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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 25 December 1895</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
          <mods:abstract>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</mods:abstract>
          <mods:identifier type="local">MICROFILM REELS GVER-9-11</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 25 December 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>18951225</dc:date>
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                <p>
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
pared to do all work <lb />
of this line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
I.- <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
EVERY ROY. <lb />
D. J. Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 1895. <lb />
NO. <lb />
Wants or should <lb />
an Education, <lb />
And The Eastern Reflector is <lb />
Going to help one Boy in <lb />
that direction- <lb />
We will give absolutely free of charge <lb />
a ship entitling the holder to <lb />
tuition in the branches <lb />
tor the entire spring term, <lb />
of <lb />
Greenville Mile Academy- <lb />
Tin, i the best school for boys in <lb />
Eastern North Carolina, and the boy <lb />
Will be who wins this prize. <lb />
CONDITIONS. <lb />
This months is to be <lb />
given to the boy who will get the <lb />
of yearly subscriber for <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
between now and o'clock P. M. on Jan <lb />
Two for <lb />
in i or tour subscribers for months <lb />
will count the same as one yearly sub- <lb />
scriber This is no catch penny <lb />
but a offer, and if only one <lb />
-u brought During the <lb />
time tin boy who brings it <lb />
will get the scholarship Of course <lb />
more than one subscriber to be <lb />
in. for this is a prise worth win <lb />
and many boys will work for it <lb />
n order that there may be an <lb />
for WHO wishes to <lb />
this contest, we offer a cash commission <lb />
per cent on all subscribers, BO <lb />
that tho-e who to get the <lb />
will be paid for their work, hut <lb />
the one who wins the scholarship will <lb />
not the Now boys get <lb />
to work with the to win <lb />
this prize. You can get as many <lb />
copies of the as you need <lb />
by applying to the office. If you decide <lb />
to enter this contest send us your name <lb />
as we to know how many a. e <lb />
working for the prize. We will publish <lb />
the result of the with the name <lb />
of winner in the of the <lb />
tor of Jan. 15th, giving the <lb />
boy time to enter school on the <lb />
opening day of spring term Monday, <lb />
Jan, <lb />
Address all to <lb />
THE EASTERN REFLECTOR. <lb />
Greenville X. C. <lb />
THE N. C. CONFERENCE. <lb />
In Session at Elizabeth City. <lb />
N. C. Oct. 25th, <lb />
This to that I have arranged <lb />
with the publisher of THE EASTERN <lb />
Reflector to teach free of charge in <lb />
the English branches, the months <lb />
term beginning Jan. the boy <lb />
to whom he may award the scholarship <lb />
in the above subs contest, <lb />
. H. <lb />
Principal Academy.<lb />
J. B. Moore. L. 1- <lb />
Williamston. Greenville. <lb />
f MOORE. <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, <lb />
Office under Opera House. Third <lb />
GREENVILLE. N C. <lb />
Pia in ion <lb />
F. TYSON, <lb />
Attorney and Counselor at-Law <lb />
Greenville, County. <lb />
Practices in all the Courts. <lb />
Civil end Criminal Business <lb />
II a special of fraud <lb />
ages, actions to recover land, and col- <lb />
Prompt and careful attention given <lb />
all business. <lb />
Money to loan on approved security. <lb />
Terns easy. <lb />
WILCOX, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Practices in Lenoir and Pitt counties <lb />
II. LONG, <lb />
Attorney- A <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
w, <lb />
Practices in all the Court. <lb />
J. H. BLOUNT. J. L. FLEMING <lb />
Blount Fleming; <lb />
Attorneys-at-Law, <lb />
keen vi n. c. <lb />
e- Practice in all the Courts. <lb />
L. C. LATHAM. <lb />
HAM ft <lb />
HARRY. SKINNER <lb />
.-K INNER. <lb />
T- 1.11 <lb />
N- C- <lb />
John E. Woodard. Y. C. Harding, <lb />
Wilson, N. C. Greenville, N. C <lb />
WOODARD A HARDING, <lb />
ATTORNEYS-AT-LAW, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
Special attention given to collections <lb />
and settlement of claims. <lb />
R. D. L. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
GREENVILLE, N- C. <lb />
DR. H. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
IN <lb />
O. <lb />
up stairs over E, render Cos <lb />
Hardware store. <lb />
The Philadelphia Times reports an <lb />
official of the Railroad, <lb />
Speaking recently of the difference in <lb />
railroad traffic since one year as <lb />
saying that the 1st of December, <lb />
1894, that company had cars <lb />
stowed away in sheds because not want- <lb />
ed, while to-day they are not only using <lb />
every car own, but could use over <lb />
more cars than they have at <lb />
their command. When <lb />
whether it was not possible to obtain <lb />
cars from other railways to bridge over <lb />
the emergency, the answer was that <lb />
every other railroad the country has <lb />
use for more cars than it now <lb />
The business of the railroads is <lb />
sally regarded as an infallible <lb />
of the general business of a country. <lb />
If be true and if the <lb />
is a type of the oilier railroad lines, <lb />
then the country's business must be <lb />
righting itself indeed, <lb />
have reached already a of pros- <lb />
Observer. <lb />
FIFTH DAY. <lb />
Minutes of Saturday and Sunday <lb />
afternoon sessions were read and ii- <lb />
proved. <lb />
Revs. T. Page and J. C. <lb />
were placed on the min- <lb />
list. <lb />
The hour of o'clock having <lb />
rived the special order relating to the <lb />
conference organ, the North Carolina <lb />
Advocate, came up. Rev. W. L. Gris- <lb />
half owner of the paper, offered <lb />
through Rev. F. D. Swindell to sell <lb />
his Mods at one thousand dollars less <lb />
than cost. Referred to committee on <lb />
Hooks and <lb />
The statistical secretaries made their <lb />
reports which showed considerable in- <lb />
crease in church membership <lb />
erection of new churches. <lb />
The total white membership is <lb />
colored total In- <lb />
adults Sun- <lb />
day-schools teachers <lb />
scholars 38,303- Amount paid confer- <lb />
claimants members of <lb />
societies church edifices val- <lb />
of church property <lb />
The committee on Books and <lb />
brought in their report, reject- <lb />
the offer of Rev. L. W. Grissom <lb />
to sell his interest in the to <lb />
the conference. A lively discussion <lb />
look place, participated in by Revs. F. <lb />
D. Swindell and R. John. Rev. <lb />
J. T. Gibbs moved the previous <lb />
and the ottered by Rev. <lb />
R. John to not adopt the North <lb />
Carolina Advocate as the organ of the <lb />
conference, was adopted by a vote of <lb />
to A consisting W. <lb />
S. Black, R. A. Willis, II. B. John, <lb />
T. J. Jarvis, T. II. and Q. II. <lb />
were appointed to confer with <lb />
the Western Conference to take charge <lb />
the paper question. <lb />
Question Where are the preach- <lb />
stationed this year The following <lb />
arc those best known Inn <lb />
Washington R. Hall, <lb />
Presiding Elder <lb />
J. Moor- <lb />
man. <lb />
Washington circuit. W. Martin. <lb />
Wilson N. Ivey. <lb />
James-, T. <lb />
Swan A. Watkins. <lb />
Fremont II. <lb />
and L. <lb />
Warlick. <lb />
Aurora C. <lb />
P. Jerome. <lb />
Nashville C. Davis. <lb />
Ryder. <lb />
Bethel Barnes. <lb />
Spring Hope F Taylor. <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
Tarboro circuitS A Gotten. <lb />
Rocky Mount E Under- <lb />
wood. <lb />
Greenville II D Wilson. <lb />
South M Jackson. <lb />
Greenville II Joyner. <lb />
Norman. <lb />
II <lb />
Louisburg F Smith. <lb />
It B John continues its <lb />
Elder of Elizabeth City district. <lb />
Plymouth L <lb />
Trinity College C <lb />
street <lb />
L Nash. <lb />
street station <lb />
R A Willis. <lb />
Hill It Raven. <lb />
Scotland Neck B Saw- <lb />
M Sham- <lb />
berger. <lb />
A Bishop. <lb />
Mount Olive circuit M N <lb />
J O <lb />
Grifton S <lb />
Carteret T <lb />
Morehead City C <lb />
B Anderson. <lb />
THE LITTLE PATCHED <lb />
Suppose that war between ti United <lb />
How dear to my heart arc the pants of states and Great shot I occur. <lb />
. l. <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
for 1896. <lb />
Brim full of fresh, crisp <lb />
news,, both foreign <lb />
and domestic <lb />
Only a year. <lb />
my childhood, <lb />
When fond recollection presents <lb />
th to view, <lb />
The pants that I wore in the deep <lb />
tangled wild wood. <lb />
And likewise the groves where the <lb />
crab apple grew, <lb />
The wide spreading seat with its little <lb />
square patches. <lb />
The pockets that bulged with <lb />
luncheon for noon. <lb />
And also with marbles and fish-worms <lb />
matches <lb />
And and kite strings from <lb />
March until June, <lb />
The little patched trousers, the made <lb />
over trousers, <lb />
The high water trousers that fit me <lb />
too soon. <lb />
No pantaloons ever performed great- <lb />
service <lb />
In filling the hearts of us <lb />
with joy ; <lb />
They made the descent from Adolphus <lb />
to Jarvis, <lb />
Right down through a family of ten <lb />
little boys, <lb />
Through no fault of mine, known to <lb />
or to others, <lb />
I'm the tenderest branch on our big <lb />
family tree; <lb />
And having done service for nine older <lb />
brothers, <lb />
They came down to me slightly bag- <lb />
at the knee, <lb />
The little patched trousers, the second- <lb />
hand trousers, <lb />
The old family trousers that bagged at <lb />
the knee. <lb />
Hex. Z. Vance. <lb />
IN NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Matters of Interest Over the State. <lb />
The Plymouth military company has <lb />
been added to the State Guards. <lb />
T. J. Jr., one of Winston's <lb />
tobacco manufactures, hag brought suit <lb />
against the <lb />
Street Company for killing <lb />
his little son on September 10th. <lb />
A Rocky Mount who is gifted <lb />
with supernatural vision, can sec in the <lb />
dark well enough to read a <lb />
Citizens of Mt. Airy will vote on the <lb />
first Monday in March on a proposition <lb />
of bonds to pay for a <lb />
system of water works. <lb />
In the ten years Dr. pas- <lb />
at the Wilmington First <lb />
church, has been <lb />
collected for all purposes. Of this <lb />
amount about half, has <lb />
been expended for its own expenses. <lb />
We learn that a strange disease is <lb />
prevalent among the hogs in <lb />
Some of the farmers have <lb />
about all their fattening <lb />
They are attacked with fits and in a <lb />
short time they lie down and <lb />
ford Express. <lb />
The faculty of the Agricultural and <lb />
Mechanical College has expelled <lb />
students, two of them for making a <lb />
lire out of materials owned by a <lb />
contractor. The fire was made as a <lb />
mark of disapproval of the action of the <lb />
faculty in prohibiting games of football <lb />
off the college grounds <lb />
Mrs. J. II. county, <lb />
is peculiarly afflicted. It is stated <lb />
that blood will suddenly break through <lb />
the pores of the skin just like <lb />
and stand in great beads on the <lb />
face. She is able to be up most of the <lb />
time and tend to her domestic affairs. <lb />
This sweating of blood comes on once <lb />
or twice a day and lasts only a short <lb />
time, when she will bathe her face and <lb />
no sign is left, until it suddenly breaks <lb />
out again. <lb />
The Wrought Iron Range folks, who <lb />
took in this country about a year ago, <lb />
sold a range to Major W. A- Graham, <lb />
of Lincoln county. after the <lb />
range was set up Major Graham's <lb />
house was burned and he sued the range <lb />
folks for damages, claiming that the fire <lb />
was caused by the range being <lb />
put up. The case was tried in the <lb />
Federal Court in Charlotte last week <lb />
and the major was awarded <lb />
The company <lb />
Landmark. <lb />
A preacher addressed his <lb />
flock with great earnestness on the sub- <lb />
of as <lb />
beloved friends, de greatest of all <lb />
was the loaves and fishes. <lb />
was five thousand loaves and two <lb />
thousand fishes, and de twelve <lb />
had to eat all. De miracle is, <lb />
didn't Constitution. <lb />
A man is a creature of cast-iron <lb />
its ; woman adapts herself to <lb />
this is the foundation of the moral <lb />
difference between them. <lb />
or between this country and any other <lb />
great in what would <lb />
it find this vast country Are the <lb />
United States prepared for war on laud <lb />
or sea There is but one answer. <lb />
Gen. Miles says that the entire <lb />
tic coast cities south of New York arc <lb />
in a condition. It is then <lb />
an excellent time to improve I he tie- <lb />
fences. There is no sounder adage <lb />
applicable to our country than time <lb />
of peace prepare for war. We must <lb />
maintain the Monroe Doctrine, and yet <lb />
our seacoast cities will be tit the <lb />
of the great navies. In ten or fifteen <lb />
days after war was declared with Eng- <lb />
land, her great armored vessels could <lb />
be battering down the cities that lit; at <lb />
their mercy. Is this a pleasant thing <lb />
to have, or a desirable condition tin- <lb />
great Republic to be in How.-in it <lb />
enforce the Monroe Doctrine with such <lb />
a navy Senator of Illinois, <lb />
voiced public sentiment on the 10th <lb />
n addressing the Senate when he <lb />
have reached the time when it <lb />
becomes our bounden duty to to <lb />
the world with dignity and firmness, <lb />
that thus far. but no farther, shall <lb />
foreign systems of government p <lb />
in it to approach. Our policy i.- the <lb />
American policy, our doctrine is the <lb />
protection of American interests, and <lb />
our motto is America for -ins. <lb />
We do not claim that the world is oars, <lb />
but we insist on our right to be in- <lb />
upon affairs pertaining to the <lb />
American continents. Let us bull I <lb />
strongly and speak so plainly that th <lb />
way of the future Executives, Prime <lb />
Ministers and Ambassadors of our <lb />
country shall be <lb />
The Congress should take -as t <lb />
protect the cities and seaports on the <lb />
long Atlantic coast and speedily. Th <lb />
leading Powers in Europe have larger, <lb />
more powerful navies than our country <lb />
has. There is, therefore no Jingoism <lb />
or patriotic gush in insisting upon th <lb />
demanded. It is a ease of <lb />
While we have no idea <lb />
war will occur between Great <lb />
and the United States soon, either <lb />
growing out of the Venezuelan <lb />
or Behring Straits or any -r <lb />
question to the front now, it is not an <lb />
impossible thing. In fact, war with <lb />
some other European Power might <lb />
cur in any year. While this country <lb />
can take care of itself, so far as an <lb />
is concerned, it is very different in <lb />
so far as the navy is involved. If war <lb />
does occur the injuries inflicted will not <lb />
be all on one side. England may <lb />
vessels and even bombard or de- <lb />
our cities and towns near tin- <lb />
coast, but she cannot invade with any <lb />
safety to her armies. On the other <lb />
hand, it would be Ireland's <lb />
to off the British yoke, or assure <lb />
her full rights, and Canada might too <lb />
fall a prey to our invading armies. A <lb />
million of men in Canada would make <lb />
quick work of the <lb />
Messenger. <lb />
HE'D DONE DONE IT. <lb />
The brilliant Performance of a Fool <lb />
Finding- Fault. <lb />
We have had occasions from time to <lb />
time to give instances showing the utter <lb />
incompetence of many of those fools <lb />
whom the late Fred Douglass Memorial <lb />
Association created magistrates. One <lb />
of the most ridiculous occurrences that <lb />
we have yet heard of, comes to our <lb />
ears this week. <lb />
It seems that some days ago, a <lb />
couple bearing a license to marry, is- <lb />
sued by the register of deeds of <lb />
Rutherford county, went before a <lb />
magistrate in county <lb />
and invoked his services. The <lb />
mus read over the marriage service <lb />
and pronounced them man end wife. <lb />
After wrestling with the blank for <lb />
several days and being too ignorant to <lb />
make the proper return, the <lb />
upon a Democratic magistrate o <lb />
this county and asked him to help <lb />
make a return the license. Upon <lb />
investigation, the learned <lb />
that the license was issued in <lb />
ford county and that there were no <lb />
witnesses to the marriage. <lb />
said he to the <lb />
can't marry these <lb />
by Gd, I've done done it <lb />
exclaimed the <lb />
The democrat gravely advised him <lb />
to summon the pair before him and <lb />
undo his illegal work by reading the <lb />
marriage ceremony <lb />
The took the advice, <lb />
married the couple he had married a <lb />
week or ten days before, then escorted <lb />
them to the Democratic magistrate who <lb />
married them legally. <lb />
If Jesse Holmes, the fool killer, <lb />
should visit North Carolina about this <lb />
time, there would be many vacancies <lb />
on the bench magisterial to be tilled. <lb />
Democrat. <lb />
The winds refused to blow ; <lb />
said they, try. <lb />
north, or south, or east, or west. <lb />
These folks to <lb />
The north wind, too <lb />
The west wind, and <lb />
The east is chilly, they complain ; <lb />
The south, cool <lb />
And so the windmills stopped. <lb />
The ships lay idly by, <lb />
The sun beat down from morn till night <lb />
Because no clouds could fly. <lb />
The people sighed for wind ; <lb />
hot or said they, <lb />
north, or south, or east, or west, <lb />
be the wisest way <lb />
Youth's Companion. <lb />
Don't Do It. <lb />
OUT OF THE ORDINARY. <lb />
Cotton manufacturing interests are <lb />
interesting reading just now. In <lb />
brief, they show the following <lb />
The spindles of the world increased <lb />
from nearly in 1888 to a <lb />
little over in <lb />
Britain gaining less than 1-12th on <lb />
; Europe a little over <lb />
on the Northern States a <lb />
little more than on nearly <lb />
India nearly doubling its <lb />
and the Southern States <lb />
gaining nearly per cent, on <lb />
spindles. The same rate of gain <lb />
continued for years would give the <lb />
South more than double as many <lb />
spindles as India ; per cent, more <lb />
than the Northern Slate's j over pa r <lb />
cent, of the number in Europe, and <lb />
within per cent, of the number in <lb />
Great The handwriting on <lb />
the wall clearly foretells the destiny of <lb />
the South as the great manufacturing <lb />
section of the world and that in the <lb />
next half <lb />
It Is nearly Christmas and the <lb />
Congressmen haven't given the <lb />
people free coinage yet. is <lb />
too busy with John Sher- <lb />
man, and Butler Jim Young that <lb />
he was too getting to house-keep- <lb />
to think of politics. Harry Skinner <lb />
a Biblical excuse, Linney wants to <lb />
limit it to the product of American <lb />
mines, Pearson is too busy playing lead- <lb />
of society, Strowd and Shuford have <lb />
not learned the ropes yet, and Settle <lb />
hasn't finished fixing up Tom Reed's <lb />
committees. It begins to look like <lb />
these new Congressmen will have to <lb />
postpone free coinage till New Year's <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
The letter sounds odd for a <lb />
name, but there is a distinguished <lb />
in Belgium whose name is O, no <lb />
more and no less. <lb />
A collection of over Saxon and <lb />
coins found at <lb />
in Hampshire, in 1828, was recently <lb />
-Id in London in one block for <lb />
Sarah Bernhardt's last gown cost <lb />
It is decorated with diamonds <lb />
and turquoises and the. skins of <lb />
ermines were required to line the <lb />
rain. <lb />
Tramps in Holland are put in a <lb />
cistern which has a in the bot- <lb />
t Water is turned on in sufficient <lb />
volume to keep them pumping briskly <lb />
to keep from drowning. One dose is <lb />
generally sufficient. <lb />
The length of the day varies in <lb />
places. In London the longest <lb />
day has sixteen and a half hours ; at <lb />
St Petersburg, nineteen, and in SpitS- <lb />
the longest day lasts throe <lb />
months a half. <lb />
A bow load for deep-sea sounding <lb />
s a cartridge which on <lb />
t in the bottom. A submerged <lb />
microphone receives sound and the <lb />
depth is estimated from the time <lb />
by the lead in sinking to the <lb />
butt <lb />
The Great Light. <lb />
Though the endeavor to construct a <lb />
light-house at Diamond shoals, seven <lb />
miles beyond Hatteras, has been a fail- <lb />
thus far, it is believed the new plan <lb />
reported by the engineers will be a <lb />
success. An account of it says that <lb />
the plan contemplates a <lb />
resting on eight great iron tubes, <lb />
which are to be driven to a depth of <lb />
thirty feet. They are to form a circle <lb />
sixty feet in diameter, and to be of such <lb />
a length that the floor resting upon <lb />
then will he about fifty feet above high <lb />
water. On this floor a structure of <lb />
east steel will be raised to provide <lb />
quarters for the three keepers, and <lb />
above will be the light and the steam <lb />
siren. The lens is to be the most pow- <lb />
in existence, the light, <lb />
which is to be electric, to a distance of <lb />
twenty-three miles. <lb />
The engineers believe that the plan <lb />
of having the light rest on pillars, be- <lb />
tween which the winds and waves can <lb />
play, promises better success than one <lb />
for a solid structure would offer <lb />
more resistance to the elements. The <lb />
cost of the light house is to be a million <lb />
of dollars. <lb />
If you wont to succeed in this world <lb />
you must make your own o; port unities <lb />
as you go on. The man who writs for <lb />
some seventh wave to toss him on the <lb />
day laud will find that the seventh <lb />
wave is a long time coming. You can <lb />
commit no greater folly than to sit by <lb />
the roadside until some one comes <lb />
along and invites you to ride with him <lb />
to wealth or Sun- office more than a year ago. <lb />
Don't leave the Christmas shopping <lb />
until the day before Christmas. <lb />
Don't worry and fret when you find <lb />
such a crowd about the Christmas <lb />
counters, that it is impossible to <lb />
make the desired purchases. <lb />
Don't neglect the little tots in tho <lb />
home, nor any of the home duties in <lb />
your anxiety to finish some elaborate <lb />
Christmas finery. <lb />
Don't plan some gorgeous Christmas <lb />
entertainment with extravagant re- <lb />
at the expense of the com- <lb />
fort of the home loved ones. <lb />
Don't forget that it is an insult to an <lb />
acquaintance to send him a gift which <lb />
is not accompanied by friendly <lb />
Don't let your Christmas be spoiled <lb />
through selfishness, envy, resentment <lb />
or any bitter feelings; but hold fast to <lb />
the love and simple sacredness belong- <lb />
to the day. <lb />
Don't belong to that class who arc <lb />
trying to make it a day for the ex- <lb />
change of gifts by which the giver's so- <lb />
standing is t J be determined. <lb />
Don't forget that it is wrong to give <lb />
mote than one can well afford simply <lb />
for the sake of making a costly present, <lb />
or to give to anyone simply because it <lb />
is customary to give gifts on that day. <lb />
Don't discard the dainty white table <lb />
linen for more elaborate dining table <lb />
display. However fashionable <lb />
materials may lie for table use <lb />
they certainly are not in good taste. <lb />
Don't fail to leave the plush and <lb />
satin and ribbons to their proper places <lb />
keep them off of the dining table, <lb />
and use instead, dainty floral <lb />
and fresh green ferns. <lb />
Don't forget that in striving to make <lb />
the Christmas season beautiful <lb />
we will find that we have <lb />
made it perfect to ourselves. <lb />
Benefit of Thorough Business <lb />
Active Boards of Trade and similar <lb />
organizations arc by no means useless <lb />
in any city. When each business man <lb />
is content to it and take <lb />
what conies to him, there can never be <lb />
the same results as when the business <lb />
men unite, consult together as to plans <lb />
for advancing the general interests of <lb />
the community and act according to <lb />
their combined wisdom. <lb />
The Durham Sun in speaking of <lb />
this, well says that no city has ever <lb />
become actively progressive unless she <lb />
and united her strength. <lb />
M e all remember the old story of how <lb />
the giant laughed at the single string in <lb />
a cord, snatching it asunder in an in- <lb />
and defying his persecutors. <lb />
But the cords were combined and inter- <lb />
woven, and when placed around his <lb />
neck, was irresistible and caused his <lb />
death. This but illustrates the old <lb />
adage, that unity there is <lb />
Let our merchants study this fact that <lb />
in unity of action there is power, and <lb />
as a unit all work together for the com- <lb />
good of town <lb />
born Journal. <lb />
Pitt County Stock. <lb />
For many years under a Democrat- <lb />
official Mr. A. W. a Pitt <lb />
county boy, held the position of chief <lb />
clerk in the Superior Court C <lb />
office of Wake count-. In the election <lb />
last year Wake county, like many <lb />
on, got caught in the slump and went <lb />
down under the fusion landslide. D. <lb />
II. Young was elected but not- <lb />
withstanding Mr. Move was a <lb />
Young could not run the office <lb />
without him, and though Republicans <lb />
kept throwing it up at Young it was <lb />
not until last week that a successor to <lb />
Mr. was named. Speaking of <lb />
him the Press-Visitor <lb />
the gentleman who re- <lb />
tires, the best testimonial that <lb />
could be him, from the fact that <lb />
he has continuously held his office <lb />
Mr. Young since that gentleman <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
Absolutely pure <lb />
Death of a Most Estimable Young <lb />
Kan. <lb />
THE JOKE HE NEVER SPOKE. <lb />
Several weeks ago Robert Wilson, <lb />
the oldest son of Mr. and Mrs. R. T- <lb />
Wilson, of was stricken <lb />
with pneumonia. He was a student at <lb />
the Greenville Male Academy here <lb />
and many were the in <lb />
respect to his condition. The disease <lb />
proved to be very severe, and his <lb />
friends soon became alarmed as to his <lb />
condition. About ten days ago there <lb />
was some improvement, and hopes wore <lb />
entertained that he might recover. <lb />
The sad news, however, reached here <lb />
List night that he died on Monday <lb />
night at ten minutes to nine o'clock. <lb />
He was just budding into young man- <lb />
hood and no young man in the writer's <lb />
acquaintance had seemingly brighter <lb />
prospects. He had been for several <lb />
years past a student at Chocowinity <lb />
school but came here last September <lb />
to pursue his studies. He was studious, <lb />
intelligent, honest, truthful upright and <lb />
persevering, and his Instructor has had <lb />
no boy in his fifteen years in the school <lb />
room for whom he had more respect <lb />
than Robert This confidence <lb />
and respect had already ripened into <lb />
affection, and no one outside of his rel- <lb />
mourns more sorrowfully his <lb />
seeming untimely death. It ought to <lb />
be also that there was not a single <lb />
of his fellow students that he did <lb />
not number among his friends in truth <lb />
and in deed. <lb />
Robert was just sixteen years old <lb />
and was the ideal of father, mother, sis- <lb />
and brother all whom are grieved <lb />
beyond expression that one so young <lb />
and so promising should be taken away <lb />
from them. He was a member of the <lb />
Episcopal and every act of his <lb />
known to the writer was that of a con- <lb />
Christian young man. lie <lb />
was buried Wednesday at Trinity <lb />
church in Beaufort county. To the <lb />
sorrowing father, mother, sister and <lb />
brother can conic only consolation <lb />
Lord gave and the Lord hath <lb />
taken may the Holy Spirit <lb />
enable them to see His hand in this <lb />
ore bereavement and say will <lb />
be The sympathy of many <lb />
friends in town and in the country go <lb />
out to the bereaved his teacher <lb />
especially would assure them that their <lb />
sorrow is his, and that as long as life <lb />
lasts he shall remember Robert as one <lb />
well Worthy to be loved. <lb />
Transplanted from earth to Haven <lb />
our loss is his gain. To us it is left to <lb />
so live that we shall meet him again in <lb />
Sweet May the <lb />
great comforter give to the aged parents <lb />
grace to bare this sore trial and see in <lb />
it the hand of Him who loved us and <lb />
are himself for us. W. II. It. <lb />
Breathes there a man with so dead, <lb />
Who never to himself hath said. <lb />
At night before he went to ed <lb />
I, swear, I'll crack n joke <lb />
Whose heart has ne'er within him <lb />
As o'er an o'er his thoughts he turned <lb />
Till mad. then from his mind has <lb />
spurned <lb />
The joke he never spoke. <lb />
Danville <lb />
HOW THEY DIFFER. <lb />
The Roanoke Union. <lb />
The Roanoke union of the Tar River <lb />
Baptist Association will be held in <lb />
Washington, Dee. 27-29. Fol- <lb />
lowing is the <lb />
Friday a. <lb />
J. A. <lb />
p. <lb />
p. from the <lb />
Churches. <lb />
p. Work, within <lb />
our Bounds. What has been done and <lb />
what remains to be J. R. <lb />
Pace, J. W. Powell and R. T. Vann. <lb />
p. in-----Sermon. <lb />
Saturday a. and <lb />
E. J. Edwards. <lb />
a. Fundamental <lb />
of J. K. <lb />
W. V. Savage and J. W. Carter. <lb />
a. Nature and Office of <lb />
the Holy C. M. Billings, <lb />
J. A. and J. A. <lb />
p. Attitude of Baptists <lb />
Toward Education, Secular and <lb />
J. W. Powell, J. W. Car- <lb />
and R. T. Vann. <lb />
p. m. Our Duty to Orphans <lb />
Rev. E. J. Edwards, E. E. Hilliard <lb />
and Rev. J. A. <lb />
Sunday a. School <lb />
Mass Meeting. <lb />
a. <lb />
p. <lb />
A can cut a book only with a <lb />
paper cutter ; a woman deftly inserts a <lb />
hairpin, and the book is cut. <lb />
Shaving is the only use to which a <lb />
man puts a razor; a woman employs it <lb />
for a chiropodist's purposes. <lb />
A man storms if the ting-paper <lb />
is not conveniently near ; a woman dries <lb />
the ink by blowing on it, waving the <lb />
paper in the air, or it near a <lb />
lamp or fire. <lb />
A man does not attempt lo drive a <lb />
nail unless he has a hammer ; a woman <lb />
does not hesitate to utilize anything, <lb />
from the heel of n boot to the back of a <lb />
brush. <lb />
A man drops a letter unhesitatingly <lb />
in the box; I woman rereads the ad- <lb />
dress, assures herself that the envelope <lb />
is sealed, the stamp secure, and then <lb />
throws it violently into the box. <lb />
A woman ransacks her brain trying <lb />
to mend a broken object; a man puts it <lb />
aside forgets that for which there is <lb />
no remedy. Which is the superior <lb />
Minnie Conrad, in <lb />
A man consider corkscrew absolute- <lb />
necessary lo open a bottle ; a woman <lb />
attempts to extract the cork with the <lb />
scissors; if she does not succeed readily, <lb />
she pushes the cork in the bottle since <lb />
the essential thing is to get at the <lb />
fluid. <lb />
For a man signifies the <lb />
end of a conversation and the moment <lb />
of his departure ; for a woman it is the <lb />
beginning of a new chapter, for it is <lb />
just when they arc taking leave of each <lb />
other that women think of the most <lb />
important topics of conversation. <lb />
When a man must <lb />
be in apple-pie order; pen, paper, and <lb />
ink must be just so, a profound silence <lb />
must reign while he accomplishes this <lb />
important function. A woman gets any <lb />
sheet of paper, tears it perhaps from a <lb />
book or portfolio, sharpens a pencil <lb />
with the scissors, puts the paper on an <lb />
old Atlas, crosses her feel, balances <lb />
herself on the chair, and confides her <lb />
thoughts lo paper, changing from pencil <lb />
to pen and vice versa from time to <lb />
time, nor does she care if the children <lb />
romp or the cook comes to speak to <lb />
her. <lb />
England Take <lb />
The President's message on the <lb />
boundary dispute ween <lb />
Great Britain is uncompromising in <lb />
tone in regard to the maintenance of the <lb />
Monroe doctrine. He recommend <lb />
that a committee be sent to <lb />
the dispute and locate the <lb />
This he says is made <lb />
by the failure of the effort of the <lb />
United States to secure arbitration. <lb />
The President's message is among <lb />
the ablest he has ever written. In so <lb />
many words he virtually tells Groat <lb />
that sooner than permit the <lb />
rape of Venezuela, a weak sinter Re- <lb />
public, the United States is ready to <lb />
go to war to enforce the sacred Monroe <lb />
doctrine. <lb />
There is nothing of the jingo in the <lb />
message. It is a statesman-like <lb />
ration of the policy that has always <lb />
characterized this <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
Ode to the Calamity Howler. <lb />
Bury the calamity howler out in the <lb />
woods, in a beautiful hole in the <lb />
ground, wood-pecker pecks <lb />
and the straddle bug straddles around. <lb />
He is no good in tho city of push ; too <lb />
impractical, stingy dead; but he <lb />
wants the whole earth and the crust, <lb />
and the stars that shine overhead. <lb />
Then hustle him off to the bumble bee's <lb />
roost, and bury him deep in the ground; <lb />
he's no use to us here; get him out of <lb />
the way, and make room for a man <lb />
that is Times. <lb />
State op Ohio, City or <lb />
Lucas County j <lb />
Frank J. makes oath that <lb />
he the senior partner of the firm of If. <lb />
Co., doing business In <lb />
the City of Toledo, County State <lb />
Aforesaid and that said will pay <lb />
the sum of ONE HUNDRED <lb />
LARS for each and every ease of Ca- <lb />
that cannot be cured by the use <lb />
of i Cure. <lb />
Sworn to before me and In <lb />
my presence, this day of December <lb />
A, . 1896.<lb />
Notary Public <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is take intern- <lb />
acts directly on the blood and <lb />
surfaces of the system. Send <lb />
for testimonials, free, <lb />
F. J. Toledo, O. <lb />
by Druggists,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017777_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
rt v-.<lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville. N. C. <lb />
I J, mi <lb />
Entered at the it <lb />
C, as second-class tn matter. <lb />
December 1895. <lb />
EX MINISTER J. <lb />
INTERVIEWED. <lb />
JAB VIS <lb />
His Approval of the Pres- <lb />
Firm Support- <lb />
of the Monroe Doctrine <lb />
What He Advised the Eng- <lb />
Consul General. <lb />
CH LETTER. <lb />
A few ago there was n terrible <lb />
explosion at a mine in Chatham <lb />
county in which forty three people lost <lb />
their lives. It is most dis- <lb />
aster that ever in Heath <lb />
Carolina. <lb />
Senator Hill has introduced a bill in <lb />
the Senate to repeal the law which pro- <lb />
those who served in the <lb />
army and navy from eon. <lb />
missions in the S. army <lb />
he will push it when Congress <lb />
January ltd, after the holiday re- <lb />
Last Thursday was a memorable <lb />
day in Washington City. It was a <lb />
day of excitement and The <lb />
Senate panel the Venezuelan Com- <lb />
mission bill just as it came from the <lb />
House. The President sent a special <lb />
message to Congress urging them not to <lb />
adjourn for the holidays. There were <lb />
two meetings of the cabinet and the <lb />
announcement made that the country <lb />
is threatened with another financial <lb />
panic. <lb />
Humors have already reached Wash- <lb />
of the intention of English <lb />
to frighten the administration by <lb />
attempting to bring on a money panic <lb />
unloading American securities held <lb />
by them. Those rumors cause no <lb />
easiness here; such action would be <lb />
more costly to the British than than a <lb />
war would be. The silver men in Con- <lb />
would welcome such a move on <lb />
the part of the British, as they <lb />
it would result in the States sit- <lb />
ting up an financial policy <lb />
of its own. This country has too many- <lb />
resources which its patriotic citizens <lb />
would at the of the gov <lb />
eminent to be frightened by such <lb />
Wax Preferable to a Surrender of One <lb />
Iota of the Monroe Doctrine. <lb />
The recent message of President <lb />
Cleveland bearing upon the dispute <lb />
between Venezuela and Great Britain <lb />
being the chief topic of conversation <lb />
just now, and that no <lb />
within our knowledge is better <lb />
pared to give an opinion on foreign <lb />
fairs than our ex-Minister <lb />
J. Jarvis, and that whatever <lb />
he might say would be read with more <lb />
than ordinary interest, the <lb />
had an interview with him and his <lb />
views are given in the conversation <lb />
that <lb />
you spent four years <lb />
in South America, it may be of inter- <lb />
est to readers to have an <lb />
expression of your views on the Pres- <lb />
recent message on Venezuelan <lb />
affairs, mid we will be glad to publish <lb />
them if you have no objection. <lb />
have no objection to giving them. <lb />
I have read the message with great <lb />
pleasure and hearty approval. am <lb />
delighted to see the President take so <lb />
bold a stand in and support <lb />
of the Monroe <lb />
you give any special <lb />
to the Monroe doctrine while you <lb />
were a Minister of the United States in <lb />
South America <lb />
immediately after my appoint- <lb />
I devoted myself to the study of <lb />
International Law and especially to <lb />
the Monroe doctrine in its <lb />
to European relations with the <lb />
South American <lb />
you have any occasion to <lb />
assert the Monroe doctrine while you <lb />
were representing this country at the <lb />
government of Brazil <lb />
The English government <lb />
Cleveland's <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington, D. C, Dec 20- <lb />
Such a wave of enthusiastic patriot- <lb />
ism as has greeted President Cleveland's <lb />
message notifying Great Britain that <lb />
the Monroe doctrine is not a historical <lb />
myth, but a tangible policy that the <lb />
United States is to maintain <lb />
by force of has not been seen by <lb />
the present generation. The White <lb />
House has been flooded with messages <lb />
by wire and mail from all sections of <lb />
the country, containing not only con- <lb />
but offers of volunteers by <lb />
thousands from organizations of veter. <lb />
ans, both and Confederate. <lb />
ORIGINAL OBSERVATIONS. <lb />
Congress forgot its past antagonism to- <lb />
wards the President and gave him the <lb />
authority to appoint a commission to in- <lb />
and report the true <lb />
between Venezuela and British Guiana <lb />
and appropriated the pay its ex- <lb />
and to show Great that <lb />
no bluff was being made a bill has been <lb />
introduced hi branches of Congress <lb />
appropriating to <lb />
mediately available, for strengthening <lb />
the military armament on our sea-coast <lb />
and the Canadian frontier. Congress, <lb />
like the President, fully recognizes the <lb />
tendency of European governments to <lb />
make light of the Munroe doctrine, and <lb />
is determined to let them learn differ- <lb />
if it takes a war to teach them <lb />
the lesson. <lb />
Whatever may be the opinion of <lb />
as to President Cleveland's past <lb />
acts it is universally believed that his <lb />
Monroe doctrine message will be known <lb />
in history as the second Declaration of <lb />
Secretary is also getting high <lb />
commendation from all quarters. His <lb />
masterly communication to Lord <lb />
bury is justly regarded as the best inter- <lb />
of the Monroe doctrine ever <lb />
printed, one which should be used as a <lb />
text book in every school in the <lb />
States. It has placed him at one <lb />
bound in the front rank of American <lb />
Statesmen, and was never excelled by <lb />
was pressing the collection of a claim . <lb />
against the government of I lie <lb />
Let's fight England and twist the. <lb />
lion's tail off. <lb />
Sliding down hill is great .-port, bu <lb />
it has its drawbacks. <lb />
As the twig is bent so is the gift in- <lb />
the Christmas tree. <lb />
He who worships a dollar worships a <lb />
very small and changeable god. <lb />
He who puts his thoughts on getting <lb />
well will soonest have no need of a <lb />
physician. <lb />
It is more; pleasant to receive pres- <lb />
than to give them, and not so ex- <lb />
pensive, either. <lb />
Searching for happiness be <lb />
so unsuccessful if you were not <lb />
finding fault. <lb />
If conscience is what makes cowards <lb />
of us all, there ought to be a great <lb />
many brave men now-a-times. <lb />
Your presents will be more <lb />
appreciated than your Christmas ah- <lb />
The happiest man is who prevents <lb />
himself doing things he finds objection- <lb />
able in others. <lb />
Congress is determined to it <lb />
this session, as chaplains of <lb />
both houses are men. <lb />
Nearly every family observed <lb />
ground-hog day during the past two <lb />
have been making <lb />
age. <lb />
Evergreens are popular at this sea- <lb />
son of the year. They are favorites <lb />
with us at any the form of <lb />
and bills. <lb />
The big turkey struts proudly by, <lb />
his coat is sleek and trim; this week <lb />
he gobbles as we week we'll <lb />
gobble we get an <lb />
out to dine. <lb />
If in providing our gifts for those <lb />
who do not need them, we remember <lb />
those down whose chimney no Santa <lb />
Claus ever comes, wouldn't our own <lb />
hearts beat more joyful music to the <lb />
measure of the Christmas bells <lb />
CHRISTMAS IS <lb />
PL<lb />
to <lb />
In Purchasing; a Suit or Overcoat <lb />
We don't confine you to a few prices. Starting as low as you can buy a good garment for, we <lb />
lead you gradually through more than a <lb />
One but notice the difference in <lb />
the verdicts of the juries of Jones <lb />
Carteret county in the <lb />
of the insurance cases <lb />
now being tried in the former county. <lb />
Last fall every ease tried at Beaufort <lb />
resulted in a verdict of acquittal <lb />
Every case so far tried at Trenton ha. <lb />
in a verdict of guilty. If ones <lb />
half of the evidence introduced is true <lb />
it could only be expected that all of <lb />
the parties will be convicted. At last <lb />
three of the parties have turned state's <lb />
evidence and the state of facts narrated <lb />
by them show that Col. Hinsdale was <lb />
not far wrong when he said at Beau- <lb />
fort last propose if your <lb />
ship will permit me to unearth and ex <lb />
pose lo the people of this state MM o <lb />
the vilest conspiracies ever concocted <lb />
in North <lb />
Not there is much talk <lb />
about war when there is little prospect <lb />
of one. For some months there has <lb />
been much discussion war clouds <lb />
in the old country but talk is about all. <lb />
Now it has shifted and we have the <lb />
discussion on our own soil and not <lb />
without cause. For the only thing <lb />
which prevent war now is that <lb />
England back down. The <lb />
Sates has and there is no back- <lb />
ward step she take. President <lb />
Cleveland's message to Congress com- <lb />
unreservedly this country to war <lb />
if its demands are acceded to. Con- <lb />
a dissenting vote <lb />
you are right, we are with you <lb />
Now what will England This is <lb />
the question. We have spoken and done <lb />
n no uncertain sound. It is now Eng- <lb />
land's time to respond. We have <lb />
ready commenced preparations for war. <lb />
The session of the Senate Wednesday <lb />
was devoted entirely to the matter of <lb />
arranging for these preparations. The <lb />
passed a resolution appropriating <lb />
to defray the of a <lb />
, to be appointed by the <lb />
President to proceed at once to <lb />
to establish the line it <lb />
British Guiana and when this is <lb />
done the States has already <lb />
audio England, you come this tar and mi <lb />
farther, and we mean what we I <lb />
remains to Is seen what she will say. <lb />
She already refused positively to <lb />
have the dispute settled in this way. <lb />
Will she stand by this or will she find <lb />
some excuse to say, well, this is is all <lb />
we demanded Let the answer be <lb />
it may course of the United Stales <lb />
is already marked out. We mean to <lb />
enforce the Monroe doctrine peaceably <lb />
if possible, if not by force and arms. <lb />
The near future will decide which we <lb />
will nave to do. <lb />
English Minister addressed a very tart <lb />
note to the Brazilian Minister of For- <lb />
Affairs which created intense ex- <lb />
in the Brazilian Parliament <lb />
which was then in session. The <lb />
became so acute that it looked for <lb />
some days as if the English Minister's <lb />
would he sent to him and <lb />
diplomatic relations broken off. It <lb />
was at this stage of the proceedings <lb />
that the English Consul General, who <lb />
was a man of long experience and fine <lb />
ability, had an interview with me in <lb />
which these laconic and pointed pies- <lb />
and answers were asked and given <lb />
English Consul <lb />
your people in earnest about the Mon- <lb />
roe doctrine <lb />
American Minister-I think <lb />
English Consul w <lb />
were to take of two of the <lb />
Brazilian Provinces and hold them <lb />
our claims an paid, do you think your <lb />
in the of the <lb />
Monroe doctrine, would <lb />
America Minister------Yes. My <lb />
government will not permit it. and if <lb />
TOOT country does not desire to come <lb />
in conflict with mine you had better <lb />
not attempt <lb />
a few days the English Min- <lb />
modified his attitude and the mat- <lb />
was amicably settled. I do not <lb />
say my position on the Monroe doc- <lb />
had anything to do with the <lb />
amicable adjustment of the <lb />
but I will say that I heard no <lb />
more of seizing Brazilian <lb />
you thing a <lb />
this country and England <lb />
do not. If the President main- <lb />
his firm attitude and Congress <lb />
stands up to him, I think England will <lb />
find some way to adjust her difficulties <lb />
with Venezuela without involving the <lb />
States in the matter. If, how- <lb />
ever, war should come, as much <lb />
as it is to be deplored, it will not be as <lb />
calamitous to us as a Nation as a <lb />
render of one iota of the Monroe doc- <lb />
as Americans interpret <lb />
in the office of Secretary of State, <lb />
Daniel Webster. It has also caused <lb />
his same to be very frequently mention- <lb />
ed as the democratic candidate for Pres- <lb />
next year. <lb />
President Cleveland has followed up <lb />
his message on the Venezuelan <lb />
with another startling one upon <lb />
the present apparently financial crisis <lb />
which seems now to threaten this <lb />
try. He urges Congress not to ad- <lb />
for any thing until they have <lb />
given some financial relief which they <lb />
can give, lie says that there is only one <lb />
way left for him to sustain the credit of <lb />
this great nation and that is by issuing <lb />
bonds, that as long as he is <lb />
dent this credit shall lie maintained at <lb />
all He says our entire <lb />
system must be changed. The <lb />
President very timely puts upon Con- <lb />
the responsibility of giving relief. <lb />
It remains to lie seen what they will do. <lb />
Are they equal to the occasion <lb />
Of Interest to Hunters. <lb />
It is said that when the sun is vis- <lb />
a watch may take the place of a <lb />
compass. This information will be of <lb />
value to anglers and other sportsmen <lb />
ill emergency. Point the hour hand of <lb />
a watch to the sun, and south is ex- <lb />
half way between the hour and <lb />
figure on the watch. For example, <lb />
if it be o'clock point the hand in- <lb />
to the sun, and the on the <lb />
watch indicates due south. If it <lb />
o'clock in the morning point the hand <lb />
indicating to the sun, and the on <lb />
the watch indicates due south. If it <lb />
be in the morning point the <lb />
hand indicating to the sun and the <lb />
figure on the watch is due south. If <lb />
the hour hand be at due south will <lb />
be exactly half-way between and <lb />
and so on. <lb />
THE SITUATION SERIOUS. <lb />
England Will Remain Firm in the <lb />
Position She Has Taken. <lb />
CANADA TAKES UP THE <lb />
CHORUS. <lb />
it is an Attempt to Fasten a <lb />
Quarrel on Great <lb />
St. JOCKS, N. B. Dec. <lb />
Daily Telegraph says one. <lb />
reads the Venezuelan <lb />
can come to any other conclusion than <lb />
that a attempt is being made <lb />
the Government of the United <lb />
Slates to fasten a quarrel upon Great <lb />
The dispatch of Mr. is <lb />
in tone and manner as insulting as if it <lb />
had been written by the late James G. <lb />
and we may say, as illogical <lb />
and <lb />
The Montreal Herald says of the <lb />
Presidents message the discus- <lb />
of the application of the Monroe <lb />
doctrine to the Venezuelan quest ion. <lb />
Lord Salisbury a signal <lb />
victory over Cleveland and his cabinet. <lb />
The matter will be amicably <lb />
adjusted on the basis originally laid <lb />
down by Great Mr. Cleveland <lb />
has not often yielded to the demands <lb />
of American politics. It is regrettable <lb />
that he should done so on the <lb />
present <lb />
The Toronto Mail concludes a long <lb />
article on the President's message as <lb />
follows. commission is a very <lb />
good device from Mr. Cleveland's point <lb />
of view, which is evidently that of the <lb />
politician who is out of votes. It <lb />
would probably be long before the com- <lb />
mission could report, but in the mean- <lb />
time Mr. firm vindication <lb />
of the doctrine would be winning votes <lb />
for his third term election. We may <lb />
be however, that whoever wins or <lb />
loses in that election, not a foot of M. <lb />
territory be transferred to <lb />
London, Dec. commenting <lb />
today upon the Venezuelan question <lb />
the newspapers generally agree that the <lb />
situation is much more serious than <lb />
they thought it U lie yesterday. In <lb />
the public mind also there is a <lb />
feeling of disappointment at the action <lb />
of Congress in supporting the stand <lb />
taken by the President in his message <lb />
to that body. <lb />
The exchange here and the <lb />
exchanges throughout the country con- <lb />
under the influence of the- <lb />
which has arisen between Great <lb />
Britain and the United States. At the <lb />
same time there is no excitement. <lb />
declined j, foreign funds were <lb />
weak and Canadian stocks were lower <lb />
on continued selling. The Pall Mall <lb />
Gazette's money article says <lb />
course, Amer- <lb />
will lose credit over the affair. It <lb />
is particularly inopportune when many <lb />
of her railways need <lb />
The afternoon papers all contain <lb />
long editorial articles on the <lb />
question, the general tenor of their <lb />
utterances being the same as yesterday, <lb />
though all agree that the matter is he- <lb />
coining much graver. <lb />
The Globe, a high conservative or- <lb />
and a newspaper which may be <lb />
supposed to be on terms of intimacy <lb />
with the government, gives warning <lb />
that Great Britain will remain firm, <lb />
Cleveland may <lb />
point a dozen commissions, but Eng- <lb />
land will remain firm in her refusal to <lb />
recognize them and jurisdiction of this <lb />
sort. This is our unalterable position, <lb />
lie the what they may. <lb />
We will never submit to such <lb />
The Globe is also irate at the recent <lb />
utterances of Dr. Chauncey M. <lb />
especially his references to the easy <lb />
manner in which the States <lb />
could conquer Canada, <lb />
overwhelming naval strength of <lb />
England would enable her to pour <lb />
troops into Canada any sign of <lb />
small warships could be sent to <lb />
the lakes and Chicago. Detroit and <lb />
Buffalo would be utterly at their mer- <lb />
What use in there In eating food when <lb />
does you no fact, when it does <lb />
yen harm than good, for such is <lb />
the case If it is not digested. <lb />
If you have a for food there <lb />
is no use of forcing it down, tor It will <lb />
list be digested. Yon must restore the <lb />
digestive organ to natural strength <lb />
cause the to be digested when <lb />
an appetite will come, and with it a rel- <lb />
for food. <lb />
The tired, languid will give <lb />
to vigor and energy, then you will <lb />
put flesh on your bones and become <lb />
strong. The Shaker Digestive Cordial <lb />
as made the Mount Lebanon Shakers <lb />
food already digested and is a <lb />
digester of food its well. Its n is <lb />
prompt and its effects <lb />
It is easy to buy from such a large easy to select to pay for, too. <lb />
Pick out Your Suit and we will Astonish. You in Price,<lb />
Too Tired to Smile <lb />
Weak, and Worn <lb />
Dizziness, Impure Blood-Cured by <lb />
Hood's. <lb />
Many weak and worn-out women <lb />
know just what this means. In totally <lb />
unfit condition <lb />
for work, they <lb />
force themselves <lb />
through the daily <lb />
routine of duties, <lb />
almost too dis- <lb />
to even <lb />
look for relief. <lb />
But it is to be <lb />
found in Hood's <lb />
la, <lb />
S which makes the <lb />
blood pure, builds <lb />
up the nerves, <lb />
Km win. Smith makes the weak <lb />
New York strong and gives <lb />
a cheerful spirit. Read <lb />
I have suffered more than tongue can <lb />
tell from dizziness and severe pains in my <lb />
head. I felt BO low spirited, that I <lb />
often said I wished I was dead. A friend <lb />
suggested I try Hood's <lb />
I gave it a trial and was more than <lb />
prised to see what a great change came <lb />
over me after I had taken the first bottle. <lb />
I felt better right away. I have now taken <lb />
nearly five bottles <lb />
and am happy M <lb />
all <lb />
I am entirely car <lb />
I would all<lb />
suffering on account of impure blood to <lb />
try Hood's It will <lb />
Ta E. 88th St., N. Y. City. <lb />
Hood's become the favorite <lb />
with everyone who trios them. per <lb />
CLOSING <lb />
OUT AT <lb />
COST <lb />
ENTIRE STOCK <lb />
MERCHANDISE <lb />
Will be closed out at cost without reserve. There <lb />
will be a change in our business next year and <lb />
these goods must go. Remember everything <lb />
goes at New York cost. Parties owing us must <lb />
make immediate payment so we can settle up <lb />
the business. <lb />
J. O. Proctor Bro., <lb />
GRIMESLAND, N. C. <lb />
Organized <lb />
Assets over <lb />
Surplus over <lb />
The Mutual <lb />
Life Ins. <lb />
Company, <lb />
of NEW YORK. <lb />
Security, and Profit. <lb />
We Lave got what you want. A <lb />
Twenty Payment Investment Con <lb />
tract in the largest financial <lb />
in the world, which affords <lb />
protection to your families as well <lb />
as provides for old age. <lb />
Our Motto best com- <lb />
is the company which does <lb />
the most We have paid <lb />
to policy holders years <lb />
VIM I <lb />
Our lice are the <lb />
best. Among will found <lb />
the oldest Scottish companies as <lb />
well as We do the <lb />
business for the people <lb />
cit your <lb />
WHITE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C- <lb />
Office on Main <lb />
r in <lb />
thought with the nun just now la j <lb />
in hi-, while <lb />
the ladle are thinking the <lb />
LATEST STYLE IN <lb />
t Lowest Prices. <lb />
If I hey will call at I lie store <lb />
MIS. <lb />
They will a fall line of <lb />
Fancy <lb />
Hair <lb />
and Monroe doctrine. <lb />
to look nays an <lb />
exchange. Not always. Remember <lb />
foreign flag by any ruling of their bias Lot's wife. Hut perhaps Lot thought <lb />
A It I Would <lb />
it sweet. Lot's of men would. <lb />
HOUSE. <lb />
MUSICALE <lb />
Friday <lb />
Miss lone May, as- <lb />
by Mr. and Miss Swan, of <lb />
New York, and several of Green- <lb />
best local talent. <lb />
The will consist of <lb />
Vocal and Instrumental Solos and <lb />
Cornet Solos, Mandolin, <lb />
Guitar and Flute Trio, <lb />
Ac. <lb />
Proceeds for the benefit of <lb />
Disciples church at Farmville. <lb />
Reserved <lb />
General Admission Children <lb />
ESTABLISHED <lb />
PORK SIDES <lb />
FARMERS AND MERCHANTS BU <lb />
their supplies will and <lb />
their interest prices before <lb />
chasing elsewhere. Our stock <lb />
n all its branches. <lb />
FLOUR, COFFEE, SUGAR <lb />
RICK, TEA, Ac.<lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we direct from Manufacturers, ens <lb />
you to buy at one profit. A <lb />
stock <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always and sold prices to sun <lb />
the times. Out goods bought <lb />
sold for having no <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
S. M. C <lb />
NOTIONS <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
If you do it will you to buy <lb />
them of------ <lb />
CLARK. <lb />
He keeps nothing but the best at <lb />
lowest prices. Try him for bar- <lb />
gains. <lb />
H. B. CLARK, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
N WORKS, <lb />
am -t II at my -I mil with Com- <lb />
workmen ready <lb />
TO DO MY REPAIR <lb />
on machinery of any kind. Guns. <lb />
Locks, Sewing Bicycles or <lb />
other repair work. All my work Is <lb />
guaranteed. New Home Sewing Ma- <lb />
chines sale. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
m n <lb />
For sale at reduced rates. We have in <lb />
to rive a large lot of <lb />
and Wagon, put up to <lb />
order according to <lb />
i by u. <lb />
These buggies are <lb />
manufactured <lb />
Material <lb />
and the workmanship is guaranteed to j <lb />
us to be The are i <lb />
made of North Carolina Oak Hick-1 <lb />
and made in the State by North <lb />
Carolina workmen. We a <lb />
nil of <lb />
eras m OUTFITS, <lb />
Side Combs, Belt and at. <lb />
other latest style good-;. <lb />
for Standard Fitter. <lb />
Mrs. Anna Gage, wife of <lb />
Deputy U. S. Marshal, <lb />
Columbus, Kan., . <lb />
of TWINS <lb />
less than <lb />
and with <lb />
scarcely any <lb />
after using <lb />
two bottles of <lb />
DID HOT SUFFER <lb />
or Mall, on <lb />
per Boot <lb />
fr. <lb />
CO., <lb />
SOLD <lb />
YES YES <lb />
D- W. <lb />
Is ready to offer to the <lb />
on goods. handle as <lb />
MEAT, FLOOR, <lb />
Meal, Sugar, Crackers. Candy, <lb />
Cheese, Paper and Paper <lb />
Lime, Hotter Dishes Ac., In job <lb />
ties. Also I handle <lb />
AND TIES. <lb />
I have a nice line of <lb />
FINE SHOES <lb />
which we offer at low rates. Call and <lb />
examine our stock before purchasing exchange for <lb />
elsewhere. <lb />
Harding <lb />
GREENVILLE N C. <lb />
to suit everybody- <lb />
Remember I take Country <lb />
good-. Al-o I <lb />
n car sell as cheap as <lb />
body times. <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017777_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
gift. <lb />
The schools close Friday for the <lb />
days. <lb />
From this day oar Children, <lb />
Youths and <lb />
be sold per ct- Its-.-, <lb />
New York cat at <lb />
Work the vaults iii the Court <lb />
House progresses <lb />
The wishes every nil I <lb />
a merry Christmas. <lb />
For an easy and comfortable <lb />
to please your . <lb />
motlier. <lb />
Call see our stock <lb />
at J- B- Cherry <lb />
Co. <lb />
Mr. Reflector <lb />
Store a good lead <lb />
C. T. is making some <lb />
to hi residence near Five Points. <lb />
For and call <lb />
J. ii. <lb />
Mrs. F. is having some <lb />
around her home in <lb />
Buy your Macintosh and Rub <lb />
Ct at J. B. Co's <lb />
save money. <lb />
Master Hal Sugg sent the <lb />
a live rabbit Thursday and we had <lb />
a rare-bit stew. <lb />
Buy your Macintosh and Rub <lb />
Coats at J. B. Cherry Co's <lb />
and save money. <lb />
Friday the warehouses had their last <lb />
sale until alter the holidays. They <lb />
bad big breaks. <lb />
Toys, Rabies, Wage us, Horns, Can- <lb />
dies, Nuts, Raisins, Dates, <lb />
at S. M. <lb />
A large line the celebrated <lb />
R G Corsets at J. B. Cherry <lb />
Cos. The ladies specially invited <lb />
to inspect them. <lb />
On Friday the Star Warehouse sold <lb />
some tobacco at per hundred. <lb />
There was a large pile that brought <lb />
that price. <lb />
Mr. S. R. Ross showed us a turnip <lb />
Thursday that weighed <lb />
could get it in a peek <lb />
Wire Buckle Suspenders <lb />
all Buckles and fastening's war- <lb />
ranted for two years, at J. B- <lb />
Cherry Cos. <lb />
Tom Christman suggested to a young <lb />
man that a good present for <lb />
his girl would be a jar chewing <lb />
gum. <lb />
best Flour is Proctor <lb />
Knott sold by S. M. Schultz. Try a <lb />
lb bag. <lb />
Granulated sugar cent per <lb />
pound at J. B- k Co's. <lb />
President Cleveland's special <lb />
to Tuesday raises a war <lb />
smell, and the British lion had better <lb />
be in his den. <lb />
Greenville is now full if smiles. <lb />
The boy smiles his best girl is <lb />
home from school, and the girl smiles <lb />
because her best fellow has come too. <lb />
Just received a Car-load Flour <lb />
none cheaper and better than that <lb />
offered by J. B. Cherry k Co. <lb />
Some of colored laborers who <lb />
have been working on the turpentine <lb />
farm- in South Carolina and Georgia <lb />
re returning home to spend Christmas. <lb />
Several came in this morning. <lb />
For best Carts and Wagons go <lb />
to A. G. Cox, Manufacturing Co., <lb />
S- C- <lb />
Gov. Carr has ordered a special <lb />
term of Beaufort county Superior <lb />
Court to January 6th, Judge <lb />
to preside, to try the four white <lb />
men charged with J. Ii. <lb />
Beautiful stylish and cheap <lb />
Goods and Trimmings at <lb />
J. B. Cherry Co's- <lb />
North Carolina has had no more <lb />
elaborate wedding than was witnessed <lb />
in Durham, on Wednesday evening, <lb />
when Miss Carr, of Col <lb />
J. Carr, was married to Mr. II. C <lb />
Flower, of Kansas City. <lb />
good <lb />
wear for the Yon can't go <lb />
with them, they are rights <lb />
and left. For by Ii. <lb />
Co. <lb />
Granulated sugar cents per <lb />
pound at J. B. Cherry Go's. <lb />
FURNITURE cheaper than <lb />
ever before at J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Chamois Lining <lb />
and new styles of Dress Goods <lb />
at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
Doctors because it <lb />
has all the virtues of Castor Oil and <lb />
is palatable. <lb />
There will be a tournament <lb />
ball at next Tues- <lb />
day, -list. The successful knights will <lb />
be awarded handsome prizes. <lb />
Information reached Mr. J. W. <lb />
Wiggins on Saturday that Ids father <lb />
was critically ill at Rocky Mount and <lb />
he left Sunday morning by private con- <lb />
to his bedside. <lb />
Leslie Billie Saturday <lb />
-If his maternal relatives knew <lb />
of his illegal absence from his parental <lb />
Billie told him he didn't care <lb />
if England did light the United States, <lb />
that he had a place picked out in the <lb />
and he was going to crawl in it <lb />
and pull it in after him. <lb />
The road to success is paved with th e <lb />
skulls of misfortune and the hones of <lb />
contention. <lb />
CHRISTMAS COMERS. <lb />
And Some Going the Other Way. <lb />
Miss Margie Langley is sick. <lb />
L. E. Cleve, of is here. <lb />
Rev. G. left Friday morning <lb />
for Louisburg. <lb />
L. II. Render returned from Tarboro <lb />
Saturday night. <lb />
W. T. has gone to Oxford <lb />
to spend Christmas. <lb />
II. P. Harding came home Saturday <lb />
evening from Hill. <lb />
lira. W. Brown returned from <lb />
Thursday morning. <lb />
Mrs. S. W. Coates arrived Friday <lb />
to spend a few here. <lb />
Mis. Warren, of Penny Hill, <lb />
is visiting her parents here. <lb />
Fine Tobacco. <lb />
The lot of tobacco pounds, that <lb />
sold on the Star Warehouse floor on <lb />
Friday at cents a pound, <lb />
on the second sale brought a <lb />
pound. There has never been any <lb />
finer tobacco on the market. <lb />
Maj. W. S. came <lb />
from Saturday. <lb />
horn <lb />
Miss <lb />
is rusting <lb />
W, <lb />
Pate, of <lb />
Mrs. II. <lb />
C. Mines to <lb />
county to spend the holidays. <lb />
Miss Katie Haskett, of is <lb />
visiting her uncle, D. D. Haskett. <lb />
S. C. Hamilton left Wednesday <lb />
evening on a business trip to <lb />
Miss Joyner is visiting the <lb />
family of her brother, Andrew Joyner. <lb />
L. D. Ames is able to be out after a <lb />
confinement several days with sickness. <lb />
Miss Jennie Tucker is visiting her <lb />
aunt, Mrs. A. Forbes, for the holidays. <lb />
Mrs. Ellen Lee, of Raleigh, arrived <lb />
Friday evening to visit Mrs. R. W. <lb />
King. <lb />
J. C. Greene came home from Nor- <lb />
folk, Saturday evening, to spend Christ. <lb />
mas. <lb />
Congressman Harry Skinner came <lb />
home from Washington City Saturday <lb />
evening. <lb />
Miss Ella Smith came home <lb />
day evening from Tarboro to spend <lb />
Christmas. <lb />
W. C. Jackson came home from <lb />
Raleigh. evening, to spend <lb />
the holidays. <lb />
C. C. Joyner and Johnson Nichols <lb />
have returned home from Chapel Hill <lb />
for the holidays. <lb />
Agent J. U. Moore and little <lb />
Myra, returned Friday evening <lb />
from the Atlanta Exposition. <lb />
Mi. R. J. of Washington <lb />
came up on Friday's boat and went to <lb />
Kin.-ton on the evening train. <lb />
Mrs. Nannie Anderson has moved to <lb />
town and occupies one of the Elliot <lb />
buildings on street. <lb />
Rev. J. W. of Washing- <lb />
hi, was here Friday afternoon and <lb />
went south on the evening train. <lb />
Mrs. G. W. who was vis- <lb />
Mrs. A. B. Ellington, returned to <lb />
her home in Petersburg <lb />
Mrs. II. L. Coward, of Greene <lb />
is visiting her sister, Mrs. J. L. <lb />
Mr. Coward spent Sunday <lb />
here. <lb />
Miss Mary Alice returned <lb />
from Kinsey school Saturday morning. <lb />
Miss Dean, of accompanied <lb />
her home for a visit. <lb />
George Hawks, of the <lb />
train, has been taking a few days <lb />
vacation in Richmond. Capt. W. L. <lb />
Jones was on the run in his stead. <lb />
F. M. of <lb />
burg. retaining from conference, spent <lb />
a short while here Wednesday after- <lb />
noon, and left on the evening train for <lb />
Kinston. <lb />
An Invitation. <lb />
The degree team of Covenant Lodge, <lb />
No. I. O. O. F. of Greenville, re- <lb />
a very cordial invitation from <lb />
the Kinston Lodge, to attend a banquet <lb />
to be given at that place on Friday <lb />
evening. December 27th. 189.3. They <lb />
may attend. A number of noted <lb />
speakers will lie <lb />
Good Man For The Place. <lb />
Mn. is currently <lb />
lated from the authority that <lb />
our townsman, Hon. G. B. King, is in <lb />
Washington City conferring with <lb />
dent Cleveland and expects to be <lb />
pointed one of the commission to <lb />
the Venezuela boundary. Pitt <lb />
county is proud of her sons and she can <lb />
men capable for any position in <lb />
the gift of the country. We <lb />
Mr. Kins. . X. <lb />
This is About Pencils. <lb />
When a business man uses a lead <lb />
pencil he wants a good one. The Re- <lb />
Book Store offers the largest <lb />
variety in town to select from, all the <lb />
way from cents a dozen to cents <lb />
each. Try a or <lb />
and you have something good. <lb />
Advertising Bella the Goods. <lb />
A gentleman who just d for <lb />
an article Le saw advertised remarked <lb />
yesterday, that people look <lb />
to of the newspaper to learn <lb />
where such articles as -y wish to <lb />
purchase are kept, he is right. <lb />
The day of walking from store to store <lb />
in search of an article Wanted is a thing <lb />
of the past, and the wise man <lb />
j is the one who keeps his advertisement <lb />
in the paper. <lb />
Off for the Holidays. <lb />
Several of the tobacco boys left <lb />
to spend the holidays at home, <lb />
or at the home of their best girl. <lb />
K. M. Pace went to <lb />
to Santa Clans for the children. <lb />
X. II. went to Oxford. <lb />
Andrews, D. J. <lb />
Walker and K. R. Aiken went to Dur- <lb />
ham. <lb />
The wishes all tin <lb />
a merry Christmas. <lb />
The Benefit Bale. <lb />
At Friday's tobacco sales two of the <lb />
warehouses devoted a part of the pro- <lb />
for benevolent purposes. The <lb />
Star gave one-half its net commissions <lb />
to the Oxford Orphan Asylum, and <lb />
the amount is The Eastern gave <lb />
its gross commissions to the <lb />
King's Daughters, amounting to about <lb />
These are good contributions <lb />
and make nice offerings to <lb />
the objects for which they go. The <lb />
proceeds at the Star Warehouse would <lb />
have been much larger but they had <lb />
the last sale on Friday. <lb />
Mighty True. <lb />
We overheard an old colored man <lb />
lecturing his son a few days ago. It <lb />
seemed as if his son wanted to get mar- <lb />
It was in this wise <lb />
is a fool nigger. De of <lb />
getting married and settling down. <lb />
Why it is nil an expense. <lb />
About three months ago I married U <lb />
pretty a gal as ever broke into a chick- <lb />
en coop, about two weeks ago she laid <lb />
right down and died and I never felt so <lb />
shame in all my life. Now look here <lb />
boy , if got an of getting mar- <lb />
and settling down, take my advice, <lb />
single and settle up <lb />
Home From School. <lb />
There was a large, jolly crowd <lb />
around the Friday evening, many <lb />
having gone up to meet the boys and <lb />
girls who were coming home from <lb />
school to spend the holidays, and when <lb />
the train rolled in there were many <lb />
joyous greetings exchanged. <lb />
who returned were Misses Ty- <lb />
son and Myra Skinner, from Salem; <lb />
Misses and Rosa <lb />
Hooker, from Richmond ; Misses Bessie <lb />
Harding, Maud Blow and Ada Tyson, <lb />
from Greensboro; Miss Hearne, <lb />
from Littleton ; Charlie Pres- <lb />
ton Gotten and Julius Fleming, from <lb />
Oxford; J. B. Jar vis and J. F. Daven- <lb />
port, from Chapel Hill; E. F. Mum- <lb />
ford. J. B. Jackson and Fountain Cox, <lb />
from Wake Forest; S. W. Erwin, from <lb />
Trinity; J. M. Moore, from Raleigh. <lb />
The Musicale. <lb />
There is a rare treat in store for <lb />
those who attend the musical under the <lb />
management of Miss lone May, in the <lb />
Opera House Friday evening, 27th. <lb />
She be assisted by Mr. and Miss <lb />
Swan, of New York, as well as by the <lb />
best home talent. Miss Swan has par- <lb />
in a number of entertainments <lb />
at the north, and the press spoke in <lb />
highest terms of her. The Jefferson <lb />
County Journal <lb />
Swan has a rich, powerful voice of <lb />
sympathetic quality to which is added <lb />
thorough cultivation and perfect <lb />
The Times, <lb />
speaking of an entertainment, says <lb />
crowning delight of the evening <lb />
was a fine rendering of the solo, <lb />
ear, O by Miss Marietta <lb />
Swan, which she sang with such lower <lb />
and gave us a <lb />
of the possibilities of her glorious <lb />
voice. For the closing <lb />
piece Miss Swan surprised the audience <lb />
by appearing in a new role, that of <lb />
elocutionist. In this also she surpassed <lb />
herself. Miss Swan has surely the <lb />
elements of success in her make up in <lb />
that she odds to natural gifts of a high <lb />
order, intense and <lb />
to her studies, and a determination <lb />
to reach the highest point of excellence <lb />
i in she <lb />
College <lb />
The entertainment Friday evening <lb />
by the pupil- of the Collegiate <lb />
was a very interesting and enjoyable <lb />
occasion. All the pieces were so well <lb />
rendered that we do not make Special <lb />
mention of any but give the full pro- <lb />
gramme. Some of the participants <lb />
who were only beginners did <lb />
well. <lb />
Bes- <lb />
Patrick. <lb />
Katie Moore <lb />
and Mamie I lines. <lb />
Daniel's <lb />
Maggie Bagley. <lb />
Lot- <lb />
tie Blow and Maggie Bagley. <lb />
Whistling <lb />
Bessie Patrick. <lb />
First Eva Allen <lb />
and Mamie Haskett. <lb />
Walter <lb />
Wilson and Bessie Patrick. <lb />
Bertha <lb />
Patrick. <lb />
Rawls and Maggie Bagley. <lb />
Piano Bessie <lb />
Patrick. <lb />
Bagley. <lb />
Piano Katie <lb />
Moore. <lb />
Wat- <lb />
Bessie and Bertha Patrick. <lb />
In all the pieces the pupils showed <lb />
that they hail been under excellent <lb />
Tried Friends Best. <lb />
Pills have <lb />
proven a blessing to the invalid. <lb />
Are truly the sick man's friend. <lb />
A Known Fact <lb />
For bilious headache, dyspepsia <lb />
sour stomach, <lb />
and all kindred diseases. <lb />
Liver PILLS <lb />
AN ABSOLUTE CURE. <lb />
Obstructs the Crossing. <lb />
We hear some complaint about the <lb />
length freight cars are allowed <lb />
to stand the Dickerson as cross- <lb />
near the o;. One <lb />
he win kept there fully <lb />
half an before he could get by. <lb />
The railroad people could en cm <lb />
this uncoupling the leaving <lb />
the crossing open when it is necessary <lb />
LETTER TO SANTA <lb />
Dear Santa Clans, if you could <lb />
A patent doll to dance and sing, <lb />
A five-pound box of caramels, <lb />
A set of reins with silver bells ; <lb />
An elephant that roars and walks, <lb />
A Brownie doll that laughs and talks <lb />
A humming top that I can spin, <lb />
A to keep my treasures in , <lb />
A or two that I can <lb />
A dog to and wag his tail, <lb />
A pair of little bantam chicks. <lb />
A chest of tools, a box of ; <lb />
A scarlet suit of togs. <lb />
A net for catching frogs. <lb />
A bicycle and a silver watch. <lb />
A pound or two of butterscotch ; <lb />
A small toy farm with lots of <lb />
A gun to load with beam and peas; <lb />
An orange and a music box, <lb />
A double set of building blocks <lb />
If you will bring me these I say. <lb />
Before the Coning Christmas day, <lb />
I sort of think, perhaps, that I'd <lb />
Be pretty nearly satisfied. <lb />
Harper's Young People. <lb />
CHRISTMAS WEDDINGS. <lb />
A Long List For Last Week. <lb />
for the train to stand down the track. <lb />
Then could not complain. <lb />
T. <lb />
At I o'clock this morning t <lb />
home of Mr. John F. Boyd, <lb />
the bride, near Greenville, Mr. <lb />
Haydn, of Washington City, and Miss <lb />
Boyd were married by Rev. <lb />
A. The couple took the <lb />
morning train for a few days Nor- <lb />
folk and Old Point, and will reach <lb />
their home in Washington Saturday. <lb />
Mr. Haydn is a very popular d.-um- <lb />
mer and well known in mercantile <lb />
circles. The bride is one of Pitt's <lb />
handsomest young women. <lb />
His Skull Cracked <lb />
There was trouble between two <lb />
out in Carolina township, a <lb />
few days ago. that may cost one of <lb />
them his life. One went to the house <lb />
of the other on Sunday and <lb />
a suit of clothes to use <lb />
He went back later and started to put <lb />
the suit on again to wear it off. The <lb />
and his wife were both <lb />
home then and the latter him to <lb />
let the clothes alone. He threw a <lb />
brick at her, striking her in the face <lb />
when her husband picked up an <lb />
and cracked the assailant's skull with <lb />
it. The wounded man was still <lb />
critical condition at last accounts. <lb />
Paying the Pensioners. <lb />
Register of Deeds King has received <lb />
the warrants for pensions for the Con- <lb />
federate soldiers and widows in this <lb />
county, and is giving them out as fast <lb />
as called for. The list for Pitt county <lb />
contains the names of So soldiers and <lb />
widows. Of the soldiers one is in <lb />
the 1st class, three in the 2nd class, <lb />
three in the 3rd class and in the 4th <lb />
class. The total amount paid to both <lb />
soldiers and widows is <lb />
The whole sidewalk out by J. B. <lb />
Cherry Co's was lined Monday with <lb />
furniture just sold, and when we passed <lb />
two clerks were busy packing it away <lb />
in wagons. <lb />
Register of Deeds King broke the <lb />
record on license bat week, <lb />
the number issued running up to <lb />
twenty-seven. Of these sixteen wen <lb />
for white couples and eleven for <lb />
end couples. <lb />
WHITE. <lb />
II. P. Brown Agues Whitehurst. <lb />
J. K. Congleton and II <lb />
C. and M-ind L. Allen. <lb />
Arch and Stocks. <lb />
W. T. and Bessie Boyd. <lb />
Alex and Susan Keel. <lb />
Aug Taylor and Nannie Core. <lb />
Wm. Daniel and Susan Morgan. <lb />
Win. Pitt and Sallie Pitt. <lb />
I. II. Whitehurst and Pattie Pierce. <lb />
L. It. Ricks and t Langley. <lb />
J. D. Smith and Mary O. Forbes. <lb />
W. It. Nobles and Tripp. <lb />
Gray and Highsmith. <lb />
Cornelius Roebuck and A. K. <lb />
Eddie Tripp and K. <lb />
Warren Freeman and Susan <lb />
Sylvester Barrett and Rosa Vines. <lb />
Henry Tyson and Millie Faison. <lb />
Ransom Staten and Harriet Ran- <lb />
and Annie Biggs. <lb />
Lang and Tabby Ward. <lb />
Geo. Pitt and Sarah Cleve. <lb />
Jerry and Amanda Sugg. <lb />
I. A. Parker and Hardy. <lb />
Henry Williams and Allie Jordan. <lb />
Brown and Allie Edwards. <lb />
PRESENTS <lb />
There is a great deal of sameness in <lb />
our lives. We go through the regular <lb />
daily routine of work, we walk the <lb />
same streets, we see the same faces <lb />
we idle away time at the same stores, <lb />
we tell the same jokes, hear the same <lb />
funny stories, and such is the story o <lb />
life in a country <lb />
Observer. <lb />
AT COST. <lb />
Owing to a dissolution in our business we <lb />
offer our entire stock of <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
Dry N <lb />
Bethel, N. C, Dec. W. <lb />
A Forbes returned from the <lb />
dist conference at Elizabeth City yes- <lb />
J. L. Sugg and J. A. Dupree. of <lb />
Greenville and N. It. Dawson of <lb />
spent to-day in town. <lb />
P. J. White, of Richmond. Va. is <lb />
here adjusting the loss of S. T. <lb />
caused by the tire last week. <lb />
At the residence of Mr. M. <lb />
Whitehurst the bride's father, on Wed- <lb />
December 18th. Herbert <lb />
Brown was married to Miss Agnes <lb />
Whitehurst, Elder Samuel Moore of- <lb />
At the bride's father, S- J. Gore, on <lb />
Wednesday, December 13th, <lb />
Augustus Fay ton was married to Miss <lb />
Nannie Gore, F. C. Martin. Esq., <lb />
officiating. <lb />
J. R. Bunting went to Tarboro to- <lb />
day. <lb />
Married. <lb />
Wednesday morning at the house of <lb />
the bride in Dunn, X. C, Mr. <lb />
Holliday, of Grimesland and Miss <lb />
Florence Harper were married by Rev. <lb />
J. J. Harper. The couple reached <lb />
Greenville on the evening train and <lb />
left at once by private conveyance for <lb />
the home of the groom. <lb />
At o'clock this morning at the <lb />
home of Mrs. M. V. Forbes, mother of <lb />
the bride, near Greenville, Mr. J. D. <lb />
Smith and Miss Mary O. Forbes <lb />
were married by Rev. G. F. Smith. <lb />
The couple took the morning train for <lb />
Oxford to spend the holidays at the <lb />
groom's old home. <lb />
Thursday afternoon at the home of <lb />
Mr. George in Carolina town- <lb />
ship, Mr. John E. Congleton Miss <lb />
Belcher were married by Rev. <lb />
J. L. Winfield. The attendants were <lb />
S. A. Congleton with Miss Nannie <lb />
Belcher, Sherrod Belcher with Miss <lb />
Leggett, Skinner <lb />
Miss Maggie J. L. Perkins <lb />
with Miss Mary Whitehurst. <lb />
the res- <lb />
of the bride's father, Mr. Wiley <lb />
Pierce, Dec 18th, 1895, Mr. Henry- <lb />
Whitehurst and Miss Pattie Fierce <lb />
were united in the bonds of matrimony, <lb />
R. Williams, Esq., officiating. The <lb />
ceremony was witnessed by a large <lb />
number of relatives and friends. The <lb />
attendants were M. H. Jackson and <lb />
Miss Mamie Pierce, J. T. Whitehurst <lb />
and Miss Parker, W. T. Pierce <lb />
and Miss Rosa Abrams, D. Smith and <lb />
Miss Bryan, R- A. Bryan and <lb />
Miss Sarah Rollins, W. J. Cook and <lb />
Miss Martha Abrams. After the mar- <lb />
the collide with their friends en. <lb />
joyed a nice Upper which had been <lb />
prepared for the occasion. We con- <lb />
Mr. on gaining <lb />
the affections of so nice a young lady <lb />
and trust that as the dark and dreary <lb />
clouds of life pass over earth, the wing <lb />
of their happiness may never loose a <lb />
feather. J. <lb />
CLOTHING, <lb />
At cost until the January 1st, 1896. <lb />
RICKS, TAFT CO. <lb />
AT <lb />
Next Rawls the Jeweler.<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
COST. <lb />
AT COST <lb />
There will be a change in <lb />
our business Jan. 1st, 1890 <lb />
Now we offer our entire stock <lb />
Notions <lb />
Hats, <lb />
Caps, <lb />
CLOTHING, <lb />
Boots <lb />
Shoes <lb />
LADIES CLOAKS AND CAPES, <lb />
Everything without reserve at Cost for Cash <lb />
N, C<lb />
Holiday Display at Lang's. <lb />
New line of Dress and Shirt Waist Plaids. <lb />
New line of Ladies Wraps. <lb />
New line of Dress Goods and Trimmings. <lb />
New line of Mufflers and Handkerchief. <lb />
New line of Shoes to fit every foot. <lb />
New line of Notions and Capes. <lb />
New line of Trunks and Floor Oil Cloths. <lb />
New line of Furnishing Goods. <lb />
And lots of other nice goods at Lang's. <lb />
we sell Clothing at less than cost. <lb />
LANG'S. <lb />
FOR YOU. <lb />
A beautiful Xmas line of <lb />
Dry Goods, Shoe <lb />
Dress Goods, Clothing, <lb />
NOTIONS. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
NEXT DOOR OF BANK. <lb />
FOR THE- <lb />
FALL WINTER <lb />
BUSINESS I <lb />
and cordially invite you to inspect I ho largest <lb />
and neatest assortment of <lb />
con- <lb />
ever brought to Greenville. Our stock <lb />
all the newest and <lb />
DRESS GOODS, <lb />
Furnishing <lb />
Boots <lb />
and Shoes, Domestics, <lb />
Bleached and <lb />
ed Sheeting and Shirt- <lb />
Calicoes, Fancy <lb />
Cotton Dress Goods <lb />
everything you will <lb />
want or need in that <lb />
line. Hardware for far <lb />
and mechanics <lb />
use, Tinware, Hollow- <lb />
ware, Wood and <lb />
Whips, Buggy Rope, <lb />
Twine, Heavy Groceries always on hand, <lb />
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Salt and Molasses. <lb />
The best and largest assortment of Crock- <lb />
Lamps, Lanterns, Lamp Chimneys and <lb />
Shades, Fancy Glassware, to be found <lb />
in the county. And our stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
Matting. Carpets, Rugs and Foot Mats is by far <lb />
the best and cheapest ever offered to the people <lb />
of this section. Come look and see and buy. <lb />
Sole agents of Coats Spool Cotton for this town <lb />
for wholesale and retail trade. Reynold's Shoes <lb />
for and Boys. Shoes <lb />
for Ladies and Children. We buy Cotton and <lb />
Peanuts and pay the highest market price for <lb />
them. Your experience teaches you all to buy <lb />
and deal with men who will treat you fair and <lb />
do the square thing by you. and see us <lb />
and be convinced that what we claim is true. <lb />
Yours for business square dealings, <lb />
DON'T FORGET THE I <lb />
Hardware Store <lb />
When you want anything in the Hardware line. <lb />
Doors, Sash, Locks, Butts and Hinges, Saws, <lb />
Tools, Paints and Oils, Nails and Axes. <lb />
Corn Shelters from to Corn and <lb />
Cobb Mill for Axes to cents. <lb />
Stoves from to King Heaters <lb />
to and Stovepipe, Pumps <lb />
Pump-Pipe, Rope, Belting, Ac., Ac, always go <lb />
to the Hardware Store where you will get the <lb />
lowest prices. Yours, <lb />
D. D. HASKETT, <lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017777_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
GREENVILLE <lb />
Male Academy. <lb />
The next session of this School will <lb />
begin <lb />
SEPT- I <lb />
and Tor ten months. <lb />
The course embraces all the brunches <lb />
usually in an Ac <lb />
Terms, both for and board <lb />
reasonable- <lb />
Boys well fitted and equipped for <lb />
business, taking the <lb />
course alone. Where they wish to <lb />
pursue a higher course, this <lb />
guarantees thorough preparation to <lb />
enter, with credit, any College in North <lb />
the State University. It <lb />
refers who have left <lb />
Its wall the truthfulness of this <lb />
statement. <lb />
Any young man with character <lb />
moderate ability taking a course with <lb />
us will be In arrange- <lb />
to continue in the higher schools. <lb />
The discipline will be at its <lb />
present standard. <lb />
Neither time nor attention nor <lb />
work will be spared to make- this school <lb />
all that parents could <lb />
For further particulars see or ad- <lb />
dress <lb />
W. H. <lb />
July <lb />
Greenville Collegiate <lb />
Institute. <lb />
N. S. D. <lb />
J A. M. Principal. With full corps o <lb />
Teachers. Next session will begin <lb />
MONDAY, SEPTEMBER All <lb />
the English Branches, Ancient and <lb />
Modern Languages. Music will <lb />
taught on the conservatory plan, <lb />
by a graduate in music. Instruction <lb />
borough Discipline firm, but kind. <lb />
reasonable. Art and Elocution <lb />
will be taught, if desired. Calisthenics <lb />
free. For particulars address the <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Cheap Excursion Rates <lb />
Cotton <lb />
ATLANTA, GA. <lb />
Sept. to Dec. 31st., <lb />
VIA <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Line <lb />
Through Pullman Palace Buffet <lb />
Sleeping Cars between New York <lb />
Atlanta Ga. via Richmond, Petersburg, <lb />
Mount, Fayette- <lb />
ville, Florence, Aiken and <lb />
For Rates, Schedules, Sleep- <lb />
Car accommodations call on or ad- <lb />
dress any agent Atlantic Coast Line, or <lb />
the undersigned. <lb />
C. <lb />
Div. Pass. Div. Pa-s <lb />
Ch Richmond Va. <lb />
T. M. If. EMERSON. <lb />
Mgr. Asst. Pass- <lb />
Wilmington, N. C. <lb />
Cotton States International <lb />
ATLANTA, GEORGIA, <lb />
via the <lb />
Seaboard Air Line. <lb />
Vestibuled Limited Trains <lb />
upon which no extra is charged. <lb />
LOWEST DOUBLE <lb />
DAILY <lb />
RATES. SERVICE. <lb />
Through Pullman Sleeping Cars <lb />
and day from <lb />
Washington, D. C. and <lb />
Portsmouth, Virginia, <lb />
via <lb />
Fredericksburg. Petersburg, <lb />
Raleigh. Southern C. <lb />
C, Athens, <lb />
Leave 3.00 A. M. noon <lb />
Arrive Atlanta P. M., A. M. <lb />
next day. Le <lb />
n-ion. P. M. Arrive Atlanta 4.00 <lb />
P. M., 3.20 A. M., next day. <lb />
Ask for tickets via <lb />
BOARD AIR LINE. <lb />
Pullman Sleeping Car reservations <lb />
will be mule and further information <lb />
furnished application any <lb />
Agent of Air Line, or to <lb />
the undersigned. <lb />
H. ANDERSON, <lb />
Traffic Manager. Pass. <lb />
E. ST. JOHN, <lb />
Port-mouth, Va. <lb />
On <lb />
J. F KING,<lb />
STABLES. <lb />
Fifth Street near <lb />
Points. <lb />
Five <lb />
No crop varies more in <lb />
according to grade of <lb />
used than tobacco. Pot- <lb />
ash is its most important re- <lb />
producing a large <lb />
yield of finest grade leaf. Use <lb />
only fertilizers containing at <lb />
least actual <lb />
Potash <lb />
GUARDING PRISONERS. <lb />
Sow of <lb />
in form of sulphate. To in- <lb />
sure a clean burning leaf, avoid <lb />
fertilizers containing chlorine. <lb />
pamphlets are not circulars boom- <lb />
special fertilizers, bat are practical contain- <lb />
latest researches on the subject of and <lb />
are really helpful to Carmen. They are lent free for <lb />
the ft <lb />
, GERMAN KALI WORKS, <lb />
, St. New York, . <lb />
The Charlotta <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
North Carolina's <lb />
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and fearless; Digger and <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will be an <lb />
invaluable visitor to the home, the <lb />
the club or the work room. <lb />
THE DAILY OBSERVER. <lb />
All of the news of the world. Com- <lb />
Daily reports from the State <lb />
and National Capitols. a <lb />
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect family journal. All the <lb />
news of the week. The reports <lb />
from the Legislature a special. <lb />
Remember the Weekly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb />
Send for sample copies. Address <lb />
THE OBSERVER, <lb />
Passengers carried to any <lb />
point at reasonable Good <lb />
Horses. Comfortable Vehicles. <lb />
College Hotel <lb />
M RS- DELLA GA Y, Pi opt <lb />
WILMINGTON WELDON R. B. <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND FLORENCE RAIL ROAD. <lb />
Condensed Schedule. <lb />
i fated Nov. 17th S y. <lb />
Leave. M. M <lb />
Wilson Selina Ar. M i o e p. a. OS i Hi P. A. M <lb />
Magnolia Ar <lb />
TRAINS GOING <lb />
Dated Oct. 6th o y <lb />
Florence Selma Ar M. <lb />
Wilmington Magnolia Ur Goldsboro r e A. M M P. M. i w <lb />
Wilson Ar Rocky M. P. in <lb />
r Th Tarboro Mt Ar i <lb />
Convenient to depot and to the to- <lb />
B-st arid highest location around <lb />
Splendid water. <lb />
large and comfortable. Table <lb />
the best the market <lb />
fouls. <lb />
THE MORNING STAR <lb />
lit Oldest <lb />
Newspaper in <lb />
North <lb />
Only Six-Dollar Daily <lb />
its Class in the State. <lb />
Favors Limited Free <lb />
of Silver and Repeal <lb />
of the Tea Per Gent. Tax on <lb />
State Banks. Daily SO cents <lb />
month. Weekly per <lb />
year. Wm. H. BERNARD, <lb />
Ed. Prop., Wilmington, <lb />
TONSORIAL PARLORS <lb />
House, <lb />
N C <lb />
in whoa want good work. <lb />
Train on Neck Branch <lb />
weaves 3.55 p. in., Halifax 4.13 <lb />
p. m-, arrives Neck at 4.55 p <lb />
n., Greenville p. m., Kinston 7.45 <lb />
in. Returning. I 7.20 <lb />
a. in., m. <lb />
. 11.20 am <lb />
tally s <lb />
Trains on V leave <lb />
Washington a. m. Parmele <lb />
3.40 a. in. Tarboro V <lb />
1.30 p. . 6.20 <lb />
y. arrives 7.45 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday, with <lb />
trains on <lb />
Train C, via <lb />
Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. m., Sunday P. M; <lb />
arrive Plymouth 9.00 P. 5.26 p. m. <lb />
Plymouth daily except <lb />
6.00 a. m., Sunday 9.30 a -m., <lb />
Tarboro 10.26 and <lb />
Train on N. C. branch leaves <lb />
except Sunday. a <lb />
m. arriving 7-30 a. in. Re- <lb />
turning leave S a. m., <lb />
rives at 9.30 a. m. <lb />
Trains in Nashville branch leave <lb />
Mount at 4.30 p. in., arrives <lb />
Nashville 5.06 p. in., Spring Hope 6.30 <lb />
p. in. Returning leave Spring Hope <lb />
8.30 a. ii ., a in, at <lb />
Mount 9.05 a m. daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
on Latta bunch, Florence R. <lb />
U., leave p m, Dunbar <lb />
7.50 p in, Clio 8.05 p hi. <lb />
leave Oil am. 6.80 a m, <lb />
e Latta 7.50 a m, daily except Sun- <lb />
day. <lb />
Train Branch leaves War- <lb />
saw for Clinton except Sunday, <lb />
11.10 a. m. and p, m- Returning <lb />
m. and p m. <lb />
l rain No. makes connection <lb />
at Weldon points daily, all rail via <lb />
at Mount with <lb />
Norfolk and R for <lb />
all pUnts North via Norfolk. <lb />
F. DIVINE, <lb />
General Supt. <lb />
T. H. <lb />
J R. Manager, <lb />
TWO ABLE KICKERS. <lb />
n Warder How <lb />
Thin Try to <lb />
A reporter mot a prison warder <lb />
the other day, and the latter, be- <lb />
coming communicative, volunteered <lb />
information con- <lb />
attempted escapes from <lb />
their guardians made by prisoners <lb />
who are being conveyed from the <lb />
police station to the court or from <lb />
one prison to another. a few <lb />
days he said, was a <lb />
case of two prisoners trying to break <lb />
out of a prison van while being con <lb />
to the police court. But they <lb />
were not it is not in one <lb />
case out of ten that they do manage <lb />
to get away. <lb />
prisoner whom I was taking <lb />
from a county prison to an assize <lb />
offered mo if I would <lb />
help him to escape. Ho was a well <lb />
known and I believe <lb />
would have made good his promise <lb />
had I helped him. All I did, <lb />
was to tighten my grasp at the <lb />
of the handcuffs and threaten <lb />
to report him. Another man storm- <lb />
ed at me in the most revolting <lb />
ion when I refused to assist him. He <lb />
said tho only punishment I merited <lb />
for not lotting him go was to be <lb />
boiled in a pan of white hot lead <lb />
He was a cheerful man, he was. <lb />
of tho funniest offers I had <lb />
made to mo by a prisoner was that <lb />
of a man who had had an unequaled <lb />
career as a burglar. He promised <lb />
to send me the proceeds of the first <lb />
house he burgled after his escape. <lb />
had a curious experience when <lb />
traveling in Manchester with one <lb />
prisoner. His friends had got the <lb />
tip that he would by a certain <lb />
train. we arrived, lo and be- <lb />
hold, there were five or six flashily <lb />
dressed waiting for us. <lb />
One of them, apparently the <lb />
came up to me. do you do, <lb />
said he; might let <lb />
me see how tho handcuffs <lb />
Ho thought I was a green <lb />
looked young. thank <lb />
said I; next time the cuffs <lb />
go on anybody they'll go on you in <lb />
real and I thereupon called <lb />
up the station police officers to <lb />
me to guard my prisoner. And, sure <lb />
enough, at the very assizes, I <lb />
saw the swell himself <lb />
standing in the dock waiting to re- <lb />
is still doing <lb />
a time I've thought that <lb />
if I were a prisoner I could easily <lb />
make my escape traveling <lb />
with a warder. And especially easy <lb />
may this be done in towns <lb />
the prisoner and warder walk <lb />
from tho station to tho prison. <lb />
Sometimes I've had to walk through <lb />
low quarters, where nearly every <lb />
house contains a thief. But some- <lb />
how or nothing happens. <lb />
In time tho chances of escape will <lb />
be reduced to nil, for no prisoner <lb />
will be allowed to walk in the open <lb />
street from tho railway station to <lb />
the prison. <lb />
an experience of years I <lb />
have only known of attempts <lb />
made by prisoners to escape. One <lb />
only was successful, and then the <lb />
fellow was captured tho following <lb />
day. Sometimes a prisoner manages <lb />
to jump from a railway carriage <lb />
window, but he rarely i -capes. In- <lb />
stead, ho generally smashes a leg or <lb />
other limb and is speedily <lb />
London Telegraph. <lb />
or Snapper <lb />
Fishing in bay, Queens- <lb />
land, is scarcely sport; it is a <lb />
You are hauling up <lb />
from the bottom, fathoms down, a <lb />
burden which taxes all the strength <lb />
and makes the perspiration ooze <lb />
from yet it is grand fun <lb />
for awhile. The fish bite fast and <lb />
furious. As your line, after yielding <lb />
its captive, is recast, it throws out <lb />
coruscations of silver in its rapid <lb />
descent. Soon your eye discerns, <lb />
fathoms deep, an almost impalpable <lb />
flashing to and fro, as if a burnish- <lb />
ed plate wore gyrating in an eddy; <lb />
it assumes a lovely pink hue as you <lb />
bring it nearer the surface, and <lb />
then in a twinkling a burly <lb />
per of seven or eight pounds is flap- <lb />
ping vigorously and noisily on deck. <lb />
Sometimes it is a fish at every <lb />
haul, and under those circumstances <lb />
not the least amusing part of the <lb />
sport is the spectacle of a score of <lb />
excited men jumping round a score <lb />
of big fish, which are their <lb />
best to convoy their and <lb />
indignation to an unfading world. <lb />
Badminton Library Sea Fishing <lb />
A Shrewd Fruit <lb />
An ingenious device for attracting <lb />
custom was that of a fruiterer in a <lb />
midland town. Instead of ordinary <lb />
plate glass a large number of rough <lb />
magnifying glasses formed the win- <lb />
Seen through one of these <lb />
panes, an orange looked as large as <lb />
a pumpkin, and cherries as large as <lb />
apples. A great disadvantage attach- <lb />
to this novelty was the fact that <lb />
at the distance of a few yards from <lb />
the window it was quite impossible <lb />
to see into the shop. Everybody <lb />
knows that you must bold a <lb />
glass very close to the eyes to <lb />
Bee anything through it. <lb />
less, for Borne time, at all events, <lb />
the enterprising shopkeeper did a <lb />
splendid <lb />
Famed Brown Bind. <lb />
For one large loaf of bread use <lb />
three pints of cornmeal, three <lb />
pints of rye flour, one cup of good <lb />
bop yeast and one cup of molasses. <lb />
Mix very soft with warm water, <lb />
poor the mixture into a round <lb />
ding tin and allow it to stand until <lb />
light Bake with a steady fire for <lb />
three hours. Home Journal <lb />
A of <lb />
A gem of a memorial from the In- <lb />
education <lb />
am, during my fatality and <lb />
nation, I my employment and <lb />
my orbits me as a <lb />
shiftless and man here, <lb />
I have to admonish my legs to the <lb />
foreign countries for this ill fame. <lb />
I, therefore, most <lb />
you to excuse the <lb />
defying your <lb />
orders I was doing in your <lb />
schools. I thought that I might <lb />
permitted as your to tench <lb />
that class with an increased salary, <lb />
but my bad luck has driven me out <lb />
of employment. Ga- <lb />
Ob Was a and the a Jack. <lb />
am, Mas Won. <lb />
In the days of the San Gabriel <lb />
canyon mining boom in the seven- <lb />
ties a large boned and. gigantic <lb />
was known to his rough but <lb />
kindly associates as Kicking Tom. <lb />
He had won the nickname by reason <lb />
of the force with which he <lb />
could launch his great sinewy foot <lb />
against an opposing object. One day <lb />
a miner brought into a <lb />
can burro, which soon obtained a <lb />
wide celebrity as a vicious animal, <lb />
who, when would attack <lb />
man or beast with desperate fury. <lb />
Several mountain ponies had been <lb />
kicked to death by him and more <lb />
than man had nearly t his <lb />
life by tho heels of th I brute. <lb />
So exciting had become the record <lb />
of jack's that <lb />
they became tho subject of <lb />
conversation and inquiry among <lb />
tho minors. Sitting in their cabins <lb />
spun wonderful tales of what <lb />
he had done and was capable of do- <lb />
J is the liveliest <lb />
said one. <lb />
right, old man. That <lb />
beast can kick tho hair off a man's <lb />
head without touching the <lb />
replied one of his companions. <lb />
That was Tom in a ten- <lb />
place, and, after a moment's re- <lb />
he spoke up with the re- <lb />
mark <lb />
can't The ob- <lb />
was received with amazed <lb />
silence. <lb />
Tom Why, he'd make <lb />
mince meat of you in a <lb />
replied the athletic <lb />
Indianian. ho can have <lb />
chance. I'm ready to kick for <lb />
and may the host man <lb />
the boat interposed a <lb />
companion. <lb />
moan what I say, old man, so <lb />
don't be too spry with your <lb />
And Tom's brow lowered in gather- <lb />
anger. His friend apologized for <lb />
the jest, and the crowd dispersed. <lb />
next day the rumor went wild <lb />
through tho camp that Tom was <lb />
willing to kick burro for a <lb />
In the dusk of the evening the <lb />
miners gathered in from work <lb />
and discussed the subject in all its <lb />
bearings. Opinion as to the match <lb />
was about evenly divided. If any- <lb />
thing, Tom was the favorite. Under <lb />
these a mill for <lb />
a side was easily between <lb />
the boast and the man, and it was <lb />
decided that tho conflict should come <lb />
off Sunday afternoon. <lb />
Promptly at tho appointed hour <lb />
every inhabitant of tho canyon and <lb />
the villages that since grown <lb />
into Pomona and Pasadena was as- <lb />
in a little level spot just <lb />
outside tho limits of tho camp. The <lb />
preliminaries were quickly <lb />
and the The beast <lb />
scorned to take in situation at a <lb />
and, laying back his oars, he <lb />
watched his wary opponent with <lb />
angry eyes. Suddenly Tom leaped <lb />
forward and landed a kick <lb />
squarely on the junction of the neck <lb />
and head. <lb />
The brute reeled before the force <lb />
of the blow, but on the <lb />
instant he wheeled and launched <lb />
both heels at his antagonist. The <lb />
man leaped aside, and as as <lb />
lightning responded with another <lb />
fearful kick on the burro's neck. <lb />
And so the conflict raged. Some- <lb />
times the jack would get in a <lb />
age blow on his opponent, <lb />
the man had the best of it, and <lb />
at last, putting forth all of his won- <lb />
strength, ho landed a kick <lb />
with fury and irresistible force <lb />
of a pile driver on jack's <lb />
which bad his objective point <lb />
from the beginning. The beast reel- <lb />
ed back, and with a convulsive <lb />
fell over. Tom was terribly <lb />
bruised, but no bones were broken, <lb />
and in a few days he was as spry as <lb />
Louis Globe-Democrat. <lb />
Both Wondered. <lb />
They were a couple of <lb />
is to Bay, they rode <lb />
and believed in a woman's <lb />
to dress as she pleased and in <lb />
her right to vote. They were travel- <lb />
alone and in doing so. <lb />
From time to time, indeed, they <lb />
congratulated themselves their <lb />
freedom and independence and the <lb />
fact that there were no men around <lb />
to bother them. One day one of <lb />
them had her pocket picked. It is <lb />
not necessary to dilate upon <lb />
rowing details of affair. Suffice <lb />
to say that the thief was the porter <lb />
of the car, and the loss was largely <lb />
due to the woman's carelessness. <lb />
This, too, although there were no <lb />
men around to bother them. After <lb />
much planning what to do, and aft- <lb />
much of a futile and in- <lb />
effective sort, the two women sat to- <lb />
for some time in <lb />
They had plenty of other money <lb />
with them, It wasn't that that <lb />
was their impotence <lb />
to bring the thief to justice to <lb />
get anybody to do anything at all <lb />
to the occasion. Finally <lb />
one of the women <lb />
is other <lb />
woman. <lb />
Then the first woman <lb />
was wondering, yon <lb />
know, what a man would do under <lb />
these <lb />
The other woman <lb />
just what I was wonder- <lb />
Inter Ocean. <lb />
Life and <lb />
Dr. J. in a paper <lb />
on of the Influences of City <lb />
Life on the Nervous lays <lb />
great stress on the well known fact <lb />
that the average American treats <lb />
himself outrageously. The best <lb />
proof of this is the immense sale in <lb />
every large city of so called nerve <lb />
the trade done in the wines <lb />
of cocoa and kola and the <lb />
of phosphorus is almost in- <lb />
credible. This is all wrong. A tired <lb />
and nervous man does not want <lb />
but fresh air and exercise ac- <lb />
cording to bis strength. In this <lb />
the English are wiser than we <lb />
are. They up their habit of <lb />
physical exercise until far into old <lb />
age, and paresis is comparatively <lb />
little known in England. Dr. Hay- <lb />
cock says that American men will <lb />
have to turn over a new leaf and <lb />
draw, a sensible balance between <lb />
work and play. <lb />
BESIDE A GRAVE. <lb />
Out the gram that in over thy breast. <lb />
Heating my coming, n bird took her night. <lb />
she travel for holier rest, <lb />
dew on the robes of tho night <lb />
Was she thy soul for a moment returned <lb />
Out of hand to the temple of rust, <lb />
Torching the bosom of clay she has spurned, <lb />
tears on thy forehead of dust <lb />
of my heart, I was sad all tho day, <lb />
thee ask for mo, bearing thee sigh. <lb />
I am coming at the evening to pray <lb />
-r darkening dome of the sky, <lb />
and crying by I <lb />
Raw felt thee in lily and lark <lb />
All of tender. Imperatives heard, <lb />
Convert thee, comfort thee, friend In the <lb />
dark. <lb />
What shall I tell thee changes to morn. <lb />
Woodlands are sweet with the call of the <lb />
dove. <lb />
Motherly finches contented in thorn <lb />
Nurse for their husbands a of love. <lb />
What Is all beauty if thou have no part <lb />
Would that life's rule might be dead for <lb />
Sake, <lb />
Friend, as I moan from the turf on my heart. <lb />
Ob, to be sleeping and know thee awake I <lb />
Norman in Windsor Magazine. <lb />
GROVES <lb />
The Ideal Schoolboy. <lb />
The ideal schoolboy is an orderly <lb />
machine, always obedient, receptive, <lb />
submissive, ready in the cricket field <lb />
and with real or simulated <lb />
for football, despising all other <lb />
games, and conservative to the <lb />
backbone. He is tho darling of the <lb />
who sends him home with <lb />
glowing reports and arms full of <lb />
prize books. It seems never to <lb />
cur to any one that there may be <lb />
natures to which the <lb />
and history make no appeal, <lb />
who have not the gift of the <lb />
and who do not even care <lb />
to play at cricket or football. If <lb />
such appear in a public school, they <lb />
have a bad time of it, dragging out <lb />
their miserable days at the bottom <lb />
of the form, regarded as fools by the <lb />
masters and as muffs by the boys. <lb />
And yet among school failures <lb />
there may be or or <lb />
at any rate there may and com- <lb />
there is material out of <lb />
good and useful citizens <lb />
made if only had a chance to <lb />
show what they can <lb />
Rough on Chelsea. <lb />
A Chelsea man recently <lb />
died, says the Boston Budget, and <lb />
i a conversation him and <lb />
a friend at a Spiritualistic the <lb />
following colloquy <lb />
The friend, on being called for by <lb />
the departed one, <lb />
old chum, Jim <lb />
Jim, I suppose you are <lb />
partaking of celestial <lb />
a bit of it I the <lb />
Scott, that's awful <lb />
The spirit smiled. know that's <lb />
the popular it said, m <lb />
boy, it's a great sight better <lb />
The story would indicate that the <lb />
medium must have played to very <lb />
poor business in Chelsea. <lb />
Stage Realism. <lb />
One of my best in <lb />
was Benjamin Haydon. His <lb />
son, the artist of celebrity, at <lb />
that time a spirited and intelligent <lb />
little fellow about years of ago, <lb />
who used to listen to my songs and <lb />
laugh heartily at my jokes when- <lb />
ever I dined at his father's. One <lb />
evening I was playing Sharp in <lb />
Lying when he and my friend <lb />
Benjamin were in the stage box, and <lb />
on my repeating the words, have <lb />
had nothing to eat since last Monday <lb />
was a little Haydon ex- <lb />
claimed in a tone to the <lb />
whole a whopper <lb />
Why, you dined at my father's <lb />
house this afternoon. <lb />
of tho <lb />
Rotten Row. <lb />
It is a royal prerogative, belong- <lb />
exclusively to the reigning <lb />
to drive down tho middle <lb />
of Rotten row, London. Tho queen <lb />
has only availed herself or <lb />
twice of the right. From this an- <lb />
privilege came the name Rout <lb />
whence the corruption <lb />
Poverty Cottage. <lb />
If ever household affections and <lb />
loves are graceful things, they are <lb />
graceful in the poor. The ties that <lb />
bind the wealthy and the proud to <lb />
home may be forged on earth, but <lb />
those link the poor man to <lb />
his hearth of the true <lb />
metal, and bear the stamp of <lb />
North Carolina has a output <lb />
of pounds a New <lb />
Hampshire about <lb />
pounds, South Dakota pounds <lb />
and New Mexico pounds. The <lb />
mica of North Carolina is of the best <lb />
quality and brings the highest price. <lb />
The proverbial wisdom of the pop- <lb />
at gates, on roads and in mar- <lb />
instructs him who studies man <lb />
more fully than a thousand rules <lb />
ostentatiously <lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
HILL <lb />
JUST AS FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE <lb />
a . Ills., Nov. <lb />
Paris Co., St. Louts, Mo. <lb />
Bold last year, GOO bottles of <lb />
GROVE'S TONIC am <lb />
In all <lb />
of it years. In the drug bare <lb />
never sold an article i hat gave universal <lb />
as your Tonic truly, <lb />
a co- <lb />
Sold guaranteed J. <lb />
druggist. <lb />
J, C. LANIER CO. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
--------DEALER IN-------- <lb />
Amateur Postmaster. <lb />
A member of the government was <lb />
visiting the other day at a ball in <lb />
the neighborhood of <lb />
Having a pretty wide correspond- <lb />
and there not being any postal <lb />
delivery in the village, the lady at <lb />
the hall took a bundle of to <lb />
the church on the Sunday evening <lb />
and gave them to the <lb />
en, thinking he would be able to <lb />
get them sent to the post- <lb />
office. <lb />
He, not catching what she bad <lb />
said about them, came to con- <lb />
that they were something <lb />
for him to distribute in the church. <lb />
The lady took her seat at the organ. <lb />
Then churchwarden commenced <lb />
to take them from pew to pew as far <lb />
as they would go. <lb />
One young person, looking at hers, <lb />
aid to him that it was a stamped <lb />
letter and did not belong to He <lb />
noise and put it in <lb />
thee pocket and read it when thee <lb />
gets There's something in it <lb />
that will do thee <lb />
Weekly. <lb />
Cleaning Doll Gold. <lb />
Dull gold may be cleared by <lb />
in a bath of grains cal- <lb />
grains sodium <lb />
bicarbonate and grains table <lb />
salt, all of ingredients are <lb />
dissolved in throe quarts distilled <lb />
water. The fluid must be kept for <lb />
use in well corked bottles. Articles <lb />
to be cleaned are placed in a basin <lb />
and covered with liquor and taken <lb />
out after awhile, washed and rinsed <lb />
in alcohol and dried in sawdust The <lb />
then, looks like new.- <lb />
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. First-class work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly qualified the <lb />
of the Court of <lb />
county as Executor of the estate of T. <lb />
C is hereby <lb />
Riven to all parties holding claim <lb />
against said estate to present <lb />
to the properly proven, on <lb />
or before the day Of November. 18- <lb />
or this notice Will lie plea I in bar <lb />
of their recovery, and nil persons <lb />
ed to the laid estate are requested to <lb />
make meat. <lb />
November <lb />
HARRY SKINNER, <lb />
Executor of f,. C. L ill am, deceased. <lb />
The modern stand- <lb />
ard Family <lb />
cine Cures the <lb />
common every-day <lb />
ills of humanity. <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at once <lb />
the most <lb />
strengthening <lb />
is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A bot- <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
won't it mt your <lb />
and It's <lb />
pleasant to <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only the has crossed red <lb />
lines on the wrapper. All others are sub- <lb />
On receipt of two ac. stamps we <lb />
will send set of Tan World s <lb />
Fair Views and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MO.<lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
Stoves, Stoves j <lb />
We are laying in a full line of <lb />
also Sheet <lb />
Iron <lb />
Stoves. Best quality, low prices. Call and <lb />
We also are agents for th- celebrated <lb />
Rambler and Bicycles; <lb />
and have on hand a few second-hand <lb />
for sale very cheap. You may need a <lb />
Machine, we have them in stock. <lb />
Opposite Drugstore. <lb />
ABLE. <lb />
--------IS AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE-------- <lb />
VB <lb />
YEARS has taught best if the i <lb />
Hem Rope, Building Pumps, Faming every- <lb />
tug necessary for -Millers. Mechanics and general n- will as <lb />
Clothing, Beta. Shoes. have on Am <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and Jobbing for Clark's O. N. T. <lb />
Cotton, and keep courteous and attentive clerk,. <lb />
FORBES, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb />
J. L. SUGG. <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-C ASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates <lb />
AGENT FOB. FIRST-CLASS FIRE PROOFS APE. <lb />
and Retail <lb />
O- <lb />
T. A- JONES. <lb />
1878. <lb />
P. H. SAVAGE <lb />
SAVAGE, SON CO, <lb />
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants. <lb />
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
Wholesale Retail Dealers in Bagging, Ties, Peanut Bigs. <lb />
Attention given lo Cotton, Grain, Peanuts a-. <lb />
Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. Prompt and Highest <lb />
Market Guaranteed. <lb />
Norfolk National Bank, or any Reliable In t h <lb />
R. J. Cobb, <lb />
Pitt Co., N. C. <lb />
c, c. <lb />
Co., N. C. <lb />
Skinner. <lb />
Co., NO <lb />
COBB BROS CO., <lb />
Vet. <lb />
and U arc room a near C. R. <lb />
COTTON <lb />
Ragging, Peanut Sacks Famished at Lowest Prices. <lb />
Code, edition used in Telegraphing. <lb />
and Solicited. <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Steamers <lb />
ville and Tarboro touching at all land <lb />
on Tar River Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. M. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. same <lb />
These departures are subject to <lb />
of water on Tar River <lb />
at with steam- <lb />
of Th Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion torn <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk A Bait <lb />
more Steamboat from <lb />
more. Merchants <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. <lb />
N. t <lb />
. J. Agent, <lb />
J N. C <lb />
HE PENN MUTUAL Lift <lb />
INS. CO. OF PHILADELPHIA, <lb />
ORGANIZED <lb />
25,000.000. <lb />
Surplus over <lb />
R. B. Rainey, State <lb />
C. <lb />
The Old Penn Mutual is best <lb />
managed Life Insurance Company in <lb />
America. It furnishes all kinds of pol- <lb />
at lowest possible rates <lb />
with absolute security. It may not pay <lb />
as commissions to agents as <lb />
other companies, but It low of ex- <lb />
low death rate, immense <lb />
plus safely and profitably invested, <lb />
large dividends and Indulgence to its <lb />
policy-holders, render i the Company <lb />
in which to insure. Its policies arc ab- <lb />
and alter three <lb />
years cannot be Money loan- <lb />
ed on policies, paid up <lb />
or policies carried by the Company fur <lb />
a number of <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
WE WANT YOUR ORDERS FOR <lb />
HUB <lb />
We will fill them QUICK <lb />
W will till them CHEAP <lb />
We will till them WELL <lb />
Bough Heart Framing, . <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; 7.0 <lb />
Rough Sap Bo under Inches <lb />
Rough Sap Boards, lo A Inches, <lb />
-ti- <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
Pop Cure of all Skin Di <lb />
This Preparation has been In use <lb />
years, and wherever know <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been en- <lb />
the leading physicians all over <lb />
country, and has effected cures where <lb />
all other remedies, with the attention of <lb />
the most experienced physicians, have <lb />
for years failed. This Ointment Is of <lb />
long standing the high reputation <lb />
which It has obtained is owing <lb />
a it own efficacy, as but little <lb />
ever made to bring it before the <lb />
One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Cash promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. r. <lb />
Greenville. N <lb />
Wood delivered to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking you for past patronage, . <lb />
N. C. <lb />
PATENTS. <lb />
and Trade-Marks obtained all Pa <lb />
and we can patent <lb />
remote from Washing too. <lb />
Send model, drawing or with <lb />
We H c not, of <lb />
charge. Oar fee not due till patent b secured. <lb />
A lo Obtain with <lb />
cost same in the U. S. foreign <lb />
sent free. Address,<lb />
Ops. Washington, D. C. <lb />
HENRY <lb />
Real <lb />
Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Agent. <lb />
or for <lb />
terms Rents, Taxes, <lb />
and open accounts and any other twP <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
have prompt attention <lb />
.-faction guaranteed. I solicit yo <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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