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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 20 April 1892</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18920420</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 20 April 1892</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18920420</dc:date>
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                <p>
I THE REFLECTOR <lb />
A--------- <lb />
Job Printing Room <lb />
Thai be surpassed no <lb />
in this wet ion. <lb />
Our work always give <lb />
faction. <lb />
Type <lb />
Good Presses <lb />
test <lb />
US YOUR ORDERS. <lb />
Appointment of Rev. A. D. Hunter. <lb />
First morning and night, <lb />
Second Sunday morning at <lb />
Saturday <lb />
Third fourth at Green- <lb />
morning night, also <lb />
Similar night, <lb />
night each week. <lb />
Service at school house on <lb />
Tarboro road on lay night before, <lb />
each third Sunday until April and then <lb />
in third Sunday <lb />
Rev. R. P. Taylor's Appointment. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
Rev. R F. Taylor, pastor of <lb />
ville Circuit of the M. E. <lb />
South. <lb />
will preach at following times and <lb />
regularly each <lb />
Sunday at Salem, o'clock A. VI. <lb />
1st Sunday. Chapel, t W o <lb />
P. M <lb />
2nd Sunday, Shady Grove. o'clock <lb />
A. M. <lb />
2nd Sunday. Horse. <lb />
miles et of <lb />
F. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday. or spring <lb />
School k A. M. <lb />
3rd Sunday, <lb />
o'clock r. M. <lb />
4th Sunday. II o'clock <lb />
A- M. <lb />
4th Icing's House. MO <lb />
o'clock P. if. <lb />
VOL. <lb />
PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, APRIL <lb />
NO. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, in Advance. <lb />
LOS <lb />
L. T. in Watch-1 <lb />
SPEAK A GOOD WORD. <lb />
Milton Jackson In Watch-Tower. <lb />
Inflamed with bigot zeal an <lb />
the mailed armed If you -about a <lb />
lard's neighbor or friend, or even ft <lb />
it a chm- <lb />
and brotherly charity to <lb />
was the knowledge of evil of one <lb />
Of ha I set. an I they another, unless oar higher public <lb />
. . . . . duty compels uh to bear accusing <lb />
race time has known had .- . . . <lb />
witness and if it be true to <lb />
Tin Mat up our knowledge of such evils <lb />
h to ourselves much more should <lb />
re refuse to spread evil of one- <lb />
Discreditable an the <lb />
till fame <lb />
I and <lb />
I heirs, and <lb />
their of <lb />
i A K It, <lb />
and <lb />
TRAINS NO SOUTH. <lb />
No So No <lb />
Mar. Mill. daily Part Mall, <lb />
ex Sun <lb />
Weldon pm <lb />
Ar am <lb />
Ar<lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar<lb />
Ar is <lb />
TRAINS DOING <lb />
So<lb />
Ar . <lb />
A r iv<lb />
Oh an<lb />
p ion- <lb />
-an <lb />
another. <lb />
I he an ea j a, it is by far t he ten <lb />
b know of oar neighbor and friends. <lb />
We in this matter as though <lb />
centuries when s we felt that by pushing our fellows <lb />
down or back we are putting our- <lb />
dim, now la soil . . <lb />
selves e are jealous <lb />
might, , unless we get <lb />
Spread swift in the i , . . <lb />
in is;, the larger share. Social <lb />
and the Saints; most by the i as known to every <lb />
r golden wen- they j largely made up of what is best <lb />
enticed understood by term scandal. <lb />
k difficult to find a talk- <lb />
scowling group, of either sex, who <lb />
or <lb />
A form ill. In the dim. ; hour without evil <lb />
Lo, in his I. <lb />
-Such as denotes lb.- walk; , , . , <lb />
i an the peace-makers, <lb />
Avails him with by which we are <lb />
governed in our <lb />
a h in s halts ii. Better a thous <lb />
iii old , ., , , , <lb />
beard the lean aid pro- and times, stand or sit dumb than <lb />
, open our lips ever so foment <lb />
on the awl tempting i , . ,, , . a <lb />
store -v disparagement of <lb />
of an the ; What should do in this, as in <lb />
,. . . our , <lb />
the -r ill heart to tine the golden rule- If we do <lb />
unto as we would <lb />
do us, we shall eta <lb />
cart not to<lb />
late <lb />
Of no. a sou; decayed and <lb />
He of in a upon the <lb />
st pi Mil- <lb />
blood by is own <lb />
was <lb />
And r with is <lb />
j ought i-it boundless love <lb />
of men. <lb />
His holy he mi <lb />
Of wood <lb />
ah n, <lb />
tip- <lb />
lb.- <lb />
me;, s. <lb />
hordes wen- untie <lb />
life <lb />
Nor human <lb />
that stood <lb />
M man's most toil. <lb />
MM i <lb />
His long I <lb />
form, <lb />
I lie cross uplifting ill his ham, <lb />
as <lb />
is ban-, bis and flowing <lb />
1- <lb />
I I on hi hang, steady <lb />
frisked far of the soldiers in k, <lb />
A they <lb />
Tim tide lie stint., its course is <lb />
. . <lb />
T e alien <lb />
race <lb />
w host in a score of battles died. <lb />
are recalled Iron, Spanish cut- <lb />
base. <lb />
names if Cortex and the <lb />
re.-t <lb />
Who their a will <lb />
Bit may his love, noblest and tile <lb />
best, <lb />
ho oil grand <lb />
of <lb />
I y Wilson H am pm <lb />
Ai Mount W <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro am <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Twin on Scotland Neck Road <lb />
leaves P M,. arrives Soot <lb />
land at M. <lb />
I. M. Kinston , <lb />
leaves n. <lb />
8.2 a. m. Halifax a, m. <lb />
11.83 a. m. daily <lb />
Local train leaves <lb />
and at <lb />
in., 1.05 <lb />
a. m. p. in., <lb />
Thursday aid Saturday at <lb />
7.20 a. m. arriving Greenville 8.8- <lb />
a. m. Neck p. m. <lb />
3-15 p. ill. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N vis <lb />
d Raleigh It. K. except <lb />
M. -i M, <lb />
N C, F M, t -0 V M. <lb />
8.30 p. 3.28 p. m <lb />
Let ii i n mi leaves except <lb />
in. a. in-I <lb />
, n in. j n <lb />
arrive I N . A w 11.20. <lb />
Division. Wilson <lb />
and Branch leave i <lb />
ville a in. arrive d p <lb />
hemming p m. <lb />
arrive ex- . <lb />
ct-p. Sunday. <lb />
Tram on Midland Branch , <lb />
except A <lb />
X , <lb />
leaves v <lb />
arrive X , In II. <lb />
Train on leaves <lb />
ill M, arrive <lb />
H Hope P M. <lb />
lo- A M, <lb />
A M, arrives Bock Mount t a <lb />
except <lb />
Train Clinton Branch leaves v and SO OH, and now we shall have <lb />
for . r the the broom, which <lb />
A M lea- I <lb />
tea at s A M, ml a <lb />
Warsaw- W it I <lb />
Southbound train on Wilson <lb />
ville Branch is No. s <lb />
ill. . <lb />
mid ill <lb />
stop at <lb />
and <lb />
wakes j Pit <lb />
all point- North AI <lb />
via and daily Sun <lb />
day via Bay Line, also Mart <lb />
daily except with <lb />
Carolina railroad Norfolk and all <lb />
via Norfolk.<lb />
r . Mn .-. aural <lb />
WORLD'S PAIR. <lb />
The Wort of North Carolina Women. <lb />
We have the language of the <lb />
the the <lb />
is intended especially for the <lb />
ladies. <lb />
it in the properly <lb />
I shall sweep the <lb />
Bringing it up over the <lb />
end <lb />
Bo a tat VI <lb />
Why another m-W discovery by Alfred <lb />
Ho it across the per-son <lb />
I love <lb />
Moving it a near the ceiling <lb />
I a in the distance. <lb />
Sweeping the floor very <lb />
sweetheart cometh, <lb />
and he will consider my <lb />
when he me busy. <lb />
vicious v with the stick <lb />
en is husband, he <lb />
a correcting band. <lb />
very carefully and <lb />
in of afflict <lb />
calling the tenderly -Brooms up, <lb />
barber, <lb />
. SB p i w i <lb />
f and pausing t hf j <lb />
be and <lb />
only two or tree a <lb />
week If a hair <lb />
brush is all to be used after <lb />
for a few minutes with <lb />
the Try a bottle and I <lb />
cents.<lb />
ALFRED <lb />
Barber, <lb />
N C; <lb />
ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb />
to <lb />
cation, Send <lb />
far Sample copy. Office of Pub- <lb />
Ion Greenville, , C. <lb />
Editorial Office, Wash- <lb />
N. C. <lb />
J. L. WINFIELD, <lb />
V. W. DAVIS. <lb />
Putting in the <lb />
brush know <lb />
anything about the care of <lb />
brooms. <lb />
Fatting away in the comer brush <lb />
end know very little about <lb />
the care of brooms. <lb />
Putting a string to the <lb />
and hanging on a nail I know all <lb />
about it <lb />
Throwing the old, the <lb />
back new broom sweeps <lb />
are what do they <lb />
that are petitioning <lb />
Congress not to the silver <lb />
If yon make a little <lb />
would not be surprised if <lb />
they were n t near kin to the gold <lb />
bogs of Wall street <lb />
that the people r not <lb />
at <lb />
when <lb />
than a good word is to be spoken- <lb />
it be spoken to the person <lb />
concerned, that he may know your <lb />
motive is not idle, cowardly and <lb />
sinister, and that h way have a <lb />
to defend himself, and <lb />
above all, speak the truth. Bead <lb />
and all liars shall <lb />
have their in the lake which <lb />
fire and brimstone <lb />
is the second death. Bat <lb />
let us remember that in the end <lb />
troth will triumph over <lb />
truth crushed to will rise <lb />
again- a man sow- <lb />
that shall he also reap, if you <lb />
sow tores you will reap disappoint- <lb />
you will reap you <lb />
will reap death and if you <lb />
sow to the spirit you shall <lb />
peace f and happiness and <lb />
eternal life- The reaping time is <lb />
coming. What is the harvest <lb />
going to be <lb />
An to the Humane. <lb />
for <lb />
the of to <lb />
appeals to all people <lb />
in the their support an I <lb />
assistance. was <lb />
two years ago under a <lb />
legislative charter, with authority <lb />
establish an locate branches <lb />
at any place or places within the <lb />
boundaries of the At <lb />
time of its organization it received <lb />
a donation of five hundred dollars <lb />
from a non-resident of the State, <lb />
who h is recently, <lb />
fifty <lb />
with an expression of <lb />
at t-h successful work of the <lb />
far. This work has <lb />
been hitherto con- <lb />
fined to Asheville and its <lb />
but society has from the be- <lb />
ginning forward to the <lb />
time when could <lb />
the State, ac or Hog to <lb />
the provisions its <lb />
If that a systematic <lb />
that en I now to bu <lb />
ma 1- To make <lb />
it is absolutely <lb />
that every of the <lb />
should lend the a <lb />
hand; first, by financial <lb />
at least to the extent of the f <lb />
a annual membership, which in it <lb />
present only one do sec- <lb />
by a-tire assistance in <lb />
outing the pt tn of ext adopt- <lb />
ed by the Board of Manager All <lb />
desired information the <lb />
will be furnished, upon application <lb />
to the and <lb />
S n, <lb />
fee- <lb />
sent q and, be act <lb />
A- If- <lb />
Secy and r. <lb />
The Lady-Managers appointed <lb />
to collect specimens of work of the <lb />
women of North Carolina, for . ex- <lb />
at the Columbian Expo- <lb />
to be held in Chicago, desire <lb />
to be in communication <lb />
with experts in all lines of woman's <lb />
work, both usual and unusual <lb />
They invite correspondence and <lb />
suggestions on all per- <lb />
to the work they have in <lb />
hand. <lb />
For the batter prosecution of the <lb />
details of this work, they have <lb />
ranged it into the following Di <lb />
visions. The name and address <lb />
of the in charge is <lb />
given with each Division, so <lb />
on the various sub- <lb />
can be addressed to the lady <lb />
in of that Division, and <lb />
thus expedite <lb />
Division Display, <lb />
curious ancient and modern. <lb />
Mrs. George Kidder. <lb />
Wilmington. <lb />
Division <lb />
Etchings, Crayon Work, <lb />
Pottery Home <lb />
Mas. Charles Price, <lb />
Salisbury. <lb />
Division Work, Tax- <lb />
Feather Work, Leather <lb />
Fish-Scale Works, Ac <lb />
Miss Stella Divine, <lb />
Wilmington. <lb />
Division Work, liter- <lb />
and Inventions, <lb />
Statistics. <lb />
Mrs- It- <lb />
Falkland- <lb />
The competition at Chicago <lb />
be both National <lb />
and the standard of excellence <lb />
is necessarily very high- <lb />
the urge <lb />
upon the women of the State to <lb />
on this occasion to ex- <lb />
any former efforts in their re- <lb />
lines of work. <lb />
The Chairman of the Committee, <lb />
Mia. Robert B- will take <lb />
pleasure in replying to inquiries <lb />
on any not mentioned in <lb />
the above classification, which re- <lb />
late, to the subject <lb />
Resolutions Against the Run- <lb />
Train and Operation of Tel- <lb />
Lines on Sunday. <lb />
Whereas, Man has so con- <lb />
as to need one day in <lb />
seven for physical rest and moral <lb />
improvement; and <lb />
Whereas, Many thousands of <lb />
the laboring class are, as railroad <lb />
and operators, <lb />
Virtually compelled to work every <lb />
day in the w ; and <lb />
is no necessity <lb />
work, be it <lb />
1st- That the <lb />
members of Ridge. Alliance. <lb />
No. of Iredell county, N- C, <lb />
respectfully and earnestly request <lb />
every in the United <lb />
States to petition Congress to <lb />
prohibit the and opera- <lb />
ting of all freight, mail and pas- <lb />
trains and <lb />
the W Saturday <lb />
until m-. Sunday night. <lb />
That these <lb />
be published in the Land- <lb />
mark, Salisbury Pro <lb />
Farmer and National <lb />
Economist, and request all reform, <lb />
political and religious papers in <lb />
sympathy with this action, to <lb />
copy these resolutions. <lb />
A W. <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
A Ft Young; <lb />
A four days in the <lb />
of So <lb />
by to II h <lb />
his former sweetheart to return tho b-at you are A case of <lb />
Ma kind recently <lb />
in which two firm- <lb />
been enjoying for ten <lb />
years. One out don a cherry <lb />
tree at winch th <lb />
other claimed., and he <lb />
g-t. and the <lb />
other appealed and carried the <lb />
Base to the Supreme Court. <lb />
The plaintiff won his suit at last, <lb />
W it him <lb />
f in fees, not counting <lb />
time lost, etc, while the defendant <lb />
paid his lawyers and <lb />
costs, making a total of for <lb />
a tree and some fun. <lb />
refused to marry him. The jury de- <lb />
that such of the as <lb />
were not be return <lb />
ed, bat th-we upon he had <lb />
had engraved her name or initials <lb />
should remain <lb />
a lot men <lb />
If they do not have <lb />
its <lb />
them, by lair, but can, <lb />
the same by <lb />
to another girl. <lb />
is pretty said <lb />
an undertaker to an interviewer, <lb />
bat if lying was as is <lb />
in the mM, I <lb />
have to s. large works and <lb />
The battle to be fought in the <lb />
future will be the dollar <lb />
and the people. Who shall <lb />
sovereign, money or Th <lb />
had power <lb />
and it no <lb />
to dethrone such a mighty <lb />
king. it IN wag <lb />
Tim Color or Skin. <lb />
The color of t he is raid by at <lb />
least three influences, which are only in <lb />
a very indirect manner under oar own <lb />
control. The cutaneous circulation is, <lb />
perhaps, tho most controllable, if this <lb />
be slow and impeded the inner skin <lb />
shows red or purplish <lb />
skin; whereas a brisk and free blood cur- <lb />
rent a pinkish, living look which <lb />
one calls flesh color. <lb />
Hard and clean work with the hands <lb />
and of course, with <lb />
general calculated to do all <lb />
that possible in this direction, and <lb />
making boils and applying <lb />
to mahogany furniture are two <lb />
forms of work which are accounted es- <lb />
efficacious in whitening the <lb />
hands. <lb />
Thickness of the a second <lb />
element conducive to whiteness. If <lb />
are naturally thin skinned it hard <lb />
to see how they can produce anything <lb />
but an extremely limited local thicken- <lb />
Some of the numerous emollient <lb />
skin lotions may stimulate the blood <lb />
current and retard the <lb />
which is perpetually going on, but <lb />
should -t nothing permanent from <lb />
these applications. <lb />
A third requisite for whiteness is ab- <lb />
of natural pigment. When a <lb />
method removing it has been <lb />
a great many Ethiopians will <lb />
changing their skins. we <lb />
shall have to endure the presence of <lb />
brown, yellow, <lb />
red or nature has placed <lb />
our skin. A certain pallor can gen- <lb />
be produced by gloves, idleness, <lb />
indoor life, parasols and car- <lb />
moreover, the blue veins on tho <lb />
lardy, or let us say waxy, white have <lb />
a certain look of delicacy and refine- <lb />
There is another method of securing <lb />
paleness, though it cannot be trusted <lb />
not to run to yellow. It is the paleness <lb />
of ill health and and semi- <lb />
starvation on foods which are both <lb />
and indigestible is the plan for <lb />
securing it; at least the most pallid girl <lb />
I ever who looked as if <lb />
were modeled in ointment <lb />
reported to have reduced herself to <lb />
that condition by a sustained diet of dry, <lb />
bard rice grains and cold water, taken <lb />
with a view of producing a pale, pearly <lb />
Journal of Health. <lb />
A State of Affair. <lb />
A few months ago I was present in <lb />
Dr. consulting room watching <lb />
the prisoners from the depot filing past. <lb />
were a child had been <lb />
brought by its parents to be examined. <lb />
These people were shown in. They be- <lb />
to the respectable working class, <lb />
and were quiet and well mannered. Tho <lb />
man the driver of a dray belonging <lb />
to one of the railway stations, and had <lb />
all the appearance of a stalwart work- <lb />
inn The boy barely six years <lb />
old. He had an intelligent, rather <lb />
face, and was neatly dressed. <lb />
here, M. said the <lb />
father, have brought our boy; <lb />
he us. Ho is no fool; ho begins <lb />
to road; they are satisfied with him at <lb />
his school, but we cannot help thinking <lb />
he must lie insane, for he wants to <lb />
his little brother, a child two years <lb />
old. The other day he nearly succeeded <lb />
in doing so. I arrived just in time to <lb />
snatch my razor from bis <lb />
The boy stood listening with <lb />
and without hanging his head. <lb />
The doctor drew tho child kindly toward <lb />
him and <lb />
it that you wish to hurt your <lb />
little <lb />
With perfect composure the little <lb />
will kill will kill <lb />
Tho doctor glanced at the father and <lb />
asked in a low <lb />
yon <lb />
The exclaimed <lb />
sir Why, he never enters a <lb />
house and has never come homo <lb />
They were quite sincere. <lb />
less the doctor <lb />
out your <lb />
The man obeyed; his hand trembled. <lb />
Had these people told lies, then, in <lb />
stating that the man had never come <lb />
home the, worse for drink No; all <lb />
through the day, wherever he had called <lb />
to leave a package, the people of the <lb />
house had given him something to drink <lb />
for bis trouble. Ho had become a drunk- <lb />
ard without knowing it, and the poison <lb />
that had entered his blood was at this <lb />
moment filling tho head of Ms little <lb />
child with dreams of an <lb />
nightly Review. <lb />
A While <lb />
A young American woman artist <lb />
studying in Florence had rather an <lb />
alarming experience until she under- <lb />
stood its import She had few friends <lb />
in the city, and becoming ill not <lb />
able or willing to let her condition be <lb />
to even such as she had, <lb />
had been helpless in considerable <lb />
need of at ten t ion for several days, when <lb />
evening, after night had fallen, four <lb />
black robed figures, with faces hidden <lb />
and only holes cut the somber <lb />
cloth for eyes, appeared in her room. <lb />
Almost swooning with terror she made <lb />
frantic appeal, which was met with a <lb />
soothing murmur that did not re- <lb />
assure her, and the stretcher which they <lb />
brought was placed at her bedside. <lb />
Passive tot helpless after the first out- <lb />
burst, she was slipped into it, a cloth <lb />
thrown over her and felt herself <lb />
borne to the street <lb />
Silently and swiftly she was convoyed <lb />
distance, then a building en- <lb />
presently she found, herself in <lb />
a, ward, where every care and <lb />
devotion were shown to her. Later she <lb />
learned that her case had come to the <lb />
notice of the famous Order of the <lb />
and its If somewhat mys- <lb />
ministration the result <lb />
AU ranks and conditions of Florentine <lb />
society bold membership in this order; <lb />
the shrouding robes conceal a peer as <lb />
Often as a pauper, and are worn that <lb />
service without ostentation may be <lb />
It has existed for hundreds of <lb />
Point of View New York <lb />
Among European raters in a matter <lb />
of ago Pope excels, be being <lb />
ha only ruler who ha pawed eighty. <lb />
Berkley, Va, Graphic. i j,,,, g m have <lb />
Senator Hill be. making a seventy, these being Vic- <lb />
more were I U Denmark, the <lb />
strictly to business in, Grand Frederick William of <lb />
the States instead <lb />
of the f-0 J <lb />
exhibiting himself to admiring; <lb />
NEWS. <lb />
Happenings Here and There as Gathered <lb />
Prom our Exchanges. <lb />
The Semi-centennial of St. Mary's <lb />
school, will occur in Jane <lb />
and will be appropriately observed. <lb />
The Governor has offered <lb />
reward for the arrest of the <lb />
of Atlas Taylor in North- <lb />
Tarboro The Kemp <lb />
P. Battle Walnut Creek farm, in <lb />
stock and farm implements <lb />
has been sold to Wm- M. <lb />
for cash. <lb />
The Concord Standard says that <lb />
John Cline, of Cabarrus, hereto- <lb />
fore a big cotton planter, will not <lb />
plant a seed of it this year, but <lb />
will plant corn instead. <lb />
Evangelist Fife will hold a series <lb />
of meetings at New com- <lb />
Hay 1st and lasting ten <lb />
days. The meetings will be hold <lb />
in a large tent capable of holding <lb />
3.000 <lb />
Wilmington It is a <lb />
busy scene now street, <lb />
near the depot. Three new <lb />
houses are up there, in the <lb />
distance of block, and it looks <lb />
lively. Soon the last trace of the <lb />
disastrous of February, 1886, <lb />
will covered over. <lb />
Last Saturday Williams, <lb />
col., lost his horse in a singular <lb />
manner. When the bridle was <lb />
pulled off, the horse swift- <lb />
for the stable and making a <lb />
sudden full with bis head <lb />
upon the upturned heel of a <lb />
which penetrated th brain and <lb />
caused almost death. <lb />
Kinston Free Miss Ruth <lb />
left hist Thursday for Hali <lb />
fax, whore she mot by appoint- <lb />
Mr. O. T. Boney, express <lb />
messenger from Weldon to Kin- <lb />
They were married in the <lb />
hotel at Halifax that afternoon. <lb />
The came to Kinston <lb />
and are stopping at the <lb />
Bailey Hotel for the present. <lb />
Washington The steam- <lb />
R. E- Lee was burned at Vance- <lb />
on Monday night. It is sup- <lb />
posed to been <lb />
but at last there was no <lb />
to the tire Miss- <lb />
Rodman has shipped some- <lb />
thing like five barrels of <lb />
to tho north. It is cut <lb />
into kindling wood, put in a barrel <lb />
and headed-up with cloth just as <lb />
potatoes shipped. The use of <lb />
Southern pine kindling is <lb />
quite a fad at the North.------We <lb />
wore interested in the shipments <lb />
by Capt- He <lb />
is sending barrels of lies <lb />
to the Northern markets, packed <lb />
on ice, He is not only a clover <lb />
Captain but something of a trucker <lb />
and fancier. <lb />
There is quite a sensation in <lb />
Hyde over the <lb />
of the widow Mason with a worth- <lb />
married man named Watson. <lb />
Mrs. Mason has been a <lb />
three years and is the mother of <lb />
five children, youngest about <lb />
years old- She has two <lb />
sons, who by. Wat <lb />
son has been making frequent <lb />
visits to the house of Mr. Mason <lb />
for the last six months, but there <lb />
was not even a suspicion as to her <lb />
chastity. was held in the <lb />
highest by hr neighbors. <lb />
Before she left a note was written <lb />
and ad tressed to her sou, which <lb />
am gone. Take of <lb />
the Mrs. furn <lb />
horse and <lb />
left the with the big <lb />
t by her aid. Their where- <lb />
are unknown.-Watch <lb />
Tower- <lb />
THE LASH IN MARYLAND. <lb />
whole for <lb />
On- . lint <lb />
in It <lb />
I hi advance <lb />
you <lb />
i j <lb />
on the of the , <lb />
paper the <lb />
To Week <lb />
grass This <lb />
It Is to give yon no- <lb />
that unless re- <lb />
newed In that tit <lb />
Two Wife Under <lb />
the Provision of a New law. <lb />
Saturday was a black letter day for <lb />
wife beaters in this two of- <lb />
fenders having received ten lashes each <lb />
for violating the net of 1883, which pro- <lb />
that man convicted of <lb />
tally assault inland beating his wife shall <lb />
receive not more than forty lashes or be <lb />
imprisoned for not more than one year, <lb />
or be both whipped and imprisoned, in <lb />
the discretion of the The man <lb />
who was the first to be convicted and <lb />
this act Robert I. <lb />
Thompson, of district. He <lb />
was convicted Friday and sentenced to <lb />
receive ten lashes. <lb />
Early in the morning the sheriff, ac- <lb />
companied by a dozen or more witnesses, <lb />
entered Thompson's cell to carry out <lb />
the sentence of the court. The <lb />
oner guessed at once the meaning of the <lb />
visit and raid he was ready. The sheriff, <lb />
who is a very young man and kind heart- <lb />
ed, told prisoner that his duty a <lb />
very unpleasant one. After the prisoner <lb />
was stripped to the waist his hands were <lb />
bound by a leather strap, to which a <lb />
stout cord was fastened. The latter was <lb />
passed over the half open door of the cell <lb />
and held by a deputy on the other side, <lb />
drawing the prisoner's hands above <lb />
his head. While these preparations were <lb />
being made Thompson showed no signs <lb />
of fear. When all was prepared the <lb />
asked Thompson if he was ready. <lb />
don't hit me hard, <lb />
was Thompson's reply. <lb />
The instrument of was a <lb />
common reed buggy whip, from the large <lb />
end of which a portion had been <lb />
leaving it about four feet in length. The <lb />
whip descended with terrific force <lb />
the bared hack of the victim, laying open <lb />
the flesh a distance of six inches and <lb />
drawing the blood. In twenty seconds <lb />
the whipping was ended, and the first <lb />
victim of the whipping post in this conn- <lb />
had paid the penalty of his offense. <lb />
Thompson took his punishment with a <lb />
stoicism that excited the wonder of the <lb />
spectators. He is short in stature, stout- <lb />
about twenty-five years old, and <lb />
a boat builder by trade. He is accused <lb />
of striking his wife a severe blow on the <lb />
head with his list, and afterward beat- <lb />
her on the head and face with his <lb />
hat because she declined to prepare his <lb />
supper on account of sickness. When <lb />
she still refused to get he an <lb />
ax which was in the room, and ad- <lb />
toward threatened to kill <lb />
her if she didn't obey. Terrified by this <lb />
threat, she arose and warmed his supper, <lb />
which ho then refused to eat, saying he <lb />
didn't want any <lb />
George H. Barnes, colored, the second <lb />
man in this to suffer tho penalty <lb />
for wife beating, was convicted <lb />
day morning, and also sentenced to re- <lb />
ten lashes. same preparations <lb />
were made as in case of Thompson, <lb />
who was whipped in the morning. Barnes <lb />
did not take his punishment as well as <lb />
did Thompson. He writhed and crouched <lb />
while tho whip was being applied, <lb />
when released he writhed and groaned <lb />
in an agony of pain. In a few minutes, <lb />
however, ho said he felt all right, and <lb />
laughed and talked as if he had <lb />
but an everyday occurrence. <lb />
When asked if the lashes he said, <lb />
Both Thompson and Barnes declared <lb />
emphatically that they would never be <lb />
with a similar offense <lb />
of Women In i; Store, <lb />
A superintendent in a large dry goods <lb />
establishment, speaking of the wages of <lb />
saleswomen, remarked as <lb />
know women in this and other stores <lb />
who receive more money than men in <lb />
the same lines of work. This is <lb />
true of the dressmaking depart- <lb />
in which nowadays men and <lb />
women are employed. We have a fitter, <lb />
a woman, who is under a contract at a <lb />
salary of per week. Women are <lb />
entering fields hitherto monopolized by <lb />
men. In big dry goods stores we now <lb />
have women heads of departments, <lb />
something a few years ago. <lb />
In all cases these receive large wages. <lb />
fraternal spirit is evidenced <lb />
among employees of Brooklyn dry <lb />
goods stores. A large number are <lb />
of insurance orders formed within <lb />
the stores, which pay burial expenses <lb />
and a for the of the family <lb />
of the deceased, should they be in want. <lb />
Socially, too, dry goods people seem to <lb />
stick together closer than those in other <lb />
lines. Each summer the big houses <lb />
give a picnic, with a ball in the win- <lb />
After all, life behind the counter <lb />
is not without <lb />
Eagle, <lb />
The Doom <lb />
There are twenty well built towns in <lb />
Kansas without a single inhabitant to <lb />
waken the echoes of their deserted <lb />
streets. Saratoga has a opera <lb />
house, a large brick hotel, a <lb />
school house and a number of fine <lb />
houses, yet there nobody even to <lb />
claim a place to sleep. At Fargo a <lb />
school house stands on the side of the <lb />
hill, a monument to the bond voting <lb />
craze. A herder and his family <lb />
tho population of what was once an <lb />
incorporated Herald. <lb />
The Bel. as <lb />
Dexter P. Ramsey, of Buffalo, who <lb />
became a father about a year ago, after <lb />
having passed the three score years and <lb />
ten limit, petitioned the trustees of <lb />
Westminster church recently to have <lb />
the bell silenced. He said that the bell <lb />
kept the baby awake, and the baby kept <lb />
him awake, and there no health in <lb />
it The churchmen by a vote <lb />
of to to ring the bell in spite of Mr. <lb />
Ramsey and his <lb />
HI Mom, to n <lb />
Mrs. Francis Carter, an old colored <lb />
woman, of Alton, Ills., has been be- <lb />
by Dr. William <lb />
son, of Mrs. Carter was be- <lb />
fore the war the slave nurse of Dr. <lb />
son, the only child of a wealthy New <lb />
Orleans family. He was a bachelor, and <lb />
dying without Immediate was <lb />
impelled by the lore he bore to his old <lb />
to leave her his entire estate. <lb />
Philadelphia Ledger. <lb />
According to the <lb />
for 1803, Europe numbers at pt stint forty <lb />
sovereigns. Of these the longest en the <lb />
throne la Victoria, whose reign <lb />
has luted fifty-four years. After <lb />
Ernest of <lb />
who has reigned forty-seven years; the <lb />
Prince of forty-sis and <lb />
the Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria, <lb />
-three years. <lb />
R. J. MARQUIS, <lb />
V. C, <lb />
Office in Skinner upper <lb />
Photograph Gallery <lb />
L. JAMES <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
If . <lb />
L. FLEMING, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
at Tucker Murphy's old stand. <lb />
JARVIS <lb />
L. SLOW <lb />
BLOW, <lb />
KT 8-AT-L A W, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N, C. <lb />
Practice In all Courts. <lb />
J. <lb />
B. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LA <lb />
N. ft <lb />
I. A. B. F. <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
VI N. C. <lb />
Prompt attention given to collection <lb />
tom ii. long, <lb />
M. C. <lb />
Prompt and careful attention to <lb />
Collection solicited. <lb />
LATHAM. <lb />
t skinner, <lb />
green n. c <lb />
H G. JAMES,<lb />
GREENVILLE, ft. C. <lb />
Practice In all the courts. Cells <lb />
a Specialty. <lb />
r-i <lb />
T. <lb />
I m <lb />
i. <lb />
-i <lb />
ii<lb />
II<lb />
-4 <lb />
CD <lb />
CO <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1375. <lb />
S. M. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BUY <lb />
their year's supplies will find <lb />
their Interest to get our prices before par <lb />
chasing elsewhere <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICE, TEA, c. <lb />
at Low bit <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF <lb />
we buy direct from Manufacturers, ,. <lb />
you to buy at on A <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on hand and sold at sulk <lb />
the times. Our coeds are all bought <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having a rial <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
M- SCHULTZ. <lb />
E. <lb />
Tit <lb />
Forbes, Greenville,<lb />
J. Greenville, <lb />
N. M. Tarboro, <lb />
Capt. R. F. At <lb />
The Line tor travel <lb />
River. <lb />
The Steamer U the <lb />
and quickest boat on the river. <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially tor the comfort, as <lb />
and <lb />
POLITE k <lb />
A first-class Table famished with <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on <lb />
not only comfortable but attract. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb />
and Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, a. . <lb />
Freight and <lb />
to<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017543_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
s- <lb />
REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
mM Editor m <lb />
WEDNESDAY, <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
N. C, as mail matter. <lb />
of its misrule, to perpetuate white <lb />
and lo stand a <lb />
January 1887 I attended Warrior against amalgamation and <lb />
convention in i the evils that would follow there <lb />
presided over by Hon. Elias Carr, the people of North Carolina <lb />
while I claim the <lb />
individual views I <lb />
n. while I claim the <lb />
Publisher's <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
I Reflector Is 81.00 per <lb />
one ; one-nail column one <lb />
; column one 82-3. <lb />
Transient Inch <lb />
one week. l ; two week. one <lb />
Two inches one week. S 1.60, <lb />
two weeks, ti; one month, <lb />
Advertisements Inverted in <lb />
us reading Items, cent per <lb />
for each Insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad, <lb />
and <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc., will <lb />
be charged at legal rates and must <lb />
BE PAID TO ADVANCE. <lb />
Contracts for any space not r, <lb />
Above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office either <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy N v Advertisements and <lb />
ail changes of should lie <lb />
handed in o'clock u Tuesday <lb />
morning in order to prompt in- <lb />
the day <lb />
The having a large <lb />
will be found a prof table medium <lb />
ill rough which to reach the public. <lb />
We yield much of our space <lb />
to a letter from Col. Harry <lb />
Skinner. The letter speaks for <lb />
itself and needs no comment at <lb />
our hands. <lb />
From present indications it is <lb />
almost fact that Cleve- <lb />
; land will be nominated at the Chi- <lb />
Convention. Up to the pres- <lb />
time of the delegates appoint- <lb />
ed two to one favor Cleveland in <lb />
preference to Hill. If this ratio <lb />
continues the ex-President will <lb />
have two thirds of the delegates <lb />
and will be nominated. Only one <lb />
State so far has instructed for <lb />
Hill- <lb />
The address issued by Russell. <lb />
Norment and others, advising <lb />
the Republican party not to put <lb />
any State ticket in the field this <lb />
time is only a sham to deceive <lb />
Democrats and encourage the for- <lb />
of a Third Party. They <lb />
know this, that they have every- <lb />
thing to gain, and the Democrats <lb />
all to lose. Who believes any <lb />
Republican is going to vote for <lb />
the Third party should one be <lb />
organized in North Carolina <lb />
They never their party and <lb />
seldom die out of it. Let no <lb />
be deceived by any such a <lb />
sham. The address <lb />
from the first to the last <lb />
word. <lb />
The Republican State <lb />
met in Raleigh last week and <lb />
was one of the most boisterous <lb />
and rowdy bodies that has met in <lb />
the State for a long while- There <lb />
were more white men present than <lb />
usual but the colored men got in <lb />
some good work, and divided the <lb />
honors with The Eaves <lb />
Mott quarrel was rehearsed in full <lb />
and it looked at time as if <lb />
there would be personal <lb />
during the session of the body. <lb />
The Convention was largely made <lb />
up of the followers of Eaves and in <lb />
consequence Dr. Mott was pretty <lb />
effectually overruled. Eaves was <lb />
re elected chairman of the <lb />
Committee. Democrats need <lb />
not however, that the bad <lb />
will do them any good on <lb />
election day. The lamb will lie <lb />
down with the lion then and all the <lb />
ballots will the The <lb />
convention did nothing towards <lb />
putting a in the field <lb />
but left this with the Executive <lb />
Committee. This was as the <lb />
bosses desired. They will have <lb />
One ready by November. Now <lb />
they desire to encourage division <lb />
among Democrats so that <lb />
have a chance to win. <lb />
A CARD FROM COL. SKINNER. <lb />
The time has come when I can- <lb />
not those who have been <lb />
my friends associates and <lb />
in the cause of Democracy, to <lb />
be by the <lb />
of designing men. <lb />
I stood the fire as long as <lb />
I can without making a plain <lb />
statement to my advocacy <lb />
of measures for financial relief, so <lb />
that the people may see how <lb />
fairly I have been recently treated <lb />
by to whoso good opinion <lb />
lam I commenced to <lb />
thought to the financial prob- <lb />
em in 1873-74 while I was a student <lb />
m, Transylvania University, Lev <lb />
Ky- I read the press of <lb />
the day with great interest and <lb />
the pleasure of hearing such <lb />
lights as Senators <lb />
nines B. Beck. J. G- <lb />
J, ti. Black burn, make campaign <lb />
fishes on the line of financial <lb />
and denouncing especially <lb />
the demonetization of silver. <lb />
to investigate the <lb />
I tried <lb />
current <lb />
upon the subject <lb />
My reading and study <lb />
sincere and <lb />
decided conclusion that the <lb />
problem is of the first <lb />
among the issues that must <lb />
be settled by the American people. <lb />
la this J find myself<lb />
. If. <lb />
to financial relief. In March the <lb />
same year I wrote an article <lb />
led Basis for National <lb />
Bank which appeared in <lb />
the Greenville and <lb />
and Observer about the same <lb />
time. After this I wrote an article <lb />
dealing with the cotton problem <lb />
Hope of the <lb />
This was first published <lb />
in the farmer and <lb />
afterwards in abbreviated form in <lb />
frank Leslie's. Both of these tic- <lb />
lea, were widely copied. I followed <lb />
these with of the South- No, <lb />
Subsequently I have and <lb />
then contributed different pa- <lb />
on the line of financial reform <lb />
especially in advocacy of the Sub- <lb />
treasury Plan. These questions <lb />
naturally brought me to the <lb />
of the Alliance, an organized body <lb />
working for legislature reforms, <lb />
and consequently I many <lb />
invitations from different parts of <lb />
the State to address Alliance <lb />
Some few of these <lb />
I accepted. In mid-summer I <lb />
received an invitation to join Col- <lb />
Polk a series of speeches <lb />
State. Before con <lb />
to do so I consulted many <lb />
prominent Democrats among them <lb />
Chairman E. C Smith, Hon. T. R. <lb />
their associate editor of <lb />
the and Observer, Hon. T. J. <lb />
Jarvis has always shown <lb />
himself a wise and conservative <lb />
and others. They advised <lb />
me that it would do good for me <lb />
to accept the invitations. Follow- <lb />
the few speeches I made I was <lb />
flooded with other invitations, and <lb />
at a sacrifice, with only the good <lb />
of the people at heart, have <lb />
speeches in counties. I <lb />
leave the and tendency <lb />
of my to the people who <lb />
heard them as well as to the <lb />
graphic reports of them in differ- <lb />
Democratic journals invariably <lb />
reporting me as having done my <lb />
good, which could not have <lb />
otherwise, as I made the <lb />
same of speeches that I was <lb />
wont to do in the campaigns from <lb />
1876 to 1890, and also the same <lb />
kind of speeches spoken by Hon. <lb />
Jesse J. Yeates, Hon. T. R. <lb />
Hon. D. M. Carter, Hon. L. <lb />
C. Latham and Hon. G- <lb />
Skinner, in respective can- <lb />
of the first District, and that <lb />
the electors for the State at large <lb />
and our Senators Vance and Ran- <lb />
have made throughout North <lb />
Carolina for the past <lb />
They denounced the <lb />
of silver, the resumption of <lb />
specie payment and the credit <lb />
strengthening act, they have held <lb />
up the of a gold standard- <lb />
promised the remonetization of <lb />
silver and general financial relief <lb />
through the Democratic party. <lb />
So have I. <lb />
In the present hour we only <lb />
differ as to the plan of relief. I <lb />
believe in the sub treasury plan, <lb />
they do not- As Democrats each <lb />
is entitled to his individual <lb />
ion- As i as freedom of speech <lb />
is guaranteed in the country we <lb />
all have our individual right to <lb />
express our own views and I trust <lb />
without having our Democracy <lb />
impugned or ourselves personally <lb />
or politically proscribed. Mr. <lb />
Bland can favor free silver and be <lb />
a Democrat. Mr. Halter can op- <lb />
pose free silver without having <lb />
his Democracy questioned. Mr. <lb />
Randall was a protectionist and <lb />
yet a recognized leader of <lb />
racy in Congress. Mr- <lb />
can reverse himself on silver and <lb />
all the while fight against the <lb />
of internal revenue a <lb />
plank in our State platforms, <lb />
and yet to North Carolinians a <lb />
great loader in Democracy. <lb />
But Mr. Skinner, it would seem, <lb />
can not advocate a measure which <lb />
he believes would relieve <lb />
the people of their great <lb />
stagnation and arm the fields <lb />
with the power to command higher <lb />
for their products, without <lb />
laving his political heritage taken <lb />
from him, his past can- <lb />
celled and his future proscribed. <lb />
Hence I desire to say, as much as <lb />
I may be maligned, sharp as the <lb />
criticisms may made, nothing <lb />
can cause me to waver or falter in <lb />
my political faith, lo- I expect to <lb />
follow the flag when many who <lb />
now judge me wrongly shall have <lb />
deserted and joined with our com- <lb />
enemy. <lb />
My advocacy of tho sub-treasury <lb />
plan has always been within tho <lb />
pale of the party. I discuss it <lb />
only in a general way, trying to <lb />
impress two pivotal thoughts <lb />
that Democracy is tho rule or <lb />
strength o the people and that <lb />
a majority leave the to con <lb />
that Democracy means <lb />
all power with the people <lb />
that, what we call money <lb />
whether in the shape of govern- <lb />
credit or coin, is tho most <lb />
powerful controller of human <lb />
action and the great distributer of <lb />
the results of Tabor; that as gov <lb />
credit has to be invoked <lb />
in the form of treasury notes, <lb />
certificates or. guaranteed bank <lb />
notes, to do tho business of the <lb />
country, that it if more Democratic <lb />
to put this power in tho hands of <lb />
or near the people at first cost <lb />
than to delegate it to corporations <lb />
with the power to the people, <lb />
and that the government can ex- <lb />
tend its credit under proper super <lb />
vision upon land and staple crops <lb />
as well as upon bonds, gold or <lb />
silver, for the reason that those <lb />
must redeem tho bonds and furnish <lb />
tho power with which to purchase <lb />
gold and silver. <lb />
Now while these are my <lb />
views, I have no desire to force <lb />
them upon Democrats who not <lb />
see through the glasses as I <lb />
lo, and certainly would n it want <lb />
them incorporated in our State <lb />
platform, recognizing as I do that <lb />
there is that difference of opinion <lb />
among Democrats that <lb />
tho of Democratic <lb />
councils and jeopardize our <lb />
at the realizing farther <lb />
as I do that white people must <lb />
hold together within the organ <lb />
of Democracy to preserve <lb />
homo to prevent the common <lb />
-e <lb />
of my individual views <lb />
ready to make any <lb />
to prevent the disruption of the <lb />
Democratic party. And if I way <lb />
be permitted to make a suggestion <lb />
to Alliance <lb />
non-Alliance Democrats in the <lb />
interest of would be to <lb />
carry out what I intended at the <lb />
last meeting of the State Executive <lb />
Committee, to recommend to the <lb />
different count conventions with <lb />
as little variation as possible tho <lb />
state platform of 1890, relegate <lb />
all our differences of a national <lb />
character to the different <lb />
conventions, as this class <lb />
of relief must come through the <lb />
channel of Congress, and these are <lb />
the political bodies that should be <lb />
impressed with the importance of <lb />
relief on the line indicated. In <lb />
making this suggestion I am not <lb />
retreating from the Democratic <lb />
principles involved in the sub- <lb />
treasury Plan. I shall attend the <lb />
Democratic convention of the First <lb />
District and do as did at our <lb />
last District convention, use my <lb />
power to have incorporated this <lb />
plan in the platform, and work for <lb />
the nomination of a man that will <lb />
stand flat-footed upon such a plat- <lb />
form. If I fail it will not diminish <lb />
my Democratic ardor, but will <lb />
follow the majority. As a <lb />
reformer I can not see how <lb />
anything unusual in <lb />
our State platform will advance <lb />
our cause. I can see how it may <lb />
divide our people and endanger <lb />
our local institutions. I give the <lb />
Alliance credit for too much <lb />
and patriotism, even if in the <lb />
absolute control of the State con- <lb />
to act either in naming <lb />
the ticket or the platform so as to <lb />
bring defeat the work there <lb />
committed to their charge. My <lb />
opinion is they will act wisely <lb />
conservative and on the day after <lb />
will deserve the applause of pa- <lb />
Let non-Alliance Democrats stop <lb />
their mad criticisms, <lb />
tone themselves down, be <lb />
ed to act conservatively, meet on <lb />
a ground, help enact a <lb />
common platform that all can <lb />
stand upon and name a <lb />
ticket that will inspire union <lb />
and solidity in city, town hamlet <lb />
and county, and under one flag <lb />
march to an assured victory. <lb />
To this end let us nil meet as <lb />
true Democrats, prepared to make <lb />
tome sacrifices and concessions <lb />
for the the common good. <lb />
Harry Skinner. <lb />
we hold it to be the duty of every <lb />
Democrat who eon, to attend them. <lb />
If any Democrat willingly remains <lb />
away and things do not go to suit <lb />
him he has nO right to <lb />
In the next place we beg to urge <lb />
the Democratic voters who <lb />
attend these meetings to select <lb />
conservative, wise and <lb />
men to represent them the <lb />
County Convention. not <lb />
shut our eyes to the fact that there <lb />
are differences of opinion among <lb />
those who have heretofore been <lb />
together for Democratic <lb />
success as to what we should do, <lb />
and what we should not do, in the <lb />
coming campaign. If co <lb />
are composed of conservative, <lb />
wise and men, <lb />
can be and <lb />
we can present an unbroken -front <lb />
to our common enemy, the <lb />
party. Division de- <lb />
feat, and defeat means death to all <lb />
hopes of relief or reform of any <lb />
kind. Division can only come <lb />
our opinion by allowing <lb />
men of views to <lb />
take control of our conventions <lb />
and dictate the line of action for <lb />
our party. It is better, at this <lb />
time, that men of known prudence <lb />
and wisdom, who believe that the <lb />
integrity of the Democratic party <lb />
is the surest safety for the State <lb />
and Nation shall be sent to our <lb />
party conventions, and we urge <lb />
upon our township meetings to <lb />
choose such men as their delegates. <lb />
Alex L. Blow, <lb />
R. Williams, Jr., Chairman. <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
COUNTY DEMOCRATIC <lb />
Rooms of the <lb />
Executive Committee of , <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Greenville. N. C, April 9th, <lb />
At a meeting of the Executive <lb />
Committee of the Democratic party <lb />
of the county of Pitt, held in Green- <lb />
ville this day, pursuant to a regular <lb />
notice given by tho chairman, it <lb />
was ordered that a County Con- <lb />
of the party to be held in <lb />
Greenville on Satin day the 7th <lb />
day of May 1892, for the purpose <lb />
of appointing delegates to the <lb />
Convention called to meet in <lb />
the city of Raleigh on the 18th day <lb />
of May 1892. <lb />
It was further ordered that the <lb />
township meetings to appoint <lb />
delegates to the County <lb />
be held at the usual places in <lb />
each township, at o'clock P. M., <lb />
on Saturday tho 30th day of April, <lb />
1892. <lb />
Each township will entitled <lb />
to appoint to the County <lb />
one delegate one alter- <lb />
for every twenty-live Demo- <lb />
votes, and one delegate for <lb />
fractions of fifteen or more votes <lb />
the last Gubernatorial <lb />
that is to say i <lb />
Beaver Dam is entitled to<lb />
Bethel <lb />
Carolina<lb />
Falkland<lb />
Greenville<lb />
Swift Creek <lb />
The committee have deemed it <lb />
not inappropriate in making this <lb />
call for a convention of the party <lb />
to address a few words of advice <lb />
and encouragement to those who <lb />
to participate in it- And <lb />
first of all we urge every Demo- <lb />
in the county, -vim can do so, <lb />
to be present at the township <lb />
meetings and to take part in their <lb />
proceedings. are the <lb />
meetings of party under <lb />
plan of organization, and it is <lb />
in these meetings that each <lb />
of the party can speak for him <lb />
self, act for himself and vote for <lb />
himself. The County Convention <lb />
and State Convention and Nation- <lb />
Convention are representative <lb />
bodies, and the persons who com- <lb />
pose those, are in their <lb />
capacity. In tho township <lb />
meetings each person is there in <lb />
his individual capacity and it is <lb />
there that he can perform part <lb />
in giving tone and direction and <lb />
character to tho Conventions of <lb />
his party are to follow. It <lb />
is in Die township meetings that <lb />
the life of our party <lb />
begins, and it is from these that all <lb />
authority to platform, <lb />
candidates and <lb />
support of the derived. <lb />
These meetings are open to ovary <lb />
person, who in goo <lb />
WEATHER CROP BULLETIN. <lb />
For the Week Ending Saturday, April <lb />
1891. <lb />
A New Enterprise, <lb />
lo our patrons for the <lb />
patronage they given us In <lb />
the line of <lb />
we Also wish to let It now we <lb />
tie building truck Barrels for Potatoes <lb />
and would glad to furnish those lie <lb />
need Barrels. We think we hut as <lb />
good and well ventilated Barrel as will <lb />
lie on or it has been so pron- <lb />
by those acquainted with truck <lb />
We sell for apiece. <lb />
lots of barrels cents. As we <lb />
have no of the we <lb />
wishing to barrel <lb />
place I heir with u as early a <lb />
possible so we may have prepared limber <lb />
to build the when needed. Those <lb />
not give any notice of their order <lb />
limy barrels on they <lb />
need them. We are also prepared to <lb />
furnish cotton planters or to any repair <lb />
work on them or furnish any repairs. Also <lb />
we can furnish on short notice any trim- <lb />
for dwellings, or anything our <lb />
line of <lb />
We would also cull attention to our <lb />
new style circular scat fur <lb />
Please address Cox Win- <lb />
via.- N. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
On the 4th day of April, 1893, the <lb />
o the Superior Court of <lb />
Issued to the letters of <lb />
administration as administrator de <lb />
of the estate of L. H. Anderson, de- <lb />
ceased, who duly qualified and gave bond <lb />
as such. Notice Is now given to the <lb />
creditors of said I,. R. Anderson to <lb />
sent their claims to me for payment duly <lb />
authenticated on or before the <lb />
April, or this notice will be <lb />
plead In bar of their recovery. All per- <lb />
sons indebted to said estate are request- <lb />
ed to make Immediate payment to me. <lb />
This the 18th April. 1892. <lb />
Conn, Ad <lb />
d. b. n. of I.- It. Anderson. <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 <lb />
W W, timber land, J D <lb />
Little Jacob <lb />
J C, 1800 <lb />
Simon. acres, <lb />
Co. H, Align- <lb />
land, <lb />
Moore, Stanley heir, acres, <lb />
Tait, E A, acres <lb />
C V, a, swift creek <lb />
Braxton, K W a, swift creek <lb />
COX. Biggs a. K i <lb />
Cox, S C Sr, a, V creek <lb />
Cannon, W a. t swamp -i <lb />
A B a , <lb />
Dawson, A stock law <lb />
Ellis. Willis n, swift creek <lb />
Hart. town lot Ayden <lb />
Harrington, swift creek <lb />
maiming W H a swift creek <lb />
Moore, Marcellus O a <lb />
Nobles, a swift creek <lb />
Nobles J W a gum swamp <lb />
Powell, V a C creek <lb />
Powell, Callie V stock law <lb />
Patrick. James a swift creek <lb />
Boss. Potter town lot <lb />
Sutton, a creek <lb />
stock law <lb />
Sermons. Henry a long branch <lb />
a Long Branch <lb />
-DEALERS IN<lb />
m m <lb />
NOTIONS, <lb />
tho r. to W at d <lb />
Office, Raleigh, N. C. <lb />
The reports of the <lb />
dents of the Weekly Weather <lb />
Crop Bulletin, issued by the North <lb />
Carolina Experiment Station and <lb />
Weather Service, for the <lb />
week ending Saturday, April 16th, <lb />
1892, show that the weather has <lb />
been very unfavorable during the <lb />
week, especially in temperature. <lb />
Killing frosts visited every part of <lb />
the State, doing much to <lb />
fruit and track and slight injury <lb />
to other crops. <lb />
Eastern this part <lb />
of the State the truckers have been <lb />
great losers the last crop <lb />
bulletin was issued. The frosts <lb />
on the 10th, 11th and 13th did <lb />
great injury to Irish potatoes, <lb />
beans, strawberries and peaches. <lb />
The truck crops, in the New <lb />
section alone, were damaged to <lb />
the extent of as <lb />
ed by the newspapers. Corn, just <lb />
coming up, was damaged to some <lb />
extent frost also. The rain-fall <lb />
and were about the aver- <lb />
age and fairly distributed. Cotton <lb />
planting has It report- <lb />
ed that tho cotton will be <lb />
considerably reduced in this dis- <lb />
Wheat, oats and grasses <lb />
doing well. reported <lb />
from Weldon, inch; South- <lb />
port, 0.18 inch. <lb />
Central tern <lb />
and rain-fall have been <lb />
the average the <lb />
week, seriously retarding growth <lb />
of vegetation. The cold snap and <lb />
frosts from 10th to 13th greatly <lb />
injured crops. The damage may <lb />
be somewhat overestimated at <lb />
present, but it appears that fruit is <lb />
badly damaged, namely, peaches, <lb />
plums, cherries and, to <lb />
able extent, grapes also. <lb />
vegetables were killed young <lb />
corn in places cut clown. Potato <lb />
tops frozen to the ground- The <lb />
damage to wheat, oats and tobacco <lb />
plants is probably trifling- <lb />
Corn planting has been progress- <lb />
rapidly, and planting cotton <lb />
also now tinder way. It appears <lb />
that a large increase in the acre- <lb />
age of corn small grains is <lb />
certain. <lb />
A severe hail-storm occurred on <lb />
the 14th in the northern part of <lb />
this district, being felt at Burling- <lb />
ton, Oxford, Dabney, Me- <lb />
bane, Winston and Henderson <lb />
Rains during the <lb />
Chapel Hill, 0.2 inch ; <lb />
0.25 inch Burlington, 1-50 inches; <lb />
Raleigh, 0.30 inch; Oak Ridge, <lb />
0.62 inch. . <lb />
Western <lb />
been altogether <lb />
From sections ex- <lb />
rain on the is re- <lb />
ported. There was hardly an <lb />
average of sunshine, while <lb />
tho temperature was low for <lb />
season. The heavy frosts -on the <lb />
9th, 10th, 11th, and <lb />
killed about all the poaches ; <lb />
vegetables seriously damaged; <lb />
wheat in some localities slightly <lb />
t corn and cotton planting <lb />
somewhat retarded. <lb />
Salisbury, 0.21 inch; Statesville, <lb />
0.22 inch; Mt. Pleasant, 1-21 inches. <lb />
H. B. Battle, Director. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of an Her o the Clerk of <lb />
the Superior Court of Pitt county in tho <lb />
case of J. B. Bullock, administrator of <lb />
John I. Lewis, against Harriot Ann <lb />
and Susan Lewis, the undersigned <lb />
will sell rash before the Court House <lb />
door In Greenville on Thursday, the 21st <lb />
of April, the following de- <lb />
piece or of land lying In <lb />
township, Pitt county, adjoin- <lb />
the lands of H. Thomas <lb />
Thomas, the Harriet Bunting land, the <lb />
land of and <lb />
acres, morn or less. <lb />
March 1892. <lb />
j. D. BULLOCK, <lb />
r. o. any. <lb />
Notice to Creditor. <lb />
Having been appointed by the <lb />
Court county Receiver <lb />
Combination notion Is here- <lb />
by Indebted to said <lb />
Greenville Combination men to make <lb />
to the <lb />
and all against <lb />
Wars Mast file <lb />
the <lb />
on or Kb <lb />
TOWNSHIP. <lb />
John F, 1.50 a-, <lb />
J D, a. Allen land <lb />
a, place <lb />
stock law <lb />
Braxton, Nell a. Button land <lb />
Cory, W M. a. Nichols land, ft <lb />
Edward, George, part of town lot <lb />
Edmonds. Henry, town lot <lb />
stock law <lb />
Fleming, E P. , ferry land, <lb />
Gorham, Dinah, I town lot, <lb />
stock law <lb />
H C, a, N Button land <lb />
Hardy. W C, L Elks land <lb />
W H. a, Fleming land 13- <lb />
Harris. Alex, a. Turner land <lb />
Johnson, S M, a Johnson land <lb />
Moore, Jr. a, land <lb />
T H, a, land <lb />
J B, a, B. no land <lb />
J C, <lb />
Norman A Everett a. G Do <lb />
sermons, D G. a sermons land <lb />
Savage, E T. a, Pollard land <lb />
Stancill. Wilson, a, Pollard Ian I <lb />
Tucker Murphy, a, James land <lb />
stock law <lb />
a, <lb />
W n, J F W land <lb />
Yellowley, J B, town lot <lb />
farm n. <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 W. <lb />
W M, n, root. <lb />
Forties, L A. K a. land <lb />
Galloway, E B, a, cow swamp <lb />
Haddock, T R, a. creek <lb />
Hines, Aaron, a, <lb />
Mills, W F, a. Indian well <lb />
Mills. Martha J, a, ridge <lb />
Mills. Henry J, Sr, a. pill ridge <lb />
Mills, Mrs J B, a. cow swamp <lb />
II A, <lb />
B. I land <lb />
N La 1st a, <lb />
Smith, Turner, a. Indian well <lb />
Smith, m. a, ill <lb />
Smith, Oliver, so a, cow swamp <lb />
Stokes, H a, pole ridge <lb />
Sullen. Jr, a, clay root <lb />
Tall, Mrs I A. 15-1 a. tar river <lb />
White, L a, cow <lb />
K DAM. <lb />
Joy W C, a, log <lb />
Turner, a. gum branch I <lb />
Murphy, J a Crawford land <lb />
Bilker, Geo B. lot in Marlboro <lb />
J H, creek <lb />
L P, n, <lb />
a, Marlboro, <lb />
FALKLAND. <lb />
Atkinson, B S hell 1250 Move, <lb />
Braswell, A, a, Peebles place <lb />
Born m, , part of <lb />
D F, a. part of <lb />
Jenkins, Mrs a, <lb />
Annie, a, balance due <lb />
John F, s, <lb />
James, of Win Pippin <lb />
a, BullOCK farm <lb />
Atkinson, B heirs by V <lb />
for 1890, 1260 n, Atkinson hind <lb />
for 1891 <lb />
Brown, Mrs Nancy A, a, brown <lb />
land, balance due <lb />
Robert a land <lb />
Corbett. A J a Tool land <lb />
Fields. Amos a <lb />
J a I <lb />
Pippin, a <lb />
Randolph, a Randolph I'd <lb />
E a <lb />
Brown, Jesse a <lb />
Cox, Fred a well <lb />
Coward, Jno W H Smith a <lb />
Freeman. John S <lb />
stock law <lb />
Wm a <lb />
S V a <lb />
stock law <lb />
Purser, David a <lb />
A a <lb />
Slaughter, a and a <lb />
Smith, Cicero in h <lb />
Lewis H a Holloway land <lb />
James W n<lb />
Town Tax Sale. <lb />
As Town Tax Collector I have <lb />
vied on the following lots on the <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 the 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 the taxes and costs <lb />
duo thereon. <lb />
W. H. HARRINGTON, <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, quarter town lot. <lb />
Kin-nil. Amos, town lot, <lb />
J town lot, <lb />
Lawrence, LIV, guardian, town lot, <lb />
. . <lb />
i it it . <lb />
N B Lawrence, <lb />
Murphy and wife, town lot, <lb />
town lot, <lb />
Tucker A Murphy, law office. <lb />
Williams, Matthew, fourth town lot, <lb />
Wilson, B. J. town lot, <lb />
W wife, town lot, <lb />
Hopkins. Wilson, town <lb />
House. Luke, town lot, <lb />
Hardy. town lot, <lb />
TINWARE, <lb />
glassware <lb />
WOOD AND WILLOW WARE, <lb />
Harness, Whips, and Collars, <lb />
FARMING TOOLS, <lb />
Plows of the Improved Makes, <lb />
Stokes D C a <lb />
Charles A a <lb />
Stokes n Hardy a <lb />
in W G Stokes a <lb />
Stanley in J town lots <lb />
. stock law <lb />
B F half a land <lb />
stock w <lb />
Smith, Oliver land <lb />
mills land <lb />
D C a <lb />
w L a Wilson land <lb />
Tyson E A s <lb />
Wot <lb />
h n town lot <lb />
stock law <lb />
Wilson D a Dan Wilson <lb />
meadow branch <lb />
Carson, R, CO a, House place, <lb />
U C a. James mini. <lb />
Hunter, W. by H skinner, <lb />
Rollins land, <lb />
Harmon, Mr- a, <lb />
a, lo land, <lb />
K C, Berths Hop- <lb />
kins. p a, Hope, <lb />
W, Home land, <lb />
John, lot. <lb />
It <lb />
at <lb />
1418 <lb />
at <lb />
Notice. <lb />
I will sell at public 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 tho year <lb />
1891 and cost. <lb />
D D Andrews, lot W James St, <lb />
O C est, lot St, <lb />
lots, V N B, <lb />
James St. <lb />
hotel A store. S R It, R CO <lb />
stables. James 1-t, <lb />
acres land, Bethel, <lb />
Mary E James lot, W Main St, <lb />
lot, E James St, <lb />
lot, E James St, <lb />
J ti Nelson dwelling, N R R, <lb />
lot near Academy <lb />
lot W Main St, <lb />
J W lot, W St, <lb />
lot, N St. <lb />
A Bro, lot W Main St, <lb />
lot E Main St, <lb />
W W lot E Main St. SO <lb />
w H Harrington, i lot E Main st, <lb />
lot E Main <lb />
lot E Main St, <lb />
lot K Main St, <lb />
J L lot B Main St, <lb />
Bert lot W James St, <lb />
J S Shack lot H It B, <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 />
lot W St, I <lb />
Ward est, lot W Main St, <lb />
G Jenkins. lot, E Andrews St, <lb />
This April the 4th 1892. <lb />
W. O. <lb />
Town Tax Collector. <lb />
To the Oars. <lb />
If you arc going to Arkansas, Texas <lb />
or West, it will be money in your pocket <lb />
to bear in mind that the <lb />
C. . St. L. offers <lb />
facilities to all classes of <lb />
having fewer changes, cleaner and <lb />
more comfortable cars, sure <lb />
Elegant Palace Coaches Atlanta <lb />
i to Memphis without change, making <lb />
direct connection there with fast trains, <lb />
requiring on one change for <lb />
and Texas. For reliable Information, <lb />
rates, routes, schedules and maps write <lb />
to or call on undersigned, <lb />
we can give yon the very lowest rate, and <lb />
that we make no extra charge for <lb />
In our through Cars. Call on or address <lb />
J. W. Hicks; Pass. Charlotte N. C, <lb />
Malay, Pass No Kimball <lb />
House Atlanta Ga. W. T. Rogers, T. P. <lb />
A. Chattanooga. <lb />
Sr J B Hawthorne Si-affirms <lb />
lute resting <lb />
J. D. D. D. <lb />
Atlanta, On. <lb />
More that two years ago you were kind <lb />
enough to allow us to publish s letter <lb />
from yen. In which you declare that u <lb />
had been cured of Catarrh, by the use of <lb />
King's R hi the same <lb />
letter you said that you had seen its <lb />
curative effects upon various diseases. <lb />
Knowing your enviable reputation <lb />
throughout the nation, confident <lb />
that the public would reply upon any <lb />
statement coming you, the <lb />
cf King's <lb />
would esteem it a real favor if you would <lb />
consent to answer the following <lb />
1st. Has there been any return <lb />
of your Catarrh trouble V Have <lb />
your observations of the effects of the <lb />
medicine within the last two years <lb />
strengthened the convictions expressed <lb />
In your Hist published testimonials <lb />
Hoping to hear from yon at <lb />
est convenience, <lb />
I am yours <lb />
T. H. BLACKNALL, <lb />
Manager K. R. G. <lb />
Mai. T. II. Blackball, <lb />
Manager K. It. G. Co. <lb />
Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Dear Sir <lb />
In to your letter requesting me <lb />
to answer certain concerning <lb />
King's I take much <lb />
pleasure in saving that I am Indebted to <lb />
the medicine what looms to me <lb />
complete cure of trouble. My <lb />
present health is almost perfect. <lb />
My observation within the last two <lb />
has to strengthened my faith In the <lb />
remedy, that I am prepared to say that <lb />
there is not s on the market <lb />
that is worthy of comp with it. <lb />
Thousands of and reliable <lb />
people, among them some of the most <lb />
men oil Me country, ban <lb />
expressed to the opinion. <lb />
Many or my have been cured of <lb />
dyspepsia, others of and <lb />
some o neuralgia Ai a remedy for <lb />
cholera uranium It Is par <lb />
Atlanta alone baa a <lb />
and living witnesses to its over <lb />
My conviction as to ins merit of this <lb />
Is strong s any <lb />
can <lb />
One of our firm <lb />
will soon visit <lb />
the Northern <lb />
Markets and <lb />
while there will <lb />
buy Roods at <lb />
prices that will <lb />
command the at <lb />
of all. Realizing the hard limes <lb />
and scarcity of money we will sell during <lb />
the coming Spring and Summer all goods <lb />
prices than ever before. We will <lb />
be prepared to sell as low as any <lb />
who sells first- <lb />
c a goods. <lb />
We thank our <lb />
friends for past <lb />
patronage and <lb />
hope to merit a <lb />
continuance of <lb />
the same. Prom- <lb />
honest and <lb />
square dealings <lb />
to all. The <lb />
tea c h n g s of <lb />
each generation <lb />
says c o n n e <lb />
your to <lb />
those whom <lb />
you know <lb />
be reliable. <lb />
Come one, come all and us. <lb />
CHERRY <lb />
CO. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
Has Moved to next Door Court House <lb />
WILL THE MANUFACTURE OF <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory Is well equipped with the best Mechanics, consequently up nothing <lb />
but first-class We keep up with the times and improved styles <lb />
material In all work. All styles of Springs are use-, you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Run Horn, King <lb />
Also keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS <lb />
be year round, we will sell AS AS LOWEST. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of this and counties for past we hope to <lb />
merit a continuance of the same <lb />
Williamson. <lb />
J, L, SUGG. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE <lb />
N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAMES OLD STAND <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lowest current rates. <lb />
AM AGENT FOR A FIRST-CLASS FIRE <lb />
THE RELIABLE OF C <lb />
to the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following goo <lb />
not to be excelled Id this market. And to be an <lb />
pure straight goods. DRY GOODS of all kinds. NOTIONS, CLOTHING, <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and BOOTS and SHOES, LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SUPPERS, and HOUSE <lb />
GOODS, SASH and BLINDS, and <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE. i-LOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER of <lb />
kinds, Gin Mill Hat, Hock Limb, of Paris, and Pius <lb />
Hair. Harness, Bridles and <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which f offer to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers prices, cents per less per cent for Cash. Bread Prep <lb />
ration and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, Lead and pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors, Cucumber Wood Pomps, Salt and Wood sad <lb />
Willow Ware. Nail a Giro me a and I guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
m mew hill <lb />
i Mini <lb />
REMODELED AND IMPROVED. <lb />
GOOD <lb />
The Rest Standard Typewriter in the World. <lb />
Inexpensive. Portable. No Ink Ribbon, In- <lb />
Type In all <lb />
to learn, and rapid a- any. <lb />
AGENTS WANTED EVERYWHERE <lb />
as Represented. <lb />
This is everybody's friend. Every- <lb />
body should have writing done on <lb />
Typewriter. It always Insures most <lb />
Attention. Address <lb />
St., Boston, Mass. <lb />
One of these machines be seen st the Reflector office, where and <lb />
prices ran e had. <lb />
For Accident Insurance by th year in one of <lb />
the best Companies in existence, tee<lb />
i .<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017543_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb />
XI. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C . APRIL 20th, 1892. <lb />
A QUESTION FOR SCIENTISTS. <lb />
I Mrs. M la <lb />
for Her <lb />
Chief of Detectives t <lb />
had novel experience in the way of <lb />
finding a new cause for crime. The <lb />
resulted from the visit of a <lb />
motherly and distressed old <lb />
an to the Court. On the previous <lb />
day a youth named Patrick <lb />
had been in North St. Lords, <lb />
charged with having a <lb />
house. The police knew the lad and <lb />
claim that be is a hard ease. It m <lb />
also that Desmond knows the <lb />
boy's parents as hardworking <lb />
people. Yesterday Mrs. <lb />
railed at the Court and requested <lb />
of Chief to talk <lb />
with her son in the holdover. The re- <lb />
quest was granted, and the mother, who <lb />
appeared almost heartbroken, went <lb />
down stairs and for half an hour was <lb />
engaged in a tearful conversation with <lb />
the boy. at last withdrew <lb />
the old woman went to Chief <lb />
office in great distress. There she fell <lb />
to discussing her son's wayward course. <lb />
breaks my she said feel <lb />
to Desmond, see the boy grow <lb />
up to be a thief and a criminal. can't <lb />
see how be turns oat so. His father is <lb />
an and self man. and <lb />
I have never heard of any bad character <lb />
either among my husband's people <lb />
my own. We have been very careful <lb />
in raising Patrick to be an honest boy. <lb />
and now that be be locked <lb />
burglary is a great blow to both of n <lb />
Chief Desmond knew the old woman <lb />
was telling the and was <lb />
interested in the problem of why the on <lb />
of honest parents should develop into a <lb />
criminal. <lb />
bad company. guess. Mrs. <lb />
he said. suppose <lb />
son got to running with a tough crowd <lb />
and they led him into evil ways that <lb />
brought him in conflict with the law. <lb />
The old mother looked earnestly at <lb />
Desmond for s moment. sud- <lb />
she <lb />
Mr. Desmond, it isn't that I <lb />
have known ever since Pat was s little <lb />
boy that be bad an instinct to steal. It <lb />
has given me great uneasiness before <lb />
now, and it was one of the why <lb />
watched over the boy more carefully <lb />
than I did with any other of my <lb />
And to save my life can <lb />
bat one reason for it. It is <lb />
Just before Pat was born bis <lb />
was drinking more than was good f u <lb />
him, and would spend all his wages <lb />
drink if be bad sufficient opportunity. I <lb />
found it very hard to get any money <lb />
from him to pay for oar bread and meat <lb />
At last it got so that the only way I <lb />
could get his money was by waiting <lb />
be was asleep at night and then pick <lb />
his pockets. Many and many a <lb />
night I have got when my husband <lb />
was asleep in the bed by my side, tip <lb />
toad over to where bis clothes lay, font <lb />
through bis pockets and took what <lb />
money found there. He at <lb />
time drinking so bard that every night <lb />
almost he would go to bad drank, and <lb />
the next morning not i <lb />
whether or not he bad had any money <lb />
when he home. Bat be had a hot <lb />
tamper and was afraid when I <lb />
. u m i ii <lb />
might . doing it Put <lb />
horn s ; after and I b <lb />
ha was u born Just U <lb />
thaw a of <lb />
Chief Desmond made no reply to the <lb />
old woman's story. It was a new lessen <lb />
for him in the cause of crime. lie could <lb />
neither confirm nor contradict suck a <lb />
Louis Post-Dispatch. <lb />
THE <lb />
As Annum, i of a slag Mistake <lb />
Whirs Horns of MaSs. <lb />
About the moat and <lb />
man that ever bad his torn with the <lb />
boys at the Cross Roads was the <lb />
Jonathan He was a <lb />
Methodist preacher and rode what they <lb />
called the Backwoods Circuit three years <lb />
hand He was a little, quick <lb />
motioned, hump shouldered, wily <lb />
man, with hair and red as s <lb />
fox's tail. <lb />
If I do say it myself, Jonathan Pep- <lb />
was a good man, and there <lb />
anything particular slouchy about <lb />
him as a preacher. He have much <lb />
to say outside of the church <lb />
but be had his heart op in the <lb />
good work, and you conic, look into his <lb />
clear, steady gray eyes sad tell that he <lb />
was game to the bone. <lb />
The preacher started off one Saturday <lb />
to fill his for Sun- <lb />
day down at old Yellow Shank church, <lb />
and his route took him around by the <lb />
Cross Roads. The boys was pow- <lb />
lively times that Liquor <lb />
had been right free, and there <lb />
was a horse race and two or three fights <lb />
on at the same time. It more <lb />
the preacher could stand still and <lb />
pat with. Be hitched the horse and <lb />
mounted a big dry goods box and lit <lb />
into the crowd without any gloves on. <lb />
He told the boys to his own plain, <lb />
blunt way that they was straight <lb />
for that country where they could not <lb />
git any water and need any <lb />
to keep them warm. Some of <lb />
them, be said, worth the Gospel <lb />
salt that it would take to save them, <lb />
and some was so mean that the <lb />
devil would throw up his job if he could <lb />
keep from caught in their company. <lb />
The boys stood off and took the med- <lb />
like he fixed it up for them till be <lb />
got and quit. Then they closed <lb />
to on him and told him not to hurry off <lb />
in the heat of the day. They didn't like to <lb />
be rough and ungentle with a preacher, <lb />
they said, bat at the seine time a preach- <lb />
to keep himself in a preacher's <lb />
place. It look to them like he <lb />
was in any big hurry reach in his <lb />
and as he bad plenty of <lb />
time to spare they would have to ask <lb />
him to tarry till they could unbutton bis <lb />
and give him a good sound <lb />
didn't like to do it. but <lb />
it simply had to be did. The preacher <lb />
pat to some serious objections and tried <lb />
bis level to talk the beys oat of <lb />
their fool notion, bat they stuck to it <lb />
that the job had to be right <lb />
then and there. <lb />
So pitched in without <lb />
what a big slice of blue were <lb />
bi tin off. soon found the job <lb />
devilish for the <lb />
crowd. The little preacher could kick <lb />
hie a steer and hit a clap of <lb />
l l . i o i ., <lb />
two or of the done and <lb />
laid i U ii yon could turn a rand. <lb />
Then the crowd took up the <lb />
preacher a stop to the p n- <lb />
They decided it might be better <lb />
maybe to let him keep his on <lb />
and put off the till some more <lb />
convenient time. <lb />
Th ere was meet in at old Yellow Shank <lb />
church the next day as usual, and after <lb />
that the little Methodist circuit rider <lb />
didn't have no better friends than the <lb />
boys be met over at the Cross Roads <lb />
that Saturday Sanders <lb />
hi Columbus Inquirer-Sun. <lb />
Prom the side of religion many pro- <lb />
tests have been made against the present <lb />
system of popular education. The clergy <lb />
of the different churches cannot help <lb />
thinking that at least the more <lb />
doctrines of the Christian faith <lb />
should be officially and they <lb />
draw most discouraging pictures of <lb />
what the moral future of the youth of <lb />
this country will be if their counsels <lb />
are not heeded. All sound and success- <lb />
moral teaching, they contend, must <lb />
repose upon a basis of theology, and to <lb />
confine ethical teaching to the region of <lb />
the natural Is to deprive it of all war- <lb />
rant, of all authority, of all coercive <lb />
power. <lb />
If these views were correct, it would <lb />
be difficult to see bow the weakness of our <lb />
schools on the moral side could ever be <lb />
remedied, for nothing is more certain <lb />
than that any attempt to teach theology <lb />
In thorn would be predestined tailor. <lb />
The people some will pay for <lb />
theology in the pulpit, they are not <lb />
willing to pay for it in the schools, and <lb />
have shown in most unmistakable ways <lb />
that they do not want it there. The <lb />
question, then, Shall all attempts at <lb />
moral teaching in the public school be <lb />
abandoned, seeing that it cannot be ad- <lb />
ministered as an adjunct of theology. <lb />
or shall a brave effort lie made to <lb />
R an independent status of its own and <lb />
a fair chance to show what it can ac- <lb />
when conducted on purely <lb />
Science Monthly. <lb />
His th Morphia <lb />
victims of the liquor habit, or <lb />
are royal compared with the <lb />
sufferers from morphine. look <lb />
down an admitted height on <lb />
slave of drugs. do not want to be <lb />
classed with them. are above <lb />
them. morphine victims, by the <lb />
are the greatest sufferers. Then <lb />
is not a chamber of horrors in all the <lb />
world so terrible as that dim hall at <lb />
Dwight when morphine patients are <lb />
waiting for their injection. Splendid <lb />
men, strong physiques, fair faces, <lb />
such hollow, hungry such roving, <lb />
restless eyes; each fearful, mindless <lb />
yea. face is wan and <lb />
flag aw are t the feet con- <lb />
moving, thought b distracted. <lb />
You cannot talk with them. will <lb />
not follow you two They will <lb />
move away and walk with frightened <lb />
bast and down the hail. win <lb />
hurry and prepare for the injection. <lb />
will crowd and quarrel for first <lb />
place in line. They are unstrung <lb />
and Chicago Herald. <lb />
NO. <lb />
of <lb />
i of <lb />
It was old man and a <lb />
shall.,. .;. voice on Thirty-third <lb />
street He bad a very peculiar gait on <lb />
a horse with the <lb />
owing to the sole his right shoe being <lb />
loose and the necessity for napping the <lb />
piece well up and forward with every <lb />
step In order to bring it down in the <lb />
right place. He had a small and well <lb />
worn satchel, carried a paper of pins <lb />
and kept his eyes strained on the upper <lb />
windows for customers. <lb />
rows of pins, <lb />
he cried somewhat mournfully. <lb />
A window went with a bang that <lb />
made his heart jump A redheaded <lb />
woman with a flushed face her <lb />
head out one she <lb />
shouted. <lb />
one row, you old she <lb />
screamed it She made a <lb />
gesture if she would scoop him up <lb />
with her bony Angers. <lb />
rows, ma'am, only two <lb />
he said apologetically. <lb />
one row, I tell you I want <lb />
to let that good for nothing husband of <lb />
mine see whether I'm worth a row of <lb />
pins or not. IT fix In popped <lb />
the red head and bang went the window <lb />
down again. <lb />
up with a row of pins, will <lb />
the old man. shaking his <lb />
head. She don't want any <lb />
pins. She the neighbors to know <lb />
what her husband says about <lb />
what she wants. Ill bet he's up there <lb />
now for me with a club. Row of <lb />
pins I wouldn't go up-there if she'd <lb />
offer to buy my stock P <lb />
Thus does age and adversity bring <lb />
York Herald. <lb />
of th <lb />
There wan not, if early historians, <lb />
missionaries and theologians arc to be <lb />
believed, a tribe of American In- <lb />
who had at the time of the white <lb />
man's advent in the western hemisphere <lb />
least smattering of tradition con- <lb />
the life, ministry and sufferings <lb />
of Jesus. But this not bold good <lb />
in regard to story of creation, the <lb />
Tower of Babel and flood, many of <lb />
them having history which <lb />
almost exactly corresponds with the <lb />
stories of these great events related <lb />
la th Bible. <lb />
One day Major Davenport, gov- <lb />
for was <lb />
telling some chiefs about Noah, the <lb />
flood and th ark, when one of in- <lb />
him with We know <lb />
that long time. We was In canons all <lb />
tied together. We float on heap water. <lb />
We send muskrat down one, <lb />
tins. Ha diva, com Last be go <lb />
own and come up with mod to his <lb />
W know water going <lb />
This was all the information Mr. Dav- <lb />
could elicit from the dusky <lb />
-St Louis Republic <lb />
College th boys have <lb />
attended prayers regularly this <lb />
Professor Not one baa missed far <lb />
two weeks <lb />
I Some <lb />
Is brewing. -Good News.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017543_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
THE GREAT SALE IN FULL BLAST AT <lb />
r. s r-. <lb />
Notwithstanding the immense crowds and the big rush of the past two <lb />
------weeks we are still running the------ <lb />
Immense Clearing Sale <lb />
Don't let the crowd keep you away but call at once and secure some of <lb />
the many bargains we have. <lb />
Call Early and Avoid the Rush. J <lb />
immense stock consists of the many new and stylish goods in <lb />
every department. <lb />
Goods, <lb />
Goods, <lb />
Notions, <lb />
Hosiery, <lb />
Clothing, <lb />
Shoes <lb />
at Cost for tie Only <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017543_tn_0005" n="5" />
                <p>
BO BEAD <lb />
IF SO, THIS OFFER IS <lb />
FOR YOU- <lb />
We have made special <lb />
with <lb />
Weekly Constitution, <lb />
Published at Atlanta, by which are <lb />
enabled U It with <lb />
for ONE TEAS Tor only <lb />
This offer a while. Ker <lb />
is your chance to get all the news of all <lb />
the and your home paper for the <lb />
price of one <lb />
Every rate is <lb />
entitled to a chance at <lb />
for 1898, details <lb />
of which will be found elsewhere. <lb />
This is the most remarkable <lb />
offer ever made. Every home in <lb />
Pitt county should receive the <lb />
and after that, It have <lb />
the best General Newspaper, bringing <lb />
every week the of the world, <lb />
overflowing with the choicest special <lb />
features, such as the Weekly 11.1 <lb />
published at Atlanta. and <lb />
having a circulation of 156.000. <lb />
BOTH PAPERS. <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Lent is now over. <lb />
Municipal politics very quiet. <lb />
Monday was a regular blustery day. <lb />
was later this year than <lb />
for sale by J. B. Cherry <lb />
Many farmers planted some cotton last <lb />
week <lb />
Cakes at Shel- <lb />
b urn's. <lb />
Regular thunder storm last Thursday <lb />
night. <lb />
Cotton Seed Meal for sale at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
The merry-go-round grows in <lb />
Soda Water, Milk Shakes and <lb />
Lemonades at a- <lb />
Fish are plentiful in market and sell- <lb />
cheap. <lb />
The New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines for at Brown Bros. <lb />
Still a few cases of measles in the <lb />
community. <lb />
Try Cardenas, the best Scent <lb />
smoke, at Reflector Book Store. <lb />
has tilted up a cozy ice cream <lb />
parlor in his store. <lb />
Cash given for Produce, Hides, <lb />
Eggs and Furs at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The is nearly or quite on- <lb />
get the <lb />
The New Home Ma- <lb />
chines and all parts at Brown <lb />
Bros. <lb />
the potato bug ill not escape <lb />
the frosts of last week- <lb />
Cheapest Furniture, Bedsteads <lb />
Mattresses at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
The commencement exercises of James <lb />
School, will be held May <lb />
inD. M- Ferry Cos <lb />
new Garden Seed, at the Old Brick <lb />
The colored folks are preparing for a <lb />
big celebration here on the of May. <lb />
Fob Dancy house <lb />
on Pitt street. Apply to <lb />
Yellow jasmine and honey suckle <lb />
blooms make the woods rich <lb />
Boss Lunch Milk Biscuit will <lb />
your appetite when nothing <lb />
else will. At the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Quite a large attendance upon the Al- <lb />
meeting held here on Thursday <lb />
last. <lb />
C- A. Snow Cos In- <lb />
formation and about Pat- <lb />
Caveats, Trademarks, Copy- <lb />
rights, etc., may be obtained free <lb />
at this office. <lb />
Last week was one of cool weather, <lb />
quite different from the <lb />
week. <lb />
We have had a few days of dust which <lb />
made moat wish for street <lb />
sprinklers. <lb />
All parties who have tobacco to <lb />
sell can save Warehouse charges <lb />
and freight by bringing same to <lb />
the prise house on Saturdays <lb />
where they will receive good prices- <lb />
Scraps particularly wanted. <lb />
up the country got the Tar on a <lb />
rise last week sufficient to run some of <lb />
the seines out. <lb />
The crowd in town Saturday was quite <lb />
large. The merchants sold several suits <lb />
of spring clothing. <lb />
Kid Gloves to match <lb />
your Hats an Dresses at <lb />
Mrs. M. D. <lb />
Organize an independent military com- <lb />
and name it the Greenville <lb />
pendant Light Infantry. <lb />
Chiffon in all shades at Mrs. M. <lb />
D. <lb />
Overcoats and straw hats do not make <lb />
a nice combination, but some of them <lb />
were out together last week. <lb />
Latest styles in Spring Hats <lb />
from to at Mrs. M. D. Higgs <lb />
Every Democrat In the county should <lb />
be at his respective township primary on <lb />
the 30th. and do your duty. <lb />
Point Lace <lb />
in all the new shades at <lb />
Mas. M. D. <lb />
Fifty cents will get the <lb />
from now until the election. Send on <lb />
your mar with the money. <lb />
Our milliner, Mrs. Georgia Pearce <lb />
has just returned from the North- <lb />
markets where she selected <lb />
with great care the prettiest line of <lb />
goods we ever had. <lb />
M. D <lb />
Now who do you want for <lb />
in your ward Settle this matter and <lb />
nominate the right men Friday. <lb />
Not everybody knows the value <lb />
of Ointment Those <lb />
who have used it testify to its mer- <lb />
its. No house should be without <lb />
a bottle. <lb />
Get up a list of subscribers for the Ra <lb />
Fifty from now <lb />
the issue after tit election. To any one <lb />
who will get op twenty names for the <lb />
give a large Webster's <lb />
Mist of <lb />
Is visiting Mrs. E. II. <lb />
Miss Wells, of Wilson, has seen <lb />
visiting Miss Nannie King the past week. <lb />
Mr. L. of was <lb />
town Sunday spending the day with the <lb />
family of Mr. M. K. Lang. <lb />
ft. S. Wilson, who has a railroad <lb />
and telegraph position Georgia, <lb />
has been spending the past week with <lb />
his parents hero. <lb />
Mr. P. F. <lb />
W. Davis, Norfolk, was In town <lb />
yesterday sporting, courting selling <lb />
cigar, a hi hand all around. <lb />
At the Republican Convention in <lb />
last week, Mr. C. M. Bernard, of <lb />
Greenville, was elected as one of the <lb />
Presidential electors for the State at large <lb />
Dr. W. II. B. Brown has been exceed- <lb />
ill the past week. Dr. J. X. <lb />
Baker, of o, came down twice to <lb />
hold conciliation with other physicians <lb />
as to his condition. <lb />
Mr. E. Warren led. last week on <lb />
a tour through several of the neighbor, <lb />
lug counties in the interest of Riverside <lb />
Nursery. e hope he will return <lb />
bis pockets full of orders. <lb />
Dr. W. II. Savage mother. Mrs. <lb />
Jane F. Savage, of Forge, Va., <lb />
Prof. Silas E. Warren wife, of <lb />
son, and Mrs. Jennie Savage, of Tarboro, <lb />
all relatives of Mrs. C. T. <lb />
part of the past week at Mr. <lb />
Messrs. J. D. Bullock Robert <lb />
Hester, of Oxford, were here part of the <lb />
past week looking into the tobacco pros- <lb />
of this for the coming sea- <lb />
son. K is very mat the next <lb />
season will largely interested <lb />
Straw hats are venturing out again. <lb />
We hop they will not lie driven back so <lb />
unceremoniously this time, but come to <lb />
stay. <lb />
The firemen were out for u little <lb />
Saturday evening. Not enough <lb />
the members in attendance to make a <lb />
good showing. <lb />
Oh, for factories, and a good hotel In <lb />
Greenville. We don't feel like letting <lb />
up on the agitation of these things until <lb />
they arc realized. <lb />
We heard Mr. H. F. Keel say the other <lb />
day that he had some tobacco plants large <lb />
enough to set out and was only waiting <lb />
for a warm rain. <lb />
Ward Meetings. <lb />
The Democratic voters of tho Second <lb />
and wards of the town of Greenville <lb />
are requested to met; on Friday April <lb />
32nd, 1891. at o'clock p. m., for the <lb />
purpose of nominating candidates fur <lb />
Council men to be voted for at an elect <lb />
to be held on the first Monday In -May <lb />
next <lb />
TIM voters of the Second ward will <lb />
meet at the Court House those of <lb />
Third ward will at the Mayor's <lb />
e. b, Blow. <lb />
Dem. Com. <lb />
New Advertisements. <lb />
tells on on the to- <lb />
day that the prices cunt in if <lb />
at his More. Better go see something <lb />
about It. <lb />
Alfred Cully says be has reached per- <lb />
with his preparation. <lb />
see what is said about it our <lb />
columns. <lb />
wants to see you at his store <lb />
don't care how you come so you get <lb />
Once there be will do rest. <lb />
Read his advertisement. <lb />
Mrs. M. D. invites attention <lb />
of the ladies advertisement to-day. <lb />
She has secured the service of Mrs. <lb />
Georgie Pearce, and has a beautiful line <lb />
of goods to show you. <lb />
Young would have you re- <lb />
member fact that only a few days <lb />
are left which you on the <lb />
big candle. They also call your <lb />
to a large line of goods which they <lb />
are offering at Sec advertise- <lb />
Stylish <lb />
-----1 have tho latest designs in <lb />
LADIES, MISSES AND <lb />
Hats and Trimmings <lb />
to suit the most fastidious. <lb />
Our Spring Goods <lb />
are now open ready for Inspection. <lb />
Come and make a selection before the <lb />
stock is broken. Prices to milt hard <lb />
times. <lb />
Mrs. M. D. HIGGS, <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
ClO O <lb />
SHOES. DRY GOODS, NOTIONS. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
Merchants who desire to catch spring <lb />
trade should not overlook the advantage <lb />
of advertising. Frost never nips the <lb />
early advertisement. <lb />
It looks now just like another tobacco <lb />
warehouse will be a reality before the <lb />
next tobacco season comes on. Will tell <lb />
you more about it later. <lb />
With Pitt county raising large crops <lb />
cotton and does it net look <lb />
like it would he wise lo have factories <lb />
for the manufacture <lb />
If as much effort made to sell <lb />
during a dull season as in a busy <lb />
one. quite a difference in sales would be <lb />
noticed. Merchants should take a hint. <lb />
April is hard to locate. The first week <lb />
of this month gave some June <lb />
weather, while last week's weather <lb />
very much in keeping with February. <lb />
Sometime in May Mrs. E. A. <lb />
and Miss Sue will give a <lb />
did theatrical for the of tin <lb />
church. Our people may expect <lb />
something nice in this presentation. <lb />
Don't forget the ward meetings Friday <lb />
to nominate candidates for <lb />
n. Men are needed who arc going <lb />
to do something the town. Every <lb />
Democrat should be at his post of duty. <lb />
County Commissioner Leonidas Flem- <lb />
tells us there are a number of eases <lb />
of pneumonia his neighborhood. Mr. <lb />
Wyatt Brandy, aged about years, died <lb />
of tills disease on last Thursday morning. <lb />
On Thursday Hooker Bros. A Greene <lb />
will the proceeds of their merry- <lb />
go-round with the Ladies Aid Society cf <lb />
Baptist church. The ladies will sell <lb />
tickets request you to give them a <lb />
liberal patronage. <lb />
The Greenville Guard disbanded on <lb />
last Friday and this town now has no <lb />
military company. The company was <lb />
trusted very shabbily by Inspector Gen- <lb />
Smith, who made the last inspection <lb />
of them, and when they met last Friday <lb />
to consider the matter the company dis- <lb />
banded. <lb />
Work of the Frosts. <lb />
The general opinion as to the re- <lb />
of last week's frosts is varied. <lb />
We spoke to persons from several <lb />
different section.- of the who <lb />
were in town on Saturday and some <lb />
thin- the damage much greater than <lb />
others. Where potatoes were up the <lb />
tops were nipped off. These will come <lb />
again, but it will nuke potatoes some <lb />
days later than would have recur <lb />
Where corn was up some of it was killed <lb />
and tome just bitten. It is hard to tell <lb />
about the fruit. In some sections it is <lb />
thought to be killed or seriously dam- <lb />
aged, while In others it is thought not to <lb />
be hurt at all. Young strawberries were <lb />
not seriously injured, but the blooms on <lb />
the vines at the time were killed. The <lb />
greatest damage reported is to gar- <lb />
dens, and the early vegetables fared had. <lb />
Since writing the above Mr. Allen <lb />
Warren tells us the pearlies and straw- <lb />
berries are both badly damaged and he <lb />
thinks there will be very few of <lb />
this year. <lb />
virtue of a decree of Superior <lb />
Court of Pitt County at March Term <lb />
1892, Ills Honor H. R. Bryan Judge <lb />
presiding. In the case cf W. H. Cox vs. <lb />
E. J. mount the undersigned <lb />
will sell for Cash before the Court <lb />
House door Greenville on Monday <lb />
the 2nd day or May 1882 the following <lb />
ands in the County of <lb />
in Township, a one fourth <lb />
undivided Interest in the land, known <lb />
as the M. 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 />
and others, containing acres, <lb />
more or less, the other tract adjoin <lb />
of W. L. mount, the Nobles land <lb />
and others containing acres, more or <lb />
This April 1892. <lb />
F. G. JAMES, <lb />
Commissioner. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified before the <lb />
Court t of Pitt county, of <lb />
of 1892, as <lb />
of Peggy 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 the estate <lb />
must present the same for payment on <lb />
or of March, 1898, or <lb />
this notice will be plead bar of <lb />
recovery. <lb />
This 5th of 1892. <lb />
Monks <lb />
Isaac <lb />
of Peggy Cherry. <lb />
Died. <lb />
The regrets to chronicle, <lb />
the death of Mr. James F. Smith, which <lb />
occurred at his home near Greenville on <lb />
Friday morning. He died of pneumonia. <lb />
Mr. Smith was a member of the Odd <lb />
Fellows and Masons and both of the <lb />
lodges here attended his funeral and <lb />
buried him the honors of each order <lb />
Sunday afternoon. A large number of <lb />
people attended the funeral. <lb />
Religious Notes. <lb />
The meeting in the Baptist church <lb />
will begin the first Sunday in May. <lb />
B. Greenwood, of the Primitive <lb />
Baptist church, will preach In Greenville <lb />
on the of May. <lb />
All the churches had services Sunday <lb />
morning and each was decorated with <lb />
Sowers for Easter. <lb />
Rev. C. W. Howard will preach at <lb />
Mount on the first Saturday <lb />
and Sunday May. <lb />
Rev. J. M. Rose. Presbyterian Evan- <lb />
will begin a meeting in Elliott. <lb />
Hall on the and continue through <lb />
the week. <lb />
The meeting had been in <lb />
the Methodist church for two <lb />
weeks closed Sunday night. Rev. Mr, <lb />
preached bis last sermon Friday <lb />
and returned to Tarboro Saturday <lb />
morning. There were twenty or more <lb />
during the meeting. At the <lb />
Sunday morning service fifteen were <lb />
added to the membership of that church, <lb />
and two joined the Baptist church the <lb />
same morning. <lb />
Resolutions of Greenville Lodge No. <lb />
A. F. ft A. M. <lb />
are that mourn, for they <lb />
shall be Since our Divine <lb />
Creator, out of the abundance of His <lb />
grace and mercy, has called our brother, <lb />
J. F. Smith to his long home, there to <lb />
unite with that holy lodge above whose <lb />
members are the saints and whose Mas- <lb />
is our God, therefore be it <lb />
1st. That by the death cf <lb />
Bro. Smith the community loses an es- <lb />
teemed citizen, and our fraternity a be- <lb />
loved brother and this a worthy <lb />
member. <lb />
That we commend to Him <lb />
who all things and his be- <lb />
widow and family to care of <lb />
Him who tempers the to the <lb />
iamb. <lb />
That as evidence of the sorrow we <lb />
feel at the loss of so worthy a brother <lb />
this Lodge be suitably draped and that <lb />
its member wear the usual badge <lb />
mourning for thirty days. <lb />
That a copy of these resolutions be <lb />
-cut to widow of deceased, and <lb />
one to the with <lb />
to publish, and that they be en- <lb />
on our regular minute book. <lb />
J. L. <lb />
W. S. Bawls, <lb />
Moore, <lb />
Committee. <lb />
An Announcement. <lb />
I am n w ready to treat baldness. I <lb />
have improved my preparation and have <lb />
observed in the last ninety days that It <lb />
will do what I claim for It. Partial <lb />
baldness can be treated by the bottle <lb />
and the patient can use It himself. <lb />
Total baldness must treat myself. I <lb />
invite correspondence in reference to <lb />
treatment Ac. Every one who tries my <lb />
preparation will be thoroughly satisfied <lb />
with results. We can refer you to a <lb />
number of men here this town as to <lb />
Its merits. <lb />
C, April 5th, <lb />
Sealed Proposals. <lb />
The board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
county will at their meeting on the 2nd <lb />
day of May. 1892, receive sealed bids for <lb />
tho construction of a for a public <lb />
roadway commencing at the north end <lb />
of the bridge across Tar river at Green- <lb />
ville, and running from thence north <lb />
one and one-half degree hundred <lb />
and thirty-two poles to the public road. <lb />
The dirt to be used in the construction <lb />
of -aid dam is to be taken from the land <lb />
lying immediately upon the west side of <lb />
the said proposed roadway. The bids <lb />
are to be by the yard for <lb />
the dirt used In dam, and <lb />
bidder is to clear the land up in which <lb />
the dam is to be constructed of <lb />
bushes and logs. The board of Com- <lb />
missioners reserves the right to reject <lb />
any and all bids. For further <lb />
apply to J. R. Move or <lb />
Fleming at Greenville, N. C. <lb />
order of the hoard of Commission- <lb />
of Pitt county. <lb />
D. H. JAMES, Clerk.<lb />
Hotel <lb />
Sealed proposals for renting <lb />
Hotel for one or three years will be re- <lb />
and opened April 8th, 1892. <lb />
The Board reserve the right to accept <lb />
or reject any or all bids. <lb />
C. M. BROWN. <lb />
Washington, H, C. <lb />
Growers <lb />
USE <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
Tobacco Furnace <lb />
Prom the East, West, North and Come from <lb />
winds the earth. from and <lb />
Asia, and the whole of North and South America. Come in <lb />
on wings. in carriages Come in <lb />
baggies. Come on telephones. Come in balloons Come <lb />
on railroads. Come on foot. Come on horse back, mule <lb />
back, hog-buck, cat back, dog-back, cow <lb />
back, green-back, or canvas-back. Ran up, walk <lb />
up, hobble up, limp roll tumble up, slide <lb />
up. push up, crowd up, jam climb <lb />
jump up, squeeze up, tease up, flare <lb />
up, tear rise up, rear up, square up, <lb />
back up. waltz up, bear up, flip up, and <lb />
any in creation to get up, so <lb />
yon will be sore to be on hand at the <lb />
------GRAND RUSH FOR------ <lb />
NEW SPIN INK, <lb />
SHOES, HATS, <lb />
Not at cost but as low as any competitor. <lb />
RD, <lb />
OTHERS <lb />
There is a deal of satisfaction in <lb />
we are still in that position. Rivals at- <lb />
tempt to follow our methods but find that we <lb />
them a merry chase and they finally give <lb />
it up or come to grief. <lb />
Elegance and durability, coupled with low <lb />
prices, is what has placed our Shoes, Dry Goods <lb />
and Notions in the lead. <lb />
Opposite Old Brick Store. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN <lb />
You now have only about days to guess <lb />
on the Candle.<lb />
will be lighted promptly at o'clock on <lb />
May 2nd and under no circumstances <lb />
will any guessing be allowed after it is <lb />
lit. If you fail to guess you loose the op- <lb />
to get a handsome Dress, <lb />
Clock, or King free of charge. <lb />
Truck Barrels. <lb />
Cox are manufacturing <lb />
class truck barrels and advise all who <lb />
will want barrels in time to place <lb />
early before the rash for them conies on. <lb />
There I like being in time and <lb />
have barrels on band, when your truck is <lb />
ready for shipping. Having to for <lb />
there even a few day keep yon <lb />
out of market long enough for a big de- <lb />
in pries to take place. <lb />
To Be Taken Off. <lb />
Elsewhere will be found advertise- <lb />
of the sale of the steamer Green- <lb />
ville. Thin Indicates the withdrawal of <lb />
the Tar Company <lb />
from the river. The regrets <lb />
that the small patronage the home com- <lb />
baa received necessitates its with- <lb />
river. With the steam- <lb />
Greenville off the river we fear that <lb />
next fall will find an advance In freight <lb />
by both rail and water. <lb />
For Hi Town Election. <lb />
The following have been appointed as <lb />
and Foil Holders the several <lb />
wards for the town election May <lb />
First Ward. S. P. Hum- <lb />
Poll Holders. B. H. and <lb />
John<lb />
Poll Holders, W. H. Smith and Moses <lb />
Williams. <lb />
Thud B. F. Tyson. <lb />
Poll Holders, W. B. James and Moses <lb />
aft. <lb />
Registrar, J. T. <lb />
Poll HoW-r i, H. F. ass <lb />
Mrs. Joe Remedy Will Cure <lb />
Skin Eruption. <lb />
I. the undersigned, do certify tint our <lb />
babe, at the age of three months, was <lb />
taken with a breaking or <lb />
which baffled the skill of our finest <lb />
for two years, and never did <lb />
get relief until I used Mrs. Joe Person's <lb />
Remedy, and one half bottle made a final <lb />
cure. W . ROACH. <lb />
Pitt Co., N. C, June <lb />
The Fertilizer Yet. <lb />
To make Cotton at the present <lb />
prices you must use cheap <lb />
and Boykin <lb />
Chemicals are the cheapest yet <lb />
For sale by G. E. Harris, call on <lb />
him before baying. <lb />
The best Invention ever made for <lb />
With it you absolute <lb />
control over heating your barn, <lb />
and it removes <lb />
All Danger of Fire. <lb />
Two per week can be <lb />
made in the same <lb />
co of different degrees of ripe- <lb />
can be 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 />
Our Spring Stock <lb />
Stock is now open ready for <lb />
inspection. It will be money in your <lb />
pocket to give us a look before you buy. <lb />
We have the largest stock of Ladies Dress <lb />
Goods ever brought to this town, consist- <lb />
of Lawns, Henri- <lb />
and Worsted Goods of all the la- <lb />
test pa <lb />
Our Clothing <lb />
Men's Clothing is complete. <lb />
T We can give you a good Suit n any <lb />
price from to We have <lb />
just thrown about dozen Straw Hats on <lb />
our Bargain Counter which we propose <lb />
to sell regardless of coat. They range in <lb />
price from cents to cents. We still <lb />
have many other <lb />
Desirable Goods <lb />
on Bargain Counter, and <lb />
tee to save you money en many things. <lb />
A few pieces of 4-cent Calico still left. <lb />
We only ask you to call, look and be <lb />
convinced. <lb />
YOUNG <lb />
ONE PRICE STORE. <lb />
BROWN BROTHERS. <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
--------AND OF-------- <lb />
Country Produce <lb />
Bring all of your Chickens. Eggs, Ducks, <lb />
Turkeys and Geese, and I will give you the <lb />
highest market price for them and pay in spot <lb />
cash. <lb />
K you anything to ship I will attend to it for you on a small <lb />
Call see me. <lb />
JNO. <lb />
LET ME HAVE YOUR <lb />
FOR <lb />
TOBACCO FLOES <lb />
I want to begin in time this year. <lb />
L. H. PENDER, <lb />
For S. E. PENDER A CO <lb />
Opposite Wooten's Drugstore. <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1883. <lb />
J. A. A <lb />
Headquarters for the following lines of Goods <lb />
Car load Mess Pork. <lb />
Car load Hide Meat. <lb />
Car load all <lb />
Car load Seed Oats. <lb />
Cases Star <lb />
Case Hereford's Bread Powders. <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Cherries and <lb />
Full line Case Goods. <lb />
Crackers. <lb />
Boxes Tobacco. <lb />
Boxes Starch. <lb />
SO Rico Molasses. <lb />
Stick <lb />
M Barrels A Ax Snuff. <lb />
Barrels Railroad Mills Snuff. <lb />
Barrels P. Snuff. <lb />
Paper Sacks. Cigarette, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
a. E. HARRIS, <lb />
-DEALER IN <lb />
Important Notice. <lb />
Sale of Steamer Greenville. <lb />
By authority conferred on me <lb />
of the Tar River <lb />
Company, I will offer for sale at <lb />
public auction at Clyde wharf In Hit <lb />
town of Washington. N. C, on Thursday. <lb />
May 19th. at o'clock P. M., the <lb />
Steams with all her <lb />
tackle, apparel and furniture, together <lb />
with Barf of tons decked <lb />
all over. The Steaks is <lb />
a light draft propeller, length of keel <lb />
feet, length all feat, of <lb />
bottom over all, speed <lb />
miles par boar, earning <lb />
bales of March <lb />
1812. Title For further in- <lb />
apply In person or by letter to <lb />
John Havens, V. C, J. <lb />
Cheery, C., et. f. M. <lb />
K. C. <lb />
TO <lb />
If you want to save<lb />
in the purchase of a PIANO and from <lb />
Ten to Fifteen Dollars <lb />
In purchase of an Organ address <lb />
ADOLPH COHN, <lb />
NEW X. <lb />
General Agent for Carolina, <lb />
who Is now handling goods direct from <lb />
the manufacturers, as HIGH <lb />
GRADE PIANOS, <lb />
for tone, <lb />
and endorsed by nearly all the <lb />
musical Journal In the United <lb />
Made by Paul O. who is at this <lb />
time one of the best mechanics and in- <lb />
of the day. Thirteen new <lb />
patents on this high grade Piano- <lb />
Also the NEW BY A EVANS UP. <lb />
RIGHT PIANO which baa been sold by <lb />
for the past six years In the eastern <lb />
part of this state and up to this time, has <lb />
given entire The Upright <lb />
Piano Just mentioned will he sold from <lb />
Rosewood, Oak, <lb />
or Mahogany cases s -I <lb />
Also the PARLOR ORGAN <lb />
from to In solid or Oak <lb />
cases. <lb />
Tea years experience In the music <lb />
business has enabled to handle <lb />
nothing but standard goods and he does <lb />
he can sell any <lb />
musical Instrument about X put tent, <lb />
cheaper than other agents an <lb />
at all lessen <lb />
L. W. DAVIS. <lb />
FINE------ <lb />
HAVANA CIGARS <lb />
-AND- <lb />
Roanoke Avenue, <lb />
NORFOLK. VIRGINIA. <lb />
I O. <lb />
Ton Are Not In It <lb />
If you fall to see the brand new stock of <lb />
GENERAL MERCHANDISE <lb />
------that la Mt besot offered by- <lb />
W. H. WHITE. <lb />
------1 have Just the to <lb />
Printers and Binders <lb />
1ST. O <lb />
GENTLEMEN, <lb />
LADY, <lb />
BODY ELSE. <lb />
If you want wear or anything <lb />
to eat, or any article to go in the house, <lb />
on aw. Goods all not a piece <lb />
of old stock in the house. <lb />
My prices wilt be found as low as <lb />
able goods can lie sold at. <lb />
W. H. WHITE. <lb />
. Two deem from C. A. Waite's <lb />
Beat Fin <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
establishment of the kind to he found In <lb />
the and solicit orders for all <lb />
Of Commercial, Rail- <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY READY <lb />
FOE PRINTING INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS FOR MAGISTRATES AND <lb />
COUNTY OFFICERS. <lb />
MS your orders.<lb />
K. V, <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017543_tn_0006" n="6" />
                <p>
I- <lb />
POLICE CORRUPTION. <lb />
REV. THOMAS DIXON, JR., ARRAIGNS <lb />
THE MINIONS OF THE LAW. <lb />
or the York <lb />
a for <lb />
on Municipal Corruption. <lb />
H. <lb />
New York, Before reg- <lb />
sermon in Association hall this <lb />
morning, Mr. Dixon reviewed the sob- <lb />
of the of police <lb />
forces of our great cities. He <lb />
The recant terrific indictment of <lb />
whole police force of the city of Now <lb />
York by the grand is an event <lb />
history of modern municipal govern- <lb />
It is to be hoped that it will <lb />
mark the beginning of a new era in <lb />
civic life of America. <lb />
Mr. Henry M. Tabor, foreman of this <lb />
remarkable grand said in an inter- <lb />
view after its sessions that from <lb />
presented the was <lb />
convinced that is at least <lb />
collected from the <lb />
keepers of gambling dens, saloons, con- <lb />
cert and of ill and <lb />
distributed among the members of the <lb />
police department. I say at least <lb />
for calculation shows that <lb />
the amount is probably nearer <lb />
He declares that this accusation in- <lb />
the. integrity of the entire police <lb />
force, from the superintendent down to <lb />
patrolman. <lb />
This is a grave charge. It cannot be <lb />
down by the men accused. It <lb />
cannot be answered by the assertion <lb />
that the March grand was an <lb />
of lunatics. In fact, while ex- <lb />
points may be inevitable, t i i <lb />
are not satisfactory just now to the in <lb />
quiring public. <lb />
There is in this official document much <lb />
of startling suggestion to every great <lb />
city in America. <lb />
Is the police power of the state in <lb />
centers of life thus honeycombed with <lb />
rottenness If so, the future life of your <lb />
civilization is threatened. And no man <lb />
who loves his neighbor and his country <lb />
can afford to be indifferent to such a <lb />
situation. <lb />
HIE TEMPTED <lb />
How to keep a police force is <lb />
a serious problem. <lb />
And Christian public is somewhat <lb />
to blame for this fact. The temptations <lb />
in the way of a policeman to do <lb />
are well nigh resistless to the ordinary <lb />
In the first place they are cut oil <lb />
from the association sympathy of <lb />
the good. They get few sympathetic <lb />
hand grasps from their neighbors. They <lb />
cannot go to church often. As a dam <lb />
of men they are utterly neglected by <lb />
those who seek to help and save their <lb />
fellowmen. There are no friendly inns <lb />
built for their comfort, though they live <lb />
a life of danger and exposure. We try <lb />
to save the wretch in the ditch, but <lb />
have no sympathy or help for the heart <lb />
of the who tramps his beat and <lb />
sees sin and crime and misery until hi.- <lb />
eyes and ears and very heart at last be- <lb />
come saturated with it. Familiarity <lb />
with vice makes it well nigh inevitable <lb />
that the officer himself will at last <lb />
to some form of it. The saloon is <lb />
is always and here the <lb />
finds his friends and finds fellowship. <lb />
The way downward is made ea.-y for <lb />
him The way of virtue and honesty <lb />
and Christian manhood is well nigh <lb />
possible. <lb />
In my sou of souls I sympathize with <lb />
these men. I thank God I am not called <lb />
to tramp a policeman's beat and touch <lb />
crime and vice and sin and temptation <lb />
at every corner. We need not be <lb />
prised if now and then a policeman is <lb />
guilty of brutality and of assault <lb />
innocence. Such things are inevitable <lb />
in the very nature of such a situation. <lb />
But when the whole force and the whole <lb />
system is honeycombed with a scheme <lb />
of wholesale blackmail and bribery the <lb />
time has come for action by the whole <lb />
community. <lb />
WITNESSES AFRAID. <lb />
The foreman of the grand jury further <lb />
declares that witnesses are afraid to tell <lb />
the truth. They fear for their lives if <lb />
they testify against the police and these <lb />
chronic criminals. He said that wit- <lb />
who could give satisfactory <lb />
against the keepers of disorderly <lb />
resorts were deterred from doing so by <lb />
fear of calling down the vengeance of <lb />
the parties vengeance in the <lb />
execution of which the police would <lb />
ford every opportunity and assure <lb />
lute protection. How utterly helpless <lb />
is the public when guarded by such a <lb />
force <lb />
It was discovered the ether day that an <lb />
ex-police retired on half <lb />
a in a gambling <lb />
bell. Retiring from active police duty, <lb />
he seems naturally to have gravitated to <lb />
this den of gamblers whose business is <lb />
daily to violate and defy law. What is <lb />
the remedy for such a condition <lb />
REMEDIES. <lb />
seems to me that the Chris- <lb />
should get closer per- <lb />
to the police force. We should <lb />
know them better. Beading rooms and <lb />
libraries should established for their <lb />
while of duty, where they could <lb />
find decent friendship and companion- <lb />
ship. These men need more Christian <lb />
sympathy and help than any class in the <lb />
community ad they get less. The con- <lb />
is -that many of them become <lb />
and skeptics. <lb />
dirty politicians back of <lb />
the most be robbed of their <lb />
The policeman preys on the <lb />
criminal, and the political cutthroat <lb />
preys on both the policeman and the <lb />
criminal, and drives them tandem to hi <lb />
triumphal cart. <lb />
the present corrupt <lb />
of things it is necessary, as a <lb />
is sometimes necessary, to organ- <lb />
law and order societies of such in- <lb />
l strength that a complete police <lb />
Ban, at least for be main- <lb />
Dr. Society for the <lb />
of Crime and all such organ- <lb />
shoal be so strengthened by <lb />
it- j and that the regular <lb />
protect when they desire, and <lb />
cannot therefore curry out part of <lb />
any bribery contract. Let us pour our <lb />
manhood sad money into these <lb />
a normal condition of order <lb />
can be attained a purified police force. <lb />
a district attorney in office; <lb />
who has clean and who hasn't sold <lb />
before the election. <lb />
WHAT A THE BIBLE <lb />
Thy word Its my <lb />
the Bible for eighteen <lb />
raged the storms of <lb />
I and of ft has been as- <lb />
with all the power of human <lb />
with all the subtlety of learning <lb />
science, by its enemies who have <lb />
to destroy it. It has been mis- <lb />
interpreted, misapplied and <lb />
stood its friends, and yet it lives and <lb />
sways the. world. It has withstood all <lb />
enemy; and man than <lb />
has bean able to survive the in- <lb />
of the dead- <lb />
Brat fees that aver handled <lb />
n liars ten those who hots handled <lb />
it of undying <lb />
I -ling the <lb />
th book. I do not propose toaster <lb />
into Mm sessile of the <lb />
cluster around criticism, i <lb />
rather just at this time to point out the <lb />
power of the that we may know <lb />
its real worth to man. <lb />
What is the Bible The boat <lb />
I ever read of I lie Bible, <lb />
the developments of science and <lb />
achievements of the critics, i-i this, -The <lb />
Bible is the literary record of the <lb />
of God in human history a <lb />
supernatural manner, to the end that <lb />
man might be This is but n <lb />
paraphrase of the great thought con- <lb />
in the text. The Bible was writ- <lb />
ten as a guide to life. word is n <lb />
lamp unto my Such has been the <lb />
revelation of to man through all <lb />
the ages. Nor.- if the Word of God <lb />
such a light, there are some things it is <lb />
not. <lb />
NOT AS <lb />
is certainly not a <lb />
scheme of philosophy, either sacred <lb />
or profane. It is not a systematic the- <lb />
over ch intellectual gymnast <lb />
and hairsplitting dogmatists are to es- <lb />
their powers of reasoning and dis- <lb />
It is a record of life, the way <lb />
of life. <lb />
it is such a lamp <lb />
i to guide the feet of men, it is not <lb />
magazine of weapons with which men <lb />
; are to fight one another. It is not a <lb />
holy arsenal; it is not a collection <lb />
bludgeons, an assortment of chains <lb />
a collection of sacred torches with <lb />
which martyr fires are to be kindle <lb />
I There are those who have-felt that <lb />
Bible was God's testimony against man- <lb />
I kind, and that we are to preach <lb />
I Bible in order that God Almighty may <lb />
have grounds on which to damn the <lb />
I rest of the world. <lb />
BIBLE OR PACK Of CARDS <lb />
it is such a lamp for <lb />
feet of man, it is not a charm <lb />
I which to conjure. The paper and the <lb />
, leather are not sacred. We laugh at <lb />
, Catholic friends is <lb />
when they wear their beads and <lb />
medals and holy trinkets. <lb />
I that there is power in the <lb />
i sacred things to ward off evil spirit <lb />
j and calamities. It is well for the <lb />
i world to ask if sometimes we <lb />
have not regarded the Bible as such a <lb />
charm. I read a description of a <lb />
lie mutual assurance for the relief <lb />
and deliverance of poor souls in <lb />
It was organized recently in St. <lb />
Joseph's Catholic church, West De <lb />
Wisconsin. The announcement de <lb />
there would be no reserve fuse. <lb />
All contributions would be immediately <lb />
employed in celebration of masses for <lb />
the deliverance of souls in purgatory. <lb />
The circular of announcement of the <lb />
society has a frontispiece containing a <lb />
highly realistic picture, <lb />
liberated souls the act of issuing from <lb />
purgatorial flames. <lb />
We smile at such a faith as <lb />
and yet the Protestant world ha.- <lb />
sometimes regarded the Bible, the very <lb />
possession of it, as some sort of an in- <lb />
coupon for safe conduct through <lb />
world beyond. It is a lamp unto <lb />
the feet of man here. Let us not believe <lb />
that it is a charm in itself. Its only <lb />
charm is the truth it teaches. <lb />
I heard a preacher once tell in graphic <lb />
manner how that a young man's life <lb />
was saved in a battle because he had a <lb />
Bible in his coat pocket. The bullet <lb />
struck the Bible and it saved his life. <lb />
also heard a gambler say that he had a <lb />
pack of cards in his pocket and that in <lb />
battle the bullet struck the cards and <lb />
his life was saved. no doubt that <lb />
the cards really were a better protection <lb />
against a ballet than the soft leaves cf a <lb />
Bible. --Thy word is a lamp my <lb />
SCIENTISTS. <lb />
not a book of science. <lb />
The boobs were written by men not one <lb />
of whom omniscience as <lb />
to the facts of physical nature. <lb />
There arc, consequently, grievous <lb />
in the Bible to those of spec- <lb />
Upon questions of <lb />
physical the Bible is practically <lb />
silent. It is a to <lb />
mortal hereafter. There was <lb />
a great clatter of so called scientists a <lb />
few years ago about the failure of the <lb />
old Book. Much of this noise was made <lb />
by who <lb />
ply owned .- dollar which <lb />
they bought at the bargain counter of a <lb />
shoddy store, and with this imperfect <lb />
lens had examined the four legs of a <lb />
or the hind legs of a fly. <lb />
and were thrilled with the wonders of <lb />
and because they failed to find <lb />
in the Bible a description, and <lb />
accurate, of the legs of a grasshopper <lb />
they were disappointed. <lb />
WAS THERE A <lb />
We do not reject history because the <lb />
language of appearance is in de- <lb />
Neither can we reject the <lb />
great moral history of the race because <lb />
the language of is <lb />
when matters scientific are touched. <lb />
was on the battlefield of Gettysburg the <lb />
other day. I bought a book descriptive <lb />
t the It was written a man <lb />
who present and engaged in it, <lb />
he said. I do not know it as a fact, per- <lb />
because the battle was fought lie- <lb />
fore I was born. But this man professed <lb />
to have been there and wrote a <lb />
of the event. In the very beginning <lb />
of his description he declared that the <lb />
sun rose. I stopped. I say that is a <lb />
mistake. That is a scientific blunder. <lb />
Now any man ought to have better <lb />
sense than to assert that the sun rose. <lb />
The sun don; rise. The world revolves <lb />
around the sun. This book is a failure. <lb />
There was no battle of It <lb />
is all a hoax, i will have nothing to do <lb />
with it. I reject the whole thing. A <lb />
man who to believe in the <lb />
reality of the battle or the of the <lb />
description -e the narrator <lb />
failed to use scientific nomenclature in <lb />
relating historical events would be con- <lb />
a madman. So the sacred his- <lb />
did not use scientific language, <lb />
but language of his times, the <lb />
language of appearance, as the best v. <lb />
through which to convey the great <lb />
essential truths aimed at <lb />
u to the Bible it an <lb />
guide to here, life hereafter. <lb />
OR SAW <lb />
text in the declaration that <lb />
it is a lamp implies unity in the <lb />
of God. There is such unity in the <lb />
revelation of God, and in this Book, <lb />
which covers sixteen centuries of time, <lb />
there is a complete of teaching in <lb />
this revelation as a whole. It is not to <lb />
be wrested from its historic setting, but <lb />
it is to read with the history of the <lb />
world, as a part of the history of the <lb />
world. have no right to destroy this <lb />
unity by a text from Genesis and <lb />
hocking it onto a sentence from Paul's <lb />
letter to the Romans, and on these two <lb />
amalgamated texts, separated by <lb />
years, to build a scheme of historical <lb />
The teaching of the <lb />
Bible is a unit morality of the Bible <lb />
is its final morality. We Say that its <lb />
is a miracle. Bo it is. We most <lb />
not seek to destroy the miracle by dis- <lb />
this unity by a jig saw <lb />
of interpretation. One of the most <lb />
convincing evidences to my mind of the <lb />
divine origin of the Bible, its divine <lb />
bringing together and preservation, is <lb />
the fact that it has survived the met 1- <lb />
of its friends as well as of its enemies. It <lb />
Bros power onto salvation, in spite <lb />
of of such a man who <lb />
took text and <lb />
preached a m life of an <lb />
to <lb />
to rob text of <lb />
its plain, direct moaning, and read into <lb />
world. spite of all mis, snore M at <lb />
much of divine and light in the , <lb />
Book that it points out the way of I <lb />
way of salvation, with unerring <lb />
Second--It is a lamp unto my <lb />
It is not a skylight. It is not a rainbow. <lb />
It is not an aurora It is not a <lb />
display of sacred fireworks for the de- <lb />
limit of tho imagination. It is a divinely <lb />
practical Book. Its light is centered on <lb />
way of human life. <lb />
THE OF MUSIC. <lb />
It accords with the highest teachings, <lb />
tho breathings of the human <lb />
soul. I like tho company it keeps. Show <lb />
me a man who made the principles <lb />
of tho Book the counsel of his life and <lb />
will show you a king among men, find <lb />
where yon will, in whatever nation, <lb />
under whatever skies. It finds the soul <lb />
of man. It comes to the soul like the <lb />
revelation of music. Tired and worn <lb />
and oppressed with the world you sit <lb />
and hear the masterpiece of a great mu- <lb />
rendered by the touch of genius. <lb />
Into your soul steals divine melody, <lb />
and tho breath of the spirit of music <lb />
breathes on tho chords of the soul and <lb />
heart is made into an harp <lb />
and tho weary spirit is soothed by divine <lb />
melodies So this grand old Book <lb />
into the soul of man its breath divine I <lb />
and the soul responds with its sweetest ; <lb />
music. <lb />
It revolutionizes character under that j <lb />
touch. It revolutionizes nations <lb />
that divine touch. Take the Book <lb />
and put it in the bands of a savage tribe, <lb />
breathe it into their souls, and go back <lb />
in a hundred years, and from every hill- <lb />
top will gleam the spires of a church and <lb />
over every cradle there will be breathed <lb />
the prayer end hope of Christian mother- <lb />
hood. <lb />
President Oilman, of Johns Hopkins <lb />
university, recently said that as an <lb />
he longed to see the day when the <lb />
English Bible would be studied in every <lb />
school of the land as a text book, simply <lb />
because tho wonderful story it records <lb />
of the life of the has a power in <lb />
molding and fashioning the lives and <lb />
of men, such as is possessed <lb />
by no other literature extant. <lb />
INSPIRATION. <lb />
If it be an infallible guide to life, <lb />
the question of verbal or plenary <lb />
ration or essential inspiration becomes <lb />
of secondary importance. If there is a <lb />
guide at month of the great cave <lb />
want to know before I enter if he is in- <lb />
fallible as a guide. I want to know if <lb />
he has ever lost anybody in the cave. If <lb />
his record is unimpeachable and he <lb />
stands as an infallible guide to every <lb />
nook and corner of tho dark cavern <lb />
the earth which I desire to explore, <lb />
accept him as my guide. Suppose <lb />
should refuse to accept such a guide on <lb />
tho ground that he did not understand <lb />
tho veins in the rocks. Suppose I should <lb />
demand of him an explanation of the <lb />
different periods of geology which might <lb />
be unfolded in tho formation of that <lb />
cave. that I should say I re- <lb />
fuse to allow a man to pilot me through <lb />
the earth unless he can analyze the dirt. <lb />
Would this reasonable Would this <lb />
be scientific or philosophic Would it <lb />
not rather be simply idiocy Though <lb />
not a complete revelation of all mys- <lb />
human and divine, the Book is en- <lb />
sufficient to put all responsibility <lb />
on man. <lb />
THE EXCISE'S <lb />
It is a light on tho way of life and it <lb />
so that way that a wayfaring <lb />
man, though a Cool, need not err therein. <lb />
It is a locomotive headlight, whose <lb />
gleaming rays are centered down the <lb />
rails of life. The headlight cf an <lb />
sits in the focus of a <lb />
mirror. Tho mirror concentrates i. <lb />
rays and them at the to <lb />
and sends all the light immediately <lb />
down the track. It does not light the <lb />
landscape on the right or the left It <lb />
does not illumine the mountain peaks <lb />
through which the engine travels, but it <lb />
does light the engine's track with <lb />
accuracy. If the engineer smashes <lb />
his headlight because it does not light <lb />
the mountain peaks and wrecks his train, <lb />
he is responsible, not the headlight. We <lb />
must hold to this book and cherish it <lb />
until those who have attacked it can <lb />
give world a better guide to life. <lb />
AND THE BIBLE. <lb />
I defy mortal man today to find <lb />
a guide outside the teachings of this <lb />
Book. Yon may go to the libraries of <lb />
the world and search them through <lb />
department science, philosophy, <lb />
history, sociology, economics, fiction, <lb />
nowhere you find <lb />
one book, ten books, a hundred books, a <lb />
thousand books which, combined to- <lb />
will form an infallible <lb />
guide to This being true, the Book <lb />
stands. I have never heard any man <lb />
claim that man could produce a book <lb />
its equal. I never heard but one man <lb />
who made a stupid claim, and he <lb />
had to deny it. Some years ago Colonel <lb />
Ingersoll was reported to have said that <lb />
he could write a better book than <lb />
Bible. He hastened to deny that he said <lb />
it. He had to deny it And yet I heard <lb />
General George Sheridan, in reply to <lb />
that denial, publicly say believe <lb />
that Colonel Ingersoll said it for three <lb />
It sounds just like him. No <lb />
other man that I know of in the world <lb />
would be fool enough to say it. I <lb />
believe he said it, because I bought an <lb />
official, copy of bis lecture as I entered <lb />
a theater night to hear him speak, <lb />
which contained the assertion. I be- <lb />
he said it, heard him <lb />
say And yet in spite of such <lb />
the felt it absolutely <lb />
to deny this assertion. <lb />
In 1806 the French institute <lb />
gated eighty theories, any one of which <lb />
were sufficient to overturn and destroy <lb />
the Bible. In the few years that have <lb />
elapsed since then every one of these <lb />
eighty theories have been cast as rub- <lb />
into of the <lb />
world, and the old Book is a <lb />
mightier power today in the history of <lb />
the world than ever. <lb />
The is that its eternal <lb />
belong to the inmost secrets of <lb />
man's inmost soul. The world cannot <lb />
outlive it or outgrow it. <lb />
TO TH RHYTHM OF THE SOUL. <lb />
As A. C. Wheeler beautifully said <lb />
some years is of little account <lb />
into -what puddle of doctrine or rut of <lb />
selfishness man may get fixed, if the an- <lb />
them tones of those grand old sentences <lb />
sweep back to him from lips that prayed <lb />
over him in his cradle or surged up on <lb />
the tide of memory from the cathedral, <lb />
the synagogue or the conventicle. <lb />
phraseology has caught a new <lb />
diapason from the events it helped to as- <lb />
most of its old periods were set <lb />
by sorrow and suffering to a music of <lb />
their own. <lb />
vibrate for myriads of people <lb />
significance of event. Their <lb />
liturgical cadences have come down <lb />
through the ages wet with the tears and <lb />
winged with the triumphs of fervor and <lb />
belong to the rhythm of the soul <lb />
no less than to the reason of the race, <lb />
and heavy with the passion of life and <lb />
the mystery of death they are eternal <lb />
in which lie hidden the echoes of <lb />
So, long as this Book can thus sweep <lb />
the and of it is idle to talk of <lb />
world it Until the world <lb />
can Its own beast, <lb />
Bad think, <lb />
Ike, <lb />
ii y. hack <lb />
M-M <lb />
x on as try to pot out oat stars <lb />
by pitching straws at them. grass <lb />
tho flower bat the <lb />
the Lord shall endure <lb />
A Leader. <lb />
Since Its firs; ma. <lb />
Hitlers his g lined rapidly in popular <lb />
until Is In the lead <lb />
untiling which <lb />
it w <lb />
You've Dr. <lb />
nave yon and you're ii- use us a <lb />
totaled. The results Immediate. recognized t the purest <lb />
did sen-e for all men's Liver <lb />
of I kidney. It will sic k <lb />
I Constipation, and <lb />
M d i the Sails- <lb />
in o i i h each bottle or <lb />
money will refunded. Sold at <lb />
tit In it week Put <lb />
II in ever dose. Yon <lb />
lie poor Hi-rinse Hie ,, <lb />
lies In an If an <lb />
ere sure In If a <lb />
Dr. He <lb />
is Mire it If n <lb />
trial. get d costs <lb />
If b id lit <lb />
We we pun Id give <lb />
-how by tin- <lb />
back ail raws no bane <lb />
know <lb />
few d liar to keep the re- <lb />
fund. <lb />
Mild, soothing and I. <lb />
Dr. Cat i <lb />
win <lb />
Ii Old <lb />
far f <lb />
ires the <lb />
Before Health. <lb />
Dr. Louise Fiske Bryson reverses the <lb />
theory of health as means of beauty <lb />
and advocates beauty as a means of <lb />
health. She affirms that systematic <lb />
forts to be beautiful will insure a fair <lb />
degree of health, and that happiness is <lb />
the best safeguard against vice. Dr. <lb />
Bryson says that the prayer of the New <lb />
York child, make very sty- <lb />
is an aspiration based sound <lb />
scientific principles and is worthy of <lb />
commendation. <lb />
Ls said the little doctor, in <lb />
speaking on this subject a few days <lb />
since, is it that makes a <lb />
between one woman and an- <lb />
indefinable some- <lb />
t which will make a girl of <lb />
traits and indifferent features <lb />
infinitely more attractive than many <lb />
others of faultless features and <lb />
strong points It is the quality <lb />
popularly known as style. <lb />
is the outward and. visible sign of <lb />
an inward and reserve force. Care of <lb />
the body, tho feet, the complexion are <lb />
all necessary to secure this outward at- <lb />
and the expression of the <lb />
face must also be cultivated by a con- <lb />
of higher thoughts over <lb />
ones, for this is the essence of <lb />
living and can be secured by all. <lb />
would sum up the great secrets of <lb />
beauty and therefore of said <lb />
Dr. Bryson, <lb />
in eating and drinking; <lb />
short hours of and study; <lb />
in exercise and rest; cleanliness and, <lb />
above all. equanimity of temper and <lb />
equality of temperature. To be good <lb />
looking and to be physically well one <lb />
must in general lie happy. To lie happy <lb />
is a duty, just as style is a duty, and <lb />
both are in a great measure an affair of <lb />
intellect and management. The ardent <lb />
pursuit of good looks sums up the best <lb />
there is in hygiene, and is a legitimate <lb />
means of <lb />
Here is something to think about. Is <lb />
it not the duty of every woman to make <lb />
a study of herself, discover her strong <lb />
points and make the very most of them <lb />
New World. <lb />
Life lat <lb />
Fla. Jan. <lb />
For the last rears I have Ii en In <lb />
bad health. with <lb />
f ii at at baa draper. M <lb />
Was bad. and my all <lb />
o t. in fact I nearly . I Int <lb />
sad bl. <lb />
me no V- hen I akin; <lb />
a out a- <lb />
a a child. I have <lb />
ml I <lb />
Not a Rigger <lb />
Bust is the heir apparent of <lb />
Massachusetts, ii a strict <lb />
He took a very lively interest in the <lb />
state campaign, and, although he is <lb />
not yet old enough to read the political <lb />
news in daily papers, he asked <lb />
enough of his father and other <lb />
members of tho family to form a com- <lb />
if somewhat biased, opinion of <lb />
the situation. <lb />
His interest and excitement <lb />
on election day, and it woo only <lb />
after a good deal of persuasion and by <lb />
whispering some mysterious sentence <lb />
into his ear his nurse could induce <lb />
him to go to bed at all. , <lb />
The morning after election was <lb />
very early. He came down into the <lb />
dining room and sat there very quietly <lb />
all alone. By and by his gubernatorial <lb />
dad appeared. <lb />
He said, morning, but <lb />
he heir apparent made no answer. In- <lb />
stead he got gravely and circled <lb />
about his astonished father, surveying <lb />
him from head to font <lb />
is the matter, asked <lb />
the governor uneasily. there any- <lb />
thing wrong with my coat Is my tie <lb />
coming up behind Do you see any <lb />
smut on <lb />
said the son, in a <lb />
pointed tone. yon ain't any <lb />
today than you were yesterday. <lb />
Nurse said last night if I went to bed <lb />
early I'd wake this morning and find <lb />
you the biggest man in Massachusetts. <lb />
I think she fooled Herald. <lb />
Ion I <lb />
a a e I n i l <lb />
I e iv. <lb />
V. C. . <lb />
hair II-- <lb />
I P. <lb />
. k. m a E. <lb />
. la. <lb />
s,<lb />
William Lloyd Garrison has great <lb />
faith in refining power of woman, it <lb />
would seem from his address on <lb />
cation before the Woman's Suffrage as- <lb />
According to bis idea, the <lb />
separation of the sexes in college is so- <lb />
unwise. The criticism that be <lb />
would make applies to Wellesley, <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 he recommends for <lb />
excesses among men is co- <lb />
education. To quote his <lb />
Throw open 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 and false standards 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, bow <lb />
many generous and disinterested women <lb />
are enrolled. Their gifts are ever <lb />
come, but its degrees are not for female <lb />
hands. In Massachusetts, where for <lb />
forty years struggle for equality has <lb />
found its ablest champions, 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 />
Ch, i <lb />
Will heed the warning Tin- <lb />
the of that <lb />
more terrible disease Con. Ask <lb />
yourselves if OM afford for the sake <lb />
of saving in run the risk and do <lb />
for it, W know from <lb />
that Shiloh's will cure <lb />
Ii fails. This explain-, why <lb />
than a million were -old past <lb />
year. relieve, croup and whooping <lb />
cough Mothers, do be with- <lb />
out For lame hack, side or chest use <lb />
Porous Plaster Sold at Wool- <lb />
en's i rug Store. <lb />
Navy. <lb />
The naval estimates for 1892 <lb />
amount to or <lb />
more than last year, which sum is to be <lb />
spent building of new ships. <lb />
By order of the czar a large ironclad <lb />
cruiser of the same type as the <lb />
of tons and horse power, is <lb />
to be put upon the stocks at St. Peters- <lb />
burg this spring, in addition to three <lb />
ironclads of tons and several iron- <lb />
clad coast vessels of from to <lb />
tons. It is also intended to build <lb />
small cruisers. As soon as the <lb />
sets in two ironclad gunboats, <lb />
and of 1,492 <lb />
tons and with a speed of fifteen knots, <lb />
are to be launched at St. Petersburg. <lb />
The now in course of con- <lb />
will be the largest <lb />
afloat. She will be feet in length, <lb />
with a speed of knots, and will be <lb />
able to go under steam from the Baltic <lb />
to at a speed of ten <lb />
knots without coaling. Her armament <lb />
will consist of four b-inch guns, six of <lb />
0-inch, six of 5-inch and four torpedo <lb />
tubes, while her armor plates up to the <lb />
water line will be ten inches in thick- <lb />
Tho will, it is expected, <lb />
be ready for launching next autumn. <lb />
Paris Letter. <lb />
IN WYOMING <lb />
ow Am by Man <lb />
Nat Lave <lb />
The most important question before <lb />
tho people of Wyoming, western South <lb />
Dakota, Montana and Idaho today is the <lb />
fend between the rustlers and <lb />
For the information of those who do <lb />
not the depths and intricacies of <lb />
frontier politeness, it may be said that <lb />
is the term applied to man <lb />
who steals horses and cattle from the <lb />
large herds on the western ranges. The <lb />
rustler does not steal after fashion <lb />
followed by thieves of high and low de- <lb />
from time of Mars, who drove <lb />
away the oxen of Jupiter in the night <lb />
and was trailed by the foreman of <lb />
the ranch next morning and forced to <lb />
the back track. <lb />
Instead of driving the cattle from tho <lb />
range on which they may be feeding, <lb />
the rustler adopts a. brand similar to <lb />
that owned by his wealthier neighbor. <lb />
This brand is so fashioned that a few <lb />
lines added to the mark bis neigh- <lb />
cattle will change it to the one <lb />
adopted by the rustier. Once he has a <lb />
skillfully fashioned brand, the rustler <lb />
has only to be industrious and frugal, <lb />
and soon he will enter the ranks of the <lb />
and some other fellow will be <lb />
stealing from <lb />
It is a noticeable fact, by the way. <lb />
that those cattlemen whose herds in- <lb />
creased most phenomenally and <lb />
first the cows, even the <lb />
most antiquated steers seeming to bear <lb />
each year, according to the Biblical <lb />
standard, some fifty and some an <lb />
the ones that are talking <lb />
the loudest of the necessity for <lb />
the law. <lb />
Another plan by which the large herd <lb />
owners of Wyoming lost heavily has <lb />
been that adopted by certain residents <lb />
of Nebraska, living near the line <lb />
the two states. These gentlemen <lb />
adopted brands identical with those <lb />
owned by the largo outfits in eastern <lb />
Wyoming. This brand being registered <lb />
in Nebraska, its owner would be law- <lb />
fully possessed of all cattle bearing it <lb />
found on ranges. Large <lb />
which have drifted to the <lb />
and east before the heavy storms have <lb />
stolen in this way in past winters. <lb />
All this has in a condition <lb />
of affairs closely resembling actual war- <lb />
fare. The rustlers are yearly becoming <lb />
bolder and more numerous, and the cat- <lb />
profits are as constantly <lb />
tho vanishing point. The <lb />
State Stock association has <lb />
been formed for the avowed of <lb />
putting a stop to rustling. Whether <lb />
proved by this association or not, the <lb />
hanging of Waggoner, some distance <lb />
west of this city, and the shooting of <lb />
and Jones, in Johnson county, <lb />
show that extreme measures arc to be <lb />
followed. <lb />
The rustlers have already worked the <lb />
law in their own behalf. Tho arrest of. <lb />
Joseph Elliott, a special agent of the <lb />
Stock association, and the <lb />
swearing of a warrant for Fred <lb />
Coates, another who is acting <lb />
administrator of the Waggoner estate, <lb />
is the latest move in the fight. These <lb />
men are charged with having attempted <lb />
to murder rustlers who were camped <lb />
on Powder river. <lb />
When one remembers that the country <lb />
is sparsely settled, that immense in- <lb />
are at stake affecting the <lb />
welfare of entire states, that the <lb />
rustlers are numerous, brave and <lb />
less, and that the some of <lb />
whom are rustlers grown wealthy, <lb />
are equally determined and ready if they <lb />
find it necessary to resort to the <lb />
est measures, it may tie seen that the <lb />
situation promises anything a season <lb />
of brotherly love and pea OS for tho <lb />
Either tho will be killed <lb />
and forced to leave the country or the <lb />
business of stock raining on an extensive <lb />
scale is at an Omaha World- <lb />
Herald. <lb />
as <lb />
W authorize our <lb />
r. K Ne v <lb />
Consumption. Coughs an I . <lb />
till- With <lb />
fold or or <lb />
fl troth and use i. n ed <lb />
as giving It a fair trial, ex- <lb />
n yon may return <lb />
battle and have you- money refunded. <lb />
w e not make ibis offer <lb />
know that Dr. King's New Discovery <lb />
could be relied on. never <lb />
Trial bottle free at M DRUG <lb />
and <lb />
RM at <lb />
Alexander, H. H. Stuart, who lately <lb />
died at Stanton. Va. secretary of the in- <lb />
President to <lb />
tell the following good story of how he <lb />
got rid of an office seeker shortly after <lb />
the office. was <lb />
very ranch annoyed by o <lb />
for poet of messenger. The <lb />
man came in regularly every day for <lb />
several weeks, until he became to <lb />
bearable bore. Finally one day after <lb />
the man bad gone asked the mes- <lb />
then office if be knew what <lb />
that man was after. He said <lb />
said I, wants place, and <lb />
if i ever see him again be -shall have <lb />
I never saw the man<lb />
M, If <lb />
I bare the in sty <lb />
Mr over a year and am <lb />
hf the surest any <lb />
that art <lb />
than ft, <lb />
U baa <lb />
and Liver Complaint. <lb />
Is it not worth the sin.-ill price of 7-V <lb />
to of every symptom of <lb />
complaints, you <lb />
SO call SCOOT gel a <lb />
Sh lob's every bottle ha <lb />
guarantee on it, accordingly <lb />
and if it does you no you <lb />
nothing. Sold at s Drag Store-. <lb />
Mum pi Easily <lb />
A learned English justice has been <lb />
delivering an opinion from the bench <lb />
so homely a complaint as mumps. <lb />
may catch be announced, <lb />
five minutes by looking st a person, as I <lb />
know by my own <lb />
This statement was wrung from the <lb />
in an action brought by an in- <lb />
father against a school. His <lb />
young son, ill with a cold, had been <lb />
reported by a sister as having <lb />
mumps. He did not nave them, but on <lb />
the report the little girl was sent home, <lb />
and all the of the family <lb />
to school were banished for three <lb />
weeks. The father sought damages. <lb />
claiming that the report have <lb />
been investigated. <lb />
The judge, however, who evidently <lb />
looked upon mumps with small favor, <lb />
held that the bare assertion by the sister <lb />
of the malady's presence was reasonable <lb />
ground for heroic York <lb />
Times. <lb />
A Resort a <lb />
A report of the Cincinnati Society of <lb />
Natural History of its investigation of <lb />
specimens of worms which recently <lb />
fell in a shower near Clifton, Ind. has <lb />
been received. The report <lb />
specimen was submitted to Mr. <lb />
Charles Decry, the most competent en- <lb />
we have among and he <lb />
has just returned it He says he thinks <lb />
it is the larva of some kind of a beetle, <lb />
bat as the worm is a stranger be is tum- <lb />
to fully determine its <lb />
worm is about as inch in length <lb />
and covered with short, brown hair, <lb />
and has eyes similar to a fly when ex- <lb />
with a glass. Thousands of <lb />
them fell on the frozen crust of snow, <lb />
and when picked came to life. A <lb />
reporter visited the vicinity recently <lb />
sad several responsible par- <lb />
ties, who reported that they the <lb />
worms, and all described the particulars <lb />
the Indianapolis Sentinel. <lb />
Via a Hemp. <lb />
One of sought inventions is <lb />
now reported to hare been <lb />
namely, n machine by which sisal hemp <lb />
is rendered Suitable for commercial <lb />
poses, and this without the <lb />
expense which has usually char- <lb />
contrivances for this purpose. <lb />
object of the machine that of <lb />
working out in good condition the fiber <lb />
from ks said to be <lb />
realized in its and action <lb />
to a only partially attained be- e- <lb />
thus, it is stated, English <lb />
made machines have been is use is Ban <lb />
Domingo, in the Bahamas and at other <lb />
points, but owing to the fact of their <lb />
the fiber when operating their <lb />
employment has proved undesirable. <lb />
This new machine an American in- <lb />
and one of its important ad- <lb />
vantages U that when leaves <lb />
it it is ready for the market except dry- <lb />
York Telegram. <lb />
W speedy and positive <lb />
far catarrh, <lb />
A free with <lb />
each rattle, II It H you desire <lb />
sweet .-Fries at <lb />
IN CONSTRUCTION. <lb />
DURATION. <lb />
DO. I I SKILL- <lb />
QUICKLY . <lb />
The Kit poise Is M for <lb />
Cars of Without <lb />
on new of the <lb />
and cure . ow, <lb />
of th <lb />
gnarl it <lb />
con Mies con. III Ions <lb />
b simply Impaired The <lb />
only assists is way. <lb />
Io throw oil the trouble. <lb />
containing testimonials Iron, nil see. <lb />
Men, for I he cure nil diseases <lb />
mailed free on application. Address, , <lb />
ATLANTIC <lb />
l. Charleston. C. <lb />
Atlanta, <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
obtained, and all ill the S <lb />
Patent office or In the <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the If, S. Patent t- <lb />
engaged In Patents Exclusively, and <lb />
patent In less time than <lb />
more from Washington. <lb />
model or I- sent we <lb />
at to free of <lb />
no change we ob- <lb />
We refer, here, to the I h. <lb />
Supt. of Money Outer Did., Ii <lb />
of f. S. Office. <lb />
terms and reference i <lb />
actual clients in own State, or <lb />
A. SNOW CO. <lb />
it L-lo. . I. I <lb />
; Morning <lb />
Noon <lb />
Night <lb />
all the time. It removes i <lb />
the languor of morning, bus- I I <lb />
the energies of noon, lulls <lb />
i the weariness of night. i <lb />
I I delicious, sparkling, I<lb />
U If denier, the <lb />
of Ink;, r other kind <lb />
. n <lb />
If u good at genuine <lb />
Whichard, <lb />
mi.-. .- <lb />
Severn d part f real <lb />
estate for ale. ever die lit-t <lb />
i. <lb />
GRAND EMPORIUM <lb />
AT FRONT <lb />
the at which <lb />
I have located, end where I saw <lb />
line <lb />
NEW, CLEAN AND ATTRACTIVE, <lb />
TO MAKE A <lb />
MODEL BARBERSHOP <lb />
the appliances; <lb />
for work outside of my shop <lb />
promptly executed. respectfully, <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
and Irish. C <lb />
The lord bishop of Limerick, Dr. <lb />
who has examined the Christian <lb />
antiquities remaining amidst the ruin. <lb />
of several of the great Egyptian temples, <lb />
states that many of these monuments <lb />
bear Christian inscriptions and in- <lb />
scribed with Christian crosses. Thus <lb />
great temple called the <lb />
at Thebes, which has been in part <lb />
as a Christian place of worship, bears a <lb />
Coptic inscription on one of the columns, <lb />
with figure of a cross, and on walls <lb />
and columns of this temple a great many <lb />
crosses have been rudely inscribed. <lb />
In the magnificent court of the temple <lb />
of tho traveler will see <lb />
a score of columns, several of them bear- <lb />
Greek inscriptions, and in <lb />
on northwest side of the temple <lb />
he will see crosses designed to consecrate <lb />
parts of tho building which bad <lb />
been devoted to pagan uses. <lb />
These crosses vary greatly in form, and <lb />
the bishop attention to the close re- <lb />
semblance exists between them and <lb />
those on many of the most ancient Irish <lb />
monuments. There are many examples <lb />
of oriental crosses, he says, or <lb />
without circles, on monuments <lb />
in Ireland and <lb />
Ledger. <lb />
has been in use I . <lb />
fifty Tears, and wherever known <lb />
i n in steady It has seen en <lb />
by leading <lb />
country, and <lb />
ii, other remedies, the <lb />
most experienced physicians, ball <lb />
years failed. s Is <lb />
g standing and the high <lb />
it has is owing <lb />
Us a- but little effort has <lb />
Io bring it <lb />
, ill lie. One tie Of M III <lb />
i sent to any on n i One <lb />
Sample box live. lie Usual <lb />
below and end on or write tin in. <lb />
A I lot on Third street la-low Co- <lb />
lunch. In town of Greenville, <lb />
house with four <lb />
kitchen and smoke house convenient <lb />
large mi the premises. <lb />
. i o building lots in <lb />
desirable <lb />
ion . <lb />
A lot on <lb />
O. mid Second, has nice house of <lb />
rooms, good well of water, large Cr- <lb />
plot and <lb />
A A hill acre lot in <lb />
t. I <lb />
rooms. rOOk dining looms <lb />
Inched, all necessary out building- and <lb />
good water <lb />
A Hue I in containing Ml <lb />
from Greenville on Mt. <lb />
email road, has gin house, stables, <lb />
barns, s two tenant so <lb />
BO balance well wooded, <lb />
water. This land is excellent for <lb />
cull line tobacco. <lb />
One in, k branch of <lb />
w. i. half way l- <lb />
and and within i <lb />
mile of a lieu depot, contain- acres. <lb />
and In timbered <lb />
pine, oak, hickory, ind cypress; <lb />
has I good tenant houses; railroad pas-c <lb />
nearly through farm. The <lb />
land clay subsoil with sandy loam, <lb />
is ill good slate of mil highly <lb />
improved; is line laud. <lb />
H A farm H mile- from on <lb />
I Kin-ton known a the <lb />
farm; i ; has <lb />
good dwelling house and all necessary <lb />
, out This is a <lb />
lam <lb />
A and lot In oil <lb />
corner H. In and V . S. <lb />
. now en, by the I . v of <lb />
MARK. the hue A. Mocks, house contain <lb />
n oms. convenient. Is convenient <lb />
Ion, only half a block from main <lb />
busbies street of the town. <lb />
can la- given <lb />
A I lot on <lb />
I bird and <lb />
street, splendid location. <lb />
; . house and lot on Pill <lb />
cited cures near Dicker-on Avenue, <lb />
house m rooms, large lot <lb />
Stables and oil, buildings. <lb />
The house or. <lb />
. Pitt el. ail joining It. <lb />
S. and lot M d III <lb />
one -I I dwelling <lb />
of four roosts, and cook . <lb />
of room for <lb />
Corn and Hot <lb />
Mill, and Wore <lb />
i count to All <lb />
to. Addles- ail <lb />
sen and communication lo <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Sole Proprietor, <lb />
N. <lb />
Mr. <lb />
A Natural <lb />
Miss <lb />
that I am engaged. <lb />
Mr. Miss <lb />
that I expressed a curiosity o <lb />
know whom she Is engaged to now. <lb />
ck en's A S -re <lb />
The best salve It the work for Cut, <lb />
Bruises, Hum,. Sale. <lb />
Freer Sores Chapped Hands. <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all Skin <lb />
and positively cure Plies, or no <lb />
required. It is guaranteed <lb />
satisfaction, or money refunded <lb />
cents pet For sale at <lb />
n's Store. <lb />
CHILDBIRTH <lb />
EASY <lb />
is a scientific- <lb />
ally prepared Liniment, every <lb />
of recognized value and in <lb />
constant use by the pro- <lb />
These ingredients are com- <lb />
in a manner hitherto unknown<lb />
WILL DO all that is claimed for <lb />
HAND MORE. It Shortens Labor, <lb />
Lessens Pain, Diminishes Danger to <lb />
Life of Mother and Child. Book <lb />
to mailed FREE, con- <lb />
valuable information and <lb />
voluntary testimonials. <lb />
receipt of ft bottle <lb />
am. <lb />
CURES SYPHILIS <lb />
-A- r. V r. . <lb />
m k tor O t of <lb />
. a hundred yard of It. K is <lb />
in one of ill.- heal <lb />
Sections of Pitt enmity. The mill- are <lb />
Sited up with the best machinery. <lb />
i In; cloths, i and re in full <lb />
op. ion. The store i- a to <lb />
story building dwelling attacked <lb />
I ills., a and warehouse rear. <lb />
The store is supplied <lb />
general to a <lb />
count -tore is g s <lb />
in as. The mills an known In <lb />
I this motion. <lb />
This property is offered for sale the <lb />
owners wish to withdraw from <lb />
Terms on any of the above <lb />
San on IO <lb />
man v <lb />
Unit g. ids. nil <lb />
I V N. <lb />
Se- <lb />
es <lb />
P. <lb />
mm <lb />
Chronic tbs all <lb />
in; <lb />
P. <lb />
u-ho <lb />
t i- ere <lb />
CURES<lb />
-J <lb />
I I. r. T. r. RM <lb />
For sale at -f. la Store<lb />
I tin <lb />
How Lost How Regal<lb />
th-3 <lb />
Ml<lb />
Ii. <lb />
k- <lb />
no <lb />
Th of Mis, or U <lb />
b. <lb />
ha STRONG .- <lb />
BOILING WATER OR MILK <lb />
COCOA <lb />
1-2 LB. TINS <lb />
, hi am. <lb />
BEST AND PIANOS <lb />
FOR <lb />
The MASON Si CO. now offer to one u <lb />
famous Organs or Pianos for three giving the <lb />
full opportunity to test it M bin own home, <lb />
and return if be does not longer want it. If he continues to hire <lb />
lit until the aggregate of rent paid amounts to the price of <lb />
instrument, it becomes his property without further payment. <lb />
Illustrated with net prices, free. <lb />
Mason Organ and <lb />
BOSTON. YORK. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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