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            <title>Eastern Reflector</title>
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                <name>Michael Reece</name>
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                <distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor>
                <address>
                    <addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine>
                    <addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine>
                </address>
			<date>2012</date>
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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_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_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_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>
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