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            <mods:title>Eastern reflector, 8 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>
          <mods:identifier type="bib">558892</mods:identifier>
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          <mods:identifier type="job">834</mods:identifier>
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            <mods:dateIssued encoding="w3cdtf">18960108</mods:dateIssued></mods:originInfo>
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            <mods:geographic>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:geographic>
            <mods:genre>Newspapers</mods:genre></mods:subject>
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            <mods:hierarchicalGeographic>
              <mods:country>United States</mods:country>
              <mods:state>North Carolina</mods:state>
              <mods:county>Pitt County (N.C.)</mods:county>
              <mods:city>Greenville (N.C.)</mods:city></mods:hierarchicalGeographic></mods:subject>
          <mods:accessCondition type="useAndReproduction">This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.</mods:accessCondition>
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              <mods:title>Eastern Reflector Newspaper Collection</mods:title></mods:titleInfo>
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            <mods:physicalLocation>Joyner NC Microforms</mods:physicalLocation></mods:location>
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          <dc:title>Eastern reflector, 8 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:contributor></dc:contributor>
          <dc:date>18960108</dc:date>
          <dc:type>Text</dc:type>
          <dc:format>newspapers </dc:format>
          <dc:publisher>J. Y. Joyner Library, East Carolina University</dc:publisher>
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          <dc:identifier>17779</dc:identifier>
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                <p>
. I <lb />
JOB PRINTING <lb />
The is <lb />
pared to do all <lb />
of this line<lb />
and <lb />
IN BEST STYLE. <lb />
of new mate- <lb />
rial and the best <lb />
of Stationery. <lb />
, 4-1 <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
EVERY BOY. <lb />
Wants or should want <lb />
an Eduction, <lb />
D. J. WHICH ARD, Editor and Owner <lb />
TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION. <lb />
per Year, in Advance. <lb />
VOL. XIV. <lb />
GREENVILLE, PITT COUNTY, N. C, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY <lb />
NO. <lb />
And The Eastern Reflector is <lb />
Going to help one Boy in <lb />
that direct ion- <lb />
We ill give absolutely free of charge <lb />
entitling the holder to <lb />
free tuition in all the English <lb />
for the entire spring term, ls <lb />
of <lb />
f Male Academy- <lb />
This i- the beat school for boys in <lb />
Eastern North and the hoy <lb />
Will be who wins this prize. <lb />
CONDITIONS. <lb />
This mouths Is to be <lb />
given to who will get the <lb />
yearly subscribers Tor <lb />
The Eastern Reflector <lb />
between now o'clock P. M. on Jan <lb />
Two for <lb />
months or four subscribers for months <lb />
i as one yearly <lb />
This is no catch penny device <lb />
hilt a oiler, an i if only one <lb />
i brought boring the <lb />
time boy who brings ii <lb />
will get the Of con me <lb />
more than one to he <lb />
in. for this is a worth win <lb />
mid boys will work for it <lb />
In order that there may be an <lb />
b-v WHO to <lb />
this we Offer a cash <lb />
v per cent on all no <lb />
that those who fail to get th.- <lb />
will be paid for work, hut <lb />
the one who win- the scholarship will <lb />
not Set the commission. Now boys get <lb />
to work with the to win <lb />
prize. Yon can get as <lb />
as you need <lb />
applying to the office. If decide <lb />
to enter this contest send us your name <lb />
M we to know how a, e <lb />
working to- the prize. W- will publish <lb />
the result of the contest with the name <lb />
of winner in the issue of the <lb />
tor an. 16th, 1898, giving the sue- <lb />
boy to school on the <lb />
opening day of spring term Monday, <lb />
Jan, <lb />
all to <lb />
THE <lb />
Greenville N. t. <lb />
N. Oct. 25th, . <lb />
This I have arranged <lb />
with the publisher <lb />
to teach free of c in <lb />
the English brunches, tor the months <lb />
term beginning Jan. iS- <lb />
to whom he may award the scholarship <lb />
in the subscription <lb />
Vt. H. <lb />
Principal Greenville Male Academy. <lb />
J. II. BLOUNT. J. <lb />
BLOUNT FLEMING <lb />
C. <lb />
Practice in aM the Courts. <lb />
SKINNER H. W. <lb />
SH t <lb />
H Successors to Latham Skimmer.<lb />
. k- a <lb />
John E. T. Harding, <lb />
X. C. Greenville, N. . <lb />
Greenville, X. <lb />
Special attention to collections <lb />
an i of <lb />
J. E. Moore. L. <lb />
Greenville <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW,<lb />
Opera House. Third S <lb />
P G. <lb />
B BE VI LL F. S <lb />
Practice-n th ct <lb />
on <lb />
F. TYSON. <lb />
Attorney at-Law <lb />
Greenville, County. <lb />
Practices in all the Courts. <lb />
Civil and Criminal Business <lb />
Makes a special of fraud <lb />
to recover land, and col- <lb />
Prompt and careful attention given <lb />
ail business. <lb />
Money to loan on approved security. <lb />
Terms easy. <lb />
r ii. WILCOX, <lb />
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. <lb />
Grifton. N. O. <lb />
Practice in and Pitt counties <lb />
w. <lb />
II, LONG, <lb />
Greenville, N. <lb />
in all the <lb />
R. D. L. JAMES. <lb />
DENTIST, <lb />
GREENVILLE. N C. <lb />
DR. EL A. JOYNER <lb />
DENTIST. <lb />
XV. C <lb />
Office up stairs over S. E, Co. I <lb />
Homes be Heeded for a Number <lb />
of Them. <lb />
There a number of girls in the <lb />
Oxford Orphan Asylum whose time <lb />
will be out in a short while by reason <lb />
of reached their eighteenth <lb />
birthday, the limit for girls to remain <lb />
at the Asylum. Homes will be <lb />
ed for some of them, and perhaps <lb />
will return to their relations. They <lb />
are all in the highest studies and have <lb />
bright minds and willing hands for <lb />
study and work. It would an easy <lb />
matter for some friends of the or- <lb />
who would like for these young <lb />
girls to good and useful women, <lb />
to make such a tiling more possible by <lb />
giving them tree scholarships at some <lb />
our academies or colleges. The <lb />
Normal and Industrial School holds <lb />
out very favorable advantages to poor <lb />
not to mention other schools that do <lb />
the same. We are aware that a <lb />
people think the little <lb />
obtained at the Asylum is amply <lb />
sufficient both girls and boys, but <lb />
it is not. And leaving out the <lb />
part of the which is <lb />
first, the Asylum is not prepared to <lb />
give these girls the necessary training <lb />
for an independent livelihood. It is <lb />
true they arc taught how to cook, <lb />
wash, sew and do other important <lb />
things necessary in every household, <lb />
but beyond this there is very little <lb />
taught them. <lb />
A limited number arc taught <lb />
and that is the only <lb />
occupation. If there were other <lb />
lines of professional study in this in- <lb />
such as so many young girls <lb />
arc putting to use to earn their <lb />
living, all right. But because of this <lb />
lack the need for a coarse in some of <lb />
these branches at our colleges is <lb />
parent. <lb />
The market is already overrun with <lb />
cooks, washerwomen and housemaids. <lb />
These places arc filled by <lb />
Even if these girls arc poor, and or- <lb />
they should at least lie classed <lb />
in a higher grade than mere menials <lb />
drawers of water, etc, etc. Have <lb />
the orphan white girls a right to ex- <lb />
a little better this Not be- <lb />
cause they are not willing to wort. <lb />
Oh, <lb />
Now who will help girls by <lb />
paying their I n who de- <lb />
sire lo some where they <lb />
can be taught a good, practical method <lb />
of earning a living The cost need <lb />
not much, but the result will lie <lb />
satisfactory, we arc sure. If any one <lb />
desires to do such a good work for one <lb />
of these let the desire be made <lb />
known before they leave the asylum. <lb />
Give the orphan <lb />
Orphan's Friend. <lb />
HISTORY ITSELF. <lb />
The recent defeat of the Democratic <lb />
party has had a tendency to discourage <lb />
some Democrats and to utterly- dispirit <lb />
those who are not well ground ad in the <lb />
faith. <lb />
After the disaster that befell the par- <lb />
in the Greeley campaign the dis- <lb />
and disgust were such <lb />
that disruption seemed imminent. In <lb />
Ohio a movement to declare the Demo- <lb />
officially dead and to build <lb />
another party with a new name took<lb />
ART <lb />
I Everybody <lb />
THE REFLECTOR; <lb />
for <lb />
Brim full of fresh, crisp <lb />
news, foreign <lb />
and domestic <lb />
Only a year. <lb />
SAMUEL <lb />
If thou weft true as thou art fair. <lb />
Love should for thee thy hard- i bear; <lb />
No service would his heart disdain, <lb />
Or deem it or in <lb />
But fare thee well too fair a thou ; <lb />
So face well forever now. <lb />
If thou mine and mine alone, <lb />
Then thou reign no l love's <lb />
throne ; <lb />
shape. There was a meeting of But other hands may thine cares i. <lb />
PRESERVE THIS. <lb />
Bent Democrats who were ready to <lb />
launch the new party, hut before <lb />
the formal announcement it was <lb />
decided to send a committee to see <lb />
Judge and secure his co- <lb />
operation. He received the committee <lb />
in his little unpretentious office, <lb />
heard them patiently, and after they <lb />
had finished their long statements, <lb />
and predictions the Old <lb />
man sat for a while apparently lost in <lb />
deep he came to <lb />
make known his position he did not <lb />
reply to anything that had been urged, <lb />
but dismissed the subject and the com- <lb />
with this <lb />
this room is too small to break <lb />
up the Democratic party The <lb />
delegation was offended, withdrew, <lb />
launched their new party, and saw it <lb />
die like a flower wilts in the sun. <lb />
Four years later the Democratic <lb />
elected a President and carried <lb />
the House of Representatives by <lb />
majority, justifying the wisdom <lb />
of Mr. memorable reply. <lb />
And other lips those lips may <lb />
So fare thee well Unfair art thou <lb />
Go fare thee well forever no.-. <lb />
If thou a goddess divine. <lb />
Should all men worship at thy shrine <lb />
prithee think is there .; one <lb />
Who from thine alter would pass tin. <lb />
Crying. thee well Mere <lb />
thou <lb />
Nay. fare thee well forever no <lb />
Yet tell me, thou, my own, my queen, <lb />
An true at thou art ever been <lb />
And I thy servant still shall b ; <lb />
doubting, sing this song to <lb />
O Fair art <lb />
And me fare forever n <lb />
Fighting in a Church. <lb />
On last Saturday at the Cary <lb />
church, Mr. Thad manager of the <lb />
State Alliance business agency and <lb />
C. II. Clark got into a fight <lb />
a business session of the Ii. <lb />
THE DEAD BABE. <lb />
FIELD. <lb />
It seems that Clark ha ; <lb />
History itself. The boastful to come to the chin. <lb />
Republicans and Populists and the weak- lie <lb />
kneed Democrats that Dent- railed attention to some <lb />
party cannot die so long -as between Maj. Clark, the <lb />
Keen <lb />
h on <lb />
some <lb />
people believe in a government of the <lb />
people by the people for the people. <lb />
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb />
South Ignored <lb />
con of the church, and Mr. Thad <lb />
superintendent of the Sunday school. <lb />
During an explanation being by <lb />
Maj. Clark. Mr. Ivey advance. across <lb />
Last night, as my dear babe lay dead, <lb />
In agony I knelt and said <lb />
God what have I done, <lb />
Or in what wise offended Thee, <lb />
That Thou take away from <lb />
me <lb />
My little son <lb />
the thousand useless lives. <lb />
Upon the guilt that vaunting thrives. <lb />
Thy wrath were better spent <lb />
Why Thou take thy little son <lb />
Why Thou vent Thy wrath <lb />
upon <lb />
This innocent <lb />
Last night, as my dear babe lay dead , <lb />
Before mine eyes the vision spread <lb />
Of things that might have been <lb />
Licentious riot, cruel strife, <lb />
Forgotten prayers, a wasted life <lb />
Dark red with sin <lb />
Then, with soft music in the air, <lb />
I saw- another vision there <lb />
A Shepherd, in whose keep <lb />
A little lamb, my little child, <lb />
Of wisdom <lb />
Lay fast asleep <lb />
Last night, as my dear babe lay dead, <lb />
In those two messages read <lb />
A wisdom manifest ; <lb />
And. though my arms be childless now, <lb />
I am content, to Him I bow, <lb />
Who best. <lb />
NORTH CAROLINA. <lb />
Matters of Interest Over the State. <lb />
Convict Labor m a Cotton Mill. <lb />
Alabama has undertaken a novel ex- <lb />
in cotton manufacturing, the <lb />
outcome of which will lie watched with <lb />
s. interest. The penitentiary board <lb />
has decided to establish a <lb />
cotton mill to be operated by <lb />
seven-eights of whom will, according to <lb />
the church, and standing with lied I a dispatch received by the <lb />
Record, be The building <lb />
will he two stories high, <lb />
fist over Maj. Clark, demanded <lb />
. the name of his informant, <lb />
A careful of the u . .,. . . . , <lb />
p tI statements. Maj. Clark declined to. <lb />
forced by threats to give Mr. the <lb />
information, Then flak <lb />
decline to give your informant, y <lb />
sit ion of the committees of the House <lb />
by Speaker Reed shows that not a sin- <lb />
first or second or third chair- <lb />
is given to the South, and that <lb />
in all the Slates that seceded in <lb />
only one little tenth-rate chairman- <lb />
ship is bestowed. New England got <lb />
clever, including such important <lb />
struck Mat. Clark, who is a man u <lb />
as the Ways and Means, Naval , . . . ,,, , , . <lb />
about Maj. t lark returned <lb />
Affairs, Banking and Currency, Pat- ,. ,. , , . , <lb />
lick. and. despite his age, <lb />
cuts. <lb />
and will be constructed by convict la- <lb />
borers out of brick made by them from <lb />
clay on the convict farm, and the <lb />
used will be sawed from trees now <lb />
the author of the statement yourself. tiding on the farm and dressed by j <lb />
whereupon Maj. Clark, in ;, . convicts. The cotton will be <lb />
told him he was a liar, raised by convicts on the penitentiary <lb />
Then who is about years old,, r. m. and manufactured in die mill lo-i <lb />
immediately on the ground. <lb />
The South gets one little <lb />
cant commutes, that of Expenditures <lb />
Public Buildings, it going to Mr. <lb />
Settle, of North Carolina. This is not <lb />
the committee on Public Buildings, as <lb />
been proposed. important <lb />
committee goes, of course, to a New <lb />
Mr. of Maine. <lb />
The committee, of which a North Car- <lb />
is chairman, merely examines and I i i i -v <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
looks after the expenditures on public . <lb />
to follow it up when the <lb />
interfered. <lb />
It is understood that the difficulty <lb />
grew out of false and reports <lb />
made by during the last campaign, <lb />
Maj. dark being a leading and high- <lb />
will be an unusual experiment in <lb />
the employment of convict labor, a <lb />
well as in the manufacture of cotton <lb />
pi Though the operatives will be <lb />
mostly its or value <lb />
will hardly be a fair criterion by which <lb />
In judge the possibilities of utilizing col- <lb />
or labor in cotton mills. What can <lb />
toned Democrat, who served his Stale I lie done with labor in <lb />
with gallantry in the war, was of this kind is hardly the <lb />
a long time cotton weigher in m -are of what can or ram be done <lb />
and was a member of the Legislature in wit Ii Free labor. Still the progress of <lb />
had a fire Mon- <lb />
day. <lb />
C. C. Taylor, while leaning from the <lb />
platform of a moving train, near <lb />
son, came in contact with a bridge and <lb />
was killed. <lb />
The fund raised by the <lb />
Leader to purchase a memorial for the <lb />
United States cruiser Raleigh, now <lb />
amounts to <lb />
, Jas. Ellington, a farmer, was found <lb />
dead in a well in a vacant lot in Hen- <lb />
It is supposed he <lb />
dentally fell in and was killed by the <lb />
fall. <lb />
Emma Anthony a colored woman <lb />
living a miles in the country, died <lb />
a few nights ago at the advanced age <lb />
of 10-2 Neck Demo- <lb />
A deposit of anthracite coal has <lb />
found in near Hot <lb />
Springs, on the line of the Southern <lb />
railway. Experts pronounce the coal <lb />
of good quality. <lb />
Yesterday the Treasurer, on <lb />
Solicitor K. W. Pen's motion, took <lb />
judgment before the Clerk of die <lb />
Court against the sheriff of Jackson <lb />
county for four thousand dollars <lb />
Raleigh News and Observer. <lb />
Samuel A. Ashe, has been <lb />
pointed Cashier by Collector Simmons <lb />
to sliced Mr. F. ;. Simmons, resigned. <lb />
Ashe will assume charge <lb />
1st. This one of the three places <lb />
in the Collector's office not under civil <lb />
service. The salary is per <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
Last a tree on <lb />
near the city was struck <lb />
by lightning. A cow Standing under <lb />
the tree was killed instantly. Several <lb />
days ago. another of Maj. fine <lb />
cows was standing under the WOO, when <lb />
a limb fell, striking the cow and killing <lb />
it. Maj. Harris like <lb />
spare that <lb />
Observer. <lb />
The Herald is told by a gentleman <lb />
who saw a party from Montgomery <lb />
county this morning at the depot that a <lb />
nugget of gold, weighing pound-and <lb />
ounces, was last week found near <lb />
Kid in the Uwharrie river dis- <lb />
If this report is true the nugget <lb />
is the largest ever found in North Car- <lb />
or in any other State east of the <lb />
Rocky Herald. <lb />
Highest of all in Leavening Power. Latest U. S. Report <lb />
ABSOLUTELY PURE <lb />
GUNS LOADED WITH FOOD. <lb />
buildings, and is about the most They All Help. <lb />
committee in Congress. Mr. <lb />
deserved better than this. The Have you ever seen a little boy sailing <lb />
people of the Soul h deserved I boats on a small pond There is no <lb />
better representation, if they were to wind, the boats an- half way over, and <lb />
Eclipse for the Tear 1896. <lb />
In the year 1696 there Will be four <lb />
of the Sun and two of <lb />
the Moon <lb />
IAn annual Eclipse of the Sun. <lb />
February Invisible to North <lb />
America. Visible generally as a par. <lb />
eclipse, to the Southeastern Coast <lb />
of South America. Southern Africa, and <lb />
the South Atlantic and Antarctic <lb />
The line of annulus passing <lb />
through the Antarctic Ocean. <lb />
Partial Eclipse of the Moon, <lb />
February Invisible to North <lb />
America. Visible entire to <lb />
Asia and Africa ; and in part to <lb />
the extremity of South <lb />
America, and the Atlantic Ocean. <lb />
IllA total eclipse of the Sun, <lb />
August Invisible to all of North <lb />
America except Alaska. Visible to the <lb />
Arctic Regions, eastern Europe, the <lb />
northern half of Asia, and the West- <lb />
portion of the North Pacific Ocean. <lb />
The line of totality running through <lb />
Nova and Japan. <lb />
IVA Partial Eclipse of the Moon. <lb />
August 22-23. Visible entire to North <lb />
and South America; and in part to the <lb />
western extremities of Europe and <lb />
Africa, to eastern Australia, and the <lb />
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. <lb />
AND <lb />
Mercury will be Evening St about <lb />
January May and September <lb />
; and Morning Star about March <lb />
July and <lb />
Venus will be Morning Star till July <lb />
then Evening Star the rest of the <lb />
year. <lb />
Jupiter will be morning Star till Jan- <lb />
then Evening Star till Au- <lb />
gust ; and then Morning Star again <lb />
the rest of the year. <lb />
be given anything at all <lb />
If Speaker Reed had studied to <lb />
and insult the South, he could not <lb />
have succeeded better. <lb />
And yet the Southern men are ad- <lb />
vised that if they want the recognition <lb />
they merit, they ought to go into the <lb />
Republican party. That advice was <lb />
taken in home Southern States <lb />
last year, with the recognition above <lb />
stated. <lb />
Mr. pride and his public ex- <lb />
of toadyism to Reed will shut <lb />
his mouth, but the people of all parties <lb />
in the South will be indignant th <lb />
Speaker's studied policy to <lb />
Southern men, and to make it <lb />
tor Southern Republicans to ex- <lb />
the least influence in shaping <lb />
News <lb />
lie there idly. There seems bin <lb />
A to the Star says that the <lb />
alleged of the Southern Express <lb />
agent at N. C a station on <lb />
the Cape Fear and Yadkin Valley rail- <lb />
road of by masked men a <lb />
undertaking will command general days ago has turned out to be no robbery <lb />
at all. According to the confession of <lb />
Agent Grier it was a planned <lb />
and executed conspiracy, participated <lb />
in by himself. Dr. Flee Cooper. <lb />
Coroner of Sampson county, and Red- <lb />
den Butler, Mayor of <lb />
Record. <lb />
Please Explain. <lb />
. New York Advertiser, having <lb />
in praises of the old soldiers <lb />
chance that the voyage will be because say they will fight if <lb />
Here is where the ingenuity of their are needed to defend the <lb />
he mind comes in. He throws a the Charleston News and <lb />
stone into wafer near the little sail- fa moved lo that its -war-like <lb />
or. The stone makes a little wave, the <lb />
bark rises on the wave and floats near- <lb />
to the shore. Another and another <lb />
stone is thrown. Gradually the distance <lb />
between the boat and the bank lessens- <lb />
and finally the boat is ashore. The <lb />
boy did not ask which stones he <lb />
threw influenced most the progress of <lb />
his boat. He knows that all of them <lb />
together accomplished the desired re- <lb />
Good ads are the effective missiles <lb />
that the bark of business to <lb />
praise is well <lb />
would like to know can old <lb />
Soldiers who are drawing a hundred <lb />
and million dollars in pensions on <lb />
of wounds and dis-. <lb />
eases incurred in one war possibly fight <lb />
in another one We should think, it <lb />
remarks, that they could only ride in <lb />
the ambulances or Be up in the hos- <lb />
How could they possibly march <lb />
and carry heavy muskets and <lb />
sacks and things, and keep out <lb />
of in all kinds of weather in their <lb />
shore. Each ad makes a little wave, <lb />
each wave helps to effect the condition mid health <lb />
and Leather Journal. <lb />
What Means. <lb />
To Put a Stop to Lynching. <lb />
Hon. Frank Johnston, Attorney- <lb />
General of the State of will <lb />
Says do you think recommended in his <lb />
the beautiful word comes from <lb />
It is the great word in which the Eng- <lb />
and Latin languages conquered the <lb />
French and Greek. I hope the French <lb />
And so Mr. a. Republican Sen <lb />
a tor who hails from the land of wooden <lb />
nutmegs, was full of forgiveness on <lb />
this before Christmas that I am <lb />
will some day get a word instead of <lb />
that femme. But what do you think it <lb />
comes from The great value <lb />
Saxon words is that they mean some- <lb />
thing. Wife means You <lb />
must either be house-wives or house- <lb />
moths, remember that. In the deep <lb />
sense, you must either weave men's for. <lb />
tunes and embroider them, or feed <lb />
and bring them to decay. Wherever a <lb />
true wife cones, home is always around <lb />
her. The stars may be over her head, <lb />
the glow worm in night's cold grass <lb />
may be the tire her feet, but home is <lb />
where she is, and for a noble woman it <lb />
stretches around her, better than houses <lb />
with cedar or painted with <lb />
million shedding its quiet light for those <lb />
who else are homeless. This I believe, <lb />
is the woman's true place and <lb />
. s i ready to forgive the <lb />
official report to the special j r . , <lb />
r c Maybe he was full of something else <lb />
legislation ., , . . , , <lb />
D . . ; the day before Christmas, and hence <lb />
Among other suggestions will be pro-1 . o , . . <lb />
these tears. Somehow, we ought to <lb />
visions as follows <lb />
I, That the county where lynching <lb />
occurs shall be held in damages in an <lb />
action by the children or heirs of the <lb />
victim of the. mob, to be brought in <lb />
any adjoining in a sum to be <lb />
feel happy and thankful and in good <lb />
condition, but we don't. Not having <lb />
asked Mr. for his forgiveness the <lb />
soldiers can hardly be <lb />
supposed to care much for it. His for- <lb />
and for what We have done <lb />
fixed by law, not less than 110,000.1 . <lb />
i nothing wrong, nothing that we are <lb />
That the officers of the <lb />
charged with the custody prison- <lb />
shall, with the sureties on their <lb />
bonds, be held liable in for <lb />
neglect of duty in protecting their <lb />
wards against lynchers. <lb />
That a constitutional amendment <lb />
shall lie adopted making it a <lb />
for voters in all public elections <lb />
that, before being allowed to register, <lb />
each elector shall be required to make <lb />
affidavit that he has not since the <lb />
amendment been engaged, <lb />
either directly, or indirectly, in any <lb />
such violence. <lb />
j sorry for, nothing for which we are dis- <lb />
posed to ask forgiveness of Mr. <lb />
or anyone Review. <lb />
An exchange gets this A man <lb />
named Moon was presented with a <lb />
daughter by his wife. This wan a new- <lb />
moon. The old man was so overcome <lb />
that he got drunk. This was a full <lb />
moon. When he got sober he had only <lb />
twenty-five cents. This was the last <lb />
quarter. <lb />
They Buy Shoes Together. <lb />
Rather a novel incident here <lb />
yesterday. Mr. Frank Morgan, of the <lb />
New York Racket, was called upon to <lb />
wait upon two men who wanted to buy <lb />
one of shoes. only two feet <lb />
between them. The deficiency was <lb />
made up by what are known as <lb />
The two men had lived neigh- <lb />
when boys and volunteered to- <lb />
in They pledged mutual <lb />
slept under the same blanket, ate <lb />
at the same mess, and fought side by <lb />
side. Thus they went through the <lb />
war and had nearly ranched the end <lb />
before any harm to <lb />
Hut on July 18th, 1664, one them <lb />
lost his right leg in battle. Three <lb />
months later, October the other <lb />
lost his left leg. Since they came out <lb />
hospital each has been using a <lb />
wooden leg, the one right, the other <lb />
left. One of them now lives in Mon- <lb />
roe township, the other in Jackson. <lb />
Yesterday they met on the street, and <lb />
as they had done several times before, <lb />
decided to buy a pair of shoes between <lb />
them, one taking the right and one the <lb />
left. They wore the same number <lb />
Monroe Journal. <lb />
Things You Did Not Knew. <lb />
One thousand, seven hundred and <lb />
eighty-three miles of railroad were <lb />
built in the United States last year. <lb />
The South Atlantic States built <lb />
miles, of which number North Carolina <lb />
built miles. <lb />
There were business failures <lb />
in the United States the past year, an <lb />
increase of more than per cent, in <lb />
number and of per cent in liabilities <lb />
There were less failures at the south, <lb />
in New England and on the Pacific <lb />
cost, and more at the west northwest <lb />
and in the middle state. <lb />
A in, i. That ii laM to <lb />
Major Thomas Q. of <lb />
Ala., on a visit to Buffalo <lb />
recently, told an Express reporter n <lb />
humorous story of war. Dur- <lb />
the siege of be was in <lb />
command of n Confederate regiment <lb />
of General Grant's <lb />
bad plenty of he said. <lb />
WM a fertile territory that <lb />
had to draw from, and was no <lb />
difficulty in getting enough to oat. <lb />
We Intercepted a poorly guarded sup- <lb />
ply train of tho Yanks had <lb />
enough to lead n regiment for a <lb />
month stored right in our <lb />
camp. In of vigilance, <lb />
spies would now then steal out <lb />
of tho city, saw and talked <lb />
with several of them. Each had a <lb />
pitiful story to tell of how tho in- <lb />
habitants of suffered for <lb />
food, and racked brains to <lb />
devise some means of sending thorn <lb />
a portion of our plenty. <lb />
old who was acting as <lb />
ft gunner under me was tho to <lb />
suggest what looked at first like ft <lb />
feasible plan. His idea was to load <lb />
i supplies into tho four cannon which <lb />
had and fire them bodily over <lb />
tho heads of tho Yankees into the <lb />
I city itself. It was n grant idea, and <lb />
after some study decided that it <lb />
was worth while making the <lb />
The supplies which bad <lb />
captured consisted of hard tack in <lb />
tins, that would go into tho guns <lb />
grape shot, and calculated <lb />
that by giving them plenty of <lb />
con hi send the food direct- <lb />
into tho city, where even such <lb />
morsels would ho welcome. I was in <lb />
command of tho detachment and <lb />
gave my consent to what an older <lb />
and more experienced officer would <lb />
probably have frowned upon as be- <lb />
contrary to all the rules of war. <lb />
morning at sunrise we load- <lb />
ed tho puns. put a plentiful <lb />
charge of powder in each and then <lb />
rammed many cans of hard <lb />
tack as would equal in weight an <lb />
ordinary hall, and that was <lb />
not a groat many, I assure yon. In <lb />
of tho guns put four cans of <lb />
tomatoes. This considered an ex- <lb />
We had that <lb />
fluid stuff would survive tho <lb />
impact of falling in tho city, but it <lb />
was worth trying. pointed the <lb />
guns, and just before the lanyard of <lb />
tho first one was pulled our old <lb />
gunner ran a few-rods down tho <lb />
hill, where would ho the <lb />
lino of smoke and able to <lb />
our novel shot <lb />
first nun to fired <lb />
e-l to be tho we bad loaded with <lb />
tomatoes. Tho gunner pulled the <lb />
lanyard, wan a roar and a puff <lb />
of smoke that our sight for <lb />
an instant, then it blew away and <lb />
saw, running up toward us, <lb />
old covered from head to foot <lb />
with what looked blood, <lb />
waved bis wildly and shriek- <lb />
killed I'm killed I O Lord, <lb />
have on my <lb />
alarmed and ran down toward him. <lb />
Ho still and shrieked, and <lb />
fell down In a faint ho saw us. j <lb />
I rushed to him, and then <lb />
sty man of us burst into n laugh <lb />
that would have waked the dead. It <lb />
old Tom, who opened his <lb />
and shrieked the louder when <lb />
saw our apparently inhuman ; <lb />
As soon able to speak or <lb />
move picked tho old up, <lb />
stood him on his foot, to assure him i <lb />
i that was still and then or- <lb />
him scrape tho tomatoes off <lb />
; himself. Be was tho most thorough- j <lb />
bedaubed specimen I over saw. I <lb />
i Yon the heat of tho of <lb />
the cannon had melted tho solder in <lb />
the tomato cans, and they had <lb />
dropped to pieces on leaving the <lb />
gun, contents had boon j <lb />
propelled just far enough down <lb />
I bill to spatter all over tho old no- <lb />
Tho major paused and <lb />
chuckled again. <lb />
did tho hard tack <lb />
asked the reporter. <lb />
didn't get a chance to try <lb />
was tho reply. Yanks, think- <lb />
that about to bombard <lb />
thorn from tho rear, started up <lb />
bill after us, and as would <lb />
been no in making any re- <lb />
against so superior a force, <lb />
we spiked the guns and retreated. <lb />
What they thought when they found <lb />
the bard tuck in them I never learn- <lb />
ed, but I suppose it only confirmed <lb />
their idea that going to at- <lb />
tack <lb />
The <lb />
A drive that wont a rocket <lb />
high in tho air and far, a <lb />
approach and two easy puts gave <lb />
the hole in four. He <lb />
tapped his ball in the drive for the <lb />
second hole, but it luckily hounded <lb />
the bunker. His shot <lb />
lacked good direction, but an <lb />
iron approach shot landed tho ball <lb />
dead on tho and he out <lb />
In four. Sands also topped bis drive, <lb />
but bad tho poor luck to go <lb />
straight into tho bunker. was <lb />
in two, tho first attempt being; a <lb />
failure. An approach shot that <lb />
brought him over and into the <lb />
followed, and it took eight to make <lb />
ii of n Game. <lb />
THE FLAG OF MICKEY FREE. <lb />
He t red Has, Free, <lb />
With wall <lb />
doll, unpatriotic heart, <lb />
Ali-l c v.-r it with Mimic. <lb />
Old Ireland was his native <lb />
V. I, Hi I ii in be, <lb />
railed the stun and <lb />
was n i <lb />
He mi t the tolls of life. <lb />
And honestly he for <lb />
His children and his wife. <lb />
Four year-, throughout ho <lb />
So that the slat, s intent <lb />
And lived to ho it in <lb />
Tho Dag of Mickey Free. <lb />
Ho often the flag <lb />
It floats above a laud <lb />
Where everything the heart can wish <lb />
Man's <lb />
O'er Christian, Jew and infidel <lb />
It Impartially; <lb />
And sinners well may <lb />
The Bag of Mickey <lb />
Poor Mickey I When the time drew nigh <lb />
That he must earth, <lb />
He lay within hi- walls <lb />
as at his birth. <lb />
Uneasy moved his eyes about, <lb />
he fain would <lb />
He looked ill failed to find <lb />
The Bag of Mickey <lb />
His wife, the flag, <lb />
it before his eyes; <lb />
Ami, in joy, a hundred smites <lb />
Seemed o'er his face to <lb />
His manly heart was <lb />
content was ho, <lb />
His vi-ion mating on <lb />
The Hag of Free. <lb />
Edward b. Creamer in New York Sun. <lb />
c o on a Runaway Car. <lb />
years ago I had an ox- <lb />
will never said <lb />
of Syracuse, a travel- <lb />
man, to a fairly <lb />
my blood run cold at the time. <lb />
I was riding on the Lansing <lb />
and Northern railroad in Michigan <lb />
on my way from Lansing to Grand <lb />
Rapids. had been out from <lb />
Lansing about an hour be- <lb />
to go down a stoop grade. The <lb />
present patent couplings wore not <lb />
in on that road then, and there <lb />
was always danger that tho oars <lb />
would become separated. was sit- <lb />
ting in tho rear end of tho train and <lb />
was tho only passenger in the oar. <lb />
Suddenly I began to realize that we <lb />
going at a great rate of speed. <lb />
I looked out tho window and I saw <lb />
that shooting down the <lb />
the train had gone <lb />
before I ran to door at the <lb />
front of tho ear. I saw that <lb />
tho engine and two cars had broken <lb />
loose from us and shooting on <lb />
ahead. gaining on <lb />
rapidly. The was slowing <lb />
I saw that we would crash into <lb />
in two or three moments. I <lb />
took hold of tho brake, and I <lb />
away at it with nil my strength. <lb />
Tho sweat came out on my forehead <lb />
I saw how fast we were gain- <lb />
on tho ears ahead. Then we be- <lb />
to slow down. Tho engine and <lb />
oars not BO yards ahead of us <lb />
when came to a stop. If I <lb />
reached the brake as soon as I did, I <lb />
wouldn't ho alive to toll you about <lb />
it today. Express. <lb />
Theory In Majolica. <lb />
Mrs. Bright won. In of <lb />
My and a <lb />
very interesting and tastefully illus- <lb />
little book in which the de- <lb />
scribes her experiences in taming <lb />
and keeping birds and animals of <lb />
different kinds, tolls a good story of <lb />
unlocked for intelligence. One day <lb />
in the dining room was talking <lb />
to her cook on culinary matters <lb />
tho latter suddenly looked <lb />
at a majolica plate over the doorway <lb />
and a mythological <lb />
subject, Isn't it, <lb />
Mrs. replied that it <lb />
was. Tho cook then <lb />
that in tho <lb />
Mrs. said, but it <lb />
is a <lb />
replied cookie, was <lb />
saying tho other day to tho butler if <lb />
there of that sort to <lb />
be seen nowadays it would go far <lb />
to prove tho Darwinian theory. <lb />
Wouldn't it, <lb />
adds Mrs. <lb />
not record my <lb />
minster to. <lb />
Two girl friends mot on the street <lb />
and stopped to hands. <lb />
glad to see you, said <lb />
tho tailor Alice. Just on <lb />
my way to ask you, as my oldest <lb />
friend, to be one of my brides- <lb />
I How lovely I I did <lb />
not know were re- <lb />
plied tho fin de Grace. <lb />
sudden, very but <lb />
he's awfully in and is lust too <lb />
lovely to Will you <lb />
Of course. I'll charmed. <lb />
moving forward and speaking <lb />
in an undertone, round <lb />
the corner and tell mo all about it <lb />
There that idiotic, <lb />
Jim Berton. He's grin- <lb />
as though be meant to stop <lb />
and I don't care to be seen talking <lb />
to <lb />
Berton He's the man I'm <lb />
going to marry London Tit-Bits. <lb />
Slander. <lb />
Close thine car against him that <lb />
shall open his mouth secretly against <lb />
another. II thou not bis <lb />
words, fly back and wound the <lb />
reporter. If thou dost receive thorn, <lb />
fly forward and wound the<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017779_tn_0002" n="2" />
                <p>
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Greenville, N. C. <lb />
B. J. <lb />
Entered at the at Me <lb />
X. C as mil matter. <lb />
8th, <lb />
John W. son of Rev. Dr. <lb />
W. S. of Charlotte, loved Miss <lb />
Clara Gaston of the same city. The <lb />
parents thinking they wen-too young to <lb />
wed, there was from that <lb />
source. In June last, the young couple <lb />
managed to get over into South Caro- <lb />
together and were quietly married, <lb />
and this little romance was never dis- <lb />
covered until within the last few days. <lb />
They kept their secret well. <lb />
President Cleveland has announced <lb />
the names of commissioners who are to <lb />
go to Venezuela and locate the boundary <lb />
line now in dispute with Great Britain. <lb />
They arc David J. Brewer, of Kansas, <lb />
Associate Justice of the S. Supreme <lb />
Court ; Richard II. Maryland, <lb />
Chief of the Court of of <lb />
the District of Columbia; Andrew D. <lb />
of Mew York; Frederick It. <lb />
of New York ; and Daniel C <lb />
of Maryland, President of John <lb />
Hopkins University. They are all able <lb />
men. <lb />
The year 1893 will go down in ship- <lb />
ping history as the blackest and most <lb />
disastrous of the century. The most <lb />
serious disasters of the year were the <lb />
loss of the North German Lloyd steam- <lb />
the Spanish warship <lb />
the Pacific mail steamer <lb />
the China steamer <lb />
French steamer Dom Pedro, the Span- <lb />
steamer the Italian steam- <lb />
Maria P., the Chinese transport <lb />
and the Brazilian steamer <lb />
Hi these nine wrecks alone <lb />
souls perished. Other big wrecks <lb />
during the year, which, however, did <lb />
not involve loss of life, were the French <lb />
Liner Ward Liner <lb />
Liner and <lb />
the Liner By the <lb />
loss of other vessels fishing <lb />
not here enumerated, the <lb />
New York Mail and Express <lb />
that other lives were lost. <lb />
England, it seems, has her hands full. <lb />
Germany is after her with a sharp stick. <lb />
The populace is greatly <lb />
over the attitude of Germany in the <lb />
Trans matter and arc ready to <lb />
tackle that nation as a The Lon- <lb />
don Globe says the entire nation will <lb />
become a war party it the congratulatory I <lb />
words of the Emperor are followed by <lb />
deeds. All the English papers teem <lb />
with abuse of German insolence. <lb />
Some of the papers advocate, in view <lb />
of this grave situation, that England <lb />
make concessions to the Tinted States <lb />
in the Venezuelan matter, as the <lb />
day Renew says, is better to eat <lb />
home crow than foreign and Sal- <lb />
must yield. Lord Salisbury is <lb />
chagrined by the London <lb />
Chronicle's publication of the Lord <lb />
correspondence on the <lb />
dispute. It is almost assured <lb />
that he will this as a loop-hole to <lb />
crawl through. On last Wednesday <lb />
diplomatic relations between England <lb />
and Germany came near bang broken <lb />
off but a surrender by Lord Salisbury <lb />
alone averted a crisis. A number o <lb />
American students in Germany have <lb />
volunteered to go to the Trans and <lb />
fight against England if it to war <lb />
with Germany. The British are <lb />
strict censorship over all <lb />
graphic news from the Trans <lb />
England needs checking, she is too <lb />
grasping, too over-bearing ready to <lb />
take advantage of a small country at the <lb />
least provocation. She must be stop- <lb />
and now is as good a time as any. <lb />
England has crowded on Venezuela to <lb />
Oh an extent until Uncle Sam told <lb />
her to stop or he would shoot. <lb />
land will stop, for she well knows that <lb />
we could easily capture Canada and <lb />
England would come over this side to <lb />
protect Canada and it would be a land <lb />
fight and then the United States would <lb />
whip her before she could fix. Then <lb />
little Ireland would take a hand and <lb />
perhaps be liberated. W do not want <lb />
any war, but war is preferable to being <lb />
run over foreign power. <lb />
Superior Court. <lb />
The January term of Pitt Superior <lb />
Court commenced Monday morning, his <lb />
Honor Judge E. T. Boykin, presiding. <lb />
There are no capital cases to be heard. <lb />
The docket contained cases when <lb />
court opened, and the work the grand <lb />
jury will do gives the outlook for a busy <lb />
term. Judge charge to the <lb />
grand jury was an excellent one. <lb />
The following compose the grand <lb />
jury and the jury for this week<lb />
EXPECTANT <lb />
MOTHERS, <lb />
W. Offer Yon , <lb />
REMEDY Which <lb />
INSURES Safety <lb />
of Lit. to Mother <lb />
Child. <lb />
Rota Confinement of Its Pain, Horror and <lb />
WASHINGTON LETTER. <lb />
Greenback for <lb />
England and the <lb />
Battle York after the <lb />
Convention. <lb />
J. J. May, Foreman, J. L. G. Man- <lb />
J. B. Gardner, James Evans, Joel <lb />
A. Ward, W. II. Harper, Jas. T. <lb />
B. T. Smith, B. F, Ward, <lb />
Teel, John A. Bullock, Richard Man. <lb />
ford, G. B. Kilpatrick, W. J. Kittrell, <lb />
Wm. C. Dixon, J. J. Ford, <lb />
Ford, Jas II. Mills. <lb />
JURY. <lb />
Alonzo Mooring. Jefferson, <lb />
John L. Warren, T. B. Manning, Jas. <lb />
A. Smith, W. S. Brooks, Win- <lb />
gate, Edward Stokes, M. B. Lang, N. <lb />
II. Hathaway, Charles Manning, W. <lb />
A. Hymen, Joseph Griffin, Move, <lb />
J. S. Powell. <lb />
The following cases were disposed of <lb />
up to Tuesday noon. <lb />
Walter Harris, failure to list poll tax, <lb />
submits, judgment suspended upon pay- <lb />
of <lb />
W. D. failure to list poll tax, <lb />
submits, judgment suspended upon pay- <lb />
of costs. <lb />
Adam Moore, failure to list poll tax. <lb />
submits, judgment suspended upon <lb />
payment of costs. <lb />
R. R. Cotton, Bruce Ike <lb />
forcible trespass, submit, <lb />
suspended upon payment of costs. <lb />
Young Savage, assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, submits, judgment suspended <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
Leone Patrick, violating town <lb />
submits, judgment suspended <lb />
upon payment of costs. <lb />
Hardy Harrington and John Turner, <lb />
affray, judgment suspended <lb />
upon of costs. <lb />
assault with deadly <lb />
weapon, guilty. <lb />
Isaac and Mary Givens, for- <lb />
and not <lb />
F. J. H. P. Bryan, M. C. Man- <lb />
James Mailman and Henry Ed- <lb />
wards, forcible trespass, not guilty. <lb />
W. A. Murphy and Exum, <lb />
affray, submit. Murphy judgment <lb />
pended. Exum fine and costs.- <lb />
My wife used be- <lb />
lore birth of bar first child, she did not <lb />
suffer from or quickly <lb />
relieved at the critical hour suffering but <lb />
, hart no and her <lb />
recovery was rapid. <lb />
E. E. Ala. <lb />
Sent by Mall or Express, on receipt of J <lb />
price, per bottle. Book Moth- <lb />
i era mailed Free. <lb />
CO., Allan., <lb />
BOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS. <lb />
TELEGRAPHIC <lb />
George W. opened his <lb />
great mansion. near Ashe- <lb />
ville. Christmas day by entertaining a <lb />
large number of members of his family <lb />
and by giving the of the estate, <lb />
numbering over two hundred, a Christ- <lb />
mas tree and collation. Mr. <lb />
made an address of welcome and <lb />
presents were distributed to all. Ten <lb />
private cars, forming two special trains, <lb />
were required to transport the <lb />
for this christening of <lb />
was made the occasion of a family re- <lb />
union. All the save Mrs. <lb />
Willie K. the Duchess of <lb />
rough. were there. George <lb />
is a and modest young man. <lb />
Here is a little story about him Not <lb />
long ago his farm manager went to him <lb />
and said lie was about to build a <lb />
much is it to cost <lb />
queried George. thousand <lb />
was the reply. Conn; talk <lb />
to me this said the young <lb />
millionaire. When the man went <lb />
George handed him a check for <lb />
saying, you can build a nice <lb />
Now that the railroad authorities <lb />
have Stopped allowing the freight trains <lb />
between Weldon and Kinston to carry <lb />
they would confer a favor on <lb />
the traveling public by shortening the <lb />
schedule of the passenger trains. The <lb />
schedule consumes four hours <lb />
each way between Weldon and Kinston, <lb />
a distance of miles, which is very- <lb />
slow running, and even then the trains <lb />
arc frequently behind time. The train <lb />
leaves Kinston so early in the morning <lb />
and returns so kite in the evening as to <lb />
be very inconvenient, especially at points <lb />
on the Southern section of the run. <lb />
Because of this inconvenience much of <lb />
the local travel has heretofore been on <lb />
the freight trains. Since the advantage <lb />
of going on the freight trains is now <lb />
denied the public, the inconvenience <lb />
in a large measure be overcome <lb />
with a better and quicker schedule for <lb />
the trains. There is no good <lb />
reason why so much time should be <lb />
consumed on a run of miles. The <lb />
believes that with proper <lb />
equipment a larger and faster engine <lb />
for run each way could <lb />
be made in three hours or less as easily <lb />
. as it is now made in four. <lb />
Besides the convenient-J to travelers, <lb />
a schedule that would bring the evening <lb />
train in night, would of mate- <lb />
rial advantage to all business interests. <lb />
If Greenville and business <lb />
men could get their mail by six o'clock <lb />
in the evening, instead of at eight o'clock <lb />
often later us at present, it would be <lb />
a great help to them. <lb />
our Regular Corespondent <lb />
Washington, D. C, <lb />
President Cleveland may or may not <lb />
have felt complimented when Senator <lb />
Sherman offered a resolution providing <lb />
that when greenbacks or S. Treas- <lb />
notes are redeemed for gold they <lb />
shall not be reissued except for <lb />
but that resolution and a speech made <lb />
in its favor by Mr. Sherman have been <lb />
the most sensational occurrences of the <lb />
week in Congress. It will be <lb />
that when President Cleveland in <lb />
his annual message and Secretary Car- <lb />
lisle in his annual recommended <lb />
the retirement of the greenbacks and <lb />
Treasury notes as the best remedy for <lb />
our financial troubles Senator Sherman <lb />
was foremost among those republicans <lb />
who hooted at the idea. Now Senator <lb />
offers a resolution which, if it <lb />
became a law, would probably result in <lb />
retiring the greenbacks and Treasury <lb />
notes, although he claims that it <lb />
wouldn't. The basis for his claim is <lb />
not. however, a very substantial one. <lb />
He figures that the law would work like <lb />
the assurance of a bank cashier to a <lb />
frightened depositor, that he could have <lb />
his money if he it; and that <lb />
those who have been presenting these <lb />
notes for redemption in gold will stop as <lb />
soon as they know that the notes so <lb />
presented will not be again paid out for <lb />
them to present again. <lb />
The scrambling among those who <lb />
want more of the protection pork than <lb />
the tariff bill which the House passed <lb />
gives them has not been since <lb />
the hill was being made up. <lb />
It has been and is making life miserable <lb />
for the republican members of the <lb />
Finance committee, which i <lb />
now trying to decide in what shape the <lb />
bill is to be reported back to the Sen- <lb />
ate. The greed of seeking p-o- <lb />
for special lines, at the expense <lb />
of everybody else, would make <lb />
scramble sufficiently disagreeable, but <lb />
Presidential politics have also been <lb />
brought into it. The de- <lb />
that the bill passed by the <lb />
House Is in the interest of Reed's can- <lb />
and that they will have more Mi- <lb />
put into it, or know <lb />
the reason why it isn't done. Th <lb />
Democrats are not biking much <lb />
interest in the bill, although the nearer <lb />
it gets to the better it <lb />
will suit them; they that the <lb />
country is as strongly opposed to <lb />
now as it was when it elect- <lb />
ed the Democratic House of the fifty- <lb />
second Congress and when it elected <lb />
Cleveland President and gave the Dem- <lb />
control of both branches of the <lb />
fifty-third Congress and that the nearer <lb />
the bill approaches the original <lb />
hill the greater will be its effect <lb />
helping to elect a Democratic <lb />
President next November. Democrat- <lb />
Senators have not agreed upon any <lb />
on the tariff bill, but the <lb />
general sentiment among them <lb />
that after putting the on <lb />
record against the bill they will place <lb />
no obstructions in the way of <lb />
a vote. Even if the bill passes the <lb />
Senate in a shape to meet the approval <lb />
The Best Yet. <lb />
Of course there are calendars and <lb />
calendars, some of them exquisite <lb />
works art. but the best we have yet <lb />
seen tor all around business purposes <lb />
is one received from J. C. Addison. <lb />
paper dealer, of Washington, D. C. It <lb />
is on twelve of white paper, <lb />
one for each month, fastened to a <lb />
hanger and the figures are fully three <lb />
inches long. You don't have to put <lb />
on spectacles to find the but can <lb />
see the figures any part of the <lb />
room. <lb />
On Friday, at Lake Superior, the <lb />
temperature went to degrees below <lb />
zero. <lb />
At Archer, Fin., a gang of tramps <lb />
and trainmen had a fight and one of the <lb />
former was killed. <lb />
W. B. George was assassinated on <lb />
the streets of Jacksonville, Fla., Sat- <lb />
by an unknown person. <lb />
The President issued his <lb />
on Saturday admitting Utah <lb />
as a State. There are now forty-five <lb />
States. <lb />
At Harris City, Fla., an eighteen- <lb />
was caught robbing it <lb />
Pullman sleeper, and later on commit- <lb />
suicide. <lb />
S. Strauss, manufacturers of <lb />
corsets at Broadway, New York, <lb />
have assigned. Liabilities <lb />
assets <lb />
Two companies have been chartered <lb />
at Norfolk, Ya., for the purpose of man- <lb />
all kinds of munition- of war, <lb />
the capital ranges from to <lb />
Commander Lewis Kingsley, of the <lb />
U. S. training ship Essex, dropped <lb />
dead on board of his ship just after <lb />
eating dinner Saturday. The Essex <lb />
is at Yorktown. <lb />
Seymour Sailors, of Athens, Go., is <lb />
reported to have been murdered in <lb />
Jackson county, Ga. Sailors is a <lb />
man and robbery is supposed to <lb />
have been the motive. <lb />
On Saturday, at Roanoke, Ya., the <lb />
general building of the Norfolk <lb />
As Western railroad was burned. Most <lb />
of the records and furniture were saved. <lb />
The loss is about Origin <lb />
unknown. <lb />
happy untie w<lb />
ID <lb />
In Purchasing; a Suit or Overcoat <lb />
tern TEAR <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 />
Such a schedule as is herein suggest- <lb />
ed would be appreciated by people all j of Mr. Reed, who is to all intents and <lb />
along the line, and we hope the the House, it is well-nigh <lb />
authorities will it under consider- J certain that it will be vetoed by <lb />
dent Cleveland. <lb />
am eared since taking Hood's <lb />
is what n any thousands are <lb />
saying- It gives renewed vitality and <lb />
vigor. <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 />
TAX NOTICE <lb />
Those who fail to pay their taxes to <lb />
of January will pay cost- I <lb />
shall have no collectors in any of the <lb />
and those who f to by <lb />
the above stated time will be visited by <lb />
myself or a deputy and levy made and <lb />
tax collected at once. <lb />
R. W. KING, <lb />
Sheriff Pitt County. <lb />
P P. P. <lb />
cures all skin <lb />
and <lb />
blood diseases <lb />
endorse P. P. P. as a <lb />
splendid combination, and H <lb />
with great satisfaction of the cure of all <lb />
forms and stages of primary, secondary <lb />
and tertiary syphilitic <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures RheumatisM. <lb />
ulcer and lores, Welling <lb />
in, old ulcers <lb />
all treatment, ca- <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Blood Poison. <lb />
km diseases, eczema chronic female <lb />
mercurial poison, <lb />
said head, <lb />
P. Is a powerful ionic and an <lb />
excellent <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Scrofula. <lb />
appetizer, building up the system rap- <lb />
idly <lb />
Ladles 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 properties of <lb />
Prickly ash, Poke root and Potassium <lb />
P. P. P. <lb />
Cures Dyspepsia. . <lb />
Bros., Props. <lb />
DRUGGISTS. BLOCK. <lb />
Ga. <lb />
Bi o i Blood Diseases lieu. <lb />
Cotton and Peanut, <lb />
Below are Norfolk prices of cotton <lb />
and peanuts for yesterday, as tarnished <lb />
by Cobb Bros- Commission Mer- <lb />
chants of <lb />
COTTON-. <lb />
Good Middling <lb />
Middling <lb />
Low Middling <lb />
Good Ordinary <lb />
Organized 1848- <lb />
disease by the timely use I Assets over <lb />
ft <lb />
15-16 <lb />
Prime <lb />
Spanish <lb />
Greenville Market. <lb />
Corrected by S. M. <lb />
Butter, per lb <lb />
Western Sides <lb />
cured Hams <lb />
Corn <lb />
Corn Meal <lb />
Flour, <lb />
Lard <lb />
Oats <lb />
Sugar <lb />
Coffee <lb />
Salt Sack <lb />
Chickens <lb />
Eggs per <lb />
Beeswax, per <lb />
lo <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
3.75 to 4.25 <lb />
to <lb />
to-10 <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
to <lb />
What use in there In eating food when <lb />
does you no fact, when it does <lb />
yen harm than good, for such is <lb />
the case if it is not digested. <lb />
If you have a loathing for food there <lb />
is no use of forcing it down, for It will <lb />
nit 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 food. <lb />
The tired, languid will give <lb />
to vigor and energy, then you will <lb />
put flesh on your bones and become <lb />
strong. The Digestive Cordial <lb />
as made the Mount Lebanon Shakers <lb />
food already digested and is a <lb />
digester of food as well. Its action is <lb />
prompt and its effects permanent. <lb />
Doctors because it <lb />
has all the virtues of Castor Oil and <lb />
is palatable <lb />
SMITH EDWARDS, Props. <lb />
the late store near <lb />
Court <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. <lb />
Manufacturers and dealers in all <lb />
kinds of <lb />
RIDING VEHICLES, <lb />
mm, harness. <lb />
FINE BUGGIES a SPECIALTY <lb />
All kinds of repairing done <lb />
We use skilled labor and good <lb />
material and are prepared to give <lb />
you satisfactory work. <lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The Dim of J. L. Starker Co., was <lb />
this day dissolved by mutual consent. <lb />
J. L. purchasing the Interest <lb />
of the other members of the firm. All <lb />
outstanding business the Arm will be <lb />
settled by J. L. ., <lb />
J. L. <lb />
J. E. <lb />
MOORE. <lb />
This day of December, <lb />
Liver Pills, an old and <lb />
favorite remedy of increasing <lb />
popularity. Always cures <lb />
SICK HEADACHE. <lb />
sour stomach, malaria, <lb />
torpid liver, constipation <lb />
and all bilious diseases. <lb />
Liver PILLS <lb />
Surplus over <lb />
x- <lb />
Administrators Sale <lb />
of Land for Assets. <lb />
By virtue of a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court In the case W. B. Wingate ad- <lb />
of J. L. W. Nobles, I will <lb />
sell cash at the Court House door in <lb />
Greenville on Monday, the 27th day of <lb />
January, the following tract of <lb />
land, to A tract land situated <lb />
in Township adjoining <lb />
lands of Amos W. H. Stocks, <lb />
Redding Trip and others, containing <lb />
forty eight acres, more or less. Sub- <lb />
to the dower of Mary Nobles <lb />
ow of J L. W. Nobles. <lb />
Dec. 26th. 1305. <lb />
of J. L. W. Nobles. <lb />
It A. SUGG, Atty.<lb />
The Mutual <lb />
Life Ins. <lb />
Company, <lb />
of NEW YORK. <lb />
Security, Pi and Profit. <lb />
We have got what you want. A <lb />
Twenty Payment Investment <lb />
tract in the largest financial <lb />
the world, which affords <lb />
protection to your families as well <lb />
as provides for old <lb />
Motto best com- <lb />
is company which does <lb />
the most We have paid <lb />
to policy holders in years <lb />
VIM I <lb />
Our line companies are <lb />
best. Among them will be found <lb />
the oldest companies as <lb />
well as American. We do the <lb />
business for the people <lb />
cit your <lb />
WHITE <lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
Office on Main Street. <lb />
WOMAN'S RELIEF <lb />
for monthly pains in back, <lb />
neck, shoulders, head and limbs. <lb />
These are of de <lb />
peculiar it, women. <lb />
Wine of corrects Hie de- <lb />
cures Whites and of <lb />
relieves Suppressed Menstruation and <lb />
the nerves and brings <lb />
to afflicted women. . <lb />
ton <lb />
no n <lb />
ft <lb />
OS <lb />
E-m <lb />
P-. <lb />
w a <lb />
P on <lb />
ill <lb />
ill<lb />
ill <lb />
a. R <lb />
a,<lb />
CO S T <lb />
ENTIRE STOCK <lb />
Will be closed out at cost without reserve. There <lb />
will be a change in our business next year and <lb />
these goods must go. Remember everything <lb />
goes at New York cost. Parties owing us must <lb />
make immediate payment so we can settle up <lb />
the business. <lb />
J. O. Proctor Bro., <lb />
N. C. <lb />
LIABLE. <lb />
Differ in their <lb />
thought with the men just i ow is <lb />
tobacco and prices, while <lb />
the ladies are thinking the <lb />
LATEST STYLE IN MILLINERY <lb />
at Lowest Prices. <lb />
II will call Hie store of <lb />
They will it ml a full II lie of <lb />
Laces and <lb />
it Fancy Hair <lb />
Pins, Side Combs, Belt Buckles, and <lb />
other latest style goods. <lb />
Agent for Standard Pattern.<lb />
Notice of Dissolution. <lb />
The Arm of Forbes, <lb />
dealers, was this day dissolved by <lb />
mutual consent. The business will <lb />
be conducted by A <lb />
Co. <lb />
JESSE <lb />
OLA FORBES. <lb />
This 31st day of December, 1895. <lb />
--------IS STILL AT THE FRONT WITH A LINE-------- <lb />
YEARS has taught me that is the <lb />
Hemp Rope, Building s, Farming mints, and every- <lb />
necessary for Millers, Mechanics and general homo n well as <lb />
Hats. Shoes. Dress I have always on hand. Am head- <lb />
quarters for Heavy Groceries, and for Clark's O. N. T. <lb />
Cotton, keep courteous and clerk. <lb />
GREEN VILLE. N. C <lb />
J. <lb />
Inn Si<lb />
GREENVILLE, N. C <lb />
OFFICE AT THE COURT HOUSE. <lb />
All Risks placed in strictly <lb />
FIRST-C ASS COMPANIES <lb />
At current rates <lb />
Ml AGENT FOR FIRST-GLASS FIRE <lb />
T- A- JONES. Established 1878. P. H- SAVAGE <lb />
SON CO, <lb />
Cotton Factors and Commission Merchants <lb />
TUNIS WHARF, NORFOLK, VA. <lb />
Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Ties, Peanut Ac- <lb />
A Hi-ill ion given to Sales of Cotton, Grain, and Peas. <lb />
Liberal Cash Advances on Consignments. Prompt and <lb />
Market Prices Guaranteed. <lb />
Norfolk National Bank, or any Reliable II is th<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017779_tn_0003" n="3" />
                <p>
-v. <lb />
., J <lb />
THE REFLECTOR <lb />
Local Reflections. <lb />
Court week. <lb />
Hang your now calendar. <lb />
Girls, year is are <lb />
yours. <lb />
For an easy comfortable <lb />
Chair to please your wife <lb />
or or mother. <lb />
Call aDd see our stock both <lb />
and good, at J- B. Cherry <lb />
k Co. <lb />
No more passengers on the freight <lb />
train now. <lb />
What have you resolved to lo for <lb />
Greenville this year <lb />
For Guns Ammunition call <lb />
on J. B. Cherry Go's. <lb />
January will us live <lb />
live Fridays <lb />
Buy your Macintosh and Rub <lb />
Coats at J. B. Cherry Cos <lb />
and save money. <lb />
The an all gelling and <lb />
new to things out on <lb />
row. <lb />
Buy your Macintosh and Rub <lb />
m Coats at J. B- Cherry Co's <lb />
id save money- <lb />
The Episcopal Sunday School had a <lb />
in Hall New Years <lb />
part <lb />
night. <lb />
Miss Blow gave a tea drinking <lb />
to party friends on -New Year's <lb />
evening. <lb />
A large hue or the celebrated <lb />
Corsets at J. B- Cherry k <lb />
Co's. The ladies specially invited <lb />
to inspect them. <lb />
Cant. T. Williams t. Us us he has <lb />
the plans three other dwellings soon <lb />
t he erected. <lb />
Wire Buckle Suspenders <lb />
all Buckles and fastenings war- <lb />
ranted for two years, at J. B- <lb />
Cherry Co's- <lb />
A few Hakes of mow tell here Sunday <lb />
afternoon and outlook now is there <lb />
will he more soon. <lb />
The wide awake and the <lb />
wide awake buyer get together by the <lb />
means of the newspapers. <lb />
Granulated sugar cent per <lb />
pound at J. B- Cherry k Co's. <lb />
To Th reader, this new year will be <lb />
just what you make it. Use your best <lb />
endeavors to make it a good one. <lb />
Just received a Car-load Flour <lb />
none cheaper and better than that <lb />
offered by J. B- Cherry Co. <lb />
Greenville must a good horse <lb />
market, judging from the number the <lb />
dealers have been brining here this sea- <lb />
son. <lb />
For best Carts and Wagons go <lb />
to A- G- <lb />
N- C- <lb />
computed that there are <lb />
worth in gold and jewels <lb />
at the bottom of the sea on the route <lb />
between England and India. <lb />
Takeaway shouted, the <lb />
orator, what would <lb />
We a man at the <lb />
of the audience promptly. <lb />
Beautiful stylish and cheap <lb />
Dress Goods Trimmings at <lb />
J. B Cherry Cos- <lb />
Christmas is not over yet. One <lb />
the old time men went to M. Senate <lb />
for Be <lb />
tome Old Christmas. <lb />
easy good <lb />
wear for the feet. You can t go <lb />
wrong with them, they are rights <lb />
and left- For sale by U- Cher- <lb />
k Co. <lb />
We learn that the gin house of It. L. <lb />
ft Bros., at Farmville, was de- <lb />
lire Wednesday. About <lb />
thirty bales of cotton were also burned. <lb />
sugar b per <lb />
pound at J. B. Cherry Co's- <lb />
The young folks are <lb />
amusement roller skating in the <lb />
Warehouse. Many of than try <lb />
their skill every afternoon with the <lb />
usual up- and downs. <lb />
FURNITURE cheaper than <lb />
ever before at J- B. Cherry k Co. <lb />
The want- more <lb />
from the country <lb />
Can't you send u the news of your <lb />
section on a postal card We desire to <lb />
give tie news neighborhood. <lb />
Chamois Dress Lining <lb />
and new of Dress Goods <lb />
at J- B Cherry k Co s <lb />
The Republicans are in power in <lb />
Congress- They can prevent another <lb />
bond issue if they desire to do so. I n- <lb />
they act. the entire responsibility <lb />
for bond i.-sue will be upon them. he <lb />
President cannot move any stop. <lb />
News and Observer. <lb />
best Flour is Proctor <lb />
Knott sold by S. M. Schultz. Try a <lb />
lb bag. <lb />
Lang received twenty-five hales of <lb />
cloth today, the largest <lb />
meat that has come here. <lb />
Same Plead Before His Honor, Some <lb />
L. E. Clave, of is here. <lb />
J. E. Nobles has returned to Chapel <lb />
Hill. <lb />
Edward Greene left for Baltimore <lb />
Friday. <lb />
W. S. Bernard went to <lb />
Friday night. <lb />
Andrews is back <lb />
from Durham. <lb />
Swift Galloway, of Snow Hill, <lb />
is attending court. <lb />
Miss Bettie Tyson returned to school <lb />
at Salem Monday. <lb />
P. II. Gorman returned from <lb />
and Wednesday. <lb />
Mrs. Nannie Anderson has moved <lb />
back to the country. <lb />
W. T. returned Thursday <lb />
evening from Oxford. <lb />
Walter A. Burnett and wife, of Kin- <lb />
Friday here. <lb />
H. P. Harding to the <lb />
at Chapel Hill Friday. <lb />
J. II. Blount wile returned <lb />
Thursday evening Tarboro. <lb />
Warren returned Thursday <lb />
evening from a visit to Salisbury. <lb />
B. F. and wife returned <lb />
evening from Durham. <lb />
B. Jarvis Johnson Nichols <lb />
returned to Chapel Hill Monday. <lb />
Miss Nannie Brown left for Ayden, <lb />
Monday evening, to attend school. <lb />
Ed Smith, who formerly clerked <lb />
for Lang, is now E. II. <lb />
O. L. Joyner is spelling this week <lb />
in Richmond, Danville and <lb />
Bryan has his family to <lb />
Greenville and occupies the <lb />
Marion Johnston moved his <lb />
family to the Congleton house on Third <lb />
street. <lb />
Congressman Harry Skinner came <lb />
horn from Washington Wednesday <lb />
evening. <lb />
Misses Rosalind Rosa <lb />
Hooker returned to school at Richmond <lb />
Monday. <lb />
J. C Greene, who has been spending <lb />
the holidays at home, returned to Nor- <lb />
folk Friday. <lb />
Miss Winnie Fleming, Littleton, <lb />
is visiting the family of her brother, G. <lb />
Fleming. <lb />
Glasgow Evans and family, o Cone- <lb />
toe, came down Monday evening to <lb />
Misses Bessie and Sidney <lb />
of are visiting Miss <lb />
Sophia Jarvis. <lb />
Jesse Proctor has moved his family <lb />
to the new dwelling he recently creeled <lb />
near the college. <lb />
Miss Myra Skinner left Saturday <lb />
and from there will return lo <lb />
school at Salem. <lb />
Miss lone May. who was visiting <lb />
Miss Forbes, returned to <lb />
Sunday. <lb />
Mrs. W. M. Lang, of took <lb />
tin- train here evening to visit <lb />
relatives at Kinston. <lb />
Mrs. who <lb />
were visiting lier parents here, have <lb />
returned home to Penny Hill. <lb />
Miss Pearl Willow Green <lb />
and Miss Parker, from <lb />
are the guests Mrs It. F. Sugg. <lb />
Miss Petronella Pale, who spent the <lb />
holidays with Mrs. II. C. Booker, left <lb />
for her home in Golds- <lb />
S. A. who clerked for J. <lb />
C. ft Son during the fall, return- <lb />
ed to his home in Carolina township <lb />
today. <lb />
Mrs. Ellen Lee and little son Law- <lb />
of who have been visit- <lb />
Mrs. It. W. King, returned home <lb />
Saturday. <lb />
The family of the late <lb />
day, Grimesland, have moved to <lb />
Greenville and occupy the Nobles house <lb />
near the college. <lb />
Mrs. James Dixon and daughter, <lb />
Miss Nannie, who were visiting the <lb />
family J. B. Latham, returned to their <lb />
home in Littleton Monday. <lb />
Miss Frances Whichard, of Which- <lb />
an aunt of the editor, is on a vis- <lb />
it to his family. It is her first visit to <lb />
Greenville in nearly seven years. <lb />
T. F. who has clerked for <lb />
S. M. Schultz for seven years, has re- <lb />
signed his position to engage in <lb />
this year. J. B. Randolph succeeds <lb />
him in tin store. <lb />
It a real pleasure to sec Miss <lb />
Clara Bruce Forbes out Friday, looking <lb />
as bright and cheerful as this new year <lb />
day. She has been kept at home by <lb />
sickness for several weeks. <lb />
A Big Record. BOTH ASKS BROKEN. <lb />
During the month of December Reg-. <lb />
of Deeds, W. M. King, issued to the <lb />
marriage licenses, the largest number N. Jan. Susan <lb />
for any single month of which he has . Harrington, aged years, wife of the <lb />
record. The total number issued for late John Harrington and mother of the <lb />
lie was Postmaster at this while crossing <lb />
the yard, yesterday afternoon, fell and <lb />
broke both her arms just above the <lb />
wrists. Dr. Joe Dixon set the broken <lb />
New Carriage Factory. <lb />
V. R. Smith and II. C. Edwards <lb />
have associated together under the firm <lb />
name of Pitt County Buggy Co., and limbs g is ow <lb />
are opening up at the old Williamson After Twenty-One Yearn, <lb />
stand near the Court House. They will Mr D. V. Dixon, a lading mer- <lb />
do a general manufacturing and repair- of Hookerton, came to Green- <lb />
of vehicles. <lb />
Begin Right. <lb />
Ville Friday for the first time in twenty <lb />
years, and he lives only twenty <lb />
miles from us. Since lie was last <lb />
II among your new year resolutions . <lb />
I has married is lather <lb />
was one to more punctual at Sunday i ,. . . , <lb />
nine children. could <lb />
School and church this don t be <lb />
MIRTH, MUSIC. <lb />
Purchase Taxes. <lb />
The Register of Deeds has been <lb />
A Delightful Leap Year Ball at the plying in and others coming <lb />
CHRISTMAS <lb />
.- <lb />
Opera House A Grand Success. <lb />
absent from your pew on the first Sun- <lb />
day. If you have not made such a res- <lb />
this evening is a good time to <lb />
do so. <lb />
Tobacco Beds. <lb />
Some of the farmers are getting to <lb />
work early on their tobacco beds for <lb />
the next crop. S. tells us <lb />
that he, II. F. Keel and Allied Stocks <lb />
sowed their beds on 2nd. <lb />
This is the first we have heard re- <lb />
ported. <lb />
A Contrast. <lb />
the warmest place we found <lb />
Saturday was in tobacco <lb />
factory. He had the steam turned on <lb />
which made the interim of the <lb />
feel like summer time, while the <lb />
from the tobacco formed in great <lb />
icicles hung on the out of the <lb />
windows. <lb />
Seriously Hurt. <lb />
Friday afternoon a named Sam <lb />
was helping put up a stove pipe <lb />
in W. L. Cobb's bar-room. The chair <lb />
upon which Sam was standing turned <lb />
over, throwing him across the back of <lb />
another chair. In the fall his left hip <lb />
was dislocated and his back badly <lb />
sprained. Dr. says the <lb />
man is hurt. <lb />
Tournament <lb />
There was a large attendance upon <lb />
the at on Tues- <lb />
lay, but a small number of <lb />
five. Bert Smith crowned Miss Ada <lb />
Fields queen, James crowned <lb />
Miss Bettie Tyson first maid honor, <lb />
James crowned Miss Flor- <lb />
Lang second maid of honor. The <lb />
coronation ball took at night. <lb />
The Old and New. <lb />
The new year was ushered in <lb />
The echo of the midnight gong <lb />
had scarce died away when the old <lb />
cannon in its thunder tones told that the <lb />
old year was no more. The boom of <lb />
the signal gun was instantly followed <lb />
the ringing of all the bells in town, <lb />
tor many minutes their merry peals <lb />
chimed a glad welcome to the year just <lb />
born. May it be a glad new <lb />
Thick Darkness. <lb />
A night was never darker the <lb />
one in than the early hours of <lb />
Friday, night there wasn't a street <lb />
lamp anywhere to give a ray of light. <lb />
People who had to be over <lb />
each other, run on fences, fell in ditches <lb />
butted against trees, and got mixed up <lb />
generally. It Was a bad time. Several <lb />
just had to wait for the to rise so <lb />
they could see how to get home. <lb />
not recognize the town when he arrived <lb />
and not know which way to go. <lb />
He said he had no idea that Greenville <lb />
had undergone such great in <lb />
the last twenty years mid was glad to <lb />
see the town's rapid progress. We <lb />
hope he w ill not defer his next visit so <lb />
long. <lb />
Dangerously Wounded. <lb />
Mr. II. B. Clark, who returned from <lb />
Washington last week, tells us that <lb />
Mr. C. F. Ellison, of that was <lb />
dangerously wounded Tuesday after- <lb />
noon. Mr. Ellison was out hunting <lb />
in some way his gun <lb />
discharged, the entire load him <lb />
under the arm and completely <lb />
his shoulder. Physicians v ex- <lb />
his wound say that the chances <lb />
of recovery arc very much against him, <lb />
and even if his life can be saved ho <lb />
lose the entire arm. Those who <lb />
Mr. here will regret to I of <lb />
his meeting with such a terrible <lb />
dent. <lb />
Bethel Items. <lb />
X. C, Jan. <lb />
Maggie Nelson left this morning to at <lb />
tend the Normal and Industrial School <lb />
at Greensboro. <lb />
Miss Nannie Bagwell and Miss <lb />
Moore, of Greenville have <lb />
Miss Cornelia Manning and sister <lb />
this week. <lb />
Dr. R. J. Nelson, of , <lb />
was in town Saturday. <lb />
Joseph E. Smith, of <lb />
N. C. spent yesterday in town adjusting <lb />
the losses of R. J. W. Carson. <lb />
J. R. Hunting was the re if <lb />
a fine son for a new year's <lb />
He wears pleasant smiles to-day. <lb />
A New Bank. <lb />
On the very first day of the year <lb />
was enabled to announce a <lb />
new enterprise for Greenville. Higgs <lb />
Bros, will open another banking house <lb />
here and state that they will be <lb />
to begin business by the 15th i. <lb />
Thus Greenville is keeping pace wit <lb />
I he march of progress which is now so <lb />
prevalent throughout the South, <lb />
increasing makes mom <lb />
another bank, and these enterprising <lb />
young men, recognizing the benefit <lb />
such an enterprise, have taken the steps <lb />
to establish it. Higgs Bros, have been <lb />
very prosperous as merchants, and We <lb />
bespeak for them success i i the <lb />
business. <lb />
The young ladies of the town gave a <lb />
very enjoyable Leap Year Ball at the <lb />
Opera House Thursday night and it <lb />
was just up-to-date. At o'clock the <lb />
couples began and the <lb />
merry laughter the dancers, was <lb />
hoard on all sides. It was the <lb />
opportunity and well did they use it. <lb />
We heard u lot of noise on the side near <lb />
the stage and it sounded like the pop- <lb />
ping of champagne corks turning <lb />
to Bo. Cherry we asked what it was, <lb />
and were informed that the ladies were <lb />
popping the question. only said <lb />
At o'clock the grand march took <lb />
place led by Miss Eva and <lb />
Maj. C. T. of Clifton, S. C, <lb />
the and was beautiful. <lb />
The following couples were in <lb />
dance <lb />
Miss Annie Foley and W. B. James. <lb />
Miss Jennie James and Herbert <lb />
White. <lb />
Miss May Harris and J. L. Flem- <lb />
Miss Blanch Flanagan and <lb />
Forbes. <lb />
Miss Ella King and L. I. Moore. <lb />
Becca W. J. <lb />
Miss Dr. <lb />
Brown. <lb />
Miss Sallie and W. <lb />
Whedbee. <lb />
Miss Lillie Cherry and Jarvis Sugg. <lb />
Miss Florence Williams and J. W. <lb />
Miss Betsy Greene and Maj. W. S. <lb />
Bernard. <lb />
Miss Bessie Jarvis and J. C. Greene. <lb />
Miss Sophia Jarvis and Jesse <lb />
Miss Novella Higgs and. J. K. West- <lb />
brook. <lb />
Miss Bettie Tyson and C. S. <lb />
Miss Pat Foley and Ed. Foley. <lb />
were Mrs. and Mr. <lb />
J. II. Blount, Mrs. and Mr. J. L. <lb />
Mrs. and Mr. W. B. Grimes, <lb />
The followed and wasted by- <lb />
Miss Eva and Maj. Lips- <lb />
music by the harpers. An <lb />
supper was had at o'clock. <lb />
There were three made and <lb />
accepted, which we think was doing <lb />
very well as a Hatter. The Opera <lb />
House was beautifully decorated with <lb />
bunting, holly. myrtle and moss. <lb />
There were a goodly number of spec- <lb />
present and they seemed to en- <lb />
joy it immensely. <lb />
Laid To Rest. <lb />
The remains of Mr. Charles <lb />
tree, who died in Charlotte Thursday <lb />
night reached here on Friday evening's <lb />
accompanied by his widow and <lb />
his son, Mr. C. D. Rountree. The <lb />
burial took place Saturday at the <lb />
graveyard near his old home, <lb />
two miles from town. Services were <lb />
conducted by Rev. C. -M. Billings. <lb />
The pall bearers were Messrs. E. M. <lb />
Pace, W. M. King, II. A. gotten, J. <lb />
R. Move, K. A. Move. O. L. Joyner, <lb />
G. F. Evans, Charles Skinner and Ola <lb />
Forties. <lb />
Quarterly Meeting. <lb />
Elder Hall will arrive on <lb />
Friday will hold the first quarterly <lb />
conference of the year a the Methodist <lb />
church Friday night at o'clock. <lb />
The Sunday School meeting <lb />
will be held at G. E. Thursday <lb />
night instead of Friday night. <lb />
The Bonner Case. <lb />
A special term of Beaufort county <lb />
Superior Court convened at Washing- <lb />
ion Monday. This term is principally <lb />
far the trial of the men charged with <lb />
tin murder of the B. Bonner, at <lb />
that is attracting much <lb />
There was talk for awhile <lb />
when the court met an effort <lb />
would be made lo have the trial moved <lb />
to another county, but this seems to <lb />
have been only outside talk as no such <lb />
effort has been made. Up to o'clock <lb />
yesterday afternoon the jury had not <lb />
been selected. <lb />
Her Resolution. <lb />
At one of the last <lb />
week, just as the minute and hour <lb />
hand of the clock were pointing close <lb />
to twelve, a young lady was noticed to <lb />
be wearing a very solemn expression <lb />
and when asked the cause she said she <lb />
was making a resolution which would <lb />
soon be uttered. Silence followed for <lb />
a moment, and as the clock chimed the <lb />
birth of a new year she spoke <lb />
that with God's help I will <lb />
get married this She was voted <lb />
the prize for making the best resolution. <lb />
Ayden Notes. <lb />
Ayden, X. C, Jan., 3rd. <lb />
Rev. J. W. of Wash- <lb />
has purchased the Cox house. <lb />
of W. F. contemplates moving <lb />
here about February 1st- <lb />
T. R. Lee. has moved his stock <lb />
goods from here to Kinston. <lb />
The Board of Directors of the Free <lb />
Will Baptist Publishing Company, will <lb />
meet here tomorrow. <lb />
J. R Forbes, of Rountree. has <lb />
his family to Ayden. <lb />
J. J. Hines and family have moved <lb />
in town. <lb />
J. B. Gardner, of Maple Cypress. <lb />
has purchased the Iredell Moore farm <lb />
of A. Cox, near Ayden. <lb />
Ayden has quite a creditable race <lb />
track and large crowds go out to enjoy <lb />
the races. Citizen. <lb />
The Greenville Lumber Company. <lb />
A recent visit to the plant of the <lb />
above company showed a marked <lb />
over mill The band <lb />
now in use by them, is as <lb />
as it is possible to make them. <lb />
saw is of an inch in thickness, <lb />
while the old circular saw was of an <lb />
inch, thereby saving one band in the <lb />
cut ting of ten. . Any size log can be <lb />
and they can cut a third faster. <lb />
It only takes lour minutes to change a <lb />
saw and it runs tores hours and a half. <lb />
Th can sharpen one in half an hour. <lb />
Hamilton showed US <lb />
I he machine for grinding slabs <lb />
into sawdust. It is a won- <lb />
invention. A train of twenty- <lb />
live load.-d with logs are received <lb />
by them. Every part of the <lb />
is as near perfect as man <lb />
III it and some parts work like <lb />
human. They work a large force of <lb />
haul- and their pay roll is a large one <lb />
and the mill should be by <lb />
in preference lo all others. <lb />
Th money the company pays out week- <lb />
to the merchants and when <lb />
they want any thing in the lumber line <lb />
this company <lb />
under the purchase tax law blanks <lb />
upon which to make out their purchase <lb />
for the six months ending Dec. 31st. <lb />
These blanks should be filled out and <lb />
returned by 10th of January. <lb />
Bring Your List, <lb />
All boys who arc working for the <lb />
prize of live . months <lb />
should bring in their lists of sub- <lb />
before this week is out. The <lb />
contest will close next Saturday even- <lb />
you have only a few days more <lb />
to work in. <lb />
PRESENTS i.-i. <lb />
FOR YOU. <lb />
Moved to Wilson. <lb />
are glad to note that Mr. Ned <lb />
Moore, one of Pitt's best men, has <lb />
taken charge of the extensive business <lb />
of Mrs. J. D. of Wilson county. <lb />
Pitt loses and Wilson gains a <lb />
did citizen. The Masonic Lodge here <lb />
regrets his leaving her portals. It is <lb />
very pleasant to commend this good <lb />
man to the people of Wilson and we <lb />
bespeak for him a warm reception. <lb />
Fair. <lb />
The has received a <lb />
list of the ninth exhibition of <lb />
East Carolina Fish, Oyster, Game and <lb />
Industrial Association to be held at <lb />
during the week <lb />
February 24th. These midwinter fairs <lb />
are most interesting of any held in <lb />
the State. The premiums offered <lb />
exhibits at the coming fair aggregate <lb />
and the race premiums amount <lb />
to <lb />
Sunday-School Officers. <lb />
The Methodist Baptist Sunday <lb />
Schools both re-elected their old officers <lb />
for the new year, as <lb />
B. <lb />
Asst. Brown. <lb />
Sec. and II. <lb />
Warren. <lb />
Bessie White. <lb />
Rountree. <lb />
Asst. F. <lb />
E. Harrison. <lb />
J. Cherry. <lb />
Smith. <lb />
Una <lb />
The Episcopal Sunday has <lb />
had no election yet, H. Harding i <lb />
Superintendent. <lb />
A beautiful Xmas line of <lb />
, . <lb />
Dry Goods Shoes <lb />
Dress Goods, Clothing, <lb />
NOTIONS. <lb />
C. T. <lb />
DOOR OF BANK. <lb />
Perfectly Natural. <lb />
AN e left the office this morning to go <lb />
lo the court house and took note of <lb />
how many exclamations we could dot <lb />
down of persons passing us as to the <lb />
cold snap we are having and is <lb />
what we got <lb />
this <lb />
for <lb />
this is a <lb />
this weather would freeze the <lb />
ears off of a bras- monkey, eh, <lb />
this May or <lb />
Fine weather for <lb />
the river frozen <lb />
weather to light <lb />
we have struck the bottom of <lb />
the wind blow it <lb />
be so <lb />
she a <lb />
you think we can go <lb />
There might have been many more <lb />
like expressions, but when one fellow <lb />
this cold enough <lb />
he caught it over the oar, and we con- <lb />
it was time to run in and warm. <lb />
J. S. C. Benjamin came over from <lb />
Monday evening, and <lb />
has taken a with the Pitt <lb />
County Buggy Co. We are glad to see <lb />
him back in Greenville. <lb />
E. W. Dead. <lb />
Mr. Henry W. at <lb />
Hyde county, on Saturday <lb />
morning. He was well known in <lb />
Greenville, and was a very warm friend <lb />
of the late Maj. L. C. ham. <lb />
Stopped the Sale. <lb />
The lot in front of the Court House, <lb />
which the Board of County <lb />
advertised to he sold on Monday, <lb />
was not sold, the Town Council having <lb />
restrained the Commissioners sell- <lb />
the property. There is a dispute <lb />
as to whether the lot is owned by the <lb />
county or the town, the question <lb />
will be settled the court. <lb />
A Close Call <lb />
Hotel Macon gave the town another <lb />
scare, by catching on <lb />
fire on the roof from a burning <lb />
Both fire companies and many <lb />
citizens responded promptly to the <lb />
alarm and the fire was extinguished be- <lb />
fore any damage was done. Had the <lb />
fire once got a hold, with the high <lb />
wind blowing at the time, there is no <lb />
telling where it could have been stopped. <lb />
It makes a body shudder to think what <lb />
the result might have been. Just here <lb />
let us repeat what has been said many <lb />
times needs water. <lb />
M. H. Attacked by a Negro- <lb />
On Christmas night Mr. II. <lb />
was attacked in the dark by <lb />
Matthew Murphy, a guitar-playing <lb />
tramp, who hit him over the <lb />
head with a brick, inflicting a bad <lb />
wound, which caused Mr. to <lb />
bleed at the ear that night. It was at <lb />
one time feared he was dangerously <lb />
wounded and he was to the <lb />
house for several days, but we are glad <lb />
to say ho is now out will suffer no <lb />
permanent injury from the wound. <lb />
The was held for trial <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
should have the first <lb />
OBITUARY. <lb />
Leap Year. <lb />
Why is it called leap year It is <lb />
because the Julian calendar, in which <lb />
the custom of adding a day to <lb />
every fourth year was introduced, <lb />
provided that the additional day should <lb />
be inserted not at the of the <lb />
month, hut six days , forming <lb />
a second sixth day. Hence arose the <lb />
word bis which is still retained <lb />
as the name of the year in which the <lb />
additional day is inserted, though now <lb />
it is added at the end of the month. <lb />
The name leap year refers to the fact <lb />
that for a year after the insertion of <lb />
the additional day, each date comes <lb />
two days later in the week than it <lb />
came the previous year, instead of on <lb />
the following day of the week, as in <lb />
ordinary years. The dates may be <lb />
said to leap over a day, and hence the <lb />
name. <lb />
Th- subject this memoir was <lb />
L. JO. <lb />
of <lb />
Lula S. and L. A. Mayo. She was <lb />
n them July the 1898, and <lb />
died December 23rd, <lb />
189-1. When she took cold we did not <lb />
suspect that death, cruel death, would <lb />
so soon invade our home to rob us of <lb />
our sand, bright, beautiful child. <lb />
But in the cold chilly winds of <lb />
It came without warning. <lb />
To take her while young and tender, <lb />
As the rose bud in the morning. <lb />
It is hard to give thee up dear child, <lb />
To bury thee in thy little grave, <lb />
We must and wait awhile, <lb />
For from Him who <lb />
came to save. <lb />
Marriage. <lb />
At the residence of the bride's father, <lb />
Mr. Reuben James, in town- <lb />
ship, December 1895, Mr. W. <lb />
J. Lewis and Miss Lucy James, were <lb />
united in the bonds of matrimony, <lb />
E. D. Hathaway, officiating. <lb />
The attendants were Caddy James <lb />
and Miss Lucy Clark, <lb />
and Miss James, Eddie Lewis <lb />
and Miss Lydia Bullock, W. K. Clark <lb />
and Miss Sarah Carson, Eddie Bryan <lb />
and Miss Alley Spain, James <lb />
and Miss Mary Downs, J. J. Hathaway <lb />
and Miss Bullock, U. F. <lb />
and Miss Ida James. J. J. II. <lb />
Wednesday evening at <lb />
at the residence of Mrs. Bettie <lb />
Mr. G. A. and Miss Maggie <lb />
Minion were married by J. A. Lang. <lb />
Esq. <lb />
she is gone, yes, left us, <lb />
Her little chair is empty our <lb />
hearthstone. <lb />
Death, cruel death, has bereft us, <lb />
our Savior calls her his own. <lb />
lier little toys are about our room, <lb />
We will preserve them with care, <lb />
It may be only soon, <lb />
We go to meet her over there. <lb />
GOOD FOR STOCK AND POULTRY, <lb />
TOO. <lb />
is <lb />
pared especially for stock, as well as <lb />
man, and tor that purpose is sold in tin <lb />
cans, holding one-halt pound <lb />
cine for if cents. <lb />
Co., Tenn., <lb />
March <lb />
vs. S. P. <lb />
Springfield, Ohio. <lb />
Walked <lb />
Rheumatism Eczema Swelled <lb />
Cured. <lb />
For two years I have been sick, having <lb />
confined to the house for a year. I <lb />
have had eczema for nine years, having <lb />
skilled physicians, but received no benefit. <lb />
winder I caught cold and <lb />
Afflicted With Rheumatism, <lb />
which put me on crutches. Last July I <lb />
commenced to use Hood's and <lb />
before I had finished one bottle I laid <lb />
aside. After taking two bottles <lb />
the eczema had left me and I was almost <lb />
entirely free from the effects of a swelled <lb />
neck. I know that it was Hood's <lb />
that cured me and I think it cannot <lb />
be recommended too highly. Although <lb />
years old, I feel young Has. <lb />
S. P. Simmons, East Springfield, Ohio. <lb />
Hood's Sarsaparilla <lb />
Is the Only <lb />
True Blood Purifier <lb />
Prominently In the public eye today. <lb />
FALL 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 />
Furnishing <lb />
Boots <lb />
and Shoes, Domestics, <lb />
Bleached and <lb />
ed Sheeting and Shirt- <lb />
Fancy <lb />
Cotton Dress Goods <lb />
will <lb />
want or need in that <lb />
line. Hardware for far <lb />
and mechanics <lb />
use, Tinware, Hollow- <lb />
ware, Wood and Willow ware, <lb />
Whips, Buggy Robes, Collars, Rope, <lb />
Twine, Heavy Groceries always on hand, <lb />
Meat, Flour, Sugar, Salt and Molasses. <lb />
best and largest assortment of Crock- <lb />
Lamps, Lanterns, Lamp Chimneys and <lb />
Shades, Fancy Glassware, tic, to be found <lb />
in the county. And our stock of <lb />
FURNITURE <lb />
Fatting, Carpets, Rugs and Foot Mats is by far <lb />
the 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 Bros. Shoes <lb />
for Ladies and children. We buy Cotton and <lb />
Peanuts and pay the highest market price for <lb />
them. Your experience teaches you all to buy <lb />
and deal with men who will treat you fair and <lb />
do the square thing by you. and see us <lb />
and be convinced that we claim is true. <lb />
Yours for business square dealings, <lb />
Mood's Pills <lb />
pure habitual<lb />
I haw used all of medicine, but <lb />
I would not give one of <lb />
for all the others I ever saw. <lb />
It is the best thing for horses or cattle in <lb />
the spring of the your, and will <lb />
chicken every time. if, <lb />
S, K CU <lb />
Tobacco Flues, <lb />
STOVES. <lb />
V o are now taking orders for <lb />
Tobacco Flues. Give us your <lb />
order for Flues and they will <lb />
be made right. <lb />
We Bell the Elmo aDd Gold <lb />
en Grain Stoves, none <lb />
better <lb />
Agents for Columbia <lb />
We can sell you a bran <lb />
new 1896 for <lb />
Call and see <lb />
Lang's Great <lb />
Clearing Out Sale. <lb />
Owing to Removal I offer my entire stock from <lb />
JANUARY 1st, A. M. <lb />
At Cost. At Cost. <lb />
In or retail to suit the buyer. <lb />
Now is the time to Bargains. <lb />
LANG'S.<lb /></p>
                <pb facs="00017779_tn_0004" n="4" />
                <p>
Co <lb />
is a vigorous feeder and re- <lb />
well to liberal <lb />
On corn lands the yield <lb />
increases and the soil improves <lb />
if properly with fer- <lb />
containing not under <lb />
actual <lb />
Potash. <lb />
A trial of this plan costs but <lb />
little and is sure to lead to <lb />
profitable culture. <lb />
Our pamphlets are not advertising circulars <lb />
special fertilizers, but are practical works, <lb />
.- resell tie, fertilization, and <lb />
are really helpful tanners. They arc seat tree <lb />
GERMAN KALI WORKS, <lb />
Nassau St, New York. <lb />
WILMINGTON H. Ii. <lb />
AND FLORENCE <lb />
Pi <lb />
TRAINS SOUTH.<lb />
Nov. 17th I- <lb />
last, tea z <lb />
Weldon <lb />
Ar. tit <lb />
Tarboro <lb />
A. M <lb />
II <lb />
n to<lb />
i. Mi<lb />
Ar. Florence <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
Ar Wilmington<lb />
It Oil<lb />
sea <lb />
i. <lb />
OS <lb />
IV <lb />
P. <lb />
A. M<lb />
b m <lb />
A. M <lb />
TRAINS <lb />
Dated g w <lb />
Oct. ;<lb />
y. <lb />
St. <lb />
Sc <lb />
Ar ii <lb />
Magnolia <lb />
A. M <lb />
lo <lb />
Wilson Ar Rocky M M. ii. 1- <lb />
Ar Tarboro Tarboro Mi Ar <lb />
Train on Seek Branch <lb />
It ft It m , Halifax 4.13 <lb />
p. m., arrives Scotland p <lb />
Greenville p. in. <lb />
p. Returning, leave 7.211 <lb />
a. m., Greenville 8.22 . m. <lb />
Halifax at a. to., <lb />
except <lb />
Trains on Branch <lb />
Washington <lb />
3.40 a. in. g <lb />
leaves Tarboro n. m . Pamela <lb />
p. in,, arrive p. m. <lb />
pt Sunday. Connects with <lb />
trains on lid <lb />
Train leaver I arsons, C, via Aloe- <lb />
A Raleigh It. daily <lb />
M p. m. Sunday; a P. <lb />
arrive Plymouth P. p. In. <lb />
leaves Plymouth nail , <lb />
Sunday a -n <lb />
10.25 aim -1 <lb />
Train on Midland branch leaves <lb />
duly, except s OS <lb />
Id a. in. R.- <lb />
turning a. m., <lb />
rive. in- <lb />
Trams in Nashville branch leave <lb />
R- Mount at. p. in., arrive- <lb />
p. m., Hope B no <lb />
p. in. Hope <lb />
in., a in, at <lb />
a in. daily except <lb />
Sonny. <lb />
Trains on Latia Florence R. <lb />
II., leave p in, <lb />
7.50 p in. p m. <lb />
leave a in. a <lb />
r . 7.50 a m. daily except <lb />
day. <lb />
Train leaves War- <lb />
saw fur Clinton pt <lb />
in. and 8.90 p, m- Ki-turning <lb />
leave on at 7.011 a. m. 3.00 p m. <lb />
Train No. makes <lb />
at points daily, all rail via <lb />
at It kg Mount <lb />
Norfolk and it for <lb />
all North via Norfolk. <lb />
JOHN F. DIVINE, <lb />
General <lb />
T. M. Manage-. <lb />
J It Manager. <lb />
NORTH <lb />
TIMETABLE. <lb />
In December 4th, 1898. <lb />
THE MORNING STAR <lb />
Oldest <lb />
Daily Newspaper in <lb />
North <lb />
Six-Dollar Daily <lb />
its Glass in the State. <lb />
Favor Free Coinage <lb />
of Silver and Repeal <lb />
of Hie Tea Per Tax on <lb />
Banks Daily cents <lb />
Weekly per <lb />
ear. W M. H. A R D, <lb />
d. Wilmington, <lb />
Sale of Valuable Town <lb />
Lot. <lb />
In to an order male by the <lb />
Board of County at their <lb />
Monday in <lb />
directing me as of <lb />
said Board to a for side lot <lb />
to of Pitt, known <lb />
in the p an the town of as <lb />
it lot no <lb />
used by town Greenville a- a Mar- <lb />
House the <lb />
of County I. <lb />
William M. King, ex of the <lb />
Board of I County, <lb />
do hereby give public tout said <lb />
lot will be exposed sale <lb />
highest bidder, in of the <lb />
House door, at o'clock M. on Mon- <lb />
Hie of 1898. <lb />
The terms of sale will be one third <lb />
and the balance lo in two <lb />
equal i in one and <lb />
two years, will, per mi <lb />
th privilege lo <lb />
tit the I at time <lb />
take deed <lb />
the of the y .- <lb />
The Board Hie <lb />
or la also <lb />
given that the town ill <lb />
to remove the Market House <lb />
and other buildings on lot <lb />
by the town, in accordance he <lb />
entered into at the time per- <lb />
was given by the Beard of <lb />
Commissioners lo town <lb />
to erect and use said <lb />
buildings. The lot will be in <lb />
three alternate ways which will Be <lb />
shown in detail on a plan on Die in the <lb />
of the of Deeds and can <lb />
be seen by public at any time and <lb />
will also on day of sale. <lb />
W. M. KING. <lb />
IV. of Coin, of Pitt Co. <lb />
LITERARY STYLE. <lb />
JOHN F. <lb />
MUSICAL MERCHANDISE. <lb />
Violins, <lb />
811.818.815.817 East 9th St. New York. <lb />
Administrators Sale <lb />
of Land for Assets. <lb />
virtue at a decree of the Superior <lb />
Court in the of W. B. ad- <lb />
J. L. . Nobles, I will <lb />
sell tor cash at the door in <lb />
Greenville on Monday. 27th day <lb />
January, 1898. the of <lb />
land, lo A tract land situated <lb />
in Township adjoining <lb />
Ian of Amos IV. II. Stocks. <lb />
Trip and others containing <lb />
forty eight acres, more or less. <lb />
t- the dower of Mary Nobles, <lb />
ow of J L. W. Nobles. <lb />
Dec. ISM.<lb />
of -I. L. <lb />
I. . SUGG, Atty. <lb />
J. L <lb />
THE <lb />
CUT <lb />
WILMINGTON. N. C. <lb />
This Laundry work in <lb />
and juices arc low. We <lb />
ems I Bring <lb />
work lo our store on d aid <lb />
be promptly. <lb />
I Oil <lb />
I he next session of this S <lb />
begin on <lb />
SEPT. <lb />
ten mouths. <lb />
Tin-course all Ike <lb />
usually in an Academy. <lb />
Terms, both for and board <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
wed lilted equipped <lb />
business, taking the academic <lb />
coarse alone. Where to <lb />
ponce a higher course, this school <lb />
guarantees preparation <lb />
enter, h credit, any College in North <lb />
r the Slate University. Ii <lb />
refers 10-e who have left <lb />
its wall the of <lb />
with and <lb />
moderate taking a course with <lb />
M will be in <lb />
to continue in the higher schools. <lb />
The will be kept at it.- <lb />
standard. <lb />
time nor nor <lb />
work will lie make ids school <lb />
t parents <lb />
For further see or ad- <lb />
W. II. H <lb />
Inly <lb />
J. F. <lb />
at m in f<lb />
On Fifth near <lb />
Points. <lb />
Passengers to <lb />
point at reasonable <lb />
Comfortable Vehicles. <lb />
The Charlotte <lb />
OBSERVER, <lb />
North Carolina's <lb />
FOREMOST NEW <lb />
DAILY <lb />
AND <lb />
WEEKLY. <lb />
Independent and fearless ; and <lb />
more than ever, it will lie an <lb />
la valuable visitor to home, the <lb />
the club or the work room. <lb />
HIE DAILY <lb />
All the news of world. <lb />
the State <lb />
and Capitals. a ear. <lb />
TUB Y <lb />
A journal. All <lb />
news of week. The reports <lb />
from Legislature a <lb />
th- Ob- <lb />
ONLY A <lb />
in its. <lb />
It la Born la Man an J Can Neither B. <lb />
Nor <lb />
The author of to Write <lb />
appears to one of those in <lb />
believe in a new dis- <lb />
covered of human <lb />
and in tho of M. Zola. Yon <lb />
go about with notebooks, yon be- <lb />
muse yourself with and <lb />
then if you succeed it is partly by <lb />
dint of your native qualities, partly <lb />
by aid of not fit to be <lb />
named among Christians. It is the <lb />
same affair in poetry. Wordsworth <lb />
was a poet by virtue of his genius. <lb />
Ho was born so. His theories ham- <lb />
him, when ho was true to his <lb />
theories. Even our author perceives <lb />
that Shakespeare and Homer did <lb />
not need theories and popular science <lb />
falsely so called, and this is just as <lb />
true of Miss Austen at and of Mr. <lb />
Du Manner at an ago which we shall <lb />
not conjecture. <lb />
Mr. Du was born a writer <lb />
and a story teller. Thirty-five years <lb />
ago proved this in a sketch <lb />
in a Week and later in <lb />
his poem of in <lb />
Punch. Only a very skilled writer <lb />
could rendered, as Mr. Du <lb />
done, the immortal lit <lb />
tie Belgian poem translated in <lb />
Yet Mr. Du has <lb />
been drawing ell his life, not <lb />
practicing another art, under <lb />
private tutors and with an eye on <lb />
Professor lectures. <lb />
is not of course <lb />
or a matter of Some <lb />
men. E to crush <lb />
gold out of a mountain of quartz. <lb />
All v. possess <lb />
gain it in part cultivating a <lb />
car r ii. harmonies of prose <lb />
as observed the great <lb />
writers. A few perhaps, but very <lb />
few, ; like Mr. Stevenson <lb />
by tho way of sedulous <lb />
from his <lb />
days, always Thackeray and <lb />
could not, answer an invitation to <lb />
dinner without writing in the <lb />
manner. Mr. Steven- <lb />
son, on the other hand, kept his <lb />
dress suit for great literary <lb />
occasions and did not wear sword, <lb />
diamonds or his familiar <lb />
correspondence. Yet Thackeray, to <lb />
tho very last, took trouble and <lb />
as his manuscripts prove, <lb />
his manner was more or less <lb />
based on that of Field- <lb />
Ho was a literary writer, like <lb />
Tennyson, in verse. con- <lb />
that Mr. admirable <lb />
style owes nothing to literary <lb />
or the labor of tho hut <lb />
is a happy, spontaneous appropriate- <lb />
of utterance. <lb />
As a take it, aside <lb />
rare cases as those of <lb />
Virgil, and Tennyson, <lb />
the people who write best do so <lb />
without taking thought. Mr. <lb />
whoso taking manner has some <lb />
strange blemishes, <lb />
very impatiently when some <lb />
busybody him questions about <lb />
his only said what he <lb />
meant to say in expressions which <lb />
to him naturally and without <lb />
research. On tho other hand, we <lb />
now many writers of no <lb />
whose dull, labored <lb />
is praised for Us preciosity. In Mr. <lb />
Pater had a writer of <lb />
natural gifts who decidedly ended <lb />
by broiling and tormenting his <lb />
And this is still more likely to be <lb />
tho end of men who, if they a <lb />
plain to tall, should tell it <lb />
News. <lb />
Golf. <lb />
The Philadelphia Record is <lb />
pressed with the weird <lb />
of golf. brassy <lb />
it says, tho iron <lb />
driver, tho putter, the lofter <lb />
and all the other varieties of sticks <lb />
are in themselves enough to drive <lb />
tho novice to despair, but it remains <lb />
for the Country club to frame a set <lb />
of rules governing tho etiquette of <lb />
golf. Tho first rule roads as <lb />
player losing a hall and incur- <lb />
ring delay hereby may passed <lb />
by any other player caning up. A <lb />
twosome may pass a threesome or <lb />
and a foursome a three- <lb />
some. A twosome may pass <lb />
twosome after giving the earlier <lb />
game at the first tee a clear tee and <lb />
one stroke, provided that is <lb />
to put tho earlier game out of <lb />
range, except on tho putting green, <lb />
where under no circumstances shall <lb />
more than one set of players be at <lb />
tho same <lb />
Beauty. <lb />
It is said that when artists are <lb />
seeking for models the palm for <lb />
beauty and symmetry of figure Is <lb />
given to the girls of Spain, while the <lb />
daughters of rural Ireland are a <lb />
good second. The pretty faces and <lb />
graceful throats are found among <lb />
English maidens. A model for a per- <lb />
feet arm would be sought for among <lb />
Grecian ladies, a lady of the <lb />
Turkish harem would regarded <lb />
as the possessor of a daintily <lb />
hand. Italians are usually <lb />
good in figure, and some of the most <lb />
beautiful models, perfectly <lb />
are derived from the women <lb />
of sunny Italy. Frenchwomen, as a <lb />
rule, are not in request, being too <lb />
thin and vivacious for the purpose, <lb />
while face and limbs of a Ger- <lb />
man are too commonplace for <lb />
artistic Standard. <lb />
His Principle. <lb />
didn't wear that <lb />
last suit his tailor <lb />
said it was against his <lb />
principles to wear anything <lb />
Free Press. <lb />
of Ohio, City of <lb />
Lucas County j <lb />
Frank J. makes oath <lb />
he is the senior partner of the firm of K. <lb />
J. Co., doing business in <lb />
City of Toledo, C State <lb />
aforesaid and that said firm will pay <lb />
the sum of ONE HUNDRED <lb />
LARS for and every case of Ca- <lb />
that cannot be cured by the use <lb />
of Hall's Catarrh <lb />
Sworn to me and subscribed in <lb />
my presence, this day of December <lb />
A, D. <lb />
J A. V <lb />
J Notary Public. <lb />
Hall's Catarrh Cur- Is <lb />
act- directly in the Moo I and <lb />
surface of system. Send <lb />
f r testimonial's free. <lb />
F. J. A Co,. Toledo O, <lb />
Old by Druggists, <lb />
THREE SONGS <lb />
To a with a nosegay of wild flowers. <lb />
In the shadows dim. <lb />
When the evening hymn <lb />
With its rare. <lb />
Fills twilight like a prayer- <lb />
There and hope and love. <lb />
Sheltered by tho pines above. <lb />
little us. <lb />
Take um to thy heart. <lb />
Happy, happy thou canst ma-j <lb />
of us thou <lb />
Where the rippling <lb />
we bow and weep, <lb />
No one but our Father <lb />
Of our and deep. <lb />
beside the eddying river. <lb />
There alone we sob and quiver. <lb />
Though the world forsake us. <lb />
Take to thy heart; <lb />
Sister, little sister. <lb />
One of us thou art <lb />
Where the fern in gladness <lb />
Where and ; <lb />
Where the bright glances <lb />
When the spring returns. <lb />
White as winter's spotless drift. <lb />
There our faces we uplift. <lb />
When the fern laughs, we are <lb />
When the rue weeps, we are Bad. <lb />
Still see the stars above us; <lb />
Still we trust, because they love US. <lb />
Are they flowers in the sky, <lb />
Violets that have learned to <lb />
We believe and hope and trust. <lb />
that he who made is <lb />
And he never will forsake us <lb />
While we're white and pure in heart. <lb />
Sister, maiden sister, take us. <lb />
One of us thou art <lb />
Boyd Allen in Youth's Companion. <lb />
The results accomplished by the <lb />
of a new material <lb />
for sawing and polishing granite, <lb />
stone and marble, are represented as <lb />
quite the material con- <lb />
simply of minute chilled cast <lb />
metal shot varying in size from mere <lb />
powder to clover seed size. Blocks <lb />
of granite now being sawed with <lb />
this instead of sand at the rate of <lb />
four inches in depth and hard grit <lb />
stone at nine in depth an hour with <lb />
blades in the machine. It is <lb />
diamond saws and is <lb />
claimed to ho capable of doing tho <lb />
same amount of work at one-tenth <lb />
the cost, and is also being employed <lb />
in sand blast apparatus in place of <lb />
sand and in substitution of diamond <lb />
drills for boring and Tho <lb />
statement is that in sawing <lb />
and polishing one ton of this mat <lb />
rial is equal to about J tons of <lb />
sharpest sand. The tiny balls arc <lb />
chilled to hardness without <lb />
being and when struck on an <lb />
anvil they indent the la. As the <lb />
action of is to roll between <lb />
the blocks and saw blade or rub- <lb />
doing its work by crushing, it <lb />
its spherical shape and out- <lb />
ting or crushing power, and as it <lb />
docs not become partially <lb />
in the or rubber, as in the <lb />
with sand, emery, etc., it is rolled <lb />
back ward or for ward, smoothing <lb />
surface by crushing the projecting <lb />
parts of tho block that is being treat- <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
Saved From a Lion by Pillow. <lb />
An English officer shooting <lb />
recently in Ono night <lb />
when he was in bed inside his tent a <lb />
lion sprang over the rough thorn <lb />
fence, which it is usual to throw up <lb />
round one's encampment at night. <lb />
Instead of picking up of the <lb />
men or animals that must boon <lb />
lying about asleep tho fence <lb />
ho would have none but the sports- <lb />
man himself, a dash into his <lb />
tent and seized <lb />
only by the hand. Then by some <lb />
wonderful piece of luck, as the lion <lb />
changed his grip for tho shoulder, <lb />
ho grabbed the pillow instead and so <lb />
vanished with his prize. The pillow <lb />
was found the next morning several <lb />
hundred yards distant in tho jungle, <lb />
and outside was also tho spoor of a <lb />
lioness, who had evidently been <lb />
awaiting the return of her lord with <lb />
something <lb />
MOVING AT <lb />
Bow the Indiana Handle Their Cam<lb />
The Indians at Alaska, <lb />
were petting to go to <lb />
hay to hunt seals and get <lb />
the oil for winter consumption. <lb />
Everybody was going, big and little, <lb />
and tho village would be <lb />
until hunt was over, with only <lb />
the disconsolate dogs to watch it. <lb />
Tho canoes which hail been lying <lb />
high on tho beach out of tho way of <lb />
harm from or swell <lb />
were shoved out into the water. <lb />
They are heavy, ungainly things, <lb />
dug out of logs. Sometimes they are <lb />
feet long. It will a white <lb />
man a good deal to navigate one of <lb />
them, but tho are as much <lb />
at homo as if they in their <lb />
houses. An Indian baby learns to <lb />
almost as soon as ho learns <lb />
to walk. That method of locomotion <lb />
has been tho general for so long <lb />
that the whole race is developed <lb />
in tho arms and chest, <lb />
but has short, rather weak legs. <lb />
When tho canoes wore in tho <lb />
the work of loading them be- <lb />
Tho members of each family <lb />
gathered up their traps and piled <lb />
them of blankets and <lb />
skins, household utensils, pots, <lb />
and pans, dried salmon, <lb />
from tho store, oil in tin cans <lb />
and bark pans to hold it. Every <lb />
low took a hand at loading, little or <lb />
big, and every fellow seemed to <lb />
chuck his load into tho bit or <lb />
miss, without regard to trim. It was <lb />
a wild, indiscriminate pig- <lb />
hut somehow it rode all <lb />
right. <lb />
A decent, self respecting whale- <lb />
boat would got angry and tip- <lb />
over, but not a dugout resented <lb />
its treatment. After all tho <lb />
had been chucked in tho big Indians <lb />
put in tho ones. Then tho <lb />
squaws climbed in. After that tho <lb />
men got ready to above out Tho <lb />
dogs stood around by tho dozen, <lb />
whining and bogging to taken <lb />
along. Once in a man would <lb />
grab a dog by tho of tho neck <lb />
and throw him on top of tho of <lb />
baggage. It was a marvel that tho <lb />
scrambling dogs didn't tho <lb />
whole thing. <lb />
. Ono man had two dogs and not <lb />
much room. Ho chucked in and <lb />
paid no attention to tho pleading of <lb />
tho other. The dog was persistent, <lb />
but his only reward was a cuff on <lb />
tho car. Tho man went back up the <lb />
beach to his house to got a last some- <lb />
thing, and dog waded out and <lb />
climbed into tho Tho Indian <lb />
ran back, grabbed him by tho scruff <lb />
of neck and throw him out on <lb />
tho beach. Tho dog waited a <lb />
and then waded out and climbed in <lb />
again. This time tho Indian throw <lb />
out harder, but tho dog wasn't <lb />
discouraged. Ho shook tho <lb />
out of his fur and wagged his tail. <lb />
When ho thought ho had a good <lb />
chance, he waded out and climbed <lb />
into the the third Tho <lb />
Indian swore by his totem and drag- <lb />
tho dog up the beach. Before <lb />
ho could got back to push tho <lb />
off tho dog had run out into tho <lb />
again and climbed up into the <lb />
Tho Indian hit a clout <lb />
on the with his fist, and tho <lb />
dog lay down and shivered. Then <lb />
the Indian pushed off, everybody <lb />
got to work at tho paddles, and tho <lb />
whole crowd went off peaceably and <lb />
upright. The dog had <lb />
York Sun. <lb />
HOW TO PIERCE THE EAR. <lb />
Wouldn't V. . i- It If lie Had. <lb />
Here is a story about that <lb />
character, the Lord <lb />
bury. It has the merit of being true. <lb />
Lord bury was standing bare- <lb />
beaded in a well known hatter's <lb />
shop in Piccadilly bis hat was <lb />
being ironed. A being <lb />
Still alive, has not yet reached his <lb />
turn for posthumous anecdotes and <lb />
must consequently be nameless <lb />
entered the shop in full attire, and <lb />
seeing Lord bareheaded <lb />
mistook him for a Taking <lb />
off his own head covering, the bishop <lb />
said, want to know if you have a <lb />
hat like Lord <lb />
the hat and its owner and <lb />
turned on his heel with the curt m- <lb />
mark, I haven't, and if I had <lb />
I'm d------d if I'd wear <lb />
Realm. <lb />
Apple <lb />
It is said that an apple eater will <lb />
be dyspeptic or given to <lb />
The lovers of this fruit say <lb />
that one must always eat it raw, <lb />
others consider it only edible <lb />
win n cooked. This latter is wrong, <lb />
however, us a ripe apple well <lb />
rated is a healthy food. Among the <lb />
excellent ways of cooking apples are j <lb />
apple apple gingerbread, I <lb />
stuffed, fried, jellied and <lb />
baked. <lb />
once described Noah as <lb />
outside ark at twilight <lb />
reading his This reminds <lb />
one of the noted picture by a Dutch <lb />
artist of St. Peter reading his own <lb />
epistles bound in leather with a pair <lb />
of horn framed spectacles. <lb />
Famous <lb />
The total number of distinct <lb />
words in New Testament, ex- <lb />
proper names and their de- <lb />
is The vocabulary <lb />
of tho is much larger. <lb />
According to <lb />
the Old Testament contains <lb />
distinct words, not counting proper <lb />
names and obsolete roots. A few <lb />
comparisons with the above may <lb />
not prove uninteresting. Tho <lb />
and the together <lb />
contain distinct words. Milton <lb />
used different words and forms <lb />
of expression in his entire works, <lb />
and Shakespeare, the peer of all <lb />
twisters, used over or <lb />
one-111 i rd more than was used by all <lb />
writers of both Old and New <lb />
Louis Republic. <lb />
safe. <lb />
little <lb />
egged on by his wife, who insisted <lb />
that there was a burglar in tho <lb />
room. <lb />
returned the burglar. <lb />
my snapped <lb />
exactly what I told you. <lb />
Nobody's so do go to <lb />
Lord Piety. <lb />
Tho bishop of Winchester is <lb />
said to possessed among his <lb />
many other qualities that of <lb />
A good story is told of a re- <lb />
tort ho to tho Lord Bram- <lb />
well, who, meeting him on his way <lb />
back to his room to takeoff his robes <lb />
after reading prayers in tho <lb />
of lords, apologized for having been <lb />
absent from tho <lb />
I kneel down, it me <lb />
palpitation of tho said Lord <lb />
it would not re- <lb />
for mo to sit or stand while <lb />
your lordship was <lb />
Bishop perhaps knowing <lb />
almost as much about old baron's <lb />
sanctity as did Lord him- <lb />
self, answered in, measured <lb />
do not mention it, Lord <lb />
I nm sure your lordship <lb />
can equally devout whether you <lb />
standing, kneeling or <lb />
will not say <lb />
The playful old judge afterward <lb />
inquired who had read prayers that <lb />
afternoon, and on being told remark- <lb />
ed, with a in his eyes, <lb />
a Words. <lb />
Broke Bank at One <lb />
A local sport named walk- <lb />
ed into the gambling rooms of the <lb />
at tho commence- <lb />
of play tho other afternoon. <lb />
The first hand at was being <lb />
dealt. Laying down what appeared <lb />
to be a bill with ii in silver on <lb />
the top of it on tho do bus- <lb />
ho calmly awaited tho result <lb />
of the draw. The card won, and on <lb />
the dealer proceeding to open the <lb />
bill was surprised to find <lb />
neatly folded inside two bills. <lb />
The sport had won which <lb />
was promptly paid, although it took <lb />
whole bank and more to do <lb />
it. lucky rolled a <lb />
in tho customary Mexican non- <lb />
manner, and, bowing polite- <lb />
to the croupiers, left the room <lb />
leaving those gentry staring vacant- <lb />
at the of green cloth in <lb />
front of them and wondering what <lb />
the best thins- to do. <lb />
Advice. <lb />
One day a rich but ill man <lb />
who made sad of tho French <lb />
language called upon Jules <lb />
famous critic, and began <lb />
a tirade upon some trivial matter in <lb />
execrable French. After listening <lb />
politely for some time at last <lb />
replied to his visitor in Latin. <lb />
do you mean, M. <lb />
demanded man angrily. <lb />
don't understand yon. I can't speak <lb />
sir; cried the great <lb />
critic. could not speak it <lb />
worse than you do <lb />
Too Much Exhibited In This <lb />
Simple but Important Operation. <lb />
The Herald contained recently a <lb />
brief account cf a Italian girl, <lb />
years cf age. dying from blood <lb />
poisoning, which set in tho day after <lb />
her mother had her cars. <lb />
Italian in sifter <lb />
of tho laws of health, a <lb />
green thread through tho holes <lb />
which she hod made in tho child's <lb />
cars, to keep them open until tho <lb />
wounds healed. Inflammation set in <lb />
very n after the operation. <lb />
This brings properly <lb />
on the the subject of earrings <lb />
and piercing ears. With <lb />
learning whether there many <lb />
I such cases on record, I secured tho <lb />
I of a surgeon whoso <lb />
for tho past years Las been <lb />
j confined to women. Ho read tho <lb />
I brief making any com- <lb />
Then, as ho returned tho pa- <lb />
per, he I have <lb />
known of death caused by tho <lb />
before this in Tho Herald. <lb />
But I seen a great many cases <lb />
of agony and suffering. And I <lb />
never seen tho operation prop- <lb />
by mothers or In tho <lb />
first place, the ears never, ex- <lb />
by chance, pierced so that the <lb />
earrings will hang or be held prop- <lb />
Ono runs in and out, <lb />
as a rule. Ono is often higher than <lb />
tho other. Tho lobe is pierced too <lb />
high up or too low down. Ono hole <lb />
is nearer tho than tho other. <lb />
danger of blood poisoning is <lb />
not to ho ignored as of no account <lb />
the operation is supposedly <lb />
not a dangerous is <lb />
right about this homo surgery. <lb />
The clean st person, when it comes <lb />
to a surgical operation, is, without <lb />
proper scientific laving, medically <lb />
unclean. If you could but know the <lb />
extreme cautions that taken in <lb />
all well conducted hospitals The <lb />
operating surgeon will not allow any <lb />
to hand him a towel even, if <lb />
such a one has not <lb />
prepared his hands to net as an as- <lb />
All tho instruments to he <lb />
used have been cleansed. A woman <lb />
takes a needle, any needle, and <lb />
threads it with any thread. This <lb />
thread may been in her work <lb />
basket months and months, lying <lb />
nest to other spools of all colors. <lb />
would not think of washing her <lb />
own hands or washing tho ear to <lb />
pierced. A cork is taken out of some <lb />
bottle, any bottle, without <lb />
as to what is in tho or how <lb />
long tho cork has been exposed to <lb />
tho dost This cork is placed under <lb />
the lobe of tho ear for tho needle to <lb />
strike against when it comes <lb />
through. Inflammation and <lb />
result. <lb />
have always insisted that the <lb />
Operation should done by a <lb />
and by who will take the <lb />
trouble to do it <lb />
would not so slight an <lb />
beneath the notice of n <lb />
the rich can command these, <lb />
and poor could it at <lb />
wearing earrings any- <lb />
way not earrings a of <lb />
both barbarism and ancient Biblical <lb />
do not think that women should <lb />
wear earrings. But so long as they <lb />
will do it tho ears should be proper, <lb />
treated, so that tho rings will <lb />
hang gracefully and both alike. And, <lb />
more important still, the danger <lb />
should also ho avoided. Wash tho <lb />
lobe of the car with a disinfectant. <lb />
it surgically clean. a cut- <lb />
Pass it through tho <lb />
of tho lobe, and at right angles <lb />
to it. Use silk thread prepared so <lb />
that it is free from disease germs <lb />
and will turn easily in tho hole, that <lb />
tho tissues may not be <lb />
New York Herald. <lb />
TASTELESS <lb />
The Benefit of <lb />
Piano does it. happen <lb />
that in this house the pedal is bro- <lb />
ken every <lb />
our young lady rides <lb />
IS JUST AS GOOD FOR ADULTS. <lb />
WARRANTED. PRICE GO <lb />
Ii Nov. if., ISM. <lb />
SI. <lb />
gold In- <lb />
TASTELESS CHILI. TONIC an, tun <lb />
boil this In nil our t- <lb />
per f M in the <lb />
in<lb />
J. N <lb />
LANIER <lb />
N. C <lb />
IN------ <lb />
MARBLE, <lb />
Wire and Iron <lb />
sold. work <lb />
reasonable. <lb />
Notice to Creditors <lb />
Having duly qualified before in <lb />
I In- i l I of Tin <lb />
county of tin- i unto i . <lb />
him. he-rob <lb />
in ail holding claim- <lb />
against the tn <lb />
I to the in on <lb />
or before tin- hull of November, is <lb />
ii, or tills notice will be plead In in <lb />
of tin recovery, and all pert ma i i-i <lb />
I id to the In <lb />
i make Ir <lb />
II <lb />
i if I. . i h in. iIi-it <lb />
The modern stand- <lb />
ard Family <lb />
cine Cures the <lb />
common every-day <lb />
ills of humanity. <lb />
s . i a <lb />
Devil <lb />
According to tho host authorities, <lb />
tho only strictly honest and truthful <lb />
people in Asia Minor tho <lb />
or devil worshipers. Their <lb />
prophet is Lucifer, and they hold <lb />
tho of in such <lb />
that they struck with <lb />
when they hear or Chris- <lb />
blaspheme it, and when of <lb />
tho pronounces tho name <lb />
those hear it said to ho <lb />
hound to kill first tho <lb />
then themselves. But Christian <lb />
missionaries among them <lb />
represent them as far <lb />
morally to their <lb />
or Mohammedan neighbors. <lb />
perfectly soys <lb />
a scrupulous re- <lb />
for tho property of others. <lb />
They ore also extremely courteous <lb />
to rs, kind to each other, <lb />
faithful to the marriage vow and of <lb />
A pretty good <lb />
devil <lb />
Actresses. <lb />
who can't net wen <lb />
perhaps never more numerous than <lb />
they now said of our host <lb />
dramatic critics n little time since. <lb />
have pretty faces, charming <lb />
figures and can smile most bewitch <lb />
What more can tho most ex- <lb />
acting playgoer <lb />
In like way Charles <lb />
writing in 1875 to a country man- <lb />
ager, my experience of <lb />
provincial managers I should say <lb />
that a young pretty woman who <lb />
can't act, who knows can't, <lb />
is an a particularly <lb />
wants no salary for her <lb />
Now, such a one my son asks <lb />
mo to you. lady is <lb />
off stage and has tho advantages <lb />
I named and be gives <lb />
mo bis word of honor that so far as <lb />
he knows can't act a bit and <lb />
looks upon a salary tho first season <lb />
as positively nauseous. is <lb />
to to your theater and <lb />
show her insufficiency or anything <lb />
else the may require She <lb />
may a genius or n duffer. She <lb />
doesn't know what can do, <lb />
like tho man who didn't know <lb />
whether ho could play on tho fiddle <lb />
or not, having tried. She <lb />
wishes, any to put her foot <lb />
on the which generally means <lb />
foot in Will yon <lb />
give her a trial If tarns <lb />
worth anything, I pledge myself to <lb />
her at tho earliest <lb />
opportunity. If not, yon are <lb />
sons to her so long as you find her <lb />
thoroughly <lb />
Poor <lb />
Health <lb />
means so much more than <lb />
you <lb />
diseases result <lb />
trifling ailments <lb />
Don't play with Nature's <lb />
greatest <lb />
OUt WM-t <lb />
and generally ex- <lb />
nervous, <lb />
have no appetite <lb />
and can't <lb />
begin once <lb />
the most <lb />
Brown's If on Bit- <lb />
A bot- <lb />
cure-benefit <lb />
cornea from the <lb />
very first dose it <lb />
slain your J <lb />
and It's <lb />
pleasant lo take. J <lb />
It Cures <lb />
Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver <lb />
Neuralgia, Trouble, <lb />
f Constipation, Bad Blood <lb />
Malaria, Nervous ailments i <lb />
Women's complaints. <lb />
Oat only has crossed red <lb />
lines on the wrapper. All others ate <lb />
L On receipt of two k stamps we <lb />
will send set Tan <lb />
Fair Views and <lb />
BROWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE. <lb />
OLD DOMINION LINE. <lb />
s-a- <lb />
PORK S <lb />
i V <lb />
J- their will <lb />
i our re <lb />
chasing where. i . . i.-t <lb />
n all branches, <lb />
flour, cony , <lb />
b Ma t k .<lb />
hi en. I <lb />
tiling yon t hoy . <lb />
ii-ii stock<lb />
the . i <lb />
old ll i i n <lb />
to i I a. <lb />
S. M. , a<lb />
i I . <lb />
S Mil i ; <lb />
Q I, I . . i <lb />
Rock <lb />
P. Pell a . <lb />
I'll <lb />
Din- a, <lb />
. I r. <lb />
A CO. <lb />
Ai . j in in <lb />
i i I IS and <lb />
Can . II i <lb />
i Hough Di e i I <lb />
n in be r <lb />
Give your orders. <lb />
8- C HAMILTON, -r. <lb />
I T AI -m OYSTER <lb />
I HOUSE in II.<lb />
I to <lb />
nil orders for Sob <lb />
promptly. cents <lb />
per . in <lb />
l II <lb />
building between tho Market <lb />
i is- and . n <lb />
v, where O- t i will <lb />
vi l nil hours- <lb />
Plate Stew, Lo cents. Whole plat <lb />
Stew, i We your <lb />
Bade. -I. R. DANIELS CO. <lb />
t vi I u, s. c <lb />
mm sniff am. <lb />
. Real <lb />
Estate <lb />
. and <lb />
Rental <lb />
Agent. <lb />
i;,.,. ,,,, i ,;, for sale <lb />
I.-in- easy. Rent, <lb />
an I open and any <lb />
of debt placed hi my hands fur <lb />
have prompt <lb />
OINTMENT <lb />
TRADE <lb />
TAR RIVER SERVICE <lb />
Washington <lb />
ville and Tarboro all Ian I <lb />
tenon Tar River <lb />
and Friday at A. M. <lb />
Returning Tarboro J. <lb />
If. A. <lb />
These <lb />
of on Tar River <lb />
with -tea o- <lb />
en of The <lb />
direct line for Norfolk, <lb />
Philadelphia. Mew Tors and Bo-ton. <lb />
Shippers order their <lb />
via tr <lb />
Ni-w York, front <lb />
Norfolk v <lb />
from <lb />
tore. Merchants- Miner I <lb />
JNO. SON. Agent, <lb />
X. <lb />
. C <lb />
fa g. all Ski. <lb />
This Preparation her-n I i i ; t <lb />
years, and wherever know <lb />
been iii steady demand. It has been <lb />
the clans all <lb />
end where <lb />
all other remedies, of <lb />
the experienced physicians, have <lb />
for foiled. This Ointment Is of <lb />
Ion and the high reputation <lb />
winch it has tallied la owing entirely <lb />
own as but little effort ha <lb />
ever been made to bring It lbs <lb />
public. One bottle of this Ointment will <lb />
be sent to any address on receipt of One <lb />
j Dollar. All Olden promptly at- <lb />
tended to. Address all order and <lb />
communication lo <lb />
T. F. <lb />
y. C<lb />
obtained all Pa- <lb />
U, . <lb />
and we patent in teas tuna toss <lb />
from Washington. <lb />
j drawing or photo., <lb />
j if or not, o. <lb />
charge. Our fee not due till patent is <lb />
A J How to Obtain with <lb />
i of in the U. S. sad foreign cot <lb />
Ires. Address, <lb />
LO. o <lb /><lb /></p></div></body></text></tei:TEI></mets:xmlData></mets:mdWrap></mets:dmdSec>
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