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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
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			<date>2012</date>
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<p>
f HE REFLECTOR <lb/>
------HAS A------- <lb/>
Job Room <lb/>
can be surpassed no <lb/>
in this section. <lb/>
Our work always satin- <lb/>
faction. <lb/>
New Type <lb/>
Good Presses <lb/>
Material <lb/>
SEND US YOUR ORDERS. <lb/>
Reflector <lb/>
GIVEN AWAY <lb/>
; ST TEE GREAT <lb/>
The Atlanta <lb/>
Ten thousand dollars will be <lb/>
ibis year by The <lb/>
published at Atlanta, <lb/>
among its <lb/>
This newspaper has already the <lb/>
largest circulation of weekly news- <lb/>
paper in the Tubed St rites. <lb/>
MM, with one exception, in London, the <lb/>
largest ill the world. It i, and <lb/>
foremost, a newspaper. <lb/>
week the full news ail the world, <lb/>
devoted especially to the development <lb/>
of the south. Its circulation now ex- <lb/>
it is pushing <lb/>
Sample copies will be sent on <lb/>
application. <lb/>
A Distribution. <lb/>
rise thousand dollars will be divided <lb/>
among; its now and <lb/>
July 1st, between then and <lb/>
the end of the year. <lb/>
The division Mill lie based on the <lb/>
result of the nominating convention of <lb/>
the parties in June, and the <lb/>
other on the result of the <lb/>
election- <lb/>
The national democratic convention <lb/>
meets at Chicago June 21st. <lb/>
The national republican convention <lb/>
meets at Minneapolis June 7th. <lb/>
Both will nominate a candidate for <lb/>
president and vice president. <lb/>
for First <lb/>
Twenty-five dollars in gold <lb/>
will be by The to <lb/>
the successful answers of the <lb/>
will lie the nominees of each <lb/>
party for president and vice <lb/>
Any person the names <lb/>
tins chosen will be entitled to the first <lb/>
prize of cash, and if, chance, more <lb/>
than one answers correctly, the prize <lb/>
will be divided accordingly <lb/>
for a Second <lb/>
Five hundred dollars in cash will be <lb/>
divided among who guess correctly <lb/>
only three out of the four to be <lb/>
thus as standard bearers, so <lb/>
that the goes may prophesy wrong as <lb/>
to one of the four names, and by getting <lb/>
three correct will come in for this prize. <lb/>
Prig,. <lb/>
In addition to the above in <lb/>
more will be distributed in <lb/>
prizes, consisting of twenty-live silver <lb/>
value which is <lb/>
an i CM, respectively, and copes of <lb/>
Mammoth es, <lb/>
edition, fully illustrated and consist- <lb/>
of 1.600 pages, <lb/>
gold watches will be given to <lb/>
every hundredth ballot of the first <lb/>
received, silver watches to the next <lb/>
of hundredth ballots, and after <lb/>
that every fiftieth ballot will one <lb/>
of the Webster's mammoth diction- <lb/>
All must lie by one <lb/>
year's subscription to Cos- <lb/>
t and must be writ- <lb/>
ten on a separate piece of paper from <lb/>
that containing order for subscription. <lb/>
The winner of any of the prizes <lb/>
above noted will be given a free guess at <lb/>
the next distribution after July <lb/>
1st This costs you nothing and you <lb/>
may get or in gold. You <lb/>
ill certainly receive the greatest week- <lb/>
newspaper published the south for <lb/>
one year and there will never be a year <lb/>
when a great will b more <lb/>
than this one. <lb/>
all communications to The <lb/>
Constitution-. Atlanta, Us. <lb/>
VOL. XI. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, S. a, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1892. <lb/>
NO. <lb/>
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb/>
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb/>
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb/>
THE SOUTH <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
PAIR. <lb/>
WORLD'S <lb/>
Appointments of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb/>
First Sunday, homing and night, <lb/>
Second S morning at Anti <lb/>
and Saturday before. <lb/>
Third and fourth at Green- <lb/>
morning and night, also second <lb/>
Sunday night, and Regular Wednesday <lb/>
night services each week. <lb/>
Services at school house on enterprises for furthering <lb/>
on Thursday night the Smith Ki <lb/>
each until A. and then j <lb/>
on evening. <lb/>
Rev. R. F. Taylor's Appointments. <lb/>
Rev. H F. pastor of Green- <lb/>
ville Circuit of the M. E. Church, South, <lb/>
will preach at the times and <lb/>
each <lb/>
1st Sunday at Salem, o'clock A. M. <lb/>
1st Sunday. Chapel, .-SO o <lb/>
P. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday, Grove, o'clock <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
2nd Sunday. For School Rouse. <lb/>
miles net of ;. <lb/>
r. u. <lb/>
Sunday, Ayden or Spring Branch <lb/>
School o'clock A. M. <lb/>
Sunday, <lb/>
o'clock P. M. <lb/>
4th Sunday, o'clock <lb/>
A. M. <lb/>
School House, <lb/>
o'clock P. M. <lb/>
WHAT DOES THIS MEAN <lb/>
Within the mouth the immense <lb/>
of King's Royal Co. <lb/>
has been more than doubled and large <lb/>
orders are pouring in from all directions. <lb/>
On February 20th I. L. A Co., of <lb/>
Kev Orleans cash order for <lb/>
seven thousand and two hundred bottles <lb/>
to be delivered at once. <lb/>
It <lb/>
L That when such as General <lb/>
General Turner, Governor <lb/>
Colonel A very. Rev. W. G. K, <lb/>
Rev. J. B. Hawthorne <lb/>
and Rev Sam a medicine and <lb/>
give it unqualified <lb/>
believe them. <lb/>
That has done all that <lb/>
most ardent friends have declared <lb/>
that it would do. <lb/>
S. bat it has mastered La Grippe, <lb/>
Rheumatism, Dyspepsia, Nervous de- <lb/>
Insomnia. Kidney troubles. <lb/>
ma, Summer complaints and Catarrh <lb/>
wherever it has been tried. <lb/>
That the discovery of <lb/>
is the most valuable contribution of <lb/>
century to medical science, <lb/>
A a spring medicine it has no equal. <lb/>
the stomach, digestion, <lb/>
tones up the and brings <lb/>
health and happiness In this respect <lb/>
no other remedy can compare with it. <lb/>
it is net a nauseous com- <lb/>
In its issue for last week the <lb/>
Manufacturer's Record, of <lb/>
more, makes this urgent <lb/>
the South to prepare for the <lb/>
World's Columbian <lb/>
display of apathy regard- <lb/>
preparations for the World's <lb/>
Columbian Exposition that is be- <lb/>
manifested several sections <lb/>
of the South is greatly to be la- <lb/>
In the absence of <lb/>
obstacles, the refusal of <lb/>
any Southern legislature to make <lb/>
it-1 appropriation for State rep- <lb/>
at Chicago false <lb/>
economy of the most conspicuous <lb/>
kind. Neglect to make ample pro- <lb/>
vision for this great event is a <lb/>
short policy that is sure to <lb/>
react in an injurious manner upon <lb/>
the whole South- The older in- <lb/>
sections of the North are <lb/>
making liberal preparations for <lb/>
representation in the World's Fain <lb/>
and the West is providing for the <lb/>
with a wonderful display <lb/>
of prodigality. Money <lb/>
for this purpose dots not in- <lb/>
extravagance in any respect, <lb/>
but the indifferent policy that has <lb/>
been adopted by a few of the <lb/>
Southern States must be regarded <lb/>
as either parsimony or a failure <lb/>
to appreciate the of the <lb/>
opportunity. <lb/>
is not, to our knowledge, <lb/>
any other use to which a reason- <lb/>
able appropriation could be de- <lb/>
voted with better results than in <lb/>
the provision of a suitable exhibit <lb/>
of the and industries of <lb/>
any Southern State in this great <lb/>
exposition. Advertising is the life <lb/>
of industry in these days, and <lb/>
States that desire to attract <lb/>
and promote development <lb/>
might as well enclose their <lb/>
with a high fence as to neg- <lb/>
any good opportunity for <lb/>
making their advantages known to <lb/>
the world. The businessman who <lb/>
does not advertise confines his <lb/>
operations to a narrow and <lb/>
this rule applies equally well to a <lb/>
town, county or State. The <lb/>
World's Columbian Exposition is <lb/>
a huge advertising enterprise, and <lb/>
those who do not participate in it <lb/>
will feel the effects in an <lb/>
manner. <lb/>
is a peculiar necessity for <lb/>
the South to utilize this <lb/>
to the fullest possible extent. <lb/>
There are thousands ox people in <lb/>
the in the West, in New <lb/>
England and across the ocean who <lb/>
have invested largely in various <lb/>
the de- <lb/>
Nine out <lb/>
of every ten of such investors has <lb/>
never been in the South and will <lb/>
never visit that section of the <lb/>
country. They have read and <lb/>
heard much of the wonderful re- <lb/>
sources of the South, its rapidly <lb/>
wing industries, its mines, <lb/>
forests, mills and furnaces, and <lb/>
when go to Chicago next year <lb/>
they will naturally expect to see a <lb/>
Southern exhibit proportioned to <lb/>
the wealth and resources of that <lb/>
section. They are fully justified <lb/>
in such an expectation, and the <lb/>
responsibility for fulfillment rests <lb/>
with the each State <lb/>
as well as with individuals- <lb/>
earnestly hope that all con- <lb/>
of false economy will <lb/>
be set aside in this matter, and <lb/>
that all the Southern States will <lb/>
act in unison in providing for a <lb/>
liberal display at Chicago. It is <lb/>
not a matter of willingness or in- <lb/>
but of <lb/>
that is imperative. Let there <lb/>
be no delay, no differences of <lb/>
ion as to plans, but let there be <lb/>
everywhere a united and <lb/>
ed effort to place the South on i-n <lb/>
equal footing with the entire world <lb/>
in the World's Columbian <lb/>
We have no interest what- <lb/>
ever in this exposition apart from <lb/>
its bearing the but <lb/>
ALLIANCE IN DANGER <lb/>
If the Third Party Secures a Following <lb/>
in the State This Year. <lb/>
At the request of some friends <lb/>
in and out of the Alliance, and de- <lb/>
siring to advance the best interests <lb/>
of the masses of the people of my <lb/>
native State. I write to give my <lb/>
views upon the Third Party which <lb/>
some over-zealous members of the <lb/>
Alliance talk about establishing in <lb/>
North Carolina. I am a member <lb/>
of the Alliance, ready at any time <lb/>
to advocate, defend and maintain <lb/>
the dignity as well as the demands <lb/>
of the order. I see great danger <lb/>
not only to the best interests of <lb/>
the- State, but also to the Alliance <lb/>
in the suggestion of organizing <lb/>
an independent party. If a third <lb/>
party is formed in this State it will <lb/>
endeavor to draw a very large per <lb/>
of its vote from the Alliance. <lb/>
If a sufficient of Alliance <lb/>
men who have heretofore been <lb/>
Democrats and voted with the <lb/>
Democratic party, go off into and <lb/>
vote with the third party, it would <lb/>
bring ruin home to the people of <lb/>
North Carolina. Then instead of <lb/>
the Alliance bettering our <lb/>
it would pull us down, and <lb/>
carry us from bad to worse, to utter <lb/>
degradation and ruin. The aim <lb/>
and object of the Alliance is not <lb/>
to form political parties and fight <lb/>
political battles inside Alliance <lb/>
halls. To do that would bring <lb/>
discord, contention and division <lb/>
in the order, and be an injury to <lb/>
the Alliance cause, and in the end <lb/>
the Alliance would accomplish <lb/>
nothing- <lb/>
The Alliance has come <lb/>
to stay. It is the greatest <lb/>
ever organized on the <lb/>
American continent. But the Alli- <lb/>
not come to pull down or <lb/>
destroy or overthrow good govern- <lb/>
but to amend f time to <lb/>
time and restore good government. <lb/>
It has not to make war and <lb/>
desolation in the land, but to make <lb/>
peace and restore the people to a <lb/>
much needed prosper- It has <lb/>
not come to divide and go off into <lb/>
a third party that will be only a <lb/>
sensation and accomplish nothing. <lb/>
The Alliance favored and made a <lb/>
Railroad Commission in North <lb/>
Carolina that has saved thousands <lb/>
of rs to the people in the way <lb/>
of taxes, freight and passenger <lb/>
traffic. Look at the House and <lb/>
Senate journal and see who voted <lb/>
for that bill. It will disclose who <lb/>
your friends arc <lb/>
Let all Democrats remain in the <lb/>
Democratic party, whenever <lb/>
tho Alliance makes a demand or a <lb/>
request, and our political friends <lb/>
oppose it, let rs meet together in <lb/>
council and advise together for the <lb/>
best interest of the State and the <lb/>
country's good. I verily believe <lb/>
that our friends in the Democratic <lb/>
party who are not members of the <lb/>
Alliance will meet us more than <lb/>
half way. By taking this course <lb/>
we can accomplish much good. <lb/>
I have given the third party <lb/>
movement much thought. Besides, <lb/>
I have kept myself posted by read- <lb/>
one North Carolina daily and <lb/>
six weekly papers of all parties, <lb/>
Alliance and non-Alliance, and <lb/>
have seen no good reason ad- <lb/>
by any, how or in any way, <lb/>
a third party can bring about the <lb/>
relief the Alliance demands. This <lb/>
being so, I appeal to my brother <lb/>
in North Carolina <lb/>
who are Democrats to remain in <lb/>
the Democratic party, and <lb/>
and press the Alliance de- <lb/>
Go into the Democratic <lb/>
conventions- Contend for and <lb/>
fight for Alliance measures in a <lb/>
mild and conservative <lb/>
vote the Democratic ticket, and I <lb/>
am sure good will be accomplished. <lb/>
And also I would say to the <lb/>
Democratic papers and to all Dem- <lb/>
as well, lie mild and <lb/>
in expressing opinions. A <lb/>
conservative and persuasive policy <lb/>
we fully appreciate the importance is apt to lead the masses and do <lb/>
th occasion, and v <lb/>
not to let such an <lb/>
pass <lb/>
am the <lb/>
In the present <lb/>
pound, but as pleasant to take as a glass , . . , , <lb/>
of lemonade, Che patient loves it and there are solid democratic <lb/>
delegation from Alabama, <lb/>
Georgia, Louisiana, Maryland, <lb/>
Mississippi, Missouri, Caro- <lb/>
Texas, Virginia and West <lb/>
Virginia. Maine, South Dakota, <lb/>
and Vermont have solid <lb/>
looks forward with pleasure to the time <lb/>
of taking it. <lb/>
For sale at bottle all drug- <lb/>
Manufactured By <lb/>
King's Co, <lb/>
ATLANTA, GA. <lb/>
Dissolution. <lb/>
The firm of A Tyson was <lb/>
I mutual consent on the In <lb/>
of February. All indebted to <lb/>
the Ann are requested tn come forward <lb/>
with either party. <lb/>
M. <lb/>
B. A. TYSON. <lb/>
The referred to above will be j an in. <lb/>
States with only one <lb/>
each i seven of these are Be- <lb/>
and two Democrats. <lb/>
There are in the house Demo- <lb/>
good, but bitter railings do no good <lb/>
and those who employ them will <lb/>
lose their following. The people <lb/>
love to follow conservative men <lb/>
because they are apt to be safe <lb/>
men and apt to be right. I say <lb/>
to all, and non-Alliance, <lb/>
let us work together in a <lb/>
way and we will save the <lb/>
State in the coming contest <lb/>
David Alexander. <lb/>
coot of railroads in the <lb/>
united States has been nine billion <lb/>
dollars; they employ one million <lb/>
can delegation. There are nine ; sight passenger <lb/>
AS THE FLAME OF A CANDLE. <lb/>
One who looked the crowd over <lb/>
as we waited for the train would <lb/>
not have set us down as hard- <lb/>
hearted and indifferent; so we <lb/>
proved to be as a young girl not <lb/>
over years of age, reading an <lb/>
old who was stone blind <lb/>
very feeble, passed slowly around <lb/>
the soliciting alms. They <lb/>
got a penny here and there, but <lb/>
SOME MISFIT NAMES OF PLACES. <lb/>
T. C. in N- C Teacher. <lb/>
If a stranger from another State <lb/>
were to look over a map of North <lb/>
Carolina he would find some per- <lb/>
cases, where tho names <lb/>
certain towns seem to be a misfit <lb/>
as regards the names of their <lb/>
counties. This may some- <lb/>
times account for mail-matter going <lb/>
or <lb/>
those coins seemed to be i addressed within a reasonable time- <lb/>
example, he would expect to <lb/>
find both Asheville and <lb/>
given grudgingly, and those who <lb/>
gave nothing consoled themselves <lb/>
with the reflection that the pair <lb/>
were frauds and needed no <lb/>
assistance. <lb/>
When they had made the tour <lb/>
of the room the girl led old <lb/>
man to a seat in a corner, and after <lb/>
a few words had passed <lb/>
them they began singing a hymn. <lb/>
She had a wonderful voice for a <lb/>
child, clear and sweet, and his was <lb/>
a deep bass. The hymn was that <lb/>
entitled, My God, to <lb/>
Ton have heard it by a <lb/>
full choir, accompanied by the <lb/>
strains of a grand organ, but yon <lb/>
never listened so intently as <lb/>
did there. There was a plaint in <lb/>
that girl's voice which touched a <lb/>
chord, and there was a quaver in <lb/>
the old man's bass which saddened <lb/>
you. They sang low and soft, <lb/>
in Ashe County, but instead of that <lb/>
arrangement ho finds tho former <lb/>
in Buncombe and the latter in Ran- <lb/>
County. He naturally <lb/>
look for Greensboro and Greenville <lb/>
in Greene County, instead of <lb/>
ford and Pitt, while he would see <lb/>
Pittsboro not in Pitt County at all <lb/>
but in Chatham. Beaufort ought <lb/>
to be in Beaufort County, instead <lb/>
of Carteret, while Washington, in <lb/>
Beaufort County, should in <lb/>
Washington County. Mooresville <lb/>
in Iredell County, should be in <lb/>
Moore County, and in <lb/>
Moore County, would seem best <lb/>
suited to Jones County. Hay wood <lb/>
in Chatham, ought to be in Hay- <lb/>
wood County, while the capital of <lb/>
that county would Wayne. <lb/>
was not Jackson put in the <lb/>
WON THE CASE. <lb/>
STATE NEWS. <lb/>
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb/>
From our Exchanges. <lb/>
they had not finished a verse when I county of that name instead of <lb/>
half of us were standing up to see I Northampton, as well <lb/>
them better. as Franklinton in Franklin County <lb/>
The girl kept her eyes on the Then there is Macon, in Warren <lb/>
floor at feet. Tho sightless <lb/>
eyes of old father <lb/>
were raised to the coiling, and <lb/>
over his wrinkled face crept a glad <lb/>
smile as they finished the <lb/>
my God, to <lb/>
Nearer to Thee. <lb/>
The hymn was not finished when <lb/>
every man began feeling for a con- <lb/>
women opened their <lb/>
It was different <lb/>
now. They were no longer <lb/>
and everyone was glad to give <lb/>
something. Two or throe were <lb/>
ready to move about to take up a <lb/>
collection; but they waited for <lb/>
end of the hymn. When it came <lb/>
to the chorus of the last verse the <lb/>
old man was singing bravely. <lb/>
Half way through his voice sud- <lb/>
choked and the last two <lb/>
lines were sung by the girl alone <lb/>
and died away in a sob and a cry. <lb/>
All of us saw the old man's head <lb/>
County instead of and <lb/>
in instead of <lb/>
Hertford County. in <lb/>
Caswell County, he could see as <lb/>
well in County, and Rock- <lb/>
he would put in Bocking- <lb/>
ham County, instead of Richmond. <lb/>
is in Polk County, and <lb/>
is in County, while <lb/>
Columbus County has not even <lb/>
Columbia. Davidson College is <lb/>
not in Davidson County, nor is <lb/>
College County. <lb/>
Neither Alexanders nor Alex <lb/>
is in Alexander County. <lb/>
Graham would seem best in <lb/>
ham County, and just suits <lb/>
Lenoir County. Vanceboro might <lb/>
have been put in Vance County, <lb/>
instead of Craven, in Gas- <lb/>
ton County, and Madison in <lb/>
son County, instead of <lb/>
hum. <lb/>
Tribune. <lb/>
yon wore <lb/>
said the embarrassed young lawyer, <lb/>
hesitatingly, could plead my <lb/>
cause with more self-possession, j commencement address <lb/>
In the courts love I <lb/>
don't think I stack p as a first- <lb/>
class <lb/>
have not had an <lb/>
extensive practice in such courts, j May 10th. <lb/>
suggested tho maiden, A Pennsylvania paper quotes <lb/>
softly. clover seed at per <lb/>
it exactly, Clara eager-1 should make a <lb/>
rejoined the young man. moving I note of tint <lb/>
i fin i clever <lb/>
his chair a little nearer. m a <lb/>
green hand at this business. But Rev. Carter Helm Jones, pastor <lb/>
if I feel sure the the First Baptist church, Knox- <lb/>
i ville, will preach the <lb/>
,, ,, . . . address at the next com- <lb/>
prejudiced against of Wake Forest cu <lb/>
Senator Vance will the <lb/>
at the <lb/>
University of Virginia, in June- <lb/>
Capt. S. A- Ashe, editor of the <lb/>
News and Observer, will deliver <lb/>
the Memorial-day address at <lb/>
raise their own <lb/>
the <lb/>
you <lb/>
then, I <lb/>
kind of a jury arc you <lb/>
considering mo, William she <lb/>
asked, with eyes downcast. <lb/>
jury, of course <lb/>
You couldn't a Grand Jury, <lb/>
yon know, <lb/>
we don't try cases be- <lb/>
fore grand <lb/>
think, said the <lb/>
young girl, blushing, would <lb/>
rather for this occasion to be con- <lb/>
a Grand <lb/>
and she hid her face <lb/>
somewhere in the vicinity of his <lb/>
coat collar, have found a true <lb/>
Bill. <lb/>
Wilmington Hen-roost <lb/>
thieves visited the premises of Mr. <lb/>
C- corner of Seventh and <lb/>
Mulberry streets, Wednesday <lb/>
night and carried off fine fat <lb/>
fowls, <lb/>
Warrenton Herald Roy. C. M- <lb/>
Anderson and wife moved the first <lb/>
of the week to Connelly Springs, <lb/>
where they will make their future <lb/>
home. Mr. Anderson has <lb/>
chased a beautiful residence near <lb/>
the Connelly Springs hotel. <lb/>
Free We are <lb/>
told that Mr. Richard Nobles has <lb/>
a sweet potato patch that has been <lb/>
in potatoes for fifty years, and up <lb/>
on which no manure has been <lb/>
hauled. He pens his cattle on it. <lb/>
Mr. is years old and <lb/>
still plows right along. <lb/>
The <lb/>
Norfolk, Wilmington <lb/>
Railroad. <lb/>
Char <lb/>
Wilson Tramps arc <lb/>
plentiful, and keep the police on <lb/>
the watch all night. The station <lb/>
house is kept full every night. <lb/>
.,.,. A gentleman who lives on the <lb/>
The Philadelphia Record con- between Black Creek and <lb/>
the following railroad i Fremont tells between ten and <lb/>
of projected J twenty come to his house every <lb/>
Norfolk, Wilmington A Charleston something to eat. <lb/>
railroad, whose offices are in this The following are the consider- <lb/>
ed-, have completed the survey able items in the River and Harbor <lb/>
the entire length of the this Inland water <lb/>
j i way between river and Swan- <lb/>
miles are now in j <lb/>
locating <lb/>
Norfolk <lb/>
follows an almost air line of Char <lb/>
S. C, passing through a <lb/>
section of country which is now <lb/>
almost without railroad facilities. <lb/>
The surveys show that the <lb/>
the line. Starting from river, <lb/>
, Va., tho surveyed route Cape Fear <lb/>
con- <lb/>
creek, New, Pain- <lb/>
and Tar, Fishing <lb/>
creek, <lb/>
Concord Standard Our friend <lb/>
Isaac who lacks <lb/>
There may be other cases of <lb/>
drop forward and his body misfit, but these are <lb/>
He would have fallen to h So when you a <lb/>
had not the girl and bold be sure to tho <lb/>
up. A dozen of up were there j <lb/>
in a moment, but we were too late. <lb/>
The old man's life had gone out <lb/>
as yon breathe upon the flame of <lb/>
a candle, and on his ashen lips <lb/>
still trembled the sacred notes of <lb/>
the <lb/>
to <lb/>
M. Quad. <lb/>
His Heart In It. <lb/>
He had Been There. <lb/>
locomotive costs and s pal- <lb/>
lace ear <lb/>
are railroad triages in <lb/>
United States spawning <lb/>
miles; the longest span is the <lb/>
river at <lb/>
That was an editor of ex- <lb/>
in all the <lb/>
and vicissitudes of the profession <lb/>
who wrote the following with a <lb/>
that its own bit <lb/>
Most editors are well acquainted <lb/>
with the man who takes more <lb/>
papers than he reads, and <lb/>
has no use for his local <lb/>
paper. He takes a paper publish- <lb/>
ed in Portland, Maine. It con- <lb/>
all the news about the <lb/>
Last <lb/>
of Moose, the Bandit <lb/>
etc., and while he is storing his <lb/>
mind with information his <lb/>
wife reads bock-number almanacs. <lb/>
But let him get into trouble, he <lb/>
rushes to the local paper to help <lb/>
him out, and wants it bad If hrs <lb/>
baby or wife dies he wants a <lb/>
column obituary, yet he cannot <lb/>
help his local paper by subscribing. <lb/>
This is also the man wants a <lb/>
fifteen-line local puffin your paper <lb/>
just to fill up, you know. <lb/>
We Have Seen. <lb/>
Indiana Farmer. <lb/>
A young man sell a good farm, <lb/>
turn merchant, break and die <lb/>
vent <lb/>
A farmer spend so much time in <lb/>
town that there was. nothing at <lb/>
home worth looking after. <lb/>
A worthy farmer's idle away <lb/>
the prime of his life in dissipation <lb/>
and end his car in poverty. <lb/>
A poor boy grow rich by <lb/>
try and good and a <lb/>
rich boy grow poor by idleness <lb/>
and dissipation. <lb/>
A man-spend more mosey in <lb/>
folly than support his <lb/>
in comfort and independence. <lb/>
A farmer deliver a fins oration <lb/>
at the with bis <lb/>
all down, fields <lb/>
with wood foraging at a <lb/>
taM and his an <lb/>
A manufacturer in Philadelphia <lb/>
lately told a friend a story of one <lb/>
of his <lb/>
years ago a boy applied <lb/>
to me for work. He was employed <lb/>
at low wages. Two days later <lb/>
awards of premiums were made to <lb/>
manufacturers at the Centennial <lb/>
Exhibition. <lb/>
down Chestnutt street <lb/>
early in the morning I saw Bob <lb/>
poring over the board in <lb/>
front of a newspaper office. Sud- <lb/>
he off his cap with a <lb/>
shout <lb/>
have taken the medal for <lb/>
he exclaimed. <lb/>
said but kept my <lb/>
eye on Bob. The boy who, could <lb/>
identify himself in two days with <lb/>
my interest would be of use to me <lb/>
hereafter. <lb/>
work was to deliver pack- <lb/>
ages. I that he took a real <lb/>
pride in it. His wagon must be <lb/>
cleaner, his horse better fed, his <lb/>
orders filled more promptly, than <lb/>
those of the men belonging to any <lb/>
other firm. He was as zealous for <lb/>
the house as though he had been <lb/>
a partner it- I have advanced <lb/>
him step by step. His fortune is <lb/>
made, and the firm have added to <lb/>
their capital so much energy and <lb/>
will be easy, the come into town <lb/>
difficulty encountered being the <lb/>
Dismal Swamp, which tho road <lb/>
runs directly through. From a <lb/>
point near Kinston, N. C-, it is <lb/>
proposed, to a branch <lb/>
to Columbia. S- C-, a distance <lb/>
nearly miles, but this has not <lb/>
been surveyed yet. <lb/>
The main line will run through <lb/>
Norfolk county, in Virginia, <lb/>
ford, Bertie. Pitt, Craven, <lb/>
Jones, Onslow, Bl idea, <lb/>
and Brunswick, in North <lb/>
riding on a bale of cotton. He <lb/>
said that was only the last <lb/>
but that ho had his entire crop of <lb/>
two years stored away at home. <lb/>
George W. Riser, aged <lb/>
of county, having buried <lb/>
four wives already, was married <lb/>
Saturday to tho Daniel <lb/>
aged years. <lb/>
Raleigh News and <lb/>
A letter received by Commissioner <lb/>
of Agriculture Robinson from Hen- <lb/>
discloses the fact that <lb/>
no commercial fertilizers winterer <lb/>
are used in Henderson county, and <lb/>
Carolina, and Georgetown still more surprising is. tho fact <lb/>
and Berkeley counties in South shipped during <lb/>
the months of September. October <lb/>
and November last five million <lb/>
Carolina. <lb/>
A Touching Incident. <lb/>
Atlanta Constitution. <lb/>
Yesterday morning a was <lb/>
pounds of vegetables, all raised <lb/>
without the aid of any fertilizer<lb/>
ager G. M. <lb/>
General Han- <lb/>
the Norfolk <lb/>
heard at the big door of tho Fill- Carolina railroad confirms the <lb/>
ton county jail. Miller <lb/>
opened door and a ragged <lb/>
man came in. There was a hag- <lb/>
look on the fellow's face. It <lb/>
was Jim Wesson, the moonshiner, <lb/>
who escaped from the Fulton <lb/>
county jail a week ago, to go home <lb/>
to see his sick baby. <lb/>
sorry, Mr. he said <lb/>
in a broken voice. hope you <lb/>
and Morrow don't care, but <lb/>
I heard the <lb/>
He stopped a moment his <lb/>
lip quit quivering so, and went <lb/>
heard the baby was sick, and <lb/>
I thought about wife of it <lb/>
at home, and I just had to go. <lb/>
report that a branch road will <lb/>
built from the main line via <lb/>
and Windsor to in <lb/>
Bertie county. The distance is <lb/>
about forty miles and it will <lb/>
run through a splendid country. <lb/>
is the location of Dr. W. R- <lb/>
Capehart and his largo seine <lb/>
fishery. The survey of the route <lb/>
began Monday. <lb/>
A little <lb/>
thirteen year old daughter of Mr. <lb/>
Martin Welch, who lives near Bun- <lb/>
Hill, was instantly killed Sat- <lb/>
afternoon while pi lying with <lb/>
other children in tho woods near the <lb/>
house. The little girls were swing- <lb/>
from the limbs of a that <lb/>
that had lodged another tree, it <lb/>
having been formerly cut down <lb/>
Those are disposed to find <lb/>
fault with the Democratic party <lb/>
should in all fairness take as an <lb/>
example some government where <lb/>
the Democrats have been in pow- <lb/>
and show its errors and crimes- <lb/>
Take North Carolina for instance. <lb/>
The Democrats have been in full <lb/>
here. They have had the <lb/>
all the State officers <lb/>
the Legislature- They have made <lb/>
the laws and executed <lb/>
What is wrong Who <lb/>
defaulted Who has been op <lb/>
Our State Government <lb/>
as boon economically administer- <lb/>
ed ; taxes are low; laws are <lb/>
ed ; life, liberty and property are <lb/>
protested; our schools are flourish- <lb/>
; oar resources are de- <lb/>
are in- <lb/>
creasing, sin The general govern- <lb/>
once under the control of <lb/>
Democrats be run on the <lb/>
same desk and pit free <lb/>
a. <lb/>
was sorry, wrote you I'd come j when it became detached, trunk <lb/>
back. I done it. They done I falling on the little Welch girl, <lb/>
bored the baby, I hope yon killing her instantly, <lb/>
ain't Raleigh A band of <lb/>
Capt Miller did men broke into the <lb/>
utter a word of reproach. of Jay Atwater, <lb/>
. , . , , T- ,. young colored man of Chatham <lb/>
glad yon have come back, Jim, him, tied his <lb/>
he s-id. hands behind him, and brutally <lb/>
mi i , whipped and otherwise terribly <lb/>
, , , , him. It was done be- <lb/>
Six hundred and fifty he ft witness R <lb/>
left Memphis, Tenn , for between two white men; and was <lb/>
intended to drive him off to prevent <lb/>
his evidence. The parties are <lb/>
known and <lb/>
their arrest <lb/>
Charlotte <lb/>
recent term <lb/>
warrants are out for <lb/>
ma They will make the journey <lb/>
in wagons and on foot It is ex- <lb/>
that one thousand more <lb/>
will leave for the same place soon. <lb/>
The exodus is not directly due to <lb/>
the late The matter, of <lb/>
had been talked of before, but the j,, was severe in his <lb/>
lynching and action of the colored, dealings with the offenders. Gas- <lb/>
mass-meeting advising all who ton, as is known, is a dry county. <lb/>
of Gaston <lb/>
At the <lb/>
court a <lb/>
and <lb/>
III The REFLECTOR <lb/>
A hole for <lb/>
only One hut <lb/>
In i It yon <lb/>
i swat pay In advance, <lb/>
If you <lb/>
just after j our name <lb/>
M the of the <lb/>
the <lb/>
Expires Two Weeks <lb/>
From This <lb/>
ft is to yon no- <lb/>
unless i <lb/>
newer in that time <lb/>
the will <lb/>
cease going to you <lb/>
at the expiration of <lb/>
j, the two weeks. <lb/>
R. J. MARQUIS, <lb/>
DENTIST, <lb/>
C. <lb/>
Office In Skinner Building, upper <lb/>
opposite Gallery <lb/>
L. <lb/>
DENTIST, p- <lb/>
H it. <lb/>
FLEMING, <lb/>
E Y-A T-L A W. <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
to business. Office <lb/>
at Tinker Murphy's old <lb/>
HOS. J. <lb/>
ft BLOW, <lb/>
ALEX. L. <lb/>
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb/>
in nil the Courts. <lb/>
B. YELLOWLEY, <lb/>
A Y- A 7-LA IV <lb/>
Greenville, N. <lb/>
A. B. V. <lb/>
ft TYSON, <lb/>
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
attention given to collection <lb/>
II. LONG, <lb/>
A KN ET AT- LA W, <lb/>
It. C. <lb/>
Prompt mid careful attention to bad- <lb/>
solicited. <lb/>
marry <lb/>
t skinner, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
W JAMES, <lb/>
G KEEN V ILL E, N. C. <lb/>
Practice in all the courts. <lb/>
n Specialty. <lb/>
Cl <lb/>
an B m <lb/>
B o a <lb/>
V r <lb/>
i ; r <lb/>
El <lb/>
-K ft B<lb/>
H S<lb/>
CO <lb/>
could to leave precipitated and <lb/>
caused many to make their <lb/>
The judge said fines seemed to <lb/>
have no so he would try <lb/>
. a,, m imprisonment, and see how that <lb/>
minds to o who perhaps towards putting an <lb/>
not otherwise have done <lb/>
AH the paths of life lend to the <lb/>
grave, and the utmost we can do <lb/>
i is to avoid short cut. <lb/>
end to tho violations of the law. <lb/>
Two parties were sentenced to <lb/>
three months each jail, another <lb/>
to six for Helling <lb/>
whiskey and throe for telling a <lb/>
list on the <lb/>
1875. <lb/>
S, M. SCHULTZ, <lb/>
AT THE <lb/>
OLD STOKE <lb/>
I FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb/>
. their year's supplies will And <lb/>
their interest to jet our prices before <lb/>
is <lb/>
n all its branches. <lb/>
PORK SIDES <lb/>
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb/>
RICK, TEA, Ac. <lb/>
always at Lowest Market Pi <lb/>
TOBACCO <lb/>
we direct from Manufacturers, <lb/>
you to buy at one profit. A <lb/>
stock of <lb/>
always on hand and sold at prices to sail <lb/>
times. Our goods are all bought <lb/>
sold for CASH, therefore, having no rial <lb/>
to sell at a margin. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
S. M. <lb/>
Tar bur <lb/>
Forbes, Greenville, <lb/>
. B. Cherry, <lb/>
J. S. <lb/>
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen Man <lb/>
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gee A <lb/>
The People's Line travel on Tat <lb/>
. <lb/>
The Steamer is the Inert <lb/>
and quickest boat on the river. <lb/>
been thoroughly repaired, <lb/>
painted. <lb/>
Fitted up specially for the comfort, at <lb/>
and convenience of <lb/>
POLITE WT, VI Off <lb/>
A Table furnished <lb/>
best market <lb/>
A trip on the Steamer to <lb/>
not only bat <lb/>
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb/>
And Friday at ft. o'clock, A- at. <lb/>
Leaves <lb/>
and Saturday at o'clock. A. . <lb/>
Freights received daily and <lb/>
to aB<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017541_0002" n="2"/>
<p>
Sm <lb/>
same measures now <lb/>
it a virtue then It seems to <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
Editor at <lb/>
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1802. <lb/>
say because Folk- and others ad- <lb/>
them. The same reasoning <lb/>
would declare even the Herald <lb/>
entered at th at Greenville, <lb/>
N. C. mail matter. <lb/>
Publisher's <lb/>
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICK OF <lb/>
The U per <lb/>
Rates.-One <lb/>
column one year. <lb/>
; one-quarter column one year, <lb/>
Transient inch <lb/>
weak, two weeks, one <lb/>
month W. Two inches one week, <lb/>
two weeks, one month, <lb/>
Advertisements Inserted In Local <lb/>
Column M reading items, cents per <lb/>
for each Insertion. <lb/>
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb/>
and Notices- <lb/>
and Sales. <lb/>
Summons to Non-Residents, etc., will <lb/>
be charged at legal rates and must <lb/>
PAID FOB IN ADVANCE. <lb/>
Contracts for any space not <lb/>
Above, for any length of time, can be <lb/>
by application to the office either <lb/>
in person or by letter. <lb/>
Copy tor New Advertisements and <lb/>
all changes of should he <lb/>
handed in by o'clock on Tuesday <lb/>
mornings in order to receive prompt in <lb/>
the day following. <lb/>
The Reflector having a large <lb/>
will be found a profitable medium <lb/>
through to reach the public. <lb/>
be depended oil or grimly <lb/>
deceived- <lb/>
The above is to who point and <lb/>
has lots of food it for the Dem- <lb/>
press of North Carolina <lb/>
democratic if Polk should now. No one doubts but <lb/>
. . . what this comes from good Dem- <lb/>
to go to Salisbury T <lb/>
. . ., i In <lb/>
HE IS A DEMOCRAT. <lb/>
Last week we wrote an editorial <lb/>
in to Col. Harry <lb/>
of this The Reflector said <lb/>
what it believed to be true- It <lb/>
spoke in the interest of the Demo- <lb/>
party. It had no other <lb/>
motive. We could not help say- <lb/>
some things in reference to the <lb/>
press because we believed Col. <lb/>
Skinner had been misrepresented- <lb/>
We repeat with emphasis this fact <lb/>
after having read what some of the <lb/>
papers have had to say in refer- <lb/>
to this editorial. <lb/>
The and Observer says in <lb/>
its general observations it endorses <lb/>
what the Reflector says, but that <lb/>
it denies that the press of State <lb/>
has been unfair towards Col- <lb/>
Skinner but instead that he has <lb/>
been treated very gently, and that <lb/>
the papers have been very <lb/>
able in regard to him- We con- <lb/>
fess that we fail to see much gen- <lb/>
and in saying <lb/>
that a man is aiding and abetting <lb/>
a third party, that he is placing in <lb/>
jeopardy the Democratic party, <lb/>
that he advises that the primaries <lb/>
shall appoint men who shall select <lb/>
delegates to go to Raleigh to the <lb/>
Democratic Convention, take <lb/>
session of the Convention, adopt <lb/>
such measures as th desire, send <lb/>
delegates to the Omaha <lb/>
instead of the Chicago Con- <lb/>
Col. has been accused <lb/>
of these and various other things, <lb/>
not less to be condemned. If they <lb/>
are true he deserves to be severely <lb/>
If they are not true it <lb/>
is misrepresentation to accuse him <lb/>
of them. We say that none of <lb/>
them are true. <lb/>
Heirs Observer says his <lb/>
speeches have been correctly re- <lb/>
ported. When they have been the <lb/>
report states every time that he <lb/>
declared himself a Democrat from <lb/>
birth. He states plainly and <lb/>
that he is opposed to third <lb/>
party. We know he advises <lb/>
ways against the formation of an- <lb/>
other party. How can it be said <lb/>
that he favors these things when <lb/>
he openly and fearlessly opposes <lb/>
them all- It would be strange <lb/>
policy to favor these and declare <lb/>
openly in every speech he makes <lb/>
that he is opposed to them. The <lb/>
only reasonable solution is that he <lb/>
does not favor them but is a <lb/>
thorough going Democrat. So <lb/>
much for what the and Ob- <lb/>
server says in reply to our <lb/>
The Salisbury Daily de-- <lb/>
some space to the same <lb/>
and says that in the main it <lb/>
endorses what the Reflector says <lb/>
but that in some very essential <lb/>
points there is a vast difference- <lb/>
It pleads guilty to but <lb/>
denies misrepresenting Col. Skin- <lb/>
and goes farther and says that <lb/>
he deserved severer words than <lb/>
were addressed to him- We refer <lb/>
the Herald to what has been said <lb/>
above in reference to the <lb/>
against the Colonel and repeat <lb/>
that the says he is not <lb/>
guilty of any of these things. The <lb/>
Herald assumes that Col. Skinner <lb/>
favors the third party because he <lb/>
has spoken at the same times and <lb/>
places that Col- Polk and others <lb/>
have, and advocates the demands <lb/>
of the Alliance, or at least a part <lb/>
of them. Col- Skinner advocates <lb/>
now what he did before Polk knew <lb/>
anything about such measure.-and <lb/>
before the Alliance was born- He <lb/>
advocated them when he was <lb/>
for the Legislature by a <lb/>
Democratic convention as a Dem <lb/>
He advocated them in <lb/>
Ha advocated diem <lb/>
while in the legislature. He was <lb/>
. a member of the Demo <lb/>
Executive Convention of the <lb/>
he advocated them and <lb/>
hie Democracy was not questioned <lb/>
by eve sect of the <lb/>
Democrats- We would ask the <lb/>
i it treason to <lb/>
what the Herald is now ad- <lb/>
The repeats <lb/>
what it said before that Col. Skin- <lb/>
is only acting consistently <lb/>
when he advocates the measures <lb/>
for which he is abased. Tho re- <lb/>
cord of the man shows this to be <lb/>
an undeniable fact- The Herald <lb/>
says that Skinner has done <lb/>
more to wean men from their <lb/>
to the Democratic party <lb/>
than all the out spoken Third <lb/>
party men The doc- <lb/>
he advocates then must be <lb/>
popular with a large number of <lb/>
Democrats. In fact if we are not <lb/>
very much mistaken they are <lb/>
all a part of the platform of the <lb/>
Democratic party of 1890 except <lb/>
the sub-treasury- That platform <lb/>
also endorsed financial reform but <lb/>
not the special bill known as the <lb/>
sub-treasury bill. We do not see <lb/>
that the advocacy on <lb/>
of this measure is to be made <lb/>
the test of a man's Democracy- It <lb/>
is not a State matter, it would not <lb/>
accomplish a thing if it were in- <lb/>
in the State platform, if <lb/>
every officer in North Carolina <lb/>
favored it, it could not hasten its <lb/>
passage as a law. Our <lb/>
as has been seen could do <lb/>
nothing but endorse it and instruct <lb/>
its representatives in Congress to <lb/>
vote for it. It is a national issue <lb/>
and should not be used to disrupt <lb/>
the State Democracy. We believe <lb/>
that Col. Skinner will and can <lb/>
have great influence in keeping <lb/>
the Alliance in the Democratic <lb/>
party. There was no division two <lb/>
years ago and if both Alliance and <lb/>
non-Alliance will concede to each <lb/>
other honesty of purpose there <lb/>
will be no division this time, but <lb/>
when you read or drive a man out <lb/>
of the Democratic party, if he don't <lb/>
want to go into the Republican <lb/>
party ho must go into a third <lb/>
party. <lb/>
The Herald says Col- Skinner <lb/>
wants office as bad as the <lb/>
Ton wants subscribers. This may <lb/>
be true- It is certainly his <lb/>
and as long as he remains the <lb/>
true Democrat that he is there is <lb/>
every prospect that he will set <lb/>
one. <lb/>
The Harold wants to know if <lb/>
Reflector means to inti <lb/>
mate that the men mentioned <lb/>
who will not stand quietly by <lb/>
and see Col. Skinner misrepresent- <lb/>
ed are and pan- <lb/>
to the third party crew as <lb/>
Col. Skinner is stat- <lb/>
ed that these men knew he was a <lb/>
Democrat and therefore <lb/>
back him. To show that we were <lb/>
right when we made the assertion <lb/>
we invite the attention of the <lb/>
Herald to the following from <lb/>
of the men mentioned which <lb/>
written about the same time <lb/>
editorial was. Col. R. <lb/>
authority. In <lb/>
with Jarvis article <lb/>
in last was referred to <lb/>
and ho remarked think you said <lb/>
exactly what should have been <lb/>
This looks like they will <lb/>
stand by Col. Skinner. And tho <lb/>
Herald should remember, too, that <lb/>
only a few weeks ago it was point- <lb/>
with pride to some of these <lb/>
men as the Democratic tutors of <lb/>
its editor. Now it should not go <lb/>
back on its training. <lb/>
In compliance with the request <lb/>
of the Herald we insert the follow- <lb/>
one <lb/>
was <lb/>
B. <lb/>
the <lb/>
The Democrats who would aid <lb/>
or countenance a party which ad- <lb/>
cannot win, but may and <lb/>
probably will destroy, remember <lb/>
that treason to the prosperity and <lb/>
welfare of North Carolina has <lb/>
never yet gone unpunished- <lb/>
State Chronicle. <lb/>
The above is commended to the <lb/>
careful consideration of Col. Harry <lb/>
Skinner, who while professing to <lb/>
be a Democrat is aiding the laird <lb/>
party machine- As Col. Skinner <lb/>
does not see the Herald we ask <lb/>
tho Greenville Reflector to call <lb/>
his attention to the above, and to <lb/>
say to him that, in the opinion of <lb/>
Democrats up this way, it fits his <lb/>
case Herald- <lb/>
The Herald quotes the above <lb/>
and says that it fits Col. Skinner's <lb/>
case precisely. We think the <lb/>
editor misconceives the above <lb/>
quotation from the Chronicle. It <lb/>
had no to men who, like <lb/>
Col- Skinner, openly oppose a <lb/>
party but those who favor a <lb/>
third party. Col. Skinner only <lb/>
advocates some of the demands of <lb/>
the Alliance and to show that the <lb/>
Chronicle had no reference to him <lb/>
quote from an editorial written <lb/>
since the above paragraph in the <lb/>
same paper under the heading of <lb/>
and vote in which <lb/>
the Chronicle <lb/>
The Democratic party <lb/>
a favorable position towards the <lb/>
Alliance. It recognizes the justice <lb/>
of the demands made by the farm- <lb/>
It can say that for years it <lb/>
has made similar demands, and, <lb/>
with equal earnestness, insisted <lb/>
that they should be heeded. And <lb/>
with the strictest consistency the <lb/>
Democratic and Alliance elements <lb/>
can act and vote together, because, <lb/>
in every essential particular, the <lb/>
same principles underly and <lb/>
vitality to both. <lb/>
No one doubts the Democracy of <lb/>
tho Chronicle with T. R. <lb/>
as its editor. What does it say T <lb/>
Democratic party recognizes <lb/>
the justice of the demands of the <lb/>
Is a man to be read out <lb/>
of the party because ho favors <lb/>
what the party favors t This is <lb/>
all Col- Skinner docs and in this <lb/>
according to the Chronicle he is in <lb/>
harmony with his party. It <lb/>
says that Democratic party <lb/>
for years has made similar de- <lb/>
and, with equal earnest- <lb/>
insisted that they should <lb/>
be Is a man to be <lb/>
ousted because he is laboring <lb/>
for the same thing It adds <lb/>
further, with the strictest <lb/>
consistency the Democratic and <lb/>
Alliance elements can act and vote <lb/>
together, because, in every <lb/>
particular, the principles <lb/>
underly and give vitality to <lb/>
Is Col. Skinner to be accused of <lb/>
inconsistency because he fearless- <lb/>
advocates the same t There is <lb/>
much wisdom in the above para- <lb/>
graph from that recognized Demo- <lb/>
organ, the Stale Chronicle. <lb/>
The Democrats and the Alliance <lb/>
must vole together. It is the only <lb/>
way by which we can keep from <lb/>
under Republican rule which is <lb/>
the worst of all supremacy of <lb/>
every name. <lb/>
Herald lays great stress <lb/>
upon the fact that Col. Skinner <lb/>
travels and speaks with Marion <lb/>
Butler and others- How do you <lb/>
expect to control the Alliance if <lb/>
you have nothing to with it <lb/>
There is not a Democratic paper <lb/>
in North Carolina that does not <lb/>
recognize that the Alliance vote is <lb/>
to the success of the <lb/>
Democratic party and there is no <lb/>
political wisdom in abusing the <lb/>
order, and the Democrats who as- <lb/>
with them. We venture <lb/>
the assertion that if this course is <lb/>
continuously and generally per- <lb/>
sued by the Democratic press that <lb/>
North Carolina will be given over <lb/>
to the Republicans and those who <lb/>
do these things will be <lb/>
for it. <lb/>
There is much being said about <lb/>
who shall go into the Democratic <lb/>
We believe that if the <lb/>
test that some propose is adhered <lb/>
to that there will inevitably be a <lb/>
third party, which would be the <lb/>
saddest thing that has befallen <lb/>
North Carolina since <lb/>
day a H yon drive <lb/>
of your primaries how on earth <lb/>
can yon expect them to support <lb/>
your nominees t All who are <lb/>
Democrats ought, to be admitted <lb/>
though they do favor some nation- <lb/>
measures which tho State <lb/>
Democracy does not endorse. <lb/>
when you crash or cramp this <lb/>
crush and cramp the Democratic <lb/>
party. We want to see harmony <lb/>
between the press, the politicians <lb/>
and the people, so that the Demo- <lb/>
banner may continue to <lb/>
proudly wave over beloved <lb/>
State, oven though it may n. t over <lb/>
the nation. <lb/>
We are not making <lb/>
i on any One. for the Dem- <lb/>
party, first, last and ell the <lb/>
time. We are for retaining in its <lb/>
ranks who are members of <lb/>
the Alliance and whom the press <lb/>
of the State almost without <lb/>
lion have been saying that they <lb/>
have confidence in as being true <lb/>
Democrats. We expect to d fend <lb/>
Col. Skinner as long as he <lb/>
a Democrat, regardless of the fact <lb/>
that he advocates the sub-treasury <lb/>
from the fact that this makes him <lb/>
no less a Democrat- Who doubts <lb/>
the Democracy of Livingston <lb/>
Who doubts the Democracy of <lb/>
Alexander Who doubts the <lb/>
Democracy of Grady of the 3rd <lb/>
District, and A. H A. Williams of <lb/>
the 5th District All of these ad- <lb/>
tho same measures that Col. <lb/>
Skinner does. Nothing is said <lb/>
about Alexander favoring a third <lb/>
party and yet he speaks and as <lb/>
with Polk, Butler and <lb/>
others. <lb/>
We know Col. Harry Skin is <lb/>
a Democrat. know the Dem- <lb/>
.- i <lb/>
Senator Mills changed bis mind J S a <lb/>
about remaining in House . 8tH law <lb/>
S W <lb/>
and was on Wednesday sworn in i Slaughter, a and -is a <lb/>
as a Senator. His vote will not Smith, Cicero hi a <lb/>
be needed, as the wool bill will re- Lewis H a <lb/>
the votes of about two-thirds j . <lb/>
of Stokes D O . k <lb/>
. diaries A a <lb/>
The business of the House is in j stokes b IT a <lb/>
such a condition that if it could m m W u stokes a <lb/>
dictate the time of adjournment it <lb/>
would not be later than June 1st, <lb/>
but it is already apparent that the <lb/>
Senate will attempt <lb/>
to <lb/>
increase the appropriation <lb/>
bills, as passed by tho House, and <lb/>
of course the House will fight to <lb/>
maintain its economical figures, <lb/>
which will necessarily prolong the <lb/>
session. <lb/>
Much has been written about <lb/>
democratic dissension because of <lb/>
the shelving of the free coinage <lb/>
bill, but mighty little of it can be <lb/>
discovered. There can be no <lb/>
doubt that a majority of the demo- <lb/>
in the House are in favor of <lb/>
free coinage, would vote for it <lb/>
if given an opportunity, but it is <lb/>
equally true that a majority of the <lb/>
democrats are opposed to the <lb/>
of a gag rule to pass that or <lb/>
any other measure. That is the <lb/>
whole situation in a nutshell. Sen- <lb/>
Stewart has given notice that <lb/>
he will, next Monday, call up his <lb/>
free coinage bill. Then we shall <lb/>
see some on the same <lb/>
subject republican Senate. <lb/>
party needs the aid of all <lb/>
its talent in the present crisis <lb/>
therefore we call upon tho press <lb/>
to cease to abuse and misrepresent <lb/>
those who may be of great use in <lb/>
the coming struggle- Harry Skin- <lb/>
clarion voice and eloquent <lb/>
words have electrified many a <lb/>
Democratic audience in the past, <lb/>
the party needs him now and we <lb/>
confident in saying that he <lb/>
will be and willing to obey <lb/>
its behests. <lb/>
in <lb/>
We are sorry to some of our <lb/>
friends, and some cf the editorial <lb/>
guild, disposed to question Col. <lb/>
Hairy Skinner's sincere democracy, <lb/>
and we rise to call a halt and <lb/>
counsel deliberation before <lb/>
to an unjust and hasty conclusion- <lb/>
Democracy is his heritage in <lb/>
politics. If Harry Skinner is not <lb/>
a wool-dyed, yard wide, <lb/>
stalwart Democrat, then we have <lb/>
got to read his history all back- <lb/>
ward and the history of his line- <lb/>
age for a hundred years in the <lb/>
past history of North Carolina. <lb/>
Before the Democratic party was <lb/>
out of the old, anti- <lb/>
Federal, Republican party,. the <lb/>
ancestors of Harry Skinner <lb/>
Perquimans county in the-I <lb/>
General Assembly of North Caro- <lb/>
and stood by the standard of <lb/>
Thomas the great Father <lb/>
of Democracy. Harry Skinner the <lb/>
grandfather, James Skinner the <lb/>
father, and T. G. Skinner, the <lb/>
brother of Harry Skinner of our <lb/>
time, have all trod the same an- <lb/>
track of Democracy, and is <lb/>
it just and fair to denounce one of <lb/>
the best specimens of Albemarle <lb/>
stock whose voice and influence <lb/>
from early manhood has always <lb/>
been on the side of manly <lb/>
racy, because he has the courage <lb/>
of his convictions and thinks the <lb/>
is the best <lb/>
device for the relief of the cotton <lb/>
planters of the South, and yet de- <lb/>
his honest opinion, that <lb/>
while he loves the <lb/>
much he loves Democracy more, <lb/>
and if he has to choose between <lb/>
them then he will cling to the <lb/>
Democratic party But say his <lb/>
accusers, he is an Alliance man <lb/>
and speaks from the same platform <lb/>
with Col. Polk. He was for the <lb/>
before Col. Polk came, <lb/>
and before the Alliance had an <lb/>
existence- Must he retreat be- <lb/>
cause Col. Polk shows himself <lb/>
Has he ever uttered a word that <lb/>
had not the genuine ring of the <lb/>
guinea Democracy he ever <lb/>
been a Democrat and <lb/>
proclaimed his purpose to shuffle <lb/>
off his Democratic boots, as has <lb/>
CoL Polk We have faith in <lb/>
Harry Skinner, in his democracy, <lb/>
in his character, in his lineage, in <lb/>
his fidelity and pluck, but if we <lb/>
thought him Untrue to his political <lb/>
faith this hand would be the last <lb/>
to write one word in his <lb/>
But the Democratic party <lb/>
cannot afford to throw away snob <lb/>
sound Democratic timber as Harry <lb/>
upon a clamor. He <lb/>
is no man. He is <lb/>
no man, but or the people, and b the people, <lb/>
and sterling Democrat that may th primaries is <lb/>
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb/>
From our Regular Correspondent. <lb/>
Washington, D. C, April 1st <lb/>
Mr. Harrison is arranging a hole <lb/>
for himself to crawl through <lb/>
should the opposition to his re- <lb/>
nomination grow dangerous by <lb/>
concentrating upon somebody, or <lb/>
should he become convinced, like <lb/>
Mr- Blame, that no Republican <lb/>
can be elected, by having his <lb/>
friends hint it around that he will <lb/>
not be a candidate unless assured <lb/>
in advance that his nomination <lb/>
will be made on tho first ballot- <lb/>
In view of the spread-eagle com <lb/>
which Mr- Harrison <lb/>
recently addressed to Lord <lb/>
bury, the satisfactory ending of <lb/>
the controversy is a very <lb/>
thing for this country, <lb/>
though it must be humiliating to <lb/>
Mr. Harrison when he compares <lb/>
the tone of his entirely <lb/>
communication, alleged by <lb/>
his admirers to have been an <lb/>
with that of Lord <lb/>
bury, which Is extremely friendly, <lb/>
and which also shows that there <lb/>
was as little reason for the latest <lb/>
war scare which Mr. Harrison <lb/>
fathered, as there was lot the one <lb/>
concerning Chili. The <lb/>
part about this sort of thing <lb/>
is that it causes the people to lose <lb/>
confidence in the administration, <lb/>
and sometime when there is real <lb/>
danger of war they may refuse to <lb/>
respond to its cry of <lb/>
Representative Springer expects <lb/>
to be able to attend next Monday's <lb/>
session of the House, and move a <lb/>
suspension of the rules for the <lb/>
cf passing the free wool <lb/>
ill, general debate upon which is <lb/>
to close on Saturday. Mr. Springer <lb/>
will not make a speech on this <lb/>
bill, in fact his strength would not <lb/>
allow him to, but he wishes to <lb/>
move the suspension of the rules <lb/>
for the passage of the bill of which <lb/>
he is the author. <lb/>
The sugar bounties already paid <lb/>
by the Treasury department <lb/>
and the claims <lb/>
pending foot up <lb/>
Boss of New York, was <lb/>
over here this week holding <lb/>
mysterious conferences with prom- <lb/>
republicans in Congress, and <lb/>
there is reason to believe that his <lb/>
visit bodes no good to the Harri- <lb/>
son boom, notwithstanding state- <lb/>
that he had promised to <lb/>
support Mr. Harrison. The only <lb/>
man that ever really and <lb/>
sincerely supports is Thomas C- <lb/>
Ex-Representatives Owen, who <lb/>
was, it was said at the time the <lb/>
was made, appointed <lb/>
Commissioner of <lb/>
position created by the <lb/>
Mr. Harrison in <lb/>
order to pay one of his Indiana <lb/>
political debts, is in the hottest <lb/>
kind of hot water, and it is among <lb/>
the possibilities that he may figure <lb/>
as the defendant before a criminal <lb/>
court. He is charged openly by <lb/>
his superior, Assistant <lb/>
Secretary with being <lb/>
unfit, incompetent and <lb/>
worthy, and by implication with <lb/>
being dishonest- These facts have <lb/>
been brought out in the <lb/>
which the joint House and <lb/>
Senate Immigration Committee is <lb/>
conducting, and which promises <lb/>
to show that some Treasury <lb/>
them Assistant Sec- <lb/>
rotary been very <lb/>
wastefully extra if not ac- <lb/>
dishonest in allowing <lb/>
to be spent upon the Govern- <lb/>
Immigration Station at Ellis <lb/>
Island, when only had <lb/>
been appropriated, the difference <lb/>
being paid from find known <lb/>
as The thing must <lb/>
be very or <lb/>
Senator Chandler, chairman of the <lb/>
Senate Committee on Immigration, <lb/>
who has never been accused of be- <lb/>
as to public ex- <lb/>
would not have been <lb/>
in his examination <lb/>
and ,, <lb/>
who. <lb/>
en mm <lb/>
appeared <lb/>
Tax Sale. <lb/>
Pursuant to provisions of <lb/>
of the laws of 1889, I <lb/>
shall, beginning Monday May <lb/>
2nd, at A. M . in front of the <lb/>
Court House door in Greenville <lb/>
sell the below described land and <lb/>
town lots for taxes due for the <lb/>
year 1891 and unpaid thereon <lb/>
and cost for advertising the <lb/>
same. J- A- K. TUCKER, <lb/>
Sheriff of Pitt County. <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
John F, a, homestead <lb/>
Barnhill, J D, a, Allen land IS <lb/>
Jack, i a, Clark land <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Bryant, Sam. a, place <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Bras-ton, Nellie, a. Button land <lb/>
Cory, W M. a. Nichole land, <lb/>
Edwards, George, part of town lot <lb/>
Edmonds, Henry, town lot C <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Fleming, E V. a. ferry land, <lb/>
Gorham, Dinah, i town lot, <lb/>
H C, a, N land <lb/>
Hardy, W C, L Elks land <lb/>
W II, n, Fleming land <lb/>
Harris, A lex, a. Turner land B <lb/>
S M, a Johnson land <lb/>
Moore, Jr. a, hind <lb/>
T H, a, land <lb/>
J B, a, land <lb/>
May, a. land <lb/>
C, n, <lb/>
Norman Everett a, G <lb/>
D G, a sermons land <lb/>
Savage, E T. a, land <lb/>
Stancill, Wilson, a, Pollard land <lb/>
Tucker Murphy, a, James land <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Tripp, Eliza, a, <lb/>
W a, J F W land <lb/>
Yellowley, J B, town lot <lb/>
E C Yellowley <lb/>
farm a, <lb/>
Moore land a, <lb/>
Nichols land a, <lb/>
Yellowley, J B, cf II A Yellowley <lb/>
Home place <lb/>
TOWNSHIP. <lb/>
II A, a, creek <lb/>
Chapman, W If, a, clay root. <lb/>
Cox, Fannie, a clay root <lb/>
L A, a, dark land <lb/>
Galloway. E a, cow swamp <lb/>
Haddock, T E, a. creek <lb/>
Hudson. A B, a. tar river <lb/>
Aaron, a, <lb/>
Mills, W F, a, Indian well <lb/>
Mills, Martha J, a, poll ridge <lb/>
-Mills. Henry J, a. poll ridge <lb/>
Mills, Mr- J B, a, cow swamp <lb/>
H A, <lb/>
B B, a. land <lb/>
N L, a, Grimesland <lb/>
Smith, Turner, a, well <lb/>
Smith, Sr, a, <lb/>
Smith, Oliver, a, cow swamp <lb/>
Stokes, Guilford, a, pole ridge <lb/>
Sutton, Jesse Jr, a, root <lb/>
Mrs E A, a, tar river <lb/>
White, L H, a, cow <lb/>
DAM. <lb/>
W C, a, pine lug <lb/>
Turner, a, gum <lb/>
Murphy, J a Crawford laud <lb/>
Baker, Geo B. lot in Marlboro. <lb/>
Beardsley, J H, content's creek <lb/>
L P, a, <lb/>
Thigpen, a, Marlboro, <lb/>
FALKLAND. <lb/>
Atkinson, B S heirs, 1250 a More, <lb/>
Braswell, A, a, Peebles place <lb/>
a, part of <lb/>
J, D a. part of Jordan <lb/>
Jenkins, Mrs Nora. a, <lb/>
Annie, a, balance due <lb/>
a, <lb/>
James, of Win Pippin <lb/>
Estate, a, Bullock farm i <lb/>
Atkinson, B S heirs by S V Joyner <lb/>
for 1890, 1260 a, Atkinson <lb/>
for 1891 <lb/>
Brown, Mrs Nancy A, a, brown <lb/>
land, balance due <lb/>
Cobb, Ella, a, Cobb land <lb/>
a land <lb/>
Corbett, A J a Teel <lb/>
Fields, Amos a <lb/>
J a <lb/>
Pippin, a <lb/>
Susan a Randolph I'd <lb/>
Thigpen, tars II E a <lb/>
SWIFT. <lb/>
Brown, Jorge a <lb/>
Cox, Fred a Indian well <lb/>
Coward, Jno D W H Smith a <lb/>
Freeman, JohnS half a <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Gaskins, a <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
b F halt a land <lb/>
a stock <lb/>
Spier J E I town lot <lb/>
Smith, Oliver a land <lb/>
mills laud <lb/>
D C a <lb/>
w a Wilson land <lb/>
D H a home laud <lb/>
Smith laud <lb/>
Tyson E a <lb/>
Wood S Blown lot <lb/>
stock law <lb/>
Wilson mo D a Dan Wilson <lb/>
meadow branch <lb/>
Bullock, R W, Rollins a. <lb/>
Carson, Jas R. a, douse place, <lb/>
Farrar, O C. a, James land. <lb/>
Hunter, W, by M skinner, <lb/>
Rollins land, <lb/>
Si- <lb/>
Lee I and, <lb/>
James, W Homo land, <lb/>
Andrews, <lb/>
Knight, E C, Bertha Hop- <lb/>
kins. i Hope, <lb/>
Vick, L W, a laud, <lb/>
John, town lot, <lb/>
Hunter, W W. by H Skinner, <lb/>
Rollins, <lb/>
Whichard, David acres, <lb/>
W W, timber laud, J B <lb/>
Little and Jacob <lb/>
J C, 1600 <lb/>
Simon, acres, <lb/>
Co, a, <lb/>
Little laud, <lb/>
Moore, Stanley heirs, acres, <lb/>
Taft, E A, acres <lb/>
C a, swift creek <lb/>
F W j a. swift creek <lb/>
Cox. a, F swamp <lb/>
Cox, S C Sr, a, C <lb/>
Cannon, W a, F swamp <lb/>
Dawson, A B a <lb/>
A B stock law <lb/>
Ellis, Willis a, swift creek <lb/>
Hart, town lot Ayden <lb/>
Harrington, a swift creek <lb/>
manning W S a swift creek <lb/>
Moore, G a <lb/>
Nobles, a swift creek <lb/>
Nobles J W a gum swamp <lb/>
Powell, Callie V a C creek <lb/>
Powell, Callie V stock law <lb/>
Patrick. IS a swift creek <lb/>
Boss, Potter town lot <lb/>
Sutton, a C <lb/>
Sutton, stock law- <lb/>
Sermons. Henry a long branch <lb/>
Saml G <lb/>
Richard, a Long Branch <lb/>
JO<lb/>
9-1 <lb/>
Town Tax Sale. <lb/>
As Town Tax Collector I have <lb/>
vied on the following lots on tho <lb/>
1st day of April, 1892, listed for <lb/>
taxation in town of Greenville <lb/>
by the following parties who are <lb/>
delinquents- And on Monday <lb/>
the 2nd day of May, 1892, at <lb/>
M-, I will offer tho same for <lb/>
cash, to the highest bidder, at <lb/>
public auction, at the Court <lb/>
House, in the town of Greenville, <lb/>
to satisfy tho taxes and costs <lb/>
due thereon. <lb/>
W. H. <lb/>
Town Tax Collector. <lb/>
Clark, Matilda, town lot No <lb/>
Cherry, A B, town lot, <lb/>
Cherry. Peggy, quarter town lot, <lb/>
Evans, Lucy, town lot. <lb/>
Harris, Guilford, quarter town lot, <lb/>
Amos, town lot, <lb/>
J C. town lot, <lb/>
Lawrence, guardian, town lot, I<lb/>
H t <lb/>
N B Lawrence, <lb/>
Murphy wife, town lot, <lb/>
town lot, <lb/>
Tucker Murphy, law <lb/>
Williams, Matthew, fourth town lot, <lb/>
Wilson, B. J., town lot, <lb/>
Hanrahan, W II, and wife, town lot, <lb/>
Hopkins, Wilson, town lot, <lb/>
House. Luke, town lot, <lb/>
Hardy. Stanly, town lot, <lb/>
Notice. <lb/>
I will sell at sale in the <lb/>
Town of Bethel, on Saturday, <lb/>
the 7th day of May, 1892, real <lb/>
estate to satisfy the taxes of the <lb/>
following persons for the year <lb/>
and cost. <lb/>
D D Andrews, lot W James <lb/>
O C Farrar, cut, lot Tarboro St, <lb/>
lots, V N ft R, <lb/>
James St, <lb/>
hotel store. S R R, <lb/>
stables. James <lb/>
acres land. Bethel, <lb/>
Mary E James lot, W Main <lb/>
lot, E James St, <lb/>
lot, E James St, <lb/>
J L Nelson dwelling, N B R, <lb/>
lot near Academy <lb/>
lot W Main St, <lb/>
J U W lot, W Main St, <lb/>
Lewis Hilliard, lot, N Pleasant St, <lb/>
Hardy Bro, lot W Main St, SO <lb/>
lot E Main St, <lb/>
J W Hunter. I lot E Main St, <lb/>
W H Harrington, lot E St, <lb/>
lot R Main St, <lb/>
lot E Main St, <lb/>
lot E Main St,<lb/>
Bert lot W James St, co <lb/>
J S lot N R K, <lb/>
Skinner, office E Main St, <lb/>
Teel Pollard. store E Main St, <lb/>
Albert lot E James St, <lb/>
lot N Pleasant St, <lb/>
H lot W M'S St, <lb/>
Robert Ward est, lot W Main St, <lb/>
Q Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St, <lb/>
This April the 1892. <lb/>
W. C. <lb/>
Town Tax Collector. <lb/>
For sample of our work w you to editor of the <lb/>
NOTIONS, <lb/>
TINWARE, <lb/>
CROCKERY, GLASSWARE GROCERIES, <lb/>
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb/>
Harness, Whips, and Collars, <lb/>
FARMING TOOLS, <lb/>
Plows of the Improved Makes, <lb/>
One of our <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/>
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 <lb/>
class goods. <lb/>
We thank our <lb/>
friends for past <lb/>
patronage and <lb/>
hope to merit a <lb/>
continuance of <lb/>
honest and <lb/>
square dealings <lb/>
to all. The <lb/>
tea c h i n g s. <lb/>
each generation <lb/>
says c o n ft n e <lb/>
your trade to <lb/>
those whom <lb/>
you know to <lb/>
be reliable, <lb/>
Come one, come all and see us. <lb/>
J. B. CHERRY CO. <lb/>
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb/>
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb/>
WHO, CONTINUE THE M OF <lb/>
CARTS DRAYS. <lb/>
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, put up nothing <lb/>
but WORK. We keep up with the times and Improved styles <lb/>
Best material used in all work. All styles Springs are you can from <lb/>
Brewster, oil, Horn, King <lb/>
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb/>
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb/>
he year round, which we will sell as the lowest. <lb/>
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb/>
Thanking people of this and surrounding counties for past favors we hope t <lb/>
merit a continuance of the same <lb/>
T. 13- Williams on. <lb/>
J. SUGG, <lb/>
LIFE AND FIRE AGENT. <lb/>
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb/>
OFFICE SUGG k JAMES OLD STAND <lb/>
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb/>
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb/>
At lowest current rates. <lb/>
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb/>
RELIABLE OF C <lb/>
to the Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo <lb/>
not to be excelled la this market. And to be an <lb/>
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS. CLOTHING, <lb/>
FURNISHING GOODS. and CAPS, BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb/>
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, FURNITURE and HOUSE <lb/>
GOODS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, QUEENS <lb/>
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING, LEATHER of <lb/>
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hat, Rock Limb, or and <lb/>
Hair, 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, cent per dozen, less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep <lb/>
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lip. <lb/>
teed Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb/>
Willow Ware. Nails a Give me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb/>
TIE HALL <lb/>
A Writing <lb/>
REMODELED AND IMPROVED, <lb/>
GOOD MANIFOLDER. <lb/>
The Best Standard Typewriter in World. <lb/>
Inexpensive. Portable, No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb/>
Type in all language, Easiest <lb/>
to learn, and rapid as an v. <lb/>
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE. <lb/>
as Represented. <lb/>
This Machine is everybody's friend. Every- <lb/>
body should have tenting done on the <lb/>
--Typewriter. It always Insures lbs most <lb/>
prompt attention. Address <lb/>
R COMPANY, Washington, St., Boston, Mass. <lb/>
o machines can seen at the Reflector office, where particulars and <lb/>
prices can U <lb/>
ii.-- <lb/>
Accident Insurance by the year in of <lb/>
the beet Companies in existence, see<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017541_0003" n="3"/>
<p>
READ <lb/>
IF SO, OFFER IS <lb/>
FOB YOU <lb/>
We bare made special <lb/>
with <lb/>
Weekly Constitution, <lb/>
The Great <lb/>
by we r.; days <lb/>
to offer It with the tires here <lb/>
Personal. <lb/>
Miss fat In Wash- <lb/>
Misses Etta Harris and Lizzie <lb/>
re visiting near Bethel. <lb/>
Miss of Greene comity, <lb/>
is visiting Mrs. J. S. Smith. <lb/>
Miss EH King home lad <lb/>
week from a to her stater in Wilson. <lb/>
Mrs. Walter of <lb/>
with<lb/>
for ONE YEAR ft only <lb/>
This offer lasts only a while. Now <lb/>
is your chance to get all the news of all <lb/>
the world and your home for the <lb/>
price of one <lb/>
Every clubbing subscription at rate Is <lb/>
entitled to a chance at Tit <lb/>
Free <lb/>
of which will be found elsewhere. <lb/>
This is the most remarkable <lb/>
offer ever made. Every borne In <lb/>
Pitt county should receive the <lb/>
first, and after that, it should hare <lb/>
the best General Newspaper, bringing <lb/>
every week the of the world, and <lb/>
overflowing with the choicest special <lb/>
features, such as the Weekly <lb/>
published at Atlanta, Ga., and <lb/>
having a circulation of <lb/>
1.50 GETS BOTH PAPERS.<lb/>
A Splendid Dictionary <lb/>
The like all other <lb/>
papers, wants more subscribers, in <lb/>
order to induce persons to get up a <lb/>
club we have the following liberal offer <lb/>
to make for the month of <lb/>
Any one who will during this month <lb/>
bring or send the Ten <lb/>
scribe s one year with will be <lb/>
given tree a splendid Webster's Una- <lb/>
bridged Dictionary. This Dictionary <lb/>
contains nearly 1300 pages, and em- <lb/>
braces 12.000 synonyms. Copies of the <lb/>
Dictionary can seen at this office. <lb/>
Any om who tries to get up a club and <lb/>
succeeds in getting only rive, can bring <lb/>
on that number and get the <lb/>
by paying extra. Ten subscribers <lb/>
gets the Dictionary free to the person <lb/>
raising the club. Any boy, girl or <lb/>
grown person can get up a club. Start <lb/>
at once so as to get a Dictionary free. <lb/>
No subscriptions accepted unless ac- <lb/>
companied by the cash. <lb/>
UP <lb/>
Local Reflections. <lb/>
Mrs. Warren, of Penny Hill, is <lb/>
visiting the family of hT father, Mr. S. <lb/>
B. Wilson. <lb/>
Miss Maggie home <lb/>
last week front n visit to her sister in <lb/>
Washington. <lb/>
Mrs. S. of was <lb/>
last week visiting the family of her father <lb/>
Mr. W. M. <lb/>
Sheriff Tucker Mr. W. H. Smith <lb/>
went to Raleigh yesterday tr take three <lb/>
prisoners to the penitentiary. <lb/>
Rev. E. C. Glenn, of Elm City, is <lb/>
spending the week hi town. Ills friends <lb/>
are glad to know that his health is <lb/>
proving. <lb/>
Dr. Zeno Brown attended the launch- <lb/>
of the Raleigh at Portsmouth, last <lb/>
Thursday, and spent a few days with <lb/>
friends in Virginia. <lb/>
Our good friend Ales has <lb/>
been sick the past ween, but we arc <lb/>
to know is improving. Everybody <lb/>
see Alex out again. <lb/>
Rey. n. fl. Phelps, Evangelist for the <lb/>
Convocation of will hold <lb/>
vices in St. Paul's Episcopal church here <lb/>
next Sunday, morning and evening. <lb/>
Mr. agent for the Norfolk <lb/>
Virginian, was in town Saturday and <lb/>
Monday. The Virginian is a good paper <lb/>
and has many readers through this sec- <lb/>
Mr. Frank Wilson went north last <lb/>
week to purchase the spring stock for <lb/>
Young He is an excellent <lb/>
judge of goods and will make good <lb/>
select ions. <lb/>
Don Esq., and Mr. j. L. <lb/>
Bridgers. of Tarboro and Mr J. H John- <lb/>
son, of Bethel, were at Court last <lb/>
week, besides those attorneys mentioned <lb/>
in last issue. <lb/>
Prof. John Duckett, principal of Ham- <lb/>
Institute, spent from Saturday <lb/>
evening to Monday morning with his <lb/>
friends in this place- He reports a good <lb/>
school at Hamilton. <lb/>
Mrs. fell out a door at <lb/>
the King House, some days ago, and was <lb/>
right painfully hurt. Her many friends <lb/>
will learn with pleasure that is re- <lb/>
covering from her injuries. <lb/>
A days more weather as we <lb/>
have just had and the angler will go in <lb/>
search of the earth worm, and the two <lb/>
together with pole and line between <lb/>
them he after the small fish. Listen out <lb/>
fish <lb/>
Quite u large number of Presbyterian, <lb/>
ministers and delegates came in on the <lb/>
train Monday evening and took the boot <lb/>
for Washington yesterday morning to <lb/>
rein- attend the Presbytery to he held in that <lb/>
town this week. <lb/>
Mr. Allen Warren tells that every- <lb/>
thing is in line order at Riverside <lb/>
and that they are preparing for a <lb/>
large trade this year. lie also told us <lb/>
that a few days ago be received some <lb/>
carp to place in his pond at the <lb/>
Mr. J. Brooks, Grifton. was in <lb/>
town Saturday, and while in the Re- <lb/>
office told that his firm, <lb/>
Hellen Brooks, shipped seven car <lb/>
loads of shingles during the week. <lb/>
Their usual average is about a oar load a <lb/>
week. Their large milling plant does an <lb/>
immense business and is a great help to <lb/>
Grifton. <lb/>
Mr. Jesse Warren and a young Mr <lb/>
Dawson, of Conetoe, came down to <lb/>
Greenville Sunday morning on their <lb/>
bicycles, making the run in little over <lb/>
two hours. The distance is about <lb/>
miles. This is excellent bicycle <lb/>
for ordinary roads. If the roads <lb/>
generally were good bicycles would come <lb/>
in to general use. <lb/>
The question has been asked us if per- <lb/>
sons who were taking the Reflector <lb/>
before we made the clubbing arrange- <lb/>
with the Atlanta Constitution are <lb/>
entitled to the club offer. Certainly <lb/>
they are. Any person who has paid for <lb/>
the Reflector for all of this year can <lb/>
be included in the club list by paying the <lb/>
additional amount. <lb/>
This is <lb/>
This is good ban ball weather. <lb/>
has opened his bakery. <lb/>
On every the talk is politics. <lb/>
Preparations for Easter lire in order. <lb/>
This is the last oyster month till next <lb/>
fall. <lb/>
Buy your of D- D- Has- <lb/>
Saturday was a nice all around spring <lb/>
day. <lb/>
The martins are putting in an <lb/>
reach, pear and plum trees in <lb/>
bloom. <lb/>
Cakes at <lb/>
b urn's. <lb/>
Greenville ought to have an <lb/>
ice factory. <lb/>
The spring hats, a girl in them, <lb/>
are pretty. <lb/>
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the <lb/>
Old Brick Store. <lb/>
The weather will put picnics <lb/>
on the program. <lb/>
Leather and Rubber belting at D. <lb/>
D. Haskett. <lb/>
tells you something else a <lb/>
supplement to-day. <lb/>
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb/>
chines for at Brown Bros- <lb/>
The last few days gave us some beau- <lb/>
spring weather. <lb/>
Try Cardenas, the best cent <lb/>
smoke, at Reflector Book Store. <lb/>
Flies are coming out, and that must <lb/>
mean wanner weather. <lb/>
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb/>
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
An exchange it's the fast people <lb/>
that don't fast in <lb/>
The New Homo Sewing Ma- <lb/>
chines and all parts at Brown <lb/>
Bros- <lb/>
Auctions were in order Saturday, two <lb/>
in town at the same time. <lb/>
Just received 1400 feet Rubber <lb/>
and Leather Belting. <lb/>
D. D. Haskett. <lb/>
How about manufacturing enterprises <lb/>
Greenville ought to have them. <lb/>
Cheapest Furniture. Bedsteads <lb/>
and Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store- <lb/>
The street cars were entirely off the <lb/>
track and failed to run Monday. <lb/>
inD. M- Ferry Co's <lb/>
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb/>
Store. <lb/>
If your umbrella is still keeping Lent <lb/>
it can be returned in a few days. <lb/>
Fob Dancy <lb/>
on Pitt street Apply to <lb/>
Corn planting has commenced with <lb/>
the in plenty of it. <lb/>
bushels fine, large Seed Pea- <lb/>
nuts for sale by J. B. Warren, near <lb/>
Falkland, N- <lb/>
Green will be the prevailing color this <lb/>
season. All the trees will wear it. <lb/>
Bobs Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb/>
year appetite when nothing <lb/>
else will- At the Old Brick Store- <lb/>
Several Joke served as reminders that <lb/>
last Friday the first day of April. <lb/>
C- A Snow Co's pamphlet, In- <lb/>
formation and about Pat- <lb/>
Caveat, Trademarks, Copy- <lb/>
rights, etc., may be obtained <lb/>
at this office- <lb/>
is called to the notice el <lb/>
land ante y F. G. James, <lb/>
All parties who tobacco to <lb/>
Bell can save Warehouse charges <lb/>
tad freight by bring <lb/>
the prise noose on <lb/>
will receive <lb/>
wanted. <lb/>
Cast your eyes over the columns of the <lb/>
to-day and read Mrs. Fannie <lb/>
Joyner's double advertisement. She has <lb/>
a beautiful display of On <lb/>
April 13th she will have her opening and <lb/>
everybody visiting her store that day will <lb/>
receive a souvenir. The <lb/>
department is in full blast and com- <lb/>
ladies are in charge. and <lb/>
convinced. <lb/>
go to some of the stores and sec <lb/>
at what prices cabbage and turnips sell. <lb/>
when they can be had at all, then see if <lb/>
you make up your mind that <lb/>
money can be made in raising them for <lb/>
winter market. Our produce raisers <lb/>
let many opportunities for money <lb/>
slip them through failure to take <lb/>
hold of such things and trying to raise <lb/>
all that tin market demands. <lb/>
It is getting towards time for the mer- <lb/>
chants to again take up the early closing <lb/>
hour. <lb/>
April coming in on Friday gives us <lb/>
five Fridays and Saturdays during the <lb/>
month. <lb/>
An oyster boat came up last Friday. <lb/>
It had some ones, despite the warm <lb/>
weather. <lb/>
The Journal reports the Sunday School <lb/>
convention in New last week the <lb/>
best yet held. <lb/>
Now you are Didn't pay <lb/>
your taxes so the Sheriff has you in his <lb/>
list of <lb/>
There was not so much wind in March, <lb/>
after all, and the month went out ex- <lb/>
lamb-like. <lb/>
The finding the lost by Miss <lb/>
Nannie Cox is evidence of some of the <lb/>
good a newspaper docs. <lb/>
Miss Mollie Rouse gave an art <lb/>
in Washington Friday night. Of <lb/>
course it was a success. <lb/>
The Reflector thanks Mr. W. L. <lb/>
Brown, insurance agent for a supply of <lb/>
nice blotters for use. <lb/>
W. C. Nelson. Town Tax Collector of <lb/>
Bethel, advertises a list of delinquent <lb/>
tax payers In the Reflector. <lb/>
Only a short while now and commence- <lb/>
invitations will be occupying a <lb/>
good space in the mall pouches. <lb/>
The Washington G has the <lb/>
est advertising patronage of any State <lb/>
weekly that comes to this office. <lb/>
Moon shine again, so something like <lb/>
light to get along on the streets may be <lb/>
expected for a few nights least. <lb/>
Read C. T. new ad to-day. <lb/>
He is Northern markets and on his <lb/>
return will make your eyes sparkle <lb/>
This is a good time to give the town a <lb/>
thorough cleaning up. Best not to wait <lb/>
until warm weather gets too far ad- <lb/>
It seems only get a day or two of <lb/>
good weather at a time. What little <lb/>
comes is worked to good by <lb/>
the farmers. <lb/>
W. H. Harrington. Town Tax <lb/>
tor of Greenville, advertises a list of <lb/>
those who are delinquent In their town <lb/>
taxes for last year. <lb/>
It is not thought by the truckers that <lb/>
the stand of Irish potatoes will be good. <lb/>
Some planted six weeks ago are not yet <lb/>
up. The weather has been too cold and <lb/>
damp for them. <lb/>
The large collard stalk which we men- <lb/>
last week as being brought us by <lb/>
Mr. Harrington, was raised by Mr. Jesse <lb/>
Brown near Falkland. It beats any col- <lb/>
lard stalk yet. exhibited. <lb/>
The lawn mower will soon be getting <lb/>
In its spring work. Cully Edmonds <lb/>
are ready to use theirs on over-green <lb/>
heads. They can do you up all right <lb/>
style at their fashionable emporium. <lb/>
People have been known to let their <lb/>
last opportunity for becoming a Christ- <lb/>
go by unimproved. Think of this <lb/>
as you attend the protracted services <lb/>
now in progress. <lb/>
The Board of County Commissioners <lb/>
at their meeting Monday, decided to re- <lb/>
sealed bids until the first Monday <lb/>
in May for the construction of the dam <lb/>
from the north end of the bridge. <lb/>
Grifton is to hare a barrel factory, and <lb/>
Bethel Is taking steps to get a knitting <lb/>
factory. Can Greenville afford to sit <lb/>
still and let the smaller towns of the <lb/>
county go ahead of he n manufacturing <lb/>
enterprises r It is time our people were <lb/>
waking up. <lb/>
The civil docket kept the Court en- <lb/>
gaged up until Friday evening week <lb/>
when if adjourned for the term. But <lb/>
few cases on the docket. a <lb/>
hearing, as several day. were <lb/>
in die ease of Ward against the W. A <lb/>
W. B, B. The gave the plaintiff <lb/>
Before the adjournment of Court last <lb/>
Judge Bryan a change in <lb/>
the sentence In the case against Tip <lb/>
for secret assault, the notice <lb/>
of appeal was withdrawn. The sentence <lb/>
as changed is that Moore should pay E. <lb/>
N. the sum of together <lb/>
with the medical account <lb/>
and all costs of and <lb/>
be imprisoned the county jail for six <lb/>
months. <lb/>
Try Stock Raising. <lb/>
While in town a few days ago, Mr. J. <lb/>
Bryan Grimes, of was in for <lb/>
a chat with the Among <lb/>
other things he told he Is now build- <lb/>
two large grading and pack- <lb/>
houses in which to hr his next <lb/>
crop. He also said that he is going <lb/>
put one acres in grasses and <lb/>
give attention from now on <lb/>
to stock raising. He believes as fine <lb/>
stock can be raised in Pitt county as any <lb/>
where, and that there is good profit in it. <lb/>
There will not he half as much cotton <lb/>
planted on his place this year as last. <lb/>
Mr. Grimes is one of the best and most <lb/>
practical farmers in the county, and <lb/>
other farmers should follow his ideas of <lb/>
grasses and stock raising. <lb/>
Revival. <lb/>
Rev. G. F. Smith commenced a pro- <lb/>
meeting the Methodist church <lb/>
Sunday, and preached to large <lb/>
both morning and night. From <lb/>
the start there seemed to be much inter- <lb/>
est the meeting, several persons <lb/>
making requests for prayer at the Sun- <lb/>
day night service. Dr. Morton, <lb/>
Evangelist, preached an excellent <lb/>
sermon Monday night. Rev. D. II. <lb/>
Tuttle, of Tarboro, who is here to assist <lb/>
in the meeting, preached last night. <lb/>
are held twice each day, at <lb/>
a. m. and at p. in. Every day at <lb/>
p. in. a brief prayer meeting for men is <lb/>
held in Germania Hall. Christians are <lb/>
praying for and expecting the <lb/>
of persons during the meeting. <lb/>
Tax Yet. <lb/>
To make Cotton at the present <lb/>
prices you meat use cheap <lb/>
and Boykin Camera <lb/>
Chemicals an the cheapest yet <lb/>
For sale by Q. E Harris, on <lb/>
him before buying. <lb/>
Judge Shepherd's Opinion. <lb/>
Washington, N. C, June <lb/>
Mrs. Joe Person's Remedy has been <lb/>
used by a member of my family, and the <lb/>
result lit been very I be- <lb/>
it be a good medicine. <lb/>
as. E. <lb/>
Mrs. the case to in <lb/>
Judge testimony, <lb/>
Washington, N. C, July 1886. <lb/>
is with pleasure I mid my-grateful <lb/>
testimony to the host of witnesses who <lb/>
have attested the virtues of Mrs. Joe Per- <lb/>
Remedy After years of <lb/>
and suffering, it has proven to the <lb/>
best of tonics and blood purifiers. An <lb/>
obstinate, Irritable ulcer on my ankle, <lb/>
from which agony for years, <lb/>
seems to have healed entirely and health- <lb/>
fully under Its purifying effects, and my <lb/>
general health has greatly improved. <lb/>
Mas. S. T. Brown. <lb/>
New Music. <lb/>
Collection of Popular as <lb/>
arranged and played by Mrs. Joe Per- <lb/>
son at the Southern Expositions, <lb/>
Waltz and <lb/>
Boatman <lb/>
bet my In the Low <lb/>
Carry Me <lb/>
and several others, in all, <lb/>
pieces. This collection is In regular <lb/>
sheet-music form, and is <lb/>
music for the home circle. The arrange- <lb/>
is exceedingly brilliant <lb/>
enough to lie played by any one. Price <lb/>
Also a of the Blue <lb/>
Alsatian with two of the <lb/>
old Southern melodies added. Price SO <lb/>
cents. The Collection and <lb/>
Used largely in <lb/>
schools. For tale by <lb/>
-M us. Job Person, <lb/>
Kittrell, X. C. <lb/>
Land Sale. <lb/>
By of a decree of the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt County at March Term <lb/>
1802, His H. It. Bryan Judge <lb/>
presiding, in the case of W. H. Cox vs. <lb/>
E. J. Blount the undersigned <lb/>
will sell for Cash lief ore the Court <lb/>
House door in Greenville on Monday <lb/>
the 2nd day of May the following <lb/>
lauds in the County of Pitt and <lb/>
in Township, a one fourth <lb/>
undivided interest in the land, known <lb/>
as the M. J. Blount land also a one fifth <lb/>
undivided Interest In the lands of J. F. <lb/>
Blount. the first tract adjoins the lands <lb/>
of J. L. Blount, B. F. B. W. <lb/>
Briley and others, containing acres, <lb/>
more or less, the other tract adjoins the <lb/>
lands of W. L. Blount, the Nobles land <lb/>
others containing acres, more or <lb/>
less. <lb/>
This April 1892. <lb/>
F. G. JAMBS, <lb/>
Commissioner. <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having been appointed by the Superior <lb/>
Court of Pitt county Receiver of Green- <lb/>
Combination re, notice is here- <lb/>
by given to all persons indebted to said <lb/>
Greenville Combination Store to make <lb/>
payment to the undersigned, <lb/>
and all having claims against <lb/>
Greenville Combination Store must file <lb/>
the same for payment properly <lb/>
on or before the 6th day of April <lb/>
next. B. F. TYSON. <lb/>
Receiver of G. C. Store. <lb/>
This 23rd day of February, <lb/>
Notice to Creditors. <lb/>
Having duly qualified before the <lb/>
Court Clerk of Pitt county, of <lb/>
the 5th of 1892, as <lb/>
of Peggy Cherry, deceased <lb/>
notice is hereby given to all persons in- <lb/>
to tie estate to make immediate <lb/>
payment to the undersigned, and all per- <lb/>
sons having claims against the estate <lb/>
must present the same for payment on <lb/>
or the of March, 1898, or <lb/>
this notice will be in bar of <lb/>
recovery. <lb/>
This 5th of Match, 1832. <lb/>
Moses King, <lb/>
Isaac Rhodes, <lb/>
of Peggy Cherry. <lb/>
LIVERY, FEED AND SALE <lb/>
I have removed my stables from Five <lb/>
Points to the ones formerly <lb/>
pied by Mr. H. F. Keel and will <lb/>
constantly keep on hand a <lb/>
full line of <lb/>
Horses and Mules. <lb/>
have beautiful and fancy turnouts for <lb/>
the livery and can suit the most <lb/>
I will run in connect ion a DRAY- <lb/>
AGE BUSINESS, and solicit a share of <lb/>
your patronage. Call and be convinced. <lb/>
GLASGOW EVANS. <lb/>
Greenville, N. O. <lb/>
Money Found. <lb/>
The money, which Miss Nannie <lb/>
Cox lost a few weeks ago has been re- <lb/>
covered. The same day on which the <lb/>
money was lost a colored man went to <lb/>
Mr. B. F. Patrick, who lives not far <lb/>
from town, and showed a roll of money <lb/>
which he said was picked up on the <lb/>
street in town and asked Mr. Patrick <lb/>
examine and see if it <lb/>
Mr. Patrick said that it was and told the <lb/>
colored man that no doubt somebody had <lb/>
lost it and if the man would allow him <lb/>
to take care of It the owner might offer <lb/>
some reward which he could get for <lb/>
finding it. The man consented to leave <lb/>
the money with Mr. Patrick, saying he <lb/>
would come back in a few days to see If <lb/>
any information as to the owner had <lb/>
bee a found. When Mr. Patrick got his <lb/>
Reflector the week and read the <lb/>
Item about Miss Cox losing some money <lb/>
he was satisfied that this found by the <lb/>
was what she lost. The col- <lb/>
man went back a few days later to <lb/>
learn If Mr. Patrick had heard anything. <lb/>
He was told about the item in the paper, <lb/>
and learning that no reward was offered <lb/>
with It he did not want give the <lb/>
money Mr. Patrick told him this <lb/>
was wrong, that be sure the money <lb/>
belonged to Miss Cox that if he <lb/>
would let her know about it she would <lb/>
reward The said he needed <lb/>
some money and wanted Mr. Patriot <lb/>
let have of it, bat this was de- <lb/>
dined. He then told Mr. Patrick to hold <lb/>
on to it awhile longer and left. Mr. <lb/>
Patrick let it be known that the money <lb/>
was in hit possession and on Tuesday of <lb/>
last week a brother of Miss Cox went to <lb/>
see Urn about t- The Was a <lb/>
roll as she lost it. . delivered <lb/>
to Mr. Om and fas Ml fas with <lb/>
Patrick for the <lb/>
the colored what <lb/>
Mr. Patrick had to took the V <lb/>
n Mir <lb/>
Ocracoke Hotel <lb/>
Sealed proposals for renting Ocracoke <lb/>
Hotel for one or three years will be re- <lb/>
and opened April Sin, 1892. <lb/>
The Board reserve the right to accept <lb/>
was good money, or reject any or all bids. <lb/>
C. M. BROWN. <lb/>
Washington, N. C. <lb/>
APRIL 13th. <lb/>
On the 13th I will have on <lb/>
exhibition the <lb/>
and cheapest lot of <lb/>
ever <lb/>
brought place, in fact <lb/>
defy competition. My <lb/>
goods most go regardless of <lb/>
. , Call and be con- <lb/>
that we will you Hard <lb/>
Time prices. Each caller on Open- <lb/>
Day will be with a Sou- <lb/>
at the door. In connection with my <lb/>
Millinery will conduct <lb/>
And have secured the services of Misses Margie and <lb/>
Cherry, both ladies of wide reputation and taste and up to <lb/>
the styles either French or American. Prices will compare with <lb/>
other dressmakers of the town. cut and fit at shortest <lb/>
notice. Come one, come all.<lb/>
If you fail to sec the brand new stock of <lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb/>
------that is now being offered by------ <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
------1 jut the to suit----- <lb/>
f GENTLEMEN. <lb/>
LADY, <lb/>
HOUSEKEEPER, <lb/>
FARMER. <lb/>
BODY ELSE . <lb/>
If you want to wear or anything <lb/>
to eat, or any article to go in the house, <lb/>
call on me. Goods all new, not a piece <lb/>
of old stock in the house. <lb/>
My prices will be found as low as <lb/>
able goods can be sold at. <lb/>
W. H. WHITE. <lb/>
Two doors from C, A. <lb/>
near Five Points. <lb/>
WATCH TOWER, <lb/>
Published Semi-Monthly. <lb/>
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb/>
Devoted to Apostolic Christianity, <lb/>
cation, General Intelligence Send <lb/>
for Sample Copy. Office of Pub- <lb/>
Greenville, N, C. <lb/>
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
h. <lb/>
D. W. DAVIS, Associate. <lb/>
Sale of Land to Pay Debts. <lb/>
Pursuant to an order from the <lb/>
Court of Pitt county, the under- <lb/>
signed sell to the highest bidder, for <lb/>
cash, at Che House, in <lb/>
county, at auction, on Mon- <lb/>
day, the 4th day of April. the fol- <lb/>
lowing described real estate, of which <lb/>
John Whitehurst died seized and <lb/>
A tract of land lying on the north <lb/>
side of Creek In Bethel town- <lb/>
ship, Pitt comity, State of North Caro- <lb/>
adjoining the lands of J. M. Man- <lb/>
Roderick Matthew. John A. <lb/>
Manning, the Teel heirs and others, <lb/>
known as lots No. and in the lands <lb/>
of the late John Whitehurst, and being <lb/>
the land devised to It. D. Whitehurst <lb/>
IS. It. Whitehurst the will of tho <lb/>
said John Whitehurst containing seven- <lb/>
acres, more or less. <lb/>
The share of said tract of land de- <lb/>
vised and bequeathed to John A. White- <lb/>
by John adjoining <lb/>
the land that James K. Whitehurst sold <lb/>
to William Ford, containing <lb/>
acres, more or less. <lb/>
The tract of land known as the share <lb/>
of the John land devised and <lb/>
by him to Ann E Carson. <lb/>
containing seventy-five acres, more or <lb/>
less, adjoining the land of John A. <lb/>
The share of said tract of land de- <lb/>
vised and bequeathed to W. S. White- <lb/>
by the will cf John Whitehurst, <lb/>
containing seventy-live acres, more or <lb/>
less, adjoining the land of Ann E. Car- <lb/>
son. <lb/>
This March 4th, 1893. <lb/>
R. J. GRIMES, <lb/>
John Whitehurst <lb/>
By J. H. JOHNSTON <lb/>
Tobacco Growers <lb/>
Tobacco Furnace <lb/>
The best Invention ever made for <lb/>
With it you have absolute <lb/>
control over heating your barn, <lb/>
and it <lb/>
All of Fire. <lb/>
Two per week can be <lb/>
made in the same <lb/>
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb/>
can be cured at one time in <lb/>
the same barn. Saves labor and <lb/>
fuel. <lb/>
For further particulars ad- <lb/>
dress <lb/>
PHELPS, <lb/>
Greenville, N. C. <lb/>
this paper when you write. <lb/>
TO <lb/>
-----If you want to save----- <lb/>
Witty <lb/>
in the purchase of a PIANO from <lb/>
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb/>
in the purchase of an Organ address <lb/>
ADOLPH COHN, <lb/>
N. C. <lb/>
Agent for <lb/>
who is now handling goods direct from <lb/>
the manufacturers, as <lb/>
GRADE PIANOS, <lb/>
for tone, workmanship and <lb/>
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb/>
musical Journals In the lulled States. <lb/>
Made by Paul G. who is at this <lb/>
time one of the beat mechanics and In- <lb/>
of the Thirteen new <lb/>
patents on high grade <lb/>
Also the NEWBY EVANS UP. <lb/>
RIGHT PIANO which has been sol by <lb/>
him for the past six years in the eastern <lb/>
part of this state and up to this time has <lb/>
given entire satisfaction The Upright <lb/>
Piano just mentioned will lie sold at from <lb/>
f-200 in Rosewood, Oak, <lb/>
Walnut or Mahogany cases. <lb/>
Also the CROWN PARLOR ORGAN <lb/>
from to in solid or Oak <lb/>
cases. <lb/>
Ton years experience in <lb/>
business has enabled to handle <lb/>
nothing but standard goods and he docs <lb/>
not hesitate to say he can sell any <lb/>
musical instrument about per cent, <lb/>
cheaper than other agents lire now offer- <lb/>
Refer to all banks in Eastern Carolina. <lb/>
Laud Sale. <lb/>
By virtue of a order of the Clerk of <lb/>
the Superior Court of Pitt county in the <lb/>
case of J. B. Bullock, administrator of <lb/>
John I. Lewis, against Harriet Ann <lb/>
Lewis and Susan Lewis, the <lb/>
will sell for cash before the Court House <lb/>
door in Greenville on Thursday, the 21st <lb/>
day of April, 1892, the following de- <lb/>
scribed piece or parcel of land lying in <lb/>
township, Pitt county, adjoin- <lb/>
the lands of Joseph H. Clark. Thomas <lb/>
Thomas, the Harriet Bunting land, the <lb/>
land of Gilbert and con- <lb/>
acres, more or less. <lb/>
This March 1892. <lb/>
J. B. BULLOCK, <lb/>
F. G. JAMES, Atty. <lb/>
NORFOLK ADVERTISEMENTS.<lb/>
We'll not be a April fool and wait until this <lb/>
month is gone before we buy, it will be too late. <lb/>
C. T. is now the Northern Markets <lb/>
purchasing our e SPRING Those in need of any <lb/>
thing in the DRY GOODS line, NOTIONS, Ac. <lb/>
be benefited by visiting before purchasing, as we most clear <lb/>
Fall and Winter Woods to room for our new ones. <lb/>
Spring Goode will not be sold at cost, but will be sold as low <lb/>
as those advertised at cost. All are invited. <lb/>
DON'T FORGET THE PLACE. <lb/>
C. T. M FORD, <lb/>
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb/>
SHOES, DRY GOODS, NOTIONS.<lb/>
There is a deal of satisfaction in leading <lb/>
a ad we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb/>
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb/>
lead 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/>
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb/>
------AND OF------ <lb/>
Country Produce. <lb/>
Bring me all of your Chickens, Eggs, Ducks, <lb/>
Turkeys and Geese, and I -will give you the <lb/>
highest market price for them pay in spot <lb/>
cash. <lb/>
If you anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a. small commission. <lb/>
Call and sec me. <lb/>
JNO. S. <lb/>
LET ME HAVE YOUR<lb/>
ORDERS <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
COBS, C. C. COBS, <lb/>
Pitt Co H. C. Pitt Co. M. C. <lb/>
T. H. GILLIAM <lb/>
Co. N C <lb/>
Gilliam, <lb/>
Cotton Factors, <lb/>
Commission Merge ants. <lb/>
NORFOLK, VA. <lb/>
of CON k <lb/>
We have Lad many years ex <lb/>
at the business and are <lb/>
prepared to handle Cotton to <lb/>
the advantage of shippers. <lb/>
All business entrusted to our <lb/>
hands win receive prompt and <lb/>
careful attention <lb/>
L. W. DAVIS. <lb/>
------MANUFACTURER FINE------ <lb/>
HAVANA CIGARS <lb/>
-AND- <lb/>
Roanoke Avenue, <lb/>
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb/>
Strength <lb/>
If you are not feeling and heal- <lb/>
thy, try Electric <lb/>
has left weak and ass <lb/>
Bitters. This remedy <lb/>
on Stomach and <lb/>
Wing those o <lb/>
f If with Sick <lb/>
trial win tats is <lb/>
bottles <lb/>
TOBACCO FLUES <lb/>
I want to begin in time this year. <lb/>
L. H. PENDER, <lb/>
For S. E. ft CO <lb/>
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb/>
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb/>
a. <lb/>
Headquarters for the following lines of Good <lb/>
COTTON MARKET is lower now than at any former period <lb/>
about forty years; this has been brought about by the <lb/>
dented movement of the crop since September last, and the large <lb/>
of cotton all over the world. Many believe we will <lb/>
see an improvement in prices later on in the season, when the <lb/>
movement must be necessarily light; and if any of our friends, <lb/>
who have cotton, would like to raise money on same and hold it <lb/>
longer, we.-are prepared to advance them to per bale <lb/>
and hold it until May or June if so desired- <lb/>
Very truly, <lb/>
BARNES, <lb/>
VIRGINIA <lb/>
Car load Mesa Pork. <lb/>
Car load Side Meat. <lb/>
Car load all <lb/>
Car load White Seed <lb/>
Cages Star Li. <lb/>
Case Bread Powders. <lb/>
Cares Soap. <lb/>
Cases brandy and Peaches. <lb/>
Full line Case Goods. <lb/>
n. c. <lb/>
Boxes Crackers. <lb/>
Boxes Tobacco. <lb/>
W Boxes Starch. <lb/>
Barrels Stick Candy. <lb/>
Barrels Gall Ax Sr <lb/>
Barrels <lb/>
P. <lb/>
Paper Sacks, Cheroot . <lb/>
w ,. <lb/>
G. E. HARRIS, <lb/>
DEALER IN <lb/>
M,<lb/>
</p>
<pb facs="00017541_0004" n="4"/>
<p>
SIMPLE IN CONSTRUCTION. <lb/>
IN DURATION. <lb/>
The Is an Instrument far <lb/>
f Without Medicine. <lb/>
on now theories of the <lb/>
and cur of It deal with the <lb/>
electrical and magnetic conditions of th- <lb/>
aim tin pro, it in toe <lb/>
twill. It <lb/>
vitality. The <lb/>
l- t the vitality <lb/>
assists nature s <lb/>
to throw off the <lb/>
A book, describing treat <lb/>
testimonials Iron, all sect <lb/>
and tor the cure all disease- <lb/>
free on application. Address. , <lb/>
ATLANTIC CO . <lb/>
Washington, D. C. Charleston. S. C. <lb/>
Atlanta. Ga. <lb/>
AND SACRED <lb/>
REV. THOMAS DIXON HOLDS ALL LE- <lb/>
BUSINESS AS SACRED. <lb/>
obtained, and all business in S <lb/>
Patent or in Courts attended to <lb/>
for Moderate Fees. <lb/>
We are opposite the C. s. Patent Of <lb/>
flee engaged in Patents Exclusively, and <lb/>
can obtain patents in less time than tho <lb/>
more remote from Washington. <lb/>
model or is sent we <lb/>
advise as to free of <lb/>
and we make no chalice unless we oh <lb/>
We refer, here, to the Post Master, tin <lb/>
tat of the Order Did., and In <lb/>
the S. Patent Office. For <lb/>
reference <lb/>
actual clients in your own State, <lb/>
C, A. SNOW Co., <lb/>
Washington. D. C.<lb/>
For Shaving. Cutting and messing Hail <lb/>
AT THE GLASS FRONT <lb/>
House, a which <lb/>
I have recently locate , and where i have <lb/>
everything in Hue <lb/>
NEW, CLEAN AND <lb/>
TO V <lb/>
MODEL BARBER SHOP <lb/>
with ail the Improved appliances; <lb/>
and chair-. <lb/>
sharpened at reasonable figure- <lb/>
for outside of my <lb/>
promptly executed. Very respect fully, <lb/>
CHRISTIAN'S <lb/>
OINTMENT <lb/>
This has use over <lb/>
years, and wherever <lb/>
in steady demand, it has been en <lb/>
by the leading physicians all over <lb/>
and has effect -u cures where <lb/>
all other remedies, with t attention of <lb/>
the experienced p <lb/>
for years failed. This is el <lb/>
long standing and high <lb/>
it has obtained is <lb/>
-o its own efficacy, as but little hat <lb/>
ever made to it before I he <lb/>
public. One tie of Ointment <lb/>
to any address o receipt One <lb/>
Dollar. Sample box live. <lb/>
discount to Druggists. All Cash Orders <lb/>
promptly at ten to. Address all or- <lb/>
and com to <lb/>
T F. <lb/>
an i Proprietor, <lb/>
Greenville. N. C. <lb/>
Hy. 1- R <lb/>
It far Ba of <lb/>
form <lb/>
Mi <lb/>
old<lb/>
CURES<lb/>
P. P. p. a so <lb/>
P. P. P. <lb/>
ill i <lb/>
L v. <lb/>
CURES <lb/>
P. P. . AMt Fob <lb/>
Block, <lb/>
For sale at J. L. Store <lb/>
A on Dr. on <lb/>
Ties m Now <lb/>
Hill and <lb/>
April <lb/>
Jr., to <lb/>
morning after a torn- of two <lb/>
weeks through the west The regular <lb/>
sermon of the day was preceded by a <lb/>
review of current events, entitled <lb/>
in which most <lb/>
hearty and approval were ex- <lb/>
tended to his militant neighbor, whoso <lb/>
church is across the street from <lb/>
Association -mil. He <lb/>
It has been suggested, since the recent <lb/>
explosion of a sacred bomb from the <lb/>
Madison square that a worthy <lb/>
successor to Dr. Crosby has been found <lb/>
in Dr. by the directors of <lb/>
Society fox the Prevention of Crime. <lb/>
True. And they have found a man of <lb/>
aggressive power who will press the <lb/>
work far beyond any point ever before <lb/>
reached in its history. <lb/>
DIGNITY OP A <lb/>
With all my heart welcome him to <lb/>
this work. I bid him Godspeed. I ex- <lb/>
tend to him the right hand of Christian <lb/>
sympathy and fellowship. May his heart <lb/>
never grow weary and his arm never <lb/>
grow weak We of course mingle our <lb/>
tears with those who spell their piety <lb/>
with a capital P. over the fact that so <lb/>
great a preacher has fallen into <lb/>
This is too bad. then, <lb/>
after all, it is well to remember that a <lb/>
dead preacher never makes a sensation. <lb/>
The most dignified preacher I ever saw <lb/>
was a corpse. <lb/>
What has been given to this <lb/>
terrific indictment of Now York's <lb/>
life <lb/>
The friends of truth and righteousness <lb/>
have given generally most hearty sup- <lb/>
port so far as the public press has <lb/>
spoken. <lb/>
THE CHICKEN. <lb/>
And yet a few decent newspapers <lb/>
have expressed regret that the preacher <lb/>
denounced crime so vigorously without <lb/>
having in Ms possession documentary <lb/>
evidence to fix the crime on individual <lb/>
I criminals What nonsense The fact <lb/>
I of crime is one thing; the fastening of <lb/>
that crime the individual culprit <lb/>
is another. It is not necessary to find <lb/>
feathers in tho teeth of to know <lb/>
the fact that I have lost a chicken. It <lb/>
is my duty to proclaim my loss. The <lb/>
fixing of is the duty of the officer <lb/>
of the law. The failure to fix that guilt <lb/>
does not restore the chicken or make my <lb/>
loss any less a painful fact <lb/>
Tho response on the part of the <lb/>
directly attacked has been quick <lb/>
and painful. Tammany has wept <lb/>
briny, globular <lb/>
tears Tammany weeps not at her own <lb/>
sins but at degeneracy of the modern <lb/>
in falling so low as to mention <lb/>
its name before a decent audience. <lb/>
Well, it is rather hard on the <lb/>
but hard things must be done sometimes, <lb/>
if Tammany's sense of the sacred and <lb/>
the worshipful is shocked <lb/>
And then the keepers of houses of ill <lb/>
fame whose business has been inter- <lb/>
by this episode have joined their <lb/>
melodious voices with he chorus of <lb/>
Tammany and Tammany's brilliant <lb/>
hand organ hard by the city hall, and <lb/>
all together these three birds of a <lb/>
weep a dirge over the harm done the <lb/>
morals of the young by this indecent <lb/>
preacher This trio weeping over the <lb/>
wounded morals of the city forms u <lb/>
spectacle that should bring tears to the <lb/>
pavement stones of the Bowery <lb/>
BY SKA. <lb/>
Dr. has only touched the <lb/>
facts. He might have gone much <lb/>
farther. With the positive zeal of a <lb/>
child in a new world, to whom all was a <lb/>
revelation, he has only picked tip a few <lb/>
pebbles on the seashore of a city's <lb/>
fathomless shame <lb/>
Is it necessary to prove that the sun <lb/>
shines at noon because an owl hoots at <lb/>
the idea Bah <lb/>
Do we not all know that police cap- <lb/>
enter office poor and come out rich, <lb/>
and grow rich on a salary barely <lb/>
for the modest support of a family <lb/>
Only last Saturday a gentleman told <lb/>
me that to his personal knowledge the <lb/>
police captain of his district had lived <lb/>
for years in rear of a notorious house <lb/>
of prostitution, and that the citizens of <lb/>
that street had appealed in vain for re- <lb/>
dress. To uncover these villainies is <lb/>
next to impossible, because they are <lb/>
compacts between criminals and <lb/>
those who represent tho law itself. <lb/>
WHO IS <lb/>
But who is really responsible for all <lb/>
this is a minority, and <lb/>
ways has The citizen king who <lb/>
forgets it on the day of election. The <lb/>
criminal upper who prove trait- <lb/>
ors to their country and their God by <lb/>
loafing instead of voting. The men who <lb/>
in their greed for personal <lb/>
they please to call private <lb/>
the affairs of the city to go <lb/>
to the devil. The preachers of the past <lb/>
and present who have spoken smooth <lb/>
things and cried peace, peace, when <lb/>
there was no peace. The preachers <lb/>
called to proclaim the kingdom of <lb/>
righteousness who have been awed <lb/>
into submission by bullies and com- <lb/>
to hold their tongues, and have <lb/>
held them, and gone on whining and <lb/>
sniveling and visiting old women and <lb/>
children, while the world has laughed <lb/>
at them as sexless monstrosities <lb/>
ADAH JUDAS <lb/>
If for the last twenty years we had <lb/>
heard less about Judas Iscariot and <lb/>
more about bis modern successors, there <lb/>
would be fewer of his ilk still holding <lb/>
the bag. If we bad heard less about <lb/>
the fall of Adam and more about the <lb/>
fall of our aldermen, population of <lb/>
Canada might have been much larger, <lb/>
with corresponding benefit tons. It we <lb/>
had heard less about Moses and more <lb/>
about the mayor, we might be nearer <lb/>
ideal of Moses today. <lb/>
Let Dr. go with his <lb/>
work. But will come of it The <lb/>
kingdom Th kingdom of <lb/>
at But the remedy will <lb/>
be found at last, not in the courts. It <lb/>
win be found in the ballot box behind <lb/>
A campaign for the <lb/>
of crime to be efficacious must <lb/>
begin before primaries, continue till <lb/>
the sun goes down on tho day of <lb/>
and promptly begin again next <lb/>
morning. <lb/>
THE IN <lb/>
I have set <lb/>
shall never hold their peace <lb/>
day <lb/>
Shall the clergy interfere with <lb/>
ties If by clergy we a peculiar <lb/>
class differentiated from tie rest of man- <lb/>
kind, with a peculiar aim <lb/>
by peculiar whose and <lb/>
principles ate in ease antagonistic <lb/>
to the rest of then I say no. <lb/>
Such a class should with <lb/>
They have right to exist The <lb/>
result of such a class in society is evil <lb/>
The foundation of the <lb/>
power t Jena said, have <lb/>
you and sent yea <lb/>
act choose a title. Be <lb/>
did mat choose a He did <lb/>
a a Be <lb/>
chose as of <lb/>
I class <lb/>
., I <lb/>
a i MM <lb/>
to teach, and. have power In teaching <lb/>
simply as my in worthy. The <lb/>
minister should be first a. man. <lb/>
The of <lb/>
of man in entire <lb/>
Should the preacher then teach <lb/>
I maintain it ix not <lb/>
to but that no man can fill <lb/>
a Christian and do duty with- <lb/>
I out teaching politic.<lb/>
no pulpit hi these times <lb/>
i can maintain vital with <lb/>
whole man that ignores the world of <lb/>
politics. Dr. Strong baa well said in <lb/>
one of his addresses at the Evangelical <lb/>
Alliance that the great question that <lb/>
confronts modern Christianity is not <lb/>
primarily one as to the authenticity or <lb/>
authorship of certain sacred books, but <lb/>
it is whether Christianity has within it <lb/>
vital power; whether it can save man as <lb/>
he is today; society today; commerce <lb/>
and business today. preacher that <lb/>
does not touch the world vitally has no <lb/>
power to move the world. <lb/>
used to look on a preacher with a <lb/>
sort of curious contempt I did not <lb/>
class my father in this thought of a <lb/>
preacher. Knowing him as did in all <lb/>
the intimate relations of home as the <lb/>
man, meeting him in all sorts of con- <lb/>
and having all sorts of personal <lb/>
interviews and encounters with him in <lb/>
the process of life, I did not include him <lb/>
in this concept I once had an idea <lb/>
that a clergyman was a sort of sexless <lb/>
monstrosity, not quite a man. not a <lb/>
woman. I have encountered this idea <lb/>
frequently in world of today. There <lb/>
are a great many people who thus re <lb/>
preachers, and the roan who holds <lb/>
the preacher in such esteem is a man <lb/>
whose life cannot be touched by the <lb/>
preacher's words. People do not have <lb/>
respect for a power that does not lay <lb/>
hold of life. <lb/>
AT ALBANY. <lb/>
Those medical students with their <lb/>
knives began to slash a dead body. <lb/>
They joked about the corpse, treated it <lb/>
with the utmost contempt, but when <lb/>
one of them inserted his knife the corpse <lb/>
sat up and looked around, and those <lb/>
young men got up and moved out of <lb/>
that building. They got out in a <lb/>
Their respect for that man rose at least <lb/>
in sixty seconds. The secret <lb/>
of this increase of respect was simply <lb/>
the manifestation of life. <lb/>
No preacher can move the modern <lb/>
world who does not lay a firm grasp upon <lb/>
the life of that modern world. All <lb/>
problems are today social prob- <lb/>
and all social questions are <lb/>
cal questions. Every scheme of <lb/>
every dream of madman, every <lb/>
theory of nihilist, becomes at last a <lb/>
of politics. The villain who sits <lb/>
down in the secret chamber of his own <lb/>
darkened heart and concocts a plan of <lb/>
enlargement of his life of vice will have <lb/>
a bill introduced at Albany, if you do <lb/>
not watch him, to legalize his methods. <lb/>
Political questions are now inseparably <lb/>
woven and interwoven with questions <lb/>
of religion and of society. You can no <lb/>
more separate them than yon can tear <lb/>
out the heart of the civilization of the <lb/>
century. <lb/>
SPIRITUALISTIC MEDIUM. <lb/>
preacher must teach <lb/>
tics, because his work is the application <lb/>
of to the sum total of human <lb/>
The preacher cannot survey the <lb/>
relations immediate between God and <lb/>
man. I can reach man's real relations <lb/>
with God only by a survey of his <lb/>
with man. When I want to <lb/>
if my people are in tho ways of <lb/>
righteousness, if they are in harmony <lb/>
with God, do not seek a spiritualistic <lb/>
medium and ask for a message from this <lb/>
spirit world about certain individuals. <lb/>
simply go down into everyday life and <lb/>
find out how these people are living. <lb/>
What are their relations at home, to <lb/>
their neighbors, in their business As a <lb/>
man's relations to his fellow man arc, <lb/>
wholly so are his relations with God. <lb/>
The sum total of human relations there- <lb/>
fore is the field of the divine survey on <lb/>
the part of him who his compass <lb/>
in the name of the Lord. Here we find <lb/>
the test of character. Hera We find the <lb/>
secrets of the heart of man. The Gos- <lb/>
therefore, must be taught. It must <lb/>
be applied. It must be rubbed in. Salt, <lb/>
if it save, must be thus rubbed in. The <lb/>
fact is its saving quality is entirely de- <lb/>
pendent upon this closeness of <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
If men say you must preach <lb/>
Gospel, I agree with them. A man <lb/>
must learn the multiplication table be- <lb/>
fore ho can make progress in world <lb/>
of mathematics. He would be a great <lb/>
fool to stop when he learned the multi- <lb/>
plication table. He has only then mas- <lb/>
the first principles. has only <lb/>
gotten his standard of measurement. <lb/>
and all the work has got to be done. <lb/>
Twice two is four. Exactly. That is a <lb/>
glorious truth. It will not do to stop <lb/>
there. Twice two is four. You owe <lb/>
your neighbor four dollars; nay it This <lb/>
is applied mathematics. This is vital <lb/>
Christianity. trouble with men is <lb/>
that they simply desire to hear an ab- <lb/>
theory proclaimed winch applies <lb/>
to another man. while they invent means <lb/>
of escaping its application to their own <lb/>
person. The man that shoots at nobody <lb/>
hits nobody. If I fire in the air every <lb/>
Sunday I shall certainly have no results. <lb/>
It is my duty to shoot straight at the <lb/>
men and women who are before me. If <lb/>
they do not like it I cannot help it If <lb/>
they are displeased it is no affair of <lb/>
mine. They can get in a good humor <lb/>
again. It is not my business to please, <lb/>
to teach the truth. <lb/>
OP THEIR <lb/>
But the old familiar argument is, yon <lb/>
are outside of your sphere, you-cannot <lb/>
understand the situation. I am sorry <lb/>
for the preacher who is out of his sphere <lb/>
when he enter politics, for if a man <lb/>
keeps out of politics in this world his <lb/>
sphere is a very small affair. These <lb/>
great and skillful politicians declare <lb/>
that the preacher does not understand <lb/>
the machinery of law and the enforce- <lb/>
of law. He misunderstands the <lb/>
duties of the district attorney. He sup- <lb/>
poses, in his blundering way, that the <lb/>
district attorney is a detective. Where- <lb/>
as his duty is very clearly defined along <lb/>
another line. So die preacher is de- <lb/>
barred from telling the truth, because <lb/>
be cannot understand the technicalities <lb/>
of the processes of politics. <lb/>
absurd. <lb/>
It is not necessary for me to be able to <lb/>
calculate the of <lb/>
sun in order to know the difference be- <lb/>
tween the truth and a lie. I need not <lb/>
study differential to tell a thief <lb/>
from an honest man. of <lb/>
moral truth is so simple that a <lb/>
man, though a fool, Bead not err <lb/>
therein. Bight is right and wrong is <lb/>
wrong, and from the time man begins to <lb/>
think be sits in this <lb/>
It is not necessary to <lb/>
the technicalities of trades to <lb/>
know the principles of truth, a is a <lb/>
good tone to remember, the face of <lb/>
inch pretensions, the fact that any hen <lb/>
can lay an egg. I cannot perform that <lb/>
feat; but I fearlessly maintain that I am <lb/>
a better of eggs than any hen in <lb/>
America. The politician the <lb/>
preacher to take care of be <lb/>
takes in earth. He forgets the fact that <lb/>
the preacher's is to <lb/>
there be anew <lb/>
TAM sT <lb/>
Of all toe cries that have <lb/>
the ears of <lb/>
.-Was who thus <lb/>
of the <lb/>
are the very Who <lb/>
care that Gospel. <lb/>
who cries for the Gospel when <lb/>
his pastor has preached a practical <lb/>
on- temperance and prohibition, is <lb/>
the man keeps a demijohn at home <lb/>
under the bed. The man who cries for <lb/>
the simple Gospel pastor <lb/>
preaches a sermon on the cf giving <lb/>
his money to the cause of man, is the <lb/>
man who loves a dollar and holds <lb/>
it and it until yon can hear the <lb/>
eagle scream. Tammany Hall weeps <lb/>
over the disgrace of the pulpit Tam- <lb/>
many Hall sheds bitter tears over the <lb/>
corruption of the church. Wonderful <lb/>
tears are these It seems to me that all <lb/>
the crocodiles of Florida should come <lb/>
sweeping the bay in pure <lb/>
at the flow of these tears. <lb/>
I do not think I ever heard of tit one <lb/>
outcry that was just equal to V is. <lb/>
heard of a man once who was crying In <lb/>
great pain. He was a wooden <lb/>
man. He declared that he wept from <lb/>
the pain caused by the development of a <lb/>
knothole in wooden leg. Perhaps <lb/>
Tammany is sincere in this cry, bat I <lb/>
am sure that if Tammany is really <lb/>
wounded by this assault on its reverence <lb/>
and piety the wound is inflicted in a <lb/>
of Tammany's body that is not es- <lb/>
to its vital relations. Oh, the <lb/>
sham and humbug of the hypocrite who <lb/>
whines today over tho degeneracy of a <lb/>
pulpit whose altar they have heard <lb/>
the cry of righteous indignation <lb/>
INVENTION OF THE DEVIL. <lb/>
The preacher must teach politics, be- <lb/>
cause the preacher is learning more and <lb/>
more that there is no real distinction <lb/>
between things sacred and things <lb/>
The distinction between things <lb/>
and secular is purely artificial. It <lb/>
was an invention of the devil to deceive <lb/>
the elect Heaven is described as a re- <lb/>
deemed city, a redeemed municipality <lb/>
in which man in his relations to man- <lb/>
individual, social, economic, political <lb/>
is redeemed. All channels of love and <lb/>
beauty am truth through which the <lb/>
human and divine excellence enter the <lb/>
soul of sacred. AH <lb/>
work is sacred. All man's relations in <lb/>
the world of labor are sacred. Tho <lb/>
smith at his forge, the inventor at his <lb/>
workbench, the scientist in his <lb/>
the teacher in his <lb/>
man teaches the secrets of nature or <lb/>
God, he is teaching truth, and all <lb/>
truth is divine truth. The mechanic <lb/>
who toils with his tools is not in a <lb/>
world. His work is unto the Lord; <lb/>
and, done well, it is holy. <lb/>
WRECK AT DEAL BEACH. <lb/>
What a magnificent illustration of this <lb/>
truth we have in the stranded vessel <lb/>
that is now being dashed to pieces by <lb/>
the waves on Deal beach. A great steel <lb/>
merchantman was this ship just from <lb/>
her docks, feet long, feet wide, <lb/>
with four masts. With all her sails set she <lb/>
started her first journey; but over- <lb/>
whelmed in March storms on <lb/>
her first trip, she was dashed upon the <lb/>
beach and wrecked. But now <lb/>
in his shop, a workingman has invent- <lb/>
ed a steam engine that drives the ship <lb/>
through the waves. Now they launch <lb/>
from her docks a great black monster in <lb/>
sea, loaded to her water line with <lb/>
bread for the starving. On through <lb/>
tin very winds and storms, through <lb/>
the bowling tempests of March, over <lb/>
waves, through darkness <lb/>
and rain end sun and the fury of the <lb/>
tempest that magnificent ship plows <lb/>
her way. <lb/>
On, on; she does not pause. On swift <lb/>
wings of mercy, with tireless lungs of <lb/>
stool, plows across the storm swept <lb/>
on her errand of mercy to a <lb/>
nation. And now in a far away <lb/>
foreign port the bread is unloaded and <lb/>
carried to the starving, and the Greek <lb/>
church of Russia sends down its priest- <lb/>
hood and they bring this ship of mercy <lb/>
into the port, and the priests take posses- <lb/>
of her and hold a service of thanks- <lb/>
giving aboard, and bless the great <lb/>
messenger of mercy. And we hear <lb/>
through all this the voice of the great <lb/>
Master, was hungry and ye gave me <lb/>
Before a sail in ship could have <lb/>
touched Russia her starving millions <lb/>
would have been beyond help <lb/>
OF CITIZENSHIP. <lb/>
The state is a function of-the church. <lb/>
Constitutional government itself rests <lb/>
upon the principle of love to man and <lb/>
deference to the wish of others. Con- <lb/>
government does not rest <lb/>
upon the lire force of a majority. The <lb/>
battle is i always to the strong, nor <lb/>
race to the swift. Two men have <lb/>
whipped three as often as three have <lb/>
whipped two in the history of the world. <lb/>
The count of noses is not the principle <lb/>
on which modern constitutional govern- <lb/>
rests. It rests the great <lb/>
of love to one's fellow man. <lb/>
Five Christians meet together. Three <lb/>
agree upon one view, two another. <lb/>
The two yield to the three and allow <lb/>
them to rule, not because the three could <lb/>
whip tho two, because of this <lb/>
of love. <lb/>
Patriotism is a religions sentiment. <lb/>
We love our country, not against the <lb/>
world, but because it is a part of the <lb/>
world which God made. The nation's <lb/>
hymn was sung by a sweet old Christian <lb/>
My country <lb/>
Sweet land of liberty, <lb/>
O thee I sine. <lb/>
Laid where my fathers died, <lb/>
I of the pride. <lb/>
From every aide <lb/>
Let freedom <lb/>
ore, are inseparable from <lb/>
religion. True politics is religion. A <lb/>
man that fulfills his duties as a citizen <lb/>
has fulfilled one of his deepest religious <lb/>
duties. No man can be a consistent <lb/>
Christian in America today and not <lb/>
take active part in politics. The <lb/>
of citizenship are the <lb/>
of kingship. They cannot be <lb/>
delegated to others. To fail to fulfill <lb/>
them is to fail to fulfill a sacred and <lb/>
divine trust <lb/>
AGITATE AGITATE AGITATE <lb/>
Do you ask what good will it do Do <lb/>
you ask what is the use for the preacher <lb/>
to go in his and denounce <lb/>
evils of our municipal and civil life <lb/>
You say that nothing comes of it Yon <lb/>
say why keep it up Only suppose the <lb/>
twenty years ago had spoken as <lb/>
fearlessly and as fully and as <lb/>
on these matters as it has spoken <lb/>
within the past year in this city. If <lb/>
had Urns been faithful during <lb/>
the past twenty 3-ears it would be <lb/>
for such an organization as Tam- <lb/>
many Hall to rule this city today. Be- <lb/>
cause tho pulpit has not done Its duty in <lb/>
the past, public sentiment has been so <lb/>
debauched that have reached has <lb/>
condition in which we had to- <lb/>
day. Let the continue to preach <lb/>
on politics, to teach on politics, without <lb/>
the fear of man or devil, hi season and <lb/>
oat of season, from year to year, <lb/>
victory crowns the effort or defeat <lb/>
and as as God tires there rise <lb/>
who will grasp <lb/>
tie of government and make <lb/>
the city at for the of the <lb/>
Lord. <lb/>
I want to say to you rafts. <lb/>
feat ya. w i the <lb/>
Ufa. <lb/>
Tammany <lb/>
that has <lb/>
it . . . <lb/>
i mm to, w <lb/>
lave. fanny <lb/>
bus the <lb/>
i Is there any man before me this morn- <lb/>
tag fool enough to believe that if he lot <lb/>
alone politics will let him alone <lb/>
Mo tragic blunder could be made. <lb/>
Let alone and the reign of filth <lb/>
at your city hall will pollute the very <lb/>
water you drink. Let polities alone and <lb/>
your streets will be piled with rubbish <lb/>
and disease win hold its riot Let pol- <lb/>
alone and the pestilence born of <lb/>
this heaped rubbish will steal through <lb/>
open window and drop the seeds of <lb/>
death into the sleeping form of <lb/>
loved one. Oh, yes, you will let politics <lb/>
alone, politics will not let you alone. <lb/>
You let politics alone and politics builds <lb/>
a saloon opposite your home. Yon let <lb/>
politics alone and politics establishes a <lb/>
brothel on tho. way between house <lb/>
and the school to which your boy goes; <lb/>
establishes a gambling den within touch <lb/>
of that school door and surrounds it <lb/>
with a cordon of saloons. <lb/>
The questions paramount interest <lb/>
to today are the questions of today, <lb/>
not the questions of years ago. It <lb/>
is of interest to know how many wives <lb/>
Abraham had. The old man doubtless <lb/>
had his weaknesses. We recognize that <lb/>
fact, it may important to teach <lb/>
the world all the facts about his life. <lb/>
I would tell you a mightier prob- <lb/>
today for you and me than how <lb/>
many wives Abraham had. It is, how <lb/>
many wives has the district attorney of <lb/>
I Hew York city This is a question of <lb/>
paramount interest <lb/>
the scarlet woman. <lb/>
It was doubtless a very wicked thing <lb/>
which Ananias and Sap phi did when <lb/>
they lied- and tried to rob the Lord, <lb/>
I'll tell you a mightier question than <lb/>
the one involved in what Ananias and <lb/>
Sapphira did. It is this, Has not Ana- <lb/>
Tammany formed an unholy com- <lb/>
pact with the scarlet woman to rob <lb/>
the protection of law your homes of <lb/>
their virtue and manhood It was a <lb/>
very mean thing for David when be <lb/>
robbed the poor man of his one little <lb/>
j lamb. We have no excuse for <lb/>
j David. But mightier problems confront <lb/>
today. It was bad for David of old <lb/>
; to steal one little ewe lamb; how <lb/>
about your modern David, who steals a <lb/>
whole flock of sheep at one time How <lb/>
about your modem David who can steal <lb/>
a whole and seek even more to <lb/>
steal a whole nation as a reward for bis <lb/>
first feat I do not about <lb/>
these facts, but say these are questions <lb/>
of tremendous import. <lb/>
If you say to had better get <lb/>
out of the way; you will be run over if <lb/>
you interfere with politics. Yon had <lb/>
better keep out of the way of the pro- <lb/>
cession; you are overstepping your <lb/>
you are set Am If <lb/>
I am set aside by entering the ministry <lb/>
i I do not know it If I know my work, <lb/>
I I have the broadest field of any man <lb/>
I who speaks to the modern world. Shall <lb/>
the cut of my coat or the style of my <lb/>
collar prevent me from serving man <lb/>
and thus from serving God I do not <lb/>
i wear a peculiar coat or n peculiar collar. <lb/>
If my coat interferes with my work I'll <lb/>
take it off and go in my shirt sleeves. If <lb/>
my collar interferes I will wear no col- <lb/>
The service of man is the service of <lb/>
God. All that interferes with my <lb/>
ice of God in thus seeking to save man <lb/>
is an interference with the vital <lb/>
of my manhood and my ministry. <lb/>
Mr. and Mrs. Loren keep- <lb/>
the Gov. Stand <lb/>
Beach, Mich, and are blessed with a <lb/>
lighter, tour years old. April site <lb/>
was taken down with followed <lb/>
with a and turning into <lb/>
a fever. Doctors at home I <lb/>
treated her, but in vain, he <lb/>
rapidly, until she was a mere <lb/>
she tried Ur. <lb/>
Ne Discovery and after two <lb/>
and a half bottles was completely cured. <lb/>
They Dr. King's New is <lb/>
worth its weight In gold, yet you <lb/>
get a trial bottle free at Drug <lb/>
store. <lb/>
Consumption Care <lb/>
This Is beyond question the most <lb/>
Cough Medicine we over <lb/>
Mid, a few doses invariably cure the <lb/>
worst cases of Cough. Croup and Bron- <lb/>
while won. the <lb/>
cure of Consumption is without a <lb/>
in the history of since its <lb/>
first discovery it has been sold on <lb/>
n test which no oilier medicine <lb/>
can stand. If you have a cough we earn- <lb/>
ask you to try It. Price <lb/>
If your lungs are sore, or <lb/>
hick lame, use Plaster. <lb/>
Sold at DRUG SToRK. <lb/>
A for <lb/>
I speak not willingly, but out of the <lb/>
necessity of truth telling. The Indian <lb/>
east of the Rocky mountains is to me <lb/>
the subject of an admiration which is <lb/>
the stronger the more nearly I find him <lb/>
as he was in his prime. It is not his <lb/>
fault that most of his race have <lb/>
It is not our fault that we have <lb/>
better uses for the continent than those <lb/>
to which he put it <lb/>
it is our fault that he is, as I have <lb/>
seen him, shivering in a cotton <lb/>
full of holes, and turning around and <lb/>
around before a fire of wet wood to <lb/>
keep from freezing to death; furnished <lb/>
meat if ho been enough to <lb/>
make us fear him, left to starve if he <lb/>
has been docile; taught, aye, forced to <lb/>
beg, mocked at by a religion ho cannot <lb/>
understand, from the mouths of men <lb/>
who apparently will not understand <lb/>
debauched with rum, despoiled by <lb/>
the lust of white men in every form that <lb/>
lust can take. Ah, it is a sickening <lb/>
story. Not in Canada, do yon say Why, <lb/>
in the northern wilds of Canada are dis- <lb/>
peopled by beggars, who have been <lb/>
in such pitiful stress for food and <lb/>
that the Hudson Bay company has <lb/>
kept them alive with advances of pro- <lb/>
visions and blankets winter after win- <lb/>
Ralph in Harper's, <lb/>
Answer This Question. <lb/>
Why do -i many people <lb/>
seem to prefer to suffer and be made <lb/>
Indigestion, Constipation. <lb/>
Dizziness, Lots of Appetite, Coming up <lb/>
of Yellow Skin, when for T-. <lb/>
we H Shiloh's Vital int. <lb/>
to cure them Sold L. <lb/>
Drug Store. <lb/>
Rev. Father <lb/>
as he is called by all the boys <lb/>
about town, is the pa-tor of St. Leo's <lb/>
church. East Twenty-eighth, street. He <lb/>
is a rollicking, good natured man about <lb/>
forty-five years of age, thoroughly <lb/>
democratic in his ideas and a little bit <lb/>
inclined, I think, to resent the restrictive <lb/>
policy of the hierarchy. In fact he has <lb/>
been strongly suspected of <lb/>
He loves the good things of this life and <lb/>
one of his favorite stamping grounds is <lb/>
restaurant He is quite a <lb/>
favorite in society and as a diner out <lb/>
has few equals. It was thought at one <lb/>
that he was very anxious to secure <lb/>
for himself the title of <lb/>
That was before Capel had ran his ca- <lb/>
and am inclined to suspect that <lb/>
the recalcitrant tendency on toe part of <lb/>
is traceable to the fact <lb/>
that his ambition has been <lb/>
hot a bettor storyteller in <lb/>
town than He reminds <lb/>
me very much of those rollicking, good <lb/>
natured Irish priests for whom we are <lb/>
indented to Charles Lever. Not long <lb/>
ago I had the honor to serve as a judge <lb/>
of a literary society debate in <lb/>
hall, lather was the <lb/>
jury also. While the anteroom <lb/>
the good father told two or three <lb/>
delightful stories, not one of which <lb/>
could well have been printed of <lb/>
a newspaper, and he was alto- <lb/>
that the literary <lb/>
proceedings of the evening lost some <lb/>
their charm for A. <lb/>
New York Recorder. <lb/>
William Lloyd Garrison has great <lb/>
faith in the refining power of woman, it <lb/>
would seem from his address on <lb/>
cation before the Woman's Suffrage as- <lb/>
According to his idea, the <lb/>
separation of the sexes in college is so- <lb/>
unwise. The criticism that he <lb/>
would make applies to <lb/>
and Smith, as well as to Harvard, <lb/>
Yale and Princeton. The monastic sys- <lb/>
there obtaining helps to perpetuate <lb/>
injurious and artificial social <lb/>
beyond the college walls. The <lb/>
remedy which ho recommends for <lb/>
excesses among men is co- <lb/>
To quote his <lb/>
Throw open the doors of Harvard to <lb/>
women on equal terms, absorb the an- <lb/>
into the college proper, and as the <lb/>
night follows day scholarship will rise <lb/>
and dissipation fall by the law of <lb/>
The moral atmosphere will find <lb/>
immediate purification and the daily <lb/>
association of brothers and sisters in in- <lb/>
pursuits impart a breadth of <lb/>
view which is an education in itself. <lb/>
Then the double and false of <lb/>
judgment will be abandoned. What is <lb/>
morality for Harvard will no longer be <lb/>
deemed destructive for Wellesley. The <lb/>
current philosophy of Cambridge holds <lb/>
that a man may commit acts and in- <lb/>
in sights that would damage for <lb/>
life the reputation and prospects of a <lb/>
woman student <lb/>
Among Harvard's benefactors, how <lb/>
many generous and disinterested women <lb/>
are enrolled. Their gifts are ever <lb/>
come, but its degrees not for female <lb/>
hands. In Massachusetts, where for <lb/>
forty years the struggle for equality has <lb/>
found its ablest champions, the prizes of <lb/>
learning most coveted are disdainfully <lb/>
withheld from women. hope my <lb/>
will live to see a woman president <lb/>
of Harvard college, and the thought of <lb/>
sex relegated to the monasteries and <lb/>
nunneries of the Dark Ages. <lb/>
The best salve in the world for Cuts, <lb/>
Bruises, Sores. Salt Rheum. <lb/>
Fever Sores happed Hands. <lb/>
Corns, and all Skin <lb/>
i ions. positively cores Piles, or no <lb/>
pay required. It hi guaranteed to give <lb/>
satisfaction, or money refunded <lb/>
at cents pet box. For sale at <lb/>
s.-re. <lb/>
ant <lb/>
The dresses worn by Mrs. Russell B. <lb/>
Harrison, tho daughter-in-law of the <lb/>
president, have attracted much <lb/>
in Washington this winter, and <lb/>
some comment, from the fact that until <lb/>
within two years or so her husband's in- <lb/>
come would not have been sufficient to <lb/>
provide for expenditures of such an <lb/>
amount as her costumes must have cost. <lb/>
It has been said that President Harrison <lb/>
himself added to his son's income some- <lb/>
thing every year for the purpose of <lb/>
enabling the women of his family to <lb/>
make a good showing in society. The <lb/>
facts of the matter, however, are that <lb/>
Mr. Harrison has never given Russell <lb/>
an allowance for dressing his wife, but, <lb/>
owing to fortunate investments of <lb/>
young Harrison made through the ad- <lb/>
vice of Secretary of War Elkins, he is <lb/>
now practically in independent <lb/>
stances. <lb/>
It is said that Russell B. Harrison's <lb/>
connection with certain New York illus- <lb/>
papers was at first nominal, so <lb/>
far as any expenditure of money upon <lb/>
his part was concerned, and it is now <lb/>
known that for at least a year after he <lb/>
joined his interests with those of Mr. <lb/>
his compensation from him was <lb/>
only per month. Young Harrison <lb/>
however, naturally thrifty, and he <lb/>
has been able by the opportunities of- <lb/>
him through his father's official <lb/>
position to meet many men of wealth <lb/>
and prominence, who have let him in on <lb/>
the ground floor on several schemes <lb/>
which since turned out profitably. <lb/>
It is only fair to say t hat none of these <lb/>
have had any connection with govern- <lb/>
work or have been dependent in <lb/>
any sense upon official <lb/>
Brooklyn Eagle. <lb/>
To Up <lb/>
Your System and <lb/>
You-strap <lb/>
Invigorate your Liver and <lb/>
Purify Your Blood <lb/>
Strengthen your Nerves and <lb/>
an Appetite <lb/>
Take that I lent Medicine. <lb/>
P- P. P. <lb/>
Ash, Poke Root and <lb/>
Afoul a <lb/>
It is rumored that popular <lb/>
is not the spring chicken that his <lb/>
business manager would fain have us <lb/>
believe him to he. We learn from a <lb/>
credible source that he was a suitor for <lb/>
Helena heart and hand as <lb/>
far back as MM, at which time he was . <lb/>
of piano playing in con- <lb/>
at But he was cut <lb/>
out by Count Charles <lb/>
ski, political editor of the Daily <lb/>
It is furthermore narrated <lb/>
that the constant practice of eating <lb/>
lemons has given to hair <lb/>
the peculiar tint and still more peculiar <lb/>
which it so remark- <lb/>
able a feature of <lb/>
News. <lb/>
CATARRH <lb/>
A for Catarrh, <lb/>
Canker and <lb/>
bottle there at an <lb/>
tor the mere <lb/>
If yon are not feeling and heal- <lb/>
thy. <lb/>
ha ton weak and Klee- <lb/>
Bitters. This remedy acts directly <lb/>
on Liver. and Kidneys, <lb/>
those organs their <lb/>
If yon with Sick <lb/>
you III And speedy and per- <lb/>
relief taking rs. <lb/>
trim will convince that this is <lb/>
the remedy need. Large bottles <lb/>
wily No. <lb/>
Nearly everything grown to the <lb/>
or tropic zones can be grown <lb/>
without artificial protection from the <lb/>
natural climate somewhere la Cali- <lb/>
Thia fact has led Mr. James <lb/>
to believe that coffee can be <lb/>
added to the list of profitable crops <lb/>
produced in this state, ha order to give <lb/>
this theory a practical test Mr. <lb/>
I with Mends in to <lb/>
supply him with coffee and <lb/>
thaw will be planted in the famous <lb/>
belt of the Sierra near <lb/>
T people to bay Dr. Sage's <lb/>
Remedy, at bottle, to <lb/>
make up One failure <lb/>
take the profit Hum sales. Its <lb/>
profess to cure in the <lb/>
and even chronic c if <lb/>
they fail they for their <lb/>
Not in newspaper bat it haul <lb/>
cash Think of whit it <lb/>
to put that in the mean it. <lb/>
ltd makes believe in the remedy. <lb/>
Isn't Ii worth a trial Isn't any trial <lb/>
to cat <lb/>
Alter all. the mild agencies are the <lb/>
best. Perhaps they work more slowly, <lb/>
hut they work Dr. <lb/>
Pleasant Pellets are ail active agency <lb/>
out quiet and mild. They're sugar. <lb/>
ad. to take, nor <lb/>
derange he an half their power <lb/>
is the mild way in which is <lb/>
done. Smallest. easiest to <lb/>
take. One a dose. Twenty cents a <lb/>
vial. all<lb/>
Until a recent morning Charles Bar- <lb/>
of St Mary's, O., owned a hound. <lb/>
Ho was a good coon dog and kind to the <lb/>
children, and had the respect and con- <lb/>
of the <lb/>
Mrs. Barber mode some light bis- <lb/>
set them behind the stove to rise <lb/>
and went visiting, leaving alone. <lb/>
saw those biscuits. He was only <lb/>
canine after all, and he couldn't resist <lb/>
the temptation. He ate those raw bis- <lb/>
Mrs. Barber always makes good <lb/>
yeast. Those continued to at- <lb/>
tend strictly to kept <lb/>
right on rising. Soon began to <lb/>
think he had made a mistake. His <lb/>
was confirmed an hour later <lb/>
when a muffled explosion in the kitchen <lb/>
startled passers by and caused them to <lb/>
make an investigation. <lb/>
Tho same unkind fate that had robbed <lb/>
Mr. Barber of a mess of warm biscuits <lb/>
for supper had deprived him of his fa- <lb/>
coon Chicago Inter <lb/>
Ocean. <lb/>
X. C. <lb/>
WEBB. Esq. <lb/>
Washington, D. C. <lb/>
My For the benefit of <lb/>
those who suffer Nervous Debility <lb/>
in my opinion no <lb/>
cine will give the permanent relief to be <lb/>
the use of the <lb/>
I have had one fa my family for <lb/>
early a year, and do not hesitate to <lb/>
It is to us. <lb/>
Ill my own of Nervous <lb/>
which was all the horrors the <lb/>
in Us Went form. I found It gave <lb/>
relief when everything else railed, <lb/>
and feel confident its use laid the <lb/>
for fie good health now enjoy <lb/>
after three of suffering, such as <lb/>
few men could stand. <lb/>
Very truly yours. W. R. <lb/>
A Remarkable Record. <lb/>
Rev. Dr. Edward has completed <lb/>
a forty pastors to over the Con- <lb/>
church at Greenland, N. H. <lb/>
This church is remarkable for minister- <lb/>
permanency. <lb/>
One hundred and eighty-six years old, <lb/>
it has had seven ministers, the first <lb/>
two pastorates covering ninety-seven <lb/>
Letter. <lb/>
The infant reason grows apace and <lb/>
culls for one more application of that <lb/>
good friend. Salvation Oil. which never <lb/>
disappoints hut always kill- pain. <lb/>
It neither pleasant nor profitable <lb/>
hear people constantly coughing when <lb/>
could he easily -5 cent <lb/>
bottle of Dr. syrup. <lb/>
M. speaking of the boasted <lb/>
culture of Bostonians, <lb/>
have always heard that Boston <lb/>
prided itself on its love of literature, but <lb/>
I am inclined to think it is living off the <lb/>
fame of its ancestors. am very sure <lb/>
that I never saw so many dime museums <lb/>
in any place. If are to Boston <lb/>
by its treatment of plays, it certainly <lb/>
has very poor judgment. never saw <lb/>
so many good plays fail or so many bad <lb/>
ones succeed as I seen in <lb/>
M. referred to the treatment <lb/>
of a well known literary man in Boston <lb/>
and <lb/>
will not his is well <lb/>
known in England and America. But <lb/>
in Boston he was <lb/>
as if somebody <lb/>
had been giving him lessons in classic <lb/>
City Times. <lb/>
CHILD BIRTH <lb/>
MADE EASY <lb/>
Friend is a scientific <lb/>
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb/>
of recognized value and In <lb/>
constant use by the medical pro- <lb/>
These ingredients are com- <lb/>
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb/>
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb/>
it AND MORE. It Shortens <lb/>
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb/>
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb/>
to FREE, con- <lb/>
valuable information and <lb/>
voluntary testimonials. <lb/>
Seat by on receipt of price per bottle <lb/>
REGULATOR CO. <lb/>
BOLD BY ALL <lb/>
mm a <lb/>
WHiCHARD, <lb/>
mm.-. <lb/>
O. <lb/>
several d parcel of <lb/>
estate for sale. Look over the list <lb/>
Man and call on or write them. <lb/>
A lot on Third street below <lb/>
in the tow ii of <lb/>
good Noose with four rooms <lb/>
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb/>
on premises, <lb/>
Two good building lots in <lb/>
villa desirable <lb/>
location. <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/>
A hall acre lot in <lb/>
Urge story <lb/>
off rooms cook dining room- <lb/>
ached, all necessary out buildings and <lb/>
good water <lb/>
A fine farm containing US acres. <lb/>
miles from Greenville on Mt. <lb/>
road, has gin house, <lb/>
n two room reliant boar-en; ab at <lb/>
cleared, balance well wooded, <lb/>
good Water. This laud is excellent for <lb/>
the cultivation of tine <lb/>
if One fans lying on branch of the <lb/>
W. ft . about half way <lb/>
slid Kinston and t <lb/>
t mile of a new depot, contains <lb/>
cleared and balance heavily timbered <lb/>
with pine. oak. cypress; <lb/>
has Rood tenant passes <lb/>
through of farm. The <lb/>
land has clay subsoil with sandy loam. <lb/>
It good Mete of and highly <lb/>
is line trucking land. <lb/>
h farm miles from on <lb/>
Kin-ton road known as the Jackson <lb/>
i acres, cleared; has <lb/>
good dwelling house and all <lb/>
out This is a first-class lo- <lb/>
hum <lb/>
A house and lot In Greenville on <lb/>
corner near J, B. Cherry and W. <lb/>
Bawls, now occupied by the family of <lb/>
the late W. A. Stocks, house contains <lb/>
rooms, kitchen convenient, is convenient <lb/>
location, only half a block from main <lb/>
street of the town. Possession <lb/>
can lie given 1st. <lb/>
A good lot on <lb/>
street, between Third and Fourth <lb/>
location. <lb/>
Lander house and lot on Pill <lb/>
street near nicker-on Avenue, <lb/>
good house rooms, large lot with <lb/>
stables and out buildings. <lb/>
The house and on <lb/>
street, adjoining the lot of B. <lb/>
S. Sheppard and the lot described in No. <lb/>
large, comfortable one-story dwelling <lb/>
of four rooms, dining and cook <lb/>
plenty of room for garden. <lb/>
Valuable Strum Corn and <lb/>
Mills, Cotton Gin and Store <lb/>
property located at a X Road <lb/>
within a hundred yard of a R. R is sit- <lb/>
in On of the best Agricultural <lb/>
Sections of Pitt county. The mill- are <lb/>
best machinery. Holt- <lb/>
cloths, unfit, r and re in full <lb/>
operation. The store house is a two <lb/>
story with dwelling attacked <lb/>
also a kitchen and warehouse in rear. <lb/>
The store is kept constantly supplied <lb/>
with general merchandise suite I to a <lb/>
country stove and is a good <lb/>
The mills are tin <lb/>
ibis section. <lb/>
This property is let sale as the <lb/>
owners wish to withdraw from business. <lb/>
on any of above property <lb/>
can lie had on lo <lb/>
why another new discovery by Alfred <lb/>
in the way of helping the afflict <lb/>
ed. My calling on or addressing the <lb/>
above mime barber, you can procure a <lb/>
bottle of a rat mo is <lb/>
for eradicating and and causing the <lb/>
hair lie soft and <lb/>
glossy, only two or three application a <lb/>
week if and a common hair <lb/>
brush is all to be used after the <lb/>
vigorously for a few minutes with <lb/>
the Preparation. Try a bottle and be <lb/>
only cents. <lb/>
Respectfully, <lb/>
ALFRED <lb/>
Barber, <lb/>
IS, <lb/>
penny can get Sal- <lb/>
Oil Best <lb/>
In the market. <lb/>
John B. the far-famed lecturer <lb/>
to an audience because <lb/>
at a had cold, then tor in <lb/>
the bone Of genie rid of It. Egypt <lb/>
contains no remedy now in <lb/>
than Bull, <lb/>
BOILING WATER OR MILK <lb/>
GRATEFUL-COMPORTING. <lb/>
COCOA <lb/>
I-1 TINS<lb/>
Printers and Binders <lb/>
We have the largest and most complete <lb/>
establishment of the kind to be found In <lb/>
the State, and solicit orders for all classes <lb/>
Of Commercial, Rail <lb/>
or School Print- <lb/>
or Binding, <lb/>
FOR <lb/>
for magistrates and <lb/>
county officers. <lb/>
aTOned tie orders.<lb/>
M. C.<lb/>
and Schedule <lb/>
TRAINS <lb/>
No No <lb/>
fan. dally Mail, daily <lb/>
Sun <lb/>
Weldon pat II <lb/>
Ar Rocky Mount<lb/>
IS an <lb/>
Ar Wilson IS p m pin am <lb/>
Wilson i <lb/>
Ar Fayetteville S <lb/>
7-10 On n<lb/>
Magnolia in <lb/>
Ar Wilmington COO <lb/>
NORTH <lb/>
No it. No <lb/>
dally <lb/>
ii nun,<lb/>
Magnolia <lb/>
arena Mil <lb/>
8.1 W <lb/>
Fayetteville fl In <lb/>
Ar Wilson lo <lb/>
Wilson am pm 4- m <lb/>
A, Kooky Mount W I <lb/>
Ar Tarboro <lb/>
Tarboro am <lb/>
Ar Weldon out I M <lb/>
Daily Sunday. <lb/>
Train No. will not before <lb/>
Train oil Scotland Neck Road <lb/>
leaves 4.22 M. arrives Scot <lb/>
land Neck at 5.15 M., Greenville <lb/>
M. m. <lb/>
leaves Kinston a. in. <lb/>
a. in. Halifax II a. in. <lb/>
Weldon 11.25 a. m. daily except Sun- <lb/>
freight train leaves Weldon <lb/>
Monday, Wednesday and Friday at <lb/>
10.15 a. m., arriving Scotland Neck 1.05 <lb/>
a. m. Greenville 5.80 p. in., <lb/>
p. in. Returning leaves Kinston <lb/>
Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday at <lb/>
7.20 a. m., arriving Greenville 9.56 <lb/>
a. m., Scotland Neck 2.20 p. Weldon. <lb/>
. <lb/>
Train leave Tarboro, C, via <lb/>
ft Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb/>
M, Sunday P M, <lb/>
Williamston, N C, V M, P M. <lb/>
8.30 p. m., 5.22 p. m. <lb/>
Returning leaves Plymouth daily except <lb/>
Sunday a. m., Sunday 0.00 a. m- <lb/>
N m, am. <lb/>
arrive Tarboro, N C, lb A <lb/>
Train on Midland N C Branch a <lb/>
Goldsboro dally except Sunday, A M <lb/>
rive N C, a M. Re <lb/>
turning leaves N V M <lb/>
arrive Goldsboro. N A M, <lb/>
Train on Nashville leaver Hoy n <lb/>
at P M, arrive Nashville <lb/>
P Hope P M. Returning <lb/>
leaves Spring Hope A M, <lb/>
8.85 A M, arrives Rocky Mount A <lb/>
except Sunday. <lb/>
Train on Clinton Branch leaves <lb/>
for Clinton daily, except Sunday, t <lb/>
and M Returning leave <lb/>
ton at A M, P. Conner <lb/>
at Warsaw with Nos. tad <lb/>
Southbound train on Wilson ft <lb/>
Branch It No. Northbound Is <lb/>
No. Dally except Sunday. <lb/>
No, south and North <lb/>
stop only at Rocky Mount. Wilson <lb/>
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb/>
Train No. makes close connection <lb/>
Weldon for all points North dally. AI <lb/>
ail via Richmond, and dally except <lb/>
day via Bay Line, also at Rocky Mount <lb/>
dally except with N folk ft <lb/>
Carolina railroad for Norfolk and all <lb/>
points via Norfolk. <lb/>
General Sup t. <lb/>
a R. Transportation <lb/>
M. agent. <lb/>
<lb/>
</p>
</div>
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