Eastern reflector, 28 August 1895






JOB PRINT KG
The Reflector is
pared to do all
of this line
NEATLY,
QUICKLY, and
IN BEST STYLE.
Plenty of new mate-
rial and the best
of Stationery.
STATE NEWS.
of Matters of Interest
convocation if Wilmington
iii September
Tin i tittle dog has
paps
easily.
Raleigh physicians ere send-
their Uphold fever patients
to city h
The Populist clerk of
laud last appointed
ii of the police.
L Banjul n
F. at
tn to shoot
is
of ex-
have gone Ashe
Tile
the Washington fa
mined tint of the at-
of
while playing with a sup-
posed pistol, shot her-
self through die arm-
At Bay church,
county, a a week ago, Mr.
Cit-o. to
attitude
of pi
A dug got a
of yeas and ate heartily of it-
Within a hours he had
to almost double his natural
; he gave up his
of votes a
school tax of cents on the
valuation of and
each i oil. This is the
eat ever voted North
Carolina.
Mi- H A of Hickory
Point, has lost chick-
ens in two wicks with
has lost
Gazette-
crop the
in the Western part of
Stale is year immense. They
have retailed at Mt. Airy as low
as a bushel.
It Is slated th it
was married
at Chicago. A
man who spells name
way may be expected to do
an
About bran I;
have been
so far. It appear
the supply of will
be for use,
bites, such other
s, to which the flesh is
heir.
A It-ear old gill in
county, eloped
with a young man whom her pa-
rents forbidden to visit her
they were The fa-
of the girl pursued I hem and
killed her husband.
John R. the
Carolina pane horse, great
disappointed his admirers and
backers by his defeat at the Chi-
races Thursday Joe
easily won three straight
heats from making the
race a one sided affair.
over the
line in Alexander, comes oat
a rattlesnake that's hard to
beat, says the Wilkesboro
He killed it last week near
his house, and it required time
shots to do it. The wore
rattles and MK B feet long.
The snake's hide was stuffed,
to do this it required one bushel,
one peck and out gallon of bran.
There seems to be a of
pestiferous bug in
township- No vegetable is too
delicate or too coarse for it to
destroy, but cabbage seems to be
its favorite. Numbers of tine
cabbage are being destroyed by
the Borne kind of an
epidemic has struck the peaches,
as they are f st rotting away.
Charlotte
The render of will e pleas
to learn that there is at least one
dreaded disease that hat been
lo cure in all its stages, and that is
Catarrh, Halls Cure is the
only MM known to the medical
fraternity. Catarrh being I
disease, require, constitutional
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is
taken internally, acting directly on the
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys-
thereby destroying the foundation
of the disease, and giving the patient
strength by building up the
lion and assisting nature in doing its
work. proprietors have so much
faith its -power-, that they
offer One Ban Ire I MUMS any case
I hit it fails to Bead f r
V. i. A O ,
Toledo, U.
SOU by
The Eastern Reflector.
D. J. WHICH
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
VOL. XIV.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1895.
NO.
You Need
Negro.
The North University
Magazine lately contained a
I of the life character
of by Prof K.
P. LL. of which the
lay in the fact Ilia
of the sketch is
j g, and that be is the
faithful colored janitor of the
The article has
reprinted separately. Few white
janitors, we may have
been honored. with
this incident is
of Mr. White, of Rock
Hill, S- C , to with
r. the loyalty
to his family during the
war.
The extract is from the
New York Nation. Northern
are to see that the
white man has a kindly
toward the We
doubt if anywhere earth as
much has existed be-
tween two races so
rated by But unhappily
has been led astray
bad men of both races. The
of the depends
the restoration of the old time
cordial affection between him
tho white The alone
can restore it. The white people
of the State hare taxed themselves
for education, have
the equal privilege on
cars steam boats, have erect-
ed asylums tor the of his
race, have protected him as a
Voter and a juror, have been
just to him as a laborer- What
the done return
Tho mass of them have voted
inst every interest, cf
i the State, made
, possible in
appreciation of and
favors already granted, have fol
lowed bad men, ignorant men,
men instead of true
j patriotic
The path for the is plain.
I Let him follow good men, for they
alone will do him justice.
Such blunders, cleanly
to crimes, as tho surrounding of
i the j Winston Sunday
j night do to destroy the
and relations
that between whites
and the best of th n-i
in the State.
Women.
There is nothing my I
dear boys, in making light cf
women For your mother's
the sex. Never use a j
lady's name in an improper j
place, or at an improper time,
or mixed company. Never j
make assertions about her
you think are untrue, allusions
that you feel she would
blush to hear. When yon meet
with men who do not scruple
to make use of a woman's name
in a reckless and unprincipled
manner, shun them, for they
are very worst members of
the lost to
every sense of ; every feel-
of humanity. Many a
good and worthy woman's I
has been forever ruined j
and heart broken a lie, con- j
coded an unprincipled i
but believed by people of j
good principles, who are
ready to believe slander or con-1
imprudence as crime.
The smallest thing
to a woman's character will fly
on the wings of the wind, and
magnify as it circulates, until
its monstrous weight crushes
the poor unconscious victim.
Remember this if you are
tempted to repeat or listen to a
scandalous story.
He Paid the Bill.
our Town.
have that are I Sm ,
Mr. a A ,,,
tobacco de-1 . ; . .
pay of his Chinese ,. , , . ,
, , matte in your mind
for a garment had . ,
j ti j live a stand up
it, say good things
averse to handing over, R
., . can about it, if you know
tho saying this par- . . , , H
, j . no good, then preserve
garment had never I , . .
. . . . . . , . . a. silence regard to its
to ; but he to do; .,.,
, . ,, that is considered golden Do
so when a policeman was called in , , , .
, . , , , , what yon can t help along every
and a neighbor, whom he hail j
consulted, told him that Mr. Pug
man who is engaged in a
,, male business. Don't
maker was a gentleman and would ;
j a for every nice you
not make ch a demand unless ,
he was positive that he was right, i
sud John, to suit the whim cf one or
first me yon The sue-
He explained that he would get of
a and that Mr. be success. No man
must cut off its head, if the no
blood spurted away from the -dependent of his fellow
business men. Take your home
By the way, we may lay many
things at door of the Negro,
but should not overlook the
service he has done as a bulwark
against immigration- Negro It
; has kept out alien labor, has
kept out discontent and strikes
mid
If we will educate the
I him his
pointing him to wholesome
ideals and arousing worthy am
I he will to be the
j m lower laboring cir
in we ought
to stand by him in the
that Italians, Irish, Poles,
etc., etc. will bring upon him, be
he is batter suited to our
climate, able to do more work,
more tractable, possessed of
i more of the spirit of our
lions than they. Take the Negro
out of the hands of
politicians and he is
a iv f tho lower
will d
proper
laud uncompromising treatment.
i d
In a recent lengthly editorial
the Washington Post expressed
a to see the whipping-post
re-established a
and permanent Tho idea
is no doubt, to latter-
nay it is
sound, through and through-
Th whipping post is one of the
greatest conservators of the
. peace good order of
the human mind has ever
devised, we would b-; de-
lighted to see it re-established
North Carolina the basis
that the Post suggests i
and permanent. It is not
able, to be fastened up
and given lashes on
the bar. back but this treatment
need not be visited upon any ex
those who need it. and such
as receive it, they do say, never
I forget It. It was a highly
we had it, the
I old whipping
spurted away
manufacturer ho was telling the
truth, and if it spurted l
him he was guilty the
attempt to swindle. Amused of cheer
and curious Mr. told personal action
John to bring forth the fowl. that the big
John produced a chicken and a do not care for not
keen-edged knife of strange pat- Don
After an and the difference the
burning of incense, he number of his and your
tobacco man the blade- Mr. Plug own is that yon pee his through
maker whacked off the fowl's head magnifying glass of criticism
at a Stroke, the blood j yours in a glass darkly. That ill
spurted away from him- omened bird, the croaker, can do
exclaimed John the more harm a minute
with a grin-
he promptly paid tho
Tobacco Journal.
than two good citizens can repair
j in a month.
Tho Reflector this year
It will give the news
every week for
a year.
Bulletin.
Figs and Thistles.
Outdoor
Some years ago a young
Truth loves to looked was hunting for work
I among the farmers of a
; em town at harvest-time.
He made his a indication to a
benevolent looking farmer who
T wrong is
side.
the
have taught the world
how to
was attracted by the young
man's frank, merry face, but
No young takes his first was not really in need of extra
drink alone, help.
If you don't kill besetting you cradle he asked,
sin it will kill you. after a moment's hesitation
leading to hell are very j is repeated the
together a great city. ; young in bewilder
. can,
Every man who lives
The report of correspondents
of th- Crop bulletin, i
sue I Carolina
Weather nice, for the week
ending Sat
ire favorable- The week
opened warm,
ma xi inn in temperatures
above the 15th
10th wore the normal. The
am-MiLt of sunshine was slightly
has than usual. The drought
prevailing the beginning of the
week C aim Western
Districts was by the
oral on tho 16th and 17th,
which p, assures a
did com crop. Too much rain
occurred a stations.
The next week will be dryer
and cooler.
The this week has
been generally except
in portion. Tue week
opened ended very
with two day, the 15th and
Kith, below normal in
en the
southern part of the district,
where there has been no drought,
the fall this week has
injurious, it. all other
portions i bits broken tho
prevailing and
highly to all crops ex-
tobacco. Special reports as
to corn indicate Unit as a whole
the crop in tin- district is as
good as in oilers, is
ally below the average ; but as
the acreage is larger than
a big crop will be gathered-
Early corn is now safe, and the
late general rains do much
toward making late corn, which,
however, will not be safe before
September 1st to 15th.
e is now
is still g owing
blooming; has improved, but
fruit still scarce. There has
too much lain for tobacco. Rains
reported
Wilmington, Rocky Point
Falkland, Ml. Olive,
SO; Nashville,
ville, 1.80; Golds
HO; Li 1-89; New
1.66
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report
ABSOLUTELY PURE
There seems to be too much
of a spirit among to
take up with strangers going
the county, who offer
them in the way
of trade. They seem to be
of men who are doing
business in town ; men who
are responsible. The business
men of the town are not
who want your money for
nothing. The people of the
country must not think that a-
man can do business for
long, not make
and unjust j
in trade is such in these j
days that big profits are
possible. Slick to the business
men of your own and
stick to you.
ham Sun.
helps to make unwritten laws for
the good of others.
There may be as much selfish-
giving as there
is robbing a bank.
The father should fear to walk
where it would not be for
his children lo travel.
A young Mew Orleans
shot a because the
refused to marry him. The
father the pistol shots
rushed room the
young shot him also,
out of the house ho knocked down
a sister of the young lady. All
the fools are dead yet. but
this, one ought
Up in Michigan lay
school the close
of an address
which he was sure he had Kept
within the c of the
least smilingly invited
A tiny boy, with a
face brow,
at once held up his hand.
sir, why was Adam
The coughed
some doubt as to what answer to
give, a little girl of nine, the
eldest of several brothers
sisters, came promptly to his aid.
was to MM
Tho New Orleans Picayune
thinks a theological
would have turned that over for
a week, with no result.
We Played a Small .
Little game
Quite hot,
same
Jack Pot
Went around
trips
Jolly sound
chips
I played.
Bet a V;
He stayed
showed,
Cards talked ;
He rode
I walked
don't writes Bill
the ladies lace as much
as they used to. I haven't seen
but girl in a long time who
excited my fears, I am still
concerned for fear she will break
two, right at the or
become uncoupled of these
days. A good healthy-sized waist
is absolutely necessary to a
healthy wife, and nobody but an
idiot would marry a woman with
a dirt dauber body. Nevertheless
I like to see fixed up nice
with co-sets In fact, with
on save Mother
bards.
In a letter to the author of a
book dealing with tho relations
between science and religion,
thanking him for a copy of his
work, Mr. Gladstone expresses
lo science for all it has
and is but says that
Christianity does not it, and
is as able as it ever was to hold
its ground.
Some placed a cross-
tie tho track of
ft read near
City a, causing and
ears o a freight Be be
An down
wrecked. The engineer, the old-
est in the service of tho toad, was
killed.
the at
he added, per-
give
me a job out av
A Remedy.
A lady who has tried a great
many things to get rid of mos
has hit upon
it at last.
Her remedy is
She discards all
the wide
at Across the
space of the window she
a piece of ribbon I
inches wide.
said she,
not be induced to pass that
Why it is so I do know,
but I know natives of
take this means of tin.
vicious mosquito. It. w to
A man
but failed to provide an
entrance. Very foolish of him ;
but not mot- so than for a man to
fit up an expensive store and
then neglect to provide for the
entrance of business by
Ink.
the board fences vi-
I of nearly country
town may be read half
letters of the names of
j the business firms of that
passed who
, thought they knew a better way
I to advertise than in the
Ink.
The Executive of the
Virginia Press Association, at a
meeting held at Richmond on
the 13th, decided to arrange
excursion for the Association to
Slates and
Rich-
October and arriving
at Atlanta the 11th.
If tho people of the South would
talk loss politics more
it would be better for them
There is too much polities the
South enough
Topic.
Pitt, of the tobacco
of Eastern
North Cir is importing to
oaten from the old bright
belt at a rapid rate- More than a
hundred have employed, at
average pay of per mouth
ville Tobacco Journal.
One Hun and One.
II ad lit a despite his
great weight of years, Jacob Ur-
ban of the inmates of the Lu
home for tho at-
Airy, Philadelphia, Mon-
day his hundred
and first birthday. of
co rare occasion, the entire
population of the united in
a of tho event.
Mr. has
ate ah swot and smoker of tobacco
since his boyhood days.
the exception of a of
breath his health is quite robust.
The cut was born
Germany,
aid is tho son of
Urban, who died at the of
four His mother lived
until she war, ninety years old.
She was a vigorous woman up to
short time to her death.
A letter was at Lib
in Randolph county, a few
days ago, with the following ad-
dress cu gentleman
who saw it after it had reached
its distillation, took it
gave it to us
roe on at
To M no,
lieu me down let me b
They Had A Neat.
Little Brown, Ma
wants to know if she con Id
row a of eggs. She wants
to put under a hen.
you've got a hen
silting, have you didn't
you kept hens.
Little ma'am, we
but Mrs. to lend us
a hen that's to set, ma
thought if you'd us some
eggs we'd a neat ourselves.
Ii women will just lake care of
i Ibis sleeves they will have
Till MU Ala Kivett goods for a dress next
Miss Ada is a
lady of and the letter
was no doubt her sweet The better a thing is the I
heart. pays to advertise it-
situation.
Tho little boy was going along
road wee, n
His face red as he had
he
sculled i p Mid but he
shewed mi ks of bi nines r
prospective eves.
But his was
matter, sonny Did
you get In-kid
sir I I him, and
licked him good. I bunged
both eyes, and I blooded his nose
Mid broke his front teeth,
and I kicked the stockings
him, I did
hi get in
not. lie chased
him all the way. He was big
me, and leek ail of,
his tumbles from him and
his top and his knife had
two blades part of
what are you
about, then
was I bigger
buys I hat by and s me
lick I ,.,, I held I
up and away i
from v till,
picnic.-.
n me, little
to
tough moat cut
Use bacon fat for frying chicK-
I en game.
a stale loaf of broad lo
fro-hen it.
Warm cracker slightly in the
oven before using
Dip sliced onions milk be-
fore frying.
Fry apples you
have liver or
Heat dry before pouting
on the water.
vinegar over fresh fish to
make the scales come
Hard f Yet.
The New York has kept
of companies and firms
which have raised wages up to
M, last. number of em
thus benefited being
I., the face of
iii. s it if be tolerably hard for
those o are trying to
the for tho lack of
the free o i f silver at tho
ratio of to the county is go
to hell in a hand-basket, to
deep their
Several h largo
of freight were burned
at Milwaukee, Wis , a loss
of nearly
A NEW IDEA.
How Time of Day May Be Told
in the Dark.
time is
think I can tell you without,
looking
Ho drew out his watch, says the
Boston Traveler, and held it up
close to his ear and slowly turned
the stem-winder.
two, three, four, five, six,
seven, he counted, and then
he means seventy-two
minutes. I wound the watch up
tightly at three o'clock, and so
time ought to be about twelve min-
past four. Let us see how near
came to it. Well, It's four eight-
I was only six minutes
The other was regarding him with
you moan to say
that you can tell the time of day by
winding up your
exactly; but I can come very
near it; usually within ten minutes;
and it's quite simple, too. All you
have to know is how long one tick-
in winding up will run the watch.
I'll explain to Suppose at
throe o'clock wind up my watch
until it is tight, as we is,
until another turn of the winder
would break a spring. At five
o'clock I wind the watch again, and
find that the winder clicks twelve
times before the watch is wound up
to the place where it slicks.
know twelve clicks will run
the watch one hundred and twenty
minutes, and one click
ten minutes of
good is it to know
suppose you go to bed at
eleven o'clock to-night, and on re-
tiring wind your watch and put
it under your pillow. During tho
night wake up and wonder what
time it is. want to
and the gas. All you have to
do is to that, out from
under your pillow, hold it. to your
oar and count the licks as you wind.
If you count eighteen, thou you
know that the watch has run down
one hundred and eighty minutes
since eleven o'clock, and that tho
lime must be very near two o'clock.
To be sure, you can't tell tho exact
lime, but you can generally get
Within a quarter of an hour of
tho same rule hold
good for a clock or watch which is
wound with a
dare say it would, but have
never tried it on anything except a
stem-winding know a
blind man who always tells time by
winding his watch and counting the
ticks. His sense of touch is quite
delicate, and he can wind up his
three or four times a day and
calculate within ten minutes of
correct
An exchange rises to remark
is not our custom to
nature, we have no hesitancy
in saying that she fell down when
she didn't grow handles water-
melons.
COLLEGE MEN.
Men
England Delights to Honor
Bearing a Degree.
Tho prejudice which exists
against college men in politics
has no place in public life in
England. Indeed, it is very doubtful
whether an uneducated man could
maintain permanently any
in the legislative affairs of
England, even supposing it possible
that he could obtain such a place.
Every one of tho chief members
the now English ministry boars a
college degree, and the coincidence
certainly proves that a U. A. or an
M. A. or LL. D. Is
neat In English public affairs.
bury is a graduate of Oxford and a
chancellor of the university.
four, his nephew, got his schooling
at and Cambridge; ho Is lord
rector of St. Andrew's university and
of Glasgow university and lord
roller of the University of Edinburgh.
Chamberlain, the beau and dandy of
the ministry, acquired learning
the university college school in
London, and tic always said that his
Crook and Latin did him no harm as
a business man when he became a
manufacturer in he is
a follow of the Royal society. The
of Devonshire was made an II,
A. at Trinity college, Cambridge, In
and ten years later the same
college bestowed upon him an LL. D.;
he is now a chancellor of the
of Cambridge.
went from to Christ Church
college, Oxford, where he took
the degrees It. A. and M. A.
was an honor man of his
college and won distinction as an
economist and as a writer in his
Theory of Foreign Ex-
Almost every one of the
subordinate members of Salisbury's
cabinet has achieved a college degree,
before or since catering
American.
DR. I,.
N C.
Ml. II. A. JOYNER
DENTIST,
O.
S. K. Penile-. cs,
Hardware
K.
B.
F.
an Unmistakable Exception.
my said the
prudent father, politeness
doesn't cost
was the reply, hoard
don't it, do
it certainly costs mo about
dollars a to get any
out of the waiters at
Star.
J. It. J. I.
BLOUNT FLEMING
n. C.
in all the Courts.
LOCAL DIRECTORY.
COUNTY
Superior Clerk, K. A.
Sheriff. K. W. King.
Register of Deeds, M. King.
Treasurer. I,. Little.
Coroner, Dr. C.
Surveyor,
Dawson,
Fleming, T. K. I.
Smith and S. M. Jones.
Health, Dr. W. II. Bagwell
Comity Home, W. Smith.
County Examiner of Teacher-. prof.
W. II.
TOWN OFFICE KS.
Mayor, Ola
Clerk, C. C.
Treasurer, w. t. Godwin.
W. Perkins, chief,
Cox, J. w. night,
W. II. Smith, W. L.
Drown, W. T. Godwin. T. A.
Baffin, deltas Jenkins.
every Sunday
second morning and night,
. night. Rev. C. M.
I pastor. Sunday School
A. II. C. I.
No regular service-.
Episcopal. fourth Sun-
day morning and Rev. A,
Hector. School at
A. M. W. II.
Methodist. Services every Sunday
morning and i Prayer meeting
night. Rev K.
Sunday A. M. A.
it supt.
Services 1st and
I Rev. Archie
pastor. Sunday at
II. D.
Covenant Lodge No. I. O. o, K.,
I meets every Tuesday night. Has-
I A. F. A.
M. and third Monday
Zone Moore, W. M
E Y-AT-I, A W,
Office under Opera House. St.
J, i.
G R S N V I L L E. t.
Practice, ii all the Collection a
Practices in all the Court.
Civil and Criminal Bundles
Makes a special of fraud
axes, act ions to recover land, col-
Prompt and careful attention
Money to loan on approved security.
Terms
L. C. LATHAM.
I a i ti am
v .
John R K.
Wilson, N. C. S. V,
N.
Special l.
of claims.





THE REFLECTOR
Greenville, N. C.
IT CAKE FRIDAY.
f. J. E. Editor mi
Entered at the at Greenville
C. as second-class m matter.
WEDNESDAY, Aug.
Holding tip trains is still th
fad away out West.
was in where an
express train was blown open
and
The Treasury gold reserve
is dwindling down close to the
safety line again, and th ere is
not much surplus above the
limit.
There is somewhat of a stir
in Washington City over the
discovery that there are
in the office of the
Li brain n of Congress. A
shortage is
Ohio Democrats at their con-
in Springfield,
ex-Gov. J- E. Campbell
by acclamation for Governor.
The platform adopted by the
convention embraced as its
money plank the financial
clause of the last National
Democratic Convention.
The Hundred Thousand Mark Passed.
J The Tobacco Department
In some sections are
men of enterprise who would
make a fortune out of it if they
had a chance at the fruit going
to waste in North this
season. What a short sighted
people we are not to be
canning factories and
the abundance
has placed at our doors.
Some of the sufferers by the
recent big tire at Durham are
having trouble in getting the
insurance companies to settle
their lessee. There should be
a law compelling prompt pay-
by insurance companies.
When a person takes a policy
with a company he should re-
the protection for ch
he pays.
ON THE QUESTION.
Editor
Io your issue of Tuesday, you
say that the of
on Saturday was construed
by some one to upon the
present bank in Greenville- I as-
sure those who thus construed
the article, that nothing was more
foreign to and purpose
of the writer.
The present bank has done a
great towards aiding the bus
prosperity in the county,
but business proportions are fast
growing. The tobacco market
did a prosper the
town and community with one
warehouse The and
the people urged the
building of more warehouses, and
what is the result It is too ob-
to be discussed-
Every business is more pros
where there is
No one will dispute the
that without convenient fa-
for money upon
easy terms, when necessary, bus-
enterprises of any kind are
slow to spring up or to prosper
quickly.
I am sure the owners of the
present bank do not to sup-
ply the needs of the business in-
of the community. The
people know better. At any rate,
with two or more banking
in the town would
be a spirited activity that would
inspire sleeping industries, that
would now life to the town
and development beyond the ex
of the most sanguine.
Our natural resources are
nominal, and only require active
money power, with careful
judgment, and the present
bank would be one of the
of the many developing en-
that would follow. It is
and coming
if our own people do not avail
themselves of the opportunity,
strangers will.
Money has its power in every
department of life, and the
who comes in the field and uses
his money in business matters in
a business manner, will find
awaiting him.
No competition, but little
thrift or enterprise is the result-
The only purpose that has in
arguing this matter is the general
good that will follow to the com-
and not detract
from the merits of any citizen or
X.
Fridays have developed
record for the Green-
ville tobacco market- Every day
during week the sales were
good, averaging about
pounds per day the first four days,
but the that came in to-
day was a surprise to everybody.
Just think of it I there wore
pounds of tobacco brought
to Greenville. people never
saw the like and it looked
like a circus day around
the warehouses-
Tobacco began in by
day break, when the sales
started at o'clock there were
rows of wagons around every
warehouse waiting to get in.
There was more by fully
pounds than could get on
the warehouse floors it had
to be stored away the prize
houses-
The Star the
with 2.1,000 pounds and fairly
the price hum- It sold
away up yonder, the sellers
were never better pleased.
Ola Forbes rang his new bell
for the second sale at the Plant-
and made the lay out of
for the buyers to
bid on. It was fine, too, and he
C by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse.
then we have talked with a few
of our business men and i hey all
say they will give it their up port
do all they can to encourage
and maintain it. Now, this writ-
is too young in experience of
this kind to give advice, but it
curs to us that when a cull is
Mr. Ii W- Smith, of Rocky I made, our citizens one all.
Mount, one of the most clever, that feel any interest in the town's
genial and courteous gentlemen should respond and
in the trade, left this not burden the few who may take
a brief visit hero- the initiative step by regaining
away until the trove has either
Mr. W. warehouseman of
was on our break- to-day.
Friday's break was just simply
and outdid any sale Unit has
ever been in new to-
faring August, the reports sent
out Wilson to the contrary not-
withstanding.
About per cent- of the crop
has cut, and cure up to
now have fairly good, but a
good lot of that still on the hill
tailed or succeeded and tin u say,
told you is for
the public good and advancement
benefits the individual, and it is
right, to Bay the least of it, to
cured after this week.
The Journal,
has taken the second growth remain silent while a few pull a
not much good can thing along to success by hard
work and then jump
and reap as much of the re-
ward as have labored
, , , the start- We must have a
as it usually is, predicts that- h We
thin will neither be a very hue nor of who are
a very common crop, but a
dims one, with right much color.
From the information that
we can this is about the
condition of the crop Eastern
Carolina
Mr. C, W. Harvey, of Danville,
I Va., has come to Greenville to
and operate this market.
spurred them on to the very top the tobacco part
notch. of it especially, always extends
When they the Eastern i a welcome comers.
there was such a sea of tobacco
that the boys said they had to
stay themselves up with some
before tackling it. This
excellent house just broke the
record of the Greenville market.
There were piles on the floor
which aggregated pounds,
and twenty loads more to be
stored. When feet addition
was recently u length
of this house somebody wanted
to know if they ever to
till up so much room- But to
day showed. Tim was full,
the drive way was full, even
then more room was
much tobacco going there it
proof that prices at the
Eastern are nil right.
The Greenville bad closing
sale with pounds. Leon
Evans says that while he has not
got the largest house and cannot
get quite so many pounds on his
floor as the others, ho would like
to see anybody for higher
prices than he does. right of any of two Eastern Car-
then the spoke a para- a. How
c f making anything a success
so when the is made, let
man respond we will do
credit to ourselves the town.
For the lust three months we
have been around picking
up all the information we could If keepers
gather on tho prospects for prices does not have plenty of
Set on by the Rays of the
Sun.
People gassing Oil main street about
t o'clock Sunday witnessed
All unusual About two
weeks ago Mr. V. II.
umbrella lying across a pile of tin pans
in the from window of S. E. Tender
Co's hardware store. Sunday the.
warm rays sun shining full
through this window and reflected on
the tin pans set umbrella on lire
and burned every w of cloth off of
it. The burning umbrella tilled the
room full of Hundreds of
people Mopped to at it. In this
case Inert ma nothing else to BOOM in
contact with the burning umbrella
Ix-come ignited, but we wonder if build-
have not been set en lire
in tills way never known.
of i occurrence
Maj. II. Harding said it recalled i little
incident lie met with a few days ago.
While silting in front of his place of
business talking with a gentleman lie
took off Ills i and was holding
them In bit band. A few minutes Infer
he felt a Stinging on hi- leg
just above the knee, and Ii down
saw that a round hole the size of
a dime was burned through Ids pants.
lie had been holding bis spectacles so
that i in- sun shining through one of the
glasses had on his pants and
burned the hole in them.
Mr. Watson, of Pemberton
Penn, Danville, Va., has been
a few days on this mar-
He says this is the first year
his h placed any or-
outside of Qt
course he left some here-
Information us indirectly
that our article a few
days ago urging t-hp organization of a
board of trade baa been read some
tobacco man, who
Greenville, and understood him
refer to the organization of a
board of trade here. If the reader had
examined the article more closely he
would bay known that the article re
to commercial bawd of trade,
and not a board, of
have here organized
board chartered under
laws, and the tobacco market Is govern-
ad by its We have as
ff trade as there is la the
state, hut we board
consisting
of all professions.
A dispatch Mount
to tho and
dated August Si, says, M
housemen here seem tho most
least boastful of their
of tobacco year. From near-
every comes the report
that old stocks been moving
dealers who have had
stocks on hand for four
or five rears, longer,
been enabled to a
largo part dining the past sum- ,
One leaf
who buys tobacco on ibis,
market we expect all the
other North Carolina markets to-1
engaged
in a private
let to the writer owe if-j-o
shall be on this full
hotter shape to tho
op ever before. Wu have
out to a very extent
our old be
better position to hold of the
now The coast seems
there is an all around bet
U-r of
kinds, and everywhere, j
the writer Las been engaged in
the tobacco business. We wish
to this;
that by this do not i
to put on the table next winter,
it will be because something hap-
pens to the large quantities of
fruits now being preserved and
canned.
Nervous
People should realize that the on
true and permanent cure for the
condition
Another great thing about this
big break is the prices at which
tobacco sold. The Reflector
took particular pains to go among
the farmers on every floor
ask him about prices- Not a
was found on the
On the contrary we
received as these
saw is
selling better than I ever
prices were never had
Greenville than to am
delighted with my
rot ask for There were
many other similar expressions.
Please the sellers and everybody
else is pleased.
have said before, just
watch is going
above pounds this sea-
son.
brotherhood, for they sell i there inflation of
more at the j because those who hare
had their tied up for these
many years will be likely
rush recklessly tho new crop
On Saturday. August 31st, the
Baltimore Clothing Store, M.
will open
in the newly painted store under
the Opera House next door to
the Bother Shop, advertise-
another column.
The colored progress
at this week.
OAKLEY HEMS.
N. C, Aug. 95-
Mr. P. Gainer went to
Saturday.
Mrs. J. L. Robertson spent Sun-
day here.
Capt- Dunn, of
was here Friday on business-
Mr. W. A. Andrews returned to
Saturday, after spend-
several days here as Section
Master.
Messrs.-W. E. Fleming, J. J
and others attended church
at Sunday-
Miss Lizzie Moore, of near
Greenville, is spending this week
near here with her sister, Mrs. J.
L. Robertson.
Mr. J. E. wife re-
turned home, Saturday, after
and damage themselves
stock- lint believe
there will be more
and dis-
position pf this crop than any in
five years- have
good tobacco will get good prices
and satisfied, while on the con-
have common to-
ill gAl
There flue thing
that if our farmer j
be. lefts
in tho marketing of
the tobacco crop. to be-
judges of tobacco and do
your to
e him credit for an
est man he proves himself to
be otherwise, and don't look
him as your enemy, but
our friend- This ,. an d a
of mutual interest
soon be circulated fr one to
other each then
be thoroughly understood. Oh,
if we could only understand each
other, the motives which
prompt our action-, tho
impulses which direct
kind, happy world this
would
to lie found in having
Pure Blood
Became the health every organ and
tissue of tho body depends upon the
purity of the blood. The whole world
knows standard blood is
Hood's
Sarsaparilla
therefore it is the only true and
reliable medicine for
It makes the blood pure and healthy,
and thus cures nervousness,
the nerves firm and strong, gives sweet
sleep, mental vigor, a good appetite,
ft. does all this, slid
cures or cull.
all other blond diseases, because it
Mikes
Pure Blood
Result every have
said. Thousands of voluntary
fully the that
Hood's
Be Sure
to Get
eat better, sleep aid
better in every nay since taking
Hood's C. C. Davis,
Box
Nod,
ii i
their hunt Their
horns must have been blown off,
if they are not blowing them still,
for if there ever a town blown
any more than the
town, then we don't want to
it. If making the flat statement
that the market sells more
co at higher figures than any
other eastern is dot
in the light of all common
sense and we appeal to
those who have a knowledge of
both markets, what is it
Quite a of farmer
met at Air. A. H . Coat's More,
on last Saturday
ago K. L. Dixon
a watch chain lamer who
would the best one
of to and file it
with him by the
of August. The s were Io
the amount of As they wen;
brought hi they were numbered the
farmer's name put on a separate
of paper, M that would not
know tobacco they were
Messrs. N. U. and II.
L. were chosen go from
and Mr. A. B. Clark
the third man.
were all taken in private room and
there H, bail
the best sample, wrappers,
and was awarded the watch and
Then before it was known who bad
best glades Mr. A. ti. Cox ottered
a dollar for the second bet and fifty
cent tor the third. C. Beard, a col-
man. curing for Mr. A. Cox.
had second grade drew the
dollar, and W. third
grade and gut the fifty cent.
Were several lots of very line
and one belonging lo Mr.
was the tin t sample of bright
have seen in a long time,
but he had several cutter leaves mixed
with it which so I torn the
that it could not be counted . for a
premium, as was, only
A few days ago while con
with a leading tobacco-
f this State, asked us why
it was that our people did not pet
a bid for here
Military Academy from Pay
Of I. to name of of learning r belt
TASTELESS
CHILL
tobacco
O. f.
iii 1.1.
Good
Fine
Cutters
Medium
Good
to
i to
to
to
to
to
JUST AH FOR
WARRANTED,
U II
Co., et. Louis, Mn.
Us year,
SHOWS TASTELESS TONIC
In nil our ox-
of It In tho have
in
too-
by
druggist.
In tin- 1-1 of -tie Military Academy t
to name of this p of learning
several days Golds, eastern be Military Academy. The PALL
if your people will show up the I With greater facilities,
A New
following we from
Hie tin Herald win be
to the as it shows
what a of U
doing in e would be glad
if some of . would
Mr. start man-
help,
Ibis kind i ones that pay
best. The Herald
Everything at the fa of Mr.
I. on street. It now
about completed and ill machinery
will I e full in a few days.
The scribe went around there
I f tin- place as
snug and complete as could be wisher.
liters are fifteen machines for
corn and I'm-
Ins clothes line, one brand new
and In working order. Home
t ii.-mi tried and a consider-
able quantity of i hi d but the en-
10-d all hands
bun potting other machinery hi
place.
Tin- new a
h of the m
i- f the hinds of the makers
mi I i- of the very best nuke, lie Ides
the machines above mentioned
spooler I
machine all in Hie bus u. Ill
building. two Other will he
Used for raw material and
the finished product at present, but will
filled later w other
machinery. Mr. not mt
of h- lie
orders lie make.
The i will he
made
in agreed by h
men in this city that an u
per cent of horses have ii,
as the a
of often
tho question
now among
is did they catch it
Prevention
better than cure. Liver
Pills will not only cure, but if
taken in time will prevent
Sick Headache,
dyspepsia, biliousness, malaria,
constipation, jaundice, torpid
liver and kindred diseases.
Liver PILLS
ABSOLUTELY CURE.
Enterprise- -Integrity.
every movement, every
idea, transaction Tho
King It is the pulse
the great Its re
felt in every department, every aisle,
on every shelf, For every
expended Frank returns full
value. No discrimination is made
tween small purchaser or tho great,
or the poor, the experienced
have the
is given i
the rich
or the inexperienced. All
advantages, no one is
concession, or discount
I must make room for my fall stock
will put prices down to notch so as
to clean them out. My stock of Fine
North Carolina
mm mm
iii
in
Vi a
at On will
well In a m
A.
X. c-
AT T v. r.
Will open
Sept. 2nd,
I lull i HI
iii all Hie I
Art.
a in
Enid Type win jug.
Y. WU
must be cut down I intend
line this fall do not
suit over. In
nave
want to
ii. a
Gents Furnishing Goods
I have knocked the bottom clean out and will
sell you if you will come and look.
FRANK
THE KING CLO II EH.
The year
will
August 29th, 1895.
a lull Corps of
i tie-
with Charge
the
notice;
I--. Hie
Stoves. Stoves.
We are laying in a full line of
mm
Stoves. Best quality, low prizes, Call and ex-
We also are agents for the celebrated
Rambler and Columbia Bicycles
Pound land nave on hand a few second-hand Bicycles
cheap. You may need a Mowing
Gallery Machine, we have in
before III, I will give
Id in Vii 3-011 Portrait free, i
Slice
beat one rear sub.
t This
oiler is Io only.
Three member- of Board
Trade trill act Judges.
ii. Hf
Greenville. M. C.
Drugstore,
We Keep That Kind,
Bear this in when
out for
urn a
ESTABLISHED
-A. Andrews.
and n.
N. C.
Just Received Cars Rock Lime.
BO NAILS,
Ca-ea
if
Sq.-i.
Boxes Cakes and Cracker.
Dust,
inn Luck Baking Powder.
Meat.
p;
i Ma,
Lard,
Granulated
r. Snuff,
BO Gall A Ax
II. P. Mills
Three Thistle Snuff,
Bethel Items.
Bethel, N. C, Aug. 1895.
Cherry, who vi-
Ml father the past week, returned
to Sunday.
Mr. M. O. Blount left for New York
Saturday morning to purchase the fall
winter stock for the of Blount
Mr. John D. Blount, of
i speeding a few in Bethel,
Ex-Superior Court Clerk, V. T.
Crawford, of
Tuesday in town.
and lie he i bill
a game at Bethel last Tuesday.
The score was to favor of
The farmers are all busy engaged in
curing tobacco and pulling in
this section.
The Atlantic Hotel at Morehead
Las closed for the It has
better next
; U prove depriving to those
whose Is poor. Such people
should enrich their Hood's
Sarsaparilla.
not had a profitable season, and
it is safe say the hotel will be n .- will
come hero and establish
i He asked if we had a hoard
of trade, and if our business men
seemed to take interest in
trying to others to our
town. We answered as bust we
could, that our people did all
could their capacity
but that unfortunately we had no
regularly board.
said he, town is too healthy
you have too much
of a People
are making too many inquiries
about your town to allow this
state of affairs to continue. Yon
should organize a board of trade
at once and prepare yourselves to
meet the demands that will be
made upon you. It should be
composed of representative
citizens business men, us
to add strength and tone, in
the busiest little cities m the
To J o J which we assent-
ed, and him that e thought
a short while we would have a
board of
BEGINS
any address Address
Maj. J. W. Supt.,
Wilson, N. C.
The Agricultural and Me for the
at Greensboro, N. C.
The will begin Wednesday, lad, for ad-
mission will he made and October 2nd and 3rd.
student will he made in each by the county on
the first Saturday in next.
Instruction la given in Agriculture, Dairy the Me-
Alls, the English and various of
Physical, Natural and Economic Science, with special to their
in the
A number of girls will admitted for in to the regular
course will be given In Music, Sewing, Cooking and
div work.
This School endowed by the Stales, the State of Carolina
It is not sectarian, and is not controlled or influenced by any particular
TERMS,
Other Students.
Tuition, per 310.00
Board, per week 1.25
mom, per n 10.00
hi a 1.00
use of piano per session 1.00
Bee which can be bad by addressing.-
President of Th Agricultural and Mechanical College for Colored
C.
Our is in
every and we supply ill
your wants h
You have lo for any-
thing wanted. Our good- and
will please you.
In addition to selling the best goods at
lowed prices, we p top of the
market for cotton an all country pro-
duce.
the rope to have n any calls ,
from
J. BRO. j
X. C.
Sacks
So
Tons
K.-gs
Boxes Tobacco,
Dukes V. M. P.
Old Va.
Cases Oysters,
J. L
Insurance Alt
Acts like
If yon have Catarrh.
any Gloria Oil, which yon can.
get at Dr,
Wanted
fut and
I illy tbs
l Variable Friction
Feed Saw Mill
HI. k . to
lent,
land Hollers t
For full
A. B. FARQUHAR CO.,
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE.
All kinds Risks placed strictly
COMPANIES
At current rates.
AGENT FOR
Neck Male School.
only High Grade Boarding
and Young Men,
In Eastern Carolina
Good k. Only the
he of
means for bay I.-re. .
Sand for
PRINCE Principals
Scotland Neck,





FOLKS ONLY.
In These Items. Other News Else-
THESE SQUIBS.
Just Give You a Gist of the News
where.
Mrs. A. J. Monday m
for ville.
The prophets are
storms next few
Mr. J. I, Wooten returned from
Monday.
Mr. B. M. is his
stalls t the market louse
Mrs. Dr. W. Brown In
Thursday evening.
Miss Mamie Hint s has returned from
a visit to
Mrs. L. C. K of folk is on a visit
to bar old home here.
Miss Annie Sheppard is visiting rel-
near LaGrange.
is of
but you take care and Dot let the
policy
Cramer returned to
and opened a store in the Opera
House corner.
Sunday the months will be
ushered in. lien the trouble for the
Oyster will begin.
A DELIGHTFUL EVENING.
Greenville's Belles and As-
at Hotel
Three colored convicts tried to es-
r. J. M. capt, the
from Wrightsville. ., Two of were killed
W. II. is mt
as well a- ever. Services were held only in the K pis-
and daughter, Miss c church Sunday morning, and
gone to Littleton. I none of the churches had at
pie,
Miss Millie Parker, of Falkland, is
siting Mrs. W. I
Master Beanie has returned
home a visit to
ills . Margie left Sat-
to visit is at
NORTH for
about days
and am giving
big reduction
in Clothing
Dry Goods,
Laces to make
The Kt has an in-
to a and to be
given by the at Tar-
on the evening of September
of Deeds Issued only
two n-es las; week. One
was for a couple, th other f r
and both Wire issued Friday-
Mr. L. and refer- I hands as
lied Friday from Tarboro. dirty M said a mother to
her little grill- but
room for Fall
Stock. Come
and see for
yourselves.
Mis Tyson, of is vis-
icing Miss Aylmer near
Miss Harden, of Greene
is J. Sugg
Lena Tuesday
evening a to Mount
Miss M i lie Hargrove, of Washington,
Mis. -v. near tobacco samples here to-day, and
town. ; among them was a twin I. two
saves had grown together, on one stem
Mr. Joe Powell, one I about half length when they
at tie d pot, is spending a vacation ; and formed two perfect leaves. ,
was the reply.
exchange says, if a were
ma on a man's nose every lime lie
it into other people's business,
there are men we know
noses would look like nutmeg graters.
Mr. William brought
Col Harry and Solicitor C M.
Bernard returned Monday evening Horn
Wilmington.
Mr. of is here
put in a band saw for the Greenville
Lumber
left Monday morning
a ten bargain hunt in
l markets.
lira IS. If. Sugg and sou Mr.
Sugg, i evening to visit rel-
a at t
Miss Alice of who has
Mr- W. N. Nichols some of
the largest Dative onions in town
Saturday that we ; seen.
One of thorn a pound
two ounces He said they
seeded in March.
The and Observer says
10.010 pounds of tobacco were
sold at i In opening of the
market on Thursday Put
that along side of Greenville's
hundred thousand on Friday.
Mr. E B. Dudley brought
the
been Florence re- laid
tin by of ,, of
Mis Ada baa to Lit-
to resume lier duties as In
female
and Vines will begin a
THE
Local Reflections.
The Beast n of
is a.
be first
have appeared.
mil chants say the sale of
fruit jar this season is almost
unprecedented-
It is believed that Greenville
now b is more
is talk of a census being
taken
Tin List place to put
i in paper that
joys the confidence of tho com-
is the smallest chicken egg we
ever saw, not much larger
than ordinary lead
The entire force,
from the
. thanks to Mr- J. J f t a
basket of peaches which he
brought in Saturday. They
were the tine it and best soft
peaches have seen sea-
son.
Mr. B. F. Sugg tells
has every that
j there will a largo crowd hen
lot the re union picnic
ran Grimes of Confederate
j Veterans on 5th,
the old soldiers will have a bis
Dr. K. A. to
lo stand all
state Hoard of Examiners. boys shouted
Mr. Henry returned gave him a hearty greeting when
g from meeting the u j. g, put his
Honor at ,. , , .,
I on the breaks
i t be
they were on a bucking the boy
bidding-
It. J. ,, , . -i ,
A. IS indebted to
lug new arrived homo Friday some one a nice melon- A
evening.
Mr.
next Sun Sept. let.
Is to welcome
George back from New York.
Friday evening.
Misses and
Williams returned Sunday from a vi-it
to relatives
Mayor D. C- Moore, of Bethel,
by two of hi- little
spent the here lay.
Mrs. Win. Harris returned
Littleton and went out a
to h.-r at Falkland.
colored boy walked in with it
B. Cherry left day I evening and said
to spend two weeks
markets purchasing for J.
Co.
It.
Mr. It. of the Government
Pick out the strongest points of
your goods, pat it m
and ll
advertising pays
Show appreciation the
prosperity blessings pf the
oust week by worship
to morrow and keeping the
sent this to but
th it is all he we don't know
Mr. Kins to
ton. arrived
his r- B- B- King ells us he has
A- just made a six weeks trip through
Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Cherry and Master I the cotton belt of this State and
Cherry came ho. Monday from South and everywhere
where have been spend-
the it . . u
prosperity, lie that all
Mi. D-D, has gone co bis were fine.
having relieved a telegram that i
who is visaing he. sister, ,,, ,
tie re. is unite sick- . , , . ,.
and and thrown out
the S . on his which the warehouse
about all they can look
They will soon be with
charge of the train
Mond iv, having rued from Old
Point. lie looks improved.
J. B. cherry and l. F,
Smith, and little Misses James
and Velma Bawls I home Wed-
both these crops.
W. I. and L. D- Over-
ton had a rive mile bicycle race
Thursday. Ponder made the dis evening from
in Hi minutes and j y I
ton in minutes. I and Harvey, of Danville, were j
. on the break here Friday. They sneak
maw r
of the
steamer is enjoying a brief
cation. Mate George Doughty is
while the captain is
Mr Brown returned Saturday
evening from New York. Mrs. Brown
and me children, who were visiting her
parents near Norfolk, returned
can have more room for
sales- H the
office just before the breaks
started this morning and said-
warehouse out yonder is
chock fall, and some of them are
placing tobacco on the
for this came yesterday
that we not call attention to
each one It is to your
interest to read them ail-
By request of of
Burke county ex T. J.
will make a speech a.
on Tuesday. He and Mrs Jar vis
are still at Connelly Springs.
Me.-sis. Henderson
Mr. F- has purchased L. i,. of
on st rest
HE IN HIS THUMB.
And Off the Plum.
prominent came in
evening to spend a day or two off this
G . A. will
G. in
next and
Mr. a
in Hyde comity.
We were glad to meet Ai. L.
Sh of at the depot Sat-
lie was on Ins home
Smith Hooker and
charge at Ho will
a livery, sale feed stables
people are becoming in-
in Greenville than the
home folks are perhaps aware of,
at no far distant day the old
town will be fairly spreading her
self.
The Warehouse lb put
style the outside, as well the meeting of the Grand Lodge
S tiling hum on the in- ,
Side- A bell and fl pole ensuing term.
raised over the front of
I States
Butler, Congressman-elect Harry
A protracted meeting will start ,,,. c; M ,
in the Baptist church at
first Sunday in j here were
by Carroll j G. Z. French,
by Rev- Tb for .-- . .,.
county in the lust
legislature, at at the Orton ye-
They went to View hot
in company with Judge
and some
We caught a good one on 01-
thus at the Eastern Ware-
house sale to-day. Man
had come on to relieve him
and run the sales, and one of the
buyers asked, to bid for
him a few minutes. The buyer
ca back just as there was a
lively tilt over a pile of
gave Joyner a with
his thumb. Joyner the
and raised the bid. A wink from
Pat to the auctioneer
raised him a half when another
hunch ride sent it
still higher, and so on until the
pile was knocked off at a fancy
The buyer turned to
let Joyner bid longer for
the they
were on silently observed
what had taken place and
That was a brilliant gathering,
indeed, that graced the
at Hotel Macon, On Tuesday
evening, given by Miss Myra
Skinner complimentary to her
guest, Miss Leonard Pitts, of
Alabama. The renowned old Ma
con never looked gayer than
this occasion with its bountiful
decorations gathering of
happy hearts bright faces.
Two received each
parlor Miss Myra Skinner
II. with Miss
Skinner J. B. Miss
Leonard Pitts and II. W. u
bee with Miss Louise Latham and
J- B. White; Miss Bessie Jarvis
and S. T- White, Miss Maud Blow
and J. B. Jarvis.
Skinner, the hostess, was
in white silk organdy with
white satin and violet trimmings;
Miss Pitts in blue and white silk
crepe in black velvet,
diamond.; Miss W. Skinner in
white trimmed in ribbon
and diamonds; Miss Jar-
v-s true trimmed with
ribbon and forget me Miss
Blow, trimmings;
Miss Latham, blue silk, lace trim
The other couples in attendance
toilets of the ladies were as
follows
Miss Helen Perkins, yellow silk
black lace trimmings; A.
White and Miss Bettie Tyson,
white silk, pearl beads and lace
W. B-
Betsy cashmere,
ti ; T. E- Hooker
Miss Sheppard, blue
with lace ribbon trim-
J. W. Wiggins and Miss
Florence Williams white organdy
with satin C- M- Jones
and Miss Bessie Harding, white
SWiss, hire trim mi Louis
Skinner Miss Bruce Forbes,
white silk, lace W. S-
Bernard Miss Carrie
blue trimmed with ribbon,
white violets; B M. and
Miss Bessie white or-
J. L- Fleming and Miss
Lizzie. Blow, black satin, red pop
pie--; W. and Miss Lil-
Cherry, yellow with
green velvet and lace; Star
key and Miss Lucy Cox, blue
c in ribbon;
Hyman and Sallie Lips-
comb, silk organdy, red satin
trimmings; E. A and Miss
Forbes, blue silk, lace;
J. A. R and Miss Annie
Sheppard green lace and
J. L. Little and Miss
Novella Higgs, cream cashmere,
satin; W. H. Long and Miss Lula
White, white cashmere, pink
R. H- Hayes and Miss
Annie Perkins, blue silk, garnet
velvet and Frank
en and Miss Rosalind Rountree,
white swiss, satin and lace; B. h.
Parham Miss Pattie Skin-
red satin.
Skinner,
silk purple
trimmings; Mrs. A. L- Blow,
black trimmings;
Mrs- F. G James, black silk with
de waist, pink
chrysanthemums; C.
black silk, jot, trimmings;
Mrs. Georgia Pearce, black j
de violets.
Those of the guests delighting
in the dance assembled in the
spacious dinning room and pat-
a Gorman- At twelve
o'clock refreshments were served-
Not until a late hour did the hap-
party bid good night to the
hostess disperse to
homes. It was voted by all
one of the most enjoyable social
events that has taken place our
midst
The Greene Homicide.
We have learned fuller par-
of the homicide in
county that was mentioned
Tuesday's James
Hunt, of Vance was
there curing tobacco for John
Turnage his broth
Henry wore about the barn
and in a spirit of fun began
throwing peaches at each
Henry receiving a right sharp
blow on the cheek became an-
threw an at
This so enraged that he
rushed in his house got a
gun and fired at Henry, but the
latter dodged and the load of
buck shot struck Hunt in the
side. Hunt died of the wounds
and his remains have been
en to Vance county- John
has not been seen since ho
did the shooting.
Hall la Martin.
Mr. F. Purvis, of Hamilton,
was here and told us that
a heavy wind and hail storm
A Pier., ant Day.
Tho out at
Mt. Pleasant,
on Friday, was an occasion
the
led bis section day this j to be remembered by the
morning. He home at The crowd was large and
an only hour that he could not I they had ail around good time.
learn the extent of the damage
done. Mr. Purvis also told us
tint much tobacco had been
this season n his neighborhood
and the farmers over there have
eye on the Greenville market-
He put his name on the Reflect-
Ton roll so as to keep posted
what our market is doing-.
Car of Machinery
Mr. S. C Hamilton tells us he
received information from
the shippers a car load of
machinery for the Green
ville Lumber Co. had been wreck-
ed en the Pennsylvania
The company took the
machinery back to the factory to
be replaced, consequence
of this tho G- L Co., will be de-
a few weeks in getting their
new mill fitted up. They will
continue with the old outfit
until the new machinery arrives
and is placed in position.
N but in our entire line of
The which was served
about was a splendid
one for even a
number of people than were
present. A large platform was
provided for the dancers and it
was made good use of all day. A
string band from Robersonville
furnished music. The managers
deserve much credit for the excel
lent manner which they , l
the picnic Everything passed to OUT fall
off pleas mt in the beat of I
order.
CLOTHING
Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, fee
in
The Presbytery
with the Presbyterian
church Greenville on
A committee will sot n
wait upon our to secure
homes for the delegates. They
will be glad if all win can enter-
any of the will be
prepared to let them
call-
The has
turned out the Riverside
tor A
town v of was never
the colored folks forming a
of them.
done Greenville-
Ricks. Taft Co.
JUST COT BACK
and are opening up
New Fall Winter Goods
Wait and see prices next week.
, as they are in every day.
We
worth of
vi e bought them at old
prices, since buying the manufacturers have ad-
the price per cent., we propose to-
give the people the benefit of our bargain.
that you can go home realizing that you
bought your goods cheap for cash of
C. T.
INVITE
Your attention to our large and well selected
------stock of------
GENERAL
MERCHANDISE
in which can be found during all seasons many
useful articles suitable for personal use,
household purposes, We are
an effort to put on the mar-
this Fall and Winter the
Have just returned from New York
where we purchased
worth of goods. They are arriving
daily. Look for cut rates next week
HIGGS BROS.,
Leaders of low Prices.
Opposite J. C. Cobb Son.
AND
ever brought to this town. We are sure that
will be well pleased with the goods and
prices that we will you, and ask you to
keep a lookout for the many attractions which
we offer for your inspection. There is a right
and a wrong way to do almost every tiling. The
wrong for you to trade is to buy without
cording to sec us to get our prices and qualities
firmly fixed in your mind. The right way is to
come and see us and look over the best
line of General Merchandise to be found in
Pitt county. Consult us as to prices and
and if we don't sell you the bill you want to
buy then will go out feeling that you are
none the loser by spending a few minutes look-
over our stock. It is good assortment,
in a few weeks after our buyer gets through it
will lull and a sight to look at. In a few days
we expect the arrival of a cargo of
FURNITURE
and when you need goods in this line never
buy until you come to sec us, we expect to
have any thing you may wish.
Yours for Business.
Death of an Esteemed Lady.
Mr. Andrew Joyner received in-
to-day of the death of
his oldest sister, Mrs Bessie Ma-
lone, which occurred at Fletcher,
near on Sunday morn-
August 18th. Mrs- Malone
had been in feeble health
for several years and lived in Co-
S. C-, for the past year.
Two weeks ago she paid a visit
to her sister, Mrs. Whelps,
whose husband is minister in
charge of the Episcopal church
at Fletcher- She never rallied
it
Lexington-
The Salisbury ha g
made u big stride forward is
now giving its readers tho after-
noon press dispatches. We hope
it will meet with in this
enterprise.
Friend Jon Evans places the
editor obligations now
theE. Coining from his farm he
usually brings a lot of vegetables
and melons, drives by the
to divide.
The Planters had tobacco to-
day from light close to Wilson
and some from Craven That
looks like the best market
is.
Baltimore again stands at the
head sea
from the trip. Her husband and .
, children and Rev. E. N- W-
concluded to hit thumb. He L
., aunt Mrs-
and Rev. Isaac
were able
to be with her at the last. Mrs.
was beloved
as a young woman in Pitt county
has been a wife and
mother There are in her
old neighborhood Farm
ville and in the county who will
drop over the memory
at the death of Bessie Joyner.
eased lip to buyer
just been .
Th- -M
. had started
mi met with a bid all around
when the farmer's thumb coming
in contact with Joyner's fifth rib
made him sing him
a half, all in
one breath. The other buyers
raised him when that thumb
came into play again, and both
sides kept rolling the
fractions and whole numbers at
a rate- As they wont to
pass on to the nest pile Joyner
cut his eye around to look at the
who was doing that lively.
thumb work, when the farmer, l.
thanked him
so .
I attended the auction sales in New York and Ital more in July
jobbers were purchasing to sell to southern trade
and I am now prepared to offer many inducements to
my customers and the trade generally. I also
bought a big Jot of good and reliable BOOTS
and SHOES on June 1st before the
Also a big line of
Dress Goods, Dry Goods and Crockery,
Hardware, Tinware. amt
and will sell cheap. In
vi what I say will quote you prices of a few
Mens Cashmere Pants Men and B Cashmere
Suits Boys Vest , Mens Vest fine, Boys
Mens Coats Mens Suits made of
Mens Clay Worsted, Diagonal and Cork,
Suits to Mens Coats, same
Suits, size to at Mens Overcoats to
Shoes to Ladies and Misses old stock. to
Children Shoes, old stock, to Nice Rice Good
High-
Meeting of Physicians.
There be the
at House
in Greenville on the first Monday in
12-o'clock M. tor the paw
electing e
Good West India All
kinds of Farmers taken in exchange for goods
est cash prices paid for Cotton in Seed or
ff.
-J WANTS D
1,500.000 Pounds of
TOBACCO,
and we are going to have it if hard work and
satisfactory prices will get it.
Give us a trial and be convinced that
FORBES
can and will give satisfaction in every respect.
The High Prices we are getting every day for
the farmers who sell with us will convince you
that we are yours for highest averages,
GREEN N. C.
no TIM





Fertilizers for Fall Crops
should contain a high percentage of Potash to
insure the largest yield and a permanent enrichment
of the soil.
Write for our a. 142-page illustrated book. It
is full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and
will make and save you money. ; Address,
GERMAN WORK Street, New York.
PORK
MERCHANTS BIT
-U their supplies will
their interest to get our re
chasing elsewhere.
n all branches.
FLOUR, COFFEE,
RICK, TEA,
always -t Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
buy direct from M
tiling you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
FURNITURE
ways nod sold at prices
times. Out nail art nil be gin
sold for having no risk
to sell at a
ft. M.
J, C, LANIER CO.
GREENVILLE. N. C
One of the principal sources of the
supply of caffeine in England is the
sweeping of tea from the floors of
the various docks, wharves and
in London. These sweep-
aggregate about pounds
of tea annually, or, with the dirt,
nails, ton which
mixer tea, -to about
Op
a fa pro
of to fine teas
and consequently
a larger amount of the active
principles of tea, by chemists
than the low quality teas.
The s weepings cost the chemists y
half a cent per
LINEN FOR LINERS.
No
Great
board
MARBLE.
Wire and Iron Fencing
sold. First-class work
and prices reasonable.
WILMINGTON
AND
RAH.
Schedule.
Mm.
Hated it; I sis I
July k
it. R
ah.
Laundries on Board the
Transatlantic Steamers.
There are no laundries
ship; they take up too much room.
So the chief steward lays in thou-
sands of pillow-slips, sheets and
towels.
These come on board, says the
Record, up in
a dozen each, and are stored
in the linen locker, a cubbyhole of a
place on the main deck. The
pipes from the engine room
through it and keep it hot.
There is no danger of linen get-
ting mildewed there. The
which has been used is thrown into
another room, provided with the
atmosphere, and is so kept
thoroughly dry.
Where there are clean napkins
every day frequent changes of state-
room linen and an everlasting re-
of towel racks, the de-
upon the locker are very ex-
tensive.
A liner like the New York puts to
sea with about nine thousand
serviettes, ten thousand towels, six
or seven thousand sheets, eight
thousand pillow-slips and about one
thousand tablecloths. Most of these
find their way to the soiled linen
locker in the course of the voyage.
When the vessel arrives they are
tarted off to a laundry.
A SORRY BULLHEAD.
I o
A.
Leave Written ft
Ar. Mt . It ill
Tarboro
Mt I
Wilson ; J it
i l
Ar. Florence l IV A
n id
Interfered with a Water Motor and
Came to a Bad End.
One bull-head species of I he
catfish escaped from Lake
some time since, and. no doubt, is
for it; we are, He
came down the mains of the water
company and floated up the pipes
leading to our motor, where he
Shopped; so did our motor, presses,
etc. He didn't use good judgment,
as he went into the motor tail first,
just fitting so he stopped the
machine. Had he gone at it head
Drat, the opening was such that ho
I r i
S.-1
p. J.
j is
I . S
Magnolia ;
Ar
i A
. M
. M
TRAINS
Hated
July
College Hotel
MRS DELLA GAY,
to depot Bad to Mm to-
Beat
mineral water.
Rooms large and Table
with the the market,
ford.
Terms reasonable.
The minister of a
in an agricultural district was
greatly annoyed Sunday after S
day by the unruly conduct of
tho junior members of his flock.
When any of the younger
the .-x pot weary
of the evening service she would in-
variably rise and go out. A moment
later her admirer would Bean his hat-
awl sheepishly follow her. To such
ah would this course of action
prevail that by the time the dis-
course was finished only the old
remained for the conclusion of
the service. Mr. Jones concealed
chagrin for several weeks, but at
last he firmly resolved to act. A
youth grew drowsy one Sunday
evening, up his hat,
stepped into aisle. But the min-
open and,
he Stopped
ate
at
sit down. After- this, when
a young woman goos out I will call
on the proper young man to take
care of
The minister resumed his dis-
course. There Was much tittering
and considerable anger, but his
mons were not interrupted again.
Hartford
The Mean Man m Town.
TOLD OF THE SENATORS.
Good. Stories on August Lt-
at Washington.
The champion mean man paid San
Francisco a visit recently. He was
a big, long-legged, raw-boned fellow
with a nose like the of a
hatchet. His eyes, like little black
beads, were within half an inch
of each other and glistened and
gleamed at everybody every-
thing at He clutched the arm
of a sad-faced little woman with one
long, bony hand and clawed at his
whiskers with the other as he or-
the waiter in a Market street
restaurant to give him a cup of
coffee. The brought it with
bread butter and laid
down a check for ten cents.
you me an extra
pitcher of asked the mean
man. The waiter brought it.
by the way, give me a cup
of hot water, you,
The waiter brought it and watched
the mean man curiously. He poured
the cream into tho hot water, put a
little sugar in it, shoved it at Us
wife and slice of bread
without any butter in her direction.
The little woman ate it hungrily
and the added five cents to
the mean man's cheek.
The was heard three blocks
up Market street. He declared he
was being robbed because be was
from the country, but he finally paid
when threatened with
Francisco Post.
There Was a Conn.
A.
lit . M
Ar u
c s
V Z.
A. M.
Magnolia
r Wilson
v m
Wilson
Ar Rocky Mt
Ar
Tarboro
Kooky Mt
Ar Weldon
.-
M. i m M M.
Train on Scotland Sleek Branch
Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax
arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p
p. in.,
t. in. leaves Kinston
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m.
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.20 am
Trains on Branch
8.40 p. in. 9.50;
4.50 p. m.,
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects with
trains on Neck
Train leaves S C, via
A Raleigh It. It. daily except I
day, at p. m. M
arrive 0.20 I. M., 5.20 p. in.
Returning leaves daily
6.30 a. m., a m.
arrive Tarboro 10.25 and II. in
M t Bruin b
daily except Sunday,
n. in. It
leaves a. m.
Goldsboro. a. m.
Trains on leaves
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. arrive
Nashville i p. m-, Si-ring Hope 5.30.
p. m. leave Spring
H a. m., a. m., arrive-
t Mount in., excel I
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence
R. 6.50 p. in., arrive Don-
bar 8.00 Returning leave Duo-
0.30 a. re. arrive Latta a. m.,
Daily except Sun
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War-
w for Clinton daily, except Sunday
a. in. Returning
at ting at
i line
M.
J. If.
This
You every day
in the month of
August that
you have
your Printing done
at the
REFLECTOR
JOB OFFICE.
It will lie done right,
It will be done in style
and it always suits.
These points arc
well worth weighing
in sort
of work, but
above all things in
Your Job Printing,
Ship your produce to
Factors
AND
to
There was a man leaning up
a lamp post on Jefferson
avenue, near Second street, seem-
afar and having a lot of
thoughts on when he was
a second man who
had stood for half an hour almost
opposite him with his back to a
building.
said the second man,
been watching for some
and been looking at
was the reply.
believe there's some sort of
bond between
have I. Want something
to drink and eat, of
do I. Got a bed for
have I. Shake hands.
Does me good to meet you. I
thought there was a bond between
us. Let's walk around and be con-
genial and strengthen the bond and
strike somebody for a dime and go
Free Press.
r, COOKERY.
Some Delightful Dishes Cleverly Pro-
pared by Folk.
being an every race
has a style of its own. The Mala-
like the gentle Hindu, knows
how to prepare his mess of rice. It
is not boiled to a mash as in Eng-
land, or as our potatoes are some-
times pulped, but, covered with a
of water, is
fully treated until tho grains are
swollen fit to burst yet remain
full, intact, soft and rather mealy.
The manioc root Is an easier dish to
prepare. It is served
boiled, as yams and sweet
and again as a sort of cold porridge.
Native coffee understand how
to make, and the aroma is excellent;
but tea, you have to look for
the brewing of that from start to
finish if you a cup.
Poultry and game are eaten fresh,
and the cooks have a clever
withal trick of dipping the
dead In boiling water, which
enables them to pluck them easily
quickly. The preparation for
trussing comes later. is no
lack of variety at a Malagasy table,
but, all the same, you miss the
wheaten bread, sugar and
condiment when cloyed with rice
fowls, and eggs. The
fuel is bunch grass, when dry
burns fiercely, and settles into a
ember that gives off a deal
of heat. All tho cooking is done on
earthen hearths, the roasting,
boiling and baking in big iron pots.
Th grass being slightly aromatic,
the odor is as agreeable as that of a
hard-wood fire.
An Urgent Landlady.
An aged lady complained to a Lon-
don magistrate that because she was
a little behind with her rent her
landlady followed her to church and
asked for it there. The landlady came
into the pew alongside of her, and
when she was in the re-
whispering
magistrate
was very but there was
In It.
His on the
of a Proposed
of Doe The
Seed
They tell a great many of
that honest old ex-senator, Coke, of
Texas, says the
Be was a great admirer of Vest.
One day some bill was pending
which, bluntly stated, offered to
appropriate public money for what
seemed to Senator Coke private or
purpose. Coke w. ; very
much against it, as was Senator
Vest. The Missouri senator made a
speech and showed that the
law was unconstitutional. Coin
listened to his oratory with at-
and very applauded
K, the
to tho
out in
tho and Gov
wired Senators Vest and
gain the aid of the
national government in hunting the
malady to its lair and exterminating
A measure was introduced
making an appropriation to
gate the causes and report remedies
the hoof and disease.
The measure made exactly the same
question which Senator Coke was
much opposed to, and which Vest
had so eloquently denounced but the
week before. Under the stress of
danger threatening Missouri live
stock Senator Vest felt
compelled to change his position in
the matter and did it most graceful-
It all afforded the good-natured
senator from Texas amuse-
he said, as a writer for
the Star was told, is the first
time I ever knew a man to change
his opinion on constitutional law on
Hut Senator Coke's turn was com-
Inspired by the hoof and mouth
appropriation example, the Texas
seed bill was introduced. It asked
appropriation to buy farm seeds
for drought sufferers in Texas. In
all its principles it. paralleled
hoof an mouth measure as well as
the one before, against which Coke
had voted and Vest had orated.
But this time Senator Coke fell
obliged to bow to fate and support
Texas seed bill. Senator
offered him irritating
by
mind, Coke, suppose you
do have to switch.
statesmanship is but the science of
circumstances, and a senator, like a
may be going north on one
voyage and south on the
However, Coke felt very sore over
his fate; and the Texas seed bill was
understood by his fellow senators to
be a subject which must not be
lightly mentioned in his presence.
One Senator
had just introduced an old white-
haired, benevolent-looking gentle-
man to Senator Vest. They were in
the senate cloakroom at the time.
The white-haired philanthropist had
just finished a campaign in Indiana
for a seat in the house, and he had
been egregiously beaten. Senator
Vest was consoling him and ex-
pressing regret that his light was
not to shine at tho south end of the
capital in the next congress.
I do not regret
said the Samaritan.
was clad if I was
defeated. ft- may do the
Bod of the
pK allot Senator
Coke His quick ear caught
the word and his face
flushed. However, he passed on to
his seat in the senate. Hut his
wrath began to rise, and in ten
minutes he was back in the cloak-
room again looking for an
and his white-haired
friend were gone, but Vest was
sitting there all alone, contented as
a toad under a cabbage leaf. Coke
addressed him.
said he,
was that white-haired old idiot I
saw talking with you and Senator
Senator Vest was somewhat
prised, but furnished the
have merely returned to say
to him, went on Senator Coke,
severely, I now say to you,
sir; and that is, that some of you
gentlemen are making yourselves
fin- too about that Texas seed
bill, sir. I want to urge on you
the necessity of getting through
your laugh on that subject,
sir. It was no doubt a good
joke, but it has run long enough,
sir. I don't care to hear any more
about it,
did not explained Senator
Vest, when afterward he told the
story to Senator
make any explanation. I simply
offered an abject apology and prom-
to offend-no
Haw Mrs. Stowe Got Original
Characters.
The Author's Connection with tho
Story
Slim
In the Story.
reads almost like some chapter
of forgotten story of,
Harriet Beecher Stowe, who did;
more to free the slaves than any
other one or half dozen causes. It
may not be generally known that
Tom's was written
when Mrs. Stowe was a resident of
Walnut Hills, a suburb of
and her husband, Prof. Calvin
was connected with Lane
Theological seminary. That was be-
fore the war, when Cincinnati, in
slavery days, was an important
on the
Ohio river was easily crossed at
point, and numerous runaways
made their way over from Kentucky
and were met in Cincinnati by
friends who assisted them in various
ways to make good their escape.
Among those more or less active
in this movement were
Mrs. Stowe being a daughter of
Lyman Beecher, president of the
seminary. There she first imbibed
her hatred of slavery, and began
work on a newspaper story depict-
life among the lowly, that was
afterward enlarged to Tom's
The house in which she
wrote the historic work still stands
on Walnut Hills, a modest little
home, at which no passer would
glance a second time, and all the
characters were taken from the ex-
of Mrs. Stowe. who saw
much of the evils of slavery at that
time. The house that gave
refuge to the escaped slave who
afterward figured in the story as
Eliza, stands upon a hill near the
village of Glendale, the Van
Old Stocks.
There probably never has been
K time the history of this mar-
when the bet-n as
of n pies
f old o ks of has
cutters
re haul to rs
equally v h 11- big
i. f old of
have
until there lot live
hogsheads to be
every nook coiner in
market. In fact the in
is stronger than
at time for part live years.
Already
for the
and dealers disposed o
liberal of not over;
having been mist-;
tied for tho pal twelve
been of.
not rind immediate sale for. I
of s
touched working stock very light j
it will take no very lingo
demand to clean up the stock
of tin so goods that the
hands of speculators
Journal.
VICTOR
f H
arc -if skilled
. rank
.-tor in .
ho ii
. i,
mitts,
ts,
nets, racket presses, c r- in footballs,
suits, ; ; shoes,
supplies, sweaters, etc. for
money than asked by other your local
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write our
illustrated
OVERMAN WHEEL CO
cf
Chicago
YORK. coat
pin. x. CO. X.
The Rice Buds Leg Days arc
Una,
The bird his annual
tho proverbial
-01 h of August. Residents of
coast heard tho well known chirp,
tho birds crossed the
their Southern routes to
the fields.
It W notoriously tine that tin;
first appearance of I birds is
on tho first East winds
us after certain of tin-
moon in which usually
on or about the
Equally lino is the that
mocking birds do not sing in dog
days and is sine
of the narrative being John Van when those days
a member of the Society of
Friends, who settled on the farm
and made it an underground station.
The Eliza was Eliza Harris, a Ken-
All exchange we
give it to our readers as I lie
Honor to the
tacky slave, owned by a man I words of
O., but on the slavery side ,
of the river. away from her I , U
master with her child, as told in the i his hands, and, at all hazards.
story, crossing the river on the ice, speaks the word which is given
and afterward sheltered in the house j to whether will
COBB CO,
NORFOLK, VA
Commission Merchants
hP and Belief
Bagging, Tics and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices,
THE OLD
AT I A I INK---------
Hi MERCHANDISE,
has l tho -I
Hemp s, Kai I very
and general house well m
i i- I have on hand. Am head
for Heavy Groceries, o. X. r.
and and
FORBES,
N.
DOMINION
The in Maine, was
named from an Indian word, mean-
of Rev. John Ran kin, whose family
still lives in Ripley.
Another young girl who gave much
to the construction of the character
of Eliza was a seamstress in the em-
ploy of Mrs. Stowe. She camp from
Kentucky with the consent of her
mistress, her brother being held as
a hostage for her return. Tho
were not frequent, as the
Kentuckians were very lenient with
their slaves and often Indulged them
in trips across the Ohio to free soil.
The was loyally free hr her pres-
by consent her
tress. Shortly after her arrival the j
brother escaped, and she resolved
not to return. In this she was en-
by her friends, and also
by Mrs. Stowe, in whose family she
had found employment. pa-
were obtained for her to make
her condition doubly legal. There
were many people in Cincinnati,
however, who were ready to serve
the slaveholders by
and when Prof. Stowe learned
that the former master of was
in the city, and a told him
there was a plan to take the girl at
it determined to put her
u a place of safety. Accordingly
Prof, Stowe performed the part of
Bird. Procuring a horse
and wagon, accompanied by Henry
Ward Beecher, he drove the girl ten
miles along a lonely road and over
a dangerously-flooded ford, to the
house of John Van The fire-
place is still shown where Eliza is
said to have been confined during
one of the visits of the slave hunters
to the place in their pursuit.
Another character in the story is
Richard a young Quaker
from Morrow, O., who came to
to teach the and
whose enthusiasm led him to Nash-
ville in behalf of a slave, where he
was imprisoned and died before his
release. So far as known, only one
of the originals of the characters of
the story is now living, a very old
man, and whose adventures are
recorded In this story as the
of George Harris. He crossed
the Ohio at Ripley, and had refuge
Mr several days with the
He was afterwards conducted north
Into Clinton county, where he found
safety and a homo for years among
the Quakers of that part of the state.
A son of Rev. John Rank in, William
was and tells
with relish tho incidents of the
escapes of Harris and Eliza.
Such arc some of the scenes and
incidents and people upon which was
founded the story of Tom's
a book which has been read
in quarter of the globe, over
which millions have wept, and which
brought freedom to the captive
enduring fame to the woman who
celebrated in a quiet way her eighty-
fourth birthday recently. Ohio
State Journal.
hear or forbear, whether the
end thereof is to he praise or
censure, gratitude of hatred.
On July 88th, 1890, Mrs
dropped a
bowl of butter in a well at At-
Ala. On Thursday the
well was cleaned out and the
bowl found. In it tho butter
still remained
and fresh as when put in the
well.
, a , , , a a ,
Is a Rabbit a Coward f
Cowardice depends somewhat
the way things arc looked at.
The Atlanta Constitution tells a lit-
story illustrating
said the young hunter
is the most awful coward that there
is in the world. how he docs
run from a
you think the rabbit is a cow
aid,
of
let us a
Suppose you were about six or eight
Inches
had good, strong, swift
didn't have any gun, and a
great, big fellow came you,
who did have one. What would you
lo I should
alt
Chicago
A Seeming Inconsistency.
Some years since, Dr. now
the popular president of a flourish-
western college, was the pastor
of a congregation in an eastern city.
He was one day preaching with great
earnestness and, in defining Iris
position on the question at issue,
the language of the
mortal Luther, I stand; I
cannot do otherwise, God
He had not finished the familiar
quotation when, owing to the fact
that he was unconsciously on the
very edge of the platform, he fell off
and down a distance of about three
feet.
He quickly picked himself up, and,
on entering the pulpit again, he
helping me I will not change
my moral position, but I will take
my stand just a trifle farther from
the edge of the
The sermon proceeded without any
further quotation from the of
the
Poor
Health
means so much more
you and
natal diseases result from
trilling ailments t
play with Nature's
greatest
Oil Of J
nervous, J
have no appetite
can't work, J
begin at
the most J
Me
Brown's lion Bit-
A few bot-
cure-benefit
comes the
very first
your,
a n it's
pleasant to take.
It Cures
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver
Neuralgia, Troubles,
f Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, ailments
Women's complaints.
Get only the red
lines on All others
stamps
will send Ml Te
On .
en World's
Fair Views
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD.
Real
Estate
and
Rental
Agent.
TAR RIVER SERVICE
Washington for Green
villa mill touching at all
Ins n Tar River Monday. Wednesday
and Friday A. M.
Returning A. M.
Tuesday, Saturday
A. M . same days.
departure bid i
of water on Tar River.
nix-ling at with
Norfolk,
line for Norfolk. ore
York
Shippers should m-Yr their
marked via Dominion h
New York. from
ft
more Steamboat
more.
Burton.
Agent,
X. i
Ore X
GREENVILLE
for or for sale
raw. Rent,
open and any oilier
o In my for
haw prompt
n I your
put
TONSORIAL PARLORS
Under era
Call In when on good work
W an FOR
We will QUICK
We will nil them CHEAP I
We will till
ml Ii I
Sap tiling,
Sap
Sap Board OS
I,,.
ho
-ion till S
on
I SEPT.,
TRADE
MARK
for tat Core of iii Skis
This Una In
fifty and wherever know has
in sternly demand. It been el
by the leading over
country, and
all other of
the most .
for fatted. Ointment Is of
long standing high
which It has obtained is owing entirely
it own as but lie
ever been to bring it before ll
One bottle of this Ointment will
be lent to address on of One
Dollar. promptly in-
tended to. Address nil order- and
to
T. F. CHRISTMAS,
X. C
PATENTS
Caress, and all Pat-
for
and we potent
remote from Washington.
Send modal, drawing or photo.,
W advise, or nut, free, of
Our fee not due patent is secured.
a How to Obtain
cost U. S. and
C.
continue foe ten mouth,
Tim Malta embrace all branches
Usually taught in an Academy.
Terms, both for tuition and heard
and equipped for
inking scad-
alone. Where I hay l-h to
pursue a blither
preparation to
enter, h credit, any North
or the Slate
refers to tho-c who have left
its walls tor the this
Any young limn with character and
moderate ability taking a course with
us will be aided in making arrange-
to in
The discipline will be kept at
present standard.
Neither time i or attention
work win be spared to mate i
all that parents
your boys on the first day.
For further see or ad-
dress
W. II.
BUILDUP HOME
By Home
Co.,
of N. C,
manufacturing an fine I in-
roots and a can be found on
the market. Their I ailing arc
OF
a dime cigar lot a N hand male.
Havana filled.
a Hue
Havana mad
Named in honor of Col. Buck Black
well.
a line live cent. Sumatra Wrapper
hand made, u sure win-
In honor of Col, S.
Can-. Pleat, of veil's Durham To-
i o.
Ten cent.
OLD
he liner t smoke for
the money.
NORTH STATE
Three for i cents, a hummer that
ways pleases.
stick to and or.
Special p-it up when de-
sired. Address
CO.
Wall tor III
we will yon Lumber
as
Wood delivered to your door for
a load.
cash.
Thanking you fin past
X. V.
NOR III X
R. K.
In .
GOING
D.
Sum.
NO V KM
Ar.
l.
.-,
P. M.
M.
Ar.
A. M
tin
i II
II
Sun.
A. M.
ti a
M.
Train councils with Hi, ii ft
Weldon train In having
in., with R
train Hui, m
The
OBSERVER,
North f
WEEKLY.
Independent and ;
more attractive than ever, it will an
Invaluable visitor to home.
Office, or the work room.
THE DAILY
All of the news of tin world, i
Daily report the Mate
and Capitol. a
A perfect family All
new the week. The
from the Legislature a special.
the Weekly
ONLY A
Send for
Oh N. O


Title
Eastern reflector, 28 August 1895
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
August 28, 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/
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https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/17760
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