Eastern reflector, 24 February 1892






I THE REFLECTOR
J-
-HAS A-
I Job Printing Room
That be surpassed no
where in this section.
Our work gives
faction.
Ne
Material
SEND US YOUR ORDERS.
GIVEN AWAY
BY THE WEEKLY,
Tie Atlanta Constitution.
Ten thousand dollars
this year by The
published at Atlanta, Ga ,
among its
This at newspaper has Hie
largest circulation am weekly news-
paper published in the Unfed Slates,
and, with one exception, in London, the
largest in the world. It i, first and
foremost, a newspaper, every
week the full news of ail the world, and
devoted especially to the development
of the south. Us now ex-
and it is poshing for
Sample copies will be sent on
application.
A Distribution.
Five thousand dollars will be divided
among its subscribers now and
July 1st. and between then and
the and of the year.
The first division lie based on the
result of the conventions of
the two great in June, and the
on the result of the presidential
election.
The national democratic convention
meets at Chicago June 21st.
The national republican convention
at Minneapolis June 7th.
Both will nominate a candidate for
president and vice president.
for the First Prize.
dollars in gold
will be given by Tub to
the successful answers of the question
will lie the nominees of each
party for president and vice
Any person selecting the four names
thus chosen will be entitled to the first
prize of c and more
than one answers correctly, the prize
will lie divided accordingly
for a Prize.
Five hundred in cash will be
divided among those who guess correctly
only three out of the four to be
thus chosen as part., standard bearers, so
that the rues may prophesy wrong as
to one of the four and by getting
three correct will come in for this prize.
Mis-
In addition lo above in gold
more will be distributed in
prizes, consisting of twenty-live silver
the recall value which is
an I Sill, respectively, and copies of
r's
edition, fully illustrated and consist-
of 1,500 pages.
The gold watches will be given to
every hundredth ballot of first 2.5
silver watches to the next
aerie of hundredth ballots, and after
that every fiftieth ballot will receive one
of I h-200 Webster's mammoth
All must be by one
year's subscription Weekly ox-
only and most lie writ-
ten on a separate piece of paper from
that containing order tor
The winner of any of the prizes
noted will be given a free guess at
the next distribution after July
1st costs you and you
may get CUM or in gold. Yon
will certainly receive the Week-
newspaper published in the south for
one year will never lie a year
when a great will b more
interesting than this one.
Address all communications to The
Constitution-, Atlanta,
The Eastern Reflector.
VOL.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter.
morning and
at Antioch
First
Second morning
and Saturday night before.
Third and fourth at Green-
ville, morning and night, also second
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday
night services each week.
Service at school house on
Tarboro road on Thursday night It-fore
each third Sunday until April and
on third Sunday evening.
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments.
Rev. R. F. pastor of
Circuit of the M- K. South,
will preach at the tallowing times and
places regularly each
1st Sunday at Salem, II o'clock A. M.
1st Sunday. Chapel. o
P. M.
2nd Grove, II o'clock
A M
2nd Sunday, School House,
miles west of Greenville.
P. M.
3rd Sunday, Ayden or Branch
School House. A. M.
3rd Sunday, Tripp's
o'clock F. M.
4th Sunday, Bethlehem, o'clock
A. M.
4th Sunday. Lang's School House,
o'clock r. M.
THE BACHELOR.
H. C. DODGE.
We not a ;
He leads an MT
Yet he deserves no FT for
He ought to CK wife.
If he is will not wait
Until he's in
But now to lad a mate.
Who'd come in RA.
He he is foolish, too.
For In the ND's dead.
Without one sweet RT can woo.
And then so wed.
M dainties nice to KT gets
Nor NE soft caress;
In sick no angel pets
Him to distress.
It's RD finds to cook his steaks
And no doubt.
And eat the baker makes
To supper out.
lie has to wash and too.
And mend hi CD clothes;
Hit lodgings make him blue,
When at goes.
Of course in slumbers well.
In DO he finds delight
To hear cherub All yell.
With all night.
But in old AG will be sad.
His heart will
will call him
E will die unknown.
Sun.
The Coast Line System.
The work of laying the track on
the Washington branch of the j
W. road began Tuesday by a
force of penitentiary convicts.
The entire grading has been com-
and the track laying will
begin at the junction of the
branch and the
and Raleigh road, a few-
miles below There will
be twenty-four miles of the Wash-
branch and when completed
it will give the Atlantic Coast Line
a system or roads tapping nearly
every important section of Eastern
North and opening to
the markets of the country the
fine grain growing section of the
the trucking inter-
of the seacoast comities as
well as the fish and oyster
tries- Washington branch
especially will develop one of the
finest truck growing regions of the
State, and great oyster beds of
sound with its fishing
interests.
From good authority it is also
reported by the Wilmington Mes-
New is also to
be taken the embrace of
the Coast Line system. It has
been decided to put on a line of
boats from Bells Ferry on
branch to New which
will give an independent line into
and out of New
The Fayetteville short cut has
been completed, the last rails
having been laid Monday. It is
that it will be thirty
days before the new part of the
short cut will be for opera-
When the Washington branch is
completed it will give the Coast
Line a road mileage of 1,223
miles, of which miles will be in
North Carolina.
The branches of the Atlantic
Coast Line in North Carolina,
together with the mileage of each
road in the limits of the State, is as
HUES.
Wilmington and railroad
mainline, Weldon to
OUR SQUANDERED
Charlotte
When Mr. Harrison and the
Fifty first Congress came into
power there was a surplus in the
Treasury so largo as to be em-
In less than three years says the
World that surplus has been
squandered and the Government
so burdened with new and per-
obligations that the Ways
and Means Committee has had to
ask the Secretary of the Treasury
to inform it whether or not the
country can meet its expenses
without the adoption of devices
for getting more money out of the
people.
And this startling change has
not been brought about by the
reduction of taxes. On the con-
the Fifty-first Congress
multiplied taxes- The straitened
condition of the Treasury is due
solely to wanton waste
less bounties,
subsidies the diversion of taxes
by means of prohibitive duties,
from the Treasury to the coffers
of a fat-frying favored class of
monopolists.
What do plain men of sense
think of such stewardship And
what are they going to do about it j
at the polls next fall
The St. Louis Republic has been
making some investigations and
has developed some appalling
with reference to the young
men of this country. It finds that
one-eighth of the population may
be put in this is,
there are young men in
America- Only fifteen in every
one hundred go to church regularly.
Out of each hundred about
seventy-five never see the inside of
a church. Only five per cent.
the total number make
any profession of religion. In our
jails are one hundred and fifty
thousand prisoners, of whom
par cent, are young men.
one-fifth of the active criminals
are ever in jail at any one time,
this make our criminal pop-
number of which
are young men. a
dark picture-
A FAMOUS EULOGY.
Of all the eulogies in literature
there is none more beautiful than
the following upon Gen. Robert
E. Lee. It fell from the silver
tongue of that eloquent Georgian,
Senator Benjamin H. Hill, and is
said to have been
the future historian
comes to survey the character of
Lee he will find it raising like a
huge mountain above the
ting plain of humanity, and he
will have to lift his eyes high to-
ward heaven to catch its summit-
He possessed every virtue of the
other great commanders without
their vices. He was a foe without
hate, a friend without treachery, a
soldier without cruelty, and a
without murmuring- He was
a public officer without vices, a
private citizen without a wrong, a
neighbor without reproach, a
Christian without hypocrisy, and a
man without guilt. He was Caesar
without his ambition, Frederick
without his tyranny, Napoleon
without his selfishness, and Wash
without his reward. He
was as obedient to authority as a
int royal in authority as a
true king. He was as as a
woman in hie, pure and modest as a
virgin in thought, watchful as a
Roman vestal in duty, submissive
to law as Socrates, and grand in
battle as
Notice.
By virtue of the power and authority
given in a Trust Deed from G. W. Cox
and E. O. Cox to James H. dated
the 30th day of December re-
corded in the Register of Deeds office,
county, E, pages and X.
I will on March 7th, offer
for sale at the Court House Door in
Greenville- to the of
the said K. G. Cox. the following
or parcel of land lying in
as the Causey place, continuing
one hundred acres more or less.
of Sale, Cash.
February 1st MM.
James H. Trustee.
C M. for Trustee.
Notice to Creditors.
The Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt
county having letters of
ration to the undersigned, on the
3rd day of February. 1393, on the estate
of James Adams, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all person indebted to
the estate to make immediate payment
to the undersigned, and to all creditors
of said estate to t their claims
properly authenticated, to the under-
signed, within twelve mouths after the
date of this notice, or this will be
in bar of their recovery.
V This the 3rd day of Feb. 1883.
J. Q. ADAMS.
on estate James Adams.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on
the 3rd day of Feb. 1802, as
Of th Last and Testament of A. A.
Baker, deceased, notice is hereby given
to all persons indebted to the estate to
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and all persons having claims
against estate are that they
must present the same for payment on
or before the 3rd day of Feb. or this
of recovery.
A. A. Baker.
ton.
branch, Mount to
Tarboro,
Seek and Kinston
Halifax and
Nashville branch. Rocky Mount
to Spring Hope,
Wilson and Fayetteville branch,
Fayetteville,
Wilson and branch
in course of construction, Fay-
to Rowland, N. C.,
Clinton Warsaw to
ton,
Midland North Carolina,
to
Washington A. A R.
junction, to Washington. N. C,
in course of construction,
Albemarle and railroad,
Tarboro to Plymouth,
Wilmington, Columbia and Au-
railroad, Wilmington to
Fair Bluff,
and Carolina ad, Tar-
to
and Salisbury railroad,
Wadesboro to
Wilmington, Con-
way Hub Mt, Tabor,
Total
Best Sorghums for Molasses, or
Sugar.
Frank E. Emery, N. C- Experiment
Station, Raleigh.
This Station received some
heads of Sorghum
from the U. S- Department
of Agriculture in the spring of
1891, which were planted and the
crop of seed resulting from each
variety has been saved for
to such growers of
hum in the State as may desire to
improve in the sugar producing
value of their Sorghum
Applications for seed will be sup-
plied until the stock of seed is ex-
Below is a list of the
rarities, together with per
of sugar in juice of the identical
canes from which our seed was
grown. The analyses were made
by the Chemical Division of the
U- S. Department of Agriculture
on Kansas grown Sorghum, hence
this year's growth will be second
in North Carolina and second from
analysis of the
in
XI ME OF
Early pr. ct.
l. Link's
Colman
Early
Lei
Orange Amber Cross
man
Honor to a North Carolinian.
Chronicle.
Sons of North Carolina, who go
abroad and try, usually become
famous. The pulpit of late
of London, will
be tilled by a North Carolinian,
Rev. A. C- a native of
Shelby. Rev. Mr. Dixon left the
State several years ago and be-
came paster of a Baptist church
Baltimore. From Baltimore he
went to Brooklyn and became pas-
ton of Hansom Place Baptist
In all probability Rev.
Mr. Dixon will soon receive a call
to
These have been selected with
great care for distribution on the
analyses given, and the stock of
seed having now been increased, it
is hoped good crops of Sorghum,
richer in sugar than those now in
use, will result from introduction
of this seed.
Moving to Reduce the Cost of
Special Chronicle.
Douglas, N. C, Feb. 1892-
The following resolutions were
passed by Rockingham county
Alliance in session at Wentworth,
N. C-, January 14th, 1892
Resolved 1st, That we respect-
fully request our legislative com-
to investigate the cost of
litigation in our courts, and see
whether or not they can be
cheapened by legislation or
report to the next meet-
of the State Alliance-
Resolved That we respect-
fully ask all our Superior court
clerks and other court officers to
give to the people through the
press, all the information at their
command relating to this point.
Resolved That a copy of
these resolutions be sent to the
Chronicle, Progressive
Review and Webster's Weekly
with request to publish.
All papers friendly to the cause
of the masses will please copy this
and also all statements given by
court officers as requested in
second-
Respectfully submitted,
R. P. Bans.
T. B. Lindsay. Sect.
The Best Way.
Durham Sun.
Business men are each year en-
come nearer to the
cash system of doing business,
realizing that it is the only correct
way of doing trade, and that it is
better for both buyer and seller.
To the dealer it means less book
accounts and the expense and
worry of making collections, and
any hard feelings that may arise
between himself customer
over accounts. Store accounts
invariably grow to larger
than the is aware of,
and then follows a dispute with a
feeling on one side that charged
accounts have been made that
were never ordered, and on the
other side that injustice and loss
have been sustained by long
credits. Make it cash every time
or it equivalent
. GRIP'S GREETING.
New York Sun.
I am La Grippe
for
But I get there just the same.
I am no of persons,
And silk, or satin, or broadcloth
Has no more influence with me
Than a width of
Brown muslin has I
I lay for the woman
Who runs around bareheaded
Or thin shod;
And the swipe man
Without an overcoat
Is perfectly astonishing
The air is full of me ;
I've got a corner on the
Human system at present,
And I am working it
For all its worth
I and the doctors
Are having a picnic
With the doctors
Getting all the gate receipts
However I'm not in it
For boodle,
But why multiply words
You know me,
And if you don't you can learn
All you want to know
By reference to the. families
Which, and in which,
I have worked
Mighty few of them
recognize me socially,
And curse me
For all the crimes in the cal-
But I ain't saying a word.
I simply
Let her go r.
Endorsing.
What the Railroad Commission Has
Done.
Mr- James W. Wilson, chairman
of the railroad commission of
Carolina informs a reporter
of the Washington that, while
the railroad commission of North
Carolina has only been established
about ten months, it has
ed the assets in tax valuation of
railroad property in the State
about and, by
ting the telegraph tariffs and re-
passengers fares and
freight charges, has saved to the
people between four and five
thousand dollar ,
These Men Were Killed by
Washington Post.
Senator Back's death resulted
from overwork.
Henry Ward Beecher succumbed
to overwork.
Zach Chandler died of apoplexy
due to overwork.
Family troubles and overwork
killed Horace Greeley.
Secretary Folger fell a victim
to the demon of overwork.
Senator Plumb, though a giant
in strength, died from overwork.
Dan Manning died from lack of
exercise and excessive brain labor-
Edwin M- Stanton's death was
by overwork and
worry.
Family troubles and overwork
killed ex-Senator Pendleton, of
Ohio.
Worry and disappointment killed
Charles Henry Clay and
Daniel
This system of endorsing is all
wrong, and should be utterly
abolished. It has been the
ruin of more men than, per-
haps, all other causes. Book-
a journal devoted to mer-
chants, clerks business
advises our young men especially
to study the matter carefully in all
its bearings, then adopt some set
tied policy to govern their conduct,
so as to be ready to the
man who asks them to sign his
note. What responsibility does
one assume when he endorses a
note Simply this; He held for
the payment of the amount in full
principal and interest, if the ma-
of the note, through
mismanagement, or fails
to pay it- Notice, the endorser as-
all this responsibility, with
no voice in the management of the
business and no in the
profits of the transaction, if it
proves profitable, but with a
of loss if, for any of the
reasons stated, the principal fails
to pay the note-
A Safe Rule.
Mirror.
Never suspect a friend of doing
you a wrong until the truth of it is
as plain and as clear as the sun at
noon on a cloudless day, and then
yes, even then, do not accuse or
censure until you have heard from
his own lips his version and ex-
of the supposed wrong.
If you were ever a friend to him
he is certainly entitled to that
much forbearance and
If this rule were practiced,
many a misunderstanding would
averted, and many a heartache
spared.
The Bank of England, which is
the great depository of bullion in
the real holds at ordinary times
in its vaults The
Bank of Germany holds
of bullion in gold and silver.
Bank of France usually hold
2475.000,000. The United States
holds in the Treasury and in the
various National Banks some-
where about in gold
and silver. The increasing wealth
of the various nations is some-
what remarkable, During the last
ten years the Bank of France has
more than doubled its reserves.
Drake's
HERE'S THE SIZE OF IT.
Concord Times
Much is being in some of the
papers about the lack of funds to
support the graded schools of
Charlotte, as a result of the
of the town treasury caused
by the withdrawal of the
tax. Of course, this makes a big
hole in the is
to that fact- But is it not
infinitely better, and cheaper too,
looking at it from a business point
of- view, for the town to levy a
special tax for the support of the
graded schools is done in Con-
than it is to license bar-
rooms to scatter want and drunk-
throughout the city More
than this, even, the lovers of
good order in Charlotte
themselves had better make up a
private subscription to support the
schools than to submit to the re-
licensing of the saloons. Further,
the suspension of the graded
schools altogether would work far
less harm the re-opening of
the saloons.
STATE NEWS
Go To Mother.
Last week twenty-five
from the surrounding country left
this place for the coal mines of
Pennsylvania where they are
promised good wages and steady
work in the mines. A few days
later twelve others left for the
same destination. If the
want to improve their condition
we think they will have a better
chance of doing so in the
and West than in the South,
from reports which have come
back from those who have gone to
the cotton fields of the States far-
toward the South Weldon
Wilson Mirror.
What a blessing, what a
When trials come, when
sorrows break, when the clouds of
misfortune lower what a comfort
is it to go to mother and all
shadows in the sunlight of her
love. So children, go to mother
in every mother
knows. Do not hang back shyly,
feeling that your youthful follies
will be laughed at. There is no
thought of yours that is not
sacred to mother. Her touch will
send the shadow flying
before the radiant sun of her
selfish love- She is the comforter
given you for your very own.
When all else turn from
from the dread depths of deep dis-
grace or misery you open your
eyes look upward
there is mother's face close
above you, her heart beating above
your own, her pitying soul yearn-
over you, her whole being
changed into a protecting
wall to shut you from the cold and
unforgiving world.
The Country Publisher.
The public should ever bear in
mind, says an exchange, that it is
a constant struggle with many
country publishers to keep their
paper going financially. The
business is made up of such small
accounts that many people think
that the trifling amount due from
them docs not matter ranch
paid promptly or not, forget-
ting that there may be thousands
entertaining the same idea, and
thus withholding from the pub-
his hard-earned dollars,
while not particularly meaning to
work a hardship. The better plan
is always to promptly pay in ad-
for a newspaper the moment
the subscription expires. The
paper will be all the better for
promptness i this matter, for no
man can get up a spicy, interest-
journal if his mind is harassed
by bills coming due, and which,
from the negligence of patrons, he
is unable to meet.
Test Your Seeds.
Thousands of dollars are lost
every year by sowing stale and
worthless seeds. This can be
largely avoided by purchasing
early and having the seeds tested
before sowing them- The N- C.
Experiment Station will advise
its friends, upon application, where
the best class of seeds may be
obtained, and will test samples
free of charge for citizens of the
State- Samples sent for test should
contain at least seeds, and
should be a fair average sample of
the original package The names
of the seller and price paid for the
seeds must in all cases be stated.
It requires two full weeks to make
a complete test of a seed sample.
Address samples to the N. C.
Experiment Station, Raleigh, N.
Botanist.
Happenings Here and There Gathered
Prom our Exchanges.
Evangelist Fife has been hold-
a successful meeting at
Goldsboro There is
a certain family of four residing in
this city whose combined ago is
years.
Asheboro Temperance
sentiment is so strong in this
county that no applications are
made to the county commissioners
to giant license for the sale of
spirituous liquors.
Washington The
schooner Wave, Capt.
was swamped in Sound
on Thursday last and the captain
and entire crew were lost. She
was laden with oysters for Norfolk.
A school boy in Gaston county
has the schoolhouse at
which he was a pupil. He did
this because he disliked the idea
of attending school. The house
a handsome one and was furn-
Only a few months ago.
The Supreme court of the State
rendered a decision of interest to
every merchant the State. It
was in regard to the
purchase tax. and the court finds
that the tax is constitutional. So
the merchants will have to pay the
tax.
Washington On Thurs-
day Mr. Allen Hudson, who was
logging for mill, while
attempting to extricate a pine
which had lodged as he felled it,
was struck by the rebound and
killed. His collar bone and
were broken.
Pittsboro A few days
ago a man in this comity married
his step mother, his father's widow
whose five children are his own
half brothers and sisters, and also
now his step children. The idea
of a man being the husband of his
mother and the father of his broth-
era and sisters.
Newton Mrs. Little,
widow of Rev. M. L. Little, who
was killed in the A- k. L. railroad
accident near Maiden about a year
ago, has compromised with the
railroad for damages, and
that the widow of engineer John
who was killed on
mountain Ashe-
ville two years ago, has com-
promised for
Lenoir They have a
in Asheville which
assesses every bachelor for any
charitable object they have in view
and they always send round and
collect it. They sent to collect
Judge Shuford s assessment the
other day and he non-plussed them
by refusing to pay and offering to
many any one of the spinsters the
club would designate.
Tarboro Some
in this one-crop ruined land
still contend that it does not pay
to raise meat. W. M. Edmondson
says with peanuts the cost is very
little. He estimates that the
pounds of meat killed by him did
not cost more than three cents a
pound. The hogs picked his pea-
field after he had gathered a
bushels to the acre-
Salisbury Our
friends are rejoicing over a
magnificent proposition by which
their home at Barium
Springs will be speedily rebuilt.
Mr. Geo. W. Watts, of Durham,
has written to Dr. Rumple that he
will build one of the cottages, cost-
not more than five thousand
dollars, provided the Regents will
erect the other. As a portion of
the sum needed is already on hand
and the Presbyterians of the State
can be depended on in an
e is no doubt the build-
of these two handsome cottages
Astronomers tell us in their own
simple, intelligible way, that the
gradual lengthening of the days is
due to the of the ecliptic
to the terrestrial This
ought to set at rest the foolish
idea that the days are longer
because the sun rises earlier and
sets later. Orange
CATARRH REMEDY.
A marvelous for
Canker mouth and
With each there Is an ingenious
nasal Injector the m-re successful
treatment of these complaint without
Price Sold at
STORE.
The REFLECTOR
A whole year for
One Hollar; lint
i in order ii
i must pay in advance.
i If you stamped
just after your name
on die the
paper the
Subscription
Expires To Weeks
From This
It is to you no-
unless re-
newed in that time
the will
cease going to you
at the expiration of ;
the two weeks.
TR. J. MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
. C.
Office In Skinner Building, upper
opposite
It. D. L. J AUKS,
N.
h. FLEMING,
E Y-AT-LA W.
N. C.
Prompt attention to business. Office
at Tucker Murphy's old stand.
JARVIS.
BLOW,
ALEX. L. SeW
W,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
in all the Courts.
B. YELLOWLEY,
Greenville, N.
I. a a; a. r.
A TYSON,
VI N. C.
Prompt attention given to
WM. H. LONG,
x. c.
Prompt and careful attention to
Collect ion solicited.
L. C. LATHAM.
T SKINNER,
n. c.
U G. JAKES,
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Practice in all the conn.
a v.
H-0
i m
et n
Don't Swear.
Wilson Mirror.
Do not swear. There is no
to swear outside of a print-
office. It useful in
reading, and indispensable in get-
forms to press, and also
bean known to assist in looking
over the paper after it is printed,
but otherwise it is a very disgust-
habit.
The Nashville
has sent a protest to congress
against the printing of stamped
envelopes by the government
without charge to users- By
printing these envelopes for
men the government does an
injustice to the printers all over
the country, and it is a custom
that be abolished by con-
A friend Induced me to try Salvation
Oil for my rheumatic food, I used it and
the rheumatism Is entirely gone. JOHN
ii. ANDERSON, Baltimore, Md.
Positive and unsolicited testimony
from every section every claim
made for hint efficacy of Dr.
Bull's Cough Price cents.
1875.
S. M.
AT THE
BRICK STOKE
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT
lug their year's supplies will And
their interest to get our prices before par
chasing elsewhere. is complete
n all Its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR,
RICE. TEA, Ac.
Lowest
TOBACCO SNUFF C A
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit.
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to sulk
the times. Out goods are all bought and
sold CASH, therefore, having
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
M.
K.
Tin
Greenville, Preside
I. B.
J. S. Greenville,
N. M. Tarboro, Gen
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen A
The People's Line for travel on Ta
River.
The Steamer is the fines
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired,
and painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort,
and convenience of Ladles
A Table furnished with ti
best the market affords.
A trip on the Steamer U
not only comfortable but attractive.
Leaves Washington Monday,
and Friday at o'clock, A. H.
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday
and Saturday at o'clock, a. M.
Freights received daily
Lading given to
r. I. j.
Washington N. C IT.





THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
B. J.
WEDNESDAY,
at at
N. C., n mail matter.
Publisher's
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF
The Reflector is 81.00 per
Advertising Rates.-One com ran
one year, one-hall year.
; one-quarter column one year,
Transient Inch
lie week. ; two weeks, one
month Two inches one week,
two weeks, one month,
Advertisements inserted in Local
Column as reading Items, cents per
i for each insertion.
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad,
and Notices-
and Sales,
Summons to Non-Residents, etc. will
be charged at legal rates and must
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any space not
Above, any length of time, can be
made by application to the office either
in
Copy tor N v Advertisements and
all changes of should lie
handed In by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to receive prompt in
day following.
The a large
will be found a prof table medium
through which to reach th public.
Charlotte wants the State Dem-
convention this year and is
working in dead earnest for it.
The North State recently re-
moved to Raleigh, from Greens-
has moved back to the latter
place
The South is for the ablest,
strongest and truest Democrat for
the Presidency, no matter from
what State or section he hails.
With us principles are first and
men second.
General Milton S- a
name not forgotten by North Car-
is to be tried in New
York City for grand larceny. He
is a corrupt rascal and is now what
he was in when the chief
Radical boss in this State.
Alger finds himself as a
Presidential possibility embarrass-
ed by the fact that he will have to
defend his war record, as official
statements record that Sherman
recommended his dishonorable
discharge from the army. What
makes it worse it that his witnesses
are all dead-
The Democratic State
Committee meets in Raleigh
the second of March to select time
and place for holding the State
Convention. There should be a
attendance. Let there be no
objection to the time and place
after it has been named. We
need harmony.
Mr. Blaine says the report that
he is to resign from the Cabinet
is an This is de-
emphatic and yet his friends
are still insisting that he does not
mean what he says. He evidently
furnishes the brains for the present
administration and it seems as if
he ought to be allowed to remain
in the Cabinet-
Monday was the. birth
clay of Washington- It was
observed in many places.
It is to be hoped that its annual
return has inspired some of our
great statesman with the
which marked him for all
time as in war, first in peace,
and first in the hearts of his
If the weather here was to be
taken as an index, allowing for the
difference in the latitude of this
place and Albany, the New York
World was not far wrong in
naming the Convention that met
there last Monday the out
It was evidently a
cold day for Hill and unless the
signs of the times are wrong for
Cleveland also.
Hon. T. R who has
been associated with the Raleigh
News and Observer for some time
past has severed his connection
with that paper. The only cause
assigned is that the reasons are
sufficient to himself. We trust
Mr. will not remain long
out of journalism. He is a scholarly
gentleman and makes a fine editor.
His plans will be announced later.
President Winston of the
has made an elaborate
report of the condition, progress
and needs of the University. The
report shows a large increase of
patronage. It indicates general
prosperity in all departments. He
makes some suggestions in
reference to the conduct and needs.
He also names specified amounts
which the University needs now
to and develop its useful
Doubtless some of these
will be forth coming. President
Winston is the right man in the
right blade and under his manage-
may reasonably expect
the University to be at no distant
day second no institution learning
in the South.
or Star the
Indian of the Cheyenne tribe
who is traveling lecturing
with the object of awakening an
interest in the Indian both as to
his civilization and Christianity,
was here some time ago and de-
livered three lectures. We have
intended saying something in the
last two or three issues in refer-
to the subject matter of these
lectures but have been prevented
from doing so.
Mr. Star is a man of no ordinary
information- He seems to be fully
conversant not only with the his-
of his own race but that of the
white race also. He has a mag-
voice and speaks the
English language with remarkable
clearness. Ho feels deeply
interest in his own people and in
consequence is endeavoring to
enlighten the people generally in
reference to their past and present
and enlist their sympathies in be-
half of this race that seems to have
been badly treated.
He says there are
ans in this country and cut of this
number are savages. He
is very pointed in speaking of
these heathen here in our own
country with but little interest
manifested for their salvation. No
one can hear him in reference to
this without feeling a desire to
give these people the gospel.
He thoroughly convinces you that
there has never been any real
effort by the Government to civil,
this race. Instead of that they
have kept away from
by being driven farther and
farther from it. The only effort
that has been made he says is to
shoot them into it. This has
never been successful with any
people. How do you expect it to
be with the Indian He says the
white people showed their
years ago to be far inferior to
what it is now. If this race has
not become civilized in hundreds
and hundreds of years how do you
expect the Indian to be in so
short a time Mr. Star shows that
the Indians can be civilized and
also, if they were in
contact with these things. The
system of appointing agents for
the Indians is fully ventilated and
shown to be rotten to the core. Of
the solemn treaties made with
this people only one remains
broken, the one made by Jackson
about fifty years ago. The Indian
did not break them either. Most
if not all of them were caused to
be broken by this sys-
of the United States in
pointing salaried agents to go
among them to cheat and defraud
them and give them whiskey until
they make one or two of a tribe
commit some crime, then the
United States declares war against
the whole tribe for the act of two
or three- This is not the way they
treat other races- The Indians
never come in contact with any of
the better class of white people-
Nothing but the scum of society
goes among them and this is to
cheat and them.
He shows that it cost the United
States about to fight
the Indians every year and that
agency system is the prime
cause of this- The other principal
cause is that when any land which
they possess under a treaty
is found to be valuable on account
of its minerals and a body of land
sharks along and settles
down among them, others follow
and the Indians see their hunting
ground passing from them. They
make complaints but these com-
plaints are to be made through
these agents who never make them.
Then as the great father at Wash-
does not interfere to stop
them the Indians scalp a few, as
they have been taught that if they
will do this a fellow will never
come back to trouble them again.
This the agents report and the
great father makes them get farther
and farther and gives their lands
to the white people.
There are many in these
lectures that are matters of fact
and observation and they are so
put by this noble Christian Indian
that they cannot fail to awaken a
deeper interest in these people.
He says the Indians only hope
lies in the people. They must
right these things and he trusts
that by traveling from State to
State he may in some way con-
tribute to the relief of his
We are satisfied that the
been badly treated.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
ACORNS FROM BLACKJACK.
Mr Regular Correspondent. I promised your readers that I
Washington, D. C- Feb. 19,1892- would have something to say of
Springer, chair-j Black Jack in the future,
man of the Ways and Means com I. The farmers are delayed in their
Representative Bland, farm work owing to the cold and
chairman of the Coinage commit-j weather has
tee, both assured your cleared off and the ground has be-
dent there was not the slight-1 come dry and work is
est foundation for the that I The acreage of cotton is not so
Rev. T. A- Boone, pastor of the
Methodist church in Lexington,
has just finished a series of
mons on the second coming of
Christ. He has long made a
careful study of this question
through the prophesies of the
Bible, from which alone he draws
his conclusions, and feels
that the millennium will occur in
the year 1897, only five years from
Dispatch.
This is all and any
preacher is very much of his
line when he goes to arguing
or trying to prove any definite
time for the world to come to an
end. The Bible teaches as plainly
as it teaches anything that no
the day, not even the
angels in heaven, when the wind-
up of the affairs of this man
sphere is to take place.
have been recently told about
these committees antagonizing
each other on the floor of the
House- Mr. Bland says that him-
self and all the rest of the free
coinage Democrats are as
anxious to see the bills passed
putting wool, cotton ties and bind-
twine on the free list, which
have been prepared by the Ways
a Means committee, as they are
to pass the free coinage bill, and
that they have never had any
of antagonizing any of them.
They only ask that a time be set
for the consideration of the free
coinage bill, and they will utter no
complaint if the Committee on
Rules decide that their bill be
taken up after the tariff bills are
passed.
The story that Mr. Mills intend-
ed offering an entire tariff bill as a
substitute for the first one of the
tariff bills taken up by the House,
had just as little foundation. Mr.
Mills has no idea of doing any-
thing of the kind. He favors each
of the kind. He favors each of
the bills prepared by the Ways
and Means Committee, the only
difference of opinion between him-
and the majority of the com-
being that he would like to
see the entire tariff reformed at
one time, instead of going at it by
He will heartily sup-
port each of the bills, as steps in
the right direction.
Congress, or as many of its
as spare the time from
important committee work, will
leave here for Chicago to-night,
guests of the World's Fair com-
of that city, returning next
Wednesday morning.
Representative Rayner, of Mary-
land, this week delivered one of
the strongest speeches against
trusts ever heard on the floor of
the House. He reminded the Re-
publicans that neither the Inter
state Commerce law nor the Sher-
man act passed at the last session
of Congress, had prevented the
continued formation of the trusts
and combinations which it was
their alleged purpose to eradicate ;
that trusts still blossomed and
flourished as they accumulate in
every commercial ; that they
still defied the law and the
diction and mandates of the
courts, and that they still, with
arrogant front and bold
executed their s
without the slightest fear of in-
punishment of the slightest
concern about any encroachment
upon their prerogative- They
so powerful and influential that
the legislatures of States seem
to tremble at their presence, and
the Congress of the United State
had stood by with folded hands
and permitted them, with an iron
heel to trample upon the rights of
the people.
The committee to investigate the
Pension Office has had a room as-
signed it in the capital
and it will hold daily sittings of
several hours until its work is
completed. Representatives Coop
of Indiana, and Enloe, of Ten-
will assume to positions of
prosecutors being thoroughly
familiar with most of the charges
brought against the bureau.
Chairman heeler, of the
committee, says he enters
upon the investigation without
prejudice, and that he will be gov-
entirely by the evidence
presented to the committee.
The House committee on
has designated Messrs. J.
D. Warner, M. D. Egan, Sherman
Hoar and Ezra B. Taylor a sub-
committee to conduct the
of the
authorized by resolution of the
House. Mr. Sherman Hoar will
act as Secretary to the sub-com-
and he will be glad to hoar
from any persons desiring to aid
in finding out about this business.
It is expected that the first hearing
before the committee will take
place the latter part of next week.
The House adopted a resolution
calling upon the Postmaster Gen-
for information relating to
contracts made under the ocean
mail subsidy act- Representative
Enloe is the author of the
and he wishes to use the
formation asked for in preparing
an argument in favor of
asked for in preparing an
in favor of his bill for the
repeal of the subsidy act, which he
is confident will be passed by the
House.
Democratic absentees are giving
the leaders of the House the con-
of this practice will
prove very embarrassing, as it
enables the Republicans to tie the
House up at any time by refusing
to vote, thus breaking a quorum,
as was done several times this
week.
The Indian appropriation bill,
which is less than the
one passed last year, which carried
to pay for lands
chased from various tribes, is now
being considered by the House.
No time has been set to close de-
bate upon it.
AND
large last year. The low price
has discouraged the farmers and
are putting in more oats than
usual. There will be some
c planted in this direction this
yea Mr. E. S- Dixon used one
barn last year, and this year he
will use five. Some of the farmers
are going to try some Irish
We are too far from tr;
Two rail roads have been
partly surveyed in this n and
the rights secured for one of them.
I think we will have a i be-
fore a great while. If we had one
I think we could compete with any
section of the county. Our laud
is underlaid with as fine marl as
there is in the county and with
generally a clay sub-soil wet or
dry weather does not affect it as
the lighter land. I have noticed
the crop for the last ten years and
the farmers have made a plenty of
corn and meat and most of
them have some to spare. If you
will notice a man with a full barn
and smoke house you will find him
out of debt. I don't think you will
find a farm lien against any farmer
around Black Jack. A large
of the farmers have not sold
their cotton, owing to low price
On the 14th, Mr. W. S. Dixon
of Black Jack was married to Miss
Carrie Harris, of Haddocks X
Roads. Moore, J. P.
Mr. E- S. Dixon has a sow
fourteen fine pigs all of her
She is a very prolific
sow, birth twice one year
and three times the next with from
fourteen to sixteen pigs in each
farrow.
Mr. Church an old
is very sick.
The measles is in several
lies and is still raging. We also
have the grip and whooping cough
and what next t
Success to the Reflector.
C- L. W.
WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE NOW HAVE
Mr. Blaine is reported as favor
Robert Lincoln for the
He might run as the son
of his father. This only would he
have to recommend him.
As the Democrat says,
now that Congress has broken up
the Louisiana Lottery, now let it
turn its attention to gambling
in futures in New York-
to say that the gambling done
in New York has ruined more
and done more harm than the
; while the latter only re-
small sums from each
the former hopelessly
swamped thousands upon thous-
ands, whose failure ruined others
every year. Let this other and
greater gambling concern and its
everywhere be
on their way to Washington, N. C , and we are prepared to sell
------it at very low figures------
There is no place where a boy or
. young man, can display his good
manners and raising more
ally than a public gathering
whether at church, reception, a
play, or entertainment of any kind-
And there is no better place for
him to make a consummate fool
and nuisance of himself, to the dis-
gust of ladies and gentlemen.
Durham Sun.
Some men will give a town the
because it is dull, as they
say, and when a movement is made
to advance it they jump right
on it with both feet and try
to crush the life out of it- Are
such men public-spirited, or have
they the pride of their town at
heart Such should not the
case. Let everybody pull
for the good of their
you will see it take on new life
and flourish as never before.
Kernersville
A man registered at Mr- W. W.
Unison's hotel last Thursday as
W. Williams, N. He
went away Monday without saying
anything about settling his bill.
He purported to be in
of enlarging pictures. His scheme
was to show a very nice picture to
some prominent persons, secure a
picture of some member of the
family and offer to enlarge it upon
being paid a dollar to defray the
expense of sending it to N. Y.,
and returning the enlarged picture.
He was well dressed, about ft.
about years old, had a
limped a little
his walk and was of medium
build. We have also learned that
he carried not less than dollars
from this place and Burlington
besides pictures that were
prized. Our exchanges would do
the people a service to publish a
notice of this fraud, that he
be caught and the pictures secured.
Graham Gleaner.
Land Sale.
By virtue of a decree of Pitt Superior
Court made at March Term, 1890. by
Honor E. T. Boykin Judge, in the case
of Wiley Pierce and wife vs. William
and others, the undersigned
will sell before the Court House door in
Greenville, on Monday the day of
Karen, 1892, the following described
tract of land dusted in the county of
Pitt, in Falkland Adjoining
the lands of Dr. P. H. Mayo, Martha
E. Williams and others and known as
part of the Robert Williams place, being
on which said Pierce and wile for-
resided, being all of said tract
of land lying on the north side of
main road leading from Greenville to
Falkland containing acres, more or
less.
Terms of third cash, balance
In one and two years, secured by
gage on said land percent interest
from day of sale payable annually.
This
F. G. James.
Commissioner.
FEED AID SALE
I have removed my stables from Five
Points to the ones formerly
pied Mr. F. Keel and will
constantly Keep on band a
full line of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful and fancy turnouts
the and can suit the most
Will run in connection a DRAY
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
your patronage. Call and be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
N.
for
WATCH-TOWER,
Published Semi-Monthly.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
Devoted to Christianity,
cation. General Intelligence Send
Sample Copy. Office of Pub-
Greenville, N, C.
Editorial Office, Wash-
N. C.
Editor.
As we
purchased
this
from the Agents
of the German 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 guarantee it to be the
highest grade and in good condition. To other
merchants who want buy in to ton lots we
will make special prices. We have also made
t again handle the popular brands of
Fertilizer sold by last year and it is indeed gratifying
to us to be able to say that each of them gave entire
faction to all who used them last year, and we can assure
you they are fully up to the same standard of excellence this
season. To those who have used our Fertilizers it is not
for to say anything as their merits usually establish a
trade. But for 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
WE COME
To enlist attention and claim a fair share of your patronage.
We are determined that if dealings and honest
of our will secure you as a customer,
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into
------the Northern-Markets with the-------
CASH
and buy for the CASH, getting every possible advantage that 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 us. The ten days spent in market by our
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our
Special Tobacco
Fertilizer.
This brand is too well known all over
the Tobacco growing region of Eastern
Carolina to need praise at hands
For the production of fine BRIGHT
it stands at the head of the
list. The guarantee analysis is per
cent. per cent. Avail
Acid, per cent. Pat ash.
Capital Tobacco Fertilizer.
Last year was the first season that these
goods were on the market and the
result, from use in the production
of FINE BRIGHT TOBACCO was so
highly satisfactory that the demand for
them this season gives promise of being
very heavy. We confidently recommend
it to our friends and know whereof we
speak. The guaranteed analysis is per
s per cent. Acid,
per cent. Potash,
The Guano.
Is one of the oldest and best established
brands of Guano sold in the State. 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. We
sold a large quantity of it for Potatoes
last year and it gave such universal sat-
the demand this season is much
increased. The guaranteed analysis is
per cent. cent. Avail
Acid, percent. Potash.
The National Fertilizer.
Is a first-class all-round goods, at a mod-
price, prepared with the greatest
care, of the best material, and is
suited for either Cotton or Tobacco W e
sold it last season largely for both crops
and it gave entire satisfaction- The
an teed analysis is per cent.
per 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 lie our most popular brand. The
guaranteed analysis is per cont.
per cent. Avail Acid, per
cent. Potash.
W e also keep a full supply of-
carried in our double stores prove. You cannot help but b.
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 bes
assorted line of General Merchandise that was ever brought
-to market Consisting of
Dry Goods Dress Goods,
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes,
Hardware Cutlery, Tin-
ware, Crockery, Queen-
ware, Groceries, Wood-
and Willow ware,
and Whips
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF
FURNITURE
that has ever been brought to this county. We are headquarter
for all goods in respective lines. Also we have a lot of
AND TIES
which will be sold at lowest prices.
Come one. come all and see us.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
W e may add that we know all these goods to be made oat of
the best material and compounded with great care and skill, and
having them largely for a number of years we feel safe in
you will make no in baying either of them. As
we control the sale of these goods for a large section of country
we want a few good local agents. To farmer clubs of not less
than tons we will make special terms. Yon will find it to your
interest to come to see or write to before buying elsewhere
Very
YOUNG
N O.
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.
L. W. DAVIS,
FINE-----
HAVANA CIGARS
-AND-
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
COTTON MARKET is lower now than at any former period
in about forty years; this has been brought about by the
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large
accumulation of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the
movement must be necessarily light; and if any of our friends,
who have cotton, would like to raise money on same and hold it
longer, we are prepared to advance them to 25.00 per bale
and hold it until May or so desired.
Very truly,
VAUGHAN BARNES,
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA
S. B. HARRELL CO.,
COTTON AND
Corn, Cotton, Peanuts, Stock, Eggs,
and Sawed Lumber will our
special attention. Your patronage
solicited.
AN D COMMERCE STREET,
NORFOLK, VA,
Strictly a
E. E. A. A,.
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in
A Supply Always on Hang.
Fine Hones a specialty.
guaranteed
Nos. and Va
Land Sale.
By virtue of an order of the of
Superior Court of Pitt county In MM of
J. B. Bullock, administrator of John I.
Lewis, against Harriet Ann Lewis and
Susan Lewis, the undersigned
will sell for cash before the Court
House door In Greenville on Monday
the th day of March, 1892, the following
described piece or parcel of land, lying
n township, Pitt county, ad-
joining the lands of Joseph H. Clark,
Thomas Thomas, the Harriet
and, Gilbert Harriet and others, con-
acres, more or lest.
This January 28th, 1892.
J. B BULLOCK,
Ch
C C COBB, T. H. GILLIAM
Pitt Co. N. C. Pitt Co N C. C. N C
Bros.,
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merchants.
NORFOLK, VA.
of COTTON k
We have Lad many years
at the business and are
prepared to handle
the advantage of shippers.
to
All business entrusted to our
will receive prompt and
careful attention
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on
the of January, 1898, as
of deceased,
notice is hereby given to all persons in-
to e estate to make immediate
payment to the undersigned, and all per-
sons hawing claims against the estate
most p- the for payment on
or the 28th of January or
this notice will be plead in bar of
recovery.
This 28th of Jan. 1802.





LANG'S COLUMN. DO YOU READ
Tobacco Cloth.
3-4 Cents per Yard
SPOT CASH.
-o-
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
IF SO, THIS OFFER IS
INTENDED FOB YOU.
We special arrange-
with
Weekly Constitution,
The Great
Published at Atlanta, by which we are
enabled to offer it with
c i on for ONE TEA, for only
This offer lasts only a short while. Now
is your chance get all the news of nil
Che and your home paper for the
price f one paper.
Every clubbing subscription at rate is
entitled to a chance at Th
Free Distribution for 1892. details
which will be found elsewhere.
This the most remarkable
offer made. Every home n
Pitt county should receive the
first, and after that, it should have
the best General Newspaper, bringing
every week the of the world, and
overflowing with the choicest
features, such as the Weekly
turn, published at Atlanta. Ga. and
having a circulation of
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS.
Local Reflections.
Nice grip weather again.
March for fir. s.
This is lira last week n
Ai other oyster boat here this week.
Monday was Wash-
day.
Who is going to try rice Ibis sea-
son
lb best Tomatoes for only
cents at
Necktie pound
Golly
Sam Jones lectures in Wilmington
to night
The merry-go-round still draws
large crowds.
The New Home Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros-
The fertilizer movement is
in activity.
v eights were much in de-
last
S- us your job work, we are
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book Store.
Campaign
co-its but a dollar.
Mud is one; more the prevailing
feature of the
You can't be too careful with fire
this windy weather.
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C-
Bryan-
How many Is did you get
last night at the party
per
Nice white blotters five cents
dozen, at Hook Store.
Cash given for Produce, Hides,
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
i- n n at
the Atlanta
The trees are a in-
that spring is approaching.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines and all parts at Brown
Bros.
Remember the Red Book store
keeps paper, pens and ink for school
purposes.
The very inclement weather Sun-
day caused small attendance st the
churches.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store.
is in progress this
on the
Personal.
Lucy la visiting j friends
in
Mrs. H- F. Harris is visiting
in Washington.
Mr. B. C is among his
many friends here this week.
Mrs. Barden, of Plymouth, is visit-
her sister, Mr. B. Wilson.
Gov. Holt has appointed Mr. Hen-
of this town, a Notary
Public.
Miss of
has been visiting L. C.
tree the past week.
Mr. W. H. Grimes, Raleigh, has
been in this section several data
looking after his interests in Pitt.
Mr. C G of Baltimore,
was greeting his many friends here
Saturday. He did not forget the
Mrs. S. A. Ellington, of Peters-
burg, Va. moved to Greenville
and will reside with her son, Mr. A.
B. Ellington.
Divine permission Rev. N.
Harding, Washington will preach
at the Episcopal in this town
on night next.
Mr. Jas. L. Harris run down from
Scotland Neck Saturday and spent
Sunday here. There was a special
in town for him.
Capt. former con-
on the passenger train here,
was in town yesterday. He has re-
signed his punch and is now a knight
the grip sack.
Rev. G. L. Finch, of
preached in Baptist church here
Sunday morning and night. On
Monday night he delivered a very
amusing and instructive lecture.
Mr. Finch is laboring to build a
at Seven Springs and is
meeting encouragement
ever lie goes. He went to Grin on
yesterday evening and lectured there
last night.
Miss Nannie King, of Greenville,
whose grandly developed woman
hood gives to nor a that
challenges universal admiration, is
visiting the elegant homo of her
cultured sister Mrs. Stephen
this place. She is
highly in Wilson, for in
addition to her splendid figure she
has a lace of remarkable and
over which the most
bewitching smiles sweetly
creep, and make
which the deadliest and surest
arrows are plucked for Cupid's fate-
bow, and from whose precious
wounds the sweetest flow.
Wilson
It affords the and
. to announce Mr
William Rush, so nail known to the
people of Raleigh, and undoubtedly
the best known traveling man in the
State, has accepted the position of
State Agent of the Mutual Life In-
Company of Kentucky, and
will make Raleigh his headquarters.
Mr. Russ will be in the city at
least a month or two at the Florence
Hotel, and much of his time will ha
spent lure a tar the expiration of
time. He will be joined shortly
Mrs. Russ, who will be a charming
addition to the social circles of
Raleigh, and who will receive a warm
welcome to our city Raleigh
Observer.
The town authorities of
have made a law that U sidewalk
gates shall open on the inside of the
premises, no longer swing out tn
street. Greenville might take a
hint here.
Beware of the green goods swindle
The country is being flooded with
circulars from them again. The
man who allows himself to be
by these sharpers does not de-
serve any sympathy.
The tobacco warehouse narrowly
missed being destroyed by fire yes-
afternoon. Some people pass-
by discovered the root to be on
fire and put out same any
damage was done.
Seed arc coming in the car
load for our farmers to plant.
When farmers learn to raise such
things and save the money which
they pay for the western product,
there will be better times in the
land.
J. A. Am has something in
in his space to-day. Look
over the list goods he has and call
on him.
Last Saturday eggs sold as high in
Greenville as they did in Baltimore,
17-i cents per dozen. The price will
Fall Winter
STOCK
Going at greatly
Reduced prices.
-W-
Tobacco Cloth.
3-8 Cents per Yard
SPOT CASH.
LANG'S COLUMN
New fail-
week. Many go
to-day.
Attention is called to the
el land sale by F G. James,
Just M. Ferry
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick
Papers down nearer the coast say
the indications point to a large catch
fish this spring.
Mr. Glasgow came in from
Richmond Friday evening with a ear
load stock.
For Dancy house
on Pitt street. Apply to
Judging from what can be seen in
passing the girls are trying to make
the best of leap year.
The bird law goes effect sooner
this year than formerly. Don't hunt
after March first.
Fob lot of Horses and
Mules for sale on time. Apply to
R. R Cotton, Center Bluff, N. 0-
The merry-go-round had a big
business Saturday, large crowd
around it most the day.
Almost an army of drummers have
had in town the past week. Lots of
clever fellows among them.
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will
appetite when nothing
else will. At the Old Brick Store.
The had a meeting Friday
afternoon but no drill. The boy's
must work no or lose their standing.
Attention is called to the no ice to
creditors h B. F. receiver
Combination
All parties who hare tobacco to
at-11 can save Warehouse charges
and freight by bringing same Q
the prise Louse on Saturdays
where they will good prices.
Scraps particularly wanted.
We are expecting a large lot of
stationary this week and can fill
your for artistic printing.
The farmers are putting in the
ground the seeds of the green tilings
that turn to hacks in and
May.
They hit town hard wk
its two monkeys and two
hand organs all in the same
Carmer Go's
costs half what
you pay for manipulated guanos.
For sale by G. E. Harris. By
using this you
can afford to make cotton
The continued rain th K has hem
tailing since Saturday has consider-
ably cut off the to the
New fair
Both the Masonic and Old
here h-iv-
quite increase in membership
during last few months.
The other Mr. Han-is.
of Falkland, allowed us the tusk i n
wild boar which he recently killed.
It eight inches in length.
We see where the Wilmington
Review copied item from the Re-
and gave credit tn the Greens
Reflector. You arc excusable.
The steamer Myers broke her shaft
while coining down the river
day morning. She was about two
miles above here when the accident
occurred. The steamer
took her in tow from this place to
Washington.
The undersigned will deliver a
lecture in the Court House in Green-
ville on the evening of Friday. March
11th, the Kingdom
of God A cordial invitation Is ex-
tended to all, Spatial to clergymen.
J. A. WALSTON.
Ex-Sheriff Allen dropped
in our office yesterday morning, and
said might tell Reflector
readers this week that all the trees
of Greenville will soon be
And the funny part of it is that after
they leave they wont be gone.
Several subscribers have come in
for the Reflector and Atlanta Con
combined, under our special
clubbing arrangement. Plenty room
tor more, and all who want both pa-
should take advantage of the
low offer while they
After rending this issue of the
call the attention of your
neighbor to the fact that he can get
this paper and the Atlanta
both a year for This is
election year and these arc the two
papers from which to get local and
general campaign news.
The largest shipment of tobacco
ever made from Greenville in one
day was by E. J. Hester Co. last
Saturday, on which day they shipped
pounds. Though the ware-
house is not now they buy all
tobacco that is taken to their prize
ho and pay the
prices.
Preparations should be made early
to get all premises of the town
thoroughly cleaned before summer.
People arc quick enough to send
alter a doctor if they get sick, while
at the same time filth enough is left
in some places tn produce most any
An ounce
i teller than a pound
In Want.
If a little girl on streets yes-
relates a true story, mid she
seemed to be very honest in what she
said, there are cases of
in our midst that need tin hand of
charity. This little girl said the
family to which she belonged was
composed of a mother and two little
girls, the father having been dead
for several years. The mother was
sick in bed with no means to pro-
cure medicine or and this little
girl n soliciting aid. They re-
cent I moved lo ibis town. They
be looked up and not allow -it
to
Sunday School Convention.
The third a mind Pitt County
Sundae Convention will be
held in the tit
Greenville, Thursday, Feb.
Religious exercises conducted by
Rev. A. D. Hunter.
Address of welcome by President.
Response by Bey. R. F.
of members of the
Convention.
Appointment of Committees.
Reports from the various Sunday j
Schools
Sunday School
F. Smith, followed by Rev. A.
D. Hunter.
Afternoon Session, S Re-
exercises conducted by-
Rev. J. L Winfield.
Origin and Progress of Sunday
Schools, by II. A. Latham, of
How to make a Sunday School
Successful in a Rural District,
Rev. R. B. John, followed by
Rev. J. L. Winfield.
Opening box, Rev. G. A.
Evening Session, Re-
exercises conducted by
G. F Smith.
Address by Dr. J. H. Cordon, of
Wilson, followed by T.
J. Jarvis.
Some other addresses may also be
expected during the
It U hoped that every Sunday
in the county will be
at this meeting. All inter-
in Sunday School work are in-
to attend. The session
should tie made the most interesting
yet held.
Tobacco Growers
Tobacco Furnace
The best Invention ever made for
CURING TOBACCO.
We hear that one township in the
county three for one
to be filled at the next, election,
with ten more townships to be heard
from.
Pitt County Sunday School Con
to-morrow in the Methodist
Church here. There should be a
large attendance. Everybody in-
A told the
other day that the sermon Rev
Dixon In last issue was worth
the subscription price of the paper
a year.
Hall's Typewriter is advertised in
this paper. It is rapid, easy to learn
and does excellent work. See one
operation at office and
learn prices.
not plentiful yet and the
price still too high for poor folks.
The price will come down some
when the skimmers get lo g
i hem here.
Neck Tie Party.
very was given
Hall last, night b, the
I In- Baptist church. I was
call a neck tie party, and the in an
p was
novel. Each young lady led a
small of and pi ice I a
neck lie ill with her
young men drew out the
basket a curtain,
had to pay for it according to the
weight of the young lady who
pared it, the price being one-halt
cent, a pound. The young man was
laved escort to the lady whose
he drew for the
he evening
Presiding Appointment.
Rev. B. John's
for second round of Quarterly
are as follows for places in Pitt
Greenville circuit, at Bethlehem.
March and 0th.
Greenville station, March 5th
and Sib.
Washington circuit, at
March and 13th.
Notice to Creditors.
been appointed by the
Court of Pitt county Receiver of
Combination Store.- notice is here-
by given to all persons indebted to said
Combination Store to make
immediate payment to the undersigned,
and all having claims against
Greenville Combination Store must file
the same for payment properly I-
on or before the day of April
next. M. F. TYSON,
Receiver of G. C. Store.
This 23rd day of February, 1892.
With it yon have absolute
control over heating your barn,
and it
All Danger of Fire.
Two per week can be
made in the same barn
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. C.
this paper when you write.
TO
-----If you want to save-----
Witty Dollars
in the purchase of a PIANO and from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW X. C.
Genera Agent for North Carolina,
who Is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers, as
GRADE PIANOS,
for tone, workmanship and
and endorsed by nearly all the
musical journals In the United States.
Made by Paul O. who is at this
time one of the mechanics and In-
of the. day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade Piano-
Aim the NEWSY A EVANS UP.
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by
him for the past six years in the eastern
part of this State up to this time has
given entire Upright
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from
to in Rosewood, Oak,
Walnut or Mahogany eases
Also the CROWN PARLOR
from 9-50 to f in solid or Oak
eases.
Ten years experience in the music
business ha enabled him to handle
hut standard goods and be does
not hesitate to say that be can sell any
musical instrument about per cent,
cheaper than other agents are now offer-
Refer lo all banks in Eastern Carolina.
We arc closing out what's left of Winter Wear,
And for the Spring we will now prepare.
PER CENT W
PROFITS ABOLISHED and cost squeezed on everything.
Out Inducements are numerous and variety great.
Our Closing
f Have; Made; are i 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 OF A. TRIP HAMMER.
Everything must go and go rapidly, at
C.
Opposite Old Brick Store.
if. c.
WE WILL SELL
At Cost for the next
DAYS
Respectfully,
BROWN BROTHERS.
sine.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
--------AND BUYER
Country Produce.
Bring me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
If yon have anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a small commission.
Call sec me.
JNO. S.
Agents for New Home Sewing
Machines.
Depository for American Bible
Society.
W. M. Moore
W,
Financial Condition, June
-OF
Buyers Attention.
I on and am res
every steamer large
of Special Com
Guano and Pine
Island Guano. You all know what
these goods are. No guanos ever
sold in this county have made a bet
showing, and but if any, so
good. buy these goods very close.
My expenses in handling them are
very small. I am satisfied with a
profit, and it stands to reason
11- ii I i mi sell the same grade of
goods as or cheaper than any
man. Come and see me
yen It casts you nothing to
get my prices and out what I
can do and if I can't save you money
you can buy elsewhere just easily
as if you had been lo see me.
G. R. Harris.
The New York Life Insurance Co.
WILLIAM H. BEERS, President.
DEPARTMENT THE STATE YORK.
Y. January
Pursuant to request of the Company's Baud of Trustees, the under
spied, of the Insurance of the State of New York,
caused an examination of the conditions mid affairs of the New York In-
Company to be made by the Deputy this Department.
This examination was of June 1801, on that date find that
its assets and liabilities were as
ASSETS.
Appraised value of real estate owned by the Co m per
on bond and mortgage on real as per
Exhibit 20,825.483
Loans by pledge of bonds, stocks, or other marketable
n per Exhibit
i. Premium notes, loans or liens on policies in force, the reserve on
each of such being in of all indebtedness there-
on, as per Exhibit
Market value of bonds, stock, and securities owned absolutely
as per Exhibit 75,016.949
Cash In Company's 14.092 CO
Cash in bank, except fixed deposits in foreign countries, included
in Item 2,010.094
Interest due and accrued on bonds and mortgages,
Cross premiums due and on policies in force
deferred premiums on policies in force, 1,961.048
Annuity premiums 157.091
MOORE PARKER,
FOR-------
Smith's Improved Hand Pomp,
Window and
LOCKS AND BOLTS.
Central Life Company, Cornish ft
and Organs.
will pleasure the public any of the above lines,
MOORE PARKER,
Office in corner under Opera Greenville, N.
As we were to press venter
day indications pointed lo clearing
weather, which will help up the
crowd to the New fair on the
excursion to-day.
It has been said that corn which
is planted the days of February
or the first of March seldom fails to
make a good mop, no matter whether
the season be wet or dry.
The body of Mr. Douglas, who
was drowned at Tarboro sometime
ago, was yesterday about a
half a mile from the boat landing,
where he fell in, at a bend the
river. bad, v e buried
immediately
A recent order issued by Ad.
General of the State it the
effect that forty is to h the minimum
standard of the companies now com-
posing The Greet-
ville contingency will have to work
up a revival in
Better get it or
you can't go World's Ft
Institute.
The Institute for the white teach-
of Pitt will be held at
Greenville by Pro. K. A. Alderman
for one week, commencing on Mon-
day, the Tin day March next, and
all white public school teachers are
positively required by law lo attend
continuously upon said Institute,
and upon failure so to do they will
be denied a certificate for the
in year, their absence tie
caused by sickness or absence from
the county. Te absentees need not
for a certificate to teach. We
hope to make ample s
for the accommodation of all teach-
who report the first day of the
Institute, and we will do our best
to make it Tor then. In.
will be held
Several distinguished gentle-
men will deliver addresses, among
whom are T. J. Jarvis,
Gee. T. Winston, President
North Harry
Hon. G. B. King
I,, The are
ally invited to attend all the
s. H.
Oat Pub, last.
Total.
Deduct p r cent, loading on above gross amount,
Net amount of uncollected and premiums.
Total assets.
120.710.690
AND
Net present value Of all the outstanding policies In force on he
30th of June, 1891, computed according to the combined
experience table of mortality with per cent, interest,
Deduct net value of risks of this Company In other
solvent companies,
Net reserve,
Claim tor endowments due and unpaid.
Claims for death-losses unpaid not
Amounts due and on annuity claims,
Liability on account of lapsed policies,
Premiums paid in advance.
Total liabilities op
ti rota sin plus on account,
89.019
Best Selling in the
The Most Reliable Worm Destroyer in Use.
furnished to any regular Physician when
Messrs. i. M. ft. V. Powell, prominent, merchants Columbus county, N C,
wrote u in July. 1887, that Mr. T. C. Floyd gave his child one dose of Boy-
kin's the result was worms. He wishes all interested to
know
CHI, N. J., May 8th, 1884.
Carmer Co., Baltimore, Mil. Dear Mr. A. Rudd, a very
responsible customer of mine, gave a to a child
last week the result was Mr. Daniel Pines used It with still better
results, worms from one child. Of course my sales will be large.
Yours truly, E. SMITH.
Read the following from one of the most prominent best known physicians
and farmers in Carolina. He writes a girl years old near
him, took two or three doses of the and passed
Dated, S. May 26th, 1884.
H. H. M. U.
Mr, H. M. of LaGrange, N. C. says. Dr.
hood; and that It
Worm
brought over worms from one child in his
versa satisfaction He sells more of it than all other worm medicine.
PRICE ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER BOTTLE.
Do not let your Druggist or General Dealer put you off w
s Worm and get It. Any M. D. can p
some other. Ask for
prescribe It and many do.
mm, a co., id
ESTABLISHED 1863.
14.708,876
II. Total liabilities,
Estimated surplus, accrued on or other policies, the
profits upon which are especially reserved that o
policies, 8.870.419
Estimated surplus accrued on all policies,
Signed, JAMES F. PIERCE,
MICHAEL
Deputy Superintendent.
The above total surplus of 14,708.873.98 Is exclusive any amounts due from
Agents, and is larger than the surplus of any other purely mutual Insurance
company In the
General Agents for North and South Carolina,
CHARLOTTE, N.
X. U. CAMPBELL, Special Agent,
A.
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods
Car load Mess Pork.
Car load Rib Side Meat.
Car load Flour, all grades.
Car load Seed Oats.
Cases Star 1-ye.
Cases Bread Powders.
Cares Soap.
Cases Cherries Peaches.
Full line Case Goods.
Boxes Crackers.
Boxes Tobacco.
SO Boxes Starch.
Barrels Rico Molasses.
Barrels Stick Candy.
Barrels Gail ft Ax Snuff.
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff.
Barrels P. Snuff.
Paper Sacks, Cheroot. Cigarette. Ac.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
HALL
J. M
REMODELED AND IMPROVED.
GOOD
The Rest standard Typewriter In the World.
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon. In-
Type in all language. Easiest
to learn, and rapid as any.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as Represented.
This Machine i everybody's friend. Every-
body should have their writing done on the
Typewriter. It always Insures most
prompt attention. Address
N Boston,
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector where
prices can be and.





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A book, treatment
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mailed free on application. A
ATLANTIC; CO .
D. V. Charleston. S. V.
Atlanta, Ga.
REFLECTOR
CHRISTIANITY.
REV. THOMAS DIXON ON THE
FAIRNESS OF SOME CRITICS.
PATENTS
obtained, and ail business in the S.
Talent office or in the Courts attended to
for Moderate Fee.
We are opposite the II. S. Patent Of-
engaged in Patent
can obtain patent in time than
more remote from Washington.
the model or drawing is sent we
advise a.- to patent free of charge,
we make change unless we ob-
We refer, here, to Post Master, the
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S. Patent For
advise terms and reference to
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NEW, GLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE,
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promptly Very
v.
OINTMENT
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This has been In use over
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been in steady demand, ii been en
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sale at Drug Store
MANHOOD
How Lost How Regained
PRIZE V on sad
of
B sad
baa j
b do equal.
Om or to a
than Bod It now,
A on the Ibo
Haw Turk Hie
Sale of Liquor How
a Fanciful Tiling.
New Feb.
Jr., preceded the sermon in As-
hall this morning by review-
the question involved in the bill now
pending in the New York legislature
proposed by the liquor dealers, which
grants practically free every day
and Sunday too. He said
It is a dark day in the history of the
great temperance reform Apparently
the saloon is about to master the forces
of Christian civilization. Every-
where the saloon is aggressive and
The reason for this is
far to seek. The forces of temperance
are sadly divided. The Prohibitionist
sullenly maintains his position the
rock of ultimate truth and demands an-
or nothing. The high license
man carries a razor in his boot for the
Prohibitionist. little church
organizations spread out their
wares and declare they are the only gen-
reformers and all others are base
imitations. Our Catholic brethren work
within their own lines. Meantime the
devil laughs and grows fat, rides into
power on every popular wave, makes
legislatures and governors his puppets.
hell
It is Christendom divided against Hell
united.
The liquor dealers of New York have
met in solemn council and drafted a bill
to suit themselves, which they have
presented to the New York legislature.
It will vastly surprise me if their pup-
pets do not obey their requests to the
letter. They modestly demand that all
the liquor laws passed during the last
quarter of a century shall be repealed.
They want saloons opened on Sundays,
concert halls and dives opened all day and
all night, free at all hours at
protection from the
of police interference, repeal
of the civil damage, act, the free right to
sell to boys and girls, and all license
fees reduced to next to nothing.
must confess that admire the sub-
lime cheek of these men. Think for a
moment of the daring of a set of chronic
violators of is, habitual
and drafting a bill grant-
themselves immunity in the prose-
of crime and demanding the
power of the state to protect them
while they are about it
THE LICENSE I If MB CO.
confess to the secret hope and pray-
that they will succeed in passing this
law and give as free for a sea-
son It seems to me it will be for
good. First, because it will be a shock
to the miserable factions of a temper-
guerrilla war that will bring unity
out of chaos; second, because the whole
license system is a humbug and a lie.
It is a delusion and a snare. It is wrong
in principle and utterly devilish in
For the state to go into partner-
ship with the manufacturers of
is for the state to commit suicide.
Go into partnership with the
always owns the whole concern.
If it is right to license the
business it is right to license the lottery
lottery is a mild evil in
comparison. The lottery takes in
a year. bill last
year was times morel
A bill is now pending before this same
legislature to license prostitution in
New York state. If rum is licensed
why not license all crime If the sys-
is right and good we cannot have
too much of a good thing. The enforce-
of the license system is the grand-
est farce of the times. It is said that
prohibition could not be enforced. Pro-
is always enforced better than
the excise system. The grand jury
and pathetically petitioned the
legislature last year to repeal the excise
laws and relieve them of thousands of
that would never be tried To in-
a liquor dealer the present
excise laws is a joke. Everybody knows
this.
Why not repeal the farce and give
free awhile It is estimated
by conservative men that there are be-
tween and 3.000 unlicensed drink-
places today in New York city
Why continue such a travesty
on law The back door of every saloon
is open on Sunday. Why not open the
front one and thus lessen its power in
politics at least Why should we be
reformers Why deceive ourselves
Let them pass their law. They will
a swindle and give us the t
it a storm of moral wrath and the air
will be purified. Free or
are the ultimate issues. They
had as well be joined now as later. Let
the war begin.
COLONEL INGERSOLL'S IGNORANCE.
am that may bays
in.
I lie on the Son bath
I v. IS.
Not ever one that saith onto Lord,
, shall eater Into tho of heaven,
Dot he the will of my Father which
In heaven. Matthew a.
A Dew commandment I unto that
I love one another. John
For whole law is fulfilled in one word,
In Thou shalt love as
v, II.
In the colonel's recent broadside be at-
tempts a definition of Christianity. The
I errors in this definition are so
mental that it is impossible to proceed
further in our discussion until we point
ant these mistakes and give a definition
which may be used as a standard when
we refer to Christianity He says
is a code of He
then proceeds to declare that Christian-
is responsible for persecution and
murder, and declares that the
founder of Christianity had plainly
is not necessary to believe in
order to be saved; it is only necessary to
lo, and he who really loves his fellow
men, who is kind, honest, and char-
is to be forever he had
only said that, there would probably
have been but little persecution
Now, falling back on the old
its fruits we may know Chris-
then I think we are justified in
saying that, as Christianity consists of a
mixture of morality and something else.
and morality never has persecuted a
human being, and as Christianity has
persecuted millions, the cause of per-
most be the something else that
was added to
The blunder of such a definition of
Christianity reveals the fact that Colonel
Ingersoll is so ignorant of what real
Christianity is that it is impossible for
him to give of it an intelligent definition.
Let us again clearly fact
that toe Christianity of tradition his-
is one thing and the Christianity of
the Christ is another The force of Colonel
assault hi always found in his
attack upon historic of true
Christianity. he assails
and bigotry and superstition and
be is on solid ground. I
heartily agree with many of tho
be has taken upon these questions
but the of one
thing and the historic perversions
entirely thing.
This definition is mi to
u the meaning of real Christianity. At
surface, would be
the impression of the ordinary render.
The colonel therein displays ignorance
profound painful pathetic Such a
blunder vitiates all that may follow
baaed such a conception. His
after such a definition to real
Christianity is absolutely worthless
Parts of what he says may be partly
truth, and yet it is a truth that is
the farthest removed from the real
truth Yon may so accent that which
is true that it may be very antithesis
of the truth.
WRY BURNED.
The colonel here reminds me of
boy who was studying history. His
teacher told him that the
Nero played the fiddle while Rome
He went home and told his
mother that the Nero was
playing the fiddle so burned
The he used was
most identical with the language of
teacher, and yet the boy declared that
they burned Rome because they did not
like the tune that Nero played. He
most got it right. But in almost stating
the truth be missed it the more com-
And yet we must not judge the colonel
too harshly We cannot demand too
of a man who makes no profession
of Christianity. Especially we must not
be severe in judgment upon the failure
of such a man to know true Christianity
when we remember the tragic blunders
of the apostles themselves. Christ's own
chosen followers misunderstood him up
to the very day of his death. They drew
their swords and attempted to defend
him by force. He had to rebuke them
and to explain again that his kingdom
was not of this not of force, but
of the spirit. His leading disciples were
found wrangling over the first places in
the kingdom temporal which they sup
posed be had come to establish.
Though they lived thus in daily con-
tact with Christ, so far above their range
of vision his real mission that not
until after his death did the meaning of
his words begin to dawn their
souls. When we remember how his
own chosen misunderstood him. and his
professed followers have belied their
professions and have failed to under-
stand his mission through years of
the past, and have committed so many
crimes in his sacred name, we not
be too harsh in our judgment of such a
man as Ingersoll if he fail to find
secret of the great heart of the true
Christ. The failures of men through all
these ages to comprehend the height and
depth and glory of his mission only bring
out in bold relief sublime proportions
of tho truth that he came to teach.
What is Christianity of Christ
What is the Christianity for which this
church stands today, for which as a
minister am striving I do not ask what
has been taught in the past about Chris-
by theologians and expounders of
systems of ask what is the
Christianity for which the living church
strives and stands in this hour of the
Nineteenth century
The of Christ is that heart
which manifests itself in a life of
love, lore to and man, love to God
through love to man
DEVILS BELIEVE.
say it is a heart faith.
the heart man Chris-
faith is not a feat of the intellect
over a philosophic proposition. It is an
attitude of the soul. Devils believe.
Belief in itself does not constitute Chris-
A man may believe any system
of theology be may select, and have
nothing of Christ in bis heart or life.
Theology is of the bead. Religion is of
the heart. Theology is a science. Re-
is a life. Man is not merely what
he believes. A creed in itself has no
necessary connection with conduct A
man may believe all things as an
fact and accept nothing connect-
ed therewith as a moral fact. He may
accept every dogma of the historic
creeds of all the ages and yet hare with-
in a heart as black as hell. Intellectual
belief plays the surface of life. It
does not the center of man's being.
With the heart man of
the heart the issues of
behind a haystack.
A man's professions of creeds or phi-
may be one thing, his actual
character another. Profession, in fact,
may or may not signify reality. Is a
man a soldier and patriot He professes
to be a soldier. He wears a uniform.
He has epaulets on his shoulders. Ha
has brass buttons on his coat, a stripe
down his pantaloons, a belt with an em-
blazoned buckle strapped with bis sword.
But is he a soldier He professes to be
one. We can only learn whether he is
when we see him in the fight Now the
battle is joined. Across the plains the up-
posing hosts charge each other with
deadly fury. The field is swept with
storms of bullets, shot and shell. Now
walk over the field and you will find the
On such an occasion, a com-
parsing over field found a
subordinate officer crouching behind a
haystack. Turning upon him, he de-
sort of a place is this
for yon, The reply that greeted
him was. do you really think
the bullets can come This
man wore the full uniform of battle.
He had on all the of war;
but he was as far removed from a sol-
as though he had been a thousand
miles removed from that battlefield.
Belief about Christian history and
dogma is not Christianity. Belief about
the questions of doctrine do not
Christianity. A man may believe
that is stated in dogmatic
theology about the Atonement and yet
have no part in it. A man may believe
that the Bible is true, the whole of it is
true and inspired, and yet in life he may
deny every truth taught in it A man
may believe in the divinity of Christ
an historic fact and yet crucify Christ
every hour in his life. Some of the
truest Christians in this world know ab-
nothing the questions that
agitate the world of theology and
In fact, they have never read the
Bible. Some of tho truest Christians
know in the world are men and women
who cannot read at all, who hare no
idea the Trinity or Predestination
or Election or Atonement as philosophic
concepts, and yet their hearts are one
with
THE RICH
Jesus Christ never promised salvation
to any man for believing anything
himself. The rich young man came to
Christ and asked him the pointed
what shall I do to inherit
eternal He declared that be had
kept the Judaic code of morals to the
letter. All the commandments from his
youth up he had scrupulously obeyed.
Christianity was more than a code
of morals Jeans gave him distinctly to
understand that fact When he naked
Christ this pointed question about the
way of eternal life, what did Master
answer Did he say. you believe in
the inspiration of the Old Testament
will be No. Did he say.
yon believe that am divine yon can in-
eternal lifer No. His answer
startled the young man should
startle tho creed tinker of every ago.
Looking Into the face of this inquirer
for eternal life we hear these wonderful
words, sell all thou bast and give
to the The young man went
for be had
great possessions, jeans with that single
question to very center of
his heart life and laid bare its covetous
secrets
STRIPED MODELS.
A mere code of morals may be per-
practiced and not signify purity
of heart. To say Christianity is a code
of morals is to fail to comprehend the
very alphabet of truth which Jesus
came to teach. There are in the
state of New York who form com-
We have several -if these
model communities where perfect
code of morals is
habits, regular sleep, wholesome food
taken in proper quantities, regular hours
to rise and retire. In fact, thee people
Conform perfectly to the outer code of
upright, moral men. But we give them
no credit because they wear striped
clothes. Every penitentiary Is a com-
whose citizens practice an ideal
code of morals in life, so far as hey can
within the limitation of the But
it signifies nothing, because it is
for reasons external rather than
internal.
a heart faith always
manifests itself in life. Colonel Ingersoll
says that if the founder of Christianity
had only plainly said, in so many words.
is not necessary to believe in order
to be saved; it is only necessary to
all would have been well. He fairly
takes our breath away with such a state-
It reveals the fact, that with all
the colonel's years of assault upon the
New Testament, he has never read it
No man who bad read the New
Scriptures could have made so fool-
an assertion.
CHRISTIANITY A LIFE.
This is precisely what Christ did say
in so many words.
every one that onto me.
Lord. Lord, shall enter into the kingdom
of heaven, but he that the will of
my Father which is in
much as ye did it not,
much as ye did it unto the least of these,
ye did it unto me. Enter thou into the
kingdom prepared before the foundation
of tho In other words, Christ
directly taught that the heart faith
which is of the essence of his religion
always embodied itself in life.
Christianity is a life. The Bible is a
book of life. Therefore the Bible is a
book of eternal power. It will ever
and move and save the lives of men. It
is alive, it throbs with life
of the race, with the life of as
folded in the race. The Bible is not a
systematic theology. It does not pro
fess to set forth for the guidance of the
mind of man a systematized and con-
scheme of philosophy. Strip the
Bible of the rubbish of traditionalism,
and there can be read into it no sys-
scheme of sacred philosophy. It
is the simple record of life. It contains
contradictions, paradoxes, mysteries.
These contradictions are the contra-
dictions of life. The paradoxes are the
paradoxes of life. Its mysteries are the
mysteries of life. As the secrets of life
elude the scalpel of the surgeon and the
biologist, so secrets of divine life
elude the dissecting knife of the keenest
philosopher or theologian.
IN
The supremacy of Christian truth is
not based on any philosophy taught by
Jesus Christ It rests upon the person-
of Christ. His creed was his life.
He did not come into the world to talk
truth. He was the truth. The
only supreme truth is that embodied in
life. No man who knows anything about
the subject of comparative religion today
pretends to deny that the divine is found
in all religions. that Jesus taught
had been taught before. had not
left the world in total before the
advent of Christ. He had spoken to all
races and to all peoples. The unique
personality of Jesus consists In the fact
that be summed up in life truth that
was thus gathered from the four quarters
of the earth and from the remotest ages.
He incarnated truth. He lived the
truth. Abstract truth is the commonest
thing in the world; it is everywhere. It
grows on the housetop. It is the com-
sound in the street. But abstract
truth does not save a world until it is
embodied in flesh and blood.
Herein we find the secret of the
nation, necessity for the incarnation,
the secret of the power of the
God, who had spoken to the race
through divers prophets in the past, now
in the fullness of time spoke to man
through man, through the incarnation
of truth. When that Man came in
man history, who truly said, am the
way, the truth and he came to
whom every knee must bow at last and
every tongue confess. Such a man is his
own vindication. Christ is, in fact, his
own vindication. He never taught a
duty that he did not live. Ho never
preached a hope that he not rest bis
full weight upon. His disciples were
not literary or philosophic adherents or
they were followers in action
Truth itself is merely a bullet When
the explosive power of life is placed be-
hind it then only is it power. He only
hath the Son who hath life.
The Christian is the man who partakes
of this divine life. He is not a man who
accepts a given code of morals. He is a
man in whose soul there springs a
fountain of everlasting life that makes
its own code of morals. He is the one
man in all the world who is free from
any code of morals. There is one law
only that binds him, and that the law
that is inclusive of all
THE COLONEL'S THEOLOGY.
The effort of Colonel Ingersoll to de-
fine Christianity in view of such facts is
pathetic. We are sorry for a man who
knows so little and yet talks
about a subject so profound. He re-
minds me of a man who was fascinated
with the discoveries of science. He de-
with enthusiasm that he could
understand how the astronomers could
compute distances from star to star and
give their relative proportions; he
said that the mystery of mysteries to
him was how on earth they ever found
out their names Before such ignorance
we stand dumb. We do not know where
to begin. It pathetic.
Christianity of Christ is
that heart faith which embodies itself in
a of love. Colonel Ingersoll says
that if the founder of Christianity had
only said that who lores his fellow
men, who is kind, honest, just and
charitable is to be forever all
would have been well. How pathetic
such a statement If the New Testament
teaches one thing with greater emphasis
than another it is
one
ye one another's burdens, and
so fulfill the law of
ye are
no man seek his own, each
his neighbor's
fulfillment of the
whole law is summed in this
one shalt love thy neighbor
as thy
if I have all faith so to re-
move mountains, but have not love,
am
ye did it unto the least
of these, ye did it onto
INCARNATE.
Love declared by Christ to be the one
principle upon which the
judgment Is conducted. life of Jesus
Christ was a supreme service of love.
He to minister, not to be ministered
unto. His life was one supreme mys-
tery of lore. He stands at the gates of
heals the sick. He unstops
the Mind, heals lepers, weeps toe
grave of the loved dead, calls back the
broken life. His whole life was one
effort of love toward man. He
broke his life as a box of rich perfume
and poured it out without stint He
sought to give the world a home; had
none for himself. Foxes had holes and
tho birds of the air nests, he had not
where to lay his bead.
To be a Christian is to believe in
Christ; that is. not to believe anything
about him, but to believe in him. That
is, to eat his flesh and drink his blood,
to partake of his life and his spirit As
he incarnated the truth, to incarnate the
truth. As we incarnate his spirit, so are
we of Christ. His spirit is the spirit of
love. Love is the universal judge, the
principle of love the only statute by
which the race of man is to be arraigned.
This principle is not confined in its
plication to the territory of the Bible or
the preacher. It Is not limited by the
limitations of language.
VOICE OF TEARS.
Love is the universal language of
race in ail ages, all nations, all climes.
I may not be able to understand my
neighbor in a foreign tongue, but if I see
in his eye the tear of suffering, I know
the language of tears. All hearts are
tuned to the universal language of love.
The sigh, the groan, tear, the heart-
ache are words known to every human
heart and interpreted by every human
heart By this universal principle is
man to be judged by Christ The
heathen world that has never heard of
Christ shall rise before his throne and
be judged by this eternal truth, and
from among them there will be those
who look in astonishment the face
of the and exclaim in wonder,
saw we thee or
athirst or sick or in prison or a
And Love from the throne of a
universe shad as
ye did it unto the least of these my
brethren, in sorrow and ye
Aid it unto me.
Faith is a moral attitude of the soul.
Christianity is such a faith embodied in
a life of love. A man who practices one
thing and professes another is what he
practices, not what he professes. Real
Christianity is that power that trans-
forms the life of man and rules it by the
principle of love. So that a man who
feels its divine power can walk up and
take his enemy by the hand and forgive
forget all the bitterness and hatred
of the past in the supreme thought of
Christian love. The Christianity that
has not this transforming power in life
is a and a delusion. The Chris-
that bas this power is its own
vindication, is invincible in its eternal
power.
A DRUNKARD REDEEMED.
Mr. Moody was preaching in a foreign
country. A drunken brute of a
band consented to accompany his wife
to the meetings and leave her, while he
went off again to his dissipation. The
press at the door was so great he stopped
for a moment to see his wife well through
in safety. The pressure of the crowd
was so great, however, that with her he
was carried into the building against his
will While there he heard this simple
apostle of Christ tell the old story of
love. His soul was swept with its power.
He opened the windows of his heart and
the messenger of eternal love entered
and took possession of his son. He
went back home with his wife crying
with joy. His children at his approach
hid in terror. He walked into his
and drew them from their hiding places;
told them they need not fear Said
have a father now There
will be no more terror in this
Those who had known him laughed
to scorn his professions. They gave him
a few weeks in which to return to his
wallowing, but from that day forth for
seventeen years he has lived a life of
tenderness and of love, of truth and of
temperance, and over that home cursed
with the shadow of sin and of selfish-
and of brutality there bas hovered
the ministering angels of peace. Chris-
is the power that transforms and
redeems the soul of man and melts into
love that which is of self and of sin.
The Christianity that is less than this is
not the Christianity of Christ.
A Common
Boyd is man who ruled in
a in bis court that a man was not a
disturber of religious worship simply
because be stood a preacher
asked everybody to stand up who wanted
to go to bell. The judge held that there
was no sense in question in the first
place, and that there was. in the second
place, no law against a man going to
bell if he wanted Courier
Journal.
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Beauty In Woman.
In his Christmas sermon Bishop Pot
mourns because woman has beauty,
and says it her to sin and deflects
the pious flowing of life's He
even doubts it is worth while to have
beauty at
Bishop, woman's beauty does not lead
her to sin, nor does it deflect the pious
flowing of life's stream. Do not try to
teach men that beauty leads to sin. A
Frenchwoman once, when told that
something she wanted to do was naughty.
replied, but it is so nice to be
If yon teach men that it
doubtful it is worth while to
have beauty or yon will have
empty benches to preach to, and your
congregation will be standing on street
corners by daylight and at night, with
lanterns in hand, groping, like Diogenes,
after beautiful sin. No, no.
Grecian genius waved a wand
and tho Apollo sprang from cold mar-
Greek genius looked upon a human
model and the chisel turned hard stone
into Venus. Raphael dip-
his pencil into tints stolen from the
rainbow. his heart to a song
chanted by and the Madonna
exorcises sin from the be-
holder. Murillo caught a flame from
genius and his ascending Mary con-
the looker on that the immaculate
conception was a possibility Again,
bishop, take a layman's advice. Do not
grow Times.
Keep your eyes open; cents buys
Salvation Oil, the greatest cure on earth
for pain.
Tourists to Yellowstone Park next
season might encounter a northwestern
blizzard. If are wise men they will
take along a supply of famous Dr.
Bu l's Cough Syrup.
The
From brothers-in-law who don't know
their who undertake to man-
age newspapers in our interest, and
make themselves ridiculous; who
tend to be pious, yet indulge in profanity
in cold type. Good Lord, deliver us.
Metropolis.
Oh. ringing In the ears
Oh. ting in the
Hawking, blowing, snuffing, gasping.
Watering eyes and a-r i-pi ,
He Imp ire and fled.
Till I would that I were -lead I
What folly to so with
troubles. hen the case of
In the are and
oared the mild, cleansing and healing
proper of Dr. Catarrh Rem
It purifies the by re-
moving the cause of heals the
sore and flamed passages, and
a lasting cure.
Bow Woman
Women to whom nature has been gen
in the matter of feet are apt to in
case them in long, slender boots of kid
with patent leather tips, no
ties in the matter of decoration to at
tract attention to the size
of the offending members. There la one
peculiarity about large feet when be-
longing to one of fair Me
never In any one's way. no matter how
large they are. No one stumbles over
them in a car or steps on them In
dim. religious light of the modern draw-
room.
Now, the small foot of the feminine
persuasion is always being trodden
and tripped over. Itself upon
all occasions, and is bane and
of the awkward man. There is.
however, one apology which always
soothes the wounded feelings of this
downtrodden foot If the man who
crushes its delicate bones beneath his
broad No. thinks quickly to remark
that foot was so small he couldn't
see woman to whom it belongs
rejoices in the pain it gives her,, and
thrusts the other foot yet further out for
the next blunderer to balance himself
upon and soothe in the same way.
A pair of boots for every indoor gown
is almost a necessity now that the shoes
must match toilet in tint, and this
gives the usually prosaic shoe
a chance to bis fancy
consult bis ancient history and wake up
his muse. For we men who cannot
wear it must be
that slippers add to size of a
broad, ungainly are very
dainty boots of suede in pile grays
pinks and blues, with Vandykes of em
set in down the and boots
of rich brocaded silk with patent leather
tips and satin tops. New Sun
Preform to
The Rev. O. K. Flack, of
street mission, has a novel Idea for less-
the consumption of beer among
the workmen in the lumber district. He
has started what he calls a gospel wag
on, with a cabinet organ in one end and
a coffee tank in other. The wagon
makes the rounds of the lumber yards
at noon When men start out for
beer music on the organ begins,
a placard is hung out over the coffee
tank, is better than beer, and
yon can get it here for
The men are taking kindly to
fee and the gospel songs The Rev. Mr
Flack says lie has men throw away
the beer in their pails to hare them tilled
with tho coffee. If the movement proves
a success other wagons will circulate
the labor districts. Tribune
RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door Court House
WILT, II or
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory Is well equipped with the best put up nothing
but WORK. We keep up with the times and Improved styles
material used in all work. All Springs are use. yon from
Storm, Horn, King
Also keep on hand a full of ready made
HARNESS AND WHIPS
lie year round, which we will sell AS as
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past we hop
merit s continuance of the same
T. X,
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE
N. C
OFFICE k OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rate
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the buyer of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo
not to be excelled in this market. And to be an
pure straight good. of all kinds, NOTIONS. GEN
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kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hay. Rock Limb. and
Hair. Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent lot Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at
prices, per dozen, less per cent for Lash. Bread
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Headache
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Stomach troubles are cured by
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Poke Root and
Indian Corn Paint cures
Wart and Bunion.
Answer Question.
Why do st people see around
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. END
Young I
Mothers
WE USE
DISTORTED surely come to those who clean house and wash
clothes in the old-fashioned soap, now can it otherwise f You
and you You spend hours inhaling the hot
steam and odors which rise from the tub, with the filth of soiled
clothing, and with all this have not obtained the results.
WITH PEARLINE delicate woman can do a large wash. You do not
have to rub yourself and your clothes to pieces. You do not have to Inhale fetid
; when you are not too tired to see that your work is well and
and that saved many hours of woman's hardest wort
y-
ti
, . . OR CO.
, A.
its.
tWP,
HEAL ESTATE AGENTS,
O.
several of real
estate for sale. Look over the list
he low and call on or write them.
IA i lot on Third street below C.-
In the town of
nod two-story house with four rooms
kitchen and smoke house convenient
luge on the premises.
Two lots in Skinner
desirable
location.
A lot on street, between
Front and Second, bus nice house of
i rooms, good well of water, large gar-
den plot and stables.
A half acre lot In
large single house
of rooms, cook and dining rooms at-
all out buildings and
stables, good water
A line farm containing M acres.
about miles from Ml.
P road, has sin house, stables. I
barns, two room tenant houses;
acres cleared, balance well wooded,
good water. This laud Is excellent for
the cultivation of fine tobacco.
One farm lying on branch of the
W. o. ail road about half way be-
tween and and within
mile of a new depot, contains acres.
and balance heavily timbered
with pine, oak, hickory, ash and cypress;
has good tenant houses; railroad pas-es
nearly through of this farm. The
land clay subsoil with sandy loam,
is in good slate of cultivation and highly
improved; is fine trucking land.
A farm H miles from Greenville on
Kin-ton road known as the JacKson
farm; contains M acres, cleared; has
good dwelling house nil
out is a 10-
la in
A house and lot in Greenville on
corner near B. Cherry and W. S.
awls, now occupied by the family of
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains
rooms, kitchen convenient. Is convenient
location, only half a block from main
street of the town. Possession
can be given 1st.
A good building lot on
street, between Third and Fourth
streets, splendid location.
house and lot on Pitt
Us street near Avenue,
good house of rooms, Urge lot with
tallies and out buildings.
house and on
Pitt adjoining the lot of B.
S. and the lot described in
large, comfort aide one-story dwelling
of four rooms, cook
plenty of room for garden.
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour
Mills, Cm ton Gin and Store This
property located, at a X Road
within a hundred yap- of a Ii. It. sit-
one of lie best Agricultural
Sections of Pitt county. The mills are
fifed up with the machinery. Bolt-
cloths, smelter and in full
opt ration. store Is a two
story building with dwelling attacked
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear.
The store is kept constantly
general merchandise suite I to a
count store is a good
The mills are the be-t known in
his
This is offered for safe the
I owners wish to withdraw from business.
Terms on of
can I p had on
soap.
ft R.
and
TRAINS SOUTH.
No No
Jan. daily Fast Mall, dally
daily ex Sun.
I Weldon 12.30 pm pm
Ar am
am
Ar p am
Ar Sell
Ar
am
Ar
ex Sun.
V am ti
Ar Suits
Ar
am pm pm
A. Rocky Mount
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
Daily excel Sunday.
Train No. will not Jan.
Train on Neck branch Road
leaves Halifax 4.22 P at. arrives Soot
laud Neck at 5.16 P. M., Greenville
P. M. Kinston p. m. Returning,
leaves Kinston 7.10 a. m,, Greenville
8.25 a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m.
Weldon a. m. daily except Sun
Local freight train leaves Weldon
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at
10.15 a. in., Scotland Neck
a. m. Greenville 6.30 p. m.,
7.40 p. in. Returning leaves Kinston
Tuesday, Thur-day and Saturday at
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.56
a. m. Scotland Neck p. m., Weldon
6.13 p. m.
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via
marl,. Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
P M. Sunday P M,
N C, P M, P M.
Plymouth 8.30 p. m., p. m.
leaves Plymouth daily except
6.00 a. m., Sunday a. 111-
S C, 7.30 a tn. 9.58 am.
arrive Tarboro, C, A
Train on Midland N C leave
daily except Sunday, A M
rive N C, AM. Re
turning leaves AM
I arrive N C. A M.
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky
I at P H, arrive Nashville
P Rope P M. Returning
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for dally, except Sunday, it
M leave
ton at A M, P. M-
. at Warsaw with Mos.
Southbound train on Wilson
j Branch is No. Northbound is
No. except Sunday.
Trains No. South and North
stop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson
j Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection a
Weldon all point North
via Richmond, and daily except Sun
day via Bay Line, also at Mount
daily except with Norfolk
Carolina tor Norfolk and all
, points via Norfolk.
General
J B.
T.
ASTHMA-IS
, Tr
WATER OR MILK
GRATEFUL
i-i i tin


Title
Eastern reflector, 24 February 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
February 24, 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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