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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
THE REFLECTOR ft<lb/>
-HAS A- <lb/>
Our <lb/>
Job Printing Room S <lb/>
be no <lb/>
in tills <lb/>
work Rive <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
Type <lb/>
Good Presses <lb/>
Best i <lb/>
US YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
BY -T, <lb/>
The <lb/>
Ten thousand dollars will be <lb/>
year by Tub <lb/>
Atlanta, Ga., <lb/>
among i- subset <lb/>
This Treat the <lb/>
largest circulation t weekly <lb/>
published in the United <lb/>
with one exception, in London, the <lb/>
largest ill the world. It i-. Hist and <lb/>
a every <lb/>
week the full news of ail the MM <lb/>
especially to the development <lb/>
of the south. Us circulation now ex- <lb/>
mi I it is for <lb/>
Sample be on <lb/>
application. <lb/>
A Distribution. <lb/>
Hie thousand dollar will In- divided <lb/>
now mid <lb/>
then <lb/>
the end of the year. <lb/>
The first division will be based on the <lb/>
result of the nominating of <lb/>
Che two great parties in and <lb/>
other on the Mill of the <lb/>
election- <lb/>
democratic <lb/>
meets at -tune 21st. <lb/>
The national <lb/>
at June <lb/>
will nominate a Candidate tor <lb/>
president vice president. <lb/>
for the <lb/>
Twenty-live dollars in gold <lb/>
will be by to <lb/>
answers of the <lb/>
will lie the of <lb/>
party vice president <lb/>
Any person select in, the f names <lb/>
thus chosen will entitled to the first <lb/>
prize of arid If, chance, more <lb/>
than one answers correctly, the prize <lb/>
will lie divided accordingly <lb/>
for a <lb/>
Five hundred in cash will be <lb/>
divided among those who guess correctly <lb/>
only three oat of the four to be <lb/>
thus chosen as party bearers, so <lb/>
that the may prophesy wrong as <lb/>
to one of the four mime, and by getting <lb/>
three will come in for this prize. <lb/>
Ms <lb/>
In addition to the above ft in gold <lb/>
more will be ed in <lb/>
prizes, of twenty-live silver <lb/>
re ail value of which is <lb/>
an l respectively, and cope s of <lb/>
edition, fully and consist- <lb/>
of m pages. <lb/>
The gold watches will be given to <lb/>
every; ballot of the Brat <lb/>
receiVed. silver watches to the next <lb/>
of hundredth and after <lb/>
that fiftieth ballot will one <lb/>
of the Webster's m- <lb/>
s. <lb/>
A I In- one <lb/>
if to n v <lb/>
. O I p <lb/>
o .- e-r r n <lb/>
ii i-op, tor Bull <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
VOL. <lb/>
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
A LIFE OR AN ACTIVE <lb/>
I pa-.-ed along my neighbor's Melds. <lb/>
My aged honored <lb/>
had many yields <lb/>
In seasons past of <lb/>
There had in prime. <lb/>
The forest's breaking. <lb/>
For human good In after time <lb/>
The soil to waking. <lb/>
I cried, in soul, <lb/>
A little respite seeking. <lb/>
I'll struggle free from control. <lb/>
And hear my neighbor <lb/>
In simple phrase own ways, <lb/>
And <lb/>
For in his dim and softened gaze <lb/>
No can be <lb/>
with ll that man should claim <lb/>
b thy shady bower, <lb/>
I power and f me <lb/>
Through all toe golden hours, <lb/>
must he thy calm <lb/>
In <lb/>
I each varying flight <lb/>
In <lb/>
of any of the <lb/>
will he given a fie- I <lb/>
S hi <lb/>
The<lb/>
the <lb/>
1st . . ii <lb/>
i v e I II g I <lb/>
Ml O-ll I <lb/>
i i in ill o <lb/>
t i <lb/>
a great will <lb/>
Inter hi- <lb/>
Ad. n. mil. I <lb/>
Com i tin t. <lb/>
I.-. <lb/>
is <lb/>
No pois her man <lb/>
brain are <lb/>
Let MM I'll re-t a single day <lb/>
Ami share with thee thy blessings. <lb/>
Meet soothing Peace upon my way. <lb/>
And Mr sweet <lb/>
My smiled and his he I <lb/>
An looked at me in ; <lb/>
Cut soon the mood was fled, <lb/>
bob-van to ponder. <lb/>
And then he said your <lb/>
life <lb/>
way to such a longing. <lb/>
To leave the ring if manly strife. <lb/>
Your and man wronging <lb/>
the strength knowledge <lb/>
gives. <lb/>
Which ads on to daring ; <lb/>
Some purpose r lives <lb/>
not of despairing. <lb/>
passions mock your life. <lb/>
To earth your dragging. <lb/>
Scenes with action rife <lb/>
Your powers are never flagging. <lb/>
that like yon. were free <lb/>
To unread my for <lb/>
The I see <lb/>
ii <lb/>
Urn hi re th dust an mist, <lb/>
nil shroud my <lb/>
And s from m eyes <lb/>
And dim power of <lb/>
KISSING BEFORE MARRIAGE. <lb/>
Letters Disclosing Many Views on the <lb/>
relegate Subject. <lb/>
cod the rest Well, I was <lb/>
frightened for mama and <lb/>
Aunt have said so often <lb/>
that it was positively awful for a <lb/>
yon fig girl to let a man kiss her, <lb/>
no matter if were engaged, <lb/>
that I waylaid papa the oilier <lb/>
night and coaxed him into the. <lb/>
and climbed into his <lb/>
then astonished him by asking if <lb/>
mama allowed him to kiss her be- <lb/>
fore they were married. You <lb/>
to have heard him <lb/>
And the way he jumped con- <lb/>
was so perfectly <lb/>
for, instead of answering my <lb/>
he exclaimed. Jack Dick- <lb/>
ens can be engaged to a girl like <lb/>
you, and not find opportunity to <lb/>
kiss you, in spite of forty duenna- <lb/>
aunts, he got <lb/>
yeast enough in his veins to be <lb/>
my sou-in <lb/>
And still <lb/>
I believe in kissing <lb/>
theory; in practice <lb/>
a good deal depends upon the man. <lb/>
I am no connoisseur, except from <lb/>
observation. I saw Castle kiss <lb/>
Emma Abbott in that famous stage <lb/>
kiss of theirs, confess I could <lb/>
easily have put myself in her place. <lb/>
There was something about it so <lb/>
delicate and its intensity <lb/>
was so fine, its feeling so <lb/>
perfect, that I felt a strong desire <lb/>
to learn the science of kissing. The <lb/>
trouble is, I have as yet found no <lb/>
man of teaching me. <lb/>
have essayed, but they were <lb/>
clumsy bunglers, and sickened <lb/>
where they should have enchanted. <lb/>
If over, on this mundane <lb/>
THE <lb/>
An Old Rewritten From Memory, <lb/>
by Davis. <lb/>
Build the mot stately mansions, O my <lb/>
soul, <lb/>
A- the roll. <lb/>
I-eave thy <lb/>
Let each new temple, than the <lb/>
last. <lb/>
Shut thee heaven with a dome <lb/>
more vast, . <lb/>
Till thou at List art free. <lb/>
Leaving thine i shell life's <lb/>
unresting sea. <lb/>
There once lived a wise and good <lb/>
king who had two daughters. <lb/>
largo enough to hold them all. <lb/>
Sometimes there came those who <lb/>
needed not her alms. These her <lb/>
mirrors always enabled her to de- <lb/>
Yet a deeper pity filled the <lb/>
heart of the king's daughter for <lb/>
the latter, and she longed to give <lb/>
them the help of which she saw <lb/>
they stood so much in need. <lb/>
As the days passed she began to <lb/>
feel a greater love for the people, <lb/>
and to wish that she do more <lb/>
than merely feed and clothe them. <lb/>
One evening, as she was stand- <lb/>
,, . i before one of the this <lb/>
daughters, in . , <lb/>
. ,. , a i i i wish came to her more strongly <lb/>
with the kings commands, had <lb/>
been brought up at a distance <lb/>
from the palace they had <lb/>
never by faithful servants of <lb/>
the king. <lb/>
Hero they were carefully in- <lb/>
in everything which the <lb/>
king wished to learn. They <lb/>
were frequently encouraged in <lb/>
their lessons by loving messages <lb/>
from the king, their father, by <lb/>
hearing accounts of the beauty of <lb/>
the palace to which they were <lb/>
some time to go. <lb/>
One day, when they were grown <lb/>
up and their education completed, <lb/>
the king sent a trusty servant for <lb/>
them- <lb/>
The king's two daughters gladly <lb/>
made ready to accompany him. <lb/>
and they all traveled together <lb/>
until they came to a large city. <lb/>
Here the servant told them the <lb/>
king wished them to live there for <lb/>
a while before he took them home <lb/>
to his palace. He then showed <lb/>
them the homes the king had <lb/>
pared for them while they stayed <lb/>
As she <lb/>
than ever before. As sub was <lb/>
thinking, and reviewing in the <lb/>
mirror the events of the day, she <lb/>
noticed on its smooth surface what <lb/>
at first seemed a defect. But on <lb/>
examination she discovered it to <lb/>
be a small key inserted in the <lb/>
of wonder, she put out <lb/>
her hand and touched it- <lb/>
key turned in her hand, <lb/>
I and, to her astonishment, the, <lb/>
swung buck, revealing a long, <lb/>
narrow hall. At the other end of <lb/>
the hall shone a light. <lb/>
Obeying a sudden the <lb/>
king's daughter passed through <lb/>
the door and walked down the hall <lb/>
toward the light. On emerging <lb/>
from the hall she found herself on <lb/>
the seashore. She in de- <lb/>
light at the beauty of the scene <lb/>
which lay before her. In <lb/>
her stretched the ocean, calm and <lb/>
overhead was an intensely <lb/>
starry sky under her feet lay the <lb/>
white, pebbly bench, and behind <lb/>
her shone the lights of the city. <lb/>
give some of the joy mid <lb/>
beauty which-had come into her <lb/>
own life. The contrast seemed to <lb/>
her so great. After her people <lb/>
left she thought long over <lb/>
this, and wondered how she might <lb/>
put more happiness into the Jives <lb/>
of others. <lb/>
Then she thought of how <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happenings Here and There Gathered <lb/>
From our Exchanges. <lb/>
Mr. H. C. Hardison, brother of <lb/>
Sheriff Hardison. died at William- <lb/>
recently of paralysis. <lb/>
Governor Holt has made <lb/>
The REFLECTOR <lb/>
A i hole for <lb/>
only One <lb/>
in It you <lb/>
must my in <lb/>
If I <lb/>
after your name I <lb/>
on the of the <lb/>
I he <lb/>
Weeks <lb/>
From This <lb/>
It Is to you no- <lb/>
that unless re- <lb/>
newed in that time <lb/>
Hie Will <lb/>
cease going to I <lb/>
at the expiration <lb/>
, the two weeks. <lb/>
DB <lb/>
J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
her home had widened, i on the Governor of Georgia <lb/>
What would the next door open <lb/>
to She looked the room <lb/>
the four mirrors, and her eye <lb/>
stopped at the fourth. Where did <lb/>
it lead to Was not that door <lb/>
by which the people entered the <lb/>
room every She bad <lb/>
gone through tho others, might <lb/>
she not go through, this also <lb/>
Another moment, and tho mirror, <lb/>
which was always ajar, had yield- <lb/>
ed to her touch, and she found <lb/>
herself in the streets of tho city. <lb/>
Her most difficult task now lay <lb/>
before her; but tho inspiration of <lb/>
the music was with her. There <lb/>
were others in the city who needed <lb/>
her help, she knew, but whom she <lb/>
had not seen- She must help <lb/>
them in some way. Many repulsed <lb/>
her, but in this new door which <lb/>
had opened to her she found her <lb/>
real work. The study the pro- <lb/>
ceding had taught her much. <lb/>
for John Stone, who is wanted for <lb/>
murder committed in <lb/>
The murderer is in jail in <lb/>
and a special officer has <lb/>
gone there niter him. <lb/>
Wilmington Atlantic Monthly i <lb/>
On last Friday, a youth fifteen <lb/>
years of age, by the name of Fred- <lb/>
J. was killed in the <lb/>
machinery department of the At <lb/>
Coast Line shops, in this <lb/>
city. His thing were caught by <lb/>
a and was most <lb/>
mangled. Nearly every bone in <lb/>
his body was broken. <lb/>
Scotland Neck Democrat The <lb/>
firm of Hart V Allen in Weldon, <lb/>
and the branch house of the <lb/>
business in Oxford under the name <lb/>
of Hart Lawrence, have made <lb/>
an assignment. Mr. W. E. Daniel <lb/>
of Weldon, is assignee- Dr. <lb/>
bank in Oxford has closed. <lb/>
The stockholders will lose nothing <lb/>
One evening, when she came, <lb/>
homo tired and longing by the failure of the bank. <lb/>
she saw one standing on the steps <lb/>
which led to her room. Though <lb/>
she had never ween she knew <lb/>
it was her father; and he took her <lb/>
home to his palace, she <lb/>
Salisbury Herald Last Thurs- <lb/>
day morning Mr. Daniel <lb/>
living in neighborhood of <lb/>
Mill, this county, <lb/>
after getting up, that his <lb/>
found the veal eternity and rest, Of kitchen floor underneath the stove <lb/>
sphere, I come across the mas- <lb/>
individual who has learned i very i of , <lb/>
as I have, from observation solely, j one of a single of <lb/>
how exquisite the act is, I mar zoom, the walls and ceiling of i W <lb/>
I had been on fire during the night. <lb/>
j Several planks and one of the <lb/>
sleepers were burnt badly, but <lb/>
fortunately the tire had gone out. <lb/>
mirrors, <lb/>
Appointments of Rev A. U. <lb/>
an I <lb/>
Ai <lb/>
gin <lb/>
. a <lb/>
first i <lb/>
n i <lb/>
and lief- <lb/>
Third i fourth at <lb/>
and also <lb/>
Sunday and Wednesday <lb/>
ices week. <lb/>
Services school house on <lb/>
road on <lb/>
each third Similar A; rd then <lb/>
third Sunday evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments, <lb/>
R pastor -f <lb/>
ville Circuit of the. K. i. <lb/>
will at the times and <lb/>
places, regularly each mouth <lb/>
at II A i <lb/>
1st Sunday, S. no <lb/>
P M. <lb/>
Slid Sunday. Shad <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
-Sun <lb/>
west <lb/>
r m- <lb/>
aid <lb/>
o'clock M. <lb/>
4th Sunday. <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
4th Lang's <lb/>
o'clock Si<lb/>
i i. <lb/>
lo k A <lb/>
II <lb/>
II <lb/>
Oil nary <lb/>
Sew t em a order for <lb/>
and two I s <lb/>
to be at <lb/>
It means <lb/>
I. hat when men a <lb/>
Turner, <lb/>
Colonel Avery. Kev. ST. B. <lb/>
Kev. I. It. <lb/>
am Kev Sam ones r e <lb/>
give it their I the <lb/>
e o -r n- I ill <lb/>
it- have d-cl <lb/>
that h <lb/>
t. bat it ha m t <lb/>
Nervous de- <lb/>
I Kidney <lb/>
i- it ha- tried. <lb/>
Hie of <lb/>
U the c. that <lb/>
to medical <lb/>
spring medicine it has no equal. <lb/>
id-, digestion, <lb/>
tones i lit an thin bring <lb/>
To d sure, <lb/>
th a <lb/>
s to whose heads <lb/>
run the color gauntlet from silver <lb/>
to sold o the subject of kissing <lb/>
before, A few of the <lb/>
answers and if they <lb/>
not set at rest the question of <lb/>
what is delicate and indelicate in <lb/>
e ; they at least <lb/>
the fore assertion <lb/>
that it needs something besides <lb/>
to rout out the ex- <lb/>
of u love that is both <lb/>
and honest- Tue following <lb/>
from a aired grandmother <lb/>
is worthy of the perusal of <lb/>
I believe in kissing before <lb/>
kissing <lb/>
no, a thousand times no I have <lb/>
an horror of the young girl <lb/>
who has so little native <lb/>
that she bestows the blossoms of <lb/>
love upon every wayside beggar- <lb/>
There is something about <lb/>
her; for despite beauty, the ad- <lb/>
of wealth ad all that out- <lb/>
training an do for her, she <lb/>
o'clock i at and sweet- <lb/>
which are the inherent crown <lb/>
Si royal But when <lb/>
when she has moved <lb/>
by the three that the <lb/>
sun sen never shine unless it <lb/>
filtered eyes when <lb/>
he asks like the noble man he <lb/>
should lie, for the priceless gift f <lb/>
her tin u, well, it would be a <lb/>
somewhat singular maiden, an ab- <lb/>
normal product of modern over re- <lb/>
who stop to ask <lb/>
go. d I <lb/>
can readily fancy such a girl has <lb/>
not much heart to give. <lb/>
the frank- i <lb/>
of a it is not necessary <lb/>
to run to other extreme and <lb/>
keep an honest love so bound by <lb/>
the harness of etiquette that the <lb/>
mettlesome steed becomes a very j <lb/>
dray horse and dies at last <lb/>
knock-kneed and <lb/>
From a long experience besides <lb/>
my own Jo, and the knowledge of j <lb/>
permit him to kiss the tips .,,. <lb/>
Li i -t t ling ill tho beauty rest of the Ii <lb/>
rendering it impossible to J <lb/>
The -i . i in . W hen she y returned a <lb/>
n gentle-1 determine the size of the room. ,, ., . ,. <lb/>
man of forty gives a masculine But of these mirrors <lb/>
j view of the they reflected not people, <lb/>
ask my opinion in modern but Whoever stood be- <lb/>
love Bless you it is saw not himself, but <lb/>
which the seashore was a type- the <lb/>
The daughter felt deeply of which the books <lb/>
All were a part, the beauty and <lb/>
of which she had had but a dream. <lb/>
But when the king came for his <lb/>
younger daughter, he could not <lb/>
find her- When the younger <lb/>
daughter had been left to <lb/>
to her room, it was with a she delighted with the view of j A Caroline, to <lb/>
of new strength for her work. All i her own beauty which the forty four miles. The <lb/>
tho next day the memory- of the I gave her. Lost in contemplation j line will pass through a rich and <lb/>
a long while on the seashore drink- <lb/>
General Manager <lb/>
Norfolk A Carolina <lb/>
begin next Monday a survey of <lb/>
the route for a railroad line <lb/>
to be built from on the <lb/>
of the <lb/>
railroad, will <lb/>
survey <lb/>
preceding <lb/>
and when <lb/>
was with <lb/>
night came she <lb/>
her, <lb/>
once <lb/>
more stood before the mirror. As <lb/>
same yesterday, to-day and forever. was thinking of. Only <lb/>
Modern fa.-ts have not created a; people who thought con- <lb/>
new race of men , and by of themselves could see I . M-t <lb/>
not taken their own images in the mirror. <lb/>
away the appetite of the old pas-; said the servant, <lb/>
the fair Ruth, or commanded that <lb/>
developing country and will an <lb/>
important feeder to the business <lb/>
of Norfolk. <lb/>
of for <lb/>
Jacob, fur Rachel, or the unhappy s <lb/>
judge for th maid of Whit- <lb/>
tn r's love Nor do methods <lb/>
essentially. There may be a <lb/>
little more ceremony <lb/>
We don't altogether take forcible <lb/>
a la th.- Laplander, we <lb/>
n t literally throw any more <lb/>
golden apples for the fair Atlanta <lb/>
to chase this <lb/>
point I have more mental <lb/>
we if e are <lb/>
in love. do in and , <lb/>
if we can- I haven't much <lb/>
WHAT DO mi; <lb/>
the h the p -e <lb/>
King's <lb/>
ban , <lb/>
are pouring in H herself if a kiss was <lb/>
I. OH A I . of <lb/>
live until he takes you to his <lb/>
palace. As he intends that you <lb/>
shall one day rule, he wishes that I <lb/>
you shall first learn to serve. To <lb/>
this end he has given to you the <lb/>
task of tee poverty which <lb/>
is in this city. The poor of the <lb/>
city will come to you, and you will <lb/>
always have the means at hand for <lb/>
necessities. Tho <lb/>
mirrors with which these rooms <lb/>
are lined will enable you to detect <lb/>
from tho true. When <lb/>
you have learned this lesson, the <lb/>
king has said that he will himself <lb/>
pressing it, the door again swung <lb/>
back, and was soon standing <lb/>
the seashore. Evening after <lb/>
evening she spent in this manner. <lb/>
Soon tho people noticed a differ- <lb/>
in her manner of helping <lb/>
them -a setting aside something <lb/>
of what seemed to them their most <lb/>
pressing needs, and an endeavor <lb/>
to help them higher and bet- <lb/>
tor lives. . <lb/>
One evening, as she was passing <lb/>
as usual toward her mirror with <lb/>
the key, to her surprise she saw a <lb/>
j Key appear in another mirror. As <lb/>
she had turned tho first, i <lb/>
now tinned this one. The second <lb/>
mirror swung back as the first had <lb/>
of herself, she was annoyed by <lb/>
people tumbling her. Very <lb/>
graciously she gave them what j <lb/>
they asked. Fewer people came Charlotte <lb/>
every day, but then she had less to Rice dropped dead <lb/>
give them, as her piles of food and <lb/>
his <lb/>
Mr. W. M. <lb/>
yesterday <lb/>
home near <lb/>
morning at <lb/>
cotton factory- Mr- Rice <lb/>
clothing dwindled. Finally no i front of the fire <lb/>
one came, and she threw away place, when he suddenly fell to the <lb/>
what remained. Then she was I floor, and expired before any one <lb/>
satisfied. But she did not under- i could reach him. He <lb/>
stand the peculiar property of her I w- W <lb/>
. C, <lb/>
Office in Skinner Building, tipper <lb/>
Photograph <lb/>
TIE. L. JAM KM,<lb/>
AS. I. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Prompt attention to business. Office <lb/>
Tucker Murphy's old eland. <lb/>
OS. J. JARVIS. ALEX. L. <lb/>
A BLOW. <lb/>
V. C. <lb/>
in all the Courts. <lb/>
J. <lb/>
B. <lb/>
ATTORNEY- AT- <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
B. F. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
given to <lb/>
WM <lb/>
II. LONG, <lb/>
x. c. <lb/>
Prompt en refill attention to <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
SKINNER, <lb/>
C LATHAM. <lb/>
T A <lb/>
i, vii. n. c. <lb/>
Y JAMES, <lb/>
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in nil the courts. <lb/>
a Specialty. <lb/>
had been <lb/>
for nearly <lb/>
two years, and that was tho cause <lb/>
of his death. <lb/>
room. The room kept growing I <lb/>
smaller and smaller, but she could <lb/>
not perceive this, as the mirrors. <lb/>
kept her from any knowledge of, <lb/>
its size. At length they closed on j ,, on <lb/>
her and crushed her. I to New met with <lb/>
New Journal s The steam <lb/>
Cobb in rounding n sharp bend <lb/>
in creek, one <lb/>
her way <lb/>
a slight <lb/>
done, the king's daughter saw <lb/>
deal and working hard f As for <lb/>
kissing her when ho gets her. what <lb/>
n molly coddle he must be who <lb/>
lets and modern idols of <lb/>
good form and social etiquette de- <lb/>
h. m Ti me earth is flat, <lb/>
the moon is cheese, <lb/>
that the head of the ocean is dry <lb/>
sand or t Jay is a <lb/>
but don't . any; <lb/>
man with ounce of manhood in j <lb/>
his nature is kind of a <lb/>
expect me to believe <lb/>
EYE <lb/>
home to his hall. There no <lb/>
at a about rs <lb/>
light was diffused through a room t <lb/>
disclosing shelves upon shelves of <lb/>
use for the man who doesn't make <lb/>
love, as he prosecutes any other I you <lb/>
business in hand, for all he is <lb/>
worth If a girl is worth loving, the servant <lb/>
i . i, loving a he must <lb/>
; leave them and return to tho <lb/>
said the older daughter, The king's daughter felt a slight <lb/>
duty to my father, and tell I disappointment at first, out soon <lb/>
him it shall be my pleasure to, set about examining this new ac- <lb/>
I obey his To her delight she <lb/>
said the younger, found that these books contained <lb/>
my father that I wish to go to the the information she had longed <lb/>
j for, how and what to teach these <lb/>
The servant merely bowed again people in whom she had become <lb/>
and left them; and the so strongly interested- She spent <lb/>
daughters, the one contentedly a busy evening studying, and <lb/>
and the other en-j many an evening after that, until <lb/>
their homes. she became a real teacher and <lb/>
And now we will follow, the helper; not a mere provider for <lb/>
fortunes cf the older, then of tho, their physical necessities. New <lb/>
younger sister. i relations of friendship and <lb/>
On the next morning, the j thy began to be established be- <lb/>
older sister discovered that the, tween them. Her life grew more <lb/>
king's commands had evidently j busy helpful every, day. The <lb/>
DR. FELIX ON <lb/>
Dr. Felix, a Baptist minister of <lb/>
high standing in said, <lb/>
his sermon last Sunday, that he <lb/>
had changed his mind in one re- <lb/>
At one <lb/>
tho right love <lb/>
you. <lb/>
Winking the left hate you- <lb/>
Winking both <lb/>
both eyes at once <lb/>
We are watched. <lb/>
Winking right eye -I am <lb/>
engaged, <lb/>
Winking left eye am <lb/>
Her stem swung <lb/>
the bank and broke the support <lb/>
i which held u one side her <lb/>
thus disabling her. She <lb/>
was poled down to Neuse river, <lb/>
i from which point tho steamer <lb/>
towed her down to the <lb/>
city. <lb/>
T-P. a large farmer <lb/>
and merchant at as- <lb/>
signed Monday to A. <lb/>
Liabilities about assets <lb/>
about to Prefer <lb/>
about of which i <lb/>
t Barnes of Nor-<lb/>
in <lb/>
Z P <lb/>
-i a <lb/>
if<lb/>
I, <lb/>
JO <lb/>
-n <lb/>
he said, was of the <lb/>
ion that only papers which did not <lb/>
publish matters of a certain char- <lb/>
ought to circulate. News- <lb/>
papers are the best police force in to <lb/>
the land, and many a man has folk, except and <lb/>
been prevented from doing some a few small debts here- losses <lb/>
. , ,, , . i were caused by decline on spot <lb/>
act of villainy by tho fear that it cotton Ht. bales, <lb/>
be published by the papers which cost nine cents per <lb/>
and the newspapers are right when; pound, <lb/>
they show all kinds of Yes- <lb/>
-y- about o'clock, u <lb/>
bright light might have been seen <lb/>
to the eastward of the city. Soon <lb/>
t- i after tho news came in that the <lb/>
. T . . , cotton gin of Mrs. Julia Fisher, <lb/>
A certain farmer in Jackson had mA city, had <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1875; <lb/>
DON'T BORROW. <lb/>
Dropping the I <lb/>
several other I know there is t <lb/>
h In <lb/>
m i n can it. <lb/>
l-i <lb/>
p Mat ii to U a <lb/>
i. an <lb/>
looks to time <lb/>
of it. <lb/>
for it i U ail <lb/>
nothing so pleasing to the average <lb/>
in Ah as eyed, candid girl <lb/>
whose yea is yea and nay, <lb/>
Here is another letter from a gay <lb/>
young darling of society <lb/>
You <lb/>
me. <lb/>
Raising the me. <lb/>
Closing right eye <lb/>
are beautiful. <lb/>
Closing left eye slowly Try and <lb/>
love me. <lb/>
Covering both eyes with both <lb/>
i I let Jack kiss <lb/>
goose, ask such a question. hands Bye-bye. <lb/>
How can I when mama or Aunt right forefinger to right <lb/>
it, j yon love me t <lb/>
Placing left to left eye <lb/>
Kb <lb/>
a-j <lb/>
-V <lb/>
always nit <lb/>
propriety drawing room <lb/>
whenever he Foils, and then lee <lb/>
he hat gone on the modesty of <lb/>
y girl- and proper <lb/>
in the of young men <lb/>
you H never, never tell, <lb/>
let you into a bit of a secret- The <lb/>
Hr ii of <lb/>
mi <lb/>
All -f onS In . <lb/>
i Vb t. e other behind the <lb/>
ii M t bye he <lb/>
a the <lb/>
o will l- stooping to disentangle <lb/>
Yon <lb/>
Placing left third finger to left <lb/>
eye So are yon. <lb/>
Placing right little finger to <lb/>
right ashamed- <lb/>
Why <lb/>
ii. to to rafter uS<lb/>
obeyed, for there stood be- <lb/>
fore her door poverty in its worst <lb/>
forms. <lb/>
daughter had never <lb/>
seen poverty or suffering before, <lb/>
and her heart was filled with pity <lb/>
at the sight. Remembering the <lb/>
servant's promise that she should <lb/>
always have at hand the means <lb/>
for relieving want, she called them <lb/>
into her room, and, from a pile of <lb/>
clothing which she found there, <lb/>
she clothed the naked, and fed the <lb/>
hungry from a similar pile of pro <lb/>
visions. they had left she <lb/>
felt a strange glow in heart, <lb/>
and a feeling of happiness to which <lb/>
she had before been a stranger be- <lb/>
to possess her. <lb/>
Day after day the. same crowd <lb/>
of starving and suffering people <lb/>
stood before her door, and day <lb/>
after day she relieved their dis- <lb/>
tress- Bat her piles of food and <lb/>
clothing grew never the On <lb/>
the contrary they seemed to grow <lb/>
still And those <lb/>
king's daughter now began to per- <lb/>
something of the nature of <lb/>
the home her father had prepared <lb/>
for her. That the walls of her <lb/>
room were merely doors leading <lb/>
outward. <lb/>
Another mirror would presently <lb/>
open as the others had done, and <lb/>
she must prepare herself to enjoy <lb/>
what it disclosed by a. faithful use <lb/>
of what she already had. Often <lb/>
she glanced at the other mirrors to <lb/>
see if a key had yet appeared. For <lb/>
a long time she was unrewarded; <lb/>
but at last, one evening, to her <lb/>
great joy, she saw the third key in <lb/>
the mirror. Quickly pressing it, <lb/>
the third hall was revealed. <lb/>
Strains of the most delicious music <lb/>
greeted her ear. In this hall was <lb/>
gathered beauty of which the <lb/>
king's daughter had never dream- <lb/>
There were fine sculptures <lb/>
and The hall itself was <lb/>
most beautifully carved. <lb/>
The king's daughter spent a <lb/>
most delightful evening. But the <lb/>
next day as she looked into the <lb/>
lace Around h <lb/>
a clause in his will setting boned to the Mrs. <lb/>
of his estate to pay for a per gin was burned down <lb/>
to be sent to one of bis neighbors j last year by an and it. <lb/>
for life, as the neighbor had been obeyed that the <lb/>
. , i morning was also the <lb/>
a constant borrower of his paper. fiend. <lb/>
and tho dying man did not want . <lb/>
him to bother any of the other j Speaking of the Norfolk, <lb/>
neighbors Charleston Railroad the <lb/>
Philadelphia Record <lb/>
road is expected, if built, to open <lb/>
up a fine lumber and trucking <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD Mid STOKE <lb/>
AND BUY <lb/>
J- supplies will <lb/>
their interest to get our before <lb/>
rim o if <lb/>
n all branches. <lb/>
PO SIDES ft <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICE, TEA, <lb/>
at Market <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
we direct from Manufacturers, mm- <lb/>
tiling you to boy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
Mr. son, <lb/>
how I j lesson the distance <lb/>
pair I between the North and Florida by <lb/>
of pants. over miles- Among the larger <lb/>
Mr. poor. towns through or near which the <lb/>
pair <lb/>
The always on hand and sold at prices to suit <lb/>
the times. Our roods are all <lb/>
sold tor CASH, therefore, having no rial <lb/>
to sell Ht a close margin. <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
X. <lb/>
pants for free <lb/>
routs has been <lb/>
Va., <lb/>
are <lb/>
Yardley, Cole-<lb/>
Mills, <lb/>
Washington, <lb/>
Dover. <lb/>
South <lb/>
a j Johnsen's <lb/>
Mr. Hill, Wat <lb/>
You will make a man vet. Washington, Point <lb/>
, and Pander. N- C, and <lb/>
. Conway, Georgetown, <lb/>
It is hard to tell from men's; San tee and S. C <lb/>
outward bearing of just how of the company <lb/>
, j v hone to award the contract for <lb/>
hypocrisy and they are; a <lb/>
capable. While a man was time-anti are now <lb/>
in Chattanooga, Tenn-, a few to necessary funds, <lb/>
nights to and construction the main <lb/>
them to treat their wives n estimated at about <lb/>
n Ci I <lb/>
he was arrested on a charge of <lb/>
bigamy <lb/>
With the aid of compressed air says a Georgia editor, <lb/>
a German y engineer drives -h found in counties in <lb/>
cement to tho bottom of stream, t State, in three, diamonds <lb/>
the water at once hardens whiskey in all of <lb/>
the bed of stream ., . . ,, <lb/>
table for them. ad the last gets aw <lb/>
with <lb/>
tail the <lb/>
Tit <lb/>
Greenville, <lb/>
f. B. <lb/>
J. S. Greenville, <lb/>
N. M. Tarboro, Gen <lb/>
Capt. It. P. Jones, Washington, Gen A <lb/>
The People's Line for travel on Ta <lb/>
River. <lb/>
The Steamer Is the finest <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb/>
and painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for the comfort, m <lb/>
and convenience of Ladle <lb/>
POLITE ATTENTIVE <lb/>
A Table <lb/>
best the market affords, <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer It <lb/>
not only comfortable <lb/>
Leaves Monday, <lb/>
and Friday at o'clock, A. K. <lb/>
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock, a. m. <lb/>
dally and <lb/>
to all <lb/>
W. <lb/>
k. v<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017540_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
J, Editor -d Proprietor, <lb/>
MARCH <lb/>
Hon. A M. take of feet Her <lb/>
,, the and the needy deserve protection, i merit to tons. The <lb/>
. oration before toe , The been to Green indicated horse power of V- <lb/>
j at the next Commencement ha, is to be which will <lb/>
and Character of Col. Wm. toward any one, has no give her a speed of nineteen knots <lb/>
L- The oration be I personal grievances whereof to at least, with a possibility of its <lb/>
delivered on Alumni Day, Tuesday, complain, does not know who be- reaching twenty. <lb/>
May before the Alumni the be, The engines will be triple ox <lb/>
Entered at Greenville, <lb/>
X. C. as mail matter. <lb/>
COL. HARRY SKINNER. <lb/>
For several weeks we have in- <lb/>
tended saying things which <lb/>
we think justice and the occasion <lb/>
demand that we should say. The <lb/>
Reflector believes that every <lb/>
man should be fairly reported and <lb/>
not have his motives <lb/>
however those <lb/>
who do this may be. The press of <lb/>
North Carolina, especially of the <lb/>
West, seem at present to be <lb/>
some adverse criticisms upon <lb/>
Col. Harry Skinner on account of <lb/>
his present attitude towards, and <lb/>
advocacy of Alliance and reform <lb/>
measures- They may feel that <lb/>
they are called upon to do this but <lb/>
to these the Reflector would say <lb/>
that Col. Skinner is perfectly con- <lb/>
He has advocated faithful <lb/>
both with tongue and pen these <lb/>
measures for the past <lb/>
The columns of the Reflector <lb/>
for years back have had pieces <lb/>
from advocating financial re- <lb/>
form. If he did not advocate these <lb/>
now he would go back on his own <lb/>
record. <lb/>
The Reflector can assure its <lb/>
contemporaries in the West that <lb/>
Col. Skinner has the good farmers <lb/>
and business men of the East to <lb/>
back him. He comes of a long <lb/>
line of influential men in the East <lb/>
that have always been on the side <lb/>
of the people This is where Col. <lb/>
Skinner now stands. When we <lb/>
say the people we mean not only <lb/>
the farmers but the masses as op- <lb/>
posed to plutocracy. He ought <lb/>
not to be misrepresented in regard <lb/>
to this. His contemporaries in <lb/>
this section are Jar- <lb/>
vis, Hon. L- C- Latham. Hon. T. <lb/>
G. Skinner, Hon. George H. <lb/>
Brown. Hon. Jas. E- Moore. C- L. <lb/>
Pettigrew, W. D. Pruden, R B. <lb/>
and others- They will not <lb/>
quietly see Col. Skinner so <lb/>
treated while they know him <lb/>
to be a true Democrat- We would <lb/>
say to the Western press go slow, <lb/>
in fact be sure you arc right be- <lb/>
fore yon go ahead. Col. Skinner <lb/>
is a Democrat. This we feel <lb/>
in saying we <lb/>
know him. watched his <lb/>
course in the past and he has man- <lb/>
fully battled for Democracy in <lb/>
every campaign since manhood. <lb/>
The Alliance and non-Alliance sen- <lb/>
of this section will support <lb/>
him for any office to which he may <lb/>
aspire. Col. Skinner has never <lb/>
let the Reflector know that he <lb/>
was a candidate for any office. <lb/>
We believe he is perfectly sincere <lb/>
in his advocacy of measures of re- <lb/>
lief. This has been his life work <lb/>
as a politician. We have no <lb/>
son to believe that he has departed <lb/>
in the least from his past record. <lb/>
Should he desire our support <lb/>
the Reflector can be relied upon <lb/>
as as the entire East. There <lb/>
is no sense in abusing and <lb/>
resenting a man because we may <lb/>
not agree with him in respect to <lb/>
the method of getting relief. We <lb/>
have said before and we say now <lb/>
that there is something radically <lb/>
wrong with our financial system- <lb/>
We must have relief. <lb/>
This will not come by <lb/>
those who have heretofore <lb/>
and are still advocating reform. <lb/>
Let all unite from a common need <lb/>
in a common cause for relief and <lb/>
we expect to succeed. <lb/>
The Reader which was <lb/>
started last year by Rev. E L- Pell, <lb/>
at Franklin ton, and a few months <lb/>
Inter moved to Richmond, has just <lb/>
closed its first volume. It met <lb/>
with an unprecedented growth <lb/>
during its first year r goes into <lb/>
thousands of homes in this and <lb/>
other States. It is an excellent <lb/>
paper, and a good help to Bible <lb/>
study. <lb/>
bat be The engines will be <lb/>
would stake his last bottom pension, inverted and <lb/>
that many excellent men do not. acting, with a high-p insure <lb/>
An cylinder of thirty-six an <lb/>
. . . , . ., i intermediate of fifty three i <lb/>
Our friend who writes us the two low pressure of fifty-seven <lb/>
above letter i laboring under an inches. The collective horse-pow- <lb/>
erroneous impression; at i of these the smaller engines <lb/>
least his ideas are very thousand <lb/>
from those we had formed as to <lb/>
The Silver bill was diseased <lb/>
three days last week- No final <lb/>
action was taken upon it- The <lb/>
adjourned after <lb/>
the last day it was discussed with- <lb/>
out action- It will be necessary <lb/>
that the committee on rules call it <lb/>
up at some future day for final <lb/>
action. The vote on the <lb/>
motions that were made in refer- <lb/>
to the bill did not show a very <lb/>
large majority for it- The vote of <lb/>
the speaker kept it from being <lb/>
indefinitely postponed. <lb/>
BOTH VIEWS. <lb/>
Some plain talk is taking place <lb/>
between this Government and <lb/>
England in reference to seal catch- <lb/>
in Behring Sea- <lb/>
Hon. Roger Q- Mills has been <lb/>
elected Senator from Texas. He <lb/>
had no opposition when the ballot <lb/>
was taken. He will be a help to <lb/>
the tariff reformers of the Senate. <lb/>
The Wilmington Star last week <lb/>
its fiftieth volume. It is <lb/>
the oldest daily paper in the State <lb/>
and age does not hurt it in the <lb/>
least We hope it may reach <lb/>
twice its present age- <lb/>
Rev. J. Carter Jones of Knox- <lb/>
ville, Tennessee, preaches the <lb/>
Sermon at Wake Forest <lb/>
College in and Hon- Mr. <lb/>
Bailey, member of Congress from <lb/>
Texas, delivers the Literary Ad- <lb/>
dress- <lb/>
President Butler of the Alliance <lb/>
has called upon each county to <lb/>
send one of their trust men to <lb/>
Raleigh on the 17th of May to <lb/>
meet him in Conference for the <lb/>
good of the and the <lb/>
cause of reform. <lb/>
The New York World published <lb/>
last week a sketch of Senator John <lb/>
G. and gives him an <lb/>
in which it says the only <lb/>
to prevent bis nomination <lb/>
, for the is bis being <lb/>
iron the would <lb/>
a sable President The <lb/>
has baiter <lb/>
Pitt Co., N. C, March <lb/>
Editor of the have <lb/>
admired the Reflector, especial- <lb/>
for two tor its <lb/>
unfaltering advocacy of pure and <lb/>
unadulterated Democracy; and <lb/>
second, its manliness, often <lb/>
to heroism, defending the right <lb/>
against the wrong. But in your <lb/>
last, as well as in former issues of <lb/>
the Reflector, it was shockingly <lb/>
unpleasant to see that you had <lb/>
become apologist to what is known <lb/>
as the Commercial <lb/>
a secret society with head- <lb/>
quarters at the Drexel building, <lb/>
Philadelphia. Now let us see if <lb/>
there is not two sides to that <lb/>
They are the only body of <lb/>
organized capitalists in the world <lb/>
whose avowed purpose is to boy- <lb/>
the and take re- <lb/>
upon the poor. One letter <lb/>
I recently saw stated that they <lb/>
knew the debt could not be collect- <lb/>
ed, and yet if immediate payment <lb/>
was not made they would report <lb/>
him to the headquarters at <lb/>
and publish him to every <lb/>
merchant in America and Canada- <lb/>
That meant plainly that we, the <lb/>
Commercial <lb/>
will boycott you, we will <lb/>
hound you down. This reminds <lb/>
me of an incident I once read in a <lb/>
northern newspaper that took <lb/>
place at Harper's Ferry. A <lb/>
of the Federal Army was <lb/>
stationed on the Maryland side of <lb/>
the river. For several days a Con- <lb/>
federate scout appeared on the <lb/>
heights on the side and <lb/>
calmly surveyed the Federal Army. <lb/>
Such daring was only construed <lb/>
to be impudence, so the Federal <lb/>
General gave a command that a <lb/>
brigade should be in readiness. <lb/>
The brave scout came again and <lb/>
three thousand rifles simultaneous- <lb/>
emptied upon him. The scout <lb/>
fell and his steed galloped away. <lb/>
This was a sad scene, no bravery, <lb/>
no heroism there It was enough <lb/>
to make angels weep. The <lb/>
apologist can only defend by say- <lb/>
it was war. <lb/>
But now when the roar of no <lb/>
cannon disturbs the quiet and the <lb/>
of the nation, this <lb/>
Commercial Association is doing <lb/>
things a thousand times more at- <lb/>
If being in debt now is <lb/>
a sin, then may the Lord help the <lb/>
wicked, and of them all the mer- <lb/>
chants are the chiefest sinners. <lb/>
Sec a late number of the Financial <lb/>
Chronicle giving the failures of <lb/>
last year. I do not know how <lb/>
many merchants belong to the as- <lb/>
; but in America and <lb/>
Canada they must approach near <lb/>
a million with millions of money. <lb/>
Now. Mr. Editor, let me ask you <lb/>
in the name of humanity how can <lb/>
you defend these millions of men. <lb/>
these millions of money hounding <lb/>
down the unfortunate and the <lb/>
poor, even if he is dead <lb/>
Why take <lb/>
is mine, the The <lb/>
people are getting restless, and <lb/>
the monopolist each day widen- <lb/>
the chasm. Is it not better to <lb/>
speak words of kindness, to help, <lb/>
encourage. The laborers and <lb/>
farmers arc having a hard time <lb/>
now. The were <lb/>
against them last year, and the <lb/>
monopolist price his hard earnings <lb/>
below the cost of production. <lb/>
These with <lb/>
headquarters at Philadelphia, are <lb/>
sowing dragons teeth by the hands <lb/>
of Don't defend them. <lb/>
nil trials born, <lb/>
The and unrest; <lb/>
Be not hast- to condemn, <lb/>
Have is <lb/>
Herbert Spencer says in his ad- <lb/>
book on Sociology that <lb/>
there are two religions in the <lb/>
world, the religion of amity and <lb/>
the religion of enmity. The for- <lb/>
mer have nut few the <lb/>
latter have many. One is based <lb/>
upon and kindness; the <lb/>
other hatred and selfishness. <lb/>
It is plain to see which side this <lb/>
association m my <lb/>
debt or I will ruin your good <lb/>
Is that not even worse <lb/>
than the pound of flesh demanded <lb/>
by Shylock <lb/>
A correspondent writing from <lb/>
Greenville to the <lb/>
says the merchants at that <lb/>
place demand a mortgage <lb/>
the crops, and a waver of all the <lb/>
rent by the landlord, including <lb/>
stock, land. etc. I <lb/>
Mr. Editor, that lakes all, so where <lb/>
is the credit The merchant takes <lb/>
no risk of the failure of crops, feels <lb/>
no anxiety about prices. He <lb/>
knows be is sale. Such iron clad <lb/>
methods were not known a few <lb/>
years since. To as poor farmers <lb/>
and laborers we have at least one <lb/>
consolation, acre driving <lb/>
Mr, <lb/>
very different ten thousand at one hundred <lb/>
and sixty four revolutions. The <lb/>
what a commercial agency is. In <lb/>
replying to what he has said we <lb/>
will start by saying that the Re- <lb/>
is not an apologist for any <lb/>
agency, has no interest <lb/>
in any and is under no obligations <lb/>
to any, and what we wrote last <lb/>
week only had reference to that <lb/>
class of people who contracted <lb/>
debts and instead of making an <lb/>
honest effort to pay them, took <lb/>
every possible step to avoid paying <lb/>
them, and added that for protection <lb/>
against such many merchants took <lb/>
advantage of the commercial <lb/>
Now before going we <lb/>
will stop to add that we do not be- <lb/>
our correspondent himself <lb/>
would be willing to uphold people <lb/>
who make debts that way. <lb/>
Now as to our views about a com <lb/>
agency. Our <lb/>
dent says this particular one in <lb/>
question is secret society with <lb/>
headquarters at the Drexel build- <lb/>
It is not a <lb/>
society, and its headquarters <lb/>
at Chicago, with only a branch <lb/>
office at Philadelphia. They are <lb/>
not a body of organized capitalists <lb/>
for the purpose of boycotting the <lb/>
and taking revenge <lb/>
upon the poor. They are simply <lb/>
a collecting agency, and <lb/>
more than that. They are. the <lb/>
lawyers who advertise <lb/>
a ready to make col- <lb/>
for anybody who wants <lb/>
their services- They collect out <lb/>
of the rich as well as any one else, <lb/>
will collect for any one else <lb/>
as well as for a merchant. We <lb/>
have no idea how many compose <lb/>
the agency, but suppose it is only <lb/>
an organization of a few men like <lb/>
compose the various insurance <lb/>
companies, or or Dun's <lb/>
commercial agencies, or some <lb/>
manufacturing or industrial con- <lb/>
that requires several men to <lb/>
conduct. Instead of being an or- <lb/>
of merchants or a mer- <lb/>
chants association to take revenge <lb/>
or oppress the poor or <lb/>
in any way, the merchants have <lb/>
nothing to do with and no inter- <lb/>
est in it further than to pay the <lb/>
agency for the service it renders <lb/>
them. <lb/>
These are our ideas of a com- <lb/>
agency, and we know of <lb/>
cases where they help make <lb/>
out of merchants, doctors, <lb/>
lawyers, editors, mechanics, farm- <lb/>
laborers, or any other class <lb/>
who contract debts and never make <lb/>
an honest effort to pay tho same, <lb/>
we expect that they usually <lb/>
collect more out of merchants than <lb/>
any other class. To show that <lb/>
there is no prejudice against <lb/>
any class we will tell of a list <lb/>
containing five names which we <lb/>
once knew to be sent to the agency <lb/>
with accounts for collection. The <lb/>
first name was a professional man <lb/>
who is also a merchant, another <lb/>
was a large dealer in <lb/>
another was a spring and hotel <lb/>
concern that had a bank president <lb/>
at its head, the fourth was an <lb/>
editor and the last was a farmer <lb/>
or laborer. Another man once <lb/>
told us he sent in a list that wan <lb/>
headed with a doctor. <lb/>
Now the Reflector does not say <lb/>
the above as an apology for, or <lb/>
in any way defending the <lb/>
agency. we say it be- <lb/>
cause our friend misconceives the <lb/>
idea intended in our former <lb/>
and because further that we <lb/>
think his letter is calculated to array <lb/>
the farmer and laborer against the <lb/>
merchant and cause them to have <lb/>
hard feelings against the latter <lb/>
when it should not be so. The in- <lb/>
of the farmer and the mer- <lb/>
chant are identical, and both alike <lb/>
feel the financial depression that <lb/>
exists. Instead any hard <lb/>
feelings being between them there <lb/>
should be the utmost harmony, <lb/>
and all should labor together to <lb/>
remove the industrial depression <lb/>
and bring about better times than <lb/>
are now us. <lb/>
condensers each have seven thous- <lb/>
and feet of cooling surface. There <lb/>
will be four double-ended two <lb/>
single-ended boilers, in tight <lb/>
compartments. Two of the main <lb/>
boilers will be thirteen feet four <lb/>
i in diameter twenty feet <lb/>
three and one-half inches long, <lb/>
and the other two will be fourteen <lb/>
feet six and one-half inches by <lb/>
twenty feet three and one-half <lb/>
inches. The two auxiliary boilers <lb/>
will be eleven feet two inches in <lb/>
diameter and nine feet one-half <lb/>
inch in length. The working <lb/>
pressure is to be one hundred <lb/>
founds, the total heating surface <lb/>
square feet and the grate <lb/>
five hundred and ninety- <lb/>
seven square feet. <lb/>
Turning now to her armament, <lb/>
the main battery of the Raleigh <lb/>
will of one six-inch rifle <lb/>
and ten four or five inch rapid-fire <lb/>
guns. Originally these guns were <lb/>
to be four-inch, weighing about <lb/>
one and one half tons each, and <lb/>
the substitution of five inch guns, <lb/>
which has since been reported, <lb/>
would require a reduction of <lb/>
about fifteen tons in the weight <lb/>
elsewhere in the ship The six- <lb/>
inch gun is to be mounted on the <lb/>
forecastle, and the others will be <lb/>
all on center pivot mounts, pro <lb/>
by steel shields. The sec- <lb/>
battery will consist of <lb/>
eight six-pounder and four one- <lb/>
rapid-fire guns and <lb/>
There will also be six tor- <lb/>
tubes about four feet above <lb/>
the water, one fixed in the bow, <lb/>
one in the stern, and the <lb/>
four, which will be training tubes, <lb/>
on each broadside. <lb/>
Such is a description of the <lb/>
Raleigh as she will when <lb/>
ready for service. If she fulfills <lb/>
expectations, and there is no r Ba- <lb/>
son for believing that she will not, <lb/>
she will be quite a formidable <lb/>
and will prove of value <lb/>
to this country in case of war with <lb/>
some foreign power. <lb/>
Among the distinguished visit- <lb/>
ors who will witness the launch is <lb/>
Governor Molt, of North Carolina, <lb/>
who will be accompanied by his <lb/>
family and staff, numbering <lb/>
persons. The Governor's <lb/>
daughter, Mrs. Heywood, will <lb/>
christen the vessel by breaking the <lb/>
customary bottle of wine. <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
LAUNCHING THE RALEIGH. <lb/>
Many people of this State are <lb/>
to Norfolk and Porte- <lb/>
mouth to-day to be present at the <lb/>
launching of the <lb/>
row from the Portsmouth navy <lb/>
yard- The is a new <lb/>
and is named in honor of the <lb/>
capital of our State. We did not <lb/>
hear that anyone from Greenville <lb/>
would attend the launching. Sat- <lb/>
issue of the Berkley, Va., <lb/>
Graphic, in speaking of the launch- <lb/>
gives wing interesting <lb/>
description of the <lb/>
A brief description cf the vessel <lb/>
which is to slide into tin on <lb/>
that occasion not be amiss fa <lb/>
bare. The <lb/>
From our Regular Correspondent. <lb/>
Washington, D. C March <lb/>
Jingoism has again taken <lb/>
s of Mr. Harrison, it is <lb/>
said, although the wording of the <lb/>
communication is carefully with- <lb/>
held, that he has sent a very saucy <lb/>
note to Lord Salisbury, demand- <lb/>
an immediate and specific <lb/>
answer as to whether he proposes <lb/>
to renew the modus his <lb/>
last communication, received this <lb/>
week, not being at all <lb/>
Some of Mr. Harrison's friends <lb/>
call this last communication an <lb/>
ultimatum, but it's dimes to straws <lb/>
that Mr Harrison did not intend <lb/>
that Lord Salisbury should put <lb/>
that construction upon it. There <lb/>
is no occasion for the sending of <lb/>
an ultimatum. Nearly a year ago <lb/>
this Government was notified that <lb/>
Great Britain not renew the <lb/>
modus this season, and <lb/>
yet it now pretends to great <lb/>
because Lord Salisbury <lb/>
declines to change his mind. Let <lb/>
Mr. Harrison quietly order a <lb/>
naval to Sea <lb/>
to maintain the rights we. claim <lb/>
there, and the whole country will <lb/>
back him up, and Great Britain <lb/>
will not interfere, simply because <lb/>
it is none of her business ; but if <lb/>
he continues to try to stir up the <lb/>
people needlessly he will find him- <lb/>
self deserted even by his party. <lb/>
Has Secretary Blaine resigned <lb/>
He has been well enough to take a <lb/>
long walk, such as no sick man <lb/>
would have undertaken, this week; <lb/>
but he has not been to the State <lb/>
department, nor was Lord <lb/>
dispatch or Mr. Harrison's <lb/>
answer thereto submitted to him <lb/>
before they were sent to the Sen- <lb/>
ate This has an odd look; and <lb/>
besides, an official stated to-day <lb/>
that Mr. Harrison had not called <lb/>
on Mr. Blaine at all during his <lb/>
sickness, although his house is <lb/>
just across the street from the <lb/>
White House. <lb/>
Senator Chandler brought oat <lb/>
by questioning Assistant Secretary <lb/>
of the Treasury in re <lb/>
to his connection with the <lb/>
expenditures at Ellis Island, the <lb/>
Government immigrant station, <lb/>
the astounding fact that the man <lb/>
who has been acting Secretary of <lb/>
the Treasury during the absence <lb/>
of Secretary Foster knows nothing <lb/>
whatever about the business of <lb/>
that department, depends en- <lb/>
upon a clerk of the depart- <lb/>
who has bee detailed to <lb/>
as his private secretary, for the <lb/>
information which his <lb/>
acts based. In other <lb/>
words, whenever Gen. <lb/>
been acting Secretary of the <lb/>
Treasury, the business of that <lb/>
great department has been com- <lb/>
in the hands of a clerk. If <lb/>
the clerk in question knows <lb/>
enough to be trusted with such <lb/>
enormous responsibility, be should <lb/>
be made Assistant Secretary, in <lb/>
order that be might draw a salary <lb/>
commensurate with hat knowledge, <lb/>
and else should be <lb/>
found for if it is <lb/>
absolutely necessary that be <lb/>
should be taken care of. <lb/>
Senator who m baaing <lb/>
op, of tho <lb/>
Are a Good <lb/>
is the <lb/>
for you to it. <lb/>
-------There is now on exhibition at the store of------- <lb/>
YOUNG <lb/>
-THE-<lb/>
ever seen in ibis county. It is feet inches high, and inches <lb/>
in circumference They propose to have a little guessing <lb/>
match among their customers, and yon are one <lb/>
and all invited to call to see them and <lb/>
guess how long it will this <lb/>
Candle to burn up. It <lb/>
will be lighted on <lb/>
Monday, May 2nd, <lb/>
at o'clock, will burn continuously until entirely <lb/>
consumed. The person guessing nearest the time which <lb/>
it takes to burn up will receive, with our <lb/>
compliments and best wishes,<lb/>
one of the following articles, of which they shall have the <lb/>
of choosing . <lb/>
One Camel's Hair Dress Pattern, <lb/>
1-2 Yards. Price <lb/>
Handsome Mantel Clock valued <lb/>
at <lb/>
Ladies Gold Ring, <lb/>
j set with Diamonds and Sapphires. <lb/>
Every customer is entitled to a guess, free of charge, and for <lb/>
every dollar or fraction of a dollar spent to exceed one <lb/>
dollar, they are entitled to an additional guess- no <lb/>
further guesses will be allowed after the candle <lb/>
has been lighted. Permit us to say here this is <lb/>
no gambling scheme or game of chance. The <lb/>
III SI III TE L <lb/>
We have <lb/>
but one <lb/>
the articles which we <lb/>
offer we propose to give our <lb/>
customers as an advertisement <lb/>
and only employ this method to de- <lb/>
to whom they shall go. If only <lb/>
one party should guess they would get the <lb/>
So you see it is not a matter of <lb/>
on on your part or gain on ours. We shall request <lb/>
a committee of gen men to light the candle and keep ac- <lb/>
curate account of time which it takes to consume, and the re- <lb/>
will be announced in the Reflector as soon as ascertained. <lb/>
In order to make room for our Spring stock we just started a <lb/>
-DEALERS IN- <lb/>
m m <lb/>
NOTIONS, <lb/>
Hats, Sloes, Hardware, <lb/>
TINWARE, <lb/>
MASS VI Alt i; <lb/>
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb/>
Harness, Whips, and Collars, <lb/>
FARMING TOOLS, <lb/>
Plows of the Improved Makes, <lb/>
Bargain Counter<lb/>
which we shall run for a short time, or are closed <lb/>
out. These goods are <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS IN RESPECT, <lb/>
And to them out and get room for oar spring <lb/>
good, which we are lied to We have made these <lb/>
prices regardless of cost and in some we have <lb/>
made the price less than the actual first <lb/>
cost. But we tried to make such a price <lb/>
as would sell I hem, and we <lb/>
would advise you to call at <lb/>
once before the counter <lb/>
is too picked <lb/>
over. You will <lb/>
bf certain <lb/>
to find something need nod save money, <lb/>
We below give list of what we <lb/>
About yards Calico, former price cents, now cents, . <lb/>
Umbrellas former price now cents, <lb/>
Children's Shoes, former price cents, now cents. <lb/>
Men's Shoes, former price now cents. <lb/>
Cloth Shoes, former price now cents. <lb/>
Morocco Shoes, former price now <lb/>
All colors Silk from to cents per yard. <lb/>
Ladies and Gents Handkerchiefs, former price now eta. <lb/>
Ladies and Gents Silk s, former price Boots, now <lb/>
All Shades of Silk Veiling at cents per yard. <lb/>
Linen Window Shades, former price now cents. <lb/>
Big lot of Remnants, composed of <lb/>
and Flannels, at half first cost. <lb/>
Big lot of Remnants, Lawns and Hamburg Edgings regard- <lb/>
less of coat. <lb/>
Pew Remnants of Bed-ticking at half price. Nice <lb/>
at cents. <lb/>
Pew Remnants All-Wool Carpets at <lb/>
Nice line Scarfs, former prices eta, now <lb/>
Pew Men's Pants, former price now cents. <lb/>
line Men's Boy's Hats, former price to <lb/>
now pants to <lb/>
We also hare a few Blankets and Quilts will <lb/>
cost <lb/>
On entire of Boot and ts also go t coat tot the <lb/>
next thirty days. <lb/>
All <lb/>
strictly tor SPOT <lb/>
CASH none of them will be <lb/>
taken beck or Nor will me agree <lb/>
to ever again duplicate price. W think you will <lb/>
fluff to come and this AT <lb/>
ONCE THE BEST BARGAINS ARE OUT <lb/>
One of our firm <lb/>
will soon visit <lb/>
the Northern <lb/>
Markets and <lb/>
while there will <lb/>
buy goods at <lb/>
prices that will <lb/>
command the at <lb/>
tendon of all. Realizing the hard times <lb/>
and scarcity of money we will sell during <lb/>
the coming Spring and Summer all goods <lb/>
lower prices than ever before. We will <lb/>
be prepared to sell as low as any dealer <lb/>
who sells first- <lb/>
class goods. <lb/>
We thank our <lb/>
friends for past <lb/>
patronage and <lb/>
hope to merit a <lb/>
continuance of <lb/>
the same. <lb/>
honest and <lb/>
square dealings <lb/>
to all. The <lb/>
tea c h i n g s of <lb/>
each generation <lb/>
says <lb/>
your trade to <lb/>
those o m <lb/>
you know to <lb/>
be reliable. <lb/>
Come one, come all and us. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE OLD FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
CONTINUE THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb/>
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but work. We keep up with the times and the . Improved styles <lb/>
Rest material used In all work. All styles of Springs arc use,, you can select from <lb/>
Brewster, oil, Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full II of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he round, which we will sell AS as the lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we <lb/>
merit a continuance if the same <lb/>
i ii i i. m . . a <lb/>
J. L. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N, C, <lb/>
OFFICE k JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strict <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At rules. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRE <lb/>
out <lb/>
THE MERCHANT C <lb/>
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled In this market. And to be an <lb/>
pore straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds, CLOTHING, GEN <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS- HATS and CAPS, SHOES, LA <lb/>
and SLIPPERS. HOUSE <lb/>
GOODS, DOOR., WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds, Gm and Hay, Rock Limb, Plaster of and <lb/>
Harness, Bridles and addles <lb/>
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb/>
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I offer to the trade at Wholes <lb/>
Jobbers prices, cents per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Hereford's Bread Prep- <lb/>
and Hall's Star Lye at Jobbers Prices, White and Lin- <lb/>
seed Oil. Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a all and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
w it Mini hall if pi <lb/>
A Mm <lb/>
REMODELED AND IMPROVED. <lb/>
GOOD MANIFOLDER. <lb/>
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World. <lb/>
Inexpensive, Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in all Easiest <lb/>
to learn, arid rapid as any. <lb/>
WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
AGENTS <lb/>
Mt <lb/>
This everybody <lb/>
body should have the writing done on <lb/>
Typewriter. H always Insures the most <lb/>
prompt attention. Add rest <lb/>
COMPANY, n Washington, St., Boston, Mat <lb/>
One machines can toe seen the Reflector office, where particulars and <lb/>
prices can had. <lb/>
For Accident Insurance by the year in one of <lb/>
left in existence, Bee <lb/>
the<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017540_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
i IF SO, THIS OFFER IS <lb/>
for you. <lb/>
turtle special <lb/>
with <lb/>
Weekly Constitution, <lb/>
The Great <lb/>
Pill at Atlanta, which we are <lb/>
enabled U off It with <lb/>
for YEAS only <lb/>
This offer a abort white. Now <lb/>
is year U ISMS the news Of all <lb/>
the world and your homo paper for <lb/>
price paper. <lb/>
Every at is <lb/>
entitled to a at <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Mr. S. P. has suite hick ; I of will <lb/>
for several days. night, April let. at o'clock. Every <lb/>
Mr. John S. b visiting U to be <lb/>
of the northern cities in the Interest <lb/>
of Ms <lb/>
present. <lb/>
I Bryan went to i Sat- <lb/>
evening to spend bis <lb/>
sister, Mrs. Grimes. <lb/>
Mr. W. B. Wilson returned <lb/>
Friday from had <lb/>
been visiting relatives. <lb/>
Mis. I;. H Home has been very sick <lb/>
the past week, been taken very <lb/>
suddenly last Tuesday. <lb/>
Mrs. J. R Walker, of Gary, who has <lb/>
of importance. <lb/>
it. <lb/>
H. <lb/>
A Strong Company. <lb/>
was having <lb/>
over to n the letter <lb/>
containing forty-seventh annual <lb/>
1892. details I her Mrs. A. D. <lb/>
of which be found elsewhere, <lb/>
is tin- most remarkable <lb/>
ever made. Every home in <lb/>
Pitt county should receive the <lb/>
toe first, and after that, it have <lb/>
best General Newspaper, In <lb/>
every week the the world, and <lb/>
overflowing with the choicest special <lb/>
features, such as the Weekly <lb/>
tit-n. at Atlanta. Ga and <lb/>
having a circulation of 156.000. <lb/>
SI GETS BOTH PAPERS.<lb/>
A Splendid Dictionary. <lb/>
Eastern Reflector, like all other <lb/>
paper--, wants subscribers, in <lb/>
order to induce to get us up a <lb/>
club we have following liberal offer <lb/>
to make for the month of Ma <lb/>
Any one who will doting this month <lb/>
bring or fend the Reflector Ten <lb/>
one with will be <lb/>
given tree a splendid Webster's Una- <lb/>
bridged Dictionary. This Dictionary <lb/>
contains nearly 1300 pages, em- <lb/>
braces 12.000 synonyms. Copies of the <lb/>
Dictionary can seen at this office. <lb/>
Any one who tries to get up a and <lb/>
succeed in g only rive, can bring <lb/>
on that number and get the i <lb/>
by paying extra. Ten subscribers <lb/>
gets the Dictionary free to the person <lb/>
raising the club. boy, or <lb/>
grown person can get up a club. Start <lb/>
at once so as to get a Dictionary free. <lb/>
subscription accepted unless ac- <lb/>
companied by the cash. <lb/>
GET UP -A. <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
will be the first day at April. <lb/>
Only two weeks mote of Lent. <lb/>
out for the Friday, <lb/>
of D. D. Has- <lb/>
Buy your belting <lb/>
Just think that the year one-fourth <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the <lb/>
Old Brick Store. <lb/>
To-morrow will be last day <lb/>
March. <lb/>
Leather and belting <lb/>
D. Haskett. <lb/>
It is <lb/>
menu. <lb/>
time to plant spring ti-e- <lb/>
home last Thursday. <lb/>
Mr. L. V. Campbell returned from a <lb/>
trip to several towns in the east <lb/>
of us, in the interest of his insurance <lb/>
work on Thursday last. <lb/>
Mr Claude F. Wilson, the bright <lb/>
editor of the Wilson Advance, spent <lb/>
Sat dropped in <lb/>
we had a very pleasant chat for an hour <lb/>
or two. <lb/>
His many friends here will regret to <lb/>
learn Rev. K. Glenn, of <lb/>
was taken one night last week with a <lb/>
hemorrhage, and came very near dying. <lb/>
lie was taken while on the street and <lb/>
had to be carried home, lie was danger- <lb/>
m for a day or two. <lb/>
We were pleased to have a call from <lb/>
the traveling representative of the <lb/>
Messenger, Mr. J. A. Crews, <lb/>
on last Monday. He is still suffering <lb/>
from the he received some time ago <lb/>
In a railroad accident, keeps on <lb/>
go. He reports business good. <lb/>
Mr. Battle, of considerable <lb/>
former newspaper fame but now travel- <lb/>
in in the interest of the Institute <lb/>
at Greensboro, was in town last week <lb/>
and made us a call. He Is <lb/>
over the good this Institute is doing in <lb/>
curing people of whiskey and <lb/>
relieving them from all desire for drink. <lb/>
Any one wanting a sample copy of the <lb/>
Atlanta Constitution can get it at the <lb/>
Raw <lb/>
Tribe. t Cat O. W. <lb/>
On last, upon motion of one <lb/>
of the Bar. Honor, Judge Bryan, <lb/>
pointed t. A. J. F. Moore. <lb/>
and Skinner a committee to draft. <lb/>
upon the death of Col. <lb/>
an-1 report at a meeting of the Bar <lb/>
to be held Saturday afternoon, in respect <lb/>
to his memory . <lb/>
The Bar arid a number of citizens met <lb/>
In the Court ft <lb/>
; at S o'clock, and in absence of Judge <lb/>
statement of the New York <lb/>
J Bryan. Hon. J. B. Moore was made <lb/>
of meeting. Col. I. A. <lb/>
for the committee presented the <lb/>
Death, who knocks will <lb/>
hand at the door of the palace and <lb/>
has been at his appointed <lb/>
The affairs of the com <lb/>
puny are shown To be in one <lb/>
condition. Mr. informs <lb/>
Mr. J. D. Church, the general agent <lb/>
North and Carolina, will reach <lb/>
Greenville to-night for the purpose of <lb/>
looking over business for this <lb/>
Died. <lb/>
On Friday the March, at the <lb/>
of her father, Mr. Luke <lb/>
Mrs Mac Phelps. the beloved wire of <lb/>
E. A. Phelps. Mrs. Phelps was born <lb/>
Nov. 11th. and was married in Dec- <lb/>
ember, <lb/>
Her many lovable traits of character <lb/>
had endeared her to all who knew her. <lb/>
She was an affectionate daughter, allied upon to pay this of sad- <lb/>
wife and a warm Mead. To i to tile memory of the senior <lb/>
work. grim monster, not content <lb/>
with plucking from youth <lb/>
and innocence, not with <lb/>
for middle age and robust manhood to <lb/>
satiate, bet invaded the. home of the <lb/>
hoary-haired and aged veteran, and <lb/>
claimed him hi victim while in health, <lb/>
and without one hour's warning no <lb/>
note to call him to duty hereafter. <lb/>
It is with sorrow that we. the <lb/>
of the fraternity, are <lb/>
The famous trial cost <lb/>
county how <lb/>
much the Martin trial cost Pitt. <lb/>
Track lay on the new railroad Is <lb/>
reaching on towards Washington and <lb/>
will soon be completed to that town. <lb/>
Bids will lie received by C. M. Brown. <lb/>
at Washington, for the lease or rent of <lb/>
hotel at Ocracoke. See advertise- <lb/>
Sheriff Tucker sent two colored people <lb/>
to asylum Mon- <lb/>
day. Mr. G. W. Evans was in charge of <lb/>
them. <lb/>
The base hall season opened up here <lb/>
Monday and a club was and <lb/>
began practice. can look for some <lb/>
good ball this summer. <lb/>
is the place to buy <lb/>
your groceries and confections. <lb/>
There was a large crowd in to S it- <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb/>
for at Brown Bros. <lb/>
A . i . every at <lb/>
seven. <lb/>
Try the best cent <lb/>
smoke, at Book <lb/>
Law or no law, the boys keep on <lb/>
cigarettes. <lb/>
roasted coffee only <lb/>
cents per pound at <lb/>
It is almost as dull in news lines as in <lb/>
business circles. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb/>
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
The farmers need a good season of <lb/>
open spring weaklier. <lb/>
The New Home Ma- <lb/>
chines and all parts at Brown <lb/>
Bros. <lb/>
Cleat at her is predicted for April. <lb/>
We hope It will come. <lb/>
Just received 1400 feet Rubber <lb/>
and Leather Belting. <lb/>
The State Sunday School convention <lb/>
Is now in session at New <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb/>
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
Florida has commenced shipping i w- <lb/>
berries. With us they are not <lb/>
yet. <lb/>
Just IND. M- Ferry <lb/>
new at the Old Brick <lb/>
Fob Dancy house <lb/>
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb/>
Three ox teams in company passed up <lb/>
the street Monday morning, two double <lb/>
and one single. <lb/>
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb/>
your appetite when nothing <lb/>
else will. At the Old Brick Store. <lb/>
L. C. Ricks has moved from <lb/>
Goldsboro to Greenville and occupies the <lb/>
house in <lb/>
A- Snow pamphlet, Lit <lb/>
formation and Pat-, <lb/>
Caveats, Trademarks, Copy- <lb/>
rights, etc., may be obtained free <lb/>
at this office- <lb/>
Only little more than a month to town <lb/>
election. It's most time to begin look- <lb/>
candidates. <lb/>
All parties who have tobacco to <lb/>
baH can save <lb/>
and freight by <lb/>
the house Saturdays <lb/>
where will good prices. <lb/>
Scraps particularly wanted. <lb/>
See beautiful Millinery <lb/>
Goods at Mrs. Fannie Joyner's. <lb/>
is bow busy receiving and die- <lb/>
playing large ad prettiest <lb/>
fine of Hats, <lb/>
Notions, Embroideries <lb/>
Sunday School at Allen's School <lb/>
House will be opened again on next Sun- <lb/>
day at p. u. of community art <lb/>
invited to be present. <lb/>
Mr. W. II. Harrington us a <lb/>
large collard stalk that is four and a half <lb/>
feet long and crooKed at the top end like <lb/>
a walking stick. <lb/>
The remark is frequent that this Is an <lb/>
unusually late spring. Despite this we <lb/>
hope the year will prove an excellent one <lb/>
for all kinds of crops. <lb/>
The game law . effect <lb/>
on 15th prohibits the shooting of <lb/>
robins as well as other game n- <lb/>
The should take warn-<lb/>
Evangelist Fife has just closed a <lb/>
did meeting in Wilson. Good results <lb/>
follow his work and we regret that bis <lb/>
engagement for Greenville had to be <lb/>
Last week Mr. Pender received a card <lb/>
from South Carolina about, making some <lb/>
tobacco flues for in the section <lb/>
of that State from which the <lb/>
cation came. <lb/>
bonnet given by the ladies <lb/>
Of the Methodist church last Tuesday <lb/>
evening was very interesting. Mr. <lb/>
Edgar Buck won the prize for trimming <lb/>
the best hat. <lb/>
Three months of the year gone and <lb/>
nothing done ill the way of improvements <lb/>
in Greenville beyond what had been <lb/>
already started. Wonder If such is to <lb/>
be the record for the year. <lb/>
M. R. Lang talks to read- <lb/>
to-day on a supplement. He has too <lb/>
many goods for the room in bis store and <lb/>
will make a clearance sale to reduce <lb/>
stock. Lookout for the bargains he <lb/>
offers. <lb/>
It is evidence you are In <lb/>
if you fail to read the advertisement of <lb/>
W. II. White to-day. He has a brand <lb/>
new stock of general merchandise which <lb/>
he says will be sold just as low as <lb/>
goods can be had. Give him a call. <lb/>
Last Sunday afternoon at the Forbes <lb/>
School house, Tarboro road, services <lb/>
were held in memory of Mrs. Jacob <lb/>
conducted by Mr. J. White. <lb/>
Superintendent of the Sunday at <lb/>
that place. Remarks were also made <lb/>
by Revs. G. F. Smith and A. D. Hunter- <lb/>
the bereaved family <lb/>
deepest sympathy. <lb/>
we extend <lb/>
our <lb/>
B. <lb/>
Cheap Stationery. <lb/>
A lot of the nicest tablets ever offered <lb/>
for sale in this town received at the Re- <lb/>
Store last week. We also <lb/>
received a nice line of memorandum and <lb/>
account books, ledgers from to <lb/>
pages, day books, etc We <lb/>
high envelopes at cents a pack or <lb/>
at cents by the box, good note paper <lb/>
six for cents, three quires letter <lb/>
paper cents, legal and fools cap at <lb/>
cents a quire, pen points o dozen. <lb/>
white I cents a dozen, la fill <lb/>
ink stands at from to cents. <lb/>
Time for Action. <lb/>
It is time the county executive com- <lb/>
were preparing their call for <lb/>
township and county conventions to <lb/>
select delegates to the State convention <lb/>
May 18th. There is much important <lb/>
work for Democrats to do they <lb/>
need to be getting at it. <lb/>
Nailed Up. <lb/>
A farmer told as other day that <lb/>
one of his neighbors had a cow to get In <lb/>
a When -taken out cow was <lb/>
so weak that she could not stand up. In <lb/>
order to make her the owner took <lb/>
some plank and and nailed her <lb/>
so that she not move. As soon as <lb/>
the cow <lb/>
he turned oat the <lb/>
Southern Ba at it t Convention, <lb/>
The Coast Line will sell round <lb/>
trip tickets for Southern Baptist <lb/>
Convention at Atlanta, Ga., May th to <lb/>
at rates as <lb/>
14.00; Wilson, M; <lb/>
11.0; Weldon, <lb/>
Tarboro, 115.00; <lb/>
Motet. <lb/>
May ts <lb/>
Religious Notes. <lb/>
Services in all the churches Sunday. <lb/>
Rev. H. a <lb/>
minister will preach In Elliott's Hall on <lb/>
second Sunday April. <lb/>
Rev. Dr. Morton. Presbyterian <lb/>
will preach in Elliott's Hall next <lb/>
Monday night, April 4th. at tie usual <lb/>
hour. <lb/>
Father held service in the <lb/>
church here Sunday at <lb/>
o'clock, and mass Monday morning at <lb/>
o'clock. <lb/>
A cornet has been added to the choir <lb/>
of the Baptist church, which makes much <lb/>
improvement in the music. It is played <lb/>
by Mr. Stephen <lb/>
Rev. G. F. Smith will a pro- <lb/>
meeting in the <lb/>
next Rev. If. II. Tuttle, of <lb/>
Tarboro, is expected to assist him. All <lb/>
Christians of the community should In- <lb/>
themselves in the success of <lb/>
meeting and pray tor the conversion <lb/>
of sinners. <lb/>
Superior Court. <lb/>
The present term of Pitt Superior <lb/>
Court ha disposed of a large amount of <lb/>
business. The criminal docket com- <lb/>
Friday, the motion docket <lb/>
day morning, and the civil docket was . <lb/>
taken up Monday, that docket now <lb/>
the attention of the Court. <lb/>
Upon the criminal docket the follow- <lb/>
cases were for trial and dis- <lb/>
posed <lb/>
W. S. affray, no. guilty. <lb/>
Tip assault, sen- <lb/>
for three in penitentiary, <lb/>
notice of appeal. <lb/>
Jesse Phillips and Moses Carr. affray, <lb/>
guilty, fined ten each an costs. <lb/>
II. W. Hell, injury to live stock, <lb/>
judgment suspended upon payment <lb/>
costs and payment of five dollars to <lb/>
owner of stock. <lb/>
Howell pleads <lb/>
judgment suspended upon payment of <lb/>
John W. Carson, on Sun- <lb/>
day, pleads judgment suspended. <lb/>
E. M Turner, assault with <lb/>
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment <lb/>
pended on payment of costs. <lb/>
Charles disposing of <lb/>
gaged property, not guilty. <lb/>
J. B. disposing of <lb/>
gaged <lb/>
suspended. <lb/>
Elias Daniel and Jack Moore, affray, <lb/>
continued as to Daniel; Moore guilty <lb/>
lined and co. ts. <lb/>
Zeb Calvin Dawson, <lb/>
affray, plead guilty, both confined in jail <lb/>
for sixty <lb/>
John W. Carson, selling liquor on Sun- <lb/>
day, pleads guilty, judgment suspended. <lb/>
J. W. Perkins, assault and battery, <lb/>
pleads guilty, for judgment, mo- <lb/>
continued, defendant to pay costs. <lb/>
Joseph Dupree, affray, guilty, sixty <lb/>
days in jail with authority to hire out. <lb/>
Hoyt Fleming, larceny, guilty, twelve <lb/>
mouths in penitentiary. <lb/>
Charles Harris, of not <lb/>
guilty. <lb/>
larceny, guilty, twelve <lb/>
months In penitentiary. <lb/>
C. T. Savage, selling liquor where pro- <lb/>
by statute, pleads gully, judgment <lb/>
payment of costs. <lb/>
Buck, larceny, guilty, two years <lb/>
in penitentiary, <lb/>
Sam assault with deadly <lb/>
on, motion for coin <lb/>
until term. <lb/>
Delia Briley, assault, guilty, one pen- <lb/>
and costs. <lb/>
Bunt assault with deadly <lb/>
weapon, pleads days In jail <lb/>
with authority to Commissioners to hire <lb/>
out. <lb/>
J. B. disposing of. <lb/>
g property, <lb/>
went suspended,, <lb/>
New Musts. <lb/>
Collection of Popular as <lb/>
arranged and play by Mrs. Joe Per- <lb/>
son at the Southern <lb/>
Waltz and <lb/>
the Boatman <lb/>
bet my In Low <lb/>
Carry Me <lb/>
and several others, in ail, <lb/>
pieces. This is In regular <lb/>
tern, and la emphatically <lb/>
for the <lb/>
is she pie, bat brilliant <lb/>
enough to be flayed try any one. Price <lb/>
fl. Also a of the Blue <lb/>
Alsatian with two of the <lb/>
add, <lb/>
teats., The<lb/>
our local Bar. Col. George W. <lb/>
Johnston Is no more. No longer will he <lb/>
mingle in the scenes and strife of the <lb/>
Court where his clarion voice has <lb/>
so long and often been heard and whose <lb/>
thrilling eloquence and wise counsel will <lb/>
echo back from the corridors of time and <lb/>
give inspiration to followers of the <lb/>
honorable profession to which he be- <lb/>
longed. <lb/>
manly is in the dust. <lb/>
His voice is forever hushed. <lb/>
His soul is with the Gods we <lb/>
Those who knew him liked him. He <lb/>
was generous kind. He <lb/>
leaves a host of few. if any. en- <lb/>
To his wife and ti lends <lb/>
we. the of his chosen <lb/>
extend our sincere sympathy and <lb/>
lordliest feelings, and with that <lb/>
and brotherly love that ever char- <lb/>
fraternity. May He who <lb/>
fie winds to tho lamb <lb/>
comfort them in this their sad <lb/>
therefore, that a of <lb/>
these resolutions be upon the <lb/>
minutes of this Court, and n copy of the <lb/>
same be sent the Secretary of this <lb/>
meeting his bereaved family and that <lb/>
a copy be published the <lb/>
Reflector. <lb/>
I. A. <lb/>
K. Mm Hi . <lb/>
Committee. <lb/>
Speeches on the resolutions were made <lb/>
by Col. skinner. Capt. <lb/>
Col. I. A. Sugg and Hon. J. E. <lb/>
Moore, each one of the speakers <lb/>
high tributes to the deceased. The <lb/>
were adopted by unanimous <lb/>
and the meeting adjourned. <lb/>
MAJ. HARDING FOR REGISTER. <lb/>
Black Jack, Pitt Co. N. C-, <lb/>
March 29th, 1892. <lb/>
Editor of <lb/>
While in your town week, I <lb/>
was highly gratified by tho <lb/>
that a prominent name <lb/>
your midst had been mentioned as <lb/>
a probable candidate for the office <lb/>
of Register of Deeds for this <lb/>
county. Iain glad to see that the <lb/>
people are to recognize <lb/>
the right and the importance of <lb/>
expressing their own choice. <lb/>
They are more apt to center <lb/>
competent reputable men, <lb/>
than are frequently forced upon <lb/>
us by cliques. It is neither my <lb/>
wish not intention to disparage <lb/>
the present of any <lb/>
office; but the fact is too potent, to <lb/>
be overlooked or ignored, that <lb/>
some of our county, as well as <lb/>
higher officials may lie much bet <lb/>
tar qualified for other <lb/>
those now occupy. <lb/>
Maj. Harding has earned <lb/>
as well as deserved the implicit <lb/>
confidence and highest respect of <lb/>
all who know him. Ho is, and <lb/>
always has been in cordial <lb/>
with the best interests of his <lb/>
county and State. He has earn- <lb/>
unremittingly and success- <lb/>
fully labored for the industrial, <lb/>
intellectual and material develop- <lb/>
of the people. Especially <lb/>
has his connection with the <lb/>
Bureau of the State been <lb/>
efficient, eliciting <lb/>
the highest praise from his <lb/>
and deepest gratitude <lb/>
from all who appreciate its <lb/>
benefits <lb/>
I have an intimate ac- <lb/>
with Mr. Harding for <lb/>
more than forty years, and can <lb/>
reservedly say that I esteem him <lb/>
one among the very best men with <lb/>
whom my good fortune has thrown <lb/>
me. He is universally regarded as <lb/>
a man of very fine attainments <lb/>
highly esteemed by all who <lb/>
know him, eminently qualified <lb/>
for the position spoken of, and <lb/>
above all of unblemished moral <lb/>
character. <lb/>
By all the interests stake, by <lb/>
all the rules that obtain a <lb/>
cal party, we in tills section, near <lb/>
where he was and raised, sin- <lb/>
and confidently hope that <lb/>
he will receive the Democratic <lb/>
nomination at the approaching <lb/>
For <lb/>
ft Is reported that Mrs. Joe <lb/>
Remedy Is a preventive and cure for the <lb/>
grip. We are prepared to <lb/>
as it is an medicine <lb/>
diseases. and Goldsboro, <lb/>
grip has been quite prevalent <lb/>
for some time, Mrs. Joe <lb/>
Is used almost exclusively, and such <lb/>
has proved its beneficial that It is <lb/>
upon by community a a <lb/>
for grip in all stages forms <lb/>
It also prevents disease from <lb/>
those who the in lime. <lb/>
Weldon News. <lb/>
The Cheapest Fertilizer Yet. <lb/>
To make Cotton at the present <lb/>
prices you must use cheap <lb/>
Chemicals are the cheapest yet. <lb/>
For sale by G. E. Harris, call <lb/>
him before buying. <lb/>
If you fail to see the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
is now offered by------ <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
------1 have just the to suit <lb/>
f GENTLEMEN, <lb/>
LADY, <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER. <lb/>
FARMER, <lb/>
ELSE. <lb/>
If you want anything to or <lb/>
to eat, or any article to go the house, <lb/>
call on O all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock in the house. <lb/>
My prices will be found as low as <lb/>
able can lie sold at. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
Two doors A. cu- <lb/>
neat Five Points. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Raving been appointed by the <lb/>
Court Receiver of <lb/>
St notice I <lb/>
given to all persons to said <lb/>
to make- <lb/>
payment the <lb/>
and all having <lb/>
Greenville Store must tile <lb/>
the payment properly <lb/>
on or before the nth t April <lb/>
I next. It. TYSON. <lb/>
Receiver of ;. Store. <lb/>
This 23rd day of MM. <lb/>
to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified the Sit. <lb/>
I i of Pitt county, of <lb/>
nodes is to persons In- <lb/>
to t estate to mike immediate <lb/>
payment to Ike all per- <lb/>
sons having estate <lb/>
must present same for on <lb/>
or the of or <lb/>
this notice will be plead in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This nay of Ms., 1892. <lb/>
Motto<lb/>
of Peggy Cherry. <lb/>
SHUT-, <lb/>
LIVERY, PEED AND SALE <lb/>
I removed my stables from Five <lb/>
Points to the formerly <lb/>
pied by Mr. If. Keel and will <lb/>
constantly Keep on hand n <lb/>
full line of <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
I have beautiful and fancy for <lb/>
tho livery and can suit the most <lb/>
ions. I will ran in connection a DRAY- <lb/>
BUSINESS, solicit a share of <lb/>
your patronage. Call and convinced. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
The ever fir <lb/>
TOBACCO. <lb/>
Ocracoke Hotel <lb/>
Sealed proposals for renting Ocracoke <lb/>
Hotel or three years will be <lb/>
and opened on April 8th, 1892. <lb/>
The reserve the right to accept <lb/>
or reject or bids. <lb/>
C. M. BROWN. <lb/>
N. C <lb/>
Pin Co n. c. <lb/>
C C. COBB. <lb/>
Pitt Co <lb/>
T. M. GIL IV <lb/>
C- N C <lb/>
Bros., <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
AND <lb/>
convention. <lb/>
The Orphan's Home. <lb/>
The Committee of the Orphan <lb/>
Home, I O. O. F-, me, in <lb/>
Tuesday, for the <lb/>
of inspecting the building <lb/>
Just completed for h <lb/>
Home by Messrs. Porter God win- <lb/>
The building gives entire <lb/>
Tee committee la <lb/>
of obeying the of the <lb/>
Grand Lodge, and to open the <lb/>
Home at for tho <lb/>
of orphans. We receive <lb/>
a few. six girls <lb/>
With this wot in view the com- <lb/>
desires to re the es <lb/>
of a Superintendent and Matron <lb/>
man and wife preferred. <lb/>
cants will <lb/>
undersigned at Goldsboro, giving <lb/>
their qualifications in full, <lb/>
stating tho most terms <lb/>
Commission Merchants. <lb/>
of COTTON b. <lb/>
have- had years ex <lb/>
the and are <lb/>
to handle to <lb/>
advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
will and <lb/>
careful attention <lb/>
With it yon have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your barn, <lb/>
and it <lb/>
All Danger of <lb/>
Two cures pet week can be <lb/>
made in the same <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at one lime in <lb/>
the same barn. Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For Farther particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
ft PHELPS, <lb/>
Greenville, H. V. <lb/>
this when you write. <lb/>
of Land to Pay Dibs. <lb/>
Pursuant to an order from the <lb/>
of I'm county, the under <lb/>
Sell to the highest bidder, <lb/>
cash, .-it she House, in <lb/>
county, at oil Mon- <lb/>
day, the day of April. the fol <lb/>
lowing real estate, which <lb/>
John died <lb/>
A tract of land lying on north <lb/>
In Bethel town- <lb/>
ship, county, of Caro <lb/>
Una. adjoining the lands of M. Mu- <lb/>
A. <lb/>
banning, the and others, <lb/>
known m lots No. u and T, in tin- lands <lb/>
of the late John la-lug <lb/>
the laud devised to R. <lb/>
and . R. in the will of the <lb/>
said containing seven <lb/>
or less <lb/>
The of said tract of land de- <lb/>
vised to John A. <lb/>
by adjoining <lb/>
that James R. sold <lb/>
to William containing <lb/>
more or lea. <lb/>
S. The tract of hind known as the <lb/>
land and <lb/>
by him to Ann K <lb/>
acres, or <lb/>
adjoining the land of John A. <lb/>
The share of said tract of laud de- <lb/>
vised and bequeathed to W. Walt- <lb/>
hunt by the will of John <lb/>
sores, more or <lb/>
adjoining the land of Ann K. Car- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
This March <lb/>
R. <lb/>
John deed <lb/>
Ry J. II. <lb/>
I- direct from <lb/>
PIANOS, <lb/>
and <lb/>
nil<lb/>
TO <lb/>
If you want to save <lb/>
Fifty <lb/>
ill tin- purchase of a <lb/>
Tun to n Dollars <lb/>
in ill.- of in organ <lb/>
ADOLPH <lb/>
ft. c. <lb/>
fir Carolina, <lb/>
Who Is now <lb/>
the <lb/>
tilt A Ml. II <lb/>
I for tone, <lb/>
Journals <lb/>
Ma la Paul l. who is at this <lb/>
lime one of the boat mechanics and In- <lb/>
of tin- day. Thirteen new <lb/>
on <lb/>
Also the A If. <lb/>
PIANO has sold by <lb/>
him the pant yens in eastern <lb/>
part of state an I time has <lb/>
entire satisfaction. The <lb/>
Piano Jim me i will ti. at from <lb/>
iii Oak, <lb/>
or <lb/>
Also the <lb/>
from to f in solid or <lb/>
Ten years experience in the music <lb/>
s has I him to handle <lb/>
nothing bin standard good- and he does <lb/>
not to say lie sell nay <lb/>
per cent, <lb/>
cheaper than other agents arc now offer <lb/>
lag. <lb/>
Refer to all banks in K Carolina. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
Re virtue of a or the Clerk of <lb/>
the Superior of Pitt v <lb/>
r .,, t. or <lb/>
I. Lewie, Harriet Ann <lb/>
Lewis and the <lb/>
will sell to.- cash before the House <lb/>
door in Greenville on Thursday, the <lb/>
day of April, the following <lb/>
piece or parcel of laud lying In <lb/>
B township, Pitt county, adjoin- <lb/>
tho lands of Joseph II. Clark. Thomas <lb/>
Thomas, the Harriet Bunting land, the <lb/>
land of and con- <lb/>
acre, more or less. <lb/>
U. BULLOCK, <lb/>
F. O. <lb/>
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS. <lb/>
Should cold, wet or dry, <lb/>
Before it ends our Piling Goods we'll <lb/>
and Attractive Line of Men's, Hoy's and Youth's Clothing <lb/>
r. <lb/>
-i <lb/>
r a <lb/>
IS S<lb/>
------A NEW AND LARGE LINE OP----- <lb/>
JUST RECEIVED.<lb/>
C, <lb/>
OM w. <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS. <lb/>
is a deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
aid we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
them a merry chase and they finally give <lb/>
it up or come to grief. <lb/>
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb/>
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb/>
and Notions in the lead. <lb/>
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb/>
is- <lb/>
merchant, <lb/>
--------AND <lb/>
Country Produce. <lb/>
Bring mo 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 n in thing to ship I will attend toil for you on a small commission. <lb/>
Call and eM me. <lb/>
JNO. S. CONGLETON. <lb/>
FARMERS; <lb/>
LET ME HAVE YOUR <lb/>
ORDERS <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
L. W. DAVIS. <lb/>
FINE <lb/>
HAVANA CIGARS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
the m-it m <lb/>
the at <lb/>
Oaf. <lb/>
NORFOLK. <lb/>
Roanoke Avenue. <lb/>
VIRGINIA. <lb/>
TOBACCO FLOES <lb/>
I want to begin in time this year. <lb/>
L. H. PENDER, <lb/>
For S. E. PENDER A CO <lb/>
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1888. <lb/>
THE COTTON MARKET is lower now than any former period <lb/>
la about forty years; this has been brought about by the <lb/>
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large <lb/>
accumulation of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will <lb/>
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the <lb/>
must be necessarily and if any of our friends, <lb/>
who have would like to raise money same and hold it <lb/>
longer, we are to them to per bale <lb/>
and hold May or June if so desired- <lb/>
, Very truly, <lb/>
VAUGHAN A <lb/>
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb/>
Car load Mis <lb/>
Car load Side Meat. <lb/>
low all <lb/>
Huts. <lb/>
Cases <lb/>
Ca-es Soap. <lb/>
Cherries and <lb/>
rail line Hoods. <lb/>
Boxes Crackers. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
no Rico Molasses. <lb/>
So Barr-ls <lb/>
S A Ax <lb/>
W Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb/>
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb/>
Mack. <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
HARRIS,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017540_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
I- <lb/>
SIMPLE IN CONSTRUCTION. <lb/>
T I <lb/>
D. ITS SKILL- <lb/>
I be is an Instrument r <lb/>
We out <lb/>
w theories an i <lb/>
line i i ii with <lb/>
anal i lb- <lb/>
gasps <lb/>
i-. s <lb/>
at will. <lb/>
is limply impaired vitality, <lb/>
constantly adds to the vitality <lb/>
only in way, <lb/>
to throw Hit trouble. <lb/>
A I-nag-- book. treatment <lb/>
Containing t. fee <lb/>
lions, and for of all diseases <lb/>
mailed free on application. Address. <lb/>
ATLANTIC I CO., <lb/>
D. C. S. C. <lb/>
Atlanta. Ga. <lb/>
PATENTS <lb/>
ail the <lb/>
Patent Urn, -e or in tun Courts attend -d <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We are Patent <lb/>
flee engaged in Patents Exclusively, a i <lb/>
ran obtain patent in ml time than <lb/>
more remote from <lb/>
the model r dram-tag i- sent <lb/>
advise a to free of charge <lb/>
and nuke no change are <lb/>
intent-. <lb/>
We refer, here, the Poet Master. In <lb/>
of ill.- II Older Did., and i <lb/>
of the U. S. Office. l <lb/>
circular, advise reference I <lb/>
own Suit.- or.-. <lb/>
t address. C. A. x Co., <lb/>
O. C. <lb/>
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb/>
For Shaving, C in . and Dressing <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
the Opera Mouse, at which place <lb/>
have recently and where I have <lb/>
even-thing In line <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AT <lb/>
TO MAKE A <lb/>
with all the Improved appliances; <lb/>
and comfortable chairs. <lb/>
for work outside if my <lb/>
promptly executed. Very i <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
Prep ton baa been In ma eve <lb/>
jeers, end wherever ha <lb/>
j i-n in steady demand. it baa <lb/>
by physicians all Are, <lb/>
all other es. attention t <lb/>
the i need <lb/>
for year failed, Ointment la o <lb/>
long ding and the <lb/>
stitch it baa obtained la owing entirely <lb/>
a its efficacy, u but effort bar <lb/>
ever made to bring <lb/>
public. One bottle of this will <lb/>
be sent to any address, on of On <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box tree, <lb/>
to All Or h r <lb/>
promptly attended to. all or <lb/>
pan and to <lb/>
F. <lb/>
Sole Proprietor, <lb/>
Greenville, X. <lb/>
t . .-. 11-1 <lb/>
r. V- f. a r t <lb/>
Ian r ii-d ad la at <lb/>
at m f <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
j Ll t aV P. P. P. Mi KM <lb/>
Block, GA. <lb/>
For -sale at Wooten's Drug Store <lb/>
on sad<lb/>
r r and <lb/>
feat b If <lb/>
OUR CHRISTIAN AGE. <lb/>
CHURCHES GAINING FASTER IN SPIRIT- <lb/>
POWER THAN EVER BEFORE. <lb/>
The Prophecy Credited to Col- <lb/>
Activity <lb/>
Now Since the Ago. <lb/>
Detroit, March . Thomas <lb/>
Dixon, Jr., preached in tonight <lb/>
.- ever assembled here. He <lb/>
on night in the Star <lb/>
to an of people <lb/>
and then consented to remain in the <lb/>
city over Sunday and preach. Plymouth <lb/>
where the service was held, is <lb/>
great tabernacle of Detroit, <lb/>
the largest church in the state. <lb/>
The pastor, Rev. L. Morgan Wood, <lb/>
preaches to the largest regular <lb/>
in the city and one of the largest <lb/>
in the entire west. The audience packed <lb/>
the great tabernacle this evening to <lb/>
overflowing and several hundred were <lb/>
tillable to gain an entrance. Promptly <lb/>
at Mr. Wood ordered the doors <lb/>
closed and then the great throng, led <lb/>
simply by a and <lb/>
joined in singing our rousing national <lb/>
hymn After the opening <lb/>
exorcises Rev. Mr. Dixon delivered a <lb/>
most powerful and eloquent sermon on <lb/>
He said, <lb/>
from the text, yo cannot <lb/>
discern the sign of the <lb/>
xvi, <lb/>
A few years ago Colonel is <lb/>
reported to have uttered the prophecy <lb/>
that within ten years from the time he <lb/>
spoke there would be two theaters erect- <lb/>
ed where one church would be built It <lb/>
is remarkable that a man of the <lb/>
of the distinguished infidel could <lb/>
work himself up to such a pitch of <lb/>
blind incapacity that he could <lb/>
utter so remarkably stupid a prediction. <lb/>
It only the height and depth of <lb/>
the pit of blind folly into which <lb/>
dice can lead a so called freethinker. <lb/>
Any man who labors beneath a <lb/>
of prejudice as incapacitates <lb/>
his judgment can in no sense claim to <lb/>
be a freethinker. He is a slave of slaves. <lb/>
THE OLD <lb/>
We cannot imagine how the colonel <lb/>
could have the check to face the world <lb/>
today after such a prophecy, except that <lb/>
he had sublime confidence in the <lb/>
of great public to whom he <lb/>
his prophecy. I suppose he relied <lb/>
upon the same power which an old col- <lb/>
man of whom I heard in the <lb/>
south did, when indicted in a court of <lb/>
justice. judge asked him if he had <lb/>
any lawyer. <lb/>
He replied, <lb/>
The judge asked him if he desired one <lb/>
to appointed to defend him. <lb/>
He replied, <lb/>
The judge asked him what ho pro- <lb/>
posed to do then. <lb/>
The old man replied, I'd <lb/>
my case to de ob de <lb/>
Colonel must have had a <lb/>
boundless faith in the fathomless depths <lb/>
of the of tho public ho ad- <lb/>
dressed, or else his own ignorance was <lb/>
unfathomable. We are all liable to <lb/>
draw wide of the fact, if we <lb/>
base our estimate of the world upon our <lb/>
own limited circle of acquaintances. <lb/>
Sometimes when we know one or two <lb/>
people who differ with us in religion, or <lb/>
indeed a subject of vital importance, <lb/>
we ire too apt to feel if we are out- <lb/>
numbered in our acquaintances, that <lb/>
are outnumbered in the world. Many <lb/>
of feel, when we surrounded in <lb/>
our daily work by scoffers and <lb/>
believers, that all the world has deserted <lb/>
the and that there is no hope for <lb/>
the future. So the colonel knows a few <lb/>
agnostics and and basing his <lb/>
prophecy on his own limited <lb/>
he predicted the downfall of <lb/>
Christianity. Let us lift vision a <lb/>
little beyond this narrow view. <lb/>
In the that u <lb/>
file of <lb/>
We in clear outline a new world <lb/>
whose heart is nearer the heart of Jesus <lb/>
Christ than that of any age before seen <lb/>
in human <lb/>
GROWTH. <lb/>
are led to this conclusion <lb/>
because of the remarkable progress in <lb/>
organic church life within the period of <lb/>
years covered by this remarkably stupid <lb/>
prophecy of Colonel <lb/>
Within precise period the <lb/>
of i- lurch life in America has <lb/>
been the most remarkable in many re- <lb/>
in our history. Within this past <lb/>
twenty-five years the number of comma- <lb/>
in Christian churches in Amer- <lb/>
has nearly per cent, <lb/>
faster than the increase of population. <lb/>
The increase of our population within <lb/>
that period has been of the miracles <lb/>
in the development of n lions. The <lb/>
progress in organic church life in the <lb/>
of the numbers of <lb/>
has been equally remarkable. Think of <lb/>
a prophecy that within ten years there <lb/>
would lie two theaters constructed for <lb/>
every church The period of this <lb/>
has expired. There arc about <lb/>
theaters in New York city with a <lb/>
population of There are over <lb/>
churches. There were more <lb/>
built in New York city last year than <lb/>
there arc theaters in the whole city. The <lb/>
Methodist denomination alone built hist <lb/>
year in America over I <lb/>
not that there are <lb/>
in America. <lb/>
THE SEW CHURCH TOWERS. <lb/>
Within this precise period of agnostic <lb/>
prophecy the church has with- <lb/>
in itself powers hitherto unknown in the <lb/>
of the world. Within this period <lb/>
the magnificent organization as <lb/>
tho Bang's has been born. It <lb/>
now hundreds of thousands of <lb/>
consecrated women, their hand <lb/>
of f. and love, touch human society <lb/>
at almost possible point of contact. <lb/>
Within th period has been the <lb/>
Young Society of Christian En- <lb/>
over a million active <lb/>
members. Such an enlistment of the <lb/>
forces of manhood and woman- <lb/>
hood in active organic church life is a <lb/>
development or power of which the <lb/>
never dreamed twenty-five years <lb/>
ago. <lb/>
V, this period has been born tho <lb/>
Young Men's Christian association, that <lb/>
now covers the civilized world with its <lb/>
thousands of buildings and thousands of <lb/>
organizations and thousands of doors <lb/>
swinging wide open in all the centers of <lb/>
metropolitan life. Into those doors pass <lb/>
and millions of young men. I <lb/>
mention only these three among the <lb/>
scores of such organizations that have <lb/>
been developed along lines of <lb/>
that are new to church work and were <lb/>
forces in that past which pro- <lb/>
ceded this remarkably stupid prophecy. <lb/>
OF <lb/>
this very period the <lb/>
development of modern missions baa <lb/>
reached a point of which fathers <lb/>
never dreamed. <lb/>
Tho advance has been simply <lb/>
Every nation of earth is now <lb/>
open to the propaganda of Christian <lb/>
doctrine, and every nation of earth has <lb/>
its Christian missionary proclaiming <lb/>
gospel. Within have <lb/>
had remarkable developments as <lb/>
tea thousand natives a single year, <lb/>
and the remarkable developments of the <lb/>
great Inland mission in Chum, <lb/>
hundreds of <lb/>
yearly the erring of the <lb/>
Christian backed by no <lb/>
a. i <lb/>
To take illustration at own <lb/>
doors, within our own of New <lb/>
York, there a single with no <lb/>
rich men in its membership, that <lb/>
out this year Into the mission field <lb/>
missionaries. This organization, which <lb/>
is only a few years old, has established <lb/>
thirty-three missionaries in India, tho <lb/>
Congo Free State, China, Japan and <lb/>
and within tho past six months <lb/>
has been contributed toward <lb/>
furthering the Gospel in heathen lands. <lb/>
I refer to the remarkable work conduct- <lb/>
ed by tho Rev. A. B. Simpson. <lb/>
UNITY. <lb/>
growth of unity in tho <lb/>
Christian world within this period of <lb/>
agnostic has been moat re- <lb/>
markable. <lb/>
Twenty-five years ago the Protestant <lb/>
were busy fighting one an- <lb/>
other. Now they are busy seeking to <lb/>
co-operate with each other in fighting <lb/>
evil. Co-operation in aggressive church <lb/>
work is one of tho orders of the day. <lb/>
The temper of the Protestant world is <lb/>
most accurately expressed by the <lb/>
Professor Austin Phelps, of Andover. <lb/>
He was a blue <lb/>
I thought Episcopacy a sir. and <lb/>
of the devil. I now find a <lb/>
great deal of piety everywhere where <lb/>
Christ is owned as tho living head. I <lb/>
work because I must <lb/>
work somewhere, and am neither wise <lb/>
nor strong enough to work alone, and <lb/>
am not such a fool as to throw away <lb/>
nine-tenths of my power for good by <lb/>
trying to work in ecclesiastical solitude. <lb/>
But I could work just as well in half a <lb/>
dozen other organic forms of church <lb/>
life. There is an Episcopal tempera- <lb/>
and a Methodist temperament and <lb/>
a Calvinistic temperament, from which <lb/>
sects grow by natural evolution. At the <lb/>
core of character they mean little <lb/>
than red hair or a birthmark. The mas- <lb/>
tor will know his own only by the name <lb/>
in the <lb/>
There has come likewise to be a better <lb/>
understanding between the Catholic and <lb/>
Protestant world. Today, if any move- <lb/>
is started in great cities look- <lb/>
toward the destruction of evil and <lb/>
the uplifting of society as a whole, you <lb/>
may count with certainty on the support <lb/>
of a large and influential element in tho <lb/>
Catholic priesthood. They will be found <lb/>
by your side on the platform and co- <lb/>
operating with you in every way to fur- <lb/>
the common cause. <lb/>
Within this period we have witnessed <lb/>
the remarkable reconciliation of science <lb/>
and revealed religion. Twenty-five year <lb/>
ago the church militant shivered at the <lb/>
mention of science and men timidly <lb/>
thought the remarkable develop- <lb/>
of modern science threatened the <lb/>
foundations of tho church. Today science- <lb/>
is the servant of Christian truth. Today <lb/>
science is the handmaiden of religion. <lb/>
Today tho preacher's library contains as <lb/>
many books of science as books of <lb/>
and theology. <lb/>
SEW LIKES OF BATTLE. <lb/>
display of the power of <lb/>
adjustment to new conditions, shown by <lb/>
the church within this period, has given <lb/>
evidence of its immortal power and its <lb/>
immortal destiny. <lb/>
Within this period tho great social <lb/>
problem has become the problem of the <lb/>
age, and tho church has shown that <lb/>
within its heart there the principle <lb/>
of salvation not only for the individual, <lb/>
but for society. The pope of Rome has <lb/>
swung the greet ecclesiastical machine <lb/>
of the ages into line of battle. He <lb/>
champions today the cause of the masses. <lb/>
He lays his hand on the church in Franco <lb/>
and says to the clergy, cause of <lb/>
the republic is tho cause of the <lb/>
And whereas once tho ecclesiastical ma- <lb/>
chine stood for monarchy and <lb/>
it has, today, adjusted itself on <lb/>
the platform of triumphant democracy <lb/>
that is to <lb/>
The church of Christ has developed a <lb/>
liberality in giving within this period <lb/>
such as the leaders of church life and <lb/>
mission work did not dream of twenty- <lb/>
five years ago. Last year gave about <lb/>
to home missions and <lb/>
to foreign missions. <lb/>
All along tho line of tho Christian <lb/>
world within this past decade there has <lb/>
been a forward movement. There has <lb/>
been a remarkably forward movement in <lb/>
education. Within our own denomination <lb/>
in the past two years there has given <lb/>
over to the cause of higher <lb/>
education. There has been established <lb/>
the great University of Chicago, which <lb/>
has laid under tribute the scholarship of <lb/>
the world and will be a contribution to <lb/>
the higher education of the whole world. <lb/>
OP THE MASSES. <lb/>
Within this period we have had a re- <lb/>
markable development of evangelism <lb/>
as tho world never saw before. <lb/>
Men believe, sometimes, when they read <lb/>
the past, that the age of Whitfield was <lb/>
the age of power in the of <lb/>
masses. It is not true. The past <lb/>
years has been the age of remark- <lb/>
able development in the <lb/>
of of people. There is a man <lb/>
now at work, whose name many of you <lb/>
do not know, whose meetings far <lb/>
more remarkable in results than any of <lb/>
tho meetings of Whitfield or Wesley. <lb/>
Rev. B. Fay Mills recently held a meet- <lb/>
in tho city of Elizabeth, N. J. There <lb/>
were over professions of faith in <lb/>
those two weeks. All business in the <lb/>
city was suspended. Stores were closed. <lb/>
Thirty-five saloon keepers their <lb/>
and made confession of religion. <lb/>
Mr. Mill-- has just closed a meeting in <lb/>
Cincinnati with results equally as re- <lb/>
markable. night that lie left 10.000 <lb/>
people filed him, taking him by <lb/>
the hand, thanking him for the work he <lb/>
had done, for the blessing he bad brought <lb/>
to their lives. There are scores of men <lb/>
today in the field in active evangelistic <lb/>
work, reaching hundreds and thousands <lb/>
of people whose work is as large as the <lb/>
work of the great evangelists of past <lb/>
It excites no comment today be- <lb/>
cause it is so common. <lb/>
THE FORWARD MOVEMENT. <lb/>
Ill London we have the remarkable <lb/>
developments of a great metropolitan <lb/>
mission work. We see tho Rev. Hugh <lb/>
Price as he starts five years ago <lb/>
without a single member in hall, with <lb/>
no church, and in five years builds a <lb/>
church with nearly members, with <lb/>
four great congregations, a network of <lb/>
charitable and philanthropic endeavor <lb/>
that covers a vast district of the city. <lb/>
In New York and all our great centers, <lb/>
within every denomination there is an <lb/>
aggressive movement looking toward <lb/>
the reaching and the saving of the great <lb/>
masses of the people. <lb/>
Within the precise period of this re- <lb/>
stupid prophecy has been born <lb/>
tho Salvation Army. Twenty-five years <lb/>
ago U seemed that the church lost its <lb/>
grip on the lapsed and lost millions. In <lb/>
response to this need the Salvation <lb/>
Army sprang into existence. Its drum- <lb/>
beat now around the world. Its <lb/>
officers and are numbered by the <lb/>
hundreds of thousands, even by the <lb/>
million. It is lifting up and saving the <lb/>
outcast world. It is laying hand on <lb/>
the great social problem involved, and <lb/>
gives promise today of the <lb/>
of this riddle that the <lb/>
heart of for the past <lb/>
fifty years. <lb/>
THE <lb/>
Christian church has to- <lb/>
day tho meet and powerful <lb/>
ministry in the history of the world. <lb/>
never a time when there <lb/>
were as men in <lb/>
and the <lb/>
today. <lb/>
live, an y nave are to <lb/>
proclaim of its eternal truth. Think <lb/>
of this i for life, that never <lb/>
wearies in to whom defeat or <lb/>
victory ore alike, to whom, therefore, <lb/>
there can lie no thing as defeat. In <lb/>
serried rank, with militant tread, they <lb/>
press with triumphant faith to <lb/>
the goal set by the Great Commander. <lb/>
They march to the waving of unseen <lb/>
banners, to the throb of music <lb/>
by common cars Nothing <lb/>
turns them aside. They are better <lb/>
equipped, better educated and have a <lb/>
firmer grasp of truth than any ministry <lb/>
in the history of the church. Their lives <lb/>
are more spiritual, and therefore their <lb/>
work rests upon a surer foundation than <lb/>
ever before. <lb/>
THE SECRET OF POWER. <lb/>
Tho great ministers of the world today <lb/>
are men not great because of tin ma- <lb/>
chine back of them, great because <lb/>
of inherent spiritual power. Even-, <lb/>
the great ecclesiastical machine i the <lb/>
world this is equally true of the <lb/>
world today. Cardinal Maiming <lb/>
was the typical cardinal of modern <lb/>
times; and Manning's greatness lay not <lb/>
in the fact that he wore the red hat, but <lb/>
in the fact that his life worthy at <lb/>
the highest honor that Rome might con- <lb/>
fer. <lb/>
The ministry of today preaches the <lb/>
strongest, purest, sweetest Gospel, a Gos- <lb/>
closer to the heart of Christ than that <lb/>
of any ago within Christian history. The <lb/>
prophets of God today ore bolder in their <lb/>
utterances than ever before in the his- <lb/>
of Christianity. Their field is wider <lb/>
and their appreciation of the <lb/>
of that field are greater. Tho <lb/>
time was in the past when the court <lb/>
preacher was proclaiming his message <lb/>
before the king. He announced the great <lb/>
truth, men The king <lb/>
made a gesture of impatience, and tho <lb/>
preacher hastened to add, with servile <lb/>
accent, sire, almost If you <lb/>
had gone to Dr. church <lb/>
and heard him deliver his second <lb/>
on the subject of municipal mis- <lb/>
rule in New York, I will guarantee that <lb/>
yon have heard no such accent <lb/>
And there scores of men <lb/>
equally faithful. . <lb/>
INFIDELITY RETREATS. <lb/>
only has Christianity made <lb/>
remarkable progress within this period <lb/>
of agnostic prophecy, but infidelity has <lb/>
beat a retreat. <lb/>
Within this period infidelity has been <lb/>
dying out with a rapidity that is gratify- <lb/>
to the Christian believer, and that <lb/>
must carry dismay to him who rejoices <lb/>
In the creed of destruction. <lb/>
Within this period of <lb/>
years has come the remarkable develop- <lb/>
known as Even <lb/>
Colonel now is <lb/>
His reply to all the great questions is, <lb/>
don't This is a vast retreat <lb/>
from the position occupied in the old <lb/>
days. He need to know. He knew it <lb/>
all. lie asserted his position with <lb/>
dogmatic confidence. Agnosticism is <lb/>
the first rallying point in the retreat of <lb/>
infidelity. It is the cry of uncertainty. <lb/>
It is tho cry of confusion in tho ranks <lb/>
that were solid with vehement de- <lb/>
The growth of the idea of God <lb/>
has been so overwhelming in the thought <lb/>
of this modern world that it is <lb/>
for any man today, outside of a <lb/>
tic asylum, to stand up before an <lb/>
and declare there is no God. No <lb/>
sane man makes such a declaration. <lb/>
Twenty-five years ago it was a common <lb/>
declaration by public men. <lb/>
The state of Kentucky in its old con- <lb/>
had no mention of the name of <lb/>
God. In tho new constitution adopted <lb/>
it a of faith and thanksgiving <lb/>
and prayer. This is not because the <lb/>
modem world is bigoted and demands <lb/>
tho incorporation of religious dogma in <lb/>
law. The age is far more liberal than <lb/>
the ago which made the old <lb/>
This idea of God was incorporated <lb/>
into tho new organic law simply because <lb/>
the heart of the people was so full of the <lb/>
idea that it could not be kept out of the <lb/>
constitution. <lb/>
THE FRENCH <lb/>
France is a nation more <lb/>
than any other in the Old World, and the <lb/>
student of tho civilization of the race <lb/>
will do well to study the history of France <lb/>
first. The French temper is more sub- <lb/>
to sensitive change, indicating lines <lb/>
of progress or retrogression in the his- <lb/>
of thought. Twelve or fifteen years <lb/>
ago France was practically infidel out- <lb/>
side tho Catholic church militant. Tim <lb/>
government Was infidel. The brains of <lb/>
France denied God. Now have what <lb/>
is known as the of <lb/>
France. There has risen a new Chris- <lb/>
The heart and the brain of <lb/>
Franco has swung back to the Christ of <lb/>
Galilee and of Calvary. They have <lb/>
grown y with the materialism of <lb/>
certain scientific schools and of the heart- <lb/>
less negations of tho school of Voltaire. <lb/>
This movement is remarkable in that it <lb/>
has touched the whole life of France, <lb/>
artistic, social, intellectual, and <lb/>
is sweeping it with resistless power. <lb/>
THE NEW ISMS. <lb/>
growth of isms <lb/>
within this period has undermined the <lb/>
foundations of a materialistic philosophy. <lb/>
From the ranks of infidelity and <lb/>
belief of various degrees these anti- <lb/>
materialistic isms have been recruited. <lb/>
Spiritualism numbers its followers by <lb/>
tho thousand and the million. Spirit- <lb/>
is recruited from the ranks of <lb/>
those who have lost faith or who had no <lb/>
faith practically. <lb/>
Within this period have had the <lb/>
remarkable developments of hypnotism <lb/>
and telepathy, which in the minds of <lb/>
hundreds have undermined the basis of <lb/>
matter on which they had before based <lb/>
a denial of Within <lb/>
this period Theosophy has been born. <lb/>
Take two remarkable illustrations <lb/>
and you will see from whence these isms <lb/>
are recruited. <lb/>
Hare, the distinguished physician, <lb/>
was a noted infidel. He declared that <lb/>
he had analyzed the human body and <lb/>
knew its component parts. He declared <lb/>
that man was made of water, <lb/>
lime, flint and don. He de- <lb/>
that this was all there was to <lb/>
man, that he knew reduced him <lb/>
in his retort. Dr. Hare was inveigled <lb/>
into spiritualistic He deserted <lb/>
his former position and solemnly swore <lb/>
that he had conversed with the <lb/>
bodied spirits of his ancestors <lb/>
Mrs. was the high priestess of <lb/>
infidelity in the British empire. With <lb/>
Charles she stumped the em- <lb/>
in the propaganda of infidel ideas. <lb/>
She denied God and ridiculed the super- <lb/>
natural. Mis. recently in <lb/>
New York as the high of <lb/>
Theosophy, and solemnly declared that <lb/>
she had received a letter from the dis- <lb/>
embodied or re-embodied spirit of the <lb/>
ex-high priestess, Mme. I The <lb/>
development of modern thought, in other <lb/>
words, has undermined and destroyed <lb/>
the foundations of materialistic<lb/>
THE OUTSIDE CHURCH. <lb/>
organic church life <lb/>
has advanced and infidelity has <lb/>
ed, the spirit of Christ has far outstripped <lb/>
the organic development of m <lb/>
The spirit of Christ conquers th <lb/>
world. And we are to see <lb/>
the great thought of th <lb/>
seer m the world when <lb/>
on the or man, in <lb/>
their lives verify the spirit of Christ. Your is like a flower, <lb/>
In tho political world tho spirit of Christ Sweetheart <lb/>
coming to assert it supremacy step j hour by hour, <lb/>
by stop. have been ,. <lb/>
and therefore within the <lb/>
the world. <lb/>
War today is a more remote <lb/>
than ever before. Christian <lb/>
the dominant sentiment in the <lb/>
hut analysis of the world's diplomacy. <lb/>
DAVID B. BILL. <lb/>
In practical politics today in America <lb/>
Christian sentiment is a greater power <lb/>
than ever before in our history. Even <lb/>
David B. Hill went to church the other <lb/>
day. Think of it, yo saintly Republic- <lb/>
ans t Think of the modern <lb/>
of political world deeming it <lb/>
to go to church Indeed, it was a <lb/>
necessary movement upon the part of <lb/>
this great political diplomat. He knew <lb/>
that no n an in this age could ever be <lb/>
elected of the United States <lb/>
who stood in a position of antagonism to <lb/>
organic church life, even such as once <lb/>
occupied by Thomas Jefferson. Not be- <lb/>
cause this age is more for it is <lb/>
the moot liberal age in the history of the <lb/>
world. It is simply because at heart the <lb/>
age is Christian. <lb/>
This Christian spirit is permeating the <lb/>
commercial and international relations <lb/>
of the world. From Cramp's shipyard in <lb/>
Philadelphia lately launched our <lb/>
great monster of destruction, with lips <lb/>
of steel. from the docks in <lb/>
tho other day was launched a <lb/>
new ship in a new navy of the new earth <lb/>
that is to be. On swift wings of mercy <lb/>
across the sea flies this messenger of <lb/>
peace and of love, bearing its burden of <lb/>
bread to starving strangers. the <lb/>
ocean we stretch the hand of fraternal <lb/>
greeting to Russia. We not guns. <lb/>
but bread <lb/>
TUB STUDENT WORLD. <lb/>
At heart the thought of this century <lb/>
is becoming more and Christian. <lb/>
The men who do the thinking are Chris- <lb/>
at heart. It is supposed by shallow <lb/>
Observers that our institutions of learn- <lb/>
are infidel and agnostic. It is a <lb/>
mistake. A census of the class <lb/>
t Cornell was taken in <lb/>
students rap, i very of <lb/>
people. Ont of the were <lb/>
of the church; were regular <lb/>
churchgoers, not church <lb/>
only expressed no <lb/>
preference, though not necessarily <lb/>
without religion. This is a typical ex- <lb/>
of the sentiment of our <lb/>
of learning, for the class at <lb/>
year was so liberal that it in- <lb/>
Colonel to deliver its <lb/>
annual address. <lb/>
Tho cry of infidelity today Is the cry <lb/>
of do not The an- <lb/>
to that cry is a of <lb/>
from hearts that make <lb/>
up the Christian world, tho civilized <lb/>
world. From every continent of the <lb/>
earth, from every island of the sea, from <lb/>
every kindred, race and tongue comes <lb/>
back tho answering shout of <lb/>
know in whom have <lb/>
Comes the answering of <lb/>
la tho cross Christ I <lb/>
Towering o'er the wrecks of lime. <lb/>
Comes the answering shout of <lb/>
All the power of menu. <lb/>
Let fall <lb/>
forth Hie rend diadem <lb/>
And crown him Lord of till <lb/>
Davis, of N. <lb/>
Court, <lb/>
Dear Mis- Yours or t <lb/>
12th Is received, and I <lb/>
by saying that I have been much b <lb/>
by the use of I aw <lb/>
from a severe and <lb/>
attack of the Grippe, foil--wed bi <lb/>
In the neck u should, r- <lb/>
commenced the of the op he <lb/>
Id October last, and my rheumatic pain- <lb/>
ceased immediately, and I think m <lb/>
health and feelings have much n <lb/>
proved by Its use. Very r <lb/>
J DAVIS. <lb/>
N C, Jan. <lb/>
Not a Bigger Man. <lb/>
Russell, the heir apparent of <lb/>
Massachusetts, is a strict <lb/>
He took a very lively interest in the <lb/>
last state campaign, and, although he is <lb/>
not yet old enough to read tho political <lb/>
news in tho daily papers, he asked <lb/>
enough of his father and other <lb/>
members of the family to form a com- <lb/>
if somewhat biased, opinion of <lb/>
the situation. <lb/>
His interest and excitement <lb/>
on election day, and it was only <lb/>
after a good deal of persuasion and by <lb/>
whispering some mysterious sentence <lb/>
into his ear that his nurse m induce <lb/>
him to go to bed at all. <lb/>
Tho morning after election was <lb/>
up very early. He came down into the <lb/>
dining room sat there very quietly <lb/>
all alone. By and by his gubernatorial <lb/>
dad appeared. <lb/>
He said, morning, but <lb/>
the heir apparent made no answer. In- <lb/>
stead he got gravely up and circled <lb/>
about his astonished father, surveying <lb/>
him from head to foot. <lb/>
is the matter, asked <lb/>
tho governor there any- <lb/>
thing wrong with my coat Is my tie <lb/>
coming up behind Do you see any <lb/>
smut on my <lb/>
said the son, in a <lb/>
pointed tone. you ain't any big <lb/>
today than you were <lb/>
Nurse said last night if went to bed <lb/>
early I'd wake up morning and find <lb/>
you the biggest in Massachusetts. <lb/>
I think she Herald. <lb/>
Sweetheart, sweetheart <lb/>
Why, nothing but Dr. Favor- <lb/>
It imparts strength to <lb/>
the failing cure organic tumbles <lb/>
and for debilitated and feeble women <lb/>
generally. Is unequaled. It dispels <lb/>
nervousness, and builds up <lb/>
both flesh strength. Guaranteed to <lb/>
satisfaction In every ease, or money <lb/>
paid for it refunded. <lb/>
Mew York's Mayor on Ills More. <lb/>
The following query and answer is <lb/>
found in the columns the New York <lb/>
yon kindly inform me of the <lb/>
significance of act of Mayor Grant <lb/>
at Cooper union, at the celebration of <lb/>
the pope's birthday, when he knelt and <lb/>
kissed the hand of Archbishop <lb/>
According to the report in The <lb/>
one seems to have done it. Yours <lb/>
truly. <lb/>
the mayor kissed was not the <lb/>
band of the archbishop, tat his <lb/>
ring. That is a symbol of the, <lb/>
authority of the Every bishop <lb/>
wears one, and every Catholic will <lb/>
on one knee and kiss It. when the <lb/>
bishop's hand l offered to <lb/>
Savannah. Ga., April HI. <lb/>
Having used three of P <lb/>
for impure blond and general <lb/>
and derived great f <lb/>
the same, having gained II pound <lb/>
weight four weeks. I take g <lb/>
pleasure recommencing It to all <lb/>
like. <lb/>
March 1801. <lb/>
Messrs <lb/>
Dear I have from <lb/>
for a time, and did not ll <lb/>
a cure until I. P. P., <lb/>
completely cured me <lb/>
Yours truly. <lb/>
F. JONES, <lb/>
Orange M. Savannah. U <lb/>
What Hie Girl <lb/>
When the swagger comes out of <lb/>
tho chrysalis of be cap- with the <lb/>
spring sunshine sin- will lie gotten as <lb/>
close to the English ideal as <lb/>
the gracefully flowing curves of <lb/>
her tin ire will admit. Her fit- <lb/>
ting cloth skirt will the only dis- <lb/>
l. Is I ween the garb <lb/>
of the d ll swell mid her <lb/>
own. cutaway coat <lb/>
it. I waistcoat, the name <lb/>
isl n front and carefully ad- <lb/>
tie. I lie stiff crowned derby hat <lb/>
and loves. There will a <lb/>
debonair and . ml grace about the <lb/>
spring female <lb/>
served. mi air of buoyant confidence, <lb/>
a kind of good-as-yon aw <lb/>
swing to her step. And tho secret of it <lb/>
all in her latest appropriation from mas- <lb/>
attire. <lb/>
She doesn't weir the tram n . bat she <lb/>
does wear the Th y are of <lb/>
the and often of the same <lb/>
material hi r n. They have silver <lb/>
chains cylinder, <lb/>
yield e t every movement of the <lb/>
body. on difference between them <lb/>
and tin-to n i- that the <lb/>
bat e on of <lb/>
dress a outside of then <lb/>
em. hi be de- <lb/>
moralizing in -lax- <lb/>
panders, . t precise of . <lb/>
in calling . <lb/>
twinkle in and an in <lb/>
in bar step when she i <lb/>
dress that rouged lie cream <lb/>
and soda water pram of the wild- <lb/>
est Bacchanalian York Sun. <lb/>
Sales. <lb/>
The best salve In the world for Cut.,; <lb/>
Bruises, Mores, Salt i <lb/>
Fever Sores, Chapped I <lb/>
What's <lb/>
. ft by Alfred <lb/>
cures Piles, or <lb/>
pay required. It Is guaranteed to <lb/>
perfect satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
Price is box. For at <lb/>
Drug store. <lb/>
It Be Id Home. <lb/>
J. B. Wilson, Clay St., <lb/>
Pa., says he will not be Dr. <lb/>
King's New Discovery for Consumption <lb/>
Coughs and Colds, that it his <lb/>
was threatened with <lb/>
an attack of wren <lb/>
other remedies and several <lb/>
bad done her no <lb/>
of i Pa., Dr. <lb/>
King's New Discovery has done bin. <lb/>
more good than anything In- ever <lb/>
for Lang Trouble. Nothing like it. Try <lb/>
it. Free Trial Bottles at Drug <lb/>
Store. Large and <lb/>
Pity tho Morphine Victims. <lb/>
The victims liquor habit, or <lb/>
disease, ore royal with the <lb/>
sufferers morphine. They look <lb/>
down from an admitted height the <lb/>
slave of drugs. They do not want to be <lb/>
classed with them. They are above <lb/>
them. The morphine victims, by the <lb/>
way, are the greatest sufferers. There <lb/>
not a chamber of horrors hi all <lb/>
world so terrible as that dim hall at <lb/>
when the morphine patients are <lb/>
waiting for their injection. Splendid <lb/>
men, strong physiques, fair faces, but <lb/>
such hollow, hungry eyes; such roving. <lb/>
restless eyes; such fearful, <lb/>
eyes. The face is wan and pinched, the <lb/>
fingers are twitching, the feet are con- <lb/>
moving, the thought L distracted. <lb/>
. You cannot talk with them. They will <lb/>
not follow you two minute. They will <lb/>
move away and walk -with frightened <lb/>
baste up and down the hall. They will <lb/>
hurry and prepare for the injection. <lb/>
They will crowd and quarrel for first <lb/>
the They are unstrung <lb/>
and Chicago Herald. <lb/>
Bit en. <lb/>
l W <lb/>
i, no <lb/>
a .,. I ll <lb/>
after <lb/>
medicine urn exist <lb/>
id II M do nil that is <lb/>
c aimed Hitters <lb/>
if and Kidneys, VI <lb/>
re.,. V Boil. Salt Kin urn and <lb/>
by impute <lb/>
w ill fr the system <lb/>
hi pr vent us we I as all Malarial <lb/>
cure of Headache. Canst I- <lb/>
and <lb/>
I u <lb/>
f l I i c <lb/>
I Ii ll I a <lb/>
. an. <lb/>
i . <lb/>
I and <lb/>
From tho side of religion many pro- <lb/>
tests have been made against the present <lb/>
system of popular education. The clergy <lb/>
of the different churches cannot help <lb/>
that at least the more <lb/>
doctrines of the Christian faith <lb/>
and they <lb/>
draw discouraging pictures of <lb/>
what the moral future of the youth of <lb/>
tin country will be if their counsels <lb/>
an not heeded. All sound and success- <lb/>
moral teaching, they contend, must <lb/>
i a basil of theology, and to <lb/>
; teaching to the region of <lb/>
is to deprive it of nil war <lb/>
all authority, of all coercive <lb/>
If lb <lb/>
.- <lb/>
rein iI <lb/>
Club. <lb/>
Officer Dennis Fitzgerald can carve a <lb/>
turkey a neatly with his hickory <lb/>
any head of a family In the city, and <lb/>
while ho demonstrated thin on Thursday <lb/>
poor temporarily dishonest August <lb/>
showed to what extremes <lb/>
necessity may drive a man. It was <lb/>
from butcher shop that the <lb/>
officer saw him grab a dressed bird <lb/>
and start away. was <lb/>
and the flying not over- <lb/>
taken until ho had set a lively pace many <lb/>
squares down Grand boulevard. <lb/>
called Damns, Anally <lb/>
within arm's thoroughly <lb/>
winded. <lb/>
came the defiant reply and <lb/>
the turned for battle <lb/>
lack to yea. then gasped the <lb/>
officer, and hi stick flew in the air. <lb/>
was too quick for him and the <lb/>
fat Upped Dennis in the month <lb/>
went the stick again and out flew <lb/>
the They met and they met <lb/>
again The was short and the <lb/>
only the fat In the <lb/>
end it lay in pieces mi the sidewalk <lb/>
Both men wen- and the light <lb/>
declare I a draw, nil <lb/>
was with who <lb/>
OM without a scratch Each time the <lb/>
hardy Dennis strove to use ins stick the <lb/>
athletic was there with his <lb/>
and blow after blow <lb/>
dismembered the sacrifice <lb/>
up the turkey said the officer <lb/>
at last in <lb/>
gnaw I don't want <lb/>
I'll take it, and take yon <lb/>
and the Fitzgerald, carefully <lb/>
collected parts With these under <lb/>
one arm. lie marched German to the <lb/>
Fiftieth street police station <lb/>
Mail <lb/>
Care- <lb/>
This is beyond question the most <lb/>
Medicine we have ever <lb/>
sold, a few doses invariably the <lb/>
worst cases of Cough, Croup and Bron- <lb/>
while its wonderful success In the <lb/>
cure of Consumption is without a para I <lb/>
the history Since It- <lb/>
discovery It has been sold on <lb/>
an a test no other medicine <lb/>
can stand. If you have a cough we earn <lb/>
ask you to try It. Price <lb/>
and If your lungs are sore, chest, or <lb/>
back lame, use Porous <lb/>
sold at WOOTEN'S STORE. <lb/>
way of helping the afflict- <lb/>
on or addressing the <lb/>
mime burlier, you can procure <lb/>
I of that , <lb/>
I mil and causing the <lb/>
, to be soft and <lb/>
only two or three application a <lb/>
week a common <lb/>
I brush Is all to lie used after the <lb/>
vigorously for ii few with <lb/>
bottle aid be <lb/>
cents. <lb/>
AL RED <lb/>
Barber, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
BOILING ER OR MILK <lb/>
COCOA <lb/>
1-2 La TINS ONLY. <lb/>
BALSAM <lb/>
i, <lb/>
Mn. S I <lb/>
Fells <lb/>
its Co <lb/>
V half<lb/>
. I- <lb/>
r Ion <lb/>
Pi <lb/>
e, ,. Cost.<lb/>
CO., <lb/>
BID ION V <lb/>
Printers and Binders <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
the kind to be found In <lb/>
th. state, solicit older-for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb/>
road or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding. <lb/>
STUDDING HEADY <lb/>
FOB INVITATION'S <lb/>
rOll AND <lb/>
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb/>
Send us your order. <lb/>
it<lb/>
Th j Great Raiser <lb/>
of spots and dirt is <lb/>
PEARLINE. Try it <lb/>
on the is <lb/>
cheap as dirt. It makes <lb/>
house-work easy and <lb/>
your washing light. You <lb/>
could do no harm with <lb/>
it if you tried. It refines <lb/>
the finest things; makes <lb/>
them like new; and <lb/>
cleans quickly the <lb/>
est. It is ready to help <lb/>
you if you are ready to <lb/>
have it. <lb/>
Sharp <lb/>
peddlers selling <lb/>
powders of which <lb/>
they same <lb/>
as as <lb/>
Keep a ajar on your wits against <lb/>
such. PEARLINE has no <lb/>
JAMBS PYLE, Mew Tow <lb/>
s views were correct, it would <lb/>
i to see how the weakness of our <lb/>
the moral side could ever be <lb/>
I. for nothing is more certain <lb/>
than i attempt to teach theology <lb/>
n v be predestined failure, <lb/>
some will pay for <lb/>
a; in the pulpit, but they are not <lb/>
to pay for it in the schools, and <lb/>
ave in most unmistakable ways <lb/>
they do not want it there. The <lb/>
-to . en. Shall all attempts at <lb/>
t public school be <lb/>
1.1 i it cannot be ad- <lb/>
i. stared as an adjunct of theology, <lb/>
or shall a brave effort be made to give <lb/>
it an i ml, at status of its own and <lb/>
a to show what it can ac- <lb/>
when conducted on purely net <lb/>
Science Monthly. <lb/>
Mashed sell at <lb/>
dollar a I you ran get a bottle of <lb/>
Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup for only twenty- <lb/>
live cent. <lb/>
be gay an I for <lb/>
OH is o cent a b It kills <lb/>
all <lb/>
B Dr. Bull's <lb/>
Couch Syrup, has won for itself a most <lb/>
enviable reputation. <lb/>
I've been for the past three <lb/>
weeks will a trained wrist. I tried <lb/>
Salvation Oil. i ray-elf. after <lb/>
having need one bottle, cured. <lb/>
St.,<lb/>
k WHICHARD, <lb/>
ESTATE.-. <lb/>
O. <lb/>
several d of real <lb/>
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb/>
below and cull on or write them. <lb/>
A t lot on Third street below Co- <lb/>
i.-inch. In the town of Greenville, <lb/>
good two-story house with lour rooms <lb/>
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb/>
large stables on the premises. <lb/>
Two good building lots in <lb/>
desirable <lb/>
ion . <lb/>
A lot on street, between <lb/>
Front and Second, has nice house of <lb/>
rooms, good well of water, large gar- <lb/>
den plot and stables. <lb/>
ft WK B. II, <lb/>
and Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS BOOTH. <lb/>
No No Si, No <lb/>
Jan. daily t Mail, dally <lb/>
ex Mm <lb/>
Weldon 12,30 pm S pm <lb/>
Ar Mount am M <lb/>
Ar pm H <lb/>
Ar <lb/>
Oil am<lb/>
Magnolia Ar Ii <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY I <lb/>
h a <lb/>
ally prepared every <lb/>
of recognized value and in <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These ingredients are com- <lb/>
REMEDY <lb/>
for I <lb/>
Canker <lb/>
err and <lb/>
then is an<lb/>
WILL DO aB that b for <lb/>
k AND MORE. Hi <lb/>
Lessens Pan, Danger to <lb/>
Ufa of Mother and <lb/>
to <lb/>
Wilmington <lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
A half acre lot in v <lb/>
large tingle story r <lb/>
of rooms, cook and dining at- <lb/>
all necessary out buildings and <lb/>
stables, good water <lb/>
l A fine farm containing acres, <lb/>
w. about miles from Greenville on Mt, <lb/>
P road, has gin house, stables, <lb/>
barns, two room tenant houses; <lb/>
acres cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good water. This laud Is excellent for <lb/>
the cultivation of tine tobacco. <lb/>
One farm lying on branch of the <lb/>
W railroad about hall be- <lb/>
tween and and within i <lb/>
mile of a new depot, contains acres. <lb/>
cleared and balance heavily timbered <lb/>
with pine, oak, hickory, ash and cypress; <lb/>
has good tenant houses; railroad passes <lb/>
nearly through this farm. The <lb/>
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb/>
is In good state of cultivation and highly <lb/>
improved; is flue trucking laud. <lb/>
A farm miles from Greenville on <lb/>
road known as the Jackson <lb/>
farm; contains acres, cleared; ha <lb/>
good dwelling house and all necessary <lb/>
This is a first-class to- <lb/>
A house and lot In Greenville on <lb/>
corner near J. B. Cherry and W. <lb/>
Rawls, now occupied by the family of <lb/>
late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb/>
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb/>
location, only half a block from main <lb/>
street of-the town. Possession <lb/>
Can be given January 1st. , <lb/>
A good building lot on <lb/>
street, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
street, splendid location. <lb/>
The house and lot on Pitt <lb/>
street near Dickerson Avenue, <lb/>
good house of rooms, large lot with <lb/>
stables and out buildings. <lb/>
and on <lb/>
Pitt street, adjoining the lot of B. <lb/>
pm <lb/>
MOUTH <lb/>
No No No <lb/>
dally daily daily <lb/>
ex Sun. <lb/>
am am<lb/>
1.06 <lb/>
Ar Wilson <lb/>
Wilson am pm <lb/>
At Rocky Mount<lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon pm pm <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. will not before <lb/>
Train on Scotland Neck branch Road <lb/>
leaves Halifax 4.22 arrives Scot, <lb/>
land Neck at 6.16 P. M. Greenville 6.52 <lb/>
P. M., p. m. Returning, <lb/>
leaves a. m., Greenville <lb/>
a. in. Arriving Halifax a. m. <lb/>
Weldon 11-38 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb/>
Local freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb/>
10.15 a. m. arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb/>
a. m. Greenville 6.80 p. m., <lb/>
7.40 p. m. Returning leaves <lb/>
Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at <lb/>
17.20 a. to., arriving Greenville 9.55 <lb/>
a. m- Scotland Neck 2.20 p. in., Weldon <lb/>
p. m. <lb/>
Train leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb/>
A Raleigh R. R. dally except Sun- <lb/>
day, P M, P M, arrive <lb/>
N C, P M, P M. <lb/>
Plymouth 8.30 p. m., 6.22 p. m. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
a. m., Sunday a, m- <lb/>
N C, 7.80 a m. 0.58 am, <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, N C, A M <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch leave <lb/>
dally except Sunday, A II <lb/>
rive N C, a M. Re <lb/>
turning leaves X C AM <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. N A M. <lb/>
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Rocky <lb/>
at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
S. Sheppard and the lot described n No. <lb/>
large, dwelling <lb/>
of four rooms, dining and cook rooms, <lb/>
plenty of room for garden. <lb/>
Valuable Steam Corn and Flour <lb/>
Mills, Cotton Gin and Store <lb/>
property located at a X Road <lb/>
within a hundred yards of a R. R. is sit- <lb/>
la one of the best Agricultural <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county. The mills are <lb/>
up with the best machinery. Bolt- <lb/>
cloths, smelter etc., and are In full <lb/>
operation. The store house is a two <lb/>
story building with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a and warehouse In rear. <lb/>
store is kept constantly <lb/>
with general merchandise salted to a <lb/>
country tore and is a good <lb/>
mills are the best known in <lb/>
that section. <lb/>
This property offered for sale as the <lb/>
owners wish to withdraw from <lb/>
Terms on My of the above property <lb/>
can bad on fr <lb/>
except <lb/>
Train on Branch leaves Warsaw <lb/>
for Clinton dally, except Sunday, at Qt <lb/>
ll Chi- <lb/>
ton at A M, and P. <lb/>
at Warsaw with Nos. <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson <lb/>
Branch is No. Northbound <lb/>
No. Dally <lb/>
Trains No. Sooth North <lb/>
stop only st Mount, Wilson <lb/>
Goldsboro Magnolia. <lb/>
No. makes close connection a <lb/>
Weldon all point. North dally. Al <lb/>
via Richmond, and dally except Sun <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
except Sunday with Norfolk <lb/>
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
DIVINE, <lb/>
General <lb/>
J. R. KENLY, <lb/>
T. M. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
</body></text></TEI>