Eastern reflector, 31 October 1894






.
BEAK. IN MIND.
That a vote for the
ticket means a vote
against County Govern-
against White
and against
the best interests of
your State. White men
be wise and vote the
straight Democratic
ticket.
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.
before act.
WHITE MEN.
If you love your State
and desire to see White
Supremacy continued
in North Carolina, go to
the polls next Tuesday
and vote the entire Dem
ticket from
of the Supreme
Court to Township Con-
stable.
AN HIGH
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 arc selling with
JAS.
Pounds. Price. Amount
.
60.22
15-50. 15.50
. 8-74. 5.77
. 13.02
JNO- GALLOWAY
5.91
Average
27-00. 16.47
24-00.
20.00.
30.50.
20.50.
Average 23-
5.17
12.00
11.60
9.36
23-80
22.87
10.45
8-25
JOYNER.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
17.25.
20-00.
J. W. EDWARDS.
Pounds. Amount
4.90
28.00.
20.00. 4.00
36.50. 5.47
. 3.54
39.50.
Average
24.50.
Average 4-5
2.94
JNO.
Pounds.
52-------
Price- Amount-
. 13.78
. 27-03
Average 36-100.
MISS Pounds-162. HORN-Price Amount. . 1664 . . . 10.75 15.00.
12-00.
W. T. HARRIS.
Pounds. Price. Amount.
19.38
29.32
1480
Average
As ever, your friends,
FORBES M YE, Proprietors Warehouse. N. C
PITT FEMALE SEMINARY.
GREENVILLE N. C.
Session Opens September 5th, 189-t, June, 1895-
Full of Teachers. Complete English Course- Ancient and Modem Languages. Special
Advantages in Music and Art For full particulars apply to
Principal.
SCHOLARSHIP H 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
music. Use of Piano or Organ, one
hour each day,
Weeks. . . Z
Vocal Latin, Greek. French and
Primary ,
Academic. Vocal-Special,. 15-00
Intermediate,. Board,
Collegiate . 20-00
Ger-
lights and
DEMOCRATIC NOMINEES.
FOB STATE
S. TATE.
of County.
CHIEF
JAMES E. SHEPHERD,
of Beaufort County.
JUSTICES,
WALTER CLARK, of Wake county.
JAMES C. of Cumberland.
AR MISLEAD BUR WELL, of
FOR JUDGES SUPERIOR COURT,
District, JACOB WATTLE.
4th District, R ALLEN.
District. F.
9th WILLIAM N. ML BANE
10th Dist B. CO
12th Dist. H BASCOM CARTER.
For Cong.
WILLIAM A. B. BRANCH,
of Beaufort county.
For Solicitor Third Judicial District,
JOHN E.
of Wilson county.
County Canvass.
The candidates for
the Legislature and county offices
will address the people at the
following times and
Stokes, Wednesday, October,
31st.
Thursday, November,
1st.
Cobb's Store, Friday,
2nd.
Black Jack, Saturday,
3rd.
If you are an American citizen
this is as much your government
as it is that of any other man, and
while you may not take an active
part in political you
should feel and
interest to go to the polls and
vote for the men who represent
or are the exponents of those
principles calculated to give you
and your neighbors the best, fair
est and cheapest government.
j If the good citizen throws away
The sentiment given expression . opportunities by not
to by J. C. L. Harris, of th, law of
last week to the effect that the, wicked element
Reps and Pops would be justified come into power, infringe
in shooting down the County rights and despoil your
Commissioners is bearing country as it has done in times
county on Good citizens must ever
a prominent Republican shot and
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
FOR
F. G. JAMES.
OF REPRESENTATIVES
J. D. COX,
g M. JONES.
FOR SUPERIOR I OORT
WILLIS R. WILLIAMS.
FOR SHERIFF
RICHARD W.
FOR
FOR
JOHN FLANAGAN-
TO. . OH-
FOR j
J.
seriously wounded a registrar of
election in that county. This is
the first fruit borne by the in-
advice of the Republican
and Populist
News and Observer.
Marvelous
From a letter written by Rev. J.
of Mich., we
are permitted to make this extract
have no hesitation in recommending
Dr. King's New Discovery, as the re-
were almost marvelous in
case of my wife. While I was pastor of
the Baptist Church at Rives Junction
she brought down with Pneumonia
with La Grippe. Terrible
of coughing would last
lion's with little interruption and it
med as if she could not survive them.
friend recommended Dr. King's New
it was in it work and
in Trial
free at John T. Drug
and
be on the alert; there is no other
way to hold the evil in check.
Let us admonish yon by every
right and tie that you hold
for the sake of good laws,
peace, prosperity and happiness;
for the sake of good and benign
laws and the humane and
cent institutions which have been
given you under Democratic rule,
to rally once again for their main-
and perpetuation, that
those who may come after you
may bless your memory
ham Gleaner.
Salve-
Tin boat Salve In the world for Cut-.
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum,
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin
and positively Piles, or no
required. It is to give
perfect or money
Price cents per For mS by
John L. Woolen. Druggist
OUR NATIONAL CAPITOL.
of the
Washington, D- C, Oct. h,
As the day of election approach-
es the Republicans are getting
more more sanguine that they
are going to sweep the country.
The Democrats, however, are
laying low working hard.
They are confident of surprising
the Republicans the 6th in
New York, Illinois, Indiana, Wis-
and the It is well
by Reflector readers
that the Republicans hope for
Populist victory in the South and
Democrats hope for Populist
in the West. The reason is
plain. They are working against
each other us ever and neither
side cares a straw as to the
fit to be derived by their
list brethren. Wherever they can
use the Populists to ride in pow
they doing it,
To forecast the election,
at both headquarters
size it up as follows ; Hill will be
elected Governor of New York
and Tammany will likely be de-
in the city. Illinois and
Delaware will have Democratic
legislatures elect Democratic
Senators, Bryan may possibly
win in Nebraska, but not
; Wilson will have a close rub
in West Virginia; Republicans
will gain five Congressmen in
Pennsylvania, two in New York,
two in Michigan, one in
about ten from the West and
South. A very conservative
mate of the standing of the next
House, Democrats, Re-
publicans and Populists. With
these figures the Democrats can
organize, for the Populists will
all support Crisp for Speaker as
against Reed. Both Simpson and
Pence, the Populist leaders, have
been heard to say that as between
the two the full Populist strength
would go to Crisp, but there may
be an effort to make Simpson or
Weaver Speaker, should the
Populists demand it of the Demo-
with threats that otherwise
they will vote for Reed. In this
emergency the Democratic ad-
ministration would certainly re-
the support of the Populists
on every administration measure
and would have all the clerkships
and committee chairmanships.
But this is mere talk, for there
are very few Democrats who do
not expect to retain tie House.
On the other hand the
cans have already conceded the
Senate to the Democrats, and it
is conceded by all sides that if the
tariff bill bad been passed six
months earlier the Republicans
would have been swept utterly
of existence, for the downfall of
business so enthusiastically pie-
by tho Republicans should
the tariff bill become a law has
been met by the great business
revival and the upheaval in the
price of raw
The unexpected flop of Speaker
Reed, over to the Democratic
ideas of a reduced tariff is
a great deal of talk here. Re-
publicans are dumbfounded. They
understand it to be a challenge to
on the Presidential
nomination question. It was in
Michigan Mr. Reed, said
It is well known
that is fins all over
for the Republican nomination in
So is Allison, Harrison, and
Reed- Allison is popular because
of his tariff and Reed
knows it is Irving to crop his
wings. As it looks at present
will be the
in As to who will be the
Democratic it is too ear-,
to conjecture. Gov. Campbell
of Ohio, Stone, of
Bryan, of Nebraska, of
Kentucky, and of
New York, Stevenson, of
and are all possibilities.
If Bryan should happen to win in
Nebraska the ticket might be
an Crisp. Four influential pa-
in Pennsylvania, three in
New York and two in Ohio say
Crisp should the man-
The headquarters
here claims to know all the
North Carolina campaign. They
expect Democratic Congressmen
from every district but the
good hopes there.
Mr. is very popular in
Washington his district is
closely watched. White people
of all political parties here can't
understand how any white man,
be he Populist or can
aid Cheatham either directly or
indirectly, but, as the old saying
goes, depends upon a
The suit for divorce of Dr.
who stole his two little
boys from Mrs. by force
three weeks ago, has not yet been
heard, but the court has ordered
alimony of a month to be
paid to Mrs. while the
suit is pending- it will be
that Mrs. is the
daughter of ex-Congressman Ken-
Rayner, of North Carolina.
A story leaked out here last
week that though dating back to
before the Democratic State
Convention of 1892, will be of in-
to North Carolinians. A
close acquaintance of the late Col.
L. L Polk told your
dent last night that when the
name of Julian S- Carr was men-
for Governor, Col. Polk
was delighted and immediately
declared that whatever the
might do toward putting up
another State ticket, he would
use his whole strength tor Carr.
Polk asked a friend of Col. Carr
to come to his office and talk over
the matter, whereupon he told
this friend that the Alliance in
North Carolina be con-
trolled by him in this mat-
and that he liked Mr. Carr so
much that he could get the entire
support for him, provided Mr.
Carr would write him a
j letter by claiming
I to be in sympathy with the Alli-
in its movements, Polk de-
that he would only show
he letter very cautiously to the
Alliance. This, said will
give Mr. Carr the Alliance vote
in the State Convention and elect
him Governor by an overwhelm
majority. This friend left
Washington to Durham
to see Col Carr about it, where
upon Mr. Carr is reported as say-
with great emphasis,
Col. Polk that I appreciate his in
my behalf, and that no
one sympathizes with tho farmers
of North Carolina as I do, but if
I thought by writing that letter it
would make me President of tho
United States I not be
found my Demo-
in that So this end-
ed it. Dr. Sanderlin received the
Alliance support in the
and Gov. Elias Carr was
nominated. Had the Alliance
vote that Col. Polk about
been added to the support ac-
corded Mr. J. S. Carr his
would have been assured.
Thanks be to heaven that the
sentiment which actuated Henry
Clay to be right than be
actuated Mr. Carr with
reference to gubernatorial
nomination.
Senator Faulkner says ho feels
confident from advices received
from all parts of the that
the Democrats will control the
nest House of Representatives by
a good majority.
The stamp thieves,
S- C, have been
are in the hands of
the Post Office Department
There are cases of small-
pox in this city. Tho health
officer says there is no danger of
the disease becoming epidemic.
The of the of
momentarily expected.
When he dies the Russian Em-
here will go into mourning
for one year, and will take no
part whatever in the social
at the capital. The
dent will send an unusually gen-
message of to the
Russian Government because of
the very kindly relations which
exist between the two Govern-
As the 6th of November draws
nearer, Democrats every-
where bear in mind personal
animosities and potty jealousies
should now be made to yield to
a sense of party duty. The
of the Democratic party
is what loyal Democrats will
strive to preserve. It is no
a question of this man or
that man, but the continued do-
of that on which
the welfare and prosperity of the
south depends. Experience
Republican rule
our people what that means. As
the day draws near, let
Democrat be to
cast his vote for. the Democratic
nominees, regard-less of.
prejudices and preferences.
Nov. Senator Ransom,
Senator Gorman, wife and
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
I Baking
Powder
pure
Senator and other
friends of the Senators will leave
here for the Pacific slope on a
special train which the last
session of Congress appropriated
The of this trans
continental to is tour see if
in Southern California needs
move no luxury
who go.
special trains
is wanting for
A Tariff Object Lesson.
The law went into
effect in 1890- It so happened
hat the Methodists of Morganton
were that year building a hand-
some brick parsonage. The build-
was located in a section of
the town where they wore
deepening. It is a charming trio to it
and when these trains . n
Herald of Oct. 1890, were
showed how by reason of the
law tho Methodists had
No lady was more popular j to pay fifty-two dollars more for
She is j tin to cover that than
than Mrs. Jarvis
so approachable, affable so
thoroughly interested in every-
thing that concerns North Caro
that all the people here from
the State liked and admired her.
Governor Jarvis was also very
Ha proved himself an
aggressive, hard working, able
Senator Pitt ought to be
of him.
Marion is now doing his
level bast to destroy our system
of county government, which two
years ago he pronounced the
bulwark of our safety, and on
which he discoursed thus in his
are in favor of the present
system of county government as
long as there is a single county
that is saved by it from African
and Rule. We will
they would have paid before the
law passed.
Just now our Baptist friends
are erecting a handsome brick
church on the same street on
which the Methodist parsonage
stands and only two hundred feet
away from it They are also re-
quired to cover the building with
tin. Before the law
was repealed they got quotations
on tin at per box. They
decided to wait until tho new tar-
law went into effect, and yes-
they bought their tin at
per box. The new tariff bill
has saved them more than forty
dollars in this one item. They
will besides save money on their
nails, and hinges and locks and
other hardware.
These are facts. Let those
who doubt ask Mr. J. A. Clay well
forever preach that this h. the Methodists fifty-
government founded by two fan under
the courage, framed by the
and won by the patriotism
of white men, and for the benefit
of all citizens alike- Therefore
it is right, ought to be and must
be managed by white men
of 1892.
Marion Butler was right
he wrote thus, and we do him the
credit to believe that he meant
what he said; but he have
the Senatorial itch then as badly
as he has it now, and didn't see a
vacant chair that he thought he
might be boosted into by the aid
of Republican votes- That's
what's the matter with Marion
ambition, to gratify which he
swallows all his patriotic
of two years ago, consorts
with the element he deemed dis-
reputable and dangerous then,
and conspires with them to
troy the by
the wisdom and won by the pat-
of white Marion is
no Star-
law.
Let those who ask our
honest Republican friend, Pink
Hildebrand, how much the
saved on tin because the
law was repealed.
This is only one of many in-
stances showing how the Demo,
party is redeeming its
pledges to make goods cheaper.
Morganton Herald.
Capt W. Mason is
the point in his speeches that
the leaders of the Third party
movement in North Carolina were
in the Democratic State
He is consumed by an, ion endorsed
It is important to keep the Off and
kidneys in good condition. Hood's
Sarsaparilla is the remedy for
ting these organs,
its work, and that inside of ninety
days they had turned around,
repudiated the ticket they
had endorsed in the beginning,
and were supporting another
against it; and he is wanting to
know of the people how they can
this year support a lot of men who
in 1892 could not keep their
promises from convention time to
election day. The foots are as
Capt Mason states them, and his
questions are pertinent and time-
Observer.
. .





THE REFLECTOR are making their
in several towns
Greenville, N. C.
J. Editor
OCTOBER 31st. 1894.
Entered at th at
M. C. as mail matter.
HOW TO VOTE.
Vote for F. G- James for the
Senate-
Vole for J. D. Cos and S. M.
Jones f the of
Vote for Willis B for
Superior Court Clerk.
Vote for R. W. King for Sheriff.
Vote for Henry Harding tor
Register of Deeds-
Vote for John Flanagan for
Treasurer.
Vote for Dr.
for Coroner.
Vote for J B- for
Surveyor.
Vote for the Democratic
date for Constable in your town-
ship.
Vote for W. A. B. Branch for
Congress.
Vote for John E- Woodard
Solicitor-
Vote for S. Tate for State
Treasurer.
Vote for the Democratic
Judges for both the Supreme and
Superior Courts-
In fact in short, vote the
straight Democratic ticket from
had as well
sharp watch for them.
keep a
This issue of the
is the last warning we give
you to do your duty on election
day-
Do you want Harry to
this district Con-
If not yon had better get
to the Democratic ticket.
If yon vote the fusion
ticket you vote for the over-
brow of our system of county
government for a return of
the Radical rule that
came so near the State
Two passenger trains on the
Raleigh Gaston road collided
between Henderson and Kittrell
on Saturday afternoon. The con-
of one of the trains, Capt.
Drummond, and two or three of
passengers were slightly
hurt.
MARRIED.
company with Dr. W. H.
Bagwell, on Thursday morning,
October 25th, I went up from
Greenville to Penny Hill, where
at o'clock P. M., in the home of
Mr. Jenkins, the bride's brother-
in-law, I united in marriage Mr.
M- T- Spier, and Miss Hattie
Cobb- A youthful,
good looking they make,
and have the well wishes and
prayers of many friends and
j j relatives tor their success
a single name. Do this you
do your as a citizen who
loves government and is op-
posed to a return of Radicalism
in North Carolina.
Another important thing for
Democrats to think about is that
Justices of Supreme Court,
several Superior Court Judge
a State Treasurer must be
elected the of November.
It is co time for men. who want
to these places filled by
official, to fooling with
Populist fusion can-
Harry is
with there
fore if you vote for Skinner for
Congress vote to restore the
high taxation of the
bill; you to put our elections
back under Federal supervision ;
you vote to abolish the income
vote against stopping
the payment of fraudulent pen-
; you vote against the re
forms that the Democrats have
inaugurated ; in fact if you
for Harry Skinner you vote
against your own interest.
Hon. W. A. B. Branch and Col.
Harry Skinner met here Saturday
joint canvass. There
was a large crowd present to hear
them. We venture the assertion
that Democrat who heard
them left a less Democrat than
before, but on the contrary was
prouder than ever that he was a
Democrat. can also assert
with equal emphasis that no votes
were made for the third party, or
as they are now. We
go further and say that no
sensible, unprejudiced man heard
the two speeches who was not
convinced that Mr. Branch ought
to be elected and the Colonel
ought and must be beaten.
Mr- Branch's speech was pleas-
a gentle, mild and truthful.
It was brim-full of sensible mat-
delivered in a gentlemanly
way- Col- Skinner's was exactly
the opposite in every particular.
was the speech of an hone; t
man with a high regard for truth
and principle. The other was the
speech of a pure unalloyed
a meaner, more
deceiving speech we never heard.
If every white man in Pitt
county could have heard the Colo-
tirade he would not get
enough of their votes to count.
If every white man in the First
District could have heard this
speech the cast for the
Colonel on the day of
by them would not be enough
to mark the fact that he had ever
been a candidate for Congress in
this District. has
nothing to fear from such
It has only the effect
to arouse to new effort those who
love honor, truth and upright-
in politics- We ask the
good, men of Pitt to slay w
by their votes next Tuesday their
of any such ha-
as the Colonel made here
last Saturday.
Politically the Colonel is a
dead back number,
justly so too, as there is nothing
in him.
Mr- Branch has made a
against whom not the
slightest suspicion has ever rest-
ed. His character, both public
and private, is above reproach.
He is just s man as the
wart to represent them and
Married.
Jokes It was a grand
and most delightful at
the of Mr. Fernando
Ward, seven miles from Green
ville, on last Wednesday morning,
being the marriage of his oldest
and lovely daughter, Miss Eliza,
to Dr. C M. Jones, of Grimes-
land. The reception was had on
Tuesday evening and the many
friends met feasted upon a
bountiful supper spread by Mrs.
Ward At Wednesday morn-
J- L- Winfield read the
ceremony and pronounced them
husband and wife- Mr. and Mrs.
Jones left on the train for a
tour in the northern cities.
The presents were numerous and
valuable. W.
Bethel Items.
October, 29th 1894
Presiding Elder G- A.
held quarterly meeting here in
the M. E. Church Saturday and
Sunday.
The pupils of the Baptist Sun-
day School held a sociable in the
public school house Friday night
and had a pleasant time.
Hon. W. A. B. Branch and Col.
Harry Skinner spoke here Friday
to at least people, a large ma-
of whom were Democrats.
Mr. Branch completely wound up
the Colonel and showed himself
to be more than for him,
and we feel confident that his
speech will make many votes for
the Democratic party. The De-
in this section is being
thoroughly aroused.
Parmele Items.
October, 29th, 1894.
Mr. Hughes Mayo spent
day and to day at Mildred.
Messrs. G- J- Cherry and J. A-
are quite sick this week-
Mr. Wm. Powell's children have
been quite sick but are improving
now.
W. J. Little had a little
way Saturday night, no special
damage-
Mr- of
is spending a few days with
Mr.
Mr. Gay had his foot right
mashed last week by let-
ting a lumber truck run over it
Mr- S- T- is expected
to move his family from
to this place to-morrow.
The many of Mr.
Howard are delighted to see
him in Parmele again after a con-
illness.
Cue of the so-called
fell from a tree yesterday
and fractured some of his ribs.
No is necessary, he was
squirrel hunting-
Jim Staton, a lad who works in
the planing mill here, had both
his legs right badly hurt by a
belt last week. Hope he will
soon be out again-
Mr. F returned from
Jacksonville Tuesday, where he
J. B. CHERRY.
J. R.
J. G.
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN PRESENTING TO THEIR
MANY AND CUSTOMERS THEIR
FALL WINTER
which has been selected with special to the trade in
this It includes the pick of the market in Fresh
Fall and Winter Styles and not less astonishing than the
goods, will be the lo-v prices put on them. We
here to compete with
all which goes to make up life.
attendants were Mr- J. E
Miss Cobb.
Mr. Joe Thigpen Miss Alma
House, Mr. J. J.
and Miss Elects Thigpen, Mr. R.
W. Ward and Miss -Bag. ,.
well, Mr. W. J. Thigpen a-d Miss
Lou Cobb. Mr. W. S. Briley
Mis Laura Ward- These were
all nicely drear ed and graced the
occasion uniquely. The chosen
twelve accompanied the groom
his bride to his father's, Mr.
Montgomery near Pas
where the fatted calf had
been killed, all tilings wire
readiness, a we-ks
with the old people. Mr.
Mrs. Spier will go to house keep
their newly prepared home.
Long may they live and happy
may they
Their true friend,
J. H
We are after your patronage and expect to get it by giving
value we do not want it on terms.
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.
-ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT WE CARRY
potions,
and to fit all.
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Valises, Crockery, Glass
ware. Wood and Hardware, Guns, Shot and Pow-
Gun Implements, Tinware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings to
tit, Harness, Groceries and Flour.
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.
Oak Suits, Marble lop Bureaus,
Wood Top Bureaus
Tables,
Extension Dining Table, Side Boards, Tin Safes, Mattresses
Bed Spring, Children's Beds and Cribs, Parlor Suits, Hall
Racks, Wardrobes, Lace Curtains, Curtain Poles, Floor Oil
Cloths, yard, yard and a half and two yard wide, and Door
Mats, call on us.
o-
LOW
AT
A chance of a life time to secure good goods
at low prices. See
FRANK WILSON
------and get his low prices on------
BOYS
ma sun, rant
A trial will convince you.
Dry
furnishing Goods
to suit your pocket book and your person- Don't forget but com
and see for yourself.
Disciples Convention.
The Carolina
Missionary Convention is now
session at Kinston. The follow-
delegates Ministers came
up on the Monday morn-
Rev. J. L. Winfield, editor
of Watch-Tower and President of
the Convention, Rev. D. W.
Davis. T. W- Philips. Correspond-
Secretary W. J. dumpier,
Recording Secretary, E. H- Whit
H. Stancill,
J. W. Latham, Rev. J. N.
and lady and Miss
Mamie 0- Burgess. All took the
freight train for
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly
before the Superior Court Clerk of
; county a Executor of the Last
I Will and Testament of Martha brooks,
I deceased, notice Is hereby given to all
persons indebted to the estate of toe
decedent to make immediate pay-
all per-
baling claims against said
must present the same for payment on
or before the 27th day of October,
or this will be plead in bar of re-
This 27th day of October, MM.
JOHN W.
of Martha Brooks.
Items.
October, 29th j
Mrs. Pugh is visiting rel-
in Lenoir county.
Miss Sarah Tripp, of Washing-
ton, is visiting relatives here.
Miss Mamie Seawell. of Jones-1
is visiting at Mrs. Mary;
Harding's
Those who attended tho speak-
at X roads last Fri-
day it the best they
ever heard.
-IN
Cotton and
Below are Norfolk cotton
for
Cobb Bros. Co., Mer-
of
Good 11-16
Low 15-16
God
Extra
M. T, CO.
have received their new stock and
show their customers the very latest
designs, styles and colors for fall and
winter.
Our Patten Hats
are beauties, while our Ribbons
Laces and all other goods
be sure to please you.
Call and examine our stack.
TO
MANY F
recovering
I am pleased to state that since
from my recent sickness I have visited
the northern markets to purchase
NEW GOODS
and am now prepared to show yon an
------site line of------
Notions
HATS,
FURNISHING
You will find all my goods strictly first-class and prices low.
Come to see me and let me show what can do.
GREENVILLE N. C.
COTTON BUYERS,
AND DEALERS m
To deal fair and square with our friends and patrons and by giving them
BOTTOM PRICKS on Goods and Prices for Produce. We intend to dad
I. -it been for acme time re-setting
machinery in the P. E. L-
b- elected were wrecked in the
boiler explosion,
We have some rare bargains in all lines. We
defy competition. We are here to stay. We
can and will sell as low as any one.
Your friends,
mm
i. hand.
sown
PUB
ind stow p
WOK
to
mot ii
s h o s n v -1 i. o
pun I
Ml





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Editor and Prorate
WEDNESDAY. 31st, 1894-
Pages.
READ THIRD PARTY MEN.
The Black Record of Black Radicals.
four months, this Legislature second in importance to
of bonds of judiciary is the Legislature-
the State to the extent of What our statute laws
Other schemes were also our whole system of
worked, and when this
adjourned North Carolina,
counting her old debt, was pros
beneath a debt aggregating
the frightful total of
At that time the values of
the State were only
County authorities, emulating the
example of the State, began a sys
tern of plunder in their municipal
credit and plunged many of them
so deeply in debt that many of
the wealthiest in the State had
their script hawked on the streets
at cents on the
The ring went to New York,
men of the town, the dining
wining, the debauchery
crimes against the people
North Carolina continue.,
and
and
of
the
The Republican party in North
Carolina proved itself to be in-
capable of managing public
fairs wisely, discretely, honestly,
and prosperously, says the of them and took an
Messenger. That is j entire floor a great hotel, par-
plain, solid, unbending truth, the and all. For weeks the sell
whole truth, nothing but the ling of bonds, gambling of
truth. Its record is one of folly. bonds, the giving bonds to
of extravagance, of infamy. It
plundered the people, robbed the
school children, bankrupted the
State- It did all that was
to do that was evil and
destructive. It left undone
all that was good and right and
beneficial. Hard words, but true
words. The white men of North
Carolina who lived between
know how this was.
The rule of the carpetbaggers, the
the black and tan
was a rule of ruin rob-
If we could get hold of
the book of 1376, we
could bring out the startling fig-
of the crimes plunder
Radicals. They
show a degree of political
personal debauchery
that seems now beyond belief.
One Legislature alone, fully
their control, ran up the
State indebtedness to about
The State then was too
poor to pay the even
this robbery. Of this
great sum the people have
ed but very little benefit. One
Southern woman from New Or
in
possession of of these
bonds. She said sh obtained
whole sum thus thrown away pa d
by the helpless overburdened
people of our State. It was the
most vicious, the most dis-
play of corruption and robbery
that was made by he plunderers
of any of the several harrowed
and pillaged States of the South-
The record is dark with
and most damning to all engaged
in the rioting stripping
And now after some twenty
years of prosperity under Demo-
supremacy and benign gov-
; the State has
steadily and surely advanced in
prosperity ; after its schools and
colleges have placed upon a
high plane of success ; the
railroad system has greatly
developed and perfected ; after
taxes have been reduced well-
nigh to what they
were; after long continued law
and order and the prevailing of
good will between the races, it is
now asked the grand old
party of the Union and the
that has brought all this
Railroad j and much more that is good to
North shall sot aside,
them from a
President of
Mr. Jonah Turner, the old
Raleigh Sentinel, used to tell of
all villainy from day to day
until the people understood the
whole lesson of moral
and financial ruin.
a recent issue our valued
contemporary; the Asheville
there were some few points
in the black rd of the black
radical party, ought t
blur i and
names i-i the rascals who
and bring
shame to the consenting fellows
some now seeking
did not have grace enough to
even bang their heads with
while their party was
carrying out its plans that pros-
everything, violated all
honor, made the State a byword
and reproach, heaped debts
mountain high robbed whole-
sale the already well nigh ruined
people by the war and the
disastrous results.
this is the party that the
erring, misled Populists are allied
With in 1894, and hope with them
to gain possession of the control
of the State- Woe the day
when that comes to our dear old
mother North Carolina.
The Citizen shows that a
cal Legislature with some two
thirds of the members or more,
several not able to
read or at once entered
upon their raiding robbing.
The treasury was emptied early.
The school fund was made way
with. It says, although an
old story will be new to many
hundred twenty
thousand dollars of stock
in the Wilmington
Wilmington and Manchester
railroads, which belonged to the
educational fund for the benefit
of the poor children of the State,
were sold by the Republican
Treasurer for only
was paid out to members
of this legislature at the rate of
per day.
Not satisfied with robbing tho
treasury and the public schools,
this august assembly of carpet
baggers and Degrees determined
to work the credit of the State
for all it was
Theo the began and the
money flew and the people were
plucked- It was a mad, cruel
Saturnalia of scoundrels and
A with a Yankee
soldier, Gen- at its
bead was organized, and George
W. his confederate and
backer. The Citizen tells the
simple truth when it says that
the demanded, and in many
cases per cent, of all
appropriations by that
Legislature. This ring bought
the Legislature, giving orders
G. W. for the money.
A regular bar was established in
of the State. Rail-
roads were chartered right and
left- Bonds were is med for the
tuck of the State in all these pro-
Id this war, in leg than
disappointed, incapable, and
in many cases unprincipled
shall be placed power,
and control the destinies of a
great State with than
population. The proposition
is monstrous. Let the white men
and the colored men who wish
well to the State and have a prop
regard for their own interests
beware, see to it that such an
unmitigated curse calamity
does not befall North Carolina.
WILL THE
PEOPLE RUN
RISK.
THE
would be made by a
Legislature elected upon idea
of general opposition to the ex-
order of things, cannot
be foretold. We know,
though, that such a Legislature
would be dominated for the Pop-
by Marion Butler, and
the Republicans by Dr. J- J-
Mott. We ate not unmindful of
the fact that it is now the
that Mr. Butler and
Mr. would be the con-
trolling influences of such a body,
but Dr. Mott is a stronger char-
and an abler than Mr.
Pritchard, as the fattier of
espoused it two
years ago while Mr. Pritchard
was yet a straight would
quickly shove the latter the
background and in
with Butler rule the Legislature.
We should then have government
North Carolina not, as now, by
the people, but by Mott and But-
Mott is a natural and
has had long years experience in
the business- Butler has within
two years developed into tho most
autocrat the State has
ever seen- He is the supreme
ruler of the Populist party in this
State and his underlings obey him
implicitly. Mott would pimply
take the Republican of
a fusion Legislature by the throat
choke them into subjection
by virtue of his force
capacity.
It is alone that these two
men would elect themselves to
the United States Senate. That,
heaven knows, would be bad
enough ; but the States
Senate cannot hurt or help us half
as much as can the Legislature
of North Carolina, and well might
the State tremble for what would
be meted out to it through the
Legislature by these two men
intoxicated with victory
mated by the spirit of revenge.
The work of years would be over
turned a new of things
instituted. An intolerable auto-
would set up the
true people, who have since
the war rescued the Common
wealth from bankruptcy and dis-
grace, would see their work
strayed and themselves
under ban. We cannot the
picture of what would b , for no
one knows. If we could we would
recoil from it in the
spectacle would every be-
holder.
God the State
people of North Carolina
should reflect well upon what is
involved in a transfer of
State government from the hands
of the Democratic party to those
of the party which has placed its
candidates before thorn but
which has not yet taken unto it
self a name. All but of the
members of tho Supreme Court
are to be elected, and half of the
judges of the Superior Court. As
to the Supreme
Court candidates, Capt. W. H.
Kitchin has been charged with
having said, and as far as
know has not denied having said,
that everybody in tho east knows
that Judge Faircloth is not tit to
sit the Supreme Court bench
and that he has heard the west
that Judge Furches is even less
tit than Faircloth. If Captain
did not say this we will
give him the liberty of our col-
to deny it- It is that
in his he cannot be in-
to tell the people who they
should vote for, notwithstanding
that he has been urged to do BO
by gentlemen who have met him
in joint discussion. He is the
chief speaker for the unnamed
party in their campaign and tho
people may naturally regard with
suspicion a ticket which he will
not advise them to vote for. As
to the candidates for the Superior
Court nominated by
the combination against the De-
who can Mine thorn
We cannot. The majority of them
are men unheard of until now
and some of them are wholly in-
who have made
no reputation at the bar or in
any other line of endeavor, and
who are unfitted to sit in
upon the lives and property
of the people- Toe judiciary is
the last refuge of the citizen. If
it be incompetent or corrupt he is
in danger of both his person and
and we distinctly as-
that some of the men who
have been named for judges
against the candidates of the Dem
party are entirely
to discharge the duties of
the places for which they have
been nominated Its judiciary has
been in all times the pride and
the glory of North Carolina and
unless her people have become
unworthy of their traditions they
not sec the standard lowered
this year.
Then he some
more.
Then he felt much better-
In eastern North Carolina it is
generally admitted that Buck is
acting on the advice of his family
physician.
Buck is of a billions tempera-
his system being so
that it resists the medicinal prop-
of the most drastic
tics.
While medicine had failed,
Buck's physician discovered that
the of Cleveland in large
doses, before and after each meal,
relieved the torpid condition and
the liver correspondingly.
Buck doesn't hate the Demo
party. He is making a tour
of the State simply that he may
have a wider field in which to
Grover and thus improve
the condition of his liver -John R
Morris in Charlotte Observer.
N. C Oct.
Kitchin gave a performance in
this town on Saturday.
Saturday is a stirring day, and
tho commerce of our county towns
hum on this old Jew
There was a swarm of
folks in town, but tho attendance
show was slim-
Many who were old school
Democrats who are fond of the
humorous phases of Buck, and
who, on love to laugh
at ridiculous thing-
In the ring with Buck was Dr.
W- Patrick Exum, surgeon gen
of the North branch
of Army.
Surgeon General Exum is the
same Exum who, while
for Governor, stumped his toe
against the Democratic party and
fell sprawling.
After the election and fall of the
doctor, he said
the people in tho county
as I do, tho streets of Golds-
would run knee-deep with
Though Dr. Pat threatened this
knee-deep freshet of blood, a pro-
position, authorized by act of
Legislature, to issue in
bonds for a system of sewerage
was defeated. It was impossible
to awake oven a timid people to a
sense danger or to the
of ditches to carry off
the blood.
The surgeon general will talk-
He probably talks more and
does less harm than any man on
earth.
Enough of the surgeon
Let us quietly and prayerfully
turn to Buck for a moments.
How far Buck is yet reconciled
to political association with Mr-
Marion Butler, Duke of Sampson
and Earl of Wayne, is not
pen since Buck, a few weeks ago,
remarked to a friend of mine, in
been in tho Populist par-
enough to find out that
Marion Butler is a
In his speech, o Saturday,
Buck declared the free
and unlimited coinage of silver
except on a basis of an
agreement.
Then he Cleveland.
Then Buck declared that the
Democratic party was not
for the low price of
but that the price was fixed by
the English, in Liverpool.
vote ticket.
The result of the in
North Carolina to the whole
pie is of stupendous importance,
It really, and without
would amount to something
very nearly approaching a
if by the stupidity and
blindness of the people voting
that tho control of public
should be taken from the great
party that has saved the State
and governed wisdom and
righteousness, and handed over
to the unwise and reckless
and have
united, throwing all semblance of
principle to the winds, for the one
purpose, the sole purpose of get-
ting o, of securing grub and
the distribution of spoils. It
not be a revolution of
blood, but a revolution of radical
wide, deep, broad that would
amount to a cataclysm of rum and
robbery, says the Wilmington
Messenger.
Tho thinking, sensible, honest,
well people of North
who would not bring upon
the State a condition of disorder,
of discontent, of
waste and must
unite vote for
the nominees of the party. As
Senator Ransom said in his speech
here throw away and
preference and personal dislikes
burn the n on the altar of
your country. It is of the great-
est importance that the party
nominees should be voted for by
man calling himself a Dem-
and by every man who
wishes well to his people and him
self.
This is u time for splitting
tickets and dropping names- You
may find names tho tickets
this year that are to you
against your and
But do not throw them
aside. Vote the ticket. This is
necessary now aim. beyond any
other year because of the truly
infamous conspiracy afoot to ruin
and blast North Carolina- Put
the Radicals again in and
you will invite the flood of waste-
high taxes
to come with all of its
destructive, oppressed power.
By failure to vote for a Dem
fact to that extent
help to put the vile
of hungry office seekers who
drop all pretense of principles to
fasten their clutches upon the vi-
of North Duty to
yourself, duty to your family,
to your State compel you to
maintain your principles, vote the
ticket and stand guard to the
Democratic flag-
We repeat, tho election and its
results is of the utmost
to the future weal of North
Carolina. Your Legislature, two
nine Representatives,
the Judiciary and County Gov-
low taxes and pub-
education are all at stake-
Vote the Ledger
OPPOSED TO POPULISTS.
There is a very strong feeling
among the intelligent color-
ed men fusing with the
populists, whom they say are only
disappointed Democrats. One of
the most intelligent colored men
in this State is the editor of the
Star of published at
bury from which we copy the
history of the Populist
movement shows that it has been
inaugurated carried on by a
disgruntled element of the Demo-
party which has changed
in nothing except in name, only
from bad to worse. All the crazy
political freaks that disturb the
public and the legislation which
would unsettle, if not disrupt, our
whole system of government,
spring up and are advocated by
the Populist element. They
generally as much, if not more,
opposed to giving fair play to the
than are intelligent and
progressive Democrats- The
reasons for this are apparent.
The Populists are made up, as a
rule, of the element of white
which has always been op-
posed to the progress and best
of the The ac-
of the so called white
of the votes of
the Populist members of Con-
and tho various State
Legislatures all questions
which concern tho give
evidence that there is in
that pan v, or a coalition with that
party, that will prove of benefit
to the There are only two
parties that can hope to have any
show of success in this
for years to come. Those are
the grand old Republican party
which once stood for human
rights and fair play, and the
Democratic party which is now
in control of national affairs.
The history of the two parties is
before intelligent citizen,
lie who can't what suits him
in the one should try the other,
since any other course amounts
to little more than labor lost.
We advise colored men who
can't it convenient to act
with and for the Republican
party to either lot politics alone
or endeavor to make some sort of
deal with their Democratic friends
as will give them a chance to ex-
the right of franchise in a
manner that will promote the
best interests of the country and
Th i time will come, if it is not
already here, colored men
will fill it to their to
act with the Democrats in
matters, especially those pertain-
to local State As
between Democrats Populists
we prefer straight-out
racy with all that the term
plies, to Populism. The Demo-
have set the Republicans
excellent example- When
they were out of power in
the minority they kept their or-
intact, Dominated can-
each year and continued
the victory came. If
tho Republicans even here in
North Carolina will only do like-
wise, return to the old landmarks,
preach and practice Republican
doctrine as it was in the days of
Lincoln, Sumner Grant, d
the doctrine of a free
vote and fair count for
every lawful citizen, with
protection to American la-
borers and American institutions
they are sure to win.
PONDER WELL WHAT YOU DO.
If has a single sen-
reason yet why
should desert vote against the
Democratic party in North Caro-
we seen it. There is
none. The record is too plain, so
plain that every man must see it.
He can't help it. The party in
North Carolina has stood for and
pledged an economical and hon-
est government. Where is the
man who can deny prove that
it has failed to keep its pledges t
Every man knows that taxation
is now lower in North Carolina
than in any other State in the
Union, that justice is dealt out
from our courts, that the laws
are administered the best
way, that
have without exception been
faithful to every trust, that the
whole department of government
has been administered iD a prop-
honest and economical way-
When a man denies these facts it
is in order to ask him for some
proof to substantiate his state-
Populist editors and
speakers deny it all, but offer not
a single instance which a trust
has betrayed-
Men of North Carolina who
have passed through tho expert
of the last thirty years
should be slow to turn
this party which has been the
salvation of of the State. If
will but stop reflect, and
bring to bear their common
and experience, they will not do
so. We are not surprised that
boys, irresponsible men, and place
hunters should do as they are do-
seeking to destroy tho only
party that can will govern
the State well. But why in the
world sensible honest men
who are seeking only the welfare
of their State should for a mo-
hesitate to give their en-
tire support to tho Democratic
party, we cannot see.
No matter how of North
Carolina are divided
issues, all true men should come
together make a solid unit
for the best State government.
While every man should have an
in affairs, his
supreme should
in his State government- Lot us
not lose Bight of this truth.
were the National Demo-
party opposed to our inter-
that party, as a State
party, could give us the best
State government, then it would
clearly be to our interest to sup
port that party. There are many
men who oppose the
party, however but
they must admit that the Demo-
party is the best one in
North
And this is the important point
with us. North Carolina must be
kept in safe hands. Where can
any improvement be made by a
change if there is
there will certainly be
a retrogression, a backsliding, a
return to thee irrupt, extravagant
and raining la of Radical-
ism. Men who love their State
will think twice before they do
anything to wrench it from the
party that has given it all win h
it now possesses.
The Populists are in of the
Ballot System.
In a speech at Winston
day night Mr. J. C- re-
to the subject of hard
times, warned the people that if
the Republicans gained this
we have such bard
times that the depression through
which we have passed would, in
comparison, be reverted to as a
sort of thanksgiving occasion.
And Mr. Buxton is exactly right,
except that he did not put it
strong enough. No such distress
and hard times has ever been
witnessed in the United States as
would result from the control of
Republicans and Populists.
Either would be bad but the two
combined, would be confusion
worse confounded, From such
an aggregation the of
North Carolina and the South
have everything to fear. South
Carolina, Colorado, Kansas
Oregon are samples of what can
be expected- The result would be
much worse if the whole country
was turned over to the
Herald.
be in separate compartments; the
ballots are printed on one pa-
per by the State, and each voter
is allowed to have only one ballot
only one voter is allowed in the
booth at once; each is re-
quired to make a mark exactly in
a certain place indicating the per-
sons on the ballot they wish to
vote for.
These are the main features of
the system. Any one can Bee a,
a glance that this would prevent
any one from voting who could
not read- It would not only do
this, but its intricacies would
vent many others more intelligent
from exercising their rights at the
ballot box. It would practically
disfranchise a large number of
both colored and white people,
but of course it would affect a
larger number of colored people
than Times.
-a,
The Price cf
POPULIST
SHOULD
WELL
PONDER
We are sorry to learn that the
farmers are showing a
to rush their to mar-
when it is not absolutely
to do so.
There is no doubt that the size
of the crop is over-estimated and
that the present low price is due
to the general belief that an
crop has been raised- This
report is, we believe, untrue, but
it has been industriously,
by agents of foreign spinners
brokers who find it to their
advantage do so.
Cotton is low simply because
the size of the crop is over
mated. The market the pro-
are demoralized by this re-
port and until this feeling is
proved there is little reason to
look for and advance in prices.
Raleigh News and Observer.
order to bury Populism and
Radicalism forever in North Car-
it for
Democrat to the
of defeat in the
election-
What They Think of Other.
We give Marion Boiler's
opinion of the Republican party
in his exact words, copied from
his paper of July, 1892, as
a word to these who have
the People's party What
is there to be gained for reform
by defeating tho Democratic
State ticket I but much
to lose, let the result be what it
may If you elect your ticket,
you do it at the sufferance of the
Key party, and you are at
their mercy now and in the
If you are the cause of the
Republican party capturing the
State you have given a heavy blow
to the cause of reform and put the
management of your State in
worthy and hands- Let
not those who want office more
than they do reform precipitate
you into taking any such unwise
We would ask our Republican
friends what they think of the
above words. and
incapable strong
language that,
The Republicans in their
hand-book denounce the
Populists as and
What do our
list friends think of that f
Take the Populist opinion of
the Republicans, and the
opinion of the Populist, and
we wonder how there era be a
fusion between the parties.
It is a strange mixture can
be explained in other way
that parties want to boat
Democrats and are willing to
to airy thin
cord Times,
The Populist here are bitterly
denying that they are favor of
the Australian ballot system-
They are very of their
own platform, or they are not toll-
tho truth- They may take
whichever horn of tho dilemma
they choose-
Now this is a matter very
proven. Their own county pa-
per publishes every week the last
platform and utterance of the
People's party. What does
that say Here it is, and it is
copied verbatim from the
Populist's bible, the
Resolved, That we demand a
free ballot and a fair count in all
elections pledge ourselves to
secure it to every legal voter with-
out Federal intervention, through
the adoption by the States of the
Australian or secret
ballot
The Pops, considered it so very
important that they put it the
very first resolution in the plat-
form. If there is any one who
doubts that this is tho exact word-
of platform, lot him get
any copy of the Vestibule see
for himself.
Now, this platform of the Pop-
only declares for the
Australian ballot but it
in favor of tho
or secret ballot
That is, the pure article, as
it originated exists in
and not as it has been
changed and New
York other States.
The question to consider,
what is the
ballot system t Here it is n
a few
A polling booth bull pen, as
Jo lit has been is arranged so
j that each to be voted in shall
We have never thought or be-
otherwise that there
were thousands of good, well
meaning citizens in North Caro
who have united with the
Populists. We would novel inti-
mate otherwise says tho
ton Messenger. They are
in being most unwisely led.
A part of their principles are
safe, but
they are so blended with
other dogmas that are revolution-
destructive as to repel
tens of thousands of people all
States who would wish them
success if their ends were indeed
wise, practical
We feel assured that every
county good men, religious men
even, men of character who
are at heart patriotic, are follow-
the Populists leaders. They
are following blinded
rant men who have no real genius
for government, but who are self-
ill-balanced, disappoint-
ed ambitious. No w and
conscientious sincere
in fundamentals of the
Party would ever unite with
the Republican party that
its principles at every turn.
The good true men among
tho Populists ought to spurn
repudiate with hot indignation
this base wholesale
surrender to tho radicals. If this
worthy element will look at the
matter in the white light of truth
they must see how glaring and
false and foul tho act that unites
a party originated in reform with
a party entrenched for more than
thirty years behind the very
the Populists tight and de-
In all the history of par-
ties there has never such a
shameful surrender that author-
every honest man to believe
it to steeped fraud and
Then to think of Eastern men
good honest in
counties once so harried rob-
bed and ruined by the Radicals
and their allies between
1806-76, to be to be
with the
cal gang pledged to a repeal of
tho present system of County Gov-
and making it certain
that the old era of ruin, of high
taxes and open will be
returned with all of mildew of
death to prosperity, peace and
safety.
The Messenger would say unto
every good man, every true
among tho Populists to eve-
patriot and friend of humanity
don't- Never agree to unite
with your old devilish enemy to
oppress and vex injure your
Democratic neighbors of a life
time- Do not bring hurt and
row upon yourselves-Oxford
Lodger.
Public Schools in
The public schools in North
Carolina are in jeopardy. The
talk enough about
their devotion to the cause of ed-
but there can be no
doubt that the combination of in-
capacity and would
away steal the money
that ought to go to the little
of the State. The
can record regard to public
schools in North Carolina is well
known. In 1868 collected
for public schools ; in
1869, and 1870,
411.01, making a total cf
collected in the three years,
of which only was spent
for common schools. Raleigh
News Observer.
Lot the old Confederate soldier
remember when he goes to vote
that the Democratic party in
North Carolina last year paid
in pensions to the Con-
federate soldiers and their
Do you think the fusion
crowd, which is composed of lead-
Republicans, your old en-
and some Demo-
will give a cent to pension
the old out Confederates
and their widows No, no, not a
a Times.
Eugene Field says have
no hesitancy declaring that the
newspaper writer who can write a
timely newspaper article just now
without offending somebody is a
daisy from Daisy
A Negro Editor's Opinion of Fusion.
Tho editor of Maxton Blade, a
Republican newspaper by
a colored man, is opposed to
and doesn't hesitate to
out in about the
who are trying to sell out his
race drive them like cattle
into the Populist camp. He is a
Republican of the
sect, but no good for tho
in this new doctrine. We
quote from a late issue of his pa-
since colored men were
clothed with the robes of citizen-
ship the white Republicans have
taught them that it was a crime
to vote any other than a straight
Republican and now be-
they persist in doing what
they have been taught to do,
they are called rebels. They re-
fuse to driven into
list camp, and for this they are
called all manner of hard names
The fact is, the white
cans are the rebels they are the
traitors, for they are seeking to
sell the colored vote to the Pop-
party. They will not be
able to deliver the goods,
A Tennessee Farmer Obtains an Odd
Subject for Exhibition.
Jack of District fifteen,
Dyer count-, Tenn., struck a
piece of unprecedented good
Early one morning ho picked up a
hatchet and started out wood-
pile to cut some kindling for his
wife. As he stepped from the
kitchen he was considerably
prised to see a large hemlock
pine climbing a tree about ten feet
from the door.
Jack had often heard If a
pine's tail is cut off while the animal
is in the act of climbing It will stop
refuse to climb higher or
descend. As the prickly little
was only about four feet from
the ground Jack had no trouble In
springing forward and with a quick
blow of the hatchet severing the tall
of the porcupine In twain.
Sure enough the animal ceased its
ascent and remained In the
position. A porcupine Is
in that section of country, and was
therefore quite a curiosity to Ten-
neighbors soon
heard of the porcupine to
see it. could sec no reason
why he should not make
out of the thing, so be placed ft
twelve-foot, board fence
around It and charged ten cents ad-
mission. He made several dollars a
day with his prize.
The animal became accustomed to
the spectators and would readily
eat and drink from Its master's,
baud. said he would cut
off a section of the tree with the
on It and carry the animal
around and exhibit It but tor
fact it Is a valuable shade tree, and
the porcupine might not be able to,
hold en long enough.
Signaling at Sea.
George L. Tonnoffski, for years
prominent as a local Republican
at more recently as a
Populist, is in a card saying
he can't stand and will
big lot with the Democrats,
The British government is testing
a new plan for signaling at sea. It
consists merely of an ordinary gong
fastened to the bow of the ship be-
low the water line. This acts as a
transmitter, and the receivers are
gongs of exactly similar tone and
rate of vibration, one on side
of the ship below the water Una
The receiving gong will take up and
reproduce the sound of the sending
gong from a long distance. Signals
already have been clearly transmit-
ten miles.
Nitrogen Obtained From the Air.
Lord Rayleigh and Prof. Ramsay
have announced the discovery of a
new element. Nitrogen obtained
from the air, It was observed, has a
density different from that of
gen obtained from other sources.
Nitrogen obtained from the
was accordingly treated with
magnesium, with the result that the
nitrogen was absorbed, but a residue
remained. This residue was the new
dense and Inert gas
times heavier than hydrogen
and fifty percent, heavier than
gen. Its spectrum is a single blue
line more Intense than the
line of
Dewar, the U
as to the new element, but confesses,
that In liquefying nitrogen he has
ways found it by white





WON.
BOHEMIAN.
Clip clip, went the whip. One
the most exciting races that ever
took place in the county was on.
Dashing around country road
came the black stallion, and In the
light wagon were seated a couple
whose destiny depended upon the
speed of the thoroughbred. A
young man held the reins tightly,
while his companion, a girl with her
hair flying all over her face, gazed
behind her at an approaching
with apprehension written
her spirited features.
Jack, they are she
breathed.
Clip, clip. The stallion was strain-
every nerve. It was a stern
chase and a long one.
pa does catch us, Jack, he'll
kill she whispered.
The wagon now was rocking like a
boat in a storm, and she clung with
solicitude to his arm.
Jack, he's got his
muttered Something, pressed
lips more closely and again
lite whip to the flanks of the
nag.
he only hadn't changed horses
on us, sweetheart, we'd have beaten
him out of the
was always fall of mean
so, the meanest man on
not that,
what does he want to come
between us for You belong to me,
don't
that confounded dog hadn't
barked we'd have got away all
thought he'd bitten you when
he flew at you like
got a piece of cloth for his
trouble. Still it's embarrassing. If
I had only an ulster to put on.
Might me to explain to the
we only get sighed the
other.
there We will or
die
Clip, clip. Patter, patter. The
second vehicle was approaching
closer. Another ten minutes and
the race would be lost. Jack bad
apparently played for desperate
stakes, and stood a good chance of
losing.
much farther is it to the
minister's.
dear, there's the
Like a whirlwind the wagon
dashed up to the low wooden
structure. A man with sandy whisk-
came out. Jack pressed a five-
dollar bin into his hand.
mind the he said.
lift the gate, life or
death. You're a good friend of
mine,
can bank on that, squire.
I your father and his father
before him, and the
waste a word then, Bill.
Let me
man back Pointing
to the approaching cloud of dust.
hot, I
quick,
a I
heaven's sake, lift that gate
use it, too, he would. Why,
I remember
with the gate,
right. It's rather unsociable
morning, but I
rattler busy. Good
m M to be and
away for a bonnier girt
there ain't to be found in the
even if she Is the darter of the
meanest man in the vicinity, and it's
Bill who says
Like arrow from a bow they
shot beneath the uplifted pole and
Bill gazed after them meditatively.
well, young blood and
warm said he.
just like afore I got old in the
plow. Gosh, ain't the old man tear-
mad. Look at the dust he's
raising. He's along like a
cyclone, waving his arms and
mad. They won't be much
loft of Jack after he gets through
with
The cyclone was approaching
nearer and nearer. In the center of
the cloud could be seen a wagon and
in the wagon an elderly man who
held the whip with one hand and the
reins with another, while between
his knees was a formidable looking
weapon which looked like a blunder-
buss. He dashed toward the toll-
gate at about a clip and was
about to ride through when down
came the pole and the horse sank
back upon his haunches.
said the mild, pleasant
Voice of Bill.
haven't any time to bother
with you, you was the
reply. that
now, that ain't a
to
me through, you rascal, or
I'll horsewhip
now, two can play at
little game. Toll,
raged and then felt in his pocket.
la his haste in donning his trousers
his change had dropped to the floor
be hadn't a cent.
he said, haven't any
money with me. I must get through.
I must catch that scoundrel ahead.
Lift that bar at
ain't doing business that
the calm reply. cost
two hundred and twenty-three
last year to maintain this here
private thoroughfare, and we ain't
running a charity
The old gentleman nearly fell
from his wagon in an apoplectic fit.
won't let me
When added
the extra syllable that meant
confound you,
He raised bis gun. In a
ling It was wrested from him. Then
Bill raised the old blunderbuss and
at his opponent. The old
got behind the seat In
. raw
your mincing said,
as calmly as ever.
The old ducked his head
more than ever to save that
portion of bis anatomy.
I guess we can talk
said Bill. ain't no
and it ain't to be
stormed in that fashion. You haven't
got the
you can't go through.
the
For an hour they expostulated.
At the end of that time another car-
approached and the old gentle-
man borrowed a nickel from a friend
and dashed on his way. The man at
the tollgate would not surrender the
gun, which he said had been raised
against him and which he wanted as
evidence. When the old gentleman
reached the house of the minister
the young couple and the reverend
gentleman were strolling out of the
front door. JacK surveyed his irate
father-in-law calmly.
a little late in getting
here, he said. hoped
to have the pleasure of your corn-
pan y, and indeed wanted you to give
away your daughter, but time was
you understand the
anxiety of a we decided
not to wait. Still, better late than
never. You will at any rate have
the satisfaction of being the first to
congratulate us. There is my hand,
sir. I thank you for the honor of
having given me your lovely
and trust that I may never prove
unworthy of the confidence you have
bestowed upon me. Edith, dear, re-
the parental
Free Press.
Bound to Get the Train.
A young woman, jauntily dressed,
wearing a natty suit, rushed into the
union station the other afternoon.
Taking a hurried glance at the walls
of the room, she finally discovered
the timepiece, and with an audible
ran upstairs as fast as her
already weakened strength would
permit. She was nearly overcome
by her exertions as she reached the
exit to the platform. A large box
and two bundles were all the imped-
she carried. She was climb-
aboard a train for Springfield,
minding not the drops of rain that
were drenching her costume, at the
same time telling the brakeman,
with spasmodic gasps, how she
feared the horrid train would leave
before she arrived, adding that she
had an engagement in New Britain
that she must break. On learn-
that she was not on the New
side of the station, and had
not time to go around, she tossed
her luggage over the fence, and with
an athletic bound sprang after it.
She landed all right, and, making a
dash, succeeded in boarding the
train she sought just in time. Hats
were off to the New Britain maiden.
Hartford
THE PAST.
The Necessity for the Old-Time Ox
Team Gone.
Cattle Inspector has
finished his rounds, and reports not
one team of oxen owned in town,
says the Easthampton News.
Last year there was just one, which
was sold for beef on the day after
his call was made. This, the last
team, was owned by P. Burt.
This vanishing of the heavy ox team
marks an era in our progress just as
surely, if not as noticeably, as the
coming of steam after the stage
coaches and canals, or the entrance
of the electric car to supplement
and in some respects displace the
steam locomotive and the horse
team. Years ago the farmer was
not to be found who did not own an
ox team and oftentimes more than
one. The land was heavier than
now, much of it was new sod, and
the roads were far harder to travel
than even at this date when we are
apt to think them anything but
good. But with the coining of bet-
roads the more complete break-
of the fields, the of
powerful machinery and cheap
for removing stumps and
rocks, and, more especially, the
breeding of heavier horses, the pa-
ox has, like the Indian, gone
out of our civilization gradually but
surely, but, unlike the Indian, he
has not gone west. To the little
folks to-day the massive yokes,
smooth and glistening with the labor
of straining shoulders, arc a
The big-tongued cart is
most as obsolete as the ox himself,
and the long whip has gone with the
and and and
strange terms of a now almost
dead language. As, in so many
other respects, classic reference to
will have to be ex-
plained before long, with reference
to the cow as the
and undoubtedly the revisers will
have it in the
of a decade hence.
So we progress from crude muscle
and the tugging of sinews to the
power of swift horses, tireless steam,
and now stand on the threshold of
the universal electricity, that has
been back of all these forerunners,
and is now fast supplanting them.
There may be a pair or so of oxen
again owned in town, but, like the
getting out of the tin lantern, it
be but a flickering revival of a
past already dead.
goose, standing in dread of the
monkey, seeks salvation by speedily
making for the water, instinctively
knowing that in her native element
she is sure of freer movements than
upon the land. The monkey, afraid
of the water, exerts himself to the
uttermost not to drawn into it.
Both animals utter cries of despair,
while the noise and laughter of the
onlookers conduce to make the hap-
less creatures completely frenzied.
As a rule the goose proves
and the monkey is drawn
into the water. At the outset he is
utterly at a loss to know how to con-
duct himself there; but the cunning
rogue, quick recognize bis
advantages, presently sits
astride the the goose, in
true equestrian fashion. The goose
is likewise flurried at first, but soon
appears to regain her scattered wits
if a goose may be said to have
wits. She is about to take a dive,
but the simian throws his long arms
about her neck and prevents her.
Hardly the rascal made certain
of his advantage than his courage
returns. With the most provoking-
ludicrous grimaces the angered
monkey deals blow upon blow upon
the poor goose's body and tears her
feathers; and the more the
tors laugh and shout the wilder are
his antics. This state of things lasts
until the luckless animals are loosed
from an uncongenial companionship,
and the exhibition comes to an end.
N. Y. Ledger.
Subterranean London.
A JAVANESE
The Peculiar Way In Which
Amuse Themselves.
Combats between animals of
ENTERTAINMENT.
They
species arc a source of great
amusement among the Javanese.
One of the most popular contests is
that between monkey and goose.
The monkey is tied to one of the
goose's legs, by means of a string,
and both animals lire set down Dear
h V.-U .
It gives an impressive idea what
subterranean London is fast
to learn that, on emerging from
the river, the new city and Waterloo
line will, in its passage up Queen
Victoria street, run for apart of the
way underneath the low level main
sewer, which, in its turn, runs along
beneath the District Underground
railway. So that at this point In
the city shall have first a busy
main thoroughfare, below that a
steam railway, then a huge metro-
sewer, then an electric rail-
way, reaching its terminus at a
depth of about sixty-three feet be-
low the streets, and here it will
communicate with another
Central will lie at a
depth of eighty Daily
Now.
gross in Ins cart. The grass slid off
the water, and the carp came
around and began eating it. He
jumped into the water with his pitch-
fork to throw the grass back on his
cart, and a regular battle
between him and the
carp for the possession of it. The
carp ran against his legs and nearly
threw him but he worked
away like a Trojan and managed to
save about half of the grass, and
with it pitched about half a ton of
carp into the cart. The rest of the
grass was eaten by the carp he did
not catch. He was on his way to
the city, the grass was intended
as a for his horses. When he
arrived here the carp among the
wet grass were all alive and kicking,
and he sold the lot to a Chinese fish
dealer for two dollars and fifty cents.
He thinks of repeating the
the next time ho comes to the
BEHIND THE TIMES.
-W
COTTON SEED.
E WANT ONE MILLION
ELS COTTONSEED.
II p
II. will the highest prices, either
Civil We I, for
Greenville. N. C. sale Cotton seed Meal and Hulls.
at the House. SHEPPARD
A BATTLE WITH CARP.
Green Grass an Excellent Bait for
These Fish.
Carp have become so plentiful in
the sloughs along the Columbia that
fishermen have offered to supply
farmers at with any de-
sired quantity for manure at five
dollars per ton. No one can with
just ice call the carp a worthless fish
after that. As tending to show
how numerous the carp are in places,
a farmer states that recently he was
with a lot
Why Thomas Will Draw
for the British.
To those who are interested in
cartoonists and their work it long
ago become evident that Thomas
had ceased to be attractive to
American readers, says the Detroit
Free Press. His great reputation,
made when he was the most popular
caricaturist In America, would not
sell his work in late years, and one
failure was recorded only to be fol-
lowed by another. Mr. has
gone to London to enter the service
of the Pall Mall Gazette. A writer
in the New York Sun explains his
loss of prestige and popularity here
by saying that he would not work
in colors as a cartoonist, and he re-
fused until the very last to give way
to the requirements of the new
school of caricaturists and cartoon-
which at the present time holds
the ascendancy. Until the very last
Mr. insisted upon running his
mottoes, rhymes and comments in
the body of the picture, and his fond-
for an elaborate framework of
scrolls, lines and brackets could not
overcome. The publishers with
whom he dealt endeavored to get
Mr. to devote more attention
to his drawings, and pointed out to
him that the public required ac-
curate drawing even more than
novel ideas, but Mr. continued
bis exaggerated style, so that grad-
his work ceased to be in de-
It is not unlikely that he
may succeed in catching the popular
fancy in London, for the reason that
the Londoners like black and white
and Hue work in their cartoons.
They have no colored illustrated
journals, such as we have here, nor
have a school of young
who deal with questions of
yesterday and to-day in the papers.
They like political cartoons that arc
carefully thought out and thorough-
partisan in nature, and they ac-
them whether the drawing is
or
, ., -4 DENTIST,
WANTED.
A TYSON,
B. K.
AT tO N K W,
Prompt attention f
L C. LATHAM HARRY
AW.
E. Ii. I.
Williamston. Greenville.
N. C
under Opera House. Third St.
T I. FLEMING
ATTORNEY -AT-LAW
N. C.
Prompt business.
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
All kinds of Watches. Clock,
Jewelry tor repairs.
Main Springs to He. Cleaning
to Gold Sp a mid Gold Kings to
mend to
Fine work a specialty. All work
lit i by
Z. F. HIGHSMITH,
Jewel r,
Greenville, N. C.
HOTEL NICHOLSON,
WASHINGTON, N. C
Geo. A. Spencer, Mgr.
IN EVERY
attention to Commercial Me i.
free
V G. JAMES,
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, N
Practice in the courts. Collections
special
J. JARVIS. ALEX L. BLOW
A BLOW,
W.
GREENVILLE. X. C.
In all the Courts.
COTTON
BAGGING
At per Yard.
I am offering to the a handsome
Bagging which can be retailed at
Mi yard. The Bagging is put up in
bales of yards to a bale, weighing
and pounds to the yard. This
is the New York
Cotton Exchange and is preferred by
exporters. It is for sale by J. R. Smith
Ayden, and Boswell, A
Co., Greenville.
E. A. KEITH Ayden,
Agent for the Manufacturer.
for Greenville
Salem en the first Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three
o'clock.
Grove on second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and School
Horse at O'clock.
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel at three
o'clock.
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
G. F. Smith,
Baptist Services.
Below arc the regular
of Rev. J. II. pastor of the
Baptist church s
At and fourth Sun-
days in each month, morning and night,
and every Thursday night.
At Sunday in each
month, morning and night.
At Person
Sunday In each month and Saturday
fore.
Episcopal Services.
Below are the regular appointments
of Kev. A. Hector
in
each month, morning and evening.
Greenville Fourth Sunday In each
month, morning and evening.
vice- other Sunday
St. Johns, Sun-
day in month, evening
Holy Innocents, Lenoir Co.
Sunday morning,
Services.
first morning
night, alternating between Rev. J. N.
H. and Kev. w. nines.
Every third Sabbath, morning and
night, Kev. J. W- Hines.
Sunday School every Sabbath morn-
at o'clock, D. B. Evans
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.
STOKES, Wednesday, October 81st, 1894.
Thursday, November 1st. 1894.
STORE. Friday, November 2nd. 1894.
LACK JACK, Saturday, November 3rd, 1894.
K. W. KING,
Sheriff of Pitt County.
id Constitution
LL YOU HELP
In the great contest which is to be fought between now and the next presidential election for
THE PEOPLE'S Coinage both Gold and Silver, without discrimination, which means the
free coinage of both as opposed to the policy of contraction, which is being dictated by England, and
which levies tribute on every product of the farm, on valuations of all kinds and on all compensation for
labor.
The Great; Issue now 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, 156,000-
WEEKLY CONSTITUTION
published at ATLANTA, GA., and having
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IN CASH to the person who comes second nearest.
CASH to the person who comes third nearest.
CASH to the person who comes fourth nearest.
CASH to the person who conies fifth nearest.
ft R IN CASH to the person who comes sixth nearest.
f Q IN CASH to the person who comes seventh nearest.
IN CASH the person coming eighth nearest
IN CASH to the person coming ninth nearest.
IN CASH to the person coming tenth nearest.
IN CASH to the person coming eleventh nearest.
SR IN CASH to the person coming twelfth nearest.
IN CASH to the person coming thirteenth nearest.
CASH to the person coming fourteenth nearest.
IN CASH to the person coming fifteenth nearest.
IN CASH to the person coming sixteenth nearest.
Each of these prizes will be delivered in cash, subject to the following Each guess must
accompany a clubbing subscription to the paper publishing this announcement and The Constitution at
the above announced clubbing rate, which must be in cash. All clubbing subscriptions must be
sent through the paper making this publication and not to The Constitution. This offer is to be
closed on the first of May, 1895, received with subscriptions after that time will not be
counted in the distribution of these Should there be any ties in the guesses, the prizes
will be divided. Every new or renewal to either of the two papers will entitled to
a guess with every subscription.
fit heartily advocates an
EXPANSION OB THE CURRENCY
Until there is enough of it in circulation to do the business of the country.
If you wish to help in shaping legislation to these ends, GIVE THE CONSTITUTION YOUR ASSIST-
lend it a helping hand in the fight, and remember that by so doing you will help yourself, help
your neighbors, and help your country
THE WEEKLY CONSTITUTION has no equal in America Its news reports cover the world,
and its correspondents and agents are to be found in almost every in the Southern and Western
States.
AS A
It prints more such matter as is ordinarily found in the great magazines of the country than can he got ten
even from the best of them.
AS AN It school house within itself, and a year's reading of THE
is a liberal education to any one.
Ag A FRIEND AND It cheer and comfort to the fireside eve y r.-k.
is eagerly sought by the children, contains valuable information for the mother, and is an
Of Instruction for every member of the household.
WILMINGTON R. It
AND
FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS
Dated S, a
Leave Weldon Ar. M. M.
Ar
Rocky Mt Wilson Ar. OS
Wilson Goldsboro Magnolia Ar M. . M. r, S l A. M.
Dated July p c o y- y XI
Floret Ar OH
Magnolia Goldsboro km A. M l V . M. no H a
Wilson Ar Rocky U. M U M.
Ar Tarboro Rocky Mt Ar
Train on Scotland Neck Branch
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.00
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p.
Greenville 6.87 p. m., Winston
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m.
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.90 a.
m., daily except
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington a, m., arrives
8.40 a. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., 6.10
p. m,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
on Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
day, at no p. m. a p. M;
arrive Plymouth 9.20 P. M., 6.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
Sunday, 5.30 a. m., Sunday 8.80 a. in.,
arrive Tarboro 10.26 a. m., and
a. in.
Train on Midland N C
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, a.
m. a m.
leaves a. m.;
at Goldsboro. a. m.
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. m., arrive
Nashville i p. m-. Spring Hope 5.30,
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope
a. m Nashville 8.85 a. arrives
at Rocky Mount m., daily except
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence K-
R. leaves Latta 6.50 p. in., arrive Hun-
bar 8.00 p. in. leave Dim.
bar 6.30 a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a.
Dally except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War.
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday
at a. in. Returning Clinton
at 1.00 p. Warsaw with
line trains.
T. No. makes connection
at Weldon for all points North daily, all
via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
railroad for Norfolk daily and
all points via Norfolk, daily ex-
Sunday.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
K. KENLY, Manager.
. v,
NORTH CAROLINA
R. R. TIMETABLE.
In Effect December 4th. 1893.
GOING LAST.
GOING WEST
Pas. i
Ex Sun. STATIONS
Ar.
P. M.
P M.
P. M
P. M,
Goldsboro
Kinston
Pas.
Ex
A. M A.
A.
connects with Wilmington ft
Weldon train bound North, leaving
a. in., and with D
train West, p.
Train connect with A
train, arriving at Goldsboro
p. in., and with W. A W. train
Lorn North at in.
P L. DILL,
M a
.
.-- v-





are all in and I am offering them
to the trade at
LOW Figures
-They consist of
Dry Goods, Clotting, Hals,
Is,
Butt
C ire and see
j id let me show
my stock, I
am certain I can
you.
Mr- Bernard Greene is with
me will he to see his
friends and customers.
Yours for rare bargains,
H. C. HOOKER,
GREENVILLE, N- C
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Q.
THE REFLECTOR
Local Reflections
Mrs. Al.
fall
Last day of October.
Cotton Seed wanted for
t the Old Brick Store.
November begins to m
For reliable shoes to Frank
Wilson.
A beautiful line of Hats
received to day at M- T-
Cos.
The forest leaves have taken on
their autumn tints.
Latest beta at frank
Wilson's.
Very latest and
of fall and winter Ha's at
D.
Nice lot Clocks, in
town, at J. L- Starkey it Co's
For a nice suit of clothes go to
Frank Wilson's.
Comity Commissioners meet
next Monday.
Full line Ornaments,
fancy Pins, Tortoise Hair Pius
and Side Combs, at Mrs.
new Admiral Cigarettes
u thousand.
J. L Starkey A Co
Give the Warehouse
a trial with a load of fine
co and yon will to home
over the high prices obtained.
A full line of Dry Goods at
Frank Wilson's.
Don't forget the Furniture
Racket Store if want cheap
roods.
See J. C- Cobb
stock of Shoes and Boots.
Frank Wilson carries the largest
and best line of clothing in town.
Every pile of brings its
full value the Ware
house and your check is ready as
soon as the Bale is made.
Ladies it will pa you t-; exam
my Millinery. Mrs L GRIFFIN
A New Orleans cotton exporter
estimates this years crop at
bales.
Every reader of this paper is
asked not to over look the
he can get the
and Atlanta Constitution a whole
year for
Handsome and cheap Oak Sols,
up stairs, Old Brick Score-
Large assortment Pattern Hats
latest deafens from both
more and New York, at Mrs. If,
D.
Democrats, work earnestly to
gather and the victory is yours
next Tuesday.
Just received barrels first
patent Flour. 18-60 a barrel, at J.
L. Starkey t Co's.
The latest style in Ribbons
vets, Silk and Fancy Feathers
Walking hats and etc . M. T- Cow
ell Co.
Candidates for Constable can
get tickets at the REFLECT OB
office.
Democrats should lose op-
to work between now
and election day.
Our sign reads Ware-
Follow that
advice and you will get highest
prices for your tobacco.
Lock Bracelets, Love
gold, silver and tortoise Hair Pins
and Side at M. T.
Cos.
is called to the notice
to creditors by John W. Brooks,
executor of Martha Brooks-
Keep in mind that the
Warehouse is the place to get
highest averages for your to-
New Fall goods just received at
M- T- Cos-
Let every Democrat be at the
ballot box next Tuesday. Not
one should remain at home.
CO
CD
CD
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
First class Cart Wheels with
Iron Axle, only a pair.
John Buggy Co.
New assortment cf Bibles from
American B. S-, just received.
Wiley Brown, Depositor.
A large of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
Goods to suit all from the fin-
est to the cheapest at if. T- Cow-
ell Co's.
The game law limit expires to
day and to-morrow the
can begin partridges.
Sewing machines from to
Latest improved New Home
Wiley
Remember I pay you Men for Chicken
Egg Country Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
See the in the
Opera House Tickets
on sale at drug store.
Complete line of Dry goods at
Wiley Brown's-
Cheap, New Butter
cents per pound. Best Blended
Tea cents per pound. Import-
ed Macaroni cents. Cream
Cheese at the Old Brick Store.
Mens good Shoes a pair-
Ladies Shoes at cents,
J. L- Starkey Co.
It is getting late for thunder
storms, but there was a consider-
able one Friday and
day-
Building lots for sale on easy
terms, apply to S. E-
A shed has placed
tho outside stalls t the market
house. It a good improve
Mr- J. W. Tyson, of
told us Saturday that one of his
children had recently had five
yellow chills.
On fourth page to-day is an ad
of the John Flanagan
Buggy Co., to which your
is directed.
I have removed opposite J. B.
Cherry Cos next to Brown
Hookers. Z. F. Highsmith.
Mr. of the
Paint Co., has arrived town
can be found at the Kins House-
See announcement.
The State fair at Raleigh last week
is said to have been the best yet
held. There wore people
present on Thursday.
Just Car load of
Bagging and Ties at J. C Cobb
Son's-
Our stock Dry Goods and
Groceries are complete. Call
see us- J. C. Cobb Son-
is much matter on
the fifth pas-e of the Reflector
that every man should read care-
fully before he votes next Tues-
day.
To get highest average bring
your tobacco to the
Warehouse and we will prove it.
Forbes
John Jones, a white man, cap-
an at the
and Racket store on
day. Later tho Sheriff captured
Jones
Look at Mittens
per pair at Furniture t Racket
Store, very thug for school
The mail train was over two
hours late Saturday evening. It
was delayed at Weldon waiting
for the train that was wrecked on
tie Raleigh v. Gaston road-
A- G- Cox is conveniently
on the railroad at Winterville
where he has splendid advantages
in handling all of
The Greenville Amateurs will
present the in the
Opera House to night for tho
benefit of the church.
They go to Kinston Friday night.
Pretty line of Ribbon,
Gloves, new style Collars green
and at Mrs. M- D.
Mens heavy oil tanned gloves
pair at the
Racket Store-
Last Friday afternoon tire broke
out in the cotton lot of R- L-
Davis Bros., at
id considerable damage to about
twenty bales of cotton. It is
thought the tire was by
some boys who were playing on
the cotton.
For Sale or. BENT- House and
lot where I now reside, furnished
or given
mediately. J- J. Cherry
A- G Cox, is
lead in the flour trade,
your will be
prices are ex-
low.
The dwelling house of T- B.
Evans, colored, near Red
meeting house, was destroyed by
fire on Sunday night,
Everything destroyed but four
beds four bed quilts. There
was two in money
which was also lost.
During the coming season we
will keep the very best horses
and mules for sale- Call to see
what we have before buying.
We guarantee satisfaction- We
also conduct a first class livery
stables. Tucker Edwards.
The Musical,
Tho pupils of Pitt Female
gave a delightful musical,
on last Friday evening, at which
the following was
rendered
taut I.
Greeting Glee, Chorus.
t.
Patrick an I K. Moore.
Raid.
Miss Brace
Piano Solo, Betas
Heading, Women,
Miss Lets
Piano Duet,
l. Tucker and S
Hie Rainy Hay Chorus,
Primary data.
II.
Piano Trio,
Misses and Moore.
Duet,
and Forbes.
The
Miss
Piano Solo,
Miss Fleming.
Ball, Chorus,
Primary Class.
Piano Trio,
Misses James Bawls.
Drill. Physical Culture.
Old Chorus.
Prof. Goode has only had
charge of this school for about
two months and it was surprising
to see how progressive thing
was- were
arid Prof- Goode and his ex-
Assistants took seats with
the audience. Each pupil came
out or read without
the least confusion, and without
prompting from an instructor. For
a little girl would go to
the piano, fix her own music,
her selection perfectly,
retire without the assistance of
any one- All other parts passed
in the same manner. .
Every selection of the program-
me was faultlessly rendered and
the audience was delighted.
Prof. Goode was wise in the
selection of his teachers and they
Mr. John Nelson, cf
part of last week here.
Mr. H. F. Harris has gone to
and opened a shoo.
Mrs. R W. King and little
daughter are Kinston.
Mr. Frank Wooten, of
is a few With
his Mr. J. L. Wooten.
Mrs S. M- arrived Sat ;
from Atlanta
visit her sister, Mrs. S B-
Rev. J. N. H.
will in Pres- j
here next Sun-
day.
Miss lone May. of Farmville,
spent Monday here and left that
evening to attend tho
Convention at Kinston.
Mr- James Everett is sick
from a yellow chill had Sun-
day. His little son, died
last week of a congestive chill
Mrs. S. and children
returned home last week from
Rocky Mount. Her sister. Miss
Abrams, her home
for a visit here.
Mr. Jack White had another
yellow chill on last Friday and
was again very sick for a few
days. We are glad to know he is
much better.
Chm J and
Mo ire. who arrived home
Thursday ti a few
Jays with their returned
to Oxford to Monday
mi
H- A. a former cit-
of this who for sever-
years has been living in
came to Greenville last
to locate in the practice
of dentistry. We welcome
back to Pitt.
Mr. Charlie. Sugg, who holds a
position the Government print
office a arrived
home evening on a visit
to his pi rents. He was in the
wreck on the
road but escaped unhurt-
Polk Miller.
One of the largest audiences
that has assembled in the Opera
House for sometime greeted Polk
Miller in his entertainment for
the benefit of the Odd Fellows on
Monday evening. His
nations of the
and dialect were perfect, his
stories of plantation life
were almost and
his songs with
everybody. We
have not heard our people ex-
press themselves so delighted
with any entertainment as with
Polk M
The Method.
The
had a big barbecue and rally over
at Parkers X Roads, on Saturday.
John H. Williamson, of Franklin
ton, was to make them an
address- The hired
one of the bands to go over
to try and break up the meeting
and draw the over to
town. The presence of the band
infuriated the crowd and armed
with sticks and pieces of fence
rails they made a rush for the
wagon. But for tho timely in-
of Williamson there
might have been serious trouble-
While he was urging the crowd
back the band put whip to their
mules and cleaned up for town.
It is reported that the
have tried to interfere with all
the meetings of the
The Past
Guarantees
The Future
The fact that Hood's
has cured thousands of
others is certainly sufficient
reason for belief that it will
cure you. It makes pure,
rich, healthy blood, tones and
strengthens the nerves, and
builds up the whole system.
Remember
Hood's
Cures
Be Sure to get HOOD'S and
Only HOODS.
Pills are specially prepared to t
with Hood's Mo. per box
Have arrived in the city
If you want good cart wheels
at see A. G. Cox, Winter-
ville. can get cart bodies
there also, or any repair work on
carts or wagons promptly done.
Saturday we were shown by-
Mr. J. J- Cherry a check for
payable to the mother of Mr.
W- E. Tucker, who died in July
and was insured in the Odd are proving themselves capable
lows order. very work to their
I r departments.
MR.
of the PAINT
COMPANY, of Peters-
burg, Va., is here at the
King House.
Parties who have
leaky or rusty Tin Roofs
should see Mr.
His Paint conies highly I
recommended. They
painted every tin roof in
Scotland Neck,
all who they worked for
speak of them and the
Paint as wonderful
Paint.
CD
-----Buy your Fall and Winter-
until you have looked at
DON'T
-S K BUY YOUR FALL AND WINTER 3-
Dress Goods,
Flannels, Hamburgs, Hosiery,
UNTIL YOU HAVE SEEN THE STOCK OF
DO YOU
WEAR
If so we can fit you both in Price and Quality.
J B Ladies
Latest styles in Knox, Dunlap
HATS
My stock was bought with the hard cash thereby enabling me to
offer you special prices.
O. T.
EXT DOOR TO BANK.
v .; . . .
.-. .
. w





Notice to Tax Payers.
LI A Tax List of town of
Wholesale Retail
GREENVILLE, C
Offers to the retail trade a
Family Groceries,
CROCKERY,
SNUFF, AC,
To the wholesale trade I am prepared to
give jobbers prices on
MEATS, SUGAR. COFFEE OILS.
Molasses, Vinegar, Matches. Star Lye,
Baking Paper
Beaks, Wrapping Paper and Twine,
Car load Flour, best brands, just received
Car load Bagging and Ties at bottom
prices.
Big lot to fit everybody.
Call on me when you want goods at
the lowest figures.
i r the MUM been
in my hands for collection, and
am required to make prompt settlement
notice is hereby given to the tax payers
the town to make settlement
with You can save both yourself
and the collector trouble not over-
looking this. G. E.
Town Tax Collector.
o t Ice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk Pitt county as
Administrator of the estate of Martha
A. Moore, deceased, notice is hereby
given to all indebted to the
estate to make immediate payment
to the undersigned, and all persons
having claims against said estate must
the same tor payment on or be-
fore the 17th day of September. 1895, or
this notice will be placed in bar of re-
This 17th day of Sept. 1894.
H. MOORE.
of Martha A.
I want Customers
You Want Goods.
Then call my store and we both can
get our supplied.
I am prepared to furnish anything you
want from a complete of
Merchandise
Clothing, Dry Goods, Notions,
Shoes, Hats, Hardware,
Tinware, Crockery, Staple and
Fancy Groceries,
ROCK LIME la any quantity.
Car load BAGGING and TIES.
You will find my goods all reliable
and prices low.
W. H. WHITE.
For sale by
I, Pi
N. C.
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT.
O- 3- JO X M Eastern
The Campaign in The State.
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO
JOTTINGS
We feel that it is pertinent just
Last Thursdays sale at the at this time to call attention to
Eastern was one of the largest of L, of being
the season. , ., ,
i concentrated by the people
Farmers all seem to be very , . . , .
, , ., ,. . and by press upon the
pleased with the prices to-, .
prices
is bringing now. There is
good money in at pres-
prices.
We never saw of all
grades selling better. Cutters
of a strong fight being
made for our State ticket. In
reading our State exchanges we
A from the country was
asked here on Wednesday last
what she thought of politics.
Her reply was that she did not
much about politics, but
that before the Third party came
into existence the people were
contented, satisfied and friendly,
and since that time there has
been strife, brother against broth-
father against father and
are well up, strip smokers and and to to some ex-
note that there is a tendency to against friend. This was
t, I good sense. She could the
national. . , , ,.
evil this party has brought
give prominence to the
fillers are in active demand and
wrappers, oh if we had them,
would sell out of sight.
Nine wagon loads of tobacco
over from the Hookerton
section of Greene county
week and in a solid train they
drove into the Eastern Ware-
house drive way, filling up the
entire space- These loads weigh-
ed over pounds.
HOW HIRELINGS DO.
tent the State issues and the State
ticket. In the rapidly closing
weeks of the campaign special
prominence should be given to
the State canvass and the issues
last i involved in it, the high character
and claim for recognition of cur
candidates for the Judicial offices
and for State Treasurer and the
very great importance cf electing
them as well as the Democratic
Legislature. Our people have
doubtless felt so certain of elect-
these gentlemen that but lit-
accent has been placed upon
their candidacies. The time is
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
LIT
We will fill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will fill them WELL
Heart Framing.
Rough Sap Framing, ;
Rough Rap in Inches HUM
Rough Sap Beards, A inches 67.00
The RAMBLER took five of the high-
est awards at the World's Fair and
holds U World's Records. The
pion rider of the South rides the Ram-
1803 at reduced price. Ml
Data all a-e strictly highest
grade. We make
Hues, Sell Ron. Tinware,
and do all kinds of Tin work, Roofing,
Guttering, Ac
S. E. PENDER CO.
Real Estate
and
Rental Agent.
Houses and lots for Rent or for Sale
terms easy. Rents. Taxes. Insurance,
and open accounts and any other
of debt placed in hands for
collection have prompt attention.
faction e I. solicit your
patronage.
We are toll by a gentleman
Greenville and
that a certain drum- j getting short and it is imperative
mer was at his house a few days that the greatest prominence be
trying to get tobacco, of j given to the State canvass- As
we recently stated, we have a
double enemy to and this
double enemy is combining
against us. It is not necessary
to the national politics,
but the importance of State Dem-
success should be pressed
home to our people. Urge the
club and local organizations and
committees to perfect our
and complete our
and to give a big majority-
All that is necessary is untiring
and zealous work. Let us not
fail to carry through our State and
county Globe-
upon our people. The devil has
no better workshop than through
these organizations. It bring-
dissension in the churches
and is sowing the seeds of dis-
cord in the
Progress.
It is the duty of every Demo
to vote the whole Democrat-
ticket. This is no time to
over men- We have an en-
on either side of us- We
have to fight with both hands
and if stop to see whom we
are fighting for our our own
ranks we may get left. Can men
go conventions and failing to
get their choice nominated
the ticket We think not
oil
Wait days for our Planing Hill and
we will you Dressed
eve I your door
cents a load.
Terms
tor pact patronage,
GREENVILLE X. C
GREENVILLE
MALE ACADEMY,
O.-
GRIMESLAND H C.
Call your attention to their
line of
Winter Bowls.
They carry a complete stock of
General Merchandise J
And can f
Everything yon Deed to wear.
Everything you need to eat.
Everything yon need about the
Everything about the
you need about the farm.
At prices M low as can lie had
Highest s for Cotton and all
Country Produce.
Returning thanks for past favors, a con-
of your patronage is
j. o. ft
1875.
M. SCHULTZ.
AT THE
OLD BRICK STORK
FARMERS
their year's supplies will id
their interest to get our prices before
is complete
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TEA, Ac.
at Lowest Market Prices.
TOBACCO CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
always hand fend sold at prices
the times. Out goods are all bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
M.
X,
THE GREENVILLE
IRON WORKS
JAMES BROWN, Pro;,.
x. c.
at xi Session or this
begin oil Tin the 4th thy
and c
mat moth
Prawn English
Higher English
Languages
ts no
18.00
The instruct ion will continue through.
Discipline mild oat If
an additional teacher will be
guaranteed when
enter early and attend regularly. For
further information apply to
W. II.
c. Wit.
obtained and all Pat-j
-r Fees. S
OPPOSITE
5.1 y
M I
Scad n or w-th
it or u,
due
to Obtain
Eba U. S.
to Obtain
THE
k Charles
lift,
Is prepared to give its the
benefit of Bank and Counting
House Practice in all their details.
and extensive experience has I
facilities such as cannot be found
elsewhere.
Commercial Shorthand.
Typewriting and Penmanship taught
by
free on application to
A. II.
Baltimore, Md.
L. n. DUELING,
Washington, D. C
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK.
the Cure of all Skin
Manufacturer of
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons, ac.
And dealer in
Pipe, Fittings,
Machinery,
Prompt careful given
pairing Sat-
guaranteed.
talc at prices.
GREENVILLE, N, C.
This In use on
years, and wherever know ha
been in steady demand. It has en
by the leading physicians all
and cures where
all other remedies, with the attention
the experienced have
for years Tins is
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entirely
-o efficacy, as but little
ever been made to bring it before
One bottle of this Ointment will
lie 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,
course-Failing to produce of
an impression by puffing bis mar-
he turned bis attention to
misrepresenting and abusing
Greenville warehouses, thinking
by this course to influence
co away from Greenville. Among
other things he said that a man was
silly to sell tobacco in Greenville
because the weight clerks would
cheat him out of six pounds in
the hundred, Ac.
Any man who would resort to
such a course of lying to get to-
to go to a market that was
paying him only 135.00 for his
services, could be hired to do
almost anything for a very small
amount of money.
This same man has been the
Greenville warehouse floors when
tobacco was selling really higher
than the market, and because it
happened to belong to one of his
customers, we have seen
him go behind the sale and try to
the farmer by tolling
him that the tobacco was cheap
would more on his
This man know at the
time he uttered the words that he
a base falsehood, or if
he he knows no more
about tobacco than a blind horse.
A man who would thus
his for the small
pittance of a month, and
knowing too at the same time
that word he uttered about
short weight and short prices was
an unmitigated falsehood, is too
low And utterly depraved to be
allowed the privileges of human
beings. He ought to be classed
among for truly indeed
they haven't the remotest
of the rights and
of others whenever their greedy
interest intervenes-
It is true the world is composed
of all kinds and classes of beings,
and it takes all and classes
of creatures to make a world.
But when there are plenty of wild
vicious beasts of the lower
animal kingdom to live and move
in the sphere for which they were
intended, we certainly fail to
see why man made after the
of God should get down on
a level and equality with them.
From time to time this year,
have been forced to write
such articles as this one, and we
want to say just here that it is
anything else pleasant to
write in such a strain, but so long
as loafing scalawags and
of the Greenville market
in around abusing,
by lying and all other kind of de-
hypocrisy, just so long we
are going to be found in th fore
front defending our market
against such vile and slanderous
reports. These tales have be
come so numerous of late that
not only those of us who are
interested but all lovers
of truth and justice are becoming
indignant, and unless they are
stopped, and that soon, there will
be a mighty nice opportunity for
somebody to employ counsel to
defend them in a slander suit-
The Populists drift as naturally
towards office as ducks toward
water. The only trouble i that,
they never get there.
Speculation as to a Future
in the Torrid Zone.
Control of the Legislature.
WANTED in each
A for special work. Will pay
a month. P. W. CO.,
Box 1767. Philadelphia, Pa.
FOR THIN
PEOPLE.
It makes plump round
out the figure. It is Standard Rem-
for leanness, containing no arsenic,
and GUARANTEED ABSOLUTELY
Price, prep per
Pamphlet. to
free.
GREENVILLE TOBACCO MARKET
REPORT.
QUOTATIONS-
to
to 7-00
to 10.00
to 30.00
to
to 7.00
best. 7.00 to 15.00
to 1200
to 25.00
Fine
There is no confusing issues in
the election in November. It is
simply Democracy
Co., wort
the WorM All for
of by the White
of tin Southern
For those who believe that the
world has been created
for man, it is, no doubt, difficult to
understand that any large portion
of it is to remain for an indefinite
period untouched by the plow or
spade. Hut those who have con-
the infinite life of nature, to
which man has no apparent relation,
especially who in the tropical
forests, where the foot of man has
rarely or never trodden, have had
brought homo to their imaginations
the thousands of generations of
plants since the world was evolved
out of chaos, and the millions of gen-
, legislation orations of insects which arc born,
, , ., I multiply and die in a day, find It
for it would take , , , . . ,,
, hard to believe that all this could
With a rattle-brain, revolution-
Legislature, more harm
could done in one session of
sixty days than six years of level
leaded
could
many to restore tho i for the benefit of
which would be shattered item of the creation, however
by the election of such a important, and will as readily and
judge of the effect I without more sadness contemplate
in this State by what the effect j hat
. , , ,, . . man for ages past will remain so for
has been in other States where I in the
this revolutionary element has
been in the and held j Possibly, however, the all-for-man
power. They have blighted the , theory may in tho end seem the
of every State where one even in this case. It may
they have made their power felt,
so would they blight tho
prospects of this State if they got I what is now the arid tropical desert
a position to put their j may be made to support flocks and
progressive-destroying herds in number beyond comparison
policies into effect. Give this those now in the country; It
. . i , i be that the gradual awakening
combination control of ; of from its long sleep
the law-making, a where the world
and law-enforcing depart- j will have to count with the power,
of the government and ow for the most part latent, of its
would be worse for Caro four hundred million of men, and
a and will be unable to prevent their
a- . . . m
overflow upon the vacant regions of
one even in this case.
he that in of discovery,
by water drawn from below the
earth or attracted from above, even
than if a or a
swept over it from the
seashore to the mountain crest,
for these would sweep over
leave desolation them, but
the people would re-build their
or burned homes,
find peace and content under
their roofs, but with the hell this
combine would kindle there would
be neither peace, content, nor
safety under any
ton Star-
Four Big
Having the needed merit to more than
make good all the advertising claimed
for them, the following four remedies
have reached a phenomenal sale. -t.
Dr. King's New Discovery, for con-
Coughs and Colds each bot-
Bitters, the
great remedy for and
Kidneys- the
best in the world, and Dr. King's New
Life Pills, which arc a public pill. All
remedies are guaranteed to do
just what is claimed tor them and
dealer whose name is attached here-
with will be glad to tell you more of
them. it John L. Drug-
Store.
Have you anything to do I Do
your Does it seem small
and not worth the doing That
makes no difference; it is needed
to make some larger work com-
And God and under-
stands- It is just as important to
Him that the hidden things should
be perfect as those that are in
sight; and when the sunlight of
eternity strikes your work yon
will be glad you wrought with
patience and skill, and were faith-
in that which was least.
There is more Catarrh in this section
of the country than all other
put together, and until the last few
was supposed to be incurable.
For a great many years doctors pro-
it a local disease, and
ed local remedies, and by constantly
falling to cure with local treatment,
pronounced it incurable. Science has
proven catarrh to be a constitutional
disease and therefore requires
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure,
manufactured by F. J. t o.
Toledo. Ohio, is the only constitutional
cure the market. It is taken Inter-
in doses from drops to a tea-
spoonful. It acts directly on blood
and mucous surfaces of the system.
offer one hundred dollars for any
case It falls to cure. Send for circulars
and testimonial. Address.
Co.,
O.
by Druggists,
the earth, that of
Australia included, it may be
that in the course of time there will
be evolved, by the survival of the
fittest, a purely English
having perhaps have the south-
overcome an original
incapacity to withstand the tropical
sun, will spread over tho wastes of
northern Australia, and increase
and multiply, and replenish the earth
and subdue it; or, again, it may
that the inclination of the plane of
the ecliptic, or a change, however
produced, similar to the many which
have already occurred on this planet,
will render temperate the now tor-
rid climate, and thus enable the
white race, without any such
cal modification In its constitution,
to occupy a country now unsuited to
Century.
The Illustration.
A bright young native of Japan,
who Is in business in this city, came
into the Express office the other
evening to learn the latest news
about tho war between his country
and China. He speaks English with
but. a slight accent, and his only
In expressing himself seems
to be rather in a limited vocabulary
than In Inability to pronounce the
words. Ho has the utmost
In Japan's ultimate victory,
and when It was remarked to him
that had a great advantage in
point of numbers, he
just like this. You have one
hundred one dollar. I
have one dollar-bill. That's only
one. My one Is as good as
This Japanese has evidently a full
appreciation of the advantages of
civilization. His simile was a good
one, and pretty nearly describes the
Express.
The Banana as a Food.
Tho banana Is a fruit that
wonderfully sustaining prop-
It is now fully appreciated;
yet years ago, in the warm countries
where It flourishes, it was thought
of so lightly that it was allowed to
waste if not eaten by the cattle. It
is true the plant itself was valued,
but simply as a shade for coffee
trees, between rows of which it was
planted. When In bloom, the
plantation is a sight of beauty,
the buds and blossoms being
tic affairs. In Cuba the fruit is
reared with exceptional pride. The
Spaniards used to regard the banana
a forbidden fruit, because they
believed they detected In its heart
action, the crow,
-c buying your new bicycle look
the field carefully. The superiority
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully
demonstrated as at present. Our line
will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and we
challenge comparison.
There's but one
. ,
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
BOSTON.
YORK.
PHILADELPHIA.
CHICAGO.
BAN FRANCISCO.
DETROIT.
DENVER.
NOTICE.
THE JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY
COMPANY contemplates making a
change in their firm and they
all persons indebted to them by note
or otherwise to settle at as the
present business will be changed.
We have a large lot of CA RT
WHEELS with IRON AXLES at TEN
DOLLARS a pair. ALSO a
large lot of good BUGGIES in pro-
portion.
JOHN FLANAGAN BUGGY
October 23rd, 1894.
lout of or
la ; iii . not;
Possibly
siting of Life Insurance
your special forte. Many
people have, after trial,
surprised
fitness for it. To such
Sit has proved a most con-l
genial and profitable
The Management j
of the
Equitable Life j
Sin the Department T
res to
Etc its force, i
of ; . j
I Write for . ;
W. J. Manager, s
Rock Hill, C.
OLD DOMINION LINE
T i i
Lie id Fire Insurance
GREENVILLE, N. C
AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At rate.
AGENT FOR FIRST-GLASS FIRE PROOF
SERVICE
leave Washington for
ville and Tarboro touching all
lug on River Monday. Wednesday
and Friday at A. M.
leave at A. M.
Tuesdays. Thursday Saturday
A. M. name
The departure are
of water on Tar
Connecting at
of The Norfolk, lien Wash-
direct Norfolk,
Philadelphia, New York and
Shipper order
marked via Dominion fr n;
new York.
Norfolk
Steamboat Haiti-
more. from
Boston.
JNO. SOW. Agent,
N-
J. J. Agent.
N.
Plants, nil
BERRIES.
I have 100.000 Strawberry Plants.
I Plants, ready in Nov-
Hyacinths. Tulips, Ac.
10.000 Vines.
The price of the Vines
has been reduced one half. I hive a
Hue lot of fruit and ornamental trees
nil kinds. Send for pi ices
low,
Greenville, N. C.
CATARRH
ELY'S CREAM
IN
II RAD.
BALM.
Is absorbed. Cleanses the Nasal
Passages. Allays and
Heals the Sores, Protects the
Horn additional Restore
the Senses of Taste and Smell.
Directions for Using Cream Balm.
a particle of well up
Into the MetrO. a moment draw
strong through the nose. Use
three times a day. alter preferred
and before retiring.
Price cent at Druggists or by ma I.
Warren
Notice to Creditors.
HAVING duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as
Administrator of the estate of B. Ty-
son, deceased, notice Is hereby given lo
all persons Indebted to the estate lo
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
against said must present the
same for payment on or before the first
day of October, or this notice
be plead In bar of recovery,
This 1st day of Oct.
W. B.
of B. Tyson.
i Sale of Hill Farm.
the decree rendered
at the March Term. of toe
Superior Court of Pitt county, on Mon-
day the 3rd day of December next, I
will sell at public auction on the
the well-known of Penny
Hill. The said tract land being fully
described In a mortgage from the late
James It. lo J re-
corded in county, in Book
page for a more particular de-
reference is had thereto. The
same will be sold in parcels to
Terms made known on of sale.
JOHN L.
T. -A.
1883.
Andrews.
n. c.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime
KEGS NAILS. AM, BIBS
Cases Sardines.
Bread
Soap.
Star
BOO Boxes Cake and Crackers,
Stick Candy,
Cases Matches.
Gold Dust,
Good Baking Powder.
Sacks Coffee,
Molasses.
Tons Shot,
Kegs Powder.
Cars Flour.
Meat.
Hay,
Tubs Lara,
Granulated Sugar.
P. Snuff,
Gall A Ax Snuff,
I R. It. Mills Snug.
Three Thistle Snuff,
Boxes Tobacco,
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes.
Old Va. Cheroots,
Cases Oyster,
THE OLD RELIABLE.
IS AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE--------
YEARS has taught me best Is the cheap-st.
Building Pumps, Farming and
InT for Millers, Mechanics and general purpose, a- well as
Clothing Hats. Shoe. Ladies Dress Good. I have always or. hand Am head.
quart. A for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark. O. N. Spool
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive
GREENVILLE. N. C.
SHOE
CORDOVAN,
Soles.
EXTRA
LADIES
, SE NO
Mass.
money W.
we ore the Of
In the world, and
the
the
OB
high
price, and the middleman;, profit. Oaf
equal work a U . ; My
A CO
N c
R. L. DAVIS A
N. C
t-ii
II r a
c a. E
ill
oil
Hill
v i
r-
u a
Is
HERBERT
TONSORIAL PARLORS
Under Opera
Call In when you want good work.
HAIR BALSAM
Hair to Its Color.
Curve It heir
COBB CO.
-AND-
Commission Merchants
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
mad
t-b f
Take In lime
To the Tan Payer of Pitt count.
The tax list the year
bean placed In my hand on first
Monday In September for collection, and
a I am required by law to make prompt
settlement of all taxes charged thereon.
I now notify tie tax payer, of
county that I m determined to i
rat self an I bondsmen all penalties
Imposed by law for to
my duty, In order to
and It will he heat for
owing taxes to settle
mentor I Shall i in
tame by at the moms
allowed. Don't this. I
it


Title
Eastern reflector, 31 October 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
October 31, 1894
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17717
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