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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 26 February 1890</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: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>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 26 February 1890</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>18900226</dc:date>
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                <p>
. .- <lb />
i l <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
-----Solicits your patronage <lb />
is be o <lb />
THE <lb />
REFLECTOR<lb />
Department can i <lb />
where in this Cur WorE <lb />
gives satisfaction. <lb />
Bend <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Proprietor. <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
TERMS Per Year, hi Advance.<lb />
VOl IX. <lb />
GREENVILLE. PITT COUNTY N. C, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 1890. <lb />
NO. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
C. <lb />
Niter ff <lb />
O. Fowle. of Wake. <lb />
M. Holt. <lb />
of L <lb />
of Wake. <lb />
W. of Wake. <lb />
of Wayne, <lb />
Superintendent of Public Instruction <lb />
M. Finger of <lb />
Attorney F. <lb />
in, of Buncombe. <lb />
Chief Justice N. H. Smith, of <lb />
Wake. <lb />
Associate S. of <lb />
of <lb />
E. Shepherd, of Beaufort and <lb />
C. of Burke. <lb />
SUPERIOR COURT. <lb />
Pint TL Brown, of <lb />
Beaufort. <lb />
Second Philips, o <lb />
Third O. Connor, of <lb />
son. <lb />
Clark, of <lb />
Wake. <lb />
District John A. Gilmer, of <lb />
Clifford <lb />
Sixth T. of <lb />
Seventh C. of <lb />
Cumberland. <lb />
A. of <lb />
Iredell. <lb />
Ninth F. Graves, of <lb />
Surry. <lb />
Tenth G. of <lb />
Eleventh M. Shipp, of <lb />
Twelfth H- <lb />
of Buncombe. <lb />
U. Vance, of <lb />
Matt. W. Ransom, of <lb />
House of District <lb />
Thomas G. Skinner, of Perquimans. <lb />
Second P. Cheatham col, <lb />
of Vance. <lb />
Third W. of <lb />
Pender. <lb />
Fourth IT. of <lb />
Kai-h. <lb />
Fifth W. Brower. of <lb />
Sixth Rowland of <lb />
m S. Henderson, <lb />
Eighth W. II. A. Cowles <lb />
Ninth G. Ewart of <lb />
GOVERNMENT. <lb />
A. <lb />
A. K. Tucker. <lb />
Register of H. James. <lb />
B. Cherry. <lb />
S. L. Ward. <lb />
B- Harris. <lb />
Commissioners-Council Dawson. Chair- <lb />
man. Guilford C. V, Newton, <lb />
W. A. James. Jr., T. E. Keel. <lb />
of <lb />
Chairman J. S. and J. D. <lb />
Cox. <lb />
School Superintend <lb />
of F. W. Brown. <lb />
TOWN. <lb />
G. James. <lb />
F. Evans. <lb />
Treasurer M. R. Lang. <lb />
T. Smith. <lb />
R. <lb />
Ward, B. N. Boyd ; <lb />
Slid Ward. R. Jr., and <lb />
3rd T. J. Jarvis and M. <lb />
R. Lang; 4th Ward, W. N. Tolbert. <lb />
GIB IS <lb />
The New bows her stately <lb />
head. <lb />
And she fixes her lip <lb />
In a firm, hard way, and then let go <lb />
In spasmodic <lb />
her specs <lb />
Ai z th In I face a smile ; <lb />
she out her lip, like an <lb />
open <lb />
And a bean meanwhile. <lb />
The St. Louis says never a word. <lb />
And you'd think she was rather tame. <lb />
With her practical views d the matter <lb />
in hand, <lb />
. But she gets all the same. <lb />
The Baltimore girl, the pride of the <lb />
South, <lb />
In her clinging and soulful way. <lb />
Absorbs it all in a way. <lb />
As big as a bale of hay. <lb />
The Chicago girl gets a grip on herself. <lb />
As she carefully takes off herbal; <lb />
Then she grabs up the prize in a <lb />
ed way. <lb />
Like a terrier shaking a rat. <lb />
The Washington girl, so gentle and <lb />
sweet, <lb />
Lets her lips meet the coming kiss <lb />
With a rapturous warmth, and the <lb />
youthful souls <lb />
Float array on a sea bliss. <lb />
Washington <lb />
The Charlotte girl, she beats them all. <lb />
So charming graceful and good. <lb />
As as Eve before her fall. <lb />
She'd warm your best heart's blood. <lb />
The girl receives a kiss <lb />
As every good girl ought; <lb />
She takes It not at all amiss <lb />
If it along unsought. <lb />
Sun- <lb />
The girl is the best girl <lb />
of all. <lb />
Her claims cannot e denied. <lb />
For the sweet young Miss will receive no <lb />
kiss <lb />
the nuptial knot is tide. <lb />
Times. <lb />
The Greenville girl don't at all. <lb />
But gets married just same. <lb />
And after that event has passed, <lb />
he kiss gets up in a flame. <lb />
Bad Boy. <lb />
many of it may not sell the one as the <lb />
and constitutional at an equal rate to all f <lb />
was in close and deadly struggle <lb />
It issued stamps at three cent-, <lb />
, , . and then for i he greater convenience <lb />
wit. the money power the North <lb />
which, spirit of dilation, ultimately it can <lb />
hat joined the fighters for the them at the general govern <lb />
ton in the West, and which has has the right, as the U. Sn <lb />
Mince, tamed for the Union has decided it has, to <lb />
for monopoly and for absolute control or the <lb />
MM, and into defeat for j volume of the currency, is there <lb />
for local self . in or philosophy <lb />
for evil liberty, i may not in <lb />
yon loan me WOO on this so- j business <lb />
I said a young friend or mine of at of <lb />
The government has <lb />
to a b inker in an Eastern town <lb />
some time ago. The security was <lb />
admitted to be unquestionable. <lb />
see about it. Comeback <lb />
said the banker. <lb />
went to buy an overcoat yes <lb />
said the borrower, the <lb />
merchant sold it to me at once and <lb />
was anxious to sell. I come to buy- <lb />
some money of and you <lb />
you are going to let me have it, and <lb />
ready solved the It hat <lb />
already exercised the power of is- <lb />
suing a volume sufficient to do the <lb />
business of a favored of the <lb />
country and a favored class of its <lb />
citizens at low rates of interest <lb />
Can't i lie be enlarged <lb />
Some of us down here already <lb />
get money at high rates; bow much <lb />
tum exercise of the to <lb />
yet yon put me off till I the <lb />
want it now or not at Do you <lb />
know why a holder of money can <lb />
ford to be independent and even <lb />
incur v does it take to give us <lb />
at low Everybody who has <lb />
learned his A B G's In finance knows <lb />
indifferent There is a monopoly u as easy for the gov- <lb />
in the money. The borrower <lb />
lender both feel this and act <lb />
A monopoly in any other <lb />
to make money cheap and <lb />
and plentiful as it is to make it high <lb />
and scarce T It is high and scarce <lb />
here now because the speculator <lb />
would <lb />
similar methods of business A mo- <lb />
CHURCHES. <lb />
First and <lb />
Sundays, morning and night. Rev <lb />
D. D., Rector. <lb />
Sunday, <lb />
and night. Meeting <lb />
night. Rev. R. B. <lb />
every Sunday, <lb />
Inc and Meeting <lb />
night. Rev. A. D. II <lb />
Pastor. <lb />
Third <lb />
morn- <lb />
every <lb />
John, <lb />
morn- <lb />
every <lb />
tinier. <lb />
Greenville No. A. F. ft A. <lb />
M., meets every 1st Thursday and <lb />
night 1st and Sunday at <lb />
Masonic Lodge. A. L. Blow, W. M., <lb />
G. L. Sec. <lb />
Greenville R. A. Chapter. No. meets <lb />
every 2nd and 4th Monday nights at Ms- <lb />
sonic nail, F. W. Brown, H. P. <lb />
Covenant Lodge, No. I. O. O. F. <lb />
meets every Tuesday night. O. W. <lb />
N. G. <lb />
insurance Lodge. No. K. of H., <lb />
first and third Friday night. <lb />
D. Hasten, D. <lb />
Pitt Council. No. A. L. of n., meets <lb />
very Thursday night. C. A. White, C. <lb />
POST OFFICE. <lb />
Hours for all business from P A. <lb />
W. to P. M. All mail distributed <lb />
on arrival. The deliver-- will <lb />
b kept open for minutes at night <lb />
after the Northern mail is distributed. <lb />
N Mail arrives d illy <lb />
at P. M. and departs at <lb />
A. V. <lb />
Tar Old Sparta and Falkland <lb />
mails arrives at <lb />
If. and depart at P. M. <lb />
Washington, X <lb />
Roads, and Grimesland <lb />
malls dally at <lb />
and departs at A. M. <lb />
Ferry, Mills. <lb />
Ha and Pullet malls arrive Tuesday <lb />
Thursday and Saturday at A. M. and <lb />
Vanceboro. Black Jack and <lb />
mails arrives every Saturday at P. M. <lb />
and departs Friday at A M. <lb />
J. J. PERKINS P. M <lb />
Rev. A. D. Hunter's <lb />
Appointments, <lb />
1st <lb />
2nd and 4th Sundays, morning and <lb />
night, Greenville Baptist church, also <lb />
Prayer Meeting every Wednesday night. <lb />
Sunday, morning and night. Beth- <lb />
el church. <lb />
Rev. E. C. Glenn's <lb />
For preaching on Bethlehem Mission. <lb />
Bethlehem, 1st Sunday at <lb />
tangs School House, 1st at S <lb />
o'clock <lb />
Sparta, 2nd Sunday at o'clock. <lb />
Shady Grove, S at <lb />
4th at o'clock, <lb />
i, Sunday <lb />
The Dollar. <lb />
The of <lb />
Special to State Chronicle. <lb />
you cash this <lb />
asked or a banker one day. <lb />
be said, have no <lb />
than will supply our regular <lb />
There was no question about the <lb />
being ample, and he admit- <lb />
it was perfectly good. <lb />
don't yon use your credit in New <lb />
York, which you say N <lb />
and loan out the money here at <lb />
rates I loan on <lb />
he replied. He could not put- <lb />
ting it out on our long time <lb />
ties. He would n it have been able <lb />
to get it in when This <lb />
That the we need <lb />
At our daily business with is at <lb />
That the Yankee is <lb />
of our securities an I loans <lb />
only i short terms. <lb />
That the loaned is <lb />
still under his control, at. his <lb />
and he keeps to see if It <lb />
will come. <lb />
That we cannot turn his <lb />
can pay <lb />
its debts but once a year and it j <lb />
must have long time or is at <lb />
a fatal disadvantage. <lb />
That the only is i <lb />
country is totally to <lb />
THE MAIN INDUSTRY IN THE SOUTH. <lb />
A pretty good one <lb />
transaction with the Yankee's <lb />
But the Yankee has not left <lb />
of money and consequent <lb />
mercantile to himself <lb />
and consequent destruction of our <lb />
credit to the secret innate <lb />
which he has juggled into <lb />
dollar by and covert <lb />
He has fortified his <lb />
also wild some open legislation <lb />
Grown confident bold in his <lb />
game, he has enacted <lb />
That the National Bank <lb />
shall not loan money on real estate <lb />
security- <lb />
They shall loan only on <lb />
to days time. <lb />
Having desired a system <lb />
not work In any way to the <lb />
advantage of the main industry in <lb />
the system <lb />
which was bound, ultimately, any- <lb />
how to work its ruin by putting the <lb />
farmer at a fatal disadvantage in <lb />
obtaining credit and he <lb />
enough to voice the spirit of <lb />
bis in the very terms of <lb />
his legislation, and actually names <lb />
the interest be is seeking to enslave. <lb />
Be it said to the eternal honor or <lb />
the Sooth that at the time of the <lb />
passage of the National Banking <lb />
Act, it bad no representation in <lb />
Congress. Its voice patriotism, <lb />
which had so often sounded the <lb />
alarm when the <lb />
of the North had plotted treason <lb />
against agriculture, drowned <lb />
in the din of war. The Sooth, <lb />
statesmen bad founded this govern <lb />
meat, and it through so <lb />
in the carrying trade be- <lb />
tween two points breeds insolent <lb />
railroad officials. If ordinary mo- <lb />
divides the people into class <lb />
es and separates their interests, <lb />
how infinitely more potent for snob <lb />
purposes is in money. <lb />
Let the mutterings of discontent in <lb />
fifty thousand homes in North Car- <lb />
answer my question. <lb />
Two hundred million worth <lb />
of property in North <lb />
million a half people an-l <lb />
probably not live million dollars In <lb />
circulation <lb />
Among the masses, in the largest <lb />
richest section the State, <lb />
most no circulation except the lieu <lb />
bond the mortgage, which <lb />
makes but one circuit a year Our <lb />
politicians may not know, but the <lb />
people feel there is not enough <lb />
money circulation not <lb />
enough in As- <lb />
Mortgagee's, and <lb />
sales show it. High rates of inter- <lb />
est communities where <lb />
is stagnant, m it so plain that a <lb />
fool may run and read it. <lb />
editor.-, and <lb />
who say business requires you <lb />
to stand in the watch and <lb />
sound the alarm of danger, it <lb />
begin now to dimly dawn upon yon <lb />
that there may lie rotten <lb />
about the system of Federal finance <lb />
Yes, I know want good <lb />
that will any <lb />
but you like to have one <lb />
that would circulate your <lb />
constituents low enough to <lb />
In what school of <lb />
did you that the <lb />
dollar, which rarely migrate- ; <lb />
here, is the best In what, mental <lb />
sweat did discover that the am- j <lb />
i . ii , . i I great <lb />
dollar which always ; . <lb />
. . , Borrowers there get. it At was <lb />
away from your constituents <lb />
J. <lb />
P. NO. <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Borrower Manteo <lb />
applies for 810.000 in <lb />
Raleigh money tender employs <lb />
in City to find him <lb />
reliable agent in Em <lb />
ploys agent in Manteo to <lb />
status of b <lb />
rower <lb />
per cent. <lb />
The Agent at E. City. <lb />
Agent at Manteo. <lb />
Suffers delay and great <lb />
Pays extra per cent on account <lb />
of distance from lender. <lb />
Borrower in worth ; <lb />
910.000 on his note <lb />
without delay, without any extra <lb />
rates without agents. <lb />
York City. <lb />
Advertisement in the Times; <lb />
to loan at per cent, on <lb />
long <lb />
Money Lender. <lb />
Application from North Carolina <lb />
for at per cent. j <lb />
cant worth <lb />
Cannot accommodate you. <lb />
Yon may be worth acres <lb />
land, but, I do not know the mi- <lb />
your land. <lb />
Would require a very , <lb />
system of agents to keep us posted <lb />
on the nature of securities. <lb />
Yon are too far m- to as j <lb />
certain with ease and accuracy your <lb />
credit and financial standing. <lb />
Our capitalists had rather in- i <lb />
j in New York at lour <lb />
j per than North Carolina seen <lb />
at eight. <lb />
st Lesson <lb />
Money l heap.-. I up at the <lb />
SUn SCENE IN THE SOUTHERN PART <lb />
OF THE FIELD. <lb />
Mole standing on his tail ea. <lb />
log the I of the era. <lb />
I'm-.- <lb />
is plenty of manure the <lb />
to the stalk. <lb />
2nd Provincial <lb />
No, there is only seven. <lb />
Common Sense. But the tn n- <lb />
is it has applied to the <lb />
corn. <lb />
Old Farmer The manure <lb />
all heaped up ever yonder. <lb />
. Politician You can't under- <lb />
contraction. <lb />
Old Farmer But I can see <lb />
them heaps, and there's none down <lb />
here. I've always heard it was <lb />
mighty poor farming. Their scat- <lb />
machine, if they've got one, <lb />
don't scatter. <lb />
Politician I <lb />
guess the leaders el the party know <lb />
what they are about. <lb />
hereafter, open uses the rod <lb />
upon Is he not a wise Father, <lb />
and does he not know how to train <lb />
Ms children Solomon tells to <lb />
train a child in the way he <lb />
should go and then gives us after- <lb />
wants some useful hints to how <lb />
that training is to effected. In <lb />
They Don't Go Together. <lb />
Scotland Democrat <lb />
North Carolina is a good enough <lb />
the people would read mote <lb />
and Mt <lb />
The Memorial Volume. <lb />
The Wink la and Soon to Us <lb />
The Grady Memorial <lb />
volume, containing the life, writings <lb />
and the Mr. Grady,<lb />
There is th <lb />
I above quotation iron our able cons of preparation <lb />
giving these hints, the rod figures ; ,,;, V well known house <lb />
conspicuously. There i at- times Tie of or <lb />
more in a application ., Sew and will probably be <lb />
hickory switch than two M . i,., during th- mouth <lb />
lather, y o , Marc. <lb />
or mother, ii you love your child, Millions of wealth Volume will contain an in- <lb />
control him, and if the rod is no- ,.;,.,, i,,.,,,.,,,, ,.,. interesting sketch of life of Mr. <lb />
use it. unless are wiser fro,,, pen of Mr. Joel <lb />
than Solomon or the Bible. When <lb />
ever a man or woman gets wiser <lb />
than the are reminded for- <lb />
that all the fools are not dead. <lb />
the suggests Io bring it up the Constitution, <lb />
The people need know re <lb />
and the to the work <lb />
A second evil we men- <lb />
is that of allowing girls not yet <lb />
out of their short dresses Io <lb />
themselves voting ladies; to re- <lb />
Old Farmer Yes, them This evil is very closely allied will <lb />
heaps didn't grow there just so. <lb />
Somebody was knowing to if. <lb />
Shifting Scenes. <lb />
visitors, ,,, <lb />
then they need b Ho- w <lb />
or Conner-. <lb />
The work is compiled by <lb />
Mr. former to workers <lb />
the n, and will <lb />
all of his s, some of his <lb />
most Important letters and writings <lb />
con- <lb />
them. To know our resources <lb />
means a great deal. It does not <lb />
simply mean to commit to memory <lb />
1.1 <lb />
I he number of iron mines, go <lb />
j mines, copper mine.--, granite beds. <lb />
Yankee philosopher sitting on the <lb />
manure pile by the river <lb />
It's the problem that vexes <lb />
me. <lb />
, water powers, and of oilier <lb />
the one just mentioned; in is; for each and I lamented young <lb />
the natural result of its exist- a lo commit to memory a hi <lb />
What sad mistake do parents I to whole <lb />
make when encourage their development of this great State, and sale of this <lb />
daughters to act. Ah rho J alter deducting the <lb />
knows how many hasty and unwise , , ours ., will be devoted <lb />
marriages are the result of j 0- Most -illy we lo of Mr. Grady's family <lb />
Scene on A sand in North I is indulgence. Can a girl four I something of what is around to children, mother and <lb />
Carolina. j teen or fifteen years old decide the mt , much. will be the sole benefit <lb />
Unprotected to of her j ,,,.,., for this <lb />
It's the empty stomach on ice t make of their theories. his is the only volume relating <lb />
problem that vexes us. An-V The says that of Mr. Grady that is pub- <lb />
Lesson- happens to a and is a good State authority. It is covered <lb />
Money and manure must h has people would read and right applied by Mrs. <lb />
scattered to do much good. handsome face, can win the heart, the reading and It saW that there are <lb />
It is a bail banking system <lb />
that banks up money and <lb />
too high in one place. <lb />
It is bad farming and <lb />
where the distributing ma- <lb />
chine doesn't distribute money and <lb />
W. J. P. <lb />
That Need Correcting. <lb />
Recorder, <lb />
It is a gift, or a grace, devoutly <lb />
to longed to lie able always <lb />
to see the sunny side every <lb />
inhere are clouds about <lb />
lo see their silver lining. There <lb />
are, ho ranch evil, much sin, <lb />
and much imperfection in the world, <lb />
the man or woman of the j <lb />
and turn the head of such an coupled preparation con- <lb />
cent and guileless creature, together. parts or Mr. Grady's speech- <lb />
dude may not he worth the clothes j just here is one of cur great biographical <lb />
on his back; may be utterly worth-j man sketches. The Constitution desires <lb />
less as a yet if you don't ,. read , to give notice that above is <lb />
control inexperienced child, he ho bad the time. authorized edition of a <lb />
may become law. About j of this character and asks the <lb />
the first thing he will do after mar- j he can not for <lb />
your fifteen or sixteen time to lead. six to <lb />
old daughter, will be to settle down T . . pages, printed in <lb />
into the best room R or- s, , , , A d <lb />
into tin neat room is , busy containing four handsome steel en- <lb />
and stay until his welcome your I d , , <lb />
are worn to a From , ,., The Southern agent for the sale <lb />
twelve to eighteen is the best period <lb />
of a gill's life, and she ought to be <lb />
kept at school much as possible. <lb />
Her mind and her he <lb />
carefully cultivated. She should be <lb />
carefully taught domestic duties. <lb />
of this volume is Mr. B. Luther, <lb />
lie would manage it intelligently as <lb />
I Caused <lb />
he does now Horn three. to apply agencies <lb />
The laboring man needs to read J can address No. White- <lb />
more, hall Street, Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Then there is audio r , <lb />
high with some, that pro I Census of North <lb />
leaves them in debt, is tho <lb />
soundest For whose benefit is it <lb />
sound f <lb />
is says law. <lb />
and says the <lb />
establish says <lb />
the Constitution. How about the <lb />
a financial system by <lb />
which a small class of citizens get <lb />
at four per vent to <lb />
nothing, a vast multitude must <lb />
pay from eight to twenty cent t <lb />
Is there nothing suspicious about <lb />
a system makes easy <lb />
and at the North and <lb />
scarce and difficult the South and <lb />
Wen t <lb />
Are we to the of <lb />
Wall street the Yankee's <lb />
T Are our leaders <lb />
of thought certain that the Yankee <lb />
has in a <lb />
system which loans at <lb />
lo rates to great speculators and <lb />
no rates to farmers-which makes <lb />
money cheap among robbers and <lb />
scarce among their victims Does <lb />
not general government claim <lb />
control as complete over <lb />
Don of money as of the postal <lb />
vice I the government charge <lb />
the rich and the poor alike two cents <lb />
for postage stamps f Is there any <lb />
sound reason in law or philosophy <lb />
why rich man should pay two <lb />
cents his stamp and two cents <lb />
for his dollar, and the poor man pay <lb />
two cents for bis stamp and from <lb />
eight to twenty for his dollar f It <lb />
government controls the value <lb />
the volume Of dollar as it does <lb />
the and the volume of <lb />
is there any good and <lb />
reason heaven why <lb />
unable talcs. <lb />
Borrowers fur away get it at <lb />
ruinous rates. <lb />
Borrowers very far from the <lb />
don't get it at all. <lb />
Agricultural borrower fares <lb />
worse than any. <lb />
2nd <lb />
Borrower at the gets <lb />
money directly the lender. <lb />
The greater the center tho <lb />
lower the rates. <lb />
Distant borrowers get it <lb />
through agents. <lb />
The greater the distance tho <lb />
greater the delay and the greater <lb />
the uncertainty. <lb />
Fool's Garden. <lb />
Manure piled up in several <lb />
great heaps in the North side of the <lb />
to make it fertile all <lb />
over. <lb />
Com planted all over the field. <lb />
RESULT. <lb />
Corn on the manure pitas ex- <lb />
luxurious. <lb />
Corn near the manure <lb />
mighty good. <lb />
Corn near enough to gut some <lb />
of the washings of manure piles fair <lb />
to middling. <lb />
Corn far away on the South- <lb />
edge of the field exceedingly <lb />
low, and spindling. <lb />
SUB SCENE IN THE NORTHERN PART <lb />
OF THE FIELD. <lb />
manure pile Con- <lb />
This is a glorious n <lb />
On manure pile Y. <lb />
Millionaire is <lb />
v own native <lb />
Idle Yea. yea and <lb />
crowd the beat part <lb />
of it. <lb />
come in contract evil, sin, temp <lb />
n, and who vex his <lb />
soul, indeed he one, <lb />
We endeavor as as within us <lb />
to avoid being pessimistic, <lb />
but we have notice I so often certain <lb />
forms of which art <lb />
modern in their nature, that we <lb />
hope to do some good by at <lb />
ten lo them. <lb />
Tho first we ion is the <lb />
failure of parents to control their <lb />
This is noticeable <lb />
in larger towns and cities. <lb />
Boys when quite young are permit- <lb />
to roam at will wherever fancy- <lb />
may dictate. They form associates <lb />
among the vile wicked, rapidly <lb />
acquire their manner-, their <lb />
slang phrase, Wicked <lb />
and boys are almost, sure to teach <lb />
tho that come their in <lb />
to disregard the commands <lb />
or desires their parents, tho <lb />
creating a disposition to rebel rt- <lb />
parental Such <lb />
books as Bad which <lb />
found such an immense sale a few <lb />
years since, have done much to <lb />
fuse among the boys especially <lb />
our land quite false of filial <lb />
duty. If is considered smart to <lb />
outwit the It is quite <lb />
funny to worry and vex very life <lb />
out of hi m. The mother, likewise, <lb />
comes in for her share of the <lb />
and vexations caused by so <lb />
called funny pranks of her progeny. <lb />
Parents are often to blame for this <lb />
state of things. Our fathers con- <lb />
trolled their children; but now you <lb />
often find fathers, and mothers, too, <lb />
who cease all effort to control their <lb />
children before they become of <lb />
age. Many a boy now twelve or <lb />
thirteen years of age considers him- <lb />
self a and nuts accordingly. <lb />
He often learns the swaggering gait <lb />
and uses the words of the <lb />
rowdy. His youthful lips stained <lb />
with tobacco; or else he struts along <lb />
the streets with a cigar or cigarette <lb />
his mouth. The opinion has be- <lb />
come quite common that the rod <lb />
is a. relic of barbarism and that it <lb />
should be utterly banished from <lb />
school-room and from the fireside. <lb />
Census Superintendent Porter has <lb />
pleat temperament must at vents our progress; and that is the <lb />
opportunity to study music and j those who do read- ,, ,. <lb />
drawing in connection with s., . visions for the taking <lb />
studies. Above all, instill the proceedings in Congress,, the census or this State. The Ii- <lb />
her mind heart the of <lb />
Jesus Christ. Then yon have a no- <lb />
emigration, cyclones, or other visions are as <lb />
. Ber- <lb />
thing that makes their hair stand , ., -i. <lb />
, I tie. t <lb />
specimen womanhood, and on cud for fear, and then three craven <lb />
she lives lo many a man what <lb />
Cat <lb />
tick, Dare, <lb />
Greene, Hyde, Lo- <lb />
la many instances before <lb />
she will have enough to refuse young man has intelligently read Pitt, and <lb />
enough to appreciate her <lb />
any other .-he will know history of Ins own State he con j <lb />
I Washington counties. <lb />
Second Districts Chatham, <lb />
. ,. , , , . . ; <lb />
make his Ix-me happy oh, that educated people Halifax, <lb />
up children that aid be an honor to not to stay in tho sunshine; Mash, Northampton, Orange, <lb />
her, a lo their country his board and a suit cT Vance, Wake, Warren, <lb />
mankind. We do extra lo somebody's More. Wilson <lb />
,. k n. o.-ii m , <lb />
an, c Too , ,,,, Do, <lb />
needs more emphatic sons in business before they pi,,,, New Hanover, <lb />
the our we are now Know how ox or tender, <lb />
is once fully catch Idea <lb />
that Hay an- ladle, that <lb />
a horse. When boys get a little <lb />
educated many of them don't want <lb />
to soil hands. don't like <lb />
they the;. , w any longer <lb />
it i to go any, wan he pale dyspeptics, <lb />
where ninny men are ashamed of their <lb />
are almost sore lobe of and go too out <lb />
and Sampson <lb />
Davie, th. <lb />
Iredell, Mecklenburg, <lb />
pupils at sch and generally <lb />
form quite premature often <lb />
Deeds to labor more. <lb />
, Stanley, Stokes, <lb />
way to hide it. The reading man Surry, Union, counties. <lb />
Fifth Al <lb />
Ashe, Buncombe, <lb />
well, Cherokee, <lb />
Cleveland, Graham, <lb />
our people down this evil, and i 1st. It is entirely vegetable, con-j wood, Henderson, Jackson, Lincoln, <lb />
happy Let the common of g g <lb />
sense and Christian sentiment <lb />
let our parents remember no mineral or poison any <lb />
that they are , I kind, and builds up the system from <lb />
for moral intellectual rain- <lb />
of their children. Ah how <lb />
many unhappily married women <lb />
I there tire in the land today, <lb />
I how many parents there are whose <lb />
gray hairs are hastening with <lb />
row to assure that would be generations. <lb />
their lives could be lived done it. <lb />
tho first dose. <lb />
It cures Cancer of the Skin. <lb />
No other remedy or treatment was <lb />
ever known to cure. <lb />
It cures hereditary Blood <lb />
Taint, even in the third fourth <lb />
No other remedy has <lb />
Madison, Mitch- <lb />
ell, Polk, Swain. Tran- <lb />
counties. <lb />
again . <lb />
A Headache. <lb />
4th. It has never failed to <lb />
Scrofula King's all <lb />
its forms from the system. <lb />
5th. It cores contagions Blood <lb />
N. C. Farmer. j Poison in all its stages by <lb />
A scientific writer j ting tho horrible virus from <lb />
if taken at the right moment, will system, thus giving relief from all <lb />
in event an attack of nervous head- ; the consequences or this bane or the <lb />
ache. If the subjects of such head- j the human family, <lb />
aches will symptoms of blood hail been so out of or- <lb />
It DANIELS. <lb />
C. C DANIELS <lb />
N C <lb />
its coming, they can notice that it <lb />
begins with a feeling of weariness, <lb />
and heaviness. This is the time <lb />
that a sleep of an hour or even two, <lb />
as nature guides, will effectually <lb />
prevent headache. If not taken <lb />
then it will be too late, for after <lb />
the attack is fairly under way, it is <lb />
impossible to get sleep until far into <lb />
have at our homes an tho com <lb />
inned book called the Bible, which <lb />
very strongly commends the rod <lb />
when needed; aid we are fully per- <lb />
that a more liberal use of <lb />
in these days for doctors to for <lb />
bid having their patients waked to <lb />
daring the summer of that <lb />
I virtually had no health at all. I <lb />
had no appetite; nothing I ate a- <lb />
greed with me. I was feeble, puny, <lb />
and always feeling bad. I bad tried <lb />
various remedies without receiving <lb />
any benefit, until at com- <lb />
on Swift's Specific <lb />
That medicine increased my weight <lb />
from pounds to pounds in a <lb />
few mouths, made me as well <lb />
and healthy as any man now living. <lb />
take medicine they are asleep S. S. S. Is undoubtedly the greatest <lb />
the hour comes round, blood purifier to day on the <lb />
so called relict of barbarism j the lesson <lb />
work a wonderful reformation <lb />
.,. ., , ,, . that sleep is better for the sick than <lb />
among the juvenile population <lb />
many of towns and cities. Our <lb />
Father in heaven <lb />
an <lb />
medicine. But it is not well known <lb />
that sleep is a wonderful preventive <lb />
in heaven, in training disease better than tonic <lb />
d fitting us for our sphere of use- tors or <lb />
can continent. John <lb />
No. North State St., Chicago, <lb />
Treatise on Blood Skin <lb />
sea mailed free. <lb />
SWIFT'S SPECIFIC CO., <lb />
At la Ga. <lb />
a mm i mm. <lb />
n. c <lb />
L. JAMES, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
N. <lb />
A LEX L. BLOW, <lb />
KY-AT-L A W, <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
J. E. M <lb />
J. M. TUCKER. <lb />
J. <lb />
MOORS, TUCKER MURPHY, <lb />
A T-LA W, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. HARRY <lb />
T A SKINNER, <lb />
A AW, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
B G. JAMES, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Practice In all tho courts. Collection <lb />
I B. <lb />
ATTORNEY-A W, <lb />
N. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018976_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Editor and <lb />
Publisher's <lb />
THE SUBSCRIPTION PRICE OF <lb />
The Reflector is pat year. <lb />
Advertising One column <lb />
one year, one-half column one year, <lb />
; one-quarter column one year, <lb />
Transient Advertisements. One inch <lb />
one week. ; two weeks. one <lb />
month Two inches one week, <lb />
two weeks, ; one month, <lb />
Advertisements inserted in Local <lb />
Column as reading items, cents per <lb />
line for each insertion. <lb />
Legal Advertisements, such as Ad- <lb />
and Notices, <lb />
and Sales, <lb />
Summons to etc. will <lb />
be charged for at legal rates and must <lb />
BE PAID FOB IN The RE- <lb />
has suffered some loss and <lb />
much because of having no <lb />
fixed rule as to the payment of this class <lb />
of advertisements, and in order to avoid <lb />
future trouble payment in advance <lb />
will lie demanded. <lb />
Contracts for any space not mentioned <lb />
above, for any length of time, can be <lb />
made by application to the office <lb />
in person or by letter. <lb />
Copy tor Sew Advertisements and <lb />
all changes of advertisements should be <lb />
handed in by o'clock on <lb />
mornings in order to prompt in- <lb />
the day following. <lb />
The Reflector having a large <lb />
will be found a profitable urn <lb />
through which to reach the public. <lb />
Rocky Mount Fires. <lb />
There were three large fires in <lb />
Rocky Mount last week. All the <lb />
fires are said to be of incendiary <lb />
origin, the supposed work of the <lb />
many congregated in that <lb />
town for the purpose of <lb />
The emigration agents made <lb />
themselves very troublesome <lb />
around that section until the <lb />
become so aroused and in- <lb />
that they drove every one <lb />
out of town who there. <lb />
This made the mad and <lb />
they started in with a <lb />
to burn up the town. <lb />
three fires occurred in three sue- -even after Lee's surrender at <lb />
recourse could be <lb />
ed and most reliable statistician of <lb />
age, in respect to id a <lb />
paper read a few mouths ago before <lb />
the Cotton <lb />
of New England, <lb />
Appalachian chain gathering <lb />
lure from Gulf Stream <lb />
spreading it over the ferule fields <lb />
or United States, has fixed <lb />
supremacy in cotton <lb />
It more evidence is desired I refer <lb />
the searcher after truth to what is <lb />
known as the history of the cotton <lb />
fain abroad and <lb />
caused by the war the <lb />
States, which partially cut off <lb />
American crop. The first gnu at <lb />
was the signal that marked <lb />
a lively advance in the Liverpool <lb />
cotton market, was main- <lb />
with a rapid pace upward <lb />
at the Office at <lb />
C, <lb />
Mail Matter. <lb />
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY <lb />
Nearly Completed. <lb />
Th load be in <lb />
Should <lb />
Things have hustling about <lb />
the railroad bridge and over <lb />
that part of the road bed lying in <lb />
town during the last week or so <lb />
will continue to hustle until the <lb />
depot is reached. The cause for <lb />
this seems to be a certain agree- <lb />
under which the railroad <lb />
authorities are bound. When the <lb />
extension from Scot land Neck to <lb />
Greenville was projected and be- <lb />
to look like it might be n real- <lb />
some of the railroad men <lb />
Greenville to ascertain what <lb />
inducements her citizens would <lb />
offer to secure the road. Of course <lb />
was wanted and some of <lb />
our business men were into <lb />
signing an agreement that <lb />
would pay all the cost in excess of <lb />
for the right of way from <lb />
Creek to the sight <lb />
for the depot in Greenville, <lb />
thinking the excess be only <lb />
a small amount. it came <lb />
down to the rub of getting the <lb />
aforementioned right of way the <lb />
cost of the same loomed up to <lb />
times double what was <lb />
pated. Our is the <lb />
few who were in this agreement <lb />
found out they were caught, but <lb />
to the After <lb />
much discussing and contending a <lb />
compromise was effected by the <lb />
signers to the agreement paying <lb />
over to the railroad the sum of <lb />
the railroad authorities <lb />
then entering into an agreement <lb />
to forfeit the same if the cars were <lb />
not running into Greenville on the <lb />
1st of April, 1890. For a month <lb />
or so past the indications have <lb />
pointed to the failure to get the <lb />
cars in town by the time <lb />
said indications eating a slight <lb />
hope among the payers of the <lb />
that they might yet finger <lb />
the money again. But there is no <lb />
accounting for what a railroad can <lb />
do when the test comes, the <lb />
indications now arc that the road <lb />
will be over in time. All the <lb />
force possible has been <lb />
at the bridge and the work <lb />
fairly goes on with a hum. Keep <lb />
p the hustle, gentlemen or you <lb />
might lose the Hun ah <lb />
for Greenville and her railroad <lb />
Now, to be serious, the early <lb />
completion of this railroad over <lb />
into town should be the source of <lb />
much gratification to all the <lb />
and the town is to be <lb />
upon it. Already much <lb />
benefit has been brought to the <lb />
community by the completion of <lb />
the road to within mile of us, <lb />
and its coming on within and <lb />
through the corporate limits will <lb />
be sure to bring a still greater <lb />
volume of business and trade. We <lb />
take it as the beginning of a new <lb />
era for Greenville, the fogy- <lb />
ideas to be superseded by an <lb />
air of progress and activity. At <lb />
no far distant day we expect to see <lb />
more than one railroad to <lb />
Greenville, with street cars, water <lb />
works, electric lights and various <lb />
factories in operation. With such <lb />
a splendid country surrounding as <lb />
is found here there are no <lb />
reasons why all these things <lb />
and more should not be. <lb />
Greenville ought to rejoice over <lb />
the completion of this road and <lb />
the Reflector suggests that we <lb />
get up a celebration in every way <lb />
worthy the town. Let all the <lb />
railroad authorities be invited to <lb />
come down and spend day <lb />
with as and lets show them what <lb />
e fine section ours is. As the cars <lb />
will be over in town at an early <lb />
day preparation for the <lb />
should begin at once. What <lb />
Mayor James and the <lb />
mess men the town to this The <lb />
wants to hear from <lb />
you. Let as <lb />
nights. The first was a <lb />
storage warehouse belonging to Mr <lb />
R. D. Armstrong which occurred <lb />
Sunday night. The loss was <lb />
Monday night the <lb />
large carriage factory of Hackney <lb />
Bros, was burned. Their loss was <lb />
no insurance. Early Tues- <lb />
day night the floral hall at the <lb />
fair grounds was burned. It was <lb />
thought that the idea of the <lb />
diaries was to attract all the white <lb />
men to the Fair grounds, about a <lb />
mile distant, and then tire the town, <lb />
but enough of the men remained <lb />
in town to keep it sufficiently <lb />
The Infantry turned out <lb />
and peel to guard the town. <lb />
seems to be no doubt of the <lb />
fires being and of the <lb />
being The <lb />
were holding was <lb />
alleged to be Knights of Labor <lb />
meetings, some of the women <lb />
heard to say the fires would <lb />
not have occurred but for the ac- <lb />
of the people in preventing <lb />
the agents taking away <lb />
the Capt. Henry Thorpe <lb />
received a note through the post- <lb />
office saying that if the Light In- <lb />
fantry were under arms that night <lb />
every single member be <lb />
killed, sooner or later, if the <lb />
to shoot them one by- <lb />
one from ambush. The <lb />
Alliance also a note <lb />
which said the way and only way <lb />
to stop the fires was to send a parse <lb />
of three or four hundred dollars to <lb />
Professor Martin, of Petersburg. <lb />
Martin was a emigration <lb />
agent who had been run out of <lb />
Rocky Mount. <lb />
Just what the people of Rocky <lb />
Mount ought to is hard for an <lb />
outsider to determine. Such a <lb />
state of affairs is unfortunate. For <lb />
the time being the greatest excite- <lb />
prevailed among the citizens <lb />
of the town. We hope all has <lb />
grown quiet ere this the race <lb />
troubles at an end. <lb />
The Legislature of New York <lb />
has passed a bill appropriating <lb />
for the World's Fair <lb />
of 1892. <lb />
The Board of Trustees of th <lb />
North Carolina University held <lb />
their annual meeting last Thurs- <lb />
day and declared themselves <lb />
against the frame of football being <lb />
played with other teams. The <lb />
Board was wise in its action. <lb />
A second article from Col. <lb />
Skinner upon the hope of the <lb />
South, in which he answers <lb />
brought against his former <lb />
article and maintains his position, <lb />
is published elsewhere in this <lb />
paper. The article speaks for it- <lb />
self. <lb />
The Hope of the <lb />
The Col. Barry Skinner, Ex- <lb />
plains Dejections and Main- <lb />
His Position. <lb />
, NO. <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
This writer has watched with in- <lb />
the comments of press on <lb />
the article entitled of <lb />
the which appeared <lb />
Frank Leslie's a short time since, <lb />
and which advanced a plan for <lb />
governmental interference to <lb />
vent the unnecessary sacrifice the <lb />
American cotton <lb />
The premises the argument ad- <lb />
therein stand admitted <lb />
to wit; that the price of our great <lb />
staple can be controlled by the gov- <lb />
had to our fields to supply the de <lb />
But want no further data than <lb />
that the Southern States <lb />
produce per cent of the <lb />
cotton crop the world, which gives <lb />
us a monopoly, and it is axiomatic <lb />
that a country that has the <lb />
of any production can regulate <lb />
its price, analogous to the <lb />
that the producers of <lb />
any given article of <lb />
consumption whose production is <lb />
not greatly excess the de- <lb />
can control the price of the <lb />
whole. <lb />
The the question assumes this <lb />
Should the government <lb />
interfere, take advantage of its <lb />
and exercise its in the <lb />
premises I Mm government <lb />
permit so great an industry to tan <lb />
and those engaged in it to <lb />
become paupers by raising a staple <lb />
so essential to the comfort of the <lb />
world, and be forced to accept <lb />
prices fixed by the Liverpool Cotton <lb />
Exchange, whose manipulation, <lb />
backed by world, is <lb />
to command the American crop with <lb />
as little money as and to <lb />
this end brings to bear great con- <lb />
capital, which is multi- <lb />
plied a thousand fold through op <lb />
on the exchange for the <lb />
purpose of low prices, when <lb />
it the power to prevent it <lb />
The cotton producing industry is <lb />
second to no in the United <lb />
States, and deserves the fostering <lb />
care the government. The con- <lb />
of the crop, from planting to <lb />
harvest, as well a the statistical <lb />
position of the product, with the <lb />
regularity of the daily course of the <lb />
is around world, <lb />
and its staple is as as gold <lb />
across the counters of every bank <lb />
in Christendom It constitutes in <lb />
value nearly one-half of all our ex- <lb />
ports. Without it we would be <lb />
largely the nation on <lb />
the balance trade with other <lb />
portions of the world. the <lb />
greater purchasing power we can <lb />
give to this our great export crop <lb />
the better it is not only the pro <lb />
at the South but for all sec- <lb />
the country, which hold a <lb />
joint in our national wealth <lb />
to which cotton is the largest con- <lb />
Is it right fourteen <lb />
millions of people estimated <lb />
population engaged in this <lb />
try, j at the expense of great labor, <lb />
of soil and sacrifice <lb />
health, to produce per cent, of a <lb />
great staple which is necessary to <lb />
of fourteen <lb />
millions of people, estimated <lb />
population the wot at prices <lb />
that are to the producers, <lb />
when this can be prevented by gov- <lb />
interference, and the in- <lb />
converted into a to <lb />
them without any injustice to any <lb />
other interest <lb />
But, says the vigilant partisan, <lb />
who has the of his par- <lb />
at heart more than the material <lb />
prosperity of Ins people, your sys- <lb />
smacks of protection, pro- <lb />
is anti-Democrat Dem. <lb />
is essential to the social <lb />
peace, contentment and <lb />
of the South. I trust my status <lb />
the Democratic party is fixed be- <lb />
the shadow of question. <lb />
I place the social <lb />
people far advance any <lb />
other and there is no sac- <lb />
would make or advise to <lb />
made to secure it. <lb />
Those who know me know that I am <lb />
thorough accord with my party <lb />
the tariff, that I am <lb />
in taking this new novel <lb />
by a desire and, as you may <lb />
put it, interest as all have <lb />
seeing simple justice meted out to <lb />
fields. And my position, with- <lb />
out hostility to my <lb />
party, is that they are entitled to <lb />
the same protection as is or <lb />
may be hereafter extended to the <lb />
shop-; a nutshell, that <lb />
protection or no <lb />
and that my is <lb />
of all or none. <lb />
Those journals who for zeal <lb />
or any other interest desire to <lb />
summarily dispose of the system as <lb />
anti-democratic and impracticable <lb />
ought in justice to give the article <lb />
and foreign <lb />
weak from the assault of the strong <lb />
the poor and dependent from the <lb />
exorbitant and unjust <lb />
exactions of the great <lb />
producing classes from the power <lb />
and rapacity of combines, <lb />
lies and trusts. If advocating such <lb />
a principle that contends for <lb />
but justice, to those field- from <lb />
which we must forever draw not <lb />
only oar livelihood bat our <lb />
happiness and prosperity makes me <lb />
a protectionist then I shall have to <lb />
be classed as one. that be <lb />
son make the most For I <lb />
cannot permit such a shadowy line <lb />
as this to between me and a <lb />
fraught with so much good <lb />
to an unfortunate and wronged <lb />
who have been devastated by <lb />
war, plundered by carpet bag <lb />
robbed by unequal <lb />
of their constitutional right of bank <lb />
means of <lb />
and Lee's surrender have had <lb />
such an unfair and unequal race in <lb />
that march of progress which we <lb />
so much about but can never <lb />
hope to attain through unequal <lb />
la <lb />
Another objection is that it bears <lb />
the ear-marks of paternalism. To <lb />
be plain, brief and sensible, it is <lb />
folly to stickle over this growing <lb />
tendency of the government. Let <lb />
realize it ask the Pater to be J. <lb />
just to all of his children for as <lb />
long as holds a monopoly in <lb />
banking and facilities, <lb />
disguise it. as we may, is a pa- <lb />
government. Restore to the <lb />
States their constitutional right <lb />
over banking and monetary matters <lb />
and we ask the general <lb />
Letter. <lb />
R -T r I <lb />
From regular Correspondent. <lb />
Washington, C. Feb. <lb />
Mr. Harrison has been trying to <lb />
lay wires tins week that will result <lb />
in his controlling the Pennsylvania <lb />
delegation to the next national re- <lb />
publican convention, tie returned <lb />
to the While House today from <lb />
from the pleased ex- <lb />
his lace when he got off <lb />
the train be evidently thinks he <lb />
What Senator Quay, who <lb />
is on a trip to Florida, <lb />
will think of this invasion of bis <lb />
can not. be said, but he will <lb />
certainly broadly at the <lb />
idea of Mr. Harrison Or Mr. anybody <lb />
else controlling the Pennsylvania <lb />
delegation without bis assistance <lb />
He owns Pennsylvania <lb />
can machine. <lb />
Politics have got into the contest <lb />
for the World's Fair, which opened <lb />
m the House which is <lb />
to be finally decided next week. <lb />
Members of both parties fear <lb />
its location will have upon the <lb />
Presidential and best <lb />
informed now believe that unless <lb />
the fair is held at Washington it <lb />
will not be held at all. Mr. <lb />
says it cannot constitutionally be <lb />
under the control of the Gov- <lb />
anywhere in the Dis- <lb />
of Columbia. Mr. Mills heads <lb />
about sixty members who are op- <lb />
posed to its being held all, and be <lb />
expects to be joined by enough dis <lb />
appointed members, after site is <lb />
selected, to defeat bill providing <lb />
for the fair. the present stat- <lb />
without hazard of loss and <lb />
to the benefit of all sections of our j referred to credit exemplifying <lb />
country. No journal has taken issue very strikingly the gross inequality <lb />
with this, as some term, bold <lb />
On the contrary, the best <lb />
informed men and journal.- concede <lb />
that the Southern States hold the <lb />
supremacy of the world in pro- <lb />
of this great staple, both as <lb />
to quality and quantity. Man- <lb />
commenting <lb />
the article referred to, <lb />
as it may to avoid it, the world at <lb />
large will have to draw the bulk of <lb />
its cotton from the Southern States, <lb />
and consequently we can and <lb />
to what its selling price <lb />
shall be instead cf leaving that to <lb />
be dictated by the <lb />
Hon. J. M. Husk, Secretary of <lb />
at Washington, in a re- <lb />
cent letter upon Southern progress, <lb />
supremacy which the <lb />
South possesses in the markets of <lb />
the world as a cotton producing <lb />
country there little reason to be- <lb />
will ever be forfeited. The <lb />
natural facilities of South for <lb />
production of this great cotton <lb />
crop, aided and directed by <lb />
must assure for all time <lb />
supremacy of the Southern States <lb />
as the cotton producing region of <lb />
In the same line <lb />
thought, Secretary in <lb />
his fiscal reports, refers to the ac- <lb />
movement the cotton crop <lb />
and the good prices commanded, <lb />
drawing largely on old country, <lb />
as saving the United States from a <lb />
threatened financial Mr. <lb />
Edward the heat <lb />
is-a- <lb />
of present tariff while <lb />
throwing its arm protective <lb />
care around the in- <lb />
of the country, leaves <lb />
fields unprotected as a prey <lb />
.-peculation, monopoly and trusts <lb />
both at home and from <lb />
government under which <lb />
live possesses the power to protect <lb />
all alike- in a new and differ- <lb />
manner but in results the same <lb />
by securing per cent more for <lb />
the cotton crop than is now <lb />
on general average from op- <lb />
of a speculative market <lb />
which is not governed as political <lb />
economists would have it by <lb />
great economic law of supply and <lb />
demand but is entirely within the <lb />
control of the money power as is <lb />
worked out by ways that are dark <lb />
through the exchanges at home <lb />
abroad. And yet the bold fact must <lb />
be admitted that these fields by <lb />
adoption of system I have <lb />
or that which the Alliance <lb />
has advanced, can be placed beyond <lb />
the manipulators of <lb />
the exchange and those engaged in <lb />
industry be freed from the slay <lb />
which baa been fastened upon <lb />
them and the industry Itself be <lb />
made pi oil table by meting <lb />
oat justice, to them- . <lb />
So that in lieu of protection it <lb />
justice I plead for say people and <lb />
secures to each and all of w- <lb />
Burnt fur no favors; but as it , . , <lb />
holds the reins over these and only us- b Ta <lb />
grants these great privileges to a of combination may be made to <lb />
few and a favored <lb />
we are compelled to appeal to our <lb />
government for help to keep the <lb />
great classes from slavery <lb />
to this privileged <lb />
effort is powerless to avert the <lb />
dangers that threaten <lb />
popular cry against this, and <lb />
almost every other plan conceived <lb />
in the interest of the tillers of the <lb />
soil, is that it is not practical. <lb />
seems practical to the favored <lb />
class and the old school of political <lb />
economists except to move in those <lb />
economic grooves which have <lb />
nine hundred and ninety- <lb />
nine of every thousand of the pop- <lb />
the old world and is <lb />
tined to do the same for this. The <lb />
thousandth man and bis allies are <lb />
always ready to snub every <lb />
as impracticable by that <lb />
means shut off all investigation. <lb />
Practical, as meant to bear upon <lb />
the subject matter under consider- <lb />
is that can be <lb />
plied to The plan suggested <lb />
can be applied to use, when <lb />
plied will accomplish the purpose in <lb />
view and is therefore practical. It <lb />
may be possible, owing to see <lb />
an apparent in <lb />
afore of Congress to do anything to <lb />
alleviate the of <lb />
to pan the <lb />
; but nevertheless with the leg- <lb />
the plan be <lb />
and successfully operated <lb />
accomplish the purpose intended. <lb />
With equal force one may say the <lb />
reformation of the is <lb />
because, regardless of he <lb />
complexion of Congress, the result <lb />
is all talk and no legislative relief. <lb />
There is certainly more mi <lb />
practicable building the ware- <lb />
; than constructing other gov- <lb />
buildings. will not <lb />
cost so much as has been expended <lb />
heretofore on this line without any <lb />
great benefit to the country. <lb />
when there is nothing <lb />
practicable operating the in <lb />
under strict governmental <lb />
lance more than operating any of <lb />
the great departments of the gov- <lb />
certainly not half so <lb />
complicated as the Post- <lb />
office Department, which the gov- <lb />
dispatches with wonderful <lb />
promptness and accuracy, though <lb />
while a private affair is done <lb />
with great benefit to the <lb />
and profit to the government. <lb />
There is nothing <lb />
the certificate system, <lb />
which has, already been inaugurated <lb />
and operated respect to gold and <lb />
silver, and can be as successfully <lb />
applied to of a standard <lb />
grade and price. The system itself <lb />
fixes the price, and an equal <lb />
can be reached by proper <lb />
i To say otherwise is to <lb />
annul the receipt system now <lb />
by all Exchanges which forms <lb />
basis of their operations that <lb />
aggregate more than a thousand <lb />
fold the annual crop strength <lb />
I of this system is that the cotton is <lb />
in the warehouse to redeem the <lb />
or when it is sold the gold <lb />
or its equivalent is covered the <lb />
Treasury to redeem it, so that these <lb />
certificates will carry with them ab- <lb />
solute confidence in all monetary <lb />
transactions. Then the <lb />
used to disparage this <lb />
and those formulated by the <lb />
that the necessary <lb />
cannot be secured, Rome was <lb />
not built in a day, nor can we expect <lb />
a material reformation of this kind <lb />
to be accomplished until the great <lb />
masses of people are educated in <lb />
respect to matter. If the <lb />
advanced have the foundations <lb />
of right, equity and justice, alter a <lb />
season will triumph; if are <lb />
errors deserve to perish. More <lb />
light will exemplify their truths and <lb />
tend to them upon the <lb />
thought of the nation. <lb />
When the pioneers of abolition <lb />
first raised their voice for universal <lb />
freedom were denounced a.- <lb />
fanatics and almost as criminal <lb />
the truth and justice of <lb />
their cause caught the ear and chain <lb />
ed thought of the country, and <lb />
as a result slavery was abolished. <lb />
And so the certificate system to <lb />
prevent the sacrifice of cotton, or <lb />
sub-treasury system as advanced by-1 <lb />
the founded in truth <lb />
and justice, as f believe them to be, <lb />
will catch the ear and com- <lb />
the thought and heart the <lb />
country so as to pass the necessary <lb />
legislation to free the great <lb />
from slavery of <lb />
and trusts make those en- <lb />
gaged that heaven appointed in- <lb />
tilling of the Mil <lb />
happy, contented and prosperous, <lb />
which alone can <lb />
growth and prosperity oar <lb />
to <lb />
change it. <lb />
Mr. scheme for a <lb />
cheap postal telegraph system be- <lb />
tween all cities having a free <lb />
seems to be very favorably re- <lb />
it is generally believed <lb />
that Congress is disposed to give it <lb />
a trial. <lb />
The pension appropriation bill for <lb />
the next fiscal year has <lb />
to the House. It is for <lb />
nearly more than <lb />
that passed by the last Congress, <lb />
and still the cry for a service pen- <lb />
bill carrying an additional <lb />
amount of a year is re <lb />
through the corridors of <lb />
the Capitol. The gentlemen favor- <lb />
this last do not tell <lb />
where the money is to come from. <lb />
It certainly is not in the Treasury <lb />
or likely to be in it. , <lb />
The republicans of the House <lb />
propose taking up the contested <lb />
election cases as as the World's <lb />
fair question is settled. There <lb />
four reports waiting to be acted <lb />
and strange to say, one of <lb />
them confirms the claim of the Dem- <lb />
The republican members of the <lb />
Ways and Means committee the <lb />
House, in to make a <lb />
about the tar- <lb />
propose to the finking <lb />
act which requires about <lb />
a year. The only that <lb />
they are agreed is the repeal <lb />
of the tobacco tax. They are <lb />
engaged in trying to get up some <lb />
sort of a compromise as to sugar <lb />
tariff. <lb />
Jay who a years ago <lb />
posed as the boss the <lb />
party, is here in the interest of the <lb />
bill providing for the purchase <lb />
the Portage Lake canal, connecting <lb />
Lake and Lake Superior. <lb />
The bill transferring the <lb />
bureau to the Agricultural <lb />
will reported to the <lb />
Senate week. Its passage is <lb />
regarded as certain. <lb />
The investigation of the civil <lb />
service commission opened quite <lb />
lively, and Mr. Lyman is far from <lb />
being he was compelled <lb />
to acknowledge that his <lb />
stole a set of questions and <lb />
furnished them to a woman who <lb />
obtained a position through <lb />
knowledge she got the <lb />
questions. He also <lb />
edged that the stealer of the <lb />
was promoted. <lb />
How can be kept on the <lb />
commission after this without <lb />
the whole business more of a <lb />
laughing stock than it already is, is <lb />
more than ordinary folks see. <lb />
The committee will hold another <lb />
meeting <lb />
The Woman's rights annual con- <lb />
ended a four days session <lb />
today. Several of the <lb />
predicted that women would vote <lb />
in less than ton years. <lb />
The British extradition treaty, <lb />
which the late <lb />
succeeded in last win- <lb />
has been ratified by the Sou- <lb />
ate. <lb />
COME IN <lb />
We want to a talk <lb />
with you and tell <lb />
you now cheap <lb />
we can sell <lb />
you <lb />
HARDWARE <lb />
Cash <lb />
Dixie and <lb />
Tobacco Plows, Plow <lb />
Castings, The Famous <lb />
Cook Stoves. <lb />
Give us your orders <lb />
for <lb />
TOBACCO FLUES <lb />
early and you will be <lb />
sure to get them in time <lb />
LATHAM PENDER, <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
Car Load of Fine <lb />
Horses <lb />
AND <lb />
Mules, <lb />
--------Just received by <lb />
ALFRED FORBES, <lb />
RELIABLE OF C <lb />
lo the buyers of Pitt and surrounding counties, of the following good <lb />
that are not to be excelled In this market. And to be First-class and <lb />
pure straight goods, DRY GOODS of all kinds, NOTIONS, CLOTHING, GEN <lb />
FURNISHING GOODS. HATS and CAPS, SHOES, LA <lb />
and CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS, Mid HOUSE FURNISHING <lb />
GOODS, DOORS, WINDOWS, SASH and BLINDS, and QUEENS- <lb />
WARE, HARDWARE, PLOWS and PLOW CASTING. LEATHER <lb />
kinds. Gin and Mill Belting, Hay, Rock Lime, Plaster or Paris, and <lb />
Hair, Harness, Bridles and addles. <lb />
HEAVY GROCERIES A SPECIALTY. <lb />
Agent Clark's O. N. T. Spool Cotton which I to the trade at <lb />
Jobbers cents per dozen, less per for Cash. Bread Prep <lb />
and Hall's Star Lye at jobbers Prices, While Lead pure Lin- <lb />
seed Oil, Varnishes and Paint Colors. Cucumber Hood Pumps, Salt and Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware. Nails a specialty. me ft H guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
LIFE AND FIRE INSURANCE AGENT, <lb />
N. C <lb />
OFFICE SUGG JAM Kg 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 PROOF SAFE. <lb />
THE OLD RELIABLE CARRIAGE FACTORY <lb />
STILL TO THE FRONT <lb />
J. D. Williamson, <lb />
will be SOW------ <lb />
CHEAP FOR CASH, <lb />
or at reasonable terms on on <lb />
proved security. I my for <lb />
Cash and can afford to sell as cheap as <lb />
anyone. Give me a call. <lb />
LOW TARIFF <lb />
CARRIAGE FACTORY. <lb />
m urn <lb />
For we have free now. Ah <lb />
you arc free to buy where you please, but <lb />
if want to save money you come M <lb />
my Factory on street, rear of J. B. <lb />
Cherry Co's. For convenience we <lb />
have also an entrance through H. F. <lb />
Keel's Stable 3rd street. lean give <lb />
That you ever had in your life tor <lb />
410.00 to less money than any one <lb />
else in the county can Rive you. Why <lb />
for my expenses are less and pay th <lb />
spot cash for good and save the dis- <lb />
counts, and if you don't believe it you <lb />
Come and see. Having had IS years <lb />
experience in business I guarantee <lb />
perfect satisfaction or no charge. Re- <lb />
pairing a specialty. Don't forget the <lb />
place on 4th street rear J. Cherry <lb />
A. <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
Tar Transportation <lb />
Forbes, Greenville, <lb />
B. CHERRY, <lb />
J. S. Greenville, <lb />
N. M. Lawrence, Tarboro, Gen <lb />
Capt. R. F. Jones, Washington, Gen Ag <lb />
The People's for travel on <lb />
River. . , m <lb />
The Steamer Greenville is the finest <lb />
and quickest boat on the river. She has <lb />
been thoroughly repaired, refurnished <lb />
and painted. <lb />
Fitted up specially for the comfort, ac- <lb />
and convenience of Ladies. <lb />
POLITE ATTENTIVE OFFICERS <lb />
A first-class Table furnished with th <lb />
best the market affords. <lb />
A trip on the Steamer Greenville Is <lb />
not only comfortable but attractive. <lb />
Leaves Washington Monday, <lb />
and Friday at o'clock, a. m. <lb />
Leaves Tarboro Tuesday, Thursday <lb />
and Saturday at o'clock, A. M. <lb />
Freights received daily and through <lb />
Bills Lading given to all points. <lb />
J. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
SUCCESSOR TO JOHN <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C. <lb />
Has Moved to One Door North of Court House. <lb />
WILL THE OF <lb />
BUGGIES, CARTS DRAYS. <lb />
My Factory d well equipped with the best Mechanics. put up nothing <lb />
but FIRST-CLASS WORK. keep up with the times and <lb />
Best material used in all work. All styles of Springs are you can select from <lb />
Brewster, Storm, Coil, Ram Horn, King. <lb />
keep on hand a full of ready <lb />
HARNESS AND WHIPS, <lb />
the j-car round, which we will sell as low as lowest. <lb />
Special Attention Given to REPAIRING. <lb />
Thanking the people of and surrounding counties for past favor hope <lb />
merit a continuance the same. <lb />
E. A. TAFT, <lb />
Wishes to inform his friends and the public generally that he has <lb />
bought out the Grocery establishment of T. Cherry, and with <lb />
new stock added is now prepared to furnish the very best <lb />
GROCERIES, PROVISIONS AND FAMILY SUPPLIES <lb />
At prices fully in keeping with the times. I keep Flour, <lb />
Meat, Lard, Molasses, Confections. Canned Goods, Crockery, <lb />
Tobacco, Snuff, fee., fee. <lb />
Orange Syrup is the best Molasses in this market. <lb />
You are invited to call. Remember the piece, Cherry's stand. <lb />
Alliance Resolutions. <lb />
the mid and <lb />
other papers have published statements <lb />
that are and calculated to <lb />
the Alliance, <lb />
And Whereas our brother E. A. <lb />
has written a communication <lb />
said statements and setting forth <lb />
the of the Alliance which the <lb />
and Observer refused to print, now <lb />
therefore <lb />
that we endorse the <lb />
sot forth by our worthy brother <lb />
and thank him for so ably our <lb />
Asa <lb />
Prosperity alliance No. <lb />
Whereas the Alliance of <lb />
Pitt comity has be n misrepresented by <lb />
a certain newspaper of this State, pub- <lb />
that the Alliance of Pitt <lb />
favored abolishing of public schools, <lb />
W n in our worthy and es- <lb />
teemed brother E. A. has written <lb />
a communication as published In the <lb />
Eastern of Feb. 6th, set- <lb />
ting forth the of the <lb />
therefore be It i- <lb />
try Prosperity Alliance No. <lb />
i that we thank our brother f r the <lb />
of oar order, <lb />
we fully the sentiments <lb />
et in his and, <lb />
limy <lb />
has been so kind in print- <lb />
resolutions Ac., tor j <lb />
the of our <lb />
we extend Mr to <lb />
the ask tot <lb />
and e of from <lb />
form or if ear<lb />
J. B. CHERRY. <lb />
J. R. MOVE. <lb />
J. G. <lb />
CHERRY CO. <lb />
Have again conic lo your attention your esteemed patronage <lb />
do not claim that have the largest and best stuck cast of the <lb />
but we do say that we are to the front <lb />
with a specially selected line of-------- <lb />
Suited to the want of a large class of customers. are In full sympathy with <lb />
the hard times and and will make low cash prices lo all who favor us with <lb />
their patronage. Look down this column and see if we cannot yon. We <lb />
Notice. <lb />
To White Public School <lb />
Commit teem en of <lb />
Pitt County. <lb />
Prof. Alderman, authority of the <lb />
School Law of the State, will hold an <lb />
Institute White Teachers at the <lb />
Court House in the town of Greenville <lb />
Monday March 3rd, <lb />
Institute will continue one week. There <lb />
will de public addresses delivered on <lb />
Friday of that week. <lb />
Public School teachers of the white <lb />
race are required to attend. They will <lb />
be compelled to suspend I heir Schools <lb />
during the continuance of the Institute <lb />
I hope they will all be on hand. <lb />
The School of Pitt <lb />
County are respectfully in to attend, <lb />
especially on Friday. <lb />
Respectfully <lb />
Henry Harding, <lb />
Co. Supt. Pub. Ins. <lb />
Splendid Opportunity. <lb />
A well established Cash Paying Millinery <lb />
business. Trade constantly growing. <lb />
Good location. Small capital required. <lb />
Address, Look Box <lb />
N. C. <lb />
MARKET. <lb />
Corrected by Samuel M. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Grocer, <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
Syrup and Molasses, <lb />
Mess Pork, <lb />
Bulk Sides, <lb />
Bulk Shoulders, <lb />
Bacon Sides, <lb />
Bacon <lb />
Pitt County Ham, <lb />
Sugar Ham, <lb />
Coffee, <lb />
Brown Sugar, <lb />
Granulated <lb />
Syn <lb />
Tobacco, <lb />
Snuff, <lb />
Lard, <lb />
Corn, <lb />
Hides. <lb />
Cotton, <lb />
10.75 to 11.75 <lb />
to <lb />
E to <lb />
.-to <lb />
to <lb />
Si to <lb />
to <lb />
tO to <lb />
TO to <lb />
are better <lb />
a line of <lb />
prepared than ever before to serve you. We have in stock to-day <lb />
DRY GOO <lb />
Embracing Dress Goods and Trimmings, Ginghams and Calicoes. <lb />
and Suitings, Piece Goods and Men's Hoy's Suits. Homespuns, <lb />
Sheetings, Bleached and Unbleached Flannels Bel <lb />
Boots and Shoes. <lb />
For Men. Women. Boys, Misses and Children, at prices will cause the poor to <lb />
rejoice, and the hearts of all will be made glad who buy Hoot sand Shoes from us, <lb />
why because sell low and give the worth. A full line of <lb />
and Goods that will the hearts th <lb />
HATS and CAPS for men, boys and children. HE, In this line we offer <lb />
you a stock as complete as farmer or mechanic can wish. make a <lb />
of Steel. Nails and guarantee them to be the best made. <lb />
Groceries. <lb />
Which arc selling at rock bottom prices, not because we are forced to do so <lb />
but We take pleasure in offering and selling low down. Can we interest yon here <lb />
if so conic in and examine our stock of Sugar, Molasses. Coffee, Tea. Soaps, both <lb />
Toilet and Laundry, Lye, Matches, Starch, Rice. Meats of different kinds, <lb />
which we are now buying from first hands and can save yon money if yen call and <lb />
examine before buying elsewhere, Tobacco and Snuff. <lb />
Headquarters for Furniture. <lb />
Of which carry a line not to be excelled in this market, such as <lb />
Bureaus, Double and Single Bedsteads. Tables. Cots. Bed Springs and <lb />
Mattresses, Children's Cradles and Beds, Chairs of different kinds and varieties, <lb />
all to suit hard times and short crops. Anything that you want In this lino If We <lb />
have not got it in we will make a special order for you, as we have <lb />
from several of the best furniture in the United States and guarantee sat- <lb />
as to prices. Wood and Willow ware, Crockery. Glassware, Lamps, <lb />
and Collars. Cart Saddles. Whips and Millinery. Trunks, <lb />
Valises and Traveling Bags, <lb />
is too short to keep on telling What we have and d., But wishing <lb />
c to prosperity and giving to every man. woman and child who comes <lb />
lo t invitation to come in and examine <lb />
We remain yours to serve <lb />
j B. CHERRY CO., <lb />
Greenville, N. O.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018976_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
. Attractive <lb />
GOOD NEWS <lb />
DIES. <lb />
A mammoth display <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
NO. <lb />
Green villa. <lb />
Local Sparks <lb />
Imported tor us direct <lb />
from Switzerland. <lb />
This assortment is com- <lb />
posed of many new <lb />
and rare novel- <lb />
tics in <lb />
Hamburgs, Swiss, <lb />
Irish Point, <lb />
and Van Dyke Edging, <lb />
Allovers, <lb />
Edgings, <lb />
Etc. <lb />
These <lb />
imported <lb />
are <lb />
goods<lb />
direct <lb />
bought <lb />
to us <lb />
without <lb />
Cotton t , <lb />
In new to see as. <lb />
Dec, M. Kerry Sew <lb />
Garden Eked at Old Brick Store. <lb />
What of oysters <lb />
One dollar buys a Solid Leather <lb />
Ladies Shoe at J. B. Cherry <lb />
Sow Oats bushels <lb />
cheap, at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
was a dark, gloomy, rainy <lb />
day. <lb />
Arrived on tin- <lb />
Milk Biscuit at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The Sew Fair is in <lb />
One dollar buys a Whole Stock <lb />
Mass Shoe at J. B. Cherry Go's <lb />
river is tolerably good <lb />
older. <lb />
We sell only tor cash therefore <lb />
can .-ell very low. Try us <lb />
I. Co. <lb />
Only mac days in <lb />
to-day. <lb />
The finest loaf of bread I ever ate <lb />
sad Antic of Town Lace flour, at <lb />
the Old Store. <lb />
It was almost as warm as summer <lb />
Monday afternoon. <lb />
Seed Potatoes, five <lb />
varieties, cheap, at the Old Brick <lb />
Store. <lb />
Blank Died-, Mortgages and <lb />
Liens sale at this <lb />
Beautiful designs in Job Printing <lb />
at the Reflector office. <lb />
per for Sweet Scotch <lb />
lb sold in Co., which <lb />
is a of its superiority, at <lb />
the Old Brick Store. <lb />
The railroad through <lb />
ton u is fairly <lb />
Tobacco <lb />
a quantity of Tobacco Cloth <lb />
for Covering Tobacco Beds at <lb />
M. Lang. <lb />
Greenville Farmers Alliance bad <lb />
a last Saturday. <lb />
The office can sell <lb />
you good at a pack. <lb />
A nice visiting cards, plain, <lb />
bevel and gilt, just received at this <lb />
office. <lb />
Tut Richmond Stove Co's Stoves <lb />
sell on their own merit, soother <lb />
shipment just Sold only by <lb />
D. D. Co. <lb />
We are ready to write <lb />
receipts in our office. <lb />
pure water have no <lb />
chills, by iron drive pump <lb />
with pipe. Sold by <lb />
D. D. Co. <lb />
The County <lb />
will be in session next Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
The train came in on time <lb />
Saturday evening at A notch <lb />
should have been cut one of the <lb />
rails. <lb />
Position Wanted.-A man of <lb />
eight years experience in <lb />
per job a position <lb />
as compositor. temperate. <lb />
Address care <lb />
Greenville, C. <lb />
The ordinance baptism will be <lb />
administered in the Baptist <lb />
to-night. <lb />
Prof. System is <lb />
creating greater interest than ever <lb />
were tried before <lb />
Clerk E. A. <lb />
court keeps <lb />
Personal- <lb />
Mrs. A. L. Blow has been sick for <lb />
several days. , , <lb />
Hon. L. C. Latham is coil lined to <lb />
his <lb />
Miss Maggie Harvey, of <lb />
is visiting Mrs. O. <lb />
i Mrs. V. L. Stephens are <lb />
visiting her pa Hamilton. <lb />
Florida, who <lb />
has been visiting Mrs. Murphy, loft <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Mr. J. M. has been pros- <lb />
Kentucky for the past <lb />
week or two. <lb />
Mamie Duckett returned <lb />
Sunday a visit to relatives in <lb />
county. <lb />
Mr. L. the Tailor, has <lb />
the Baker on <lb />
Washington street. <lb />
Miss Ollie of Wilson, was <lb />
in town last week, visiting <lb />
of her Mr. B. A. <lb />
Miss Whitaker, representing the <lb />
Orphans Friend, spent a <lb />
day or two cf last week Green- <lb />
ville. <lb />
Ex-Gov. J. is <lb />
ed at home with the It <lb />
vented him attending Sew <lb />
Fair. <lb />
On Monday Mr. Flem- <lb />
the Superior Court <lb />
Clerk, Ilia resignation as a Justice <lb />
of the Peace. <lb />
We were glad to sec friend Joe <lb />
B. Latham, who recently left this <lb />
section moved to <lb />
in town last Thursday. <lb />
Mr. Goo. S. Terrell, agent for the <lb />
State Agricultural Department, has <lb />
town this week looking <lb />
business connected with tho De- <lb />
Messrs. J. J. Hill and sou, <lb />
the S. C Building and <lb />
Loan Association, spent the. <lb />
week in Greenville. We are <lb />
ice came <lb />
last <lb />
Girl <lb />
A copy, ti <lb />
to the <lb />
an I T-. <lb />
kins turned Will <lb />
ho assist told <lb />
him very <lb />
Miss <lb />
-is a<lb />
est, . <lb />
ii <lb />
baa <lb />
to which Was <lb />
given. One <lb />
from would have <lb />
writer's <lb />
name It IS a rule <lb />
publish <lb />
any article knows <lb />
who The need not <lb />
be sent for publication, <lb />
let I <lb />
K i . . p. <lb />
. <lb />
A waft present <lb />
at last <lb />
to witness <lb />
of the. Deacons, <lb />
Messrs, I. Tucker., 0- I. <lb />
D. L-. James. <lb />
The sermon preach- <lb />
ed W. of Tar- <lb />
who was -followed in <lb />
by J. Dow- <lb />
ell, Mr. <lb />
was and <lb />
qualification <lb />
and their duty. <lb />
that succeeded in <lb />
a good branch association here. <lb />
We were glad to have a call from <lb />
oar friend, Mr. Amos Brown, a deaf <lb />
mute, Saturday. For a number <lb />
of be lived near Greenville <lb />
with the family of Bey. Josephus <lb />
Latham, and early this year moved <lb />
to Washington to live with his <lb />
Mr, Latham, editor of <lb />
the Saturday he was re- <lb />
turning a visit to Mi. J, II. <lb />
Latham county. <lb />
Hot i to Short. <lb />
thief rob the <lb />
key roost, of Mr. Henry <lb />
one night last week, going early in j <lb />
the while Mr. Sheppard was <lb />
down-town. is wife heard tho <lb />
tin keys making a and took a j <lb />
pistol-and went out on the porch to <lb />
what the trouble was. The <lb />
ran the gate she sent <lb />
of the pistol alter him. <lb />
The doctors will have to be picking <lb />
glad balls out of some of these thieves <lb />
if they look sharp. <lb />
The people down this way with <lb />
pleasant weather that has prevailed <lb />
all winter sen hardly realize that <lb />
our the Western par <lb />
the State me having <lb />
snows. <lb />
was adopted, that all <lb />
ministers and School work-. <lb />
era present lie . <lb />
of Convention. <lb />
J. White and C. X. were <lb />
to get the names and <lb />
address of. -all Sunday <lb />
School <lb />
-On motion of It. B. a <lb />
of three wad appoint ed <lb />
rules, etc, K. B D. <lb />
Hunter A. N. <lb />
on <lb />
as follows We rec- <lb />
the of the <lb />
In; a a Vice- <lb />
Corresponding Secretary an <lb />
Executive three. To <lb />
till these offices we. recommend the <lb />
Pies., T. J. Jams; Vice- <lb />
Pres E. It. See., J. <lb />
; C. Sec, B. John ; <lb />
Ex. Com,. A. IX Hunt, r, B. D. <lb />
and L. Hi <lb />
A. moved to <lb />
the report, so as to include a <lb />
Vice-President for each township <lb />
the county, which with report <lb />
was <lb />
The retired and <lb />
reported the following selection of <lb />
from the several <lb />
townships Greenville, D. L. James; <lb />
ville, A. J. Beaver <lb />
Dam, J. B. , A; <lb />
Swift F. Harding <lb />
J. M. Cox; Ward. <lb />
W. U. I lag well; Carolina, <lb />
V. U. Whichard; Falkland, John <lb />
King ; A. A. Tyson. <lb />
R. B. John and G. A. Ogles- <lb />
by were appointed to escort the <lb />
President to the chair. <lb />
the chair Jams very <lb />
addressed the <lb />
much the interest of Sunday <lb />
good done <lb />
them. He was by A. <lb />
Hunter who of how Sun- <lb />
day Schools better citizens. <lb />
Mr. J. J. Hill, of Atlanta, was in <lb />
the convention and was invited <lb />
address toe body, and responded in <lb />
a very <lb />
The the adjourned to <lb />
J o'clock. <lb />
CHEAP CASH STORE <lb />
M. Co., <lb />
At Harry Skinner Co's Old Stand. <lb />
-DEALERS IN- <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, Shoos and <lb />
GROCERIES. <lb />
We shall always carry a complete stock of First-Class Goods. <lb />
Nothing Shoddy. <lb />
to <lb />
I be glad to have my old friends and oust <lb />
see us, and assure them that we can sell them goods <lb />
For <lb />
Give a trial and be that the way to buy goods is for <lb />
the spot cash. <lb />
JOHN S. CONGLETON. <lb />
N. C, January, <lb />
WILEY BROWN. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
NEW FIRM <lb />
Died. <lb />
In Saturday morn- <lb />
22nd, inst., Mrs. Martha <lb />
House, wile of our Mr. J. <lb />
It. House, departed this life niter an <lb />
illness of Weal months. She was <lb />
a daughter of J. W. Car <lb />
Bethel, and was not quite years <lb />
old at tune her death. Deceased <lb />
was married to Mr. House in Match, ., . <lb />
husband and two children <lb />
her. She a <lb />
tent member the Methodist <lb />
died in hope <lb />
the blessed hereafter. The remains <lb />
were interred Cherry <lb />
tery afternoon, B. it. <lb />
John tho funeral <lb />
Meeting opened with prayer. <lb />
The Committee on rendered <lb />
the <lb />
This organization shall be known <lb />
as the county Sunday School <lb />
Association. It shall be auxiliary <lb />
i to the Sunday School <lb />
i a lion and hall cooperate it in <lb />
S. <lb />
ties the people, making their <lb />
work mote <lb />
a general S. S. work. <lb />
All teachers Sun- <lb />
all ministers of the <lb />
gospel and such delegates as <lb />
Churches or Schools may <lb />
OWN BROTHERS <lb />
At R. Williams Son's Old Stand. <lb />
vices. <lb />
to them <lb />
The Steamer broke <lb />
shaft while up the river <lb />
evening. A tug boat- came from <lb />
Washington yesterday and went <lb />
up the to bring the <lb />
down. <lb />
The only snag we have stuck <lb />
this side of street is Ste- <lb />
We would down lit in but <lb />
he keeps such a nice lot fruit <lb />
and confections that it do to <lb />
be too hard him. <lb />
Some broke into the store <lb />
Mr O. M. Tucker, sis miles below <lb />
Greenville, Sunday and <lb />
stole pairs of shoes <lb />
boots and some other goods. There <lb />
is as yet no clue to thief. <lb />
J. A. who was <lb />
with the shooting of <lb />
on the of January 7th, <lb />
placed in jail, was released on bail <lb />
last week, lie was required to give <lb />
a vended bond in the sum of <lb />
profit and m all parts the country, and per- <lb />
to <lb />
send for his prospectus <lb />
be Cheaper free as advertised another column. <lb />
for every <lb />
to do in ad the town ll they <lb />
expect the town to advance. <lb />
OF from <lb />
the laxative juice <lb />
of California figs, combined with <lb />
virtues of plants <lb />
known to be most beneficial to the <lb />
human system, acts gently, on the <lb />
cleansing the system, dispelling <lb />
colds and headaches, and curing <lb />
constipation. <lb />
A cold wave was for <lb />
last Thursday but it exploded be- <lb />
fore They cannot <lb />
stand in our mild climate. <lb />
The brick work to the i ail road <lb />
bridge has been finished and the <lb />
whole structure will soon be com- <lb />
The wants lots of <lb />
new subscribers this year. It <lb />
campaign year they ought to <lb />
come in. <lb />
Several cases <lb />
Superior Court <lb />
last week. Ills <lb />
busy of late. <lb />
Hotel is on a boon in <lb />
patronage line. If Greenville only <lb />
bad a good hotel building host Skin- <lb />
would make a all around. <lb />
On Saturday we heard several <lb />
farmers speak of farm work being <lb />
very far advanced the time <lb />
year <lb />
The only observation the 22nd <lb />
here was several people being beard <lb />
to Why this is Washing- <lb />
ton's <lb />
From the number of people we <lb />
see going the stairway to <lb />
gallery, he must <lb />
be enjoying a largo patronage. <lb />
Will anything be done to that <lb />
skirt of trees just back tho <lb />
They should be cut down, b- <lb />
all means, so that a view of the <lb />
grounds may be had from the rail- <lb />
road- tho grounds ought to <lb />
be placed in better order and kept <lb />
Mr. Barrett, of Marlboro, was <lb />
in office yesterday <lb />
told us that several miles of <lb />
county fencing between this <lb />
had <lb />
recently been burned. Tallies in <lb />
Wilson county are supposed to have <lb />
fired the fence. <lb />
n-r Party. <lb />
Little Misses Tyson and <lb />
gave their little <lb />
friends a very party in <lb />
Mrs. James Brown's school room <lb />
last night. They invited <lb />
quite a to attend in mask, <lb />
which they did, the following <lb />
characters were well represented <lb />
Gypsy <lb />
tree. <lb />
Sugg. <lb />
Baby <lb />
Flower Sheppard. <lb />
Fortune Brown. <lb />
Belle of <lb />
Baby Williams. <lb />
Sugg. <lb />
Jockey White. <lb />
Robertson. <lb />
Country Perkins. <lb />
Wild Sugg. <lb />
Cow <lb />
Clause- Raymond Tyson. <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
Little Country Shep. <lb />
Duke or <lb />
Jarvis. <lb />
never was a masquerade in <lb />
in which the characters <lb />
represented were better sustained <lb />
by these little folks. It was a <lb />
pleasant affair and they had jolly <lb />
time until o'clock. <lb />
On Wednesday 19th <lb />
inst. at the residence of Mr Noah <lb />
Forbes, Jr., father of the bride, <lb />
Mr. W. A. Forbes and Miss Nannie <lb />
Forbes were married, Rev. J. E. <lb />
Craft officiating. A large <lb />
were the <lb />
a pleasant one. <lb />
Brigade. <lb />
A registered letter was mailed in <lb />
this State, the 1st <lb />
February a party ville <lb />
and was not delivered to him <lb />
the Nineteen days to go less <lb />
a hundred miles. This gives <lb />
some idea as to the slackness in <lb />
which mail service is conducted <lb />
at present. <lb />
Call and see the <lb />
grandest display in this <lb />
line ever shown in <lb />
Greenville <lb />
-n <lb />
yards Tobacco <lb />
Cloth for covering to- <lb />
beds, just re- <lb />
and will be sold <lb />
cheap. <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
New Advertisements. <lb />
A well established Millinery <lb />
is offered for sale See <lb />
headed <lb />
Mrs. L. C. King will the <lb />
House for boarders March <lb />
1st. The has nicely <lb />
furnished and the table will be first <lb />
class. See advertisement- <lb />
Death of J. <lb />
The many friends in Greenville or <lb />
that excellent Christian gentleman <lb />
and consecrated Minister of tho <lb />
Gospel, Dr. J. D. of Set- <lb />
land Neck, were pained to on <lb />
last Wednesday morning that bis <lb />
estimable wife had died the night <lb />
previous. For some months she had <lb />
been in wretched health, all had <lb />
hoped that she might be restored. <lb />
The funeral services were <lb />
in the Baptist Church of Scot- <lb />
land Neck on morning the <lb />
The weather was <lb />
yet a large crowd was present. <lb />
Scriptures read prayer was <lb />
offered by Dr. C. T. Bailey, editor <lb />
the Biblical Recorder. The <lb />
was preached by Dr. T. U. <lb />
ard. pastor of Church <lb />
The was <lb />
the theme of the sermon which was <lb />
solemn and well delivered. The <lb />
services at the grave were conduct- <lb />
ed by C. Durham, Secretary <lb />
of the Board of Missions and Sun- <lb />
day Schools of Baptist State <lb />
Convention of N. C The singing <lb />
was excellent well suited to the <lb />
occasion. Several preachers from <lb />
other were to <lb />
their sympathy and appreciation <lb />
for Dr. his family. <lb />
Rev. A. D. pastor the <lb />
Baptist Church was <lb />
attendance. <lb />
-------Having purchased entire stock of------- <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Boots, <lb />
Stows, and Furnishings. <lb />
Of Little, House Hie, we are determined to dispose of I hem at <lb />
VERY LOW PRICES. <lb />
We do not propose to sell at cost or below cost, but by buying <lb />
at a discount we can afford to sell at such prices that will astonish <lb />
you. <lb />
shall be <lb />
entitled to member-snip the <lb />
elation. Pastors and <lb />
of Schools are <lb />
to see to it that each school is <lb />
i represented <lb />
The of the Association <lb />
shall be a President, a <lb />
one from each <lb />
township, Secretary <lb />
responding an <lb />
Committee winch <lb />
shall he. annually. <lb />
The and <lb />
with the Ex. Com. time -and <lb />
place for an animal <lb />
for same and <lb />
other arrangements as they may <lb />
deem helpful to the <lb />
the objects this Association. <lb />
Each to i n.-hip shall <lb />
organize a township association aux- <lb />
to the county association. <lb />
After as to make <lb />
the of Corresponding <lb />
read Corresponding Secretary <lb />
and Treasurer the report was adopt-, <lb />
ed. <lb />
motion of E. C. <lb />
the Ex Com. was to <lb />
pare a statistical report of the Sun <lb />
day Schools the county and have <lb />
it ready by next meeting. <lb />
the State Convention <lb />
were then elected, <lb />
D G. A. <lb />
H., A. D. Hunter and Mrs. <lb />
F. . James. Alternates, J. U. <lb />
Tucker; D. L. James and A. L. <lb />
Blow. <lb />
The following questions which <lb />
had been handed to the Secretary <lb />
were read discussed by the par <lb />
ties named <lb />
Is it wise to offer rewards for at- <lb />
good lessons, in <lb />
Sunday Schools I J. White. <lb />
Is it best to put converted and <lb />
unconverted scholars a to- <lb />
G. A. Hun- <lb />
nod E. C. <lb />
use of S. S- helps. A. D. <lb />
Hunter- <lb />
How to teach, J. J. Hill and G. A. <lb />
How old aught children to be be- <lb />
fore they arc taken to S. B. B. <lb />
John. <lb />
What is the best plan for <lb />
a bad boy J. U. Tucker. <lb />
How will you get out an <lb />
f B C. Glenn. <lb />
Do S- S. picnics and parties effect <lb />
any permanent good f D. L. James <lb />
H. B. John, A. D. Hunter and D. J. <lb />
Whichard. <lb />
Aught an unconverted person lie <lb />
a teacher in S. S f B. II. Sugg and <lb />
A. D. <lb />
The convention then adjourned. <lb />
This is no Humbug-. See us before buying. <lb />
New Grocery Store <lb />
Next door to K. C. Glenn. I have a Grocery Store and <lb />
keep on hand a fine line <lb />
Meat. Hour, Coffee, Oil, Hum, <lb />
Candies, Cheese, Crackers, Tobacco, Cigars, Apples, <lb />
Bananas, Canned Goods and most everything usually kept in a <lb />
grocery store, well as Tinware, Crockery, Wood and <lb />
Willow Ware, Call and see us. Goods delivered free any <lb />
where-in town. <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, Greenville, N. C. <lb />
INTERESTING INFORMATION <lb />
Thai Man Stephens <lb />
-----WHO KEEPS SUCH A ASSORTMENT OF----- <lb />
CONFECTIONS AND FRUITS, <lb />
Says there is never any doubt of his giving you entire satisfaction <lb />
if yon just him a call when needing goods in his line, <lb />
lie keeps Nice Goods, Fresh Goods and Cheap Goods, lie also <lb />
keeps the beet Cigars Cigarettes. Remember the place. <lb />
V. <lb />
Confectioner and Fruiterer. <lb />
G. E. HARRIS, <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
N. C.<lb />
The iron bridge for tho <lb />
across the liver here arrived the <lb />
earn Sat and the workmen are <lb />
engaged this <lb />
The movements of the town <lb />
had as well be watched <lb />
now until the town election, so that <lb />
they may be made to vote In the <lb />
ward in they actually live. <lb />
Guard had a drill last Friday <lb />
afternoon in command of Capt. <lb />
About twenty-three were <lb />
out. The boys made some nice <lb />
Movement on the Court <lb />
on. <lb />
TO <lb />
COMMISSION MERCHANT, <lb />
-----AND DEALER IN----- <lb />
Greenville, <lb />
Attention is called to the <lb />
of Greenville <lb />
of N. C. Building and <lb />
The is a <lb />
in associations this <lb />
one offers splendid opportunities to <lb />
Greenville and vicinity. <lb />
We take pleasure in calling the <lb />
in to- j attention of our readers and of all <lb />
the good people to the our <lb />
little friend Charlie K. Sugg, sou of <lb />
Col. I. A. is prepared lo take <lb />
orders tor the life of Jefferson <lb />
vis, President of <lb />
States. Also be is prepared lo take <lb />
fill orders for Bibles, and <lb />
in we com- <lb />
mend him to the <lb />
household should hare these books <lb />
Ur. Davis share n <lb />
proceeds of the he lire of <lb />
Davis. i.-.- ., <lb />
S. Convention. <lb />
a number people <lb />
bled in the Court House last <lb />
Wednesday morning at o'clock, <lb />
pursuant to call had been <lb />
made for a county Sunday School <lb />
Convention. After a song lie v. G. <lb />
A. led in prayer, when Mr. <lb />
K. A. arose and in a short <lb />
address explained the object of the <lb />
meeting and spoke upon the good <lb />
Sunday School work, then declared <lb />
the convention ready for business. <lb />
motion of Rev. G. A. Ogles- <lb />
by E. A. was made temporary <lb />
D. J. Whichard <lb />
Secretary. <lb />
motion of B. John a <lb />
consisting one <lb />
each denomination represented way <lb />
A Lady's Perfect Companion. <lb />
Our new by Dr. John II. Dye, <lb />
on of Mew York's most skillful <lb />
shows that pain is not necessary <lb />
in childbirth, results from <lb />
easily understood and overcome. It <lb />
that any woman may be. <lb />
come a mother without any <lb />
It also tells how to over <lb />
come and prevent morning sickness and <lb />
the many other evils attending <lb />
It is highly endorsed by physicians <lb />
everywhere as the wife's true private <lb />
companion. Cut this It will save <lb />
you great pain, and possibly your life. <lb />
Scud two-cent Stamp tor descriptive cir- <lb />
testimonials, and <lb />
letters sent sealed envelope. <lb />
Thomas Co., <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
THIS OF <lb />
i son Davis, Bibles. in <lb />
In I am <lb />
prepared to take orders for the these <lb />
good books, which be In the <lb />
of every person. I shall be glad <lb />
to take orders from nil who to <lb />
any of these bocks, Orders <lb />
left at my Col. A. <lb />
The commute; R. O. <lb />
Glenn, C. D. B. <lb />
W. and <lb />
or addressed to me will prompt at-<lb />
R. <lb />
X. C. <lb />
ENJOYS <lb />
Both the method and results when <lb />
Syrup of Figs is taken; it is pleasant <lb />
and refreshing to the taste, and acts <lb />
yet promptly on the Kidneys, <lb />
Liver and Bowels, cleanses the sys- <lb />
rm dispels colds, head- <lb />
and fevers and cures habitual <lb />
Syrup of Figs is the <lb />
sly remedy of its kind ever pro- <lb />
pleasing to tho taste and ac- <lb />
to the stomach, prompt in <lb />
action and truly beneficial in its <lb />
prepared only from the most <lb />
substances, its <lb />
many excellent qualities commend it <lb />
to all have made it the most <lb />
popular remedy known. <lb />
Syrup of Figs is for ads in <lb />
and bottles by all leading drug- <lb />
gists. Any reliable druggist who <lb />
may cot have on hand will pro <lb />
core it promptly for any one who <lb />
wishes to try it. Do not accept any <lb />
substitute. <lb />
no co. <lb />
BAH CAL. <lb />
a. mm mac <lb />
HOUSE. Will be <lb />
opened for Boarders on March 1st. <lb />
The building has Inst hi nicely fur- <lb />
throughout will- re- <lb />
every attention. Table <lb />
with best the market Both <lb />
regular and transient boarders cm be <lb />
moderate. <lb />
-Mils. I,. O. KING, <lb />
TYSON BAWLS, <lb />
BANKERS, <lb />
O. <lb />
We have opened the or ton- <lb />
a genera I <lb />
Money to Loin n Approved Security <lb />
Oil <lb />
and <lb />
made promptly. <lb />
i-e <lb />
GREENVILLE BRANCH <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
ASSOCIATION. <lb />
F. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
D. WHICH At; Tress., <lb />
I. A. <lb />
A home Institution. Loans on <lb />
try a well proper. A chance <lb />
h home. <lb />
TORi <lb />
T. J. <lb />
Harry <lb />
Mm <lb />
b. II. <lb />
D. <lb />
. For I apply to <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, <lb />
Wholesale Retail III <lb />
STAPLE <lb />
GREENVILLE. N <lb />
in Mock and lo strive <lb />
Car Load Seed Oats. <lb />
Cm Load Rib Bide Meat. <lb />
Car Load St. Flour, in all <lb />
grades. <lb />
Heavy Moss Pork. . <lb />
Granulated Sugar. <lb />
Sugar. <lb />
Ax Snuff, all <lb />
kinds. <lb />
Rail Road Mills Snuff. <lb />
Snuff. <lb />
Rico Molasses. <lb />
II <lb />
SO Tubs Huston Lard. <lb />
Cases Star Lye. <lb />
Gross Matches. <lb />
Also lull line leaking <lb />
Starch, Tobacco, Co, MS, Crack- <lb />
Candles, Canned Goods, Wrapping <lb />
Paper, Paper Banks, <lb />
Special prices given in the wholesale <lb />
Wide on large of the. <lb />
goods. <lb />
J. A. ANDREWS. <lb />
Washington <lb />
AGENCY, <lb />
Engines and Boilers, <lb />
All sizes mid con used. <lb />
MILLS, <lb />
Circular and Shingle Saws, <lb />
Rubber and Leather <lb />
Shafting, Pulleys, Ac. <lb />
In fact the machine line. <lb />
We represent the standard <lb />
of the land and can Mil as low a <lb />
the lowest and on better terms. <lb />
Write for terms and <lb />
wan agency, <lb />
K. Manager <lb />
Washington, N. C. <lb />
R J. C C T. M. <lb />
Pill Co. N C Co C N C <lb />
Cobb <lb />
Cotton Factors, <lb />
E. A. <lb />
V. O, <lb />
I. A. Sugg, <lb />
J. h- <lb />
AND- <lb />
Commission Merchants, <lb />
SOLICIT SHIPMENT of COTTON, <lb />
We have had many years ex- <lb />
at the business are <lb />
prepared to handle to <lb />
advantage of shippers. <lb />
All business entrusted to our <lb />
hands will receive prompt and <lb />
careful <lb />
ESTABLISHED 1875. <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ, <lb />
AT THE <lb />
OLD BRICK STOKE. <lb />
AND MERCHANTS BUY- <lb />
i- their year's supplies will It to <lb />
their Interest to get our prices <lb />
is complete <lb />
in all Its branches. <lb />
SIDES SHOULDERS, <lb />
COFFEE, SUGAR, <lb />
TEAS, to. <lb />
always at Lowest Market Prices. <lb />
we buy direct Manufacturers, ens- <lb />
you at one profit. A <lb />
stock of <lb />
always on and sold at prices lo suit <lb />
the times. Our goods are all bought Slid <lb />
sold for CASH, therefore, having no risk <lb />
to run, we sell in t close <lb />
Respectfully, <lb />
S. M. SCHULTZ. <lb />
Greenville. M. C <lb />
Having associated II. S. <lb />
In the <lb />
art really to serve I lie people In <lb />
capacity. All notes and <lb />
me for past services have been placed <lb />
the Mr. Sheppard n. <lb />
JOHN <lb />
We keep on hand nil limes s nice <lb />
stock of Burial Cases end Caskets of ill <lb />
kinds can furnish anything r <lb />
from the Case down to <lb />
Pitt county Pine We an I <lb />
up with all conveniences and run <lb />
satisfactory to all who in . <lb />
US . <lb />
1-s-. <lb />
RECEIVED AT <lb />
Store, <lb />
Front Office. <lb />
Golden Medical War- <lb />
Cure, <lb />
of I ins <lb />
S. S- S., H. <lb />
hum; <lb />
Mills <lb />
Meal. Will every <lb />
TUESDAY <lb />
White, <lb />
N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00018976_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
i-S J------ <lb />
f to km p so ct <lb />
few BO a I fur sing i . It Hit and <lb />
; m Ma from the linens to the <lb />
LADY- i -f pi bat I and want every- <lb />
clean as . <lb />
We to U next akin <lb />
in i. u is which <lb />
to i . . <lb />
la told ma, Row <lb />
tr WELDON R. B <lb />
and Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS GOING SOUTH. <lb />
HoS, No <lb />
Pee. Mil, daily Fart Mail, daily <lb />
ex Sun.<lb />
Ar Mount M am <lb />
A r <lb />
Ar am am <lb />
Ar <lb />
Ar <lb />
run <lb />
-4 <lb />
At M,.;,,,, <lb />
Ar <lb />
GOING<lb />
Money to Loan. <lb />
ON IMPROVED in sums of <lb />
and upwards. Loans are <lb />
in small annual <lb />
through a period of live year thus <lb />
the borrower to pay oft his <lb />
without exhausting his <lb />
ii an.- one Apply to <lb />
MURPHY. <lb />
Greenville, X. O <lb />
EMORY <lb />
MM Bows <lb />
an <lb />
parts of the globs. <lb />
rare, seat on to P-of. <lb />
A. SB <lb />
daily <lb />
ex Sun. <lb />
OB a in pin <lb />
Magnolia I am <lb />
a SI <lb />
4- <lb />
A r <lb />
Ar <lb />
T Wilson -i am pin <lb />
Ar I S l <lb />
A r <lb />
Ar <lb />
i Sin <lb />
t 4-i <lb />
In Jo am <lb />
pin pin <lb />
IT. <lb />
Train on i I <lb />
M., <lb />
at no M. <lb />
I. U. 7.00 <lb />
A. XI. at A. M. <lb />
all except Sunday. <lb />
Train X via A <lb />
A K. It. daily except <lb />
V. Sunday M. <lb />
w. Hi no-ton. X P M. M. <lb />
leaves X daily <lb />
Sunday. M A M. A <lb />
K. X M A M. <lb />
Train on Midland X C leaves <lb />
daily except Sunday. GOO A M, <lb />
X C, SO a M. <lb />
leaves Smithfield. R S A M. <lb />
arrive Goldsboro, X C, A M. <lb />
Train on Nashville Branch leaves Bock <lb />
at P M, arrives Nashville I <lb />
I Hope II P M. <lb />
MoM- i A M. <lb />
M. arrives Rocky Mount IS A <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trail, on Clinton leaves <lb />
for daily, except Sunday, <lb />
II A leave <lb />
ton A M, and S P. M. <lb />
i lad <lb />
train on Wilson A <lb />
Is North bound <lb />
K. except Sunday. <lb />
Train South will stop only at <lb />
Goldsboro and Magnolia. <lb />
Train No. makes close connection at <lb />
Ti If-II for points daily. All <lb />
via and daily except Sun- <lb />
via Hay Line. <lb />
Trains make close connection for <lb />
paint North via Richmond and <lb />
Al trans run solid between <lb />
ml and have Pullman <lb />
Sleepers attached. <lb />
J. K. K Transportation <lb />
T M. A. t <lb />
WANTED r <lb />
; s- <lb />
Sample A rare <lb />
o. A. st M. Y. <lb />
ENGLISH <lb />
PILLS.<lb />
HAIR <lb />
i . the hair. <lb />
Cr <lb />
wanted <lb />
to sell <lb />
no more I <lb />
pins needed. It <lb />
holds <lb />
est <lb />
pins <lb />
do not <lb />
freeze to it and <lb />
blow <lb />
NO <lb />
It is n perfect <lb />
w t r line. <lb />
Sample line by <lb />
for <lb />
also ft. line <lb />
b mail <lb />
For <lb />
circular, <lb />
list, ad- <lb />
dress Hie <lb />
less CI o t h es <lb />
I Jim Co. <lb />
Ii St. <lb />
MADE WATER, <lb />
N C. <lb />
r v. <lb />
,, . .-in M. Sal . e <lb />
. <lb />
r, v . -o <lb />
j. . ., Ii . . . <lb />
. . . . <lb />
; l in . ii <lb />
a, t I SI <lb />
I pin Lily <lb />
sun <lb />
No L X. It <lb />
II. Vised I . <lb />
f.- I r. <lb />
mm p in <lb />
ti s <lb />
o ; I a SI <lb />
ii I <lb />
f i ;. S<lb />
., Creek . <lb />
0.1; <lb />
M i <lb />
t 4- 3.1 I<lb />
S 2-i <lb />
.; a-41 .-Oil <lb />
AI la -2 <lb />
Morehead iv <lb />
Ml H V Atlantic Until <lb />
pm Draft am <lb />
Thursday and Saturday. <lb />
and Friday. <lb />
i mutt i <lb />
Train bound North, <lb />
a. in., and With <lb />
A Train We.-I. <lb />
. III. <lb />
Train with d <lb />
Train, at <lb />
in., and with and <lb />
Train at p. m <lb />
and <lb />
Train, leaving <lb />
p in and with It <lb />
And k <lb />
p. m. <lb />
no <lb />
Why another new discovery by Alfred <lb />
Oiler in way of helping the afflict- <lb />
a. calling on or the <lb />
above named can procure a <lb />
of Preparation is <lb />
far and causing the <lb />
hair to be Soft and <lb />
only two or three a <lb />
is and a common hair <lb />
is all to be used after the <lb />
for a few minute with <lb />
Try a bottle and be <lb />
cents-. <lb />
fully, <lb />
Barber, <lb />
THYSELF, <lb />
A Scientific and Standard Treatise <lb />
the Youth, <lb />
i . Debility, of the <lb />
Folly, Vice, <lb />
Vt.-r-mine the <lb />
or Social <lb />
this <lb />
It contain page, royal Beautiful <lb />
full only by <lb />
; concealed In plain r. <lb />
Free. Ii yon now. The <lb />
author, Wm. ii. M D. re- <lb />
AND JEWELLED MEDAL, <lb />
from the National Medical <lb />
for he, ESSAY on and <lb />
PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Ir. <lb />
Of may be <lb />
I y or In person, at the of <lb />
No. St., Ma-, lo <lb />
for or for advice be <lb />
m above. <lb />
SMITH, <lb />
ARTIST, <lb />
Greenville f . <lb />
We have IV <lb />
Chair ever in tin-art. <lb />
sharp and guaranteed <lb />
in every Call h- i <lb />
Ladies waited on <lb />
Notice I <lb />
for <lb />
falling nut of hair, end <lb />
i before <lb />
the many who nave u-en nil <lb />
wonderful I refer t. <lb />
lowing named who <lb />
lo the truth of my . <lb />
Lath am. Greenville. <lb />
Mr. O.<lb />
Any one to give it a trial <lb />
the above named can procure <lb />
it from in, at my place of business, for <lb />
S 1.50 per bottle. <lb />
ALFRED CULLEY. Barber. <lb />
March C , <lb />
BOOKS <lb />
T. of <lb />
C. <lb />
He on hand a floe <lb />
of the book at publisher's prices. <lb />
fall on for large or <lb />
pulpit, family or pocket size. <lb />
II;. urn <lb />
and work <lb />
Can you any book you want on <lb />
short <lb />
EASTERN REFLECTOR, <lb />
N. <lb />
ram mm old. <lb />
m old tho hill. <lb />
old when tho earth w <lb />
Th. Bloom of It -aye t the lay of It <lb />
Love's sons wherever It sung. <lb />
Tie not Ii in.- bat That woman <lb />
as a river flow down to these, <lb />
Andaman bow old oceans mores I <lb />
Man conies him <lb />
The sea Is a bold a the wind and tide <lb />
Mar choose, and It shakes the shore; <lb />
As H cots a swath In the sands so <lb />
With a roar.- <lb />
Bat over the bar the waves are lees. <lb />
Where old ocean the river. <lb />
And she lives be. ah, re I <lb />
What doe old ocean give her <lb />
The tale Is as old as the oldest hills, <lb />
Twas old when the earth you <lb />
The Bloom of I the Joy of it fills <lb />
wherever It's <lb />
Tis nothing bat That a flow <lb />
A a woman Urea for her lover; <lb />
And the sea T Who the water knows <lb />
The likeness he skull discover. <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
ram <lb />
A Pathetic Which la Vouched far <lb />
by <lb />
A pathetic story of the late Mr i. Ruth- <lb />
B. Hayes, and one that is said to <lb />
be for by the ex -President, is <lb />
printed in the January number of the <lb />
Home Magazine. It is as <lb />
Some of her nearest relatives had died <lb />
of paralysis and she had a premonition <lb />
that she, too, would pass away with the <lb />
same disorder. She had a long talk with <lb />
her husband on the about three <lb />
years ago. He to away <lb />
her fears with light and kindly words. <lb />
Early last autumn, just about the time <lb />
of the anniversary of the death of lier <lb />
brother, who had passed away in paralysis, <lb />
the spoke of her premonitions again. <lb />
Her fears now amounted to an absolute <lb />
conviction, and she spoke of her end by <lb />
paralysis as an event certain to take place. <lb />
None of the endeavors of her to <lb />
turn her thoughts to a more cheerful sub- <lb />
could a Tail. She quietly on <lb />
arranging with him her business and <lb />
other affairs. She put her in perfect <lb />
order. <lb />
she finally said, I be <lb />
stricken with paralysis, as I I <lb />
be, I will not, as yon know, be able to <lb />
peak. But perhaps I still may be <lb />
lo hear. You may me then <lb />
my mind is serene and clear, whether I <lb />
at ease and free from pain. For th i <lb />
answer yes to these questions I shall <lb />
press your hand. If I cannot truthfully <lb />
reply in the my hand will <lb />
not clasp <lb />
days after this what she feared <lb />
would happen came to pass She was <lb />
down with paralysis. <lb />
Her organs of ch benumbed. <lb />
not utter a word. Then all <lb />
had cam s sadly back to the <lb />
i of her devoted husband. Looking <lb />
down into her shining he took her <lb />
hand in his and asked the questions <lb />
which days before she had <lb />
dear, are you at ease Is <lb />
ii ml serene and clear and are you <lb />
trout <lb />
Slowly the poor white fingers closed <lb />
n his giving a reassuring <lb />
The next day the bravo and <lb />
wife was dead. <lb />
Trying- to A <lb />
Sugar a Larger Scale. <lb />
It is pretty generally known that chem- <lb />
can produce in their laboratory from <lb />
rags a substance very similar to sugar <lb />
and the same sweetening proper- <lb />
ties, says the St. Louis Republic. he Ger- <lb />
mans are at work trying to produce <lb />
artificial mi on a large scale, and <lb />
though i s production for practical <lb />
poses has not yet been consider- <lb />
able advancement has been male and <lb />
many steps taken toward ultimate sue <lb />
Herr Emil Fischer succeeded in <lb />
obtaining true sugar, which will undergo <lb />
alcoholic when yeast i <lb />
plied, just like ordinary sugar. There <lb />
is only one thing wanting in this, new <lb />
chemical product, it does not <lb />
differ from the natural product, and that <lb />
U that it is optically in will not <lb />
rotate a single beam of polarized light <lb />
either to the right or left. <lb />
that sweet anchor of so <lb />
many recent is tho start- <lb />
point in the of <lb />
as the new product is called, and which <lb />
must not be confounded with <lb />
which is not a sugar and can never <lb />
take the place of sugar as an article of <lb />
diet The discoverers of are <lb />
of making a k-i f. sugar at no <lb />
distant day, and their work is being <lb />
watched with interest not only by the <lb />
but by th industrial <lb />
commercial world welL <lb />
la <lb />
The natives in the east who have <lb />
r Hi.- familiar with foreigners and <lb />
customs very readily to the custom <lb />
of New Year's <lb />
day, one lady had a very peculiar <lb />
experience with a native official in Seoul <lb />
year. <lb />
She was keeping and <lb />
had made some preparations for <lb />
her guests in the proper manner. <lb />
Among other things, she had prepared <lb />
with her own bands a very excellent <lb />
rake, which she expected to distribute <lb />
in bits to all who might favor her <lb />
with n A party of native gentle- <lb />
men arrived, and, having given one of <lb />
Diem a cup of too, she placed this lino <lb />
cake him, with an invitation to <lb />
She then went with the <lb />
others to another room, and was gone <lb />
some time. returned, she <lb />
saw to her horror that her beautiful <lb />
had all but disappeared down the throat <lb />
of the who had tried his best <lb />
to do the polite to his <lb />
country's not leave any of <lb />
the food set before him, thus showing <lb />
his appreciation of the host's table <lb />
hospitality. The lady's vexation was <lb />
banished by a feeling of n <lb />
for the miserable man, who seemed to <lb />
be very much in need of an emetic just <lb />
then. It is said that this call was his <lb />
first and last on that day, as he declared <lb />
to a friend foreigners must all <lb />
stomach, if they could go from home to <lb />
house and do justice to the hospitality <lb />
of each. Homo <lb />
The are much displeased <lb />
over a competitor who is steal- <lb />
their host practice ; mean Dr. <lb />
Hull's Conch Syrup. <lb />
To Mm n t u Accident- a re <lb />
occurring among en- <lb />
ins of time and Keep <lb />
Salvation Oil Price K et. <lb />
Is a hat yon ought to have, in fact <lb />
must have it to folly life. <lb />
searching for it daily and <lb />
mourning Bud It not. <lb />
Thousand noon thousands of dollars are <lb />
annually by people In the hope <lb />
that, they attain And yet <lb />
it may by all. that <lb />
If used <lb />
Ions and the In trill bring <lb />
digestion and the demon <lb />
dyspepsia and Install instead <lb />
recommend Kilter <lb />
awl all eases of stomach <lb />
Mid Kidneys, e and It a at <lb />
A SAILOR'S <lb />
A. II. <lb />
believe In the Dutch <lb />
man, said Tom as he <lb />
took a tip from hi can In the of <lb />
the and set It down again. <lb />
most certainly do,, for the <lb />
like, in my cruising among the water of <lb />
the world. <lb />
heard a great deal about the Fly- <lb />
Dutchman and other specter craft, <lb />
but I was However, after my <lb />
own experience, I am willing to <lb />
phantom ships, witches, sea serpents, <lb />
and in fact everything. <lb />
just gone home after a fire <lb />
year's cruise, and I had saved up my <lb />
money so as to take a nice little sum <lb />
home to the old woman, and I was <lb />
come. <lb />
Having been gone for so long, aid be- <lb />
no hand with a pen to write home, I <lb />
was afraid Mary might hare got spliced <lb />
again, believing that I had set sail for the <lb />
port of Paradise, <lb />
no; the was true to the sailor <lb />
lad, though the country parson was <lb />
cruising round her pretty sharp, and try- <lb />
to beat windward of her affections. <lb />
then, Mary had a comfortable <lb />
home which was all paid for, and the <lb />
son only got half a hundred a year. <lb />
broke up that <lb />
and silenced his yarns of <lb />
for Mary, when I ran in and drop- <lb />
anchor at the old home. <lb />
was in 1845, that I got connected <lb />
with the ship Falcon, cruising for right <lb />
whales in the Son t n Pacific <lb />
We were away down in latitude sixty- <lb />
three, having followed the whales south- <lb />
ward with extremely good luck, although <lb />
with constant danger from bodies of ice, <lb />
which were drifting from the Antarctic <lb />
circle, when we fell in with the <lb />
doc from our own port; and her captain, <lb />
bringing with him his mate <lb />
and two boat crews, came on board of <lb />
t see Captain Collier, commander. <lb />
Of course, a good chat was had among <lb />
officers and hands. <lb />
left home a year later than <lb />
Ourselves, the men had <lb />
advantage of us in the way of news; and <lb />
they told how such a ship was lying in <lb />
docks when they came away; how such <lb />
another was loading at tho head of the <lb />
wharf; how the Morrison had <lb />
just got in, and the L. B. Stafford been <lb />
heard from; and who had got married <lb />
in the year's interval, and who died <lb />
etc., etc. <lb />
But presently they informed us of a <lb />
singular circumstance, which only a few <lb />
days before had occurred in connection <lb />
with themselves. Right in the of <lb />
a school of whales, they had encountered <lb />
Flying Dutchman, which had <lb />
cleared their stern by not more than ten <lb />
feet, and on her deck they saw the <lb />
crew were dressed in white, which were <lb />
silent and motionless as corpses. <lb />
mates, you know it is <lb />
to deny, to a person's face, ex- <lb />
of a thing which he assures us <lb />
that he has seen; however I'm not over <lb />
nice in this particular. <lb />
One of our crew said that be would <lb />
try to believe enough of their story to <lb />
oblige them; this, with an old tar <lb />
like Perry Davis Davis he is <lb />
and gone an con- <lb />
with regard to <lb />
doubt Thus it may well lie <lb />
that no attempt was to dis- <lb />
guise the incredulity with which the ac- <lb />
count of the crew was re <lb />
in our <lb />
mates evidently thought that there <lb />
might be some foundation of fact for the <lb />
story, but they were not prepared to ac- <lb />
all its <lb />
was desirable to know the <lb />
Captain would have to say <lb />
on the subject <lb />
our visitors, ask old <lb />
man. You can't take the turns out of <lb />
what he says. <lb />
We soon found that Captain <lb />
the story of his men. d <lb />
relate I the yum to <lb />
lain Collier, while his mate was no lea <lb />
in the same direction. <lb />
males, therefore, that <lb />
tho crew seen some- <lb />
thing very remarkable, nil hough to what <lb />
degree fear and might have <lb />
clothed it with terror beyond the <lb />
was i till uncertain. <lb />
all we were placed sharply <lb />
on tho lookout for an object so a <lb />
hoping, yet half dreading, lo sec it. <lb />
some days Flying <lb />
formed the chief of <lb />
on board the and all that any <lb />
crew had ever heard or read <lb />
the mysterious craft was up <lb />
afresh nod related with new <lb />
One night as were running t-lowly <lb />
we sighted a large which <lb />
coming right down upon as, and the cap- <lb />
jammed his helm to port and hailed <lb />
her hard. <lb />
Ii paid no attention to and <lb />
came straighten, just our atom <lb />
by not more than six feet. It was a <lb />
row and tho crew, most of whom <lb />
on deck, were <lb />
I noticed something that I did <lb />
not like. <lb />
the schooner was white all over <lb />
from hull to and on her decks <lb />
crew I saw were in while, and <lb />
they were as and motionless as <lb />
corpses. schooner also carried with <lb />
her a chilly air that made me shiver, and <lb />
felt uncommonly uncomfortable. In <lb />
fact, it was the Flying D <lb />
had appeared to us in the same manner <lb />
as had to the crew. <lb />
We got safely into port, but we sent a <lb />
dead ashore, for one of the crew <lb />
died day after we had seen tho <lb />
phantom schooner, and this act me think- <lb />
more about tho craft, <lb />
months later we again sighted <lb />
the white schooner. She and <lb />
coining on a course that would bi her <lb />
across our bows, if tho captain hold en. <lb />
mates, the Falcon was a fast <lb />
sailor, and the captain was determined to <lb />
make white craft go astern. 8- we <lb />
out the reefs, crowded on all she <lb />
carry, arid sent her ahead a slap- <lb />
ping pace. the white her <lb />
own without putting Out another stitch <lb />
of canvas. <lb />
last we were so near that the can- <lb />
Han determined to hail her and <lb />
Schooner No answer. <lb />
Schooner ahoy, ahoy <lb />
no answer, and he shouted, Coo- <lb />
yon, what is that T <lb />
still, and then right <lb />
bows went the stranger. <lb />
I felt the same chill as before, <lb />
and in the d I saw that same <lb />
crew. <lb />
next moment came one of the <lb />
crew from below, and reasserted the cap- <lb />
to shorten sail, as the cook, who was <lb />
ill, was much shaken up. <lb />
took in canvas, hot it did no good, <lb />
for the man died the following day, and <lb />
then I began to think that the craft was <lb />
and not sailed by men. <lb />
several months we continued <lb />
cruising for whales, without seeing the <lb />
craft, and my spirit rose, until one moon- <lb />
light night as ware going into port, <lb />
we again saw that same identical <lb />
tom <lb />
come out from somewhere <lb />
us, overhauled and glided <lb />
by close that I could <lb />
have thrown a line board, not <lb />
answer could we get to <lb />
I I found--at say <lb />
old lady had id her life's cable, hes- <lb />
Though fiat was- <lb />
years ago, I <lb />
ABOUT <lb />
has passed an act to prevent <lb />
the practice of fraud by tree peddlers in <lb />
the sale of nursery stock. Peddlers from <lb />
other states before being allowed to sell <lb />
must file an affidavit with the secretary <lb />
of State of Minnesota that they are all <lb />
right and enter into bonds to the <lb />
same effect <lb />
By mulching newly set trees or plants <lb />
late in the fall or early winter, the dam- <lb />
age from thawing and freezing may be <lb />
Another advantage, <lb />
with fruit, is that it often delays <lb />
in the spring, and in this way <lb />
prevent the fruit from being damaged. <lb />
The strongest wood in the United <lb />
States, according to Professor Sargent, <lb />
is that of the nutmeg hickory of the Ar- <lb />
region, and the weakest is the <lb />
West Indian birch. The most elastic it <lb />
the tamarack, the white or <lb />
hickory ranking far below it The <lb />
having the highest specific gravity is tho <lb />
blue wood of Texas. <lb />
Magnitude of Agriculture. <lb />
As far back as 1890 the value of the <lb />
farms of the United States exceeded ten <lb />
thousand million dollars. To the <lb />
industry of their owners <lb />
farms yielded an aggregate annual value <lb />
of nearly four thousand million dollars, <lb />
in the production of which a vast <lb />
of nearly eight million toilers <lb />
utilize I nearly half a billion worth of <lb />
farm implements. The value of live <lb />
stock on farms, estimated in the last <lb />
census to be worth over one thousand <lb />
five hundred million of dollars, is shown <lb />
by the reliable statistics collected by the <lb />
Department of Agriculture to be to-day <lb />
two thousand five and seven million <lb />
dollars. A low estimate of the number <lb />
of farmers and farm laborers employed <lb />
on our five million farms places it at <lb />
nearly ten million persons, representing <lb />
thirty million people, or nearly one-half <lb />
of our present population. Secretary <lb />
Rusk adds that the productive- <lb />
of our agriculture and the prosper- <lb />
of our farmers the entire wealth and <lb />
prosperity of the whole nation depend. <lb />
The trade and commerce of this vast <lb />
country, of which we so proudly boast, <lb />
the great transportation facilities so <lb />
greatly developed during the past <lb />
of a century, are all possible only <lb />
because the underlying industry of them <lb />
all, agriculture, has called them into be- <lb />
Even the product of our mines is <lb />
only valuable because of the commerce <lb />
and the wealth created by our <lb />
These are strong assertion, but <lb />
they are assertions fully justified by the <lb />
facts and recognized world over by <lb />
the highest authorities In political econ-<lb />
frog Farming <lb />
Hie frog editor in some <lb />
paper must have been let loose again, to <lb />
judge from the many inquiries we re- <lb />
every day about frog farming. <lb />
The principal frog farms are said to <lb />
in New Jersey. We have traveled <lb />
through the State of New Jersey in all <lb />
directions, but hare been able to <lb />
discover one of these frog farms, nor <lb />
have any of our many correspondents in <lb />
that State ever beard of such a thing. <lb />
The very nature of frog prevents their <lb />
being raised in large quantities in <lb />
The young frogs live principally <lb />
on small insects and crustaceans, and <lb />
how to provide these In sufficient <lb />
ties would be the groat problem in such <lb />
an undertaking. If their is such a thing <lb />
as a successful frog raising establishment <lb />
anywhere in existence, we would be <lb />
tempted to travel a great way to see it <lb />
American Agriculturist <lb />
Sawyer's Sam. <lb />
It pays to keep a scrap book. It is a <lb />
way of storing up knowledge. When <lb />
you read a good thing, particularly if it <lb />
is new, cut it out and paste it where it <lb />
can be referred to again. <lb />
Take no advice without submitting it <lb />
to the test of your judgment What <lb />
man found good may not tho best <lb />
thing for you. <lb />
A thinking cap is the most useful tool <lb />
to keep about the house. It will save <lb />
many a dollar from being put it <lb />
will do no good. <lb />
Educate your boys to work and <lb />
to deny themselves tho fripperies and <lb />
vanities of life. No boy was ever <lb />
a farmer by driving a fast horse or at- <lb />
tending all the Kills. <lb />
Good books and newspapers arc an at- <lb />
traction that no farmer with a family <lb />
can afford to do without It is money <lb />
well spent make home attractive <lb />
and an aid to useful knowledge. <lb />
Reading and study arc trees of slow <lb />
growth. They do not produce an early <lb />
crop; but when they begin to bear they <lb />
yield largely and last for a lifetime. <lb />
Bar for Home Use and <lb />
If to Vie used for tho farm do not <lb />
it to got too rip; if to be sold for haling, <lb />
the do not mind the hard <lb />
stems, they think that there Is more <lb />
in it So there would be in <lb />
shingles a-id in any kind of wood. <lb />
beginning of flowering is the proper <lb />
time to begin clover, as well as <lb />
the grasses. by hard and <lb />
woody i senior thin orchard grass. <lb />
It better hay to sell, but not so <lb />
good to feed out <lb />
Fattening Animal. <lb />
Only a portion of the food of an <lb />
is stored up as fat; a large share is <lb />
expended in keeping tho warm. <lb />
If the weather be mild, much less of the <lb />
food will be require lo keep up the heat, <lb />
and more will go to laying on fat There <lb />
are two kinds of food <lb />
producers and flesh formers. Every <lb />
farmer who fattens animals, whether <lb />
beeves or poultry, should study the com- <lb />
position of food, that he may feed most <lb />
profitably. <lb />
The Best Salve in the world for rut, <lb />
Sore. Salt <lb />
Sore. Hands <lb />
and all Skin <lb />
and positively cure Tile, or no <lb />
It is guaranteed to <lb />
or money <lb />
cents per box. For sale h <lb />
L. Wooten. <lb />
All honest, conscientious <lb />
give II. ft. B. <lb />
a t rial, frankly admit Its superiority over <lb />
ALL ether blood medicines. <lb />
Pr. W. t I flail Will Ha <lb />
regard II. It. B. as one of the best<lb />
A. H. Nashville. Tenn. <lb />
of II. II. B. are fa- <lb />
it speedy action is wonder- <lb />
Dr. J. W. Rhodes. <lb />
confess B. B. B. is <lb />
end quickest medicine for rheumatism I <lb />
have <lb />
Dr. J. Ga. <lb />
cheerfully recommend <lb />
as a flue tonic Its use cured <lb />
an excrescence of neck r other <lb />
remedies effected no perceptible <lb />
Dr. II. Montgomery. <lb />
Ala., writes mother Instated on my <lb />
celling B. B. R. for her rheumatism, as <lb />
her stubbornly resisted <lb />
She experienced Immediate <lb />
and her improvement has been <lb />
A physician who w Mies his <lb />
name not given, patient of <lb />
mil e whose ease of tertiary syphilis was <lb />
mil killing him, which no treat- <lb />
inn it seemed to check, cured <lb />
twelve bottles of B. II. B. <lb />
lie tip skin and <lb />
The Eastern Reflector, <lb />
IN COMBINATION WITH <lb />
if says the Springfield <lb />
EASTERN M., <lb />
AWAKE <lb />
if AT THIS OFFICE <lb />
NOVEMBER <lb />
WHO Of <lb />
OffER <lb />
FOR THE YOUNGER YOUNG FOLKS. <lb />
B-s , -y f-m , offers combination Tales with <lb />
Eastern Reflector- <lb />
cents x For baby and in the nursery. 81.76 I year. <lb />
Mm add Women a For readers. a year. <lb />
Ta a For Sunday week-day reading. a year <lb />
SUBSCRIBE aSK SAVE MONEY <lb />
When the is with colic <lb />
or once Dr. Bull's <lb />
Syrup and observe its quick <lb />
and effect. <lb />
If your id is and the <lb />
purities break the skin in <lb />
and eruptions, you need a Rood med- <lb />
LEGAL NOTICES <lb />
It Incurable. <lb />
Bead the fallowing Mr. II. <lb />
Ark., say down <lb />
with abscess of the and friend <lb />
and pronounced me an incur- <lb />
able Regan Inking Dr. <lb />
King's New discovery for consumption, <lb />
m now on my third bottle, and able to <lb />
oversee the work on farm. It is the <lb />
finest medicine ever <lb />
Jesse O , <lb />
Had it not been for Dr. King's <lb />
Discovery would have <lb />
died of troubles, given up <lb />
doctors Am now in or health. <lb />
Sample free at drug- <lb />
store. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Letters of Administration on the Ks- <lb />
I of Keel having <lb />
grunted to the undersigned by the Hon. <lb />
I K. A. Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
County on the Kill day of Feb. 1800 <lb />
i is hereby to all creditors of <lb />
Keel deceased to present <lb />
their claims duly to the <lb />
undersigned Administrator on or before <lb />
the first day of March A. D. <lb />
Person indebted to said are like- <lb />
wise notified to make; payment within <lb />
that time. D. <lb />
Adm. of Keel <lb />
N. C, Feb. <lb />
net Advisable. <lb />
Some nun are always positive, with or <lb />
without Mason, while others err on the <lb />
other side, and are never certain of any- <lb />
thing. General <lb />
first secretary of a who afterward <lb />
lived at Me., had a <lb />
named who was com- <lb />
supposed to know more <lb />
than did himself. <lb />
He was in hi and <lb />
could weakness of which <lb />
general occasionally made game, j <lb />
On one Knox a <lb />
new house, which one of <lb />
several ho had completed, when <lb />
he took it into his head to see whether he <lb />
could get a negative out of his <lb />
useful superintendent. <lb />
he, you think <lb />
that the chimneys in this <lb />
finished and topped lie <lb />
removed without being taken down, and <lb />
be put into that house pointing <lb />
to another in a less ard state nearly <lb />
half a mile away. <lb />
as usual. <lb />
Then in a moment he saw the <lb />
of his answer, and <lb />
be done, but it <lb />
would injure the building. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
HAVING before the Clerk of <lb />
the Superior Court of Pitt county on the <lb />
day Jan. as Administrator <lb />
upon the estate of Mary Spain, <lb />
tins is to notify all persons holding claims <lb />
against said estate to their claims <lb />
payment within twelve <lb />
this date or this notice will be plead In <lb />
liar of their recovery. All person ow- <lb />
estate will come forward and <lb />
make immediate settlement. <lb />
25th, 1890. <lb />
of Mary Spain. <lb />
TO core Biliousness, Sick <lb />
Liver Complaints, take <lb />
the sale and certain remedy. <lb />
BILE BEANS <lb />
Use the MM ALL Mae Beans to the <lb />
most <lb />
Soar sail Sass <lb />
f either nag, per <lb />
I IS fa. <lb />
a. <lb />
people habitually endure a feel- <lb />
think they <lb />
have to. would take Dr. J. If. <lb />
this feeling of <lb />
weariness give to visor and <lb />
vitality. <lb />
No liniment i- in more <lb />
widely known J. II. <lb />
Volcanic Gil It Is n <lb />
remedy. <lb />
Persons advanced in f. -I <lb />
nun stranger, a well as Ires the <lb />
infirmities of by Dr. II <lb />
i the bane of ninny <lb />
lives. This annoying complaint may lie <lb />
cured and prevented by the occasional <lb />
use of Dr. J. II. Liver and <lb />
Kidney <lb />
Disease lies in ambush for the a <lb />
feeble constitution is ill adapted to en- <lb />
counter a malarious atmosphere and sud- <lb />
den changes of and the <lb />
least robust are the easiest <lb />
Dr. J. If. <lb />
will give tone, vitality and strength to <lb />
the entire body. <lb />
Dial re's after <lb />
headache, and indigestion are <lb />
Dr J. Me Ivan's Liver <lb />
If you feel unable <lb />
have tired feeling, Dr. J. II. <lb />
it will make you <lb />
bright active and vigorous. <lb />
The most popular liniment, is old <lb />
reliable. Dr. J. II. Volcanic <lb />
Gil Liniment. <lb />
One of Dr. J. Little Liv- <lb />
and Kidney taken at night be <lb />
fore going in lied, will move the bowels <lb />
the will astonish <lb />
Pimples, boils and other humors, are <lb />
liable to appear when the blood gets <lb />
healed. Dr. J. II. <lb />
Is the beat remedy. <lb />
Land Sale. <lb />
By virtue of the given me by <lb />
order of the Clerk of the <lb />
Court of Pitt county In the case of S. <lb />
Sheppard. vs. Naomi and <lb />
The undersigned <lb />
will sell for cash the Court House <lb />
door in Greenville at public auction on <lb />
Monday the 17th day of March I a <lb />
one half undivided interest in the follow- <lb />
described town Situated in the <lb />
town of Greenville known in the <lb />
plot said town as Lot No bounded <lb />
on the North by Front Street, on the <lb />
East by Green street, on by <lb />
lot No. and on the South by lot No. <lb />
B. S. <lb />
This February 1800. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On the Kill of M A. <lb />
D. I will sell at the II -use <lb />
door in the town of Greenville lo <lb />
highest bidder for cash one tract of laud <lb />
in county containing about <lb />
acres and bounded as follows Situated <lb />
in Greenville township North side of <lb />
Tar River, adjoining the lands <lb />
Miss S. O. Brown and others. <lb />
Sixty acres of described land <lb />
will be Bold for the purchase, money of <lb />
of said land and known as the Bridge <lb />
Field trait, to satisfy sundry executions <lb />
in my hands for collection against B. J. <lb />
and which have been levied on <lb />
said laud the property of said B. J. <lb />
A. K Shit. <lb />
By It. XV. King. S. <lb />
February <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On Monday the day of A. <lb />
D. I Will sell at the Court <lb />
don-in town Greenville to the <lb />
bidder for Cash the -d <lb />
one sixth interest in one tract of land in <lb />
Pitt county containing acres <lb />
and bounded as Greenville <lb />
Township North Side of Tar Ad- <lb />
joining the lands of It, II. Carney. S. <lb />
Johnson and Also one <lb />
tract In Greenville Township on <lb />
North Side Tar Hirer adjoining the <lb />
lands of A. D. J. A. <lb />
mid others, containing <lb />
more of less, the said <lb />
that of G A. ill I Slide <lb />
his fuller, XV. and be- <lb />
the one-sixth undivided interest In <lb />
the lands of the said IX-. MeG at <lb />
lime of his drain, Io satisfy sundry <lb />
executions in my for collection <lb />
G. A. and <lb />
been levied on said land as the property <lb />
of said G. A. <lb />
J. A. K. <lb />
It. XV. King. <lb />
February 1890. <lb />
Notice. <lb />
On 19th day of March <lb />
A. D. 1800. I will sell the Court House <lb />
door in the town of Greenville to the <lb />
highest bidder for CASK one tract of <lb />
in Pitt containing about <lb />
acres and bounded as follow Situated <lb />
Township, on the side of <lb />
the public leading from Gum <lb />
Swamp Church to and being the <lb />
excess of the homestead of T. <lb />
adjoining the lands of the late F. C <lb />
the Bridges land, <lb />
way, G. A, and others, contain- <lb />
about six hundred and twenty-six <lb />
acres more or less, being all woods <lb />
land, to satisfy an execution In <lb />
for collection against T. J. and <lb />
which has been levied on said laud as <lb />
the property of J. <lb />
J. <lb />
By R. W. KING. Feb. <lb />
WHAT <lb />
SCOTT'S <lb />
EMULSION <lb />
CURES <lb />
CONSUMPTION <lb />
SCROFULA <lb />
BRONCHITIS <lb />
COLDS <lb />
Waiting <lb />
Wonderful Flesh Producer. <lb />
Many have gained one pound <lb />
par day by nae. <lb />
Scott's Emulsion a secret <lb />
remedy. It contains the <lb />
properties of tho <lb />
and Norwegian Cod <lb />
Oil, the potency of both <lb />
being largely increased. It is used <lb />
by Physicians oil over the world. <lb />
PALATABLE AS MILK. <lb />
by all <lb />
Tombs, Fencing, k <lb />
I would respectfully call your <lb />
to the following address and as <lb />
yon to remember that you can buy a <lb />
HEADSTONE or MONUMENT of <lb />
this house cheaper than any ether in the <lb />
country. That It Is the moat reliable <lb />
and best known having been <lb />
for forty years In this vicinity <lb />
the workmanship is second to none <lb />
and has unusual for Ailing or <lb />
promptly and satisfactory. <lb />
Very respectfully. <lb />
P. W. BATES <lb />
Nor <lb />
Spool <lb />
SIX-CORD <lb />
Cotton <lb />
IN <lb />
WHITE, BLACK AID COLORS, <lb />
FOR <lb />
Hand and Machine Use. <lb />
FOR SALE BY <lb />
M. R. LANG, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
TEACHERS <lb />
Duckett. Principal, <lb />
Associate Principal <lb />
Mrs. E. W, De- <lb />
Assistant in <lb />
Department. <lb />
Miss May Ii <lb />
KM MAMa Vocal Music. <lb />
Miss Painting and <lb />
Drawing. <lb />
If J. G. Penmanship <lb />
and Commercial Department. <lb />
DEPARTMENTS. <lb />
Primary. Academic. <lb />
Classical and Mathematical. Mu- <lb />
sic. Painting and Drawing. <lb />
Commercial. <lb />
ADVANTAGES <lb />
Large, Comfortable <lb />
Location end Good <lb />
Plenty of Well Prepared Food <lb />
Boarders. A of Teachers, <lb />
all being graduates of first class <lb />
Music Department equal <lb />
in work to any in the State <lb />
New Pianos Organs. <lb />
A of nearly volumes, <lb />
purchased recently for the School. <lb />
Bates Moderate, from to fol <lb />
Board Toil ion Tuition and Terms <lb />
for Day Pupils the same as advertised <lb />
in Pupils who do not loud <lb />
with the Principal consult bin. <lb />
before engaging board elsewhere. For <lb />
fur. her particulars, Address, <lb />
JOHN <lb />
Principal. <lb />
C. B. EH V A MIS <lb />
B. <lb />
Printers and Binders, <lb />
1ST. C- <lb />
We have the largest and most complete <lb />
of the. kind to be found In <lb />
the Stale, and solicit orders for all classes <lb />
Commercial, <lb />
road or School Print- <lb />
or Binding. <lb />
WEDDING STATIONERY It E A D Y <lb />
FOR INVITATIONS <lb />
BLANKS AND <lb />
COUNTY <lb />
us your orders. <lb />
AND BINDERS, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Obtained, and all business ii. the U, S. <lb />
Patent or in the Courts attended is <lb />
for Moderate Fees. <lb />
We are opposite the I, s. Patent Of- <lb />
engaged in Patents and <lb />
can Obtain patents III lot time than those <lb />
more remote from Washington. <lb />
W en the model or drawing is sent we <lb />
as to patent- free of charge, <lb />
and we make no change unless we on- <lb />
Patents. <lb />
We refer, here, to the Post Master, the <lb />
Supt. Money Did., and to <lb />
Is of tin- r. S. Patent For <lb />
advise terms reference lo <lb />
actual clients in your own State, or <lb />
address, C. A. Co., <lb />
Washington, D, C <lb />
I II N W <lb />
e-.-i <lb />
i SI <lb />
Will. wOrt, <lb />
at. an <lb />
wits m, <lb />
lea. T-Ma , -S<lb />
U lo what w. H Una, rail<lb />
ilia. far all M. AM <lb />
.- Ska la fa u. ea as. <lb />
Self-Inking- Pencil <lb />
s -ca c- <lb />
ANYTHING <lb />
four name In J <lb />
. -C I- I r- V <lb />
PUSS I<lb />
One l-f I <lb />
y I <lb />
the <lb />
to<lb />
r in <lb />
-he <lb />
. <lb />
all I <lb />
retain is ---4 m <lb />
the el- <lb />
ii ft <lb />
t toe <lb />
a We will sis- y <lb />
fT I day . <lb />
bu. aw a a <lb />
W. pay . <lb />
GOOD BOOKS <lb />
Scat post-paid receipt of <lb />
In th <lb />
A most and sat <lb />
Pt's; paper reals; i <lb />
of <lb />
St A Paper, if eta<lb />
from Ward. <lb />
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WRITE TO <lb />
Refer to <lb />
J. J. <lb />
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for 1800. by Hot. It. Hicks, mailed <lb />
to any receipt of a two-coat <lb />
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CULLEY EDMON <lb />
. . ,. . . J <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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