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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 20 January 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18920120</dc:date>
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                <p>
m I<lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
-HAS A- <lb />
Job Room <lb />
That can be surpassed <lb />
where in this section. <lb />
Our work always gives <lb />
faction. <lb />
New Type <lb />
Presses <lb />
Material I <lb />
SEND US YOUR ORDERS. <lb />
HOW TO TREAT GRIP. <lb />
A Celebrated Paris Physician's Ideas. <lb />
The New York publishes <lb />
an interview with Albert Robin, <lb />
the celebrated Paris physician, <lb />
giving his ideas as to the best <lb />
treatment of the grip. He is re- <lb />
ported as <lb />
thing is noted, and <lb />
that is that in large cities it is less <lb />
intense than in the towns <lb />
and villages. It attacks all <lb />
but old and feeble per- <lb />
sons are the most severe sufferers. <lb />
Children the malady <lb />
better than adults. If influenza is <lb />
specially dangerous on account <lb />
of the complications that arise <lb />
from it. it follows that its true <lb />
treatment is to avoid the latter. <lb />
These complications are <lb />
pulmonary congestion, weak- <lb />
of the nervous system and <lb />
acidulous poisoning of the blood. <lb />
To avoid such complications the <lb />
patient should be kept rigorously <lb />
in bed so long as there is the <lb />
slightest fever or the slightest <lb />
cough. Warm aromatic potions <lb />
should be given, which induce <lb />
perspiration, and by sweating <lb />
eliminate the products that <lb />
encumber the blood. <lb />
have determined, by the way, <lb />
that of a suffer- <lb />
from influenza is twelve times <lb />
more tonic than that of a normal <lb />
condition. Weak doses of <lb />
of quinine of from twenty- <lb />
five to fifty centigrams should be <lb />
given three times a day. The <lb />
reason is that large doses make the <lb />
patient sleep profoundly and de- <lb />
the fever, but have no action <lb />
whatever upon the poisons <lb />
in the blood and do not <lb />
their destructibility. Small <lb />
doses, on the contrary, give <lb />
render more active <lb />
and elimination of these <lb />
which are the source of <lb />
the danger. which is <lb />
often recommended as a specific <lb />
for influenza, should be mistrusted. <lb />
This medicine depresses the <lb />
system, closes the kidneys, <lb />
which are the principal means of <lb />
eliminating animal poisons, and <lb />
consequently it is more harmful <lb />
than useful. To sulphate of <lb />
nine should be added alcohol in <lb />
moderate doses in the form of <lb />
port wine or grog. <lb />
is necessary above all, when <lb />
fever has disappeared, and the <lb />
patient wishes to go and re- <lb />
his usual occupations, in- <lb />
upon a convalescence indoors <lb />
for from four to eight days, ac- <lb />
cording to the seriousness of the <lb />
attack. Such is the general treat- <lb />
If influenza becomes local- <lb />
and affects any particular <lb />
organ, a local treatment should ac- <lb />
company this general treatment. <lb />
This is, of course, the affair of the <lb />
physician consulted, and cannot be <lb />
treated under the head of general <lb />
VOL. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, if C., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1892. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
MR. CLEVELAND. <lb />
Analyses. <lb />
Fertilizer Analyses at the <lb />
Station will be sent out at <lb />
the very earliest moment during <lb />
the coming season. A bulletin <lb />
will be issued in January giving <lb />
the results of all analyses made <lb />
last season, including the fall in- <lb />
Of the new analyses <lb />
finished during the coming season, <lb />
the results will be mailed every <lb />
two weeks, as they are completed. <lb />
If you desire these special <lb />
tins, applications must be made to <lb />
the at Raleigh for then. <lb />
They will only be sent to special <lb />
applicants. <lb />
There is a pretty general com- <lb />
plaint by the State papers of the <lb />
wretched condition of the country <lb />
roads, preventing farmers from <lb />
in town and causing much <lb />
stagnation business. In some <lb />
places since the late fall of snow <lb />
there is a scarcity of wood amount- <lb />
almost to a wood famine, and <lb />
some places have had to depend <lb />
upon the railroads to supply the <lb />
demand and prevent the needy <lb />
from suffering- This illustrates <lb />
the necessity of good and <lb />
shows why the people of the towns <lb />
as well as of the country should <lb />
take an interest in them. The <lb />
town people suffer quite as much <lb />
from bad roads as the country <lb />
people do, and both suffer much <lb />
more than either seem to realize <lb />
that they do- This is a subject <lb />
that does not receive one-half the <lb />
the attention it should, for their <lb />
are subjects that have greater <lb />
bearing upon the prosperity of the <lb />
Star. <lb />
MAKES ONE OF TELLING <lb />
SPEECHES. <lb />
And Gives Expression to His Usual <lb />
Wisdom and Sound Democracy. <lb />
There is so much wisdom and <lb />
pure Democracy in the following <lb />
extracts taken from a speech de- <lb />
livered by ex-President Cleveland <lb />
at the celebration of the battle at <lb />
New Orleans by the Business <lb />
Men's Democratic Association of <lb />
New York that we cannot refrain <lb />
from them to our readers <lb />
with the full comment upon the <lb />
same by the Wilmington Star of <lb />
January <lb />
Democratic party has late- <lb />
declared to the people that if it <lb />
was trusted and invested with <lb />
power, their burdens of taxation <lb />
should be and that a bet- <lb />
and more distribution of <lb />
benefits should be assured to <lb />
them- There is no doubt concern <lb />
our commission from the <lb />
to do this work, and there is <lb />
no doubt that we have re- <lb />
their trust and confidence <lb />
on the faith of our promises- In. <lb />
these circumstances there is no <lb />
sign of Jacksonian determination <lb />
and in faltering or hes- <lb />
in the cause we have <lb />
If we accepted the <lb />
trust and confidence of the people <lb />
with other design than to re- <lb />
fully to them, we have been <lb />
dishonored from the beginning. <lb />
If we accepted them in good faith, <lb />
disgrace and humiliation await us <lb />
if we relax our efforts before the <lb />
promised end is <lb />
who are proud to call our- <lb />
selves Democrats, have; <lb />
boldly aggressively attacked a <lb />
political opposed to the <lb />
best of the people and <lb />
defended by an arrogant and <lb />
scrupulous party. The fight <lb />
still on. Who has the hardihood <lb />
to say that we can lay claim to the <lb />
least Jacksonian spirit if in the <lb />
struggle we turn our backs to the <lb />
enemy or lower in the least our <lb />
colors T<lb />
we are to act upon our de- <lb />
belief in the power of that <lb />
Jacksonian spirit which was the <lb />
inspiration of our party in the <lb />
days of our great leader, we shall <lb />
be steadfast to the issue we have <lb />
raised until it is settled and right- <lb />
The steadfastness we <lb />
need will not permit a <lb />
and distracting search for other <lb />
and perplexing questions, nor will <lb />
it allow as to be tempted or driven <lb />
by the enemy into new and tan- <lb />
paths. <lb />
We have given pledges to the <lb />
and they have us. I <lb />
we have outgrown the <lb />
Democratic spirit of Jackson's <lb />
time duty is plain- Our promise <lb />
was not merely to labor in the <lb />
people's cause until we should tire <lb />
of the effort or should discover <lb />
way which seemed to promise j <lb />
and quicker party <lb />
The we undertook was not <lb />
to advise those Waiting for better <lb />
days cause was hopeless, <lb />
any pretext to suggest <lb />
a cessation of effort- Our engage <lb />
to labor incessantly, <lb />
bravely, and stubbornly, seeing <lb />
nothing and considering nothing <lb />
but ultimate success- These pledges <lb />
and promises should be faithfully <lb />
and honestly kept- Party faith- <lb />
is party dishonor.<lb />
believe our countrymen are <lb />
prepared to act on principle, and <lb />
are in no mood. for political ma- <lb />
They will not waste <lb />
time in studying political <lb />
drums, guessing riddles, or trying <lb />
to interpret doubtful phrases. <lb />
They demand a plain and simple <lb />
statement of political purpose. <lb />
all finesse <lb />
should not lead us to forget that <lb />
at the end of our plans we must <lb />
meet face to face at the polls the <lb />
voters of the land, with ballots in <lb />
their hands, demanding as a con- <lb />
of their support of our party <lb />
fidelity and undivided devotion to <lb />
the cause in which we have enlist- <lb />
ed them. . <lb />
inspired by the true Jack- <lb />
spirit we hold to the doc- <lb />
i that party honesty is party <lb />
duty, and party courage is party <lb />
expediency, we shall win a sure <lb />
and lasting success through the <lb />
deserved support of a <lb />
ting, intelligent and thoughtful <lb />
These are the of a <lb />
man who believes that there is <lb />
patriotism in politics and that it is <lb />
something more than a mere game <lb />
to win power, and the spoils of <lb />
office, and there are thousands of <lb />
Democrats in this country who <lb />
endorse them and applaud their <lb />
utterance. <lb />
These is such a thing as <lb />
ency, but there is also such a <lb />
thing as duty. Expediency should <lb />
always be subordinate to duty, at d <lb />
never paramount. There may be <lb />
times when expediency and duty <lb />
may go together, and when ex- <lb />
judiciously practiced <lb />
facilitates and hastens the <lb />
of those aims to <lb />
duty points- The competent lead- <lb />
this fact, and shows <lb />
his wisdom by knowing when, how <lb />
and to what extent expediency <lb />
should be recognized in party <lb />
management. The expediency <lb />
which is the inspiration of <lb />
and the expediency is <lb />
the offspring of trickery, are two <lb />
entirely different things, the one <lb />
being the wisdom which triumphs, <lb />
the other the mere which <lb />
overreaches itself, forfeits popular <lb />
respect and loses what it strives to <lb />
win. <lb />
OUR STATE. <lb />
ALL OVER NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Happening's Here and There as Gathered <lb />
From our Exchanges. <lb />
Raleigh Chronicle On Sunday <lb />
Mr. aged <lb />
died at his home in the eastern <lb />
part of Wake. <lb />
Several counties in the State are <lb />
failing into line in regard to the <lb />
whiskey question. Now Pender <lb />
and Caswell counties both hare <lb />
refused to grant liquor licenses. <lb />
If the Democratic party is any. Mr. Abel <lb />
thing it is a party of principle, and <lb />
to this is due the fact that in spite <lb />
of combinations of money and mer- <lb />
interests the most power- <lb />
that this world has ever seen it <lb />
has grown from an almost hope- <lb />
less minority a quarter of a <lb />
ago to be the dominant party <lb />
among the people, with a majority <lb />
of nearly a million of the white <lb />
voters of the country. <lb />
At the close of the war it had a <lb />
majority in one State in the North <lb />
to-day it controls two-thirds of the <lb />
States in the Union. Had it not <lb />
been a party of principle, a party <lb />
which adhered to the cause of the <lb />
people and in which the people <lb />
had confidence, it could never <lb />
risen from its apparently hopeless <lb />
condition to the power and <lb />
influence it wields to-day, in spite <lb />
of power, patronage, money and <lb />
the prejudice that were combined <lb />
against it. <lb />
It has been defeated but never <lb />
conquered, outnumbered and out-. <lb />
counted but never cast down or <lb />
despondent- With a confidence <lb />
and a heroism that commanded <lb />
the respect and admiration of even <lb />
its opponents, it rallied after the <lb />
-battle, mod its lines, and with <lb />
duty for its inspiration and <lb />
its animating spirit, and <lb />
principle for its slogan, it <lb />
the war into and <lb />
at last by the very dint <lb />
of its perseverance and devotion. <lb />
The Democratic party had n mis- <lb />
save the of <lb />
the people from the encroachments <lb />
of centralized it did it. <lb />
It has a mission save <lb />
these same people from the en- <lb />
of the money power <lb />
and the favored classes, which, <lb />
Republican rule, have <lb />
ed the government and shaped its <lb />
it must perform that <lb />
mission honestly, faithfully and <lb />
unswervingly- To waver is to <lb />
abandon the fight and prove false <lb />
to the people who trust in it, <lb />
A Unique Courtship. <lb />
Here is a romantic anecdote <lb />
Strickland, aged died at his <lb />
home about two miles from town <lb />
on last He was a clever <lb />
and a good citizen- His <lb />
was caused by the grippe- <lb />
A Washington dispatch says <lb />
Representative Grady, of North <lb />
Carolina, has introduced a bill to <lb />
pay to the Cape Fear Steamboat <lb />
Company for the use of its <lb />
steamers by the Government <lb />
after the close of the war. <lb />
The Rev. W- E Edmonson, of <lb />
California, will be sent to take <lb />
charge of the Methodist Church at <lb />
Snow Hill, the of which <lb />
was made vacant by the <lb />
until Conference, of the Key. <lb />
Mr. <lb />
Tarboro Rill Fife, <lb />
the evangelist, will begin a series <lb />
of revival meetings, in the town <lb />
hull, on Sunday January 24th- The <lb />
choir to furnish music for the <lb />
meeting will be organized this <lb />
week, and will begin, at <lb />
once- <lb />
The <lb />
examine <lb />
Raleigh Chronicle <lb />
court will <lb />
cants for license to practice law on <lb />
Friday and Saturday, the 29th and <lb />
30th of this month, and will enter <lb />
upon the call of appeals from the <lb />
first district on Monday, the first <lb />
day of February- <lb />
Tarboro The <lb />
family, near store, is <lb />
great on twins- There are five <lb />
brothers, four of whom have been <lb />
blessed cherubs two at a birth, <lb />
Levi, Watson, Robert and J. B. <lb />
The one, Frank, expects <lb />
to maintain the family reputation. <lb />
Counterfeit silver dollars are in <lb />
circulation in these is, <lb />
M-. Frank Epps had one <lb />
on him at Wright's last Tues <lb />
day. It is a very poor imitation <lb />
of good money, aDd if we had time <lb />
we believe we could chip as good <lb />
out of the babbitt metal in our <lb />
Observer. <lb />
Mr. Calvin Benton, a hard-work- <lb />
and successful farmer of this <lb />
county, says that he is feeding his <lb />
cows on wheat bran, seed cotton <lb />
and shucks, and is getting all the <lb />
good butter and milk he wants. <lb />
Mr. Benton raises his own supplies <lb />
consequently he has a to <lb />
live on, and says he doesn't owe a <lb />
dollar in the world. <lb />
The Rockingham Rocket reports <lb />
that Mr- R- A. Gaddy, a <lb />
about Louisa Alcott's father and I in Wolf Pit township, was <lb />
mother. As a young man, Mr- Al- visited by a large crowd of masked <lb />
so the story goes, was <lb />
or secretary to Mrs. Alcott's <lb />
father. The. two young people <lb />
met often and naturally fell in love <lb />
with each other. Mr. Alcott's so- <lb />
position and prospects being <lb />
somewhat uncertain at that time, <lb />
he did not feel justified in asking <lb />
this well-born and talented young <lb />
woman to marry him. He finally <lb />
gave up his position and they par- <lb />
with no confessions on either <lb />
side. It was agreed, however, that <lb />
each should keep a journal, and <lb />
that these journals should be ex- <lb />
changed once in so often. Thus <lb />
men at night who ordered him to <lb />
leave in thirty days and told him <lb />
if this order was not complied with <lb />
they would call on him in another <lb />
style. A notice was posted on the <lb />
court house door yesterday, offer- <lb />
for sale all of person- <lb />
affects. <lb />
Wilmington The losses <lb />
by fires in 1891 were in <lb />
excess of those of 1890. At least <lb />
one-half the fires in the country <lb />
are the result of carelessness. As <lb />
a proof of this we cite the fact <lb />
that there is a town in North Car- <lb />
now numbering three or <lb />
four thousand <lb />
where there hasn't been but one <lb />
house burned in a hundred years. <lb />
matters went on for some he, aim ply because the people are re- <lb />
I unwilling to ask so much and of- <lb />
fer so little; she, willing to give all <lb />
under a woman's necessity of keep- <lb />
silent <lb />
At length, one lay, while read- <lb />
the journal he had sent her, <lb />
she came across a few sentences in <lb />
which he hinted at his love and <lb />
unhappiness, and wondered what <lb />
she would say if ho should ever <lb />
presume to ask her hand in mar- <lb />
The moment was a critical <lb />
one, but Mrs. was equal to <lb />
it. Seizing a pen quickly and <lb />
clearly she wrote <lb />
you ask her and find <lb />
out It is said that the journal is <lb />
is still preserved in the Alcott <lb />
family. <lb />
Charming people, these exceptional <lb />
people I Here's a Pierre's <lb />
Golden Medical Discovery for instance <lb />
and it's cured hundreds, <lb />
known thousands <lb />
known, and yet is an exceptional <lb />
easel Do yon think that that bit of <lb />
human nature which you call. is <lb />
the other parcels of human <lb />
nature Bat you don know my <lb />
Good friend, I ninety-nine oat a <lb />
cases, causes are the <lb />
pure that's why <lb />
Medical Discovery oases <lb />
out of every hundred. Too may be the <lb />
exception. And you may sot Bat <lb />
could yon rattier be She exception, <lb />
rather well If you're <lb />
the except on it costs <lb />
get money <lb />
cures yon <lb />
Let the Medical <lb />
take the it. <lb />
you nothing, you <lb />
suppose It <lb />
PUBLIC ROADS AND CONVICTS. <lb />
Asheville Citizen. <lb />
The action of the last legislature <lb />
of North Carolina enacting a <lb />
law whereby certain classes of <lb />
of the law may be put to <lb />
the public highways <lb />
of the counties in which their of- <lb />
fences were committed, is one step <lb />
in the right direction- <lb />
There is no way in which the <lb />
convicts of North Carolina could <lb />
be with greater benefit to <lb />
all the people than putting <lb />
very man of them to work upon <lb />
the public roads. In this way <lb />
they will in no sense come into <lb />
competition with honest labor, a <lb />
complaint often heard of late <lb />
years, and with much reason and <lb />
justice because it cannot be done <lb />
without degrading the largest and <lb />
most deserving portion of our <lb />
There is not an honest laborer <lb />
in North Carolina but detests the <lb />
working of roads, and it is no <lb />
more than the truth to say that <lb />
nine out of ten who do work the <lb />
roads do so under protest, and <lb />
therefore never do and never will <lb />
do full and fair work- <lb />
And this question of public <lb />
roads is really the most vital with <lb />
which the American <lb />
has to deal to-day- It has been de- <lb />
by those making a <lb />
study of the question, that the far- <lb />
of the United States lose <lb />
more money every year by reason <lb />
of bad roads, than they pay out <lb />
in the way of taxes for all <lb />
poses. <lb />
With the force of the <lb />
state kept constantly at work year <lb />
by year upon the public highways, <lb />
upon a fixed plan and in a <lb />
way Worth Carolina farmers <lb />
in a few years would realize that <lb />
they were gaining infinitely more <lb />
than the cost, that of their main- <lb />
The Citizen proposes to agitate <lb />
this and endeavor to <lb />
make it a distinct in the <lb />
of the next members of our <lb />
state legislature, and see if it is <lb />
not possible to inaugurate a sys- <lb />
whereby North Carolina may <lb />
eventually hope to have public <lb />
roads that will be the pride of the <lb />
state and the greatest blessing <lb />
that ever came to the farmer. <lb />
And it is hoped that the press <lb />
will lend their aid- To the press <lb />
will be attributed this blessing if <lb />
it ever comes, and to the press we <lb />
look for the of this <lb />
which may mean more, and <lb />
will mean more, in the long run, if <lb />
properly undertaken and <lb />
prosecuted, than any <lb />
measure which has engaged the <lb />
attention of our legislators during <lb />
the past quarter of a century. <lb />
quired to be careful- <lb />
Dr. H- Rogers, a native of <lb />
this State, died a day or two since <lb />
at Abilene, Texas, where he had <lb />
been living for two years- Dr. <lb />
Rogers, while in Raleigh, was as- <lb />
physician at the insane <lb />
asylum, and was one of those most <lb />
active in bringing the charges <lb />
against Dr. Grissom which stirred <lb />
the whole State and resulted in an <lb />
entire change of asylum officers. <lb />
Dr. Rogers the State soon <lb />
after the trial and dismissal of Dr. <lb />
Grissom- <lb />
Graham Dogs killed <lb />
and wounded seventeen head of <lb />
sheep for Mr- R- L. Walker, at <lb />
place, last Friday morning- They <lb />
were fine sheep of good stock. Mr. <lb />
Walker place the damage at fifty <lb />
dollars. Such things as this will <lb />
continue to be of frequent occur- <lb />
once until a good, law <lb />
is passed that will curtail the <lb />
of worthless ours, and cause <lb />
their tails to be out off about <lb />
inches behind their ears- <lb />
Senator Vance <lb />
has introduced in the Senate a bill <lb />
to pay Mir. John D. Thorne of this <lb />
county the sum of for cot- <lb />
ton taken from him during or just <lb />
after the war by the Federal <lb />
ties. This but was reported favor- <lb />
ably in the last Congress, <lb />
claim has been prosecuted by Mr. <lb />
Thor for many years, and being <lb />
a one ought to be paid with- <lb />
out further delay. We hope- <lb />
will succeed in set or- <lb />
The Washington correspondent <lb />
of the Richmond Times writes of <lb />
Hon. Mr. Grady, Representative <lb />
in Congress from the Third Dis- <lb />
of North Carolina, as follows <lb />
Grady, of North <lb />
Carolina, which he will in- <lb />
Its object is to prevent <lb />
Federal courts from taxing costs of <lb />
suits against parties who are ac- <lb />
His idea, o says, is to <lb />
make the Federal law conform to <lb />
the North Carolina State law in <lb />
this <lb />
he said, man <lb />
is indicted and dragged one <lb />
miles or more, to Raleigh, <lb />
say. He is acquitted, but besides <lb />
his personal expenses, traveling <lb />
and others, is taxed to pay his <lb />
witness. That is not right, and I <lb />
mean to have it corrected if I <lb />
Mr. Grady has ideas as to <lb />
to confine the Inter-State <lb />
Commerce Commission to its <lb />
field of operation. He says <lb />
the commission, interpreting pas- <lb />
traffic to be commerce, has <lb />
the regulation of <lb />
traffic. That, he maintains, is be- <lb />
the constitutional jurisdiction <lb />
of the commission, I am for <lb />
the Constitution at all times and <lb />
under all added <lb />
the North Carolina member of <lb />
Congress. <lb />
The Charlotte Chronicle came <lb />
out yesterday for for the <lb />
Presidency Herald believes <lb />
him to be a good man, but if <lb />
Cleveland is to be given up we <lb />
think Senator Vance is the next <lb />
best man. North Carolinians <lb />
would rather see him President <lb />
than any other Hying man. He <lb />
perfectly familiar with all the de- <lb />
tails of the office and would make <lb />
NO THIRD PARTY. <lb />
A COMPROMISE PLATFORM <lb />
Special to State Chronicle. <lb />
N- C, Jan. We <lb />
have read many fulsome and laud- <lb />
editorials upon that great <lb />
rhetorical myth drafted by the <lb />
Will it bear <lb />
fruit or remain a barren waste of <lb />
words <lb />
We appreciate the astute states <lb />
of its authors in <lb />
this instrument. Has <lb />
any one had the temerity to pro- <lb />
this wonderful production <lb />
an abortion At <lb />
all events it has fallen still-born <lb />
Such fustian delights the ears, <lb />
but beggars common sense. <lb />
We have long since <lb />
the political meaning of <lb />
etc., as words without definition. <lb />
What was the object of this <lb />
Was it not fear of a <lb />
that would certainly wreck <lb />
all our cherished institutions and <lb />
remand us to the dark days of Re- <lb />
to the indelible dis- <lb />
grace and injury of our beloved <lb />
State, that impelled our <lb />
to such an unusual proceeding <lb />
If so why did they not give us <lb />
something tangible This self- <lb />
constituted body could promise <lb />
nothing. Why did not the Demo- <lb />
Executive Committee <lb />
accede to the people's de- <lb />
and necessities to the ex- <lb />
tent of conciliation or compromise <lb />
The Alliance in North Carolina is <lb />
the Democratic party and can <lb />
formulate its own demands and <lb />
incorporate them in the Demo- <lb />
platform- There can be no <lb />
in this State unless <lb />
some of our old political war <lb />
horses, professional politicians and <lb />
demagogues read themselves out <lb />
of the and rearing an <lb />
pendent banner usurp the <lb />
Tho honest, patriotic <lb />
and industrial classes of the Old <lb />
North State are her Democracy. <lb />
We forced to believe had some <lb />
of our wary politicians and <lb />
expended as much of their <lb />
energy, wisdom and eloquence in <lb />
guiding the Democratic forces in <lb />
their respective districts as they <lb />
did in protesting love of the party <lb />
and and desire for <lb />
in the House of Commons <lb />
in Raleigh the night of October <lb />
15th, there would have been little <lb />
point in the expression of fears to <lb />
the Chairman of the Democratic <lb />
Executive Committee of <lb />
can success in a strongly Demo- <lb />
district which was so <lb />
as to have an <lb />
a farmer, as the Democratic con- <lb />
standard bearer. <lb />
Does it argue that love for our <lb />
party and to leave a <lb />
struggling candidate our <lb />
dent district to the tender mercies <lb />
of a Republican adversary, while <lb />
we campaign elsewhere <lb />
Free and full discussions in a <lb />
spirit of honesty, justice and <lb />
would do much to <lb />
our differences, but this <lb />
pears impossible, as fanaticism <lb />
and self-aggrandizement is as great <lb />
outside its ranks as in the Alliance <lb />
and our leading Democrats in- <lb />
stead of encouraging mutual for- <lb />
and moderation, allow a <lb />
system of irritation to be <lb />
and countenancing this are <lb />
doing more to disrupt the Demo- <lb />
party than all the <lb />
and frenzied <lb />
fanatics within our order. <lb />
We do not arrogate to ourselves <lb />
the privilege of making <lb />
to this august body, or of <lb />
offering to our sages-a solution of <lb />
our difficulties, but if we <lb />
aged farmers and laborers as <lb />
in a common cause and <lb />
reasoned with their de- <lb />
we believe they would ac- <lb />
a compromise as an ultimatum- <lb />
Would not a platform somewhat <lb />
similar to the following unite the <lb />
extremists in all classes in our <lb />
A POSSIBLE PLATFORM <lb />
PROPOSED. <lb />
Whereas, Believing the present <lb />
agricultural and industrial <lb />
is due to the unsound and <lb />
false financial system and class <lb />
legislation of the United States <lb />
be it <lb />
That we favor the <lb />
of the National Banks and <lb />
advocate that government <lb />
shall establish Sub-Treasuries or <lb />
depositories in the Capitols of the <lb />
several which shall loan <lb />
direct to the people at a <lb />
low rate of interest not to exceed <lb />
per cent, or per cent, upon real <lb />
estate for a period not to exceed <lb />
years with proper limitations upon <lb />
the quantity and quality of land. <lb />
That the State bonds at <lb />
per cent- or per cent, and deposit <lb />
same the United States Treas- <lb />
equivalent to the amount of <lb />
money drawn from the govern- <lb />
by the States- <lb />
ad. We advocate the issuing of <lb />
Treasury notes and fractional cur- <lb />
which shall be full and legal <lb />
tender for all debts, both public <lb />
and private, without the exception <lb />
clause as to on imports and <lb />
interest on the public The <lb />
circulating medium should be in- <lb />
creased to not less than per <lb />
capita. <lb />
We advocate a repeal of the <lb />
present internal revenue system. <lb />
4th. We most rigid, <lb />
honest and just State and National <lb />
government control and <lb />
ion of the means of public <lb />
and transportation, and if <lb />
this control and supervision does <lb />
not remove the abuse now exist- <lb />
we demand the government <lb />
ownership of such means of trans- <lb />
and <lb />
5th. We denounce the present <lb />
high tariff and advocate tariff for <lb />
revenue only. <lb />
6th- We believe the education of <lb />
the masses the chief bulwark of <lb />
our liberties and think taxation for <lb />
public school purposes should be <lb />
increased. <lb />
7th- demand that Congress <lb />
shall such laws as shall affect- <lb />
prevent the dealing in futures <lb />
of all agricultural and mechanical <lb />
productions, preserving a <lb />
gent system of procedure of trials <lb />
as shall secure the prompt con- <lb />
and imposing such penal- <lb />
ties as shall secure the most per- <lb />
compliance with the <lb />
8th. condemn the Silver <lb />
bill passed by Congress, and de- <lb />
in lieu thereof, the free and <lb />
unlimited of <lb />
9th. demand the passage of <lb />
laws prohibiting alien of <lb />
land, and of Congress to take <lb />
prompt action to devise some plan <lb />
to obtain all lands owned by <lb />
aliens and foreign syndicates ; and <lb />
that all lands now held by rail <lb />
roads and other corporations in <lb />
excess of such as is actually need- <lb />
ed by them be reclaimed and held <lb />
for actual settlers <lb />
10th. in the doctrine <lb />
of equal rights to all and special <lb />
privileges to none, we demand <lb />
that our National legislation shall <lb />
be so framed in the future as not <lb />
to build up one industry at the ex- <lb />
of another ; and we further <lb />
demand a removal of the existing <lb />
heavy tariff tax from the necessities <lb />
of life that the poor of our land <lb />
must we further demand a <lb />
just and equitable of grad- <lb />
tax on incomes; we believe <lb />
that the money of the country <lb />
should kept as much as <lb />
in the hands of tho people, and <lb />
hence we demand that all State <lb />
and National revenues shall be <lb />
to the necessary expenses <lb />
of the government economically <lb />
and honestly <lb />
11th. We demand more speedy <lb />
and direct postal facilities, so that <lb />
farmers in out-lying districts may <lb />
have equal advantages with the <lb />
city business men, and request our <lb />
representatives in Congress to en- <lb />
to secure such legislation. <lb />
We believe a platform somewhat <lb />
similar to the above is one on <lb />
which all factions can stand to do <lb />
battle in the cause of the people- <lb />
Why should the government not <lb />
issue two per cent, bonds at <lb />
twenty years in lieu of the four <lb />
per cent, bond now issued Why <lb />
should it issue bonds at all <lb />
Why should we continue to <lb />
support for it <lb />
not time the unwise and strategic <lb />
war legislation and <lb />
acts of Congresses were <lb />
repealed <lb />
Our people are by no means a <lb />
unit on the <lb />
but instead of antagonizing every <lb />
measure of relief that seems to us <lb />
impracticable why not offer them <lb />
views of our own that appear <lb />
and will seemingly ameliorate <lb />
their condition <lb />
It seems to us unreasonable to <lb />
ask the government to loan money <lb />
to us at one per cent, and <lb />
two per cent, when its own bonds <lb />
bear four per cent interest. <lb />
We condemn class legislation <lb />
in favor of bankers; can we con- <lb />
it for ourselves <lb />
One of the cardinal principle <lb />
lot order is aqua an <lb />
-3 <lb />
The REFLECTOR <lb />
J A whole year for <lb />
; only One Dollar; but <lb />
in order to get it yon <lb />
must in advance. <lb />
If you And stamped <lb />
just after your name <lb />
; on the margin of the <lb />
paper the <lb />
Subscription <lb />
Expires Two Weeks <lb />
From This <lb />
It Is to 110- <lb />
; that unless re- <lb />
newed in that time <lb />
the will <lb />
cease going to you <lb />
at expiration of <lb />
the two weeks. <lb />
justice to all men and special <lb />
privileges to none- <lb />
Real estate is the basis of our <lb />
country's wealth so why should our <lb />
government not secure its loans <lb />
upon its land <lb />
The financial condition of the <lb />
farmer is the of its unrest. <lb />
There has been systematic <lb />
conspiracies to enslave our <lb />
people and it is from these man- <lb />
we ask to be freed. <lb />
It is a well accepted theory <lb />
commodities rise in price in pro- <lb />
portion to the increase or <lb />
or the whole <lb />
volume of money in circulation <lb />
were doubled, prices would <lb />
Give us sound and abundant <lb />
finances is what we ask ; the Dem- <lb />
party can surely endorse <lb />
the petition for the people's good. <lb />
We congratulate the Alliance <lb />
the people of the whole State upon <lb />
the consecrative, wise an honest <lb />
administration of State officers <lb />
that we now employ. We would <lb />
not ask a change in this, but the <lb />
National administration is our <lb />
curse, and we trust the good <lb />
of North Carolina will unite <lb />
with us in our demands so that <lb />
in time we may overcome the evils <lb />
which now beset us. <lb />
We are not of those who <lb />
the ultra Democratic journals <lb />
whose views differ so radically <lb />
from our own, as we accredit to <lb />
them the same sincerity of belief <lb />
and purpose that we entertain; but <lb />
we condemn both the partisan and <lb />
the Alliance press who distort the <lb />
actions and misrepresent the views <lb />
and principles of our best men <lb />
within and out of the Alliance- <lb />
A change must come, the time <lb />
for temporizing is us act <lb />
for the good of our country- <lb />
J. Bryan Grimes. <lb />
Electric <lb />
This remedy is becoming so well <lb />
known and so popular as to need no <lb />
mention. Ail who have seed <lb />
Bitters sing the same song of praise. <lb />
A purer medicine does not exist and It <lb />
is guaranteed to do all that la claimed. <lb />
Electric Bitters will cure all diseases of <lb />
the Liver and Kidneys, will remove <lb />
Boils, Salt Rheum and <lb />
impure <lb />
drive Malaria from tho <lb />
vent, as well as cure all Malarial fevers. <lb />
For cure of Headache, Consumption <lb />
and Indigestion try Electric Bitters- <lb />
Entire satisfaction guaranteed, or money <lb />
and per <lb />
bottle at Jno. L. Drug Store. <lb />
The coal industry of this <lb />
try employs persons, to <lb />
whom it pays annually in wages <lb />
f 110.000,000. The capital invested <lb />
is Pennsylvania <lb />
leads in the output with <lb />
tons, Illinois following with IS, <lb />
Ohio with West <lb />
Virginia with Iowa with <lb />
Alabama with 4.000,000, <lb />
Maryland, Kentucky and Missouri <lb />
with each, and Tennessee <lb />
with 2.000,000. <lb />
A marvelous cure for <lb />
Canker and Headache. <lb />
With each bottle there is an ingenious <lb />
nasal Injector for the mire successful <lb />
treatment complaints without <lb />
charge. Price Sold at <lb />
EN'S STORE. <lb />
L. JAMES, <lb />
j. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
ALEX. L. <lb />
S-AT-L A W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
in all the Courts. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
Y-A T-LA H <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
i. a. b. f. <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
f ATTORNEYS-AT-L AW, <lb />
If. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
B. J. MARQUIS, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
. C. <lb />
Office in Skinner Building, upper it <lb />
opposite Photograph Gallery <lb />
M. H. LONG, <lb />
h. c. <lb />
Prompt and careful attention to <lb />
Collection solicited. <lb />
L CUT HAM. <lb />
r SKINNER, <lb />
H G. <lb />
IT. . <lb />
all the<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017530_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
JANUARY 20th, 1884. <lb />
Entered at th at Greenville, <lb />
N. G-, as mail matter. <lb />
Publisher's Announcement. <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICK OF <lb />
fee is 81.00 per <lb />
year, one-half column one year, <lb />
one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient Inch <lb />
week, ; two weeks. one <lb />
month Two inches one week, 1.50, <lb />
two weeks, one month, <lb />
Advertisements Inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items. cents per <lb />
for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb />
and Notices- <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc., will <lb />
be charged for legal rates and must <lb />
BE PAID FOR Of ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor K-v Advertisements and <lb />
all of should be <lb />
handed in by o'clock en Tuesday <lb />
morning in order to receive prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable medium <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
TEN YEARS OLD. <lb />
with <lb />
for <lb />
It has been the custom <lb />
cannot say <lb />
how a new <lb />
volume in their career to have <lb />
Something to say, looking both to <lb />
the past and the future- They <lb />
have a kind of birthday <lb />
so to speak, in which the <lb />
only layout is words. The East- <lb />
Reflector is not different <lb />
from other papers in this respect, <lb />
for despite the bad weather, the <lb />
worse roads, the threatened war <lb />
with Chili, and the grip, we find <lb />
that every time fifty-two weeks <lb />
roll around a year is completed, a <lb />
volume likewise, and it is in order <lb />
to say something- <lb />
And there's where the <lb />
finds itself the <lb />
threshold of a new <lb />
eleventh. Long ago realizing that <lb />
short sermons are the best, and <lb />
short speeches the most enjoy- <lb />
able, it is oar purpose to be short <lb />
this we are ready to <lb />
assert that there is nothing short <lb />
about <lb />
It was ten years ago when a lit- <lb />
sheet bearing the name this <lb />
paper proudly wears, and scarcely <lb />
larger than one-fourth its present <lb />
size, rolled out of the press and <lb />
fell into the hands of the <lb />
public. The little fellow <lb />
could talk and was lusty from the <lb />
jump- It began doing its own <lb />
blowing, and in the face of ad- <lb />
verse declared that <lb />
it had come to stay- The staying <lb />
quality has been right well tested. <lb />
Through this decade just closed <lb />
the Reflector has made its visits <lb />
regularly, never being forced to <lb />
miss but one that one <lb />
was because of an adjacent fire <lb />
which so threatened the plant that <lb />
all of it which could be was <lb />
and unceremoniously re- <lb />
moved. It has endeavored to <lb />
make its visits agreeable and <lb />
tried to be with news that <lb />
was interesting and reliable. It <lb />
has not pleased everybody; it has <lb />
not tried to please everybody and <lb />
not be caught to do so. <lb />
It has been its purpose to be pure <lb />
in tone, elevating in character and <lb />
truthful in its utterances, and of <lb />
course that kind of policy strikes <lb />
the grain the wrong, way in some- <lb />
body. endeavor to fol- <lb />
low this same course in future, <lb />
trying to give our readers a pure, <lb />
clean, honest paper. <lb />
On these anniversary occasions <lb />
it is sometimes customary, at least <lb />
not deemed ill taste, to talk about <lb />
finances. Well, questions of this <lb />
kind usually lie between the editor <lb />
and bis pocket-book when <lb />
the delinquent subscriber gives <lb />
another meaning to that little word <lb />
by keeping it between him and <lb />
the and may not be of <lb />
much interest to the public. Rut <lb />
if any are anxious to know the <lb />
standing of this vehicle of <lb />
it can be summed in <lb />
few words- If the was <lb />
not making expenses it would not <lb />
be here ; when a bill comes in its <lb />
paid; when Saturday night comes <lb />
round the printers get every penny <lb />
of their wages, go home happy and <lb />
return contented to their work <lb />
Monday morning. While the <lb />
man at the helm does not get any- <lb />
thing like a Congressman's or <lb />
Policeman's salary, in accordance <lb />
to the work done, he gets two <lb />
sometimes three meals a day, <lb />
wears two Sundays, can <lb />
afford two pair of socks a year, <lb />
and bis- old lady don't have to beg <lb />
a month when she want; a frock <lb />
for herself or the baby. <lb />
So much by way of digression <lb />
from the usual anniversary com- <lb />
position. Now to business. <lb />
The people who read the Re- <lb />
regularly know its past so <lb />
well that we deem it unnecessary <lb />
to rehearse its history to-day. <lb />
They know how it tarted, how it <lb />
has struggled, what it has <lb />
As to the future let the <lb />
past judge trusted us then <lb />
you can trust us now- We shall <lb />
continue to put forward our best <lb />
efforts to make this journal a good, <lb />
honest, family newspaper. It <lb />
continue the staunch advocacy of <lb />
Democratic principles ; it will con- <lb />
to run on the cash in advance <lb />
system. <lb />
it costs is a a <lb />
We do heartily thank every one <lb />
for the very liberal patronage <lb />
given the Reflector in the past, <lb />
and earnestly solicit your <lb />
ed aid and <lb />
NO THIRD PARTY NEEDED. <lb />
On the first page of issue <lb />
will be found an article written to <lb />
the Chronicle by Mr. <lb />
Grimes of this county. <lb />
article deals with living issues and <lb />
submits a possible platform for <lb />
the Democratic party which the <lb />
author thinks would be common <lb />
ground upon which all might <lb />
unite and heal any differences <lb />
which may exist the party. Mr. <lb />
Grimes sustains admirably well <lb />
the position he takes and his views <lb />
receive mature con <lb />
He is a young man of <lb />
decided talent and this article <lb />
marks him as one of thought also. <lb />
From present indications there <lb />
will be nothing but harmony be- <lb />
tween the Alliance and the Demo- <lb />
and this will in a large meas- <lb />
be brought about by the time- <lb />
suggestions, and expression <lb />
of a disposition to meet on com- <lb />
ground which so forcibly <lb />
mark this article of this true Al- <lb />
and staunch Democrat. <lb />
concede that the agricultural <lb />
classes need as read- <lb />
concede that this relief must <lb />
come through the Democratic par- <lb />
The late utterances of the lead- <lb />
of this State and <lb />
many other States show that they <lb />
are opposed to separate action to <lb />
secure these needed reform- There <lb />
is also a sentiment in the <lb />
Democratic party to continue on <lb />
record as a party favorable to a <lb />
government for the masses as op- <lb />
posed to classes- The members of <lb />
the present Congress from the <lb />
South who were elected as <lb />
men are acting in perfect <lb />
with the Democratic party and <lb />
we may expect as much favorable <lb />
legislation for instant relief as the <lb />
complexion of the present Con- <lb />
admit. We are all agreed <lb />
as to our needs. We may differ <lb />
as to the method of obtaining re- <lb />
lief but not to an extent to cause <lb />
any trouble. <lb />
Even a few months ago there <lb />
was much discussion as tin <lb />
final action of the Democratic par <lb />
and the Alliance in the South- <lb />
Already the fears of any separate <lb />
action have vanished. We will <lb />
united in one common effort upon <lb />
common for the accomplish- <lb />
of one grand result, the gen- <lb />
prosperity of this fair South <lb />
land of ours. <lb />
We commend Mr. <lb />
to our readers as containing <lb />
thoughts worthy of honest, and <lb />
careful consideration and predict <lb />
for this farmer, <lb />
and Democrat on enviable <lb />
among the counselors of <lb />
his native State. <lb />
The Duke of Clarence and Avon- <lb />
dale died on January 14th. He <lb />
was the grand-eon of Queen <lb />
Being the eldest son of the <lb />
Prince of Wales he was the heir <lb />
presumptive to the throne of Eng- <lb />
land. <lb />
Several men in <lb />
the city pay five cents for each <lb />
bucket of water used in their es- <lb />
rather than carry it <lb />
Herald. <lb />
And if the truth was known we <lb />
expect these same young <lb />
men are clerking for about a <lb />
month. <lb />
They've got things mixed down <lb />
in Georgia The blackest man is <lb />
named White, the whitest man is <lb />
named Brown, the tallest man is <lb />
named Lowe, and the largest man <lb />
is named <lb />
Greenville can add one to that <lb />
Here the shortest man is named <lb />
Long, and there ain't <lb />
short about him, either. <lb />
Senator Willis R. Williams of <lb />
this county introduced at meet- <lb />
of the Agricultural society <lb />
last week a resolution calling upon <lb />
farmers of North Carolina to <lb />
reduce the cotton acreage per <lb />
cent. The board <lb />
it. This is similar to one <lb />
at Memphis by the great mass <lb />
meeting of cotton planters and en- <lb />
by the commissioners of <lb />
Agriculture of many States. We <lb />
will have something to say along <lb />
this line next week. <lb />
GEN. RANSOM DEAD. <lb />
Gen. Robert Ransom died at his <lb />
home in New January 14th, <lb />
from a congestive chill. He <lb />
in the United States Army until <lb />
North Carolina left the Union. He <lb />
then resigned and returned to his <lb />
native State to share her fortunes <lb />
in the civil contest that was to fol- <lb />
low for the next four years. He <lb />
did good service all during the <lb />
war, and was in many hotly con- <lb />
tested engagements. He reached <lb />
the rank of Brigadier General. He <lb />
was at the time of his death <lb />
dent of The North Carolina Vet <lb />
Association- For some years <lb />
he has been assistant engineer in <lb />
charge of the government works in <lb />
the waters of Eastern North Caro- <lb />
Gen. Ransom was a man of <lb />
wonderful force of character, a fine <lb />
soldier, a born cavalry man, and a <lb />
man of great personal pride. <lb />
Another of the old immortal <lb />
heroes of those stormy days has <lb />
passed over the river to join the <lb />
comrades gone before. <lb />
to his soul sweet be his rest <lb />
Where the brave and honored lie <lb />
the shady i on yonder crest <lb />
Till shall sound on <lb />
The many friends of Dr. Gris- <lb />
some, formerly of this ill be <lb />
gratified to know that there was <lb />
no truth in the report that became <lb />
current some weeks ago that he <lb />
was insane. The Dr. is practicing <lb />
medicine in Denver and several of <lb />
bis friends in his native State <lb />
have had letters from him since he <lb />
was reported to be in the Asylum- <lb />
The County Commissioners of <lb />
Vance county met pursuant to an <lb />
order of Judge Connor and grant- <lb />
ed license to the bar-keepers of <lb />
Henderson. Judge Connor held <lb />
that the mere application of a man <lb />
to sell liquor was not an evidence <lb />
of bad character and this was. <lb />
the only cause upon which license <lb />
had been refused they of <lb />
The city of Raleigh is consider- <lb />
the advisability of adopting <lb />
an ordinance against the sale of <lb />
imported second-hand clothing in <lb />
that city, following the example of <lb />
Greensboro, which prohibits that <lb />
kind of traffic. don't know <lb />
whether Greensboro is the only <lb />
town which has such prohibitory <lb />
ordinances or not, but every town <lb />
in the State should have, for there <lb />
is no telling when disease by the <lb />
wholesale may be imported with <lb />
these cast on old clothes and re- <lb />
tailed with them. The men who <lb />
ship such clothing to other towns <lb />
to be sold don't know whether they <lb />
are infected or not, and probably <lb />
wouldn't care if they were. The <lb />
only way of being safe and <lb />
guarding against danger <lb />
from this source is to rigidly pro- <lb />
the <lb />
We think New and Scot- <lb />
land Neck have both had such or- <lb />
in effect for some time. <lb />
The is in ac- <lb />
cord with the sentiment expressed <lb />
by the Star and thinks every town <lb />
in the State would do well to pro- <lb />
sale of second-hand <lb />
clothing, There is enough <lb />
to contend with without hewing to <lb />
spread it with cast off hospital <lb />
and clothes, <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, Jan. 16th, 1892. <lb />
Mr. Harrison has, if high Re- <lb />
publican may be be- <lb />
Mr. Blaine of the <lb />
business and that an <lb />
has been sent to Chili and <lb />
all of the correspondence and the <lb />
President's accompanying <lb />
which were ready ten days <lb />
ago but were held because of the <lb />
minister having succeeded <lb />
in bamboozling Mr. Blaine as to <lb />
his country's intentions, will go to <lb />
Congress just as soon as the <lb />
of the sailors of the <lb />
has boon taken. This <lb />
as far as it has been <lb />
graphed to the eastern papers, has <lb />
created a very war-like feeling in <lb />
Congress, and if Mr. Harrison <lb />
does not hurry up and send the <lb />
correspondence in, he will find it <lb />
demanded by resolution. <lb />
The House has adopted a <lb />
offered by Representative <lb />
that has spread <lb />
nation among the promoters of <lb />
schemes requiring little <lb />
It declares it to be the <lb />
judgment of the House that the <lb />
granting of subsidies or bounties <lb />
by Congress in money, public <lb />
lands, bonds or by endorsement <lb />
or by pledge of the public credit, <lb />
to promote special private <lb />
tries or enterprises, independent of <lb />
the constitutional power of Con- <lb />
is unjust impolitic and <lb />
in manifest conflict with the <lb />
spirit of Republican institutions. <lb />
And further resolves that in view <lb />
of the present condition of the <lb />
treasury, and because efficient <lb />
and honest government can only <lb />
be assured by the frugal <lb />
of the public money, while <lb />
unnecessary ard lavish <lb />
under any and all conditions <lb />
leads inevitably to venal and <lb />
methods in public affairs, no <lb />
money ought to be appropriated <lb />
by Congress, except such as is <lb />
necessary to carry on the depart- <lb />
frugally, efficiently and <lb />
honestly administered. <lb />
The Republican party has, by <lb />
its national legislation, given pro- <lb />
to certain classes, always <lb />
at the expense of the masses; but <lb />
it has persistently denied <lb />
to one class, to which it might <lb />
have been given without expense <lb />
or injury to any honest man. The <lb />
class referred to is the <lb />
tors, to whom the country owes <lb />
so much, who have vainly <lb />
implored Congress to amend <lb />
the patent laws by making it a <lb />
criminal offense to knowingly <lb />
infringe a patent. Representative <lb />
chairman of the House <lb />
committee on Patents, is <lb />
ed that the democratic House shall <lb />
have the honor of passing a bill <lb />
complying with the <lb />
wishes and breaking up the <lb />
now so common, of intention- <lb />
of successful pat- <lb />
by parties without financial <lb />
responsibility. <lb />
The Senate Committee on <lb />
this week heard the <lb />
n of<lb />
Idaho, and Davidson vs. Call, <lb />
Florida. The hearings in both <lb />
cases were mere formalities, it <lb />
been certain beforehand that <lb />
the unanimous- <lb />
favored the sitting members. <lb />
and Call. <lb />
Owing to the fact that the <lb />
which will be affected by the <lb />
separate tariff bills likely to be re- <lb />
by the House Ways and <lb />
Committee are few in <lb />
and that they so <lb />
thoroughly discussed in the press, <lb />
the has decided that it <lb />
will be unnecessary to grant hear- <lb />
to those interested in them, as <lb />
it is not probable that a single <lb />
new fact could be brought out <lb />
Representative of Ohio, <lb />
has introduced a bill to c. <lb />
date and reduce the of <lb />
Customs Collection districts i the <lb />
country, which he thinks will <lb />
prove the service and save 1178.- <lb />
annually. <lb />
The Democrats of the <lb />
have already reached the why and <lb />
wherefore stage of the session. <lb />
They want to know why Secretary <lb />
Foster has withheld the payment <lb />
of some appropriated <lb />
for the fiscal year ending June <lb />
last; also why some <lb />
less than should have been paid <lb />
out of the appropriations the <lb />
current fiscal year, during its first <lb />
half, ending January has been <lb />
These questions and others <lb />
concerning Government finances, <lb />
may give the Secretary more <lb />
trouble than the grip, from which <lb />
he has just recovered, did. <lb />
The Democrats also wish to know <lb />
just what effects the <lb />
tariff law is having upon the <lb />
try, and it is proposed, in order to <lb />
obtain that information quickly, <lb />
that the House committee on Man- <lb />
investigate its effect <lb />
upon the general manufacturing <lb />
interests, the committees on <lb />
Labor and Commerce to <lb />
do the same for those several in <lb />
A Senate Committee <lb />
spent a part of last summer in <lb />
making an investigation of this <lb />
subject, but the House proposal <lb />
would be more thorough, <lb />
consequently more satisfactory. <lb />
Sneaker Crisp is expected to be <lb />
well enough to preside over the <lb />
House by next week. <lb />
of man-of-war Yorktown was at one <lb />
of the wharfs at waiting <lb />
for Commandant Evans, a mob <lb />
soon gathered- there and <lb />
the crew as Americans be- <lb />
n to stone them. No one was <lb />
but doubtless hat the York <lb />
town men been ashore there <lb />
would have been a- repetition of <lb />
Baltimore affair. Command <lb />
ant Evans reported the matter to <lb />
the senior naval officer <lb />
afloat and demanded protection <lb />
for himself and men, stating that <lb />
if the government did not <lb />
protect him he would protect him- <lb />
self with arms. Our government <lb />
bountifully blessed with <lb />
patience. U. S- A. <lb />
I The Newest <lb />
arid Best. <lb />
For all classes and type furnished at <lb />
lowest prices. Planters raise tobacco <lb />
the money it brines but only the <lb />
Finest Varieties produce First-class <lb />
Tobacco, that pars. Start right, order <lb />
best for your locality and thus real- <lb />
the largest returns possible from the <lb />
crop. free on application. <lb />
R. L. SEED CO., <lb />
Va. <lb />
MORE PAY FOR THE SOLDIERS. <lb />
Correspondence of Reflector. <lb />
Fort. Monroe, Va., Jan. <lb />
-The question that interest the <lb />
soldiers most is, will the <lb />
Democratic Congress do for the <lb />
Last rear there was a bill <lb />
introduced to increase the salary <lb />
of the enlisted men. It did not <lb />
pass. I understand that it will <lb />
again be placed before Congress <lb />
for their consideration. Will <lb />
TWO INCHES OF sNOW. <lb />
Special Correspondence of Reflector. <lb />
Fort Worth Tex., Jan 13th, <lb />
A fall of snow in Texas south of <lb />
the Panhandle is always a novelty <lb />
and when at o'clock yesterday <lb />
afternoon the little white flakes <lb />
began to flutter from the clouds <lb />
that hung over Fort Worth for <lb />
forty-eight hours like a pall there <lb />
was a thrill of joy accompanied by <lb />
a shudder of cold in the breast of <lb />
the small boy and the staid man of <lb />
business as well. In a jiffy the <lb />
ground was covered and there was <lb />
a lively scurrying on the streets <lb />
through the blinding snow by <lb />
hurrying home to inviting <lb />
grates and stoves aglow <lb />
fires. By night-fall the thick- <lb />
of the snow was such as to <lb />
impede street car traffic and <lb />
the vigorous use of <lb />
vised shovels the problem of keep- <lb />
the tracks cleared was a <lb />
one to the various lines. At <lb />
first ordinary house brooms in the <lb />
hands of a man on the car were <lb />
sufficient to sweep tho rails clear <lb />
of their but as the <lb />
snow fall increased and the wind <lb />
began to swash the snow about in <lb />
troublesome little drifts more <lb />
means were adopted and <lb />
gangs of men were put to work <lb />
with shovels to throw the snow off <lb />
the tracks. About half past seven <lb />
in the evening pedestrians on <lb />
Houston street were startled by <lb />
the dull of what they <lb />
considered a cow bell. It was <lb />
thought that cow had <lb />
jumped the back lot fence and con- <lb />
to frolic in <lb />
But as the object from which <lb />
sound came dashed under a flash- <lb />
electric light, a noble charger <lb />
pulling a sleigh on which was <lb />
seated the Napoleonic form of Erie <lb />
Chief Don Adams was revealed to <lb />
the astonishing gaze of tho ob- <lb />
server. A shout greeted tho chief <lb />
all along the street and others <lb />
the cue from him hurried home <lb />
and dismounted the running gear <lb />
buggies, ripped <lb />
Office of the Board of Com- <lb />
m If-ion for Pitt County. <lb />
The following Is a statement I lie <lb />
of meetings of Board of Com- <lb />
missioners for Pitt County, number <lb />
of days each member hath it tended. <lb />
number of miles traveled, and <lb />
amounts allowed for services as Com- <lb />
missioners for the fiscal year ending <lb />
December 1st, 1801. <lb />
OF <lb />
Council bath attended <lb />
G. M. Mooring <lb />
T. K. Keel <lb />
C. V. Newton <lb />
Leonidas <lb />
allowed Council Dawson <lb />
for days as <lb />
per day, 34.00 <lb />
For ten days as committee men <lb />
per day, 20.00 <lb />
For miles traveled fie 8.20 <lb />
192.20 <lb />
allowed O. M. Mooring for <lb />
days as Commissioner <lb />
per <lb />
For six days 12.00 <lb />
For miles traveled 10.30 <lb />
WE COME AGAIN <lb />
To enlist your attention and claim a fair share of patronage. <lb />
We are determined that if square dealings and honest <lb />
of will secure you as a customer, <lb />
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into <lb />
-------the Northern Markets with the------- <lb />
allowed T. E. Keel for <lb />
days as day, 34.00 <lb />
For ten days as <lb />
per day, 20.00 <lb />
For miles traveled 34.00 <lb />
allowed C. V. Newton for <lb />
days as per <lb />
day, 80.00 <lb />
-For days as <lb />
per day, 22.00 <lb />
For miles traveled 38.00 <lb />
of their buggies, ripped <lb />
, ,, , i from their own or neighbors fences <lb />
Congress see fa make this bill a ; off tho end as best <lb />
is a question of vast two pi together <lb />
to the enlisted men, and <lb />
they will live in great anticipation <lb />
until it is accepted or rejected. <lb />
Had the officers of the army a <lb />
voice in the matter I am convinced <lb />
that such a bill would have been <lb />
made a law long since. It has <lb />
been and is the aim of those in <lb />
to enlist for the a <lb />
better element. I am thoroughly <lb />
convinced that this is the only <lb />
means that-can be used to retain <lb />
in the service such as they <lb />
desire. Many of the better class <lb />
have and are enlisting but retire <lb />
at the first honorable opportunity, <lb />
for the simple reason that the <lb />
government does not pay a <lb />
salary to retain their service- <lb />
We have the greatest and richest <lb />
government in the world; and <lb />
almost the smallest standing army. <lb />
This being true should not the <lb />
salary of a soldier is now- <lb />
very be increased If the <lb />
bill to which I refer should be- <lb />
come a law, those in authority <lb />
would soon realize that they hod <lb />
attained their wish in securing the <lb />
service of a better element. De- <lb />
court and the <lb />
guard house would soon be things <lb />
of the past, for our army would be <lb />
composed of gentlemen of honor <lb />
and patriotism. We have now in <lb />
the service men whose honor and <lb />
patriotism is unquestionable- But <lb />
as I have already said many of <lb />
them will retire at the expiration <lb />
of their term of service, and even <lb />
earlier if honorable means can be <lb />
found. If the question should be <lb />
asked why they leave the army, <lb />
invariably would be the reply that <lb />
the pay was not sufficient. <lb />
The army to-day is vastly differ- <lb />
from what it was a few years <lb />
ago. Much has been done for the <lb />
enlisted men. Those in authority <lb />
have used almost every means to <lb />
improve not only the intellect but <lb />
the morals of the men and giant <lb />
strides have been made in this <lb />
endeavor with marked success. <lb />
soldiers at this post have <lb />
every opportunity to improve. <lb />
The school here under the super- <lb />
vision of that efficient and popular <lb />
officer Lieut. Miller, offers many <lb />
advantages that cannot be had <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
Again there is a telegraph school <lb />
under the management of Capt <lb />
where any enlisted man who <lb />
so desires may become proficient <lb />
in the art of manipulating the key. <lb />
In this school you receive <lb />
cal knowledge- During the firing <lb />
season the members of the school <lb />
put at different stations on the <lb />
line. They are taught not only to <lb />
receive messages from the sounder <lb />
but also, from the holes graph and <lb />
flags. <lb />
The artillery school at this poet <lb />
offers opportunities and <lb />
ages not only to the enlisted men <lb />
to the officers that cannot be <lb />
had at any other post in the de- <lb />
of the east. <lb />
Not only those things pertain- <lb />
to the service are taught <lb />
chemistry, electricity, <lb />
and many other things <lb />
might be named, <lb />
With all these advantages there <lb />
is still one thing <lb />
Let the government offer <lb />
such inducements as will secure <lb />
the of that <lb />
they so ad soon we <lb />
will have an that will he <lb />
looked upon with envy by the <lb />
whole world. <lb />
Again this government has been <lb />
insulted by a mob. A <lb />
day. the gig too the <lb />
pieces <lb />
and were soon prepared for sleigh- <lb />
The night air was then <lb />
until a late hour. Some <lb />
single teams, others double, others <lb />
tandem, and still others four-in- <lb />
hand. The sport was found so <lb />
exhilarating that the participants <lb />
resumed it at an early hour this <lb />
morning and are keeping it up at <lb />
this writing. The ladies joined in <lb />
the fun with zest and many of <lb />
them will Bleep the sounder to- <lb />
night for it and wake up in tho <lb />
morning with pinker checks than <lb />
they have known since childhood. <lb />
The snow fall is about two inches <lb />
and is said to be the heaviest ex <lb />
hero since 1876. It was <lb />
general throughout this region, <lb />
too, and extend east and west as far <lb />
as Louisiana and Colorado City. <lb />
The sun came out this afternoon <lb />
and so moderated the weather as to <lb />
render it likely that the two inches <lb />
of snow will be melted before <lb />
morning. Meantime the small boy <lb />
is taking advantage of this rare <lb />
opportunity, to say nothing of the <lb />
greater mass of humanity with <lb />
whiskers on his face, who <lb />
it the acme of delight to pluck <lb />
the unsuspecting be- <lb />
tween the eyes with a composition <lb />
of mud and sleet that he playfully <lb />
calls a snow ball. This being the <lb />
only snow that I have seen of any <lb />
note during the absence from my <lb />
native State, I had to join in the <lb />
western game I love to <lb />
snow and write yon a letter <lb />
which I trust can find space in <lb />
the columns of the <lb />
W. H. Fleming. <lb />
Vick's Floral for 1892 is a <lb />
beauty, as usual. return thanks <lb />
for a copy. Vick gets out <lb />
est that is published and he <lb />
ells the best vegetable and flower <lb />
seeds that can be bad anywhere. <lb />
Your address sent to James Vick, <lb />
Rochester, New York, will get a copy <lb />
of the Guide. <lb />
co <lb />
tr <lb />
r- <lb />
r- <lb />
Ain't allowed Leonidas Fleming <lb />
for days as per <lb />
day, t 20.00 <lb />
For days <lb />
10.00 <lb />
For miles traveled 9.40 <lb />
45.40 <lb />
Total allowed Board <lb />
State of North Carolina, <lb />
County of Pitt, I <lb />
I, David II. James. Clerk <lb />
tire Board of Commissioners the <lb />
county aforesaid, do certify that the <lb />
Is a correct as doth <lb />
appear upon record in my office. Given <lb />
under my hand and the seal of said <lb />
Board of Commissioners, at office in <lb />
Greenville, this 21st of December <lb />
1801. <lb />
D, II. <lb />
for Pitt <lb />
is <lb />
and for the CASH, getting possible advantage that <lb />
to be offered to first-class buyers, therefore we are enabled <lb />
-------to give you at all times the------- <lb />
Benefit of Purchases Made <lb />
for Cash. <lb />
We have bought this season the largest stock of <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb />
ever handled by us. ten days spent in market by our <lb />
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
County having issued <lb />
to me, the on the <lb />
1st day Dee. 1891 the estate of <lb />
I. Lewis, deceased, notice is hereby <lb />
given to all persons Indebted to the es- <lb />
to make Immediate payment to the <lb />
undersigned, and to all creditors of said <lb />
estate to present their claims properly <lb />
authenticated, to the undersigned, with- <lb />
in twelve months after the date of this <lb />
notice, or this notice will he plead in bar <lb />
of their recovery. <lb />
This the 1st of Dec. 1801. <lb />
J. B. Bu <lb />
on the estate of John I. Lewis. <lb />
Laud Sale. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at Term 1801 by His <lb />
Honor G. Connor Judge, lit the case <lb />
of P. E. Dancy vs J. D. Murphy, <lb />
and Trustees and others, the under- <lb />
Commissioner will sell before the <lb />
Court House door in Greenville on Mon- <lb />
day the 1st day of the fol- <lb />
lowing lots of laud situated in the town <lb />
of <lb />
Beginning at a point on Evans street <lb />
feet from the S. K corner of Lots No. <lb />
In the plan of the Town of Greenville, <lb />
th same being the corner of J. and <lb />
W. H. Smith, and running thence, with <lb />
said Smiths line feet to the line of <lb />
Lot thence with the line of Lot <lb />
No. In the direction of Fourth street <lb />
feet, thence at right angle and <lb />
led with first line ft. to Evans street <lb />
thence with the line of Evans street ft. <lb />
to the beginning being a part of Lot <lb />
No. plan of said Town. <lb />
Terms of cash, except the <lb />
sum of 8034.16 which amount must lie <lb />
secured by Mortgage with per cent in- <lb />
payable annually. <lb />
This Dec. 80th MM. <lb />
P. E. <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
At o'clock P. M. on Saturday the <lb />
80th day of January 1892, at the work <lb />
shop of B. L. T. ft Sons in the <lb />
town of Bethel, Pitt county, the under- <lb />
signed will sell to the highest bidder for <lb />
cash, public following de- <lb />
scribed personal property, viz ; two pair <lb />
heavy wagon wheels, two iron axles, <lb />
wagon role and all other fixtures belong- <lb />
to said wagon, to satisfy a lien <lb />
which the said . T. Sons <lb />
hold ii said property for work and <lb />
labor performed on said property by <lb />
said B. A Sons, in <lb />
of a contract made with M-. G. <lb />
Manning. <lb />
This January 12th 1892. <lb />
B. St Sons. <lb />
By J. II. Attorney. <lb />
Incorporation Notice. <lb />
NORTH. <lb />
Martin <lb />
Before W. T. Crawford, Clerk Superior <lb />
Court, <lb />
I of The Dennis Simmons <lb />
Lumber <lb />
Notice is hereby given that Dennis <lb />
Simmons, D. D. of William- <lb />
T. W. of <lb />
N. C. have this day filed articles of <lb />
agreement under their hands and seals <lb />
before undersigned for the e of <lb />
becoming under the name <lb />
and style Dennis Simmons <lb />
Lumber and letters have <lb />
Issued to them and their successors <lb />
tinder that name. The business to be con- <lb />
ducted by said U tho buying <lb />
and selling of timber and timber lands, <lb />
to get, cut. buy, sell, mill, transport and <lb />
manufacture timber and lumber Into any <lb />
and all of Its various products and gen- <lb />
to conduct and carry on a lumber <lb />
business in all ii details, branches and <lb />
departments and for that purpose may <lb />
own and operate saw and other mills, <lb />
dry kilns an all machinery and <lb />
proper for carrying on said <lb />
The principal of <lb />
shall be at N. C. <lb />
and the period of Incorporation thirty <lb />
Tears. The subscribers of the <lb />
stock of said company are Dennis Sim- <lb />
mons, D. D. and T. W. <lb />
The capital Stock of said com- <lb />
Is forty-five thousand dollars <lb />
ed into four hundred and fifty shares of <lb />
par value of one hundred dollars each, <lb />
but said company may from time to <lb />
time increase said capital Mock to any <lb />
not to exceed one hundred <lb />
thousand No or <lb />
liability for the debts, ties <lb />
of said company is <lb />
aid or an <lb />
subsequent subscribers to the <lb />
Coon. <lb />
carried in our double stores will prove. You cannot help but be <lb />
interested if you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing <lb />
yon what we have to sell There can never be a business of <lb />
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statement <lb />
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by at <lb />
our customers, and by such to merit their continued pat- <lb />
We nave now open ready for your inspection the largest I <lb />
assorted Hue of General Merchandise that was ever brought <lb />
to market. Consisting of <lb />
Dry Goods Dress Goods, <lb />
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, <lb />
Hardware Cutlery, Tin- <lb />
ware, Crockery, Queen- <lb />
ware, Groceries, Wood- <lb />
and <lb />
and Whips <lb />
AND THE LARGEST LINE OF <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
that has ever been brought to this county. We are headquarter <lb />
for all goods in our respective lines. Also we have a lot of <lb />
BAGGING AND TIES <lb />
which will be sold at lowest prices. <lb />
Come one, come all and us. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS, <lb />
L. W. DAVIS, <lb />
FINK------ <lb />
HAVANA CIGARS <lb />
-AND- <lb />
Roanoke Avenue, <lb />
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb />
-SHIP YOUR- <lb />
AND OTHER PRODUCE TO-- <lb />
ALEXANDER MORGANS CO. <lb />
COTTON FACTORS COMMISSION MERCHANTS. <lb />
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA, <lb />
Guarantee highest market prices, quick sales and prompt <lb />
S. HARRELL CO., <lb />
COTTON FACTORS AND <lb />
COMMISSION <lb />
Corn, Peanut. Stock, <lb />
and Sawed Lumber will receive <lb />
attention. Tour patronage <lb />
solicited. <lb />
NOS. AND STREET <lb />
NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
Strictly a <lb />
B. B. <lb />
A. It. u <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in <lb />
A Good Always on Hand. <lb />
Horses a specialty. <lb />
No. <lb />
and Union <lb />
R J. COBB. <lb />
Pitt Co N. C. <lb />
C C COBB.<lb />
T. H. GiLLIAM <lb />
C. N C <lb />
Cobb Bros., Gilliam, <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
Commission ants. <lb />
NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
SOLICIT of Ac. <lb />
We have Lad many years ex <lb />
at the business and <lb />
prepared to handle Cotton to <lb />
the advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business to <lb />
hands will receive prompt and <lb />
attention <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
By of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court made at March Term by His <lb />
Honor E. T. Judge In the case <lb />
of Wiley Pierce and wife vs William <lb />
and others. The undersign- <lb />
ed will sell before the <lb />
Court House door In Greenville on Mon- <lb />
day the 1st day of 1892 the follow-1 <lb />
described tract of land situated In <lb />
the County of Pitt, in Falkland Town- <lb />
tract adjoining the lands of <lb />
Dr. P. H- Mayo, Martha E. Lewis and <lb />
others, and known the Robert <lb />
place, being same which said <lb />
Pierce and wife formerly resided, being <lb />
all of said tract of land lying on the <lb />
North aide the main road leading <lb />
from Greenville to <lb />
acres more or less, also one half <lb />
an acre land in the Town or <lb />
being one half of said lot and being <lb />
name purchased of W. A. James and <lb />
deeded to Wiley Pierce and B. F. Bryant <lb />
as appear of reference given <lb />
third cash, balance in we buy direct from Manufacturers, ens- <lb />
one and two years, scoured by Mortgage ; you to buy at one profit, A <lb />
on the land, with per cent Interest of <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BITS <lb />
their year's supplies will And <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere Our stock is complete <lb />
n all Its branches. <lb />
FORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
RICE, TEA, Ac. <lb />
at <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb />
payable annually. This Dec. 1881. <lb />
JAMB, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Om Hi <lb />
for <lb />
t home. la <lb />
i at <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to sulk <lb />
the times. Our goods are all bought sod <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin, <lb />
M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
V, C. <lb />
.-<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017530_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
LANG'S COLUMN <lb />
Again it is our pleasure to <lb />
sent to our numerous friends <lb />
and patrons this, our <lb />
And <lb />
again we <lb />
rejoice with <lb />
you that our <lb />
country is in <lb />
such a . <lb />
condition, and we <lb />
thank you for your <lb />
kind and liberal patron- <lb />
age in the past, and by <lb />
the same fair and honest <lb />
measures that have marked <lb />
our dealings heretofore we hop <lb />
to merit your future patronage. <lb />
Our stock was never more com- <lb />
with stylish and season- <lb />
able goods than present. <lb />
No matter what you want <lb />
if it is stylish ard first- <lb />
class we have it. In <lb />
Fine Goods <lb />
and Trimmings <lb />
we show the <lb />
most co in- <lb />
plate and <lb />
stock <lb />
in town <lb />
All the new <lb />
and <lb />
from the <lb />
fashion of <lb />
the country are <lb />
in endless variety <lb />
on counters. In La- <lb />
dies and Misses Pine <lb />
Wraps we show the most <lb />
able and stylish gar- <lb />
of the season. trade <lb />
on this line of goods has been <lb />
such as to a second sup- <lb />
ply and we have to suit <lb />
everybody. In Men's and <lb />
Youth's Fine Clothing we <lb />
are the leaders. Fine <lb />
Tailor Made Clothing <lb />
That comprises all <lb />
advantages of <lb />
to-order <lb />
are a <lb />
spec i a y <lb />
with us. <lb />
In fit, <lb />
styles <lb />
and ma- <lb />
our <lb />
be <lb />
surpassed An <lb />
line of light <lb />
weight fancy overcoats <lb />
In Boy's Clothing, as <lb />
usual, we always please <lb />
both parents and boys and <lb />
this is what has made our boys <lb />
clothing department such a sue <lb />
that we do <lb />
not handle second hand and <lb />
In Footwear <lb />
for Ladies. Misses, Men, Boys <lb />
and Children we show only <lb />
the standard and reliable <lb />
makes. In Men's Hats <lb />
we have all the new <lb />
blocks and shapes <lb />
in the most <lb />
grades. Our <lb />
Carpet and <lb />
House Fur- <lb />
Department was never more com- <lb />
Long experience in this <lb />
has learned us just what is <lb />
needed by our people. Carpets <lb />
in all grades, Floor Oil Cloths in <lb />
all widths, Rugs and Mats, Lace <lb />
Curtains, Curtain Poles, Win- <lb />
Shades and Drapery effects <lb />
are all shown here in a <lb />
variety Every department is <lb />
complete. Come to see us and <lb />
we will send you away satisfied. <lb />
All goods warranted as <lb />
and no shoddy goods sold. <lb />
M. R. Lang. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Personal. <lb />
Mr,. <lb />
LANG'S <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Vol. XI. No. i. <lb />
You can look out for rain. <lb />
The Reflector is ten year old. <lb />
Water rUing rapidly in the river. <lb />
The office for nice job <lb />
work. <lb />
We had much sunshine <lb />
ibis year. <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma-, <lb />
chines for at Brown Bros- <lb />
what J. B. Cherry Company <lb />
have to say about plows and farm <lb />
tools. <lb />
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb />
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
Saturday was the first bright, clear <lb />
day we had in several; it was <lb />
cold, too. <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines and all parts at Brown <lb />
Bros. <lb />
Every time you get a Reflector <lb />
make a note another week has <lb />
rolled around. <lb />
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb />
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
You will find Black genuine <lb />
Durham Smoking Tobacco at Re- <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
inD- M- Ferry Go's <lb />
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
We have not mentioned the fact <lb />
this year; but Greenville needs a <lb />
good hotel, all the same. <lb />
For Dancy house <lb />
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb />
Two failures occurred in Washing- <lb />
ton last week, J. C. Morton, jeweler <lb />
and A. W. Thomas, dry goods dealer. <lb />
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb />
your appetite when nothing <lb />
else will. At the Brick Store. <lb />
E. B. Moore had some fine dressed <lb />
turkeys among his meats at the mar- <lb />
Saturday. One of them weighed <lb />
pounds net. <lb />
Where Food has been <lb />
used hogs have never been known <lb />
to have cholera. At the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The best way to get rid of the <lb />
blues is lo keep at steady work. <lb />
beard complaining loudest are <lb />
the ones who do least. <lb />
Will Greenville haTe the second <lb />
tobacco warehouse in time for the <lb />
next crop This market is going to <lb />
hum more than ever. <lb />
Many cases of grip reported <lb />
through the country. We have been <lb />
told of some families in which every <lb />
member has been attacked. <lb />
Ola Forbes makes the music on <lb />
the floor the tobacco warehouse <lb />
since the holidays. He is develop- <lb />
into a tip-top auctioneer. <lb />
the papers are telling that <lb />
Joe Daniels, editor of the Raleigh <lb />
is the proud father of a <lb />
baby girl. Better late than never. <lb />
Hear the music bring on your to- <lb />
to the Greenville warehouse. <lb />
They opened up last week after the <lb />
holiday vacation and are having fine <lb />
sales. <lb />
Since Nichols, the candy man. has <lb />
moved around the corner he is <lb />
up an exceedingly nice place and <lb />
keeps an assortment of frails as <lb />
well as fresh <lb />
The rains last week, put a fresh- <lb />
et in the river. Saturday <lb />
Creek was reported almost <lb />
No vehicles able to pass the <lb />
river here since Sunday. <lb />
Profanity is commonly used to <lb />
give force to weak ideas. The man <lb />
who has an idea that amounts to <lb />
anything does not need to hitch an <lb />
oath to it to give it effect. <lb />
A fine list of subscribers enrolled <lb />
on the book last week. <lb />
Always room for more on the list, <lb />
and ample room in the safe for a <lb />
responding number of dollars. <lb />
Hereafter the Reflector carrier <lb />
will look after collecting from town <lb />
subscribers when on his rounds. He <lb />
will have a book with him and tell <lb />
you when to renew your subscription. <lb />
Sometime in February Col. Harry <lb />
Skinner and Judge H. C. Bourne, of <lb />
Tarboro, will have a Sub-Treasury <lb />
discussion in Greenville. This will <lb />
be the second discussion between <lb />
them. <lb />
Friday there will be a big break <lb />
at the Tobacco Warehouse. There <lb />
will be about six visiting buyers. <lb />
Let a who tobacco bring a <lb />
load as prices are going to shoot on <lb />
that day. <lb />
Greenville shows fine streets for a <lb />
town that has a great big charter. <lb />
In many places would disgrace <lb />
a country cross roads. And the way <lb />
they are lighted puts electricity in <lb />
the shade. <lb />
Just as well stop now <lb />
and go to work. It is time <lb />
for the year were getting well <lb />
under way, and brooding over the <lb />
past docs not help matters at all for <lb />
the future. <lb />
Of all the men who came to town <lb />
last week nobody could say a good <lb />
word for the condition the roads. <lb />
If everybody is on a thing it is <lb />
apt to be in bad shape, and that is <lb />
about the sire of the roads. <lb />
People often wonder why country <lb />
editors generally wear belts to hold <lb />
up their pants instead of suspenders. <lb />
It's the most simple thing in the <lb />
rid. When an editor gels word <lb />
from that there is nothing <lb />
on hand for dinner he simply tightens <lb />
up his belt one hole and says nothing. <lb />
Ex. <lb />
Attention Farmers have <lb />
a full line of the improved Clipper, <lb />
Atlas and Girl Champion Turn <lb />
Plows and Castings. We carry <lb />
also the Stonewall and Climax <lb />
Cotton Plows- All of these Plows <lb />
are first-class and give general sat- <lb />
A full of farming <lb />
tools kept on hand- We will make <lb />
it to your interest to buy from us. <lb />
. B- Cherry Co. <lb />
Jany. 18th, <lb />
I is nick. <lb />
clerking <lb />
is <lb />
for <lb />
Mr. Jim Starkey <lb />
Higgs Bros. <lb />
Mrs. B. S. Sheppard has been quite <lb />
sick a few days. <lb />
Dr. and Mrs. W. M. B. Brown <lb />
were both sick last week. <lb />
Miss Lucille Owens left yesterday <lb />
for her home in Plymouth. <lb />
Mr. C. D. has been sick <lb />
a few day j but was out yesterday. <lb />
Mrs. Annie Batch left Monday to <lb />
spend some time in Wilmington. <lb />
Miss Mollie Rouse has been sick <lb />
several days, but is now out again. <lb />
Miss Ella left Friday <lb />
morning on a visit to Birmingham, <lb />
Ala. <lb />
Mr. Edward Flanagan left last <lb />
week for Texas. We wish him good <lb />
luck down there. <lb />
Mrs. S. M. has been sick <lb />
the past week at the home of her sis- <lb />
Mrs. S. B. Wilson. <lb />
Rev. Nat. of Washington, <lb />
will hold services at the Episcopal <lb />
Church next Friday night. <lb />
Glad to see both Mr. B. C. Pearce <lb />
and Uncle Joe Burgess out again <lb />
their recent sickness- <lb />
Willie Louis <lb />
Karl Kan and H. <lb />
of Tarboro, spent Sun- <lb />
Messrs <lb />
Morris, J <lb />
day here. <lb />
Miss Annie who has been <lb />
spending several weeks with Mrs. <lb />
W. B. Wilson, left Monday for her <lb />
home at Williamston. <lb />
Mrs. It. A. Stephens returned last <lb />
week from Wilson where she had <lb />
been visiting her son, Mr. V. L. Step- <lb />
hens, whose wife was quite sick. <lb />
Mr. H. C. Hooker turned his back <lb />
on us yesterday and took train for <lb />
San Antonio, to try bis <lb />
in the Lone Star State. hope he <lb />
will find a big one. <lb />
Hon. W. A. Branch was called <lb />
home Washington, D. C. a few <lb />
days ago, owing to the extreme <lb />
only child, whose <lb />
is such as to alarm him. <lb />
Mr. Brogden, Oxford, who was <lb />
here last fall as bookkeeper for the <lb />
Greenville Warehouse, is back again <lb />
time as a buyer. He is going to <lb />
make the boys bid lively for what <lb />
weed they get. <lb />
Mrs. R. H. Home has moved into <lb />
the store occupied last year by Miss <lb />
Mollie Rouse. The studio of Miss <lb />
Rouse has been moved up stairs lo <lb />
the large room that used to be the <lb />
Reflector office. <lb />
Mr. Dock Mooting, an aged and <lb />
esteemed citizen Carolina town- <lb />
ship, died last Thursday morning <lb />
alter a long illness. He was <lb />
father of ex G. M. <lb />
who was also reported quite sick <lb />
last week. <lb />
Messrs. Robert Hester and <lb />
Hester, two county farmers, <lb />
have brought their families to Pill <lb />
and will try their ban is at making <lb />
line tobacco down here. We welcome <lb />
all such who come among us and have <lb />
room more. <lb />
i S. T. Hooker has moved his <lb />
family to a portion of the residence <lb />
occupied by Rev- R. F. Taylor. Mr. <lb />
Z. has taken the house <lb />
by Mr. Hooker, and Mr. W. B. <lb />
Duke lakes the house formerly <lb />
by Mr. Moore. <lb />
your <lb />
break Friday. <lb />
tobacco to the big <lb />
If any of lac buys who roam the <lb />
streets Ht night turn up missing at <lb />
bed time suggest to the parents <lb />
that they have the mud holes of our <lb />
dragged. Possibly <lb />
the missing urchin may lie lost in <lb />
one of them. <lb />
All over portion of the Stale <lb />
above us there was heavy snow and <lb />
sleet last week. There was no snow <lb />
at all here, and Wednesday the <lb />
weather was so mild that fires were <lb />
hardly necessary. This is the <lb />
mate for you. <lb />
We hear that the Town Council <lb />
condemned the old Delaney dwelling, <lb />
just in rear of the Court House, at <lb />
last meeting. While in the <lb />
condemning business they ought to <lb />
draw a line on the streets and public <lb />
wells of the town. <lb />
We heard a leading farmer say the <lb />
other day that no man can induce <lb />
him to plant a seed this year. <lb />
Some other farmers are reported to <lb />
be selling all their seed. Surely <lb />
anything will pay than cotton <lb />
at present prices. <lb />
If the Councilmen of the town <lb />
could be forced to tramp in a body <lb />
for ten hours on a dark <lb />
through some of the muddiest <lb />
of our streets you would hear <lb />
votes for improvement at their next <lb />
meeting. As it is the comfort and <lb />
convenience of the citizens are the <lb />
last things the last <lb />
is still being waited for. <lb />
The Reflector Book Store has <lb />
bought out a receiver's stock of <lb />
and is preps red to offer <lb />
heard of bargains on legal cap. fool's <lb />
cap, letter and note papers. Schools <lb />
will be supplied at even less than <lb />
auction prices. We will sell job lots <lb />
of it to dealers at prices that will as- <lb />
them. We bought paper <lb />
to sell and will save money if <lb />
you will call before the stock is sold. <lb />
New Officers. <lb />
At our regular meeting Jan. 15th <lb />
Past Dictator. S. M. install- <lb />
ed the following officers of Insurance <lb />
Lodge K. of H. for the year <lb />
1892. <lb />
D. <lb />
Vice Flanagan. <lb />
Assistant T. House- <lb />
Sheppard. <lb />
Financial M. Bonnie. <lb />
R. Lang. <lb />
A. Sutton. <lb />
R. M. Reporter. <lb />
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb />
First Sunday, morning and nigh. <lb />
Second Sunday morning at <lb />
and Saturday night before. <lb />
Third and fourth at Green- <lb />
ville, morning and night, also second <lb />
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday <lb />
night services each week. <lb />
Services at school house on <lb />
Tarboro road on Thursday -night before <lb />
each third Sunday until April then <lb />
on third Sunday evening. <lb />
FUN AND MERRIMENT. <lb />
A Pleasant Evening at Hotel Macon. <lb />
tor <lb />
The Macon House on last Friday <lb />
evening was the scene of a brilliant <lb />
social event occasion being a <lb />
mask party given by Miss Myra <lb />
Skinner complimentary to her two <lb />
friends Misses Aileen Latham and <lb />
Lucille Owens. <lb />
Many were the bright and fancy <lb />
costumes worn by the young folks as <lb />
they assembled for the grand march, <lb />
and to the strains of the <lb />
music furnished by Smith's orchestra, <lb />
all wended their way to the <lb />
spacious dining room, where fun and <lb />
merriment reigned supreme, <lb />
There were so many good costumes <lb />
that it would be hard to say which <lb />
deserve the title of best, but for the <lb />
ladies we think Miss Can-away and <lb />
Miss Aylmer Sugg lead, while for the <lb />
gentlemen Jarvis Sugg and <lb />
Lawrence deserve special <lb />
mention. <lb />
The reporter was unable to obtain <lb />
the names of all who masked, but <lb />
below we give a list of those ob- <lb />
Miss Sophia Jarvis, Baby Blue. <lb />
Miss Carrie Cobb, Pink Domino. <lb />
Miss Bessie While, Liberty. <lb />
Miss Betsy Greene, Peasant. <lb />
Miss Lizzie Blow, Swiss Peasant. <lb />
Miss Maud Blow, Folly. <lb />
Miss Rosalind Rountree, Poppy. <lb />
Hiss Carraway, Ice Queen <lb />
Miss Louise Latham, Dutch Peas- <lb />
ant. <lb />
Miss White, Winter. <lb />
Miss Smith, Red Riding <lb />
Hood. <lb />
Miss Ora Whichard, Night. <lb />
Miss Leta Maid of the <lb />
Mist. <lb />
Miss Pat Skinner, Red Riding <lb />
Hood. <lb />
Miss Lucille Owens, Butterfly. <lb />
Miss Aileen Latham, Music. <lb />
Miss Jennie James, Pink Domino. <lb />
Miss Myra Skinner, Fortune <lb />
Teller. <lb />
Miss Winnie Skinner, Baby Mine. <lb />
Miss Jennie Williams, Juliet. <lb />
Miss Aylmer Sugg, Huntress. <lb />
Mrs. J. Marquis, Dilapidated <lb />
Market Woman. <lb />
Mrs. R. W. King, Night. <lb />
J. B. Cherry. Jr., Convict. <lb />
J. V White, Cadet. <lb />
Larry Humpty Dumpty <lb />
Chas. Forbes, Jockey. <lb />
Skinner, An Animated <lb />
Feather Bed. <lb />
Chas. Sugg, Santa Clans. <lb />
Jarvis Sugg, Scotch Peasant. <lb />
Lawrence Country Gal. <lb />
Clarence Whichard, Blue <lb />
Joe Jarvis, <lb />
Clarence Jones, Merchant Tailor. <lb />
Dr. J. Marquis, Had his face <lb />
washed. <lb />
R. W. King, <lb />
Bruce Latham, Year. <lb />
Louis Skinner, Nellie <lb />
Jim Fauntleroy. <lb />
Sam While, Jockey. <lb />
R. M. Black Domino. <lb />
Many were the guesses as lo who <lb />
is my partner, and when masks were <lb />
removed there was a general round <lb />
of Supper was then served <lb />
and such a repast as only Mine Host <lb />
Skinner and his amiable wife know <lb />
how to prepare. The tables were <lb />
profusely decorated with holly and <lb />
evergreens, and all passed as picas <lb />
as could be The party <lb />
will be remembered by those who <lb />
were privileged to be present us <lb />
one of the most enjoyable events of <lb />
season. <lb />
A Card. <lb />
All persons holding our Checks <lb />
drawn on J. J. Nicholson Sons will <lb />
please present them to us for payment. <lb />
J. J. Nicholson Sons having as- <lb />
signed and it being generally known <lb />
that they were our in <lb />
Baltimore, take means to <lb />
assure our patrons and depositors <lb />
that our operations will not be inter- <lb />
nor our financial condition <lb />
embarrassed. Our books are open <lb />
inspection, and we invite all <lb />
depositors to examine them. <lb />
Yours Truly. <lb />
Tyson Rawls. <lb />
Good Prices. <lb />
There was a large attendance <lb />
sales of the Moore real estate last <lb />
week and bidders were numerous. <lb />
The two pieces of property most <lb />
sought after were the homestead in <lb />
Greenville and the farm a mile out <lb />
on the Plank Road. The farm was <lb />
bought by J. W. Higgs at and <lb />
the homestead was bid off the first <lb />
day by C. T. at <lb />
Next day other parties raised this <lb />
bid per cent, which necessitated <lb />
homestead being sold over. The <lb />
second it was knocked down at <lb />
Mr. being the <lb />
chaser. Some other parcels of the <lb />
property sold well. <lb />
Married. <lb />
At the residence of the bride's fa- <lb />
Mr. Elbert Forbes, on January <lb />
1892, were united in heir wed- <lb />
lock Mr. Abram Joyner and Miss <lb />
Annie Forbes, all or Pitt count-, the <lb />
writer officiating. After the mar- <lb />
at o'clock the company <lb />
who had attended were invited to the <lb />
home of the groom where quite a <lb />
bountiful repast was given which <lb />
was much enjoyed. <lb />
May their pathway through life be <lb />
strewn with many fragrant flowers, <lb />
and the rich blessings of an all wise <lb />
Providence prove to be a means of <lb />
salvation to their souls. <lb />
R. F. <lb />
Th Murder Trial. <lb />
I The trial of F. Martin lot the <lb />
killing of G. Manning is in <lb />
progress. The prosecution is -being <lb />
conducted by Solicitor and <lb />
Messrs. Swift Galloway, Jarvis A <lb />
Blow, A Tyson-, while de- <lb />
is represented by Mess. Latham <lb />
Skinner, J. E. Moore and J. D. <lb />
Murphy. The prisoner was carried <lb />
into court Monday afternoon of last <lb />
week and in answer to the bill of in- <lb />
pleaded net guilt p. A <lb />
men from Which to <lb />
select the jury was ordered and the <lb />
case was set for Thursday. <lb />
It was called about o'clock <lb />
Thursday morning when Maj. <lb />
for the defense offered a motion <lb />
to quash the bill of indictment on <lb />
the ground that one of the Grand <lb />
Jurors who found the bill had a suit <lb />
pending in court. Capt. Galloway <lb />
for the State objected to the motion <lb />
on the ground that it was offered too <lb />
late, as prisoner had already <lb />
been in court and pleaded The <lb />
argument over this lasted about two <lb />
hours and was engaged in by the <lb />
two attorneys mentioned and also by <lb />
Solicitor and Mess. Moore <lb />
and Murphy. A number of Supreme <lb />
Court decisions were referred to <lb />
showing that the matter at stage <lb />
was entirely discretionary with the <lb />
Court and Judge Bryan not <lb />
grant the motion but decided that <lb />
the case should proceed. <lb />
After recess for dinner the select- <lb />
of the jury commenced and con- j <lb />
the remainder of the day. <lb />
The following selected to sit <lb />
upon the J. W. Smith, j. H. <lb />
Joyner, G- W. S. <lb />
W. C. Burney, W. U. Whichard, J. I <lb />
Manning, Orlando <lb />
J. <lb />
W. Page, J. H. <lb />
Blount. William Worthington, A. <lb />
and M. A. Robinson. <lb />
The examination of State wit- <lb />
began Friday morning and <lb />
continued two days, when the State <lb />
rested the case. Monday morning <lb />
the defense began introducing its <lb />
testimony and had not closed at this <lb />
writing, Tuesday afternoon. The <lb />
case is being strongly contested on <lb />
both sides, some bring- <lb />
forth frequent argument between <lb />
the counsel, which necessarily makes <lb />
progress slow. <lb />
We heard sonic old men about the <lb />
Court House say they never saw a <lb />
case proceed so slowly. No definite <lb />
idea can be had as to when the case <lb />
will close. <lb />
Trinity College. <lb />
Trinity College, at Durham, is <lb />
going to be an honor to Hie State. <lb />
The main building is nearly com- <lb />
at o cost of is <lb />
substantially built. Dr. <lb />
gift, in honor of his wife, the Tech- <lb />
building, is nearly com- <lb />
work is progressing on <lb />
the Inn. Dr. Crowell, J. S. <lb />
Curr and B. N. Duke were appointed <lb />
committee, says the to <lb />
devise ways and means for the com- <lb />
of the Inn. Col. J. W. <lb />
has been elected president <lb />
of the board of trustees; Prof. H. <lb />
Peg ram succeeds O. Carr, resign- <lb />
ed, as secretary, B. N. Duke was <lb />
re-elected treasurer. <lb />
SHILOH'S CATARRH REMEDY. <lb />
A marvelous cute for Catarrh, <lb />
mouth and Headache. <lb />
each there Is an ingenious <lb />
nasal Injector for the more successful <lb />
treatment of these complaints without <lb />
charge. Price Sold at <lb />
EN'S DRUG STORE. <lb />
IN MEMORIAM- <lb />
of Lodge, <lb />
No. R. of <lb />
Greenville. N. C, Jan. <lb />
At the threshold of our <lb />
Noble Order, standing without Its portal <lb />
we acknowledge our faith In God, the <lb />
Supreme Ruler of the universe, who In <lb />
His providence has removed from <lb />
us our beloved brother A. N. R by <lb />
death on the 98th of November, 1891, <lb />
thereby as we hope upon him <lb />
the immortal degree of eternal <lb />
and exalted him to a seat In the <lb />
lodge above. Therefore be it <lb />
Hi That In the departure sf our <lb />
esteemed brother Knight, our loss Is his <lb />
eternal gain, and while we miss him who <lb />
ever responded to the distress call with <lb />
a sympathetic heart, and a ready parse, <lb />
to contribute to necessities of those <lb />
whom we by our fraternal ties have <lb />
sheltered beneath the helmet of <lb />
order; may the remembrance of our <lb />
brother cause us to emulate his manly <lb />
virtues and Christian character. <lb />
Iced. That we as a lodge of <lb />
do hereby tender to the bereaved widow <lb />
and children our sincere sympathy in <lb />
this hour of their bereavement in the <lb />
great loss of a kind and affectionate <lb />
husband and father. <lb />
That a copy of these <lb />
be furnished to the family of <lb />
our deceased brother, and to the <lb />
Eastern for publication. <lb />
Signed, R. M. r<lb />
R. M. Reporter. <lb />
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb />
Rev. R. F. Taylor, pastor of Green- <lb />
ville Circuit of the M. E. Church, South, <lb />
will preach at the following times and <lb />
places, regularly each <lb />
1st Sunday at Salem, o'clock A. M. <lb />
1st Sunday, Chapel, 3.30 <lb />
P. M. <lb />
2nd Sunday, Grove, o'clock <lb />
A. M. <lb />
2nd Sunday. School Mouse, <lb />
miles nest of Greenville, o'clock <lb />
P. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday, Ayden or Spring Branch <lb />
School A. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday, Tripp's Chapel, <lb />
o'clock P. M. <lb />
4th Sunday, o'clock <lb />
A. H. <lb />
4th Sunday, Lang's School House, <lb />
o'clock V. M. <lb />
GREETING <lb />
TO <lb />
-----If you want to save----- <lb />
fifty <lb />
the purchase of a PIANO and from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in of an Organ address <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
NEW X. C. <lb />
General Agent for North Carolina, <lb />
who is now handling goods direct from <lb />
the manufacturers, as HIGH <lb />
GRADE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, workmanship <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
musical journals In the Suites. <lb />
Made by Paul G. who Is at this <lb />
time one of the mechanics In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on high grade <lb />
Also the NEW BY EVANS IT. <lb />
RIGHT which has been sold by <lb />
him for the past six years in eastern <lb />
part of this State up to this time has <lb />
given entire The Upright <lb />
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from <lb />
in Rosewood, Oak, <lb />
-Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb />
Also the CROWN ORGAN <lb />
from to f in solid or Oak <lb />
eases. <lb />
Ten years experience in the music <lb />
business has enabled him lo handle <lb />
nothing but standard goods he does <lb />
not hesitate to say that he ran sell any <lb />
musical Instrument about per cent, <lb />
cheaper than other agents are now offer- <lb />
Refer to all banks Eastern Carolina. <lb />
HOW MANY ACRES IN TOBACCO <lb />
Reflector desires to know the number o acres that will he <lb />
planted Tobacco in Pitt county this year. V e desire these statistics <lb />
in order that we may be able to present to Tobacco dealers and buyers <lb />
the established tobacco markets the world, the advantages of our <lb />
county as the coming tobacco market of Eastern and induce <lb />
thorn to make Pitt county their home. <lb />
We print herewith a blank form on which we request our <lb />
and subscribers to send us the names of those who will plant tobacco <lb />
this year. <lb />
We also have spaces in same for the address of the plan- <lb />
and the number of acres that each planter will have in tobacco. It <lb />
is to the interest of every tobacco planter in the county to report every <lb />
acre of tobacco in their neighborhood as they will be giving their aid <lb />
to build up a home market. <lb />
Cut out this blank and mail to TOBACCO EDITOR, <lb />
Eastern Reflector, <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Reported by. <lb />
. Township. <lb />
NAMES. <lb />
NUMBER <lb />
ACRES. <lb />
ADDRESS. <lb />
Be sure to put in above all tho names of those that will plant tobacco <lb />
in your neighborhood and mail it at once. <lb />
THE NEW YORK <lb />
WEEKLY WORLD, <lb />
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. <lb />
Greenville FEMALE School. <lb />
Drowning at Tarboro. <lb />
The boats coming down from Tar- <lb />
yesterday morning brought in- <lb />
formation or a sad accident ban <lb />
occurred there. The boats leave <lb />
Tarboro at o'clock a. m., which is <lb />
now before light. A visiting young <lb />
lady was to depart on one of the <lb />
steamers for her home in Washing- <lb />
ton and two young men went down <lb />
to the wharf to see her off. One of <lb />
these, Mr. Stonewall in <lb />
going to pass from one steamer to <lb />
another, made a n and fell in <lb />
the water between them. He <lb />
not swim and the swift current of <lb />
the freshet swept him down. It was <lb />
also thought that he was by <lb />
his bead striking against the boat in <lb />
falling. A colored deck hand reach- <lb />
ed over and grabbed for him but <lb />
could reach to Mr. <lb />
bead and could not get a grasp on <lb />
him. In an instant be was out of <lb />
reach and drowned. Mr. Douglass <lb />
was an excellent young mun and one <lb />
of the proprietors of the Pioneer <lb />
Warehouse at Tarboro. Ha was a <lb />
native of Danville, Va. <lb />
Contains the beet features of any weekly <lb />
printed. M. Quad, late of the De- <lb />
Free Press, writes a page of <lb />
matter every week. <lb />
SEND FOR SAMPLE COPY. <lb />
TBS WORLD, <lb />
Subscriptions taken at Reflector <lb />
Book Store, Greenville, N. U. <lb />
SALE AND FEED <lb />
I have removed to the new stables on <lb />
Fifth street In rear Capt. White's <lb />
Store, where I will constantly <lb />
keep on hand a fine line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb />
the livery and suit the most <lb />
I will run In connection a <lb />
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share <lb />
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
Green villa, N. C. <lb />
N ENTERING UPON THE <lb />
New Year we wish to thank <lb />
our many friends for their pat <lb />
during the past year, <lb />
and trust for a liberal <lb />
in the future. We will <lb />
still sell at cost our entire stock <lb />
of winter goods. Messrs. Jas. <lb />
L. Little Co. having closed out <lb />
their business I have secured <lb />
the services of Mr. C. M. Jones <lb />
who will be glad to have all of <lb />
his friends call and see him. <lb />
Wishing you many happy <lb />
returns of the season, we are <lb />
Yours very truly, <lb />
C. T. RD, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
WE WILL SELL <lb />
Slacks <lb />
At Cost for the next <lb />
DAYS <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS. <lb />
Agents for New Home Sewing <lb />
Machines. <lb />
Depository for American Bible <lb />
Society. <lb />
TO BE OPENED <lb />
ON JANUARY 4th, 1892. <lb />
Believing and desiring that Greenville <lb />
should have a Female School, <lb />
we undersigned I ave employed Miss <lb />
Nicholson, who comes highly <lb />
to take charge of school <lb />
room work, and Mrs. A. D. Hunter, who <lb />
is well-known, to charge of <lb />
the Department, and we most <lb />
respectfully solicit the patronage of <lb />
those desiring to patronize a strictly <lb />
mi female school. Those desiring <lb />
boa can secure the same reasonable <lb />
rates. Terms of tuition are as follows <lb />
to be paid monthly <lb />
Primary, <lb />
Intermediate, 2.00 <lb />
Higher 2.60 <lb />
Higher English and Latin, 3.00 <lb />
Other Languages each per month <lb />
extra. <lb />
Music, per month. <lb />
For further particulars call on or ad- <lb />
dress either of the <lb />
C. A. WHITE. <lb />
A. D. <lb />
C. D. ROUNTREE, <lb />
D. H. JAMES, <lb />
R. A. TYSON. <lb />
Committee, <lb />
R. A Treas. <lb />
W. M. <lb />
W. <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
FOR.------ <lb />
Smith's Improved Hand Pump, <lb />
Burglar Window and Door <lb />
LOCKS AND BOLTS. <lb />
Union Central Life Company, Celebrated <lb />
Pianos and Organs. <lb />
We will take pleasure in serving public any of the above lines <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
Office in corner Opera House Greenville, If. <lb />
. ------BY USING------ <lb />
Selkirk, SC, Sept. 27th. 1800.1 <lb />
Mess. Boykin, farmer Co., Md <lb />
Dear Replying to yours of a few <lb />
days ago, would that I have used j <lb />
for years, and made <lb />
more clear money during those years <lb />
than any other since have been farming, <lb />
and have done nothing else. <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
NIEL A. <lb />
Tallahassee, Fla, Oct. 7th, 1889. <lb />
Mess. Boykin, Md. <lb />
Having bought and used <lb />
one car load of your <lb />
I can cheerfully recommend it as one of <lb />
he finest fertilizers on the market, at <lb />
a mo time it Is cheapest and appears <lb />
especially adapted to the soil cf Middle <lb />
Florida. It tho to early <lb />
maturity and largely increases the yield, <lb />
and I am confident it permanently <lb />
improves the land, I expect to use <lb />
three car-loads the coming season. <lb />
Very truly yours, <lb />
Moor's Mill, Ga. Jan. <lb />
Boykin, farmer A Co., <lb />
Dear Sirs I used two formulas <lb />
last season <lb />
Cotton and Corn. I gathered near <lb />
a bale of Cotton to the acre. I measured <lb />
one acre of Corn land and gathered W <lb />
bushels Corn by weight oft the acre. <lb />
I am well pleased with your <lb />
J. J. <lb />
N. C, October 31st, <lb />
Mr. S. O. <lb />
Dear Sir The <lb />
bought of you in the Spring was the bast <lb />
I ever used. I used 1-2 formulas on <lb />
acres and he Cotton was the best I <lb />
have ever made. I have used several <lb />
brands of guano but none equal <lb />
Yours truly. <lb />
D. D. BROWN. <lb />
BOYKIN, Baltimore, Id <lb />
1883. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS, <lb />
-At the same old stand where he will continue to keep a full line of----- <lb />
Groceries <lb />
MEAT AND <lb />
Will Sold for <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
-DEALER IN- <lb />
W.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017530_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
WORST REFLECTOR. <lb />
N. C <lb />
-OF- <lb />
La Grippe <lb />
RELIGIONS OF INDIA. <lb />
-CURED IN- <lb />
men bought <lb />
ran such men be bought <lb />
o, i hey are not tor sale, <lb />
o, they arc not for sale. <lb />
Below we give the names <lb />
some of the best men <lb />
in the United States, <lb />
who voluntarily <lb />
gave their <lb />
of <lb />
cures <lb />
made the use of <lb />
of <lb />
Royal <lb />
Among them were many old <lb />
chronic cases of from ten to <lb />
twenty years standing. <lb />
We refer the read- <lb />
to any of the <lb />
names given <lb />
below. <lb />
I. D., Chicago, <lb />
cured of and Catarrh. <lb />
Gen. Gainesville. Go., <lb />
Dyspepsia Insomnia. <lb />
Major Rankin, Atlanta, <lb />
Worst form. <lb />
Hawthorne, O. <lb />
Catarrh. Twenty years standing. <lb />
Gen. P. Turner. General <lb />
of Tenn. Rheumatism. years standing <lb />
Ex-Gov. R. Texas, mother <lb />
cured of Dyspepsia and General Debility. <lb />
Nashville, Tenn., <lb />
La Grippe and Nervous Debility. <lb />
Rev. Sam P. Jones, Wife <lb />
cured Nervous yr. <lb />
Dr. J H. Pearson. St. Louis, Mo., <lb />
Stomach and Kidney <lb />
E. F. Small, Atlanta. Asthma. <lb />
vi. <lb />
C. E. Wright, Chattanooga. <lb />
Sou cured of Epilepsy. G yr, <lb />
R. B . Jones. Norfolk, Ya. Neuralgia <lb />
and La Grippe- <lb />
B. W. Cheek. Norfolk. Va., <lb />
M. C. Cole, New Orleans, <lb />
and Dyspepsia. <lb />
Col. I. W. Atlanta, Kidney <lb />
Troubles and <lb />
Major Charles W. Atlanta, <lb />
Nervous <lb />
Mrs. Mary A. Atkinson. Atlanta. <lb />
ma. <lb />
Rev. A. J lawless, Winchester. <lb />
Inflammatory Rheumatism. Wost form. <lb />
Blacknall, Atlanta. La Grippe. <lb />
Worst form. in twenty-four hours. <lb />
Hon. Lyle, Senator 27th Dis- <lb />
Ga. Wife of Neuralgia. <lb />
W. E. Shepperd, Athens, Ga. <lb />
Rheumatism. case <lb />
Mrs. Joe Davis. Piano, Cough <lb />
and Hemorrhage. <lb />
Rev. A. B. Ga- <lb />
Neuralgia and Liver Trouble- <lb />
Dr. O. P. Stark, Alexandria, La., <lb />
infancy.; <lb />
Rev. W. It. N. <lb />
C. and Dyspepsia. <lb />
A. W. Jackson. Ga., <lb />
Rheumatism. Fifteen years standing. <lb />
Mrs. M. Farmer, Atlanta. <lb />
Rheumatism. Ten years standing. <lb />
J. B. St. Louis. Catarrh and <lb />
. <lb />
M. Whitman, St. Louis. <lb />
R-v. J. Erwin. D. D. Nashville, <lb />
., Dyspepsia and <lb />
Rev. W. G- E. Cunningham, D. D., <lb />
Literature, <lb />
D. C. Chicago, <lb />
Worst form <lb />
Rev. W. B. Morris, Ashley. Ill, Spinal <lb />
Dr J Liberty. Kan. <lb />
and Rheumatism. Very severe. <lb />
S M Chicago. and <lb />
Rev. G. W. Clark, i <lb />
Child cured of Summer Complaint. <lb />
J J Scruggs, Miss. Child cured <lb />
of Summer <lb />
Chicago. La- <lb />
Grippe and Dyspepsia- <lb />
J II Ky, <lb />
sis. Eight years standing. <lb />
F Gray, Ohio, and <lb />
La Grippe . <lb />
John F Cincinnati, Ohio, La <lb />
and Rheumatism <lb />
Rev Samuel H Schwartz, Chicago. Ca- <lb />
and La Grippe <lb />
Rev W H Wells. La <lb />
Grippe ad <lb />
Rev R H Rivers, Louisville, Ky <lb />
Debility. <lb />
Kev G aT Winn, Nashville, <lb />
and La Grippe <lb />
The lamented Henry W. <lb />
said of be- <lb />
it to be the Thule <lb />
of <lb />
We could fill this paper with <lb />
names of people who been <lb />
cured of diseases by the use of <lb />
Royal but <lb />
consider the above sufficient. <lb />
We are having with us, and <lb />
the country, the dread- <lb />
Hundreds <lb />
are being cured right here in a <lb />
few hours <lb />
Two of <lb />
in One-Self Bias of Bet Water <lb />
Bear <lb />
For six or eight hours. It is <lb />
as pleasant to take as a glass of <lb />
lemonade. For sale at per <lb />
bottle by all Druggists. <lb />
Manufactured by <lb />
King's<lb />
The Watch-Tower <lb />
The magnitude of India is not <lb />
known by the ordinary reader. It <lb />
is nineteen hundred miles long <lb />
and eighteen hundred miles wide <lb />
half the size of the United States. <lb />
With a territory only half the size <lb />
of the United States it is really <lb />
marvelous when we consider the <lb />
density of its population. The <lb />
United States including the <lb />
ans has sixty three millions, while <lb />
India with less territory has two <lb />
hundred and eighty millions- Of <lb />
this number only four per cent can <lb />
read their own language. They <lb />
are like all human beings, so con- <lb />
that they must worship. <lb />
If they do not -worship the one <lb />
true God they must worship a God <lb />
even if it is one made of their own <lb />
hands. <lb />
The religions of this dark <lb />
country are the the Mo- <lb />
and Brahms. While <lb />
is a manifest difference in <lb />
their mode of worship, still they <lb />
worship and that with all their <lb />
power. The are better <lb />
known as fire Their <lb />
name tells us that they worship <lb />
fire- These number <lb />
about one hundred and twenty <lb />
millions and reside in Bombay and <lb />
on the Western slope of the <lb />
try. They believe that there is a <lb />
God, who created all things and <lb />
afterwards created two other Gods <lb />
the God of light and goodness, <lb />
and the God of darkness and evil. <lb />
They believe that when every- <lb />
thing is full of light and goodness <lb />
this God is in the but <lb />
when darkness and evil prevail <lb />
this God is in the In <lb />
fact these two Gods are constantly <lb />
at war. one with the other. To <lb />
carry into execution the works of <lb />
the different Gods human beings <lb />
are used as instruments. If a ship <lb />
goes to sea and has a safe and <lb />
pleasant voyage the God of good- <lb />
is in the If tins <lb />
voyage is with difficulty <lb />
and danger the God of darkness <lb />
is in the Whatever <lb />
is accompanied with goodness and <lb />
happiness is attributed to the reign- <lb />
power of this God. and every <lb />
pain, sorrow and disappointment is <lb />
attributed to the God of evil. It <lb />
is strange that in all <lb />
the happiness contemplated by <lb />
these fire the women <lb />
are entirely have no <lb />
hope of anything beyond this life. <lb />
The women are regarded as the <lb />
lowest and vilest of beings. She <lb />
is worse than a hewer of wood and <lb />
drawer of water. <lb />
As indicated these <lb />
ship fire. A fire is constantly <lb />
burning on an altar in the temple. <lb />
No one is allowed to approach this <lb />
fire except the priests and they <lb />
must first cover their mouth and <lb />
nose with a cloth for fear that tho <lb />
breath will contaminate the file. <lb />
They worship tho sun, <lb />
stars and sometimes trees. <lb />
As the sun is setting they may be <lb />
seen at the waters edge bowing and <lb />
praying to the sun as it sinks be- <lb />
hind the Western lull. They pray <lb />
after this manner. Thou that has <lb />
watched over us during tho day <lb />
please protect us during the dark <lb />
shades of the night- Send some <lb />
token of thy presence, if only a star <lb />
and let us know that thou art with <lb />
us. This prayer is offered with <lb />
much fervor and earnestness. <lb />
These have a peculiar <lb />
way of disposing of their dead. <lb />
A tower is erected in one corner of <lb />
a lot and on the top is a grate. <lb />
After death the body is borne by <lb />
four men on a bier to the foot of <lb />
the tower. Here the cloth that <lb />
covers the face is removed and a <lb />
white dog is permitted to look on <lb />
the face of the dead. This is a <lb />
token diseased is happy. <lb />
The face is again covered and four <lb />
other men bear the body up to the <lb />
grate where it is left. Soon as the <lb />
pall bearers descend or <lb />
buzzard alight and in a few mo- <lb />
the flesh is torn from the <lb />
bones and by these <lb />
buzzards, while the bones fall <lb />
through the grate to the bottom of <lb />
the tower. The only woman <lb />
is allowed to attend the is <lb />
the widow and she is only allowed <lb />
to follow so as to be cursed and <lb />
otherwise abused. <lb />
The reader no doubt thinks that <lb />
these are very ignorant. <lb />
This is a mistake. They are the <lb />
best educated people- A boy who <lb />
can't speak three languages is re- <lb />
as being very ignorant <lb />
If they are so very intelligent, why <lb />
are they not Christians. They <lb />
have the Bible and read it They <lb />
think Jesus was a most excellent <lb />
man and very good. But why are <lb />
they not Christians. The sad <lb />
story is told in their own words. <lb />
They say to yon, we have dealings <lb />
wit a your merchants and shippers <lb />
and if they are Christians we don't <lb />
want anything to do with Christi- <lb />
These men who hail <lb />
a Christian land live drunken, <lb />
licentious, profane lives and the <lb />
heathen looks at Christianity <lb />
through them and regard it a very <lb />
dangerous religion. It is a pain- <lb />
fact, these traders and nippers <lb />
from a Christian land are doing <lb />
more to becloud the heathen mind <lb />
than the missionaries can do <lb />
good If every one who profess- <lb />
ed Christianity possessed it and <lb />
lived up to its requirements; <lb />
poor India would be <lb />
captured for Christ within ten <lb />
years I What a lesson to all of us <lb />
in this Christian country The <lb />
unholy, profane lives of Christians, <lb />
strikes a fatal blow to Christianity. <lb />
May the rebuke from a heathen <lb />
make every Disciple of the Lord a <lb />
living letter seen and read of all <lb />
men. <lb />
Cue. <lb />
This Is beyond question the most <lb />
Cough hive ever <lb />
old, a few doses invariably cure the <lb />
worst cases Cough, Croup and Bron- <lb />
while its success in the <lb />
sure of Consumption is without a <lb />
in the history of Since its <lb />
first discovery it has been sold on a <lb />
a test which no other medicine <lb />
can stand. If you have a cough we earn- <lb />
ask you to try It. Price <lb />
and If your lungs are sore, chest, or <lb />
back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. <lb />
Sold at WOO TEN'S DRUG STORE. <lb />
THEY DON'T READ NEWSPAPERS. <lb />
Argus. <lb />
It is a waste of time and of a <lb />
very generous attribute of human <lb />
character, to lavish sympathy upon <lb />
the fools who buy bogus gold <lb />
bricks, or who are out of <lb />
their money by sharpers, or who are <lb />
tempted into the duns of the <lb />
or counterfeit money deal- <lb />
Such cases are reported <lb />
most every day in some of the <lb />
journals of the country, but the <lb />
victim is always a countryman, and <lb />
one whose habits of economy <lb />
prevent him from reading the daily <lb />
newspapers. <lb />
Now and then an old man in his <lb />
dotage, once possessing average <lb />
intelligence, may be taken in by <lb />
these criminals who simply play <lb />
for fools, but in other cases the <lb />
men who buy gold bricks at a <lb />
great bargain, or who undertake <lb />
to gamble with dealers, or <lb />
who dream of wealth by the <lb />
chase of counterfeit money, are <lb />
simply the idiots who think it but <lb />
waste of mo to inform them- <lb />
selves of the worlds doing by reg- <lb />
reading the newspapers. <lb />
No man who bus been a reader of <lb />
any sort of a newspaper, even the <lb />
most weekly, could be <lb />
of the fact t the men <lb />
who offer to t gold bricks at a <lb />
bargain, play tho game <lb />
or to sell counterfeit are <lb />
unmitigated scoundrel- and must <lb />
cheat somebody, and t at they <lb />
ways prefer to cheat a first hand. <lb />
The worst economy i the world <lb />
in this enlightened , is the fail- <lb />
to read regularly a daily news- <lb />
paper, if it is accessible ; if not. to <lb />
read the best weeklies that can be <lb />
obtained. There is not a man in <lb />
the country capable of reading <lb />
who does not lose ten times and <lb />
often a hundred times, and <lb />
a thousand times more <lb />
than the cost of a newspaper each <lb />
year, by the failure to inform <lb />
himself of what is going on around <lb />
him. <lb />
The time was when newspapers <lb />
were luxuries, but they are now <lb />
within the reach of every family in <lb />
the land. The daily newspaper is <lb />
as cheap to-day as the good week- <lb />
was twenty years ago. and the <lb />
home without a newspaper is the <lb />
place where all the adventurous <lb />
thieves of the land seek to ply <lb />
their vocation, and the victims of <lb />
such are not entitled to <lb />
sympathy, because their own in- <lb />
excusable ignorance and greed are <lb />
the sole causes of their misfortune. <lb />
DEATH OP JORDAN STONE. <lb />
Raleigh Chronicle. <lb />
The many friends of Jordan <lb />
Stone, who after a long connection <lb />
with the press in Nor Carolina <lb />
moved to California, will regret to <lb />
hear of his death, which occurred <lb />
at Los Angeles, California, on De- <lb />
26th. <lb />
Mr. Stone, who had been en- <lb />
gaged in publication of the <lb />
we believe, 1871 <lb />
founded the News, <lb />
which Sam Williams was the <lb />
editor. After a journalistic <lb />
in this city of several years, <lb />
Mr. Stone in 1876 went b Ashe- <lb />
ville and in connection with Capt <lb />
M- Furman published the <lb />
Citizen, which soon be- <lb />
came a powerful journal, wielding <lb />
a potent influence across the <lb />
For many years Mr. Stone was <lb />
the Secretary of the North Caro- <lb />
Press Association, and h is <lb />
most kindly remembered by all of <lb />
the older members of the <lb />
Four years ago he was in- <lb />
to go to Los Angeles <lb />
some friends there and he soon es- <lb />
himself successfully in <lb />
business in that place. Although <lb />
of a naturally robust constitution, <lb />
he fell a victim to pneumonia, and <lb />
died at the age of about fifty-two. <lb />
Mr- Stone was a man of fine <lb />
character, with a pleasing address <lb />
and entirely devoted to his <lb />
He was held in high es- <lb />
teem and his death will be much <lb />
regretted.<lb />
Hotel I'd <lb />
like a Sunday paper, but I'm a stranger <lb />
here and don't know which paper la <lb />
best. <lb />
Newsstand your breakfast <lb />
you'd better take this paper; <lb />
three supplements, twenty-four pages. <lb />
If waiter is spry he'll get your order <lb />
tilled before you're through reading <lb />
Good News. <lb />
Thy Were Together. <lb />
He to yon <lb />
think I'm slow and a too soft <lb />
She But then you <lb />
bare wealth and position, and that <lb />
counts for <lb />
T Mignonette In Bloom. <lb />
When the flower begins to wither, <lb />
eat the stalks off close to where the <lb />
pods begin to form; new shoots will <lb />
soon appear, followed by new <lb />
i i. <lb />
A Household <lb />
FOR ALL <lb />
BLOOD and skin; <lb />
Di Di Di <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm <lb />
SCROFULA. ULCERS. SALT . <lb />
RHEUM. ECZEMA, wars <lb />
form SKIN ERUPTION. <lb />
ides being efficacious In toning up the <lb />
system and restoring the constitution, <lb />
alien Impaired from any cause. <lb />
almost supernatural healing properties <lb />
justify In guaranteeing a curt. If <lb />
directions are followed. <lb />
FREE <lb />
BLOOD BUM CO. Atlanta. Ga. <lb />
MMES ft <lb />
WHICHARD, <lb />
O. <lb />
R. B <lb />
and <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
Jan. 4th, daily Fast Mall, daily <lb />
daily ex Sun. <lb />
Weldon 12,30 pm S pm <lb />
Ar am<lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
are millions in said a drug- <lb />
gist when asked about Dr, Bull's Cough <lb />
Syrup. Price <lb />
For some time past I've been a <lb />
I tried Salvation Oil <lb />
which gave almost instant relief, I <lb />
sincerely recommend It as it has entirely <lb />
cured GORDON, <lb />
more, Md . <lb />
Setting it Right. <lb />
St. Louis Dispatch. <lb />
There wax a sign on the harbor <lb />
shop window <lb />
BLACKED <lb />
A pedestrian halted, and read <lb />
and re-read the then lie <lb />
opened tho door of the shop, and <lb />
sign ought to read <lb />
Not one man in fifty wears hoots <lb />
The barber didn't say anything, <lb />
but after due reflection he con- <lb />
that the man was right; so <lb />
he changed the sign so that it <lb />
blacked <lb />
He had scarcely put it up when <lb />
the same man came along again, <lb />
and opened the door to say <lb />
one wants the inside of his <lb />
shoes blacked. We pay to have <lb />
the shine on the outside. You'd <lb />
better fix <lb />
The barber puzzled over tho <lb />
matter for a while, and realized <lb />
that the man was again correct; so <lb />
the next day the sign replaced <lb />
by one <lb />
outside of shoes blacked <lb />
perfectly said <lb />
the fault-finder, as he came along <lb />
in the afternoon. give <lb />
yourself away on the English <lb />
language. Always say what you <lb />
mean. You'd better put up a sign <lb />
in the other You <lb />
While You Everybody will <lb />
then understand that they must <lb />
wait while you <lb />
Girl's Experience In a Light- <lb />
house. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. are keep- <lb />
of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand <lb />
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a <lb />
daughter, four years old. Last April <lb />
she was taken down with fol- <lb />
lowed with a dreadful Cough and turn- <lb />
into a Fever. Doctors at home and <lb />
at Detroit treated her, but in vain, she <lb />
grew worse rapidly, until she was a men <lb />
of she tried <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery and after the <lb />
use of two and a bottles, was com- <lb />
cured. They say r. King's <lb />
New Discovery is worth its in <lb />
gold, yet you gel a trial bottle free <lb />
at John L. Wooten's store. <lb />
ml <lb />
To Young <lb />
Mothers <lb />
IV- <lb />
A funny man who asked the <lb />
question, is the state of <lb />
matrimony received the follow- <lb />
explanatory answer I It is one <lb />
of the United States. It is bound- <lb />
ed by hugging and kissing on one <lb />
side and cradles and babies on the <lb />
other. Its chief products are <lb />
broom sticks and staying <lb />
out of nights. It was discovered <lb />
by Adam and Eve while trying to <lb />
find a passage out of Paradise- <lb />
The climate is rather sultry until <lb />
you pass the tropics of housekeep- <lb />
when squally weather sets in <lb />
with sufficient power to keep all <lb />
hands as cool as cucumbers- For <lb />
the principal roads leading to this <lb />
state consult the first pair of <lb />
eyes yon run against. <lb />
Answer This Question. <lb />
Why do so many people a roam <lb />
as seem to prefer to suffer and be made <lb />
miserable by Indigestion, Constipation, <lb />
Dizziness, Loss of Appetite, Coming up <lb />
of Food, Yellow Skin, when <lb />
we will sell them Shiloh's <lb />
to care them Sold at J. L. <lb />
Wooten's Drug Store. <lb />
is an or town <lb />
cold wind, this It <lb />
is, but Dr. Ball's Cough Syrup is all over <lb />
town too, yon can buy It everywhere for <lb />
cents a bottle. <lb />
careful mother always keeps Sal- <lb />
Oil handy. <lb />
En <lb />
Boo-1<lb />
. CO. <lb />
-.-. t <lb />
r . . <lb />
Jab. H. V <lb />
r j <lb />
valid son, has r -i <lb />
r. <lb />
i-e-it r t i <lb />
tho i <lb />
to give r i v. -it . . . i <lb />
i J i i i <lb />
I r i I <lb />
his fever, o. to ; . s <lb />
would not be i . . i <lb />
cost. Yours L-. . J. <lb />
Mr. I I r <lb />
. <lb />
foremost men i <lb />
C , <lb />
No. 1403 I . C, <lb />
on tuna c a. c <lb />
CURES SYPHILIS <lb />
several parcels of real <lb />
-11 for sale. Look over the list <lb />
below and call on or write them. <lb />
lot on Third street below Co- <lb />
in the town of Greenville, <lb />
Rood two-story house with four rooms <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large stables on the premises. <lb />
O Two building lots in Skinner- <lb />
desirable <lb />
location. <lb />
A lot on street, between <lb />
Front and Second, has nice house of <lb />
rooms, good well of large gar- <lb />
den plot and stable. <lb />
A A half acre lot in <lb />
Urge single story house <lb />
of G rooms, cook and dining rooms <lb />
all necessary out buildings and <lb />
stables, good water <lb />
A fine farm containing acres. <lb />
Wt about miles from Greenville on Mt. <lb />
road, house, stables, <lb />
burns, two room tenant houses; about <lb />
seres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb />
u m hub <lb />
n with <lb />
Mr. Randall the retired drug <lb />
gist of Madison Fla says <lb />
he regards P. P. Ash, Poke <lb />
as the best <lb />
on the and he has seen <lb />
more beneficial results from the use of it <lb />
than any other blood medicine. <lb />
Exhausted vitality, nervousness, lost <lb />
manhood, weakness caused by <lb />
of the system will be cured by the <lb />
P. P. P., which gives health <lb />
and strength to the wreck of the system. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT <lb />
Another year has passed and I am here <lb />
with the same The New Lee <lb />
New Patron, Piedmont. <lb />
and Seminole, and all of <lb />
these are pronounced nil <lb />
right. Also a full <lb />
line of Heating <lb />
Stoves, <lb />
Stove Pipe, Tinware. <lb />
Ac, <lb />
Doors, Sash. Blinds. Locks, Butts, <lb />
Nails, Axes. Glass and <lb />
Putty, Paints and Oils. <lb />
Agent for Brown's Cotton <lb />
Gin, Agent for <lb />
Safe Lock <lb />
Safes. Agent <lb />
for The <lb />
American Sewing Machines. <lb />
It will be to your interest to examine <lb />
my before purchasing. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
art It <lb />
all form ard of <lb />
Cures scrofula. <lb />
Glandular Meier., old <lb />
that all <lb />
Ar pm <lb />
Ar Sell in <lb />
Ar <lb />
am<lb />
Ar <lb />
TRAINS <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
r- pro <lb />
At Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar U pm <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train CO will not before Jan. 7th. <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Halifax 4.22 P M. arrives Scot- <lb />
good water. This land Is excellent for i land Neck at 6.15 M. Greenville 6.59 <lb />
k CURES <lb />
Poison <lb />
B- <lb />
S-i . <lb />
P. P. P. It a<lb />
Poison, W., rt. <lb />
P. <lb />
CURES<lb />
tonic and blood <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
BROS., Proprietors <lb />
Block, a A. <lb />
For sale at J. L. Wooten's Drug Store <lb />
ABBOTT'S <lb />
Without <lb />
PAIN. <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
For Shaving, Cutting and Dressing flail <lb />
the cultivation of fine tobacco. <lb />
One farm lying on branch of the <lb />
W. W. railroad about half way be- <lb />
tween and and within i <lb />
mile of a new depot, contains acres. <lb />
cleared and balance timbered <lb />
with pine, oak, hickory, and cypress; <lb />
has good tenant houses; railroad pusses <lb />
nearly of this farm. The <lb />
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam. <lb />
Is in good state of cultivation and highly <lb />
improved; is line land. <lb />
A farm miles from Greenville on <lb />
Kin-Kin road known as the Jackson <lb />
farm; contains acres, cleared; has <lb />
good dwelling house and all necessary- <lb />
out buildings. This is a lint-class to- <lb />
farm. <lb />
A house and lot in Greenville on <lb />
corner near B. Cherry and W. S. <lb />
Rawls. now occupied by the family of <lb />
the W. A. Stocks, contains <lb />
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb />
local ion, only half a block from Main <lb />
street of the town. Possession <lb />
can be January 1st. <lb />
A good building lot on <lb />
street, between Third and Fourth <lb />
streets, splendid location. <lb />
The house and lot on Pitt <lb />
street near Dickinson Avenue, <lb />
good house of rooms, large lot with <lb />
stables end out buildings. <lb />
house and on <lb />
Pitt street, adjoining the lot of <lb />
Sheppard and the lot described In No. <lb />
large, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb />
of four rooms, dining and cook <lb />
plenty of room for garden. <lb />
Terms on any of the above property <lb />
can be bail on application to <lb />
WHICH <lb />
Printers and Binders <lb />
F. A K. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
the Opera House, at which place <lb />
have recently located, and where I have <lb />
in line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
with all the improved appliances; <lb />
ind chairs. <lb />
Razors sharpened at reasonable <lb />
J for work outside of my shop <lb />
promptly executed. Very respectfully, <lb />
CILLEY EDMONDS <lb />
BOILING WATER OR MILK <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK. <lb />
GRATEFUL-COMFORTING. <lb />
COCOA <lb />
1-2 La TINS ONLY. <lb />
a A <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb />
the State, and solicit orders for all <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
EDWARDS <lb />
PRINTERS AND BINDERS <lb />
RALEIGH, N. C. <lb />
P. M. p. m. Returning, <lb />
leaves 7.10 a. m., Greenville <lb />
8.25 a. m. Halifax a. <lb />
Weldon 11.98 a. m. daily except <lb />
Local freight train leaves <lb />
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb />
m., Greenville 6.80 p. m., <lb />
7.40 p. m. leaves at <lb />
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.65 <lb />
a. m., Scotland 2.20 p. Weldon <lb />
5.15 p. m. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun- <lb />
day, P M. Sunday P M, arrive <lb />
Williamston, N C, P M, P M. <lb />
Plymouth p. in., 5.20 p. m- <lb />
leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
0.00 a. m., Sunday a. mt <lb />
Williamston, N C, a 0.58 am. <lb />
arrive Tarboro, N C, A M <lb />
Train on Midland N Branch leave <lb />
Goldsboro daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, A M. Re <lb />
turning N C AM <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. N C, SO A M. <lb />
Train <lb />
Monet at P M, arrive Nashville <lb />
P SO P M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb />
8.35 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for Sunday, i. <lb />
and M Returning <lb />
ton at A at, and P. M. <lb />
lug at Warsaw ind <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A <lb />
Branch is No. Northbound is <lb />
No. except Sunday. <lb />
Trains No. South and North will <lb />
stop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson, <lb />
, Goldsboro Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection a <lb />
Weldon for all points North daily. Al <lb />
via Richmond, and except Sun <lb />
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday With Norfolk <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb />
points via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J It. Transportation <lb />
Greenville Iron Works <lb />
A. B. Prop. <lb />
AM <lb />
Engines, Saw Mills, Ac. repaired, <lb />
Iron Brass Castings made to order. <lb />
Largest stock Pipe and Pipe Fittings In <lb />
town. He sure so work to <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON. <lb />
Near depot Greenville, N C, <lb />
DEAF <lb />
,. <lb />
Com- <lb />
t. <lb />
. <lb />
This Trepidation has been In use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever known hits <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians all over <lb />
the country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention <lb />
most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment is <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which It obtained is owing entirely <lb />
to Its own as but little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring it before the <lb />
public. One bottle of tills Ointment will <lb />
sent to any address on receipt One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box tree. The usual <lb />
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb />
promptly attended to. Address ail <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. F. CHRISTMAN, <lb />
Sole Mar. and Proprietor, <lb />
Greenville. . C. <lb />
ALLEY A HYMAN, <lb />
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW <lb />
Views of Animal. Churches.- <lb />
cob. Family Gatherings, taken at <lb />
Short Notice. Copying from <lb />
to lite size. In Inks, Crayon or <lb />
Colors. <lb />
Head quarters for line Photographs. <lb />
Call and <lb />
B HYMAN, Manager. <lb />
V. <lb />
Tar<lb />
Alfred Greenville, <lb />
f. B. Vice-Pres <lb />
J. Greenville, Sec A <lb />
K. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb />
cant. R. F. Washington, Gen <lb />
The People's Line for travel on <lb />
Steamer is the finest <lb />
and quickest boat on the river. <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially tor the comfort, e <lb />
and convenience of Ladles. <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on tire Steamer Greenville la <lb />
not only attract. <lb />
Leaves Monday, <lb />
and Friday at, o'clock, a. M. <lb />
Leaves Tuesday. <lb />
SC. X. C <lb />
Salve <lb />
The best salve In the world for cuts, <lb />
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, <lb />
chapped hands, <lb />
corns, and all eruptions, and <lb />
lively cures piles, or no pay required, it <lb />
is guaranteed to give satisfaction <lb />
or money refunded. Price o per <lb />
box. For sale by Jno. L- <lb />
MUNICIPAL BONDS <lb />
INDUSTRIAL STOCKS <lb />
CORPORATION BONDS <lb />
APPROVED BANK STOCKS <lb />
OAK <lb />
PAY INTEREST. <lb />
ALSO<lb />
IN ma. <lb />
Bf <lb />
a. v. <lb />
PARKER'S <lb />
HAIR BALSAM <lb />
hi <lb />
to <lb />
to its Youthful Color. <lb />
Cur-l U hair <lb />
ti <lb />
OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb />
WILL CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb />
BUGGIES, <lb />
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, consequently put up nothing <lb />
but first-class work. We keep up with the times and improved styles <lb />
material used In all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb />
Ran. Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready . <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
he year round, which wt will sell as low as <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope to <lb />
merit a continuance of the same <lb />
X. 13- <lb />
CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
Co., a. v. <lb />
How Lost I <lb />
Its<lb />
FREE <lb />
of On <lb />
Pr. W. <lb />
No. ft., <lb />
ha many <lb />
tool no . <lb />
The of of U n <lb />
nun <lb />
J. L, SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt, and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an <lb />
, pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
I FURNISHING HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
Gin and Rock Lime. Plaster op Paris, and <lb />
Hair. Harness, and addles <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's O. N. T- Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per per for Bread Prep <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Jobbers Prices, White Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
JAME Prop- <lb />
Greenville, W. <lb />
We bare <lb />
Chair used In the art. Clean towels, <lb />
harp razors, and guaranteed <lb />
h. every instance. Call and be eon <lb />
Lao lee walked ow at their rest- <lb />
WHY <lb />
n e riB <lb />
Pets,<lb />
CLOTHES TALE, a sad they would of abort <lb />
necessary when <lb />
and the NOT SO THE or their <lb />
rubbing. <lb />
In the old-fashioned <lb />
ad. <lb />
as much as poor, misguided women who still <lb />
burning am <lb />
with common <lb />
necessary <lb />
They would say dread <lb />
antiquated <lb />
who wash in tho modern with tho <lb />
PYLE'S PEARLING WASHING COMPOUND. <lb />
It saves the clothes, women ; their time end health, and is<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017530_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
WORST FORM <lb />
-OF------ <lb />
La Grippe <lb />
------CUBED IN------ <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
N. C <lb />
men be bought <lb />
ran men be bought <lb />
o, they are not sale, <lb />
o, they arc not for sale. <lb />
Below we give the names of <lb />
some of the best men <lb />
in the United States, <lb />
who voluntarily <lb />
gave their <lb />
of <lb />
cures <lb />
made the use of <lb />
Royal <lb />
Among them were many old <lb />
chronic cases of from ten to <lb />
twenty years standing., <lb />
We refer the read- <lb />
to any of the <lb />
names given <lb />
below. <lb />
Be. D., Chicago, <lb />
cured of and Catarrh. <lb />
Gen. Gainesville. <lb />
Major J. Y. Rankin, Atlanta, <lb />
Worst form. <lb />
J. B. Hawthorne, <lb />
Catarrh. Twenty years standing. <lb />
Gen. G. P. M. Turner. General <lb />
of Tenn. Rheumatism. years standing <lb />
Ex-Gov. R. Texas, mother <lb />
cured of Dyspepsia and General Debility. <lb />
G. W. Nashville, Tenn., <lb />
La and Nervous Debility. <lb />
Rev. P. Jones, Wife <lb />
cured Nervous Headache y r. <lb />
Dr. J II. Pearson. Si. Louis, Mo., <lb />
Stomach and Kidney <lb />
E. F. Small, Atlanta. Asthma. <lb />
yr- <lb />
Kev. C. E. Wright, Chattanooga. <lb />
Tenn. Sou cured of Epilepsy. yr, <lb />
Jones, Norfolk, Va., Neuralgia <lb />
and La <lb />
B. W. Cheek. Norfolk. Va., <lb />
Re M. O. Cole, New Orleans, linen <lb />
and Dyspepsia- <lb />
Col. I. Atlanta, Kidney <lb />
Troubles and Paralysis <lb />
Major Charles W. Atlanta, <lb />
Nervous <lb />
Mrs. Mary A. Atkinson, Atlanta. <lb />
ma . j r. <lb />
Rev. J. lawless, Winchester, <lb />
Inflammatory Rheumatism. Wost form. <lb />
H. S Blacknall, Atlanta. La Grippe. <lb />
Worst form. in twenty-four hours. <lb />
Hon. Lyle, Senator 27th Dis- <lb />
Ga. Wife cured of Neuralgia. <lb />
W. E. Athens. Ga., <lb />
Rheumatism. Severe case- <lb />
Mrs. Joe Davis, Piano, Texas, Cough <lb />
and Hemorrhage. <lb />
Rey. A. B. Canton, Ga, <lb />
Neuralgia and Liver Trouble. <lb />
Dr. O. P. Stark, Alexandria, La., <lb />
Asthma. <lb />
Rev. W. R. Gwaltney, N. <lb />
Dyspepsia. <lb />
A. W. Jackson, Ga., <lb />
Fifteen years standing. <lb />
Mrs. M. Farmer, <lb />
Rheumatism. Ten years standing. <lb />
J. B. St. I-i Catarrh and <lb />
M. Whitman, St. Louis, Eczema. <lb />
D. D. Nashville, <lb />
Te i., Dyspepsia and <lb />
Rev. W. G. E. Cunningham, D. D. <lb />
Ed. S- Literature, <lb />
D. C. Chicago, <lb />
Worst form <lb />
Rev, W. B. Morris, Ashley. Ill, Spinal <lb />
Dr J Fulfill. Liberty, Kan. <lb />
and Rheumatism. Very <lb />
S M Chicago, and <lb />
Rheumatism. <lb />
Rev. G. W. Clark, Texas. <lb />
Child cured of Summer Complaint. <lb />
J J Scruggs, BUM, Miss. Child cured <lb />
Of Summer <lb />
Chamberlain, Chicago, La- <lb />
Grippe and <lb />
J II Ky, <lb />
sis. Eight years standing. <lb />
F Gray, Ohio, Rheumatism and <lb />
La Grippe <lb />
John t Cincinnati, Ohio, La <lb />
Grippe and Rheumatism <lb />
Rev Samuel H Schwartz, Chicago, Ca- <lb />
and La Grippe <lb />
Rev W II Wells. Birmingham, La <lb />
Grippe d Rheumatism <lb />
Rev B H Rivers, Ky <lb />
and Debility. <lb />
Rey G W Winn, Nashville, Tenn, <lb />
pep-iii and La Grippe <lb />
The lamented Henry W. <lb />
said of be- <lb />
it to be the Thule <lb />
of <lb />
We could fill this paper with <lb />
names of people who been <lb />
cured of diseases the use of <lb />
ROYAL but <lb />
consider the above sufficient. <lb />
We are having with us, and <lb />
the country, the dread- <lb />
Hundreds <lb />
are being cured right here in a <lb />
few hours <lb />
By Taking Two of <lb />
In One of Hot <lb />
Hoar <lb />
six or eight hours. It is <lb />
as pleasant to take as a glass of <lb />
lemonade. For sale at per <lb />
bottle by all <lb />
I by <lb />
King's Royal Co., <lb />
GEORGIA , <lb />
RELIGIONS OF INDIA. <lb />
The Watch-Tower <lb />
The magnitude of India is not <lb />
known by the ordinary reader. It <lb />
is nineteen hundred miles long <lb />
and eighteen hundred miles wide- <lb />
half the size of the United States. <lb />
With a territory only half the size <lb />
of the United States it is really <lb />
marvelous when we consider the <lb />
density of its population. The <lb />
United States including the <lb />
ans has sixty three millions, while <lb />
India with less territory has two <lb />
hundred and eighty millions- Of <lb />
this only four per cent can <lb />
read their own language. They <lb />
are like all human beings, so con- <lb />
that they must worship. <lb />
If they do not worship the one <lb />
true God they must worship a God <lb />
even if it is one made of their own <lb />
hands. <lb />
The religions of this dark <lb />
country are the the Mo- <lb />
and Brahms. While <lb />
Hire is a manifest in <lb />
their mode of worship, still they <lb />
worship and that with all their <lb />
power. Tho are <lb />
known as fire worshipers. Their <lb />
name tells us that they worship <lb />
fire. These number <lb />
about one hundred and twenty- <lb />
millions and reside in Bombay and <lb />
on the Western slope of the <lb />
try. They believe that there is a <lb />
God, who created all things and <lb />
afterwards created two other Gods <lb />
the God of light and goodness, <lb />
and the God of darkness and evil. <lb />
They believe that when every- <lb />
thing is full of light goodness <lb />
this God is in the but <lb />
when darkness and evil prevail <lb />
this God is in the In <lb />
fact these two Gods are constantly <lb />
at war. one with the other. To <lb />
carry into execution the works of <lb />
the different Gods human beings <lb />
are used as instruments. If a ship <lb />
goes to sea and has a safe and <lb />
pleasant voyage the God of good- <lb />
is in the If the <lb />
voyage is with difficulty <lb />
and danger the God of <lb />
is in the Whatever <lb />
is accompanied with goodness and <lb />
happiness is attributed to the reign- <lb />
power of this God. mid every <lb />
pain, sorrow and disappointment is <lb />
attributed to the God of evil. It <lb />
is strange that in all <lb />
the happiness contemplated by <lb />
these fire the women <lb />
are entirely ignored -they have no <lb />
hope of anything beyond this life. <lb />
The women are regarded as the <lb />
lowest and vilest of beings. She <lb />
is worse than a hewer of wood and <lb />
drawer of water. <lb />
As indicated these <lb />
ship fire. A tire is constantly <lb />
burning on an altar in the temple- <lb />
No one is allowed to approach this <lb />
fire except the priests and they <lb />
must first cover their mouth and <lb />
nose with a cloth for fear that the <lb />
breath will contaminate the fire. <lb />
They worship the sun, <lb />
moon, stars and sometimes trees. <lb />
As the Sun is setting they may be <lb />
seen at the waters edge bowing and <lb />
praying to the sun as it sinks be- <lb />
hind the Western lull. They pray <lb />
after this manner. Thou that has <lb />
watched over us during tho day <lb />
please protect us during the dark <lb />
shades of the Send some <lb />
token of thy presence, if only a star <lb />
and let us know that thou art with <lb />
us. This prayer is offered with <lb />
much fervor and earnestness. <lb />
These have a peculiar <lb />
way of disposing of their dead. <lb />
A tower is erected in one corner of <lb />
a lot and on the top is a grate. <lb />
After death the body is borne by <lb />
four men on a bier to the foot of <lb />
the tower. Here the cloth that <lb />
covers the face is removed and a <lb />
white dog is permitted to look on <lb />
the face of the dead. This is a <lb />
token diseased is happy. <lb />
The face is again covered and four <lb />
other men bear the body up to the <lb />
grate where it is left- Soon as the <lb />
pall bearers descend or <lb />
buzzard alight and in a few <lb />
the flesh is torn from the <lb />
and by these <lb />
buzzards, while the bones fall <lb />
through the grate to the bottom of <lb />
the tower. The only woman <lb />
is allowed to attend the funeral is <lb />
the widow and she is only allowed <lb />
to follow so as to be cursed and <lb />
otherwise abused. <lb />
The reader no doubt thinks that <lb />
these are very ignorant. <lb />
This is a mistake- They are the <lb />
best educated people. A boy who <lb />
can't speak three languages is re- <lb />
as being very ignorant- <lb />
If they are so very intelligent, why <lb />
are they not Christians- They <lb />
have the Bible and read it- They <lb />
think Jesus was a most excellent <lb />
man and very good. But why are <lb />
they not Christians- The sad <lb />
story is told in their own words. <lb />
They say to you, we have dealings <lb />
with your merchants and shippers <lb />
and if they are Christians we don't <lb />
want anything to do with <lb />
These men who hail <lb />
a Christian land live drunken, <lb />
licentious, profane lives, and the <lb />
heathen looks at Christianity <lb />
through them and regard it a very <lb />
dangerous religion. It is a pain- <lb />
fact, these traders and shippers <lb />
a Christian last, are doing <lb />
more to becloud the heathen mind <lb />
than the missionaries can do <lb />
good If every one who profess- <lb />
ed Christianity it and <lb />
lived up to its requirements; <lb />
poor India would be <lb />
captured for within ten <lb />
What a on to all of us <lb />
in this country The <lb />
unholy, profane lives of Christians, <lb />
strikes a fatal blow to Christianity. <lb />
May the rebuke from a heathen <lb />
make every Disciple of the Lord a <lb />
living letter seen and read of all <lb />
men. <lb />
Curt- <lb />
This is beyond the most <lb />
M j ever <lb />
Id, a few invariably cure the <lb />
worst cases of Cough. Croup and Bron- <lb />
while its success In the <lb />
sure of Consumption is without a <lb />
in the history of Since its <lb />
discovery it has been sold on a <lb />
a test which no other medicine <lb />
can stand. If you have a cough we earn- <lb />
ask you to try it. Price Sue. <lb />
and If your lungs are sore, chest, or <lb />
back lame, use Shiloh's Porous Plaster. <lb />
Sold at WOOTEN'S DRUG STORE. <lb />
THEY DON'T READ NEWSPAPERS.<lb />
It is a waste of time and of a <lb />
very generous attribute of human <lb />
character, to lavish sympathy upon <lb />
the fools who buy bogus gold <lb />
bricks, or who are out of <lb />
their money by sharpers, or who are <lb />
tempted into the dens of the <lb />
or counterfeit money deal- <lb />
Such cases are reported <lb />
most every day in some of the <lb />
journals of the country, but the <lb />
victim is always a countryman, and <lb />
one whose habits of economy <lb />
prevent him from reading the daily <lb />
newspapers. <lb />
Now and then an old man in his <lb />
dotage, once possessing average <lb />
may betaken in by <lb />
these criminals who simply play <lb />
for fools, but in all other cases the <lb />
men who buy gold bricks at a <lb />
great bargain, or who undertake <lb />
to gamble with dealers, or <lb />
who dream of wealth by the <lb />
chase of counterfeit money, are <lb />
simply the idiots who think it but <lb />
waste of money to inform them- <lb />
selves of the worlds doing by reg- <lb />
reading the newspapers. <lb />
No man who has been a reader of <lb />
any sort of a newspaper, even the <lb />
most obscure weekly, could be <lb />
of the fact that the men <lb />
who offer to sell gold at a <lb />
bargain, to play tho game <lb />
or to sell counterfeit money, are <lb />
unmitigated scoundrels and must <lb />
cheat somebody, and that they <lb />
ways prefer to cheat at first hand. <lb />
The worst economy in the world <lb />
this enlightened age, is the fail- <lb />
to read regularly a daily news- <lb />
paper, if it is accessible ; if not, to <lb />
read the best weeklies that can be <lb />
obtained. There is not a man in <lb />
the country capable of reading <lb />
who does not lose ten times and <lb />
often a hundred times, and <lb />
a thousand times more <lb />
than the cost of a newspaper each <lb />
year, by the failure to inform <lb />
himself of what is going on around <lb />
him. <lb />
The time was when newspapers <lb />
were luxuries, but they are now <lb />
within the reach of every family in <lb />
the land. The daily newspaper is <lb />
as cheap to-day as the good week- <lb />
was twenty years ago, and the <lb />
home without a newspaper is the <lb />
place where all the adventurous <lb />
thieves of the land seek to ply <lb />
their vocation, and the victims of <lb />
such are not entitled to <lb />
sympathy, because their own in- <lb />
excusable ignorance and greed are <lb />
the sole causes of their misfortune. <lb />
DEATH OP JORDAN STONE. <lb />
Raleigh Chronicle. <lb />
The many friends of Jordan <lb />
Stone, who after a long connection <lb />
with the press in Nor Carolina <lb />
moved to California, will regret to <lb />
hear of his death, which occurred <lb />
at Los Angeles, California, on De- <lb />
26th. <lb />
Mr. Stone, who had been on- <lb />
gaged in the publication of the <lb />
Roanoke we believe, 1871 <lb />
founded the of <lb />
which Capt Sam Williams was the <lb />
editor. After a journalistic <lb />
in this city of several years, <lb />
Mr. Stone in 1878 went to <lb />
ville and in connection with Capt. <lb />
Root M. Furman published the <lb />
Asheville Citizen, which be- <lb />
came a powerful journal, wielding <lb />
a potent influence across the <lb />
For many years Mr. Stone w as <lb />
the Secretary of the North Caro- <lb />
Press Association, and he is <lb />
most kindly remembered by all of <lb />
the older members of the <lb />
Four years ago he was in- <lb />
to go to Los Angeles <lb />
some friends there and he soon es- <lb />
himself successfully in <lb />
business in that place. Although <lb />
of a naturally constitution, <lb />
he fell a victim to pneumonia, and <lb />
died at the age of fifty-two. <lb />
Mr. Stone was a man of fine <lb />
character, with- a pleasing address <lb />
and entirely devoted to his <lb />
He was held in high es- <lb />
teem and his death will be much <lb />
regretted. <lb />
Li Girl's In a Light- <lb />
house- <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. are keep- <lb />
of the Gov. Lighthouse at Sand <lb />
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a <lb />
daughter, four years old. Last April <lb />
she wax taken down with fol- <lb />
lowed with a dreadful Cough and turn- <lb />
into a Fever. Doctors at home and <lb />
at Detroit treated her, but in vain, she <lb />
grew worse rapidly, until she was a <lb />
of she tried <lb />
Dr. King's New Discovery and after the <lb />
use of two and a half bottles, was com- <lb />
cured. They say r. <lb />
New Discovery is worth its weight in <lb />
gold, yet you may get a trial bottle <lb />
at John L. store. <lb />
A funny man who asked the <lb />
question, is the state of <lb />
matrimony V received the follow- <lb />
explanatory It is one <lb />
of the United States. It is bound- <lb />
ed by hugging and kissing on one <lb />
side and cradles and babies on the <lb />
other. Its chief products are <lb />
broom sticks and staying <lb />
out of nights. It was discovered <lb />
by Adam and Eve while trying to <lb />
find a passage out of Paradise- <lb />
The climate is rather sultry until <lb />
you pass the tropics of housekeep- <lb />
when squally weather sets in <lb />
with sufficient power to keep all <lb />
hands as cool as cucumbers- For <lb />
principal roads leading to this <lb />
state consult the first pair of blue <lb />
eyes yon run against <lb />
Herald. <lb />
millions in said a drug- <lb />
gist when asked about Dr, Bull's Cough <lb />
Syrup. Price <lb />
For some time past I've been a <lb />
I recently tried Salvation Oil <lb />
which gave me almost instant relief. I <lb />
sincerely recommend It as it has entirely <lb />
cured me. JAMES GORDON, <lb />
more, Mil. <lb />
Setting it Right. <lb />
Answer This <lb />
Why do so many people w see around <lb />
seem to prefer to suffer and be made <lb />
miserable by Indigestion, Constipation, <lb />
Loss of Appetite, Coming up <lb />
of the Food, Yellow when for <lb />
will sell Shiloh's <lb />
to cure them Sold at J. L. <lb />
Wooten's Drug Store. <lb />
Is an over town <lb />
cold wind, this It <lb />
Is, but Dr. Ball's Cough Syrup Is all over <lb />
town too, you can buy It everywhere for <lb />
cents a bottle. <lb />
The careful mother always keeps Sal- <lb />
Oil handy. Twenty-live a <lb />
bottle. <lb />
St. Louis <lb />
There was a sign on the barber <lb />
shop window <lb />
BLACKED <lb />
A pedestrian halted, and read <lb />
and re-read the then lie <lb />
opened the door of the shop, and <lb />
sign ought to read <lb />
Not one man in fifty wears boots <lb />
The barber didn't say anything, <lb />
but after due reflection he con- <lb />
that the ran was right; so <lb />
he changed the sign so that it <lb />
BLACKED <lb />
-He had scarcely put it up when <lb />
the same man came along again, <lb />
and opened the door to say <lb />
one wants the inside of his <lb />
shoes blacked. We pay to have <lb />
the shine on the outside. You'd <lb />
better fix <lb />
The barber puzzled over the <lb />
matter for a while, and realized <lb />
that the man was again correct; so <lb />
the next day the sign replaced <lb />
by one <lb />
OUTSIDE OF SHOES BLACKED <lb />
perfectly said <lb />
the fault-finder, as he came along <lb />
in the afternoon. give <lb />
yourself away on the English <lb />
language- Always say what you <lb />
mean. You'd better put up a sign <lb />
in the other You <lb />
While You Everybody will <lb />
then understand that they must <lb />
wait while you <lb />
FRIEND; <lb />
To Young <lb />
Mothers <lb />
Warier <lb />
Hotel <lb />
Ike a Sunday paper, bat I'm a stranger <lb />
here and know which paper lathe <lb />
Ne ind your breakfast <lb />
Tl <lb />
pond better take this paper; <lb />
three twenty-four page. <lb />
If the waiter la spry bell get order <lb />
before you're through reading <lb />
Good <lb />
Playing Together. <lb />
He to -Don't yon <lb />
think I'm and a little too soft <lb />
She Bat then you <lb />
have wealth and position, and that <lb />
count for <lb />
.---- <lb />
Te la Bloom. <lb />
When the flower begins to wither, <lb />
eat the stalks off close to where the <lb />
pods begin to form; new win <lb />
soon appear, followed by new <lb />
j A Household <lb />
ran all <lb />
I BLOOD and SKIN <lb />
DISEASES j <lb />
Bi BiBi <lb />
Botanic Blood Balm <lb />
I Purse ULCERS. SALT <lb />
I I RHEUM. ECZEMA, I <lb />
ton at SKIN ERUPTION, I <lb />
In up A <lb />
no Iron any lit I <lb />
healing properties i <lb />
In a curt, It . i<lb />
FREE <lb />
M CO. Allan <lb />
a. I <lb />
FARMS <lb />
WHICHARD, <lb />
h.-. .-. <lb />
o. <lb />
ALLEY A HYMAN, <lb />
FINE PORTRAIT AND VIEW <lb />
PHOTOGRAPHERS. <lb />
Views of Animal. <lb />
Family Gatherings, taken at <lb />
Short Notice. Copying from small <lb />
to life size, in Inks, Crayon or <lb />
Colors. <lb />
Head quarters for line Photographs. <lb />
Call <lb />
R HYMAN, Manager. <lb />
V. O. <lb />
S Tar S <lb />
Alfred Greenville, <lb />
f. B. <lb />
J. <lb />
N. M. Tarboro, Geo <lb />
Capt. R. F. Washington, Gen <lb />
People's Line Bevel on Tat <lb />
River. <lb />
The Steamer U the finest <lb />
am quickest boat on river. <lb />
keen thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
end painted. <lb />
Pitted up specially for the comfort, <lb />
and convenience of Ladles. <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip the Steamer Is <lb />
not only but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Monday, Wednesday <lb />
and Friday t. o'clock, a. k. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and at <lb />
Freights received daily and threat <lb />
K. C. Greenville. If. C- <lb />
T -v. i <lb />
K. I . . . i<lb />
have i r.-i i <lb />
for lour -i n. i <lb />
valid urn, v.-ho has i <lb />
trouble A ml II <lb />
have found re. f l II <lb />
v. ti. <lb />
to him any r-r- it i . . i <lb />
I I <lb />
his fever, or to I J <lb />
would be I- f; .- I t <lb />
cost. Yours tr. . J <lb />
Mr. I avidest <lb />
w Inn . I c. . c. <lb />
foremost men of J h. <lb />
all <lb />
ATLANTIC C , <lb />
No. 1403 He i ., <lb />
e. C. <lb />
Mr. Randall the retired drug <lb />
gist of Madison says <lb />
he P. P. P. Ash, Poke <lb />
Root and as the best <lb />
on the market, he has net-n <lb />
more from the use of it <lb />
than any other blood medicine. <lb />
Exhausted vitality, <lb />
manhood, caused by <lb />
of the system will be cured by the <lb />
I. P. P., which tin- <lb />
and strength to the wreck of the system. <lb />
CURES SYPHILIS <lb />
. f t. <lb />
several h real <lb />
estate for Look over the list <lb />
below and call on or write them. <lb />
A lot on Third street MOW Co- <lb />
tenon, in town of <lb />
good two-story house with four rooms <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large stables on the premise. <lb />
O Two good building lots in <lb />
ville desirable <lb />
location. <lb />
O A lot on street. <lb />
Front, and Second, has nice house of <lb />
r rooms, good well of water, large gr-l <lb />
den plot and stables. I <lb />
A lot in <lb />
and branches Condensed <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No No <lb />
4th, dally Mali, daily <lb />
. dally ex Hun. <lb />
W 12,30 pm S pm <lb />
Ar Rocky Mount am <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar Fayetteville <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington<lb />
am <lb />
p m<lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Goldsboro <lb />
j- Fayetteville <lb />
Angelina <lb />
Ar <lb />
TRAINS GOING Mouth <lb />
No No <lb />
dally dally <lb />
ex Hun. <lb />
Hi am fl fin iii I II inn <lb />
ion<lb />
No <lb />
daily <lb />
t. Urge single story house iv Wilson am s , <lb />
rooms, cook and dining rooms a., Mount <lb />
Inched, all necessary out building and Tarboro <lb />
m oN <lb />
aW a ah nM a aw am <lb />
all m <lb />
Cures scrofulA. <lb />
Maura.<lb />
stables, good water <lb />
i A fine farm containing acres, <lb />
. about miles from Greenville on Mt. <lb />
Pleasant road, has gin house, stables, <lb />
barns, two room tenant houses; <lb />
acres cleared, well wooded, <lb />
good water. This land Is excellent for <lb />
the cultivation of fine tobacco. <lb />
on branch of the <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Ar M pm H pm <lb />
Dally except <lb />
Train No. will not before <lb />
Train on Neck Road <lb />
Halifax 4.22 M. arrives Moot <lb />
land Neck at 6.18 M. 6.61 <lb />
P. M. p. m. Returning, <lb />
leaves 7.10 a. m., <lb />
One farm lying . <lb />
Va W. St. W. railroad about half way be- Arriving Halifax M a. m. <lb />
tween and within Weldon a. m. daily except Hun- <lb />
I mile a new depot, contains iv <lb />
cleared and balance In timbered I Local train <lb />
with pine, oak, hickory. and cypress; arriving Scotland 1.06 <lb />
has good tenant houses; railroad passes Greenville 0.30 p. m. <lb />
through Benin of this farm. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT <lb />
Another year has passed and I am here <lb />
with the same The New <lb />
New Patron, Piedmont, <lb />
and Seminole, nil of <lb />
these arc pronounced all <lb />
right. Also a full <lb />
line of Heating <lb />
Stoves. <lb />
Stove Pipe, Tinware, Hot- <lb />
Ac, Ac. <lb />
BL, U. <lb />
H-- r. Me. <lb />
r. r. r. a . . <lb />
p. p. p. <lb />
Cures rheumatism <lb />
ere f -i b <lb />
tn <lb />
CURES <lb />
Doors, Sash. Blinds. Locks, Butts, <lb />
Nails. Axes. Glass and <lb />
Putty, Paints and Oils, Ac, Ac. <lb />
Agent for Brown's Cotton <lb />
for <lb />
Safe A Lock <lb />
Safes. Agent <lb />
for The <lb />
American Sewing Machines. <lb />
It will be to your interest to examine <lb />
my stock before purchasing. <lb />
D. D. HASKETT. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK. <lb />
This has In use over <lb />
fifty years, and wherever known has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
by the leading physicians nil over <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. Tills Ointment is <lb />
long standing and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained Is owing entirely <lb />
to its own efficacy, as but little effort has <lb />
ever been made to bring It before the <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box The usual <lb />
to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb />
promptly attended to. Address all or- <lb />
and communications to <lb />
T. K. <lb />
Sole Mar and Proprietor, <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
Stirs <lb />
The best salve In world for cuts, <lb />
bruises, sores, ulcers, salt rheum, fever, <lb />
chapped hands, <lb />
corns, and all eruptions, and <lb />
piles, or no pay required. It <lb />
is guaranteed to give <lb />
or money refunded. Price M per <lb />
For sale by Jno. L. <lb />
MUNICIPAL BONDS <lb />
INDUSTRIAL STOCKS <lb />
CORPORATION BONDS <lb />
APPROVED BANK STOCKS <lb />
INTEREST. <lb />
SAFE, <lb />
PAY<lb />
in <lb />
CM <lb />
CO <lb />
to B <lb />
Smith's Parlor. <lb />
JAMB A. SMITH. Prop. <lb />
Greenville, W. <lb />
We the easiest <lb />
Chair ever used in art. Clean towels, <lb />
sharp razors, and satisfaction guaranteed <lb />
B. every instance. Call and be con <lb />
Ladles on at their rest- <lb />
W r. r. P. A, <lb />
BROS., Proprietor, <lb />
Block, <lb />
For sale at J. L Drag Store <lb />
land has clay with sandy loam. <lb />
Is in slate of cultivation mid highly <lb />
Is line trucking Lead. <lb />
A farm H miles from on <lb />
I Kin-Inn known as tin- <lb />
7.40 p. m. Returning leaves at <lb />
7.20 a. m. arriving 9.95 <lb />
a. Scotland 2.20 p. m. <lb />
5.15 p. m. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A It. R. dally except Hun- <lb />
farm; contains acres, cleared; has A, <lb />
food dwelling doom and necessary P M P M. <lb />
out building. This is a . m <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth <lb />
A house and lot In on <lb />
corner near Cherry and W. S. <lb />
I-. now by the of <lb />
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb />
rooms, convenient. Is convenient <lb />
location, only half a block from main <lb />
street of town. <lb />
call lat. <lb />
good lot on <lb />
Third and Fourth <lb />
streets, splendid location. <lb />
The house and lot on Pitt <lb />
street near <lb />
house of rooms, large lot with <lb />
-tallies and out buildings. <lb />
The house and on <lb />
adjoining the lot of <lb />
S. and the lot in No. <lb />
write, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb />
of lour room, dining and cook <lb />
plenty of room for garden. <lb />
Terms on any of the above property <lb />
can be had on application to <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
Cutting and II <lb />
AT THE <lb />
the Opera at which place <lb />
I have recently located, and where I have <lb />
everything In my line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
with all the appliances; <lb />
mil comfortable chain. <lb />
Razors at reasonable <lb />
for work of shop <lb />
promptly executed. Very respect <lb />
-V <lb />
WATER OR <lb />
GRATEFUL COMFORTING. <lb />
TINS ONLY.<lb />
mi<lb />
r mm <lb />
Com <lb />
all f-l. HIM <lb />
a-l. .- ,.,. Writ, <lb />
hair balsam <lb />
KM heir. <lb />
MIL<lb />
tr re Color. <lb />
M . W U half <lb />
, CONSUMPTIVE <lb />
B f It .- U-<lb />
How Lost; How <lb />
Gold Modal M and <lb />
VITALITY. <lb />
of On. <lb />
Printers and Binders <lb />
have the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind to be found in <lb />
the and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOR PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOB MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
A Mil BINDERS <lb />
It A N. C. <lb />
a. m. a. mt <lb />
N C, 7.30 a m, am. <lb />
arrive N C, A <lb />
Train on Midland N Branch leave <lb />
daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
rive N C, AM. Re <lb />
turning leaves i; <lb />
arrive Goldsboro. N C, A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
Monet at U M, arrive Nashville M <lb />
P HOM HO M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring Hope AH, Nashville <lb />
A M, arrival Rocky Mount A <lb />
except <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb />
for din tor dally, Sunday, e. <lb />
ton at H A M, and In M. <lb />
lug at Warsaw with Nos. And <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson A <lb />
Branch is No. Northbound It <lb />
No. M. except Sunday. <lb />
No. South and North will <lb />
stop only at Mount, Wilson, <lb />
mid Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connect loll a <lb />
for all North dally. Al <lb />
via and except Sun <lb />
day via Bay also at Rocky Mount <lb />
dally except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad for Norfolk all <lb />
point via Norfolk. <lb />
DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
J R. Transportation <lb />
I. M <lb />
Greenville Iron Works <lb />
A. B. Prop. <lb />
Saw Mills, Ac. repaired, <lb />
Iron mill Castings made to order. <lb />
Largest stock and Pipe In <lb />
town, lie sure so bi lug your work to <lb />
A. B. ELLINGTON. <lb />
Near depot Greenville, N C, <lb />
RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb />
THE MANUFACTURE OP <lb />
BUGGIES, <lb />
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb />
hut WORK. We keep up with the times and <lb />
material used in all work. All styles of Springs are use., you can from <lb />
Coil, Raw. Horn, King <lb />
keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIP <lb />
he year round, which wt- will as ah <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking people of and surrounding counties for past favors hope <lb />
merit a continuance of the same <lb />
T. P. <lb />
J, L. SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds placed in <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to buyers of Pitt and surrounding count of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an <lb />
pure straight GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. GEN <lb />
i HATH and BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb />
i I and CHILDREN'S SUITERS. and <lb />
GOODS, HASH and BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, and FLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Rock Lime. and <lb />
Hair. and <lb />
J, . . <lb />
Medical hat many iii- <lb />
bat <lb />
The of Ll, r l a <lb />
gM. <lb />
WEAK man. U <lb />
Potatoes, Put, <lb />
Ml other <lb />
like aB <lb />
a i t at <lb />
tool ant <lb />
mo m . . ----7-<lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A <lb />
Clark's O. N. T- Cotton which offer to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, less per cent for t ash. Bread Prep <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Halt and Wood <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a H and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
CLOTHES TALK, what a would tell of abort lire <lb />
the result of rubbing, twisting, burning and when <lb />
In the old-fashioned way with <lb />
They would say we dread <lb />
women who still hold antiquated <lb />
of and the washboard. NOT SO THE WOMEN, or their clothe. <lb />
common sou <lb />
wash-day as much as poor, misguided women who still <lb />
wash in modern with tho modern means, <lb />
PYLE'S PEARLINE <lb />
It saTes Ike clothes, women ; their time and health, and is <lb />
to i to that, <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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