the in
North Carolina, by Re-
publican Governors. These
for a short time, made records as
judges and at tho first
tho people of North Carolina dis-
with their services. Since
leaving tho bench gentle-
men have, each, more than once,
been candidates before the
as nominees upon a partisan
Republican ticket At each
election the people of
i North Carolina have declined
their services by constantly in-
creasing majorities. Finding
that each candidacy left
them further from the Supreme
Court bench than they wore when
they began to make a
effort to get there., their
press their claims upon
non partisan grounds and do-
an ejection for these
office seekers he solo
ground that it is time North Car-
had a
Their candidates for Superior
Court judges are men with whose
records this committee is net fa-
It is hoped that these
gentlemen have qualifications for
the position of judge, the
judges are most important
but if have tho
that are necessary to
make a judge, those qualities are
only to their closest
friends, or are as yet
ed. The records made by the
Democratic judges now on the
bench, and the qualifications for
judicial office shown by the
of the Democratic party not
already on the bench prove them
to be in every way worthy. With
these men on the bench
rights of every citizen, whatever
may his politics, his condition
in life, or his color, will be safe.
If proof were needed of the fair-
of our judges, of their free-
from and partisan
bias, that proof is furnished in
the decision last spring which
A General Assembly is to be
chosen at this election, and that
Legislature, under the
of this State, if vested
powers to reverse the political
condition of every county in
North Carolina ; that Legislature,
if controlled by the
will have the power it will
exert it no to appoint
magistrates in every and
to increase their number in every
until they control the
boards of commissioners and
boards of finance they ex-
in every county in the State ;
that Legislature will the
power to turn over the control of
oar great institutions to tho
; it will have the power
to deliver into the hands of the
our institutions of
learning, our charitable and pen-
institutions, and the control of
the common schools of North Car-
; that Legislature will have
charge of the levying of the tax-
es, and the spending of the pub-
for the next two years ; it will
have the power to enact and
law to be framed by the
and to be enforced by
them at tho next election, and it
will devolve upon that Democrats.
to choose two United States i Let as earnest
The question now is only one
of majority. What shall our ma-
Shall it be a small
one, such a majority as will leave
the some hope for the
future, some ground upon which
they may base hope for future
attacks upon the welfare of the
State f Or shall we, by one
month's earnest work, pile up
such a majority on the 6th day of
as will for years to
come dishearten tho enemies of
our State
This committee bogs that you
make choice of the latter course.
It is within the power of the
Democrats of North Carolina by
month's united work, by one
month's zealous and earnest
fort, to annihilate the Fusion
aggregation.
We have it in our power to
elect every member of our
to the next Congress, our
State Treasurer, every judge,
every solicitor and a great major-
in the Legislature. We can
do it if we will- Let us put aside
every question which might weak-
en us and seek only the success
of the Democratic party, let
us seek that success with a zeal
Senators, one to serve six years
and the other to serve two years.
If we lose these two Senators we
will lose control of the Senate
the United States.
The Legislature will choose
one member of tho railroad com-
mission.
Nine members of Congress are
to be elected, and every county
office in North Carolina is to be
filled at the coming election. In
short our honest and efficient
judiciary is at the control
of the Legislature is at stake;
the control of each in the
State is at stake; and the control
of tho United States Senate is at
stake. Never had a party great-
incentive to work than we
have in this election. Never
were the rewards of victory more
satisfactory or more and
never results of defeat
disastrous or humiliating.
No good citizen can
without a shudder the
of a Fusion victory in November.
In tho opinion of this commit-
tee result of the c
is no longer in doubt. We
will elect our State ticket by tho
largest majority ever given in
the State. will elect a major-
of both houses of the General
Assembly, and we will probably
increase the number of Demo-
Congressmen from eight to
nine. The indications all over
the State are that the people
turned against the Fusion
and that they will bury it
an avalanche of
votes. have borrowed
strength gathered inspiration
from the great victory won this
summer by tho Democrats of our
sister States of the South, Ten-
Arkansas, Florida,
Alabama, where tickets
made up like the mongrel in
this State been buried be-
neath decisive majorities- The
returns from these elections show
that as a political factor the Pop-
movement at the South is at
an end. Claiming successively
each of these States the Populists
carried none of them.
list at the South has
a mere side show to the
Republican party, to the
least reputable wing of the Re-
publican party at that. It has
sold its principles and its honor
with this election it will dis-
appear from the of the earth.
The Populists are losing every
day their men of character, and
all those who went into it from
principle see that must now
leave that party or prove
to their principles- These men
see the base purpose for which
they are being used by the Pop
leaders, and they are spurn-
that leadership and coming
back to the Democratic party.
Let us welcome back home all
those who in leaving us acted
from pure motives and from con-
principles. Their re-
turn increases our majority and
adds gladness to success.
The best men in the Republican
disgusted with such per-
as lately been
this State, refuse to
the deals made by their own
discredited leaders with would be
Populist autocrats, announce
that they will assist in burying
the fusion ticket.
In almost every in the
State discord reins supreme
among the ranks of our enemy.
Disgust and indignation fill the
minds of honest men of both Re-
publican and Populist parties;
they spurn the loathsome dish
offered them by the
They feel that their personal
honor and personal dignity re-
quire them to adopt this course,
and they no longer hesitate to
proclaim their intention.
The Democratic party,
aroused, solidified and
effort to
make sure aid complete the
of our party on November
6th.
Let us make our victory so
complete that no man in North
Carolina shall hereafter to
reach judicial honors by deals
effected in secret caucus with dis-
politicians. Let us
make our victory so great that no
man will again essay to reach the
Supreme Court bench by deny-
politic, or by making
claims to border-
on false pretense-
Lot us make our majority so
large that man in North Caro-
will hereafter believe that he
can reach the United States Sen-
ate by traveling a path paved with
treason, or that he can hold the
confidence of tho people after he
has betrayed them and after he
has sacrificed his honor his
principle.
We can make and must
make out majority for our judges
for our Treasurer not less
forty thousand.
Very respectfully,
James H.
Chairman Democratic Ex.
Committee-
Wiley Rush, Secretary-
Deafness Cured.
By local applications, as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of ear.
There, is only to cure
and that is by constitutional remedies.
is caused by an con-
of the mucous lining the
Tube. When tins tube
inflamed you have a rumbling or
hearing, and when it is en-
closed Deafness is the result,
and unless the inflammation can be
out and this restored lo its
in condition, hearing will be de-
forever ; nine case out of
are caused by catarrh, which Is
but an inflamed condition of the
mucous surfaces.
will give One Hundred Dollars
any case Deafness by
that cannot lie cured by Hull's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free.
K. . CO. Toledo, O.
by Druggists,
terminated their own tenure
office and made continuance
in office dependent upon the in every in the
Qt this marches to certain victory.
Along the Right I inc.
Net money will leave
North Carolina this year for
hay because not only is the
crop of fodder enormous but a
great deal of hay and has
been cut- There have been as many
as three crops cf grass cut from
some Holds, and, we under stand
that the people are into
the way of making more and more
hay every year. The encourage-
cf big crops of feed this
year will a wonderfully
effect on all kinds of farm
labor next year and we may yet.
hope to tho day when our
pie will regularly, year after year,
export corn and hay instead of
importing
Salve
The best Salve In tho world for Cute,
Balsas, Sores, Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands-
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required, it is guaranteed to
perfect satisfaction or money
Price cents per box. For sale
John I,.
Every good woman is a con-
reminder that God lives-
There is only ten billion dollars
of money in circulation in all the
world. The Pops in Congress
introduced bills appropriating
thirty-five billion
and a half times as much as there
is money in the whole world
Raleigh News and Observer.
ELY'S CREAM BALM.
Is quickly absorbed. Cleanses the
Passages. Allays and
Heals the Sores,. Protects the
from additional Cold, Restores
i h Senses of Taste and Smell.
Directions for Using Cream Balm.
Apply a particle of the Balm well up
into the nostrils. After a moment draw
through the nose.
three times a day, after meals preferred
and before retiring.
Price cents at Druggists or by mail.
York,
There's Choice in Bicycles.
The Victor Pneumatic tire has no
rival. It is more durable than any
other and the inner tube can be re-
moved in case of puncture in less
than five minutes.
The only inner tube removable
through the rim.
All Victor improvements are abreast
with the times and meet every re-
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON.
NEW YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
SAN
DETROIT.
DENVER.
the Flanagan
BUGGY
ARE STILL AT IT MAKING FIRST-CLASS
AND SELLING THE BEST
AND WAGONS,
and doing all kinds of repairing to vehicles. We are also
-------Agents for the-------
fA
The best
known
It will cut,
lift, turn,
el and
the land
all in one op-
We
have them in
all sizes from
to feet.
lout of or in j
s a position that yon do i
P- the
siting of Life Insurance is j
your special forte.
-people have, after trial,
sheen at theirs
; fitness for it. To all such
Sit has proved a most con-1
I genial and profitable
The Managements
of the .
I Equitable Life
the Department of
Carolinas, desires to a
s to its force,
character ability.
i Write for information, c
S W. J. Manager,
Rock Hill, C. E
Steamers leave Washington for
and touching at all la
on Tar River Monday,
Friday at A. M.
Returning leave at A. SI.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday
A. M. Kline days.
These departures are subject lo RM
of cm Tar River.
You can find us at the same old stand ready to serve you.
The John Flanagan Buggy Company.
J. L. SUGG,
it Apt
Connecting at with j
Mill ilk,
line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. J
Shippers should
Dominion trial
York. from
Haiti.
more
more. Miners I
Boston.
X. C
I. J.
C.
the
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE AT THE COURT ROUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AM FOR FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF S
ANT AGES
To my Friends and Customers of Tin and adjoining
I wish to have made special preparation in preparing
HEAD MM and propose HOGSHEADS with inside dressed
smooth which will prevent cutting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing
Also t have made special arrangements to use best split Hoops made Vt
Oak special advantages have in cutting own timber places mo ma
to meet all competition. I cheerfully promise you that I will strive to
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can them at any lime
either at my factory at tho Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. V,
hi Sawing,
And Turned Trimming for House a Specialty,
prepared to do any kind of Scroll sawing for or anything in H-
line or turning Balustrades for Pickets for Stairways. Mending-
any kind, including Balling. would pleased to name yo i price i
anything In the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short, notice. you your past patronage, lam willing
to moot your future patronage, and ask you me trial
elsewhere. Respectfully,
ESTABLISHED
T. Andrew
KT. C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
NAILS,
Cases Sardine,
Bread Preparation.
Soap,
Star Lye.
Boxes Cakes and Cracker,
Stick Candy.
Cases Matches,
Gold Dust,
Luck Baking
Sacks Coffee,
Molasses.
Tons Shot,
Kegs Powder.
u a i
NO
CORDOVAN,
Soles.
EXTRA FINE.
LADIES
tor
w MASS.
eBB money by W.
are the largest
advertised shoe in the world,
the value by the name and price
the bottom, n
prices and the shoo
CUT CO
N C
R. L. DAVIS A
N. Ca
Cars Flour.
Meat.
Hay,
Tubs Lard,
Granulated Sugar.
P. Snuff.
Gail A Ax Snuff,
R. R. Mills Snug.
Three Thistle Snuff,
Tobacco,
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes.
Old Va. Cheroots.
Cases Oysters,
OLD RELIABLE.
IS STILL AT THE FRONT A LINE--------
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me best is cheap st.
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming and
necessary for Millers, Me. and general purposes, as well as
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head-
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent Clark s O. . Spool
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive
GREENVILLE. N. C.
-AND
Commission Merchants
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
Solicited,
v j
J c
3.3 a II
Jr T
f . a
U It Q
ah
bIS-
Z P P
rial
HERBERT
PARLORS
House,
Call In when you want
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
and th I.
in,
Mover Pl to
Hair to its
ELI
mi
. c- IV
Ta
Notice.
To the Tax Payers of Pit county.
The tax list. tho v.
been in my hands on t
Monday in
as I am required by law n
of all taxes I
I now notify ; i- t.-ix a of
that I am determined o protect
myself all i
imposed by law for to
my duty, in to
and will It
owing taxes to make an
mentor I to collect
same by at the -n
f .
r.
Sept. 180-, Pitt coo


Title
Eastern reflector, 17 October 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 17, 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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