Eastern reflector, 30 January 1895






JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all
in this line
NEATLY,
IN BEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best VOL, XIV.
of Stationery.
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
per Year, in Advance.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1895.
NO.
A SUCCESSFUL FIRM.
Yesterday the stockholders of
Durham Tobacco Co.,
at o'clock met annual meeting
offices this
city-
it of the Company,
submit
THEIR PICNIC.
MRS. M. I.
Tho
Col. Julian B
Stockholders,
the next largest in
The Nows and Observer is
abundantly able to hold its end
down in any controversy, and we People who knew anything said
do not to take a hand in its when Barlow Graham married that
tight with the Populist organ, but little Laura Cates-
we cannot from quoting a t their friends would have
. sentence two from an editorial
to take care of them for the rest of
According to public
report to the the Kern and Observer, who had Laura was a idle,
showing that the dared to the for girl, who knew nothing
displacing a white man it of taking care of a house, or a
the the hand either; and he
of . largest I The hadn't wit enough to cam his salt,
ii. point of profits, since the
of the is a citizen. He
The following gentlemen were has to bear the burdens of citizen-
elected Directors the He is the
Hies and honors of
Col. Julian Carr, his intelligence d
North II. Austin character qualify him for them,
Jr. Jno. V Dun laud the white man is entitled
can and M- E. Jr., of no other ground.
Pennsylvania. Col. Juliana To make the r. a
supposed racial inferiority
or
an
much less porridge- for two. Pretty
housekeeping there would be with
such a pair at the head Besides,
Laura was a spendthrift, just as her
father had been before her. Look
how she had squandered the
had left, in tine gowns to get mar-
in, Instead of investing it in
something useful, or putting it out
at interest And then the dear
public washed its hands of the
argument for dour jug to him the altogether, and took up
for charitable com-
was chi
President, at a salary of ten I fruits of bis achievements something
thousand dollars a which by to do him a gr to
the way. is probable tho largest J do great against i Laura and Barlow Graham fur-
speech, up a little cottage and went
to housekeeping. Their
in
plain
prosperous condition of the Com
warmly thanked Col.
Carr for his wise successful
People of all shades in our com.
unity rejoice in the good fortune
I bat comes to
Co., all feel
a measure it is -our com
arc proud to have
such an institution our midst.
Whatever said about
corporations, the Dur-
ham Tobacco Co., we will assert
seal, is not one of tho soul-
less hut is liberal,
handed just in all its deal-
and shows a soft spot
and a warm side for the interest
welfare of all its operatives
the community generally-
Hence its marvelous success.
Long live the and its own-
to enjoy tho love, confidence
and respect of Its neighbors, th
state and the
Sun.
A Sample
William Vickers, the
erstwhile Democrat, but now a
Pep-Con
in the lower of
about
rs.
had brought a
and sat down in front of their house,
they would have asked the grim old
dame and had a picnic with her.
They were bound to have a good time
in this world, and all the better be-
cause of their journey through it to-
j You
j The Reflector this year.
It will give the news
every week for
a year.
Reflector and Atlanta
a yr.
Reflector,
and twice-a-week
N. all for
a year.
THE GREAT CONDOR.
snail expect Warm at regular
blind
you shall have an of Known Flying Birds
servant We cannot afford i Inhabits tho Andes Mountains.
will be ever so
Haven't we always envied
the blind men who stood on corners
with a dog to guide i The condor of the Andes is the
hand organs grind, and a largest of known flying birds, and is
They
from Tip to Tip of Wins
Will
of Meat
Harlow was
cup, dear,
are the At
The bargain male by Butler
with Richmond Pearson and
rd. by which the
Populist vote was to be delivered
to the Republicans exchange
for a Senatorial seat fur Butler
a few of the loaves and fishes
for the in the Populist
ranks, been curried cut
good faith Pearson has been
elected to Congress, Pritchard
gets the short term the Semite,
and Butler gets the long term.
Al the fight have been
parceled out ; the legislative
mill has been set to work, to
ate places for a score or so more
of the faithful. So far, SO good.
But what about the mass
the down
trodden laboring man The big
bosses are too busy now to think
of things of minor
oh ye faithless
and unbelieving. Two years
from now, about election tune,
you will In looked alter again.
But until Adieu
Au Good bye
Pshaw Scat Skip tho
gutter Git
day they'll wander back
fellows who told you
they were going to make cotton
bring twelve cents a pound and
a dollar a barbel, and who
were going to distribute fifty
all over this
laud of the free and home of the
brave.
But they busy
busy, and you really must wait.
Time enough to attend to you
there's nothing else to do.
Wait, till tho tires,
Wait, till the century expire-,
Wait till you all men arc liars
on Herald.
the Legislature from Durham
county ; who voted for Abe
of a for as-
doorkeeper against Mr.
a one logged Confederate
soldier, who has a class in
the Second Baptist Sunday
came homo Sunday
to instruct his class in the s
of the After giving bis
class all he could think of he
went homo for dinner. In tho
afternoon ha took his accounts
Laura's dear friends were right.
She was no housekeeper, and poor
Harlow sat down to many an ill-
cooked meal, while she was learning
the chemical process by which the
raw material was to be converted
into delicious and nourishing food.
He could not blame her mother, for
she had died when Laura was a
baby, but he had no inclination to
blame anyone. had agreed to
picnic through life, and a picnic it
was. Besides, he made errors in
the counting-room where he was em-
cup to
laughing.
will carry the tin
and fill it,
little girl. I thought my
life was ended. Laura, can you bear I
will be a perfect she j
said, with tears running
she managed to keep
them out of her voice.
It was a perfect picnic in more I
ways than one. It rains at
picnics, and there was a rain of tears
for this, but also an intermittent
Sunshine that soon dried them.
It was decided at the store, when I
Barlow's blindness was announced,
that he was to have a vacation until
such time as the firm saw fit to sup-
ply his place, and for the present his
salary was to be continued.
That is what his misfortune did
for a soulless corporation drew
them out to a deed of beautiful
Then friends came to offer
assistance, which so far was not
needed. They came tearful and full
of conventional sympathy, and went
away wondering and rather piqued.
children who do not
the gravity of the
said one sympathizer with a sniff.
she talked about it as if
sudden blindness was a real bless-
said another.
But no one saw how exquisitely
pathetic the situation really
The two as they called
the subject of many interesting
stories.
The London zoological gardens
have recently acquired two new
condors, which are probably the
rarest and most valuable birds
by that great institution.
An artist who went to inspect the
new condors found them dis-
on the stump of a tree,
and was somewhat disappointed at
their appearance. Having read that
these birds occasionally measured
eighteen feet from wing to wing, ho
was surprised to find them consider-
ably smaller than himself.
The condor belongs to the vulture
family. Although its size has been
frequently exaggerated by travelers,
it undoubtedly attains a great size.
The ordinary expanse of the wings
in a full-grown bird Is said to be
about nine feet, and the height four
feet, but the wing measurement is
sometimes as great as fourteen feet.
The wings are long In proportion
to the body and extremely power-
The tail is short and wedge-
shaped. The general color is black
and is brightest in the males.
Around the lower part of the neck
there is a broad, white ruffle of
downy feathers. Above this tho
head is bare and of a raw
The male has a large cartilaginous
comb on his head and a
wattle on his neck. The beak is
very thick and strong and the upper
them, clinging together to the wreck j mandible is sharply curved at the
of their happiness, both willfully end. Tho condor could probably
went to collect rents ployed that nearly cost him his sit-
were due on several of his and they were both learning.
houses ii. rents in near town, Laura set before him one day a plate
stating that be considered it of biscuits.
more harm for him to collect his them all out of my own
rents on Sunday an it a head, and had enough wood left to
preacher to get his salary on make another she said, mer-
Sunday. Mo wonder he voted
f. r Abo you mean, sweetheart.
They are just like the biscuits moth-
-p. ., . ., . . . used to answered Harlow.
The News tells this Um at
story of the rather if facetiously, that it was
of work done by the same that Mrs. Noah saved
a mechanic e from the ark.
George W. Picket went out
to Mr. Henry N. a
time ago to build a new
dwelling for him. He it
on the same spot of his old house,
so George figured it d built
the new house over the old one;
covered it, then took the top off
the old one laid a floor, moved
the family up there, tore out the
old house, completed the new
and Mr. Albright in his new
home without moving. Did you
ever bear of such a thing in this
country
There were more failures, and
Laura sometimes shed a few tears of
vexation in secret, and then there
were more attempts, and at last
success came to stay. The cooking
was conquered, and Laura had won
ft graduate's laurels. She invited
her friends to dinners and teas,
which were highly praised, and old
housekeepers asked for her recipes.
It was a triumph of art, and Laura
was proud of her success, as she had
a right to be.
Now, strange as it may seem,
there is nothing so insipid as the
dead level calm of happiness. Pain
is healthful compared to the
of constant calm and sunshine,
and Laura was beginning to yawn a
little and feel bored now that every-
was
Threw Away the Paper.
They tell a good on the new
Populist sheriff of Cleveland
county- He received a document
in the mail the other day, but
after a careful scrutiny
fore and aft, he concluded it was
and no good, and his wife
concurring it this opinion, the
document was consigned to the
trash heap. official
J use waste The
man who used to be sheriff hap-
to pass by the new sheriff's
office about this time, and he was
called in and the paper fished
of the trash pile and the ex-sheriff
given an opportunity to pass
it and see what a fool thing it
was.
The man who had held down
the job of hanging the county's
criminals in the good old Demo-
days now gone, looked at
the paper a moment and said;
by this is a
warrant from the railroad tor
It is said that Colonel
ridge is very much humiliated at
the failure of his lecture tour.
We doubt it not. He could was
be made to believe that the pub- mistress of the situation. It seemed
regarded his association with as her life lacked the friction
Pollard as heinous toP from rusting.
until he started out bis Hut the two
. m , , lovers, until one day
lug tour. Everywhere ho was low Lama he
received In the South felt queer.
the cold shoulder was turned to; going to be ill, I she
him in the most unmistakable asked anxiously
manner. He has returned to Lei-, but my head is
a sadder and a wiser man. riding too much in th ,
Now he would do well to with-
draw from tho gaze of the public; i
Not more than usual.
for some i
patch.
Dis-
But no- j
that when I am at the books tho
figures swim before my
determination of arithmetic to I
the
It's queer and
That was a funny thing, sure
by the
typographical union of
resolutions or felicitation upon the That was all the preparation she
selection of Mr. C. had when a week later Harlow
ard for United States Senator, for his
the reason that he had been for a My God, I'm
short time, long ago, a Ho nearly fell into her extended
printer boy j and the arms- She him to a chair, and,
of the Wilmington Star that the another, sat down before
officers should assemble face was white, and her
and adopt similar resolutions, for lips quivered.
the re. i that Pritchard was is it, dear Have you seen
officer lunger than he was
a printer, is as pat as anything and he girl, have
could Observer. , you courage to hear
yes. Go
There are pensioners
I will never see again. It
, , . a never st
now on the roils, and it is but a clot-he called it some long
oh, Laura, what I
the pensioners now alive there-
fore are just about per cent,
of the entire force. Either the
Confederates shot as troops never
shot before or there is an
amount of lying and steal-
going on
Review.
A run on the Atlantic Coast
Line is reported of miles
r minutes, the engine pulling
Observer. them sleepers.
do with a blind man on your hands
play blind man's buff, as
used to do when we were
she said, smothering a sob.
be frivolous,
you arc In my hand
now, and I think I can manage, if
you will do it la my own way.
First, I shall fake your place In
cannot do the
can. And you can keep
blind together to the awful realities
of the situation, but keeping up their
courage by a fiction in which they
were tho principal characters.
kind of n dog will you
Harlow asked suddenly on the second
day of his affliction.
shall match the
said Laura, brightly.
must be
and intelligent. You will
enjoy training it,
shall tumble over it first, and
it will bite
will be part of the
They were getting used to the sit-
in this romantic way, and
Laura had their lives planned out.
She was to be the working member
of the firm, and come home at night
full of news for him, and they could
still take long walks together on
Sundays after church, and he was to
have a guitar and learn to play; she
had always laughed him out of it,
but now it would be his one re-
source.
what is there for me to do
while you work,
to wait, dear, like Milton
in his blindness. also serve
who only stand and
little he said,
will it
soon enough, dear, picnics
never last long. We'll get so used
to it we wouldn't have it different if
we
she went upstairs and cried
herself to sleep.
The next morning she was
by a joyous shout.
The sun is shining I
can see. Thank God. I can
was true. The clot had
the painless pain was ended. Like
a man who has been once tried for
his life and acquitted, it could never
be done over again.
The doctor said such occasions
were rare, but not unknown to med-
science. Harlow Graham was
as well as he ever was In his life.
won't be any more of that
said Laura, almost regret-
fully, although it been such an
awful to live up to for twenty-
four hours.
thank said Harlow,
won't have to keep
we won't need the
we haven't got him yet, so
he's no great
the
you can carry that, and
we'll see how soon it will be
a answered Laura,
shall be our Free
Press.
Cause for Suspicion.
had better watch the book-
keeper a said the senior part-
has been buying a bi-
cycle.
you can hardly call that an
said the junior part-
but it is likely to make
And the junior partner, who had
entered the firm by tho son-
in-law route, dutifully laughed.
Indianapolis Journal-
Remarkable Hailstorm.
The most wonderful hailstorm on
record as having occurred within
the United States was that at Du-
la., June 1882. It began
at p. m., and lasted but
teen minutes, but within that time
hail fell to tho depth of three feet.
The hailstones, which weighed from
one mince to two and one-half
pounds, were of all kinds of
tic shapes and were woven around
rocks, sticks, earth, beetles,
etc.
kill an unarmed man if inclined to
do so.
The condor feeds by preference on
carrion. It is quite unpleasant to
look upon and a disagreeable
neighbor, on of its appear-
its personal and
its habits in general.
It is an enormous feeder. The
naturalist mentions
case of one which ate eighteen
pounds In one day, and the next day
appeared to have as big an appetite
as if he had not eaten for weeks.
Condors often cat so heavily that
they cannot fly, and then if attacked
they disgorge their food in order to
o to git away.
Their usual dwelling place is at a
height of ten thousand or fifteen
thousand feet above the sea. in the
Andes mountains. They make no
nests, laying their eggs on the bare
rocks.
They usually live in little com-
Together they descend to
the plains for food and then return
to their mountain strongholds.
Tho condor is said to soar to a
height of six miles above the level of
the sea, or six times tho ordinary
height of the clouds. This is a
higher flight than that of any other
Y. World.
VS.
Grammatical Oddities Which Grate
Upon the Ear of Ed Readers.
The subject of pronunciation has
been up for discussion a good deal
of late. The following regarding
and should be of
interest, coming from the best
Don't is like dropping the
final g of the present participle,
of people of culture,
and Anthony Trollope con-
place it, along with ain't for
or in the mouths
of their highly bred characters. The
late prince consort used t. I
says a writer in the New York
Sunday from
memory from his by Sir T.
speaking of Princess
Beatrice as an infant, the prince
don't like Other
corruptions are, or were,
for for
for for
for
non for for
for
for The first duke of
as I have been told, always
It certainly does grate
upon the ear to hear don't used for
and yet we find it used in
the In the song
which Mr. sings on Christ-
mas eve at the manor farm,
And that's too strong, why, It don't last
As many hare found to pain.
n East they say
don't and didn't
which, though true, is slightly
grammatical.
What They Preached.
It was in a little town down on the
Maine coast where the folks, old and
young, knew all about the fishing
business, that the minister who was
teaching a Sunday school class on a
recent Sunday, propounded tho
were the disciples taken
from among the
fishermen and The
they had been a-fishing
long and made so lit t that they
were likely to starve, so tho Lord
took pity on them r and made them
Is said id have surprised
Journal.
HE STRUCK OIL.
And the Rancher Was Ever After
Wiser If a Sadder Man.
see petroleum has been
up in Marion county and a com
is buying up all the land in the
remarked a rancher,
and it was noticed that there was a
tinge of incredulity in his tone.
I believe they have struck
oil up that was the
testimony of one of his hearers.
I'll believe it when they
commence piping it into tanks and
not a minute before. I struck oil
that the way you made your
that's the way I made my
which the present time
lacks just of being a blamed
cent. Those are my liabilities; as-
sets nominal, as the papers
did it
it was this I had a
mineral spring on my ranch up in
Lake county, and the gas that came
out of it used to kill little birds that
came to drink.
I, and commenced poking around a
little with a spade. Then a yellow
greasy formed on top of the
water. says I, and I com-
tanks and tanks
of petroleum and barrels of money.
I got a cheap drilling outfit and
bored a hole down about eighty feet,
and all the neighbors sat.
laughing at me, but I reckoned on
having the last laugh.
morning when I went to work
the hole smelled awful strong of coal
oil, and the first lift brought up a
lot of oil burned for half an hour.
says I to myself, but
I kept it quiet. I let a few of my
friends in, we organized a company,
bought up all the land around there,
got an expensive outfit and com-
drilling. We punched the
ground full of holes for about six
mouths and couldn't find enough oil
to make a on dress.
It broke the whole crowd of
did you chance to strike
that little pocket of oil in tho first
just found out that one of the
neighbor's boys poured a five gallon
can of coal oil in the hole one night
to make me feel good, and, if any-
body should ask you, you can tell
them that I am feeling a blamed sight-
better than he is right now, for his
dad went broke on it too, and we
took turns about walloping
San Francisco Post.
THE ONLY EXCEPTION.
Cleveland the First President
Enter a Foreign Legation.
The fact that the president at-
tended the ceremonies held at the
Russian legation in memory of the
late Czar Alexander III., marks the
first occasion that a president of the
United during his term of of-
has, in his official capacity, en-
U foreign legation. It is a
well-known fact that the president
never accepts any invitation either
to dinners or receptions at a foreign
legation, and that throughout the
term of his office as chief magistrate
of the United States he has never
upon any occasion entered the doors
of a legation. The reason for this is
because in so doing be is conforming
to tho conditions of the constitution
of the United States. In that in-
is a clause declaring that
the president of the United States,
shall during the term of his
presidency, enter a foreign country.
As the legations in Washington
arc each under the flag of the
tries represented, they virtually
represent the countries Into which,
for the four years indicated, the
president is prohibited from enter-
That President made
exception to this rule was due to the
fact that the Russian legation
a church in which the me-
services for the czar were
held. As there is not Washing-
ton a Greek church, and to omit for
this reason the service that was held
would have been looked upon by the
Russian government as sufficient
grounds for a recall of their minis-
the legation was made to do
duty as a church. In regard to Pres-
Cleveland's action attending
the services at the Russian legation,
it would have been a grave
for him to remained away
upon such an occasion. there-
fore regarded the legation for the
time being as a church and the head
of the United States of America
went to pay the last sad tribute of
respect to tho memory of Russia's
dead Commercial
The Age of Books.
Verily, this is the ago of books.
The number of them piled in the
cellars of the is
is no other word for it
when one considers what the piles of
recorded thought signify. The dis-
plays In tho of these
house but the flotsam of the
great sea of literature whose cur-
rents swell in subterranean caverns,
ever spouting to the surface new
copies, and dragging to their depths
from some mysterious source to fill
their places still fresher volumes.
With what amazement would any of
tho old fathers of literature look
upon these outpourings of human
thought. Even so recently as Mac-
day there was nothing like
the book printing that there is in
Our time. And we can almost
how Dr. Johnson would stare
ho turned over the
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Baking
ABSOLUTELY PURE
MEDICAL PROVERBS.
Several Ancient Sayings Relating to
the Health.
The Yorkshire folk have a pro-
observation to this
Quickly quickly go.
Quickly will thy mother have
And this has given rise to a lot of
learned discussion, for there seems
to be doubt as to whether
means or the
former being the interpretation com-
accepted. Others insist that
early breeding of teeth is a
sign of a short in spite of the
notorious instances to the contrary
in the cases of Marcus
and
Richard III. Another proverbial
observation has it that would
be young when they are old must be
old when they are A theory
highly disapproved of by physicians
of the present time is that
and chicken must always be pick-
by which is meant that both
must eat often and but little at a
time.
Since we have mentioned the
here arc several ancient
proverbs relating Io
Wash your hands often, your feet
seldom and your head never.
The best physicians are Dr. Diet,
Dr. Quiet and Dr. Merry man.
Never touch your eye but with
your elbow.
After dinner sit
After supper walk a
Eat at pleasure.
Drink by
Cheese It la a elf,
It digests
Milwaukee Journal
LOVE IN JAPAN.
Discarded Suitor's Treatment of tho
Girl Who Jilted Him.
The steamer Janeiro, which
arrived recently from the orient,
brought the following from
A tragic episode occurred recent
in Two years ago a young
farmer In an out-of-the-way village
fell in love the pretty daughter
of a fellow-villager. They exchanged
vows and the girl received some
trifling gifts from her admirer
Called away soon after on business.
the young man kept up a desultory
correspondence with his betrothed.
As soon as he could he went back to
his native village, only V find the
girl false and the wife of another.
Hers, it appeared, had been merely
a girlish fancy. She was now the
contented wife of a man whom she
loved.
The disappointed suitor tried to
arrange a meeting with her, but all
his endeavors were foiled. Finally
he wrote to her insisting upon the
return of the gifts he had once made.
This the young woman foolishly re-
fused to do. The discarded suitor
that night forced his way into the
dwelling of his former love and her
husband. He cutoff the wife's head
in the barbarous fashion, and
then seizing the husband, who was
trying to escape, stabbed him to
death. Taking the woman's head
with him he returned to his own
house. He placed the head on a low
table, and, after upbraiding it in the
bitterest terms, deliberately cut his
own throat. Death was
Francisco Examiner.
SHE KISSED HIM.
TENNYSON'S FLOWERS.
The Poet Makes Many References ts
Beautiful Blossoms in His Works.
Tennyson speaks of skin as
clean and white as privet when It
and truly the privet, with
its prim leaves and small white
flowers, looks a very Puritan for
neatness and simplicity. Refer-
to tho flowers of our gardens
of course abound, and many will
cur at once to the Tennyson reader.
The rose and the lily play more than
a commonplace part in
where, indeed, all the flowers are In-
spectators of the drama.
Passages such as
walk of roses from door lo door,
A of lilies It lo the
from tho Idylls might have been
written by many others, and bell
flowers, though may be grateful
to Tennyson for preserving the old-
fashioned name,
are easily paralleled from many
poets. Perhaps beautiful line,
like an Alpine harebell hung
with deserves an especial
mention; ho has written a poem to
the snowdrop, which is styled
and It forms a fit-
of his picture of Ag-
which, as W. E. Henley
has pointed out, is so dazzlingly
In its whiteness, and a contrast in
Keats brilliantly-colored poem on
the same subject.
Of the early spring, with its
lets, primroses and crocuses, our
poet is never tired, and has avowed
his especial love for April, being an
Elizabethan In this as In many other
things, that It Is surprising to find
comparatively little mention of the
daffodil. It is hardly to be found
anywhere except in and
Sonnet to the Nineteenth
in this roaming moon
of daffodil and Perchance
Tennyson felt that it had been so
fully celebrated elsewhere as to be-
come hackneyed in spite of all its
Words.
Disheartening.
said Meandering
Mike, the most, I
ever
the asked Plod-
ding Pete.
place I stops asks fur
work they offer me
Thom of eases f have
been eared by Hood's This
i reason belief ii
cure yen.
Carte
V. ,
ft
N. O
After That There Was Nothing to
Do But Order Orange Blossoms.
A kiss once played an important
part in the life of the famous
Belgium statesman,
In his youth the future minister
was a poor student, bearing the
simple name of had great
difficulty in earning enough money
to keep him at the university till
was ready to pass his examination
In the department of law.
The young man foil in with a
Fraulein the daughter of a
wealthy and aristocratic family
who opposed his suit.
you pass your examination
well said Fraulein
on the eve of the trial to her
lover, to the theater and to
tho box in which I shall be sitting
with my
they allow asked the
student.
shall sec to was the de-
young woman's answer.
was successful, and entered
the box In the evening happy but
frightened.
The pretty girl, as soon as he had
crossed the threshold, stood up,
rushed toward him before a word
was spoken and kissed him heartily
on the lips.
The astonished parents were soon
informed of the significance of tho
kiss by the daughter. As many
other people had seen the young
girl's action, the parents decided to
make the best of it, and accepted
young as a son-in-law on con-
that odd to his
name.
This he did as a matter of course
and made it famous
F.
So; Civil
X. C.
Office Kin Heine.
DR. II. A. JOYNER,
DENTIST,
Office D E.
e store.
K. ii.
DENTIST.
t I c
J.
I.
Al
N. U.
i attention to
at Tuck, i ft old stand.
BLOW,
ALEX L. BLOW
AT
ill the
M. C
ft
Mention to
Jas. K. -looKS. Ii.
Greenville
A MOORE.
N. C
House. Third St.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
R E N V L E. .
in all th Collection





I The movement of Now
inc. L-co i
N. C. in spite of the warnings and
i I protest of the newspapers that
B. I Editor ad
at the at Greenville
X. C., as second-class mail matter.
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY 30th
Respectfully referred to the
Please change or
abolish days while you have
your hand in at the business.
The Reflector has received
from Hon. R. B. Lacy,
the eighth annual report
of the Bureau of Labor Statistics
of the State for the year 1894-
The total number of
grants arrived in this country up
to December 1st last year was
against the
corresponding period the year
previous-
The Wilson Mirror advocates
extermination of whiskey sell
while the two largest home
advertisements in that paper are
of bar rooms. That is
with a great big C
section.
THE LEGISLATURE.
Let us hope and pray for a
per reduction acreage and
a bale crop of cotton this
year. It would be one of the
greatest blessings that could
come to the South.
The progress of in
is one of the marvels of
modern church history. The first
five years of faithful Christian
struggle produced one convert.
In 1872 was the first
church of
members. Now there are
churches a membership of
Josephus Daniels has resigned
as Chief Clerk in the Interior
Department at Washington and
returned to Raleigh to devote his
whole time to the News
lie is a power in this, his
chosen profession, and it is better
for North Carolina to have him
hero at the head of this paper
than to have him Washington.
The gold reserve in the Nation-
Treasury has dwindled down
so low that another bond issue
seems inevitable- the face of
this it does look Congress
ought to be doing on
a financial bill.
A Fusion caucus Raleigh
Marion Butler, Harry
Skinner, Richmond Pearson, T-
R. D L- Russell to
draw up the bill for a new election
law and government law.
As the bosses direct the
will do
WASHINGTON LETTER,
The Scotland Neck Democrat
now issues six pages regularly,
its advertising patronage
necessitating the enlargement.
The is among the best
and ablest edited papers that
comes to this office we are glad
that it is so prosperous.
North ranks next to
Kentucky as a growing
State, with a crop last year of
to
for Kentucky. Virginia comes
third with
The total crop the country is
put at pounds.
If the legislature waste to do a
good thing let them railroad
through a bill to change the
western blizzard is beading
this way. There be no
to a bill of this nature being
introduced passing its sever-
readings all the same day.
Washington officials report that
for four months past there have
been more emigrants from this
country to Europe
grants to us. That is good, and
we hope the emigration will
continue. is more
scum the United States
we have any use for-
We see that is a
of the legislature visiting
the fair in a body. The
management of the fair had bet
keep a sharp lookout, or that
body might railroad through a
bill to abolish the fair
the time of holding it
bent on or
everything.
Washington, D. O, Jan.
Secretary Gresham will submit
some very interesting documents
to Congress response to the
resolution adopted by the House,
calling for information concern-
the expenses of the Untiring
Sea commission, appointed by
President the cost
to the United States carrying
out the joint treaty between the
States. Great Britain and
Germany to maintain the govern-
of Samoa. These documents
will show that members and sup
porters of the Harrison
are no position to
criticize th policy of the
present or any other
Senator Jones, of Arkansas,
introduced his financial bill the
Senate this week just as any
ordinary bill is introduced,
although lie had hoped that it
might have had the
the finance before it
was formally brought to the at-
of the Senate. The bill
authorizes the Secretary of the
treasury lo in his discretion
at per cent, up to
provides that the tax on
national bank shall be
one forth f one per cent,
that they may issue currency up
to the par value of the
deposited by them ; also, for the
unlimited coinage of silver, the
government to retain as seignior-
age the difference between the
market value of the bullion and
the face value of the money coin
ed. Senator Smith, of New
Jersey, also introduced a
bill, merely provides
for the issue of and the
establishment of a non-partisan
monetary commission, to
gate and report to Congress text
December. There is no apparent
change in the financial situation
the House, which has lately
been looking to the Senate, if not
for guidance, at least a pointer.
The income tax won easily
its first legal contest. Judge
sitting in the equity
branch of the Supreme Court of
of the District of Columbia, re-
fuse d to grant an junction asked
for to prevent the collection of
the income tax and decided the
tax to be valid. Appeal was noted-
MONDAY.
The principal new bills intro-
in the Legislature to day
were To provide a reformatory
for youthful criminals; to appoint
a joint select Committee of Re-
Reform of Pub
lie Institutions; to provide for
marking
made goods ; to protect and pro-
mote the shell-fish industry; to
provide for the study of vocal-
music public schools; to pro
penalties tor all
of food; to make sheriffs
other county officer
for more than two terms in
succession ; to the just
equal payment of the debts
of insolvents ; to provide for the
support of the public school by a
direct appropriation of
from the State Treasury. A
was adopted instructing
the Judiciary Committee of the
House to draft a bill greatly in-
creasing the jurisdiction of mag
so as to cover larceny
and abandonment- There was
considerable debate on a bill in
the Senate to restore per cent-
as the legal rate of interest-
Most of the discussion was on the
penalty clause of the bill.
TUESDAY.
Not many new bills were intro-
the Legislature to-day
Those of were to ex-
mills and iron fur-
from taxation, if built by
foreign ; to aid pub-
schools by local assessments ;
to repeal act giving
liens priority over mortgages; to
award public printing by contract;
to establish a criminal court cir-
for Rutherford,
Polk counties; to reduce
of State officers.
A committee was appointed to
investigate public expenditures
especially the Agricultural De
Bureau of Labor Sta
Geological Survey, it
being the avowed purpose of the
to consolidate all
these. A special committee on
election law was chosen, and was
given charge of the county-gov-
bill-
The election of was
held at noon. The vote was as fol-
lows For Marion Butler
C- Pritchard
in the Senate in the House,
for Thomas W-
Lee S. Overman
the Senate and in the
House.
WEDNESDAY-
nine hours as a day's work on
State contracts.
To provide for the election of
the Commissioner of Labor Stat
by the Legislature on joint
ballot; to prevent the adulteration
of candy; to allow farmers to
ship quail and other game out of
the State.
There was a sensation in the
Senate, caused during a discuss-
ion of judicial fairness, by a
of Senator Carver
who said that in a suit
of his, United States Judge
had been intimidated by a
layman, and that thereby Carver
had lost half his property.
SATURDAY.
The chief new bills
the Legislature to , were
To give the Alliance the
same privileges regarding
as are possessed by other
benevolent associations ; to
the Charlotte
burg railway ; to require
of all public teachers;
to regulate the appropriation to
the University ; to restore Mitch-
ell county to the Ninth
District; to provide for the
distribution of all the school funds
by the State boards of education
among all the counties upon the
basis of school population; to
allow punitive and not actual
damages in cases of railway
accidents-
Bills passed To so amend the
charter of the Stock
Mutual Insurance Company, of
as to allow it to have
a separate branch in each county;
to allow the rail-
way to extend its main line to the
river; to better protect
drinking water from pollution,
to equip the new female build-
at the insane asylum here.
Bills requiring railways to re-
deem unused
to provide for musical
in public schools were
tabled. The same fate befell a
resolution the election
of senators the people-
The event of the day was the
discussion of a bill to provide
that of the three members of the
township school-boards one
should be a female. The discus
attracted a large audience-
it was the first proposition of the
kind over made in this State. It
was tabled a vote of to 18-
Diversify your crops-
There will be a ball in Farm-
ville on February 14th.
See notice to creditors in this
issue by F. M.
Shad in Wilmington are sell-
for one dollar per pair.
WORDS OF WISDOM.
begins with
satisfied with
or change
seem
abolishing
were noble eulogies
the United States Senate last
Saturday on the life of the late
Senator Vance by Senators
B-m and Jarvis- No man has
ever lived in North Carolina who
held a warmer place the hearts
of the people than Senator Vance
did and the people are ready to
say to whatever may be
said in honor of the statesman
Now it is less than
gold reserve.
A war between
Guatemala
The Nicaragua canal bill passed
the Senate by a vote of to
The British steamer
has been wrecked and twelve
lives
A boiler explosion at
killed six wound-
ed seven others.
The measures re-
sorted to by the the
Legislature to unseat Democrats
and fill their places by Populists
deserves the condemnation of
every man who has any respect
for justice and law, unless we
are mistaken they are receiving
this pretty
ally- Nobody ever met which was
more regardless of every
custom of Legislation-
Hodges k White,
wholesale dealer,
caps, assigned,
f Norfolk,
hats
liabilities
Two well defined cases of
have been discovered near
Ohio.
Mamie a young
divorced woman at Savannah,
Ga., committed suicide by shoot
herself.
Lord
dead.
is
Hon. J. Jarvis is long-
a United States his
successor, Hon. J C. Pritchard,
having arrived in Washington
sworn in. Senator
has been short, it is not
record that other man ever
made such a reputation
took so prominent a stand in such
a short while as he did. He re
for a while from public life
no man in North Carolina
who has been in public service
as long as he can hare the
consolation of knowing that he
has made fewer mistakes than
Hon. T. J- Jarvis. It has always
been a pleasure for this State to
honor him and he has fulfilled
Two men held up and robbed a
train near Ark.
R. a newspaper
respondent, was killed on the
street in by
a lawyer.
The most important new bills
introduced in the Legislature to-
day To prevent
by insolvent corporations ; to
prevent to validate
deeds by corporations ; to provide
for the malting up of jury lists by
clerks of courts sheriffs
instead of by commission-
to provide for the collection,
arrangement and display of North
Carolina's resources at the At
Exposition by appropriating
to restore to the tax-
lists all lauds which taxes have
not been paid for three years ; to
provide for the maintenance of
Agricultural
College, slightly increasing the
appropriation.
A bill passed the Senate
May a legal holiday,
one was tabled to repeal the
tax. There
was a prolonged discussion of the
per cent- interest bill the Sen-
ate, and it passed, only two votes
being cast against it. It provides
that per cent, shall be tho legal
rate for such time as interest may
accrue do more ; that a viola-
of this rate shall for
of entire amount, that
a person who has paid n greater
-ate recover, bringing
suit, for debt twice the amount
of interest paid. Such action
must be brought wit hi u two
years of payment of the indebted-
There was a hot partisan
debate in the House in
contest from Pamlico county,
which resulted in the seating of a
by
The principal new bills intro-
in the Legislature to -day
were as To prevent any
save chartered companies from
doing business North Carolina ;
to improve the public roads by
convict labor ; to equalize
; to encourage the study of
civil government in the public
schools ; to abolish days of grace
to limit to the of
potty larceny to award the pub
lie printing binding to the
lowest bidder. There was a pro-
longed and heated debate the
House on case from
county.
The on the
Committee all signed the
majority in favor of
the contestant, and while
the minority contend
ed for the rights of Lyon, the sit
ting member. Crews was seated
by a strict party vote of to
Tim is the fourth Democrat
seated in the House- The case
all way.
NORTH CAROLINA
Happenings Here and There Over the
State.
Two barracks at the Davis
Military school, Winston, have
been destroyed by fire
Mr. A- A. baker, of New Jersey,
dropped dead while hunting near
Thursday.
N- Y- World almanacs for 1895
at Reflector Book Store.
See notice of division this
issue by N. S- Peel, of Martin
county.
The will
soon begin preparation for early
vegetables.
The rain Friday night washed
up some of the newer budges
around town.
A box car of the freight train
jumped the track in Washington
last night. No damage.
Friday night's ruin seems to
have been general. People from
various sections of the county say
it was tremendous.
Kinston and Scotland Neck
are both talking of building to-
warehouses. Greenville
better begin to hustle get a
factory.
So many people have asked
Mr. Andrew if he was go-
to move in the that
he requests us to say that he has
moving out of
ville-
J. A. Ricks k Co. doing
at the furniture Racket
have dissolved
ship, Mr- Kicks pure the
interest of Mr.
Mr. J. L. of Falk
laud, on killed two
hogs weighing 3-5 and
making
for both. Mr. is not a
farmer,
Mr. J. L. Sugg, local agent, re-
Monday a check for
from the Mutual Benefit Life In-
Co-, of Newark, N J-, on
the life of Mr. Jesse V. William
son. If you need insurance yon
should see Mr Sugg-
Mr Allen Warren, of Riverside
Nursery, says he thinks this is
going to be the best fruit year
we have had in several years
past. The Sheriff is a good judge
of the and we hope he
will strike it right in this
Sin nearly always
a look.
A loafer is never
his wages.
If you are not made bettor
giving, double your
The easiest thing for a fool to
do is to tell how ho
Sec here I'm going to make
Mr. B. C- Pearce turned over
on Monday to the public school
committee, Messrs. J. S- Smith,
J. White and B- F. Sugg,
the amount realized by the Chick
Concert Co., for seats in the pub-
school building- They will
let out the contract at
The man who hates light
always afraid of his shadow. I
When people have only a little
religion they are apt to be
ed of it-
Angels weep on tho day that a
young man begins to spend more
money he can make-
Some fiddlers can a tune
on one string, but it never makes
anybody want to dance.
A hypocrite better
with himself every time he
sees a good make a misstep-
You generally tell how
much love there is in a
heart by tho way he opens his
mouth.
Prospering in a way is
very apt to make men stop pray-
that they may be pure in
heart-
There are who never
heard any music that suits them,
except they are playing
first fiddle.
One of the first covenants that
every young man ought to make
with himself is that never
run in debt
You can generally tell how
much love there is a man's
heart by tho way he opens his
month.
Prospering in a worldly wry is
very apt to men stop pray-
that they may be pure in
heart.
There are people who never
hear any music that suits them,
except when they are playing
first fiddle
of the first covenants that
every young man ought to make
with is that he will never
run debt.
Every has a dagger in its
hand with sooner or later
it will strike, matter how
it may
born.
Every has a dagger in its
hand with which sooner or later
it will strike, no matter how
harmless it may look-Ram's
sweep of my
I at still
reduction and if you will come to
my store and let me show them to yon, you
will not go out without buying one of those
fine suits.
I must make room
for Spring
and will greatly
reduce prices to
clean out.
SHOES
Bay State and other brands which I have just
received and they are beauties. All shapes
lace
ladies and
Conic to see
and sizes
for men,
and button
children.
before you buy and you will go away
satisfied in price and quality.
keep a complete line of-
Fire did damage
Hotel New York.
A financial panic
N.
banks are trouble.
Y.
to
An fit at a mill tear
W. two
men and seriously injured two
others
Masked robbed the
exp office at Texas,
of Four of them were
cap eel.
Suit for damages has
been brought against the Norfolk
Pilot Publishing Company by
Hon. John E- Massey,
FRIDAY.
The Senate passed a bill re-
freight shipments by
providing that
freight must be shipped within
days, and if not, the railway
is liable for twice the amount of
the freight. Perishable freight
be shipped within two days,
and if not, company is liable
for twice the freight and pen
for each Gay's delay.
The new bills intro
To regulate the
hours of labor in factories,
hours a days work, or not
over hours a week ; for
bidding employment of children
under years ; em-
not to make agreement
not to join labor unions- No
women or children are to work
between P. M- and A. M.
No child under is to be per-
Mayor Link, of Durham, died
Saturday morning,
while riding to the depot to de-
part on a train.
county reports the
champion hog raiser- A man
there Killed a hog two and a half
years old that weighed thirty
pounds.
Ella Norwood, who killed her
own child, and was sentenced to
be hanged at Durham, has had
her sentence commuted to life
by Governor
The Atlantic Coast Line will
build another bridge across
river at The new
engines this company uses are
too for the Seaboard bridge
over which they pass.
The University appropriation
bill before the Legislature pro-
that of the present
appropriation shall expire after
nest June, and more one
year later, leaving as the
annual appropriation.
The tells of a drunken
colored man being killed in
bury. An engine run over him
literally tore his limbs in
pieces. The man lived three
hours after the accident.
The Statesville Landmark re-
ports the finding of dead
body of a colored man hid in a
clump of in Iredell
The man's skull was crushed.
He had been missing since Dec.
24th-
It is said
that during tie recent big freshet
in Deep River a party of sports
men killed rabbits on an old
fence in the lowlands near Gulf
where the high water had caused
them to take refuge-
Mrs. M. B. Brown, of Washing-
ton, has presented her home to
the Ring's Daughters of the
State to be used as an orphanage
for imbecile children. The
will be asked to make an
appropriation to such an orphan-
age
Deputy-Revenue-Collector J.
H- and his posse of
three men had quite an
with moonshiners the other
day. They hired a carriage at
Oxford and drove out in the
try in search of an illicit distillery.
Some part of the car- broke
they obtained another vehicle
and drove on- When they re-
turned to where they had left the
carriage standing in the road
they that moonshiners or
their sympathizers had with axes
cut the carriage to pieces and re-
it to wood- The
wheels were hung up a tree-
Hatteras Light House.
Capt. Mills, engineer secretary
of the light house board, has re
turned to Washington from an
official of inspection to
shoals, off Cape Hatteras,
N- C. He reports as the results
of his investigations as to the
character of the sands and coast,
that he found nothing to change
the opinion of the light house
board that it is entirely
cable to erect a light house on the
shoals.
Congress has
of to begin the
work limited the total cost to
The pleas are in an
advanced of preparation
A Pointer.
An interesting Coincidence.
Maj. J- W. Wilson, Chairman
of the Railroad Commission, re-
calls to memory an interesting
coincidence in with
the of Stales Sen-
by the Legislature. In the
General Assembly of 1885, Hon.
W. Mason was in the Sen-
ate and Hon. Lee S. Overman
was a member of the House.
Both of these gentlemen made
the leading speeches in that
Assembly, the one in the
Senate and the other in the
House, nominating Hon. Zebulon
B. Vance for United States Sena-
tor. In the present General As-
Capt. Mason Mr.
Overman were themselves the
nominees of the Democratic
party for the same high position.
Wilmington Star.
always something
for idle hands to do. A very
large percentage of criminals
comes from a who will not
employ their brains hands
the prosecution of some use-
enterprise. Boys who grow
up idleness give no promise
for the future. Those having the
training of children id
should bear this fact mind and
bend their energies toward in-
stilling the youthful mind a
love for honest toil. By paving
proper attention to this subject
parents teachers can relieve
themselves of a vast burden of
responsibility and become con-
factors in solving the
problem of lessening criminal
Sun.
Goads, Mil, Is, Cans,
Furnishing
which arc also in the reduction and can show
yon great bargains.
Conic and see
FRANK WILSON
The Leader
Clothing.
Gold and Silver.
The whipping post seems to be
coming to the front A bill has
been introduced in the New York
Legislature to establish it in that
State, and in a bill has
been introduced allowing jurors
to substitute whipping in lieu of
imprisonment and fines for per-
sons convicted of petty larceny.
Something everybody wants,
something all get by securing
a copy of Vick's Floral Guide for
1895, a work of art, printed in
different tinted with
colored plates. Full list, with
description and prices, of every-
thing one could wish for
table, fruit or flower garden.
Many pages of new novelties, en-
cased in a chaste coyer of
and gold.
Unusual and astonishing offers,
such as Sweet Peas for cents a
pound, for a name for a
New Double Pea, etc. If at all
interested in or plants send
cents at a copy of
Vick's Floral Guide, which
amount may be deducted from
first order, to James Vick's Sons,
Rochester, N. Y-, and learn the
many bargains this firm is offer
The Philadelphia Record
that Delaware inaugurated a Gov-
Tuesday that can neither
read nor write. For the first
time in tie history of tho State,
there was no inaugural s
and this, according to the Record,
set people inquiring- Joshua
was the Republican can-
last fall and was elected-
He is a business man of good re-
and worth at least
which he made by hard work
shrewd investment. can
his name. Knowing his
weakness, the Record says, he
cured the services of N. P. Smith-
era, a leading lawyer, as
of State, and Smithers will
virtually be the Governor.
am pleased to state since
from my recent . have
recovering
VI
Cotton and Peanuts.
arc Norfolk prices of
XI
7-10
for yesterday, as
by Cobb Co.,
chants Norfolk
COTTON.
Good Middling
Middling
Middling
Ordinary
Prime
Extra Pi j
Fancy H
Spanish
at IS to ct.
U. E. lo poring.
damaged. to 1.75.
Black Co lo per bushel.
man in Greenville who.
voted the Populist ticket in No-
is ashamed of what his
gang are doing in Raleigh and is
mighty sick at seeing the whole kit
Radicals together. Wonder how
like
ARE YOU
constitution undermined by ex-
in eating, by
the laws of nature, or
physical capital all gone, if so,
NEVER DESPAIR
Liver Pills will cure you.
For sick headache, dyspepsia,
sour stomach, malaria, torpid
liver, constipation, biliousness
and all kindred diseases.
Liver Pills
HORSES
AT AUCTION.
At our stables in Greenville on
we will sell
A LOT OF GOOD
Mill
at Auction. They will
be sold to the highest
bidder without regard
to price. No stock put
up will be taken down
or bought in for us, but
will be knocked off to
the highest bidder. . .
the northern markets to purchase
NEW GOODS
and am now prepared to show you
------site line of------
Dry
HATS, CAPS I
Furnishing Goods, Etc, Etc.
You will find all my goods strictly prices
Come to see me and let me show you what can do.
lo
WILEY BROWN,
GREENVILLE N. C.
J-
ESTABLISHED P.
A.
C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
KEGS N AILS, ALL SIZE.
Ca-cs Sardines,
Bread Preparation.
Soap
Slur Lye
Boxes Cakes and Om
Stick Candy,
Cases Matches,
G Must.
Good Luck Powder.
Sacks Coffee,
Bills Molasses,
Tons Shot,
Kegs
Cars
Meat.
Tube Lard.
Granulated Sugar.
M V.
Call A An Snuff,
R. K. Mills
Three Snuff.
Tobacco,
Dukes v. M. P.
Old Va.
Cases Oysters,
L.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.





THE REFLECTOR.
Local Reflections.
Cold waves are weekly visitors-
Factories are what we in e
to grow
tar
load just
D. W.
Cotton Seed wanted for Cash
I going tO be lOSt I at Old Brick Store.
in the Or SOaked j and cheap Oak
in the SOUP Not if I up stuns, Old Brick Store
know I am here to
D- M. Ferry's Now Send
Compete With all the Old Store.
stock against stock; or
and dollar against Doors,
I am after the d. d.
Shining
Shekels
An early spring is predicted
We Lope the will come
true-
Complete of Dry
at
and expect to
by giving value for
them. I don't want
on any other terms. I
you'll find me
Death on
the Dicker.
I take no man's dust
on the trade track. I
won't be bluffed out of
the business game. I
now have ready a fine
stock of Fall and Win-
Goods and they are
all marked at a low
price. Come and size
them up and you'll see
I'm
Fixed to
Stay in
the Game
No or she-
with me. A fair
deal to all is my motto.
Next year will yo At
mat there will not be
leap year
Remember I take
I measure and have you a suit o
Come and see me node to order,
Frank
Two car loads of horses arrived
Thursday for it Edwards
and ii- L. Smith Co.
Buy and
at the
Old Brick
A colored train hand foil off a
box car at
and was hurt nut badly.
Do you want pure water
D Haskett just received
Remember pay you cast, for Chicken
Eggs v Produce at the
Brick Store.
be taken
of every to
the interests of
Jest received car load of
Flour, lowest
D-
There seems to more shoot-
at in certain
portions of town
law allows-
machines from
Li New
Narrow Escape.
Mr. W. E Belcher went out in
be country on horse back Friday
night. While Hie
load the stumbled fell,
Mr. Belcher off and fall
in over on him. Fortunately he
escaped with no injury except
being considerably bruised.
List Your Purchases
Register of Deeds says
the merchants are forward
very slow to list purchases,
a few cf them having so far
complied with tho law. This
should have been attended to by
the 10th of the month- He asks
us to request them to delay
A hint to the wise should
be sufficient.
Marriage Licenses.
Last week Register of Deeds
King issued licensee to sis coup
four white two colored.
The whites are James and
Anna Joe J.
Little, Moore
Lucy C- Brown,
Lillie Askew. The colored are
Elias Washington Ellen
Joseph Gray and Ellen
Cooper-
Joke on Somebody.
Last week Deputy Sheriff H.
T. King with Mr. S- I. y
a special deputy to Raleigh
to take three prisoners to the
The News and
server printed it that the Sheriff
of Pitt was there with four
for the Now the
arises, which one of the
passed as the sheriff and
which made the fourth
prisoner
AND
Boys Clothing,
Cents
5th and Evans St.
Greenville, N. C.
Read the
BULLETIN
Bung seed
Maul Halls. Car load of each
just sale cheap.
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at Old Brick Store.
Mrs. J. C- Tyson is sick.
Mr. R B. Morgan is quite sick.
Miss is sick.
Col. Harry Skinner has to
Raleigh-
Mr. of Plymouth,
is in town.
Mr. R B- Smith, of Halifax, was
in town Saturday.
Dr. H. O. Hyatt, of Kinston,
was Monday.
Mr. W. A. Fleming, of
was here
Mrs. W. M. Brown has returned
from a visit to Kinston.
Miss Lena of Farmville is
visiting Airs. J- A.
Col Skinner returned
evening from Raleigh.
Mr. E. A. returned Sat
night from Raleigh-
-Miss Emma Mayo, of
is visiting Mrs- Andrew Joyner.
county, is Mrs. Ii-
White.
Mr- B- F. Sugg returned Thurs
day evening from a trip to
Miss Emma Harris went to
Ayden Saturday to visit
friends.
Miss Lissie Brooks left Friday
morning to spend a few days at
Mrs. Georgia returned
Saturday from a visit to
Kinston-
Mr. Z. P. Highsmith has been
to Oakley to spend a few days with
ills father.
Mrs- M; Brown left Friday
evening for Kinston to visit Mrs.
U. K-
Messrs. O L P H.
man returned Thursday
from
Miss Sue House is speeding a
days with friends and
in town.
Robbery.
Mrs. M. E. Allen, of Lewiston, night some one
Bertie Co., is visiting the House the store R. Cory by break
near Greenville. j door
Mr. J. H. Small, one of a lot goods- Cory tells us
leading spout the thief got three pair of pants,
Friday and Saturday here a pair of shoes, shirts and
. j underwear, two pocket kt
end what small cl was left
in tho money drawer, the goods
IS YOUR UNDERWEAR.
Perhaps you arc particular about
re. Needs to be well other friends.
Good Underwear has warmth and lasting
Pitt Takes Lead.
Mr. W. J. Jackson, of this
county, has received a check for
as a premium for selling the
best pounds of tobacco raised
last year from Orinoco
Mr- Jackson sold
at Warehouse
for county has
this premium for three years.
Mr. also had some fine
tobacco on exhibition at the last
State fair won three
on it.
ALMOST WRECKED. I
The A. Large Liable to
Collapse at tine.
The hard winds of last Friday I
night and Saturday nearly wreck- j
ed the large five-story prize house
of Hooker St Bernard occupied
by the American Tobacco Com j
The South end of the first i
is bulged and careened j f like
it is about three feet out of .
and the windows are that If YOU W AIM A WARM
The west side is sunk in ., ,, . . i i p v
and warped out of it fins winter, buy underwear men,
the ground floor is badly I
strained. From the second story I
up building seems to be in-
tact, but with the immense weight
of tho building large stock of
tobacco bearing the displaced
first story it is doubtful if the
building can be saved. Its
became so dangerous
that the hands deserted
it, and tho remainder of that day
and the collapse of the
building was looked for tit. any
moment. It is standing yet,
efforts have been made to brace
it that hands can go in
remove the stock of tobacco.
Hundreds of people have been
out to look at it. This is the
same building that blew down
last July when raised to the
fourth story and injured Several
The loss caused
its condition will be
heavy upon the even if it
be saved short of a total loss
The American Tobacco
have some tornado insurance on
the stock of tobacco but not near
enough to cover the large
stored in the building-
The disaster is an
fortunate one, as the loss
sustained to the building and
stock a large number of hands
will be temporarily thrown out of
employment. hope the build
may be saved falling
and be strengthened to make
is substantial, but the outlook for
it is bad.
Three Falkland Items.
Miss Becca is vis
Miss May Harris.
Mr- C C Vines is building a
house-
Mr. John Moon has moved
into the house I occupied
by Mr. W. T. Pierce.
Mr- W. B. Grimes, of
in on tie train Thursday
buy WONt down to
Mrs. J. E- of Rich-
arrived Thursday night to
visit Mr. Mrs. J- L-
Mr. Edwin Mines, of Sampson
arrived last Friday to
bis brother, Mr. W. C
The wife of Mr- Allen
died night at their J
home three mil's from
Deputies H. T. and S- I-
If you see us on street Dudley left Thursday
when you ate in town, call at the colored to the
office renew your penitentiary.
subscription for this year. ,, . ,, ,, ,.
Mrs P. Hall
and money amounting to about
Other goods were left scat-
tho show c; the
thief seeming to want only men's
wearing apparel nod
and children
Cash always Days goods
My motto is, for cash,
D. V. HasKETT-
returned Saturday fro i.
where they have been
spending several weeks.
A family by tho name of Harris
have moved down hero in
county will farm tho
lauds of Mr. Jacob Joyner
Difficult Operation.
Dr. Charles
assisted Began, Bag-
well and P. W. Brown, of Green-
ville, Hyatt, of Kinston, J.
Taylor, of Wed-
removed a large tumor
from the stomach of Mrs. Thomas
who was brought here to
Ml. the House to undergo the
has commenced on Mr.
J. new residence just
beyond railroad Fifth
street.
New assortment of Bibles from j Mr. J-H- Tucker, of Asheville,
American B. S-, just received. ; arrived on evenings train.
Willy Depositor. friends here were glad
opportunity of a life time He Mt Monday-
To a Heater at I Lettie music
they sell in other towns at teacher at the Seminary, left
9- O- D Haskett. j Friday to spend a few
After nightfall bright lights i days at her home in
from burning tobacco beds cat.
be various directions
from town.
Use Orinoco Tobacco
The highest price sold in
Eastern North Carolina in 1884
was made from Orinoco Tobacco
Mr. E. A. went to Ply
month Sunday. Re will be there
a few days packing up tho Racket
Store stock to move it to Green-
ville.
Little Charlie Borne a few days
was . r. a . , ,. .,
Call on G M. Tucker, of
Greenville, A G Cos, Winterville residence,
Ormond Turnage,
ville, R. L- Davis A- Bro., Farm-
ville, J. L- Fountain,
badly hurt.
Mi. Herbert White, of Greens-
Have yon malaria if so you I
get it by drinking impure water. h W
The remedy is one of D. D.
Haskett Drive Pumps,
Tho early fishermen have com-
skimming for shad. We
have not heard of any being
caught here yet.
The horse auction Saturday at-
a large crowd to Tucker
stables. Several
good animals were sold
He is representing an insurance
company.
We learn that Mr. T. J. Camp-
bell, who for sometime has
living at Newport, has
moved back to North Carolina
located at Asheville. He is a
brother of Mrs- A- J- Griffin of
this town.
operation. The tumor weighed
and
pints of fluid. She died that
evening about o'clock. Mrs.
Tyson would not to an
sooner and neglected it
too long for her life to be saved.
Kelp the Editor.
Local editors are blamed for a
great many tilings they can't help,
such as using partiality men-
visitors; giving news
about ; folks and leaving
others, so on. He prints all
such items that he can find
Some people inform him of such
things and others do An
editor should not be expected to
know the names and residences of
all arrivals, it is frequently
the case that he is unable to
ascertain them- If you will make
it a point to tell us these things
we will gladly mention them.
We wore glad to meet friend P.
, v Ennis, of Raleigh, at the depot
Friday at tho Eastern V ares j L
. m n v I Thursday. is
a. If. Heel . . . . , . j
a. f the department
pounds of tobacco for
I hat was a good sale for a barn
through.
First of the
Spring Oats, Cheap at the Old
Brick
Axes at cents, Shovels at
c and Stoves at are to Miss Lena Davis,
some of low prices at D. f town. The bridal party
Haskett e. will return to Greenville Thurs-
The wind Friday night blew day evening.
down a Mr. H. C- Edwards . . . , . r
W e welcome to our city Mi- o.
R- King and family, who have
has been making a tour
the eastern
Mr. R. L. Humber,
ed by Messrs. Brown and
D. J. Whichard left Monday
night for Beaufort where Mr-
Humber will be married Thurs-
LANG
will tell
the news
next
Week.
barroom. A shin-
was the only damage to the
building-
Rev. I. L. Chestnut, for whom
an appointment had made
to preach in the Baptist
Sunday night, could not come.
A congregation assembled ex-
to hear him but were
disappointed.
Plenty of land blanks
at Reflector office now, also
chattel deeds and crop
liens.
For good reliable Shoes go to
Wiley Brown.
People who write should make
a note that Diamond Inks t
be surpassed. Sold only at Re-
Book Store.
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.
moved here from Falkland, Pitt
county, are domiciled in
I he Arlington building. Mr. King
is the traveling representative of
Messrs. F- M. Baker Co,
more, and has made this move to
be re centrally
Headlight.
These Bonds.
The Board of County
rejected the bonds of W. H
Harrington d. A-
They both gave notice of
peal. The bond cf R. W. King,
who was elected by the Board
December, was tendered
and the oath of office ad-
ministered. King's bond was
perhaps the best ever given
an officer in Pitt his
sureties being worth between
and John
Flanagan, who was elected Treas
by the Hoard in December,
having declined to qualify in.
successor will be elected at their
next meeting- The Reflector
will give some figures in a later
issue that will show why the Com-
missioners rejected the bonds of
Harrington
Note,
Mr. O. I. was in town
Mr. Frank Mart has m int
his new store and will b ready
for the spring trade-
Ayden, N. C-, Jam heavy
rain storm visited section last
night- No damage
A tn weekly mail route has
been d en Ayden
and to take effect arch
4th-
Our town was of drummers
yesterday, them being
clever fellow J. B. Bell, with
Paul D. Howard, of Norfolk.
was jovial as ever.
here is dull, while p u
Greenville ire busy g
w nothing.
The advantage of ha tobacco
warehouses see.
Ayden. N. C. is
coming; machinery for a to-
flue factory is on the way
a gentleman from
will manage it. It will be ready
for work a few days.
YOUR NEXT BEST
Is your Overcoat and Clothes, and if your pock-
is not heavy laden it is just the same, for
our prices on Clothing are so low every one
can buy. No doubt you have heard about our
Dress Goods prices. The ladies of Greenville
are all talking about the elegant prices
so low. I remain, respectfully yours,
f,
Next door to bank.
All the above goods will be sold at as near
cost as possible for the next days in order to
reduce stock for spring goods.
Offer the best selected line of t
. mm
Noter,
C I- Harry Skinner Deputy
Sheriff 11- T. King passed through
hero Sunday.
Mr- John and wife, of
Elizabeth City, are
in town-
G- A. Hill's standard
Company will exhibit here
the entire week.
At tho residence of the bride's
father, Mr- Newsome
Wednesday evening. January
1803, Mr-Henry James was
married to Miss
U. C- Moore Esq. officiating.
There were ten couples in
dance. Immediately after the
marriage the bridal party went to
house cf the groom whore an
elegant supper awaited them.
The bride groom were the
recipients of many handsome and
valuable presents.
Best
The on Hood's Pro
by Squire
to b found in Greenville. Comprising
goods at reasonable prices.
Dry Notions. Shoes, and Caps,
Furnishing Goods, Crockery, Wood
and Plows and
Agricultural Implements. A full line of
Heavy Groceries, Sugar, Molasses, Meat,
Flour a specialty. The largest and most com-
be found in Pitt county. Ladies, men, children,
farmers, mechanics and laboring people of any
and every profession come to see us and get
fixed in your minds before you
try to buy elsewhere. Black and Spring Oats
and Seed Potatoes on hand and to arrive.
Yours for lair dealings, good quality and low
J. P. CHERRY CO.
There is a time in affairs
man when lie should
his
commend the example of the
who have already ad
to tho others who have
not done so- Plant an ad in the
it will pay
you- it will help m to do bettor
work for the town, too- See
Mrs. aged
years, passed quietly away on
Monday morning in Ayden. Just
as the gray of came
peeping over the eastern hills.
n. Jones was the daughter of
the or-
citizen of Arthur now-
called Ayden-
In
Poor
Health
so much more than
you and i
diseases result
trilling ailments neglected.
Don't play with Nature's
greatest
If
I It, ,
id f-
i J
have no
ltd
begin
the v. i.
lie
Iron I n-
ten. A few Um-
the
a i i t
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney find Liver
Neuralgia. Troubles.
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ;
Women's complaints.
Get only
on the wrapper.
will tend set l
Fair Views
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE.
Ike is no Tariff
ON
Stoves
AND
Stove Pipe
that we sell. We keep
a full line. Also a
stock of
Tinware, Paints Oils
which we are selling
cheap.
Well Tubing A pumps
BICYCLES,
Roofing, Guttering,
and Repairing.
m,
MO
w E ANT YOUR ORDERS FOR
Tucker t Edwards
will hold another auction sale of
horses mules February th
See this issue.
To the Tobacco Growers of
Eastern North
beg to that within a few
days we will begin the of
Tobacco Flues at the Eastern
we will keep on
hand a full supply at times,
which we will sell as
as first class work can be sold for.
Hoping for a fall share of
patronage, we are yours
O. L- Joyner,
Married.
Mr- G. Horton ard Miss
Lillie Askew, of Farmville, were
married lust Wednesday-
Mr- Joseph Parish, of
and Miss of
sou married on
Wednesday- The bride has a
of friends here-
Tuesday afternoon at the Moth
parsonage in Greenville,
Mr. W. J- Moore Mrs. Lucy
from near Ayden,
married by Rev- G. F- Smith-
Mr. J- Gladstone and Miss
Emma Hardy were married at
o'clock this afternoon at the home
of the bride's father. Mr. James
Hardy, near Greenville. Rev. J
Corbitt officiating. A very
reception will be held at
the residence of Mr- R T- Wilson
nigh.-
At o'clock Wednesday after-
noon, in township at the
of Mr. J. R- chair-
man of the Board of
cation, his daughter, Miss Mamie
Mr. S- M. Bailey
were married by John Rog-
attendants were Mr.
Robert Bailey and Miss Lizzie
Mr- J- H Keel and
Mis Mary E- Bailey, Mr- John
Everett and Miss Barnhill, Mr.
Mr Israel one of
model farmers, is quite
ahead on hog raising. One day
last week he kill twenty boon
that weighed in
numbers. One hog two
years old weighed
Our correspondent says
is second to none in
Pitt in pork
fine tobacco.
Notice to Creditor.
The haying July
Bad u of
A. notice is
by given to till tho
estate th. lent to
ate payment to lite signed and
all having claim the
estate before
January 80th t this will be
in bar
This
V. M.
de of Paton A die.
fully,
Hooker. h a and Miss Keel
Th following testimonial comes from T. M.
Esq., who Is well-known throughout Ken-
court Justice and Justice of th
for Bath county. Ills words should
confidence all who read bis
I. Hood Co., Lowell,
will for I
It to be the best medicine In the world. In the
winter of I had a bad case of the grip which
left my system In very bail I tried every-
thing I could find and got no relief. In the fall
of the same year I bought a bottle of
The first dose I took
Made a Decided Change
for the better. When I began taking the
bottle my weight was pounds, the lightest
since manhood. By time the second bottle
had been my weight was M pounds. I
owe all this to Hood's and I gladly
It to all T. M.
Justice of the Peace. Kentucky,
Notice of Dissolution.
firm of A. Ricks Co , trading
as the Furniture Store, was
this day by consent. J.
A. pin -inn the of
T. will be con-
by -I. A. Kicks, to whom all per-
sons Indebted to the will m
nay men t.
A. KICKS.
C. T.
This of Jany -5.
NOTICE.
No Carolina, I Superior Court
Martin Co. before
Dennis and Joseph Early
Notice of Dissolution.
The of Lang Son doing
at Kama N. C . m dis-
solved i y consent on the let day
V, u Lung with
drawing from
will be by W. M. Lang All
e indebted the are
ed to make to Lain;.
W. i.
W M-
This 1st, KM.
Notice of
of A Co., doing
Ayden. was dissolved
by on the 28th of
lice. Allen withdrawing from
will be
by-I stoke- to whom all
the are to
payment.
I J.
J.
to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before tho
Court Clerk of county as
Administrator of the estate of -I. L.
w. Nobles, is hereby
lo all persons indebted to the es-
j to make immediate payment to the
and all persons having
I claims against-aid
the payment on or before the
of January or Ibis notice will
I be plead in bar of recovery.
w. B.
of J. L. W.
, is day January 1888.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having duly quail
lied before the Superior of
Pitt comity as administrator of William
no ice is hereby given to
. nil pt ii -i lo I bees of
said em to make Immediate pay
to the undersigned, and all per
sins having claims against the said el
must present same re th
day of December or
will lie plead in bar of recovery.
This 2-lb day
W. R. WHICHARD Jr.
of William Warren.
The next session of the James
proved School begins at
Co., N. C. Jan. 14th, 1895, an
will only four
The principal guarantee- a good
practical business education to all o
will attend bis school and apply l hem-
selves property dining the next four
months.
Young people now is your chance ,
glance over the country and see the
of teachers and business young
men women that the James School
has furnished to the public and be
convinced tint mo In
the State . advance yon as fast B
Jami s school.
The principal guarantee a position to
all completes a course at hi school.
C H. JAMES.
Pitt Co , ft. C
We till them QUICK
We CHEAP
We will fill
Bough Heart Framing,
Rough up Kr lining,
Rough Inches
Boards,
Wail H I days for our Planing Mill and
we will furnish yon Dressed Lumber
as licit me.
Wood to your door for
vents a load.
Terms cash.
Thanking YOU for past patronage.
N. C.
Z. P. Vincent and K.
The will take that
plaintiffs have begun an action
idem in this court for the
pose of celling for a division that tract
of land in this county of which said
plaintiffs and defendants are tenants hi
Common, known the Williams
and the said are re-
quired to at my office in
on day of March,
and answer or to complaint
in said action. The will
take notice that if they to appear
and answer or demur to said complaint
the relief demanded by said
be granted.
Witness official hand and seal
Ship your produce to
J C. Jr., Co.
Factors
--AND-
NORFOLK VA.
Personal Attention to .
THE GREENVILLE
JAMES BROWN, Prop.
of
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons,
And In
Pumps, Pipe. Fittings
Machinery,
and attention given t-
ion git ed. Tobacco
sail lowest, p c.
o.
OINTMENT
MARK
They quote Monday's
produce
Middling cotton, Peanuts, to
Irish I on Old Chickens,
Sweet Young
to Peas,
sic
Corn.
to
for the Cure of all Skin
In
and wherever know has
been In demand. It been m
toned i-y the leading physicians all over
com, try, and has effected cures where
ail other remedies, with the attention of
the experienced physicians, have
for failed. Tins Ointment la
and the high reputation
n has obtained is owing entirely
a Its as but ha
ever made to bring it before the
One bottle of this Ointment will
be to any address on receipt of One
All Cash promptly at-
to. Address all orders and
to I ; s lo
T.
M,





This
Hit You
The management of the
Equitable Life Assurance
Society in the Department of
the Carolina, wishes to
cure a few Special Resident
Agents. Those who are fitted
for this work will find this
A Rare Opportunity
It however, and those
who succeed best in it possess
character, mature judgment,
tact, perseverance, and the
respect of their community.
Think this matter over care-
fully. There's an unusual
opening for somebody. If it
fits you, it will pay you. Fur-
information on request.
W. J. Manager,
Rock Hill, S. C.
A MOUNTAIN HEROINE.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
OLD BRICK STORE
BIT'S
their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices before pa
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR. COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TEA,
at Lowest Market Pricks.
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one A cot
stock of
FURNITURE
on hand and sold at prices
he time s. Out goods are all and
old for CASH therefore, having no
o run, we sell at a close margin
N. C
WELDON B
AND
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS SOUTH.
Dated
1805.
Leave Weldon
Ar. Mt
Tarboro
Rocky Mt
Wilson
Selma
Ar. Florence
A.
M.
-VI
i IV
M.
it on
Goldsboro I
Magnolia
Ar
A. M.
h an
on
A.
Dated
1894.
Florence
Ar n
M P. M.
in a i
Wilmington
Magnolia
Goldsboro
Ar Wilson
-r
A.
Hi
M.
no
ft
ft
lo -7
Wilson
Ar Rocky Mt
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
Mt
Ar Weldon
P. M P. M.
1202
ISM
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.00
p. in., arrives Scotland at I p.
n., Greenville p. in. Kinston
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving
Halifax at a. Weldon 11.20 am
m., daily except Sunday.
Trains on Washington Branch leave
7.00 a, in., arrives
m. Tarboro 0.50;
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. 6.10
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. in.
Daily except Connect with
trains on Neck Branch.
Train leaves Tarboro, N via AlLe-
Raleigh R. R. daily except sun-
day, at p. no. Sunday P.
arrive 0.20 M., 5.20 p. in.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily
Sunday, 6.30 a. m., Sunday a. m.
arrive Tarboro 10.26 a. in., and 11.46
a. in.
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a.
m. Smith field. a in. K
retiring leaves a.
a Goldsboro. ft a. in.
Trains on Nashville Branch leaver
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. in., arrive
Nashville S p. m-, Spring Hope M.
p. m. Returning leaveR Spring Hop
a. Nashville 8.35 a. m., arrives
at Rocky Mount m.,
Sunday.
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R.
R. Latta p. in., arrive Dun-
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave Dun-
bar a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. in
Daily except Sunday.
Trim on Clinton Branch leaves
for dally,
at II a. in. leave Ion
at in., at Warsaw with
line trains.
No. makes close connection
all point.- North daily, all
via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk A
railroad tor Norfolk dally and
points North via Norfolk, daily ex
opt Sunday.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
F. Manager.
T. M,
W. J.
The man from Chicago had told
his story, and while the listeners in
the smoking-car were digesting it a
quiet man, smoking a bad cigar,
gave a slight cough indicative of be-
ginning a yarn himself. The listen-
gave him their attention
did you know had any-
thing to asked the man.
looked said Chicago.
I laughed the man,
I've got an affidavit to go with
mine. Have you got one for that
you
grinned Chicago,
I'll show it to you when you've had
your
forget that, said
the man, turning to the listeners.
now for mine. Five years ago
I was a deputy United States mar-
in southeastern Kentucky, and
most of my business was with moon-
shiners. I had pretty fair success
and bagged a lot of them, but there
was one, the chief of the gang and
the worst of thorn all, that we
couldn't get our hands on. One day,
however, word to me that he
was at his cabin in the mountain,
end if I could get there with a force
of men we might surround the place
and capture him, as he had just
come, in and expected to get out
again before we should hear any-
thing of him. In ten minutes I was
on my way to his cabin with ten
men, all armed with heavy
and all moving out by differ-
ways, so as not to excite
and let him get on to our
movements. We were to meet at a
point about half a mile from his house
and then swoop down on it and take
him in. The first part of the pro-
gramme went off all right, and
hour after I had heard he was at
home I had his house surrounded.
Then I rode to the door and yelled
and a woman came out.
your asked,
for I knew her quite well.
do you want she
responded.
want to see
you
I'm going to just the
I hoard he was here not an hour
ago, and he's got to come this
reckon she said, and
dodged in, shutting the door after
her with a slam, and barring it on
the inside, as I could very plainly
hear.
before we had a chance to
make a rush a gun went off in the
house and a bullet went
against a tree near me. I thought
it was time to get under cover, and
did so with promptness and dis-
patch, and at once ordered my men
to close up and fire on the house.
This they did with pleasure, but we
might as well have fired at a stock-
for the cabin was built of heavy
logs, and nothing short of a
howitzer could have any serious
effect upon it. We banged away,
though, and every now and then a
shot came from the inside, and
whistled disagreeably near us. One
time, when one of my men showed
up where he could get a shot at the
only pane of glass visible, two shots
came after him so closely that he
stayed in hiding for the rest of the
time. This was about nine o'clock
in the morning, and we at last con-
that, as there were children
and a woman in the house with our
could not very
well burn it down, even if we could
get close enough to fire it; we would
simply camp on their trail and
starve them out. So we took our
places to command every point to
prevent escape, and waited.
At intervals a shot would
come from the cabin, but we
would not pay any attention to
it, thinking that our man might think
we had gone and come out, but he
didn't, and the long day wore on. It
was raining, too. after noon, and we
were decidedly uncomfortable, but
we had our game c ed, and we were
bound to get him or stay there a
year. However, it was not to be
that we were to remain quite that
long, for about eight o'clock in the
evening, when it was so dark we
couldn't see our hands before us, and
had come up so close to the cabin
that we trusted to our ears instead
of our eyes-to catch the moonshiner
in case he tried to get away under
cover of darkness, the door was
thrown open and the woman called.
is I asked from be-
hind a stump in the yard.
can come in you wan
she replied.
your old man to come
I won't do the
she said, in a most, womanly
ion. want him, come in after
parleyed awhile, fearing
but when she handed out two
guns and punched up the fire on the
hearth, until the cabin was brilliant-
I called up my men and
went inside, the woman standing
meanwhile in the middle of the
floor, with four or five children
clinging to her skirts. Every man
of us had his revolver his hand.
and expected trouble, though it
nanny under toe
stances. Once inside we had made
a thorough search of the one room of
the cabin in a very few minutes, and
as the floor was mostly earth we did
not feel like going for a cellar, not-
withstanding there was no sign of
the moonshiner in the room where
were. He was clean gone, and
there could be no doubt on that
point. It was so unexpected and
disappointing that I looked at the
woman helplessly. In reply she
laughed at me.
your I
asked, because there wasn't much
else to say.
do I she answered,
provokingly.
he beer, here all
course he He
that big a
been doing the shooting
and she gave me the laugh
again.
I gasped.
me. Why not she
laughed, again., I
i did
not compliment her on it.
he been I asked.
this question she shook her-
self loose from her children and
stood straight before us.
ho she said;
here not five minutes afore you
with gang. I seen one you
that and I shoved Bill out
and told him to run and I'd take
the balance. Bill run, and
you fellers know the rest. He's got
twelve hours the start
and want to go after him you
kin; but it's powerful dark in
the mountains, and better
stay and take supper with mo and
try it in the
was a true story, too, every
word she said, and we tried to do
something with her for resisting of-
but not much, for somehow
we felt she acted the heroine, and
we let her off with only a reprimand.
As for Bill, ho never came back
while I was
needn't show your
said the man from Chicago, when the
story had ended, and the ex-deputy
smiled at him blandly. Detroit
Free Press.
IT SETTLED THEM.
The Story Francis Used to Tell
to Tiresome Visitors.
A Hungarian paper says that
Francis the Hungarian states-
man, used to get rid of troublesome
visitors by telling them the following
when in Paris, Na-
I. paid a visit to the hospital
for old soldiers. He perceived among
the rest a man who had lost one of
of his arms, and he entered into con-
with him. did you
lose your asked the. emperor.
your
no doubt, you curse the emperor and
your country every time you look at
your mutilated
protested tho veteran, the em-
and my native land I would
readily sacrifice my other arm, if
needs can hardly believe
the emperor quietly remarked
and passed on.
the soldier, anxious to prove
that he was in earnest, Immediately
drew a saber from his sheath and
lopped off his other Here
would pause and fix a
look on his visitor.
what have you to say of such a man
and such an most sub-
lime act of self-sacrifice A truly
noble This was the
style of reply invariably given.
tho story has one
he would gravely add.
is that, is simply
impracticable. How could a one,
armed roan contrive to cut off his
only remaining Y.
A FINE DOG.
Rochester Boasts a Canine That Heeds
Every Alarm.
Rover is the name of a white-and-
black spaniel that for the past month
has followed truck of Front street
to all fires where the services of the
company were needed. Truck
only responds to calls in the sections
of the city where there are high
buildings, but there have been a
number of calls to break
Rover in to his new duties.
It is a strange story that the fire-
men tell of how the dog happened to
take up with their manner of life. It
was in the early part of August,
they say, that when going at full
speed to a fire on the west side tho
animal was first seen following the
apparatus and barking as if he
thought his efforts would spur the
four grays to a greater speed. Tho
dog was allowed to follow the truck
back to the house, where he has since
remained. He is a great pet of the
fire laddies, who named him Rover,
after the old hand engine Red Rover.
Rover sleeps in the stable with the
horses and during the night if a call
comes he will bark and run about,
impatient for the firemen to leave
the building. The men say that
when their pet gets used to a fire
man's life he will be more calm when
an alarm is
Herald.
It May So U Much YoU.
Mr. Fred Miller, of writes
that id a Severe Kidney trouble
for many years, with pains in
his back and that his bladder was
affected. He tried many so called
Kidney cures but without any good
result. About a year ago he began use
of Electric Bitters found relief at
once. Bitters is especially
adapted to cure Kidney am. Liver
trouble and often given almost instant
relief. One trial will prove our state-
Price only for large bottle
At John L. Drug Store.
with
with
by
Words of Wisdom.
Sin nearly always begins
a look.
A loafer is never satisfied
his wages-
If you are not made better
double your gift.
The easiest thing for a fool
do is tell how little he knows.
The man who hates light is
ways afraid of his own shadow.
When people have only a little
religion they are apt to
med of it.
The man goes to bed tired who
spends the day in looking for an
easy place.
Angels weep on the day that a
man begins to spend more
money than he can make.
Some can play a tune
on one string, but it never makes
anybody want to dance-
Bewail,
The render of this paper will be pleas
ed to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that has been
able lo cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh, Hall's Cure is the
only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a
disease, requires a constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, acting directly on the
blood and surfaces of the sys-
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the
assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much
in its curative powers, that
offer One Hundred Dollars for any
that it fails to Send for list of
F. J. A CO.,
Sold
THE BILLS ALMOST READY
Last night in the Auditor's
office there was a meeting of the
Populists and Republicans of the
Joint Committee of House and
Senate on and County
Government.
The meeting lasted about one
hour and a half, and a the
muck a mucks invited as the
grannies at the christening were
Harry Skinner, Judge Bus
sell, Major Guthrie, Senator Ma-
Butler, Major Grant, Tom
and others, who looked
as if they wanted to be doing
something. All these sisters had
their caps on, and took up the
County Government and Election
Laws and bounced and
gave them soothing and
togged them out in all kinds of
frills, and then turned over
to their nurses, who consisted of
sub-committee of six, three
lists and three Republicans, who
are expected to bring them up
smiling tho next few days-
Major thought last night
that an election bill would be
offered to the Legislature this
week certainly, cud that the
government bill would
follow. There has been no date
fixed, however, and last night
there was only a knocking to-
of heads after the manner
of Sydney Smith's vestrymen who
put their heads to make
a block pavement in front of the
church. Everybody dropped a
word or two into the slot, and it
was stated by some that it could
be fairly said that the precinct
would be the unit, and that no
precinct would Le allowed more
than voters. township
containing more than voters
would be divided into two or
products- The polls will open at
o'clock and at the votes
to be by 5- There will
be one ballot and one box- Other
features of the coming bill were
discussed, but resulted in a kind
of Yale mixture capped with
They all thought
they want something whatever
that was. One of the lights said
that the Democrats could depend
en one thing, namely, that all
things would work together for
the good of the dear people.
On the question of comity gov-
there was much differ-
of opinion, some favoring
the abolition of the office of com-
missioner, some opposing such
abolition. But the greater
weight seemed to be toward the
substitution of a like bode under
a different name, but to be elected
by the people. The Magistrates
will appointed either by the
Legislature or by the Judges,
some of the cagey ones favoring
the latter. Several heavy weights
are now here, including Capt.
Harry Skinner, swamped in the
tumultuous possibilities of I he
two herein
They will remain and croon like
watchful old mammies through
all the squalls, and see the twins
through the teething act, and
later hope to real the
unto that stage ho will feed
on the white meat of a live Dem
as if lie were a missionary
on a table
dressed after the tooth of Uganda.
The six sub-committee chefs
getting up the menu, and the
feast will be a Belshazzar affair
reaching far into the night.
There will be no
business about the blow oat
the first era of the orgies. All
will be well and the wine of the
State's yeomen blood will
How freely down the gullets of
greed. use the
of their power to lay the
summer's dust with showers of
blood rained from the wounds of
slaughtered
Or to change the Mrs.
Jailer, they are the orchard
for apples, and pick the
trees from the commission-
pippin to the constable crab.
Raleigh News and Observer, 24th.
IT WAS NOT REDEEMED.
From a letter written by J.
of Mich., we
permitted to make this
have no hesitation in
Dr. King's New Discovery, a the re-
were almost In the
MM of my wife. I was pastor cf
the Church at Rives Junction
she was brought down with Pneumonia
succeeding with La Grippe. Terrible
paroxysms of couching would last
hours with little interruption and it
seemed as if she could not survive them.
A friend recommended Dr. King's New
Discovery; it was quick in Its work and
highly satisfactory in Trial
free at L. Women's Drug
Sore. Regular and
Wants Editor to Do It.
The Winchester Times says, a
day scarcely passes in the news-
paper office without a visit from
some one who has some fault to
with somebody or something.
He wants the editor to attend to
the matter for him. Some times
it is the fire department, again it
is the police, and the next time it
may be the dog catcher-
don't you score he says.
are not doing their
Then he goes into details, talks
about this and that being an out-
rage on the tax-payers, etc.
When the editor tells him he will
publish his complaint provided
he will sign it, he says, no I
don't want to put my name to it
don't want to get into e
with these people, don't yon
Can't yon put it in the shape of
an editorial He does not
what the editor may get
into by publishing hie grievance
A Singing Hen.
A little twelve-year-old
of a hotel keeper at Baxter.
has a pet hen that sings to a
piano accompaniment. The little
girl will go into the yard, pick up
the hen, bring her into the
place her on the piano and com-
playing something lively,
and the hen will sit back on
dignity, raise her head and sing
like her life depended on the
effort. Georgia leads in the
poultry business, as well as in
everything Con- j
The Old Man Had rod a
Till the Mice Nibbled It.
Not long ago a twenty dollar note
was sent to the United States treas-
for redemption. Accompanying
it was an affidavit saying that the
owner put it in a cigar box,
mice had got at it and nibbled it.
The note was a counterfeit. Not
only that, but it had been through
the treasury here at some previous
time, and had been stamped with
the word in letters cut out of
the paper. But tho alleged mice
had almost obliterated the letters
by nibbling them. It was a
queer way for mice to behave, to
say the least of it. A detective of
the was sent to look the
matter up. He investigated the
case fully, and reported that it was
all short, that the note
had been submitted for redemption
in good faith.
The owner, it appears, was an old
German sailor of respectable char-
Nevertheless he would go on
an occasional spree. Waking up
one morning
he found all his money gone
except this note of twenty dollars.
Somebody had, doubtless, passed It
off on him. He noticed nothing
wrong about it, and had put it into
the cigar box in which he kept not-
only his ready money, but also bird-
seed for his pet canary. Mice at-
by the birdseed, visited the
box, and incidentally chewed up tho
note. finding It partly de-
tho sailor forwarded it to
the treasury at Washington. The
case is interesting, chiefly us an
illustration of the way in which
of fraud may sometimes
Post.
WORKING
What the Longfellow Noonday Rest
Has Demonstrated.
The success in Boston of the
Longfellow noonday rest,
last year, is of a nature to en-
courage its duplication in other
places. Tho rest is in tho busy part
of the city and was opened for the
exclusive use of women employed in
its vicinity. There is a sunny,
cheerful lounging room, with easy
chairs and comfortable sofas, and
work baskets and magazines strewed
on tables Invite a member to the
stitch in time or the peep into
In the leisure moments of her
noon hour. The payment of ten
cents a week entitles one to the
of tho rest, not the least of
which is the opportunity to enjoy at
moderate price tho excellent food
served from the well-ordered
kitchen, which is a chief feature of
the rest. Great is taken to
serve the food In tempting fashion.
A specimen bill of fare, with prices,
includes lamb broth, eight cents;
tomato soup, six; pickled lamb's
tongue and lettuce, ten; beef hash,
ten; mashed potatoes, five; scalloped
tomatoes, eight; health bread, three;
white bread, three; graham bread,
three; floating island, eight; orange
cake, five; apple pie, five; baked
apples, eight; coco, five; milk, three;
coffee, tee, three. Variety is
given to the bill of fare from day to
day. Those who wish it may order
a regular course dinner, for which
they are charged twenty-five cents.
N. Y. Times.
The
SOME TEA STATISTICS.
Not
to
Fragrant Crop Is Not Apt
Become More Expensive.
Tea has not yet been seriously
in price by the Chinese war
and for a very good reason. Hos-
have not In the least affected
either the tea district, nearly ell in
the south of China, or the ports
from which It is exported. While
some tea is produced in north China,
the foreign supply comes almost
together from regions removed from
the war and its influence, says the
Philadelphia Press. In addition,
the proportionate share of tea pro-
by China is steadily diminish-
In 1880-83 of the average
product of pounds China
produced pounds. In
1883, however, while the product of
China remained stationary the prod-
of other countries had grown
from to and
It is now still larger.
Work He Does.
How much docs a newspaper man
write in a year An old newspaper
worker has sat down and figured it
out. He figures that he writes an
average of a column and a half every
day, except for his Sunday paper,
when he contributes three
This makes twelve columns a week,
and, allowing for two
he has fifty weeks in a year, in
which time he turns out 8-10,000
words. An ordinary book of short
stories contains about words,
therefore his year's labor Is
to twenty books. At this rate
of comparison the feat of Marion
Crawford in publishing two books
per annum does not strike tho news-
paper man as an Incredibly hard task,
even allowing for the extra amount
of thought involved in story writing.
Mr. considers thousand
words a good day's work. Thomas
Is satisfied with four
words, or a little over a quarter
of a Sentinel.
The State Guard
North Carolina would be in a
her State Guard
Scenes would follow in which
mobs and lawbreaker generally
would fairly If
ton were military
companies, how long it be
before the for these
; organizations would be keenly
felt No a knave or a
fool would think for e- moment of
abolishing the State
Star.
A touching funeral is mentioned
as having taken place in Muncie,
, a few days ago. The child
of a poor family died- They had
do money to buy a coffin or pay
funeral expenses The father
made a little pine coffin, placed it
with the lit lo corpse in it on a
sled, and two brothers drew it to
the cemetery, followed by the
father and mother- That was the
funeral. And yet Muncie is sap-
posed to be a civilized and a
THE NEWS CONDENSED.
People's Savings Hank, a
Erie, Pa., has assigned.
The heavy snow storm
blizzard has struck New York.
Peter Jackson has I
challenge to tight Charley
Three men were burned t
death in a building in
N. Y.
Snow in portions of
twenty-two deep cu i
level.
A severe i
be rapidly moving eastward iron
Colorado.
Eight thousand troops are
scene of the railway ii
The American hotel at
Ala., destroyed by tire- N
lives lost.
Baker has been chosen
U- S- Senator by the Republican
legislature of Kansas.
A steamer founded in i
on Luke
Twenty nine lives were lost.
A large steamer struck a rock
in tho Ohio near
Alton, III. Several lives lost.
Pile in Fort Worth, Texas.
Domed a livery stables and eleven
head of horses. Loss
It still comes gold re-
serve was reported yesterday at
a little above
Col. of
is dead. He served
during the war on the
Gen.
A cotton compress and 1.200
bales of cotton wore binned at
Chattanooga, Loss about
half covered by
A Tenn.,
blew off the top of the Court
House and demolished a dozen
residences. Damage placed at
000-
The legislatures of several
States elected S- Senators
Tuesday, as follows; Texas,
ace Clifton; California. George
Perkins; Wyoming, Francis E.
Warren and Clarence D. Clark ;
New Million J. ;
G. Harris.
Mr. Robert of Gran-
villa County, was standing fifty
feet from the circular saw at a
lumber mill, when in some way
the saw caught a piece of
fifteen feet long and hurled it
through the air. The
struck Mr. Downey just under the
arm and stuck completely
through his body. He lived
nearly three days.
I f i are the product of skilled
k I rank with
Victor
II lb- base-
balls.
f mitts, tennis j
J rackets, tennis
nets, racket presses, racket cases, boxing gloves, footballs,
football suits, football and gymnasium shoes, gymnasium
supplies, sweaters, etc. mt- rood,, for less
money than asked by other manufacturers. II local
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write for our
illustrated
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
Makers of Victor Bicycles and
CHICAGO.
NEW
coast.
LOS
licit
for I Monty .
DOUGLAS
A m
SHOE
Over On.-
W. L. Douglas and Shoos.
. Alt our
They Rive fur
In
Their , are
From SI f i other make.
If your dealer cannot
BO Police Shoes. soles.
and
MM
If your dealer cannot
; i yon,
w W. L. Douglas,
C MUM
R. L. Davis Bro., Farmville, N. C.
It. .
C.
Co., X.
ii., N.
COBB BROS et CO.
Religion from Congressional Lips.
Senator of Caro-
and Representative
of Massachusetts, delivered
addresses at churches in
Washington on Sunday. The
Senator delivered address at
the young men's Gospel meeting
at the Colored
rooms, 1607 Eleventh
street northwest,
Morse delivered a discourse
on King's at the
First Congregational church on
Tenth and Q northwest.
Baltimore Sun-
Commission Merchants
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA
Consignments and
FE OLD
ABLE.
AT THE FRONT WITH A I INK-
AND ISIS,
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught i i i- the
Hemp Rope, Building , Farming mi in-, and
ting Millers, Mechanics and general lion- n- mt
Huts. Shoos. Goods I have Am
quarters for Heavy Groceries, o. N. t.
Cotton, keep coin Icons an I attentive clerk i.
ALFRED FORBES,
GREENVILLE. N.
C.
The best Salve In tho world for Cuts
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum,
Fever Sores, Chapped
Chilblains, Corns, and all skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required, it is to Rive
perfect satisfaction or money refunded
Price cents per box. For sale by
John l Woolen.
Notice to Creditors.
The having qualified be-
fore the Superior Court Clerk of Pit
county to the i state
Fernando Fleming, deceased, notice Is
hereby given to all persons Indebted to
tin I stale of said decedent to make
mediate payment lo the undersigned,
mid all persons claims
said estate must present the
before the 28th day Dec. 1895, or this
notice will in bar recovery.
This 26th day of
FLEMING,
of Fernando Fleming.
COTTON SLED.
E MILLION lit
ELS Oil ON SEED.
Will pay tin- highest either
in small or large lots. We
Hale Cotton Seed Steal and Hulls.
This Reminds
You every day
in the
month of
January that if
you have
your Printing done
at the
REFLECTOR
JOB OFFICE.
It will be done right,
It will be done in style,
and it always suits.
These points are
well worth weighing
in sort
of work, but
above all things in
Your Jab Printing.
Real Estate
and
Rental
HERBERT
TONSORIAL PARLORS
Under Opera House,
GREENVILLE,
Call in when want work
Agent.
Houses and lots for Rent or for Salt
terms easy. Rents, Insurance,
and open accounts and any other
of debt placed my for
collection nave prompt attention,
faction guaranteed. I solicit your
patronage.
GREENVILLE, X. C.
The next Session of this Si-ho will
begin on Tuesday I he day Of
Continue weeks.
NORTH
R. R. TIME
Effect December th,
LAST.
Ia-.
STATION is
Ar.
Ev
Ar. I
Primary English
Intermediate English
Higher English
Languages
2.00
2.60
The instruction will continue through.
Discipline mild mil If necessary
an additional teacher will b employed.
Satisfaction guaranteed h u pupils
enter early and attend regularly. For
further apply to
W. II.
Aug. 1801.
N LINE.
SERVICE
Ste Washington for
and Tarboro touching at all land
n gs on Tar River Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
A. M. same
These departures are subject
of water on Tar River.
Co at With steam
Norfolk,
direct Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their good
marked via Dominion fr m
New York. from
Norfolk A Haiti-
more Steamboat irons
more. Merchants,
Boston.
JNO. SON. Agent,
. J. Agent,
c.
P. M. M I A. M A. M.
ii ll I
I I iS l
h it ; s
P M. A. M.
Trail connects With Wilmington
Weldon train bound leaving
Goldsboro a. in., in I with R.
p.
FERTILIZER
-FOR-
Cotton, Corn and
General Crops.
and endorsed by leading far
mi ruin North Carolina and the So nth
for the past twenty Rea I the
following and tend for
pamphlet giving directions mixing
testimonials. Ac.
N. C, Sept.
Messrs.
chemicals I bought
of you for making
lo give only
use under cotton. You know must
think It good, or I should not have
used it so long. This m HI or
year- that I have been Ming It, its
use ha made me able to pay for It cash,
not on crop time.
Yours truly, OS. S. EVANS.
s. c, Oct, 1803
Messrs. n kin. Carmer Co.
It gives us pleasure to say have
been using for
more than years continuously,
and aspect to continue to do so. Of
we are entirely satisfied that it
pays us to use It.
Respectfully, W.
R. M.
Boykin, Carmer Co.
Baltimore, Md.
Cress All Crops
for N. HARRIS.
.,





This
Hit You
The management of the
Equitable Life Assurance
Society in the Department of
the Carolinas, wishes to
cure a few Special Resident
Agents. Those who are fitted
for this work will find this
A Rare Opportunity
It however, and those
who succeed best in it possess
character, mature judgment,
tact, perseverance, the
respect of their community.
Think this matter over care-
fully. There's an unusual
opening for somebody. If it
fits you, it will pay you. Fur-
information on request.
W. J. Manager,
Rock Hill, S. C.
A MOUNTAIN HEROINE.
W. . LA Mil ON.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
OLD BRICK STORE
AND ill. Y
their year's supplies will
their interest to get our prices before
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE. TEA,
always at Lowest Market Pricks.
TOBACCO SNUFF A, CIGARS
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A cot
stork of
FURNITURE
on hand sold at prices
he time s. Out goods are all bought and
old for CASH then-fore, having no
o run, we sell at a margin
Respectfully,
S. M.
N. C
R B
WILMINGTON
AND BRANCHES.
FLORENCE RAIL ROAD.
Condensed Schedule.
TRAINS
Dated
V.
Leave Weldon
Ar. Mt
H. M.
A.
Tarboro
Rocky Mt
Wilson
Selma
Ar. Florence
Goldsboro
Magnolia
Ar Wilmington
--------1
i a
p. M.
. M.
A.
NOT nil.
Dated
1894.
Florence
Selma
Ar
A. M. I. M.
IS
y-z
Wilmington
Magnolia
Ar Wilson
A. M
P, M.
DO
Wilson
Ar Rocky Mt
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro
Mt
Ar Weldon
P. M.
P. M P. M.
II
Train on Scotland Meek Branch Road
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax
p. in., arrives Scotland Seek at p.
n., Greenville 0.37 p. m. 7.35
p. in. Returning, leaves 7.20
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m.
Halifax at a. Weldon u
m., daily except
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a,
8.40 p. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. 6.10
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. in.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on ml Neck Branch.
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. R. daily except Mil
day, at p. m., Sunday p. M
arrive Plymouth 0.20 M., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily
Sunday, 5.30 a. m., Sunday 0.30 a. m.
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. m., and 11.45
a. in.
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, a.
m. riving Smith held, a m. R
retiring leaves a.
a Goldsboro. o a. m.
Trains on Nashville Branch leaver
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. arrive
Nashville i p. m-. Spring Hope
p. m. Returning leaves Spring Hope
a. in., Nashville 8.35 a. arrives
at Rocky Mount in., daily except
Sunday.
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence K.
R. Latta 6.50 D. m. arrive Dun-
bar 8.00 p. m. Returning leave Dun-
tar a. m. arrive Latta a. m
Daily except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves W
saw for daily,
at a. in. Returning Clinton
at m., conic ting at Warsaw with
main line trains.
No. makes close connection
a. Weldon for all points daily, all
ill via Richmond, and daily except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk .
Carolina railroad for Norfolk dully and
points North via Norfolk, daily ex
Sunday.
JOHN F. DIVINE,
General
F. KENLY, Manager.
T. M, . Trial I Mi i f
The man from Chicago had told
his story, and while the listeners in
the smoking-car were digesting it a
quiet man, smoking a bad cigar,
gave a slight cough indicative of be-
ginning a yarn himself. The listen-
gave him their attention at once.
did you know I had any-
thing to asked the man.
looked said Chicago.
I laughed the man,
I've got an affidavit to go with
mine. Have you got one for that
you
grinned Chicago,
I'll show it to you when you've had
your
forget that, said
the man, turning to the listeners.
now for mine. Five years ago
I was a deputy United States mar-
in southeastern Kentucky, and
most of my business was with moon-
shiners. I had pretty fair success
and bagged a lot of them, but there
was one, the chief of the gang and
the worst of them all, that we
couldn't get our hands on. One
however, word came to me that he
was at his in the mountain,
and if I could get there with a force
of men we might surround the place
and capture him. as he had just
come and expected to get out
again before we should hear any-
thing of him. In ten minutes I was
on my way to his cabin with ten
men, all armed with heavy
and all moving out by differ-
ways, so as not to excite
and let him get on to our
movements. We were to meet at a
point about half a mile from his house
and then swoop down on it and take
him in. The first part of the pro-
gramme went off all right, and an
hour after I had heard he was at
home I had his house surrounded.
Then I rode to the door and yelled
and a woman came out.
your asked,
for I knew her quite
do you want she
responded.
want to see
you
I'm going to just the
I hoard he was here not an hour
ago, and he's got to come this
reckon she said, and
dodged in, shutting the door after
her with a slam, and barring it on
the inside, as I could very plainly
hear.
before we had a chance to
make a rush a gun went off the
house and a bullet went
against a tree near me. I thought
it was time to get under cover, and
did so with promptness and dis-
patch, and at once ordered my men
to close up and fire on the house.
This they did with pleasure, but we
might as well have fired at a stock-
for the cabin was built of heavy
logs, and nothing short of a
howitzer could have any serious
effect upon it. We banged away,
though, and every now and then a
shot came from the inside, and
whistled disagreeably near us. One
time, when one of my men showed
up where he could get a shot at the
only pane of glass visible, two shots
came after him so closely that he
staved In hiding for the rest of the
time. This was about nine o'clock
in the morning, and we at last con-
that, as there were children
and a woman in the house with our
we could not very
well burn it down, even if we could
get close enough to fire it; we would
simply camp on their trail and
starve them out. So we took our
places to command every point to
prevent escape, and waited.
At intervals a shot would
come from the cabin, but we
would not pay any attention to
it, thinking that our man might think
we had gone and come out, but he
didn't, and the long day wore on. It
was raining, too, after noon, and we
were decidedly uncomfortable, but
had our game and we were
bound to get him or stay there a
year. However, it was not to be
that we were to remain quite that
long, for about eight o'clock in the
evening, when it was so dark we
couldn't see our hands before us, and
had come up so close to the cabin
that we trusted to our ears instead
of our eyes to catch the moonshiner
in case he tried to get away under
cover of darkness, the door was
thrown open and the woman called.
is I asked from be-
hind a stump in the yard.
can come in you wan
she replied.
your old man to come
won't do the
she said, in a most womanly
ion. want him, come in after
parleyed awhile, fearing
but she handed out two
guns and punched up the lire on the
hearth, until the cabin was brilliant-
I called up my men and
went inside, the woman standing
in the middle of the
floor, with four or five children
clinging to her skirts. Every man
of us had his revolver his hand,
and we expected trouble, though it
under the
stances. Once inside had made
a thorough search of the one room of
the cabin in a very few minutes, and
as the floor was mostly earth we did
not feel like going for a cellar, not-
withstanding there was no sign of
the moonshiner in the room where
we were. He was clean and
there could be no doubt on that
point. It was so unexpected and
disappointing that I looked at the
woman helplessly. In reply she
laughed at me.
your I
asked, because there wasn't much
else to say.
do I she answered,
provokingly.
he been here all
course he He
that big a
been doing the shooting
she gave me the laugh
again.
I gasped.
me. Why not she
laughed again., I
i urn. am
not compliment her on it.
he been I asked.
this question she shook her-
self loose from her children and
stood straight before us.
he she said;
here not five minutes afore you come
with gang. I seen one you
that and I shoved Bill out
and told him to run and I'd take
the balance. Bill run, and
you fellers know the rest He's got
twelve hours the start
and want to go after him you
kin; but It's powerful dark in
the mountains, and better
stay and take supper with me and
try it in the
was a true story, too, every
word she said, and we tried to do
something with her for resisting of-
but not much, for somehow
we felt she acted the heroine, and
we let her off with only a reprimand.
As for Bill, he never came back
while I was
needn't show your
said the man from Chicago, when the
had ended, and the ex-deputy
smiled at him blandly. Detroit
Free Press.
IT SETTLED THEM.
The Story Francis Used to Tell
to Tiresome Visitors.
A Hungarian paper says that
Francis the Hungarian states-
man, used to get rid of troublesome
visitors by them the following
when in Paris, Na-
I. paid a visit to the hospital
for old soldiers. He perceived among
the rest a man who had lost one of
of his arms, and he entered into con-
with him.
lose your asked the emperor.
your
no doubt, you curse the emperor and
your country every time you look at
your mutilated
protested the veteran, the em-
and my native land I would
readily sacrifice my other arm, If
needs can hardly believe
the emperor quietly remarked
and passed on.
the soldier, anxious to prove
that he was in earnest, Immediately
drew a saber from his sheath and
lopped off his other Here
would pause and fix a
look on his visitor.
what have you to say of such a man
and such an most sub-
lime act of A truly
noble This was the
style of reply invariably given.
the story has one
he would gravely add.
is that, is simply
impracticable. How could a one.,
armed man contrive to cut off his
only remaining Y.
A FINE DOG.
Rochester Boasts a Canine That Heeds
Every Alarm.
Rover is the name of a white-and-
black spaniel that for the past month
has followed truck of Front street
to all fires where the services of the
company were needed. Truck
only responds to calls in the sections
of the city where there are high
buildings, but there have been a
number of calls to break
Rover in to his new duties.
It Is a strange story that the fire-
men tell of how the dog happened to
take up with their manner of life. It
was in the early part of August,
they say, that when going at full
speed to a fire on the west side the
animal was first seen following the
apparatus and barking as if he
thought his efforts would spur the
four grays to a greater speed. The
dog was allowed to follow the truck
back to the house, where he has since
remained. lie is a great pet of the
fire laddies, who named him Rover,
after the old hand engine Red Rover.
Rover sleeps in the stable with the
horses and during the night if a call
comes he will bark and run about,
impatient for the firemen to leave
the building. The men say that
when their pet gets used to a fire-
man's life he will be more calm when
an alarm is
Herald.
It May Do Much Ton.
Mr. Miller, of living. III., writes
that lie hid a Severe Kidney trouble
for many years, with severe pains
his back and that his bladder was
affected, lie tried many so called
Kidney cures but without any good
result. About a year ago he began use
of Electric Bitters found relief at
once. Bitters is especially
adapted to cure of all Kidney Liver
troubles and often given almost instant
relief. One trial will prove our state-
Price only for large bottle
At John L. Drug Store.
Words of Wisdom.
Sin nearly always begins with
a look.
with
by
A loafer is never satisfied
his wages.
If you are not made better
giving, doable your gift.
The easiest thing for a fool to
do is tell how little he knows.
The man who hates light is
ways afraid of his own shadow-
When people have only a little
religion they are apt to be
med of it.
The man goes to bed tired who
spends the day in looking for an
easy place-
Angels weep on the day that a
young man begins to spend more
money than ho can make-
Some can play a tune
on one string, but it never makes
anybody want to dance.
THE BILLS ALMOST READY.
Last night in the Auditor's
office there was a meeting of the
Populists and Republicans of the
Joint Committee of House and
Senate on Elections and County
Government.
The meeting lasted about one
hour and a half, and u the
muck a mucks invited as the
grannies at the christening were
Capt- Harry Skinner, Judge Bus
sell, Major Guthrie, Ma-
Butler, Major Grant, Tom
Purnell, and others, who looked
as if they wanted to be doing
something. All these sisters had
their caps on, and took up the
County Government and Election
Laws and bounced them, and
them soothing and
togged out in all kinds of
and then turned them over
to their nurses, who consisted of
sub-committee of six, three
lists and three Republicans, who
are expected to bring them up
smiling the next few days.
Major Grant thought last night
that an election bill would be
offered to the Legislature this
week certainly, and that the
government bill would soon
folio . There has been no date
fixed, however, and last night
there was only a knocking to-
of heads after the manner
of Sydney Smith's vestrymen who
put their heads together to make
a block pavement in front of the
church. Everybody dropped a
word or two into the slot, and it
was stated by some that it could
be fairly said that the precinct
would be the unit, and that no
precinct would Le allowed more
than voters. township
containing more than voters
would be divided into two or
products. The polls will open at
o'clock and at the votes
to be counted by 5- There will
be one ballot and one box- Other
features of the coming bill were
discussed, but resulted in a kind
of Yule mixture capped with
They all thought
they want something whatever
that was- One of the lights said
that the could depend
en one thing, namely, that all
things would work together for
the good of the dear people.
the question of comity gov-
there was much differ-
if opinion, some favoring
the abolition of the office of com-
missioner, some opposing such
abolition. the greater
weight seemed to be toward the
substitution of a like bode under
a different name, but to be elected
by the people. The Magistrates
will be appointed either by the
Legislature or by the Judges,
some of the cagey ones favoring
the latter. Several heavy weights
are now here, Capt.
Hurry Skinner, swamped in the
tumultuous possibilities of the
two measures herein mentioned.
They will remain and croon like
watchful old mammies through
all the squalls, see the twins
tin mi the teething act, and
later hope to real the
unto that stage ho will feed
on the white meat of a live Dem
as if lie were a missionary
a table
dressed after the tooth of Uganda.
The six sub-committee chefs
are getting up the menu, and the
feast will be a Belshazzar affair
reaching far into the night.
There will be no
business about the blow out
the first era of the orgies. All
will be well and the wine of the
State's gentle yeomen blood will
How freely down the gullets of
greed. use the
of their power to lay the
summer's dust with showers of
blood from the wounds of
slaughtered
Or to change the Mrs.
they are in the orchard
for apples, and they'll pick the
trees clean, from the commission-
pippin to the constable crab.
Observer, 24th.
From a letter written by J.
of Mich., we
permitted to make this
have no hesitation in
Dr. King's New Discovery, as the re-
were almost m in the
OUt of my wife. While I was pastor of
the Baptist Church at Rives Junction
she was brought down with Pneumonia
succeeding with L Grippe. Terrible
paroxysms of couching would last
hours with little interruption and it
seemed as if she could not survive them.
A friend recommended Dr. King's New
Discovery; it was quick its work and
highly satisfactory in Trial
bottles free at John L. Wooten's Drug
S ore. and
Bewail,
The render of this paper will be
eel to learn that there is at least one
dreaded that has been
able lo cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh, Hall's Cure Is the
only positive cure known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being a
disease, requires a constitutional
Hall's Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, acting directly on the
blood mucous, surfaces of the sys-
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the
and assisting nature in doing its
work. The proprietors have so much
in Its curative power, that they
offer One Hundred Dollars for any
that it fails to cure. Send tor list of
F. J. CO.,
Sold
Editor to Do it.
The Winchester Times says, a
day scarcely passes in the news-
paper office without a visit from
some one who has some fault to
Bud with somebody or something.
He wants the editor to attend to
the matter for him. Some times
it is the fire department, again it
is the police, and the next time it
may be the dog catcher.
don't you score he says.
are not doing their
Then he goes into details, talks
about this and that being an out-
rage on the tax-payers, etc.
When the editor lulls him he will
publish his complaint provided
he will sign it, he says, no I
don't want to put my name to it
don't want to get into e
with these people, don't you tee.
Can't yon put it in the shape of
an editorial He does not
IT WAS NOT REDEEMED.
The Old Man Had Treasured a
Till the Mice Nibbled It.
Not long ago a twenty dollar note
was sent to the United States treas-
for redemption. Accompanying
was an affidavit saying that the
owner put it in a cigar box, where
mice had got at it and it.
The note was a counterfeit. Not
only that, but it had been through
the treasury here at some previous
time, and had been stamped with
the word in letters cut out of
the paper. But the alleged mice
had almost obliterated the letters
by nibbling around them. It was a
queer way for mice to behave, to
say the least of It. A detective of
the was sent to look the
matter up. He Investigated the
case fully, and reported that it was
all short, that the note
had been submitted for redemption
in good faith.
The owner, it appears, was an old
German sailor of respectable char-
Nevertheless he would go on
an occasional spree. Waking up
one morning after a night of
he found all his money gone
except this note of twenty dollars.
Somebody had, doubtless, passed It
off on him. He noticed nothing
wrong about it, and had put it Into
the cigar box in which he kept not
only his ready money, but also bird-
seed for his pet canary. Mice at-
by the birdseed, visited the
box, and incidentally chewed up the
note. finding partly de-
the sailor forwarded it to
the treasury at Washington. The
ease is interesting, chiefly us an
illustration of the way in which
of fraud may sometimes
Post.
WORKING CLUBS.
What the Longfellow Noonday Rest
Has Demonstrated.
The success in Boston of the
Longfellow noonday rest,
last year, Is of a nature to en
its duplication in other
places. The rest is in the busy part
of the city and was opened for the
exclusive use of women employed in
its vicinity. There is a sunny,
cheerful lounging room, with easy
chairs and and
work baskets magazines strewed
on tables Invite a member to the
stitch in time or the peep into
in the leisure moments of her
noon hour. The payment of ten
cents a week entitles one to the
of the rest, not the least of
which is the opportunity to enjoy at
moderate price the excellent food
served from the well-ordered
kitchen, which is a chief feature of
the rest. Great is taken to
serve the food In tempting fashion.
A specimen bill of fare, with prices,
includes lamb broth, eight cents;
tomato six; pickled lamb's
tongue and lettuce, ten; beef hash,
ten; mashed potatoes, five; scalloped
tomatoes, eight; health bread, three;
white bread, three; graham bread,
three; floating island, eight; orange
cake, five; apple pie, five; baked
apples, eight; cocoa, five; milk, three;
coffee, tea, three. Variety Is
given to the bill of fare from day to
day. Those who wish It may order
a regular course dinner, for which
they are charged twenty-five cents.
N. Y. Times.
SOME TEA STATISTICS.
The
to
Fragrant Crop Is Not Apt
Become More Expensive.
Tea has not yet been seriously
in price by the Chinese war
and for a very good reason. Hos-
have not in the least affected
either the tea district, nearly all in
the south of China, or the ports
from which is exported. While
some tea is produced north China,
the foreign supply comes almost
together from regions removed from
the war and its influence, says the
Philadelphia Press. In addition,
the proportionate share of tea pro-
by China is steadily diminish-
In 1880-83 of the average
product of pounds China
produced pounds. In
1883, however, while the product of
China remained stationary the prod-
of other countries had grown
from to
is now still larger.
Work He Does.
How much docs a newspaper man
write in a year An old newspaper
worker has sat clown figured it
out. He figures that he writes an
average of a column and a half every
day, except for his Sunday paper,
when he contributes three columns.
This makes twelve columns a week,
and, allowing for two
he has fifty weeks in a year, in
which time he turns out
words. An ordinary book of short
stories contains about words,
therefore his year's labor is
to twenty books. At this rate
of comparison the feat of Marion
Crawford in publishing two books
per annum does not strike tho news-
paper man as an Incredibly hard task,
even allowing for the extra amount
of thought involved in story writing.
Mr. Howells considers one thousand
words a good day's work. Thomas
Is satisfied with four
words, or a little over a quarter
of a Sentinel.
The
North Carolina would be in a
nice without her State Guard
Scenes would follow in which
mobs and lawbreakers generally
would fairly If
ton were military
companies, how long it be
before the necessity for these
necessity
may organizations would be keenly
into by publishing his grievance but a knave or a
fool would think for a moment of
abolishing the State
Star.
A Singing Hen.
A little twelve-year-old
of a hotel keeper at Baxter,
Ga., has a pet hen that wings to a
piano accompaniment. The little
girl will go into the yard, pick
the hen, bring her into the
place her on the piano and com-
playing something lively,
and hen will sit back on
dignity, raise her head and sing
like her life depended on the
effort. Georgia leads in the
business, as well as in
everything
A touching is mentioned
as having taken place in Muncie,
Ind, a few days ago. The child
of a poor family died. The y had
no money to buy a coffin or pay
funeral expenses The father
made a little pine coffin, placed it
with the little corpse in it on a
sled, and two brothers drew it to
the cemetery, followed by the
father and mother. That was the
And yet Muncie is sap-
Con-1 posed to be a civilized and a
Christian community.
THE CONDENSED.
People's Savings Hank, a
Erie, Pa., has assigned.
The heavy snow storm am
blizzard has struck New York.
Peter Jackson has accepted i
challenge to tight Charley
Three men were burned t
death in a building in Brooklyn
N. Y.
Snow in portions of
is twenty-two deep cu i
level.
A it
be rapidly moving eastward iron
Colorado.
Eight thousand troops are
scene of the railway strike ii
Brooklyn-
The American hotel at
Ala., destroyed by tire- N
lives lost-
Lucien Biker has
U. S- Senator by the
of Kansas.
A large founded in i
Lake
Twenty nine lives were lost.
A large steamer a rock
and sunk the Ohio
Alton, III. Several lives lost-
Fort Worth, Texas,
burned a stables and eleven
head of horses. Loss
It still comes gold re-
serve was reported at
a little above
Col. of
is dead. He served
during tho war on of
Gen. Bragg.
A cotton compress and 1,200
bale of cotton were burned at
Chattanooga, Loss about
half covered by insurance.
A at Covington, Tenn.,
blew off tho top of the Court
House and demolished a dozen
residences. Damage placed
The legislatures of several
States elected IT. H. Senators
Tuesday, as follows ; Texas,
ace Clifton; California. George
Perkins; Francis K.
Warren and Clarence D. Clark ;
New Million J. ;
G. Harris.
Mr. Robert Downey of Gran
ville county, was standing fifty
feet from the circular saw at a
lumber mill, when in some way
the saw caught a of
fifteen feet long and hurled it
through the air. The plank
struck Mr. Downey just under the
arm and stuck completely
through his body. He lived
nearly three days.
Religion from Congressional Lips.
Senator of North Caro-
and Representative Morse,
of Massachusetts, delivered
addresses at churches in
on Sunday. The
Senator delivered n address at
the young men's Gospel meeting
at the Colored
rooms, 1607 Eleventh
street northwest,
Morse delivered a discourse
on King's at the
First Congregational church on
Tenth and G streets, northwest.
Baltimore Sun.
In the world for Cuts
Ulcers, Salt
Fever Sores, Chapped Hands,
Chilblains, Corns, and all .-kin
positively cures or no
pay required, it is guaranteed to give
perfect or money refunded
Price 2- cents per box.
f Woolen.
This Reminds
You every day
in the
month of
January that if
you have
your Printing done
at the
REFLECTOR
JOB OFFICE.
It will be done right,
It will be done in style,
and it always suits.
These points are
well worth weighing
in sort
of work, but
above all things in
Your Job Printing.
I f I f are the product of killed
workmen, and rank with
F-Ts f Victor Bicycles in quality.
We make the best base
A balls, baseball bad, base-
ball gloves and mitts, tennis
J rackets, tennis balls, tennis
racket presses, racket cases, boxing gloves, footballs,
football suits, football and gymnasium shoes, gymnasium
supplies, sweaters, etc. e better goods for less
money than asked by other manufacturers, If your local
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write for our
illustrated
OVERMAN WHEEL CO.
MaVen of Victor Bicycles
i r
CHICAGO.
COAST.
LOS
W. L DOUGLAS
SHOE
Over Our
W. L. Douglas and Shoos.
. All
FIT FOR
A KING.
c for
qualities are
. i
ti saved on
If your cannot supply
fit If
Police Shoot. solos.
and
SI School
If your t cannot supply
you,
W. L. Douglas,
Mail,
R. L. Davis Bro., Farmville, N. C.
Co . C.
c. ;.
Co. N. C.
Joshua
u., X.
COBB BROS
Commission Merchants
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA
Consignments and
ABLE.
AT THE FRONT WITH A I INK--------
taught me that I lie bf.-l l th cheap
Hemp Rope, Pomps, Farming and very
necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general purposes, as well s
Hats. shoe.-. Dress Goods I have always on hand. Am head
quarters for Heavy Groceries, Jobbing agent tor N. o
Cotton, keep courteous an i attentive
FORBES,
GREENVILLE. N.
O.
Notice to Creditors.
The undersigned having qualified be-
fore the Superior Court of Pin.
as administrator to the
Fernando Fleming, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all persons Indebted to
of said decedent to make
mediate payment lo the
and all persons claims against
estate must present the -lime
before the day or this
notice ll be plead in bar of recovery.
This day of
of Fernando Fleming.
COTTON
MK WANT INK MILLION
ELS ON SEED.
Will the highest cash prices, either
in small or large lots. have
sale Cotton Seed Meal and Hulls.
ft
Real Estate
and
Rental Agent.
Houses lots for or for
terms easy. Rents,
and open accounts and any other
of debt placed in my hands for
collection She. have prompt attention,
Sail faction guarantee. I your
patronage.
WALK
. C.
The next Session this S.-ho
begin Tuesday the till day of
continue i weeks.
MONTH.
Primary English U-00
intermediate
Higher English
Languages
The instruction will continue through.
Discipline mild out If necessary
an additional teacher will employed.
Satisfaction n pupils
enter early and at tend regularly. For
further informal ion at to
W. II.
HERBERT
PARLORS
Under Opera House,
Call when want work
NORTH CAROLINA
B. K. TIMETABLE.
In Effect December
GO INC EAST.
GOING WEST
Pu-.
Sun.
STATION
Ar.
will
OLD DOMINION LINE.
TAR SERVICE
Ste leave Washington for Green
and Tarboro touching at all land
n gs on Tar Wednesday
and Friday at A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
Greenville A. M. same days.
These departures are subject
of water on Tar River.
Co at with steam
era of The Norfolk, Wash-
direct line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their good
marked via Dominion
New York. from
Norfolk A
more Steamboat from
more.
Boston.
JNO. MYERS SON. Agent,
J. J. Agent,
H. C.
i.
Pass
Ex i.
Ar. I
P. M. M A. M A. M.
I Kin-ton -18 ,
.-. rs Newborn
-8,
P M I A.
Train I with Wilmington
Weldon train bound North, leaving
Goldsboro a. in., an I with
train West, p, m
FERTILIZER
-FOR-
Corn and
General Crops.
Used and endorsed by leading far
mi rs In North Carolina and the .-O
for the past twenty years. I the
following for
pamphlet giving directions fir mixing
testimonials,
N. C, Sept. 1893.
Messrs. ft Co.
chemicals I bought
of you for making
to give I only
use It under cotton. You know I must
think It good, or I should not have
used it so long. This mikes HI or
years that I have been using It, and its
use hat made me able to pay for It cash,
not on crop time.
Yours truly, S. EVANS.
S. C. Oct, ISM
Boykin, Co,
gives us pleasure to say we have
using your for
more than fifteen years continuously,
and to continue to do so. Of
we are entirely satisfied that it
pays us to use It.
Respectfully, W.
R. M.
Boykin, Carmer Co.
Baltimore, Md.
Bros All Crops With
For sale by O. R.


Title
Eastern reflector, 30 January 1895
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 30, 1895
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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