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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 1 January 1896</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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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 1 January 1896</dc:title>
          <dc:description>The Eastern Reflector was a newspaper published in Greenville, N.C. It later became known as the Daily Reflector.</dc:description>
          <dc:creator></dc:creator>
          <dc:subject>Greenville (N.C.)--Newspapers</dc:subject>
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          <dc:date>18960101</dc:date>
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                <p>
A- -V<lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The Reflector is <lb />
to do all <lb />
v line <lb />
NEATLY, <lb />
and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
The Eastern Reflector. <lb />
D. J. WHICHARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. per Year, in Advance. <lb />
Plenty of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
EVERY BOY. <lb />
Wants or should want <lb />
an Education, <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY i, <lb />
NO. <lb />
Everybody mild <lb />
Oil <lb />
for 1696. <lb />
Brim full of fresh, crisp <lb />
news, both foreign <lb />
and domestic <lb />
Only a year. <lb />
THE EVENTS OF A YEAR. <lb />
A Condensed Diary of the Past <lb />
Twelve Months. <lb />
OF 1895. <lb />
And The Reflector is <lb />
to help one Boy m <lb />
that direction. <lb />
To will absolutely free of charge <lb />
a the holder to <lb />
f,. in nil the <lb />
fur entire <lb />
of <lb />
Greenville Academy- <lb />
Tin- i- the bf-t sellout for in <lb />
i, the <lb />
Will who ills till- <lb />
conditions. <lb />
This scholarship is to be <lb />
given to the boy who will get the <lb />
of Yearly for <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
between now o'clock P. Jan <lb />
1898. To for <lb />
or for <lb />
will one yearly <lb />
This is no catch <lb />
offer, an I if only one <lb />
lie baring the <lb />
time -p-i the boy who brings it <lb />
get the Of coarse <lb />
more than one to be <lb />
in. for l his is a worth win <lb />
will work ii <lb />
In order there may be an <lb />
for v h wishes to <lb />
we offer a each <lb />
W per cent on all HI <lb />
tho e who fail to get the <lb />
will be paid for their work, but <lb />
the one who win- th- will <lb />
not the Now boys get <lb />
o work the n to win <lb />
prize. M many <lb />
of you need <lb />
by applying to the office. If you decide <lb />
to enter this contest send your name <lb />
as we know how many a e <lb />
working for the prize. We will publish <lb />
the of the contest with the name <lb />
of winner in of the <lb />
of 1698, giving lie- <lb />
boy enter school on the <lb />
opening day of spring term Monday, <lb />
Jan, 80th. <lb />
Ad all to <lb />
THE <lb />
N. <lb />
X. C. Oct. 25th, <lb />
This that have arranged <lb />
with publisher Eastern <lb />
o free of charge in <lb />
the K brandies, the -J months <lb />
term b J m. 20th. i, the b y <lb />
to whom he d the scholarship <lb />
in tile COOt .-t. <lb />
II. <lb />
Principal Greenville Male Academy- <lb />
j. J. l. <lb />
el <lb />
n. v. <lb />
all the <lb />
H H W- <lb />
It -v <lb />
Successor to Latham Skimmer. <lb />
. <lb />
x. c <lb />
E. C Harding. <lb />
-on, X. O. N. V<lb />
AT I-A W, <lb />
Greenville, X. <lb />
given to <lb />
an n of claims. <lb />
J. K. a Moore, i <lb />
U Greenville <lb />
MOORE.<lb />
ante Opera House. Third S <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LA <lb />
GREEN r I- I E Y f. <lb />
Practice in all . ion <lb />
P. TYSON, <lb />
Attorney and Counselor at Law <lb />
Greenville. County. <lb />
Practices in all the Courts. <lb />
Civil and criminal Solicited. <lb />
Makes a special of fraud <lb />
ages. actions to recover land, and col- <lb />
Prompt and careful attention given <lb />
all <lb />
Money to Ivan on approved security. <lb />
Terms easy. <lb />
-5. WILCOX,<lb />
N. C. <lb />
counties <lb />
H. LONG, <lb />
A y . At- Law. <lb />
X. C. <lb />
w. <lb />
Practices In all the <lb />
L. JAMES, <lb />
w- c. <lb />
DR. H. A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
J. O. <lb />
Office upstairs S. Co<lb />
and <lb />
the and Index off Every- <lb />
Worth <lb />
Tho of hauling <lb />
of 1806 boon can-fully <lb />
for or future <lb />
tho of <lb />
Eon. P. P. Mast, O. build- <lb />
mu at Kan.; loss, <lb />
Dr. Marx, famous <lb />
in <lb />
David H. I In <lb />
of Ike at Asbury <lb />
Park, <lb />
ft. Tho Toronto Globe build and <lb />
burned a blizzard; l-s. over <lb />
killed. <lb />
Obituary; K-v. Dr. King, famous for aid <lb />
to escaping Clot ham. Ont.; <lb />
Gen. Philip Sidney a <lb />
Union veteran and a <lb />
from Illinois, in aped <lb />
Uprising in Hawaii in the interests <lb />
of tho deposed queen. <lb />
Fires; mill and elevator <lb />
burned at N. Y.; loss, <lb />
Obituary; Archibald Gordon, newspaper <lb />
critic and dramatist, in Port <lb />
N. . <lb />
Th building and several <lb />
large business houses in <lb />
Factories of the <lb />
Hardware company burned at tit. Joseph, ; <lb />
loss, <lb />
Aaron L. Dennison. tho father of j <lb />
in Birmingham, <lb />
England; aged Si. Gen. Alfred W. Eliot, <lb />
as leader of ram fleet in <lb />
tho Mississippi, at El Dorado, Kan. <lb />
A blaze at O. <lb />
Trolley and conductors <lb />
in <lb />
Fire; St ad t theater, Milwaukee, <lb />
to the amount of <lb />
Ex-Gov. S. F. Chadwick of Ore- <lb />
at Salem; aged Charles C <lb />
active temperance loader, in Brooklyn; <lb />
Explosion of several powder cars <lb />
at Butte, Mon.; killed. injured. <lb />
President of France <lb />
resigned. <lb />
IT. Gen. N. Stile, a Union <lb />
veteran prominent in public life in <lb />
aped Col. John Kean, founder and <lb />
first president of the Central Railroad of . <lb />
Jersey, in New York; <lb />
Francois Felix elected <lb />
dent of France. <lb />
Arrest and confession of <lb />
the bond forger, in New York; amount <lb />
involved, <lb />
Texas Cotton palace burned at Waco. <lb />
20- Prof. C. of <lb />
Columbia college, at Athens; aged <lb />
by trolley strikers <lb />
in Brooklyn. <lb />
CL Tho Kink of <lb />
and private bank of Erastus <lb />
Sons closed th doors. <lb />
Charles noted Swiss <lb />
philosopher, at aged <lb />
The National <lb />
association met at Cincinnati. Militia <lb />
on trolley in Brooklyn. <lb />
Dr. Alfred L. <lb />
professor and practitioner, in Now <lb />
York city; aged Gen. Stephen V. <lb />
Benet, U- S. A., retired; aged . <lb />
Lord Randolph Bony <lb />
Churchill, prominent English politician, in <lb />
London; <lb />
Two masked men held a train <lb />
on tho Cotton road near Ark., and <lb />
plundered the car of <lb />
Five coal sunk in i <lb />
Island Pound; drowned. <lb />
Gloucester fishing Leader wreck- <lb />
ed on the Massachusetts coast; of the <lb />
crew drowned. <lb />
Obituary M. Russian minister of <lb />
foreign affairs for many years, at St. <lb />
aged Gas. Darr, a <lb />
prominent Union v. at no. Pa.; <lb />
aped <lb />
fierce gale along th New England, Long <lb />
Island and New Jersey coasts. <lb />
Mrs. . G. <lb />
Jenny at Morristown, N. <lb />
J.; aged . <lb />
last mar. of, <lb />
in Paris; aged <lb />
Storm struck capsizing <lb />
several sloops; many lives lost. Blizzard <lb />
in Oklahoma. <lb />
Dr. Jam in Strong, widely known <lb />
authority on mental diseases, in Cleveland; <lb />
aged <lb />
Steamship Elbe of th North Ger- <lb />
man Lloyd collided with a small steamer; <lb />
in the North sea and sunk with over <lb />
people. <lb />
Jude r Hoar , <lb />
in Ward <lb />
Bated Ba leader, in w York <lb />
city. <lb />
The twenty-seventh annual con- <lb />
of the American Woman's <lb />
began at Atlanta. <lb />
FEBRUARY. <lb />
Theodore once a <lb />
prominent antislavery agitator, at Hyde <lb />
Park, Mass.; aged <lb />
i . works burned at Mo- <lb />
Pa.; lots, <lb />
Gen. D. Manson, veteran of <lb />
the Mexican and civil wars, at Frankfort, <lb />
Ind.; aped Gen. Rufus Barringer. a <lb />
Confederate Charlotte, N. C; <lb />
aged <lb />
A trolley car plunged through an <lb />
open draw in Milwaukee; killed, in- <lb />
Boardman tobacco warehouse <lb />
mimed in loss over A <lb />
fire in the business district of <lb />
V. <lb />
Denison hotel, Indianapolis, dam- <lb />
aged by fire to the extent of <lb />
A blaze at Evansville, Ind. <lb />
Gen. John M. made lieu- <lb />
tenant <lb />
John L. ex-minister to <lb />
Hawaii, at Augusta, Me.; aged Rev. <lb />
Dr. William Mar hoe Taylor, a prominent <lb />
Presbyterian, in New York city; aged <lb />
men run down by a Pennsylvania <lb />
railroad at <lb />
P. The onion depot and burned <lb />
at St. Ma ; loss, The Con- <lb />
church burned at <lb />
Prof. James R. Boise of the Chi- <lb />
capo one of the noted <lb />
Greek scholars in the country. In <lb />
aged <lb />
The Syndicate block burned In Rock- I <lb />
ford. Ills.; The state printing house <lb />
at <lb />
A store and a factory burned at Rock- <lb />
Die.; loss. <lb />
Judge Charles E. A. due <lb />
r I v N. <lb />
Or Mans; Judge <lb />
prominent writer and lawyer, at Detroit; ; <lb />
SI. Gen j <lb />
veteran, at Alexandria. aged <lb />
is. Fatal fire at Lynn, Mass,; firemen , <lb />
injured. A 9100.000 lire in Salt <lb />
Luke City. <lb />
Silk mill burned at Paterson, H. J.; <lb />
loss. <lb />
Ex-Got. Gray, U. minister to <lb />
in the City of Mexico. <lb />
Richard P. <lb />
n organizer, in Detroit; aped <lb />
Dr. Samuel Spencer Stafford, founder of <lb />
the Stafford Ink company, in New York; <lb />
W. <lb />
Tho Brooklyn trolley strike ended <lb />
on all lines t one. <lb />
Yorke <lb />
actress, in Philadelphia <lb />
by B. Gentry. <lb />
burned at <lb />
N. loss. <lb />
Eliza D. one of Chicane <lb />
old- <lb />
The convention of Sn- <lb />
con- <lb />
in Cleveland. The fourth <lb />
of th Daughters of the Revolution opened <lb />
in Washington. <lb />
ID. Douglass at Washing- <lb />
ton, <lb />
n. Ex-Gov. Benjamin <lb />
of New at N. H.; aged <lb />
The ninth annual convention of <lb />
the News met <lb />
New York. <lb />
Several cottages and boarding <lb />
at Hot Springs. <lb />
Gen. Matt W. Ransom, senator <lb />
from North Carolina, appointed minister <lb />
t-j Mexico. <lb />
Gen. B. Carr, a <lb />
Union veteran, in Troy, N. aged <lb />
of em- <lb />
and acquitted. <lb />
The National Dairy <lb />
mt in annual session at Washing- <lb />
ton. The third annual session of butter <lb />
and makers began Ills. <lb />
Ex-Judge Richard <lb />
once a prominent Fenian, in New York <lb />
city; aged <lb />
L hotel burned at Norfolk, Nob.; <lb />
loan, <lb />
on the Inter- <lb />
railway near the City of Mexico; <lb />
train down an embankment. <lb />
t- business of tho town of <lb />
N. D., burned; loss, China <lb />
company's works burned at Akron. O.; <lb />
lone, A fire at <lb />
Ills. <lb />
Prof. John Stuart of the <lb />
University of Edinburgh, in that city; aged <lb />
A fire in Toronto, the third <lb />
great conflagration in two months; a dozen <lb />
business houses, hotel and church de- <lb />
Electric power house burned at <lb />
Ills.; loss, A 9150.000 <lb />
by fire at Salina, Kan. <lb />
W. C Coup, the veteran <lb />
showman, at Fla.; aped <lb />
Rot. Daniel a pioneer mission- <lb />
of China, In San Francisco; aged <lb />
Anna youngest daughter of <lb />
the late Gould, married Count de <lb />
of Fran-e. <lb />
Obituary Col. David Ramsey <lb />
a veteran distinguished in the cavalry <lb />
service, Ills.; aged <lb />
Block if buildings destroyed by an <lb />
explosion of natural gas at Anderson, Ind.; <lb />
loss, <lb />
William E. the noted <lb />
railway magnate and multimillionaire, <lb />
by his wife on statutory grounds in <lb />
New York city. <lb />
ft. Edwin Forbes, n well known <lb />
American artist and veteran war <lb />
lent with tho Union armies, in New <lb />
York aged <lb />
Hyde Clark, famous linguist <lb />
and scientist, in London; aged <lb />
Obituary Frederick E. Sickles, an engineer <lb />
and inventor, in Kansas City. <lb />
The Cincinnati and Now <lb />
packet Longfellow a channel span <lb />
of the Chesapeake bridge at Cincinnati <lb />
and went down in minutes; lives lost <lb />
and about people saved by a tug. <lb />
Canter, Italian historian <lb />
and Liberal, Milan; John F. <lb />
Temple-, noted in Chicago; <lb />
Worth, the famous <lb />
in Paris; aped <lb />
Commercial Mutual Accident as- <lb />
of America held its twelfth annual <lb />
session at N. Y. <lb />
ball and other properties burn- <lb />
ed in Brooklyn; loss, <lb />
riot at New Orleans; I kill- <lb />
-d at their work. <lb />
Large buildings burned in Kansas <lb />
City; loss, 9300.000. <lb />
City hull at Me., damaged <lb />
by fire. <lb />
Rev. Dr. John W. <lb />
dent of the Baptist seminary at <lb />
Louisville, in that aged <lb />
Ho to elevator and ware- <lb />
burned in St. Louis; loss, A <lb />
building occupied by and news <lb />
concerns burned at Cleveland; loss, <lb />
killed and injured at the <lb />
burning of the in To- <lb />
Capt. D. I. president Min- <lb />
exchange, in Denver. <lb />
Business block burned at Perry, O. <lb />
T.; loss. <lb />
buildings burned in Burlington, <lb />
loss 9250.000. <lb />
Gen. Adam Grant's <lb />
biographer, etc., at Ridge- <lb />
N. J.; aged <lb />
A fire at Peoria, Ills, <lb />
On, Philip St. George Cooke, <lb />
prominent army veteran, in Detroit; aged <lb />
miners killed by an explosion at <lb />
Evanston. <lb />
Neal Dow, tho apostle of pro- <lb />
his ninety-first birth- <lb />
day. <lb />
worth of cotton burned in <lb />
the yards of the International Cotton press. <lb />
New Orleans. Warehouse and elevator <lb />
burned at Sioux City, la.; loss, <lb />
Prof. Henry LL. of <lb />
university, at Bethlehem, Pa.; aged <lb />
Richard a prominent <lb />
aged <lb />
deaths at afire in the St. James <lb />
hotel, Denver. <lb />
packing plant In Kansas City <lb />
burned; loss, hotels, a church <lb />
and bank burned at Decatur, Mich. <lb />
Li Bung Chang, China's peace en- <lb />
by a Japanese in <lb />
P houses and other property <lb />
burned loss, <lb />
Prof. James E. Oliver, well known <lb />
mathematician at Cornell university, in <lb />
Ithaca. N. Y. <lb />
buildings burned at St. <lb />
tine, Fla. buildings burned at <lb />
raga, N. Y.; loss, <lb />
Housing, noted German <lb />
editor, in aged Mrs. <lb />
Stevens, noted leader of society, in New <lb />
Yarn <lb />
APRIL. <lb />
Tho business portion of the city of <lb />
St. Charles by fire; loss, <lb />
David M. Stone, formerly editor <lb />
of The Journal of Commerce, in New York <lb />
aped <lb />
workmen killed and injured by <lb />
a boiler explosion at Mass. <lb />
I. Henry noted abolitionist, at <lb />
Conn.; aged Rev. Bar- <lb />
ton H. Cart a pioneer Methodist of <lb />
the west, at Oregon, Ills.; aged Jack <lb />
Wallace, once th- wealthiest landholder in <lb />
Atlanta, died at Sherman, Tex. Captain <lb />
a well known navigator <lb />
of the port, in Mass.; aged <lb />
t. Obituary Ex-Gov. William R. Marshall of <lb />
Minnesota, at Pasadena, Cal.; aged <lb />
d. Thompson a veteran <lb />
of Hawk war and a pioneer of <lb />
Kansas City; aged <lb />
The Am Starch works burned <lb />
at Columbus, Ind. ; loss, <lb />
Anthony M. Cannon, a leading <lb />
citizen of tho northwest, in New York city. <lb />
a fire the railroad works <lb />
at Winslow, A. T. <lb />
Gov. Joshua H. of Dela- <lb />
ware, at aged Gen, James L, <lb />
or Virginia and a <lb />
leader of one of Pickett's brigades at Get- <lb />
in Orange county, Va.; aged <lb />
miners killed by gas explosion <lb />
at Lake Wash. <lb />
W. Jennings founder <lb />
of Magazine and a leader in <lb />
movements, in New York city; <lb />
aged Gen. T. A. Harris, a Confederate <lb />
veteran, at Lodge, near Louisville. <lb />
five story buildings fell in Wheel- <lb />
burying men in the ruins; ft deaths; <lb />
property among victims <lb />
was Vicar General Parke, who was passing <lb />
and was caught by the falling wall, <lb />
A We express wagon rob <lb />
bed of 915.000 in Colorado; the messenger <lb />
fatally wounded. <lb />
Warehouse burned at Colo.; <lb />
loss, <lb />
At Mo., the courthouse <lb />
and all the buildings on one side of the <lb />
public square destroyed by Are; loss about <lb />
Pressed brick works burned <lb />
Glen US.; loss nearly <lb />
James W. Scott, editor and pub- <lb />
of the Chicago Times-Herald, in New <lb />
York aged Prof. James Dwight <lb />
Dana of Yale, at New aged <lb />
Dr. John P. <lb />
Prohibitionist, at Springfield, Mass. <lb />
Earthquake; Heavy shocks in Italy and <lb />
Hon. prom- <lb />
leader, at Brook lino, <lb />
Mass. <lb />
R. C. ex-governor of <lb />
Louisiana, at Ky. Granville <lb />
Perkins, the artist, in New York city; aged <lb />
The fifth international convention of the <lb />
open- <lb />
ed in <lb />
Plains J Charles K. Knox, the well known <lb />
Now York hatter, In that aged <lb />
Eddie Bald lowered cycling <lb />
record a second in California by riding a <lb />
mile in <lb />
Fire in the school of arts at <lb />
France, destroyed exhibition <lb />
models and machines valued <lb />
francs. <lb />
Paul Cooper, son of the <lb />
novelist, in Albany; aged <lb />
Obituary Albert Young, patriarch <lb />
of the people of the <lb />
died at Ross Park, opposite St. Louis; be <lb />
Wan years old. <lb />
Col. Franklin Fairbanks, one of <lb />
Vermont's most prominent citizens, at St. <lb />
Brig. Wesley Merritt appoint- <lb />
ed major general by tho president. Cols. <lb />
R. Bliss and John J. r were <lb />
promoted to be brigadier generals. <lb />
Nat Jones, a veteran <lb />
of the died in Chicago. <lb />
Mrs. Frank Leslie, first wife of the well <lb />
known New York publisher, at <lb />
N. Y. <lb />
Tho tobacco factory burn- <lb />
ed in Montreal; loss, several fatal- <lb />
persons injured. <lb />
Henry H. Scott, a <lb />
and leading Democrat of San Francis- <lb />
co, in that city. <lb />
B Taft, an eminent <lb />
jurist, at Pontiac; aged <lb />
the popular Ger- <lb />
man novelist, author of <lb />
and other notable ; aged <lb />
MAY. <lb />
Maj. John Newton, <lb />
soldier of the Mexican and civil <lb />
wars and engineer of Hell Gate, in Now <lb />
York Gen. S. B. a <lb />
veteran of the Mexican and civil in <lb />
Third annual con press Sons <lb />
of the American Revolution began in <lb />
ton. Tornado in Kansas; <lb />
a. American Powder company's <lb />
mills near Concord, Mass., blown up; <lb />
killed. Sioux City, la., and other towns <lb />
swept by a tornado; over killed. <lb />
James Kelly, a Cook county <lb />
and one of tho founders of the <lb />
go Tribune, at Winnetka, Ills. <lb />
ft. New O., bad fire. <lb />
Strauss tannery and other proper- <lb />
tap in East Buffalo destroyed by fire; loss, <lb />
Ex-Gov. Robert S. Green of Now <lb />
at Elizabeth, N. J.; aged <lb />
Field Marshal Pane, a <lb />
distinguished Prussian veteran and <lb />
governor of Berlin, in that city ; aged <lb />
Ex-Gov. James A. at <lb />
Manchester, N. H.; aged <lb />
The thirty-first international <lb />
convention Y. M. C. A. of North America <lb />
mot at Springfield, Mass. <lb />
Gilbert Elliot, constructor of the <lb />
noted Confederate ram in New j <lb />
city; aged <lb />
Gen. Joseph Colton, <lb />
in tho Confederate army, aft New L <lb />
aged Gen. Charles Sutherland, <lb />
goon U. S. A., in i <lb />
aped at, <lb />
Ex-Gov. Ira J. Chase of Indiana, <lb />
Me.; aged <lb />
Fire Huron, destroy- <lb />
ad a grain elevator and flour mill; loss, I <lb />
At Pratt City, Ala., tho city j <lb />
a hotel and church and dwellings wore <lb />
destroyed by Are. <lb />
Julius H. ex-president of <lb />
Amherst college, in Amherst; <lb />
Chief Whirlwind, noted Cheyenne warrior, j <lb />
died at Fort Reno, O. T. <lb />
Tho sixteenth annual con I <lb />
of the Hotel Men's Mutual Benefit as- <lb />
began in New York. Biennial , <lb />
convention of the Order of Railway Con- j <lb />
doctors began in Atlanta. <lb />
Duke of Hamilton, twelfth of, <lb />
his line, died in Algiers. Admiral John J. <lb />
U. S. N., retired, in Washington; <lb />
aged Peter H. Burnett, first governor <lb />
of California, in San aged <lb />
business places and dwellings <lb />
destroyed in St. Vt.; loss, 9750.000. <lb />
David S, S. tho well <lb />
known Fire Island in Babylon, <lb />
N. Y.; aged Hiram Barney, collector <lb />
of the port of New York under Lincoln, in <lb />
that city; aged <lb />
EL At Angelica, N. Y., stores, opera <lb />
house and other property burned; loss, <lb />
Franz the <lb />
composer of <lb />
In Vienna; aged Dr. Mary Harris <lb />
Thompson, founder and head surgeon of <lb />
tho Chicago Hospital For Women and <lb />
in Chicago; aged <lb />
Explosion at Cal., of <lb />
pounds of nitroglycerin and pounds <lb />
Hercules powder; killed; loss, <lb />
Tho income tax declared <lb />
constitutional by a vote of to The <lb />
fifth annual reunion of the United <lb />
veterans convened at Houston, Tex. <lb />
Obituary Hon. Hugh secretary <lb />
of treasury to 1869, at Washington; <lb />
aged <lb />
John A. Morris race horse own- <lb />
and capitalist, Tex. <lb />
Obituary Hi Fry, noted wood <lb />
carver, near Cincinnati; aged <lb />
business houses and dwellings <lb />
burned at Mo.; loss, <lb />
Walter Quinton Gresham, <lb />
w of W S <lb />
The seventieth <lb />
muting of the American Unitarian <lb />
held in Boston. The American <lb />
Baptist union began its eighty-first <lb />
convention at Saratoga, <lb />
Pacific Mail steamer Col i ma ran <lb />
upon a reef off Hex., during a <lb />
gale; persona drowned. French steamer <lb />
Dom wrecked off the Spanish coast; <lb />
lives lost. <lb />
Gen. G. M. Union vet- <lb />
at Charleston, Ills.; aged <lb />
JUNE. <lb />
George M. Gray, a Chicago <lb />
in that city; aged <lb />
B. Hon. Vincent D. Markham, a <lb />
very distinguished jurist- of Colorado, at <lb />
Denver; aged <lb />
Miss Emily the Eng- <lb />
economist and philanthropist; aged <lb />
Gen. Rivera, captain general of Mad- <lb />
rid, mortally wounded by a subordinate. <lb />
Samuel Washington Fuller, artist <lb />
and portrait painter, at Saratoga; aged I <lb />
The one hundred and fourteenth annual con- <lb />
clave of the grand lodge of Freemasons <lb />
opened in New York. <lb />
ft. Carriage plant burned at Jackson, <lb />
loss, elevators destroyed <lb />
at Wis.; loss, <lb />
I. Ralph an old j <lb />
lie. r associated with George Stephenson, <lb />
of the near Charles- <lb />
ton, W. Va.; aged <lb />
I. At Minn., feet of i <lb />
loss, <lb />
John A. the circus <lb />
manager, in aged <lb />
Dewing A yard and <lb />
factory, with adjoining destroy- <lb />
ed by fire at Kalamazoo, Mich.; loss, <lb />
The Leonard silk m at Florence, <lb />
Mass., destroyed by fire; loss nearly <lb />
Cameron, W. Va,, almost wholly de- <lb />
by a train from Wheel- <lb />
wrecked and men killed. <lb />
William a pioneer mer- <lb />
chant of California in San Francisco; aged <lb />
II. Obituary Prof. Daniel Kirkwood, LL. D., <lb />
late of the Indiana university, <lb />
Gal.; aged <lb />
professor of ancient languages In the <lb />
of Indiana, at <lb />
aged j <lb />
Christian Endeavor annual <lb />
convention opened in Boston. Destructive j <lb />
storms and tornadoes in Minnesota and <lb />
Oklahoma. <lb />
Henry Cooper, formerly <lb />
a well known New York tailor, in Now <lb />
York; aged gorilla, noted Span <lb />
republican loader, at Madrid; aged <lb />
Rev. A. Minor. D. <lb />
pastor emeritus of the Second <lb />
church and a prominent prohibitionist In I <lb />
Boston; aged I <lb />
A horsepower engine exploded <lb />
Fall Mass., wrecking a story build- <lb />
people killed and <lb />
t Stowe j <lb />
fa r eight; fourth birthday at Hartford. <lb />
ft. At O., lire destroyed j <lb />
drug atom, hotel. banks and <lb />
loss, j <lb />
An fire <lb />
church. offices and several <lb />
stores; -s Jacob's Third Avenue <lb />
The Woman's Christian conference <lb />
opened in London. <lb />
The Harlem ship canal con- <lb />
North river with Long Island sound <lb />
opened with ceremonies. <lb />
W. H. head of the <lb />
great drug firm, in Now York city; aged <lb />
Power house and oars of the street <lb />
railway in Seattle, Wash., burned; loss, <lb />
Henry B. Houston, <lb />
interests in <lb />
In Philadelphia; aged <lb />
Emperor William laid the keystone of the <lb />
Kaiser canal. <lb />
The soldier bicycle courier ended <lb />
his ride from New York to Chi- <lb />
Lord and hit <lb />
ministry resigned. Columbia won the <lb />
angular race at <lb />
Cornell and Pennsylvania. <lb />
Thomas Henry Huxley, the <lb />
England; aged years. <lb />
pi M. D. a pioneer <lb />
In San Francisco; aged <lb />
Philip Phillips, the evangelist, in Dela- <lb />
O.; <lb />
San Francisco swept by the largest <lb />
fire known there in over years. <lb />
Yale defeated Harvard by <lb />
lengths at New London, Conn. <lb />
Prof. Thomas H. Huxley, the <lb />
scientist, at England; aged <lb />
of Brazil, near Rio <lb />
Janeiro; aged Daniel Eaton, pro- <lb />
of botany at Yale, in New Haven; <lb />
sped Gen. Green Clay Smith, a Union <lb />
veteran, at Washington ; aged <lb />
JULY. <lb />
L At Elkhart, Ind., a bridge fell <lb />
under a crowd witnessing a boat race; <lb />
injured. <lb />
deaths in the region west <lb />
of and adjoining tho Mississippi by cloud- <lb />
bursts and lightning. burglars <lb />
Allen and out <lb />
Ludlow Street jail, Now York. Mob at- <lb />
tacked an A. P. A. parade in Boston. <lb />
Alexander Hester, America's <lb />
greatest died at Evanston, <lb />
Ills. <lb />
ft. Lumber plant burned at <lb />
Cab; loss, At Duluth, Minn., I <lb />
loss in a warehouse Are. bust- <lb />
places burned in N. Y.; loss, <lb />
Terrific storm at Chicago and on Lake <lb />
many deaths reported. <lb />
David A. publisher <lb />
Almanac, at New London, Conn.; <lb />
gad <lb />
killed and injured in a real <lb />
end collision on the Grand Trunk at <lb />
Band. Quebec. <lb />
Fatal at deaths. <lb />
Allen father of the. <lb />
Hartford; <lb />
Over people injured at I <lb />
tic City by tho collapse of the old casino. <lb />
Cornell beaten by Trinity hall <lb />
Henley for Grand Challenge cup. <lb />
famous French <lb />
and the original Marguerite, <lb />
at I <lb />
Convention of the United <lb />
of Christian Endeavor opened in <lb />
ton. <lb />
Dr. Norton S. <lb />
emeritus professor of agriculture in the <lb />
university, at O.; aged <lb />
Steamer burned at Lewiston, <lb />
N. loss, about 9250.000. <lb />
M. Business portion of Alta Vista wiped . <lb />
out by loss, <lb />
ex-premier of , <lb />
by assassination, at Sofia; aged <lb />
fireman and injured at <lb />
fire in Cincinnati; property loss, I <lb />
Charles Emanuel Schenck, ex- <lb />
president of Switzerland, at Born ; aged <lb />
Fifth international convention <lb />
of the Baptist Young People's Union j <lb />
America opened in Baltimore. <lb />
Henry Irving. Walter and <lb />
Lewis Morris by the <lb />
loss by of an oil mill <lb />
in <lb />
lives lost by steamboat collision <lb />
in the of Genoa. <lb />
Ex-Gov. Alexander H. Rice of <lb />
Massachusetts died at Prof. Rn- j <lb />
eminent German scholar and <lb />
professor, instructor of the reigning <lb />
at Berlin; aged <lb />
Y. M. C. A. building in Washington <lb />
burned; loss, water- <lb />
works destroyed by fire; loss, <lb />
James Bunn, chief of the <lb />
cock Indian-, at Southampton, N. Y.; aged <lb />
Rev. Edward one of the ; <lb />
famous seven brothers, in Brooklyn; aged<lb />
Dr. Anthony Wilson <lb />
I of Winchester, at Surrey, England; <lb />
Col. Alfred M. Wood, mayor <lb />
Brooklyn during the war, in that <lb />
John Minor, LL. D-, <lb />
of common and statute law in the <lb />
University of Virginia at Charlottesville; I <lb />
-d <lb />
Scott, Tex., flooded by sudden <lb />
imitation of rain, <lb />
Richard M. Hunt, noted arch <lb />
at Newport, R. I.; <lb />
AUGUST. <lb />
I I. ; Prof. Ger <lb />
historian, in aged <lb />
I cloudburst in Wyoming. <lb />
I A business block at Lima, O., de- <lb />
r by Arc; loss, <lb />
Thompson, African ex- <lb />
r, in London. <lb />
the seat of Lincoln county, <lb />
d stated by fire; loss nearly 91,000.000. <lb />
Fir Berlin, Md., almost wiped out by <lb />
loss, <lb />
ft. In steamers burned at Cincinnati; <lb />
Charles Foster, actor and <lb />
pi.;. in New York city; Aged <lb />
Charles Foster, an old <lb />
and Manager, in New York; aged Gen. <lb />
M. A. Stovall, a Confederate veteran, at <lb />
Ga.; aged George F. Root, <lb />
the composer, at Bailey's Island, Me.; aged <lb />
Associate Justice Howell Ed- <lb />
Jackson of the U. supremo court <lb />
West Meade, aged <lb />
Di An story building collapsed In <lb />
New York city. British steamer <lb />
thorn. from Sydney for went <lb />
on he rocks near Sydney and sank in <lb />
minutes; lives lost, <lb />
The James Co. stamping j <lb />
Works at Newark. N. J., destroyed by fire; I <lb />
loss, Fire destroyed property val- <lb />
at at Ills. <lb />
Frank M. a veteran <lb />
t, at San Francisco. <lb />
factories, dwellings and other <lb />
properties burned in Philadelphia; loss, <lb />
French explorer and engineer, In Paris. <lb />
William Dean, noted Baptist <lb />
missionary among the orientals, at San <lb />
Diego, aged <lb />
The first national convention <lb />
Of commercial lawyers opened in Detroit. I <lb />
The seventeenth conference of the <lb />
can Library association began in Denver. <lb />
The National Association of Newsdealer <lb />
met in Brooklyn. <lb />
Baron Christian Bernard <lb />
the European publisher, at <lb />
aged Thomas fa- <lb />
artist, at Norristown, Pa. <lb />
American Pharmaceutical association opened <lb />
at Denver. <lb />
P. P. painter of the <lb />
and other <lb />
ed pictures, at Pa, Gen- John D. <lb />
famous Confederate cavalryman, <lb />
at aged <lb />
Gen. Samuel Bell a Con- <lb />
federate veteran and ex-U. S. senator from <lb />
Texas, at Eureka Springs, Ark.; aged <lb />
The thirtieth annual reunion of tho <lb />
of Locomotive Engineers opened at <lb />
William Strong <lb />
the U. supreme court, at Lake Minne- <lb />
N. aged 87- Leonard W. V <lb />
the sculptor, at Wis.; aged <lb />
people drowned at Ocean City, <lb />
from an overcrowded skiff. <lb />
Boiler explosion and destroy- <lb />
ed the hotel. V deaths. <lb />
The Union dock and ware <lb />
house and oil r property in Mil <lb />
loss. <lb />
Luzon B. of Con <lb />
at New Haven; aged <lb />
At N. Y- <lb />
loss, <lb />
H. O. head of tho <lb />
ton publishing house, at North Andover, <lb />
Mass.; aged <lb />
Patrick Gavan Duffy, <lb />
Justice <lb />
at J. <lb />
G. n. Ely S. Parker, an Indian <lb />
who on staff, at Fairfield, <lb />
Conn. <lb />
SEPTEMBER. <lb />
Marshal U. S. com- <lb />
missioner of fish and fisheries, in Washing- <lb />
ton. <lb />
Sedan day, twenty-fifth <lb />
the French surrender <lb />
ed Germany. <lb />
shook in tin- eastern states. <lb />
A runaway locomotive dashed <lb />
Into a train on the Island <lb />
railroad; injured. <lb />
burned in Evans- <lb />
ville, Ind.; lean, 9110.000. <lb />
Boston and wharf and freight <lb />
in Boston destroyed by fire; loss, <lb />
Sven distinguished Swed <lb />
naturalist, aged BY. William Henry <lb />
the American journalist, at Cs <lb />
Italy J aged Gen. A. V. Kautz, <lb />
U. S. A., retired, in Seattle, Wash.; aged <lb />
Peter Styers, a locomotive <lb />
who had boon on the rail years, <lb />
Bethlehem, Pa.; <lb />
Henry Bent of <lb />
local near N. Y.; <lb />
aged <lb />
miners by fire in th <lb />
Osceola mine at Mich.; <lb />
deaths. <lb />
The American yacht Defender <lb />
the first against Valkyrie HI by I <lb />
and <lb />
Bowler's brewery burned at <lb />
dam, N. Y.; loss, 9200.000. <lb />
A. R. met in annual encampment <lb />
at Louisville. <lb />
Harrison Millard, popular song <lb />
writer, in New York aged <lb />
Valkyrie HI foaled the American <lb />
yacht Defender and won by seconds. <lb />
Henry well knows <lb />
paper dealer of Maw in that city <lb />
killed and many in t <lb />
hand end collision on the Great Northern <lb />
near Minn. <lb />
Rev. Dr. Charles H. Hall, prom <lb />
Episcopal divine, in Brooklyn; age <lb />
Sport Lord withdrew the Eng <lb />
Valkyrie III, Riving the race <lb />
cup to the Defender. <lb />
Prof. Sigismund <lb />
instructor and composer, in Brook- <lb />
The Mora indemnity of 91.419,000 paid b <lb />
Spain. <lb />
Tho of Dodge, Nob., <lb />
destroyed by lire; loss, <lb />
A blaze in the business <lb />
of Indianapolis. death and a prop <lb />
loss of in a at Oshkosh, <lb />
Wis. <lb />
Marian one of the oldest <lb />
actresses in America, at <lb />
Highlands, N. J.; born in in 1810. <lb />
A storm destroyed <lb />
lives and worth of in <lb />
The Atlanta exhibition formally <lb />
lumber dry kilns burned at Wash- <lb />
M. C.; loss. <lb />
Charles lo well known <lb />
actor, in New city ; .; Alex H <lb />
Ritchie, formerly well known as an artist <lb />
and engraver, in New Haven; <lb />
Tin Spanish cruiser Sanchez Bar <lb />
run down and sunk in the <lb />
of Havana; officers and sailor <lb />
drowned. <lb />
At Green Bay, Wis., lost by <lb />
fire. <lb />
Prof. Abraham Victor Rydberg, <lb />
Swedish author, at Stockholm. <lb />
Lumbar yards and mills burned at <lb />
Lao, Wis.; loss, <lb />
Paper mill and dwelling burned <lb />
Y.; loss, <lb />
The Catholic Young Men's Na- <lb />
Union began; its <lb />
annual convention in St. Louts. <lb />
Hon. E. W. Bull, a prominent <lb />
originator of the Concord <lb />
grape, in Concord. Mass.; aged <lb />
Prof. Louis of Dart- <lb />
mouth, noted scholar in French and Ger- <lb />
man, at Hanover; <lb />
The French army the capital of Mad- <lb />
At Superior, Minn., the elevator <lb />
the Daisy Flour mill A <lb />
factory fin- at R. I <lb />
OCTOBER. <lb />
In Philadelphia; losses, <lb />
Charles F. Brown, the first malt <lb />
in Chicago, died at <lb />
Ills. <lb />
At Cambridge, O, fire destroyed Lin- <lb />
den hot. Taylor block. <lb />
. a. Orlando U. S. <lb />
Detroit; <lb />
Maj. Gen. Miles ordered to com <lb />
y in place of Lieut. Gen. <lb />
retired. <lb />
Harry Wright, veteran baseball <lb />
manager, died Atlantic City. <lb />
Prof. <lb />
. well known as an author <lb />
and critic, in w York city; <lb />
Prof, lb Maurice <lb />
Yale athlete defeated Cambridge <lb />
at Held, winning B oat of it I <lb />
event-- and the international collegiate <lb />
championship. <lb />
George I. Tyson, president of <lb />
the American News company, at Riverside. <lb />
Conn. Miss Ada the actress, <lb />
died in William <lb />
d American and poet, <lb />
Italy; <lb />
Gen. William a <lb />
Confederate veteran and ex-U. sen- <lb />
from Virginia, at Washington; <lb />
HO people in a wreck on <lb />
the Pennsylvania railroad mar <lb />
Dr. Albert E. Foote, distinguish- <lb />
ed mineralogist, expired suddenly while at <lb />
the Atlanta exposition. <lb />
Radiator works in Bremen, <lb />
Ind., by loss, <lb />
Prof. Thomas Coates, leader of the firs <lb />
circus band in America, died at Easton, <lb />
Pa. <lb />
N. Y., a hamlet In <lb />
county, destroyed by fire. <lb />
William J. <lb />
an of the wars, at <lb />
Ky.; F. L. Pope, noted <lb />
engineer, by a shock in ate <lb />
at Harrington. Mass. <lb />
S and by a <lb />
way- trolley car at <lb />
Gen. a prom- <lb />
Union general at Nice, <lb />
France; aged Be. Clara Bates, the <lb />
in Chicago. Andrew J. <lb />
pioneer of San Francisco, in <lb />
that aged <lb />
Franklin a well <lb />
and successful nurseryman, at War- <lb />
Md.; <lb />
Gen. John elected com- <lb />
r in chief Order of the Loy- <lb />
legion. <lb />
At Ills., Empire Cordage <lb />
mill destroyed by fire; loss, <lb />
At O. stores, AC <lb />
dwellings, banks and Masonic <lb />
hall loss, 9150.000. A fire <lb />
in New Orleans. Fin- swept blocks lo <lb />
Colo., and destroyed property <lb />
el at 9150.000 <lb />
Tin national W- C. T. U. convened in Haiti- <lb />
Atlanta suffered a loss of by <lb />
fire. <lb />
John W. Jr., killed while <lb />
racing in <lb />
burned In New Orleans; <lb />
people homeless; loss nearly <lb />
Henry Augustus Loop, well known <lb />
artist, at Lake George; aged <lb />
first woman settler in Chicago, <lb />
died In that city. <lb />
Town of Bagwell, Tex., destroyed by <lb />
loss. <lb />
Gen. Thomas G. Pitcher, A., <lb />
retired, Fort Bayard, N. M.; aged <lb />
Clark D. D., LL. D., <lb />
ed Greek scholar, at Rochester; aged <lb />
Oliver Ames, ex-governor of Massachusetts, <lb />
in North Easton ; aged <lb />
buildings destroyed In Madison, <lb />
Wis.; loss, 9150.000. <lb />
Signor Bought, celebrated Italian <lb />
author, scholar and statesman, at Naples <lb />
Ex-U. ft- Senator Charles H. Van <lb />
of Nebraska, in Washington; aged <lb />
Charles noted pianist-, in <lb />
Lynching mob fired upon by at <lb />
O.; killed. <lb />
inches of snow at Mich. <lb />
hotel burned at Springfield, <lb />
At On,, <lb />
high school and won <lb />
Highest cf all in Leavening U. S. Report <lb />
Absolutely pure <lb />
NOVEMBER. <lb />
Durant of the <lb />
of at Bag Francisco. <lb />
Holmes of the <lb />
of <lb />
killed and or injured in s <lb />
wreck on tin- Baltimore and Ohio <lb />
Wheeling. <lb />
business blocks at Decatur, <lb />
Ills.; loss, 9250.000 to 9300.000. <lb />
Obituary Field, the popular journal <lb />
1st and verse writer, in Chicago; aged <lb />
The Empire bank and Manhattan <lb />
Savings in New York city; <lb />
firemen injured; loss, <lb />
William tabby, partner j <lb />
A. Stewart in Now York city; <lb />
Rachel Cantor, the oldest living actress in <lb />
the United States, at Worcester; aged <lb />
Obituary; Mrs. D. P. Bowers, well known <lb />
actress, at Washington; aged t. <lb />
killed and wounded by at <lb />
explosion in Detroit. Tho Evening Journal <lb />
wrecked; loss, <lb />
Duke of Mai thorough married <lb />
Vanderbilt in New York. <lb />
The Erie railway sold under a foreclosure <lb />
Obituary; Rear Admiral Robert Wilson <lb />
U. S. N. to Washington; aged <lb />
Thirty of the Society For th <lb />
Women met in New Or <lb />
bans. <lb />
single scull race for th ; <lb />
world's won by <lb />
Austin, Tex.<lb />
the in surgery, <lb />
Rome, Ga.; aped W. Hill, a not <lb />
eel citizen of Atlanta, that city; aged <lb />
Henry G. Ashton. inventor <lb />
the Ashton safety valve, at <lb />
Mass.; aped <lb />
Tho eightieth birthday of Eliza- <lb />
beth celebrated by a <lb />
gathering in New York. <lb />
The thirteenth Baptist con- <lb />
of the United States opened at <lb />
A daughter born to the czar and <lb />
Russia. <lb />
Rev. Dr. Samuel Smith, <lb />
of in Boston; aged <lb />
An electric oar fell into a draw <lb />
deaths. <lb />
A fire at Meridian, Miss. <lb />
Banner brewery burned at Cincinnati. <lb />
barrels of naphtha burned at <lb />
Whiting. Ind.; deaths. <lb />
Factory building burned at Dallas, <lb />
Tex.; loss, <lb />
Cardinal Bonaparte, grandson <lb />
at <lb />
The Parker block at Lowell, <lb />
Mass.; loss, <lb />
Turkish <lb />
to Great Britain, in London. <lb />
firms burned out in Chicago fire <lb />
many lives loss, <lb />
Sir Henry private m o- <lb />
Victoria, at Eng- <lb />
aped <lb />
Calve-rt a noted <lb />
can landscape found drowned in <lb />
New York bay. Verdict of not guilty in <lb />
lbs sensational murder trial in <lb />
New fork. <lb />
It, deaths in a fin- In the Dry Goods <lb />
Woolen Exchange building In Chicago <lb />
loss, j 100.000. <lb />
M. Bartholemy Saint <lb />
prominent in literature, in Paris <lb />
aged BO. <lb />
noted <lb />
artist, in New city; aged <lb />
Edwin A. Meyers, a vote-ran <lb />
man of in that city; aged <lb />
Yale defeated Princeton at Ne-w <lb />
York; score Pennsylvania defeated <lb />
Harvard at football by a score of to <lb />
deaths by an explosion of car- <lb />
at Barcelona, Spain. <lb />
The eighth annual session of <lb />
the congress in <lb />
ha; 2-1 stat-s and <lb />
Alexandre Dumas, noted <lb />
writer and author of in Paris; <lb />
aged ReV. Octavius Frothing- <lb />
ham, noted in aged <lb />
Gun. Thomas Jordan, a <lb />
e-x V de-rate and Mexican vet. ran, <lb />
in New York aged <lb />
defeated Come at <lb />
score, <lb />
Count Von Austrian <lb />
statesman, in aged SB, <lb />
Explosion at the Tilly Foster <lb />
I. and II injured. <lb />
DECEMBER. <lb />
Harvey Partridge, <lb />
and author, at N, J.; aged <lb />
K. <lb />
opened. <lb />
Oscar Taylor, n Union <lb />
Veteran ho Mo the guerrilla, <lb />
in Y irk. <lb />
W. <lb />
Slates <lb />
hit firms burned out In- . <lb />
fire-men killed. <lb />
Tin- son In state- New <lb />
broke the- <lb />
New York and making tho <lb />
miles an hour. <lb />
ft, W.-E. H. the historian, <lb />
of for tho <lb />
university. <lb />
broke out in the U. S. assay of- <lb />
with in gold bars lying loose <lb />
and 921.000,000 In damage slight. I <lb />
annual of the <lb />
can Federation opened In New <lb />
York city. <lb />
American commercial liberty <lb />
celebration. <lb />
IT WAS A <lb />
Bat It Sh. <lb />
to II. <lb />
She KM pro- <lb />
on not only upon <lb />
tho old <lb />
met, but all tho people <lb />
in the well. <lb />
I yon hail hack <lb />
to Chicago to she said, after <lb />
greetings had been <lb />
really not had time to come to <lb />
see you. I have no <lb />
are tho plague of a <lb />
in <lb />
I suppose you keep n good <lb />
you know, can't get <lb />
them well trained, and it is one per- <lb />
son's work to keep thorn <lb />
well, I haven't had much <lb />
trouble, hut then I only keep two. <lb />
How <lb />
course, my house is large and <lb />
I nm <lb />
are you living now I <lb />
want to to <lb />
tho North Side, only wish <lb />
I could ask you over to dinner, but <lb />
it is impossible so long I nm with- <lb />
out a cook, and I nm particular <lb />
about references I may not suit- <lb />
ed for a long time. <lb />
lucky that I met yon today. <lb />
An old cook of is hunting a <lb />
She will just suit you, for she <lb />
is servant, fond of <lb />
seldom out, <lb />
Have you seen Ellen <lb />
since you <lb />
was going to her <lb />
am so anxious to get Christine t <lb />
and I thought might take <lb />
her, but now that I've mot yon <lb />
shall not Bead to go. I can her <lb />
the best of recommendations, so <lb />
I haven't seen Ellen for a <lb />
longtime, lives plainly, I might <lb />
say poorly, and of course don't <lb />
go out together at <lb />
Now, about the cook; <lb />
shall I send her to you, <lb />
don't yourself; <lb />
is no nil. What is <lb />
your <lb />
mo. I don't believe I have <lb />
a card with mo. I intended to stop <lb />
at tho engraver's today, but tho fall <lb />
things in tho shops were so lovely <lb />
forgot all about it. <lb />
bad. However, I can write <lb />
down your address. You will find <lb />
n treasure, I <lb />
yes; no But I <lb />
am along very well and <lb />
bate to <lb />
you won't need to train <lb />
Christine. I did Hint and I'd <lb />
now only I a treasure <lb />
Do tell mo if you over see <lb />
the <lb />
They have just gone <lb />
to boarding. Christine had been <lb />
with them for n year, and Laura <lb />
was perfectly delighted with her. <lb />
You bad better her at <lb />
Why, isn't that your husband com- <lb />
in So glad to see you, Mr. Van <lb />
Tompkins. I am perfectly delighted <lb />
to see Dora looking so well. Why, <lb />
hasn't changed n bit in five <lb />
hasn't. I think it is <lb />
wonderful too. Six married, <lb />
and tho way that woman has work- <lb />
ed Why, she had a <lb />
in tho house except once when the <lb />
twins had scarlet fever. Why, Dora, <lb />
I haven't soon you blush so at a <lb />
compliment since you were a <lb />
Chicago Tribune. <lb />
nu- . Kind, of <lb />
to enable tho user to <lb />
near at hand or a dis- <lb />
in a variety <lb />
forms. In a common form tho glass- <lb />
es in two parts, at the <lb />
center, tho upper halves of n <lb />
power suited to and the <lb />
lower halves to reading. Sometimes <lb />
a piece is cut out of tho glass and a <lb />
of a different power is put in <lb />
its Sometimes tho <lb />
is made by cementing a of <lb />
glass over a part of tho spectacle <lb />
glasses, and sometimes by grinding <lb />
away a part of tho spectacle glasses. <lb />
also with <lb />
crescent shaped tho upper <lb />
part of the glass being cut out en- <lb />
j the wearer roads through the <lb />
glasses and looks over them to <lb />
at a There are ; <lb />
called clerical glasses, that are like <lb />
glasses with tho upper halves out <lb />
off; the wearer looks down through <lb />
tho glasses to read, and ho can see i <lb />
over them without effort when ho <lb />
looks at tho <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
of Discipline. <lb />
In February, 1748, Lord Robert <lb />
Bertie, third son of Robert, first I <lb />
of Lancaster, afterward goner-1 <lb />
in tho army and colonel of the j <lb />
Second regiment of foot guards, re- <lb />
a reprimand, reprimand <lb />
being convoyed to him by tho <lb />
of Cumberland's aid-do-camp. His I <lb />
military was that he had <lb />
blown his nose, as ho relieved guard, <lb />
his grace's window in St. <lb />
James palace; this, and this only, i <lb />
was all ho had done. <lb />
Robert Face. <lb />
Look at his portrait in profile, and <lb />
you will and refine- <lb />
of a virile sort in the <lb />
of tho face and head, sagacity <lb />
in the long but not prominent <lb />
and poetic feeling in the contour of <lb />
tho brow. But in a full the <lb />
was still more remark- <lb />
able. The upper part, <lb />
broad between the eyes, was deer, <lb />
in its gentle serenity, but the <lb />
lower part, very narrow in <lb />
son, was almost in its keen <lb />
alertness, and the mobility of the <lb />
mouth hardly seemed to fit with the <lb />
steady of tho wide, dark <lb />
eyes. But if at first this face <lb />
to contradict itself the reason <lb />
lay, I think, in the fact that <lb />
see tho face of a man who is at <lb />
a lover of action and a lover of <lb />
dreams and of books, an astute and <lb />
yet a most observer of <lb />
life and of men and of the humors <lb />
of the lives of men and besides an <lb />
artist of imaginative <lb />
Louis Stevenson and His Writ- <lb />
by Mrs. M. O. Van <lb />
in <lb />
A Moment. <lb />
the next case, bailiff. <lb />
next yet honor, <lb />
is a liquor. <lb />
the be opened, <lb />
an if it ain't any bettor than tho <lb />
liquor we've been here <lb />
I'll fine the whole business for eon- <lb />
tempt court an adjourn till Sun- <lb />
Constitution. <lb />
In human life there Is constant <lb />
change of fortune, and it is <lb />
to expect an-exemption from <lb />
the fate. itself decays, <lb />
and all things are daily changing.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017778_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
J. <lb />
Entered at the at <lb />
X. C second-class m matter. <lb />
Wednesday, 1st, 1890. <lb />
Frank Thornton, the largest mer- <lb />
chant of has made an <lb />
has a by a vote <lb />
of to fl i <lb />
revenue to meet the expenses of the <lb />
government, and to provide a <lb />
The Newport News shipping and <lb />
Dry Dock company gets the Govern- <lb />
contract for constructing both the <lb />
new battleships that are to be Unit, the <lb />
and her unnamed mate. <lb />
is a great triumph for the South <lb />
and another incontrovertible proof of <lb />
her present and increasing magnitude <lb />
of industrial <lb />
Hon. Alfred M. Waddell writes the <lb />
following manly sentiment to the <lb />
Messenger notice- ill the <lb />
proceedings of Congress that a <lb />
offered in the Senate by Mr. Call <lb />
to permit ex Confederates to serve in <lb />
the United States army, a similar <lb />
suggestion in the House by Mr. Mere- <lb />
Virginia, were in the one ease <lb />
Objected to and in the other ignored. <lb />
Under these- circumstances the ex-Con. <lb />
federate who would offer his services to <lb />
the country is a hound of the <lb />
Give a boy a gun and you rim a <lb />
great risk making a out him. <lb />
In most instances a boy is careless with <lb />
a gun and shows but poor <lb />
in selecting an object to shoot at. Two <lb />
brothers at Salisbury, aged and <lb />
years respectively, went out with a gun <lb />
Tuesday evening made a target on <lb />
the side of a powder magazine. They <lb />
were warned the danger of such <lb />
sport but regarded not the admonition <lb />
of older heads. A lead slug from the <lb />
went through the side the mag- <lb />
and a explosion followed <lb />
blowing a hole in the ground. <lb />
trees by their roots worse <lb />
than the severest tornado, breaking <lb />
hundreds of window lights from build- <lb />
in the town near by, and doing <lb />
other damage to property. And this <lb />
is not the worst side of tin- story. The <lb />
older boy was blown into fragments, his <lb />
body being scattered hundreds of feet <lb />
around, every vestige of ; except <lb />
one shoe, small patches of undershirt <lb />
on each shoulder and his be- <lb />
torn off. while the younger boy was <lb />
so badly injured that his recovery is <lb />
doubtful. Tin- magazine contained <lb />
pounds of dynamite and kegs <lb />
of powder. The explosion wan beard <lb />
mid shock felt tor mill's i <lb />
id. <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER <lb />
Reed uses the Don't <lb />
Like the Civil Service Russia <lb />
Offers to Come to Uncle <lb />
Sam's Rescue. <lb />
JOHN BULL'S CHEAP JACK <lb />
SHOW. <lb />
W. CHAMBERS. <lb />
There wore on 1st, 1894, <lb />
names upon the pension roll. On <lb />
1st. this number had been <lb />
increased to which is regarded <lb />
as the maximum. thou- <lb />
sand pensioners died during the last <lb />
year. One hundred and three <lb />
thousand three hundred and fifty-live <lb />
eases were rejected. Thirty-seven <lb />
thousand new applications were re- <lb />
during the lust year. The <lb />
amount of money paid tor pensions <lb />
dining the fiscal year was <lb />
There are surviving upon the pen- <lb />
non roll twelve widows and daughter <lb />
of revolutionary soldier, while the <lb />
of 1812 is by twenty-one <lb />
survivors and widows. Then <lb />
are survivors of the Mexican <lb />
war. There are in the United Stales <lb />
eighteen pension agencies. Then are <lb />
residing abroad persons who draw <lb />
pensions to the extent of <lb />
1,737 of these living in Canada. in <lb />
Great in Germany. The <lb />
names, ages and residence of the widows <lb />
of revolutionary soldiers surviving arc <lb />
as follows Aldrich. aged nine- <lb />
Los Angeles, Cal. ; Nancy- <lb />
Cloud, eighty-two, Chum. Va.; Susan- <lb />
Chadwick, eighty. Emporium, Pa.; <lb />
Esther S. Damon, eighty-one, Ply- <lb />
mouth Vt.; Sarah <lb />
Chatham Valley, Pa. ; <lb />
Nancy Jones, <lb />
Mayo, eighty-two <lb />
Va.; Patty Richardson <lb />
ninety-four. Bethel, Vt ; Mary <lb />
a. ; <lb />
Ann M. Slaughter, eighty-five. Mitch- <lb />
Station Va. ; Turner, <lb />
ninety, N. Y. ; Nancy <lb />
Weatherman, <lb />
Tenn. <lb />
The Republic ins hi the House <lb />
that their new tariff bill will in- <lb />
crease taxes forty million dollars a <lb />
rear. is a low that tor <lb />
every dollar the Treasury get from <lb />
tariff five dollars goes into the <lb />
packets home Thus <lb />
the Republican measure of is <lb />
an increase of taxation amount- <lb />
to about per or more <lb />
than five million dollars for North Car- <lb />
to pay the year in ad- <lb />
to the present burden of <lb />
This is the we are getting <lb />
from News <lb />
and Observer. <lb />
our Regular <lb />
Washington-, D. C., Dee. <lb />
Speaker Reed's muzzles an- in prime- <lb />
working order. He muzzled the <lb />
of the Ways and Means committee <lb />
and compelled them to report two bills <lb />
prepared by him ; one increasing the <lb />
tariff upon wend, woolens and lumber <lb />
to per cent of what it was in the <lb />
law, and raising the tariff <lb />
everything else, excepting sugar, <lb />
IS per cent above rates, and <lb />
the other providing for the issue M <lb />
three per Cent coin bonds to replenish <lb />
the gold reserve whenever the <lb />
of the Treasury deems it necessary, <lb />
and of three per cent <lb />
I 3-year Treasury certificates, or so much <lb />
thereof as the Secretary of the Treas- <lb />
may need from time to time. lie <lb />
muzzled the objecting who <lb />
wanted the bills submitted to a caucus <lb />
before bring reported to the House, <lb />
and lastly he muzzled the House and <lb />
had his bills passed, notwithstanding <lb />
that the did all the protest- <lb />
they could under the Reed rules, <lb />
against the railroading of such <lb />
legislation through the I louse <lb />
without debate. When one of his own <lb />
party went to Mr. Reed and asked <lb />
that a reasonable time be allowed for <lb />
debate on the bills before they were <lb />
passed Mr. Reed dismissed him by say- <lb />
sharply; House isn't a de- <lb />
bating In fact, for all <lb />
purposes there is no House. Its <lb />
powers have all been usurped by Mr. <lb />
Seed and its only important duties are <lb />
to obey his orders. <lb />
But there are neither Reed rules <lb />
nor methods in the Senate, to which <lb />
bills have now and the <lb />
country may count upon their <lb />
thoroughly debated before they are <lb />
acted upon. It is doubtful whether <lb />
either of them can pass the Senate at <lb />
all. and certain that neither can get <lb />
through without I icing materially <lb />
amended. <lb />
In creating three <lb />
to bounce those democrats whose seats <lb />
are being contested by republicans and <lb />
to give those republicans who are hold- <lb />
seats which are contested by demo- <lb />
a valid title to their seats, Mr. <lb />
Reed overlooked one thing that is <lb />
ready making trouble. The committee <lb />
on elections has but one room, and <lb />
each of the three committee's claim the <lb />
right to use it. <lb />
The union printers are not so glad <lb />
about the extension of the Civil Ber- <lb />
rule's the Government Printing <lb />
as they were. Already four <lb />
non-union printers have secured <lb />
in the building by passing the re- <lb />
quired examination, and there will be <lb />
others, until their number grows so <lb />
that the office will have to be <lb />
classed as non-union. <lb />
The report, although not yet officially <lb />
confirmed, that Russia had offered to <lb />
loan the Unwed 9400,000,000 in <lb />
gold, without interest, has probably <lb />
created greater consternation among <lb />
the European gold kings who have been <lb />
enormous profits out of the <lb />
State's under our bad <lb />
financial system than did President <lb />
Cleveland's announcement in be- <lb />
half off the Monroe doctrine. Already <lb />
an agent t the has been <lb />
to Washington to assure Secretary <lb />
their willingness to furnish <lb />
all the this government might <lb />
need, notwithstanding their assertion <lb />
right after the Monroe doctrine message <lb />
was published that American <lb />
of all sorts had been put on the black <lb />
list. course there is no probability <lb />
that this government will accept <lb />
offer, but it was none the less a <lb />
very friendly and gracious act on the <lb />
part of Russia, and it the ad- <lb />
ministration with a weapon that will <lb />
inspire in the minds of the <lb />
The same game of grab. <lb />
John Bull <lb />
I win and tails you lose <lb />
The old. trick snatch and nab <lb />
Now what's the use, <lb />
John Bull t <lb />
II. <lb />
Your circus tent is runt, <lb />
John Bull ; <lb />
Your thimble game DO longer draws; <lb />
Your old trick lion's not worth a cent ; <lb />
We've clipped his claws, <lb />
John Bull. <lb />
Ill <lb />
We've fixed his paws and claws, <lb />
John Bull; <lb />
We've lately learned a thing or two ; <lb />
Your cheap-jack show i bust because <lb />
We're onto you, <lb />
John Bull. <lb />
IV. <lb />
Your we know, <lb />
John Hull ; <lb />
We've seen you fleece your weaker <lb />
kin <lb />
n ho ventured in to see the show <lb />
You needn't grin. <lb />
John Bull <lb />
V. <lb />
We've seen you rap the <lb />
John Bull ; <lb />
We've seen you throw the Russian <lb />
down ; <lb />
We've seen the take his slap <lb />
And rub his crown, <lb />
John Bull. <lb />
VI. <lb />
The French you've and banged, <lb />
John Bull ; <lb />
worked your green-goods on <lb />
the Dutch; <lb />
But if we're I'll be <lb />
Oh, HO ; not much, <lb />
John Bull <lb />
VII. <lb />
So tack and pack your <lb />
John Bull; <lb />
Pick up your thimble-ring and git, <lb />
And heed your come <lb />
back <lb />
You might get hit, <lb />
John Bull. <lb />
VIII. <lb />
There-fore, enough of bluff, <lb />
John Bull ; <lb />
Your tent, cheap lion and show must <lb />
go. <lb />
The law for thieves is rather rough <lb />
And tough, you know, <lb />
John Bull. <lb />
What use In there in eating food when <lb />
doe you no when does <lb />
harm than good, for such is <lb />
the case if it is not digested. <lb />
If you have a loathing for there <lb />
is no use of forcing it It will <lb />
n-t be digested. Yon must restore the <lb />
digestive to their natural strength <lb />
and cause the to be digested when <lb />
an appetite will come, and with it a rel- <lb />
for <lb />
The tired, languid will give <lb />
to vigor and energy, then you will <lb />
put on your bones and become <lb />
s The f baker Digest Cordial <lb />
as marts the Lebanon Shakers <lb />
Domains food already digested and is a <lb />
digester food as well. Its is <lb />
prompt and its effects <lb />
Doctors preside because it <lb />
has all the virtues of Castor Oil and <lb />
is <lb />
CAROLINA DELEGATION <lb />
burden on cotton-tics and bag. <lb />
which, no he will find <lb />
it hard to make answer to his <lb />
from the Fourth <lb />
District, has voted consistently with <lb />
his party, and seems to be doing the <lb />
bast he can, however, in a body <lb />
of congressmen, can hardly be said to <lb />
be very luminous with promise. But <lb />
he is a of old man. <lb />
Settle from the Fifth, <lb />
is the wizard of the lot, and keeps <lb />
live in behalf of the Speaker's meas- <lb />
seemingly for fear his colleagues <lb />
may suspect that ho docs not <lb />
as solidly with the Czar as he teems to <lb />
think he does. But he is shrewd, and <lb />
has made- a number of friends on both <lb />
sides, and is undoubtedly somewhat of a j <lb />
favorite with Mr. Reed. <lb />
Shuford, from the Seventh, <lb />
ed as a Populist, in spite of which, how- <lb />
ever, he voted tor the tariff bill. Of <lb />
course, be most appear at great <lb />
vantage, following, as he doe's, John S. <lb />
Henderson, who, as chairman of Post- <lb />
Offices and Post-Roads, was, perhaps, <lb />
the most conspicuous of the last North <lb />
Carolina delegation. <lb />
from the Third <lb />
District, fought a three -cornered <lb />
with Spears <lb />
son, a Populist, and now president of <lb />
the State Alliance. There <lb />
arc some Republicans, even, who think <lb />
influences have been brought to bear <lb />
which will cause to keep his seat. <lb />
His counsel is his opponent, <lb />
Spears, who was a Republican national <lb />
delegate in the famous third term Grant <lb />
convention, who is a man of force <lb />
and with his party. But <lb />
Shaw claims, besides, a right to his seat, <lb />
which is undoubted. <lb />
Shaw is a young man, self-made, and <lb />
a clever, fellow. <lb />
It is hardly fair Lr people to judge <lb />
at this stage the game ; it is <lb />
fairly to judge, and yet <lb />
seems to he regarded as of greatest <lb />
promise among the Democrats. He is <lb />
a man of strong sense, and cordial, <lb />
winning personality and presence. He- <lb />
is at present detained at home by the <lb />
sickness his child, who is quite ill <lb />
with typhoid fever. <lb />
The seat of Mr. Woodard, also Dem- <lb />
from the Second District, is con- <lb />
tested by a but <lb />
Woodard s claim seems clear beyond <lb />
all doubt, but he may be said to lack <lb />
that magnetism which might aid him <lb />
before u committee ; and, if he wins, it <lb />
will be on the merits of his case alone, <lb />
and they seem almost undoubted from a <lb />
reading of his ease, an outline of which <lb />
was recently published in the Raleigh <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
Settle say the whole delegation is <lb />
better fixed as to committees than was <lb />
the last one, and, it would seem, rather <lb />
claims the credit of doing the fixing, <lb />
having asked places on the Elections <lb />
for and on Foreign Affairs for <lb />
Pearson, which they both got. Settle <lb />
got on Interstate Commerce, which, he <lb />
says, was his choice. And this clever <lb />
man is much <lb />
A. <lb />
it <lb />
f-a <lb />
-J <lb />
In Purchasing a Suit or Overcoat <lb />
HEW <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 />
It is easy to buy from such a large to select to pay for, too. <lb />
Pick out Your Suit and we will Astonish You in Price. <lb />
gold king-, who know by <lb />
what Russia on do in the <lb />
line in to them. Russia <lb />
has not only made itself independent of <lb />
the aforesaid money kings, <lb />
but while doing it his accumulated <lb />
in gold. -More than <lb />
half of this gold, for which Russia has <lb />
no particular use, is deposited in <lb />
banks of Russia. That is <lb />
the gold that she is willing to loan us. <lb />
Its withdrawal from Europe would be a <lb />
knockdown blow for the gold kings <lb />
TELEGRAPHIC BRIEFS. <lb />
Four awn held up a street car in San <lb />
Francisco and a row ensued in which <lb />
three wen- hurt and one <lb />
of a considerable amount of <lb />
money. Three the robbers were <lb />
aught <lb />
Baltimore was visited by another <lb />
large tire on Friday night. Armstrong, <lb />
Qatar Co., were large- losers. The <lb />
fire is estimated at <lb />
The damage by water in is <lb />
at In some <lb />
a famine is feared. <lb />
While a Jewish company <lb />
was in Baltimore, a <lb />
was caused by the cry of fire mid <lb />
were killed and <lb />
By a vote of to th House <lb />
Saturday passed the of <lb />
introduced by the Committee on Ways <lb />
and authorizing the issue of <lb />
cent coin to maintain the <lb />
gold reserve. Forty-seven Republicans <lb />
voted with the Democrats against the <lb />
proposition as did all the Populist. <lb />
From the Richmond Dispatch of <lb />
Sunday we take the following in refer- <lb />
to North Carolina's delegation in <lb />
To take a running at the <lb />
North Carolina delegation, it seems to <lb />
be the prevailing opinion, all politics <lb />
aside, that Republican, from <lb />
the Eighth District, has attracted thus <lb />
far the greatest amount of attention of <lb />
the nine from the Tarheel State. He <lb />
drew sharp notice to himself, when, on <lb />
Thursday, he asked a question by way <lb />
of protest against the rule shutting off <lb />
the debate on the at o'clock- <lb />
Thus it may have happened that he <lb />
alone was sent out by the press dis- <lb />
patches as having voted against the <lb />
gag. But Skinner, from the First, <lb />
and from the Pop- <lb />
voted also with the Democrats <lb />
against the rule. <lb />
is undoubtedly beginning to <lb />
develop symptoms of thinking for him- <lb />
self that are causing the Speaker some <lb />
and should he persist in his <lb />
independent course it is quite likely <lb />
that he will lie returned to his by <lb />
an increased majority. <lb />
Mr. Pearson comes <lb />
from the Ninth District, and readers of <lb />
the Dispatch during the hot p <lb />
fight in North Carolina last winter will <lb />
doubtless recall the persistent <lb />
attempt of Mr. Pearson to have <lb />
Mitchell county taken out of <lb />
district and put into his. Pearson was <lb />
elected by only majority, and as <lb />
many think, he is a congressman more <lb />
for the social fun and distinction of the <lb />
thing than for any great mark he can <lb />
make, it wag quite natural for him not <lb />
to get himself into fashionable Wash- <lb />
at until he had by the ad- <lb />
of more votes, added thus to the <lb />
probability of his return. Hut it seems <lb />
quite likely in the minds of some <lb />
Democrats that his next return <lb />
will be a return home. For the major- <lb />
in his district was to <lb />
from that of several thousand to the <lb />
Republican who him, where- <lb />
as has converted a Demo- <lb />
into a Republican majority. <lb />
Harry Skinner, elected as a Populist <lb />
from First District, has thus far <lb />
distinguished himself mainly by voting <lb />
for the tariff bill, thus putting an ad- <lb />
P. P. P- <lb />
cures all skin <lb />
blood diseases <lb />
1848. <lb />
over <lb />
Surplus over <lb />
------x- <lb />
Physicians endorse. P. P. P. as a <lb />
splendid combination, and prescribe it <lb />
with great the cure all <lb />
forms and of primary, secondary <lb />
and tertiary syphilitic <lb />
P. P. P <lb />
Cures RheumatisM. <lb />
ulcers and sores, swelling, <lb />
malaria, old chronic ulcers <lb />
that hive all treatment, <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Blood Poison. <lb />
skin diseases, eczema chronic <lb />
mercurial poison, <lb />
scald head, etc., etc. <lb />
V. V. P. is a powerful tonic and an <lb />
excellent <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Scrofula. <lb />
appetizer, budding up the system rap- <lb />
idly <lb />
Ladies whose systems are poisoned <lb />
and whose blood is in an impure <lb />
due <lb />
P- P. P. <lb />
Cures Malaria. <lb />
to irregularities, are <lb />
benefited by the tonic <lb />
and blood cleansing <lb />
ash, Poke root and Potassium. <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Dyspepsia. <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 />
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 />
N.<lb />
tin <lb />
Bros., Props. <lb />
DRUGGISTS. BLOCK. <lb />
Ga. <lb />
Book on Blood Disease milled free. <lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The firm of Forbes, Ni <lb />
was ibis day dissolved by <lb />
mutual consent. The business will <lb />
hereafter be conducted by<lb />
OLA <lb />
This 31st day of December, <lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The firm of J. L. Starker Co., was <lb />
this day dissolved by mutual consent. <lb />
J. L. Starkey purchasing the interest <lb />
of the members of the Arm. All <lb />
outstanding business of the will be <lb />
settled by J. L. <lb />
J. L. STARKEY, <lb />
J. E. STARKEY, <lb />
ZENO MOORE. <lb />
This 30th day of December, <lb />
The Mutual <lb />
Life Ins. <lb />
Company, <lb />
of NEW YORK. <lb />
Security, Profit. <lb />
We got what you Want. A <lb />
Twenty Payment Investment Con <lb />
tract in the largest <lb />
in world, which <lb />
protection to your as well <lb />
as provides for age- <lb />
bent com- <lb />
is company which does <lb />
the most have paid <lb />
to policy <lb />
Our line companies are the. <lb />
best. Among lie found <lb />
the oldest Scottish companies as <lb />
well us American. We do the <lb />
business for the people <lb />
cit your . <lb />
WHITE <lb />
N. C. <lb />
Office on Main <lb />
Differ In their The foremost <lb />
tin. just row is <lb />
tobacco and high prices, while <lb />
the ladle are think ingot <lb />
LATEST oil IN MIL. <lb />
at Lowest Prices. <lb />
If they will call the <lb />
T i will find frill Hue of <lb />
ill flt- <lb />
IS Fancy Hair <lb />
Pin-, Combs, Buckles, and <lb />
other latest goods. <lb />
EVER BUY------- <lb />
Twenty Years Proof. <lb />
Liver Pills keep the bow- <lb />
els in natural motion and cleanse <lb />
the system of all impurities An <lb />
absolute cure for sick headache, <lb />
dyspepsia, sour stomach, con- <lb />
and kindred diseases. <lb />
do without <lb />
R. P. Smith, Va. <lb />
writes I don't know how I could <lb />
do without them. I have had <lb />
Liver disease for over twenty <lb />
years. Am now entirely cured. <lb />
Liver Pills <lb />
GREENVILLE <lb />
IRON WORKS, <lb />
I am t II lit my old with <lb />
workmen ready <lb />
TO U ANY WORK <lb />
on machinery of any kind. Onus, <lb />
Looks. Be wing Machine, or <lb />
any Other repair work. All my work i <lb />
guaranteed. Home Sewing <lb />
sale. <lb />
JAMES BROWN. <lb />
EXPECTANT <lb />
MOTHERS, <lb />
We Offer Von <lb />
REMEDY Which <lb />
Safety <lb />
of Lite to Mother I <lb />
and Child. <lb />
Robs Confinement of its Pain, Horror and Risk. <lb />
My wife used nut be- C <lb />
i or d. not <lb />
from quickly <lb />
I tho critical hour but <lb />
, hail no her <lb />
recovery was rapid. <lb />
E. E. John-ton. Ala. <lb />
Sent by Mall or Express, on receipt of J <lb />
price, f per Book <lb />
mailed Free. <lb />
in. <lb />
SOLO BY ALL <lb />
NOTIONS <lb />
Off I <lb />
CLOTHING. <lb />
II yon do it will you to buy <lb />
thorn of------ <lb />
CLARK. <lb />
He keeps but the best at <lb />
lowest prices, fry him for bur- <lb />
gains. <lb />
H. R <lb />
N . <lb />
For side reduced rates. We have in <lb />
and to .-ii rive a large lot of <lb />
I'm Slid Mil up to <lb />
order according; to <lb />
I ii. <lb />
These are <lb />
ill i- I'll of <lb />
Material <lb />
and the guaranteed to <lb />
u to be Hilt The w arc <lb />
North Carolina Oak Hick- <lb />
and made the State by North <lb />
Carolina workmen. We also carry a <lb />
nil line of <lb />
era and mil mm <lb />
YES YES <lb />
D W. <lb />
ready to oder to the prices <lb />
on good. handle null as <lb />
FLOOR, COFFEE, <lb />
Sugar, Candy, <lb />
Paper mid Paper <lb />
Ac., In job inti- <lb />
I handle <lb />
BAGGING AND TIES. <lb />
I have a nice line <lb />
FINE SHOES <lb />
to suit <lb />
I take Country produce In <lb />
goods. A I <lb />
we offer low rates. <lb />
examine our stock before purchasing fur <lb />
Harding <lb />
GREENVILLE N U sell n cheap<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017778_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
-V r <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Now the day will to lengthen <lb />
owly. <lb />
From this day our Children, <lb />
Youths and -Mens <lb />
will be sold per ct. lam <lb />
than New Yolk test at <lb />
THE DYING. <lb />
These People are in the Land of <lb />
the Living. <lb />
Cornelius Stephens is quite sick. <lb />
L. . Moore returned Friday even- <lb />
Miss Doughty has moved to <lb />
Miss Lela Cherry's. <lb />
S. V. King, of dropped in <lb />
had an exceedingly plea Saturday. <lb />
Married. <lb />
evening at o'clock in <lb />
the Methodist Mr. T. L. Han- <lb />
cock and Mary Browning were <lb />
married by Kev. G. F. Smith. <lb />
A Good Kan. <lb />
Kev. N. II. D. Wilson, the pas- <lb />
tor of the Methodist church, preached <lb />
his first sermons here on Sunday. <lb />
Large congregations Wore out to hear <lb />
him morning and evening. He is <lb />
RECORD OF A <lb />
What Greenville Did in the Way of <lb />
Building Improvements in 1890. <lb />
Yon may what a town <lb />
is doing in the way of progress, and <lb />
say it is doing thus and so, hut giving <lb />
the proof of it is sometimes a different <lb />
thing. The ha-s much <lb />
Quarterly Meetings. <lb />
Did. <lb />
Presiding B. I. Hall will hold Mi. M, ;. died T T J I C r I A A A Q <lb />
the first quarterly meeting of Ayden on sitter a V L II I i <lb />
circuit at Bethlehem January and long illness. He a <lb />
At Greenville station January <lb />
12th and lie will preach in <lb />
Greenville on the evening of the 12th. <lb />
Rill Christina.-. <lb />
young begin t <lb />
lean year <lb />
For an easy <lb />
Rocking Chair to your . <lb />
or sweetheart or <lb />
Gall see block both beau- <lb />
at J. ii. <lb />
Co. <lb />
We have eighteen hundred nine- <lb />
almanacs in our -e. <lb />
and call <lb />
J. B. Cherry Go's- <lb />
The little folks not d talking <lb />
yet about what Santa them. <lb />
N. II. Whitfield from Ox- <lb />
t rd Thursday evening. <lb />
J. W. Wiggins returned from <lb />
Mommy evening. <lb />
Miss Nannie King gone to Rocky <lb />
-Mount to visit her sister. <lb />
Warren left Christmas morn <lb />
on a visit i Salisbury. <lb />
of is <lb />
Mrs. II. C. <lb />
W. of <lb />
mine over <lb />
Ur. C. A. hit h ad, of Scotland <lb />
Granger, <lb />
to Bay during the past year what <lb />
, Greenville was doing, has <lb />
a young man of surpassing ability . . <lb />
. . . . . IV new <lb />
a splendid preacher. His church and <lb />
the community generally are delighted <lb />
him. <lb />
No Passengers on Freight Trains. <lb />
The Atlantic Coast Line authorities i <lb />
have passed an order that on and after, <lb />
Monday. January no passengers <lb />
Will be carried on the height trains run- I <lb />
here and there, but to-day are en- <lb />
to give the figures that speak for <lb />
j themselves and show that is no <lb />
myth about the t Green- <lb />
I ilk- is making. <lb />
J. T. Williams, one of our <lb />
contractors, has <lb />
; follows <lb />
Lu;, <lb />
at J. U. Cherry ct Cos Mrs. W. <lb />
save <lb />
Some of I lie turpentine men from <lb />
South Carolina and Georgia are here <lb />
hiring hands. <lb />
Buy your Macintosh Hub <lb />
at J. Cherry V Go's <lb />
eave money. <lb />
This year to the girls and <lb />
one must try catch lier <lb />
she can. <lb />
C. returned Saturday <lb />
evening from county. <lb />
K. B. and wife returned from <lb />
Scotland Neck Friday evening. <lb />
G. Fleming left Thursday for <lb />
to visit his parents. <lb />
between Weldon and <lb />
This rule may take much responsibility dwelling. <lb />
tiff the shoulders of I he railroad I Bros., tenant houses. <lb />
and but we believe will j Jesse <lb />
work a great inconvenience to <lb />
living along the road. <lb />
Journalism Standard. <lb />
A newspaper of one <lb />
a candidate of another party <lb />
the loss of and a <lb />
suspicion of having sold out ; but a good <lb />
lawyer can lake a contract <lb />
to deprive a Democrat of an office to <lb />
which he has been elected, and give <lb />
is as <lb />
C. M. Bernard returned to a and it is regarded as <lb />
A large hue the celebrated <lb />
Ii it G Corsets at J. j ins <lb />
Co s be specially invited <lb />
to them. <lb />
from -Mount Monday <lb />
W. T. Lee, who went to Wilson to <lb />
spend Christmas, returned Friday even- <lb />
The Methodist Sunday School had a <lb />
a gay time at the party in the <lb />
Thursday night. <lb />
Harriot Wire Buckle Suspenders <lb />
all Buckles and fastenings war <lb />
ranted two years, at J. B <lb />
Cherry <lb />
is called to the advertise- <lb />
wife and <lb />
Goldsboro, arc the of B. <lb />
F. Sugg. <lb />
J. I. Jackson. K. F. <lb />
Fountain Cox returned to Wake Forest <lb />
College <lb />
Capt. C. T. of South <lb />
Carolina, is spending the holidays with <lb />
his father, W. T. Lipscomb. <lb />
Mrs. II. L. who was visit- <lb />
of land sale by W. B. her sister. Mrs. J. I., re- <lb />
of J. L. W. Nobles. <lb />
sugar cent per <lb />
pound at J- B. Cherry t Go's. <lb />
The boys touched off the old cannon <lb />
several limes Wednesday night and <lb />
made the windows around town rattle. <lb />
Just received a Carload <lb />
none cheaper and better than that <lb />
offered by J. B. Cherry k Co- <lb />
forty colored laborers left here <lb />
Monday morning for Georgia. There <lb />
crowd around the depot to see <lb />
them off. <lb />
For best Carts and Wagons go <lb />
to A. G- Cox, Co- <lb />
Winterville, N- C- <lb />
Mr. Merchant, let your plans for the <lb />
new year embrace an advertisement in <lb />
the tun. Don't try to do <lb />
business it. <lb />
Beautiful stylish and cheap <lb />
Dress and Trimmings at <lb />
J. B. Cherry Cos- <lb />
It is not to say that it rained, but it <lb />
simply poured down Monday night. <lb />
The young ladies of the town will <lb />
have a leap year party Thursday night. <lb />
Mr. II. M. of Greene county, <lb />
has purchased through Air. Henry <lb />
real estate agent, the Smith store <lb />
building now occupied by Mr. M. K. <lb />
Lang. Mr. will come to Green- <lb />
ville engage in merchandising. <lb />
We will have another lot of horses <lb />
and mules this week. Wail for us. <lb />
R. L. Smith Co. <lb />
easy <lb />
wear for the feet. You can't go <lb />
with them, they are rights <lb />
and left For sale by J. B. Cher <lb />
Co. <lb />
Will you need a ledger for the new <lb />
year's business The Reflector <lb />
Store has all sizes. <lb />
best Flour is Proctor <lb />
Knoll .-obi by S. M. Try a <lb />
lb bag. <lb />
Oiler having purchased the <lb />
store building now occupied by Lang. <lb />
necessitating bis removal to another <lb />
store, he will begin on January 1st. dis- <lb />
posing of bis at cost to save <lb />
moving goods. advertise- <lb />
In a few days I will ha e head <lb />
of fine horses and mules, and they will <lb />
be sold cheap. It will pay you to see <lb />
inc. J. F. <lb />
Granulated cents per <lb />
pound at J. B. Cherry Co's. <lb />
Miss Bet tic Warren will open a <lb />
school in Greenville, on Monday, Jan- <lb />
G, Sec her for terms and <lb />
particulars. <lb />
It is said that the President's <lb />
recognizing Utah a State <lb />
will be issued on January 4th, and the <lb />
terms of the State officers will begin on <lb />
January 6th. <lb />
Prof. opened school Monday <lb />
at the Collegiate Institute. We are <lb />
requested to say that Mrs. has <lb />
charge of the Primary Department, <lb />
and Miss Lizzie Carver of the Music <lb />
Department. Parents cannot do better <lb />
than send their children to this excel- <lb />
lent school. <lb />
FURNITURE cheaper than <lb />
ever before at J. B. Cherry Co. <lb />
Chamois Dress Lining <lb />
and new of Dress Goods <lb />
at J. B. Cherry <lb />
J. C. Greene Edward Greene <lb />
went to Washington on their bicycles <lb />
Saturday and returned Sunday even- <lb />
Jim says that a breakdown and <lb />
prospect of baring to walk miles on <lb />
the trip kinder made him feel <lb />
down in the mouth he <lb />
. rowed a shop, patched up <lb />
and got home in shape. J <lb />
loaned home Saturday evening. <lb />
Kev. N. II. D. Wilson, the new pas- <lb />
tor of the Methodist church, <lb />
by his wife, arrived Friday evening. <lb />
II. B. Sledge, and little son, Tar- <lb />
who were visiting the family of <lb />
I,. returned home Saturday- <lb />
John Ames, of Portsmouth, who <lb />
Christmas here with his parents <lb />
and sister, returned home Friday morn <lb />
Capt. K. M. Pace Monday <lb />
evening from Wilson where he had <lb />
been to the holidays with his <lb />
family. <lb />
J. E. Matthews and daughter. Miss <lb />
Lizzie, of Bertie are <lb />
the family of his brother, J. T. Mat- <lb />
thews. <lb />
F. M. I bulges and wife and Miss <lb />
Betsey Greene went to Washington <lb />
Saturday to visit relatives and returned <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Misses Ada Tyson, Addie Johnston, <lb />
Tripp and Clyde Cox left for <lb />
the N. at Greensboro Mon- <lb />
day morning. <lb />
Joseph Tunstall, of Greene county, <lb />
has moved his family to and <lb />
Occupies one the buildings <lb />
in <lb />
Misses Williford and Flor- <lb />
Vick, of Rocky Mount, who spent <lb />
Christmas with Mies Lena Matthews, <lb />
returned home Saturday. <lb />
Mayor Ola Forbes and family spent <lb />
Christmas with relatives at Grifton. <lb />
Councilman W. L. Blown was Mayor <lb />
protein during his absence. <lb />
J. I. Baker, of the U. S. army a <lb />
j Fortress Monroe, who been home on <lb />
a ten day's furlough, returned to his <lb />
post Saturday morning. <lb />
Miss Mattie Whitfield and little <lb />
May Whitfield, sister and daughter of <lb />
N. II. Whitfield, who have been spend- <lb />
a few days here, returned to Oxford <lb />
Monday. <lb />
Dr. W. II. Savage and wife, of <lb />
Mrs. Savage and Mrs. of <lb />
spent Christmas here with the <lb />
family of C. T. They re- <lb />
turned to their homes Saturday. <lb />
J. B. Cherry, Jr., left Thursday <lb />
morning for Baltimore to lake a <lb />
with Hurst, Co. Jim's <lb />
host of will miss him but wish <lb />
him great success in his new position. <lb />
Miss Mary Alice who has <lb />
been spending the holidays at home, <lb />
and Miss Carrie Dill who was <lb />
her, returned to Monday <lb />
evening. <lb />
Begin the new year right by having <lb />
year name on the <lb />
list. <lb />
J. L. Starkey has purchased the in- <lb />
of the oilier members of the Brat <lb />
of J. L. Starkey Co. and will carry <lb />
on the business individually. Notice of <lb />
dissolution appears elsewhere. <lb />
If you want any magazines for next <lb />
year you can leave your subscriptions <lb />
at the Reflector Book Store and save <lb />
the trouble of ordering them yourself. <lb />
We can give discounts when several <lb />
arc ordered for one person. <lb />
Jesse has purchased the in- <lb />
Ola Forbes in the firm of <lb />
Forbes, fertilizer dealers, <lb />
and ha- associated with Charles Cobb <lb />
to continue the business under the <lb />
firm name of Co. They <lb />
will handle the leading brands of fer- <lb />
lime, will <lb />
make it to your interest to sec them <lb />
before placing orders. <lb />
Co. <lb />
law practice. This is the <lb />
difference between the two great, pro- <lb />
of law and journalism. The <lb />
standard of morality is higher in <lb />
than in any profession short of <lb />
the <lb />
an. <lb />
Marriage <lb />
Were issued so the following couples <lb />
by the Register of Deeds last week <lb />
WHITE. <lb />
Thad Bullock and Mary <lb />
Herbert Dixon and Lucy Nelson. <lb />
C. F. and Nannie Webb. <lb />
T. L. Hancock and Mary Browning. <lb />
Amos Williams and <lb />
son. <lb />
J. II. Stevenson and Clara M. Fair- <lb />
John Hardy and Nellie <lb />
Haywood Spell and Emma Pitt. <lb />
J. M. and Louisa Tyson. <lb />
Turner Mobley and James. <lb />
David and Millie Daniel. <lb />
DYING <lb />
Mb. <lb />
We are told by ancient tradition that <lb />
he swan never sings except when it is <lb />
This is not true, and many of <lb />
the citizens of Greenville can bear <lb />
to truth. heard on <lb />
Friday night a most beautiful Strain of <lb />
a most beautiful living Swan and the <lb />
echoes still linger in our soul. We <lb />
would be delighted to hear this living <lb />
Swan sing in her own exquisite style <lb />
Then You'll for <lb />
surely the good people of Greenville <lb />
will long remember the Swan's down <lb />
in the Xmas holidays X. <lb />
Bun Over and Badly Hurt. <lb />
evening Just before night <lb />
little Leon Pender, son of Mr. L. II. <lb />
went to cross the street in <lb />
front of his father's store when he was <lb />
knocked down by a passing vehicle. <lb />
The horse struck him first, a.- the <lb />
little fellow went lo raise up the animal <lb />
kicked over the right eye, then both <lb />
wheels the buggy passed over him. <lb />
Mr. Pender rushed out to pick his little <lb />
son up and carried him into Wooten's <lb />
drug store where Zeno Brown and <lb />
Charlie were called in <lb />
to attend him. They found a fearful <lb />
cut over his right eye and bad bruises <lb />
about his head and face. Fortunately <lb />
no bones were broken, but he had a <lb />
narrow The little fellow is re- <lb />
ported to be getting along very well. <lb />
THE <lb />
Greeted by a Large and Appreciative <lb />
Audience. <lb />
1,250 <lb />
GOO <lb />
l ; i <lb />
1,500 <lb />
2.000 <lb />
Glorious Drunks. <lb />
A western paper t a fellow who, <lb />
every time he gets on a spree, insists on <lb />
paying a year's subscription to his <lb />
town paper. He has already paid to <lb />
January An effort should be <lb />
made to ascertain of whiskey <lb />
the fellow is using that it may lie more <lb />
generally put on the market. <lb />
Chas. A. Carter, who came over to <lb />
Greenville last fall with a view of <lb />
ting on this market to buy tobacco and <lb />
was unable to secure a factory, went <lb />
back to at which place he <lb />
died last evening of malarial l <lb />
fever, and was buried in Wilson Mon- <lb />
day by the Wilson Light Infantry, of <lb />
which he was a member. <lb />
PRESENTS <lb />
J. K. Moore, hows <lb />
Cobb, store <lb />
Greenville Lumber Co. mill <lb />
and fixtures <lb />
O. Hooker, two prize houses <lb />
Eastern Warehouse Co., en- <lb />
warehouse <lb />
Hooker Bernard, improve- <lb />
lo prize house <lb />
Forbes prize house <lb />
dwelling <lb />
Mrs. dwelling <lb />
J. A. dwelling <lb />
II. C. Edwards, dwelling, <lb />
Brown Co., ware- <lb />
house <lb />
C. T. three dwellings <lb />
Mrs. dwelling <lb />
A. Forbes, school house <lb />
Mrs. Daniel, dwelling <lb />
Dr. C. J. improve- <lb />
Dr. F. W. Brown, office <lb />
Vaults in Court House, <lb />
Elliott Bros., improvements <lb />
D. J. H improvements <lb />
S. M. enlarging store <lb />
Cory Bros, two dwellings <lb />
Joseph Whitty, store <lb />
II. F. Harriss, improvements, <lb />
A. C. Line, enlarging depot <lb />
P. II. Gorman, improvements <lb />
to prize house <lb />
L. I lumber, dwelling <lb />
Small jobs, estimated <lb />
Williams says that <lb />
work represented in the em- <lb />
brace Several buildings put up for col- <lb />
people whose names he could mil <lb />
Obtain and a number of small jobs of <lb />
repairing when- the amount <lb />
was less than There are also I <lb />
several buildings upon which work was <lb />
recently commenced but not advanced j <lb />
far enough to include in report <lb />
Ibis year. <lb />
Upon whole it shows good <lb />
for the and indicates that- <lb />
Greenville is enjoying a healthy j <lb />
growth. <lb />
There may possibly have been i <lb />
omissions from the above list of h <lb />
the will gladly make t <lb />
if our attention is called to <lb />
Stormy. <lb />
That was a heavy wind that <lb />
ibis section Monday night. It pounced <lb />
down in ail its fury about o'clock <lb />
and for sometime lo blow <lb />
most like a cyclone. whistled and <lb />
roared and shook houses with a <lb />
is blown down is about <lb />
the only damage we have heard of <lb />
around here. The storm was followed <lb />
by a decided cold wave. <lb />
Our <lb />
As the is now at its end, the <lb />
takes Occasion to tender <lb />
IN NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Matters of Interest Over the State. <lb />
A girl baby born the oilier day in <lb />
daughter <lb />
of a fourteenth daughter of a fourteenth <lb />
record which is thought <lb />
to be unprecedented. <lb />
The Gastonia Gazette says there is <lb />
a man years old in Gaston county, <lb />
who has a blue back spelling <lb />
book for his own use. <lb />
At on the 20th of next <lb />
May, the corner stone of a monument <lb />
to commemorate the Mecklenburg <lb />
declaration of independence will be laid <lb />
under the auspices of the North Caro- <lb />
Historical Association. <lb />
Mr. S. Hoover, of put a <lb />
20-pound watermelon away in the fall, <lb />
to eat Christmas day. He got it out <lb />
and found it had kept all right. When <lb />
cut it was found to be fresh and nice as <lb />
if just Observer. <lb />
The Mt. Airy News says that John <lb />
T. Cook, of Sorry county, is years <lb />
old and is the father of lo children. <lb />
The Herald says that Hay- <lb />
wood Poteet. of Burke county, is <lb />
years old and is the father of lit <lb />
A team of mules belonging lo Kelly <lb />
Woods were drowned at W. A. Bailey's <lb />
ferry on the Yadkin river, in Davie <lb />
county. The animals took fright from <lb />
the master hollowing for the ferryman <lb />
They dashed in the river were <lb />
drowned in a few minutes. <lb />
The town of Liberty, <lb />
County, was visited a very disastrous <lb />
fire Thursday night. The fire started <lb />
i. a ware room, how it is not Court in the case of W. B. Wingate nil- <lb />
, i . of L. W. Nobles, I will <lb />
and as there was no protection what- sell tor cash at the door in <lb />
I ever against it the flames spread until <lb />
was left for them to feed upon. <lb />
stoic in the town was burned. <lb />
FOR YOU. <lb />
A beautiful Xmas line of <lb />
its gratitude to every who has pal- s j A <lb />
ionized i, during, he year. While we O Hi vS <lb />
hank every subscriber for mite he i <lb />
Dress Goods, Clothing, <lb />
NOTIONS, <lb />
C. T. <lb />
has added lo its support, feel cs <lb />
p grateful lo merchants and <lb />
tobacco men for the manner in <lb />
they have stood by the paper. A pa-, <lb />
per must have readers, but it goes <lb />
out saying the liberal advertiser U <lb />
its best friend. Ins been our en-l <lb />
full value for every <lb />
dollar ha- been turned our way <lb />
to every reader full return for the sub- <lb />
price, and to every advertiser <lb />
a benefit fully commensurate with <lb />
amount invested. With sincere thanks <lb />
to all. and wishing every a happy <lb />
and prosperous new year, the <lb />
makes its closing bow for the <lb />
veer. <lb />
NEXT OF BANK. <lb />
Tobacco Flues, <lb />
STOVES <lb />
BICYCLES, <lb />
W e are now taking order for <lb />
Tobacco Flues. Give us <lb />
order for Flues they will <lb />
lie made right. <lb />
sell the Elmo and Gold <lb />
Cook none <lb />
better made. <lb />
Agents for Columbia <lb />
We sell you a <lb />
new 1896 for <lb />
Call and <lb />
S. E. PENDER CO. <lb />
Administrators Sale <lb />
of Land for Assets. <lb />
Ivy virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
FOR THE- <lb />
FALL <lb />
k WINTER <lb />
BUSINESS <lb />
and cordially invite you to inspect the largest <lb />
and neatest assortment of <lb />
ever brought to Greenville. Our stock con- <lb />
all the newest and <lb />
DRESS GOODS <lb />
The loss is about with <lb />
a .-c of about one-fifth amount. <lb />
Several dwellings were also burned. <lb />
The <lb />
A Nice Treat. <lb />
office was made <lb />
happy Monday when friend George <lb />
Harrison walked in and handed the i d- <lb />
a box of cigars with the <lb />
of the They are f <lb />
the famous Southern Leader brand <lb />
every cigar wrapped in tinfoil, <lb />
ting in gold and silver color. There is <lb />
no likelihood of our <lb />
from smoking when such delightful <lb />
gars as these are on hand. <lb />
Union at W <lb />
ReV. C. M. returned from <lb />
Washington. He says the union meet- <lb />
there was a very pleasant and prof- <lb />
one. The pulpits of all the <lb />
churches of the town, except the <lb />
were filled by Baptist ministers <lb />
Sunday morning, and they <lb />
together in the Opera House Sunday <lb />
night. A resolution was adopted that <lb />
the Union would take up the <lb />
work and complete the church building <lb />
at Washington. <lb />
Furnishing <lb />
Boots <lb />
and Shoes, Domestics, <lb />
led and <lb />
ed Sheeting and Shirt- <lb />
Calicoes, Fancy <lb />
Greenville on Monday, 27th day of <lb />
January, the following <lb />
land, A tract land situated I <lb />
in Township adjoining the t <lb />
lands of Amos W. II. Stocks, <lb />
Bedding Trip and others, containing <lb />
forty eight acres, more or less. <lb />
Which P <lb />
From general observation who do <lb />
you think has done the best business <lb />
during the past year, those merchants <lb />
who have not advertised or those who <lb />
have advertised regularly is <lb />
something to think over in this. <lb />
A very large audience attended the <lb />
in the Opera House Friday <lb />
evening, and were well, pleased with <lb />
the entertainment. The musical was <lb />
given under the direction of Miss lone <lb />
May, of who was assisted <lb />
by Miss Marietta Swan and Mr. M. M. <lb />
Swan, of York, Miss Petronella <lb />
Pate, of Goldsboro, and Misses <lb />
tense Forbes, Annie Sheppard and <lb />
Sarah Hooker, of Greenville. <lb />
The following was <lb />
Piano <lb />
Misses Forbes and Hooker. <lb />
Flight of Miss <lb />
May. <lb />
Comet Solo. <lb />
Mr. Swan. <lb />
Miss Pate. <lb />
Vocal Divine, Misses <lb />
May and Swan. <lb />
Piano de Miss <lb />
May, <lb />
Vocal Miss Swan. <lb />
Cornet Solo, <lb />
is the Last rose of <lb />
Mr. Swan. <lb />
Instrumental Trio. <lb />
Vocal That Two were <lb />
Misses Swan and May. <lb />
The encores to Misses May and <lb />
Swan mid Mr. Swan were <lb />
Miss Swan having to respond the third <lb />
time. She has a charming voice. Miss <lb />
May deserves much credit for the <lb />
of the entertainment. <lb />
January Weather. <lb />
The following data covered the <lb />
for the mouth named, and should <lb />
prove of value and interest in <lb />
the more important <lb />
elements, and the range within <lb />
which such variations may lie expected <lb />
to keep for the coming mouth of Jan- <lb />
Mean or normal temperature, ; <lb />
the warmest month was that of <lb />
with an average of the coldest <lb />
month was that of with an av- <lb />
of the highest <lb />
was on the 28th, 1870 ; the low- <lb />
est temperature was on the <lb />
1894; average date on which first <lb />
frost occurred in autumn. <lb />
November 6th, average date on which <lb />
last frost occurred in spring, <lb />
March 30th. <lb />
Average precipitation for the month, <lb />
3.94 inches; average number of days <lb />
with of an inch or more, the <lb />
greatest monthly was <lb />
inches, in 1878; the hast monthly <lb />
precipitation was inches, in 1876; <lb />
the greatest amount of precipitation <lb />
recorded in any consecutive hours <lb />
was 3.53 inches, on the 1874. <lb />
Snow seldom falls here in January. <lb />
Average number of clear days, ; <lb />
partly cloudy days, ; cloudy days, <lb />
the prevailing winds have been <lb />
from the southwest; the highest <lb />
of the wind was miles, from <lb />
the southwest, on the 9th, <lb />
Wilmington <lb />
Nervous Prostration <lb />
Could Not Sleep Had No <lb />
Appetite <lb />
C rod In Mind by <lb />
I suffered very much for a long time <lb />
i nervous prostration. I had about <lb />
given up all hopes <lb />
ever getting bet- <lb />
when <lb />
Sarsaparilla was <lb />
recommended t o <lb />
me and I believe it <lb />
my duty to let <lb />
other <lb />
know the benefit I <lb />
derived from it. I <lb />
Could Not Sleep <lb />
out and <lb />
J. Ed. what little I did <lb />
Allegheny, Pa. eat I was unable to <lb />
e-i my stomach. After taking the <lb />
fir t Hood's Sarsaparilla, which <lb />
-d to do me some good, I tried a <lb />
.-. . and continued to better. I <lb />
i. <lb />
Bright and Refreshed <lb />
the morning. I continued with the <lb />
and am cured, body and mind, <lb />
ran p well and better in every <lb />
way. I gladly recommend Hood's <lb />
to J. Edward <lb />
Ave., Allegheny, Pa. <lb />
j- <lb />
Be Sure <lb />
to Get Hood's <lb />
Hood'S PillS <lb />
Sub- <lb />
to the dower of Mary Nobles, <lb />
ow of J L. Nobles. <lb />
Dec. <lb />
of L. w. Nobles. <lb />
SUGG, Atty. <lb />
Sale of Town <lb />
Lot. <lb />
In obedience to an order made by the <lb />
Board of County Commissioners at their <lb />
the first Monday in <lb />
directing me as of <lb />
Beard to advertise for sale lot <lb />
belonging to the County of Pitt, known <lb />
In the p an of the town of Greenville as <lb />
lot number it being the lot now <lb />
used by the town of Greenville as a Mar- <lb />
House with of the <lb />
of County I, <lb />
W M. King, ex of the <lb />
Hoard of I of County, <lb />
do hereby give public notice said <lb />
lot will be exposed to sale to the <lb />
highest bidder, In front of l lie <lb />
House door, at o'clock M. on Mon- <lb />
day the day ; of January <lb />
The terms of sale will be one third cash <lb />
and the balance to be secured in two <lb />
equal payable in one and <lb />
two with six percent interest on <lb />
red payments, With privilege to <lb />
purchase to the Whole at any time <lb />
and take his deed. Title reserved until <lb />
the whole of the purchase money Is paid, <lb />
The Hoard reserves right t affirm <lb />
or said sale, is also <lb />
given the town government will be <lb />
permitted to remove the Market House <lb />
and other buildings on sail lot <lb />
by the town, hi accordance with <lb />
agreement entered into at the time per- <lb />
was given by of <lb />
County Commissioners to the town <lb />
Commissioners to erect and use said <lb />
The lot will be offered In <lb />
three alternate ways which will be <lb />
shown in detail on a plan on in the <lb />
office of the of Deeds and can <lb />
be seen by the public at any time and <lb />
will also be announced on day sale. <lb />
W. M. <lb />
of Com. of Pitt Co. <lb />
Lang's Great <lb />
Clearing Out Sale. <lb />
Owing to Removal I offer my entire stock from <lb />
JANUARY 1st, 1896, A. M. <lb />
At Cost. At Cost. <lb />
In bulk or retail to suit the buyer. <lb />
Now is the time to secure Bargains. <lb />
you <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 Men 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. o me and see us <lb />
and be convinced that what we claim is true. <lb />
Yours for business square dealings, <lb />
DON'T FORGET THE <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 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, always go <lb />
to the Hardware Store where you will get the <lb />
lowest prices. Yours, <lb />
D. D. HASKETT,<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017778_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
costs cotton planters more <lb />
than five million dollars an- <lb />
This is an enormous <lb />
waste, and can be prevented. <lb />
Practical experiments at Ala- <lb />
Experiment Station show <lb />
conclusively that the use of <lb />
will prevent that dreaded plant <lb />
disease. <lb />
Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars Win- <lb />
special but practical works, contain- <lb />
the results of latest experiment, in this line. <lb />
Every cotton farmer should hare a copy. They <lb />
KM free the asking. <lb />
L KALI WORKS, <lb />
St., New York. <lb />
First <lb />
It was return of the to <lb />
simple conditions, and its long so <lb />
in these the pioneer <lb />
period of the middle west, which en- <lb />
it to give us Lincoln, <lb />
first as Lowell called <lb />
him in the deepest inspiration of <lb />
his own life. It can, of course, just- <lb />
be said that the conditions in <lb />
which the race gave us Lincoln were <lb />
rude, but I think that it is not from <lb />
rudeness that tho love of equality <lb />
comes. Otherwise I cannot under- <lb />
stand how the politest society should <lb />
always for equality among <lb />
it members and that within its <lb />
limits it should offer us the truest <lb />
imago of equality now recognizable i <lb />
among as tho Basis j <lb />
of Good by W. D. Howells, <lb />
in <lb />
THE FIRST PSALM IN SCOTCH. <lb />
WILMINGTON B. B. <lb />
AND BRANCHES. <lb />
AND BAIL BO AD. <lb />
TRAINS <lb />
. . . <lb />
Nov. -a <lb />
M. M <lb />
Leave oil <lb />
Ar. <lb />
Rocky <lb />
Oil <lb />
So <lb />
Ar.<lb />
Ar<lb />
Oct. <lb />
Hi <lb />
Si <lb />
Ar<lb />
M.<lb />
N P.<lb />
Ar Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Rocky <lb />
Ar <lb />
Train on Scotland Neck Branch Hoar <lb />
Weldon p. Halifax 4.13 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland at 4.55 p <lb />
Greenville 6.47 p. m., Kinston 7.45 <lb />
p. Returning, leaves Kinston 7.20 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 a. m. mu <lb />
Halifax at a. m., am <lb />
except Sunday. <lb />
Trains on Branch <lb />
Washington 7.00 a, arrives Parmele <lb />
8.40 a. m. Tarboro returning <lb />
leaves Tarboro 4.30 p. m , 8.20 <lb />
. arrives Washington 7.45 p. m. <lb />
Daily except Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on Neck <lb />
Train leaves C, via <lb />
a it Raleigh R. R. daily except Sun- <lb />
day, at p. Sunday P. M; <lb />
Plymouth 9.00 I. M., 5.25 p. in. <lb />
I Plymouth daily <lb />
0.00 a. a u, <lb />
Tarboro 10.25 and -15 <lb />
Train on Midland X. branch leaves <lb />
except Sunday. a <lb />
m. arriving 7-30 a. in. Re- <lb />
turning leaves a. m., <lb />
rives at a. m. <lb />
in Nashville branch leave <lb />
at 1.30 p. m. arrives <lb />
Nashville 5.05 p. spring Hope 5.30 <lb />
p. in. g leave Spring Hop <lb />
in-, a at <lb />
Mount 9.05 a in, daily except <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Treble on Florence R. <lb />
K., leave p m, Dunbar <lb />
p Clio p m. <lb />
leave I a m. 6.30 a m, <lb />
arrive Latta 7.50 a daily Sun- <lb />
day. <lb />
Train leaves War- <lb />
saw Clinton except <lb />
in. and 8.50 p. in Returning <lb />
a. m. and p m. <lb />
rain makes com <lb />
at Weldon for all daily, all rail via <lb />
at Mount with <lb />
and Carolina It at for <lb />
MM all points via Norfolk, <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
General Supt. <lb />
T- M . Manage . <lb />
J R KENLY, <lb />
NORTH CAROLIN <lb />
B. B. TIMETABLE. <lb />
In Effect December 4th. 1893 <lb />
College Hotel <lb />
MRS DELL A GAY, <lb />
to depot and to the 10- <lb />
warehouses. <lb />
B-st and <lb />
Splendid mineral water. <lb />
Rooms large and comfortable. Table <lb />
supplied tin; best the market <lb />
fords. <lb />
Terms reasonable. <lb />
When the Emperor Henry in <lb />
captured Salerno, he <lb />
wives and daughters of tho leading <lb />
citizens to be put up at auction and <lb />
sold, and all these unhappy <lb />
were thus disposed of to a brutal <lb />
soldiery. <lb />
There is a sort of economy in Prov- <lb />
that one shall excel where <lb />
another is in order to. <lb />
make them more useful to each <lb />
and mix them in j <lb />
Ohio, City of <lb />
County <lb />
Frank J. makes oath that <lb />
he is the senior partner of the firm of F. <lb />
J. Co., doing business in <lb />
the City of Toledo, County State <lb />
aforesaid and that said firm will pay <lb />
the sum of HUNDRED <lb />
LARS for each and every case of Ca- <lb />
that cannot be cured by the use <lb />
Hall's i Cube. <lb />
Sworn to before me subscribed in <lb />
my presence, this day of December <lb />
A, D. i. <lb />
j seal A. W <lb />
I I Notary <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cure Is taken intern- <lb />
acts directly on the Wool and <lb />
surfaces of the system. Send <lb />
l-r testimonials free. <lb />
F. J. A Co,. Toledo O, <lb />
by Druggists, <lb />
Bleat la the man that stock <lb />
In what tho godless <lb />
folk <lb />
Nor walk within their way; <lb />
sits nu in the bin, bow chair <lb />
The like lo fill. <lb />
Bat aye and <lb />
To work will; <lb />
never tines it his <lb />
At or far <lb />
But In an in <lb />
Keeps on God's law. <lb />
That man shall flourish like tho tree <lb />
That grows beside a burn; <lb />
fruit we see aye free <lb />
As r i m in days return; <lb />
leaf shall ne'er be lost <lb />
trees <lb />
An blithe may boast sun an frost <lb />
A glossy robe green. <lb />
That man may gang to soil or bay <lb />
An still good luck <lb />
Yo may rely he try <lb />
Shall prosper in his ban. <lb />
men that lean, <lb />
Satan's rule conform; <lb />
They'll till they gang <lb />
Like stocks afore the storm; <lb />
Nor will rascal be <lb />
In paradise to dwell; <lb />
For God hath but the good <lb />
Shall sit beside <lb />
Toronto Globe. <lb />
A SECTARIAN MULE. <lb />
175- <lb />
II <lb />
J. F. <lb />
STABLES. <lb />
On Fifth Street <lb />
Points. <lb />
Passengers carried to any <lb />
at reasonable rates Good <lb />
Vehicles. <lb />
MERCHANTS <lb />
their supplies will Bud <lb />
their interest our prices before <lb />
all branches. <lb />
RICE, TEA, <lb />
Lowest Ma Trices <lb />
TOBACCO SNUFF CIGARS <lb />
we direct from Manufacturers, en <lb />
you to buy at one profit. <lb />
stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
always and prices <lb />
the times. Our goods and <lb />
sold for having no risk <lb />
to sell at a close margin. <lb />
S. M. N C <lb />
CREEK <lb />
Male Academy. <lb />
The next session of this v i <lb />
on <lb />
and continue for ten months. <lb />
The embraces all the branches <lb />
usually taught in an Academy. <lb />
Terms, both for tuition and board <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
fitted and equipped for <lb />
business, by taking Hie academic <lb />
course alone. here hey wish to <lb />
I c a coin--, this school <lb />
guarantees reparation to <lb />
enter, w North <lb />
n the State University. It <lb />
refers lose n ho have recently left <lb />
its wall the of this <lb />
statement. <lb />
Any young man w and <lb />
ability taking s course with <lb />
us will be aided in arrange- <lb />
to continue in the <lb />
The discipline will be kept at it- <lb />
standard. <lb />
Neither time nor attention nor <lb />
work will be spared to make this school <lb />
ail that parents could wish. <lb />
For further par s see or ad- <lb />
W. H.<lb />
THE MORNING STAR <lb />
The Oldest <lb />
Daily Newspaper in <lb />
North <lb />
The Only Six-Dollar Daily of <lb />
its Class in the State. <lb />
Mountain Animal Had Prejudice Is <lb />
the of Sects. <lb />
As I jogged along the sandy hanks <lb />
of the Poor fork of tho Cumberland <lb />
river, letting ray horse take its own <lb />
head, I up with the <lb />
on also taking his <lb />
time. <lb />
a fine morning for <lb />
says he, <lb />
in a <lb />
don't know that; some <lb />
of tho rides had in <lb />
the mountains been mule- <lb />
case didn't tor <lb />
ride one only when wanted <lb />
do it from it's <lb />
on seems to be <lb />
a pretty good <lb />
oz a ever <lb />
I ho said in a tone <lb />
indicating bis lack of faith in the <lb />
tho matter with <lb />
got his <lb />
are they Notions to kick <lb />
the top rail off the <lb />
he ain't much a kicker; <lb />
he kinder have a satisfied <lb />
sort mind an things <lb />
much oz <lb />
what ails <lb />
I want git over on <lb />
tho fork, an I can't till <lb />
I git up hero about two miles <lb />
a boat, I kin ride over in <lb />
don't you ride him <lb />
what I don't like about <lb />
a mule an I'm a <lb />
This was a poser and quite beyond <lb />
my of comprehension. I had <lb />
beard of religious prejudices, <lb />
they had never gone so far to <lb />
any other animal than man. <lb />
will have to explain that <lb />
says I. too far over <lb />
for <lb />
it's this he said, <lb />
with a short laugh. see, I got <lb />
this critter from a preacher <lb />
that had raised him from a colt, an <lb />
had rid him for seven on cir- <lb />
an wouldn't a parted with him <lb />
fer no ho <lb />
an couldn't tho mule <lb />
along. Ho was a power work, an <lb />
the used tor help out his <lb />
wages tho mule tor people <lb />
when he him. That's <lb />
how I come git him. Well, the <lb />
preacher never said an I <lb />
never axed an the Sun- <lb />
day I got him I rid off tor the <lb />
never <lb />
About a mile from meet- <lb />
in house I had tor ford the fork, an <lb />
the water deep that morn- <lb />
in, but the the way, <lb />
an I lot him have his bead. An, <lb />
by gum, he done it, fer when ho <lb />
got tho deepest he stopped <lb />
in tho crick, tucked his head, <lb />
his heels an sent me <lb />
over his years inter the water <lb />
it four foot deep it a <lb />
inch, an me clean <lb />
ho I asked as <lb />
the mountaineer paused a moment <lb />
to think over it. <lb />
a ho said. I <lb />
come an he <lb />
for me oz quiet <lb />
an I got on an rid <lb />
out. ho concluded, <lb />
I a <lb />
an ho a born an <lb />
raised, ho run his doctrine outer <lb />
mo an soused all ho <lb />
had the He's too good a <lb />
kill, ho over docs that <lb />
I'll kill him shore. not <lb />
him no temptation, I never <lb />
try no more with <lb />
Washington Star. <lb />
favors Limited Free Coinage <lb />
of American Silver and <lb />
of Ten Per Cent. Tax on <lb />
State Banks. Daily cents <lb />
month. Weekly per <lb />
ear. Wm. H. BERNARD, <lb />
d Prop., Wilmington, <lb />
Lincoln's Money. <lb />
at said Mr. <lb />
Wanamaker, under my <lb />
notice at tho department <lb />
that Abraham Lincoln, in his early <lb />
life, bad been postmaster at a small <lb />
Ohio town. In tho changes that took <lb />
place the office was consolidated <lb />
with Salem, and tho man twice <lb />
wanted for president was for once <lb />
not wanted for postmaster. <lb />
afterward it was discover- <lb />
ed that no settlement bad <lb />
Washington of the affairs of that <lb />
little post office. A visit was made <lb />
to Mr. Lincoln and case stated. <lb />
He rose from his desk and walked <lb />
over to a chest of drawers and took <lb />
out a of papers, among them <lb />
an envelope containing and some <lb />
cents, the sum in identical <lb />
money of the government safely in <lb />
keeping until called for. As he band- <lb />
ed it over to agent of post- <lb />
office department he it <lb />
is. I never use any other man's <lb />
Record. <lb />
Ba a Good Thing. <lb />
shouted the funny law <lb />
clerk into telephone. that <lb />
replied the pretty type- <lb />
writer at the ether end of the wire. <lb />
like to to him a mo- <lb />
are asked the girl. <lb />
I'm a good replied <lb />
the funny <lb />
it along, central. <lb />
didn't <lb />
A OF <lb />
They sat together, side by <lb />
He bent her heart on winning, <lb />
is arm embraced her slender waist, <lb />
And the band played Begin- <lb />
Said lie, dear, thee I love, <lb />
My singing bird, my linnet. <lb />
And as lie pressed her slender waist, <lb />
The band played <lb />
Above the heavens were all aglow, <lb />
Bright stars the sky adorning, <lb />
He kissed her band struck <lb />
up, <lb />
Won't do Home Till <lb />
S you to foot the <lb />
bills, <lb />
never want to <lb />
His face grew street <lb />
played, <lb />
Wink the Other <lb />
Orange Observer. <lb />
it Hope or Despair <lb />
The Richmond Dispatch, in referring <lb />
to the large number of marriages of late, <lb />
remarks that is a wonderful <lb />
amount of marrying going on just <lb />
mid makes the mat- <lb />
market so active Is it a sign <lb />
that times are better, or is it because <lb />
many couples have waited and waited <lb />
in vain for times to improve, and in de- <lb />
thereof have brought their court- <lb />
days to a The Press- <lb />
Visitor, speaking for the capital city of <lb />
the North are <lb />
glad to state that times are good, <lb />
that the matrimonial market was never <lb />
This, of course is good news ; <lb />
but, after all, does the condition of the <lb />
times have very much to do with the <lb />
matrimonial market Men have mar- <lb />
in all times and under all <lb />
in war and in peace; in and <lb />
in bad times, and so it will be to the <lb />
end. a man makes up his mind <lb />
to get married and can find the right <lb />
one, hard times does not ways stop <lb />
Virginian. <lb />
Things That Happened on Friday. <lb />
Lee surrendered on Friday. <lb />
Moscow was burned on Friday. <lb />
Washington was born on Friday. <lb />
Shakespeare was born on Friday. <lb />
America was discovered on Friday. <lb />
was evacuated on Friday. <lb />
The was destroyed oil <lb />
The Mayflower was landed on <lb />
was bombarded on <lb />
Friday. <lb />
Victoria was married on Fri <lb />
day. <lb />
King Charles was beheaded on <lb />
Friday. <lb />
Julius Caesar was assassinated on <lb />
Friday. <lb />
Bonaparte was born on <lb />
Friday. <lb />
The battle of was fought on <lb />
Friday, <lb />
The battle of Bunker Hill was fought <lb />
on Friday. <lb />
loan of Arc was burned tit l he stake <lb />
on Friday. <lb />
battle of New Orleans was fought <lb />
on <lb />
The Declaration of Independence <lb />
was signed on Friday. <lb />
By slow and sad degrees country life <lb />
is being robbed of its poetry, as one by <lb />
one the picturesque parts of husbandry <lb />
disappear under the advancing wheels of <lb />
agricultural machinery, the <lb />
Detroit Free Press. The chirp of the <lb />
plowman is exchanged for the silence of <lb />
the electric plow, which drives a swifter <lb />
and a straighter furrows <lb />
at once, in fact. Gone also are <lb />
thresher and his flail, and the gleaners, <lb />
who no longer find a harvest in the <lb />
close-combed There are <lb />
machine hens that incubate chickens <lb />
artificially. Now the English milkmaid, <lb />
with her stool, is threatened by the rest- <lb />
less imagination of the labor saving in- <lb />
The maiden, all forlorn, who <lb />
milked the cow with the crumpled <lb />
will made more forlorn than ever <lb />
when her occupation is taken away. <lb />
Is it not record ten have <lb />
milked in ten minutes by machinery <lb />
at the dairy show And what <lb />
will resist the temptation <lb />
of abolishing the milking stool as he has <lb />
already abolished the churn Someday. <lb />
perhaps, cows will disappear, too, in <lb />
favor of iron beasts, who will crop <lb />
grass more closely and convert it into <lb />
milk with less waste. <lb />
An Excellent Number. <lb />
Christmas tide brings no visitor <lb />
more than the special Christ- <lb />
Number of the Youth's <lb />
ion. Original, bright and striking, it is <lb />
filled with a feast of good things, bring- <lb />
pleasures alike to young and old. <lb />
To the entire home circle its weekly <lb />
visits are such a source of pleasure and <lb />
profit, that the small subscription price <lb />
of should head the list of <lb />
household expenses. <lb />
Administrators Sale <lb />
of Land for Assets. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court in the case of W. B ad- <lb />
L. W. Nobles, I will <lb />
sell tor cash at the Coon. Howe door in <lb />
Greenville on Monday, the 27th day <lb />
January, 1896. the following tract of <lb />
land, to A tract bind situated <lb />
In Township adjoining <lb />
lands Amos w. H. Stocks, <lb />
Redding Trip and nth. r. containing <lb />
forty eight acres, more or less. Sub- <lb />
to the dower of Nobles, <lb />
ow of J. L. W. Nobles. <lb />
Dec. 1395. <lb />
of J. L. W. Nobles, <lb />
f . A. SUGG, Atty. <lb />
The insurance cases, <lb />
of Beaufort, which have been on trial <lb />
in Jones county for the past two weeks <lb />
have been concluded. There was a <lb />
verdict of guilty in every case that the <lb />
state undertook to convict in. In pro- <lb />
sentence upon those convicts <lb />
Judge Graham said <lb />
the evidence in these cases he <lb />
true, the most stupendous crime ever <lb />
committed in Carolina has been <lb />
unearthed. I suppose there is nobody <lb />
that had any conception of the degree <lb />
to which this had gone. I <lb />
can see how people could be drawn <lb />
into this nefarious business of <lb />
or buying these policies upon these <lb />
dying people and people who were <lb />
likely to die, but few could be innocent. <lb />
In to procure these policies, for- <lb />
false and conspiracy <lb />
were all committed. There has never <lb />
been, within my knowledge, in the <lb />
criminal annals of our whole country, <lb />
a more gigantic conspiracy than this. <lb />
Here we have the greatest crimes <lb />
known except rape, murder, arson and <lb />
burglary. It seems to have been <lb />
on for years, and it has drawn in a great <lb />
many unsuspecting people, and these, <lb />
in order to make money, either by the <lb />
commissions or out of the policies, <lb />
have committed these crimes. There <lb />
has been enough forgery proven against <lb />
Dr. T. to send him to the <lb />
penitentiary for one hundred and fifty <lb />
years, if all the cases for forgery were <lb />
prosecuted against him, and the ex-. <lb />
punishment inflicted on him in <lb />
each case. <lb />
regret circumstances are such that <lb />
these men have not all been convicted <lb />
of crimes for which I could impose pun- <lb />
adequate to the prov- <lb />
en, many cases of forgery and false <lb />
tense being proven though not charged. <lb />
But the crime of conspiracy is a mis- <lb />
demeanor and punishable only by <lb />
in jail and a fine. The <lb />
crimes of false and forgery <lb />
are both felonies and can be <lb />
by imprisonment in the penitentiary, <lb />
and though I regret the same punish- <lb />
cannot be meted out to all de- <lb />
alike in these cast's, still when <lb />
this conspiracy is proven, when false <lb />
arc proven, when forgery is <lb />
proven to have been committed, then <lb />
must discharge my duty in each one of <lb />
cases, under the laws of Car- <lb />
as I find it laid down in our <lb />
statute hooks. <lb />
has been proven that these men, <lb />
Levi T. J. C. and <lb />
den D- were agents this <lb />
fraudulent business; that Dr. T. B. <lb />
was their medical examiner; <lb />
that David Parker and William Fisher <lb />
were their henchmen and went out and <lb />
got the names of those people who <lb />
WOre in the last stages of disease, as <lb />
Parker said, die in or- <lb />
as one of the witness said, <lb />
might make a little <lb />
-In the case of C. Hass-11, if the <lb />
evidence is to be believed he is the <lb />
arch conspirator f the whole lot. lie <lb />
seems to have been encased in this <lb />
business for years, and his success for <lb />
a tine seems to have induced others to <lb />
go into it. Then took it up and <lb />
after pursuing it for a year he takes <lb />
the in with him. They arc <lb />
all induced by the success with which <lb />
he has met to engage in this <lb />
table business. <lb />
Bill Fisher comes in and <lb />
forged the name of Florence <lb />
and others, and David Parker also <lb />
pears as an agent and one of the con- <lb />
Their particular conspiracy <lb />
was to defraud in probably cases by <lb />
the use of the names of a large number <lb />
of people who were in the last stages <lb />
of disease, many of whom were pro- <lb />
before the jury by the State. So <lb />
without going into the details I repeat <lb />
this is the most stupendous crime that <lb />
has been committed in our Slate within <lb />
my knowledge. <lb />
much as I sympathize with the <lb />
families of these defendants in the <lb />
that have overtaken them, <lb />
as much as I regret the disgrace that <lb />
will have to them the balance <lb />
of their days, and as hard as it is for <lb />
me lo pronounce sentences in cases of <lb />
this this is the part <lb />
of a Judge's lite, I am bound to do my <lb />
duty. The of the court is <lb />
that C. It. Hassell be confined in the <lb />
State penitentiary at hard labor seven <lb />
years ; that Bill Fisher be confined in <lb />
the penitentiary at hard labor five <lb />
years; that Selden D. J. C. <lb />
and Levi T. Note be confined <lb />
in the common jail of Craven county <lb />
for a term of two years, and pay a fine <lb />
of three hundred dollars each, that be- <lb />
the limit of imprisonment allowed <lb />
by <lb />
An appeal having been taken, <lb />
sell will give a justified bond in the <lb />
sum of for his compliance with <lb />
the judgment of this court if affirmed <lb />
by the Supreme Court. <lb />
The rest of the defendants will give <lb />
bond in the sum of each. <lb />
The Season. <lb />
Visitor the is <lb />
it that while a lawyer in a court-room <lb />
may call a man a liar, scoundrel, thief <lb />
and so on, nothing comes of it after- <lb />
wards, but if a newspaper prints such <lb />
a reflection a man's character, there <lb />
is a suit or a dead editor <lb />
Able Editor is be- <lb />
cause the public what an ed- <lb />
says, hut passes over the utter- <lb />
of a lawyer as unworthy of at- <lb />
CHILL <lb />
FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE SO <lb />
Not. 1803. <lb />
Paris Medici Co., St. Mo. <lb />
Bold last year, bottles of <lb />
GROVE'S CHILL TONIC <lb />
this year. In all ex- <lb />
of years. In tho drug business, <lb />
never sold that gave such universal <lb />
your Tonic. <lb />
Yours truly, <lb />
J. <lb />
GREENVILLE. N. C <lb />
--------DEALER IN <lb />
Stoves, Stoves <lb />
We are laying in a full line of <lb />
also Sheet <lb />
Iron Heating <lb />
Stoves. Best quality, low prices. Call and ex- <lb />
We also are agents for celebrated <lb />
Rambler and <lb />
and have on hand a few second-hand Bicycles <lb />
tor sale very cheap. You may need a Mowing <lb />
Machine, we have them in stock. <lb />
Opposite Drugstore. <lb />
--------IS STILL AT THE WITH A LINE--------<lb />
GREEN N. G <lb />
MARBLE, <lb />
Wire and Iron Fencing <lb />
sold. work <lb />
and prices reasonable. <lb />
Notice to Creditors. <lb />
Having duly before <lb />
of the Court of <lb />
comity of the estate of <lb />
O; not lee fa hereby <lb />
given to all holding <lb />
the estate to present them <lb />
to the and properly proven, on <lb />
or before the day of November, <lb />
or this notice will be plead in bar <lb />
of tin recovery, and all persons <lb />
ed to the said estate are requested to <lb />
make <lb />
November 6th., 1895. <lb />
SKINNER, <lb />
Executor of L. C. Lath deceased. <lb />
J. I,. SUGG. <lb />
Fire Mi <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-C ASS COMPANIES <lb />
At lo current rates <lb />
KM FIRE <lb />
The modern stand- <lb />
ard Family <lb />
cine Cures the <lb />
common every-day <lb />
ills of humanity. <lb />
In <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you and <lb />
fatal diseases result from <lb />
trifling ailments neglected. <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
out of sorts, weak <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't work, <lb />
begin at <lb />
the most <lb />
strengthening <lb />
is <lb />
Brown's Iron Bit- <lb />
A few bot- <lb />
comes from the <lb />
very first <lb />
won't stain <lb />
mud it's <lb />
pleasant to take. <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Troubles, <lb />
Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Get only 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 Ten Beautiful World's <lb />
Fair Views and <lb />
CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, MD. <lb />
,,,,,, <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
and Retail <lb />
T. A JONES. <lb />
Established 1878. <lb />
P. H. SAVAGE <lb />
SAVAGE, SON CO, <lb />
Factors and Commission Merchants, <lb />
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
Healers in Ties, Peanut <lb />
Attention to ale t Grain, Peanuts and Pent. <lb />
Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. and <lb />
Market Prices Guaranteed. <lb />
National Bank, or am Reliable Business In <lb />
I. <lb />
Pitt Co., C. <lb />
C, <lb />
Co., X. C. <lb />
Joshua Skinner. <lb />
COBB BROS CO., <lb />
Vest. <lb />
near A c. B. It. <lb />
COTTON AND <lb />
Bagging, Ties Peanut Sacks Famished at Lowest Prices. <lb />
Code, edition 1878, used in Telegraphing. <lb />
and So <lb />
The Charlotte wk want your orders for <lb />
observer, <lb />
North Carolina <lb />
FOREMOST NEWSPAPER <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and ; and <lb />
more attractive than ever, it will be <lb />
visitor to home, the <lb />
office, the club or the work room. <lb />
HIE DAILY <lb />
All the news of tin- world. Com- <lb />
Dally reports from I he State <lb />
and National Capitols. a -ear. <lb />
THE WEEKLY OBSERVER. <lb />
A perfect family journal. All lie <lb />
news of he week. The reports <lb />
from the Legislature a special. <lb />
Remember the Weekly Ob- <lb />
server. <lb />
ONLY ONE DOLLAR A YEAR <lb />
tor sample copies. <lb />
PUB <lb />
We will till them QUICK <lb />
W will till <lb />
We will them WELL <lb />
TAR SERVICE <lb />
Steamers Washington for <lb />
and Tarboro touching at all land <lb />
on Tar River Wednesday <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning leave Tarboro at A. <lb />
Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays <lb />
Greenville A. M. same days. <lb />
These departures are subject to stage <lb />
of water on Tar River <lb />
with steam- <lb />
of The Norfolk, Wash- <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, Baltimore <lb />
Philadelphia. New York and Boston. <lb />
Shippers should order their goods <lb />
marked via Dominion fr m <lb />
New York. from <lb />
Norfolk A Bait <lb />
more Steamboat from Bel <lb />
more. <lb />
Boston. <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
N. <lb />
. J. Agent. <lb />
N. C <lb />
CHRISTIAN'S <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
-o- <lb />
Rough Heart Framing, <lb />
Rough Sap Framing, ; <lb />
Bough Sap ill Inches 86.-1 <lb />
Rough Sap Hoards, in inch.-. 87-0 <lb />
-0------- <lb />
TRADE <lb />
MARK <lb />
Tor the Core ill Skin <lb />
This been In use <lb />
years, and wherever know <lb />
been in steady demand. It has been on <lb />
by the leaning physicians all over <lb />
e 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 and the high reputation <lb />
which it has obtained Is owing <lb />
Its own efficacy, as but little effort hat <lb />
ever been made to bring It before <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
Dollar. All Older promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all orders and <lb />
communications to <lb />
T. F. <lb />
Greenville, N. C <lb />
Wood delivered to your door for <lb />
cents a load. <lb />
Terms cash. <lb />
Thanking y-u past patronage. <lb />
N. C <lb />
PATENTS <lb />
Caveats, and Trade-Marks obtained and all Pat- <lb />
business conducted for Moderate Fees. <lb />
a Opposite U. <lb />
we can secure patent in less time than those <lb />
remote Washington, <lb />
Send model, drawing or photo., With <lb />
We advise, if or not, of <lb />
charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. <lb />
A How to Obtain with <lb />
cost of same in the U. S. and foreign <lb />
sent free. Address, <lb />
i OS. D. C. <lb />
. <lb />
mm <lb />
Real <lb />
Estate <lb />
and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Agent, <lb />
Reuses and lots for Rent or for sale <lb />
easy. Rents, Taxes, inn <lb />
and open accounts and any other <lb />
of debt placed in my hands for <lb />
have prompt attention <lb />
Satisfaction guaranteed. I solicit <lb />
patronage. <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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