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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 16 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:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 16 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>18950116</dc:date>
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                <p>
1- <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all wort. <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 <lb />
Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICH Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
SKATING IN CHINA. <lb />
its Utility in Carrying on the <lb />
Trade of the Country. <lb />
Skating, says the Pittsburgh Dis <lb />
patch, is a with the China <lb />
man, rather than a sport, for he <lb />
contrives to turn frozen canals into <lb />
convenient highways for his mer- <lb />
as they do in Holland and <lb />
Denmark. Passengers are <lb />
in sledge chairs, propelled by an <lb />
active Celestial on and there <lb />
is no more enjoyable way of making <lb />
a tour round the seventeen miles of <lb />
wall which encircles the ancient city <lb />
of Peking than in a sledge of this <lb />
description. The canals afford <lb />
ties for locomotion which are not to <lb />
be in the streets, crowd- <lb />
ed as they are with overworked<lb />
It is not likely that the Celestials <lb />
will ever astonish the world with a <lb />
rival to our Smarts or Sees, for they <lb />
do not aim at great speed of <lb />
but they are, nevertheless, <lb />
fairly qualified adepts in their way, <lb />
and there have been some efforts <lb />
made to introduce ice yachts out <lb />
there, which would, indeed, be a <lb />
grand thing not only for sport, but <lb />
for the transport of goods at a. time <lb />
when all traffic is practically at a <lb />
standstill, owing to the impassable <lb />
condition of the wretched causeways <lb />
which do duty in China for high- <lb />
roads. There are over seventy miles <lb />
of the annually covered with <lb />
ice several feet thick, bank to bank, <lb />
extending from the port <lb />
of Peking, to the mouth of the river <lb />
at in the gulf of What <lb />
a noble racecourse this would form <lb />
for our fen skaters <lb />
It is not commonly known that <lb />
the capital of China is icebound for <lb />
five months out of the twelve, or that <lb />
the Chinese could ever <lb />
be graceful skaters, yet both these <lb />
facts are well established. The Chi- <lb />
use a very inferior style of <lb />
skate, of their own <lb />
mere chunk of wood arranged to tie <lb />
on the shoe, and shod with a rather <lb />
broad strip of iron. There is no at- <lb />
tempt at elegance of design or at <lb />
anything approaching a spring fas- <lb />
A pair of clamp <lb />
when shown by the writer to some <lb />
native students in the Chinese <lb />
produced unbounded astonish- <lb />
and admiration by their neat- <lb />
and strength. On the other <lb />
hand, the very cheapness and <lb />
of the common native-made <lb />
article tends to make skating gen- <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 1895. <lb />
NO. I <lb />
OUR BOYS. <lb />
HORACE GREEN AND CO. <lb />
Organ Paradise. <lb />
A whole village of well-to-do Ital- <lb />
speaking English with an ac- <lb />
cent, is one of the most astonishing <lb />
things that Italy offers to the tour- <lb />
They are retired organ grind- <lb />
who have acquired comfortable <lb />
fortunes in this country and <lb />
gone back to their beloved native <lb />
land to live in affluence with their <lb />
families in this strange little colony <lb />
which they have founded among the <lb />
sweet Italian mountains. <lb />
The stranger in walking through <lb />
the quiet streets is often astonished <lb />
at the sound of a hand organ sending <lb />
forth the familiar strains of a once- <lb />
popular air from within one of the <lb />
houses, giving evidence of the <lb />
in which the organs are held by <lb />
their swarthy, dark-eyed owners, <lb />
and which most of them cherish <lb />
fondly in their ideal life of idleness. <lb />
Boston Herald. <lb />
A DUMB ROOSTER. <lb />
The takes little <lb />
interest in the school duties of <lb />
his u. boy <lb />
to Row all his duty is <lb />
done. He the but <lb />
teachers must the <lb />
Gnu r st <lb />
at i <lb />
is a rub. <lb />
Ii one cf schools <lb />
low <lb />
this for analysis <lb />
is to light custom with <lb />
How true The boy <lb />
is the for live, or, <lb />
six hours day. lie is <lb />
under control, or ought <lb />
to be, the other hours. <lb />
One fourth f his under re <lb />
at <lb />
his time not at school. Where is <lb />
the boy during those <lb />
hours I Give him eight <lb />
hours for sleep and vine more <lb />
meals ; then we have hour- <lb />
left. Where dot's this <lb />
boy spend these hours Does <lb />
he spend two of them in study at <lb />
Ins Lome- Hardly. But give <lb />
trim these two should <lb />
give him. the one trial, <lb />
benefit of every reasonable doubt,. <lb />
us the says, charging <lb />
the what becomes of <lb />
the seven hours still Spent ii <lb />
lawful, honorable <lb />
this average help it and . <lb />
he generally helps-it. <lb />
He has learned to smoke the <lb />
deadly the law j <lb />
says that shall Dot be sold i <lb />
minors. Ho has learned to use <lb />
language, though the i <lb />
fond mother declares that her <lb />
boy is this respect.; <lb />
He is expert gambler, though <lb />
doting papa asserts that his hoy <lb />
Beret heard of such a thing. He I unless <lb />
to ardent <lb />
though both patents <lb />
i. v is a lie <lb />
Again, this average youngster, <lb />
remember, spends <lb />
of bis time with those who think, <lb />
very little of accuracy <lb />
It had been Horace Green, dealer <lb />
in general merchandise, for so long <lb />
that when the people of South Farm- <lb />
saw that the sign had been <lb />
lengthened to Horace Green A Co. <lb />
did not know whether to be- <lb />
their eyes or not. Green was <lb />
one of those men who detested part- <lb />
of any kind. The only one <lb />
Dun or Bradstreet. South Farm- <lb />
merchants did not aspire to <lb />
that abundant proof of <lb />
his rectitude In financial affairs was <lb />
not wanting and Mrs. Joseph Pea- <lb />
body, of Columbus, became Horace <lb />
Green's partner. <lb />
So that wait the reason the sign <lb />
was changed to Horace Green A Co. <lb />
It took the curious townspeople <lb />
months to learn the identity of <lb />
the in fact they never <lb />
j You Need <lb />
Reflector this year., <lb />
It will give the news <lb />
every week for <lb />
a year. <lb />
Reflector and Atlanta <lb />
Constitution <lb />
Reflector, <lb />
and twice-a-week <lb />
a year. <lb />
DAINTY BOUDOIRS. <lb />
Where New York's De- <lb />
Receive Friends. <lb />
wait Parlor <lb />
Room Ara <lb />
Combined <lb />
ad P <lb />
Not less dainty than jewel cases <lb />
Eu had ever entered into was when ascertained the particulars of the are the boudoirs of the young women <lb />
married Nettie Gray, and even . me out winter as <lb />
that failed to pan out to the <lb />
faction of either of the interested <lb />
parties. <lb />
After five years spent in constant <lb />
bickering and general connubial <lb />
happiness Mrs. Green procured a <lb />
divorce on the plea of <lb />
of tempt r and left South Farm- <lb />
for parts unknown, at least <lb />
to Horace Green. The impression <lb />
prevailed in South Farmington <lb />
that her fancy had alighted upon <lb />
some one whose will promised to <lb />
coincide with hers more happily <lb />
than that. of her ex-other half. <lb />
But that was only supposition. <lb />
new sign until their curiosity on <lb />
that score was swallowed up In the <lb />
surprise which another act of Horace <lb />
Green produced, and the whole series <lb />
of events were made public. <lb />
The new firm had straightened it- <lb />
self out had been calmly <lb />
the sea of prosperity for about four <lb />
months when the postman delivered <lb />
electric shock to Green one morn- <lb />
in the shape of a letter from Mrs. <lb />
Peabody. It was a very <lb />
looking letter and its words <lb />
could be counted on the fingers of one <lb />
hand, but they were of such a nature <lb />
as to throw him into a cold sweat of <lb />
anxiety. They informed him that <lb />
; Mrs. Peabody would be in South <lb />
The momentous change in Horace <lb />
Green's domestic life did not affect I Farmington on Monday, <lb />
his business methods to any Many ideas as to what he should <lb />
extent. He continued to buy do surged through his brain, but the <lb />
and sell his general merchandise one that loomed up most prominent- <lb />
with varying degrees of was that of getting out of town <lb />
according as the times were good or i and leaving the Impression that he <lb />
I bad, and kept his own counsel more I had not received the letter. <lb />
strictly than he had ever done be- j But his moral forces had been too <lb />
But there came a time when well tutored to allow him to stoop <lb />
the debit side of his ledger, which that deception. The only thing <lb />
was kept from other eyes j he could conscientiously do was to <lb />
than his own, overbalanced the <lb />
credit. He did not know just how <lb />
it came about, but there it was, and <lb />
figures won't lie. He tried by every <lb />
means in his power to remedy the <lb />
defect, but in vain. Undoubted <lb />
defeat stared him in the face <lb />
something unforeseen <lb />
curred to tide him over the prevail- <lb />
financial depression. <lb />
After a weary wait of several <lb />
weeks, during which things kept on <lb />
going from to worse, he com- <lb />
to cast for some re- <lb />
lief outside of bis own resources. Of <lb />
of language, and care less. Hew j all the plans considered, that of <lb />
can you expect him to <lb />
to the English language <lb />
Now, then. With nearly very- <lb />
thing to pull back, nod very little <lb />
face his partner, even though she <lb />
did happen to be a woman. <lb />
He sat in his private office all <lb />
Monday morning waiting for Mrs. <lb />
Peabody to come. About noon the <lb />
boy announced her arrival. <lb />
her Green commanded, <lb />
giving his cravat an extra twitch, <lb />
avid Mrs. Peabody rustled through <lb />
the door. But Green had no word <lb />
of greeting. She held out her plump, <lb />
white hand, but he did not take it. <lb />
you are surprised she <lb />
asked, with her mellow laugh. <lb />
j didn't you say <lb />
He found his voice then. <lb />
A GHOST <lb />
The Deserted Factory by <lb />
Rhine Was Haunted. <lb />
the <lb />
a partner was the only one that he said, you know who it <lb />
seemed feasible. The proceedings <lb />
relative to the accomplishment of <lb />
that extraordinary step were in- <lb />
in mystery. There was no <lb />
to urge him forward to a good one of his acquaintances to whom he <lb />
education, how is it possible to his <lb />
the average boy to be made into <lb />
a reputable <lb />
Is it any wonder that our lend <lb />
swarms with youthful criminals <lb />
and annoyers of the public peace <lb />
If the parents of our laud do not <lb />
wake up to the responsibilities <lb />
the Greater has laid upon <lb />
them, they may live to mourn for <lb />
a country discordant, <lb />
in Biblical <lb />
Some of Hi Original Ways About <lb />
Chicken Park. <lb />
of Palermo, says that <lb />
his deaf and dumb rooster just beats <lb />
creation, and that's right, com- <lb />
the Journal-, he <lb />
wasn't created that way. Up to the <lb />
time he was eight months old he <lb />
could reel off a as <lb />
flippantly as any rooster in the <lb />
neighborhood, and then one unlucky <lb />
day be got his head caught In a <lb />
barbed wire fence in such a way as <lb />
to mangle his neck and probably tear <lb />
out his vocal cords. <lb />
Just what made him deaf, though, <lb />
is uncertain, but it is likely that <lb />
when he lost his power to make <lb />
he evidently forgot how to <lb />
hear them. At least, now at the <lb />
age of three years, he gives no <lb />
of hearing. So this Leg- <lb />
horn goes through life and <lb />
He wake up the <lb />
neighborhood at four in the morn- <lb />
with an everlasting cock-a- <lb />
doodle-do. <lb />
Every time a cloud passes over the <lb />
tun he does not scream <lb />
and send the hens scaling for the <lb />
barn in fear of hawks. No, but he <lb />
is just as much lord of the chicken <lb />
park as ever. There is nothing that <lb />
he fails to see. He makes eyes an- <lb />
for ears and voice, too. <lb />
When the first glow of sunrise <lb />
pears he begins the duties of the day <lb />
by raising the rest of the fowls in <lb />
the in his own original way. <lb />
He walks around to each one and <lb />
kicks it off the perch. There's no re- <lb />
such an invitation to get up. <lb />
It's so much more effective than <lb />
crowing. When he gets a challenge <lb />
to fight he does not stop to announce <lb />
what he can do. He goes and does it. <lb />
What is most remarkable, how- <lb />
ever, about this deaf and dumb bird <lb />
is that he can readily distinguish be- <lb />
tween an admonition to <lb />
invitation to come in and have <lb />
something to eat. His owner thinks <lb />
he does it by the motions <lb />
of the and the general attitude <lb />
of the person. At least he know <lb />
what It what Jr <lb />
STRICKEN <lb />
The people of North Carolina <lb />
should contribute to the relief of <lb />
the stricken people of Nebraska. <lb />
Read the following, which gives <lb />
really but a faint idea of <lb />
in that <lb />
recent blizzard which <lb />
swept the Northwest <lb />
inaugurated a of sever, <lb />
winter weather that has largely <lb />
aggravated the already great <lb />
destitution and sufferings of the <lb />
people of the of <lb />
Throughout a large section of <lb />
that State drought last Sum <lb />
mer caused almost a total loss of <lb />
the corn crop. As a consequence, <lb />
where the animals bad not <lb />
starved, the people have been <lb />
forced to sell off their bogs and <lb />
other live stock which they could <lb />
not feed, and sales always <lb />
impose a sacrifice to sellers. <lb />
en to serious straights by the de- <lb />
of their chief food sup- <lb />
ply, sufferings of he <lb />
people have been increased <lb />
by stormy wintry weather to <lb />
a degree that is not <lb />
and the accounts which come of <lb />
the situation in Nebraska are <lb />
truly terrible. <lb />
The wretched sufferers <lb />
wide expanses of open plain. <lb />
which in Summer are subject to <lb />
destructive droughts, while hi <lb />
the Winter Northern <lb />
rash down upon with <lb />
fury. have little, or <lb />
nothing upon which to live, and <lb />
are destitute of means of get- <lb />
ting away. They are making <lb />
peals help, in this con <lb />
it has been proposed to <lb />
send them from South a train <lb />
of meat and <lb />
Slates Banished tram Boston <lb />
The reasons assigned by the <lb />
school committee for the <lb />
of slates, slate pencils <lb />
and sponges in public schools <lb />
and substitution of paper, <lb />
lead pencils and rubber erasers <lb />
in their places, are as follows <lb />
light gray mark <lb />
a slightly darker gray surface is <lb />
or less indistinct and trying <lb />
to the eyesight- <lb />
resistance of the <lb />
bard pencil upon the hard slate <lb />
is tiring to the and the <lb />
resistance to which the muscle <lb />
are thus trained must be over- <lb />
come when beginning to write <lb />
with pencil or pen upon paper. <lb />
Third- The of slates, slate <lb />
sponges is n vary <lb />
uncleanly and leads to <lb />
establishes <lb />
Boston <lb />
stances and he could hit upon no <lb />
satisfactory plan of the <lb />
subject to a stranger. In his ex- <lb />
he went to a lawyer who <lb />
had diffused legal light around him <lb />
when his divorce suit was <lb />
and described the quagmire of <lb />
in he had been hope- <lb />
floundering for some time <lb />
past. <lb />
The lawyer listened patiently to <lb />
the recital, of financial woes. <lb />
that is he said, when <lb />
had concluded and signified <lb />
his readiness for <lb />
for a partner. You had <lb />
bettor take one of the Birmingham <lb />
papers. The Bugle is a good <lb />
medium; one of the best in <lb />
the country, and it'll be sure to land <lb />
you something <lb />
The suggestion seemed to be a <lb />
good one, and Green acted upon it. <lb />
More than two hundred letters <lb />
poured in on X Y Z in answer to the <lb />
call for financial which <lb />
occupied a prominent spot in the ad- <lb />
columns of the <lb />
ham Bugle. He waded through them <lb />
all, then, being unable to make a de- <lb />
for himself, he again sought <lb />
the friendly counsel of the attorney. <lb />
It took the legal nose three days to <lb />
scent out good and bad points of <lb />
the communications. After the law- <lb />
had judiciously selected the let- <lb />
which his judgment told him his <lb />
client ought to deal with he called <lb />
on Horace Green. <lb />
he said, laying a heavy <lb />
white sheet on the table, the one <lb />
that meets with my highest <lb />
It is written by <lb />
Joseph Peabody. Perhaps you have <lb />
not noticed how concise and sensible <lb />
her letter <lb />
Green picked it up re-read it. <lb />
he said, did notice it, <lb />
be sure. But what of <lb />
If you can make any kind of a <lb />
reasonable agreement with her, the <lb />
mere fact that she is a female ought <lb />
not to deter you from looking out <lb />
for your own interests. If she will <lb />
put up the money and give you the <lb />
say -so of the management of the con- <lb />
you have no right to be putting <lb />
in any kind of a <lb />
haven't thought much of <lb />
en, you know, Simmons, <lb />
yes, I hastily, <lb />
there is no sense of letting that old <lb />
rankle to the extent of <lb />
you of the benefits of a good <lb />
business <lb />
guess you are Green re- <lb />
you don't know bow <lb />
shy I have fought of the sex, I'd <lb />
almost as leave see a tornado burst <lb />
was all the time What made yon <lb />
do <lb />
course I knew. Aren't you <lb />
the only Horace Green here And <lb />
well, what do you think I did it <lb />
for Mr. Peabody died a year and a <lb />
half she added, quite naively. <lb />
don't ha <lb />
stammered, <lb />
I do she retorted. <lb />
were both idiots in our younger <lb />
days, but I suppose we've both <lb />
learned a good deal in the last ten <lb />
you willing to try it over <lb />
he asked. <lb />
she answered, and it was <lb />
when they entered upon their life <lb />
partnership for the second time that <lb />
the neighbors learned the history of <lb />
Horace Green A News. <lb />
Man- Others Were by <lb />
with Aid Popular <lb />
Others by Allan <lb />
Be Meats. <lb />
It is a peculiarity about the public <lb />
statues in New city that they <lb />
have had to be provided by popular <lb />
subscription, with little or no aid <lb />
from the city. An exception to the <lb />
rule is the monument in Madison <lb />
square, erected in 1887 in honor of <lb />
Maj. Gen. Worth. The city paid for <lb />
that. Most of the other statues <lb />
have been erected by private enter- <lb />
prise. <lb />
Individuals paid for bronze <lb />
statue of Franklin on Printing House <lb />
square, that of Alexander Hamilton <lb />
in Central park, the statue of Daniel <lb />
Webster in the same place, and the <lb />
Irving statue in Bryant square. <lb />
The Scotch residents of New York <lb />
contributed to the erection of the <lb />
Scott statue in Central park in 1871, <lb />
and of Robert Burns statue in <lb />
The German citizens of New York <lb />
presented the bronze bust of Hum- <lb />
on the one hundredth <lb />
of his birth in 1869, and ten <lb />
years before that they had provided <lb />
for the expense of the Schiller statue <lb />
in Central park. The French <lb />
of New York raised the money <lb />
for the Lafayette statue erected in <lb />
Union square in 1876; Irish citizens <lb />
for the bust of Thomas Moore erect- <lb />
ed in Central park in 1880; the <lb />
residents of New York for the <lb />
equestrian statue of Bolivar in 1884, <lb />
Aid the Italian residents of New <lb />
York for two statues, that of <lb />
erected in Central park in 1878, <lb />
and the Garibaldi statue, erected in <lb />
Washington square a few years <lb />
later. <lb />
The status of Holley, the civil en- <lb />
was unveiled in 1890 by the <lb />
civil engineers, and the telegraphers <lb />
gave the statue of Prof. Morse in <lb />
Central park, which was erected in <lb />
singing societies <lb />
contributed the Beethoven, <lb />
through the door of in <lb />
with a woman in them, if I bad to the furnished that of <lb />
wait on her But go ahead; ;. in Astor place. <lb />
I'll leave this thing entirely in vow Lincoln statue in Union square was <lb />
hands. D you can make s dicker erected by to <lb />
with Mrs. Joseph why. all <lb />
right suppose everything . toe same <lb />
turn ant shipshape lathe , square is In <lb />
latest statue of <lb />
that <lb />
the steps <lb />
street Is AM <lb />
bony was brief ad So of <lb />
seemed to be to concede to f T <lb />
Say proposition -sign. t <lb />
provided be <lb />
York's heiress <lb />
Many of these boudoirs, or <lb />
as they are familiarly <lb />
called, have been newly fitted up for <lb />
this coming out season; and are as <lb />
elaborate as money can obtain, while <lb />
keeling the exquisite daintiness of <lb />
a French boudoir. <lb />
The much discussed and very <lb />
pretentious little girl. Miss Gertrude <lb />
Vanderbilt, has a white boudoir as <lb />
one of a set of three rooms in the <lb />
Fifth avenue palace facing Central <lb />
park. There is a sleeping-room, a <lb />
dressing-room and a parlor or <lb />
just as she chooses to call it. <lb />
This last is a large, almost square <lb />
room, fitted up entirely in white <lb />
without so much as a dash of gold; <lb />
nor are even brass, but <lb />
of white metal. <lb />
Between the two great front win- <lb />
and banked on either side <lb />
with growing plants, is a large oval <lb />
mirror of French plate, so fine that <lb />
once a new chambermaid walked <lb />
into it thinking it another room. <lb />
All around the oval mirror are wild <lb />
flowers in a garland, whose ends are <lb />
held by flying boys. <lb />
Over the mantel, which is white <lb />
enameled wood, there is a similar <lb />
mirror, similarly treated, and a <lb />
with the same floral design <lb />
adorns the white wall. It Is not a <lb />
bare room. There are too many <lb />
fresh flowers, too many girlish me- <lb />
for this. But its simplicity <lb />
is so pronounced that many another <lb />
and less favored girl would plead <lb />
for something little <lb />
The furniture is blue and white and <lb />
the carpet, woven like a rug, is the <lb />
same. <lb />
room where Miss Gertrude's <lb />
Miss Consuelo Vanderbilt, <lb />
receives her girl friends on her <lb />
somewhat brief visits to New York, <lb />
is described by one of the young <lb />
ladies to whom served <lb />
chocolate one aft . <lb />
found Connie lying upon a <lb />
pile of bear rugs, and she begged us <lb />
to excuse her if she kept one wrapped <lb />
around her, as our New York days <lb />
are so The room was hung <lb />
with rugs, and upon the plate glass <lb />
tables lay curios of all countries. <lb />
We enjoyed looking at the photo- <lb />
graphs taken by Mrs. Willy K , and <lb />
we greatly enjoyed seeing a <lb />
of oriental scarfs gathered by <lb />
Consuelo herself on her last yacht- <lb />
tour. <lb />
a great deal of chatter, <lb />
Connie drew out a china table loaded <lb />
with cups and saucers <lb />
across the water; and we <lb />
had chocolate prepared by a French <lb />
maid. The room was a combination <lb />
of Spanish negligence and French <lb />
taste that was very attractive but <lb />
wholly different from any belonging <lb />
to the other <lb />
Another envied of the <lb />
winter is Miss Edith Morton, the <lb />
daughter of New York's governor- <lb />
elect. Miss Morton is tail, fair, viva- <lb />
and highly accomplished. Her <lb />
private rooms in the mansion at <lb />
abound pictures. <lb />
Upon the walls hang bunting em- <lb />
There are her spurs, her <lb />
riding whip, her cap and tiny riding <lb />
boots. There are fencing swords, <lb />
too, for this young lady Is athletic, <lb />
and a small gymnasium stands ready <lb />
for her use. <lb />
Miss Mabel Gerry, the daughter <lb />
of the famous S. P. C. C. president, <lb />
makes this winter, while <lb />
yet an unmarried daughter, Miss <lb />
Angelina, remains in the family. <lb />
Miss Mabel can boast a series of <lb />
homes. In the Gerry's Newport <lb />
mansion she has her daintily <lb />
pointed boudoir; in the Gerry town <lb />
house she has the same; and, more <lb />
than all, on her father's yacht <lb />
has a parlor luxurious y fitted up <lb />
as those of the mikado's pet <lb />
daughter. Miss Gerry <lb />
in dress, like nearly all the season's <lb />
Miss Alice Shepard, a daughter of <lb />
the late Eliot Shepard. will come <lb />
out with her cousins the Vander- <lb />
girls, and Miss Ethel Stokes, a <lb />
less conspicuous but enormously <lb />
wealthy girl, will make her appear- <lb />
about the same Nearly <lb />
all of these girls will come out at <lb />
teas; and all will have a chance to <lb />
entertain privately for a few weeks <lb />
before undergoing the ordeal of s <lb />
grand ball. <lb />
The Oldest Lighthouse. <lb />
The north coast of Egypt has bees <lb />
guarded by a. lighthouse since <lb />
B. C, when Ptolemy <lb />
Philadelphia, toe Greek king of <lb />
Egypt, and one of the successors of <lb />
Alexander toe Great, built the so- <lb />
called Alexandria. This <lb />
was a lofty tower, placed st to en- <lb />
trance of to harbor, with s great <lb />
Are on its summit during to <lb />
As H <lb />
said toe artist to toe <lb />
sculptor, made that bust of <lb />
Were Heard <lb />
Within- <lb />
and the <lb />
was walking along a side <lb />
street in a little town along <lb />
Rhine one said the man who <lb />
has been around the world to a <lb />
writer for the Louisville Courier- <lb />
Journal, I saw a crowd of <lb />
puzzled-looking people standing in <lb />
front of an abandoned building. It <lb />
had once been a factory, but the <lb />
firm had gone by the board and de- <lb />
cay was doing the rest for <lb />
structure. The crowd was divided <lb />
off into little knots of people who <lb />
held their fingers up mysteriously <lb />
and bent their heads as does one <lb />
listening. don't you hear <lb />
said one to his neighbor, and the <lb />
crowd stood perfectly quiet. <lb />
listened with the rest of them and <lb />
heard a slow, steady flow of rasping <lb />
sighs. It came from just behind <lb />
the cracked wall. is <lb />
every one asked himself. The sound <lb />
was so mysterious that it became <lb />
creepy. Some one suggested that <lb />
maybe murder had been attempted <lb />
and the victim, still alive, had been <lb />
secreted in the building and left to <lb />
die alone. Still no one had the <lb />
courage to go into the building by <lb />
himself and investigate. Finally <lb />
one man more daring than the rest <lb />
said he would go In if some of the <lb />
other men would accompany him. <lb />
little party was gotten to- <lb />
and it made a complete search <lb />
of the building. Nothing could be <lb />
found to explain the strange sounds. <lb />
The men, still puzzled, filed out of <lb />
the building and took their places <lb />
with the rest of the crowd. The <lb />
muffled sighs still floated out. <lb />
mystery deepened. While the <lb />
crowd was, standing there looking at <lb />
the blank wall with their mouths <lb />
open, some one yelled In <lb />
look in <lb />
eyes were turned to one of <lb />
the fissures In the wall. There <lb />
thrust out into the daylight was a <lb />
human hand. The women and <lb />
screamed and ran. Some of <lb />
the men took a second startled look <lb />
and started off, too. A few held <lb />
their ground, and as they watched <lb />
they saw the hand disappear back <lb />
Into the opening. Some of the <lb />
weaker ones who stayed said It was <lb />
the hand of a spirit warning us to <lb />
depart. One of the stronger-minded <lb />
ones said he didn't believe spirits <lb />
had hands and was sure If they did <lb />
they never wore black gloves. So <lb />
he started into the building to make <lb />
another investigation. None of the <lb />
others dared follow him. While he <lb />
was in the building, the mysterious <lb />
sighing kept up right along. Sud- <lb />
we heard a scream, and, I <lb />
must confess, I was one of those who <lb />
thought the venturesome fellow had <lb />
run against something that wasn't <lb />
human. When we saw three owls <lb />
fly out of one of the crevices In the <lb />
wall we were not a whit reassured. <lb />
Owls and bats go with ghosts. <lb />
one of the group, which <lb />
had thinned out considerably by <lb />
this time, said if there old owls <lb />
in the building there were pretty <lb />
sure to be owls, and young <lb />
owls in breathing made just such a <lb />
noise at we had been hearing. This <lb />
settled it. We all dashed bravely <lb />
into the building and found the <lb />
brave German who had preceded us <lb />
standing with a grimy little German <lb />
boy by the collar of his blouse. He <lb />
was talking to the boy rapidly and <lb />
trying hard to keep from laughing. <lb />
The boy looked defiant. In a little <lb />
while he explained the mystery. He <lb />
showed a false wall in room in <lb />
which we were standing and a hole <lb />
through which he had crawled. He <lb />
said he had seen the old owls flying <lb />
the wall from outside and <lb />
went into the building to capture <lb />
the young, owls be was sure were <lb />
there. While was in there he <lb />
heard the crowd on the outside <lb />
talking mysteriously and heard them <lb />
mentioning ghosts and spirits. He <lb />
thought he would have a little fun, <lb />
so be thrust his hand through the <lb />
opening. He was hugely enjoying <lb />
the consternation he bad caused <lb />
when he was jerked put of his hiding <lb />
place by the <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report. <lb />
Baking <lb />
Powder <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
UNDER A TREE. <lb />
There, as He Requested, Lies James <lb />
G. Blaine, <lb />
The graves of Walker Blaine and <lb />
his sister, Mrs. Alice Stan wood Cop- <lb />
pinger, in Oak Hill cemetery, are <lb />
marked by plain monuments, says <lb />
the Washington Post, the first a <lb />
round-topped slab of marble, with- <lb />
out a line of ornamentation except <lb />
the inscription. This <lb />
Blaine, born Augusta, Me., May <lb />
1855. Died Washington, January <lb />
The grave of Mrs. Cop- <lb />
is marked by a Celtic cross <lb />
about four feet high, inscribed as<lb />
About <lb />
of James G. and wife of <lb />
Col. J. J. U. S. A. Born <lb />
Augusta, Me., March Died <lb />
Washington, February 1890. <lb />
Erected by her sorrowing <lb />
Over the grave of James G. Blaine <lb />
A Eastern <lb />
can remarked in <lb />
says the and Observer, <lb />
be looked for wild <lb />
within the next sixty <lb />
days. He said that Western <lb />
Republicans are in the saddle, <lb />
at do not fully under- <lb />
stand conditions in the East For <lb />
this reason he for <lb />
will be unsatisfactory <lb />
and injurious to the East. Among <lb />
changes which be expects is <lb />
the substitution of a new system <lb />
of which will <lb />
put many counties under <lb />
ruination This, he feels sure, <lb />
will create such dissatisfaction as <lb />
to cause a reversion of sentiment <lb />
in th- East favorable to <lb />
Like Judge this Re- <lb />
publican does not favor <lb />
rule over white people, but <lb />
neither monument nor in- . . J . <lb />
ii i . like the Judge, he thinks a <lb />
uniform system of govern- <lb />
WIRE NAILS ARE CHEAP. <lb />
A Wastes Time In Stop- <lb />
pins One Up. <lb />
our remarked a <lb />
well-known master carpenter, <lb />
can always tell a green workman by <lb />
watching to see if he stops and <lb />
picks up a nail which he has dropped. <lb />
Wire nails are now so cheap that if <lb />
a carpenter drops one it is cheaper <lb />
to let it lie than to consume the time <lb />
required to pick it This <lb />
naturally occasioned some <lb />
prise, but the Speaker, after a little <lb />
substantiated It as <lb />
he continued, It <lb />
takes a carpenter ten seconds to pl k <lb />
up a nail which be has dropped, and <lb />
that his is worth thirty cents <lb />
an hour, to recovery of the nail <lb />
cost cent. There are <lb />
six-penny nails a pound, <lb />
which is worth at ninety cents <lb />
base and sixty-five cents average per <lb />
keg 1.58 per pound. This would <lb />
make the money, value cf the <lb />
Or in other <lb />
pay to pick up <lb />
ton seconds of <lb />
save a small <lb />
with the G. At <lb />
the head of the grave stands a <lb />
blasted tree, which is, in accordance <lb />
with the dead statesman's wish, his <lb />
only monument. tree was a <lb />
magnificent hickory, one of the <lb />
of its kind that divide the honors of <lb />
the hillside with the magnificent <lb />
the cemetery its name. <lb />
The absence of a monument is not <lb />
a sign of neglect, but was his or.-n <lb />
request. Upon death of his fa- <lb />
son, Walker Blaine, the then <lb />
secretary of state selected a lot in <lb />
Oak Hill comet err, one down the <lb />
hill from the little red sandstone <lb />
chapel and overlooking the waters <lb />
of Rock creek. Here Walker Blaine <lb />
was buried, and when, not long <lb />
afterward, Mr. Blaine's daughter, <lb />
Mrs. died, he bought the <lb />
adjoining lot, where she was in- <lb />
On this lot there stood an <lb />
old hickory tree. It had been struck <lb />
by lightning some years before and <lb />
had died at the top, but it was <lb />
trimmed and revived, and now bids <lb />
fair to reach as green an old age as <lb />
any other tree in the cemetery. Mr. <lb />
Blaine requested he bought <lb />
the second lot that this tree should <lb />
never be destroyed, and that on his <lb />
death he should be buried beneath it. <lb />
must obtain throughout <lb />
State- <lb />
IVORY FOR THE MARKET. <lb />
The Supply Is Time- <lb />
Suggestion. <lb />
Naturalists and commercial ex- <lb />
perts are bewailing the fact that <lb />
there is danger that the supply of <lb />
elephant ivory may soon be ex- <lb />
At least sixty thousand <lb />
elephants are slaughtered yearly to <lb />
obtain tho amount of ivory <lb />
to supply the world's demand. <lb />
The value of ivory depends some- <lb />
what on the locality from which it <lb />
comes. West African ivory is the <lb />
most valuable. It is exceedingly <lb />
tine-grained, and some of the <lb />
choicest specimens have the semi- <lb />
transparent appearance of onyx. <lb />
The best ivory comes from animals <lb />
found in very warm and humid at- <lb />
In northerly situations, <lb />
where the air is cooler and dry, the <lb />
product Is coarse and harsh, lack- <lb />
the velvety elasticity of the <lb />
other. Guinea ivory is slightly <lb />
greenish at first, but whitens upon <lb />
exposure to the air and light. <lb />
Vegetable Ivory, is obtained from <lb />
seed, and Is a valuable sub- <lb />
for the real article. There <lb />
are several manufactured ivories, of <lb />
which celluloid is best known and <lb />
Is, perhaps, the most valuable. In <lb />
view of the enormous consumption <lb />
of ivory, the establishment <lb />
farms is suggested. <lb />
animals are extremely docile in <lb />
captivity, and when reared with <lb />
domestic surroundings are manage- <lb />
able and may at the same time be <lb />
made useful as beasts of burden. <lb />
N. Y. Ledger. <lb />
of Thought. <lb />
No man knows just what Le <lb />
can do till he <lb />
culture which does not <lb />
reach heart is a failure. <lb />
services. Sweet <lb />
will grow from <lb />
which we do no <lb />
We <lb />
Sow good <lb />
ran <lb />
them. <lb />
Every evil to <lb />
succumb is a <lb />
lain strength of the <lb />
lion to resist. <lb />
first in good <lb />
conversation truth, the next <lb />
good sense, the third good humor <lb />
and the fourth wit. <lb />
Those who sneer habitually at <lb />
human nature and to desire it <lb />
are among its worst and least <lb />
pleasant samples. <lb />
It is only the great hearted who <lb />
can true friends. The mean <lb />
and can never <lb />
what true friendship means. <lb />
Montreal Star. <lb />
Out of blind who <lb />
are said by the census reports to <lb />
be in this Slate, the authorities <lb />
were to get the names of <lb />
oily 1-5 and of these only <lb />
be induced to the in- <lb />
at Raleigh- The <lb />
i i f parents and <lb />
is the cause of their not <lb />
availing tin n selves of the great <lb />
W. L. Wilson, of <lb />
West belief <lb />
that an extra session of Congress <lb />
will be unavoidable. <lb />
z. <lb />
V. <lb />
A Jeweler, <lb />
N. <lb />
PRICK, <lb />
and Civil <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office at the House. <lb />
DR. H, A. JOYNER, <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
O. <lb />
Office up stair's overS. E.<lb />
AN AMERICAN <lb />
COUNTESS. <lb />
the <lb />
Lady Randolph Churchill and <lb />
Snake on Her Arm. <lb />
There are certain women In the <lb />
world who capture public attention <lb />
to that degree that everything they <lb />
do Is promptly chronicled. Lady <lb />
Randolph Churchill Is one of them. <lb />
When returning home from India <lb />
with Lord Randolph, she noticed a <lb />
British soldier tattooing a deck- <lb />
baud. It dispelled the ennui <lb />
bad upon her incident of <lb />
ship life, and from watching the op <lb />
from her deck chair she con- <lb />
to try it herself. She had the <lb />
artist brought before her, and asked <lb />
him for some designs. He suggest- <lb />
ed the Talmudic symbol of eternity <lb />
a snake holding its tall In its <lb />
mouth. Lady Randolph was charmed <lb />
bared her arm for the operation. <lb />
Lord Randolph swore and protested. <lb />
But tattooing was it Is <lb />
said, at it to described as <lb />
a beautifully executed snake, dark <lb />
blue in color, with green eyes <lb />
red As a thing It It <lb />
hidden from vulgar by a broad <lb />
gold bracelet, but bar <lb />
friends are q see. i, <lb />
J. <lb />
ATTORNEY <lb />
N. C. <lb />
attention to business. Office <lb />
at old stand. <lb />
J JARVIS. la SLOW <lb />
A BLOW, <lb />
w Practice the <lb />
SKiNNER, <lb />
has t. the <lb />
it, <lb />
AW, <lb />
Prompt attention to collection <lb />
K. Moore. L. <lb />
W . Greenville. <lb />
A MOORE. <lb />
N. G <lb />
Office Opera Ho . <lb />
V Ms<lb />
H f K A f I L I. r. , , <lb />
I U s <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017728_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville, N; C. <lb />
. Stilt w <lb />
Entered it the at Greenville <lb />
C , as mail <lb />
JANUARY 6th TO. <lb />
MILE POST. <lb />
Eastern to-day <lb />
enters upon its fourteenth, vol- <lb />
For thirteen years it <lb />
made its regular weekly visits, <lb />
ten years of this <lb />
throe under the <lb />
sole management and ownership <lb />
of its editor, it is with <lb />
degree of pride that we can <lb />
look back over these years and <lb />
view has been accomplished <lb />
in the. Of course there have <lb />
been trials and difficulties along <lb />
the way, many of these very hard <lb />
ones, but they have always been <lb />
confronted with a determination <lb />
to surmount them- The paper <lb />
speaks for itself whether or not it <lb />
has succeeded. <lb />
The Reflector has never shown <lb />
the disposition to be boastful of <lb />
its achievements, but has prefer- <lb />
red to along quietly, doing <lb />
what was deemed its duty, <lb />
always to do all in its power <lb />
for the and advancement <lb />
of the community in which it <lb />
lives. Yet we cannot feel other- <lb />
wise than that it has done some <lb />
good for Greenville and for Pitt <lb />
county, and feel that it is our <lb />
privilege to make this modest <lb />
claim now. In its career some <lb />
errors may been <lb />
doubt not there have <lb />
its purpose was always to do the <lb />
right maintain the truth- <lb />
While having cause to feel <lb />
at what the <lb />
done, we realize its success is <lb />
in a large measure duo to its <lb />
No newspaper can <lb />
live without patronage. In this <lb />
respect the has been <lb />
fortunate- Its lot is among a gen- <lb />
liberal people, whose con- <lb />
is the cause of <lb />
much gratification. We shall con <lb />
to to merit this at their <lb />
hands. <lb />
We begin the new volume with <lb />
as bright prospects were ever <lb />
before us, and shall as <lb />
in the past, to give the people the <lb />
best paper our ability will permit- <lb />
To this end we ask the continued <lb />
patronage of every one. If you <lb />
think the Reflector worth any- <lb />
thing to your home, to your bus <lb />
to your town, to your <lb />
don't deny it a helping hand <lb />
in being worth <lb />
still more- <lb />
Speaker Walser seems to be <lb />
mere figure heard and moves as <lb />
the Boss pulls the string- He is <lb />
probably the first speaker of a <lb />
North Carolina House of <lb />
who was allowed <lb />
to appoint his own <lb />
but Mr. Walser had to submit to <lb />
having a committee to name <lb />
them for him, and then he has <lb />
the pleasure of reading or <lb />
their names to <lb />
House. He pretends to <lb />
this way of doing things- <lb />
fact is this was the terms upon <lb />
which the Boss consented that <lb />
he should be elected Speaker. <lb />
What a humiliation this would <lb />
be to, any man except the Speaker <lb />
of the present House of <lb />
-1.1.1 <lb />
COMMISSIONER'S <lb />
an- <lb />
the <lb />
like <lb />
The <lb />
The theatrical that <lb />
is on the road playing <lb />
Tom's have recently met <lb />
with much adverse criticism. <lb />
The pictures they display by way <lb />
of advertising, and the play <lb />
grossly misrepresents the South- <lb />
people- The company had <lb />
billed to play Goldsboro <lb />
day night, but upon arrival there <lb />
were waited upon by a committee <lb />
of prominent citizens and inform- <lb />
ed that it was against the <lb />
of the community for them <lb />
to present the play there, and <lb />
trouble would follow if they at- <lb />
tempted it The company left at <lb />
once for <lb />
The question been <lb />
the if we thought that <lb />
at the close of we would be <lb />
able to publish as good a build <lb />
record for Greenville for the <lb />
year as was shown for 1891. <lb />
Of course it is too early yet to <lb />
form any of what will be <lb />
done, but we like so see <lb />
more new buildings this year <lb />
than the splendid record of <lb />
last year chows. A gentleman <lb />
who heard the question, remarked <lb />
that Greenville to a <lb />
cotton factory, a knitting factory <lb />
and a tobacco factory this year. <lb />
So it had. And mark this <lb />
diction <lb />
year of 1895, you will see 10,000- <lb />
people living here by the year <lb />
If Greenville will <lb />
three such factories in this <lb />
The action of the Populists and <lb />
Republicans in taking away from <lb />
Lieut Governor the <lb />
right to appoint the committees <lb />
as speaker cf the Senate was <lb />
his-h handed and revolutionary <lb />
and without At <lb />
twice in the the Democrats <lb />
had a majority in the Senate <lb />
when there was a Republican <lb />
Speaker and it was not even <lb />
intimated that this should be <lb />
done. In fact it has never. <lb />
attempted before in North Caro- <lb />
Talk about this being a con <lb />
Legislature We <lb />
the assertion never be- <lb />
fore has there been more radical <lb />
legislation than will be ease red <lb />
before this mongrel body <lb />
adjourn. <lb />
another place some or at <lb />
least one such measure is referred <lb />
to. What a spectacle the body <lb />
will present before their <lb />
can be <lb />
To a man on the outside mat- <lb />
over the Senatorial question <lb />
look pretty much muddled <lb />
around Raleigh- Telegrams sent <lb />
to the papers after the <lb />
result of the joint caucus Tuesday <lb />
night became known, said the <lb />
of Walser for Speaker of <lb />
the House had given Pritchard a <lb />
black eye tor the while <lb />
telegrams to the <lb />
papers said the result Pop- <lb />
victory and the car- <lb />
out of the <lb />
combination that was agreed <lb />
upon when fusion was born last <lb />
summer. is no toiling <lb />
what developments may take <lb />
place before the 23rd, the day on <lb />
which Senators are to be elected, <lb />
and there may yet be changes <lb />
and combinations that will <lb />
prise everybody. <lb />
Judge Simonton, of the Fourth <lb />
United States Circuit Court, and <lb />
Judge Bradley, of the District <lb />
Court of South Carolina, <lb />
recently halt that 1255 of <lb />
the Cole of North Carolina gives <lb />
to parties personal in- <lb />
juries a lien on a railroad and its <lb />
property to that of a <lb />
preexisting mortgage bondholder <lb />
and the Supreme Court of North <lb />
Carolina has very <lb />
strongly that its interpretation <lb />
of this section agrees that of <lb />
the South Carolina courts. <lb />
Ed- <lb />
In the absence of <lb />
dent Stevenson Senator <lb />
who was speaker pro <lb />
of the Senate, Senator Ransom <lb />
has been elected Speaker pro tern <lb />
of the United States Senate. <lb />
This is honor worthily be- <lb />
stowed. Senator has been <lb />
in public service for a long time, <lb />
and richly deserves any <lb />
that can be conferred upon him. <lb />
Eulogies or Senator Van <lb />
be delivered Thursday of this <lb />
week in the Senate by Senators <lb />
Ransom and Jarvis and a number <lb />
of other Senators. Represents <lb />
live Henderson will call together <lb />
the House delegation for the <lb />
pose of making arrangements <lb />
there in a few days. Perhaps <lb />
every North Carolina member will <lb />
deliver an address. <lb />
TH NEWS CONDENSED. <lb />
Hon- Phillip congress- <lb />
man from the Tenth Illinois Dis- <lb />
is dead- <lb />
Fire in Toronto, Canada, Globe <lb />
building destroyed <lb />
worth of property. <lb />
Corbett, who is in Atlanta, says <lb />
he will fight and <lb />
then retire from the ring. <lb />
, The residence of John Logan, <lb />
near Bedford, Va, destroyed by <lb />
fire, the family barely escaping. <lb />
It has been agreed that a t <lb />
will be taken in Congress Friday <lb />
on the banking bill. <lb />
De Witt C. Hays, treasurer of <lb />
New- York Stock Exchange, is <lb />
dead- <lb />
Mrs. J. Head and her child <lb />
froze to death in Camden county, <lb />
Georgia. <lb />
The New Hampshire <lb />
can legislature W. <lb />
E. Chandler for the U S. Senate- <lb />
A. gang of dangerous counter- <lb />
has been at Bran- <lb />
s wick, Ga-, and the leader arrested <lb />
The Republican caucus of the <lb />
Montana legislature nominated <lb />
J. H- Carter for U- S- Senator. <lb />
C E- Whitlock, a wealthy <lb />
man of Richmond, commit- <lb />
suicide in Philadelphia. <lb />
A large sugar house near New <lb />
Orleans was set on fire and de- <lb />
by Italian laborers, loss <lb />
A collar factory at St Joseph, <lb />
Mo., destroyed by fire, loss <lb />
It gave employment to <lb />
men. <lb />
The California legislature can- <lb />
State returns and de- <lb />
J. II. elected Got <lb />
mat. <lb />
Another tire at Toronto, <lb />
destroyed worth of <lb />
property. Several very large <lb />
buildings were burned. <lb />
There is no hope for the re- <lb />
of Vice-president Steven- <lb />
eon's daughter, who. has been sick <lb />
for some weeks at <lb />
William Smith, an employee, <lb />
was found polity of <lb />
two cent postage stamps from the <lb />
Bureau of Engraving and Print- <lb />
He was from New Jersey <lb />
Exchange Bank, of York <lb />
S. C, was given a verdict <lb />
for against Hub- <lb />
bard Price <lb />
merchants of New <lb />
is two feet is<lb />
N. Jan. <lb />
Board of Commissioners for <lb />
Pitt county met this date, <lb />
C. Dawson, chairman, T- E- <lb />
Keel, Fleming, J. L <lb />
Smith and S. M. Jones. <lb />
Orders for paupers were issued <lb />
as <lb />
Martha Nelson H D <lb />
Smith Jacob <lb />
Nancy Moore Susan <lb />
Briley Smith <lb />
Patsy Henry <lb />
Crawford Jno <lb />
and Hettie Ken- <lb />
Henderson Ed- <lb />
wards Carlos Gorham <lb />
J H Henry <lb />
Sam and Amy Cherry Fan <lb />
Tucker J O Proctor <lb />
Alice Corbitt Easter Vines <lb />
I Alex Harris Winifred <lb />
Taylor Mary Briley <lb />
Staton John Ham <lb />
W H Parker J G Nelson <lb />
Winnie Chapman Polly <lb />
Adams J W Crisp W F <lb />
Williams John Crisp for <lb />
wife James Long <lb />
Amelia Edwin <lb />
Haddock R E Mizell <lb />
The following orders were is- <lb />
sued for general county <lb />
Chas Skinner It. L Joy- <lb />
C John <lb />
Flanagan D J <lb />
W M King E A <lb />
W R Parker W <lb />
II Bagwell Edwards <lb />
Broughton J W Smith <lb />
W T Smith G H <lb />
Leggett Andrew Robinson <lb />
License to retail liquor for six <lb />
months granted to the following <lb />
Greene Co., <lb />
W L Cobb, L Looker Co., Os <lb />
car Hooker, W E Belcher, J A <lb />
Brady, J Q Smith Co., H C <lb />
Edwards. <lb />
S Powell, Robert <lb />
Staton. <lb />
Bland, E Lang, <lb />
Bryan Gardner. <lb />
O Proctor <lb />
Bro., T M Moore Go. <lb />
B Garris, E C <lb />
wards, H J Williams. <lb />
B Burnett. <lb />
T Pierce. <lb />
R Davenport. <lb />
E Fleming. <lb />
S Warren. <lb />
S Hicks. <lb />
S Harris. <lb />
Cobb's D Smith. <lb />
S Keel. <lb />
Dr. W. H- Bagwell, Supt. <lb />
Health, presented report for De- <lb />
which was ordered filed. <lb />
Joshua W Smith appointed Supt- <lb />
Home for Aged and Infirm at <lb />
per month. <lb />
Samuel R Ross, Jr., appointed <lb />
keeper of bridge at Greenville at <lb />
per month. <lb />
H J Hoyle elected Standard <lb />
Keeper. <lb />
The following were exempted <lb />
from poll tax for <lb />
W J Manning, Austin Flood, <lb />
Whichard, D C R L <lb />
Moore, Henry Fulford, John <lb />
G W Abrams, J F <lb />
Hardy. <lb />
The following were relieved of <lb />
double tax for 1894 <lb />
T J Jarvis. Alonzo Wilson, <lb />
Oliver Smith, Mrs. <lb />
M S Moore, T C Moors. <lb />
W M Moore relieved from pay- <lb />
on solvent credits <lb />
charged against him. <lb />
W W Leggett was released <lb />
from payment on personal <lb />
property erroneously charged <lb />
against <lb />
The following were allowed to <lb />
list taxes for <lb />
James E Roberson, Iredell <lb />
Moore, Zeno Lyons, John <lb />
T W Cox, W A <lb />
Mrs M S Moore, Oliver Smith, W <lb />
G Gray, G W Smith, Margret <lb />
Smith, J E Thorough, Ed <lb />
wards, M B Barber, Guilford <lb />
Stocks, G W Venters, James Mo- <lb />
Lawhorn, W J Jenkins, J D <lb />
Sylvester Williams, Mrs. <lb />
Margret Belcher, Mrs. Susan <lb />
Blount J N Bynum and wife. B <lb />
B Bynum and wife, E <lb />
Thigpen- <lb />
Jany. 8th, 1895. <lb />
Board re assembled, all <lb />
sent. <lb />
The following orders were <lb />
J A Harrington Dr B T <lb />
Cox R W King J <lb />
Flanagan Buggy Co R W <lb />
King R W King R <lb />
W King B S Sheppard <lb />
O W Harrington T <lb />
Carson S M Jones C <lb />
Dawson L Fleming <lb />
T E Keel Jesse L <lb />
Ordered that Sheriff refund to <lb />
Wiley P cents, <lb />
changed against him <lb />
Greenville Stock Law territory. <lb />
Ordered that all delinquents <lb />
who pay their taxes before May <lb />
1st, 1895, are hereby released <lb />
from tax. <lb />
W H Boss, Constable of <lb />
township, tendered his <lb />
official bond with W G Mizell <lb />
and J R Davenport as sureties <lb />
which was accepted and official <lb />
oath administered. <lb />
Dr. Charles Laughing- <lb />
house tendered official bond <lb />
as with and <lb />
J J as sureties, <lb />
which was accepted and official <lb />
oath administered- <lb />
The following jurors were <lb />
drawn for March term of<lb />
First W Brewer. R D <lb />
J B Overton, J J <lb />
Harris, G W Gainer, W V Hardy, <lb />
G H Little, Wm Teel, Robt L <lb />
Nichols, O <lb />
Stokes, John F Boyd, Newsome <lb />
John W Warren, G B <lb />
Overton, Robert Grease Jr. Job a <lb />
H Flanagan, TE Robinson, <lb />
Second J ti P <lb />
at M A James. W H <lb />
Galloway, J R Davis, R D Cherry, <lb />
L H Allen, J L Moors. Allen <lb />
John D N Nobles, R <lb />
J B Garris, <lb />
W J <lb />
Ban, J H Smith. O P Moore, <lb />
Th U <lb />
. <lb />
THE LEGISLATURE. <lb />
BOTH HOUSES DULY ORGANIZED <lb />
of Hit <lb />
WEDNESDAY. <lb />
Both houses of met <lb />
at noon; all members present. <lb />
Those of the House sworn <lb />
m by Judge Walter No- <lb />
of several contests were <lb />
en. Only members. <lb />
Attendance of spectators very <lb />
large- <lb />
Lusk, of Buncombe, nominated <lb />
Z. V- Walser, Republican, of <lb />
Davidson, for Speaker and <lb />
of Northampton nominated <lb />
J. F- Ray, Democrat, of Macon. <lb />
Ray 4-1 <lb />
voted for , <lb />
L. P. Satterfield, of Person, <lb />
elected Principal Clerk J- M. <lb />
Brown voted for by Democrats- <lb />
John W- elected Reading <lb />
Clerk; Democrats voting for H- <lb />
A. Latham. <lb />
Lt- Got- called Sen <lb />
ate to order. Chief G <lb />
Burkhead and H. E. King <lb />
King elected. <lb />
Spencer Blackburn an <lb />
Wiley Rush nominated- Black <lb />
burn elected. Door <lb />
N. and W. V. Clifton <lb />
nominated, elected <lb />
Asst- Door Mr. <lb />
Babb elected. Engrossing Clerk <lb />
Wallace and Blair <lb />
Wallace elected. <lb />
Message was Bent to House <lb />
notifying that body the Senate <lb />
was duly and a com- <lb />
appointed to wait on the <lb />
Governor and inform him the <lb />
Senate had organized and ready <lb />
to receive any communication <lb />
from him- <lb />
Governor Carr's message to the <lb />
Legislature was an able <lb />
and makes a grand showing <lb />
for the Democratic government <lb />
and management of North Caro- <lb />
affairs. <lb />
Excellent advice is given the <lb />
Legislature to beware of the <lb />
enactment of partisan legislation <lb />
and of changing the county gov- <lb />
system and the systems <lb />
of the various public institutions <lb />
An increase of the pension tax <lb />
to cents is recommended, as <lb />
are also the equalization of taxes, <lb />
the increase of school taxes to <lb />
twenty-two cents. <lb />
The Atlanta Exposition is <lb />
heartily endorsed and the <lb />
is asked to make an <lb />
for an exhibit. <lb />
Fifty thousand <lb />
gent appropriation for the pen- <lb />
is asked for and the <lb />
chase of farms is <lb />
mended- <lb />
The Governor says that the <lb />
Commission has been <lb />
unable to enforce the oyster law, <lb />
as it has no funds, and North <lb />
have defiantly violated <lb />
the law by dredging for oysters- <lb />
The Governor emphatically de- <lb />
that the present oyster law <lb />
is a failure and suggests a new <lb />
appropriation to carry it into <lb />
effect <lb />
Tie Fusion is began active <lb />
work in the Legislature- <lb />
Senator introduced <lb />
a bill which, under suspension of <lb />
the rules, was promptly passed, <lb />
repealing the act of the last Leg <lb />
which amended the char- <lb />
of the Alliance. <lb />
Grant and Patterson were <lb />
sworn in as the Senators from <lb />
and Smith, Dem <lb />
not appearing or making <lb />
any claim to seats- <lb />
Senate session was very short. <lb />
That of the House was longer. <lb />
of State Coke notified <lb />
the House that he was ready to <lb />
exhibit all bills for print- <lb />
under the new law. <lb />
Bill introduced by French, of <lb />
New Hanover, to repeal present <lb />
election law and replace it by one <lb />
box and one ballot system. <lb />
By Ewart to repeal the county <lb />
government law and establish <lb />
county boards trustees and <lb />
boards of audit and finance. <lb />
By Winburne to make six per <lb />
cent the legal rate of interest <lb />
French was made chairman of <lb />
the committee on rules, Ewart of <lb />
the committee of privileges and <lb />
elections. <lb />
Notices of fine election contests <lb />
were filed, these being in Edge- <lb />
Pamlico and <lb />
Halifax. <lb />
In the Senate to-day the <lb />
pal bills introduced were <lb />
the legal rate of interest, per <lb />
cent to allow Bertie county to <lb />
convicts on farm, to repeal <lb />
the act of last legislature order <lb />
the public printing to be let to <lb />
lowest bidder. <lb />
This last bill was introduced <lb />
by and was railroaded <lb />
through Senate, sot being refer <lb />
red to any committee, <lb />
two Democratic Senators p <lb />
ed against its passage on <lb />
third reading. <lb />
Another quick business <lb />
was the adoption of an amend- <lb />
to Senate rules by a <lb />
placing in the hands of a <lb />
committee the of <lb />
all committees, thus taking away <lb />
from the president of the <lb />
his- to name all the <lb />
committees- <lb />
The had made all <lb />
their plans and resolution naming <lb />
a Populist and Republican as <lb />
members of this end <lb />
the president to name <lb />
the third member, Th <lb />
dent appointed Senator Adams, <lb />
Democrat Adams mads -pro- <lb />
test against the resolution and <lb />
offered an to it, <lb />
the President the power to <lb />
appoint committees. He de- <lb />
the change proposed by <lb />
the to be the most red <lb />
teat on record. <lb />
The member of the <lb />
be did m <lb />
to <lb />
if the <lb />
FRANK<lb />
WILL THROW MY OF <lb />
------ON THE MARKET TO BE------ <lb />
Reduced by January it 1895, <lb />
to make room for Spring Goods, and in order I sell you I will <lb />
you Wonderful Bargains in <lb />
Men and Boys Ready Made- Clothing <lb />
This is a legitimate offer and if you will and see me I will <lb />
astonish you in fit, finish, style and 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 />
IN <lb />
HATS, <lb />
AND FURNISHING GOODS. <lb />
I have reduced prices on everything in order to reduce my <lb />
stock by the 1st of January, 1895. <lb />
Come on good people and let me prove to you that I have made <lb />
a great reduction. Remember I will refuse no reasonable price <lb />
Remember the name <lb />
Frank Wilson, <lb />
TEl in <lb />
to increase the public school tax <lb />
from sixteen to cents, by Dan- <lb />
can to protect Carteret county <lb />
fishermen monopolies, to <lb />
allow the railway <lb />
to be extended to <lb />
or sound, to allow <lb />
Greene county to levy a special <lb />
tax, to extend the corporate <lb />
its of Snow Hill, by Williams of <lb />
Crayon to the time for <lb />
holding of Craven and Bertie <lb />
courts. <lb />
The act of the lest legislature <lb />
amending the charter of the <lb />
Farmers Alliance regard to <lb />
the withdrawal of the <lb />
fund subscription was repealed <lb />
by unanimous vote. <lb />
SATURDAY. <lb />
Office <lb />
Pitt County, j <lb />
The following is a statement of <lb />
the number of meetings of the <lb />
Hoard of of Pitt <lb />
river c number of days each <lb />
member hath and the <lb />
number of traveled by each, <lb />
and the amounts allowed to each <lb />
member for services as <lb />
for the fiscal year ending <lb />
December <lb />
OF <lb />
Dawson hath attended <lb />
T- E. Keel <lb />
Fleming <lb />
Smith <lb />
S. A. Gainer <lb />
C DAWSON. <lb />
The General Assembly today For <lb />
did nothing except of a local at per day <lb />
A bill, which will pass, was u, on committee <lb />
introduced to take the public At per day <lb />
printing away from bidders and it miles travel at <lb />
is said, give it out to Butler's or-<lb />
TO MY <lb />
MANY <lb />
am pleased to state that since recovering <lb />
from my recent sickness I have visited <lb />
the northern markets to purchase <lb />
NEW GOODS <lb />
and am now prepared to show you an <lb />
line of------ <lb />
bore as To-day's <lb />
session of the Senate was <lb />
interest. A <lb />
resolution to recall the bill sent <lb />
to the House repealing the law <lb />
letting the public printing to the <lb />
lowest bidder was defeated. It <lb />
provoked a heated debate. <lb />
The first attack on city char- <lb />
Mr- Grant, of <lb />
Wayne, bill to amend the <lb />
charter of the city of Goldsboro. <lb />
Resolutions were adopted in- <lb />
Senators and <lb />
in to endeavor <lb />
to secure the repeal of the per <lb />
cent, tax on State banks, and <lb />
objectionable features of the <lb />
internal revenue, laws. <lb />
A beaded debate arose over the <lb />
proposition to elect a President <lb />
pro tern. This procedure was <lb />
by to be <lb />
constitutional and without <lb />
dent The constitution provides <lb />
for the election of a President <lb />
tern, in the absence of the <lb />
Governor or when he <lb />
the is Governor. The <lb />
was defeated. . <lb />
Total <lb />
T. E. KEEL. <lb />
Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days as committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at Bets <lb />
For <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 Gets <lb />
at <lb />
The Sheriff of R <lb />
has resigned, moving to town. .,.,.,, <lb />
getting up a large bond For 3-v miles travel at <lb />
trouble than be <lb />
, Total <lb />
JESSE L SMITH- <lb />
For as Commission- <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee at <lb />
per day <lb />
For miles travel at <lb />
HATS, CAPS <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Etc, Etc. <lb />
You will find all my goods strictly first-class and prices <lb />
Come to see me and let me show yon what I can do. <lb />
low <lb />
Total <lb />
A. GAINER. <lb />
For days as Commission <lb />
wan <lb />
to undertake- <lb />
-John Davis, the <lb />
ton who Fifth <lb />
street Methodist church of that <lb />
city so mUch trouble, has escaped <lb />
from the insane st <lb />
D- J. Garter, editor of the <lb />
Herald, <lb />
rested for throwing rooks through <lb />
the windows of a <lb />
In default of bail he was <lb />
to jail. <lb />
acres of land in tbs <lb />
of Jew port, have been <lb />
ed for New Jersey farmers. <lb />
families will more at an <lb />
early day. A colony from <lb />
and Ohio have also <lb />
met kl Bertie county. <lb />
A armed desperadoes <lb />
the house of H. <lb />
broke <lb />
tbs, <lb />
at per day <lb />
For days on committee <lb />
per day <lb />
Total MB <lb />
I, M. King, clerk ex- <lb />
office of the Board of <lb />
for the county, do Jon <lb />
certify that the foregoing is s <lb />
correct statement doth appear <lb />
upon record in my office. <lb />
WILLIAM M. KING, <lb />
, Clerk Com. for Pitt Co. <lb />
WILEY BROWN, <lb />
GREENVILLE N, C. <lb />
ESTABLISHED . <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C. <lb />
Just Received Cars Bock Lime. <lb />
KEGS STEEL NAILS, ALL <lb />
Sardines i Floor, <lb />
Bread . at. <lb />
Soap. <lb />
Star Lye. <lb />
Box Cakes and <lb />
Stick candy. r- <lb />
Ship your produce to <lb />
J C. Jr., Co. <lb />
Cotton Factors <lb />
Norfolk <lb />
Personal Attention gives to <lb />
Weight and <lb />
tr tin. <lb />
price on a <lb />
cotton, St <lb />
G Duet. <lb />
Good Luck <lb />
Sacks Coffee. <lb />
to Tons Shot, <lb />
Powder. <lb />
i Gall A Ax <lb />
i R- R. Mills Snug. <lb />
Powder, a Three <lb />
V. M. P. Cigarette. <lb />
Va. cheroot, <lb />
j case Oysters, <lb />
j-. <lb />
AT COURT HOUSE. <lb />
AU kinds Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-CLASS COMPANIES <lb />
At <lb />
AM mm PROOF PR<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017728_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
Local <lb />
Am i going to be lost <lb />
in the shuffle or soaked <lb />
in the soup Not if I <lb />
know it; I am here to <lb />
compete with all com- <lb />
stock against stock <lb />
and dollar against <lb />
I am after the <lb />
Shining <lb />
Shekels <lb />
and I expect to <lb />
by giving value for <lb />
them. I don't want <lb />
on any other terms. <lb />
Come see me and <lb />
you'll find me <lb />
Death on <lb />
the Dicker. <lb />
I take no man's dust <lb />
Ion 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 />
Slice. Come and size <lb />
up and you'll see <lb />
Tm <lb />
Fixed to <lb />
in <lb />
the Game<lb />
Stay <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 />
Gents U, St;. <lb />
I 5th and Evans St. <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
Read the <lb />
BULLETIN <lb />
. i <lb />
Cotton to if <lb />
The river is pretty full <lb />
Very little cotton in. <lb />
The weather has moderated- <lb />
Freshets are reported all over <lb />
the State- <lb />
Fertilizers is the biggest <lb />
subject talked <lb />
Car load fresh Flour, just in- <lb />
D W. <lb />
The and Observer <lb />
comes a day late now. <lb />
man in town <lb />
should have advertisement in <lb />
the <lb />
The days are growing enough <lb />
longer for the difference to be <lb />
noticeable.<lb />
Mr. H. Taft ft <lb />
position situ J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Mr. C. <lb />
to his studies at University. <lb />
Mr. L. left Monday even- <lb />
to spend a few days in <lb />
Miss Mary left Monday <lb />
School, <lb />
Grange. <lb />
Mrs. Julia Nelson, of Hobgood, <lb />
is visiting her. brother, Mr R. L.<lb />
his <lb />
ti; <lb />
Cotton Seed wanted for <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Cash <lb />
are different <lb />
from cotton, they are down one <lb />
day and up the nest- <lb />
Handsome and cheap Oak Sets <lb />
op stairs, Old Brick Store- <lb />
A rich of gold is of the <lb />
recent occurrences in <lb />
county. <lb />
D- M. Ferry's New Garden Seed <lb />
at the Old Brick Store. <lb />
Auction sales of horses seem <lb />
to be popular. We notice that <lb />
towns are having them. <lb />
Complete line of Dry g at <lb />
Wiley Brown's. <lb />
There is talk again of having <lb />
the portion of the streets leading <lb />
wharf depot shelled <lb />
It would be a improvement. <lb />
Buy Cotton Seed Meal and <lb />
Triumph Potatoes at the <lb />
Old Brick Store. <lb />
is called to the notice <lb />
to creditors by W. B. <lb />
administrator of J-L- W. Nobles. <lb />
Remember I you cash tor Chicken <lb />
Eggs and Country Produce at- the Old <lb />
Brick Store. <lb />
Just received car load of best <lb />
Flour, lowest prices- <lb />
D- W- <lb />
Sunday's cold wave and the <lb />
biting wind that came along with <lb />
it, made the day one upon which <lb />
people hated to get away from <lb />
the fire. <lb />
machines from to <lb />
New Home<lb />
Pitt gets one officer in the hen- <lb />
Mr. W. p. Hall moved <lb />
family from <lb />
Lucy Tyson returned Sat- <lb />
a visit toR <lb />
and Oxford. <lb />
Mr. G- A. of Ml. <lb />
is spending a few days with <lb />
Mr W. P. Hall. <lb />
Mr. John William, ft dyer from <lb />
is going to move to <lb />
Greenville soon. <lb />
Mr. E- former <lb />
Solicitor of this District, <lb />
last Fr here. <lb />
Mr. a <lb />
of died of <lb />
fever Tuesday <lb />
Mr. B. T. Bailey returned Fri- <lb />
day fro u a to his <lb />
at Va. <lb />
Th large bill board pat <lb />
October between <lb />
and the railroad, nearly blew <lb />
down in the hard wind Thursday. <lb />
Mr. J. 8- Jenkins m walking by <lb />
it lit the time and so near <lb />
catching him as to give him ft <lb />
so are- <lb />
Jury. <lb />
The for this week is com- <lb />
posed of A. A. V. <lb />
M- B- B L <lb />
A. J. Walter <lb />
Sims, L. G. Which B, W. <lb />
son, Jesse W. 8- Pollard, <lb />
Herbert G. M- Tucker. <lb />
Zeno Moore, Haddock, <lb />
W. B- Ricks, Lemon Johnson. <lb />
Captured. <lb />
The who shot at Mr. W. <lb />
Hicks last week, was arrested <lb />
in f n and <lb />
brought here on the Friday- <lb />
He has a bad wound in one of bis <lb />
legs, which he says was <lb />
by accidentally shooting himself, <lb />
but he tells two or three different <lb />
tales as to how it occurred, <lb />
Second Potatoes, <lb />
Wednesday afternoon Mr. W. <lb />
S. Fleming sent us a half bushel <lb />
of Irish potatoes for table use. <lb />
They are of the second crop <lb />
very Mr. Fleming raises <lb />
two crops of potatoes every year <lb />
and disposes of his second crop <lb />
for seed- They are us in <lb />
i size bettor for seed than <lb />
. ,, . . . , -v-r those here from <lb />
Miss of New . K <lb />
York, and Miss Julia <lb />
of Tarboro. are visiting Mrs. M- <lb />
B- Lang. <lb />
Mr. William Murray his moved <lb />
his family into a portion of the <lb />
building occupied by Miss Lela <lb />
Cherry. <lb />
Mrs. J. H. Weinberg, who has <lb />
be mi Mrs- M R- <lb />
left for her home in <lb />
Monday morning <lb />
Mr. Zeno Stocks and son, of <lb />
White Hall, who spent some <lb />
weeks with relatives in this <lb />
have returned home. <lb />
Mr. Charles Cobb, Farm <lb />
ville, has his to <lb />
Greenville and occupies the <lb />
Fleming house in <lb />
Mrs. . Lucy Hester, who was <lb />
her father, Mr- Warren <lb />
Tucker, near Greenville, returned <lb />
to Goldsboro Saturday morning. <lb />
Miss Williams is teach- <lb />
a school at She is <lb />
excellent teacher o <lb />
You Can Help Us This Much. <lb />
When you away from home, <lb />
or have friends visiting you, or <lb />
you are going to give a party or <lb />
reception, or when your church <lb />
or society any pro- <lb />
or when you sell, buy <lb />
or charge your residence or bus- <lb />
or your son or daughter is <lb />
married, or in a word, if you <lb />
know or hear of any item of in- <lb />
to public, bring or send <lb />
it in. <lb />
A Good Contribution. <lb />
Saturday the Chick Medicine and <lb />
Concert, Company turned over <lb />
about fifty dollars to the Public <lb />
School Committee, to be used in <lb />
furnishing the new school build- <lb />
This was one-fourth of the <lb />
receipts of their entertainments <lb />
last week. They will give the <lb />
same proportion of this, week's <lb />
receipts, by patronizing them <lb />
you not only witness a good en <lb />
but also help a pub- <lb />
j lie enterprise.<lb />
our most young ladies, j <lb />
Mr- H. W. Whedbee returned I <lb />
from Hertford were he <lb />
has been a few weeks, j <lb />
His health has considerably <lb />
proved. <lb />
A daughter of Mr. E- S. Phelps, <lb />
Mr. A. J- of about two miles below Greenville, <lb />
LANG <lb />
will tell <lb />
the news<lb />
next <lb />
Week. <lb />
is door-keeper of the <lb />
House. <lb />
A large of nice Furniture cheap <lb />
at the Old Brick <lb />
If you don't see us on the street <lb />
when you are in town, call at the <lb />
office and renew your <lb />
subscription for this year. <lb />
A prominent merchant of <lb />
Farmville township upon renew- <lb />
subscription take <lb />
six papers, but always look for <lb />
the first when my <lb />
mail is received- <lb />
New assortment of Bibles from <lb />
American B. S., just received. <lb />
Wiley Depositor. <lb />
Calvin Sutton, colored, while <lb />
timber near Grifton <lb />
Thursday, was nearly killed by a <lb />
tree falling on him. <lb />
C- T- new advertise- <lb />
today tells you of <lb />
best friend- Special bargains will <lb />
be given for thirty days to make <lb />
room for spring <lb />
Use Orinoco Tobacco Guano. <lb />
The highest price sold in <lb />
North Carolina in 1894 <lb />
was made from Orinoco Tobacco <lb />
Guano. Call on G M. Tucker, <lb />
A G Cox, <lb />
Ormond Turnage, <lb />
ville, R. L. Davis Bro., Farm- <lb />
ville, J. Fountain. Falkland- <lb />
Plenty of land mortgage blanks <lb />
at office now, also <lb />
chattel deeds and crop <lb />
liens. <lb />
For good reliable Shoes go to <lb />
Wiley Brown. <lb />
Tucker Edwards will have <lb />
another lot of horses and mules <lb />
at auction on Saturday, 26th. <lb />
See announcement. <lb />
People who write should make <lb />
a note that Diamond Inks t <lb />
be surpassed. Sold only at Re- <lb />
Book Store. <lb />
The Charlotte Observer showed <lb />
enterprise in printing Got. <lb />
message to the Legislature <lb />
foil- It occupied sixteen col- <lb />
of small type. <lb />
During the coming season we <lb />
will keep the very best horses <lb />
and mules for sale. Call to Bee <lb />
what we have before buying. <lb />
We guarantee satisfaction. We <lb />
also a first livery <lb />
stables. Tucker A Edwards. <lb />
A prominent tobacco man tells <lb />
us that at least two more good <lb />
are needed in Green- <lb />
ville- Won't somebody with <lb />
take the hint and build them. <lb />
Book- <lb />
keeper or Salesman in General <lb />
Merchandise store. Will give <lb />
satisfactory Apply <lb />
for name at <lb />
The Harriett Company <lb />
telegraphed here to make a two <lb />
engagement bat not <lb />
get the Opera House. Oar <lb />
would have been glad of an <lb />
opportunity of hearing them. <lb />
Mr- H- T. who purchased <lb />
the from Mr- Joyner has <lb />
name of the paper <lb />
to will <lb />
it. The feat tier We etas <lb />
died Saturday of hemorrhagic <lb />
fever. She was about <lb />
years old. <lb />
Messrs. C D. Osborne and <lb />
Buck Meadows, of Oxford, are <lb />
spending a few days with Mr. N. <lb />
H. and looking at our <lb />
tobacco market- <lb />
Ma j. H H- Roger, represent- <lb />
the United Banking <lb />
Building Co., of Richmond, is in <lb />
town looking after the <lb />
of a branch board here. <lb />
Mr. W. T- has moved <lb />
his family to the Dancy house on <lb />
Pitt street. We lived by <lb />
more re- <lb />
that th h ire moved out of <lb />
Mr. L- H- Short, <lb />
Co. of <lb />
was here Thursday- He was a <lb />
former conductor on the <lb />
Neck branch before it was ex- <lb />
tended to Kinston. <lb />
Maj. H. Harding and Mr. B- F <lb />
Sugg returned from Raleigh Sat- <lb />
where they attended the <lb />
meeting of the Grand of <lb />
They report a very <lb />
interesting meeting. <lb />
The striking resemblance be- <lb />
tween Judge Coble and Presiding <lb />
Elder has been noticed <lb />
by many people attending Court. <lb />
We one man <lb />
when did Elder become <lb />
a judge- <lb />
Work is progressing rapidly en <lb />
Mr- R. L- new <lb />
present indications cot- <lb />
ton will cut a small figure in the <lb />
crops this year. <lb />
Make few debts early in the <lb />
year and you will have less to <lb />
pay later in the year. <lb />
who keeps oat of debt <lb />
seldom does any complaining <lb />
about hard times. <lb />
The man who shoots in church <lb />
and won't pay bis debts had bet- <lb />
use well what time has <lb />
here- <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co. have <lb />
best selected stock of <lb />
Merchandise to be found in <lb />
goods and <lb />
reasonable prices. Fair dealings <lb />
reliable goods, low prices is the <lb />
motto they go on. See their new <lb />
advertisement. <lb />
Solicitor Shaw is an able pros <lb />
and that he <lb />
came here and took hold of a <lb />
docket with which he entirely <lb />
unfamiliar ms success so far is <lb />
remarkable. He and Judge Co- <lb />
are both making a splendid <lb />
impression- <lb />
A great many are <lb />
coming to t taking or <lb />
from the merchants for <lb />
spring good. The hotel people, <lb />
many others who deal- <lb />
with them, smile when <lb />
of the grip come <lb />
around. <lb />
On account of the times <lb />
rent and <lb />
AH person's <lb />
Kelp the Sufferers. <lb />
We towns and <lb />
counties in the State ate making <lb />
up contributions of supplies <lb />
and to help the thousands of <lb />
suffering people in Nebraska. <lb />
Pitt is a grand county and made <lb />
a good corn crop the year just <lb />
closed. Could not our people <lb />
out of their abundance make <lb />
up a Those destitute <lb />
people need bread need it <lb />
badly. He who gives quickly <lb />
gives twice. <lb />
A Pleasant Surprise. <lb />
Friday night's express brought <lb />
the editor a box which we <lb />
very highly. It was sent by <lb />
Col. J- S- Carr, of Durham, and <lb />
contained a nice clock, a large <lb />
package of the old genuine Liar <lb />
smoking tobacco, <lb />
of the famous Durham <lb />
. cat and packages of <lb />
the cut The clock <lb />
represents an extra large size <lb />
sack of Durham tobacco and has <lb />
been given a prominent position <lb />
in the office, and the <lb />
force will enjoy many delightful <lb />
of these excellent tobaccos. <lb />
The clever Colonel has our heart- <lb />
thanks for the box- <lb />
pens <lb />
following cases on the <lb />
docket tare dis- <lb />
James Foreman, carrying cm <lb />
weapons, pleads guilty, <lb />
fine and costs. <lb />
henry Harrington, carrying con <lb />
pleads guilty, <lb />
fined one penny and costs. <lb />
Abram Barrett, affray, pleads <lb />
guilty, days in jail to <lb />
ed on payment of cos a. <lb />
Sidney Heater, Tom Hester and <lb />
Anderson Hester, assault with <lb />
deadly weapon, each <lb />
days in jail and costs, with <lb />
to commissioners to hire out. <lb />
May, Wm. <lb />
John Williams and Joshua Wit <lb />
Hams, affray, plead guilty. <lb />
May and John Williams each <lb />
and costs, the <lb />
and costs. <lb />
Joseph affray, not guilty- <lb />
G- A- Vick, carrying concealed <lb />
weapons, pleads guilty, judgment <lb />
suspended on payment of costs. <lb />
G- A- Vick and J- C. <lb />
ton, affray, plead guilty, <lb />
suspended payment of <lb />
costs. <lb />
G. A. Vick, sci fa, on <lb />
payment of costs. <lb />
Sampson Harris, carry con- <lb />
weapons guilty- <lb />
Walter White, assault with <lb />
deadly weapon, guilty. <lb />
David carrying con- <lb />
weapon, guilty- <lb />
J. with deal <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
iT. with dead- <lb />
weapon, guilty. costs. <lb />
John to stock, <lb />
not guilty. <lb />
Tobe con <lb />
u, <lb />
Mills with dead- <lb />
pended payment cost. <lb />
day up to the noon recess <lb />
J. A- Roderick <lb />
all guilty. <lb />
coats, <lb />
ell and costs- <lb />
Crawford and Isaac Nor- <lb />
affray, judgment <lb />
pended payment of costs- <lb />
Walter White, carrying con- <lb />
pi guilty, <lb />
judgment on payment <lb />
of costs- <lb />
Pennie <lb />
Williams, John <lb />
Williams, Sarah <lb />
Williams and W- M- Smith, affray, <lb />
all guilty. <lb />
and Amanda <lb />
Atkinson, F. A guilty. <lb />
Adrian R u , assault with <lb />
deadly guilty, and <lb />
costs. <lb />
Adrian use. c con <lb />
guilty- <lb />
Silas Knight, Walter <lb />
Maggie Mary Moore, <lb />
removing crop, n pros as to <lb />
others not <lb />
Willie Mobley, assault, guilty, <lb />
judgment on payment <lb />
of costs- <lb />
Henry to animals <lb />
guilty, days in and <lb />
costs- <lb />
Fernando Ward and G. A- Mo <lb />
Gowan, Ward submits, <lb />
Gowan guilty, judgment <lb />
on payment of costs. <lb />
Dennis carrying con- <lb />
weapons, guilty, and <lb />
costs. <lb />
Vine's, assault, <lb />
Porter assault with <lb />
deadly weapon, guilty, days in <lb />
jail with leave to Commissioners <lb />
to hire out- <lb />
Peter Plummer, assault with <lb />
deadly weapon, not guilty. <lb />
Porter Johnson, con- <lb />
weapons, pleads guilty, <lb />
judgment suspended upon pay- <lb />
of <lb />
Maker, assault with intent <lb />
to commit rape, not guilty in- <lb />
tent to commit rape but of <lb />
simple assault- <lb />
Marriage Licenses <lb />
During last week Register of <lb />
Deeds King issued licenses to <lb />
twelve couples, seven white and <lb />
five colored, as follows <lb />
White-John Baker and Carrie <lb />
Harris, Jas. L- and <lb />
Mary E Cooper, J. J. <lb />
and Lillie D- M. <lb />
I, a whom and Delia Jackson, L. <lb />
H. Edwards Sallie Norris. A- <lb />
J. and Ada Cannon, Jar <lb />
and Vain- <lb />
right. <lb />
and <lb />
Rosetta James Brown <lb />
and Forbes, Frank Streeter <lb />
and Annie Johnson, Joseph <lb />
Gardner and Florence <lb />
March Vines and Amanda Tyson. <lb />
Shooting Bat no Damage. <lb />
A few days ago a <lb />
works for Mr. W. B- Ricks, <lb />
about miles from town, became <lb />
so insolent that Mr Ricks order- <lb />
ed him to leave place While <lb />
they were talking he made a <lb />
motion like be was going to <lb />
draw a pistol when Mr. Ricks <lb />
caught him and threw him down. <lb />
The begged to be allowed <lb />
to get up, declaring he did <lb />
hot have a weapon. Mr. <lb />
got up and was walking off <lb />
towards the house when the <lb />
fired three shots at him, but <lb />
fortunately did not strike him <lb />
with either shot Mr- Ricks <lb />
on to the house and armed <lb />
himself but was prevented by <lb />
his people from going beck out <lb />
where the was. Mr- Ricks <lb />
fired one shot at the from <lb />
the porch bat was too far to hit <lb />
him- <lb />
A train on the Burlington road <lb />
was held up near Iowa, <lb />
and robbed of several thousand <lb />
dollars- The express messengers <lb />
were bound and gagged. <lb />
filing for of the <lb />
will of the late Senator E- <lb />
Brown, of Georgia, shows his es- <lb />
to be worth No <lb />
bequests are made, but the prop- <lb />
will be divided <lb />
among the heirs. <lb />
A Georgia editor thus <lb />
out the profit on a bushel of corn <lb />
under certain conditions <lb />
bushel of corn makes four gallons <lb />
of whiskey, which retails for <lb />
Oat of this the government gets <lb />
the railroads the <lb />
the the far- <lb />
mer cents and the drinker <lb />
delirium <lb />
John Wanamaker has spent <lb />
over half a million dollars in ad <lb />
and keeps it <lb />
advertising in m all sec- <lb />
of the country, although no <lb />
house in the country is <lb />
known Mr. <lb />
is the man who recently refused a <lb />
, presidency a railroad <lb />
he didn't have time to <lb />
spare from business. The <lb />
merchant who can't m the moral <lb />
in this should immediately invest <lb />
in doable barrel <lb />
A Peculiar Case <lb />
the Cyan. <lb />
write to <lb />
smuts baT. n <lb />
Your Nearest Friend <lb />
IS YOUR UNDERWEAR. <lb />
Perhaps you are particular about it folks <lb />
are. Needs to be well other <lb />
Good Underwear has warmth and lasting <lb />
qualities, and is not given to back-biting, like <lb />
some friends. If you WANT A WARM of <lb />
it this winter, buy Underwear from men, <lb />
women and children. <lb />
Your Next Best Friend <lb />
Is your Overcoat and Clothes, and if your pock- <lb />
is not heavy laden it is just the same, for <lb />
our prices on Clothing arc so low every one <lb />
can No doubt you have heard about our <lb />
Dress Goods prices. The ladies of Greenville <lb />
are all talking about the elegant prices <lb />
so low. I remain, respectfully yours, <lb />
C. T. <lb />
Next door to bank. <lb />
All the above goods will be sold at as near <lb />
cost as for the next days in order to <lb />
reduce stock for spring goods. <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling- ailments , <lb />
play with <lb />
greatest . <lb />
if <lb />
oat of ports, <lb />
and .- <lb />
hunted. <lb />
no <lb />
can't work, <lb />
I . <lb />
t- <lb />
A bot- <lb />
from <lb />
very first <lb />
and <lb />
lo <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia. Kidney sod Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailment f <lb />
complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
the <lb />
I wrapper. All others are <lb />
On receipt two ac. w . <lb />
will send act of Too World's <lb />
Pair View and <lb />
CO. MO<lb />
There is no Tariff <lb />
ON <lb />
to be found in Greenville. Comprising <lb />
goods at reasonable prices. <lb />
Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes, Hats and Caps, <lb />
Furnishing Goods, Crockery, Wood <lb />
and Plows and Castings <lb />
Agricultural Implements. A full line of <lb />
Heavy Groceries, Sugar, Coffee, Moat, <lb />
Flour a specialty. The largest and most com- <lb />
line of to <lb />
be found in Pitt county. Ladies, men, children, <lb />
farmers, mechanics and laboring people of any <lb />
and every profession come to see us and get <lb />
Cherry's prices fixed in your minds before you <lb />
try to buy elsewhere. Black and Spring Oats <lb />
and Seed Potatoes on hand and to arrive. <lb />
Yours dealings, good quality and low <lb />
prices, J. B. CHERRY CO. <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 selling <lb />
cheap. <lb />
Well Tubing Pumps <lb />
BICYCLES, <lb />
Roofing, Guttering, <lb />
and Repairing. <lb />
GREEN-VILLE. N. C <lb />
NEWS. <lb />
Female college at Huntsville <lb />
Ala., barned. <lb />
Heavy snow storms <lb />
throughout Austria. <lb />
R. F. Pettigrew is named <lb />
as his own successor in the U. S. <lb />
Senate by the South Dakota leg <lb />
Hon. r. Q. Harris is <lb />
for the Senate by the Demo- <lb />
of the <lb />
legislature. <lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The ft. of W. G, Lang Son doing <lb />
N. C., was <lb />
mutual consent on the 1st day <lb />
January, 1895. i. with- <lb />
drawing from the The business <lb />
will be continued by W. M. Lang All <lb />
indebted to are request- <lb />
ed lo make payment to W. G. Lang. <lb />
W. G. LANG. <lb />
. W. M. LUNG. <lb />
This 1st, 1895. <lb />
Notice of <lb />
The firm of J. J. Stokes Co., <lb />
Hon. John E. Massey, of I business at Ayden, N. C, was l <lb />
has instituted legal pro- . f <lb />
the Norfolk r . withdrawing<lb />
Pilot for libel. <lb />
The President has agreed to let <lb />
the Marine Hand, fifty nieces, <lb />
make a concert tour of six weeks <lb />
through South- They will <lb />
start the middle of March, <lb />
The store of J. D- A R. <lb />
Christian, wholesale merchants of <lb />
Richmond, gutted by fire, loss <lb />
The Merchant's National Bank <lb />
of Defiance, Ohio, was lobbed of <lb />
by who blew <lb />
open the safe. <lb />
The West Virginia legislature <lb />
organized by Republican <lb />
officers. Stephen B. will <lb />
get the <lb />
State Treasurer Taylor, of South <lb />
Dakota, failed to put in an appear <lb />
to turn over the office and <lb />
money to his successor, is <lb />
absent with of the State's <lb />
money. He was a heavy loser <lb />
by several bank failures during <lb />
the panic. <lb />
O- Rollins and his <lb />
found dead in their home at Min- <lb />
A pistol found with <lb />
them indicated murder and <lb />
In a riot in Charlton <lb />
county. Champ Johns shot <lb />
and his son Frank. The <lb />
boy shot his father in the leg be- <lb />
fore the latter fired the <lb />
the Arm. The business will be <lb />
by Stokes to whom all persons <lb />
indebted to the are requested to <lb />
make payment. <lb />
J. J. STOKES, <lb />
J. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The undersigned having duly <lb />
Bed before the Superior Clerk of <lb />
Mat county as administrator of William <lb />
Warren is hereby given to <lb />
all persons indebted to of the <lb />
said to make p-y <lb />
to the undersigned, and per <lb />
gong having the said es <lb />
present I he same th <lb />
29th day of December or <lb />
lie plead in bar at recovery. <lb />
This day of Dec l-94. <lb />
W. R. WHICHARD Jr. <lb />
of Warren, <lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
We will fill them QUICK. <lb />
will fill them CHEAP <lb />
We will fill them WELL <lb />
-o- <lb />
Heart Framing, 19.00 <lb />
Rough ; 17.00 <lb />
Rough sap Inches <lb />
Sap Boards, A inches, <lb />
Walt days for our Planing Mill and we will furnish you Dressed Lumber <lb />
id to your door for BO cents a <lb />
Terms <lb />
Thanking you for past <lb />
N.<lb />
OLD STORE <lb />
their year's supplies <lb />
their interest to get our prices before <lb />
n Ms <lb />
PORK <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, <lb />
RICE, TEA, c, <lb />
at <lb />
MIFF <lb />
we buy from Manufacturers, pus <lb />
yon m bay st one A <lb />
stock <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always co <lb />
Ail <lb />
NOTICE. <lb />
The next session of James <lb />
proved begins at Put <lb />
Co., N. C. Monday Jan. 14th, 189-5, and <lb />
cautions only four months. <lb />
The principal guarantees good <lb />
business to all who <lb />
will attend his them- <lb />
selves the next four <lb />
months. <lb />
people now is your chance, <lb />
over the country mid see the <lb />
and business young <lb />
men women that the James School <lb />
has to the public and be <lb />
convinced that no in <lb />
the state could advance you as fast as <lb />
the James School. <lb />
The principal guarantees a position to <lb />
all who completes a course at. bis school. <lb />
C. H. JAMES, <lb />
Pitt Co., N. C <lb />
THE GREENVILLE <lb />
mm <lb />
JAMES Prop. <lb />
of <lb />
plow, Stove and Brass <lb />
castings, andirons, ac. <lb />
Pipe, <lb />
Machinery, <lb />
Prompt and given, r <lb />
Sat- <lb />
Hogshead <lb />
bat sate at <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
On Saturday, 26th, <lb />
at our stables in Green- <lb />
ville, we will sell <lb />
TRADE <lb />
A lot of Good <lb />
HORSES MULES <lb />
At Auction. They <lb />
will be sold to the high- <lb />
est bidder without re- <lb />
For the Cm ill Sim Sim <lb />
put up will be taken <lb />
down or bought in for <lb />
its, knocked <lb />
off t bidder <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
years, and wherever know has <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
the leading physicians all <lb />
and cures where <lb />
U other with the attention <lb />
the experienced physicians, have <lb />
for failed. This Ointment to <lb />
long and the high reputation <lb />
awl t-n obtained Is owing entirely <lb />
a. A -0 as bot little Ma <lb />
ever mad to bring Ft before <lb />
One tills Ointment <lb />
t to any address on ON <lb />
All Cash Orders a. <lb />
tended to. Address all orders <lb />
to <lb />
T. r. CHRISTMAS, <lb />
N, C<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017728_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
This <lb />
I Hit You <lb />
Toe management of the <lb />
Equitable Life Assurance <lb />
; Society in 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 is work, 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. Theres an <lb />
opening for somebody. If it <lb />
fits you, it will pay you. Fur- <lb />
information on request. <lb />
W. J. Manager, <lb />
Rock Hill, S. C <lb />
SHAKER INDIANS. <lb />
A Sect That Flourishes In the Pacific <lb />
Northwest. <lb />
The Indians of this county have <lb />
just closed a religious revival, and <lb />
have left for Pacific county, where <lb />
they will endeavor to rekindle a re- <lb />
spirit the tribes there. <lb />
religion is very unique, <lb />
original and distinctly Indian. <lb />
It is known as the Shaker religion. <lb />
It is said that it first originated in <lb />
the Sound country, among the Mud <lb />
j Bay Indians. <lb />
The story is that one of the tribe, <lb />
i John Slocum, was taken sick and <lb />
j gradually wasted away and died. <lb />
; Preparations were made for his <lb />
funeral, but John surprised his <lb />
friends by coming to life again <lb />
the day the funeral was to <lb />
held. lie stated that he had gone <lb />
I to Heaven, but that he <lb />
I back to earth again and help his <lb />
I people; that they were very wicked, <lb />
and that he must help them. His <lb />
recovery was very rapid, and he at <lb />
started this new sect. It for- <lb />
The New York Herald gives a <lb />
table showing the lowest points <lb />
by the gold reserve in <lb />
each of the past six years, as <lb />
1890 <lb />
1890 September 147.981,732<lb />
The grip of n very deadly kind <lb />
has become epidemic in New <lb />
York city. <lb />
This thing el a man taking <lb />
oath when h wishes to sign an <lb />
official bond that he is worth so <lb />
o his liabilities and <lb />
exemptions by law, when his <lb />
he h-is taken before the <lb />
be tax lister shows to the contrary, <lb />
is rather in consistent and a <lb />
was told to I <lb />
TOBACCO DEPARTMENT <lb />
Conducted by O. L. Joyner, Proprietor Eastern Tobacco Warehouse. <lb />
I . .- <lb />
It isn't easy to shake off habits <lb />
Tin re is an old lady <lb />
in Export, Maine, who years <lb />
; ago contracted the hi bit of <lb />
bids the use oil as an as quilts, and it still dings <lb />
also, the use of tobacco her a age- S. She has <lb />
I Salve. <lb />
The in world for Cat <lb />
Sores, Salt <lb />
t Chapped Hands, <lb />
Chilblains, Corns, and <lb />
positively Piles or i o <lb />
pay required, it is guaranteed to give <lb />
perfect satisfaction r h d <lb />
Price i cents per box. For sale y <lb />
John I., <lb />
of <lb />
Property. <lb />
On Wednesday the day of <lb />
the of Fer- <lb />
Fleming decease., the under- <lb />
signed will expose to sale for <lb />
cash, at farm in <lb />
township, tin the <lb />
estate the deceased upon said <lb />
consisting of bogs. mules, <lb />
horses, torn, tobacco, cotton seed <lb />
and implement., Sic <lb />
K day. Thursday, the h <lb />
of at the Old Ad m <lb />
Fleming Homestead in Greenville town- <lb />
ship. Pill county, the proper- <lb />
of the said Fernando FL <lb />
the said consisting of <lb />
hogs, mules, fodder, cotton, <lb />
cotton seed and i g implements, <lb />
Fernando Fleming, <lb />
Dec. <lb />
P. R <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAH. ROAD. <lb />
Condensed <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
eave el-ion Ar. M. a M. <lb />
Ar Tarboro <lb />
l-v Rocky Mt Wilson Selma Ar. tS SB T e no <lb />
Goldsboro Magnolia Ar M. A. H <lb />
Dated . f. -If <lb />
Flam Ar M-7 OS 2.1 3.1 <lb />
Magnolia Goldsboro Ar M OS i. H. <lb />
Ar Rocky M-1 M n a M M. <lb />
Tarboro L- Rocky Mt Ar <lb />
Train on Scotland Meek <lb />
leaves Wei Ion 3.40 p. in. Halifax COO <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland Neck at p <lb />
at. Greenville p. in., 7.86 <lb />
p. in. Returning, leaves Kinston <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. Arriving <lb />
Halifax at a. m. Weldon 11.20 a <lb />
m. daily except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Washington Branch leave <lb />
V m. arrives <lb />
8.40 a. m. Tarboro 9.50; returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.50 p. m., Parmele 6.10 <lb />
p. arrives Washington 7.35 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Connects with <lb />
trains on Scotland Neck Branch. <lb />
Tram leaves Tarboro, N C, via <lb />
A Raleigh R. R. daily except mil <lb />
at p. m. Sunday P. M <lb />
arrive Plymouth P. M-, 5.20 p. <lb />
Returning leaves Plymouth daily <lb />
5.80 a. m., 9.30 a. m. <lb />
arrive Tarboro 10.25 a. in., and -5 <lb />
a. in. <lb />
Train on Midland N C Branch leaves <lb />
daily except Sunday, a, <lb />
m. a m. <lb />
leaves a. in. <lb />
a- Goldsboro. <lb />
Trains on Nashville Branch leaves <lb />
Rocky Mount at 4.30 p. arrive <lb />
Nashville p. m. Spring Hope 5.30. <lb />
p. in. Returning leaves Spring Hope <lb />
a. m., Nashville 8.35 a. m., arrives <lb />
Rocky Mount in., <lb />
Trains on Latta Branch, Florence R. <lb />
R. 0.50 D- m. arrive Dun- <lb />
bur 8.00 Returning leave Dun- <lb />
bar a. m. arrive Latta 8.00 a. m <lb />
Daily except <lb />
on Brand, leaves r <lb />
daily, except <lb />
f, a. id. leave <lb />
at n-. at Warsaw with <lb />
line trains. <lb />
No. makes close connection <lb />
at Weldon for all point North daily, all <lb />
-ail via and daily except <lb />
via Portsmouth and Bay Line <lb />
also at Rocky with A <lb />
railroad for Norfolk daily and <lb />
via Norfolk, daily ex <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
General <lb />
B. <lb />
t. m. i <lb />
and intoxicating liquors of any kind. <lb />
j It has worked wonders among the <lb />
county Indians, who <lb />
were not noted for their mo- <lb />
or sobriety. One who has <lb />
witnessed some of their meetings <lb />
a candidate announces a <lb />
desire to join he is placed in the <lb />
of the room on his tip-toes, with <lb />
his arms extended full length over <lb />
his head. The crowd circles around <lb />
him, singing, shouting, ringing bells <lb />
and hammering away at anything <lb />
that will make a noise. Frequently <lb />
one of the heavy bells is broken, and <lb />
this is hailed with delight, as it is <lb />
supposed that the bad spirit has left <lb />
the candidate, and entered into the <lb />
bell, filling it to bursting. When <lb />
this happens the candidate is com- <lb />
cleansed from all evil, and is <lb />
born again. The candidate for ad- <lb />
mission, after standing in this <lb />
for a short time, commences to <lb />
shake through fatigue. This is <lb />
taken as a sign that the good spirit <lb />
is entering; and the noise and din <lb />
is, if possible, increased as the poor <lb />
victim's shaking increases, until <lb />
from sheer exhaustion, he falls <lb />
trembling upon the ground. His <lb />
conversion is then complete, and he <lb />
is admitted into full <lb />
The Preservation of Rolls or of <lb />
Folded Sheets. <lb />
It was only writing was <lb />
made upon separate pieces, or <lb />
sheets, of pliable and perishable <lb />
material that binding proper was in- <lb />
vented to hold the pieces or sheets <lb />
together and give strength to them <lb />
and protection and beauty. <lb />
But, says the Fortnightly Review, <lb />
we must distinguish. The pliable <lb />
written sheet may be either <lb />
or folded, each giving rise to a form <lb />
of binding peculiar to itself. The <lb />
rolled sheet Is bound by fastening <lb />
each sheet to the other sideways and <lb />
rolling the whole from end to end, <lb />
the last sheet serving as a cover to <lb />
all the rest. This form of binding <lb />
is no doubt the more ancient of the <lb />
two, and it was a long time in <lb />
general use. was used, for ex- <lb />
ample, by the was <lb />
probably invented by it <lb />
was used by the Greeks and by the <lb />
Romans, and groat libraries of rolls <lb />
existed for some time after the <lb />
Christian era, and many industries <lb />
were engaged in contributing to the <lb />
perfection of the binding. It has, <lb />
however, been superseded for many <lb />
by the folded form of <lb />
literature, the invention of which is <lb />
attributed to king of <lb />
whom, too, comes <lb />
our parchment, or skin, prepared <lb />
for writing in the third century <lb />
before Christ. But, if the form has <lb />
disappeared, the terminology of the <lb />
roll has survived, and the word <lb />
originally a thing that is <lb />
rolled or wound up, i. e., a roll, is <lb />
now applied indiscriminately to its <lb />
substitute, the book of folded <lb />
sheets. <lb />
The folded sheet, at section, as it <lb />
is called, is bound by simply sew- <lb />
or otherwise fastening the parts <lb />
of the sheets to one another at the <lb />
back crease or fold, and a number of <lb />
sections are bound by fastening <lb />
each of them to some common sup- <lb />
port at the back, so that when all <lb />
are sewn or otherwise fastened they <lb />
may be free to open and to shut <lb />
at pleasure at the front or <lb />
The invention of the folded sheet <lb />
thus gave rise to the invention of <lb />
modern binding, which in its essence <lb />
is the union at the back of the folded <lb />
sheets, which together constituted <lb />
one folded book, or, as I may say, <lb />
despite the latent contradiction, the <lb />
folded volume. <lb />
pine past year and ft <lb />
half. <lb />
All Free. <lb />
who Dr. King's <lb />
know value, and I hose <lb />
who have not, have now <lb />
to try it Free. Call on the advertised <lb />
Dr and get a Trial Bottle, Free. <lb />
Send name and address to II. K. <lb />
A . Chicago, and get a <lb />
sample Dr. King-s New Life, <lb />
Pills Free, as well as a copy of Guide <lb />
to Health and Household instructor. <lb />
Free. All of which is guaranteed to do <lb />
yon good and cost you nothing at John <lb />
L. Drugstore. <lb />
LOCAL NOTES AND TOBACCO <lb />
JOTTINGS. <lb />
BY O. L. JOYNER. <lb />
All the tobacco re- <lb />
turned from various Christ- <lb />
mas resorts and now ready <lb />
for duty on the breaks- <lb />
While in Danville a few weeks <lb />
ago we heard numbers of the <lb />
there say that he <lb />
crop was equally as poor <lb />
poorer than the previous o <lb />
nearly was <lb />
an advance in prices on <lb />
tobacco after the holidays. <lb />
LACK OF TIME. <lb />
A Woman's Excuse In the Light <lb />
of Its <lb />
BLUE DENIM. <lb />
Who Cannot find Opportunity for <lb />
or Improvement <lb />
for Thinking the <lb />
Mot <lb />
it <lb />
not <lb />
e, <lb />
g for <lb />
good <lb />
Numbers of our <lb />
the side of the river who <lb />
have never plan <lb />
tobacco are of g i <lb />
into it this ye those we <lb />
would to plain too <lb />
go at it slowly, <lb />
well, cultivate well it <lb />
properly. In this kind of a <lb />
there is more th in <lb />
double the acres half manured sad <lb />
half cultivated, and <lb />
half the expense preparing. <lb />
The New Jersey court of errors <lb />
appeals decided that the <lb />
heirs of a man killed by a mail <lb />
pouch thrown out a passing train <lb />
could not recover from <lb />
the railway company. They <lb />
must look to Uncle Sam. <lb />
The Steam Engine's Work. <lb />
In the manufactures of Great <lb />
Britain alone the power which steam <lb />
exerts is estimated to the <lb />
manual labor of four billions of men, <lb />
or more than double the number of <lb />
males supposed to inhabit the globe. <lb />
THE BICYCLE. <lb />
Appellations Given to It by Those of <lb />
Foreign Tongues. <lb />
Here, says the Courier <lb />
is an amusing linguistic con- <lb />
on the subject of the de- <lb />
nomination of the velocipede in <lb />
languages. In French it <lb />
was called and <lb />
Then came the words bicycle, <lb />
and at last <lb />
The word which has also <lb />
been given to it, is taken from the <lb />
Argot. Its etymology is unknown. <lb />
It signifies simply machine. <lb />
In Italian it is called <lb />
velocipede, and The same <lb />
In Spanish. <lb />
In Germany it is or simply <lb />
rad, just as in English they say <lb />
The Chinese call it some- <lb />
times which means <lb />
and sometimes <lb />
They also <lb />
it <lb />
But the palm <lb />
must to the Flemish. In <lb />
to the appellations, <lb />
and so forth, some of <lb />
the wags on the banks of the Es- <lb />
t have baptized this winged con- <lb />
the centipede <lb />
e a d n ens <lb />
fertilizer works of Griffith <lb />
t the acid works of G. H, <lb />
C- T. the stable, <lb />
office, and home trade warehouse <lb />
of the Standard Oil Company, t <lb />
Canton, Baltimore, destroyed by <lb />
fire, loss <lb />
will be the effect of the <lb />
of the one million toes <lb />
Cuba sugar in. America on top of <lb />
the surplus million tons of beet <lb />
root sugar is of the unknown <lb />
quantities of the coming year. <lb />
Gray's Statistical. <lb />
Dealers in playing cards, in <lb />
Kansas, don't sell them- They <lb />
them, the rent charged be- <lb />
the the pack- This <lb />
is The way they dodge the tax- <lb />
That's a regular sneak game. <lb />
The report of Postmaster Gene <lb />
giving the operations <lb />
of th Department of <lb />
the United States for the fiscal <lb />
year ending June 30th, 1894, has <lb />
been received. <lb />
According to statistics four <lb />
out of five suicides are men, from <lb />
which it may be inferred that <lb />
men do not follow the men so <lb />
much j'S some people say they do. <lb />
Free Pills. <lb />
Send address to B. E. <lb />
hi. ago, set a free <lb />
b of Dr. King's New Life rills. A <lb />
trial will convince yon of their merits. <lb />
These pills are easy in action and are <lb />
particularly effective in the cure of <lb />
constipation and Sick For <lb />
Malaria and troubles they have <lb />
proved invaluable. They are <lb />
guaranteed to be perfectly free from <lb />
every substance and to <lb />
purely vegetable. They do not weaken <lb />
by their action, but by giving tone to <lb />
stomach bowels greatly <lb />
the size per <lb />
by John L. Wooten Druggist. <lb />
M. N. H. Whitfield, the clever <lb />
and genial book-keeper of Evans <lb />
Hayes Co., says there is a <lb />
of in the <lb />
neighborhood around <lb />
At a recent club meeting, where <lb />
formed the sub- <lb />
for discussion, one member was <lb />
heard to tell another that she <lb />
had not bad time to read <lb />
during the sum- <lb />
though the members of the <lb />
I organization had been allowed <lb />
time from May to November for this <lb />
on agreeable says a writer in <lb />
Harper's Bazaar. <lb />
is so much going on these <lb />
complained the delinquent <lb />
member, one can't get time <lb />
to read anything but the papers and <lb />
This woman was a fair <lb />
of the well-to-do, comfortable <lb />
house-mother. She had taken a <lb />
trip to the Thousand islands during <lb />
the summer just past and had spent <lb />
weeks in her cottage on <lb />
I Long Island sound. She had <lb />
I pied herself with a dressmaker <lb />
; most of the spring months, fit- <lb />
ting up her three daughters with <lb />
finery for the season. Her two sons <lb />
were members of a famous college, <lb />
and quite able to take care of them- <lb />
selves. Her responsibility in her <lb />
household was comparatively <lb />
and extending oat by light She had two <lb />
through Greene by servants, with outside aid when re- <lb />
and through Lenoir and her daughters were not <lb />
counties that produce j inefficient. One would think that <lb />
the equal in texture she have read a dozen book <lb />
tobacco the equal m <lb />
and color to the once far famed <lb />
section of <lb />
county; that there is plenty of <lb />
land Eastern Carolina that can <lb />
be made to bright <lb />
co, but this particular strip which <lb />
is only a few miles in width is <lb />
composed of a soil which, <lb />
does not give to the tobacco a <lb />
in four months and still have given <lb />
considerable time to periodical liter- <lb />
and to the fancy-work which <lb />
in reality she liked better than any- <lb />
thing else. <lb />
In point of fact, she knew perfectly <lb />
well that she might. She knew as <lb />
well as anybody else that the modern <lb />
woman, unless absolutely engaged <lb />
in a long-drawn daily battle for <lb />
bread, can make time for almost <lb />
superior color, yet it is peculiarly anything she really wishes to do. <lb />
This estimable lady had found time <lb />
adapted to the growth of rich <lb />
mahogany wrappers, the kind of <lb />
tobacco that brings money <lb />
now. This strip of land may be <lb />
and very likely is an extension of <lb />
the strip in Gran- <lb />
ville, composed of the matter and <lb />
formation requisite to the growth <lb />
of mahogany tobacco, but as it <lb />
peaches our Eastern section it be <lb />
comes richer, more fertile an <lb />
adaptable to the production of a <lb />
to embroider several jokes and <lb />
fronts for her winter <lb />
gowns and make half a dozen <lb />
She had spent innumerable <lb />
hours in bootless chatter with <lb />
on hotel piazzas and the decks <lb />
of steamships. She had had <lb />
no time for doing half the <lb />
things which she had she <lb />
had done them nevertheless. <lb />
Many good women have no time to <lb />
concoct toothsome but unwholesome <lb />
, dainties for the demoralization of <lb />
A German philosopher <lb />
know of but two lovely things <lb />
in the starry sky <lb />
above heads and the of <lb />
duty within our <lb />
Green, the wealthiest <lb />
woman in America, baa the <lb />
collection of diamonds in the <lb />
country but never a gem does she <lb />
wear. <lb />
It has taken science years <lb />
to discover that kissing is deadly, <lb />
and it will take science years <lb />
longer to get any one to pay at- <lb />
to the <lb />
No town can prosper <lb />
citizens endorse and work for en- <lb />
that give to <lb />
home labor develop home re- <lb />
sources- <lb />
It is proposed to construct an <lb />
underground railway in New <lb />
York city which will cost <lb />
Governor cf <lb />
is a candidate for the United <lb />
States Senate, to succeed Mr. <lb />
Berry- <lb />
Rheumatism is primarily by <lb />
acidity of the blood. Hood's <lb />
purities the blood, and thus cures <lb />
the disease. <lb />
The grip has made its appear- <lb />
New York again- <lb />
in <lb />
The render of this will be pleas <lb />
ed to learn that there is at least one <lb />
dreaded disease that stance ha been <lb />
able lo cure in all its stages, and that is <lb />
Catarrh, Hall's Cure the <lb />
only positive core known to the medical <lb />
fraternity. Catarrh being a <lb />
disease, requires a constitutional <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cure is <lb />
taken internally, acting directly on the <lb />
blood and mucous, surfaces of the sys- <lb />
thereby destroying the foundation <lb />
of the dinar, and giving the patient <lb />
strength, by building up the <lb />
and assisting nature in doing its <lb />
work. The proprietors have much <lb />
In its powers, that they <lb />
offer Ons Dollars r pa <lb />
Hut it fails to Send for list of<lb />
i their families, but some of <lb />
superior grade of tobacco to that . custom which <lb />
grown away up Granville. j keepers gratify their family palate <lb />
Irrespective of any other <lb />
impels them to do it. They <lb />
have no lime for haunting the shops <lb />
when they have nothing to buy and <lb />
there is nothing important to see. <lb />
They have no time to spend in empty <lb />
society functions, nor in <lb />
less, formal, old-fashioned calls. <lb />
On the other hand, only the most <lb />
strenuously employed have not time <lb />
for an hours good reading each day, <lb />
an hour's healthful exercise in the <lb />
open air, clearing the brain and <lb />
sweetening the soul, an hour for the <lb />
cherishing of choice friendships by <lb />
genuine letter-writing or face-to- <lb />
face exchange of thought and <lb />
and more than one useful life- <lb />
work in philanthropy, art, literature <lb />
or science. These are the things for <lb />
which we have time. Time was <lb />
given us on purpose that we might <lb />
spend it in such duties as these, <lb />
which should be grafted upon the <lb />
necessary routine of every woman's <lb />
lire. <lb />
Even the young mother, the teach- <lb />
the shop-girl, the milliner, the <lb />
dressmaker, may devote on the aver- <lb />
a taking a year together, an hour <lb />
each day to that which feeds the <lb />
higher part of us. There is no need <lb />
that any but the very slaves of the <lb />
market places should spend them- <lb />
selves on drudgery or fritter them- <lb />
selves away on unworthy trifles. <lb />
As for the well-to-do woman and <lb />
the society woman it is exasperating <lb />
to hear them prate of <lb />
They have plenty of time for good <lb />
work in many directions. They <lb />
have no time for the pursuits in <lb />
which they are too apt to spend <lb />
themselves. <lb />
It is said that the chief defect of <lb />
mind is in the sense of pro- <lb />
portion. It is easy to believe this <lb />
the things that the <lb />
modern woman makes room for in <lb />
her life, and compares them with <lb />
those lofty and soul-nourishing <lb />
ties for which she explains that she <lb />
has <lb />
GROWING <lb />
The year that has just closed <lb />
has, think, very clearly demon- <lb />
to our the <lb />
of the tobacco market <lb />
There is no line of industry in <lb />
midst but what has in some way <lb />
by the money <lb />
paid out on the breaks tor <lb />
co. Cotton it present prices will <lb />
be planted in much quantity <lb />
than usual. The acreage in to <lb />
will be greatly increased <lb />
in the section to this <lb />
market. The warehouses are go- <lb />
to prepare to handle the in- <lb />
creased crop, but we will need <lb />
more prize room for our buyers, <lb />
our facilities for handling <lb />
will not be to <lb />
this year's crop- Can't some <lb />
of our capitalist build more <lb />
houses, we need several more. <lb />
There is no need of any one with <lb />
money being afraid to invest now- <lb />
The tobacco market here is now <lb />
on a solid basis. We are <lb />
as the market of the <lb />
east, manufacturers of the bright <lb />
grades are sending their orders <lb />
her and arranging to increase <lb />
their business. expect sides <lb />
next season to be increased over <lb />
this year's by hundred per <lb />
cent. Without a change of <lb />
on the part of th j planter, <lb />
Greenville, the mistress of the <lb />
New Golden Belt, will sell more <lb />
tobacco than any other eastern <lb />
Last year John of <lb />
Lawrence County, Pa., killed a <lb />
couple of skunks and sold <lb />
hides for each. He concluded <lb />
that at that rate it be a <lb />
profitable business, says an ex- <lb />
change, to raise the animals for <lb />
hides. He built an <lb />
of some two acres, arranging <lb />
it so that the animals could not <lb />
burrow under the walls, and flap- <lb />
some thirty skunks to stock <lb />
it. He now has and expects <lb />
next year to have The <lb />
skunk breeds twice in the year <lb />
and produces seven to nine at a <lb />
litter, so the rate of increase is <lb />
kept down by a habit animals <lb />
have of killing the first litter <lb />
when the second one is born- Mr. <lb />
feeds the animals with <lb />
from the slaughter house, <lb />
refuse meat and milk- He says <lb />
that his pets are very tamp and <lb />
inoffensive, and never emit their <lb />
characteristic odor save when <lb />
He that. <lb />
skunk farm will soap make Dim <lb />
Independently <lb />
The Henderson Gold Leaf <lb />
claims for Vance county the <lb />
championship of the State on big <lb />
hogs. The porker which it <lb />
wins the prise weighed <lb />
gross, pounds net. and <lb />
m of lard. <lb />
Apartments Made Very <lb />
with It <lb />
Bow a Material May Ce Very <lb />
Artistically <lb />
for a Pretty <lb />
Bed Chamber. <lb />
Blue denim is to most people <lb />
simply blue denim and nothing <lb />
more, but this same prosaic material <lb />
in the hands of an artistic worker in <lb />
fabrics can be so manipulated as to <lb />
produce results both charm- <lb />
and surprising. One of the <lb />
latest things in household economy <lb />
is a dining-room in which denim is <lb />
the article most used for decoration. <lb />
The fabric is cheap, as few others <lb />
are, and its texture strong, so <lb />
that it does nicely for a carpet, if <lb />
plenty of good. sot lining be used in <lb />
the laying, and again it has the <lb />
of being easily kept clean, as a <lb />
spot can be washed off with hot <lb />
water and soap. <lb />
Any sort of a plain old couch can <lb />
be freshened and made attractive by <lb />
recovering it with denim finished <lb />
with a flounce, the hem of which is <lb />
worked with a good-sized feather <lb />
stitch in white or linen embroidery <lb />
thread. Cord tassel to match the <lb />
thread can be used as an additional <lb />
A few big and comfortable sofa <lb />
pillows are needed to complete the <lb />
couch. These are covered with the <lb />
same material and embroidered with <lb />
the same thread. Any of the art- <lb />
designs now in vogue may be <lb />
used in stamping. There is some- <lb />
thing exceedingly stylish about a <lb />
denim sofa pillow if it is large and <lb />
well made. <lb />
The sideboard for this pretty blue <lb />
dining-room is covered with a denim <lb />
scarf, edged with the same thread <lb />
and finished with a fringe to match, <lb />
or, if preferred, a white scarf may- <lb />
be used, embroidered with dark blue <lb />
cotton. The table appointments <lb />
should match the color of room. <lb />
The center piece is worked in dark <lb />
blue cotton, as are the table napkins, <lb />
if they bear a monogram or initials. <lb />
A set of white and blue china, some <lb />
bright flowers and a pretty lamp <lb />
complete the furnishing of the <lb />
room, which for comfort and beauty <lb />
might rival a much more expensive <lb />
A blue denim bedroom may be <lb />
ranged just as easily and made to <lb />
look equally as well. A white An- <lb />
rug or two stretched across the <lb />
denim carpet relieves its plainness <lb />
and looks soft cozy. The dress- <lb />
table can be adorned by trim- <lb />
ming the denim with a white or <lb />
cream-colored fringe or small <lb />
A toilet set of art bunting <lb />
combined with light blue silk and <lb />
some wide, light-blue satin make the <lb />
bedroom bright and pretty. <lb />
Another feature of a clever <lb />
home, in which she displays her <lb />
taste skill, is in her <lb />
center pieces, carving <lb />
pieces, etc. The stores are full of <lb />
coarse linen pieces, hemstitched or <lb />
fringed by machinery, which come <lb />
within the means of the average <lb />
housekeeper and with which she con- <lb />
tents herself. There are a few <lb />
pieces made of very fine linen and <lb />
beautifully embroidered or worked <lb />
in fine Spanish drawn work, which <lb />
can be purchased only by the rich, <lb />
and yet any wide-awake woman may <lb />
have them by simply doing them <lb />
herself, for it is the labor on them <lb />
which makes them expensive. <lb />
There's No Choice in Bicycles. <lb />
The Victor tire <lb />
rival. It is more durable than any <lb />
other and the inner tube can be re- <lb />
moved in case of puncture in less <lb />
than five minutes. <lb />
The inner tube removable <lb />
through the rim. <lb />
All Victor improvements are abreast <lb />
with the times and meet re- <lb />
Victors <lb />
are <lb />
BEST. <lb />
OVERMAN WHEEL CO. <lb />
YORK. <lb />
ruin <lb />
CHICAGO <lb />
SAN <lb />
DETROIT <lb />
DOUGLAS <lb />
SHOE A KIM. <lb />
People wear the <lb />
W. L. and <lb />
All oar <lb />
They rive the best value for the <lb />
shoe Ir. fit. <lb />
Their wearing qualities are <lb />
The prices are uniform on <lb />
other makes, <lb />
cannot supply we can. <lb />
Calf and <lb />
83.60 Police Shoes. tote. <lb />
1.60 and <lb />
S She <lb />
If dealer <lb />
you, write for <lb />
w. L. Douglas, <lb />
Boswell, Co., Greenville, N. C. <lb />
R. L. Davis Bro., Farmville, N. C. <lb />
II. nib. <lb />
X. C. <lb />
CO. <lb />
it X. i . <lb />
Skinner, <lb />
i i c. C. <lb />
COBB <lb />
mm<lb />
Commission Merchants <lb />
STREET NORFOLK, VA <lb />
and <lb />
I I <lb />
Mutton. <lb />
regard to mutton, <lb />
old mutton is now a thing of the <lb />
past. Formerly people could not <lb />
dine unless a saddle of mutton <lb />
out from a four-year-old sheep; now <lb />
mutton sent to table is from <lb />
eighteen months to two years old, <lb />
and the younger generation are not <lb />
sure that Is not preferable to the <lb />
much-prized four-year-old mutton. <lb />
The saddle is still considered the <lb />
prime joint to serve. <lb />
The very high-sounding word <lb />
etiquette had a very humble origin. <lb />
for etiquette a <lb />
Edwards gives the <lb />
received its significance <lb />
from the foot that a Scotch gardener <lb />
laid out the grounds at <lb />
for Louis XIV. was. <lb />
annoyed at tho walking <lb />
pis newly-made paths, and at <lb />
had labels placed to Indicate <lb />
where they might pass. At first <lb />
these labels were not attended to, <lb />
but a from high quarters that <lb />
In future the walks of the courtiers <lb />
must be within or <lb />
labels was promptly attended to. <lb />
To keep within the etiquettes be- <lb />
came the correct thing. Tb <lb />
Of Vb <lb />
widened and fa now universally <lb />
SEEMED QUITE NATURAL, <lb />
The College Athlete Thought the <lb />
Town Had a Strong Rush Line. <lb />
The young man was hurrying along <lb />
the street with bis hat pulled down <lb />
over his eyes. He was so oblivious of <lb />
all his surroundings that he got <lb />
in front of a big delivery <lb />
wagon without even seeing it. <lb />
That was when the sport began. <lb />
The muscular corner policeman <lb />
reached out and caught him by the <lb />
collar. Quick action was necessary, <lb />
and he gave him a yank that lifted <lb />
him off his feet and shot him against <lb />
a passing cable car. The car turned <lb />
him over or twice, and then <lb />
some projection caught in his coat <lb />
he was dragged half a block. <lb />
He managed to wriggle out of his <lb />
coat, and by an almost superhuman <lb />
threw himself clear of the car, <lb />
but directly in front of one coming <lb />
from the opposite direction on the <lb />
next track. That caught him <lb />
squarely in the back, and carried <lb />
him fifteen or twenty feet, part of <lb />
the time in one position and part of <lb />
the time in another, all of the <lb />
being decidedly awkward and <lb />
uncomfortable. <lb />
When the car was stopped the <lb />
carefully pulled him out <lb />
from under the- fender, and yelled <lb />
for some one to call the ambulance. <lb />
But it wasn't necessary. The <lb />
young man his feet, shook <lb />
himself once or twice, and then, <lb />
with a dreamy, far-away look in his <lb />
eyes, <lb />
scrimmage. I've <lb />
never played against a team with a <lb />
stronger rush <lb />
And he on his way to <lb />
the university gymnasium. <lb />
of Chicago <lb />
Nowhere are old soldiers so dis- <lb />
as in China. In 1890 Em- <lb />
issued a <lb />
which read in part as <lb />
To thank Heaven that it has <lb />
lowed us to reach the age of twenty <lb />
years, we herewith raise all active <lb />
soldiers of the eight banners of Man- <lb />
and Mongolia to the rank of <lb />
the nobility. To those who have <lb />
passed four score we give in addition <lb />
a piece of silk, ten measures of rice <lb />
and ten of meat. Those who <lb />
have passed their ninetieth birthday <lb />
are to receive double measure la <lb />
each, When the crack <lb />
of the army contain <lb />
men almost a. century old, it is not <lb />
difficult to understand the success <lb />
the <lb />
--------IS AT FRONT W A I <lb />
EXPERIENCE has me the be Is the <lb />
Rope, Build s. m ,., , <lb />
necessary Millers. and general .,. , <lb />
Hats. Shoes. Ureas Goods I have M i,,. <lb />
quarters for Heavy and o r <lb />
Cotton, keep courteous an i attend e <lb />
X. C. <lb />
WANT<lb />
Will p y th high -s I, <lb />
iii mail or lot. to, <lb />
isle i -i-.-d Meal and Hulls. <lb />
SHE V i <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
The having; lie- <lb />
the Superior Court Clerk of Pitt <lb />
county to the i stair of <lb />
Fernando Fleming, deceased, is <lb />
hereby given to all persons Indebted to <lb />
said decedent to n <lb />
mediate payment to <lb />
and all is having claims <lb />
th- said estate must present the <lb />
before 88th day Dee. 1886, or this <lb />
notice will plead In recovery <lb />
of Dec. <lb />
Fl <lb />
of Fernando <lb />
Real <lb />
and <lb />
Rental Agent. <lb />
Houses and lots Rent or <lb />
terms easy. Rents, Taxes, <lb />
and open accounts and any other <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
Collection have prompt <lb />
faction guarantee I. solicit your <lb />
patronage. <lb />
HALE <lb />
N. C. <lb />
next Basel m of this l will <lb />
begin on the day <lb />
and continue week-. <lb />
PER MONTH. <lb />
Prim English <lb />
Intermediate English <lb />
Higher English <lb />
language <lb />
The instruction will continue through. <lb />
Discipline mild out If necessary <lb />
an additional teacher will <lb />
guaranteed u pupil- <lb />
enter early and attend regularly. For <lb />
r a ply to <lb />
W. II. <lb />
EDMONDS <lb />
PRIORS <lb />
. Opera e. <lb />
GREENVILLE. <lb />
Call in when you good work <lb />
.-, ., . <lb />
A R. R. TIME <lb />
in December 4th. ISM,<lb />
GOING<lb />
Sun. <lb />
Ar. <lb />
P. <lb />
i m <lb />
T s <lb />
P. M <lb />
i i <lb />
n . hem <lb />
P. M <lb />
Ex <lb />
SERVICE <lb />
Ste leave Washington for Green <lb />
ville and Tarboro at all land <lb />
on Tar Monday. Wednesday <lb />
Friday at A, M. <lb />
leave Tarboro at B A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These to <lb />
of water on Tar River. <lb />
Co net ting at w steam <lb />
of The Norfolk, and w h- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk. <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should good <lb />
marked via Dominion fr tn <lb />
New York, from <lb />
Norfolk a <lb />
more Steamboat from Haiti- <lb />
more. Miners <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. ON. <lb />
N. , <lb />
Tun connects with Wilmington A <lb />
Weldon train hound North, leaving <lb />
a. in., and with <lb />
leaving p. m <lb />
----FOR---- <lb />
Cotton, Corn and <lb />
General Crops. <lb />
Used and endorsed by leading far- <lb />
in r In North Carolina and South <lb />
for past twenty rears. Head th <lb />
following for <lb />
I for ml sin, <lb />
testimonials. ,,. <lb />
N. V. Sept. SO, <lb />
Messrs, b <lb />
of you for malting <lb />
to give satisfaction. only <lb />
it mi You know I must <lb />
think It I. or I should not lave <lb />
sad long. mike lit or IT <lb />
years I and lit <lb />
oat baa a me i be to pay f i r It h <lb />
not. on PT tune. <lb />
Yours truly, S. <lb />
Ch ; -w. S. 1884. <lb />
Messrs. Us rater Go, <lb />
It gives in pit a live say we <lb />
II one tor <lb />
more tin <lb />
an I to to do so. Of, <lb />
rouse, we ; re entire d that <lb />
. US to Use <lb />
J. <lb />
R. M. <lb />
Boykin, Carmer Co, <lb />
Baltimore, Md. <lb />
R. HARRIS. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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