Eastern reflector, 6 January 1897


[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]





A ,
JOB PRIMING.
The Reflector is pro-
pared to do all
of this
NEATLY,
and
STYLE.
Plenty of new mate
rial and the best
of Stationery.
The Eastern Ref
D. J. WHICH Editor Owner. TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance.
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY
NO
Two Papers for
We have made
to furnish-
the Reflector and
North Carolinian
above amount, is
campaign year
should, take the two
leading papers.
WE
HISTORY
OF A YEAR.
of all to
anyone ear advance I n-
for MM It contains
Mi Pew it are.
. Ratty C etc. Yon
my-
with Hi- pianola a are pay-
hill our price. Drop
a our money-saver.
lines V Son
Baltimore, Md.
O, TIME.
Tin- bring forward
who oft
in minutes,
tarn backward,
flight ;
V ad aw on gruel
for
I n
abed cake ;
In
Baser at
A Goliath of ;
Wean
For what I don't eat,
up
And ailing
Backward, mm
For wear; I am
Give in- a v hack
At grand wider ;
Lei ate milk
Thai baa been skimmed.
Let me batter
has been trimmed;
L -t one more
Have an pis,
Then I'll be ready
To up
STATE BOARD OF
The State Braid Charities has
the annual Secretary
Den.-i-ii. exhibits Ike details
the and additions to
Slate ii during the year.
show the of the capacity
the insane asylum 1880. There
rate cores at and
number
ream at Morganton
SI per of the
r d. At there
were cares and percentage
recovery was upon
admit d. death rate
about p r a per
cent, at and over at
the bones in Ike wen-
reported as good, bad and the re-
as Bight s
homes. the jail
l-l bad and the remainder
The new school the
deal and dumb at ace. mi-
In the at
both there are
Oxford Orphan col-
asylum State Penitentiary
which there are ill
, tiers are in convict
The report ions
the important questions, such as
it Slate school, care the in-
sane asylums,
in and reasons
tor. n ml in
details connected with the
charities. It also includes a state-
the all the
Souther- Stales giving the
Sir veteran
and homes, which
North Carolina maintain
her home at per cent, less cost than
other. letters and report
have been and filed
use of the legislative com lets in-
in these subjects, and the en-
tire is the most
t matters ever ban d
in North t
Penitentiary Pays Its Way and
, .
ti the penitentiary
rill again S to
en ml d n
The of tin-
end till December SI. local
year the institutions
Novell;, r tO.
Sup will make a
showing this year than ever
a loss
by
on th Slate be have
o . hand after paying all the
of the
a dollar o the
per year made by As
This appropriation was to
cover run-ins it
revert bark to the
New Observer. i
Review of the Leading
Events of 1896.
FOOTPRINTS OF TIME.
Havoc of the Dread
Cyclone.
A LONG DEATH ROLL.
of Important Events Arranged
Consecutively by
Act l i ill--, t i
at Home and Abroad.
The earth has made another
round the nun. f seasons
have swept past, and Time, the
measurer and the discloser of all things,
hap turned a page of eventful
Oar own country saw the most
and bitter presidential in
its history. It culminated, in a
quiet election and in a dis-
position on the part of d
party to by the will of the
The great European powers have
at peace among On
the British lion roared
the bear growled. Tho
phlegmatic German and the
Frenchman had their periods of
bellicose patriotism, but nothing more.
The Cuban insurrection en
continuously. At this writing no
can foresee the end, pt as it will re-
in the certain n groat
island of fabulous natural
riches. Our with
over the Venezuelan boundary
is in a fair way of speedy solution.
Tho death roll includes many names
of worldwide prominence. Among them
are those of Sir John Mil-
la.-, two of the Harpers of publishing
fame, Stowe, Gail Ham-
Austin Kate Field and
Mrs. Scott.
Disasters have frequent, but the
more severe calamities cannot be
ed to the neglect or carelessness of man.
The cyclone season opened early, and
the tho
crops, buildings animals have been
extremely heavy. It is estimated that,
from May to May 1,200 persons
their lives in storms which in
a radius of miles of Chicago. But
the force of the wind in the locality
was but as
which Sherman,
May During Hint terrible paroxysm
of nature more than persona were
killed and several times that number
maimed.
Special mention may also be made of
the business failures, notably that of
Hilton, s Co., the great dry
goods dealers of New York. The bank
failures also numerous, especially
during the period just prior to the
election, when at one time
money .- loaned at per cent on
call in Wall street. Thus it will be
seen that the year has been one of
eventful interest. A classified review of
the more important events
Alfred Ely Beach, editor
in New York aped TO.
H. . i famous
Fin-1 At Fla.;
County at
loss,
la.;
Central hotel
i l . Ail
II. P.
in Ck aged Col.
W. Knox, author, in New York
W. R. Marshal of Min-
at aged At
Paris, Paul Verlaine, French pout; aged
II. In St. Louis; km,
U. Wright, ex U.
tor and ex-chief of Iowa, at
Moines; Francis Channing
Barlow, war veteran and lawyer, in
New York ; aged
a pioneer capital-
of aged OS.
Martin noted
philanthropist art pa-
in Boston; aped Charles A.
noted in
Pa.; aged
Matthew Brady, one of the
pioneer photographers of the States,
in New York city; aged
E. B. Fowler, noted veter-
an of the Federal army, in Brooklyn; aged
OB.
Crescent City Rice mills burned in
New Orleans; loss, 11,000.000.
Obituary Charles Thomas former
premier of France.
large apartment houses burned in
Chicago; loss,
Obituary Bernard lam, noted cartoonist,
at N. Y.; aged
Rev. Dr. Thomas a
noted Baptist preacher, at N. Y.;
aged Prince Henry of died
at sea; aged
Thomas Ewing, In New
York city; SB.
B. Judge Charles B. Elliott,
famous sporting man and builder of racing
shells, in aged
Lard Leighton, noted British
artist, in Mac-
of A Co., British pub-
in aged
C. Shipwreck steamer J. W.
Hawkins wrecked on her voyage from New
York to Bermuda with men and material
for Cuba; drowned.
John son of the late Pres-
Tyler, In Washington. Theo-
Runyon, a war veteran and U. S. em-
to in Berlin;
Joseph H. Porter, a New York war
In New York city.
r r deaths in a coal mine disaster
Shaw, founder of Shaw
university. North Carolina, at Wales,
Mass ; . George
a t Philadelphia artist, in that city;
aged Ir. L. A. Harris, a noted public
of Atlanta, in that city; aged
Gan. Alfred Baker Smith, at
N. Y.; Sir Joseph Barnaby,
well known in London.
Senator the
gist, at Home.
A F. founder and
of the Iowa college, at Grin-
Ii in Rev. Dr. William H.
Furness, noted Philadelphia;
aged
FEBRUARY.
Stephen B. French, noted Re-
publican politician, in New York city;
aged Butler, a pioneer settler
on Puget at Seattle; aged
a ii w
I . of New
Orleans in that city.
Prof. teacher of men-
In San
Disaster; Bridge river,
near washed away and work-
men drowned.
John Gibbon, U. A., re-
in B ill more; aged Harry How-
ard, chief of the old volunteer fire depart-
of New York, In that city; aged
William English, well
known capitalist and politician, in
aged Charles the
world's greatest paleontologist in
at Burlington. la.; aged .
Bound Brook, N. J. swept by and flood.
West Virginia state normal school at
West Liberty burned.
Jean distinguish-
ed French sculptor, in Paris, aged
LL. D., a high authority in
oriental literature, in London.
Sanford Hunt of the Methodist
Book Concern, In Cincinnati; aged
aged
years, died at Ontario. Isaac Murphy,
a famous as a jockey, died at Lex-
Ky.
Allen worth, noted New York
at Cal.; aged
Charles Louis Thomas,
musical composer, in Paris; aged
IS. drowned by the sink-
of a at Brisbane, Australia.
Rev. Theophilus Jones, the
Welsh Baptist minister In the United
States, at Pa.; aged
At N. C.; loss. 1150.000.
i l; k. r
i m van
city.
Factory burned at Troy, N. Y.;
working girls killed. The Buckeye
Glass works burned at Martins Ferry. O.
at Over miners killed by an ex-
at Colo. deaths in a
Arc at a masked ball at
gal.
Mrs. Amelia Reeves Chanler, the
American novelist, married to Prince
of Russia.
Hundreds of houses wrecked at
Johannesburg, South Africa, by dynamite
explosion; over deaths.
. Sir John Everett elected
president of the Royal academy.
Edgar Wilson Nye, tho popular
American humorist, near N. C.;
aged j. George D. Robinson of
Massachusetts, at aged
Q. Fire deaths at the burning of
a in Baltimore's fashionable dis-
Hon. George Davis, who was at-
general of the Southern
in Wilmington, N. C.; aged
C. Bowen of The
pendent, in Brooklyn;
A blaze at Binghamton, N.
Y. Street Baptist church burned at
Richmond.
Gen. David Morrison, a Federal
war veteran. In New York city; aged
Rear Admiral Joseph U. S. N., re-
tired, at Pierce, Neb.; aged
JO. celebrated
French writer, in Paris; aged
business places burned at Flor-
. C.; loss, 1100.000.
Gen. Miller, veteran of
the Mexican and civil wars, in St. Louis;
aged
MARCH.
la The village of Mono
Cal., wiped out by fire.
Riotous demonstrations in Spain against the
States.
Charles Carleton Coffin, war
respondent and author, at
Mass.; aged Baron
ex-senator of France and diplomat, in Par-
lot mm.-A CS. U m
pioneer lawyer on the coast, in San Fran-
buddings burned at Danbury,
Conn.; loss,
Dr. P. Palmer, antiquarian
and writer. In
Prof. John a pioneer in
kindergarten work, in New York city;
aged Pet or former
archbishop of St. Louis, in that city; aged
Dr. Hiram a specialist
writer on medical at Plymouth
Montgomery county. Pa.;
Gov. T. of
Lowell, Mass.; aged
Sons,
rice dealers, suspended in New York city.
I Philip J. A. Harper, retired sen-
number of the firm of Harper Bros.,
at N. V. ; aged
n. veteran
theatrical manager, in Chicago; aged
Rear Admiral H U. N., re-
tired, in aged
John Hoey, famous shut, died at Long
Branch.
The American team won the in-
match by cable; score,
t games.
Col. H. Nelson, ex-U.
minister to Chile and to Mexico, at Torre
Ind.; aged
The A Rand
works at N. Y-, by the
explosion of pounds of powder;
employees
The Masonic building burned at
Providence; loss,
a. Richmond, portrait artist, died.
Plant of the Pennsylvania Salt works,
at Pa., loss,
Isabel Burton, widow of
Capt. Sir Richard Burton, in London.
Hughes, author of
School at aged
houses burned at Colon, Colombia.
Jennie R. manager of the Kimball
Opera company, died at St. Paul.
Mine miners killed by gas ex-
I in the mine at
Pa.
Gen. Thomas L. U. S. A., retired,
in ; aged
President of Haiti;
aged U H. Wray, inventor, at
Nashua, N. H.; aged
At Waterbury, Conn.; loss,
I Pleasure Ridge distillery burned near
Louisville; loss,
Weston, W. Ya., suffered to the ex-
tent of nearly
D. Ex-Gov. Thomas of Ala-
at Greensboro. Rabbi Aaron Wise,
in York city ; aged
APRIL.
j deaths in a burning tenement In
Brooklyn.
killed and several wounded
by a boiler explosion at Greenville, Miss.
The loan
of closed in London.
Docks and warehouses valued at
barned at Brunswick, Ga.
Benjamin T. Tweed, educator
and author, at Cambridge, Mass.; aged
Augustus H. well known
tor and cartoonist, at Flushing, N. Y.
Michael Sullivan, one of the old-
est and best known engineers in the Unit-
ed ; in Chicago; aged
Ex-President Benjamin Harrison
wedded Mary Scott Lord in New
York city.
f. Fire At Douglass, Ga.; loss,
Fire At Savannah; loss,
tO. Col. John A. the well
known American journalist, at Cairo,
Egypt; aged Gov. John E. Jones of Ne-
at Ban Francisco; aged
Count mortally Baron
in a pistol duel at Berlin.
Ex-Gov. Thomas M. Holt of
North Carolina; aged
at. Pits Hugh Lee, the noted
Confederate veteran and former governor
of Virginia, nominated consul general at
Havana.
V Oliver Caswell, widely known
blind deaf mute, at Newport, R. I.; aged
Baron Constant in de Grimm,
well known cartoonist, in New York city;
aged
f. James Rich Steers, one of the
builders of the yacht America in 1850, in
New York city.
. Dauntless Bicycle company
out at Toledo; loss,
Judge Arthur J. the first
governor of West Virginia, at Parkersburg.
D. Baron Maurice de Hirsch, nosed
financier and philanthropist, at
Hungary; aged
B. M. Jean Say,
statesman, in Paris; aged
B. Gen. Noah L. a Federal
veteran and a lawyer of distinction, in
Washington; Ci.
a.
at Flu 11.11, N. Y-;
veteran Shaker, Harvard,
M. .
ii. David H.
m V
if. . a wed
American dentist, at Indianapolis; aged
46- At Cripple Creek, Colo.; business
blocks valued at burned.
Clay county, Kan., devastated;
people killed and many injured.
leaders of the national reform commit-
tee, including the American, John Hays
Hammond, sentenced to death for high
treason at Pretoria.
D. Ills., the block and
other properties burned; ls,
British sunk by
collision with the near
; Europeans and drowned.
MAY.
f Persia assassinated.
Residence of Senator Hale at Ells-
worth, Me., burned.
Obituary W. H noted on the
can turf, in Philadelphia; aged O.
M. Poe, noted veteran engineer, in Detroit;
aged
Andrew Fuller, noted
ail near
wood, N. J.
i. Many lives lost by the collapse
of a story lodging house in Cincinnati.
At Somerset, Ky.; loss,
At Laure, Mich., lumber and ore
docks valued destroyed.
Capt. J. D. a noted
val veteran, in Savannah; aged
At Ashland, Wis., feet of
lumber destroyed; loss, nearly .
H. C. editor of Puck.
at N. J.; aged
6th annual convention of military Bur-
opened in Philadelphia.
Nora Perry, author poet, at
Dudley, Mass.; aged
Sherman, Tex., devastated; over
deaths.
Obituary Rear Admiral Thomas H. Stevens,
U. N., retired, at Ind.; aged
At Painted Post, N. Y.; loss.
At Blue Island, Ills.; buildings
burned; loss, nearly
In Washington; loss, fire-
men killed, missing.
Mrs. John S. C. Abbott, widow of
tho at N. Y.; aged
Otto noted Prussian
at Berlin; aged
Kate Field, lecturer and
at Honolulu; aged . Archduke
Charles Louis of Austria, at Vienna.
The Amalgamated Association of Iron and
Steel Workers began its 21st annual Session
at Detroit.
JO. sentence of the reform
leaders commuted.
Nelson, s veteran
ton journalist, at Cambridge, Mass.; aged
Clara Schumann, widow
of tho composer and a noted pianist, at
aged Gen.
Martinez, celebrated soldier of Mex-
The 108th general assembly of
church in the United
States opened in Saratoga. Tho Southern
Presbyterian assembly opened Memphis.
B. Gen. Lucius in Mad-
Wis.; aged
M. Iowa, Michigan Illinois visit-
ed ; heavy loss of life. Steamer swamped
by tho gale at people drowned.
Gen. John Confederate
veteran, at Va.
At Dallas; loss, At Fort
Worth. Tex.; loss,
Oakland county, Mich., devastated;
many deaths.
H. An electric car crashed through
a bridge at Victoria, B. people
At Cairo, Ills., people were
drowned by the capsizing Of a
Nicholas II crowned czar aft
Moscow. Tho 71st anniversary of tho
American Unitarian association opened in
Southern Illinois and eastern
Missouri devastated. In St. Louis the dam-
age amounted to buildings
were totally destroy, d, partially and
1,200 slightly death- in St. Louis
Mark M. Pomeroy, the journal-
In Brooklyn.
M. In a crush at the of the czar's
coronation at Moscow 1,200
killed.
Dr. H. M. V. Miller, U.
tor from Georgia, at Atlanta; aged
Will nit Taylor, a veteran of the war of
1812, in Baltimore; aged
daughter of Chief Seattle of Washington
and a heroine of the plains, in Seattle.
H. Roper, inventor of a steam
died while riding first machine
Cambridge, Muss.
Prince of
won the Derby.
Judge O. P. Stevens,
from at San Diego, Cal.; aged
SB. Gerard German traveler and
explorer,
Sir Waller won tho Brooklyn
Austin Corbin, the railway mag-
Newport, R. I.; Ernesto
Rossi, distinguished Italian actor, at Pus-
earn; aged
Ex Gov. of Michigan, at
Flint; aged
Frank Mayo, tho actor. In Ne-
aged Jules Simon, distinguish-
ed statesman, formerly premier at France,
In Paris;
HO horses burned in New York
loss,
Isaac H.
tho court of appeals of New York, in Al-
Harriet Stowe
her BOth birthday at Hartford.
Severe the New Jersey coast; great
damage at Atlantic City and Cape May.
George H. president of
the New Amsterdam bank, in New York,
totally shot by George H. who de-
money.
Lie Kin and Hobart nominated
ID. Death of mother of the emperor
Of China.
Goth anniversary of tho accession of Queen
Victoria celebrated in England.
Hon. Benjamin H. ex-
secretary of the treasury, in New York
city; aged
Henry of
urban Handicap in Brooklyn.
J. K. C. Forrest, veteran Chicago
newspaper man, in that city; aged
Acquittal of Mrs. Mary Alice Liv-
Fleming of the charge of murder-
her mother in New York city.
Kip, well known so-
club and sporting man, in New York
city.
Louis Charles Philippe
leans, duo de son of Louis Phi-
in Paris; aged Lyman Trumbull,
ex-U. senator, in Chicago; aged Gen.
W. Smith, a noted Confederate
soldier, tn New city; aged
John W. Kelly, enter and
song writer, in New York city.
fit Mine miners entombed by a
cave In at the Twin shaft, Pittston, Pa.
6th annual reunion of
federate veterans began at Richmond.
L Daniel De Foe, a lineal descendant of the
great author, died in Francisco.
Harriet Stowe, at New
Haven; aged Gen. A. R. Lawton, a
veteran, at Clifton Springs
sanitarium; aged
Anson D. F. Randolph, the well
known book publisher, at West Hampton,
N. Y.; aged Charles Howard Johnson,
artist, in New York city;
Dr. George famous sporting man,
known Price, in St. Louis;
aged
Leander crew beat in trial
heat at the regatta.
Gen. Young, a dis-
Confederate cavalryman, in
New York city ; aged
T. Mrs. Ward Downs, once a
noted Kentucky belle, in Louisville; aged
Sir John Pender, cable magnate. In
London. George Law, eccentric million-
and son of the more fa-
George Law of Panama fame, in New
York city ; aged
San Luis Cal., suffered to the
extent of 1250.000.
Leander won tho final heat at
Henley, defeating New college.
M. William Jennings Bryan
ed by the Democrats at Chicago.
persons killed and Injured
In a railway collision near Logan, Ind.
Business block burned in Nashville;
loss,
Ernst Curt ins, LL. D., a well
known German Hellenist, In Berlin; aged
Gen. John veteran of she Fed-
army, at Detroit; aged
Walter O. Lewis, a to
i-a. j
M. Peter Gerard, author, inventor and
close, died in N w York city.
Mgr. Monaco la senior
cardinal bishop of the J. man hierarchy,
at Rome; Luther Whiting Mason,
famous teacher of music, at
Me.; aged
MaJ. Jacob a noted German i
of the Army of Potomac, died
at N. Y.; aged
Ex-Gov. William E. Russell of
Massachusetts, near Little
sped William Hamilton Gil son, artist i
and author, in Washington, Conn.
The car barns of the Chicago City
railway burned; loss,
Ex-Gov. Joseph Hart well
at Gen. j
Andrew K. z. a Booth Dakota
pioneer, in Dead wood. Gen. J . K.
Siegfried, a Federal Veteran, at i . .
Pa.; aged
SO. Park theater and Barrett House
Henderson, Ky.; h. s,
Fair;. . M at
Fordham Heights, N. em Ba.
Nay s Opera and other
buildings barned at Terre Ind.;
lass,
Mrs. widow of the
late president of Adams com-
and a s-. at Long
Branch, N. J.; Charles Dickens,
Jr., son of the great
ton, England; aged Joseph Wesley
per, one of the family of publishers. In
New York city ; aged
Centennial anniversary of
the death of Robert Burns celebrated in
Dumfries, Scotland. Cloudburst near
Frankfort, Ky., drowned
troops stormed and captured
hills, stronghold.
Gen. George W. Jones, ex-U.
senator, at Dubuque, la.; aged
Horace artist, died a Denver.
damage in a
Belfast.
28- Jameson, the Transvaal raider, and his of-
found guilty.
Robert ex-president of the
more and Ohio railroad, died in Baltimore;
aged
Montreal exhibition building
nearly loss,
Obituary. Kirkland,
noted educator, hi Chicago.
Grass Valley, Cal., partially destroy-
loss,
AUGUST.
Dr. Joseph Toner of Washing-
ton, well known philanthropist and col-
at Springs, Pa.
a. Calvin E. Pratt, a Federal veteran, a
Buzzards Bay. Mass. Gen. E. R. Colston, a
Confederate veteran, at Richmond;
aged 71-
Moore Bros., speculators, suspended in
Chicago.
Explosion and Are at Swift
packing plant, Kansas City; loss,
Several persons injured.
Judge Samuel noted
lawyer and public man in Washington;
C. H. Fargo Co. boot and shoe
Ann, assigned in Chicago; liabilities,
killed and injured in a
accident Columbia, Pa. persons
drowned the capsizing of a pleasure
bout en the at Philadelphia.
William J. Gilmore, noted Ohio
lawyer, at Columbus, O. Judge A. J. Ed
ex-U. S. senator from
at Sioux Falls; aged
Lady widow of the late
at
Business The Murray Hill bank,
of tin oldest state banks of New York
city, closed its doors. The Security bank
of
it. C. A., a famous Canadian
painter, died at the age of
The Man has--t Shelter is-
land, N. V., destroyed; loss,
George old railway engineer
on the slope, in San o.
John president of
the in London; aged If.
Dr. Hanson, the tie ex-
d an island Nor-
way. by cl at
Pa.; missing.
Tout r won the national
championship race at Louisville L. A.
W. r
Olin L. Warner, sculptor. In Now
York aged Sister Irene, mother
superior New York Foundling
a dry sister of charity,
in York city; Dr. William
of the University of Missouri, a
prominent at Columbia, Mo.
o. Borne A Co.,
dealers II. M. wool
and the and Western Soap works.
three close
ties, The Chicago
dated Iron and Si.-el company
s, about
noted New York banker,
died Great Mass.
burned
The laboratory
of of Illinois at
Champaign kins,
Mary Abigail
at Ma.; aged about
telephone linemen killed and
workmen seriously injured by a dynamite
New Holland, Pa.
IS. The yacht down
by the M- or in a race at a, Eng-
land; owner of the
Isolde, killed.
Pr if. William Crouch,
r of at
the ago of in Portland,
Prof. Joseph of
Harvard at w London, N.
H-; aged
Dr. C. C.
physician, author, in
aged
The Exposition building, Buffalo
Driving park, named; toss,
Sister Stella, widely known for
charitable at Dallas. John
n. ii- eat. at Sara-
toga.
Obituary; Hamid Bin Said.
or Zanzibar; Prof. Nicholas
celebrated German
at Bavaria.
The town of Mich.,
million dollars; the
company's plant, valued
at among the properties burned.
Business Co., j
successors to the as of A. T. Stewart .
A Co., made an assignment and closed their
liabilities over
Harry Hill, once a noted sporting i
In Raw York city, died at Corona. N. Y.
LI Hung Clang. Chinese statesman, arrived .
in New on the St. Louis.
The Iowa State Institution For the ,
Minded struck by lightning and
burned; lass,
Wordsworth
genre painter, at N. J.; aged
Stanley the artist.
In New York; aged
Business The Kings County
Railway company of Brooklyn placed
in tho hands of a receiver.
SEPTEMBER.
Masonic hall burned at Winston, N-
C.; loss,
The thirtieth national en-
of Q. A. R. opened at St.
Paul.
Daniel the hank
president in the United States, at Fonda,
N. Y.;
Obituary Niles Fowler,
1- and writer. In West Orange,
J-;
Rev. Francis A. D. D.,
of University of the South, a veteran
Confederate at Columbia, Tenn.;
If.
Dr. Gallagher, the
Irish political prisoner, arrived In New
York. Maj. T. S. of Omaha elect-
ed commander in of the G. A. It.
Business The First National bank
of Helena, Mon., with heavy
Opera House burned Boo- ;
ton Harbor. firemen killed.
Dr. Brown Goode of the i
Smithsonian institution, a American
at Mount Pleasant, near Wash- j
a. Gen. R. C. veteran of the
Mexican and civil wars, died at Mount No-
Ark.; aged
Ex-Senator Henry Payne,
Cleveland;
noted Italian
at Rome; I
Lewis, comedian in Daly's company, I
West K.
n. of Harvard
died at Cambridge, Ma--.
James D. Morgan, ran
of the Mexican and civil wars, in
Ills.; aged
Delaware OH works burned
Chester. Pa.; loss,
Col. Norman
and Inventor of guns and
tiles, at Reading, Pa.; aged
Charles L. an old
who aided the
in Europe, at aged
Gen. Edward K.
sin war in Chicago; J.
deaths In a fight between the Young
Turkey party and at
If. Tornado wrecked many towns in eastern
Pennsylvania.
Enoch Pratt, banker, merchant
and philanthropist; aged
Utah, damaged to tho
extent of by a violent
Prof. astronomer of
the institution, Bay Head,
N. J.; Kl bridge G. Blunt, a Kan-
pioneer and in aged
Katharina well
known i at Hamburg; d
John Erie Eh; n,
nary to died at Folk -ion
England; d
Bessie a noted
in London, in that city.
Prof. Sir George
author of Doted work-. In
London; d
M. Bus. in Wolf
In Little , k . . . , it-
Tie-
National bank of Springfield, N. Y., sub-
Mount Holyoke college, South
Had Mass., destroyed. The n
elephant at burned.
J. a Mi-
in aged
i ;. burned La.;
loss,
At N. J.; a knit goods
damaged to the extent
William Morris, Doted English
in London; aged
deaths In a wreck on tho A.,
T. and s. F. It. R. near E up Kan,
Conventions; The annual
of the United at
Falls, Wis. The lath annual
convention of the National of
Book. Hers. Newsdealers Stationers
opened in Boston.
Tho Car and Lumber
company of fail -i
ties estimated at John M A
Co., millinery, f. d in Mont-
real; B. L.
Co., failed to New
York; liabilities.
T. The First National bank
of Ithaca. failed.
Gen. Louis noted
. soldier, at Tours. HI.
M. Victor de Lesseps, bod of the
and in Paris; d
a grain r
at Corning, la.;
George A. Sheridan, noted
Federal veteran, at Hampton, Va.;
Silas Mis-
at St. J i
the Australian Melbourne;
d Do Manlier, artist and
In London; C. Minnie Con-
way u once American
England.
IS. Towner w. ll known mu-
sic In Chicago;
Levi K. Vermont, at
aged On noted
and woman In Philadelphia;
John II. Williams, tho
ff th Norristown
town. Pa.;
Tho Right Hon. and Most Rev.
Edward White r. neon, archbishop of Can-
primate of Lon-
don;
A West India hurricane swept the
r. a from Kw England to Now
Jersey.
Bruckner, mu-
of all in Pow r. latest U. S. Report
in d
encamp-
; l I V ran , m began In
a, f tho
Tr h Ho -i
of A u l i h N. Y.
t id the National
Board of Strain Navigation began
Louie.
and Injured by a
. t I. in. Pi.
Business ll Marine
ban; D I I
r s. ; Thomas W. Fur-
hi I i, Mich.; I BO.
Bu-. Bank of Commerce
of BuT. to email It- t.
I ; ; .
Joining . In
lo.-s, ; n killed,
linnet Holland, loss,
National bank of
Atlanta f The army
memorial d t at inland. Ml.
Oar formerly
envoy to the d States, bailed from
New York for Italy.
Henry E. Abbey, theatrical man-
ager, in N York By.
Horace distinguished
journalist, in
fir.
. Business New York
company at by
the for liabilities,
Charles B A merchants of
., failed, with liabilities of
William A. Richardson, noted
chief justice of tho court of claims In
Washington Rev. IV
prom Mien t Odd Fellow, In Indianapolis;
aged
Stoneware works burned tn East
Akron, O.; lass,
The U. cruiser
captured the -1 big steamer Daunt-
less and her sender, the ft. L. Mallory, on
the Florida Dr. Henry S. Tanner,
once noted as a day burned to
death Akron, O.
Gen. F de captain
general of Madrid, died in that city.
James H. a
engineer, in England; aged
Charles F. Crisp, OX speaker of the house
of representatives, Atlanta; aged
Columbus Delano, ex of the In-
at
Rev. J. M. known as
the oldest priest in point of service tn the
United States, in G
Cotton warehouse in
damaged to tho extent of
houses in Tex.
yard and dwellings burned at Mil-
Mich.; loss.
killed and injured in ahead
near II Mo.
Morton C. Hunter, a
in Bloomington, Ind, ; aged
Train elevators burned in Chicago;
loss, A factory fire in
Brooklyn.
The annual missionary council of tho
Episcopal church opened in
Castle, a Cali-
in Baa Francisco.
miners killed by an explosion
In shaft No.
Dr. H. Martin, formerly
of Johns Hopkins university, a noted
gist, at
Money per cent on call in
Wall t. The County
bank at Big Rapids n led.
coffee and works
burned in San Fran loss,
Ht a German
prince, ranking member of the Sacred col-
in Rome.
Gen. Joseph T. Torrence, a Fed-
and an iron in t
aged
NOVEMBER,
ft. Tho theater burned la St.
Louis.
Fit Hugh
Havana, all lead in Washington from
a.
Ansel L. a veteran
Island et
Mr. W H. at Sear-
bore-on-1
t. Tb- company,
Cambridge port, burned out; loss
goods store burned
in
u the well known
r, in New York
Smith, n and
landscape painter, at
John
rated astronomer, Stockholm; aged
Joan Y. Poster, a ad
it r of New Jersey, in New-
o.
of th
rs of Notre university, at
Bond, Ind.; aged
14- Coleman E. Bishop, s noted
v r and editor, at Pa.
burned
-n, loss
Frank a noted
Inn and patron of music darts, In St.
; d
. P. Captain Alfred T.
writer, retired from the United
States navy after service.
Judge J. Parker, a noted Ark
Fort Smith.
Hon. Eli II. Murray, ex-govern-
or of Utah, in fowling Green, Ky.
The British steamer
went to pianos OB English coast; IS
lives lost.
Mrs. Scott the reader
and actress, in Paris.
The First National
of Sioux City, la., fulled.
U. Obituary; Benjamin Ward Richardson, s
English and author,
in London; aged
defeated at foot-
ball Now York; score, to
Obit George W. G. Ferris, Inventor
and i- . th r of the F. In
burg. Amos a Chicago pioneer,
that city;
San
the coast of California; deaths from
drowning and exposure.
Obit t greatest tenor
bis time, well known the United
Slates, at Italy.
Benjamin Gould, well
known scholar astronomer, in Boston.
The at Tex.,
loss,
lie steamer City of K am burn-
ed at South Haven. Mich; don Ins.
Tho Missouri National
bank at Kansas city panned into the hands
of the comptroller of the treasury. The
First National bank of Tyler, Tex., failed.
Ira Shafer. a noted figure of the
New York liar, at William
head of piano firm, in New
L At Mason City, la.; loss.
shock Cairo,
Ills, Gage and brokers,
failed Boston.
At St.
The National Council Women bean its
annual in Boston.
Capt. William B. a California
pioneer, at San l
Date reported for the death of the
Cuban loader.
John B, Fellows, the noted
p in York city;
Shipwreck The North German Lloyd steam-
red off the of
about BOB and lost.
Fire; At Bay City. loss,
Drury, hove been
the i. United Stales,
in New Boston, Ills.; Kl. Nathan
a of tin war ISIS and of
the v in New York city; aged
; favoring Cuban
in tho United
States Ben Face a
tho Canny died on
the r. ration in the Indian Territory.
At Winston, N. C.; loss.
Obituary; Alfred Noel. Inventor of
at Daly.
The German slop Rajah
In Bristol sailors
drowned.
U. Gen. N. L. Beal,
Me.; d Felix G. de Fontaine, a Con-
federate war correspondent and
known Journalist, at Columbia. S. C.; aged
Mine, of
on of a New
A York
in of a woo an in
who went to South
. i from
her
both the
ac-
quired after the are legal
laws of
Stare South paid the
judge ii; his decision, the
lawful wife State of the
second husband. By Hie laws of
the of New Turk is the
lawful wife of It is
therefore, plain that while Wes-
tern divorces not valid in the
East, although in the
la which they were
a condition of
result in
be
The with t wife every
has held up us a
horrible example, but if de
of the N. w York court
the ladies may to
torn the tables on teen and have
a husband in
Union without
the- penalty of the law. It.
no r that thorn many
advocates of a national divorce
law, and view of
if the New York it will be
b mid that the Western divorce
mills Actually encourage
a House.
ordinary polite inquiry
do yon calls for
but a polite
response, but if a man is past
and a philosopher
. s, it ii reply
full and worthy of
When John was
So old he in tie
of Boston en old friend who
shook hi trembling hand and
morning, and how
John r
was the
Mine. . . .
s answer.
Now well, I thank
a any record
you. in lie
M. Pa.;
i- .- r. a German
suitor, in M. Louis;
f it.
Tho Marie
in
Hit- actor, at
in Wales. ma
N. Y.
G.
at M. .
that big will r. .;
in r of
the of the at Val-
Forge in Philadelphia. The National
M 1.1 annual
in Cincinnati.
Some Startling Figure
Nebraska,
n iii which,
If carried, is likely to-open to
at with
The
oil's nine lo be elected by
tin- a coma to
into the of money in p
Upon reading the re
Senator Allen to t c
mi an paper
to for
president in the pivotal
paper on to
carried in
1802 by l . and
more than Cleveland re-
vi i carried
carried i
and Bryan received
m re than anal received
yet
earned Indiana
in 1892 by and Bryan
more than re-
Indiana.
Cleveland in 1892
by Bryan
more limn Me-
Kentucky. Harrison
carried Iowa in ISM by and
Bryan more
vet earned Iowa.
i at
dated- It upon
Time and I lie
i to- nearly destroyed it.
is iv worn out
Its walls are
it a with every wind. Tho
old almost
and I John
Will have to move
out of noon; bat he himself in
quite well, an, quite
It no loop that
h- had his second fatal stroke
capitol at
is the last
of he said. I am con-
Companion.
Campaign
The late presidential
lent additional piquancy to a
Ii anecdote of the Montana
c. two rests
Mr. was the Democratic
did and Mr. Smith his Pop
It appears that
one day, in their campaign, they
traveled i short distance in com-
a very
and in
Mr. Smith was compelled
to ave the car hurriedly when
his station was reached. He
can i up one of the two
in the seat front
out. A few
on A left the
L He reached
hi any-
v . The
i waiting
in-
I have tho wrong bag Con-
plug of
six -shooter Demo-
Michigan to WM I
and more k
voles than ,
carried
vole, Illinois was
nearly in the vole of
el
From gained
so lamely in lour-
I, too have wrong bag. con-
Treatise on
tore of Mary Ellen Learn and
bundle of hay marked
CORBETT.





fa
THE REFLECTOR
N. C.
at the post e t
r Ilia, C. mail
January C, 1896
NOTES.
Wilmington merchants are
together with a view of
bringing suit against city for
venting the side of the stocks of fire
works they had on Land.
The number of bank and other
failures occurring in the cities over
the country does not argue well for the
prosperity boom. One can-
not pick up a city paper without read-
of several big failures.
was chairman of Board when
that splendid institution was
opened for reception of pa
In 1834 be was elected
State of Public
and was re-elected in
1888 Since bis retirement
that office in 1893 be bas devoted
himself to. bis private affairs
taking deep interest as a director
in the Greensboro Normal and
School, and in late
campaign taking an active part in
the contest in bis county.
Maj. Finger was married early
n life. His wife survives
no children
was an ideal life, and
thy of a large circle of friends
goes out to bereaved widow.
He was a consistent and
member of German Re-
formed all
of public improvement, a
good citizen, and a patriotic
Christian man.
this State, has recently
been much excited over grave yard
robberies. Twice during the past
week graves in the city cemetery have
been and in one instance the
body of a child was taken away.
The secret service division of the
Treasury Department reports the dis-
of a new ten-dollar national
note. It is a photographic
i-f a note issued by the Union Na-
Bank of Detroit, Mich., check
letter series signed by W
S. Rosecrans, Register, and X.
Treasurer. Chief of the
secret service, says it is the product of
the same hand as a counterfeit note he
recently discovered the National
Bunk Commerce, of New York.
We stand upon the an-
other year. A few hours more and
1896 will have gone into the past t
to return. This is a time that should
bring solemn impressions to us all. It
is a fit time for examination as to
whether we have lived as we
the past year. Doubtless every life
is marked more or
can dare boast of having
come up to the full measure of duty
and opportunity. Still many have
done what they Let us profit
by past experiences, forgetting the error
that are behind, and with faces to
rosy new year resolve to turn over a
new leaf and make it the best of our
life.
Train wreckers got in some of
dastardly work near Raleigh on Wed-
morning. About two miles
from the city they misplaced a rail on
the track of the Seaboard Air Line
with the intention of the
train from Atlanta when it should
along. From some cause this
train, which bad on a large number of
passengers, was more than an hour late,
and a freight train was permitted to
run on the of the vestibule.
When the freight reached the place
where the wreckers had the rail
the engine struck it plunged over
an embankment into a cut. ten loaded
cars piling ever on top of it. The en-
and cars were
The engineer was badly bur
and the tin-man. a man, was
killed. Had it been the train
to come along first the result would
have been It that the
hand of was shown to
he lives of those whom the n s
had to kill.
Major Sidney M- Finger died at
Newton on Dec. 26th. He had
not been in good health for some
time but his death was a surprise
to his many friends in the State
whose esteem and affections he
shared to a very large extent.
Mai- Finger was born in Lin-
county, May 1837. As
a boy he worked with his father
on the farm and in the tan-yard,
and went to such public schools
as neighborhood afforded. At
the age of eighteen he entered
Catawba college, acting as tutor
daring his last year there- In
1859 he entered the junior class of
College in Maine, grad-
in 1861 with A B., and re-
his A- M. in 1865. He en-
the Confederate army, and
was made Quarter Master
geant, promoted to and
to collection of taxes
in kind in the Charlotte
district- In 1864 be was
promoted to and put in
charge of the collection of
in kind for the whole State-
After the close of the war he
entered profession of teach-
and was associated for nine
or ten years with Rev. J- C-
in conducting Catawba college,
the leading educational
of German Reformed
in State. He was an
excellent teacher and manager,
and from the active work
because of ill-health in 1874 in
which year he was elected by the
Democrats of bis county to the
House of Representatives. He
was elected to the Senate in 1876,
and re-elected in 1880- After re-
tiring from Catawba college he
became engaged in
and in cotton manufacturing-
In 1882 he was appointed a
of the Western Hospital, and
WASHINGTON LETTER.
Our Regular
Washington, Jan. 1st 1897.
No President, not even Andy
ever held a New Year
reception that was attended by
fewer Senators and
fives than were at White
House today. The President gave
no sign indicating that be noticed
their absence, but it is
less certain that be did. Other-
wise the reception was a great
success. Mrs. Cleveland never
looked better, of lady
assistants never displayed more
elegant costumes, the diplomatic
corps never made a more nor-
showing and the army,
navy and marine officers were out
n fore in and span new-
uniforms with gold lace and brass
buttons galore.
The Cuban question is awaiting
the of
next week, although there are
daily, almost hourly, reports of
steps being taken either in Spain.
or by Gen. or by Seen
and the Spanish Min-
which will result in placing
it where there will be no occasion
for to act upon it. That
most of these rumors are
by persons who are either
friendly towards Spain or at least
opposed to any action by the
present is generally be-
in Washington. The
ion is growing that they will be
successful, at least to extent
of postponing action until after
assumes office. In
act, that purpose was practically
accomplished when
can leaders of House decided
that nothing should be clout-
The Democratic National Com-
makes secret of using
ail the influence it can
la winds bringing about re-
election of Sun of
Idaho, who is being by
his crowd, because be
followed his an., sup-
ported the Democratic platform
and ticket in the late campaign,
and because they think his defeat
would result in frightening other
silver continuing to
act with the Republican party
Democrats who know
active part took in fight-
for Bryan endorse Senator
Blackburn's owe
a debt and
nothing should be allowed to
stand in way of its
It is a debt of honor, and, like
all debts of honor, should be paid
in advance of all other
Gen. Wheeler, of Alabama, one
of Democratic members of
House committee on Ways
and Means who is carefully at-
tending tariff bearings now in
progress, although he knows that
be and his Democratic colleagues
will not be allowed to have any
baud in making tar ff bill, is
always emphatic in and
dramatic- Nobody was
prised, when Mr. W.
Craig, of Mis;., as
representative of the cotton grow-
of the Mississippi Valley,
before Committee and
that a duty of cents a
pound be put on Egyptian cotton,
to see wiry old soldier stiffen
up and to hear say
South would be selling its birth-
right for a mess of pottage to ask
for thin protection
thought to Gen-
Wheeler when he asked him.
do you
Without a hair Ala-
free trade, free every
Senator term expires
March and the Florida
which will elect bis successor
dues net meet until April, so that
if calls the extra
together in March, Florida
will for a time have only one
Senator. According to a member
of the Florida legislature, who is
now in Washington, Senator Call
will certainly be his own
notwithstanding red hot
fight which is being made against
him- gentleman
only
be defeated for re-election is to
cede State back to Spain or
abolish the office. I am a
of the and
as a great majority of the
of the are Farm-
men, and not law
I know what I am
about.
At a meeting of the
Kt ale v and Hobart Club of this
city ex Commissioner Douglass
said be club
would be kept up for the purpose
of supporting and Ho-
in When a friend told
Speaker R about that speech
his only comment was Mr-
Reed know s that it isn't the ticket
of 1900. but the offices of
the and the other members
the club are worried about.
thing has been made very
eh by first week of the tariff
bearings. That s, the men
who have for higher duties
the ground their business
under the present tariff is
profitable, must have had a big
surplus draw upon. None of
iIi look like men engaged in
occupations. On
contrary, to a man they
well-dressed, well-fed and
prosperous, if haven't
been mating money the must
have rited They
look like men who
were
and
The Washington Star says ac-
cording to a prominent North
Carolina Republican in city
the senatorial situation clown
there ban developed a new
unexpected
Harry Skinner, Populist, has
been in favor th- election
Senator Pritchard from the
ginning in event Pritchard
would pledge himself to act with
the silver men on
In case of re-
has had an eye
place himself, He is now
said to have become
ally in favor of the election of
Pritchard, and is all he can
for his This it
has lea to
notify Senator
that if he persists bis
to he, Skinner, will
oppose the re-election of Butler
four years from now and will be a
himself. If Butler will
cease hi tight on
will let Butler come back to
the Senate without Populist op-
position-
There may be some truth ti is
story, which will North
Carolina politicians until the el c-
is settled. If the populists
vole for
this time it will doubt with
an understanding that are
to have the four years
from now. Not even
would to the populist
voting for unless with
a clear understanding this
point. If Skinner sticks to
J and helps to pull
through the supposition is that
Pritchard will back four
years from now with republican
aid, this the chances
of Senator Butler, who has array-
ed himself strongly again-1
republicans this time, and who
has incurred their ill will- An
arrangement like this, it is said,
would t-e almost a
Skinner that he could succeed
Butler.
Skinner has the pop-
in North to defy
i the leadership of Butler, and for
tins Butler
it is known that would not
consent to the of Skinner
this if he could help it
The altogether is said
to be the knottiest that Senator
Butler has cackled. If he loses
this time, with an understanding
Pritchard,
will probably have lost his seat
the If he succeeds in
defeating bis hold on
will
become and he will o
able to succeed himself- Know-
log facts Senator is
said to to working every
nation be can to defeat
victory is the undoing
of the former, unless he should be
able to a powerful re
populist
which would for its ob-
bis slaughter.
Columbus Durham of Wake, John I
H. Watson of Orange, George
Bit of Wilson, David
of Catawba, Rev. Harris,
D- 1-. of Col. L
Steele of Richmond. Alfred
of Wake, -j. A- Womack of
Chatham, Col. Duncan Shaw of
Cumberland, Dr. John T. I inlay
of A- K. Pierce, of Mali
fax, Edgar W. Nye N.
Buncombe, Dr. Hanks of
Chatham, Hon. George Davis of
New Hon. Charles W.
of Pender, Maj. John
Cox Wake, Rev.
of Halifax, Col. Win J.
Martin of Mecklenburg, Rev. W.
R. Warwick of the North Carolina
Conference, ex-Governor Thomas
M. Holt of Edward M.
of Wilson, Col. E-
Brown of Hon.
John H- aid of Greensboro.
Win. B. of Rev.
Thomas U. Pritchard, u. D., of
Mecklenburg, Col. William John-
cf Mecklenburg, Dr. John
D- Bellamy of New Hanover, Maj.
A- M. Lewis of Wake, Rev. J. B.
Bobbitt, D. D of Wake, William
W. Vass of Wake. Rey. W- W,
Albea of Forsyth, Dr. B. A-
of Dr. W. G.
Stephens of Caswell, Dr. L- L
Sasser of Johnston, Col. Paul P.
Faison of Wake, Rev. R. B.
ton, D. D-, of Wake, Rey. W. B.
of Durham, Rev T. W.
of Richmond, Dr. D. T-
Mallard of Buncombe; George M-
Sr-, of Robt-
Carr of Dr. Robert D
DicKson of Richmond, Dr. Wm.
B- Meares of Davidson, E. D.
of Edgecombe, Wm. B,
Boyd cf Craven, L. L- Hen
of Craven, W- P.
of Wilson, Maj. A. D. Crudup of
Col. E. D. Hall of New
Rev- of the
Carolina Conference,
C- M. D. of Union,
John L of Brunswick
Rufus Galloway of
Rey. J- B. Bailey of the North
Carolina Conference, J. W. Goslin
of Forsyth, Prof. R. M. Browning
of W. Thompson,
Sr., of Chatham, Maj. Sidney
M. of Catawba-
These men others, whine
names we do not now recall, have
been among the Stales foremost-
sous every d- of life.
They will sadly missed the
years that are to come when the
roll is called patriotic action
and useful service
Boil of 1800.
The has lost heavily of its
strong men all vocations
the year- It is a pad
reflection that comes to one
miming over the files of a paper
o note passing away of useful
patriotic many of
them in prime of life, others
gathered like ripened sheaves.
Those most widely known whose
this paper bas recorded in
the year that was rang last
night William G-
of Wake, Dr. W- M. Clark of
Capt W. F.
way Senator Call can of the Seaboard Air Line,
Wm. H, Smith of Halifax Dr.
TAMPA, A.
lie my reward,
place in pitch lent.
or vine
hum I may sit above sea
And ill ink the wind, drinking
The charm of romance
The death of Barney Wilson was gotten ender control and
sadness to many hearts b-side bis family j to two buildings named,
and relatives, for bis were The losses m as
It also breaks the chain of a large and j. . Mobley, two stores, ;
family circle. This is first covered by insurance,
bereavement that has A. J. ;
in many years, and to bis aged parents
is sore indeed. Four brothers i K. K. lodges and II. Cowan, loss
and four sisters are also left to mourn no insurance,
his death. The family have the
of y in mob
burial will lake place in Cherry
Hill Cemetery Wednesday morn
Little Annie Lynn age
months, infant of Mr. and
Mrs. L. Joyner, died it the
Hotel at o'clock. The
death of child was unexpected,
ere having been sick only two or time
days, the shock sends a s.
to hearts of the
parents. extend sincere
to them in and
mend for comfort lo who
said little n to come
to
The interment look this r-
noon at Mr. Joyner's home place, three
miles from town.
Taken From the Record of Proceed-
Before His Honor.
Up lo the recess for today the
cases bad been called and
disposed
Fernando assault with dead-
weapon, pleads u
months in county jail.
Abram Brown, larceny,
judgment suspended upon pay.
costs.
L. M. and W. Ii. Baker,
fray, plead guilty.
assault with deadly
on, pleads judgment suspended
upon payment of
Van Harris, with deadly
on, pleads guilty, judgment suspend up
on payment of costs.
J. S. carrying
pleads guilty, judgment
pended upon payment of
failure lo list poll tax.
guilty, judgment suspended upon
payment of
Alonzo failure to list poll
tax, pleads guilty, judgment suspended
upon payment of costs.
Frank Fleming, failure lo list
tax, pleads guilty, judgment suspended
upon payment of costs.
Will Manning, carrying concealed
weapons, not guilty
Van assault with deadly
weapon, pleads guilty, judgment
pended upon payment of costs.
Almore Hill, burglary, pleads
sentenced in penitentiary.
Henry carrying
weapons, pleads guilty, sentenced to
months in jail with leave lo
to hire out.
Silas Knight and Kiln Tucker,
cation, nut
King, breaking in guilty,
sentenced ; years in penitentiary.
Percy Williams, assault with deadly
weapon, guilty, sentenced t
CHERRY.
J. R.
J. O
Superior Court.
January term of Superior Court
d this morning. Judge W. S.
Robinson presiding. Judge Bob
bas been oil bench for two
years, but this is his first court in Pitt
county. His charge to the g and jury
was a good one, he spoke very
plainly and in such as
are degrading and
to society, and urged the jurors to use
their best t. put down such.
The moral tone of the Charge ought to
have a good it is well that
Judges sometime, talk i
virtue and sobriety, as I he
of people often stand sorely need
instruction on these things.
The juries for this week are as
lows
v. It. Berber, Foreman, W. II.
Adams, Mills, L.
C. C. Case, Sherrod White. J. S.
Oscar Johnson, J. J. J. T. Tug-
well, W. II. Jenkins, Langley.
II. II. Hardy, M. C. Manning, J. II.
John Q Taylor. N. Stokes
and George Mooring. Officer of the
jury W. S.
David Hymen, W.
Tripp, James M. M. Stokes
W. J. S W.
O. Barnhill, B. C. Council, J. H. Star-
key, A. K, Harris, Fred Cannon, L. II
lowest price any object to you Are the best qualities and
inducements f If no come aid tea our stock
which have just received. Our store in
full of New Goods and prices
wore never lower.
To
Indies we extend t examine our of
Dress Goods
Trimmings
We have a bountiful and up-to-date line. You will
styles and know we can you. Oh, now lovely, how
beautiful, the prettiest line I have ever seen, is what our friend
say of them. We have a both in colors and blacks and
an please you.
a sin
To a pin,
It is a greater
To steal a
And he who a CO
Is guilty B whopper
We
hive a car of ; S I it
C. Conn A Si is.
See J. C. CoWl
in ices on Hour.
for
M.
forming
he
I pound
Horses, two Mules. Good
team. For sale on credit
U. W.
In Hi Dates
Currents Seeded Nuts
Apples and -it
S. M- Shultz.
h Tampa. suggests the i
poetry of motion, the wonderful, lustrous, I months iii jail.
dark eye.-and wine of a Perry V carrying concealed
famous chief the s of j weapons, pleads guilty, judgment
it Wei i not history or I co-Is.
the oldest can tell us, except in
a VagUe, yet imp man-
about these tail acres, over which
the light-footed S-mini i; warrior used
t. roam. to this day there is every
sign remaining would suggest why
came to tent among tin-palms in d
Howe s and enjoy the freedom tot which
race is so
There are and all
life the lizard
paled on the by he murderous
butcher bird to the poetry high
things, the acquisition of the great re-
of life, the marvels in original
thinking, that has taken Tampa trim
the embers of the past
t reeled a palace to her memory,
and unsurpassed. There is a
lofty and ethical significance in the pro-
of humanity, and it is a wonderful
thing to find in any mortal man the
upwelling spirit of such as is
the possession of Tampa's
i-t, Mr H. B. Plant, his ideas -re
high and nob , he is an original think,
and has, I- ii of
gathered .
and fraternal f A a id new
have blossomed and the
traditional bay tree, which seem to
been reach of any
other man's save own-
He bus terraced the uplands, built stone
made ponds and planted
orchards of oranges, and the
veritable is over all.
is a a poet's thou-hi ;
beautiful and practical.
And Tampa is the
crowning glory, the Moorish
with its wonderful finishings,
tin lushing both from the I
aim new, of
latest touch and lamb.
gob.
At o'clock Ht Mr. H,
S. Wilson, aired died at
home his parent; in this town. He
had been sick several weeks with
d fever, end ring the past two
week bi condition was I
for the last day or it had been
lb
better. this hope and the
careful attention given hire the dread
not be checked, and his
spirit gassed quit a; the hour
above stated.
F. . AT
Two Brick Stores and Contents
Do
to
Williams ton, N. C., Jan.
Lately several alt have been made
to hum buildings in Williamston,
the tire fiend paid the town another
visit early this
Just before o'clock the night watch.
men discovered lire and gave the
alarm. The lire was torn d a block
two brick stores owned by J. Ii.
Mobley and occupied by A. J. Mizell
and F. K. Mizell kepi a
grocery bar, and I lodges Kept a toy
store and restaurant in the roar.
The lire originated the
and is supposed to be the work of
an incendiary. The flames spread
to the other store and both were
entirely consumed budding was
situated in the heart the
the town and it seemed id-
impossible to save the remainder,
heroic work of fire
Brown Hooker selling their
entire at New York cost. This is
no take, It warn aH
oil them.
Much in Little
Is especially true of Hood's Pills, no
cine ever contained o great curative power In
So small space. They are a whole medicine
Hood's
chest, always ready, pk
ways efficient, always sat- E C
prevent a cold
or cure all liver
headache, Jaundice, constipation, etc.
The only fills to take with Howl's 1.1.
Have opened up a new
and large stock
STOVES, TINWARE
BICYCLES,
the new store next
door to j. c. and
Son
call onus ever
we are selling goods
very cheap
Respectfully,
STOCK
be
Owing to the death of of our firm
during the past year and in order to settle
his estate we find it necessary to close
out our entire stock
or
and to close out as early as possible we have
marked everything down to
FIRST COST.
From such a stock at the low prices the goods
will be sold you can get genuine bargains.
Come early if you want benefit of these
bargains.
The entire stock will be closed out as fast as
possible
HOUSES. INT. O.
In Ladies and Gents
GOODS have a
splendid line.
In CLOTH
we have just what
In Men Boys
GOODS we the best
stock to found pried were
never lower.
FIXTURES, TINWARE,
WOOD WAKE
HARNESS COLLARS.
TRUNKS, GROCERIES,
PROVISIONS. FURNITURE
CHILDREN S CARRIAGES,
CARPETS, CARPET PAPER,
BUGS, LACE CURTAINS.
CUR IAIN POLES.
and any goods need for your
family come to sue us.
Our is to sell hon
SHOES. In sham at Hie lowest
or to buy snob n will the
the prices Shoe are
much lower hut season,
is trial when you tie. Shoes
for or any member of
your family. We lit the small-
est or foot in the
L. M Reynolds shoes
have a of
FURNITURE
you yea
may need at the lowest prices
ever beard of. Come and see our
hi Men and Rove are warranted Oak Bedroom Suits,
service. We have To puss us by would be
years experience with
line know them to nil
we claim for them.
In HARDWARE, GUNS,
GUN
LOADED SHELLS. CROCK-
HALL
LAMPS. LIBRARY LAMPS,
PARLOR LAMPS, LAMP
disable injustice to your pocket
book. This is not so been use we
ho, but because our
pi ices it so Here is a
fair If
not hint-, us but if
you our goods prices
acknowledge it with
Hoping to see
you our best
to make your coming
profitable, we are
Your friends,
To the Sports.
are now for, all kinds
and defy all competitors as to price
and high grade goods.
cents per box.
in abundance and low price.
Special Inducements
on
GUNS.
J. W. Cashier Maj. At Cashier.
THE GREENVILLE BANK,
D. W.
Greenville, N. C.
Br.
STOCKHOLM.
Representing a Capital More Thar a Hall
Million Dollar,
Win. T. Dixon. President
Bank, Baltimore. Md. We the
The Scotland Bank, Scotland affirms, individuals and the general
Neck. N. C.
Noah Scotland Neck, N. C- am,
R. R. Fleming, N, C. ed on
GREENVILLE
Horse Exchange.
For Horses ard Mules
to Dr. old stand, rear of Hotel Ma-
con. I have just returned with a lull line
from Richmond, at prices to suit tho
Call at once, to sec my stock before buying
elsewhere, it will pay you.
E. WHITE, Manager.
For Baggies, or Norfolk Trans
I can save you per cent. Nothing but
class vehicles sold and guaranteed.
ii





FRANK
WILSON,
The King Clothier.
THE
Local Reflections.
place be-ore you
grainiest display
week.
Far-well
Feel like
Year.
All Ike glad New
Th- meets
have not learned to
yet.
Let Year resolutions be
good
M like this
UP.
Holiday Being Are
ting R for
Miss Olive Daniel it visiting at
ii
Jaw
looser.
The log
in be It.
era
thick
has
J. A. Dupree Thursday
i r
C. Foy h is moved his family to
ilia- Georgia James returned Thurs-
evening.
Ham went to Kinston
I d y evening.
W. Owens returned Friday
from No.
B. Hart returned Friday
from
Mrs. W. C. I lines is
mi
arrived Friday evening
from sit. Olive.
them the Same
Places- A Tew Changes.
When baying be eve- wise.
Aim trade with those who
went lo Kinston
I. F. Goodrich
evening.
J. R. from Raleigh
On the I a Tuesday evening.
was by fee
home
Let your first new year be
to take the i .
S returned Monday even-
Five Fridays, five Saturdays and five . lag from Wilson.
Sundays in this
Willie Bo wen returned Friday even
gilts and
are out date now.
K. D. Well returned Saturday
There are very few workers for
Street Walker Co. around
You can't I bl is in-
pure, but you may have and
good health by Hood's
W. R. of this
county killed a pig that w
The i mi Co., f
made an assign in--.;
SHOES,
HATS
Notions,
in Greenville. Our
prices are the lowest--
compare quality and
prices. That's the test.
A Mrs. Hopkins
Being the largest buy-
or tine Clothing,
Shoes, Ac, in Green-
ville we buy lower than
anybody else. Being
Largest it
naturally follows that
we can and do sell low-
than anybody else.
Plain English enough,
Frank
Wilson
a o i the
Sun Jay in the year and a leas
tomorrow.
v Warsaw.
A. A. returned from Dur-
Saturday evening.
W. T.
veiling from Nashville.
P. II. Gorman returned from Rich-
Tue. evening.
T. Harrison returned Saturday
evening from Richmond.
R. W. returned Friday
Miss Mary L. Lacy
day evening Oxford.
J. II. Cherry, Jr., returned Thurs-
day evening
The s Hew Year
Come in
name tin oil. d. j. W. U returned
The Hit Mount-
may lie a and N
Monday
one.
G. A. Co. ban
ck s- d the John Flanagan Co's
business.
lit men wan tin ledgers and
day books fur the new year should call
at the Book tore.
When you come to town call at the
i and let us till you
out a lotion receipt.
On while at work in the
woods near his home, W .
Jr., lost a pocket book containing
Thursday night the entire plant cf
lbs Street
was destroyed by lire, loss about
We have now launched the new
yaw. Let th watchword every
one be upward onward Green-
ville
Contractor W. H. Barnes returned
Suffolk Wednesday night.
of or , arrived
M evening to attend
Ii. R. Aiken and family returned
W evening.
Mrs. T. and little sou
p-turned from Wilson Monday evening.
Miss Leta returned Fri-
day a to
ii. E. and J. Hugh returned
S; evening from their holiday
Mrs. and Mrs. and
children went to Wednesday
night.
Jesse and wife, of
are the fondly of J. B.
reporter made a
among the merchants to see what
changes bad taken place among
tor the new year. There not many
changes and with few exceptions the
at the stores remains the same
as last year.
Wyatt Barber remains with D. W.
M. L. Starkey and T. B. Moore con-
with S. T. White,
T. F. Christman takes a
with W. H. White.
J. B. White, will soon go in
for himself.
James Long an O. S. bar
Do extra clerks.
No changes take place at Mrs. Grit-
fin's millinery store or at
jewelry store.
K R. Tunstall continues with J. S.
Tunstall.
Miss Bessie
Mrs. Higgs.
Miss Lucy Cox and Bob continue
at their lather's store, or in other
says the continues with
them.
No changes take place with J. B
Cherry Co., J. A. Ricks, M.
Jones and W. T. Lee all
with firm.
J. S. Congleton and J. White con-
regularly with J. C. Son
Charley Briley continues with fie firm
for a few weeks longer.
No changes take with S H
Co.
A. B. Hart continues with Baker
Hart.
No change in the force at the Green-
ville Bank.
S. M. A. B. top, D. D.
and J. W. Brown have no ex-
help at present.
No change a. J. G. jewelry
Ed Matthews continues with W. C-
Hines.
W. Owens and Ed Smith continue
with M.
John Home and J. M. I i i . con-
with El II Co.
J. I. Smith with his lather,
J. S. Smith.
Mrs. M. M. Nelson, Mrs. T. B.
Cherry and J. S. It -i i at
Lang's. Of course Mrs. Lang i- also
indispensable about lac store.
Charlie Wilkinson continues with 11-
M. V. I. also take a
p a, there in -A Ed
resigned.
Brown Hooker now have no
A T. for tee ids j a.
Te Ad it
The he r takes
to to
liberal during
the past year, them we feel For the last half of winner K.
of the is largely due, of issued
it could not live without advertise f while and
incurs. We all will
with us through the New Year,
that new patron may be add.-d to Herbert a d Sal lie Haven
We Extend Thanks
list. We wish all a happy New Year
On Tire Again
Some on must have
the Dam y building on the cornet
Evan and Fourth street, as another hi-
m bum it Tue -light.
About o'clock people par
their mail saw flames leaping up by a
front window the second
There were a few cries fire but no
general alarm, and the flames were
quickly bOOM and
trash saturated with oil M found be-
tween the roof and ceiling of the porch
where the fire was homing.
G. P. returned Saturday
-go burglars entered from a trip t-
J. II. Pan am, Jr., and J. G. Bow-
i returned from Oxford Monday
A nights
the bar room of
taking some and about
money.
J. L.- and Miss
both Kinston, were married that
low ii eve. Mr. Ellis is a
native ct I'm com
year ought to be our of much
tor Greenville. Our
can make it So it they start out with
the right
The boys have been getting
fun out roller skating in the tobacco
v. l- .- since sales tut been bus-
the
Drinking much Christmas whiskey
I i for the taking off of a colored
man at and one at
Leila found lo death.
Fewer railway have been
in the States during
he
like to.- a decade.
hat pal. of the collapsed
Warehouse I hat tell over the street
U be It it dangerous
a. way.
It's curious Kit many
Will point the to riches
And tell how lo
their
that the i C ii Book
More has a full line of ledgers, day
note, and receipt books.
Get your supply for new year's
business.
he Run i. . l- C. T.
doming dry . , .,,,.
some very
They are the we have
Who says for Greenville
year i Put some early talking
and acting along we be-
some can be secured before the
year has grown old.
D. D. is wearing one hand
in ii sling, lie stuck a big in
his band and it i- giving him much
pain and inconvenient
Owing to the hi of on.- member
of th firm, D. E. House Bro. at
House, N. C, will dispose their en-
tire stock of general merchandise at
cost. See advertisement.
The Horse Exchange has
a good lot of horses and at Dr.
old stand in rear of Hotel Ma-
can. hey also sell all kinds of riding
vehicle. See advertisement.
W. B. moved into bis
new dwelling on corner Fourth and
Mrs. Hooker, Greene
will more here and occupy the
ea avenue vacated by Mr.
Will Celebrate Tin Wedding.
The i i fur. acknowledges re-
of a ticket of invitation
and Mrs. W. J. lo b.
present at ilk tin of
daughter-. and Mrs. E. C.
Mr. and Mrs. J. II. Tues-
day evening, Jan. at half
past o'clock, Concur I, N. C. It
would give i very pleasure to
l able to attend. Mr. is
of the limes, and were
and treasurer of the North a
Press Association,
What the Old Han
One day last week a number ,,
Kin; went out to the
County Home to take some
s and serve a dinner lo the in-
male. One of the ladies not
the opportunity for some
w along other
deeds, ask d an and
dated c-1-ired inmate if he knew win
we every year.
The amazement ladies can be
will mi a i when old man r-
i -i it- f -r pub
pa
Away.
Mr. James L. who
w-.-ks ago ii.-d a stroke of
sis, died at o'clock Tue Jay
at bis r on street
He was years old
a resident Greenville l
He haves a widow and three
the Inter J. E. y,
d Mr. II. B. CU-k mi -Mi-
Maggie of I
these and oilier s of the family
our I sympathy.
be took place at I
afternoon in
clerk, the lime W. J. Hem- j Cemetery.
by expiring with the close of the year.
port.
M.
ft L. Martha J
UM F. Evans and M. ft Path .
Arnold and II.
L. Smith and Sarah
Ed Carraway and S.;,
and
J. Spier and
and Emma I, .
T. ft Hooker and lone May.
J- C. Can a, Ada Co.
W. J. Jenkins and Mamie Mm n.
I s mid
Hales and Arnold.
W. Roberson and M.
Nichols and C
Luther and Maud Mayo
Dudley Lillian C.
R I
in r.
Ed Wilson and
Brown and Martha Hardy,
John and Smith,
Jane .
Me. Wiggins and Emily I
and M n , ,;
W . . .,
Ad ma,
Mumford and Hi tin Daily.
and
All-ii Stoke
John Joins and Eliza t m.
Irvin i and .
and
Henry and Mils.
he total number lie UM
month was I r
The
I was
his
with J. L.
At Baptist Sunday School last
Sunday morning, were awarded
to little Misses Irma and Eula
for the largest number
E. T. Savage i in to see
bis daughter, Mrs. L. W. Lancaster
who is very sick.
George J. Woodward
evening from his holiday
visit to Durham.
Root and S- M. Daniel
went to Ayden Friday night and
ed next morning.
Rev. N. M. pastor of th
church, .- tum-J from E l.-n
ton Friday evening.
Mrs. D. Rocky Mount,
arrived evening to visit
daughter, Mrs. S. M. Schultz.
i. V. Johnson, who been sick
with lever several week, has so far re-
. as to able lo be out.
Policeman Fred Cox has in n- -1 back
down town and occupies one the
Elliott lion- Fifth street.
Dr. Johnson and Bryan Gardner,
of was here Monday and both
called at the office.
B. Drew, of Georgia, arrived here
Thursday to
lake back lo bis turpentine farms.
Mrs. Tunstall and
W ;. e.
in Mr. T. A. n- .
h J. in Bearer township, i-
a The cause is
peculiar if certain
SHOW Wells i-i
have
over th of lb i
like a
. in in.- n th
In.; same the exception of V. J. , some distance away fro-
L e. j from the wells. The m I-
With the exception of W. B. s, on a
term expired at the close of the
Louis Meyer
brother, Morris.
J. II. -talk-;
Starkey A Bro
J. L. i- arm; and R. B. Le id
continue with II. IS. Clark.
P. Crawford continue; J. L.
Woolen.
At Ricks A the
year, there is no change Frank
son's.
Bo. Cherry. Z--b and
Sugg Continue with C. T.
The Bank of Greenville force con-
as b lore.
ft A. Tyson takes the place of Z mi
Moore with Alfred , Mr. Moire
because of poor health- J.
E. Starkey and C. S. Forbes continue
J. B. Randolph continues with
M.
Dr. Ernul continues to manage
bis drug store and without
the aid of a clerk.
W. T. Fleming continues with J. A.
S. A. has at l-
C. Hooker A Co's, end the firm lakes
no one his at present, Simon
goes back to his home in the to
try farming.
ii. A the
New store for the present.
Burch he and his
neither no;
muddying it. Some t
know what to k the well-
and are getting
lay alt-moon at home
A- C. Miss hi
was to Mr
Rev. Fred
tor the marriage bride and
for the borne o the ,
Mrs. Margaret Nichols, where a
most enjoyable r-past was given in
honor A III-; couple to tin-
delight of those who
The attendants on long .
for were m-ii y the i
of th bride and
hi d s- em to
roost universally hi
d joy, and whenever u
iii eM home risen i- a
gain n. -r. No on-
is lost at home or abroad but all is
in w;
with lamenting, if any
be, we and
faces an-
A e and
Thus, old year is
A at
Lit- Monday a
. plan-
Wilson. we e v
ill th- cell, and Ma II
turned them out in t r
a to have some I d u
-ells. Alt-r the work
In-d f rise prisoners re-
lo but
There M one to
i-l the -r, and el the
,. held him. one the
rum hi-
lie- crowd made
-ii
w n were th
the jail and gave eh-
V the m r-, were limning in
ill direction After an elm
w. re all who
r.- till t l win had shot a
at Creek re-
d and p- -ion lo g t
t-. , id T MM
E Several d--, crate
d aid are ,, The
. w. n- ban i-; tie- over
e lb-- j
Ii r.
year's in North
i- Stale
Eel a r lour
is r gain
-f per lit s.
The r in to advertise
is the h
J. m- i, m . i-i lie
l.-i.-r. The high
will I brow a T
all of the in
Tin stall, of in changing, especially hi away the r-r in, a . d
a -.- of J. S, Tun- cold her, and you can find at u ii.- in-. ,
Midi.
II. I Coward is moving his t
here from He will
the on Dickinson
avenue.
Maj. Henry Harding, assistant cash-
of the Greenville Hank, is suffering
from a very painful carbuncle on hi
right hand.
W. B. Rick has moved his family
lo town and occupies the Clark house
on Washington street, better known
late years as Ricks house.
Andrew from Whit-
evening. He reports
Mrs. Joyner as having suffered a re
lapse bat pronounced by physician
out danger.
Louis of New York,
r red Thursday to visit M R.
Lang. is with Berliner, Strauss.
D--i z.-r, a large New York firm He
shows very little change since last here
and his is yet
Rev. E. C. the new of
Central Methodist church arrived in
the city yesterday. Mr. Glenn is a
y Ming man of pleasing personality and
of the most girted divines in the
c inference. The More bead City
gave him up with reluctance and
you i
his usual place in the U
when he goes to eat.
Some M may have been
looked in i. op ill- list, if so k
will be cheerfully if our
on is called to it.
The extend happy new
year to all the business
and clerks and wishes they have
a prosperous year all through-
Last week Brown purchase
a horse and carried the animal home.
Tuesday morning he hitched up to a
at baggy to come town. About
two miles away the bone took fright
at something and jumped off a ran.
The baggy struck a stump and Mr.
was thrown out. Being thus
treed any one to hold him the horse
took the middle cl the road and run all
the way to town, lie kept right on
across the bridge, dodging per-
sons woo tried to stop him, and to k a
course for Smith A
stables, running inside and
hi. on accord. The
thing about the runaway is that Mr.
Brown was not hurt, the horse sustain-
ed no injury, and the damage
whose n-,
as yet d, this happy couple has
com.- t front lo a
lite. In one they bell
another is lo and love,
in all r-t true -s and h may
it continue. N.
We had a good trade daring the
have a k to select from. g
show you latest in T
Dress Shoes,
Notions. Hats,
AND GENTS FURNISHING GOODS,
prices that are way down. Come and sec uH
we will give you m re goods for a
bill than any house in Greenville.
G T
Fine Staple and FAncy
There's no need to go anywhere else when
you
I have a complete line to select from and in-
your inspection. fresh and
new and bought to sell low. Come and sec
g pg
i-.
2-J
Z-
Good
I to a
nook C
and corner of the WU
TUm is reached blood, on
j every de-
pend. Good blood mean strong nerves,
good robust Impure i
blood means
catarrh or other disuse.
way to Mood is to take Hood's
vi-
and enriches blood, and sends
element of health and to
every nerve, organ and tissue. It create
a good appetite,
and core that tired feeling.
Hoods
the Rood
mm ,, f-,. em W ID; easy
S PHIS take, easy to operate. Be.
1897.
r NEW f III.
to see us and we will make you still
happier by selling bargains of
Winter Goods which must go.
hi welcome to i most cordial . . , ., ,., .,.,.
Sir. Glenn was a banker in to the boggy was a slight
but pave up his the axle when the was
new scholars during past year, interests to enter
The were
RICKS
The glamor of Christmas
has faded, the holiday
spirit and are wan-
there is less of shine
and shimmer to the mer-
displays, gift
goods are not so
or important, the
regular stocks figures as
features and they over-
flow with val-
Dress Goods and
ons. Hats
Shoes, underwear, and
Clothing are thick
bargain chances it lie
that prudent can't
to ignore. Come this week
RICKS TAFT
The Ladies Palace Royal,





AM. M,
PORK
their supplies will
their interest our prices before
u all its branches.
RICE, TEA,
AT LOWEST
Tobacco, Snuff
we bay from Manufacturers en-
to buy at one A com-
stock of
FURNITURE
ham and sold at prices to suit
the times. Our are all bought and
old tut CASH therefore, having
run, we sell at a clone margin.
S. M. Greenville.
ON B. I-.
AND
AND FLORENCE Ho All,
Dated
Weldon Ar. M. M
i u.
Rocky Mt Wilson Sol ma Ar. Oil a M o
Wilson Magnolia Ar M. OS i IS P. K
Dared Nov.
r Ar M. Id H
V v Magnolia r M. fl It. ;
-M,
Wilson Ar Rocky P. M l;
Ar Tarboro Rocky Mi At i
Train on Scotland
eaves Weldon 3.60 p. n, Halifax 4.10
p. in., arrives Scotland Neck at 4.56 p
p. ., 7.45
p. m. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.2
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m
Halifax at .
ally except
Trains on Branch leave
Washington a. m., and 3.00 n . in
arrives a. m., and 4.40 u-
m., Tarboro 0.46 a. m.
Tarboro p. m., 10.20 a. m.
and 6.20 p. arrives
11.60 a. m., and 7.10 p. m. Daily ex-
Sunday. with trains
flay, at p. m., Sunday P M
Plymouth 9.00 P. M-, 5.25 p. m.
6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a
Arrive Tarboro 10.26 and
c- leaves
daily, except Sunday, a
m. arriving a. m Re.
turning leaves 8.00 a m .
rives at 9.30 a. m.
Trains on branch, Florence R
A, leave 6.40 pm. arrive Dunn,
LaO p m, 8.06 p m.
daily except
Train Branch War-
a. m. and 8.50 p, m-
leave Clinton at 7.00
No. makes
Weldon points daily, all rail vi.
at K Mount mi
Norfolk for
n- all points North via folk.
JOHN K. DIVINE,
T. Manage-
J. R. LY. . l am . -r.
The ate, iT
Bruise. -alt
land-.
Chi urns, all kin r mi.
lions, cures Piles. no
required. It is guaranteed Is
or m
i -ox. Put gal., b.
John I.
A Town on a Spree.
The of Connecticut
is to be in and so-
the town cf Manchester,
in the entire
of which, almost, is said to
be on a cocaine Some
time ago an enterprising Man-
chester commenced to
pat up an asthma snuff composed
of cocaine and menthol. The
preparation was not long in be-
coming both popular and
and despite the efficacy of
the snuff as a remedy for
or other the
to have spread with start-
ling rapidity. The manufacture
of the snuff also proved lucrative,
and soon the other druggists of
to put it
on the market. Now everybody
in the town is th e
Persons be
on the streets at night, at
entertainments, hosts guests
will go off into quiet cornets to
enjoy a sniff, the vice has
oven gone so far as to become a
treating habit- Moreover, the
remedy has returned to plague its
and all others who were
not content that he should y
a of its manufacture
and sale. The drug-
gists are waked up at all hours
of the night by men and women
and made to deal out the snuff
under penalty of their
wrecked if they refuse so
to do, and there is no peace for
the of the mortar and the
spatula- Some of the victims of
the preparation consume worth
of it a week. Moral suasion has
entirely failed to work reformation
and the spree has assumed such
proportions that it has been de-
that the only way pulling
the town together is to have the
pass a law
restricting the sale of cocaine,
From the accounts the
give of the ravages of
the habit and the of
its victims, it the Legislature re-
fuses to take the action referred
to, the alternative will be to build
a wall around Manchester
turn it into a lunatic asylum
Richmond Dispatch.
Stands at th Head.
Aug. J. the leading druggist
of La.
New i the only thing that
cure it is the s. Her
J. r, merchant Of
King's
New discovery i all is
for It; it never fails, is a sine cure
for Coughs aid Colds,
I cannot bay enough for Mi
Dr. King's
Colds is not an
It been tried for a
quart r of a and to-day stands
at head. It never disappoints.
Free at Joan L.
Stoic.
There seems Io have been less
drunkenness, and s
disaster, in Carolina during the
holidays, than is generally re
corded a port of the Christmas his
but it does lint
W is less Season. The
tact i that with increasing
our people are learning
is nut the correct thing. It is no
long r in as it once
Not -lily public is not as
t rant of it as it was. The
young man who gets drunk these days
goes out with a mark on him ; employ-
do not want him ; ho is
capped in the start the race lite.
Society is regulating matter fur
itself much more than it
once did. and while it is not to be
Imped that drinking, or even KB-
will soon cease, there is much
reason the belief that both evils are
undergoing the process abatement
Statesville Land
Here is a diamond there a Bluer o
charcoal. y
them stand the mightiest Io
Nature. The food on your la and
your own body ; the same,
between the two stands the
the arbiter of growth or declines
life or death.
We cannot make a diamond, we can-
not make blood and none. No.
But by means of the Shaker Digestive
Cordial can enable the to
digest food which would otherwise fer
and poison the y-t m. In
forms dyspepsia and eon-
with weakness, of
thin blood, nervous n the
dial is the successful remedy. Taken
with food it relieves at once. It
and assist nature to nourish
to show Its merit
cents,
is the best medicine for
d-en Doctors recommend it in place
of Castor Oil.
Scold
Never permit in
IO give WU to lira very
inclination to comp your goods to
those of competitors. You may
have a better stock, and your store
and your business m may be
better, but talk it in your ads.
It looks us if you Hurl jealous, or were
losing ground, 01- something that
The best way is to go
and tell all about a.
if you weren't aware the fact
was
cure dyspepsia.
its
To the Editor have an absolute
remedy for Consumption. By timely
thousands of hopeless cases have been already
permanently cured. So proof-positive am I
of its power that I consider it my duty to
two boll Us to those of your readers
who have Bronchial or
Lung Trouble, if they will write me their
express and address. Sincerely,
T. A. C Pearl St. Sew Tort.
at
The Business
we are almost pleas-
ed that Mr. Bryan was not elected
President, for if he had bet n the
imprecations would loud and
prolonged that the financial em-
and business fail-
have taken place and
that are likely to occur in the
present and future would a I be
attributed to his election.
The New York says
that south shows gratifying
signs of business
with sense enough in some
to recognize that it the re-
of Republican
The Richmond Dispatch ex-
There has some improve-
in business in the south, but
this is due to the election of
Mr. but to a cessation
of political excitement, and to the
fact that the people have settled
down to business.
The industrial revival that was
promised in the event Mr.
bus not mate-
yet. He has before him
the greatest responsibility over
undertaken by any of his
lie has contracted with
the American people to restore
by a revival of
and a of values.
We wish the Republican
abundant success in its
undertaking. All patriotic
citizens should pray and wort, for
this consummation- We feel con-
in he ability of the south to
meet and surmount any
that may confront her
within the next four years. She
looks to tin with courage
and
Under Times Not Necessary.
At this season of the year, it
to in order to do as lit-
business as possible; and
what is more to even look with
suspicion upon the poison who
talks business, if such
anything that requires effort and
push.
The people of a town or city
are themselves responsible
dull times, for by their efforts
trade come to them, and this
age business does not come
it is sought, industriously
The merchant who finds his
Sales falling off and does not
look to it and find the remedy for
it, will soon be at of his
rope, and the capitalist who
his loans a dull u-
one that is not reaching out
for business, is going to rind his
investments grow poorer
poorer each year.
Dull times are as the of
a suffer them t be-
come so, and it is of vital
for the preservation of
commercial life of a
that its citizens watch con-
guard against any slug-
which may en-
its city.
The interests of a city demand
constant preset to th
world. A town with industrial or
commercial advantages will
see these improved and develop-
ed their benefit they
are pushed and kept before those
who can will assist in minting
realities of what was simply poss-
Globs Sights.
It is a good thing not to live to
too old.
An man who earns
a speaks of his in-
stead of bis shirts.
A woman does not consider a
man a perfect gentleman unless
he apologizes pretty of. n.
It is surprising what a case
can be made out by the gossips
against the man who is not guilty.
A woman who owns a horse
and buggy is a great autocrat
with other women and she knows
it.
, A boy who has time to mate
calls week need
not expect a job. No wants
him.
A man succeeds in go-
Ma believe he ii impound
upon when he cannot make him-
self believe it-
There is more satisfaction in
loving work than a woman.
There is one person in the
world who is not afraid of a
wife.
Some people do not think a
physician knows his business if
his office does not have a
smell
An man says he has
kissed a thousand girls not one
of whom ever gave consent or
got mad.
There never was a blackguard
who did not have a great deal to
say about other people not being
gentlemen.
A man who has dissipated by
overworking is as pitiful a wreck
as a man who has dissipated
drinking
Globe.
The less a talks about a
grievance the greater chance that
he has one.
Lew Wallace's Suggestion.
Even the freight department a
railroad has its humorous incidents.
The Chi-ago Times-Herald narrates
When Gen. Lew Wallace was
as territorial governor New Mex-
a few years ago, he shipped home
Indiana a of for his
friends. The collection the most
part of boxes of minerals, furs,
Indian blankets and
with them was included a
Mexican or donkey intended
a neighbor's child as a pet.
When the ear reached its
the freight in up
contents cf I he ear
the word and ii
all.
literate railroader to spell
was to Ii d any pi.-e;
t fit the bill lading. On the
other hand, he found the car a long,
eared donkey not included in the
According to rust m, whenever
are discovered, he
telegraphed back to the shipping
No. con.
signed Wallace, arrived, minus one bu-
plus one jackass,
and
General Wallace himself dictated the
places with the
GOOD STOCK AND POULTRY
is
pare especially for stock, as well as
man, and for that purpose is sold in tin
cans, holding one-halt pound
cine id cents.
Lambert. Franklin Co., Tenn.,
March
Electric Bitters.
Hitters is a Suited
any season, but perhaps more gen-
needed when the languid, ex-
feeling prevails, liver
is torpid and the need of a
tonic and attentive is felt, ii prompt
use of this has often averted
long and bilious fevers
No medicine will act more surely hi
freeing the system
from the poison, Headache.
Indigestion. Dizziness
yield Hitters. and
per at John L. Drug
It appears from the State
Treasurers report that his
mate of expenses for the next two
years is 9825.860 a year, which is
less the expenses for the
two years past, that, owing
to the depreciation in the value of
taxable properly present tax
rate will raise only
No one need delude himself with
idea that the expenses of the
have Mod all kinds of but future will tie less those of
I would nut one package of Black the past. the contrary they
all the others I ever be This is the his-
It is the horses or cattle t of all the pop-
the spring of the year, and will cure , , ,
time. and enterprise of which
. are m astute progression. So,
I then, it may be accepted ad-
as a fact the
appropriations will be in-
creased, and a another fact
the tax rate will have to be
Observer.
It.
The Atlanta
more music a
little blown by a rosy-
boy there is in a
But yon
look at it from the right
point of and
of view must be about seven
miles from whore the
boy in
Di patch.
Catarrh Cm Ct . -red
with LOCAL, a
hey cannot the the if is
Cat n is a blood or
disease, order to cure i
you must take Internal remedies. Unit's
Ca arm Cure is internally, and
acts on the and
Hall's Catarrh Cure is not ck
ft Was prescribed by one of the
best in this country
year-, and is a It
is of the best t known,
With Hit bet Mood
acting on the mucous
The combination the two
i is produces such won-
results curing Catarrh,
S. J. Toledo,
sold by druggist
The Georgia Nugget says
the man in the world
resides in He
not only a
teen cents tendered a bill for
to his sister for a sack flour
and lard used while
and neighbors were sitting up
with corpse of his father at
house not long since, besides
charging his twenty-five
cents for what she alt visit-
him on
TASTELESS
There are Missionary Hap
this Slate,
Primitive Tree Will
Church of Christ
Disciples, Seventh
Baptist, Old Baptist,
Episcopal South,
dist Protestant,
Associate
Reformed Re-
formed Church cf United States
Evangelical Lutheran, Pro-
Episcopal, Moravian,
i Salvation Army,
lb Adventist,
lie is, i Jewish, and Roman
Catholic. Total white
preachers. supply
u all .
members- inure .
of eleven
who supply
es with 296,779- Thus, of
people in the State
are church members- This is
said to be a very large percent-
age The Baptist Almanac as-
sorts that North Carolina is the
best evangelized tin
world.
TONIC
AS GOOD FOR
WARRANTED. PRICE etc.
a, Nor.
r Co. Mo.
rear,
TONIC
prom In nil our r
o In
hat
a loam truly,
Wanted-An Idea
thin,
is a vigorous feeder and re-
I well to liberal
On corn lands the yield
increases and the soil improves
if properly treated with fer-
containing not under
actual
Potash.
A trial of this plan costs but
little and is sure to lead to
profitable culture.
All rank as by SB,
lb. bra. In United Slam Ii
old book will
IO my In W k.
N.
dent of the Oxford Orphan
gives some interesting iv-
it are
children, of whom are girls. The
this year is
less of the asylum
are about State
gives and the Grand Lodge of
Masons During the year
there were eases measles aiming
the pupils hut not a death resulted.
wore only two deaths during the
year. The industrial feature
ii n is being well looked altar.
die farm, shop, bin in
factory and printing office. Five new
buildings I been erected this
year, J at a total COll
with a complete sys-
N. Duke, Durham,
made the asylum s cash gift
for buildings, and the Masons raised a
amount.
A Chicago man has been
scratching around and discovered
that there are differ-
kind fleas. It might in-
from this that that would
be a good town to flee from in flea
time.
Hard
ATTORNEY-AT-LA W,
N. C.
In all t
M X B. W. W F I
Sh
to A
u. c.
Too Big to Advertise.
When a concern is in the heyday of
its prosperity, when business is good
is felt, it is no mi
thing for the tining
to be informed that concern is so
well known and its business already so
extensive that advertising in a u-eh-.-s
expenditure of money. We
known a number to argue in this
In almost every instance where this
has happened We have seen
competitors, by judicious ii
and push, them in the rare for
business. Then thus concerns
too well known Io advertise would
awaken to the mid their ad-
would again appear ; but
while were sleeping wide.
awake must
hive mud inroads into s
t bu n. r
bk they hold. Let y
in any line stop
aid in what .-h rt E. Woodard. K. Harding,
space f time a larger business will lie
built up by who
they sleep. Art you
Wheel.
How av, B.
Snow Hill. N. M. C.
GALLOWAY A TYSON,
AT It K V -AT-1 -A W,
in all the
yO
oil x
S-N-V-d-I-U
JUST RECEIVED
------A fresh line of-----
Lard,
Meat, Coffee
Meal, Sugar
which am
selling so low
that it
surprise.
Come see me
and I will
treat yon fair
and square.
HUM B SCH
Will open Cottage,
Oct. 2nd a Homo School Oil
row to years of age.
bet limited to Address
Sirs. AL. Whelan,
Norwood P. O Nelson C
Wilson, N. ;. Greenville, N. C
WOOD A i Kin m;, j
, S, ,
attention given to
and of
m.-de on short time.
John W. H. Long,
W N. C. Greenville, N. C,
Attorneys and Counselors Law .
in all the
fa
i Pt-J
I . . . . i u
from ;.
I Scud model, drawing or
lion. of n t.
Our -1 i S
of in the L. b. and
free.
d. C.
SMITH EDWARD. Props.
At the late store
Court
GREENVILLE, N. C.
Administrators Notice
Having this day E
A. Clerk of Superior court of
PHI as administrator -f cs-
state of Christ -eased.
notice is to the c-.
s estate to their claims
duly to me for pay me t
on or before tin- day December,
notice will be plead in bar
their All per ons indented
o at ate make
payment and thus -ave
expenses.
This tin nth day of
J. II.
of Christie T.
Sale of Real Estate.
and of decree of tho
for the Ea-
of North
entered in ca-c of the Marine
Bank of Norfolk. against
I will noon on Fri-
day, January Bl the Court House
door in Pitt county,
expose to public sale
tract of la in av-r
townships emit lining four hundred
seres- more or less, the lands
Alfred Forbes, V. T. Cannon,
heirs and others situated on
sides the road from
lards Cross Boa to Adam's bridge,
and known as the May place.
II
Terms cash, Dec.
The XI of the I ill
open en
SEPT. Mi
and i ll-.
be terms a e a- loin s.
-ft I
Higher . MOO
Languages
The work and discipline
will be as heretofore.
We ask a of your past
liberal patronage.
v . II.
and in
of
NEW
AH kinds of done
V labor Bud
u and prepared to give
you
CO.
GREENVILLE. N- C
IN---------
MARBLE
Wire and Iron Fencing
sold. work
prices reasonable.
THE OLD RELIABLE.
---------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE---------
YEARS EXPERIENCE has taught me that the best Is tit e cheap
Hemp Rope, Building Pumps, Farming Implements, and every
ting necessary Millers, and general house purposes, as well a
Clothing, Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress I have always on hand. Am Mad
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and jobbing agent for Clark's O. N. T.
Cotton, and keep courteous and
ALFRED
GREENVILLE. N. C-
C. C. COBB, Pitt Co. V C.
Pills
Cure All
Liver Ills.
Doctors Say;
Bilious and Intermittent Fevers
which prevail in dis-
are invariably
by derangements of the
Stomach Liver and Bowels.
The Secret of Health.
The liver is the great
in the mechanism of
man, and when it is out of order,
the whole system becomes de-
ranged and disease is the result.
Liver Pills
Cure all Liver Troubles.
Old Dominion Line,
SERVICE
Steamers leave Washington for Ore
and Tarboro touching at all
bigs on Far Rivet Monday,
and Friday at A. M.
leave Tarboro at S A. M.
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturday
Greenville A. M. same days.
These are subject to stage
of on Tar River.
Connecting at Washington with
fr Norfolk, Baltimore,
Philadelphia. Hew York Bo-ton.
Shippers -old their goods
via Dominion
York
Nor
Baltimore Steamboat
from Miner
JNO. Agent,
J. Agent,
V.
His Worst Enemy Defeated by
P. P. P.,
Great Remedy.
ME
HARDLY BREATHS AT
FOR years.
A. M. of
s sufferer Catarrh worst
Trail, bin of
of f
lie to H wit
that another loan, Witt
fill asS n Io was
lie eon Id steep on
aide for two year. P. P.
him Id
to
f th f;
it to
T. J. Co
COBB BROS CO.
Stock, Cotton, Grain and Provision Brokers.
II ill an I Water Street.
Bagging, Ties and Peanut Sacks at Lowest Prices.
and Consignments Solicit
All editions Codes used in ten
life, Fire
N. C
AT COURT HOUSE.
All placed in strictly
FIRST-C ASS COMPANIES
At lowers current
I AM FIRE PROOF
LAND SALE.
By virtue of the power vested in Be
as Commissioner by a decree of Pitt
Superior Court made at Match
case of M. Stokes
again-t W. G. -tokes. J. L. Perkins
and J. P. W. L. Elliott
John nailing as
Brothers. I shall offer for at the
Co door Greenville, to Hie
highest bidder on Tuesday the 6th day
of a tract of land
In a deed ill trust If. O
Stokes mid wife to John Nicholson,
KI
the II I
page in the
an in the
in the i ed as follows.
the hunts Alfred
on the south, lands J. B.
pa rick i u the nest, Ian s of Cal-
the north, and lands
K. u on the . a.-t eon-
acres in r or Less
seres Of said and
G. a tokes and wife to Isabella stokes
by deed d January 1802,
recorded in Book . ii page MM and re.
leased the operation of He afore-
aid deed in trust by John
I run tee. deed release from him to
Stokes d the 12th.
i recorded in Book SUB,
rm
Wm. II.
Runs. us.
I four
of P. P. P. I was from rS
of my head to of Tour
P. P. P. baa coed ray of
T t
me of all
win closed for tea years, but saw I
tan a
I hare not aide for two
Io I to night
Now I soundly la any all
am SO old, bat
be aids to take hold
I feel that I
P. P. P., I bear .
my and the
Yours
A M.
or of
on thin day.
A. M. who. Mr
my on
made by him rs
of P. P, P. l tn
A. M.
to . . ma this.
ISM.
J. M. N. P.
Catarrh Cured by P. P. P.
where all other
t failed.
and feet. Us are
but speedy relief and a
la the nae of P. V P.
otherwise, be run-d a-
op P. P. P. A
a woman.
Pimples.
sf akin n d
by P. P. P.
P. P. P. will yam-
and fa
say. P P. P. th u
In
For Blotches and
take P. P. P.
for
take P. P. P.
Remedy, and
SOLO ALL
BROTHERS,
NU
Black. .-t. at.
For silo by J. n.
THE MORNING
lie st i,
in
Carolina.
The FIve-D Daily of
Its lo the Stats.
Favors Coinage
Silver and repeal
of the Ten Per Oral. Tax on
State Hanks. Daily SO cents
per month. I pet
year
N. C
at
curb
cure had
gives relief.
ears





ISSUE
MISSING
.-


Title
Eastern reflector, 6 January 1897
Description
The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.
Date
January 06, 1897
Original Format
newspapers
Extent
Local Identifier
MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
Joyner NC Microforms
Rights
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