THI DAILY REFLE Vol. 2. GREENVILLE, N. C., AUGUST 30, 1895. No. 225 ] ; Local Trains and Boat Schedule. Greenville which had about 20, - | Passenger und mail north, arrives 8:22 A. M. arrives 6:37 P. M. North Bound Freight, arrives 9:00 A M, leaves 10:10 A. M. South Bound Freight, aprives 2:00 P, M., leaves 2:15 P.M. Steamer Myers arrives from Wash ington Mouday, Wednesday and Friday leaves for Washington Tuesday, Thurs Gay and Saturday. train yoing Going south, a! Weather Bulletin. ae an aia ed Saturday : geverally fair. SCOR E ANOTHER FOR GREEN- VILLE. Over One Hurdred Thousand Ponds, Again To Day. When something over 50,000! pounds of tobacco came in for | 000 pounds. /progress at this house when the The sale was still in| , ] | ; ° \REFLECTOR went to press, withb' ithe outlook that 3t would con |! isume the rest of the day. ‘The! |Greenville holds its end of ithe breaks both in | price, i The Star, ‘the fourth sale aleo had about 20, ,000 pounds but had to carry it ov- up ler to Saturday. Ifa, quality ard in | | | which was down for | There were people here from! r and near, and with one accord | ‘they declare the Greenville market| i\to be the best they ever saw. ‘RIP VAN WINKLE HAS WAKED. UP. | North Carotina to the Front with Pitt County in the Lead. GREENVILLE, N. ©., Aue. 30, ’95. Editor Daily Retlector: Thursday's breaks, it was looked upon to mean that the farmers! were going to divide, and that) there would not ve a3 wuch in to day as there was ou Friday of last week, and cause avotier biuck'! sale. But contrary to this suppo sition, there were 120,000 poands| on the breaks again to-day, mak-| ing such an immense sule that! the warehouses could not get through. By sunset Thursday eveuving wagons had commenced rolling in, and they kept: oming all night apd through the early morniug. The wagons coming in over night gave the warehousewen better time to uploaa and arrange their floors, but there was more here than could be handled and sold ju a day, starting at 10 o'clock. The first sale opened promptly on time at the Planters with 600 piles shoving the aggregate on te 40,000 pounds. Auctionser L ps. comb put in his liveliest chin ma— sic and wouud up the lot in two and a quarter hours, all of it go ing at good prices. “Qn tothe Eastern” was the sopg amoug the buyers as they went over for the second ésule. And the “Oid Reliable” wa ready for them with the bigyest lot that has yet been tackled on any one fluor. There were 656 piles gen erally estimated to average 75 pounds, so it is safe to say that the Eastern had not less than 45, 0OU pounds. We never saw a ful- jer house or larger piles on ‘the floor. After the sales nad ran for half an hour they stopped for dinner, and it toot two and a half hours to finish after dinner. The third sale came off at the In the market quotation of yes- terday North Oarolina 6 per cent. | bonds sold for $1.30, the bizhest point paid for any State bonds in the United States. Pitt county bas sold tobacco on the Grvenyille warket during the month of August, 1895, amount ing to mOre than $2 per capita for her entire populatio 1-—white and colored, meu, women and chiidren—and not one-twen'ieth of the crop is marketed. The peo ple of old Pitt do nus realize what; a great county they live in. Give the information in your columos, and they will be spurred on to greater energy and development of our many natural resources yet unthought of. Now, Mr. Editor, will not the business men of the community exert themselves toward manufac- ‘uring interests, or shal Istrangere cowe in and reap the golden har- vest that is now ripe and readv to be piucked ? Tnere are men 'n this couuty with sufficient | meaus tO Carry Ou euterprises commensurate with the natural advaaotages we possess. They are coming, and coming sooa. Will not the business meu of Green- ville wake upto thesituation? Y. Look at This. Promptly at 10 o'clock Ola Forbes rang his bell for the sale at the Planters Warehouse, and started the bail to rolling on over 600 piles which aggregated over 40,000 pounds It looks tu us that if the Planters Warehouse accommodates her custo ners the proprietor will have to extend their house. They needed 5U inking---Blinking Buying GOODS. Wait for Me. WINTER FRANK WILSON, The King Clothier. —— STATE NEWS. Record of Matters of General Interest Goldsboro will open a tobacco : warehouse on Sept. 17. Uncle Ace Triplette, who lives near Goshen, waked up the other morning tu find that some one bad carried away his coro crib. He says he heard of corn, wheat, bacon and everything else being stolen, but this isthe first time he has ever heard of the crib it- self being stolen. Thisis age of progress.— Wilkesboro Chronicle An alligator about ten feet in length was brought up to the city on the 28th by Peter Fisher, col., whose wife and another colored woman caught him at Adam’s creek in a net they were attend- ing. The alligator had been eat- ing fish out of the net and had partly swallowed it, and then be-- came entangled in it.—Newbern Journal. Mr. Aaron Mizell, of Martin county, near the Beaufort county line, had been getting together his little saving for several years, until he had accumulated $914, which he keptin atin bucket, wrapped in tow sacks aud hidden in his smoke house. A few nights ago some thief broke into the feet more today as they had to carry over 10,000 peounda. building and stole every penny-— Washington Gazette. & He’s a Dandy, Out at the Planters Warehouse to-day Mr. R. O. Jeffreys; of Tar- boro, stepped upto relieve Auc- tioneer Lipscombe for a few min- utes and give him time to suck a lemon. Talk about “piano box- . es,” Mr. Jeffreys is one of them. He hung the corner of his mouth over his left ear, and rattled< the bids faster than the buyers could wink. Mr. Frank Sugg wanted to send after Photographer Hyman to catch a picture of that ‘mouth. This morning the editor found a trsmendous watermelon in his front porch. It was left there by Mr. 8S. M. Jones, of Bethel, who droye by with a load of tobacco for the breaks. It was the lary~ est melon we have encountered this season, weighing even 45 pounds. AMERIHN MUTUAL BEE! SOCIETY. A Friend in Adversity. Protects you when sick and unable to follow your business or occupation. : Seelts $2.50 to $200 per Wo cents per day. No assessments, Ex- act cost stipulated. ply For information a to HERBERT A. WHITE. Cashier. ZENO MOORE, President. . DAILY | iD material benefits, means ee success in educational and social —— matters. It means a healihy de-' Subscriptiog 28 cents per Month. velopment along all lines for the! Entered as second-ciass mail matter.| present generation, and very much) ore for future generations. The upbuilding in the present EVERY APTERNOON (EXCEPT SUNDAY) ™ ae serene > In keeping with increasing by co-operation, patronage and enterprise the creasing growth with each suc- Durham Sun begins its four- ceeding year, and with the years teenth volume bj eniarging the benefits arising from this co- from ative :o a six column pa- ‘Operation will astonish tuose who per. As its name implies the|#re to-day bat feeble advocates of Sun is a bright journal and we the anion in sentiment, purpose . * . i = . ; trust it may continue to prosper. and ee of the people of a city ‘for its development. a The following from the Seuth | __ port Zeader 1s so full oftruth that) There is a good joke going we publish it as peculiarly @PPrO- around here in Durham on a cer priate and applicable to our tow |tain colored minister that is wortb just now. ‘repeating. The town or city whose citizens It is vouched for by se veral re- are not united upon ail matters sponsible persons that the afore which go to build up and iucrease | gig coloured diviue was very earp- the prosperity of their place, will estly expounding acertain pas-— never see their own town devel- | cace of the scripture in the Buble oped. 'no: long since when he had occa-— In the co-operaiion of the peo—jsion to refer to Heaven and was ple of any community for its de-/™@king a vigorous effort to im . | press upon his congregation what velopment there are several things P Pp srexa Ie apn ideal place Heaven was. involved. The coming together fad passed the noon hour and he upon a common basis of the citi~| was getting very much warmed ns oO c to agre upite: 2p in his sermon when he sud and a outithe claw de-|denly exclaimed “I tell you what . Heaven is, it is a place where termined upon, means a success lyou can aways have a plenty to fol result. Cooperation of theleat and no work to do. There is citizens of a place indicates faith plenty of fried chicken, collards, and trust among its people, ana fat meat and—” At this juncture fd “a th ‘piliti fone of the deasons in the church, contdence in the possibilities o _who alweys occupied a seat in the the development of the natural “amen corner,” yelled out “Ya-as, resources of the place. ‘Lor?, I smell ‘sm now.” The itis not alone sufficient that a church has not fally recovered town has natura! resources. Its Ye+—Darbam San. people must either themselves _ _ take advantage, and increase what Meeting of Physicians. nature has dune, orif unable of ‘There will be a meeting of the Phy- themselves to do 80, to bring in siciansot Pitt connty at the Court House : . in Greenville on the first Monday in sep- such capital and labor, which tember,at 12 o’clock M., forthe pul- joined to their own, will produce pose of electing a Superirtendent of results beneficial to all interested. ‘4. and other basiners. Sach a union once happily be- gun should be increased into a firm and unchangeable desire up | ‘**] Smell "Em Now.”’ Greenville Market. Corrected by S. M. Yehultz. on the peuple of the community | Butter. per Ib 17 to 25 tO continue in a joint fellowship Western Sides 6.60 to 70 . , Sugar cured Hams 11 to 12 of ection on every questivn which orn 40 to 69 meéans the welfare and prosperity Corn Meal 50 to 80 MCabhage of the town and country. Flour, Family 6.25 tod .5 will see an in-. Educational - Greenville Collegiate Institute. { * + a wary Tees.” Be 'Greenville is unsarpassed.— oak wok t to@urstereoa Monday a1 Washington Gazette, te Oeil be forwarded promptly. Price) Then you said something. hsta furnished on application: ‘tthe moon next Tuesday night commencing afew minutesto 10 College Hotel _and ending a few minutes past 4 MRS.DELLA GAY, Proprietress | ‘o'clock next morning. Convenient to depot and to the to | bacco warehouses. In One of the towrs of Illinois | banker put bis private mark Best aud highest location areund |on the money he paid out on reenville. Splendid mineral water. ‘Saturday night to the wage Rooms large and comfortable. Table | workers of the town who patron- supplied with the best the inarket af/ized his bank; and on Monday fords. \night, of the 8700 paid out and Terms reasonable. j}marked privately, over $300 had ~~ _|come back to him from the sa- Cotton and Peanuts. loons of the town. Below are Norfoik prices of cotton); __ and peanuts for yesterday, as furnished | Now IS THE TIME.-To try one of by Cobb Bros. & (o., Con naission Mer |our Electric Appliances remem _ chants of Norfolk : (ber if you are not cured your , There witibea total eclipse of! WanTeD-—Fifty or Seventy-five ‘hogs at once. Apply to J. C. Cocs & Son. A good ad tell the peo ple some- ‘thing that they do not know but |\wanted tu know without being aware of the fact. The Goldsboro Headlight has just closed its eight yeur. I[tisa good paper and one we very much like. A stock of goods withuut ad- vertising is like a gun withuout ammunitioa—tbere’s notuing to make it ‘“‘go cit.” The steamers running between Washington and Ocracoke make their fast trip of the season to- morrow night. Little Miss Glenu Forbes will give her friends a party tonigh. In the music building near ha father’s residence. To-day Mr. Allen Warren re c ived a telegram from Wilson anuooaucing the death of a rela- tive, Mrs. Sallie “Warren. She was 33 years old. Dr. 8. B. Watson, the oldes: practitioner in the State, died in Mecklenburg conut’ Saturday night. He was 90 years old and had practiced 67 years. Dont forget that Mr. Fredland- er, proprietor of the Baltimure Clotuing Store, will open tomor row vext dour to varber shop, with a brand sew stuck of goods. Cali and see bis display. This ‘s earthquake feeling oorTror. )movey will be refunded. If you Middiing 715-16/are allran down our Belt wifl Miidiing - 3.8 build you ap and make yva well Gord Ordinary 6,/8zain. Don't delay but .use , one. Tone—steady. Let us hear from you and we will PEANUT 3. take pleasure in giving any in- a ; 2}/formation in regard to our ap- Fane 3}/ Pliauces. Spanish $1 bu. C. J. Rocers, Gen'l Agt. Tone—steady Jon Dosson, Special Agt.- weather, and rewiuds as tpat if was just vine years ago to mdr |’ row bt that the big shake nbd, | Ohariestou aboat sv and frightened maay of we North Car |80ld SATURDAY. AUGUST 3 On the above date, in the new painted store under the Opera Huuse, next door to the Barber Shop. 7s THE ASS BALTIMORE GLOTHING STORE, M. FREDLANDER, PROP., will open a first-class stock of CLOTHING. GENTS FORNISHING GOODS Boots, SHOES, Hats,&c. Make a note of the opening day and bear in mind that we will be prepared to furnish any ar- ticle in the above lines at prices that can’t be beat. ESTABLISHED 1975- S.-M. Sehultz PORK SIDES & SHO TLDER ARMIES AND MEKUHANTS BUY ng their year’ supplies will finc their interest toget our prices befcfe pu. chasing elsewhere. Ourstock is complete nf allits branches. Jae SORT EE, SUGAh K, TEA, &c, . . alway ut a pseu MARKET PRICES. TOBACCO SNUFF & CIGARS we buy darect from Manufacturers, ena bling youto bay at one orotit. A com plete stock of FURNITURE a Times. Cur gous ont emia stu sult ue times. (ur aed hous areal! bought and refore, having no risk to oe ror at a close margip. olina folks out of much growth. 8. M. SCHUL ‘T'z, Greenville. N.C