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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 9 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, 9 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>
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          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18950109</dc:date>
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                <p>
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all <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 />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIII. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1895. <lb />
NO. <lb />
You Need <lb />
The Reflector this year. <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year. <lb />
Reflector and Atlanta <lb />
Constitution a yr. <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
and twice-a-week <lb />
N. Y. World all for <lb />
a year. <lb />
CONDENSED. <lb />
Congress Ml Fri- <lb />
day. <lb />
A whole block of buildings <lb />
burned at Ala. <lb />
Four murderers <lb />
jail at <lb />
a ha i celebrated <lb />
bis tight -fifth birthday. <lb />
Fire ii the Prince Knitting <lb />
Works. did data <lb />
age. <lb />
The gold S ii- the <lb />
bas been reduced to <lb />
Chas. W. Button, one of the <lb />
oldest journalists in Virginia is <lb />
dead. <lb />
schooner lost <lb />
making the past <lb />
week- <lb />
Eight barned at <lb />
Utica, N. Y. a loss of <lb />
C H. Fl tab Co., grocers of <lb />
assigned with <lb />
liabilities- <lb />
The Colorado Legislature <lb />
ed Senator F. O- Walcott to <lb />
At Fort Worth, Tax., Martin <lb />
kilted <lb />
a saloon brawl. <lb />
Five children of ons family at <lb />
Beading, Pa-, died in twenty-four <lb />
hours of diphtheria. <lb />
Three men and two women lost <lb />
their lives the burning of a big <lb />
hotel at Albany, M. Y. <lb />
Six masked men made <lb />
successful attempt to hold up a <lb />
train near Ark. <lb />
Another hotel destroyed by tire <lb />
and three- lives lost- This time it <lb />
occurred at Lancaster, Ky- <lb />
Charles H. a wealthy <lb />
citizen of San Francisco, commit <lb />
led suicide by taking morphine. <lb />
Hamilton Fish, Jr., received <lb />
the Republican nomination for <lb />
Speaker of the New York <lb />
A farmer named Charles White <lb />
his BOD were burned to death <lb />
their house near <lb />
B- A- Brown, a merchant and <lb />
manufacturer, of N- <lb />
C, has liabilities over <lb />
The estimates appropriations <lb />
for the government New York <lb />
City for 1895 foot up nearly <lb />
000,000- <lb />
Geo. W. has <lb />
chased acres more of land <lb />
near Asheville for which he paid <lb />
Ex-Senator G Fair, of Ne- <lb />
recently died ban <lb />
Francisco, leaves a fortune of <lb />
A wrecking steamer has been <lb />
from Norfolk to the <lb />
of the water-logged <lb />
near Ocracoke- <lb />
Two brothers named Patrick at- <lb />
tacked a man named near <lb />
Little Rock, and all three <lb />
received fatal wounds. <lb />
W. C Miller, of Newark, O, <lb />
blew out his bruins with a <lb />
in his room at the <lb />
Hotel, Jacksonville, Fla. <lb />
Twenty five loaded freight cars, <lb />
one mail car and a car-shod, prop- <lb />
of the South Florida rail- <lb />
road, at <lb />
Ella Norwood, a woman <lb />
who murdered infant child <lb />
by forcing it to swallow pins, will <lb />
be hung in Durham February <lb />
8th- <lb />
Two ladies and a young man <lb />
who was driving them, were <lb />
by a train while attempting <lb />
to cross the Lehigh Valley rail <lb />
road near N. Y. <lb />
Mr. C W. Toms, of Durham, <lb />
has been elected president, and <lb />
Mr- D- Howell. of <lb />
secretary, of the <lb />
of City School <lb />
dents- <lb />
A Mrs. and five <lb />
were burned to death in their <lb />
home at Wis. The bus <lb />
band and two children were the <lb />
only ones who escaped from the <lb />
building. <lb />
Henry Clemens and Miss Lillie <lb />
a couple were <lb />
goon to have b-en married, while <lb />
together near Defiance, <lb />
Ohio, fell through the ice MM <lb />
were both drowned. <lb />
Three colored laborers employ- <lb />
ed in excavating for the <lb />
of a new State penitentiary <lb />
near Nashville. Tenn., were en- <lb />
in thawing a box of <lb />
the dynamite ex- <lb />
killing all three of them, <lb />
i . <lb />
A series of thirty games for the <lb />
checker championship of North <lb />
Carolina was finished et Asheville <lb />
Monday night with the following <lb />
J- A- Murdock, of Ashe- <lb />
eight; H. J- <lb />
county, four; drawn, <lb />
ADJUTANT GENERAL'S REPORT. <lb />
There Soldiers Fewer Than a <lb />
Year Ago. <lb />
Dec. annual <lb />
of General Cam <lb />
for UM that the <lb />
forts to perfect the organization <lb />
tile State Guard, as well as its <lb />
efficiency, are satisfactory, con- <lb />
resources. <lb />
The aims and uniforms are in <lb />
serviceable During <lb />
the year enlisted men were <lb />
honorably discharged and <lb />
dishonorably discharged- That <lb />
there a decided and steady mil- <lb />
spirit is shown by the fact <lb />
that since February, no less <lb />
than applications for <lb />
to organize have <lb />
This increase is <lb />
the abolition of fancy <lb />
uniforms and fancy soldiering- <lb />
The Adjutant General strongly <lb />
recommends that the troops while <lb />
be rationed and that <lb />
some compensation be flowed <lb />
them. <lb />
The First S <lb />
has an effective strength of <lb />
; the Second, with <lb />
the Third, with <lb />
companies, the Fourth, <lb />
with ; cavalry <lb />
troops and unattached infantry <lb />
company, So; three <lb />
visions Naval Reserve, <lb />
staff IS; <lb />
total 2.6-0. or 2-5 less than in <lb />
per cent- of <lb />
the troops were present at <lb />
Good was done at <lb />
the camp by the Third <lb />
Fourth Regiments of infantry. <lb />
general government give s <lb />
all the arms and uniforms. Its <lb />
annual allowance is There <lb />
is a fine camp equipment, with <lb />
tents for the whole brigade, and <lb />
blankets have just been ad- <lb />
The Guard is now ready to <lb />
take the field, at a point on the <lb />
border of State hours, <lb />
ready for service. The <lb />
General says a permanent camp <lb />
is needed- <lb />
Paymaster General Carr dis <lb />
the Slide funds as follows <lb />
Adjutant General's department, <lb />
f 700.06 ; Quartermaster General's <lb />
department, including <lb />
of troops, ; <lb />
department, <lb />
annual appropriation to <lb />
companies, and to <lb />
mental and brigade headquarters, <lb />
; encampment ; ; total, <lb />
The of the <lb />
troops in camp was good- A hos- <lb />
corps is warmly recommend <lb />
ed by the Surgeon General; also <lb />
a medical crops. Four times <lb />
during the year troops were call- <lb />
ed on to aid the civil authorities <lb />
by guarding the, jails, etc. Com- <lb />
First Regiment ; F, of <lb />
Third, G, of First, and C, <lb />
of the First, were thus called on <lb />
and in all cases the response was <lb />
prompt. There were two <lb />
where troops were a guard <lb />
at executions. The Naval Re- <lb />
serves are equipped with Lee <lb />
magazine rifles and have also a <lb />
Galling and four howitzers. <lb />
THREE JUSTICES RETIRE. <lb />
Chief Justice Shepherd and <lb />
Justice and Leave <lb />
the Supreme Court Bench. <lb />
When the autumn term of the <lb />
Supreme court ended Friday it <lb />
ceased to exist as a Democratic <lb />
body- The Chief Justice two <lb />
Associate Justices retire from the <lb />
j bench to-morrow and will be <lb />
by the three gentlemen <lb />
elected the last <lb />
month- Of the retiring Justices <lb />
the Raleigh Observer of <lb />
of Saturday says <lb />
Chief Justice Shepherd was <lb />
I pointed by Governor Holt in 1892 <lb />
to succeed the late Chief Justice <lb />
j Augustus S. <lb />
Associate Justice was <lb />
appointed in September, 1892 to <lb />
j succeed the late Justice Joseph <lb />
I Davis. He was elected to fill the <lb />
in the election of <lb />
j November the same year- <lb />
Associate Justice was <lb />
I appointed by Governor Holt in <lb />
the autumn of to till the <lb />
caused by the elevation of <lb />
j Justice Sheppard to the Chief <lb />
These retired with <lb />
the high esteem of fellow- <lb />
citizens. They have adorned the <lb />
. bench, and go buck to private life <lb />
; with the ermine unstained. <lb />
AM will return to practice <lb />
of the law. <lb />
The plans of Chief Justice Shep- <lb />
are not yet made known. <lb />
Justice will enter into <lb />
I partnership with his son, Mr. S. <lb />
I II. at Fayetteville. lie <lb />
also form law <lb />
with Capt- W. H. Day, the offices <lb />
to be in Raleigh, where he will <lb />
spend a portion of each week. <lb />
Justice will resume the <lb />
practice of law in Charlotte, with <lb />
the firm of Walker and <lb />
tho name the new firm to be <lb />
Walker and <lb />
Depression why <lb />
Here are some of the <lb />
Every manufacturer wants to be <lb />
a millionaire, every working man <lb />
wants to be and receive <lb />
j fancy wages, every merchant <lb />
wants to be a merchant prince, <lb />
i every doctor wants to be a <lb />
and get rich fast, <lb />
lawyer wants to be the attorney <lb />
of a great corporation, every <lb />
preacher to be a D. D., and <lb />
have charge of a city church, <lb />
farmer his land con- <lb />
into town lots and most of <lb />
them every railroad <lb />
company wishes to tbs con <lb />
and bind ocean to ocean, <lb />
every girl to be leader <lb />
society before she leaves her <lb />
and every boy wants to be <lb />
a man before he reaches his. Are <lb />
we extravagant saying every <lb />
Well, let's it to <lb />
most every one, and what's the <lb />
Universal unrest, wide- <lb />
spread disappointment pro- <lb />
found depression. Remedy i Call <lb />
a halt. Go slower. Saving food <lb />
and raiment therewith be content. <lb />
The contented are the. rich after <lb />
According to the report of <lb />
Comptroller there are now <lb />
tho United States nation- <lb />
banks, of which are the <lb />
South, so that the North, with <lb />
population about twice as large <lb />
as tho South, has more <lb />
national banks. It is true that <lb />
there are more and larger cities <lb />
in the North than in the South, <lb />
more and more <lb />
business, but still this exhibit <lb />
shows how the baking <lb />
and the of currency are <lb />
monopolized by that section. Is <lb />
it that, under these <lb />
conditions, there is a strong <lb />
a wide-spread demand in the <lb />
South for State bunks With <lb />
the start the North has had, and <lb />
the of money <lb />
banking circles of that section, <lb />
the scarcity of money in this <lb />
section, we never can establish <lb />
national bunks enough to give <lb />
our people a reasonable <lb />
of the volume of money in <lb />
circulation. The bankers up <lb />
there say we have money enough, <lb />
and doubtless there may be for <lb />
them- they have more <lb />
than they can profitable use <lb />
for, while the South hasn't half <lb />
as much as she needs, and this <lb />
will always be the case while the <lb />
present monetary system <lb />
and the North has the mo <lb />
of the national banks, as <lb />
she has Star. <lb />
Red Rooster Turns White. <lb />
the leopard change his <lb />
spots Hardly, out a red rooster <lb />
may turn white- Mr- S. E. Foy <lb />
has a game rooster which <lb />
last spring was as red as any <lb />
man's rooster. He to shed <lb />
off and the red feathers kept <lb />
giving place to white ones until <lb />
there was not colored feather <lb />
on his body. The bird about two <lb />
years old- History tells of men <lb />
whose hair was turned gray <lb />
one night by a great of <lb />
grief. This bird must have been ; <lb />
a Democratic prophet <lb />
from the great grief he felt <lb />
over what he the <lb />
Gastonia Gazette. <lb />
The Put on <lb />
Five New Wind-Bur <lb />
The Atlantic Coast sys- <lb />
says the Courier, <lb />
has a reputation for fast running <lb />
in order to sustain it the <lb />
of the road always keeps <lb />
its equipment with eve <lb />
modem improvement. When <lb />
the heavy inter travel begins <lb />
the Coast will put into <lb />
vice five new which it has <lb />
recently ordered. It is believed <lb />
that these engines are the fa-test <lb />
railroad locomotives in the South <lb />
that they will be able to car <lb />
the Coast Lino from <lb />
the North to the South at the rate <lb />
of miles an hour without <lb />
trouble. The new engines were <lb />
ordered in November and are <lb />
ready for delivery to the<lb />
First Regiment's New Officer. <lb />
The Colonel of the First <lb />
of the State <lb />
Capt- Williams of the follow- <lb />
appointments <lb />
H- C- of Washington, <lb />
and captain of the <lb />
First Regiment. <lb />
Dr. Roger A. Smith, of Golds- <lb />
major and surgeon, First <lb />
Dr. J- Malone, of Louisburg, <lb />
captain and assistant surgeon, <lb />
First <lb />
W. Cook, adjutant of <lb />
Second Battalion, First Regiment <lb />
BETHEL NOTES. <lb />
Bethel, Jan 3rd <lb />
R. W. King was in town <lb />
day. <lb />
Mr. R- J. W- Carson has moved <lb />
to town to live. <lb />
Mr. J- S L. Ward has moved in <lb />
the country to his farm. <lb />
Mr- W. Carson has <lb />
chased the house lot of Jas. <lb />
S- L. Ward on main street <lb />
will to town to live. <lb />
Mr. T. T. Cherry has moved his <lb />
family to Conetoe, he will have <lb />
charge of the branch store of <lb />
Staton, Cherry Bunting there- <lb />
the <lb />
of the brides father Mr. J. <lb />
H. Eubanks on Wednesday even <lb />
1895. Mr. J. L. <lb />
was married to Miss Maggie Eu- <lb />
banks, D. C Moore, Esq., <lb />
The were Mr. <lb />
Columbus Wynn with Miss <lb />
tor Barnhill, Mr. J. T. Ward with <lb />
Miss James, Mr. Wm. <lb />
Nobles with Miss Ida <lb />
Mr. Jas- Page with Miss Dora <lb />
Brown, Mr. S- C Page with Miss <lb />
Alice Davenport, Mr- K <lb />
with Miss- Lula Ward, <lb />
Mr. Johnnie Barnhill with Miss <lb />
Jennie Ward. After the mar- <lb />
ceremony the bride and <lb />
groom with attendants and <lb />
invited guest went to the groom's <lb />
father's, Mr- J. Wynn. where a <lb />
bounteous supper awaited them. <lb />
May happiness them <lb />
through life. <lb />
RICE PAPER. <lb />
The <lb />
The people of Nebraska, who <lb />
are brought face to face <lb />
with starvation, are victims of an <lb />
unfortunate choice of homes. <lb />
The lands are fertile but the sea <lb />
sops are uncertain. And yet <lb />
immigrants per year <lb />
have going to these West- <lb />
States. The suffering there <lb />
now will turn stream else- <lb />
where and the <lb />
the of the <lb />
South are already beginning to <lb />
attract those who are seeking <lb />
homes. <lb />
THE PAST YEAR. <lb />
A- D-. 1894, will be entitled to <lb />
remembered as a year of wars, <lb />
tumults and disasters. During <lb />
this year Rio de was long <lb />
in a state of siege, the <lb />
President of the French republic, <lb />
was assassinated, the Czar of all <lb />
the died, and the war be <lb />
Japan and China was begun <lb />
the end whereof is not yet. <lb />
At hers in America <lb />
had tho great strike of coal <lb />
which created a fuel <lb />
Then came the Pullman <lb />
boycott, and after that the <lb />
and anon in and near Chicago <lb />
and in some other localities, re <lb />
suiting the calling out of large <lb />
bodies of State and Federal <lb />
troops, the destruction much <lb />
railroad property the loss of <lb />
many lives. <lb />
e also the army of <lb />
marching to Washington <lb />
a fantastic mission, which <lb />
in the army's com <lb />
in chief some of his <lb />
lieutenants being put jail, <lb />
while their deluded followers <lb />
were pursued from pillar to post <lb />
as vagrants. <lb />
army, be it said, got as <lb />
free rations and as much <lb />
free advertising as any army that <lb />
ever was organized, and without <lb />
the loss of a man killed or <lb />
ed- In this respect General Cos <lb />
may pleasure compare <lb />
his campaign with in <lb />
Russia, <lb />
The year 1894 will also be re <lb />
membered as the year of tariff re- <lb />
vision ; the year of almost interim <lb />
talk in Congress of <lb />
great business. But <lb />
there is cheering reflection in <lb />
with that painful and <lb />
protracted episode in our national <lb />
history, and this is that like <lb />
war of it is behind us and <lb />
not before <lb />
We are of those who think that <lb />
the work in baud was not badly <lb />
done by Congress, considering all <lb />
of the difficulties in the way, and <lb />
we have good reason for believing <lb />
that the country will not have to <lb />
suffer from any general re- <lb />
vision cf the tariff for many years <lb />
to come. <lb />
It is a bad piece of road that <lb />
we had to pass. Let us rejoice <lb />
that we have passed it ; that we <lb />
did not sink hopelessly in the <lb />
mud so doing, and that before <lb />
us is a roadway which will admit <lb />
of good, steady, healthful <lb />
Dispatch. <lb />
Case. <lb />
S. ii. Hew Wis., was <lb />
troubled with Neuralgia <lb />
hi. <lb />
was to alarming de- <lb />
appetite fell away, lie WM <lb />
terribly reduced in and strength. <lb />
Three bottles of Electric Bitters <lb />
him. <lb />
Shepherd, <lb />
had a running sore on ids leg of eight <lb />
standing. Used three bottles of <lb />
Electric Bitters and seven of <lb />
his leg U <lb />
and John Speaker, <lb />
O., had five large Purer son's on <lb />
leg, do tors said lie incurable. <lb />
One bottle one box <lb />
Halve cured him en- <lb />
J. L. Drug <lb />
stare, <lb />
Near Decatur, III., robbers tor-j <lb />
tared an old man by forcing j <lb />
to sit a hot stove until he told <lb />
where his money was hid. <lb />
got <lb />
The total visible supply of cot <lb />
ton for the world is bales <lb />
of which 4,494.551 are American, <lb />
against re <lb />
last year. Receipts this <lb />
week at all interior towns, <lb />
bales. Receipts from plantations <lb />
349.972 bales. Crop in sight, <lb />
bales. <lb />
I opponents of the income- <lb />
J tax threaten that when the bill to <lb />
; provide money to pay for <lb />
income-tax law shall <lb />
i come up in Congress, a motion to <lb />
; repeal the law itself will be made- <lb />
I Perhaps so ; we regard it as <lb />
i certain that the income-tax will <lb />
be collected this <lb />
The Baltimore News says it is <lb />
estimated that at least <lb />
I new capital will be invested in <lb />
I southern cotton mills in the next <lb />
months. <lb />
Chinese Tree Is Now Success- <lb />
fully Grown in Florida. <lb />
The rice-paper tree, one of the <lb />
most interesting of the flora of <lb />
China, has recently been success- <lb />
fully experimented with in Florida, <lb />
where it now flourishes with other <lb />
sub-tropical and oriental species of <lb />
trees and shrubs. When first trans- <lb />
planted In American soil the <lb />
expressed doubts of its <lb />
fearing that it would be <lb />
unable to stand the winters. All <lb />
these fears have vanished, however, <lb />
and it is now the universal opinion <lb />
that It is as well adapted to the <lb />
mate of this country as to that of <lb />
the famed Flowery kingdom. <lb />
It is a small tree, growing to a <lb />
height of less than fifteen feet, with <lb />
a trunk or stem from three to five <lb />
inches in diameter. Its canes, which <lb />
vary in color according to season, <lb />
are large, soft and downy, the form <lb />
somewhat resembling that noticed <lb />
In those of the bean plant. <lb />
The celebrated rice paper, the prod- <lb />
of this queer tree, is formed of <lb />
thin slices of the pith, which is taken <lb />
from the body of the tree in <lb />
cylinders several inches in length. <lb />
Tho Chinese workmen apply the <lb />
of a sharp, straight to <lb />
these cylinders, and, turning them <lb />
round either by rude machinery or <lb />
by hand, dexterously pare tho pith <lb />
from circumference to center. This <lb />
operation makes a roll of extra <lb />
paper, the scroll being of equal <lb />
thickness throughout. After a <lb />
has thus pared it is <lb />
rolled and weights are placed upon <lb />
it until the surface is rendered <lb />
smooth throughout its entire <lb />
length. <lb />
ft is altogether probable that if <lb />
rice paper making becomes an Indus- <lb />
try in the United States these prim- <lb />
modes will all be done away <lb />
Louis Republic. <lb />
OLD WHALING DAYS. <lb />
PROBLEMS IN ANIMAL Lire. <lb />
Most of New Bedford's Great Wealth <lb />
Comes from Bones and Blubber. <lb />
Down at New Bedford the other <lb />
day I was much interested in a lot <lb />
of old whalers like that we had at <lb />
the exposition, which are there tied <lb />
up to the docks to decay. The <lb />
whaling the source of <lb />
great riches to that city until about <lb />
or when the discovery of <lb />
petroleum destroyed demand for i <lb />
fish oil, and the long rows of fine old <lb />
colonial mansions down tho shaded <lb />
streets still furnish evidence of <lb />
profitable voyages. The <lb />
whale money that was laid away <lb />
still furnishes large incomes to the <lb />
heirs of hardy old sea dogs and the <lb />
descendants of those who provided <lb />
their outfits and shared the results <lb />
of their perilous cruises in the Arctic <lb />
seas. <lb />
New Bedford is said to be the <lb />
wealthiest city of its size in the Unit- <lb />
ed States, and most of its capital, <lb />
which is estimated at <lb />
came from blubber the bones of <lb />
whales. The began as ear- <lb />
as 1755, and reached its height In <lb />
1860, when there were nearly six <lb />
hundred vessels going out from that <lb />
port, with more than sailors <lb />
and representing an investment of <lb />
more than The catch <lb />
that year was worth nearly <lb />
for then oil sold for a gal- <lb />
and whalebone for a <lb />
pound. But now the whales the <lb />
northern Atlantic arc almost <lb />
and the only places <lb />
it is worth while to hunt them are <lb />
down around the antarctic circle and <lb />
among the seal Islands of the North <lb />
Many old whalers have been turned <lb />
into sealers and now sail from San <lb />
Francisco and Portland instead of <lb />
New Bedford. Now there are only <lb />
thirty-five ships from this port en- <lb />
gaged in trade, and less than <lb />
nine hundred men. With the com- <lb />
petition of petroleum, oil is worth <lb />
only cents a gallon, and whale- <lb />
has been largely replaced, as <lb />
most of you know, by metallic <lb />
that make the form <lb />
diviner still. <lb />
The most valuable catch over made <lb />
by a was that of tho On- <lb />
ward., Capt. which In <lb />
New Bedford after a forty-one <lb />
cruise with a worth <lb />
over of which the captain's <lb />
share was The total value <lb />
of the whole product of the whale <lb />
brought Into New Bedford during <lb />
the fifty-two years for a rec- <lb />
has been kept is more than <lb />
The average ship carrying a crew <lb />
of thirty hands, used to cost about <lb />
Tho ships were owned by <lb />
companies, which supplied pro- <lb />
visions and clothing and all the <lb />
necessities of the voyage and ad- <lb />
certain sums of money for <lb />
the captain to leave <lb />
for the of their families <lb />
while they were away. No wages <lb />
were paid to either the officer- <lb />
the. but es <lb />
proceeds of the voyage, and <lb />
the balance was divided among the <lb />
stockholders when they returned. <lb />
The and mates were hardy <lb />
New Englanders, but the crews were <lb />
mostly Portuguese from the Canary, <lb />
Madeira and Islands.- <lb />
Overheard In the <lb />
Speckled learned <lb />
something awful about Miss <lb />
Rock to-day. <lb />
Mrs. Leghorn For <lb />
sake, what was it <lb />
prides herself on her family <lb />
connections, you know, and she <lb />
hasn't any. She was hatched in an <lb />
Y. World. <lb />
Some of the Unaccountable Things <lb />
Done by Birds and Beasts. <lb />
Tho greyhound runs by sight only. <lb />
This is a fact. The carrier pigeon <lb />
flies his hundreds of miles home- <lb />
ward by eyesight, noting from point <lb />
to point objects he has marked. <lb />
This is only conjecture. The dragon <lb />
fly. with twelve thousand lenses in <lb />
bis eye, darts from angle to angle <lb />
with the rapidity of a flashing sword <lb />
and as rapidly darts back, not turn- <lb />
in the air, but with a clash re- <lb />
versing the action of his four wings <lb />
and instantaneously calculating the <lb />
distance of objects, or he would <lb />
dash himself to pieces. But in what <lb />
conformation of the eye docs this <lb />
power consist No one can answer. <lb />
Ten thousand mosquitoes dance <lb />
up and down in tho sun, with the <lb />
minutest interval between them, yet <lb />
no one knocks another headlong on <lb />
the grass or breaks a wing, long <lb />
and delicate as they are. <lb />
a peculiar, high-shouldered, vicious <lb />
creature, with long and pendant <lb />
nose, darts out of the rising and <lb />
falling cloud and, settling on your <lb />
cheek, inserts a poisonous sting. <lb />
What possessed the little wretch to <lb />
do this Did he smell your blood <lb />
while he was dancing No one <lb />
knows. <lb />
A carriage comes suddenly upon <lb />
some geese in a narrow road and <lb />
drives straight through the flock. A <lb />
goose was never yet fairly run over, <lb />
nor a duck. They are under the <lb />
very wheels hoofs and yet they <lb />
contrive to flap and waddle safely <lb />
off. Habitually stupid, heavy and <lb />
indolent, they are, nevertheless, <lb />
equal to any emergency. <lb />
Why does tho lonely woodpecker, <lb />
when he descends from his tree and <lb />
goes to drink, stop several times on <lb />
his way and listen and look around <lb />
before he takes his No <lb />
one knows. How is it that the <lb />
of an ant which is taken in bat- <lb />
by other ants, to be made slaves, <lb />
should be the black or ant <lb />
No one knows. <lb />
The power of judging of actual <lb />
danger and the free and easy bold- <lb />
that results from it are by no <lb />
means uncommon. Many birds seem <lb />
to have a correct notion of a gun's <lb />
range, and are scrupulously careful <lb />
to keep beyond it. The most <lb />
resource would be to fly right <lb />
away out of sight and hearing, but <lb />
this they do not choose to do. <lb />
A naturalist of Brazil gives an ac- <lb />
count of expedition that he made <lb />
to one of the Islands of the Amazon <lb />
to shoot spoonbills, ibises and other <lb />
magnificent birds which are <lb />
there. His design was com- <lb />
baffled, however, by a <lb />
wretched little sandpiper, which <lb />
preceded him, continually uttering <lb />
his tell-tale cry, which at <lb />
aroused all the birds within hearing. <lb />
Throughout the day did this <lb />
bird Its self-imposed <lb />
duty of sentinel to others, <lb />
ally preventing the approach of the <lb />
hunter to the game and yet <lb />
to keep out of the range of his <lb />
Times. <lb />
Young Gladstone Played Pranks. <lb />
Mr. Gladstone was a country <lb />
house guest with Henry Chaplin. <lb />
Mr. Gladstone one evening asked <lb />
him whether his grandmother had <lb />
not lived in a certain street in May- <lb />
fair. Mr. Chaplin assented, <lb />
said Mr. Gladstone, re- <lb />
member It very well. I lived next <lb />
door to her for awhile when I was a <lb />
child. She used to give evening <lb />
parties. When the carriages were <lb />
assembled to up my brother <lb />
and I used to creep out of <lb />
was summer open the <lb />
window, get out our squirts and dis- <lb />
fire away at the coachmen on <lb />
the boxes. I remember tho intense <lb />
delight with which we used to see <lb />
them look up to the sky and ask <lb />
each other whether it was not be- <lb />
ginning to <lb />
To Be Nicely Naughty, <lb />
In the art of being wicked grace- <lb />
fully and if not be- <lb />
we have still much to <lb />
learn, and It seems to a trans-At- <lb />
observer that some of the <lb />
London writers are pursuing the <lb />
substance without the alleviating <lb />
nuisance. It is task enough for one <lb />
generation to vulgarize our <lb />
by giving conspicuous place to <lb />
tho sordid and mean, without re- <lb />
it to the level of the <lb />
gossip of the set anywhere. <lb />
Better even as it is <lb />
called, than tho vulgarity of <lb />
Fiction la a great spreader of <lb />
morals, as well as manners, and If <lb />
the Linden life Is what It Is depicted <lb />
In many recent romances, It la <lb />
pity to risk ltd diffusion l- mid- <lb />
classes the <lb />
libraries. <lb />
Tom Prevented Wreck. <lb />
Tom, tho twelve-year-old son of <lb />
Tom Dickinson, of Ind., <lb />
saved a score of lives tho other <lb />
night. A passenger train was side- <lb />
tracked at that city waiting for a <lb />
fast freight to pass. By some over- <lb />
sight the switch was left open. <lb />
Tom, who was playing near, hap <lb />
to notice that It was open. <lb />
Ho took In the situation, grabbed <lb />
the handle, and, when the engine <lb />
was less than fifty feet away, threw <lb />
the switch. The next the <lb />
freight rumbled past the passenger <lb />
coaches. As the freight was going <lb />
at a high rate of speed the wreck <lb />
terrible. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
Baking <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
Say It on I h <lb />
Train Than OS Tl Will <lb />
Astonish n<lb />
In keeping with these constant <lb />
improvements the safety of travel <lb />
is now almost absolute. Tho <lb />
of personal safety is even <lb />
greater for the passenger than for <lb />
the average person who is not <lb />
as may easily be demon- <lb />
During 1803 the railroads <lb />
of the United States carried <lb />
passengers an average <lb />
of about miles each, or <lb />
passenger miles. A <lb />
traveling constantly would ac- <lb />
about miles per <lb />
year, and traveling constant- <lb />
would be equivalent to the pas-1 <lb />
mileage for 1803, during <lb />
which year passengers were <lb />
killed. This is equivalent to an <lb />
average annual death rate of be- <lb />
tween and per thousand among <lb />
passengers. The annual death rate <lb />
for the population at large is three , <lb />
or four times as great. other <lb />
words the probability of death is <lb />
several times greater oil than on a <lb />
train. <lb />
It is curious to note that while, <lb />
freight have fallen <lb />
dropping from and cents <lb />
per ton per mile in earlier years, to <lb />
less than a cent per Ion per mile at <lb />
present, passenger fares show little <lb />
depreciation. The average fare on <lb />
roads in 1848 was 2.85 cents per <lb />
mile; on all roads now the average <lb />
is about 2.2 cents per mile. But in- <lb />
creasing luxury of equipment has <lb />
perhaps atoned for this maintenance <lb />
of old time rates. <lb />
The railways in 1893 earned <lb />
220,751.874, and of this amount <lb />
was expended for <lb />
From the net proceeds an <lb />
average interest of 4.25 per cent, <lb />
was paid on the mortgage indebted- <lb />
of and an aver- <lb />
age dividend of 1.68 per cent, was <lb />
paid on the capital stock of <lb />
a revenue to stockholders <lb />
by no means extravagant. It can <lb />
be said for American railroads that <lb />
their average capitalization, <lb />
bonds and stock, of per <lb />
mile is less than one-third the <lb />
of English railways per <lb />
mile, and considerably less than the <lb />
average for tho world. Tho total <lb />
capital invested in the railways. f <lb />
the world at the beginning of 1803 <lb />
was about 180.000 <lb />
per <lb />
TIMES ARE CHANGED. <lb />
An Old Woman's Reflections on <lb />
Virtues of Long Ago. <lb />
said one of the <lb />
old ladies of Clark county, Ind., <lb />
are not what they used to be. <lb />
This is the first time that I have <lb />
been in town for thirty years, I <lb />
had no idea that there were such <lb />
Why, there is a man <lb />
who works for a living at so much <lb />
per week, and his family has a car- <lb />
and they spend nearly every- <lb />
thing he makes. The dinners they <lb />
have at their houses are nicer than <lb />
I have, and their children are dressed i <lb />
finer than any I ever saw before. I <lb />
reared fifteen children myself, but <lb />
none of them ever had such clothes . <lb />
as those children of this man have. <lb />
Still, all of mine now good <lb />
farms and bank accounts, and go to, <lb />
church and try to be Christians. <lb />
When I was married my husband i <lb />
had a horse and I owned a cow. <lb />
They were all that we had. <lb />
rented a place, and now we not only <lb />
own that place, but several more in <lb />
that neighborhood, besides some <lb />
business property in Louisville. I <lb />
never worked hard, and have <lb />
enjoyed myself In a quite way. <lb />
These people who spending <lb />
everything they get, and would be <lb />
in a bad fix If the husband were <lb />
suddenly thrown out of work, can <lb />
hardly having a better time <lb />
I am, because must be <lb />
worrying as to how long they <lb />
eon keep it up. I am positively <lb />
alarmed when I think of it myself. <lb />
These are tho kind of people that fill <lb />
the almshouses. Everybody can <lb />
save, unless there Is sickness In the <lb />
Commercial. <lb />
History of Pen. <lb />
The first pens wore made of <lb />
steel and iron, sharp pointed like a <lb />
bodkin. These were used in pro- <lb />
hieroglyphics on stone In <lb />
Assyria and other eastern countries. <lb />
Then tho pencil <lb />
for painting on the skins of animals, <lb />
and next the stylus bone, Ivory <lb />
or metal. But parchment and <lb />
became known, and the reed pen <lb />
was Invented. Time rolled on, and <lb />
It was discovered that quill was bet- <lb />
than the reed, and It came Into <lb />
universal use, and continued so <lb />
far into the present century. <lb />
Silver, horn, tortoise shell and glass <lb />
came along only way to steel, <lb />
until in 1820 a gross of the latter <lb />
pens was made In Birmingham and <lb />
sold at wholesale for thirty-six <lb />
The best gold pens made <lb />
Id the United States-Hardware. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER, <lb />
Our Regular <lb />
Washington, D- 1895. <lb />
Cleveland has not <lb />
fully decided to send a special <lb />
message to Congress the <lb />
necessity for financial legislation <lb />
at this season, but he has had <lb />
the subject consideration <lb />
and will gladly send in a special <lb />
in. if he it will aid <lb />
the cause of currency reform. <lb />
As there are a considerable <lb />
of Democratic members of <lb />
the House who have not yet re- <lb />
turned to Washington, it is prob- <lb />
able that tho decision as to the <lb />
proposed Democratic caucus on <lb />
the currency reform bill <lb />
will go over to next week, general <lb />
debate on tho bill <lb />
meanwhile in the House. <lb />
Tie idea of the Democratic <lb />
loaders in tho House is to try to <lb />
meet all reasonable objections to <lb />
tho bill by amendments <lb />
then to put bill through <lb />
the House by a majority so large <lb />
that tho Senate will be compelled <lb />
by public opinion to act upon the <lb />
measure. They wish to get the <lb />
fullest possible attendance at the <lb />
caucus mid to have every <lb />
to the bill frankly stated. <lb />
There is no desire to any- <lb />
body, to ask anyone to vote <lb />
for the bill who cannot be con- <lb />
that it is at least a step <lb />
towards relief. <lb />
Notwithstanding all wild <lb />
talk about Democratic opposition <lb />
to the bill, your <lb />
unhesitatingly <lb />
that when the bill is put upon its <lb />
final passage in the House there <lb />
will not Democratic votes <lb />
against it. But the bill <lb />
may considerably changed by <lb />
amendment before it is voted up- <lb />
on. Whatever is with it, it <lb />
should in the be passed <lb />
if it did not deserve to be on its <lb />
as t vote of confidence <lb />
by a Democratic Congress in a <lb />
Democratic <lb />
Treasury officials now <lb />
await tho appropriation to start <lb />
the for the collection <lb />
of the income tax, and there is no <lb />
of the of <lb />
the bill containing that <lb />
by the has <lb />
passed house-but it <lb />
ill be delayed by some <lb />
can speeches against <lb />
the tax. <lb />
In the year just closed 1,920 <lb />
miles of now railroad track have <lb />
America. It is rather <lb />
surprising to find that <lb />
leads with miles. <lb />
Cards <lb />
N. <lb />
II K. PRICK,<lb />
,. , . ,. N. C. <lb />
at <lb />
DR. II. A. JOYNER, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
O. <lb />
oilier up.-lull overs. K, render A <lb />
Hardware tore.<lb />
. I. JAM KM <lb />
. c. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
N, C <lb />
L. C. LATHAM HASH <lb />
AT HAM A<lb />
J. <lb />
I. <lb />
ATTORNEY <lb />
N. o. <lb />
Prompt attention to business. <lb />
Ht Tucker , old stand. <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
Ll L. BLOW <lb />
it. nil the Courts. <lb />
A TYSON, <lb />
s. r. <lb />
Prompt attention given t collection <lb />
Jas. K. L, <lb />
Greenville. <lb />
MOORE A MOORE. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
under Opera St. <lb />
LI J. JAMES, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
GREENVILLE, NO, <lb />
In ail Collections a<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017727_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE Mr- <lb />
I proprietor of the Atlantic <lb />
N. C. j hotel at City, died at <lb />
Raleigh on last Saturday. He <lb />
1.1 eaves a and three <lb />
John E. Woodard has again <lb />
declined the appointment as So- <lb />
of this district, tendered <lb />
by Gov Carr, and W. P- Shaw, of <lb />
Henderson, was appointed. W. <lb />
C Douglass, of Carthage, was <lb />
pointed in the seventh district. <lb />
WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb />
at the at Greenville <lb />
P., as second-class mail matter. <lb />
According to Dun's Review the <lb />
business failures in this <lb />
during 1804 were about the same <lb />
in number as in 1893, but the <lb />
liabilities were <lb />
less. <lb />
RANK WILSON. <lb />
J. B. CHERRY <lb />
Mr. has re- <lb />
signed his position as Chief clerk <lb />
of the Interior Department- He <lb />
will return to North Carolina <lb />
and devote his whole attention to <lb />
his paper, the Raleigh Newt and <lb />
Observer. <lb />
The Newts and Observer says <lb />
the Fusion clans are already <lb />
gathering in Raleigh making <lb />
ready for the Legislature which <lb />
convenes next Wednesday. The <lb />
office seekers are there In great <lb />
numbers and opening their head- <lb />
quarters. <lb />
The State Railroad <lb />
report that in the way of <lb />
accidents j persons were killed <lb />
and injured on the Atlantic <lb />
Coast Line system j and <lb />
respectively on the ; <lb />
and on the Seaboard Air Line <lb />
and and on miscellaneous <lb />
roads, making a total of killed <lb />
during the year. The North Car- <lb />
division of the Southern led <lb />
with killed and injured. <lb />
The death-rate of New <lb />
for 1894 was the lowest in the <lb />
history of the city. There were <lb />
deaths. The rate was 21.05 <lb />
to the In the same period <lb />
there were marriages and <lb />
births. The report shown <lb />
that deaths resulted from <lb />
small pox, from scarlet fever, <lb />
from diphtheria, from <lb />
heart diseases, from <lb />
from <lb />
from Bright's disease and <lb />
Died in institutions, <lb />
015- Died in tenement houses. <lb />
20.149. <lb />
A special from Washington <lb />
says friends of Mr. <lb />
R. Henry, of Henderson, N. <lb />
C-, feel encouraged to hope that <lb />
before long his name will be <lb />
found among the nominations by <lb />
the President. They have work- <lb />
ed hard to laud him in the for- <lb />
service, and it is said the <lb />
State Department officials have <lb />
been hunting for something that <lb />
is worth tendering If hard <lb />
work and faithful service to the <lb />
party are any recommendation, <lb />
no man in the State is more de- <lb />
serving of recognition than Mr- <lb />
Henry. For several campaigns <lb />
he has been in the forefront of <lb />
the battle, and it is no credit to <lb />
the administration that <lb />
have been so long neglected- <lb />
The New Year issue of the <lb />
folk Virginian was a <lb />
edition twenty-four pages and <lb />
contained a review of the <lb />
of Norfolk for the year 1894, <lb />
and a comparison tho trade <lb />
of 1884. The showing is a won <lb />
exhibit of growth and de- <lb />
In 1884 the trade of <lb />
Norfolk was estimated at <lb />
the business for last <lb />
year reached nearly <lb />
double. Norfolk's population in <lb />
was ; it is now <lb />
50,000- Its area was embraced in <lb />
acres; it now occupies 2.470 <lb />
acres. Its postal receipts were <lb />
200.27 they are now <lb />
The number of buildings erected <lb />
in eight years was at a val- <lb />
of nearly Last year <lb />
buildings were erected a <lb />
cost of The combined <lb />
population of Norfolk, with that <lb />
Portsmouth. Berkley, and <lb />
towns, amounts to The <lb />
Virginian proposes a a <lb />
of the cities and towns under <lb />
one municipality Greater <lb />
and this issue is <lb />
to the promotion of this re- <lb />
reflects much credit on <lb />
the Virginian and will be of vast <lb />
benefit to Norfolk. <lb />
Mr- John Flanagan, who baa <lb />
been Treasurer of the county f-r <lb />
two years, and who was elected <lb />
for another term by the Board of <lb />
Commissioners at their December <lb />
meeting after they had rejected <lb />
the bond of Mr- j. A. <lb />
and declared the office vacant, ha; <lb />
given notice that he cannot ac- <lb />
the office and only holds <lb />
over until his successor can be <lb />
elected and qualify- With mat- <lb />
situated just as they are at <lb />
present it looks like a good time <lb />
to discuss the question of <lb />
dating the offices of Treasurer <lb />
and Sheriff, letting the <lb />
bent of the latter perform the <lb />
duties of the At the <lb />
Democratic convention in <lb />
b this was suggested, but <lb />
deemed not the proper body to <lb />
decide the matter it was dropped <lb />
We would like to hear this sub- <lb />
discussed fully, the Re <lb />
columns are open to any <lb />
one who would like to express <lb />
himself on it. Some counties in <lb />
the State have tried the two <lb />
consolidated and find the ex- <lb />
very satisfactory. <lb />
county is highly pleased with <lb />
such a system It makes the <lb />
Sheriffs office mute remunerative <lb />
and renders the giving of <lb />
bonds troublesome, j <lb />
Rev. Hicks, of St. Louis, <lb />
the man who hits the weather <lb />
forecasts on the bead more <lb />
than any other of school <lb />
of prophets, says that the <lb />
est and part of the present <lb />
winter is to come in February <lb />
and March. If it is to be any <lb />
worse than the past week are <lb />
not anxious to see it. <lb />
The Journal, in pub- <lb />
the statement of the Com- <lb />
missioners of Craven <lb />
notes tho that when the <lb />
Democrats took charge of the <lb />
finance-, there was a debt <lb />
of which had been sad <lb />
died upon the county by <lb />
Commissioners. The Demo- <lb />
have kept up the interest, <lb />
reduced the debt to <lb />
and will shortly pay on <lb />
this amount. <lb />
J. B- <lb />
J. O <lb />
TAKE GREAT PLEASURE IN TO THEIR <lb />
MANY FRIENDS AND CUSTOMERS THEIR <lb />
INTER <lb />
It is that the <lb />
is to run Senator Ransom for <lb />
Governor election. The <lb />
News hears that things are being <lb />
shaped to that end, and it wants <lb />
to say right now that the Demo- <lb />
party was big enough fool <lb />
in the last election, ought to <lb />
learn some from what <lb />
happened then. Let's let the <lb />
timber that has gone to the bot- <lb />
tom lie there, look out for <lb />
new u lotto News- <lb />
That is good logic. Let the <lb />
Governor's chair time be <lb />
filled by Jule Carr or <lb />
well. Go to bothering with the <lb />
old timber there may have to <lb />
too much explaining of why <lb />
this or that was done in years <lb />
gone by. Plenty of men not yet <lb />
reached the meridian of life who <lb />
will make good Governors <lb />
against whom a finger could not <lb />
be raised. <lb />
To Examine the Bonds Again <lb />
In the mandamus proceedings <lb />
before Judge Coble, Monday, an <lb />
order was issued that the <lb />
Commissioners re-examine the <lb />
bonds of W- H. Harrington, for <lb />
Sheriff, and J- A. Thigpen, for <lb />
Treasurer, which the Board re <lb />
the first Monday in <lb />
The Commissioners were <lb />
perfectly willing to do and <lb />
their attorney assented to the or- <lb />
-I WILL THROW MY ENTIRE <lb />
-------ON THE MARKET TO BE------ <lb />
Reduced by January <lb />
to make room for Spring Goods, and in order to sell yon I will offer <lb />
yon Wonderful Bargains in <lb />
Men and Boys Ready-Made- Clothing <lb />
which has been selected with special reference to the trade ii <lb />
v II includes the pick of the market in Fresh <lb />
all and Winter Styles and no lets astonishing than the <lb />
Boos, will be the low prices pat on them. We <lb />
here to compete with <lb />
This is a legitimate offer and if yon will come and see me I will <lb />
astonish yon 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 Cl <lb />
RY IN <lb />
BOOTS,<lb />
AND FURNISHING GOODS. <lb />
I have reduced juices on everything in order to reduce my <lb />
stock by the 1st of January, 1895. <lb />
We are after your patronage and expect to get it by giving <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 />
REMEMBER THAT WE CARRY <lb />
Goods, <lb />
and to fit all. <lb />
Gent's Furnishing Goods, Trunks and Valises, Crockery, <lb />
ware. Wood and Hardware. Guns. Shot and <lb />
Gun Implements. Tinware, Cutlery, Plows and Casting <lb />
lit, Harness, Groceries and Flour. <lb />
Come on good people and let me prove to y on that I have made, <lb />
reduction. Remember I will refuse no reasonable price offered. <lb />
Remember the name and place. <lb />
Frank <lb />
Leader in <lb />
Hotel A rivals. <lb />
King House. H- Shaw, La <lb />
T. C Wooten, Hill; <lb />
J. J. Satterthwaite, F. <lb />
H. Short, W. A. Wash- <lb />
F. R. Stallings, N. Biggs, <lb />
Scotland T. M. C; <lb />
Stephen W. Goldsboro. <lb />
Hotel Chick <lb />
and wife, H. West and wife, C- <lb />
C. Matthews and wife, J. L. Glen- <lb />
Chick Medicine and Concert. <lb />
Co.; S- Galloway, Snow Hill ; T. <lb />
W. J. E <lb />
Moore, ; S-V- Joy- <lb />
N. C-, O. E D. S- <lb />
ford, G. T. Tyson, county- <lb />
Two Fires. Help For Children. <lb />
Id the complaint in the When will we ever learn that it <lb />
tuns proceedings against the I is not what we do for the child, <lb />
Board of County Commissioners, but what we help him to do for j <lb />
one of reasons assigned by himself, which is of value to him <lb />
the plaintiffs for wanting a re-ox-, that it is not what he has, but <lb />
given the bonds was what he is, which brings j <lb />
that some of the badness The of a for- <lb />
property that did not appear on no matter how does <lb />
the tax list. If this is so it not compensate for a weak and <lb />
somebody is going to be marred character, and the price- <lb />
ed a bad and the Com- gift of a strong, true training j <lb />
mission may rind cause to bring of heart and will, is within the j <lb />
action against some for j reach of every mother's thought <lb />
to list property for and study upon this great sub-1 <lb />
Cents Tails. <lb />
Some boys out in Dam <lb />
set out to have some fun, a few <lb />
nights ago, and concluded that <lb />
nothing would add more the <lb />
occasion than fried chicken and <lb />
baked turkey. Following up this <lb />
idea some neighboring poultry <lb />
roosts were visited. The first <lb />
haul brought forth the chicken <lb />
without much trouble but turkeys <lb />
were not so easily captured- One <lb />
was grabbed at but tho grabber <lb />
had nothing to show for his skill <lb />
but a hand-full of tail feathers, <lb />
and when a pass was made at a <lb />
second turkey it met with <lb />
the same success. So the boys <lb />
had to content themselves with <lb />
chicken Next morning the <lb />
fun came on the other side. The <lb />
owners of the bob-tailed turkeys <lb />
and tho fried chicken got together <lb />
and traced up th cause of <lb />
their loss. They soon found <lb />
their game made the boys put <lb />
up the cash at the rate of cents <lb />
per tail. <lb />
TUB NEWS CONDENSED. <lb />
at Decatur, Ala., rob- <lb />
bed of <lb />
Two hundred English fisher- <lb />
men drowned last week gales. <lb />
Fire did damage to <lb />
State Imbecile Asylum at <lb />
bur, Ohio. <lb />
The assistant cashier the <lb />
Cincinnati post office was held up <lb />
and robbed of <lb />
Office of <lb />
Pitt County, j <lb />
The following is a statement of <lb />
the number of meetings of the <lb />
board of Commissioners of Pitt <lb />
and number of days each <lb />
member hath attended and the <lb />
number of miles traveled by each, <lb />
and the amounts allowed to each <lb />
member for services as <lb />
for the fiscal year <lb />
December 6th <lb />
NUMBER <lb />
wen <lb />
Mrs. Georgia Banks dropped Conned Dawson hath attended <lb />
NOTES <lb />
Bethel N. C, 7th 1895- <lb />
Mayor Moore was the recipient; <lb />
of a fine son last Monday. <lb />
Rev. W. A- Forbes returned <lb />
last Friday from a visit to <lb />
and Danville Va, and other <lb />
places, preached in the <lb />
church Sunday morning <lb />
night- <lb />
Rev. E. J. Edwards, new Pastor <lb />
of the Baptist church here, filled <lb />
his first appointment Sunday <lb />
morning and night. He preached <lb />
two excellent sermons. will <lb />
preach here regularly on tho first <lb />
Sunday in each month- <lb />
Town Constable W. C- Nelson <lb />
is court this week. <lb />
In the Methodist church in <lb />
Bethel at M. Sunday Jan. C <lb />
1805, Mr. H. S. Brown was mar- <lb />
to Miss Rev. <lb />
W. A. Forbes officiating <lb />
in World. <lb />
Taken altogether Greenville has <lb />
the best merchants of any town <lb />
in the world. This is a big boast <lb />
but we make it without fear of <lb />
the contrary being proven. They <lb />
are not only solid, reliable <lb />
of child training, it matters <lb />
not how humble her position <lb />
may be. <lb />
A few days ago a party of gen- <lb />
were engaged in <lb />
on the street when a boy <lb />
came up and demanded of one of <lb />
them a nickel which was due <lb />
him. The boy received his nick-j <lb />
el straightway gave it to <lb />
another of the party to whom he <lb />
owed it. And this lone nickel <lb />
passed among the party until it <lb />
had debts amounting to <lb />
cents. Keep the money <lb />
; it will do the rest. States- <lb />
ville Landmark. <lb />
dead while attending service in a <lb />
church at Hampton, Va. <lb />
knocked out <lb />
on the ninth round at a <lb />
prize fight in Cincinnati. <lb />
T. E. Keel <lb />
Leonidas Fleming <lb />
Smith <lb />
S. A. Gainer <lb />
C DAWSON- <lb />
The large tobacco of For IS days as Commission <lb />
E. T. Crump Co., Richmond, at per day <lb />
Notice Dissolution. <lb />
The of W. G. Lang doing <lb />
at C., was dis- <lb />
solved by on the 1st day <lb />
January, W. U. with- <lb />
drawing the firm. The business <lb />
will be continued by W. M. All <lb />
indebted to the are request- <lb />
ed to make payment lo W. O. Lang. <lb />
W. G. LANG. <lb />
W. M. LING. <lb />
1st, <lb />
Notice of <lb />
The of J. J. Stokes Co., doing <lb />
J. R. Walker D.-ad. <lb />
His many friends learn with <lb />
sorrow of the death of Mr. J. R. <lb />
Walker, which occurred <lb />
day at the home of his <lb />
father, Mr. A- S Walker, <lb />
mill's from Greenville. Be had <lb />
two chills but was <lb />
thought to be along very <lb />
well, when he took a relapse Tues <lb />
and died in a short while- <lb />
He was about years old and a <lb />
splendid young man. He clerked <lb />
during the past fall for Mr. Alfred <lb />
Forbes and made a great many <lb />
warm friends here The <lb />
sympathizes with the <lb />
ed family. <lb />
The remains of Mr. J. R. Walk- <lb />
were brought to Greenville <lb />
Thursday afternoon and interred <lb />
in the Methodist cemetery. <lb />
vices were conducted at the grave <lb />
by Rev. G, F-. Smith. The pall <lb />
bearers were six of <lb />
young friends, Messrs. J. Er Star- <lb />
key, L- U- J- L. Star- <lb />
key. Moore, D-S. Smith and <lb />
S- A. There was a <lb />
large t the <lb />
J. STOKES, <lb />
J. <lb />
men, but in their manner are business at Ayden, N. C, was dissolved <lb />
so clever and courteous that it is , by mutual consent on the day of <lb />
a pleasure to transact business or J withdrawing from <lb />
i i -ii n t- Thu business will be <lb />
trade with them. During the last, whom <lb />
few days we have had occasion to indebted to the Him are requested to <lb />
visit most of them in settling up make pa <lb />
advertising accounts for the past <lb />
year, and almost without <lb />
were met with a pleasant <lb />
smile, a word of encouragement, <lb />
and found them ready to go on <lb />
with us in another year's contract. <lb />
They believe in the Reflector, <lb />
and Reflector believes <lb />
in them. We would not give one <lb />
square of Greenville for <lb />
some towns that could be <lb />
named- <lb />
Solicitor Shaw <lb />
After Judge Coble had deliver- <lb />
ed his charge to the Grand Jury, <lb />
at the opening of Court, Hon. W. <lb />
B. Shaw, who was appointed by <lb />
Carr as Solicitor for this <lb />
district, presented his commission <lb />
from the Governor to the Court. <lb />
Mr. C. M. Bernard arose and stat <lb />
ed that he had been elected by <lb />
the people of the State as <lb />
tor of the Third district, that he <lb />
had taken the oath of said office, <lb />
and that he now presented him- <lb />
self and his services to the <lb />
and the State in the capacity of <lb />
Solicitor. His Honor asked Mr. <lb />
Bernard if lit. a commission, <lb />
receiving a negative answer <lb />
remarked that the Court would <lb />
recognize Mr. Shaw as Solicitor. <lb />
Judge Coble then administered <lb />
the oaths of Solicitor <lb />
Mr. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Hie undersigned having duly <lb />
lied before the Superior Clerk of <lb />
as administrator of William <lb />
Warren no; ice is given to <lb />
all persons Indebted of the <lb />
said decedent to make pay- <lb />
to the undersigned, and all per- <lb />
sons lg claims against the said es <lb />
fate must present tame <lb />
29th day of December 1805 or this notice <lb />
will be plead in bar of recovery. <lb />
This h day of Dec. <lb />
W. R. WHICH it Jr. <lb />
William Warren, <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
The next session of the James <lb />
proved School begins at Pitt <lb />
Co., N. C. Monday Jan. 14th, 1895, and <lb />
will continue four months. <lb />
The principal guarantees a good <lb />
practical to all who <lb />
will attend his and apply <lb />
selves dining the next four <lb />
Young people now is your chance , <lb />
just glance over the country and see the <lb />
of and business young <lb />
men women that the James So I mo <lb />
has furnished to the public and t-e <lb />
that no school In <lb />
the stale could advance you as fast as <lb />
the School. <lb />
The p guarantee a position to <lb />
all a course at hip school. <lb />
C. H. JAMES, . <lb />
Co., N, g <lb />
destroyed by fire, loss <lb />
Slugger John L. Sullivan is on <lb />
big drunk and has caused <lb />
his theatrical company to disband. <lb />
The business manager of the <lb />
St. Louis Post Dispatch was <lb />
badly beaten by a mob of news- <lb />
boys. <lb />
A call has been issued for a <lb />
convention Feb. Kith-, to organ- <lb />
the Republican party in South <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Representative Burrows <lb />
for Senator by the <lb />
of the <lb />
The palatial residence of P. P. <lb />
Mast, at Springfield, Ohio, ruined <lb />
by fire, loss on building aid <lb />
furniture <lb />
The Director of the mint at <lb />
Philadelphia has given orders for <lb />
the coinage of of gold <lb />
bullion stored there- <lb />
The condition of <lb />
dent Stevenson's daughter, who <lb />
has been sick at Asheville for <lb />
sometime, is reported very <lb />
cal. <lb />
A- W. wealthy Virgin- <lb />
was fleeced out of in <lb />
Richmond by sharp- <lb />
One of the swindlers arrest- <lb />
ed in Petersburg. <lb />
Mrs. Mary T- Lathrop, <lb />
dent of the Michigan Woman's <lb />
Christian Temperance Union, <lb />
died at her home in Jackson en <lb />
the 3rd. <lb />
Vanderbilt buys still more land <lb />
near Asheville, this time <lb />
acres for He will get all <lb />
of the State of Buncombe if he <lb />
keeps <lb />
he Inn Suffered. <lb />
For days on committee <lb />
at per day <lb />
For miles travel <lb />
Total <lb />
T. E- KEEL. <lb />
m so. <lb />
For days as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For as committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at <lb />
Total <lb />
L. FLEMING. <lb />
For days as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at <lb />
We still lead in this line, having tho largest and best selected <lb />
stock ever carried in our town. We have six thousand <lb />
and seventy five square feet of door space <lb />
to this one line, and hen yon want <lb />
anything in the Furniture line <lb />
-------consisting of------- <lb />
Marble lop Wall Sots, <lb />
Medium Price Marble Top Suits. <lb />
Oak Suits, Marble lop Bureau, <lb />
Wood Top Bureaus <lb />
Tables, j <lb />
Extension Dining Table, Side Boards, Tin Safes, Mattresses <lb />
Bed Children's and Cribs, Suits, Hal <lb />
Racks, Lace Curtain Poles, Floor <lb />
Cloths, yard, yard and a half ; n I two yards wide, and <lb />
Mats, call on us. <lb />
We have some rare bargains in all lines. We <lb />
defy competition. We arc here to stay. <lb />
can and will sell as low as one. <lb />
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 <lb />
Total S. A. GAINER. For days as Commission at per day For days on committee at per day For miles travel at <lb />
-m <lb />
TO MY<lb />
I, William If. King, clerk ex- <lb />
office of the Hoard of <lb />
for county, do <lb />
certify that the foregoing is a <lb />
correct statement as doth appear <lb />
upon record in my office. <lb />
WILLIAM M. KING, <lb />
Clerk Com. for Pitt Co. <lb />
Tuesday night the parlor of <lb />
Trinity College Inn received <lb />
somewhat of a sprinkling, in fact, <lb />
you might say it was flooded. <lb />
The pipes in the Inn had been <lb />
frozen and when they began to <lb />
thaw one on the second and third <lb />
floors bunted, a great <lb />
amount of water down on <lb />
the floors below. The parlor is <lb />
directly the place -where <lb />
the pipes and the carpet <lb />
was considerably damaged, the <lb />
furniture, however, was moved <lb />
before it was damaged. It <lb />
was about an before the <lb />
water be shut off and holes <lb />
were made in the floor to allow <lb />
the to run <lb />
Sun. <lb />
Ship your produce to <lb />
J, C. Meekins, Jr., Co. <lb />
Factors <lb />
AND <lb />
Commission <lb />
VA. <lb />
Personal Attention given to <lb />
Weights and Counts. <lb />
They quote the following n.- <lb />
prices on produce <lb />
Middling cotton, I lo <lb />
Irish Potatoes, Kl Old Chickens, <lb />
Young to <lb />
to Peas, f- <lb />
to <lb />
MANY FRIENDS. <lb />
I am pleased to state 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 />
Dry <lb />
HATS, CAPS <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Etc, Etc. <lb />
You will find all my goods strictly first-class and prices low <lb />
to see me and let me show you what I can do. <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
GREENVILLE N. C.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017727_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
BE OR BUST <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 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 />
H. C. HOOKER, <lb />
MEN AND <lb />
Boys Clothing, <lb />
Cents Etc. <lb />
Every business man in town <lb />
have an advertisement in <lb />
the <lb />
Cotton Seed wanted for Gash <lb />
at the Old Crick Store. <lb />
What hare you got in mind to <lb />
do for Greenville this year that <lb />
will help advance the town T <lb />
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets, <lb />
up stairs, Old Brick Store- <lb />
There is much changing of <lb />
residence going on among the <lb />
people throughout the county. <lb />
t tome Saturday night from Hen- <lb />
Complete line of Dry goo a j <lb />
Miss White is improving. <lb />
Mrs. L. C King is here visiting <lb />
friends. <lb />
Mr. F- if reported bet- <lb />
Mr. J. S. Jenkins has returned <lb />
from Danville- <lb />
Mr- W. T. Mangum has re <lb />
turned from Oxford. <lb />
Mr. J. W- Hickerson has re- <lb />
turned from Wilkes county. <lb />
Mr- Cooper has moved to <lb />
Mr. C- Stephen's near the bridge- <lb />
Mr. J. <lb />
back to <lb />
mouth <lb />
W. Brown has come <lb />
Greenville from Ply- <lb />
Died. <lb />
The infant child, aged two <lb />
j months, of Dr. and Mrs. W- H. <lb />
i Bagwell, died at o'clock last <lb />
night. It was at this <lb />
in Cherry Hill <lb />
The parents have the <lb />
of many friends in their <lb />
bereavement. <lb />
Mr. E- Harrison returned <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
If you want to find out how <lb />
strong is habit, observe how often <lb />
you write instead of 1895. <lb />
Remember I you cash for Chicken <lb />
Eggs and v Produce at the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
We are glad to know that Mr. <lb />
F. C- Harding is to locate <lb />
in Greenville and will practice law <lb />
here. <lb />
Sewing machines from <lb />
to <lb />
Home<lb />
5th and Evans St. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Read the <lb />
BULLETIN <lb />
LANG <lb />
will tell <lb />
the news <lb />
next <lb />
Week- <lb />
Mr. Isaac Hardy moved to <lb />
town and occupies one of the <lb />
Elliott buildings on <lb />
street. <lb />
A large stock of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at Old Brick Sore. <lb />
We are glad to see the <lb />
boys getting back from their <lb />
trips. The market has re- <lb />
opened- <lb />
You'll be hearing mu.-ii com- <lb />
plaint now over the condition of <lb />
the public roads. <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S., just received. <lb />
Wiley Brown, Depositor. <lb />
The Reflector predicts that <lb />
before this year is out there will <lb />
be a tobacco factory in Greenville <lb />
Watch what we say. <lb />
Use Orinoco Tobacco Guano. <lb />
The highest price tobacco sold in <lb />
North Carolina in 1894 <lb />
was made from Orinoco Tobacco <lb />
Guano- Call on G- M. Tucker, <lb />
Greenville, A G Cox, <lb />
Ormond Turnage, <lb />
title, R. L- Davis Bro., Farm- <lb />
J. L- Fountain, Falkland. <lb />
The new year begins with <lb />
bright prospects for the south- <lb />
It is going be a year of had <lb />
work and rich rewards. <lb />
A company is being made up <lb />
here for the manufacture of truck <lb />
crate. barrels, tobacco hogshead, <lb />
to- Much of the stock has been <lb />
subscribed. <lb />
Some of the boys out of a job <lb />
since the new year came in say <lb />
there is not much fun in loafing. <lb />
Greenville needs enough enter- <lb />
prises to give everybody employ- <lb />
The Five says that L. <lb />
Schultz Co., doing business at <lb />
Kinston ard Lave as- <lb />
signed- Liabilities about <lb />
with assets between <lb />
and <lb />
Mr. Warren says he will <lb />
have plenty of roses in in <lb />
about two we It is a delight- <lb />
place his green house over <lb />
at Riverside It remind <lb />
you of summer time in there. <lb />
The goat eats up the posters, <lb />
the waste basket gets the <lb />
the lugs off the <lb />
handbills, but newspapers with <lb />
their advertisements are saved <lb />
and read by the people- <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
Mr. has purchased <lb />
the Index from Mr. Joyner. <lb />
People who write should make <lb />
a note that Diamond Inks cannot <lb />
be surpassed. Sold at Re- <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
The mandamus case of W. B. <lb />
Harrington and J. A. Thigpen <lb />
against the Board of County Com- <lb />
missioners came up before <lb />
Coble this afternoon but had pot <lb />
been completed at the time go <lb />
to press. <lb />
A patty was held at the <lb />
of Mrs. Laura Anderson, near <lb />
town. There was a large crowd <lb />
and they had a pleasant time. <lb />
During the coming season <lb />
will keep very best horses <lb />
and mules for sale- Call to <lb />
what we have before buying. <lb />
We guarantee satisfaction. <lb />
also conduct a first livery <lb />
stables. Tut Edwards. <lb />
The new- ear the <lb />
Richmond Dispatch was a fine <lb />
paper and made a splendid shew <lb />
of progress <lb />
past year- The <lb />
is an excellent all the mi <lb />
through. It has many admirers <lb />
in this section. <lb />
All the obstacles in the <lb />
Tobacco Furnace have been over <lb />
come and I now have a perfect <lb />
tobacco furnace. It is so simple <lb />
that it can be used by <lb />
without any risk or danger. For <lb />
further information apply to S- <lb />
M. Jones. Bethel, N. C- <lb />
Agent J. R. M requests <lb />
to state that hereafter no freight <lb />
or express matter will be <lb />
ed to any party other than tin <lb />
consignee unless a written order <lb />
is filed No express mat- <lb />
will be received after o'clock <lb />
A- M- forwarding the same <lb />
j day- <lb />
There was a big trial before <lb />
Esquire B. S. Sheppard to-day <lb />
over the ownerships of a pig. <lb />
The contestants were <lb />
and Jerry the <lb />
former having sworn out a war <lb />
rant for the latter About <lb />
witnesses were present. The case <lb />
was dismissed at plaintiffs cost <lb />
Maj H. Harding and Mr. B- <lb />
F. Sugg left Monday evening <lb />
for Raleigh to attend the Grand <lb />
Lodge of Masons- <lb />
Miss Annie Harding, of <lb />
is visiting the family of <lb />
her uncle. Maj H. Harding. <lb />
Mr. J. C- Tyson has moved his <lb />
family to town occupies the <lb />
new built by his brother on <lb />
Greene street- <lb />
Miss Sallie Smith, of <lb />
Jack, is boarding at Mrs. Laura <lb />
Anderson's and attending the <lb />
Female Seminary. <lb />
Paul Hosier left Wednesday to <lb />
spend a short while at Suffolk. <lb />
From Suffolk he goes to Elon <lb />
College, this to attend <lb />
school there. <lb />
Mrs. Lovitt and children <lb />
returned Saturday from Do- <lb />
Miss Kitty Foy <lb />
her home tor a visit here- <lb />
Mrs. J. Cherry, Jr. and Mr. <lb />
Forbes and wife have <lb />
moved to the Cherry house on <lb />
Greene street, recently vacated <lb />
Mr. Wooten. <lb />
Miss Aylmer Sugg, who has <lb />
been attending the Normal and <lb />
Industrial College at Greensboro <lb />
came home Monday <lb />
Trouble with her eyes made it <lb />
for her to lay aside <lb />
studies for the present. <lb />
Mr. Moore, one of the <lb />
best farmers of Carolina town <lb />
ship, spent Friday night with the <lb />
editor and we kept the old gentle- <lb />
man up talking till midnight. <lb />
He is a well informed man and <lb />
full of something interesting to <lb />
talk about. <lb />
Miss Fannie who <lb />
has been visiting Miss Nannie <lb />
Wednesday morning for <lb />
her home. Richmond, Va. Her <lb />
visit to Greenville was indeed a <lb />
the many who met her <lb />
while here, for she is a woman of <lb />
high culture and intelligence and <lb />
superior accomplishments, <lb />
many attractive charms <lb />
and graces, and no doubt sever- <lb />
of our young men feel a- spell <lb />
of sadness creeping over them <lb />
since this morning's train carried <lb />
away one so much admired by <lb />
those she leaves behind. <lb />
Sunday Services. <lb />
Yesterday was a beautiful day <lb />
and everybody seemed to enjoy it <lb />
The Methodist church had good <lb />
congregations both day and night <lb />
and Rev. G. F. Smith preached <lb />
two excellent At the <lb />
Presbyterian church Rev. J. N. H <lb />
Summerel delivered a splendid <lb />
discourse at night to a con- <lb />
Will Leave Us. <lb />
Mr. B. R. called in <lb />
day to bid us good bye and have <lb />
his address changed on the Re- <lb />
list. becoming so <lb />
popular as a knight of the grip <lb />
his house has requested him to <lb />
locate at some railroad center, and <lb />
he moves from Falkland to Golds <lb />
He hates to leave old Pitt <lb />
and we regret to see him go.<lb />
A new fence has been built in <lb />
front of the Methodist <lb />
Stop borrowing your neighbor's <lb />
paper, for one <lb />
yourself. <lb />
During the past year <lb />
and apprentices <lb />
the U. S- navy. <lb />
The family of Mi- J. E. <lb />
left this morning for Baltimore to <lb />
make that city their Loin-. <lb />
Broken new year resolutions <lb />
not received a subscription at <lb />
this office- They are out of date <lb />
now. <lb />
Remember your good <lb />
and keep them, that is until <lb />
are thirsty, or must have <lb />
a smoke. <lb />
Superior Court Clerk, E. A. <lb />
has appointed J. A <lb />
Lang as a Justice cf the Peace in <lb />
place of G. F- Evans- <lb />
On Monday Mr. J. T. Williams, <lb />
of Swift Creek township, killed <lb />
seven hogs seven months old that <lb />
weighed 1312 pounds. <lb />
Messrs. A. A. Forbes, J. T. Phil- <lb />
lips and E V. Cox, Senator and <lb />
Representatives for Pitt county, <lb />
left this morning for Raleigh. <lb />
There were about a <lb />
before the County Com- <lb />
Monday for bridge <lb />
keeper. Mr. Sam Ross was elected. <lb />
The News and Observer <lb />
says the condition of Mr. J. H. <lb />
Barnhill, who was recently sent <lb />
from this county to the insane <lb />
asylum, is much improved. <lb />
There is and old saying that a <lb />
good fruit year follows a sleet or <lb />
freeze between Christmas and <lb />
New Year. Then there ought to <lb />
be an abundance of fruit this <lb />
year. <lb />
A e-caped from the <lb />
Stale prison near Tillery Mon- <lb />
day and to Wei <lb />
don where the Chief of <lb />
caught him and returned to <lb />
the prison. <lb />
Mr- Will Blow, who works in <lb />
the office, got one of his <lb />
hands caught in the press, <lb />
day and mashed two <lb />
lingers right badly <lb />
Junes <lb />
The following compose the <lb />
Juries for this week of Pitt <lb />
Grand Jury-W. W. Little, Fore- <lb />
W. Cannon. Flem- <lb />
Jr., Wyatt M. Meets, Geo. <lb />
Lang. W. H. Smith, W- L. Clark, <lb />
A. B. Pollard, W. E. <lb />
Washington Chapman, T. A. <lb />
Nichols, A. B. Congleton, Jo <lb />
Cox, John I. James. C- J. <lb />
Briley, Carlos Harris, J. C <lb />
Tyson, W. S. Little. Officer of <lb />
the jury, W. B- <lb />
O. J. <lb />
J. John Coward, <lb />
L- B- Mum ford, J. P. Pittman, <lb />
John A- A. <lb />
Forbes, Lazarus Richard <lb />
M. Williams, John A. Gardner, <lb />
James L- Moore. <lb />
Falkland Notes. <lb />
Falkland N C, Jan Early <lb />
last night this town was thrown <lb />
into much excitement by some <lb />
one reporting that cotton was <lb />
burning at Cook's gin hods A <lb />
large crowd gathered there but <lb />
find no fire. <lb />
Several changes have been <lb />
place here for the new year. <lb />
Mr B- R. King has moved to <lb />
Goldsboro his house will be <lb />
occupied by Dr. Morrill. Mr. C- <lb />
C- Vines has rented his house to <lb />
Mr- A- O- will board. <lb />
Five Washington Notes <lb />
Washington, N. C, Jan <lb />
river is reported frozen over about <lb />
a mile below <lb />
Sheriff R. T- Hodges appointed <lb />
J. R. Proctor Depot Sheriff to- <lb />
day. <lb />
The firm k Bra- <lb />
was dissolved yesterday. <lb />
Mr- J. A. Burgess has been <lb />
pointed agent for the Styron <lb />
Transportation Co. at this place. <lb />
Miss Willie Rae, of Eden ton, <lb />
his been spending the holidays <lb />
with Miss Eugenia Lodge. <lb />
Judge Coble. <lb />
Hon. A- L. Coble, who at the <lb />
election was chosen <lb />
one of the Superior Court Judges <lb />
for the State, is now holding his <lb />
first court in Pitt county. Judge <lb />
Coble is only years old, and a <lb />
man of high He <lb />
graduated at the University and <lb />
was an instructor there for two <lb />
years while pursuing his law <lb />
studies. He is a native of Ala- <lb />
county, but moved to <lb />
after completing his <lb />
education. His charge to the <lb />
Grand Jury occupied about an <lb />
hour and a half and showed <lb />
good knowledge of the law. His <lb />
manner is very pleasant and <lb />
agreeable. <lb />
we Co. Assign. <lb />
The many friends of the clever <lb />
young men composing of <lb />
Boswell, Co., were in- <lb />
deed sorry to learn they had been <lb />
forced to make an last <lb />
Wednesday. The deed of assign- <lb />
was filed at o'clock and <lb />
names L. I. Moore as assignee. <lb />
The liabilities of the <lb />
and the assets between <lb />
end Two members <lb />
of the firm who owned real estate <lb />
made a surrender of it and put <lb />
it in the deed of trust to help pay <lb />
off their indebtedness. Every <lb />
one sympathizes with the young <lb />
men in their financial trouble, <lb />
and we hope they will soon have <lb />
their matters so adjusted that <lb />
they can resume business. <lb />
Special Meeting if the Beard Cm <lb />
of Pitt County. <lb />
Upon the written of <lb />
M. a member of tin B -ard of <lb />
Con -sinners of county, a meet- <lb />
c he said Board is hereby called <lb />
to be held at the Court House in Green- <lb />
ville on Monday, 21st, <lb />
At o'clock for the of <lb />
considering the bonds of W- H. <lb />
a- Sheriff and J. A. <lb />
as Treasurer in conformity with an <lb />
made by Hon. I. <lb />
Judge presiding at the Term <lb />
of Superior Court, in the <lb />
mus proceedings instituted said <lb />
Court by the Harrington and <lb />
Thigpen. <lb />
the day of 1805. <lb />
COUNCIL <lb />
Clim. Com. of Co.<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 />
f i g. <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 />
We have them and can please you in style as well as prices. <lb />
Hood's is Good <lb />
Makes Pure Blood <lb />
Thoroughly Eradicated. <lb />
I. Hood ft Co., Lowell, <lb />
with pleasure that I give you the details <lb />
sf our little May's sickness and her return ts <lb />
health by the as Hood's <lb />
was taken down with <lb />
Fever and a Bad Couch. <lb />
Following this a sore came on her right side be- <lb />
tween the two lower ribs. In s short tine an <lb />
r broke on the left side. would <lb />
spells of sore month and when we had succeed- <lb />
ed In overcoming she would suffer with at- <lb />
tacks of high and expel bloody looking <lb />
corruption. Her head was affected and <lb />
oozed from her ears. After each attack she be- <lb />
Cures <lb />
worse and all treatment railed to tire he <lb />
relief until began to us Hood's <lb />
After bad taken one halt bottle we could ice <lb />
that she was better. continued until she <lb />
had taken three Monies. Now she looks like <lb />
The of <lb />
fat U ft We feel grateful, and <lb />
too much In favor of <lb />
MRS. A M. Adams, T <lb />
Pills set easily, yet serf <lb />
We are determined to push our goods, we have them to suit you. <lb />
Chairs, Bedsteads. Lounges, Safes, Cradles, Mattresses. Bedroom Suits, Ac. <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 are way down and clean out of sight. If you <lb />
want anything like the following call and see us. <lb />
Ladies Shoes peats worth Men Hats cents Large Oil Paintings <lb />
cents worth Crockery, Table Cutlery, Carpets, Lace <lb />
Curtains, Curtain Poles, cent a paper, Needles <lb />
a paper, Slates cents, everything needed in the house. <lb />
Crayon, Pencils, Pens, Ink, Paper, <lb />
The Furniture and Racket Store. <lb />
Mrs. M. T. Millinery Store. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017727_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
Does This <lb />
The Clerk, having ls- <lb />
letters to M the <lb />
Um Nth ma of Nov. <lb />
the of E- Tuft, deceased, <lb />
notice u hereby gives to ail in- <lb />
, tickled to the MM lo untie In <lb />
f- V Alt to the undersigned, and to <lb />
j r creditor of said estate to present <lb />
I If LI heir c Him <lb />
the twelve months <lb />
lifter the date of this or this <lb />
notice will be plaid In liar of their re- <lb />
A II. KICK-. <lb />
Extra on the sets of Q. E. T <lb />
the 27th d.-y of Nov. 1894.<lb />
The management of the <lb />
Equitable Life Assurance J <lb />
Society in the Department of <lb />
the Carolina., 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 you, it will pay you. Fur- <lb />
information on request. <lb />
W. J. Manager, j <lb />
Rock Hill, S. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
FERTILIZER <lb />
-FOR- <lb />
Cotton, Corn and <lb />
General Crops. <lb />
Used by loading far- <lb />
in North Carolina and the South <lb />
for the put twenty year. Read the <lb />
following and lend <lb />
pamphlet giving directions for mixing, <lb />
testimonials. Aw. <lb />
N. C, Sept. <lb />
Messrs. Co. <lb />
chemicals I bought <lb />
of you for nuking <lb />
to give satisfaction. only <lb />
use under You know I <lb />
think It goo or I <lb />
USed It BO long. This IT <lb />
years I h l en using It, and <lb />
OM has trade me to pay for CM h <lb />
not on crop time. <lb />
truly, S. <lb />
s. Out, 1803. <lb />
Messrs. Boykin, v Co, <lb />
It gives in pleasure to say have <lb />
been using your for <lb />
more than years <lb />
and expect to to do so. <lb />
we are entirely satisfied that it <lb />
fays to use it. <lb />
Respectfully, M KAY. <lb />
R. M. <lb />
Co. <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
All Crop; M <lb />
GREEN <lb />
ACADEMY, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
The next HI v, ill <lb />
begin on Tuesday day o <lb />
and weeks. <lb />
Tl MOUTH. <lb />
Primary English <lb />
Intermediate h <lb />
Higher English<lb />
The lust met ion will continue <lb />
Discipline oat Arm. If <lb />
additional teacher will be ad. <lb />
guaranteed <lb />
early and attend regularly. <lb />
further Information apply <lb />
w. II. <lb />
Aug. C. 1801. <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
MARK <lb />
For the Cure all Skis <lb />
This Preparation has been In <lb />
years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been <lb />
the leading physicians all <lb />
c country, and cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the moat experienced physicians, have <lb />
for year failed. This Ointment is of <lb />
long standing the reputation <lb />
which it has obtained la owing <lb />
its own as but little aBort <lb />
ever been made to bring It before tin <lb />
public. One hot tie Ointment <lb />
be sent to any address on of One <lb />
Dollar. AH Cash Olden promptly at- <lb />
tended lo. Address all orders and <lb />
Communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
X, U <lb />
OLD DOMINION LIME <lb />
SERVICE <lb />
leave Washington for Green <lb />
and Tarboro touching at all land <lb />
ii KB on Monday. Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave at A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
A. M. same <lb />
These departures are subject <lb />
of water on River. <lb />
Co inciting at with steam <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. ore <lb />
New York and Boston. <lb />
order good <lb />
via fr -m <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk t <lb />
from Haiti- <lb />
more. -Merchants from <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. Agent. <lb />
Washington N. C <lb />
J. J. CHERRY, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
II duly qualified e Ike Bu <lb />
Court of as <lb />
of estate of <lb />
Militants, d . hereby <lb />
given to all person Indebted to es- <lb />
to make Immediate payment to the <lb />
an I nil having <lb />
claims against <lb />
the sum t on or before the <lb />
3rd of December or ibis notice will <lb />
he plead in of <lb />
T. I,. <lb />
Lydia <lb />
day m December <lb />
In Fins Condition. <lb />
Mr Ed Chambers Smith has <lb />
been the Atlantic and <lb />
forth Carolina on a <lb />
tour of the Stats. <lb />
did you a <lb />
reporter tasked. <lb />
has been <lb />
better <lb />
there been an increase in <lb />
the rolling stock <lb />
A of Dew box- <lb />
cars have built old <lb />
roaches have <lb />
thoroughly <lb />
of an officer is <lb />
President W. H. <lb />
is the president the <lb />
over had, a thorough man of <lb />
affairs acute <lb />
I The business of tits road i <lb />
proving its are in fine <lb />
The roadbed in being <lb />
continually better and sever <lb />
new depots have been built <lb />
since the lust report to tho <lb />
News Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
LATE SPREES. <lb />
A Man Who Makes Burden- <lb />
some tor a <lb />
B. y All <lb />
In <lb />
to Flit <lb />
I. <lb />
of Nelson I <lb />
to <lb />
K. N. It. j sell laid <lb />
Cory wife Martini. I <lb />
W. Cannon Mid I <lb />
M A. Cannon. j <lb />
Haying obtained an order of in the <lb />
above entitled notice Is hereby <lb />
given that I shall on Monday, the 7th <lb />
of January, ISM sail at public see <lb />
lion the Court House door In <lb />
the <lb />
of Situated in Click town- <lb />
ship adjoining the lands of N. It. Cory. <lb />
IV. Cannon and COS- <lb />
a res mere or less Terms <lb />
sale cash. M. c <lb />
of Eugenia Nelson. <lb />
98th <lb />
Real Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental Agent <lb />
and lets for Rent or for Sale <lb />
Rents, Taxes, <lb />
and open and any other <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
have prompt attention, <lb />
faction guarantee I. I solicit your <lb />
patronage. <lb />
ft II It <lb />
AND <lb />
AND FLORENCE ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
TRAINS am NO SOUTH. <lb />
July R,<lb />
A. M. <lb />
-127 <lb />
Ar <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Rocky Mi <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Selma <lb />
Florence <lb />
in <lb />
IS <lb />
i v on <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington <lb />
i- -r <lb />
y. <lb />
p. <lb />
l w <lb />
I d <lb />
A. M. <lb />
no <lb />
A. <lb />
Dated <lb />
July s, <lb />
1894. <lb />
Floret <lb />
Selma <lb />
Ar <lb />
y. <lb />
A. M.<lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilson <lb />
A. M <lb />
DO <lb />
III I i <lb />
OS <lb />
if, <lb />
y. <lb />
Wilson <lb />
Ar Ml <lb />
Mt <lb />
Ar i l .;. <lb />
P.<lb />
P. M M. <lb />
II HI <lb />
ii<lb />
Train on Road <lb />
leaves in., <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p <lb />
8.87 p. m., <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb />
a. in. Greenville a. in. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m . Weldon 11.80 a. <lb />
m., daily except <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
S, in., arrives <lb />
a. in. Tarboro 0.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., 6.10 <lb />
p. in,, arrives Washington p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trainees Neck <lb />
Train leaves N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh It. R. dally except Sun- <lb />
day, at on p, m. a p. M; <lb />
arrive 0.20 P. M., 5.20 p. in. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
Sunday, 6.80 a. m., Sunday 8.30 a. in., <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. in., and 11.45 <lb />
a. in. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leases <lb />
daily except Sunday, a. <lb />
in. a in. <lb />
r.-i ii- leaves a. m.; <lb />
arrive B -10 a. in. <lb />
Trains on leaves <lb />
Rocky Mount in., arrive <lb />
Nashville p. Hope <lb />
p. m. Returning; leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. in. Nashville 8.86 a. m arrives <lb />
at Rocky Mount a. m., except <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. Latta 8.60 p. m. arrive Dim- <lb />
bar 8.00 p. m. leave Dun- <lb />
bar a. m. arrive felts 8.00 a. m <lb />
Daily except <lb />
Train on Clinton leaves War <lb />
has for Clinton dally, except Sunday <lb />
st II a. in. Returning leave Clinton <lb />
at LOIS. Warsaw with <lb />
man line trains. <lb />
No. makes clone connection <lb />
at for all points North daily, all <lb />
-ail via Richmond, and dally except <lb />
Sun Jay via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also Rocky with Norfolk <lb />
railroad for Norfolk dally <lb />
II points North via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
F. DIVINE. <lb />
Salvo. <lb />
ill. Salve In world for <lb />
Salt <lb />
Fever Chapped <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and all <lb />
and positively cures Piles, or no <lb />
pay required, it is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect or money kid <lb />
Pries -5 cents per For by <lb />
John I. W n. <lb />
Sale of <lb />
On Wednesday Hie h day of <lb />
as the of <lb />
Fleming decease I, the under- <lb />
signed will expose to sale for <lb />
cash, at Joy iii r farm <lb />
township, Pitt county, <lb />
Estate of tie said upon said <lb />
Harm, of hogs, mules, <lb />
horses, corn, tobacco, seed <lb />
and farming fol- <lb />
lowing day. Thursday, the 17th <lb />
day of the Old Ad mi <lb />
Fleming Homestead In Greenville town- <lb />
ship. Pill county, the personal proper- <lb />
of the said Fernando <lb />
upon the said of <lb />
hogs, mules, fodder, cotton, <lb />
cotton seed and farm lug implements, <lb />
FLEMING <lb />
Fernando Fleming, <lb />
Dec. 20th 1804. <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
Brown's <lb />
Iron <lb />
Bitters <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at once <lb />
the most <lb />
strengthening <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
ten. A few bot- <lb />
from the <lb />
very first dose-it <lb />
and It's <lb />
pleasant to take. <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only ha crossed red <lb />
All others <lb />
will tend set Tan Beautiful World's <lb />
. U <lb />
lines on A <lb />
On receipt of t <lb />
ac. stamps we <lb />
Fair View and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. <lb />
The night clerk in one of Long <lb />
Branch's largest hotels was dosing <lb />
lightly at his desk at o'clock on a <lb />
recent morning, when a man who <lb />
had evidently been imbibing freely <lb />
staggered through tho hail. Ho was <lb />
stout; had gray hair, <lb />
and carried himself with tho air of s <lb />
rounder. He stopped at sight of the <lb />
clerk, braced himself on his cane, <lb />
and glared fiercely at the sleeper. <lb />
For fully a minute he on <lb />
his frail support, and then he top- <lb />
over. <lb />
The crash was awful. It shook <lb />
the floor and made tho movable <lb />
on the desk dance. It startled <lb />
the clerk so that he jumped <lb />
up in the air, landing squarely on <lb />
his feet before his eyes were open. <lb />
The watchman rushed In from <lb />
the piazza in alarm, and several <lb />
guests who had just returned from <lb />
the club houses stopped In tho door- <lb />
way aghast. <lb />
The prostrate man looked a fear- <lb />
wreck. Ho seemed completely <lb />
as the watch- <lb />
man put It. It seemed Impossible <lb />
that that inert mass of flesh could <lb />
ever move of its own volition again. <lb />
Had the man fallen from the roof tho <lb />
result would not have appeared <lb />
worse. He remained motionless as <lb />
the men gathered around him. <lb />
exclaimed one of tho <lb />
guests, poor fellow Is <lb />
said the clerk, with on <lb />
of great disgust, wish ho was. <lb />
Confound him, ho Is bother than <lb />
all the of tho <lb />
the matter with <lb />
asked the solicitous guest. <lb />
drunk, as <lb />
Tho clerk stooped and turned the <lb />
man on his back. He was sleeping <lb />
as innocently as a child. Without <lb />
further ceremony tho clerk caught <lb />
him by the shoulders, the watchman <lb />
took his feet, and they carried him <lb />
into the elevator. <lb />
mind about putting him to <lb />
said the clerk to the watch- <lb />
man j lug him Into his room and <lb />
leave him on the <lb />
Then the elevator shot up. <lb />
said tho clerk, <lb />
the queerest case I ever struck. He <lb />
has lots of money, and lives hero <lb />
with his daughter, a very sweet and <lb />
refined young To see him <lb />
about in the day time or In the even- <lb />
you would think ho was the <lb />
old gentleman you ever saw, <lb />
hut after the daughter has retired <lb />
he slips over to one of the club <lb />
houses and gambles and drinks until <lb />
ho Is full to tho nozzle. Then he is <lb />
likely to do anything. <lb />
night last week ho came in <lb />
and said he felt hot. <lb />
said I, out and cool <lb />
said he, and out he staggered. He <lb />
went out on the lawn In front of the <lb />
hotel, took off his coat and vest and <lb />
lay down to sleep on the grass. <lb />
The spray in from tho ocean <lb />
strong that night, and must <lb />
soaked his clothing, but he slept <lb />
disturbed until daylight. You may <lb />
think he would have <lb />
rheumatism, but ho was walking <lb />
around here as looking as ever <lb />
at ten o'clock. <lb />
is up to something new every <lb />
night, and keeps me guessing what <lb />
he'll do next. I'd have him fined If <lb />
ho wasn't so decent in the day- <lb />
time and didn't manage to confine <lb />
his sprees to hours when nobody's <lb />
around who is likely to offended. <lb />
I don't believe his daughter, even, <lb />
imagines that he Is up to any of these <lb />
Y. Sun. <lb />
is no Tariff <lb />
ON <lb />
Stoves <lb />
AND <lb />
Stove Pipe <lb />
that we sell. We keep <lb />
a full line. Also a <lb />
large stock of <lb />
Tinware, Paints Oils <lb />
which we are <lb />
cheap. <lb />
A Pumps, <lb />
BICYCLES, <lb />
Roofing, Guttering, <lb />
and Repairing. <lb />
N. C <lb />
-.-4 <lb />
Wholesale and Retail <lb />
B. Can Manager. <lb />
n u t,. Call on me you want <lb />
T. , Truffle <lb />
N. C <lb />
v- lo the a choice line of <lb />
Family Groceries, <lb />
CROCKERY, TOBACCO, <lb />
SNUFF. AC, AC, <lb />
To s trade I am prepared to <lb />
give prices on <lb />
MEATS, SUGAR. COFFEE <lb />
Vinegar, Star <lb />
lye. Raking Powder, <lb />
-U-, Wrapping Paper Twine, Ac. <lb />
Car load Flour, received <lb />
Car and at <lb />
lot of SHOES lo fit everybody. <lb />
The Wheel In the Army. <lb />
The use of the bicycle in military <lb />
operations is gradually extending all <lb />
over the world. In our own <lb />
try, see tho militia, in some in- <lb />
stances, using it, and abroad the <lb />
governments are endeavoring <lb />
to avail themselves of the <lb />
of the wheel in many ways. <lb />
In Holland young men skilled In the <lb />
of the bicycle are Invited to <lb />
join tho army, and given Increased <lb />
pay and tho rank of a corporal. In <lb />
these cases the attendance to <lb />
the army Is reduced to tho mini- <lb />
mum, so that tho enlisted men can <lb />
pursue other occupations. In <lb />
Spain and Bulgaria, there are <lb />
certain advantageous terms offered <lb />
to recruits of the character men- <lb />
In Denmark recruits are <lb />
always under tuition, and In France <lb />
two men from each regiment are <lb />
told off for such work. Sweden <lb />
takes pains of a most elaborate <lb />
character In the of her <lb />
troops In a bicycle In fact <lb />
nation Is experimenting more or <lb />
less with the <lb />
SAW HIMSELF DIE. <lb />
An Odd <lb />
Bis Last Request. <lb />
and<lb />
ad <lb />
snored Him<lb />
A Machinery Market. <lb />
A good demand for machinery <lb />
could be built up in China, but it <lb />
would be for the cheapest sorts. <lb />
The masses in that country are very <lb />
poor, the fishermen on the sea <lb />
being unable to common twins. <lb />
Survivors of Napoleon's Army. <lb />
One of tho French papers, which <lb />
has been devoting a great deal of at- <lb />
to Napoleon Bonaparte of <lb />
late, has been entertaining its read- <lb />
by having a census made of tho <lb />
survivors of Napoleon's grand army- <lb />
Four of these men only are now left. <lb />
Tho eldest is Jean Jacques <lb />
who was born on the 15th of April, <lb />
at where <lb />
be has Jived in retirement for many <lb />
years. Then come Victor <lb />
Jean and Joseph Rose, <lb />
aged respectively one hundred and <lb />
one years and one month, one <lb />
years and one month and one <lb />
hundred years and a days. <lb />
it is said that all are as hearty <lb />
and vigorous as can be expected, in <lb />
spite of their experiences as long as <lb />
eighty-two years ago in that <lb />
retreat, when tho beggarly <lb />
remnant of the greatest army, the <lb />
world has ever seen, worn out with <lb />
and hunger, angrily called to <lb />
the victor of and <lb />
One of the oddest characters that <lb />
Chicago has known was a blithe <lb />
low named Horn. They called him <lb />
Horn. He boosted that he <lb />
could not keep money; he declared <lb />
that as he was ii horn he must needs <lb />
himself. It was this joke <lb />
that allured him from his trade, that <lb />
of sign painting. After this <lb />
lived on his wits. He was not <lb />
known to he dishonest, but to tho <lb />
man who lives by his wits there <lb />
come but few con- <lb />
science. Once he made n reputation <lb />
In a new direction. One day <lb />
he took oil a new overcoat and <lb />
wrapped it about the shoulders of a <lb />
thinly clad woman whom ho <lb />
met in the street. His companions <lb />
marveled at this, knowing that he <lb />
had but little money, and in reply <lb />
lo their expressions of surprise he <lb />
father was a slave owner <lb />
fore tho war, and an old black <lb />
mammy brought me <lb />
He always wore a flower on his <lb />
coat, and when tho flower was a <lb />
wilted his acquaintances knew <lb />
that he was hungry. He was u man <lb />
of courage. Once, in a playful <lb />
mood, he fought tho <lb />
commander of the de- <lb />
him, and this was no easy <lb />
matter. His great fad was to in- <lb />
everything, and in this re- <lb />
he became strangely curious <lb />
toward the lust. He had a mania <lb />
for gazing into the eyes of a dying <lb />
man, and often hung about the hos- <lb />
He used to say that he In- <lb />
tended to see himself die. Some of <lb />
his friends said that he was losing <lb />
his mind. <lb />
Well, hard luck came, and he <lb />
drifted away. He went south and <lb />
then Into the far west. But ho <lb />
found no place to interest him. In <lb />
lie did all sorts of jobs, <lb />
striving to got back to Chicago. Ho <lb />
said that he had but a short while <lb />
longer to live, that it would em- <lb />
bin to die away from home. <lb />
He back and stood the <lb />
comers looking for his old friends, <lb />
but found them not. No one knew <lb />
him. <lb />
you must have heard of <lb />
he said to a man. am Pink <lb />
heard of you, <lb />
I was hero before the <lb />
may be, but I never heard <lb />
of <lb />
you hear of the sport <lb />
who took off his overcoat one bits- <lb />
day and gave it to a black <lb />
yes, I believe I did hear of <lb />
that. So, you are the Wall, <lb />
you again. So <lb />
No one cared to talk to him. He <lb />
strove to joke, but his merriment <lb />
was ghastly. <lb />
One night last week they took <lb />
him up and carried him to the hos- <lb />
And this Is the story they <lb />
tell. He had been In bed two days <lb />
when a physician told him that he <lb />
had but a few hours to live. <lb />
you he asked. <lb />
am certain. If you have any <lb />
arrangements to make you'd better <lb />
lungs are gone, I sup- <lb />
yon do me a <lb />
What is <lb />
I want to sec myself <lb />
don t understand <lb />
simply to see how I look <lb />
while dying. Prop up put a <lb />
mirror the foot of the <lb />
that would <lb />
you would do me a <lb />
The doctor propped him up and <lb />
a nurse brought a mirror placed <lb />
It so that he could Into it. And <lb />
so they left him for a time. He said <lb />
that he desired to be alone. When <lb />
they back he was dead; his <lb />
gaze was wide and his glassy eyes <lb />
mirrored the mirror. Wanted to <lb />
see himself die He was an odd <lb />
Ocean. <lb />
His Face Fortune. <lb />
before tho war John Rey- <lb />
was a great man in <lb />
said Col. W. R. Morrison. far <lb />
buck as 1818 he was a justice of the <lb />
supremo court and was governor <lb />
from 1830 to 1834. He cut a figure <lb />
In tho Black Hawk war, and later <lb />
came to congress. He was a power- <lb />
man before a jury, his facial <lb />
expression, which certainly did him <lb />
great In winning his cases, <lb />
was something wonderful. It would <lb />
made the fortune of any actor. <lb />
His sneer was a thing to be dreaded. <lb />
on an occasion at which <lb />
chanced to a spectator, though <lb />
only a lad, Reynolds was pitted In a <lb />
lawsuit against Lyman <lb />
It was a contest of giants, Trumbull <lb />
being, as everybody knows, a man <lb />
of the keenest lit tot loot and a lawyer <lb />
of the highest rank. He saw that <lb />
Reynolds was working the jury in <lb />
his usual way, and with great effect. <lb />
In answering Trumbull fairly <lb />
outdid himself. Turning to his <lb />
opponent at a climax of his speech, <lb />
answered all your legal <lb />
points, have answered every <lb />
that you have brought for- <lb />
ward, but the devil himself couldn't <lb />
answer your <lb />
as . <lb />
Knowledge In the Mains Woods. <lb />
Tho old Maine fellow who poet- <lb />
letters lit the fire alarm box has <lb />
a right to laugh at the smart <lb />
girl who comes down here and digs <lb />
gum out of a white birch tree. <lb />
Lewis ton Journal. <lb />
A Commission from Madison. <lb />
Col. J. M. of Home, <lb />
has a curiosity in the shape of a com- <lb />
mission from President to <lb />
a man named to the <lb />
of captain of a company during <lb />
to get off his hone acid shaft H war of 1812. <lb />
Dr. Howler- Mow much is <lb />
Dr. <lb />
Dr. Howler know I'm a drug- <lb />
in <lb />
Dr. price to In three <lb />
Chicago <lb />
MANUAL<lb />
c-v <lb />
we only hail Homo lines <lb />
now might <lb />
Who's <lb />
do bolt, books, <lb />
in lines, haul out do <lb />
take do <lb />
we'd to <lb />
hire to do purl of it. <lb />
AM <lb />
There's No Choice in Bicycles. <lb />
The Victor has no <lb />
rival. It is more than any <lb />
other and the inner tube can be re- <lb />
moved in case of puncture in <lb />
than five minutes, <lb />
The only inner tube removable <lb />
through the rim. <lb />
AM Victor improvements arc abreast <lb />
with the times and meet every re- <lb />
Victors <lb />
arc <lb />
BEST. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
BOSTON. <lb />
YORK. <lb />
CHICAGO. <lb />
BAN FRANCISCO. <lb />
DETROIT <lb />
W L DOUGLAS <lb />
Our Million <lb />
W. L. Douglas and Shoes. <lb />
, All <lb />
value tor <lb />
in-y i In <lb />
Tho uniform on <lb />
From <lb />
H dealer cannot eon. <lb />
83.50 Police Shot. <lb />
12.00 and t. <lb />
81.70 School Shoot <lb />
If roar supply <lb />
j write for <lb />
W. L. Douglas, <lb />
Boswell, Co., Greenville, N. C. <lb />
R. L. N. C. <lb />
Widow Is It <lb />
U that by this <lb />
token. I've got orders to go down <lb />
arrest two of the <lb />
house <lb />
WHY FAILED,<lb />
L. SUGG, <lb />
Fire Insurance Apt <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
AT THE <lb />
All placed strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current <lb />
GENT FOR FIRE PROOF PR <lb />
r. <lb />
sT- A. <lb />
JR. O O R. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Rock Lime. <lb />
NAILS, ALL SIZES <lb />
cans <lb />
First Agent felled utterly In <lb />
sell blot- <lb />
In tho whole <lb />
Second the matter <lb />
Don't they use blotters there <lb />
First They wait for <lb />
the to Life. <lb />
on IN <lb />
c- J <lb />
what's the mat- <lb />
Toothache <lb />
Tried to a Chi- <lb />
drummer's <lb />
ANNOYING MISCALCULATION. <lb />
I've toM Amy the seal of <lb />
the strictest Charles has <lb />
proposed to me. the mean thing has <lb />
really told no one about <lb />
BO <lb />
All <lb />
Cars Flour, <lb />
I Most, <lb />
hay. <lb />
i Tubs <lb />
Preparation. <lb />
Soup. <lb />
sun- Lye, <lb />
Slick Tandy, <lb />
Cases <lb />
Dust, <lb />
Bilking Powder. <lb />
Sack Coffee, <lb />
Hills Molasses. V M. P. Cigarettes <lb />
Tons Shot i Va, <lb />
Kegs Powder. Km Cut Oysters, <lb />
I Km lib <lb />
so <lb />
so<lb />
Sn mi. <lb />
Snuff, <lb />
It It. Mil Snug. <lb />
Three Snuff, <lb />
ii. <lb />
OLD RELIABLE. <lb />
STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A TE I INK--------- <lb />
oil <lb />
ha taught Is the cheapest <lb />
Hemp Hope, Building Pumps, Farming m every <lb />
ting necessary for Mechanics and general house a well us <lb />
Clothing, Hats, shoes. Ladies Dress I have on Am head <lb />
for Heavy Groceries, and Clark's O. N. T. <lb />
Cotton, an I <lb />
FORBES, <lb />
N. C. <lb />
H. Cobb, <lb />
Pit t N. C. <lb />
C, Cobb, <lb />
I Co. X. C. <lb />
CO., N- Q <lb />
COBB BROS. CO <lb />
-----AND <lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
VA <lb />
and <lb />
cf the <lb />
The Stale Commander writes us <lb />
from Neb., <lb />
trying other for <lb />
to be a very In our two <lb />
children we tried Dr. New Dis- <lb />
at the end of two days the <lb />
cough entirely left We will not <lb />
be without It as out <lb />
m It cures where <lb />
Other F. W. <lb />
Stevens, not give tills <lb />
great a trial, as It k <lb />
trial arc free at L. <lb />
Wooten's Drug Store. <lb />
The render of this paper will be pleas <lb />
ed to learn that there Is at least one <lb />
dreaded disease tint has been <lb />
able lo ran In all Its stages, suit that Is <lb />
Catarrh, Hall's Cure Is the <lb />
only positive cure known to medical <lb />
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb />
requires a <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Is <lb />
taken Internally, acting directly on the <lb />
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb />
thereby destroying <lb />
of the disease, and giving patient <lb />
by building up the <lb />
assisting nature In doing its <lb />
work. The proprietors have so much <lb />
faith In Its curative powers, they <lb />
offer Umpired for any <lb />
that It fails to i in. Send for list of <lb />
testimonials. <lb />
Address, F. J. <lb />
Sold by TB. O. <lb />
of <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The d having he- <lb />
the Superior Court Of Pill <lb />
county to the i <lb />
I t B It <lb />
hereby given to all persons Indebted to <lb />
tin estate of said decedent to make <lb />
mediate payment to <lb />
and all permit having claims <lb />
Hi said must present the <lb />
before the 1808, or <lb />
notice will in bar Of recovery. <lb />
This day of <lb />
ESTER FLEMING, <lb />
Fernando I- looting. <lb />
WANT TOUR ORDERS <lb />
-o------- <lb />
We will them <lb />
We rill <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Kr ; <lb />
Rough Sap III filches <lb />
Rough Sap Hoards, It Inches, <lb />
-O- <lb />
M days for our Planing Mill and <lb />
we will furnish you Dressed Lumber <lb />
as <lb />
Wood delivered to door for BO <lb />
a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking you for past <lb />
THE <lb />
IRON WORKS, <lb />
JAMES BROWN, Prop. <lb />
plow, Stove and Brass <lb />
castings, ac. <lb />
And tr tn <lb />
limps, ripe. Ft <lb />
Machinery, <lb />
and given re- <lb />
sale at prices, <lb />
LB, N. C. <lb />
N. C <lb />
COTTON <lb />
WANT ONE MILLION BUSH <lb />
i COTTON SEED. <lb />
Will the cash prices, <lb />
in small or large lots. We have <lb />
sale Cotton Seed Meal and <lb />
HERBERT <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
GREENVILLE, <lb />
In when you want g work, <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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