Eastern reflector, 9 March 1892






a,
I Job i
That can be surpassed no j
where in this Motion.
Our work always gives
faction. S
God tam
Ban Material i
I SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
GIVEN
Si THE OS AT WEEKLY,
Ten thousand will be
this year by The
published at Ga.,
This has already the
largest circulation of am weekly
paper in the United Slates,
and. with one exception, m the
largest in It i-.
foremost. N
week the full news of ail the world, and
devoted especially to the
of the tOOth. Its circulation now ex-
and it is pushing for
Sample conies will I sent on
application.
Five thousand dollars will lie divided
among it- between now and
July let. and between then and
the end of the year.
The division will he Meal the
result of tin- r conventions of
the two great parties in June, and tie
on the result of the
election
The national democratic
meets at Chicago Jane Slat.
The national republican
meets Minneapolis June
Both will nominate a
vice
the
Twenty five dollars in gold
will be given Tun to
the successful the
Who will lie the of each
party for president and vice president V
An person selecting the names
thug these n will be entitled to the
prize of c ah, and If, chance. More
than one answers the prise
will he divided accordingly
a Second
Five hundred in cash will
among th-e
only three oat the four mines to
thus chosen as pan. standard
th-it the goes may prophesy wrong a-
to one of the four and getting
will cone in for this prise.
How MO Prig--
In addition to the above in I
more will in
prizes, consisting of twenty-live silver
.-ill value which is
an it and Ml cope s
W -I st.
edition, fully illustrated and consist-
of
The watches will he given to
every hundredth ballot of the Brat
d. silver watches to the next
series of hundredth ballots, and after
will one
Of Webster's Met
s.
All h be by one
year's s in v I
I ill I most lie writ
ten oil a of
cm ; sub lion.
The of any of I he prise
n will give i i free at
the after July
1st costs and
or in You
will cert
u I in
one year hi . t ere will never a v.
when a will . more
than on
nil co Tun
Atlanta,
The Eastern Reflector.
VOL.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter.
First Sunday, morning and nigh,
Second Sunday miming at Ant inch
night before.
Third and fourth at
and night, also
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday
services each week.
Services at school on
Tarboro road on Thurs night
each third until April and then
on third Sunday evening.
WAS STILL MY
Well yes. I was a r;
I I the war was done.
Our out but tell
in -sixty-one.
It was my tun. o i picket
O e night in June,
The was foil
My heart had caught its tune.
White in the moonlight
to a i fro.
To mother the dear old home.
To father and brother Joe.
Our parents died, we were ten years old
Twin brothers. Joe me.
A down farmer look ho
Joe went to Tennessee.
years had I. we ha I never
But somehow that summer night.
With its shining moon, brought Mi face
again
So plainly to my sight.
I heard a step. who goes
The moon anon bright as day.
And through the bushes saw a man
And he wore a of gray.
I -aw his
And quiCKer loan L can lull
Hash a shot and
The w I rebel fell.
was by him ill . mo
To stop die red
I'll it r- ma Joe
you to
Well fib ill i y be -o.
But in nine or her H
He my Joe.
What to Teach a Daughter.
Home Journal.
Teach her that not only must she
love her father and mother, but
honor word and deed.
That work is worthy always
en it is well done.
That the value of w is just
the it will do life, but that
she ought to know appreciate
this value.
That the man who wishes to
marry her is the who tells her
so is willing to work for her.
and not the one who whispers silly
love speeches and i; men
cease to be men when they have
life.
That her best is always ;
her mother, and that in-1
her in her pleasures i
joys us you do.
Teach her to who i
speak lightly of any of the great
duties of life, who show in their
that their habits are
bad.
Teach her that her own room is
her that to make it sweet
attractive is a duty as well as
a pleasure.
Teach her that if she can sing or
read or draw, or give pleasure in
any way by her
she is selfish if she
does not do this gladly-
Teach her to be a woman self-
respecting, honest,
id. an you will have a
daughter who will be a pleasure to
you and whose days will
be and joyous in the land
the. Lord hath given her.
RICE AND ITS VALUE.
Grapes at Is . C. Experiment
v K.
The N. C. Agricultural
Station last Spring erected a
neat, span-roofed glass structure
and feet, in which to grow
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments.
Rev. B F. pastor
Circuit of the M. K. Church.
will . at the following times and
places, each
1st Sunday at Sam, A. U.
1st Sunday.
P. M.
2nd Sunday. Grove. II o'clock
A. M.
2nd Sunday. School House.
west of
P. M.
3rd Sunday. den or spring Branch
School House. k A. M.
3rd the foreign varieties of grapes for
clock i. m ,, . .
4th Sunday, o'clock
A. M.
School House.
o'clock P. M.
Notice.
By virtue of the power and authority
given in a Trust wad from U. W.
and R. Cox to James H. Pan, dated
30th day of December re-
in the Register of Deeds
Hook E. S. pages and
will on Monday, March 7th, , offer
for sale at the House in
Greenville, ct to the of
the said B. G. Cox. log I
or parcel of land lying in Pitt
as tile Causey place, containing
one hundred acres or
Tel ms of Sale, Cash.
February 1st
II. POI, Trustee.
C U for
the purpose of crossing them with ,
our native species to
The building was
completed and the vines
June 15th- vines had been
started in flower pots.
The growth of these vines
rest of the summer was
several vines by actual I
measurement having made cane
feet in length. The
Muscat of Alexandria, Black Ham-
bar. Sultana. White Tokay,
Muscat, Black St. Peter's and
Muscat Hamburg. These only sue
under glass in our climate,
owing to the difficulty in keeping j
Notice tO Creditors. j mildew in check in summer-
The of Court or Hit glass the atmosphere can
having issued letters of c -j -r.
to me. the undersigned. o the controlled and fine fruit It j
3rd day of February. on the estate is proposed to cross these grapes
of James Adams, d-ceased, U the of the James and
A Tough Competitor in Japan
The Supply and
In the Market.
Star.
The following extracts are taken
from a letter written to a planter
by Messrs. Dan Sons,
of New York, d the 20th in-
it. They are worth the perusal
of all the rice men of the State
have to modify our views
regarding the present and future
values of rice. It were rank, folly
a J false to conceal lie
true situation from those who re-
on us to diagnose and describe
the symptoms i f market from time
to time- We might see no cause
for alarm as regards in
Atlantic coast markets, as the
stock is not in excess of local re-
but in the Southwest
New Orleans, the situation is
greatly Some
say it-, sent troubles are duo to I he
attempt of millers to get their
together so as to avoid
man who blames the millers
or their for the pres-
condition of tin- market is
acquainted with the facts. The
movement is altogether slow
and disappointing- The
fact that t trade will not buy is
a fair d reason that pi ices
are high or as regarded
the first the visible
s In New Orleans, 200.000
sacks to come in at the ratio of
past experience not less than
sacks more, equal in cleaned
to s barrels. Second,
the This at present is
scarcely barrels per day.
which is, unless demand quickens
seven months supply and only five
months Third, reasons
for falling away in for
domestics this season ; it arrived
late and bags of for-
were soUl the time
that home las full
sway ; an open f kept v
tables and in the markets
as competitors, and to a at extent
interfered with the side of foreign
just to; in of
Inter-State law J
pan i has i legally freight-
ed through from Japan to
all the larger points in the
a distance of mill s at less
than it could be freighted from San
Francisco or any Eastern point at
a given distance of 2.000 miles.
Japan at cents per pound
delivered anywhere is a tough
competitor and accounts quite
largely for the diminution in the
demand in he horn, product. This
at the moment is by
reason of the pressure of other
and higher priced freights on
Pacific but. it is quite
anticipated will be re-
newed ; canned vegetable, fruits
and competing cereals are cheap.
were certainly unwise to
ignore the competition of Japan,
for while it may not be at present,
it is sure to b a lively opponent
of the new crop in th near future.
To it will require a radical
lowering of values rough and
cleaned, in primary markets for
strict good or prime. Grades be-
low such will not have to fall away
as they do not suffer
from any possible
from f.-reign.
are,
palatable facts, but is due that
they be made known. It is time to
begin more active marketing of
crop, if an is to be avoided.
Were we a planter we should sell
part of our holdings now, or at
some early date, at beat possible
prices, and retain balance until
arrival of spring trade, when it is
hoped conditions will improve for
the better. If the crop is to be
placed, a break got to lie made
to get things
S. S. CONVENTION.
hereby given to all person indebted to
the estate to make immediate payment the object being
to undersigned, and to all creditors
of to t id
properly authenticated, to the
within twelve months after the
date of this notice, or this notice will be
plead in oar of their recovery.
This 3rd Feb.
J. Q. ADAMS.
on estate of James Adams.
to
raise grapes combining the
and robust of the I
with the large
ones and high quality of the Mus-
cats, and particularly to get a late
grape for the South. I
Heretofore all efforts in this line
have made at the North, with an
The
of Feb. 1892. as now is a late
of Hi win and Testament of a. A. i ripening and late keeping grape.
Baker, deceased, notice is hereby
to all person indebted to
make immediate payment to the under-
all person having claim i i-
I as to what being
must present Hie same for on to be done do
or before the 3rd day of Feb. or this more to increase liberality than
notice will be plead Io bar of recovery, exhortations to duty- Let mis-
This 3rd day of Feb. try sermons and addressee
th
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the ha-1 early grape as the
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on l.
Station hopes to secure
God and
Lyman Abbott.
I pluck an from the green
sward, hold it to my ear; and
this is what it says to
and by the birds will come and
nest in me. By and by I will fur-
e for the cattle By and
ivy I will provide warmth for the
home in the pleasant fire. By and
by I will be a shelter from the
storms to thus- who have gone
under the roof. By and by I will
be the strong ribs of the vessel,
and the tempest will beat against
me in vain, while I carry men across
the Atlantic. foolish acorn
thou be all I ask. And
answers, God and
We have before us a copy of the
for the Eleventh An-
Convention of the North Car-
State Sunday School
to be held in New
March and next, to be
presided over by R. P. Dick,
Judge of the Western of
North Carolina, who is
of the Association. We notice
this Convention will be at-
tended by Mr. Wm. Reynolds, of
Peoria, Illinois, who was President
of Fifth International
school Convention, who is now
Superintendent of Organization
for tho International Sunday
school Association. It will also
be attended by Prof. H. H.
Superintendent Normal Depart-
of the Illinois Sunday school
Prof. will
the Convention into a
Sunday-school Institute on
day and Thursday afternoon and
present the following Conference
a.
The Equipment, b- The Pro-
gramme.
a.
Their Attendance- b- Their Home
The following Training Lessons
will be given.
a.
Their Preparation, b. Their Du-
ties, c Their Mistakes.
d a. Its Aim. b.
Its Methods, c. Its Needs.
Sunday's
Convention as the will be
by Mr- N. B. Broughton, of
We also notice that the several
pastors of New will on Tues-
day evening give the Convention
words of welcome, which will be
responded to by some of the
gates.
Win. P. Fife, the well-
will attend
the Bible R at the
of several of the sessions
of the Convention.
A large number of singer, a
combination of all the choirs of
New under the direction of
Mr. Joe K. Willis, of New
contribute largely to the mu-
sic for the Convention.
Reduced rates of fare on all the
railroads of the State have been
secured.
Quantities of Periodicals and
Lesson Helps from the various
Sunday-school publishing houses
will be displayed for gratuitous
distribution.
The above indicates that
these Sunday-school people are
going to have a good Convention.
We hope they will, and that our
local workers will see that a full j
delegation is sent from this
Our county work needs the
that this Convention will
give to the attending delegates.
THE PRAYER IN
In Thatchers Military Journal.
date of December, 1777, is
found a note containing the
prayer in
made by tho Rev. Jacob a
gentleman of great eloquence.
Here it historical curiosity
O Lord, our Heavenly Father,
high and mighty King of kings
and Lord of lords, who dost from
throne behold all the dwellers
of the earth, and with
power supreme and uncontrolled
over all the kingdoms, empires
and governments, look down in
mercy we beseech Thee on the
American States, who have fled to
Thee from the rod of the
and themselves on
Thy gracious protection, desiring
to be henceforth dependent only
on Thee. To Thee they have
pealed for the righteousness of
their cause ; to Thee do they now
look up for that countenance
support which Thou alone canst
give. Take them, therefore.
Father, under Thy
care. Give wisdom in council
and valor in the field. Defeat the
malicious of bur adversaries ; con-
them of the unrighteousness
of their course, and if they still
persist in sanguinary purposes, oh
let the voice of Thine own
ring justice, sounding their
hearts, constrain them to drop
weapons of war from their
hands in the day of battle. Be
Thou present, O God of wisdom,
an direct the councils of this hon-
y. them to
settle on the and surest
foundations, that the scenes of
blood may be speedily closed, and
harmony and peace may be
effectually restored, and truth and
justice, religion and piety prevail
and flourish among Thy people.
Preserve the health of bodies
tho vigor of their minds.
Shower down upon them and the
millions they here represent,
temporal blessings as Thou Boost
expedient for them in this world,
and crown them with everlasting
glory in the world to come. All
this we ask in the name and
through the merits of Jesus Christ,
Thy Son, our Saviour. Amen.
A Good Crop Year.
State
Mr. J. P. Edmundson, of John
county, who was here
day, was asked by the Chronicle,
How are and
same as usual. Always
of work to do and plenty of
bread and meat to eat. Pure hard
down laziness is the cause of hard
times. I say without the fear of
contradiction that the average la-
borer does not work four full faith-
months in the year- If I have
the choice of the average laborer
in this country or a monkey as to
working when I am away from
home, I will take the He
will not destroy anything.
When the war ended there were
scraps of property left, and the
owners of that property have hired
irresponsible labor, gone to town,
smoked cigars; idle labor at home
and fast living in has ruined
them. More any one thing
that has contributed to the
is idleness. I am going to
have a good crop year this year-
The reason is, I have cleaned out
my ditches, made manure, hauled
off my ditch banks, cleared op my
hedge-rows, hired but little labor
and all I ask to make a good crop
is health.
A Dog Saves a Child's
Basic I Advance.
Another illustration of canine
fidelity and intelligence was given
here a few days ago. The little
three-year old daughter of Allen
Harris, who near the
was playing in a room when
dress caught on fire. Her parents
were some distance from the house
did not hear the child's
screams, but the dog did, and know-
that something was
with his friend, he ran to
where they were standing, barked
several times and returned to the
house. By this time the
girl's clothes were in a blaze, while
help had not yet arrived. The
dog then, after pushing the child
over, grabbed the burning clothes
with his teeth, and before the
flames had reached the face
body, he had torn every particle
of clothing from the child and
saved its life. The little girl es-
caped with a very slight burn and
a big scare- Harris would not
trade his dog for the best horse in
the county.
They Don't Want Mr. Pritchard.
Charlotte Chronicle.
A prominent Republican of this
was asked who the
cans would likely nominate for
Governor. He said that the
cations pointed toward
Pritchard for a while, but he is
out of the race now, for it bad
been learned that the colored man
would not vote for him, and the
could not afford to put up a
man that the would not
support. He said that he would
not be surprised if Judge W. P.
Bynum, of this was
and he believed he would
make a good race.
The North Carolina
are not going to follow any man
into the Third party. Doubtless
some will do it, but the moment
any man tries to carry them into
the Third party that minute the
Alliance is torn into two warring
factions. The Alliance is
destroyed and the Democrat party
may be defeated this year.
this and nothing
We are glad to see the Green-
j ville Reflector the A. N.
a good hit. All the ills of this
road was once attributed to the
bad management of President
Washington Bryan, now no
seems to be the scapegoat
i President Bryan was emphatically
tho most energetic and worthy
President that ever directed tho
affairs of the A. N. C. R R.
Bryan was full of We
would be glad, with many others,
to see Mr. Bryan again at the
place he filled with such
ability. W. L. Janet, in Watch
STATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There as
From our Exchanges.
Each month the of
agriculture issues copies of
its They are free
to all who ask for them.
Rev. Thomas Dixon, of New
York, will lecture and preach lie-
the Assembly at
City next summer.
The Supreme Court of the State
has decided tho Wilmington and
Weldon Railroad Company must
pay takes their branch roads.
The Rev. Dr. J. W. Carter,
the First Baptist church. Raleigh,
will preach the
at the University before the
graduating class, on Sunday, May
29th.
Mrs. Dennis Simmons died at
her home in on Fri-
day, February 1892, after an
illness of a few days. Heart
failure was thought to be the
mediate cause of her death.
Mess. Kit Bland and Jack
son seem to lend our sportsmen in
partridge. On Tues-
day they sacked between thorn.
Bland claims 28- Dawson
says his shells gave out, or
he would not have been left.
Kinston tree Abel Bell.
a colored of the A. N.
C R. R-, whose home is at Wild
wood, fell between two cars of the
freight train last Thursday and
was I to death- His body
was found between two
cars when the train stopped at a
wood station five or six miles from
Goldsboro.
Charlotte Mr. Jno.
Armstrong met with a peculiar ac-
He was stand-
with one foot crossed over tho
other, whetting his knife on the
heel of his shoe when the knife
slipped, he lost his balance and fell
against a post- Tip- knife was run
into his foot and an artery severed.
The wound bled dreadfully but was
soon attended to and he will be
able to walk in a day or so.
Scotland Neck lie Mess.
D. C and John H. who
have been carrying on a saw mill
business the past two or three
years between this place and Till-
cry, expect in a short lime, to move
their plant to Ayden. near Green-
ville. Pitt county, where they
purchased a large lot of tine timber.
f hey will increase the capacity of
their mill and expect to do a much
larger business than heretofore.
Concord Scott Fisher
and wife, who when from this
country to Arkansas a few weeks
ago, have They say
North Carolina beats them all-------
During the past twelve months
six practicing physicians in this
immediate section have died.
are Dr. R. W. Cope, Dr.
G. G. Smith, Dr. L. S. Flow, Dr. I
R. F. L. Letter, Dr. W. M.
and Dr. J. H.
Tarboro It is report-
ed that Jake Knight, colored, who
lived in the Mount section
of the county was killed last week.
The of his death are
peculiar. A man by the name
of Savage took a rope, made a
lasso and threw it around Knight's
neck. The latter was in a wagon
and the mule became frightened
and ran away. with the
rope d his neck was snatched
from wagon. In a few days he
died from his injuries.
Oxford A few nights
Rufus Reavis, a farmer, was
load lying dead at the foot of a
stairway in Henderson. Foul play
was suspected and the coroner
took the case in hand- The jury
presented the names of four per
sons and charged them with the
murder The names are withheld
for the present. Warrants have
been issued and are in the hands
of the sheriff. James A. Peace of
is held bond
as ho is suspected of knowing
something about it
Weldon Services in
memory of the Rev. Robert O.
Burton, D. D., will be held at the
Methodist church at Littleton on
the second Sunday in April next.
The memorial sermon will be
preached by the Rev. John N. Cole,
of Raleigh. Two other services
will be held during the day, but
the names of the preachers have
not vet been announced. Large
crowds will doubtless attend these
services. The regular
will be announced later-
Salisbury
morning, W. A-
Esq., of township, No. Cabarrus
county, met with an awful accident,
killing him instantly. He and
several other parties were running
a saw mill near his home, and in
moving around near the saw Mr.
stumbled and fell, his
shoulder striking against the rapid-
revolving saw. It drew him in
before he could be rescued, the
saw cutting its awful course
through his neck, and in an instant
his head was rolling down on one
side and his falling on the
other- Mr. Misenheimer was
years old, and his tragic end is
something dreadful to contemplate.
Written for the Reflector.
IN MEMORY OF SISTER SOPHIA
CRAWFORD.
V FANNIE.
Sister, thy sufferings here are ended,
No more sorrow, pain
disturb thy peaceful o
In this wicked world again.
thou art sweetly resting,
In the cold and silent tomb;
the guide and help thee
To bright heavenly home
Oh, how we thee.
in tongue express.
Thy here are over,
And are in distress.
Thou hast only mid debt
That ill of us do
And we hope to meet thee
On fur
When this weary life i over.
And our hearts have ceased to beat;
What a pleasure to think
That we can rest at feet.
Sister, thou art resting.
Trouble fills our he to-day.
Hut beyond this veil sorrow,
will all be wiped away.
They Have Gone to Georgia.
Raleigh Chronicle.
Weathers, the notorious
woman of whose
desperate infatuation for Dr. J. L.
Stone, led to the prisoning of her
father, has again fled with her par-
amour. The woman is fine look-
and Stone is equally infatuated
with her. The details of the pois
of old Mr. Weathers, of
tho desertion by Dr. Stone of his
wife and thirteen children, have
been published. He fled with the
Weathers woman and
months ago it was discovered that
they were living in Pitt
Warrants were issued, and they
departed, but boldly returned to
Chatham. The was arrest-
ed, but strange to say the Dr. was
not, though it is said the sheriff
made diligent efforts to get him.
The woman last week pleaded
guilty to the charge her, of
living unlawfully with Dr. Stone,
and a motion for judgment was
continued until the next term of
court She was allowed to give
her personal recognizance for her
appearance. Now comes the last
sensation. Dr. Stone, whose own
son had taken out a warrant
and engaged counsel
to prosecute him should he be cap.
lured, it appear returned to Pitt
He arranged with a friend
in that county to go to Georgia
with the woman. Dr.
Stone it is said joined them there.
This is probably the last of the
Stone-Weathers affair, which has
shown how reckless of life or hon-
or some people are.
If we arc to have a purer, bet-
higher standard of public life
public station, it must be
outgrowth of purer, better, higher
private life among the people ; and
for this must look to
of tho
to be found
the refined farm home. There
no other home on this green earth
so well adapted to the develop-
of the physical, mental and
moral stamina needed to qualify
men for positions of public duty
and public trust, as that one on
the farm, into which intelligence,
and moral culture have
carried the refinements, the beauty
and the strength of life. Are you
contributing to the best of your
ability to the and
maintenance of such a home I
If then what are you living
for If then are an
exemplar of the true American
farmer, and counted among the
pillars of the
burg
Kate Field, in her paper, Wash-
says that brotherhood
of man is but surely
Kate is behind the
times- Man commenced to
women away back in the
garden of Eden, if we mistake not.
Berkly Graphic.
The
whole for I
Dollar; but
In order It you
must pay advance.
If you find stamped
Just after your name
on the margin of the
paper the
Subscription
Expires Two Weeks
From This
It is to give yon no-
that unless re-
newed in that time
the will
cease going to you
at the expiration of
the two weeks,
R. J. MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
C,
Office In Skinner upper Bess
opposite Photograph Gallery
D. L.
-4 DENTIST,
AS. I. FLEMING,
Greenville, N. O.
Prompt attention to business. Office
at Tucker Murphy old stand.
HOS. J. JARVIS. ALEX. L. StOW
T Alt VIS BLOW,
AW,
N. O.
in all the Courts.
I B.
A Y-A
N.
I. A. B. F.
TYSON,
AT
n. c.
Prompt attention given to collections
TH. II. LONG,
It. C.
Prompt and careful attention to
Collection solicited.
SKINNER,
A at- Law,
N. C.
U G. JAMES,
GREENVILLE, S. C.
Practice in all the courts.
CD
V,
Si
ft
-I
We do wish that all tired people
did but know the infinite there
is in fencing off the six days from
the bus-
ships of our daily life as the
Saturday draws to its close, leaving
them to rid peacefully upon the
flow or the Monday morn-
cornea again Weldon
A farmer who has tried it says
that a tobacco plant bed, after the ,
plants are off. is a very fine place i
to plant potatoes. Just drop ,
them about and cover them with ,
straw, and they
will do th rest.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD BRICK STOKE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will And
their interest to get our prices before par
chasing elsewhere Our stock It compute
n all Its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA,
at
TOBACCO SNUFF
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
on hand and sold at prices to
the times. Out goods are all bought
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M. SCHULTZ,
IT.
Tip
i, Greenville, Presides
L B.
J. Greenville, See A
N. M. Tarboro, Gen
Capt. R. F. Washington, Gen
The People's Line for travel on TM
River.
The Steamer the inert
and quickest boat on tho river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and
Some one has recently given the
following excellent definition of
which may
be used as a universal passport to
everywhere except heaven, as
a universal provide of everything
except
Pitted up specially for the
and convenience of
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer U
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday
and Friday at. A. kt.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
I sad Saturday at o'clock. .
I Freights received dally and through
Lading given to all point.
J. at. .
J Greenville, H. Washington H,





ion in which he short time ago, upon a bare
the sewage of
.-., ;,, the Capitol was in a bad condition.
; And yet, year after year it leaves
never Laving; three thousand men and women
fur the of the Government
Hi his faults Printing Office-in a building that
. as by sanitary
, ,. ,, experts as a dead-trap, and by art-
. retired from i . um.
lent.
.-.
. ;
Ti .
two weeks,
.- to No
. . .
BE PAID FOB
said lived a
. ; life.
act were said to have
u kind and even
. ,. ,. a better
. days and though
have atoned for the
we should mag.
. a as light-
acts allow, those acts
and disgrace
might have been
liable. His life
that may be
. i by Hie public
I succeeding ages.
Land Sale.
of I t Superior I
Court made March T rm, I
i j i l i 11- in the case
As has not been of and wife vs.
represented in your paper for quite Whitehead other, the undersigned
a good while, I will try to represent will sell In I he Item door In
on the of
March, the following-
. .
and builders as a
Now this isn't consistent.
One class of Government
are not entitled to a safe and
healthy place to work in. any more
than any other There's
good sense in these remarks, even
in this year of retrenchment and
reform in public expenditures ; and
it would be for the
Democrats to provide Re-
publicans have neglected to for
a new Government Printing Office
building; it would emphasize the
claim always made by the Demo-
party, that it is the friend of
the wage-worker.
The Democratic leaders of the
House have been unfortunate in
having important legislative plans
upset by illness during the present
session. It had been all arranged
that immediately after the reports
the three tariff
Executive f,,.,
has I. on
the
candidate
claim .
b u
. b
o . .
pi o
era ,
also to i
at, an
as i
. .
his first
Cl
P .
gen .
re .
Hill
the above i I hi
own for Pa
t i
Di
the
Wall a i age,
St
J. .
. .
been
do
Its
I last Wednesday in
. vi member of
. pr sent
. . . absent were
proxy. The meeting
harmonious
t of feeling
was
, for tut meeting the
,. . and the date
18th of May.
will be
and also
appointed to the
Convention which
on the 21st of
ii candidates for
and
e a opted a
each county in
is to take a vote
ions ca and
rates in proper-
showed the
Ii candidate This
. . his full
State convention.
. v. is only in the
. i test and is not bind-
county conventions.
. u is . two years
. i i fair way to get the
each c in the
. and date of
be.
Democrat to
i- that
. i .;, rested, and
. meeting to
poi and get the very
. wisest men among us to
es. No effort should
. give all classes a
a, and thereby
irate action. No
ii any Dem-
Party. If
. o open-handed
. have no
re I be any serious
. o inks.
and must at
thoroughly
; . . to
a wise and prudent
taken there is danger
ill . Let the council
I i factions be
there will be a ticket
on the 18th
carry the State by
. . majority.
it to . t excel
in this i
built Di
obi . . I
i and
i.
f .
public
the
The labor
10.1 of t
t to raise money
e do.
UTTER.
Re n IT
. con,
who says the present
. is a do-
r body either a
or is ignorant of
which speak for
work of the House is
I of that of the House of
Congress at the same
, . r instance, it has
I three appropriation
Urgent Deficiency, the
Academy and the Indian
an I is making rapid progress in
of the fourth one
District of
bill was not
House cf the last
the of March.
. the reporting of three
as the first of
unheard of in
In addition
, has been done by the com-
which was never further
I i period in any first
ion. To give a dear idea of
work is advanced,
Catching- stated
. the appropriation bids, except
. general deficiency, which is
the last one taken up
committee, could
I to the House within n week.
of slow, the major-
the House have proven
c th their
i.
home in
public affairs in N .,. ,
for the i y
thirty years. Ho I
one an D
few teen have i
lit
th we
party to
Had he beta serve
i h-1
I . j,. .
;. . . Hp
were so
so that he
to them. He had an
to ha I m to
himself for good and to
., have gained the lore and
of his country to an i in its daily sittings, of but a
the Home will
r resolution reported by
on Rules
and of March for the
r- of the coinage
I Ii this resolution is adopted,
seems
r. the talk of a combination
of Republicans and anti silver
to defeat it, the pass-
of free coinage bill maybe
Bet a
asked a Democratic
Senator, Congress consent
cotton ties and
to the House, the free wool
bill should be called up and the
tariff debate opened with a set
speech by Chairman Springer-
The reports were made on Tues-
day, but owing to the serious ill-
of Mr. Springer the opening
of the debate had to be postponed
until next Tuesday, when Mr.
will lead off for the
Democrats.
Mills is confined
to his bed with a painful attack of
erysipelas in his ankles, and his
physician says he will not be able
to resume his duties for a week or
two.
It is now estimated that the total
amount of the regular
that will be passed by the
present House will he about
less than what was
at the last session of the
Congress. That means one
dollar less for each man, woman
and child in the United
Sneaker Crisp says he
to allow the members of the House
to do own voting,
standing the decision of the
Court in favor of Reed's
counted A thing may
be legal and yet not be right.
One year from said
Senator Hill this I shall
attend the inauguration of a Dem-
After an unusual amount of or-
had been poured out on the
subject, the Senate voted on the
Idaho Senatorial contest just as it
was known from the first that it
would favor of
Representative Sayers has had
printed in the Congressional Record
a table showing the unexpected
appropriations for public build-
now in course of erection
the amounts required to complete
them. A glance at this table will
snow why it is necessary to curtail
appropriations of new buildings at
this session.
The rainy weather has can
the roads to be in quite c id
condition.
Old Tar is trying to get en
another boom, and that is just what
suits the fishermen.
are glad to hear of Mr. H.
H. Proctor eyes improving very
fast-
Messrs C- P. Moore Co have
recently moved to Grimesland a d
gone into the mercantile .
We wish them much success.
Mr. Thad Moore expects to , o
to New York City in a few days
for the purpose of purchasing his
spring and summer stock.
The farmers are hauling
for their crops.
The in teeth has
quit glittering so bright, and the
tone of Peck's bad boy's harp has
quit sounding so loud, which makes
Grimesland quieter than ever.
D. E. G.
of Mini III of
in Adjoining i
Hie or Dr. II.
E. Williams others
pin-i of tin; Robert plant,
HUM on which Ml I and wile fur- j
merit bring l of Hie Mid tract j
Wad lying on I lie north Of the
road loading from Greenville to
es, more or
Terms of third balance
one and two jean, by
on land with s percent interest
from day of sale
K. o. Jams
Notice to Creditors.
Slaving been appointed y the
of county
Combination re. notice i
given all persona Indebted Mid
Combination to make
immediate payment to the
and nil prisons having claims against
Greenville Combination Store must
the same for payment properly
on or In-fore the of
next. II. K. TYSON.
of A.
Tills day ,
Tobacco Growers
-1
-DEALERS IN-
has fallen to the lot any
few hours each, in a building it
knew to be unsafe and unhealthy f
w hi;
one, No man ever sue,, j loDe, may sure.
man the with which a
threw i ordering an examination made
no pleasant wren now o think of was rushed through a
Marriage Licenses.
record hr lean yen-
good, the of i-
by the Register of Deeds
the of Ft will
A Ricks and Minnie
L It R Fleming and Ida P
Gay, Charles and Fan-
Heath. It F Gainer and
Peal. F O Stoke and K
Manning. S and Carri I
Harries, Tripp and
Tripp, T B Ross Sal lie
Perkins, Teel It. A. Run
G. L. Dora
J. K. Lula F.
Evans, Nelson and
S. Jas. S. Corbitt Mary
V. and
Sarah Harris.
Johnson and
Sherrod, A Pander and
Rosa I. Gilmer, Blount
Mary J Wilson, William Little and
Chamberlain,
Mamie D Cox
Adelaide Edwards, Stephen
Adams, Jordan
an Mary Jordan
mid Smith, Robert
and Polly Hines, Henry
and Hat tie Ellis, w and
William Ann Perkins. Crawford
B Bullock and Frances Forbes.
Notice to School Com-
The Teachers Institute for white
teachers will commence on Monday the
list., and your attendance is earn-
solicited. Especially is it
that nil be on
Friday of that week, to hear Prof. Her-
man's address of instruction
B. HARDING, Co.
Land Sale.
By virtue of an order of the Clerk of
Superior Court of Pitt county in of
II. of John I.
Lewis, against Harriet Ann Lewis and
Susan Lewie, the undersigned
will sell for cash before the Court
House door in Greenville on
the 7th day of March, the following
described piece or parcel of land, lying
in township, Pitt county, ad-
joining the lands of Joseph II. Clark,
Thomas Thomas, the Harriet ling
and, Gilbert Harriet others, con-
acres, more or less.
This January 28th. 1802.
J. BULLOCK.
F. G. James, Attorney.
Furnace
The best Invention ever made for
CUBING TOBACCO.
ARTILLERY SHOTS.
Monroe, Va.,
March 5th, 1892-
Owing to the terrible weather
but little work has been tit
Post for the past two weeks.
Although the weather is disagree-
able many of the are out
ill the evening attending the
places of entertainment
dread not the wind and
rain, nor would they hesitate to
face the storm of the enemy's
lets, for braver men cannot be
found than those composing the
Artillery school. Especially would
we mention those composing Bat-
tery H, 4th Artillery. A good
of them represent the best
lies in this country as one can
readily perceive by their gentle-
manly deportment. Doubtless this
is surprising to some of the
low minded aristocrats of our
country who believe pretend to
that the word
does not apply to soldiers, and no
one will enlist in the service but a
convict. How absurd How dis-
gusting true that there are
bad men in the army. Where will
you find a town or where
this bad element does not exist
In every instance where they are
found they are cast by in-
law. But men composing
the army are looked upon by that
set we have mentioned in a different
light. They see misdeeds of
that bad element in the army and
and are ever ready to condemn the
whole army. I repeat how ab-
Why should this unchristian
feeling exist Were war declared
how quickly these people would
pray for protection at the hand of
the men they now so readily con-
and despise. May nothing
ever occur to cause such a terrible
humiliation on their part.
Private Whitehurst of Battery
H. who has been on furlough,
visiting relatives and friends in
Tarboro, N. C, has returned to his
Battery. We are glad to him
looking much better. He was on
the sick list when he left the Post.
Private Ryan of Battery H. has
recently returned to his Battery.
This soldier has been to Europe on
six months furlough-
The stormy weather has
vented a great many vessels
here and caused many to seek
gaiety in Hampton Roads. They
can lie seen in great numbers from
the parapet.
I am sorry to learn that so little
interest is taken in the Greenville
Guards. Having once been a
member myself of Company B-, I
feel a interest in its welfare.
Soon they will go into camp. I
would be glad to hear that com-
B. had won the laurels this
year-
As I leave this Post and the
Army on March 8th, this is my
last from this place. With best
wishes for Greenville and your
excellent paper, I am,
Very Truly,
J. J.
Batty. Arty,
Dissolution.
The Unit of Congleton Tyson as
dissolved by mutual consent on the 1st
February. All indebted to
the are requested to forward
settle with caber party.
M.
It. A. TYSON.
The business referred to above be
continued Congleton Co. the
obi stand. J. S. CONGLETON.
Last Call for Taxes
I will visit I lie named below on
till-dale for the of
collecting the Taxes 1891.
All who do not pay prompt
before will
be advertised accord-
to law.
Meet me and save costs.
Saturday, March 1801
Falkland. Saturday. March 13th,
Ayden, Saturday. March 12th,
Grifton, Saturday, March lath.
Bethel, Saturday, March 1892,
J. C. Store, March
10th,
Grimesland, Friday, March 11th, 1892.
Wednesday. March 9th, 1892.
Tuesday, March 8th. 1892.
Hill. Monday, March 14th,
J. A. K.
Sheriff.
Sale of Land to Pay Debts.
Pursuant to an order from the
Court of county, the
will sell to the highest bidder, for
at the Court House, in Greenville,
county, at public auction, on Mon-
day the 4th day of April. 1892, the fol-
lowing described real estate, of which
John Whitehurst died seized and
A tract of land lying on the north
side of creek In town-
ship, county, of North Caro-
adjoining the lands of J M. Man-
Matthews, John A.
Manning, the Teel heirs and others,
known as lots No. and In the lands
of the late John Whitehurst, and being
the land devised to It. Whitehurst
and B. R. Whitehurst in the will of the
said John Whitehurst containing seven-
acres, more or less
The share said tract of land de-
vised and bequeathed to John A. White-
by John Whitehurst, adjoining
the land that James R. Whitehurst sold
to Ford, containing seventy-fife
acres, more or
A. The tract of land known as the share
of the John Whitehurst and
bequeathed by him to Ann E Carson,
containing seventy-five acres, more or
less, adjoining the land of John A.
The share of said tract of land de-
vised and bequeathed to W. S. White-
by the will of John Whitehurst,
containing seventy-live acres, more or
less, adjoining the land of Ann K. Car-
son.
This March 4th, 1892.
R. J. GRIMES,
John Whitehurst deed
By J. U. JOHNSTON
ft
Printers and Binders
NOTIONS,
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
parlor Court clerk of county, of
the of Moron, 1892, a-;
of Peggy Cherry, deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons in-
to e estate to make immediate
payment to the undersigned, and all per-
sons having claims against the estate
must present the same for payment on
or before the of March, 1893, or
this notice will he in bar of
r.
This Mb nay of 1892.
Moses
of Cherry.
AND SALE
I removed my stables from Five
Points to the ones formerly
pied b Mr. II. K. Keel and will
constantly Keep on hand a
full line of
Horses and Mules.
I have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run in connection a Y-
BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
your patronage. Call and be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. O.
WATCH-TOWER,
Published Semi-Month I v.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
Devoted to Christianity,
cation. General Intelligence Send
for Sample Copy. Office of Pub-
S, C.
Editorial Office, Wash-
N. C.
J. L.
D. W. DAVIS. Associate.
With it you absolute
control over heating barn,
and it removes
All Danger of
Two cures week can be
made in the same
co of different degrees of ripe-
can be cured at one lime in
the same barn. Saves labor and
fuel.
For further particulars ad-
dress
PHELPS,
Greenville, N.
this paper when you write.
TO
-----If you want to save-----
In the purchase of a PIANO and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW C.
General Agent for Carolina.
who is now handling goods from
the as HIGH
for tone, workmanship and
and endorsed by nearly all the
musical journals in tin; United Scales.
Made by Paul G. who is at this
time one of the best mechanics and in-
of the day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade Piano-
Also the EVANS
BIGHT PI been soil by
him for the past six years in the eastern
part of Ibis and up to this time has
given entire The Upright
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from
in Rosewood, Oak,
Walnut or Mahogany eases.
Also the PA ORGAN
from to in solid or Oak
cases.
Ten years experience in
has enabled to handle
nothing but standard goods and he does
not hesitate to say that he can sell any
musical instrument about per cent,
cheaper than other agents arc now offer-
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina.
MEW MEL
A Mine Writing Characters,
REMODELED AND IMPROVED.
GOOD MA Mi
The Standard Typewriter in the World.
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon,
Type III all Easiest
ii learn, ard rapid M any.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as Represented.
Ills Machine is everybody's friend. Every-
should have waiting done on tIn
typewriter, it always insure the most
prompt attention. Address
COMPANY. Gil Washington, St., Boston, Mass. MM
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector where particulars and
prices can be had.
advertisements.
L. W. DAVIS,
FINE------
HAVANA CIGARS
-AND-
TINWARE,
WOOD WILLOW WARE,
Harness, Whips, and Collars,
FARMING TOOLS,
Plows of the Improved Makes,
One of our firm
will soon visit
the Northern
Markets
while there will
buy goods at
prices that will
command the at
of all. Realizing the hard limes
and scarcity of money we will sell during
the coming Spring and Summer all goods
lower prices than ever before. We will
be prepared to sell as low as any dealer
who sells first-
class goods.
We thank our
friends for past
patronage and
hope to merit a
continuance of
the same,
honest and
square dealings
to all. The
tea h i n g s of
each generation
says c o n n e
your to
those whom
you know to
be reliable.
Come one, come all and see us.
CHERRY CO.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door M Court House
OP
BOSSIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory is well equipped with the host Mechanic, y put up nothing
ass We keep tip with the time and improved
material used in all work. All style of Springs arc you can from
Brewster, Storm, Horn, King
Also keep on a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
he year round, which will tall AS LOW AS THE LOWEST.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking people of this and counties for past favor we hope to
merit a of the
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
COTTON MARKET Is lower now than at any former period
in about forty years; this has been brought about by the
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large
accumulation of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the
movement must be necessarily light; and if any of our friends,
who have cotton, would like to raise money on same and hold it
longer, we are to advance them to 325.00 per bale
and hold it until May or June if so desired-
Very truly,
VAUGHAN BARNES,
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
We have the largest and most complete
establishment of the kind to be found in
tho State, and solicit for classes
Of Commercial, Rail-
road or School Print-
or
WEDDING READY
FOE. PRINTING INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY OFFICERS.
orders.
ft
AND BINDERS.
RALEIGH.
S. B. HARRELL CO.
COTTON FACTORS AND
Corn, Peanuts, Stock, Eggs,
and Sawed Lumber will our
special attention. Your patronage
solicited.
NOS. AN D COMMERCE STREET,
NORFOLK. VA.
Strictly a
E. E.
A. L.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
A Goal My Always on Hand,
Firs Horses a specialty.
Not. and Union Ya
COBB,
Pitt Co. N. C.
C. C. COBB,
Pitt Co
T. H.
Co. N C
Bros.,
Cotton Factors,
AND-
Commission Mer ch a
NORFOLK, VA.
We have Lad many years ex
at the business are
prepared to handle Cotton to
advantage of shippers.
All business to
Laud will receive prompt and
careful attention
M.
MOORE PARKER.,
------AGENTS F-OR.------
Smith's Improved Hand Pump,
Burglar Window and
LOCKS AND BOLTS,
Union Central Life
Insurance Company,
and
Celebrated
We will lake pleasure in public in nay of the above line.
MOORE PARKER,
Office in coiner under House Greenville, N. C
J. L SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds placed in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
THE OF
to Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo
hut-ire not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be an
GOODS of all NOTIONS, clothing, GEN
n HATS and CAPS, BOOTS SHOES, LA
and FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS
ADDLES
KM DOORS WINDOWS. SASH and BLINDS. and
RE HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
s and MILL BELTING, HAY, ROCK PARIS, and
Harness, bridles and addles
GROCERIES A SPECIALTY
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
e cents per dozen, less per cent for Bread Prep-
Star Lye at jobbers Prices, White MM pure Lin-
WARE,
kinds, G.-
mum Hair, Harness, bridles and
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent
prices,
Zed Varnishes and Cucumber Wood Pump., Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a
me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of
the best Companies in existence, see
Whichard.
-f;
Safe





. . I-.
LANG'S COLUMN
Tobacco Cloth.
3-4 Cents per Yard
CASH.
-lo-
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
DO YOU READ
Fill Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices,
IF SO. THIS OFFER IS
INTENDED FOR YOU-
We made arrange-
with the
Weekly Constitution,
Great Weekly.
Published at Atlanta, by which we an
enabled to it Hie
for ONE for only
This offer lints a short Now
is your chance all the news of all
Che worM and your paper for the
price of one
Every M rate is
entitled In a chance at Tit Constitution's
Free Distribution fer 1892, details
of which will be found elsewhere.
This is the most remarkable
offer ever made. Every home in
Pitt county should receive the
first, and after that, it should have
the best General Newspaper, bringing
every week the of the world,
overflowing with the choicest special
features, such as the Weekly
published at Atlanta. Ga., and
having a circulation of
GETS BOTH PAPERS.
greet
A Splendid Dictionary
The Reflector, like all other
papers, wants re subscribers, in
order to induce to get us up a
club we have the following liberal offer
to make for the month of
Any one who will during this month
bring or send the Sub-
s for one with will he
given tree a splendid Webster's Una-
bridged Dictionary. Tins Dictionary
contains nearly 1300 pages, and em-
braces 12.000 synonyms. Copies of the
Dictionary can be seen at this office.
Any MM ho tries to get tip a and
succeeds In getting only live, can bring
on that number and get the Dictionary
by paying extra. Ten subscribers
gets the Dictionary free to the person
raising the club. Any boy, girl or
person can get up a club. Start
at once so as to get a Dictionary free.
No subscriptions accepted unless ac-
companied by the cash.
GET UP
Local Reflections.
Try Cardenas, the beat
smoke, at Reflector Book
Snow Hill,
f Mr. II. P.
Tobacco Cloth.
23-8 Cents per Yard.
SPOT CASH.
LANG'S COLUMN
Stonewall Plow Casting at D. D.
Pay your taxes.
Buy your Cooking Stoves of D.
D. Haskett.
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the
Brick Store.
The best brands of Axes D.
D.
Peach blossom;.
can best Tomatoes for only
cents at
Hardware of D. D.
Haskett
The New Homo Sewing Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros.
Yes, Sunday was a cloudy
Sash and Doors a full stock at
D. D.
cent
Store.
I will sell my Heating Stoves at
cost. D. D. Basket.
are eleven hours
long.
Elegant large cucumber pickles
only one cent a piece at
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C.
Bryan.
Cash given for Produce, Hides,
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
The weather i about as hard to
gel settled as some debts-
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines and all parts at
Bros.
Sewing Machines at
and 30.00 at D. D.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store.
M. Petty Cos
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick
March ha given us two beautiful
days, Friday
For house
on Pitt street. Apply to
Two of the Celebrated Favorite
Corn left, only 17-75 at
D. D.
Garden peas for
table use only cents per quart
at
For lot of Horses and
Mules for sale on time. Apply to
R R- Cotton, Center Bluff, N. C
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will
your appetite when nothing
else will. At the Old Brick Store.
have the largest
assortment and finest selection of
cigars in Greenville. Visit my
store convinced.
Ed
Be sure and read all the legal no-
ii this issue, they may interest
you.
All part-es who have tobacco to
sell can save charges
and freight by bringing same to
the prize on Saturdays
where they will receive good prices-
Scraps particularly wanted.
I will offer for sale at the Court
House door, in Greenville, on Tues-
day, the 22nd of March, at M.
Five Shares in the Greenville
Land Improvement Company.
8- V. Joyner.
Boykin, Carmer Co's
costs about half what
you pay for manipulated guanos.
Tor sale by G- E. Harris. By
j using this you
I can afford to make cotton for
i cents.
Personal.
Mrs. L. C. in quite nick.
Miss has
her sister in Washington.
Mrs. It. II. left yesterday
Rocky on a business trip.
Miss of Center
ville, is visiting Mm. W. M. Moore.
Miss Cox returned home
yesterday from her visit Golds-
MiS Emilia Potter,
is visiting the
Saw.
Mrs. Dr. Frank returned a
few days ago a visit In
Mrs. J. C Tyson a days
in tons with Mrs. J. T. Williams
last week.
Col. Many Skinner is booked to
peak at Charlotte, and Lin-
minion at an early day.
Mr. Powell, who conducts the ex-
agent Moore, was
or, the sick list last week.
Mr. Mrs. W. S. to
last la attend the
of Mr. J. R. Rawls.
Rev. A. A. Watson, D. D-, will
hold services in the Episcopal church
on Wednesday, the 16th Mai eh.
Ed. Barnes, representing
mammoth warehouse m
Henderson, been in town the
last few days.
L. F. of the firm of
Norman Everett. Norfolk, arrived
Monday night. Many
readers know of this excellent firm.
Mr. W. U. White is opening a
of general merchandise in the
store two doors from the one
pied by his father. Mr. James Star-
key is clerking tor him.
Mr. Benjamin Crawford, of Beaver
Dam township, is ninety years old.
lie is the oldest man in the township
and is still vigorous for an old man
and able to do some work.
Mrs. Barden, who was visiting her
sister Mrs. W. B. Wilson, returned
to her home in Plymouth last Fri-
day. Mrs. Wilson accompanied
home and will remain some days in
Plymouth.
Mr. and Mrs. Julian
of Raleigh, are spending a few days
at with the parents of
Mrs. Timberlake. Accompanied by
Mrs. Cotten they spent Monday
night in Greenville, the guests of
Hotel Macon.
Rev. Redding Moore died Sunday
near Farmville, at an advanced age.
He was for many years a local
preacher of the Methodist church,
but owing to age and declining
health had not been able to follow
the ministry the last few He
was a few months over years old.
That good and instructive preach-
the Rev. Mr. Stancill, the Dis-
church, is making a line
in Wilson. a good
preacher and a most excellent pastor
and predict that wholesome re-
will Ins excellent
and a bountiful harvest be
gathered his pure and good
and effective
That charming young lady of
Greenville, who is now visiting
in Birmingham, Ala., is at
trading no Mule attention in the
social circles that city, as the
lowing clippings from Birmingham
papers will
A very charming correspondent
writes me regarding a lair visitor to
see my old friend.
Miss Ella is a success in
your city. She comes of a brilliant
race of women, being a nice of Mrs.
Jarvis, of north Carolina,
whose husband was Cleveland's min-
to Brazil, and -a sister ex-
Congressman wile. A
the guest of Mrs. Latham, during
the Cleveland administration, she
was always a belle at the While
House receptions, and all the New
York and Washington papers were
lull of hr beauty. Her sister was
the most brilliant conversationalist I
ever knew, in style very much like
Ella, all in the amber
Miss is in
deed a success in our city, and I be-
is very appreciative, even
a of Washington triumphs.
An admirer said to the Spanish
beauty at
discovered America, yon
have
Miss North Carolina,
bus a mass of wavy brown
hair, g eat dashing eves and a form
whose every movement is us rapid at,
electricity. The blue blood of a
grandee courses through
her veins, and she seems shot through
with the fire of the Spanish sun.
Over a ton of paper unloaded at
the Reflector office Monday.
The wife of Mr. Joe Henry
of township, died not many-
days ago.
Attention is called to the notice of
dissolution of the firm of Congleton
Tyson.
Moses King, administrator of Peggy
Cherry, has a notice to creditors in
this paper.
Mr. B, F. Manning died at his
home, four miles from town, on last
Wednesday.
The mocking birds are making
these beautiful days rich with their
sweet melody.
It looks almost
SM I he f
like fall time to
cotton in rear of
B. Cherry Co's store.
The merry-go round has taken its
departure, and now some people are
wanting somewhere to go.
Overlooking the first two days
March has been exceedingly lamb
like since coming to sec
Evangelist File will conduct
a meeting in Wilson. His dale for
Greenville has been
electric lights went out last
night and but for the moon shine
Greenville would have been in
darkness.
The College and Academy boys
played some football last Wednesday
evening, which the former came
out
The law that prevents the killing
of birds does not go into effect until
March 15th, March 1st, ab
many supposed.
Tie residence of Mr. J. S. Smith
in is receiving a new
dress of paint. Mr. Carlos Harris is
doing the work.
A little child Mr. J. A. Which-
aid, Carolina township, was pain-
burned from its clothing catch-
lire on Saturday.
The Institute for
county begins next Monday. Every
public school teacher of the county
is required to attend.
The Sheriff says he means what he
says this time and is going to have
the taxes due for last year or will
proceed to land and sell
as the law directs.
As pretty a top bug as we ever
saw was run out of J.
son's shops last Friday. is one
he had put up for his own use.
Everybody admires it.
She's my honey,
I'm her bee,
Give us a hive,
And pay parson's fee.
Orange Observer
The skimmers caught quite a
of shad past week, some of
them very line. The price has de-
somewhat and may get to
poor man's prices yet.
Sheriff Tucker is putting on his
war paint. is now making his
last call for taxes due for 1891.
After this tall he is to
the land of all delinquents.
It is evident that enough empty
flour barrels to ship all the truck
raised this year cannot be Why
would not a to
size truck barrels prove profitable
It cannot be disputed that Shel-
burn has the neatest looking grocery
in town. He shows taste and care
in the arrangement of his goods and
keeps everything about him
Track laying commenced sure
enough on the railroad from the
Junction to Washington last week.
It is expected to have the road com-
in time to move this season's
truck crop.
Our farmers should turn their at-
more to the cultivation of
rice. have seen it staled that
the straw alone is worth the
lion, to say nothing of what may be
derived the grain
It the tanner goes into his next
crop resolved another
will not find him spending money for
western meal, corn, hay and oats, he
will find himself with a much larger
account a year hence.
There was not a clear, pretty sun-
shiny Sunday in February. Had
you noticed it
A drive through the country will
show many farms all in readiness for
planting to begin.
County Commissioners in session
Monday. Proceedings will be pub-
next week.
Do yon think a canning factory
would pay here Somebody might
be looking into this.
Whenever yon know anything that
is news drop in tell the editor or
him a postal card.
There was a general mixture of
weather last Wednesday, with a few
flakes of anew thrown in.
Quite a number of extra trains are
run on the road here. They come in
nearly day or night.
v. A. i. Hunter announces Ii IS
purpose to preach on next Sunday
night the
wicked rule the people He
desires specially that the men d
these parts hear what he expects to
Owing to sickness the union prayer
for men was not organized
last Thursday night. It may be ex-
next Thursday night; and all
men, young and old, who arc inter-
in the religious good Green-
ville and community, are invited to
be present.
The editor tenders his thanks to
Messrs. Warren Son, proprietors
Riverside Nursery, for a fine young
pecan tree which they sent last week
to be placed in his garden. These
gentlemen are advocates of pecan
culture, something in which every
owner of a piece of land should be
interested.
Mrs. Fannie Joyner now occupies
both rooms of the old Forbes store
for her and other business.
Both rooms have been newly
up and repaired. The large room
to be used for millinery and notions
and the smaller one for
king. Mrs. Joyner will increase her
business spring.
Last week the Reflector had
something to say the hens
lazy. Sunday the editor spent
the day in the country and going out
to get his horse on starting home
found that at least one was
smarter than he bad calculated on.
This particular hen had climbed up
in the buggy and left an egg.
The Reflector mentioned
one day last week that during the
coming summer two more tobacco
warehouses with a corresponding
number of would be built
in Greenville. That is what the
town needs. There is no reason why
this town could not be made of
the best tobacco markets in the State.
In their space to-day J. B. Cherry
Co. have something to say that it
to the interest of every Reflector
reader. Their buyer goes north in a
few days after spring and summer
goods and will buy at such figures
as no one can undersell them. Be
sure that you read over three times
the teaching at the bottom of their
advertisement.
a Guess.
Young A received quite a
curiosity yesterday which is now
being exhibited in their store. It is
a candle eight inches in
lour and a half feet high.
Guesses will be made at the length
of time it will take for the candle to
burn up, and the person guessing
nearest to the correct time will re-
a handsome present.
Pitt is Coming-.
An incident occurred at Farmville
Saturday, so G. T. Tyson
us, that attracted some attention
from people in the village that day.
Messrs. Moses an I A iron
both drove in behind two-year-
old mules, one a road cart
and the other to a light wagon
There was about
driving mules, but when it
known that they were bath home
raised mules interest was I
and all wanted to what kind
mules rats. They
were as fine
as any section can show Other f
do well In interest
this direction.
Impostors.
Two weeks ago the
spoke of the pitiful story a little
was as she went around town
soliciting aid. It has developed
her story was all false and that she
belongs to a family of professional
beggar. She has been over the town
several times since different
kin is of tales in order to gel people
to give her something. Monday four
of them came along together with a
mule and cart and would send the
same girl in lo the different
houses as they went along.
expected to make a big haul
on the town that day, but many of
our citizens had discovered her game
and not themselves lo be
imposed on further by her.
Follow His Example.
Mr. Charles Cobb, Farmville,
had a chat with us other day-
while renewing his subscription to
the Reflector. He said that while
some the farmers of his section
would reduce their cotton acreage
this upon the whole there would
be a large crop of it. For his part
he was not going to waste much of
his time on crops that no money could
be made in cultivating, therefore
would have very little cotton. He
now has every bale of his last years
cotton crop on hand, having sold
enough peanuts, grain, poultry, eggs
potatoes, and such products as these to
supply what money be has been in
need of, while hoof course had his
smokehouse home. The country
more of this class of farmers.
Institute.
The Institute for white teachers
in Pitt county will begin next
Monday, and be conducted by Prof.
Alderman. All white public school
teachers of the county are required
to attend, as will be seen by refer-
lo Sec. Chapter of the
laws of which reads as
shall be the duty of all white
public school teachers of the county
in which the is held lo
tend continuously the sessions of
said institute, and on failure so to
do, without satisfactory reasons, they
shall not be certified as teachers for
the ensuing year; and in an in-
is held while schools are
in session in any county, they shall
be suspended during the session of
the Maj. Harding,
superintendent of education, says
this law in regard to the attendance
of teachers will be strictly adhered
to, and all who fail to attend need
not make any application for a
to teach public schools in
Pitt county.
Both for
The clubbing arrangement that the
Reflector has ma e with the Al-
in a Constitution, whereby
papers can be sent a year for the
small sum of i only for a
limited time. All who want take
advantage this low offer for both
papers should l-e no lime about it.
This is the year that every voter
should keep pooled as to what
is occurring and the Reflector and
arc papers that will -jive
vim the desired information on pans
events. Subscribe at once.
Buyers Attention.
have now on hand and am re
wiving by every steamer large
of Special
Guano and Pine
Guano You all know what
these goods are. No guanos ever
sold in this have made a
showing, and but few, if any, no
good. I very close.
My expenses in handling them are
very small. I am satisfied with a
small profit, and it stands to reason
that I can sell you same grade of
goods as cheap or cheaper than any
other man. Come and see me
you It costs you nothing to
get my prices and find out what
can do and if I can't save you money
yon can buy elsewhere just as easily
as if you had never been to see me.
G. R. Harris.
After
Sheriff Tucker tells us the people
nave been very backward in paying
their taxes for 1891. He has already
settled with the for the amount
due from the county, but there is now
due the county by the tax payers
over This amount is
among the several townships in
about the following
Dam
Bethel Carolina
Falkland
Farmville Greenville
Swift Creek
This is too large a sum to be
still due at this time of another year
and the Sheriff says he shall proceed
to collect by distress out of all
who do not pay by the 15th inst., as
advertised in the appointments pub-
elsewhere in this paper. It is
time the delinquents were paying.
Everybody knows that taxes must
be paid.
At His Old Tricks.
In a late issue of the Graham
Gleaner find the following about
a gentleman who for several years
lived in Greenville, and who appear-
ed here in the same roll as spoken of
In
Next came the sensational temper-
drama, Social
Tragedy and comedy were
features. While all played their
parts well, Bob Brittle J. H.
and Nettie
Lillis were the lira
and attractions of the play, and won
many compliments. In truth they
were funny. Mr.
made several happy hits that
were greatly enjoyed. But so well
was the play executed in its entirety
that the audience manifested not, the
least symptom of unrest.
Gone.
Messrs. Faller. who for a
month past have been operating a
steam merry-go-round here, took up
their machine yesterday and moved
to Plymouth. here they
forded the community considerable
amusement and their gallery was
quite a resort. Both gentlemen
proved themselves very agreeable
and courteous t all with whom they
came in contact. They were also
very generous with their machine,
and operated it three days in the in
of the here, dividing
proceeds with them. Tuesday
of last week it was run jointly for
the King's Daughters of the
pal church who received as
their part of the proceeds Friday-
it was run for the Aid
of the Methodist church who re-
and Monday of this
week, the day here, the proceeds
were divided with the Aid
Society of the Baptist church which
received In all the
to the three churches was
a very nice sum.
Institute.
The Institute for the white teach-
of Pitt will be held at
Greenville by Prof. E. A. Alderman
for one week, commencing on Mon-
the 14th day March next, and
all white public school teachers are
positively required by law to
continuously upon said Institute,
and upon failure so to do they will
be denied a certificate for Hie
year, unless their absence be
caused by sickness or absence from
the county. The absentees need not
for a to teach. We
hope to make ample arrangements
for the accommodation of all teach-
who report the first clay the
Institute, and we will do our best
in make it pleasant for them. In-
exercises will be held every
night. Several distinguished gentle-
men will deliver addresses, among
whom are ex-Gov. T. J. Jarvis, Hon
Geo. T. Winston, President
North Carolina, Col. Harry
Skinner, Hon. C. B. King and Jas.
L. Fleming. The public arc
ally invited to attend all
H. Harding,
Co. Supt. Pub. Inst.
Should March be cold, wet
Before it ends our Goods we'll bay.
driving gaily
and Attractive Line of Men's, Boy's and Youth's Clothing.
r.
C K
2-
-----A NEW AND LARGE LINE OP
VALISES, UMBRELLAS,
ONE,
C. T. M FORD,
Opposite Old Brick Store. k. c
WE WALL SELL
At Cost for the next
DAYS
Respectfully,
BROWN BROTHERS.
-o-
Machines.
for American
Society.
New Home Sewing
Bible
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
-AND BUYER
Country Produce.
Bring-me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
It you have anything to ship I will attend to for you on a small commission.
Call see me.
JNO. S.
HOW MANY ACRES IN TOBACCO
The Reflector desires to know the number of acres that will be
planted in Tobacco in Pitt county this year. We desire these statistics
in order that we may be able to present to Tobacco dealers and buyers
in the established tobacco markets of the world, the advantages of our
county as the tobacco market of Eastern Carolina and induce
them to make Pitt county their home.
We print herewith a blank form on which we our friends
and subscribers to send us the names of those who will plant tobacco
this year.
We also have spaces in same for the address of the plan-
and the number of acres that each planter will have in tobacco. It
is to the interest of every tobacco planter in the county to report every
acre of tobacco in their neighborhood as they will be giving their aid
to build up a home market.
Cut out this blank and mail to TOBACCO EDITOR,
Eastern Reflector,
Greenville, N. C
LET ME HAVE
C IR, ID S
FOR
Reported by.
PLANTERS NAMES.
NUMBER
ACRES.
ADDRESS.
Be sure to put in above all the names of those that will plant tobacco
in your neighborhood and mail it at once.
I want to begin in time this year.
L. H. PENDER,
For S. E. PENDER CO
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods
Car load Mess Pork.
Car load Rib Side Meat.
Car load Flour, all grilles.
Car load White Seed Oats.
Cases Star Lye.
Cases Bread Powders.
Soap.
Cases Cherries and Peaches.
Pull line Case Goods.
Boxes Crackers.
Boxes Tobacco.
Boxes Starch.
Barrels Rico Molasses,
Stick Candy.
Gall Ax
Barrels Mills
2-i Barrels P.
Finer Sack-. Cigarette, fee.
KT. C.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN--------
in; an
ST.





IN CONSTRUCTION.
PERMANENT IN DURATION.
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USE QUICKLY LEARNED-
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new theories lb
and cure of disease, h deal- with the,
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mm surrounding it in the
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It is
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A -page
testimonial all sec-
lions, and for the cure of all j
mailed free on A
ATLANTIC SB
I. C. Charleston, S. I
Atlanta. Ga.
THE REFLECTOR
COMBINE.
REV. MR. DIXON SPEAKS OF IT IN
HIS INTRODUCTION.
PATENT-
obtained, and all business in the B.
Patent or In Courts attended t
for Moderate Ma.
We are opposite the IT. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patent- Exclusively,
can obtain patent- in less time than
more from Washington.
the model or drawing is
advise at to free of charge,
and we make no change unless we on.
Patents.
We refer, here, to the Post Master. Hi.
of the Monet lid. and u
tin s. Office. Pol
advise terms aim reference i
actual ill own State or coin
a. snow a
Washington,
GRAND EMPORIUM
and II i
AT
the Opera House, at which
I have located, an I re I
everything nit line
NEW, CLEAN AM
TO MAKE
MODEL S
with all tile
and comfortable chair-
for work of my -h
Very
k i
OINTMENT
Ml
This has b n in use
years, and wherever h
been in stead; it has been en-
by leading
and baa where
all r attention of
the mo-t d
for war- failed. his Ointment is of
long st -Hiding I be high reputation
which it has obtained is entirely
it.- nu . as bill little
ever neon nude to bring b before mm-
On. of this Ointment win
be of One
Dollar, sample box lice,
in .-. t
prompt to. a I
K-r.- to
t.
. i.
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j.-i p. r.
t II fret lb. can
Tl Mr, I T-e
C CURES
t It it
Chronic
letter,
t. P. P. k a task Bed as
Cures
CURES
H E ----ml
B A. Ph R
Block, GA.
For sale at J. I. Drug Store
WARTS
Humanity- Divine
of Total Depravity.
lie Not Hold Such
Thereon
New York, March Dixon
ceded hi. sermon in Association hall this
morning by a review of the recent com-
of the anthracite coal kings of
Pennsylvania. He
The most gigantic railroad deal in the
history of the world has been con-
in Wall street. The
cite coal of America is controlled
by f. v. railroads. Four of these roads
have entered into a
Beading. Lehigh Valley, Jersey Central,
and Delaware, wanna and West-
The combination represents a total
of real and watered stock to the
amount of It is de-
that the earnings of this trust
will be over annually. We
do not doubt it.
STREET s.
The scene on the Stock exchange when
the announcement of this deal was
made beggars description. Men plunged
and shrieked and jumped and yelled like
maniacs. Millions hung in the balance
of a moment. It was a day never to be
forgotten even on the floor of this daily
pandemonium.
It was enough to move men to mad-
and transform a market into a hell
of greed and speculative lust. These
stocks, in spite of the burden of tons of
water, leaped upward some
within a few ticks of the clock. Visions
of imperial splendor Hashed before the
crowd of genteel gamblers. Nor
was there any decline in prices.
fortunes were made in an hour. It
was an hour that should interest pro-
the whole nation. Those who
have best reason to know declare that it
means an advance of fifty cents a ton on
the price of coal.
all profit
This means that the masses of the
will be robbed of more
annually in a tax on their firesides to
furnish the sinews of war for our
of finance as the- walk from throne
to throne and dream of new worlds
to conquer. Yes, for all this inflated
stock, for all these fictitious values, for
all these enormous profits, somebody
must the men who have done
this trading have scarcely crooked their
little fingers. From certain quarters
there rises the cry trusts,
lies, combinations and conspiracies
against competitive trade. The power
of law is invoked to break up the con-
NONE OF YOUR
But why all this noise What has the
law to do with such a combination
Such a deal is a perfectly legitimate
to system of commercial
war. The inevitable end of all
is combination. Combination is
the possible fruit of such a system.
At present railroads are owned and
run by private capital. Have not two
roads the same right to combine under
one management as one road to combine
capital in the beginning Certainly.
What business is it to yon or me if the
owners of these roads enter into a part-
The roads belong to their
They invested their
money for gain. They did not build or
buy those roads for philanthropic par-
poses. They went into it to make money
for themselves. They did not invest for
the purpose of f fuel to poor
people who are cold. You allow them
to own these public highways. They
will you just what they
for carrying your coal. If they feel like
it they will raise the price of coal fifty
cents a ton. The engines, tracks, cars,
belong to the managers. They will ad-
the price a dollar a ton if they
feel inclined It is none of your
If you do not like it yon can
whistle. If yon don't want to buy coal,
let it alone. You can burn wood, oil,
gas, electricity.
THE
Yes, there is a remedy. Just one. All
other remedies only play with the prob-
and pile up wrath against the day
of wrath. The time has come when the
government must assume control of the
highways and run them in the
interests of the people.
HIGHWAYS AND HIGHWAYMEN.
Streets and public roads were the
highways of past The rail-
road is the highway of modern times.
The king owned the old highway. The
king must own the new highway or the
new highwaymen will own the king.
HUMANITY DIVINE.
How Lost How Regained
Gold ox
i or Expert
tad
Um, tat w
The Hun at Ufa, or a
Ml oM. Bead It .
mac. and learn la
Sutler the little children to come me;
forbid not. for of such is the kingdom of
x, U.
And one of the malefactors which were
railed on him. But the other answered
and rebuking him said. We receive the due re-
ward of our deeds, but this man has done
nothing amiss. And he said, Jesus, remember
me when comest in thy kingdom. And
He said unto him. Verily I say thee, to-
day thou be with me in
at a
Colonel Ingersoll says that
has taught that the whole human
race is by nature depraved, and that if
God should act in accordance with his
sense of justice all of the sons of men
would be doomed to eternal pain.
man nature has been derided, has been
held up to contempt and scorn, all our
desires and passions denounced as wick-
ed and to any. Colonel
Ingersoll declares at this late day that
Christianity teaches the doctrine of Total
Depravity. Again we find the colonel
at his old tricks. He sets up a man of
straw that he may knock him down for
the of the crowd. He is
again hunting for imaginary gain.
A FIRE ii r
In a wild district of the south two
men went out on a certain night to hunt
deer in what is known as a
two men, with their guns, and a boy
i to hold the light. Suddenly one of the
hunters saw the gleam of the eye of his
deer in the distance in the forest. The
crack of his rifle announced to his friends
that they had found game.
deer shone up he said
in a self satisfied tone as he loaded
gun.
They in the direction of the
prize, but in astonishment they saw an-
other blue light appear in another
Again he fired, again the light
went out Again they sought for their
deer and found it not.
said the hunter,
I've only seen one eye each
they have been standing
to replied his friend.
Again crash went the rifle, down went
the eye. They rushed to secure their
game, and the doer was nowhere to be
found. They exchanged guns, and when
the eye of lie deer again gleamed by the
light of the torch, he tried his mark-
the fourth time. Bat he I
no game. Then the other tried
a shot. The eye dropped. They went
to find the game; found it not. But
they heard behind them the boy
in great glee laughing over something.
They asked hi a what was the
He
Five miles away
You have baa i shorting at the light-
Their purely imaginary.
They oat mistake at last and
proceeded to hunt ml
SATANIC
The trouble with the colonel is that
ho has not yet found out his mistake,
and ho is still firing away as though he
were doing wonders. He sets up this
imaginary object and proceeds to de-
it. When he makes such an as-
ho again proclaims the fact that
he has not been to church lately. In
fact, judging from this statement, he
has not been to church in about fifty
years, and what is worse, the last time
he was at church, fifty years ago, the
probability is that he did not understand
what he heard.
The doctrine of Total Depravity is one
that Christianity is in no sense
for. It is a centuries old,
but is none the less a slander. It is a
slander of Almighty God, a
upon Christ and his church. My own
idea is that it originated with the devil.
I do not charge the colonel with orig-
this assertion. I do charge him
with circulating a malicious slander.
It seems to me that there came a time in
the history of the forces of evil below
when his Satanic majesty conceived n
brilliant plan of campaign. He said,
if I can only convince tho world that
Christianity means the abrogation of
manhood; if I can only produce the
that to be a Christian moans to
be less a man, and that the man who
enters the Christian life must resign all
that is and good and worth
having in this world, then I will
in trapping thousands where one
would fall otherwise. The devil should
certainly build a monument to the man
who first taught this doctrine; for it is
calculated to deceive the very elect. It
has played wild havoc with the church
in tho past.
Thank God are reaching the
when such a slander no longer has
force over the minds of the followers of
Christ. They are learning now what
Christ really taught. Nobody believes
now within organic, so called orthodox
circles in such a doctrine. Whenever
you hear an old man get up and confess
that he is the greatest sinner in tho
world, and that he is altogether wicked
and altogether evil, he is simply repeat-
a traditional theology which is not a
part of his life, for if a brother on tho
other side the church should get up in
reply and agree with him, and declare
that he was the biggest scoundrel in the
church, there certainly would a fight.
This is simply the chatter of tradition.
It has no part in real Christian life.
OF ROYAL LINEAGE.
So far from Christianity teaching that
the race is by nature de-
and that man is totally depraved,
Jesus Christ taught the very opposite,
namely, that Christianity is intrinsically
divine. sin intrinsic;. inhuman and
natural.
Open the book of Christianity and see
if this is not true. Yon will it shad-
Owed forth ill the Old Testament before
the founder of Christianity came upon
the scene. The Old Testament teaches
in the very chapter, in the first
lesson God taught the infant class of the
human race, t hat God made man in his
own image. He did not man in
the image of the but in man God
reproduced himself. Again, the Psalm-
tells us that he made him a
lower than the And now the
later translation it, little lower
than echoing first great lesson
taught in Quote When the prophets
of old looked out upon a sinning, erring
people their cry set forth this
divine truth. Tho of their hearts
was ever the cry of the of tears-.
thou backsliding Israel. Only
come back. I will not chide; I will for-
give; I will not keep This
peal recognized element to which it
appealed. So Christ taught, and
did his apostles teach. the Now
Testament and yon find it upon almost
every page.
teaches the intrinsic
of in his doctrine of
child salvation. He teaches it with an
emphasis that marks the thought
in his ministry. His disciples
had driven the children away from the
great master. Christ turns upon them
with anger. The Word says that
was moved with but the
Greek declares that he was angry. This
word signifying anger is used only once
to describe the emotions that swept the
heart of Christ, and this was the
Jesus turned to his shortsighted
disciples with those immortal words
never to be forgotten, the little
children to unto me; forbid them
not. for of such is the kingdom of
He distinctly declared that heaven
is peopled with hosts of little children.
He distinctly declared that every child
is an incarnation of the breath of God.
That every into the world is
from the throb of God's heart.
taught again this sub-
lime truth in his attitude toward the
outside Tho proud Pharisee and
Jewish would not enter the
homes of the poor and degraded. To
enter pollution. But the great
Galilean Teacher went from
home to home, mingled with the poor
and the outcast, and one of the
which they brought against him
was that he was the friend of publicans
ind sinners. He loved man as man. He
ministered to man as man, teaching that
man as man is worthy. The howling
mob brings before the master a trembling
woman taken in sin. They clamor for her
life. They expect now to see this teacher
of law visit upon the offender the
of violated law. But could
see through the exterior, through out-
ward clamor. He looked not at that which
was without, but at that which
within the heart. Turning to the
tent, frightened woman, we hear
do I accuse
thee. Go and sin no
He teaches the world the sublime
son of the Prodigal Son. That the boy
was at home, that he left father's
house, went to the lowest depths of
degradation, and that still in thy lowest
depths he was his father's child. He
pictured the father waiting and watch-
out on the highway for his return.
He tells us how the father him
in rags and tatters and yet received him
as a child, rejoiced in that reception.
be glad, make merry; for this
my son, that was dead, is alive. He
that was lost is
doctrine of the Fatherhood
of God likewise proclaims that man is
of royal blood, and when be taught the
world to pray he taught
that every man made in the image of
God has in his veins the blood of a king.
He taught this to a world of slaves in
which the life of man was held in low-
est possible estimate. Teaching ho
taught of necessity that all are
brethren. He told the m the
throne and the beggar by the wayside
that there was one Father above, tho
Father of all. He threw around
man as man tho r robes of divine
kinship.
OUTWEIGHS
attitude toward
likewise proclaimed the same great
truth. He violated the Jewish laws.
He broke I he Jewish Sabbath. He did
it without hesitation. Hear his
Sabbath was made for How
vast looms the thought in the
Sou of Man. Far this
made m or a
of God, all things were made. All
things must his
were made to he is not
the servant of
of life
this of the intrinsic
divinity of man. Jesus proclaimed the
incalculable value of a single soul. He
declared that if you should all the
thrones and scepters and , all the
wealth of all the nations of all he earth
and all tho treasures under earth.
and pile them all in one y heap,
they would be worth nothing as com-
pared to the value of a single life. Hear
him, shall it profit a man if ho
gain the whole world and lose his
The life of man loomed up before him
in immortal grandeur.
ALFRED.
teaching concerning tho
providence of God likewise the
same truth. To his listening disciples
he be anxious, worry
The father above hears the of the
smallest, child. The father counts
the beat of the sparrow's wing before
the storm. Not one shall fall to the
ground but that it shall disturb the
economies of his infinite universe. The
very hairs of your head are numbered.
Be not anxious. He who clothes the
grass of the field, he who watches and
counts the sparrows, watches every step
in the life of greater than all
the birds and flowers of the
A legend of good King Alfred de-
that when he and his huntsman
were one day riding through the forest
they saw an eagle's nest on the top of a
steep cliff, and from it they heard a
sound like the sobbing of a babe. A
man was sent to climb to the nest, and
in it he found a baby boy, alive and
hurt. The king carried the little one
home, and he grew up in the royal
He became one of Alfred's most
heroic knights and followers.
Hear the words of Jesus, Son of
Man came to seek and to save that
which was So worthy is man
that the outcast, the weak, the helpless,
the lost, call for the infinite expression
of infinite love.
DUST OR FLAME.
teaching as to the nature
of sin unfolds the same truth. Sin.
Christ declares, is of the heart- That is.
it is a violation of the in man.
says, not that which enters into a
man denies him, but that which pro-
out from the man within. Sin he
declares to be the violation thus of the
true nature of man. It is by
some that Paul, the great apostle who
followed Christ, taught the doctrine of
Total Depravity. Paul does say, know
that in me is, in my
no good
The trouble the man who be-
in Total Depravity, who professes
Christianity, is that he omits this clause
my which qualifies the who
sentence. Man is not flesh.
is not flesh. The tiger kills a man an
lies down after his meal and
soundly. Man kills his fellow man at.
is pursued by an invisible hand to th.
ends of the earth, until at last he tear-
open his breast and tells the secret to ;
avenging law. The tiger is an .
man is an animal. They are flesh
But yon do not find the man in the flesh
Humanity- is that which is added to the
flesh. Man did not become a man until
he ceased to be merely an animal. W
he ceased to be merely an animal lie e-
divine. He partook of
Flesh is the soil out of which .
man grew. He is not of the soil.
Christ taught in Hi-
fact of the incarnation this
truth. This is the meaning and t
mystery of the incarnation. The life
Christ was a supreme service to man.
He denied himself even On comfort i
sou was swept
row, as in the days of sunlight and pros-
While he hung quivering on the
cross, he looked down the ribald
crowd that mocked and jeered him in
his anguish and lifting his -lying eyes
toward heaven, he for-
give them. They know not what they
He knew that if they only did
realize their true position, such conduct
would be impossible.
A BROKEN LIFE.
An itinerant minister in the south
some years ago was passing through a
prison pen one day. It was crowded
with prisoners, many among
them, showing every phase of ignorance
and brutality. One gigantic fellow
crouched alone in a corner, his feet
chained to a ball. There was the mark
of an unhealed wound on his face where
he had been shot while trying to escape.
The sight of the dumb, gaunt figure
touched the visitor's sympathies.
long has he to he asked
the keeper.
he anybody outside to look after
old master or wife or
should I know Nobody but
yon has ever noticed him all the time he
has been
I speak to
but only for a
The minister hesitated. What could
he say in one minute
He went up and touched the man's
torn cheek. am he said.
wish I could help
The looked keenly at him, and
then the hard lines of his face softened,
and he nodded to indicate that he ac-
and believed in the sympathy ox-
pressed.
am going away, and shall never
see yon again, perhaps, but you have a
friend who will stay here with
The small, keen eyes were on him;
the dragged himself up, waiting
and eager.
have heard of
is your friend. If you are good
and true, and pray to God to help you, I
am sure He will care for
tie,
And if you surely try to do
right he will sometime take you away
from here to His home. will; you
may be sure of
called the keeper.
The clergyman turned sorrowfully
away. The prisoner crawled after him,
life, that he might serve man. He wen.
about doing good. He stood at the gate
and healed the sick. He fed tho hungry.
He comforted those who were . u
with Ho poured out his I.
that the world might he blessed, i
was a man of woman, and the fa.
that God speak his last
love to the world
man, the incarnation of the i.
vine in flesh, means nothing more
less than that he meant to the birth-
mark of divinity on man born of woman.
AT the
Last summer a man fell dead on
avenue. There was no money
his chain, catching his
band held it in his own while he could.
Tears were in the clergyman's eyes.
Fourteen years passed. The convict
was sent with gangs of his fellows from
place to place to work in the mines or
on the roads of the state. The old min-
coming back to the south, went
down one day into a mine, and among
the workmen saw a gigantic fig-
, bent with hardship and with age.
is he asked the keeper,
the huge again attracting his at-
lifer, and he's a steady follow, the
j best of the
Just then the looked His
figure straightened, for he had
tho clergyman. His eyes shone.
you, Does you know
ho said. Ho come soon,
i yon me about tried to be
Through all the outer of this
broken life, through the skin, the
wounded body, this preacher had looked
and seen in the heart of this man its
vine secret. At a single word of
laying hold of that divine secret,
the life had been transformed, the con-
redeemed. So would have
done. So he did. Turning to the male-
factor by his side in the agonies of death
we hear his voice, day thou
be with me in Ho died for
man as man. He looked through all that
which lies upon the outer surface and saw
the immortal, the infinite, the divine ca-
of this creature made in the image
of God. There is no meaning to the
cross of Christ save that man was worthy
of such a sacrifice. This is the
mental message which Jesus bears a
lost and sinning world.
cut Moth r
. .- . . ,,
ill
away.
.-n,,
fusion home would lie if did no;
return. If your wife is slowly
down, from a combination of
cares and disorders, make it your
Hist business to restore her health. Ur
favorite is with, m;
n peer as u Ira feeble
and is the only in
the of known a- in
lineages i sold under a positive
the
it will give or i he money
will e refunded. It is i on--live cure
fir the complicated
tr.
A Story or Rev. Dr. Cuyler.
heard a good story about Kev Dr
Cuyler the other day. It was not by
him nor related by him. nor did it
from him. but it was about
that is to say. it an incident of
which a recent event in his and
lovely life was the cause Von know
he was seventy years old a few days ago.
His friends in many cases knew about it
in advance, for his birthday has been an
anniversary which they have always
honored. Between those aware of the
anniversary the competition to make the
good man's drawing room and study
fragrant with ferns and flowers was in-
tense. The rooms were a bower of
beauty. The delicate gifts were ex
pressed in all forms which art or
could suggest or dense. They made
a glorious showing in themselves. They
delighted the heart of the his
kindred and friends. Among those who
it was known would be not the least
pleased was a faithful servant, knitted
by interest, association and affection
with the life of the household by years
of tender and trusting association.
It occurred to one of the women of
the family to bring this devoted domes
tic up to the drawing room and let her
contemplate and admire the evidences of
loving remembrance in which the good
man was held. This was done. The
servant reveled in the examination of
the gifts, expressed her surprise at their
quantity, her appreciation of their
and her amazement at the
and diversity of the forms they
Her sense of the loveliness of the
spectacle and of tho merit in the doctor
which elicited the tokens was expressed
in the following glowing words to Mrs.
Cuyler, tell you. ma'am, the doctor
couldn't have had more flowers sent to
him if he was Tribute,
cation, as well as affection and surprise,
certainly reached their climax in these
Eagle.
A Title,
I cannot imagine anything than
the story of B iron arriving in
this v i twenty-sis full
of . u
to marry a rich and attractive
widow, and his all seized
for debt, then presenting himself at the
beautiful widow's house with nothing to
wear but an old steamer suit, and with
a monkey, a parrot and a bit of cheese
in his hand. There seems to be an
that the does not pay his
debts because of his eccentricity. It has
been that he has an in-
come of 5,000.000 francs a year.
This statement is scarcely consistent
with the baron's in connection
with the seizure of his clothes, and the
whole farce calls to mind the
blindness which American women
display whenever a foreign title is in
view. Baron is eccentric to the
point of violence, and he is likely to
occupy a prominent place in the papers
during his stay here. An American who
did the things that the baron does would
have rather hard going in this cast iron
and commonplace age of
Hall in Brooklyn Eagle.
A i
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daily
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dawn a o you can net
cents
to plunk
Salvation
Gil led
five doll
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live cent are going for
r I nieces, but Ur.
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Sine-
Bitters
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A Leader.
t ion. Electric
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and me
men st in eh Live
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fr in lie -is -at. a is-
with each r
be refunded Sold t
om.
A Brooklyn woman is suffering from
a heavy cold caught in rather an
usual way To some persons even it
may seem in rather a humorous way
With the rest of the world this woman s
domestic arrangements have de-
moralized the grip First her cook
and a the waiter
to the sought nursing and
at tin The
waiter left late one evening, and the
woman by tin- d v red to assist
Newman-ville, r , MM.
Messrs. Bro .
Dear wish to
inn card in
P. P. P. for tin-cure -in
in his pockets. He was dressed in seedy, neuralgia, dyspepsia,
worn clothes. They took him to th
morgue. The reporters described hi
body accurately. No one could
him; but on his right hand, tattooed in
India ink, was the picture of a tomb,
with a willow overhanging.
this picture was the inscription, the
memory of my A kind hearted
merchant came and looked at the poor
unknown. They were going to bury
him in the potter's field on the morrow.
this man was or what he was
none can he said; he once had
a mother whom he loved; so had Give
him a decent funeral and send the bill
to
And the body of the nameless stranger
v, as honored with a handsome coffin, an
undertaker's service, a religious
and a cemetery burial, because of
one mark that made him brother to all
human hearts, meant to put this
birthmark on every human soul, when
he spoke his message of love to tho
world through the man born of
woman. The incarnation is thus the
climax of God's revelation of himself to
man. He sneaks to van in man, and
this is the highest possible language of
divine revelation. It is God's last word
in malting the way complete.
explanation of the
of the life of Christ proclaims the
j same sublime truth. Why was it
I for Christ to die Because only in
suffering and pain is salvation
I Man must have been worthy of this
I outpouring of love, else it never
could have been made. He who knew
. the worth of man was willing to die that
I man might live. Jesus died for man as
man. He saw his intrinsic worth and
he made the supreme sacrifice of love.
A STRANGE SCENE.
On the 25th of last month a strange
scene was witnessed in the police
j in Brooklyn. A criminal was brought
for sentence. He bad been convicted
j a few days before of breaking into a
house and stealing property. He had
i previously served a term in prison. The
sentence it was expected would be the
full penalty of the law. His attorney,
however, appeared before the justice and
aid that a lady who was then in court
had long loved this prisoner in of
his misconduct and wag willing to mar-
him. She was wealthy, and believed
that had enough influence over the
man to reform him, as she could place
him in circumstances of comfort where
he would not be tempted by poverty to
Steal.
It was a remarkable request
when the justice was convinced of her
sincerity and truth he pointed out to the
prison what a sacrifice the girl pro-
posed to make on behalf and asked
Um what he would do. The prisoner
was overcome with gratitude and
if released, to awry the girl and
lead an hornet life. The justice de-
that the end of the law was
bat the object of the state was to
reformation for criminal. He
suspended sentence.
It was just this sacrifice which
Christ made for man. Beneath all Ins
and all his wretchedness, He saw
clearly cm, ate
In was w III
rheumatism, aid have
to i I l -i
medicine- I hem n h
doctors reach, bill f
p the pairs
times t I did care
or died My
paired bin-
with me. wife Is
tensely with I i
a burden loin ; she w i
to her d for at
i-in o a
In I Ii
b Clime I n
ii I-
re ii n
a el life
n- c
i In- ;
also red f
loss of Some nine ill March I
was adv to take I. P. I., an
we i and had sec-
of in e
Ran to My pains so
much th . have been lo work, and
am el like doing what I haven't
done in a of ears. We
will continue P. I. P. e
in entirely cured, and will
i. ml it suffering humanity.
Yours very
J. s.
Chill and England.
For seventy years past Chili has
as much a dependency of Great Britain
as Belgium is, but with a difference.
Belgium really owes her national
to the good offices of
who helped to separate her from
land in and has stood between her
and annexation to France ever since.
Chili owes nothing to England and
everything to America, but she has been
bamboozled into the belief that England
is her real true author
of the Monroe doctrine. Through Eng-
traders and diplomatists there has
been fostered in the an
and unreasoning jealousy of America,
which controls their policy in all
it came out as distinctly in their treat-
of our peaceful advances during
their war with in their response
to Mr. Brine's proposals for a pan-
American congress Mr. Gar-
field's administration, in their grudging
compliance with that invitation when
renewed by Secretary Bayard, and in
the conduct of their delegation
the sessions of the congress in 1888-0, as
since the collapse of To
trace this hostility to anything Minister
Egan has done or omitted to do is to
shut one's eyes to the essential facts.
Mr. Egan has been made the stalking
horse for abuse and enmity which have
deep roots in the past history of the
country, and which only wanted an ex-
for an B. E.
Thompson in Irish World.
could
shall
was
not
I'll I
ton-
till mommy -1
lire
and -lie
that mid
fir Hale.
boys and girls may still be
bought even in Constantinople, and will
be so long as parents are eager to sell
their children. The government may
pass laws and honestly carry them out,
but a friendly transaction of this kind
be prevented. As the young
grow however, they learn
their rights, and naturally they give
trouble. But of late years it has be-
come a common practice in households
of the middle class to train a
boy, educate at the Robert
start him in life, with the
view, if he turn out well, of marrying
him to one of the master's daughters.
So with girl slaves also, but less
We have been by parents
that such marriages are nearly always
happy. No shadow of excuse can be
urged for the slave trade. it will
not be thought surprising, after the
facts detailed, that respectable
find another point of
Review.
s favor a tariff for revenue only
-nine a tin ill with incidental
some a tariff for protection, per-e;
nut a large favor the free use
Oil for cuts and bruises.
An chain of verify
the excellence of Dr. Bull's Cough
cents.
One of the Trials of a Subject.
That the edict is-
sued by the English queen is a trial to
some not of tho court circles is shown
by the peremptory answers in the
of the English
devoted to social and fashionable
interests. black wherever you
would be the worst possible
taste to appear in wed-
ding need not he postponed, hut black
should be worn except, of by
the altar party, bride and
and so on.
Americans cannot help sympathizing
with the struggling uncertainty which
prompts these questions. It is all very
well to share a prominent family's grief
and to show respect for tho death of an
officially high but when in-
convenience, expense and serious de-
of plans are imposed
households in no way connected with
the bereaved one, except by political
sympathy seems to have gone
further than there is any necessity for.
Her Point of View in Now York
Times.
v It
Mi
I IS am
IS
i Sin day.
Train No. GK not 7th.
Train on Neck branch Road
leaves Halifax 1.-22 M. arrives Scot
land Neck at 6.16 II.,
P. M. Kin-urn p. m. Returning,
leave a. m. Greenville
. a. in. Arriving Halifax h. hi.
II U a III., daily except
Local freight train leaves Weldon
Monday, and Friday at
in., living Scotland Neck 1.05
a. m. Greenville p. in.,
p in. Returning leaves
Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday at
7.20 a. in., arriving
a in., Neck p. DI., Weldon
5.15 p. in.
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via
Raleigh R. K. daily except Sun-
P M. Sunday P M,
N C, P M, V M.
Plymouth 8.80 p. m., 5.22 p. m.
leaves Plymouth daily except
a. in., Sunday a. m-
N m, 0.58 him.
Tarboro, N A M 11.20.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
daily except Sunday, A M
N C, Mi a M.
turning leaves X C AM
arrive N SO A M.
Train on leaves y
at P M. arrive Nashville 1.6
I Mope P M, Returning
leaves Spring Hope sun AM. Nashville
8.86 A M. arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton leaves
to- Unto dull- f
I. InA M Gill
on at s A M, and In P. M. Conner
Warsaw Nos. M
train on Wilson A
Branch h No. is
except Sunday.
No. South and North
stop it Rocky Mount Wilson
Magnolia.
I rain Nu. makes close connection a
Weldon for all points North daily. Al
ail via and daily except -urn
a via Hay Line, also Rocky Mount
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A
Carolina railroad for Norfolk I all
points via Norfolk.
JOHN P.
J. R. Transportation
Scientific American
for
en's A S .
or
s. ire
prep.
i laid r lire, with the
I be novice and the mis-
tress and . .- from the
kitchen she took the
and lo the ash closet under the
stoop to empty it. Alas the basement
door closed alter her with a spring lock,
and when sue would enter she could
not It was one of the bitter cold morn-
and it was very
-lie was the only member
of the household known to be awake.
She rang the bell vigorously
and often Its distant peal disturbed
in the chambers. Then
she tried the hall door. Clang, clang,
her heard sleepily in his dreams,
he remembered hastily that his wife
had dressed and left the room, and she
would look after the bell.
It was fully five minutes before the
continuous ringing warned him that
something unusual investigation
and he investigated it. Fancy his feel-
when he found the was his
wife, chilled through and shivering on
the front steps. Of this performance
the heavy cold is the natural result.
Her Point of View in New York Times.
ah
lei i happed Hand.
inns. Coins, and all Skin
positively cures or PU
mi required. It is guaranteed to give
t satisfaction, or money refunded
I lire cents box For sale at
w Store.
is
Women are, in truth,
creatures, and capable of
by turns angels and demons. And there
are men who would allow them to vote I
I would sooner give children razors and
revolvers to play Truth.
The
From who don't know
their who undertake to man-
age newspapers in our interest, and
make themselves ridiculous; who
tend to be pious, yet indulge in profanity
in cold type. Good Lord, deliver us.
Metropolis.
ate.
For information and free Handbook
ft act York.
bureau or patent In America.
patent taken out by
the public a notice riven free m
Sf
Lars-eat of any
Splendidly No
man should be without
1.0 nil a CO.
New York.
Sh J Cure.
This s question the most
Cough Medicine we have ever
said, fen doses Invariably cure the
of Cough. Croup and Bron-
while won success in the
cure of i without s
in the history of Since its
discovery It h is sold on a
a test no other medicine
can If have we earn-
ask you it. .
and I your lungs are or
back In me. use
sold at
A Filthy Chinaman.
During of the wars with China
Commissioner Yen. who was viceroy
over millions, was taken prisoner, and
in consideration of his high rank he was
kept on board the flagship. While there
he lived after the fashion of Peter the
Great, when be occupied house
at and his society was so
bearable that a formal complaint was
made by the crew to the admiral. The
latter d to through the in-
if he did not mend his
would have to swab
i day like a bullock on
r a Mail.
To Young
Mothers
j- i
ways the
him d
shipboard. ,
en
n. Cur
We authorize our advertised druggist
to sell r. King's Ne Minim I j
motion. Coughs an
the- If you are afflicted with
a Cough. or Throat or
best trouble, will use this
directed, giving it a t rial. and ex-
no yon may he
bottle and have Mi money refunded .
We could not make offer we not
know that Dr. King's New Discover
could be relied on. It never disappoint
Trial bottle free
Large
Answer Question.
o , ,. j. .
.-, i h
. s ,. I II I ,,
. up
e . Yellow .
-If hem
ice I to cup sold a I.
on a
One day last week a clerk in a
grocery store emptied some sour wino
into a pan and thoughtlessly placed it
near a coop with ducks. They
made abort work of tho pan's contents.
and in a few every duck in the
coop was under the of a royal
They reeled and staggered I-
drunken men and did not recover
the effects of their for several
Francisco Call.
A cine I
Head
each there Is an ingenious
nasal Injector for the m re
of these com without
f Price Sold at WOt T
if.
BOILING ER OR MILK
COCOA
I. LR TINS ONLY.
Ho What sTill
why Knottier new discover by Alfred
in the way of helping the afflict-
ed, or addressing the
above name bettor, you oar. procure
if is invaluable
for i-rail and full and the
hair lo In and
only two or three application h
week i and a common hair
brush is all to he used after rubbing the
for a few minute with
the Preparation. Try a bottle aid lie
convinced, only
Respectfully,
ALFRED CULLEY
Barber,
m.-. um
O.
HA V A several d par.-cl; of real
for -ale. Look over the list
and mil n or w rite then.
v i lot on Third below Co-
I In Man of
Bond house with four rooms
and smoke convenient
I on the
Two good lots in Skinner
. veil desirable
A lot between
and Second, has nice house of
S rooms, good well of wider, large gar-
den plot and stable-.
A bull Mere lot in
Tr. Urge single story home
of rooms cook and dining rooms
Inched, all necessary out buildings and
stables, good water
A line containing Ml acres,
. miles from Greenville on M t.
P has gin house, -tables.
barns, I two room tenant houses;
SO cleared, balance well wooded,
nod water. This hind excellent for
Cultivation of line tobacco.
One farm lying on branch of the
. W . half way lie-
and Kinston and within i
mile a depot, contains acre.
Well and timbered
with pine. oak. hickory. and cypress;
ha good tenant houses; railroad
nearly of t Id. farm. The
and bus clay subsoil sandy
i in good suite ion and highly
improved; is line trucking land.
A farm x miles from on
. road known as the
cleared ; ha
dwelling and nil
This -i a 10-
b A and lot In Greenville on
Or B. and W.
now family of
In- W. A house contains n
kitchen convenient. Is convenient
cation, only half block from main
of be town. Possession
ran lie given
Q A goto I lot
w t, I ween Third
N. lo-
lot on Pitt
net near
t o rooms, large
j and oil building.
The honor and pr.
I. Pitt -in adjoining the lot of 8-
S. and the lot in
one
of four room-, and cook
I room for
and Flour
Mills, Cotton Gin and Store This
property located at a X Road
a hundred yard of R. It.
MM in one of the best Agricultural
Sections of Pitt county. The mill re
up the best machinery. Bolt
f cloth, . and in full
op, lion. Th- store house i- a two
building, with dwelling attacked
n a kitchen and warehouse in rear.
The store kept constantly supplied
with general merchandise to a
and is a good
lies. mills are the beat known in
his section.
property I offered for sale as the
o wish to withdraw from business.
Term on any of the above property
can be had on to
on
and Fourth
. venue,
lot with


Title
Eastern reflector, 9 March 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
March 09, 1892
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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