c-C 
W L- 
JOB PRINTING 
The Reflector is 
pared to do all 
in this line 
NEATLY, 
QUICKLY, and 
IN BEST STYLE. 
Plenty of new mate- 
rial and the best 
of Stationery. 
The Eastern Reflector. 
D. J. 
TRUTH TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. 
VOL. XIV. 
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 1895. 
NO. 
Weather Crop Bulletin. 
The reports of correspondents 
Trouble at Winston. 
A serious not between whites 
of the Weekly Weather Crop blocks was averted 
issued by the Caro-. at Sunday night. It 
Una State Weather Service, for j was out the colored 
the week ending Saturday, Au churches during the day that an 
gust 10th, 1895, indicate a very was going to be made to 
warm, sunny week, with local Arthur Tuttle, on trial there 
showers. The rose for murder of policeman Tickers 
Steadily during the week, last May. After church, about 
temperatures organized 
and a MM ed to the jail where they re- 
S decrees above the nor for several hours. They 
A very were armed with pistols and 
local lain which Mayor Gray went to the 
If really crops, but and the 
many sections the 
part of the and the 
Districts are 
which is 
chiefly gardens and corn 
at many where 
A Pretty, Happy 
There are many plain young 
girls whose faces are lined with 
discontent and 
Protection a Needles, Fraud. 
You Need 
A VIEWS. 
When Ala., is able to 
supply Japan, with water j 
pipe at a profit, in competition 
American Visitors to the Land o 
the Sun. 
Th-re is a drawn, perplexed ex- with English, German and 
between the eyes, and 
corners of the mouth have a de- 
droop. These are the girls 
who have a settled idea that they 
are plain beyond remedy, and the 
distressing belief has deepened 
the lines of dissatisfaction ; but 
in reality there is only a cloud 
over the face, cast by the habit of 
A pretty by which we 
all profit is fold in exchange 
U follows 
One morning a certain gill 
was no danger of lynching 
and begged them to disperse- 
Sheriff and two of 
Winston's addressed , whose face was under this cloud 
the assuring that walked out across sunshine 
there was no danger of lynching-1 of the common. For a Moment 
the drought was must Brown, who is holding the lightness of the morning had 
week lino showers have fallen I court, the that lifted the gloom and her thoughts 
this week With a good season , they were violating the law, tell-j were unusually pleasant. 
next week a splendid crop of corn that Tuttle have; a happy girl that 
will be cures a fair trial and that he would be j is we just she Heard one 
very gated. are sow- 
and beginning 
pulling m South. 
responsible for Tuttle's 
said they 
would leave if the sheriff would 
j put a guard of twenty with envy in her heart, to see the 
pretty girl, but she was the only 
of two ladies passing say to the 
other. 
She quickly around, 
front this are nearly all, This but 
favorable, and crops have made I ,,. , , , 
the mob refused 
fine TIm weather was 
very warm, with local showers 
nearly every day. except at some 
places, in the northern 
portions of the district, where not 
enough rain has fallen. There 
Las been abundant sunshine- 
Sunday, August a heavy 
rain occurred in the 
ed to go away. 
Sheriff then ordered 
out the besides 
a number of deputies, who were 
sworn in- Judge Drown also in- 
the sheriff to attest those 
who did not leave. The mob be- 
filing on the officers, several 
southeast comer of the struck with small 
great W- Light ,,.,, b 
two 
There are a few sections in tint- 
which can be said to be 
The Riflemen fired 
several volleys into the crowd, 
seriously Buffeting fir want causing the to diapers 
rain- Corn especially doing very 
well fodder-pulling has 
in the South. crop 
good and curing up fine. The 
majority of reports indicate 
cotton, which with 
late fall make a good crop report. 
Bowing turnips, and early planted 
have come up well. Field peas 
Sweet potatoes doing well, 
crop Irish no 
go 
in quick order. Fourteen of the 
rioters were an- officers 
and put jail. 
There is every that 
the next New York 
State will out last year's 
Republican majority and 
substitute its plane a 
girl sight. 
they wean me one 
ever called me pretty before It 
must be because I am 
Again, as she was getting a 
horse car, she heard fates 
were out in you 
see pretty girl 
I declare I am always 
to look happy if this is 
comes of it I have been 
called homely all my life, and 
here twice one day I've been 
called Horn. 
Weather 
Don't worry about the weather. 
Don't wall on the sunny side 
of the attest- 
Don't work unless have to, 
being planted. doing Democratic The 
well. reported. Falkland present between the Re- and work slowly. 
to carry an umbrella 
exposed to the 
-30, 37- 
A Warning Smoking Boys. 
meat change has come 
the Democrats since last 
says the New Times, 
the outlook was gloomy and the 
prospers for dis- 
Don't to excess. 
Ice water is about as bad as any- 
con Where six mouths 
Don't use a fan. The exercise 
it will overcome all 
the good you experience. 
Speaking of the evils of 
a prominent 
good deal has been said 
about the evils of cigarette I . . , ., 
in- I am talking now to boys there is now a day you ever experienced, and if 
remember. The effect upon grown substantially united and hopeful you do think it, don't say it- 
men is of course not so marked. 
ago there wan left nothing bur 
the divided, defeated din- Don't thick it is hottest 
cigarette fiend will lie and 
body, seeking to perfect its or be of 
making a strong It B and 
s a or opium effort victory the of body, 
deserved. 
If you follow out the majority 
of will feel that 
your grave all the rest of life. . , , . . 
This remarkable vow was made followed the injunction to 
fifteen years ago to his sick wife keep cod. 
by Edwin L. Morrison, at that 
nerves It sends boys into con j time chief of the 
it gives them enlarge- j freight department Miami- thermometer every ten or 
heart and it sends I Ho built a rude hut minutes during the middle 
, r at side of his wife grave in of the 
them to the insane asylum. cemetery- 
to several i Morrison, once the handsome rail Don't make a meal 
glum how foolish and in- 
seem the dolorous wails 
sent up from that quarter 1893 
when it was proposed to remove 
the duty from iron ore and pig. 
No pi election was needed, it is 
clear, since can pay 
freight on its water pipe to I 
via Liverpool, and yet underbid 
ail competitors. is said 
to have sent tons of pig to 
recently, and 
town, Ohio, tons of I 
waste metal- The wool 
industry prospers greatly I 
with the free wool given by 
Democratic tariff. American 
Wool and Cotton Reporter states 
that there were, June 1895, 
this 
sets of cards, 
machines, as 
against sets of cards, 
looms ma- 
chines in May, under the 
tariff and before the 
Sun- 
and Beautiful Answers. 
A Sophist, wishing to puzzle 
with questions 
which had arranged, rut the 
following, to which Thales 
without hesitation end 
with utmost 
What is the oldest God 
for He existed always. 
What is the most beautiful 
The world, for it is work of 
God. 
What is the greatest of all 
things Space; for it all 
things. 
What is the most 
Hope, for ii when all else 
is fled. 
What is the best of all f j 
Virtue, for without it there is DOth- 
What is the quickest Thought j 
in a moment it can reach the end 
of the universe- 
is the strongest i 
it makes face all I 
What is the easiest of all things 
To give advice. 
What is the most difficult To j 
Men's Era. 
On the 
fiend will lie and steal. Cigarette 
smoking blunts the whole moral 
nature. It has appalling 
upon the system- It first 
then stupefies the 
Knew Enough. 
com 
and I am called in to -j road man, is old, wrinkled and posed of meats. Vegetables come 
scribe for palpitation of the heart, but still sits in his rude at this season of the year es- 
hut by the side of the grave of t . i , ., 
woman he loved so well. For I for of 
teen years he has kept up this 
solemn vigil. In rain or shine, 
summer or winter, ho lingers 
around the little spot where his 
loved one lies, Day after day 
so many years, he has spent 
miserable cowards by cigarette of old 
smoking- I am not exaggerating-1 No strife of the 
I am speaking the truth, as every ; his 
physician nearly all of the j 
teachers popular man residing 
In nine cases out of ten it is 
pd by the cigarette habit. Every 
the cigarette 
habit. I have seen bright boys 
turned into dunces and straight- 
forward, honest boys made into 
The following of New 
York life shows how bully our 
population is mixed i Au Italian j 
sent American lad to a China-; 
man for his laundry. The Amer- 
lean gave the Chinaman a 
cent piece. John bit it and, 
said ; you 
trouble; me 
it his pocket. The Italian 
then culled to give 
the a A 
at Greek his stand to 
as peace maker- Italian 
drew a razor aid the shied 
a bottle of Cayenne pepper 
him. which struck a Hebrew, A; 
who was passing shouted, j 
and an Irishman the uniform 
of a policeman arrested the fight 
lug congress of nations which 
was presided over by a Dutch 
polios justice. 
; a mile yest of Winston paid dear 
The great dailies are every day j for R morn village, a sailor, with Indian 
which the sail- 
or's calling is held 
setts coast towns is indicated by 
a true story that comes from Gay 
Head, a primitive community on 
the island of Vineyard. 
A was wanted at the 
full of expressions of 
from prominent that 
the bond syndicate will not pro- 
treasury from gold raids. 
of a great govern- 
appealing helplessly lo a 
half bankers to be- 
tween it and insolvency is a spec- 
that is humiliating to every 
man in America except the out 
, I -14 
and out .-,. 
nothing to condemn in a 
system that thus humiliates J Judge Brown notified 
and dwarfs the Federal govern- 
He was one of the special 
drawn for the Tuttle jury 
was promptly on baud, but 
thinking his name would not be 
reached for several hours, went 
to the homo of his sweetheart 
he remained 
good of his bank account 
His name wits drawn but he failed 
to answer to the roll-call. When 
in his veins, applied to the 
town committee for 
He had to pass an examination 
by the committee, and trembled 
the ordeal, being sadly 
in 
The chairman began the exam- 
what is the n 
earth I 
The Burlington Mews hits the 
on the head and 
gives excellent advice in these 
invested in the 
cultivation of the talents of 
your children does 
yields a dividend as long as they 
live. it is not. j 
to raise your girls j 
ignorance for the sake of a small i 
Mind is more in 
the battle of life than muscle, and 
brings more the of 
the world- Sequel; Put 
children at 
opening, keep them there for a 
term and watch the 
in 
Newt ma 
The reader of this paper will be pleas 
ed to that there is at least one 
dreaded disease that has been 
able lo cure in all its stages and that is 
Catarrh, Hall's Catarrh Cure is the 
only positive cure known to the medical 
fraternity. Catarrh a 
disease, requires a constitutional 
treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is 
taken internally, directly on the 
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- 
thereby the foundation 
of the disease, and giving patient 
strength by building up the 
and nature in doing tap 
work. The proprietor have much 
in its powers, that they 
offer One Hundred Dollars for any case 
that it fails to cure- Send for list 
., . 
F. J. CO 
by 
in the courtroom and . J is 
himself known Friday flats answered. 
know 
Because I have sailed around 
it three 
will do, sir 
He received the as 
a teacher without another 
being asked. 
The Cherokee form of marriage 
is, perhaps, the simplest and 
most expressive to be found 
among modern Man and 
maiden, their courtship happily 
ended, simply join hands over a 
running stream, emblematic of 
the wish that their future lives, 
shall on in the same 
and the thing is done. Among 
our Indian tribes the mar- 
is equally simply 
and effective. 
him that his absence would only 
cost him with no cost attach- 
His Honor added also 
that by paying this amount bis 
young friend would be excused 
without any further ceremonies. 
He paid his cash to Clerk Wilson 
and left the a sadder 
but wiser young 
Herald. 
In his youth John A- King, o 
Chicago, was a mule engineer on 
the Erie canal Now he is very 
wealthy president of a big 
national bank- This shows what 
perseverance with a mule will 
do. 
Secretary of State, 
Coke, is critically ill at his 
in Raleigh. 
42.35 per cent- of the people cf 
North Carolina are 
is far above the aver- 
age, which is about per cent. 
Near Lexington, Mr. h. Swing 
and a Miss were out 
driving. While crossing a bridge 
the horse shied and backed 
off into the creek below- 
The young man tried to 
young and. in 
she held too heavily about 
neck and be unowned. 
Another man appeared on the 
just time to save lady 
Tl o horse was also. 
The says the 
Baptists will put up a 
building at the Orphanage at 
some future day. 
Many Bern looking That 
Way For Ordinary Traveler It la a 
Better Trip Than to 
or too 
A Japanese of distinction in his 
own country has come to this for 
the purpose, as he says, of 
at In an interview with a 
reporter of the New York Sun, he 
spoke of the good esteem in which 
Americans are held by the Japanese. 
he said, 
there as many Americans in Japan 
as there are this year. The tourists 
are to be seen not only in Yokohama 
and other seaports, but in out-of-the- 
way places, which they explore that 
they may get glimpses of the old- 
time Japanese life and customs. If 
they cannot put up at big hotels 
they are always able to find some 
place to stay, for the natives are of 
a hospitable nature, and have all 
heard of the Americans. In Yoko- 
we have always 
to Americans, and I am sure 
that as many as two thousand of 
them have lived there longer than I 
can remember. But there arc re- 
upon foreigners who want 
to travel over the country, and it U 
not everybody who can gain 
to do so. 
am sure that Japan will yet be 
a great resort for American tourists. 
Before coming to New York I had 
visited Europe, and the that 
has struck me most since I arrived 
here is that this country is very 
much like the European countries I 
have seen. The streets there and 
here are the same; the residences 
and business buildings are the same; 
so arc the manners customs, the 
garb, the religion, the theaters, the 
food and everything else. do not 
understand why so many Americans 
go to France, or German y 
every year, and why they do not go 
to some country that is different 
from their own. When the Amer- 
travels in Japan he sees things 
unlike any he ever saw before. The 
people are of another race; we have 
ancient history and many things 
of antiquity; we have arts that are 
all our own; we have a social system 
that has descended to us from 
historic times; you can go into 
Buddhist temples or into playhouses 
unlike yours; you can everywhere 
notice the abiding influence of our 
two great religions, which you call 
pagan; you can see novelties of 
every kind, all hands, a m- 
try which is healthy and beautiful 
and orderly, and which is 
by a people whom foreigners char- 
as excessive in their polite- 
Japan is not a second edition 
of Europe; it is unlike other 
in the world; it is a country 
for American tourists who 
change; and I think that thousands 
of will go every year hereafter. 
think that more of the usual 
number of Americans have traveled 
to Japan this year because of the 
revelations made during the war 
with China. The war has brought 
more fame to Japan than all the 
other events that have occurred 
since the mythological ages. It has 
given the world at large some 
edge of Japanese life and character 
and history. It has taught mankind 
that are not a country of 
ans or simpletons, and that we are 
not like the Chinese or the 
or any other Asiatics. It has made 
many intelligent Americans curious . 
to learn more about us. It has been j 
the means of attracting hundreds of 
Americans to the country which . 
owes so much to Americans. If as 
many Americans as have gone to 
Europe this summer had thought of 
to Japan both countries would 
be benefited. Besides the war, 
many books about Japan recently 
written by American and European 
authors have aided in creating a 
new interest in it. There must be 
very many of these books. Of all 
the foreigners who have ever visited 
my country, Mr. has 
the best understanding of it, He 
was observant when here. He 
is very subtle. He got into 
with the soul and heart of 
Japan. I think that both he and the 
poet Arnold are much too flattering 
to us in their books, and I could 
same things that they say. It 
was their kindly spirit. One might 
believe that no American can read 
their language about my 
Without desiring to visit it They 
may be assured that visitors will be 
especially if Russia 
does not with us. Vet an- 
other thing that has tended to pro- 
mote the American Interest in Japan 
is the coming of Japanese among 
you. There must several thou- 
sand of Japanese In the United 
States, and many of them have got 
acquainted your people, and 
entered into business relations 
with 
He Will Be 
Our former invaluable friend, the 
horse, that looked on the 
the forerunner coming 
by reports of rice of horse- 
less carriages in The steed 
the future, for uses both of pleas- 
and labor, will be an 
automation, driven by electricity 
and managed by a Yet with 
all the advantages of such a system 
there will be something even 
by the unsentimental in the honest 
affection and unquestioning loyalty 
our dumb living 
The Reflector this year 
It will give the news 
every week tor 
a year. 
Men 
COLLEGE MEN. 
England Delights to Honor 
Bearing a Degree. 
The prejudice which exists here 
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 
canes in the legislative affairs of I 
England, even supposing it possible I 
that he could obtain such a place, i 
Every one of the chief members 
the new English ministry bears a 
college degree, and the coincidence 
certainly proves that a B. A. or an 
M. A. or LL. D. is no bar to advance- 
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; he is lord 
rector of St. Andrew's university and 
of Glasgow university and lord 
of the University of Edinburgh. 
Chamberlain, the beau and dandy 
the ministry, acquired at 
the university college school in j 
London, and he always said that his 
G reek and Latin did him no harm as j 
a business man when he became a 
manufacturer In he is 
a fellow of the Royal society. The I 
duke of Devonshire was made an M. j 
A. at Trinity college, Cambridge, in I 
1852, and ten years later the same 
college bestowed upon him an 
he is a chancellor of the 
of Cambridge. Hicks-Beach 
went from to Christ Church 
college, Oxford, where he took 
the degrees and 
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, 
either before or since entering pub- 
American. 
ON THE 
They Wear Gray or Brown Dresses 
and Quiz the Policemen. 
there ever a bride that didn't 
Insist upon having in her trousseau 
a gray or brown traveling 
asks the New York Press. 
If you want to answer this 
to your own satisfaction walk 
across the Brooklyn bridge any day, 
especially in midsummer, and you 
will see brides by the score. 
You can tell them at once by their 
gray or brown dresses and their leis- 
They stroll along with their 
and look at the river, mar- 
at the statue of liberty and won- 
whether Governor's island could 
resist an invader, all with a delight- 
freshness that is restful to the 
sight of a nervous metropolitan 
dent. 
The policemen on the bridge be- 
come wonderfully softened in sum- 
mer, for they have many colloquies 
with timid, blushing brides, who be- 
the police know everything and 
arc animated guide books and ency- 
rolled into one. And the 
policemen like the job of telling all 
about the points of interest to be 
seen from the bridge, and almost 
wish that and his bride had 
nothing to do save to be astonished 
on the Brooklyn bridge and store up 
memories to be turned loose on the 
community at Way back or Spring 
City. 
One way that brides can be dis- 
from ordinary people is 
by their far-away look. They do not 
seem to see the people near by. They 
seem not to care what interest they 
themselves excite. They are simply 
ridiculously happy and New York is 
only pleasure ground to 
them. 
The bridegroom Oh, yes; be is 
there, of course, but he is only an 
attendant of the bride and he doesn't 
count for much on the Brooklyn 
bridge. 
CLAY WAS SOAKED. 
Highest of in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Govt Report
Absolutely pure 
COINING SMALL 
Uncle Sam Derives a 
PIECES. 
Profit 
A University Extension Lecturer's 
Witty Retort. 
other said Byron 
King, was called to a town down 
to address a meeting of mill- 
workers in a course of lectures on 
university extension. was 
quite a large audience present and 
they all listened attentively. Dur- 
the course of my remarks I had 
occasion to refer to our lowly origin, 
saying our Creator made us out of 
clay. At this a man, who was sit- 
ting away back in the audience, who 
was well known in the community 
for his capacity for absorbing 
liquor, and who, from his fondness 
far drink, had made a rank failure 
In life, while his fellows had 
got up and disagree 
with you; from my experience I 
would say that I was made out of 
ft was a pretty good re 
mark, knowing- the man to be what 
he was, and I was for an 
answer. Finally I are 
mistaken, my were 
originally made out of clay, but the 
trouble was you. went out and got 
Dispatch. 
Large 
from the Occupation. 
One of the most profitable 
of the United States govern- 
is found in the coinage of five- 
rent nickel pieces and one-cent 
bronze pieces. The cost of the 
bronze disks from which the cents 
are stamped is about twenty cents 
per pound, and a pound of them pro- 
dollar and forty-six cents. 
Nickel ready for coinage costs thirty- 
two cents per pound and a pound 
produces four dollars and forty-three 
cents In rive-cent pieces. The 
average profit of on the 
coinage of these minor coins for the 
past few years has been about six 
hundred and fifty thousand dollars. 
There is a profit, and a consider- 
able one, in of subsidiary 
coin, but owing to the fact 
that the United States owns several 
ounces of bullion which was 
purchased at the prevailing high 
rate of 1890, the profit In that species 
of coinage is not as great as it would 
tie if the government should go into 
the open market to-day and buy 
silver at its market value for this 
purpose. 
There is a big demand at the 
treasury department for bright new 
coins of all denominations. Almost 
every request that is received from 
banks in various sections of the 
country for subsidiary coins ask 
that bright new ones sent. Every 
month the street car companies 
banks of the capital city turn Into 
the treasury large quantities of 
nickels, dimes and quarters, for 
which they receive in turn paper 
money of large denominations. Of 
course the money thus redeemed is 
not and there is no demand 
for it. The result is that there are 
large quantities of such subsidiary 
coin in the vaults of the treasury, 
and it is impossible to get it into 
NOT THE FIRST- 
Why the Selection He Wanted to 
Play Was Inappropriate. 
They were engaged. That was 
apparent from their actions. 
were together all the time, and he 
tried to anticipate her every wish. 
They wandered on the beach to- 
and they sat out the 
The weather prophets are say- 
that the warm weather has 
fairly begun, that for the re- 
of this month and 
September it will be scorching 
hot. h 
LOCAL DIRECTORY.
Clerk, E. A. Move. 
It. W. King. 
Register of Deeds, W. M. King. 
J. I,. Liitle. 
Coroner, 
MISC. 
Surveyor, 
Viewing, T. K. L 
Smith M. Jones. 
Health. Dr. XV. II. 
County Home. W. 
County 
W. II. 
Dr. C. Laughing- 
TOWN 
Mayor, Fortes. 
Clerk. C. C. Forties. 
Treasurer, t. 
W. Perkins, chief, Fred. 
Cox, last; J. W. Murphy, night. 
II. W. L, 
w. t. Godwin. T. A. 
Jenkins. 
CHURCHES. 
Baptist. Services every 
second morning and night. Prayer 
night. c. M. 
pa-tor. Sunday School at 
A. It. C. 
Catholic. No regular services. 
Episcopal. fourth Sun- 
day morning and night. Rev. A, 
Rector. Sunday School 
A. . W. . 
Services every Sunday 
morning Prayer meeting 
night. U. F. Smith, 
Sunday at A. If, A. 
It. l- 
Presbyterian. Island 
Sunday morning and night. Prayer 
meeting i night Archie 
pastor. Sunday School at 
porch in the moonlight earnestly, 
Moreover, 
talking about nothing 
he could play the flute and 
would occasionally steal from 
the crowd around the hotel and he 
would entertain her with solos. . 
she was more worldly titan 
she looked, and one night some of 
the other quests overheard a con- 
that was unique, but not 
intended for their ears. 
I get my he asked. 
yes, she replied. 
you like to hear he 
quired, fishing for a compliment. 
shall I play this 
you 
after a few momenta 
spent in thought, you think 
the waltz would very 
He wished to be very 
but somehow he seemed to 
have made a mistake. 
I she replied, short. 
Lodge No. SB I A. F. A, A. 
II. meets lire, and third Monday 
Moore, W. M 
DR. I. L. JAMES, 
H. C. 
DR. 
H. A. JOYNER 
DENTIST. 
O. 
up Mails overS. 
Hardware store. 
about three years 
Times-Herald. 
too 
A Young Lawyer's Mistake. 
There Is a certain judge in one of 
the higher courts of this city who 
rather prides himself on his 
edge of the law. The other day he 
was compelled to listen to a case that, 
had been appealed from one of the 
lice courts. The young practitioner 
who appealed for the appellant was 
long and tedious; he brought in all 
of the elementary text books 
quoted the fundamental 
of law. 
At last the judge thought It was 
time to make an effort to close the 
argument. 
we not he said, 
pompously, the court knows a 
little about law 
K. I,. 
Greenville 
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, 
1.1,1. 
under Opera House. St. 
ATTORNEY-AT-LA 
K. N. C 
Practice, in all the courts. Collection a 
B. 
F. TYSON, 
Attorney and Counselor at-Law 
Greenville. 
in all the Courts 
Civil and Criminal Business Solicited. 
Makes a of fraud 
ages, actions to recover land, and col- 
Prompt and careful attention given 
all 
,. . Money to loan on approved security. 
That's the Tery mistake I made j 
the 
Good Old Days. 
all said Meandering- 
about things 
be fine, but gimme de good old 
everybody says is good 
said plodding Pete. 
do trouble. What 
I'm heartsick for is de days when cf 
ye told a man ye was 
he go and show some place 
where ye could find 
ton Star 
in the other answered 
young orator, I don't want to 
let It defeat me Motion 
denied. N. Y. Recorder. 
A Monarch's Heart. 
Louis heart has been 
to a representative of Don 
Curios, the senior male Bourbon, by 
M. Edouard the Jew 
baiter. He inherited it from his 
mother, who had It from M. Gabriel 
whose father, Dr. 
examined the body of 
dauphin, land removed tho 
heart from It. The doctor gave it, 
in to M. de archbishop 
of Paris, to baud over to the royal 
family, taking a receipt for it. Dur- 
the revolution of 1830, the palace 
was sacked, the vase containing tho 
heart broken, and the heart itself 
lost, but M. Gabriel looked 
for it and found it a sand heap in the 
palace yard, 
J. II. I . J. L. 
FLEMING 
Attorneys-at-Law, 
N. C. 
Practice all the Courts. 
I. C. LATHAM. 
I AI HAM
St 
N. C. 
nos. J. JARVIS. 
I,. BLOW 
ii. ill the Court 
John E. Woodard. F. C. Harding, 
Wilson, C. Greenville, X. C. 
HARDING, 
Greenville, . 
Special attention given to 
n I
THE REFLECTOR 
Greenville, N. C. 
I J, tester 
Entered at the t 
K. C-, as second-class m- I matter. 
II 
Aug. 21st, Mi. 
The directors o the North 
Carolina Railroad, at their meet- 
at Burlington last week re- 
leased the road to the Southern 
for a term of The 
Southern is to pay per cent- 
for years, and per cent, for 
years, to keep up the prop- 
and to pay all taxes. Only 
two of the directors, Hon. Lee S. 
Overman, of Salisbury, and F. S- 
WHAT PLUCK AND 
WILL DO. 
Beginning at the Bottom Ascends 
the Ladder of Business Success. 
of opposed 
the leases The action soon as 
There is scarcely a loading 
person throughout our land who 
has not read something of the 
great merchant of Mew York, who 
a few years ago wandered 
through the streets of that 
city but is now worth his millions- 
While people have wondered at 
this, of them have never 
stopped to consider that almost 
every business has 
its man, who, though 
their success may not have 
friends the hundreds- He is 
connected with the benevolent or- 
of the town, and has 
never turned his back on any 
peal for charity or assistance 
that came to him- He has always 
taken an interest in mutters that 
would advance the town, and is a 
liberal contributor to our 
prises. While a thorough 
man, his is 
marked by selfishness in any 
form. 
Mr. was married to Miss 
Abrams, of Rocky Mount, 
and has a bright, interesting, hap- 
family. 
Greenville is proud of Sam I 
M. and th record he has 
made in town. 
Our Growing Ir- 
being Severely yet their 
The silver conference of 
prominent J Democrats, in 
City this week, 
bad a large attendance of 
from States. Sen- 
J. was pres- 
and was placed on most of 
the prominent committees- He 
with. Senators Harris, 
Gov. Stone and Mr 
constitute a provisional 
committee power to 
select national committeemen 
for each State and perfect the 
plan of organization. The gold 
advocates may ridicule the 
men as much as they please 
and say there are no men of 
brains are on side, bat this 
meeting in Washington shows 
just the contrary to be true. 
The silver advocates are going 
to be heard and their presence 
will be felt in the nation 
convention- 
The Tobacco Department. 
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. 
MORE BANKS NEEDED. 
We see it stated that the 
Raleigh News and Observer 
announces by authority that 
Senator Jarvis is not and will 
not De a candidate for Govern- 
or. The Senator being absent 
from home we cannot get his 
confirmation of this, but taking 
it for granted that the News 
and Observer would not have 
made the statement without 
some grounds for so doing, the 
Reflector cheerfully adds a 
second to the suggestion that 
Col. J. S. Carr be the next 
Democratic nominee for Gov 
of North Carolina. Every 
reader knows just where the 
Reflector stands in reference 
to Senator Jarvis, but next to 
to him we had as live see Col. 
Carr the Governor's 
chair as any one. He is an 
able man, a patriotic citizen, a 
philanthropist without a 
in the State, and 
fill the position with credit and, 
dignity 
We take the following 
Richmond of y 
Hon. M- W. of 
is no longer 
from the United Slates to Mexico. 
That office practically 
ed vacant to-day by a decision 
by Mr. Holmes Conrad, 
Solicitor-General of the United 
States and Acting Attorney 
Mr. Ransoms 
was declared to to 
Federal an I the 
Attorney -General 
ed the action of Mr. Thomas 
Auditor of the Treasury for 
the State Department, in 
to pass favorably upon Mr- 
Ransom's vouchers for salary and 
expenses. 
The decision of the Acting At- 
General was based on a 
question raised by Auditor 
as to the legality of Mr- 
Ransom's appointment to the 
Mexican mission, in view of the 
existence of section article of 
the Constitution, which declares 
that Senator or 
shall, during the time for 
which he was elected, be appoint- 
ed to any civil office under the 
authority of the United States, 
which shall have been created or 
the emoluments 
have been increased daring such 
provision apparently fitted 
the case of Mr. Ransom, for he 
was nominated by 
Cleveland and confirmed by the 
Senate before his term of office as 
senator from North Carolina bad 
expired, and during that term the 
salary of the Mexican mission 
had been increased a year. 
German do not always 
consider the difficulties 
which confront the officers of the 
Jaw in carrying out their 
es. Lately a criminal convicted 
of killing two women and at- 
tempting the life of a third was 
twice sentenced to be banged, one 
time for each murder, and to 
teen imprisonment for the 
attempt at murder, and what 
meets are equally remarkable and 
Every man cannot 
do business in the metropolis, 
else the smaller cities and towns 
would be unknown, and there are 
men conducting in 
try towns who, bail 
them the of such 
a population as No there 
is no telling what they would 
have accomplished 
has some men of 
this kind, and the purpose of this 
article in the Reflector is to call 
to what one of them 
has done right hero in our midst. 
m. BOOTHS. 
in the year 1805 M. 
was born in the city of 
Richmond, Va. When he was 
years old his father died, and 
throe years later young 
went to New York and engaged 
in such work as a boy of his age 
could perform- At the age of 
he to the State of Minnesota 
where he spent four years on a 
farm- relatives Tar- 
Mr- then HI years 
old. came to North Carolina. He 
took a position with D. 
stein, a wholesale grocer of Tar 
He had occupied that 
sis months his 
talent and tact for business had 
so impressed his employer that 
Mr- decided to open 
a branch store in Greenville and 
put Mr. charge of it- 
So 1875 we Mr- 
in Greenville with a stock of 
furniture. He opened 
in what was then the only brick 
store town, and when now ones 
were built later his place was 
styled the Old Brick Store, under 
which name it become famous 
through Pitt and surrounding 
counties. He conducted this 
business successfully for Mr- 
through seven years 
and thou became a partner with 
him. Under the 
thus formed business was ear- 
on for seven years longer, 
Mr. purchased 
interest partner and he- 
cone sole is 1889- 
duty . 
is whether they will hang 
a couple and then m 
prison him. or imprison him 
fifteen years and then hang him our cleverest gentlemen, genial 
a couple Star. with every and numbers his 
Greenville, N. U, Aug. 17th, 
Editor Daily Reflector. 
Friday's sales of tobacco on 
this market, and the general sen- 
of the town and county, 
indicates that is in 
need of better more extended 
banking facilities. There is 
that so tends to the success 
and prosperity of a community 
as easy and liberal banking fa- 
are in Pitt county 
men with means who are capable 
of organizing operating a 
bank or banks that would add to 
the progress of the entire com 
and prove a highly prof- 
business to the parties en- 
gaging in it. 
The tobacco industry has done 
much towards the advancement, 
of the interests of this section, 
and those who are the promoters 
and engaged in know 
the great need of additional bank- 
facilities. 
There are those the county 
of Pitt who could during the 
present cotton and tobacco season 
start a bank with capital stock 
sufficient to and 
encourage this market to greater 
competition with other markets. 
There are other markets which 
claim as an advantage over 
Greenville their banking 
and ability to carry the 
business of the town- 
Shall it be said that Greenville, 
the best cotton and tobacco mar- 
shall be behind in the 
greatest lever power to business 
and prosperity 
With stockholders as W. 
G. Lang. R L Davis T. L 
Turnage, of Farmville, J. R. Dav- 
R. R- Fleming J. J. 
of Bros 
J. J. R. T. 
son and J. B. Galloway, of 
; A- G- Cox, of Win- 
; J. EL Cobb J- R- 
Smith, of 
from different sections of 
the county, combined with the 
strong, healthy, active business 
men of Greenville, a bank 
be operated that would to 
Greenville Pitt county such 
an impetus success in 
as would make our county 
and town the peer of any in the 
Stale. 
We have the natural advantages 
to make us great and prosperous. 
Let there be a call of the people 
and stock taken shares of 
leach, we will soon have a 
j institution able to ac- 
the needs of the 
progress of our 
would astounding. It will 
pay any aspect it be 
thought of. Shall have it I or 
shall we go on cramped in every 
feature that makes progress a 
certainly- Will not our enter 
prising men stall in this matter r 
Sooner or later foreign capitalists 
will See tin then 
what X- 
Mr- A- A- Andrews, of Durham, 
has come to locate on thin mar- 
The heavy rains are seriously 
damaging tobacco crops now 
standing on the bill. 
Fully half the crop has already 
been cured, if not two-thirds, and 
from best reports the cures have 
been fairly good. 
The number of now 
buyers coming shows the 
Greenville market is going to be 
lively this season. 
There were many pleased farm 
on breaks Friday. That 
is a result of selling tobacco on 
the market 
WHAT WILL THE 
The Popular Estimate at New Orleans 
Is Out of 
Debt Their Cot- 
ton 
Messrs- Co., 
their cotton letter, furnish the 
following statistics and 
mates ; 
world's visible supply of 
Liver Pills 
Early this year Mr. 
chased from Mr. D. E. House the 
brick store in which Mr- Wiley 
Brown kept. He had another 
added building which 
with the largo it eon- 
makes it practically a three- 
story building. This building was 
equipped especially for a grocery 
and furniture business, and Mr 
moved in on July 15th. 
His new quarters are admirably 
adapted to his large business and 
we are satisfied he will go on 
meeting the success that has 
crowned his efforts hero during 
the past twenty years. He carries 
a complete stock and does a large 
business both and re- 
tail. He is also our largest ship 
per of country produce. 
When Mr. first came to 
Greenville in 1875 the motto of 
his business was sales and 
profits He made such a 
cut in the price of groceries as to 
produce almost a at 
the time, as e result 
for miles around and even from 
other counties flocked to his store 
recognizing him as the leader of 
low prices. He has always enjoy- 
ed the confidence of the people 
and is held in highest esteem in 
business circles. He is a roar of 
enterprise and 
a knowledge business seldom 
Ho is a believer 
now puzzling the officers whose and has always 
it is to execute the sentence- . -H. ht. 
been best 
Socially Mr. is one 
Mr- W. Z- Mitchell, of Bullock 
Mitchell, Oxford, N. C, came 
down Friday and will spend a 
few days on the market. 
Mr. J. W. Morgan buyer for 
the American Tobacco Co., is now 
occupying of Mr. O. Hook- 
new prize houses, just com- 
Winston's decrease in the ales 
of leaf tobacco this year accord- 
to the President of the Win 
Tobacco Association is 
pounds. 
Mr. G- P- Fleming, of 
ville, Va., came in Wednesday 
night and will locate on this mar- 
He is a very extensive buy- 
we are told. 
J- N- Gorman Co., continue 
to add improvements to their 
large prize house. It is the best 
equipped house here for hand- 
ling tobacco. 
Mu's. Geo- Thomas, of It ox 
W. L. Ferrell, of Durham, 
came in on Wednesday's train. 
We learn that Mr. Ferrell will lo- 
on this market. 
The most rapid selling of to- 
have heard of was done 
by Mr. B. T- Bailey, 
of the Eastern Warehouse, Fri- 
day- He sold piles in just 
one hour and fifty minutes. 
Mr. B- T- Bailey wife came 
u Tuesday night from 
ville, Va., are stopping at the 
College- Mr. Bailey will auction- 
for the Eastern Warehouse 
this year. 
The rains last week have 
damaged tobacco stand- 
on the hill, yesterday we 
noticed in fields tobacco 
firing up and getting diseased 
from bottom to top. 
We learn that tobacco 
barns were burned last week- Mr. 
J. W. Allen lost and learn 
that it was very good tobacco. It 
requires very to 
work around a tobacco 
the tobacco is process of cur- 
Mr. T- Hi- Hodges, of Beaufort, 
was up last week a load of 
bright tobacco. He says he has 
cured or will have cured this 
week barns this year. 
He is satisfied with his cures 
North Carolina 
and mechanic mi 
next session of this college will 
begin September Ml. Examinations at 
county reals first Saturday in August. 
Young desiring a technical 
cation at an low cost will do 
well to apply fur a to 
Q. 
Raleigh. N. C 
Secret of Beauty 
is health. The secret of health is 
the power to digest and 
a proper of food. 
This can never be done when 
the liver docs not act it's part. 
know this 
Liver Pills are an 
American cotton on first I lute cure for sick headache, 
will be about larger than sour stomach, malaria, 
September 1st last year, yet, .- .- 
. . J , constipation, torpid liver, piles, 
the excess the crop over last . ,. , . r , 
year is thus proving jaundice, bilious fever, bilious- 
the large consumption of it. The and kindred diseases, 
question of supply, so far us the 
next crop is concerned, is now 
the most important factor the 
cotton market usual, at this 
inasmuch as we are on the 
eve of the marketing of it, and 
estimates of its size, are from 
to 0.000,000. The pop- 
estimates at New Orleans, 
where the people are in touch 
with the producer, and more fa- 
with crop conditions of the 
Gulf States and Southwest 
the greater portion of the is 
are about or 
less than that of the cur- 
rent season- The crop of four 
years ago was and the 
following year and 
again, the crop of this year will 
exceed that of last year by 
thus establishing a 
for a crop next 
season two one quarter mil- 
lions less than the present 
From 1st to 28th, last 
year there came into sight, in 
round figures, bales, and 
for the five weeks following, to 
November or 
for the first sixty three days 
of the cotton season of 
Tho average in Sept- 
ember during the last fifteen 
years this was 
and for October, 1.541,333 
and 2.301,000, re- 
last year. The crops 
during that period from 
to 9.750,000. It is fair 
to estimate on account of the 
lateness of this crop, while last 
year it was early, that the move 
will ex- 
bales, or less 
than last year, and for the five 
weeks, to November it is 
reasonable to suppose the move- 
will not exceed or 
as the probable move- 
for the two months, against 
same period last year, 
while the average for September 
and October during the last 
teen years was 2-119,000- That 
there should not be a further loss 
of at least, during the 
ten mouths of the sea- 
son, no who investigates the 
mutter closely will a 
doubt about, we believe. 
As the loss the movement, it is 
beginning to be felt, will show it- 
self decidedly by the middle of 
September, or earlier, it is mob 
able world will 
more freely, anticipation of 
those expectations, and that 
higher prices Will be 
Female Institute, 
AT N. 
Will open 
Monday, Sept. 2nd, 
with a full Corps experienced teach- 
in all the Departments, Literary, 
Music and and 
also a thorough course- in Stenography 
F. 
GOVERNS every movement, every 
idea, every transaction at 
King Clothiers. It is the pulse 
the great business. Its vibrations are 
felt in every department, every aisle, 
and on every shelf. For even cent 
expended Frank Wilson returns full 
value. No discrimination is made be- 
tween the small purchaser or the great, 
the rich or the poor, the experienced 
or the inexperienced. All have the 
same advantages, and no one is given 
concession, commission or discount. 
I must make room for fall stock and 
will put prices down to a low notch so as 
to clean them out. My stock of Fine 
The 37th year under the same 
Will begin 
August 29th, 1895. 
With a lull Corps of teachers. Courses 
of Mathematics. 
and Chemistry, and a 
business course Including Stenography 
with Charges to suit 
the times. Send for 
Principal. 
must be cut down as I intend to have a beau- 
hue this hill and do not want to carry a 
suit over. In 
NOTICE. 
For the best 
Pound of Tobacco 
left at my 
Photograph Gallery 
before January 1st, 1886. will give a 
x Crayon Portrait 
For second pound I will give a 
Dozen Nice Cabinet Photographs free. 
For third best pound one year's sub- 
to This 
offer is made to the only. 
Three members of the Tobacco Hoard of 
Trade will act as Judges. 
R. Photographer. 
Greenville. X. C. August 1893. 
THEATRICALS AX 
Ill's s the wake. 
Editor 
Pleas- all m to write to you 
toil you of a I was walk- 
the other When 
the to just look 
at his watermelons we hauled 
the largest to the and 
weighed it and it tipped the 
at two a half pounds. 
Then he wanted me to see in his 
garden. He gave me his largest 
cabbage for dinner, which meas 
nearly two inches across, 
They were the Late Drumhead 
and he says are the finest he has 
ever raised, and he raised 
them for twenty years. He is a 
Democrat and an excellent 
don't judge his neigh- 
by what I have told yon of 
him. I also have a neighbor who 
has worn out several rabbit boxes 
catching tobacco worms. 
L. F- W. 
State Officers. 
The State Alliance, at Cary, 
elected following officers for 
the ensuring President, 
Dr. W. Thompson, of On- 
slow; Vice President, John 
ham, of Ridgway; Lecturer, J. T- 
B. Hoover, of W. S- 
Barnes,. of Raleigh, Secretary , 
Dr- V- N- Sewell, of Moore, Stew- 
ard; P. H. of Dur- 
ham, Chaplain; George T. Lane, 
of Doorkeeper; James 
E- Lyon, of Durham, Assistant 
Doorkeeper; A- D. K, of 
Rutherford, Sergeant T. 
Ivey, of Wake, Business Agent; 
says the most of it is very bright. Mu. 
bars evening, August 
the youth and beauty of 
assembled in 
The of 
has suit against 
spacious artistic parlors of 
i Wilson Ci. Lamb to witness 
the Company I 
to recover license fees for doing original interesting, 
in that State, for the beautiful attractive, 
year July 1st, 1895-1 and inspiring. 
Jas. M. of Lenoir, 
members of the Executive Com- 
Dr. J- E- Pearson, of 
delegate to the 
J. W- Denmark, of 
Wake, alternate to National 
The claims that if the 
legislature of Pennsylvania has 
passed any laws subjecting them 
to a fee for that it is an 
constitutional in that it conflicts 
with the Inter State Commerce 
Law- 
The Myers Tobacco 
Co., the largest ping 
establishment in the world, 
The Tobacco 
the National Cigarette Tobacco 
Co., have been in consultation in 
New York to adopt measures to 
head off The Tobacco 
Co., says the Journal. 
The war against The American 
Tobacco Company seems to be 
waging on all sides- The New 
Eng. Grocers Association some 
time ago refused to handle it 
goods any more and now the 
New York State Wholesale 
Association have joined 
hands with the New England- 
The cut throat competition that 
has been going on between The 
American Tobacco Co. and the 
plug manufacturers in the West 
we are afraid will result in good 
co no one- Tobacco that a short 
while ago sold for by The 
American Tobacco Co. and a 
similar brand for the same money 
by The Tobacco Co. 
is now on the markets at and 
Whenever one drops 
the other goes him one better 
and now they e selling their to- 
much below the cost of 
manufacturing it- What will be 
the result They can't continue 
at this rate very long and if they 
N. O. English, of Randolph, and the as it is at present 
they will be to get 
their raw goods cheaper. We 
hope these matters will be 
ed satisfactorily, and very soon, 
because there is no health mi 
All the beauty poetical in- 
that music art 
sculpture lends to an enchanted 
eye was presented in pantomimic 
grandeur. All the sentimentalism 
of the vicissitudes 
and marvelous development of 
art and the of a 
Perfect Wedded were ex- 
displayed in Na- 
vernacular. 
The with their 
varied ever changing hues 
were presented in living pictures 
that were indicative of the 
round of happiness, peace 
and joy and the whole 
with dread sorrow- 
Nor were the tragedians 
conscious that their audience 
a faculty for the ludicrous, 
thus they interpolated the 
with wit and humor to check 
the progress of a pathetic tear, 
and the twentieth century woman 
was alive and demanded all her 
rights, while the husband stooped 
in grace over the washtub in ha- 
animosity- 
Miss Delia Lamb's rendition of 
Flower touched the 
sympathies of the entire audience 
which gave vent to added 
and called forth again and 
again the elocutionist who favored 
them with a comic selection 
Old Mose counted the 
Miss Delia displayed great pro 
in that the rarest and 
noblest of the fine arts. 
The entitled 
was so well 
rendered that Virginia 
and Delia Lamb, Miss 
Messrs. and Herrick 
merit especial mention for their 
ability in the comedian's 
This, with a number of vocal 
and instrumental selections by 
the male orchestra and re- 
but not good by those 
who participated in tile perform 
closed long 
to be remembered evening set 
We Keep That Kind. 
Bear Ibis tact in mind w heft Stat 
for your 
FAIL ID TOR II. 
Our steak this season is complete in 
every and we can supply all 
your Want III
You simply lo COW to us for any- 
thing wanted. Our and 
will please you- 
In to telling the gOO 
lowest prices, we pay top of the 
and country pro- 
fur a liberal patronage 
in the we hope to have many 
from season. 
J. BRO. 
V. 
in 
Gents Furnishing Goods 
I have knocked the bottom clean out and will 
sell if you will conic and look. 
FRANK WILSON, 
THE KING CLOTHIER. 
Acts Like Magic 
If you have Catarrh, Rheumatism, 
tiny oilier p tin Gloria Oil, which you can 
get at Dr. will cure you. 
Truck Barrels, Pumps 
AnD 
All Kinds of Machinery. 
We have opened at 
the old 
Moore store and are 
prepared to furnish 
any kind of 
may want. 
Special attention given 
to putting down 
and repairing 
PUMPS. 
All kinds of Pipe 
work done and sat- 
guaranteed- 
Place your orders 
for Flues with 
I have rented the old Greenville Warehouse 
and and with Messrs. R. D. 
A. H. Critcher, under the firm name of Evans 
Co., will be in the warehouse business the com- 
season. We earnestly solicit your patronage 
With the best light in the State for showing your 
tobacco, polite and competent assistants, plenty 
of prize room, experience and ample means to 
successfully conduct the business. We know we 
can get as much for your tobacco as any house or 
market in the State. Give us a trial and we will 
try to please you. Respectfully, 
L. F. EVANS, Greenville, N. C. 
TOBACCO 
Flues are Now Ready for Delivery 
BY 
S. E. Fender Co. 
-X- 
greatly reduced. Same juice to 
Terms Cash. 
Opposite Drugstore. 
J. Andrews. 
Ft. 
1ST. C. 
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. 
KEGS NAILS, 
i Cars Flour. 
Meat. 
Hay, 
C. 
Lumber Wanted 
spiteful a this. t in honor of City 
a of it j 
will be made to 
Cut Accurately and Rap-1 
Idly on the 
FARQUHAR 
Variable Friction 
Feed Saw Mill 
irks. , 
reel, with , 
and Holler from lo 
Hone Power. 
For full 
A. B. FARQUHAR CO, Ho., 
YORK, PA. 
Sardines, 
II Bread Preparation. 
Soap. 
Star Lye. 
Boxes Cakes and Crackers. 
Stick Candy. 
Cases Matches, 
Gold Dust. 
Good Luck Baking Powder. 
Sacks Coffee. 
Molasses 
Tons Shot, 
Kegs Powder. 
Tubs Lard. 
Granulated Sugar,
M Gall Ax Snuff, 
R. B. Mills Snug. 
Three Thistle 
Tobacco, 
Dukes V. M. P. Cigarettes. 
Old Va. Cheroots, 
Cases Oysters, 
GREENVILLE, N. C 
AT THE COURT HOUSE. 
All Risks placed in strictly 
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES 
At lower current rates. 
M AGENT FOB PROOF
THESE SQUIBS 
It 
NORTH for 
about days 
big reduction 
in Clothing 
Dry Goods, 
Laces to make 
room for Fall 
Stock. Come 
and see for 
yourselves. 
Just Give You a Gist of News. 
R. Photographer, of- 
three prizes for tobacco. See 
notice- 
J. B- Cherry Co. in their new 
advertisement to-day call 
to various lines of 
good. 
Isaac a colored man 
who worked on the log got 
bis leg broke at the ankle, Fri- 
day afternoon, by a log rolling 
on him- He was brought to 
Greenville and given proper at- 
Be sure that you read the ad- 
of J- 0- Proctor 
Bro, of They will 
carry a splendid stock this season 
and sell at bottom prices. 
were only four marriage 
licenses issued in this county for 
the first seventeen days of 
August. Register of Deeds 
Kings explanation of the small 
number was that it has been too 
warm tor them- 
Mr. S. M. Daniel was a 
preliminary hearing before 
J- J. this 
under a warrant for slander and 
was bound over to Court 
in a 
Wilkinson Female Institute 
and Tarboro Male Academy are 
advertised in this issue- 
These are schools 
thorough in work- 
The is in receipt 
of a letter from Prof. Z- D. 
late of Bethel, stating 
that he and his family had 
ed safely their new borne in 
Ala. We are glad to 
learn that bright prospects 
for a good school there. He is 
among best of teachers and 
Pitt county regretted to lose him. 
Homicide in Greene. 
Information has reached here 
of a homicide that occurred in 
Greene county a few days ago, 
though particulars are very 
meaner All that our informant 
I could tell us was that a 
named John had 
I killed another man who come 
j from up the country to cure to 
The way ho heard the 
was that the two 
i men were barn to 
had a gun, that one 
of them was attempting to take 
the gun in the other when it 
D R i discharged killing
country mac 
Local Reflections. 
Dog days over we can 
look for busy days. 
a greater reduction in 
summer at Lang s. 
Mow about some factories 
Greenville must have them. 
It II ; i ; l mp 
he en Badly missing this 
Falkland Item. 
Falkland, X. C, Aug. 19th 
Mrs. B- R King and 
Goldsboro, are visiting the 
family of Capt- Jno. King. 
Mr. Floyd and sister, 
I of Wilson, returned home Thurs- 
day after a few days 
around Falkland. 
Lottie of 
fa visiting Mis- 
r Bedding Corbet, of Edge 
is his father, Mr. 
Ivy 
ti i M f farmers are very busy cat 
open if the kitchen be ; ting and curing tobacco. 
water
keep 
Add ice to toe 
in which rice is boiled to 
the grain separate. 
Toe force thanks 
Mr. Walter Leggett r two fine 
and a 
Bethel Item. 
N. C-. 1896- 
Mr. J. E Whitehurst lost a 
horse week. 
Mr. M. O- returned from 
Williamston I his morning. 
G- Lamb and son, 
of last Wed- 
in town. 
, , Rev- E Edwards assisted by 
white and j A conducted 
colored named was ,, meetings in the 
from me July Will last week, closing 
give reward f the I Sunday morning. 
dog. E. M to H 
j Davenport, who has been 
Mr. W. C ha for several weeks, is 
with Mr. J- A- to build a 
dwelling house for the latter j Master Andrew Moore, who has 
hf the P week 
is better able to be out- 
A remarked that if The and Bethel boys 
Greenville don't get some I it game of ball here to 
the fault will not be with I morrow evening- 
the Reflector. Mr. of Rich- 
Va , is visiting his father, 
Ii is the heavy of 
last few days will cause such 
overflows as to seriously 
low laud crops. 
A few day s ago struck 
set tire to the old plantation 
on the J. L. Ballard place, 
pine miles from town. It was 
entirely consumed. 
Two white men inflicted very 
cruel treatment to a balking 
horse as were going out of 
Thursday 
Tho Planters Warehouse, 
Forbes v proprietors wants 
pounds of and 
say they will have it if high 
es will bring it in have 
started the season by shoving 
prices to the top of the market, 
and if you want the best averages 
read their advertisement and act 
accordingly. 
M r. M- C S. Cherry. 
items 
More Facilities Needed. 
Our attention has been direct 
ed back to the communication 
Saturday's Reflector relative to 
more banking facilities being 
needed in Greenville, and the 
advanced that portions of 
it might be as a 
upon the bank the town 
ready has- In glancing over the 
communication when it was band- 
ed in we caught no 
from it, and we arc sure the 
author had no such spirit or in- 
tent in it. There is no 
question that the bank here has 
been a great to the town. It 
has given every encouragement 
to the tobacco market and is 
amply able to meet every demand 
that comes from that quarter. 
But Greenville is growing, and 
the needs and is going to 
have other enterprises than a 
tobacco market, and we take it 
that seeing this and knowing 
the advantages of banks to a town 
thought it an opportune time to 
establishment of 
facilities as will 
of par 
general business and to 
act as a stimulus to new enter-
X. C-, July 
Rev. C. Howard tilled his 
regular at Salem 
last Sunday. 
Miss Essie Brooks is visiting 
friends at Maple Cypress- 
Messrs- Robert Best and Ed 
of South Creek, spent 
Saturday with Dr. Best- 
Tobacco was badly damaged by 
rain last week- 
Mrs. George Moore, of Ga., is 
visiting in this county. 
Messrs. Bayard Nunn and 
Noble, of Lenoir county, 
spent part of the past week visit- 
friends and relatives in the 
city- 
Five of Dr. Best's horses ran 
a barbed wire fence last 
Thursday night and were badly 
cut- One of the best will 
not get well 
A Good Firm Go d Methods. 
While on the rounds for news 
we stopped for a chat with Mr- J. 
G- Move- He said can tell 
the people that J. B. Cherry Co- 
are at the old stand selling goods 
cheaper than Speaking 
about advertising its 
Mr- remarked 
will have to make a change 
in advertisement in the week- 
Reflector by next issue, as 
we have almost made a clean 
sweep of our fruit jars, lanterns, 
thermometers and tobacco knives. 
And we bad seventeen cases of 
fruit jars, too, with a correspond- 
large supply of other 
This reliable firm be- 
in the use of printer's ink, 
and it is a fact that never 
print a word in an advertisement 
but what an examination of their 
stock will show yon is 
Mr. James Galloway, one of the 
best men of the county, died at 
his borne near at an 
early hour this or Ding. Mr. 
Galloway years 
FOLKS ONLY. 
In These Items. Other News Else- 
where. 
Mr. Jesse returned Saturday 
from Norfolk. 
Dr. C. J. has returned home 
from Littleton. 
Mis Loraine has gone to Rocky 
Mount tor a visit. 
Mr. C. L. Whichard of 
been bar Monday. 
It. L. returned from 
Saturday. 
Mr. J. C. Tyson family are 
in the country. 
Mr. J. of Richmond was 
on the breaks Friday. 
Mrs. P. C. home Sat- 
from Chapel Hill. 
Stephens returned Tues- 
day from Dunn. 
Miss returned home Sat- 
from Rocky Mount. 
Mr. T. Smith. Jr. has taken a p i- 
with S. t,, 
Mr. K returned Wednesday 
evening from City. 
Presiding Elder G. A. left 
for Selma Monday morning. 
Miss of is 
Miss Nannie 
Mr. lee, of Wilson, has taken 
a with C. T. 
Mr. J. W. Wiggins returned from 
Rocky Mount Friday evening. 
Mr Joe Ross has taken a position at 
I. hardware store. 
Misses Olive Daniel 
have gone to for a visit. 
Mr. T. E. Hooker has returned from 
a visit to hi.- mother 
Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Rawls 
from Beaufort afternoon. 
Mr. T. H. Ty-on has taken a 
at W. Hardy s grocery store. 
Miss Ward is visiting 
Nannie Bagwell and Bailie 
Master Tail home 
from a visit relatives at 
M. Billings has gone to 
ville and Danville for a few days visit. 
Mr. K. J. left Monday morn jug 
goods his J. V. 
Sou. 
Mis Carrie of Kinston. it vi 
the family of Col I. A. Sugg near 
town. 
Mr. J. returned homo 
from a visit to Littleton and 
Cary. 
Miss Daisy of is 
rutting Mis Lizzie Peebles, at College 
Hotel 
Mr. C. T- of 
county, are visiting T. R. 
Moore. 
Mrs. and two 
of Wilson, are visiting Mrs. C. T. 
Mr K. A. Mosley, of 
Saturday night Sunday with Mr. 
W. Blown. 
Mrs J. A. and 10- 
home lay evening 
Mis. K. B. and little daughter 
returned hi in.- from Scotland N 
Friday evening. 
Mr. Frank Wilson has gone W 
markets to make his 
tall and winter. 
Misses Myrtle and Wilson 
u Friday evening from a visit to their 
in Conetoe. 
Miss 
home Friday from where she 
had been 
Fleming, of 
arrived Wednesday evening and will 
buy to on this market. 
Mr. B. left Monday morning 
Baltimore to be his 
the fall purchasing season. 
Susie V bite, of Hobgood, 
been Mi.-s 
n turned Saturday morning. 
S. I. family arrived 
Tuesday. They will occupy Mr. S. 
house on Pitt 
Mi.-s Rosa of Rocky Mount, 
who has been 
at King House, home 1- n- 
lay. 
Mr, M, Rising . ii for his 
purchasing tour, He says 
he is going to lead the style the 
season. 
Mr. E. A. returned Friday 
evening from Cary he had been 
attending the meeting of the State Alli- 
Rev. R. W. 
evening, and mid hold 
Services the church to- 
morrow. 
Mr. left Monday 
for Baltimore and New York to buy 
fall goods. He lie will 
gains back with him. 
Mr. S. V. King, of Falkland, is here 
assisting the a few 
weeks. September he will take a 
position 
Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Bailey returned 
evening from Va., 
and . ill again make this their home 
the tobacco season. 
Mr. B. S. Sheppard and Master 
left Friday for After 
a few days there will go to 
to re-enter 
Mr. J. O. Proctor, of the of J. 
O, took the 
train here , Monday for the northern 
markets to buy new goods. 
Capt George Hawks, our 
train conductor, is enjoying a well earn- 
ed vacation at Old Comfort. Capt. 
W. L. Jones is on the run in his place. 
Mr. J. R. Davenport, of 
the day in town. lie has just 
turned from the North, where he had 
been to purchase his fall and winter 
The family of Mr. E. R. 
of Star and wares 
houses. arrived from Durham 
evening. 
Prof W. F. Harding left Saturday 
for a few days at Chapel Hill and from 
there will go to to resume his 
position as Instructor in the Military 
that city. 
Mr. Andrews, J. C- 
paper house of Washington 
City, spent I and night 
here. The Reflect, k put in a nice 
order with him. 
Agent J. R Moore little 
Myra returned Friday evening from 
Wilmington and 
niece, Miss Annie of Burgaw, 
e.-me-w for a Visit here. 
The Reflector overlooked, of 
Tuesday evenings arrivals. Hi. 
NEARLY POUNDS. 
The Golden Was Here 
And Everybody W-s Happy. 
The Greenville tobacco 
went a Friday with one 
of the largest breaks the his 
of the market- At an early 
hour and carts full of 
weed coming in and 
were still arriving when sales 
started, swelling aggregate on 
four warehouse floors to near- 
The Greenville Warehouse start- 
ed the ball on the first sale with 
pounds- Evans 
was in one of finest humors 
and fairly shot in high prices 
the boys, making every seller at 
his happy- The old 
it a hummer. 
The Star came in for second 
sale With pounds, and CPl 
Pace's bald pate glistened 
silver as it bobbed and 
over the piles. kept a 
whooping up and Pat Gorman 
would cause no little fun when ho 
would whistle and yell 
down from there causing the 
spectators to stretch their necks 
towards the roof to see who he 
was down- 
The Planters pulled off the 
third sale with pounds 
Ola was all his glory 
cried himself hoarse making 
the boys run up. But ho got 
there great shape and every 
farmer smiled with joy over his 
prices. 
The Eastern rounded up 
the last best sale, having the 
enormous break of pounds 
the largest by pounds that 
has ever been any single floor 
here. Man was strict 
in it up to his neck, 
hardly time to shake 
the floods of perspiration bis 
auburn locks while shove the 
on and made them do. 
fancy bidding- 
It watt an all round break 
The tobacco was here 
buyers almost tumbled over each 
other after the bright piles. The i 
high prices on every floor was the j 
subject of general remark. It 
goes w saying that Green- 
ville is tobacco market of ; 
Eastern North Carolina. The j 
farmers are out 
they will bring their tobacco 
whom they get prices, j 
You just can't keep 
down. 
Reunion. 
officers of Bryan Grimes 
Camp of Pitt county Confederate 
Veterans have banded the II k- 
the following names j 
which compose dinner com-1 
for the reunion and picnic 
to In- held in the College grove, 
near Greenville, September 
5th. It is expected of this j 
that they all invite Con- j 
federate Veterans in 
five townships to be present, and 
that will also solicit baskets; 
provisions for the dinner. 
Beaver 
chief, . F. Allen. 
Bullock 
brother. 
L- Brown, M- A. 
James- 
Moore, W. 
H- , 
W. 
IV. Tucker. 
Pierce. 
Harrington. 
Forbes, J S 
Harris 
W. 
H- 
C Nobles, Eli 
Briley. 
P. Daniel. T. H- 
Langley- 
Swift II Cherry, 
Bryan 
The previously 
pointed to get a for tho 
occasion expect to be able to re 
port in a few days that they have 
secured one of ablest men in 
the State. reunion will be 
a great day for the old 
of Pitt. Let them all turn out. 
MORE 
A Opens Mr. 
Safe, 
From the learn that 
has been made 
to rob Mr- Joel Gardner, of Bel- 
township, one of weal- 
citizens of county. It 
is known that Mr- keeps 
large sums of money about his 
house, and robbers make effort to 
get it- A few years ago one of 
his barns was set on fire and 
his family were to 
put out robbers went 
in bis house and took a trunk 
that had money it 
it out of a window- About 
of what win stolen at that 
time was recovered, but much 
more was lost. 
After that robbery Mr. Gardner 
procured a of old look 
pattern since been 
hid money in that, and 
kept key a trunk. A 
days ago while the family were 
occupied the kitchen, a 
named Ned 
with Mr. Gardner and knew 
where bis money was, entered the 
got tho key from bot- 
tom of trunk, opened the safe 
was in act of taking out 
when Miss Alice 
walked the room. 
a window escaped, 
leaving a bag of gold a large 
roll of bills It is 
pot whether he got away 
with money. The was 
for three miles. Mr. 
Gardner has offered reward 
for his capture and delivery to 
the Sheriff. 
Simplicity of speech is sure to 
save us from many complications, 
He who talks little has seldom 
necessity of an ex 
pin nut Advocate. 
AT SCOT AND 
They a Great Big Time. 
The picnic at Scotland Neck 
was a success. 
There were Masons and Odd 
Fellows from Tarboro, Greenville, 
Hamilton and elsewhere, besides 
many who belonged to neither 
order. 
The weather was tine and the 
crowd was estimated from 
hundred to a thousand people. 
We saw a more inviting 
place for a picnic than Capt. 
Kitchen's Grove, where speak- 
stand with ample seats for the 
crowd, a large table supplied 
with everything to a 
man had been prepared- 
speakers the 00- 
are told, were 
ably absent, but Halifax county 
is beggar for She has 
speakers of her own Capt. 
H. Kitchen broad 
style had entertained us near an 
hour when dinner was 
ed. After bad all eaten, 
were filled, Whitaker 
Claude Kitchen both made short 
addresses which wore re 
by this social body. 
u to 
all the 
as they tho order. 
But to nu observer it seemed that 
every I joked and 
the chances wore good. If good 
r-1 t , f It , -oil 
good pretty 
girls a picnic, there was a 
It was our vi-U to Scot- 
laud Neck, but never saw 
people nor better behaved 
crowd. We note with that 
in all crowd there was 
ill ill km. j ; AI. 
REDUCTION 
Not in but in our entire lino of 
FIE CLOTHING, 
Dry Goods, Hats, Caps, 
for the next days to make room for our fall 
stock, as are coding in every day. 
We have I 
worth of 
We bought them old 
prices, since buying the manufacturer; have ad- 
the price per cent, we propose to 
give the people the benefit of our bargain, 
So that you can go home realizing that you 
bought your goods cheap for cash of 
C. T. 
You wall your 
i pun-. your 
With the st 
ilia. 
GROVES 
Mrs. Mary 
Iowa. 
Years 
Tenacious Chronic 
to Hoods 
year after 
my neck to swell. It did 
not give any the 
for many year. About ten years 
commenced to me and if I took 
cold I would have 
Terrible Choking Spell. 
Even my people thought my 
come. I read of a lady in 
Mich., who had been cured of by 
Immediately 
f-an to take this medicine, several 
My neck inches last 
against f f 
now. It is wonder W J 
and astonishment to 
my friend and neighbors, for I ill grow- 
worse tho time no one t 
t could live through the winter. All 
a cure Impossible I am 
Mas. Mart Fred-- 
lows. Take only 
fills headache. 
INVITE 
Your attention to our large and well selected 
------stock of------ 
GENERAL
CHILL 
Ii JUST FOR ADULTS. 
WARRANTED. PRICE 
Ills., Not. 1633. 
Bl. 
year, 
this In nil 
f In 
noT.-r an m 
CO- 
Hold A by J. 
MERCHANDISE 
in which can be found during all seasons many 
useful articles suitable personal use, 
household purposes, We are 
an effort to put the mar- 
this Fall and Winter the 
it on 
Miss Le 
had la poor health 
time- He 
,. of 
, .,. Bailey, 
ant I Ta; just five Old,. 
many 
to happy parents. 
One Shoots Another. 
Two small a bod of 
Mr. W- G- Webb and the other a 
son of Mr- Tom in 
township, were oat with a 
gun Wednesday afternoon- 
Webb had the gun, and while 
trying to shoot a bird accidental 
discharged it, the load striking 
the Hodges boy in the thigh 
a bad flesh wound- Gods are 
dangerous things lot little boys 
to have. 
Picnic- 
invitations are sent out 
for a picnic to be hold in Mr- 
Henry Brown's grove, near Ml- 
Pleasant church, on next Friday. 
The managers are J. B- 
J- F- Davenport, W- 8- 
Briley, B- A. J- 
R. D- W. J. Briley,. 
M. T. Spier, W- 8- R. W, 
Ward- Floor J B. 
and J- M- It 
is to be a 
take a lull 
of 
. be meeting of the 
comity at the 
on first In 
J o'clock M. for 
of electing a fit 
Health, and 
Tie Planters Titan 
WANTS 
Pounds of 
TOBACCO, 
we are going to have it if hard work and 
satisfactory prices will get it. 
Give us a trial and convinced that 
FORBES 
can and will 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, 
GREENVILLE, N. C. 
ever brought to tin's town. We arc sure that 
you will be well pleased with the goods and 
that we will offer you, and ask you to 
keep a lookout for the many attractions which 
I we oiler for your inspection. There is a light 
and a wrong way to do almost everything. The 
wrong way for you to trade is to buy without 
coming to see us to get our juices 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 
country, us as to prices and 
if we don't sell you the bill you want to 
buy then you will go out feeling that you are 
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 be full 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 see us, we expect to 
have any thing you may wish. 
Yours for Business, 
The Agricultural and Mechanical College for the 
Colored Race, at Greensboro, N. C. 
The Term will Wednesday, -ml, INS. 
will be made and October and 3rd. 
nation of county will be made In county examiner 
the first Saturday In next. 
l in Agriculture. Horticulture, the Me- 
eh Arts, the English mid of Mathematical, 
Natural and Economic Science, to their 
in the Industries of life. 
A number of will b.- for in, in to the regular 
course of study, will be given in Music, Sewing, Cooking and 
dry work. 
dry worK. 
This is endowed by tr i, i 
It i not and not controlled ox M J, 
I I 
I Neck Male School. 
only High Grade Hoarding School in Carolina 
Com. 
barrack, healthy MOTH of thorough- Only the 
eta Of patronage solicited- M. 
will show what education means for n boy Send for 
PRINCE Principals, 
Scotland Neck, N. C. 
In of the of the Military Academy Fay 
to the mime of this of learning will here, 
after lie known a Military Academy. The 
WEDNESDAY, I. With greater better 
mid and. if brighter prospects the school enters 
upon third with every of a much patronage and more 
The MOM given in and com- 
bran, lies; and moral culture and physical training due attention- 
The Third Annual Announcement, full will be mailed to 
any address upon 
Mai. J. W. Supt., 
Wilson, 
Tuition, par 
Board, per week 
f use of room, bedding, . pet n 
n i 
hi h em I e h by in he 
Colored 
N. C. , . , t , 
University of 
, University, Col- 
the law Medical Schools and 
the Summer School for Teachers, 
M Teachers, 
Andre Winston 
Hill, N. 
book on . 
. 
WALL PAPER. 
I have removed my Wall Per to 
to the Marcellus Moore and 
added a lot of new samples, 
Come before the are 
selected. The beat opportunity yon 
ever had to beauty house at 
a cost. as low as 
three cents a roll of 
.,. B. ELLINGTON,
Exhausted Soils 
are made to produce larger and better crops by the 
use of Fertilizers rich in Potash. 
Write for our a 142-page illustrated book. It 
is brim full of useful information for farmers. It will be sent free, and 
will make and save you money. Address, 
GERMAN KALI WORKS, Nassau New York. 
ESTABLISHED 1875. 
PORK 
BLACK ROSES. 
The Unique Production of German 
Gardener. 
We learn, on good authority 
a certain gardener has 
at last in producing a 
black black as as 
declares. it-ls 
THE CAMPAIGN 
A Story from the Po 1- 
the Day. 
Told 
chasing elsewhere. 
n all its branches. 
FLOUR, COFFEE, 
RICE, 
always Lowest Market Tricks. 
TOBACCO 
we buy direct from en a 
you to buy at one profit. A com 
stock of 
FURNITURE 
always unhand prices to rum 
times. Out goods bought and 
sold for having no risk 
to sell at a close margin 
S. M. 
.-. 
though 
ago by a member 
of his fraternity. Science, we sup- 
pose, makes every experiment worth 
while, otherwise, one would be 
tempted to question whether the re- 
were worth the trouble taken, 
as a black rose certainly cannot, 
from a purely Philistine point 
view, be considered as beautiful as a 
pink or yellow one. Moreover, the 
good man is a trifle behind 
times, since the artificial flower 
makers succeeded In making all 
thoroughly tired of black roses quite 
a ago. It is to be 
hoped erase for unnaturally 
colored will not spread, 
otherwise we gee black lilies, 
like those In the mosaic pavement of 
Santa Maria de in 
and what a misfortune that would 
Queer Pool Playing. 
are many ways of playing 
cool, but the queerest way ever 
saw the game played was at the 
Louisville hotel the other 
said a rounder. was a young 
man, was the admired of every 
pool player in the room. 
played with two cues, but 
never struck a ball with his cue- He 
held a cue in each hand, with the 
points touching. He picked his cue 
j ball up with the rolled it 
back into the groove formed by hold- 
the cues nearly together. 
. , , . he took aim, and slanting 
Wire and Iron Fencing, cues down let the cue bail shoot 
FirSt-ClaSS down the improvised groove. He 
running from five to 
and prices reasonable. ten very to 
shoot Courier 
J. C. LAMER GO. 
GREENVILLE, N. C 
--------DEALER 
MARBLE. 
WILMINGTON WELDON R. B 
AND BRANCHES. 
AND FLORENCE RAIL RoAD. 
Condensed Schedule. 
TRAINS SOUTH. 
Dated 
July 5th 
Leave Weldon 
Ar. Mt 
o s 
A. M. 
SI 
VI 
Tarboro
II 
Beck Mi 
Wilson 
Ar. Florence 
Wilton 
Goldsboro 
Magnolia 
Ar Wilmington 
lo 
A. M 
Ran Away a White Woman. 
A correspondent informs 
Raleigh Press that Rev. 
son colored, whose homo is 
in Halifax county, but who 
lately been engaged in mission 
work in Pennsylvania, has run 
away with the of a white man 
j op there, notwithstanding that be 
I has a family of his own. The 
truants been captured- 
IS 
O a 
H. 
P.
A. M 
College Hotel 
GAY, 
to depot and to Ac lo-
and 
I mineral 
Room Table 
j supplied b a 
fords. 
Terms reasonable. 
TRAINS mm 
Dated 
July 
ii
A. M.
Ar 
Wilmington 
Magnolia 
Goldsboro 
Wilson 
V Q 
M. 
2.1 
c a 
P. M.
O r. 
x a 
Wilson Ar Rocky 
Ar Tarboro 
Tarboro 
Rocky Mt 
Ar Weldon 
48- 
P. M,
Train on Scotland Neck branch 
Weldon 3.40 p. in., Halifax 4.00 
p. arrives Scotland Neck at 4.55 p 
., Greenville 6.37 p. m., Kinston 7.35 
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving 
Halifax at a. m., Weldon 11.20 am 
except 
Trains on leave 
Washington 7.00 a. m., arrives Parmele 
8.40 p. m. Tarboro 0.50; returning 
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., Parmele 
p. in,, arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. 
Daily except Sunday. Connects with 
trains on Neck Branch. 
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via 
A Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- 
day, at p. m. Sunday 
arrive Plymouth 9.20 P. M., 5.20 p. m. 
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except 
Sunday, 8.30 a. m., Sunday 0.30 a m., 
arrive Tarboro 10.25 and 
a. m. 
Train on N C Branch leave 
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, 6.50 
m. riving a. in. R 
i leaves a. 
arrive Goldsboro. a. m. 
Trains on Nashville leaves 
Mount at 4.30 p. arrive 
Nashville I p. in-. Spring Hope 5.30. 
Returning leaves Spring Hope 
a. m. Nashville 8.35 a. arrives 
t Rocky Mount except 
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence K. 
R. 6.50 p. in., arrive Dun- 
bar p. in. Returning Dun- 
bar 6.30 a. m. arrive 8.00 a. m., 
Daily except 
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War- 
saw for Clinton daily, except Sunday. 
at 10.00 a. in. Returning leave 
at 
mail 
JOHN F. DIVINE, 
l Supt 
T. M. Traffic Manage . 
J. R. KENLY, Manager, 
This 
You every day 
in the month of 
August that 
you have 
your Printing done 
at the 
REFLECTOR 
JOB OFFICE. 
It will be done fight, 
It will be done m style 
and it always suits. 
These points arc 
well worth weighing 
in any sort 
of work, 
above all things in 
Your Job Printing. 
Ship produce to 
J C. Jr., Co. 
Factors 
One Prominent Public Man Make a Con. 
That with All 
Be Pot Into the 
Month of Another. 
Aid I get Into 
asked a prominent public man, re- 
the question which, accord- 
to the Youth's Companion, an 
old friend had put to him. 
tell you in a few words. It was by 
adapting myself to existing 
was young, ambitious and 
continued the great man. 
nomination, which nobody 
seemed to want, since it involved 
what was apparently a hopeless 
for election, came in my way. 
obtained it, I went to 
a political 
thanked him for his 
friendly services. He inquired if I 
had any money to use for campaign 
purposes I told him I had none. 
After a moment's reflection he said 
that he would have to raise the 
money in his own way. 
ran over rapidly a list of 
corporations which were dependent 
upon state legislation, checked 
them off. It was too soon to strike 
this one again, for it had boon 
heavily drawn upon during the 
year. Another could not be 
touched, for it had no favors lo ask 
at the capital, and was temporarily 
out of politics. Another had been 
levied upon by both parties in the 
last presidential canvass, and could 
not be approached. There was, 
however, one corporation which. 
would require protection from ad- 
verse legislation. Would ten thou- 
sand dollars be enough for election 
purposes well, he would 
manage It. 
five continued the 
rising statesman, boss 
sent me the money. I made a vigor- 
canvass and was elected. The 
money was used legitimately for 
hiring public halls, printing 
and sending ballots to voters. 
got politics, I made 
the most of my I now 
have Influential friends, and have no 
need to take financial aid from any- 
body. But that pas the only method 
by which I could have an 
entry into public 
is a true story. While names, 
localities and political associations 
are suppressed, it has so many direct 
applications that a good many public 
men of both parties may be justified 
in thinking that somebody has told 
it at their expense. It is a parable 
of the politics of the day, and illus- 
the effects 
campaign funds raised by what was 
virtually blackmail. 
The candidate made his start 
public life through the willingness of 
a corporation to pay to a 
political leader for a guarantee of 
immunity from legislation at the 
The sold pub- 
law m advance, and mortgaged 
the convictions of incoming leg- 
By the profits that 
transaction, and through the 
ices Of a corruption broker, the 
rising young politician was enabled 
to pay his election expenses and to 
get into office. 
These are among the worst evils of 
American politics to-day. Public 
conscience ought to be aroused 
against them. An immoral begin- 
in political life by a young 
degradation, the debasing effects 
of which years may efface. 
Money in Trifles. 
Ope has that more 
has been made of ingenious trifles 
than out of some of the most 
Inventions of the age. A great 
and expensive or article can 
be purchased by only 
few, but the five-cent 
novelties, the little trifles,, the 
needles and pins and things, every- 
body wants, is able to buy, must 
have. Even such an insignificant 
article as a toothpick suggests the 
investment of a vast army of labor- 
Some exceedingly fine 
are used in the manufacture of 
these little splinters; and the money 
invested runs well up into millions. 
Toothpicks are used for many 
poses besides the one that gives 
them their name. They are 
able to the florist, and have their 
place in a great many household per- 
As little skewers for 
boiled and stuffed and as 
to tie up broken plants, they 
are useful, indeed, indispensable, 
nothing seeming to so well, 
The day of small things is far from 
being despised, and there are com- 
representing large capital 
that are constantly on the 
for trifling inventions from which 
they may receive large sums either 
by purchase and manufacture or by 
putting them on the market and 
paying royalty. The latter item, 
however small, foots up a very con- 
aggregate to the inventor, 
and there are hundreds of people In 
this country who are living hand- 
on the regular income de- 
rived from some of these children 
i heir Y. Ledger. 
A NEW fog. 
How the Time of B 
in the Dark. 
time is 
think I can tell you without 
looking 
He drew out his says the 
Boston Traveler, and it up 
close to his ear and turned 
the stem-winder. 
two, three, five, six, 
seven, he end then 
he means seventy-two 
minutes. I wound the watch up 
tightly at three and so the 
time ought to be about twelve min- 
past four. Let us see how near 
I came to it. Well, it's four eight- 
I was only six minutes 
The other was regarding with 
amazement. you mean to 
that you can tell the time of by 
winding up 
but I can come very 
near it; usually within ten minutes; 
and it's quite simple, All you 
have to if now is how long one tick 
in winding up will run the watch. 
I'll explain to that at 
o'clock I 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 sticks. Then 
you know that twelve clicks will run 
the watch one hundred and twenty 
and that one click 
ten minutes of 
good is it to know 
suppose you go to bed at 
eleven o'clock to-night, on re- 
tiring wind up your watch and put 
It your tho 
night you wake up and wonder what 
You don't want to get up 
and light the gas. All have to 
do is to pull that watch out from 
under your pillow, hold it to your 
ear and count the ticks us you wind. 
ft you count eighteen, then you 
know that the watch has run down 
one hundred and eighty minutes 
since and that the 
time must be very near two o'clock. 
To he sure, you can't tell tho exact 
time, but you can generally get 
a quarter of an hour of 
tail same rule hold 
good for a clock or watch which s 
wound with a 
dare say it would, but I have 
never tried it on except a 
stem-winding watch. I know a 
blind man who always tells time by 
winding his watch and counting the 
ticks. His sense of touch is 
delicate, and he can wind up his 
watch three or four times a day and 
then calculate within ten minutes of 
the correct 
FORTUNES. 
Banks Holding Vast Plies of 
claimed Wealth. 
LINEN FOR 
on Board the Great 
Laundries 
Transatlantic Steamers. 
There are nu laundries on board 
ship; they take up too much room. 
So the chief steward lays in thou- 
pillow-slips, sheets and 
towels. 
These come on board, says 
Philadelphia Record, tied up in 
bales of 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 
run through it and keep it hot. 
There is no danger of linen get- 
ting mildewed there. The linen 
which has been used is thrown into 
another room, provided with 
same, atmosphere so kept 
thoroughly dry. 
Where there ire- clean 
J every chaoses state- 
Voted n 
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 
eight 
and about one 
thousand S 
find their way to the soiled 
locker in the course of the voyage. 
When the vessel arrives they are 
carted off to a laundry.
Warsaw with t 
in line trains m 
VA. 
Personal given to 
and Count. 
Is Rabbit a Coward 
Cowardice depends 
upon the way things are 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 does 
run from a 
you think the rabbit is a cow- 
ard, 
of 
let us a 
Suppose you were about six or eight 
inches 
had good; strong, swift 
didn't have any gun, a 
big fellow came after you 
ho did have one. What would yo 
What should do I 
it like 
f think you would. And I 
also, that you would have your own 
ideas as to who was the 
Chicago lames-Herald.
thousand 
An Deposit Fifty 
Dollars and Immediately Forgets All 
It Other of 
Mature. 
To say that there must be at 
least lying in London 
banks which has been forgotten, or 
is awaiting claims from relatives, is 
no exaggeration at all, said a bank 
manager to a representative of 
Tit-Bits the other day. If an in-1 
could be made, he went 
on, it would most likely be found 
that this unclaimed sum was nearer 
than 
A most curious case was that of a 
wealthy in, 
street, whose forgetfulness was a 
byword. Ten years ago ho placed 
in his bank, to his 
count, and immediately forgot oil 
about neglected up 
the counterfoil in his deposit book. 
A few months ago, while tearing 
up some old papers, he came across 
a penciled note bearing the 
and a date which 
he was unable to decipher. He made 
Inquiries into the matter, and found 
that be was wealthier than he 
thought by with interest. 
How he overlooked the amount it is 
difficult to say. He is still noted 
for the haphazard way in which he 
keeps his private accounts. 
The old woman who forgot the ex- 
of a legacy of a year 
from her master was another in- 
stance of carelessness. Here th 
old lady, a one-time housekeeper, 
hardly read or write. When 
she received a letter from her late 
master's solicitors to the effect that 
the legacy would be paid quarterly 
on application at a city bank the 
lucky woman tot a fortnight was 
none the wiser. 
The important look of the seal on 
the envelope and the fine note paper 
caused her to make inquiries, and a 
friendly neighbor, after much effort, 
spelled the letter. The 
old lady, who was In poor 
stances, could not believe the good 
news, and so, without going to the 
bank, she decided the letter was 
Five years passed away, when her 
China's Trade Statistics. 
China's foreign trade in 1894 
amounted to 290,207.433 as 
compared with in 
1893, and in 1802, ac- 
cording to the recently published 
report of the Chinese maritime 
toms, the exchange value of a 
varying from cents to 
during the year. The imports were 
and the exports 
A smaller quantity of 
opium was imported than in any of 
the last years, but Its value 
was higher. The chief causes of dis- 
apart from the change in 
the value of silver, were the serious 
drought in the south during tho 
spring and the plague in Hong Kong, 
the war with Japan having had no 
effect till this year. One hundred 
and thirty-three million of the 
trade was with Hong Kong, with 
Great Britain direct, with the 
United States, with the rest of 
Europe, except Russia, with 
India and with Japan. Wool is 
becoming an important staple of ex- 
port, while gold In bars ranked next 
to tea and silk. government's 
revenue from customs was 
Philadelphia Record. 
of skilled 
rink v. 
L i 
bats, bas 
id mitts, i 
arc 
i- . 
ball
;. ; 
nets, racket presses, boxing gloves, footballs, 
football suits, football and shoes, gymnasium 
supplies, sweaters, etc. We guarantee better goods for 
money than asked by other If your 
dealer does not keep Victor Athletic Goods, write for 
illustrated 
our 
A Seeming; Inconsistency. 
Some years since, Dr.------, now 
the popular president of a flourish- 
western college, was tho pastor 
of a congregation in an eastern city. 
He was one day preaching with great 
earnestness and, in defining his 
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 
th reformation. 
Convincing Proof. 
There is plenty of evidence already 
that during tho long cold winter 
The Jersey Mosquito. 
In the town of N. J., 
which lies in a low, hot nook, 
rounded by swampy the mos-j 
have been so thick this 
season that, when the breeze is 
they form a thick black cloud 
over the town. On several 
of late this has been so noticeable 
that the hens have gone to roost at 
noon, under the impression that is thought to combine great 
was already nightfall, and without 
performing their daily task of egg- 
laying. As the poultry business is a 
leading one in the town, fanciers 
suffered for a time considerable 
financial loss, until the device was 
hit upon of sending up small 
mite cartridges among thickest 
swarms of mosquitoes, by means of 
a kite flown by a wire, which, at the 
right moment, conveys a current of 
electricity discharge the morning. While walking along the 
mite. After a few discharges the 
air is o cleared that the hens can 
resume operations, and the gory 
remains of the dead mosquitoes, 
falling to the ground, plowed as 
fertilizers N. Y. Recorder. 
CYCLE SLANG. 
Much Inelegant English Due to the 
Wheel Craze. 
What a lot of slang verbiage has 
grown up out of the bicycle. The 
youth who talks boastfully and 
is called down by the apt 
suggestion of the bicycle young 
woman with the 
your lamp is The 
is borrowed from old New England 
nomenclature, but is of 
the bicycle's own lingo, and 
an undue haste in driving a wheel. 
exhausted bicyclist on the road 
and needing refreshments, 
stop here and pump re- 
to fagged condition of 
the pneumatic. Bicycle girls are 
and comes my 
Is equivalent to 
comes my A policeman is 
and the cyclometer Is 
lost his I 
to tacks 
oft 
and no doubt there more 
of the Journal. 
entire 
be possible to use 
any support, and experiments are 
being made on roofing with this 
glass, which, put up in arch shape, 
will, It is hoped, be sufficiently 
strong to answer all purposes with- 
out the wood or iron frames 
used in such buildings. Houses 
of this material are said to be heated 
at much less cost than those made 
after other methods. The light 
comes through the bricks, ard ex- 
windows are not necessary. Tho 
only from j months not a single fly got frozen or 
India. One day he accidentally Journal 
came across the letter, read and 
asked his old mother the particulars. 
But her mind was a complete blank 
on the However, the son 
made inquiries, and the result was 
that his mother and he 
awaiting them at the bank and the 
promise of a year during the 
forgetful lady's lifetime. 
Old misers who have amassed 
small fortunes have more than once 
destroyed their bank books and all 
evidence showing they were 
and In this war 
wen-Known Danit once to 
the extent of None of the 
relatives of the old man knew of 
Vis fortune, and such things are 
never the concern of the bank. 
The money was kept In the de- 
name for five years, when 
it passed into the bank's own ac- 
count. No doubt, If a claimant 
came they would give the 
money but they would probably 
fiercely fight the case If the evidence 
on the other Bide, showed any weak 
loopholes. 
At present Is money in 
banks in metropolis 
which never will be claimed, for 
naturally a is not inclined to 
to finding right- 
for, 
ward of their own account. 
Bricks. 
Hollow bricks of glass are being 
used in the construction of th walls 
of winter gardens and plant houses. 
They are so set that the hollows are 
filled with rarefied air, which is a 
non-conductor of heat. The bricks 
a cement that unites the 
It Is thought to 
re mass. 
in 
Poor 
Health 
means so much more than 
and 
fatal diseases result from 
trifling ailments neglected. 
Don't play with Nature's 
greatest 
If you are feeling 
out of sorts, weak 
and generally 
nervous, 
have no appetite 
and can't work, 
begin 
the most 
strengthening 
is 
Brown's Iron Bit- 
A few hot- 
ties 
comes from the 
very first dose-ft 
won't four J 
teeth, and 
pleasant to take. 
It Cures 
Kidney and Liver 
Neuralgia, Troubles, 
Constipation, Bad Blood 
Malaria, Nervous ailments 
Women's complaints. 
Get only the genuine it has crossed red 
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub- 
On receipt of two stamps we 
will send set of Ten Beautiful World's 
and 
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, 
i u m
BOSTON, 
R. J. 
Pitt Co., X. C. 
OVERMAN WHEEL CO, 
Makers of Victor 
CHICAGO
PACIFIC 
Los 
r a 
C. J. Col, 
Co., X. ;. 
Skinner, 
Co. 
COBB BROS fit CO, 
cone factors. 
------AND 
Commission Merchants 
FAYETTE STREET NORFOLK, VA 
and Solicited. 
OLD 
--------IS STILL AT THE WITH A I INK 
FORTY TEARS has taught that be i- ,. 
Farming even 
for and 
Shoe. Ll-c Goods I bays 
qua i 
Cotton 
fur Heavy Groceries, fobbing agent 
mm keep courteous mil attentive clerk . 
on hand, 
Clark-.- O. X. 
A hi head 
T. Sn 
FORBES, 
GREENVILLE. N. C. 
OLD DOMINION LINE. 
strength and economy, and if it ft 
success will almost revolutionize the 
of plant 
or Mastodons on Puget Sound. 
Another relic of the 
elephant, of which island 
seems to been a favorite feed- 
ground In past geologic ages, 
was found by E. O. Lovejoy on the 
north side of Penn's cove the other 
beach near the no- 
protruding from the. bank 
what appeared to be large bone. 
J- By digging be found that it was a 
huge tusk, front which a set of 
balls six or more inches in 
diameter could have been carved. 
He dug out a section two and a half 
feet in length. Upon exposure to 
the air It soon lost its bony appear- 
and crumbled away. The 
strata of island have 
been known to be rich in fossil re- 
mains, especially ii those of the 
mastodon or prehistoric elephant, 
numerous traces of which have been 
uncovered by the crumbling of 
along the 
King of 
West, King of 
Is an autograph creating a good deal 
of speculation at the Parker house 
just now. Persons having but 
geographical knowledge of Uncle 
Sam's domain are ignorant of the 
whereabouts of of in 
state, yet that is 
where that little town is located, 
Mr. West royalty's 
nor has he any claim of relationship 
to his royal highness of Prussia. His 
sf above no- 
many 
to Creditors. 
. , . it the 
duly . 
Court of Pitt county a t- 
if the Last Will and Testament 
of Warren Tucker, deceased, notice is 
hereby given all Indebted to 
the to make Immediate payment 
to the undersigned, and all persona 
having claims against estate most 
present same for payment on or before 
the day of June, 1809, or no- 
will be plead in bar of recovery. 
This day of 1805. 
E. 
Executrix of Warren Tucker. 
TAR RIVER SERVICE 
Steamers Washington for Green 
and Tarboro touching at all land 
Inga on Tar River Monday. Wednesday 
and Friday at A. M. 
leave Tarboro at A. If. 
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays 
Greenville days, 
These departures are subject lo 
of on Tar River. 
with steam- 
of The Norfolk, and Wash- 
direct line for Norfolk, Baltimore 
Philadelphia. New York and Bo-ton. 
Shippers 
marked via Dominion 
New York. 
Norfolk Haiti. 
more Steamboat 
more. 
Boston. 
son. Agent, 
Washington X. 
. J. CHERRY, Agent, 
a-f n . 
GREENVILLE 
Male Academy. 
SHIP 
Estate 
and 
Rental 
Agent. 
Homes Slid lot- for Rent or for sale 
term easy. Rent-. Taxes. Insurance 
and open and any other 
of debt in my hands for 
have prompt attention. 
Satisfaction guaranteed. I solicit 
patronage. 
TONSORIAL PARLORS 
Under Opera House, 
GREENVILLE, 
Cull when you it 
work 
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOB 
will Mil them QUICK 
We will CHEAP 
We will fill them WELL 
Heart Framing, 
Bough Sap Framing, ; 
Sap Indies 
Rough Sap Boards, IS 
-o- 
next session of this S 
begin on 
will 
I, SEPT., 
CHRISTIAN'S 
OINTMENT 
TRADE 
MARK 
h the Cure all Skin Sises. 
Preparation has In use over 
fifty and wherever know has 
been in steady demand. has been en- 
by the over 
cures where 
all other i with the attention of 
the most experienced have 
for years failed. This Ointment is of 
standing and lie high reputation 
which it has obtained h owing entirely 
its own as but little effort ha 
ever been made to bring it before the 
One bottle of this Ointment will 
b sent to any address on receipt of One 
Dollar. All Cash Orders promptly at- 
tended to. Address nil orders and 
communications to 
T. F. CHRISTMAN, 
Greenville. X. C 
PATENTS 
Marks obtained and an H 
U. S. 
and we can secure patent Um 
remote from 
Send model, drawing or photo with 
W advise, if or not, free of 
Oar fee till patent is 
A How to Obtain 
coat of same in U. S. and foreign countries 
sent tree. Address, 
and continue for ten months. 
embraces all the branches 
usually taught In an Academy. 
Terms, both for tuition and board 
reasonable. . . 
wed lilted and equipped 
by taking tho academic 
course alone. they wish to 
pursue a higher course, this 
guarantees thorough preparation to 
enter, credit, any College In North 
Carolina, or the State University. It 
refers to who have recently left 
its walls for the of this 
statement. 
Any young man with character and 
moderate ability Inking a course with 
us will be aided In making arrange- 
to continue in the higher 
The discipline will be kept at it 
present standard. 
Neither time nor attention nor 
work will be this school 
all that parents could 
Scud In your boys on the first day, 
For further see 
dress 
W. II. 
July to, 
Wall SO days for our Planing Mill and 
we will you Dressed Lumber 
as 
Wind delivered your door for 
cents a load. 
j Terms cash. 
Thanking you for past patronage, 
N, C 
NORTH 
R. R. TIME K. 
in 
GOING 
Pa H. 
Sun. 
STATION'S 
Sim. 
Ar. I 
P. M 
I I SO 
; Nil 
f a it. 
m. 
Kinston 
A. M. 
S i 
UP HOME 
patronizing Home Enterprise. 
Cheroot Go., 
of DURHAM, N. C, 
Arc as line Cigars, Che- 
roots and as can be found on 
the market. Their leading brands arc 
OF 
a dime cigar for a hand made. 
Havana filled. 
a very Nicki e Cigar, 
Wrapper, Havana hand mad 
in honor of Col. Buck Black 
well. 
a fine five cent Sumatra Wrapper 
hand made, Havana filled, a sure win- 
Named in honor of Col. J. 
Carr, of Durham To- 
Co. 
Ten cents. 
OLD CHUNK 
Five for The finest smoke for 
the money. 
NORTH STATE 
Three for cents, a hummer that 
ways pleases. 
Stick to home and send us your or- 
Special brands put up when de- 
sired. Address 
CHEROOT CO. 
Train connects with 
Weldon train bound North, 
Gobi 
trail
with BAR. 
In West, leaving 
Charlotte 
OBSERVER, 
North Carolina's 
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER 
DAILY 
WEEKLY. 
Independent f. ; bigger and 
more attractive than ever it will be m. 
invaluable visitor to home, the 
office, the club or the work room. 
THE DAILY OBSERVER. 
All of news of the world. Com- 
Dally reports from the 
and Capitols. a 
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. 
A perfect family journal. All the 
news of the week. The reports 
from Legislature a special. 
Remember the Ob- 
server. 
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. 
Send for sample copies, Address 
THE OBSERVER, 
 
         
                ![Workers at Reflector office (8 Negatives) 1959, undated [Sleeve 33, Folder e, Box 19]](https://iiif.lib.ecu.edu/cantaloupe/iiif/2/00028103_0001.jp2/full/!225,225/0/default.jpg) 
                     
                    