Eastern reflector, 26 June 1895






, L
JOB PRINTING
The Reflector is
pared to do all
in this line
NEATLY,
QUICKLY, and
IN BEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best
of Stationery.
A VIEWS.
. . RH j
Reflector.
D. J. Editor Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 1895.
NO.
RAM'S HORN BLASTS.
-Air. B- F. Keith, of Wilmington,
N. C-, was in the city yesterday
way back home from the
great Memphis.
Lave the attempts of
the papers to jest
of the silver
he said lo
amounts to
wider bat I cannot
protesting they put
down as this,
w rep
resell tin at only
by one or two populists. Now, I
was at the convention Lorn my
State and I am a Democrat.
There were many others there
who have never voted anything
but a Democratic ticket M long
as have lived. I never
known what it was to vote a Pop-
ticket. I am no politician,
have never held an office and
to hold any within the
gift of the people. I am a mer-
chant and have a
farm and I bad nothing at stake
when I went to the Memphis con-
but the earnestness of my
that silver should be to the pit
restored to its rights along with
gold the money question that
confronts the people of the re-
public.
Lave political
in sympathy with the
lists. they are going to
of the country
by coining back into the folds of
the Democratic party and poling
issues with us this line for
the cause of sliver-
l-I know will come back in
the party if the Democratic lead-
will simply fulfill the pledges
that have been made, and am
sure the interests of the Demo-
party mid of the
of country are in-
separable this matter. The
party must meet its obligations
and if it the people will
cease to suffer the injuries that
have been inflicted by the leaders
who have misled Con-
slit
Warning Notes Calling the Wicked to
Repentance.
There are various things
that the Southern farmer
is to be strictly in it this year.
He has cut down his cotton crop
per cent, and is likely to get a
good price for what he raises.
The wheat crop of the country is
going to be short, its condition
showing per
against per June
1st, 1804; but the crop of the
Southern farmer, especially him
of North Carolina, is all right.
The outlook of the corn crop of
the country is promising, nowhere
more so than the Southern
Slates The prospect generally
is for a year of good crops and
prices. The realization of
this hope will set the country up-
Charlotte
life is a prayer of some
kind-
The who cheats
robs himself.
When the heart the gift
is always great.
The who plows deep has
God for his friend-
The hi when the
heart is
A resisted is a step
taken with Cod.
God speaks to us most in the
voice to which will-best listen.
No gift can be put on God's
altar unless the blood of religious
life has been put there first.
Unbelief is the egg out of which
all sins are hatched.
It is easier to give God ail
than it is to give him a part-
The pedestal nothing
until the statue is place-
The moderate drinker is help-
to gravel the road that
There isn't a alive
to-day whom an would con
rich-
If the road to the pit didn't be
gin in respectability it couldn't
end in ruin-
It may be that God made the
Dead Sea to show a stingy man
how he looks
It is always safe for right to
count the help of God when
it goes into
devil will promise to pay
kind of if we only
take his note.
Jesus wrote the woman's sins
the dust. Our names are writ
ton on his baud--
The only thing the matter with
the religion of some people is
that it has no Christ-
The paths of righteousness lead
straight into the valley of the
shadow of death.
Half Human, Half Calf.
Help Yourself.
Fight your own battles. Hoe
of Memphis Com- own roe. no favors of
any one, and you will succeed a
thousand times better than one
is always beseeching some
one's influence and patronage.
No one will help you as you help
yourself, because no one is so
heartily interested your affairs.
unanimously agreed, by a series i . . . . ,
, . step will be such a long
of resolutions to that to .
, . perhaps; but, carving your
discontinue their organization as , ,
Tr . . TO the mountain, you make
a party and unite themselves with , , ,
, y ,, I each one lead to another, and
the true Democracy. I his was I .
. , . . stand firm while you chop
brought about mainly by wise i , ,
, . . r ., another out. Men who
and liberal action of , , . .
, . made fortunes are not those who
racy of the county in opening the
way by extending the right to I
vote in the primaries to all who
would agree to vote for the
Disbanding.
The Jackson, Miss.,
Appeal, under date of
June 13th,
Quill announces
that the executive committee
the Populist party, at its recent;
meeting in county.
You Need
The Reflector this year.
It will give the news
every week for
a year.
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
Happenings of Interest In This and
In Other Countries.
the beginning God created
the heaven and earth and all things
says an exchange,
then created man and woman and
left loafers on the corner. And
in due time they and
spread the depot,
and Bye and by they are
bountifully supplied with cheap
chewing tobacco, and they spit
seas of nasty slobbers through
which they safely guide the ship
f State and lessons of in-
value to the statesmen
of the land.
The Wilmington Messenger tells
of a very remarkable
county monstrosity which it
learns of through Rev. S. L-
Swain, of that county, who was
visiting a Wilmington clergyman.
The monstrosity is in the shape
of a half calf and half human, of
which a cow in Shallotte town-
ship became the mother on Fri-
day, May 31st. The cow belonged
to Mr. William and the
was born on the
plantation of Mr. father-
in-law, Mr- Cornelius Thomas. It
had no tail and half of its face
and body were human, including
a perfectly shaped shoulder, arm,
hand, leg and foot- The other
half was that of a calf, and the
thing walked erect.
the general election- It
was a wise and conservative
course the part of the
racy of that county and their ac-
is to be commended by all
who have the interests of the
party and the good of the conn,
try at
There is no need for a Populist
party for honest men really
want financial reform. It is a
good thing for office seekers, who
use its membership to pull chest-
nuts out of the fire for their per-
Mississippi,
the Populists re
form to seeing that sup
port of Populism tends to
rule, those who joined it
few years ago are disbanding
their organization and returning
to the Democratic fold. There is
no other course to them if
they desire to preserve good home
government and secure
laws.
The action in Mississippi is but
a few months advance of what
the honest Populists in North
will take. Up to this
time they have blindly followed a
corrupt cabal, and been used to
degrade their State and to put
Republican gold-bugs and
into office. Those who
are tie Populist party for office
will stay continue to dicker
with the Republicans and the
trusts for personal aggrandize-
but the rank and file will
be found again under the banner
of good government in the Dem-
and
Observer.
have had five or six thousand
I dollars them to start
I but boys who have started fair
with a well earned dollar or two.
Men who ire fume have
never been thrust into popularity
by puffs begged or paid for, or
in public spirit. They
have outstretched their own
hands and touched the public
heart. Men who win love do
their own wooing; and I never
knew a man to fail so signally as
one who induced his affectionate
grandmother to speak a good
word for him. Whether you
work for fame, for love, for money
or for anything else, work with
your hands, heart, brain
Say and some day you
TUB SOOTH.
The money broker. Smith, who has
so mysteriously disappeared from At-
has not yet been found.
Josiah Patterson and Ex-Governor
Lowe debated the financial question
jointly at Miss., Friday night.
The state of Mississippi finds it
to issue another lot of special
warrants as her treasury Is almost
bare.
The of Dallas, Tex., in session
adopted strong resolutions against the
proposed prize fight between Corbett
Mid
The committee of the Cot-
ton States exposition has decided to
an annex to the
and liberal art building.
Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and
Louisville railroad will be sold by
Special Master James Maynard July
Upset price
The Memphis convention lined the
battle for the free coinage of gold and
silver at a ratio of M to within the
limits of the democratic party.
Dr. H. C. White, professor of
try at the University of Georgia,
Athens, has been offered the
of the State Technological college,
Atlanta.
Savannah is greatly stirred up over
three murders occurring within less
than a week. Nearly one hundred
homicides have occurred there in the
last ten years.
The Chesapeake Ohio railway has
withdrawn its application for admission
to the trunk line association and has
put in force a schedule by which
freight rates are cut.
At commissioner's sale, the Richmond,
-me ponce new York and
have been notified to arrest Actor
King Headley, of New York, at the In-
stance of his wife who claims that he
secured from her under false
pretenses, and thee deserted her.
Senator Quay declared in an inter-
view at Saturday that the re-
publican leaders are making a mistake
in helping the democrats agitate the
silver question. He says republicans
ought to stick to tariff if they expect to
win in 1896.
The executive board of the
ville. R. I., strikers authorize a denial shows that in there will be Tittle or
Royal
Baking
Powder
ABSOLUTELY PURE
will conquer. let any man i
have to Say, have dragged you j Va. granite quarry was, Saturday sold
a Van mun. some- to of Philadelphia, for
Too many friends some
times hurt a man more none
at Hustler.
They sing nowadays of the
girl whose hair
was hanging down but
she it with a girl who lives
in a certain neighboring village
whoso hair kills cats. This girl's
hair, according to a report from
her neighborhood, is so charged
with electricity that a single
strand will shock the person who
touches it. She would be a
girl to court, for if a fellow
went to caressing her shining
locks he would be instantly tied
up into hard knots.
The women of Alexandria, Va.
prompted by a desire to com-
the virtues of the moth-
of Robert E. Lee, propose to
erect in that city a monument to
her memory. An association has
been formed in Alexandria, called
the Annie Lee Monument
Deafness Cannot
By local as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way Deafness,
and that is by constitutional remedies.
I leaf s is caused by an con-
of the mucous lining the
When this tube eat
inflamed you have a rumbling or
imperfect hearing, when it is en-
closed Deafness is the result,
unless inflammation can be
taken this restored to its
condition, hinting will be de-
forever nine case out of ten
are Caused by which is
but an i i ed condition of the
-mis
We will give Hundred
any case Deafness by
that cannot lie cured Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free
K. CO. Toledo, O
by Druggists.
Salve.
The best Salve in the world for Cut
Sores, Ulcers, Silt
Fever r-ores. Chapped Hand
Chilblains, Corns, and all skin
and positively Piles, or no I . j j
pay required. It is guaranteed to stander very pertinently
Civil Service.
Mr. Cleveland continues to en-
large the list of those who must
come under the civil service rules.
Congress should enlarge the
so as to include all, and pro-
for an examining board to
test the presidents knowledge of
the last Democratic rational plat-
form. If such an examination
was had Mr. Cleveland would not
grade as high as per cent
Wilmington Dispatch.
Definition of a Populist.
We were very much struck with
the definition of a Populist by a
friend of ours the other night.
Speaking of them, he -They
are like one of these peanuts that
yon break open and there isn't a
darn thing in And a by
The Vanished Bluebirds,
The Landmark has noted the
absence of the bluebirds this
spring and summer. A few have
been seen but they are very
scarce. It appears that this is
the case elsewhere as well as in
North Carolina. New York
papers have recently commented
on the absence of these birds
a recent issue of the Boston
Transcript contains the
has now gone
by, and a sufficient number of ob-
have been made to re-
move all doubt that the vast ma
of our Massachusetts blue
birds have lost their lives during
their winter absence. The writer
has seer just one bluebird this
season. A of his, a keen
observer, has one blue-
bird's Bedford. Other
observers have seen none at all in
haunts where the birds in other
years have been It
will be of interest to see how
long it will take the very few
bluebirds who have returned to
us to replenish the earth with
their kind, and data as to the
places where they may still be
found will be of interest. If the
one pair of bluebirds to be found
in a township possess reason
reflection, they must feel some-
what as Noah and his family felt
when they were spared for the
purpose of re-establishing the
human race after the
In bis recent talk to the Land-
murk on birds, Mr. Mel. Clark
said that in his neighborhood
numbers of bluebirds had been
dead in a bunch in hollow
trees, and a number of State
papers have reported similar
Landmark.
The original spent
in developing
One of the most eminent jurists of
East Tennessee, ex-Chancellor William
M. Bradford, died at
Tuesday, aged years. The cause of
death was heart disease.
The Amalgamated Association of
park, twenty in I Iron and Steel Workers of America,
Tl which has just closed its annual
i meet next
There are now only wild
buffaloes alive the United
States, of which are in the
do and thirty in Texas
remnant of the vast
once roamed over
shows how nearly one of the j
most typical of American wild
animals has reached extinction.
All Free.
Those who have used Dr. King's New
Discovery know Its value, and those
who not, have now
to try it Free. Call on the advertised
and get a Trial Bottle, Free.
Send your name and address to II. E.
Co. Chicago, and get a
sample box of Dr. King's New Life,
Pills Free, as well as a copy of Guide
to Health and Household instructor.
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do
yon good and cost you at John
L. Wooten's Drugstore.
Hard Earned Wages.
old church in Belgium de-
to repair its properties, and
employed an artist to touch up a
large painting. Upon presenting
his bill, the commute in charge
refused payment unless the details
were specified, whereupon he
presented the items as follows
To correcting the Ten Command-
putting new ribbons on his
bonnet
Putting new on the rooster of
St. Peter, and mending his
comb
and gilding left wing
of Angel,
Washing the servant of the High
Priest, and putting carmine
on his cheeks
Renewing Heaven, adjusting the
stars, and cleaning up the
moon
Touching up Purgatory, and rest-
lost souls
Brightening up fie flames of Hell,
putting new tail on the Dev-
mending his left hoof,
and doing several odd jobs
for the demand
the robes of Herod,
and adjusting his wig
Taking the spots off the sum of
Tobias
Cleaning Ass, putting
one shoe on him
Putting earrings In Sarah's ear
Putting a new stone in David's
sling, enlarging the head of
extending Sauls
legs
Decorating Noah's Ark. put-
ting a on
Mending the shin of the prodigal
son cleaning ear
ls
perfect satisfaction o r money
Price cents per box. For sale
John L. Woolen, Druggist.
that the reason they are called
Free Pills.
Send address to H. E.
Co., Chicago, and get a free sample
box of Dr. King's New Life Pills. A
trial will convince you of their merits,
These pills are easy in action and are
particularly effective in the cure of
Constipation and Sick Headache. For
Malaria and troubles they have
been proved invaluable. They are
guaranteed to be perfectly free from
every deleterious substance to
purely vegetable. They not weaken
by their action, but giving tone to
stomach and bowels greatly invigorate
the system. Regular size per box.
Soul by John I. Wooten Druggist.
The bill was paid.
The farmers are at work in
their fields, the merchant is
selling his spring clothing, the
miller is grinding away at his
wheat, the laborer is laboring
every day at his work, whatever
it may be, the banter is
sport sporting, idler idling
branch of work is running
along smoothly, while the poor
printer toils at his case, the editor
scratches his head with his
and racks his brain for news for
his subscribers to read. Of all
of these fields of work the editor's
is most to be pitied, for he gets
less pay and more abuse than all
the rest put together- Still we like
it and shall continue to rack
to please our subscribers,
we only hope pray that
some of the delinquents will come
pay the price of their sub-
T Tunes.
Those who borrow trouble
never get a chance to pay it back.
, at Cleveland. O., will
herds that year at Birmingham. Ala.
the plains i preparations are being made
for the coming Southern Students con-
which convenes at Knoxville,
Tenn. Many world renowned Chris-
leaders will be in attendance.
Florida fruit exchange met Thursday
and President R. Fairbanks de-
livered his annual address in which he
estimated that the orange crop of
would be about one million boxes.
Senator David of Indiana,
presided over the Memphis silver con-
and Senator Jones, of
was made chairman of the commit-
tee on resolutions. Large gathering
present.
Judge Felix one or the most
prominent jurist in Louisiana, is dead.
It is denied that Minister Ransom
will be unable to return to his post in
Mexico.
Texas has contracted for the display
of the Southwest Texas exhibit at the
Atlanta
Captain Reuben F. who has
run for governor of Alabama twice on
the populist ticket, each time de-
is out in an interview, in which
he says he will a candidate for
governor next year.
Secretary left Washington
Thursday afternoon for Louisville, Ky.,
where he delivered an address on the
financial situation Friday night It
was his final appearance in the Ken-
campaign this year.
The annual convention of the South-
railway and Steamship association
was held Saturday at the Hotel
Sew York. The session was con-
in the consideration of the new
of rates revision.
Hi-hop n. M. Turner, of Atlanta,
rived in New York Saturday from
The bishop has been in Africa In
the interest of the African Methodist
Episcopal Church. He says the colony
carried over by the is doing well.
Precinct conventions were held all
over Kentucky Saturday and delegates
to the convention Monday
the latter in turn selected
gates to the state convention at Louis-
ville. June 25th. Sentiment was large-
for free silver.
Negotiations are pending between
the Tennessee Coal A. Iron, the
and the Thomas Iron companies, all
operating in the district,
to establish a joint selling agency for
the purpose of maintaining prices and
reducing expenses.
The Nev Orleans Lumber Journal in
its of this week shows the total
lumber exports for the month of May
from eighteen southern ports to have
been divided as Tim-
lumber,
of wood,
The properties of the Coal
companies were sold at Hewitt, Ala.,
Wednesday by D. M. as-
W. C. Shackelford, trustee for
the creditors, for The company
had a capital stock of and
bonded indebtedness The
sale subject to the last named
claims
THE
The National Press League, which
has just closed session at
voted to meet next year at
N. Y.
The twelfth suburban handicap was
won by an outsider, at
Hay Saturday, in the pres-
of spectators.
The International League of Press
clubs was in session Tuesday and Wed-
in Philadelphia. Editor Clark
of Atlanta, presiding.
R. O. Pun A company claim that bus-
generally is improving rapidly.
Frederick one of the Princeton
students who was shot Saturday night
by the Collins, died at the Prince-
ton hospital early Wednesday
morning.
Notices posted Wednesday an-
an increase of to per cent
in tie of the of
the Bethlehem Iron company, who
a reduction of, that amount in
January,
of the story that the strike has been
declared off. The evident intention of
the strikers is to go to work in all save
the Atlantic and Fletcher mills and to
draw on the operatives outside those
mills for financial help.
THE WEST.
The first yield of wheat has
brought cents a bushel in St. Louis.
Iowa farmers report that recent
rains insure the best corn crop Iowa
has had in twenty years.
Carl Browne, famous
ant, has married the latter's eighteen
year old daughter. Miss Mamie
The candidacy of Senator W. It. Alli-
son, of Iowa, for president, will be
launched at the National convention of
republican league clubs at Cleveland,
Ohio.
Meetings were held in all the
go wards Saturday evening to elect
officers of democratic clubs. In most of
the meetings free silver men
The Ida ho Statesman has information
that a movement is on foot to make W.
A. Clarke, the Montana copper million-
the democratic candidate for vice-
president.
Campbell says he is not
a candidate for the democratic
for governor of Ohio and would
not accept it if it were offered on a
silver platter.
Out of papers, in Kansas, are
for free and unlimited coinage of silver
to while stand on the
money plank in the last republican
platform.
Professor Daniel Kirkwood, LL. D-,
late professor of mathematics in In-
State University and one of
America's best known astronomers,
died Wednesday, aged
Dispatches from
Fort Scott, Wichita and Kan.,
and and Perry. Okla., report
a heavy twenty-four-hour rain, which
will be the saving of the corn crop.
The silver senators from the mining
Mutes are trying to arrange a plan to
commit the convention of the National
League of Republican clubs, which
meets this month at Cleveland, O. to
free silver.
It is reported that an agreement has
been reached by which Dakota's em-
treasurer is to surrender and
turn over all his property to the state
and whatever sentence the court
may impose.
Dispatches from Lima. Ohio, say that
Senator Brice has had a conference
with a number of his party friends, to
whom he has announced his intention
of becoming a candidate for re-election
as States senator.
Eugene V. Debs has turned up. He
walked into the States mar-
office, Chicago, at o'clock
Wednesday. He said he was ill Tues-
day afternoon and could not at
o'clock as promised. It is inferred
that he has been intoxicated.
R. M. secretary of the civic
federation of Chicago, has been in New
York and in Boston for the past few
days in the interest of the coming
and Harvey free silver debate. The
time for the contest co begin has been
fixed for July and it will continue
from until finished and will
be held in the Chicago.
AT WASHINGTON
Representative continues to
prove
Miss Mary A. Dodge
is slowly recovering.
Saturday's statement of the condition
of the treasury Available cash
balance i; gold reserve
Arrangements have about been per-
to the of the
government printing office under the
civil service.
Postmaster General Wilson is at
Mo., where he delivered an ad-
dress Wednesday at the commence-
of Central college.
Vice Consul Knight, at Capetown, an-
the death at that place of
United States Consul Charles II.
who was from Minnesota.
Assistant Secretary left
Washington Monday on an inspection
tour. He will visit the naval militia
along the coast in those states where
same arc well organized.
The treasury department has decided
to strengthen the revenue cutter patrol
along the Atlantic c from Charles-
ton to Mobile, by ordering the cutters
Morrill. Forward to patrol
those waters.
Secretary Lamont Mrs. Lament
will leave Washington at once for a
western trip, lie will be accompanied
by Quartermaster General
Secretary Lamont may extend his trip
to the Pacific coast.
The trouble between Foreman
and the book binders of the govern-
printing office was amicably set-
Saturday, threatened
strike averted. Public Printer
had no hand in the
President Cleveland promised to
be at the Cotton States and
exposition, Atlanta, on the
of October.
The navy department is co-operating
with the state department in prevent-
expeditions from leaving
the United States to aid the Cuban
rebels.
Lieutenant C. D. Rhodes, sixth
has been relieved at his own re-
quest from duty after June 20th at the
Ohio university, Delaware.
He will join his troops at Fort Meyer.
The reports of June compiled from
the returns of the correspondents of
the agricultural department, makes
the acreage of winter wheat at present
growing, after allowing for abandon-
96.1 per cent of the crop
vested in
The result of the special
made by the department of
in cotton counties
no change in acreage as compared with
last year; in report increase of to
per cent less, all others decreased.
The president has directed that Pay-
master H. R. Smith, of the navy, be
dismissed from the service, approving
the record, findings and sentence of a
court martial which two months ago
tried Smith on charges of drunkenness,
absence without leave, and scandalous
conduct on the China station.
The report published in a New York
paper that a party of government
were killed by Chickasaw In-
near Little in Indian
last Wednesday, is incorrect. It
is said that the Indians know that the
work is for their benefit and give the
best of treatment to the surveyors.
It is rumored at the interior depart-
that the position of assistant land
commissioner, made vacant by the
transfer of E. A. Bowers to the treas-
department, will be filled by the
promotion of W. R. Anderson, of Ken-
now chief of the land rail-
roads division.
In Hungary, houses have
been burned and several persons killed.
The commercial treaty between
and Japan was signed Wednesday.
Richard the well known com-
poser and poet, is dead in Vienna. He
was born in in ISM,
The Congress, of Re-
form Religion and Education will hold
session at Toronto, Canada, in July.
The asserts
that cholera has become alarmingly
prevalent in the district of
Prussia Silesia.
The countess of Essex, who, before
her marriage was Miss
daughter of Mrs Beach Grant, of New
York, has a daughter.
The lire in the
Prussian Silesia, been extinguished.
All of imprisoned miners except
twenty-six were saved.
The new Italian parliament was
opened Monday, groat ceremony,
by Humbert in person. The city
was c waled for the occasion.
The States which
will take part in the ceremonies at-
tending the opening of the North sea
and canal entered the harbor at
Kiel Saturday.
worms have caused sad
in the province of the Delta. Many
fields have been stripped, it is
feared that the yield of cotton in Egypt
will be seriously affected.
A special dispatch from Shanghai
says it is almost certain that a mas-
of all the persons connected with
the English, French and American mis-
at has occurred.
Regrets have been received from
Prince Bismarck, who says that his
health will not permit him to accept
the invitation of the senate to attend
the ceremonies at the opening of the
canal at Kiel.
The British, French and Russian am-
to Turkey have formally de-
that the Porte disarm the
Bedouins at and pay an in-
the attack on the foreign
consuls at that place.
The and Pan districts of France
are Hooded by heavy rain storms.
Large tracts of territory are sub-
merged, factories stopped and railway i
is almost entirely suspended.
No loss of life is reported.
It is rumored that Miss Frances E.
Willard, president of the Woman's
Temperance who is
LOCAL DIRECTORY-
COUNTY
Superior Clerk, E. A.
Sheriff, II. King.
Register of Deeds, W. M. King.
Treasurer, J, L. Little.
Dr. C. Laughing-
Coroner,
Dawson,
T. K. Keel, Jesse L.
Smith and S. M. Jones.
Health, Dr. W. . Bagwell.
County Home. J. W. Smith.
County Examiner of
W.
TOWN OFFICERS.
Mayor, Ola Forbes.
Clerk, C. C. Forbes.
Treasurer, W. Godwin.
Perkins, chief. Fred.
Cox, asst; J. W. Murphy, night.
H. Smith. W. I,.
Brown, W. T. Godwin. T. A.
Julius Jenkins.
CHURCHES.
Baptist. Services every Sunday
night. Prayer
night. I. . M.
Billings, pastor. Sunday School at
A. M. C. I.
Catholic. Nil regular services.
Episcopal. fourth Sun-
day morning night. Rev. A,
Sunday School
A. H, W. B. Brown,
Services every Sunday
morning and right. Prayer meeting
Wednesday night. Rev. G. F. Smith,
pastor. Sunday School at A. M. A.
B,
Presbyterian. Services 1st and
3rd Sunday morning Prayer
meeting Tuesday night Rev. Archie
pastor. Sunday School at
A. D. Evans.
Covenant Lodge No. I. . O. F-,
meets every Tuesday night. Dr. W.
Bagwell, H. G.
Lodge No. A. F. A A.
M., first and third Monday
W. M. King, W. M
Cards
DR. L.
DENTIST,
I I N C.
DR. II. A.
DENTIST.
O.
now in England, is about to be married I Office tip stairs over S. K, A
to an English gentleman of wealth and Hardware store.
position and of prominence in ref
work.
The republican newspapers of
are satisfied with the speech delivered
by Minister in the chamber
of deputies Monday, but the radical
and socialist press are in
denouncing the government's action in
ending warships to Kiel.
The marine hospital service is a 1-
vised of the detention at the gulf I W Si JAMES,
station of the British ship
from Rio Janeiro. She had one
fatal case of yellow fever at port of de-
and twelve cases and two
deaths in transit.
The Dix Paris, as-
that the Chinese government has
ceded to France a port in the
Islands. The adds that France
will probably acquire the whole
group, as the result of her inter-
conjointly with Germany and j
Russia.
The military governor of Santiago,
Jab. E. I. Moons,
Greenville
MOORE
ATTORNEY S-AT-LAW,
N. C.
Office under Opera House. Third St.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,
GREENVILLE, C.
Practice in nil collections a
specialty.
B.
F. TYSON,
Attorney and Counselor at-Law
Greenville, Pitt County,
Practices in all the Court.
Civil and Criminal Business
Makes a special of fraud
ages, actions to recover land, and col-
de Cuba has issued an order prohibit- I
the people of that city or of the j
towns and villages in the Province j attention
from leaving for the open country be- ii business.
tween sunset and sunrise. Any person Money to loan on approved security.
disregarding this order will be shot by Terms easy.
the troops on sight.
The most important expedition that
has landed on Cuban soil from the
United States was landed June 10th at
River. It of men
1.000 repeating rifles, rounds
of ammunition and in gold,
under the command of Colonel
They left Key West, June 6th,
and sailed for Bahama island where
they took on the men and cargo. I
J. II. J. L.
A FLEMING
N. C.
Practice in all the Courts.
A Missing Vats.
It turns out that
vase is not In the art collection of
the late Mr. Walters, of Baltimore,
In whose possession it had been sup-
posed to be. This famous little jug,
which was Intrinsically worth about
two cents and which was sold
at auction at the Morgan sale
about eight years 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, he was,
was not proud of his judgment or of
bis Herald.
U C. LATHAM.
I A AM
HA till V
I. BLOW
J. JARVIS.
I AH VIS A BLOW,
E. Woodard, V. C. Harding,
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. C.
WOODARD A HARDING,
Greenville,
Special attention given to
and of claims.





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
Senator address see the silver men should
favor the culling of a convention
J, i
at the at Greenville
K. C, as second-class m matter.
the University of Tennessee bas
been by the press
of that State as able, thoughtful,
excellent and brilliant. Those
are characteristics of the man.
He made one of the best Gov-
the State of North
ever Times-
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 26th,
Treasurer Worth has issued a
Col. Harry has just
been on a brief trip to Washing
ton City. While there he seems
circular letter which he is send-
to all druggists in the State to hi bearings and fall
notifying them that they are
liable to the tax of for selling
liquor, that it is due and
they are liable to
Now York is clean out of sight
on curiosities. Now they have
one in the shape of a baby that is
only three-quarters of an inch in
and weighs about half an
ounce. Its a boy and we expect
he will step into Cleveland shoes
some of these days-
have a freak in New-
York. It a man who found
on the streets of that city
who returned the money to its
rightful owner and refused to
take a reward or disclose his
name. They are going to put
him in a glass and exhibit
him.
Ex-Gov. Ben R- Tillman, of
South Carolina, says he will fight
before the gates of hell for free
silver. our opinion of
any man who wont take up lot
his own home- Ben, we expect,
will tight before behind those
same said gates if he look
out-
The treasury gold reserve is
now within of the
mark. Tins result
has been attained by the agree-
with the
syndicate by which the treas-
has already received
in gold, leaving
still due from the
en into the hands of newspaper
reporters. The Charlotte
correspondent writes the fol-
lowing about him
Contrary to his custom, Harry
Skinner submitted like a lamb to
the shearing interview this morn-
He tells me that as all three
parties in North Carolina are for
free silver, the Populists will not
go over to th Democrats; that
Tom Reed is stronger in the Old
North State than i than
On his count, leaving such States
as Michigan, Iowa and Indiana in
the doubtful column, silver
Democrats in tho national con-
will still lack votes of
majority ; that nevertheless he
thinks they will largely influence
the body ; that the people like
the Legislature's action better on
reflection, especially its treatment
of county government,
schools and the State
Harry however, the
might have let alone
the school management. He is
hare to show his little son the
city and take daughter to
school at Baltimore, and
home to night by the bay boat-
The Roxboro Courier says
there were several applicants for
the position of county examiner
of Person county and the clerk of
the court decided the contest in a
novel manner- He had the
draw straws. G- E
Webb, the retiring county super-
was the lucky man-
He drew the longest straw.
The national convention of Re-
publican leagues met at Cleve-
land, Ohio, Wednesday.
was done but the appoint-
of committees and the intro-
of one or two resolutions.
The main tight is on the silver
question. Tho convention is
on the of adopt
any platform- North Caro-
was not represented.
President Cleveland has
to Buzzard's Bay for the
summer. The Wilmington Re
view says that they are author
in advance to deny the
statement that some Yankee
preacher may announce next
week that Mr. Cleveland amuses
himself en Sundays by stand-
It is reported that the store
being built out near the tobacco
warehouses is to be used for a
bar-room. We also hear
petition from the Tobacco
Trade and will
be taken to the Board of
asking them not to issue
a license for liquor to be sold
our there. To our mind the
Councilmen could hardly do a
worse thing for the town than
to allow a bar-room to be es-
in the tobacco
During the tobacco sell-
large crowds are
gathered around the ware-
houses and prize houses every
day. some working, sell-
some buying, and
just looking on, and to place a
bar-room in the midst of such
gatherings disorder and dis-
might be looked for
as daily occurrences.
One idea in locating the to-
business as far out as it
is was that it might be free from
the contaminating influences of
bar-rooms. For several years
they have enjoyed quiet and
good order out there and no
disturbing influences have
and now to place a bar-
room out there would simply
mean to break up this good
order and to the ware-
housemen and buyers a great
deal of annoyance. The
is so far from the main
business portion of the town as
and that the experimental result
was proving satisfactory that
was no trouble to get invest
that added to the internal
improvements of the town. We
told him to come five years
hence and we would show him a
city of inhabitants.
Until about four ago
there was quite a of
opinion a to the best met of
laying by, that is disposing of
the final cultivation of a tobacco
crop. Some argue that an
hill should be made
the tobacco plant with the hoe-
This was done by the
main ridge into throw the
dirt around the stalk, after the
fashion of an old time hill,
while thought this work
unnecessary and that the same
amount of good could be done
the tobacco by simply siding and
splitting the middles very deep
the hint time. This last method
has met the almost public
and to-day it is a rare thing
that you see a farmer having the
ridge out into and forming such a
hill around his tobacco. Of course
the hoes go over after the last
and supply any
work of the in
making a substantial hill for the
tobacco. While there are a few
who still hold to this system the
majority of the best farmers only
use the plow. In the up country
fields whose farm-
we imbibed this Idea of
by the a system is
most necessary, be-
cause there the earth is so full of
that loose dirt cannot be
supplied with a plow, but here
where the soil and
hie there pa we
believe there is often serious dam-
age done the tobacco by hilling
such a troublesome and ex-
pensive work The writer has
hoard his father porn was
hilled the way, but
time passed on new and more pro-
ideas were and
in due course of time this irksome
work with the hoe was succeeded
by more useful and rapid
system of Ho it is
I with tobacco, modes of
The Winston Tobacco Journal that were in ten years
says the Wilmington Star thinks are now numbered with the
the lands surrounding that dead things of tho past, and it
are adaptable to the growth the wide and up to date
progressive tobacco farmer to be-
houses stir himself to take of
this year. If the few men in the
State who are to silver
think there has been any change
of sentiment or that they can re
verse the judgment of the party
on that question, they should be
the movers if anyone, in calling
the but I take it that
lit be apparent to anyone
that the overwhelming sentiment
of the Democrats in this State is
in favor of the free and unlimited
coinage of silver and that the
calling of a convention to pass
upon that subject would simply
be a waste of
believe our success in de-
pends very largely upon our
selves. If we stand firmly by
in our in our
State Convention present to
the people candidates who are
known to he steadfast advocates
of silver, I do not believe it will
be possible for the Republicans
and Populists to fuse against us
and without fusion such as we
had in I do not believe the
Democratic party can be beaten
the State. Whatever may be
the outcome of oar fight over the
question in National
Convention of the Democratic
party, it seems to me very certain
that the Republicans will make a
and a
date that satisfy the
element either in the Republican
or Populist party in North Caro-
and that it will be impossible
under these circumstances for the
Republicans to fuse
in If the Democratic
will show the people by its acts
as as its words that it is the
friend of the people, and that it
means to stand them in this
tight for reform until
the battle is won by the people,
no matter whether it shall be in
or after that, I
think we can win back many
left us, save the State
from the curse of another such
Legislature as we had last
LOCAL
NOTES AND
JOTTINGS.
TOBACCO
O- h.
A planter in South Carolina has
already a the
crop.
Mr. R- B- Better, of
Mount, is spending a few day a
with friends here.
of white barley tobacco.
Two mate new prize
will commenced in a few days, new and get out of
With these the market will and
their
on his head on his front
piazza and winking at all the I to be beyond
pretty girls who pass by. I lance unless a special officer
should be placed out there, and
Sixteen copies of the acts can be seen at a glance that
have been delivered by j to do this would cost the town
times the revenue it would
derive from the license, to say
nothing of all the annoyance,
hindrance to
the public printers. It is said
that this is a delivery in law,
as it does not state how many
shall be delivered. The indexes
were not furnished by the law- that would ensue
and clerks of the Senate course every reader of the
and House until very recently Reflector knows that it is op-
11th, the the ninety to anywhere,
days so it is not very ; but if the must have
probable that any attempt will
be made to collect the penalty
of per day.
In 1894 the railways killed
1,823 of their or
less than in 1893- and injured
or less than in 1893.
Tho passengers killed numbered
an increase of and the in-
numbered a
of This commendable
in limbs of railway employees
is ascribed by the Inter-State
Commission in part to the de-
creased number employed and in
keep them confined to their
present bounds where can
be under the eye of the officers.
We trust the Councilmen will
not allow a bar-room to be
placed out in the tobacco
i and if they have the good
order and business prosperity
of the town truly at heart they
will not.
the coming season with thirteen
buildings for handling to-
Everything is being done now
on this market to make it the
banner market of the east. If
the buyers and
farmers will do their duty the
coming year will see
leading the other eastern mar-
by at least a million pounds.
when they have outlived
usefulness, because some man has
made a success under this system
don't continue to keep it up, but
rather set yourselves to work to
discover for yourself and your
neighbor something new, that is
better mope than
the old style dress you or
some one else wore under
The Winston Journal misquotes circumstances in dead ages
us saying that Messrs. J. W,
Below we part of an
with ex Senator Jarvis.
Whenever he speaks his thoughts
are worthy of earnest
part to the increased use of auto- He is always on the right
appliances that have
railway employment much
less dangerous.
side and thus is with the masses-
His suggestions in reference to
fusion in North Carolina in 1896
j are especially timely, and this is
William R. Laidlaw brought a of vital interest to
has been suggested
North Carolina that a silver con-
ought to be held this
summer.
for the fact Hint the
Democratic party in North Caro-
in made s cleat cut de
for the free
coinage of silver. I would
favor the Calling of a convention
to take the sentiment of the party
on that question. My idea is that
the of a party made
at one convention stands as the
declaration of that party until
convention meets, so that
the declaration of our party made
in is just as and bind
suit against Sage, the
millionaire, for dam-
ages for injuries received by
the explosion of a bomb in Mr-
Sage's office in 1891 Mr. laid
law claimed that Mr. Sage
caught hold of him and held
him between the
bomb thrower, and himself,
was permanently in-
while Sage escaped com-
unhurt. The jury
found a verdict of for
the plaintiff Tuesday. It was
received with applause by the
audience.
Morgan and E. Parham are
spending summers at their
old Tho word not
was overlooked their copy.
These will remain here
during the summer-
From what we have neon
can gather from the best
tho tobacco crop of the eastern
section is not at The
very heavy rains of the first half
of the year seems to have
the laud crops are not at all
as an average, strong
however hope to see
quite an improvement soon.
We heard gentleman say a
few days ago, who is just getting
his first experience in tobacco
culture, that he had already had
advice enough on his four
of tobacco to make twenty crops
He said would come along
and to do one way and in
a short while another would come
tell him to reverse his
work, and he said he had about
up his mind to exercise his
own judgment with the aid of
made by those whom be
knew to be good authority. An
excellent and very wise conclusion.
During the on to-
culture at the last meeting
of the Tobacco Growers
Mr. O. T. Tyson told a very
good anecdote to illustrate the
necessity of growing good
He said up in the mountain
section, one morning a
was passing along and noticed a
small boy digging away
He inquired of him what
he was after to which the boy re-
plied, you say, why, I am
after a gopher, and if I don't get
him there is no breakfast
He said if the farmers the
eastern counties didn't grow good
tobacco they wouldn't get any
money as king cotton had long
since outlived its usefulness and
farmers were forced to grow to-
and good tobacco at that
or they would not et much
money out of it
Mr- B. B- Hester, who moved
away from this county three
years ago to Rocky Mount, visit
the quarters Friday
morning- Be said that it did not
look like the Same old town. So
many new prize houses and ware
had gone tip since he was
here that he was utterly astonish
at the rapid progress that
Greenville was making as a to-
market. We told him that
Greenville bad carefully avoided
Ly.
There seems to beau erroneous
id a abroad in the minds of some
men that the Tobacco Growers
Association was here
at this place for the exclusive
purpose of discussing and
upon the future course of our
in regard to the patented
looping system, whether or not it
be used people,
While this matter has a
place in the discussion of the
topics for which the
was yet it is
not the permanent nor all
at all object of the
In fact the first meet-
was called there was no
edge of any thing as a pat-
on tho looping method of cur-
tobacco and hence repeat
that while it is right and proper
it be discussed, it is
not, by far, the only object of the
Tobacco Growers Association.
There o a many who
seem to think that after dis-
position has been made of this
talked of looping system,
why then the association will dis-
baud and all go home, when in
reality the business of the
has not really been touched.
is perfectly natural that such a
conclusion should be reached, be-
cause just prior to the meet-
this patent system of curing
tobacco was sprung upon the
and hence as a natural
was the first matter that
came up for discussion. As no
permanent bad been
effected this matter came up reg-
at every meeting it be-
came general that fop object
of the association was to dispose
of the looping system.
At its meeting here on
day, fortunately, the
matter was finally placed before
tho and a partial re-
port made from th
appointed to investigate the
course to be pursued to set aside
the patent. This report is full
and final so fir as the proceed-
to be taken in order to an
the patent is and
for the benefit of those interested
who were not here, we give a
apsis of the report which is; The
Patents says be
no authority to set aside
pursued is to bring suit in the
U. S; circuit court of this Slate
in the name of the Attorney Gen-
and to prove there that pat-
was in common use for two
years or more before patent was
issued. Now this is the only
course left to tho farmers the
only thing that the association
will have to do with this matter
in the future is to decide whether
they will bring suit or
At next of the as-
we hope to have a large
attendance. There is business
to come up that will very
to the tobacco growers
everywhere-
Let everybody come with-
in less than a year if every farmer
who attends regularly is not
by the association far more
than by any other that he
has ever gained information on
tobacco culture thou this writer
will give it up that there is
in union- Heretofore the
looping system only has been dis-
cussed. Hereafter we will get
down to the business of the
and it will be
and interesting to all-
THE GROWERS IN SESSION.
An Enthusiastic
Prominent Features Argued.
The Tobacco Growers
met in the Court House,
Greenville, June --d, accord-
to the absence
of J. J. Laughinghouse Esq., the
President, W. M. King was
called to the chair.
Minutes of last moating were
read and approved Mr. A.
suggested that in the min-
when Mr- Joyner appeared
it should be prefaced by
which were O- L. Joyner.
Mr- E- A- submitted
Rules Regulations governing
tho Association, on motion
received and adopted fol-
lows.
I.
N This organization shall
be known as the Eastern Tobacco Grow-
-j. Association
shall be to unite the tobacco growers of
Eastern North Carolina, that they may
by concert action be enabled to ad-
an by aid
and cooperation he in a position not
only to advance their interests but to
the camp when
The Association shall be
composed those who are engaged in
growing tobacco and those who are In-
in its culture and sale.
Sec. The of the Association
shall consist of a President,
dent and ho
annually and hold their for
the term of one year.
c. The officers shall be elected at
the last regular meeting held in the
month of J of each and every year
Sf a majority the members
by ballot, qr as the At;
sees proper.
There shall be appointed at
the meeting in June a commit
tee Lo be known as the on
pi be o
members residing sections,
the tobacco growing territory, whose
business it shall be to observe closely
the crop condition, to note as nearly as
possible the temperature and av-
ran tho sec-
in each lives, to note
of any ravage that may he infecting the
tobacco Holds and general to make a
thorough report at each meeting of the
Association, and also to make a report of
other matter coming under their
to the tobacco
crop.
ARTICLE,
Sec. 1- duties of the President
shall be those belonging to presiding of-
The shall
the absence of the President perform
his duties. case of the absence
of the President and Vice
dent at any meeting, the
can elect temporarily a presiding
officer for that meeting.
3- The duty of the Secretary
shall be to keep accurate proceedings of
the meetings, attend to the
of the Association and shall also
be Treasurer of the and
shall receive and disburse the funds as
the Association shall direct.
G. T. stated chat on
way of the looping process
trouble would be to cut the stalk,
and keep out of tho clutches of
A. J. of the great
benefits to by the ad-
of an insurance feature to
this Association to the
recent hail destruction tho
county, when, if we would assure
ourselves even per in to
would be of lasting benefit
to the
Guilford Cox read the claim as
set forth by the patent looping
process and stated the loop,
the patent calls for, he used many
years before the issuance of the
patent but for other purposes
and explained his
connection with a machine for
planting lice, his investment
was a loss. L F- Evans stated
that no test case could be brought
this Association before any
court, and stated tho only way
that it could be brought, then it
might be ten years before any
decision would be reached.
Mr. Harris moved that this As-
disclaim all
for any one using this patent
looping process, resolutions
having been passed to the con-
notwithstanding, the latter
being offered by A. J. which
was added-
E. A- took tho floor and
in forcible language,
how it was a lawyer had
consulted that he was the
last man to advise his to
take the law their
G, T, wanted harmony
and that he was for law, and while
the patent was legally right it was
not morally.
Fred Phillips had with him a
stick and leaves of tobacco and
his process for strip-
ping tobacco fur curing
met with much genera favor ind
id in no way an infringement on
tho patent looping process.
O. L. Joyner stated ho had
pared an affidavit blank for
any person their
proceed prior to its patent-
ed for signatures, but after the
explanation ho had heard, that
such would not be taken as
ho not produce it.
motion the Association pro-
with the of officers.
It was withdrawn to hear from
Mr. Williams who it would
ample for the people to
take tho matter under advisement
when some authorize agent should
come around to sell the
but post
that would keep miners
loafers, strangers and tramps off
their premises-
The Association then proceeded
with the election of officers, as fol-
lows-
I. J. Laughinghouse President,
G- F. Evans vice E. M.
Pace
No business appealing
the adjourned to
meet Saturday before second
in July.
W. M. King,
E. M- Pace, Pies, pro tern.
Secretary.
There's No Mystery
About It.
The truth is I am doing rushing bud
Lively scenes about the store. People
appreciate my superb styles and low prices.
-o-
I ask no man to buy a
worth here who feels he
can do better elsewhere, but
I do ask all men to
gate the broad claim we make
and the truth or falsity on
which we stand or fall, and
that is that we give better
values on a given amount in
MEN'S BOYS
CLOTHING
Hats, Caps,
Scats. Furnishings
SHOES
for men, women, misses.
There shall be no fees or dues
connected with the Association, but all
necessary funds shall be raised by vol-
contribution.
Sec. The meetings tho
shall be held at Greenville on Sat-
before the 2nd and 4th
in month.
O. L. Joyner.
K. A.
a D.
It moved by E- A.
these Roles Regulations
may be by a two -thirds
rote o the members present at
any regular meeting-
E. A. of the Committee
on data in regard to patent laws,
made his report to make a
test be necessary
that proceedings should
by the Attorney General
in U. Court, as the
of Patents has no author-
to set aside a patent that has
been issued by the patent office.
This information
from the Department of tho In
and that it was the
of one of leading lawyers
such a suit would while
another one said that it would
cost
A. J. thought differently
was that any one
could use it, and if Court did
decide them they
only get times tho damage
done- This he slated on the
authority of attorney
the V- S- Court- E A. ex-
plained bis report and war, he
said, would be the last roan to
advice his or other people to
violate, law and to use this paten
for maid, wife, mother,
Mr. Finch Will Marry
Cards are cut announcing the
marriage of Miss Ida Barnes to
O- h- Pinch at the First
Baptist church in
June 36th. Mr. Finch is a Hali-
fax county boy, is meeting with
pleasing success as a of
the gospel his friends here
will congratulate him bis
marriage. He is
pastor of Baptist at
Dem-
Cotton
Below are
and peanuts for yesterday,
by Cobb Bros. A Co., Commission
chant of Norfolk
Good Mid 1-k;
Low 5-1
id
bu
B. E. bay.
j i. i i c L.-Ill
University of
i the the Col-
the I Medical Schools, and
the l for Teachers,
Teachers,
President Winston, Chapel
Hill, N. C and hand-
book on
J, C, LANIER GO.
GREENVILLE, N. C
--------DEALER IX-
My
my
than any competing concern anywhere,
stock is more varied, my styles higher,
prices lower and my methods more modern,
more liberal, more
my business is greater and growing larger.
Come and see me and I will treat you right.
FRANK WILSON,
THE KING CLOTHIER.
To
I have rented the old Greenville Warehouse
and and with Messrs. R. D. Evans and
A. H. Critcher, under the firm name of Evans
Co., will be in the warehouse business the com-
season. We earnestly solicit your patronage
With the best light in the State for showing your
tobacco, polite and competent assistants, plenty
of prize room, experience and ample means to
successfully conduct the business. We know we
can get as much for your tobacco as any house or
market in the State. Give us a trial and we will
try to please you. Respectfully,
L. F. EVANS, C.
Flues are How Ready for Delivery
BY
S. E. Pender Co.
-X-
greatly reduced. Same price to all.
Terms Cash.
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore.
ESTABLISH
Car ft. O O ES F
GREENVILLE. ST. C.
Just Received Cars Rock
KEGS STEEL NAILS, ALL SIZES.
MARBLE.
Wire and Iron Fencing
sold. First-class work
and prices reasonable.
process without first buy on the old Dancy
on the game a
H Broad Preparation.
Soap.
Boxes and
Stick Candy,
Cases Matches,
Dust,
Good Luck Baking Powder.
Sacks Coffee.
Molasses,
Tons
Kegs
Four,
Meat.
Hay,
Tubs Lard,
P. mil,
Ax Snuff,
no m R. K. Mills
Three Thistle
Boxes Tobacco,
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes.
Old Va. Cheroots,
Cases Oysters,
L.
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At rates.
AGENT FOB FIRE PROOF SAFE





GREAT
These goods will be sold
at
CENT.
DISCOUNT
to make room for my
fall stock.
THE REFLECTOR
Mr. W. went to Norfolk Mon-
day.
Mr. Richard cut. of Rocky Mount,
The Sheriff is after lawyers,
doctors, dentists and hotel keep-
for that special tax the last
Legislate- pat on them.
Mr. Carlos Harris-, the artist, I Mrs. J. E. Crow of is visit-
has just painted a handsome bag Mrs. W. H. Cox.
across the front of Mr- S- M.
I store-
e learn that another man was
arrested in Wednesday,
charged with
four now jail.
Lumber is being placed near
the building for the enlargement
Ely, of Virginia is
Mr. W. B. Brown.
Mrs. M. A. Ricks Friday
evening from Tarboro.
Mr. Lang, of has
was in town Friday.
Mrs. Alfred Forbes returned from
Local Reflections.
thermometer is up in the
A large quantity of potatoes
left hero Friday.
C. -M- tells n ho
saw a bird
I have just received a hue line
of Pocket Table cutlery.
D. Haskett.
Re member I pay yon for Beeswax
Chickens. and Country Produce
at the Old Brick
If a dry June foretells a good
crop the harvest will
this fall.
The is the best
Cane Mill made. have just re-
a No. Place your or-
now. D. Haskett.
A large of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
So far Greenville has entirely
escaped any base ball agitation
this season.
Fob bushels
known Peas, by J. L Starkey
Co
have the best Tobacco
that I have ever kept-
D. D. Haskett.
Farmers have to hustle now to
keep the grass from getting
ahead of them-
sold at cents
a gallon Friday.
to get a dumpling at that
price.
The grass is not all yet,
buy some of my hoes while they
are going cheap-
D.
Some of the young have
built a tennis court near the
cemetery and some interesting
bad-
Bring your cotton seed to
Henry Sheppard, and buy your
Meal and Hulls- Car load of each
just arrived tor sale cheap.
Fob well equipped
Machine Shop, Black-
smith Shop and Wood-working
Shop, with all necessary tools and
machinery. Kr terms apply to
James
C, June 1895.
Tobacco Attention.
We have just received a large
quantity of tobacco floe o-
good quality and clean. Parties
who have ordered flues from us
now at any time
S. E- Co-
Of my stock lie
I have only left. Come ear-
and secure one.
D. D.
of the Eastern Warehouse. The
work will soon begin.
Washington is to have a
phone exchange. We hope to
say something like this for Green-
ville before long.
The says hog
ii is i aging in sections
of Halifax county and a great
many hogs are dying.
Not left for tax list-
Those who ha ye not listed
had better attend to it if they do
not to be charged with
double tax.
all tho world to he
cried,
And she, with gentle mirth
And you told
Papa you watt tho
Mr. Alfred Forbes has been
curing some other drunk-
with salts. He tried a
dose on a the other day and
had him sober in a few minutes
Charlotte is boasting of ten cot-
ton factories and is the humming-
est town in North Carolina. Could
not Greenville catch this spirit
and start one t humming beret
On, Monday Mr. S- R. Ross,
keeper of the bridge across the
river here, will take up the draw
for repairs, and the bridge will
Mrs. R. J. returned from
Kinston Saturday morning.
Mr. B. Brown returned from Nor-
folk Wednesday evening.
Mrs. H. B. Anderson, of is
Wring Mrs. D. D. Haskett.
Miss Sugg went to Kinston
Friday evening to visit friends.
Rev. C. M. Billings left Monday
to spend a few days at Carthage.
Miss Clara Bruce Forbes returned
Wednesday morning from Kinston.
Miss of Washington, is
her brother. Mr. W. J.
Mr. J. H. mount is out after a few
days sickness, and has gone to Tyrrell.
Solicitor C. M. Bernard and
Monday for to spent a
month.
J. P. of Kinston, has
been making a brief visit to Mrs. D. D.
Ha-k.-ti.
Mr. and Mrs. I. II. Fender little
daughter it-turned from Tarboro Friday
e voting.
Mr. Atkinson, returned Thurs-
from a vi-it to ins mother
in Norfolk,
Dr. I. C. was the guest of Mr.
Alfred Forbes while here-. He left
Monday.
Ex-Senator and Mrs. T. J. Jarvis re-
turned home evening from
their visit ti Tennessee.
not passable before the . . ,, , ,. , , ,,.
i Mis. I. M. Moore, of took
We are now in the midst of the
longest days of the year. From
the to the 25th the sun rises
at and sets at giving
Louis and of sunlight.
The colored woman, Mahala
Brown, who recently lost her
mind, was placed jail Friday
for safe keeping until
she to Die
The colored people will have a
big celebration at on
the 4th.
The colored people of
are also to celebrate
the 4th in grand style.
had
their picnic Wednesday near tho
Pollard mill site, three miles from
town. A largo crowd went out
they hid a good time. It
a hue day for such an
outing.
In addition to our regular
of job printing the
office is prepared to take orders
lithographed letter, note
bill heads, checks, drafts, cards,
invitations, Samples can be
seen at the office.
The outside work of the new
store of Mr- S. M. Schultz is
completion. The build-
shows up splendidly will
be well suited for carrying on
the large business Mr.
will conduct it.
Col. I. A. Sugg tells us that
during the past week he has in
quired of as to the
prospects of their crops, and the
opinion of all but three of this
number was that all crops
through they did not believe the
average would come to
half a crop.
Mr. L- F. Evans, who recently
leased the Greenville Warehouse,
has associated with Messrs. R- 8-
Evans and ditcher, and
they will conduct the house to-
under the firm name of
Evans Co. All of them have
had good experience in the leaf
Oakley Hems.
N. C-, 24th, 1895-
Crops are looking tine.
Mr. J. O. Williams made a fly-
trip to Parmele Sunday.
Mr. S R Ross, king potato
of this section, was hero
Friday- He reports his crop fine
Mr. S- G. Williams wife
returned home Sunday from a
visit to relatives friends near
Conetoe and Tarboro.
Mr T. P. Nelson recently
purchased a lot of Mr. J. I
James. He will b u
largo store.
Mrs- R. F. Gainer returned
home Saturday after
days in Williamson
Everetts.
the train here Friday morning to visit
friends Scotland
Miss Gotten, of ankle,
Pitt visiting Miss Hen-
Herald.
Mis. X. L. Shaw, of Ins
been spending some days with her sister
Mrs. A. J. Johnson, near town.
Harry and son Harry and
Master Charlie Latham returned Thurs-
day evening from City.
Mrs. B. E. Goode left this
morning Va., where
i y to take of a school.
Mr. L. O. Bagwell, of an of
of the revenue Service is in town.
He is a brother of Dr. W. II. Bagwell.
Mr. J. B. Cherry, Jr., came home
Thursday evening from Baltimore where
be has been taking a business course-
Misses Clara
Lina Sheppard left evening
for the Assembly at Morehead.
Register of Deeds W. M. King left
Monday for Oxford attend the
Meting of the Grand Lodge of Masons.
Misses Louise and Winnie
Skinner returned Thursday evening
from school at Notre Dame near
more.
Mr. has
from a business college in
Ga. and has taken a position with the
Prof. W. F. Harding from
Wednesday where he has
been to attend marriage of a former,
class-mate-
Mrs. Mary Edwards Miss Nellie
Edwards, of Farmville, took the train
here Thursday evening to visit relatives
in Kinston.
Mr. W. R. Whichard, Jr., Coast Line
agent at station, came over
Thursday on his bicycle. He the
distance, miles, in exactly an hour.
A telegram received here Wednesday
announced the death of Mr. John D.
Wells, of Wilson. He was a very
man and well known over the state.
Mr. A. R- has received notice
from the examiners that he passed
the late civil service
held Richmond. His average
was a f reel ion over
Kev. B. II. Melton, a of the
College of the Bible, at Lexington, Ky.
will preach at Mt. Pleasant four
miles from Greenville, on Thursday and
Friday nights before the Sunday.
Superior Court Clerk E. A. Move, Mr.
W. Long, Mrs.
Mis. Georgia Pearce and little son
and Nannie King and
die Short left Monday afternoon for the
Assembly at Morehead.
Bethel Items.
Bethel, N-C. 24th, 1893.
Miss Mamie of Hen-
is visiting Mrs. M. O-
Blount.
Rev. W. A. Forbes and quite a.
large number of other Bethel
I people attended the Methodist
Conference at Tarboro
C- Iv who has been last week and Sunday,
with tho A. C. L- as Section Mast- A. W. Wilson, of B-i
at this place for eight months,
has move., to the main line at
Dudley.
Mr. W. E. Fleming anticipates
moving his gin and mill from
Stokes to Oakley. He will also
run in connection with his store
a livery and exchange stables.
The hustling firm of R. A. Poll
Co., have removed their stock
merchandise from to
Oakley- We welcome
them and all other enterprising
gentleman-
Our jolly railroad agent, Mr.
W. H. Williams, seems to have
his Bands full shipping truck-
His hospitality is doing much
good for company. His bills
show an increase of shipments
each day. He is a Pitt county
man and a solid Democrat.
will preach here in the
Methodist Wednesday
night, the inst.
Little Ruth, infant child of Mr.
and Mrs. A- B. Cherry, aged
about ten months, died last
Thursday evening about o'clock.
Funeral services were conducted
by Rev. W. A. Forbes in the
Methodist church at o'clock
Thursday evening, after which it
was buried at the family burying
ground near town. We extend our
heartfelt sympathies the be-
parents in sad be-
Monday's brought in
some They caught
the eye of everybody around the
depot.
Riverside Nurseries has the
thanks of for a h-
of fine peaches. They were the
largest we have seen this season-
Two This Week.
Some of the matrimonially in-
are recovering from the
shock caused by the extra dollar
being placed on licenses, and two
couples applied to the Register of
Deeds this week to have their
names put in the blanks- They
were Allen Hudson and Bettie
Buck, white, and Hyman Johnson
and Lula Pitt, colored.
Bishop Wilson.
Our people were again delight-
ed Monday night by having an
opportunity of hearing Bishop
A. W. Wilson, of Baltimore, who
has just been holding the District
Conference at Tarboro. He
rived hero on the evening
and preached to a large
in the Methodist church
at night. He is one of the
ablest men. The
Bishop was the guest of Mr. J.
B. Cherry while here and left on
the steamer to day for
ton-
Bring on Your Trotter.
It is learned here that the
at Greenville will not let any but
Pitt and Green county horses en-
the races there cm the fourth-
Some of our horsemen are dis-
pleased at this and think it a lit-
selfish- But it is perhaps a
compliment to Beaufort county
We have some horses
that are faster than any they
have, and we are Io
challenge them for a tilt with a
neat little stake at the back of the
Progress-
The above is entire error as
there is a purse of open to
all. We would he glad to
the Washington horses,
those that are willing to trot
for the purse or for outside
stake, they to name the amount.
N. H Whitfield,
Sec'y pro torn-
Money in a Bag of
A few days ago while clerks in
the store of J- C. Son
were opening a bag of coffee they
a bill of money. It is a
Brazil bill and quite a curiosity.
The design of the bill is handsome
very on the order of
United States bills, though slight-
smaller- The denomination of
the bill is
ting in our money a value of
of the words on the
bill, especially the written
wore faded, yet most of
them were very distinct. The bill
was issued while was an
Empire- How the bill came in
the bag of coffee no tell,
but the supposition is that while
the bug was being tilled at of
the Brazil coffee farms some one
dropped this bill out of his pock-
et and it got the coffee.
Toe
There was a large crowd out a.
the race track, Tuesday after
noon, to witness the trials of
speed between three local horses
and the races were interest-
Dr. D. L. James, Mr. 8- T.
White and Mr. J. W. en-
their trotters to race for a
sulky.
by White, time
second, Higgs third.
2nd by James, time
Higgs second, White third.
3rd by time
Higgs second, White third-
Dr. James was declared winner
of the of the race and tooK the
sulky.
After these trials there was
a half mile foot race between
boys under years of age-
This was won by Dick White in
with Ben second. It
was good running for the boys-
on,
To be held with the Baptist
church in Williamston, N- C,
to 30th, 1895.
Friday U A.
C- M- Billings,
alternate, J- K- Howell- P- M.
Organization. P.
ports of Pastors Their
Work. P. M-The Bible the
only Authority for the Faith and
f J.
K. P.
Saturday A- M. Devotional
A-
Its Meaning -Rev.
R. Its Scriptural
J- A. Monday
Our Obligations to
W. T- Savage.-2 P. M.-The
sign and t f Sunday schools
Col. D. and Pi of
W. H. P. M- Our
Duty to the Orphans North
D. and W. A- Dunn,
P.
A-
school Mass A. M.
P. M-Sermon.
Pastor and Deacons of
church will be a commit-
tee on Religious Exercises.
Th e Honor Comes to Greenville.
The musical contest before the
Teachers Assembly for a gold
medal for the best performance
on the piano of a piece of music
they had never seen came off Sat
night, of Friday
night as was first advertised. The
medal was awarded to Miss
Sheppard, of she hay-
played, the piece drawn by
her without a mis-
take- Sim performs beautifully
and gracefully, and many
from at the
Assembly. The medal was de-
livered by Dr. of Mary
land. Greenville is indeed proud
of Miss Sheppard and her host
of friends at home congratulate
her most heartily winning
it reflects credit not
only upon her, but also upon
Miss Lottie who was her
instructor at Pitt Female
. . ;
A Good Run.
Mayor Ola Forbes took a
mile spin on his wheel Monday
afternoon- He left Greenville at
o'clock, stopped at several
tobacco farms along the road,
spent nearly an hour in Bethel,
made a short stop at Parmele,
then on to where
he stayed nearly another hour
and was back to Greenville at
He made the homo run
from to Greenville,
miles, in an hour and forty min-
Tho actual time
for the entire miles was about
four hours.
He Delighted Greenville People.
Dr. J. C. President of
Trinity College, arrived here Sat-
evening and preached to
large congregations in the
church both Sunday morn-
and night. The people of
Greenville were fortunate in
opportunity of hearing
such an able man and we hear
nothing but expressions of de-
light from bis sermons. He is a
brilliant man, an eloquent speak-
throws such earnestness
enthusiasm in his discourses
as to command the closest
to every utterance. Green-
ville hopes to be favored with
other visits from him. Dr.
is the best Trinity has
bod he is much inter-
est to that excellent institution.
The Price of a Kiss.
A lady in town sent a book by
until to a gentleman friend
other town and not haying time
to a letter she placed a strip
of paper inside tho book which
was written time to
send a kiss Another lady
a word above her initials
on the wrapper. When tho book
reached its destination the word
and initials on the wrapper ex-
cited the suspicion of the post-
master and he went inside
package. Finding the strip of
paper with the kiss on it he re-
quired the young man to pay
cents a postage on the book.
The lady received a letter of
thanks, of but a
was added that it would he cheap-
to tho kisses by express
next
To the Memory of Joe
z.
o present with gentle step
The graves where loved ones sleep,
Where fondness kneels to offer prayer
And memory turn, to weep.
hone of all the put lie here
the sod
And. baptized in the of grief,
They've joined church of Go-I.
Then why lament, vain, heart,
Or wish to call them forth,
The spirits hack to heaven gone.
The earth none hack lo earth.
The flowers so fade
And rare fruits decay.
So memories of a year ago
Are all t.-day.
Greenville Market.
For Reflector.
BY MRS. ALICE E.
Forty fears ago I was a young bride.
The of life I had never tried ;
All seemed bright prosperous t
me,
Since then many I have been
brought to see.
As the years rolled on more
I became,
And learned that a great many worked
for fame.
A great and land
But soon were all in great distress.
Our homes that were so and
bright.
Here soon over-run with sorrow and
fright,
sad to return to the old home now,
see so many changes I re
know how.
It seems like a dream that I have
To come back and my all
taken,
And scattered in of this
land.
Which was once a loving little baud.
I have red among strangers who
were kind to me,
May God bless them and keep them from
dangers free,
Although my afflictions for three years
have been great.
I have learned to lie patient and learned
to wad.
Now, my dear children, when this you
see.
Read with care and think of me.
One whose love goes out for you.
Who hag always been to you so true .
The changes here have been so many,
A true friend Is hard to And if there be
any,
The time has come when all must try
To learn the wherefore and why
Tho people of my younger day
Are nearly all in their graves;
In their homes now arrangers
Of the it's .-ail to tell.
I am now at my old home to brood over
the past;
May God work out all g- for me at last.
Now, sixty years of my life have passed
And according lo nature I have but a
short time here to stay.
May God and strengthen my
faith.
Keep me temptations, and give me
grace
That I may pan safely over the river to
the other hide,
h Jesus his angels forever to
abide.
PLAIN FACTS.
Corrected by S.
Store.
Butter, per lb
ii Sides
Sugar cured Hams
Corn
Coin Meal
Flour,
Lani
Oats
Sugar
Coffee
Salt per Sack
Chickens
Eggs doz
Beeswax, per lb
Kerosene,
bu
Hulls, per ton
Cotton Seed Maul
Hides
M. at the
to 2.1
to
to to
to SO
MS
to
SO
to
it; to .-
to
to
to JO
C Oil
s r,
Arrest
disease by the timely use of
Liver Pills, an old and
favorite remedy of increasing
popularity. Always cures
SICK HEADACHE,
sour stomach, malaria,
torpid liver, constipation
and all bilious diseases.
Liver PILLS
Ship your produce to
J. Jr., Co.
Factors
AND
Commission
NORFOLK VA.
Personal Attention given to
Weights Counts-
MY ARCTIC SODA FOUNTAIN, be-
well Chang d at all by the
new process of Carbonated Hate, will
for the season be run on full time, day
and It is an acknowledged fact
that my Fountain produces the best and
most cool drink that has ever
been made this town.
My Orange, Strawberry, Raspberry,
Lemon, Vanilla, and Apple
are all of the st syrups and flavors
that can be bought, and when two or
more are well Mended together by i-n
experienced hand with plenty of Ice and
you something
delicious and refreshing, more you
drink the you wish for more, the
of I his fan that my trade has near-
doubled itself each season for the past
three years.
Everybody who has tried them will
tell you that my Milk are
celled, no city heat those mad- right
here at my Soda Fountain.
My foamy Lemonades heal oft any-
thing ever seen in this of the
try, if yon try one you will be my
customer as long as the hot c n-
My Wine Coca Cola, the
nerve tonic and headache cure,
tired feeling, produces refreshing
sleep. One glass a d will renew your
energies and keep you feeling to id all
the summer.
The only Soda Fountain In
town can be at store of
JAMES LONG.
Notice to Creditors.
T be having duly qua
before the Superior Court Clerk of
Pitt county as administratrix of Wini-
May, deceased, notice is hereby
all persons holding claims
against the estate to present them to
Hie undersigned for collection on or be-
fore the 6th day of May 1800. or this
notice will be plead in Dar for their re-
and all persons indebted to said
estate will make immediate payment.
This the day of May
MRS. S. G. CANNON.
of Winifred May
Notice to Creditors.
duly qualified before the
Court I of Pitt county H ex-
of the Last Will and Testament
of Warren deceased, not ice is
hereby given to all persons indebted to
the to make immediate payment
to the undersigned, and ail persons
having claims estate must
present same for payment on or before
the day of June. or this no-
will be plead in bar of recovery.
This of June, 1805.
SUSAN E. TUCKER,
of Warren Tucker.
Tax Notice.
The of Commissioners of Pitt
county will meet at the Court House in
on 8th, for
the purpose revising the tax of
and valuations reported to them.
At which lime the Hoard will heir all
improper
or real or personal property or ex.
Any person having
such complaints to m will present
them in writing to said on said
day such evidence as they may
ha -o-
order of the Board.
W. M. KING,
BUILD U HOME
patronizing Home Enterprise.
In lift
ii re
lo or break any M
a repaired. All
Ra None
at so tame or
leas. free.
a i co.
O. C.
of DURHAM, N. C,
Are manufacturing is line Cigars, Che-,
roots and can be found on
the market. Their brands are
OF DURHAM,
a dime N hand made.
Havana filled.
a very e Cigar,
Havana mad
Named in honor of Col. Buck Black
well.
a line live cent Sumatra Wrapper
hand made, Havana tilled, a sure win-
Named in of Col. J. S.
Ci-r, Press, of Durham To-
Co.
Ten
five for The line, t smoke for
STATE
Three for o a hummer that
ways pleases.
Stick to home and send us your or
den. Special brands put when de-
sired. Address
CHEROOT CO.
Durham, N.
DRY GOODS.
Price. Regular Price.
Scotch Lawns.
Satin Lace Stripped Mitts
Silk and Wool
Colored Dotted Swiss
Colored
Cloths
French Sateens
Dotted Swiss
Crinkled Cloths
White Goods cents up.
La Vest price.
La
HAMBURGS.
k's Price.
8-cent cents.
10-cent . j
20-cent cents.
25-cent
50-cent cents.;
Shirt Waists.
Our Shirt Waist,,
Our 60-rent Shirt Waist,. now
Shirt
Our Shirt
STRAW HATS.
Our Dollar
Our
Our
Our
styles to from.
Shirts, Collars and Cuffs. Gauze
Underwear, and Suspenders
at panic prices.
CLOTHING.
Men, Youth and Boys
go to make room for fall stock.
PANTS GOODS.
Our
Our 49-cent
Our 34-cent
Our 24-cent
Our 20-cent
Remember to these puces it takes the
Hard Cash down and don't yon forget it.
Yours for business,
C. T.
WE
ARE THE PEOPLE
Who want your trade on-
Jelly TUMBLERS,
Tobacco Knives.
DRY GOODS,
Shoes, Groceries
FURNITURE.
We can sell LANTERNS very cheap.
Call on us for lowest prices on all goods.
GROVES
Truck Barrels, Pumps
All Kinds of Machinery.
have at
the
Moore store and are
prepared to fun
any kind of
you may mill.
Special attention given
to putting down
and repairing
PUMPS.
All kinds of Pipe
work done and sat-
Place orders.
for Flues with
Greenville, N. C.
WALLPAPER.
I have removed my Wall Pit per to
to the Marcellus Moore and
have a lot of sample.
Come before the are
selected. The best opportunity yon
ever had to beauty your house at
a m ill cost. Prices as low as
three cents a roll of eight yard.
A. B.
TASTELESS
CHILL
It J At mt LT.
WARRANTED. PRICE
ILLS., HOT. M. ISM.
Put. Medicine Co. St. Mo.
ft
GROVE'S TASTELESS CHILL and ear.
bought groat already Id allow ex-
In the
an care
In th.
loan i
CAM
Sod guaranteed by J. L. WOOTEN


Title
Eastern reflector, 26 June 1895
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
June 26, 1895
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17751
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Cite this item
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