Eastern reflector, 10 January 1894






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STATE NEWS
Mentioned in our State Ex-
changes that are of General Interest
The Cream of the News.
A fire at Tillery last week de-
two store and tho post
office building.
Tobacco, is name of a new
19-page paper by the Tobacco
Publishing Co., Durham, to be
started this month-
Lieut. Richard Henderson has
been detailed as military
tor at the Agricultural and Me-
College at Raleigh.
Washington Mr. S.
L. Grist, of Chocowinity, raised
thirty eight pounds bales of
cotton on acres. have
heard of no who has boat this.
Tarboro James
G. Lawrence, who lives about two
miles from Conetoe, killed a large
hog on Tuesday
pounds, twenty-seven months old.
Weldon Tho Great
Falls Company has sold one half
interest their canal, near this
town, to a wealthy Northern syn-
and learn that two large
mills are to be erected at once.
Wilson A man
in Wilson, iD trying to shoot a
big gun turned the muzzle down
into a well. Tho explosion burst
the gun, and so his
right hand that Moore and
Albert Anderson had to amputate
it just above the waist-
We
learn that the stables of Mr. Ash-
with two mules, buggy,
wagons, and all farming
were destroyed by an in-
fire Monday night. Mr.
lives in Johnston county-
near the Wayne line. No
Tho Board of Aldermen of
Greensboro passed an ordinance
that practically kills the
in city. The ordinance
imposes a tax of on whole-
sale and per year on retail
merchants. A tine of or thirty
days in jail will imposed upon
retailers without license.
There is
a wide difference now in the
price of Bahama and yam
toes. Numbers of boots have been
lying the market dock with the
former and yesterday they sold
by the cargo at per bushel-
Not many yams have been coining
since Christmas and they are get-
ting in demand. They command-
ed GO cents yesterday at wholesale
from the boats-
Burlington News; Mr. L. W.
Holt has brought us a box of
what he calls year locusts, dug
up at his nursery near town- He
informs us that he has been dig-
them out there all the past
year, and they are now near the
surface, and are sprightly. Those
we have are as large as the little
finger and full of legs
being well developed. Mr. Holt
says the woods will be full of
them the coming summer.
Clinton We regret
to learn of the serious accident
which befell Miss Clyde, the 14-
year-old daughter of Mr.
Bass, postmaster at Warsaw.
A gun which a colored man care-
left standing by a counter
fell to the floor and was
ed by fall. The load of shot
struck Miss Bass on the foot
which was blown almost entirely
off, necessitating amputation. At
last accounts Miss Bass was doing
well and hopes are entertained
for recovery-
There are seven white female
convicts in the penitentiary.
There is one Croatan Indian
woman. One of the white women
is serving a life-sentence, and two
are in for twenty years. There
are among these women two sis-
from Iredell county. The
number of convicts in the prison
to-day is 124- The health of all
has been above the average
the past twelve months. The
record for behavior has been
generally good, and the officials
have had very little trouble. The
last report to the Superintendent
showed that there were convicts
at Castle Hayne farm, at the
Northampton dike, at the
Caledonia dike, at the Halifax
farm, at the Northampton
farm, and at the Caledonia
farm- Of the considerable
of females are
serving life-sentences.
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. Year, in Advance.
VOL. XI
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
NO.
TYPHOID FEVER AND DRINKING
WATER.
We deaths annually
from typhoid fever, and we know
how to prevent those deaths.
Why do we not do it f It is
mated that the of the average
adult is worth to the State
If a young man of from to
twenty-five years cf ago loses his
if will cost, to raise
another up from the cradle to tho
same age ; and I am sure that any
father who is engaged in the
pleasurable occupation of raising
a family of boys, will deny that it
can be done so cheaply. But on
this estimate, this Government is
losing times or
annually, in death from
typhoid fever- This is not all
that typhoid fever is costing us.
For every death from this disease,
at least ten other people are sick
with Five hundred thousand
who do not die are sick
each year with typhoid fever-
We will suppose that tho average
duration of the sickness is twenty-
eight days, and all physicians
will agree that this estimate is too
low. Tho person who has
fever is unable to re-
his vocation within a short-
time than three months. How-
ever, we will make our estimate
on the supposition that the aver
age time lost from work by a man
sick with typhoid fever is twenty-
eight days. Then tho aggregate
of time lost each year by people
sick with this disease amounts to
times twenty-eight days,
or days, which is
equivalent to more than
years. Supposing that the time
of the individual is worth cents
per day when he is well, this rep-
resents an actual loss of
annually, and this should be
doubled, for every per-
son sick the time of another per-
son who acts as a nurse is de-
The 614.000,000 added
to the which is lost by
death makes a total sum of
or about for every
inhabitant, tho annual tribute
levied upon this Nation by the
one disease, typhoid fever. This
represents approximately the
amount which we pay every year
for the ignorance and
which we exercise in allowing
this disease to
among us.
I said that typhoid fever
is a disease, and that
the large number of deaths from
this disease is unnecessary. This
is true, not only theoretically, but
practical demonstrations are not
wanting. Prior to 1859 the city
of Munich, in Bavaria, was a
veritable hotbed of typhoid fever.
There were no sewers and no
public water supply- Most of the
houses were furnished with large
brick or wooden flues which were
built from the up through
tho different floors- Into these
the excretions from the body
were dropped and accumulated
in the cellars. Other waste ma-
was deposited in cesspools,
and garbage was thrown into
back yards. The air in the
houses was foul and offensive to
the sense of smell. The drinking
water was taken from shallow
wells in the yards, and these
often received the ooze from the
cesspools and vaults. In 1859 the
citizens were compelled to seal
tightly the bottoms and sides of
these receptacles of filth, and
later a system sewerage was
introduced, and later still a sup-
ply of wholesome drinking water
was obtained. Notwithstanding
the fact that portions of the city
still remain at the
time of the last report, the results
have been most gratifying. From
1852 to 1859 the typhoid deaths
per in Munich averaged
24.2. This has been gradually de-
creased, until in 1884 it was 1.4
per This shows what has
been done in an old and crowded
city, and Vienna has practically
repeated the demonstration made
by Munich. The majority of
cases of typhoid fever arise from
a contaminated water. That a
drinking water infected with the
discharges from a person sick
with typhoid fever may cause an
epidemic of the disease, there can,
no longer be any doubt. The
records of sanitary science
abound in histories of such cases.
Every physician of large
with this disease can detail
one or more instances in which
the disease has dearly
traced to infected water, and I
will consider that this method of
the dissemination of the disease
is recognized by all. It probably
is a safe estimate to say that bad
drinking water causes not loss
than deaths each year in
this Victor C
M. D., in the Now York
Independent.
The South Farming More Wisely.
The Record, in
a review of the business condition
of the South, shows that the
farmers of that section now
largely engaged in raising grain
crops and provisions, supplies of
which character they formerly
in tho West; and in
tho of writer,
full result is that this section is
probably loss in to the North
and West for than
any year since the war
The thrifty condition of tho
South, as revealed by this show-
makes plain the beneficial
fruits of diversified agricultural
methods. For many consecutive
years tho planters of the South
the mistake of devoting
nearly all their acreage to the
growing of cotton, with the
result of producing larger crops
than could at times, be harvested
or marketed to advantage. Con-
by costly experience of the
unwisdom of such a course, they
have the policy of put-
ting all the ex-i in one basket;
and to growing many
necessaries of life, which, under
their former easy-going system of
living, they were to
purchase. Diversification of their
crops has already proven a good
thing for their pockets; and it
will prove a good thing also for
their farms.
Of course, the economic
will it more essential than
ever that the West shall
freer access to the markets of the
outer world for its surplus
and pork; but tho
now revenue system outlined by
the Ways Means Committee,
and soon to enacted by Con-
will go as far as possible
in opening the gates of com-
outward, and make work
as well for tho who plow tho
water as for those who plow
ALL ABOUT THE
The People and the Revolution.
tin
Stop Talking Panic.
The country has been pretty
nearly talked to death during tho
last three or four months.
suddenly observed
that gold was going off to Europe
It had been doing this for three
years, but nobody noticed it until
the drain began to tell on the
Government's gold reserve- Then
somebody spoke of it with an
ominous shake of the head, and
immediately went up a great lino
and cry about tho danger just
ahead. The people were scared
out of their wits. They began to
take their money out of the banks
and hide it away and
banks had to Suspend. They
began to skimp and scrape and
save and deny themselves the
ordinary indulgence of life, and
merchants trade dull and
themselves unable to pay their
bills. Every dollar that could be
obtained was fastened upon with
a death grip, instead of being
sent about its business of paying
debts. Banks loaded up their
vaults with reserves of
or per cent, and refused to
cash their depositor's check or
loan a dime on the best of
We became a nation of
as to money matters
a nation of crazy fools, some-
body has put each went
about yelling at the top
of his voice to alarm his neigh-
all the
The way to restore confidence
is to restore confidence, and the
best plan is the old Jerusalem
style of each man looking out for
that part of the wall over against
his own door. Pay your bills.
Use your money as you would
ordinarily. Put your cash in
banks. Don't talk panic, or act
panic, and in a little while there
will be no
Salve.
The Best Salve in the world for Cuts,
Bruises, Sores. Ulcers. Salt Rheum,
Fever Sores, Hands,
Chilblains Comes, and all Skin
and positively cures Piles, or no
pay required. It Is guaranteed to give
perfect or refunded
Price cents box. For Sale by
Hon. Claudius Dockery, of
North Carolina, recently returned
from Brazil, where he was station-
ed for four years as vice consul,
is in attending the an-
meeting of the Sigma Alpha
Epsilon college fraternity. Yes-
he was elected its
chairman for tho coming
year. During his residence at
Rio Janeiro Mr. Dockery a
very close observer of the affairs
of the Brazilian people and nation.
This morning he talked very
pleasantly and entertainingly to
a Loader on the
of affairs since tho fall of the
Emperor, Dom Pedro, and the
rise of the At the time
Mr. Dockery left Brazil, July
last, the the State of
de was in pro-
Shortly afterwards Ad
then secretary of the
marine department, resigned, and
soon assumed command of the
rebellious force on sea and land.
Speaking of tho revolution Mr.
tho Ad-
resigned ho publicly
stated that ho favored President
course. Ho himself
had been one of ad-
at tho time he forcibly
made president. I do not
think Admiral is fighting
for any other reason than is
All these South American
wars for tho spoils to be had.
I dunk, favors a republican
form of government, but to en-
his own interests is willing
to see the monarchy restored.
The rebel leader is an able man,
of family and well educated.
With the navy he is tho most
popular man in the county. The
old rivalry between the land and
naval forces is partly to blame for
Admiral position.
I think President
will be successful I think he will.
He has the support of all the
wealthy people of the county, the
coffee planters and leading mer-
chants. In addition, tho general
feeling of opposition to the
is very strong. During tho
era of the empire, the Republican
element was very bold and strong-
This element will stubbornly op-
movement tending toward
a restoration of the imperial party.
Besides all this, I thin k
made a very choice
he secured American vessels and
seamen to fight tho rebels. I am
personally acquainted with the
commanders and several
of the two boats now
Brazilian waters. All
these men are men of experience
and reliable seamen, well ac-
with all the arts of
modern warfare. The Brazilians
are very poor naval managers and
know or nothing of naval
warfare.
my at Rio
J the soldiers in a small
fort near the city rebelled. Tho
entire navy was in the harbor.
Orders were issued to shell the
insurgents and force submission.
For hours those vessels sent
shot and shell at that fort, but
not one effective shot was fired
Considerable was
done in the neighborhood, but
no one was killed in the fort-
another time,
presidency, Admiral
of the navy, sent an
ultimatum to the President, stat-
he must resign by noon or
he would fire on the city. Shortly
before noon a launch was noticed
approaching the vessel, carrying
several men. As they gave no
sign of their mission Admiral
ordered them to be
fired upon. One shot aimed at
that launch demolished the
steeples of a church in the sub
of Rio Janeiro, five miles
Concerning the financial and
moral conditions existing in Bra-
mi, Mr. Dockery
Brazil is practically bank-
Gold and not to
be had since the republic. The
the unit of value, worth
cents during the monarchy,
has dropped as low as cents.
Fluctuations in the money market
have rendered the condition of
affairs too precarious for business.
Everything is stagnant. Ex-
change is at the lowest ebb. Men
who were formerly millionaires
find themselves really bankrupt.
In accordance with this, the
imports have decreased
per cent. Europe suffers more
than the United States by this as
under act, trade
with our country has improved.
No actual increase has been noted
owing to tho stagnation
in Brazil. The conditions of ex-
change cause all merchants to be
very backward at importing.
American interests in Brazil are
very strong. We practically
control the coffee trade and if tho
reciprocity has a fair trial
will have tho same control over
the
Regarding the civilization and
life in tho great South
State, Mr. Dockery says they are
awful. Ho a few cities
along the coast, where tho foreign
predominates, society is
very good and the people live
well. But in all portions
of that great country the
awful. Morally the
people are very low. A census
of tho of Para in
1890, showed that per cent,
of the children were
The conditions of the poor is low,
and the laboring class is
uncivilized and wars and re-
have had much to do
with this. Since tho
the monarchy this state of affairs
has rapidly grown All
restraints have been practically
thrown off and the natural
cal toward licentious
has full sway. Pestilences
always follows such
If conditions were rendered any
ways stable, Brazil is a wonderful
country, whose resources
merely hinted at. Tho country is
a glorious one and rightly ruled
would rapidly advance to a prom-
position among the great
ODDITIES OF GREAT MEN.
Octavius Augustus had a
dread of thunder, and when-
ever a storm on he retired
to underground vault, built
for protection.
Richter was fond of pets, and
at one time kept a great spider in
a paper box, carefully feeding
and tho for
months.
Phillip, tho of Burgundy,
spout much in contriving
trap-doors in his and
grounds to souse unwary
in water
Spinoza's amusement
was to set spiders to fighting, and
ho would laugh immoderately at
beholding their ferocious
Julius was ashamed of
his bald hood, and it
shiny, ho constantly a
laurel wreath tho of con-
tho deformity.
Seneca, when tired writing his
treatises on moral, found
going over his accounts,
and calculating how much inter-
est was duo him.
The Eighth Silver Dollar of 1804.
Jan. Tho be-
lief that only seven of the 1804
silver dollars were in existence,
has been an error, for the eight
one has turned up. Rosenthal
Bros., dealers old coin, had a
debtor Virginia from whom
they tried vainly some
to collect a bill of Recently
tho Virginian sent tho firm one of
the much sought-for 1804 dollars.
He stated that he sent the coin in
payment of his bill, and if the
Rosenthal company could sell it
for than the total amount
they could keep tho balance. In
explanation of how ho came into
possession of the dollar, tho
wrote that ho had bought
it for from an old who
was ignorant of its rarity and
value, and in whoso family it had I mind.
been for a long time. The
took tho dollar to the
mint here and it was pronounced
genuine. A coin collector has
offered them for the dollar,
but they refused the offer, as at
an auction sale of coins here one
of the 1804 dollars sold for
Barton, when out of spirits,
would go to the seeps leading to
tho water, and find pleasure in
listening to tho stories of the
bargemen.
to money Rembrandt
loved nothing so well as his
key. shed tears when tho ape
died, and painted a portrait of his
pet from memory.
Adam Smith, the author of the
of when tired
of study, would go into a neigh-
boring blacksmith-shop and
watch th at work.
the astronomer, had
been a player ill a Prussian
mental baud, and his old
ago set his neighbor's on
edge with a
Both Pope and Campbell were
accustomed to ring for pens, ink,
and tea at unreasonable hours of
tho night, that they might record
tho thoughts that occurred to
them.
Cowper loved pots, and at
one time five rabbits, three hares.
two guinea-pigs, a magpie, a jay
a starling, two canary birds, two
dogs, a and
squirrel.
Coleridge found for his
troubles the forgetfulneSS in-
by opium, and when under
its influence would sit for boon
threading tho dreamy mazes of
A Newsboy's Gallantly.
A bright-faced little newsboy
performed an act one day last
week which rivals Lord Chester-
field's courtly deeds. He was
standing on the corner of Penn-
avenue Seventh
street northwest, crying his
papers with lusty voice. A
stylish attired little miss of about
his own age crossing to tho
where he was standing,
had the misfortune to have one of
her trim little shoes splashed with
a big gob of slush. She stood
on the curbing and glanced rue
fully down at the bespattered foot
and then looked at the other,
which was so shiny and bright as
could be. Great big tears welled
Mozart always kept his note-
book his pocket, and while
walking or playing billiards, his
favorite would often
stop to jot down a melody that
occurred to him.
took his Sunday din-
alone at a coffee-house. After
dinner ho would build a pyramid
of wino glasses, which usually
toppled over. Ho would pay for
tho broken glass, and go.
Diocletian, after his abdication,
spent his leisure in gardening.
yon could see the cabbages I,
ho said to a deputation,
would not ask mo to
the
Kant, tho Gorman philosopher
was fond of walking, but was so
fearful of contracting some
disease that ho always walk-
ed with his lips closed and a
handkerchief his nose-
Sheridan spent his leisure
in manufacturing clever repartees
arid funny sayings, and after
going into would load
TRAINING BOTH HANDS AUK.
In one of his essays in a book
entitled tho late
James T. Fields I
wore a boy again I think I would
to use my left hand just at
freely as my right one, so that
if anything happened to lamp
either of thorn the other would be
I all ready to write and handle
things just as freely as if nothing
had And undoubtedly
a groat many of us would learn to
use both hands alike if had
our lives to over again. Of
all tho young who came
under my instruction while in
charge of tho school of
economy of tho Iowa Agricultural
College not than one in
could sweep properly-
The ratio in this respect of those
who came under my instruction
at Purdue University was about
tho same. And, as far as my
observations extend, this ratio
will hold in regard to women
generally.
As a rule, women, old am
young, do not know how to handle
B broom. Their right hands only-
have been trained. Their left
hands been
When a woman takes hold of a
broom it is with tho right hand
near the top of the handle and
the hand toward tho com;
and instead of changing and re
Versing them as occasion demands
she always keeps them in the same
position. Whether she sweeps to
the right or to tho left, the
of her hands remains
changed. And body is coil
totted her muscles strained
in the performance of an operation
that would exercise these organs
harmoniously if the hands were
so trained that could be used
at will were changed as
mended by the changes
position of tho sweeper.
I refer to women
merely to illustrate my point.
The same can be concerning
the training of the hands in
other of women's
work that it is to men
so far as the use of till
left hand is concerned, men arc
in no better condition than women.
Men and women are this
maimed and handicapped
alike. Why should such a stale
Of things extol Why in this
of manual training, should we
Overlook and neglect the education
of tho left hand to
train tho right hand at the ex
Dense Of the left No physician
or physiologist has given a
sensible reason for so doing, and
seem to adhere to the custom
merely because it has been carried
down to us by our ancestors.
Monthly.
th
It every
Anton St. Lewis,
Mo., suffered with
for the last two and have
doctored considerably Salvation
Oil the only remedy that has effected
up into her eyes as the contrast j conversation to a point at
struck her painfully. The news-
boy was quick to see and
the situation. Pulling a
handkerchief from his tattered
coat pocket he stooped and wiped
the shoe until it was again as dry
and clean as it had been before
the mishap- Before the little
miss, who was smiling by this
time, could thank him he jumped
up and ran down the avenue yell-
papers at the top of his voice.
Washington Post.
which they could worked off as
impromptu-
David, the artist, when not
painting, amused himself by
scraping an old fiddle, which ho
did Ho would in-
on playing for every visitor,
and often if I
had only been born a
Byron's household, according
to Shelly, consisted,
of ten horses, eight
dogs, three monkeys, five
cats, an eagle, a crow, and a
con, and all except the horses
went to and fro in tho house at
their pleasure.
Says that well known
journal, tho Louisville
Home and Farm
No man is more to envied
to day than the owner of a farm,
be it largo or small, who is out of
debt has learned to so man-
age it that it furnishes an
supply for the wants of his
family, and leaves to be
laid by for future use. There are
men who doing this on a few
acres. We visited in Frank-
county, Ohio, whoso farm con-
acres the sales were
a year for a series of years.
Another on a farm of acres,
only half tillable, who sold on
of nor year. Both
of those unusual cases and
are only mentioned to show some
of tho possibilities of firming.
Scrofula eradicated and nil kindred
disease eared by Hoe
which by vitalizing and
effects, pure blond.
Deserving
We desire to say to our citizens,
or years we have been selling Dr. K
New Discovery Consumption, Dr.
King's New Lifts Pills.
Salve 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 Hand
refund the purchase if
satisfactory not fellow their
use. These remedies have won j
great popularity purely on their merit fight and endorsing Mitchell, dollars.
Methodist conference
at adopted resolutions
denouncing the proposed
Tho Globe man good
pokes fun at tho kiss
tho and
you ever kiss the
pretty girls at Christmas under
the mistletoe bough I never
Kissing the girls at Oh
the mistletoe is a good
old English but in
America we hare a better, viz.
kissing tho girls under tho
without regard to the season.
pi
In Federal income-tax
yielded about seventy millions of
NOW LOOK
Tho Eastern Reflector
ho Atlanta Constitution
ho Now York World
ALL ONE TEAS FOB 82.25
Subscribe at office.
This Office for Job Printing
A Great Truth.
The man who borrows your pa-
per is as able to subscribe as you
Sentinel.
The stormy winter with its rains,
and snow-, and rushing blasts serves
timely on all persona, who think
life worth the living, that they must
keep on hands supply of Dr.
Cough syrup, the cure for
cough, cold Incipient consumption,
or die of
A girl is considered of
able ago at in
Spain, Hungary and
In America she is
whenever can got
her dower.
Lease in is
the caption of an in a con-
temporary, tolling of the
row In Kansas. That's it. Sister
is satisfied
a disturbance, and she is
as happy now, in a big black-
guarding match with of her
own kidney, as if wore again
dodging eggs in
lotto Observer.
It Should Be In House.
I.
Pa., mys he will not be without
King's New Consumption,
Coughs and Colds, ft his wife
who was Pneumonia
after attack of when
various other remedies and several
bad done her no good. Robert
Barber, of Pa., Dr.
King's New Discovery baa done him
more good than anything he ever used
for Lung Trouble. Nothing Try
It Free Trial Bottles at Drag
Store. Large bottles, Me. and S
A full-length portrait of the late
Mrs Caroline Scott Harrison, wife
of ex President Benjamin Harri-
son, is being painted by Daniel
Huntington for tho National So-
of tho Daughters of tho
American Revolution. When
finished, tho picture will hang in
the White at Washing;
ton. Mrs. Harrison was the Re-
society's first
dent-general, and upon her death
Mrs. Mrs. Letitia Green Steven-
son, wife of Vice President Adlai
E. Stevenson, to fill
position us leading officer.
Ohio, City of
Lucas County.
Prank J. makes oath he
lathe senior partner of the J.
it Co., doing business in the
Icy of Toledo, States afore-
and that mid Arm will pay the sum
of one hundred dollars for each and
every ease of Catarrh that cannot be
by the use Hall's Catarrh Core.
J,
sworn to before me and inscribed in
my ibis 8th day t December.
A, II. 1888.
A. Gumboil
ska
Notary
Hall's Catarrh to taken Internally
and acts directly on the blood and mu-
surfaces system. Send for
U tree.
V. Co., Toledo, O
j MENSTRUATION
woman of vigorous health
J oil in time without pain or dis-
but when she approaches this
, crisis MONTHLY with a frail
Slid feeble health she endangers
both physical and mental powers.
-8 FEMALES
REGULATOR
if taken a few days before the monthly
sets in and continued
nature performs her functions, has no
J equal a SPECIFIC for Painful, Pro-
J Scanty, Suppressed and Irregular
, MENSTRUATION
J Book to WOMAN mailed free.
REGULATOR CO., Ga.
Sol-t all
D.
DENTIST,
KY -AT-LAW
N. C.
Prompt attention to business.
at old stand.
J JARVIS.
BLOW,
L. BLOW
ATTORNEYS- AT-LAW,
N. C.
Practice in nil the Courts.
A. n.
TYSON,
Prompt attention Riven to collections
LATHAM.
HARRY
SKINNER,
N. C.
Li l.
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
GREENVILLE X C.





r-
THE REFLECTOR.
Greenville, N. C.
S. J. and
WEDNESDAY. JANUARY
red t Greenville,
N. i . second-class mail matter.
The House of Representatives
at Washington Las been
to transact any for
days because so many Demo-
are absent Loin their places
that when the Republicans refuse
to vote there is no This
is a pretty spectacle to be
to the American people.
If the Democrats with the major
that they have in the House
can't get to work on the tariff bill
how is it to be expected that the
bill shall soon become a law. It
is time that the constituents of
shall demand that
they be in their places at all
times when they are not
kept away, or resign
their seats, one or the other.
They are paid their salaries, they
are expected to carry out the
pledges of the party, and unless
they do it they ought to be com-
to step down and out. Two
weeks holiday at Christmas
ought to have been sufficient to
have attended to any private
business and there is no excuse
for the absence of so many Rep-
We are glad to see
from papers that a
has been passed in the
House commanding the Sergeant-
at-Arms to every
present and authorizing him to
summons as many deputies as
may be necessary to carry out the
intent of this resolution. When
they have been gotten there they
ought to be kept there and not
excused to home, often for
the purpose not voting upon
Borne question. We are glad to
see that ah of our Representative
have been present and voted
every time. This is as it should
be and we trust that they will not
absent themselves during the en-
tire session unless compelled by
unavoidable circumstances- For
doing this they will be
ed and it will be remembered at
the next election. want
but faithful men to represent
us in these responsible positions
and the sooner this demand is
made and enforced the country
over, the sooner we will have the
reforms which this age so much
needs. The Democrats are ex
to revise the tariff. Every
man ought to know this and
hooves Congress to act recording
to the instructions them by
people at the polls more than
twelve months ago. Let this de-
be made by every Demo-
paper in the Union and 1st
them speak in no uncertain words
as to the result of failure to use
the opportunity which tho party
now has to itself in power
for years to come. Nothing but
the fulfillment of the pledges
made to the people will do this
and this can never be done while a
large number of those who ought
to be at their post remain absent.
Business before the House de-
every Representatives
presence and we trust before this
is read that the Democratic
House may have a working ma-
and go forward with the
work which they ought and must
do if they expect the approval of
the American people.
The long continued fight over
the confirmation of Mr.
as Collector for the West-
District has come to an end,
and it m settled by Mr. Elms
himself. He wrote a letter to
President Cleveland thanking
him for the interest he had taken
in the matter and the manner in
which he had stood by him, and
requested that his name be with-
stating that he had rather
i from the contest rather
be the cause of dissension
in the Democratic party. The
then went to Mr. Mel-
E. Carter, of Asheville, who
was agreed upon by both Sena-
tors-
The great six days bicycle race
at New York came to an end last
week with Shock the winner,
making 1,600 miles. This beats
the world's record of Martin in
1891 by miles- Waller came
out second, making 1,484; Martin
1,430; Albert 1,410. There were
only eleven contestants that re-
to the finish-
The Teachers Assembly will
meet at Morehead City, begin-
June 19th to 30th- There
were steps taken to hold it at
Chapel Hill, but failed to mate
One thousand names
will be sent to Vice President
Stevenson and family
them.
Mr. J. A. proprietor of
the Harrell printing house, at
Weldon, and a prominent can-
for Public Printer, died
last Thursday morning at his
home in Henderson, aged years.
He was sick only two weeks with
heart trouble.
The Tarboro Southerner has
passed another mile post and is
now in its seventy-second year,
and tho oldest paper in the State.
Success to it.
Speaker Crisp certainly made
himself solid with the country
when he said the Wilson bill
would be passed without the loss
of time-
if a Democratic
quorum cannot be kept here all
the time ; already the day of the
final vote has been charged to
January 22- This absenteeism is
more the result of the big Demo-
majority than indifference-
Each member who stays away
probably thinks there will be a
Democratic quorum without him,
but so many stay away that there
isn't.
The investigation of the
of this government with
Hawaii is being pushed by the
of the Senate com-
on Foreign Relations. All
of the witnesses heard up to this
time have been gentlemen who
took an active part in the
movement and the formation
of the provisional government of
Hawaii.- consequently the
money has been all of one kind-
Although the proceedings are
supposed to be secret, the nature
of the testimony taken becomes
known almost as soon as it would
if the hearings were public. Con-
comment not favorable
to ex-Minister Stevens has been
indulged in this week. Senator
Frye had reported the health of
Mr. Stevens to be so precarious
that it might prevent his coming
to Washington to testify before
the committee, yet the newspapers
all contained accounts of his
traveled from his in
Maine to Island in order
to deliver a speech on Hawaii at
a club banquet. Now the
is being asked, why, if his
health permits him to attend club
banquets and sit up two-thirds of
a night to make a set speech, it
should prevent his coming to the
mild climate of Washington and
giving the committee a few hours
of his time during the day Per-
haps the oath which the commit-
tee administers to its witness may
have something to do with the
reluctance of Mr- Stephens. A
man doesn't have to swear to
statements made in a banquet
speech-
Representative Bland has in-
a bill in the House,
providing for the immediate issue
of of silver certificates
to supply the treasury with money
to meet the growing deficiency,
the same to be passed upon the
of the silver bullion
in the Treasury; also providing
for the coinage of the silver
lion in the Treasury as rapidly as
possible. Mr. Bland thinks the
adoption of this bill preferable
to an issue of bonds to meet cur-
rent expenses of the government.
There has been a great deal of
interest of late in the revolution
in Brazil, and anything about it
coming from a reliable source,
has been eagerly read by the
public. We publish on first page
to day an interview by a Pitts-
burg Leader reporter with Mr.
Claudius of North Caro
late vice at Rio.
which throws considerable light
on the situation. Commenting
on this interview, tho Charlotte
Observer says
views of ex Gov. Jarvis
upon the Brazilian
ought to be of interest now.
When he was minister to that
country under Mr. Cleveland's for-
The New York World has been
collecting the opinions of
of various States relative to
the expediency of an income tax.
Every Southern Governor, except
one, Gov. of West
is in favor of it. Gov. Carr,
we are glad to state gives his
endorsement. Hear him
as he speaks in the
people of North Carolina
warmly favor a graduated income
t I might say without regard
to political parties that a
law imposing such a tax will
meet with no opposition in
North Carolina. I favor going
as low as possible on the amount
income to be taxed, going as
near as may to the amount
necessary for support, say all in
excess of per annum. No
statement is more true than that
people who own the most proper-
are not only best able to pay
taxes, but have more at stake.
there was a Government
income tax the men who paid it
fought it, and their powerful lob-
by at Washington secured the re-
peal of the law. There is an in-
come tax in North Carolina. It
is one half of per cent, on in-
comes in excess of I do
not know that there are any ob-
to this tax.
is sail that but little money
is derived from it, but a United
States income tax would
be collected by internal
collectors. They collected it
under the old law and they
did the track thoroughly.
I do not think an income tax
leads to more false swearing than
any other form of taxation, as
people generally give themselves
the benefit of the doubt when it
comes to giving in property for
The World itself endorses the
measure strongly.
WASHINGTON LETTER.
mer administration it was yet an
our Regular
Washington D. C-, Jan. 6,1894-
Chairman Wilson is not
the support he deserves from
the Democratic members of tho
House. He had worked himself
into a state bordering on physical
exhaustion in order that the tariff
bill might be called up as soon as
the House met on Wednesday,
and his disappointment can only
situation i when ho saw that tho
tariff bill could not be taken up
on that day because of the ab-
of a quorum of Democrats,
it being the policy of tho
cans not to allow the bill to be
empire and Dom Pedro was on ans not to allow the bill to be
the throne. Gov. Jarvis regard considered without a quorum,
j w;, ., and i which they will refuse to assist in
ed him as an able and excellent
man, if we remember rightly, and
became personally attached to
him during his residence in Bra
The Reflector hopes Gov. Jar-
will be heard from.
Granulated sugar is quoted
now to jobbers at 3.74 cents per
pound, lower than ever was
known- The price was fixed at
cents less a rebate of of a
cent and per cent- discount to
cash buyers, so that the net cost
to jobbers, was 3.74 cents per
The lowest previous
prices was con's, less the cash
discount, in the fall of 1891, short-
after the removal of the duties
on raw sugars, and at the of
the competition with
local trade outside tho trust-
I making. Inasmuch as every
i Democratic member knew tho
of having a quorum of
their own members present this
absenteeism is inexcusable. The
whole country is demanding
prompt action on the tariff, and
at the very opening of the session
a day is thrown away.
The tariff as map-
out by Chairman Wilson was
five days for general debate, eight
days with evening session for
discussion under the five-minute
rule, during which tho internal
revenue amendments decided
upon this cent
tax upon all incomes of and
over ; the increase in the tax on
cigarettes to per ; the
increase in tho tax whiskey to
per gallon, and tho tax of
cents per pack on playing cards
are to be and the final
vote to be taken on the 17th of Jan-
; but it will not be possible
to carry out this or any other
MEETING.
W O Vinson and Guilford
Stocks were allowed to pay single
tax only instead of double tax as
charged on delinquent list.
Ordered that Adam Gaskins, of
of township, be credited
on list with 96.93, he having
been charged twice.
Ordered that Albert
be refunded his tax for 1893,
the same property having been
listed and paid by M S Moore.
J J Elks, Constable of
township, tendered his bond
which was approved and ordered
filed.
Dr W H Bagwell,
dent of Health, presented his
monthly report which was order-
ed
Ordered that the Clerk of this
Board notify the Board of Road
Supervisors of Swift Creek town-
ship, of the completion of the
new road in neck, and
direct them to assign hands to
the keeping up of the same.
Ordered that the Sheriff grant
peddler's license free of charge
to T E Randolph, Sr., a disabled
Confederate soldier, for the year
1894.
Ordered that J H Mills,
an, be credited with on the
tax books of 1893, it being the
amount charged on acres of
land in township which
was listed twice.
W G Stokes, H
A Smith, Ben Dancy and James
F Clark were allowed to list
for 1893-
The office of Constable of
Greenville recently held
by W B James, was declared
cant, and O W Harrington was
elected to the position. He ten-
his official bond which was
accepted and ordered filed, and
the oath of office administered.
G B King having tendered his
resignation as Superintendent of
Public Instruction to the Board
of Education, the said Board of
Education at o'clock met in
joint meeting with this Board to
elect his successor. A ballot was
taken resulting in the election of
W H
The following were drawn as
jurors to serve at March term of
Pitt Superior
First Edwards,
John S Hart, W N Simmons, E F
Cox, J S C Ben-
Jesse Thomas, W F Flem-
David Newell, R J W Car-
son, J S Higgs, C L Patrick, Chas
S G Forbes, L B Bur
Fred Brooks, Fernando
Ward.
Second W Martin,
E Hardy. John J Mason, B
F W B James, J J
Laughinghouse, G Holliday,
Fred Cox, B F Patrick, L H
W M Cory, Geo Mooring,
col, J G W J S
A Arnold, Leon Ford, Jas H
Highsmith, Jas W Briley.
E A Clerk Superior
Court, filed his statement of the
amount of funds in his hands on
the first Monday in Dec, 1893,
and the same was ordered re-
corded.
T E Keel and Leonidas Flem-
who were appointed a com-
to assist in a settlement be
tween J A K Tucker,
and John Flanagan, Treasurer,
for the taxes collected for the
year 1892, made their report
which showed a settlement in full.
BY A MOB
Of eager buyer. The props have fallen and prices have dropped
down to actual of production. We are not
after profits now, our sole object is to unload our shelves
and turn our enormous stock into money. Your dollars
will be more now than ever before or ever again.
Josephus Daniels.
N. C-, Jan
The Board of County
met this day, present C
Dawson, chairman, S. A Gainer,
Jesse L- Smith, T. E. Keel and
Leonidas Fleming.
The following orders for
were
Martha Nelson Margaret
Bryan Smith Lydia
Bryan Jacob
Nancy Moore Susan
Norris Susan Briley
Lucinda Smith Patsy
Henry Harris
Crawford
Smith Kenneth Henderson
Eliza Edwards Carlos
Gorham J H
Henry Sam and
Cherry Fanny Tucker
J O Proctor Alice Corbett
Jordan and Hettie Andrews
Patsy Stocks Easter
Vines W A Jones Alex
Harris Winifred Taylor
W H Parker Mary
Briley Lydia Staton
James Long Theophilus
The following orders for
county purposes were issued
John Flanagan R W
King C J
Flanagan Buggy Co W T
Smith A M Cameron
E A Dr W E
Warren, G W Edmundson
W R James W F
E A Chas
Skinner Dr W H Bagwell
W B Wilson D J
Whichard D J Which aid
Andrew Robinson J
L Wooten D D Haskett
J B Cherry Co H Harding
R W King S A
Leonidas Fleming
Tom Blow Jesse L Smith
T E Keel C Dawson
R W King R W King
R W King
For Greenville Stock Law
D J Whichard J B
Cherry Co 119-
For and Swift
Creek Stock Law D J
Whichard
The Sheriff was directed to is-
sue license to retail liquor for six
months to the following
Gardner, E
and E A Bland-
Farm B Burnett, W J
Turnage it J I Baker, T L Turn
age.
T Pierce.
J Williams Co., J
B Garris and C L Patrick.
S Powell and Robert
Staton.
Hooker, W E
Belcher, B F Anderson Co., J
A Brady, L Hooker k Go. and U
C Edwards.
Parkers X Fleming.
Cobb's D Smith.
S Hicks.
E Fleming.
S Harris.
J R Davenport.
P Moore Co.
J O Proctor Bro.
Upon application it was order-
ed that the acreage of the land of
Prince Moore in Greenville town-
ship, be changed from acres
to and the valuation from
to
Richard Moore, J S Smith, col,
James A Stocks, the estate of
James Adams, J H P Bynum, Ed
Stocks. John col,
Abram Haddock, D W Braxton,
J J Moore, John Hathaway, and
S C Whichard were released from
poll tax for 1893.
Ordered that J O Smith be
credited with on tax list . , . . .
for 1893 there appearing to be a
clerical mistake in calculation.
A Washington special to the
New York Press It is re-
ported that President Cleveland
has determined to appoint Jose-
Daniels of North Carolina,
public printer.
Daniels is now the chief clerk
of the Interior Department. He
soon won the confidence of Hoke
Smith and made himself quite
popular with Senators and Con-
in their office hunting
forays, but none of them has
ever dreamed of him for public
printer, the fattest office under
the place that
controls upward of
offices not subject to Civil
Service rules. Mr. Daniels at-
the President's notice in
his attendance upon Smith at
Cabinet meetings and was slated
for public printer when it was
seen that the contest among the
leading aspirants for the place
was so bitter that a dark horse
was desirable. So far no member
of either House has been taken
into the President's confidence
in the matter of the proposed
Sad and Gloomy
Weak and Dyspeptic
Gave Strength
and Perfectly Cured.
J. K. White
Birmingham, Alabama.
not word enough to
thanks for the great fits received from a
few bottle Hood's I
weak, and It made me strong; I was a
tic, and It cored me; I was sad and gloomy, and
it made me cheerful and hopeful. And last,
though not least, It made m an
Hood's s Cures
working democrat All who hare taken Hood's
with my good re-
I gladly recommend It to all
J. R. White, m. Birmingham, Ala.
N. B. If you decide to take
do not be Induced to buy any other
Instead. Insist upon HOOD'S.
Hood's PHI are the best family
and
For Liver
BROWN'S IRON BITTERS
FRANK WILSON
WILL SHOW YOU HIS SPLENDID LINE OP
CLOTHING
Dry Goods
NOTIONS
If you will give him a call- No trouble to show goods, its a pleasure.
See him this week without fail.
DON'T WALK
When it is Cheaper to Ride.
The John Flanagan Buggy Company
to put up their first-class work and will furnish you any kind of
at so reasonable a that riding is cheaper than walking.
---------Besides a full line
BUGGIES AND HARNESS
They sell the W offered on the market.
J. B. CHERRY CO.
-o-
Don't Grub and Sweat when you can the
ft
and do your work
so much quicker,
cheaper and better.
This splendid farm
i m p e m c will
crush, cut,
level and pulverize
land all in one
operation. Use
them once and you
will
out them again.
We sell these
row in several
sizes, from feet to
feet.
LAST BUT NOT LEAST
IT OF COURSE requires some money to carry on a business like ours, and
we request all indebted to us to settle as early a possible. Thanking all for
liberal patronage in the past, and hoping to continue receiving you i
orders we are Yours to please
The John Flanagan Buggy Company.
RELIABLE
the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following
not to be excelled in this market. And all guaranteed to be first-class
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS, LA
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE, HOUSE FURNISHING
GOODS, DOOR-i, WINDOWS, SASH, BLINDS, CROCKERY and QUEENS-
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of different
Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster of Paris,
Hair. Harness, Bridles and addles
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY.
Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale
jobbers per cent for Bread Prep
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin
Red Oil, Varnishes and Paint Wood and Wood and
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a call and I guarantee satisfaction
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before th.
Court Clerk Pitt county as
Executors of the Last Will and
of Allen Mills, deceased, notice is
hereby given to all persons indebted to
the estate to make payment
to the Executors, and all
persons having claims against the estate
must present the same for on
or before the day of December,
1884. or this notice will be plead in bar
of
13th day of December 1893.
JAS. A. MILLS,
MILLS,
Executors.
Notice.
Allen Warren, of F. Manning
against
W. J. g, Jesse Baker and wife,
J. Addie, Henry A. Manning and
J. Manning.
To J. Manning one of the above
You are hereby recognized to appear
and answer or demur to the petition
filed in this special proceeding before
Clerk of the Superior Court of Pitt
county, at his office in Greenville, 4th
day of February, 1694. purpose of
this special proceeding is to obtain eave
of court to sell the lands of B. F. Man-
deceased, for the, purpose of
assets with which to pay debts of the
said and no other relief Is
sought against this defendant.
This 29th day of December, 1893.
E. A.
Clerk Superior Court.
Land Sale.
By virtue of a decree rendered in a
certain cause pending in the Superior
Court of Edgecombe county, wherein
W. S. Forbes Co., are plaintiffs and
Latham Skinner are defendants,
the undersigned, Commissioner duly
authorized by said decree, will sell at
the door in Greenville. N.
C. for cash, on Monday, Jany 22nd,
1894, the following described real estate
in the county of Pitt, a certain
tract of land lying in Falkland town-
ship, adjoining the lands of Margaret
Mathews, Willis R. Williams, Mis.
Newton and others, containing by
acres, generally known as
the Adam laud; a certain lot or
parcel of Ian I lying In the town of
Greenville, as lot No. In
of said town and well as
old Nelson lot; a certain
other lot in the town of Greenville, a
part of lot No. in the plan of said
town, being the same lot which was
conveyed to Harry Skinner by W. T.
Marsh and wife by deed recorded in
Book H. pages and of the
registry of Pitt
DONNELL
Commissioner.
Notice.
By virtue of a decree of the Superior
Court made in the civil action wherein
R. J. W. is plaintiff
and Mrs. Julia and others are
defendants, I will sell at the Court
House in Greenville, N. C, on
day the 17th day of January, 1894, the
following described One
tract of land situated in
township. Pitt county, adjoining the
lands of Win. Barrett, J. W. Bynum
and others, it being the land whereon
r,. J. Barrett lived at the time of his
death, acres more or less.
The dwelling together with acres
of land contiguous thereto, is covered
by the widow Julia Barrett's dower.
cash. JNO. F.
Commissioner.
Laud Sale.
By virtue of a Decree of Pitt Superior
Court made at December term by
His Honor W. A. Hoke Judge presiding,
in the case of Susan against
Jesse P. Brown and others, the
Commissioner will sell tor
cash before the Court House door in
Greenville on Monday the 5th day of
February, 1894, the following described
tract of land situated in the county of
Pitt, and Township, known
as the Ida Warren land, adjoining the
lands of Betsy Phillips,
John A. Cobb. O. B. Hathaway, J. W.
Clark and others, containing seres,
more or less.
F. James.
This Jan 3rd 1894. Commissioner.
Mortgage Sale.
By virtue of a power of sale contained
in a mortgage deed executed by Fer-
Brown and his wife Ann II.
Brown to the undersigned on the Elev-
day of February 1884 and duly
recorded in the Registers office of Pitt
county in Book F on pages 86-87-88.
I shall sell before the Court House door
In Greenville, N. C. at M. on
day of February 1891. to the
highest bidder for cash, the Real Estate
described in said mortgage.
B. J.
January 5th, Mortgagee.
Notice to Creditors.
Having duly qualified before the
Court Clerk of Pitt county as ad-
the J. I. Which-
ard, deceased, notice is hereby given to
all persons indebted to tho estate to
make immediate payment to the under-
signed, and those claims against
the estate must present the same for
payment before the 27th day of
1894, or this notice will be plead In
bar of recovery. This 27th of
T. H. WHICHARD,
of J. I. Whichard.
To all who want goods that are all we invite
them to come to see we will make the prices
all right and satisfactory. We have often
been told that we were a little high in
price on some lines of Goods but
our friends would always add
that the quality of your
goods is better than
the lower priced
goods costing
more and
demand-
better
priced than the
inferior good. This
is what we claim i That we
will meet competition on the
different lines of Goods carried by
us, quality considered. Come to
see us, we have in stock a general as-
and can supply your every want
FURNITURE.
When we say that we have the largest and best line
of FURNITURE ever kept in our town. We
make no mistake as a visit to our store will
prove. Numbers of our customers ex-
press surprise at our haying such a
large and well selected stock
on hand. Call on us for
anything you may want
in the Furniture
line. We have
j us t re-
lovely line
of CHAIRS,
and
ROCKERS in Silk Plush,
These Chairs
make nice Christmas presents
and we would our friends
not to overlook them when making
chases for Christmas as they will please you.
GUNS
Call on us for Gun
Implements. We have some
nice ones on hand and will
make the prices right-
Wishing all our friends and tho a joyous and
happy Christmas,
We remain, your friends,
ESTABLISHED 1883.
t, a.
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL--------
N. C.
Boxes C. R. Side Meat,
Tubs Boston Lard.
barrels Flour, all grades
barrels Granulated Sugar,
barrels C. Sugar,
boxes Tobacco,
barrels M ills Stiff
barrels Three Thistle
barrels Gail Ax
barrels P. Snuff,
cases Sardines.
Full stock of all other
50.000 Luke Cigarettes,
s Cakes and Crackers,
barrels ck Candy.
kegs Rand's Powder.
ton Shot,
c Bread Powders.
cases Star Lye,
barrels Apple Vinegar,
cases Gold Dust Washing Powder
rolls lb Bagging.
bundles Arrow Ties.
goods carried in my line.
SPECIAL ADVANTAGES
To my and Customers of Pitt and adjoining
I wish to say that I have made special preparation in preparing HOGS
HEAD MATERIAL and propose giving you HOGSHEADS with inside dressed
smooth which will prevent catting or scrubbing your Tobacco when packing
Also I have made special arrangements to use best split Hoops made from White
Oak. special advantages have in cutting my own timber places me in a
position to meet all competition. cheerfully promise you that will strive to
make it to your interest to use my Hogsheads and you can And them at time
either at my factory at the Eastern Tobacco Warehouse, Greenville, N. C.
Scroll Sawing,
And Turned Trimmings for a Specialty.
I am prepared to do any kind of Scroll Sawing for Brackets or anything In the
line, or turning Balustrades for Piazzas, Pickets for Stairways.
any kind, including Piazza Railing, and would lie pleased to name you prices on
anything in the above upon application.
GENERAL REPAIR WORK
done on short notice. Thanking you your past patronage, lam willing to
to meet your future patronage, kindly ask you a trial
11-ranging elsewhere- Respectfully,
COX, Winterville,
n C
COBB BROS. CO.,
Commission Merchants,
FAYETTE NORFOLK, VA.
and Solicited.
J. L. SUGG.
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT,
GREENVILLE, N. C
OFFICE SUGG A JAMES
All Risks placed in strictly
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES
At lowest current rates.
AGENT FOB A FIRST-CLASS FIRE





THE REFLECTOR
Great Reduction
Local Reflections.
Court began yesterday.
in
-IN-
PRICES.
In order to reduce our
We sell for the
NEXT I DAYS
at far below regular prices.
four widths
church is
of
MUST BE
SOLD
AT SOME
PRICE.
WE HAVE
TOO
MANY GOODS
AND THEY
Clothing
Clothing
with
Our must be sold
out regard to cost-
potions
and
the same way, to these we add
Ml IN
Cheap to make any reduction
ANY DAY YOU COME.
BROS.,
Leaders of Low Prices.
Greenville, N. C
Carriages and Wagons at
T. B. Cherry Co's.
When in want of good shoes go to
J. B. Co.
Breech Loading and Muzzle Guns and
for sale by J. B. Cherry Co
The Best Flour on earth 84.40 at the
Old Brick Store.
Cotton pay cash for
Cotton it the Old Brick Store.
J. B. Cherry Co Keep a full stock
of General Merchandise and solicit
your trade.
L. M. Reynolds Mens and Boys
shoes are the best. For sale by J. B.
Go to J. B. Cherry Co when in need
of Furniture, they keep a full stock and
fell at prices that will please you.
Fob room house
in kitchen and dining room
attached. Apply to ALLEN
Come on while you can get the Re-
the Atlanta Constitution and
the New York World, all three papers a
year for
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap
at the Old Brick Store.
Orders for the New York World Al-
for 1894 should be left at the
office. Our subscribers can
get them less than the regular price.
Remember I pay you cash for Chickens
Eggs and Produce at the Old
Brick Store.
for Greenville C
Salem the first Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Jones Chapel at three
o'clock.
Shady Grove on second Sunday at
eleven o'clock and School
House at o'clock.
Ayden on third Sunday at eleven
o'clock and Tripp's Chapel at three
o'clock.
Bethlehem on the fourth Sunday at
eleven o'clock, and Lang's School
House at three o'clock.
Everybody invited to attend.
G. F. Smith,
J. C.
Strictly Cash System.
The Cash System adopted by
me one year ago has shown by
increased business that it is
best for merchant and best for
customers. For 1894 I have
adopted the Cash Sys-
or over the Counter
before the Goods goes This
system saves to the buyer to
per cent, and does away with
the unsatisfactory monthly
My stock will be found
full, my goods of first quality, and
my prices low. I carry in the
Stove line but the
Richmond Stove Stoves,
Castings and Fixtures of which I
have always on hand,
you the Kelly Perfect Axe bought
direct from factory at cents-
The world renowned Red War-
at cents. Nails at
per pound. Other goods
low. My Stoves are
talking for themselves hence I'll
Bay nothing more about them.
think the public for their
patronage the past year and
assure my customers that I shall
study their interest in the future.
Come to see me but always bring
tho cash Truly,
D. D. Haskett.
Floor Oilcloth
at Lang's.
The Presbyterian
nearly ready for use.
You can always find a sheet
water on the bed of the ocean.
The days begin to lengthen
And the cold begins to
B. J-
a sale of land in this issue.
F. G- James, commissioner, ad-
land for sale in this issue.
Lang is determined to sell out
his winter goods at very low prices
The disagreeable Weather makes
small crowds at Court this week.
W. H. Harrington,
has an advertisement of
laud sale to-day.
Houses for to
Henry Sheppard, Real Estate
and Collecting Agent.
We are closing out our entire
stock of winter clothing at greatly
reduced rates at Lang's
Quite a number of colored
hands left here last week for the
Southern turpentine farms.
Hats, and Gen-
goods will be
sold at a great sacrifice at Lang's.
A siege of bad weather has been
on again during the past week
and is still getting in its work.
There be little or no
cessation of the grip, and most
every one you meet has more or
less to complain of.
A who could make
commonly good music on an ac-
has been doing up the
town the past week.
Venus will continue to be even-
star until Valentine's Day,
after which it becomes morning
star until November 25th.
falls this year
on February 7th and Easter Sun-
day on March 25th. just one
week earlier than last year.
Only a few of those beautiful
and stylish Cloaks and Caps left
which we are determined to close
at starvation prices at Lang's.
Somebody ought to send the
Lexington an almanac.
That paper has just made the an
that this is leap year.
Dress goods and trimmings
have been marked down
and we will sell them
cheaper than eyer at Lang's
There will be four eclipses this
year, only one of which, a partial
eclipse of the moon on the night
of September 14th, will be visible
here-
Frank Wilson tells you in this
paper something about his
did stock of dry goods and cloth-
of course you will not over-
look it.
The Skinner block of brick
buildings East side of Evans
street, was sold Monday, Mr. Wm.
of Baltimore being the
purchaser.
Mr. J. L. Hudson, of Florid.
wrote his father here last week
that be had ripe strawberries for
dinner on New Year's day. That
is quite early.
Do you want it New York
World Almanac for so
subscribe to the Reflector your-
self and bring us one new sub-
scriber and you get the book free.
They are taking advantage
right along of our low
Constitution and World
all a year for Reader, do
us a favor, and your neighbor
too, by telling him about this.
We are in of a premium
list of the fair, which
will be held February 16th to 24th.
The premiums are very liberal
and the fair promises to be the
greatest of of the mid-winter
fairs yet held.
Mr. G- A. Vick, of this county,
who 1887 was convicted of per-
jury and served a sentence there-
for, was at last term o Pitt
Court restored to full citizen-
ship, it appearing to the
of the Court that he was
wrongfully prosecuted and con-
Mr. R. Hyman, the
besides doing you up in
good style when you want your
picture taken, is also taking
orders for enlarging portraits to
life size- We have seen some of
the work he gets and it is excel-
lent while his prices are much be-
others charge for
work.
We see in a recent issue of the
Norfolk Virginian that at the
election of officers of Columbia
Lodge I. O. O. F., Mr. G L.
Whichard was elected financial
secretary, and Mr. C- Cobb
chaplain. Both of them are young
men of this county, and their host
of friends will no doubt find
pleasure in this item.
An Ex-Sheriff Dead.
Mr. Zeno Moore received a let-
from Ga., last week, in-
forming him of the death of Mr.
Joseph H Gray, which occurred
there in October. The letter was
I can sell from a daughter of the deceased,
who that she was so young
when her father moved away from
Pitt county that she did not re-
member any one here, but in re-
looking over his papers
she found Mr. Moore's address
and decided to write him of her
father's death. It was back in
the seventies that Mr. Gray
moved away, but there are many
people in the county who
him. In 1866, the year after
he came out of the war, he was
J Paste
Personal.
Mr. L. H. Wilson is sick.
Mr. D. D. has tho grip.
Mrs. V- H. was quite
sick last week.
Mr- Henry C Hooker has gone
to Richmond.
Mr. Malone Tucker is clerking
for W. H. White.
Mr. Roscoe Little spent part of
last week in town.
Miss Mamie Hines, of Wilson,
is visiting Miss Etta Hines-
Mr. W. F. Harding left Monday
evening to return to the
Mr. W. H. Harrington has
moved over to the Yellowley
place.
Mrs. Barden of Plymouth, is
visiting the family of Mr. W. B.
Wilson.
Dr. R. L. Carr has returned to
Philadelphia to continue his den-
studies-
Mrs. E. M. Williams has moved
back into her dwelling on Wash
street-
Mrs- Whedbee, of Hertford, is
visiting Mrs. Charles Skinner at
Hotel Macon.
Mr. T. E. Randolph, Jr last
week for Pemberton, Ga., to take
a position there-
Miss Smith left
morning for the Normal and In-
College at Greensboro.
Rev. J. N. H. failed
to fill his appointment last San-
y in the Baptist church owing
to sickness-
Mr. E. A. Jr., left Wed-
morning of last week to
resume his medical studies in
Philadelphia.
Mr. W. F. Morrill has moved
his family from Snow Hill to
Greenville, and occupies Mrs.
Daniel's building on Greene
street.
Messrs. Harding and J. L.
Sugg returned from Wilmington,
Saturday, where they had been
attending the Grand Lodge of
Masons.
Mr. B- Drew, of Georgia, who
has been coming here fourteen
consecutive years to hire hands
for his turpentine farms, was here
last week.
Rev. J. H. is expect
ed to arrive to-night from his visit
up the country, and will hold
services in the church to-
morrow night.
Mr William Murray has moved
into the building on corner of
Second and streets, re-
vacated by Mr. W. H.
Harrington.
Mr. John Nicholson, of the
firm of Elliott Bros., Baltimore,
has been spending a few days in
town. The had a
pleasant call from him.
Rev. A- D. Hunter, former pas-
tor of the Baptist church here has
resigned his charge in
and has accepted a call at Cary,
N. C- He will live in Raleigh-
Rev. R B. John, P. E., held
meeting in the
church Sunday morning,
administering the Lords Supper.
He preached an excellent sermon
and elicited the closest attention.
Mr. G. L. of Tar-
so well-known here as the
Grand Mogul of the A. I. O.
fame, smiled on us last week
and says the only thing he does
not like in Greenville is that his
mustache grows so rapid.
New Officers.
The following officers of
Lodge No. K- of H.
have been elected for the ensuing
D. Haskett.
V- D--A. C Nobles.
A. S. Roach.
A. Sutton.
Sheppard.
F. RS. M- Schultz.
R. Lang.
Junes.
The following compose the
juries at this term of
Grand J. Chapman
Foreman, B. S. Bowers, Jeremiah
J. J. Humbles,
Southey Carroll, Wm. W. Andrews
H. J. Hudson. C A. Elks, C. M.
Tucker, J. R. Randolph, R- M.
Kennedy, D. Wilson, E. S.
Phelps, J. R. Forbes, L. H.
tree, R. J. Lang, Jr. Henry Shep-
M O Blount.
An Old Woman.
Roxie Pearce, perhaps better
known as an old
colored living on the
premises Of Mr. J. B. Cherry,
died Friday night Dec. 29th.
She was the oldest person in the
community. Her exact age can-
not be given, but that she was
more than a hundred years old
can be established doubt.
She belonged to the
and when Mr. B- G father
was born in 1799 she was his
nurse- This was years ago,
and presuming that she should
then be about years old or
more to have been with
the care of an infant, it is safe to
say she must have been at least
years old at death She lived
with the older of the
family until Mr. B. C Pearce
married then went to live with
him- After his daughter was
married to Mr. J. B. Cherry
then an old woman
went to live with her- When
she became too old to be of
further service she was given a
comfortable home on their
and was fed regularly from
their table. The family and Mr.
Pearce gave her a nice burial,
and several of them accompanied
the remains to the grave, where
services were conducted by Rev.
J. C. This item was
written for last issue, but the
copy was misplaced by the
and not until too
late to get in-
A MANLY LETTER PROM ELDER
PHILLIPS.
Johnson's Mills Items.
Mills, N. C, Jan,
Mr. Herman Johnson is on the
sick list this week.
Mr. Clarence went to
Kinston last Tuesday and re-
turned Wednesday.
Mrs. Kate of Kinston,
was in last
day.
Misses Clara Richardson and
Henrietta Metts are visiting at
Mr. May's.
Mr. Joe left Monday
for Raleigh to attend the A. M.
college-
The ladies at this place gave
a festival last Thursday night for
the benefit of St Johns church.
Election of Officers.
The following officers were
appointed in the Methodist Sun-
day-school last Sunday
for
Superintendent-D. D- Haskett
Assistant White.
Secretary A- L. Blow.
E. Warren.
B. Ellington-
Assistant Harding.
C.
The following officers were
in the Baptist Sunday-school
on last Sunday for the ensuing
year s
D.
Assistant F. Burch.
J. Cherry.
F.
Assistant Brooks
Jarvis.
Ivy Smith-
Rosalind
tree-
Assistant Lina
Sheppard.
Small debts are what blight the
general business of the country,
says an exchange. Every store-
keeper has e large number of
small debts on his books and
when it is remembered that the
aggregate in many oases amounts
to hundreds and it
Greenville, N. C, Jan, 1894.
Editor Eastern
I feel it my duty to speak to
my friends and the public through
your columns, with your kind in-
of the great benefits
I and others have from
the treatment for the liquor habit
at the Institute of Green-
ville. But first let me return my
heartfelt thanks to the better class
of the citizens of Greenville for
their many courtesies and kind-
extended to me and my
fellow patients during our three
weeks stay in your midst. To Mr.
Andrew Joyner the excellent
Manager and Christian gentleman,
Mr. James Joyner his patient and
lovable assistant, to Baker
and Brown the healers of our
infirmities, my most grateful
thanks and kind shall
be ever due.
So many people ask me about
the treatment, I want to say to
them now once and for all, that
I consider it a God blessing
to our country, especially to our
county. It is not necessary for
a man to be a sot drunkard to be
damaged, or ruined by whiskey,
Like a thief in the night it steals
away his mind, his character, his
property and his physical strength
in such a quiet undermining
way that he hardly realizes his
condition. To all such the Green-
ville Institute is a pleasant home
where the broken down faculties
of the physical man can be built
up. It is a Jordan in
moral Leprosy can be washed
away. It is a Siloam where all
those who have become blind by
the disease of alcohol can wash
and come away Some
who every day and on all public
occasions, advertise themselves as
drunkards, keep away because
they are ashamed. A man who is
more ashamed to be cured of a
horrible disease and restored to
his family and country a sober
upright citizen, than to continue
a drunkard and a suffer, has
gotten to a sad condition
of moral and mental delusion.
God pity that man in his blind-
and open his eyes to the
light before it is too I wish
they would visit the Institute at
Greenville see what
big brained, whole souled
men are there drinking at the
fountain of health, enjoying
themselves in innocent games, or
friendly intercourse, or reading
out of the large library of excel-
lent books the manager has pro-
the daily papers, or stroll-
about the town eating, sleep-
resting as they have never
done before. I wish I could do-
scribe the feeling when a man
feels that old devil, whiskey de-
sire, is cast out There are no
words to describe the happiness.
You just feel like getting down on
your knees and thanking God
Almighty for the blessing. And
when those men go home, instead
of a bloated face and unsteady
step and a quart of liquor to slip
under the back steps, they go
home with a Bible and Prayer
Book in their pockets, a proud
step, a sense of freedom in the
heart and manhood in the body.
Oh ye wives and little children
weep for joy for this is your
band and lather who was dead and
is alive again, was lost and is found
There is no suffering whatever,
in the whole treatment. It has
been used in North Carolina for
nearly two years and I under-
stand that not a single graduate
has gone back to drink-
Mr- Editor, this Institute is a
blessing to all sufferers and to the
community, and with Governor
Jarvis I join in saying bless
God that science has placed relief
in Greenville for my suffering
Go on Bro. Joyner in the good
work, God and all good people
will stand by you and name
will be blessed in years long to
come by those whom you have
helped to rescue from the slough
of despond.
My friends, let what was weak
and frail in me, in the past, be
buried, forgotten and forgiven
and trust me for a nobler and a
better future-
Respectfully,
John I- Phillips.
Notice of Sale.
In pursuance of an order of Court I
will sell at public auction before the
Court Home door. In the town of
Greenville, on Monday. February 6th.
1894, the following described tract of
, , . i land Lying In Greenville township,
comes out of the profits of his adjoining the of VT. K.
business, it can readily be the lands of heirs, and
why the debt system of the others, containing thirty-one acres,
elected Sheriff of Pitt county and j try figures so largely in
l one term. and losses to the trade-1 A. D.
Grifton Items.
January, 8th, 1894.
Rev. Mr. Burns lectured in the
Disciple church last week. He is
a State evangelist.
Mr- C. S- Hollister, of
was in town last week.
Mr. George of Kinston
was in town last week on business.
Miss Stella of Kins-
ton, and Miss Rosalind Rountree,
of Greenville have been spending
several days here with relatives,
and on New Year night a
was given them
at the academy.
Rev. J. L. Keen, pastor for the
Craven Circuit, preached his first
sermons at this place and
Sunday night at the M E Church.
He made a very favorable
upon his hearers.
Parmele Items.
N. C Jan-, 8th, 1894-
The Co's mill here has
been shut down for some time
putting in more machinery, but
will start up to-morrow.
Our sports gave a musical at
Mr. Wm. Powell's last Thursday
night in honor of the Misses
from Aurora, N. G, where
we spent a very pleasant evening.
F. has returned
from Norfolk, Va., whore she
has been visiting
Mr. M. G S. Cherry, of Bethel,
was here to-day talking
Mr. A. L. Bellflower has opened
a bar and grocery business on
Main St.
T.
To make room for his
Falkland Items.
January, 8th, 1894-
Mrs. A. V. Newton with her
family has moved from Tarboro
back to her farm near here.
Miss Lizzie Savage of Scotland
Neck is visiting the Misses Mayo.
There was a nice party given
in Smith's hall last Tuesday night
by Miss Maud Mayo and S. V.
King.
E. C King and B. J. Pally were
on the sick list last week, but have
much improved.
Mr. J. A. Cobb who has been
clerking for C- C. Vines is now
with J. L. Fountain, P. G. May o
takes Mr. Cobb's place with Mr
Vines.
Mrs
from
We are glad to
Henry Harris is recovering
an attack of
V. Newton is building a
dwelling and intends moving his
family here the near future.
Rev. J. N. H. Summered failed
to fill his appointment in the
Sunday, on
account of sickness.
Grimesland Items.
January, 8th-, 1894-
Mess. J. O. Proctor Bro,
C P- Moore Co, have just
ed a prosperous year, and are
making preparation for a large
business this year.
Mr. Bob Smith, of
Washington, N. C- has taken up
temporary residence here our
town is delighted at the
of so genial a gentleman and
his charming family. We hope
he will conclude to remain per-
Our Photographer, Mr. J. P.
Taylor will leave this place next
week for Falkland.
Miss Rena Teel spent Christmas
with Miss Lula Warren near
Falkland.
Our Mr. W. H.
slipped away during the
days and spent thorn at Edward's
Mill. Fortunately, our town was
orderly and quiet we did not
need any Mayor.
Calvin Bear
was in Town to day, bright,
spunky and as sharp as ever.
Miss Ward, of
is visiting Mrs. Thad Moore.
She is one of our favorite visitors.
Miss Bessie Wilson, the
daughter of Mr, R. T.
Wilson, came home for a few days
Christmas. She returned to
son Collegiate Institute Tuesday.
Miss Minnie Holiday gave a
pleasant party Thursday even-
complimentary to our young
people and visitors. Miss Minnie
is a very agreeable hostess as
this scribe can testify from the
nice time and courtesy accorded
to him-
Our young men have gotten up
a dance to be given at the late
residence of Mr. Henry Evans,
Judging from the managers,
this is bound to be a
We are soon to have a new
school house and Masonic hall-
Mr. will soon com-
the erection of several new
buildings-
We hope to hear often from
the Grimesland correspondent-
Ed.
Greenville, N. C-, December 1893.
We have this day formed a to conduct a
Mercantile Business, sell Fertilizers and buy Cotton, Peanuts and
Rice in the town of Greenville under tho firm name of Boswell,
Si-eight Co. W- I. BOSWELL,
JESSE
C. M. JONES.
Greenville. X. C , Dec. -6,1808. i N. C, Dec.
Referring to the above card we have We beg to announce that having
this day sold our entire business, stock business formerly conducted
of and fertilizers, store fix-j by at this place,
hues and good will to Mess. Boswell, we shall continue to occupy the same
Co. They will continue building and shall be pleased to have all
to conduct the business formerly car- of our friends call to sec us. We shall lie
on by us at our old stand. They re-
the control for this territory of those
brands of fertilizers formerly sold by
us, National, Capital
and Beef, Blood and Bone. They will
very thankful tor a continuance of the
patronage of their customers and
shall strive to merit their Confidence
and
Having the stock of
continue to buy cotton, disc of Mess. Young at a very
rice, and are prepared to pay the liberal discount from first New York
est market prices. we arc enabled to offer many
We desire to return thanks to our and shall continue to sell that
many friends who have so kindly pat-
us in the past and to them
the public generally we most cordially
recommend the firm succeeds
us, and with our intimate acquaint nice
of many years with each of know-
their strict MUM of honor and in-
we feel Justified in asking a
continuance of your patronage which
we can assure you they will appreciate
and merit.
Mr. C. W. will up the
business of Young and his
address after January 1st will be
Buchanan's Wharf, Baltimore, Md. in
care of The Fertilizer Co.
Yours truly,
YOUNG
at greatly reduced prices. We
are also now receiving a large stock of
new goods just bought the lowest
markets for cash and we are therefore
prepared to save you money on any
purchase you may make. It will pay
you to see us before buying. We shall
carry a full stock of Dry Goods. Cloth-
Hals, Shoes, Hardware.
Implements Groceries.
also arranged to continue the sale
of those well established brands of Fer-
National, Cap-
ital and Blood and Hone, also
Acid Phosphate and We shall
combine to buy peanuts and
rice and are prepared to
market prices.
Trusting to be favored with
share your patronage, we are
Yours truly,
CO.
v.-, ,. ant
w. a
TIMES HAVE CHANGED.
Old things have passed away and All
things have new. My old
stock of goods have been sold out
and a new stock has taken its
place. The old was replaced
by the new because my
LOW DOWN PRICES
the people and keep the goods
moving. Now listen to a few plain
I know times are hard and
money scarce just as well as the man
who raises cotton, corn and tobacco,
and am going to sell goods just as low
as any honest dealer can afford to sell.
For every dollar spent with me you will
get tin worth of your money. I keep a
complete of
General Merchandise,
Dry Goods, Notions
Boots, Shoes, Hats,
Caps and Gents
Furnishing Goods,
Clothing
at any price a man can want. Also a
full of
Groceries
Cotton Bagging Ties.
ESTABLISHED 1875.
S. M. Schultz.
AT THE
OLD STORK
MERCHANTS BUY
their year's supplies will find
their interest to get our prices before
chasing elsewhere is complete
n all its branches.
PORK
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR
RICE, TE A, Ac.
always at Lowest Market
TOBACCO
we buy direct from Manufacturers,
you to buy at one A torn
stock of
always on band and sold at prices I
the S. Our goods are nil bought and
sold for CASH therefore, having no risk
to sell at a close margin.
Respectfully,
S. M.
N.
OINTMENT
-TWENTY-FIVE HUNDRED WORTH OF------
To be sold at reduced
prices, together with a large
assortment of Fall and
winter
IN SHORT A COMPLETE
STOCK OF GOODS TO BE SOLD
CHEAP.
bought my brother out I am determined to sell en-
tire-stock exceedingly close. Come and see for yourself-
Respectfully,
WILEY BROWN,
Now Home Sewing Machines and Depositor for American Bible So.
-Manufacturer of-
BUGGIES, CUTS DRAYS
EXTENDS TO ALL
A HAPPY
and thanking them for their liberal patronage
in the past, asks a continuance of the same
in the future.
For the all Sh
This Preparation has In use
years, and wherever know ha
in Steady demand. It has been
lowed by the leading physicians all
all other remedies, With the attention
most experienced physicians, have
for years failed. This is
long and the high reputation
which it obtained is owing entirely
its own as but little ha
ever been made to bring ii before the
public. of this Ointment will
sent to any address on receipt of Ono
Dollar. All Cash Order., promptly at-
tended to. Address all orders and
communications to
T. r.
Greenville. X. C
DOMINION LIE
TAR RIVER SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington
villa and Tarboro touching at all land-
on Tar River
and Friday at o A. M.
leave Tarboro at A M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays
days.
These depart u res are subject to stage of
water on Tar
Washington with
erg of The and Wash-
direct line for Norfolk. Baltimore
Philadelphia. New York and Boston.
Shippers should their goods
marked via Dominion
New York. from
Norfolk
more Steamboat from
more. Miners from
Boston.
JNO. SON.
Agent,
Washington N. C
J. J. CHERRY,
Agent,
Greenville, N. C.
ran
NEW GOODS.
Come and sea at Bros,
old stand, where we are ready
to serve yon with a full line of
Hill
,.





WOMEN AS FLORISTS.
The Peculiar Fitness of wives
to This Occupation.
JUST ONE SMALL GIRL.
Kean Perception of the of
r Thine nod n Alert Attention to
the to a
Paying Business.
While the urgent cry of the day
to be for
for women, it is comforting to
discover that a few of the more sen-
and practical
members of the sisterhood have
gone about their business and Bet-
the matter themselves and a
very easy and satisfactory way.
Among the first prizes carried off by
florists, not a few have gone to
a little consideration of
the- possibilities of this line will
show abundant reasons for belief
that as florists women are destined
to succeed.
The alert attention,
the daintiness of handling, the habit
of care and the keen perception of
the needs of delicate things, arc
much more highly developed in
en than in men; and these are among
the qualities necessary for the best
work in the floral kingdom. One
moment's the least
chance-taking, the well-enough idea,
and all of the hap-hazard
that follow in their train
are against the best results in flower-
land as well as in household
The trained housewife, if her time
and strength allow, will, all things
being equal, make an excellent
for the reason that she has de-
precisely the qualities most
needed in this new field. In order
to make a financial success and
when all the fuss and feathers have
been taken away it, this is
about the basis of the florist
It is necessary to reduce floral
as near as possible to an exact
science. It is not imperative that
the present-day woman runs so
deeply into the scientific, but in
order to achieve results she must
take advantage of other people's re-
searches and use their brains and
discoveries to further her own
pose. She must also keep very
track of the markets, the law
of supply and demand and the ca-
price of the moment. A good deal
of money has been wasted by invest-
in the cultivating of certain
flowers just as they were going out
of fashion.
Just why some woman should not
introduce a new flower is a question
that many people would like to
have answered; indeed, if one has
the facilities for so doing, this is
where a great deal of the money
One man in New York city
cleared ten thousand dollars annual-
by watching for and introducing
novelties; another turned his
exclusively to new roses, and
banked a still greater
There U no limit to the desire of
the public for floral novelties, and
those who can in any way meet such
wants are quite certain to reap
golden harvests.
Just now the idea
is to the fore, and there are excellent
opportunities for making money in
raising these beautiful flowers.
various shows arc
incentive in this direction, and it is
not in the least difficult, with proper
care and a small investment, to Lave
a complete assortment of the
varieties. There is scarcely o
community of any size in which
florists might not make a com-
living; and, as sort of
business grows by what it feeds on,
it is possible to develop in the minds
of the residents of almost any given
locality a taste for nature's beauties
that will be met only by a continual
enlargement of the floral field.
Violets, sweet peas, roses,
and similar offer
excellent inducements to careful
growers, and every year new flow-
will come into demand, and for
this the would-be successful amateur
should be ever on the Y.
Ledger.
Clever Expedient.
A story is told of a certain French
Singer which shows that he possessed
not only musical ability, but an ad-
presence of mind. On the
occasion of his first appearance at
he was not in good voice,
and his local efforts were greeted
with hisses loud and prolonged, from
the disappointed audience.
Without appearing to be in the
least moved by this unpleasant re-
the young artist looked
calmly down at the crowd of listen-
and
it is a pity to hear
you whistle so me to
give you a
Upon that he began to whistle in
a most exquisite manner the varied
airs of an opera of which
was very popular at the time.
At this unexpected turn of affairs
first silence and then loud applause
succeeded to the rude hissing, and
from that time on, whether he sang
or whistled, the young artist's
was assured with the
Companion.
IN MIS BED.
How She and Her Stayed
a Desperate Hand.
THE EARTH'S WEIGHT.
NAMES OF THE DEVIL.
A Man About to Commit Sal-
Better Thoughts Brought
the Gentle Innocence of
III, Little One.
She was just a wee girl, with curly
brown hair and great black eyes
that had a quaintly solemn look
sometimes and then again sparkled
with a gleam that her most ardent
admirers were forced to admit was
not entirely cherubic, but her heart
was big with the mother love that
has managed somehow to save half
of us from perdition at one time or
another, says the Grand Rapids
Democrat.
When the brown-thatched head
dropped sleepily upon tho pillow
nights there always an exciting
scurry downstairs, because every
one of the collection of dolls that
littered the house all the way from
the reception hall to the back cellar
stairs had to hunted up and laid
carefully on the bed with its dis-
an impressive
row where a small arm could reach
out and encircle be-
fore the black eyes would close in
content.
One night the big chap, whose
mission it was to swear softly when
he stepped on a doll in the hallway,
and then in a fit of remorse go
straight downtown and buy a larger
and handsomer one, staid in his of-
until very late. When he did
come home at last he went straight
to his room, and as he turned up the
gas the look on his face seemed to
reflect the color of the leaden clouds
that were swiftly whipped like torn
banners across the night sky by
the autumn gale. He took from his
overcoat pocket a little oblong
that rattled dully as he laid it down
and then looked at himself
in the mirror.
this is the end of it he
said grimly. struggled hard
enough, God knows, but the tide has
been too strong. The world has
no use for a beaten man. It takes
pains to sec that he never gets on
his feet again, and they'll be better
off here without
He walked to a closet and one
hand fumbled along the shelf until
it closed upon the ivory handle of a
revolver, which he brought to his
dressing-case and opened a box of
cartridges he had taken from the
pocket of his overcoat. He pushed
a cartridge into the chamber of tho
pistol and then paused abruptly.
little wailed a
piteous voice.
The big chap laid down the revolver
beside the cartridge box. He stood
irresolute for a moment and then
strode to the nursery door.
is it, he
asked unsteadily.
The brown-haired baby was sitting
up in bed and the black eyes were
wet with tears.
She reached out both hands de-
Little
I see; family a little short
to-night, eh Never mind, baby,
papa will find the young lady and
escort her back to her own
and by the half-light of the night
lamp he groped the room,
under a chair in one corner he
found a particularly ragged and dis-
reputable rubber doll. This he
brought gravely and laid beside its
companions on the bed. It was
clasped ecstatically to a soft little
breast.
all murmured
the quivering lips, and presently the
long lashes came down upon the
tear-wet cheeks and the little maid
slept blissfully.
The big chap stared hard at her
for a minute and then bent down
and kissed the small flushed face,
reverently. When he went back to
his room ho replaced tho ivory-
handled revolver on the closet shelf,
and opening a window threw a full
box of cartridges into the street.
A Wealthy Lumberman Caught by a Fire
In His
depot of the East Tennessee,
and Georgia railroad at Vine a
small station in county, was
bunted between the hours of and
o'clock this morning. Adjoining
depot the office of the Vine Hill
Lumber Company. G. M. Frederick-
son, president of the a
room in it where he slept. Before he
could be aroused from his the
office was in a sheet of flames and he
was burned to death. The origin of
the fire is unknown. Mr. Frederick-
son was a prominent and wealthy man.
Killed a
DAVES, Ga. December
Monday night colored,
mortally stabbed Cain Baptist and he
died in ten minutes. The grand jury
found an indictment the next day for
murder. The woman was put on
trial today Judge
and the will probably render a
verdict f murder.
Another murder was committed on
the same evening in the country.
Charles Owens, colored, was tried for
the murder and was acquitted.
What He Was.
Eight little boys got on a
Niagara street car at the corner of
Vermont street about half-past
seven o'clock. They had been out
to St. to rehearse something
or other were choir and
they were then on their way to St.
Paul's. They all talked willingly,
except one little fellow, who was as
black as coal and who seemed to be
the butt of the other seven.
you all asked one of the
women.
answered three of the
boys at the same time.
your are regular little
no, ma'am. Blackbirds don't
do but chirp. I'm a
a an-
other, and each boy told what kind
of a bird ho was until tho eighth
one, the butt before mentioned, was
the only one who had said nothing.
what kind of a bird are you,
my little asked the woman.
I be a chicken, I gets
it in the neck so Ex-
press.
How Scientists Go About
the Interesting Fact.
Might Have Changed History.
Ah interesting of the
of the great Napoleon has
brought to light by Prof. Ram-
baud, who has just been rewarded
for his of with the
Cross of the Legion of Honor.
as is well known, was at one
disgusted with the slowness of
his promotion, and entertained
pus thoughts of directing his talents
into other channels. Now M. Ram-
baud tells us that Napoleon applied
for service in the Russian army, but
that the petition which he had ad-
dressed to was rejected,
as Catherine II. would not admit
foreign officers on the same stand-
I as that which they occupied in
their own country. Napoleon would
have had to accept an inferior rank,
and this he refused to do. If Prof.
be correctly informed, and
if Bonaparte had taken service in
. Russia, the whole course of the his-
if the century would have bean
changed, and a whole vista of
i possibilities would have been
Telegraph.
of the Appellations Applied
to His Satanic Majesty.
Complications of the Problem Which
Engaged the Men of
Result Measured Id Tout Writ-
ten In Twenty-Two
One of the problems that men of
science occasionally undertake to
over again for the sake of get-;
ting nearer to the exact truth is that
of the density and mass of the earth.
The density of a body is tho
of matter that a given volume
of it contains, while the mass is the
total quantity of matter that the
whole body contains. In a popular
sense the mass of a body is meas-
by its weight.
Water is taken as the standard of
comparison in estimating the den-
of the earth. It has been
know in a general way for a hundred
years that the earth's mean or aver-
age density is between five and six
times that of water; in other words,
that the earth weighs five or six
times as much as a globe of water of
the same size would weigh, provided
that the water in such a globe had
the same average density that water
has at the surface of the earth.
The matter composing the earth
Is denser in the interior than at the
surface. If that were not so It
would only be necessary to take a
cubic foot from the surface of the
globe and weigh it against a cubic
foot of water in order to ascertain
the density of the earth. As it is,
the earth's density can be learned
only by roundabout methods; by-
noting, for example, tho difference
in the attraction of gravitation at
the surface and at the bottom of a
mine.
Recently a new method of
the mass and density of the
earth has been put into practice in
France. This consists in changing
the level of a small lake, which can
be raised or lowered by artificial
means, and noting the effect upon
the height of a column of mercury.
The results of these experiments
have given for tho earth's mean
5.41 times tho density of the
water. Tho latest previous
mate, made by Messrs. and
Bailie, gave It has been
to speak of the earth as
weighing six of tons.
Its weight, according to the re-
cent determination, is
000.000,000,000,000, or five
lions, seven hundred and fifty-seven
of tons. A very weighty
and substantial globe, according to
our ideas, notwithstanding the fact
that the sun could swallow it in one
of its with hardly a
Chicago Post.
LITTLE LORD FAUNTLEROY.
AN ANCIENT
The Bold Deception Practiced by the
Small Hero of the Play.
It has always been rather interest-
to me to remember that he first
presented himself in an
disguise, writes Mrs. Frances
Burnett in a paper entitled
Fauntleroy Really
in the Home Journal. It
was a disguise sufficiently artful to
have disarmed the most wary. I,
who am not at all a far-sighted per-
son, was completely taken in by him.
I saw nothing to warrant in the
slightest degree any suspicion that
he had descended to earth with
intentions; that he furtively
cherished plans of making himself
into the small hero of a book, the
picturesque subject of illustrations,
the inspiration of a fashion in cos-
the very premier in a
play over which people in two
would laugh and cry.
Perhaps in periods before he in-
himself to his family that
morning of April in a
house in Paris, he may have
known all this and laid out his little
plans with adroitness and
but when I first examined him
carefully as he lay on my arm look-
extremely harmless and ex-
fast asleep In his extremely
long night-gown, he did not bear at
all the aspect of a crafty and de-
signing person; he only looked warm
and comfortable and quite resigned
to his situation.
He had been clever enough to dis
guise himself as a new baby
in violet powder and a bald head and
a florid complexion.
HER LAST
Instructions to the Hus-
band as He Leaves Home.
Mr. Morse is an undemonstrative
man, and as absent-minded one as
well. In these two respects he is a
trial to his wife, who is exactly his
opposite. she said, as she
bade him good-by when he was about
to start for Chicago, you
to hunt up Cousin William, and
find out all about Aunt Sarah It is
so many years since I've
any of that
my
will you take particular no-1
the Ohio exhibits in the
needlework and
the pottery from Cincinnati, my dear
old
my
do you re-
member to put on your if
the wind changes, so as not to catch
one of your dreadful
my
you will try to remember
that you have clean collars,
so you needn't go about looking as if
had no wife to see to
my said Mr. Morse,
as he turned to take up his bag.
said Mrs. Morse,
tearfully, you suppose you will
think of me every day while you are
gone, and I am here at
responded Mr. Morse,
with his mind on catching the train,
will certainly make a
to do Companion.
Causes Sore Throat
A Choice and Selected of the Title
by He
Curious Evidence of His
Visitation.
According to the Talmudists Sat-
an, whose real name is or
was originally an angel with
six wings. He is also known as the
old serpent, the devil, Beelzebub, the
unclean spirit, leviathan and
In the East Indian story of the fall
he is referred to both as and as
and is also represented
as the great serpent against
which fought and which, after
a desperate struggle, he overcame.
In the Persian tradition he is known
as Ahriman, and it is believed that
at the time of the last day, after he
had been purified by fire, he will re-
turn to obedience and again occupy
the realms of the just as an angel.
In Norse mythology the evil spirit .
is Loki, and it was believed that the
wolf and the serpent were his vile
progeny. The Egyptians believed
he was a full brother of Osiris, their
god, and that he rebelled and was
thrown out under the name of
Typhon. The people of and
Rhodes spoke of the evil one as
or the serpent, which will
account for the fact that all
pents are to this day
under the generic of
that title in
Gould says and
Titan is the same
as the Arabic the Erse
the time god; the Biblical
Satan or Lucifer, the Son of the
The Greek story of
Prometheus stealing fire from
Heaven is believed by many learned
commentators to be identical with
our fall of Satan.
The Caroline island Indians have
a similar myth that
was driven out of Heaven,
and that he took with him a spark
of fire, which he presented to man.
It is needless to add that Pluto and
of the Roman and Grecian
mythologists, is the same as our
devil, or Satan. In the Irish
he is called of
the in Welsh he is called
meaning or
the god of darkness; in old Saxon
ho was In Danish
and in the language
The gypsies called him Bong, and by
the strange system of contraries by
which their language or dialect is
noted they call God or
as some writers give it.
From the above list, says the St.
Louis Republic, It will be seen that
one can his devil by any title
that Or, in the language
of
Ob, thou, whatever title suit thee,
Hondo, Satan, Nick or
His other common nicknames are
Old Harry, Cloven Foot, Old Boy
and
THE OFFICE CATS.
It Was Printed in
in
What is known as a in
modern journalism is but a new
name attached to a very ancient of-
The editors of our early pa-
were not free from the
practice.
One quite remarkable Instance of
the kind has recently been
earthed in the columns of James
Royal Gazette of
1778. printed
a Tory paper in this city during the
revolution, says the New York Her-
and made himself most
to the patriots by publishing
canards about the Continental army,
the congress and Gen. Washington.
His office was sacked just prior to
battle of Long Island, but after that
event and during the British
his paper was the subsidized mo-
of issuing lies.
In the issue of tho paper referred
to I find the following remarkable bit
of
letter from Phil-
we learn that on the receipt
of the last manifesto from the English
commissioners one of the congress
had the resolution make the follow-
short
have listened to this manifesto
with great attention, and I am
ashamed to acknowledge that it
breathes a spirit of candor and
by which I am considerably
influenced. No man in this august
assembly dare to express a doubt of
my true attachment to the true inter-
est of my country. I am convinced
that the Interest of is in-
separable from that of Britain, and
that our alliance with France is
natural, unprofitable, absurd. I
move that this phantom
of independence may given
had scarcely uttered the
words before tho president sent a
message to tho Polish Count Pu-
who happened to be exercising
a part of his legion in the courtyard
below. The count flew to tho
chamber where congress sat, and
with his saber in instant severed
from his body the head of this hon-
est delegate. The head was ordered
by the congress to be fixed on the top
of the liberty pole of Philadelphia as
a perpetual monument of the freedom
of debate in the continental congress
of the United States of
Infection from foul drains and
posits often causes throat, sore
throat often merges in croup and
Droop in various
grades of what is
all this but a ladder of stages in the
evolution of a microbe
from a harmless one by the
of variation and heredity under
a noxious regimen i
Tom and Irene Would Go Fooling
Around Loaded Battery Jars.
Tom and Irene are no longer on
this earth. Their souls have passed
to the great unknown, says the
Inland Ocean. Tom and
Irene were the feline mascots of the
Leader building and their untimely
death brings to a large
community of from the
horse down to the devil.
The cats had inhabited the big
composing-room of the Leader for
the past three months. They were
dainty creatures and obtained their
sustenance from the abundant sup-
ply of which was scattered
about the floor. They had become
veritable adopting their
customs, language and hours, going
to bed at three in the morning and
arising at noon. But they were
curious cats and therein lay their
doom. They discovered the battery
jars of the telegraph instrument and
partook copiously of the greased
lightning. The effect was electrical.
In a few short hours Irene was
wrapped in the shrouds of death.
But Tom, who had fallen from the
third story window twice and other-
wise shown his great tenacity of
life, hung on for a period of thirty-
six hours, when he too succumbed.
Death came to him at one o'clock
Thursday morning.
The funeral exercises were brief
and touching. The
voted an adjournment of ten
minutes out of respect to the dead.
The cats lay stretched upon the
composing-stone while Slug Eight
touchingly recited Death of
Little during which proceed-
tears could be heard dropping
with loud reports upon the grimy
floor. After all that was mortal of
Tom and Irene had been consigned
to earth the went back to
their cases with a firm resolve that
the next time they got a mascot they
will keep tho battery jars out of
sight. The tho
of the entire newspaper com-
Yellow-Dog Money.
A correspondent of the Boston
Transcript, writing of tho evils of
irresponsible banks and
such as the people of the
United States endured prior to the
adoption of the present national
bank system, tells the following
At one time the Mississippi valley
was flooded with bills on which was
stamped the figure of a big hound,
and which were universally known
as The cap-
of a steamer was trying to work
some of the stuff in exchange for
wood. As he came to one wharf
after another on his way up the
river he called
for
In substance the answer was
ways the same, though the form
varied. Nobody wanted
At last, however, the captain re-
an affirmative reply. He
steamed up to the wharf at once,
but just as the line was being cast
off he bethought himself to ask an-
other
do you take said he.
for was the answer.
STRANGE WAYWARDNESS.
A Childlike Genius and His Impulsive
and Hot-Headed Ways.
Dante Gabriel Rossetti, painter
and poet, had impulsive and hot-
headed ways, might have
caused his detractors to consider
him a spoiled child. One day when
he was sitting upon the ground
leaning on his easel, it came down
with a picture which had given him
a great deal of trouble and the china
palette, breaking in pieces, cut his
hands.
has ended it he cried.
shall have lockjaw; and i t is a very
good thing, too I've had enough of
this
said Harry
Quilter, who tells tho story.
don't lockjaw simply be-
cause they cut their
people cut their thumbs they
always have he returned.
I'm glad shall never touch
this picture And ho never
did touch it.
He was both romantic and
shrewd, and among Yankee
there are few keener men of
business than was this childlike
genius. Yet ho treated tho
of his pictures with scant
George a banker and a fine
judge of art, had bought several of
them, but ho objected to the price
Rossetti had set on A
few days after he returned and Ros-
greeted him sarcastically.
do you want for your
asked Rae.
hundred
you offered it to me for two
hundred and fifty
really don't was
the lordly reply; I did.
But why didn't you take it Well,
may have It for three hundred
pounds. If the odd shillings are of
use to you, Rae, you're welcome
to
It was sometimes a wonder to
those who knew Rossetti casually
that his friends bore so patiently
with his moods and impulses, but it
was nevertheless true that he was
beloved and that his faults
were universally
Cobra Poison as a Medicine.
Those
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A few bottles of S. will
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Chas. Laurel Street,
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pimples would be cut, thus causing to
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my face is all clear and smooth as
it should splendid,
sleep well and feel like running a
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Treatise on Wood and skin diseases mailed free.
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TOPICS
TREATED.
ENDORSED BY STATESMEN. EDUCATORS, AND
STUDENTS EVERYWHERE.
Rocky pm
Ar
Has Reached Such a State of
That It Is a Veritable
of Facts and Events,
Brought Down to January
First, 1894.
A rather curious commission has
been received from the Bombay Nat-
History society, from the
rector general, army medical depart-
war office, viz., to supply him
with grains of dry cobra poison
for experimental purposes. The
society has offered to collect, if
the required amount and dis-
patch it to London. A steady in-
in the market value of cobras
is expected, the same being described
in the Bombay Times as
with a rising
Daily News.
Polite and Grateful.
That's what all boys should be,
whether trained In the parlor or In
the barn. When Wolfgang Amadeus
Mozart was six years old
he exhibited his wonderful talent as
a musician before the emperor and
empress of Austria at Vienna. On
leaving the instrument he slipped
upon the polished floor of the palace
reception room, and fell. Marie
Antoinette, afterward queen of
France, lifted him up and kissed
him. are very said the
little musician, when I grow up
will marry
din Battle.
London, November dispatch
to the Telegraph company
from Rio de Janeiro Admiral
lie has left Rio with several of
his swiftest war vessels in order to
intercept the new ships which are on
their way to reinforce President
The dispatch adds that groat ex-
prevails at Rio de Janeiro.
It is believed that a great naval battle
will shortly be the
Magnolia US
St
TRAINS NORTH
No No
daily daily daily
ex Sun.
Florence U
Ar Wilson
Wilmington
Magnolia
Goldsboro
Ar Wilson am p m
Wilson
Ai Rocky Mont
Ar Tarboro
Tarboro p m
except
Train on Scotland Neck
leaves Weldon 3.40 p. m. Halifax 4.40
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck 4.48 p. in.
Greenville 0.28 p. id., p. in.
Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 a.
Greenville 8.22 a. m. Halifax
at a. m., Weldon 11.20 a. m. daily
except
Trains on Washington Branch leave
Washington 7.00 a. m. arrives
8.40 a. in. Tarboro returning
leaves Tarboro 4.40 p. m 6.00
p. m,, arrives Washington 7.30 p. m.
Daily except Sunday. Connects, with
trains on Scotland Neck Branch.
Train leave Tarboro, N C, via Alb
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun
day, F M. Sunday P M, arrive
Plymouth 9.20 p. m., 5.20 p. m.
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except
5.30 a. in., Sunday 10.00 a. m
arrive Tarboro, N C, 10.26 AM 12,20.
Trains on Southern Division, Wilson
Branch leave Fayette-
ville SO a m, arrive Rowland p
Returning leave Rowland p m.
-rive Daily ex-
Sunday.
Train on Midland N C Branch leave
Goldsboro daily except A M
N C, A M. Re
laves X C S A M
Goldsboro, NO A M.
Train
Mount at P M, arrive Nashville
P Hope P M. Returning
Hope A M, Nashville
8.85 arrives Rocky Mount A
M, except
Trains on Latta Branch R. R. leave
7.80 p. in., arrive 8.40 p.
m. Returning leave a. m.,
arrive Latta 7.15 a. in. Ha except
Sunday.
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at
and leave Clio
ton at A M, and P. M.
at Warsaw with Nos. and
Train No. makes at
Weldon for all points North daily,
ail via Richmond, and daily except Sim-
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount
dally except Sunday with Norfolk
railroad for Norfolk all
points via Norfolk.
DIVINE,
General
. P. Transportation.
M,
THE Edition of 1894 has been prepared
with an extra force of editors. It will
have a novel and attractive cover, wide mar-
new and improved binding; is printed
on good paper, and contain more and better
information than any book of a similar nature published. It is
AMERICA'S STANDARD YEAR BOOK.
by mail,
CENTS.
fork City.
W mm
You can get THE EASTERN REFLECTOR, THE ATLANTA
CONSTITUTION, THE NEW YORK WORLD all one year for
Or you can got two of above papers a year for
Subscribe at the Reflector Office.
art coin- t
pounded from a prescription
widely used by the best
cal authorities and ore j
in a form that is be-
coming the fashion every-
where.
. gently ,
but promptly upon
stomach cure
dyspepsia, habitual .-
breath and head-
ache. One taken at j
first symptom of
biliousness, dizziness,
after eating, or depression
spirits, and r, ;
remove the whole
may be c n
of neatest druggist
Is Your Life j
Worth Anything
Are there not
persons dependent on
your earnings for their
support Are they pro-
for in case of your
The simplest and
safest way of assuring
their protection is life in-
Business, pro
and working
men generally, should in-
sure, for their brains or
their muscles, are their
capital and income too.
Death stops them both.
Insure in the
Equitable Life
and death cannot
salary or steal your
and your loved ones
will be safe from want.
Agent for the C roll
ROCK HILL. South Carolina.
Tubule
are easy to lake,
quick to act, and-.,
save many a
tor's
the hast.
Mover to Oral
to it. Color,
a bait
r Iron
iv it.
Ail . II OB
kw liars
CONSUMPTIVE
Tonie. It th
I rail. Take Id


Title
Eastern reflector, 10 January 1894
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 10, 1894
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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http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
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