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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 3 February 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:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <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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                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
---------HAS A--------- <lb />
Job Printing Room <lb />
That can be surpassed no <lb />
where in this section. <lb />
Our work always Rives <lb />
faction. <lb />
New Type <lb />
Good Presses <lb />
Best Material <lb />
ENO US YOUR ORDERS. <lb />
DER DRUMMER. <lb />
BY F ADAMS. <lb />
Who puts at pest <lb />
his on <lb />
mil d.-r a swell <lb />
drummer. <lb />
Who van it mine <lb />
Drops down his on <lb />
never to shut the door <lb />
drummer. <lb />
Who me by hard <lb />
how you <lb />
goes for right <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
Who in a trice. <lb />
dells me sec how <lb />
says I -r <lb />
Der dreamier. <lb />
Who say was flue <lb />
upon <lb />
cheats me den times out of nine <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
how bought, <lb />
Mooch less I good <lb />
But lets go, as he was <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
Who rants all goods to suit <lb />
his route, <lb />
veil was no <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
Who goes around I been omit. <lb />
up mine bier and mine kraut, <lb />
Katrina in <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
Who. lit comes again dis <lb />
hear has to say, <lb />
a eye goes away <lb />
Der drummer. <lb />
Good Advice Prom a <lb />
To young men Bob <lb />
Yon n of water, place <lb />
your finger it twenty-five or <lb />
thirty seconds, take it out and look <lb />
at the hole that is left. The size of <lb />
that hole represents about the <lb />
that advice makes on a <lb />
man's mind. <lb />
Don't depend too much on your <lb />
dead part, I mean. <lb />
The world wants live men ; it has <lb />
no use for dead ones. Queen <lb />
Victoria can trace her ancestors <lb />
back in a direct line to William <lb />
the Conqueror. If you can not <lb />
get farther lack than your father <lb />
you are Better off. Your father <lb />
was a man in his time than <lb />
old William. He had better <lb />
clothes to wear, better food to eat, <lb />
and was better housed. <lb />
If you are a be sure <lb />
that you will be found out. Cheek, <lb />
brass or pall never gets ahead of <lb />
merit. <lb />
I love a young man who is <lb />
Ask for what <lb />
you want. If you want to marry a <lb />
rich man's daughter or borrow <lb />
five hundred dollars from him. <lb />
ask him for it amounts to the <lb />
same thing in the end. It is <lb />
always better to astonish a man <lb />
than to bore him. <lb />
Remember that in the morning <lb />
of life comes the hard working <lb />
days. Hard work never killed a <lb />
man. It's fun, recreation, <lb />
holidays, that kill. The fun <lb />
that results in a head next morn- <lb />
so big that a tub could <lb />
cover it is what kills. Hard work <lb />
never does. <lb />
Those who come after us have <lb />
to work just as hard as we do. <lb />
When I shovel snow off my side- <lb />
walk, if, perchance, I take a three- <lb />
quarter piece off my neighbor's <lb />
walk. I put it back, b if I <lb />
didn't I should be doing him an <lb />
injustice. <lb />
You can't afford to do anything <lb />
but what is good. You are on <lb />
dress parade all the time. <lb />
Don't be afraid of pounding <lb />
persistently at one thing. Don't <lb />
be afraid of being called a one- <lb />
idea man or crank- If yon have <lb />
an idea you have one more than <lb />
most men have. It a smart <lb />
man to be a crank. <lb />
No Third Person Present. <lb />
Between Judge Martin, of Eng- <lb />
land, and a witness in court, it is <lb />
said, occurred the following <lb />
The witness seemed unable <lb />
to report verbatim the <lb />
in point, and the judge took <lb />
him in hand. <lb />
man, tell us now exactly <lb />
what <lb />
my lord; I said would <lb />
not have the <lb />
what was his answer <lb />
said he had been keeping it <lb />
for and that <lb />
no, he could not have said <lb />
that; he spoke in the first <lb />
my lord, I was the first <lb />
person that <lb />
mean, don't bring in the third <lb />
person; repeat his exact <lb />
was no third person, my <lb />
lord, only him and <lb />
good fellow, he did not say <lb />
he ha been keeping the pig. He <lb />
T have been keeping <lb />
assure you, my lord, there <lb />
was no mention of your lordship <lb />
at all. There was no third person <lb />
there, and if anything had been <lb />
said about your lordship, I must <lb />
have heard <lb />
The judge gave in. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
VOL. XI. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1892. <lb />
NO. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
A SHORT ADDRESS TO YOUNG <lb />
MEN. <lb />
James Allen in Nashville Times. <lb />
The time has come when young <lb />
men must educated or fall into <lb />
the rear rank. Every one must <lb />
choose his own position in life. <lb />
This he does whenever he settles <lb />
the question as to whether he will <lb />
be an educated or uneducated man. <lb />
There is no avocation or calling, <lb />
from the life of the farmer to that <lb />
of the learned professions, in <lb />
which a education is not <lb />
necessary to the highest success. <lb />
The young man, no matter what <lb />
his abilities are, who goes into <lb />
business life without a well trained <lb />
and well stored mind goes into it <lb />
only half made up. You know men <lb />
who have been successful and <lb />
somewhat influential without be- <lb />
educated the schools. <lb />
but numbers of men of this class <lb />
have said to met greatest <lb />
mistake of my life has been that <lb />
did not become thoroughly <lb />
before entering upon <lb />
life. I have made money and <lb />
won what men call success, but I <lb />
am not mentally equipped for the <lb />
circles and opportunities to which <lb />
my money and labor have brought <lb />
me- It is now too late, but I would <lb />
give thousands if I undo <lb />
this fatal <lb />
You will also observe that these <lb />
men are the most determined that <lb />
their children shall be thoroughly <lb />
educated. They do not want their <lb />
sons to repeat their folly or inherit <lb />
their misfortunes. <lb />
In the main, boys have much <lb />
more to do in determining this <lb />
matter than they think. Almost <lb />
every father will be found willing <lb />
to educate his son, even with great <lb />
labor and sacrifice to himself, pro- <lb />
the boy shows a proper am- <lb />
to rue above the common <lb />
level and exhibits a praiseworthy <lb />
diligence in the use of the <lb />
which his father provides <lb />
for him. Yon may not have <lb />
thought of it, but it is really a <lb />
great affliction for parents to have <lb />
sons who are without an ambition <lb />
to be something in the <lb />
will not, when in school at home <lb />
or abroad, study and strive to ex- <lb />
who are content to be nothing <lb />
or next to nothing- Are you will <lb />
to be one of these The world <lb />
shall have y our answer little later <lb />
in life. <lb />
There is in this day and in this <lb />
land no excuse for one who fails to <lb />
become educated. young man <lb />
a good mind and good health <lb />
can educate himself, thus be- <lb />
come fitted for a grand and useful <lb />
life, if he so make up his and <lb />
heart. <lb />
Many of our brightest and best <lb />
boys and young men are being <lb />
ruined by going too early in what <lb />
is called business. They, and <lb />
their parents, feel com- <lb />
that they are called at <lb />
the age of or years to take <lb />
places of responsibility the <lb />
store, the shop, the office; but <lb />
when you reflect that he who is a <lb />
bright office boy at is more i <lb />
than likely to be only an office <lb />
boy at the compliment vanishes <lb />
and the serious results begin to <lb />
appear. This is true, because as <lb />
a rule young men must be <lb />
ed a; from to years of age- <lb />
Any engagement in business takes <lb />
away a taste for the drill work <lb />
to a thorough <lb />
The right time for this <lb />
process having passed it <lb />
can never be recalled, and thus <lb />
the young man, by one fatal mis- <lb />
take, has bound his life to this <lb />
lower plane. <lb />
There are many young men who <lb />
fail for lack of a higher standard. <lb />
They seek only a little or <lb />
training, and then go off for <lb />
a few months to a so-called <lb />
and get there a little <lb />
technical training in type writing, <lb />
stenography, book-keeping, <lb />
engineering, and the like, and <lb />
think that they are prepared for <lb />
life. They seek a <lb />
education, and they will <lb />
probably find but they will also <lb />
find, when it is too late, that they <lb />
have prepared themselves for be- <lb />
only the servants and the fol- <lb />
lowers of other men, instead of <lb />
their leaders- <lb />
In this regard, as all others, <lb />
aim high. Do not be content to <lb />
be a half man. Develop to their <lb />
fullness the talents which God has <lb />
conferred upon yon- The day in <lb />
which yon live demands <lb />
educated men as none be- <lb />
fore it has ever done- It <lb />
have them; it will have them. Will <lb />
yon be one of them or will yon, <lb />
i r requires, <lb />
slink into the rear, and ignobly <lb />
i yield the to others who are <lb />
no more capable than yourself <lb />
MARRIED COURTSHIP. <lb />
Chicago Tribune. <lb />
set his lips firm- <lb />
together, buttoned his coat <lb />
about him and started for home. <lb />
was as much my f suit as <lb />
he muttered, when I <lb />
went home the other day with the <lb />
idea of courting my wife, I didn't <lb />
seem to succeed. I ought to have <lb />
known better than to bother her <lb />
when she was picking the pin <lb />
off an old hen, and Bridget <lb />
was taking an afternoon out. I <lb />
won't make a blunder like that <lb />
About half an hour afterward, <lb />
Mr. entered the family man- <lb />
He found Mrs. in the <lb />
sitting-room. Merely remarking <lb />
that it was a chilly day, he throw a <lb />
package carelessly into the fire <lb />
that burned brightly in the grate. <lb />
is that, in- <lb />
quired Mrs. somewhat <lb />
but my pipe and cigar- <lb />
he replied with a yawn. <lb />
sworn off from <lb />
Mrs. looked pleased, but <lb />
said nothing. <lb />
will save me at least one <lb />
hundred dollars a year, Mary <lb />
observed with another <lb />
yawn, as he walked aimlessly about <lb />
the room with his hands in his <lb />
pockets, the habit's a nuisance <lb />
certainly assented Mrs. <lb />
glad you've <lb />
you'll only stay <lb />
Mr. continued his aimless <lb />
walk about the room. Presently <lb />
he brought up in front of a small <lb />
closet that he had been the <lb />
it of his smoking-cap and <lb />
smoking-jacket in. He opened it, <lb />
look those garments out and in-1 <lb />
them. <lb />
I am about said, <lb />
make a clean job of it- I'll <lb />
hang these things in the woodshed, i <lb />
and the next tramp that comes j <lb />
along may have them. Yon can <lb />
use this closet for anything you <lb />
like. Seems to me, continued Mr. <lb />
resuming the nonchalant <lb />
walk about the room, and extend- <lb />
his stroll into the room ad- <lb />
joining, we don't have more than <lb />
about half enough closets in this <lb />
house. If I were building a house <lb />
for human beings to live I'd <lb />
put in fifty of Now, here's a <lb />
place under this stairway where I <lb />
could have a good, large closet <lb />
made. I suppose you'd object to <lb />
it <lb />
I responded <lb />
Mrs. warmly. would just <lb />
suit me, <lb />
I'll have it And <lb />
kept on yawning and <lb />
strolling leisurely through the <lb />
rooms. <lb />
are half a dozen other <lb />
ventured his wife, some- <lb />
what timidly, I should like <lb />
to have closets built or shelves put <lb />
up, while you are about <lb />
right. Yon have all you <lb />
Mrs. went behind the door <lb />
and hugged herself. Mr. <lb />
continued to walk about j <lb />
what will you like for <lb />
dinner this <lb />
Mary <lb />
thing. I don't know but I'd like <lb />
some hot <lb />
doesn't know how to <lb />
make good <lb />
Do you like <lb />
my biscuits better than <lb />
never eat biscuits <lb />
but yours if I can help <lb />
Mrs. came nearer to her <lb />
husband- For the first time in <lb />
eleven years she threw her arms <lb />
about his neck, nobody <lb />
has any business to be intruding <lb />
here. Please retire.<lb />
isn't such a hard job, even <lb />
for a married rhinoceros of eleven <lb />
standing, to court his wife, <lb />
if he only knows how to go at it <lb />
said Mr- to himself, as <lb />
he went about the the same <lb />
evening at a late hour locking up <lb />
things for the night. <lb />
forth <lb />
POOR BOYS WHO HAVE BECOME <lb />
PRESIDENTS. <lb />
The second President of the <lb />
United States, John Adams, was <lb />
the son of a farmer of moderate <lb />
means, who was compelled to work <lb />
constantly for the support of his <lb />
family. When at the age of the <lb />
son graduated at Harvard College, <lb />
his education was his only capital <lb />
for his start in active life- <lb />
Andrew Jackson was born in <lb />
log hut in extreme poverty. <lb />
grew up in the woods of <lb />
Carolina, living the homo of a <lb />
relative, where his mother worked <lb />
to support herself and three <lb />
James K. Polk, the eleventh <lb />
President, spent his early days on <lb />
a farm in the wilderness of North <lb />
Carolina. His father placed him <lb />
in a store, with the that <lb />
he should enter mercantile life <lb />
but his dislike for the business <lb />
was so great that, at the ago of <lb />
he was sent to the <lb />
Academy to tit him for <lb />
Millard Fillmore was the sou of <lb />
a New York farmer, and his home <lb />
was an humble one- When ho was <lb />
years old he was sent away <lb />
from home to learn the business <lb />
of a clothier- But five years later <lb />
he entered a law office and at the <lb />
age of was admitted to the bar. <lb />
lames Buchanan was born a <lb />
small town of the <lb />
mountains. His father was poor, <lb />
and his own built his homo in <lb />
the wilderness. When James was <lb />
eight years old ho was placed at <lb />
school, and six years entered <lb />
Dickinson College, where he grad- <lb />
with the highest honors. <lb />
It is well known that Abraham <lb />
Lincoln was the sou of parents <lb />
who wore the poorest of the poor. <lb />
Till he was more than his home <lb />
was a log cabin- His attendance <lb />
at school was limited to a few <lb />
mouths. From early life he was <lb />
compelled to depend on himself <lb />
only for his living, but <lb />
for his success in his business and <lb />
his profession. <lb />
At the ago of ten, Andrew John <lb />
sou was apprenticed to a tailor. <lb />
Previously his mother had sup- <lb />
ported him by her own labor. He <lb />
was never aide, it is said to attend <lb />
school. His education ho gained <lb />
by his own efforts at night, after <lb />
working all day at his trade, and <lb />
by the help of his wife- <lb />
Tho early homo of General <lb />
Grant, also, on tho of the <lb />
Ohio, more than years ago, was <lb />
without many of tho comforts of <lb />
civilized life. Till he was when <lb />
he was sent to West Point, he <lb />
ed the life of a common boy in a <lb />
common home- <lb />
James A- Garfield, as many of <lb />
his predecessors, was born in a log <lb />
hut- When he was a year and a <lb />
half old his father died. The <lb />
was poor. When he had hard- <lb />
entered bis teens he was doing <lb />
a man's work in a harvest field. <lb />
He learned the carpenter's trade- <lb />
He worked on the Ohio canal. He <lb />
was determined, however, to have <lb />
an education, and leaving his <lb />
Elane and his scythe, he worked <lb />
is way through the preparatory <lb />
school, and, with some help from <lb />
friends, was able to graduate at <lb />
Williams College. <lb />
The lives of many of the <lb />
dents prove that no boy is so poor <lb />
but that he may hope to attain the <lb />
highest honors which the <lb />
can people can <lb />
They are Thoroughly Read. <lb />
Savannah New. <lb />
The gets more for his <lb />
now than formerly, be- <lb />
cause the greater attractions of <lb />
the newspapers increase the <lb />
of newspaper readers and the <lb />
papers are read more thoroughly <lb />
now than ever before. The ad- <lb />
columns are an interest- <lb />
feature of well conducted news- <lb />
papers, and are read about as <lb />
generally as the news columns. <lb />
American Press. <lb />
There are published to-day in <lb />
the United States some <lb />
newspapers, trade papers, literary <lb />
weeklies and monthlies and other <lb />
periodicals, devoted to every in- <lb />
and order of any importance- <lb />
Every settled county in every <lb />
State and Territory has now two <lb />
weeklies, at least which represent <lb />
the two prominent parties, while <lb />
nearly every village of -in- <lb />
habitants has its own local <lb />
cation. It is estimated that <lb />
people find employment in the <lb />
production of these periodicals, and <lb />
that is invested in <lb />
those enterprises, says a writer in <lb />
the newspaper- <lb />
In the history of the American <lb />
newspaper there have been so far <lb />
six epochs, each m irking well de- <lb />
fined eras in the advance of the <lb />
country and of the press; these <lb />
may be indicated in this <lb />
First The first American news- <lb />
papers, 1690-1704. Second. The <lb />
colonial 1704-1765. Third. <lb />
The revolutionary pi 1765-1788- <lb />
Fourth. The party press, the re- <lb />
press, the agricultural <lb />
press, the sporting press, the com <lb />
press, etc., 1783-1833- <lb />
Fifth. The cheap press, 1833-1886- <lb />
Sixth- The telegraph and <lb />
pendent press, <lb />
BETTER ROADS DEMANDED. <lb />
A scientific gentleman in speak- <lb />
on this subject says <lb />
is almost a hopeless task to <lb />
attempt to arouse the people to <lb />
the necessity of making better <lb />
toads in the country, but it is one <lb />
that must be continued until some- <lb />
thing is done. Our country roads <lb />
as a whole are far behind the age <lb />
and are holding other things back. <lb />
They are tho channels of com- <lb />
and social intercourse, and <lb />
when they are out of order and <lb />
obstructed, business suffers, ex- <lb />
are increased and people <lb />
are shut off from the educating <lb />
and inspiring effects of mingling <lb />
in society. <lb />
tho long standing sys- <lb />
of repairing roads, individuals <lb />
feel that they working for tho <lb />
town or county instead of for <lb />
and that it is the <lb />
of such municipality to see <lb />
that the work is done and their <lb />
business to do as little as possible <lb />
for tho pay received. Much of <lb />
tho work is done as if the only <lb />
object was to have it to in- <lb />
without regard to the <lb />
permanent usefulness of the road. <lb />
particulars too well <lb />
known to every one who has seen <lb />
the work done, and no rule for <lb />
can given that will <lb />
apply to all but there should <lb />
be a general awakening on this <lb />
subject in country towns, and men <lb />
should realize that they are at <lb />
work for themselves, and that in <lb />
making a good road they are in- <lb />
creasing the durability of their <lb />
teams and carriages, reducing the <lb />
cost of getting their produce to <lb />
market and improving the means <lb />
of associating with their neighbors. <lb />
this climate our roads in <lb />
winter depend very much on <lb />
weather, but in the other months <lb />
they depend on the men who care <lb />
for them, and if the people would <lb />
but use more common sense and <lb />
s senseless selfishness in the <lb />
work, there would be great <lb />
made with the same <lb />
amount of labor. Tho strength of <lb />
a chain is measured by the weakest <lb />
link, and in moving heavy loads <lb />
they must be governed by the <lb />
worst place in the road. <lb />
prosperity of a town de- <lb />
pends upon the greatest good of <lb />
the whole, and if people who live <lb />
in thickly settled neighborhoods <lb />
would refrain from expending <lb />
needless labor in making turn- <lb />
pikes and smoothing up the road- <lb />
side at the town's expense along <lb />
their farms and would work when <lb />
there is less to do and more to do <lb />
with, they would show more signs <lb />
of what was once called civilization. <lb />
this is not to expected <lb />
under the old highway district <lb />
system, for every man who lives <lb />
on a good road imagines that his <lb />
taxes are a little higher on that <lb />
account, and every one who has a <lb />
poor road thinks he is taxed as <lb />
much as if tho road was better, <lb />
and this a feeling that is <lb />
not favorable to mutual aid. A <lb />
money tax put into the hands of a <lb />
competent commission to keep the <lb />
roads repair is the best arrange- <lb />
and gives the best <lb />
where it has been thoroughly <lb />
tried. Tho roads then kept up <lb />
to an even standard without re- <lb />
to whom or how many travel <lb />
over <lb />
Flirt. <lb />
Do you want to act a lie Then <lb />
flirt. <lb />
Do yon care lose the modest <lb />
charm of manner which is woman's <lb />
best heritage and man's too <lb />
found attribute Then <lb />
play at love. <lb />
Do you want your future life <lb />
embittered by memories which <lb />
will stab you when your heart is <lb />
beating with happiness Then <lb />
cheat some one into giving you <lb />
regard for falseness. <lb />
If you would be womanly, my <lb />
woman reader, or manly, my <lb />
known questioner, give your es- <lb />
teem to all who deserve it, your <lb />
friendship to those who are your <lb />
friends, and your heart's warm, <lb />
earnest love to one man or one <lb />
woman and let it be unsullied by <lb />
the flirtations which many count <lb />
in triumph on the fingers of both <lb />
hands. <lb />
A strange death is from <lb />
New Orleans. It is said that while <lb />
playing n hose a fire a <lb />
phone wire and an light <lb />
wire got crossed, the stream of <lb />
water from the nozzle struck the <lb />
wires, a heavy current followed <lb />
clown the water and killed the <lb />
fireman who was holding the <lb />
WHY FARMING DON'T PA V. <lb />
Atlanta Constitution. <lb />
A county paper in Tennessee, <lb />
the of Madison county, <lb />
interviewed the merchants <lb />
of the county, and prepared a <lb />
statement showing the of <lb />
food-stuffs and stock imported into <lb />
the county for the year ending <lb />
October, 1891. The following is a <lb />
statement i <lb />
lbs. meat at <lb />
lbs. lard at <lb />
flour at <lb />
bush, meal at <lb />
bush, corn at <lb />
tons hay at <lb />
tons bran at <lb />
47.000 bush, oats at Me, <lb />
bushels of Irish <lb />
at cents, <lb />
1.183 crates cabbage <lb />
bush, apples at 11.86, <lb />
1.297 bush, onions at 11.60, <lb />
1.000 horses and mules at <lb />
a head, <lb />
53.200 <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb />
From our Exchanges. <lb />
Louisburg It is <lb />
that there is more wheat sown in <lb />
Franklin county this year than for <lb />
several years past. <lb />
The President has appointed <lb />
Benjamin Henderson, a young <lb />
colored man, hardly more than <lb />
age-, postmaster at Fay- <lb />
He is the son of Abe <lb />
Henderson, a well known barber. <lb />
Progressive About <lb />
2.000,000 were spent in North <lb />
Carolina for last season. <lb />
Whether this was a wise <lb />
or not we cannot say, but any- <lb />
how raise your own supplies <lb />
buy less of everything. <lb />
Raleigh The took <lb />
of tho Atlantic hotel at <lb />
City met at the <lb />
last evening and conferred with <lb />
Mo Mr. John O. Plank, a widely <lb />
known Chicago hotel keeper, <lb />
whose plan is to lease the Atlantic <lb />
So it seems that tho of <lb />
Madison county in one year sent <lb />
nearly half a million dollars to the <lb />
north and west for supplies and <lb />
stock that should have been raised <lb />
at home. <lb />
If our readers would take tho <lb />
trouble to collect similar statistics <lb />
in each county they would readily <lb />
see one great reason why money is <lb />
tight with then, all the year round. <lb />
You cannot oat your cake and still <lb />
have it, is an old and saying. <lb />
Our farmers cannot send all their <lb />
money north and west and still <lb />
have enough currency to supply <lb />
their needs. <lb />
When our people raise what <lb />
they cat, and buy home-made <lb />
instead of giving the prefer- <lb />
to distant factories, they will <lb />
be independent and prosperous, <lb />
and before. The South for <lb />
generations has been eating her <lb />
cake, and then complaining vigor- <lb />
because it disappears. If <lb />
tho poorest county in Georgia <lb />
would keep its money at home in- <lb />
stead of sending it off for articles <lb />
that could be produced at home it <lb />
would a generation become a <lb />
wealthy community. <lb />
A Broken Marriage. <lb />
Christian <lb />
A scene of tragic pathos took <lb />
plane in Long Island City on Tues- <lb />
day, June 30th, at tho family <lb />
of a wealthy citizen. A <lb />
large number of friends had <lb />
to see the of the <lb />
host married- The bride was ready, <lb />
and the minister was in waiting <lb />
but tho groom came not. After a <lb />
hotel next season. <lb />
Tarboro A mad dog <lb />
passed through town Friday. <lb />
Some of the citizens endeavored <lb />
to kill him, but did not succeed. <lb />
This is the third mod dog report- <lb />
ed in this county in the past <lb />
month. The only way to prevent <lb />
dogs from going mad is to kill <lb />
them. <lb />
Southport On Wed- <lb />
night of last week, at <lb />
Kenansville. N. C-, occurred the <lb />
death of Mrs. Brown, <lb />
relict of the Into John Brown, n <lb />
former resident of Southport <lb />
Mrs. Brown died at <lb />
the advanced ago of years, <lb />
months and days. <lb />
A Tho sad <lb />
news comes from Seven Springs <lb />
of Mr. and Bin. Louis <lb />
husband and wife, both on tho <lb />
same day within a few hours of <lb />
each on Wednesday, of La Grippe. <lb />
They were of advanced years, most <lb />
estimable people and leave several <lb />
grown children and hosts of <lb />
and friends to mourn their <lb />
demise. <lb />
Durham Another liberal <lb />
and grand move. Durham's gen- <lb />
citizen. Washington <lb />
Duke, offers to increase his gift of <lb />
to Trinity College and <lb />
make it in cash with <lb />
in property value if the <lb />
of the will raise an ad- <lb />
endowment of and <lb />
equip the main building. His <lb />
Oner has been accepted. Mr. <lb />
Duke is doing a grand work for <lb />
Trinity and tho monument ho is <lb />
erecting is not of marble or bronze. <lb />
It will live in memory. <lb />
Raleigh New <lb />
Complaint having been made to <lb />
the Railroad Commission about <lb />
the accommodations for <lb />
at the Wilson depot, the <lb />
commission gave their attention <lb />
long which the friends j to tho matter, and the railroad <lb />
became anxious, tho family had <lb />
about made up their minds to in- <lb />
form the guests of non-arrival <lb />
of the missing bridegroom, when <lb />
company has agreed to remedy <lb />
the inconvenience complained of. <lb />
The commission has also ordered <lb />
that freight and passenger <lb />
shall be afforded on the <lb />
he entered the door. The person I Raleigh and Albemarle railroad at <lb />
he met first was father of Everett in Martin county, <lb />
bride, who saw that lie was county, and that <lb />
. i . satisfactory passenger <lb />
condition to act as principal in <lb />
Without a moments <lb />
hesitation he ordered the young <lb />
man the house, and told him <lb />
never to darken the doorway again, <lb />
file young man started to argue <lb />
the matter. Tho description of <lb />
what followed is taken from a daily <lb />
paper. The discussion was <lb />
and tho guests who <lb />
had crowded into tho hallway were <lb />
f that Mr.--------would throw <lb />
the young man out on his head, <lb />
when there was a rustling on the <lb />
stairs and the bride appeared. Her <lb />
eyes were wet with tears, but there <lb />
was a blush of indignation <lb />
her handsome face, and she point- <lb />
ed a gloved hand toward the front <lb />
door and commanded to <lb />
leave. He obeyed instantly. <lb />
Love may be as strong as death, <lb />
but wino is stronger than love. <lb />
We pity the bride that she loved <lb />
an object, and felicitate <lb />
her that his mask slipped off before <lb />
she became irrevocably his. <lb />
The papers still keep hammering <lb />
away on the and <lb />
matter- It is the biggest <lb />
racket nothing we ever <lb />
heard. Old man Grimsley, the <lb />
shooting Grimsley, and everybody <lb />
else say that the woman did <lb />
wrong and is a pure, innocent <lb />
Christian woman- How in the <lb />
name of God and common sense <lb />
can the woman be so pure and in- <lb />
and the man be guilty of <lb />
a fiendish, hellish crime <lb />
would appear from the criticisms <lb />
he is receiving I We are not de- <lb />
fending his kissing propensities, <lb />
but we like to see a common <lb />
sense in all <lb />
One Way to Save. <lb />
Home-made banks have become <lb />
a family institution with us, and <lb />
well have they taught us the truth <lb />
of the old proverb, a little <lb />
makes a <lb />
These banks are old baking-pow- <lb />
or cocoa boxes, with the lid <lb />
soldered on and a slit cut in the <lb />
top. Each member of our family- <lb />
has one, and saves for some pet <lb />
scheme or long desired article. <lb />
These or, as one of <lb />
our number calls them, <lb />
always astonish us, when <lb />
they ore opened, by the amount <lb />
of change they have picked up, <lb />
and we get quite ingenious in find- <lb />
ways to help fill them. <lb />
Rag money and the of a <lb />
car ride are two favorite sources <lb />
of income for our little boxes. <lb />
Then, there is often the price of <lb />
some article of dress we find we <lb />
can do without and odd pennies <lb />
are always dropped in. All these <lb />
little ways that help swell the <lb />
sum. Other ways will suggest <lb />
themselves. <lb />
It takes time to get a really nice <lb />
article but the money so saved is <lb />
never missed. One of our number <lb />
has saved enough by these boxes <lb />
for a sewing-machine, two clubbed <lb />
together for a book-case, and one <lb />
ambitious wants a mileage <lb />
ticket, and has almost the twenty <lb />
dollars necessary. <lb />
Now, when we hear a friend <lb />
for the unattainable, we <lb />
relate our experience, and suggest, <lb />
a Household. <lb />
There are a great many people <lb />
in tho world who are always just <lb />
getting ready to do something. <lb />
The REFLECTOR <lb />
A whale for <lb />
only One Dollar; but <lb />
ill order it <lb />
v in advance. <lb />
lint stumped <lb />
after your name <lb />
on of the <lb />
paper the <lb />
Subscription <lb />
Expires Two Weeks <lb />
From This <lb />
it Is to give yon no- <lb />
unless r <lb />
hewed in that time <lb />
the will <lb />
going to you <lb />
at the expiration of <lb />
the two weeks. <lb />
TO REMEDY BAD ROADS. <lb />
Herald, <lb />
A novel idea in road building is <lb />
that advanced by the a <lb />
newspaper published at Du. <lb />
Mississippi. The Signal idea is tint <lb />
the way to stimulate intensive <lb />
fanning and double and quadruple <lb />
farm values throughout the <lb />
is to build a system of dummy <lb />
roads, four to radiate from every <lb />
county seat. This, it is argued, is <lb />
a cheaper, more practical and <lb />
more useful system than the far <lb />
more expensive macadamized <lb />
roads. By making the roads of <lb />
standard cars could <lb />
loaded in all parts of the county, <lb />
and hauled by the dummy engines <lb />
to the county scats, and thence <lb />
carried over the trunk lines to <lb />
their destination. dummy en- <lb />
says the Signal, no <lb />
more than a team of four mules <lb />
and docs the work of a <lb />
The idea of establishing such a <lb />
railway network throughout the <lb />
South was conceived when its <lb />
anther saw a steam saw mill com- <lb />
build a dummy line miles <lb />
long between a pine forest and <lb />
its plant, whereupon <lb />
a sow mill company can afford <lb />
to build a railway to a pine forest, <lb />
cannot two counties <lb />
afford to connect their two capitals <lb />
by means of the same sort of <lb />
my The idea of the Mis- <lb />
editor may be car- <lb />
out. but many a poorer <lb />
scheme has been put through, and <lb />
a people whose highways <lb />
class at no time of the year and <lb />
practically impassible for a great- <lb />
or less period every winter will <lb />
take very kindly to anything which <lb />
makes them in a measure <lb />
pendent of the mud and tho rain <lb />
at times when they are now so <lb />
often hindered by these agencies <lb />
from marketing their products. <lb />
1300 Bushels of Potatoes, <lb />
This extraordinary of <lb />
Potatoes was raised on an acre and <lb />
a half of land the past season by <lb />
W. Bramble, Kent <lb />
County, Md., ho applied as a Fer- <lb />
to tho acre and a half of <lb />
ground only pounds of Pow- <lb />
ell's Green Bag Fertilizer for Po- <lb />
When the small quantity of Fer- <lb />
and the character of the <lb />
land is considered, this is <lb />
the best Potato crop ever <lb />
grown in tho United States, if not <lb />
in the World. We often wonder <lb />
why more of our readers do not <lb />
raise Potatoes. W. 8- Powell <lb />
Co., Baltimore, Md., who <lb />
the Green Bag Potato Fer- <lb />
issue a special book on the <lb />
subject of Trucking Crops which <lb />
they will glad to send free to <lb />
e interested in this <lb />
line of agriculture. <lb />
We have a speedy positive cure <lb />
for catarrh, diphtheria, canker mouth <lb />
headache, in <lb />
REMEDY. A nasal Injector free with <lb />
each bottle. Use it If you desire health <lb />
sweet breath, Ma, Sold at <lb />
Harris. <lb />
I lit. I- J KM, <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
HOS. J. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
L, slow <lb />
W, <lb />
V N. O. <lb />
Or Practice In s-ll the- Courts. <lb />
B. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LA <lb />
N. <lb />
I. A. <lb />
TYSON, <lb />
. r. <lb />
N. O. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
MARQUIS, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
. f. <lb />
Office In Skinner upper <lb />
opposite Photograph <lb />
M. II. LONG, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
Prompt careful attention to <lb />
Collection solicited. <lb />
MARRY <lb />
T A A SKINNER, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
U G. <lb />
S. C. <lb />
Practice in all the <lb />
a Specialty,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017532_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
verdict. If they be- oner charged with a serious offense. <lb />
prisoner guilty of this The lawyer was telling man <lb />
Greenville, W. ought bad a right to do so protect <lb />
allowed to have brought in a This man who did not I <lb />
I Has . m accordingly. Any law that the faculty of discerning the <lb />
fl, J, ill at fallacy of the argument said he <lb />
, with justice. The law will did not know a man could do that, <lb />
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3- be vindicated and the added if this is so, many a <lb />
pie protected if the guilty are dot s not protect himself as <lb />
Entered at th Greenville, to unpunished. I he has the right to do because he <lb />
N. Cm as second-class mail matter. . fears the law. It is not improbable <lb />
There are many cases in which . <lb />
,. i that men have formed plans for <lb />
IMPROVED, commission of crime while <lb />
where the accused is really guilty . . , <lb />
. ., ; to the many strained <lb />
when the <lb />
the <lb />
a verdict of not <lb />
the fact that it must <lb />
The trial of Martin for the in <lb />
of Manning, of which a brief <lb />
resume has appeared in the Re f <lb />
affords another text for j be murder or not guilty- The <lb />
some observations on a defect well says that <lb />
the criminal law of this State. sympathetic natures are re- <lb />
jury was in substance told that the for this. However <lb />
either slew Ins assailant , h <lb />
m self-defense and <lb />
guilty of no crime, or he made a j swayed from justice, it is a stem <lb />
felonious assault on him with in- fact and our law makers ought to <lb />
tent to murder and did murder cognizance of this when <lb />
and guilty of murder. laws to give ex- <lb />
There was evidence to sustain both ,. <lb />
the jury had to take to <lb />
the evidence find what the <lb />
facts were and determine which <lb />
theory was the correct one. <lb />
We believe there is an addition- <lb />
cause to the miscarriage of <lb />
to the one above noted. It is <lb />
The was probably e , <lb />
impartial, and his rulings and the abuse of the jury system which <lb />
charge to the jury were doubtless ; is made possible under our present <lb />
without a legal Yet the laws. It is true almost every <lb />
suit of the trial will perhaps not <lb />
satisfy the general public, for it is <lb />
that the common opinion <lb />
will what one juror seems to <lb />
have had in his the de- <lb />
ought to receive some <lb />
punishment. <lb />
Under the law in North <lb />
however, the jury was constrain- <lb />
ed either to resolve all doubts in <lb />
county that when a man is to be <lb />
tried for murder about the first <lb />
question asked by a majority of <lb />
our people is has he got to <lb />
defend If the answer is <lb />
certain astute, shrewd and <lb />
lawyers the natural result <lb />
is the genera opinion that hi <lb />
Martin's favor and clear him en- not be convicted. Why is this <lb />
or to resolve them all against <lb />
him and swing him to the murder- <lb />
gibbet. When two such alter <lb />
natives are presented and the ease <lb />
is not overwhelmingly made out <lb />
against the p. the jury is <lb />
apt to take the merciful course. <lb />
Hence it is that so many murder <lb />
trials terminate favorably to the <lb />
accused. <lb />
the bloodier days of the past <lb />
juries found but little hesitation in <lb />
convicting men charged with <lb />
; but now the sympathetic side <lb />
of our nature is more generally <lb />
cultivated and there is a wide- <lb />
spread aversion to capital punish- <lb />
Our law-makers should take no- <lb />
of this change in sentiment. <lb />
and either require the jury to rind <lb />
a special verdict of the facts or <lb />
permit them to bring the prisoner <lb />
guilty of homicide in one of <lb />
degrees. <lb />
This jury might have agreed <lb />
that the prisoner was guilty of <lb />
manslaughter and the jurors might <lb />
in their consciences and upon their <lb />
oaths have that there was a <lb />
juster verdict than one of not <lb />
at all; but when they had to de- <lb />
between murder the <lb />
punishment of death, and an ac- <lb />
they were bring <lb />
the defendant as guilty. <lb />
We are not to be understood as <lb />
impeaching the good faith of this <lb />
particular jury and we are aware <lb />
that it may be said that Martin <lb />
was either guilty minder or was <lb />
innocent of crime- We are only <lb />
using the occasion to point out the <lb />
disadvantage of imposing on juries <lb />
the absolute necessity of pursuing <lb />
in such ca-es one of two paths. <lb />
They will generally, under such <lb />
circumstances, take the path which <lb />
harmonizes most with their human <lb />
sympathy without much regard to <lb />
stem and rigorous legal justice. <lb />
Raleigh and Observer. <lb />
The above editorial from the <lb />
of January the <lb />
28th has much in it that is exceed- <lb />
worthy of serious <lb />
just now. It cannot Le denied <lb />
that the masses of our people have <lb />
not the same regard for the <lb />
of juries which once existed. <lb />
In days p it and gone their <lb />
and justness was hardly <lb />
ever questioned. There is <lb />
some cause for this want of <lb />
confidence now. The fault lies <lb />
somewhere and it ought if possible <lb />
be ferreted out and eradicated. It <lb />
has ever been the pride of the <lb />
most civilized countries that any <lb />
one accused of a crime had the <lb />
right to be tried by a jury of his <lb />
countrymen. There was a time <lb />
when by this system justice <lb />
ever miscarried- This must <lb />
not now be true or there would <lb />
not be this weakening of con- <lb />
in this great bulwark of <lb />
freemen- During the past twelve <lb />
months there have been trials in <lb />
North for grave offenses <lb />
which have more thoroughly than <lb />
ever convinced a large majority <lb />
of our people that there is some- <lb />
thing radically wrong somewhere, <lb />
either the law, or the jury sys- <lb />
or in both, or in the abuse of <lb />
one or both of these. <lb />
The mi <lb />
very strongly that there is a fault <lb />
in the law in reference to murder <lb />
and says that this is shown by the <lb />
case recently tried here- It is <lb />
certainly right in its conclusions <lb />
with this case as a standard. If it <lb />
had known fully the whole <lb />
it would have been more <lb />
thoroughly convinced of the <lb />
of its conclusion. The only <lb />
eye witness to the murder was the <lb />
little son of the prisoner and a <lb />
large majority of those who beard <lb />
his evidence was fully satisfied <lb />
that if this was true it made the <lb />
accused guilty of manslaughter <lb />
The prisoner himself testified and <lb />
it would not have been hard to <lb />
have construed his testimony so <lb />
as to have justified a verdict to <lb />
the same effect. If are correct- <lb />
informed, if the jury had <lb />
that they could have <lb />
brought in a verdict of man- <lb />
It is important that a man should <lb />
have able, honest and wide awake <lb />
counsel when there is so much at <lb />
stake- But is the accused to be <lb />
tried by his array of learned and <lb />
shrewd counsel or is he to be tried <lb />
and convicted or by the <lb />
evidence Ought the jury not to <lb />
constructions of the law which if <lb />
true would give many liberties <lb />
Which ho did not have the <lb />
idea he had thus prepare him <lb />
to commit a crime which he would <lb />
never had been guilty of had <lb />
the same fear of the law <lb />
that common sense and reason <lb />
had suggested to him. <lb />
We have written what we have <lb />
not condemnation of any special <lb />
person on any special case, but to <lb />
call the attention of the people to <lb />
the serious trouble to which we <lb />
are drifting. We would do to <lb />
look to these things before they <lb />
become more serious than they <lb />
are now. The law ought to be re- <lb />
and when violated just <lb />
punishment ought to be inflicted <lb />
upon the offender. We owe it to the <lb />
cause of right and to the <lb />
of the people, <lb />
property. <lb />
RATHER STRANGE. <lb />
of our print- <lb />
ed on Saturday contained <lb />
graphic dispatches that are rather <lb />
hard for the to understand. <lb />
One of these was to the effect that <lb />
the shooting <lb />
case came up for trial in the <lb />
Court of Greene county, at <lb />
Snow Hill, that Grimsley <lb />
ed- that Solicitor moved <lb />
for a suspension of judgment, <lb />
which was ordered by Judge Win- <lb />
., , . <lb />
have the law and evidence and do- Grimsley was <lb />
by these. It is presumed that discharged from c <lb />
the Court will give them the law. <lb />
it ought also to be a fact that they <lb />
get the evidence from the witness- <lb />
es. Do always do this <lb />
Many a jury is not able when they <lb />
leave the box to tell what has it ally <lb />
been the evidence. It has been so <lb />
extorted and warped, and there <lb />
have been so many hypotheses as <lb />
to how this or that did or did not <lb />
happen, and so many characters of <lb />
honest and truthful witnesses have <lb />
been so and so many <lb />
shrewd and apparently plausible <lb />
drawn from the <lb />
that to the ordinary juryman <lb />
there almost always arises a doubt <lb />
which lie is instructed he <lb />
to the benefit of the <lb />
If the injured party in a <lb />
case Bee lit to employ counsel the <lb />
defense cries blood money Arc, Arc. <lb />
It may be said that the jury need <lb />
not pay any attention to all these <lb />
things. We admit this but do they <lb />
no do it The first grand effort is <lb />
made in getting a jury that can <lb />
thus be influenced <lb />
In many counties when an <lb />
is to tried the bet- <lb />
informed of its citizens need <lb />
have that they will be <lb />
called upon to serve their country. <lb />
They are excused without much <lb />
ceremony. Why is this Would it <lb />
not be right in every case, <lb />
if the case is an important <lb />
one, you have the most <lb />
gent, upright, and honest jury that <lb />
could be gotten Is it not a fact <lb />
though that the graver offense <lb />
the greater the effort to reverse <lb />
above requisites for a competent <lb />
jury <lb />
The first of these causes may <lb />
true and the latter not. or it may- <lb />
be vice versa. All of us, however, <lb />
are about agreed that there is <lb />
something wrong somewhere or <lb />
we would not have so many escape <lb />
who are guilty- There have been <lb />
cases tried in North Carolina re- <lb />
all the evidence of which <lb />
was published daily. It was read <lb />
by so intelligent public, <lb />
diced and unbiased by interest <lb />
or of counsel, and the <lb />
verdicts of the juries have been <lb />
just the opposite from those of the <lb />
public at large. Now what did tho <lb />
juries know more than they <lb />
Which verdict is probably the one <lb />
according to tho evidence, the one <lb />
of twelve men or the one of a <lb />
thousand who heard the same <lb />
as the twelve If they did <lb />
not agree how do you account for <lb />
the fact More than this they are <lb />
opposite. Both hearing the <lb />
evidence one says a thing is true <lb />
the other says it is not. <lb />
Enlightened public sentiment in <lb />
ninety nine eases out of a hundred <lb />
is not very far wrong. Lawyers are <lb />
allowed too much latitude. It may- <lb />
be the fault of the law, it may be <lb />
the fault of the Court- There is <lb />
every evidence that there is a fault <lb />
somewhere. These things are <lb />
matters, and ought to be <lb />
changed in some way. <lb />
There is also a positive evil re- <lb />
to society from many <lb />
speeches made on such cases. They <lb />
lessen the fear which people ought <lb />
to have for a violated law. There <lb />
arc those who listen to them and <lb />
plans are suggested to them by <lb />
which they can escape punishment <lb />
for crime. This is especially true <lb />
in to the illiterate. We <lb />
recall now a remark made by a <lb />
man while listening to the <lb />
Association. <lb />
slaughter it would have been their, of counsel in behalf of Concord <lb />
custody on pay- <lb />
of costs. The other dispatch <lb />
was from Greenville and stated <lb />
that in Pitt Superior Court, <lb />
a trial lasting eight days, F- C- <lb />
who killed M. G- Manning <lb />
in the public road, was acquitted <lb />
of murder. The two dispatches are <lb />
all right on their face, but a knotty <lb />
problem must be solved before <lb />
they can be understood by us. The <lb />
counties of Pitt and Greene are in <lb />
the judicial district and are <lb />
conducted by the same judge an I <lb />
solicitor, as it is impossible <lb />
for an ordinary man to be in two <lb />
towns, twenty-two miles apart, at <lb />
tho same time, we would like to <lb />
know how the two cases could have <lb />
been disposed of in the same week. <lb />
and both announced on the same <lb />
day. This being a question beyond <lb />
the knowledge of the <lb />
unravel i; some of its friends <lb />
on eA U <lb />
bury <lb />
Since tho man has <lb />
ed up to the West ho is <lb />
not so well posted as to what is <lb />
going on in these two Eastern <lb />
counties as when ho resided here, <lb />
else he would have seen that the <lb />
last Legislature took Give no <lb />
out of the Th id Judicial Dis- <lb />
and put it over in Sixth. <lb />
This being so of course there is <lb />
nothing Strange that while Judge <lb />
Bryan and Solicitor Woodard were <lb />
holding Court in Pitt county. <lb />
Judge Winston and Solicitor Allen <lb />
were serving in similar capacity in <lb />
Greene county. There is nothing <lb />
strange at all about the times of <lb />
holding the Courts, but its the <lb />
manner in which some eases arc <lb />
disposed of after getting them, <lb />
and the way some men are turned <lb />
loose almost with the injunction <lb />
to go commit another crime, if <lb />
they want to, that astonishes the <lb />
law loving natives down this way. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
i the report of the Election coin- <lb />
Regular . <lb />
Washington, Jan. 30th, 1892. to his seat. The question <lb />
Chili's apology has deprived Mr. I be presented his <lb />
Harrison of the glory be had some <lb />
from the conducting of a regularity in his appointment by <lb />
victorious foreign war, the Governor of Texas to <lb />
which would in his mind at n the term of Senator <lb />
rate, resulted in his in who resigned, <lb />
nomination and in adding Speaker has been <lb />
to his chances of re election and this week, <lb />
it is said, precipitated a though he m still somewhat weak <lb />
war between him and Secretary The weak- <lb />
Blaine that they destroy all of his t in his head, however. <lb />
fondest hopes. The story as it is <lb />
told here says that Mr. Harrison ; A Good Colored Citizen Dead. <lb />
knew that Mr. had received <lb />
verbal assurance from the <lb />
minister that the apology would n <lb />
due time be forthcoming from <lb />
government before he sent tho .-1- <lb />
but he feared that <lb />
credit of obtaining the apology- <lb />
through the diplomatic <lb />
channels would all go to Mr. <lb />
so ho tho ultimatum <lb />
to Chili and the correspondence <lb />
and his message to Congress, <lb />
order that he might claim the <lb />
credit for having frightened Chili <lb />
into apologizing- Mr- re- <lb />
this stealing of his thunder, <lb />
and is credited with having said <lb />
that it would cost Mr. H. the Pres- <lb />
nomination of his party- <lb />
Whether this story true or <lb />
not, it is highly creditable to the <lb />
Democrats in Congress that they <lb />
accepted the President's message <lb />
in perfect good faith and were <lb />
pared to support the demands of <lb />
the even to the ex- <lb />
tent of a declaration of war, when <lb />
the situation was by Chili's <lb />
apology. They recognized the <lb />
demands of this Government as <lb />
just, and that was enough for <lb />
them as good citizens and patriotic <lb />
Americans. <lb />
Senator Quay has returned from <lb />
his bunt, but he does <lb />
Hot seem proud of what ho <lb />
He told one gentleman <lb />
that he hoped never to hear of <lb />
another libel suit. <lb />
Tho House Committee on <lb />
has favorably report- <lb />
ed the resolution directing that <lb />
committee to and report <lb />
to the House whether the <lb />
already made for the <lb />
World's been judiciously <lb />
expended- This resolution will <lb />
certainly be adopted by the <lb />
House, and it is not probable that <lb />
tho bill appropriating <lb />
for the World s Fair will be acted <lb />
upon until the committee makes <lb />
its report. <lb />
The action of the sub <lb />
of the House Judiciary Committee, <lb />
in deciding to conduct <lb />
to ascertain whether articles <lb />
The Senate unanimously j Three Good Lectures. <lb />
or Star, an Indian <lb />
Cheyenne Mime <lb />
lecture here, one lust, Sunday after-1 <lb />
noun in lbs Methodist Church, <lb />
Sunday night at Church <lb />
night in the lecture <lb />
mom of Baptist <lb />
lectures much by <lb />
congregations deserve n mere <lb />
extended notice than our will <lb />
permit giving week. We will <lb />
have something to say in reference to <lb />
in our next issue. <lb />
Tho trouble w th Chili has been <lb />
settled to such an extent that there <lb />
is now no prospect of The <lb />
matter was never as serious as the <lb />
administration tried to make it <lb />
appear so that they might get the <lb />
credit of scaring Chili into meas- <lb />
This having been found out <lb />
it will hardly do much to boom <lb />
Harrison for President. <lb />
The New York Democratic Con- <lb />
to select delegates to the <lb />
National Convention will meet on <lb />
the 22nd of It is said that <lb />
the delegation will solid for <lb />
David B. Hill. <lb />
It is said that Mr. Cleveland <lb />
will withdraw from tho contest for <lb />
the Presidency. There will be lit- <lb />
sorrow on the part of some <lb />
other candidates. <lb />
Speaker Crisp is again <lb />
in the House after an illness <lb />
of several weeks. <lb />
The next meeting of the Nation- <lb />
Editorial Association will be <lb />
held in San Francisco, Cal., May <lb />
17th- Two special start <lb />
on May one from Chicago and <lb />
one from St. Louis, and for a week <lb />
the delegates will carried about <lb />
western seeing the <lb />
sights. The convention will be in <lb />
session three days, and then the <lb />
people of California will take the <lb />
in charge to show them <lb />
the State. Tho delegates from <lb />
this are tho f J. A. <lb />
Thomas, <lb />
J. P. Caldwell, Josephus Daniels, <lb />
Thad. R. Manning, D. J. Which- <lb />
ard and J. B. Sherrill. The follow- <lb />
are E. E- <lb />
J. P. Cook, J. A. and C <lb />
L. Stevens. The has <lb />
already forwarded a list of <lb />
names to the Secretary of the Na- <lb />
Editorial <lb />
Edmonds, a leading colored <lb />
of this town, died home <lb />
nu Man-lay morning. <lb />
He was years old and had more <lb />
friends an neg people than <lb />
colored man living here. Years <lb />
followed the profession of a <lb />
barber and was almost <lb />
referred to Henry the Barber. <lb />
For several past be has been <lb />
engaged in livery and a <lb />
always industrious and reliable. <lb />
You could bard I v find a <lb />
traveling Eastern Carolina <lb />
among the <lb />
not know the old man well and <lb />
have taken with bin <lb />
Iron this to other No <lb />
many of them will lie sorry nest <lb />
around to learn <lb />
lie is no more lint baa passed aw <lb />
The white of the con- <lb />
o a fund to purchase nice <lb />
ii in to him. <lb />
at Violence. <lb />
On Monday a gentlemen <lb />
us a duplicate copy of letter which <lb />
In- bad received by F. <lb />
Martin, who was recently tried <lb />
murder and tied, in which he <lb />
was Warned to leave county in <lb />
thirty or lake consequences. <lb />
The h no efforts will <lb />
made to care, out the threat <lb />
made in letter Martin was <lb />
tried in open court, was acquitted <lb />
and Bel free, and now in the eyes of <lb />
law his privileges are equal to <lb />
lose any other citizen. If n <lb />
was done in his acquittal, as <lb />
he unknown writers of letter <lb />
c another wrong added to it will <lb />
not sit the right. Any <lb />
to now will he <lb />
worse man wrong, and we do hope <lb />
that no such evil as that letter <lb />
I will he perpetrated in <lb />
county. <lb />
To enlist your attention and claim a Tail share of your patronage. <lb />
We are determined that if square dealings and honest <lb />
of our goods will secure you as a customer, <lb />
they not be lacking on We go into <lb />
-------the Northern Markets with the------- <lb />
CASH <lb />
The Store has <lb />
bought out receiver's stock f <lb />
and is prep-red to offer on- <lb />
board of bargains or legal cap, fool's <lb />
cap, r and papers. Schools <lb />
will lie at even less than <lb />
auction prices. will m I s <lb />
it to dealt rs prices that will as- <lb />
tie in. We bought this paper <lb />
to and yon will save money if <lb />
yon will call before the stock is sol I. <lb />
Marriage Licenses. <lb />
During the month <lb />
of January <lb />
the Register of Deeds issued <lb />
for forty-two couples in Pitt <lb />
county, nineteen white and twenty <lb />
three colored, as follows <lb />
B. Harris and <lb />
A. King, Julian B. <lb />
Agnes Gotten, John Mobley <lb />
and Dunn, W. K- Parker <lb />
and A- Charles <lb />
Rouse and Mollie Dixon, <lb />
and Lucy <lb />
and <lb />
Caraway, J. B- Smith and <lb />
Ann Buck, H. <lb />
. J Johnson A. <lb />
and Anna A- Forbes, <lb />
Clark and Ada Teel, L. S- <lb />
Edwards and Fannie Tucker, Jason <lb />
and Annie Fulford, Bryant <lb />
G. Loftin and Josephine Oliver, <lb />
Q. Stokes and Mary A. <lb />
Luther Jones and Kizzie Heath, <lb />
G. F. James and Dora Bullock, <lb />
John S. and J. <lb />
Mills, O. L. and Annie L. <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
Barrett and <lb />
Cora Robert and <lb />
Am F. <lb />
Wheeler, and Francis Teel, Wester <lb />
Morris, Wyatt <lb />
and Bettie Cox, George <lb />
Monks and Sarah Williams, <lb />
Forbes and Jennie Dawson, <lb />
Thomas Rice and Ann i Rountree, <lb />
Joseph Bryan and Mary Little. <lb />
Henry Smith and <lb />
George Ponder and Emma Lane. <lb />
and Easter <lb />
Greene, John Moore and Sarah <lb />
Belcher and <lb />
of impeachment should be present- <lb />
ed against Judge of <lb />
Louisiana, for misconduct in office, <lb />
re-opens that case, upon which <lb />
considerable evidence was taken <lb />
by the same committee of the last <lb />
House. <lb />
Senator George's resolution for <lb />
the appointment of a committee of <lb />
live to inquire into the cause of the <lb />
existing depression in <lb />
considered by the <lb />
Agriculture to which it was refer- <lb />
red. <lb />
Oklahoma, New Mexico, <lb />
Utah arc all at <lb />
doors of Congress for <lb />
to the Union and as fir as the <lb />
Democrats are concerned they <lb />
might all be admitted at this <lb />
of Congress, but the <lb />
can Senators believe that the ma- <lb />
votes in of the in are <lb />
Democratic, and for that reason <lb />
they have de to let none <lb />
of them in- <lb />
Representative M ills made his <lb />
first speech of the session de <lb />
of the new rules. When he <lb />
arose he was greeted with <lb />
from the Democrats and from the <lb />
galleries. Ho not bothering his <lb />
head about the silly reports con- <lb />
his name with the leader- <lb />
ship of a Democratic revolt in the <lb />
House. <lb />
The Senate adopted a resolution <lb />
introduced by Senator Morgan, Fleming, Guilford <lb />
calling on the President for copies Mamie Dixon, Ed Chapman and <lb />
of all the correspondence with Martha Brown, Barney <lb />
China concerning the refusal of and Mary Berry James <lb />
that country to receive and Hannah V Vt alter <lb />
Blair as Minister. It is Mills and Sarah Cannon, <lb />
that ii there is any way to I Little and Mary E. Joe <lb />
get at the inwardness of this I Williams and Katie Walden, <lb />
matter a big scandal will Lewis H. Cannon and <lb />
with which the saintly bloody-1 Ned May and Francis <lb />
shirt New York editor, Col. Elliott Brown, Austin Hanrahan <lb />
F. Shepard, will be found mixed Queenie Harms, <lb />
up. It relates to the Chinese con <lb />
I The Newest <lb />
Best. <lb />
For all chases end type at <lb />
lowest priors. <lb />
for the money it but only the <lb />
Varieties produce First class <lb />
Tobacco that pars, start right, order <lb />
the best for locality and <lb />
the largest returns from the <lb />
crop. free on application, <lb />
SEED CO., <lb />
Va. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
Ii virtue f the power end authority <lb />
in a Trust Deed from W. Cos <lb />
and R, i ex to James II. Pen, dated <lb />
the 80th . of December and re- <lb />
in the Register of Deeds <lb />
county, E. -V paces and <lb />
I will on Monday, March 7th, DO . offer <lb />
for sale at Court Rouse in <lb />
to the homestead of <lb />
the said B. O. the follow inn tract <lb />
or parcel of land lying in Pitt <lb />
as the Causey place, containing <lb />
one hundred acres more or less. <lb />
of Sale. Cash. <lb />
February 1-t 1882. <lb />
II. Trustee. <lb />
C. M. Ill for Trustee. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly before the <lb />
Court cleric of Pitt county, on <lb />
the of 1889, SI <lb />
of Joseph deceased, <lb />
notice is I given to all persons in- <lb />
to e estate to make Immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons having claims the estate <lb />
must p the same for payment on <lb />
or of January 1803. or <lb />
notice will be plead bar of <lb />
r. cover v. <lb />
of <lb />
of Joseph <lb />
and <lb />
cessions to certain Americans to <lb />
to conduct banks, build railroads, <lb />
etc., which occupied considerable <lb />
space in American newspapers <lb />
years <lb />
r- j ts <lb />
For I J <lb />
. for <lb />
. quickly <lb />
-1<lb />
HOW MANY ACRES IN TOBACCO <lb />
The Reflector desires to know the number of acres that will be <lb />
planted in Tobacco in Pitt county this year. We desire these statistics <lb />
order that we may be able to present to Tobacco dealers and buyers <lb />
tn the established tobacco markets in the world, advantages of our <lb />
county as the coming tobacco market of Eastern Carolina and induce <lb />
them to make Pitt county their home. . <lb />
We print herewith a blank form on which we request our friends <lb />
and subscribers to send us names of those who will plant tobacco <lb />
year. <lb />
also spaces in same for the address of the plan- <lb />
and number of acres that each planter will have in tobacco. It <lb />
is to 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 <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Laud Sale. <lb />
By virtue of an order the of <lb />
Superior Court of Pitt county In of <lb />
J administrator of John <lb />
Lewis, Harriet Ann Lewis and <lb />
Susan Lewis, the undersigned <lb />
will sell cash before the Court <lb />
House door iii Greenville on Monday <lb />
the 7th day of 1883, the following <lb />
described piece or parcel of land, lying <lb />
in township. Pitt ad- <lb />
joining the of Joseph II. Clark, <lb />
Thomas Thomas, the Harriet Banting <lb />
land, Harriet others, eon- <lb />
. seres, more or less. <lb />
Tar January 28th. <lb />
Ii BULLOCK. <lb />
and buy for CASH, getting every possible advantage is <lb />
to be offered to buyers, therefore we enabled <lb />
------to Rive you at all times the------- <lb />
Benefit of Purchases <lb />
for Cash. <lb />
We have bought this season the largest stock of <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb />
ever by us. ten days spent in market by our <lb />
were not Idle ones, as an inspection of our <lb />
STOCK, <lb />
carried in our double stores prove. You cannot help but be <lb />
interested if you will rail on us. We take pleasure in showing <lb />
you what we have to sell There never be a business of <lb />
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statements <lb />
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by <lb />
customers, and by such means to their continued pat- <lb />
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest bee <lb />
line of General Merchandise that was ever brought <lb />
to this market Consisting of <lb />
Dry Goods Dress Goods, <lb />
Hats, Gaps, 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 />
BACCHIC <lb />
which will be sold at lowest prices. <lb />
o- <lb />
one, come all and us. <lb />
CHERRY CO. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
or; <lb />
ADVERTISEMENTS. <lb />
By cf tho power given in <lb />
executed by Baker <lb />
Co., on January 4th. as recorded <lb />
in B, Pages In the <lb />
ti-r d of to <lb />
ii will on <lb />
Ii. I set, offer for at public suction <lb />
at tin formerly by Jesse <lb />
linker ft known us <lb />
stand situated in the town of <lb />
N. the stock of goods, <lb />
liquors, liar <lb />
all other personal property <lb />
Conveyed said and <lb />
ill said store, to the bidder, <lb />
of said made known on the <lb />
day of sale. I'm tics desiring to <lb />
chase privately will please seethe <lb />
assignees on or e the day <lb />
sale. JOHN S. SM TH, <lb />
Assignees of Jesse ft Co. <lb />
L. W. DAVIS, <lb />
HAVANA CIGARS <lb />
Avenue, <lb />
. VIRGINIA. <lb />
-ship <lb />
Reported by. <lb />
Incorporation Notice. <lb />
Mm tin Comity. <lb />
Before <lb />
of The Dennis Simmons <lb />
Lumber <lb />
Notice is hereby given that Dennis <lb />
Simmons of <lb />
and T. w. of <lb />
X. u. have filed articles of <lb />
under their hands and seals <lb />
undersigned for the e of <lb />
becoming Incorporated under the name <lb />
aid style of Dennis Simmons <lb />
Lumber and letters have <lb />
been issued and successors <lb />
under that name. The business lobe eon <lb />
ducted by said company is the buying <lb />
and selling of timber and tinnier lauds, <lb />
to gel, cut. buy. sell, mill, transport and <lb />
timber and lumber Into any <lb />
and all of its various and gen- <lb />
to Conduct and e in on a lumber <lb />
business in all Its details, branches <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 bud- <lb />
The principal office of <lb />
n shall be at N. C. <lb />
and the period of Incorporation thirty <lb />
years. The subscribers of the capital <lb />
stock of said company are Dennis Sim- <lb />
mons, I. D. Simmons end T. W. <lb />
The capital stock of said com- <lb />
is forty-live thousand dollars <lb />
ed into hundred fifty shares of <lb />
the par value of one hundred dollars each. <lb />
but said company may from time to <lb />
lime e. said capital stock to any <lb />
amount not to exceed one hundred <lb />
thousand No personal or <lb />
for the debts, ties <lb />
of said company is imposed <lb />
said stockholders successors or any <lb />
subsequent to the capital <lb />
stock of said company. It my hand <lb />
seal. <lb />
This day of December <lb />
CRAWFORD. <lb />
Clerk Superior Court. <lb />
AND OTHER TO <lb />
ALEXANDER MORGAN <lb />
COTTON COMMISSION MERCHANTS. <lb />
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK. V-. <lb />
highest sales and prompt returns.<lb />
N. <lb />
C C COBB, <lb />
Co N C. <lb />
T. H. GILLIAM <lb />
Co. N C <lb />
S. B. GO., <lb />
COTTON AND <lb />
Corn, Cotton, Peanuts. Stock, Ev's. <lb />
and Sawed Lumber will our . <lb />
special Your ; ANTS, <lb />
Cobb Bros., <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
Your <lb />
solicited. <lb />
NOS. AN U STREET, <lb />
NORFOLK. VA. <lb />
Strictly a <lb />
a. r. <lb />
. Township. <lb />
PLANTERS NAMES. <lb />
ER <lb />
ACRES. <lb />
address. <lb />
Be sure to in above all the names of those that will plant tobacco <lb />
it at once. <lb />
LIVERY, FEED All SALE <lb />
I removed my stables from Five <lb />
Points to formerly <lb />
pied b Mr. II T. Keel and will <lb />
constantly Keep on hand a <lb />
full line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and turnouts for <lb />
the livery and can suit the <lb />
I will run In connection a <lb />
BUSINESS, and solicit n share of <lb />
your patronage, and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
R. V- <lb />
jess a <lb />
CM Ml <lb />
heard. <lb />
f- <lb />
E. E. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in <lb />
A Always Hand. <lb />
Horses s specialty. <lb />
HO. and Union Va <lb />
Appointments cf Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb />
First Sunday, morning and night, <lb />
. . i <lb />
Second <lb />
and before. <lb />
Third fourth at Green- <lb />
NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
of cotton it. <lb />
We Lad many years ex <lb />
at the business and are <lb />
prepared to handle to <lb />
the advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
will receive prompt and <lb />
careful attention. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
night, second f <lb />
Sunday night, and Wednesday j <lb />
light services each week. <lb />
Services at school house on <lb />
road on Thursday night before <lb />
each third Similar until April and then <lb />
on third Sunday evening. <lb />
Rev. R. K. Taylor's Appointments. <lb />
Rev. R F. Taylor, pastor of <lb />
ville Circuit of the M. K. South. <lb />
will preach at the times and <lb />
places, regularly each <lb />
1st Sunday at U o'clock. A. U. <lb />
1st <lb />
P. M. <lb />
2nd Sunday. Shady Grove. o'clock <lb />
A M. <lb />
2nd school House. <lb />
west of o'clock <lb />
P. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday. Ayden or Branch <lb />
School House, k A. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday, Tripp's <lb />
O'clock P. M. , , <lb />
4th Sunday, Bethlehem. <lb />
A. M. <lb />
4th Lang's School House. <lb />
o'clock P. M. <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb />
their year's supplies will <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
SIDES SHOULDERS. <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, c. <lb />
Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF A <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one A com <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to sulk <lb />
the times. Our goods are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk, <lb />
lo sell at a clone margin. <lb />
M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
X. C<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017532_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
LANG'S COLUMN. <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
i, <lb />
THE REFLECTOR, l,,,, <lb />
Green villa, N. C <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
3-4 Cents per Yard. <lb />
SPOT CASH. <lb />
Fall Winter <lb />
STOCK <lb />
Going at greatly <lb />
Reduced prices. <lb />
Valentine day the <lb />
Se Young about your <lb />
This being leap year will <lb />
Mail train late nearly ever night <lb />
the past <lb />
The New Home Sewing- Ma- <lb />
for at Brown Bros- <lb />
Did you knew there waning money <lb />
in Try an acre. <lb />
For Lime direct from the kiln <lb />
g-o to Young <lb />
As yet not much firm work <lb />
been done. Too weather. <lb />
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear <lb />
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C <lb />
Bryan. <lb />
Some can he expected for a <lb />
few and tier moon is with <lb />
us. <lb />
Cash given for Pi Hides. <lb />
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
January nm none o all kinds of <lb />
weather. Now watch what <lb />
will do. <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines and all parts at Brown <lb />
Bros <lb />
While we have had no rain the <lb />
past week weather has very <lb />
changeable. <lb />
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads <lb />
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb />
Store- <lb />
One month of pone, and <lb />
majority of people not yet got <lb />
lo work the year. <lb />
Special high grade Potato Fer- <lb />
for sale by Young <lb />
A far choir <lb />
has been arranged in one coiner of <lb />
the <lb />
Just inD. M. Ferry Co's <lb />
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb />
The of th <lb />
farmer this year should be and <lb />
hominy, plenty o it. <lb />
Large Cargo of pure Oyster <lb />
Shell Lime for sale by Young <lb />
Tie Amateurs the <lb />
Opera Hawse to-morrow night, for <lb />
benefit of the Home. <lb />
For Dancy <lb />
. Kick the <lb />
past wees. <lb />
Jack Smith has taken a <lb />
position at M. R. <lb />
Jan is confined at <lb />
with grip last week. <lb />
R. V. took a <lb />
prisoner to Raleigh last week. <lb />
Mi Jennie Joyner, of Scotland <lb />
Neck, is visiting the Misses <lb />
Fire member of the family of Mr. <lb />
J. T. Williams were down sick at <lb />
one tune last week. <lb />
It is expected that <lb />
File begin a meeting in Green- <lb />
ville about May 1st. <lb />
Mr. C L W returned to <lb />
Norfolk last lo take a position <lb />
with railroad. <lb />
Sir. A- J. Berg, who the <lb />
has been clerking M. R. <lb />
Lung, iv on a visit to his <lb />
in Troy, N. V. The Bill I <lb />
wishes a pleasant trip and safe <lb />
return. <lb />
Last week the Supreme Court of <lb />
the State granted lo practice <lb />
lo seventeen Among <lb />
hem was our young <lb />
Air. James L. Fleming, n son <lb />
County Commissioner <lb />
Fleming. Mr. Fleming passed a <lb />
creditable examination. He reached <lb />
home Monday night. <lb />
Rev. G A rt turned lust <lb />
week lo attend his appointments as <lb />
Presiding Elder of Wilson district. <lb />
here he preached twice in Mm <lb />
Central Methodist His <lb />
sermons were strong and able expo- <lb />
of gospel troth. He is a <lb />
stirring and a preacher of great <lb />
force and directness Concord <lb />
See change advertisement. I o day <lb />
it Kin Co. have <lb />
the worn killer known. <lb />
house <lb />
Apply to <lb />
From the for January of <lb />
marriages in Pitt county, <lb />
it appears that the females are <lb />
of the opportunities <lb />
leap year affords. <lb />
Greenville Male has be- <lb />
gun spring session with a fine <lb />
patronage. There la a <lb />
in the and Prof. <lb />
dale is Contemplating a other.-. <lb />
Fall Winter <lb />
on street. <lb />
dining in <lb />
wastes must be breaking out. in <lb />
nearly every section of the county. <lb />
Young k have just re- <lb />
a large lot of all kinds of <lb />
Fertilizer any price you want- <lb />
We heard Mr Ben May any Fri <lb />
day there are a steal many <lb />
ca-es measles in and <lb />
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb />
your when nothing <lb />
else will. At the Brick Store- <lb />
Attention i called to the to <lb />
e editors b M. I. <lb />
Joseph <lb />
deceased. <lb />
We will continue for days at <lb />
Little's old stand to sell a large <lb />
lot of dry goods and shoes for cost. <lb />
Brows A- Hooker. <lb />
Where Food has been <lb />
used hogs have never been known <lb />
to have cholera. At the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
This month begins on Monday <lb />
Monday, no <lb />
oilier ran do. arc e <lb />
of no other day but <lb />
Lime, and all kinds of <lb />
for sale by <lb />
Attention is called to the advertise <lb />
mi Jame- H. Poll, trustee, o. <lb />
land sine take plan M <lb />
Your chance to get is <lb />
at the old Little stand where we <lb />
have combined two large stocks of <lb />
dry goods and will sell at cost for <lb />
days. Knows Hooker. <lb />
For weeks, lacking a day or <lb />
two, the river here was <lb />
vehicles. That strongly <lb />
for i he n in dam. <lb />
have for sale tons prime <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal. Tons pure <lb />
tine ground Fish Scrap. <lb />
Delight Grade <lb />
Potato <lb />
F. S- Royster k Co., <lb />
Tarboro. N. C <lb />
Ant is called to the <lb />
land sale by J. ii. Bullock, <lb />
Administrator. <lb />
Young are expecting a <lb />
cargo of pure <lb />
they will save you money, by sell- <lb />
you in either sacks or bulk- <lb />
How much have you got mind <lb />
no try to do tor the of <lb />
year talk <lb />
do ii h to wort <lb />
up a hotel it part Now <lb />
will every other citizen do <lb />
Since publishing last week <lb />
I Count Sunday School <lb />
non would he held on the it <lb />
been derided beat to ii <lb />
-we later lie- on <lb />
II . lid. <lb />
Nichols i in- ran It man, male tin- <lb />
s once h <lb />
a package nice assorted candy <lb />
he brought around Monday. <lb />
He continues to his place under <lb />
I be Opera House more attractive. <lb />
By a ticket for the en- <lb />
night <lb />
I mat to aid the r <lb />
i. the sod <lb />
at time you get. <lb />
money's worth b the he-t <lb />
of the Am i <lb />
tears. <lb />
tarried <lb />
At resilience of the bride's <lb />
Mr. A. A. Forbes, near <lb />
Greenville, on Thursday afternoon, <lb />
Jan. Mr. O. L. Joyner and Miss <lb />
Annie s were married, Rev. A. <lb />
a lull pleasant occasion. <lb />
extends wishes. <lb />
Fodder Burned. <lb />
One day week Dr. B. T. Cox <lb />
lost about pounds of by <lb />
fire. A hand was brush in a <lb />
about where tin- <lb />
was and by the <lb />
rub-bins the fir- was communicated <lb />
to the fodder before it could be ex- <lb />
The doctor's barn and <lb />
stables narrowly escaped burning. <lb />
One Train Less. <lb />
Owing to a railing off freight <lb />
oar of the freight trains haw <lb />
been removed from the road here <lb />
and now run weakly war. <lb />
Ii is rumored I hat on alternate <lb />
the train will hare to <lb />
down freight ears. If this <lb />
proves go delayed trains will be <lb />
and may be put to <lb />
much inconvenience. <lb />
In Mask Again. <lb />
Bight in Germania <lb />
Hail gave our people <lb />
another amusing occasion in <lb />
gay Quite n large <lb />
number were in mask and the spec- <lb />
were a numerous that <lb />
could hardly find room hall. <lb />
There were many very amusing <lb />
per en ions and some the <lb />
i- were perfect. The <lb />
masked o'clock and there <lb />
were many roars laughter when <lb />
the identity of some were made known. <lb />
tried to get the names <lb />
all who were in mask, and it being <lb />
such a hard undertaking some may <lb />
have been missed, but those coming <lb />
under our arc as follows- <lb />
Miss Jennie James, queen, <lb />
beautiful costume of white, with <lb />
slippers and wings. <lb />
Miss Carrie Latham, pink domino. <lb />
Miss White, Joan of Arc. <lb />
Miss Delia Marshal, ye ancient <lb />
lady, wore an elegant costume <lb />
years old, the second day reception <lb />
Of a <lb />
Miss house wife, <lb />
key basket ornament <lb />
Misses Estelle Williams, as <lb />
Ann, Bessie Jarvis as Folly Ann, <lb />
King as Susan Ann, and <lb />
Forbes as Mary Aim, four old <lb />
maid sisters from Waller, plead- <lb />
for <lb />
Miss Eva Hum her, Ceres, very <lb />
pretty costume trimmed with sheaves <lb />
of wheat. <lb />
Miss Rosalind black <lb />
domino. <lb />
Miss Minnie Carraway, Empress <lb />
every time you <lb />
looked her. <lb />
Misses Annie Tucker and <lb />
Wilson, two girls from Frog Level <lb />
with brooms. <lb />
Miss Carrie Cobb, nun. <lb />
Miss Annie Foley. 4th of July. <lb />
Miss Lee Foley, Eastern <lb />
with copies of <lb />
and head lines. <lb />
Miss Allen's <lb />
Wife. was kinder hipper- <lb />
when she came lo town, but <lb />
die on to being among <lb />
so many tine folks as <lb />
much floor in as big style as <lb />
anybody. The impersonation was <lb />
excellent. <lb />
Miss Mollie black friar, or <lb />
lit if rather call ii that way, <lb />
as she had a pan along to do the fry- <lb />
act and made I he sizzle <lb />
Her size told on hex though, and she <lb />
says next time she intends to he an <lb />
then nobody would know her. <lb />
Annie Indian queen, <lb />
Mis- Blow, den, <lb />
a pint snuff box, such a <lb />
big tooth brush out of her <lb />
mouth made give her <lb />
pleat, of room. She created much <lb />
a splendid <lb />
i M pink domino <lb />
Mi- girl. <lb />
peril <lb />
Miss Florence Williams, regular <lb />
old girl from Ike country. <lb />
carried n dilapidated band and <lb />
limped, wanted a Job as but <lb />
wasn't in demand. <lb />
Miss Emma Tall, little Bo-peep <lb />
and catch up with her sheep. <lb />
Miss Cherry, Jan., <lb />
just in Miss Annie <lb />
h. i, Jane's cousin, <lb />
two daisy chum- turkey tail <lb />
in i- who created lots of fun. <lb />
There also many good char <lb />
triers among men, some them <lb />
vi iv laughable <lb />
Bob Indian chief, <lb />
appropriate and look <lb />
character well, hut his win- <lb />
bin away. <lb />
Jim as Bridged a <lb />
in speckled calico. <lb />
hard <lb />
Iv and one of the best <lb />
in the hall, nobody con Id <lb />
tell bin. <lb />
Dolph old <lb />
John Collins, dress and actions look <lb />
off his character lo perfection. <lb />
tin original had been there it could <lb />
not have born distinguished from the <lb />
Jes.-e soldier <lb />
war suit. <lb />
Sunday School Convention. <lb />
The Pitt <lb />
School will be <lb />
hold in the <lb />
Greenville, F h <lb />
exercises com In by <lb />
Rev. A D. Hunter. <lb />
of welcome by President. <lb />
Response by Rev. R. F. Taylor. <lb />
Enrollment of members of the <lb />
lion. <lb />
Appointment of Committees. <lb />
from the various Sunday <lb />
Sunday School Rev. G. <lb />
F. Smith, followed by Rev. A. <lb />
D. Hunter. <lb />
S Re- <lb />
exercises conducted by <lb />
Rev. J. L. <lb />
Origin and Progress of Sunday <lb />
Schools, by H. A. Latham, of <lb />
Washington. <lb />
How lo make a Sunday School <lb />
Successful in a Rural District, <lb />
Rev. R. B. John, followed by <lb />
Rev. J. L. Winfield. <lb />
About <lb />
hi no win will b <lb />
coming down on and with tin- <lb />
change of will w changes <lb />
in wearing apparel and in <lb />
In order to make <lb />
changes people must have goods and <lb />
the merchants will be expected to <lb />
supply these warns. Money is not <lb />
the most plentiful article in the <lb />
country and people will buy <lb />
They will be on the lookout <lb />
for bargains and the merchants who <lb />
j Hold out the greatest inducements <lb />
I will catch the trade. This is the <lb />
j time of all others when the merchant <lb />
I should advertise and do so <lb />
Keep constantly before the reader <lb />
in an attractive and intelligent way <lb />
that tells what you can offer. The <lb />
experience of the most successful <lb />
men of the is newspaper <lb />
is greatest stimulant to <lb />
business known. It new bus- <lb />
ices ; it reviews languishing <lb />
; it increases an already good <lb />
business. Try advertisement <lb />
the People have go <lb />
lo boards and fences to read what is <lb />
Opening box, Rev. G. A. on something not often <lb />
Evening Session, Re- <lb />
exercises conducted by <lb />
Rev. G. F Smith. <lb />
Address by Dr. J. H. Cordon, of <lb />
Wilson, followed by ex-Gov. T. <lb />
J. Jarvis. <lb />
Some other addresses may also be l <lb />
expected during the exercises. <lb />
It is that every Sunday j <lb />
in the county will be <lb />
at this meeting All inter- <lb />
Sunday School work arc in- <lb />
to attend. The g session <lb />
should be made the most interesting <lb />
yet held. <lb />
Acorns From Blackjack. <lb />
I have read every number of the <lb />
done ; but your announcement in the <lb />
will go direct lo the fire- <lb />
side where it will be read and ion <lb />
TO <lb />
------If you want to save------ <lb />
lift <lb />
in the purchase of a PIANO from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
General Agent for North Carolina. <lb />
Reflector since it has been publish- who is now handling Roods direct from <lb />
ed and I never have seen anything <lb />
from Black Jack, bill will have some- <lb />
thing tn say of Jack and <lb />
its surroundings in the future. <lb />
There has been but little work <lb />
done yet owing to wet weather. All <lb />
the tanners have now lo <lb />
work in <lb />
The grip and have come <lb />
among and make room wherever <lb />
they go. <lb />
John S. and Mia Sarah <lb />
Mills were married Jan. 27th. E. <lb />
S. Dixon, J. P. officiating. <lb />
Bid. H. wile is <lb />
demented and her condition is very <lb />
sorrowful. Dr. Cox sent <lb />
to the asylum but there was no <lb />
room for her. L <lb />
Dry weather has come lo res- <lb />
cue and made the streets so can <lb />
be walked on. <lb />
the manufacturers, as <lb />
GRADE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, workmanship <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
musical journal in the <lb />
Made Paul G. who is at this <lb />
lime one of the best mechanics and in- <lb />
of the day- Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade <lb />
the HY EVANS <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by <lb />
him for lie past six years in the eastern <lb />
part of this State and up to this time has <lb />
entire satisfaction. The Upright <lb />
Piano Just mentioned will be sold at from <lb />
in El Rosewood, Oak, <lb />
or Mahogany eases <lb />
Also the GROWS PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from to in solid or Oak <lb />
cases. <lb />
Ten experience in the <lb />
business has enabled to handle <lb />
nothing bill standard goods and he does <lb />
not hesitate to say be can sell any <lb />
musical Instrument about per cent, <lb />
cheaper than other agents are now <lb />
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina. <lb />
We are closing opt what's left of Winter Wear, <lb />
And the Trade we will now prepare. <lb />
PER HIT. KNOCKED OFF. <lb />
PROFITS ABOLISHED and cost squeezed on everything. Our Closing <lb />
Out Inducements arc numerous and variety great. <lb />
ire Inspiring. <lb />
WE WILL open the gates of redaction with Men's Boy's and Children <lb />
Clothing. Prices reduced lo a point that will tempt the closest buyer. <lb />
Shoes at Rock Bottom Prices. <lb />
IN DRESS WE ARE POUND PRICES WITH THE <lb />
POWER OP A. TRIP HAMMER. <lb />
Everything must go and go rapidly, at <lb />
C. T. M FORD, <lb />
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
MERCHANT, <lb />
-AND BUYER OF------ <lb />
Country <lb />
Bring me all of your Eggs. Ducks. Turkeys and Geese, and I <lb />
Rive yon the highest market price them and pay in spot cash. <lb />
If you have anything to ship I will attend to it you on a small commission. <lb />
Call and see me. <lb />
ill <lb />
WILL SELL <lb />
At Cost for the next <lb />
DAYS <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROS. <lb />
Agents for New Home <lb />
for Bible <lb />
Society. <lb />
m. <lb />
n. MOORE PARKER, <lb />
---------AGENTS FOR.- <lb />
or <lb />
STOCK <lb />
Going at greatly <lb />
Reduced prices. <lb />
W- <lb />
Tobacco Cloth. <lb />
3-8 Cents per Yard. <lb />
SPOT CASH. <lb />
LANG'S <lb />
A man from this county, <lb />
W. C M ore, was granted to <lb />
practice law by the Supreme Court <lb />
last week. We hear that he passed <lb />
an examination. <lb />
Brown Hooker have <lb />
ed all the dry goods of S- E. Shel- <lb />
and them with the <lb />
J. L. Little Co. stock at the lat- <lb />
store, where thy will for <lb />
days give purchasers <lb />
the Fife meeting in Tar <lb />
Rev. J. N, will <lb />
postpone his regular appointment <lb />
preaching here next Sunday night <lb />
until the third Sunday, at which <lb />
time he may tie expected. <lb />
Attention Farmers We have <lb />
a full line of the improved Clipper, <lb />
Atlas and Girl Champion Turn <lb />
Plows and Castings. We carry <lb />
the Stonewall and Climax <lb />
Cotton Plows- AH 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 />
J. B. Co. <lb />
Jany. 18th, <lb />
For Lime go to Young <lb />
will soon have a <lb />
large on sell you <lb />
in either bulk or sacks, and <lb />
save you money. <lb />
Too Much Idleness. <lb />
done In keep s. <lb />
colored there <lb />
i. . he a <lb />
in pilfering. We In aid a <lb />
complain the oilier day that <lb />
four of them hung around his <lb />
so frequently that had became <lb />
i to be an <lb />
enactment of local laws to meet such <lb />
cases. <lb />
Subscription in Advance. <lb />
our town were <lb />
in error hut week in thinking tint <lb />
Hal was dun <lb />
Ding th-m tor last year. Our <lb />
d- <lb />
tine of those whom j <lb />
the Carrier called on baa expired <lb />
and he was asking for pay for <lb />
year Bear this in mind and be <lb />
ready to renew next lime be calls. <lb />
Home Pride. <lb />
You hear people talk about home <lb />
pride, town pride and c unit pride, <lb />
hut suppose they just fell enough in- <lb />
in their county paper to get one <lb />
of their neighbors to subscribe, think <lb />
it would swell the subscription <lb />
list. That would lie a good way to <lb />
show interest help along a <lb />
homo institution, while the same <lb />
time would be no to you. <lb />
Vick's Floral Guide, 1892. <lb />
True and tried friends are always <lb />
welcome, consequently Floral <lb />
is sure of a warm <lb />
especially when dressed as daintily <lb />
as this year The <lb />
Carnation on the front of cover, and <lb />
on the back, I <lb />
unusually attractive, and the <lb />
colored of <lb />
and vegetables are certainly works <lb />
art and merit. The first twenty- <lb />
four pages, printed in violet ink, de- <lb />
scribe Novelties and Specialties. <lb />
Send en cents f James Vick's Son-, <lb />
Rochester, N Y., and procure a cop <lb />
of this attractive and useful <lb />
will <lb />
, organ <lb />
was splendid, a ma no <lb />
end to amusement. Everybody <lb />
when he grinding <lb />
and holding out bis <lb />
hat ten cents de monk, <lb />
Roy Flanagan, clown, an all over <lb />
food one and footed everybody. <lb />
Clarence priest, and <lb />
Oscar James, parson, but neither of <lb />
them had a very sanctimonious look <lb />
except in clothes. <lb />
n gilt edge <lb />
who could not be told <lb />
ere <lb />
jockey, good costume <lb />
nod only d a to be ex- <lb />
in <lb />
Sain White, black <lb />
Bob Move, soldier, lo <lb />
go whip Chili. <lb />
Tom another soldier who <lb />
ready to fight at the drop a <lb />
brick. <lb />
Bun Ricks, Japanese gentleman, <lb />
nice co--time. <lb />
Ki , Mack diamond. <lb />
Charlie James, court boy, <lb />
nine. <lb />
Ed Foley, hunter, in lull rig. <lb />
fat lady, represented <lb />
his part well and could not be <lb />
Ed. Proctor, country editor, left <lb />
bis clippers home, couldn't get U <lb />
copy. <lb />
Jim Cherry, Chinese make, <lb />
man under the clothes <lb />
Dr. police, made the town <lb />
force ashamed. <lb />
Bob was there but didn't <lb />
he's Hans vats <lb />
is <lb />
Dr. James, cow <lb />
Billie and Claude Whichard <lb />
two girls whose mothers <lb />
didn't know they were out and they <lb />
retired berate unmasking. <lb />
As this is tie third mask <lb />
the young people have bad since <lb />
Christmas the suggests <lb />
that it would now be in order for the <lb />
old folks to have one and he <lb />
younger ones enjoy the fun being <lb />
spectators. We expect some rich <lb />
characters could be produced. <lb />
BEGS TO THAT <lb />
POLICIES. ISSUED IX ARE NOW MATURING WITH <lb />
THE FOLLOWING <lb />
Life Policies are returning from-20 to per cent, in excess of their <lb />
cash cost, according to age of insured, example <lb />
Endowment are returning from to per <lb />
of their cash to age of insured. example <lb />
o Life Policies are returning from lo per cent. In excess of <lb />
their cacti to age of Insured. example <lb />
Examples of Maturing Policies. <lb />
taken at Age <lb />
taken at Age so <lb />
at Age <lb />
These re urns are made to members after Company has <lb />
on the respective policies for twenty years. <lb />
nine <lb />
value 8,388.46 <lb />
value <lb />
carried the <lb />
Pump, <lb />
and <lb />
LOCKS AND BOLTS, <lb />
Union Central Lite Company, Cornish Celebrated <lb />
and Organs. <lb />
We will take pleasure in public in any of the above lines, <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
in corner under Opera House Greenville, V. C <lb />
II <lb />
Persons insured under Ordinary Life Policies may, IN LIEU E <lb />
CASH VALUES, continue their insurance, ORIGINAL Al and re- <lb />
CASH from lo per cent, all premiums <lb />
been paid, and annual dividends hereafter they accrue. example <lb />
insured under Limited-Payment Life Policies may. IN THE <lb />
ABOVE CASH VALUES, their insurance. WITHOUT <lb />
PAYMENTS, and receive CASH DIVIDEND of from to per cent, of <lb />
all premiums that have been paid, and annual dividend hereafter may accrue. <lb />
example <lb />
Best Selling in the <lb />
The Most Reliable Worm Destroyer in Use. <lb />
furnished lo any regular when requested. <lb />
Messrs. M. R. W. Powell, prominent in county, X C, <lb />
wrote in July. 1887, that Mr. T. Floyd gave hut child one dose Boy- <lb />
kin's and the result was worms. He wishes all interested to <lb />
know <lb />
ck H. C, 1884. <lb />
Boykin. Carmer A Co. Baltimore, Mr. a. Rudd, a very <lb />
responsible customer mine, gave a to a child <lb />
last week and the result was norms. Mr. Daniel Pines used it with still better <lb />
worms from one child. Of MOM my sales will be large. <lb />
Yours truly. E. S. SMITH. <lb />
Read the following from one of the 1110-I prominent and known physicians <lb />
in South Carolina. He a old near <lb />
him, took two or three doses of the and passed <lb />
Hated, S. May Wk, u R <lb />
Mr. H. M. of X. C. says. Dr. <lb />
brought over worms from one child in his and that It gives <lb />
satisfaction He sells more of it than all worm medicine. <lb />
Examples of Dividends. <lb />
Policies, see above, may lie continued for the amount, at annual rates <lb />
with annual dividends, and the accumulated dividend-, amounting to <lb />
may be withdrawn in cash. <lb />
see above, may be continued without further payments, receiving annual <lb />
dividends, and the accumulated dividends, amounting to may be <lb />
withdrawn in cash. <lb />
desiring to see results on Policies issued at their present age, and fur- <lb />
particulars as to in settlement, will please address the company or Us <lb />
agents, giving date of birth. <lb />
CENTS PER BOTTLE. <lb />
Do not let your Druggist or General Dealer put you off with some other. Ask for <lb />
Worm and get it. Any M. D. can prescribe it and many do. <lb />
BOYKIN, Baltimore, Id <lb />
factious had a mail last Friday, <lb />
the first in two weeks because of the <lb />
freshet in the river. The people <lb />
down that way can give some idea <lb />
It costs nothing, a the ten cents how bad the dam is needed, out from <lb />
be deducted the first order.<lb />
I the bridge here, <lb />
III <lb />
The Management of the Company further announce <lb />
Company's New Business for exceeded <lb />
Income exceeded that of 1890. <lb />
Assets and Insurance in force were both largely increased. <lb />
Mortality Rate was much below that called for the mortality table. <lb />
Detailed Statement of the Year's Business will be published after the An- <lb />
Report Is Completed. <lb />
II. WELCH. WILLIAM H. BEERS. <lb />
2nd Vice President. President. <lb />
W. WEEKS, Actuary. HENRY <lb />
and Broadway, New York.<lb />
General Agents for North and South Carolina, <lb />
CHARLOTTE, N C. <lb />
L. U. CAMPBELL, Special Agent, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS. <lb />
At the same stand where he will continue to keep a full line of------ <lb />
Heavy Groceries <lb />
MEAT AND <lb />
too Sold <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
--------DEALER IN-------- <lb />
n v, <lb />
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb />
the best Companies in existence, see <lb />
ft Whichard. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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