Eastern reflector, 20 March 1895






JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all wort
in this line
NEATLY,
QUICKLY, and
IN BEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best
of Stationery.
e is Worthy of all Honor.
Id the retirement of Senator
Thomas-J- Jarvis North Carolina
loses u representative who has
honored every position to
which he has called. When
the was foist-
e. all ill. ;
voice was board a the
of Like
flint he
fewest out
he order- His
in the North
was of the who for
gets ail an i
s. f if
Buff Maim
of the hie brain
t ; iv on He
iii i iii.- a for
warfare with c ability
a i ii fame
the Ii. iv I .- State. Call-
i to . -i GoV- j
he
In the gifts many
ii ml confer. As minis-
t.-; the
.- that followed the dethrone-1
if Pedro, he h. hi the
dignity of the United Slates
high very was an I
k As a Si he I
i call ii t days of the Badger
the Grahams. Too soon for
. Old N nil glory he
Las ii I fate of the martyr.
On bis return be will End
of every North
whose Si pride is greater
party a welcome mingled
with tears of He is an
to a Slate, v. hose sou-, love ;
purity, troth manhood.
Washington New.
The Eastern Reflector.
You
The Reflector this
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
It will give the news
every week for
a year.
VOL. XIV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1895.
Calender For March Term, 1895.
B Ii
v.
Be Wanted A Kits.
A certain man Greens- j
oat calling
neon.
Ii Win late when be started to I
leave wanted kiss. All
of were
railing after a time
the lady said to
you first kiss that, lying
at the wood-pile, III kiss
will
She didn't dream he was going
to d it, but the for
it. grabbed up socked
lips in lie suddenly com- ;
grunting like ;
a dog a fast las j ;
h i to ax
with i hands
he get the
girl's mother had to get some
warm water and apply it with it
When he was re
leased all the skin was off ins
his was a frightful;
condition. He ask the;
lady to forfeit her promise, j
but he won't likely kiss any more
axes, especially in cold
Diversity Crops.
MONDAY 4th
Oscar Hooker vs- L C- La-
et
A Junes vs. Hooker.
33- vs. W. G-
Pods Iv Cory vs. E.
Vs. G- A. Me-
s i ix vs. Andrew J
White vs. k Fleming.
20- J- IV u vs. U
H- I. o. v. J s.
M- It Lang.
Keel vs.
E Spain vs. m.
Spain et
56- vs.
Whit,
WEDNESDAY 6th.
It A. A-. Co vs Sc
Abel Smith.
G- A-
James.
Ward wife vs.
A. T. Bruce.
Elliot vs J
Co et
Asa vs V
Protests
CO W A Davenport vs IV
J II vs U
Co Protests
J Ii vs s
Protests-
ii D vs w It It Cu
vs It U
Protests.
-l W Page vs
it it Co
F It Ii i o
T L and wife vs
II ii Pill's Pro-
lest.
SO J Page wild vs W
It Co a Ally Protests.
J A. wife vs
W Co
S C vs the a It
it Co
8th-
A it Co
A Davenport et vs
Asa Vs It It Co
-i A y vs Amos
F vs J
Co.
M it Page and wife rs W W
it it Co
vs It it Co.
ill It ll vs ii J
w i f u
J E Spier D A
OS V wife vs
U it Co-
M O White vs W It
It Co-
et vs u
it it Co.
Win vs L V
David House vs Thomas H
F Fleming vs W A W R R Co.
H Skinner vs Grimsley-
B H Sheppard vs
G A J P Drown.
Louis e-r a.- vs J
ex.
B Cherry vs Ger-
main
Sarah vs J
A Bro.
Galloway vs Mm it
J II ii k.-r et ah vs J
Martin and wife-
Sarah Cox J W Warren.
rail vs J S
JOHNSON'S JUMP.
A Wild Slide Down a Mountain
Past Hostile Indians.
MONDAY WEEK
One of the J vs W it
favor of a reduced cotton I , ., . .
acreage according n the plan I
proposed by the Jackson
be
Au effort is being ma--
have the present . s-
a law to
tho of liquor, law is
modeled after one in opera-
in
The provides that if a
of qualified
in any or city, or town,
or village, petition the board of
or tho
authority of ti-e
against the of license to
retail liquor, such license shall
not to any person- to
retail liquors m less quantities
than one the
cant shall ti t a
for the of license,
recommending applicant to
of good reputation and a
and person,
shall be signed by
a majority, of those who
may a counter petition, of
die qualified voters
tin where the liquors
to be sold, is the of
the document. It also requires
of pi
for license ii-
ii e been d by pa
tics dealer give
to Keep an place before
the is issued. License
last n unit are not trans-
violation of t lie law for-
license A may
revoked if the authorities deem a
dealer unlit. D.-It for liquor not
Liquor not be
sold to minors, or habit
Any
who uses liquor for political
poses is liable to indictment
Card dice throwing,
hauls, pool, etc., prohibited
saloons. There will be no screens
in dram shops, if carried
at business mast conduct-
ed tho from part of the build-
n i In-re provision against
renders and
of liquors by water crafts or
railway trains.
It is claim d that Bach a meas-
ab the above can pass the
but there in doubt of
us passing the House.
Bays the Atlanta Journal, is
the encouragement it would give
to tho diversification of crops.
The of the South must
learned much by their ex-
last year, and, as our
M A James vs A k it It it Co
ii Greene Jr., vs A A
TUESDAY 10th-
A Robertson wife vs
Southern Trade, published at St.
WEDNESDAY 11th.
Louis the following to Bay 119- E. D vs C. A. White-
121- W. vs. G- T.
M- -VI Stokes vs G-Stokes
et
G- A- vs. H. C
Harris.
on the
ill of necessity
to he the main coop the
South, but there are other crops
from which the that
section are beginning to realize
money i the fleecy
o t I
This is right, tho sooner i G. W. Cox trustee, Hart,
the Southern farmer realizes the 1-1- Ellington k vs. it. L
fact and makes op his mind to d Smith.
away with this crop making, i J. U. vs. J. H
the better he will be off, vs. W. . R.
withal t.
It. Co.
13th.
There are nine classes of W. H. Harrington vs. P.
pie who are no good to a Burnett.
First, those who go out of Lucy Jesse
to do their those j ton.
opposing E. A. Bland vs. W. Bland
those who prefer a quiet to
of business; fourth
those imagine they own
Picking up Benumbed
The around New River
are the
freeze by picking up the
where so notched with the
cold they can be dipped up
readily into boats. Tuesday
fifty barrels of these were
shipped to Wilmington, and
forty to New and
besides these was a pile
that looked like about a car load
on the wharf then.
The are of different kinds,
trout, mullet, rock, herring, etc.,
but trout predominated because
they are more susceptible to the
influences of the tho
others. They are now command
five cents a pound at
Jacksonville, a very good price,
makes it ail the better
I hose gather them We
aid told of boy, about sixteen
years of age, that made twenty-
four dollars Monday b- the fish
that ho himself picked up that
day In all fine trout are
said to have thus gathered
besides other fish. Newborn
Journal.
Recreations.
wife.
-MOTIONS.
their town ; fifth, those who think
business can be done without
advertising; those who
deride public spirited
seventh, those who oppose every
does orig
with themselves ; eighth
those who oppose every public
enterprise that does benefit
those who
to credit of a
low townsman- Some men pot
more than one of these
characteristics and a few ail of
The fellow more
than is a dead drag to the
Herald-
Entire stock of
and Dry Goods
at less than Cost.
J. B vs J- E L
Spier.
vs. Moore.
B- E. Taft vs
T. W. ;. J D
A- vs. C- O-
Brown.
27- . II. Cox vs.
It. S- Tucker vs. J. A. Sat-
et
H. Cox vs. B- H.
vs
Taft vs Latham Skinner-
Harris vs Walker.
It J Grimes, vs
man
Tho late James Anthony
favorite amusements were yachting
and angling, and, until his last ill-
commenced, he was out every
fine day sailing and sea-fishing in a
little vessel which he kept at Sal-
where he lived for several
months in each year. He was the
very best of good company, and a
most attractive and delightful com-
whose excellent talk and
endless flow of anecdotes will be
; by those who have
often him In private. He
ways wished to die in Devonshire,
and his life ended within twenty
miles of Darlington Vicarage, where
he was born, and where his early
days were spent.
An Accomplished
may I take that piece
of chocolate you left on the table
I will be so
you may take
little girl does not
don't you go and
grandma, dear, I ate it
Also a lull line of Hats,
Hardware, Groceries,
Crockery, Ac, At Cost.
BROWN HOOKER.
BI U J.
Iii one of the western Indian out-
breaks years ago four men and
a boy in a lonely silver
mine. T i; mine was merely a lat-
hole dug in the mountain side,
with a rude pole shack shanty
near by, on a bit of more level
ground. It was twenty-two miles
from the nearest mining camp,
where there was a cluster of shafts
and forty or fifty men.
Tho party of live, thus weak and
remote from help, were attacked by
twenty or more Indians, who were
repulsed with a of three war-
Then the savages camped In
a grove about a quarter of a
down the mountain, and beside the
t rail.
They counted upon killing who-
ever should attempt to leave the
mine for tho settlement, or come
the settlement to the mine.
They knew that the miners had no
large supply of provisions. They
had their prey penned in a trap.
There was no way out for the min-
except by the trail. Above the
mine the mountain towered
Even if climbed, it would
load only a wild region of peaks
and gorges-
In front of the mine the ground
sloped steeply down into the broad,
grassy valley of a mountain brook.
Both above and below the mine the
mountain Hanks curved to the val-
with abrupt and impassable
crags. As the slope In front was
very steep, the trail ran diagonally
down to the brook, along a natural
gutter made by the water of melting
snow.
For several days the besieged min-
quietly wailed. Knowing how
seldom Indians have to
maintain a siege, they hoped the
ages would leave. Rut the
rapidly became desperate. The
miners wore almost worn out with
watching against sight attacks and
exchanging long shots with their
besiegers all day.
be so bad if we could
sleep and work the said Big
Jake, the mine leader. it's
risky to go to the shaft from the
shack; and if we got into the shaft,
and they should close up us, we
couldn't get out. can't waste time
this way. The be bare
grub by to-morrow night. Some
one's got to go to the settlement to-
night, and bring out the boys to
wipe out these
going Don't all speak
at said
reckon it'll have to be
said Big Jake, that Trailer
Ike's laid out with a bad leg, and
Long Mose isn't onto dodges.
Chances is I'll be afore mid-
night. So, boys you'll have all the
rest the day to study up a funeral
sermon for Jake Don't
forget to put in it that he lost his
hair for duty; I Gen.
row chin to an army scout that if a
man dies his duty, he strikes
it rich up
cried Johnson, tho
boy cook. He took from the wall a
pair of and held them out to
Big Jake.
said
a start from here down, I can go
past that camp a
coyote afore they know I'm
started. Once past, there ain't an
alive, that
can get within long rifle range of me
in this crust of snow. If you go,
we'll all be goners, Jake. I'm the
youngest, the and the
est to git through, if I do say it my-
Big Jake looked at the boy keenly
while he spoke. Then he slapped a
hard palm heavily on his thigh and
answered,
Tho kid's struck the
pay vein.
give us your whole
he said.
could start now get through
in the daylight, but it would give
them a better to shoot. So
I'll wait till dark. Going down this
pitch, I shall fly by them like a
let. They can only shoot while I'm
coming and for a few seconds after I
go by. They'll rush to the trail, but
I'll turn off and go down tho steep
just this side of the
boy, there's a straight
ledge thirty feet
the have gone
over and filled it up below. It's only
a drop of about six
you'll be like a shot
and sail out so far that you'll fall
twenty or thirty
but I won't fall straight
down. I shall light away out on a
steep down slope that will check mo
up easy. I've been over such places
just for fun. It's just what we
want for a jump. I know every
inch of the ground. This last inch
of snow on top of the crust is just
the right sort for It sticks
to the crust and is soft; but it packs
just enough under the and It
isn't either damp or dry. I shall
carry a lantern. See
Reflector and Atlanta
Constitution a yr.
Reflector,
and twice-a-week
NO. World all for
a year.
He showed a short, light pole, per-
haps six feet long. It a long
strap at its lower end and a shorter
one fifteen inches higher. He tied
the lower strap about his waist and
the shorter one about his forehead.
Thus the pole rose from his back to
over four feet above his head.
On its top was fastened a small
lantern, shaded behind. Under the
lantern the pole passed through the
of an old wool hat. The light
would show the hat; the hat would
shade all below it.
he said, think
it is a man with a lantern on his
head. They'll aim at the hat or be-
low, about where the man's breast
ought to be. So they'll shoot over
Ms. And I'll be past and out of
range before they guess the trick.
I've figured it all out, you
Johnson was a Norwegian
boy seventeen years old, who had
been trained to use from the
fit ill year of his age. He came to
America at the age of eleven with
his father, Olaf a
man.
are Norwegian snow-skates.
wore eight feet long, about
two and a half inches broad, made
of light, thin wood, turned up three
inches in front. They were a
of an inch thicker and a
heavier
Just forward of their balancing
point, but a little behind their
middle was a leather loop in which
tho toes were thrust. Behind the
heel was a small block of wood to
keep the flat foot from slipping out
of the loop. Whoa the fool was lift-
ed the hung from the toes near-
level.
In a long, light staff with
an iron point is used to steer, to
chock speed or and to help in
hill climbing. A can
over good snow as fast as a skater
can skate over good ice, and can
slide down hill at fearful speed.
chose the darkest moment to
start. Ho was armed only with re-
knife, and closely dressed
for a race. When all was ready. Big
Jake lighted tho lantern behind the
shack, and wrung hand in a
silent farewell.
The boy slid softly round the
of the hut, and shot down the
slope at a great that increased
with every second. To the Indians
below the and bat seemed to
sail through tho air. That was all
they could see. But the lantern
cast light on the path two or three
rods ahead of the boy. So sudden,
swift, silent and surprising was his
descent that the Indian watchers,
though they had their rifles hand,
did not think to shoot until he was
close them. Then one shot
wide, another high, another a rod
behind
A hastily snatched rifles,
lower down, were preparing to fire
he should have, turned the
trail curve to give them nearly a
straight aim. But whirled
aside, sharply as a wheeling skater,
and shot directly over the cliff.
This threw the Indians all out;
though, just as he sailed into the air
four or live rifles spat fire, mostly
without aim.
When took the leap he was
going at a speed, only slight-
checked by his staff. He launched
into the air standing erect, nicely
poised, with every limb and muscle
limber.
The leap was afterward measured.
It was precisely feet
and one inch from the edge of the
to whore the heels of his
touched the snow below, after
a fall of over twenty-three feet. But
he alighted on a steep, downward
slope of heaped snow, that did
slop his fall with a shock, but simply
deflected it to an glide still
farther down the steep.
Thus ho passed, with bending
knees and skillful balance, curving
to his true direction, down to
far along the wide nearly level
creek bottom, got safely away.
hurried back with a dozen
minors eager for a tight, and three
donkeys loaded with provisions.
The miners reached the mine by ten
o'clock in the morning. The
donkeys, because of the crust, did
arrive until sunset.
As the Indians were gone, the re-
lief party could but growl at their
rub their still limbs and go
and measure and wonder over
leap. The next morning they went
home.
Before going they all shook hands
with Then
Charley was deputized to present
with u purse containing nearly
a hundred dollars in money, besides
various heavy gold rings and pins,
with address intended to ex-
press the general admiration
good will.
But Charley, when
the pinch came, was so overcome
with emotion that he stood speech-
less nearly half a minute, holding
out the purse, before he blurted
a or-
of our
sex. There; take it, and God
bless you, from all of the
however, long cited
this speech as the chin-
ever produced by Five Mine
Companion.
NORTH CAROLINA
Happening Here Over the
State
Tin- Central
Charlotte wan burned Sunday
right.
Tl no prisoners set
county j on fir., and their
The. was de-
lands around New ;
sold at auction, Monday,
brought per acre.
In the recent fire at
the building which Tucker
Murphy had their law office was
burned. They saved their h
E. B of
died Sunday morning. He
bad friends o the State
who learn of death with
row.
Mr- Slaw, founder
f Shaw University at
down the
broke Iii leg. He is ears
old.
Mr. Z -I
Coin I ., in his yard
and fractured He lived
n v after tin-
dent.
The now
has, to t
thirty one miles of
road.-, constructed by
convict
report hit again
this iii.,. tie slow arrived
according to schedule. We all
the
of the i that to follow the
the snow-
Tin- hog has for a eh
been fun
of items to I he If that
hog rooted up all this bad
I e to be tun oil
pork, and that u bile the
is cold enough to keep him from
The c Enquirer ways that
a few days ago there Were twenty j
prisoners in Union jail, while
it is not supposed ill ii a jail bird I
has politics, vet that
congratulated knell upon the fact
that there was no in tho
whole lay out.
is more solid in
Hustling noon for a day trying lo
make a dollar than there is iii
on the street a month-
man who is always
is happy whether ho is making
anything or not, and he is
ally making something, while the
and croaker are forever die
Herald-
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Baking
ABSOLUTELY PURE
NEWS.
A block of buildings
bus, destroyed by See, loss
The employee if
shoo factory at Lynn,
Mass, are out on a strike.
Columbia, S. c, had ten n
of snow, the heaviest in the rec
of any citizen there-
While temporarily u
drowned hers.-If an I
two children near Pa.
The destruction by fire of a
grocery house in In
canned a loss of
A hotel at Va. de-
by fire and several
escaped with tin ii
I i v es.
J. T- defaulting cash-
-f a bank
committed suicide when his short- j
age was discover d.
F. Allen k Co., wholesale j
grocers of have made an i
assignment. Liabilities and
assets each about
Gen- J. N a distill
Georgian, who was the
owner and for many yearn
Blind Tom, is dead
Bill Cook, a notorious
outlaw, has
by the United States to
fifty years in tho Albany
A meteor passed over
Georgia and produced great m
It was of unusual
and by a
rumbling noise.
President Valentine, of
Express Company.
says the United States producer
last year worth of gold,
more than 1808,
which produced the largest
amount in twenty five years.
The French steamer La Gos-
which was eight days
over due and has caused intense
s at last arrived at
Now York and was received amid
great Fears had been
that the steamer was
lost.
TO NOT
Last night's joint caucus was
a lively meeting. bill
pared by the big five was
and rend
It provides for five county com
to be elected by the
the cumulative feature
being a provision allowing each
r to vote ballot for five
of five ballots for
just as the voter prefers.
A few of the Bads raged bit
the
combine were m
the saddle and they were riding
the old an Nag at a
break neck speed-
Speeches were limited to three
minutes, but nobody heard of the
three minute rule after it
adopted. Mr. Skinner spoke
nearly an hour in of the
system. He
that two every three
he received the late election
were colored votes, but while the
might be to create a
it would he
ons to turn loose in
different counties to elect mag-
commissioners.
Bloody got on the front seat
with Skinner in the baud
of cumulation declared that
Mott. who could see further in
the any mar m the
Republican party, was a
list Fortune ottered a substitute
providing for a board of audit
composed of three member. II
a piece, but it was said
he himself scarcely when
he was at. Cox of Pitt, the conn
t from which Skinner hails, was
the first to show light. Ho want
ed no cumulation in his. lie
some hot shots into tin
Skinner camp, mid reminded
of the fact that ho won I
be a common, ordinary,
North Carolina instead of
a Congressman, or words to that
effect, I for the colored vote.
The caucus wont on and on, and
got warmer and warmer, while
outside the wind blow colder
and and Observer.
MORTALITY Or
France Has Lost Millions of Her
Sons In Battle.
The
recently published an interesting
article on the loss of life caused by
the wars in which Franco has been
engaged in the last half century. At
the beginning of the revolution the
standing army numbered about
In the course of the year 1793
the fooling was increased to
of which about
marched off to the various battle-
fields. In 1708 there was hardly one-
third of this legion alive. Ten years
is, after the wars in Bel-
along the Rhine, In Egypt and
the were again
soldiers in the French army. In
the period between 1800 1815
the wars of the consulate and the
empire cost the country, according
men, and
to Charles
The years of the restoration and
July government were
peaceful for France. Under
the second empire France had again
heavy losses by the Crimean war,
the Italian campaign,
of China and Mexico, and, finally,
tho war of 1870-71.
In the oriental campaign of 1851 to
1850 of the soldiers
who took part in it were buried
foreign lands. The Italian campaign
cost, the country men, and
of the sent to In
never returned. There are no
trustworthy reports as to the losses
In Mexico, but in the
war Frenchmen were
killed and wounded.
Prominent Actress That man
whom you recommended to me as a
competent person lo steal my
worth of diamonds and then return
them, was guilty of unprofessional
conduct.
In what way
Prominent really and
actually did steal them.
never mind. Here
are Go and replace them.
Pearson's Weekly.
IVORY FOR THE MARKET.
The Supply Is Time-
Suggestion.
Naturalists and commercial ex-
perts are bewailing the fact that
there is danger that the supply of
i elephant Ivory may soon be ex-
; At least sixty thousand
elephants are slaughtered yearly to
I obtain the amount of ivory
to supply the world's demand.
The value of ivory depends some-
what, on tho locality from which it
comes. West African Ivory is the
most valuable. It is exceedingly
fine-grained, and some of the
choicest specimens tho semi-
transparent appearance of onyx.
The best ivory comes from animals
found very warm and humid at-
In northerly situations,
where the air Is cooler and dry, the
product is coarse harsh, lack-
the velvety elasticity of tho
other. Guinea ivory Is slightly
greenish at first, but whitens upon
exposure to the air and light.
Vegetable Ivory is obtained from
seed, and Is a valuable sub-
for tho real article. There
are several manufactured Ivories, of
which celluloid is best known and
is, perhaps, tho most valuable. In
view of the enormous consumption
of ivory, the establishment of
farms is suggested. The
animals are extremely docile in
captivity, when reared with
domestic surroundings are manage-
able and may at the same time be
useful as beasts of burden.
N. V.
Shakespeare and the Farmer.
Ex-Senator Palmer, of Michigan,
tells a good story of an old Michigan
farmer to whom he lent a volume of
works. After allow-
lime for a perusal of the book
the senator asked the man one day
what ho thought of the book.
said tho
some mighty good
in it, and I see the old man has
some of my Y. Mail and
Express.
A Scientific Declaration.
you
arc
the
star of the evening.
Young are tho first to
tell me so.
mo to claim ray
reward as astronomer.
Young do you mean
is to give my name to
the discovered
Purity your blood, tone up
rein, and regulate the
b mil r Hood's Sold
by all
a w r A Jeweler.
C.
New lot Spectacle and
F. PRICK,
ash
Greenville. N. C.
Office the Kins Hesse.
DR. H. A. JOYNER,
DENTIST,
Office K. Fender
U -inn-.
I. JAMES,
ma
N. Xi
j. ii. j. l.
FLEMING.
Law,
M. O.
Practice iii all the Courts
AM
K t N i K,
LI'S., L.
I Toil
. .
I Alt VIS BLOW,
w.
S. .
h. ill tie Court.
Cl . TYSON.
Prompt attentive given
B. I.
ATTORNEY s-AT-LAW,
N. U
Oilier under Opera Third St.
COMPANY'S
L .
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
a L A t I U L A, X V.
Frantic h
eel-
100-100 Call early and get your
pick of
at
cent on the Dollar. BROWN HOOKER.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
Senator Ransom's prospect for; have dispersed i lorn was tabled, and that to
the Mexican mission seems to be after having been in Raleigh for P to the
brightening every day.
Editor id
Entered at the at Greenville
If. C., as second-class mail matter.
FEBRUARY 20th W.
The bill to reduce the official
bond of the Treasurer of Pitt
county was tabled last
day.
At the special election held in
Warren county on the W-
B. Fleming, Populist, was elected
to the House of Representatives
to fill the vacancy caused by the
death of Dr. S- A- Williams.
Some bad blood is being
stirred in the Legislature now,
the prospect is that it will
increase as the session is pro-
longed. It is a thing for
Mr. Butler that his election has
already come off-
Gav. Carr has appointed Hon
A. Graham, of Oxford, K- C ,
to succeed Judge Winston resign-
ed, in the 5th Judicial District.
Mr. Graham has not yet signified
bis acceptance, in fact he was m
Raleigh working for the appoint
of his brother he re-
the appointment
The Senate Committee reported
adversely the House joint.
resolution to elect by
direct vote of the people.
If any additional evidence was
needed to show the partisanship
of the Legislature, the utter
foolishness of most its works
it was furnished Tuesday by the
introduction of a bill to expunge
from the record of the Legislature
of 1893 a resolution
ting President Cleveland. What
statesmen these legislators are
The office of the Carolinian, at
Elizabeth City, was destroyed by
tire Sunday night and all of the
printing outfit but one small job
press lost Editor John had bat
little insurance on the plant. He
ordered a new at once
will continue the paper. This is
the second time he has been
burned out.
Butler got a set
back Thursday when the House
the interest bill to the
committee Finance. He went
the House Wednesday had
it taken from the com-
and it looked like he was
master of the situation but he
was the day- Let
the good work go on.
Boss Butler received a good
thrashing the House Thursday.
He has accused the Republicans
uniting with the Democrats to
defeat interest bill in Wed-
s issue of his paper. The
next day Mr. Ewart started the
ball when ho arose to a
privilege. He was followed by
Lusk, Campbell, minors
and the and Observer says
he was denounced with the fol
lowing epithets these
A liar.
A self constituted
A Bulldozer.
A Penny a liner.
An
A Brutal
A Falsifier.
An Unjust and
fellow.
Colonel Julian S. Carr. of Dur-
ham, N. C-, president of the Dur-
ham Tobacco Company, Durham,
N. C, has subscribed to
the American University, which
is to be erected-in Washington
by the Methodist
Church. Colonel Carr is the first
souther man to to
educational enterprise north of
the Potomac since the war.
Mr. L. L. Smith, Democrat
from Gates Co., was unanimously
declared entitled to too seat
which he now holds in the
The whale State is to be
congratulated this fact.
Mr- Smith is thoroughly fitted for
a legislator, has already aid
ed much preventing the pas-
sage of pernicious legislation
that has been introduced in the
legislature.
Whatever may be said about
the prospect of this bill or that
one passing at the present erosion
of the Legislature, we think vi
ale safe in saying that Mr- Moody,
of Bay wood, his offered one
resolution which neither the
nor Boss Butler with his
whip aided by his henchman, 8-
Otho, can unite the upon
and make them pass. If one
them votes for it ho will do so
because has no idea of its
pissing. The res is in
following words
for the re
of this session of the
General Assembly the members
and officers thereof draw no
that they pay their own
board, do their own washing,
and fifteen hours a
During th same day a
member offered a bill to re-
duce all salaries of officers in
the State per cut i
tiny so much in favor of re
peoples salaries, let
them first start with their own
and vote for Mr.
two or three weeks. Their
pose in assembling was to shape
legislation to suit themselves.
They prepared especially two
bills, the Election bill, the
Government bill. The
former has neon introduced in the
Legislature made the special
order for to-day. This bill is
about what was outlined even
before the Legislature met, so no
very great wisdom is exhibited
the part of the in
its preparation. The
Government bill has not as yet
reached the Legislature. This is
what has tire. Caucus after
caucus has held night
night nothing could
No agreement could be reached.
The scattered, and
reassembled and tried the effect
of their august presence, and
overpowering eloquence, to get
everybody together but it was
all Finally they gave up
loft for their homes this
wonderful production has gone
into the of the four-
seven Populists seven
Republicans What will its
be oven conjectured
It is said this four
will consider at least three
bills, may evolve one
from the throe. These are the
one which has been left as a
legacy to them by the
one introduced by Mr. Ewart,
and one which has not been
offered but much talked of
the Commissioners to three
having a committee of audit.
How ungrateful this Legislature
seems. The left
their work at home, paid their
board, sleepless nights
toil to prepare a bill that would
be the admiration of the and
then for body to refuse to
receive it.
What a set-back tor the
Bat s ii lite. May be
that all ill for the best, at
lead this is all the consolation
we offer them.
Reform School for girls
postponed for ten days.
The bill to turn over to the
Board of Education the
balance of the direct tax fund in
the treasury, for division among
among the public-school children
passed.
IF PITT m GREENE.
THE LEGISLATURE.
THURSDAY.
Bills were introduced in the
Senate to day to provide for
inspectors, to regulate the
drawing of jurors to extend the
time for work to begin on the
and Norfolk Railway
the Senate refused to concur
in the House amendment bill
to delays by in
shipment of perishable freight.
The Senate tabled the bill pro-
for the compulsory t
of the blind and passed the
bill to require railways to redeem
unused ticket and to prevent
ticket scalping-
the House bills were intro-
to provide for the election
Commissioner of Agriculture
the Legislature, to require ex-
to give bond, and to pro-
mote the breeding of better
horses.
Many resented at-
tacks made by Marion Butler's
paper, the Caucasian, charging
with trying to smother the
per cent interest bill. They
made some severe remarks about
Butler his pressure upon the
Legislature they became even
more excited when the Populists
said if the six par cent bill were
not passed the Populists would
no vote with the
cans and that no more important
bills would be passed.
Bills were tabled to make May
30th a legal holiday and to
vent preferences by insolvent
corporations.
FRIDAY-
The important new bills intro
the Legislature today
were to pay Superior Court
salary ; to require
officers of corporations created
by the Legislature to sworn ;
to relieve building and loan
from any unjust contracts
and permit them to issue
policies; to appropriate
to the State Fair ; to re
quire schools, colleges, and
churches to be incorporated by
Superior Court clerks ; to
a training-school for feeble
minded children ; to incorporate
tie Chadbourn
and railway ; to de
fine qualifications of tram dis-
Bills passed requiring all check
WHAT'S
The insinuation Mr. IV
an Attorney Raleigh, before
the committee on education that
Major Finger and John C-
borough had been
their selection of books
for the public schools has aroused
considerable indignation on the
part of those who that
accusation was groundless and
false. these two gentle-
men have so denounced the
charge.
Judge Robert W Winston, of
the Fifth Judicial District, has
resigned will remove from
Oxford and locate Durham-
He will become a member of the
law firm of Fuller Fuller the
firm becoming Fuller, Winston i
Fuller. Mr. W. W. Fuller, the
senior member of the firm,
locate New York City. Ho
becomes counsel for American
Tobacco Company. Mr. Winston
has made a splendid Judge
it is a pity that he has resigned.
There is not a blighter young
lawyer in North Carolina.
The six per interest bill
came up in the House Monday
was referred to the
It is said that
Butler told the Republicans a few
nights ago that if they did not
vote for this six per out. bill
there should be no change ma
either in the election law or
county Government at this
of the Legislature. If be
sticks to this ho can certainly
have the bill passed, because the
Republicans will vote for any
thing to secure action on these
two measures.
Isaac P- Gray, of Indiana, who
was Minister from this country
Mexico, died there last week-
It is rumored at Washington
Senator will be
appointed his place- A
signed by every Democratic
Senator will be presented to
President asking the
appointment of Senator Ransom.
No appointment could be
made and it is in re
that he will be appointed
less the should desire
to fill the place the
nm which Mr. Gray
SHODDY BUSINESS
We notice the big horse heads
advertisement of the Lyon Man
Company appearing
iv some of our State exchanges.
It is to be hoped not one of them
took it at the significant price of-
us. The cut is inches
long columns wide,
space of -I inches or more
than one column. Sow, hon
est gentlemen, and say now many
of yon would have done the same
amount of advertising for one of
your homo whom
you ask and receive favors it may
and to whom you ought to
feel indebted in at
the price paid you for bus-
We pause for reply.
Henderson Gold Leaf.
The Reflector has also been
curious to know what some of
the papers in which the horse
head advertisement Appears are
getting for it- received n
proposition from the send-
out this advert offer-
the big of for its
insertion three but they
were notified they get
that space in the Reflector three
months for nothing less.
We presume that about the same
offer was made to other weekly
papers is the State, and its
so a number of
them leads to the belief that
they were eager to accept the
offer made them. If this is true
to say the least of it such papers
reflect discredit upon the
in the State. It is not
dealing honestly, either, to
charge homo patrons who
support a paper one price for
space and then sell it to
concerns at half or less than half
price. The Reflector
charges a year fur a
with a small increase prise
for smaller space or
time, and nobody gets space in
it at a less sate. If a paper ban
any favors to show the way of
Special rates, the home patron
who stands with it year by year
is mere entitled to. such favor
than who only wants
space semi occasionally. Ii
to .- the i pa-
of some p ought to
investigate and see if they are
being treated fairly in such
matters.
The most important new
introduced in the Legislature to
day were To provide for a rail
way from Murphy up the
river to Georgia and
see to amend the charter
of the Plymouth, Washington
and railway ; to regulate
the hours of opening dosing
forbidding screens
in front of them ; to revise
digest the public to pro-
for the levy and collection
of inheritance tax; to
late labor hours cotton
to prohibit the use of
profane and language ;
provide Superior Court steno
The Senate passed the bill, and
it is law, to provide for the
equipment of the new buildings
at the Raleigh insane asylum. The
passed third reading,
after a spirited debate, the bill to
employ State convicts on public
roads, each county being allow
ed twenty five. An
adopted was that no applications
for convicts are to be considered
the convicts are needed
on the State farms. The bill to
prevent prize-fighting also passed
reading. The House passed
alter much debate, an important
bill prevent delays in freight
shipments. It provides that
whenever suit is instituted against
any railway doing business
this State for violation of any of
the laws requiring prompt hand-
ling of perishable freight, and the
railway loses the it ball pay
all costs expenses,
attorney's fees if the value of the
property does not exceed
TUESDAY.
In the Senate to-day bills
introduced to define trusts and
combinations and to make them
criminals, to repeal the Code
regarding the election of keeper
of to regulate fees of
Registers of Deeds, to
rate the Farmers Life Association
of North Carolina, to increase
directors of the Western Hospital
at
The bill to lend ten thousand
dollars to the Confederate
Association was postponed
until February
The bill to allow gun clubs to
buy a hundred thousand acres of
Currituck sound at fifty cents per
acre was tabled after a long
Bills were introduced to give
school districts power to vote
special taxes for schools, to char
tor Tennessee Ohio railway,
to provide for Legislative
every four to abolish
the Board Trustees of the
for the blind and
create a board of trustees.
Smith were seated
as members from Robeson unseat-
and
A bill passed requiring County
Commissioners to take the bonds
of security companies.
A bill to prohibit State officials
from taking free passes on rail
ways was tabled.
WEDNESDAY-
scrip issued by
payable cash at the
holders, option, and protecting
holders of tire policies
by making a judgment a lieu on
the company's real personal
property ; to place the direct tax
fund in the Treas-
to the public school fund.
An order was made that after
February 25th no appropriation
bills are to be received.
A personal debase, with hot
The planting season is again at hand and the
question that is of most interest to you is what
shall I plant, where shall I plant it, and how
shall I plant it. After what to plant
and to plant, it
how you plant and cultivate. From past
experience it is conceded by all that no land
will make a good crop unless properly
and that a judicial use of commercial Fer-
pays on the lands in this section. It is
with much pleasure and satisfaction that
for sale the following High Grade and Reliable
Brands of Fertilizers named below. The past
results from their use being endorsed by the
leading farmers in this section justify us in say-
are all well adapted to our soil. We
will sell for cash or on time upon usual terms,
and we believe we can give you a better grade
of goods as cheap or cheaper than you can buy
elsewhere. We offer for your consideration
and choice the following well established brands
of
National Tobacco Fertilizer.
As a moderate priced fertilizer is equaled by
few and excelled by none. These goods have
been thoroughly tested the past four seasons for
Tobacco and in no case has it failed to give entire
satisfaction. It is also good for Potatoes.
Capital Tobacco Fertilizer.
Not including a few brands of fertilizer made
especially for early truck, this is the richest,
highest grade brand of goods offered for sale in
the State and is made especially for Tobacco.
Farmers Alliance Official.
It is useless to speak of the merits of this
well-known brand as it was made by a formula
selected by some of the leading farmers of the
State and has been thoroughly tested. We can
sell you these goods for cash or per cent,
interest November 1st. A reasonable
discount for spot cash in car lots.
Guano.
Sec here I'm going to make a clean sweep of my
at still greater reduction and if you will come to
and let show them to you, you
one of those
fine suits.
my store
will not go out without
I must make room
for Spring Goods
and will greatly
reduce prices to
clean them out.
Bay State and other brands which I have
received and they arc beauties. All shapes
and lace and button
for men, ladies and
. . . Come to see
en.
before buy and you will go perfectly
satisfied in price and quality.
-I keep a complete line of-
It is too well-known all over the State to need
any recommendation at our hands. It has been
tested on all crops and never found wanting. It
words, between arose I is one of the best Potato fertilizer on the market
on the bill to transfer Mitchell and for Cotton it stands at the head of the list.
Beef, Blood Bone Fertilizer
This brand of goods as its name implies is
composed of animal flesh, blood and bone and all
farmers know these contain the best fertilizing
from the Eighth to the
Ninth Congressional
In the course of this bitter at-
tacks were made on Congressman
elect Richmond Pearson, whose
was denied, and
who win termed a
The bill passed.
The Senate committee this.
evening decided to favorably re- properties Of anything known.
port a bill abolishing the New
Hanover and Mecklenburg
Criminal Court circuit, and to
a new one to be composed
of those counties and Craven,
Wake, Halifax, with
one at salary,
with no solicitors, those of the
Superior Court being required to
act.
It was decided to ably
report the bill to abolish the
Geological Survey.
SATURDAY.
The most important new bills
introduced in the Legislature to-
day To prevent double
taxation to abolish
trusts, monopolies, and
and to protect private
to prevent of
female convicts on public roads;
to repeal the to the
State Guard; to amend build-
and loan association laws; to
require Superior Court clerks
to
Bills passed amending
chatter of the Wilmington COnt. ammonia.
Southern railway; to incorporate
the People's Fire Insurance Com-
to amend the charter of
Winston, to that the people
elect a Mayor; to amend tie
charter of Warrenton.
A Populist senator created a
sensation by declaring that he
would not vote to amend charters
for political reasons only. The
Senate the State temper-
bill the special order for
next Tuesday. The committee
reported it favorably.
Bills were tabled for hours of
opening and closing of bar-rooms;
pi duties of solicitors
paying them a salary.
The bids for the public print-
were opened by the
joint Committee on Printing,
to. and J. C. Stewart, of Win-
were the lowest bidders,
their bid being cents per thous
for plain work, and
cents for rule and figure work,
and they will, no doubt get the
contract, though the committee
; defers the award until next week-
Furnishing Goods,
which arc also in the reduction and can show
great bargains.
Come and sec
FRANK WILSON
The Leader in Clothing.
recovering
I am pleased to state that since
from my recent sickness I have visited
the northern markets to purchase
The chief new bills presented
in the Legislature to day were i
To provide for a general
law; to incorporate the
Fire Insurance Company ;
to change the name of the Great
Falls Company to the Roanoke
Rapid Power Company; to allow
the people of Buncombe county constipation and kin-
to vote on whether liquor shall . t
be sold in Asheville. The bill to I area diseases, cure
take away the PILLS
to the Oxford Orphan
FREEMAN'S HIGH GRADE
IRISH POTATO GROWER.
This goods is for trucking and contains per
cent, ammonia, and for reference you may ask
most any potato planter east, for all who have
tried it wish it again.
DURHAM BULL FERTILIZER.
Anew fertilizer that comes in this section
highly endorsed by tobacco men from Winston
and other sections of this State and is
by the Durham Fertilizer
PERUVIAN
FERTILIZER.
Everyone knows what the old Peruvian
Guano used to be and this is largely composed
an money they receive. of genuine Peruvian, containing 1-2 to per
ammonia.
TRAVER'S PER CENT. TRUCK.
This is one of the high grade brand of goods of-
for Truck in this section and you will do
well to try it. It is adapted for early truck and
Irish Potatoes and will grow nice tobacco.
ACID PHOSPHATE
For sale, containing and per cent, of
available acid.
GERMAN
This is without doubt good or Cotton.
Lime and Cotton Seed Meal for
Purposes.
This is in great demand in some sections and
Don't forget we can give you best figures.
Write us and we will conic to sec you, and
will take pleasure in naming you low figures.
To individuals or clubs wanting a car load
more we will will make special figures. Don't
forget that we arc headquarters for
Very truly yours,
Office at Planters Warehouse
NEW
Perfect Health.
Keep the system in perfect or-
by the occasional use of
Liver Pills. They reg-
the bowels and produce
A Vigorous Body.
For sick headache, malaria,
and am now prepared to show you at.
------site line of------
S,
Furnishing Goods, Etc, Etc.
You will find all my goods strictly and prices
Come to see me and let me show yon what can do.
ow
GREENVILLE N. C.
ESTABLISHED
J.
o o e;
GREENVILLE. N. C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
KEGS STEEL NAILS, ALL SIZE-.
Cases Sardines.
H Bread Preparation.
Soap.
Star Lye
Boxes Cakes an Crackers.
Stick Candy,
Cases Matches,
old Dost,
Good Lurk Baking Powder.
Backs Coffee.
Molasses,
Tons Shot,
Kegs Powder,
Cars Flour,
; Meat.
Hay,
j Tubs Lard,
inn Granulated Sugar.
P.
SO Gall A Ax Snuff,
R. R. Mills Snug.
Three Thistle
Boxes Tobacco,
i Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes,
O d Va. Cheroots,
Cases Oysters,
L.
GREENVILLE,
N. C
N. C
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At current rates.
AGENT FOB FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOF SAFE





THE REFLECTOR
Local
There were some leaky
when thin snow melted-
load Flour, just in
D.
Greenville's electric lights and
water works are all mud.
Cotton Seed wanted or Cash
at the Old Brick Store.
Sunday was a beautiful day-
but very wet under foot.
Mr. Warren reports plum
blossoms at Riverside Nursery.
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets,
up stairs. Old Brick Store.
The snow resulted in a
few broken windows last week.
D- M. New Garden Seed
at the Old Brick Store.
The small boy is h
an a for span owe.
Remember I can take your
and Have you a suit of
clothes made to order. Tit
Frank
Friday W- E. Belcher killed a
deer that
dressed.
Next Friday, 22nd, will be
legal
holiday.
Buy Seed Meal and
lilies Triumph Potatoes at the
Old Brick Store.
The is much like a
Bent with a hole it hard to
get rid of.
and Ola Forbes
in a good bunch of ducks
every day they go out hunting.
Remember I par yon cash for Chicken
Eggs and Produce J the old
Mi Store.
e Lave h.-aid the question dis-
cussed of a tannery
Greenville It would
M tee must think that street
lamps needed lad
were lighted the
whole cf last week.
Set t received car load of b. st
Flour, lowest puces.
D- W.
Miss Margie Langley is sick.
Mr. O L went to
sou Monday.
Mr. B- F- Sugg for Kinston
Monday
Mr. Joe Scott, of Scotland
Neck, spent Sunday here.
Mrs. W. R Parker and Miss
Mary Bynum are both sick.
Mr. and Mrs- L B. Rountree
returned Monday from
Ex-Senator and Mrs. T J Jar-
left Saturday for Raleigh.
Mrs. Alien Warren has gone to
Washington to visit her
Mrs- L Starke and little
child left for Oxford Monday
morning-
Miss Clyde Moseley, of Greene
county, is visiting the Misses
Wilson.
Miss Cox, of Grifton, is
visiting her sister, Mrs. Laura
Anderson.
Mrs. Harrison has gone to
Washington to spend some Weeks
with relatives.
We are glad to hear that Miss
Lillian Cherry has so far
ed as to be up.
Mr. of
died Saturday of
consumption-
Mrs of
Hill, is visiting her parents,
and Mrs. S- B. Wilson-
Mrs. J. B. went to Kin
Friday evening to spend
some days with friends.
Mrs. G. F. of New
Haven, is visiting her
brother, Mi. R. L-
Miss Jennie Williams returned
Saturday where
has been teaching school.
Mr. Jacob E n i is gone
to to give
with wax figures daring the fair.
Miss Lucy C-ix returned home
last week from a visit of
weeks to and
Mr- and Mrs. M T. Spier, of
have spending a
with the family of Dr.
W. H. Bagwell.
At the Methodist Church.
G. A.
large to hear
at the Sun-
day, and preached two delightful
sermons. The was
administered at the close of the
morning service.
Marriage Licenses.
Only two couples, both white,
applied to Register of Deeds
King last week for a permit to
get married. They were W- A.
Garris and Cornelia Forbes. J. E-
Roberson and Lizzie Congleton.
Badly Hurt.
met with a
accident last Wednesday He
was at work at the public school
building and while hewing a piece
of timber with a hatchet it glanced
struck him on the knee,
his He is
along well-
Snow Wheel.
Last Thursday Mr. L. U- Pen-
was out on a novel wheel.
He took the front wheel out of
his bicycle and in its place put
a runner. This runner would cut
its way through the snow and
Items.
There was no preaching at
Salem last Sunday owing
to the bad weather.
Mr- F. M- Kilpatrick is smiling
again, it's another boy.
Misses Fannie Motley and
Emily Roach spent the past week
with relatives here.
We think the fair will be poorly
represented from our neighbor-
hood.
The cold weather has put the
farmers behind with their
j work.
Died.
Mrs. Delilah E- Doughty, who
slipped down on the ice Friday a
week ago and hurt herself very
died Monday night at
o'clock. She was about years
old and had long been a resident
of She was a member
of the Baptist church, professed
faith her at an early
age, and lived a consistent
life. No lady in the com-
more friends and was
held in higher esteem than she.
The deepest sympathy of our
people is extended to the
could make high speed it.
On th Snow
Mr- King returned home
Wednesday from Rocky Mount in
a sleigh- He had his up
there and got the snow,
but determined not to be out
done he removed the wheels, put
runners their places and con-
buggy into a good
sleigh.
make a path for the wheel- lie j and many relatives who mourn
their loss. Burial will take place
at o'clock morning
the Baptist cemetery.
Poetry His Sleep.
Dr. was a good
one on his brother
He said woke him
up Friday night laughing his
sleep. He kept still to see what
was up to heard him
repeat two lines of poetry.
I the snow; the beautiful
snow.
Let me see you before you go
then broke out in another
laugh so that Doc. could not
i catch the remainder of the verse.
i When of his poetic
next morning had no re-
collection of it. but said he did
j dream that he got up and upon
I going out of found that all
I the snow was gone. expect
I the doctor has got a Was bill on
urn.
Too Long.
We notice that the gentlemen
from Pitt, the Rev. J. T- Phillips
offered prayer at the opening of
the House of Representatives on
and that day is report
ed as the most and
sensational of the so far.
Verily his was much
availing.
Oldest Man in the County.
Mr. David an inmate
of the County Home, died there
a days ago. Mi. J. w. Smith,
of Home, tells
us that Mr. was
the oldest man m the
he lacked only three of
being old at the time of
his death. He was the
10th of May,
Mi. T L. Mane .-k. of t Miss Florence
Hamilton's Mill, received unite a down on the nu leading to
seven cut on hi- thumb by a bit j the dining room evening
of one of the planers. n came near breaking one of
., ,. . arms,
the snow came there
been great destruction of birds
rabbits around
let n few bright
rush yen too quick into garden
planting There will be some
weather yet. if the prophets
are to be upon.
Bring your cotton seed to
and buy
Meal and Halls. Car load of each
just arrived tot sale cheap.
The Amateurs will
present I he at the
i . i Monday evening.
25th.
Mrs. P. E. Dancy and Mrs
Charles both slipped
down at a few
Fortunate y
were only slightly hurt.
Mr. C G- J of
a man of Pitt county is
justly pr came in on Thurs-
day to be here a
days with relatives and
pi d show
chants samples of
line of
Slaughtering Birds.
The hunters had fine spout
last week and some of them made
big records. Mr. Ed
brought in
iv and got rabbits,
partridges, robins, doves
and some other birds. Mr.
Cox saw some black birds
going in a hole to his when
i e stopped up the barn and
closed the hole and captured
Hotel Arrivals.
Hotel C Dunn,
F. J. Saunders, J T.
Coast Line; S. F- Dunn,
Neck.
F. L. Hurley,
; S- F- Scotland Neck;
his splendid E. R. New York i Jas A.
Sanders, J. S Dye. C H. Snow,
Jr., Baltimore;
Virginia.
Note .
Frank Dancy. Jim Cherry and
Herbert White killed rabbits,
robins, larks, and doves
Friday.
The steamer Myers was ice bound
at Washington, and could not
come up last week She came
through Monday
From the price some the
wood haulers charge for a small
load must think the town
is full of millionaires.
Rev. J. drove
i country from Falk-
land Sunday evening, but owing,
j to the r did not preach at N. C,
i night in the Presbyterian church-i Blount, of York,
I This was his visit to i of this and a
Be left next morning of Mr. L C v
and in a few days
will depart for Ins new home in I visiting v, t, and was
Anderson, S- C- Eastern North i back to York a
Carolina loses a good man in his I s
He had
on his
Kin
The snow has
ed.
A small child was found dead
in its mother's aims here last
night No particulars as to the
cause i f death.
Tucker A Edwards lost a good Honors
The ice snow floating down horse this morning with i Rev. G-F-Smith has received
the river accumulated against from President of
the at Washington until it j notice of his selection
made the stream solid for some Hundreds of buzzards were instructor of a class of minis-
distance- noticed flying over town Monday of the first year in
afternoon. Systematic Theology to be taught
I at. a summer school there from
The snow has left people 11th to 19th. This is a
with sore eyes and col -ed glasses served compliment to Mr- Smith
are popular. shows that he high
, . I with the leading men of de
The roosters are trying s well as the
lungs at
nights-
Bethel Hems.
N. C , Feb. 18th, 1895
Mr. A. B. Cherry went to
Greenville business last Fri-
day night-
Our Mayor went to
last Monday
day on business.
Mr. John E. Carson was mar-
to Miss Lydia J. Carson at
the residence of the Bride's father
Mr- R. J. W. on
street n on Wednesday
evening Feb. 1895,
A.
Mrs. Jane
our townsman. Mr R. Bunting
died at her home near
last week funeral s were
conducted by Rev. Mr- of
Mr. A. -lames, Sr-, of Bethel,
township, died at his home last
Monday night services
were held Wednesday by Elder
Samuel Moore.
A large Mask of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
If the last half of February is
to be up with the in the way
of weather, everybody will be
glad that there are only days
in the month.
crowing early
their
these
man may guy, and a may lie,
a may puff and blow.
But he make trade by sit-
in the shade,
Waiting for business to grow.
home-
of the people here
Trouble Breaks Out Again.
Is bigger lie in the
growled the exchange
editor, jabbing his shears
into an
per before him, old pro-
verb. I've seen it rain lots of limes
when it didn't
nothing strange about
said the financial editor.
seen plenty of dry weather
when all signs didn't
rejoined the other,
you're not the one that's
seen it. And I know there are
plenty of fools like the old fools,
I don't reflected
the financial editor, I urn
willing to make affidavit that a
watched pot will boil as well as
any other
know that your
davit would strengthen the state
merit any. but it's all wrong about
a live dog being better than a
dead lion. It isn't necessarily a
that knows its own
father, and the hand that rocks
the cradle doesn't rock the world
by a jug
child isn't the father of
the man either. The man's the
father of the
troubles do sometimes
come
to bed and early to rise
won't make you healthy, o-
wealthy, or wise, either. It only
makes you I've lived in
the long enough to
know
saved isn't two-pence
earned, and care kill the
Neither does it take nine tail-
ors to make a
it you pull out one gray
hair there won't be thous-
do you about
snapped the financial
do you what
it to constitute a
the exchange editor.
know you can't always toll a
by the he
Sometimes he's got to stay in the
same room with men that
always
either. Sometimes two is a
crowd. I know men that take KB
altogether too much room for
then size,
Bat friends interfered.
Bats m disaster.
The old rhyming
tells that
In every future year of our Lord,
When of the figures is
twenty five
Some warlike will draw the
sword,
Hut peaceful in peace will
thrive-
One eight bundled
and was the fifth
year of modem limes which
the aggregate of was
and it was the first in the
series which extends over a
nod of in which
the predictions of the
were not literally In
Russia, Poland Denmark
formed the
Sweden, which the
war, which ended the
disastrous defeat of Charles XII
j at
is one of the dark
dates in the of time be
cause of its being the year in
i which the French revolution
out and raged until after
he Reign of Terror.
The year 1798 witnessed the
famous campaign of Napoleon
into Egypt, and the formation of
the coalition
against
The next date which the
sum total of the figures the
dale aggregate was 1879,
that year Great troops
Afghanistan, be
a monstrous of
Married.
morning at o'clock, at the
home Mrs. R. 0- Gardner, near
Mr. Henry C Hooker,
a popular young merchant of
Greenville, and Miss Carrie K.
Latham, a charming young lady
well known to all our people,
were Married by J. W. Hard
of Gel The attend-
ants were Mr. J. B- White, of
Greenville with Miss Pet Pate,
of Goldsboro, Mr. Frank
Latham, the bride's brother, with
Miss Alice Gardner.
Immediately after the ceremony
the couple drove to Goldsboro
and took the noon train for
Greenville, arriving here the
evening. From to a
reception was held at the
of Mrs J. J- Jr.,
sister of the groom, may j bind them
friends called to extend d.
to the happy couple and; One thousand eight hundred
to welcome the bride b to eight, the fifth this
LETTER
Our Regular
Washington, D C, Fob 1895
With the Senate pulling
way and the House the other
there is little probability that
President Cleveland's advice will
be taken to the extent of
in interest that will
have to be paid those
per cent bonds. The House
Ways and Means committee has
a revolution for the
lug of those by
the issue of per cent gold
bonds.
But nothing be hoped from
the Senate, where it has been an-
by who are strong
enough to make good their
that the only financial leg-
will agree to is the
bill for the unlimited coinage of
silver, which has been favorably
reported from the Finance Com-
This bill provides that
the government shall coin and
deliver for each dollar's worth of
presented at the mints
one silver dollar, and that the
weight shall be
as was
a of a general
bill introduced by Senator Jones,
of Arkansas-
It would seem that
statement, that the
only for not at first
public nil the details of tho
made for the purchase
of gold with that it
might hamper the other contract-
and that the
had nothing to conceal
should have been sufficient, but
it has ore vented some of the
Senators from making exhibition
of themselves.
The Senate amendment to the
diplomatic consular
bill, appropriating
to start the of a
government cable to Hawaii, has
many enemies in the House,
winch has refused to concur
therein- Th ; bill is- now in the
conference, d unless the Senate
a contest lasting to the
days of the session, and
maybe resetting in the failure of
appropriation bill is
NEAREST FRIEND
IS YOUR
Perhaps you are particular about it most folks
are. Needs to be well other friends.
Good Underwear warmth and lasting
I qualities, and is not given to back-biting, like
some friends. If you WANT A TIME
this winter, buy Underwear from men,
l women and children.
Do gee any other paper
that gives you as much good
reading matter for the as
hi foiled in the We
are h limn ever
it just such a paper as you
want to s. in Pitt
county. The more help us
tins the bet we will be
bled t make the paper. See if
neighbor will Lot subscribe.
All things being people
their patronage to
home enterprises, and
should do this when the
them a
better article than they can gel
elsewhere. Reference to one
to-day will
show you what the Dur-
ban Co. offer to smokers-
by this company
are the best for the money yon
can find. Ask your dealer for
t hem-
Hood's is Good
it
Mr. L H. has received
the prettiest wheel brought
here. It is a new model
ordered
Tobacco
A G- Cox has
load of
and to
ville headquarters for best To
Flues- Those in need of
Flues this season will do well to
remember
tho
a car The planing mill of the Green
Fines J Lumber Co. is shut down
few days waiting for dry
lumbar.
Wright colored, who
stole some money from Mr. J. Q.
Smith about put
An exchange says this is
month to plant potatoes . m jail this morning,
would like to see a fellow get a
hole in the ground big enough to
a potato now.
There was another light snow
Saturday night, but instead of
turning colder it was much warm
Sunday and the snow melted
snow is
still on the ground at this writing.
First of the
Spring Oats, Cheap at tho Old
Brick Store.
Plenty of land blanks
at office now, also I
chattel deeds and crop j
liens.
When a gets blue feels
poor and decides to cut down his
expenses, the first thing be does
is to shave down his church
the next thing is to stop
his How a can ex-
to prosper with neither re-
or news is away
our knowledge-
some incorrect
blanks for crop liens, mortgages
and deeds are being sold in
Greenville, I would call the at-
of persons wring them to
tho fact that they can correct
forms either at my or at
the office- Parties
calling at my office for them
will be supplied free of charge.
W. M- King,
of Deeds-
Charlie Barrett Eugene
Wilson are the champion hunters
reported so fr. They went out
Friday got sapsucker
two sparrows
The ground being covered so
long in snow has caused the
birds to become very poor for
want of food, and some of the
say they are hardly
worth It might be well
to give tho birds a rest
Some people haven't go much
nerve,
While some are passing held ;
But the fellow shows a brazen
cheek
Who asks you, it cold V
or the Witch's Se
a beautiful drama in acts,
will be presented by a company
of home talent the Opera
House Thursday evening, 21st-
Give them a good
Out For Side
A amusing conversation
occurred between two of our boys
in the office, Thurs-
day, we caught this part of
it-
tell you, Miss So
and So
Bay Oh,
put that pie box- There is
any Miss So So. She is
Well, if she is mar-
I reckon she is ex-Miss So
So, ain't
parted them with a col
rule.
Who knows what a day may
forth
Whether joy or sorrow;
For the beautiful snow all around
to day,
May be only slush to morrow.
Greenville
They receive many beaut if u
presents.
Hall rack, Oscar Hooker.
Lamp, S- T- bite.
Lamp, Mrs. C M Bernard.
Silver cake basket, gold
J. B-
butter dish and
B- Jane, R D
Prank Wilson-
tea
and
spoons, W. B-
J. A.
of combination date oddities,
did not witness any formal
j ration of modem limes, as far as
shipwrecks, accidents, rail
i way disasters and mis-
haps concerned-
lined Ono eight
land ninety seven will be
in which the combined
aggregate there can-
not possibly be but three others
another
She Goes Up Head.
The has resigned
its seal in the school of weather
prophets and tendered the
to the editor's little
girl. His hist born was amusing
herself singing Sunday
making her own tune her
words. Catching the sen-
prediction for
Monday evening, she was
asked where she got that song
I'm just
the weather is to be Mon
she replied, and went on
with her song, changing the
word good to favorable. Her
prophecy struck it right.
Don't Waste lime.
If you want to be ready for the
spring trade that will when
this weather thaws out, it is time
you were placing your advertise
so as to let people
what you have to offer tho-u.
your and goods
ed before hand in the minds of
the people brings better results
than waiting and rushing before
after they have already
We have heard the old to some other store to
say they always planted their gar- The
dens the of but j business is always the
guess no through, Put
the snow to put any seed in on Reflector be ready
that date of this year, 1895- tor trade when it t
Set silver
Greene.
Silver
Silver napkin ring, B- M-
Silver ice pitcher, Dr. Laugh
Pair pictures, E.
Starkey.
flower basket, Bliss
China pitchers, W. B. Brown.
China bane dishes, Miss
James-
China oat meal service, Jarvis
Set napkins, Miss My i tie
sou.
Towels, Miss Lillie Wilson.
Towels, Misses Bettie, Sarah
and Honker.
Mis. W. B
Greene.
Silver butter knife and sugar
shell, Pate of Goldsboro.
knife and
I of the same kind that
j time and the opening of year
he Quorum Restored.
Col. Harry of Pitt
county, returned yesterday to
and to his of labor
her-. During his Um
has been unable to
-lo anything for lack of a quorum.
The Big Five a quo-
the General Assembly for
transacting business, when
leave the city, the whole
thing stops lid they
back to set the wheels in motion
again Raleigh and
TELEGRAPH NEWS.
Makes Pure Blood
Scrofula Thoroughly Eradicated.
I. Hood Co., Lowell,
Is with pleasure that give you the details
of our little May's sickness and her return to
health by the use o Hood's
was taken down with
and a Bad Couch.
Following tills a sore came on her right side be-
tween the two lower In a short time an.
other broke on the left side. She would take
polls of sore mouth and when we had succeed-
ed In overcoming Oils she would suffer with at-
tacks of high fever and expel bloody looking
corruption. Her head was affected and matter
oozed from her ears. After each attack she be-
Hood's Cures
worse and all treatment failed to give
relief until we began to use Hood's ilia.
After she hail taken one-half we could see
that she was better. We continued until she
had taken three Now the looks Ilk
The Bloom of Health
i Is rat a a pig. We feel grateful, and cannot
In of Hood's
Mid. A V. Adam. Inman, Tennessee.
Hood's MM easily, yet promptly
efficiently, the bowels. Ho.
Silver knife and sugar away Wing
shell, L. Humphrey, of Golds
Bureau and Wash-stand scarfs,
Mrs. J. J. Cherry Jr.,
Set chairs, Z-V. Hooker.
There was ft set of furniture
and some other valuable presents
mentioned in this list, also It is still spread
A fire occurred in Port;
mouth Thursday night.
New Orleans people wore so
a snow
everybody shut
up business and indulged the
rare of snow balling.
In week there were sixty-
cases of cholera twenty
nine deaths from that disease
number received at the homo of
the bride-
tho home
of Mr- Augustus four
miles from Gr Wednesday
afternoon at o'clock, his
Miss Cornelia L- Forbes and
Mr- Adolph Garris were
by I. D. Cox, Esq.
Hie homo
of Mr- Elijah Proctor, at cold, stormy days people have
laud, Wednesday evening at little or time to stop read
o'clock, Mr. Galloway and bill boards, hand bills and similar
Miss were married by outdoor reading. They prefer a
Rev- G- F- Smith. cozy nook with a newspaper.
lug
Doherty A Wood worths silk
mill at N- J-, destroyed
by fire. Loss and
people thrown out of employment.
Hon. Gray, United
Minister to Mexico, died last
Thursday of pneumonia.
advertising ought
to specially valuable in winter.
Is your Overcoat and 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. doubt you have heard about our
Dress Goods juices. The ladies of Greenville
are all talking about the elegant prices
so low. I remain, yours,
c. f.
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.
t Offer the best selected line of
ill in ii i-
to be found in Greenville. Comprising
goods at reasonable prices.
Dry Notions. Shoes, Hats 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-
line of to
be found in Pitt county. Ladies, men, children,
farmers, mechanics and laboring people of any
and every profession come to see us and get
cherry's prices fixed in your minds before you
try to buy Black and Spring Oats
and Seed Potatoes on hand and to arrive.
Yours for lair dealings, good quality and low
prices, J. B. CHERRY CO.
SHIP YOUR
and
OTHER PRODUCE TO
. . . . DAVIS, HILL CO.
10th Street N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C.
You will highest Cash We buy outright o
handle on Commissions
Sales and Prompt Commission for hand
ling goods, rive r cent. for our Price
in mil
BUILD UP HOME
patrol tiring Homo
Main Co.,
f n.
At M
a- on
Their
Of
a u Nickel, hand
a very too Sumatra
Havana lilted,
In honor of t
well.
a Cigar, Wrapper
tilled, sure win-
In honor J. s.
Pratt, of Stick Durham To-
Co.
lo
chinks
Five for cent. The Hue t for
I he money.
oil
Three for I rent. hummer that
Mick to home U your or
put. up when
tired,
N. r.
Get. Your in Yon Cm U flu M
GREENVILLE, N. C.
haw of the
T W
ran ever and are headquarter. i Flue W will make th. m a
heap M the d our wort in every particular.
S. K. Fender Co.,
In I Mowing
ESTABLISHED 1879.
AT
Shin to
J. a Jr.,
Cotton Factors
--AND-
Norfolk A.
OLD BRICK STORE
flu to
Not foil, i
Middling -to
I OM J
to l
Corn.
The of W. Lang A
N. C. ll-
consent on the. l-t
ISM. W. UM with.
drawing from tho inn. The
win he by W. M. All
i to the
ed lo make payment lo V. Q, I
. i.
I W M.
. their will
their Interval, our
chasing elsewhere
n all Its
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
HICK, TEA, c.
from Ml
you in at on A com
stock of
j FURNITURE
, r M n
ho times, are nil h it tn I
lot fore, hi
I o at a woe m
fully,
. M.
N.





The management of the
i Equitable Life Assurance
Society in the Department of
the Carolinas, wishes to
cure a few Special Resident
Agents. Those who arc 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, aid the
respect of their community.
Think this matter over care-
fully. There's an unusual
opening for somebody. If it j
fits you, it will pay you. Fur-
information on
W, J. Manager,
Hill, S. C.
THE GREENVILLE
iron worn
JAMES BROWN,
-o
of
plow, Stove and Brass
castings, andirons,
O-
And tn
Pumps, Pipe, Valves,
Machinery, ore,
Prompt and i are fa attention given re-
pairing
it guarantied. Tobacco Hogshead
for sale lowest ices.
WILMINGTON II h
AND FLORENCE BAIL ROAD.
Co
Poor
Health
means so much more than
you
fatal diseases result from
trilling ailments
Don't play with Nature's i
greatest
If you are feeling
out of sorts, weak
and generally ex-
have no
and can't work, J
begin
the most J
hie strengthen log
is
Brown's Iron Bit-
A few bot-
comes from the
very first
stain your
teeth, and it s
pleasant to take.
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments i
Women's complaints.
r Get only the has crossed red .
lines on the wrapper. All others are
On receipt of two ac. stamps we
will send set of Ten Beautiful
Fair Views and
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO.
Administrators Notice.
Hating qualified ax administrator of
the of B. B. n an. deceased,
notice is hereby -nun to nil persons
estate to
them proper
on or before the of
or this notice Will lie in of
Parties I i Hi-
estate are it-quested to e prompt
payment.
This 5th.
F.
A CANINE UNDERTAKER.
Dog That Were Given a Burial by a
Big Newfoundland.
Last week a telephone message
received at the Jackson villa
crematory saying that a dead
I was lying on State street near
Main, and asking that it be removed.
A cart was sent after the dead
but on arriving at the place n
dead dog could be found. The only
I dog in sight was a large black New-
j lying by a heap of loose
; The Times-Union tells the
I story.
A person living close by insisted
I that lie had soon the dead dog close
to where the Newfoundland was
The driver began to look
, around and kicked into the mound
. of loose earth. As the earth was
knocked aside there, in plain view,
; a dog's foot projecting. The
driver took his shovel and soon had
the dog uncovered. There in the
hole by the side of the dog was the
I body of a dead chicken. The dog
and chicken were thrown into the
and carried to the
A few days ago another dog died
j about a half block from the place
where the first dog was found. The
; body was thrown into the street and
a message sent to the for
it to be removed.
When the driver and cart arrived
; the body was missing. The driver
shown where the body was lying
when the message was sent. He
saw a track in the sand where some-
thing had been dragged, and follow-
it found it led to the place
where the first dog had buried.
There, as before, lying the New-
by the side of a mound of
loose earth. The driver didn't look-
around for the dead dog this time.
He pitched right into digging. His
surmise was correct, for there was
the body of the dead dog.
As no one had seen any person re-
move the body of either dog, it is
now believed that the bodies were
buried by the Newfoundland.
AGREED ALL TOO READILY.
A MARINE GRAVEYARD.
Palatial Steamers Punk in the Mis-
River.
A HAPPY PLAN.
Bow Style and Utility Can Be
Adapter to Each Other.
N to Creditors.
Having duly d
Court Clerk of
Administrator of
W. Nobles
II
e the
of
hereby
trains
.-
; . All
Ar. n
r- a
W ii
1.7
Ar
M.
Witness Thought It Quite Likely His
Cross-Examiner Was Right.
Mr. James Hyde, once a lawyer in
j small town on Long Island, tells a
L. good story about himself. lie
deceased, notice I, hereby was j , t
given to all mile red to the ,., .
Sue tn make immediate to the a town the
and all persona the state. A farmer had one of
net mast present this neighbors arrested for stealing
the Kim nor . Hi ducks, and I was employed by the
of v IS or -.-. ii , , f
be ii, b recovery. accused to endeavor to convince the
court that such was not the case.
j The plaintiff was positive that his
was guilty because he had
I seen the duck in the defendant's
yard.
do you know they arc your
I asked.
I should know my ducks
the farmer; and be
,. p . cave a description of their various
a I peculiarities whereby he could read-
them from the
.
. I.
Title day ii January
Notice Creditors.
The in d only I
i , tin or loll i k i
Tin n of William
it. l. is h given u
r-i s i to of
.- ii 1-111 to ma
n to tin ii . I
i ; i ill T
r Ii
day ml r or
id In- b n, n .
s He. l-l.
W It i
A I I i ,. cM
Notice t
I u
Jany
r.
s Z.
me
Ar
A. M
A. M
V-Z
A.
j Sr., 1-
IS
A. M
Ar
US
is
x-
y.
l 4.1
Wilson
Ar Kooky Mt
r I
Tarboro
L- Mi
Ar
I.
IS
a as
0.1
1202
fl
era.
said I, ducks can't
j be of such rare breed. I have some
just like them in my own
not at all re-
plied the farmer, they are not
the only ducks I have bad stolen late-
Sentinel.
Chicago Enterprise.
having qua i-
de non of
A. At i .- ii iii notice ii
n p a Hi
ii i m d department stores
d and j Of Chicago supply all wants. Not
long ago a customer in one of those
all-round stores purchased a com-
supply, in-
January ii
id -n
r. .
bold non
i rd- will
v .
. HARD. Adm .
on A A ii on. d
Notice
The ti in I. A. Co .
I'm S n
day sol. -ii b .
A- in
. lie Will See
by v to whom all
Eons bid lo the dim will ,
A.
C T.
This .
1-2
Train Scotland Meek branch Road
leaves p. Halifax
y. at., arrives Scotland at i
Kill-ton
l. leaves 7.-;
a. in., Greenville 8.22 a. m.
at a. m . mi
m., daily except
Trains on Branch
7.1 a. in.,
8.40 p. in. Tarboro
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. in.
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.99 p. in
Daily except Connect with
trains on ml Branch.
Train N v, via e-
ft Raleigh R. daily -1
SOU P.
arrive M., 5.20 p. in
a. 0.30 in.,
arrive Tarboro a. in., and II
a m.
Train Midland M C Branch
Sunday, a.
a., riving a m. R-
leaves a.
arrive
Trains on Nashville Branch leave
at 4.30 p. arrive
Nashville p. .-ii-ring
leaves Spring
a. m., a.
at Rocky
Trains I;
R. n. in., arrive Dun
bar 8.00 p. in. leave
bar C SO a- a.
except
on Clinton leaves
for
at a. Retaining Clinton
at Warsaw with
line trains.
No.
all points North daily, all
via and except
Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Line
also at Rocky Mount with Norfolk
railroad for Norfolk daily and
North via Norfolk, daily e
JOHN DIVINE,
General
KENLY, Manager.
T.,
North Carolina, Superior Court
Martin Co. before
Sin and Joseph Early
vs.
Z. P. Vines an I K.
defend will ton
the have bi-gun an action
lit for ho ii-
f soiling a division
land in of which said
d nits a. tenants in
e 0.1. n . the Williams
lie said defendants are re-
quire to appear it my in
i on tn d iv of IS
or to die e
ill Mid at ion. ail
if they la I to
and o
the relief demand by
will anted.
W i n in d
in n N. C-. this
January,
V. s. PEEL,
i Superior t
eluding a do, a parrot and a
key. Ho bought himself a suit, and,
j having an ugly tooth, ho had it
I eased up without going out of his
way. up another flight, he
sat for his photograph, passed
a physician's office, on the
floor, was taken seriously
the floor above, died there,
was placed in a coffin out of
stock near by on the same floor,
and sent The manager of the
house added in a businesslike
We would have
and jury if the friends of the de-
ceased hadn't been In such a
Chicago Tribune.
The
Charlotte
A Missing Vase.
It out that
vase is not in the art collection of
the late Mr. Walters, of Baltimore,
in whose possession it had sup-
posed to be. This famous little jug,
which was intrinsically worth about
two cents and which was sold
at auction the Morgan sale
about ago for
has disappeared from view as
completely as if it had been buried
in the earth. It looks very much as
if the purchaser, whoever he was.
was not proud of his judgment or of
his Herald.
Wilhelm's Music.
Carol
NEWSPAPER
DAILY
WEEKLY.
and lea ; and
mo.- attractive it will n- an
visitor the homo.
I he or t m work
THE DAILY OBSERVER.
AM the news
pl r tally rep u
Cm
world.
b from tho
it -Is.
om-
-c
Not much success has
to the German emperor for his new
musical
When it was performed in
public it was pronounced pretty and
correct, but not wholly original.
am makes itself
heard at the beginning; then follows
a strain from Schubert's
and a bit from an English
hymn ends the thing.
Pearl dear papa is
very generous. my birthday an
he always gives me a
for each year I have lived.
Younger Indeed That
must have been the money Char
Icy Gay boy meant when he said you
had a fortune in your own right.
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER.
A perfect family the
news of lbs week. reports
from the Legislature a
Ob-
server.
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR.
Send for sample s.
THE
The reader of this paper will he pica.-
to learn that there is least out
dreaded disease that has beer
able lo cure in all its stages, and that i
Catarrh, Cure is tin
only positive known the
fraternity. Catarrh being a
disease, constitutional
Hall's Catarrh Cue b
taken internally, directly the
I and surfaces of the sys-
thereby the foundation
of the and giving
strength by up he
and nature in doing its
work. The , have so cinch
In Its powers, that the--
One Hundred any
it fails to elite. Send for list
f. J. CO.
Sold T. Toledo,
Sixty and In
la Now the St. B,
Many Which letter to
inn
Both the girls were rosy from
walking in the keen air when they
I got into the elevated railroad at
Fourteenth street, and both were
I heavily laden with packages. It was
a case of parcel, little parcel,
hat box and and every time
either one of them stirred some one
j of the impediments fell to the car
floor. Sometimes of the girls
I was stooping down to pick up the
j big parcel or the parcel, and
, sometimes they were both stooping
down to gather up these and the hat
box and bundle as well. Two
I brokers, who were sitting opposite,
began quietly making bets as to
. which package would slip off next,
; and what with their exercise in the
open air, that in the car, and their
knowledge that they were affording
a good deal of deadhead amusement
to the passengers, the girls got red-
Id the face every minute.
just think it a said one
of them at last, women don't
have pockets to put things and
I she gave a little white box a vicious
tap that jostled it up against an ob-
. long brown arrangement and sent
, both of them tumbling to the floor.
When she came up gasping from
the rescue of these, she jerked at her
big sleeves like angry little bird
plucking at its feathers, stopped
short in the process, treated her
companion to a magnificent example
of the baby stare, and
I've got
asked Katie.
an said her companion.
watch
And with that she took up the lit-
white box, thrust it under her
jacket near the shoulder, gave a
quick wriggle, and presto it dropped
into the big puff of her sleeve. Then
the oblong brown arrangement was
similarly disposed of; and then a
round, flat package; and then an-
other something and another some-
thing else, now tucking it into the
right-hand sleeve and now into the
left, until everything was disposed
of. Then Miss Katie followed her
friend's example until all of her par-
were tucked away, and when
they got off the cars at Park place
there wasn't a sign of parcel,
little parcel, hat box or but
their sleeves stuck out like four cap-
balloons, and all the Brooklyn
girls they met turned green with
envy.
It Is a Mew for Testing
the Air Breathe.
A new and novel instrument is
the or dust-testing
It is not a complicated
scientific machine, being solely in-
tended for estimating in an easy and
simple manner the amount of
and number of dust particles in
the atmosphere. The action of the
instrument is based on certain color
phenomena associated with what is
called condensation of
and which can be produced by steam-
jets, high or low temperature of the
air, the increased number of dust-
nuclei, etc. In working the
scope the air is drawn into the
by means of a common air
pump and quickly passes to the test
tubes, which arc fitted with glass at
both ends. When the tube thus
charged Is held toward the light
colors from pure white to near-
black-blue to the
or Impurity of the sample under
are indicated. The dust par-
also form an important factor
in these tests, the variation in their
number causing the mirror to throw
all the colors of the rainbow.
off
to Merchants.
recent discovery of a sunken
raft by Mayor in the
channel of the river above the Chain
of said Street Commissioner
Murphy to a St. Louis Post-Dis-
patch reporter, bring to the
mind of many of our old steamboat
men the disasters that befell the
marine craft of this city in that
of the river now Included in the
harbor of St. Louis. Tl; charter
harbor of the city that
stretch of the Mississippi be-
tween the mouth of the and
the mouth of the That
portion of the harbor under the
care and control of the harbor and
wharf commissioner lies between the
Chain of Rocks and the Rives
From the upper mouth of
the Missouri to the foot of North
Market street there are now lying
under the silt and sands I he
wrecks of over sixty boats and
barges.
of these steamboats were
the largest, best-equipped and
speediest that ever walked the
waters of the country. They
were in reality marine palaces, such
as this generation has not seen. Saw-
bend was the fatal locality
where nearly all these splendid craft
foundered and settled under the
shifting sands of the treacherous
channel. Among the boats that
were lost many now living will re-
member the York State,
Southerner, Mary Highland
Mary, Grace Darling, Allegheny,
Federal Arch, C. Ruin,
more, John B. Carson, Philadelphia,
Edinburgh, Challenge, Moderator,
Nebraska, Sioux City, White Cloud,
Omaha, New Admiral, Geneva, War-
saw, Empire City, Governor
Submarine No.
No. War Eagle, Ben John-
sun. Gerard B. Allen, Fannie Scott,
Henry Adkins, Columbia, Silver
Bow, R. J. Lockwood, Wild Duck.
Nile, Victoria, Champion, Blue
Lodge, Calhoun, Alma, Central City,
Raven, J. W. Garrett,
son, Beaver, John B. Keiser, Lulu
Worth, Cornelia and Badger Slate.
above were sunk between the
years 1855 and 1883. In addition to
these there were twenty barges lost
north of point during the
same years. No record was kept of
the sawyer or cut timber rafts that
were lost south of Alton, but it has
been estimated that the aggregate
value was over one million dollars.
Only two of the above-named boats,
the Calhoun and Alma, were raised.
The bones of all the others lie many
feet beneath the sands, petrifying
under the action of the waters. The
actual loss in marine property to the
merchants of St. Louis by the sink-
of these boats was over live
million
ART IN LETTER WRITING.
Send Cheerful Epistles, But Let
Them Be Sincere.
The popular woman docs not
write doleful letters; she waits till
she is in a better frame of mind be-
fore beginning them, for she real-
that there are burdens enough
in life without adding to them by in-
pessimistic epistles on her
friends.
If she writes a letter of condo-
it seems to come from the
heart, for if it docs not sound that
way she will not let its coldness fur-
grieve a bereaved one; and if
she sends congratulations to a bride
or a mother she makes a point of
or looking
rousing good wishes that
ring of genuine interest-
One woman drops a
flower in a letter, not to a gushing
schoolgirl, but to an old lady or a
tired mother of an exacting family,
and by this bit of
her memory
green in the hearts of her friends.
N. Y. Herald.
up some
have the
fragrant
A Family.
On of the estates of Count
In Austria, the
very rare event of a mother,
and granddaughter each giving
birth to a son on the same day
curred, says the London Standard.
The mother is forty-eight, and the
infant son is her sixteenth child.
The daughter, who has presented
her husband with his eighth, is
years old; and the grand-
daughter, who was married last
year, is not yet quite sixteen. All
tho three new-born sons are strong
and healthy, and the same may be
said of their mothers, who belong to
the Polish peasant class.
Cheating in Old Egypt.
Tho unrolling of an Egyptian
mummy, supposed to be that of a
princess, disclosed a curious cheat.
The priests who did the embalming
probably spoiled or mislaid the body
to them, and for it
that of an ordinary man
Queen Beth's Wardrobe.
The wardrobe of Queen
must have been about the most
and extensive ever recorded in
royal to judge from a list of
her wearing apparel recently
from the state papers. When
the maiden queen was sixty-eight,
and might therefore have been sup-
posed to have outlived some of her
youthful vanity, she possessed
ninety-nine complete official cos-
one hundred and two French
gowns, one hundred robes with
trains and sixty-seven without, one
hundred and twenty-six antique
dresses, one hundred and thirty-six
bodices, one hundred and twenty-
five tunics, not to mention such
trifles as ninety-six mantles, eighty-
five dressing gowns and twenty-
seven fans. With all these dresses,
however, it is curious to note that
Queen Bees only owned nine pairs of
shoes. When she died, in 1603, three
thousand of apparel were
found in Her wardrobe duly
Lining Their Winter Duds.
Two newsboys sat on tho stairs
with a pile of newspapers tho
steps above them. One had his coat
off and both were busy lining the in-
side of the tattered garment with
folded papers. They handled their
largo needles clumsily, but after a
time succeeded in lining the coat.
The boy who owned the coat slipped
it on, and, turning up the collar, re-
keep the wind
Then the other boy took off his
coat and soon his summer jacket was
made over into a winter reefer by
lining it with newspapers.
A policeman watched the little
tailors.- kids caught the idea
from the and hack
he said. see, a newspaper
ain't so warm Itself, but it keeps the
wind out, and the newsboys suffer a
great deal from the winds which
come sliding down the sides of
high office buildings. They have seen
hack drivers double up paper and
slip it Inside of their vests, and they
caught
Newspaper blankets covered many
of the poor fellows who slept in the
corridors of the city hall last winter.
The unemployed wanderers picked
up as many papers as they could,
and with bits of string quilted the
papers together. One paper quilt
served as a mattress and the other
as a Record.
A Motto Adapted.
said the truly
citizen, are becoming prom-
in
replied the local
leader.
trust you will adopt as your
motto the good old sure
you're right, and then go
exactly,
putty close. De motto of our
sure ye get ahead; ye
kin make it right
Washington Star.
His Idol.
married that hand-
some man for love, didn't she
did she get it
of it. He loves him-
self more than anyone he ever saw.
Free Press.
The best Salve In world fur Cut
gore. Ulcers. Suit Rheum
Fever Sores,
Com, and all
and positively cure or
pay required, n i In
perfect or money
Price per box. fat ml b
John Woolen.
At the Boarding House.
He drew a long breath. Being a
skilled he did this with
comparative ease.
beg your he said to
the landlady, some severity,
like to when I'm
ever going to get anything
me in this
you pay your board
replied the landlady with charming
Adams avenue
assumed a business air at once.
be a little more
he said, and d his labors on
tho steal; in front of him. Detroit
Free Press.
Youthful Rulers.
1895 VIC
I .
r 100.00
. ., .
Victor Mod Ii for I land genii .
Victors load th cycling f ., .
Alfonso XIII. the eight-year-old
king of Spain, is not only ruler
who is younger than Russia's new
czar. The little
queen of the Netherlands is four-
teen. Alexander of is
eighteen, twenty, and
j if China twenty-three. The
sultan of Morocco is also a youth,
but his exact age is a of
i speculation.
he Di. His Life,
Mr I'm v-i-t.
ville. Ill, rays Dr. New
I owe nil Mas
with Grippe n ail
for miles bow, but of no avail
wan up I not
live. Having Dr. New
In v store I bottle
and began its me from
to gel Niter, and
lining bottles was
It la worth its weight in gild.
won't keep store
it Hit hit V in John I.
St Te.
Franklin's Chess Table.
an I and all
e; Opposite
. l. Mail
ll
J Send in
i c Dot,
. ; .
WE v ANT ORDERS
We will rill them QUICK
We will fill them CHEAP
We will them WELL
Heart Framing, 19.0
Rough tiling, ;
Bough sap
Rough Sap Boards, ct IS Inches,
Wait M day tot our Mill
we will furnish you Dressed
as
Wood delivered to your dew for
cents a load.
Terms cash.
past patronage.
annul
n. c
OINTMENT
TRADE
MARK
for Cure of
This has Been In use over
years, and wherever know
been in steady demand. It been en-
by the leading physicians all over
and cures
all other remedies, with the attention of
the most experienced physicians, have
for year failed. This Ointment Is of
long standing and the high reputation
which it has obtained is owing entire;
Its own efficacy, as hut little ha
ever been made to bring it before tin
One bottle of this Ointment
be sent to any address on receipt of Om
Dollar. All Cash Ciders promptly at-
tended lo. Address all orders end
to
T. F. CHRISTMAN,
Greenville, If,
OVERMAN CO.
of Victor Bl
A KING.
and
m-f
fur
In out flt.
fir
ho on i
From mi mute
your nu
Kangaroo.
SO
and
School Shoot
I your deafer cannot
for
W. I. Douglas,
R. L. Bro.,
It. nth.
Pitt
V. C.
b,
in N.
. M. v
The most interesting piece of fur-
in the reception room at the
residence of Mrs. E. D. is
a table which no one nowadays
would presume to call chess
but such it is, and mi the prized
property of Mrs. famous
grandfather, Benjamin Franklin.
Mrs. says that her mother,
who was three years aid when
Franklin died, could remember see-
the great philosopher and states-
man while away hours over the
chessmen. The table is of
any and of ordinary height, though
rather small.
The top is scarcely a foot square, j
and it looks as though there was lit- I
tie room for the royal There
Is a sliding piece, however, that ;
comes out just under the top in some
manner similar to that of the pieces
used in the modern roll-top desk. At
the back there is a long, upright
sliding frame in which is stretched a
piece of silk. This Mrs. Gillespie's
recalled seeing Franklin
raise to keep the wind from blowing
nut the candle by the dim light of
which the game was
C ill
It May Do t or You.
Mr. Fred Miller, of Irvine. III.,
that ho bad a Severe Kidney double
for many years, with pains in
his back and also that his bladder was
a flee He many so culled
Kidney bill Without good
About year ago lie
of Electric Bitten found relief t
once. Hitlers is especially
to cure of all Ki am Liver
troubles often given
relief. trial will prove our state-
only for large bottle
At Drug store,
COBB BROS CO.
Commission Merchants
FA Y NO ft PI I V A
and
OLD RELIABLE.
--------IS STILL AT THE WITH A I INK
CE me best i- cheap
Hemp Building
ting necessary for Millers, and s well as
Hats. Shoes. I have on baud. Am head
quarters tor Heavy and for Clark's O. N. r.
keep an attend
N. C.
j ON
Notice to Creditors.
The mull be
e the Court I of
lo the state WANT ONE
deceased N SEED.
given to all to ,,., ., . , ,
Hi. of said lo n M y prices,
mediate to the 1.11 w, ,,
having Meal s
said 11111-I it m-
before the briny Dec title
notice b pie id i bar of
tiny of I
I I
of I
Real
and
Rental Agent.
Houses and lot- fur Bent or f r Bale
trims easy,
and and any other m
HERBERT
PARLORS
Under .
Call iii when lull W
a . . .
H. H TIME
III MM.
of debt placed my hand- fur
sin I lime
Sail guaranteed. I solicit your ,
STA ran.
A EST
-1
MALE
The next Session of this will
begin on Tuesday
and continue weeks.
Primary English
Intermediate
Higher
The instruction
D mild nut If
an additional teacher will ha employed.
when
enter early and attend For
further u; ply to
W. II.
G.
OLD DOMINION LI It
Al.
I. II.
I. M I
New
J -I i
Ar.
A. M A. M.
II Oil
1- l
a I
A I AM
SERVICE
Ste leave Washington for
and Tarboro touching at all land
n Holiday,
d at A. M.
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
A. M. same days.
These departures to singe
of on Tar
with
en of The and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk,
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers
marked via Dominion fr
York. de from
Norfolk
steamboat
more. Miners
Boston.
JNO. Agent,
N.
J.
H. C.
I v W -1 hi
11.1,1. . h, .
a. in.,
train -ii p,
This Reminds
You every
in the
February that
you have
your Printing done
at
REFLECTOR
JOB OFFICE.
It will be done right,
It will be done in style,
and it always suits.
These points are
well worth
in any sort
of work, but
above all things in
Your Job Printing.


Title
Eastern reflector, 20 March 1895
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
March 20, 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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