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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 2 January 1895</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>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <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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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 2 January 1895</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>18950102</dc:date>
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                <p>
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all work <lb />
in this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
QUICKLY, and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
Jan. <lb />
1896, and <lb />
one year for <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
LOOKING BACKWARD. <lb />
I of a Memorable <lb />
Twelve Mouths. <lb />
THE YEAR PASSED H REVIEW. <lb />
la res, C .-. . urn<lb />
Sporting <lb />
He corded. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb />
NO. <lb />
Your Opportunity <lb />
All new subscribers <lb />
or renewals in <lb />
during- November and <lb />
December can <lb />
Reflector 1st, <lb />
1896, and the Atlanta <lb />
Constitution one year <lb />
both for The <lb />
sooner you subscribe <lb />
the more papers you <lb />
get. Don't wait. <lb />
Job Printing a <lb />
failures. <lb />
BANKS MB <lb />
AND <lb />
Jan. Improvement <lb />
Co. Ky ; <lb />
bank at <lb />
Bank of Port Wis. <lb />
Jan. T. Co. Francisco <lb />
merchants.<lb />
Jan bank. till-. Kan. <lb />
national bank. Detroit. <lb />
Bank or a <lb />
Jan. saving at Louis- <lb />
ville. Ky <lb />
Jan. First national Fort Payne, <lb />
Ala. <lb />
Fob o Iron Co. or Philadelphia; <lb />
Feb. national bank at <lb />
Mo Fire Tornado <lb />
Insurance Co <lb />
Mar. bank at Kan <lb />
Mar. of Harrison. . <lb />
Mar. Excelsior Springs, Mo. <lb />
Mar. bank of and <lb />
bank of West <lb />
Apr 6-J Wail Ins Co. of Law- <lb />
Kan . <lb />
Apr national bank, <lb />
Apr. Thorn; Son. <lb />
rs and at Louisville. Ky.; <lb />
Apr. Superior Steel com- <lb />
of Mi- <lb />
Apr. bank of T <lb />
Apr. Newman ; Co., importers of <lb />
clothing York; <lb />
Apr. n Finland Emigrant <lb />
Co. of <lb />
4-1 i bank of Mo <lb />
Maj f at Wichita. <lb />
Hay . deal- <lb />
at St J. i i. Mo <lb />
My . Ora. <lb />
Hay U Order Of in hands of re- <lb />
. . . i. <lb />
May SO n bit of Tacoma, <lb />
. Xe -it A T. <lb />
Maj . i. i <lb />
June 4.- i r. grocers <lb />
at st. o . U <lb />
Junes bank at <lb />
Si HI ii Y. <lb />
-i rational bank at Denver. <lb />
COL; <lb />
Co. of New York; <lb />
lo Co. at Em- <lb />
. i <lb />
June . Swift, of New York. <lb />
electric railway promoters. <lb />
national bank of <lb />
City. S. <lb />
July i I f Grant, Neb. <lb />
a t i <lb />
bank at Ports- <lb />
mouth. O. <lb />
;. n I bank, Pa <lb />
Au;. vs . .; i , national bank. <lb />
Aug. <lb />
EBB FATALITIES. <lb />
Jan. d lire at Buffalo. N. in <lb />
railroad at Kan. <lb />
Jan by powder explosion, <lb />
Mo. <lb />
Jan. In wreck near <lb />
Jan. drowned In Baltimore harbor. <lb />
Seven i by citing way of drawbridge <lb />
a Bi . i. . . Island City. <lb />
Jan. a in railway Ion near <lb />
X. In railway wreck near <lb />
RafaeL CaL <lb />
Jan 16.- even in accident, st <lb />
Jan In burning insane asylum near <lb />
Boone. la. <lb />
boat in <lb />
ton Cl harbor Six. by boat, <lb />
near Island. . C. <lb />
Jan by Crow, <lb />
Ky. <lb />
Feb. 12- Five of s a crew In <lb />
near Race int, r. In during <lb />
blizzard p perished <lb />
Feb. Fa . in mine cave- <lb />
In. <lb />
Feb. by explosion In coal mines at <lb />
N in boiler explosion at <lb />
Corn pie. La <lb />
Seven from effects of eating pork <lb />
containing trichina near City. Ind. <lb />
Feb. ix In home near <lb />
Feb. of Gloucester, <lb />
Mass. in t. cos st storm. <lb />
Mar. ire In railway wreck near <lb />
He Id <lb />
Mar W In vicinity of Santa Am <lb />
In lone, s. <lb />
Mar ix in explosion of powder works <lb />
near Pittsburgh. Pa. <lb />
Mar. Creek. Wash. persons <lb />
buried In <lb />
Apr by explosions in fireworks <lb />
fact or v near Va. <lb />
Apr-9-Nine firemen in theater at <lb />
Milwaukee ,. in wreck oft Mass. <lb />
In railway wreck near Whitehall, <lb />
Mich. <lb />
Apr. lire at Buffalo. N. Y. perished. <lb />
Apr. drowned at Salisbury Beach, <lb />
May crossing Yakima <lb />
river at Wash . <lb />
May 17-Five by cyclone near O. <lb />
May drowned in gale at Milwaukee. <lb />
gale on Lake Michigan lives lost in <lb />
of <lb />
May IV even in railroad collision in Stand <lb />
Rock tunnel near Ky. <lb />
May in railroad wreck st <lb />
June boys died at Tarrytown. N. Y. <lb />
from poisonous root six <lb />
by gasoline explosion at Ore. <lb />
June member of industrial <lb />
army near Brighton. <lb />
i June b lightning In <lb />
June drowned by upsetting of <lb />
off N. by .-Inking of <lb />
tug rear New York. <lb />
June in cyclone Sleepy Eye. <lb />
Minn. <lb />
June by tornado in Minnesota and <lb />
South <lb />
July from hat at Now Orleans. <lb />
July by Canadian <lb />
Me. <lb />
July drowned at Lead Hill, Ark. <lb />
July regular s from Fort <lb />
in Chicago by explosion of ammunition <lb />
chest. <lb />
July men by dynamite explosion at <lb />
Stockton. Pa. <lb />
July Seven men in railway collision near <lb />
Queen City. Tex. <lb />
July by forest fires at Phillips, <lb />
Aug. Five drowned by stage coach <lb />
Swept Into a stream near CoL <lb />
Aug. ft Fits perished In burning house near <lb />
Minn. <lb />
TaO bank. <lb />
Life n of <lb />
at New York; <lb />
county bank at South Enid, <lb />
O. T. <lb />
bank of <lb />
bank at Weeping <lb />
Neb. <lb />
Oct. national bank of <lb />
N Y- , . . <lb />
Oct. Stanton. stock brokers In <lb />
New York <lb />
Oct. Debenture Co. of <lb />
Oct national bank of Kearney, <lb />
Oct. county national bank st <lb />
Kearney. Neb. <lb />
Oct bank, at CaL <lb />
Oct. George M, of Pittsburgh. <lb />
pa.; 11.000.000. <lb />
Oct. J- and J. J. <lb />
Co, druggists in <lb />
Firs, national <lb />
bank. <lb />
Nov. national bank or Johnson City, <lb />
. , <lb />
Not. savings bang; <lb />
n , <lb />
Nov. bank at Spokane, <lb />
Wash. <lb />
Nov. Banking company at How- <lb />
National bank of Grand <lb />
Inland. Neb. <lb />
Nov. of Carova. D. <lb />
Dec Platte rational bank. <lb />
national bank. <lb />
Dec. Insurance Co. of Seattle. <lb />
bank, at St Joseph, <lb />
Ma <lb />
national at Tex. <lb />
national bank. <lb />
Dee. Union Building and Savings Co. of <lb />
Des la. Woonsocket bank at <lb />
s. D <lb />
Dec. stock bank, of Slater, Mo.; <lb />
Slater bank. <lb />
Six by sinking on Lake Michigan <lb />
tramps in railway wreck near <lb />
Hi Seven drowned by reckless <lb />
driving of at <lb />
Oct- at Little <lb />
Oct. during a i-re Detroit, <lb />
b, dynamite at Iron- <lb />
Mi h. <lb />
Oct. 9-Twelve by falling of two houses In <lb />
New Yen k city. <lb />
Oct. 10-Sis tn New York by collapse of an <lb />
h d building. <lb />
Oct. by ct <lb />
kin. in a steamer near <lb />
N. Y <lb />
Oct by of a schooner at <lb />
She in Delaware bay. <lb />
Oct. Seattle. ash., hotel fire. . <lb />
the chi no; r I tn. Ind. <lb />
Oct. So seven In a <lb />
lire in Sew York. <lb />
Nov. in railway near Rock- <lb />
wood. Pa, <lb />
Nov. persons in forest <lb />
fires <lb />
17--Eight by capsizing of at Char- <lb />
Fix <lb />
Nov. -Eight in railway wreck near <lb />
mer. Pa, <lb />
N iv by nine explosion at <lb />
I Station Vs. <lb />
by sinking of schooner in <lb />
ton h <lb />
e. drowned in p at Littleton. <lb />
persons bitten by mad dog at Mount <lb />
o. <lb />
Dec. In at <lb />
SO sailors drowned during <lb />
gale on coast. <lb />
Dec killed by boiler explosion at <lb />
fast Bay City. Mich. <lb />
CRIMES. <lb />
Wagoner, wife murderer, <lb />
lynched near Mitchell. Ind. <lb />
13.1. o William John <lb />
Guy lynched at Kan. <lb />
lib. t. of Charles <lb />
iii <lb />
Jan. of coal miners In vicinity <lb />
O Mercer. Pa., struck, wages being reduced <lb />
per cent <lb />
-In Ohio. miners refused to ac- <lb />
reduction wages. <lb />
of passed over Mane- <lb />
Bold coal region. arson and <lb />
destruction of property followed. Discharge <lb />
of all miners demanded. <lb />
Feb. killed in right between laborers <lb />
Mar. 6-Near Bridgeport. O. 4.000 miner re- <lb />
work, leaving settlement of outside <lb />
laborers wages to arbitration. <lb />
Mar. army left Mas <lb />
O . for <lb />
Apr. men killed as result of trouble <lb />
near Pa. <lb />
Apr Ct Id decision In Union <lb />
conference at Omaha favored em- <lb />
at every <lb />
Apr. It Dandy ordered Onion <lb />
receivers to former wages of <lb />
at Omaha. <lb />
Apr. strike In <lb />
region pr ended. <lb />
Apr. Striking near Detroit. <lb />
Mich., collided with sheriffs two of <lb />
the former killed, some lo others wounded <lb />
Apr. at St Cloud, Minn, arrest- <lb />
ed for Interfering with malls. <lb />
Apr. miners of the <lb />
Mississippi obeyed order of United Mine Work- <lb />
to suspend work <lb />
Apr. in Booking fired <lb />
by laborers killed near <lb />
Detroit. Mich., in fight between strikers and <lb />
Apr. Industrial arm v. strong, <lb />
cost on u stolen train, captured by fed- <lb />
troops at Forsyth. Mont- <lb />
Apr. Northern road tied up by <lb />
strike St. Paul to the coast. <lb />
Apr. S. Marshal Cronin given com- <lb />
of regular soldiers to effect arrest of <lb />
Great Northern strikers In North Dakota. <lb />
Apr. commonweal arrived <lb />
In Bright wood pork in Washington. District <lb />
of Columbia police prevented from <lb />
a speech from the capitol steps, and <lb />
rested Chief Marshal Browne and capt. Jones. <lb />
in railroad <lb />
Kalb, <lb />
9- Twenty-four persons <lb />
wreck near Lincoln Neb. <lb />
Aug. by st <lb />
Aug. by <lb />
Of a. <lb />
Aug. by train running Into wagon <lb />
load of people Basel. Ky. <lb />
Aug. Franklin, Wash., by gas e- <lb />
In mine. <lb />
Aug. by cloudburst at Tex. <lb />
Sen. tores flus In Minnesota, <lb />
and Mil perished. <lb />
in in<lb />
Great Northern railway strike settled at , <lb />
St Paul by arbitration Seven thousand i <lb />
employed men paraded streets of Cleveland. i <lb />
O. several riot occurring in which streetcars <lb />
wire smoked persons Injured. <lb />
Hay arrested In Washington- <lb />
May strike resulted In bloody riot <lb />
the Painter near Pa. <lb />
May deputies shot at Yakima. Wash. <lb />
in battle between deputies and <lb />
May shot. captured in <lb />
fight with North u Wash <lb />
At Pullman cur works In Chicago 3.500 opera- <lb />
May u <lb />
hand all ordered out on strike having been <lb />
refused for eight hours or for nine <lb />
Browne and Jones, <lb />
sentenced to SO days In jail. <lb />
May Five strikers killed in encounter <lb />
with sheriffs at Stickle Hollow. Pa. <lb />
May at Ill-, drove out <lb />
the miners r there, then wrecked the <lb />
Strikers wreck a mine and burn tools near <lb />
Ottawa. blew up a gold mine at <lb />
Cripple Creek. Col. II men. <lb />
Juno upon j <lb />
, Va. miners killed own- <lb />
. agreed to settlement of strike n proposed I <lb />
by Gov. strikers who <lb />
were burning railroad bridges to prevent j <lb />
coal trains four were by militia near ,; <lb />
Ind. <lb />
June militia ordered out to scone of j <lb />
works strikers forced me i at to quit <lb />
work and several tipples <lb />
Strikers attacked the Little mine near <lb />
four defenders were wounded and om <lb />
striker killed. atoned a train near <lb />
Brazil. Ind. killing engineer, and injuring con- <lb />
brakeman. <lb />
Juno lost la battle between <lb />
strikers and militia at Miner; Siding. Col. <lb />
June 8-Striking miners at Cripple Creek. <lb />
Col., surrendered to commander of state militia <lb />
June striking miners killed in a <lb />
battle at Pa. <lb />
June declared settled by <lb />
agreement as to wages, to last one year, being <lb />
reached by the conference at Ct <lb />
settlement. <lb />
June formed tn Chicago between <lb />
of Labor and American Railway union <lb />
for offensive and defensive warfare. <lb />
June miners in convention at . <lb />
rejected Columbus compromise <lb />
and deposed President for agreeing <lb />
it. <lb />
June resumed in mines Flocking j <lb />
the t <lb />
district refused t pay scale agreed upon <lb />
miners decided to con- <lb />
strike. <lb />
June Railway union voted <lb />
to exclude colored men from membership <lb />
June against cars <lb />
opened in mine operators <lb />
Increased pay of men and resumed work. <lb />
June result of Pullman boycott by <lb />
American Railway union the Illinois Central <lb />
Ice was and strikes reported on <lb />
It Other of coal strike an- <lb />
July strike hrs crippled every ; <lb />
road centering in Chicago, some roads having <lb />
abandoned all service U. S- troops sent to <lb />
Trinidad, CoL. where mail trains were held by ; <lb />
tinkers. <lb />
July Woods and of the <lb />
S. court In Chicago, issued order forbidding <lb />
with roads engaged in Interstate <lb />
July troops Fort Sheridan sent <lb />
to and at stock yards were com- <lb />
i use bayonets to restrain <lb />
July the sink yards in Chicago <lb />
burned railroad property and looted <lb />
care. <lb />
strikers over <lb />
freight care d destroyed switch towers and <lb />
t Three people killed In the riots. <lb />
July TIn In between rioters <lb />
ops t re of were <lb />
r e blockade complete In California, <lb />
ex t a in the south. <lb />
July H Mob o miners Inaugurated <lb />
t r at Spring Valley, <lb />
July i-Km ire force of Illinois ordered <lb />
Into in <lb />
On i Mich Colorado and California tied <lb />
u; the strike President Cleveland issued <lb />
proclamation calling on persons obstructing <lb />
to unlawful work At <lb />
W 1.1. troops over riotous miners <lb />
killed re venting <lb />
and trade end labor organ l <lb />
s failed in to induce <lb />
in to arbitrate. Entire naval force at <lb />
Mare CaL, ordered out to assist in <lb />
rioting in San Francisco. <lb />
July Hi lifted In St. Louis. Omaha <lb />
an i Paul, Indiana strikers ask to be <lb />
to their strikers <lb />
killed regular soldiers st Spring <lb />
toward and A. R. U. <lb />
Indicted In for conspiracy. <lb />
July II-Southern train wrecked on <lb />
trestle near by strikers, killing <lb />
three regular and the engineer. <lb />
July men killed by ditching of train <lb />
American <lb />
Labor representatives of other <lb />
national organizations in session at Chicago <lb />
decide against ordering general strike in sup- <lb />
port of Railway union <lb />
July en men killed in an attack by <lb />
strikers on colored men at Pratt's. Ala. Five <lb />
men killed and persons injured in wreck <lb />
miscreants. <lb />
ordered federal troops <lb />
out of Notional tube <lb />
works in Pa., declared off. <lb />
July strike at Sacramento. <lb />
off <lb />
July prevented opening of <lb />
ear wheel works at Pullman by threats <lb />
of violence to going to work Strike st <lb />
Portland. Ore., declared Y. Debs and <lb />
other A R- U. held by Com- <lb />
missioner at Milwaukee en charge <lb />
m o <lb />
American Railway union declared strike off on <lb />
all roads except the Santa Eastern <lb />
Aug. New Bedford. Mass., 11.000 em- <lb />
of textile works went on strike <lb />
re of wages- <lb />
SO clothing Industry in <lb />
Boston paralyzed by 6.500 operatives. <lb />
Los Gallagher and <lb />
Buchanan. A. K r strikers, sentenced to eight <lb />
months and fine for Intimidating non- <lb />
union workmen. <lb />
and coal operators at <lb />
O. agreed to submit differences to <lb />
plants shut down at <lb />
b Pa., on account of dissatisfaction In re- <lb />
to wages. <lb />
Oct. of New Bedford spin- <lb />
compromised. <lb />
Oct the in New York <lb />
stride for 10-hour day and abrogation of piece <lb />
worK. <lb />
Oct. spinners at Fall River, <lb />
Mass. decided to return to work at per cent, <lb />
reduction. <lb />
Oct. st Fall River, Mass., again <lb />
on strike. <lb />
Oct. An omnibus indictment found <lb />
American union <lb />
strikers with violence and ob- <lb />
tho malls. <lb />
Dec ; i . . ; v Woods, in Chicago, sentenced <lb />
Eugene V. Debs, leader of American Railway <lb />
union strike, to six months and other <lb />
of th-1 union to three months In jail for <lb />
federal court Injunction <lb />
Jan. government <lb />
declared itself an independent sovereignty. <lb />
Feb. French anarchist, <lb />
guillotined in Paris <lb />
Feb. from nil parts of Ontario <lb />
show total majority in favor of prohibition of <lb />
81.730 <lb />
Feb. -Col. other officers with <lb />
French privates massacred by the <lb />
in Si <lb />
Mar. Senor elected president of <lb />
Uruguay. <lb />
tar. resigns and Lord Rose- <lb />
vacant premiership. <lb />
Mar. Brazilian rebel forces surrendered <lb />
unconditionally. <lb />
Mar. won boat race with <lb />
Cambridge in London. <lb />
Mar. Kossuth. Hungarian patriot, <lb />
died at Turin; aged <lb />
Mar. of Peru, died <lb />
at Lima. <lb />
May international bimetallic confer- <lb />
opened in London. <lb />
May cabinet resigned. <lb />
May -8 New French cabinet formed. <lb />
June international conference <lb />
of tho Y. M. O. A. convened in London to com- <lb />
50th anniversary of organization. <lb />
Juno won English <lb />
Derby. <lb />
June Plague in China caused 60.001 <lb />
deaths In Canton, and thousands of others in <lb />
Hong Kong, and other ports of China. <lb />
June Chief Justice John Duke <lb />
Coleridge of England <lb />
June proclaimed sultan of <lb />
Morocco. <lb />
Juno In colliery near <lb />
Wales, explosion kl led miners M. <lb />
Car not. president of France, assassinated at <lb />
Lyons by an Italian anarchist. <lb />
June elected <lb />
dent of French republic at <lb />
July persons killed by earth- <lb />
quake in Constantinople and vicinity. <lb />
July declared a republic, with <lb />
B. Dole as president. <lb />
July 26-War declared between China and <lb />
king imprisoned by Japanese. <lb />
July from In Canton dis- <lb />
china, estimated 120.100. <lb />
Aug. Santo. President Carnot's <lb />
assassin, executed at Paris. <lb />
Hermann <lb />
m-iii physiologist and scientist, died at <lb />
aged <lb />
gained decisive victory at <lb />
Ping Yang over the Chinese. <lb />
suffered a crushing defeat <lb />
Off in naval engagement. <lb />
exhibitors Antwerp <lb />
exposition awarded seven grand prizes. <lb />
and gold, silver <lb />
Ten thousand Christians massacred <lb />
his tori -n died in London, aged <lb />
Nov. III., emperor of <lb />
died at L <lb />
Nov. Nicholas II. a manifesto <lb />
announcing his accession to the of <lb />
Russia. <lb />
Nov. Thomas Matthew <lb />
G. C B. admiral of British fleet, <lb />
died in g d <lb />
Nov. Gregor Rubinstein, pianist <lb />
and composer, died at aged <lb />
Nov. Port Arthur. Chinese stronghold, <lb />
capt rod tho Japanese, <lb />
Nov. Nicholas II of Russia married <lb />
Princess Allx of at St. <lb />
Petersburg <lb />
Nov. Bismarck's <lb />
d at <lb />
Nov. submitted proposes of peace <lb />
to Japan through U. S. Ministers and <lb />
Dun. <lb />
Dec. De Lesseps. builder <lb />
canal. near France. <lb />
Dec. and Union banks of <lb />
St. Johns. N. F. forced to suspend, liabilities <lb />
amounting to several millions. <lb />
Dec. reports say that nose <lb />
troops entering Port Arthur November <lb />
massacred almost entire population in cold <lb />
blood. <lb />
Dec. John Thompson, premier of <lb />
Canada. dbl at Windsor castle. England.<lb />
lynched at assault. <lb />
Feb. 12-At Cross, O. T. Sherman Stone <lb />
killed wife live children and self to cat <lb />
freezing to death. <lb />
Feb. Three men a child killed by Jim <lb />
hell, of Richmond. Tex., at Houston. <lb />
Feb. Carter and Mont- <lb />
shot In jail at Mount tin Home, Ark., <lb />
for murder. <lb />
Mar. killed <lb />
and self at N. <lb />
In tight near Darlington, S. C. <lb />
Apr. killed in election row In Kansas <lb />
City. Mo., between s and members of <lb />
American Protective association. <lb />
Apr. killed in tight in Cheyenne <lb />
country. <lb />
Apr. Jones. Ky., <lb />
killed wife, and self. <lb />
Apr. Dock Bishop <lb />
lynched near O. T-, for horse steal- <lb />
wife and two children <lb />
murdered at Browning. Mo., by men against <lb />
whom they to appear in court as wit- <lb />
May Rose, murderer of <lb />
Postmaster at Cottonwood Falls, Kim., <lb />
lynched. <lb />
June who had <lb />
mutilated his stepbrother. Charles Berry. <lb />
lynched at Golden. and Parker, <lb />
murderers, Wash. <lb />
June killed wife, <lb />
children and self at Cramp Hill. N. J <lb />
George Brock killed wife, son and self near <lb />
Ind. <lb />
Juno William Stacy, of Iowa Falls. Ia, <lb />
lynched; swindling. <lb />
June -6 W. M. Pinkerton. alleged assailant <lb />
of Anna stoned at Spring Valley. <lb />
Merrill Biker, of Montgomery. <lb />
Vt-. hanged her four children. <lb />
July k. u. killed his two children <lb />
and at S. a <lb />
July Hudson killed three deputy <lb />
at Coal burg. Ala <lb />
Aug. D. Jenkins. Ia, killed <lb />
his sweetheart, and himself. <lb />
Aug. T. Thompson lynched at <lb />
named Bourke. Mr. Bond's as- <lb />
lynched near Watertown. S. D. <lb />
i- I and B. Y. Armstrong. <lb />
killed each other. <lb />
A hotel In New Orleans; <lb />
May Brooklyn tabernacle and <lb />
Hotel Regent; <lb />
May Sixteen acres in Boston s tenement <lb />
In Dubuque lumber <lb />
yards caused loss. <lb />
June 16-Central Stock and Transit Co. s ab- <lb />
r In Jersey City; <lb />
June Woodruff warehouses In <lb />
Brooklyn; , <lb />
July world's fair In <lb />
Central market building at Min- <lb />
July firemen killed and <lb />
perished In at Washington, <lb />
July worth nearly by <lb />
forest tires In northern Wisconsin. <lb />
Aug. in Chicago lumber district; <lb />
. . <lb />
on wharf st Portland, ore., <lb />
Oct. and Terminal Co. <lb />
end at Bast St. Louis. <lb />
Oct. J- Porter <lb />
at Pittsburgh. Pa.; <lb />
Nov. Hammond Packing beef house <lb />
and office at South Omaha. Feb.; <lb />
Nov. Texas Pacific railroad cotton <lb />
at New Incendiary. <lb />
Nov. buildings in Columbus, <lb />
Nov. bicycle factory at Toledo. <lb />
In Mississippi. <lb />
Tho following towns were entirely or almost <lb />
entirely destroyed by <lb />
Mich.; Arcadia. Kan.; <lb />
Neb.; O.; Money Point. Va; <lb />
Sutherland. Neb.; Tahoe City. Pawnee. <lb />
Palmyra. <lb />
Mich.; Col.; Hudson. Honey <lb />
Rowley. <lb />
O.; Now Berlin. lit; N. <lb />
Phillips. and Mason. <lb />
Dawson, Minn.; <lb />
Cal.; Finland sett <lb />
Mich.; Vesper. Wis.; City. Ia.; <lb />
Cape Vincent. N. Hill. O.; <lb />
Mission Creek. and Sand- <lb />
stone. Benoit. <lb />
Cartwright. Granite <lb />
Shell Like and <lb />
South Ewen and Trout <lb />
Mich.; Rising Sun, O.; Sheffield, la.; <lb />
Pa; O. <lb />
Fire destroyed the entire or large <lb />
of the Red Kev. Ind.; <lb />
island. Lake City. Kan.; Bath, <lb />
Rosamond Mont- <lb />
Mo.; Genoa, Watertown, <lb />
Conn.; S. D.; <lb />
Wis.; Cat; Ford. Ky.; Barry, <lb />
Kan.; Lancaster. N. Y.; <lb />
ton. I. Cadiz. Ind; David- <lb />
son. Norway. Bed Jacket. Mich.; <lb />
Mo.; Ia.; <lb />
St. O.; Minn.; El Paso, <lb />
Somerset. III.; Great Bend, <lb />
N. Y.; O.; Celina, <lb />
O ; la.; Brooklyn, la.; Former <lb />
Ia; Lake View. Mich.; <lb />
Ia.; Franklin. <lb />
Neb.; Ashland. Mont.; <lb />
Roberts, Ind.; <lb />
Conrad. Ia Malta. Dalton. O.; North <lb />
Enid. O. T.; Now Haven. Mo.; Liberty Center. <lb />
O.; Ky.; Frederick, S. D.; Ithaca. <lb />
i Savanna. Marlon. N. C; Lyndon- <lb />
ville. Vt Athena, Ala.; Murdock, Minn.; <lb />
Ia <lb />
Dec. 13- Two-thirds the business portion of <lb />
N stores, post office, <lb />
hotel and cry stable at Evergreen. Ala <lb />
Dec. Business portion of Stone Mountain, <lb />
Ga. <lb />
Feb. Plantations devastated in northwest- <lb />
by cyclone Great Injury to <lb />
life and property from cyclone at Port <lb />
son. La. <lb />
Feb. i- Unusually severe storm swept <lb />
through the western states. <lb />
registered degrees <lb />
below 7.1 on Iron Minn. <lb />
Mar. storm In southwest- <lb />
Apr. Waterspout and cyclone destroyed <lb />
May by storm In In- <lb />
h fell at <lb />
ill. <lb />
May suffered from frost In middle <lb />
Slates to the gulf. <lb />
May floods throughout Penn- <lb />
May of snow at Bristol. <lb />
Tenn <lb />
May In Illinois. Iowa, Wisconsin, <lb />
Michigan and Indiana suffer from frost. <lb />
to life and property from <lb />
flood at Pueblo, Wash., swept <lb />
away by stood. <lb />
Juno reported throughout Colo- <lb />
Oregon. <lb />
June and property destroyed at Ta- <lb />
coma. Wash . and Fort Scott. Kan. <lb />
June City, Wash., destroyed by <lb />
flood. <lb />
June Ore., almost wholly swept <lb />
away by and wind devastated <lb />
and counties. Minn. <lb />
Juno in Turtle Creek <lb />
near Braddock, cyclone swept <lb />
we ; of Fort Dodge, la. <lb />
Juno Kan. nearly wiped out by <lb />
cyclone <lb />
June lost in cyclone near Sleepy <lb />
Eye. Minn. <lb />
Juno swept over Minnesota and <lb />
South Dakota <lb />
July fatalities from at New Or- <lb />
Arkansas and western Ten- <lb />
swept by windstorm. <lb />
storm in northern Illinois <lb />
western states. <lb />
cyclones in northern Iowa and <lb />
southern Minnesota. <lb />
Oct. at Wichita. Kan. <lb />
Oct. inches of snow at Sioux City. Ia <lb />
Nov. in Texas and Louisiana. <lb />
Nov. registered degrees <lb />
below zero at St. PauL <lb />
Dee. lives lost and much damage <lb />
done by cyclone at White Castle and <lb />
La. <lb />
Dec drought ever known in <lb />
Ohio valley broken. <lb />
Dec. struck Forsythe. Ga. <lb />
Dec. lives lost and buildings <lb />
wrecked cyclone In Little Wills valley. <lb />
near Atlanta, Ga. <lb />
Sea Cook, suspected horse thief. <lb />
lynched Lincoln. O. T. <lb />
Station. Ky. seven <lb />
killed tor insisting upon riding In car <lb />
with <lb />
Oct. Morton, of Stanton, Ky. <lb />
lynched for murder of sheriff William s. <lb />
Oct. killed by militia tiring en mob <lb />
bent on u at Court <lb />
House. O. <lb />
I O. t blew up boardinghouse <lb />
j at Laurel Pa., killing men <lb />
I Oct. Martin, In <lb />
Ky. lynched for refusing to turn state's <lb />
evidence against Bill Goode. outlaw. <lb />
Nov. MG. K. Whitworth, of Nashville, <lb />
I falling to tenure as <lb />
clerk, kl Allison shot himself. <lb />
Nov. a match at Syracuse, <lb />
I N- V. Bob a <lb />
blow in death. <lb />
10-Near Mo. Thomas <lb />
lad., at O. o, j <lb />
Brown, of a <lb />
In Mo., lynched. i u . <lb />
killed his wife. and I P. Banks, at <lb />
M Mass.; Samuel J. <lb />
William Kirkwood. at low. City. Ia.; w <lb />
an at Fort CM., for I of <lb />
prefer <lb />
lean- Andy who expired some j and la aged-04 <lb />
later. <lb />
of conspiracy. <lb />
strike in de- <lb />
and troops ordered home. <lb />
Aug. -Over I men taken back the old <lb />
upon reopening of Chicago e A rail- <lb />
way it <lb />
Au;. of the and hog <lb />
all houses in Omaha to <lb />
in repair <lb />
NECROLOGY. <lb />
Jan. Admiral Donald Fair- <lb />
fax S. at Md.; <lb />
aped <lb />
Jan M. Rico, S. senator <lb />
from Minnesota, at San Antonio, Tex. <lb />
Jan. territorial gov- <lb />
of aired <lb />
Feb. W. Childs. editor and <lb />
In seed C. <lb />
senator Morton S. <lb />
in aped <lb />
Feb. W. Honk, of <lb />
O. in Washington. <lb />
Feb. S- Senator J. W. In <lb />
la.; aped <lb />
Mar. John C. Downey, of Cali- <lb />
at Los aped <lb />
Mar. S. senator Alfred H. <lb />
from Georgia, in Washington; aped <lb />
Mar. Curtis, lawyer and <lb />
author, In New York; aged <lb />
Apr. Dudley Field, lawyer and <lb />
writer, la New York; aged <lb />
Apr. Zebulon B. Vance, from <lb />
North Carolina, at Washington; aged <lb />
Apr. Ex-Gov. and Ex-U. S. Senator <lb />
James M Harvey, of Kansas, near Junction <lb />
S. Ives. tho of <lb />
at N. C; aped <lb />
Apr. G. S- N. Morton, of <lb />
Wyoming, at Cheyenne. <lb />
Apr. W. D. Daniel, of Idaho, at <lb />
Wash.; aged <lb />
Apr. N. S. Berry, at Bristol, N. <lb />
H.; aged CS. <lb />
Apr. S. Senator Francis B. Stock- <lb />
bridge, of Mich . In a-ed <lb />
Ex-Post master General Frank <lb />
aped <lb />
May Congressman Robert F. at <lb />
Princess Md. <lb />
May 14- A. O. Hunt, of Colorado, at, <lb />
near aped <lb />
May H. Edwards, of Ohio. U. a <lb />
at Berlin. <lb />
June Charles E. Van of <lb />
bland, In Mass. <lb />
June U. Price, of New <lb />
In Oakland. Cal <lb />
Juno Walter Phelps, statesman <lb />
diplomat, at N. J. <lb />
June CO W. Perkins, ex-senator Of <lb />
Kansas, at Washington; aged <lb />
June -Hear Admiral William Greenville <lb />
Turn N. retired at Washington, oped <lb />
July a of <lb />
f near aped years. <lb />
Dec Louis Stevenson, novelist, in <lb />
sped <lb />
POLITICAL, AND <lb />
Jan. D. S. sen- <lb />
from senates organ- <lb />
in Jersey. <lb />
Jan. rejected nomination of <lb />
V Hornblower. of New York, to be <lb />
justice in S. supreme court vice. Sam- <lb />
deceased. <lb />
Jan. legislature elected John H. <lb />
U. S. senator. <lb />
Jan re <lb />
N. <lb />
American Protective Tariff league <lb />
i in New York. <lb />
Feb. tariff bill, with the income <lb />
tax feature, passed house of representatives <lb />
by vote of to <lb />
Feb. resolution condemning <lb />
i Minister Stevens and sustaining Hawaiian <lb />
i policy of Mr. Cleveland adopted In lower house <lb />
of cuprous by vote of to J. <lb />
f elected U. s. senator from Mississippi. <lb />
j i. Battleship wrecked on <lb />
reef in Gulf of <lb />
repeal bill signed by president. <lb />
Butler, of North Carolina, <lb />
t president of National <lb />
in session tn Topeka. Kan <lb />
Feb. V. S. senate nomination of <lb />
J W. II. for associate justice of I <lb />
court. <lb />
Feb. Edward D. White, of <lb />
nominated and confirmed as associate <lb />
the U. S. supreme H. ; <lb />
of New York, elected president of <lb />
League of American session at <lb />
Woman Suffrage <lb />
elation, -0th session In Washington, <lb />
U Anthony as president. <lb />
Feb. -At meeting New York. I <lb />
per elected J. W. Scott. I <lb />
of <lb />
Feb. Mrs. Adlai Stevenson reelected <lb />
president of American j <lb />
In session in Washington. <lb />
Feb. commerce law decided by I <lb />
Judge of t inoperative of I <lb />
no <lb />
Mar. C. appointed S. <lb />
senator from Louisiana, Judge White re- <lb />
signed. <lb />
Mar. acquitted of charge <lb />
of complicity in Cronin murder in <lb />
Apr. Walsh, of Ga., <lb />
to succeed tho Senator <lb />
of representatives seated John j. <lb />
from St. Louis in place of Charles P. Joy. <lb />
City election in Spring Kin, Kan., gave all <lb />
municipal lo women. <lb />
Apr. to pass over pres- <lb />
veto failed In tho by a vote of <lb />
to unsealed as <lb />
member of congress In favor of Mr. English <lb />
Apr. senate defeated house <lb />
bill for woman Tillman pro- <lb />
claimed Carolina at an <lb />
end. <lb />
Apr. Pollard awarded In <lb />
damage suit Congressman W. C. P. <lb />
at Washington. <lb />
Apr. 10-Ex-Gov. J. T. appointed as <lb />
S. senator to succeed tho Senator <lb />
from North Carolina. <lb />
Apr. Horace Porter reelected pres- <lb />
of Sons of the Revolution In annual con- <lb />
Washington. <lb />
May chosen to succeed ex- <lb />
as commander of t Loyal <lb />
In session at <lb />
of tho American Protective association met <lb />
at Des Ia. <lb />
May Patton. Jr., of Grand Rapids, <lb />
appointed U. S. senator to succeed the <lb />
late F. B. <lb />
May Gen. O. O. Howard elected pres- <lb />
of National Temperance society. <lb />
May UP. J- elected president of <lb />
National Order of Hibernians at Omaha. <lb />
Mrs. Charles of Chicago, elected <lb />
president of General Federation of Women's <lb />
clubs at Philadelphia. <lb />
May reelected to the S. <lb />
senate from Louisiana. <lb />
May Bimetallic <lb />
representing United States. South and <lb />
Central America and Mexico, met in <lb />
ton. <lb />
May of elected <lb />
president of Educational so- <lb />
in session at s N. Y. <lb />
May Congress of Liberal <lb />
Societies in Chicago, with <lb />
I. W. Thomas as <lb />
June of New York, re- <lb />
elected preside it of society at <lb />
Des la. <lb />
June W. of Pa. <lb />
chosen resent by supreme council of the Royal <lb />
June P. elect- <lb />
ed by Island legislature to U. S. senate. <lb />
June C. of Minnesota, elected <lb />
president of National Association of -Millers, at <lb />
Chicago. <lb />
Juno A. S. Webb, of N.-w York, <lb />
elected president of the Army of the Potomac, <lb />
at Concord. N. H. <lb />
A. Lee. of St Louis, elected <lb />
president of Commercial Protective <lb />
association, at Milwaukee. <lb />
June W. of Illinois, elected <lb />
president of National Republican league, <lb />
Denver- <lb />
July bill passed tho senate as <lb />
amended by vote of to <lb />
murderer of Carter H. Harrison, found sane <lb />
and sentenced to be executed Midwinter <lb />
fair at San Francisco closed; total attendance <lb />
since 2.140.154 <lb />
July A. of Ann Arbor. <lb />
Mich. elected president too music <lb />
convention in York. <lb />
July allowing statehood signed <lb />
by tho president. <lb />
t M. of Minneapolis, <lb />
elected president of Catholic Total Abstinence <lb />
union St. Paul. <lb />
Aug. of Hawaii formally <lb />
by the United States. <lb />
Aug. of representatives agreed to <lb />
the Wilson tariff bill as amended the senate. <lb />
Aug. 23-Col. William E. Bundy. of Ohio, <lb />
elected In chief of Sons of Veterans <lb />
at Davenport. Ia <lb />
bill a law without <lb />
president's signature. <lb />
Aug. Both houses of <lb />
sine die. <lb />
A Woodbury elected <lb />
governor of Vermont by 26.000 majority. <lb />
B Cleaves reelected governor of <lb />
Maine by 37.000 majority. <lb />
Thomas G. of Rock- <lb />
ford. elected commander In of G. A. <lb />
it at of <lb />
elected Mrs. Ellen M. Walker, of Worcester, <lb />
Mass. as president. Woman's Relief Corps, <lb />
to G. A. R. elected Mrs. Emma R. <lb />
Wallace, cf Chicago, as president. <lb />
W. of Maryland, <lb />
elected sire of sovereign grand lodge <lb />
of odd follows at Chattanooga. Tenn <lb />
I. Sargent elected <lb />
master of Brotherhood of Locomotive <lb />
st <lb />
Apr games season <lb />
National League ball clubs. <lb />
May and won 8-mile <lb />
for professionals at Austin, Tex. <lb />
beat Peterson In <lb />
at Austin. Tex., the three <lb />
miles in of London, <lb />
completed trip around the world in days, <lb />
hours. SO minutes. <lb />
May lent in chess match <lb />
at Montreal for world's <lb />
June V. Miner, of Indianapolis, broke <lb />
worlds bicycle record at Louisville, <lb />
making the run in <lb />
June 15-Van Wagoner lowered record for 12- <lb />
mile handicap bicycle rood race, going the dis- <lb />
in at N. Y. <lb />
Juno Zimmerman, tho American <lb />
rider, won international bicycle race at Flor- <lb />
Italy. <lb />
June El Santa Anita, owned by <lb />
Baldwin, of San Amer- <lb />
derby at In <lb />
June walked miles from <lb />
New Orleans to St. Louis in II days ft hours. <lb />
July N. J. Fred Roves low- <lb />
bicycle record to seconds. <lb />
July trial trip at. Boston cruiser <lb />
Minneapolis broke all records, making <lb />
knots an hour. <lb />
July J. rode on bicycle from <lb />
New York to Chicago In h , <lb />
July F. Warner, who left Chicago <lb />
January to circumscribe the globe without <lb />
a dollar to pay his way, accomplished this in <lb />
less than six months <lb />
July free-for-all pace at Cleveland, O. <lb />
Robert J. made now record, an average of five <lb />
heats being in <lb />
rig. bent <lb />
world's record for 24-hour making <lb />
mile. <lb />
July Neel. of Chicago, won tennis <lb />
championship of tho northwest, at Lake Min- <lb />
and lowered mile <lb />
record at Minneapolis to 4-5. <lb />
Aug. match race at Paris, Linton rode <lb />
miles on in <lb />
Aug. lowered race records for <lb />
3-year-old pacers to at Terre Ind. <lb />
L. and Fred C <lb />
lowered bicycle record to <lb />
to hours minutes. <lb />
competitive bicycle <lb />
record for I mile to 3-5; for miles, to <lb />
Aug. came from <lb />
Liverpool to New York in days hours <lb />
minutes. <lb />
Aug. lowered east- <lb />
ward record from New York to to <lb />
days hours minutes. <lb />
Palmer. Mass. Allen Atkins, <lb />
aged lowered world's record for bicycle rid- <lb />
backwards half-mile to <lb />
Sop. Springfield. Mass. Titus lowered <lb />
5-mile record to 3-5. <lb />
Terre Ind., Fantasy low- <lb />
record for 4-year-old trotting mile <lb />
In <lb />
At Terre Ind. John R <lb />
Gentry put stallion record to In a race <lb />
New York reached Sandy Hook <lb />
from Southampton In <lb />
Case woo the tennis <lb />
of Iowa, Missouri. Kansas and Ne- <lb />
defeating J. W. st <lb />
City. <lb />
5-mile competitive road <lb />
record lowered at Chicago, to <lb />
Pittsburgh H. G Tyler lowered bicycle mile <lb />
record on one-quarter mile track to <lb />
Directly lowered <lb />
2-year-old record to <lb />
at San Jose. Cat. low- <lb />
yearling trotting record to <lb />
season of National Base- <lb />
ball ended with Baltimore at the head <lb />
O., Flying Jib lowered <lb />
world's mile pacing record to with s <lb />
running mate. <lb />
Oct. Jib paced a mile at <lb />
O. with mate In <lb />
Oct. Ninon's mare Quirt ran at <lb />
Vallejo. CaL. two fastest heats en record, the <lb />
first in second in <lb />
Oct. and deciding game of the <lb />
seven of tho cup between New <lb />
York and Baltimore baseball won by <lb />
New York. <lb />
Oct. J. won a pacing race from <lb />
Joe at Sioux City. Ia., In three heats, <lb />
making the last In <lb />
Oct. broke world's record for <lb />
4-year-olds, pacing an exhibition mile at Sioux <lb />
City. Ia. In <lb />
Oct. stake for 2-year-olds at <lb />
Nashville, Tenn., Impetuous trotted two heats <lb />
In equaling world's race record. <lb />
Oct. Hamilton. Ont. Bicyclist David- <lb />
son lowered record for tho quarter to <lb />
Oct. Mass., Tyler cut the <lb />
standing start bicycle record to <lb />
Oct rode from Chicago to <lb />
New York in hours minutes. <lb />
Oct cyclist, rode <lb />
miles at St. Louis In straight <lb />
course at Buffalo. Y., John S. Johnson rode <lb />
mile on bicycle in 2-5. <lb />
Oct. <lb />
tho Atlantic In days hours and minutes. <lb />
Nov. record lowered at San Jose, <lb />
Cal., by Senator L. trotting four miles In <lb />
Nov. At O., John S. Johnson, <lb />
cyclist, the one-third mile In 2-5, a <lb />
new world's record <lb />
Nov. O. Cyclist Johnson <lb />
one-third mile In <lb />
and a one-half mile in 1-5. new records. <lb />
Nov. paced a mile on half- <lb />
mile track at San Antonio, Tex., In new <lb />
record. <lb />
Nov. champion Amer- <lb />
wing shot, defeated In by Dr. <lb />
Carver At Louisville. John S. Johnson low- <lb />
world's bicycle record for <lb />
3-5. <lb />
Nov. Johnson lowered the <lb />
record at Louisville. Ky. of start <lb />
to train over the <lb />
road covered miles In minutes. <lb />
Nov. Louisville. Ky. John S. Johnson <lb />
cut record to 4-6 Yale <lb />
won in series of foot- <lb />
ball games at Springfield, Mass., to <lb />
Nov. cyclist, rode <lb />
paced mile at Buffalo, N. Y. In 2-5. <lb />
Dec. M. won that <lb />
he could walk from New York to San Fran- <lb />
between May and midnight December <lb />
Dec. At Indianapolis A. Hanson <lb />
rode miles In new record. <lb />
Dec. Chicago Frank C. Ives twice broke <lb />
world's record at balk-line billiards an- <lb />
running up points, then <lb />
Doc. of Buffalo, N. Y-. <lb />
broke straightaway mile road bicycle record <lb />
to and the mile to l <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
PURE <lb />
GREENVILLE'S GROWTH. <lb />
Her Building Record for Past <lb />
Year. <lb />
No can l given <lb />
of growth of a town t an in <lb />
the of buildings going <lb />
up, the desiring <lb />
to let people <lb />
had done in line <lb />
hunted up <lb />
and <lb />
m-w <lb />
W. J. <lb />
the following lint <lb />
from <lb />
W. M. residence <lb />
Fortes Move, it rs <lb />
F. residence <lb />
II. residence <lb />
Booker Bernard, <lb />
house <lb />
I. Edward-, <lb />
Public School House <lb />
A. J. cottage <lb />
Presbyterian Church <lb />
Mis II. T- Dani-I, <lb />
tenant house <lb />
Zeno Moore, residence <lb />
w. h residence <lb />
A- cottage <lb />
J. Wooten, residence <lb />
two s <lb />
Mrs. King, lo hotel <lb />
Mrs. M. residence <lb />
A. C residence <lb />
J B re. houses <lb />
Greenville Lumber Co., plan <lb />
null 1,200 <lb />
Elliott I'm <lb />
cottage <lb />
Moses tenant a G <lb />
It A- n, r <lb />
Cottage <lb />
Besides new buildings <lb />
there has considerable re <lb />
pairing painting done <lb />
the Mr. estimating <lb />
that ins small repair jobs alone <lb />
have amounted to more than <lb />
has been done by other <lb />
contractors. Th-n tin re <lb />
been several small built <lb />
for colored whose names <lb />
we could not learn, tin <lb />
whole the above shows a good <lb />
record for a town of <lb />
people. other houses <lb />
are under contract for nest year. <lb />
1,860 <lb />
1,600 <lb />
1.8 Tl <lb />
GOO <lb />
9-00 <lb />
Hews <lb />
of <lb />
A Vanishing Lake. <lb />
R of Chicago, elected <lb />
of the United <lb />
a Owens the <lb />
for <lb />
land district. <lb />
Sop. Owens, of New York, elect- <lb />
ed president of United of Car- <lb />
and Joiners, at <lb />
Oct. of the Army of the Tennessee <lb />
elected M. Dodge, of Iowa, in <lb />
annual session at Council Bluffs, la. <lb />
Oct. United Order of Odd Fellows, <lb />
otherwise Haw <lb />
pond, a sheet of water seventeen <lb />
miles east of Ga., is small, <lb />
but wonderful, being regarded as <lb />
one of the greatest natural <lb />
in the south. It takes its <lb />
name of from the <lb />
fact that every year, some time be- <lb />
tween the 10th and 20th of May, <lb />
its waters become terribly <lb />
and within a few minutes to- <lb />
tally disappear, sinking through <lb />
the bottom with a great roar. <lb />
lakes and ponds in that vicinity <lb />
have disappeared, but this is tho <lb />
Francis the last King <lb />
Naples, is dying. <lb />
A fire day <lb />
Y. A- building at Albany, <lb />
R. Y- <lb />
n. Charles P- Montague, of <lb />
a native Virginian, it <lb />
dead. <lb />
The Cliff House near San Fran <lb />
by file, loss <lb />
The Normal College for Girls <lb />
I at Livingston Ala., burned, loss <lb />
E. It Carter, a clerk Nation <lb />
Bank of C York <lb />
arrested for stealing <lb />
James a 10-year-old <lb />
boy, of Glade Springs, Va., <lb />
shot himself and died. <lb />
THE HAT-PIN <lb />
It Cultivate Quickness of the Bye sad <lb />
Street <lb />
A g i who lives in a <lb />
west -t family hotel has invent- <lb />
ed a n- gains to amuse his wife <lb />
and a same cultivate her <lb />
powers of observation. It is not <lb />
complicated can be played <lb />
by who possesses a hat <lb />
pin an I good eyesight, says an <lb />
the morning husband and <lb />
wife agree upon a i block as <lb />
the field of operations. For the <lb />
sake of convenience it may be <lb />
said that they choose the block <lb />
on Twelfth between Bread- <lb />
way and Central and on the south <lb />
side thereof. When he goes to <lb />
work he takes on of her hat pins <lb />
and sticks it into the wood any- <lb />
arm's reach either <lb />
above in below the waistline <lb />
into any available woodwork, <lb />
such as door, post, a porch or a <lb />
telegraph pole. <lb />
When she goes down town <lb />
shopping, or for any other <lb />
she looks for it, <lb />
and if rinds it she claims a re- <lb />
ward, he pays gum, <lb />
gloves or candy. To vary <lb />
she places the pin and <lb />
he endeavors to it for a re <lb />
ward of cigars- Of course they <lb />
change the block fix in lo <lb />
time, as tho eyes soon become <lb />
accustomed to every available <lb />
inch of wood in the block- <lb />
Now the lad- thinks it a <lb />
amusing interesting ; m <lb />
and she reads this will prob <lb />
not have discovered how <lb />
her really is. She is a <lb />
pretty v and there are many <lb />
good locking and susceptible <lb />
men who Twelfth street <lb />
Ir pleasure bent. The <lb />
hat pin game so absorbs the <lb />
lady's attention when on the <lb />
street that she has eyes for <lb />
the men and does see their <lb />
admiring glances. She goes <lb />
so self- <lb />
centered that men of gay <lb />
or get a chill. There is a <lb />
this story for men <lb />
the game is patented. <lb />
In annual convention In Boston, elected James <lb />
of Philadelphia, grand master. only one which fills up and <lb />
Oct. J. Shorten, of reelected ,, , , <lb />
president of American Humane so in goes <lb />
at J. of Chi- , <lb />
elected president of American i <lb />
In at Baltimore. <lb />
Nov. Election returns gave republican ma- <lb />
in New York, New Jersey. <lb />
Massachusetts, New Hampshire, <lb />
Island. Pennsylvania, North <lb />
It Would Never Do. <lb />
Dec suspected of <lb />
wounded bis two el minors <lb />
and at Council la. <lb />
Dee. Mo. <lb />
Jones cut throats of her two then <lb />
killed herself. <lb />
theater tn <lb />
worth l <lb />
S-On world's in <lb />
Casino, Music ball. Perl an part A n- <lb />
plant, at <lb />
Oct. T-Oliver Holmes, famous <lb />
philosopher and in Boston; <lb />
Q. war governor Of <lb />
at aged <lb />
Oct. <lb />
Now Jeni <lb />
u, <lb />
. b New aged <lb />
No. Myron D. of <lb />
at <lb />
Nov. C. Winthrop, S sen- <lb />
and ex-speaker of congress. In <lb />
Oh, no, it would never do to have <lb />
south Dakota. California. i a husband and wife partners at the <lb />
Colorado. Utah, . , ,, <lb />
Ohio. Wisconsin, Missouri. Kansas, <lb />
West Virginia. Idaho, Mont ma. <lb />
Iowa. Nebraska a fusion <lb />
governor. Mississippi, South Carolina, Ken- <lb />
Texas, Florida, Alabama. Louisiana <lb />
and Georgia went <lb />
amendment defeated In by <lb />
Nov. Russell A. Alger. of Detroit, <lb />
Mich., elected in Pittsburgh president the <lb />
National association. <lb />
Nov. --Brig- appointed major <lb />
In U. S. army to succeed Howard, <lb />
retired. <lb />
Nov. organized at Mont- <lb />
Ala., a national association for <lb />
of their Interests. <lb />
Nov. E. reelected <lb />
dent of National Christian <lb />
union In 21st annual session In Cleveland. <lb />
It. Sovereign reelected general <lb />
master workman of Knights of Labor in <lb />
at New Orleans. <lb />
Nov. T Morgan reelected to <lb />
S. senate from Alabama. <lb />
conference for good city <lb />
government met at Minneapolis. <lb />
house of passed a <lb />
bill amending the Interstate commerce act to <lb />
permit of railroad pooling by vote of to <lb />
Chief Justice Dale, of tho supreme court of <lb />
Oklahoma, children must be <lb />
allowed to attend white <lb />
Tillman elected United States senator from <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Civil Service Reform <lb />
league In session in Chicago re-elected Carl <lb />
as president. <lb />
elected at Denver <lb />
of Federation of Labor- <lb />
was chosen U headquarters. <lb />
struck <lb />
of <lb />
h. <lb />
Mrs. Susan Young was <lb />
and killed by engine <lb />
passenger train on the A <lb />
road. <lb />
The large four story <lb />
factory of J- M. Bailey, <lb />
burnt-d Thursday <lb />
Loss One hundred <lb />
bands thrown out of employment. <lb />
Two Saved. <lb />
Mrs of Junction <lb />
City, ill., was toll her doctors she <lb />
had and that there wag <lb />
no hope fur her, but two bottles of Dr. <lb />
New cured <lb />
sud -lie says ii saved her life. Mr. <lb />
Th- s. r Keen, Florida St. San Fran- <lb />
ii cold, <lb />
tried without <lb />
n everything else then bought one <lb />
of Dr. New <lb />
In weeks He is naturally <lb />
I. Ii is such results, of which <lb />
samples, th it prove the won- <lb />
efficacy of this in<lb />
L Store, u <lb />
and <lb />
kinds of Clocks, and <lb />
y a. <lb />
All <lb />
Jewell <lb />
Cleaning <lb />
Gold t <lb />
in ml Ii. to <lb />
work a All work <lb />
ed <lb />
Z. F. <lb />
Jewel r, <lb />
S. O <lb />
r i <lb />
gnu <lb />
of <lb />
us. J. aged <lb />
Nov. Isaac Howe, at D. <lb />
Nov. and S. <lb />
Joseph E. Brown, at Atlanta. Ga.; aged M. <lb />
Ex-Gov. Leon of <lb />
a g,. K j-tot- <lb />
Jan. S Johnson, of Minneapolis, beat <lb />
skating record at Madison, time, <lb />
Jan. fight at Fla , <lb />
of California, knocked out Mitchell, <lb />
In third <lb />
Jan ST-Johns. brake world's v. <lb />
mile at Cleveland, O.; time, <lb />
Feb. skating record for <lb />
For years it baa n <lb />
doz that it would b I <lb />
y to tun m of Southern fat <lb />
farmer would raise <lb />
his supplies and make c <lb />
a s crop. While every bod <lb />
to the of <lb />
yet farmers have <lb />
it for his n- <lb />
but t ha, <lb />
about come to piss far<lb />
a pound it a question raising <lb />
at or going bun <lb />
With plenty of home-raised lug <lb />
and there is money <lb />
, in cotton at live cents on a <lb />
l farm there in in <lb />
wheat in the or any <lb />
F PRICE, <lb />
and <lb />
N. C. <lb />
DR. II. A. JOYNER, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
It Is a well-known fact <lb />
that people who have played part- <lb />
in whist are forever after <lb />
either open or covert enemies. <lb />
Think, then, of the terrible <lb />
in case the partners wens <lb />
man and wife The would <lb />
lecture her husband all night and <lb />
every night on how he ought to <lb />
rave played, and the husband would <lb />
bear of himself, and all be- <lb />
cause she happened to trump his I <lb />
trick or failed to return bis lead, other fanning. <lb />
Oh, no, never do. The , ,, ,. <lb />
The farmers of North Carolina <lb />
A Youthful Connecticut Editor, may be PLOT, short of <lb />
A Norfolk correspondent j and badly hurt by mortgage plan- <lb />
of the New Tribune tells of an i they have bacon <lb />
editor still younger than Lady Mar-1 and ho and in <lb />
At tho age of five So they will <lb />
years little Stout began to tn <lb />
O. <lb />
ii; <lb />
store. <lb />
i. <lb />
iT, <lb />
SHOO. <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
B. F. <lb />
set type In her- father's office, and <lb />
by the time she had reached the ma- <lb />
ago of eight she printed and ed- <lb />
a paper of her own, the Midget. <lb />
workhouse or die of hunger <lb />
if the Radicals are again on top <lb />
cotton sells tor a <lb />
p mid and wheat at cents. We <lb />
that farmer now <lb />
AT <lb />
Prompt attention to <lb />
L. <lb />
KM a paper nor own, the Midget. he; <lb />
She has done this successfully for, j k hero Rt cents, J <lb />
the last four years and has More farmers wish to <lb />
come. The door stands wide open. <lb />
Messenger- <lb />
thousand subscribers, all the profits <lb />
being devoted, charitable objects. <lb />
aim now Is to establish a school <lb />
tor poor whites in the south. <lb />
is also interested in a temperance <lb />
paper. <lb />
Jab. E. <lb />
Williamston. <lb />
A MOORE. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third St. <lb />
U.<lb />
There baa been considerable <lb />
snow and sleet to the north of us,; <lb />
the wires have been <lb />
GREENVILLE, S <lb />
court, i a<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017726_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
WEDNESDAY. S, <lb />
d at the at <lb />
K. C, as mail matter. <lb />
Mr- H- J- Herrick has retired <lb />
from the editorial management of <lb />
the Wilson Mirror- <lb />
If you don't forget you may <lb />
now write it eighteen and <lb />
we mean <lb />
C. I Co. of Lowell. <lb />
Mass of <lb />
Hood s Sarsaparilla, sent us two <lb />
pretty calendars for <lb />
Brown Hooker have <lb />
chased the stock of of F <lb />
Fleming, deceased, who was in <lb />
business at the Parker X roads, <lb />
two miles from town. <lb />
The John Flanagan Boggy Co., <lb />
have vacated the store building <lb />
in the Opera House block, and <lb />
will hereafter use the Williamson <lb />
shops for show and storage room- <lb />
Come to the Reflector office <lb />
tor blank crop liens, deeds, land <lb />
mortgages and chattel mortgages <lb />
Large lot of them just printed <lb />
with now type good paper <lb />
The Presbyterian church is in <lb />
need of a good bell- If you will <lb />
hand a contribution to help get <lb />
one to Mr. B- D. Evans it will be <lb />
thankfully received and aid a <lb />
good cause. <lb />
The Quarterly Conference for <lb />
the Greenville circuit will be held <lb />
at Bethlehem Jan. All of the <lb />
stewards, trustees and Sunday <lb />
School Superintendents are re <lb />
quested to be present. <lb />
L- H. Pastor. <lb />
Among the presents given by <lb />
the Blackwell Durham Tobacco <lb />
Company, of Durham, to its em- <lb />
on day. were <lb />
watches and The <lb />
cash to its em- <lb />
by the Duke <lb />
of the city, <lb />
gated <lb />
for <lb />
the <lb />
fill <lb />
Keeper Appointed <lb />
Mr. J. W. Smith has been <lb />
pointed keeper of the home <lb />
the aged infirm until <lb />
Board of I can <lb />
the vacancy by election next Mob <lb />
day. We suppose they will <lb />
elect Mr. Smith for the year. Ho <lb />
is an excellent fat the place. <lb />
Transfers. <lb />
The following transfers of real <lb />
estate have been made through <lb />
Henry real estate agent <lb />
Greenville Lumbar to <lb />
Charlie C two lots. <lb />
Greenville Lumber , to Jo. <lb />
Whitty two lots. <lb />
Greenville Limber to Mrs. <lb />
A M- Evans, one lot. <lb />
Greenville Lumber o , to Ir- <lb />
Joyner, lot. <lb />
Not Before <lb />
It has been reported that the <lb />
public school here would be <lb />
opened soon, but this is a mis <lb />
take. The re- <lb />
quest the Reflector to slate that <lb />
as the new building is not yet <lb />
ready for use the school will not <lb />
be opened in the <lb />
spring, hardly before April- Due <lb />
announcement of the will <lb />
be made. <lb />
A Big Robbery. <lb />
A Mi. Ward who works at the <lb />
lumber mill, <lb />
near Ferry, was a heavy <lb />
loser a robbery a few nights <lb />
ago. His wife was away from <lb />
home and after supper Mr. Ward <lb />
locked up his house and walked <lb />
to Grimesland. While gone <lb />
some body broke into his house <lb />
and stole a among the con- <lb />
tents of which was <lb />
and a note for the same amount- <lb />
Burning Cotton. <lb />
Last Friday a small shed on <lb />
the premises of Mr. it- T. i- <lb />
son, near under <lb />
which he had some cotton stored, <lb />
caught tire and burned down. <lb />
Mr. Wilson had five bales of the <lb />
burning cotton hauled to <lb />
close by and thrown into <lb />
the water. Policemen T- R. <lb />
Moore who returned home from <lb />
Grimesland Monday, tells us he <lb />
saw the bales of cotton <lb />
about the creek and they are <lb />
still burning. <lb />
CONSECRATION bl. <lb />
Yesterday the beautiful house of <lb />
worship known as St. Pauls <lb />
church was consecrated <lb />
the service of Almighty God h <lb />
very ceremonies- <lb />
Work commenced on the g <lb />
in 1885, and the corner stone <lb />
laid in April. About a year la- <lb />
it was completed ready fir <lb />
use at a cost of but as a <lb />
debt was incurred the <lb />
was postponed until all <lb />
was removed. The <lb />
congregation has struggled along <lb />
heroically with the debt and this <lb />
bright new year finds them with <lb />
the last penny of it paid. <lb />
The consecration services were <lb />
conducted by Rt. Rev. A- A. Wat <lb />
son. Bishop of this Diocese, as- <lb />
by Rev. A- Rector <lb />
of St Paul's ; Rev. R. B <lb />
of ; Rey. L L- Williams, <lb />
cf Elizabeth City ; Rev- N. <lb />
ding, of Washington Rev. N. C <lb />
Hughes, of and <lb />
Rev. F- Joyner, of Banyan. <lb />
The sermon was by <lb />
Rev. N- C- Hughes from text <lb />
the Lord is in this I <lb />
The entire service was interesting <lb />
and impressive, and one could <lb />
not sit under if s with- <lb />
out lifting bis heart in gratitude <lb />
to the Father for the <lb />
manifold blessings He has vouch- <lb />
to the children of men. <lb />
Looking at the ministers in the <lb />
brought back <lb />
of the sainted Dr. H. C <lb />
Hughes, who spent many years <lb />
of his labors with St- Paul's, to <lb />
him represented there in a <lb />
son, a son-in-law, and a nephew. <lb />
Capt. R. C. Brown. Dead. <lb />
Special to Reflector. <lb />
N. C, Dec t <lb />
R. C Brown, one of <lb />
oldest citizens and proprietor of <lb />
the well-known firm of R. C. <lb />
died at his home at <lb />
o'clock last night. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY. <lb />
J. R. <lb />
J. G- <lb />
THE <lb />
to <lb />
N. C, Dec. 27.-At <lb />
o'clock in the Baptist church, <lb />
Kev. Mr Savage officiating, Miss <lb />
Mattie Wright, one of <lb />
accomplished young ladies, was <lb />
married to Dr. J. M Parker, of <lb />
Goldsboro- The couple departed <lb />
on the noon train for a northern <lb />
tour. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY CO <lb />
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN PRESENTING TO THEIR <lb />
MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS THEIR <lb />
WINTER <lb />
SHOT TO DEATH. <lb />
A Constable Killed for <lb />
His Duty. <lb />
Discharging <lb />
Washington, N. C, Dec <lb />
At Idalia yesterday J. F Ber <lb />
shot and killed <lb />
J. H. Watson. The Constable had <lb />
arrested for some of- <lb />
and the Magistrate before <lb />
whom the case was triad imposed <lb />
a heavy fine. This angered Ber- <lb />
and he shot Watson twice <lb />
in of the head. After <lb />
Watson fell shot him <lb />
four times more. He is under <lb />
arrest and officers are expected <lb />
to reach here with him to day- <lb />
has attempted suicide <lb />
on several occasions. <lb />
HIS CLOTHES OH FIRE. <lb />
A Harrow Escape <lb />
From, Death. <lb />
to <lb />
N. C, Dec. <lb />
night at a Christmas tree here <lb />
Mr. Luther Bryan had a narrow <lb />
escape from being to <lb />
death. He was dressed in cotton <lb />
acting as Santa Claus and while <lb />
walking near the tree his suit <lb />
caught fire, the flame going <lb />
over him like a flash- Parties <lb />
rushed to his assistance and by <lb />
keeping the tire from his month <lb />
saved his When turned <lb />
loose he could not <lb />
His burns are very <lb />
LYNCHED. <lb />
of Constable Watson <lb />
Swung to a <lb />
Si to Reflector. <lb />
N- C. Dec. <lb />
J- F. who on Christ- <lb />
mas morning brutally murdered <lb />
Constable J- H. Watson, was <lb />
taken from the prison at Aurora <lb />
before day yesterday morning <lb />
and hanged to a tree the <lb />
of his crime. The body <lb />
was riddled with bullets. There <lb />
were no fears at first that he <lb />
would be lynched, as he passed <lb />
the night in prison <lb />
but at the funeral of the <lb />
murdered man the tears of his <lb />
grief stricken wife and <lb />
so enraged the that a <lb />
mob was organized which <lb />
the horrible deed as stated <lb />
above. The entire neighborhood <lb />
is wild with excitement. <lb />
HIGHWAY ROB- <lb />
A Negro Assaults J. R. <lb />
Special to <lb />
Ayden N. C Dec. <lb />
night as Mr. J. R. Smith was re- <lb />
turning home from his store, he <lb />
was attacked by a boy <lb />
Tobe who was wait- <lb />
for him near the railroad. <lb />
The commenced striking at <lb />
Mr. Smith with the club and the <lb />
latter drew a pocket knife, <lb />
his only weapon, and cut his as- <lb />
in two places, and <lb />
in defeating his purpose. <lb />
Later a crowd went to the house <lb />
of Tony Tyson and found <lb />
and kept him in custody all night. <lb />
This morning he was arraigned <lb />
before W. B. Moore, Esq., and <lb />
committed to jail. The intention <lb />
of the was to knock <lb />
Smith and rob him of his <lb />
money. <lb />
The was lo <lb />
Greenville about o'clock and <lb />
put in jail. <lb />
of <lb />
of <lb />
the <lb />
the <lb />
Sunday <lb />
Below are the <lb />
several Sunday Schools <lb />
to-n for the year <lb />
METHODIST. <lb />
B. <lb />
ton. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
H. Pender. <lb />
TreasurerS A- <lb />
Warren. <lb />
Handing. <lb />
White. <lb />
BAPTIST. <lb />
D. <lb />
F. Burch. <lb />
B. Jarvis. <lb />
J. Cherry. <lb />
Ivy Smith. <lb />
Rosalind <lb />
as Perkins- <lb />
D. Evans. <lb />
B. E- <lb />
Secy and <lb />
well.- <lb />
Harding. <lb />
B. Brown. <lb />
Sec A B- Brown <lb />
A Good Thing. <lb />
We heard some business men <lb />
talking Saturday about how dull <lb />
everything seemed with the to- <lb />
warehouses closed for the <lb />
Last week gives an <lb />
idea of the of <lb />
would without a <lb />
After the services l <lb />
which has been selected with special reference to the trade in <lb />
this locality. It includes the pick of the market in Fresh <lb />
Fall and Winter Styles and not less astonishing than the <lb />
goods, will be the low prices put on them. We <lb />
---------are here to compete with <lb />
Dollar list Dollar. <lb />
We are after your patronage and expect to get it by <lb />
value received; we do not want it on terms. We pro- <lb />
post, to inaugurate the rarest bargain season we have ever <lb />
sided over. A half-hour spent in looking over our stock will <lb />
give you some idea of the popular styles and we can only hope <lb />
that it will be as much pleasure for you to see as for us to show <lb />
our goods. <lb />
-ALWAYS REMEMBER THAT WE CARRY-<lb />
and fit <lb />
all. <lb />
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Valises, Glass <lb />
ware. Wood and Hardware, Guns, Shot and Pow <lb />
Gun Implements, Tinware, Cutlery, Plows and Castings to <lb />
fit, Harness, Groceries and Flour.<lb />
We still lead in this line, having the largest and best selected <lb />
stock ever carried in our town. We have six thousand <lb />
and seventy-five square feet of floor space <lb />
to this one line, and when you want <lb />
anything in the Furniture line <lb />
------consisting of------- <lb />
Medium Price Marble Top Suits, <lb />
Marble Top Bureaus, <lb />
Wood Top Bureaus <lb />
CHAIRS, BEDSTEAD AND LOUNGES <lb />
Tables, <lb />
Extension Dining Table, Side Boards, Tin Safes, <lb />
Bed Spring, Children's Beds and Cribs, Parlor <lb />
Racks, Wardrobes, Lace Cm Curtain <lb />
yard, yard and a half and two yards <lb />
Mats, call on us. <lb />
Mattresses, <lb />
Suits, Hall <lb />
Poles, Floor Oil <lb />
wide, and Door <lb />
LS <lb />
GRAND NEW YEAR <lb />
------1 WILL THROW MY ENTIRE OF------ <lb />
CLOTHING <lb />
------ON THE MARKET TO BE------ <lb />
Reduced by January 1895, <lb />
to make room for Spring Goods, and in order lo sell you I will offer <lb />
yon Wonderful Bargains in <lb />
Men and Boys Ready- Made- Clothing <lb />
Till STICK. <lb />
This is a legitimate offer and if you will come and see me I will <lb />
astonish you in fit, finish, style and price. I have some <lb />
lovely Suits, just the thing for the Christmas holidays. <lb />
Don't forget this great Offer. <lb />
I will also put in this sale my stock of <lb />
DRY T TATS. <lb />
RY IN <lb />
AND FURNISHING GOODS. <lb />
I have reduced prices on in order to reduce my <lb />
stock by the 1st of January, 1805. <lb />
Come on good people and let me prove to you that I have made <lb />
a great reduction. Remember I will refuse no reasonable price offered. <lb />
Remember the name and place. <lb />
Frank <lb />
In. <lb />
Condensed <lb />
re- <lb />
killed and <lb />
at a tire in <lb />
The Florida orange crop is re- <lb />
ported rained by the freeze. <lb />
Severe earthquake shocks <lb />
ported from Sicily. <lb />
Two firemen were <lb />
four others injured <lb />
New York. <lb />
of John L. Beatty <lb />
near Asheville, burned Thursday <lb />
night, loss <lb />
Parties exploded n bomb in <lb />
Wilson Thursday night doing <lb />
considerable damage to the Dis- <lb />
church. <lb />
Two women at Conn., <lb />
were suffocated by a bed barning <lb />
their room. <lb />
The Presidents of col- <lb />
prohibit intercollegiate <lb />
foot ball games. <lb />
A four-masted <lb />
ashore near and is <lb />
total loss. All the crew saved- <lb />
The old capitol at Atlanta, Ga , <lb />
used for an office building, dam- <lb />
aged by fire to the extent of <lb />
J. H. Robertson, a brother of <lb />
Senator G. Robertson, froze <lb />
to death a road near Peeks- <lb />
hill, N. Y- <lb />
W. W. a merchant of <lb />
Baldwin, Fla., while beating his <lb />
wife was shot killed by h's <lb />
18-year old son. <lb />
Ninety of the Census <lb />
office at Washington were dis- <lb />
missed Monday. The work <lb />
department had been com- <lb />
August a French <lb />
man, tried to kill three people at <lb />
Newcastle. Pa., and then killed <lb />
himself. Two of his victims were <lb />
dangerously wounded. <lb />
Near Atlantic City, N. J. a <lb />
procession bearing the <lb />
body of a child was intercepted <lb />
by rapidly rising tide and had <lb />
to abandon the hearse- <lb />
Forty one persons were burned <lb />
to death while attending a Christ- <lb />
mas tree a- Silver <lb />
Lake, Oregon. Tl e fire was <lb />
ed by a man upsetting a lump. <lb />
The new Supreme Court for <lb />
this State assembled in R <lb />
today, and the oath of office was <lb />
to the Judges. An <lb />
adjournment was then taken to <lb />
February 1st, <lb />
Office of <lb />
Pitt County, j <lb />
The-following is a statement of <lb />
the number of meetings of the <lb />
Hoard of Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
and number of days each <lb />
member hath attended and the <lb />
number of miles by each, <lb />
and the allowed to each <lb />
member lot services as <lb />
for the fiscal year ending <lb />
December 6th <lb />
OF MEETINGS <lb />
Council Dawson hath attended lo <lb />
T. E. <lb />
Fleming <lb />
Smith <lb />
S. A. <lb />
For as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee <lb />
at per day <lb />
For milts travel at -G <lb />
Total <lb />
T. E. KEEL. <lb />
For days as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For as committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles Havel at <lb />
Total <lb />
L. FLEMING. <lb />
For days as Commission <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at <lb />
Total <lb />
JESSE L SMITH- <lb />
For days as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at Sets <lb />
I am pleased to state that since recovering <lb />
from my recent sickness I have visited <lb />
the northern markets to purchase <lb />
NEW GOODS <lb />
and am now prepared to show you an <lb />
------site line of----- <lb />
CAPS <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Etc, Etc. <lb />
Yon will find all my goods first class and prices low <lb />
Come to see me and let me show what I can do, <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
C. <lb />
Total <lb />
S. A. GAINER. <lb />
For days as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at Sets <lb />
Total <lb />
I, M. <lb />
-Co <lb />
We have some rare bargains in all lines. We <lb />
defy competition. We are here to stay. We <lb />
can and will sell as low as any one. <lb />
Your friends, <lb />
King, clerk ox- <lb />
office the Hoard of <lb />
for the county, do <lb />
certify that the is a <lb />
correct statement as doth appear <lb />
upon record in my office. <lb />
WILLIAM M. KING, <lb />
lid Com. for Pitt Co. <lb />
Notes around <lb />
The Greenville Lumber Co. <lb />
has started up its mill again <lb />
after closing a few days for the <lb />
holidays. While the mill was <lb />
stopped the large boilers were <lb />
newly bricked and Mr- Han-, . . <lb />
cock tells us that everything I J. <lb />
around tho plant is now in fire <lb />
Ship your produce to <lb />
I. s <lb />
ft <lb />
working order. <lb />
There are several very clever <lb />
gentlemen engaged around <lb />
mill, and it is a pleasure to stroll <lb />
that way see them busy <lb />
with their work. <lb />
Mr. L. T- Barnes, one of the <lb />
operatives, has returned from a <lb />
I holiday trip to Tillery. <lb />
Mr. Alex Simms has returned <lb />
from where he spent <lb />
the holidays. <lb />
Mr. John is back from <lb />
few days visit to Falling Greek <lb />
Factors <lb />
AND <lb />
Commission <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
Personal Attention t <lb />
Weights and Counts- <lb />
fallowing as <lb />
Norfolk prices on <lb />
cotton, i <lb />
Irish Chickens <lb />
Sweet I Young Into IS <lb />
Egg. IS to W to <lb />
Corn, i j to <lb />
We thank our many friends <lb />
their past patronage and <lb />
them all a <lb />
Happy New Year. <lb />
BOSWELL, <lb />
CO.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017726_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Am I going to be lost <lb />
in the snuffle or soaked <lb />
in the soup Not if I <lb />
know it; I am here to <lb />
compete with all com- <lb />
stock against stock <lb />
and dollar against <lb />
I am after the <lb />
Shining <lb />
Shekels <lb />
and I expect to <lb />
by giving value for <lb />
them. I don't want <lb />
on any other terms. <lb />
Come and see me and <lb />
you'll find me <lb />
Death on <lb />
the Dicker. <lb />
I take no man's dust <lb />
on the trade track. I <lb />
won't be bluffed out of <lb />
the business game. I <lb />
now have ready a fine <lb />
stock of Fall and Win- <lb />
Goods and they are <lb />
all marked at a low <lb />
price. Come and size <lb />
them up and you'll see <lb />
I'm <lb />
Fixed to <lb />
Stay in <lb />
the Game <lb />
No or she- <lb />
with me. A fair <lb />
deal to all is my motto. <lb />
a, <lb />
He <lb />
Boys Clothing, <lb />
Etc. <lb />
5th and Evans St, <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Read the <lb />
BULLETIN <lb />
Happy New Year. <lb />
We overlooked changing date <lb />
on first page from 1894 to 1893. <lb />
People who have to move such <lb />
weather as this are to pitied- <lb />
moat offering plentifully <lb />
at cents a pound. <lb />
Cotton wanted for Cash <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets, <lb />
up stairs, Old Brick Store- <lb />
Good Tobacco cents <lb />
pound. Boswell, Co. <lb />
Coffee cents pound. Boswell- <lb />
Co. <lb />
Letters dated a year behind <lb />
tin e will be the order of the next <lb />
few days- <lb />
Snuff cents p Boswell <lb />
Co. <lb />
January will us five Tues- <lb />
days, five Wednesdays five <lb />
Thursdays. <lb />
well, Co <lb />
Red White Blue and Tan Baby <lb />
Shoes. Boswell, Co. <lb />
Mr. G- E. Han is has moved <lb />
his family to the Fleming house, <lb />
corner Fourth <lb />
Splendid tobacco farm for sale, <lb />
all necessary buildings b <lb />
and pack houses, four miles from <lb />
Greenville. Henry <lb />
Real Estate Agent. <lb />
Mr. W. T. Smith, keeper of <lb />
county house for the aged and in <lb />
Brno, died Christmas afternoon, <lb />
about -1 o'clock. <lb />
The ladies are invited to call <lb />
and see the lot of beautiful Box <lb />
Papers inst received at Reflector <lb />
Bookstore. <lb />
Complete line of Dry goods at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
Let the first New Year <lb />
of the business be to <lb />
make a good advertising contract <lb />
with the <lb />
Remember I pay you Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Produces the Old <lb />
Brick <lb />
Sewing machines from to <lb />
Lit-Mt New Home <lb />
St o <lb />
A large of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
ill the Brick Sore. <lb />
The Reflector is indebted to <lb />
Senator J. Jarvis for a <lb />
copy of the official directory of <lb />
the 53rd Congress. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S-, just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb />
Use Orinoco Tobacco Guano. <lb />
The highest price tobacco sold in <lb />
Eastern North Carolina in 1894 <lb />
was made from Orinoco Tobacco <lb />
Guano. Call on G M. Tucker, <lb />
Greenville, A G Cox, Winterville, <lb />
Ormond Turnage, <lb />
ville, R L- Davis it Bro., Farm- <lb />
J. L- Fountain, Falkland. <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
People who write should make <lb />
a note that Diamond Inks <lb />
be surpassed. Sold only at Re- <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
Our Mr. Tucker has gone west <lb />
to buy stock. Wait for his return <lb />
we can give you bargains in <lb />
tine horses. EDWARDS. <lb />
Rev. M. T. of Wilson, will <lb />
preach at Mt. Pleasant church, <lb />
four miles from town on next <lb />
Everybody to <lb />
attend- <lb />
The crowd who had a row <lb />
early Christmas morning was be- <lb />
fore Mayer Flemming yesterday <lb />
afternoon. They were let off <lb />
with paying the costs, as no one <lb />
was hurt. <lb />
During the coming season we <lb />
will keep the very best horses <lb />
and mules for sale- Call to see <lb />
what we have before buying. <lb />
We guarantee satisfaction. We <lb />
also conduct a first livery <lb />
stables. Tucker Edwards. <lb />
Dr. R. L. Carr has returned <lb />
from Philadelphia- <lb />
Mrs. John Pierce, of den, is <lb />
visiting Mrs. Emily Harris- <lb />
will tali <lb />
the news <lb />
next <lb />
Miss Carrie of Snow Hill, <lb />
is visiting Mrs. R- King. <lb />
Mi. Larry returned <lb />
Saturday night from Tarboro. <lb />
Messrs James and Wiley <lb />
Brown have exchanged residence. <lb />
Mrs. E. B. Higgs returned home <lb />
Saturday from Scotland <lb />
Keck. <lb />
Mr. A. B. Ellington has moved <lb />
into the Perkins house on Fourth <lb />
street. <lb />
Miss Anna Merrill, of Farm ville, <lb />
is visiting her brother, Mr. F. <lb />
Morrill. <lb />
Mrs- J. H. Weinberg and child, <lb />
of are visiting Mrs. M. <lb />
R. Lang. <lb />
Mien Lizzie. of <lb />
son is visiting her sister, Mrs. W. <lb />
F. <lb />
Mr. J. C. has returned <lb />
to Norfolk after spending the <lb />
at home- <lb />
Mr. W. P. Hall has returned <lb />
from Goldsboro where lie <lb />
been for a week- <lb />
Mr- F- M. Hodges returned <lb />
from a to Washing <lb />
ton and Tarboro. <lb />
Mr- Larry Moore has returned <lb />
from his holiday trip to hi takers <lb />
and other <lb />
Mrs. Emily of Rich- <lb />
is her sister, Mrs. <lb />
P. C <lb />
Miss Mary A. Bernard arrived <lb />
last week from Wilmington to <lb />
visit her mother. <lb />
Mr. N- H- has return <lb />
ltd from where ho to <lb />
spend the holidays. <lb />
Mr. P. H. Gorman has <lb />
ed from Richmond where he <lb />
wont to spend the holidays. <lb />
Miss Annie Kilpatrick, who <lb />
visiting Mrs. F has <lb />
returned to home in Newborn. <lb />
Mr. and Mrs. W. P. White, of <lb />
who have visiting <lb />
here, returned home last <lb />
Capt. G T- Lipscomb, of <lb />
Clifton S- C, who was visiting <lb />
his parents here, left this morn- <lb />
Mr- J- R. Cory has moved back <lb />
from Ayden to Greenville <lb />
will again open his harness shop <lb />
here- <lb />
Mr- J. B. Jackson, who spent <lb />
the holidays with his parents near <lb />
Winterville, has returned to Wake <lb />
Forest College- <lb />
Mr. C T. his returned <lb />
from his visit to Mrs. <lb />
remains a few days <lb />
longer with relatives- <lb />
Cadets J. M- Moore and Char- <lb />
lie have returned to <lb />
Horner School, Oxford, after <lb />
the holidays at home. <lb />
We are glad to Mr. J- H. <lb />
of Miriam, Ga, here again. <lb />
lie is m looking after hands for <lb />
the southern turpentine farms. <lb />
Mr. J. B. Johnson, Jr., who the <lb />
past six years has living in <lb />
Chicago, last week to is- <lb />
it ids parents. We are all glad <lb />
o see back <lb />
BRILLIANT SUCCESS. <lb />
The Operetta Met With a Large and <lb />
Delighted Audience. <lb />
Scooting at <lb />
There was a shooting affair in <lb />
Farmville Wednesday, but no <lb />
damage done. Policeman <lb />
John Baker went to arrest a man <lb />
named James Harris. Harris re- <lb />
and the officer him <lb />
down. He attempted to shoot the <lb />
officer, when Baker drew his pis- <lb />
and tired at him. Then <lb />
and his father both tired sever- <lb />
shots at Baker. Our informant <lb />
did not know whether any of the <lb />
shots took effect. <lb />
Suing for the Offices. <lb />
On Friday afternoon W. H. <lb />
Harrington and J. A. <lb />
who were elected by the Populists <lb />
as Sheriff and Treasurer <lb />
whose official bonds were rejected <lb />
by the Board of County <lb />
had summons served on <lb />
the Commissioners to appear <lb />
before the Superior Court which <lb />
convenes on the first in <lb />
January and show canst, why th <lb />
said not be accepted. <lb />
of Officers. <lb />
The semi annual election of <lb />
officers of Covenant Lodge, No. <lb />
I. O. O- F- took place last <lb />
night tee following were <lb />
elected <lb />
N. W. B. Bagwell. <lb />
V. GD. D. Haskett. <lb />
D. <lb />
F- L. Brown- <lb />
Tr W. <lb />
They will installed rest <lb />
Tuesday eight at their regular <lb />
meeting. <lb />
On December 1894, in <lb />
Bethel, N. C at the residence of <lb />
the bride's father, Mr. James <lb />
Mayo, by Rev. R. W. Hines, Mr. <lb />
Benjamin and Mis <lb />
Anna Mayo. <lb />
26th, 1804, in <lb />
Bethel. N. C, at the residence of <lb />
the bride's father, Mr. B- L- T- <lb />
Barnhill, by R. W. Hines. <lb />
Mr, J. R. Ward <lb />
S. Barnhill- <lb />
At Baptist mar <lb />
Winterville, on the night of <lb />
ember 26th, by Rev. D- Hunter, <lb />
Mr. G- Jackson to Miss <lb />
Hattie A- Cox. <lb />
mas day at o'clock, P. M., at the <lb />
Mr. Harris, <lb />
near Greenville, Mr. C- F. Man- <lb />
Miss Priscilla <lb />
horn were married by Rev. J. B. <lb />
A sapper was spread <lb />
for the bridal party at the horn e <lb />
of Mr. James Evans and a <lb />
held there at night. The Re <lb />
extends best wishes. <lb />
Family Reunion. <lb />
There was an enjoyable family <lb />
reunion and dining at the home <lb />
of Mr- J. B. Johnson, Sr, Friday <lb />
afternoon. Besides Mr. and Mrs. <lb />
Johnson and their son Mr. J. B <lb />
Johnson, there were present <lb />
three sisters of Mrs. Johnson, <lb />
namely, Mrs. II. A. Bernard, Mrs. <lb />
E- Greene and Miss Hannah <lb />
Smith, also the children of the <lb />
two first named, Mr. S. and <lb />
Miss Marv Bernard, Messrs. Rob- <lb />
W. B-. T. C, Edward and <lb />
Misses Betsy Green , <lb />
and an intimate friend of the <lb />
family, Miss Lela Cherry. It w is <lb />
the first time they had all been <lb />
together in many years, the <lb />
was a happy one. <lb />
Notice of <lb />
Tin- firm J. J. C ., doles <lb />
Ayden, C, s <lb />
, mutual consent oil day of <lb />
Dec. 1894, J Allen withdrawing from <lb />
, firm. business will he <lb />
by J Stoke to whom <lb />
j to firm are to <lb />
make <lb />
T. STOKES, <lb />
N. <lb />
A Greenville audience was <lb />
i-r more delighted with the <lb />
presentation of the beautiful <lb />
operetta, Merry Milk <lb />
at the Opera House Friday night, <lb />
under the of that talent- <lb />
ed lady, Miss Hortense <lb />
Forbes. For the last weeks <lb />
Miss Forbes has had a <lb />
of our young people <lb />
this operetta, and the eagerness <lb />
of the people for the performance <lb />
can be told in the fact that by <lb />
o'clock Friday afternoon every <lb />
reserved seat the hall had been <lb />
sold. The audience was very <lb />
large and did not fail to express <lb />
its pleasure at the different <lb />
of the <lb />
Miss lone May as of <lb />
the was charming <lb />
and rendered her parts perfectly. <lb />
Miss Foley us <lb />
was just splendid and brought <lb />
down the house with her hit on <lb />
one of our merchants as she drop <lb />
pod s in the palm of <lb />
Miss Delia Marshal, <lb />
to tell her fortune Miss <lb />
sustained her cl <lb />
,. As Miss Sallie <lb />
Lipscomb was perfection itself, <lb />
while Miss Lillie Cherry us <lb />
related her romances <lb />
announcements in song a cap- <lb />
manner- Miss <lb />
as sang <lb />
and her ways were so <lb />
winsome that the <lb />
fell in love with her. Miss Bes- <lb />
White rendered her part as <lb />
superbly, and in the <lb />
of milkmaids composed of <lb />
Bruce Forbes, <lb />
Florence Williams, <lb />
Z die White, Flossie Pat- <lb />
tie Skinner and Gertrude <lb />
each executed her part <lb />
a delightful manner. <lb />
the dual character of <lb />
and R. <lb />
kept everybody pleased. Ed <lb />
Foley also hid two <lb />
as got there, <lb />
title, brogue all, while as <lb />
the <lb />
would pale beside him. <lb />
Warren as the was <lb />
immense and well up on what <lb />
constitutes love and life- When <lb />
he first appeared with his <lb />
whiskers some one in the <lb />
remarked is Sheriff <lb />
Warren right over As <lb />
Billie Burch <lb />
caught everybody with his fine <lb />
and almost made them <lb />
weep with his over <lb />
disappointment love affairs. <lb />
His companion. M. as <lb />
was a companion <lb />
indeed, singing his parts well and <lb />
putting consolation at the <lb />
right time. R. M. <lb />
of the farmer's brigade led <lb />
his van well, the <lb />
Paul Hosier, Clarence <lb />
Clarence Whichard and John <lb />
Home, wed their row clean and <lb />
left no grass growing when they <lb />
put in the choruses. Captain and <lb />
brigade were a set of one- <lb />
hay-seeders. <lb />
of the best features of the <lb />
c between the acts <lb />
little Emily Higgs <lb />
and Nina -s appeared and <lb />
lanced the Highland Fling. <lb />
Their movements were grace it <lb />
self. Such a hearty encore was <lb />
given them that they returned <lb />
ind gave some pretty figures of <lb />
They w-r in- <lb />
Miss Novena <lb />
Toe most difficult part of the <lb />
was tendered by <lb />
Miss Hortense Forbes, who was <lb />
ac for the entire <lb />
well was it done. Her <lb />
task was all the harder because <lb />
the burden of anxiety rested upon <lb />
that something might go <lb />
wrong and mar the pleasure she <lb />
was in return for the <lb />
time, pains expended <lb />
in instructing the <lb />
But her instruction was well laid, <lb />
the entire passing <lb />
without the slightest interruption, <lb />
and at its close she had the <lb />
faction of hearing her friends <lb />
pronounce it a brilliant success. <lb />
Much credit is due her, as well as <lb />
the of the community, for <lb />
the delightful evening given by <lb />
herself<lb />
A fountain pen is as good a <lb />
thing to have all the year around <lb />
as during the holidays, therefore <lb />
you will find a assortment of <lb />
the Parker Fountain Pen, best <lb />
made, any time you call at Re- <lb />
book Store. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The luring quail <lb />
Bed before the Superior Clerk <lb />
county as administrator of <lb />
Warren no is to <lb />
I all indebted to the estate of I'm- <lb />
I said decedent to make <lb />
to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons having claims against the sail <lb />
must present th <lb />
20th day of or notice <lb />
will be plea r b of re <lb />
Dec <lb />
M. <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
Run <lb />
That Tired feeling Severe <lb />
Headaches, No Appetite <lb />
Six Bottles of Hood's <lb />
Bring Back New Life, <lb />
SO. I- Lowell, <lb />
V Dear Before using Hood's <lb />
I was frequently sick and did not know <lb />
what was the matter with me. One day I would <lb />
feel so tired I could hardly stand, the next I <lb />
would hare a severe headache and so on. not <lb />
knowing what the next clay would bring forth. <lb />
did not have any appetite and <lb />
Was Run Down. <lb />
I tried a good many medicines but they did me <lb />
no good. Baring heard a great deal about <lb />
Hood's I decided lo try a bottle. I <lb />
am to say I soon felt better. I hare now <lb />
used six bottles and feel as well as e It has <lb />
been of great benefit to me as I base regained <lb />
my appetite, and, <lb />
Now Enjoy Good Health. <lb />
I can strongly recommend Hood's <lb />
as an excellent blood medicine M. Symons, <lb />
Street, Baltimore, Maryland.<lb />
The Furniture and Racket Store. <lb />
The Holiday Season <lb />
is upon us, and, as usual, everybody is looking around for a suitable present for those they love <lb />
to <lb />
we offer this advice Come to our establishment and see the many good things in store for you. <lb />
How nice it would be to send to your wife, mother, or sister a nice <lb />
CHAMBER <lb />
We have them and can please you in style as well as prices. <lb />
We are determined to push our goods, we have them to suit you. <lb />
Chairs, Bedsteads, Lounges, Safes, Cradles, Bedsprings, Bedroom Suits, <lb />
in abundance, and an inspection will convince you that we are prepared tor you. In fact, you <lb />
can get many useful presents at our store, and on the most reasonable terms. Remember, we <lb />
will sell you any of these goods at the very lowest prices for cash, or on our liberal terms.<lb />
Our Racket Department <lb />
is chock full of Christmas and the prices are way down and clean out of sight. If you <lb />
want anything like the following call and see us. <lb />
Ladies Shoes cents worth Men Hats cents Worth Large Oil Paintings <lb />
cents worth Crockery, Tinware, Table Cutlery, Carpets, Lace <lb />
Curtains, Curtain Poles. Pins cent a paper, Needles cent <lb />
a paper, Slates cents, and everything needed in the house. <lb />
Crayons, Pencils, Pens, Ink, Paper, <lb />
The Furniture and Racket Store <lb />
Opposite Mrs. M. T. Millinery Store.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017726_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
j Does This <lb />
Hit You <lb />
The management of the <lb />
Equitable Life Assurance <lb />
Society in the Department of <lb />
the Carolinas, wishes to <lb />
cure a few Special Resident <lb />
Agents. Those who are fitted <lb />
for this work will find this <lb />
A Rare Opportunity <lb />
It however, and those <lb />
who succeed best in it possess <lb />
character, mature judgment, <lb />
tact, perseverance, and the <lb />
respect of their community. <lb />
Think this matter over care- <lb />
fully. There's an unusual <lb />
opening for somebody. If it <lb />
fits yon, it will pay you. Fur- <lb />
information on request. <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
Rock Hill, S. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The Superior Court Clerk, having; It- <lb />
sued letters testamentary to us the <lb />
on the day of Nov. <lb />
of the of Q deceased, <lb />
notice It hereby given to all persons in- <lb />
estate to make <lb />
The Chief <lb />
Savannah Nows says the <lb />
greatest espouse on a farm is <lb />
the feed bill for men and animals <lb />
and when South produces its <lb />
ate payment to the undersigned, and to own meat the profits of <lb />
creditor of said estate to present <lb />
heir properly authenticated, to <lb />
i In- undersigned, within twelve <lb />
lifter the date of I hit notice, or this <lb />
notice will plead in bar of their re- <lb />
A KICKS AW. IS. RICK. <lb />
Extra on the estate of E. <lb />
the 27th day of 1804. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
H duly qualified before the Bu <lb />
pet Court Clerk Of as <lb />
middle men and the cost of trans <lb />
of provisions from the <lb />
West will be added to pro- <lb />
its of Southern farmers. What <lb />
then remains above the cost of <lb />
production of the amount <lb />
ed for cotton, rice <lb />
co crops will be profit, will <lb />
not have to go to pay provision <lb />
bills. This is all very true and <lb />
A MODERN CRUSOE. <lb />
BY. WON <lb />
Edward Pearsall, or as his <lb />
family and friends called him, was <lb />
born at Sag Harbor, at the eastern <lb />
end of Long Island. His father was <lb />
a well-to-do with four <lb />
two boys and two Ned <lb />
and his brother, Robert, or <lb />
being the oldest. <lb />
The senior Pearsall had been, In <lb />
his youth, a sailor, and had made a <lb />
number of voyages to the South <lb />
as bid many of his <lb />
sooner the fact, is realized and , J tho days when whale fishing <lb />
the course here laid follow- <lb />
of Lydia the better off, more <lb />
be. <lb />
Clerk of <lb />
Administrator of estate <lb />
i Williams deceased, notice Is hereby I indent the Southern farmer will <lb />
given to ad person to es-j <lb />
to make Immediate payment to the <lb />
i undersigned, an I all persons having <lb />
, claims against Bald estate must <lb />
the payment on or before the <lb />
Sid of 1895, or this notice will <lb />
be plead In bar of recover. <lb />
T. <lb />
of Williams. <lb />
T 3rd day December <lb />
FERTILIZER <lb />
-FOB- <lb />
Cotton, Corn and <lb />
General Crops. <lb />
Ced and endorsed by leading far- <lb />
to North Carolina and <lb />
for the past twenty years. Read the <lb />
following re-, and send for <lb />
pamphlet giving <lb />
testimonials. ate. <lb />
for mixing, <lb />
N. C. Sept 1893. <lb />
Messrs. Boykin. -r A Co. <lb />
I bought <lb />
of you for making <lb />
continue to give satisfaction. only <lb />
use it under cotton. You know I must <lb />
think it goo, or should not have <lb />
used it so long. Tills IT <lb />
years that I been using It, and i e <lb />
baa on me able to pay for it h <lb />
not on crop time. <lb />
Yours truly. S. EVA <lb />
S. C. Oct, Is. <lb />
Messrs. Boykin. C Co, <lb />
It gives pleasure to say we have <lb />
been using y Far f <lb />
more years r. <lb />
and expect to continue to so. of <lb />
we are t <lb />
us to use it. <lb />
Respectfully, M KAY. <lb />
R. M. licK <lb />
and I <lb />
to <lb />
sell land <lb />
for <lb />
M. <lb />
of Eugenia I <lb />
vs. <lb />
Mamie E. N. It. <lb />
Cory Martha, <lb />
J. Camion <lb />
Miry A. Cannon <lb />
Haying obtained an order of Side In I lie <lb />
above entitled cans.-, notice is hereby <lb />
given that I shall on Monday, <lb />
nay of January, 1895 sell at public <lb />
before the Court House ill <lb />
Greenville, the follow <lb />
of land Situated in town- <lb />
adjoining the lands of N. R. Cory. <lb />
W. Cannon and James Brooks, con- <lb />
a res more or less. Terms <lb />
of sale cash. J. M. c NELSON, <lb />
of Eugenia Nelson. <lb />
Nov. 20th <lb />
Salvo. <lb />
Tin. best Salve in the world for <lb />
Sores, Salt Rheum, <lb />
Fever sores. Chapped <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required, it h guaranteed to Rive <lb />
perfect or money refunded <lb />
Price cents per box. For sale <lb />
i,. <lb />
The wisdom is not t talk <lb />
to act wisely- <lb />
HUH <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Sale of <lb />
property. <lb />
On Wednesday day of <lb />
Mi, as the of Fer- <lb />
Fleming the under- <lb />
signed will expose to public sale for <lb />
cash, at Joiner farm in <lb />
township, county, the i <lb />
estate of e deceased upon said <lb />
farm, of mules. <lb />
was more profitable than row. He <lb />
know enough of the hardships of the <lb />
calling to be eager to keep boys <lb />
from repeating his experience. <lb />
Mr. Pearsall was is that <lb />
Ned, the elder, should be n lawyer, <lb />
and that, in time, Rob should <lb />
him on the farm, which over- <lb />
looked the great bay and <lb />
Shelter island, to the cast. <lb />
Unfortunately for the success of <lb />
Mr. plans, Sag Harbor <lb />
the town was only a mile from his <lb />
at the time, the resort <lb />
of whaling vessels, the crews of <lb />
which were always made much of on <lb />
their return from years of cruising <lb />
in the direction of tho north pole, or <lb />
from far south of the equator. In <lb />
the season these sailors would <lb />
gather about the pleasant fire, on <lb />
the great open hearth of the Mer- <lb />
maid inn, and spin yarns of their <lb />
cruising in tropic seas, and amid the <lb />
islands of the Pacific, to the delight <lb />
of the village youth, and particular- <lb />
to that of Ned and his brother. <lb />
The boys loved their father and <lb />
their mother, and had no reason to <lb />
opportunity came <lb />
ship put in at a port <lb />
in one of the Navigator islands. <lb />
Ned saw the natives, a most gentle <lb />
and fine-looking people, from the <lb />
ship, about which they sailed in <lb />
canoes, and determined to join <lb />
them. <lb />
The night before the Albatross <lb />
was to put to sea again, unmindful <lb />
of the huge sharks that <lb />
could be seen In the daylight <lb />
drifting through the water like <lb />
dense shadows, he slipped overboard <lb />
and succeeded in swimming to the <lb />
shore. <lb />
Ned fled to the neighboring hills, <lb />
where he lay hidden under the palms <lb />
and bread fruit trees for two days. <lb />
He saw the sailors scorching for <lb />
him, ho heard their shouts; and <lb />
though suffering with thirst and <lb />
hunger, he determined to die rather <lb />
than reveal himself; and his heart <lb />
heat lighter when he saw the Alba- <lb />
put to sea again, leaving him <lb />
the only white man among the <lb />
ages of these <lb />
The natives, to whom hunger com- <lb />
the youth to make himself <lb />
known, treated him with the great- <lb />
est kindness, soon adopted him <lb />
into their clan or tribe. Ned soon <lb />
learned their language, them <lb />
A HARD CLIMB. <lb />
Tho <lb />
Foaling of Mount <lb />
Glaciers <lb />
Treacherous <lb />
thO S. I Si .,, <lb />
a Message to Those <lb />
says one of u <lb />
party that has just climbed Mount <lb />
Rainier, out abruptly from <lb />
the smooth cone of the mountain at <lb />
a point about three thousand feet <lb />
from the summit, and is one <lb />
thousand feet high, almost the same <lb />
length and half as wide. It splits <lb />
one-of-the enormous glaciers into <lb />
two parts, glacier passing <lb />
to the right as you look from the <lb />
summit and to the left. The <lb />
only possible way to reach the sum- <lb />
from this point is to pass along <lb />
the narrow and treacherous edge of <lb />
Gibraltar rock and directly over- <lb />
looking glacier, which, on <lb />
account of the tremendous pitch <lb />
from the summit, d from a <lb />
thousand to fifteen hundred foot in a <lb />
sheer perpendicular from the narrow <lb />
sloping ledge. The ledge itself is <lb />
about thirty feet wide and slopes <lb />
Before your new bicycle look <lb />
the field carefully. The superiority <lb />
of Victor Bicycles was never so fully <lb />
demonstrated as at present. Our line <lb />
will bear the most rigid scrutiny, and <lb />
comparison. <lb />
challenge <lb />
There's but one <lb />
OVERMAN CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
new <lb />
The Best Shoes <lb />
PHILADELPHIA. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
TAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT. <lb />
DENVER <lb />
an angle of about thirty degrees. It <lb />
the many handicrafts he had learned ; b constantly breaking and wearing <lb />
from the action of the <lb />
HOE <lb />
FIT FOR <lb />
A KING. <lb />
Fleming Homestead in <lb />
ship. the personal proper- <lb />
Of the said Fernando Fleming , <lb />
upon Use said premises, Of <lb />
mules, hones, corn, fodder, cotton, <lb />
cotton seed and farming implements, <lb />
SYLVESTER <lb />
of Fernando Fleming, <lb />
Dec. -0th 1894. <lb />
Agent. <lb />
and ts f Rent or for gale <lb />
term easy. Bents, Taxes. Insurance, <lb />
open and any other <lb />
of debt placid in my hands for <lb />
collection a have prompt attention, <lb />
guarantee I <lb />
m, Co. <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
it H <lb />
ON <lb />
AND BRANCHED. <lb />
AND RAIL ROAD. <lb />
S . <lb />
OH <lb />
Dress All With <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
MALE M <lb />
GREENVILLE, X. <lb />
The next s s I hi of s will <lb />
begin on the day o; <lb />
and I I week-. <lb />
TI MONTH. <lb />
Prim English <lb />
Intermediate <lb />
Higher English <lb />
Language <lb />
The instruction coin inn <lb />
m Id i firm. If <lb />
an additional teacher will <lb />
guaranteed u pupil <lb />
enter early and attend regularly. <lb />
further i. n a to <lb />
W. <lb />
OINTMENT<lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
Rocky Hi <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Selma <lb />
Florence<lb />
U. <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and ex- <lb />
nervous, J <lb />
have no appetite m <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
at <lb />
the most <lb />
strengthening <lb />
is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
cure <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
won't stain your <lb />
teeth, and it's <lb />
pleasant to fake., <lb />
Cures <lb />
July <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor th. Cure of all <lb />
This Preparation has in <lb />
years, know <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been . <lb />
the <lb />
cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention f <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for tailed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long standing and tin- reputation <lb />
which it has obtained is owing <lb />
own as but little bat <lb />
ever been made to bring it before lb <lb />
bottle of will <lb />
lie to any on of One <lb />
Hollar. All Older.- promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders <lb />
o to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
I x. c <lb />
Ar <lb />
Kay <lb />
Selma <lb />
A. M. P. M. <lb />
-27 <lb />
x . <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
i no <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Kooky lit <lb />
P. M. <lb />
I I<lb />
P. Vi <lb />
.-, <lb />
OS <lb />
f. M. <lb />
ft <lb />
P. M. <lb />
in <lb />
II <lb />
r Tarboro <lb />
, Mr <lb />
Ar <lb />
IS<lb />
IS <lb />
old m <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Road <lb />
leaves Weldon 8.40 p. in. Halifax <lb />
p. arrives land I p. <lb />
p. in. <lb />
p. in. leaves 7.211 <lb />
a. in. Greenville 8.22 a. in. <lb />
Halifax at a. m , Weldon 11.2 i a. <lb />
in., dally <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch <lb />
Washington <lb />
H. m. <lb />
leaves Tarboro p. in. <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington p. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck Branch. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N via <lb />
A Raleigh K. daily except Sun- <lb />
at p. in. P. <lb />
arrive 8.30 P. M., p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily Bleep <lb />
MO a. m. Sunday 9.80 a. m., <lb />
j a. and 11.45 <lb />
I a. <lb />
Train on M Branch leaves <lb />
daily except Sunday, a. <lb />
m. riving Smith Held. n m. <lb />
leaves a. m.; <lb />
a Goldsboro. SO <lb />
W Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
at p. m., arrive <lb />
Ste j NashVille p. n.;, Mope <lb />
v and Tarboro touching at all land I . <lb />
u gs on River <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
t Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
lines on UM wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On receipt of two stamps we i <lb />
will send of Ton World's <lb />
Fair Views <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. <lb />
and at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. SI. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays am Saturdays <lb />
Greenville Id A. <lb />
These departures ate subject <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
Returning <lb />
a. m. Nashville m., arrives <lb />
at Rocky Mount a. except <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. leaves Latta 8.80 p. in., arrive Dun- <lb />
bar 8.00 p. in. leave Dun- <lb />
bar a. in. arrive Latta 8.10 a. in <lb />
Daily except Sunday. <lb />
Train on Clinton Branch leaves War <lb />
kM for Clinton daily, except Sunday- <lb />
Oft a. m. Returning leave Clinton <lb />
at m., conn-ting at Warsaw with <lb />
ma n line trains. <lb />
No. makes close connection <lb />
at Weldon for all points North daily, all <lb />
ail via Richmond, and daily except <lb />
Connecting at. with steam <lb />
of W <lb />
direct for Norfolk. Baltimore <lb />
New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their -nod <lb />
marked via Dominion trite , <lb />
New York. Sunday via Portsmouth and Bay Lice <lb />
Norfolk Haiti- j also at Rocky Mourn with Norfolk <lb />
more Irons Haiti- Carolina railroad Norfolk daily and <lb />
more. firm -d North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
Boston. Sunday. <lb />
JNO. Agent, JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
N. General <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, i R. KENLY, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
T. V, EMERSON, M <lb />
horses, corn, tobacco, cotton <lb />
and farming I. h to- be dissatisfied with their home, but <lb />
lowing day, Thursday, the 17th j the love of adventure, that led their <lb />
day of January, 1805. at the Old Ad father to sea, possessed them. <lb />
e town- . . . , <lb />
Despite this yearning; for a sea <lb />
life, Ned might have gone to college <lb />
and become a lawyer, as his father <lb />
intended, had he not, when about <lb />
seventeen fan of age, unfortunate- <lb />
imagined himself in love with Amy <lb />
Dawson, the pretty daughter of a <lb />
neighbor, at, this time aged about <lb />
I fifteen years. Of course ho imagined <lb />
that there never had, never would, <lb />
and never could appear, upon tho <lb />
eastern end of Long Island, or any <lb />
other part of the terrestrial surface <lb />
beautiful and perfect a human <lb />
as Amy, and, of course, he fur- <lb />
believed, though youths and <lb />
maidens had been in <lb />
since the earliest days of recorded <lb />
history, no maiden or youth had ever <lb />
been so Intensely smitten as himself. <lb />
Ned, like all others of his age, was <lb />
exceedingly bashful, but he always <lb />
felt satisfied, and tho hankering at <lb />
his heart was filled if he saw Amy <lb />
at church, or was permitted to walk <lb />
home beside her, from singing <lb />
school. Ned's brother was less bash- <lb />
and more, self-reliant, and it may <lb />
be added that he was possessed of a <lb />
spirit of mischief, which took a <lb />
at this time that Ned was <lb />
in no condition to appreciate. He <lb />
de love to the pretty little Amy; <lb />
and, seemingly, with groat success. <lb />
The result was that jealousy and dis- <lb />
content filled the heart of Ned, and, <lb />
when quite in a desperate mood, he <lb />
determined to flee from the brother <lb />
whom he deemed false and the faith- <lb />
less girl who had tho bad taste to <lb />
, prefer Rob. <lb />
It seemed that the fates favored <lb />
his purpose. Anchored out in the <lb />
bay, there was a whaling ship, wait- <lb />
for the turn of the tide, at day- <lb />
break, to sail for the south Pacific <lb />
j islands. The captain of this vessel <lb />
j was named Snow, and had already <lb />
I made overtures to the boy to join <lb />
him, so that Ned felt sure that, if he <lb />
could gain tho deck of the Albatross, <lb />
he would be certain of a position. <lb />
Bundling up a few of his clothes <lb />
a pillow ho stole out of his <lb />
bedroom window about midnight, <lb />
hurried to the shore, a few hundred <lb />
yards away, and getting on board of <lb />
own private skiff, which he was <lb />
expert in handling, he rowed out <lb />
into the darkness, guided by the <lb />
lights swinging from the shrouds of <lb />
the Albatross. <lb />
Ned hailed the watch on deck, and <lb />
a rope being lowered, sent up his <lb />
package, climbed after it himself, <lb />
and then sent his boat adrift. <lb />
When the sun rose, hot and red, <lb />
the next morning, its rays flashed <lb />
on the white sails of the Albatross, <lb />
as she rounded point and <lb />
headed for the south. <lb />
Soon the headland cliffs and woods <lb />
of Long Island became a misty cloud <lb />
to the north, and Ned Pearsall was <lb />
seized by a feeling from which he <lb />
never recovered, that he had done a <lb />
very foolish thing. <lb />
In his father's house he was well <lb />
fed, well clothed, and had a com- <lb />
room to sleep in, and the <lb />
most pleasant associations; on the <lb />
Albatross the was coarse and <lb />
not the best, the atmosphere of tho <lb />
dark forecastle, in which he was <lb />
compelled to sleep, was foul, and <lb />
his sailor associates were obscene <lb />
and vulgar; but, more than this, he <lb />
soon learned that Capt. Snow, who <lb />
appeared to be so jolly and good <lb />
when on shore, was a cruel and pro- <lb />
tyrant. <lb />
After four continuous <lb />
cruising without seeing a whale, the <lb />
Albatross sighted tho purple is- <lb />
lands that mark the shores of New <lb />
Zealand. Here some fish were <lb />
caught, and, for the first time, Ned <lb />
learned that it would be five years <lb />
before his ship returned to Sag <lb />
and that if they secured more <lb />
oil than she could carry, it would be <lb />
home in other ships. <lb />
When anchored in the Bay of Is- <lb />
lands, in New Zealand, of which he <lb />
had read in the voyages of Capt. <lb />
Cook, he was anxious to go on shore <lb />
find sec the beautiful country and <lb />
the native Maoris, but his shipmates <lb />
horrified him, by telling him that <lb />
on their previous voyage with Capt. <lb />
Snow, which had lasted for four <lb />
years, they had been permitted to <lb />
land only three times; and this was <lb />
true. <lb />
A year of Indescribable hardship <lb />
passed, during which tho boy's <lb />
heart ached more more for his <lb />
Long Island home; and his <lb />
nation increased to escape from the <lb />
tyrant Snow and his associate of <lb />
at the earliest <lb />
ON <lb />
Stoves <lb />
AND <lb />
Stove Pipe <lb />
that we sell. We keep <lb />
a full Also a <lb />
stock of <lb />
Tinware. Paints k Oils <lb />
which we are selling <lb />
cheap. <lb />
A Pumps, <lb />
BICYCLES, <lb />
. Roofing, Guttering, <lb />
and Repairing. <lb />
E. I CO. <lb />
K. <lb />
-i <lb />
Wholesale and <lb />
N. C <lb />
Offers 1- the trade a choice line of <lb />
Family Groceries, <lb />
t TINWARE TOBACCO, <lb />
SNUFF, AC, AC, <lb />
To the trade I am prepared to <lb />
give prices on <lb />
MEATS, COFFEE OILS <lb />
Molasses. Vinegar, Star Eye, <lb />
Eye, Baking Powder, <lb />
Wrapping Paper and Ac <lb />
Car load Flour, Just received <lb />
Car load and bottom <lb />
ct of SHOES to fit everybody. <lb />
fall me when you want at <lb />
the lowest figures, <lb />
in old home, and at the same <lb />
time, he adopted many of their <lb />
its. <lb />
However, years passed, during <lb />
which Ned Pearsall never saw a <lb />
white roan, and ha was beginning to <lb />
forgot his mother tongue, when <lb />
early morning, during a furious <lb />
storm that ravaged the island, his <lb />
native companions roused him from <lb />
the bed on which he was sleeping in <lb />
his thatched but, to tell him that a <lb />
white man's ship was breaking to <lb />
pieces the rocks outside the bay. <lb />
Ned was a good swimmer before <lb />
he left home and thought ho could <lb />
manage a boat well, but the people <lb />
among whom he found himself far <lb />
exceeded him in that art. He was <lb />
brave, and a feeling of humanity, as <lb />
well as the race love, prompted him <lb />
to go to the rescue. The. ship was <lb />
going to pieces on the reef; but the <lb />
outrigger canoes of the natives <lb />
in reaching her, and out of <lb />
a crew of twenty-seven five were <lb />
among them the first <lb />
a young man who bore a <lb />
resemblance to Ned himself. <lb />
The rescued sailors were taken <lb />
ashore kindly treated by tho <lb />
natives. Ned from the first was <lb />
drawn to the young man who bore <lb />
such a striking resemblance to him- <lb />
self, and when he came to converse <lb />
with him, after he had recovered, <lb />
was his astonishment and <lb />
his joy when he found that <lb />
; it was his own brother, Rob. <lb />
Rob told his story. He, too, some <lb />
years before had fallen in love, this <lb />
time in earnest, with a girl who was <lb />
not Amy Dawson. His father, as <lb />
well as the girls, opposed the match, <lb />
and he ran away to sea, and had <lb />
been promoted to the position of <lb />
first officer on the Washington. <lb />
ship stranded on the reef outside of <lb />
Tho brothers, who had parted, long <lb />
before on Long Island, were thus <lb />
mysteriously thrown together on an <lb />
almost unknown island In the South <lb />
Pacific. <lb />
Rob told his brother that Amy <lb />
Dawson was still single and await- <lb />
him; told him that his father <lb />
and mother and sisters were still <lb />
living, and their hearts yearning for <lb />
him, and so Ilia modern Crusoe was <lb />
prevailed upon to bid good-bye to <lb />
his native friends, who, finding that <lb />
ho was determined to part, <lb />
him and his brother to Apia, <lb />
the chief town in the Navigator is- <lb />
lands. <lb />
They had repeated their father's <lb />
early experience, and had had enough <lb />
of the sea. To-day Robert Pearsall <lb />
is one of the prosperous <lb />
on the eastern end of Is- <lb />
land. Ned is married to Amy <lb />
son, and by hard study he made up <lb />
for the lost time during which he <lb />
played Crusoe, and is one of the <lb />
most successful members of the bar <lb />
in his native town. K. Y. <lb />
Over One People wear Che <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb />
All oar Mil <lb />
They best value the money. <lb />
They equal t Id style fit. <lb />
Their qualities are unsurpassed, <lb />
prices uniform on Role- <lb />
Front other makes. <lb />
If your dealer supply you we can, <lb />
83.60 Police Shoes. <lb />
and <lb />
1.76 School Shoes <lb />
and <lb />
your dealer cannot supply <lb />
write for <lb />
boulders which fall from Gib- <lb />
rock. One misstep would <lb />
I precipitate one to c death. <lb />
passing rock there is a <lb />
I Climb at an angle closely <lb />
I lag a perpendicular and afterward a <lb />
more gradual slope to the summit. <lb />
I It just two hours and a half to <lb />
pass rock, on account of <lb />
high altitude end <lb />
we had to stop every ten or <lb />
fifteen steps to recover our breath. <lb />
After leaving the rock we had to <lb />
again pass across glacier, <lb />
which was out about one thousand C CO., N. C. <lb />
feet from the summit, by a largo R. L. VIS BrO., N. C. <lb />
crevice, fortunately found <lb />
bridged by snow. <lb />
reached the summit about <lb />
one p. m., and soon after dispatched <lb />
a pigeon with the message contain- <lb />
the information of our ascent. <lb />
When released the <lb />
rapidly, and was <lb />
having no <lb />
itself. We found by taking the <lb />
of the mountain that it was <lb />
fifteen thousand five hundred and <lb />
thirty-nine feet high, or almost one <lb />
thousand feet higher than hereto- <lb />
fore supposed. Every member of <lb />
the was sick from <lb />
A FAMOUS CARPENTER. <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
ion of our ascent. If <lb />
i bird sailed down I J M <lb />
SOOn lost to view. I I I <lb />
in sustaining , J ,<lb />
i . <lb />
AT TUB COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All kinds Risks placed in <lb />
FIRST-CLASS <lb />
ES <lb />
Is a Frog a Fish. <lb />
Is a frog a fish This is the prob- <lb />
which the officials of the <lb />
ion fishery department have recently <lb />
had Petitions were for- <lb />
warded to the department from the <lb />
inhabitants of Northumberland, <lb />
Ont., praying for a close season for <lb />
frogs. A lucrative trade in the <lb />
shipment of legs had been <lb />
done in that county, but it was dis- <lb />
covered that the very time when the <lb />
frogs are spawning is one when the <lb />
greatest havoc is wrought among <lb />
Possibly a change will be <lb />
made In tho fishery laws so as to <lb />
embrace frogs. The officers say that <lb />
in their Stage frogs are <lb />
certainly fishes, but later or. they <lb />
take an amphibious character. <lb />
Halifax Herald, <lb />
With a Rattler. <lb />
A perfectly truthful man once <lb />
told me that he knew the following <lb />
to have An officer had his <lb />
arm shot off at the battle of Gettys- <lb />
burg, and when he regained con- <lb />
after a fainting spell a <lb />
very large rattlesnake was sleeping <lb />
upon his bosom. He simply swooned <lb />
off again, and after awhile, when <lb />
they began to collect the wounded, <lb />
another officer found the two sleep- <lb />
there and killed the snake with <lb />
a skillful sword cut, and the <lb />
wounded man recovered, with the <lb />
loss of his arm, but with as much <lb />
sand in his craw as he ever had. <lb />
Forest and Stream. <lb />
Baby's Weight. <lb />
The average baby boy weighs <lb />
seven pounds and the dear little new <lb />
girl a trifle over six pounds. When <lb />
they have attained the full develop- <lb />
of manhood they should weigh, <lb />
twenty times as much as at birth. <lb />
That will make the voter <lb />
balance one hundred and for- <lb />
pounds and his gentle sister <lb />
about one hundred and twenty-five <lb />
pounds. Mr. Baby, if he can be in- <lb />
to stand up will <lb />
measure one foot eight Inches, and <lb />
Mile. Bebe is one foot six inches in <lb />
Late President of France Was <lb />
a Tradesman. <lb />
Not many people knew that M. <lb />
Carnot, the late president of the <lb />
republic, was a carpenter <lb />
y trade. It is true that he did <lb />
; not, in his mature years, practice <lb />
the trade of a carpenter, but in his <lb />
youth he had been taught that hand- <lb />
and no doubt might have <lb />
exercised it if it bad been necessary. <lb />
The family of Carnot's mother <lb />
came from the little town of <lb />
a department <lb />
of western <lb />
Though they were people of <lb />
means, they believed in Jean Jacques <lb />
Rousseau's doctrine that every <lb />
child should be taught a handicraft, <lb />
in order that, in ease of adversity, <lb />
he may make his way in the world, <lb />
and not be a burden upon anyone. <lb />
In pursuance of their mother's <lb />
belief in this principle, young <lb />
Carnot and his brother were put at <lb />
work every r, when they went <lb />
to to learn trade of <lb />
carpentering and joining. It was <lb />
on mere play, for they were put <lb />
in the midst of working carpenters, <lb />
and their helpers, on actual <lb />
and to do their share of the <lb />
work. <lb />
Mine. Carnot not only insisted <lb />
upon this but gave the boys no pref- <lb />
over the other workers, while <lb />
they were with them in the matter <lb />
of food, They had to eat at the <lb />
same table and partake of the same <lb />
plain fare. <lb />
In this way both boys became at <lb />
lost practical carpenters. At the <lb />
same time they learned to enter into <lb />
the feelings of the laboring people, <lb />
and to appreciate their situation; <lb />
and there is excellent reason to be- <lb />
that the liberal opinions of the <lb />
late president rested in large part <lb />
on his practical acquaintance with <lb />
the working people. <lb />
It is worth noting that these <lb />
working vacations of young <lb />
Carnot were a most agreeable time <lb />
to him. He remembered the days <lb />
spent at with feelings of <lb />
delight, and always went there for <lb />
rest when occasion offered. <lb />
Bi mother, who is still living, <lb />
looked forward with great pleasure <lb />
to the expiration her son's seven <lb />
years of presidential service, when <lb />
she expected to take him to <lb />
pals, as if he were a boy again, and <lb />
give him a there. It is <lb />
quite possible that, if the assassin's <lb />
hand had spared him, he might have <lb />
found at the carpenter's bench a de- <lb />
relief from of state. <lb />
So as Much for Ya. <lb />
Mr. Fred Miller, of living. III., writer <lb />
he had a Severe Kidney trouble <lb />
for many years. With pains in <lb />
Us back and that his madder was <lb />
affected, lie tried many so culled <lb />
Kidney put without any good <lb />
result. I a year ago he began <lb />
of Sleet i Bitters found relief at <lb />
once. Bitters Is <lb />
ed to cure Ki am. Liver <lb />
troubles and Often given almost instant <lb />
relief. One trial will prove our <lb />
Price only for large bottle <lb />
At Joint Store. <lb />
At lo current rates. <lb />
M A SENT FOR F A S i <lb />
ESTABLISHED f . <lb />
Ft. <lb />
GREENVILLE, 1ST. C. <lb />
Just Received Tars Hock Lime. <lb />
KEGS SI NAILS, ALL SIZES <lb />
Cast i <lb />
Preparation. <lb />
Snip. <lb />
tOo <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
and <lb />
on Cases Matches. <lb />
Col I <lb />
Inn Howl I. g <lb />
Sacks Collie. <lb />
Molasses. <lb />
. Tons <lb />
Kegs Powder. <lb />
Flour. <lb />
Meat. <lb />
Ill V . <lb />
i i. mm An ii . <lb />
P. ill i i S <lb />
j i Call A n <lb />
R. N <lb />
I Three Ii <lb />
U o. <lb />
m Mikes V M. P. Ci <lb />
Va. <lb />
Hi a c- Oysters,<lb />
hat <lb />
-IS STILL AT THE <lb />
BL <lb />
RON I IT l A I <lb />
MERCHANDISE, <lb />
has nu t at the i -t <lb />
Hemp e. s, Imp in an every <lb />
ting necessary for Millers, e ha Inn- a- <lb />
I lo Hats. Shoes. Ladies Dress I have id on band. Am head <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and . N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep an I e clerk I, <lb />
ALFRED <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb />
There is more Catarrh i <lb />
of country than all i <lb />
put together, and until <lb />
years was to <lb />
For a great many years <lb />
i is section <lb />
the last few <lb />
be Incurable, <lb />
duel <lb />
R. <lb />
Pitt Co, N. C. <lb />
C. C <lb />
I o ii. X. <lb />
Joshua Skinner, <lb />
ii. N C. <lb />
COBB BR S. CO<lb />
AND <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
FAYETTE STREET VA <lb />
and <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersign d qualified be- <lb />
e Superior t of Pit <lb />
as administrator lo the state of <lb />
Ken a do Fleming, e i- <lb />
hereby given to all Indebted to <lb />
tin st no of said den to make <lb />
mediate payment to the an <lb />
and all person, having claim <lb />
th said estate must present the same <lb />
before tho day 1895, mis <lb />
notice will III bar of recovery. <lb />
Tills 38th day of hen. <lb />
SYLVESTER II <lb />
of Fernando Fleming. <lb />
THE <lb />
MS <lb />
JAMES Prop.<lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
We will till them CHEAP <lb />
We will till them WELL <lb />
Stove and Buss <lb />
castings, andirons, <lb />
o- <lb />
hi <lb />
Pipe, Valves, <lb />
Machinery, be, <lb />
Prompt and given <lb />
Sat- <lb />
guaranteed. i co <lb />
or a <lb />
V. O. <lb />
it a local disease, and <lb />
ed local remedies, and <lb />
failing to cure with loci treat <lb />
pronounced it incurable. Science ha- <lb />
proven catarrh to be <lb />
disease and therefore <lb />
treatment. Hall's Cur.-, <lb />
manufactured by F. J. i o. <lb />
is the only <lb />
cure the market- It is taken inter- <lb />
ill doses from drops to a tea- <lb />
It acts directly on the blood <lb />
and surfaces of the <lb />
They offer one hundred dollars f-n an <lb />
case It fails to cure. Send for <lb />
and testimonials. <lb />
F. J. Co., <lb />
Toledo, O. <lb />
by Druggist, <lb />
Heart Filming, <lb />
Rough Sap Kr <lb />
Rough Sap inches <lb />
17.00 <lb />
Boards, Inches,<lb />
Wait days for our Planing Mill and <lb />
will furnish you <lb />
as <lb />
delivered to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
past patronage, <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C. <lb />
E WANT I MILLION <lb />
ON seed. <lb />
Will p iv i ash <lb />
in small or large lots. so have for <lb />
Cotton Hulls. <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
Opera House, <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
Call in when you want work. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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