Eastern reflector, 17 February 1892






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Job Priming loon
That can be surpassed o
this section.
J Our work always
if faction.
K New
Good Pi MM
Material
V FEND US YOUR ORDERS
GIVEN AWAY
BY THE WEEK Y,
The Atlanta Constitution-
ill
year by I'll I I
at Ga ,
en at newspaper the
largest circulation of am weekly
published in Slates,
with on.- exception. it London, the
in the world. It is. first and
foremost, a every
week the of all world, and
devoted especially to the development
of the south. Its circulation now ex-
it is for
Sample copies will lie sent on
application.
thousand dollars will bi- divided
it- now
July 1st. and then and
of the
The division will based on the
result of tin- conventions of
the great parties in line, and tin-
on the of the
democratic
at
The national i mi
meets at dis June 7th.
Both will nominate a candidate for
president and vice
for KM First
Twenty-live -d d ill in
will be give-i h I'M k to
the
will the of tarn
party president and vice president
Am son the names
will to ti
prize MS e if. more
than one answer- were the prize
will divided
fr a .
Five in will lie
divided a who en
only three out lour nones to be
as part., standard bearer, m
that u may arrange a-
one of the four and by getting
three will come in for his prize.
Mis-
In addition to the above sold
more will lie in
prizes, of twenty-five silver
re ail value i- e-t
and and s of
Vt
edition, fully and
of
gold watches will be given to
every hundredth hallo, of
received, silver the
of hundredth ballots, and
that e- will One
of th s
an
All must lie -d one
year's subscription to i ox-
at and must be
ten on a piece of fro-u
containing older tor
The winner of any of t Si- prizes
above noted will be given a bee at
the after July
1st this you and you
may get or in gold.
will certainly receive gr.-ii.-s K
new-paper I in tut
one and there will In; a
when a great will i in ore
than
all lo
ion. Atlanta.
The Eastern Reflector.
VOL.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
AT REST.
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter.
First Sunday, morning an
s morning at
and before.
Third fourth Minn us at
ville. morning and night, also
Sunday and W
night ice- week.
Services at school on
road on Thurs night in-fore
each third until April and then
on third Sunday
M.
heart,
seems vest r av fol thy
Tired hands upon breast,
fast thine eyes dimmed i-H
tile last upon marble
And laid thee.
Into the narrow hid from our
forever
Oh
The of our aching hearts.
As once again we sit within the hallow en
room
From which we ban rest;
All speak but of thee ;
The pictures OB the walls-
Tile work thy hands hare
wrought.
The keys once answering to thy j
In so divinely
Word, Ian p in life,
in death.
Ah in them all thou
It
tears and snow-
Have fallen ma thy tomb.
O We miss thee so and. ache like.
Will not b
Yet. would not call th e back.
It lint
And yet a long las; we
looked
thy face ; dear hand odd upon
Our heals dying sweet.
And on our hearts lid fall the solemn j
hush
IS fall the leaves, or lulling
winds
When st ale o'er.
An I of
What has the lifted I
To What I
Surpassing hand
I- heavenly lyre
e faltering ,
feel,
again, have Hod V Hast j
In j y on face ;
Him i ii was shed
tor t and Heart
which
so tenderly fir all mankind, hast
I tin
heal, so weary here Have
Of lunch hearts. I n tinge of
, y
Alas is
the come- back
returns to tell us of what lies
the veil. can but lit till
for us
Too peal open wide.
And while, blinding ears.
it e struggle on burdened, e
heaven we
daily pr V
Our F Thou u- ; of
peace
Make Us and her are
so ii.
Sited n light o'er our
loin path,
no and ml b us to
I in- It at I s .
I bank nut.
thee lie sin um
shock-.
I he . nil . II and e
. in
own
n art
n-i.
A TRADE FOR BOYS.
THE PRODIGAL DAUGHTER.
National Weekly.
From our first recollection we
If I bad my way I would insist
that every boy should learn a trade,
writes Foster Coates in January have always heard a gr.-at deal of
Home Journal. It was so of Pro-
in the olden times, and it should I sou. We have heard that in-
j be so now. The man who has j st. parable read many times
trade is a thousand times better churches, and heard many
equipped than the man who has J preached from the
same, yet we cannot remember of
a single instance either in sacred
or profane history, where a
was made over the return of the
mastered bis trade, if he Prodigal daughter
none- Let every boy select the
trade best suits his ability,
and promises the highest honors
and remuneration. When he has
STATE NEWS
Happenings Here and There as Gathered
From our Exchanges.
Lost week three deaths occurred
in one night at the Chatham
home for the aged and infirm-
The Republican State
meets at Raleigh April 14th,
to select delegates to the national
convention.
The State Convention of the
THE THREE ENDS OF EDUCATION
E. E. WHITE.
THINK ON THESE THINGS.
There is nothing will make you
a Christian, but a taste of
., the sweetness of Christ.
chief defect of out , . , ,
. i see will speak best to your
ran schools to-day ts the
of ti great part of the We should get tired of the sun-
given. Teachers go on as- light itself, beautiful as it is, if
signing hearing- lessons from God did not send it away every
day to day without having any , night. We're not even fit to have
clear conception of the results to the
The REFLECTOR
i A w bole for
only One but
In order login it yon j
must pay advance.
If you find
just after your name
on the margin of the
the
Subscription
Two Week
From This
I It is to give yon no-
that unless re-
newed in that time
the Reflector will
cease going to you
at the expiration of
the two weeks.
MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
GREENVILLE, V. C.
Office Skinner Building, upper
opposite Photograph
be reached. The ends that should
it, or it is not profitable, he can
to a profession, or
Many have wondered
from home, fallen into bad ways,
Young Men's Christian be aimed at are knowledge, mental
will be held Greensboro
March 24-27.
Without virtue and without
e upon a commercial life. If occasionally have become so
he should fail in both of these, he heartsick they have braved a
is still master of a good trade father's wrath and contumely, re-
that no one can take and of their female
from him. no matter what acquaintances, and sick and tired
ties may arise. The ma-i who is of life, returned to home
master of a good trade is in- of their youth and innocence
dependent as a millionaire. We have never heard,
need r want; he can find profit- however, of an instance where her
able work in any corner of the father saw her afar off and ran to
world. I do not say one word meet her, ed the finest
a career Rut brought forth, the fatted calf
I do say emphatically that the and the neighbors invited
man who has a trade and a to rejoice over her return,
as well, need have no fear On the contrary the cases we
of future. The boy who wants ever heard of, she has slipped
to can master a trade the quietly in the way the
years of sixteen and and if matter kept as quiet as possible,
he dislikes it. he still has time to Instead of making it a matter of
study medicine, the law. or any public rejoicing, the prodigal
other of learned professions, daughter was made to take a back
Rut if lie waits until he is twenty, seat. Her female acquaintances
or over, he may not an who met the prodigal son with a
or feel to hand-shake and wreath of
either. smiles upon his afraid ;
In this country there is to cine her. and generally j
tally no end to the of men gather their dress skirts as she
who found a the most passes by.
Governor Holt appointed Geo.
A. Shuford, Esq., Superior Court into the
Judge for the Twelfth Judicial; mind ; he can
District to succeed James j the act of No mat-
H. Merrimon, resigned.
power and skill. Knowledge is j the finest talents and most
the result of knowing, and know-j brilliant accomplishments can
is an active verb. A teacher never gain the respect and
the esteem of the truly
of J Rowan
Rogers, late Republican sheriff of
Wake pain over to the
county treasurer the amount of his
shortage, which was
A reward of is offered by
Governor for Mack Walker, a
white youth only years of age.
who on Christmas day murdered
Ira Anderson in and
who is believed t have fled the
State.
of mankind.
If any little word of mine
May make a life the brighter,
If any little soup of mine
May make a heart the lighter,
God me speak the little word
And take my hit of
And drop it in lonely vale,
To set the echoes ringing.
how hard the teacher may
work or how clearly he may ex-
plain, if the child's mind remains;
passive he has learned nothing
the of the lesson.
Knowledge is of three 1- Opportunity is God's call to
Perceptive knowledge. which j duty. The day is a demand for
comes to us by observation and night calls to rest. Duty is
intuition memory knowledge, ob measured by opportunity and
through their so are privilege and blessing.
and thought j the when
edge, which is result of reason- the iron is we
and comparison. The methods let us do all these
The grand jury of which the teacher uses savings have one voice,
C Court last week returned an, of tho es it is Obedient faith
seventy-two tine lulls against. . ., i n i i i
who have sold cigarettes to to the knowledge.
minors, as prohibited by the act of every learner s mind on tip- j shall we know if we follow on to
1801. Most of those indicted sub-
able of all helps on the road to
fame fortune. There is
Why this distinction
We find no fault with the grand
was the first thing that
led him into that intimacy with
which h is ended with him
being its master Andrew Carnegie
Thomas A. Edison the greatest parable, nor with those
genius of our Learning tel- from it. We think the
old did right. But the
same principle should apply to
women.
While laboring day after day to
was a Charles Pratt, we should not
who did more to help young men to give erring a
to acquire trades than any man to t. form. While we make
whom I can mention, st tried in a of we
life as a machinist; lee Daniels at the of
of the Supreme Court of the to the reformed woman,
of Hew York, was a shoemaker; and once them right
William R. who was Mayor to a living, free
of York, and who is worth from tiC contempt
some million dollars, was a
butcher ; the late George Jones. sentiment should be
who, as of the New York to crimes
Tim, was one of the most power- same as it r J
toe, so that he will be eager to know the any will to
learn something more. All first do his will he shall know of the
i Rev. W. knowledge must be taught; i Doing, being, knowing
L. Grissom and wife have brought leads to the path which
an action to set aside the will advantage only when the ends in the revelation of God and
porting to be the last will and j mind of the pupil has a clear con-j eternal Advocate.
since thy Father arm thee.
Peaceful be;
When a chastening hand retains thee.
It is lie
Know Hi- love full completeness,
Peel the measure of weakness,
that will soon put makes of facts acquired, and ; If II the spirit
a line boats from to . . o Trust Him more.
-w o com pet with the . , . , , , ,
branch road from Halifax to Kins- the teacher but of what
ton. and es to haul truck from he gives the child an Opportunity A Corner of Conundrums.
New Borne over this line. do. i
Why does a squirrel go up a
testament
wort I
of the late of the objects of which the
The estate is said to , t,
about j book treats.
Mental power carries to the
through the use which he
The
U. L.
FLEMING,
Greenville, N.
Prompt ion to Office
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
MOS. J.
BLOW,
ALEX. l.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
In all the Courts.
J.
B. YELLOWLEY,
T-LA H
N.
I. A. B. K. TYSON
TYSON,
C.
Prompt attention given to collections
WM.
II. LONG,
Attorney-at-Law,
N. C.
and careful attention to
solicited.
L. HARRY
r;
N. C.
W G. JAMES,
L E, N. C.
Practice in all the
n Specialty.
um wire to
can spell but can't nor write. y often auto
together write a letter, . , i
which is legible, but which neither .
Chestnuts.
What is woman worth
We hear Skill implies more than the mere
of a man in this county who can to do things ; it means the
write but can't spell. His wife ability to perform easily
automatically. For
should know How many hairs has a cat in its
can read-he is writing the so thoroughly that he tail None, they are all outside,
as she spells them. Our can give the sum. the product or Why was Eve not afraid of the
is reliable.
r,
Rev. Taylor's Appointments.
U-v. R
ville Circuit of
will at the limes and
places, each
Is. at A. ii.
1-t
P. M.
2nd Grave,
A M.
ind Sell ii
nest ville.
r. m.
3rd Sunday. or
School U k A.
M.
4th Sunday,
A. M.
Lang's Ms
o'clock Si.
Notice.
virtue at pow-r
given in a Trust i. W.
and K. ii. ox lo II.
the day of MM.
C-i in the of
county. Look E. pases
I will on March 1-9 ,
sale at the in
Greenville. the of
the said E. . the tract
or parcel of I in
as the Causey place,
one hundred or . s-.
Tel ins of Sale. Cash.
James II. I'm ,
C M. fin
IT WOULD HURT ME THE MOST.
you like to buy some
berries P said a cheerful
voice at the hack door.
have
y there are so
The lady hesitated. It really
looked to her like a small
measure.
wouldn't cheat, said
the clear voice- would
hurt me the most if I did. but you
can measure
They all right-, the lady
; bought them- the little girl going
away happy in the glad possession
of her earned money, and
j in the possession of a truth that it
i would well for us to learn that
j in any way we cheat or rob
we injure ourselves the
most.
can't see said little
black-eyed Frank at my side.
my boy, by cheating
others e only deprive them of
some of their earthly treasure,
at the longest, can
I keep but a little time, but as for
ourselves, we injure our souls,
are to live
men of his d iv, was a printer's
in the office with Horace
foremost into the mud. where he
i.-in. Society should be impress-1 was found the next morning en-
eased in the frozen slush. A bot-
of found in his pocket
explains this sad calamity.
; the difference between and tin
Nick Hopkins, j instant he sees them without eon-
of Cabarrus county, was found scions effort. learn to do by
dead in the road. It seems that providing we have a true
he was riding very fast when his j in ,.,.;
horse dodged suddenly around a J
mud hole, his rider face
school nit can only be acquired
by practice under guidance.
ed with the fact that both are
TEN RULES.
BI SILAS
An
r oil
can he
i.
II.
I bat call do as Well as
h were guilty and one entitled to
Gould, the great financier, was and
first a tanner and then a surveyor ; society as other.
Dr. R. D. D., who
to wealthiest
in the world, began life as
a carpenter; Phillip Armour, the
Chicago, was a
the late John Kelly, the famous j
politician, was a grate seller; John
D. now worth one
and twenty fire million
was a mechanic in iron; Rev
Robert D. D., was
,. X i i h d.
smith; John A- was a
stone before he became the v-
a i t i i Ci ., i he. c
the Lode,
one of the r chest men in the world ; V. Indulge not in pride, it costs
Jesse the eminent bank- you more hunger and thirst,
and philanthropist laid the A calm, contented, happy mind is
foundation of his fortune by uncounted gold,
the very poor night trade thine appetite, thy
schools that existed when he was be extremely rare,
young; United States Hill. ease are caused by
of New York, was a printer; the food,
late W. Grady, the
AN AWFUL STORY.
We have B speedy and positive cure
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker month
and
A nasal injector tree with
each Us ii if you desire health
mi. sweet Price Sold t
Store.
Notice to Creditors.
The of of
county having issued letters of
the the
3rd day of an the es;
of James Adams. is
hereby given to all to
the estate to make immediate payment
to the and to all
of said e Ii pr-s.-t t
properly authenticated, to the under-
twelve
date of this notice, or tin- notice will he
plead in bur of their
This 3rd day
ADAMS.
on estate of
Notice to Creditors.
duly qualified before Bu-
Court Clerk of Kilt county o .
3rd of Feb. 1892. as Exec i
of th Last Will and v. A.
Baker, U hereby
to all persons indebted to the ale lo
make payment to the
all persons claims
against the estate are notified they
must payment on
or the day of Feb. or tins
notice will be plead of recovery.
3rd day of
W. K.
A. i
HUSBAND YOUR
the salad nice,
p aid
yours
These wen the words that met
my ear in a
I looked at the two enthusiasts I
tried to imagine what their speech
would be, fur instance, were they
looking on Lake Como in a silver
or upon the
of a sunrise-tinted sea, or upon a
flock of ruby driven by a
lazy wind across a daffodil sky, or
upon Mount Blanc with a storm
flag u u fa led from its hoary battle-
and purple in the shadow
of night. If a salad
j is if a compound of hard
boiled eggs and oil, with a dash
of r pinch of celery, is
what is left for nature
What can be said behalf of
heroism, courage, faithfulness and
orator the South has given
; since the days of Cal was also
a printer And so it goes. I
I could give scores of other names
of men who were merchants, or
were skilled in trade- and
after faithfully at
their various tasks.
VII- What e'er we do with
ling hearts we never count a
trouble, actions performed be-
appear to cost us
VIII. Fret not thyself by fancy-
ill that may never be ; live in
the present discharge its duties
can leave your boy no faithfully.
better legacy than the knowledge
of a good trade.
BOYS
Treat mother as politely as if
she were a strange lady.
Be as kind and helpful to your
sisters as to other sisters.
Don't grumble or refuse to do
some errand which be done,
and which otherwise takes the
time of some one who has more to
do.
Have mother and sisters
for best friends.
Find some amusement for the
evening that all the family can
join in, large and small.
Be a a home-
Cultivate a temper.
Ii on do anything wrong, take
your mother into confidence.
Never lie about anything you
have
IX. When angry count in silence
ten. Hold thy tongue and heaven-
guidance
X. Harbor malice but forgive
as thou would be forgiven, and
strive to in peace on earth as
thou would live in heaven.
sing unto the Lord a new
for he hath done marvelous
things; his right hand, and his
holy aim, hath gotten him the
victory. The Lord hath made
known his salvation, his righteous
hath he openly shewed in the
sight of the heathen- He hath
d his and his
truth toward the house of Israel;
ail th of the earth have seen
the salvation of our
A large number of the was once a little girl who
young men of had a way of saying to
burg have taken a novel step, everything. She lived in an awful
They have issued a circular, to in vim
which their names are signed, , .
forming the people of that town I an distance from
that the sale of whiskey illegally j other pi ice. She went to an awful
must be stopped; that the signers school, where she had an awful
will spare no pains to detect who gave her awful
of the law, and to report L . .
and aid in the prosecution of any of E
offenders. day she was so awful than
,. , Tr i t . she ate an awful amount of food.
Salisbury ., . , , , , . , , .
by the name of B. G- Marsh spent
last night in the city for I H small, her
Monterey. Mexico, where he has j feet We awful large. She ft encouraging sign.
been the past two years teaching to an awful church, the minis- The home in
and preaching to tho citizens of an awful When spirituality as it in
she took an awful walk she climbed and the foreign work gains a
awful hills, and when she got awful impetus. New missionary
Mexico by th. Rose Bud Society tired she sat down under an methods arc called for. Mission
of Virginia, He has a good field tree to rest In is growing. The
Because she'd Adam.
is worse than raining
pitchforks Hailing
What is the difference
one yard and A fence-
Why do carpenters not believe
in stone They saw it.
What is the cheapest features
the face Nostrils, to for a scent.
What is the greatest surgical
operation on record Lansing,
Michigan.
rT
individual
a foreign
I missionary is steadily increasing-
The number of
churches supporting
Si
T.
r.
v.
r. S
CD
CO
that Ho is a native of
Bath, Beaufort county, this State,
and was as a missionary tn I
for his labors, and s he is
much good work.
she found the weather awful hot,
coming decade will no doubt wit-
On last
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. SCHULTZ,
OLD BRICK STOKE
AND MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will find
their to get prices before
chasing
n all its branches.
girl was all j , , ,.
i i i j v secret of her heart; that
state, and if she , , . , , , .
. u A i sons character is hedged about
about , , . . ,
and in winter awful cold. When it wonderful achievements in
didn't rain there was an awful mission fields.
Monday Mrs. Joe Dixon. who drought, and when the awful; , w , . ,
lives about four miles below John-; was over there was an a S
son s Mills, laid her four-months- .-,., . .,. . . . whose Christian mother shares
old baby in the cradle and stepped ; h w
over to see a sick neighbor who time in an aw
lived only about fifty yards from don't get
Mrs. house. She stayed she who for his most confidential
about ten or fifteen and L i friend a Christian father. They we from Manufacturers, e
on her return she was to are in danger who wear a mask in ; Ming yon to buy at one profit,
witness the heart-rending scene of kind parents, and wk
j TRUE
caught the and burned
the babe to death. Mrs. Dixon ts
a who idolizes her children ; a . young Presbyterian.
and the shock is heavy upon her.;. , i ,
r n I ., by one decided
Our deepest sympathy go out to V. . t i , ii-.
the bereaved father and mother. In Brown at we are
SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR.
RICE, TEA, Ac.
Market
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS
A com
only to have no right to I on hand and sold at prices to
J. , . , I the times. goods are all bought and
receive such i mM tor cash, therefore, having no risk
BITTEN BY A MAD DOG.
Th neat . i- not in tin-
brain. and
Brown at we are
j told the touching story of the little Indigestion,
i boy who dared to kneel at his bed-1
side and say his evening prayers j And all stomach Troubles are mired by
F and amid all sorts of interruptions and P. P. P.
About eight weeks ago a dog insults from the larger j Ash, Poke Root and
to Mr- Frank Whitener ; And it is related that as a result it
showed signs of hydrophobia, but soon came about that, whereas it j Abbott East Indian Corn Paint cures
he refused to kill it after being had been the exception for any boy Wart Bunions.
warned. As a result the do bit a to pray at it was the es-1 of
of Mr. Whitener then if any boy did not These and
the premises and bit a valuable; winter months at school or in so- societies of Wake Forest
horse belonging to Mr. M j cal afford many Co, celebrated
also one to Mr. for the of The Durham orchestra
Frock The young lady heroism. Let be true to our .,, ,
ii t i i v aW i. I , , i. i , furnish the music,
is well so far, but both the convictions if right, and we shall
died during the past week from certainly have what is better than
the of the rabid animal's men the approval of Wilmington is to have a new
bite. We are informed that the God; and if others do wrong, we bank. has been
Messrs. Shuford. will sue Mr. shall not feel that we have The capital stock is
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N.
Whitener
horses.
for the value of the
do wrong. Method be not less than nor
The w
Greenville.
I. B. Vice-Pres
J. Greenville,
N. M. Gen
Cant. It. F. Washington, Ag
The People's Line tor travel on
River.
The Steamer is the finest
quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished
and
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac
and convenience of Ladies
MUTE k ATTENTIVE OFFICERS
A first-class Table furnished with tn
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer Is
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leave Washington Monday,
Friday at. o'clock, A. M.
I Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, a. If.
Freights received dally and
Lading given to all points,
ft- F. treat,. i.
N.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
WEDNESDAY,
Entered at at Greenville.
X. C. as lass mail matter.
Publisher's Announcement.
THE OF
I The i UM per
One
MM W one-half year.
I one-quarter column m- year,
Advert
two week-. one
months-. ore
weeks, one math,
Inserted in Local
as reading item.-. pet
i for
sat as Ad,
and Notices-
and Sale-.
to
far at legal rate must
VIE PAID IS
Contracts not I
for any length of time, can 1-
wade by application to the either
in or by letter.
I tor . v Advertisements Bad
H changes should I
in by o'clock on Tuesday
morning in to receive prompt in-
the following.
The a large
will be a
through which to reach the public.
Mr. E. has been H. or at least to Bey a mod
as from this word in way
,, , , , cot it into Ins heed Mr.
in by
L the Had of Hue ho slight very touchy
mouth to decide what the about which he appears
y j take in organizing a to think surrounds his person like
third ; J
. . does it is freedom who
Democrat and has w,. .
patty proclivities. Ho end other prominent men of his
be relied upon to report North pa have announced their prefer-
against the for some other candidate
President Butler will than himself lie fears that Mr.
, ; , . ., intends to throw Ins
thereto aid m the same o
thing- With exceptions the; he is mighty
Alliance is that then was no truth in
In regard to polities or parties than the rumor prevalent a or two
has been attributed to them.
With action the reforms
signing and going to Bermuda to
until after the meeting of
by people most I the convention.
come and by united action they would snit him better jest now
will come much sooner. Maine to leave the
country for a few months but lie
. does not dare to ask for Ins
Ex-Governor Alfred M. Vales
died at his home in Greensboro Democrats of the House
Tuesday week, after have taken the step toward
a lingering illness. He was j the on in dark places
f resolutions
authorizing investigations the
World's Fair, the crooked National
bank failures at Philadelphia, and
most important of ah. the Pension
Mr. Harrison is reported as
that he wants no
gates from the of. Georgia,
and it is presumed none from any
Southern State.
There to be an effort on
foot in Vance County to organize
a third party. This would he ex-
unwise. There is no
necessity for such action in North
Carolina and it would only result
in good to the Republicans.
In accordance with orders issued
front headquarters of the North
Carolina State Guards there is to
be a change in the make op of the
command. Each of the four
is to be divided into
lions. two to each- It is also an-
that the first and second
regiments are to encamp at
and the thud and
fourth at Asheville.
Be served in Congress .
one term before the war and for live
successive terms since. He entered
the late war as a private and rose .
to the rank of Brigadier General, The which
. , ,, . the is to tie made
He was chosen Governor of North g the Committee on
Carolina it; by a large majority as a substitute for those
land made the State a faithful, up- offered by
right and honest official. He left and Cooper. It provides for the
the Office without a stain. appointment committee
, . , I of five to investigate the methods
ma term of office expired L, whether use has been
tired to private Hie. At the time I by the of bis
his death lie was president of position to promote his
the Bank of He leaves I private affairs o. tor partisan
, , , . . ,.
a record of which hut ma, ,,,,.
feel proud and his death for pensions or
had been expected for a whether any of
the whole State his loss, the clerks have taken advantage of
their positions to make profits and
. . , . whether the civil service law
Die present U
unless Mr. Cleveland withdraws On motion of
from the Presidential contest that i the resolution was. amended to
there will be lively times in the j include the method of the beard
Democratic Convention to be held Pension appeals is a big
,. , ., , , . , lob but are wondering why
in New STork on the of Fob- ,,.,,;,; include the
George A. m
has been appointed by
Gov. Holt to till the vacancy
ed by the resignation of James H-
in the 12th District-
Mr. is a lawyer of some
and has been Judge of
the Superior Court in Buncombe
county. He is capable of making
a first class Judge and will doubt
less wear unsullied the judicial
ermine-
I This will eventually result
factions which may cause the
Democracy to lose New York.
friends both Cleveland
and Hill are probably going to
extremes in advocating then-
respective claims. It will be a
great day for the Democracy of
the United States When they can
realize that New York is not
to the success of the party-
There i no comparison between
the two men in respect to States-
and the Democrats of
I that State ought t show this
Bending a solid delegation to Chi-
which have been repeat-
made by responsible parties
of fraudulent pensioners whose
names are carried upon the lolls.
Perhaps, however, the committee
may be able to reach that under
the of author-
Vice Morton appears
to be learning the ropes. A
of his. M. has
been Dominated for the vacant
Third Assistant Secretaryship of
State.
The House Committee on Rivers
Harbors having given a
number of hearings to interested
parties, has now buckled down to
the hard work of preparing a river
for Groves Cleveland, by tar appropriation bill that
the greatest man of the t
wealth.
The prize of the State
that paper daily for has
been awarded to Mr. E. Carter
of Asheville for the best answer
to the question why has the farmer
became poorer by coining in con-
tact with the world through the
railroad. Rev. J. J. came
in second best and will get the
Daily for sis months.
We will publish these letters next
week with some comments upon
the same.
We have received the Atlantic-
edited by Rev. L. L.
Nash, D. D. at Wilmington, as-
by Revs. C- P. Jerome and
H. B. Anderson. It is published
every Wednesday at a year.
The object of this paper is to help
pay the debt of Fifth Street Church,
of Wilmington, an undertaking
which Dr. Nash has entered into
heart and soul, to save that hand-
some building. Many of our
know what Dr. Nash has on
bis shoulders in grappling with
this debt, and his friends here
ought to send him a good list of
subscribers for the Methodist.
Too many incompetent persons
undertake the work of
a mere makeshift, lacking both
professional training and
zeal. Such neither
the magnitude or importance
of their work- nor the high moral
that rest upon
City
These are wise words. There is
great harm done the public school
work especially from this fact.
The salaries usually paid are not
sufficient to secure competent
teachers. Some School Commit-
have the idea that the man
who teaches school is entitled to
no more pay for his work than the
man who plows, and employ teach-
accordingly. Schools in the
of incompetent teachers
had just as will not be kept open,
so far as the good they do is con-
There should be more
mo for the schools and the
very best equipped teachers em-
ployed to conduct them.
If we arc to judge from what a
great many people say. the next
Governor of North Carolina will
be Julian S. Carr, of Durham.
His name is getting to be a house-
hold word in the State, and he
would receive a rousing vote,
should the Democratic
sec fit to put him up. It
give this writer a great deal
of pleasure to vote for him-
Time.
Mr. Carr is an excellent gentle-
man, and the Reflector would
take pleasure in supporting him
for Governor, provided Joe C aid-
well don't want it- Whenever the
says ho is ready to run
It is said that David B. Hill has
made the mistake of his life in be-
instrumental in putting in
the out
to be held the 22nd of February.
He is losing ground every day as
a Presidential possibility. It is
now probably too to
his stops and he must therefore
abide consequences. The New
York World which has been a
staunch supporter of Governor
Hill in all his undertakings now
gays tho Candidate must come
from some other State to unite the
Democracy of New York. con
ewe that this may result in untold
good to tho Democratic party of
the United States. Any man from
the West that can carry New York
will stand a better chance of
than a candidate from New
York would.
Mr- Blaine has written letter
to withdrawing
from the Presidential contest.
There arc various constructions
his letter. Some con-
sider it its final others believe it
was written so that he might not
appear as having acted as he has
condemned in his book
in that is stay-
in the cabinet at the same time
being a candidate. If he is now
nominated, which his letter will
certainly not prevent, he cannot
then be accused of duplicity. He
is evidently the strongest man in
his party and if he intends not to
accept the nomination should it be
offered him the Democrats have
lost nothing by his action. How-
ever, bis letter does not say that
he will not accept, and many be-
that he will if the nomination
is tendered him. Nothing but
failing health will prevent- He
certainly has a laudable
to be President. Mr. Harrison's
friends arc jubilant over his with-
as they believe it leaves no
opposition to bis nomination for
a second term- This certainly is
not a logical conclusion for there
are others with a large following,
and with Mr. Blaine out of the race
their friends have every
to capture large delegations
for their candidates.
shall be just without being
Tin- bill will not probably
appropriate more than half, if so
much, as the one passed at the
last Congress, but t is the aim of
the committee to provide ail the
money for necessary improvements
can be advantageously expend-
ed during the next fiscal year.
The House committee on
does not agree with the
Senate committee on Foreign
Affairs, that a continuation of the
present laws, which
expire by limitation this Spring,
for another period of ten years,
is the best thing to be done, so it
has favorably reported a bill to the
House which absolutely prohibits
Chinese immigration.
The much talked Of free coinage
has been favorably r ported
to the House from the Coinage
committee. Opinion differs as
to whether it will be acted upon at
this session. There is no doubt
about a very large majority of the
House being in favor of the free
coinage of silver, but there are
many prominent democrats, like
Mr. who do not think it
expedient to pass it when
can be gained as it is cert in- even
if it could get through the Senate,
the Finance committee of which
has this week reported adversely
on a free that it would
be vetoed There are other demo-
like Mr. Bland, who think it
the duty of the House to pass the
bill.
There are lots of of a
rumpus between Mr. Harrison and
Secretary Tracy over the enormous
financial obligations incurred by
the latter in preparing for the war
never Wanamaker is
also said to be in hot water although
he denies it.
Tho Canadian Commissioners
are going through the farce of
holding conferences at the State
department, knowing that is
no reciprocity for them-
THE LOCAL NEWSPAPER.
WASHINGTON
D- C Feb. 13,1832-
Mr. Harrison is far from being
as happy as he expected to be
after Mr- Blaine's letter was pub
if who profess to be
his friends know the state of his
mind. He expected that Mr. Blaine
would take occasion in that letter Campaign REFLECTOR
W the of
The following in regard to the
local paper, from the Philadelphia
Times, has the merit of high en-
It The public
have little appreciation the
value of well conducted local news-
papers. Their offices of
to the community are so com-
that they are but
none the less no town or city can
advance without its newspapers
are in the forefront of advance-
They are tho life of tho
community- They must lead in
every effort to invite capital, en-
large industries and enthuse the
people in the use of their ad-
vantages.
Tho local newspaper is tho one
newspaper that should command
the patronage of the community-
If only one journal can be taken in
a family it should tho one pub-
at home. There is now
little excuse for any person of
ordinary intelligence not taking a
city daily with the local news-
papers, since the best can be had
for a nominal cost; but there
should ever be the heartiest ac-
cord and sympathy between
the local newspaper and the
A CARD OF THANKS.
As alone
are a Inch fall to our hit for
which we fad the gnu- j
Such is our experience now.
father has pa-sod
i mi be
bore a of soul
l-ea-and ireful lite. is
a source great plan ere to us, his w
to remember In ea
and to know th.-it life of hon
upright dealing, and mark-
courtesy to all was rot without its
His the confluence,
in. of everybody. Our
object however in w. it ins; this is to ex-
appreciation as we can of
Hie regard shown for
kindly attention paid and the
of in aid i i it
was given i death the re
people of Greenville. V
so in it known that Henry
was dead many were the
S ons of sympathy for the bereaved and
warn the utterances of
regard tor the deceased by the whit.-
people of this town. When we were
preparing as eat our amain would allow-
to out appreciation and memory of
car dead ill and
simultaneous from
people to allow to beat this ex-
con-
can never fail to
bet this mark of esteem. To who
have spoken commendation for
husband and father, and to who
contributed so liberally to his burial ox-
pen-s we desire to oiler our sin -ere and
heart fell thanks and to assure them that
this Madams is worthily
will ever occupy a tender spot in our
memory. Ii Is a great n to us
to know he so lived as t. gain the
resp -ct and the of white
of Green, and to know that by
living lives as his may have
the regard expressed for when
we COO shall lie called to that land to
lie has gone.
Again to one an all we extend our
thanks with the w Mi you may pros
per and be here and
tor these regard.
s.
Edmonds.
I de.-ire also to join With the family In
the above expression the
sympathy serf aid given them in this
their hour of . It has teen
my privilege B d pleasure to know for a
longtime this man, To me his
life has an have
I been encouraged by seeing and know-
this honest upright, and nobleman,
and seeing that such a life not lose
i s reward veil here I know of 1.0 man of
hi.-, rare who was more widely respected.
was a barber by profession was
one among the in the Slate
profession brought him in contact
many of the men who were In
pa-1 and he not fall to
this business contact. It pleas
lire only second to Of his wife and
children u- know his worth was
by lie white of this town,
and I would not feel were I not
to join the in the above.
Alfred
AND
WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE NOW HAVE
on their way to Washington, N. C , and we are prepared lo sell
-----it at very low figures-----
FOR
As we
purchased
tins
from the Agents
of the Mines there-
by saving the jobbers profit, we
are in a position to give you the
benefit of bottom prices, and you will
find it to your interest to see us before buy-
elsewhere. We it to be the
highest grade and in good condition. To other
merchants who want t buy in to BO lots we
will make special process. We have also made
t again handle the popular brands of
Fertilizer sold by us last and it. is indeed gratifying
to to be able to say that each of them gave entire
faction to all who used last year, and we can assure
you are fully up to the same standard of excellence this
season. To those who have used our it is not
for us to say anything as merits usually establish a
trade. But tor the benefit of such as have never used them and
to refresh the memory of some of our customers, we beg to ask
your attention to the following selection of brands of high grade
Build a Hotel.
A man came in the- Re-
k r asked about
hotel Be f a neigh-
town, and bow it would h
over Tilt
at way a want to he when
is a to spend Sun
lay, alter sizing up
they usually move on as
as their business can finish
d. Won't our people ever
inn sufficient to induce them to ink
a to hotel as
n needs.
Guano Buyers Attention.
I have now mi hand and am
every steamer large
if Oiler's.
mill d, Guano
You till know
is are. No guanos ever
in county have made a bet
or showing, and but low, it any, o
I Inn these goods very close.
My expenses in handling them arc
very small. am satisfied with a
It to reason
I can yon the same grade
as cheap or cheaper than any
other in n. Come and see me before
you but. It costs you
jet prices out what
an in aid it can't -ave you
ion can elsewhere just an easily
i- if on had new r b on lo see inc.
P.,
Sunday Convention.
The third Pitt
S Convention will he
in Ml
mi Feb.
Rev. A. Hunter.
Address of welcome President.
u In Rev. It. K. Taylor.
of the
Convention.
Appointment of
front tin- various
Schools
S Literature, Rev. G.
p. Smith, followed by Rev. A-
D.
Re
I In
Rev. L
and s of Sunday
Schools, by H. A. Latham,
make a Sunday School
in a Rural District.
Rev. R, II John, I
Rev. J. L. Win I.
Opening Rev A
Re-
exercises by
Rev. G- F Smith.
Address Dr. II. Cordon, of
Wilson, followed by T.
J. Jarvis.
Some other addresses may also he
expected during the exercises.
that every Sunday
in the county will be
at this meeting. All inter-
in Sunday School work arc- in-
to attend. The coming session
should be tho most Interesting
vet held.
LIVERY, FEED AND SALE
I I ave removed my stables from Five
to the ones formerly
by Mr. II. F. Keel and will
onus taut seep on hand a
full line of
Horses and Males.
have beautiful and fumy for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run in a OKAY.
WHIM and solicit a share of
your patronage. Call and lie convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
. C.
Special Tobacco
Fertilizer.
This brand is too well known all over
the Tobacco growing region of Eastern
Carolina to need praise at our hands.
For the production of fine BRIGHT
the bead of the
list. The guaranteed analysis is per
cent. per cent. Avail
Acid, per cent.
Capital Tobacco Fertilizer.
Last year wits the first season that these
goods were put nil the market and
result from their use in the production
of FINE BRIGHT TOBACCO was so
highly satisfactory the demand for
them this gives promise of being
very heavy. We confidently recommend
it to our friends and know whereof we
speak. The ran teed analysis is per
per cent.
per cent- Potash.
The Guano.
Is one of the oldest and best established
brands of Guano sold in the It is
especially prepared for Cotton but being
composed of nothing but the best highest
grade material, it has been used with
entire satisfaction on all crops. e
sold a large quantity it for Potatoes
last year and it gave such universal sat-
the demand this season is much
increased. The guaranteed analysis is
per cent. per cent Avail
I hos Acid, per cent. Potash.
The National Fertilizer.
Is a first class all round goods, at a mod-
price, prepared with the greatest
care, out of the best material, and is
suited for either Cotton or Tobacco We
sold it lust season largely for both crops
and it gave entire satisfaction
analysis is per cent.
par cent. Avail Acid, per cent.
Potash.
Beef, Blood and Bone.
This Fertilizer was sold here for the first
time last season. Knowing the high
standing of the manufacturers we did not
hesitate to recommend it and sold it
largely and the result was most
It does well on all and bids
fair to be our most popular brand. The
guaranteed analysis is per
cent- Avail Acid, per
cent Potash.
-We also keep a full supply of-
We may add that, we know all these goods to be made out of
the best material and compounded with great care and skill, and
having handled them largely for a number of years we feel safe in
saying you will make no mistake In buying either of them. As
we control the sale of these goods for a section of country
good local agents. To former clubs of not less
than tons we will make special terms. You will find it to your
interest to come to see us or write to us before buying elsewhere,
truly
YOUNG
GREENVILLE, N. C,
To enlist your attention and claim a share of your patronage.
We are determined that if square dealings and honest
of our goods will secure you as a customer,
they shall not be lacking on part. We go into
-----the Northern Markets with the------
and buy for the CASH, getting every possible advantage is
to be offered to first-class buyers, therefore we are enabled
------to give you at all times the-----
Benefit of Purchases Made
for Cash.
We have bought this season the largest stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
ever handled by The ten days spent in market by our
were not. idle ones, as an inspection of our
STOCK
carried in our double stores will prove. You cannot help but be
interested if you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing
yon what we have to sell There can never be a business of
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statements
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by
our customers, and by such means to merit their continued pat-
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest bat
Hue of General that was ever brought
to this market Consisting of
Dry Goods Dress Goods,
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes,
Hardware Cutlery, Tin-
ware, Crockery, Queen-
ware, Groceries, Wood-
and
and Whips
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF
F U R N r T U R E
that has ever been brought to county. We are
for all goods in our respective lines. Also we have a lot of
AND TIES
which will be sold at lowest prices.
Come one, come all and Bee us.
CHERRY CO.
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.
L. W. DAVIS,
TUBED
HAVANA CIGARS
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
Ti Slip
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 I hold it
longer, we are prepared to advance them 00.00 to per bale
and hold it until May or June if so desired
Very truly,
VAUGHAN BARNES,
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA.
S. B. CO.,
COTTON AND
i v
art c
Com, Peanuts, Stock,
and Sawed bomber will our
special attention. Ymir patronage
solicited.
AND
VA,
K. t;.
a. r.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
Mules
A Supply Always on Hand.
Ba
Nos. Union Vi
Land Sale.
virtue of an order of tho of
Superior Court of county In w of
J B. BullocK. of John I-
Lewis, Harriet Ann and
Susan the
will sell for emit before tho Court
House door in Greenville on Monday
the tiny of March, following;
described piece or pan-el of land,
n Pitt county, ad-
joining the lands of II. Clark,
Thomas Thomas, the Harriet
and, Harriet con-
aft acres, more or
This January 28th. 1892.
J. B BULLOCK,
Pi Q. Attorney
COBB, C C COBB, T. H.
Pill Co. N. C. Pitt Co Co. N C
Bros., Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
AND-
Commission Merchants.
V.
We have had many years ex
at the business and
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
AH business entrusted to our
will receive prompt and
careful attention
Notice to Creditor.
Having duly before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on
of a-;
of deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons In.
to o estate to make Immediate
payment to tin- undersigned, and all per
sons having against tho estate
must n the for par-meat on
or January of
this notice will In bar
This of Jan. 1802.
M J.
ct





-i
LANG'S COLUMN.
Tobacco
3-4 Cents per Yard.
SPOT CASH.
-o-
Fall i Winter
STOCK
at greatly
Reduced prices.
Going
Personal.
Mr-. W. has n auk
fill ;,.
Mr. IV. Brown U
to relative.
M-. K. A. Keith, a cotton
h in Iowa the
Weekly
; T us
FOB
We made special
. with
The Great
at Atlanta, by which we
enabled to off.-r It with the
ONE YEAS for only
This otter lasts only a short while. Now
is your chance to get all the news of all
the world and your home paper for the
price of one paper.
Every clubbing subscription at rate is
entitle I to a chance at Constitution's
1892. details
of winch will be found where.
This is the most remark able
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 i lie of the world, and
overflowing with the choicest special
features, such as the Weekly
lion, published Atlanta. and
having a circulation of 156.000.
BOTH PAPERS.
Local Reflections.
Good Morning Miss
Irish potatoes are being planted.
New Fair next week, 22nd.
Court begins in Washington
Monday.
lb can best Tomatoes for only
cents at She
year Lent
Second of March.
will begin on tin
develop its
This section should
trucking advantages.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
for at Brown Bros.
last
up
The M of in ills went
week and cotton went down.
Next Monday be a legal
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book
frequently speaks
of mad in Tarboro and vicinity.
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C-
Plant tobacco, an I lie.
Lots more in them than cot-
ion.
Friday night was as cold as any
night tail section has had during
the winter.
Cash given for Produce, Hides.
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
It seems th Fri are now
hi Bard day withes, from
the last two.
We do not hear as much talk
the grip as formerly. It has some-
what abated.
Home Sowing Ma-
all parts at Brown
-The Dancy house
Apply to
here a few day
ii is sick.
visiting his
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
Tobacco Cloth.
I 3-8 Cents per Yard.
SPOT CASH.
LANG'S COLUMN
The New
chines and
Bros-
The tram was getting in
several times week, once as much
as two hours.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store.
Every voter in the county ought, to
read Reflector during the com-
campaign.
Just END- M. Ferry Cos
new Garden Seed, at the Old
Lawrence Edwards, merchants
Scotland made an assign-
last week.
Fob
on Pitt street.
The weather moder
and Monday was another beautiful,
day.
Fob lot of Horses and
Mules for sale on time. Apply to
R. R. Cotton, Center Bluff, N. C
The boar for evening service in
the churches has been change I from
to half past seven.
Bring I In-
jet hot this piper and the Atlanta
a whole year.
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will
your appetite when nothing
else will. At the Old Brick Store.
Take of your empty fl
barrels. Potato want them
and will pay good prices
Attention i called to the law card
of L. Fleming, under the
first
man with the ball throwing
trick is again, but appear-
is doing a dull business.
There was not as much fun here us
this Valentine season. The
comic missive could not he had.
All parties who have tobacco
sell can save Warehouse charges
and freight by bringing same
the prize house on Saturdays
where will receive good prices.
Scraps particularly wanted.
The Reflector office job work
every time. Our patrons can
to the kind of work we do.
The body of young Douglass who
was drowned at Tarboro lour weeks
ago yesterday has not yet been found.
This early in year candidates
an- looming up, By the middle of
summer they will be as hick as hops.
have for sale tons prime
Cotton Seed Meal. Tons pure
fine ground Fish Scrap. tons
Delight
Potato
F.-S. Co.,
N. C.
The weather for a few days
beep as as it If arch was
It is time to be very cautious about
fire.
Parties are in order, Another
in Germania Hall last night. Of
course all present bad a
time
We see it stated that paper barrels
will he the i thing to come in use.
The world could along with-
out
The farmers are now actively en
gaged in fixing the ground, for plant
One remarked to us last week
that up to former
year. This l good work after
I so much bud weather in January.
bus be
father.
Mr. J. W. Brown went to Wash-
Oily last week to stand a civil
service examination.
Mr. R. II. Hosier has been very
sick for at the residence
his Mr. Williamson.
Mr. L. Fleming, who recently
obtained license to practice law baa
decided to locale in Greenville. He
is at the old Murphy stand.
The Citizen announces
the death in that city of Miss Martha
Powell, aunt of Mrs. J. H. Tucker.
Her here regret to
her death.
Revs. A. D. Hunter and G. L.
Finch have defined to exchange
next Sunday, the latter
preaching in I he Baptist church here
and the former at Snow
Mr. Willie Grimmer, who for
months past has had a position
with Agent Moore at the depot here,
If It last week In accept a position as
night telegraph operator at S
Presiding Elder R. B John preach-
ed at the Methodist church on Sun-
day night last. His subject
with His illus-
were line and forcible. Tin-
reference to communion with
God for forty days on the mountain
was grand. It was a sermon full of
thought and was complimented by
our
This morning Mr. M. R. Lang
leaves in his tour to the
northern cities for the purpose of
selecting for his trade here.
He will go by way of Wilson and
there be joined by Mr.
manager of his store in that
an. the two Will go en together.
is no merchant in Eastern
Carolina possessing a better idea of
styles and than Mr.
an I when the spring summer
goods which be now goes pun-base
arrive hi- store will a
seldom in any of the towns.
We heard one housekeeper in town
suggest a return to the use of tallow
candles unless kerosene oil gets bet-
in quality;
The Ladies Ai Society of the M.
E. Church will give a festival the
week in Court for the
bent lit of the church.
see it staled I bit if no grain is
made lite straw will pay
cultivation rice. Tins being so it
looks like many more
plant it.
Last Saturday in irked another
moderately busy day with some
our merchants limes are
bad, alter all, as some
i hem appear.
A Nickel a Ride.
A man wit i a Steam
round, or set up his
machine here week. It is
led on the lot in of Hotel
and a crowd whenever
it. is tn operation, is
pally in the evening at night.
Northern Light.
The seen in the
northern sky Saturday night
considerable attention com-
the most brilliant
has been noticed here in a number
years. Of course the superstitious
had to hare their say about it, and
declare it to be a sign of war, and of
the judgment and n every-
thing else.
BO
would make
tin- railroad
Junction
Getting out cross lies is
. tuple, no-lit to quite a number of
people along line
now
Washington.
citizen are to
thank the Town Council putting
public over there in order,
even I bough they were a long time
getting at it.
The Greenville Land Improve-
Co. recently purchased the
Greenville Works and is
the plant of the latter over to
t heir property.
Fertilizer men say the farmers are
making very little arrangement for
cotton guanos, from which they are
satisfied there will a big
in the cotton acreage
an old colored woman
a Federal d-ed
Peggy
who was
here Then- was a I
turnout of the benevolent societies to
which she belongs to funeral
afternoon,
In a Idler N o k we
or a very destructive fire which
cured there Saturday night,
car were burned
line horses perished in
Loss at 950.000.
earn
The
and
fire.
Lets the Cat Out.
Th.-
time been t-
lot-
Tobacco
r ;
Furnace
Very Different Except in Name.
A lady in town who had
reading about Boyd, who is in jail
and who is claimed
wrecked the train at Statesville,
happened to pick up another paper
contained a picture of Governor
of Nebraska, and taking
a glimpse the name,
Why, I thought that fellow Boyd
was i.
New Bern Fair.
A special train will be inn
Greenville to nest
day connecting with a train
there for New which will give
all from this section who wish to
lake advantage of it an opportunity
to attend the Fair and return the
tame day. No many will go
from here. Fare trip
including one admission in the Fair
Something Good, Anyway.
A few Sabbaths ago the editor
walked into Sunday School, and
reaching down in his overcoat pocket
for a lesson book drew forth a
let, and turning to the title page
there stood hold letters
One of the teachers
in- had a flood joke on u-, but has
been convinced that
is a mighty good thing to have in
the house.
Children's Party.
A delightful children's masque
was given last Friday night in
Germania II ill honor of the birth-
lay of Master David James. It
a great pleasure lo sit and look on
gay of the little ones as
they gambol along enjoying them-
selves so nicely. It carried us back
to the days when we
The costumes were beautiful
varied. Some the characters were
very hard to be distinguished.
will not permit us to name them all,
but the little monkey caught us. We
with you many a return,
David, and may you be as happy ill
tin nigh a you were on last Fri
-o
The best Invention ever made for
CUBING TOBACCO.
With it you have absolute
nit ii over he
and it removes
Come Together.
Have yon ever noticed how hard
is lo keep correct time in Greenville
Go down the street and compare
and nearly everybody will
have different going by
time, some by Griffin's, some
by telegraph some by the
Main, some by the shop bolls, and
some b anything but Mine.
V good clock ill Court House
would all these
of lime. Gel all the lime
nieces to working together, and
maybe the might catch on to
l he spirit also come together lo
accomplish something the town.
People's ideas here seem very much
in accord with the time
man
has
am
printed big ml
made some we almost
on with envious eyes and wonder I
did come
now leaks out that instead
raking in cash for subscriptions,
editor Latham has been helling
for such a multiplicity of
thing-, it looks like he run-
a junk shop as well as a j
Getting a little pushed room lo
take care of all this old plunder, and , control over heating your barn,
a little hard up cash to get out
another issue he was to give
himself dead away last week In-
the following in
lo an auction
sale of stuff taken on
A few of the articles now in stock
consist of two barrels onions, three
bushels turnips, five pecks yams, a
half barrel walnuts, a quart
font oil, one dinner pot, one
line wire, a gallon artichokes, one
load green pine cord wood,
lame ducks, ten dozen horn buttons,
lour reed-root pipe stems, one dozen
clay pipes, a handsaw with teeth
broken out, one hatchet for
four lengths railroad iron, nine cross
ties, broken flange of a steamboat
propeller, four barrels corn shucks,
pair of left-handed shoes, a gallon
whale blubber, two dozen hen's
a spelling book, three
dozen eggs dozen coon skins
a shaker, a set of teeth
for a woman, a set of bangs, an
old fashioned switch said lo have
been used by a distinguished lady, a
woman's water tall, one Dolly
dress, -i dozen half a
few old love interesting,
twenty pounds hotel hash
in four gallons chicken soup
chicken left
and sundry articles be
only by a
he sale notice will be duly
and hope our friends will bid as
much as possible as the printers are
very anxious to be paid off. The
editor is Willing to hold the yams
and green pine cord wood for his
We notice i hat the above
includes but
gum tooth the signs
at each end tin-
the Star base ball club. So it looks
like most, anything about the
scoops Wonder
if a dollar wouldn't get it
F E B R A R TI
All Danger of
Two cures per week can be
made in the same
co of different degrees of ripe-
can be cured at one time in
the same barn. Saves labor and
fuel.
For further particulars ad-
dress
PHELPS,
Greenville, N.
Mention this paper when you write.
TO
------If you want to save------
ill the purchase of a PIANO and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW X. C.
General Agent for North Carolina,
who Is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers, as HIGH
PIANOS,
ti -n. j for tone, workmanship and
i endorsed nearly all the
musical journals in the United
j Made by Paul i. who is at lids
j time one of the best mechanics and in-
of the day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade
Also the EVANS
PIANO which has been -oil by
for the past six years in the eastern
part of this State and up to this time has
given entire The Upright
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from
Rosewood, Oak,
or Mahogany eases
Also PARLOR ORGAN
from lo in solid or Oak
eases.
Ten years experience in the
business has enabled him to handle
nothing but standard goods and he does
not hesitate to say that he can sell any
musical instrument about per cent.
her agents arc now
closing Win
And for the s, ring we will . prepare.
BUT. IF.
PROFITS ABOLISHED and cost squeezed on everything. Our Closing
Out Inducements are numerous and variety
We i Mute i are ad i
WE WILL open the gates of reduction with Men's Boy's and Children
Clothing. Prices reduced to a point that will tempt the closest buyer.
Shoes at Rock Bottom Prices.
IN DRESS WE WILL POUND PRICES WITH THE
POWER OP A. HAMMER.
Everything must go and go rapidly, at
C. T. M U N F O R D,
Opposite Old Brick Store.
N. C.
The Asheboro has a little
item of two lines that ii a whole j
sermon. read Use j than M
your boys from-galloping around the j , ., ,.;.,.,. Carolina,
streets and put them to work.
Attempted Incendiary.
Wilmington papers told
an attempt that was male Friday
to burn up the store Mr. H.
L. in city. Some one
effected an entrance into the rear of
he store and set lire to a lot of
buggy material that was in the
After doing some damage to
the amount of about three hundred
dollars fire went out itself
building at all. It
is tin lire went out as
it did, as many buildings would
destroyed
h id once headway. Mr.
friends here are glad to
know lie escaped injury
some lien intended to inflict upon
him and that he sustained no serious
loss.
L is said farmers
in
tobacco this have no
learned et how much will be
in Pit, hut number of acres will
he counted in the thousands.
Foot ball is a popular
the both At the and
Academy. We hear that teams torn
posed of nine of the best player- from
each school v soon play a match
game. No it be a goo-1
MERCHANT,
-------AND BUYER OF------
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.
If yon have any thing to ship I will attend to it for you on a small commission.
Call and see me.
JNO. S.
WILL SELL
At Cost for the next
DAYS
Respectfully,
BROWN BROTHERS.
Agents
Machines.
Depository
Society.
Home Saving
American Bible
w. if. Moon.
Financial Condition. June
OF THE-
The Hew York Life Insurance
parker.,
Smith
f-or.-
WILLIAM H.
BEERS, President.
Our Presbyterian friends here last
wee a lot noon which to
their church. The lot Is
located on Plank Road street, near
the residence of R. A.
hope to building at an
early day
The man the
round in of Hotel draws
quite a crowd every evening and
affords them no end
His machine is the nest of
any the kind that ever been
The Atlantic Coast Line sell
round trip tickets to New Orleans for
Mi. at low rates.
Tickets on sale from to
to return until
for round
from Greenville
The house on
pied by Sr. f-rank caught
on fire about yesterday
sparks falling on he root, The
alarm was given and the Are company
started to the scene in full haste,
but the fire was extinguished before
they arrived. Very damage
was done the building.
Young announce to B-
to-day that they
how have two vessels loaded
and guano on to
Washington, which is for delivery to
their customers in section.
carry a line of the very best
high grade and can sup-
ply needs of the farmer far
or crop,
They Pine For Him.
The a rule not to
In- author of it i known at the
inn tin one below amused us so
and person to whom it refers now
here that we know no
can come publishing we let
ii BO
Editor Greenville
as take
in Mr A. L.
Whole the merry
is a Worthy Gentleman.
He Spent a Month in our town
While here Great pleasure
the best Class of Both
Ladies and Gentlemen We Miss Hi.
Very Much We hope He will Boon
Return His absence has thrown .
damper over the town of
While Mr. Fuller was in
Free jumped on and
his machine with both May be
In-other has since
and cap tell something about the
origin of this letter.
Special Notice.
Rev. C. E Taylor, D. D , President
of Wake Forest Col is getting
up a general of the Col-
let nod wants the name,
i ion and present address of all who
have ever been student i. dead
the dale at death as best It can be
given. in the
command in which were sol
He sent me a list to fill and
have filled of those who have been
students from Pitt county. I have
tacts satisfactory as to most of those
sent, but desire if any can give
needed information as stated of the
following they will send at
to Dr, at Wake Forest,
N. U
When they
Name, went to
the College.
Wm. Richard Evans. 1839
Edward 1841
John Vines 1841
James Bedding Wilson, 1841
1840
W. T. B. 1867
A. D.
DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE
M. Y. 19th. 1802.
to by request the Company's Board of Trustees, the under-
of the Insurance of the State of New York,
an examination of the conditions and affairs of New York In-
Company to be made by the Deputy of this Department.
This examination was made as of June Nth, 1881, and on that date we Hurt
its assets and liabilities were as
ASSETS.
I. Appraised value of real estate owned by the Co m per Exhibit I, if 18.236,098
g. Loans on bond and mortgage on real stale, as per
Exhibit
Loans pledge of bonds, stocks, or other marketable
n Exhibit
notes, loans or liens on policies in force, the reserve on
each of such being in of all there-
on, as per Exhibit
Market value of bonds, stock-, and securities owned absolutely
as per Exhibit
C. Cash in Company's office. C
Cash bank, except fixed deposits in foreign countries, included
ill Item
Interest due and accrued on bonds and mortgages,
Gross premium- due and on policies in
Groat premiums on policies In force,
II. Annuity premiums 157.001
Improved Hand Pump,
Window and Door
LOCKS AND BOLTS.
Union Central Life Company. Cornish Celebrated
Pianos and
We will lake pleasure in the public in any of the above lines,
MOORE PARKER,
Office in corner under Opera House Greenville, N. C
Total,
Deduct SO p r loading on gross amount,
Net amount of and red premiums,
Total assets,
Net present value Of all the outstanding policies in force on he
30th day of June, computed according to the combined
experience table of mortality with per cent, interest,
Deduct net value of risks of this Company re-insured other
solvent companies,
Net re-insured reserve,
Claims tor matured endowments due and unpaid.
for death-losses unpaid not
Amounts due and unpaid on annuity claims,
Liability on account of lapsed policies,
paid in advance.
Total liabilities on account,
in. Gross surplus n polio, account.
30.010
090.507
II. Total liabilities.
Estimated surplus, accrued on or other policies, the
profits upon which arc especially reserved that class
policies, 8.670.410
Estimated surplus accrued on all other policies, 8,038.130
Signed. JAMES F. PIERCE,
MICHAEL SHANNON, Deputy Superintendent.
LI U
Best the
The Most Reliable Worm Destroyer in Use.
furnished to any regular Physician when
Means, i. M. K. F. Powell, prominent in Columbus county, C,
wrote ii- July. 1887. that T. C. Floyd gave his child one dose of Boy-
kin's and the result was worms. He wishes all interested to
know
N. c. May 1884.
Carmer iV Co., Baltimore, Mr. A. a very
responsible customer of mine, teaspoonful to a child
last week an-i the result was Mr. Daniel Pines used it with still better
results, worms from one child. Of course my sales will be largo.
Yours E. S.
Read the following from one of the most prominent and known physicians
and farmers in South Carolina. a girl years old near
him, took two or three doses of the and passed
Dated, C- May 28th, 1884.
K. II. M. D.
Mr, II- M. of LaGrange, X. C. Dr.
over low worms from one child in his and that it given
satisfaction He more of it than all worm medicine.
PRICE ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER BOTTLE.
Do not let your Druggist or General Dealer put you off with some other. Ask for
Worm and get It. Any M. D. can prescribe it and many do.
y Md
1883.
mm
J. A. ANDREWS,
------At the same old stand where he will continue to keep a full line of-----
Heavy
MEAT AND
-Will too Sold for
-it-tr-
G. E. HARRIS,
The above total surplus of Is exclusive of any amounts due from
Agents, and i larger than the surplus of any other purely mutual life insurance
company In the
General Agents for North and South Carolina,
CHARLOTTE, N. C.
L. U. CAMPBELL, Special Agent,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
-DEALER IN-
For Accident Insurance by the year in one
the best Companies in existence, see
Whichard,





REFLECTOR
Green villa, C
.
, Sow HOW
i Track Rum
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. . . .
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W. t POWELL A CO.,
BALTIMORE. MO.
OINTMENT
M i.
This Prep has been i i
lift; and when k b
been in steady ill- . mid. It h.-i- i- i
In tin- w i
V. 111-. i ll
all lb attention l
have
years tailed. Ibis is
Mid ill.-
which ll has obtained i-
to ii- a- lit
made bring h the
public, . hi-
be to any on
-amp.- box I'm- usual
to All
promptly attended to. Address a ii-
pew sad
p. AN.
Prop k r,
Greenville. N. .
f GA.
For rt Woolen I I nu
WITHOUT
MAN HO
How Lost Regained I
HOW
Or A new and only
. --.-i v.- i-----
PHYSICAL
VITALITY.
KB
d WEAKNESSES
1-a Only
ml, double solid.
m with endorsement SEND
of the Pm r now
of the cured
in or by
Ail-4 v-- H. or
No.
bu
tar, no
The Lite, or
tin n mart Urn rt
loan,
to
THE OF PAIN.
REV. THOMAS DIXON ON THE
OF
A Prelude on of
Course with
of
I Involved from Sorrow.
Feb. have been
turned away Association hall of
late unable, to obtain the
sit vices The interest continues to grow
in the series on Mistakes of Colo-
Kev. Thomas Jr.
preceded the sermon this mil by
the following r on some of our
recent English
We have recently been
examples of English
dice m the treatment of America an I
American institutions by a certain class
of alleged in
The chief characteristics of these
cam have been malignity
We have asked in
how could produce such
a prolific crop of fools in one season.
How on earth some men who have eyes
and ears and have Kissed the period of
mental infancy so delude them-
selves Has Men to us a profound mys-
tery. There is only one explanation
It is that the dominant classes
of who are largely in the pub-
eye at this to feel
a influenced democratic
ideas from America that threatens to
some traditional absurdities of
the system. Men of this stripe
are blinded by their fears and hatred
of American ideas that they fall into
hysterical lying about everything in
America. The destiny of the English
speaking race is a common one. The
day is swiftly coming when this race
will be one in spirit and in institutions,
in spite of the international liars on both
sides of the Atlantic. They had as well
take due notice of this fact now.
as mourn
One of these recent critics signs the
name of to a mass
in The Contemporary
which bears the title.
of Cain in the He de-
that the American takes to blood
as dock to that any man holds
himself in readiness to shoot another
from whom be thinks himself in danger
of a blow, or with whom he has even
had Ugh words. He gravely illustrates
his statements by relating that while
traveling in the south he left the car at
a station to get hatch and asked two
to keep his scat for him.
Hear him.
returned to the car I found
a tall. man in a broad slouch
hat. apparently about to take my scat,
but yet not actually taking it. A glance
at my opposite showed
me why he hesitated. Each of them
was holding a cup of coffee to his mouth
with his left hand, while his right
grasped a revolver covering the intruder.
Time being short, they were drinking
their coffee while they the
seat. The tall stranger politely
retired on my appearing. The others
put their revolver in their hip pocket
without any remark, and we resumed
out
A better title to article would
have been. Brand New Idiot from
the British
In The Fortnightly Review for Jan
one William Roberta, gravely in-
forms the world that mob law in Amer-
even without a mild re-
The this fellow's
malignity is seen in the
following my English
readers I would a little, and
sore American
you now so ardently admire are
really worthy of your admiration. Be-
me. it is not a bad thing to live in
a country where the is administered
without fear or favor, where judges
of honor and without reproach,
decisions upright. Whereas in
America it is popularly said and largely
every judge has bis
Could stupidity and reach
heights Whatever may tic
said of the magistracy before
whom passes the slum population of the
cities. I have yet to see the citizen of
this republic who dims not believe m the
honor and integrity of the men who ad-
minister the real judicial functions of
the
In the recent . y with Chili a
certain class of people England have
tilled the press with the most brutal and
comments upon American
nationality. epithet has seemed too
vile for them to no falsehood too
absurd for utterance. Their whole treat-
of the subject has been from the
beginning to the end a succession of bold
lies and vile insinuations. There is no
longer any doubt that the ruling classes,
whose authority rests or traditions and
abuses, have sniffed the breezes from the
coming of the age. when
will go down before the
charge of the manhood of the
Well, let them look to it. In
the we night calmly ask the
is the use to lie
about it
dudes.
It is a good season to that
American manhood means something.
It is a goad time to remind society of
this fact again. The effort of society
swells to ape the decaying so called
of Europe should be met with
the emphatic contempt of every man
who claims an ounce of American man-
hood. The called leaders of
can society, who roll the dirt before a
title stuck to some attenuated
of the missing link masquerading as a
man. the contempt they receive
from the object of their worship, and
the scorn of a manhood and woman
hood.
The American girl who marries a for-
snob is a fool of such
stupidity as to deserve little pity when
she is kicked and abused by the
calls The mother who
sells her own virgin to the
licentious embraces of a titled de-
is meaner than the
who sells for money the virtue of an-
other woman's child. A spade is a
spade. A diseased debauchee is still a
diseased, debauchee, he does
wear a checked suit, an idiotic
a single barreled eyeglass and a
pauper title.
It is good now for our so-
to recall facts.
It is a good just now for the
citizen to gird up his loins
and recall the meaning of his mission on
the earth. Let him remember that he
is the pioneer and the leader of the van-
guard of the triumphant world
racy that is sweeping to an age
The destiny of the manhood of
nations and of is in
Tours. Vim are a of the royal
blood of v. Live life
G O ft U MP
COLONEL TROUBLE
Hod Id
that
It was very i, -7. SI.
In Colonel Ingersoll's recent address
before V blob, he I
ante to at least one serious n
is not original. For that reason n is all
the more worthy of serious consider;
For a the colonel leaves
the realms of rhetoric and and
here talks sense. We have hitherto been
considering mere rhetoric and fancy.
We were forced to do this, because the
most of what the colonel says consist
of this staple. When he-utters a serious
it is worthy of serious attention
In this address he here is my
trouble. I find this world on a
very cruel plan. Life feeds on life.
Justice does not always triumph.
is not a perfect shield. do not
understand that has life feed
on life; every joy in the world born of
agony I do not understand why
in this world, over the Niagara of cruel-
run this flood of blood. II
there a he understood this. lie-
knew when he withheld his rains from
Russia that the famine would come. Be
saw the dead mothers, he saw the empty
breasts of love and he saw the helpless
babes. There is my
THE OLD.
It is the same old trouble that has
itself to every human heart since
man began to think. Round this
awful problem of pain and suffering man
has walked with eager, agonizing
through all the years of the past
do not profess to have solved all the
mysteries connected with this great
problem. It is a problem us old as the
race is old. us profound as is the mystery
of man. confess that when look
upon the havoc wrought by suffering
and pain m the world, there are many
things that puzzle the heart. When I
see the husband stricken on whose
shoulders rested the sole responsibility
of the home, starvation stab,
the open door. I confess there
are elements of the depth
whose meaning I cannot fathom.
When see young manhood stricken
the pride and glory and strength
of life's fullest hour. cannot full.-
understand. As he stood beside such
a grave Jesus As he
down the ages he saw tins ever
shadow He saw that sorrow is Borrow.
that tears must flow. While
the mystery which surrounds
much of pain. do say emphatically
without fear of contradiction that tin-
only light that has ever broken upon
this dark problem has been the light
has streamed through the rift in the
clouds that hung over Calvary. The
only salvation yet given to the human
soul in these extreme hours of darkness
has been the light, and the the
knowledge in Christ. If all knew of
human life and human hope were limit-
ed to the barren on which
the colonel builds his objections and
doubts and I would confess
the good of life were a question of doubt-
would teal that the world was in
the last analysis a failure.
I have disposition to avoid
It is one that any honest
must confront. Let us fairly meet it
The question is. Could Clod have mad.
a better world
In of dark mysteries.
In air this world is
of Infinite
Infinite Lout.
First the climax of the ere
is the wonder-
If be infinitely good, he i
necessarily under to
the highest creation. Anything
short of the highest possible effort o;
Infinite Wisdom mid Love would be to
contradict bis oat ire. What is the
highest possible creation at the hands of
such a Being We say at that if
he be infinitely wise infinitely good
the highest possible creation is for Mm
to reproduce himself. This is precisely
what he did
made man in his own
The ages through which the creative
process stretched all pointed forward
toward this supreme end of the process.
Man was the magnificent product of
these countless Man with his ca-
powers that reach into
the infinite and the eternal. Man with
the to survey the whole process
by which he was created. As we look
upon man his magnificent
attainments, his capacities and powers
we say that such a creature is a worthy
product of the groaning and travail of
the creative centuries. Now has
revealed himself to man through man.
All we of God we have learned
through his image. The more know
of man the more we see the divine.
a made
made the highest
creature as king and ruler of the
material universe, infinite Wisdom and
Love should of necessity make the high-
est possible world which this creature
shall move and grow into the perfect
likeness of bis Creator. What is the
highest possible world in which a
being can move We say at once, a free
moral world. Any other world would
be a world of mechanics. We will
readily agree that the world of morals
is higher than the world of mechanics.
A free world is precisely the
World made as the arena in which
this his image, grow.
The is a
world. It is ;. B If made world. It was
created by the free play of divine law
Batter. All law is divine law.
Law is itself an attribute of God.
The supreme decree under which the
material has been evolved
made what it is was the law of the
of the fittest. Under the full
operation of this law we have
a self made world. The highest creation
is that which is thus made to create it-
self. It partakes then of character. The
only man that is a real man is the self
made man. The only man who has
character is such a man. This is the
highest development of manhood. So
the highest development of the material
universe would be a self made world.
Such is the world which we live.
DEATH A
If say that such a world could have
been improved by the elimination of
death and the infinite perpetuation of
life death, we have made a
grave mistake m our conception of
death, and a graver mistake in
the conclusion based upon such reason-
Death is not an evil if life that
precedes death fulfill its divine mission.
Death is a benevolent provision of law.
Without death there could be no
in life. The gateway to larger life
is the gate of death. If we begin with
the unit of life, the cell, we find no such
thing as death. One cell divides into
two cells. These again divide,
millions of cells are pro-
Here we have life without death.
The life is uniform. There is no
in the cells. The millionth
cell produced is of precisely the same
character as the first. When we begin
to rise in the scale of life we can rise
only the process of death.
When this shell dies, the outer shell de-
there is produced the first out-
line of an Every step in the
increase of the functions of life from
this cell can only be met through
the process of death. Death, therefore,
not designed to be a tragedy. Nature
declares that death is but her benevolent
provision for fuller life.
Moving in this free world is
a free The freedom of
man is the key that unlocks the
of pain and suffering. Because man bar
been given the power to choose be is a
free man. This power to choose
two thing.-good and evil, darkness out.
and U we
pain, evil, worm, we
destroy the possibility of man's dual
destiny. In other words, make it
possible for man to choose. We make
him a machine and put him in a world
of mechanics. He has no destiny to
work out. He is driven by force. He
does not make himself. He is made on
an automaton pattern. In a world
of mechanics it would be impossible to
produce character. Character i the re-
of the free play of the dual in
the moral world- -good and evil. Char-
is the choice of good in the ace of
evil. Character is the highest possible
product within the attainment of man.
How does character come It comes
through temptation and trial.
Innocence in itself is a negative
Innocence is simply the absence of
wrong. A babe is innocent, because
the babe knows nothing of evil, we
cannot say that the babe is be-
cause virtue is the higher
dent to character, which can c
only when good and evil been
placed before the chooser and the
is good. Virtue, not innocence, is the
enduring quality of charade. Virtue
is power. The innocent suffer with the
guilty, for the guilty, at the hands of
the guilty. Suffering innocence be-
comes through the process of suffering
heroism and martyrdom. This world
would be a poorer world without its
heroes and martyrs.
THE
Character is produced through suffer-
Christ, we are told, was made per-
through suffering. Suffering seems
to be the only power that levels all dis-
and hinds the heart of the race
in the primal unity of its divine strength.
It obliterates I he of nations, of
races, of classes, and brings us face to
face with man as man. When the Prince
of Wales recently stood face to face
with death in his home, he sent to the
queen mother in her castle the message
that announced the sad death of the
first born of his home. That message of
supreme sorrow was signed with the
simple All titles dis-
faded away this hour of
supreme sorrow. He stood forth with
bead upon the primal ground
of inherent manhood. The only full
men who live in the world are the men
who know Borrow.
The only books in the library worth
reading are written by men who
knew the secrets of human suffering.
You may search through the great
of the world from end to cud.
there rests today on their shelves not a
single book that is worth reading that
was not written out of the sorrow of
man souls. When the novelist has fin-
the trials and temptations
sorrows of the characters portrayed the
book there is nothing more to lie
said. There is no history beyond Coal
point. II the book goes beyond
reader does not. There is no history
save the history of suffering. It is this
that moves the world. It is this that
the history of the world.
As read the wonderful works of
Shakespeare we are reminded of this
paradox. We do not know how much
we owe to Mrs. Shakespeare. If she had
not vigorously pulled William's hair it
is a question to whether would
had these monuments of genius.
She made his life a hell on earth. Von
must strike a harp to make music.
swept the whole gamut of
human from the deepest notes
of tragedy and suffering to the highest
and sweetest notes of human joy. He
had walked all the way. Ho knew
human life. Had he lived only in sun-
he would have touched only the
surface.
If yon ask me why this is true of
human life. lean more answer than
could answer why water runs down hill
-why gravitation gravitates. It is so
because it is so. Beyond that the
of the Infinite Wisdom which
made the world.
Most into poetry by
They learn in what they teach In
sons.
Sorrow, not joy. seems to be the power
that gives man the energy and capacity
tor work and making of the
story of the race. French sailors, after
they have made a tour of the world, it is
said, as they return and catch the first
view of their beautiful land, become so
filled with joy that work is impossible.
They crowd to the bulwarks of the
strain their eyes toward the shore,
stand helpless and cry like children. It
is necessary to get a new crew to bring
the ship into harbor. In the midst of
the storm that swept their decks they
stood every man to his post, with mus-
knotted like whipcords. They car-
their vessel through the storm,
through the billows in safety, each heart
charged with energy incomparable
sorrow and trial. The hour of
joy seemed to be the one hour that
strung the energies of the man.
NO PAIN, NO JOY.
seems to me. therefore,
world is the beat possible world, because
any other conceivable world would give
us not a better, but a condition.
that we have a world without
any that we ask God to
create a world in which shall be
no thing as shall be the
result If there is no pain,
won id be no joy. If we destroy
the sensibilities out of which pro-
we destroy of necessity the source
of joy, for their sources are identical.
is a primarily benevolent
of nature. Pain is the friendly
sentinel that points with kindly hand
on ward upward to safety in a higher
life. Take for instance the presence of
pain in the physical body. Take man as
an illustration. The seat of pain in the
body of man is found almost on
the outer ramparts of the body. The
most sensitive of the human
is the skin. Here man has millions of
friendly sentinels that warn him of the
approach of danger.
If thrust my hand upon a knife, in-
i the signal of danger is flashed to
the brain and withdraw to a position
of safety. If expose my body to the
fire, instantly am informed of the fact
of danger. Suppose pain were eliminated
from the physical man might
approach me in the darkness, thrust his
dagger through my side and sever an
artery with his keen blade without my
knowing that he had touched
might be slain in a moment simply for
the lack of for the vital organs
that are within the citadel of the body
have little or no sensitiveness to pain.
The human heart has been exposed in
the body of a bring man by a wound in
the sine. Yon can thrust your hand
into the body take hold of the throb-
bing heart of a live man and he will
not lie aware that you have touched
him. Pain is the friendly, outer
that kindly warns us of the approach
of danger and points to the way of
safety.
As we rise in the scale of being this
provision for safety becomes more and
more complicated and the possibility of
pain increases with the possibility of
life. Beginning with tho cell life in
which there is no pain, and climbing in
the scale to the consummate climax
of lire in man, we find this law to hold
good through the whole way. Ton rec-
the fact, therefore, that the pro-
vision for producing the highest possible
Hie la one in which pain is a
Pain, in other words, we
find to be one of the manifestations of
infinite love. It is sometimes very
cult for to understand this during
W W-
difficulty of mystery of I
pain, especially in parental government,
which is closest to government.
It used to be hard for me to understand
this problem myself at some of the in-
my father used to hold with
me in the twilight of tho apple orchard.
I thought that if he loved me he had a
poor way of showing it. But as look I
back now am confident that ho did
love me. Bad that my inability to see it j
then was a fact due to my own short-
sightedness rather than his lack of love.
Suppose have a world which
there is no injustice. a world
net frame a definition of justice.
is the result of man's choosing
right. not say that a machine has
performed a just act when it has woven
a of cloth, performing well its
functions. We do say that tho ma-
chine did an unjust act when it seizes
the operator's hand tears it to
pieces. A machine is neither just nor
unjust. Justice is of the freedom of the
moral world. Suppose have no free-
would have no morals. If we
to have no injustice, we can make
such a world, but it would a much
smaller world than the world have.
STATUE BOOTBLACK
We will make a world now without
injustice or pain or suffering. passed
a gentleman this morning in Madison
square. I passed the same gentleman
in tho sumo square, in the same place, .
about years E-go. He was sitting
calmly on an scat. He seemed
serenely happy, no knows no such
thing as suffering. All days are as one.
He enjoys a storm as well as a day of
sunlight. He knows no want, sorrow, I
no pain, no temptation, no trial.
tho trouble him is that he is made
out of bronze sits calmly on a solid
stone pedestal. Near this statue, ob-
serve, sitting on the curbstone, a little
watt, ragged, tired, shivering in the
cold, hungry. As look at his pinched
form wonder how many days in his
life yet to live ho will go hungry. I
wonder how many nights ho will crawl
into some barrel under some stoop to es-
cape the fierce winds of winter, and find
rest for his aching little body. And yet
as I look from this bundle of rags on the
curbstone up to tho bronze statue I'd
rather a thousand times be that miser-
able, ragged bootblack with his power
to suffer and to love than be the proud-
est statue that ever adorned marble or
granite pyramid. never saw a man in
my life who would not choose thus.
The world of freedom, the world of
life, the world of morals with its dual
possibilities of infinite joy. of infinite
sorrow, take it where you will rid when
you will, infinite in height above the
world of mechanics.
Out of this free world, then, of law,
the physical and moral perfection must
emerge in triumph at last. The fittest
must survive in the physical and the
moral world. Justice does not fail. The
colonel says that justice does not
but justice does triumph in the
end. It is altogether the exception for
justice not to triumph even within the
domain of time. If it do not triumph
for the moment it does triumph in the
end.
was unjust and cruel. Ho
built a gallows on which to hang
but we read this sentence at the
close of the drama, they hanged
on the gallows that he had
prepared for They always
do bang on the gallows that be
prepares for Mordecai. Evil is suicidal
and destroys itself. Evil builds the gal-
lows for innocence, but evil is
preparing the gallows for itself.
The only reason why there is an
to the rule that justice does
is that justice is of the eternities,
while our field of observation is of the
finite. Within this finite field the rule
is that justice does triumph in the long
run, and therefore we know that it will
triumph exception the end.
The reign of law. therefore, is the
reign of love. The thousand apparent
cruelties of nature are incidents to the
reign of law. We would not
the of law and inaugurate the
reign of chaos. The reign of law
ways is the reign of love. Nature does
not forget her duty to the human race.
Nature has never failed to provide an
abundant harvest for man. The spring
never forgets to come. The flowers
never t to bloom. The seasons
always come in their order and with
their rich burden of treasure for the
race. Why a famine in Russia Is
to blame Did she not send forth
her superabundance through the earth
in America, and do we not girt the earth
with ships today Whose fault is it
if peasants perish in Russia, while the
granaries of a world burst with grain
Whose fault is it in Russia, that within
her own borders there is not sufficient
harvest ye first the kingdom
God and his righteousness, and nil these
things shall be
Let man put himself, in other words,
accord with the eternal laws of God
in nature and he cannot want. The
reason why there is a famine
is because man has violated the eternal
economies of nature. It is not
it is man's fault. There has been
wrong, oppression, injustice, cruelty,
suffering. And God means to teach the
world in these hours of sorrow the
of the world to these
millions. Yes, God did foresee the dead
in Russia's famine, but yon did not fore-
see it. Russia nothing to yon
in the history of the world, and God if
lifting the burden of these millions
your brethren and placing it
hearts, with the threads of sorrow
he is binding up the borders of the ca-
until there shall lie one man lie
love unbroken that shall cover all the
race.
The famine in Russia is a call to unity
and love, to man. a call for justice and
freedom to the oppressed of the
world, and out of these hours of dark-
the God who rules brings the good.
The infinite and eternal energy that
sweeps through the ages and makes the
history of man is none other than
infinite power that makes for righteous-
Matthew Arnold, who certainly is not
regarded as a bigoted and
yet who is most competent to speak
this as the unrivaled
of civilization and culture in their pure-
aspects, said in the first ad-
dress he delivered in America that there
was no hope for American citizens and
institutions unless we walked in the
ways of righteousness.
He adduced as an illustration France
and ventured to prophesy that unless
Franco turned from the worship of the
god that is, from her
would lose her valor in
battle and her skill in counsel. No
would save her. and the life of a
once famous state must inevitably lose
its glory. Parnell. when he broke with
this resistless that sweep-
through history, this power that makes
for righteousness, whether man desire
or not, broke his own life, crushed hi-
Own ambitions and herpes as eggshells.
Whatever may be the darkness of any
hoar, we may rest assured that this
verse being swept onward toward the
final goal the triumph of righteous-
and pence and love.
Oh, a Cough.
heed the warning. The dig
ml Imp.- of the sure of that
more terrible disease Consumption. Ask j
yourselves yon can for I he sake
of saving to run the risk and do
nothing for It, We know
that Shiloh's will cure your
cough. It never fails. This explains
by more than a million Bottles were
sold the past year. It relieves croup and
Whooping cough at once. Mothers, do
not be without it. For lame side
or chest use Shiloh's Porous Piaster
Sold at Drug Store.
Sir Edwin Arnold has lately
to a magazine his admiration of
Lord Tennyson's hands, which it seems
manly and powerful in outline, tut
delicate and finely formed as those of a
poet should Now. who would have
thought that any particular kind of
hand was wanted for writing poetry
For carpentry could understand there
might be. or for blacksmith's work, or
even for painting. But why for poetry
Perhaps some Scotchman will kindly
write and tell me what sort of hands
Burns wrote
London Troth.
Women are not slow lo comprehend.
They're quirk. They're alive, yet it
was a who discovered
for their ailments. The man
was Pierce.
The his
boon to women.
Why ii round one f the
ill
when there's I at hall I
an experiment, which is
sold under the guarantee hat if are
d in any way in it, you can
your money bask by applying in
makers.
We can hardly imagine a
trying it. Possibly it may Hue of
one or two-but we it. omen
are ripe for it. They have it.
I of a prescription of
ten waiting for it. Carry new. to
Suppose
Benjamin Blossom, of Ellsworth. Me.
is having a good deal of fun as the lead-
of a crusade against dancing King's
Daughters. The King's Daughters in
the Bible, it seems, used to dance Out
that fact doesn't with Brother
Blossom, who announces kick-
as as a crusader on this question
love to be a kicker and with the kick-
he exclaims in holy zeal
the Baptist so did Lu-
so did John so did Wash-
and therefore, just as long
the Daughters dance, will
Benjamin kick.
We hate to stop any reform that is
on. we would just like to ask
Mr. Blossom if the King's laughters
mightn't do worse things than
Suppose they should read his
kicking and should decide to kick them-
York Tribune.
THE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door Court House
THE M OP
BIGGIES,
My factory h well equipped with the best Mechanics, put m nothing
but WORK. We keep up the times and improved styles
material used in all work. All styles of Spring are use. you can from
oil, Ran. Horn, King
Also on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
year round. we will sell as as
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
people of mantle for past we hope to
h of the
T ID- son.
LIFE FIRE INSURANCE
V .
OFFICE OLD ST AX
All placed in
FIRST-CLASS
rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRE
h E RELIABLE OF C
Hi rs to the of Pitt and line of the follow goo
not to he excelled in this market. all guaranteed to be First-class an
straight DRY GOODS all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN
HATS CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA
and and HOUSE
SASH and BLINDS, Hi K BY and QUEENS
W IKE, ARE. s .-nil CASTING. I of
lira Mill Hat, Rock
PI mil
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at
to dozen, less H per
and Job.- Lead pure
Color. Suit and Wood an
Ware. Nail- a . . . mil guarantee
. R
p i t
for co Is. . c.
prevails a in n
bear
n s; all
I'll, n e. . f ., and
III . e -em
By the inlaid
by Him Who
I am all for economy, the only-
kind of economy which is at
understood any branch of the public
service is that of cutting down
of the lower ranks in order to in-
crease those of the higher. To him that
hath is given, and from him that hath
not is taken away that which he hath
and the injustice of this process is
by the fact that it is earned
out by him who hath. The superior of-
with his thousands a year docks
his subordinate his few shillings a week
and then poses as a benefactor who has
saved the public purse, and is rewarded
for his noble service with another thou-
sand or two.
The true economy is the precise re-
I verse of this. Retrenchment should be-
gin at the top of the tree. Under the
present system efficiency is necessarily
sacrificed. The stuff is insufficient for
the work, and the men are either over-
worked, inefficient or or all
three. It is the same story in the army
the the customs and the
ons, and probably in other departments
Truth.
A large number of at an
expo-ell where lie
wind was
rural Dr.
Hull's syrup.
Look to vim You ca
hat ion Oil. great pain-care for -o
Cents.
from u Clock-
One of the cleverest devices that have
lately come to the notice of the police
was discovered at a South Cove house.
The police felt certain that the occupant
of tins was dealing in liquor
and they searched the place re
but failed to find any
rial sign of guilt. At last one man, while
making a search at this house, happened
to the door to an innocent looking
tall clock, when lo a faucet was re-
vealed to his Bight. He turned the
of the faucet and beer flowed from
it freely. Whaling, the clock from the
wall he saw a pipe, which led him to a
cutely covered hole in a dark cellar.
where several barrels of beer were
found.
It came out that tho proprietor of the
place had a rubber tube, one end of which
he occasionally attached to the faucet
and placed the other end in a large milk
can. drawing a supply of beer
for all demands for a time. If
the police suddenly happened in upon
him he would empty the con-
tents of the can into a sink. No other
persons knew of the faucet in the clock,
that he showed his customers was
the milk can He was a and
had personally placed the necessary pipe
and other fixtures in
Transcript.
a and
Is no worth the small price of
to free yourself of every o
distressing if you
so our and get a
every bottle baa
use ac. or
Mini if it does you no it a cent
nothing. at s Drug
-ever f I
for ale.
b- Ion a d nu write
A below Co
in he of .
ton four rooms j
kite en an I smoke hons convenient.
I stable- on the
building In Skinner
desirable
lion.
I A between I
Front has of .
well of
ii plot and stables.
IV. acre lot in
I minus cook an.
all necessary out buildings mid
. water
A line
miles from mi Ml.
I P road, has gin Mouse, stables. I
hams, n room tenant Mil
es cleared, balance well
j water. This land is excellent for
of line
I ii g mi branch of the I
. W A . half lie-
I and Winston and Within II
mile of a new depot, contains acres.
, and balance timbered I
will pine. oak. hickory, and
ha- S eon I tenant passes
I through farm. Th.-
I with loam,
i is good slate ion and highly
is line c land,
A farm s miles from on
I . Kilt-ton load known as tin-
contains i acres. cleared; has
dwelling and nil
Tin- is a first-class 10-
,, A Hid lot in Greenville on
O corner near II and V. s
atria, now by the family of
hue W. A Stocks, house ti
convenient, i- convenient
block
of the town.
cm lie 1st.
A good building lot on
street, between and
sir. 11-, s;. o
an I lot on
street neat
Of mums, large
and on
1-. Tin- Loose and or
I. Fin adjoining Hie lot -n B.
S. and the lot in
one dwelling
f i r in nu-. and cook .
I. n ;.
v a Mi. in i an I
and S Phis
i v i-iv lo ll . N j
hi. a i o i H is s t- I
ii n one of j
s, e; of Pitt in are .
up U--I ma
e. s, r I.-
;. i lion. Ii i a I
. i h lie i e
e . r is i- am v s
; n i to -i
i t a is g gnu I his I
S-. I lie mils are till lie I ill
ii- inn.
This v i- fur Bale
ii.-r- ti mill from
I rm- nu he n
e oil
t Ml-I C A A III n
I. . i K. U
Helled
SOUTH.
N. N.
I n Mail, daily
ex Sim.
pin VA pill
I CO nil. Ill
. I I IS
I . S ill. II I
v u-o. . Is p in pin s IT Mm
e. i., ;,,
VI I i Mi
I H an,
I A
ll HI I
I If. n .
t north
No . r. Mn
ex .-Mill.
ll -nu l
A Mi
III
i- i
A I in
. I I. Is -I- 4.-
. g
I v I Mil
ii -i pin
I Sin .
Train No. not Jan.
train on id Neck
1.2-2 II. arrives Scot
land Neck at SI. Greenville
-M. Kin-ton
leaves a in.
a. hi. Halifax a. in.
a. m. except Sim-
Local train Weldon
Monday, and Friday
a. in., living Neck 1.05
i. in. Green v. He MO p. in.,
7.10 p. m. leave-
Tuesday. Saturday at
a. in., arriving
in., Neck 2.21 p. in. Weldon
5.15 m.
Train leave- N C, via
Raleigh K, H. daily except Sun
M. Sunday I M,
N l . IS I M, I M.
Plymouth p. p. m.
leave- Plymouth daily except
Sunday 11.00 a. in-
ill, a III .
N . in A 11.20.
Train mi Midland N C have
Sunday, HO A M
rive N C, 7.-10 A M.
l.-ave- X S oil v VI
arrive N C, A N.
Train on leaves
a a P M, arrive
P Hope P M. Hemming
leaves Spring Nashville
.-.; V. arrive Mount A
H. except Sunday.
Clinton leaves Warsaw
l- lint
I- A M lea-v
s A M. suds I. M. cornier
lug A ii-a Si I h
nu
is No. Northbound is
. -Hail
-until and North nil
-nip I Mount A
I ran. N. make-
fin all point.- North daily. Al
vi. and daily except Sun
it via also at
with Norfolk
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all
M ii I
v- v;.,
ma IN
Fine shavings from soft pine wood
make a pleasant pillow. Have
special curative virtues for
Verb
lit
Young
T.
oh -t. i the
i a el e .-r In tile s ape d
i-ode. ale lee-.
e are V. s.
engaged iii Parents
an In lens time than
remote from Washington.
W the model or is we
advise as to free charge,
no change unless we ob-
We refer, here, to the Master,
, Supt of Money Order Did., and f
I Is of tin- S.
terms an reference
actual clients ill your own Stale,
address. C. A. Snow A
C.
BAN EMPORIUM
I , shaving. and
v i GLASS FRONT
Open. at which
and I have
b. my line
HEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
Th MAKE A
MODEL BARBERSHOP
all the appliance- ;
chairs
at reasonable
for outside of my shop
executed. Very
l a INKS
Scientific American
Agency for
WATER OR MILK
COCOA
for fr Is
intent
k C
1-2 LB. TINS ONLY.
ALMA
Fr men
On for
home. This away
stars.





LANG'S COLUMN. DO YOU
Tobacco Cloth.
3-4 Cents per Yard.
SPOT CASH.
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
-.-
T IS
Personal
M; IV. U u n sick
Di In- In
to i relative.
II. K cotton bum
R. town the
i. k-
Mr. Waller Hosier, of Suffolk, Va.,
ha here a few days visiting hi-
la; her. is sick.
Mr. J. W. went to
last week lo stand a civil
service examination.
Mr. It. II. Hosier has been very
sick for days at. the residence
FOB
We made special
the
Weekly Constitution,
Atlanta, which we are
enabled to offer It with the
for ONE TEAS for only
This offer lasts out a short while. Sow
is your chance to get all the news of all
the world and your home paper for the
price of one paper.
Every clubbing Ion at rate Is, , ,, , . , ,,
entitle to a chance at W-i Mr- J-D. Williamson.
Free M. j.,. l.
U-j-J- license to .
lion offer ever made. Every home in decided to locate in Greenville. He
Pitt county should receive the is at the old Tucker Murphy stand.
and that, it should The Asheville announces
i e death in that of Miss Martha
overflowing with the choicest special
A Nickel a Ride.
A a Steam
round, dying hot sea, set op hi-
It is
in the lot in Hunt of Hotel
Jg eon and draw a crowd whenever
j in operation, la
pally in the evening night.
Northern Light.
The aurora seen in the
northern Saturday night
considerable attention and com-
It was the brilliant that
has been noticed here in a number tit
years. Of course the superstitious
had lo hate their say about it, and
declare it to be sign of war, and of
the judgment and n
else.
natures, such as Weekly
lion, published and
having a circulation of 156.000.
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS.
Local Reflections.
Good Morning Miss
Irish potatoes are being planted.
New Fair next week, 22nd.
begins in Washington next
Monday.
lb can best Tomatoes for only
cents at Shel
This year Lent will begin on the
second of March.
This section should develop its
trucking
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros.
The went up last
week an
i o mills went
i cotton down.
I be a
xi Monday i
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book Store.
Tue frequently speaks
of mad in Tarboro vicinity.
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C-
Bryan.
Plant tobacco, peanuts and lice.
Lots more money in them than cot-
ton.
Friday night was as cold as any
night this section has had during
the winter.
Cash given for Produce, Hides.
Eggs and Fan at the Old Brick
Store.
It seems i. Fri lava are bow
ill days with us, j from
the last two.
We do not hear as much talk
the grip as formerly. has some-
what . haled.
Home Sewing Ma-
all parts at Brown
New
chines and
Bros.
The train was late getting in
several times week, once as much
as hours.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store.
Every voter in the county ought, to
read Reflector during the coin-
campaign.
Just M. Ferry Cos
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick
Lawrence Edwards, merchants
f Scotland Neck, made an assign-
last eek.
For Dancy house
on Pitt street. Apply to
The weather Sunday
and Monday was another beautiful,
spring-like day.
Fob lot of Horses and
Mules for sale on time. Apply to
R. R. Cotton, Center Bluff, N. C
The hour for evening service in
the churches has been change I from
seven to half past seven.
the Reflector and
get hot this piper and the Atlanta
a whole year.
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will
your appetite when nothing
At the Old Brick Store.
Powell, aunt, of Mrs. J. II. Tucker.
Her here regret to heir
her death.
Revs. A. D. Hunter G. L.
Fined have decided to exchange
pits next Sunday, the latter
preaching in the Baptist church here
and I he at Snow
Mr. Willie Grimmer, who for
months past has had a position
with Agent Moore the depot here.
If ft last week to accept a position as
night telegraph operator at Suffolk.
Presiding Elder R. B John preach-
ed the church on Sun-
day night last. His subject,
His illus-
were fine and forcible. The
reference to communion with
God for forty days on the mountain
was grand. It, was a sermon full of
thought and was complimented by
our Progress.
This morning Mr. M. R. Lang
leaves in his tour to the
northern cities tor purpose of
selecting goods for his trade here.
He go by way of Wilson and
there be joined by Mr.
manager of his store in place,
an. the two mil go en together.
is no merchant in Eastern
Carolina possessing a better idea of
styles and fabrics than Mr. Lang,
an I when the spring summer
goods which lie now goes to purchase
arrive his store will AM a display
seldom in any l the towns.
heard one housekeeper in town
suggest a return to the use tallow
candles unless kerosene oil gels bet-
in quality.
The Aid Society of M.
E. Church will give a festival the
week in Court for the
the church-
see it if no grain i-
made the straw
cultivation rice. Tins living ii
looks like many more Would
plant it.
Last Saturday naked another
moderately busy day some
our merchants limes are not
bad, alter all, as some would make
i hem appear.
Getting out cross lies is
to quite a number of
Very Different Except in Name.
A lady in town who had been
reading about Boyd, who is in jail
and who it is claimed
wrecked the train at
happened pick up another paper
contained a picture of Governor
of Nebraska, and taking
a glimpse at the name,
Why, I thought that fellow Boyd
was u
New Fair.
A special train will be inn
Greenville to next
day morning, connecting with a train
there for New which will give
all Iron this section who wish to
lake advantage of an opportunity
lo attend the Fair and return the
sane day. No many will go
here. Fare the trip
including one admission in the Fair
12.15.
Something Good, Anyway.
A few Sabbaths ago the editor
walked into Sunday School,
reaching clown in his pocket
for a lesson book drew forth a
let, turning to the title page
there ill hold letters
One of the teachers thought
lie hail a good joke on but has
been convinced that
is a mighty good tiling Lo have in
house.
Children's Party.
A delightful
was given
children's masque
last Friday night in
Germania Hall honor of the birth-
Master David James.
a lo and look on at
gay frailties of little ones as
they gambol along enjoying
so nicely. carried us back
to the days when we were small.
The costumes were beautiful and
varied. Some the characters were
very hard to be distinguished. Space
not permit, to name them all,
but little monkey caught us. We
you many a return,
David, and may be as happy ill
lb rough a you Here on last Fri
1st
along line
now I lie
Washington.
the
Junction i
citizen are read to
thank tin-Town Council for putting
public over there in order,
even though were a long time
getting at it.
The Greenville Land Improve-
Co. recently purchased the
Greenville Works and is
the plant of the latter over to
i heir properly.
Fertilizer men say the are
making very little arrangement for
cotton guanos, from which they tire
satisfied there will be a big
in the cotton acreage
Come Together.
Have you ever noticed how hard
is to keep correct time in Greenville
Go down the street and compare
and nearly everybody will
have different going by
lime, some by some
telegraph same by the
train, some by the shop hells, and
Mime anything hot time.
V good chick in the Court House
would harmonize these
differences of time. Gel all the lime
nieces to working together, and
maybe the might catch on to
spirit also come together to
accomplish something town.
People's ideas here seem very much
in accord with lime
man
Peggy an old colored woman
who was a Federal
here There was a
turnout of the benevolent societies lo
she belonged to funeral
Sunday
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
-W-
Tobacco Cloth.
I 3-8 Cents per Yard.
SPOT CASH.
LANG'S COLUMN
else will.
cue of your fl air
Potato
an I will pay good prices
ion is called to the law card
L. Fleming, under the
first page.
The man with the ball throwing
trick is here again, but. appear-
is doing a dull business.
There was not as much fun here as
usual this Valentine season. The
comic could not be had.
All parties who tobacco to,
sell can save Warehouse charges
and freight by bringing same to
the prize house on Saturdays
where they will receive good prices.
Scraps particularly wanted.
The office job work
every time. Our many can
testily the kind, of work we do.
The body of young Douglass who
was drowned at Tarboro week
ago yesterday has not yet been
This in the year candidates
are looming up, By the mi-Idle of
summer they will be as hick hops.
We have for sale tons prime
Cotton Seed Meal. Tons pure
fine ground Fish Scrap. tons
Delight
Potato
F.-S.
Tarboro. N. G
The for a few days
been a as if If arch was here.
It is be very about
fire.
Parties are in order, Another
in Germania Hall last night. Of
course present had a
time
We see it staled that paper barrels
will he i ext thing to com in use.
The world l along with
out
The farmers are pow actively en
gaged in the ground, for plant.
One remarked lo us last week
that wen- up to any forty i-r
year. This goad work
no much bad weather in January.
In a letter from N.-r we. learn
of a v destructive fire which
cured there Saturday night. The
were burned
fine horses perished in
estimated h 850.000.
and
plant
farmed
i-
will
this
learned vet how much will
have
pros in
not
plant
in Pitt, but number of acres will
be counted in the thousand.
Football is a popular
the both at the Institute and
Academy. We hear that teams torn
posed of nine of the best from
each school will soon play a match
game. No be a good
game.
Attempted Incendiary.
Wilmington papers told
an attempt that was made
night to burn up the store Mr II.
L. Fennell in that city. Some one
effected an entrance into the rear
lie store and set fire to a lot of
buggy material was in the upper
story. After doing some damage lo
the amount of about three hundred
dollars the fire went out itself
catching the building at all. It
is inutile tin fire went out as
it did, as many buildings would
less nave been destroyed it
once headway. Mr.
friends here are glad to
know he escaped the injury
mine I intended to inflict upon
him and that be sustained no serious
loss.
Lets the Cat Out.
The Washing m has
time been doing i-
a list,
i --Hen alum I i-
made us h
on s ii; as j es i
did come
now leaks out, ins cad
in the cash for
editor Latham has been seeing
for such a of
things that it looks like he la run-;
a junk shop as well a piper, j
Getting a little pushed Nun to
lake care all this old plunder, and .
a hard up cash to get out I
another issue he was forced to
himself dead away last week by in. j
Tobacco Growers
C B-----
The for
CUBING
With it you have absolute
control over heating your barn,
and it removes
All Danger of
selling following in the G z
soon lo Have an auction
sale of stuff on
A few of the articles now in stock
consist of two barrels onions, three
bushels turnips, five peeks yams, a
half barrel a quart
foot oil, one pot, one
line wire, a gallon artichokes, one
load green pine cord wood, three
lame ducks, ten dozen horn buttons,
tour reed-root pipe stems, one dozen i
clay pipes, a handsaw teeth j
broken out, one hatchet for
four lengths railroad iron, nine cross
ties, the broken flange of a steamboat
propeller, four barrels corn shucks,
of left-handed shoes, a gallon
whale blubber, two dozen teeth,
a Webster's spelling book, throe
dozen eggs J coon skins
a womans shaker, a set of false teeth
for a woman, a set. of false bangs, an
old switch said lo have
been used by a distinguished lady, a
woman's water tall, one Dolly
dress, i dozen half a
few old love interesting,
twenty pounds hotel hash
in four gallons chicken soup
ala hotel chicken left
and sundry articles he
only by a personal in.
The sale notice will duly made,
and hope our friends will bid as
as possible as the printers an;
very anxious to be paid The
editor is willing to hold the yams
and green pine cord wood for his
We that the above
includes but given entire
,,,,, , ii ,. I,,.,,,, Piano Just mentioned will be sold at from
gum tooth the signs hang- j ,
at each tin- budge, an,,
the Star base ball club. Ho it looks
Two cures per week can be
I made in the same barn
I co of different degrees of
can be cured at one time in
i the same barn. Saves labor and
fuel.
For further particulars
dress
PHELPS,
Greenville, C.
this super when you write.
to
------If you want to save------
lift
in the purchase of a PIANO from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ
ADOLPH COHN,
X. C.
General Agent for North Carolina,
who is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers, as HIGH
GRAPE PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship
and endorsed by nearly all the
journals in the
Made by Paul Ii. who is at this
time one of the mechanics and in-
i Teuton of the day. Thirteen new
i patents u this high grade Plano-
Also the NEW BY EVANS
I BIGHT PIANO which has been soul by
i him for the past six years in the eastern
I part Ibis and up to this time has
The
We i out in r,
And h r lb S ring Trade will u w prepare.
mm
PROFITS ABOLISHED and cost on everything. Our Closing
Out Inducements are numerous and variety
Em Inspiring.
WILL open the gates of reduction with Men's Boy's and Children
Clothing. Prices reduced to a point that will tempt the closest buyer.
Shoes at Rock Bottom Prices.
IN DRESS WE WILL POUND PRICES WITH THE
OP A TRIP HAMMER.
Everything must go and go rapidly, at
C.
Opposite Old Brick Store.
N. C.
like most anything about the
scoops in Hie Wonder
if a dollar wouldn't get it
The has a little
item of two lines that is a whole
sermon. reads line
your boys galloping the
streets and rat them to
Mahogany cases
Also the ORGAN
from to In solid or Oak
cases.
Ten years experience in the music
business has enabled him to handle
nothing bus standard good and be docs
not hesitate to say that he can sell any
musical instrument about SB per cent,
cheaper than other agents are
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
---------AND BUYER of---------
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.
II you have anything to ship I will attend to it you on a small commission.
Call see me.
JNO. S.
WE WILL SELL
At Cost for the next
DAYS
Respectfully,
BROWN BROTHERS.
Agents for New Home Saving
Depository for Bible
Society.
Financial erudition, June
OF THE-
The Hew York Life knee Co.
WILLIAM
BEERS, President.
Our Presbyterian friends here last
week purchased a lot upon which to
mild their church. The lot is
located on Plank Road near
the residence of Mr. R. A.
hope to begin building at an
early day
The map with the steam merry-go-
round in front of Hotel Macon draws
quite a crowd every evening and
affords no end of
His machine is. the neat equipped of
any Hind that been
through
The Atlantic Coast Line will sell
round trip tickets to New Orleans for
at. low rates.
Tickets on from Feb. to
until
d tickets
from
29th, to return
lath. for round
The on Greene
by Sir. caught
on fire about yesterday
sparks falling- on root. The
alarm was and the Are company
stinted to the scene in full haste,
but the fire was extinguished before
they arrived. Very damage
was done lo the
DEPARTMENT OF THE STATE NEW
ALBANY. N. Y. January 19th,
Pursuant to by request of the Company's Hoard of Trustees, the under
signed, Superintendent of the Department of the State of New York,
has caused an of the conditions and affairs of New York In-
Company to be made by the Deputy Superintendent of this Department,
This examination was made of June 80th, 1891, and on that date we that
its and liabilities were as
W. M.
MOORE
Smith's Improved Hand Pump,
Burglar and Door
LOCKS AND BOLTS.
I Central Life Insurance Company. Cornish
Organs.
We will Hike pleasure in the public in any of the above lines,
MOORE PARKER,
Often in corner under Opera House N. C
ASSETS.
to Re-
readers to-day that
now hive two vessels loaded wit
guano on way to
Washington, to
their customers in this section.
carry a line of the very best
high grade and can sup-
ply needs of the farmer for
of crop,
They Pine For Him.
The a rule not lo
unless
he author of it is known at the office,
but I one below amused us so much,
and the person to whom it refers now
being here so that we know no harm
can cine from publishing we lei
ii in,
Editor Greenville
iV c, as citizens take
in introducing Mr A, I.
Falter who is Banning the merry
round, is a Worthy Gentleman.
He Spent a Month in our town
While here Great
for she best Class of Both
Ladies and Gentlemen We Miss
Very Much We hope He will Soon j
Return His absence has thrown g
damper over the town of
Citizens.
While Mr. Feller was in
the Free Pm Jumped on him and
machine both feet. May he
brother has since repented
and can tell something about the
origin of this
Special Notice.
C. E Taylor, D. D , President
of Wake Col is
up a general of the Col-
and wants the name,
and present address of all who
have ever been If dead
dale death, as heat ft can he
given. in the name the
command in which they were sol
i lie is, He sent me a list to fill and
have filled of those who have been
students from Pitt county. I have
tacts satisfactory to most of those
sent, but if any can give the
needed information as stated of the
following they will send at
to Dr, Wake Forest,
When they
Name, went to
the
Wm. Richard Evans. 1839
Edward 1841
John Vines Johnson, 1841
James Bedding Wilson, 1841
Edward 1840
1867
A. D.
I.
by the Co a per Exhibit
on real state, as per
Appraised value of real estate
. Loans on bond mortgage
Exhibit
Loans seemed by pledge of bonds, stocks, or other marketable
n per Exhibit
Premium notes, loans or liens on policies in force, the reserve on
policies being in excess of ail Indebtedness there-
on, as per Exhibit
Market value of bonds, stocks, and securities owned absolutely
as per Exhibit
Cash in Company's office.
Cash u bank, except fixed deposits In foreign countries, included
Item
S. Interest due and accrued on bonds and mortgages,
premiums due and on policies In force
10- deferred premiums on policies in force,
Annuity premiums
Total,
Deduct M p r cent, loading on above gross amount,
and red premiums,
10,825.483
14.0113
2,610.084
Total assets,
8180.710,680
SURPLUS.
Net present value of all the outstanding policies in force on he
30th day of June, 1891, computed according to the combined
experience table of mortality with per cent, interest,
a. Deduct net value of risks of this Company other .
solvent companies,
Net reserve,
Claims tor matured endowments due and unpaid.
claims for death-leases unpaid not
due and unpaid on annuity claims,
Liability on account of laps-.-el policies.
Premiums paid in advance.
fl. Total liabilities on account.
Grogs surplus polio,
39.010
900.007
Si
14.708.075
Best Selling the
The Most Reliable Worm Destroyer in Use.
furnished to any regular Physician when
Messrs. i. M. B. Powell, prominent merchants iii Columbus county, N. C,
wrote its In July. Mr. C. Floyd gave his child one dose Boy-
Worm the result was worms. II-wishes all interested to
know
N. C, May k, 1884.
Carmer ft Co. Baltimore, Mr. A. a very
responsible customer of mine, gave a half to a child
last the result was worms. Mr. Daniel Pines used it with still better
results, worms from one child. Of course my sales will be largo.
Yours truly, E. S. SMITH.
Head the following from one of the most prominent and known physicians
and farmers in South Carolina, lie a girl years old near
him, took two or three doses of the and passed
Dated, O, May 20th, 1881.
I. II. M. D.
Mr. H. M. of LaGrange, N. C. says. Dr.
brought over worms from one child in his neighborhood, and that it gives
satisfaction lie sells more of it than sill worm medicine.
PRICE ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER BOTTLE.
Do not let your Druggist or General Dealer put you off with some other. Ask for
Worm and get it. Any M. D. can prescribe it and many do.
v Baltimore, Id
1883.
in
J. A. ANDREWS.
-At the same old stand where he will continue to keep a foil line of------
II. Total liabilities.
Estimated surplus, accrued on or other policies, the
profits upon which ire especially reserved that class
policies, 8.670.419 no
surplus accrued on all other policies,
Signed. JAMES F. PIERCE,
MICHAEL SHANNON, Deputy
MEAT AND
to
G. E. HARRIS,
The above total of Is exclusive of any amounts due from
Agents, and is larger than the surplus of any other purely mutual insurance
company In the Id.
General for North South Carolina,
CHARLOTTE, N C.
L. U. CAMPBELL, Special Agent,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
-DEALER IN-
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of
the best Companies in existence, see
Whichard.


Title
Eastern reflector, 17 February 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 17, 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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