Eastern reflector, 6 April 1892






f HE REFLECTOR
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Reflector
GIVEN AWAY
; ST TEE GREAT
The Atlanta
Ten thousand dollars will be
ibis year by The
published at Atlanta,
among its
This newspaper has already the
largest circulation of weekly news-
paper in the Tubed St rites.
MM, with one exception, in London, the
largest ill the world. It i, and
foremost, a newspaper.
week the full news ail the world,
devoted especially to the development
of the south. Its circulation now ex-
it is pushing
Sample copies will be sent on
application.
A Distribution.
rise thousand dollars will be divided
among; its now and
July 1st, between then and
the end of the year.
The division Mill lie based on the
result of the nominating convention of
the parties in June, and the
other on the result of the
election-
The national democratic convention
meets at Chicago June 21st.
The national republican convention
meets at Minneapolis June 7th.
Both will nominate a candidate for
president and vice president.
for First
Twenty-five dollars in gold
will be by The to
the successful answers of the
will lie the nominees of each
party for president and vice
Any person the names
tins chosen will be entitled to the first
prize of cash, and if, chance, more
than one answers correctly, the prize
will be divided accordingly
for a Second
Five hundred dollars in cash will be
divided among who guess correctly
only three out of the four to be
thus as standard bearers, so
that the goes may prophesy wrong as
to one of the four names, and by getting
three correct will come in for this prize.
Prig,.
In addition to the above in
more will be distributed in
prizes, consisting of twenty-live silver
value which is
an i CM, respectively, and copes of
Mammoth es,
edition, fully illustrated and consist-
of 1.600 pages,
gold watches will be given to
every hundredth ballot of the first
received, silver watches to the next
of hundredth ballots, and after
that every fiftieth ballot will one
of the Webster's mammoth diction-
All must lie by one
year's subscription to Cos-
t and must be writ-
ten on a separate piece of paper from
that containing order for subscription.
The winner of any of the prizes
above noted will be given a free guess at
the next distribution after July
1st This costs you nothing and you
may get or in gold. You
ill certainly receive the greatest week-
newspaper published the south for
one year and there will never be a year
when a great will b more
than this one.
all communications to The
Constitution-. Atlanta, Us.
VOL. XI.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, S. a, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in Advance.
THE SOUTH
AT THE
PAIR.
WORLD'S
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter.
First Sunday, homing and night,
Second S morning at Anti
and Saturday before.
Third and fourth at Green-
morning and night, also second
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday
night services each week.
Services at school house on enterprises for furthering
on Thursday night the Smith Ki
each until A. and then j
on evening.
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments.
Rev. H F. pastor of Green-
ville Circuit of the M. E. Church, South,
will preach at the times and
each
1st Sunday at Salem, o'clock A. M.
1st Sunday. Chapel, .-SO o
P. M.
2nd Sunday, Grove, o'clock
A. M.
2nd Sunday. For School Rouse.
miles net of ;.
r. u.
Sunday, Ayden or Spring Branch
School o'clock A. M.
Sunday,
o'clock P. M.
4th Sunday, o'clock
A. M.
School House,
o'clock P. M.
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN
Within the mouth the immense
of King's Royal Co.
has been more than doubled and large
orders are pouring in from all directions.
On February 20th I. L. A Co., of
Kev Orleans cash order for
seven thousand and two hundred bottles
to be delivered at once.
It
L That when such as General
General Turner, Governor
Colonel A very. Rev. W. G. K,
Rev. J. B. Hawthorne
and Rev Sam a medicine and
give it unqualified
believe them.
That has done all that
most ardent friends have declared
that it would do.
S. bat it has mastered La Grippe,
Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Nervous de-
Insomnia. Kidney troubles.
ma, Summer complaints and Catarrh
wherever it has been tried.
That the discovery of
is the most valuable contribution of
century to medical science,
A a spring medicine it has no equal.
the stomach, digestion,
tones up the and brings
health and happiness In this respect
no other remedy can compare with it.
it is net a nauseous com-
In its issue for last week the
Manufacturer's Record, of
more, makes this urgent
the South to prepare for the
World's Columbian
display of apathy regard-
preparations for the World's
Columbian Exposition that is be-
manifested several sections
of the South is greatly to be la-
In the absence of
obstacles, the refusal of
any Southern legislature to make
it-1 appropriation for State rep-
at Chicago false
economy of the most conspicuous
kind. Neglect to make ample pro-
vision for this great event is a
short policy that is sure to
react in an injurious manner upon
the whole South- The older in-
sections of the North are
making liberal preparations for
representation in the World's Fain
and the West is providing for the
with a wonderful display
of prodigality. Money
for this purpose dots not in-
extravagance in any respect,
but the indifferent policy that has
been adopted by a few of the
Southern States must be regarded
as either parsimony or a failure
to appreciate the of the
opportunity.
is not, to our knowledge,
any other use to which a reason-
able appropriation could be de-
voted with better results than in
the provision of a suitable exhibit
of the and industries of
any Southern State in this great
exposition. Advertising is the life
of industry in these days, and
States that desire to attract
and promote development
might as well enclose their
with a high fence as to neg-
any good opportunity for
making their advantages known to
the world. The businessman who
does not advertise confines his
operations to a narrow and
this rule applies equally well to a
town, county or State. The
World's Columbian Exposition is
a huge advertising enterprise, and
those who do not participate in it
will feel the effects in an
manner.
is a peculiar necessity for
the South to utilize this
to the fullest possible extent.
There are thousands ox people in
the in the West, in New
England and across the ocean who
have invested largely in various
the de-
Nine out
of every ten of such investors has
never been in the South and will
never visit that section of the
country. They have read and
heard much of the wonderful re-
sources of the South, its rapidly
wing industries, its mines,
forests, mills and furnaces, and
when go to Chicago next year
they will naturally expect to see a
Southern exhibit proportioned to
the wealth and resources of that
section. They are fully justified
in such an expectation, and the
responsibility for fulfillment rests
with the each State
as well as with individuals-
earnestly hope that all con-
of false economy will
be set aside in this matter, and
that all the Southern States will
act in unison in providing for a
liberal display at Chicago. It is
not a matter of willingness or in-
but of
that is imperative. Let there
be no delay, no differences of
ion as to plans, but let there be
everywhere a united and
ed effort to place the South on i-n
equal footing with the entire world
in the World's Columbian
We have no interest what-
ever in this exposition apart from
its bearing the but
ALLIANCE IN DANGER
If the Third Party Secures a Following
in the State This Year.
At the request of some friends
in and out of the Alliance, and de-
siring to advance the best interests
of the masses of the people of my
native State. I write to give my
views upon the Third Party which
some over-zealous members of the
Alliance talk about establishing in
North Carolina. I am a member
of the Alliance, ready at any time
to advocate, defend and maintain
the dignity as well as the demands
of the order. I see great danger
not only to the best interests of
the- State, but also to the Alliance
in the suggestion of organizing
an independent party. If a third
party is formed in this State it will
endeavor to draw a very large per
of its vote from the Alliance.
If a sufficient of Alliance
men who have heretofore been
Democrats and voted with the
Democratic party, go off into and
vote with the third party, it would
bring ruin home to the people of
North Carolina. Then instead of
the Alliance bettering our
it would pull us down, and
carry us from bad to worse, to utter
degradation and ruin. The aim
and object of the Alliance is not
to form political parties and fight
political battles inside Alliance
halls. To do that would bring
discord, contention and division
in the order, and be an injury to
the Alliance cause, and in the end
the Alliance would accomplish
nothing-
The Alliance has come
to stay. It is the greatest
ever organized on the
American continent. But the Alli-
not come to pull down or
destroy or overthrow good govern-
but to amend f time to
time and restore good government.
It has not to make war and
desolation in the land, but to make
peace and restore the people to a
much needed prosper- It has
not come to divide and go off into
a third party that will be only a
sensation and accomplish nothing.
The Alliance favored and made a
Railroad Commission in North
Carolina that has saved thousands
of rs to the people in the way
of taxes, freight and passenger
traffic. Look at the House and
Senate journal and see who voted
for that bill. It will disclose who
your friends arc
Let all Democrats remain in the
Democratic party, whenever
tho Alliance makes a demand or a
request, and our political friends
oppose it, let rs meet together in
council and advise together for the
best interest of the State and the
country's good. I verily believe
that our friends in the Democratic
party who are not members of the
Alliance will meet us more than
half way. By taking this course
we can accomplish much good.
I have given the third party
movement much thought. Besides,
I have kept myself posted by read-
one North Carolina daily and
six weekly papers of all parties,
Alliance and non-Alliance, and
have seen no good reason ad-
by any, how or in any way,
a third party can bring about the
relief the Alliance demands. This
being so, I appeal to my brother
in North Carolina
who are Democrats to remain in
the Democratic party, and
and press the Alliance de-
Go into the Democratic
conventions- Contend for and
fight for Alliance measures in a
mild and conservative
vote the Democratic ticket, and I
am sure good will be accomplished.
And also I would say to the
Democratic papers and to all Dem-
as well, lie mild and
in expressing opinions. A
conservative and persuasive policy
we fully appreciate the importance is apt to lead the masses and do
th occasion, and v
not to let such an
pass
am the
In the present
pound, but as pleasant to take as a glass , . . , ,
of lemonade, Che patient loves it and there are solid democratic
delegation from Alabama,
Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland,
Mississippi, Missouri, Caro-
Texas, Virginia and West
Virginia. Maine, South Dakota,
and Vermont have solid
looks forward with pleasure to the time
of taking it.
For sale at bottle all drug-
Manufactured By
King's Co,
ATLANTA, GA.
Dissolution.
The firm of A Tyson was
I mutual consent on the In
of February. All indebted to
the Ann are requested tn come forward
with either party.
M.
B. A. TYSON.
The referred to above will be j an in.
States with only one
each i seven of these are Be-
and two Democrats.
There are in the house Demo-
good, but bitter railings do no good
and those who employ them will
lose their following. The people
love to follow conservative men
because they are apt to be safe
men and apt to be right. I say
to all, and non-Alliance,
let us work together in a
way and we will save the
State in the coming contest
David Alexander.
coot of railroads in the
united States has been nine billion
dollars; they employ one million
can delegation. There are nine ; sight passenger
AS THE FLAME OF A CANDLE.
One who looked the crowd over
as we waited for the train would
not have set us down as hard-
hearted and indifferent; so we
proved to be as a young girl not
over years of age, reading an
old who was stone blind
very feeble, passed slowly around
the soliciting alms. They
got a penny here and there, but
SOME MISFIT NAMES OF PLACES.
T. C. in N- C Teacher.
If a stranger from another State
were to look over a map of North
Carolina he would find some per-
cases, where tho names
certain towns seem to be a misfit
as regards the names of their
counties. This may some-
times account for mail-matter going
or
those coins seemed to be i addressed within a reasonable time-
example, he would expect to
find both Asheville and
given grudgingly, and those who
gave nothing consoled themselves
with the reflection that the pair
were frauds and needed no
assistance.
When they had made the tour
of the room the girl led old
man to a seat in a corner, and after
a few words had passed
them they began singing a hymn.
She had a wonderful voice for a
child, clear and sweet, and his was
a deep bass. The hymn was that
entitled, My God, to
Ton have heard it by a
full choir, accompanied by the
strains of a grand organ, but yon
never listened so intently as
did there. There was a plaint in
that girl's voice which touched a
chord, and there was a quaver in
the old man's bass which saddened
you. They sang low and soft,
in Ashe County, but instead of that
arrangement ho finds tho former
in Buncombe and the latter in Ran-
County. He naturally
look for Greensboro and Greenville
in Greene County, instead of
ford and Pitt, while he would see
Pittsboro not in Pitt County at all
but in Chatham. Beaufort ought
to be in Beaufort County, instead
of Carteret, while Washington, in
Beaufort County, should in
Washington County. Mooresville
in Iredell County, should be in
Moore County, and in
Moore County, would seem best
suited to Jones County. Hay wood
in Chatham, ought to be in Hay-
wood County, while the capital of
that county would Wayne.
was not Jackson put in the
WON THE CASE.
STATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There as Gathered
From our Exchanges.
they had not finished a verse when I county of that name instead of
half of us were standing up to see I Northampton, as well
them better. as Franklinton in Franklin County
The girl kept her eyes on the Then there is Macon, in Warren
floor at feet. Tho sightless
eyes of old father
were raised to the coiling, and
over his wrinkled face crept a glad
smile as they finished the
my God, to
Nearer to Thee.
The hymn was not finished when
every man began feeling for a con-
women opened their
It was different
now. They were no longer
and everyone was glad to give
something. Two or throe were
ready to move about to take up a
collection; but they waited for
end of the hymn. When it came
to the chorus of the last verse the
old man was singing bravely.
Half way through his voice sud-
choked and the last two
lines were sung by the girl alone
and died away in a sob and a cry.
All of us saw the old man's head
County instead of and
in instead of
Hertford County. in
Caswell County, he could see as
well in County, and Rock-
he would put in Bocking-
ham County, instead of Richmond.
is in Polk County, and
is in County, while
Columbus County has not even
Columbia. Davidson College is
not in Davidson County, nor is
College County.
Neither Alexanders nor Alex
is in Alexander County.
Graham would seem best in
ham County, and just suits
Lenoir County. Vanceboro might
have been put in Vance County,
instead of Craven, in Gas-
ton County, and Madison in
son County, instead of
hum.
Tribune.
yon wore
said the embarrassed young lawyer,
hesitatingly, could plead my
cause with more self-possession, j commencement address
In the courts love I
don't think I stack p as a first-
class
have not had an
extensive practice in such courts, j May 10th.
suggested tho maiden, A Pennsylvania paper quotes
softly. clover seed at per
it exactly, Clara eager-1 should make a
rejoined the young man. moving I note of tint
i fin i clever
his chair a little nearer. m a
green hand at this business. But Rev. Carter Helm Jones, pastor
if I feel sure the the First Baptist church, Knox-
i ville, will preach the
,, ,, . . . address at the next com-
prejudiced against of Wake Forest cu
Senator Vance will the
at the
University of Virginia, in June-
Capt. S. A- Ashe, editor of the
News and Observer, will deliver
the Memorial-day address at
raise their own
the
you
then, I
kind of a jury arc you
considering mo, William she
asked, with eyes downcast.
jury, of course
You couldn't a Grand Jury,
yon know,
we don't try cases be-
fore grand
think, said the
young girl, blushing, would
rather for this occasion to be con-
a Grand
and she hid her face
somewhere in the vicinity of his
coat collar, have found a true
Bill.
Wilmington Hen-roost
thieves visited the premises of Mr.
C- corner of Seventh and
Mulberry streets, Wednesday
night and carried off fine fat
fowls,
Warrenton Herald Roy. C. M-
Anderson and wife moved the first
of the week to Connelly Springs,
where they will make their future
home. Mr. Anderson has
chased a beautiful residence near
the Connelly Springs hotel.
Free We are
told that Mr. Richard Nobles has
a sweet potato patch that has been
in potatoes for fifty years, and up
on which no manure has been
hauled. He pens his cattle on it.
Mr. is years old and
still plows right along.
The
Norfolk, Wilmington
Railroad.
Char
Wilson Tramps arc
plentiful, and keep the police on
the watch all night. The station
house is kept full every night.
.,.,. A gentleman who lives on the
The Philadelphia Record con- between Black Creek and
the following railroad i Fremont tells between ten and
of projected J twenty come to his house every
Norfolk, Wilmington A Charleston something to eat.
railroad, whose offices are in this The following are the consider-
ed-, have completed the survey able items in the River and Harbor
the entire length of the this Inland water
j i way between river and Swan-
miles are now in j
locating
Norfolk
follows an almost air line of Char
S. C, passing through a
section of country which is now
almost without railroad facilities.
The surveys show that the
the line. Starting from river,
, Va., tho surveyed route Cape Fear
con-
creek, New, Pain-
and Tar, Fishing
creek,
Concord Standard Our friend
Isaac who lacks
There may be other cases of
drop forward and his body misfit, but these are
He would have fallen to h So when you a
had not the girl and bold be sure to tho
up. A dozen of up were there j
in a moment, but we were too late.
The old man's life had gone out
as yon breathe upon the flame of
a candle, and on his ashen lips
still trembled the sacred notes of
the
to
M. Quad.
His Heart In It.
He had Been There.
locomotive costs and s pal-
lace ear
are railroad triages in
United States spawning
miles; the longest span is the
river at
That was an editor of ex-
in all the
and vicissitudes of the profession
who wrote the following with a
that its own bit
Most editors are well acquainted
with the man who takes more
papers than he reads, and
has no use for his local
paper. He takes a paper publish-
ed in Portland, Maine. It con-
all the news about the
Last
of Moose, the Bandit
etc., and while he is storing his
mind with information his
wife reads bock-number almanacs.
But let him get into trouble, he
rushes to the local paper to help
him out, and wants it bad If hrs
baby or wife dies he wants a
column obituary, yet he cannot
help his local paper by subscribing.
This is also the man wants a
fifteen-line local puffin your paper
just to fill up, you know.
We Have Seen.
Indiana Farmer.
A young man sell a good farm,
turn merchant, break and die
vent
A farmer spend so much time in
town that there was. nothing at
home worth looking after.
A worthy farmer's idle away
the prime of his life in dissipation
and end his car in poverty.
A poor boy grow rich by
try and good and a
rich boy grow poor by idleness
and dissipation.
A man-spend more mosey in
folly than support his
in comfort and independence.
A farmer deliver a fins oration
at the with bis
all down, fields
with wood foraging at a
taM and his an
A manufacturer in Philadelphia
lately told a friend a story of one
of his
years ago a boy applied
to me for work. He was employed
at low wages. Two days later
awards of premiums were made to
manufacturers at the Centennial
Exhibition.
down Chestnutt street
early in the morning I saw Bob
poring over the board in
front of a newspaper office. Sud-
he off his cap with a
shout
have taken the medal for
he exclaimed.
said but kept my
eye on Bob. The boy who, could
identify himself in two days with
my interest would be of use to me
hereafter.
work was to deliver pack-
ages. I that he took a real
pride in it. His wagon must be
cleaner, his horse better fed, his
orders filled more promptly, than
those of the men belonging to any
other firm. He was as zealous for
the house as though he had been
a partner it- I have advanced
him step by step. His fortune is
made, and the firm have added to
their capital so much energy and
will be easy, the come into town
difficulty encountered being the
Dismal Swamp, which tho road
runs directly through. From a
point near Kinston, N. C-, it is
proposed, to a branch
to Columbia. S- C-, a distance
nearly miles, but this has not
been surveyed yet.
The main line will run through
Norfolk county, in Virginia,
ford, Bertie. Pitt, Craven,
Jones, Onslow, Bl idea,
and Brunswick, in North
riding on a bale of cotton. He
said that was only the last
but that ho had his entire crop of
two years stored away at home.
George W. Riser, aged
of county, having buried
four wives already, was married
Saturday to tho Daniel
aged years.
Raleigh News and
A letter received by Commissioner
of Agriculture Robinson from Hen-
discloses the fact that
no commercial fertilizers winterer
are used in Henderson county, and
Carolina, and Georgetown still more surprising is. tho fact
and Berkeley counties in South shipped during
the months of September. October
and November last five million
Carolina.
A Touching Incident.
Atlanta Constitution.
Yesterday morning a was
pounds of vegetables, all raised
without the aid of any fertilizer
ager G. M.
General Han-
the Norfolk
heard at the big door of tho Fill- Carolina railroad confirms the
ton county jail. Miller
opened door and a ragged
man came in. There was a hag-
look on the fellow's face. It
was Jim Wesson, the moonshiner,
who escaped from the Fulton
county jail a week ago, to go home
to see his sick baby.
sorry, Mr. he said
in a broken voice. hope you
and Morrow don't care, but
I heard the
He stopped a moment his
lip quit quivering so, and went
heard the baby was sick, and
I thought about wife of it
at home, and I just had to go.
report that a branch road will
built from the main line via
and Windsor to in
Bertie county. The distance is
about forty miles and it will
run through a splendid country.
is the location of Dr. W. R-
Capehart and his largo seine
fishery. The survey of the route
began Monday.
A little
thirteen year old daughter of Mr.
Martin Welch, who lives near Bun-
Hill, was instantly killed Sat-
afternoon while pi lying with
other children in tho woods near the
house. The little girls were swing-
from the limbs of a that
that had lodged another tree, it
having been formerly cut down
Those are disposed to find
fault with the Democratic party
should in all fairness take as an
example some government where
the Democrats have been in pow-
and show its errors and crimes-
Take North Carolina for instance.
The Democrats have been in full
here. They have had the
all the State officers
the Legislature- They have made
the laws and executed
What is wrong Who
defaulted Who has been op
Our State Government
as boon economically administer-
ed ; taxes are low; laws are
ed ; life, liberty and property are
protested; our schools are flourish-
; oar resources are de-
are in-
creasing, sin The general govern-
once under the control of
Democrats be run on the
same desk and pit free
a.
was sorry, wrote you I'd come j when it became detached, trunk
back. I done it. They done I falling on the little Welch girl,
bored the baby, I hope yon killing her instantly,
ain't Raleigh A band of
Capt Miller did men broke into the
utter a word of reproach. of Jay Atwater,
. , . , , T- ,. young colored man of Chatham
glad yon have come back, Jim, him, tied his
he s-id. hands behind him, and brutally
mi i , whipped and otherwise terribly
, , , , him. It was done be-
Six hundred and fifty he ft witness R
left Memphis, Tenn , for between two white men; and was
intended to drive him off to prevent
his evidence. The parties are
known and
their arrest
Charlotte
recent term
warrants are out for
ma They will make the journey
in wagons and on foot It is ex-
that one thousand more
will leave for the same place soon.
The exodus is not directly due to
the late The matter, of
had been talked of before, but the j,, was severe in his
lynching and action of the colored, dealings with the offenders. Gas-
mass-meeting advising all who ton, as is known, is a dry county.
of Gaston
At the
court a
and
III The REFLECTOR
A hole for
only One hut
In i It yon
i swat pay In advance,
If you
just after j our name
M the of the
the
Expires Two Weeks
From This
ft is to yon no-
unless i
newer in that time
the will
cease going to you
at the expiration of
j, the two weeks.
R. J. MARQUIS,
DENTIST,
C.
Office In Skinner Building, upper
opposite Gallery
L.
DENTIST, p-
H it.
FLEMING,
E Y-A T-L A W.
Greenville, N. C.
to business. Office
at Tinker Murphy's old
HOS. J.
ft BLOW,
ALEX. L.
GREENVILLE. N. C.
in nil the Courts.
B. YELLOWLEY,
A Y- A 7-LA IV
Greenville, N.
A. B. V.
ft TYSON,
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW,
N. C.
attention given to collection
II. LONG,
A KN ET AT- LA W,
It. C.
Prompt mid careful attention to bad-
solicited.
marry
t skinner,
N. C.
W JAMES,
G KEEN V ILL E, N. C.
Practice in all the courts.
n Specialty.
Cl
an B m
B o a
V r
i ; r
El
-K ft B
H S
CO
could to leave precipitated and
caused many to make their
The judge said fines seemed to
have no so he would try
. a,, m imprisonment, and see how that
minds to o who perhaps towards putting an
not otherwise have done
AH the paths of life lend to the
grave, and the utmost we can do
i is to avoid short cut.
end to tho violations of the law.
Two parties were sentenced to
three months each jail, another
to six for Helling
whiskey and throe for telling a
list on the
1875.
S, M. SCHULTZ,
AT THE
OLD STOKE
I FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY
. their year's supplies will And
their interest to jet our prices before
is
n all its branches.
PORK SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICK, TEA, Ac.
always at Lowest Market Pi
TOBACCO
we direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one profit. A
stock of
always on hand and sold at prices to sail
times. Our goods are all bought
sold for CASH, therefore, having no rial
to sell at a margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
Tar bur
Forbes, Greenville,
. B. Cherry,
J. S.
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen Man
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gee A
The People's Line travel on Tat
.
The Steamer is the Inert
and quickest boat on the river.
been thoroughly repaired,
painted.
Fitted up specially for the comfort, at
and convenience of
POLITE WT, VI Off
A Table furnished
best market
A trip on the Steamer to
not only bat
Leaves Washington Monday,
And Friday at ft. o'clock, A- at.
Leaves
and Saturday at o'clock. A. .
Freights received daily and
to aB





Sm
same measures now
it a virtue then It seems to
Greenville, N. C.
Editor at
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1802.
say because Folk- and others ad-
them. The same reasoning
would declare even the Herald
entered at th at Greenville,
N. C. mail matter.
Publisher's
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICK OF
The U per
Rates.-One
column one year.
; one-quarter column one year,
Transient inch
weak, two weeks, one
month W. Two inches one week,
two weeks, one month,
Advertisements Inserted In Local
Column M reading items, cents per
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
PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any space not
Above, for any length of time, can be
by application to the office either
in person or by letter.
Copy tor New Advertisements and
all changes of should he
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings in order to receive prompt in
the day following.
The Reflector having a large
will be found a profitable medium
through to reach the public.
be depended oil or grimly
deceived-
The above is to who point and
has lots of food it for the Dem-
press of North Carolina
democratic if Polk should now. No one doubts but
. . . what this comes from good Dem-
to go to Salisbury T
. . ., i In
HE IS A DEMOCRAT.
Last week we wrote an editorial
in to Col. Harry
of this The Reflector said
what it believed to be true- It
spoke in the interest of the Demo-
party. It had no other
motive. We could not help say-
some things in reference to the
press because we believed Col.
Skinner had been misrepresented-
We repeat with emphasis this fact
after having read what some of the
papers have had to say in refer-
to this editorial.
The and Observer says in
its general observations it endorses
what the Reflector says, but that
it denies that the press of State
has been unfair towards Col-
Skinner but instead that he has
been treated very gently, and that
the papers have been very
able in regard to him- We con-
fess that we fail to see much gen-
and in saying
that a man is aiding and abetting
a third party, that he is placing in
jeopardy the Democratic party,
that he advises that the primaries
shall appoint men who shall select
delegates to go to Raleigh to the
Democratic Convention, take
session of the Convention, adopt
such measures as th desire, send
delegates to the Omaha
instead of the Chicago Con-
Col. has been accused
of these and various other things,
not less to be condemned. If they
are true he deserves to be severely
If they are not true it
is misrepresentation to accuse him
of them. We say that none of
them are true.
Heirs Observer says his
speeches have been correctly re-
ported. When they have been the
report states every time that he
declared himself a Democrat from
birth. He states plainly and
that he is opposed to third
party. We know he advises
ways against the formation of an-
other party. How can it be said
that he favors these things when
he openly and fearlessly opposes
them all- It would be strange
policy to favor these and declare
openly in every speech he makes
that he is opposed to them. The
only reasonable solution is that he
does not favor them but is a
thorough going Democrat. So
much for what the and Ob-
server says in reply to our
The Salisbury Daily de--
some space to the same
and says that in the main it
endorses what the Reflector says
but that in some very essential
points there is a vast difference-
It pleads guilty to but
denies misrepresenting Col. Skin-
and goes farther and says that
he deserved severer words than
were addressed to him- We refer
the Herald to what has been said
above in reference to the
against the Colonel and repeat
that the says he is not
guilty of any of these things. The
Herald assumes that Col. Skinner
favors the third party because he
has spoken at the same times and
places that Col- Polk and others
have, and advocates the demands
of the Alliance, or at least a part
of them. Col- Skinner advocates
now what he did before Polk knew
anything about such measure.-and
before the Alliance was born- He
advocated them when he was
for the Legislature by a
Democratic convention as a Dem
He advocated them in
Ha advocated diem
while in the legislature. He was
. a member of the Demo
Executive Convention of the
he advocated them and
hie Democracy was not questioned
by eve sect of the
Democrats- We would ask the
i it treason to
what the Herald is now ad-
The repeats
what it said before that Col. Skin-
is only acting consistently
when he advocates the measures
for which he is abased. Tho re-
cord of the man shows this to be
an undeniable fact- The Herald
says that Skinner has done
more to wean men from their
to the Democratic party
than all the out spoken Third
party men The doc-
he advocates then must be
popular with a large number of
Democrats. In fact if we are not
very much mistaken they are
all a part of the platform of the
Democratic party of 1890 except
the sub-treasury- That platform
also endorsed financial reform but
not the special bill known as the
sub-treasury bill. We do not see
that the advocacy on
of this measure is to be made
the test of a man's Democracy- It
is not a State matter, it would not
accomplish a thing if it were in-
in the State platform, if
every officer in North Carolina
favored it, it could not hasten its
passage as a law. Our
as has been seen could do
nothing but endorse it and instruct
its representatives in Congress to
vote for it. It is a national issue
and should not be used to disrupt
the State Democracy. We believe
that Col. Skinner will and can
have great influence in keeping
the Alliance in the Democratic
party. There was no division two
years ago and if both Alliance and
non-Alliance will concede to each
other honesty of purpose there
will be no division this time, but
when you read or drive a man out
of the Democratic party, if he don't
want to go into the Republican
party ho must go into a third
party.
The Herald says Col- Skinner
wants office as bad as the
Ton wants subscribers. This may
be true- It is certainly his
and as long as he remains the
true Democrat that he is there is
every prospect that he will set
one.
The Harold wants to know if
Reflector means to inti
mate that the men mentioned
who will not stand quietly by
and see Col. Skinner misrepresent-
ed are and pan-
to the third party crew as
Col. Skinner is stat-
ed that these men knew he was a
Democrat and therefore
back him. To show that we were
right when we made the assertion
we invite the attention of the
Herald to the following from
of the men mentioned which
written about the same time
editorial was. Col. R.
authority. In
with Jarvis article
in last was referred to
and ho remarked think you said
exactly what should have been
This looks like they will
stand by Col. Skinner. And tho
Herald should remember, too, that
only a few weeks ago it was point-
with pride to some of these
men as the Democratic tutors of
its editor. Now it should not go
back on its training.
In compliance with the request
of the Herald we insert the follow-
one
was
B.
the
The Democrats who would aid
or countenance a party which ad-
cannot win, but may and
probably will destroy, remember
that treason to the prosperity and
welfare of North Carolina has
never yet gone unpunished-
State Chronicle.
The above is commended to the
careful consideration of Col. Harry
Skinner, who while professing to
be a Democrat is aiding the laird
party machine- As Col. Skinner
does not see the Herald we ask
tho Greenville Reflector to call
his attention to the above, and to
say to him that, in the opinion of
Democrats up this way, it fits his
case Herald-
The Herald quotes the above
and says that it fits Col. Skinner's
case precisely. We think the
editor misconceives the above
quotation from the Chronicle. It
had no to men who, like
Col- Skinner, openly oppose a
party but those who favor a
third party. Col. Skinner only
advocates some of the demands of
the Alliance and to show that the
Chronicle had no reference to him
quote from an editorial written
since the above paragraph in the
same paper under the heading of
and vote in which
the Chronicle
The Democratic party
a favorable position towards the
Alliance. It recognizes the justice
of the demands made by the farm-
It can say that for years it
has made similar demands, and,
with equal earnestness, insisted
that they should be heeded. And
with the strictest consistency the
Democratic and Alliance elements
can act and vote together, because,
in every essential particular, the
same principles underly and
vitality to both.
No one doubts the Democracy of
tho Chronicle with T. R.
as its editor. What does it say T
Democratic party recognizes
the justice of the demands of the
Is a man to be read out
of the party because ho favors
what the party favors t This is
all Col- Skinner docs and in this
according to the Chronicle he is in
harmony with his party. It
says that Democratic party
for years has made similar de-
and, with equal earnest-
insisted that they should
be Is a man to be
ousted because he is laboring
for the same thing It adds
further, with the strictest
consistency the Democratic and
Alliance elements can act and vote
together, because, in every
particular, the principles
underly and give vitality to
Is Col. Skinner to be accused of
inconsistency because he fearless-
advocates the same t There is
much wisdom in the above para-
graph from that recognized Demo-
organ, the Stale Chronicle.
The Democrats and the Alliance
must vole together. It is the only
way by which we can keep from
under Republican rule which is
the worst of all supremacy of
every name.
Herald lays great stress
upon the fact that Col. Skinner
travels and speaks with Marion
Butler and others- How do you
expect to control the Alliance if
you have nothing to with it
There is not a Democratic paper
in North Carolina that does not
recognize that the Alliance vote is
to the success of the
Democratic party and there is no
political wisdom in abusing the
order, and the Democrats who as-
with them. We venture
the assertion that if this course is
continuously and generally per-
sued by the Democratic press that
North Carolina will be given over
to the Republicans and those who
do these things will be
for it.
There is much being said about
who shall go into the Democratic
We believe that if the
test that some propose is adhered
to that there will inevitably be a
third party, which would be the
saddest thing that has befallen
North Carolina since
day a H yon drive
of your primaries how on earth
can yon expect them to support
your nominees t All who are
Democrats ought, to be admitted
though they do favor some nation-
measures which tho State
Democracy does not endorse.
when you crash or cramp this
crush and cramp the Democratic
party. We want to see harmony
between the press, the politicians
and the people, so that the Demo-
banner may continue to
proudly wave over beloved
State, oven though it may n. t over
the nation.
We are not making
i on any One. for the Dem-
party, first, last and ell the
time. We are for retaining in its
ranks who are members of
the Alliance and whom the press
of the State almost without
lion have been saying that they
have confidence in as being true
Democrats. We expect to d fend
Col. Skinner as long as he
a Democrat, regardless of the fact
that he advocates the sub-treasury
from the fact that this makes him
no less a Democrat- Who doubts
the Democracy of Livingston
Who doubts the Democracy of
Alexander Who doubts the
Democracy of Grady of the 3rd
District, and A. H A. Williams of
the 5th District All of these ad-
tho same measures that Col.
Skinner does. Nothing is said
about Alexander favoring a third
party and yet he speaks and as
with Polk, Butler and
others.
We know Col. Harry Skin is
a Democrat. know the Dem-
.- i
Senator Mills changed bis mind J S a
about remaining in House . 8tH law
S W
and was on Wednesday sworn in i Slaughter, a and -is a
as a Senator. His vote will not Smith, Cicero hi a
be needed, as the wool bill will re- Lewis H a
the votes of about two-thirds j .
of Stokes D O . k
. diaries A a
The business of the House is in j stokes b IT a
such a condition that if it could m m W u stokes a
dictate the time of adjournment it
would not be later than June 1st,
but it is already apparent that the
Senate will attempt
to
increase the appropriation
bills, as passed by tho House, and
of course the House will fight to
maintain its economical figures,
which will necessarily prolong the
session.
Much has been written about
democratic dissension because of
the shelving of the free coinage
bill, but mighty little of it can be
discovered. There can be no
doubt that a majority of the demo-
in the House are in favor of
free coinage, would vote for it
if given an opportunity, but it is
equally true that a majority of the
democrats are opposed to the
of a gag rule to pass that or
any other measure. That is the
whole situation in a nutshell. Sen-
Stewart has given notice that
he will, next Monday, call up his
free coinage bill. Then we shall
see some on the same
subject republican Senate.
party needs the aid of all
its talent in the present crisis
therefore we call upon tho press
to cease to abuse and misrepresent
those who may be of great use in
the coming struggle- Harry Skin-
clarion voice and eloquent
words have electrified many a
Democratic audience in the past,
the party needs him now and we
confident in saying that he
will be and willing to obey
its behests.
in
We are sorry to some of our
friends, and some cf the editorial
guild, disposed to question Col.
Hairy Skinner's sincere democracy,
and we rise to call a halt and
counsel deliberation before
to an unjust and hasty conclusion-
Democracy is his heritage in
politics. If Harry Skinner is not
a wool-dyed, yard wide,
stalwart Democrat, then we have
got to read his history all back-
ward and the history of his line-
age for a hundred years in the
past history of North Carolina.
Before the Democratic party was
out of the old, anti-
Federal, Republican party,. the
ancestors of Harry Skinner
Perquimans county in the-I
General Assembly of North Caro-
and stood by the standard of
Thomas the great Father
of Democracy. Harry Skinner the
grandfather, James Skinner the
father, and T. G. Skinner, the
brother of Harry Skinner of our
time, have all trod the same an-
track of Democracy, and is
it just and fair to denounce one of
the best specimens of Albemarle
stock whose voice and influence
from early manhood has always
been on the side of manly
racy, because he has the courage
of his convictions and thinks the
is the best
device for the relief of the cotton
planters of the South, and yet de-
his honest opinion, that
while he loves the
much he loves Democracy more,
and if he has to choose between
them then he will cling to the
Democratic party But say his
accusers, he is an Alliance man
and speaks from the same platform
with Col. Polk. He was for the
before Col. Polk came,
and before the Alliance had an
existence- Must he retreat be-
cause Col. Polk shows himself
Has he ever uttered a word that
had not the genuine ring of the
guinea Democracy he ever
been a Democrat and
proclaimed his purpose to shuffle
off his Democratic boots, as has
CoL Polk We have faith in
Harry Skinner, in his democracy,
in his character, in his lineage, in
his fidelity and pluck, but if we
thought him Untrue to his political
faith this hand would be the last
to write one word in his
But the Democratic party
cannot afford to throw away snob
sound Democratic timber as Harry
upon a clamor. He
is no man. He is
no man, but or the people, and b the people,
and sterling Democrat that may th primaries is
WASHINGTON LETTER.
From our Regular Correspondent.
Washington, D. C, April 1st
Mr. Harrison is arranging a hole
for himself to crawl through
should the opposition to his re-
nomination grow dangerous by
concentrating upon somebody, or
should he become convinced, like
Mr- Blame, that no Republican
can be elected, by having his
friends hint it around that he will
not be a candidate unless assured
in advance that his nomination
will be made on tho first ballot-
In view of the spread-eagle com
which Mr- Harrison
recently addressed to Lord
bury, the satisfactory ending of
the controversy is a very
thing for this country,
though it must be humiliating to
Mr. Harrison when he compares
the tone of his entirely
communication, alleged by
his admirers to have been an
with that of Lord
bury, which Is extremely friendly,
and which also shows that there
was as little reason for the latest
war scare which Mr. Harrison
fathered, as there was lot the one
concerning Chili. The
part about this sort of thing
is that it causes the people to lose
confidence in the administration,
and sometime when there is real
danger of war they may refuse to
respond to its cry of
Representative Springer expects
to be able to attend next Monday's
session of the House, and move a
suspension of the rules for the
cf passing the free wool
ill, general debate upon which is
to close on Saturday. Mr. Springer
will not make a speech on this
bill, in fact his strength would not
allow him to, but he wishes to
move the suspension of the rules
for the passage of the bill of which
he is the author.
The sugar bounties already paid
by the Treasury department
and the claims
pending foot up
Boss of New York, was
over here this week holding
mysterious conferences with prom-
republicans in Congress, and
there is reason to believe that his
visit bodes no good to the Harri-
son boom, notwithstanding state-
that he had promised to
support Mr. Harrison. The only
man that ever really and
sincerely supports is Thomas C-
Ex-Representatives Owen, who
was, it was said at the time the
was made, appointed
Commissioner of
position created by the
Mr. Harrison in
order to pay one of his Indiana
political debts, is in the hottest
kind of hot water, and it is among
the possibilities that he may figure
as the defendant before a criminal
court. He is charged openly by
his superior, Assistant
Secretary with being
unfit, incompetent and
worthy, and by implication with
being dishonest- These facts have
been brought out in the
which the joint House and
Senate Immigration Committee is
conducting, and which promises
to show that some Treasury
them Assistant Sec-
rotary been very
wastefully extra if not ac-
dishonest in allowing
to be spent upon the Govern-
Immigration Station at Ellis
Island, when only had
been appropriated, the difference
being paid from find known
as The thing must
be very or
Senator Chandler, chairman of the
Senate Committee on Immigration,
who has never been accused of be-
as to public ex-
would not have been
in his examination
and ,,
who.
en mm
appeared
Tax Sale.
Pursuant to provisions of
of the laws of 1889, I
shall, beginning Monday May
2nd, at A. M . in front of the
Court House door in Greenville
sell the below described land and
town lots for taxes due for the
year 1891 and unpaid thereon
and cost for advertising the
same. J- A- K. TUCKER,
Sheriff of Pitt County.
TOWNSHIP.
John F, a, homestead
Barnhill, J D, a, Allen land IS
Jack, i a, Clark land
stock law
Bryant, Sam. a, place
stock law
Bras-ton, Nellie, a. Button land
Cory, W M. a. Nichole land,
Edwards, George, part of town lot
Edmonds, Henry, town lot C
stock law
Fleming, E V. a. ferry land,
Gorham, Dinah, i town lot,
H C, a, N land
Hardy, W C, L Elks land
W II, n, Fleming land
Harris, A lex, a. Turner land B
S M, a Johnson land
Moore, Jr. a, hind
T H, a, land
J B, a, land
May, a. land
C, n,
Norman Everett a, G
D G, a sermons land
Savage, E T. a, land
Stancill, Wilson, a, Pollard land
Tucker Murphy, a, James land
stock law
Tripp, Eliza, a,
W a, J F W land
Yellowley, J B, town lot
E C Yellowley
farm a,
Moore land a,
Nichols land a,
Yellowley, J B, cf II A Yellowley
Home place
TOWNSHIP.
II A, a, creek
Chapman, W If, a, clay root.
Cox, Fannie, a clay root
L A, a, dark land
Galloway. E a, cow swamp
Haddock, T E, a. creek
Hudson. A B, a. tar river
Aaron, a,
Mills, W F, a, Indian well
Mills, Martha J, a, poll ridge
-Mills. Henry J, a. poll ridge
Mills, Mr- J B, a, cow swamp
H A,
B B, a. land
N L, a, Grimesland
Smith, Turner, a, well
Smith, Sr, a,
Smith, Oliver, a, cow swamp
Stokes, Guilford, a, pole ridge
Sutton, Jesse Jr, a, root
Mrs E A, a, tar river
White, L H, a, cow
DAM.
W C, a, pine lug
Turner, a, gum
Murphy, J a Crawford laud
Baker, Geo B. lot in Marlboro.
Beardsley, J H, content's creek
L P, a,
Thigpen, a, Marlboro,
FALKLAND.
Atkinson, B S heirs, 1250 a More,
Braswell, A, a, Peebles place
a, part of
J, D a. part of Jordan
Jenkins, Mrs Nora. a,
Annie, a, balance due
a,
James, of Win Pippin
Estate, a, Bullock farm i
Atkinson, B S heirs by S V Joyner
for 1890, 1260 a, Atkinson
for 1891
Brown, Mrs Nancy A, a, brown
land, balance due
Cobb, Ella, a, Cobb land
a land
Corbett, A J a Teel
Fields, Amos a
J a
Pippin, a
Susan a Randolph I'd
Thigpen, tars II E a
SWIFT.
Brown, Jorge a
Cox, Fred a Indian well
Coward, Jno D W H Smith a
Freeman, JohnS half a
stock law
Gaskins, a
stock law
b F halt a land
a stock
Spier J E I town lot
Smith, Oliver a land
mills laud
D C a
w a Wilson land
D H a home laud
Smith laud
Tyson E a
Wood S Blown lot
stock law
Wilson mo D a Dan Wilson
meadow branch
Bullock, R W, Rollins a.
Carson, Jas R. a, douse place,
Farrar, O C. a, James land.
Hunter, W, by M skinner,
Rollins land,
Si-
Lee I and,
James, W Homo land,
Andrews,
Knight, E C, Bertha Hop-
kins. i Hope,
Vick, L W, a laud,
John, town lot,
Hunter, W W. by H Skinner,
Rollins,
Whichard, David acres,
W W, timber laud, J B
Little and Jacob
J C, 1600
Simon, acres,
Co, a,
Little laud,
Moore, Stanley heirs, acres,
Taft, E A, acres
C a, swift creek
F W j a. swift creek
Cox. a, F swamp
Cox, S C Sr, a, C
Cannon, W a, F swamp
Dawson, A B a
A B stock law
Ellis, Willis a, swift creek
Hart, town lot Ayden
Harrington, a swift creek
manning W S a swift creek
Moore, G a
Nobles, a swift creek
Nobles J W a gum swamp
Powell, Callie V a C creek
Powell, Callie V stock law
Patrick. IS a swift creek
Boss, Potter town lot
Sutton, a C
Sutton, stock law-
Sermons. Henry a long branch
Saml G
Richard, a Long Branch
JO
9-1
Town Tax Sale.
As Town Tax Collector I have
vied on the following lots on tho
1st day of April, 1892, listed for
taxation in town of Greenville
by the following parties who are
delinquents- And on Monday
the 2nd day of May, 1892, at
M-, I will offer tho same for
cash, to the highest bidder, at
public auction, at the Court
House, in the town of Greenville,
to satisfy tho taxes and costs
due thereon.
W. H.
Town Tax Collector.
Clark, Matilda, town lot No
Cherry, A B, town lot,
Cherry. Peggy, quarter town lot,
Evans, Lucy, town lot.
Harris, Guilford, quarter town lot,
Amos, town lot,
J C. town lot,
Lawrence, guardian, town lot, I
H t
N B Lawrence,
Murphy wife, town lot,
town lot,
Tucker Murphy, law
Williams, Matthew, fourth town lot,
Wilson, B. J., town lot,
Hanrahan, W II, and wife, town lot,
Hopkins, Wilson, town lot,
House. Luke, town lot,
Hardy. Stanly, town lot,
Notice.
I will sell at sale in the
Town of Bethel, on Saturday,
the 7th day of May, 1892, real
estate to satisfy the taxes of the
following persons for the year
and cost.
D D Andrews, lot W James
O C Farrar, cut, lot Tarboro St,
lots, V N ft R,
James St,
hotel store. S R R,
stables. James
acres land. Bethel,
Mary E James lot, W Main
lot, E James St,
lot, E James St,
J L Nelson dwelling, N B R,
lot near Academy
lot W Main St,
J U W lot, W Main St,
Lewis Hilliard, lot, N Pleasant St,
Hardy Bro, lot W Main St, SO
lot E Main St,
J W Hunter. I lot E Main St,
W H Harrington, lot E St,
lot R Main St,
lot E Main St,
lot E Main St,
Bert lot W James St, co
J S lot N R K,
Skinner, office E Main St,
Teel Pollard. store E Main St,
Albert lot E James St,
lot N Pleasant St,
H lot W M'S St,
Robert Ward est, lot W Main St,
Q Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St,
This April the 1892.
W. C.
Town Tax Collector.
For sample of our work w you to editor of the
NOTIONS,
TINWARE,
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE GROCERIES,
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE,
Harness, Whips, and Collars,
FARMING TOOLS,
Plows of the Improved Makes,
One of our
will soon visit
the Northern
Markets and
while there will
buy goods at
prices that will
command the at
of all. Realizing the hard times
and scarcity of money we will sell during
the coming Spring and Summer all goods
lower prices than ever before.- We will
be prepared to sell as low as any dealer
who sells
class goods.
We thank our
friends for past
patronage and
hope to merit a
continuance of
honest and
square dealings
to all. The
tea c h i n g s.
each generation
says c o n ft n e
your trade to
those whom
you know to
be reliable,
Come one, come all and see us.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY
Has Moved to next Door Court House
WHO, CONTINUE THE M OF
CARTS DRAYS.
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing
but WORK. We keep up with the times and Improved styles
Best material used in all work. All styles Springs are you can from
Brewster, oil, Horn, King
Also keep on hand a full of ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
he year round, which we will sell as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t
merit a continuance of the same
T. 13- Williams on.
J. SUGG,
LIFE AND FIRE AGENT.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
RELIABLE OF C
to the Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo
not to be excelled la this market. And to be an
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING,
FURNISHING GOODS. and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hat, Rock Limb, or and
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholes
Jobbers prices, cent per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lip.
teed Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
TIE HALL
A Writing
REMODELED AND IMPROVED,
GOOD MANIFOLDER.
The Best Standard Typewriter in World.
Inexpensive. Portable, No Ink Ribbon, In-
Type in all language, Easiest
to learn, and rapid as an v.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as Represented.
This Machine is everybody's friend. Every-
body should have tenting done on the
--Typewriter. It always Insures lbs most
prompt attention. Address
R COMPANY, Washington, St., Boston, Mass.
o machines can seen at the Reflector office, where particulars and
prices can U
ii.--
Accident Insurance by the year in of
the beet Companies in existence, see





READ
IF SO, OFFER IS
FOB YOU
We bare made special
with
Weekly Constitution,
The Great
by we r.; days
to offer It with the tires here
Personal.
Miss fat In Wash-
Misses Etta Harris and Lizzie
re visiting near Bethel.
Miss of Greene comity,
is visiting Mrs. J. S. Smith.
Miss EH King home lad
week from a to her stater in Wilson.
Mrs. Walter of
with
for ONE YEAR ft only
This offer lasts only a while. Now
is your chance to get all the news of all
the world and your home for the
price of one
Every clubbing subscription at rate Is
entitled to a chance at Tit
Free
of which will be found elsewhere.
This is the most remarkable
offer ever made. Every borne In
Pitt county should receive the
first, and after that, it should hare
the best General Newspaper, bringing
every week the of the world, and
overflowing with the choicest special
features, such as the Weekly
published at Atlanta, Ga., and
having a circulation of
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS.
A Splendid Dictionary
The like all other
papers, wants more subscribers, in
order to induce persons to get up a
club we have the following liberal offer
to make for the month of
Any one who will during this month
bring or send the Ten
scribe s one year with will be
given tree a splendid Webster's Una-
bridged Dictionary. This Dictionary
contains nearly 1300 pages, and em-
braces 12.000 synonyms. Copies of the
Dictionary can seen at this office.
Any om who tries to get up a club and
succeeds in getting only rive, can bring
on that number and get the
by paying extra. Ten subscribers
gets the Dictionary free to the person
raising the club. Any boy, girl or
grown person can get up a club. Start
at once so as to get a Dictionary free.
No subscriptions accepted unless ac-
companied by the cash.
UP
Local Reflections.
Mrs. Warren, of Penny Hill, is
visiting the family of hT father, Mr. S.
B. Wilson.
Miss Maggie home
last week front n visit to her sister in
Washington.
Mrs. S. of was
last week visiting the family of her father
Mr. W. M.
Sheriff Tucker Mr. W. H. Smith
went to Raleigh yesterday tr take three
prisoners to the penitentiary.
Rev. E. C. Glenn, of Elm City, is
spending the week hi town. Ills friends
are glad to know that his health is
proving.
Dr. Zeno Brown attended the launch-
of the Raleigh at Portsmouth, last
Thursday, and spent a few days with
friends in Virginia.
Our good friend Ales has
been sick the past ween, but we arc
to know is improving. Everybody
see Alex out again.
Rey. n. fl. Phelps, Evangelist for the
Convocation of will hold
vices in St. Paul's Episcopal church here
next Sunday, morning and evening.
Mr. agent for the Norfolk
Virginian, was in town Saturday and
Monday. The Virginian is a good paper
and has many readers through this sec-
Mr. Frank Wilson went north last
week to purchase the spring stock for
Young He is an excellent
judge of goods and will make good
select ions.
Don Esq., and Mr. j. L.
Bridgers. of Tarboro and Mr J. H John-
son, of Bethel, were at Court last
week, besides those attorneys mentioned
in last issue.
Prof. John Duckett, principal of Ham-
Institute, spent from Saturday
evening to Monday morning with his
friends in this place- He reports a good
school at Hamilton.
Mrs. fell out a door at
the King House, some days ago, and was
right painfully hurt. Her many friends
will learn with pleasure that is re-
covering from her injuries.
A days more weather as we
have just had and the angler will go in
search of the earth worm, and the two
together with pole and line between
them he after the small fish. Listen out
fish
Quite u large number of Presbyterian,
ministers and delegates came in on the
train Monday evening and took the boot
for Washington yesterday morning to
rein- attend the Presbytery to he held in that
town this week.
Mr. Allen Warren tells that every-
thing is in line order at Riverside
and that they are preparing for a
large trade this year. lie also told us
that a few days ago be received some
carp to place in his pond at the
Mr. J. Brooks, Grifton. was in
town Saturday, and while in the Re-
office told that his firm,
Hellen Brooks, shipped seven car
loads of shingles during the week.
Their usual average is about a oar load a
week. Their large milling plant does an
immense business and is a great help to
Grifton.
Mr. Jesse Warren and a young Mr
Dawson, of Conetoe, came down to
Greenville Sunday morning on their
bicycles, making the run in little over
two hours. The distance is about
miles. This is excellent bicycle
for ordinary roads. If the roads
generally were good bicycles would come
in to general use.
The question has been asked us if per-
sons who were taking the Reflector
before we made the clubbing arrange-
with the Atlanta Constitution are
entitled to the club offer. Certainly
they are. Any person who has paid for
the Reflector for all of this year can
be included in the club list by paying the
additional amount.
This is
This is good ban ball weather.
has opened his bakery.
On every the talk is politics.
Preparations for Easter lire in order.
This is the last oyster month till next
fall.
Buy your of D- D- Has-
Saturday was a nice all around spring
day.
The martins are putting in an
reach, pear and plum trees in
bloom.
Cakes at
b urn's.
Greenville ought to have an
ice factory.
The spring hats, a girl in them,
are pretty.
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the
Old Brick Store.
The weather will put picnics
on the program.
Leather and Rubber belting at D.
D. Haskett.
tells you something else a
supplement to-day.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros-
The last few days gave us some beau-
spring weather.
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book Store.
Flies are coming out, and that must
mean wanner weather.
Cash given for Produce, Hides,
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
An exchange it's the fast people
that don't fast in
The New Homo Sewing Ma-
chines and all parts at Brown
Bros-
Auctions were in order Saturday, two
in town at the same time.
Just received 1400 feet Rubber
and Leather Belting.
D. D. Haskett.
How about manufacturing enterprises
Greenville ought to have them.
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store-
The street cars were entirely off the
track and failed to run Monday.
inD. M- Ferry Co's
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick
Store.
If your umbrella is still keeping Lent
it can be returned in a few days.
Fob Dancy
on Pitt street Apply to
Corn planting has commenced with
the in plenty of it.
bushels fine, large Seed Pea-
nuts for sale by J. B. Warren, near
Falkland, N-
Green will be the prevailing color this
season. All the trees will wear it.
Bobs Lunch Milk Biscuit will
year appetite when nothing
else will- At the Old Brick Store-
Several Joke served as reminders that
last Friday the first day of April.
C- A Snow Co's pamphlet, In-
formation and about Pat-
Caveat, Trademarks, Copy-
rights, etc., may be obtained
at this office-
is called to the notice el
land ante y F. G. James,
All parties who tobacco to
Bell can save Warehouse charges
tad freight by bring
the prise noose on
will receive
wanted.
Cast your eyes over the columns of the
to-day and read Mrs. Fannie
Joyner's double advertisement. She has
a beautiful display of On
April 13th she will have her opening and
everybody visiting her store that day will
receive a souvenir. The
department is in full blast and com-
ladies are in charge. and
convinced.
go to some of the stores and sec
at what prices cabbage and turnips sell.
when they can be had at all, then see if
you make up your mind that
money can be made in raising them for
winter market. Our produce raisers
let many opportunities for money
slip them through failure to take
hold of such things and trying to raise
all that tin market demands.
It is getting towards time for the mer-
chants to again take up the early closing
hour.
April coming in on Friday gives us
five Fridays and Saturdays during the
month.
An oyster boat came up last Friday.
It had some ones, despite the warm
weather.
The Journal reports the Sunday School
convention in New last week the
best yet held.
Now you are Didn't pay
your taxes so the Sheriff has you in his
list of
There was not so much wind in March,
after all, and the month went out ex-
lamb-like.
The finding the lost by Miss
Nannie Cox is evidence of some of the
good a newspaper docs.
Miss Mollie Rouse gave an art
in Washington Friday night. Of
course it was a success.
The Reflector thanks Mr. W. L.
Brown, insurance agent for a supply of
nice blotters for use.
W. C. Nelson. Town Tax Collector of
Bethel, advertises a list of delinquent
tax payers In the Reflector.
Only a short while now and commence-
invitations will be occupying a
good space in the mall pouches.
The Washington G has the
est advertising patronage of any State
weekly that comes to this office.
Moon shine again, so something like
light to get along on the streets may be
expected for a few nights least.
Read C. T. new ad to-day.
He is Northern markets and on his
return will make your eyes sparkle
This is a good time to give the town a
thorough cleaning up. Best not to wait
until warm weather gets too far ad-
It seems only get a day or two of
good weather at a time. What little
comes is worked to good by
the farmers.
W. H. Harrington. Town Tax
tor of Greenville, advertises a list of
those who are delinquent In their town
taxes for last year.
It is not thought by the truckers that
the stand of Irish potatoes will be good.
Some planted six weeks ago are not yet
up. The weather has been too cold and
damp for them.
The large collard stalk which we men-
last week as being brought us by
Mr. Harrington, was raised by Mr. Jesse
Brown near Falkland. It beats any col-
lard stalk yet. exhibited.
The lawn mower will soon be getting
In its spring work. Cully Edmonds
are ready to use theirs on over-green
heads. They can do you up all right
style at their fashionable emporium.
People have been known to let their
last opportunity for becoming a Christ-
go by unimproved. Think of this
as you attend the protracted services
now in progress.
The Board of County Commissioners
at their meeting Monday, decided to re-
sealed bids until the first Monday
in May for the construction of the dam
from the north end of the bridge.
Grifton is to hare a barrel factory, and
Bethel Is taking steps to get a knitting
factory. Can Greenville afford to sit
still and let the smaller towns of the
county go ahead of he n manufacturing
enterprises r It is time our people were
waking up.
The civil docket kept the Court en-
gaged up until Friday evening week
when if adjourned for the term. But
few cases on the docket. a
hearing, as several day. were
in die ease of Ward against the W. A
W. B, B. The gave the plaintiff
Before the adjournment of Court last
Judge Bryan a change in
the sentence In the case against Tip
for secret assault, the notice
of appeal was withdrawn. The sentence
as changed is that Moore should pay E.
N. the sum of together
with the medical account
and all costs of and
be imprisoned the county jail for six
months.
Try Stock Raising.
While in town a few days ago, Mr. J.
Bryan Grimes, of was in for
a chat with the Among
other things he told he Is now build-
two large grading and pack-
houses in which to hr his next
crop. He also said that he is going
put one acres in grasses and
give attention from now on
to stock raising. He believes as fine
stock can be raised in Pitt county as any
where, and that there is good profit in it.
There will not he half as much cotton
planted on his place this year as last.
Mr. Grimes is one of the best and most
practical farmers in the county, and
other farmers should follow his ideas of
grasses and stock raising.
Revival.
Rev. G. F. Smith commenced a pro-
meeting the Methodist church
Sunday, and preached to large
both morning and night. From
the start there seemed to be much inter-
est the meeting, several persons
making requests for prayer at the Sun-
day night service. Dr. Morton,
Evangelist, preached an excellent
sermon Monday night. Rev. D. II.
Tuttle, of Tarboro, who is here to assist
in the meeting, preached last night.
are held twice each day, at
a. m. and at p. in. Every day at
p. in. a brief prayer meeting for men is
held in Germania Hall. Christians are
praying for and expecting the
of persons during the meeting.
Tax Yet.
To make Cotton at the present
prices you meat use cheap
and Boykin Camera
Chemicals an the cheapest yet
For sale by Q. E Harris, on
him before buying.
Judge Shepherd's Opinion.
Washington, N. C, June
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy has been
used by a member of my family, and the
result lit been very I be-
it be a good medicine.
as. E.
Mrs. the case to in
Judge testimony,
Washington, N. C, July 1886.
is with pleasure I mid my-grateful
testimony to the host of witnesses who
have attested the virtues of Mrs. Joe Per-
Remedy After years of
and suffering, it has proven to the
best of tonics and blood purifiers. An
obstinate, Irritable ulcer on my ankle,
from which agony for years,
seems to have healed entirely and health-
fully under Its purifying effects, and my
general health has greatly improved.
Mas. S. T. Brown.
New Music.
Collection of Popular as
arranged and played by Mrs. Joe Per-
son at the Southern Expositions,
Waltz and
Boatman
bet my In the Low
Carry Me
and several others, in all,
pieces. This collection is In regular
sheet-music form, and is
music for the home circle. The arrange-
is exceedingly brilliant
enough to lie played by any one. Price
Also a of the Blue
Alsatian with two of the
old Southern melodies added. Price SO
cents. The Collection and
Used largely in
schools. For tale by
-M us. Job Person,
Kittrell, X. C.
Land Sale.
By of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt County at March Term
1802, His H. It. Bryan Judge
presiding, in the case of W. H. Cox vs.
E. J. Blount the undersigned
will sell for Cash lief ore the Court
House door in Greenville on Monday
the 2nd day of May the following
lauds in the County of Pitt and
in Township, a one fourth
undivided interest in the land, known
as the M. J. Blount land also a one fifth
undivided Interest In the lands of J. F.
Blount. the first tract adjoins the lands
of J. L. Blount, B. F. B. W.
Briley and others, containing acres,
more or less, the other tract adjoins the
lands of W. L. Blount, the Nobles land
others containing acres, more or
less.
This April 1892.
F. G. JAMBS,
Commissioner.
Notice to Creditors.
Having been appointed by the Superior
Court of Pitt county Receiver of Green-
Combination re, notice is here-
by given to all persons indebted to said
Greenville Combination Store to make
payment to the undersigned,
and all having claims against
Greenville Combination Store must file
the same for payment properly
on or before the 6th day of April
next. B. F. TYSON.
Receiver of G. C. Store.
This 23rd day of February,
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county, of
the 5th of 1892, as
of Peggy Cherry, deceased
notice is hereby given to all persons in-
to tie estate to make immediate
payment to the undersigned, and all per-
sons having claims against the estate
must present the same for payment on
or the of March, 1898, or
this notice will be in bar of
recovery.
This 5th of Match, 1832.
Moses King,
Isaac Rhodes,
of Peggy Cherry.
LIVERY, FEED AND SALE
I have removed my stables from Five
Points to the ones formerly
pied by Mr. H. F. Keel and will
constantly keep on hand a
full line of
Horses and Mules.
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for
the livery and can suit the most
I will run in connect ion a DRAY-
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of
your patronage. Call and be convinced.
GLASGOW EVANS.
Greenville, N. O.
Money Found.
The money, which Miss Nannie
Cox lost a few weeks ago has been re-
covered. The same day on which the
money was lost a colored man went to
Mr. B. F. Patrick, who lives not far
from town, and showed a roll of money
which he said was picked up on the
street in town and asked Mr. Patrick
examine and see if it
Mr. Patrick said that it was and told the
colored man that no doubt somebody had
lost it and if the man would allow him
to take care of It the owner might offer
some reward which he could get for
finding it. The man consented to leave
the money with Mr. Patrick, saying he
would come back in a few days to see If
any information as to the owner had
bee a found. When Mr. Patrick got his
Reflector the week and read the
Item about Miss Cox losing some money
he was satisfied that this found by the
was what she lost. The col-
man went back a few days later to
learn If Mr. Patrick had heard anything.
He was told about the item in the paper,
and learning that no reward was offered
with It he did not want give the
money Mr. Patrick told him this
was wrong, that be sure the money
belonged to Miss Cox that if he
would let her know about it she would
reward The said he needed
some money and wanted Mr. Patriot
let have of it, bat this was de-
dined. He then told Mr. Patrick to hold
on to it awhile longer and left. Mr.
Patrick let it be known that the money
was in hit possession and on Tuesday of
last week a brother of Miss Cox went to
see Urn about t- The Was a
roll as she lost it. . delivered
to Mr. Om and fas Ml fas with
Patrick for the
the colored what
Mr. Patrick had to took the V
n Mir
Ocracoke Hotel
Sealed proposals for renting Ocracoke
Hotel for one or three years will be re-
and opened April Sin, 1892.
The Board reserve the right to accept
was good money, or reject any or all bids.
C. M. BROWN.
Washington, N. C.
APRIL 13th.
On the 13th I will have on
exhibition the
and cheapest lot of
ever
brought place, in fact
defy competition. My
goods most go regardless of
. , Call and be con-
that we will you Hard
Time prices. Each caller on Open-
Day will be with a Sou-
at the door. In connection with my
Millinery will conduct
And have secured the services of Misses Margie and
Cherry, both ladies of wide reputation and taste and up to
the styles either French or American. Prices will compare with
other dressmakers of the town. cut and fit at shortest
notice. Come one, come all.
If you fail to sec the brand new stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
------that is now being offered by------
W. H. WHITE.
------1 jut the to suit-----
f GENTLEMEN.
LADY,
HOUSEKEEPER,
FARMER.
BODY ELSE .
If you want to wear or anything
to eat, or any article to go in the house,
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece
of old stock in the house.
My prices will be found as low as
able goods can be sold at.
W. H. WHITE.
Two doors from C, A.
near Five Points.
WATCH TOWER,
Published Semi-Monthly.
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity,
cation, General Intelligence Send
for Sample Copy. Office of Pub-
Greenville, N, C.
Editorial Office, Wash-
N. C.
h.
D. W. DAVIS, Associate.
Sale of Land to Pay Debts.
Pursuant to an order from the
Court of Pitt county, the under-
signed sell to the highest bidder, for
cash, at Che House, in
county, at auction, on Mon-
day, the 4th day of April. the fol-
lowing described real estate, of which
John Whitehurst died seized and
A tract of land lying on the north
side of Creek In Bethel town-
ship, Pitt comity, State of North Caro-
adjoining the lands of J. M. Man-
Roderick Matthew. John A.
Manning, the Teel heirs and others,
known as lots No. and in the lands
of the late John Whitehurst, and being
the land devised to It. D. Whitehurst
IS. It. Whitehurst the will of tho
said John Whitehurst containing seven-
acres, more or less.
The share of said tract of land de-
vised and bequeathed to John A. White-
by John adjoining
the land that James K. Whitehurst sold
to William Ford, containing
acres, more or less.
The tract of land known as the share
of the John land devised and
by him to Ann E Carson.
containing seventy-five acres, more or
less, adjoining the land of John A.
The share of said tract of land de-
vised and bequeathed to W. S. White-
by the will cf John Whitehurst,
containing seventy-live acres, more or
less, adjoining the land of Ann E. Car-
son.
This March 4th, 1893.
R. J. GRIMES,
John Whitehurst
By J. H. JOHNSTON
Tobacco Growers
Tobacco Furnace
The best Invention ever made for
With it you have absolute
control over heating your barn,
and it
All of Fire.
Two per week can be
made in the same
co of different degrees of ripe-
can be cured at one time in
the same barn. Saves labor and
fuel.
For further particulars ad-
dress
PHELPS,
Greenville, N. C.
this paper when you write.
TO
-----If you want to save-----
Witty
in the purchase of a PIANO from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
N. C.
Agent for
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 lulled States.
Made by Paul G. who is at this
time one of the beat mechanics and In-
of the Thirteen new
patents on high grade
Also the NEWBY EVANS UP.
RIGHT PIANO which has been sol by
him for the past six years in the eastern
part of this state and up to this time has
given entire satisfaction The Upright
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from
f-200 in Rosewood, Oak,
Walnut or Mahogany cases.
Also the CROWN PARLOR ORGAN
from to in solid or Oak
cases.
Ton years experience in
business has enabled to handle
nothing but standard goods and he docs
not hesitate to say he can sell any
musical instrument about per cent,
cheaper than other agents lire now offer-
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina.
Laud Sale.
By virtue of a order of the Clerk of
the Superior Court of Pitt county in the
case of J. B. Bullock, administrator of
John I. Lewis, against Harriet Ann
Lewis and Susan Lewis, the
will sell for cash before the Court House
door in Greenville on Thursday, the 21st
day of April, 1892, the following de-
scribed piece or parcel of land lying in
township, Pitt county, adjoin-
the lands of Joseph H. Clark. Thomas
Thomas, the Harriet Bunting land, the
land of Gilbert and con-
acres, more or less.
This March 1892.
J. B. BULLOCK,
F. G. JAMES, Atty.
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.
We'll not be a April fool and wait until this
month is gone before we buy, it will be too late.
C. T. is now the Northern Markets
purchasing our e SPRING Those in need of any
thing in the DRY GOODS line, NOTIONS, Ac.
be benefited by visiting before purchasing, as we most clear
Fall and Winter Woods to room for our new ones.
Spring Goode will not be sold at cost, but will be sold as low
as those advertised at cost. All are invited.
DON'T FORGET THE PLACE.
C. T. M FORD,
Opposite Old Brick Store.
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS.
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading
a ad we are still in that position. Rivals at-
tempt to follow our methods but find that we
lead them a merry chase and they finally give
it up or come to grief.
Elegance and durability, coupled with low
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods
and Notions in the lead.
BROWN BROTHERS.
COMMISSION MERCHANT,
------AND OF------
Country Produce.
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I -will give you the
highest market price for them pay in spot
cash.
If you anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a. small commission.
Call and sec me.
JNO. S.
LET ME HAVE YOUR
ORDERS
FOR
COBS, C. C. COBS,
Pitt Co H. C. Pitt Co. M. C.
T. H. GILLIAM
Co. N C
Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
Commission Merge ants.
NORFOLK, VA.
of CON k
We have Lad many years ex
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to our
hands win receive prompt and
careful attention
L. W. DAVIS.
------MANUFACTURER FINE------
HAVANA CIGARS
-AND-
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
Strength
If you are not feeling and heal-
thy, try Electric
has left weak and ass
Bitters. This remedy
on Stomach and
Wing those o
f If with Sick
trial win tats is
bottles
TOBACCO FLUES
I want to begin in time this year.
L. H. PENDER,
For S. E. ft CO
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
a.
Headquarters for the following lines of Good
COTTON MARKET is lower now than at any former period
about forty years; this has been brought about by the
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large
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 per bale
and hold it until May or June if so desired-
Very truly,
BARNES,
VIRGINIA
Car load Mesa Pork.
Car load Side Meat.
Car load all
Car load White Seed
Cages Star Li.
Case Bread Powders.
Cares Soap.
Cases brandy and Peaches.
Full line Case Goods.
n. c.
Boxes Crackers.
Boxes Tobacco.
W Boxes Starch.
Barrels Stick Candy.
Barrels Gall Ax Sr
Barrels
P.
Paper Sacks, Cheroot .
w ,.
G. E. HARRIS,
DEALER IN
M,





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A on Dr. on
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Hill and
April
Jr., to
morning after a torn- of two
weeks through the west The regular
sermon of the day was preceded by a
review of current events, entitled
in which most
hearty and approval were ex-
tended to his militant neighbor, whoso
church is across the street from
Association -mil. He
It has been suggested, since the recent
explosion of a sacred bomb from the
Madison square that a worthy
successor to Dr. Crosby has been found
in Dr. by the directors of
Society fox the Prevention of Crime.
True. And they have found a man of
aggressive power who will press the
work far beyond any point ever before
reached in its history.
DIGNITY OP A
With all my heart welcome him to
this work. I bid him Godspeed. I ex-
tend to him the right hand of Christian
sympathy and fellowship. May his heart
never grow weary and his arm never
grow weak We of course mingle our
tears with those who spell their piety
with a capital P. over the fact that so
great a preacher has fallen into
This is too bad. then,
after all, it is well to remember that a
dead preacher never makes a sensation.
The most dignified preacher I ever saw
was a corpse.
What has been given to this
terrific indictment of Now York's
life
The friends of truth and righteousness
have given generally most hearty sup-
port so far as the public press has
spoken.
THE CHICKEN.
And yet a few decent newspapers
have expressed regret that the preacher
denounced crime so vigorously without
having in Ms possession documentary
evidence to fix the crime on individual
I criminals What nonsense The fact
I of crime is one thing; the fastening of
that crime the individual culprit
is another. It is not necessary to find
feathers in tho teeth of to know
the fact that I have lost a chicken. It
is my duty to proclaim my loss. The
fixing of is the duty of the officer
of the law. The failure to fix that guilt
does not restore the chicken or make my
loss any less a painful fact
Tho response on the part of the
directly attacked has been quick
and painful. Tammany has wept
briny, globular
tears Tammany weeps not at her own
sins but at degeneracy of the modern
in falling so low as to mention
its name before a decent audience.
Well, it is rather hard on the
but hard things must be done sometimes,
if Tammany's sense of the sacred and
the worshipful is shocked
And then the keepers of houses of ill
fame whose business has been inter-
by this episode have joined their
melodious voices with he chorus of
Tammany and Tammany's brilliant
hand organ hard by the city hall, and
all together these three birds of a
weep a dirge over the harm done the
morals of the young by this indecent
preacher This trio weeping over the
wounded morals of the city forms u
spectacle that should bring tears to the
pavement stones of the Bowery
BY SKA.
Dr. has only touched the
facts. He might have gone much
farther. With the positive zeal of a
child in a new world, to whom all was a
revelation, he has only picked tip a few
pebbles on the seashore of a city's
fathomless shame
Is it necessary to prove that the sun
shines at noon because an owl hoots at
the idea Bah
Do we not all know that police cap-
enter office poor and come out rich,
and grow rich on a salary barely
for the modest support of a family
Only last Saturday a gentleman told
me that to his personal knowledge the
police captain of his district had lived
for years in rear of a notorious house
of prostitution, and that the citizens of
that street had appealed in vain for re-
dress. To uncover these villainies is
next to impossible, because they are
compacts between criminals and
those who represent tho law itself.
WHO IS
But who is really responsible for all
this is a minority, and
ways has The citizen king who
forgets it on the day of election. The
criminal upper who prove trait-
ors to their country and their God by
loafing instead of voting. The men who
in their greed for personal
they please to call private
the affairs of the city to go
to the devil. The preachers of the past
and present who have spoken smooth
things and cried peace, peace, when
there was no peace. The preachers
called to proclaim the kingdom of
righteousness who have been awed
into submission by bullies and com-
to hold their tongues, and have
held them, and gone on whining and
sniveling and visiting old women and
children, while the world has laughed
at them as sexless monstrosities
ADAH JUDAS
If for the last twenty years we had
heard less about Judas Iscariot and
more about bis modern successors, there
would be fewer of his ilk still holding
the bag. If we bad heard less about
the fall of Adam and more about the
fall of our aldermen, population of
Canada might have been much larger,
with corresponding benefit tons. It we
had heard less about Moses and more
about the mayor, we might be nearer
ideal of Moses today.
Let Dr. go with his
work. But will come of it The
kingdom Th kingdom of
at But the remedy will
be found at last, not in the courts. It
win be found in the ballot box behind
A campaign for the
of crime to be efficacious must
begin before primaries, continue till
the sun goes down on tho day of
and promptly begin again next
morning.
THE IN
I have set
shall never hold their peace
day
Shall the clergy interfere with
ties If by clergy we a peculiar
class differentiated from tie rest of man-
kind, with a peculiar aim
by peculiar whose and
principles ate in ease antagonistic
to the rest of then I say no.
Such a class should with
They have right to exist The
result of such a class in society is evil
The foundation of the
power t Jena said, have
you and sent yea
act choose a title. Be
did mat choose a He did
a a Be
chose as of
I class
., I
a i MM
to teach, and. have power In teaching
simply as my in worthy. The
minister should be first a. man.
The of
of man in entire
Should the preacher then teach
I maintain it ix not
to but that no man can fill
a Christian and do duty with-
I out teaching politic.
no pulpit hi these times
i can maintain vital with
whole man that ignores the world of
politics. Dr. Strong baa well said in
one of his addresses at the Evangelical
Alliance that the great question that
confronts modern Christianity is not
primarily one as to the authenticity or
authorship of certain sacred books, but
it is whether Christianity has within it
vital power; whether it can save man as
he is today; society today; commerce
and business today. preacher that
does not touch the world vitally has no
power to move the world.
used to look on a preacher with a
sort of curious contempt I did not
class my father in this thought of a
preacher. Knowing him as did in all
the intimate relations of home as the
man, meeting him in all sorts of con-
and having all sorts of personal
interviews and encounters with him in
the process of life, I did not include him
in this concept I once had an idea
that a clergyman was a sort of sexless
monstrosity, not quite a man. not a
woman. I have encountered this idea
frequently in world of today. There
are a great many people who thus re
preachers, and the roan who holds
the preacher in such esteem is a man
whose life cannot be touched by the
preacher's words. People do not have
respect for a power that does not lay
hold of life.
AT ALBANY.
Those medical students with their
knives began to slash a dead body.
They joked about the corpse, treated it
with the utmost contempt, but when
one of them inserted his knife the corpse
sat up and looked around, and those
young men got up and moved out of
that building. They got out in a
Their respect for that man rose at least
in sixty seconds. The secret
of this increase of respect was simply
the manifestation of life.
No preacher can move the modern
world who does not lay a firm grasp upon
the life of that modern world. All
problems are today social prob-
and all social questions are
cal questions. Every scheme of
every dream of madman, every
theory of nihilist, becomes at last a
of politics. The villain who sits
down in the secret chamber of his own
darkened heart and concocts a plan of
enlargement of his life of vice will have
a bill introduced at Albany, if you do
not watch him, to legalize his methods.
Political questions are now inseparably
woven and interwoven with questions
of religion and of society. You can no
more separate them than yon can tear
out the heart of the civilization of the
century.
SPIRITUALISTIC MEDIUM.
preacher must teach
tics, because his work is the application
of to the sum total of human
The preacher cannot survey the
relations immediate between God and
man. I can reach man's real relations
with God only by a survey of his
with man. When I want to
if my people are in tho ways of
righteousness, if they are in harmony
with God, do not seek a spiritualistic
medium and ask for a message from this
spirit world about certain individuals.
simply go down into everyday life and
find out how these people are living.
What are their relations at home, to
their neighbors, in their business As a
man's relations to his fellow man arc,
wholly so are his relations with God.
The sum total of human relations there-
fore is the field of the divine survey on
the part of him who his compass
in the name of the Lord. Here we find
the test of character. Hera We find the
secrets of the heart of man. The Gos-
therefore, must be taught. It must
be applied. It must be rubbed in. Salt,
if it save, must be thus rubbed in. The
fact is its saving quality is entirely de-
pendent upon this closeness of
FOR
If men say you must preach
Gospel, I agree with them. A man
must learn the multiplication table be-
fore ho can make progress in world
of mathematics. He would be a great
fool to stop when he learned the multi-
plication table. He has only then mas-
the first principles. has only
gotten his standard of measurement.
and all the work has got to be done.
Twice two is four. Exactly. That is a
glorious truth. It will not do to stop
there. Twice two is four. You owe
your neighbor four dollars; nay it This
is applied mathematics. This is vital
Christianity. trouble with men is
that they simply desire to hear an ab-
theory proclaimed winch applies
to another man. while they invent means
of escaping its application to their own
person. The man that shoots at nobody
hits nobody. If I fire in the air every
Sunday I shall certainly have no results.
It is my duty to shoot straight at the
men and women who are before me. If
they do not like it I cannot help it If
they are displeased it is no affair of
mine. They can get in a good humor
again. It is not my business to please,
to teach the truth.
OP THEIR
But the old familiar argument is, yon
are outside of your sphere, you-cannot
understand the situation. I am sorry
for the preacher who is out of his sphere
when he enter politics, for if a man
keeps out of politics in this world his
sphere is a very small affair. These
great and skillful politicians declare
that the preacher does not understand
the machinery of law and the enforce-
of law. He misunderstands the
duties of the district attorney. He sup-
poses, in his blundering way, that the
district attorney is a detective. Where-
as his duty is very clearly defined along
another line. So die preacher is de-
barred from telling the truth, because
be cannot understand the technicalities
of the processes of politics.
absurd.
It is not necessary for me to be able to
calculate the of
sun in order to know the difference be-
tween the truth and a lie. I need not
study differential to tell a thief
from an honest man. of
moral truth is so simple that a
man, though a fool, Bead not err
therein. Bight is right and wrong is
wrong, and from the time man begins to
think be sits in this
It is not necessary to
the technicalities of trades to
know the principles of truth, a is a
good tone to remember, the face of
inch pretensions, the fact that any hen
can lay an egg. I cannot perform that
feat; but I fearlessly maintain that I am
a better of eggs than any hen in
America. The politician the
preacher to take care of be
takes in earth. He forgets the fact that
the preacher's is to
there be anew
TAM sT
Of all toe cries that have
the ears of
.-Was who thus
of the
are the very Who
care that Gospel.
who cries for the Gospel when
his pastor has preached a practical
on- temperance and prohibition, is
the man keeps a demijohn at home
under the bed. The man who cries for
the simple Gospel pastor
preaches a sermon on the cf giving
his money to the cause of man, is the
man who loves a dollar and holds
it and it until yon can hear the
eagle scream. Tammany Hall weeps
over the disgrace of the pulpit Tam-
many Hall sheds bitter tears over the
corruption of the church. Wonderful
tears are these It seems to me that all
the crocodiles of Florida should come
sweeping the bay in pure
at the flow of these tears.
I do not think I ever heard of tit one
outcry that was just equal to V is.
heard of a man once who was crying In
great pain. He was a wooden
man. He declared that he wept from
the pain caused by the development of a
knothole in wooden leg. Perhaps
Tammany is sincere in this cry, bat I
am sure that if Tammany is really
wounded by this assault on its reverence
and piety the wound is inflicted in a
of Tammany's body that is not es-
to its vital relations. Oh, the
sham and humbug of the hypocrite who
whines today over tho degeneracy of a
pulpit whose altar they have heard
the cry of righteous indignation
INVENTION OF THE DEVIL.
The preacher must teach politics, be-
cause the preacher is learning more and
more that there is no real distinction
between things sacred and things
The distinction between things
and secular is purely artificial. It
was an invention of the devil to deceive
the elect Heaven is described as a re-
deemed city, a redeemed municipality
in which man in his relations to man-
individual, social, economic, political
is redeemed. All channels of love and
beauty am truth through which the
human and divine excellence enter the
soul of sacred. AH
work is sacred. All man's relations in
the world of labor are sacred. Tho
smith at his forge, the inventor at his
workbench, the scientist in his
the teacher in his
man teaches the secrets of nature or
God, he is teaching truth, and all
truth is divine truth. The mechanic
who toils with his tools is not in a
world. His work is unto the Lord;
and, done well, it is holy.
WRECK AT DEAL BEACH.
What a magnificent illustration of this
truth we have in the stranded vessel
that is now being dashed to pieces by
the waves on Deal beach. A great steel
merchantman was this ship just from
her docks, feet long, feet wide,
with four masts. With all her sails set she
started her first journey; but over-
whelmed in March storms on
her first trip, she was dashed upon the
beach and wrecked. But now
in his shop, a workingman has invent-
ed a steam engine that drives the ship
through the waves. Now they launch
from her docks a great black monster in
sea, loaded to her water line with
bread for the starving. On through
tin very winds and storms, through
the bowling tempests of March, over
waves, through darkness
and rain end sun and the fury of the
tempest that magnificent ship plows
her way.
On, on; she does not pause. On swift
wings of mercy, with tireless lungs of
stool, plows across the storm swept
on her errand of mercy to a
nation. And now in a far away
foreign port the bread is unloaded and
carried to the starving, and the Greek
church of Russia sends down its priest-
hood and they bring this ship of mercy
into the port, and the priests take posses-
of her and hold a service of thanks-
giving aboard, and bless the great
messenger of mercy. And we hear
through all this the voice of the great
Master, was hungry and ye gave me
Before a sail in ship could have
touched Russia her starving millions
would have been beyond help
OF CITIZENSHIP.
The state is a function of-the church.
Constitutional government itself rests
upon the principle of love to man and
deference to the wish of others. Con-
government does not rest
upon the lire force of a majority. The
battle is i always to the strong, nor
race to the swift. Two men have
whipped three as often as three have
whipped two in the history of the world.
The count of noses is not the principle
on which modern constitutional govern-
rests. It rests the great
of love to one's fellow man.
Five Christians meet together. Three
agree upon one view, two another.
The two yield to the three and allow
them to rule, not because the three could
whip tho two, because of this
of love.
Patriotism is a religions sentiment.
We love our country, not against the
world, but because it is a part of the
world which God made. The nation's
hymn was sung by a sweet old Christian
My country
Sweet land of liberty,
O thee I sine.
Laid where my fathers died,
I of the pride.
From every aide
Let freedom
ore, are inseparable from
religion. True politics is religion. A
man that fulfills his duties as a citizen
has fulfilled one of his deepest religious
duties. No man can be a consistent
Christian in America today and not
take active part in politics. The
of citizenship are the
of kingship. They cannot be
delegated to others. To fail to fulfill
them is to fail to fulfill a sacred and
divine trust
AGITATE AGITATE AGITATE
Do you ask what good will it do Do
you ask what is the use for the preacher
to go in his and denounce
evils of our municipal and civil life
You say that nothing comes of it Yon
say why keep it up Only suppose the
twenty years ago had spoken as
fearlessly and as fully and as
on these matters as it has spoken
within the past year in this city. If
had Urns been faithful during
the past twenty 3-ears it would be
for such an organization as Tam-
many Hall to rule this city today. Be-
cause tho pulpit has not done Its duty in
the past, public sentiment has been so
debauched that have reached has
condition in which we had to-
day. Let the continue to preach
on politics, to teach on politics, without
the fear of man or devil, hi season and
oat of season, from year to year,
victory crowns the effort or defeat
and as as God tires there rise
who will grasp
tie of government and make
the city at for the of the
Lord.
I want to say to you rafts.
feat ya. w i the
Ufa.
Tammany
that has
it . . .
i mm to, w
lave. fanny
bus the
i Is there any man before me this morn-
tag fool enough to believe that if he lot
alone politics will let him alone
Mo tragic blunder could be made.
Let alone and the reign of filth
at your city hall will pollute the very
water you drink. Let polities alone and
your streets will be piled with rubbish
and disease win hold its riot Let pol-
alone and the pestilence born of
this heaped rubbish will steal through
open window and drop the seeds of
death into the sleeping form of
loved one. Oh, yes, you will let politics
alone, politics will not let you alone.
You let politics alone and politics builds
a saloon opposite your home. Yon let
politics alone and politics establishes a
brothel on tho. way between house
and the school to which your boy goes;
establishes a gambling den within touch
of that school door and surrounds it
with a cordon of saloons.
The questions paramount interest
to today are the questions of today,
not the questions of years ago. It
is of interest to know how many wives
Abraham had. The old man doubtless
had his weaknesses. We recognize that
fact, it may important to teach
the world all the facts about his life.
I would tell you a mightier prob-
today for you and me than how
many wives Abraham had. It is, how
many wives has the district attorney of
I Hew York city This is a question of
paramount interest
the scarlet woman.
It was doubtless a very wicked thing
which Ananias and Sap phi did when
they lied- and tried to rob the Lord,
I'll tell you a mightier question than
the one involved in what Ananias and
Sapphira did. It is this, Has not Ana-
Tammany formed an unholy com-
pact with the scarlet woman to rob
the protection of law your homes of
their virtue and manhood It was a
very mean thing for David when be
robbed the poor man of his one little
j lamb. We have no excuse for
j David. But mightier problems confront
today. It was bad for David of old
; to steal one little ewe lamb; how
about your modern David, who steals a
whole flock of sheep at one time How
about your modem David who can steal
a whole and seek even more to
steal a whole nation as a reward for bis
first feat I do not about
these facts, but say these are questions
of tremendous import.
If you say to had better get
out of the way; you will be run over if
you interfere with politics. Yon had
better keep out of the way of the pro-
cession; you are overstepping your
you are set Am If
I am set aside by entering the ministry
i I do not know it If I know my work,
I I have the broadest field of any man
I who speaks to the modern world. Shall
the cut of my coat or the style of my
collar prevent me from serving man
and thus from serving God I do not
i wear a peculiar coat or n peculiar collar.
If my coat interferes with my work I'll
take it off and go in my shirt sleeves. If
my collar interferes I will wear no col-
The service of man is the service of
God. All that interferes with my
ice of God in thus seeking to save man
is an interference with the vital
of my manhood and my ministry.
Mr. and Mrs. Loren keep-
the Gov. Stand
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a
lighter, tour years old. April site
was taken down with followed
with a and turning into
a fever. Doctors at home I
treated her, but in vain, he
rapidly, until she was a mere
she tried Ur.
Ne Discovery and after two
and a half bottles was completely cured.
They Dr. King's New is
worth its weight In gold, yet you
get a trial bottle free at Drug
store.
Consumption Care
This Is beyond question the most
Cough Medicine we over
Mid, a few doses invariably cure the
worst cases of Cough. Croup and Bron-
while won. the
cure of Consumption is without a
in the history of since its
first discovery it has been sold on
n test which no oilier medicine
can stand. If you have a cough we earn-
ask you to try It. Price
If your lungs are sore, or
hick lame, use Plaster.
Sold at DRUG SToRK.
A for
I speak not willingly, but out of the
necessity of truth telling. The Indian
east of the Rocky mountains is to me
the subject of an admiration which is
the stronger the more nearly I find him
as he was in his prime. It is not his
fault that most of his race have
It is not our fault that we have
better uses for the continent than those
to which he put it
it is our fault that he is, as I have
seen him, shivering in a cotton
full of holes, and turning around and
around before a fire of wet wood to
keep from freezing to death; furnished
meat if ho been enough to
make us fear him, left to starve if he
has been docile; taught, aye, forced to
beg, mocked at by a religion ho cannot
understand, from the mouths of men
who apparently will not understand
debauched with rum, despoiled by
the lust of white men in every form that
lust can take. Ah, it is a sickening
story. Not in Canada, do yon say Why,
in the northern wilds of Canada are dis-
peopled by beggars, who have been
in such pitiful stress for food and
that the Hudson Bay company has
kept them alive with advances of pro-
visions and blankets winter after win-
Ralph in Harper's,
Answer This Question.
Why do -i many people
seem to prefer to suffer and be made
Indigestion, Constipation.
Dizziness, Lots of Appetite, Coming up
of Yellow Skin, when for T-.
we H Shiloh's Vital int.
to cure them Sold L.
Drug Store.
Rev. Father
as he is called by all the boys
about town, is the pa-tor of St. Leo's
church. East Twenty-eighth, street. He
is a rollicking, good natured man about
forty-five years of age, thoroughly
democratic in his ideas and a little bit
inclined, I think, to resent the restrictive
policy of the hierarchy. In fact he has
been strongly suspected of
He loves the good things of this life and
one of his favorite stamping grounds is
restaurant He is quite a
favorite in society and as a diner out
has few equals. It was thought at one
that he was very anxious to secure
for himself the title of
That was before Capel had ran his ca-
and am inclined to suspect that
the recalcitrant tendency on toe part of
is traceable to the fact
that his ambition has been
hot a bettor storyteller in
town than He reminds
me very much of those rollicking, good
natured Irish priests for whom we are
indented to Charles Lever. Not long
ago I had the honor to serve as a judge
of a literary society debate in
hall, lather was the
jury also. While the anteroom
the good father told two or three
delightful stories, not one of which
could well have been printed of
a newspaper, and he was alto-
that the literary
proceedings of the evening lost some
their charm for A.
New York Recorder.
William Lloyd Garrison has great
faith in the refining power of woman, it
would seem from his address on
cation before the Woman's Suffrage as-
According to his idea, the
separation of the sexes in college is so-
unwise. The criticism that he
would make applies to
and Smith, as well as to Harvard,
Yale and Princeton. The monastic sys-
there obtaining helps to perpetuate
injurious and artificial social
beyond the college walls. The
remedy which ho recommends for
excesses among men is co-
To quote his
Throw open the doors of Harvard to
women on equal terms, absorb the an-
into the college proper, and as the
night follows day scholarship will rise
and dissipation fall by the law of
The moral atmosphere will find
immediate purification and the daily
association of brothers and sisters in in-
pursuits impart a breadth of
view which is an education in itself.
Then the double and false of
judgment will be abandoned. What is
morality for Harvard will no longer be
deemed destructive for Wellesley. The
current philosophy of Cambridge holds
that a man may commit acts and in-
in sights that would damage for
life the reputation and prospects of a
woman student
Among Harvard's benefactors, how
many generous and disinterested women
are enrolled. Their gifts are ever
come, but its degrees not for female
hands. In Massachusetts, where for
forty years the struggle for equality has
found its ablest champions, the prizes of
learning most coveted are disdainfully
withheld from women. hope my
will live to see a woman president
of Harvard college, and the thought of
sex relegated to the monasteries and
nunneries of the Dark Ages.
The best salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores. Salt Rheum.
Fever Sores happed Hands.
Corns, and all Skin
i ions. positively cores Piles, or no
pay required. It hi guaranteed to give
satisfaction, or money refunded
at cents pet box. For sale at
s.-re.
ant
The dresses worn by Mrs. Russell B.
Harrison, tho daughter-in-law of the
president, have attracted much
in Washington this winter, and
some comment, from the fact that until
within two years or so her husband's in-
come would not have been sufficient to
provide for expenditures of such an
amount as her costumes must have cost.
It has been said that President Harrison
himself added to his son's income some-
thing every year for the purpose of
enabling the women of his family to
make a good showing in society. The
facts of the matter, however, are that
Mr. Harrison has never given Russell
an allowance for dressing his wife, but,
owing to fortunate investments of
young Harrison made through the ad-
vice of Secretary of War Elkins, he is
now practically in independent
stances.
It is said that Russell B. Harrison's
connection with certain New York illus-
papers was at first nominal, so
far as any expenditure of money upon
his part was concerned, and it is now
known that for at least a year after he
joined his interests with those of Mr.
his compensation from him was
only per month. Young Harrison
however, naturally thrifty, and he
has been able by the opportunities of-
him through his father's official
position to meet many men of wealth
and prominence, who have let him in on
the ground floor on several schemes
which since turned out profitably.
It is only fair to say t hat none of these
have had any connection with govern-
work or have been dependent in
any sense upon official
Brooklyn Eagle.
To Up
Your System and
You-strap
Invigorate your Liver and
Purify Your Blood
Strengthen your Nerves and
an Appetite
Take that I lent Medicine.
P- P. P.
Ash, Poke Root and
Afoul a
It is rumored that popular
is not the spring chicken that his
business manager would fain have us
believe him to he. We learn from a
credible source that he was a suitor for
Helena heart and hand as
far back as MM, at which time he was .
of piano playing in con-
at But he was cut
out by Count Charles
ski, political editor of the Daily
It is furthermore narrated
that the constant practice of eating
lemons has given to hair
the peculiar tint and still more peculiar
which it so remark-
able a feature of
News.
CATARRH
A for Catarrh,
Canker and
bottle there at an
tor the mere
If yon are not feeling and heal-
thy.
ha ton weak and Klee-
Bitters. This remedy acts directly
on Liver. and Kidneys,
those organs their
If yon with Sick
you III And speedy and per-
relief taking rs.
trim will convince that this is
the remedy need. Large bottles
wily No.
Nearly everything grown to the
or tropic zones can be grown
without artificial protection from the
natural climate somewhere la Cali-
Thia fact has led Mr. James
to believe that coffee can be
added to the list of profitable crops
produced in this state, ha order to give
this theory a practical test Mr.
I with Mends in to
supply him with coffee and
thaw will be planted in the famous
belt of the Sierra near
T people to bay Dr. Sage's
Remedy, at bottle, to
make up One failure
take the profit Hum sales. Its
profess to cure in the
and even chronic c if
they fail they for their
Not in newspaper bat it haul
cash Think of whit it
to put that in the mean it.
ltd makes believe in the remedy.
Isn't Ii worth a trial Isn't any trial
to cat
Alter all. the mild agencies are the
best. Perhaps they work more slowly,
hut they work Dr.
Pleasant Pellets are ail active agency
out quiet and mild. They're sugar.
ad. to take, nor
derange he an half their power
is the mild way in which is
done. Smallest. easiest to
take. One a dose. Twenty cents a
vial. all
Until a recent morning Charles Bar-
of St Mary's, O., owned a hound.
Ho was a good coon dog and kind to the
children, and had the respect and con-
of the
Mrs. Barber mode some light bis-
set them behind the stove to rise
and went visiting, leaving alone.
saw those biscuits. He was only
canine after all, and he couldn't resist
the temptation. He ate those raw bis-
Mrs. Barber always makes good
yeast. Those continued to at-
tend strictly to kept
right on rising. Soon began to
think he had made a mistake. His
was confirmed an hour later
when a muffled explosion in the kitchen
startled passers by and caused them to
make an investigation.
Tho same unkind fate that had robbed
Mr. Barber of a mess of warm biscuits
for supper had deprived him of his fa-
coon Chicago Inter
Ocean.
X. C.
WEBB. Esq.
Washington, D. C.
My For the benefit of
those who suffer Nervous Debility
in my opinion no
cine will give the permanent relief to be
the use of the
I have had one fa my family for
early a year, and do not hesitate to
It is to us.
Ill my own of Nervous
which was all the horrors the
in Us Went form. I found It gave
relief when everything else railed,
and feel confident its use laid the
for fie good health now enjoy
after three of suffering, such as
few men could stand.
Very truly yours. W. R.
A Remarkable Record.
Rev. Dr. Edward has completed
a forty pastors to over the Con-
church at Greenland, N. H.
This church is remarkable for minister-
permanency.
One hundred and eighty-six years old,
it has had seven ministers, the first
two pastorates covering ninety-seven
Letter.
The infant reason grows apace and
culls for one more application of that
good friend. Salvation Oil. which never
disappoints hut always kill- pain.
It neither pleasant nor profitable
hear people constantly coughing when
could he easily -5 cent
bottle of Dr. syrup.
M. speaking of the boasted
culture of Bostonians,
have always heard that Boston
prided itself on its love of literature, but
I am inclined to think it is living off the
fame of its ancestors. am very sure
that I never saw so many dime museums
in any place. If are to Boston
by its treatment of plays, it certainly
has very poor judgment. never saw
so many good plays fail or so many bad
ones succeed as I seen in
M. referred to the treatment
of a well known literary man in Boston
and
will not his is well
known in England and America. But
in Boston he was
as if somebody
had been giving him lessons in classic
City Times.
CHILD BIRTH
MADE EASY
Friend is a scientific
ally prepared Liniment, every
of recognized value and In
constant use by the medical pro-
These ingredients are com-
in a manner hitherto unknown
WILL DO all that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother and Child. Book
to FREE, con-
valuable information and
voluntary testimonials.
Seat by on receipt of price per bottle
REGULATOR CO.
BOLD BY ALL
mm a
WHiCHARD,
mm.-.
O.
several d parcel of
estate for sale. Look over the list
Man and call on or write them.
A lot on Third street below
in the tow ii of
good Noose with four rooms
kitchen and smoke house convenient
on premises,
Two good building lots in
villa desirable
location.
A lot on street, between
. Front and Second, has nice house of
rooms, good well of water, large gar-
den plot and stables.
A hall acre lot in
Urge story
off rooms cook dining room-
ached, all necessary out buildings and
good water
A fine farm containing US acres.
miles from Greenville on Mt.
road, has gin house,
n two room reliant boar-en; ab at
cleared, balance well wooded,
good Water. This laud is excellent for
the cultivation of tine
if One fans lying on branch of the
W. ft . about half way
slid Kinston and t
t mile of a new depot, contains
cleared and balance heavily timbered
with pine. oak. cypress;
has Rood tenant passes
through of farm. The
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam.
It good Mete of and highly
is line trucking land.
h farm miles from on
Kin-ton road known as the Jackson
i acres, cleared; has
good dwelling house and all
out This is a first-class lo-
hum
A house and lot In Greenville on
corner near J, B. Cherry and W.
Bawls, 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 lie given 1st.
A good lot on
street, between Third and Fourth
location.
Lander house and lot on Pill
street near nicker-on Avenue,
good house rooms, large lot with
stables and out buildings.
The house and on
street, adjoining the lot of B.
S. Sheppard and the lot described in No.
large, comfortable one-story dwelling
of four rooms, dining and cook
plenty of room for garden.
Valuable Strum Corn and
Mills, Cotton Gin and Store
property located at a X Road
within a hundred yard of a R. R is sit-
in On of the best Agricultural
Sections of Pitt county. The mill- are
best machinery. Holt-
cloths, unfit, r and re in full
operation. The store house is a two
story with dwelling attacked
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear.
The store is kept constantly supplied
with general merchandise suite I to a
country stove and is a good
The mills are tin
ibis section.
This property is let sale as the
owners wish to withdraw from business.
on any of above property
can lie had on lo
why another new discovery by Alfred
in the way of helping the afflict
ed. My calling on or addressing the
above mime barber, you can procure a
bottle of a rat mo is
for eradicating and and causing the
hair lie soft and
glossy, only two or three application a
week if and a common hair
brush is all to be used after the
vigorously for a few minutes with
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be
only cents.
Respectfully,
ALFRED
Barber,
IS,
penny can get Sal-
Oil Best
In the market.
John B. the far-famed lecturer
to an audience because
at a had cold, then tor in
the bone Of genie rid of It. Egypt
contains no remedy now in
than Bull,
BOILING WATER OR MILK
GRATEFUL-COMPORTING.
COCOA
I-1 TINS
Printers and Binders
We have the largest and most complete
establishment of the kind to be found In
the State, and solicit orders for all classes
Of Commercial, Rail
or School Print-
or Binding,
FOR
for magistrates and
county officers.
aTOned tie orders.
M. C.
and Schedule
TRAINS
No No
fan. dally Mail, daily
Sun
Weldon pat II
Ar Rocky Mount
IS an
Ar Wilson IS p m pin am
Wilson i
Ar Fayetteville S
7-10 On n
Magnolia in
Ar Wilmington COO
NORTH
No it. No
dally
ii nun,
Magnolia
arena Mil
8.1 W
Fayetteville fl In
Ar Wilson lo
Wilson am pm 4- m
A, Kooky Mount W I
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon out I M
Daily Sunday.
Train No. will not before
Train oil Scotland Neck Road
leaves 4.22 M. arrives Scot
land Neck at 5.15 M., Greenville
M. m.
leaves Kinston a. in.
a. in. Halifax II a. in.
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun-
freight train leaves Weldon
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05
a. m. Greenville 5.80 p. in.,
p. in. Returning leaves Kinston
Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday at
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.56
a. m., Scotland Neck 2.20 p. Weldon.
.
Train leave Tarboro, C, via
ft Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun-
M, Sunday P M,
Williamston, N C, V M, P M.
8.30 p. m., 5.22 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
Sunday a. m., Sunday 0.00 a. m-
N m, am.
arrive Tarboro, N C, lb A
Train on Midland N C Branch a
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, A M
rive N C, a M. Re
turning leaves N V M
arrive Goldsboro. N A M,
Train on Nashville leaver Hoy n
at P M, arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
leaves Spring Hope A M,
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A
except Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, t
and M Returning leave
ton at A M, P. Conner
at Warsaw with Nos. tad
Southbound train on Wilson ft
Branch It No. Northbound Is
No. Dally except Sunday.
No, south and North
stop only at Rocky Mount. Wilson
Goldsboro and Magnolia.
Train No. makes close connection
Weldon for all points North dally. AI
ail via Richmond, and dally except
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
dally except with N folk ft
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all
points via Norfolk.
General Sup t.
a R. Transportation
M. agent.


Title
Eastern reflector, 6 April 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
April 06, 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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