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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
I THE REFLECTOR <lb/>
J- <lb/>
-HAS A- <lb/>
I Job Printing Room <lb/>
That be surpassed no <lb/>
where in this section. <lb/>
Our work gives <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
Ne <lb/>
Material <lb/>
SEND US YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
GIVEN AWAY <lb/>
BY THE WEEKLY, <lb/>
Tie Atlanta Constitution. <lb/>
Ten thousand dollars <lb/>
this year by The <lb/>
published at Atlanta, Ga , <lb/>
among its <lb/>
This at newspaper has Hie <lb/>
largest circulation am weekly news- <lb/>
paper published in the Unfed Slates, <lb/>
and, with one exception, in London, the <lb/>
largest in the world. It i, first and <lb/>
foremost, a newspaper, every <lb/>
week the full news of ail the world, and <lb/>
devoted especially to the development <lb/>
of the south. Us now ex- <lb/>
and it is poshing for <lb/>
Sample copies will be sent on <lb/>
application. <lb/>
A Distribution. <lb/>
Five thousand dollars will be divided <lb/>
among its subscribers now and <lb/>
July 1st. and between then and <lb/>
the and of the year. <lb/>
The first division lie based on the <lb/>
result of the conventions of <lb/>
the two great in June, and the <lb/>
on the result of the presidential <lb/>
election. <lb/>
The national democratic convention <lb/>
meets at Chicago June 21st. <lb/>
The national republican convention <lb/>
at Minneapolis June 7th. <lb/>
Both will nominate a candidate for <lb/>
president and vice president. <lb/>
for the First Prize. <lb/>
dollars in gold <lb/>
will be given by Tub to <lb/>
the successful answers of the question <lb/>
will lie the nominees of each <lb/>
party for president and vice <lb/>
Any person selecting the four names <lb/>
thus chosen will be entitled to the first <lb/>
prize of c and more <lb/>
than one answers correctly, the prize <lb/>
will lie divided accordingly <lb/>
for a Prize. <lb/>
Five hundred in cash will be <lb/>
divided among those who guess correctly <lb/>
only three out of the four to be <lb/>
thus chosen as part., standard bearers, so <lb/>
that the rues may prophesy wrong as <lb/>
to one of the four and by getting <lb/>
three correct will come in for this prize. <lb/>
Mis- <lb/>
In addition lo above in gold <lb/>
more will be distributed in <lb/>
prizes, consisting of twenty-live silver <lb/>
the recall value which is <lb/>
an I Sill, respectively, and copies of <lb/>
r's <lb/>
edition, fully illustrated and consist- <lb/>
of 1,500 pages. <lb/>
The gold watches will be given to <lb/>
every hundredth ballot of first 2.5 <lb/>
silver watches to the next <lb/>
aerie of hundredth ballots, and after <lb/>
that every fiftieth ballot will receive one <lb/>
of I h-200 Webster's mammoth <lb/>
All must be by one <lb/>
year's subscription Weekly ox- <lb/>
only and most lie writ- <lb/>
ten on a separate piece of paper from <lb/>
that containing order tor <lb/>
The winner of any of the prizes <lb/>
noted will be given a free guess at <lb/>
the next distribution after July <lb/>
1st costs you and you <lb/>
may get CUM or in gold. Yon <lb/>
will certainly receive the Week- <lb/>
newspaper published in the south for <lb/>
one year will never lie a year <lb/>
when a great will b more <lb/>
interesting than this one. <lb/>
Address all communications to The <lb/>
Constitution-, Atlanta, <lb/>
The Eastern Reflector. <lb/>
VOL. <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/>
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
morning and <lb/>
at Antioch <lb/>
First <lb/>
Second morning <lb/>
and Saturday night before. <lb/>
Third and fourth at Green- <lb/>
ville, morning and night, also second <lb/>
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday <lb/>
night services each week. <lb/>
Service at school house on <lb/>
Tarboro road on Thursday night It-fore <lb/>
each third Sunday until April and <lb/>
on third Sunday evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. pastor of <lb/>
Circuit of the M- K. South, <lb/>
will preach at the tallowing times and <lb/>
places regularly each <lb/>
1st Sunday at Salem, II o'clock A. M. <lb/>
1st Sunday. Chapel. o <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
2nd Grove, II o'clock <lb/>
A M <lb/>
2nd Sunday, School House, <lb/>
miles west of Greenville. <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, Ayden or Branch <lb/>
School House. A. M. <lb/>
3rd Sunday, Tripp's <lb/>
o'clock F. M. <lb/>
4th Sunday, Bethlehem, o'clock <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
4th Sunday. Lang's School House, <lb/>
o'clock r. M. <lb/>
THE BACHELOR. <lb/>
H. C. DODGE. <lb/>
We not a ; <lb/>
He leads an MT <lb/>
Yet he deserves no FT for <lb/>
He ought to CK wife. <lb/>
If he is will not wait <lb/>
Until he's in <lb/>
But now to lad a mate. <lb/>
Who'd come in RA. <lb/>
He he is foolish, too. <lb/>
For In the ND's dead. <lb/>
Without one sweet RT can woo. <lb/>
And then so wed. <lb/>
M dainties nice to KT gets <lb/>
Nor NE soft caress; <lb/>
In sick no angel pets <lb/>
Him to distress. <lb/>
It's RD finds to cook his steaks <lb/>
And no doubt. <lb/>
And eat the baker makes <lb/>
To supper out. <lb/>
lie has to wash and too. <lb/>
And mend hi CD clothes; <lb/>
Hit lodgings make him blue, <lb/>
When at goes. <lb/>
Of course in slumbers well. <lb/>
In DO he finds delight <lb/>
To hear cherub All yell. <lb/>
With all night. <lb/>
But in old AG will be sad. <lb/>
His heart will <lb/>
will call him <lb/>
E will die unknown. <lb/>
Sun. <lb/>
The Coast Line System. <lb/>
The work of laying the track on <lb/>
the Washington branch of the j <lb/>
W. road began Tuesday by a <lb/>
force of penitentiary convicts. <lb/>
The entire grading has been com- <lb/>
and the track laying will <lb/>
begin at the junction of the <lb/>
branch and the <lb/>
and Raleigh road, a few- <lb/>
miles below There will <lb/>
be twenty-four miles of the Wash- <lb/>
branch and when completed <lb/>
it will give the Atlantic Coast Line <lb/>
a system or roads tapping nearly <lb/>
every important section of Eastern <lb/>
North and opening to <lb/>
the markets of the country the <lb/>
fine grain growing section of the <lb/>
the trucking inter- <lb/>
of the seacoast comities as <lb/>
well as the fish and oyster <lb/>
tries- Washington branch <lb/>
especially will develop one of the <lb/>
finest truck growing regions of the <lb/>
State, and great oyster beds of <lb/>
sound with its fishing <lb/>
interests. <lb/>
From good authority it is also <lb/>
reported by the Wilmington Mes- <lb/>
New is also to <lb/>
be taken the embrace of <lb/>
the Coast Line system. It has <lb/>
been decided to put on a line of <lb/>
boats from Bells Ferry on <lb/>
branch to New which <lb/>
will give an independent line into <lb/>
and out of New <lb/>
The Fayetteville short cut has <lb/>
been completed, the last rails <lb/>
having been laid Monday. It is <lb/>
that it will be thirty <lb/>
days before the new part of the <lb/>
short cut will be for opera- <lb/>
When the Washington branch is <lb/>
completed it will give the Coast <lb/>
Line a road mileage of 1,223 <lb/>
miles, of which miles will be in <lb/>
North Carolina. <lb/>
The branches of the Atlantic <lb/>
Coast Line in North Carolina, <lb/>
together with the mileage of each <lb/>
road in the limits of the State, is as <lb/>
HUES. <lb/>
Wilmington and railroad <lb/>
mainline, Weldon to <lb/>
OUR SQUANDERED <lb/>
Charlotte <lb/>
When Mr. Harrison and the <lb/>
Fifty first Congress came into <lb/>
power there was a surplus in the <lb/>
Treasury so largo as to be em- <lb/>
In less than three years says the <lb/>
World that surplus has been <lb/>
squandered and the Government <lb/>
so burdened with new and per- <lb/>
obligations that the Ways <lb/>
and Means Committee has had to <lb/>
ask the Secretary of the Treasury <lb/>
to inform it whether or not the <lb/>
country can meet its expenses <lb/>
without the adoption of devices <lb/>
for getting more money out of the <lb/>
people. <lb/>
And this startling change has <lb/>
not been brought about by the <lb/>
reduction of taxes. On the con- <lb/>
the Fifty-first Congress <lb/>
multiplied taxes- The straitened <lb/>
condition of the Treasury is due <lb/>
solely to wanton waste <lb/>
less bounties, <lb/>
subsidies the diversion of taxes <lb/>
by means of prohibitive duties, <lb/>
from the Treasury to the coffers <lb/>
of a fat-frying favored class of <lb/>
monopolists. <lb/>
What do plain men of sense <lb/>
think of such stewardship And <lb/>
what are they going to do about it j <lb/>
at the polls next fall <lb/>
The St. Louis Republic has been <lb/>
making some investigations and <lb/>
has developed some appalling <lb/>
with reference to the young <lb/>
men of this country. It finds that <lb/>
one-eighth of the population may <lb/>
be put in this is, <lb/>
there are young men in <lb/>
America- Only fifteen in every <lb/>
one hundred go to church regularly. <lb/>
Out of each hundred about <lb/>
seventy-five never see the inside of <lb/>
a church. Only five per cent. <lb/>
the total number make <lb/>
any profession of religion. In our <lb/>
jails are one hundred and fifty <lb/>
thousand prisoners, of whom <lb/>
par cent, are young men. <lb/>
one-fifth of the active criminals <lb/>
are ever in jail at any one time, <lb/>
this make our criminal pop- <lb/>
number of which <lb/>
are young men. a <lb/>
dark picture- <lb/>
A FAMOUS EULOGY. <lb/>
Of all the eulogies in literature <lb/>
there is none more beautiful than <lb/>
the following upon Gen. Robert <lb/>
E. Lee. It fell from the silver <lb/>
tongue of that eloquent Georgian, <lb/>
Senator Benjamin H. Hill, and is <lb/>
said to have been <lb/>
the future historian <lb/>
comes to survey the character of <lb/>
Lee he will find it raising like a <lb/>
huge mountain above the <lb/>
ting plain of humanity, and he <lb/>
will have to lift his eyes high to- <lb/>
ward heaven to catch its summit- <lb/>
He possessed every virtue of the <lb/>
other great commanders without <lb/>
their vices. He was a foe without <lb/>
hate, a friend without treachery, a <lb/>
soldier without cruelty, and a <lb/>
without murmuring- He was <lb/>
a public officer without vices, a <lb/>
private citizen without a wrong, a <lb/>
neighbor without reproach, a <lb/>
Christian without hypocrisy, and a <lb/>
man without guilt. He was Caesar <lb/>
without his ambition, Frederick <lb/>
without his tyranny, Napoleon <lb/>
without his selfishness, and Wash <lb/>
without his reward. He <lb/>
was as obedient to authority as a <lb/>
int royal in authority as a <lb/>
true king. He was as as a <lb/>
woman in hie, pure and modest as a <lb/>
virgin in thought, watchful as a <lb/>
Roman vestal in duty, submissive <lb/>
to law as Socrates, and grand in <lb/>
battle as <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
By virtue of the power and authority <lb/>
given in a Trust Deed from G. W. Cox <lb/>
and E. O. Cox to James H. dated <lb/>
the 30th day of December re- <lb/>
corded in the Register of Deeds office, <lb/>
county, E, pages and X. <lb/>
I will on March 7th, offer <lb/>
for sale at the Court House Door in <lb/>
Greenville- to the of <lb/>
the said K. G. Cox. the following <lb/>
or parcel of land lying in <lb/>
as the Causey place, continuing <lb/>
one hundred acres more or less. <lb/>
of Sale, Cash. <lb/>
February 1st MM. <lb/>
James H. Trustee. <lb/>
C M. for Trustee. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
The Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt <lb/>
county having letters of <lb/>
ration to the undersigned, on the <lb/>
3rd day of February. 1393, on the estate <lb/>
of James Adams, deceased, notice is <lb/>
hereby given to all person indebted to <lb/>
the estate to make immediate payment <lb/>
to the undersigned, and to all creditors <lb/>
of said estate to t their claims <lb/>
properly authenticated, to the under- <lb/>
signed, within twelve mouths after the <lb/>
date of this notice, or this will be <lb/>
in bar of their recovery. <lb/>
V This the 3rd day of Feb. 1883. <lb/>
J. Q. ADAMS. <lb/>
on estate James Adams. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on <lb/>
the 3rd day of Feb. 1802, as <lb/>
Of th Last and Testament of A. A. <lb/>
Baker, deceased, notice is hereby given <lb/>
to all persons indebted to the estate to <lb/>
make immediate payment to the under- <lb/>
signed, and all persons having claims <lb/>
against estate are that they <lb/>
must present the same for payment on <lb/>
or before the 3rd day of Feb. or this <lb/>
of recovery. <lb/>
A. A. Baker. <lb/>
ton. <lb/>
branch, Mount to <lb/>
Tarboro, <lb/>
Seek and Kinston <lb/>
Halifax and <lb/>
Nashville branch. Rocky Mount <lb/>
to Spring Hope, <lb/>
Wilson and Fayetteville branch, <lb/>
Fayetteville, <lb/>
Wilson and branch <lb/>
in course of construction, Fay- <lb/>
to Rowland, N. C., <lb/>
Clinton Warsaw to <lb/>
ton, <lb/>
Midland North Carolina, <lb/>
to <lb/>
Washington A. A R. <lb/>
junction, to Washington. N. C, <lb/>
in course of construction, <lb/>
Albemarle and railroad, <lb/>
Tarboro to Plymouth, <lb/>
Wilmington, Columbia and Au- <lb/>
railroad, Wilmington to <lb/>
Fair Bluff, <lb/>
and Carolina ad, Tar- <lb/>
to <lb/>
and Salisbury railroad, <lb/>
Wadesboro to <lb/>
Wilmington, Con- <lb/>
way Hub Mt, Tabor, <lb/>
Total <lb/>
Best Sorghums for Molasses, or <lb/>
Sugar. <lb/>
Frank E. Emery, N. C- Experiment <lb/>
Station, Raleigh. <lb/>
This Station received some <lb/>
heads of Sorghum <lb/>
from the U. S- Department <lb/>
of Agriculture in the spring of <lb/>
1891, which were planted and the <lb/>
crop of seed resulting from each <lb/>
variety has been saved for <lb/>
to such growers of <lb/>
hum in the State as may desire to <lb/>
improve in the sugar producing <lb/>
value of their Sorghum <lb/>
Applications for seed will be sup- <lb/>
plied until the stock of seed is ex- <lb/>
Below is a list of the <lb/>
rarities, together with per <lb/>
of sugar in juice of the identical <lb/>
canes from which our seed was <lb/>
grown. The analyses were made <lb/>
by the Chemical Division of the <lb/>
U- S. Department of Agriculture <lb/>
on Kansas grown Sorghum, hence <lb/>
this year's growth will be second <lb/>
in North Carolina and second from <lb/>
analysis of the <lb/>
in <lb/>
XI ME OF <lb/>
Early pr. ct. <lb/>
l. Link's<lb/>
Colman<lb/>
Early <lb/>
Lei<lb/>
Orange Amber Cross <lb/>
man <lb/>
Honor to a North Carolinian. <lb/>
Chronicle. <lb/>
Sons of North Carolina, who go <lb/>
abroad and try, usually become <lb/>
famous. The pulpit of late <lb/>
of London, will <lb/>
be tilled by a North Carolinian, <lb/>
Rev. A. C- a native of <lb/>
Shelby. Rev. Mr. Dixon left the <lb/>
State several years ago and be- <lb/>
came paster of a Baptist church <lb/>
Baltimore. From Baltimore he <lb/>
went to Brooklyn and became pas- <lb/>
ton of Hansom Place Baptist <lb/>
In all probability Rev. <lb/>
Mr. Dixon will soon receive a call <lb/>
to <lb/>
These have been selected with <lb/>
great care for distribution on the <lb/>
analyses given, and the stock of <lb/>
seed having now been increased, it <lb/>
is hoped good crops of Sorghum, <lb/>
richer in sugar than those now in <lb/>
use, will result from introduction <lb/>
of this seed. <lb/>
Moving to Reduce the Cost of <lb/>
Special Chronicle. <lb/>
Douglas, N. C, Feb. 1892- <lb/>
The following resolutions were <lb/>
passed by Rockingham county <lb/>
Alliance in session at Wentworth, <lb/>
N. C-, January 14th, 1892 <lb/>
Resolved 1st, That we respect- <lb/>
fully request our legislative com- <lb/>
to investigate the cost of <lb/>
litigation in our courts, and see <lb/>
whether or not they can be <lb/>
cheapened by legislation or <lb/>
report to the next meet- <lb/>
of the State Alliance- <lb/>
Resolved That we respect- <lb/>
fully ask all our Superior court <lb/>
clerks and other court officers to <lb/>
give to the people through the <lb/>
press, all the information at their <lb/>
command relating to this point. <lb/>
Resolved That a copy of <lb/>
these resolutions be sent to the <lb/>
Chronicle, Progressive <lb/>
Review and Webster's Weekly <lb/>
with request to publish. <lb/>
All papers friendly to the cause <lb/>
of the masses will please copy this <lb/>
and also all statements given by <lb/>
court officers as requested in <lb/>
second- <lb/>
Respectfully submitted, <lb/>
R. P. Bans. <lb/>
T. B. Lindsay. Sect. <lb/>
The Best Way. <lb/>
Durham Sun. <lb/>
Business men are each year en- <lb/>
come nearer to the <lb/>
cash system of doing business, <lb/>
realizing that it is the only correct <lb/>
way of doing trade, and that it is <lb/>
better for both buyer and seller. <lb/>
To the dealer it means less book <lb/>
accounts and the expense and <lb/>
worry of making collections, and <lb/>
any hard feelings that may arise <lb/>
between himself customer <lb/>
over accounts. Store accounts <lb/>
invariably grow to larger <lb/>
than the is aware of, <lb/>
and then follows a dispute with a <lb/>
feeling on one side that charged <lb/>
accounts have been made that <lb/>
were never ordered, and on the <lb/>
other side that injustice and loss <lb/>
have been sustained by long <lb/>
credits. Make it cash every time <lb/>
or it equivalent <lb/>
. GRIP'S GREETING. <lb/>
New York Sun. <lb/>
I am La Grippe <lb/>
for <lb/>
But I get there just the same. <lb/>
I am no of persons, <lb/>
And silk, or satin, or broadcloth <lb/>
Has no more influence with me <lb/>
Than a width of <lb/>
Brown muslin has I <lb/>
I lay for the woman <lb/>
Who runs around bareheaded <lb/>
Or thin shod; <lb/>
And the swipe man <lb/>
Without an overcoat <lb/>
Is perfectly astonishing <lb/>
The air is full of me ; <lb/>
I've got a corner on the <lb/>
Human system at present, <lb/>
And I am working it <lb/>
For all its worth <lb/>
I and the doctors <lb/>
Are having a picnic <lb/>
With the doctors <lb/>
Getting all the gate receipts <lb/>
However I'm not in it <lb/>
For boodle, <lb/>
But why multiply words <lb/>
You know me, <lb/>
And if you don't you can learn <lb/>
All you want to know <lb/>
By reference to the. families <lb/>
Which, and in which, <lb/>
I have worked <lb/>
Mighty few of them <lb/>
recognize me socially, <lb/>
And curse me <lb/>
For all the crimes in the cal- <lb/>
But I ain't saying a word. <lb/>
I simply <lb/>
Let her go r. <lb/>
Endorsing. <lb/>
What the Railroad Commission Has <lb/>
Done. <lb/>
Mr- James W. Wilson, chairman <lb/>
of the railroad commission of <lb/>
Carolina informs a reporter <lb/>
of the Washington that, while <lb/>
the railroad commission of North <lb/>
Carolina has only been established <lb/>
about ten months, it has <lb/>
ed the assets in tax valuation of <lb/>
railroad property in the State <lb/>
about and, by <lb/>
ting the telegraph tariffs and re- <lb/>
passengers fares and <lb/>
freight charges, has saved to the <lb/>
people between four and five <lb/>
thousand dollar , <lb/>
These Men Were Killed by <lb/>
Washington Post. <lb/>
Senator Back's death resulted <lb/>
from overwork. <lb/>
Henry Ward Beecher succumbed <lb/>
to overwork. <lb/>
Zach Chandler died of apoplexy <lb/>
due to overwork. <lb/>
Family troubles and overwork <lb/>
killed Horace Greeley. <lb/>
Secretary Folger fell a victim <lb/>
to the demon of overwork. <lb/>
Senator Plumb, though a giant <lb/>
in strength, died from overwork. <lb/>
Dan Manning died from lack of <lb/>
exercise and excessive brain labor- <lb/>
Edwin M- Stanton's death was <lb/>
by overwork and <lb/>
worry. <lb/>
Family troubles and overwork <lb/>
killed ex-Senator Pendleton, of <lb/>
Ohio. <lb/>
Worry and disappointment killed <lb/>
Charles Henry Clay and <lb/>
Daniel <lb/>
This system of endorsing is all <lb/>
wrong, and should be utterly <lb/>
abolished. It has been the <lb/>
ruin of more men than, per- <lb/>
haps, all other causes. Book- <lb/>
a journal devoted to mer- <lb/>
chants, clerks business <lb/>
advises our young men especially <lb/>
to study the matter carefully in all <lb/>
its bearings, then adopt some set <lb/>
tied policy to govern their conduct, <lb/>
so as to be ready to the <lb/>
man who asks them to sign his <lb/>
note. What responsibility does <lb/>
one assume when he endorses a <lb/>
note Simply this; He held for <lb/>
the payment of the amount in full <lb/>
principal and interest, if the ma- <lb/>
of the note, through <lb/>
mismanagement, or fails <lb/>
to pay it- Notice, the endorser as- <lb/>
all this responsibility, with <lb/>
no voice in the management of the <lb/>
business and no in the <lb/>
profits of the transaction, if it <lb/>
proves profitable, but with a <lb/>
of loss if, for any of the <lb/>
reasons stated, the principal fails <lb/>
to pay the note- <lb/>
A Safe Rule. <lb/>
Mirror. <lb/>
Never suspect a friend of doing <lb/>
you a wrong until the truth of it is <lb/>
as plain and as clear as the sun at <lb/>
noon on a cloudless day, and then <lb/>
yes, even then, do not accuse or <lb/>
censure until you have heard from <lb/>
his own lips his version and ex- <lb/>
of the supposed wrong. <lb/>
If you were ever a friend to him <lb/>
he is certainly entitled to that <lb/>
much forbearance and <lb/>
If this rule were practiced, <lb/>
many a misunderstanding would <lb/>
averted, and many a heartache <lb/>
spared. <lb/>
The Bank of England, which is <lb/>
the great depository of bullion in <lb/>
the real holds at ordinary times <lb/>
in its vaults The <lb/>
Bank of Germany holds <lb/>
of bullion in gold and silver. <lb/>
Bank of France usually hold <lb/>
2475.000,000. The United States <lb/>
holds in the Treasury and in the <lb/>
various National Banks some- <lb/>
where about in gold <lb/>
and silver. The increasing wealth <lb/>
of the various nations is some- <lb/>
what remarkable, During the last <lb/>
ten years the Bank of France has <lb/>
more than doubled its reserves. <lb/>
Drake's <lb/>
HERE'S THE SIZE OF IT. <lb/>
Concord Times <lb/>
Much is being in some of the <lb/>
papers about the lack of funds to <lb/>
support the graded schools of <lb/>
Charlotte, as a result of the <lb/>
of the town treasury caused <lb/>
by the withdrawal of the <lb/>
tax. Of course, this makes a big <lb/>
hole in the is <lb/>
to that fact- But is it not <lb/>
infinitely better, and cheaper too, <lb/>
looking at it from a business point <lb/>
of- view, for the town to levy a <lb/>
special tax for the support of the <lb/>
graded schools is done in Con- <lb/>
than it is to license bar- <lb/>
rooms to scatter want and drunk- <lb/>
throughout the city More <lb/>
than this, even, the lovers of <lb/>
good order in Charlotte <lb/>
themselves had better make up a <lb/>
private subscription to support the <lb/>
schools than to submit to the re- <lb/>
licensing of the saloons. Further, <lb/>
the suspension of the graded <lb/>
schools altogether would work far <lb/>
less harm the re-opening of <lb/>
the saloons. <lb/>
STATE NEWS <lb/>
Go To Mother. <lb/>
Last week twenty-five <lb/>
from the surrounding country left <lb/>
this place for the coal mines of <lb/>
Pennsylvania where they are <lb/>
promised good wages and steady <lb/>
work in the mines. A few days <lb/>
later twelve others left for the <lb/>
same destination. If the <lb/>
want to improve their condition <lb/>
we think they will have a better <lb/>
chance of doing so in the <lb/>
and West than in the South, <lb/>
from reports which have come <lb/>
back from those who have gone to <lb/>
the cotton fields of the States far- <lb/>
toward the South Weldon <lb/>
Wilson Mirror. <lb/>
What a blessing, what a <lb/>
When trials come, when <lb/>
sorrows break, when the clouds of <lb/>
misfortune lower what a comfort <lb/>
is it to go to mother and all <lb/>
shadows in the sunlight of her <lb/>
love. So children, go to mother <lb/>
in every mother <lb/>
knows. Do not hang back shyly, <lb/>
feeling that your youthful follies <lb/>
will be laughed at. There is no <lb/>
thought of yours that is not <lb/>
sacred to mother. Her touch will <lb/>
send the shadow flying <lb/>
before the radiant sun of her <lb/>
selfish love- She is the comforter <lb/>
given you for your very own. <lb/>
When all else turn from <lb/>
from the dread depths of deep dis- <lb/>
grace or misery you open your <lb/>
eyes look upward <lb/>
there is mother's face close <lb/>
above you, her heart beating above <lb/>
your own, her pitying soul yearn- <lb/>
over you, her whole being <lb/>
changed into a protecting <lb/>
wall to shut you from the cold and <lb/>
unforgiving world. <lb/>
The Country Publisher. <lb/>
The public should ever bear in <lb/>
mind, says an exchange, that it is <lb/>
a constant struggle with many <lb/>
country publishers to keep their <lb/>
paper going financially. The <lb/>
business is made up of such small <lb/>
accounts that many people think <lb/>
that the trifling amount due from <lb/>
them docs not matter ranch <lb/>
paid promptly or not, forget- <lb/>
ting that there may be thousands <lb/>
entertaining the same idea, and <lb/>
thus withholding from the pub- <lb/>
his hard-earned dollars, <lb/>
while not particularly meaning to <lb/>
work a hardship. The better plan <lb/>
is always to promptly pay in ad- <lb/>
for a newspaper the moment <lb/>
the subscription expires. The <lb/>
paper will be all the better for <lb/>
promptness i this matter, for no <lb/>
man can get up a spicy, interest- <lb/>
journal if his mind is harassed <lb/>
by bills coming due, and which, <lb/>
from the negligence of patrons, he <lb/>
is unable to meet. <lb/>
Test Your Seeds. <lb/>
Thousands of dollars are lost <lb/>
every year by sowing stale and <lb/>
worthless seeds. This can be <lb/>
largely avoided by purchasing <lb/>
early and having the seeds tested <lb/>
before sowing them- The N- C. <lb/>
Experiment Station will advise <lb/>
its friends, upon application, where <lb/>
the best class of seeds may be <lb/>
obtained, and will test samples <lb/>
free of charge for citizens of the <lb/>
State- Samples sent for test should <lb/>
contain at least seeds, and <lb/>
should be a fair average sample of <lb/>
the original package The names <lb/>
of the seller and price paid for the <lb/>
seeds must in all cases be stated. <lb/>
It requires two full weeks to make <lb/>
a complete test of a seed sample. <lb/>
Address samples to the N. C. <lb/>
Experiment Station, Raleigh, N. <lb/>
Botanist. <lb/>
Happenings Here and There Gathered <lb/>
Prom our Exchanges. <lb/>
Evangelist Fife has been hold- <lb/>
a successful meeting at <lb/>
Goldsboro There is <lb/>
a certain family of four residing in <lb/>
this city whose combined ago is <lb/>
years. <lb/>
Asheboro Temperance <lb/>
sentiment is so strong in this <lb/>
county that no applications are <lb/>
made to the county commissioners <lb/>
to giant license for the sale of <lb/>
spirituous liquors. <lb/>
Washington The <lb/>
schooner Wave, Capt. <lb/>
was swamped in Sound <lb/>
on Thursday last and the captain <lb/>
and entire crew were lost. She <lb/>
was laden with oysters for Norfolk. <lb/>
A school boy in Gaston county <lb/>
has the schoolhouse at <lb/>
which he was a pupil. He did <lb/>
this because he disliked the idea <lb/>
of attending school. The house <lb/>
a handsome one and was furn- <lb/>
Only a few months ago. <lb/>
The Supreme court of the State <lb/>
rendered a decision of interest to <lb/>
every merchant the State. It <lb/>
was in regard to the <lb/>
purchase tax. and the court finds <lb/>
that the tax is constitutional. So <lb/>
the merchants will have to pay the <lb/>
tax. <lb/>
Washington On Thurs- <lb/>
day Mr. Allen Hudson, who was <lb/>
logging for mill, while <lb/>
attempting to extricate a pine <lb/>
which had lodged as he felled it, <lb/>
was struck by the rebound and <lb/>
killed. His collar bone and <lb/>
were broken. <lb/>
Pittsboro A few days <lb/>
ago a man in this comity married <lb/>
his step mother, his father's widow <lb/>
whose five children are his own <lb/>
half brothers and sisters, and also <lb/>
now his step children. The idea <lb/>
of a man being the husband of his <lb/>
mother and the father of his broth- <lb/>
era and sisters. <lb/>
Newton Mrs. Little, <lb/>
widow of Rev. M. L. Little, who <lb/>
was killed in the A- k. L. railroad <lb/>
accident near Maiden about a year <lb/>
ago, has compromised with the <lb/>
railroad for damages, and <lb/>
that the widow of engineer John <lb/>
who was killed on <lb/>
mountain Ashe- <lb/>
ville two years ago, has com- <lb/>
promised for <lb/>
Lenoir They have a <lb/>
in Asheville which <lb/>
assesses every bachelor for any <lb/>
charitable object they have in view <lb/>
and they always send round and <lb/>
collect it. They sent to collect <lb/>
Judge Shuford s assessment the <lb/>
other day and he non-plussed them <lb/>
by refusing to pay and offering to <lb/>
many any one of the spinsters the <lb/>
club would designate. <lb/>
Tarboro Some <lb/>
in this one-crop ruined land <lb/>
still contend that it does not pay <lb/>
to raise meat. W. M. Edmondson <lb/>
says with peanuts the cost is very <lb/>
little. He estimates that the <lb/>
pounds of meat killed by him did <lb/>
not cost more than three cents a <lb/>
pound. The hogs picked his pea- <lb/>
field after he had gathered a <lb/>
bushels to the acre- <lb/>
Salisbury Our <lb/>
friends are rejoicing over a <lb/>
magnificent proposition by which <lb/>
their home at Barium <lb/>
Springs will be speedily rebuilt. <lb/>
Mr. Geo. W. Watts, of Durham, <lb/>
has written to Dr. Rumple that he <lb/>
will build one of the cottages, cost- <lb/>
not more than five thousand <lb/>
dollars, provided the Regents will <lb/>
erect the other. As a portion of <lb/>
the sum needed is already on hand <lb/>
and the Presbyterians of the State <lb/>
can be depended on in an <lb/>
e is no doubt the build- <lb/>
of these two handsome cottages <lb/>
Astronomers tell us in their own <lb/>
simple, intelligible way, that the <lb/>
gradual lengthening of the days is <lb/>
due to the of the ecliptic <lb/>
to the terrestrial This <lb/>
ought to set at rest the foolish <lb/>
idea that the days are longer <lb/>
because the sun rises earlier and <lb/>
sets later. Orange <lb/>
CATARRH REMEDY. <lb/>
A marvelous for <lb/>
Canker mouth and <lb/>
With each there Is an ingenious <lb/>
nasal Injector the m-re successful <lb/>
treatment of these complaint without <lb/>
Price Sold at <lb/>
STORE. <lb/>
The REFLECTOR <lb/>
A whole year for <lb/>
One Hollar; lint <lb/>
i in order ii <lb/>
i must pay in advance. <lb/>
i If you stamped <lb/>
just after your name <lb/>
on die the <lb/>
paper the <lb/>
Subscription <lb/>
Expires To Weeks <lb/>
From This <lb/>
It is to you no- <lb/>
unless re- <lb/>
newed in that time <lb/>
the will <lb/>
cease going to you <lb/>
at the expiration of ; <lb/>
the two weeks. <lb/>
TR. J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
. C. <lb/>
Office In Skinner Building, upper <lb/>
opposite <lb/>
It. D. L. J AUKS,<lb/>
N. <lb/>
h. FLEMING, <lb/>
E Y-AT-LA W. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb/>
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb/>
JARVIS. <lb/>
BLOW, <lb/>
ALEX. L. SeW <lb/>
W, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
I. a a; a. r. <lb/>
A TYSON, <lb/>
VI N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention given to <lb/>
WM. H. LONG, <lb/>
x. c. <lb/>
Prompt and careful attention to <lb/>
Collect ion solicited. <lb/>
L. C. LATHAM. <lb/>
T SKINNER, <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
U G. JAKES, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the conn. <lb/>
a v. <lb/>
H-0 <lb/>
i m <lb/>
et n<lb/>
Don't Swear. <lb/>
Wilson Mirror. <lb/>
Do not swear. There is no <lb/>
to swear outside of a print- <lb/>
office. It useful in <lb/>
reading, and indispensable in get- <lb/>
forms to press, and also <lb/>
bean known to assist in looking <lb/>
over the paper after it is printed, <lb/>
but otherwise it is a very disgust- <lb/>
habit. <lb/>
The Nashville <lb/>
has sent a protest to congress <lb/>
against the printing of stamped <lb/>
envelopes by the government <lb/>
without charge to users- By <lb/>
printing these envelopes for <lb/>
men the government does an <lb/>
injustice to the printers all over <lb/>
the country, and it is a custom <lb/>
that be abolished by con- <lb/>
A friend Induced me to try Salvation <lb/>
Oil for my rheumatic food, I used it and <lb/>
the rheumatism Is entirely gone. JOHN <lb/>
ii. ANDERSON, Baltimore, Md. <lb/>
Positive and unsolicited testimony <lb/>
from every section every claim <lb/>
made for hint efficacy of Dr. <lb/>
Bull's Cough Price cents. <lb/>
1875. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
BRICK STOKE <lb/>
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUT <lb/>
lug their year's supplies will And <lb/>
their interest to get our prices before par <lb/>
chasing elsewhere. is complete <lb/>
n all Its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb/>
RICE. TEA, Ac. <lb/>
Lowest <lb/>
TOBACCO SNUFF C A <lb/>
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to sulk <lb/>
the times. Out goods are all bought and <lb/>
sold CASH, therefore, having <lb/>
to sell at a close margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
M. <lb/>
K. <lb/>
Tin <lb/>
Greenville, Preside <lb/>
I. B. <lb/>
J. S. Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen A <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on Ta <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer is the fines <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for the comfort, <lb/>
and convenience of Ladles <lb/>
A Table furnished with ti <lb/>
best the market affords. <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer U <lb/>
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at o'clock, A. H. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. M. <lb/>
Freights received daily <lb/>
Lading given to <lb/>
r. I. j. <lb/>
Washington N. C IT.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017535_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
B. J. <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, <lb/>
at at <lb/>
N. C., n mail matter. <lb/>
Publisher's <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb/>
The Reflector is 81.00 per <lb/>
Advertising Rates.-One com ran <lb/>
one year, one-hall year. <lb/>
; one-quarter column one year, <lb/>
Transient Inch <lb/>
lie week. ; two weeks, one <lb/>
month Two inches one week, <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb/>
Column as reading Items, cents per <lb/>
i for each insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb/>
and Notices- <lb/>
and Sales, <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents, etc. will <lb/>
be charged at legal rates and must <lb/>
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not <lb/>
Above, any length of time, can be <lb/>
made by application to the office either <lb/>
in <lb/>
Copy tor N v Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of should lie <lb/>
handed In by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to receive prompt in <lb/>
day following. <lb/>
The a large <lb/>
will be found a prof table medium <lb/>
through which to reach th public. <lb/>
Charlotte wants the State Dem- <lb/>
convention this year and is <lb/>
working in dead earnest for it. <lb/>
The North State recently re- <lb/>
moved to Raleigh, from Greens- <lb/>
has moved back to the latter <lb/>
place <lb/>
The South is for the ablest, <lb/>
strongest and truest Democrat for <lb/>
the Presidency, no matter from <lb/>
what State or section he hails. <lb/>
With us principles are first and <lb/>
men second. <lb/>
General Milton S- a <lb/>
name not forgotten by North Car- <lb/>
is to be tried in New <lb/>
York City for grand larceny. He <lb/>
is a corrupt rascal and is now what <lb/>
he was in when the chief <lb/>
Radical boss in this State. <lb/>
Alger finds himself as a <lb/>
Presidential possibility embarrass- <lb/>
ed by the fact that he will have to <lb/>
defend his war record, as official <lb/>
statements record that Sherman <lb/>
recommended his dishonorable <lb/>
discharge from the army. What <lb/>
makes it worse it that his witnesses <lb/>
are all dead- <lb/>
The Democratic State <lb/>
Committee meets in Raleigh <lb/>
the second of March to select time <lb/>
and place for holding the State <lb/>
Convention. There should be a <lb/>
attendance. Let there be no <lb/>
objection to the time and place <lb/>
after it has been named. We <lb/>
need harmony. <lb/>
Mr. Blaine says the report that <lb/>
he is to resign from the Cabinet <lb/>
is an This is de- <lb/>
emphatic and yet his friends <lb/>
are still insisting that he does not <lb/>
mean what he says. He evidently <lb/>
furnishes the brains for the present <lb/>
administration and it seems as if <lb/>
he ought to be allowed to remain <lb/>
in the Cabinet- <lb/>
Monday was the. birth <lb/>
clay of Washington- It was <lb/>
observed in many places. <lb/>
It is to be hoped that its annual <lb/>
return has inspired some of our <lb/>
great statesman with the <lb/>
which marked him for all <lb/>
time as in war, first in peace, <lb/>
and first in the hearts of his <lb/>
If the weather here was to be <lb/>
taken as an index, allowing for the <lb/>
difference in the latitude of this <lb/>
place and Albany, the New York <lb/>
World was not far wrong in <lb/>
naming the Convention that met <lb/>
there last Monday the out <lb/>
It was evidently a <lb/>
cold day for Hill and unless the <lb/>
signs of the times are wrong for <lb/>
Cleveland also. <lb/>
Hon. T. R who has <lb/>
been associated with the Raleigh <lb/>
News and Observer for some time <lb/>
past has severed his connection <lb/>
with that paper. The only cause <lb/>
assigned is that the reasons are <lb/>
sufficient to himself. We trust <lb/>
Mr. will not remain long <lb/>
out of journalism. He is a scholarly <lb/>
gentleman and makes a fine editor. <lb/>
His plans will be announced later. <lb/>
President Winston of the <lb/>
has made an elaborate <lb/>
report of the condition, progress <lb/>
and needs of the University. The <lb/>
report shows a large increase of <lb/>
patronage. It indicates general <lb/>
prosperity in all departments. He <lb/>
makes some suggestions in <lb/>
reference to the conduct and needs. <lb/>
He also names specified amounts <lb/>
which the University needs now <lb/>
to and develop its useful <lb/>
Doubtless some of these <lb/>
will be forth coming. President <lb/>
Winston is the right man in the <lb/>
right blade and under his manage- <lb/>
may reasonably expect <lb/>
the University to be at no distant <lb/>
day second no institution learning <lb/>
in the South. <lb/>
or Star the <lb/>
Indian of the Cheyenne tribe <lb/>
who is traveling lecturing <lb/>
with the object of awakening an <lb/>
interest in the Indian both as to <lb/>
his civilization and Christianity, <lb/>
was here some time ago and de- <lb/>
livered three lectures. We have <lb/>
intended saying something in the <lb/>
last two or three issues in refer- <lb/>
to the subject matter of these <lb/>
lectures but have been prevented <lb/>
from doing so. <lb/>
Mr. Star is a man of no ordinary <lb/>
information- He seems to be fully <lb/>
conversant not only with the his- <lb/>
of his own race but that of the <lb/>
white race also. He has a mag- <lb/>
voice and speaks the <lb/>
English language with remarkable <lb/>
clearness. Ho feels deeply <lb/>
interest in his own people and in <lb/>
consequence is endeavoring to <lb/>
enlighten the people generally in <lb/>
reference to their past and present <lb/>
and enlist their sympathies in be- <lb/>
half of this race that seems to have <lb/>
been badly treated. <lb/>
He says there are <lb/>
ans in this country and cut of this <lb/>
number are savages. He <lb/>
is very pointed in speaking of <lb/>
these heathen here in our own <lb/>
country with but little interest <lb/>
manifested for their salvation. No <lb/>
one can hear him in reference to <lb/>
this without feeling a desire to <lb/>
give these people the gospel. <lb/>
He thoroughly convinces you that <lb/>
there has never been any real <lb/>
effort by the Government to civil, <lb/>
this race. Instead of that they <lb/>
have kept away from <lb/>
by being driven farther and <lb/>
farther from it. The only effort <lb/>
that has been made he says is to <lb/>
shoot them into it. This has <lb/>
never been successful with any <lb/>
people. How do you expect it to <lb/>
be with the Indian He says the <lb/>
white people showed their <lb/>
years ago to be far inferior to <lb/>
what it is now. If this race has <lb/>
not become civilized in hundreds <lb/>
and hundreds of years how do you <lb/>
expect the Indian to be in so <lb/>
short a time Mr. Star shows that <lb/>
the Indians can be civilized and <lb/>
also, if they were in <lb/>
contact with these things. The <lb/>
system of appointing agents for <lb/>
the Indians is fully ventilated and <lb/>
shown to be rotten to the core. Of <lb/>
the solemn treaties made with <lb/>
this people only one remains <lb/>
broken, the one made by Jackson <lb/>
about fifty years ago. The Indian <lb/>
did not break them either. Most <lb/>
if not all of them were caused to <lb/>
be broken by this sys- <lb/>
of the United States in <lb/>
pointing salaried agents to go <lb/>
among them to cheat and defraud <lb/>
them and give them whiskey until <lb/>
they make one or two of a tribe <lb/>
commit some crime, then the <lb/>
United States declares war against <lb/>
the whole tribe for the act of two <lb/>
or three- This is not the way they <lb/>
treat other races- The Indians <lb/>
never come in contact with any of <lb/>
the better class of white people- <lb/>
Nothing but the scum of society <lb/>
goes among them and this is to <lb/>
cheat and them. <lb/>
He shows that it cost the United <lb/>
States about to fight <lb/>
the Indians every year and that <lb/>
agency system is the prime <lb/>
cause of this- The other principal <lb/>
cause is that when any land which <lb/>
they possess under a treaty <lb/>
is found to be valuable on account <lb/>
of its minerals and a body of land <lb/>
sharks along and settles <lb/>
down among them, others follow <lb/>
and the Indians see their hunting <lb/>
ground passing from them. They <lb/>
make complaints but these com- <lb/>
plaints are to be made through <lb/>
these agents who never make them. <lb/>
Then as the great father at Wash- <lb/>
does not interfere to stop <lb/>
them the Indians scalp a few, as <lb/>
they have been taught that if they <lb/>
will do this a fellow will never <lb/>
come back to trouble them again. <lb/>
This the agents report and the <lb/>
great father makes them get farther <lb/>
and farther and gives their lands <lb/>
to the white people. <lb/>
There are many in these <lb/>
lectures that are matters of fact <lb/>
and observation and they are so <lb/>
put by this noble Christian Indian <lb/>
that they cannot fail to awaken a <lb/>
deeper interest in these people. <lb/>
He says the Indians only hope <lb/>
lies in the people. They must <lb/>
right these things and he trusts <lb/>
that by traveling from State to <lb/>
State he may in some way con- <lb/>
tribute to the relief of his <lb/>
We are satisfied that the <lb/>
been badly treated. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
ACORNS FROM BLACKJACK. <lb/>
Mr Regular Correspondent. I promised your readers that I <lb/>
Washington, D. C- Feb. 19,1892- would have something to say of <lb/>
Springer, chair-j Black Jack in the future, <lb/>
man of the Ways and Means com I. The farmers are delayed in their <lb/>
Representative Bland, farm work owing to the cold and <lb/>
chairman of the Coinage commit-j weather has <lb/>
tee, both assured your cleared off and the ground has be- <lb/>
dent there was not the slight-1 come dry and work is <lb/>
est foundation for the that I The acreage of cotton is not so <lb/>
Rev. T. A- Boone, pastor of the <lb/>
Methodist church in Lexington, <lb/>
has just finished a series of <lb/>
mons on the second coming of <lb/>
Christ. He has long made a <lb/>
careful study of this question <lb/>
through the prophesies of the <lb/>
Bible, from which alone he draws <lb/>
his conclusions, and feels <lb/>
that the millennium will occur in <lb/>
the year 1897, only five years from <lb/>
Dispatch. <lb/>
This is all and any <lb/>
preacher is very much of his <lb/>
line when he goes to arguing <lb/>
or trying to prove any definite <lb/>
time for the world to come to an <lb/>
end. The Bible teaches as plainly <lb/>
as it teaches anything that no <lb/>
the day, not even the <lb/>
angels in heaven, when the wind- <lb/>
up of the affairs of this man <lb/>
sphere is to take place. <lb/>
have been recently told about <lb/>
these committees antagonizing <lb/>
each other on the floor of the <lb/>
House- Mr. Bland says that him- <lb/>
self and all the rest of the free <lb/>
coinage Democrats are as <lb/>
anxious to see the bills passed <lb/>
putting wool, cotton ties and bind- <lb/>
twine on the free list, which <lb/>
have been prepared by the Ways <lb/>
a Means committee, as they are <lb/>
to pass the free coinage bill, and <lb/>
that they have never had any <lb/>
of antagonizing any of them. <lb/>
They only ask that a time be set <lb/>
for the consideration of the free <lb/>
coinage bill, and they will utter no <lb/>
complaint if the Committee on <lb/>
Rules decide that their bill be <lb/>
taken up after the tariff bills are <lb/>
passed. <lb/>
The story that Mr. Mills intend- <lb/>
ed offering an entire tariff bill as a <lb/>
substitute for the first one of the <lb/>
tariff bills taken up by the House, <lb/>
had just as little foundation. Mr. <lb/>
Mills has no idea of doing any- <lb/>
thing of the kind. He favors each <lb/>
of the kind. He favors each of <lb/>
the bills prepared by the Ways <lb/>
and Means Committee, the only <lb/>
difference of opinion between him- <lb/>
and the majority of the com- <lb/>
being that he would like to <lb/>
see the entire tariff reformed at <lb/>
one time, instead of going at it by <lb/>
He will heartily sup- <lb/>
port each of the bills, as steps in <lb/>
the right direction. <lb/>
Congress, or as many of its <lb/>
as spare the time from <lb/>
important committee work, will <lb/>
leave here for Chicago to-night, <lb/>
guests of the World's Fair com- <lb/>
of that city, returning next <lb/>
Wednesday morning. <lb/>
Representative Rayner, of Mary- <lb/>
land, this week delivered one of <lb/>
the strongest speeches against <lb/>
trusts ever heard on the floor of <lb/>
the House. He reminded the Re- <lb/>
publicans that neither the Inter <lb/>
state Commerce law nor the Sher- <lb/>
man act passed at the last session <lb/>
of Congress, had prevented the <lb/>
continued formation of the trusts <lb/>
and combinations which it was <lb/>
their alleged purpose to eradicate ; <lb/>
that trusts still blossomed and <lb/>
flourished as they accumulate in <lb/>
every commercial ; that they <lb/>
still defied the law and the <lb/>
diction and mandates of the <lb/>
courts, and that they still, with <lb/>
arrogant front and bold <lb/>
executed their s <lb/>
without the slightest fear of in- <lb/>
punishment of the slightest <lb/>
concern about any encroachment <lb/>
upon their prerogative- They <lb/>
so powerful and influential that <lb/>
the legislatures of States seem <lb/>
to tremble at their presence, and <lb/>
the Congress of the United State <lb/>
had stood by with folded hands <lb/>
and permitted them, with an iron <lb/>
heel to trample upon the rights of <lb/>
the people. <lb/>
The committee to investigate the <lb/>
Pension Office has had a room as- <lb/>
signed it in the capital <lb/>
and it will hold daily sittings of <lb/>
several hours until its work is <lb/>
completed. Representatives Coop <lb/>
of Indiana, and Enloe, of Ten- <lb/>
will assume to positions of <lb/>
prosecutors being thoroughly <lb/>
familiar with most of the charges <lb/>
brought against the bureau. <lb/>
Chairman heeler, of the <lb/>
committee, says he enters <lb/>
upon the investigation without <lb/>
prejudice, and that he will be gov- <lb/>
entirely by the evidence <lb/>
presented to the committee. <lb/>
The House committee on <lb/>
has designated Messrs. J. <lb/>
D. Warner, M. D. Egan, Sherman <lb/>
Hoar and Ezra B. Taylor a sub- <lb/>
committee to conduct the <lb/>
of the <lb/>
authorized by resolution of the <lb/>
House. Mr. Sherman Hoar will <lb/>
act as Secretary to the sub-com- <lb/>
and he will be glad to hoar <lb/>
from any persons desiring to aid <lb/>
in finding out about this business. <lb/>
It is expected that the first hearing <lb/>
before the committee will take <lb/>
place the latter part of next week. <lb/>
The House adopted a resolution <lb/>
calling upon the Postmaster Gen- <lb/>
for information relating to <lb/>
contracts made under the ocean <lb/>
mail subsidy act- Representative <lb/>
Enloe is the author of the <lb/>
and he wishes to use the <lb/>
formation asked for in preparing <lb/>
an argument in favor of <lb/>
asked for in preparing an <lb/>
in favor of his bill for the <lb/>
repeal of the subsidy act, which he <lb/>
is confident will be passed by the <lb/>
House. <lb/>
Democratic absentees are giving <lb/>
the leaders of the House the con- <lb/>
of this practice will <lb/>
prove very embarrassing, as it <lb/>
enables the Republicans to tie the <lb/>
House up at any time by refusing <lb/>
to vote, thus breaking a quorum, <lb/>
as was done several times this <lb/>
week. <lb/>
The Indian appropriation bill, <lb/>
which is less than the <lb/>
one passed last year, which carried <lb/>
to pay for lands <lb/>
chased from various tribes, is now <lb/>
being considered by the House. <lb/>
No time has been set to close de- <lb/>
bate upon it. <lb/>
AND <lb/>
large last year. The low price <lb/>
has discouraged the farmers and <lb/>
are putting in more oats than <lb/>
usual. There will be some <lb/>
c planted in this direction this <lb/>
yea Mr. E. S- Dixon used one <lb/>
barn last year, and this year he <lb/>
will use five. Some of the farmers <lb/>
are going to try some Irish <lb/>
We are too far from tr; <lb/>
Two rail roads have been <lb/>
partly surveyed in this n and <lb/>
the rights secured for one of them. <lb/>
I think we will have a i be- <lb/>
fore a great while. If we had one <lb/>
I think we could compete with any <lb/>
section of the county. Our laud <lb/>
is underlaid with as fine marl as <lb/>
there is in the county and with <lb/>
generally a clay sub-soil wet or <lb/>
dry weather does not affect it as <lb/>
the lighter land. I have noticed <lb/>
the crop for the last ten years and <lb/>
the farmers have made a plenty of <lb/>
corn and meat and most of <lb/>
them have some to spare. If you <lb/>
will notice a man with a full barn <lb/>
and smoke house you will find him <lb/>
out of debt. I don't think you will <lb/>
find a farm lien against any farmer <lb/>
around Black Jack. A large <lb/>
of the farmers have not sold <lb/>
their cotton, owing to low price <lb/>
On the 14th, Mr. W. S. Dixon <lb/>
of Black Jack was married to Miss <lb/>
Carrie Harris, of Haddocks X <lb/>
Roads. Moore, J. P. <lb/>
Mr. E- S. Dixon has a sow <lb/>
fourteen fine pigs all of her <lb/>
She is a very prolific <lb/>
sow, birth twice one year <lb/>
and three times the next with from <lb/>
fourteen to sixteen pigs in each <lb/>
farrow. <lb/>
Mr. Church an old <lb/>
is very sick. <lb/>
The measles is in several <lb/>
lies and is still raging. We also <lb/>
have the grip and whooping cough <lb/>
and what next t <lb/>
Success to the Reflector. <lb/>
C- L. W. <lb/>
WE ARE PLEASED TO ANNOUNCE THAT WE NOW HAVE <lb/>
Mr. Blaine is reported as favor <lb/>
Robert Lincoln for the <lb/>
He might run as the son <lb/>
of his father. This only would he <lb/>
have to recommend him. <lb/>
As the Democrat says, <lb/>
now that Congress has broken up <lb/>
the Louisiana Lottery, now let it <lb/>
turn its attention to gambling <lb/>
in futures in New York- <lb/>
to say that the gambling done <lb/>
in New York has ruined more <lb/>
and done more harm than the <lb/>
; while the latter only re- <lb/>
small sums from each <lb/>
the former hopelessly <lb/>
swamped thousands upon thous- <lb/>
ands, whose failure ruined others <lb/>
every year. Let this other and <lb/>
greater gambling concern and its <lb/>
everywhere be <lb/>
on their way to Washington, N. C , and we are prepared to sell <lb/>
------it at very low figures------ <lb/>
There is no place where a boy or <lb/>
. young man, can display his good <lb/>
manners and raising more <lb/>
ally than a public gathering <lb/>
whether at church, reception, a <lb/>
play, or entertainment of any kind- <lb/>
And there is no better place for <lb/>
him to make a consummate fool <lb/>
and nuisance of himself, to the dis- <lb/>
gust of ladies and gentlemen. <lb/>
Durham Sun. <lb/>
Some men will give a town the <lb/>
because it is dull, as they <lb/>
say, and when a movement is made <lb/>
to advance it they jump right <lb/>
on it with both feet and try <lb/>
to crush the life out of it- Are <lb/>
such men public-spirited, or have <lb/>
they the pride of their town at <lb/>
heart Such should not the <lb/>
case. Let everybody pull <lb/>
for the good of their <lb/>
you will see it take on new life <lb/>
and flourish as never before. <lb/>
Kernersville <lb/>
A man registered at Mr- W. W. <lb/>
Unison's hotel last Thursday as <lb/>
W. Williams, N. He <lb/>
went away Monday without saying <lb/>
anything about settling his bill. <lb/>
He purported to be in <lb/>
of enlarging pictures. His scheme <lb/>
was to show a very nice picture to <lb/>
some prominent persons, secure a <lb/>
picture of some member of the <lb/>
family and offer to enlarge it upon <lb/>
being paid a dollar to defray the <lb/>
expense of sending it to N. Y., <lb/>
and returning the enlarged picture. <lb/>
He was well dressed, about ft. <lb/>
about years old, had a <lb/>
limped a little <lb/>
his walk and was of medium <lb/>
build. We have also learned that <lb/>
he carried not less than dollars <lb/>
from this place and Burlington <lb/>
besides pictures that were <lb/>
prized. Our exchanges would do <lb/>
the people a service to publish a <lb/>
notice of this fraud, that he <lb/>
be caught and the pictures secured. <lb/>
Graham Gleaner. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of a decree of Pitt Superior <lb/>
Court made at March Term, 1890. by <lb/>
Honor E. T. Boykin Judge, in the case <lb/>
of Wiley Pierce and wife vs. William <lb/>
and others, the undersigned <lb/>
will sell before the Court House door in <lb/>
Greenville, on Monday the day of <lb/>
Karen, 1892, the following described <lb/>
tract of land dusted in the county of <lb/>
Pitt, in Falkland Adjoining <lb/>
the lands of Dr. P. H. Mayo, Martha <lb/>
E. Williams and others and known as <lb/>
part of the Robert Williams place, being <lb/>
on which said Pierce and wile for- <lb/>
resided, being all of said tract <lb/>
of land lying on the north side of <lb/>
main road leading from Greenville to <lb/>
Falkland containing acres, more or <lb/>
less. <lb/>
Terms of third cash, balance <lb/>
In one and two years, secured by <lb/>
gage on said land percent interest <lb/>
from day of sale payable annually. <lb/>
This <lb/>
F. G. James. <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
FEED AID SALE <lb/>
I have removed my stables from Five <lb/>
Points to the ones formerly <lb/>
pied Mr. F. Keel and will <lb/>
constantly Keep on band a <lb/>
full line of <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
have beautiful and fancy turnouts <lb/>
the and can suit the most <lb/>
Will run in connection a DRAY <lb/>
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb/>
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
N. <lb/>
for <lb/>
WATCH-TOWER, <lb/>
Published Semi-Monthly. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb/>
Devoted to Christianity, <lb/>
cation. General Intelligence Send <lb/>
Sample Copy. Office of Pub- <lb/>
Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Editor. <lb/>
As we <lb/>
purchased <lb/>
this <lb/>
from the Agents <lb/>
of the German Mines there- <lb/>
by saving the jobbers profit, we <lb/>
are in a position to give you the <lb/>
benefit of bottom prices, and you will <lb/>
find it to your interest to see us before buy- <lb/>
elsewhere. We guarantee it to be the <lb/>
highest grade and in good condition. To other <lb/>
merchants who want buy in to ton lots we <lb/>
will make special prices. We have also made <lb/>
t again handle the popular brands of <lb/>
Fertilizer sold by last year and it is indeed gratifying <lb/>
to us to be able to say that each of them gave entire <lb/>
faction to all who used them last year, and we can assure <lb/>
you they are fully up to the same standard of excellence this <lb/>
season. To those who have used our Fertilizers it is not <lb/>
for to say anything as their merits usually establish a <lb/>
trade. But for the benefit of such as have never used them and <lb/>
to refresh the memory of some of our customers, we beg to ask <lb/>
your attention to the following selection of brands of high grade <lb/>
WE COME <lb/>
To enlist attention and claim a fair share of your patronage. <lb/>
We are determined that if dealings and honest <lb/>
of our will secure you as a customer, <lb/>
they shall not be lacking on our part. We go into <lb/>
------the Northern-Markets with the------- <lb/>
CASH <lb/>
and buy for the CASH, getting every possible advantage that is <lb/>
to be offered to first-class buyers, therefore we are enabled <lb/>
------to give you at all times the------ <lb/>
Benefit of Purchases Made <lb/>
for Cash. <lb/>
We have bought this season the largest stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
ever handled by us. The ten days spent in market by our <lb/>
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our <lb/>
Special Tobacco <lb/>
Fertilizer. <lb/>
This brand is too well known all over <lb/>
the Tobacco growing region of Eastern <lb/>
Carolina to need praise at hands <lb/>
For the production of fine BRIGHT <lb/>
it stands at the head of the <lb/>
list. The guarantee analysis is per <lb/>
cent. per cent. Avail <lb/>
Acid, per cent. Pat ash. <lb/>
Capital Tobacco Fertilizer. <lb/>
Last year was the first season that these <lb/>
goods were on the market and the <lb/>
result, from use in the production <lb/>
of FINE BRIGHT TOBACCO was so <lb/>
highly satisfactory that the demand for <lb/>
them this season gives promise of being <lb/>
very heavy. We confidently recommend <lb/>
it to our friends and know whereof we <lb/>
speak. The guaranteed analysis is per <lb/>
s per cent. Acid, <lb/>
per cent. Potash, <lb/>
The Guano. <lb/>
Is one of the oldest and best established <lb/>
brands of Guano sold in the State. It is <lb/>
especially prepared for Cotton but being <lb/>
composed of nothing but the best highest <lb/>
grade material, it has been used with <lb/>
entire satisfaction on all crops. We <lb/>
sold a large quantity of it for Potatoes <lb/>
last year and it gave such universal sat- <lb/>
the demand this season is much <lb/>
increased. The guaranteed analysis is <lb/>
per cent. cent. Avail <lb/>
Acid, percent. Potash. <lb/>
The National Fertilizer. <lb/>
Is a first-class all-round goods, at a mod- <lb/>
price, prepared with the greatest <lb/>
care, of the best material, and is <lb/>
suited for either Cotton or Tobacco W e <lb/>
sold it last season largely for both crops <lb/>
and it gave entire satisfaction- The <lb/>
an teed analysis is per cent. <lb/>
per cent. Avail Acid, per cent. <lb/>
Potash. <lb/>
Beef, Blood and Bone. <lb/>
This Fertilizer was sold here for the first <lb/>
time last season. Knowing the high <lb/>
standing of the manufacturers we did not <lb/>
hesitate to recommend it and sold it <lb/>
largely and the result was most <lb/>
It does well on all and bids <lb/>
fair to lie our most popular brand. The <lb/>
guaranteed analysis is per cont. <lb/>
per cent. Avail Acid, per <lb/>
cent. Potash. <lb/>
W e also keep a full supply of- <lb/>
carried in our double stores prove. You cannot help but b. <lb/>
interested if you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing <lb/>
yon what we have to sell There can never be a business of <lb/>
magnitude built upon a falsification of fact and startling statements <lb/>
of untruth. It is to our business interests to deal fairly by <lb/>
our customers, and by such means to merit their continued pat- <lb/>
We have now open ready for your inspection the largest bes <lb/>
assorted line of General Merchandise that was ever brought <lb/>
-to market Consisting of <lb/>
Dry Goods Dress Goods, <lb/>
Hats, Caps, Boots, Shoes, <lb/>
Hardware Cutlery, Tin- <lb/>
ware, Crockery, Queen- <lb/>
ware, Groceries, Wood- <lb/>
and Willow ware, <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 respective lines. Also we have a lot of <lb/>
AND TIES <lb/>
which will be sold at lowest prices. <lb/>
Come one. come all and see us. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
W e may add that we know all these goods to be made oat of <lb/>
the best material and compounded with great care and skill, and <lb/>
having them largely for a number of years we feel safe in <lb/>
you will make no in baying either of them. As <lb/>
we control the sale of these goods for a large section of country <lb/>
we want a few good local agents. To farmer clubs of not less <lb/>
than tons we will make special terms. Yon will find it to your <lb/>
interest to come to see or write to before buying elsewhere <lb/>
Very <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
N O. <lb/>
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS. <lb/>
L. W. DAVIS, <lb/>
FINE----- <lb/>
HAVANA CIGARS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
Roanoke Avenue, <lb/>
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb/>
COTTON MARKET is lower now than at any former period <lb/>
in about forty years; this has been brought about by the <lb/>
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large <lb/>
accumulation of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will <lb/>
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the <lb/>
movement must be necessarily light; and if any of our friends, <lb/>
who have cotton, would like to raise money on same and hold it <lb/>
longer, we are prepared to advance them to 25.00 per bale <lb/>
and hold it until May or so desired. <lb/>
Very truly, <lb/>
VAUGHAN BARNES, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA <lb/>
S. B. HARRELL CO., <lb/>
COTTON AND <lb/>
Corn, Cotton, Peanuts, Stock, Eggs, <lb/>
and Sawed Lumber will our <lb/>
special attention. Your patronage <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
AN D COMMERCE STREET, <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA, <lb/>
Strictly a <lb/>
E. E. A. A,. <lb/>
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in <lb/>
A Supply Always on Hang. <lb/>
Fine Hones a specialty. <lb/>
guaranteed <lb/>
Nos. and Va <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of an order of the of <lb/>
Superior Court of Pitt county In MM of <lb/>
J. B. Bullock, administrator of John I. <lb/>
Lewis, against Harriet Ann Lewis and <lb/>
Susan Lewis, the undersigned <lb/>
will sell for cash before the Court <lb/>
House door In Greenville on Monday <lb/>
the th day of March, 1892, the following <lb/>
described piece or parcel of land, lying <lb/>
n township, Pitt county, ad- <lb/>
joining the lands of Joseph H. Clark, <lb/>
Thomas Thomas, the Harriet <lb/>
and, Gilbert Harriet and others, con- <lb/>
acres, more or lest. <lb/>
This January 28th, 1892. <lb/>
J. B BULLOCK, <lb/>
Ch <lb/>
C C COBB, T. H. GILLIAM <lb/>
Pitt Co. N. C. Pitt Co N C. C. N C <lb/>
Bros., <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
Commission Merchants. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
of COTTON k <lb/>
We have Lad many years <lb/>
at the business and are <lb/>
prepared to handle <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
to <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
will receive prompt and <lb/>
careful attention <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on <lb/>
the of January, 1898, as <lb/>
of deceased, <lb/>
notice is hereby given to all persons in- <lb/>
to e estate to make immediate <lb/>
payment to the undersigned, and all per- <lb/>
sons hawing claims against the estate <lb/>
most p- the for payment on <lb/>
or the 28th of January or <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This 28th of Jan. 1802.<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017535_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
LANG'S COLUMN. DO YOU READ <lb/>
Tobacco Cloth. <lb/>
3-4 Cents per Yard <lb/>
SPOT CASH. <lb/>
-o- <lb/>
Fall Winter <lb/>
STOCK <lb/>
Going at greatly <lb/>
Reduced prices. <lb/>
IF SO, THIS OFFER IS <lb/>
INTENDED FOB YOU. <lb/>
We special arrange- <lb/>
with <lb/>
Weekly Constitution, <lb/>
The Great <lb/>
Published at Atlanta, by which we are <lb/>
enabled to offer it with <lb/>
c i on for ONE TEA, for only <lb/>
This offer lasts only a short while. Now <lb/>
is your chance get all the news of nil <lb/>
Che and your home paper for the <lb/>
price f one paper. <lb/>
Every clubbing subscription at rate is <lb/>
entitled to a chance at Th <lb/>
Free Distribution for 1892. details <lb/>
which will be found elsewhere. <lb/>
This the most remarkable <lb/>
offer made. Every home n <lb/>
Pitt county should receive the <lb/>
first, and after that, it should have <lb/>
the best General Newspaper, bringing <lb/>
every week the of the world, and <lb/>
overflowing with the choicest <lb/>
features, such as the Weekly <lb/>
turn, published at Atlanta. Ga. and <lb/>
having a circulation of <lb/>
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
Nice grip weather again. <lb/>
March for fir. s. <lb/>
This is lira last week n <lb/>
Ai other oyster boat here this week. <lb/>
Monday was Wash- <lb/>
day. <lb/>
Who is going to try rice Ibis sea- <lb/>
son <lb/>
lb best Tomatoes for only <lb/>
cents at <lb/>
Necktie pound <lb/>
Golly <lb/>
Sam Jones lectures in Wilmington <lb/>
to night <lb/>
The merry-go-round still draws <lb/>
large crowds. <lb/>
The New Home Ma- <lb/>
chines for at Brown Bros- <lb/>
The fertilizer movement is <lb/>
in activity. <lb/>
v eights were much in de- <lb/>
last <lb/>
S- us your job work, we are <lb/>
Try Cardenas, the best cent <lb/>
smoke, at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Campaign <lb/>
co-its but a dollar. <lb/>
Mud is one; more the prevailing <lb/>
feature of the <lb/>
You can't be too careful with fire <lb/>
this windy weather. <lb/>
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear <lb/>
of saps and pops, for sale by T. C- <lb/>
Bryan- <lb/>
How many Is did you get <lb/>
last night at the party <lb/>
per <lb/>
Nice white blotters five cents <lb/>
dozen, at Hook Store. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb/>
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
i- n n at <lb/>
the Atlanta <lb/>
The trees are a in- <lb/>
that spring is approaching. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb/>
chines and all parts at Brown <lb/>
Bros. <lb/>
Remember the Red Book store <lb/>
keeps paper, pens and ink for school <lb/>
purposes. <lb/>
The very inclement weather Sun- <lb/>
day caused small attendance st the <lb/>
churches. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb/>
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
is in progress this <lb/>
on the <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Lucy la visiting j friends <lb/>
in <lb/>
Mrs. H- F. Harris is visiting <lb/>
in Washington. <lb/>
Mr. B. C is among his <lb/>
many friends here this week. <lb/>
Mrs. Barden, of Plymouth, is visit- <lb/>
her sister, Mr. B. Wilson. <lb/>
Gov. Holt has appointed Mr. Hen- <lb/>
of this town, a Notary <lb/>
Public. <lb/>
Miss of <lb/>
has been visiting L. C. <lb/>
tree the past week. <lb/>
Mr. W. H. Grimes, Raleigh, has <lb/>
been in this section several data <lb/>
looking after his interests in Pitt. <lb/>
Mr. C G of Baltimore, <lb/>
was greeting his many friends here <lb/>
Saturday. He did not forget the <lb/>
Mrs. S. A. Ellington, of Peters- <lb/>
burg, Va. moved to Greenville <lb/>
and will reside with her son, Mr. A. <lb/>
B. Ellington. <lb/>
Divine permission Rev. N. <lb/>
Harding, Washington will preach <lb/>
at the Episcopal in this town <lb/>
on night next. <lb/>
Mr. Jas. L. Harris run down from <lb/>
Scotland Neck Saturday and spent <lb/>
Sunday here. There was a special <lb/>
in town for him. <lb/>
Capt. former con- <lb/>
on the passenger train here, <lb/>
was in town yesterday. He has re- <lb/>
signed his punch and is now a knight <lb/>
the grip sack. <lb/>
Rev. G. L. Finch, of <lb/>
preached in Baptist church here <lb/>
Sunday morning and night. On <lb/>
Monday night he delivered a very <lb/>
amusing and instructive lecture. <lb/>
Mr. Finch is laboring to build a <lb/>
at Seven Springs and is <lb/>
meeting encouragement <lb/>
ever lie goes. He went to Grin on <lb/>
yesterday evening and lectured there <lb/>
last night. <lb/>
Miss Nannie King, of Greenville, <lb/>
whose grandly developed woman <lb/>
hood gives to nor a that <lb/>
challenges universal admiration, is <lb/>
visiting the elegant homo of her <lb/>
cultured sister Mrs. Stephen <lb/>
this place. She is <lb/>
highly in Wilson, for in <lb/>
addition to her splendid figure she <lb/>
has a lace of remarkable and <lb/>
over which the most <lb/>
bewitching smiles sweetly <lb/>
creep, and make <lb/>
which the deadliest and surest <lb/>
arrows are plucked for Cupid's fate- <lb/>
bow, and from whose precious <lb/>
wounds the sweetest flow. <lb/>
Wilson <lb/>
It affords the and <lb/>
. to announce Mr <lb/>
William Rush, so nail known to the <lb/>
people of Raleigh, and undoubtedly <lb/>
the best known traveling man in the <lb/>
State, has accepted the position of <lb/>
State Agent of the Mutual Life In- <lb/>
Company of Kentucky, and <lb/>
will make Raleigh his headquarters. <lb/>
Mr. Russ will be in the city at <lb/>
least a month or two at the Florence <lb/>
Hotel, and much of his time will ha <lb/>
spent lure a tar the expiration of <lb/>
time. He will be joined shortly <lb/>
Mrs. Russ, who will be a charming <lb/>
addition to the social circles of <lb/>
Raleigh, and who will receive a warm <lb/>
welcome to our city Raleigh <lb/>
Observer. <lb/>
The town authorities of <lb/>
have made a law that U sidewalk <lb/>
gates shall open on the inside of the <lb/>
premises, no longer swing out tn <lb/>
street. Greenville might take a <lb/>
hint here. <lb/>
Beware of the green goods swindle <lb/>
The country is being flooded with <lb/>
circulars from them again. The <lb/>
man who allows himself to be <lb/>
by these sharpers does not de- <lb/>
serve any sympathy. <lb/>
The tobacco warehouse narrowly <lb/>
missed being destroyed by fire yes- <lb/>
afternoon. Some people pass- <lb/>
by discovered the root to be on <lb/>
fire and put out same any <lb/>
damage was done. <lb/>
Seed arc coming in the car <lb/>
load for our farmers to plant. <lb/>
When farmers learn to raise such <lb/>
things and save the money which <lb/>
they pay for the western product, <lb/>
there will be better times in the <lb/>
land. <lb/>
J. A. Am has something in <lb/>
in his space to-day. Look <lb/>
over the list goods he has and call <lb/>
on him. <lb/>
Last Saturday eggs sold as high in <lb/>
Greenville as they did in Baltimore, <lb/>
17-i cents per dozen. The price will <lb/>
Fall Winter <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 COLUMN <lb/>
New fail- <lb/>
week. Many go <lb/>
to-day. <lb/>
Attention is called to the <lb/>
el land sale by F G. James, <lb/>
Just M. Ferry <lb/>
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb/>
Papers down nearer the coast say <lb/>
the indications point to a large catch <lb/>
fish this spring. <lb/>
Mr. Glasgow came in from <lb/>
Richmond Friday evening with a ear <lb/>
load stock. <lb/>
For Dancy house <lb/>
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb/>
Judging from what can be seen in <lb/>
passing the girls are trying to make <lb/>
the best of leap year. <lb/>
The bird law goes effect sooner <lb/>
this year than formerly. Don't hunt <lb/>
after March first. <lb/>
Fob lot of Horses and <lb/>
Mules for sale on time. Apply to <lb/>
R. R Cotton, Center Bluff, N. 0- <lb/>
The merry-go-round had a big <lb/>
business Saturday, large crowd <lb/>
around it most the day. <lb/>
Almost an army of drummers have <lb/>
had in town the past week. Lots of <lb/>
clever fellows among them. <lb/>
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb/>
appetite when nothing <lb/>
else will. At the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The had a meeting Friday <lb/>
afternoon but no drill. The boy's <lb/>
must work no or lose their standing. <lb/>
Attention is called to the no ice to <lb/>
creditors h B. F. receiver <lb/>
Combination <lb/>
All parties who hare tobacco to <lb/>
at-11 can save Warehouse charges <lb/>
and freight by bringing same Q <lb/>
the prise Louse on Saturdays <lb/>
where they will good prices. <lb/>
Scraps particularly wanted. <lb/>
We are expecting a large lot of <lb/>
stationary this week and can fill <lb/>
your for artistic printing. <lb/>
The farmers are putting in the <lb/>
ground the seeds of the green tilings <lb/>
that turn to hacks in and <lb/>
May. <lb/>
They hit town hard wk <lb/>
its two monkeys and two <lb/>
hand organs all in the same <lb/>
Carmer Go's <lb/>
costs half what <lb/>
you pay for manipulated guanos. <lb/>
For sale by G. E. Harris. By <lb/>
using this you <lb/>
can afford to make cotton <lb/>
The continued rain th K has hem <lb/>
tailing since Saturday has consider- <lb/>
ably cut off the to the <lb/>
New fair <lb/>
Both the Masonic and Old <lb/>
here h-iv- <lb/>
quite increase in membership <lb/>
during last few months. <lb/>
The other Mr. Han-is. <lb/>
of Falkland, allowed us the tusk i n <lb/>
wild boar which he recently killed. <lb/>
It eight inches in length. <lb/>
We see where the Wilmington <lb/>
Review copied item from the Re- <lb/>
and gave credit tn the Greens <lb/>
Reflector. You arc excusable. <lb/>
The steamer Myers broke her shaft <lb/>
while coining down the river <lb/>
day morning. She was about two <lb/>
miles above here when the accident <lb/>
occurred. The steamer <lb/>
took her in tow from this place to <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
The undersigned will deliver a <lb/>
lecture in the Court House in Green- <lb/>
ville on the evening of Friday. March <lb/>
11th, the Kingdom <lb/>
of God A cordial invitation Is ex- <lb/>
tended to all, Spatial to clergymen. <lb/>
J. A. WALSTON. <lb/>
Ex-Sheriff Allen dropped <lb/>
in our office yesterday morning, and <lb/>
said might tell Reflector <lb/>
readers this week that all the trees <lb/>
of Greenville will soon be <lb/>
And the funny part of it is that after <lb/>
they leave they wont be gone. <lb/>
Several subscribers have come in <lb/>
for the Reflector and Atlanta Con <lb/>
combined, under our special <lb/>
clubbing arrangement. Plenty room <lb/>
tor more, and all who want both pa- <lb/>
should take advantage of the <lb/>
low offer while they <lb/>
After rending this issue of the <lb/>
call the attention of your <lb/>
neighbor to the fact that he can get <lb/>
this paper and the Atlanta <lb/>
both a year for This is <lb/>
election year and these arc the two <lb/>
papers from which to get local and <lb/>
general campaign news. <lb/>
The largest shipment of tobacco <lb/>
ever made from Greenville in one <lb/>
day was by E. J. Hester Co. last <lb/>
Saturday, on which day they shipped <lb/>
pounds. Though the ware- <lb/>
house is not now they buy all <lb/>
tobacco that is taken to their prize <lb/>
ho and pay the <lb/>
prices. <lb/>
Preparations should be made early <lb/>
to get all premises of the town <lb/>
thoroughly cleaned before summer. <lb/>
People arc quick enough to send <lb/>
alter a doctor if they get sick, while <lb/>
at the same time filth enough is left <lb/>
in some places tn produce most any <lb/>
An ounce <lb/>
i teller than a pound <lb/>
In Want. <lb/>
If a little girl on streets yes- <lb/>
relates a true story, mid she <lb/>
seemed to be very honest in what she <lb/>
said, there are cases of <lb/>
in our midst that need tin hand of <lb/>
charity. This little girl said the <lb/>
family to which she belonged was <lb/>
composed of a mother and two little <lb/>
girls, the father having been dead <lb/>
for several years. The mother was <lb/>
sick in bed with no means to pro- <lb/>
cure medicine or and this little <lb/>
girl n soliciting aid. They re- <lb/>
cent I moved lo ibis town. They <lb/>
be looked up and not allow -it <lb/>
to <lb/>
Sunday School Convention. <lb/>
The third a mind Pitt County <lb/>
Sundae Convention will be <lb/>
held in the tit <lb/>
Greenville, Thursday, Feb. <lb/>
Religious exercises conducted by <lb/>
Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
Address of welcome by President. <lb/>
Response by Bey. R. F. <lb/>
of members of the <lb/>
Convention. <lb/>
Appointment of Committees. <lb/>
Reports from the various Sunday j <lb/>
Schools <lb/>
Sunday School <lb/>
F. Smith, followed by Rev. A. <lb/>
D. Hunter. <lb/>
Afternoon Session, S Re- <lb/>
exercises conducted by- <lb/>
Rev. J. L Winfield. <lb/>
Origin and Progress of Sunday <lb/>
Schools, by II. A. Latham, of <lb/>
How to make a Sunday School <lb/>
Successful in a Rural District, <lb/>
Rev. R. B. John, followed by <lb/>
Rev. J. L. Winfield. <lb/>
Opening box, Rev. G. A. <lb/>
Evening Session, Re- <lb/>
exercises conducted by <lb/>
G. F Smith. <lb/>
Address by Dr. J. H. Cordon, of <lb/>
Wilson, followed by T. <lb/>
J. Jarvis. <lb/>
Some other addresses may also be <lb/>
expected during the <lb/>
It U hoped that every Sunday <lb/>
in the county will be <lb/>
at this meeting. All inter- <lb/>
in Sunday School work are in- <lb/>
to attend. The session <lb/>
should tie made the most interesting <lb/>
yet held. <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
Tobacco Furnace <lb/>
The best Invention ever made for <lb/>
CURING TOBACCO. <lb/>
We hear that one township in the <lb/>
county three for one <lb/>
to be filled at the next, election, <lb/>
with ten more townships to be heard <lb/>
from. <lb/>
Pitt County Sunday School Con <lb/>
to-morrow in the Methodist <lb/>
Church here. There should be a <lb/>
large attendance. Everybody in-<lb/>
A told the <lb/>
other day that the sermon Rev <lb/>
Dixon In last issue was worth <lb/>
the subscription price of the paper <lb/>
a year. <lb/>
Hall's Typewriter is advertised in <lb/>
this paper. It is rapid, easy to learn <lb/>
and does excellent work. See one <lb/>
operation at office and <lb/>
learn prices. <lb/>
not plentiful yet and the <lb/>
price still too high for poor folks. <lb/>
The price will come down some <lb/>
when the skimmers get lo g <lb/>
i hem here. <lb/>
Neck Tie Party. <lb/>
very was given <lb/>
Hall last, night b, the <lb/>
I In- Baptist church. I was <lb/>
call a neck tie party, and the in an <lb/>
p was <lb/>
novel. Each young lady led a <lb/>
small of and pi ice I a <lb/>
neck lie ill with her <lb/>
young men drew out the <lb/>
basket a curtain, <lb/>
had to pay for it according to the <lb/>
weight of the young lady who <lb/>
pared it, the price being one-halt <lb/>
cent, a pound. The young man was <lb/>
laved escort to the lady whose <lb/>
he drew for the <lb/>
he evening <lb/>
Presiding Appointment. <lb/>
Rev. B. John's <lb/>
for second round of Quarterly <lb/>
are as follows for places in Pitt <lb/>
Greenville circuit, at Bethlehem. <lb/>
March and 0th. <lb/>
Greenville station, March 5th <lb/>
and Sib. <lb/>
Washington circuit, at <lb/>
March and 13th. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
been appointed by the <lb/>
Court of Pitt county Receiver of <lb/>
Combination Store.- notice is here- <lb/>
by given to all persons indebted to said <lb/>
Combination Store to make <lb/>
immediate payment to the undersigned, <lb/>
and all having claims against <lb/>
Greenville Combination Store must file <lb/>
the same for payment properly I- <lb/>
on or before the day of April <lb/>
next. M. F. TYSON, <lb/>
Receiver of G. C. Store. <lb/>
This 23rd day of February, 1892. <lb/>
With it yon have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your barn, <lb/>
and it <lb/>
All Danger of Fire. <lb/>
Two per week can be <lb/>
made in the same barn <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at one time in <lb/>
the same barn. Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For further particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
PHELPS, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
this paper when you write. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
-----If you want to save----- <lb/>
Witty Dollars <lb/>
in the purchase of a PIANO and from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
NEW X. C. <lb/>
Genera Agent for North Carolina, <lb/>
who Is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
the manufacturers, as <lb/>
GRADE PIANOS, <lb/>
for tone, workmanship and <lb/>
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb/>
musical journals In the United States. <lb/>
Made by Paul O. who is at this <lb/>
time one of the mechanics and In- <lb/>
of the. day. Thirteen new <lb/>
patents on this high grade Piano- <lb/>
Aim the NEWSY A EVANS UP. <lb/>
RIGHT PIANO which has been sold by <lb/>
him for the past six years in the eastern <lb/>
part of this State up to this time has <lb/>
given entire Upright <lb/>
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from <lb/>
to in Rosewood, Oak, <lb/>
Walnut or Mahogany eases <lb/>
Also the CROWN PARLOR <lb/>
from 9-50 to f in solid or Oak <lb/>
eases. <lb/>
Ten years experience in the music <lb/>
business ha enabled him to handle <lb/>
hut standard goods and be does <lb/>
not hesitate to say that be can sell any <lb/>
musical instrument about per cent, <lb/>
cheaper than other agents are now offer- <lb/>
Refer lo all banks in Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
We arc closing out what's left of Winter Wear, <lb/>
And for the Spring we will now prepare. <lb/>
PER CENT W <lb/>
PROFITS ABOLISHED and cost squeezed on everything. <lb/>
Out Inducements are numerous and variety great. <lb/>
Our Closing <lb/>
f Have; Made; are i i <lb/>
WE WILL open the gates of reduction with Men's Boy's and Children <lb/>
Clothing. Prices reduced to a point that will tempt the closest buyer. <lb/>
Shoes at Rock Bottom Prices. <lb/>
IN DRESS WE WILL POUND PRICES WITH THE <lb/>
POWER OF A. TRIP HAMMER. <lb/>
Everything must go and go rapidly, at <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
if. c. <lb/>
WE WILL SELL <lb/>
At Cost for the next <lb/>
DAYS <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
sine. <lb/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
--------AND BUYER <lb/>
Country Produce. <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb/>
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If yon have anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a small commission. <lb/>
Call sec me. <lb/>
JNO. S. <lb/>
Agents for New Home Sewing <lb/>
Machines. <lb/>
Depository for American Bible <lb/>
Society. <lb/>
W. M. Moore <lb/>
W, <lb/>
Financial Condition, June <lb/>
-OF <lb/>
Buyers Attention. <lb/>
I on and am res <lb/>
every steamer large <lb/>
of Special Com <lb/>
Guano and Pine <lb/>
Island Guano. You all know what <lb/>
these goods are. No guanos ever <lb/>
sold in this county have made a bet <lb/>
showing, and but if any, so <lb/>
good. buy these goods very close. <lb/>
My expenses in handling them are <lb/>
very small. I am satisfied with a <lb/>
profit, and it stands to reason <lb/>
11- ii I i mi sell the same grade of <lb/>
goods as or cheaper than any <lb/>
man. Come and see me <lb/>
yen It casts you nothing to <lb/>
get my prices and out what I <lb/>
can do and if I can't save you money <lb/>
you can buy elsewhere just easily <lb/>
as if you had been lo see me. <lb/>
G. R. Harris. <lb/>
The New York Life Insurance Co. <lb/>
WILLIAM H. BEERS, President. <lb/>
DEPARTMENT THE STATE YORK. <lb/>
Y. January <lb/>
Pursuant to request of the Company's Baud of Trustees, the under <lb/>
spied, of the Insurance of the State of New York, <lb/>
caused an examination of the conditions mid affairs of the New York In- <lb/>
Company to be made by the Deputy this Department. <lb/>
This examination was of June 1801, on that date find that <lb/>
its assets and liabilities were as <lb/>
ASSETS. <lb/>
Appraised value of real estate owned by the Co m per <lb/>
on bond and mortgage on real as per <lb/>
Exhibit 20,825.483 <lb/>
Loans by pledge of bonds, stocks, or other marketable <lb/>
n per Exhibit <lb/>
i. Premium notes, loans or liens on policies in force, the reserve on <lb/>
each of such being in of all indebtedness there- <lb/>
on, as per Exhibit <lb/>
Market value of bonds, stock, and securities owned absolutely <lb/>
as per Exhibit 75,016.949 <lb/>
Cash In Company's 14.092 CO <lb/>
Cash in bank, except fixed deposits in foreign countries, included <lb/>
in Item 2,010.094 <lb/>
Interest due and accrued on bonds and mortgages, <lb/>
Cross premiums due and on policies in force <lb/>
deferred premiums on policies in force, 1,961.048 <lb/>
Annuity premiums 157.091 <lb/>
MOORE PARKER, <lb/>
FOR------- <lb/>
Smith's Improved Hand Pomp, <lb/>
Window and <lb/>
LOCKS AND BOLTS. <lb/>
Central Life Company, Cornish ft <lb/>
and Organs. <lb/>
will pleasure the public any of the above lines, <lb/>
MOORE PARKER, <lb/>
Office in corner under Opera Greenville, N. <lb/>
As we were to press venter <lb/>
day indications pointed lo clearing <lb/>
weather, which will help up the <lb/>
crowd to the New fair on the <lb/>
excursion to-day. <lb/>
It has been said that corn which <lb/>
is planted the days of February <lb/>
or the first of March seldom fails to <lb/>
make a good mop, no matter whether <lb/>
the season be wet or dry. <lb/>
The body of Mr. Douglas, who <lb/>
was drowned at Tarboro sometime <lb/>
ago, was yesterday about a <lb/>
half a mile from the boat landing, <lb/>
where he fell in, at a bend the <lb/>
river. bad, v e buried <lb/>
immediately<lb/>
A recent order issued by Ad. <lb/>
General of the State it the <lb/>
effect that forty is to h the minimum <lb/>
standard of the companies now com- <lb/>
posing The Greet- <lb/>
ville contingency will have to work <lb/>
up a revival in <lb/>
Better get it or <lb/>
you can't go World's Ft <lb/>
Institute. <lb/>
The Institute for the white teach- <lb/>
of Pitt will be held at <lb/>
Greenville by Pro. K. A. Alderman <lb/>
for one week, commencing on Mon- <lb/>
day, the Tin day March next, and <lb/>
all white public school teachers are <lb/>
positively required by law lo attend <lb/>
continuously upon said Institute, <lb/>
and upon failure so to do they will <lb/>
be denied a certificate for the <lb/>
in year, their absence tie <lb/>
caused by sickness or absence from <lb/>
the county. Te absentees need not <lb/>
for a certificate to teach. We <lb/>
hope to make ample s <lb/>
for the accommodation of all teach- <lb/>
who report the first day of the <lb/>
Institute, and we will do our best <lb/>
to make it Tor then. In. <lb/>
will be held <lb/>
Several distinguished gentle- <lb/>
men will deliver addresses, among <lb/>
whom are T. J. Jarvis, <lb/>
Gee. T. Winston, President <lb/>
North Harry <lb/>
Hon. G. B. King <lb/>
I,, The are <lb/>
ally invited to attend all the <lb/>
s. H. <lb/>
Oat Pub, last. <lb/>
Total. <lb/>
Deduct p r cent, loading on above gross amount, <lb/>
Net amount of uncollected and premiums. <lb/>
Total assets. <lb/>
120.710.690 <lb/>
AND <lb/>
Net present value Of all the outstanding policies In force on he <lb/>
30th of June, 1891, computed according to the combined <lb/>
experience table of mortality with per cent, interest, <lb/>
Deduct net value of risks of this Company In other <lb/>
solvent companies, <lb/>
Net reserve, <lb/>
Claim tor endowments due and unpaid. <lb/>
Claims for death-losses unpaid not <lb/>
Amounts due and on annuity claims, <lb/>
Liability on account of lapsed policies, <lb/>
Premiums paid in advance. <lb/>
Total liabilities op <lb/>
ti rota sin plus on account, <lb/>
89.019 <lb/>
Best Selling in the <lb/>
The Most Reliable Worm Destroyer in Use. <lb/>
furnished to any regular Physician when <lb/>
Messrs. i. M. ft. V. Powell, prominent, merchants Columbus county, N C, <lb/>
wrote u in July. 1887, that Mr. T. C. Floyd gave his child one dose of Boy- <lb/>
kin's the result was worms. He wishes all interested to <lb/>
know <lb/>
CHI, N. J., May 8th, 1884. <lb/>
Carmer Co., Baltimore, Mil. Dear Mr. A. Rudd, a very <lb/>
responsible customer of mine, gave a to a child <lb/>
last week the result was Mr. Daniel Pines used It with still better <lb/>
results, worms from one child. Of course my sales will be large. <lb/>
Yours truly, E. SMITH. <lb/>
Read the following from one of the most prominent best known physicians <lb/>
and farmers in Carolina. He writes a girl years old near <lb/>
him, took two or three doses of the and passed <lb/>
Dated, S. May 26th, 1884. <lb/>
H. H. M. U. <lb/>
Mr, H. M. of LaGrange, N. C. says. Dr. <lb/>
hood; and that It <lb/>
Worm <lb/>
brought over worms from one child in his <lb/>
versa satisfaction He sells more of it than all other worm medicine. <lb/>
PRICE ONLY TWENTY-FIVE CENTS PER BOTTLE. <lb/>
Do not let your Druggist or General Dealer put you off w <lb/>
s Worm and get It. Any M. D. can p <lb/>
some other. Ask for <lb/>
prescribe It and many do. <lb/>
mm, a co., id <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1863. <lb/>
14.708,876 <lb/>
II. Total liabilities, <lb/>
Estimated surplus, accrued on or other policies, the <lb/>
profits upon which are especially reserved that o <lb/>
policies, 8.870.419 <lb/>
Estimated surplus accrued on all policies, <lb/>
Signed, JAMES F. PIERCE, <lb/>
MICHAEL <lb/>
Deputy Superintendent. <lb/>
The above total surplus of 14,708.873.98 Is exclusive any amounts due from <lb/>
Agents, and is larger than the surplus of any other purely mutual Insurance <lb/>
company In the <lb/>
General Agents for North and South Carolina, <lb/>
CHARLOTTE, N. <lb/>
X. U. CAMPBELL, Special Agent, <lb/>
A. <lb/>
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb/>
Car load Mess Pork. <lb/>
Car load Rib Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load Flour, all grades. <lb/>
Car load Seed Oats. <lb/>
Cases Star 1-ye. <lb/>
Cases Bread Powders. <lb/>
Cares Soap. <lb/>
Cases Cherries Peaches. <lb/>
Full line Case Goods. <lb/>
Boxes Crackers. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
SO Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Rico Molasses. <lb/>
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels Gail ft Ax Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, Cheroot. Cigarette. Ac. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
HALL <lb/>
J. M <lb/>
REMODELED AND IMPROVED. <lb/>
GOOD <lb/>
The Rest standard Typewriter In the World. <lb/>
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon. In- <lb/>
Type in all language. Easiest <lb/>
to learn, and rapid as any. <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
as Represented. <lb/>
This Machine i everybody's friend. Every- <lb/>
body should have their writing done on the <lb/>
Typewriter. It always Insures most <lb/>
prompt attention. Address <lb/>
N Boston, <lb/>
One of these machines can be seen at the Reflector where <lb/>
prices can be and. <lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017535_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
IN CONSTRUCTION. <lb/>
PERMANENT IN DURATION. <lb/>
APPLIED. ITS SKILL- <lb/>
USE QUICKLY <lb/>
The Elect is an <lb/>
Cure of Medicine. <lb/>
BASED on new theories of <lb/>
cure f disease. Ii deal with the <lb/>
electrical of th <lb/>
MM th gases surrounding it in the <lb/>
conditions <lb/>
ill. It is not <lb/>
is simply vitality. The <lb/>
to the vitality <lb/>
ad only Is <lb/>
to off the trouble. <lb/>
A book, treatment <lb/>
and containing testimonials ail sec- <lb/>
and for the car of all , <lb/>
mailed free on application. A <lb/>
ATLANTIC; CO . <lb/>
D. V. Charleston. S. V. <lb/>
Atlanta, Ga. <lb/>
REFLECTOR <lb/>
CHRISTIANITY. <lb/>
REV. THOMAS DIXON ON THE <lb/>
FAIRNESS OF SOME CRITICS. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
obtained, and ail business in the S. <lb/>
Talent office or in the Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fee. <lb/>
We are opposite the II. S. Patent Of- <lb/>
engaged in Patent <lb/>
can obtain patent in time than <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
the model or drawing is sent we <lb/>
advise a.- to patent free of charge, <lb/>
we make change unless we ob- <lb/>
We refer, here, to Post Master, the <lb/>
of the Money Order and <lb/>
S. Patent For <lb/>
advise terms and reference to <lb/>
actual clients in your own State, or <lb/>
address, C. A. Snow Co., <lb/>
Washington, D. C. <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Sharing, Cutting and Dressing Han <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
Opera at which place <lb/>
f have recently located, and where I have <lb/>
everything in my line <lb/>
NEW, GLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb/>
with all the improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chair-. <lb/>
Bason at reasonable figure <lb/>
for of my shop <lb/>
promptly Very <lb/>
v. <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
MARK. <lb/>
This has been In use over <lb/>
fifty years, and wherever known <lb/>
been in steady demand, ii been en <lb/>
by the leading physicians all <lb/>
country, and his cures when <lb/>
all other remedies, with the id <lb/>
the experienced <lb/>
for years failed. This Ointment is o <lb/>
lone Standing and reputation <lb/>
which ii has obtained is <lb/>
to its efficacy, as but little effort has <lb/>
ever Been made to bring It before <lb/>
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb/>
sent to any address on receipt One <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box the <lb/>
iii-count to All Order- <lb/>
promptly attended to. Address ail or <lb/>
jars and communications to <lb/>
F. <lb/>
Sole Mac and Proprietor, <lb/>
X. <lb/>
am It tot Um m f <lb/>
a of <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
Scald etc, Me. <lb/>
P. P. P. a an <lb/>
Md blond at t <lb/>
an -rial <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
lad by too blood <lb/>
d r. r. r. <lb/>
P. P. <lb/>
V. Proprietors, <lb/>
Block, Ga. <lb/>
sale at Drug Store <lb/>
MANHOOD <lb/>
How Lost How Regained <lb/>
PRIZE V on sad <lb/>
of<lb/>
B sad <lb/>
baa j <lb/>
b do equal. <lb/>
Om or to a <lb/>
than Bod It now,<lb/>
A on the Ibo <lb/>
Haw Turk Hie <lb/>
Sale of Liquor How <lb/>
a Fanciful Tiling. <lb/>
New Feb. <lb/>
Jr., preceded the sermon in As- <lb/>
hall this morning by review- <lb/>
the question involved in the bill now <lb/>
pending in the New York legislature <lb/>
proposed by the liquor dealers, which <lb/>
grants practically free every day <lb/>
and Sunday too. He said <lb/>
It is a dark day in the history of the <lb/>
great temperance reform Apparently <lb/>
the saloon is about to master the forces <lb/>
of Christian civilization. Every- <lb/>
where the saloon is aggressive and <lb/>
The reason for this is <lb/>
far to seek. The forces of temperance <lb/>
are sadly divided. The Prohibitionist <lb/>
sullenly maintains his position the <lb/>
rock of ultimate truth and demands an- <lb/>
or nothing. The high license <lb/>
man carries a razor in his boot for the <lb/>
Prohibitionist. little church <lb/>
organizations spread out their <lb/>
wares and declare they are the only gen- <lb/>
reformers and all others are base <lb/>
imitations. Our Catholic brethren work <lb/>
within their own lines. Meantime the <lb/>
devil laughs and grows fat, rides into <lb/>
power on every popular wave, makes <lb/>
legislatures and governors his puppets. <lb/>
hell <lb/>
It is Christendom divided against Hell <lb/>
united. <lb/>
The liquor dealers of New York have <lb/>
met in solemn council and drafted a bill <lb/>
to suit themselves, which they have <lb/>
presented to the New York legislature. <lb/>
It will vastly surprise me if their pup- <lb/>
pets do not obey their requests to the <lb/>
letter. They modestly demand that all <lb/>
the liquor laws passed during the last <lb/>
quarter of a century shall be repealed. <lb/>
They want saloons opened on Sundays, <lb/>
concert halls and dives opened all day and <lb/>
all night, free at all hours at <lb/>
protection from the <lb/>
of police interference, repeal <lb/>
of the civil damage, act, the free right to <lb/>
sell to boys and girls, and all license <lb/>
fees reduced to next to nothing. <lb/>
must confess that admire the sub- <lb/>
lime cheek of these men. Think for a <lb/>
moment of the daring of a set of chronic <lb/>
violators of is, habitual <lb/>
and drafting a bill grant- <lb/>
themselves immunity in the prose- <lb/>
of crime and demanding the <lb/>
power of the state to protect them <lb/>
while they are about it <lb/>
THE LICENSE I If MB CO. <lb/>
confess to the secret hope and pray- <lb/>
that they will succeed in passing this <lb/>
law and give as free for a sea- <lb/>
son It seems to me it will be for <lb/>
good. First, because it will be a shock <lb/>
to the miserable factions of a temper- <lb/>
guerrilla war that will bring unity <lb/>
out of chaos; second, because the whole <lb/>
license system is a humbug and a lie. <lb/>
It is a delusion and a snare. It is wrong <lb/>
in principle and utterly devilish in <lb/>
For the state to go into partner- <lb/>
ship with the manufacturers of <lb/>
is for the state to commit suicide. <lb/>
Go into partnership with the <lb/>
always owns the whole concern. <lb/>
If it is right to license the <lb/>
business it is right to license the lottery <lb/>
lottery is a mild evil in <lb/>
comparison. The lottery takes in <lb/>
a year. bill last <lb/>
year was times morel <lb/>
A bill is now pending before this same <lb/>
legislature to license prostitution in <lb/>
New York state. If rum is licensed <lb/>
why not license all crime If the sys- <lb/>
is right and good we cannot have <lb/>
too much of a good thing. The enforce- <lb/>
of the license system is the grand- <lb/>
est farce of the times. It is said that <lb/>
prohibition could not be enforced. Pro- <lb/>
is always enforced better than <lb/>
the excise system. The grand jury <lb/>
and pathetically petitioned the <lb/>
legislature last year to repeal the excise <lb/>
laws and relieve them of thousands of <lb/>
that would never be tried To in- <lb/>
a liquor dealer the present <lb/>
excise laws is a joke. Everybody knows <lb/>
this. <lb/>
Why not repeal the farce and give <lb/>
free awhile It is estimated <lb/>
by conservative men that there are be- <lb/>
tween and 3.000 unlicensed drink- <lb/>
places today in New York city <lb/>
Why continue such a travesty <lb/>
on law The back door of every saloon <lb/>
is open on Sunday. Why not open the <lb/>
front one and thus lessen its power in <lb/>
politics at least Why should we be <lb/>
reformers Why deceive ourselves <lb/>
Let them pass their law. They will <lb/>
a swindle and give us the t <lb/>
it a storm of moral wrath and the air <lb/>
will be purified. Free or <lb/>
are the ultimate issues. They <lb/>
had as well be joined now as later. Let <lb/>
the war begin. <lb/>
COLONEL INGERSOLL'S IGNORANCE. <lb/>
am that may bays <lb/>
in. <lb/>
I lie on the Son bath <lb/>
I v. IS. <lb/>
Not ever one that saith onto Lord, <lb/>
, shall eater Into tho of heaven, <lb/>
Dot he the will of my Father which <lb/>
In heaven. Matthew a. <lb/>
A Dew commandment I unto that <lb/>
I love one another. John <lb/>
For whole law is fulfilled in one word, <lb/>
In Thou shalt love as <lb/>
v, II. <lb/>
In the colonel's recent broadside be at- <lb/>
tempts a definition of Christianity. The <lb/>
I errors in this definition are so <lb/>
mental that it is impossible to proceed <lb/>
further in our discussion until we point <lb/>
ant these mistakes and give a definition <lb/>
which may be used as a standard when <lb/>
we refer to Christianity He says <lb/>
is a code of He <lb/>
then proceeds to declare that Christian- <lb/>
is responsible for persecution and <lb/>
murder, and declares that the <lb/>
founder of Christianity had plainly <lb/>
is not necessary to believe in <lb/>
order to be saved; it is only necessary to <lb/>
lo, and he who really loves his fellow <lb/>
men, who is kind, honest, and char- <lb/>
is to be forever he had <lb/>
only said that, there would probably <lb/>
have been but little persecution <lb/>
Now, falling back on the old <lb/>
its fruits we may know Chris- <lb/>
then I think we are justified in <lb/>
saying that, as Christianity consists of a <lb/>
mixture of morality and something else. <lb/>
and morality never has persecuted a <lb/>
human being, and as Christianity has <lb/>
persecuted millions, the cause of per- <lb/>
most be the something else that <lb/>
was added to<lb/>
The blunder of such a definition of <lb/>
Christianity reveals the fact that Colonel <lb/>
Ingersoll is so ignorant of what real <lb/>
Christianity is that it is impossible for <lb/>
him to give of it an intelligent definition. <lb/>
Let us again clearly fact <lb/>
that toe Christianity of tradition his- <lb/>
is one thing and the Christianity of <lb/>
the Christ is another The force of Colonel <lb/>
assault hi always found in his <lb/>
attack upon historic of true <lb/>
Christianity. he assails <lb/>
and bigotry and superstition and <lb/>
be is on solid ground. I <lb/>
heartily agree with many of tho <lb/>
be has taken upon these questions <lb/>
but the of one <lb/>
thing and the historic perversions <lb/>
entirely thing. <lb/>
This definition is mi to <lb/>
u the meaning of real Christianity. At <lb/>
surface, would be <lb/>
the impression of the ordinary render. <lb/>
The colonel therein displays ignorance <lb/>
profound painful pathetic Such a <lb/>
blunder vitiates all that may follow <lb/>
baaed such a conception. His <lb/>
after such a definition to real <lb/>
Christianity is absolutely worthless <lb/>
Parts of what he says may be partly <lb/>
truth, and yet it is a truth that is <lb/>
the farthest removed from the real <lb/>
truth Yon may so accent that which <lb/>
is true that it may be very antithesis <lb/>
of the truth. <lb/>
WRY BURNED. <lb/>
The colonel here reminds me of <lb/>
boy who was studying history. His <lb/>
teacher told him that the <lb/>
Nero played the fiddle while Rome <lb/>
He went home and told his <lb/>
mother that the Nero was <lb/>
playing the fiddle so burned <lb/>
The he used was <lb/>
most identical with the language of <lb/>
teacher, and yet the boy declared that <lb/>
they burned Rome because they did not <lb/>
like the tune that Nero played. He <lb/>
most got it right. But in almost stating <lb/>
the truth be missed it the more com- <lb/>
And yet we must not judge the colonel <lb/>
too harshly We cannot demand too <lb/>
of a man who makes no profession <lb/>
of Christianity. Especially we must not <lb/>
be severe in judgment upon the failure <lb/>
of such a man to know true Christianity <lb/>
when we remember the tragic blunders <lb/>
of the apostles themselves. Christ's own <lb/>
chosen followers misunderstood him up <lb/>
to the very day of his death. They drew <lb/>
their swords and attempted to defend <lb/>
him by force. He had to rebuke them <lb/>
and to explain again that his kingdom <lb/>
was not of this not of force, but <lb/>
of the spirit. His leading disciples were <lb/>
found wrangling over the first places in <lb/>
the kingdom temporal which they sup <lb/>
posed be had come to establish. <lb/>
Though they lived thus in daily con- <lb/>
tact with Christ, so far above their range <lb/>
of vision his real mission that not <lb/>
until after his death did the meaning of <lb/>
his words begin to dawn their <lb/>
souls. When we remember how his <lb/>
own chosen misunderstood him. and his <lb/>
professed followers have belied their <lb/>
professions and have failed to under- <lb/>
stand his mission through years of <lb/>
the past, and have committed so many <lb/>
crimes in his sacred name, we not <lb/>
be too harsh in our judgment of such a <lb/>
man as Ingersoll if he fail to find <lb/>
secret of the great heart of the true <lb/>
Christ. The failures of men through all <lb/>
these ages to comprehend the height and <lb/>
depth and glory of his mission only bring <lb/>
out in bold relief sublime proportions <lb/>
of tho truth that he came to teach. <lb/>
What is Christianity of Christ <lb/>
What is the Christianity for which this <lb/>
church stands today, for which as a <lb/>
minister am striving I do not ask what <lb/>
has been taught in the past about Chris- <lb/>
by theologians and expounders of <lb/>
systems of ask what is the <lb/>
Christianity for which the living church <lb/>
strives and stands in this hour of the <lb/>
Nineteenth century <lb/>
The of Christ is that heart <lb/>
which manifests itself in a life of <lb/>
love, lore to and man, love to God <lb/>
through love to man <lb/>
DEVILS BELIEVE. <lb/>
say it is a heart faith. <lb/>
the heart man Chris- <lb/>
faith is not a feat of the intellect <lb/>
over a philosophic proposition. It is an <lb/>
attitude of the soul. Devils believe. <lb/>
Belief in itself does not constitute Chris- <lb/>
A man may believe any system <lb/>
of theology be may select, and have <lb/>
nothing of Christ in bis heart or life. <lb/>
Theology is of the bead. Religion is of <lb/>
the heart. Theology is a science. Re- <lb/>
is a life. Man is not merely what <lb/>
he believes. A creed in itself has no <lb/>
necessary connection with conduct A <lb/>
man may believe all things as an <lb/>
fact and accept nothing connect- <lb/>
ed therewith as a moral fact. He may <lb/>
accept every dogma of the historic <lb/>
creeds of all the ages and yet hare with- <lb/>
in a heart as black as hell. Intellectual <lb/>
belief plays the surface of life. It <lb/>
does not the center of man's being. <lb/>
With the heart man of <lb/>
the heart the issues of <lb/>
behind a haystack. <lb/>
A man's professions of creeds or phi- <lb/>
may be one thing, his actual <lb/>
character another. Profession, in fact, <lb/>
may or may not signify reality. Is a <lb/>
man a soldier and patriot He professes <lb/>
to be a soldier. He wears a uniform. <lb/>
He has epaulets on his shoulders. Ha <lb/>
has brass buttons on his coat, a stripe <lb/>
down his pantaloons, a belt with an em- <lb/>
blazoned buckle strapped with bis sword. <lb/>
But is he a soldier He professes to be <lb/>
one. We can only learn whether he is <lb/>
when we see him in the fight Now the <lb/>
battle is joined. Across the plains the up- <lb/>
posing hosts charge each other with <lb/>
deadly fury. The field is swept with <lb/>
storms of bullets, shot and shell. Now <lb/>
walk over the field and you will find the <lb/>
On such an occasion, a com- <lb/>
parsing over field found a <lb/>
subordinate officer crouching behind a <lb/>
haystack. Turning upon him, he de- <lb/>
sort of a place is this <lb/>
for yon, The reply that greeted <lb/>
him was. do you really think <lb/>
the bullets can come This <lb/>
man wore the full uniform of battle. <lb/>
He had on all the of war; <lb/>
but he was as far removed from a sol- <lb/>
as though he had been a thousand <lb/>
miles removed from that battlefield. <lb/>
Belief about Christian history and <lb/>
dogma is not Christianity. Belief about <lb/>
the questions of doctrine do not <lb/>
Christianity. A man may believe <lb/>
that is stated in dogmatic <lb/>
theology about the Atonement and yet <lb/>
have no part in it. A man may believe <lb/>
that the Bible is true, the whole of it is <lb/>
true and inspired, and yet in life he may <lb/>
deny every truth taught in it A man <lb/>
may believe in the divinity of Christ <lb/>
an historic fact and yet crucify Christ <lb/>
every hour in his life. Some of the <lb/>
truest Christians in this world know ab- <lb/>
nothing the questions that <lb/>
agitate the world of theology and <lb/>
In fact, they have never read the <lb/>
Bible. Some of tho truest Christians <lb/>
know in the world are men and women <lb/>
who cannot read at all, who hare no <lb/>
idea the Trinity or Predestination <lb/>
or Election or Atonement as philosophic <lb/>
concepts, and yet their hearts are one <lb/>
with <lb/>
THE RICH <lb/>
Jesus Christ never promised salvation <lb/>
to any man for believing anything <lb/>
himself. The rich young man came to <lb/>
Christ and asked him the pointed <lb/>
what shall I do to inherit <lb/>
eternal He declared that be had <lb/>
kept the Judaic code of morals to the <lb/>
letter. All the commandments from his <lb/>
youth up he had scrupulously obeyed. <lb/>
Christianity was more than a code <lb/>
of morals Jeans gave him distinctly to <lb/>
understand that fact When he naked <lb/>
Christ this pointed question about the <lb/>
way of eternal life, what did Master <lb/>
answer Did he say. you believe in <lb/>
the inspiration of the Old Testament <lb/>
will be No. Did he say. <lb/>
yon believe that am divine yon can in- <lb/>
eternal lifer No. His answer <lb/>
startled the young man should <lb/>
startle tho creed tinker of every ago. <lb/>
Looking Into the face of this inquirer <lb/>
for eternal life we hear these wonderful <lb/>
words, sell all thou bast and give <lb/>
to the The young man went <lb/>
for be had <lb/>
great possessions, jeans with that single <lb/>
question to very center of <lb/>
his heart life and laid bare its covetous <lb/>
secrets <lb/>
STRIPED MODELS. <lb/>
A mere code of morals may be per- <lb/>
practiced and not signify purity <lb/>
of heart. To say Christianity is a code <lb/>
of morals is to fail to comprehend the <lb/>
very alphabet of truth which Jesus <lb/>
came to teach. There are in the <lb/>
state of New York who form com- <lb/>
We have several -if these <lb/>
model communities where perfect <lb/>
code of morals is <lb/>
habits, regular sleep, wholesome food <lb/>
taken in proper quantities, regular hours <lb/>
to rise and retire. In fact, thee people <lb/>
Conform perfectly to the outer code of <lb/>
upright, moral men. But we give them <lb/>
no credit because they wear striped <lb/>
clothes. Every penitentiary Is a com- <lb/>
whose citizens practice an ideal <lb/>
code of morals in life, so far as hey can <lb/>
within the limitation of the But <lb/>
it signifies nothing, because it is <lb/>
for reasons external rather than <lb/>
internal. <lb/>
a heart faith always <lb/>
manifests itself in life. Colonel Ingersoll <lb/>
says that if the founder of Christianity <lb/>
had only plainly said, in so many words. <lb/>
is not necessary to believe in order <lb/>
to be saved; it is only necessary to <lb/>
all would have been well. He fairly <lb/>
takes our breath away with such a state- <lb/>
It reveals the fact, that with all <lb/>
the colonel's years of assault upon the <lb/>
New Testament, he has never read it <lb/>
No man who bad read the New <lb/>
Scriptures could have made so fool- <lb/>
an assertion. <lb/>
CHRISTIANITY A LIFE. <lb/>
This is precisely what Christ did say <lb/>
in so many words. <lb/>
every one that onto me. <lb/>
Lord. Lord, shall enter into the kingdom <lb/>
of heaven, but he that the will of <lb/>
my Father which is in <lb/>
much as ye did it not, <lb/>
much as ye did it unto the least of these, <lb/>
ye did it unto me. Enter thou into the <lb/>
kingdom prepared before the foundation <lb/>
of tho In other words, Christ <lb/>
directly taught that the heart faith <lb/>
which is of the essence of his religion <lb/>
always embodied itself in life. <lb/>
Christianity is a life. The Bible is a <lb/>
book of life. Therefore the Bible is a <lb/>
book of eternal power. It will ever <lb/>
and move and save the lives of men. It <lb/>
is alive, it throbs with life <lb/>
of the race, with the life of as <lb/>
folded in the race. The Bible is not a <lb/>
systematic theology. It does not pro <lb/>
fess to set forth for the guidance of the <lb/>
mind of man a systematized and con- <lb/>
scheme of philosophy. Strip the <lb/>
Bible of the rubbish of traditionalism, <lb/>
and there can be read into it no sys- <lb/>
scheme of sacred philosophy. It <lb/>
is the simple record of life. It contains <lb/>
contradictions, paradoxes, mysteries. <lb/>
These contradictions are the contra- <lb/>
dictions of life. The paradoxes are the <lb/>
paradoxes of life. Its mysteries are the <lb/>
mysteries of life. As the secrets of life <lb/>
elude the scalpel of the surgeon and the <lb/>
biologist, so secrets of divine life <lb/>
elude the dissecting knife of the keenest <lb/>
philosopher or theologian. <lb/>
IN <lb/>
The supremacy of Christian truth is <lb/>
not based on any philosophy taught by <lb/>
Jesus Christ It rests upon the person- <lb/>
of Christ. His creed was his life. <lb/>
He did not come into the world to talk <lb/>
truth. He was the truth. The <lb/>
only supreme truth is that embodied in <lb/>
life. No man who knows anything about <lb/>
the subject of comparative religion today <lb/>
pretends to deny that the divine is found <lb/>
in all religions. that Jesus taught <lb/>
had been taught before. had not <lb/>
left the world in total before the <lb/>
advent of Christ. He had spoken to all <lb/>
races and to all peoples. The unique <lb/>
personality of Jesus consists In the fact <lb/>
that be summed up in life truth that <lb/>
was thus gathered from the four quarters <lb/>
of the earth and from the remotest ages. <lb/>
He incarnated truth. He lived the <lb/>
truth. Abstract truth is the commonest <lb/>
thing in the world; it is everywhere. It <lb/>
grows on the housetop. It is the com- <lb/>
sound in the street. But abstract <lb/>
truth does not save a world until it is <lb/>
embodied in flesh and blood. <lb/>
Herein we find the secret of the <lb/>
nation, necessity for the incarnation, <lb/>
the secret of the power of the <lb/>
God, who had spoken to the race <lb/>
through divers prophets in the past, now <lb/>
in the fullness of time spoke to man <lb/>
through man, through the incarnation <lb/>
of truth. When that Man came in <lb/>
man history, who truly said, am the <lb/>
way, the truth and he came to <lb/>
whom every knee must bow at last and <lb/>
every tongue confess. Such a man is his <lb/>
own vindication. Christ is, in fact, his <lb/>
own vindication. He never taught a <lb/>
duty that he did not live. Ho never <lb/>
preached a hope that he not rest bis <lb/>
full weight upon. His disciples were <lb/>
not literary or philosophic adherents or <lb/>
they were followers in action <lb/>
Truth itself is merely a bullet When <lb/>
the explosive power of life is placed be- <lb/>
hind it then only is it power. He only <lb/>
hath the Son who hath life. <lb/>
The Christian is the man who partakes <lb/>
of this divine life. He is not a man who <lb/>
accepts a given code of morals. He is a <lb/>
man in whose soul there springs a <lb/>
fountain of everlasting life that makes <lb/>
its own code of morals. He is the one <lb/>
man in all the world who is free from <lb/>
any code of morals. There is one law <lb/>
only that binds him, and that the law <lb/>
that is inclusive of all <lb/>
THE COLONEL'S THEOLOGY. <lb/>
The effort of Colonel Ingersoll to de- <lb/>
fine Christianity in view of such facts is <lb/>
pathetic. We are sorry for a man who <lb/>
knows so little and yet talks <lb/>
about a subject so profound. He re- <lb/>
minds me of a man who was fascinated <lb/>
with the discoveries of science. He de- <lb/>
with enthusiasm that he could <lb/>
understand how the astronomers could <lb/>
compute distances from star to star and <lb/>
give their relative proportions; he <lb/>
said that the mystery of mysteries to <lb/>
him was how on earth they ever found <lb/>
out their names Before such ignorance <lb/>
we stand dumb. We do not know where <lb/>
to begin. It pathetic. <lb/>
Christianity of Christ is <lb/>
that heart faith which embodies itself in <lb/>
a of love. Colonel Ingersoll says <lb/>
that if the founder of Christianity had <lb/>
only said that who lores his fellow <lb/>
men, who is kind, honest, just and <lb/>
charitable is to be forever all <lb/>
would have been well. How pathetic <lb/>
such a statement If the New Testament <lb/>
teaches one thing with greater emphasis <lb/>
than another it is <lb/>
one <lb/>
ye one another's burdens, and <lb/>
so fulfill the law of <lb/>
ye are <lb/>
no man seek his own, each <lb/>
his neighbor's <lb/>
fulfillment of the <lb/>
whole law is summed in this <lb/>
one shalt love thy neighbor <lb/>
as thy <lb/>
if I have all faith so to re- <lb/>
move mountains, but have not love, <lb/>
am <lb/>
ye did it unto the least <lb/>
of these, ye did it onto <lb/>
INCARNATE. <lb/>
Love declared by Christ to be the one <lb/>
principle upon which the <lb/>
judgment Is conducted. life of Jesus <lb/>
Christ was a supreme service of love. <lb/>
He to minister, not to be ministered <lb/>
unto. His life was one supreme mys- <lb/>
tery of lore. He stands at the gates of <lb/>
heals the sick. He unstops <lb/>
the Mind, heals lepers, weeps toe <lb/>
grave of the loved dead, calls back the <lb/>
broken life. His whole life was one <lb/>
effort of love toward man. He <lb/>
broke his life as a box of rich perfume <lb/>
and poured it out without stint He <lb/>
sought to give the world a home; had <lb/>
none for himself. Foxes had holes and <lb/>
tho birds of the air nests, he had not <lb/>
where to lay his bead. <lb/>
To be a Christian is to believe in <lb/>
Christ; that is. not to believe anything <lb/>
about him, but to believe in him. That <lb/>
is, to eat his flesh and drink his blood, <lb/>
to partake of his life and his spirit As <lb/>
he incarnated the truth, to incarnate the <lb/>
truth. As we incarnate his spirit, so are <lb/>
we of Christ. His spirit is the spirit of <lb/>
love. Love is the universal judge, the <lb/>
principle of love the only statute by <lb/>
which the race of man is to be arraigned. <lb/>
This principle is not confined in its <lb/>
plication to the territory of the Bible or <lb/>
the preacher. It Is not limited by the <lb/>
limitations of language. <lb/>
VOICE OF TEARS. <lb/>
Love is the universal language of <lb/>
race in ail ages, all nations, all climes. <lb/>
I may not be able to understand my <lb/>
neighbor in a foreign tongue, but if I see <lb/>
in his eye the tear of suffering, I know <lb/>
the language of tears. All hearts are <lb/>
tuned to the universal language of love. <lb/>
The sigh, the groan, tear, the heart- <lb/>
ache are words known to every human <lb/>
heart and interpreted by every human <lb/>
heart By this universal principle is <lb/>
man to be judged by Christ The <lb/>
heathen world that has never heard of <lb/>
Christ shall rise before his throne and <lb/>
be judged by this eternal truth, and <lb/>
from among them there will be those <lb/>
who look in astonishment the face <lb/>
of the and exclaim in wonder, <lb/>
saw we thee or <lb/>
athirst or sick or in prison or a <lb/>
And Love from the throne of a <lb/>
universe shad as <lb/>
ye did it unto the least of these my <lb/>
brethren, in sorrow and ye <lb/>
Aid it unto me. <lb/>
Faith is a moral attitude of the soul. <lb/>
Christianity is such a faith embodied in <lb/>
a life of love. A man who practices one <lb/>
thing and professes another is what he <lb/>
practices, not what he professes. Real <lb/>
Christianity is that power that trans- <lb/>
forms the life of man and rules it by the <lb/>
principle of love. So that a man who <lb/>
feels its divine power can walk up and <lb/>
take his enemy by the hand and forgive <lb/>
forget all the bitterness and hatred <lb/>
of the past in the supreme thought of <lb/>
Christian love. The Christianity that <lb/>
has not this transforming power in life <lb/>
is a and a delusion. The Chris- <lb/>
that bas this power is its own <lb/>
vindication, is invincible in its eternal <lb/>
power. <lb/>
A DRUNKARD REDEEMED. <lb/>
Mr. Moody was preaching in a foreign <lb/>
country. A drunken brute of a <lb/>
band consented to accompany his wife <lb/>
to the meetings and leave her, while he <lb/>
went off again to his dissipation. The <lb/>
press at the door was so great he stopped <lb/>
for a moment to see his wife well through <lb/>
in safety. The pressure of the crowd <lb/>
was so great, however, that with her he <lb/>
was carried into the building against his <lb/>
will While there he heard this simple <lb/>
apostle of Christ tell the old story of <lb/>
love. His soul was swept with its power. <lb/>
He opened the windows of his heart and <lb/>
the messenger of eternal love entered <lb/>
and took possession of his son. He <lb/>
went back home with his wife crying <lb/>
with joy. His children at his approach <lb/>
hid in terror. He walked into his <lb/>
and drew them from their hiding places; <lb/>
told them they need not fear Said <lb/>
have a father now There <lb/>
will be no more terror in this <lb/>
Those who had known him laughed <lb/>
to scorn his professions. They gave him <lb/>
a few weeks in which to return to his <lb/>
wallowing, but from that day forth for <lb/>
seventeen years he has lived a life of <lb/>
tenderness and of love, of truth and of <lb/>
temperance, and over that home cursed <lb/>
with the shadow of sin and of selfish- <lb/>
and of brutality there bas hovered <lb/>
the ministering angels of peace. Chris- <lb/>
is the power that transforms and <lb/>
redeems the soul of man and melts into <lb/>
love that which is of self and of sin. <lb/>
The Christianity that is less than this is <lb/>
not the Christianity of Christ. <lb/>
A Common <lb/>
Boyd is man who ruled in <lb/>
a in bis court that a man was not a <lb/>
disturber of religious worship simply <lb/>
because be stood a preacher <lb/>
asked everybody to stand up who wanted <lb/>
to go to bell. The judge held that there <lb/>
was no sense in question in the first <lb/>
place, and that there was. in the second <lb/>
place, no law against a man going to <lb/>
bell if he wanted Courier <lb/>
Journal.<lb/>
is beyond question the most <lb/>
cough Medicine e have ever <lb/>
sold, a few doses Invariably cure the <lb/>
worst cases of Cough, Croup and Bron- <lb/>
while ii success in the <lb/>
cure of Consumption in without a <lb/>
In the history of Since its <lb/>
first discovery it bus been sold on a <lb/>
a test which no other medicine <lb/>
can stand. If you have a we earn <lb/>
ask you try It. Price <lb/>
and If your lungs ire tort; el-eat. or <lb/>
back lame, use Shiloh's Plaster. <lb/>
Sold at DRUG S P <lb/>
Beauty In Woman. <lb/>
In his Christmas sermon Bishop Pot <lb/>
mourns because woman has beauty, <lb/>
and says it her to sin and deflects <lb/>
the pious flowing of life's He <lb/>
even doubts it is worth while to have <lb/>
beauty at <lb/>
Bishop, woman's beauty does not lead <lb/>
her to sin, nor does it deflect the pious <lb/>
flowing of life's stream. Do not try to <lb/>
teach men that beauty leads to sin. A <lb/>
Frenchwoman once, when told that <lb/>
something she wanted to do was naughty. <lb/>
replied, but it is so nice to be <lb/>
If yon teach men that it <lb/>
doubtful it is worth while to <lb/>
have beauty or yon will have <lb/>
empty benches to preach to, and your <lb/>
congregation will be standing on street <lb/>
corners by daylight and at night, with <lb/>
lanterns in hand, groping, like Diogenes, <lb/>
after beautiful sin. No, no. <lb/>
Grecian genius waved a wand <lb/>
and tho Apollo sprang from cold mar- <lb/>
Greek genius looked upon a human <lb/>
model and the chisel turned hard stone <lb/>
into Venus. Raphael dip- <lb/>
his pencil into tints stolen from the <lb/>
rainbow. his heart to a song <lb/>
chanted by and the Madonna <lb/>
exorcises sin from the be- <lb/>
holder. Murillo caught a flame from <lb/>
genius and his ascending Mary con- <lb/>
the looker on that the immaculate <lb/>
conception was a possibility Again, <lb/>
bishop, take a layman's advice. Do not <lb/>
grow Times. <lb/>
Keep your eyes open; cents buys <lb/>
Salvation Oil, the greatest cure on earth <lb/>
for pain. <lb/>
Tourists to Yellowstone Park next <lb/>
season might encounter a northwestern <lb/>
blizzard. If are wise men they will <lb/>
take along a supply of famous Dr. <lb/>
Bu l's Cough Syrup. <lb/>
The <lb/>
From brothers-in-law who don't know <lb/>
their who undertake to man- <lb/>
age newspapers in our interest, and <lb/>
make themselves ridiculous; who <lb/>
tend to be pious, yet indulge in profanity <lb/>
in cold type. Good Lord, deliver us. <lb/>
Metropolis. <lb/>
Oh. ringing In the ears <lb/>
Oh. ting in the <lb/>
Hawking, blowing, snuffing, gasping. <lb/>
Watering eyes and a-r i-pi , <lb/>
He Imp ire and fled. <lb/>
Till I would that I were -lead I <lb/>
What folly to so with <lb/>
troubles. hen the case of <lb/>
In the are and <lb/>
oared the mild, cleansing and healing <lb/>
proper of Dr. Catarrh Rem <lb/>
It purifies the by re- <lb/>
moving the cause of heals the <lb/>
sore and flamed passages, and <lb/>
a lasting cure. <lb/>
Bow Woman <lb/>
Women to whom nature has been gen <lb/>
in the matter of feet are apt to in <lb/>
case them in long, slender boots of kid <lb/>
with patent leather tips, no <lb/>
ties in the matter of decoration to at <lb/>
tract attention to the size <lb/>
of the offending members. There la one <lb/>
peculiarity about large feet when be- <lb/>
longing to one of fair Me <lb/>
never In any one's way. no matter how <lb/>
large they are. No one stumbles over <lb/>
them in a car or steps on them In <lb/>
dim. religious light of the modern draw- <lb/>
room. <lb/>
Now, the small foot of the feminine <lb/>
persuasion is always being trodden <lb/>
and tripped over. Itself upon <lb/>
all occasions, and is bane and <lb/>
of the awkward man. There is. <lb/>
however, one apology which always <lb/>
soothes the wounded feelings of this <lb/>
downtrodden foot If the man who <lb/>
crushes its delicate bones beneath his <lb/>
broad No. thinks quickly to remark <lb/>
that foot was so small he couldn't <lb/>
see woman to whom it belongs <lb/>
rejoices in the pain it gives her,, and <lb/>
thrusts the other foot yet further out for <lb/>
the next blunderer to balance himself <lb/>
upon and soothe in the same way. <lb/>
A pair of boots for every indoor gown <lb/>
is almost a necessity now that the shoes <lb/>
must match toilet in tint, and this <lb/>
gives the usually prosaic shoe <lb/>
a chance to bis fancy <lb/>
consult bis ancient history and wake up <lb/>
his muse. For we men who cannot <lb/>
wear it must be <lb/>
that slippers add to size of a <lb/>
broad, ungainly are very <lb/>
dainty boots of suede in pile grays <lb/>
pinks and blues, with Vandykes of em <lb/>
set in down the and boots <lb/>
of rich brocaded silk with patent leather <lb/>
tips and satin tops. New Sun <lb/>
Preform to <lb/>
The Rev. O. K. Flack, of <lb/>
street mission, has a novel Idea for less- <lb/>
the consumption of beer among <lb/>
the workmen in the lumber district. He <lb/>
has started what he calls a gospel wag <lb/>
on, with a cabinet organ in one end and <lb/>
a coffee tank in other. The wagon <lb/>
makes the rounds of the lumber yards <lb/>
at noon When men start out for <lb/>
beer music on the organ begins, <lb/>
a placard is hung out over the coffee <lb/>
tank, is better than beer, and <lb/>
yon can get it here for <lb/>
The men are taking kindly to <lb/>
fee and the gospel songs The Rev. Mr <lb/>
Flack says lie has men throw away <lb/>
the beer in their pails to hare them tilled <lb/>
with tho coffee. If the movement proves <lb/>
a success other wagons will circulate <lb/>
the labor districts. Tribune <lb/>
RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
WILT, II or <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the best put up nothing <lb/>
but WORK. We keep up with the times and Improved styles <lb/>
material used in all work. All Springs are use. yon from <lb/>
Storm, Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full of ready made <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
lie year round, which we will sell AS as <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking the people of this and surrounding counties for past we hop <lb/>
merit s continuance of the same <lb/>
T. X, <lb/>
J. L. SUGG. <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
OFFICE k OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rate <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb/>
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the buyer of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled in this market. And to be an <lb/>
pure straight good. of all kinds, NOTIONS. GEN <lb/>
FURNISHING HATS CAPS. BOOTS and SHOES, <lb/>
CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb/>
WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS. and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hay. Rock Limb. and <lb/>
Hair. Bridles and addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent lot Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at <lb/>
prices, per dozen, less per cent for Lash. Bread <lb/>
ration and Hull's Star Lye Jobbers Prices. White Lead and pure L i <lb/>
aped Oil. Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood a n <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a special Give me a H guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
Headache <lb/>
Indigestion. <lb/>
Stomach troubles are cured by <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
Poke Root and <lb/>
Indian Corn Paint cures <lb/>
Wart and Bunion. <lb/>
Answer Question. <lb/>
Why do st people see around <lb/>
us seen to prefer to suffer and la- made <lb/>
miserable Indigestion, Constipation, <lb/>
Appetite, Coming up <lb/>
of the Food, Yellow Skin, when Toe <lb/>
we them <lb/>
to cure them Sold L. <lb/>
Wooten's Drug -tore.<lb/>
. END <lb/>
Young I <lb/>
Mothers <lb/>
WE USE <lb/>
DISTORTED surely come to those who clean house and wash <lb/>
clothes in the old-fashioned soap, now can it otherwise f You <lb/>
and you You spend hours inhaling the hot <lb/>
steam and odors which rise from the tub, with the filth of soiled <lb/>
clothing, and with all this have not obtained the results. <lb/>
WITH PEARLINE delicate woman can do a large wash. You do not <lb/>
have to rub yourself and your clothes to pieces. You do not have to Inhale fetid <lb/>
; when you are not too tired to see that your work is well and <lb/>
and that saved many hours of woman's hardest wort<lb/>
y- <lb/>
ti<lb/>
, . . OR CO. <lb/>
, A.<lb/>
its. <lb/>
tWP,<lb/>
HEAL ESTATE AGENTS, <lb/>
O. <lb/>
several of real <lb/>
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb/>
he low and call on or write them. <lb/>
IA i lot on Third street below C.- <lb/>
In the town of <lb/>
nod two-story house with four rooms <lb/>
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb/>
luge on the premises. <lb/>
Two lots in Skinner <lb/>
desirable <lb/>
location. <lb/>
A lot on street, between <lb/>
Front and Second, bus nice house of <lb/>
i rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb/>
den plot and stables. <lb/>
A half acre lot In <lb/>
large single house <lb/>
of rooms, cook and dining rooms at- <lb/>
all out buildings and <lb/>
stables, good water <lb/>
A line farm containing M acres. <lb/>
about miles from Ml. <lb/>
P road, has sin house, stables. I <lb/>
barns, two room tenant houses; <lb/>
acres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good water. This laud Is excellent for <lb/>
the cultivation of fine tobacco. <lb/>
One farm lying on branch of the <lb/>
W. o. ail road about half way be- <lb/>
tween and and within <lb/>
mile of a new depot, contains acres. <lb/>
and balance heavily timbered <lb/>
with pine, oak, hickory, ash and cypress; <lb/>
has good tenant houses; railroad pas-es <lb/>
nearly through of this farm. The <lb/>
land clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb/>
is in good slate of cultivation and highly <lb/>
improved; is fine trucking land. <lb/>
A farm H miles from Greenville on <lb/>
Kin-ton road known as the JacKson <lb/>
farm; contains M acres, cleared; has <lb/>
good dwelling house nil <lb/>
out is a 10- <lb/>
la in <lb/>
A house and lot in Greenville on <lb/>
corner near B. Cherry and W. S. <lb/>
awls, now occupied by the family of <lb/>
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb/>
rooms, kitchen convenient. Is convenient <lb/>
location, only half a block from main <lb/>
street of the town. Possession <lb/>
can be given 1st. <lb/>
A good building lot on <lb/>
street, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
streets, splendid location. <lb/>
house and lot on Pitt <lb/>
Us street near Avenue, <lb/>
good house of rooms, Urge lot with <lb/>
tallies and out buildings. <lb/>
house and on <lb/>
Pitt adjoining the lot of B. <lb/>
S. and the lot described in <lb/>
large, comfort aide one-story dwelling <lb/>
of four rooms, cook <lb/>
plenty of room for garden. <lb/>
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb/>
Mills, Cm ton Gin and Store This <lb/>
property located, at a X Road <lb/>
within a hundred yap- of a Ii. It. sit- <lb/>
one of lie best Agricultural <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county. The mills are <lb/>
fifed up with the machinery. Bolt- <lb/>
cloths, smelter and in full <lb/>
opt ration. store Is a two <lb/>
story building with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
The store is kept constantly <lb/>
general merchandise suite I to a <lb/>
count store is a good <lb/>
The mills are the be-t known in <lb/>
his <lb/>
This is offered for safe the <lb/>
I owners wish to withdraw from business. <lb/>
Terms on of <lb/>
can I p had on<lb/>
soap. <lb/>
ft R. <lb/>
and <lb/>
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb/>
No No <lb/>
Jan. daily Fast Mall, dally <lb/>
daily ex Sun. <lb/>
I Weldon 12.30 pm pm <lb/>
Ar am <lb/>
am <lb/>
Ar p am <lb/>
Ar Sell <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
am<lb/>
Ar <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
V am ti <lb/>
Ar Suits <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
am pm pm <lb/>
A. Rocky Mount <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
Daily excel Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. will not Jan. <lb/>
Train on Neck branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax 4.22 P at. arrives Soot <lb/>
laud Neck at 5.16 P. M., Greenville <lb/>
P. M. Kinston p. m. Returning, <lb/>
leaves Kinston 7.10 a. m,, Greenville <lb/>
8.25 a. m. Arriving Halifax a. m. <lb/>
Weldon a. m. daily except Sun <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb/>
10.15 a. in., Scotland Neck <lb/>
a. m. Greenville 6.30 p. m., <lb/>
7.40 p. in. Returning leaves Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday, Thur-day and Saturday at <lb/>
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.56 <lb/>
a. m. Scotland Neck p. m., Weldon <lb/>
6.13 p. m. <lb/>
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
marl,. Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
P M. Sunday P M, <lb/>
N C, P M, P M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.30 p. m., p. m. <lb/>
leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
6.00 a. m., Sunday a. 111- <lb/>
S C, 7.30 a tn. 9.58 am. <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, C, A <lb/>
Train on Midland N C leave <lb/>
daily except Sunday, A M <lb/>
rive N C, AM. Re <lb/>
turning leaves AM <lb/>
I arrive N C. A M. <lb/>
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb/>
I at P H, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Rope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M, Nashville <lb/>
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for dally, except Sunday, it <lb/>
M leave <lb/>
ton at A M, P. M- <lb/>
. at Warsaw with Mos. <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson <lb/>
j Branch is No. Northbound is <lb/>
No. except Sunday. <lb/>
Trains No. South and North <lb/>
stop only at Rocky Mount, Wilson <lb/>
j Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection a <lb/>
Weldon all point North <lb/>
via Richmond, and daily except Sun <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Mount <lb/>
daily except with Norfolk <lb/>
Carolina tor Norfolk and all <lb/>
, points via Norfolk. <lb/>
General <lb/>
J B. <lb/>
T. <lb/>
ASTHMA-IS <lb/>
, Tr <lb/>
WATER OR MILK <lb/>
GRATEFUL <lb/>
i-i i tin <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>