Eastern reflector, 13 April 1892






-HAS V-
Job i Boom
That be surpassed lie
in this section.
Reflector.
Our
work always
faction.
tali
New Type I
Good
Material
END US YOUR ORDERS.
Appointments of Per. A. D. Hunter.
First Sunday, morning and night,
Second Sunday morning at
Saturday before.
Third and fourth at Green-
morning and night, also second
Sunday and Wednesday
night service. week.
Service school house on
Tarboro on night before
each third until and then
mi third Sunday evening.
Rev. R. F. Appointments.
Rev. R. F. Taylor, of Green-
ville Circuit of the M. E. Church. South,
will at following times and
places,
lat t II o'clock M.
1st Sunday. Chapel, 3.30 o
V. M.
2nd Sunday. Shady o'clock
A. M.
2nd School House,
miles wen of
F. M.
3rd Sunday. Ayden or Branch
School A. M.
3rd Sunday,
o'clock M.
4th Sunday. Bethlehem, o'clock
A. M.
Lang's School House,
o'clock P. M.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, I. WEDNESDAY. APRIL 1892.
NO.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor.
TRUTH IN f REFERENCE TO FICTION.
TERMS Per Year, in
BOASTING-
are cousins of
says the proverb. that
he take heed
he says the Word of God-
Nothing is to be gained, but
much may be lost, by boasting.
Charles V, before he invaded
France, ordered the court historian
to obtain a large quantity of paper
to record the victories which he
was going to But he lost
his general and a large part of
his army by disease, and returned
baffled, defeated and mortified.
Mrs. Judge B-, a wealthy and
aristocratic lady of New Jersey,
was one day sailing with a party
of friends, when the subject of
losing property was discussed.
Mrs- B- slipping a gold ring from
her finger and dropping it into the
river, is as impossible
for me ever to poor as for
me to recover this Not
many days after, Mrs. cook
come into the sitting room and
showed her a ring which had been
taken from a fish. It was the
ring she had dropped in the lake-
Mrs. B. died a in Eliza-
N. J.; and her husband
died in the of an ad;
joining
f he Daily Prayer of Every Preacher
Ought to be
Horn.
Lord, make me as wise as a
pent, and as harmless as a dove.
Give me co-rage to say things I
ought to say.
Help me to love the souls of
who are personally
Help me hot h, cast
whenever I am
Keep me from being puffed up
with vanity whenever people speak
well mg,
me many opportunities for
doing good, and help me to
prove every one of them.
May I be as willing to fail as to
succeed, if Thou wilt have it so.
the Spirit of Christ reign
in me, and continually shine out
me.
L sign of wisdom to be
ling to receive instruction; the
most intelligent sometimes stand
fa Hoed, of
Life's evening, we may rest as-
sured, will take its character from
the day which proceeded
A MATTER OP CONSCIENCE
The Young Man Who Pound a
Gold Piece and Kept It.
IF YOU LOVE HER TELL HEX SO.
Whence Young
Bream of the
Julia in Austin Statesman.
There is an old poem I am
sorry I have no copy of it which
insists in in st decided language,
you love her tell her The
author of that poem had mastered
the domestic problem, and
a good part of the social problem,
too. The daily life of many a
and woman is made wretchedly
barren and unattractive by a total
lack of appreciation. It is not
that we really do i appreciate
those who help make our homes,
but we are very busy, and we have
think about our work, and there
is the first of the month to meet,
and, in our loved ones ought
to know that we love them without
perpetually being told so.
No wonder there is such a love-
rose color MS the days of
courtship, and no wonder it fades
into very plain and commonplace
gray so soon after marriage. The
lover is continually telling his
heart how dear she is to him.
how he is happy only when in her
presence, and is wretched when
she is gone. She has her little
fluttering whisper, too. She loves
him so, and she is so happy. Just
to think of spending long, long
years by his side, of being
always near him, until they shall
grow old together, and
they will be allowed bliss
to go down to the dark
river together, and cross over to
the other side, hand in hand
It is the sober afterthought who dropped
takes all the romance out of the j you didn't ask those who
case. A husband coming home at were passing at the
night, grim and taciturn, with no , because it's ten to the
eyes for anything but his paper, man j tackled would have
and no thoughts for anything but claimed it, and then I'd have
his business that's to my with a fear that I had
different, yon see ; just as the delivered property belonging to
table little woman in the soiled man to another without tho
wrapper is different from the consent the first party. That's
ant girl who used to come all business principles, and
and meet him in the most charm- would trouble me.
dresses that ever captured tho It be a breach of
heart of man- The fact is, you -But you intended to appropriate
expect remain to your own
ant long She has worn herself I didn't. Honest. Hooked
out planning little household econ- to see it was, and couldn't
you read your paper
while she tried to tell you about for owner, m it up to the
them. She has racked her brain time he shows up. Any
devising dainty dishes and setting man can me
an alluring table, and you did not can
care enough to notice what she be squared himself
had done. She has worn out j conscience.
Chicago Tribune.
There was a ring on the stone
sidewalk and the young man stop-
picked up a coin.
He held it in the palm of bis
hand, and looked to see what is
was. He looked honest even
after he had discovered that it was
a five dollar gold piece instead of
a penny he didn't close his hand
over it. Ho looked up the street
down the furtively,
but inquiringly. His face showed
that be was looking for the person
who dropped the coin; not to see
if any one was watching him-
In one direction he saw three
men who had passed the spot
the same time i in the other, a man
and a woman of whom the same
was He made a move as
though to overtake one of the three
men, but stopped, hesitated a mo-
and then the gold
piece his pocket.
en it was that a little man who
had been an interested spectator
tapped him on the arm and
that belong to yon
returned the youth.
it belong to you
But I infer yon are going
to keep
unless the owner claims
yon think that's honest f
The youth knitted his brows.
I don't he said.
see it's just this way If I
knew whom it belonged I'd return
it, but I'd rather keep it
than to have some other fellow get
it who had no m on it. I didn't
DEVOTED WIPE.
Edmund repeatedly de-
that care vanished
the moment he entered under his
Mrs. was spoken of,
even by her own sex, as all that
was beautiful and amiable among
women. Bat it was not a
face, nor refined taste, nor
mental culture, that gave this
man her wonderful influence over
the statesman. The secret of her
power lay in her
and sympathy.
Mrs. kept her husband's
accounts, regulated his pecuniary
transactions, soothed his natural
and made his home
happy, that he might remain free
and elastic for his public duties.
The wife of Sir William Hamil
ton, professor of logic and meta-
physics, also illustrated the
of self-denying love. She
identified herself with his work,
and by her energy kept him from
yielding to a naturally indolent
disposition. During the season of
the University he wrote his
on the night before the
morning he delivered them. She
sat up with him and what
he had illegibly written on rough
sheets. The dawn of the
morning often found the devoted
amanuensis hard at work- She
was his wise and his
playful, friend. He
leaned her, loving
appreciating her, and that was the
only reward she cared to receive.
The late William E- Foster, one of
the most conscientious
of modern English states-
men, Jane Arnold, the
daughter of Dr. Arnold, of
For doing so he was expelled from
the Society of Friends, which did
not tolerate mixed marriages.
Many years afterward, when ho
was one of her Majesty's Ministers,
he said to a deputation of Quakers
who had waited upon him. fore the a stamp
people turned me out of the Society ,
for doing the best thing I over did short sermons FOR BOYS,
in my His wife was
constant adviser, to whom ho sub- i ,. , . . , , .
. . ,, . ,, . . A Swedish boy fell out of the
the most difficult questions, , . , ,
. window and was badly hurt, but
LIFE CLOSE TO THE. BONE.
Dying for Lack of Two Cents to Buy a
Lemon With.
. St. Chronicle.
O, that other half of the world
If you have never experienced it
how can yon tell how it lives
There is once incident told by a
pale-faced tenement
dent She has seen prosperous
days, but has, or had, only a sick
husband and four little children.
needs so many
she sighed plaintively. day
last week I was out of coal, and I
sent for a bushel, but I only had
cents, the coal was The coal
man said he would wait until I
could pay the rest Then my
band wanted a sour drink. He had
a burning fever, poor fellow, and
wanted u lemon so stop-
her flying needle just long
enough to wipe away a
were other months to be
I didn't have the two cents to buy
the couldn't
Then she broke entirely,
down, arid sobbed aloud with her
apron over her face. it seems
as if I wouldn't have felt half so
bad when I saw his dear, dead
face in tho coffin yesterday if I
hadn't thought how he wanted that
drink and I could not get it I
wake up in and think of
it until it seems as if it will drive
me
Then she choked back the sobs
and hurried on with her work.
The woman's earnings by making
pants at cents per dozen grows
smaller with every moment taken
for tears.
But can you imagine it A
shortage of cents to buy
of life The lack of two
pennies to get a drink to cool the
fevered thirst of a loved one who
is dying, make life a lone agony of
regret Did you ever realize be-
that she might guide him to the
right solution. In his library he
table and she at cry
with clenched lips he kept back the
pain. The king,
health and spirits in tho care o
your and you have done
your part by sending the children
to another room when yon come
home because they make you
indeed No
wonder the little woman
THE DRUNKARD'S BARGAINS.
wrote at one . .-. , .
., lit l., Adolphus, who saw him full, pro-
another, for he loved to have hen , .,.,.,,., i
. . , ,. that that boy would make
near to him even when at work on , J . ,
. , , . , , i e, a man for an emergency. And so
social and political , ,., , , B f. .
he did, for he became the famous
swear. General Bauer.
A boy who used to crush the
It is mean. A boy of high j flowers to got their color and
moral standing would almost as pointed the white side of his fa-
cottage in with all
sorts of pictures, which the
at as wonderful.
TATE NEWS.
Happenings Here and There
From our Exchanges.
The Governor has appointed as
THE LITTLE QUEEN.
No doubt many of our readers
think it would be very nice to be a
heard some lit
The REFLECTOR
A whole Tot
only Our Inn
III It
my In
If yon i I
your
on Hie the ;
Two Week
From Thai
It In to yon no.
that
in tint
the will
to you
at Hie expiration or
, l he two week.
Commissioner of Wrecks of the I
first district. Dare county, W. T. ; tie girls talking about the fine
Dough, of N. for a I thing it must be to have such a
high position life. But we road
in some foreign paper not long
since that when the little Queen
term of two years.
Rocky Mount is a rapidly grow-
town. Recently a
syndicate purchased
worth of land in the suburbs of
the town, and will establish enter-
prises thereon.
Tho Lumberton re
reports the burning to death of
two young children in Robeson
county who were locked in a house
by their mother. The older child
got on fire and crawled into a
cradle with tho younger.
Charlotte Yesterday
morning a peck or more of dead
sparrows was found near the large
electric lights in the middle of the
cotton platform. It was supposed
that the birds were attracted by
the lights and were killed by tho
in other words.
Concord Standard Jas. Reed,
a very old man, died quite sud-
at his homo in No. town-
ship last Wednesday. Ho came
into the house, sat down on the
side of tho bed. asked for a knife
to cut off a chew of tobacco, and
in that position with the knife and
tobacco died.
Davie Times Mrs. Sarah Kid
who resides six miles west of
has now
living. Of this number, are her
own children, ore her grand-
children, are great
and four are great great-
grandchildren. Mrs. Kidney is in
her 83rd year.
New i-in. Around
New a largo amount of
truck crops were planted and they
are looking tine. The acreage in
potatoes is probably about per
cent larger than lost year. s.
have bar-
planted. Tho season here as
elsewhere is later than usual but
the look forward with as
hopeful anticipations over
do at this time of the year.
Wilhelmina of Holland was told
of her right to the throne, she
cried and said she did not want to
be a queen. According to the
Belgian this newly made
queen gets up at seven o'clock and
gos at once to the rooms of her
mother to bid her good morning.
She takes her first breakfast at
eight o'clock, after which come
her lessons in languages, music
drawing. second break-
fast follows at eleven o'clock. An
hour is then spent reading the
Bible with her mother, which
she is allowed to play with her
pigeons and dolls. A part of tho
afternoon is occupied in riding or
driving, or in summer in a ride
upon the water. She has a shaggy
little pony of which she
is very fond. Dinner is served to
the queen at six o'clock, and eight
o'clock she goes to bed- She is
obliged to one great pleas-
which her young subjects can
enjoy, and that is the privilege of
playing with other children. Per-
haps that is tho reason she cried
whew she heard that she was a
queen.
marry a gentleman.
It was excellent advice I saw
lately given to young
thorn to marry only gentlemen,
or not marry at all- Tho word is
said in its broadest, truest sense.
It did not have reference to those
who have fine raiment and white
i hands tho veneering of socio
polish merely, to entitle them to
the distinction, but to those
of true, manly noble
marquis,
. c,
in upper
Photograph
flit. L.
X.
L. FLEMING,
attention to
at Tinker X old stand.
ho. j.
BLOW,
n. o,
in all tho Courts.
J.
B.
A T-LA H
Greenville, N.
I. A. B. r.
N E W,
N. C.
Prompt attention given to
H. C.
and careful attention
Collection solicited.
L. C. LATHAM.
MARRY
SKINNER,
A W,
N. C.
M U.
GREENVILLE, S.
Practice In all the Ci
ii
Tarboro
twenty five citizens of this place
met Friday night and organized a
to support Col.
Curr for the gubernatorial
E. V. was made
chairman and Ed
E. V. H. R.
and Frank Powell appointed
a committee to prepare the con-
and by-laws; and Henry
Morris Jr., Henry Gilliam a
committee on membership.
too
A Doctor Advises Total
of the Dur
University, says i
has- been proved -to my
faction, and I am sure, to the
faction of the majority of my hear-
that the avoidance of alcohol
in form improves the pros-
of healthy life and length of
and tends to preserve the
organs in and
functional health, We also be
that that the use of alcohol
by large numbers who call them-
selves moderate, and are so
their friends, is a
predisposing cause of many of the
illnesses we nave to deal with, and
of the weak, resisting power of
a in practice e
all frequently advise ab-
from all forms of
Southern Star.
my money, give me a
drink There's the clothing and
looks fire of my wife and
back over the sweet, trivial me a drink I There's
of that happy time, and won- education of the family and
whether there is such a thing peace of the me a
as love, after ail, and what it is drink There's the rent I have
like. j robbed from my landlord, tees I
wife ought to know that I; from my schoolmaster,
her without being of j and innumerable articles I have
retorts the proud man, robbed from my shop-keeper-give
dressed in a little brief a Poor me
How would she know t, land yet more, I will pay for it
have been known to j There's my health of body and
your horse frequently and your . peace of mind ; there's my
dog never comes about you with- as a man and character as a
out receiving a loving word or an Christian ; I give up
affectionate pat on the head. Yet, drink More yet I have to give
the heart of a loving woman, There's my heavenly inheritance,
that woman your wife, is, the eternal friendship of the
and sow your redeemed; there, there is all hope
you love her tell her salvation
There is a time to tell those i give up my God I give up all
things, you understand, and a time is great and good and glorious
when it is too late to tell them. the universe; I resign all for-
The saddest thing about bending; ever t nay be.
over a tired face, about to be glint
soon steal sheep as to swear.
2- It is vulgar, altogether
low for a decent boy.
It is cowardly, implying a fear Ho was the great artist Titian-
of not being believed or obeyed. n painter watched a little
It is ungentlemanly. A fellow who amused himself making
according to Webster, is a drawings of his pot and brushes,
genteel man, well bred, j easel and stool, boy
will beat me one So he did,
for he was Michael Angelo.
A German boy was reading a
blood-and-thunder novel. Right
in the midst of it he said to him-
self. this will never do. I
get too much excited over it. I
can't study so well after it. So
here it. and he flung the
book out into the liver. He was
the great German
Do you know what these little
mean Why, simply this,
that in boyhood and girlhood ore
shown the traits for good or evil
which make the man or woman
good or not
I saw recently a number of
going away from church at
hour. This was an ex-
painful scene. One
of a million pf. children
leaving the at the morning
hour of worship This is a
matter, worthy of
thought They go
to church that day. Nothing can
people from
the Word of God. Some
in the after
a is that the
ears are closed, would not
hear our agonized protestations
of love, though we shouted till our
throats are rent. How willing we
are to kiss the pallid lips, the mar-
forehead, but they thrill no
more beneath our touch What a
we did no kiss
the warm blood
throbbed beneath them There
will alway be plenty of time for
love, we thought and then we were
so busy I But, ah, there was not
plenty of time I
Such a man will no more swear
than go into the street to throw
mud with a chimney-sweep.
It is indecent, offensive to
delicacy, and extremely unfit for
human ears-
6- It is foolish. of de-
is want of
It is abusive, to the mind that
conceives the oath, to the tongue
which utters it and to the person
at whom it is aimed-
8- It is venomous, showing a
boy's heart he a. nest vipers i
and every time he swears one of
them sticks out bis head-
It is contemptible, forfeiting
the respect of all the wise and good.
It is wicked, violating the
divine law, and provoking the
pleasure. o bun. will hold
him guiltless who. takes his same
in vain. -Ex-
hard their hands
i and sun browned their faces.
A true gentleman is generous
and unselfish. He regards
happiness and welfare as well
as his own. Yon will see the trait
running through all his actions.
A man who is a home
among his sisters and discourteous
to his mother, is just the man to
avoid when you come to this great
question which is to be answered
Raleigh Chronicle Deputy yes or no.
revenue collector Massey and A man may be ever so rustic in
made a raid in New Light, his early surroundings, but if he is
township, this this week he will not bring
a to your cheek in
was very small, barely large j by his absurd behavior,
enough to admit a man on is an instinctive politeness inherent
in such a character which every-
where commands respect and
makes its owner pass for what he
of nature's noblemen. Do
not despair, girls, there are such
men still in the world. You need
not die old maids. wait until
the prince passes by. No harm in
delay.
A Bit of Pun with a Point.
but the interior was roomy.
Inside was a GO gallon copper still
and a lot of liquor. All was de-
The cave had been dug
by the moonshiners, it was found,
and had been in use a long while.
And all this in Wake; though it
reads quite like a story of the wild
west- The moonshiners were not
captured, having in the usual way
received information of the com-
of the officers.
Charlotte The stew-
of Street Methodist
church met last night to take ac-
in the case of Mr. T. J.
son, one of the members, applying
for whiskey license. Four weeks
ago Mr. Wilson was notified pub-
he per-
he
affairs.
Mighty is the force of mother-
hood, transforms all things by
its vital heat i it turns timidity into
courage and
into tremulous submission;
it turns thoughtlessness into fore-
sight and yet still all anxiety into
calm it makes selfishness
and gives even
to hard vanity the glances at ad-
miring love.
Christian Standard.
A minister frequently called on
Saturday to borrow five dollars
from one of his members, which
he would promptly return on Mon-
day. It occurred so Often that the
member commenced marking the
hills, and found that the marked
bill was the one that came back.
One day the preacher borrowed
ten dollars, which was marked, and,
as usual, returned. Curiosity
could resist no longer. do
you do that, always
preach better ft money
in my why did you
borrow ten wanted
to preach a better sermon than
The necessity of borrow-
was generously removed by
his flock thereafter.
ago t.
and privately that if
in applying for lie
V,
ii
HER PERENNIAL EXPERIENCE.
Post.
day when living at Beau-
fort, S. said a gentleman the
other day, young colored
nurse in my family came in with a
terribly face. Around
I-
Ti
CO
CO
-I
Q sender
to lore and find
TO MAKE LIFE HAPPY.
Take time; it is useless to foam
or fret or do as the angry house-
keeper who has got hold the
wrong key, and shakes,
rattles, about the hick until
both m broken the door la
still unopened. The chief secret
of comfort lies in not suffering
trifles to vex us and in cultivating
our undergrowth of small pleas-
Try to regard present
vexations as yon will regard them
a month hence. Since we.
get what we he, let W hie what
we can get It is not riches, it is
net poverty, it is human nature
that is the trouble. The world is
a looking-glass. at it
audit back; frown and it
frowns back. Angry
canker mind and dispose it to
fie; worst tempt ill the
fixed
while in this temper moat
t.
BULBS USING BOOKS.
Never hold a book near the fire-
Never turn leaves with the thumb
Never drop a book upon the
floor.
Never lean or rest upon an, open
book-
Never turn comers of
touch a book with damp
or soiled hands,
Always keep your place with a
thin book-mark.
Always turn leaves from the top
with the middle or forefinger.
Never pull a book from a shelf
by the binding at the bu by
touch a book with a damp
cloth, nor with a sponge in any
form.
Never place another book
anything else upon the leaves of
an open book.
rub dust from books, but
brush it off with a soft dry cloth or
duster-
eke paths of lead to the
would be turned out of the church- her head was wound a white cloth,
He was also notified to appear be-
fore the board last night and show
cause why he should not be turn-
ed out He failed to appear, and
accordingly a committee waited
on him, told him that his name
had been stricken from the
books, and he was no longer a
member of Street Methodist
church.
Wilson On Friday
night the large pack house of C.
A. Young was destroyed with a
large lot of tobacco. Be had five
thousand dollars insurance, but
that will not begin to cover the
amount, as his whole tobacco crop
was there and it is thought that
his actual loss will be over four
which extended fully two
on earth is the matter,
Tilly r said my wife-
I I's
are you seeking V
you have to wear that when
you are seeking religion
yes, miss- I has to wear
that to mortify de
That afternoon she came to her
mistress and
de dis
to go to de woods with
the
She for four days, and
came in with a beaming
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M.
AT TUB
OLD
FARMERS AND MERCHANT'S HOT
their year's supplies will
their Interest to our before w
elsewhere. la
n branches.
FORE SIDES
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TEA,
at
TOBACCO
we buy direct from Manufacturers, east-
Ming you to boy at one profit. A
stock of
alway on hand and told at to sail
times. Our are all as
sold for CASH, having Mm
to tell at a margin.
K.
m.
The Sim
Greenville,
thousand dollars. It is. thought; ,
to be the of incendiaries, as,
he had recently received some countenance, and with the cloth
letters, threatening to bum him. taken from her head. She had
out if a certain gate was not re- found and been baptized.
moved. ------As a partial result of
the Fife meeting thirty-one
been admitted into the
church, and several others
will join at an early day. Forty
nine have connected themselves
with the Baptist and others
will follow. Sixty-two have given
in their names to Methodist
church, and quite a large number
have already been and
admitted. The Disciples church
has received a number of
and a number have
joined the chat cites in the country
said I, you have to
go through that performance every
lime you get
Mane
many times have you been
baptized in the course of your
grave, and the utmost we can the harvest has
to avoid short -been a rich and
B.
J. S. Greenville,
N. M. Tarboro,
Cap I. R. F. Washington, Ag
The far travel on
River.
The Steamer
Quickest boat on the river. Skates
thoroughly repaired,
n I painted.
Fitted up specially e
and of
A Table with U
best market
A trip on
not only comfortable hot attractive.
Lea
and Friday at,
and at a. at.
received
open, bold, honest
always wisest, always
the for every
v-





Greenville, N. C.
J, Editor
WEDNESDAY, 1802.
Entered at the at Greenville
N. C. M second-class mail matter.
Publisher's
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TO; one-quarter column one year,
Transient inch
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month Two Inches one week, S 1.50,
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Advertisements Inserted in Local
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PAID FOB IN ADVANCE.
Contracts for any space not d
stove, any length of time, can lie
made by application to the office
in person or by letter.
C tor v Advertisements and
all change.- of should lie
In by o'clock on Tuesday
mornings a. order to prompt in
the day folio wins.
The having a large
anon will be found a profitable medium
which to reach the public.
Island as was expected,
elected the Republican ticket.
There was an effort made to carry
the State that it give an
impetus to Democratic success in
the elections to follow in the other
States- There was not much hope
and yet the Republicans are
boasting about it If their signs
of the times ore true about the
only thing they will have to boast
of this year will be the fact that
they carried the States that
have been republican for more than
a quarter of a century-
The State Democratic Executive
Committee met on the 7th in
Raleigh. Among other things it did
was to endorse the letter of the
Chairman of the Committee, Ed
Chambers Smith, to Mr. Ellington
in reference to the qualifications
of those who are to participate in
the Democratic Primaries. We
did not print these letters, but the
substance was about this, that
only those who were Democrats
and expected to affiliate with Dem-
party would be expected
or would desire to take part in
these Primaries. It advised that
men who were Democrats should
not be excluded promiscuously
from participating in these
meetings.
In another column will be found
the call for the Democratic Con-
of Pitt county. It is just
what it ought to be and we call
upon the Democrats of the county
to read every word of it- The ad-
vice and encouragement attached
timely, and if followed will in-
sure the fact that old Pitt will
come up with her usual Democrat-
majority. The committee
says that if you remain at home
and things do not go as you like,
you can have no reason to com-
plain.
We call special attention to what
is in reference to the selection
of delegates. If there ever was a
time in the history of the State,
when we need wise and prudent
action it is now. We can only ex-
this action from wise and
prudent men. Let us be careful
to select our most level headed
who are not extremist
won or deed, but men
who able t weigh the- facts
carefully and then act most pro.
. If this is done we may
expect and will have harmony.
The best men of Pitt county as-
in Convention will do the
beat thing for Pitt county and
then all of us can back them.
e-
AMONG THE JOURNALS.
The Durham has just
reached the ripe old age of
it is the oldest newspaper
in, the State, and very unlike
does not weaken with age.
The Washington began
its seventh volume two weeks ago.
That paper has recently made
great
Hem
weak the en-
its volume-
la has been tea years in the hands
at its present editors who are ma-
king H a very excellent and
peT.
A ago the Wilmington
celebrated the close of its
W year under the management
of Messrs- Jackson Bell, who be-
came purchasers of the plant last
they
in the during
the year are striking, and as a me-
of news it is behind no daily
paper in the State. las editorial
utterance being from the pen of
scholarly writer, Dr.
of course
rat
something to think ON. The Convention
I and State Convention and Nation-
In keeping with the religions in- j Convention are representative
now so prevalent in Green-
ville and community, some para-
graphs like these may furnish food
for reflection-
A man be moral and not be
a Christian, but he can't be a gen-
Christian and not be moral-
Morality may simply be
to human law, while religion is
conformity to tho human and the
divine.
.
Many persons are considered
moral whose Eves are as corrupt as
perdition itself. Kid gloves, and
gold-headed canes, and diamond
rings, and Havana cigars, and
tailor-cut clothes, and fine spans
of horses, and elegant
are no indication of morality on
the part of those who worship
them. One can make a splendid
show with these in the day time,
and then at night do things that
would cause the devil to blush for
shame. Daylight makes gentle-
men of a great many people; but
darkness covers an enormous
amount of
Money is the god of this world
It seems to be the father of moral
and respectability. If it were
possible for a demon to emerge
from the darkness of the bottom
less pit with a good pile of money
he would be admitted into any
society, without any questions as
to where ho came from, or
he was going. Money puts a man
at the top of society's ladder; and
men and women look up to him as
if he were a of the first mag-
or the
mate of the
Alas for society
Religion mikes a man pay his
debts. If he doesn't do this, he
hasn't got the genuine article-
There are plenty of church
who can offer up touching
prayers on the Sabbath, say Amen
as often and with as much fervency
as any one else, sing as sweetly as
a nightingale, shout at the render-
of the Ship of and
yet, alas they habitually refuse to
pay their honest debts. They'll
dodge around the street corners
or rush into the back alleys every
time they catch a glimpse of a
creditor. Perhaps they have an
idea that they can pray and sing
and shout their debts off on the
Sabbath. But the person who
doesn't try to cancel his just debts
is not much of a Christian, and his
praying and singing and shouting
don't ascend very high. If the
church generally get rid of
a lot of these non-debt-paying
ministers and members, she would
get along- a great deal better.
GOSPEL
We have received from Hon. G-
W. Sanderlin, State Auditor, his
report for 1891. It is a handy vol-
and useful for reference.
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC
Rooms of the Democratic
Executive Committee of
County.
Greenville. N- C, April 9th,
At a meeting of the Executive
Committee of the Democratic party
of the county of Pitt, held in Green-
ville this day, pursuant to a regular
notice given by the chairman, it
was ordered that a County Con-
of the party to held in
Greenville on Saturday the 7th
day of May 1892, for the purpose
of appointing delegates to the
State Convention called to meet in
the city of Raleigh on the 18th day
of May 1892.
It was further ordered that the
township meetings to appoint
delegates to tho County
be held at the usual places in
each township, at o'clock P. M.,
on Saturday the 30th day of April
1892-
Each township will be entitled
to appoint to the County
Horn one delegate and one alter-
and the who com-
pose those, are in their
capacity. In the township
meetings each person is there in
his individual capacity and it is
there that he can perform his part
in giving and direction and
character to the Conventions of
his party which are to follow. It
is in the township meetings that
the life of our party organization
begins, and it is horn these that all
authority to make platforms,
candidates and tho
support of the voters is derived.
These meetings are open to every
person, who in faith expects
to with the party, and
we hold it to be the duty of every
Democrat who can, to attend them.
If any Democrat willingly remains
away and things do not go to suit
him he has no right to complain.
In the next place we beg to urge
upon the Democratic voters who
attend these meetings to select
conservative, wise and discreet
men to represent them in the
County Convention. We do not
shut our eyes to the fact that there
are differences of opinion among
those who have heretofore been
laboring for Democratic
success as to what we should do,
and what we should not do, in the
coming campaign. If our
are composed of conservative,
wise and discreet men, these
can be harmonized and
we can present an unbroken front
to our common enemy, the
party Division means de-
feat, and defeat means death to all
hopes of relief or reform of any
kind. Division can only come in
our opinion by allowing
men of views to
take control of our conventions
and dictate the line of action for
our party. It is better, at this
time, that men of known prudence
and wisdom, who believe that the
integrity of the Democratic party
is the surest safety for the State
and Nation shall be sent to our
party conventions, and we urge
upon our township meetings to
choose such men as their delegates.
Ales L. Blow,
R. Williams, Jr., Chairman.
Secretary.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
From our Regular Correspondent.
Washington, D. C, April 8th
Harrison, Morton and
furnished by Wall Street and the
protected manufacturers, was the
combination that brought the
present administration into
and notice has just
served Republican aspirant
to the Vice-Presidential
by no less a personage than
Vice-President Morton himself
that the same combination has
been formed to run the
can National machine again this
year. There was a disposition
sometime ago to freeze Mr.
ton out of the combination be-
cause of his unwillingness to
pledge himself to raise the amount
of money named by Chairman
as necessary to pay for
his renomination, and the
was allowed to go out that
Mr. Morton did not care for a re-
But since the with
of Mr. Blaine Mr. Morton
has reconsidered the matter, and
agreed to pay the price demanded,
and he now naively announces
that he will accept a renomination
should it be tendered him by th e
Minneapolis convention.
Speaker Crisp found it
previous to the passage of
the Springer free wool bill by the
House, to administer a lesson in
parliamentary law and good man-
to Representative Burrows,
of Michigan, who in the absence
of ex-Czar Reed was attempting
to play his role, and it will be a
long time before the scene is for-
gotten by those who witnessed it.
Mr. Burrows, who has a voice
which has been likened to a fog
horn, stood up shouting
when he was interrupted by the
sharp command of the Speaker,
gentleman from Michigan wall
resume his One glance at
the determined face of the Speaker,
and Mr- Burrows dropped into his
seat, looking like a cowed dog.
Marriage License.
During March the Register of
Deeds issued licenses to the fol-
for every Demo- lowing
votes, and one delegate for
fractions of fifteen of more votes
cast in the last Gubernatorial
that is to say
Beaver Dam is entitled to
Bethel
Carolina
Falkland
Farmville
Greenville
Swift Creek
The committee have deemed it
not inappropriate in making this
call for a convention of the party
to address a few words of advice
and encouragement to those who
expect to participate in it. And
first of all we urge every Demo-
in the county, who can do- so,
to be present at the township
meetings and to take part in their
proceedings. These the
meetings of the party under
oar plan of organization, sad it is
m meetings that each
of the party can speak for him
for vote for.
Alford and Pat tie
Ford, W. H. Galloway and Bettie
F. Anson Jones and Dasie
Mayfield, Moore and Emily
Stokes, James A. Harris and Mar-
Ann
Rives and
rah Atkinson, Jacob Rice and
Patsy Samuel Heath and
Sarah Peal, John D- Moore, and
Tucker, W. H. Worthing-
ton and Forbes. Ed-
wards and Mourning Morgan. Jack
Pitt and Delia Bynum, Willie
Johnson and Eliza Smith,
Coward and Mary Graft-
Land Bale.
virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court of Pitt. County at March Term
1892. His Honor H. It- Bryan Judge
to the cf W. H. Cox vs.
;. J. the undersigned
will sell for Cash before the Court
door in Greenville on Monday
the 2nd day of May 1882 the following
in the County of and
in Township, a fourth
undivided interest in the land, known
a the M. J. land a one tilth
undivided Interest In the of J. F.
Blount Hie Bret tract adjoin land
L. Blount, B. F. W.
other, containing acres,
more or less, the other tract adjoin the
land of W. L. the No Mas land
and others acres, am or
lea
Thin April HO.
F. JAMES,
las; la
Wild
We have already bad religious
in camp. A Catholic priest came there
weeks ago said mass. He had-
an interesting congregation and intends
to open a mission here. Over was
subscribed for this in one day.
Following him came Rev. Gas-
tun, a Presbyterian minister, of
who preached in the rear room of
gambling house. Mr. Gas;, a
an earnest young man, who the
rough element to him by his manly
qualities. There is no cant about his
discourses. He does not talk about the
wickedness surrounding him or
individuals concerning particular
acts of wickedness. He goes at his
work in a charitable, broad mi
spirit, and will unquestionably do.
good if he carries out a half
intention to remain in the camp.
The saloon and n is
the largest building in the camp c-4 is
always crowded with customers. The
preacher's request was readily granted.
The faro dealer vacated his chair and
the preacher it for a
Over the layout table, on which the
spotted and pictured cards were run for
the remaining days and nights of the
week. Rev. turned the leaves of
the Bible and made an impressive talk
on the text, a man die, shall he rise
This Sunday evening the conditions
ware not very favorable for religious
exercises. Take the men on Sunday
morning, when the night's are. ii
wearing off and the physical and mental
system yearns for sympathy, and they
are fairly susceptible to moral and re-
persuasion. But in the evening,
after various other tonic remedies have
been applied, the boys are usually ready
for another night of Mart Wat-
introduced Mr. Gaston to the crowds
at the gaming tables and requested them
to suspend play for twenty minutes. A
great many did so, the vast major-
remained to dally with the devil's
tools.
The improvised chapel was cold and
the seating accommodations scant, yet
some fifty rough men gathered
the enthusiastic young preacher and
attentively to his simple stories
of Gospel love. From tho outer room
came the click of chips, and at times
loud imprecations; but the strange con-
seemed carried away by the
earnestness of the man who was telling
them about the humble who
laid down his life to sweep away the sin
of the world. At the close of the
ice a number gathered around and
thanked Mr. Gaston for reminding them
once more that they were men with
souls in peril.
Next morning Mr. Gaston, who used
to live in Illinois, met one of his
about to take a drink at the bar.
no doubt you enjoy said he to
the toper, as for myself, I can get
along and feel bettor without it You
feel like the man, I suppose, who took
up a glass of water and addressed it
are pretty when you ore bub-
out of a, spring and sparkling in
the you are grand when you
down in the mountain
brook and glorious in the rainbow,
you ain't worth a darn to
it exactly, said tho
other, enraptured with Gaston's ready
appreciation of the case. hanged
if I to hear you next Sun-
Chicago Her-
Western
Many have read the announcement
which has been made that
Colo., has electric but few are
aware of the phenomenal time occupied
in the construction of the plant The
idea of equipping the plant was con-
at noon. Feb. Before the day
was over the Electric Light and
Power company was organized and in-
supplies were ordered and
placed aboard a special train of cars at
Denver, and everything necessary for
tho complete equipment of a model
light plant for arc and
cent lighting by midnight of the same
day were on their way to the modern
mining camp.
was in sight Tuesday night,
Feb. and by daybreak the following
morning a gang of laborers was put to
work breaking ground and getting the
foundations of the power house ready.
The work progressed night and day, and
the electric current was turned on at
p. m., Saturday, Feb. The ac-
time occupied in completing the
plant, erecting the buildings and placing
the machinery in position, was from
Feb. a. in., to Feb. p. m.
less than a week after the machinery
was purchased in Denver, over miles
away, and this young town was given
the latest luxury of
World.
A New Enterprise.
to thank our patrons for the
liberal they have given In
the different lines of our manufacturing,
i also wish to let that we
sue building truck Barrels for Potatoes
and would glad to furnish those hi
need of Barrels. We think have as
rd and well ventilated as will
en market or It has been so pron-
by those acquainted with truck
barrels. We for apiece.
In lots of barrels cents. As we-
have no idea of the demand we
to barrels
heir orders with m as early a
possible so we may have prepared limber
to the barrels when needed. Tho-
who do not give any notice of their r
may not barrels on hand when they
need them. IVe are also prepared to
furnish cotton repair
work on i hi in or furnish any repairs. Also
we can furnish on short trim-
for dwelling, or anything In our
line of manufacturing.
We would also call attention to our
new style circular seat for
Please address Cos
N. C.
An Announcement.
I am n w ready to treat baldness. I
have improved my preparation and have
observed in the last ninety days that it
will do what I claim for it. Partial
can be treated by bottle
and the can use It himself.
Total baldness must treat myself. I
invite correspondence in reference to
treatment Every one who tries my
preparation will be thoroughly
with results. We can refer you lo a
number of men here in this town as to
its merits.
N. C, April 5th,
Sealed Proposals.
The board of Commissioners of Pitt
county will their meeting on the 2nd
day of May. 1892, receive sealed bids for
the construction of a dam for a public
roadway commencing at the north end
of the bridge across river at Green-
ville, and running from thence north
one and one-half degree hundred
and thirty-two poles to the public
The dirt to lie used In the construction
of said dam is to be taken from the land
lying immediately upon the west side of
the said proposed roadway. The bids
are to be by th yard for
the dirt used In sail dam, and successful
bidder is to clear the land upon which
the dam is to be constructed of ail trees,
bushes and logs. Th board of Com-
missioners reserves the right to reject
any and all bids. For further
apply to J. It.-Move or Leonidas
Fleming at H. O.
by order of the board of Commission-
of Pitt county.
D. H. JAMES, Clerk.
LIVERY, FEED AND SALE
removed my stables from Five
Points to the 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 suit the
AGE and a share of
your
GLASGOW
Notice to Creditors.
On the 4th day of April, 1802, the
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt
issued to the undersigned letters of
administration as administrator de
non of the estate of I,. Anderson, de-
who duly qualified bond
as such. Notice Is now given to the
creditors of said L. K. Anderson to
their claims to me for payment duly
authenticated on or before the 18th day
of April, 1863, or notice will be
in bar of their recovery. All per-
sons indebted to said estate are request-
ed to make immediate payment to me.
This the 13th day of April. 1892.
R. J.
d. b. n. of L. It. Anderson.
W W, timber land, J B
Little and Jacob Joyner,
C, act-1,
Simon. acre,
Co, s,
i us Little land,
Moore, heir-, acres,
Taft, E A, acres
Braxton, C C a, swift
Braxton, F IV a, swift creek
Cox. a, V
Cox, S C Sr. SO-i a, C creek
Cannon, Tho W SO a, F swamp
A BUM a
A stock law
Ellis, Willis -2-1 a. swift
Hart. II an lee town lot Ayden
Harrington, a swift creek
manning W S a swift creek
e, Mai cellos G a
Nobles, creek
Nobles J W Mi a gum swamp
Powell, V a C creek
Powell, faille V stock law
Patrick. a swift creek
town lot
Button, a C
Sermons. Henry a long branch
Worthington, O
a Long Branch
Tax Sale.
Pursuant to provisions of
of the laws of 1889, I
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.
II KEN TOWNSHIP.
John F, a. homestead
J D, a, Allen land Go
Bryant, Sam, a, place
stock law
Braxton, Nellie, a. Sutton land
Cory, W M. a. Nichols land,
Edward, George, part of town lot
Henry, town lot
stock law
Fleming, E P. n, ferry land,
Gorham, Dinah. town lot,
stock law
H C, a, N land
Hardy. W C, L Elks land lb
Harder, W H, n, Fleming land
Harris, Alex, a. Turner land
s M, a Johnson land IS
Moore, Jr. a, land
T H, a, land
J B, a, B. land
J C, a,
Norman Everett n, G
D G. a sermons land
Savage, E T, a, Pollard land S I
Stancill, Wilson, a. Pollard land
Tucker Murph v, a, James land
stock law
Eliza, a,
W a, J F W land
J B, i town lot
E C
farm a.
Moore land
Nichols land a,
J B, cf H A Yellowley
Home place
township.
II A, a. creek
W M, a. root,
Forms, L A, a. dark land
Galloway, I S, a, cow swamp
Haddock, T R, a, creek
Aaron, a,
Mills, W F, a, Indian well IS
Mills, Martha J, a, i ridge
Mills. Henry J, Sr, a, poll ridge
Mills, in- B, a. cow swamp
HA,
B B, a. land
N L, a,
Smith, Turner, a, Indian well
Smith, Sr, n,
Smith, Oliver, a, cow swamp
Stokes, Guilford, a, pole ridge ii
Jesse Jr, a, clay root
Taft, Mrs E A, a. tar river
White, L H, a, cow swamp
BEAVER DAM.
Joy W C, pine log
Turner, a, gum branch
Murphy, J I, a Crawford land
Baker, Geo B. lot in Marlboro
Beardsley, J H, creek
L P, a,
Thigpen, A brain, a, Marlboro,
FALKLAND.
Atkinson, B S heirs. a Move,
A, a, Peebles place
Lillie, a, part of
D F, a. of Jordan
ii Win.-, Mrs Nora. a,
Annie, a, balance due
John F, a,
James, of Wm Pippin
Estate. a. Bullock farm
Atkinson, B S heirs by V Joyner
for a, Atkinson land
for 1891
Brown, Mrs Nancy A, a, brown
land, balance due
Robert a land
A J a Teel land
Fields. Amos la
J a
Pippin, a
Randolph, Susan a Randolph I'd
Thigpen. H E a
SWIFT CREEK.
Brown, Jesse a
Cox, Fred a Indian well
Coward, J no D W H Smith a
Freeman. John S
stock law
Gashing, Wm a
S V a
stock law
Purser, David a
Arch a
Slaughter, a and a
Smith, Cicero m a
Lewis H a way land
James W a
Stokes C a
Smith, Charles A a
Stokes BF Hardy a SI
m m W G Stokes a
m J town lots S
. stock law .
B F half a land
stock w
Smith, Oliver a home land
mills land
D C a
w L a Wilson land
Tyson E A a
Wood S B town lot
Stock law
Wilson D Dan Wilson
meadow branch
Carson, Jas R. a. House place, n
Farrar. U C. a. James land, 81.63
Hunter, W W, by H Skinner,
acres. Rollins land,
Mr a, Stancill
Knight, E C, Bertha Hop-
a, Hope, 1418
W, Home load,
k.
w h
Town Tax Sale.
As Town Tax Collector I have
vied on the following; lots on the
1st day of April, 1892, listed for
taxation in town of
by the following parties who are
delinquents. And on Monday
the 2nd day of May, 1892, at
M-, I will offer the same for
cash, to the highest bidder, at
public auction, at the Court
House, in the town of Greenville,
to satisfy the taxes and costs
due thereon.
W. H. HARRINGTON,
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, I
J town lot,
Lawrence, L IV, guardian, town lot,
. . .
M . . j
N B Lawrence,
, W, town lot,
town lot,
Tucker Murphy, law
Williams, Matthew, fourth town lot,
Wilson, B. J . lot,
W H, and wife, ton lot,
Hopkins. Wilson, town
House. Luke, town lot,
Hardy. Stanly, town lot,
Murphy and wile
Notice.
I will sell at public 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
1891 and cost.
D D Andrews, lot W James St,
O C Farrar, est, lot St,
lots, V N K H,
James St,
hotel store. S R R,
stables. James St,
acres land. Bethel.
Mary E James lot, W Main St.
lot, E James St,
lot, E James St,
J L Nelson dwelling, N R R,
lot near Academy
lot W Main St,
J U W Howell, lot, W Main St,
Lewis Milliard. lot, N Pleasant St,
Hardy Bro, lot W Main St.
St,
W W Hunter, lot E Main St.
W n Harrington, lot E Main St,
lot E Main St,
lot E Main St,
lot F. St,
J L lot E Main St,
Bert lot W Jame St,
J S lot N R B,
Skinner, office E Main St,
Teel PollArd. store E Main St,
Albert lot E James St,
I lot N Pleasant St,
lot W Main St,
Robert Ward est, I lot W Main St,
G Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St,
This April the 4th 1892.
W. C.
Town Tax Collector.
To the West in Through Cars.
If you are going to Arkansas, Texas
or West, it will be money in your pocket
to bear in mind that the
C. ft. St. L. offers
unexpected f all classes of
fewer changes, cleaner and
more comfortable cars, and sure
Elegant Coaches Atlanta
fin, to Memphis change, making
connection there with fast trains,
requiring U one change for
and Texas. For reliable information,
rates, routes, schedules mid map-
to or call on undersigned. Remember
we can give you the very loWest rates, and
that we make no extra charge for seats
in our through Cars. Call on or address
J. W. Hicks; Pass. Charlotte N. C,
Jas Malay, Pass No
House Atlanta Ga. W. T. I, P.
A. Chattanooga.
m m
Dr J B Hawthorne
Interesting
Rev. J. B. D. D.
Atlanta, Ga.,
Mo e that two years age you were kind
enough to allow us to publish a letter
from yen, in which you declare that
had been cured of Catarrh, by the of
King's In the same
letter you said that you had seen its
curative effects upon various diseases.
Knowing your enviable reputation
throughout the nation, confident
the public would reply any
statement coining you, the
of King's Royal
would esteem it a real favor if you would
consent to answer the following
1st. Has there been any return
of your Catarrh trouble Have
your observations of the effects of the
medicine within the last two years
strengthened the convictions expressed
In your first published testimonials
Hoping to hear from you at tout
est convenience,
I am yours truly,
T. H. BLACKBALL,
Manager K. R. G.
MAJ. T. II.
Manager K. B. O. Co.
Atlanta, Ga.
Dear Sib
In reply to your letter requesting me
to answer certain questions concerning
King's Royal I take much
pleasure in saying that I am indebted to
the medicine for what seems to me a
complete cure of trouble. My
present health is almost perfect.
My observation within the last two
years has so strengthened my faith in the
remedy, that I am prepared to say that
there is not a medicine on tin market
that is worthy of comparison with it.
Thousands of intelligent and reliable
people, among them some of the moat
distinguished men of the country,
expressed to me the same opinion.
Many of my friends bare been cured of
dyspepsia, others and
o neuralgia- As a remedy for
It is absolutely par
Atlanta alone has a thous-
and living witnesses to its triumphs over
the
My conviction as to the merit of this
medicine is ahem as strong as any con-
be made,
truly,
J,
NOTIONS,
CART,
TINWARE,
GLASSWARE GROCERIES,
WOOD WILLOW WARE,
Harness, Whips, and Collars,
FARMING TOOLS,
Plows of the Improved Makes,
One of firm
will soon visit
the Northern
Markets and
while there will
buy goods at
prices that will
command the at
tendon of all. Realizing the hard times
and scarcity of money we will sell during
the coming Spring and Summer 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
the same,
honest and
square dealings
to all. The
teachings of.
each generation
says confine
your to
those whom
you know to
be reliable.
Come one, come all and us.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE
Has Moved to next Door Court House
CONTINUE THE M OF
BUGGIES, CARTS
My Factory lg well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing
but work. We keep up with the improved Myles
Rest material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use-, you can select from
Brewster, Storm, kin, Coil, Raw. Horn, King
keep on hand a full lie ready
HARNESS AND WHIPS
he year round, which we will sell as as the lowest.
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING.
Thanking; the people of this and surrounding counties past favors we hope to
merit a continuance of the same
33-
J. L.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT.
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND
All kinds Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE
THE RELIABLE OF C
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be an
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and BOOTS and SHOES,
CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of
kinds, Gin and Mill Belting, Hat, Rock Limb, of Paris, 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
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Hereford's Bread Prep
ration and Hall's Star Lye At Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pare Lin-
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pomps, Salt and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction.
TH HEW BALL
i MM Writing U
REMODELED AND IMPROVED.
GOOD
The Beet Standard Typewriter in World.
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In-
Type in all Easiest
to and rapid as any.
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE.
as
This Machine Is every friend. Every-
body should have writing done on the
Typewriter. It always insures the most
prompt attention. Address
P COMPANY. Washington, St., Boston, Mass.
One of these machines be seen at the where particular and
prices can Le had.
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of
the beet Companies in existence, see





I THIS OFFER IS
fill I Will FOB YOU.
We bar n special arrange-
with
Weekly Constitution,
Great Weekly.
i--U mt Atlanta, by winch we err
to t It with the
for OWE fr only
I his offer a while. Now
is your u get n the news of all
the world and your home paper for the
price of one paper.
Every clubbing subscription at rate is
entitled to a chance at
fa 1892, details
of will be found
This W tn most remarkable
offer ever made. Every borne in
county should receive the
first, and after that. It have
the beat General bringing
every weak i he of the world,
overflowing with the choicest special
such as the Weekly
at Atlanta. Ga. and
having a circulation of 156.000.
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS.
greet
A Splendid Dictionary
Mrs. R. W. Kin has km spending
the past In
Dr. W. K. Wane last week
a trip to
Muster John Smith has bean
quite sick measles the past week.
Mrs. P. K. left last week far
Moore county to visit her daughter. M rs.
Seawell.
Mr. II. B. representative of
of excellent paper, the
Chronicle, spent last Thursday town.
Mrs. Carr. of county.
baa been spending the past week with
Mr-. C. D. Rountree and Miss Nichol-
son.
Mr. and Miss Lou
fool, of have been visiting
their aunt. Mrs. A. M. Clark, during toe
pact week.
We had a pleasant call Friday from
Mr. J. R. Griffin, a former newspaper
man of now representing
F. Gibson's wholesale produce house
of Philadelphia.
Mr. Walter Chandler, of Granville
who last in
co in county, and during the winter
has been attending the Male Academy,
returned to his home in Granville last
week.
I'll , t
The Draw Breaks.
The machinery to the draw of the rail-
road bridge brake stopped
the boats from The
draw was opened to let the steamer
Greenville through, that host coming
down i Brat, and the bridge
went to open It the Myers to
pass machinery so the
draw could not be moved and the Myers
had to remain above the bridge. The
draw was opened so Hie boats miss
between four and live o'clock.
The like ail other
papers, wants more subscribers, and in
order to induce persons to get m up a
club we have the following liberal offer
to make for the month of Ma ch
Any one who will during this month
bring or -end the Ten Sub-
s for one year with will be
given tree a splendid Webster's Una-
bridged Dictionary. This Dictionary
contains nearly 1300 images, and em-
braces 14.000 synonyms Copies of the
Dictionary can seen at this office.
Any one who tries to get up a club and
succeeds in only rive, can bring
on that number and get the
by paying fl extra. Ten subscribers
gets the Dictionary free to the person
raising the club. Any boy, r
grown person can get up a chili. Start
at once so as to get a Dictionary free.
No subscriptions accepted unless ac-
companied by the cash.
G-HT
Local Reflections.
The fish are biting.
Next Sunday is Easter.
get your fishing pole.
for sale J. B. Cherry
The foliage of the trees is growing
rapidly.
Cakes at Shel-
b urn's.
Monday following Easter to the time to
begin picnics.
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the
Old Brick Store.
Ladies all invited to Mrs. Joyner's
opening to-day.
Soda Water, Milk
and
Shakes
Lemonades at
Last week gave m a right good fore-
taste of summer.
The New Home Sewing Ma-
chines for at Brown Bros.
The Lenten closes with next
Try Cardenas, the best cent
smoke, at Reflector Book Store.
The coming Friday is known the
Calendar as Good Friday.
Cash given for Produce, Hides,
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick
Store.
the Episcopal church calendar this
is known as Holy Week.
The New Home Ma-
chines and all parts at Brown
Bros.
The clock the Court House steeple
has neither face or hands.
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads
and Mattresses at the Old Brick
Store-
Greenville ought to have a Young
Men's Christian Association.
The farmers continue to make rapid
progress with their farm work.
Just inD. M. Ferry Co's
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick
Stem.
There was right smart frost Monday
morning and it nipped the tops.
Fob Dancy house
on Pitt street Apply to
All vegetation is growing rapidly
the influence of the balmy we.
bushels fine, large Seed Pea-
nuts for sale by J. R Warren, near
Falkland, N. C.
If it does not rain new clothes and
hats will be out in abundance next San-
day.
Watch what
have to say. want your trade and
will serve you right.
Greenville promises to be well supplied
with ice the coming summer, a- there
will three dealers.
Don't be in too great harry lay-
aside heavy clothing. There will lie
some more cool weather yet.
The merchants enjoy good
too. It brings the shoppers out and
makes a demand for spring goods.
Henry Blount, the charming editor of
the Wilson Mirror, will do the act
in Washington on Memorial Day.
The anglers are catching nice bunches
of perch, the kind known as river robins.
It makes our fingers to go a fishing.
Nicholson, the candy man, has his re-
department in full bias,
ire cream, milk shakes, lemon-
etc.
There are some odors floating around
town are not at all conducive to
health. Cleaning up Is needed in various
localities.
Sheriff says the three prisoners
he took to last week were sent
immediately to work on the State farms
on Roanoke river.
While the farmer is planting corn the
merchant should be planting advertise-
Use the field and
reap a large harvest.
Town election Hist Monday in May.
It is time meetings were being called for
the different wards to nominate
dates for Councilmen.
Mr. James Long put a nice soda
in his store last week. He and
ought to be able to keep the
town this season.
Help the town and yon help yourself,
is an rule. all the
See it that and come together
some work to help Greenville
The beautiful weather first half of last
week brought out several left-over-from
last-season straw hats, but the shower of
Wednesday afternoon run them hack
On last morning Mr. H. F.
Keel brought us three tobacco plants of
this season's raising. leaves. Who
can beat it for the New Golden
Belt.
The way western hay is now coming
into our county by the car load ad find-
ready sale, it does look like our
farmers would give more to
raising it.
A young colored woman is
the barber's trade the shop
Edmonds. We do not sec why a woman
could not make proficiency the art
tonsorial.
The several nice weather items in this
paper may not seem in exact keeping
with the cold snap of Saturday and Sun-
day. But it takes all kinds of weather
to make up a week.
Mr. O. bought of Mr. W. A.
Pollard, Pitt county, a beef weighing
1203 lbs., and good judges say it is the
fattest ever brought to this market.
Washington Gazette.
We regret to hoar that Mr. J. P. Brown
of Washington, lost his steam saw and
mill by fire some nights ago. The
loss was only about half covered by in-
the Gazette says.
Pitt county Democratic Convention to
elect delegates to the State Convention,
May 7th. and township primaries will he
held on Saturday, April 30th. Read the
call from the Executive Committee.
Miss Lucy Hester, daughter, of Mr. H.
J. Hester, who lives two miles above
Greenville, was married last Thursday
afternoon to Mr. H. M. Rogers. Rev. A.
D. Hunter officiating. The
extends best wishes.
The mill of the Greenville Land and
Improvement Company tired up last
week and began cutting lumber. New
Boss Lunch Biscuit will whistle of its engines makes dally
music and in a short while everything
your appetite when nothing
else will. At the Old Brick Store.
Hunting Easter eggs be popular
With the little folks nest morn-
C- A- Snow Co's pamphlet, In-
formation and about Pat-
Caveats, Trademarks, Copy-
rights, etc., may be obtained free
at this
An exchange says whine adds
a Then a dog must be ail
wrinkles.
All parties who have tobacco to
ell can save Warehouse charges
and freight by bringing same to
the prise house on Saturdays
where they will receive good prices.
Scrape particularly wanted.
Directors of the Tar River
Company meet in Greenville to-
morrow morning.
is hereby given that the
of the Tar River Trans-
Co., will be held April
14th 1893 at o'clock AM- at
Greenville, N C
. Sec
Death Released Him.
On night. o'clock.
J. J. Moore, a while man confined the
jail, died in his cell. lie had been sick
more than a week, and realizing that his
condition was becoming dangerous
Sheriff Tucker on wrote to
Got. Holt setting forth the
stances and petitioned for tho pardon of
the prisoner. The Governor
Monday morning to the Sheriff that the
pardon had been mailed and that Moore
could be released at one.-, but death had
already released him. Sheriff Tucker
had the body shrouded moved to
room if the Court House
after death. Monday the remains
were taken home for burial. Mr. Moore
was serving a three sentence
from January term of Pitt Superior
Court for assault with deadly weapon.
He was about years oH, and was post-
master of His vile and a
few friends were when he died
Baptist
During the progress of the in
the Methodist the
vice of the Baptist church will to
except the Sunday morning
service. Rev. A. D. Hunter will preach
next Sunday morning at the usual hour.
On the first Sunday in May Rev. J. E.
Hut son, of Richmond, will a series
of meetings In the Baptist church. H
is remembered by many of oar people as
he has twice before
here.
Ward Meetings.
The Democratic voters of tho Second
and Third ward of the town of Greenville
are requested to on April
1885. at o'clock p. m., for the
purpose of nominating candidates for
Councilmen to be voted for at an election
to be held on the first Monday In -May
next.
voters of the Second ward will
meet at the Court House and those of
Third ward will meet at the Mayor's
e. Alex L.
Dem. Com.
will be in full blast up there.
A public meeting will be held at May's
Chapel school home in Beaver Dam
township next Friday night at which
speeches will be made by Mr. E. A.
Superior Court Clerk, and Sena-
tor W. B. Williams. Everybody invited.
It is the opinion of all who profess to
be judge in such cases that unless
happens to the fruit prospects
from now on there will be a
crop of it this year. No weather thus
far baa Injured It; orders the frost Moo-
day in some damage.
The merry-go-round, we requested to
state, will commence to run at o'clock
and atop at the ringing of the church bell
at o'clock. They don't wish to conflict
with the services at church. This Is
commendable in the young men and
they a liberal
The steam merry-go-round recent-
purchased by Hooker Bros, ft Greene,
arrived Friday evening was set up
ready for operation The
is located on vacant lot
Hotel The young awn
starting o wall with their enterprise.
are
We
Meeting.
April 4th,
Hoard of Commissioners for county
met this day in regular session, present
C. Dav, -on, chairman. T. E. Keel, C.
V. Newton, L. Fleming and S. A.
of last meeting lead and
approved.
The following orders tor paupers were
Winifred Taylor Margaret Bryan
James Masters D Smith
Alex Harriss Daniel Webster
Martha Nelson Oil. Bryan
Jacob Asa Knox
Susan Briley Susan Norris
Nancy Moore CO. Smith
Patsy Harriett
Henry Harris Emily
Edwards Win
-0. Polly An-
Smith
The following orders general
purposes were
J II Walker M G Dr.
B T Cox John Flanagan C
P Gaskins B S E
B Dudley B J Wilson T A
Thigpen Elihu Briley I W H
Long W B Moore.
Vines Jacob Rice C
W B W T God-
win W M Joshua
Rouse J A Whichard Israel
Moore W T Knight Francis
Nobles D H James IS. G A
Gowan B W Bullock J S L
Ward J A Whichard William
John Flanagan
R W King Downs E
A J J Forbes R W
King D J Whichard E A
J A K Tucker J E Woodard
J B Little G A
D C Moore SI Fleming
W B Lane It G Chapman W P
Buck B W T
Knight A A J T Smith
J J Lewis Smith
He, Holliday J A K Tucker
J A K Tucker . C
L Fleming Wm Staton
S A Gainer C V Newton T E
Keel Joe Williams
The following orders were issued for
Stock Law
Greenville C
C II Johnston
Swift Creek and Township
L B Cox A F Pittman , C
A B
W. B. Wilson released the pay-
of taxes on the same having
erroneously charged against him on
tax list for 1891.
T A released from payment of
taxes on the same having been
tax list of 1891.
Mrs Nannie Joyner allowed order on
Sheriff for error on tax list of 1891.
S T Hooker released from payment of
taxes on the same having been
charged to Brown Hooker on tax list
of 1891
Susan released from payment
of on error in tax list.
J R released from payment of
poll -ax Is. Carolina township, error In
tax list.
Andrew Moore Co allowed retail
liquor license in Greenville for months
from January 1st, 1899.
The following prisoners ware hired
to Walter Webb
for two months at per month; Joe
Dupree to E F Williams for two months
at per mouth
The following persons were appointed
List Takers of taxable for the year
B S Greenville township.
B G Chapman, township.
Alva Pittman, Swift Creek township.
E Blount, township.
J Smith, Beaver Dam township.
R L Joyner. township.
E F Williams. Falkland township.
T A
John S Keel, Bethel township.
W H Williams, Carolina township.
J B Little, township.
The following were allowed to
taxes for
Greenville Vaughan,
Brown Bros, W H Harrington.
Vaughan,
Swift Creek
The following was
The Board of Commissioners for Pitt
county will, at their meeting on Sod
of May, receive bids for the
construction of a dam a public road
way at the north end of the
bridge across Tar river st Greenville.
and running from the-ice north and
one-half degree east and one hundred
and thirty-two poke ts the public road.
The dirt to be In the construction
of said dam be taken from the land
lying Immediately upon the west sue of
said proposed roadway. Olds are to
ha bf the cubit tor tho
dirt used in said dent, and the successful
bidder is lo clear the laud upon which
dam to be of trees.
bushes The Board Com-
reserve the to reject
ear all bide.
list
The Revival.
The protracted meeting which is now
in progress at Methodist church is
widening in influence and power. Great-
results than have yet been visible arc
looked for lief ore its close.
The Meeting Is being conducted by
Rev. D. H. Tarboro. lie Is
yet a comparatively young man, being
about thirty-four years old. He was
born in western part of State, In
Caldwell county. He has been in the
ministry nearly eight years. Mr. Tut tie
is a man of unusual ability and power in
the pulpit. His life is an inspiration to
every one who knows him. Honesty
convictions aid boldness in the
of them mark him as one of the first
ministers of the South. No man has
ever more impressed us with the tact
that he believes what he preaches and
preaches what he and that
belief has been reached by a laborious
and submissive study of the word of God.
He shows a familiarity with the Bible
that is wonderful, almost beyond belief.
He quotes Scripture very frequently
with perfect accuracy and nearly always
gives you the book, chapter and verso of
each quotation. He is at all times
often eloquent and sometimes
grand in his preaching. His diction Is
clear and forcible, his language strong
and often elegant and his delivery easy,
free and attractive.
All of the sermons he has preached
here have been unusually good
but we cannot refrain from
mentioning especially those of last Sun-
day morning and evening. His sermon
in was about makers.
We shall not attempt any description of
it. No pen could report it. He Invited
the congregation to take a rip with him
up the Valley of the Life in
which we saw many people
cisterns for themselves that would
hold water. We took with him a second
trip up that valley when we found all
the cisterns broken. We would not be
satisfied If we did not say here that for
of conception, beauty of
thought, eloquence in delivery,
appropriateness in application, beauty in
tender and thrilling appeals
it was one of finest sermons we eyer
heard, and we are thankful fiat
heard it.
The sermon at night was on heart
as it's, the heart as it must The
reason we wish specially to refer to this
sermon is to say that Mr. Turtle showed
in it that he was a man opposed to all
kinds of sins, and that he had the bold-
to speak plainly in condemnation.
We believe he said just what he ought to
have said. The believes the
town is under obligations to him
for expressing the sentiments he did and
the sermon will do Greenville good
for the next ten ye; rs We say amen to
every word of It. We trust that the In-
of such a man as Mr. Tuttle will
long be felt among us and that many
who arc now leading lives of wickedness
may be induced to become followers, in
ti and In deed, of our loving
Thus far during the meeting
of professions have been made and up to
the close of Monday nights services
seven persons had given in their names
far church membership.
Th is week many of the merchants are
closing their s. ores during the hour of
morning services, from to o'clock.
Will
Mis. Joe Person's Remedy Will Cure
I, Latham, of Green-
ville, N. 5-, take pleasure in add-
a word of commendation of
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy. Mrs.
Latham had the dyspepsia very
badly, and the use of this Remedy
proved wonderful in its effects,
and after using a few bottles her
health vastly improved.
J. Latham,
Supt. Pub. Inst. Pitt Co.
Jane 20,1888-
The Cheapest Yet.
To make Cotton at the present
yon must use cheap
and Boykin
Chemicals are the cheapest yet
For sale by G- E- Harris, call
him before buying.
R J. COBS,
Pitt Co. M. C.
C C. COBB,
T. H.
Cobb Bros., Gilliam,
Cotton Factors,
APRIL
We'll not be a April fool and wait until this
month is gone before we buy it will be too late.
TOW
Mr. C. T. is now visiting the Northern Markets
purchasing immense SPRING STOCK Those in need of any
thing in the DRY line, NOTIONS, J
be benefited by visiting before purchasing, as we must clear
Pall and Winter Goods to make room for new ones.
Spring Goods will not be sold at cost, will be sold as low
as those advertised at cost. All are invited.
DON'T FORGET THE PLACE.
C. T. M FORD,
Opposite Old Store. n. c
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt of
6th of Heron, MM, as
of Peggy deceased
notice is hereby given to all-persons in-
to tie estate to make immediate
payment to the and all per-
sons having claims the estate
must present the same for payment on
or the of March, or
this notice will be in bar of
recovery.
of 1802.
Moses
Isaac
of Peggy Cherry.
You Are Not In It
If you fail to see the brand new stock of
GENERAL MERCHANDISE
-----that is now being offered by------
W. H. WHITE.
------1 have just the to suit
LADY,
FARMER.
BODY ELSE.
If you want 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 O. A.
near Five Points.
BROUGHTON V
Printers and Binders
1ST. O
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-
road or School Print-
or Binding.
WEDDING READY
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND
COUNTY OFFICERS.
us your orders.
EDWARDS
AND BINDERS,
RALEIGH. N. C.
Ocracoke Hotel
Sealed proposals for renting Ocracoke
Hotel for one or three years will be re-
and opened on April 1892.
The Board reserve the right to accept
or reject all bids.
O. M. BROWN.
Washington, N.
Tobacco- Growers
Tobacco Furnace
The best Invention ever made for
With it yon have absolute
control over heating your barn,
and it removes
All Danger of Fire.
Two cures week can be
made in the same
co of different degrees of ripe-
can be cured at one time in
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-----
Fitly
in the purchase of a PIANO from
Ten to Fifteen Dollars
in the purchase of an Organ address
ADOLPH COHN,
NEW N. C.
General Agent for Carolina,
who is now handling goods direct from
the manufacturers, as HIGH
GRADE PIANOS,
for tone, and
and endorsed by nearly all the
musical journals In the United
Made by Paul G. who is at this
time one of the best mechanics and In-
of the day. Thirteen new
patents on this high grade
Also the EVANS UP.
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by
him for the past six years in the eastern
part of this State and up to this time has
given entire The
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from
in Oak,
Walnut or
Also the GROWN PARLOR ORGAN
from to in solid or Oak
ewes.
Ten years experience in the music
business has enabled him lo handle
nothing hut standard good and he does
not to say he can sell any
musical instrument about per cent,
cheaper than other agents are now offer-
Refer to all banks In Eastern Carolina.
Hill
There is a great deal of satisfaction in leading
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 BUYER OF--------
Country Produce
Bring me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks,
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the
highest market price for them and pay in spot
cash.
II you have anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a small
Call and see me.
JNO. S.
LET ME HAVE YOUR
OR E-R-S
FOR
TOBACCO FLUES
I want to begin in time this year.
L. H, PENDER,
Land Sale.
By virtue of a i 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 undersigned
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 laud lying In
township, Pitt county, adjoin-
the lauds of Joseph II. Thomas
Thomas, the Harriet Bunting land, the
land of Gilbert and con-
acres, more or less.
This March 17th. 1892.
J. B. BULLOCK,
F. G. JAMES,
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.
NORFOLK, VA.
TOR SHIM of Cm -e,
We have Lad many jean ex
at the business and are
prepared to handle Cotton to
the advantage of shippers.
All business entrusted to
hands will receive prompt and
careful attention
L. W. DAVIS.
FINE------
HAVANA CIGARS
-----AND----
Roanoke Avenue,
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA.
For S. E. PENDER h CO
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore.
ESTABLISHED 1883.
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods
Car load Mew Pork.
Car load Side Meat.
Car load Flour, all grades.
Carload Seed
Cases Star Lye.
Case- Bread Powders.
Cases Soap.
Caws Cherries and Peaches.
Full line Case Goods.
Crackers.
Boxes Tobacco.
Boxes Starch.
M Rico
Stick Candy.
Barrels A Ax Snuff.
M Barrels Mills Snuff.
Barrels P. Snuff.
Paper cheroot. Cigarette,
Notice to Creditors.
Ha ring been appointed by the
court county Receiver of Oren-
Combination re, notice I here-
by given lo an persons indebted to said
Greenville Combination Store to make
payment the undersigned,
all prisons having Maims against
Greenville Combination Store stoat Ale
the same for payment properly
or before the U f of
next.
This say MM.
COTTON MARKET Is lower now than at any former period
in about forty years; this has been brought about by the
dented of the crop since September last, and the large
accumulation of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the
most be necessarily light; if any of 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,
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA





OF THE FLIRT.
REV. DIXON, DISCOURSES
ON RECENT SOCIAL SCANDALS.
IN CONSTRUCT
IN
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the model or drawing is sent we
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OINTMENT
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SEE
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of Lite, or b
gold. It Don
WEAK and learn
of
In
to Virtue
la of of Life.
New April Before the reg-
of the day in Association
hall this morning Mr. reviewed,
from the Christian point of view, the re-
cent startling and tragic scandals in
American society. He
The American colony in Paris was re-
shocked by the report of a pistol
from the private rooms of an American
wife and mother. A hod sought
to wash the stain of dishonor from his
home with the blood of the scoundrel
who had wrecked its happiness.
The echoes of that pistol shot rang
around the civilized world. It
many a villain. It should carry a sol-
lesson to the heart of tho giddy
woman of society.
Within the past few days two
have again shocked over the
sad revelation of the disgrace of a proud
and honored name among the social
celebrities of America. Again the con-
has centered the sacred
name of wife and mother. What makes
these incidents of specially dark import
is the insight they give in the condition
of the so called high society of today
that circulates between the Old and
New Worlds.
AWFUL FACTS.
A woman correspondent of tho St.
Post-Dispatch, writing from Paris
and commenting on one of these events,
says that can be imagined no at-
in which a woman, pretty,
and vain, with the seeds of
vice lying dormant her nature, could
find readier encouragement for the up-
springing of the evil growth than in this
circle of society.
have seen a woman of color, who
was also a woman of most immoral life
and antecedents, married to a western
widower whoso mistress she had been
for years before their was legal-
the guest of more than of the
most honorable American families in
Paris, and that long after her history
bad been spread abroad. A tremendous
scandal finally put a stop to her career
as a society lady. have known a
an who had been divorced for the same
state of affairs that led Mr. Deacon to
shoot M. who had married her
lover and come to Paris to live,
by of tho leading ladies of the Amer-
colony with the chaperonage of
that lady's young daughter at a French
watering place. have met repeatedly
at the leading houses of the American
colony an elderly American woman who
was living openly and
with the of another woman.
could go on multiplying such instances
by tho score. But I have narrated
enough of them to show that if Mrs.
Deacon chooses to again run with the
hares of respectability after going hunt-
with the hound of immorality, she
can easily manage to do
THE DOWNFALL OF SOCIETY.
This is sad reading for tho student of
tho society of today. If it be true, this
is one of the most startling facts in the
history of the social order of the Nine-
century. It as surely points to
of such a social order, as
did tho stench which rose from tho de-
society of Rome presage the day
when Goth and Vandal would build on
the ruins of the city once mistress of a
world.
it seems to mo that there are a few
things plain men and women should
learn from such
to enter such a of
society is not only not an honor, but
rather to compromise one's for
honor, integrity, truth, purity, manhood
and womanhood.
is time fathers and moth-
of wealth learned that to rear a
daughter in whirl of
fish vanity and idle idiocies, surrounded
by a set pf unprincipled libertines and
rakes, is hardly conducive to the pro-
of a woman fit to preside over a
home.
THE HABIT.
of dances and social
customs of this set is also in need of a
restudy and revision. It is worth con-
at least, whether the custom
of society women appearing at all social
functions in so called full dress is
the thing to virtue and man-
hood and womanhood.
For nowadays means as
nearly undressed as the police will allow.
Is it just the thing for women who
claim to be the leaders of modern society
to habitually appear before men, in their
homes and in public halls, in a
of nakedness whose vulgarity pass-
es the limits of sane discussion If any
woman is fool enough to believe men
not two eyes in their heads they
will wake to the fact by and by. A
spade is a spade. It is a fact that the
anatomical display in the boxes at tho
opera of today far exceeds in area that
which is seen behind the footlights.
am not simply ask for
information. Does all this make pure,
strong women and true men
FLIRTING
is time so called high society
learned an old, old home is
the holy of holies of human life. The
man who allows a libertine, or any male
biped, to enter his home, and under any
pretense of social law or custom pay
court to his wife, forfeits the divine
right of his fatherhood manhood;
and he merits the contempt of man-
kind. The wife who seeks the attention
of other men than her husband is a fool
of unfathomable proportions; and when
she receives the first of these attentions
by which men pay court to women, she
is leaning over the brink of the deepest
hell that opens on this earth.
It is a good time to think of some of
these facts.
THE SACREDNESS OF THE
And I saw a new heaven and a new
for tho first tit and the first earth
passed away; and there was do more sea.
And John, saw the holy city, new J
ion from God out of heaven,
1- i us a bride for her
And hoard a great of heaven say-
Behold, the of is with men;
and ho will dwell with thorn, and they shall be
las people, and God himself be with thorn,
and heir God.
And I saw no temple
I. S, I and
I have often heard very fine
drawn between the church and the
world by a certain class of thinkers.
Such distinction does not exist in the
Bible. There is no fine span theory of
church and world to found in tho
New Testament When Christ refers to
the world in a sense of warning he means
the sin there is in tho world. God so
loved the world that he gave his only
Son. docs not hate the
world; he died that the world might be
saved. What is kingdom of
which is to come What is the kingdom
that we are here to bring to What
sort of world heaven to be We have
outlined in the-v passages of Scripture
this new kingdom. I call your at in t ion
to four thoughts involved
In this ideal world that is to
saw a new heaven and n new
earth. That is, the new heaven and the
new earth are coterminous. There
be no new heaven until there is a new
heaven is a redeemed a
holy social organization.
an w the new Jerusalem. That
is, the new nation. Jerusalem was the
capital of the Hebrew nation, the per-
of the. nation's life. And
lastly, I saw no temple there. That is,
there is no house of worship visible, for
the dwelling place of is among men.
That Is to say, in the redeemed world
there is no ecclesiastical machinery. The
dwelling place of is in the relations
of his people.
That it to tag, the true church of
Christ in a city, a redefined
a redeemed nation, a redeemed world,
redeemed man in redeemed relation.
SHALL
This being true, there are some
inferences we necessarily draw.
is a mistake to identify
little organization for worship
with the true church of Christ.
The church of Christ is an invisible
empire. Wherever the sou of man looks
op into the heavens and says,
this is the temple of the Most
High. It is exceedingly difficult for a
member of a traditional denomination to
got into our beads this conception of tho
invisible, universal church.
It was hard for the people in the days
of Christ to understand this. Jesus had
to repeat and repeat the great thought.
God is spirit. They that worship him
must worship in spirit and in truth. He
had to repeat again and again the idea
that neither in the mount aim of Samaria
nor in Jerusalem could be found the
true temple of divine worship, but it
could only be found in tho son of man.
An evangelist walking down the aisles
of a church on one occasion after his
sermon asked his usual stereotyped
question of a lady, are you a
The lady regarded the
as somewhat impertinent. She drew
herself rather stiffly and replied,
sir; am an Her
conception of the church was confined
to four walls of an historic institution.
And so the Baptist is inclined to think
that his church n which he was born
and reared is the true apostolic church
of Jesus Christ and all others are with-
out.
ELECTED FOR WHAT
But what is the church yon ask me,
then. What is this organization for
is it here for It is tho
body of the elect. But elected for what
There are two doctrines of election;
is true and tho other is false. The doc-
of individual election for the
pose of individual salvation is a doc-
I cannot reconcile with the truth
of spiritual religion in Christ never
saw a man who believed in this doctrine
of election who did not believe that he
was elected. I am always afraid of the
doctrine because of that element of per-
self interest that seems to be its
determining characteristic. I in
the doctrine of Biblical election. The
children of Israel were an elected
but elected for what Chosen that
in and them tho world might be
saved. The church is the chosen body
through which Christ reaches and saves
tho world. We are not elected to save
our individual selves; we are elected
that the outside world may be reached
and saved. read a little poem the
other day which admirably illustrates
this conception of the elected of
tho saint as from
the people in the modern minister. Tho
poem
parish priest of austerity
up In a
To be nearer God. that he.
his word the people.
So he daily wrote sermon
What ho thought was sent from
And he down on the
heads
Two In seven.
In his age God said down and die.
And ho cried from out the steeple,
art thou, and the Lord
-Down here among my
HIGHWAYS OF LORD.
the channels through
which the human and divine excellence,
love and beauty and truth enter tho soul
of man, these must be tho highways of
the Lord, and must be regarded as holy
All societies then for the
of knowledge are not secular, but
sacred. The distinction between the
secular the sacred, honestly be-
was Hie invention of the devil to
deceive the elect. There is no such
thing as a world. It is God's
world. To impart knowledge is to
spread truth. What is truth Truth is
God; God is truth. To teach the truth
is to teach God. Men talk about secular
education and religions education. I do
not know what men are talking about
All education is sacred. To impart the
truth is to impart whether it be
taught in a log cabin at the country
crossroads or whether it be taught from
the sacred desk. Tho great scientist
who discovers the laws of and
unfolds them to the world is translating
God into human Kepler, the
great scientist, when he had discovered
the laws of the planetary world, leaped
to his feet in ecstasy and exclaimed,
Oil, Almighty God, I am thinking thy
thoughts after And he was. He
had followed the mind of God from star
to star, from world to world, unfolding
the beauties and glories of the
teaching in language deeper and diviner
than even tho of the poet the
transcendent truth that the heavens
show forth the glory of God.
PASTEUR INSTITUTE.
The work of the scientist today, is it
secular Go to Pasteur's laboratory in
Paris, in the anteroom, you will find the
victims gathered from tho four quarters
of the earth, fleeing from the nightmare
that has pursued them. All to
this magician that they may be healed
at the touch of science, and at the touch
of the great master the torn is
driven and hope once more
are theirs. As yon look into the joyous
faces of those who have been healed,
and look at this wonderful man who, in
the secrets of his laboratory solved this
problem of tho ages, is his work secular
Listen, was sick and ye visited
The pursuit and development pf art is
essentially religions, not Beauty
is an attribute of God. Art is; the trans-
of the into human
To translate beauty is to trans-
late God. Ar. grasps the divine and
imprisons it in matter that the spirit of
man may see and know and feel
the nearness of the divine. Is
music secular The master musician
who sweeps his strings and as be touches
them sweeps the listening unto the
very gates of heaven itself.
Painting, is it secular The artist
who grasps the deepest secrets of the
ideal and the spiritual and imprisons
them on canvas in form and color. A
man stood in a cathedral in Europe on
one occasion looking at the great paint-
from the
The attendant announced to that
the hoar to close the cathedral had
come. He still stood before the picture
in rapt attention. When again re-
minded that he must leave, he turned
with to too attendant
cannot go yet, I most stay until they
take him
SOCIAL
Social intercourse, is it or
sacred Social intercourse is the high-
way along which tho feet of Is may
travel to the of wan. It
be regarded as holy
iii ii mil
gathering, or casual
tag on the street
In Boston there was into a home,
day, a little with a deformed
foot The mother grandmother
and all the household were in tear over
the sad event. They were inconsolable.
From across the street there a
crippled girl, their neighbor, who asked
them the cause of all their distress. They
told her that tho little one won I be a
cripple for life.
She under,
the possibilities of such a life. You
should not be inconsolable. I been
a cripple all my life, and this world has
been a much more beautiful world to me
than to many of my friends. Everybody
is kind to me. I have only seen the
beautiful and the loving side of it
When I cross the streets the policemen
will stop all the cars and all the cabs
and help me tenderly across. n I
get on the train the baggage master will
put me on the track and roll me to the
car and assist me kindly, tenderly,
I have only seen that
which was beautiful and kind in the
And she had seen this in the
streets. She had learned this divine
son from a casual meeting of the rough
policeman and from meeting the bag-
gage smasher at the depot Wherever
man meets man may be the highway of
tho Lord through which divine troth
may pass to our souls.
THE ENGINE OF MERCY. ,
Trade and labor, are they sacred or
secular Labor is the of
matter. The laborer touches matter
and humanizes and that
which he touches. He the
rough material from the world and
forms and fashions it into things of
beauty and of use, until the rocks speak
in language divine; until our homos
made comfortable and beautiful by
this process of transforming the raw
material of The man who does
this work, is it secular work simply
The blacksmith at his anvil is doing a
work, if his work Vi done well.
He makes the anchor and the chain, and
in the storm the anchor holds. The chain
holds. The vessel is secure. The work
was well done.
The clothes I wear today, are the
result of so much labor as a commodity,
exchanged for so much money, ex-
changed in payment for tho
labor No. As I walk the
streets of New York and look to
those great tenements where the cloth-
is made, it seems to me that I can
feel in tho very seams of my coat the
throbbing, aching nerves of women who
have sewed into those seams their very
heart's blood. They did their work
well; and they were not paid for the
elements of faithfulness that went into
that work. They did their work unto
the Lord. obey your mas-
Not because you are a slave and
your master, but obey your mas-
unto the Such was the
only doctrine of slavery ever taught in
the Bible.
The mechanic who works in his shop
over the inventions which are to move
tho civilizations of the world, sacred or
secular A man started from tho golf
a short time ago on a fast express for
New York. Ho was bitten by a mad
dog, and was going to the Pasteur in-
His was a question of min-
Time That great engine dashed
through city after city until the click of
the rails came with tho regularity of the
tick of a watch. city after
city that great monster on its
mission of mercy. The man who
watched by the window cried in his
heart for speed. Inside of
hours that car was drawn into tho
cur of Jersey City. Ho reached
the institute in time, was treated and
saved. Tho man who invented that
magnificent machine of locomotion and
brought the four corners of this con-
together, was his work sacred or
secular was sick and ye
visited
The state, is it sacred or secular All
law is divine law. Law that is not
vine is not law. The state is tho
embodiment of law. It should
as holy the altar of the church it-
self. Patriotism is a divine sentiment
love country, not because we hate
tho rest of the world, but because our
country is a part of God's world.
tics should be sacred. It should be as
holy a work to be governor of a state as
to wear the red hat of a cardinal or do
the work of bishop or pastor.
A HEAVEN.
The is a part of the church of
Christ. It is holy ground. It is a little
kingdom of God in itself, where man
learns the first lesson of sacrifice and
love and obedience. It is here that the
foundations of great characters are laid.
It is the and strength of man-
hood. It is the secret fountain from
which man draws the inspiration to
meet every crisis of human life. It is
the inner sanctuary where God speaks
his deepest messages to those in distress
or trial.
Hawthorne lost his position under the
government at Salem and despaired of
is ability to succeed in life. He sat
down in bis room after tho loss of his
position utterly dejected, in despair. His
wife entered the room and saw him,
the situation. She did not say
anything at first She lighted a fire,
bright and cheerful, until its warm glow
filled the room. She brought a table
and put it down by his side, and brought
pen and ink and paper. And then, with a
tender touch on his shoulder, and in her
winning voice, she said to him,
my dear, you can write your
He looked up into her face and hope re-
Life opened anew. He seized his
pen. and wrote his book, and wrote the
masterpiece of his life, Scarlet Let-
Tho home is the secret altar from
which speaks to man Ins divinest
message, in that earlier life when char-
is being rapidly shaped for time
and eternity.
A SACRED PICTURE.
A mother in New Hampshire reared a.
family of eight boys. They all left the
homestead and went to sea. She was
heartbroken. The preacher visited her
home and had poured into his ears this
life sorrow. She said her boys were
good boys. She could not understand
why they had all gone to sea and left
her. She could not understand the mys-
work of Providence. Her heart
was desolate, the home forsaken. And
she said her boys had seen the
ocean until were grown. She asked
the preacher to explain it He looked
around the room and over the mantel
he saw a splendid picture of a great ship
under sail. Every white wing in-
with the message of foreign
The waves that dashed against
the keel speaking of a thousand shores
that had been washed as around the
world they had been swept, The preach-
said to her-. madam, this is
the explanation, Your boys became
sailors because this picture told them of
the ocean and led them around the
The very picture
every Inch of are sacred.
They make and unmake character and
life. Guard there well. Tin
of every great man's character is
laid in these primal hours of life. There
fa no touch like a mother's Thar
fa no to make and unmake char-
like that touch.
the secular hi the sacred.
Thai should be dona unto the
Lord, that wherever ton watts he
walks hi world, Una
mat f
inch of Its sou
call Bot for more church buildings,
i mere machinery; bat tho
great heed of the age in which we live
is holy ciders of merchants, holy or- ,
of holy orders of
sous, holy orders of lawyers, holy orders
I of mechanics. In other words, the re-
deemed world is that world in which all
tho relations of man are made sacred.
saw no temple therein, for the
place of God was among
We're not willing for the bat and
moles hat for men and women who hare
eyes and them, who hi ion-
reason There's a new world for
and sickly as area new
world created the el a
discovery
Years ago Dr. found out that
seem of scrofula, bronchial.
and In trouble I
at impure blood and the
weak tone of the way
sure effects to remove the
cause, human nature being the same,
results might looked for in
nearly all So confident Was lie
that the exceptions were uncommon
ho took look Ilia risk of giving
cine to those
the proved that he Was
right.
And Golden Medical is
the remedy for the million I The only
guaranteed Liver, mid rem-
Your If it doesn't
help yon
A Metropolitan
rows of
Fourteen of
It was a shambling old man and a
shambling old voice on Thirty-third
street lie had a very peculiar gait on
a horse with the
owing to tin solo of his right shoe being
loose J the necessity for flapping the
piece well up and forward with every
step in order to bring it down in the
right place. He hail a small and well
worn satchel, carried a paper of pins
and kept his eyes strained on the upper
windows for customers.
rows of pins,
he cried somewhat mournfully.
A window went up with a bang that
made his heart jump. A redheaded
woman with a flushed face stuck her
head out she
shouted.
row, you old she
screamed. it She made a
. gesture as if she would scoop him
with her bony fingers.
rows, -ma'am, only two
ho said apologetically.
one row, tell I want
to let that good for nothing husband of
mine see whether I'm worth a row of
pins or not I'll fix In popped
the red head and bang went tho window
down again.
up with a row of pins, will IT
the old man, shaking bis
head. much. She don't want any
pins. She wants the neighbors to know
what her says
what she wants. bet he's up
now for me with a club. Row of
pins wouldn't go up there if she'd
offer to buy my
Thus does age and adversity bring
York Herald.
Ob, What a
Will heed-the warning. The
perhaps the Mire approach of that
more terrible Ask
if yon can for the sake
of saving run the risk and do
for r. We know from
that Cure will cure cough.
It never fails. This explains why more
I hail a Million Bottles were sold the past
year. It croup an whooping
cough once. Mother, do not be
out For in me hack, side or cheat use
Shiloh's Flatter. Sold
Drug Stoic. ,
The Navy.
Tho Russian naval estimates for 1803
amount to or
more than last year, which sum is to
spent upon the building of
By order of tho czar a large ironclad
cruiser of tho same typo as the
of tons and horse power, is
to be put upon tho stocks at St Peters-
burg this spring, in addition to three
ironclads of tons and several iron-
clad coast vessels of from to
tons. It fa also intended to build
small cruisers. As soon as the thaw
in tho two ironclad gunboats, the
and the of 1,402
tons and with a speed of fifteen knots,
are to launched at St. Petersburg.
The now in of con-
will lie tho largest cruiser
afloat. She . will -120 feet in length,
with a speed of knots, and will be
able to go under steam from the Baltic
to the at a speed of ton
knots without coaling. Her armament
will consist of 8-inch guns, six of
0-inch, six of 5-inch and four torpedo
tubes, while her armor plates up to the
water line will lie ten inches in thick-
The will, it fa expected,
ready for launching next autumn.
Paris Letter.
Deserving
We desire to say to our citizens,
for years we have been selling Dr. King's
New Discovery tor Consumption, Dr.
New Life Pills,
Halve and Electric Bitters, and have
never handled remedies that sell as well.
or that have given such universal
faction. We do not hesitate to
tee them every time, and we stand
ready to refund the purchase price, if
results do not follow their
use. These have won their
neat popularity purely on their merits.
Drug store.
Egyptian and Crosses.
The lord bishop of Limerick, Dr.
Graves, who has examined the Christian
antiquities remaining amidst the ruins
of several of tho great Egyptian temples,
states that many of these monuments,
bear Christian inscriptions and are
scribed with Christian crosses. Thus
the great called the
at Thebes, which has used in part
as a Christian place of worship, bears a
Coptic inscription on one of the columns,
with the figure of a cross, and on walls
and columns of this a great many
crosses have rudely inscribed.
In the magnificent court of t tin
of the traveler will see
a score of columns, several of thorn bear-
Greek inscriptions, and in the
on the northwest side of the temple
he will see designed to consecrate
parts of tho building which, had,
been devoted to uses.
These crosses vary greatly in form, and
the bishop calls attention to tho close re-
semblance that exists between them and
those on many of the most ancient Irish
monuments. There many examples
of oriental crosses, he says, or
circles, on monuments
in Ireland and
Ledger.
Wilmington. N. C.
JOHN N. WEBB. Esq.,
Washington, D. C.
tin ; the of
who suffer form Nervous
I would in my opinion no
cine will give the relief to be
obtained from the use of the Electro-
poise. I have had one in my for
nearly a year, and do not hesitate to say
t invaluable to us.
In my own case of Nervous Dyspepsia.
which the horrors the
disease in Its worst I it gave
me relief when everything tailed,
and feel confident its use laid the
for the good health now enjoy
after three years of suffering, such as
men conk stand.
Very truly yours. FRENCH
Indian Tradition of the Stood.
There was not, if early
and theologians are to
believed, a single of American In-
who had at tho time of the white
man's advent in the western hemisphere
the least smattering of tradition con-
the life, ministry and sufferings
of Jesus. But this does not hold good
in regard to tho story of creation, the
Tower of Babel and the flood, many of
them having history which
almost exactly corresponds the
stories of these great as
in the Bible.
One day Major Davenport, the gov-
agent for the was
telling some chiefs about Noah, the
flood and the ark. when one of them tn-
him with We know
that long We was in canoes all
tied together. float on heap water.
We and muskrat down one,
times. He dive, come up. Last he go
down and come up mud in his
claw. We know water going
This was all the information Mr. Dav-
could elicit from the dusky
Louis Republic.
J Morning
Noon
Night
Good all the time. It removes i
the languor of morning,
the energies of noon, lulls
the weariness of night.
i Beer
delicious, sparkling, appetizing.
If a asks
of larger profit, you other kind
U as good No
I is as good as genuine
What's
why n by Alfred
in tin win of
rd. on or addressing
above barber, rim can procure a
bottle of Pm I Invaluable
and . causing the
hair l I
glossy, only two or three application a
week U a hair
brush all to In; used after the
s-alp for a few with
the Try a bottle and lie
convinced, only cents.
ALFRED
Barber,
N U.
a and Liver Complaint.
Is It not worth the small price of
to free yourself of every symptom of
these distressing if you think
so call at and get, of
Vitalize-, every bottle has
printed guarantee oh It,
and if docs you no good it a cost
nothing. s Drugstore.
Id tho I
In fever tho ti.
great quantities
poured the I
affect the
quickened .
in to get
oxidized;, when
I During a Fever.
rapidly wastes,
poison are
poisons
tho cause of
and often of
are
of poison
re
may say pretty con-
that tho rapid circulation and
the rapid breathing have not been
to Oxidize and neutralize the
mass of poison u h being carried to
tho Monthly.
Salve.
The best salve in the world for
Sores, Ulcers, Salt Rheum,
Sores, Hands.
Corns, and all skin
and positively Piles, or no
pay required. It is guaranteed to give
or money refunded.
tents box. For sale at
Drug Store.
Getting the.
A few years ago it was suspected that
tho latitude of places on the earth's
face changes. A number of astronomers
agreed to make observations for two
years, and the result has just been made
public. Latitudes do change. Berlin,
for example, was fifty feet nearer the
north pole in September than it was in
March. The change fa not, of course,
a of any one point on tho earth's
surface. It fa a tilting of the axis of the
York Journal.
The prettiest sight in the world Is a
pretty woman's feet in Jersey Lily boot,
and since Dr. Hull's Syrup cures
of colds, and costs but cents,
all women wear them.
The earth moves.--Evidence, can
it. a ant-class Salvation Oil.
for cents.
Cars Philadelphia.
A traction official who has recently
been to Boston, brought back with nun
a model of a double decked street car, a
sample of tho kind made in that city.
The upper deck fa intended for the use of
smokers and that portion of the female
community who do not object to the
use of tobacco. The official who brought
the model said that it would not be
many months before Philadelphia would
have a few double decked cars running
on one or two of the
Philadelphia Press.
Is emphatically a blood disorder earn-
ed by of the kidneys to throw
oft certain poison., in
the tissues about the slid
P. I. P. very simple, quickly and
surely cures this disease neutralizing
purities In the blood. Experience
science both endorse P. P. P., as the only
blood purifier known.
Accuracy.
many teeth has a
here;
hen hasn't any teeth.
Why
am writing a
on Care of
News.
We have a speedy and positive pure
for catarrh, diphtheria, mouth
headache, in
REMEDY. A nasal injector free with
each bottle. Use it if you desire health
breath. Price Me. Sold at
WOOTEN'S Store.
A friend need is a friend indeed,
unit not less than one million people
have round such e Mend In Dr.
King's New for
and you have never
this Great Cough Medicine, one
trial will convince you th it has won-
curative powers In ill disease of
Throat, Chest and Lungs. Each
is to do all that Is claimed or
money will be refunded, tattles
bee Store-
bottles
Obi
Among u
of Pope Leo excels, he bun.;
tho only ruler who has passed eighty.
There seven sovereigns who
passed seventy, these being Vic-
Christian of Denmark,
Grand Mo Frederick William of
Grand Duke
of Prince of
and, Ernest, of
Easy expectoration. Increased power
of the lung, the of rest,
are the reward, upon Dr. Bull's
Cough Syrup, to all consumptives.
Cuts, burns and all other wounds, can
be cured In a short time by the use of
at ion Oil, the greatest cure
THE
WATCH TOWER,
Published
ONE DOLLAR A
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity,
cation. General Intelligence. Head
for Sample Copy Office of Pub-
N, C.
Editorial Office. Wash-
N. C.
J. L. WIN FIELD,
D. w. Davis. Associate.
BOILING WATER OR MILK
GRATEFUL COMFORTING.
COCOA
1-2 LB TINS ONLY.
HAIR BALSAM
Via hair.
t Gray
Hair to Youthful
CONSUMPTIVE
TonTo. tR
Mr-loB.
h can Com
Co. at or a CO, M. V.
The Clot lies Pin is the finishing touch
in washing. A fine piece of linen is
hung over the line ; the clothes pin s
jammed down to hold it; the wind blows
and a constant wrenching is going on
until is taken down. A hole
appears where the clothes pin was. It
is difficult to see how
you arc going to get rid
of the pin; but
there arc; things which make more
holes than clothes pins; for in-
stance, the rubbing up and down
on necessity when an
article i; washed with common
rub more b into fine
c r coarse, than can
d to clothes pins. There
i a way out of tin's dilemma,
Use
You do not have to rub your
clothes ; soak them, boil them, rinse them, and the job is
done. They will be cleaner, whiter in half the
time; colors will be brighter, flannels softer, and you
have gotten rid of half the labor.
PEAR LINE costs no more than common soap. Mill-
ions of women are using it. Five cents will buy enough
PEA to prove to you that even- word we say is
true, ind if a great many times five cents would
be cheap for it.
BEST ORGANS AND
FOR EASIEST PAYMENTS.
The MASON HAMLIN CO- now offer to rent any one
famous Organs or Pianos for three months, giving the pawn
hiring opportunity to it thoroughly in his own home,
and return if lie does not longer want it. If lie continues to hire
it until the aggregate of rent paid amounts to the price of the
instrument, it his property without further payment.
Illustrated with net prices, free.
Mason Hamlin Organ and Piano Co,
BOSTON. CHICAGO.
pain. penis.
CHILD BIRTH f
MADE EASY I
of recognized value and in
constant use by the medical pro-
These ingredients are com-
in a manner hitherto unknown
FRIEND
WILL DO aB that is claimed for
it AND MORE. It Shortens Labor,
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to
Life of Mother, and Child. Book
ts others mailed FREE, con-
and
voluntary testimonials,
BY ALL
Jail free,
I F. If. J.
BEATTY
R. It,
Schedule
SOUTH.
No
daily Fast Mail, daily
daily ex Sun
Weldon 12,30 pm pm ti
Ar am M
Tarboro MB
Ar Wilson p m pm am
Wilton
Ar
a Sh
Goldsboro IS him
Ar
TRAINS WORTH
No No
daily daily
ea;
Wilmington loan.
Magnolia m
Warsaw
la C
Fayetteville
Ar Wilson
Wilson am I- pm pm
A Rocky Mount
Ar
Tarboro am
Ar Weldon pm pm
Daily except
Train No. will not before Jan. 7th.
Train on Road
leaves arrives Spot
land Neck at 5.15 P. M
P, M . 8.00 p. m. Returning,
leaves m., Greenville
8.25 a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m.
Weldon a. in., daily except Sun-
day
Local freight train leaves Waldo.
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at
Neck 1.0,6
a. p.
7.40 p. in. Returning
Tuesday, Thursday Saturday at
7.20 a. m., arriving
a. m., Scotland Neck 2.20 p. Weldon
5.16 p. m.
Train leave Tarboro, N C, via
A Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun-
E P SI,
Williamson, V P M, V M.
Plymouth 8-30 r- m., p. 1.1
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
6.00 a. m., Sunday a. in-
N C, 7.30 a at, 9.58 am
arrive Tarboro, N C, A M
Train on Midland N C Branch it
daily except Sunday, M
rive N C, A M. Re
turning leaves X AM
N 0.10
Train
loud P M, arrive
P P M. Returning
Hope A M,
A M, arrive Rocky P W A
except
Train Clinton Branch leaves
for f it
I. M
ton at A M, and P. V.
at Warsaw with So-. and
Southbound train on Wilson A
Brunch is No. Northbound la
Ho,
Trains No. South fl
stop only i Rocky Mount,
Goldsboro and Magnolia.
train No. makes clone connection t
for all point North dally. Al
all via and dally except Sun
via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A
Carolina for Norfolk and all
points via
JOHN F.
General
j. R.
r. M. agent.,
Whichard,
m . ESTATE.-. AGENTS,
O.
HA VIC panels of
estate for sale. Look over the list
below on or write them.
on Third Co-
in the town of Greenville,
good house with four
kitchen smoke house convenient
large on premises.
Two good building lots in
villa Greenville desirable
I A on street, between
. O. Front mid has nice house of
moms, well of water, large gar-
den plot and stables.
A acre lot in
Urge single story house
I of rooms, cook and dining rooms at-
Inched, all necessary out buildings and
stable, good water.
A line farm containing acres,
I u. about Greenville oil Mt.
house, tables,
I burns, two room tenant houses; ml
sen. cleared, balance
good This is excellent for
the cultivation of fine tobacco.
W. A about half .-
tween Grifton and Kin-ion and within i
mile of a new contains acres.
balance heavily timbered
with pine, oak, hickory, and cypress;
has good tenant houses; railroad passes
nearly through of this farm. The
, land clay subsoil with Bandy loam.
, is in good state and
I Improved J is fine lam.
A farm miles from
road known as the Jackson
farm; acres, cleared; has
good dwelling house and all necessary
out Building. is a first-class 10-
faro
A house ii ill lot In Greenville on
corner near J. B. Cherry and W.
J awls, now by the family of
late W. A. house contains i
rooms, kl Chen i convenient
only half a block from main
street of the town. Possession
can be given 1st.
A good building lot on
street, between Third and Fourth
streets, splendid location.
j and lot on Pitt
Ivy. street near Avenue,
house of rooms, large lot wild
I .
Pin adjoining the lot of
S- Sheppard and the lot describe. I in
Urge, story dwelling
four and pools
plenty of room for garden,
Valuable Steam Corn and
Mills, Cotton Gin and Store
property located at a X Road
within a hundred a U. R. is sit-
in one of the beat Agricultural
Section, of Pitt county. The mills are
fitted up with the best machinery. Bolt-
are In fall
operation. The store house is a two
story with dwelling attacked
it kitchen and warehouse In
The atom Is I -vi constantly
w lib general to a
Country and it doing a good
The mill., are best in
is far sale as the
to withdraw from, business.
Terms oh any of the above
can lie had on application to


Title
Eastern reflector, 13 April 1892
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
April 13, 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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