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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 2 March 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="doi">17536</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18920302</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:form authority="aat">newspapers </mods:form>
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          <mods:subject authority="lcsh">
            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
          <mods:subject authority="fast">
            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <mods:location>
            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 2 March 1892</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
          <dc:coverage></dc:coverage>
          <dc:contributor></dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>18920302</dc:date>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
          <dc:format>newspapers </dc:format>
          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
          <dc:language>eng</dc:language>
          <dc:identifier>17536</dc:identifier>
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                <p>
THE <lb />
--------HAS V-------- f <lb />
I Job Boon i <lb />
Tint ran surpassed no <lb />
where in <lb />
Our work ,,. <lb />
faction. <lb />
Jg <lb />
J m <lb />
rest Material <lb />
US YOUR I <lb />
n -m m, . w m <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH <lb />
NO. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
GIVEN AWAY <lb />
BY THE WEEK T, <lb />
lie <lb />
Tar <lb />
this year In <lb />
Atlanta, . <lb />
i's Wei <lb />
This gnat already the <lb />
circulation weekly <lb />
in the Unfed suites. <lb />
ml, with mil- exception, in London, the <lb />
in world. It i. and <lb />
Ion-most, a every <lb />
week news of nil rid. and <lb />
devoted especially to development <lb />
of the south. Its circulation now ex- <lb />
i it is pushing for <lb />
conies sent oil <lb />
application. <lb />
dollars will be divided <lb />
its between now and <lb />
ll. and between then and <lb />
end of the year. <lb />
The Brat division will lie based on the <lb />
result of the conventions of <lb />
the two great parties la and the <lb />
other on the result of the presidential <lb />
election- <lb />
The national democratic convention <lb />
meets at Chicago -1st. <lb />
The national <lb />
meets at Minneapolis June <lb />
Both will nominate a candidate for <lb />
president vice president. <lb />
J for fa- Pint <lb />
Twenty-live d doll mis in <lb />
will be give-i to <lb />
the the <lb />
will lie the of <lb />
tor president vice president <lb />
person -electing the names <lb />
thus chosen will ho entitled to first <lb />
prize of e h, and it. more <lb />
than one answers prise <lb />
will lie divided <lb />
Five hundred in cash will be <lb />
divided who guess <lb />
only three out i the four mines to be <lb />
thus chosen as part., standard bearers, so <lb />
that the goes may wrong u- <lb />
to one of the four and by getting <lb />
three correct will come in for this prize. <lb />
Ms <lb />
In addition to the above Sold <lb />
more will he distributed in <lb />
prizes, of silver <lb />
is. re ail value which U <lb />
J respectively, and at <lb />
Dictionaries, <lb />
edition, fully Illustrated and <lb />
page. <lb />
Tin- polo watches will be given to <lb />
every hundredth hallo of the first II <lb />
d. silver watches to the next <lb />
series of hundredth ballots, and after <lb />
that every fiftieth ballot will one <lb />
of In <lb />
All he one <lb />
year's subscription to i y i on- <lb />
it only win <lb />
tea on -i separate niece of paper <lb />
order Bub <lb />
The winner of any of the prizes <lb />
above will he given a free at <lb />
the after July <lb />
1st This costs you limbing and you <lb />
may 22.800 or gold. You <lb />
will receive lie are i-k <lb />
I in the south for <lb />
one year and will never he a var <lb />
when a will i more <lb />
than <lb />
Address all to <lb />
of Rev. A. D. Hunter, <lb />
and <lb />
Sunday, <lb />
Second S morning at <lb />
and before. <lb />
fourth <lb />
and also <lb />
Sunday and <lb />
night week. <lb />
Services at sell house on <lb />
mad on <lb />
each third and I <lb />
on <lb />
Rev. R. F. Appointments. <lb />
Rev. R K. of <lb />
Ville Circuit the M. E. <lb />
will i at the times and <lb />
places, regularly each <lb />
1st at em, A. i <lb />
P M. <lb />
Heave, II <lb />
A M. <lb />
Sunday, Howe, <lb />
went of <lb />
P. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday. A d-n <lb />
School lb ins . II lo k A. ii. <lb />
3rd Sunday. <lb />
P. M. <lb />
4th Sunday. o'clock <lb />
A. M. <lb />
d House. <lb />
o'clock p. ft. <lb />
THE COMING MAN. <lb />
A pair of very chubby legs, <lb />
in scarlet hose; <lb />
A pair of little stubby bouts. <lb />
With rather <lb />
A kilt, a little coat. <lb />
Cut as a ran- <lb />
And before stands in State <lb />
The future man <lb />
His eyes, perchance, will read the stars. <lb />
And search their unknown <lb />
Perchance the heart and soul <lb />
Will to their <lb />
keen awl <lb />
Will a nation's light <lb />
Those, eyes Mat now are wistful bent <lb />
On some <lb />
Those busy hands <lb />
So small and brown; <lb />
Those hands only Seems <lb />
To all order don <lb />
know what hidden be <lb />
Hidden within <lb />
Though now but a taffy stick <lb />
sturdy hold they grasp. <lb />
Ah. on those little hands, <lb />
Whose work is yet undone <lb />
And blessings on those feel. <lb />
Whose race is t I <lb />
And blessings on that little brain <lb />
That has not learned to <lb />
the fill lire holds In store, <lb />
Muss coming<lb />
Postal Laws Respecting- , A WONDERFUL PRESERVER. <lb />
THE COMMON LOT.<lb />
i- no <lb />
Notice. <lb />
By virtue of the power and authority <lb />
given in a Trust lived from W. Cox <lb />
and K. J. Cos to Pan, <lb />
the 30th day of December 1888. am. re- <lb />
corded in the Register of <lb />
county. Hook B, paces and <lb />
will on Monday. March , tier <lb />
for sale at Mouse in <lb />
to the of <lb />
the said E. Cox. the <lb />
or parcel of laud lying in <lb />
as the Causey place, containing <lb />
one hundred more or less. <lb />
of Sale, Cash. <lb />
February 1st 1811. <lb />
i mks . Trustee. <lb />
C M for Trustee. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The- Clerk of Court of <lb />
comity having issued letters of <lb />
to me. the undersigned, on the <lb />
3rd day of February. on the estate <lb />
of Adams, notice is <lb />
hereby given to all person indebted to <lb />
the estate to make immediate <lb />
to the and all creditors <lb />
of said e . t than l <lb />
properly authenticated. the under- <lb />
signed, within twelve <lb />
dale of this notice, or this notice will be <lb />
plead in bar of their recovery. <lb />
This the 3rd day of Feb. 1882. <lb />
J. i. ADAMS. <lb />
on estate of James Adams. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Haying duly qualified Mi- <lb />
Court Clerk of Pitt county, on <lb />
of Feb. 1893. as i <lb />
of th Last Will and Testament of A, A. <lb />
deceased, notice is hereby given <lb />
to all indebted to the to <lb />
make payment to the under- <lb />
signed, all persons having claim <lb />
against tho are notified they <lb />
must present the same for payment on <lb />
or before the Mi day of Feb. . or this <lb />
notice will be plead of recovery. <lb />
This 3rd day of <lb />
. K. <lb />
Executor A . A. Baker. <lb />
Tin <lb />
tended <lb />
Kill the dead is there <lb />
There is no fireside, ed. <lb />
But has one <lb />
The hour of bereavement is the <lb />
common lot of all; and we come <lb />
back from the new-made graTe <lb />
where we have laid loved ones <lb />
to sleep, come back to the vacant <lb />
chair, the desolate room, the <lb />
empty life oh. how empty Yet <lb />
not all for this do the cares and <lb />
duties of life press on with any <lb />
less weight Of diminish aught of <lb />
their demands. Wisely it is thus <lb />
ordered. To sit down and nurse <lb />
our to give full to the <lb />
indulgence of sorrow and tears, is <lb />
the worse possible thing for us and <lb />
for those around us. If grief opens <lb />
our hearts to feel the woes of <lb />
others, inclines us to forget self <lb />
and Irish sorrow in binding up <lb />
other braised and deeding hearts, <lb />
leads us t double our diligence. <lb />
that before we too are <lb />
away the whole work given us to <lb />
do shall be and well it <lb />
will be possible ii. some near fut- <lb />
for us to say from the heart. <lb />
is good for me that I have been <lb />
Bitter as the cup of <lb />
bereavement, cruel as are the pangs <lb />
of separation ft the jaws of the <lb />
lasting as is the sense <lb />
of loss, yet. from those good, may <lb />
be evolved, for only those who <lb />
have had this know how <lb />
to feel for others woes, to <lb />
war Is of consolation and lo keep <lb />
silence when no words can ho of <lb />
any avail. Death runs his plow <lb />
share through our house-hold, <lb />
up tho sod, off at <lb />
the root roses and violets, and the I <lb />
tender whose fragrance <lb />
ed our lives, wither and perish <lb />
but by and by a richer harvest <lb />
justifies the ways of God; and as <lb />
tittle by little our affections are <lb />
transferred form this to another <lb />
world, and tho of <lb />
an I hope and resignation ripen <lb />
above the sod thus <lb />
we been dimly to perceive that <lb />
God He <lb />
Lead them Straight. <lb />
is a touching story told <lb />
of a young naval lieutenant <lb />
connection with General <lb />
attack on the strong- <lb />
hold at The army <lb />
was marched at night across seven <lb />
miles of sandy desert. It was a <lb />
dark, clear night; there was no <lb />
moon, but the stars shone out. <lb />
Lieutenant had <lb />
been detailed, because he was used <lb />
to navigating by the stars, to guide <lb />
the army across the desert to the <lb />
enemy his <lb />
eye on the stars he steered the <lb />
force as he would have steered his <lb />
ship. So accurately did he lead <lb />
that the first gleam of breaking day <lb />
revealed to the British troops <lb />
of solid earthworks three <lb />
hundred yards ahead. The assault, <lb />
within half hour, put the earth- <lb />
works and the. army into <lb />
the possession of <lb />
tr. <lb />
The skillful charging <lb />
with the he had led, went <lb />
across the ditch, up the <lb />
and over the first line of <lb />
Then he fell, shot <lb />
through the body. I lead <lb />
them straight, he asked, <lb />
as the commander-in-chief bent over <lb />
him- When the pastor or Sunday <lb />
school teacher fails, how blessed <lb />
is it to able to appeal to our <lb />
Great Leader with such confidence <lb />
as this, knowing that the one end <lb />
had been constantly in view. In <lb />
work let every one who <lb />
has the of others be sure <lb />
to lead them <lb />
Inquirer. <lb />
Evening Sews. <lb />
About two years ago Messrs. <lb />
George P. Co., of New <lb />
York, the publishers of <lb />
Newspaper Directory, and several <lb />
other publications of great value <lb />
concerns wishing to do business <lb />
with the newspapers, started a <lb />
very unique weekly, both in form <lb />
and name <lb />
It was a new idea Jill through, <lb />
and like new ideas generally, re- <lb />
quired large capital, much <lb />
and utmost push to make it <lb />
go. The publishers had to <lb />
people and make a market for <lb />
the publication. To what extent <lb />
they succeeded in y be judged by <lb />
the fact that its now exceed <lb />
80.000, and business <lb />
per year. We doubt if <lb />
any publication published once a <lb />
week is read with more avidity. <lb />
In fact we have it in many <lb />
instances carefully preserved just <lb />
as monthly magazines are <lb />
ed, so highly is it valued. <lb />
Now, after allowing the publish <lb />
era to on these lines for <lb />
several years, the Post-Office De- <lb />
rules that the journal is <lb />
not a legitimate newspaper and <lb />
cannot be admitted to second-class <lb />
rates, a third-class matter. <lb />
The postage on the issue of Jan- <lb />
13th, amounted a <lb />
rates to besides the labor of <lb />
attaching stamps to that <lb />
number of papers. At second- <lb />
class antes the proper charge for <lb />
postage would be making a <lb />
difference in cost of mailing this <lb />
one issue of In other <lb />
words about a year at sec- <lb />
matter, against <lb />
as third-class. In the meantime <lb />
are <lb />
A Wilson husband was out late <lb />
the other night, and he thought he <lb />
could smooth over the temper of <lb />
his wife and soften down its as- <lb />
by giving her a little sweet <lb />
taffy- we have <lb />
married some time, and yet you <lb />
are almost as young looking <lb />
fresh and as radiant and fair <lb />
and as lovely as when you first <lb />
threw open to rue the precious <lb />
doors of hallowed affections <lb />
and enriched me with that God <lb />
giver treasury of honeyed minis- <lb />
try and endearment which makes <lb />
of earth an <lb />
And then with a look, which he <lb />
mistook for gratified pride and <lb />
sup nest satisfaction, she re- <lb />
you have <lb />
not changed the least; no not one <lb />
he answered, in <lb />
surprise, remembering his gray <lb />
locks and ruby nose. lion- <lb />
can you say that <lb />
things preserved in <lb />
never she ans- <lb />
as she took another sip of <lb />
coffee. <lb />
And then he buttered his <lb />
under the impression that it was a <lb />
buckwheat cake, and the meal then <lb />
progressed in mighty silence. <lb />
Wilson Mirror. <lb />
Snow Produces Thirst. <lb />
St. Louis Globe-Democrat. <lb />
It would be in order for some <lb />
medical man or scientist to explain <lb />
why eating snow does not satisfy <lb />
the thirst. Sometimes travelers <lb />
in very cold districts during win- <lb />
finding all the water frozen up. <lb />
eat snow to relieve thirst, and <lb />
Co. are paying this I immediately commence to <lb />
enormous sum under protest, until times than <lb />
the Department can farther in <lb />
sider the case. most extreme cases, but eating <lb />
., . ,, , snow invariably either increases or <lb />
Of course it is outrageous that , . <lb />
., , , ., . ., produces thirst, <lb />
the law is so ambiguous that the ,,. , <lb />
makes this still more <lb />
strange is that melted snow pro- <lb />
authorities themselves <lb />
can blunder in construing it. as , <lb />
., i ,. . ., , . , the purest and most satisfy- <lb />
they do according to the whim of . <lb />
the person in charge of the matter. <lb />
and it ought to be changed <lb />
in justice to those <lb />
ed to suffer by such ambiguity. <lb />
If Printer's Ink is not a news- <lb />
paper, then there is not a weekly <lb />
newspaper in the <lb />
We believe it the best I <lb />
red and most carefully preserved <lb />
in and entitled to <lb />
all the accorded any <lb />
newspaper by the Postal laws, and <lb />
hope to see the wrong done the <lb />
publishers righted without delay. <lb />
mg drinking water. Residents in <lb />
the suburbs and the country fro <lb />
shovel their cisterns full <lb />
of snow during extremely cold <lb />
spells, and their cistern water is <lb />
very much improved in flavor <lb />
thereby. I have heard the <lb />
discussed several times, but <lb />
never came across a reasonable <lb />
explanation of this apparent <lb />
though I have never heard <lb />
any attempt made to dispute the <lb />
facts as stated. <lb />
An Important Case. <lb />
Norfolk, Wilmington Sc Charleston R. R. <lb />
Stir. <lb />
The Board of Directors of the <lb />
Norfolk, Wilmington Charleston <lb />
Railroad Company held their an- <lb />
meeting in Philadelphia last <lb />
Tuesday afternoon and elected <lb />
officers for the ensuing year as <lb />
President, J. C- <lb />
Philadelphia; <lb />
R. Duncan Harris, New York; <lb />
Carroll Foster, <lb />
General Manager, <lb />
H- Philadelphia. <lb />
The general manager reported <lb />
that the short hue between Norfolk <lb />
and C miles, was <lb />
Chronicle. <lb />
The Supreme Court filed a de- <lb />
yesterday in an important <lb />
case involving a new It <lb />
appears that at Fayetteville A- G. <lb />
Thornton's property was laid off <lb />
for the homestead ; upon the land <lb />
, was an old dwelling house, which <lb />
j was burned but which was insured; <lb />
j that with the insurance money <lb />
Thornton built a new house, which <lb />
made the value of the laud <lb />
house The plaintiff, C P. <lb />
to whom Thornton owed <lb />
money, not when the homestead <lb />
was laid off, but later, brought <lb />
to determine whether he <lb />
not recover the amount <lb />
practically arrange-1 for; that the mt the <lb />
right of way was being taken up fa <lb />
and local subscriptions The mm <lb />
the people the hue and <lb />
the merchants of Norfolk and <lb />
appealed. The Supreme <lb />
.,.,. Court <lb />
Charleston and intermediate points the decision of the <lb />
were manifesting great interest in ; court that Van. <lb />
the road and assisting it liberally., recover. <lb />
The general also report- , <lb />
ed that the survey of tho branch I <lb />
between the Atlantic North I <lb />
Carolina Railroad and Columbia, ,, <lb />
S. C, would be begun M yon are impatient sit <lb />
When and What to Read. <lb />
giving the system of line i M have ft <lb />
FARM AND GARDEN NOTES. <lb />
Breed up instead of down. <lb />
The breeding stock for next <lb />
year can be mated up now. <lb />
Make the hens scratch for at <lb />
least part of what they get; they <lb />
will be the healthier. <lb />
Ground oats and bran can be <lb />
used to good advantage waking <lb />
up a ration for poultry. <lb />
Vegetables cooked in some form <lb />
can always be used in making a <lb />
change of diet for the fowls. <lb />
Never ship an that is in any <lb />
manner soiled. The appearance <lb />
is a prime factor in the sale of any <lb />
article. <lb />
Kerosene is one of the best ma- <lb />
to apply in the hen roosts <lb />
to clear them of lice; apply it <lb />
with a brush. <lb />
In nearly all cases a <lb />
of early chickens for market <lb />
with eggs in season will pay better <lb />
than either one alone. <lb />
Near a good market ducks can <lb />
often be made more profitable <lb />
than chickens, especially when on <lb />
incubator is used in hatching. <lb />
To produce a large market fowl, <lb />
one that fattens readily and <lb />
easily confined, cross a Brahma <lb />
cock with partridge Cochin hen. <lb />
A breed that may be best in one <lb />
locality will not always prove best <lb />
in another. Select according to <lb />
locality as well as <lb />
STATE NEWS <lb />
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb />
From our Exchanges. <lb />
It is said Gov. Scales <lb />
estate valued at <lb />
left an <lb />
LITTLE THINGS. <lb />
go. <lb />
Lamps to Your Feet. <lb />
Faith is the Christian's sight. <lb />
Real love never works for pay. <lb />
Work begun for God never <lb />
stops. <lb />
Darkness is the star's best friend- <lb />
Borrow is God's cure for selfish- <lb />
God's harvest sometimes ripens <lb />
quickly. <lb />
Whatever we owe to man be- <lb />
longs to ml. <lb />
God always has a place for <lb />
people. <lb />
The devil's husks m <lb />
fat. <lb />
make <lb />
Gov. Holt has a reward <lb />
of for the arrest of A. T. <lb />
Wright, charged with the murder <lb />
of Daniel Smith Richmond <lb />
county. <lb />
Trustees of the University of <lb />
North Carolina have determined <lb />
to establish n Chair of Political <lb />
and Social Science, to be filled by <lb />
President Winston. <lb />
Concord Yesterday Dr. <lb />
Griffin pulled a tooth for a horse <lb />
that beats all tho horse teeth we <lb />
have seen. It is two inches long <lb />
and an inch and a half wide. <lb />
Col. Wharton J. Green will be <lb />
the orator at May <lb />
A is a little thing, <lb />
With your hand on the to <lb />
But it lakes the venom out the <lb />
Of a thoughtless or cruel <lb />
That you made HI hour ago. <lb />
A kiss of is sweet and rare, <lb />
After the toil of the day. <lb />
Rut It smooths the furrows out of the care <lb />
And on the forehead once called <lb />
fail- <lb />
Ill the years that have Sown away. <lb />
a lit tie thing to say, are <lb />
love you my each night, <lb />
But it sends a thrill through the heart <lb />
For love Is tender, as love is blind. <lb />
As i climb life's rugged height. <lb />
We starve each other for love's caress. <lb />
We take, hut we do not <lb />
It. seem so easy some soul o bless, <lb />
But we dole less an; less <lb />
tis bitter hard ti live- <lb />
will be the life and services of Gen. <lb />
Robert Ransom. <lb />
A BEAUTIFUL TESTIMONY. <lb />
William Cullen Bryant wrote, <lb />
and his subject just before he was released from <lb />
earth to put on <lb />
character, of which Christ <lb />
The State has sent to the Orphan was the perfect model, is in itself <lb />
Asylum some 1,700 yards of black so attractive, to altogether lovely, <lb />
and white cloth which was used in ; j cannot describe in language <lb />
draping the Capitol in mourning I with j d <lb />
last spring when Governor Fowle , <lb />
and Col. Saunders died. am l express the gratitude <lb />
. .,,,. II feel for the dispensation which <lb />
The jury m the trial of j that example on mankind, <lb />
for the murder of <lb />
W. Pearsall. wife and two children <lb />
and then burning the house over <lb />
their dead bodies in Wayne county <lb />
on the night of the December <lb />
1801, returned a verdict of guilty. <lb />
Tarboro Last <lb />
day night the stables of J. W. <lb />
Sherrod Bro. on the Rev. T. <lb />
farm in this county were <lb />
set fire to and burned to the <lb />
ground, together with nearly fifty <lb />
barrels of corn. pounds of <lb />
long forage, ten mules and one <lb />
for the truths which he taught and <lb />
the sufferings which he endured <lb />
for our sake. I tremble to think <lb />
what this world would be without <lb />
him. Take away the blessing of <lb />
the advent of his life the <lb />
blessings purchased by his death, <lb />
in what an abyss of guilt would <lb />
man have been left It would <lb />
seem to be blotting the sun out of <lb />
leave our systems <lb />
of words in chaos, frost and dark- <lb />
Pittsboro The prospects my view of the life, the <lb />
are encouraging a good grain teachings, the labors, and suffer- <lb />
Wheat and oats are both j of the blessed Jesus, there <lb />
tilling up nicely, and we hope j be no admiration too profound. <lb />
reP no love of which the human heart <lb />
were s to warm, no gratitude <lb />
especially needed, surely it is this too earnest tied deep of which he <lb />
year is justly the object. It is with <lb />
sorrow that my love for him is so <lb />
that every will <lb />
bountiful harvest- <lb />
was a year when big crops <lb />
Shelby J. W. <lb />
says he ran a one-horse farm <lb />
cold, and my gratitude so <lb />
that <lb />
last year and his crop was as is <lb />
as he ever had. He made I see any attempt to pat aside his <lb />
bales of cotton. bushels of as a delusion, to turn <lb />
The devil hates to have to look bushels of wheat and a good <lb />
at himself. oat crop. He raised pounds. <lb />
To-day is ours. To-morrow be- <lb />
longs to God- <lb />
What time of day is it when love <lb />
stops work <lb />
The place during a battle <lb />
is the front. <lb />
Full is not a salvation <lb />
that is full of self. <lb />
To become wise is to find out <lb />
ho little you know. <lb />
Philosophy lights no candle in <lb />
the night of death. <lb />
To know God is to be made <lb />
with yourself. <lb />
tobacco does not buy the <lb />
weed. He has no complaint to <lb />
make of hard times. <lb />
It is a misdemeanor to sell a <lb />
package of garden or other seeds <lb />
unless it bears the date of the year <lb />
in which it was pot up. The <lb />
men's eyes from his example, to <lb />
meet with doubt and denial the <lb />
story of his life. For my part, if <lb />
I thought that the religion of <lb />
skepticism were to gather strength <lb />
and prevail and become the <lb />
dominant view of mankind, I <lb />
should despair of the fate of man- <lb />
come. <lb />
ac- <lb />
A Christian Life. <lb />
Winston Sentinel says that war-; kind in the years that are yet to <lb />
rants for indictments have been <lb />
made by the sheriffs in several <lb />
counties in the State against par- <lb />
ties who have sold seeds not <lb />
bearing a date. <lb />
Slightly Embarrassed Him. <lb />
Mr. J. A- <lb />
Johnson, one of Mr. <lb />
mechanics, <lb />
cut his leg just above the knee <lb />
Tuesday morning with a drawing <lb />
Henderson Gold Leaf. <lb />
A good joke is told on a certain <lb />
dentally I minister not a thousand miles from <lb />
here- He made a call recently at <lb />
a home which had not long before <lb />
y the arrival of a <lb />
knife, inflicting a wound about blessed <lb />
three inches long and of an inch . , u <lb />
deep. Dr. Robinson dressed the Ho met at <lb />
wound and sent him to his home, i by the lady of tho house, and after <lb />
Wilson Mirror. <lb />
The life of a Christian is indeed <lb />
a grand and glorious j,,, he will soon be usual salutation, asked after <lb />
fill of the most precious again. the baby's health. The lady who <lb />
was little hard of hearing, and <lb />
did not <lb />
again. <lb />
comfort here, luminous with , . , . , ,, <lb />
,, th n ,, <lb />
the radiant hope of a blissful , , , , . ., with the <lb />
i-. m i Herald says a lady from she <lb />
mortality Up There, when the sea . t in quite understand him, and think- <lb />
and the earth shall give up their bought he was asking about her cold, <lb />
dead. the streams of good- worth of postage stamps under the answered that although she usually <lb />
and gentleness and loveliness impression that she could get J had e winter, this was the <lb />
and beauty, which flow out from a cheaper by wholesale. A , . <lb />
,., ., ,. ii, ville lady recently went to one sue <lb />
life thoroughly consecrated to the hero under the kept her awake nights a good deal, <lb />
cause of our Saviour, are like those that a reduction had been land at first confined her to <lb />
pure and stainless and beautiful <lb />
mountain streams, whose bright <lb />
and sparkling bosoms catch the <lb />
glancing glimmer of rippling sun- <lb />
beams, and become silver threads <lb />
of radiant beauty as they go <lb />
along in joyous songs on <lb />
The REFLECTOR <lb />
A whole for <lb />
One Dollar; <lb />
in it yon <lb />
mum in <lb />
if you stamped <lb />
after your name <lb />
on margin of the i <lb />
Expires <lb />
From This <lb />
It is to give you no- <lb />
that unless re- <lb />
newel that time <lb />
the will <lb />
cease going to you <lb />
at the expiration of <lb />
, two week. <lb />
J. MARQUIS, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
X. C. <lb />
hi Skinner upper <lb />
opposite Photograph <lb />
U. L. <lb />
DENTIST, t <lb />
Greenville, N. c. <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
at Tucker A Murphy's old stand. <lb />
J. <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
S-AT-L A W. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. U. <lb />
In all the Courts. <lb />
ALEX. L. BLOW <lb />
J. <lb />
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb />
N. <lb />
I. A. <lb />
TYSON. <lb />
B. F. <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to <lb />
H. LONG, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
Prompt and careful attention to <lb />
solicited. <lb />
L. C. <lb />
I; <lb />
MARRY <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
aw, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
LI JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice in all the courts. <lb />
a Specialty-. <lb />
y. <lb />
m s <lb />
y. <lb />
2- <lb />
Hi <lb />
p- <lb />
o o <lb />
JO <lb />
i. <lb />
made in the price of stamps Then, noticing that her <lb />
tried to buy two-cent stamps at the; she said <lb />
rate of thirteen for a cent and a ., . , , <lb />
that she could tell by his looks <lb />
quarter. <lb />
Charlotte Tho pres- <lb />
weighing of the mails on the and sit down, <lb />
railroads, shows that weight of <lb />
the mail matter has largely in- <lb />
he was going to one just <lb />
like hers, and asked him to go in <lb />
down <lb />
with Job. <lb />
This line will form a direct con-j If you are just a little strong- <lb />
with the Pennsylvania headed go to see Moses, <lb />
system at Norfolk, which point is If you are getting weak-kneed <lb />
now reached by that company j take a look at Elijah, <lb />
over its New York, Philadelphia If there is no song in your heart <lb />
and Norfolk by way of Cape ; listen to David. <lb />
Charles, and will, it is claimed, j you are a policy man read <lb />
open up the largest virgin timber j Daniel. <lb />
district in the United States and j if you are getting sordid spend <lb />
shorten the distance between awhile with Isaiah. <lb />
North and South over miles. your faith is below par read <lb />
. I Paul. <lb />
I didn't know could read, laZy <lb />
Downey B M of <lb />
much interested in his . , ,. , . t, i .- i <lb />
r t- j future climb Revelation and <lb />
yes, read ,. ,,, <lb />
since I Low i get a of the promised land. <lb />
comes it A-bU Header. <lb />
paper upside always, <lb />
reads way, Downey, den The right performance of this <lb />
got at de bottom facts without hone's will be the best <lb />
read down de preparation for the hours of ages <lb />
that follow it <lb />
their everlasting journey to last <lb />
sea. And those grand streams of three years ago. For the purpose <lb />
life, with all their glorious currents, weighing the mail matter in the j <lb />
are like the mountain streams, and country, four geographical <lb />
A Safe Rule. <lb />
grow deeper and broader <lb />
and more beautiful as go <lb />
flowing down to the ocean of <lb />
mortality. <lb />
A good Deal to be Thankful for. <lb />
Of the late Bishop the <lb />
f is While <lb />
Wilson Mirror. <lb />
Never suspect a friend of doing <lb />
ions are made by you a wrong until the truth of it is <lb />
Georgia, the Florida, as as the sun at <lb />
division <lb />
blanks and scales, and the yes, even then, do not accuse or <lb />
department the weigher. The; censure until you have heard from <lb />
mail on the Air Line coming into his own lips his version and <lb />
Charlotte averages about <lb />
a month- <lb />
Kinston Tree Mr. R. <lb />
Jackson, of was in <lb />
presiding over a certain conference a few days ago. He told <lb />
us that more cotton would be plant- <lb />
in the West a member began a <lb />
tirade against universities and <lb />
education, thanking God that be <lb />
had never been corrupted by con- <lb />
tact with a college. After proceed- <lb />
thus for a few minutes, the <lb />
Bishop interrupted with the <lb />
I understand that the <lb />
brother thanks God for his <lb />
was the ans <lb />
can put it that way if yon <lb />
want all I have to <lb />
the bishop in his sweet <lb />
cal tone, that I have to say is <lb />
that the brother has a good deal to <lb />
thank God <lb />
ed around LaGrange this year <lb />
than usual. The Tree Press has <lb />
but little confidence in the reports <lb />
that the cotton acreage will be <lb />
decreased throughout the south. <lb />
of the supposed wrong. <lb />
If you w ere 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 />
pared. <lb />
Most of the trades, professions, <lb />
cotton planter I d of <lb />
who calculates on getting more ,. , ., . . . , . <lb />
than cents for his next crop of kind, take their original either <lb />
cotton will get left. If the farmers from the love of pleasure, or the <lb />
generally get the idea that tho cot- fear of want. The former when it <lb />
ton acreage will be reduced becomes too violent, degenerates <lb />
some of them are getting that . , , j i, i-i <lb />
next will be the biggest and the latter into <lb />
crop of cotton ever i avarice. <lb />
farmer will think it a good time to <lb />
raise an extra big crop, calculating <lb />
on a big price of <lb />
ed acreage. <lb />
When the soul is at ease it may <lb />
be amused, but a hungry soul <lb />
want <lb />
1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD MICK STOKE <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
tag their year's supplies will tint <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
is complete <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR. <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
a . at Lowest Prick. <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at prices to sulk <lb />
the times. Out are all bought and <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
N. <lb />
the Tar -River <lb />
L Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
J. B. <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb />
Capt. R. E. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag <lb />
The People's Line for travel on <lb />
River. <lb />
The Steamer Is the finest <lb />
quickest boat on the river. <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the comfort, a <lb />
and convenience of Ladies <lb />
POLITE A ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
A tint-class Table furnished with th <lb />
bet the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Ii <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, Wednesday <lb />
And Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb />
Freights received daily and through <lb />
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb />
r. i. J. <lb />
Washington Green villa, H. U<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017536_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
-rue has colors How <lb />
action of Livingston <lb />
Greenville, N. C , Georgia. He U <lb />
boring as haul for the interest of <lb />
the as Polk- He is the <lb />
popular President of the State Al- <lb />
of Georgia, a member of <lb />
from that State. His <lb />
; Democracy has been doubt but <lb />
S. J.<lb />
at <lb />
N. M second-class mail matter. <lb />
he too has shown his colors and <lb />
they mark him the friend of his <lb />
race by showing him to be still a <lb />
Democrat untainted by any ism. <lb />
I At a meeting held in his State <lb />
since returning from this confer- <lb />
TOT SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
is per <lb />
Advertising One <lb />
one year, year, once he gave forth no uncertain <lb />
one-quarter column one year 5-1 a by denouncing in the <lb />
Transient inch s . , <lb />
week, weeks. method and the party <lb />
month <lb />
two <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
weeK. ; weeKs. i aim <lb />
8-2. Two inches one week. t st We <lb />
-eeks, one month, ,, i . i <lb />
. , r , be the duty of <lb />
Column as reading items. cents <lb />
for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb />
and <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb />
be charged tor at legal rates and MUST <lb />
BE PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office <lb />
m person or by letter. <lb />
Copy M Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of advertisements lie <lb />
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb />
mornings in order to receive prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a medium <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
THE BIRD IS HATCHED. <lb />
The conference or <lb />
of the Labor Organization of the <lb />
United States met at St. Louis on <lb />
the of February and was in <lb />
session for three days. It was large- <lb />
attended. Col. Polk of North <lb />
Carolina was chosen Chairman. <lb />
The body was composed of <lb />
gates from most of the Labor Or- <lb />
and from the white <lb />
and colored Alliances- A woman <lb />
was one of the Vice-Presidents <lb />
and a one of its Secretaries. <lb />
The meeting was called by the <lb />
convention that met at <lb />
last fall It had general- <lb />
believed that the <lb />
was called for the purpose of or- <lb />
Third Party. For some- <lb />
time past however it was hoped <lb />
that this would not be done, as <lb />
many prominent were <lb />
opposed to its taking any action <lb />
which would lead to this. In con- <lb />
sequence much interest has been <lb />
felt in regard to the meeting. Its <lb />
sessions were with the <lb />
same interest that had shown <lb />
in the occasion previous to the <lb />
meeting. <lb />
The convention is now a thing <lb />
of the past. The fruit of it is a <lb />
Third Party. If correctly report- <lb />
believe this to <lb />
man in the <lb />
Southern States who loves good <lb />
government because a Third <lb />
Party with us means Republican <lb />
We are not ready for this <lb />
yet. We don't believe the Alli- <lb />
of North Carolina is. We <lb />
know they will get justice in the <lb />
party that was the home of their <lb />
fathers. There they will remain. <lb />
No Third Party in North Carolina. <lb />
It is reported that <lb />
Reed has resigned as Minister to <lb />
Paris and is now on his way to <lb />
the United Doubtless the <lb />
administration will need him <lb />
worse on the New York <lb />
than the does in Paris. <lb />
There is some discussion at <lb />
present as to whether the State <lb />
Guard shall be divided in the en- <lb />
nest part <lb />
going to Asheville and a part to <lb />
Wrightsville. We do not see <lb />
that much inconvenience could <lb />
arise from the division. <lb />
Thompson who was tried last <lb />
week for and burning <lb />
the Pearsall family near Golds- <lb />
last fall was convicted and <lb />
to be hanged the four <lb />
of April. The jury signed <lb />
a petition asking the Governor to <lb />
commute his sentence to life <lb />
The bigamist who mar- <lb />
a lady in Greensboro and also <lb />
had a wife in England was tried <lb />
last week the Superior Court of <lb />
Guilford and convicted- Judge <lb />
Whitaker sentenced him to five <lb />
years the penitentiary. <lb />
took an appeal and his bond was <lb />
fixed at one thousand dollars. <lb />
New York has held its mid-win- <lb />
convention. The result was <lb />
just what was expected nothing <lb />
nothing less. Hill captured <lb />
ed, however, it was not brought more <lb />
into existence by the conference t <lb />
in its session proper. Dr. <lb />
whom Col. Polk has said is a <lb />
scoundrel, it seems engineered the <lb />
scheme by which this new party <lb />
had its Just as the con <lb />
was ready to adjourn <lb />
completed its work, this <lb />
gade announced that he had some <lb />
thing important to bring before <lb />
the body and asked to be heard. <lb />
He got a long speech <lb />
the two old parties in favor of <lb />
a new one and suggested a mass <lb />
meeting immediately after ad- <lb />
for the purpose design- <lb />
of bringing into life the Third <lb />
Party. The meeting was held as <lb />
suggested. Ben Terrill of Texas <lb />
was Chairman and the result of it <lb />
was the calling of a convention to <lb />
meet in Omaha, Nebraska, on the <lb />
4th of July to nominate a <lb />
date for President and <lb />
dent of the United States- In an <lb />
address signed by various persons <lb />
among whom was Col. L- L. Polk <lb />
of North Carolina, each State is <lb />
requested to send four delegates <lb />
from each Congressional District <lb />
and eight from the State at <lb />
to this convention. This will <lb />
make the number of delegates <lb />
Each township and county is <lb />
requested to have meetings the <lb />
last of March to ratify their action <lb />
and make arrangements for send- <lb />
delegates, It remains to <lb />
be seen what the various States <lb />
will do in to this action <lb />
taken by this meeting under the <lb />
lead it seems of a man whom even <lb />
say is a scoundrel. <lb />
We do not believe there is a single <lb />
Southern State that will ratify this <lb />
call. <lb />
were instructed to vote for him in <lb />
Chicago in June, and the unit <lb />
rule also adopted However, this <lb />
is not equal to a nomination <lb />
He may be nominated, he may <lb />
not- It will take more States <lb />
than New York to do this. It is <lb />
said his plan is to enter New <lb />
Connecticut, and <lb />
Delaware which with the solid <lb />
South would nominate him if he <lb />
can capture these delegations. <lb />
Hill is evidently a shrewd <lb />
and though there is not much <lb />
prospect of his nomination now <lb />
he may so manage as to come to <lb />
the front by June. He <lb />
succeeded in New York. <lb />
certainly <lb />
So far Congress has done but <lb />
little- It is getting far into the <lb />
session and nothing of importance <lb />
has been accomplished- The eyes <lb />
of the people are upon this House <lb />
especially and they are expected <lb />
to enact wise legislation. Up to <lb />
the present everybody has been <lb />
disappointed, There is much at <lb />
stake and the Democratic House <lb />
needs to get down at once to work <lb />
and give, as far as is in their power <lb />
to do to the people. Unless <lb />
they do this the Democratic party <lb />
will be held responsible- This will <lb />
operate very seriously against the <lb />
party in the Presidential contest <lb />
so soon to be had. The members <lb />
ought and do know this, and they <lb />
ought to feel the responsibility <lb />
and do something, and that at <lb />
once. <lb />
The friends of President Cleve- <lb />
land in New York propose to hold <lb />
It should be said in honor I a convention at Syracuse in May <lb />
to the delegates from North Caro <lb />
Una that they took no part or lot <lb />
in the proceedings which gave <lb />
birth to this new party. In fact it <lb />
is said they left in disgust. We do <lb />
not believe there is one Alliance- <lb />
man in a hundred in this State but <lb />
what will approve of their action. <lb />
The tile and rank of the Alliance <lb />
in North Carolina were born and <lb />
bred Democrats and unless we are <lb />
mistaken they will be found <lb />
in the ranks of this party <lb />
when they are to cease <lb />
from their labor by the Angel of <lb />
Death. <lb />
But how will they feel about <lb />
Col Polk I We dare say that the <lb />
and appoint delegates to the con- <lb />
at Chicago. We do not <lb />
see what they can accomplish by <lb />
doing this. They will evidently <lb />
injure the prospects of their can- <lb />
They could only be look- <lb />
ed upon as and their <lb />
gates would stand not the shadow <lb />
of a chance of being seated in the <lb />
National Convention. Unless Mr. <lb />
Cleveland gets enough votes in the <lb />
convention outside of New York <lb />
he cannot be nominated. At <lb />
present it looks as if neither Hill <lb />
nor Cleveland carry Now <lb />
York if they should be nominated. <lb />
It would be poor policy to <lb />
a man who could not carry <lb />
Colonel will see the day when he j Stat and Democrat- <lb />
will recognize the fact that he has <lb />
disregarded the wishes of Us <lb />
pie in his own native State, and Boykin. t <lb />
where heretofore he numbered his i about half what <lb />
friends by the thousands be will I or guanos, <lb />
soon have only a corporals guard. <lb />
The Democratic party will now can afford to make cotton for <lb />
have to say farewell to Col. Polk, cents. <lb />
THE PEOPLE COMPLAIN. <lb />
A matter which the railroad com- <lb />
mission ought to take into <lb />
and deal with as occasion <lb />
might warrant, is the running of <lb />
such excursions by the railroads as <lb />
was experienced on <lb />
day by persons attending the New <lb />
fair. The excursion was an <lb />
outrage that deserves the severest <lb />
condemnation of all citizens, and <lb />
one which should not be tolerated. <lb />
Whatever railroads advertise and <lb />
agree to do they should be com- <lb />
to carry out, or held re- <lb />
for failure to do so. Let <lb />
us see what they did last <lb />
An excursion was advertised <lb />
to be run from Scotland Neck to <lb />
New to leave the former <lb />
place at C o'clock A. M-, and reach <lb />
New at An on <lb />
train was run from Goldsboro to <lb />
New every day during the <lb />
fail-, due to reach the latter place <lb />
about the hour named above. The <lb />
excursion train from Scotland <lb />
Neck passed Greenville a little <lb />
after o'clock and reached Kinston <lb />
something after on good time. <lb />
The Coast Lino engine had to be <lb />
dropped here, the arrangement be- <lb />
that the A. N. C- road should <lb />
furnish the engine to pull the train <lb />
its pan of the trip. No ob- <lb />
could have been raised to <lb />
this had the train been allowed to <lb />
go on to its destination. Instead of <lb />
this, however, it was side-tracked <lb />
at Kinston and made to wait until <lb />
the other train from Goldsboro <lb />
had passed, which was about <lb />
o'clock. Going down behind that <lb />
train was very much of a snail <lb />
pace, and it was o'clock when <lb />
the excursionists were pulled into <lb />
New This late arrival <lb />
caused them to miss a very inter- <lb />
part of the fair exercises for <lb />
the day. <lb />
But the worst is not yet. <lb />
excursion train was advertised to <lb />
leave New on the trip <lb />
at P. M. It being a rainy, <lb />
day the people went to <lb />
the depot as soon as it began to <lb />
grow dark and were in the cars <lb />
ready to go before the hour of de- <lb />
The advertised hour <lb />
riving and no signs of departure <lb />
being at hand inquiries led to the <lb />
the information that the excursion <lb />
train could not pull out till the <lb />
east bound mail train had arrived. <lb />
But the wait for this was not long, <lb />
as that train soon pulled in, and <lb />
the excursionists naturally thought <lb />
they would quickly be off. After <lb />
waiting until o'clock the sudden <lb />
bumping of the cars indicated that <lb />
an engine had hooked on in front, <lb />
and exclamations off now <lb />
were heard all through the train <lb />
as she moved forward. A run of a <lb />
few minutes changed this tune <lb />
when the passengers felt the train <lb />
stop and then go pushing back to <lb />
the depot. Just a shift to get on <lb />
the main track they thought, when <lb />
there were more bumps followed <lb />
by another start forward. A few <lb />
run again brought a <lb />
of what had just occurred. <lb />
This thing was repeated until it <lb />
grew and for an <lb />
hour longer the train kept running <lb />
up and down the track. Some <lb />
that the company had con- <lb />
that they had not given the <lb />
money's worth so were throwing <lb />
in that much extra others <lb />
that the train kept running back <lb />
trying to get enough headway to <lb />
go forward. However, the secret <lb />
of it was that either through gross <lb />
stupidity in the management, or <lb />
prompted a mean spirit of pen- <lb />
authorities had <lb />
decided to combine the two trains <lb />
and send them back to Kinston <lb />
with a single engine. After enough <lb />
shifting apparently for a hundred <lb />
cars the train finally pulled out a <lb />
few minutes before o'clock, one <lb />
engine with twenty-two passenger <lb />
coaches loaded with considerably <lb />
more than a thousand people. The <lb />
result, as might have been expect- <lb />
ed, was several balks along the <lb />
road, the engine coming to a dead <lb />
halt under its immense burden <lb />
and only getting off after repeated <lb />
efforts. Kinston was finally <lb />
reached about o'clock, a run of <lb />
miles in something over three <lb />
hours. In addition to these de- <lb />
lays, several of the cars had no <lb />
fire in them, very much to the dis- <lb />
comfort of the passengers. <lb />
At Kinston the Greenville and <lb />
Scotland Neck coaches were <lb />
dropped and the Coast Lone engine <lb />
took them back to their <lb />
the last named place being <lb />
reached about five hours behind <lb />
the advertised time for returning. <lb />
All trouble of this delay should be <lb />
placed right where it belongs, on <lb />
the A. N. C- road and its manage- <lb />
The fair itself may be ex- <lb />
every detail, as it was <lb />
this time, but if the who <lb />
visit it are to be outraged in this <lb />
manner by the railroad, future <lb />
years will show a wonderful falling <lb />
off in attendance. The railroad <lb />
evidently has very little interest in <lb />
trying to make people pleased with <lb />
a visit to New and the fair. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
From our Regular Correspondent. <lb />
Washington, D. C- Feb. 26,1892- <lb />
The good sense of the Demo- <lb />
of the House has about put <lb />
an end to all dangers of a clash in <lb />
the party over the free coinage <lb />
bill. A caucus was held last night, <lb />
not for the purpose of <lb />
anyone against his will, I t <lb />
allow a free interchange of <lb />
as to what ought to be done, and <lb />
the prediction is made by those <lb />
high the party councils that a <lb />
special rule will be reported from <lb />
the committee on Rules fixing a <lb />
date for the consideration of the <lb />
free coinage bill. The free bind- <lb />
is to be called up <lb />
next week and a final vote will be <lb />
taken on it, if the present pro- <lb />
gramme is adhered to, on the first <lb />
Monday in April. It is <lb />
that the date for the consideration <lb />
of the free coinage bill will be set <lb />
for the same week in which the <lb />
binding-twine bill is passed, and <lb />
that it will be disposed of before <lb />
the other two tariff bills, which <lb />
have the right of way at all times, <lb />
are called up. <lb />
Senator Sherman has had no <lb />
love for Mr. Blaine since the <lb />
national Republican convention of <lb />
1880, as he has always believed <lb />
that Mr. Blaine knocked him out <lb />
of being nominated for President, <lb />
by that convention, and his <lb />
which was adopted calling <lb />
upon the President to inform the <lb />
Senate of the proceedings recently <lb />
had with the representatives of the <lb />
Dominion of Canada and of the <lb />
British government as to arrange- <lb />
men s for reciprocal trade with <lb />
Canada, bodes no good to the man <lb />
from Maine. It is believed that <lb />
Senator Sherman, who is credited <lb />
with having said that Mr. Blaine <lb />
was still the field for the <lb />
nomination, thinks that the <lb />
Republican of the proceedings of <lb />
the recent conference will bring <lb />
out some facts not altogether <lb />
to the Secretary of State- <lb />
Mr. Harrison and his family <lb />
have gone to Virginia Beach for a <lb />
week's holiday. His extraordinary <lb />
exertions in getting that letter <lb />
from Mr. Blaine tired him out. <lb />
Senator Bate a short but <lb />
strong speech against the Paddock <lb />
pure food bill, this week which, he <lb />
said was a measure that would <lb />
turn the Agricultural department <lb />
a huge partisan political <lb />
machine, as under it there would <lb />
be commissioned a multitude of <lb />
who might be stationed <lb />
along the railroads of the country <lb />
of course, at places convenient <lb />
to voting precincts, where they <lb />
could help curry out the political <lb />
orders received from headquarters. <lb />
Another reason why Mr- Bate op- <lb />
poses the bill is that he thinks it a <lb />
matter belonging exclusively to <lb />
the several States, with which the <lb />
government has nothing <lb />
to do. Senator Coke is also op- <lb />
posed to the bill, which he says <lb />
attempts and utterly <lb />
thing in trying to regulate and <lb />
take care of the food, drink and <lb />
medicine of people, <lb />
which has been done and <lb />
never can be done. I it become <lb />
a law, he thinks the country would <lb />
be with spies and inform- <lb />
without accomplishing any- <lb />
thing, because the people <lb />
novel accept the dictum of a <lb />
bureau at Washington on what <lb />
they should eat or drink, or what <lb />
they should take <lb />
A lull amending the <lb />
laws has favorably re- <lb />
ported to the House from <lb />
committee. It provides <lb />
that no alien who has ever been <lb />
convicted of a felony or other in- <lb />
famous crime or misdemeanor in- <lb />
moral who is <lb />
an anarchist or polygamist, or who <lb />
immigrated to this country in <lb />
of any of its laws, or who <lb />
cannot read the constitution of the <lb />
United States, shall be neutralized. <lb />
It requires five years continuous <lb />
residence in the United States and <lb />
one year in the State in which <lb />
plication is made to become a <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue n decree of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court at March Term, by III I <lb />
Honor E. T. Judge, in the case <lb />
of Wiley Pierce and wile vs. William ; <lb />
Whitehead and others, the undersigned j <lb />
will sell before the Court House door In <lb />
Greenville, on Holiday the of <lb />
1892, the following described <lb />
tract of situated the county of <lb />
in Falkland Adjoining , <lb />
the lands of P. II. <lb />
K. Williams and others and known as <lb />
part of the Hubert place, being <lb />
same on which said Pierce and wife for- i <lb />
resided, being all of the said tract j <lb />
of land lying on the north side of the, <lb />
mi leading from Greenville to <lb />
Falkland containing aces, more or i <lb />
less. <lb />
Terms of third balance <lb />
In one and two years, secured by <lb />
Rage on said land percent interest <lb />
from day of sale payable annually. <lb />
This February <lb />
F. G. <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of an order of the of <lb />
Superior of Pitt county in of <lb />
J. B. 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 7th day of March. 1892, the following <lb />
described piece or parcel of land, lying <lb />
in Flit county, ad- <lb />
joining the lands of Joseph II. Clark, <lb />
Thomas Thomas, the Pitting <lb />
and, Gilbert Harriet and others, con- <lb />
acres, more or less. <lb />
This January 88th, 1892. <lb />
J. B BULLOCK, <lb />
F. G. James, Attorney. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court Clerk of county, of <lb />
the 25th of January. 1892, as <lb />
of Joseph deceased <lb />
notice is hereby given to all persons in- <lb />
to c estate to make immediate <lb />
payment to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons having claims the estate <lb />
must the same for payment on <lb />
the January 1898, Or <lb />
this notice will be plead in bar o f <lb />
recovery. <lb />
This 28th nay of Jan. 1892. <lb />
M J. <lb />
of Joseph <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having been appointed by the Superior <lb />
Court of Pitt county Receiver of Green- <lb />
sure, notice is here- <lb />
by given to all persons indebted to said <lb />
Greenville Combination Store to make <lb />
immediate payment to the undersigned, <lb />
and all having claims against <lb />
Greenville Combination Store must file <lb />
same for payment properly <lb />
on or before the 0th of April <lb />
next. It, V. TYSON, <lb />
Receiver of G. C. Store. <lb />
This 23rd day of February, 1892. <lb />
Tobacco Growers <lb />
Tobacco Furnace <lb />
The best Invention ever made for <lb />
CURING TOBACCO. <lb />
WE<lb />
AGAIN <lb />
LIVERY, FEED AND SALE <lb />
removed my stables from Five <lb />
Points to the ones formerly <lb />
pied l Mr. H. F. Keel and will <lb />
constantly Keep on hand a <lb />
full line of <lb />
Horses and Mules. <lb />
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb />
the livery and can suit the most <lb />
I will run in connection a Kit <lb />
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb />
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb />
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb />
Greenville, N. O. <lb />
WATCH-TOWER, <lb />
Published Semi-Monthly. <lb />
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb />
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity, <lb />
cation, General Intelligence Send <lb />
for Sample Copy. of Pub- <lb />
Greenville, N, C. <lb />
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. WINFIELD, Editor. <lb />
W. DAVIS, Associate. <lb />
With it you nave absolute <lb />
control over heating your barn, <lb />
and it <lb />
All Danger of Fire. <lb />
Two cures per week can be <lb />
made in the same <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 farther particulars ad- <lb />
dress <lb />
PHELPS, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Mention this paper when you write. <lb />
To enlist your attention and claim a fair share of your patronage. <lb />
We are determined that if square dealings and honest <lb />
of our goods will secure you as a customer, <lb />
they shall not be larking on our part We go into <lb />
------the Northern 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. ten days spent in market by our <lb />
were not idle ones, as an inspection of our <lb />
THE PUBLIC. <lb />
------If you want to save-----<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 />
General Agent for North Carolina, <lb />
who is now handling goods direct from <lb />
the manufacturers, as HIGH <lb />
GRADE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, and <lb />
endorsed by nearly all l he <lb />
musical Journal in the C lilted <lb />
Made by Paul i. who is at this <lb />
time one of the mechanics In- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade <lb />
Also the NEW BY EVANS IT. <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which baa been sold by <lb />
for the past six years in the eastern <lb />
part of this State and up to this time has <lb />
given entire The Upright <lb />
Piano just, mentioned will lie sold at from <lb />
in Rosewood, Oak, <lb />
Walnut or Mahogany eases <lb />
Also the PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from to solid or Oak <lb />
cases. <lb />
Ten years experience in the <lb />
business has enabled him to handle <lb />
nothing but standard goods and he does <lb />
not to say that he can sell any <lb />
marital instrument about per cent, <lb />
cheaper than other agents are now offer- <lb />
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina. <lb />
President Harrison spent several <lb />
days at Virginia Beach last week <lb />
for recuperation. <lb />
The big monopolists received <lb />
in drawbacks, from Oct. <lb />
1890, when the tariff <lb />
went into effect, up to Dec. 31st, <lb />
1891, according to a report sent to <lb />
the House by the Treasury depart- <lb />
in answer to a resolution <lb />
calling for information on the sub- <lb />
bat in reality large <lb />
amount was paid between July <lb />
1891 and Dec. of the same year, <lb />
sis tin <lb />
schedule of the law did <lb />
not go into until the first of <lb />
last July. <lb />
Congress is just beginning to <lb />
pull itself together after its Chi- <lb />
picnic. <lb />
Mr. Harrison this week sent a <lb />
special World's Fair message to <lb />
Congress, in which he treats the <lb />
question of a <lb />
in a very diplomatic manner, <lb />
throwing the responsibility of de <lb />
the matter upon the <lb />
Congressional committees, and <lb />
adding some for the expo- <lb />
Hatch says his <lb />
anti-option bill will not interfere <lb />
with legitimate transactions, but is <lb />
aimed at the fictitious speculations, <lb />
which he thinks are on a par with <lb />
any other form of gambling. He <lb />
is confident that it will be sup- <lb />
Sorted by at least two thirds of the <lb />
The bearings have been <lb />
completed, but the committee will <lb />
take time to thoroughly digest <lb />
before reporting the bill. <lb />
TiM Mil mill MILL <lb />
A Perfect Characters, <lb />
RE MODELED AND IMPROVED. <lb />
GOOD <lb />
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World. <lb />
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, <lb />
in all Easiest <lb />
o learn, at d rapid as any. <lb />
AGENTS WASTED EVERYWHERE <lb />
IVar as Represented. <lb />
his is everybody's friend. <lb />
should have done on the <lb />
It always, insures the most <lb />
prompt attention. Address <lb />
Boston, Mass. <lb />
of these machines can be seen at the Reflector where particulars and <lb />
can be had. <lb />
One <lb />
prices <lb />
advertisements. <lb />
L. W. DAVIS, <lb />
------MANUFACTURE FINE------ <lb />
HAVANA CIGARS <lb />
carried in our double stores will prove. You cannot help but b <lb />
interested if you will call on us. We take pleasure in showing <lb />
you what we have to sell There can never be a business of <lb />
magnitude 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 <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 <lb />
and Whips <lb />
--AND THE LARGEST LINE OF <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
that Has ever been brought to this county. We are <lb />
for all goods in our 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 us. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb />
CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door in Court House <lb />
ran <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory is well equipped with the best put up nothing <lb />
FIRST-CLASS WORK. We keep up with the times improved style <lb />
material used in all work. All styles Springs are yon can select <lb />
Brewster, Coil, Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
he year round, we will sell as low as the lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t <lb />
merit a continuance of the same <lb />
ID- Williamson. <lb />
-AND- <lb />
NORFOLK. <lb />
Roanoke Avenue, <lb />
VIRGINIA. <lb />
Last Call for Taxes. <lb />
I will visit the places named below on <lb />
date stated for the purpose of <lb />
collecting the Taxes due for <lb />
All who do not pay promptly <lb />
before March will <lb />
be advertised a <lb />
ins to law. <lb />
Meat me and save costs. <lb />
hi Saturday, March 12th. <lb />
Saturday. March 12th, 1892. <lb />
Ayden, Saturday, March 12th, 1802. <lb />
Grifton, Saturday, March 12th. <lb />
Bethel, March 180-i, <lb />
J. C March <lb />
10th. <lb />
Grimesland, Friday, March 1892. <lb />
Wednesday, 9th, 1892. <lb />
March 8th, 1892. <lb />
Penny Hill, Monday, March 14th, 1892 <lb />
J. A. K. TUCKER. <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 />
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 825.00 per bale <lb />
and hold it until May or June if desired <lb />
Very truly, <lb />
BARNES, <lb />
NORFOLK, VIRGINIA <lb />
S. B. HARRELL CO., <lb />
COTTON FACTORS AND <lb />
COMMISSION <lb />
Corn, Cotton, Peanuts, Stock, Eggs, <lb />
and Sawed Lumber will our <lb />
special attention. Tour patronage <lb />
solicited. <lb />
NOS. AND COMMERCE STREET, <lb />
NORFOLK. VA. <lb />
Strictly a <lb />
E. E. A. L. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Dealer- in <lb />
Unless <lb />
A God My Always on EM <lb />
Fire Horses a specialty. <lb />
Ha guaranteed <lb />
Hew. Union Tn <lb />
C C CODE. T. H. GILLIAM <lb />
Pitt Co n c Pitt Co n c. Co <lb />
Bros., <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
AND--------- <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
of <lb />
We have Lad many years ex <lb />
at the business and are <lb />
prepared to handle Cotton to <lb />
the advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
will receive prompt and <lb />
careful attention <lb />
W. II, Moore. <lb />
W. <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
AGENTS FOR.- <lb />
Smith's Improved Hand Pump, <lb />
and <lb />
LOCKS AND BOLTS. <lb />
Union Central Life Insurance Company. Cornish Celebrated <lb />
Piano-s and Organs. <lb />
We will take pleasure in the public in any of the above <lb />
MOORE PARKER, <lb />
in corner under Opera Greenville, N. O <lb />
J. L. SUGG, <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, a line of the following <lb />
not to be excelled in market. And to be an <lb />
pm straight goods. DRY GOODS of nil kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING. GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES. <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS. FURNITURE and HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, CROCKERY and QUEENS <lb />
and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
Gin and KB Hay, Rock Limb, Paris, and Pus <lb />
Hair. Harness, and adders <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Clark's O. N. T, Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholesale <lb />
robbers prices, cunts per less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep- <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye Jobbers Prices. Lead and <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Wood Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a all and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb />
the best Companies in existence, see <lb />
ft<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017536_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
LANG'S COLUMN. DO READ <lb />
Tobacco Cloth. <lb />
3-4 Cents per Yard <lb />
CASH. <lb />
Personal.<lb />
THE NEW FAIR. <lb />
lie <lb />
. <lb />
IF <lb />
U, TillS OFFER I, <lb />
FOR<lb />
I friends in New <lb />
A Best Fair <lb />
Yet Held. <lb />
i visaing <lb />
Fall Winter <lb />
STOCK <lb />
Going at greatly <lb />
Reduced prices. <lb />
We made <lb />
with <lb />
Weekly Constitution, <lb />
Southern <lb />
Published at Atlanta, by which we are <lb />
enabled to offer It the Eastern <lb />
for only <lb />
This offer lasts a short while. Now <lb />
is your chance to gel all the news of all <lb />
the world and home paper for the <lb />
price of one paper. <lb />
Every clubbing subscription rate is <lb />
entitled to a chance at <lb />
for 1893, details <lb />
of which will be found elsewhere. <lb />
This i- the most remarkable <lb />
offer ever made. Every home in <lb />
county should receive the <lb />
first, and after that, it should have <lb />
the best General Newspaper, bringing <lb />
week the of the world, and <lb />
overflowing with the choicest special <lb />
features, such as the Weekly <lb />
published at Atlanta. On., and <lb />
having a circulation of <lb />
BOTH PAPERS. <lb />
greet <lb />
A Splendid Dictionary <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, like all other <lb />
papers, wants mo re subscriber, and in <lb />
to induce persons to get its up a <lb />
we have the following liberal offer <lb />
to make for the month of Ma <lb />
Any one who will during this month <lb />
bring or send the Reflector Ten Sub- <lb />
scribe s for one year with will lie <lb />
given a splendid Webster's Una- <lb />
bridged Dictionary. This Dictionary <lb />
contains nearly 1300 pages, and em- <lb />
braces 12.000 synonyms. Copies of the <lb />
Dictionary can be seen at this office. <lb />
Any one who tries to get up a club and <lb />
succeeds in only live, can bring <lb />
on that number and get the <lb />
by paying extra. Ten subscribers <lb />
gets the Dictionary free to the person <lb />
raising the club. Any boy, girl or <lb />
grown person can get up a club. Start <lb />
at once so as to get a Dictionary free. <lb />
No subscriptions accepted unless ac- <lb />
companied by the cash. <lb />
GET <lb />
Fall Winter <lb />
STOCK <lb />
Going at greatly <lb />
Reduced prices <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Buy your Cooking Stoves of D. <lb />
D. Haskett. <lb />
March. <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Ash Wednesday. <lb />
The best brands of Axes at D. <lb />
D. <lb />
Third month <lb />
can best Tomatoes for only <lb />
cents at <lb />
Tin id I lie shad tony i.-hoard. <lb />
Hardware of D- D. <lb />
Haskett <lb />
To day is the beginning of Li <lb />
The New Home Sewing- Ma- <lb />
chines for at Brown Bros. <lb />
Sash and Doors a full stock at <lb />
D. D- <lb />
v mi will meet <lb />
next Monday. <lb />
Try Cardenas, the best Scent <lb />
smoke, at Reflector Book Store. <lb />
I will soil Heating Stoves at <lb />
post D. D. Haskett. <lb />
It mis.-i-d another good chance to <lb />
snow Saturday. <lb />
Bushels Seed Peanuts, clear <lb />
of saps and pops, for by T. C. <lb />
Bryan. <lb />
ion your get ready for <lb />
the March winds. <lb />
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb />
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
We had another clear day <lb />
day, to the delight of very body. <lb />
The New Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines and all parts at Brown <lb />
Bros, <lb />
Remember yon can get the <lb />
genuine bun king at <lb />
Reflector <lb />
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb />
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb />
Store- <lb />
M. Ferry <lb />
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb />
Attention i called to the last tax <lb />
appointments of the Sheriff, <lb />
in another column, <lb />
Fob BENT-The house <lb />
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb />
The Tobacco Furnace will <lb />
be tested at Mr. G. F- <lb />
next Go and see it. <lb />
Misses Julia and Annie Foley are <lb />
i in Heine. <lb />
Mr. S. confined <lb />
lo his room for several day- past. <lb />
Mrs. P. K. Dancy is visiting her <lb />
daughter, Mrs. Cleve, in New <lb />
Mr. W. S. of town <lb />
hew Notary Public by <lb />
the Governor. <lb />
Mr. E. G. Cox was called to Dun a <lb />
last week lo see his rather who is <lb />
seriously sick. <lb />
Mr. John Ames and wife, of Nor- <lb />
folk, are the family of Mr. <lb />
W. B. Brown. <lb />
Dr. J. left last <lb />
to spend a few days in Philadelphia, <lb />
bis former home. <lb />
Mr. It. our photographer, <lb />
baa b en spending some days with <lb />
relatives in Palmyra, <lb />
Rev. N. Han I of Washington, <lb />
spent part of Friday and <lb />
here and preached in the Episcopal <lb />
church Friday night. <lb />
Mrs. C A. H. of <lb />
bus, Miss., accompanied by Master <lb />
James Burton is visiting <lb />
sister, Mrs. E. A. <lb />
Mr. A. J. Berg, returned last Wed <lb />
evening from a month's visit <lb />
to his old home at Troy, N. Y. He <lb />
reports a delightful trip and returns <lb />
looking well. <lb />
Mr. R. R. Belcher, a young man of <lb />
this county who spent most of last <lb />
year in Texas and come hack Pitt <lb />
for a portion of the winter, returned <lb />
to that State last week. <lb />
That highly accomplished, truly <lb />
entertaining and very beautiful <lb />
music teacher the Greenville In- <lb />
Miss Minnie was <lb />
the guest Mrs Dr. Johnson <lb />
day and Lump- <lb />
Referring to the speech of J. <lb />
Murphy, Esq., at the Washington <lb />
birth day exercises, in <lb />
the of that city hays <lb />
Murphy, the first speaker, enter- <lb />
the vast crowd for something <lb />
like an hour, holding in almost <lb />
spellbound attention. To attempt <lb />
anything like a synopsis would be to <lb />
do injustice to the sneaker. It <lb />
abounded in eloquence, logic, <lb />
try and patriotism. Some of his <lb />
hits wore telling and amusing, <lb />
and his anecdotes apt and laughable, <lb />
making everyone in a good humor <lb />
with Limed and the rest of man <lb />
kin. The speech, all in all, was <lb />
the best of the <lb />
There is complaint that the hens <lb />
are rather just now and egg re <lb />
turns arc correspondingly small. <lb />
Nichols, the candy man, employs <lb />
clerks, bas everybody <lb />
treated cleverly who goes to his <lb />
place. <lb />
The field adjoining the College <lb />
property will lie rented this year <lb />
for cultivation. Apply to <lb />
This month gives each of <lb />
Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, <lb />
and the same number issues of <lb />
the <lb />
The a- he he <lb />
this time mid. ingoing have <lb />
the taxi's due for last year or will <lb />
proceed to advertise land and sell <lb />
as the law directs. <lb />
C T- Mn n ton i makes his announce- <lb />
to day. His new <lb />
stock is coining daily and he it. <lb />
ready to show you the many <lb />
In has on hand. <lb />
Sheriff Tucker is putting on his <lb />
war paint. He is now his <lb />
last call for taxes due for 1891. <lb />
After this call he is going to <lb />
the land of all delinquents. <lb />
Mr. C. D. brought the <lb />
Reflector a potato Saturday <lb />
that is shaped exactly like a young <lb />
duck. Two match sticks put in for <lb />
legs make the complete. <lb />
The lime holding the <lb />
Institute for Pitt county has been <lb />
made one week later than tho date <lb />
advertised last week. The date is <lb />
March lib of 7th. All <lb />
teachers should take notice. <lb />
It has already been conceded <lb />
the Fish, Game and Oyster Fairs at <lb />
New are tho an mini <lb />
ill lie <lb />
Stale. Its exhibits are novel, differ. <lb />
almost entirely from any other <lb />
fair in this respect, and its occur- <lb />
is at I season apart from any <lb />
other. Instead being of <lb />
i he products of the soil, its chief at- <lb />
tractions are the of our in- <lb />
land waters and It was a <lb />
happy idea the instigators of <lb />
this fair hit upon in planning such <lb />
exhibits, and this part of North <lb />
Carolina's wealth being thus brought <lb />
to notice of the world will prove <lb />
inestimable value to the entire <lb />
State. Already much has been at- <lb />
to the State this <lb />
and this will increase year <lb />
by year <lb />
From the point of interest and ex- <lb />
of exhibits the fair held last <lb />
week was the best the Association <lb />
has yet had. even the very in- <lb />
clement weather, combined with the <lb />
railroad rendering all the <lb />
in its power, did not <lb />
its being a success. The <lb />
man was present part of one day, <lb />
and look as good a survey of the ex- <lb />
as was possible in that time. <lb />
We said this was not n fair the <lb />
product of the soil, still there was <lb />
a room of one building set apart for <lb />
agricultural exhibits, and it was <lb />
creditably filled with fine specimens <lb />
corn, rice, wheat, oats, peas, <lb />
toes, turnips, etc. The room <lb />
above this was floral ball in which <lb />
was displayed hundreds of varieties <lb />
of rare and beautiful flowers and <lb />
evergreens. In one division of this <lb />
department was quite a collection of <lb />
cm many of them articles that <lb />
had been in existence more than a <lb />
century. Opposite this department <lb />
was a room containing a number of <lb />
creditable exhibits, <lb />
among which we noticed that our ad- <lb />
Mr. A. Coho, had a nice <lb />
display of pianos and organs. On <lb />
the third floor this same building <lb />
was the art and fancy work depart <lb />
where some splendid specimens <lb />
were exhibited. <lb />
Leaving Ibis building we next went <lb />
lo the and oyster build- <lb />
which caught us all over. There <lb />
was never a finer exhibit of oysters <lb />
anywhere, and clams and <lb />
were also in great abundance. The <lb />
fish were marvelous to behold, almost <lb />
every known variety, many of them <lb />
in large blocks of clear ice. <lb />
terrapin, sturgeon, <lb />
Turtle <lb />
The Reflector Book Store now has <lb />
a lot of those cheap Dictionaries. <lb />
Parties who left their name for copies <lb />
can now call and get them. Any <lb />
wanting a good Dictionary at an <lb />
unusually low price should not fail <lb />
to sec these. <lb />
A s pea a I religious meeting for <lb />
men, called prayer <lb />
will begin on Thursday <lb />
night. First meeting lo be held in <lb />
the lecture room of the Baptist <lb />
church. AH men are cordially <lb />
to attend, <lb />
Tobacco Cloth. <lb />
3-8 per Yard <lb />
SPOT CASH. <lb />
LANG'S COLUMN <lb />
Two of the Celebrated Favorite <lb />
Corn left, only 17-75 at <lb />
D. D. <lb />
Fob lot of and <lb />
Mules for sale on time. Apply to <lb />
B, Center Bluff, N. <lb />
The house on Third <lb />
street below is for rent. <lb />
ply to Whichard <lb />
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb />
your appetite when nothing <lb />
else will. At the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The steam is still <lb />
here rendering all the amusement tho <lb />
inclement weather will permit. <lb />
All parties who have tobacco to <lb />
sell can save Warehouse charges <lb />
and freight by bringing same to <lb />
the house on Saturdays <lb />
where they will receive good prices. <lb />
Scraps particularly wanted. <lb />
Talk about the fruit crop as <lb />
set in Some of the papers are <lb />
saying, giving; the farmers as their <lb />
authority, that the cold snaps of late <lb />
insures a good fruit crop. <lb />
See the offer of a fine dictionary for <lb />
a club of ten subscribers to the Re- <lb />
This is a splendid <lb />
for some smart boy or girl to <lb />
get a good dictionary very little <lb />
good luck, <lb />
L. H. Pender. for H. E. <lb />
Co. announces to-day that he is <lb />
ready for orders for tobacco flues. <lb />
Farmers should hand in their orders <lb />
so the flues can be made the <lb />
rush for them comes on. By putting <lb />
this off too long you may not be able <lb />
to get your flues just when wanted. <lb />
New Post <lb />
A new called <lb />
has just been established at Mr. W. <lb />
R. near Swamp <lb />
church. Miss Ida Rogers has <lb />
as P. M. It is very probable that <lb />
the railroad now building through <lb />
that section will make a depot there. <lb />
The Reflector wants a good list of <lb />
subscribers at the new office. Any <lb />
who are already subscribers at other <lb />
offices and want their paper changed <lb />
lo can have it done by <lb />
notifying us. <lb />
Thirty Hence. <lb />
The hydraulic elevator in the stone <lb />
hotel in some way gal bang <lb />
before reach, of <lb />
the fourth floor, the other night. It <lb />
could be moved neither up nor down, <lb />
and being at a place the pa <lb />
not get out they bad <lb />
to remain in the elevator car all sight. <lb />
They were an uneasy looking set <lb />
when released from their prison next <lb />
There was considerable <lb />
excitement among the guest i be <lb />
which will get. <lb />
curious <lb />
fish and fish not curious were all <lb />
In the game department <lb />
dead and living specimens various <lb />
birds, quail, ducks, tin keys, etc., <lb />
while there were also numbers <lb />
live squirrels, while, black, and <lb />
common rabbits, raccoons, <lb />
wild cats, tame cats, foxes, minks, <lb />
otters, and even several deer and a <lb />
bear. It was a whole menagerie. <lb />
Machinery hall also came in for a <lb />
of interest. One of the <lb />
curiosities here was some colored <lb />
women weaving cloth on a loom <lb />
years Machinery f.- making <lb />
woolen plates was work. I'm <lb />
owner of this hid a plantation scene <lb />
several dancing <lb />
fancy dress. Engines, pi luting press <lb />
and other machinery were at work in <lb />
the building. <lb />
The stock and poultry <lb />
were as a we ever saw. and the <lb />
sins, pens, kennels and coops n- <lb />
as many visitors as any oilier <lb />
part of the There were some <lb />
line horses and goad trial of speed <lb />
around track. <lb />
There were a number of side issues <lb />
in t look no therefore <lb />
cannot speak of respective <lb />
merits or demerits. We w in to <lb />
see ten cents worth of the biggest <lb />
man in the world, weighing <lb />
pounds, but found his gab, profanity <lb />
and sneers at the South lo be border- <lb />
on the disgusting to did not <lb />
tarry with him long. There was a <lb />
fat pig 1508 pounds that <lb />
could also be seen a dime. <lb />
One feature we regretted to see, <lb />
and against which the line should <lb />
have been drawn, was the gambler. <lb />
Some half dozen of these as <lb />
many different tricks with which to <lb />
fleece the unsuspecting, were <lb />
their work within the enclosure. <lb />
The management should exclude all <lb />
such in future, and must do so if <lb />
i lie. expect to retain the sympathy <lb />
an I interest of the better class of <lb />
people. There is a growing <lb />
against gamblers at such <lb />
places that has about broken up two <lb />
or three lairs in the State that could <lb />
be named. Gentlemen, let the New <lb />
fair hold its position as the best <lb />
fair held in the State and do not <lb />
allow any more of this in your <lb />
grounds, <lb />
Ex-Gov. Jarvis was among the <lb />
distinguished visitors the fair and <lb />
was greeted by many of his friends <lb />
from different sections of the State, <lb />
Gov. Holt was present and made an <lb />
excellent speech on Wednesday, but <lb />
the belated train prevented any of <lb />
the excursionists from hearing it. <lb />
THIRD ANNUAL CONVENTION <lb />
Of the Pitt County Sunday School <lb />
Held in the M. E. Church at <lb />
Greenville, February 25th. <lb />
Convention called to order at <lb />
President J. Whichard in chair. <lb />
Rev. A. Hunter conducted <lb />
religions exercises. The <lb />
read from Prov. to <lb />
Prayer by Rev. G A. <lb />
Address of welcome by President <lb />
D. J. Whichard. Besides <lb />
a cordial welcome lo <lb />
he threw out hints as lo <lb />
the great good done in <lb />
School work. The address was re <lb />
to by Rev. R. F. <lb />
The following were as <lb />
committee on A. L. <lb />
Blow, U. J. Hester, G. F. A. <lb />
D. Hunter and J. L. Sugg. <lb />
The subject of Sunday School <lb />
Literature was discussed by G. <lb />
F. Smith. He plainly showed the <lb />
necessity of using the Bible as well <lb />
as the many stood helps. He spoke <lb />
highly of having a library and es- <lb />
as to the kind of books to be <lb />
used. He was followed by Rev. A. <lb />
D who amen to <lb />
all Smith said, and <lb />
lb of <lb />
libraries. Rev. G. A. called <lb />
attention lo the need of more <lb />
reading tint our conception may be <lb />
broader. Rev. R. II John spoke of <lb />
the need of having maps so as to <lb />
know the geography of the country <lb />
about which we arc studying. <lb />
Tile morning session then adjourn- <lb />
ed Benediction by Rev. R.<lb />
The convention to order at <lb />
Religious exercises conducted <lb />
by Rev. J. C. Jones. <lb />
How to make a Sunday School <lb />
Successful in a Rural District <lb />
discussed by Rev. R. B. John. He <lb />
impressed us with the fact that not <lb />
only the but the old should <lb />
attend. He also explained how to <lb />
get them to Sunday School. The <lb />
teacher ought to know the of the <lb />
child the teacher is an <lb />
factor to the accomplishing <lb />
of good. He touched upon the <lb />
of teachers and superintend- <lb />
ants not becoming up in <lb />
not making progress as they see it. <lb />
To accomplish the most good <lb />
day Schools should lie run the entire <lb />
year and not six months in the year. <lb />
Another point that may help many <lb />
not to be discouraged as to numbers <lb />
etc, is to begin in the winter then <lb />
when fall off comes it will not <lb />
be felt. <lb />
Rev. R. F. Taylor showed the <lb />
fortunate condition of the Sunday <lb />
School that has an incompetent <lb />
superintendent, for upon the super- <lb />
much depends. He also <lb />
showed the possible good <lb />
men d if they would under <lb />
take it. <lb />
Rev. G. A. in his <lb />
way the duty of preach- <lb />
to develop the men and <lb />
around them to make good <lb />
and teachers. <lb />
Rev. J. C. Jones also discussed <lb />
the importance of successful Sunday <lb />
School work. <lb />
A. Hunter hoe-l the <lb />
ii lent, sh ml I <lb />
hay in good ten he s. <lb />
The order In the exercises <lb />
was opening the question box by <lb />
Rev. G. A. who read and <lb />
answered following <lb />
Should a meeting be held <lb />
every Sunday School. <lb />
shall we manage <lb />
School to get best <lb />
and <lb />
How can the churches best induce <lb />
member, to attend Sunday <lb />
School. <lb />
Is it best to put any novels in a <lb />
Sunday School library. <lb />
How do you make a <lb />
meeting <lb />
Should Sunday School leaching be <lb />
mainly by lectures or asking <lb />
Relation of pastor to the Sunday <lb />
School. <lb />
How is it wise to interrupt <lb />
lessons by ringing bells, giving out <lb />
papers, etc. <lb />
Should a man be a teacher who <lb />
says he has no time lo prepare and <lb />
makes no preparation. <lb />
Should Sunday Schools adjourn <lb />
for yearly meeting and such. <lb />
Should prises be offered in Sunday <lb />
Schools. <lb />
All the above questions were an- <lb />
in a very instructive manner <lb />
aid will prove a help to many <lb />
beard them. <lb />
On the Convention ad- <lb />
until the was <lb />
sung and benediction by Rev R. B. <lb />
John. <lb />
NIGHT <lb />
h Convention called to order at <lb />
o'clock. Opening religious <lb />
conducted by Rev G. F. Smith. <lb />
The committee on statistic., made <lb />
the following report of Sunday <lb />
School In the county, was on <lb />
motion adopted; <lb />
On motion e Executive C <lb />
lee lo <lb />
holding n meeting in each township, <lb />
tin- of <lb />
School work ,., conn y, <lb />
and that the following brethren lie <lb />
appointed to attend and <lb />
the township <lb />
ex Gov. T. J. <lb />
Swift Creek, A. U Blow. <lb />
A . Hunter. <lb />
Falkland, J. N. II. <lb />
E. A. <lb />
Prof. W. H. Rag Hal-. <lb />
Dam, D. J. <lb />
Rev. D. H. <lb />
G. F. Smith and A. <lb />
A. Tyson. <lb />
Carolina. Rev, J. C. <lb />
An address on the Origin and <lb />
Progress of Sunday Schools was <lb />
then delivered by H. A. Latham, <lb />
editor of the Washington <lb />
He handled his very and <lb />
gave many interesting <lb />
upon it, showing the matter in <lb />
hand had been given very careful re- <lb />
search and thoughtful preparation. <lb />
The business the Convention <lb />
being finished, the doxology was <lb />
benediction pronounced by <lb />
Rev. G. A. and the meeting <lb />
adjourned line die. <lb />
Brows, <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
Presiding; Appointment. <lb />
Rev. Ii. B. appointments <lb />
for second round of Quarterly Meet- <lb />
are as follows for places in Pitt <lb />
Greenville circuit, at Bethlehem, <lb />
March and 8th. <lb />
Greenville station, March 5th <lb />
and 6th. <lb />
Washington circuit, at <lb />
March 12th and 13th. <lb />
Policy Paid. <lb />
On Saturday a check for <lb />
payable the widow of the late Me. <lb />
Manning, who was insured in the <lb />
American Legion of Honor for that <lb />
amount was received by Companion <lb />
M. of Pitt <lb />
and on yesterday turned over to Mrs. <lb />
Manning. The American Legion of <lb />
Honor has been a boon lo a number <lb />
of widows and orphans in Pitt <lb />
as well as throughout the <lb />
and the cost of carrying a policy in <lb />
the order la comparatively cheap, lo <lb />
what it can be had for elsewhere. <lb />
More-of our people I belong to <lb />
this order. It has a membership <lb />
over and is perfectly safe and <lb />
solid. <lb />
Guano Buyers Attention. <lb />
I have now on hand and am <lb />
by every steamer large <lb />
of Special Tobacco <lb />
Guano and Pine <lb />
Island Guano. You all know what <lb />
these goods are. No guanos over <lb />
sold in this county have made a bets <lb />
showing, and but if any, to <lb />
good. I buy these goods very close. <lb />
My expenses in handling them are <lb />
very small. I am satisfied with a <lb />
sir all profit, and it stands lo reason <lb />
that I sell on the same grade of <lb />
goods as cheap or cheaper than any <lb />
other man. Come and see me before <lb />
you buy. It costs you nothing to <lb />
get my prices and find out what I <lb />
an do and if I yon money <lb />
v- u can where as easily <lb />
as If had been to see <lb />
G. R. <lb />
Denominations. <lb />
Married. <lb />
Mr. R. R. Fleming, a prominent <lb />
merchant and planter was <lb />
married about two weeks ago Miss <lb />
Ida Gay, the being perform- <lb />
ed Ivy J. N, H. at <lb />
the home of M John Peebles. Mr. <lb />
and Mrs. Fleming took no extended <lb />
bridal lour through several of the <lb />
cities and returned <lb />
last week. <lb />
At home of the Greene <lb />
Wednesday 24th, <lb />
Rev. R. John officiating, Mr. W. <lb />
H. White, of Greenville, was mar <lb />
to Mis Hattie The <lb />
happy couple left immediately for <lb />
New York and other northern cities. <lb />
They to Greenville some- <lb />
lime week. Mr. White is a on <lb />
Capt. C. A. White and i one of <lb />
the prominent young men Of the <lb />
town. His bride I a highly <lb />
young lady and will be <lb />
an addition to the circles of <lb />
The Reflector extends best <lb />
wishes all around. <lb />
M. E. Church, <lb />
Baptist <lb />
Free Will <lb />
Disciple <lb />
Episcopal <lb />
E t <lb />
Pi<lb />
. Ill I L<lb />
Complaint- <lb />
Is it not worth the small price of <lb />
to free yourself of every symptom of <lb />
these distressing complaints, If yon think <lb />
so call our store and get a bottle of <lb />
every bottle has a <lb />
I,, if I. printed guarantee On It, use accordingly <lb />
year n town <lb />
nothing. Bold t Drug Store, <lb />
Grand total <lb />
The committee on nominations <lb />
made the following report, which was. <lb />
on n <lb />
President, Henry Harding. <lb />
Vice-President, E. A. <lb />
TOWNSHIP VICE <lb />
Greenville, O. D. Rountree. <lb />
Swift Creek, Fred Harding. <lb />
N. W. Campbell. <lb />
J. S. Ross. <lb />
Farmville, W. G. Lang. <lb />
Beaver Dam, J. W. <lb />
A. A. <lb />
M. O. HI on <lb />
Carolina, J. J. Raw Is. <lb />
Dr. W. H. Bagwell. <lb />
Secretary. D. J. Whichard. <lb />
Statistical Secretary, A. L. Blow. <lb />
Executive Committee, A. D. Hun- <lb />
E. A. D. D. Haskett. <lb />
to State Convention, D. <lb />
J. Whichard, R, R. John, L, A. <lb />
Mayo, Holding. <lb />
Rev. R. F. Taylor and A. L. Blow <lb />
were appointed to the newly <lb />
elected President to the chair. <lb />
On motion the Executive Commit- <lb />
tee to appoint any <lb />
other delegate to State <lb />
might flu <lb />
Money Lost. <lb />
Last, Saturday Miss Nannie Cox <lb />
lost from her pocket while en the <lb />
street, The money had just in en <lb />
paid her for leaching public reboot. <lb />
She had been in the store of Mr. <lb />
Alfred s making some purchases <lb />
before leaving one the <lb />
advised her to have roll of bills <lb />
wrapped up, as they might be lost <lb />
the way she was carrying them. She <lb />
said she was going to purchase a <lb />
purse In put U in then she could take <lb />
care of it easily. She left the store, <lb />
placing the roll her cloak pocket <lb />
as went out. After going some <lb />
distance down the street she placed <lb />
her band in the pocket for tho money <lb />
and was surprised lo find that it was <lb />
not there but had fallen out through <lb />
a hole in the pocket. She retraced <lb />
her steps searching for the lost money <lb />
but not find it. The sidewalk <lb />
was considerably thronged with <lb />
someone had doubtless picked <lb />
it up. The roll contained seven bills, <lb />
six of the denomination of and <lb />
one Of course, if the person <lb />
picking up the money has a of <lb />
honesty in make up, they will <lb />
owner. <lb />
Institute. <lb />
The Institute for the white teach- <lb />
of Pitt will be held at <lb />
Greenville by Prof. E. A. Alderman <lb />
for one week, commencing on Mon- <lb />
day, the 14th day of March next, and <lb />
all white public school teachers arc <lb />
positively required by law lo attend <lb />
continuously upon said Institute <lb />
and upon failure so to do they will <lb />
be denied B certificate for <lb />
year, unless their be <lb />
caused by sickness or absence from <lb />
the county. absentees need not <lb />
for a certificate to teach. We <lb />
hope to make arrangements <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 pleasant for them. In- <lb />
exercises will held every <lb />
night. Several distinguished gentle- <lb />
men will deliver among <lb />
whom arc ex-Gov. T. J, Jarvis, <lb />
Geo. T. Winston, President <lb />
North Col. Harry <lb />
Hon. C B. King and <lb />
L. Fleming. The public are <lb />
ally invited to attend all the <lb />
H. Harding, <lb />
Co. Supt. Pub. Inst. <lb />
Should March be cold, wet or dry, <lb />
Before it ends our Spring Goods we'll buy. <lb />
Arriving gaily <lb />
Elegant and Attractive Line of Men's, Boy's and Youth's Clothing. <lb />
CO<lb />
IS<lb />
-9 <lb />
en <lb />
CO <lb />
AND LARGE LINE OF------- <lb />
TRUNKS, V A USES, UMBRELLAS. SC <lb />
JUST RECEIVED.<lb />
C. T. M FORD, <lb />
Opposite Old Brick Store. n. o <lb />
CO <lb />
CO <lb />
iV <lb />
WE WILL SELL <lb />
At Cost for the next <lb />
DAYS <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb />
Agents for New Home Sewing <lb />
Machines. <lb />
Depository for American Bible <lb />
Society.<lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
--------AND BUYER OF-------- <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 you have to ship I will attend to for you on a mall <lb />
Call and see me. <lb />
JNO. S. <lb />
off <lb />
FARMER <lb />
LET ME HAVE YOUR <lb />
Orders <lb />
FOR <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
I want to begin in time this year. <lb />
L. H. PENDER, <lb />
For S. E. PENDER CO. <lb />
Tiny, little, sugar-coated granule, are <lb />
what Dr. Pierce's <lb />
Pellets arc. The best Liver Pills ever <lb />
invented; active yet mild In <lb />
lick and billions headaches. One a <lb />
dose. <lb />
The people's remedy for cure of <lb />
Coughs. Colds, Asthma, Hoarseness, <lb />
Bronchitis. Croup, Whooping <lb />
Incipient Consumption, is Dr. <lb />
Bull's Syrup, the old reliable. <lb />
Price eta. <lb />
To promptly and permanently <lb />
rheumatism o neuralgia me Salvation <lb />
Price cents. <lb />
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
Headquarters for the following lines of <lb />
Car load Mew Pork. <lb />
Car load Rib Side Meat. <lb />
Car load Flour, all grades. <lb />
Car lo-id White Seed at. <lb />
Cases Star Lye. <lb />
Hereford's Bread Powder. <lb />
Cases Cherries and Peaches. <lb />
Full line Case Goods. <lb />
Boxes Crackers. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco. <lb />
Boxes Starch. <lb />
Barrels Rico Molasses. <lb />
2-5 Stick <lb />
U Barrels Gail A Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb />
H Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
Paper Sacks, Cigarette, <lb />
n. c. <lb />
Notice to School Com- <lb />
The Institute for white <lb />
teachers will commence on Mon jay the <lb />
14th inst., your attendance Is earn-i <lb />
solicited. Especially Is desired <lb />
that all lie present on I <lb />
Friday of that week, to hear Prof, <lb />
man's address of instruction to you. <lb />
Co. Supt. <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
DEALER IN <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017536_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
SIMPLE IN I ION. <lb />
PERMANENT DUB . <lb />
EASILY U-n. <lb />
USE QUICKLY D <lb />
Tl Elect is an for <lb />
Cur. , f Disease Hue. <lb />
BASED nil new ii s of <lb />
and disease, with tin <lb />
electrical and magnet I <lb />
body in III <lb />
atmosphere, controlling c h <lb />
twill. It net electricity, disease <lb />
is Dimply impaired vitality. The r-k e- <lb />
the <lb />
ml assists i i a z <lb />
to throw off the trouble. <lb />
A book, <lb />
testimonials fr.-n. all sec- <lb />
and f cute of nil disease, <lb />
mailed free on i. A as. <lb />
ATLANTIC CO . <lb />
Washington, C. Charleston, S. I . <lb />
Atlanta, <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
TRUTH AX FREEDOM. <lb />
REV MR. DIXON SHOWS CHRIS- <lb />
ABOLISHED SLAVERY <lb />
obtained, and all badness in the S. <lb />
Patent or in Conn.- <lb />
pees. <lb />
We mi opposite the s. Paten <lb />
fee engaged in Patents Exclusively, an <lb />
can obtain patents in less time ill in <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
Wen the model or drawing i- -out we <lb />
advise as to free <lb />
we make no change unless we ob- <lb />
We refer, here, to the Post the <lb />
of the Order Did., and to <lb />
S. Office. For <lb />
advise terms reference to <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address. C. A. snow i o., <lb />
l. <lb />
grasp <lb />
and . Creasing l <lb />
AT u . <lb />
the House, which <lb />
recently limited, . el have <lb />
everything in line <lb />
HEW, CLEAN <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODE L SHOP <lb />
with all appliances; <lb />
comfortable chair. <lb />
Razors sharpened reasonable figure; <lb />
for work outside my <lb />
promptly executed, respectfully, <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
This Prep i anon has been in <lb />
years, wherever <lb />
been in demand. Ii Ii a- <lb />
by the i- ill <lb />
IN country, and effect cures <lb />
all other n me lies, with I Ion id <lb />
the nm- p <lb />
for yen I., , -1 n m is o <lb />
-i r die i <lb />
v. h-el-it has obtained is owing <lb />
to ii- as but iii effort <lb />
ever made to ii <lb />
public. One bottle of this <lb />
e address on . One <lb />
Dollar. Sample box I roe. the <lb />
discount to Druggists. All Cash <lb />
promptly attended to. Ad Ires ill . r <lb />
pen and communications lo <lb />
T. P. <lb />
Sole I . or, <lb />
e. N. r. <lb />
, ionic <lb />
as P. P. <lb />
Ci. <lb />
For at -I. I. Wooten's . store <lb />
How Lost Bow <lb />
LL <lb />
on <lb />
DECLINE. <lb />
and WEAKNESSES of SAN. <lb />
Sit; Only <lb />
man, <lb />
m with SEND <lb />
of the mm and I- f <lb />
of too cored <lb />
in person or by Expert <lb />
man. <lb />
his many 11- <lb />
The Science of Lite, n <lb />
non Read It now. <lb />
every WEAK and Iron, lo<lb />
A on in ; <lb />
in Sew York <lb />
Pagan Civilization on Slavery. <lb />
on <lb />
York. Feb. the <lb />
on Mistake of Colonel In- <lb />
in Association hall this morning, <lb />
the Thomas Dixon, Jr. devoted <lb />
review of events to the <lb />
cf the hill now pending Albany <lb />
to license ion in New York <lb />
He <lb />
A bill is now being pressed before th-3 <lb />
legislature at Albany that the <lb />
state go into partnership with <lb />
and up state houses of ill fume. <lb />
It is exceedingly difficult to such <lb />
a measure before decent people. <lb />
But if our civilization is rotten enough <lb />
to breed vermin capable of <lb />
a measure, it la lime we looked the <lb />
awful fact squarely the face. If our <lb />
power has fallen so low that <lb />
a man can be found among the <lb />
of the people traitor enough <lb />
to introduce a into a <lb />
is high time respect- <lb />
able men and women faced such villains <lb />
with the righteous of com- <lb />
decency. <lb />
The measure was the heart of <lb />
a set of lecherous scoundrels, who wish <lb />
to the high seal of the slate to their <lb />
vii-vS and prosecute their careers of <lb />
crime with immunity from disease at <lb />
the expense of honest taxpayers. They <lb />
want to sow the wind and let I ho state <lb />
and their helpless victims, stamped with <lb />
the brand of infamy, reap the whirl- <lb />
wind. <lb />
SLAVES IN STATE HAREMS. <lb />
The design of the measure is to make <lb />
a life of vice easy and safe for male <lb />
brutes by confining the victims of their <lb />
brutality as slaves state harems <lb />
forced medical inspection. Are we <lb />
ready for such a villainy If so. let <lb />
have a thoroughgoing measure. Let it <lb />
apply to males as well us females. Let <lb />
there two of registration <lb />
equal license fees levied without regard <lb />
to sex, and let there be a of <lb />
offered every woman who reports a <lb />
of the male registration laws. <lb />
AND LICENSE. <lb />
Let us not mistake the origin of this <lb />
measure. It was born of the unholy <lb />
i of the brutal lost with <lb />
the equally brutal principle license. <lb />
If it is right to license tho saloon the <lb />
logic is irresistible that it is right to <lb />
license all the smaller vices that cluster <lb />
this sink of iniquity. sane <lb />
man questions the fact that the saloon <lb />
is the breeding ground of tho <lb />
rendezvous of criminals, the Open door <lb />
to the brothel. If it be said that <lb />
is a legitimate article of commerce <lb />
and has its true uses, it can be said with <lb />
greater truth that the proper association <lb />
of man and woman is the fulfillment of <lb />
the highest end noblest instinct of <lb />
The whole license system is rotten to <lb />
the core. It is all of the same piece. It <lb />
is a device of the devil to deceive Hie <lb />
elect, and he has done it with <lb />
mate skill. The debauching of the pub- <lb />
lie conscience through tho license sys- <lb />
has brought US face to face with <lb />
such a bill. <lb />
How long will good people deceive <lb />
themselves with the lies and sophistries <lb />
cf politicians The time is come when <lb />
yon must face this license principle in <lb />
all its hideous compact with <lb />
tho devil, a partnership in crime When <lb />
the people of Cod are once aroused and <lb />
do see this principle in its true light, <lb />
they will rise and rise in their might <lb />
and sweep whole system <lb />
whence it cam; and where it belongs. <lb />
May Cod speed he day <lb />
SLAVERY AND RELIGION. <lb />
shall know Hit- awl shall <lb />
you free. <lb />
Jesus Christ was born into a world of <lb />
slaves. The angels who sang their good <lb />
news to tho shepherds watching in the <lb />
hills looked down Upon the human race, <lb />
herded in one vast slave pen. Jesus <lb />
came to free the world; but how could <lb />
it accomplished The world at that <lb />
limo labored beneath the tyranny <lb />
of Rome, her brutal officers, and the <lb />
paid tyrants that ruled under them, <lb />
sides tho traditions of a <lb />
which dated back Is of years. If <lb />
Jesus had chosen force he might have <lb />
freed the chosen people, and established <lb />
for thorn a national freedom which <lb />
would have been merely an episode in <lb />
tho history of a nation. If he <lb />
had enacted a system of laws, such an <lb />
effort would have been a so far <lb />
as freeing a race of slaves is concerned. <lb />
Slaves are not made free by law Mas <lb />
only freedom as ho attains it <lb />
within. Therefore Jesus chose the only- <lb />
plan possible by which a world could be <lb />
free. He lived and tho truth in <lb />
life. He knew that man is tree only as <lb />
he knows tho truth. Ho knew that <lb />
when man knows the truth ho cannot <lb />
be bound either by institutions, kings or <lb />
priests. <lb />
THE ONLY <lb />
The Christian is only <lb />
really free. lie has liberty to do what <lb />
he pleases. He always to do <lb />
what is right when he work i within the <lb />
circle of his Christian life. Re i l higher <lb />
than law and partakes of Cod's own <lb />
nature, a law unto himself. <lb />
the law of love having swallowed all <lb />
, the within this <lb />
i domain. Ho is free from superstition, <lb />
free from fear, free from foe oppression <lb />
I of passions of life and the mysteries of <lb />
I death, free to shake off tho mortal and <lb />
p- rise to the eternal and <lb />
the <lb />
And yet Colonel Ingersoll has the <lb />
credulity to say that <lb />
Our fathers Were slaves and nearly ail <lb />
their children mental serfs. America <lb />
is tho only nation with which the gods <lb />
have had nothing to do. We all know <lb />
that the Bible upholds slavery in its <lb />
worst and most cruel The man <lb />
who makes such wild assertions as <lb />
and such involve <lb />
himself in at least three irreconcilable <lb />
absurdities. Ho must believe that truth <lb />
is for error and error's <lb />
crimes, that the known facts of human <lb />
history are false, that slavery is higher <lb />
and holier and nobler than liberty. <lb />
FOB <lb />
we believe that truth is re- <lb />
for error A man who pro- <lb />
a truth really holds that truth <lb />
only M ho it in life. Deeds <lb />
that contradict tho principles <lb />
are not of the principles, of then <lb />
Deeds that contradict <lb />
cannot lie attributed to <lb />
The Moody of tho <lb />
church is not of Christ. All <lb />
this is of tho truth <lb />
by Christ. Doe-i any man who knows <lb />
the Christ believe that he have <lb />
been present and consented to the burn- <lb />
of Is it possible to conceive <lb />
that the Man of Sorrows who staggered <lb />
tip the rugged streps of bear- <lb />
tho cross of a world and dying in <lb />
and agony tho of a martyr <lb />
that could have been <lb />
for tho perpetration such dean Can <lb />
any man v.-ho knows Christ insert that <lb />
ho is responsible for the torturing of <lb />
for the burning of <lb />
for tho massacres by in the <lb />
lands, or the horrors of the <lb />
All these of the They <lb />
are themselves the of <lb />
Christianity. In so far as the professed <lb />
church did these things, tho professed <lb />
church was of the devil, not of the <lb />
Christ. Let us again emphasize the <lb />
fact that tho Christianity of <lb />
thing, Christianity of history <lb />
and tradition-, and creeds made paper <lb />
another tin certainly i <lb />
charge to Jesus Christ the professions of <lb />
Christianity which we see today. <lb />
THE SOCIALIST. <lb />
Suppose Christ in tho garb <lb />
of a carpenter, worn with toil and <lb />
with his work, should enter a fashionable <lb />
church in New York city today and <lb />
should speak the truth with such <lb />
sis and clearness as he did lo the <lb />
and Pharisees and hypocrites of in <lb />
the days of old. I am afraid that there <lb />
are some churches that would not only <lb />
put him out the door, but would have <lb />
arrested and put in an insane asylum. <lb />
Suppose this same lowly should <lb />
enter some of our churches at our social <lb />
gatherings and should denounce <lb />
the respects hie sins of this century, as he <lb />
did the respectable sins of the century in <lb />
which ho lived. Jesus said few harsh <lb />
things about the drunkard, tho fallen <lb />
and the wayward, but with merciless <lb />
hand he laid bare the secrete of pride and <lb />
and hypocrisy and <lb />
What would men who <lb />
have a high seat in the synagogue today <lb />
and cheat their neighbors through tho <lb />
would they say to this man <lb />
who should speak such revolutionary <lb />
doctrines They would denounce him as <lb />
a crank, as an anarchist, as a socialist, as <lb />
a who sought to destroy the <lb />
of society. They would put him <lb />
out and they would instruct the sexton <lb />
to allow him to enter again under <lb />
any <lb />
TEST OX <lb />
Do we charge Christianity with such <lb />
perversions of truth taught by Christ. <lb />
It is absurd. Two children returned <lb />
from church the other day. and tho boy <lb />
of seven remarked that he like <lb />
to know what the sermon was for any- <lb />
His little sister replied, <lb />
it's to give the singers a rest, of <lb />
If yon should enter such a church as this <lb />
and there such <lb />
this be a fair test of the work of the <lb />
sermon Protestantism Could we <lb />
judge of Protestant Christianity by such <lb />
a church A true sermon is worship, <lb />
for it is tho proclamation and reception <lb />
of truth. What may considered <lb />
worship by man may perverted <lb />
by another into tho very antithesis. <lb />
instance, a teacher asked a class of <lb />
the other day the question, <lb />
docs word Nobody <lb />
answered. See asked boy in par- <lb />
if he did not know. He said, <lb />
said the teacher, <lb />
arc you so dumb Do you not know what <lb />
your father docs night before he <lb />
Bald the youngster. <lb />
know now. Ho goes into tho pantry <lb />
takes a drink his If you <lb />
should see this performance in a pro- <lb />
, fessed Christian home, would it fair <lb />
to say that Christianity causes men to <lb />
I go into r. pantry and take a drink before <lb />
j retiring Such a process of is <lb />
tho height of absurdity. A man believes <lb />
I he practices, not what he professes. <lb />
AND <lb />
Can we charge to the crimes <lb />
j committed in the name of liberty Lib- <lb />
I Colonel Ingersoll's god according <lb />
to his declaration. I say, without the <lb />
; fear of contradiction, that more blood <lb />
has flowed and more dark crimes have <lb />
been committed in the sacred name of <lb />
liberty than in all other mimes <lb />
heaven. In the sacred name of liberty <lb />
tyrants have placed their iron heels on <lb />
the necks of millions and ground out <lb />
their lives without mercy. In tho sacred <lb />
name of liberty Mine. Roland was <lb />
In tho sacred name of liberty <lb />
France was drenched in blood by a Dan- <lb />
ton, a Marat and Robespierre, until tho <lb />
soil of France was drunk with the blood <lb />
of her children. Then in tho sacred <lb />
tame of liberty Napoleon turned his <lb />
guns down the streets, swept them with <lb />
shot and shell, death and blood, ascend- <lb />
ed the throne of an empire and ruled <lb />
them with a rod of iron. Is liberty re- <lb />
for all tho crimes committed <lb />
in her sacred name If so, then liberty <lb />
is the one curse of curses that has filled <lb />
the record of tho race with horror <lb />
measurable, incalculable. <lb />
What is Christianity It heart- <lb />
faith that embodies itself in a of <lb />
to Cod, and to God <lb />
through love to man. Out of this sub- <lb />
lime truth which Jesus came to teach <lb />
grew the principles of human liberty. <lb />
Out of this grew of necessity tho truth <lb />
of tho common priesthood of believers. <lb />
SCORNS DEGREES. <lb />
knows no class or clique, when <lb />
has embraced all mankind. Jesus <lb />
faced a Jewish aristocracy with their <lb />
doctrine of election and special divine <lb />
favor, and be I them that God was <lb />
a spirit and they that worship him must <lb />
worship in spirit and in truth, and that <lb />
God would raise op of the stones of <lb />
earth children unto Abraham and cast <lb />
them off as unworthy unless they were <lb />
true to this spiritual ideal. He taught <lb />
them that Cod was no respecter of per- <lb />
sons. Growing out of Christianity was <lb />
the second great principle of freedom <lb />
that institutions are made for man, not <lb />
man for institutions. Tho world was <lb />
bound by the iron slavery of institutions <lb />
sacred and secular. Jesus broke the <lb />
Judaic Sabbath with impunity, because <lb />
he taught the law of as the supreme <lb />
law of life, declaring that the Sabbath <lb />
was made for man, not man for the <lb />
bath. The Sabbath, he declared, must <lb />
be a boon, not a burden. Growing out <lb />
of Christianity of necessity, and a part <lb />
of it was the thought that the <lb />
race is bound together by union to a <lb />
-01111111 m father. We all therefore <lb />
brethren. Artificial distinctions <lb />
were thus abolished in this new kingdom <lb />
of heaven. Hero was planted the <lb />
mite beneath every of the world, <lb />
that sooner or later explode <lb />
on the ruins draw together tho federated <lb />
brotherhood of man. <lb />
THE OP LIBERTY. <lb />
Out of Christianity also grow the <lb />
sublime truth of grace. Jesus taught <lb />
the world that there is salvation for <lb />
tho lost, hope for tho hopeless, mercy <lb />
for the self ruined, relief for <lb />
wretched, light for those in darkness, <lb />
freedom for tho oppressed, regeneration <lb />
for tho Without this <lb />
principle every civilization Christ <lb />
perished, perished of its own weight. It <lb />
had nowhere within it a principle of re- <lb />
generating life. sine;. Jesus taught the <lb />
World, this process of salvation for the <lb />
weak helpless has been growing in <lb />
resistless power. Tho time was when <lb />
history only dealt with the so called <lb />
great and Jesus declared <lb />
that weakness shall strength. <lb />
my kingdom the rank shall tho <lb />
and as that kingdom grows in <lb />
history, we see tho eye of the world <lb />
on the under masses. Now the <lb />
only history of the world is the history <lb />
of the great, dark, vulgar <lb />
crowd that used to have no history. I <lb />
The move Ike world today do I <lb />
not toll of kings and nobles, but <lb />
poor, of the masses. Here is centered <lb />
tho heart of literature, the heart of re- <lb />
tho heart of philanthropy, the <lb />
heart of social movement, loose <lb />
tour principles the corner <lb />
stones on which men have been building <lb />
the temple of liberty through tho ages <lb />
of the part, and on which it is now being <lb />
reared in beauty and glory to its Baal <lb />
capstone, <lb />
IN <lb />
assert such a creed as we <lb />
have quoted from the colonel, a man <lb />
I must believe that the incontrovertible <lb />
facts of history are not fact. During <lb />
the Dark Ages the cause of lib. makes <lb />
no progress. Why because Pharisee. <lb />
ism has hidden the truth Chris- <lb />
; has been throttled for tho time <lb />
by traditions institutions. But <lb />
, printing Ls invented. The Bible is trans- <lb />
la and scattered over world. <lb />
j Men hear more tho voice of <lb />
Jesus of Nazareth. is a moving <lb />
i of the dry bones. Germany is in com- <lb />
motion, because the truth is pro- <lb />
claimed. England is in <lb />
cause the truth is being pro <lb />
Franco totters falls tho <lb />
shock of a free Bible. <lb />
is a product of this i move- <lb />
swept tho world. It was the <lb />
movement of tho birth of Christ, as the <lb />
ponderous stones were rolled from the <lb />
tomb in which he had been kept through <lb />
the ages of darkness. Pioneers land on <lb />
tho shores of America with tho in <lb />
their hands with of it in their <lb />
hearts. They searching for liberty. <lb />
Tho secret of that search is found in tho <lb />
secret of that embodied in their <lb />
hearts. In a little while there is com- <lb />
motion in America, is revolution, <lb />
is a declaration of independence <lb />
that closes with a prayer to God for <lb />
guidance and help. This nation was <lb />
founded prayer. <lb />
a divine miracle. <lb />
To say that America is the only nation <lb />
with which God has had nothing to do is <lb />
to contradict every known fact in the <lb />
history of foundation of this nation. <lb />
The founding of this nation is, in fact, a <lb />
miracle of God's mercy and God's special <lb />
providence. It would have been the work <lb />
of mere child's play for tho regular Brit- <lb />
army to have overrun these feeble <lb />
colonies in a single campaign had <lb />
pitted against England single hand- <lb />
ed, but it pleased God to England <lb />
blind in those hours, and desperate, until <lb />
at last tho hand of every nation of tho <lb />
earth was grasping at tho of Eng- <lb />
land. England stood single handed and <lb />
fighting the known world <lb />
these years of conflict with her <lb />
colonies. then had been de- <lb />
had not again and again the <lb />
of God snatched victory from de- <lb />
feat. The tattles of tho Revolutionary <lb />
war were child's ploy. I read the his- <lb />
of one of battles lately. It <lb />
was very humiliating to my pride as a <lb />
son of tho Revolution. I found that when <lb />
tho British regulars charged they swept <lb />
tho field like a cyclone. was <lb />
left of the rugged band to contest tho <lb />
They all got away except one <lb />
little fellow who could not rim fast. <lb />
Something was tho matter with of <lb />
his legs. He stepped Into a hole and fell. <lb />
Three great British troupers rushed up, <lb />
and raising their bayonets above him <lb />
shouted, you wretched rebel, <lb />
have yon at Tho little fellow piped <lb />
out, right, kill away; you won't get <lb />
They spared his life. <lb />
LORD OLIVE. <lb />
That were not defeated and Wash- <lb />
not sleep in a traitor's grave is <lb />
not duo to our superior power, but simply <lb />
to tho righteousness of the cause and tho <lb />
God who watched over weakness and <lb />
chose this nation as the instrument of <lb />
his will. Even though England were <lb />
involved with all tho world in war, we <lb />
had still been defeated had <lb />
to have sent to our shores a man of <lb />
military genius to command her troops. <lb />
This was finally ordered. Lord <lb />
tho greatest general of his day, was <lb />
gated to take command of British <lb />
forces in the colonies. Had Lord <lb />
assumed command, tho chances <lb />
would have been overwhelm- <lb />
Just as he was ready to embark <lb />
to take command of the British troops, <lb />
by mystery yet unsolved he committed <lb />
suicide. Again, when in dire <lb />
distress, by most mysterious providence <lb />
tho winds at the command of tho God <lb />
who watches over t he weak brought into <lb />
our harbor a French fleet of warships. <lb />
When they discovered the situation they <lb />
lauded, wont to the rescue of Washing- <lb />
ton, captured Cornwallis. Tho war <lb />
was ended. The history of America <lb />
the story of a miracle of God's mercy <lb />
love. If ever was a nation <lb />
elect of Go from its very infancy it is <lb />
this republic of the New World. <lb />
CHEEK. <lb />
The progress of the principles of Chris- <lb />
as embodied in tho lives of men <lb />
and nations is one with the progress of <lb />
tho principles of freedom and the retreat <lb />
of slavery. Of all tho absurd statements <lb />
of infidelity, the absurdest of all is that <lb />
tho Bible upholds slavery. cannot <lb />
too in our judgment of such an <lb />
expression coming from a man who has <lb />
never read the Bible. But must say- <lb />
that it is sublime cheek in any man to <lb />
pretend to be a teacher of men upon a <lb />
subject on which profound <lb />
is thus displayed. The Bible records <lb />
tho fact of slavery always with tho ac- <lb />
cent of condemnation. Tho Bible covers <lb />
years of life. It covers tho infancy <lb />
of tho race. God could not wipe the in- <lb />
of slavery from the earth with- <lb />
out wiping tho freedom of man from tho <lb />
earth. Man must grow to the stature of <lb />
a freeman, if ho free indeed and not <lb />
an automaton. Tho morality of the <lb />
is its final morality, the morality <lb />
of Christ. Though it covers years <lb />
and is composed of many books, it is one <lb />
book. Sir Walter Scott well said in his <lb />
dying hours, mo the And <lb />
when his attendants asked, <lb />
this man of books replied. is but <lb />
Book, the Book, the Book of <lb />
The home of liberty is where tho man <lb />
Jesus Where he does not tn, <lb />
slavery yet reigns. No, it will not do to <lb />
say that the Bible upholds slavery. <lb />
Wherever the has been taught it <lb />
has been for slavery to <lb />
ROTTEN TO THE CORE. <lb />
To say that civilization has <lb />
pated man is to talk at random. <lb />
is civilization Civilization is con- <lb />
in life of the religion <lb />
of a people. Civilization can go no <lb />
further than tho heart faiths of tho <lb />
Tho civilization of Greece and <lb />
was the embodiment of the re- <lb />
of Greece and Rome. Greece <lb />
and Borne never went higher in their <lb />
civilization than their religion. Grecian <lb />
civilization at tho blaze of its glory was <lb />
founded upon a world of slaves. The <lb />
highest dream of Grecian poet could see <lb />
no higher world than a world in which <lb />
the burden and heat of the day was <lb />
by droves of slaves. civil- <lb />
was founded likewise upon <lb />
Tho world was a slave <lb />
world. The highest prophets Borne <lb />
ever know did not question the fact of <lb />
slaver-. Tho slaves of Rome were the <lb />
poets and scholars of the world. <lb />
civilization never wont higher <lb />
than Roman religion. When the time <lb />
came in the history of Rome that her <lb />
religion failed and smiled <lb />
tho Bight of another, then Roman <lb />
civilization was rotten to its very core <lb />
and it fell with a crash never to rise <lb />
again. <lb />
THE MORNING COMETH. <lb />
Third-To declare that religion <lb />
slavery is to declare that slavery is <lb />
higher and nobler than If this <lb />
true then the highest and noblest <lb />
thoughts that ever been born were <lb />
born in the bosom of slaves. Tho prophets <lb />
and seen of the race bare all <lb />
been men of great Only men <lb />
the mountain peaks of <lb />
thought and seen the dawn of better <lb />
days. In the darkness we below have <lb />
cried. what of tho <lb />
And down from mountain crag, along <lb />
and river and valley have rolled <lb />
the prophet cries. <lb />
Messages wet with the dew of tears and <lb />
throbbing with the prayers of love. If <lb />
religion be slavery, tho prophets of tho <lb />
race were the slaves of slaves. The poet <lb />
has yet to lie born who has touched the <lb />
lyre of and swept the gamut of <lb />
human passion and emotion who is not <lb />
the son God and religion and spirit. <lb />
Milton and Shakespeare, and <lb />
Tennyson Longfellow were slaves. <lb />
Art and music must be the product of <lb />
slavery if this be true, for they are <lb />
outgrowth of religion. They are the <lb />
We desire to on <lb />
r have bean Dr. <lb />
N-. Dr. <lb />
. z l-i Pills. Hi. kl .-- <lb />
and <lb />
III II v. I. <lb />
Ilia have ii ii v. U- <lb />
We do not lo <lb />
tee I hem every lime, and W stand <lb />
sea V in refund price, if <lb />
do not <lb />
us--. lie. have <lb />
popular purely lit marl <lb />
Drug Store. <lb />
on Father. <lb />
Mr Alfred Tennyson Dickens <lb />
truck oil with his lecture on his illus- <lb />
father At latest advices he was <lb />
delivering it in he was <lb />
overwhelmed with invitations from all <lb />
tempt to embody the beautiful in color leading Australian centers. Mr. A. T <lb />
and sound and form. Beauty is an at- <lb />
tribute of God. The artist only is <lb />
who this divine attribute <lb />
and imprisons it for us in matter. Tho <lb />
artist is yet to born whose work does <lb />
not throb and thrill with a mes- <lb />
sage. <lb />
CHAINS. <lb />
If emancipation from sin and self and <lb />
brutal passion is slavery, then religion <lb />
is slavery. If to rise above things of <lb />
time and sense is slavery, then religion <lb />
is slavery. If to free and shake tho here's h paten . is not <lb />
dust of matter from the wings of the a as that <lb />
soul and into the blue of tho infinite <lb />
Dickens was tho first of the novelist's <lb />
sons to emigrate. Ho was two or three <lb />
years in Australia before his younger <lb />
brother, Mr. E. B. L. Dickens. M. P. for <lb />
joined him. They entered <lb />
partnership and done well as <lb />
stock and station agents. Alfred <lb />
son manages tho Victoria branch of the <lb />
business, and Edward Lytton <lb />
supervises affairs in New South Wales. <lb />
-Pall Mall Budget. <lb />
and and see God be slavery, <lb />
then religion is slavery. If love be <lb />
slavery, then such a creed is true. Love <lb />
docs bind, but with such chains Golden <lb />
chains Lives are bound by the chains <lb />
of I am n slave to my loved <lb />
I work for them, live for them, die <lb />
for them. I account it gain to be able <lb />
to a slave. If be slavery, then <lb />
religion is slavery. Love does bind. <lb />
Stanley lecturing to the world, making <lb />
his fortune, receives a message from be- <lb />
tho seas telling him of weakness <lb />
and helplessness in the heart of darkest <lb />
Africa. And his heart is so bound in <lb />
to the race that he drops his work, <lb />
crosses the seas and goes into three long <lb />
years of privation and want, and coming <lb />
out of Africa's dark forest sends flash- <lb />
around the world his message of faith <lb />
and love. The priest who enters the <lb />
colony of lepers and lays down his <lb />
. for his fellow man is a slave, if <lb />
slavery. The woman who lays her life <lb />
upon tho altar of love, unworthy of so <lb />
i rich a sacrifice, may be called a slave; <lb />
and yet it is only such slavery that makes <lb />
this world worth tho living in. <lb />
HOTEL ROYAL. <lb />
Infidelity, I know, may not believe in <lb />
this sort of religion. Infidelity, we <lb />
told, believes in tho g of good <lb />
clothes, good houses, good victuals well <lb />
cooked. If all the blood over spilled by <lb />
infidelity for the good of humanity were <lb />
gathered together I fear it would not fill <lb />
a pint cup. If love slavery, then so <lb />
is religion. It is religion that binds <lb />
heart to heart, man to man. race to race <lb />
and all in one common bond around tho <lb />
throne of God. For it is love that <lb />
hinds upon our back tho burden of sin <lb />
and weakness and suffering and sorrow, <lb />
and we carry it up the Calvary steeps of <lb />
life. Last week you heard tho story of <lb />
a poor workman who fainted amid the <lb />
blackened ruins of the Hotel Royal from <lb />
weakness duo to starvation. You <lb />
bound to that man's life. You <lb />
not throw it off. Ho was nothing to <lb />
you, you did not know trim, and yet you <lb />
sent money to his relief. Yon of <lb />
what you had. His was your <lb />
burden. His sorrow was your sorrow. <lb />
Yon could not escape it. because of this <lb />
divine principle of love. Christianity is <lb />
that heart-faith embodies itself in a <lb />
life of love. <lb />
s a <lb />
iv of a I <lb />
i- <lb />
aunt, ii . ii <lb />
i- II Mill. <lb />
the<lb />
in-, do- . <lb />
Ml i w <lb />
t Skill <lb />
Th- <lb />
i a n or h u <lb />
I'm v I'm Di. . <lb />
III <lb />
WE B. <lb />
N. V. we . W <lb />
Di ah <lb />
to I- <lb />
E is- i re <lb />
it ii . . <lb />
lull Nil p l N <lb />
would in <lb />
eon us I- <lb />
v. Al ill m- till . have <lb />
ha <lb />
r ii v <lb />
on tor <lb />
A dashing, smart, unscrupulous <lb />
an will outstrip twenty cleverer, hand- <lb />
better women in getting a <lb />
getting a salary, getting a success <lb />
of notoriety. It is done every day. and <lb />
no wonder the enthusiastic girl in front <lb />
thinks it pays. Docs it Ask the dash- <lb />
unscrupulous woman in ten years, <lb />
in five, in three. No need to ask her; <lb />
look at her and answer yourself. <lb />
I said to a woman once, an actress, <lb />
life is pretty hard on a good <lb />
she replied, is <lb />
I said to a man once, an <lb />
mutual is going to leave <lb />
tho stage because she says she can't keep <lb />
respectable on it What do you think <lb />
of think is right, but it <lb />
wouldn't do to say <lb />
Why won't it do If it is desperately- <lb />
hard for a woman to keep on her feet <lb />
why not say so let tho butterflies, <lb />
which after all are butterflies, and not <lb />
earthworms, find other brightness <lb />
less poisonous to feed on dare <lb />
say weak girls would <lb />
iv.-r lings K Hi <lb />
i one, H <lb />
m purify the fountain of i <lb />
Upon rt all -i.-l, .- <lb />
I'll is II--. i <lb />
Medical rim makers <lb />
it have en III It lo I <lb />
ii rial. Thai <lb />
druggist, and doesn't do <lb />
its claimed do, you can get <lb />
money back, every cent of it. <lb />
makers call taking the <lb />
or <lb />
Millionaires in New York. <lb />
It now takes a bravo man to a mil- <lb />
with any comfort to himself, par- <lb />
in New York. Since tho late <lb />
Mr. took dynamite liberties <lb />
with Russell Sago, nearly every person of <lb />
conspicuously great wealth in the <lb />
lived in daily and nightly fear of <lb />
cranks. Many of them have changed <lb />
their habits no longer <lb />
walk freely forth like other American <lb />
citizens, but cause themselves to be ac- <lb />
companied by body guards. The private <lb />
agencies booming, and <lb />
many deserving young men earn their <lb />
eight a is union <lb />
. wages for the work, so to march- <lb />
heavily armed before or after a <lb />
plutocrat and keeping an alert eye <lb />
for gentlemen with grievances and <lb />
small hand bags. A new style of <lb />
for the opulent has even been in- <lb />
Francisco Argonaut. <lb />
I July <lb />
Savannah. <lb />
I've us, d nearly four bottles <lb />
P. I fr. the <lb />
In Io tin- soles of <lb />
i . Y in P r. P. has cured <lb />
ind -in., palpitation <lb />
i me of all <lb />
for years, <lb />
W I in ii breathe through it readily, <lb />
on side for two <lb />
. r, in fact, dreaded night <lb />
w I soundly in any position all <lb />
I am oil but expect s.-on to <lb />
be tn bk ii. id I be plow handles; <lb />
I . I ii. <lb />
I P. id I iii- ii in <lb />
. ml genera v. <lb />
is . <lb />
. I V <lb />
Capital. <lb />
Union soldiers who were never for- <lb />
mustered out come to Washing- <lb />
ton frequently and obtain Their discharge <lb />
at tho war department. At the same <lb />
time they ask for pay from the close of <lb />
tho war to tho date of such formal re- <lb />
lease, and are surprised grieved at <lb />
not getting it. Others write that <lb />
been paid for their services in green- <lb />
backs, they now want the difference lie- <lb />
tween tho value of tho greenbacks <lb />
received and gold, paper money having <lb />
since risen lo par. One difficulty com- <lb />
experienced in paying war claims <lb />
out of treasury, under existing laws, <lb />
concerns the widows. <lb />
Not a few old soldiers seem to have had <lb />
as many as three or four widows, while <lb />
many of them had two each. Tims it <lb />
is very puzzling to find out which one <lb />
to pay in every case. Some foreigners <lb />
who enlisted had families abroad and <lb />
families in this country also. Naturally, <lb />
the widows on this side usually applied <lb />
first for money due, and after they were <lb />
paid claims would come in from <lb />
real and previous widows across x.-, <lb />
ocean. Washington New York <lb />
Sun.<lb />
lea <lb />
d i <lb />
in Life. <lb />
There is too much jingle of the dollar <lb />
in the music at Yule promenade week. <lb />
Everywhere reads of the cost, and <lb />
the largo cost, of the various forms of <lb />
rather be good than vicious if I entertainment. In tho opinion of a good <lb />
stances would help them. Well, let us i best friends, it's about <lb />
time to shut down on the extravagance. <lb />
It does nobody any good, it does the <lb />
university some harm. <lb />
tell them circumstances are not helpful <lb />
behind the footlights. Let the amateurs <lb />
at virtue, who shipwreck themselves <lb />
our profession, go elsewhere, where <lb />
is easier, and leave room to tho <lb />
who can endure well as act. <lb />
know it is a widely accepted theory that <lb />
one can't do both, but theories <lb />
their judgment day as well as men, and <lb />
it is time for some kind of a judgment <lb />
day here. <lb />
Let us say an honest life on the stage <lb />
is a giant's task, and perhaps tho giants <lb />
will come and help us. At any rate, lot <lb />
us say it loud and frighten the butter- <lb />
Banks in Home <lb />
Journal. <lb />
him a positive cure <lb />
for catarrh, diphtheria, ranker mouth <lb />
an <lb />
A nasal injector free with <lb />
nob bottle It It you desire health <lb />
and sweet breath, Bold at <lb />
Store. <lb />
Question Ankles. <lb />
Mrs. Kendal, tho actress, has mortally- <lb />
offended certain people by <lb />
drawing invidious comparisons between <lb />
the slim ankles of American women and <lb />
the thick ankles of Englishwomen. We <lb />
fail to see why this should offend the <lb />
Americans. Big and splay foot <lb />
not particularly desirable features in <lb />
a land that is not under water from <lb />
November until nor ore they <lb />
things of beauty, Still, different people <lb />
have different tastes. While we choose <lb />
tho trim, light footed, fleet Arabian, <lb />
are others who prefer tho <lb />
of the Flanders mare. <lb />
Chicago <lb />
The splendid strength of Yale is in <lb />
the democratic spirit that prevails there, <lb />
which gives any boy on tho campus the <lb />
same chance and sees in a dollar only <lb />
the value that is given to it by the char- <lb />
of its owner. As a general rule <lb />
the boy there who had his fortune to <lb />
make has better than tho boy <lb />
whose father had made it for him. If <lb />
there ever comes a time when the <lb />
lows are sized up by what's in their <lb />
pocketbooks instead of by what's their <lb />
heads, Yale will be a different <lb />
from the Yale of old, and a poorer <lb />
one, however much more money it may- <lb />
give her. <lb />
There should a limit put on the ex- <lb />
and a discountenancing of <lb />
the Ward notions before they <lb />
spread through tho institution. Time <lb />
was when tho boy who could spend <lb />
money without limit was ashamed to do <lb />
it, and it was a very good time too. <lb />
Hartford <lb />
T. <lb />
o II- <lb />
of an <lb />
en <lb />
sold <lb />
who <lb />
lint I <lb />
or v <lb />
Sold <lb />
Oh, What s Congo. <lb />
Ill yon the warning. <lb />
of the sure approach of I hat <lb />
terrible disease Consumption. <lb />
Selves i you for <lb />
ring . in run the risk and do <lb />
lug for It. We know from <lb />
i . will cure your <lb />
i. It never fails. This explains <lb />
more than a Bottles were <lb />
the past year. It relieves croup and <lb />
plug rough at do <lb />
without It, For lame back, <lb />
t Porous <lb />
it Drug Store. <lb />
Bo Signed the <lb />
A good story is told of a j a <lb />
case tried tho federal court in Au- <lb />
Tho jury was all white, with <lb />
the exception of one The case <lb />
was plain, only one side to it and <lb />
against the defendant. Tho damages <lb />
amounted to something and <lb />
when the jury retired their minds were <lb />
already made up to a verdict for the <lb />
full amount for tho plaintiff. But the <lb />
juryman was obstinate. <lb />
he said, see all dun <lb />
fixed your minds Mr. Now <lb />
friendly to man and fur him <lb />
every <lb />
Argument as to the law and equity <lb />
the case failed to tarn the until <lb />
at last juryman Amos. <lb />
we can't do Mr. -----any harm. are <lb />
bound to render this verdict against <lb />
him, but he hasn't got anything, and <lb />
don't how it can ever be collected. <lb />
He will never have to That set- <lb />
it. face brightened. <lb />
say Mr. -----won't never have to <lb />
He ain't got nothing as they can <lb />
and put him in prison if he don't <lb />
pay up. Well, that is so, <lb />
and as all done fixed it so, <lb />
Ls-i to the And he <lb />
News. <lb />
A friend in need i a friend indeed, <lb />
and not less one million people <lb />
have just such a friend in Dr. <lb />
King's New for Consumption, <lb />
and you have never <lb />
i-oil this Great Cough Medicine, one <lb />
trial convince you it has <lb />
curative powers in all d senses of <lb />
Throat, i heat an Longs, I bottle <lb />
s guaranteed to do all at is claimed or <lb />
money will be refunded- <lb />
free at Drug store, <lb />
bottle- <lb />
Scientific American <lb />
Agency for <lb />
i MARKS <lb />
etc. <lb />
For Information ard free Handbook write <lb />
a co., New <lb />
Oldest bureau patent. In America. <lb />
patent taken out by In brought before <lb />
public a notice free of coarse in the <lb />
Sf American <lb />
Large. of paper the <lb />
world. <lb />
man be without it. Weekly, 93.00 <lb />
11.50 month. <lb />
New York. <lb />
A f -mud ado <lb />
-mm <lb />
f I <lb />
t I <lb />
.-.<lb />
sir. <lb />
-Y. <lb />
Why aunt her new discovery by Alfred <lb />
in the of helping the <lb />
ed. fly calling on or addressing the <lb />
above name barber, you can procure <lb />
bottle of that is Invaluable <lb />
for eradicating and mil and causing the <lb />
hair lo be soft and <lb />
two or three application a <lb />
is and a common hair <lb />
brush is all to be used after the <lb />
vigorously lorn few minutes with <lb />
the pa ion. Try bottle and be <lb />
Convinced, SO cents. <lb />
Respectfully. <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY <lb />
Barber, <lb />
Will buy sufficient <lb />
Pearline <lb />
to do a large wash <lb />
Clean a house, <lb />
or enough of both to prove to any woman its wonderful <lb />
dirt-removing and labor-saving qualities. Costs almost <lb />
nothing, but makes the dirt jump. Does it the <lb />
hands or it is harmless. Many millions <lb />
of packages used every complaints, but many <lb />
women cannot get along without PEARLINE. <lb />
Peddlers and some unscrupulous grocers are <lb />
Bering imitations which they claim lo be Pearl <lb />
line, or same as IT'S FALSE <lb />
they are not. and besides arc dangerous. PEARLINE is never peddled, but <lb />
sold by all good grocers. Manufactured only by JAMES New York. <lb />
Caution <lb />
HOMES g FARMS <lb />
Whichard, <lb />
m.-. mm <lb />
and branches. <lb />
par. f real <lb />
for ale. Look over the <lb />
. i- in or write them, <lb />
lot., l-i n-it Mow Co <lb />
i n . <lb />
. l . four rooms <lb />
. <lb />
U am <lb />
II <lb />
4.1 <lb />
sum <lb />
stables mi ii. <lb />
. <lb />
nil <lb />
iv <lb />
lee <lb />
desirable <lb />
Pi <lb />
en <lb />
lion-., of <lb />
gar. <lb />
-I .-I. <lb />
Ir <lb />
h- <lb />
st <lb />
I.,.<lb />
I ill- <lb />
nut mid <lb />
an <lb />
in <lb />
What la rt makes so <lb />
cool and pi el I, and how does he to <lb />
deep V II is be never <lb />
all himself to lie coll. <lb />
Dr. In <lb />
every Where . cents. <lb />
tin v ell <lb />
since the ion of <lb />
lion Oil. <lb />
To Young <lb />
Mothers <lb />
Makes Child Birth Easy. <lb />
Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, <lb />
by the Leading Physicians. <lb />
Book to FREE. <lb />
REGULATOR <lb />
ATLANTA, <lb />
SOLD BY ALL, <lb />
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heavily timbered <lb />
u pine, oak, hickory, and <lb />
iii iii I passes <lb />
through this farm. The <lb />
with loam. <lb />
Is in food state of ion and highly <lb />
is line <lb />
A farm N miles from Greenville on <lb />
Kin-ion road known as the <lb />
farm; contains Mm, ha <lb />
good dwelling house and all necessary <lb />
This is a 10- <lb />
1.1. in <lb />
A house and lot in Greenville on <lb />
corner near . B. Cherry and -j. <lb />
I now by the family of <lb />
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb />
rooms, kitchen convenient. Is convenient <lb />
I location, half a block from main <lb />
I busbies street of the <lb />
Ban be given at. <lb />
A good building lot on <lb />
street, between Third and Fourth <lb />
splendid <lb />
he lot Pitt <lb />
street near Avenue. <lb />
house of H rooms, large lot with <lb />
stables and <lb />
II house and . or <lb />
street, adjoining the <lb />
the lot in No <lb />
. lame, one a <lb />
i rooms, and conk r. <lb />
ii of room for garden. <lb />
Valuable Corn and Wot <lb />
Cotton and Store This <lb />
located a X Road <lb />
. bin it hundred of a H <lb />
in oil- of Agricultural <lb />
ions Of Pitt The mills are <lb />
. ed up Hie best machinery<lb />
lion. Tie store i- a two <lb />
with dwelling <lb />
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This is offered for sale the <lb />
wish to withdraw from <lb />
Perms on any of the property <lb />
. i- ml on application to <lb />
it At; i A <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Mount <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
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pin <lb />
pin <lb />
V A R. H, <lb />
Schedule <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH. <lb />
No No <lb />
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daily ex Sun. <lb />
Weldon 12,30 G <lb />
am<lb />
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TRAINS NORTH <lb />
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Train No. will nut Jan. 7th. <lb />
id Neck Bond <lb />
leaves Halifax 1.22 I arrives Scot, <lb />
land Neck at 5.16 I. M <lb />
M. Kin-urn p. in. Returning, <lb />
leaves a in., <lb />
a. Arriving a. ill. <lb />
Weldon a. m. daily expert Sun- <lb />
day <lb />
Local freight train Weldon <lb />
Friday <lb />
in., arriving Neck 1.05 <lb />
s. tn. 5-ii p. in., <lb />
7.40 p. leaves Kinston <lb />
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday <lb />
7.20 a. 111-. Greenville <lb />
a. p. in. Weldon <lb />
In p. ill. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N via <lb />
A Raleigh B. B. daily except Sun- <lb />
M, <lb />
N IS P M. l M. <lb />
Plymouth 8.80 p. in., 5.22 p. m. <lb />
leave Plymouth dally except <lb />
in., Sunday ii. m- <lb />
X a in, ant. <lb />
an Tarboro, N r, A M 11.20. <lb />
Tram Midland N Branch leave <lb />
daily except Sunday, A M <lb />
N C, a M. Re <lb />
turning leaves X C A M <lb />
arrive N C, A M, <lb />
Twin on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb />
it; a M, arrive Nashville I Si <lb />
P Hope I M. Returning <lb />
leaves Spring S A M, Nashville <lb />
A M. arrive Rocky Mount ll A <lb />
II. except <lb />
I on on Union Blanch leaves<lb />
II . A If Retaining <lb />
s A M, and P. M. <lb />
Warsaw <lb />
train on Wilson <lb />
ville Branch is No. Northbound is <lb />
Mi. Sunday. <lb />
No. south and North <lb />
snip only Rocky Mount, Wilson <lb />
sud Magnolia. <lb />
I rain No. makes close connection a <lb />
Weldon for points North dally. Al <lb />
and daily except Sun <lb />
day via Bay Line, also st Rocky Mount <lb />
daily except Sunday with Norfolk A <lb />
Carolina railroad for and all <lb />
points via Norfolk, <lb />
General <lb />
R. Transportation <lb />
s VI <lb />
DU. <lb />
tAli; <lb />
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